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                  <text>Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

Clint Eastwood and AI Pacino
finally winners at Academy awards
By JOHN HORN
AP Elltertalmaeut Writer
LOS ANG~ - On a night
that was supposed IQ honor woinen
in movies, the names to remember
were Clint and AI.
• · Clint );astwood and AI Pacino,
overlooked by Oscar voters deS{lite
more than 50 years of acung
b.etween them, finally broke
thro1J8h Monday ni~t. Eastwood's
moody Western, ' Unforgiven,"
brought hil)l awards for best piclllre
and best director. Pacino, the bitter,
blind Army veteran of " Scent of a
.Woman," was named best actor.
. Neither became famous by smil·
in~ a lot, but they each had somethmg furmy to say as they picked
.up their long-awaited Oscars and
received weD-earned standing ovalions.
·
"This is pretty good," multel'ed
Eastwood, drawing laughs as he
picked up his first Oscar of the
night, for best director. "This is all
right."
" I' ve been around for nearly 39
years; I've enjoyed it and I've been
1ucky," said Eastwood, who had
never been nominated until
"Unfoi'given." "Everyone feels
they are luclcy when lhey can malce
a living in a profession they
enjoy.''
Pacino, nominated six times
before this year, obviously arrived
with high hopes. He actually wrote
an acceptance speech. The actor
quipped "You broke my streak,"
and ihen rambled on, offering plenty of thanlcs and memories.
Midway, he paused and apologize4: "Indulge me for a minute,
because I'm not used to this.''
While films such as "Dances
With Wolves" and "The Silence
of the Lambs" have dominated

-'recent Oscar ceremonies, this
year's awards were more evenly
divided.
"Unforgiven" led with four,
also takinJ honors for best supportin~ actor {Gene Hackman) and film
editing. FoDowing with three were
"Howards End," which tied with
· "Unfor~iven" by receiving nine
nominauons, and "Bram Stoker's
Dracula."
·
The best aclreSS award went to
Emma Thompson, a heavy favorite
as the free-thinking intellectual
who marries· into money in the
stately " Howards End."
" It's overwhelming to see so
many faces who have entertained
and thrilled 111e for all my life,"
said Miss Thompson, a British
actress, in her acceptance speech.
Marisa Tomei, Joe Pesci's feisty
girlfriend in "M~ Cousin Vinnr,"
offei'Cji the night s biggest surpnse.
She won for best supporting
actress, her role in a film that
reeeived mixed reviews beating out
such highbrow contenders lis Judy
Davis Vanessa Redgrave and' Joan
Plowrlght.
'
The theme Monday night was
"Oscar Salutes Women and the
Movies," but the women receiving
the most applause weren't being
honored for their acting.
Two of the screen's most beautiful stars, Elizabeth Taylor and the
late Audrey Hepburn, were given
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian
Awards for their off-screen work.
Another favorite .was Eastwood's
mother, Ruth, who beamed from
her seat in the audience as her son
called her "the greatest woman on
the planet."
A man even attracted the most
attention for fashion. There had
been special interest whether Jaye
Davidson, the cross-dressing barrdresser of "The Crying Game,"
would wear a tux or gown for the
occasion. DaVidson, a loser for best
supporting acta, chose an androg·
ynous outfit of a long blaclc frock
coat over tight pants and boots, his
hair in a b1111.
It was a disappointing night
overall for "'The Crying· Game,"
the underground hit written and
directed by Neil 'Jordan. With a
plot twist that seems to get less
secret every day, the sexually

c TIFFAN\'LEE

New arrival

Mr. and Mrs·. Tracy Lee
announce the birth of their daughter, Tiffany Elizabeth, born Feb. 18
at Holzer Medical Center.
She weighed six pounds and 15
ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are San-.
dra Rife, Middleport and Mitchell
Stanley, Cabin Creek, W.V. Maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Stanley, Cabin Creek,
W.V., Mrs. Leona Stanley and the
late Everett Stanley.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Lee, Pomeroy.
Paternal great- ~randparents are
Mrs. Rachel Wtlson,Middleport,
and the late Howard A. Wilson,
and Mrs. Phoebe Lee, Middleport,
and the late Charles Lee.

NBA
action
turns nasty

provocative ·story about love and
terrorism Ieeeived six nominations,
but only won for original screenplay.
"Unforgiven," meanwhile,
became just the third Western to
win the Oscar for best picture in
the award's 65-year hislory. Othen
cited were the 1931 film "Cimarron" and 1990's " Dances With
Wolves."
"Howards Epd," 1! stately family saga, aJao won for art direction
and Rulh Prawer.Jhabvala's sam~­
play adaptation of E.M. Forster's
classic novel. "Bram Stoker's
Dracula," directed by Francis Ford
Coppola, picked up awards for costume desi,n, makeup and sound
effects edibllg.
"Aladdin" Disney' s latest
smash animated film, again
brought the Oscar for best original
score to Alan Menken, whife he
and Tim Rice won ·the best song
award for "A Whole New World"
Menken and ltis late · partner,
Howard Ashmin, had won Oscars
two out of the ~vious three years
for Disney's 'The Little Mermaid" and "Beauty and the
Beast.''
"A River Runs Through It"
piclced up the Oscar for cinematography, while the award for best
sound went to "The Last of the
Mohicans." The prize for visual
effects went to tbe black comedy
"Death Becomes Her."

•Vol. 43, No. 234
Copyrighted 1993

ATTEND CONFERENCE· Teachers from
Hillside Baptist Church attended the Teachers
Conference held at the First Baptist Church ill
GaUipolis recently. Pletnred, l·r, are Dau Hood,
Gary Jones, Mrs. Linda Jones, Heather Cudlf,

tion Army presented him with with
LOS ANGELES (AP) Roberta Flack will malce a guest · Tradition of Caring award
Laine, who !UI11S 80 today, startappearance Friday on the ABC
ed the "Old Shoes For the Homesoapoptza ''Loving.''
In the episode, Miss Flack sings less" program three years ago after
"Amazing Grace" at the funeral of seeing a homeless man with ragged
character Trisha Alden McKenzie shoes on a television news show.
"I said, 'He needs a pair of
(Noelle Beck}, believed to have
shoes, and I've got shoes in my
died in a ftery car crash.
The four-time Grammy winning closet just sitting there,"' Laine
singer's hits include "Killing Me said. ' I told some radio stations
Softly With His Soog."
abollt my idea to coUect shoes, and
they just nipped over the idea.
They
got involved and we lOok in
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A pair of
6,000 shoes the first year."
shoes - or the rieed for one turned singer Frankie Lane into a
Laine still pedorrns regularly
benefactor of the poor and home- and his autobiography is due out in
May.
less.
In the 1940s and '50s, he pa:Mayor Susan Golding pro·
claimed Monday "Frankie Lane forrned such hits as "Mule Tram,"
Day" in San Diego, and the Salva- "Jealous," "Moonlight Gambler,"

59 Court St.

Gallipolis, OH.
446·9545

"For% of A Century"

is making some 'hanges with some
additional management and
employees.
'

'

Begi-nning April 1 We Will Feature A

L Utl CHE0 tt BUFFE,T
SUCH AS THE FOLLOWING:
2 Homellltltle Soups

4 Salads
Warm Home- Bread
3 Stardles, Sid! as:
Potatoes, Rio, Maanlli

$ 25

4 Yeggles or Casseroles
3Meats
2 Desserts

·.Effor(t(J collect delinquent
land taxes paying off- Lentes

•

DINNER UFFET

7 Days A We-ek

. 6·8:30

• Will ,,,,,
,,,., "''"''

•

A campaign to collect delin- the property owner from forecloquent land taxes in Meigs County sure, as long as the payment plan is
Is begillning to .pay off, according followed.
to Proseeuting Attorney John R.
"This is an option· that is not
Lentes.
·
available to taxpafers who par,
Ilkcari.v,Fe.brutlrY. Lentes .issued ·,-Uieiu~ when they are due; '
an o~n fetter to those taxpayers LentesJiald, "IIC"I-urg~ those delin'
who have been certified as delin- quent taxpayers to talce advanrage
QI!CDI. In his leiter, Lentes pledged of it. It allows taxpayers to budget
to talce whalever actiOn is necessary the funds necessary to take care of
to collect. the delinquencies, includ- their delinquency, and most imporing foreclosUres.
tant for them, it prtXectS them from
Records at the Meigs County foreclosure."
Auditor's Office show that as of
Lentes also said that the county
Dec. 22, 1992, there were treasurer's office accepts monthly
$984,609.68 in delinquent taxes payments on delinquencies,
due the county . That figure although no plan is ·avadable for
includes interest and penalties.
such an option.
..
"While I realize the heartbreak
"As long as a taxpayer shows a
that w~uld result from foreclosing , COI_ISCious effort to pay on his
on family homes and farms; I will delinquent taxea, my office remains
~esort to doing just that if delinwilling to CllOperaiC! ~d worlc witb
quem taxpayers do not offer to that taxpjlyer to avoid foreclosure.
~ooperate with our efforts to colHowever, the worst thing those
lect," Lentes said.
delinquent taxpayers can do is
: A,ccording to the prosecuting ignore th~ appeals of my offiCe. We
attori\ey, those with delinquencies are now preparing the fii'St parcels
~an enter into a five payment plan for foreclosure. If such actions are
to settle their delinquent status. flied, then the taxpayers "!ill have
Under such a plan, the taxpayer is to pay coun costs and costs of prosa_sked to pay 20 percent of the . eclition as well as their taxes and
delinquency and then pay the bal- penalties just to save the propenr,
ance in five semi-annual install- they worked so bard to purchase, •
ments when the tax books are open Lentes -said.
for the collection of current·taxes.
Collection letters which oualine
Those taxpayers are also required the options available have been
to pay their current taxes as they mailed to delinquent taxpayers in
Ci)me due. Such a plan also protects

,.._________ Local
Highway projects announced
··
Two highway projects involving Meigs County were recently
,. .awarded by the Ohio Department of Transtdtation.
The SheDy Co. of Thornville is schedtOOI to resurface 9.13 miles
of. roadway on State Route 124 from the Vi\100 County line to 1.2
miles east of State Route 325 and from the Srate Route 160 junction
to the Meigs County line.
The $550,527.08 project is scheduled forcomvletion by July 31.
: In ad~ition, PEBCO Inc. of /'lorwalk received a contract to
mstall raised J)l!vetncnt marlcings on variOus routeS and sections in
,. Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, MOnroe, Morgan, Noble, Vinton
and Washington counties after submitting a bid of $94 I ,650.
Scheduled completion date for the project is Nov. 15.

Daylight Savings Time returns to Ohio and most of the nation at
·· 2 a.m. Sunday•
Dinector Michael A. Alcrouche of the Ohio Deparunent of Liquor
·· · Control reminds all liquor permit holders that ·•when the clock '
striJ:es 2. a.m. it will•. in fact, he 3,a.m.. 30 minutes put the legal
closing wne for pen01t holders entitled to be !lJ!CD until2:30 am .
Therefore, all aales and consumption of liquor must cease at 2
:a'I:i.when clocks should be advaJ!Ced one hour, Director lllaoucbe

Kuhl named instructor for class

•

You'll Find Caviar, Frog L..• and Es Cargo at Oscar's
'

was culminated with a vlalt by a uewspaper
reporter. Here, Seatinel reporter Jim Freemau
shows students at Rejolclna Lire Christian
School some nl the tools associate!! with uewspa·
ll'r reporting. (Seutinel photo by Charleue Hoe- .
flich)

·· DST returns Sunday

11:15 A.M.· 1:45 P.M.

Music students participate in concert

'

DISCUSSING NEWSPAPER • Studeuts in
selected t:laa&amp;es at Syracose aad Salem Center
elementary ·~thools and R~oldug Life C-lstlan
School in Middleport participated lalt week in
the Great Readiualll Ohio Week (GROW) program dnrina which they learned things about
the various parts or a newspaper. The program

"High Noon," and "That's My
Desire.''
LAFAYETTE, La. (AP) Cosmonaut Georgi Grechko told a
group of si:hoolchildren the reason
the Russians are building a space
shuttle.
"Keeping up with theJoneses,"
Grecl\kO said Monday, referring to
the American space program.
The students attended a lecture
and slide show, then peppered
Grechko with questions like, "Do
cosmonauts suffer ill effects from
space flights?"
The answer? After weeks of
weightlessness, the weight of food
in tbe stomach can be unsettling,
Grechko said

Or Order From
OurMenul

•

Bunny Kuhl of Pomeroy will be the instriiCIOI' for a quilting class
tlu'ot!ah t!'e Ohio Univcnlty'• cootintllng eductllion pqram, Com"muruvenaty, besinnins on April 1J&gt;.
The five-ee•aon JII'Oil'llll .will be bcld·on Tueadaya April 20May ~8, 7 to p.m. in 104 Tupper Hall. The lint and lui clua periods will be held from 7 to 10 p.m.
·
.
Everyone enrolled in the Qulltina for BeJinners clus will
receive 21 pata~m~, enotJib for a quoea size quilL
. Detnonltnllions 1111fbandl-on work on • 12~ lllllpler quilt
~teach partlc:ipanta the ~lire Cl1liltlna ja¥o:e• from choollna fabnc to trimmina and bindin&amp; the fiililhecf prodncL

procedural error.

MitcheD .said since some
_programs scheduled for deletion
involved teachers who were on the
transfer list, and had not had their
due process of a hearing yet, the aclion would be "putting the cart
before the horse".
Mitchell said the action would be
a "dOne deal" and would say to the
tt,achers that their hearings had no
meaning, if the program had already been deleted before they had &lt;•
a chance to teD the board why they
felt the program is needed.

several townships to date, Lentes
said, and the results have been
encouraging. The letters, which are
go!ng in ~email every day, are
b~mg ma1led to those taxpayers
W!th large delin~qencies whose
".topc"losrtiurees.are ·~in~ preJil!CCd for
ft.."Many of those prope:ny owners
who have been contacted have
shown good judgment and either
paid their taxes in full or have
made arrangements with the treasurer to make timely payments •
Lentes said. ''Those who haven'•t
yet contacted the rreasurer's office
or my offiCe are risking foreclosure
each day they wait•
Lentes stressed that no delin9uent property o.wners !las been
'singled out" for coUection of their
delinquent raxes1 Properties are
being eval~ for delmque~~t stabiS _~dcoDecuon by IQwnship.Itis
anticipated that the coDection letter
process will be completed by the
end of March. At that time the
office .will begin foreclosure 'proceedings against several propeny
owners.
"These are days when local governments, especially school dislf!Cts, are scrambling to operate in
d1ff1cillt t1mes. Taxpayers have a
greater responsibility than ever to
pay lheir fair share of the burden •
Lentes concluded.
'

WVEA representative Kathy PPJHS; Kathy Clay, P.E. teacher at
Smitb agreed with MitcheD when Ashton; T110othy Click, first grade
asked by the board, but implied she teacher at Roosevelt Patricia
was going to wait until the board Graziano, kindergarten teacher at
approved the deletions, then file Mason; Drema Greenlee, social
gnevances for the teachers .invol- sttidies teacher at Wahama; Kelly
Harper, fifth and sixth grade
ved.
Board lliembers exited from the teacher at Hartford; Kathy
public meeting twice last night Cot Hemetek-Johnson, reading teacher
executive sessions dealing with . at Hannan; ·Jean Henderson, teen
personnel. The first was 18 minutes parent prognim at ~Thch; Craig
long, the second lasting 28 minutes. Hesson, speeial education teacher
While board members were in at PPJHS; Bema Hilbert, business
executive session, Mitchell staled education at Vo-Tech; Christine
she felt this is what's wrong with Kratzer, special education teacher
the school system (spealcing of the at PPHS; Anna Lewis, kindergarten
possible ·deletion of programs at New Haven; Brenton Martin,
before the teaching hearings). malh teacher at PPJHS; Cheryl
"They (the school board) do some- Metz, English at Hannan; Tracy
thing and then they go back and try Pickens, social swdies at Hannan;
IQ fix it," she said.
Angela Potts, reading at PPJHS; .
"I felt this was the fair and Blythe PoweD, fifth and sixth grade
reasonable thing to do insteall of at New Haven; Walter Raynes, sowaiting, letting them go ahead, and cial studies at Waluunil; Jozie
then file grievances. Grievances Roberts, special education at Beale;
can talce QP to a year before a c!Pci· Lois Robinson, home economics at
sion is made on the fourlh level," Wahama; Barbara Scarberry, speMitchell stated. "And, it costs a lot cial education at PPJHS; Brenda
of money, county funds, and then Scott, P.E. at Leon; and Shawn Serthere is no guarantee the board is -gent, third grade at Roosevelt
going to win." ·
• Service personnel being RIF'ed
·
"I felt it was iplportant to bring it were:
Sheryl
Sims,
cook at Hannan·
to the board's attention 1mmediately," she concluded.
Catherine Cook, cook at North
Thachm affected by the RIF, Point; Wilma Martin, cook at
who will lose: their jobs at the end PPJHS; . Edna Holcomb, cook at
PPJHS; Barbara Scarberry, ~ at
of the school year, include:
Linda Bragg, kindergarten Hannan; Richard CampbeD, cus~er at Leon; Patricia BrtiJllfield, todian at Hannan; Naomi Lanier;
rea&lt;Iing teacher at Roosevelt; Mar- · secretary at Hartford; 'Illmmy Hall
Continued on page 3
'
garet c.sto. English teacher at

Cong. Strickland to address
Meigs Democrats Saturday

U. S. Congressman Ted Strick·
land (D-Lucasville) will address
the Meigs County Democratic
Party at the party's annuaiJefferson/Jackson dinner to be held Saturday.
Strickland, a psychologist and
former United Methodist minister,
was elected to that office last
November. He represents the 14
counties of Ohio's Sixth District.
His is the largest of Ohio's Con·
gressional districts, spanning from .
Washington County to the King's
Island amusement park near
Cincinnati.
Strickland defeated his Republican opponent, Incumbent Bob
McEwen with 52 percent of the
vote in Meigs County.
"I was thrilled with the way
briefs---..;;;M;;.;::;eigs;..;;.Co;;;;;un;;:..;tys;;:;:uppo;;;;.;rted;.;.Co.;;;;n~gress;;;;;.,·

man .Strickland in November, Party
Chauwoman Sue Maison ~aid.
''Ted is a true ·man of the people'
and I'm always excited when I see
· how he relates to his constituents
Ted ~ridges the gaps of partisart
pohlics and economics. He puts
people at ease, and I thinlc anyone
who speaks to him is im~ressed
with his genuine interest m their
problems. For a change, we have a
U. S. Congressman who actually
listens to the concerns of the people
who elected him. •
"Ted is also a dynamic spealcer," Maison said... He has .a way of
motivating all of us to look around
and see the job that needs to be
done. I think anyone who attends
Saturday's dinner will be inspired

•

by what he has to say."
Maison alSo rioted that Satur~~·s visit ~11 be Striclcland's third
VJSII to. Me1gs County since he took
o~ce m !anuary. In February, he
vtsll~d w1th health care and econo~nc development leaders in
Metgs County. Last week, he spolce
to the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce during its annual dinner/dance at Royal Oak Resort.
. The Jefferson/Jaclcson dinner
wtll be held at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center. A social
hour at 5 p.m. wiD precede the dinner, which begins at 6 p.m. Tickets
are available from any member of
the Democratic Executive Committee, or at' the door, at a cost of $10
per ~- Children under 12 are
admlaed free.

Enrollmeniis limited and the re~tration/cancellation deadline is
' April 16. For more information or to register, residents may contact
the Office of Continuing Education at 593-01770 or toll-free at J.
800-336-5699.

Man arrested on warrant
Walter Barrett, Briar Ridge Rd., Langsville, was arresled Tuesday evening on Mler of the Meigs County Court for failure to pay
· fines and COlts.
'
He is also beins held on a ~ check warrant from the Wellston
Police Depanment, Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported.
Barreu is to appear in the MFigs County Court.

Man cited on charges
Donald R. ~pcncer, 20, New Hope Road, Long Bouom, was
cited to the Meigs County Court on chargeS of leaving the scene and
improper bactins foUowing a Friday night incident at Five Points.
Accordina t.O 1 repon from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Spencer II charged with liacking into a I985 Chevrolet
driven by C~ Aeilcer, ~.causing modmle damage. Damage to Spencer s 1989 Ponliac' was listed as lighL
The ldlerift's depanmcnt ii itivestigating a hit·sldp accident that
occurred ~y fli&amp;ht at that ~y Tav~g lot.
Accorciin&amp; to I ftPO!t;ll977 ~ow by Ronda L. MOOII,
Union Avenue, Ponleroy, was· slniCk in the leftlidc by a vehicle
~ OUI of a pD:Ingspace.

·

An mvel'lipnon II cootinuin&amp;, Soulshy said Charges of leaving
the scene of 111 acekleolt are pendinJ.

Deer-pickup wreck reported

A Mlddlepon IUD'S pickup llllCk sustained light ~e In a
deer-vehicle ac:c:ldent on State Route 124 in Syracuse Tuesday
uound 2 I.ID.
Accordltla to l!lhertff'l danment niJXII1, Cbrillqlber A. Davis
wu fl81ll!oidod when bo all'lrk a deer dill jumped iniD the Jlllh of
hil 1987 Font ltanpr.
Coutinned on pqe 3

-

•

,

By Mindy Kearns
Mason County Board of Educalion members unanimously apeec~
to
off 39 employees dunng a
specilll session Tuesday evening.
Twenty-five professional personnel and 14 service personnel lost
their jobs due to reduction in force
{RIP). Board member Maxine
Ni~ tilade the motion to lUF the
professional persolinel, ·with Paul
Doeflinger secon~. ·. On service
personnel, Brian Billinss made the ·
!'K'tion, with Olston Wnght secondmg.
~ on the l!j!CIIda Tuesday, Supenntendent Michael Whalen had
.recommended the board approve
deletions of several professional
positions and many service perslinnel positions. Both items were
deleted from the agenda; however,
after Ann Mirchell, a representative
from the American Federation of
Teachers, O!arleston, .told the
board the program deletions were a

'-Y

OSCAR'S"'
RESTAURANT

Spea k

· ..Faith and the Burden of Reputation" was the tide of the program
presented by Mis. KatiJ?n Windon
at the February meetmg of the
Chester United Methodist Women.
"Polite" society e~es one
to associate with the "right people
- that is, people of similar race, culture, educational level, economic
class, political orientation, and
often times, gender. To this the
Gospels record Jesus as saying
.. Bah-hum-bug!" Jesus crossed
MJHS/MHS CHORUS
these lines many times wilh women
of questionable reputation in the
New Testament - women on whom
.. polite",Jewish society looked
doW!!. Examples are The Woman at
On March 11, 1993, the Meigs 1992 program. As the number of lhe
WeD, the woman who washed
·Junior-High and Hi,gh School cho- participants grows, so does the Jesus'
feet, and the woman who
ruses participated m the World' s 1mpact on the public's awareness bled continuously.
Largest Concert . There were . of school music programs.
John 4:7-26 was read. Three
approximately 65 students particiThe program reflected MENC's groups
four were formed and
paiing in the program.
1993 Music In Our Schools Month answeredofquestions
strangers
The program was broadcast ' theme "Make Time for Music." and The Woman at about
the
Well,
then
from 1-1:30 p.m. on PBS stations which was chosen to create aware- answers were discussed.
at which time millions of ness of the need for music in our
group sang the hymns "Fill
achoolchildren. teachers, and citi- schools, homes, and communities. MyThe
Cup
LOrd" and "Springs of
zens ftom around the country per- The program was chosen by an L.ivi~g Water"
with Betty Dean as
formed the same concert program MENC committee of elementary PUIIISL
simultaneously in the World's music specialists,
A poem was read and a Litany
l,.argesl Concert from the John F.
The pro~ consisted of "Har- of Prayer
in cl01ing.
Kennedy Centerfor the Performing mony", "Siyahamba", "Garden of
Mrs. Betty Dean p:esided at the
ArrJ in Washington, D.C.
the Earth", "If 1 Had a Hammer",
business
tneeling with 12 members
· Last year an estimaied 8.2 mit- "AmiQos", and "Sing a Song of
prescflt
and
56 sick and shut-in
lion students participated in the. Peace".
.
.
·
calls were repmted.
I

Mason School Board
terminates·39 employees

-----Names in the news---

SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - Two ing to tell her about his death.
weeks after a 93-year-old wpman . In the meantime, Mrs. Downs
walked a mile through several fell and also was talcen to Cleveinches of snow to get help for her land Memorial. She was dec.lared
husband, they have died within dead at 7:25a.m.
"What she did was just the ultiaboutl2 hours of each other.
Clara Downs made the trek mate love story," said Marsha
down a remote dirt road to reach a Jackson, activiues coordinator at
neighbor's pbone after her 88-year- the retirement home. "And for
old husband, Everett, broke his hip. them to die the way that they did, it
He had made the same journey, just really takes your breath
without the snow, after she brolce . away."
·
·
her hip a few Ye&amp;fll ago.
'
When Mrs. Downs moved in to
Downs stayed in Cleveland the retirement borne she had not
Memorial Hospital for more than a read a newspaper story about her
week aftet his fall, according to walk, Jackson said. One of the
The Shc;lby Star.
employees gave her a copy of the
He was admitted to Cleveland article.
.·
Pines nursing home Thursday, but
··she said, 'I didn't do nothing . .
Sunday night he was talcen back to They're making a mountnin out of
the hospital, where he was pro- a molehill,"' Jackson said.
nounced dead on arrival shortly
before 7 p.m.
Mrs. Downs had moved to a
retirement home after her bustO
band's accident. Her family had
· planned to visit her Monday mornHoyt Allen, executive director
of the KYOWVA Regional Evan·
gelizing Association will speak
Sunday at the Rutland Church of
Christ. He will tell the history of
KYOWVA at the 9:30 am. service
and speak on the need for local
evangelism at the 10:30 a.m. service. Hoyt is a former minister at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
'There will be a fellowship dinner at
noon. Eugene E. Underwood, minister, invites the public.

2 s.ctlono, 11 Pageo 25 cent•
A llulllmedlo Inc. Ne,..paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 31, 1993

Tanimi Jonu, Mrs. Jamie Humphrey, Mrs • .
Teresa Reyuolds, Mrs. Beliuda DeiD, Mrs.
'Jandl Jones, and Mrs. Betty Acree. Also attend·
log but not pictured were Mrs. Cheryl Chicle.

"Seeds of Faith -·Death and Chris Hill and Clara Mae Sargent Camp Abury are Margie West,
Resurrection" was the program The penny fund collection was Martha Dudding, Etta Mae Hill,
topic presented by Lois Bell when talcen and siclc caDs reported. Cor- &amp;uth Smith, Chris Hill, Eileen
the Racine United Methodist respondence was read.
Buclc and Lee Lee.
Sue Grace, on giving the misWomen met for their March meetThe date for the Alpha Delta
ing. .
sion report, spoke about Nome, Kappa dinner to be served has been
The focus image was a basket of Alaska, and said it is one of the changed to April22.
various seeds, seed pods, seed most isolated place in the United
A money donation was voted on
packets and dried weeds and also States. The ministry of United to ~uy a new sound system. for the
plant bulbs just' beginning to Methodists is there and 60 percent social room.
·
sprout.
of Nome's residents are Eskimos.
PlanS were fmalized for the benMrs. Bell said "we see death Despite the isolation, some 10,000- efit dinner to be given for Joe Hill.
because the visible plant ,with its 12,000 tourists 'visit Nome each
Refreshments were served by
fruit and families form are gone but year.
Clara Mae Sargent and Karen
we see resurrection because we
Mrs. Grace also explained about Walker.
know that the ~tial for a new the new prayer calendar. She said
Get weD cards were signed durplant is within. She commented on on each member's birthday, a card ing the socializing.
'
some ..Seeds of Faith" tO correlate would be sent to a missionary
Attending were Alice Wolfe,
them with the coming Easter sea- whose birthday corresponds with Lois Bell, Mariam Bell, Margie
son.
·
·
the ·member sending iL
West, Robyn Reiber, Clara Mae
the hymn "Standing on the
Ruth Stearns, program resoun:'e Sargent, Ruth . Stearns, ·Karen
Promises" .was sung by members. secretary, reported on the UMW Walker, Chris. Hill, Gladys Shields,
Scripture was read from John and reading program and presented Margery Roush, Etta Mae Hill,
the program closed with a prayer eight books which were passed Out Frances Roberts, Vicki Hill, Carla
by Mrs. BeD.
to members. Points are given for Wallace, Sharon Hubbard, Lee Lee
Lee Lee presided at the business the most books read by the UMW and Sue Grace.
meeting which opened with the groups in the Athens District and a
The next meeting (note the date
group repeating the UMW purpose. prize is awarded.
change) will be April 12 at7:30
Members attending the district p.m.
Officers reports were given by
UMW retreat on April 16-1 7 at

·Chester UMW meet

I

••
•

UMW to attend district retreat

George Clinton, the fourth vice
presideilt of the United Stales, died
in Washington in 1812. He was 73.
Clinton was the first vice p:esident
to die while in office.

Low In tile mld-4811. Rail
Tbunday, blgb near SO.

•

e

Nathan Hale was hanged in New
York on Sept. 22, 1776, by· the
British for being a ~. Under Gen.
George Washington s direct orders,
Hale had disguised himself as a
Dutch schoolmaster and made his
way into New York, only to be
captured by the British. His last
words before dying have become
immortal . They were: "I only
regret I have but. one life to lose for
my country."

Alie n

Pick 3:
623
Pick 4:
4375
Buckeye 5:
17-27-30-31-36

Page4

News notes

Elderly woman who walked through
snow dies in attempt to rescue husband

Ohio Lottery

.

I
l
·-·Ill. . -

WITH 'I'll£ GREATEST OP EASE- Ia ... llltllerlaadalk ot
llle TlltldaJ after-, Ulheull) Rio an.1e lllldellll &amp;ea,
SeD ud ADpia Rltad• 111011
I• aud . . .
peratuNID 6e a. to fly a .... • 6e P'tel ._., ADIYenary
HaD. Rlbl II Ia 6e fnriCIIt fDr today aadlllantlaJ,IIId w1a11e the
sun II expe..1ed to retnna Friday, te•perataiW wli llover in 6e

40-to-50-!lelree nuae.

. :

I

'

�•

· W Jz ! (Jzt"" da31. 1913

-

.

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mas 0 n...

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

at West Columbia; Sue
Reynolds, aid at Hannan; Penn alee
Layton, accountant at central
office; and Saml!CI Beclcner, Charles McCallislel, Harold Ridenour,
and Dorsey Campbell, all 1ransportation.
,
Aiso RIF' ed were several supplcmental positions including Edwan! Reed; Gene Moore, Edward
Cook and Michael Lambert, athletic directors; Karen Cook vocational bus run from W~; Mar·
lenc: Reynolds, hand bus runs from
the junior high; and Lany Matheny,

-

The Daily Sentinel

BNL scandal a lesson in influenc_e peddling

WASHINGTON - To hear failed to fully investigate whether
Rep. Henry Gonzalez, 0- Texas, senior BNL officials in Rome were
111 Coart Street
chairman of the Ho"se Banking involved in the scheme.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Our · associate Dean Boyd
Committee, tell it, it's not hard for
. DZVOTBD TO 'lBE J1II'I'Bill8'l8 OP TIIB IIEJG8.IIMON AJtEA
a foreign-owned bank to escape
prosecution in o!le of th~ largest
banlcing scandals tn U.S. htStory:
"All you have to do is_.hire the
services of )ltOillinent Cabmet officers and their law fmns, make sure
ROBERT L. WINGETI
a
la~c:r at one of the firms headed
Publisher
the division at the Justice Depart·
ment. that is prosecuting your
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEIIEAD
client
.... If the scandal is big recently obtained confidential
Assistant Publlsber/CGnlroBer
General Mani!ger
enough. the prime miniSiel of your diaries of one senior BNL execucountry may' be willing to travel live lhat·shed light on how a politiLETI'BRS. OF OPINION are~lcome. They should be leu than 300
abroad to defend you.'' .
cally connecled BNL defense team
words. All leltm ..., subject ID editing IDd mUJt be •iined with 1111110,
Gonzalez was referring specifi- may have helped persuade the Jusaddress IDd t&lt;lepbooo number. No unsipxd !ellen will be publisbed. Letten
cally to the Italian-based Banca lice Department to anive at such a
sbould be in 10oc1 wto, oddlessinc issues, not penonllities.
Nazionale Del Lavoro, which hilS. conclusion.
pulled out all the stops to avoid
Aflel the FBI raided the Atlanta
being fin~~:ered in the so-.called BNL branch in At~gust 1989, the
"lraqgare'" scandal.
diaries show that BNL hired former
As it currently stands, the Jus- U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell,
tice Department has charged and Bill Hendricks, who had just
Atlanta BNL branch manager left his post !IS chief of the Justice
Christopher Drogoul and a few · Department's fraud section. The
low-level bank employees with fraud unit was responsible for signsecretly providing $5 billion in ille- ing off on any BNL indictment.
Since 1960, federal spending in real leiiiiS (after factoring out infla- gal loans to Iraq - many of them BNL also enlisted the support of
tion) has gone up 22% pescent while revenues have increased 152 per- guaranleed by the U.S. government senior Italian government officials
cent. Because of lhat l!)lp, the IOial federal debt of $290 billion in 1960 and used by Saddam Hussein to since the bank was state owned.
has grown to $4.41rillion.
One month later, the Italian
buy weaponry. BNL has been
If federal spending had been inc~ since 1960 only to retlect infla. absolved of any wrongdoing, even Finance Minister discussed the case
lion and population growth, the 1993 budget would be $630.5 billion, less though a federal judge determined with then-u.s: Treasury Secretary
than half lhc acblal S).481rillim litis fiscal year.
last fall that U.S. prosecutors had Nicholas Brady. The following
Those numbers point l!P why business is keeping spending cuts on lhe
f!'llt&lt;_l _ _ ,_'PI!I('P'"
lable during the CtJlre!lt debate over deficit reductim.
·
IW!...
The board of directors of the U.S. Chambel- of Commcn:e, fa example, has urged President CliniQn to expand the spending cull in his plan to
reduce lhe deficit. To help in th8t process, the business federation has
been calling for flll1ha' reductions in expc:oditma.
Bringing taxes up to the level of spending is not the answer. Gearing
expenditures to available resources is. Tu inae&amp;&lt;les are not the only way
to deal with deficits. Spending will continue to ruo ahead of taxes no matlel how fast taxes increase unless far greaiCC spending cuts are enacled.
That is why the present effort to restrain the deficit must focus on reducing expendilureS.
Reprinted fiom Nation's Business, April, 1993

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

Why spending cuts

must come first

month, the U.S . ambassador to
Italy cabled a message ba'ck to
Washington saying that the chairman of BNL had asked that tbe
criminal probe be raised .to a
"political level." Less than 10
days lalel, the White Ho~ called
lhe Atlanta prosecutor to discuss
the case. At the same time, the
BNL defense team in Atlanta was
providing the Iopal prosecutor with
witness after witness to show that
tlie bank had been victimized by
rogue employees in Atlanta.
By early 1990,1he Atlanta proseculor agreed th8t BNL-Rome had
been victimized and should not be
indicted. Justice officials in Washington were skeptical. In a memo'
to the prosecutor, Justice complained about the •'absence of any
bard probing of BNL-Rome personnet," which they called an
"t~nfortunate consequence of relying so heavily up0n BNL for assis-

ranee."'

When the Washington office
threatened closer SCltJtiny of BNLRome's involverneilt, &lt;BNL quickly
switched to the political mode.
"The sli'ategy of coope.tating with
(the Atlanta, prosecutor) seeins to
be. losing its value," BNL execu- ,
tive Paolo DiVito wrote in his
diaries in March 1990. "Taking
advantage of access at political lev-

Letters to the editor
Upset with policy
I was dumbfounded to see the
action taken by the Meigs Local
School Board in revising the scbool
calender.
With only two weeks until one
of the two most importall QlristiaD
holidays of the year, the school
boanl has decided to schedule my
children and my wife to attend
school on Good Friday. My chun:h
has 2:30 services scheduled that
afternoon as well as a church youth
ttip 'immediately thereafter. When
the only real ally that the school
has in educating the youth of this
country is the chlllch, why does our
school boanl sec a need to oppose
the wOO&lt; of the chun:h. Whalltintl
of leaders have we clecled?
I can also make the point that
the school calendar allowed an
' exaa day off after Thanksgiving to
allow students and faculty to hunt.
Just where do the priorities lay?
Why should you expect every-

one to change his Good Friday
plans this late in time? Everyone
realizes lbal bad WCIIht::r can result
in a change of the calendar, but
surely it wmld be beaer for e&lt;lel}'·
one's
to add 1he day at the
end o the school calendar. Our
church arranges its schedule around
Meip Local testing so that its children will be able to perform their
best. We have to consWitly deal
with the innumerable children's
ball games scheduled during Sunday srrvices.
I call on the schQOI board to
reverse Ibis Vt*. I call on the ministerial associations to back this
and fellow Christians to let your
boanl members mow you fee] as I
do. As fa me llld my children, we
·will be in chwch in Good Friday •
not school.
Sincerely,
Keith D. Ashley,
Pomeroy

flaJis

Today in history
By Tile AIIOCiated Prea
Today is Wednesday, Man:h 31,the 90ih day of 1993. There are 275
days left in the year.
·
Today's Higblight in History:
Ftfty vean aao. on Man:h 31, 1943; one of the major works of American musical theater, "Oklahoma!" by Rlchard Rod&amp;en and Oscar Hammenrein the Second. opened on Broadway with Allied Drake in the role
of Curly llld Joan Robens as I..aaey.
On Ibis dllc:
In 1492, Xing f«.dinand llld Queen Iabeila of Spain issued an edict
expelling Jews from Spanisb sail, except those willing to conven to

Chrisliani .

In 188;, French engineer Alexandre Gustave Eiffel unfurled the
French tricolor aiiJ)l the Eiffcl Tol\U, dficially malking ill completion.
In 1917 ,the United Stalie8 took p
rico m the Virgin lsllmds, which
it had purdlued from Denmark.
In 1923, the 6rst U.S. t1ancc mmtbon, held in New Yorlt City, ended
with Alma Cummings IICIIing a world ra:onl of T1 holn on her feeL
·
In 1932, Fmd Motor Comptlty tmveiled itJ V-8 engine.
In 1933, during the Great Depressioo, Congn:ss IUihorized the Civilian
Conavation et.ps.
• ·
In 1949, Newfoundland enlered confederation as Canada s tenth
province• .
~--------------.----------.

Berryls World
•

FRANKLIN DELANO CLINTON

els appe8rs more promising.... We
cannot preclude the affair evolving
towanl solutions outside the judicial system."
The diaries reveal that in March
1990, then-Attorney General
Richard Thornburgh was pressed
on BNL in meetings with the Jtalian finance minister and the Italian
ambassador, who argued that
" incriminatinJ the bank would add
insult to inJury ." The Italian
ambassador also pled BNL's case
with top State Department oftJCials.
The bank also retained the publie relations fum of Sawyer Miller
and a law fmn which boaSied famer Secretary of State William
Rogers, who served under Richard
Nixon. Shortly thereafter, Rogers
accompanied then-Vice President .
Dan Quayle on Ia trip to Rome.
Notes from the office of th.enDeputy Attorney General William
P. Barr sl!ow that Rogers also
called Barr on Oct. 26, 1.990,
specifically "to discuss the BNL
mauer."·
·
On Feb. 28, 1991, BNL offacials
breathed a sigh of relief when the
Justice Department only indicted
Drogoul and a few Atlanla bank
.employees for the fraud; whne
treating BNL as an innocent victim.
The indictment has since been
tarnished by several CIA reports
that concluded that BNL-Romc ·
officials knew about the Atlanta
scam. Last fall, the judge in Drogoul' s trial ruled· that three CIA
reports "definitely support the
defendant's position that BNLRome was aware of what (Orogout) was doing." Lawyers for
BNL would not comment on the
CIA reports. .
When the judge found lhat some
CIA repo,u had not been shared
with the Justice Department, and
th8t prosecutors had failed to fully
investipte lhose which had been,
he quit the case. In his ftnal statement, the Judge argued .that highlevel meetm~)i between ltalian government offtcials and members of
the Bush adminisuation "appeared
to sleet the case and give support to
BNL-Rome's ~iew that it was a
victim." A new trial for Progoul is
scheduled for next fall. BNL's
high-powered attorney, Griffin
Bell, is now a private attorney for
George Bush. ·
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstgeln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Clinton's jobs p~ckage_ is i~fy_ at _best ·' .
Thev may, ca)l it what they like and payinl! middle-class salaries.
- an ''economic stimulus" pack· But lhey wtll be anythmg buL J..eoo
a~ or a "jobs bill." But the $16.3 Panetta, the president's budget
btUion in "emergency" spending chief, says the 219,000 figure are
that President Clinton proposes,
and the Democratic Congress
seems on! too happ to oblige has
the redolei.ce ofpotf
'
Th'&lt; American people are to be
forgiven if they do not see how "full-lime equivalent" jobs.
!!J~Cnding Sl.S million to produce
For the benefit of readers out·
ftsh atlases or $800,000 for a side lhe Beltway who do not underwhite-water canoeing course in . stand the foreign language that
Atlanta has ruuch to do with stimu- Washington bUreaucrats speak, this
lating the national economy. Or is what "full-time equivalent"
how spending $5 million for a means: It's two or three part-time
parking garage in Fort Lauderdale jobs, which, taken together, are
Fla., or $1 million for a municipai equivalent to one full-time job.
cemelely in Puerto Rico will create
The funny thing is, these are
more than a handful of jobs.
precisely the kinds of jobs - the
If President Clinton truly means part-time and temporary variety to prime the economic pump and that the president's labor secretary,
get the American job machine up · Robert Reich, disparaged earlier
and chugging again, he could not this month when commenting on
have devised a more costly and lhe 365,000 new jobs the economy
inefficient way of doing so. If we managed to produce without the
accept the president's projection president's stimulus. Wonder what
that his package will generate Reich thinks about the make-work
219,000 new )obs (100,000 fewer jobs that his boss wants to create.
than the admtnistration estimaled
Indeed, of the 219,000 full-time
just a month ago), each new job equivalent jobs that the president's.
will cost the taxpayers about stimulus is supposed to gin up, 65
$75 ooo
percent will be summertime gigs
This 'would not be such a bad for school kids and Head Start
lhing if all or most of the jobs ere- teachers. The rest of the jobs will
ated were full lime and permanent come from· infrastructure spending

Joseph Perkins

and, aga10, from budding )lar~ng
garages and cemetenes. This ~:~me
next year, '!lOSt !Jf these new JObs
no l~ger ~II eXISt..
.
~~~ton IS rewrnmg to the failed
policies of the past. History shows
that the government does a lousy
job of creating permanent job~.
Maybe .he ~ould have learned lh;IS
lesson 1f hiS people had placed 10
!'rant of him lhe Gene~ Account·
10g Office report on the,, Emerge~cy ~obs Act of 1~83, , w~1ch IS
stmilar to the preSidents sumulus
package.
.
.
.
. The 1983 jobs btU cost $9_ btl·
- I. ton, and the number of JObs
attribuled to il pealced at 35,000 in
June 1984. Of the lucky souls who
actually g'?t one of the g'?vemmentcreated JObs, two-thuds were
already employed. The net effect
o~ nattonal_employment levels was
vmually mi. Yet, here we ~e. a
deca'!e lalel, and _another ~·dent
ts trytng to aruracially create JObs.
The best way for the gov_ernmentto put people to _ ~ork ts.to
crca~ a cltmate conductve ~JOb
creanon. Reduce taxes on bustness.
Pare unnecessary reg_ulations.
When Ronald Reaga.n did that he
precipitaled the longest peacetime
economic expansion in American
~istory. More than 20 million new
Jobs were crealed.

. It

lS

hard

10

see how €hnton

~II mau:h tha~ performanc:c _
on the
JObs fro~t wtlh .the pohctes he

presently IS punwn,. -~ fact, there
1s a very ~eal. poss1biltty that the
recent upnck tn the economy - a
robust4 percent annual growlh rate
-. ~ill. be choked off by lhe $2_95
~illi~ tn new taxes that the-adm10·
tstratto!l ~·
.
.
As. if ~omtc growlh and JOb
creauon wtll not be daml?en~d
enoug~ by th.e largest tax h~e 10
Am~ncan _htstory, th~ Chnton
admtnisuauon also has_m f!ttDd a
host of mandate~ that w1ll rmse the
cost of employmg workers. The
new ·family t-:aye l~w was just a
s~ The adm~tJ'!Ibon also wants
to J8C~ up f!te m!.rumum wage and
mdex tt to infl~non .. And Y?U can
bet that fllSt wife Hillary Wtll figure som~ way ~ make employers
par a~ mcreasmg share of the
nano~ s heaJth b!ll.
.
.
&lt;;hnlon s. JObs. PO!IC&gt;: ts
s~h1zophremc. Whtle h1s ftscal
~nmulus package n:utY c~ a few
JObs on. the margms, hts overall
economtc game plan almost cerulinly is a job killer..
.
Joseph Perkins tS a c:olummst
for Tbe San Dieao Union·Tribune and a syudlcated writer for
~ewspaper Enterprise Assodabon.

Coastal reformers go home
HOMESlEAD, Fla. - Driving
and walking around this sad commwity, leveled by the redoublable
winds of Hurricane Andrew last
Aug. 24, floods the soul wilh feelings of sorrow and simultaneously
starts the bile to flowing.
The heart bleeds because of the
incredible destruction and human
suffering. The liver oozes because
the aagedy has ~ exploiled for
what I believe are narrow aims and
suspect motives. ·
• The gusts had barely abated
before the Coast Rashers were in
their bell towers pealing warnings:
The shorelines are overdeveloped,
they shrieked, and this egregtous
situation has been encouraged,
indeed subsidized, by Uncle Sam.
Belh Millemann, the executive
director of an activist environmental group called the Coast Alliance,
avowed in a Baltimore Sun article
lhat the ~payers "do not realize
that the dtonnous fmancial disaster
wrought by Andrew would not
have been ~sible without their
tax "dollars. ' The federal lreaSUry
was being sapped, she wrote, by
"more than SO federal programs
(that) fund coastal development

and redevelopment"- most especially the "grand-daddy (of) federal subsidies ... the National Flood
Insurance Program.··

read maps?
Another point: The National
Flood Insurance Program does not
cover wind damage. Andrew was a
terribly gusty but fairly dry stonn,
and flood claims amounled to less
than $250 million - all of it cov·
ered by policy-holder premiums.
The Sun's editorial page The taxpayers did not pay a dime.
weighed in with a warnin~ that
Indeed, they have not paid a
Andrew was a "wake-up call ' that dime to support the insurance proshould lead to the elimination of gram since it was revamped in
the "expensive and harmful" flood 1985 to make rates reflect risk. In
insurance subsidy. Just weelcs ago, the words of former federal insurThe Washin,!lton Post published a ance administrator C.M. Schauerte,
story headhned "Federal Flood "The NFIP is one federal program
Insurance Seen by Critics as All that works."
If you buy the logic of the Coast
Wet," and quoted Jeff Benoit,
director of the Massllchuseus Coast Alliance and their ilk, we would
Zone Management Program, who have to abandon the entire state of
claimed tllat "flood insurance is a Florida, which ill mostly Oat and
major contributor to letting people very vulnerable to hurricanes. We
develop in ... vulnerable areas."
could also say goodbye to Long
A fundamental question leaps to · Island and Cape Cod, not to menmind: What in the name of Aeolus tion the coaats of New Jersey,
did Hurricane Andrew have to do Delaware, Maryland, Virginia,
with coastal development? The two North Carolina, South Carolina,
communitiea that suffered the m011t GeorJia, Alabama, Mississippi,
,
damage, Home~tead and Florida Louislllll8 and Texas.
Indeed, could it be lhat social
City, are not coasral towns at all.
They arc 20 miles west of the and economic e~~gineerlng are the
ocean. Can't the Coast Rashers real motives behind the attaclcs on

. Joseph Spear

the flood insurance program? I' ll
offer three opinions:
C.M. Schauerte, in a letter~ to
The Washington Post: "Environmental extremists ... do not respond
to facll, because facts undermine
their effons to fon:e property owners off lhe coastlines without just
compensation." .
Gerard Stoddard, chairman of
the Long Island Coastal Alliance;
in a letter to The New Yorlc Times::
•'The subsidy issue is concocled by'
those who believe there should be'
no private property ownership on
beaches."
.
Joseph Spear, columnist and coowner of a small piece o~
on ·the Delaware coast: ere are
some people whO are convinced we
ordin8ry folk jult don't understand
how bedly we have muclced things
up and how deaperately we need
them to sttaightcn it all out for us.
These peopfe arc called elitists .
Many of them are environmentalisiS. TheY. are well educated, but
they can t read maps. They think
Homestead II on the coast.
JOMpb Spear II 1 IJDdlcated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise

Auoclatloa.

1110.

•Jcoumbus lw

7

Worthy Jeffers; C&amp;lherine Wandling, Darrell Gandee, Gari Worley,
and Delma Smith, kindergarten bus
runs.
Marty Reed, county repn:sentalive to the America!~ Federation of
Teachers, staled while board membetS were in executive session, "I
think it's a ~ day when politics
takes pm:edence over studems.
Those people (board members)
voled unanimously to RIF teachers.
They did not have their own
opinion. They went with .
proposal before lhl:m and dtdn I

thf

follow their heart. .. They followed
politics."
Kathy Smith of WVEA also
made a statemenL She said WVEA
was fighting hard on the state
budget cuts thst made Ibis RIF and
olhers around the state necessary.
''ln the hearings, we fought hard
for teachers and pro&amp;nlRIS where
we felt the board was acting unwisely or not in compliance with
the law, and, on the three teachers
we ~led where there was a

le~ issue, we prevailed," Smith
said . .
''Our job now is to look out for
the teachers who dido 't have a legal
issue by convincing the boanl to
pursue ail-day ki~tcn llld to
pull $lVen teachers
~ RlF list
as~ substituteS. These two
8CbonS will get everyone back to
wort faslel," she concluded.
Board members did not comment
on, or discuss, their actions before
or after the voce .during the open
m,eeting.

•

.-----Local briefs... - - - . Meigs announcements

I

Continued from page 1

Sheriff cautions motorists
W. VA.

s cc

Swny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C19~Accu-Wealher,

Inc.

Weather

Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports numerous complaints have .
been received regarding motorists failing to display a front license
plate.
Section 4503.21 of the Ohio Revised Code provides lhat. the
owner/operator1&gt;fa motor vehicle shall display in plain view on the
front and n:ar of such motor vehicle the distinctive number (license.
plate) including the county identification slicker.
Temporary lags shall be displayed in plain view from the rear of
the vehicle, either in the n:ar window or on an exlelRal rear surface
of tile vehicle.
.
"Motorists are urged to comply with this section to avoid a uaf.
fie citation," Soulsby said. .
Editor's note: All names, ages and addresses are published as
they appear in official reports.

Avenue. Crafts and homemad:e
noOdles will be featured. Public
invited.

Revival slated
First Southern Baptist Church
will hold revival services Sunday
through April 8 at 7 p.m . Pastor
Lamar O' Bryant invites the public.
Evangelist will be Ronde! Martin,
Colttmbus; and soloist will be Morris Wood, Gainesville, Ga.

Club to meet
The Meigs County Nursing
Mother's Club will meet April13
at noon at the health depanment.
Meetings are open to anyone interested in learning more about
breastfeeding. Pregnant women are
especially encouraged .to attend
before the birth of their baby so
they can be beuer prepared for
breastfeeding. It is now recognized
that breastmilk gives babies the
best start in life: protection from
illness, easy to digest, rapid brain
growth, fewer allergies, better teeth
development, eiC. For more information on the breastfeeding project
of the WlC Department or other
programs, call the health department at 992-6626.

Revival planned
Revival at Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Route 143, will continue
through. Sunday at 7:30 p.m. with
Rev. Amos Tillis, evangelist, and
Bill and Naomi Tillis, evangelist
and singers. Victor Roush, pastor,
invites the public.

•·
Tt
•
K znuerga
en regzstratio
n

I'Jiday tltrongh Stlllday:
J ·
Potluck planned
Frida)l. a chance of rain or
The Burlingham Modem woodT•"a'
aad .... ' • • •, ....... ._.. SIIOW. Lows in the mid-208. Highs
men of America camg· 7320 is hav~ 4Qs..
fll :aill 100 in the up!l!Z 30s Ill mid-40s. Satur·
ing a potluck April! .at6:30 p.m.
pii\Ai4 'II+ I J,
.
:aill. day, fau but cool. Lows 25-30.
at the Burlingham Modem Woodmp-so..a efllniiaiJO High&amp; in' the low 40s. Swtday, fair. . Kindergarten registration and the kindergarten registration may men Hall. The camp will furnish
Lows.in lhl: mid-20s to around 30. screening for Meigs County be helpful to ~nts.
ham, eggs, rolls, coffee and pop.
. .P'
Gospel sing
F 7 , , . .&amp;:all:
Higbsirltthe upper 40s to mid-50s. Schools has been announced by
Call.
or
vtsit
the
school
listed
There
will be no charge for this
I
The
annual
Good Friday allactivity. Public inviled.
John Costanzo, elementary supervi- above that is closet to you to
night
$Ospel
sing
at the Rutland
sor, and Kitty Hazier, Talenled and arrange for an appointment. Chil·
Freewill
Baptist
Church
will be
Chicken barbecue
Gifled coordmator for Meigs Coun- dren and parents can be better
12
April
9
at
7
p.m.
featuring
served by school personnel when
The Syracuse Volunteer Fire groups. Public invited.
ty Schools.
·
Department will have a chicken
P""eded in death by her husband,
Children who will be five years visits are arranged.
H~ Bon tUitlw
Bring your child's birth certifibarbecue Sunday beginning at 11
Tlauuaas E Hendrix, brothers, Don- old on or before Sept. 30, 1993, are
Program planned
Bdlll , · •
•Q, or all. James, Cleo, Johnnie and Ottie eligible to attend kindergarten dur- cate, social security card, and
a.m. Cost is $4 for a half-chiclcen,
Behold
the Man" will be pre1'\Jilll p
..,. 'Ji
baked -beans, potato salad and roll. senled by the
McKenzie; sisters, Kathryn and ing the 1993-94 school year. This immunization record to registraWalnut Street Chun:h
.._.30, 1993. aP
wq Raub, and two great-grandchil· year, registration and screening for b.on.
Pie. and
. cake will be available at an of Christ, Belpre, at the Tuppers
Your child should have had four
exaa charge.
dren\.
new kindergarten students will be
Plains Church of Christ on Sunday
.... neAl
23.
Funeral services will be held condl!cted during the spring in
at 3 p.m. Public invited.
ill''
.,
,..
OPT,
three
Polio;
one
MMR.
and
Cemetery
c~anup
.
Flida)l at 2 p.m.. at the Ewing Eastern, Meigs and Southern
orr; ,, ....
one TB skin test before entering
Cemetery clean-up will be~in in
l'aJ:Imll
Home, Pomeroy. The Rev. School Districts.
Dance.planaed
ll:lilt:"
j
school.
School
nurses
will
be
preLebanon
Township on Apnl 10.
J
David DaHey will officiate and
The kindergarten registration
There
will be a round and
sent at registration to answer ques- Anyone wanting to keep flowers
A
*-aii!Dall- llurid! will be in Riverview Ceme- and screening schedule is as folsquare
dance
at the Long Bottom ·
tions t~at your may have about should have thein removed by that
z5 .::orlltiag, I ller:y, Middleport. Friendj may call lows: Tuppers Plains, April 8; Mid·.
Community
Building
on Friday
immunization requiremeniS.
date.
'
all lhl: ftlnera1 home ThlllSday from
dleport, April 12 and 13; Harfrom
8-11
p.m.
Music
will
be proYour child's hearing, speech,
7109·p,m.
risonville,
April
14;
Bradbury,
vided
by
"Out
of
the
Blue.·
Ronnie
&amp;
..... $
D
'I
physical and language abilities will
Sports banquet · ~
April 16; Chester, April 23;
be ti.ssessed by trained school perThe Southern High School · Wood will be lh_e caller. RefreshPomeroy, April26 and 27; Rutland,
1 , ._ , •• • Cybil Shiltz
sonnet.
Parents
will
receive
infor·
·
Sports
Banquet will be held Sun- ments will be served. Cost is $3
April 29 and 30; Southern, May 6
marion about their child's perfor- day at. I p.m. All athletes, parents single, $5 coup)e.
Dda .._ or I'Uiill ft
b._
S,tlill Naomi Shiltz, 70, of Point and 7.
mance in the areas that . are and their guests are invited.
. _
Qedrs
""-. r.a.oc...Ray Ill C F I ·tJk P
' died. Tuesday, March 30•
The following infonnation about
SmorPSbord dinner
.
assessed.
~ z , ;e or 199l,ialktw Medical Center. ·
will
be
a
smorgasbord
There
Information obtained during the
Program to he p.--nted
!' '
•
._
·
' Rllill
Bam Julv 31, 1922, she was a
s· r· fi ct~or ,.:.CR.-r 7
~
registration
and
screening
process
The
choir of the Rutland.Church dinner at the Lotiridge Community
of the 181&amp; Dewey Thomas
8-~ 3 • 111
· is very imponant because it allows of the Nazarene will present Center on Sunday from noon 10
p
• ...l.dia(Monis)Thomas.
lWD 1
W
E."
Ill
5k wan bomerrtaker.
Six were fined and five others school staff members to plait activi- "Hosanna" and "Wave the Palms" 1:30 p.m. Carry-out available. ~ost
$5 for adults, $2.50 for children
c•.t elj+ w;..... . . - -. lf.a s.riviag. are two daughlelS, forfeited bonds in the court of lies tluit will make your child's fllSt on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. The chil- isunder
12. E&lt;lel}'one welcome.
d
C 7. ,
Oil.;
' - s - Slalc:r of Point Pleasant, Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed Mon- year of school as successful and dren will give a special presentaenjoyable as possible. Contact the lion and the congregation wiU sing
.,.._ A-. M.nc Prowse of Cross day nighL
..t
7'37 : ... Community association meets
il 7 77 7
"
· 1
, dlnlc sons, Steven Prowse
Fined on three charges and school closest to you as soon as "In the New Jerasulem." Beverly
The Lottridge Community Cenpossible
to
make
an
appoinbnent
to
Adlcins
sing
a
special
solo.
., - wwa:es . . .-•• • - af ~s·a·oti•, ~ Prowse of given probation on a fourth was
ter
Association will meet Thursday
register
your
child
for
lcindergarten.
d fi" 7 :n IO:lO aa, a • Wil- 0
L, Obio, Laben Prowse of Raymond Litchfield, Racine, $63
ttt
7
p.m. Everyone welcome.
and costs, operating a motor velti·
Trustees to. meet
r7 04"
a.·
n;. two sislers, Jewell
M'w'
,,..
...__
_,
.
....,_,_
Obi
R
th
clc while under license suspension,
The Salisbury Township
~
£
£ ~ Ul n....-.auu,
O,
U
Craft sale planned
a.ilt will ....,_ ill 1lle c •• +d ~ a •¥••: of. Beckley· two $63 and costs, failure to regislel his
Trustees will meet Thursday at 5
The
Middleport Presbyterian
C
J itt B 7 •
h+ 7 s;, Donald Thomas of Boone vehicle, $63 and costs, failure to
Bonds on four charges 'were for- p.m. at the township office on Rock Church will have its aMual Easter
1\" h _ , ~ !lltc f
4 Ct IJ. W.Va., Cirl Thomas of St. comply with a court order on old feited by' Ronald . S. Wagner, Springs Road.
craft and bake sale al the local
lttacT
I !I .._ S • 9 pa..
AI
aiDe """""'hildren and two fines, and six months probation on Racine, when he failed to appear in
Sears Store in Middleport on Frian assault charge.
Cemetery clean-up to begin
•
g: -tr~
the court of Middleport Mayor
Others fined were Donald Fred Hoffman Monday nighL
The Salisbury Township day and Saturday during store
Theria Be • b;
1k Currcrai will be Friday, I
hours.
.....__..;:_ a.....:.. R
h._.,
'
110.. .., ,._, • the Wilcoxen Funeral · Gilmore, Albany, $375 and costs
Wagner forfeiled bonds of $210 Trustees will begin clean-up and
· - _.,. ~ .. .a.- '~rill die ·Rev. Rick Towe and three days in jail, and a 90 day on a reckless opeiation charge, $58 mowing of the Bradford and Rock
.pmoj,.WW
Program to be presented
•• iifiwc Burial will be in the license suspension on a charge of for speeding, $235 for fleeing from Springs cemeteries on April 15.
The
First Baptist Church of
DUI,
and
$60
and
costs,
speeding;
·
31, 1993, • • I"
IJ' Hat · C 1JfD- ...-......m Memory Ganlens,
police, and $110 for consuming They ask that all flowers be Middleport will present the cantaatd R ! 7+illiJiticw 0
liD8uz Oms lilieS.
Audry Lambert, Ewiugton; $15 and alcohol under the age of 21.
removed by that time until clean-up
ta/drama "The Day He Wore My
ll1c • N • rz
FiienciJ may call at the funeral costs, seat belt violation, passenger
is
completed.
Others forfeiting bonds in the
Crown"
on Sunday at 7 p.m. The
Bonl . . 5epL 26, 1912 at z..r:n..sday, 7to9p.m.
side; Lalenya Tiemeyer, Rutland, court were George D. Lemley, Jr.,
church
is
located at the comer of
7
$25 and costs, seat belt violation, Cheshire, $460 on physical conttol
Craft sale
wllb::sw6.
Sixth
and
Palmer. The play pordriver's side; Valerie Wilson, of a motor ~icle while under the
The Ladies Craft Circle of the
or••nl
rMrK
res~non
trays
the
dealh,
burial and resurrec.BerW Drier MrKcwrie SFte
1.'
Pomeroy, $4 7 and costs, speeding; influence of alcohol or drugs; Sacred Heart Catholic Church will
Leroy Landets, Pomeroy, six Pattick D. Stout, Gallipolis, $53, have ~ pre-Easter craft sale Satur· tion of Jesus Christ through drama
months probation on an assault speeding; Benny J. Wright, day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the and song. Everyone welcome . .
Sllc
is
wti:£4..,
~-.
-·"
7
lllm7tF F 0
FPaad, &amp;It I.-.;
·
charge.
Pomeroy, SSO, speed~; John R. church basement on Mulberry
i\rGur Ed I Boat!, v n 5 I.
Uoiu· of the Meigs County
Forfeiting bonds on speeding Kaufl', Point Pl~t. . Va., $52,
•
and Carl
llocJd, Poi8t -E-•z.e ncy Medical Service charges were Dale Thoene, speeding; Dewayne Good, MiddlePI
W. Va.: a 7 £ •1111)' 1
to nine caJls for assis- Pomeroy, $62; Debra Doerfer, port, $50,. speeding; Andrew T.
Kad:rjll Cna', 1--c Bo•• ; a taace. on Tuesday and early ·Racine, $62; Henry Cleland III,
Bauer, Rio Grande, $60, stop sign
-a•
4!&gt;
• •
Slq)-. ............_
• - - ..
- 'io
• , )'!5
..,__,
,~y mcrrune.
. Racine, $65; Garland Naistetier, violation; Michael Joseph Eblin,
port; a Sl~pl ....-. WiaifRd
Oil liaesda)' at 9:55 a.m. the Columbus, $42; Pamela Dodson, Rutland, $60, running stop si~n;
Bltltir, C ffi aIlia, a a 7 lfGiat Racine unil was called to Adams Rudand, $47.
and James A: Williams, Jr., Mtd·
MrJCcaric. 0 · 7 ; dnc sis- Road f111 Christy Williams who
dleport. $60, expired·tags.
~~CG-ia-law, Door'
Mcl!"mrie, • • ~ to Pleasarlt Valley '
• Fined were Scott A. Frazier,
n.ca.a J' "_, 1Tdaa Boat!,. HospiDI
Middleport,. $425, and costs and
of P.
OJ, 16 11 • '""ll'o:JI. S
Al 12:28: p.m. the Racine l}flit
three days in 'jail, physical control
~~-~ _. :a:::u:d weal to Route 124 for Everett
of
a motor vehicle while under the
Am
Ele
Power
....................
36
718
Dic1t:1:a _, sF
Tiona wlaD· was taken 10 Veterans
influence
of alcohol ,or drugs, and
Ashland Oil ........................27 1/2
P·sit:r ta ·
sP:c was llltwial Hospital.
$25
and
costs, no operator's
AT&amp;:T................................57 1/4
1'k E'Mleroy unit responded to
J. Glass, Middlelicense;
Robert
Bank One...........................57 112
Maill Smel in Tuppers Plains at
port,
$10
and
COSIS,
ruoning a Stop
Bob Evans ........................ .18 1/2
3:18 p.a~~·; for Marvin Walker. He
sign;
Troy
M.
Yankuns,
Pomeroy,
Charming Shop.................. 15 518
THURSDAY, FRIDAY AIID SATURDAY
... aka to Sl. Joseph Hospital.
$25
and
costs,
consuming
alcohol
Chmp lndustries................ .l2 3/4
AI S;&lt;f5, p.m. the Tuppers Plains
under age 21, and $25 and costs,
City Holding......................22
CHILDREN'S
.-. ucaeedl but did not transport
disorderly manner; Christine E.
Federal
Mogul..
.................
.l9
Mm: Glx:sa at the ftre statioo.
Varian, Cheshire, SlO and costs,
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................74 5/8
Al'1.23 p.m. the MiddiCbort unit
running a ~ sign;. and David A.
Key Centurion ................... 24 314
IDISJICHlcdl Fanaie Hefti from
Cheshrre, $25 and costs on
Darst,
Lands
End
..........................
28
314
:Menltt,: fte 7
.. , . . . . . . .
O.ul»ot*Center 10 Veterans.·
•Eastland
lwo
charges
of operating a motor
Umiled
Inc
.......................
24
7/8
'Ik litqJpCD Plains unit. at 7:49
.._. Ne
.. a ii
Oliie
..c "
.~:::
vehicle with expired operator'.s
Multimedia Inc.................. 34 3/4
•Willits
pa..,. • • called to Reedsville for
licenSe.
Poi!Jt
Bancorp
..........
;
.........
13
112
Qoada: Sltfinger who was treated
Rax. ReslliuranL ..................7/16
.... . It ;:osted.
Reliance
Electric............... .21118
Aa1:51 p.m. the I'OI!!,eror unit
Robbins &amp;Myers ............... .18 114
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA ,..,,
wca ID MaiD Street for f'IO)'II CarShoney's lnc......................23 718
446 4114
"'
- wllo . .. aanspor1ed to Holzer
Star
Bank
.
..........................
37
1/4
BUial Ceara-.
Wendy lnt'L....................... 13 118
T:i1: -mine (Wednesday) at
..·---···,_
..-..-·--··Worthington Ind................27 314
12:10 •-•· the Middleport unit
Stock reports are the 10:30
FUTS &amp; CASUALS
10 Nartlr Fourth for Kevin
a.m.
quotes provided by
•Dol!J.........•.:...______.....- - - IT 't, wlto was Utlren 10 Veleranl.
&lt;Connie •NaturaiiDr
Kemper Securities, lac., o
F-'lY, u 1:OS p.m. the Syra' 'S\1' .. ....
ii:c. . . . .....
~a!UpoiiL
.
•Auditions
' • ..,.l!llllllllliil...
..... .. n. asc 'aait responded to College
oCherokH
tDiri1r s ·· , - • -...r.. • • a
Slnct b Cliarkl Miller. He was
!Ita 1D VctaanS.
lllmia
k
, ·~
~ *!~

1

•

beginS in Meigs county April. 8

0

1

I

Area deaths
I

~mo.

-

;.

..!&amp;-

7

I

•

:.·=
I

.,Sk-~~51,

..,_wiw -

·-b 11.

7

"'

Pomeroy Court

zr

·-.Jr --

..

•

_,_._

will

7

••••.Ra.

I

7

,

7

Middleport C.ourt

.....

c EMS
*...
· .,

*-•

ds

nine calls
.,...,..d

to

Ttic,.....

Stocks

DRESS SHOES

:,:I

~

20%oFF

.....

- ................
._.
.,.c

------..........
- ----·----...
· ----........,--··-.. ....
________
a

' III'CIH ~

,

WOMEN'S DREiS SHOES

H

.,._.F, ·;

· No

'ill

"-w! ............ ill

,

_.....,
I
13 - --···-·-.....- .........- ...... -. .
31 _ __ .._ ________....-...........
a t'

,. -- ..........--....--·-··-··-·---

.._.c :

.....

Lottery numbers
ftlklf'

· --·----··--··· ..·-·-

'61-..·---·--·····'···"-- - ·

7

lnt

~2.-3

(ID;. rso,.tlfte) .

~'irk 4 !I

7 111.

4-l-7-S

1 1 - ........._.....i...--··--···. . . .

.

t

Continued from pqe 1

secreaary

Wednesday, March 31, 1993·

The Dally Sentlnet-Page--3

~~.seven, five)

•

"qd

n:n..JO.ll-36

,_
•

•

Hospital news
'

VeteraDI Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS· .
Fred Smith, · Pomeroy; Allen
Eichinger, Pomeroy; Emma Cumings, Pomeroy.
TUESDAY DISCHAROES •
Katie Robinson and Allied Young.

20%oJF

SEAVICE • SIZES• SELECTION

CHAPMAN SHOlS
Ill THE

MIDD~

ILOCI OF

�•

Sports

Wednesday, March 31, 1993

On spring training scene,

The Daily Sentinel

By Tbe Associated Press
Jose Me$8 broke an unwritten
rule of spring training, and Hal
Morris separated his left shoulder .
ttying to get even.
Morris, .Cincinnati's starting
fmt baseman, will be out from four
to six weeks after injuring himself
Tuesday when he charged rhe
mound to tackle Mesa in a game
agl!inst Cleveland.
Mesa had given up consecutive
honre· runs to Barry Larkin and
Chris Sabo when he threw
0-2
fastball behind Morris' head. Morris· rushed lhe mound, and players
on both learns followed.
"Eveiybody was saying, 'Man,
this is spring training. There's no
need for this to happen,"' Cincin·
nati's Bip Roberts said after tlle ·
Reds beat the Indians 6-5 at Winter
Haven, Fla.
The inJury to Morris means
Randy Milligan, signed by the
Reds after being let go by Baltimore, will take over at ftrst base for
Cincinnati. Morris hit .~71 with six
home runs and 53 RBis last season.
But the incident should not have
happened at all, the Reds said .
They noted that Cincinnati pitcher
Tim Belcher didn't throw inside
Monday night after gi~ing up six
homers to Dettoit.

In NBA action,

Suns survive Jordan's 44-point
net attack to beat Bulls.l13-109
ByCHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
The best team in the NBA
showed its class, while two other
teams showed they laclced it
. The Phoenix Suns, still on a
inission to prove they can beat lhe
best teams in lhe East, oven:ame a
44-point performance from
Michael Jordan to best the Chicago
Bulls 113-109 Tuesday night.
, Two teams lhat can Qnly hope to
maJCh the Suns' success - Orlan·
do and New Jersey - won despite
having their leaders ejected.
Shaquille O'Neal was tossed for
punching AI vin Robertson in the
Magic's 105-91 victory over
Detroit. and Deqick Coleman was
ejected for taking a swing at
Armon Gilliam in New Jersey's
91-77 win over Philadelphia.
In other games, San Antonio
· lopped Seattle 99-97, New York
defeated Sacramento 109-87,
Miami beat Charlotte 116-89, the
Los Angeles Clippers beat the L.A.
Lakers 101-93 and Minnesota beat
. Golden State 103·100.
The Phoenix-Chicago game was
billed as a possible preview of the
NBA finals, although both teams
played down lhat angle.
"I said before the game lhis is
· just one of. 82," said ·suns coach
Paul Westphal. ''I'll say the same
now, even !hough we got the win.
This was not a crucial game, not a
message game."

The Suns got a combined 76.
points from Cedric Ceballos,
Charles Barkley and Kevin John·
son.
"There was no special signifi·
cance to this ¥arne. We played hard
and aggressiVe like we' ve been
playing since November," Barkley
said.
The loss dropped Chicago (48·
21) a half-game behind New York
(48-20) in the race for the best
record in lhe Eastern Conference.
Phoenix (53·15) has the best
road record in the league (23·11).
Magic 105, Pistons 91
At Orlando, Fla., O'Neal went
after Robertson after the Pistons
guard stopped him from going after
Bill Laimbeer. Robertson· said
something to .O'Neal after letting
him go and the 7-foot-1 rookie then
smacked Robertson on lhe left side
of the face.
"I think he was reacting to the
previous foul and was still upset,''
Robertson said. "I think he made
up his mind that if Bill fouls him,
he was going after him."
Robertson was ejected 12 seco~ds later after an altercation with
Scott Skiles.
The Magic didn't make a field
goal in lhe final 10:20, but scored
their last 19 points from the fo\11
line. Skiles led Orlando with 27
poiniS and Dennis Scott carne off
the bench to score 26..

Scoreboar(l
Tbursday'saames

In tJte NBA •••

HulfoNat~,7:40p.m.

Q:aeboc at Ottawa,'1:40 p.m;.
HOpm.

v,..,.....,.,T;s;.&amp;y,

EASTERN CONFERENCE
T._

AIIMIIcDhltloo
WLPtLGB

1-NewYcrt-...........43 20
. 8011a1...................41 2ll
. N.w J-y ............41 29

.?06
.594
.:516
.493
.456
.309
.294

()dmdo,,,M,.. onnoooo33 34
Mi.tmi ....................31 n
pbi'edelphit.. .... ,_,.2l 47
lO 41

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

. 1.S
I

14.S
11
I/
21

CentralfNyilioft
21 .696
CLI!VI!LAND .......43 2S .632
Atlan~a ... ~·········-···37 32 .5l6
Chedono- ............. 3S 3S .500
btotiona ...................33 3S .48S
Ddrod. ...................31 n .456
Milwaukee ............ .26 43 .m

.,

4.5
11
13.5
14.5
16.5

22.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
TIWII

M&amp;dw•tm.w.
W L Pet.

•-Hm~~aa. ..-..........44

25

C8

.631

x-san Anloaio .......43 25

.632

..5

1)l.h ,_ ............. ., .....40

.571
.420
.2S(I
.103

4.5
15
26.5
36.5

30

O..'VOr ...................29 .tQ
MUwod.t .............. 17 51
Dollu ....................... 7 61
,

Padlk DI.VW.

· · - ............. .53
•.SWIII: .................47
Ponltnd ............... ..41
L.A. Lobn ............34
L.A. Cippea .........34
Golden Sta!e ..........lll

15
23

.179
.671
.612

26
34
36

7
11.5
19
20
25.5
325

.500
.486

41

.406

Saenmerll0 ............21 41
• -olinohecl ployclf baM

.304

Tuesday's scores
New Yolk: 109, Saavnc:n1o rT
New Je:nc.y :91, Pb.iladelphil77
Odan.do lOS, Jl,euGr. 91
Miami 116, Cbulou.e 19
PhoaU&amp; 113, au.... 109
San AnLonio 99, Seattle 97
LA. Clippen 101, LA. Loken 93
Minnts01.1. I 03, Golden S11.1.e 100

Transactions
BaseboU

l::.

CALIPORNIA ANGEL'! -Optioned
· Ruu SP,!ing;!ilthor, to Vancouver of
w Pacific "Lo.tp.
CDCAOO WHrrE SOX '- Optioned
Man M.v.Uo, caiCher, to Naabvillc of .the
American Auociation . Placed Mike
D1u:m.e. pitcher, on the IS•day di4abled
!itt.
DEiliOIT TIGERS - Pw.huod ''"
ccw.n.c:t of Bob MacDonald, pik:her, from
\he Tm11110 BJ&amp;.c Jays frx- cub. Sent Rick
Greene, pitcller, to lhe.ir minor Jeaaue

-camp Cqrn•llisnmcmL
MILWAIJKEE BREWERS - S;pod
.pic:kie Thon. infielder. to a ooc-ycar cootnet. Opti.mGd Mike lp.uitk, pi.k:tlcr, to

nm;O\.~~~:vsa·'!..':iuired

Danin Jackaon, oudicldCI", from the San
Dieao Padns for Derek Bell and SlonCy
B_rifP, outfieldm.. Aaccd David Wellli,
~· IWI. waiven for the purpme of giv·
LDikim hi.J W).condition•l rele.ue. Optioned Juan de la Ron, outfielder, and
Grq: O'Hallonn, catcher, to Syracuse of
tbe lnlemniond Lea1ue. Sent Tony
Ca~lillo , phchor, and Angel Manine2':,
c:~k:hv, to 1hciJ: mimrlcagyc c:unp for re-

of the Intcmatiooal Leaaue.
CIDCAOO CUBS - Plt&lt;od Jeff D.
Rcbinlon, pilcher, on wtivcn for lhc purpate ~

Thursday's games
a.EVELAND at New YOlk, 7:30p.m.
Mi1mi at New Jmey, 7:30p.m.
SaertmenlO 11 W•hln&amp;Uift, 7:30p.m.

Mllw~cc 1\ Houl&amp;on. 8:30p.m.

BOSTON RED SOX - Pi&gt;cod Matt
Youn1, pilehcr, on waivcn for the purof Jivirl&amp; him hil WlcODdbional to·

Nadonall..agut

Wllhinpm 111ndlan1, 7:30p.m.
Saulc 1t Dallu,I:JO p.m.
Atlanlllt DenYCl', 9 p.m.
San Antonio 11 Utah, 9 p.m.
Minnao&amp;a at LA. Lakt:n, I0:30p.m.

Owioae at Orlando. 1:30 p.m.

for the pmpoHof aivinahim hil ~­
ti&lt;ml re1eue.

ATLAl'li'A BRAVES - 0_1nioned
R)'U' Kleak.o, (lilt banman, to Ricimew1d

Tonight's games

~&gt;

In the NHL...
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrick Dl'lllkln
W L T Pta. CFGA

21 6
30 7
32 6
33 6
3111
36 II

MinnOIOta at
uy, 9:40 .m.
WiMipes at San oae, tO~p.m~

...;pn.nt.

Philadelphia at BOlton, 7:30p.m.
Portland at Odmit, 7:30p.m.

Tum
•-l'iatloqh ...... 50
wuhJn&amp;IOn ...... 39
Now lcney ....... 38
N.Y. blmdrn ... l6
N .Y . R~!" .... 33
l'lillodelplliJ ...... 21

Loo Aoploo11
olpltil, 7:40p.m
DctPalat Cbica~ 1:40 p.m.

A-l.eol"t
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Pltcod
Doua Jenninp, rim bualwl, on waivcn

,.em..................48

\) '

·

106 323 246
15 304 266
81.280 264
78 302 266
17 2S4 274
67 213 301

Adams Dh'iMon

y-Monua.L ...... 46 25 6 98 312 2S4

y·B"""" ........... 44 26 7 95 300 258
y-Qud&gt;ec ·······-·· 42 24 10 94 llO 272

Y·Buffalo ....... ... 37 29 lO 14 31.5 267
Hartford ............ Z2 •s
49 247 329 .
OU..wa .............. 9 63 . 4 22 115 358

s

FYirla him hil ~mcon.dilional rc-

lcue. Opoialod lim Bllllilla" ond Hulhc:liff Sloc:wnb, piwhen, to low• of the
American A.uocittion.

HOUSTON ASTROS - Placed Juon

GrimalcY. pW:her, an waives far lho purpolO of aivina him hil u.nc:cndhional re·

leu .. Oplionod Jell' Juden and Al Otuna.
pitchen, to Tucaon of the Pacific Coast
Leap. Sent Jack Daughcny, infielder, to
their minor te.pe eamp for retUipmem.

AMD!.lncod Mike Simml:. oudic:Wc:r-, has

clec:tc41o bccon:e a free agcnL.

LOS ANGELES DODGERS

Placed Lee Gucuorman, pitcher, on
wtiw:n far th~•.)::'e of giving him his
uncooditionll
Sent Lance Parrish,
cat.cher, and Kevin Ellta-, ahortatop, to
their minor letguc camp fc.-reauiprncnt.
NEW YORK M.ETS -Placed Joe
Vilko, pi\Cher, on the 15-day diubl.ed lin.
Sent Steve SpringCI", infielder, co lbcir mi·
nor-letgue c.np.foc reaui.gnmcnt.
MONTJlEAL EXPOS - Placed Lee

fim buernan, on waiver~~ fotlhe
of Jivinl him hil; unconditional
relcuc. Optioned Pete Young, pilchcr, 1o
S~GYer.,,

pwpo~e

Otttw• of the Intem~tionaJ t..e.gue.
PHILADELPHIA PHILUES ·
Aa:recd to term~ wi1h Dan-en D11u lton,
catcher, Dr\ a four-year contn.ct etten~iCW1
lhrouah 1997.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Agreed to Ltrml with Ma.r:k Carreon, outfielder, on a one· year contracL

Basketball

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Nerrll Dl•lllol.

Tum
W L T Pta. GF GA
y.arl"'J" ·"""" 42 24 10 94 2S4-209
y-o.roit........... 42 21 9
y·Toronto.......... 41 25 to
SL l.ooDa ........... 3S 33 9
)finn-.-...... 33 33 10
Tam.- &amp;y ....... 22 49

s

93 341 269
92
217
79 2SI2S6
76 251 266
-'9 222 294

:pt

S....... DI ......
y- VanQDUVcr ~ ...

o40 'II 9 19 310 24S
.. 215 2S9

y.c.Jpty .......... r/ ' 2910
y-Loo ......... .. 36 32 I
Y· WiaoDpol....... 3S 35 7
Bdt:IWCIIULI ......... 2S oM. I
J............... 10 65 2
x-dinched diviliaa Wlc
y·cllnol!ed ployvll'-

s..

10 312 310
17 287 294
Sl 220 30S

22 1'17 384

I

Wimlpoo 5, CoJ&amp;uy 4

Tontabt'aaames

""'

OOLDEN STATE WARJUORS Rcleated Pat Dwhalll. tarwt.td.
NEW JERSEY NETS - Pla c ed
Dru.en Petrovic, guard, on the injured list.
Signed Doug Lee, guard, to a 10-day, con-

""'

Football

N11lonal Foocbaiii.Aaaue
BUFFALO BIU.S - Signed Olenell
Stnden.linebookco.
DETROIT LIONS - Signed David
lutz,~ard.

GREI!N BAY PACKERS - s;anod
Chri1 Holder, wide receiver, and Steve

Sl.ly, auud·t.lckle. Named John D. Gray

Botlool,Hotdcn!l
Wuhirtalan 4, BuffalO 1

oa.w.
v-6.St-Lcuit3

W11kC1", 1-uud, on the injured lla. Activat·
cd Trent Tucker, suard, from the injured

team phytician; Sam RamHII'i 1ui11ant
tn.incr! Wayne WichbCl d.iicctot cf c:om-

T.....S.y'o ocores
N.Y.~:I,PIDltOdpliio
Pllil~ 6.
4

National Bukttbali-O-notlatlon
ClnCAOO BULLS - Placod Dandl

Jtkw J...,- at Bu.ft'llo, 7:40p.m.
-ot-o.l,HOpm.
t.c. An. . . atTGtDd0,,7:-40p.m.
Mimeloui ... BdmiXI~ 9:40p.m.

puw:r 09Cfttioruand Kate Hoa•n pro lhcp
mamacr. Acquirod John Stephen•, runnina bKk, Crom the N•w F.naJand Patri01a
for 1ft undiacbed draft pick.

·

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERSMayhew, defr:n1ive back;
Scou McAlillet, punlcl; and Pat Tom bet·
Si~ M1rtin

lin, suard.

Hockey
N1Uonal Hoc:ke.J Leape
· DETROIT RED WINOS - Sii!;ned

........

Joe Frederick, forward, to a multiyear

..

Nets 9l,.Sixers 77
AI East Rutherford, NJ., Cole·
man was ejected in the third quarter
after he missed Gilliam with a wild
roundhouse left and then engaged
in a shouting match witll referee
Bob Delaney.
"I ain't gonlljl comment," Cole·
man said.
·
·
Gilliam said Coleman came
after him in the tunnel between the
two dressing rooms after lhey left
the court. A Meadowlands security
guard confirmed Gilliam's claim.
"He got all puffed up and came at
me. It took two or three security
guards to stop him. He was seri·
ous," Gilliam said.
The d~;eisive run for the Nets
came at lhe start of lhe fou,rth quar·
ter as a 17 ·6 run expanded their
lead to 87-70. Rafael Addison Jed
New Jersey wilh 21 poiniS.
Spurs 99, Sanies 97
At San Antonio, the Spurs'
bench players led them back from a
. 20-point second-half deficit as San
Aritonio qualified for the playoffs
for the fourth consecutive year.
David Robinson led the Spurs
with 21 points, while Sean Elliott
scored 19, including the game-win·
ning 8-footer with 2.4 seconds to
play.
Knicks 109, Kings 87
At New York, the Knicks won
their 14th slraight home game and
finished March with a 12-2 record,
the first time they've won that
many games in a month since
going 12·3 in January 1973.
John Starks had 20 poiniS and
Patrick E}Ving had 19 poiniS and 17
rebounds.
. Heat llli, Hornets 89
At Charlotte, the Heat sent the
Hornets to their most lopsided
home loss of the season. Miami
broke open .a tight 113me in lhe third
q Wlf1er by outscoqng the HorneIS
33-1710 pull ahead 90-6.8 .
Rony Seikaly had 20 poiniS and
15 rebounds and Glen Rice added
19 poiniS.
Clippers 101, Lakers 93
At Los Angeles, the Clippers
clinched their first season series
against the Lakers since moving
from San Diego nine seasons ago.
The Clippers won the series 3-2.
Stanley Roberts had a career·
high 25 poiniS and II rebounds arid
Danny Manning scored 10 of his
18 points 'in the fourth quarter for
the Clippers. A.C. Green had 22
poiniS and '10 rebounds and Byron
Scott scored 21 poiniS for the Lak·
ers.
.
Tlmberwolves 103, Warriors 100
At O.akland, Calif.; Micheal
Williams put Minnesota ahead to
stay with a 17-footer 'Vith 26 seconds left and the Timberwolves hit
six straight free throws down the
Slretch.

.

Sports deadlines posted
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Senrind, the Point
Pleasant Register and the SundayTimes-Sentinel value the conlributions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papen, and
these conlributions will continue to
be published.
'
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be Observed. The
deadline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winter
sporiS is the last day of the NBA
Finals.
Likewise, the deadline for sub-:
missions of local baseball- and
softball-related photos and related
articles, from T-ball to the majors,
as well as other spring and summer
sports, is the day of the last game
of the World Series. The deadline
for photos and related articles for
football and pther fall sports is the
Saturday before the Super Bowl.
These deadlines have been instituted to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos back from the
photography studio of choice and
to give tlie staffs the opportunity to
publish these sports photos and
articles during the appropriate sea·
son for that sport.

Sports briefs
FootbaU
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Anthony
Munoz, a former Pro Bowl offen·
· sive tackle who retired from the
Cincinnati Bengals last season, has
met wilh lhe San Diego Chargers io
dis)Ouss a possible return. Munoz,
34, met with general manager
Bobby Beathard on Monday and
passed a physical examination.
FootbaU
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The
Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed
unreslricted free agent cornerback
Martin Mayhew to a reported fouryear contract for $5.3 million.
Mayhew had !3 interceptions in
three seasons with Washington.
FootbaU
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - The
New England Patriots traded fullback John Stephens, who rushed
for 3,249 yards in five seasons, to
Green Bay for an undisclosed draft
choice.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s .

Morris injured in fracas with Mesa

Wednll-(ay, March 31,1993

•

Pomeroy-Midd.leport, Ohio

an

"That's the difference between
a veteran piiCher and a pitcher with
maybe 2 1/2 years (in the
majors)," Roberts said. "You
don 't want to set off a volatile situ·
ation by throwing inside. So what
if he's getting roughed u~? These
stats do~ 't matter anyway. ' In other action, the San Diegp
Padres worked out a deal for out· ·
fielder Darrin Jackson. They had
tried to send him to Boston and
Dettoit, but wound up trading him
to Toronto for outftelder Derek
Bell and minor league outfielder
Stoney Briggs.
Jackson batted .~49 with 17
homers and 70 RBis in 153 games
last season. He had been on the
market since winning $2.1 million
in arbitration from the Padres, who
have been unloading high-salaried
players since the end of last season.
"I'm a little sad," Jackson said,
brealdn~ in10 tears. "But what are
you gomg to say? San Diego has
always been kind of a dream place
for me to play."
Bell batted .242 with two
homerS and 15 RBis in 61 games
last season.
· On Sunday, Blue Jays manager
CiiO Gaston criticized Bell after lhe
flashy young player was doubled

off second- b.ase on an infield
popup.
','You don 't pl,ay like that, it's
temble," Gaston said. "That's jqst
careless. He waniS to do well, but it
seems like he gets caught up in
looking good. You look good by
playing good."
·
...
Briggs, 21, was the Blue Jays '
11th pick in the 1991 June free
agent draft. Last season, at Class A
Myrtle Beach, he hit .239 wilh 11
homers and 41 RBls.
In other moves, the Blue Jays
waived David Wells and sold
pitcher Bob MacDonald to Dettoii.
Wells, a l5·game winner in
1991, was sent to the bullpen last
April when Dave Stieb returned to
the starting rotation. The 29-year·
old was 7-9 with a 5.40 ERA. He
pitched 4 1-3 scoreless innings in
lhe World Series.
Wells accepted a $13,000 pay
CU! to $2.05 million, but was disappomted when learning he would be
back in the bullpen. Instead, he will
get $506,86.8 in termination pay.
McDonald split last season
between Toronto and Triple-A
Syracuse, compiling a 1·0 record
and 4.37 ERA in 27 games in th~
majors. He was 2·0 with a 1.29
ERA this spring.
Also, th~ Boston Red Sox

waived pitcher Matt Young, the
Milwaukee Brewers signed short·
stop Dickie Thon, the Chicago
Cubs waived pitcher Jeff Robinson
and sent down pitchers Jim
Bullinger and Healhcliff Slocumb,
and the Philadelphia Phillies maftc
Darren Daulton baseball's top-paid
ca}cher, giving him an $18.5 million , four-year extension through
1997.
Young, who signed with the
Red Sox as a free agent before lhe
1991 season, was a combined 3·11
the last two years. He spent parts of
both seasons on lhe disabled list
Because Young's contract is
guaranteed, the Red Sox will be
responsible for his $1.7 million
salary if he isn't claimed.
Thon, ,34, was in Milwaukee's
camp as a non-roster player. He
batted .247 in 95 games wilh Texas
last season and has a .26.4 major
'teague average in 12 seasons,
Robinson will received
$111,263 in terminatio~ pay
instead of his $450,000 salary.
Daulton will make $2.25 million
in 1993, the fmal season of a three·
year deal worth $6.75 million guar·
anteed. The nevi contract gives me
Phillies a 1998 option at $5 million
with a $500,000 buyout

Acc.ording to Florida investigators,

Alcohol, speed among factors in boat wreck

BREAKING UP A FIGHT between Orlando's Sbaquille O'Neal and the Detroit Pistou'
Alvin Robertson is the cballenge of the mome!ll
between an unidentified referee, til~ Magic's

Dqeeld

By IKE FLORES
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Alcohol, speed and the lack of a lookout
on a darkened lake conlributed to a
boat accident that killed Cleveland
Indians Steve Olin and tim Crews
and injured teammate Bob Ojeda,
Florida investigators say.
Crews, owner and operator of an
18-foot bass boat wilh a ISO..horse·
power motor, was found to be
legally drunk at the time the vessel
sttuck a private dock on Little Lake
Nellie the night of March 22.
It was "an alcohol-related acci·
dent," said Col. Bob Edwards, law
enforcement director for the Flori•
da Game and Fresh Water Fish
.Commission: Agency investigators
released their fmdings Tuesday.
Crews, 31, died libout 10 hours
after the accident, which took place
within sight of his lakeside home.
Olin, 27, died at the scene and
. Ojeda, 35, is recovering from a
scalp laceration.
Crews had a blood-alcohol content of 0.14 percent, surpassing the
0.10 considered to be Iepl intoxication·under Florida law.
Neither Olin or.Ojeda was found
to be legally drunk. Olih's .bloodalcobol was plai:ed at 0.02 percent
,and Ojeda's at 0.006 percent.
' Medical Examiner .Thomas
Hegert of Orange County said a
0.14 reading could be lhc equiva·Ient of six to seven beers in a per·
·son of Crews' stature and weight,
"but lhe effeciS vary co~siderably
itt each person."
William Anderson, another
Orange County medical examiner,
said if an average person consumed
six or seven beers in about an hour
he would have a reading of about
0.14.
Perry Brigmond, a friend of
Crews' family, told The Orlando
Sentinel he talked to Crews' wife,
Laurie, on Tuesday and, she
couldn't remember her husband
having more lhari three beers that
day.
Investigators found unopened
cans of beer in an ice chest, a near-

RIIJIOI ..... .w-· DaD ~aD

*a ' ..

(ript) dwiag
oiT.aday Digllt's
NBA
Ia 0rtu11o. PIL, wllcre tb.e Magic
115-9L O'Neal- ejeded_ (AP)

aa-e

In NHL action,

..

Penguins post 6-4 win over Senators
Elsew.here in the NHL, it was
By KEN RAPPOPORT
New
York lslandc:ls2,..,~ia
· AP Hockey Writer '
1;
Boston
3, Hadi:Jod 1; WsmgIn a game between the first and
ton
4,
Buffalo
1; VIIICOIIVI% 6. St.
worst in the Nm., the Pit!Sbqrgh
Louis
3,
and
Willnipeg
S, CaJpy
Pengui11s weren't that much better
4.
than the Ouawa Senators.
Islanders z, FIJBS 1
They were ¥ood enough to add
Benoit Hogue, playing for the
to the Senators road woes.
:·we were in it until the bitter first time in seven games. bid a
end," Ottawa coach Rick Bowness goal and an assist. . .
Hogue, out fur six pmes willa a
said following a 64 loss in Pittsknee
sprain, assiSifld 011 the pmeburgh on Tuesday nighL
winner
by Pierre·Turgcoa, wb.o
Bitter may be a good way to
scored
a
power-play goal on a
describe the Senators' frrst season
wrap,around.
in the NHL, especially on lhe road.
Bruiu 3, WUkn I
Tuesday night's .,loss was Ottawa's
Rooki·
e defenSM~•• Stcpb.aDe
37th slraight, tying lhe NHL record
Richer
scored
an n•ssitt: ~ goal.
set by the expansion Washington
his first in tbe NHL, and Ray
Capitals in.l974-75.
The Senators•actually are 0-38·0 Bourque and Cam Neely also
in road games this year.. However, scored as tbe Bruins coll,linucd
-·
the NHL doesn't count their OcL their mastery over the Whal!!rs.
Neely's pow«-play goal gave
20 neuttal-site loss to Toronto at
Hamilton, Ont., as a road game for Boston a 3.0 lead. It was abo the
Bruins • 300th goal. the lint time
record purposes.
''You look at that team and they've broken tbat.barriel' since
wonder why they haven't won a the 1987-88 season.
Capitals 4, Sallres·l
game," Piusburgh coach Scouy
Rookie
Keith Jones broke a tiC
Bowman said. "It went right to the
With
hiS
1Oth
goaJ or the
Hi }6
end.''
Larry Murphy and Ron Francis seconds into tbe second period.
each scored two gnats and Mario triggering the Capilals.
Jones surprised goollnMier GGmt
Lemieux had two poiniS as the red·
hot Penguins won their 11th con· Fuhr with a shot from the ldi. circle, throwing the puck by Fub.r's
secutive game.

Chester Bowhunter &amp; ¥chery
Club announces contest results
, (Results as of Feb. 28)
Bowbunter release
0·220 class
(3 shooters) •
First - DeeDee Tracewell: 209

First- Kermit Ruble: 258
Second- Bruce Hawley: 255
Third- Debbie Sidwell: 248
Fourth- Mike Hayman: 245

the.Jds~theslwnpingFiames.

bad two goats. Rookie

Su:en

crnsMioD Tecmu SC!anne had his
71st.fortlleJets.
Defrug man AI Macinnis scored
twice and earned two assisiS for lhe
Flames.

Sports briefs
Basketball
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP)
- Michigan· State coach Jud
1• M!ulfiC wiD &amp;"l a one-year contraCt extension duougb 1995 and
assistant Tom lzzo will succeed
him wb.en b.e retires. Michigan
SllliC a!hletic direct« Merrily Dean
Bater said sbe'U make those recommendations next week to the
sdluul's s-11 or Trnstees.

/irsl. -Roxanna ltUpe: 220

IOWIIIG CllllDS

Mea's Ra:-d!lll
(1 sb.ooeers)
F'rrst - Gary Dye: 166

MllEiaUSSEI

Uil-up class

_
-..

Fro~en · Self Bostill9 8 to 16lb. Average

Honoysucll(lo Gratll! A

Turkeys

Reg. or

No Soh

Regular or light · lb. Quarters ·

Blue. Bonnet
Spread

161o t7
oz. Cons

r•Mdlnwltment

_____. .,.......
c

h

•• ••• o1 prapury worth '

eaa •

&amp;

~-c~-5~·~·~·,=...=-r·:··=·~··~·-..:.lo~· :
111111..............
I

I=

onyH&amp;IIfor
-----~I
ftlldlll
............ ..,.. . . . . . . _ . .

llOOir, &amp;I R ' I FREE II

. ..--~-HWllo.l
.. ,.... rll"llplllor

dlllu
etl e 0 I I . . .......
•
DDyou- . . l•ani _ _ . . _ _ _ _ _7CIIIJ11U'
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Oscar Mayer
ners ·

French Fried
Potatoes

51b. Bag

Johnson joins ODC
nine on Sunshine
State road tour

e11out an.y ..... of
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All Meat Regular, Cheese, Bunlength or Light

ROY JOHNSON

1 ,.. .-..., •ICOI•• (1U....

-A._...fii'M a'

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Per
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Corn,

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lBO bowbunter
women's release
(1 shooter!

· Select
Your

Green Beans

Willi . .DS OF IKDIDS
5IIOIUI I DIP JGI USY TAX
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(4 shooters)

First- David Rupe: 254
Second- Ste~ Sarver: 252

Strawberries

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lBO bowhunttr
release clas~

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First- Buddy Spiels

Bowhunter fingers
·220-260 class
(3 shooters)
First- Mike Edge: 257

IBOo)itn
release class

Prices EHective Through April 3, 1993'

•ISScoum

Cubs

11M 1 TAlCIAYEII -.oPE •

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ey Saving

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your~;

Offering Yau Ill

. BREAKING CARDINAL RULE - Cleveland baekstop Sandy
Alomar Jr. (left) gets dowo to business In breaking np I' fight
· between pitcher Jose Mesa md Cincinnati llitter Hal MOI'I'ill during
a spring training game Tuesday in Winter Haven, Fla. Some or
Mesa's pitches went beb.iad Morris' head, precipitating the (tgbt,
Morris, who was injured in the encouoter, and Mesa were ejected.
(AP)

IOUIIIDE"IDENT

First- Ryan Hawley: '1111
Second - Timmy Gheen: t95

Bowhunter fingers
0-220 class
(3 shooters)
First - Gary Casto: 236.

Fi!st - Randy Wheeler: 272
Second- Buddy Sidwell: 246.

Indians spokesman Bob DiBia·
sio attended the news conference
and said blood-alcohol findings
were irrelevant
"As we have been saying all
along, the findings of these levels
are insignificant com pared to lhe
pain, the suffering and the loss that
the Oli~ family, the Crews f,amily
and the Indians organization are
experiencing," said DiBiasio.

lb.
food Club Vegetables

Bowhunter release
(13 shooters)
First - Hershell Kelbush: 278
Second- Coy Starcher: 26.4
Third - Mike Hendrix: 26.2
Fourth - Rodney Pugh: 248

see the dock.

'•

1.11 SendSt,. Pa•eroy

(4 sboolers)

Edwards and Lt. t;)ruce Cooper,
in charge of the probe, said evidence indicated the craft was traveling at more than 25 mph in the
dark but that the exact speed at the
time of the crash was unknown.
Autopsies determined the cause
of death for both Crews and Olin
was "blunt force trauma to the
head." The nature and location of
the injuries indicated they did not
•

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Juaiordass

Bowbunter release
221-UiO class
(12 sbooters)

Slick side.
Peter Bon.dJ'a. AI Iafrate and
Todd Krygier also scored for the
CopiM!s
Doaald Audeac scored fer Buf·
falo, wiKJI b.ad lost only one of iiS
J*eoiws 10m.~ pmes
Cullds '-Blues 3
CJiff Rmming and Jyrki Lumme
eaducoral twice for the Canucks.
Roonillg got lwo of the first
lllrce ·goals ud Lumme scored
twice in the third period.
Jdl Brown bad a pair of powerplay pis for the Blues.
.feb 5, FIMtes 4
Thomas Steen and Fredrik
Olamr•1 scooed goals 37 seconds
IJIM laic ill lhe third period to lift

ly full boule of vodka and an
empty beer can aboard lhe boat.
Relatives of Crews said the faro·
ily wouldn't comment on the investigators' findings. ·
Indians 0)8ll8ger Mike.ijargrove
met with the team in the dugout
after a 6.-5 loss to Cincinnati in
Winter Haven on Tuesday.
"Those were good, honest, solid
men. It doesn't alter the fact one
way or the other," Hargrove said

Roy Johnson, a sophomore at
Ohio Dominican College , is a
pitcher for the college's baseball
team.
, The 1991 Alexander High
School graduate, who aticnded
Southern High School before liis
ttansfer to Alexander, contributed
10 lhc Panthers' sping lrip to Paitama City, Fla., where they fmished
'With an 11·2 record on their seven- .
day lrip that ended on March 13 ..
, The lrip saw the Panthers post a
6-1 record against NCAA IIChools
and ~lit a doublehcider with West
Flonda (4·2, 3-4), which was
ranked 13th in the nation in the
NAIA pre-season poll1 ·
He IS the son of Donna Crump
of West Virginia and Roy Johnson
Sr. of Racine.
·

Please
BIG DEAR COUPON

BIG BEAR COUPON

I
I

:

Gracie A

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Two Dozen

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.

.
'

•

�'

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Wednesday, March 31, 1993

.

'

season after opening in a non-scor- Moore, 8()() meter, 2:03.1; Murphy,
ing competition March 20 at Wake 100 meter hurdles; 57.36; Jerry
Forest (N.C.}.
Sm!th, 2,!)0 meter, 22.7; Chris
Taking first place in men's Smtih, 5000 meter, 17:37.7; and
events for Rio Grande were Jerry the relay team of Benson, Michi·
Smith, long jump, 21 feet, 52 inch- · gan, Cannon and Murphy, 3:38.5.
es; Tim Murphy, high jump, six
Placing second were Cannon ,
feet, four inches; Chad Benson, l•ng jump, 20 feet, 14 inches; Mark
steeplechase, 9:50.9; the 400 relay Bennett, steeplechase, 10:41.8;
team of Jerry Smith, Dave Rose, Johnson, discus, 121 feet, one inch:
Chad Cannon and Murphy, 44.96; Dan Longcay, triple jump, 37 feet,
Cannon, triple jump, 39 feet, 1·3/4 3·3/4 inches; Chris Smith, 1500
inches; Benson, 1500 meter, meter, 4:16.53; Walter Stephens,
4: 12.3; Murp~y: II 0 hurdles, 400 meter, 54.63; Cannon, 100
15.37; Marc Mi~htgan, 400 meter, meter, 11.20; Tomoyuki Himeno,
53.35; Jerry Smith, 11.01; Chuck 100 meter hurdles, I :02; and

SponsProbe

.

Coody. Richardson, 5000 meter, Lindsey, high jump, five f~t;
17:37.7. Third place finishes Stacey Riuer, long jump, 16 feet,
included John Miller, discus, 114 6-3/4 inches; Holmes, discus, 102
feet; Richardson, 1500 meter, feet; Renee Peck, 5000 meter,
4:17.3; Cannon, 200 merer, 23.34; 21:53.8; 400relay team of Lindsey,
and Hidimitsu Maeda, 5000 meter, Kim Sowers, Ginger Smith and
17:37.8. In fourth place were Rose, Ritter, 52.24; Peck, f500 meter, ·
triple jump, 33 feet, 6-112 inches; 4:52.3; Smitb, 400 meter, 1:13.7;
Maeda, 1500 meter, 4:22.7; Long- Lindsey, i OO meter, 12.70, and
cay, 100 meter hurdle$, 1:06.7; triple jump, 32 feet, four inches;
Stephens, 200 meter, 23.85; and · Ritter; 200 meter, 26.66; Peck,
Moore, javelin, 119 feet, six inch- 3000 meter, 10:34.2; relay team of
es.
Lindsey.• Sowers, Smith and Riuer,
First place in women's events 4:53.44.
were taken by Tricia Holmes, shotSecond place finishers include
put, 36 feet, 3/4 inches; Kristy Sowers, long jump, 16 feet, 3-112

inches; Bonnie Evans, 5000 meter,
21:53.8, and 1500 meter, 5:07.7;
Ritter, 100 meter, 13.07; Sowers
triple jump, 31 feet, 3-112 inches:
and 400 hurdles, 1:21.8; Evans,
3000 meter, 11:11.3.1n third place
were Lindsey, long jump, 16 feet
1/2-inch; Jennifer Beyer, 5000
meter, 23:39.5; Lindsey, 200 meter,
26;94. Fourth place finishes went
to Jennifer Owens, shotput, 27 feet,
9-1/8 inches; Sowers, 100 meter
hurdles, 19.79; and Smith, javelin
64 feet, three inches.
'
The ·teams' next competition is
Friday at Glenville Slate.

Atlanta .Braves not auto·matic entry into playoffs, Cox says
of just 25 runs in his losses)."
Atlanta's starting pitchers for
'93 are already being compared to
the top hurlers for the 1971 Balli·
more Orioles and for the 1951
Cleveland Indians. · ·
The Big Birds of '71 were:
Dave McNally (21 wins), Jim
Palmer (20), Mike CueUar (20) ilnd
Pat Dobson (20). The Big Chiefs of
'5 I were: Bob Feller (22 wins),
Early Wynn (20), Milce Garcia (20)
and Bob Lemon (17).
But keep in mind that the 1971
Orioles lost to the Piusburgh
Pirates in the World Series, four
games to three. And the 1951 Indians finished second in the American League, five games behind the
New Y&lt;Xk Yankees.
Obviously, it takes more than
hot pitching to go all the way.
With their sights so high, the
Braves don't want to fall short
again.
''Once you win ,'' 'says Cox,
"the fans won't accept anything

won and lost on the field. No matter how well-arpted the roster
seems going into the season.
of sports:
But the manager admits that his
• Will the Atlanta Braves have it
starters look sensational:
eac;y in 1993?
''The addition of Greg·Maddux
Maybe not. No matter bow good
a team looks on paper, it still has to (20-11, 2.18 ERA for the Chicago
do the job on the field - day in Cubs), last year's Cy Young Award
and day out - for six months. winner, gives us one of the most
There jU$1 aren't any guarantees. In fonnidable starting rotations in
fact, the Braves still have some- baseball. Maddux has won more
thing important to prove. They've· games (87) in the last five years
·just lost two World Series in a row. than anyone in the Nauonal
No wonder Bobby Cox, League."
Cox says that any of Atlanta's
Atlanta's manager, isn't taking
top starters could be No. I elseanything for granled.
·
"Everyone- players, staff, where.
"Tom Glavine (20-8, 2.76),
front offiCe and fans - expects the
Braves to at least contend in who won the Cy Young in '91, is
1993," says Cox. "We have a very the only pitcher in the majors to
good baseball team, but we hope win 20 games eaclt of the last two
expectations aren't too bigh. seasons," the manager points out.
Despite what some people think, " John Smaltz (15-12, 2.85) led the
we're not an automatic lock for the league with 215 snilceouts and then
went on to earn NLCS MVP honWorld Series."
ors.
We didn't give Steve Avery
Cox, who is 51 years old, has
(11-11,
3.20) much support (a toral
been around for a while. Long
enough to know that games are
By HOWAltD SINER
Today's questiol!s in !be world

Nuggets hope to attract more
fans to sold-out game with scheme

..

l

By JIM UTKE
AP Sports Writer ·
The Phoenix at Denver basket·
. ball game on April 25 has been
sold out for weeks, yet anyone in
the Mile High City with a Smith &amp;
Wesson lying' around the· house can
still get tickets. And here's the real
beauty of the scheme:
· It's legal.
That's rigbL No fuss, no muss,
no need to threaten, intimidate or
hold anyone up.
As part of a program developed
in meetings with a mayoral task
force. the NBA's Denver Nuggets
are offering two tickets to the
Phoenix game, free parlcing, food, a
chance to meet young star LaPhonso Ellis and an armload of sou. venils -retail value, about $130
: - to anyone who turns in a gun at
· one of four Denver churches on
: April18.
: It could be anything from a pre. mium handgun, such as the Smith
: &amp; Wesson Model 29 favored by
: Dirty Harry, to one of.those repre. hensibly cheap Saturday Night
: Special,~ fa~red .by punks who just
like to act like Dirty Harry.
No matt~r . So long as it's
• unloaded and in.w&lt;»icing condition,
simply drop it in a box and take
home a pair of ducats to see
Charles Barkley come to town. No
age limiL No questions asked. .
"Sure, a lot of people are skeptical," team ~esman Jay Clark
said, " and we re not naive enough
to think a drug dealer is going to
rush down and hand over an automatic weapon for Nuggets tickets.

"I'll put it another way: We
held back 500 seats for the program, but realisticajly, we don't
expect to get anywhere near that
number of weapons turned in....
"But realistically," Clark
added, "the best thing we're hoping for is to get people talking
about il
The really scary thing is that the
Nuggets might be selling the idea
short. For just a moment, put aside
questions of morality, the mindnumbing statistics and the 1111·100vivid carnage wreaked on big-cily
streets each day, and tonk at the
offercokt
No)Y it might not sound very
promising in Denver 11ecause:
a) $130 isn't a lot of moriey;
b) a regular-season game
between a Phoenix team almost
certainly bound for the NBA finals
and a hometown team that will
watch it on TV isn't muc;h of a
lure;
c) Denver isn't crawling with
weapons, relatively speaking.
According to the most recent FBI
Uniform Crime Report, guns figured in slightly more than half of
the 24,700 homicides in the United
States in 1991 and Denver, a cily of
480,000, recorded only 88 homi·
cides toral in 1991. That ranks the
Mile High City well down the list
of big American cities and even
farther down the list of NBA·sized
towns.
But try out the same scenario in,
say, Chicago, where there were a
near-record 925 homicides recorded the same year, and where the

Bulls have sold out every home
game since the middle of Michael
Jordan' s second.season. And say
the opponent is New York and the
game ts the seventh game of the
Easrem Conference finals. And sa.y
the pair of seats are at courtside.
The fact is, a team in that posi.
tion with that offer could ask for an
arsenal - and almost certainly get
i~ But it's not likely to happen any-

11

•

"'

·

ume soon.

less. But what happeneil in 'ill and
'92 doesn't mean a thing now. We
feel good about our situation, but
we know we have to work awfully
hard."
• Can the Toronto Blue Jays
defend th~ir ~rid ·cham_Pionship?
If so, tt will be a bit of a surprise. In spOrts, it's usually more
difficult to win the second time
than the .firsL On top of that, the
Blue Jays have lost several key
stars. They said goodbye to Dave
Winfield, David Cone, Jimmy Key,
Kelly Gruber, Manny Lee and Tom
Henke.
·
·
But Toronto has some 'tldvantages that you shouldn't overlook.
Cito Gaston - like Bobby Cox
of Atlanta, by the way - is a solid
manager who doesn't get the credit
he deserves. The 48-year-old Gaston has led the Blue Jays to three
American League East championships (1989, 1991 and 1992).
Over the last three AL seasons,
only Tony La Russa of Oakland
and Tom Kelly of Minnesol3 have
had better wmning percentages
than Giston.
The Blue Jay manager knows
the score. "In order to have a truly
successful 1993," says Gaston,
"we must set our sights on a World
Series victory."
Toronto's remaining stars -led
by Joe Carter, Roberto Alomar, and
Jack Morris - know what it takes
to,win, of course.
Plus the club has added Paul
Molitor and Dave Stewart. "Their
experience and talent are among
the best in baseball," according !0
Gaston.
Finally, don't forget about the
Skydome and its fans.
·

The Blue Jays went 53-28 (.654)
~ horne last season. They averaged
JUSt under 50,000 spectators per
game in a fancy, modem stadium.

' With support like that, it's easier
to rise to the occasion.
(C)I993
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

..

Cincinnati council votes to ban
smoking at Riverfront Stadium .
.' By SONJA BARISIC
.
CINCINNATI (AP)- A City
Council committee rounded up
enough votes to approve il smolcing
ban at Riverfront Stadium.
The committee on Tuesday
voted 5·1 to endorse a proposal to·
ban smolcing in stadium sealS start·
ing Jan. I. Only five of the nine
mell!bers on the council, which
meets today, need to vote yes to
pass the ordinance.
·
Lawmakers had been considering an immediate ban. But the
committee recommended a ban
next year because the Cincinnati
Reds said they will voluntarily
.restrict smoking during the 1993
baseball season, which opens Monday.
The Reds opposed a ban this
year as unfair to people who
bought seac;on_tickets thinking they
would be allowed to smoke at the
stadium.
·
·
. The city health department recom mended the ban · because a
recent U.S. Environmental Proteclion Agen_cy repOrt classified second·hand smoke as a potential
causeofcaneer.
The han would affect sporting
events, concerts ar other gatherings
at Riverfront and other city·-stadi·
urns where patrons need tickets to
be ·admitled. It would make smoking in stadium sealS a minor misde-

meanor, punishable by ~to a $100
fine.
Under the Reds' restrictioM, a
patron bothered by second-hand
smoke could complain to a sl3dium
worker, who would ask the smoker
to stop or move to the concourse
behind the scats. As a .last reson.
the parties involved would be
moved to different scars.
Timothy O'Connell, the RedS'
director of stadium operations, told
the eommittee a city-imposed ban
would be impractical. He said the
Reds hope the ban would be
repealed tf the vohlntary restricpons work.
O'Connell also said the Reds
have had some problems wiih their
lease, and a ban might induce the
club to leave the city.
"! truly believe if this mattet is
not handled properly it could be the
catalyst for the Reds to look .elsewhere," he said.
A spokesman for the other ten·
ant of the open-air stadium, the
Cincinnati Bengals, said the team
would consider voluntary smoking
restrictions during football games.
"As far .as what the Reds are
doing; I hope that that method
works for them," Bengals business
manager William ConneUy said in
an inrerview. " It may not work for
us." . ·

.

ByCHUCKSCHOFFNER
AP Sports Writer
Hype, allendance and television
ratings are just some of the contrasts between the men's and
women's Final Four. What happens
to the players afterward is another.
The male stars have the NBA
and its accompanying glitz. The
·women only have pro basketball
overseas. They can make decent
money, but they usually aren't
heard from again in this country.
For that season, the Final Four
' experience might be more important to the top women than it is for
their male counterparts. The Final
Four is their final hurrah, their last
·chance to make a splash before a
.:national audience.
"In a lot of respects, the great
players who go to the men's Final
Four are trying to increase their
.. value for the next level," said Van·
.derbilt coach Jim Foster, whose
No. !-ranked team plays No. 5
·Texas Tech in one of Saturday's
national semifinu games in
Atlanta.
"For the women, especially the
seniors that haven't had the opportunity to be there, I think it is a big·
ger deal (to be in the Final Four).
It's the culmination of their
career.··
Among those hoping to put a
~onal stamp on Atlanta is Texas
Tech's Sheryl Swoopes, the lead·
ing candidate for player of the year.
A men's player with Swoopes'
stats- 27.4 points a game; 9.3
rebounds, 54.5 percent shooting would be a lottery pick.

.

But Tech coach Marsha Sharp
say~ all SW9QPCs )Yants is to go out
awmner.
" This has been her goal above
any individual goal she ever had at
Texas Tech - to do what she is
going to do this weekend," Sharp
said. " To have an opportunity to
play in Atlanta, there probably isn't
anything more important to her
than that."
Swoopes cenainly· has done her
part to get Tech to the F'mal Four.
She scored 30, 33 and 36 points in
the Lady Raiders' three NCAA
regional victories. That came after
she burned Texas for 53 points in
the fmals of the Soutbwesrem Conference tournament, a game Tech
won 78-71.
"Obviously, Sheryl Swoopes
has lleen the catalyst and the major .
factor that we've built around,"
Sharp said. " I think she has takeri
her game to a different level over
the summer and in the fall to at
leac;tlead us in that direction.
"In my opinion, she's the best
player in the country. She singlehandedly has taken her team to a
different level.''
It's up to Foster to fmd a way to
stop Swoopes, or keep her from
dominating the gam~. That won 't
be eac;y. Swoopes has scored 30 or
more points 11 times this season
and has reached double figures in
36 straight games.
·
"I don't know what she did
over the summer and fall, but what·
ever it is, maybe the rest of the
players should take a piece of it,"

By DOUG TUCKER

who spent

years as a North

~ Roy

Tennis
ESTORIL, Portugal (AP) - .
Top-seeded Ivan Lend! of the Unit·
ed States beat Marcos Gorriz of
Spain 6-1,6-3 and Renzo Furlan of
Italy upset second-seeded Carlos
Costa of Spain 3-6, 7-6 (7-3), 6-4
in the first round of the Estoril

Open.

.·Women's Final Four last chance for many to get national spotlight

~I

Sports briefs

·

By RICK WARNE~
be the ftrst coaching confrontation we're playing," Haskins said. " We
·'There were all these people
Both teams are young - Min- 10, we're in trouble." .
NEW YORK (AP) - At last between Thompson and"Haskins. were banged up all season. Now nes01a starts three sophomores and
The Hoyas are led by freshman waiting for us at the stale line," he
year's Final Four in Minneapolis, When Haskins was at Western . that we're healthy, we're showing two juniors, while Georgetown's center Othella Harrington, who said. "I had never seen anything
Clem Haskins and John Thompson Kentucky in tbe early 1980s, his what kind of team we can be. ••
starting lineup inchtdes two fresh- · averages 16.8 points and 8.8 like iL"
ale together at the governor's man- Hilltoppers lost three times to
Haskins played fo r Western
Georgetown (20-12) also has men,twojuntorsand a sophomore, rebounds, Minnesota's lOP gun is
sion.
GeorgetoWI!.
Kentucky
in the 1965 NIT. The
But
·their
styles
·
are
as
different
as
sophomore
guard
Voshon
Lenard,
come on strong, winning seven of
"Since we were in Clem's
" Of course, they did bave . eight following a 1·8 slump. The the cities they come frOm.
who is averaging 20.5 points in the Hilltoppers beat Fordham in the
Haskins Hoyas showed their resilience in
hometown, he took me around to Patrick Ewing,"
ftrst round before losing to Army,
Minnesota is a muscular team NIT.
see the sights, .. Thompson said. explained. which had a young assistant coach
that
usually
dominates
the
boards.
''Lenard
is
a
tremendous
player,
the semifinals when they overcame
'.'W~.hung out and had a great
This time, Haskins appears to a 17-point, second-half deficit to Georgetown relies on quickness but they've got a lol of other good named Bobby KnighL
"Coming to New York and
·tune. .
.
.
· ... have the upper hand.
.
and pressure defense to rattle its players, too," Thompson said.
beat Alabama-Birmingham 45-41.
~ontght, the close friends meet
Minnesota is strong, deep, ver'Minnesota is a very balanced, playing in the old Madison Square
" We've had lot of advenity this opponents.
agam whe~t Thompson's George- · satile and - for one of the few season, but we've responded well
Garden was orie of the highlights of
" They're similar 10 Iowa in our very unselfish team."
town Hoyas play Haskins' Min- times this season - healthy. The to it," Thompson said. " The tour- league- very quick and very ath·
Thompson , who played on · my career," said Haskins, who
nesota Gophers for the NIT cham- Gophers (21-10) have won nine of nament has been a blessing to us. letic," Haskins said. "I think the · Providence's NIT championship went on to play nine seac;ons in the
piol)Ship at Madison Square Gar· thetr last 12 games, including a 76- It's given us an opportunity to key will be how we handle their · team in 1963, still remembers the NBA . .
Minnesota and Georgetown
den.
,
70 win over Providence in the NIT extend our season and it's given pressure. If we can keep our reception the Friars got when they
Although the schools have never semiftnal$.
never
·have won the NIT.
turnovers
under
10,
we'll
be
in
returned
home
after
beating
Camour players some valuable experimet on a basketball court, it won't
"I'm not surprised at the way ence/'
good shape. If we have more than sius in the ftn'al.

'1 LAWRENCE , Kan. (AP) - . olina assistant before Kansas took

casting career. When they met
again last month at combine workouts in Indianapolis, Beathard suggesl.e!l Munoz first consider returning to the game with thi: .Chargers.
" As far as I was concerned, I
was finished ... (so) I can't say at
this point that I'm trying to come
back," said Munoz, who was
named 10 the Pro Bowl in II of his
13 seasons with Cincinnati.
"I don't need to play, but I've
got a situation in mind. You look at
a team like San Diego and you see
how close they are to getting to the
big game and that's real attractive.
"When you look at their
defense, they're young, gOod guys
and good players and their offense
is starting to come on. I look at
them as a ·team that's really coming.''
The Chargers aren't hunting for
a left taclcle, however. Their starter
at that position the last two years,
Harry Swayne, was made one of
the club's two transition players.
"I think we'd look at him more
from a standpoint of depth and
leadership, " coach Bobby Ross
said of Munoz, a unanimous choice
for the NFL team of the 1980s.

·

Old pals Thompson, Haskins to send teams onto court again

unhappy with
it~~c~er-vs.-pupil hype
ifor UNC-Kansas 10game .Car·.
Williams made a mighty effort
' to nip it in the bud, and failed completely.
~ The youthful protege coming
':back to confront his revered old
; mentor in basketball's showcase
•event is simply 100 compelling to
~ ignore. Who cares if it happened
, before?
: "I'm going to try to put to rest
•as muclt as I can this 'Roy
:.williams-against-Dean Smith'
~junk,'' the Kansas coach lold a
~media gathering Monday. ·"I hope
·•all you guys are intelligent Clllilljlh
•to think of something else to wnte
~about. You wrote about it so much
~wo years ago, surely you can think
~;of something else to write about

Smith's advice and made him Jayhawks boss in 1988.
Smith, who played for the Jayhawks under Phog Allen and maintains many ties to the school, also
had a hand in getting Larry Brown,
a former North Carolina player, the
Kansas job in 1983.
·
"He was so pleased for me and
Kansa.!L I know that if North Car·
olina had 10 lose a game, he would
rather it be to Roy Williams or
(fonner North Carolina assistant
and now Vanderbilt coach) Eddie
Fogler."
Williams disliked all the hoopla
around that 1991 reunion with his
old boss; and seems to dislike it
now even more.
~w."
"! suppose the only time in
~ for the second time in thr.ee 1991 when I let my emotions sort
M
years, however, it's Kansas vs. of get away from me was when
,North Carolina in the first NCAA coach Smith drew that second tech·
·semifmal, the young lion who stud- nical." he said. "The man didn't
•ied at the feet of the master vs. the deserve that.
&gt;wily old master himself.
"But I guarantee you, it won't
: It prov~ a fascinating sideshow be Ror Williams against Dean
:Jo the 1991 semifiital in Indianapo- Smith m New Orleans, just like it
~is, where Williams" Jayhawlts beat
wasn't Roy Williams against Dean
\the Tar Heels by six points in a Smith two years ago. It will be the
~game that, in the minds of t&gt;oth · Kansas players against the North
!j:oaches, got unfairly obscured by Carolina players, which is forrunate
Jill unnecessary evenL
for us, because I was never a very
,. Smith drew a second technical good play«." ·
·foul in the final minute after the
The Jayhawks and Tar Heels
.outcome had been decided in have not met since 1991, altbough
·:Kansas' favor and was forced to Williams works hard to stay close
1Dake an undignified exit from the to his old boss.
Jame. As he left, however, he
"! wouldn' t be sitting in this
.walked down the Kansas bench and chair without Dean Smith,"
'Shook every play«'s hand.
Williams said. "I've said it before
"I remember how disappointed and I'll say it again. But I think
i was at what hapJ?Cned io coach coach Smith would be disappointed
limith, the feeling 11 was going to in me if I had any feelings during
'take away from what ow; kids had the game that would take away
. :accomplished, that's what I from the coaching job I had to do."
remember most," said Williams,.

·

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

·

'

Foster said. "If Michael Jordan has

while No. 3 Ohio State advanced

now."
This is the year of fresh faces in
the women's Final Four.. Vanderbilt and Texas Tech are in for the
first time, as are the two olher
semifinalists - Big Ten rivals
Ohio State and Iowa. This group
made it by beating some of the
biggest names in tile women's
game.
No. 4 Iowa defeated Aobum and
three·time national champion Tennessee in the Mideast Regional,

made three Final Four trips. Van·
derbilt ousted Louisiana Tech, a
two-time national champion with
seven Final Four appearances. ·
Defending champion Stanford
lost in the West Regional semifi·
nals to Colot;ado, which in tum was
drubbed by Texas Tech.
"I think it's very exciting ~t
there are four ftrst-year teams,"
Ohio State coach Nancy Darsch
said
'I think it's very. encouraging to

a clone, it's Sheryl Swoopes right by beating Virginia, which has

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By PEGGY ANDERSEN
SEA TILE (AP} - A woman
who says she was gang-raped by
Cincinnati Bengals players says she
•&amp;lanced through a liability release
(Iocument she signed in exchange
lor $30,000, but didn't read iL
~ ''I didn't think I nccdCd to," the
) oinan identified in court records
p VictOrla C., said TUesday under
$ross~examination by players'
fawyer Robert Staebler of Cmcin-

862 Second Aw.

)lati

Phone441-140S
O.lllpol'-

Staebler~-

,;You didn'tloolc l l the titlef"

Victoria C. said she believed the
document was titled ••Ap-eemenL''
In fact, it is titled "Release of All
Claims."

"Prices Too low To Adrertl••"
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She said she silop!y flanced
through the document and 'looked
at whatever caught my eye."
An exasperated Stachler asked
whether she had g~ at the IICC·
ond ~· or the third clause.
' It doesn't look .familiar," the
woman said, peruSIDJthe docu·
menl
•
"! just .uw '$30,~!&gt;0' and I
knewwhltltWUabouL
Victoria C. is asklnll jurors to
throw out the rdease docwnenl 'ao
she can proceed with her lawsuit
against the ream and 19 current and
former playen - 12 accllled of
rapinl her and IeVeii of Slllldlng by
while It hlppenod.
•.

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~victoria

IIIII

the other teamS out there. They can averages 18 points · and 5.7
point to this year as the turning rebounds and plays the game with a
point and realize that any team is savvy that belies her age.
capable of making it to the Final
"Katie has been a nightmare for
Four. Tradition has lost some of the us, as well as the rest of their oppomagniblde it once carried.''
nents, I'm sure," said Iowa coach
Darsch has a player who cou~d Vivian Sttinger, whose team split
become as good as Swoopes. Kaue its two regular-season games with
Smith, a 5-foot-11 freshman, is the Ohio State.
main reason Ohio State went from
"Few players are able to step in
the middle of the Big Ten standings and make such a great difference.
to a first-place tie with Iowa this She's not only a good player herseason.
self, but she makes the other playSmith, a former Division I all- ers better. That's the mark of a
Ohio star at Logan High School, great player."

SUPERIOR WHOLE
7AIERI RAMS

~ Williams

San Diego Chargers looking
:: to lure Munoz out of retirement
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The San
Diego Chargers are trying to lure
former Cincinnati Bengals offensive tackle Anthony Munoz out of
retiremenL
Munoz•.considered by many to
still be the·game's bes.t at his position when he retired last season,
was scheduled to meet with general
manager Bobby Beathard today to
discuss a possible return.
"If I felt I couldn't contribure or
help, I wouldn't be here," said
Munoz, 34. "I really don't know if
· , • 1 am (coming back). There stiU is a
; -: decision that has to be made.
;:; That's why I'll listen to. what
•: • Bobby has to say."
:•: . The 6·6, 284-pound Munoz,
~ ~·· who also has talked 10 Tampa Bay
coach Sam Wyche about playing, is
an unrestricted free agent who
earned $950,000 in base salary last
year.
"We want to find out about him
as a player," Beathard said.
Munoz, who missed part of last
season with a knee injury ,
• impressed trainers with his physical
• conditioning and was cleared to
play following an examination
Monday by Chargers physician
Gary Losse.
"If you're asking if he's a risk,
he's the same risk of any guy
who's had injuries playing over 13
years, but I don't see his knees preventing him from lining up tornor. row and/laying if he had to,"
Losse sai .
Munoz first approached Beathard, who worked one year for
NBC, tO ask his help in a broad-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In tonight's NIT championship game,

Rio Grande track teams sweep first place at Bluffton event
"lt was a preuy successful
weekend," University of Rio
Grande · track coach Bob Willey
remarked as his men's and
women. s teams swept first place in
a trianp!lar meet with Bluffton and
Wilmmgton last Saturday at
Bluffton.
"I thought all of our people participated liard," WiUey added. "I
think we're starting tO put things in
~pective and our people are real·
t.Zing what they need to do in their
events."
The Bluffton invitational was
Rio
Grande's second meet of tl)e
.

· Wednesday, March 31, 1993

II 01. PKO.

BACOI

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Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 31, 1993

•

. ~Wedneeday, March 31, 1

Ohio

The

Koresh got telephone
call morning of Feb. 28
WACO, Te~as (AP) - If God
wasn't on the side of the Branch
Davidians the morning of Feb. 28,
fale appears to have been.
Around 9 o'clock that cold,
misty Sunday morning, the telephone rang inside cult leader David
Koresh's sprawling prairie fortress.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms officials have repealedly
said the call was the difference
between a successful raid and the
deadly shootout that occurred. An
investigation is under way to derermine if anyone deliberarely tipped
the Davidians, who have been
holed up inside their compound
ever since.
While officials have refused to
give a chronology of what happened that morning, some delalls
can be pieced together from the 30odd news conferences and accounts
of those cult members who have
left the compound
The ringing phone didn't go
unnoticed by the ATF undercover
agent who had infiltraled the cult to
.hear firsthand the Armageddon
preachings of the 33-year-old
Koresh and learn where he might
be hiding a massive cache or illegal
weapons.
But the agent was quickly shuffled out or earshot by cult members
who say they suspected the man
known around the compound as
Roben Gonzalez was up to something.
"It was wide! y known he was

undercover, " cult member Livingston Fagan would say later. ·
ATF officials say their agent
was not close enough to make out
details of the phone call. But he
decided it would not jeopardize the
raid by more than. 90 agents scheduled to begin less than an hour
later.
Scou Peterson, an auomey for
cult member Kathryn Schroeder,
says the tipoff call came from a
cult member who had a chance
-conversation with a person outside
the Davidians' home, probably a
reponer.
· A small contingent of reponers
had coll~ted near the compound
!fiat mormng. Some said they were
there because they had heard on
police scanners that something was
alxiut to happen.
The undercover agent slipped
out of the compound about 9:15
a.m.
·
Koresh and the ATF used the
next 40 minutes tb prepare for battle.
ATF agents equipped with black
bulletproof vests, masks and semiautomatic weapons filed into two
cattle trailers, unaware that cult
members were also talcing up positions near windows of the compound, fully armed.
"He qollected what we believe
are illegal weapons over an ex'tended period of time and says, 'Look
isn't it amazing the prophecy is

cratic member of the tax-writing
Ways and Means Committee; is
pushing for a dollar-a-pack hike. in
ctgaretre ta~es thts year, Huggms
sought to distance beer from tobacco. a traditional ally.
"To the extent you can divorce
the two of us, th.at's fair," he s:"d
· after Andrews hmled that the link
~o tobacco could hurt the beer
mdustry.
Ac.ross Capitol Hill on Tuesday,
Huggms and 1,000 others from the
beer industry pressed their case to
be e~empted from major tax
increases this year. They were
armed wit~ economic studies
claiming a big tax hike would cost
88,000 jobs, and kfts outlining
iildusll)' campaigns to cUtb dttiJilc- '

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Four agents were killed and 16
injured in the 45-minute shootouL
At least two cult members were
killed in the exchange. A federal
law .enforcement source speaking
on condition of anonymity said at
least I0 cultists had been killed.
The l;&gt;epanment of Treasury is
investigating, but Troy says what
went wrong is simple: the raid ·
failed because the ATF lost the element of surprise.
"We would have been in control of that compound. within 60
seconds or less had there not been a
prior tipoff to the compound that
there was an impendmg raid,"
Troy said.

en driving and underage drinlcin~.
But perhaps a more compellmg
m~va~on was expressed by Henry
Kin~; director of the Brewers Associauon of America, in a private
training session for the industry
lobbyists: "Remember, you're not
gain~ up th_
ere .to save· the world.
You re gomg up there to save
your" ~m line.
Clinton has promised to unveil a
comprehensive health care package
by MayS that will, among other
things, provide health insurance for
the 36 million Americans no.w
without it. Many anticipate the
White House will propose to help
pay for it with higher excise taxes
on alco!l&lt;* and tobacco products.....:.
aild Petli'ails llreiriri's. · ' • · ~

LAWYER TALKS WITH CULT LEADER
·Two unidentified men carry a ladder near tbe
Mount Carmel compound of the Branch Davidiaos on Tuesday. Authoiritles have !lllowed a

lawyer to talk with cult leader David Koresh
. who bas held federal autghorities at bay since
Feb. 28. (AP)

Malnutrition in so-uthern
Sudan shocks nutrition experis

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WASHINGTON (AP) - When . tance, said the two factions of the 1,000 in Arne, about 10 times the
two U.S. nutrition expens traveled Sudanese People's Liberation rate for non-famine periods, Herthrough southern Sudan recently Army "deserve absolute ,ondem- . waldt added. ·
There are three camps in the
some of the people they found ai nation f~ their ac~ons."
camps for the displace(! were
He satd there IS probably more - general area of Arne with· a total of
appallingly emaciated, with stick- "bruf!ll starvation" aro~nd Kongor about I 00,000 people. The only
like limbs.
than m any other area m southern outside assistance is provided by a
. These were the lucky ones. The Sudan. "The.!llalnul!ltion nues are group called Norwegian People's
.
.
less. fortunate never made it to the off the chart, he swd, adding that Aid. ·
cam!)$ because they were too weak. the Clinton administration plans a · F.or more than a decade. almost
"We saw SOll)e pretty shocking major escalation Of hurnanitaria.n · n'lthing has go_ne rigltt for lh~
things," said David Bassett. of the resources for that reg ton. One pos- southern Sud!mese, a largely black
federal Cenrers for Disease Control sibility, he said, are airdrops of Christian 8l1d animist peof,ie generin Atlanta. Barbara Herwaldt, also relief supplies from C-130 trans- ally resentful of the h8nl-1ine ~Us­
•
of the COC, said the percentages of pon planes.
lim ~ntalist military JOV~·
malnourished children "are as bad
Herwaldt, a medical epidjmiolo- . ment m Khartoum.
as we have seen .. - worse than gist and physician, said in interVntold numbers of !Jesperate
those of the legendary Ethiopian view that 84 percent of children people have fled their hoJMtowns
famine of 1984-85.
under 5 in her sampling in Kongor through·out tlie vast regiiui to
Within a week after their depar- _were eit!Jer moderately or severely escape warfare, creating teeming
ture from southern Sudan the situ- malnounshed.
~fu~~ee . villages. All too often, the
ation worsened dramatically in the . "If i~ is grea!er th~ ~ percent, it vtOI!lllce follows them, preventing
Kongor area with a sudden ·out- IS classified as a nutnuonal · emer- relief assistance from amving.
break of fighting between factions gency," she said. It was unclear·to
Last fall, the United Nations
of a Sudanese rebel force.
her, however, how representative suspended relief operations in pans
of southern Sudan afler one of irs
In a statement Monday, the her sampling was.
Stare Department said the.fighting
She and Bassett were more con- workers and a Norwegian journalist
''threatens the lives of thousands of fident of their samplings in an were killed in rebel-held territory.
Inevitably, there are comparsouthern Sudanese whose only encampment at Arne, near the
chance of survival is the uninter- Ugandan border, where 81 percent isons with Somalia but, thus far
rupled flow .ofreliefsupplies."
of the children :were moderarely or the. adminis~aiiQ~ has ·not give~
senous constdetabon to a SomaliJames Kunder, director of the severely malnourished.
.Office Q( .EoJ.!lign Disaster AssisThe death rate was 234 per like inlen:enlion .

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coming true, law enforcement is
coming to attack me,' " said FBI
special agent Bob Ricks. "Well,
obviously he ·created a situation
that required a response." ·
ATF officials said Koresh
opened the front door, smiled defiantly, and then slammed it shut.
Bullets then blazed from 40 to 50
different locations inside the compound.
Cult members say Koresh
opened the door to plead with the
agents not to shoot because womeq
and children were inside.
Koresh and several cult members claim the ATF fired first,
either accidentally or on purpose.
ATF intelligence chief David
Troy called that an "absolute false-

Beer sellers urge Congress-_to
.resist new taxes on their product
WASHINGTON (AP) - Bo
Huggins, a beer distributor from
Houston, was already sitting in the
office of Rep.' Mike Andrews when
his hometown congressman arrived
at work Tuesday and he was
primed with informa'tion.
. After some banter about jogging, Huggins got to the point the
beer industry absorbed a doubling
of excise ~s two years ago, and
should not be hit again to finarice
President Clinton's health care
plan.
·
.
A proposal to raise beer taxes as
much as !50 percent "will hun us
bad," said Huggins, who with his
father employs 188 workers. ·
Aware that Andrews, a Demo-

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By The Bend

·-

Family
Medicine

•

••

Page-11

-Boy or girl, expe~ting' moth~t
should be thankful, says Ann

,.
•

Questloa: I, or more accurately,
my husband and I have a problem
lhal.()UJ' doctor can't explain. After
we go to sleep, my husbanll has.a
sudden jerk of his legs. This shalces
the bed, startles and awakens me.
He claims he isn't doing this on
purpose. He doesn't have any leg
problems when he is awake. What
could be causing this?
· Answer: Body movements are
normal during sleep. In most individuals, these movements occur
every 15 to20 minutes even though
the person sleeps well and doesn't
remember moving. During light
sleep, semi-purposeful movements
of the legs or arms are common,
and _this may be the cause of your
husband's leg movement. There
are, however, other possible causes.
A condition called "hYJI!liC jerk"
·produces a single body pk during
the early period of sleep. This is
.quite normal. About 70 percent of
individuals repon this phenomenon
occasionally, but it probably is
experienced by everyone. Not
every jerk awakens the individual, ·
but of course, it may awaken the
spouse.
The hypnic jerk is sometimes
associated wilh !he sense of falling,
_ or with a vivid dream. This associ. ation with the sense of falling is
responsible for an old, interesting
- but incorrect - exphmation of
the phenomena. It was assumed
that the jerk waS a residual primitive reflex designed to keep us
from falling from trees. A newer,
more realistic, theory says hypnic
jerks are ·the result of minor
'addressing· errors" in the body's
nervous system. When the individual is awake, he or she can produce
limb movement by conscious
_thought that directs nerve impulses

.••.

...••

to the appropriate muscles. When
asleep; our dreams ol walking, running or other activity do not produce nerve impulses that are
addressed to the muscles associated
with these activities.
However, when we are in that
transition phase - neither fully
asleep nor awake - an occasional
signal can be addressed incorrectly
and "sneak" thrO\J$h to the limb
muscles. This, I thmk, is the real
cause of the hn'nic jerk reaction.
Hypnic jerks are reported more
frequently after vigorous physical
acuvity, during periods of
increased anxiety, or when the person has .been usmg stim11hmts such
as caffeine. They are re(XXted less
often after u5e of alcohol or other
sedatives. It is unclear if the frequency of jerks is actually changed
by any of these events or 1f only the
arousal from sleep - and/ therefore, the wakeful remembrance of
the jerk - is increased.
There are other abnormalities of
movement that could be the cause
of your husband's sleep jerk. Sleep
myoclonus and some forms of
epilepsy can produce movement. ·
However, the condition you
describe is most likely a simple
hypnic jerk. If this is a frequent ani!
bothersome problem, your husband
may need to sleep a night or two in
a special sleep lab to accurately
determine·the nature of the movements he experienced. Talk with
your family doctor about this problem. He or she can advise you if an
evaluation done in a sleep lab is

~'

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••
•

:.•

..

•

•'•

~~

·:'-•.
\,

.••••
"SILliER PlATTEr 15-7-1.11. AIICJ

aNTERaJT

Whole Bollfless
. Port LOin
POund

'2"

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf; D.O., Ohio University College of Ost_eopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, ·
Ohio45701.

"Water in Our Hands" is the for more information.
Prizes are $S for firSt place, $3
theme for this year's fourth grade
poster contest and sixth grade essay for second"place, and $2 for third
contest sponsored by the Meigs place in each contest in e'ach
Soil and Waier Conse!Vation Dis- school. There will also be three
overall winners in each contest' in
trict
- . Presenrations were made in each the county who will receive uo-· of the elementary schools early in phies from the district
This year, brown groceiy bags
. March and posters and essays_life
have
been provided to all fourth
· due to the schools by Friday at
graders
to make their poster. These
which time they will be collected
6ags
were
provided by Powell's
for judging.
. . .
Value
1n Pomeroy, VaughSuper
If your child or grandchild IS m
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Cardinal
in Middlepon and the
grades four or six and has not menRutland
Depanment
Store in Ruttioned .these contests, ask them to
contaCt the Meigs Soil and Water land.
Conservation Disuict at 992-6647

Announcement

I

•

Justin Seymour, David Anderson, Whitney Hap·
tonstal~ Jodie Sisson, Laurea Andersoo, Melissa
Ramsburg, Amy Jooes, Amy Clonch, aad Stacy
Stewart.

[~;...Star Grange plans for barbecue
-

'

:· . Plans for -the chicken barbecue
•: and open house were made when
: : Star Grange met recently at the
• • hall.
(: - The barbecue will be held April
•: : .18 with serving from 11 a.m. to I
: · · -p.m. The open house and dedica•• · tion program will begin at 1:30
:: · p.m. with State Lecturer Fran.cis
: • · Whi~ as the feature speaker. Tick; : ~ ets for the chicken barbecue are
•: available from any Star Grange
:- ; member.
! ~- Also discusse4 was the grange
• • banquet to be held on April 14 at
:~ 7: lS p.m. at the Meigs County
·~ . Senior Citizens Center with Salis~· bury PTO serving the baked steak
~· - dinner. Tickets are $7 for adults

and $6 for children and are available from all subordinat~ grange
members in the county. State Master Be~··d
,_. Shoemaker will be the
featured speaker for the banquet. ·
1anet Morris, WQmen's Activities Chairman, announced that all
contests wiU be judged at dle June
meeting.
·
The community service committee reminded members to be bringing in non-perishable i~ms for the
foOd barrel. . '
.
Legislative chairti!an Eldon Barr9ws reported on pork barreling
and various farm issues.
There will be a bake sale at Big
Wheel on Saturday by Pomona
Grange. Star Grange will have

inspection Saturday. The Meigs
County Grange banquet will be
Aprill6 at the senior citizens center in Pomeroy. Star Grange fun
·night is AI?ril 1,7 at the grange hall
and the ch1cken barbecue and open
house is April 18. District membership meeting is April ;23 at Albany
Grange Hall in Athens County .
Sixth Degree Conferral in Washington County is April24.
' Eldon Barrows, lecturer, presented a program on "Things We
Live With - Plants, Animals and
Minerals."
There were 55 members, visitors
and juniors present for the meeting
which was followed with a potluck
supper.

~1. ~=~·C=o=m=m=u~n===it~y:=c=a=le=n~d=ar===

·• •
"' •

I' •

~~ :

;! :
•;- .
' ·:

,.••• .

WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Eden United
Brethren Church will have revival
with Betsy and Peter Martindale
and family through Sunday. Spccia! music nightly at 7 p.m.

.~~ .

ROlLAND - Revival at Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church with Bob
~··· , Stewart will run through Friday.
""• • Pastor Paul Taylor mvites the pub-

l•;

t:•:
.,. lie.

,. •

~~ TUPPERS PLAINS - The
•• ; Orange Township Trustees will
a • meet in special session Wednesday
~= - at 7 p.m. at the home of the clerk,
-4~ Pauy Calaway.

.-

~

'

!a

POMEROY - The Meigs Coun•1. ty Dry Fire Hydrant Commiuee
~ .. · will meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.
•:' at the Soil Conservation Service
: • · Office. All committee members are
c~ urged to attend.

SHS choir to host
dinner theatre

.

FLAG RAISED • Tbe Middleport Fire
Department recently voluDteered time to put up .
tbe Americ1111 flag in front of Melp Junior Higb
Pictured, (I to r), are meD)bers ·of the
School.
' .
,.
student
couDcil, Myca Hayoes, Scott Sellers,
••
•• •

••
••
·~
•••.

.

Ella Osborne received the door'
prize.
Refreshments were served by
the hosteSS to the above named and
Pauline Myers, Nancy Wachter,
Marilyn Hannum. Margaret G~s­
nickle, Delores Frank, Mary Alice
Bise and Janet ConnoUy.
An auction was held with Mary
Alice Bise, auctioneer.

The Eastern High School alumni
coordinating committee is current!&gt;:
making plans for the 1993 alumm
.t
banquet to be beld June 12 at the
high school.
Any alumni not contacted within the past five years should con~t
Briad Collins at 985-3593, Juhc
Elberfeld
Dillon at 992-2006 or
TOP EMPLOYEE • NaD C.
Leonard
Koenig
at 992-9918.
Davis receaUy received Employee of tile Year lla.ors for tbe
Middleport omce of tbe Peoples
BaDkiDI aDd Tnat CompaDy.
Sbe wa1 Domlnted by ber coSALEM CENTER - Star
workers at Peoples B1111k. Sbe Is a
culllomer HrVk:e repreae•tatlve- Grange and Star Junior Grange will
:.. supervlsor. Her respoaslbilltles meet in regular session Saturday at
: IDCIIIde Y. .lt teller ud ellltolller 8 p.m. at the .grange hall. Inspec.. -vice superYilloa. ML Da'l'il II tion will be held and final plans
: a member ot tbe First Baptist will be made for the chicken barbeChrcb. Sbe aDd be~ busband cue and dedication cere111ony on
BID Uve ill Syracuse. They have . April 18. Potluck refreshments. All
members urged to attend.
tbree cbUdren.

••
••
••

.~·•'·' ·------------------------------------------------~-------------------­

Riverview Garden Club meets

Plans und~rway

'

:.

necessary.

The choir of Southern High
School will present the dinner theatre, "Made in the U.S.A.," on
April 10 at 6 p.m. at the high
school.
.
Tickets are available now and
the cost is $4 for adults or $2 for
students/children.
The dinner will begin at 6 p.m.
and the menu includes spaghetti,
cole slaw, rolls, des sen and drink.
The variety·show-themed presentation, scheduled to begin at 7
p.m .• will feature selections from
the Big Band era, songs of the Silver Screen, as well as pop, country
and jazz tunes.
The public is enc.ouraged to
attend the event and support the
musical program at Southern l.oca1
which is under the direction of
Melissa Stewart.

•l

••••

Fresh Assorted
Chops

1••~
ROlLAND - The Past Matrons
:, of Harrisonville OES will meet
:: Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the

home of Pauline Atkins.

of the Eastern Star.

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The community Unity Singers will be giving pan
of their spring concert, "Heaven's
Eyes," at the Eden United Brethren
Church on Thursday evening.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will sponsor its Eighth Annual Spring Fashion Show on Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
Pomeroy Elementary. Tickets are
$4 . The public is encouraged to
auend.

POMEROY - A free community
immunization clinics will be provided at Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly on Thursday from 9-11
, a.lll. and at the Sy~acuse Fire
Department from 1-3 p.m. Children
ages two through kindergarten
must present an immunization
record.
RACINE - The Racine Ameri·
can Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Sration. Public invited.
POMEROY - The Community
Lenten Service, sponsored by the
Meigs Ministerial Association, will
be held at the Pomeroy Baptist
Church at 7:30p.m. Rev. Bill
Hoback will be preaching.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the JTPA building. Call
992-5763 for information .

1Q-Ib.

64-oz.

.BaQS

"IN THE OA/1('( CASE" KROGER CHILlED
APP1.E JUICE OR DONALD DUCK

Idaho Potatoes

orange Juice

SUGAR FREE DELUXfLFAT FllEE
DESSEilT OR

Kroger Deluxe
Ice cream
"A.;c;allon

GENUINE

POMEROY · The Meigs County PERI group will meet Thursday
at I p.m. at the senior citizens center at I p.m. All members are urged
to attend.

FULL CASfi •.. 57.00

Kellogg's cereal
•• 25-oz. FI'OSttJd Flakes
• 15-oz. APPIB Jat:ks
• 20.4«. illnl Mruts
• 19-0Z. Bite Size FrOSted
.Mini Willits
• 1s-oz. cocoa Krlsples

If"' OFF

AS INDICA Tfo ON )'fUDW TAO IN S10IIf

113 SIZE

California
Navel oranges

''

FOr

- FUU'CASE . •. $70.00 541/E 72961
4B SIZE . • • 3 FOil $1110
FULL CASE ••• $7f.OO 541/E 12961

with il least five ol my H
h
gi)CS something like dlil: "Do ,..
know if il's a hoy or a girt? 1'111 you must want 1 girl siDte yo.
already have two boys."
· I realize that people are tl)'i8&amp; 10
be nice, but hearing tbe saae
questions OVft and ovCr is rally
annoying. Do!! 'I get me WJillll. A-.
I am very happy witb my two
healthy. beautiful boys, and IIIeya great joy to my husban!l aad -..
It's just that I have always w :1 a
daughter.
The reason I'm so scnsil.ive ro
these qucslions is because I (GUDd
out tl)ree mon_ths .ago dial I wil ~
having another hoy. I ba-'t l1lld
anyone except my hust.Dd · He
seems lhrillcd to be having a dlinl
son.
I want to know how to -h!D111r die
siiUation when the baby arri-. 1'.
sure 111 be hearing: "I'm so sony
you had another boy." "You IIIIISl
be terribly upset." "I guess )'llll'le
disappointed." •Are you going ro ay
agiin for a girl1"

it is. -- AGNES IN ARVADA,

Ann

.

SYRACUSE - A free community immunization clinic will be
offered at the Syracuse Fire
Department on Friday from 1· 3
p.m.; at. the Bashan Fire Department from 9-11 a.m.; and at the
Reedsville Fire Depanment from
12:30-3 p.m. Children ages two
months and up must show proof of
an immunizauon record.
TUPPERS PLAINS ' There will
be a round and square dance Friday
from 8-11 :30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW Hall sponsored by. the
ladies auxiliary. Music will be provided by Heritage Express. Callers
will be Red Carr and Melvin Cross.
Everyone welcome.
SATUR,DAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Willing Workers of St. Paul United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains,
will hold a bake sale Saturday at 9
a.m. in the church basement.
'SYRACUSE - There will be a
spaghetti dinner at Carleton School
in Syracuse on Saturday from 5-7
p.m. Cost is $3.50 or $2 for children under 12. Further infonnation
may be oblained by calling 992-

...

DEAR AGNES: Several readers

me to conunent on it, so in response
to popdar demand. I am breaking
my vaw of silence and sharing the
following item on the heretofore
forbidden subject
• A woman who head-butted
Haw • • • I ;• ,._, 1D diose
IIIIOiher woman in a ladies'· room
••
? l'ttedl.e-wmy dispute about toilet paper was
UJioc .......,_ fd lijlllite:ia; •Y senrenced Monday 10 serve 60 days
lldp ,_ c:al &amp;iwe ~ """ ••• iD in the Pitkin County Jail -- or until
r.n:lllypiag she is deported•
to ara1 alalol it.- DUE SOON IN
"Julia Pike, 31, wept and told
.ST.LOUIS
Judge J.E. DeVilbiss she was sorry
DFNt ST. UJUJS:: ~ cm~- for the J111111ry incident in which
_ _ .._..ttaaweacPil:~~:
she bna Carolyn Abel's nose in
Oalyadad..,...asta- !Ill'*
tine places.
iflll: il Wllll
"Pike, who is I British citizen,
~. - ,..
faces
de~tion because she
As b , . . ...... .._ , . .
U)ioclla , ____ _ . _ worked tn Aspen while on a
vioiu'a pamiL A federal immigra,.. CIJial *-t1 Do ,..~~~we.., tillllllelrina
11M been IChedulcd for
idealllolr..,..... Pte today in Deaver.•
&amp;J ;· &amp;tollnea' , , dildol
DEAR READERS: I wonder what
tillY wed K:wllfl:la blttiiiJeritl&amp;, diOIIe WIXII8D wm 11ttUally fighting
I
li ,_,._.,_llll;lJ~
lllooL Do you IIUppOIIC it c:ould have
b!u:sitclleeutnidiyt! '
been whelher the roilet paper should
.,_. .U. I
' L I Jad Ill
be buDg 10 thai it c:omea over the
IIJp or down IDler fnm the bouOm?
I.._ ... ,_,_.; ... tllele If uy011e knows Julia Pike or
Wlllllilbem.!lll'ltecalll:wlj t _ carolyn Abel, pleue inquire and let
I UMidll't resist me blow the inside *inDy.
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)- NCYa111dess.
r
Mlllide
I Jad ils die
&amp;,"Good Morning America" co-11ost
Gem ol die Pay: The real proof
d!C
Jhlri
.
I
llape
J01
1,11:1 a tid; or llllblrity is ·10 have thc same
Joan Lunden and estranged husz~ did. Hrft- l'iJmm! your friend is describing and
band Michael Krauss reachedase~­ Cl1ll ar iii
dement in their bitter 'divorce just
DOt lllillllion it.
as the case was 10 go to trial.
Jut tJkoltol problem? How Cllll you
. The settlement reached Tuesday
lte/p )'OIITU/f or ~OM }'014 /ove?
bats terms from being disclosed,
Alben Malia-Jte:allly tddnl- "AJCDirolism: How 10 Rtcoglli~L It,
said Norman Sheresky, Krauss"
ed his 7Sib llitdldly II his bilme iD How to Deal Witlllt, How 10 ConaUOmey.
, . , It" wiU give you the QIISWtrs.
Stan Rosenfield, a spokesman Cbesru. A buffet diner w1s
Sud
a ulf-aJJmud, long, bu.rifor Lunden. said Lunden would 1101 senal.
Attendiat: were Thomas, IV.U·Iizt til~ IJIId a cltec/c or
comment on the settlement
S•epaw: . . . JJenjrllr; JCiiHr; Long _,order for $3.65 (this illclllllts
Lunden. 42, and Krauss, .Sl, had
been married 14 years .when Iiley Bouom; Micbael Jandl. Lewa. po#tJgt anJ ltandlillg) 10: Alcoltol,
split in January 1992. They have Bri1D Ba:Jcr,. MN h •tc StiA.. •c.. c/o AM l..anikrs, P.O. Box 11562,
Colambus; MarpJct Wyatt, Cllicago,IU. 606/].()562. (In Cllllthree daughters, ages 12,8 and .S.
1'\ataoj,llqpld
• [ lin. Meliopo- add, ulld $4.45.)
·
In June, a judge ordered Lundc:n
lis.
DL;
Albat,
Jr._,
Elsie Millin.
to pay Krauss, a 1V producer, remporary maintenance of S18,000 a Viac::cat; Bruce, Madolya, and
Steph•ie SaadifCI', Hanisbur&amp;.
month plus expenses.
Lundel) joined "Good Moming · Pa., Canll. Eric _, Melis:SIIIsitlg,
POMEROY - The Meigs CounAmerica" 16 years ago wben Jaac Ellat ail ...... )' Mel wgb- t)' Pomona Grange will have a bake
Jin,
Ill
wOw'
•1
W.V.;
Mike,.
Krauss was the show's producca'.
sale and craft sale at
Ouis::
· ~,.~-~
-.1 v - "
tia. Salunlay at 10 a.m.
Til!: two were 'also invo!Yed in Ylii- 01
~-:I , 'lp1\
()sby _ , M8y _....,,
ous 1V ventures after Krauss aeatEdna ManiJ1, Middlepoot: 11511 Ed reminded to· bring items to Big
ed his own production company.
Wheel between 9 and 10 a.m.
Madin, R&lt;' 7

Reach settlement

- - - -

-

,_

5

.....Ill...,......

:!;

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

Birthday observed_

Announcement

~

LAWN &amp; G

EN

SPECIAL SECTION
THE
•POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
•GALLIPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
.
•POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
'

6681.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA: ·
The Libeny Mountaineers will perPOMEROY •. The local MADD . form Sauirday at the Senior CitiChapter will meet Thursday at 6 zens Center jn Point Pleasant,
p.m. at 119 Butternut Avenue in W.Va.
Pomeroy. , ·
HENDERSON, W.VA.· The
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs Gallia Twirlers Western Square
CHRISTIAN WOODS
Junior High Academic Boosters Dance Club will hold a dance Sat·
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. All urday from 8-11 p.m. at the Hensixth grade parents are invited to derson Community Center in·,Henderson, W.Va. Tom Poe wiD be the
,
Chris and Aii~ia Woods, · auend. Everyone welcome. ..
caller.
The dance is open to all
•.
• Pomeroy, announce the birth of
TUPPERS
PLAINS
•
The
Tupwestern
style square dancers.
l their dlird child, a daughter, Chris·
pers
Plains
VFW
Post
9053
Ladies
.; tian Hannah, born December 8 at
,, - the Holzer Medical Center, Gal- Auxiliary will l!lCCt Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the post home. All
WJLKESVII.,LE - There will be
~ lipolis.
.
members
11111ed
to
attend.
a
smorgasbord
dinner at the
•:
She weighed seven pound, six
Wilkesville
Pythian
Hall on Satur~· ounces aild was 20 inches long. Mr.
day
at
4
p.m.
Costs
is
$5 for adults
; - and Mrs . Woods also have two
FRIDAY
.
, . other children, Corey, seven, and
GAllJPOLIS ·There will be a and $2.50 for children. Public
~ . Alison, four.
/ bean·and cornbread dinner on the invited.
•
Paternal grandmother is Mrs. second floor of the Masonic Tern. William J. Woods (Mila), pie on ~turday from 11 a.m. to 7
HARRISONVILLE - The Har&lt; Pomeroy, Maternal grandparentS p.m. The ~ost is $3 for the dinner risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
are Mr."and Mn. Michae!J. Evans, or $1 for a hot dog. Dine-in or will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
Pordllld, and mluernal great grand· carry-out available. T~e dinner is Refreshments will be served. All
• mother is Ada VanMeter, Portland. sponsored by the Galbpolu Order master masons invited.

New arrival

COLO.

SCDl me that SIDIC clipping and asked

t

•

''SILVER PLATTER"

-

same

'••

S&amp;WCD poster contest set

The Riverview Garden Club met
recently at the home of Janice
Young. Serving as co-hostesses
were Kila Frank and Phyllis
Larkins.
Roll call was answered by members namin2 "Bible Sweethearts."
Devotions, :rHeans of Fire" and "A
Small. Boys Dilema" were read by
Ruth Anne Balderson. Devotions
had been prepared by Grace Weber
who was unable to attend.
Christi Young was welcomed as
a guest by Maxine Whitehead,
·
..
president
Card were signed for several
friends. Plans were made to make
: Easter favors for patients at the
: Arcadia Nursing Center at
· CoolviUe. This wiD be directed by
: Nola Young.
:
The may meeting will be a tour
· of the Glass House Works at
: GuysviUe.
: _ Trays of fruit were made for the
·. sick and elderly and were to be
: delivered by the members.

Dear A.. l.aac!en: I •

pregnaiiL For the laa i!C- M ' I
I have had the
CODvtUIIioa

-

'

Wednesday, March 31,1993

•

'

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

The Daily Sentinel

ADVIIFISI.G lfJIII.f:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1993 ·lOON
I.Sflrlfl. IJFf:
FRIDAY, IPIIL 23, 1993
CILL

DIYE

01 ••

J.

FOR MOll IIFOIIIIIIOII.
992~2155"

•

.,

�12-

'.
Wedne sday, March

The Dally sentinel

31 , 1993

Meigs Local on education
By Supt. James Carpenter
We really need lhe help of lhe
parents in lhe educational process.
No, we don't need parents 19 do
our job for us, but we do need lhe
suppon of parents wilh lhe.ir chil·
dren so !hal we may be more sue·
cessful in doing our jobs.
. I am not swe that many people
· realize just how much lhings have
changed in education. Did you
know that in the fe w yean~ I have
been superintendent, we've have
beeR mandated by lhe state to give
compe tency testS; ac hievement
tests, ability tests, and proficiency
tests? The high school guidance
depanment administered one test or
anolher over 80 different days last
year.
We are required to teach drug
education, sex educatiqn and about
AIDS . We have classes f!i: students
· who are already parents and for
: lhose who are pregnant so lhat ·we
· may teach lhem puenting skills.
· We have special programs for
developmentally handicapped stu·
dents, learning disabled students,
multiple handicapped sludents and
severe behavior students, and make
arrangements for students who are
; visually impaired or hearing

needs to be shown through encour·
As you can see, lhere have been aging students to work hard to
many changes in what is expected achieve to be the ~t ea.;h can .be.
of schools over the years. Many of Parents need to visit the schools
the things we are required to do and to talk wilh teachers aboutlheir
today were not even considered to children and their progress. If you
be problems twenty years ago.
have questions or concerns you
And Ibis does not t ake into con- should ask:.
sideration the changes in what is to
I can guarantee !hal there is no
be taught to students. We have stu· . school system which is recognized
dents working with equipment in as being highly successful which
our vocational programs which was does not have the active support of
not invented twenty years ago. Stu· the parents and the commiJ!Iity. I
dents work with computers and am also just as sure that there is no
other technology which were not schqol system which hall the supavailable to students ten years ago. pon or parents and lhe community
and what is expected .of students in which is not considered to be 'sue·
math and science is much more cessful .
advanced than in the pasL
Meigs Local needs your help.
Do not misunderstand that Ibis We ask you to help us help your
is a complaint about what is being cltildren by working together to
done now comll8red with the past. give children the best that we all
It is meant to show !hal there have can give lhem.
been a great many changes in what
While telling yOu that we need
is expected of students and that yol,lf help I would be remiss if I did
they have different ways of learn- not thank all of those people who
ing compared to the past. And in helped us in the recent fire at the
many instances they are expected high school and ihe loss of the roof
to learn more in a subject area than
of the gym at Salem Center. There
are too many people to mention but
students did in the past. ·
II is also meant to show that that does not diminish the sincere
schools need the suppon of parents gratitude which is felt for every one
now more than ever. This
wbo ~~
impaired.

CA'n'LE OWNERS
Kirk Undol'lchuftz, A. F. A. &lt;*lin.d journeyman tarrier
now offering his hoof trimming 11rvtces to cattle owners.
has15 yoa111
u a prolasoional larritr.
All trimming ie done with hand tools (not grinders)

'"""'rienco

using a portable rollover ehutAo.
Kirk will travel up lo w, hours lrom Utt!e Hocking,

and requires a m inimum ol 15 haad of cattfe per visit to

Special arntllgemants posaiblo for 4·H groups and clubs.
Call fer • a.,.tllt....,

614·989·2405
I'IM11 lerto - •...• I pltoao nlllMr

To place an ad

COPY.DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
MoN. tbru FRI. 8A.M.· 5J'.M, - SAT.~l Z
Thunday Paper
' Friday Paper
CLOSED SUNDAY Sunday Pa~
. POLICIES

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
'l :00 p.m. Satwday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
top p.m. ThllfSday .
1:00 p.m. l'rlday

Call992-2156 .

• Ad. outlida tho coWlty your ad 1'11111 ..,1111 he prepaid.
• Retei'N d ileoWit for adl paid Ia •dn~~te .

• Free Ad.: CiYeaway aad Foud ad. uadeio 15 wonll will M ··
rua 3 daya at ao charp.
• Price of ad for aU capjtai letlen it doOle price.of ad c:01t
• 7 polD.t W. type oaly ....d
1
• Seatiul .il a ot ftllpoulble for etTOte after fll'tt day (check
for....,., t..ot day ad nuu ia paper). CaU Wore 2:00 P·• ·
day after publication to make eerrecdoa
• ~ thllt rawt he paid itt lldvaace aN :

Cud of Tluonb

Happy Ado

In Memoriam

Y.rcl Sal~

• A c).,.if..d adoonioemeat placed lo lho C.Uipolio Daily
Tribu11e (exeepl Clulif'tecl Dllplay, BllliDeu Card or Lfltal
Noticeo) will abo appear io tloe Pelot Plouaat Roptor ..,d
lb.e Jl.ily SmJtiDel, reaclai.JII Dftl' 18,000 ho!MI

BULUTIN
4:30 P. ·~ DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON

ClOuified pages c011er the
. follmDin.g ielephone exchanges ..•

lllcldltporl, Ohio 45710

67 5-Pt. Plouam

POmeroy

458-Looa

985-Cb..tor
843-Portlaad

57.6-Apple ·Gro••

24 7- Lolart F.Uo

882- New Ha•o
895-Lotut
937-Ball'.to

AT OSCAR'S

773-M..an

949- Raclno
1142- Rutland
667-(ool.We ·

Sake&amp; AU.,e!
They Made It
To35!
'
Happy Birthday

BEGINNING APRIL 1st
WEDNESDAY NITE 1$
ITALIAN BUFFET NITE

Area Code 614 Area &lt;;ode 614 AI-ea CQde ;1M
992-Ml~rll

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
514 Not1h,s-d . _..

Galli,. County . Me !go CQu ly M...,n Co., WV

~ alii polio
367-Choahlre ·
388-Vintea
245-Rlo Graado
256-Cli)'OD Dlot.
643-Anlol• Dlot.
379-Walnat

AniiOUIICes the Opealng of their
lnfant/lotldler Proar•m
We will NOW serve children
6 months to 12 yeera of age.
Call us for more Information
(614) 992·7328
:rnt111 mo.

59 Court St. • Gallipolis
Featuring laBagne, Spaghetti,
Ravioli, Veal Sealllplno, MaiWalla,
Mamacoltl, C&amp;Melonl

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING · ,

&amp; Garlic Bread

GERMAN/HUNGARIAN/
POLISH BUFFET NITE
With Franks &amp; Krau~ Cabbage
Rolls; Goulash and Bratwurst
ALL DINNER BUFFETS
6-8:30 P. M .

RATES
Words

Days
1

IS
15
15
15
15

3
6
10
Monthly

Over 15 Words

Rate

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

57-

MU1ical lat t.rumea.\1
58- Frui,. &amp; V..... bt..

$ :2Q
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

59- For Sale or Trade

qupm
Fann• for Sale '
34- 8 ..,1,_. Buildiap

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as ~parate ads.

311- ~.o .. &amp;

=-=- ----1

GET BES(JI..TS • J'Mn

2-laMemory
3-- Allllou..eemeD..
4-- Giveaway
, 5- Happy Ad1
~

DRUG FREE • From left, DaWI! Smallcomb·
:! of Health Recover Services, David Fetty or
~ Wp Hi&amp;ll 8ehool aDil David Altllerr of Jack·

son High School participate in Wlii'III·DP activi·
ties at the recent multi-county Teen Institute
spODSOredbyTI.

·~.Meigs
County youth attend HSTI
.

Lo.t and Found
7- Lo.t and Found
8- Public Sale &amp;
A•etio•
9- Wmted to Buy

u~ Help

'IVaated

12- Siluatiolll" Wanlod

13- buura~~ee
14-- B..,.i.... Trai.Dias.
15- School• &amp; !DOtructloa
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mi.eellaneoUI
18-- Wanted To Do

Aereap
36- Real Ea0.1a Wooled

Wanted to Buy

IJ,. toe k

Real Estate General

Hay.&amp;: Craln
See4 &amp; Fertiliz~r

205 North Seeond Ave.
Middleport, OH
FLATWOODS ROAD - Approximalaly 4 1\ acrao with a
groat Jayin9. building site. TPC water available and
electric available. Almost raady to go, just noerls you.
512,000.

49-ForLoue
po

Plwnbiac&amp;Heathtc
Exeantias
Electrleal llr Relrif!enulo~

Ceaoral Haullofl
Mobile Home Repair
U~Miotery

LANGSVILLE ~ Yll!(lllovo to como homo til ralax in tho
counlly in this 2 badroom ranch with equipped kit&lt;:han aH
. sitting on t 3 acras. If you enjoy hunting this io the placa
lor you. Was $42,500. NOW REDUCEO TO $39,500
'\,

The theme for this year's proPublic Notice
Public Notice
gram was "100% Natural-No
Drugs Ad&lt;Jed." The weekend fea·
lured basic education, indepth subFINANCIAL REPORT OF Llcenaoa, Ponnlta and
F-........................... 132.00
TOWNSHPS
stance abuse prevention strategies,
Inter-mental
FD&lt; Fl..... v. . Endng
team building, or~anizing and lead·
Recelpta ...............66,236.74
o-mbor 31, 11192
ership skills traimng, and a presen·
lnteroaL ......................811.21
ORANGE
TOWNSHIP
tation on Appalachian cultural
TOTAL
COUNTY OF MEIGS
issues. It also mcluded information
RECEIPTS ............ II5,102.72
"Tille Ia an u...,cited
EXPENOITIJRE
and discussion on decision making,
Financt.l lleporf'
DISBURSEMENTS:
SUMMARY OF' CASH
self esteem, and self acceptance.
G-..al
BALANCES,
RECEIPTS
Heallh Recovery Services·
Govomment ......... 21;311 .n
(HRS) has sctteduled a Teen Insti- · . AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS Public Worb ......... 52,433.13
tute weekend for Junior High stu· REVENUE RECEIPTS:
Haallh ......................;1,1168.20
dents on April 23-25. For RJ.Ore, Tu...................... $27,842.n Mlacellaneouo .....,.14,t21.115
Debt Service:
·
information on this program, con·
by Nielsen Media Research ; tact HRS at 992·5277.
" share" is the percentage of sets
tunedin.
B
Public Sale
In the q~arterly ratings for the
a. Auction
· penod endmg Sunday, CBS won
with a 13.8 average rating; ABC
had a 12.5, and NBC an 11.3. The
Fox Broadcastmg Co. " weblet"
trailed with a 7.8 rating.
"The publicity for being No. I
makes people smile at Black
Rock," David Marans, an analyst
for the J. Walter Thompson ad
SATURDAY,
agency, said, using lhe CBS corporate headquaners' nickname. "But
APRIL 3, 1993 • 10:00 A.M.
the networks receive virtually all of
LOCATED FROM WEST COLUMBIA, 5 MILES, TURN
their revenue from advertising and
AT WASHINGTON GREENHOUSE, TURN LEFT,
most advenisers are looking at a
WATCH FOR SIGNS.
differentsetofnumhers."
On Madison Avenue, the key
FROM NEW HAVEN, TURN AT OLD BANK,
demographic group is adults aged
GO 5 MILES, WATCH FOR SIGNS:
18 to 49, and lhe quarterly ratings
HAVING SOLD THEIR FARM, MR. &amp; MilS. t.fCLURE
book ~lis a differ.ent story: ABC
WILL BE SELliNG THE FOLLOWING:
led wtth a 7.7 ra!tng, CBS had a
2
j&gt;c.
Early
American living room suite, coffee table, tables.
7.~. NBC a 7.0 ratmg and Fox a 5.5
recliner,
19'
color portable TV, enteilainmenl center, Sanyo
ratmg among 18· 10 49-year-olds.
VCF!,
nice
queen
size waterbed. boau~lul American Drew 5
"If you want to talk about pock·
pc. solid oak bedroom suite, consisting ol poster bed, lrlple
etbook issues, the three networks
dresser, large ches~ 2 night stands; 5 pc. wooden dinette.
are not that tar apart from each
Tappan microwave &amp; s81d, ,Westinghouse ,relrigenltDr •
other," Marans said. "If you look
same as now, nice GE washer &amp;dryer,chasttype deep lraeze.
at it 8S we do- and we're lhe ones
!Doster oven. Oster mixer comb. plus anachmontt. B&amp;O
undorcounter ooffeemaker, pols. pens and d&amp;hea. Montgomwho are paying the bills. you have
ery Ward dryer, VCR rewinder , GE air purilior. Cobra 2000
a somewhat different picture.' '

Teen Institute is a program
geared tdward youth in grades 6
through 12 that promotes leader·
ship skills and the prevention of
alcohol and other drug abuse. It
also encourages participants to help
other students make healthy
lifestyle choices lhrough positive
peer role modeling.

CBS wins week 27 in
Nielsen household ratings
By SCOTI WILUAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK- CBS ' "60
Minutes," television's top-rated
show this season, led the network
to its eighth consecuiive weekly
victory ·in lhe prime-time ratings.
CBS had five of the Top 10
, shows - · including the thii'd-place
; made-for· TV movie "The Man
with Three Wives" -and nine of
the Top 20, according to Nielsen.
Media Research data released
•. Tuesday.
: The victory was CBS' 20th in
·: the 27-week-old season,Jts 15th of
~ the past 16.
.
:· For the week ending Sunday,
CBS averaged a 13.8 rating and a
23 audience share· ABC was sec·
ond with an ll .8 numg, 20 share;
· and 'NBC third, wilh a 10.6 ratillg,
18 share. CBS won Sunday, Satur·
day and Thursday nights.
One ratings point equals
931 000 TV households in the 93.1
million-home " universe" surveyed

.Birth is announced
Jimmy and Jenny Nuuer,
Reedsville, announce the birth of
their soil, Joelan Lee-James on Feb.
25 at Marietta Memorial Hospital.
The infant weighed seven
pounds and 10 and one-half
ounces.
. Grandparents are Jim and Sandy
Cowdery and Jim and Shirley Nut·
ter, Reedsville.
There is another child at home,
Jade Rachelle, age two.

Employee selected
Benjamin Skinner has been
selected associate of the store for
'lhe month at Big Wheel, according
to Jon Campbell, store manager.
He works in the receiving
depanment He has been employed
wilh the store for five years.
• Skinner was chosen as won of
:the outstanding associates from
over 4,000 employees in the dis·
count depanment store chain. ·

WE FEATURE
20". 22°
GREENBRIER
LAWN .
MOWERS

PUBLIC
AUCTION

byMTD

Pickens

Hardware
MASON, WV.

VALLEY

base station, 40 channel side band, 2 wan meters. 400 watt
~near. GPX llereo, answering machine, Hitachi CO player,
touch lamps and others, flatware set, Roger Brother lilvor HI
flatware, 2sewing maehinos, RCA camcorder, lri·pod, BelliCIII
16 channel scanner, Hoover sweeper, radios, gu grill, 8ft.
~k walnut glider swing, 6 ft. cherry swing. picnic table,
kerosene heater, same as new Hot Point air conditioner 5,()()(h
BTU, Q ft. aalellite clsh with Panasonic receiver·good ouU~,
garden sprayer, Coleman cooler, smalllueUank, drilla, ,..,,,
bill, blades, wire. hand toola. nica Home lite XL 12· chain saw.
duat·to4awn light. bug ligh~ 5 hive ol bees, whaolbw-.
wood pick·up trudl bed, Sycamore sell contain truck camper
needs some work on it. nice 12 HP !.tmay riding mowar.Jna
than 1 year old, 11 HP Murray needs cleck work plua mont.
AUCTION COHDUC:UD aY

RICK PIARIDIIUCTIDfl CD.
LUNCH

MASON, WV
773-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNERS: JAMES &amp; FLOANN ~CLURE

.... _,.,_ .,,_ .. ,_,
!£Rill: CASH OR CHE¢1&lt; WI'!H 1.0.

~

n - ~ Olio. Kant""'Y. &amp; -VI~~ ...

Public Notice
Nolo principal

PllYrnent ............... s,eoo.oo
Jnraroat and Fiocll
Chargee................ I,189.84
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ............... $87,625.31
Fund C.oh Balance
Jan. 1; 11192..........25,923.44
Fund C.ah Balance
Oec: 31, 11192 ....... 23,448.03
Fund C..h ' '
Balance ................ 23,448.03
Qepooltory
Balance ................ 36,647.06
L•a Outalandlng
Checke ................. 13,199.03
TOTAL
BALANCE ............ 23,448.03
I oerllly IIIIa report to be
correct Mel tru• to the beat

ol my knowlodgo.
Much 26, 1993
Palrlcla CalawllY, Clerk
· 46686 Guthrie R01td
CoolVille, Ohio 45723
614-.s-3860
(3)31, 1tc
Public Notice

Gutters
Downspouts
GUtter Cleaning
Painting

MIODLEPORT- Front Bini I ..: II rantalproporty Ia what
you've been lool&lt;ing lor we:ve got M. In thia houM you
have a 2 bedroom apartmont downstelre and a one
bedroom apartinent up, also hu aluminum siding and a
one car garage. Prasenliy both aportmonlt ara ranted.
Owner wanta an orr. $18,000.

.
Public Notice
c~o •• the Admlnlotrallw
Entity of IDA 124 JTP.Ohlo
lunda. The Gallla·Malgo
CAA lo the oubreclplent of
JTPA Iunde for Gllllla and
Melgo CountiN.
(2) Tho GaiiiHielga CAA
will deliver · program
actlvltloa for the folowlng
JTPA tllleo: TIUo IIA, Tille .
IIA 5%, Tille IIA 11'4, Tille liB,
Title IIC, ond Title Ill
EDWAA.
(3)• The Ohio Bureau ol
Employment S.rvlcoa will
provide lntako and roforral

ROCKSPRINGS ROAD - An older home with the
downstairs completely renOvated . Hal an anonnoua

living room wilh 2 bay window&amp; and a nice stone

firaplace. The beautilul kitchen hoi new eabinell with an
island, and 3 bedrooms, with large walk-in closola, clning
room, wraparound porch, and many outbuildings. silting
on 1 Yt acras.

DOmE TURNER, Brok!ll' ............................... 1192-56112
BRENDA JEFFERS ..........................................1192-305&amp;
DARLINE STEWART ........................................9112-t365
SAI'IOY BUTCHER ........................................... 9112-6371
JERRY SPRADLING ............................... (304) 182-34U
OFFICE .........................................................., .. 9112·2181

verily the lclentlfleadon or
ellglblo applicantS.
(4) Gallla·llelga CAA
deliver• ita prograrna In
accordllnee with lho policy,
olated In Ita Mereh 28, 111G
publlohod EEO·AAP Statemont. All F-.ot ond Siato
Lawe concerning . Civil'
Rlghte end Equal Op·
portunlty are followed and ,
acltored to.
(5) Gille lhlga CAA ....
o cloubl...ntry aceountlng
ayatom 'to lnaurti aound
llacal control, a-..nunsr: ·
·audl~ and debt collection
procoduroe orod the propei
dloburut and llCCOitntlng of
lunda received In ac J
eordanco Wtlh requlncl taw~
and rogulatlona.
· '
(S) Progrui activiU.. Pill'
Ulle oro u lollowa:
Auaoamont Ia uaecl to
holp oach client pion lhti
achlovamont of ·oarMr/IOb

PUBI:IC NOllCE
.
NOTICE Ia hereby gtyon
that ~ Selurday, April 3rd,
111G,.o.t10:00 a.m., a i"'bllo
oole will be hold 1111211 Woat.
Seoond Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to ull lor oah the
following ool-ol:
·
11117 Cltaory Spectrum .
8N I J81RG5172HI414725
11110 Ford Thunderltltd
8N I 1FAPP8042LH1820811
11110 Dodge Ontnl, 8Nt
11WU.Uib3lC708911W
. , . . Cltaory Altro Van
goala, ltnd - • lint .... ~
8N IIGBDM1IZ'IINB1574U ·clno. room
trolnlng •.
The .Form ora Bank and Aoa-montle uaed to hllp
Sovlnga c-pony, Pom• applloontolcllonta occeel
roy, Ohio, tho right other luncing o.ouro• 'and
to bid llt thlo a'ale, end to ..-.ICN In the ovont JTPA
withdraw the above funding Ia unable to holp
oollalorol prior to aalo. due to lund Nmllallona.
Fullher, Tho Fermera Bank
Actlvltloa, Longth of n -:
and Savlngo Compeny
A. Tille II A: (1) JoiJ Club,
,...,.. the right to rolaot 2-3 Wllb, (2) Claoaroom
.,y or all bide ..-11ted'.
Training (CRT),
to • ·
· Fullher, the above maximum of 52 -ka .par
oollaterol will be aoklln tho. progra111 y•r, but not to
ooncltlon It Ia In with no axc...r 104 wooko. Flret
oxpreuod or lmpllod conoldarotlon wAI beglvan
worr..... glvoft.
lo funding cllento poo·
For mora lnlorrilatlon aoaolng leu than a
contact Jell Gllkoy, at -.. Baocalaureata, (3) On·th•
21:18.
Job Training, varloa PI! .
·(J) 31; (4)1, 2, 3tc
oontraot. Speolal oonakl·
arallon will be given to
Public Notice
vetotano and handicapped
lndlvldualo through the
P08UC NOTICE
"1 0% Window" with ell·
In 110cordonee with the glblllly vorlfted lor OBEL
raqulr.,.Mta of the Job
B. Tille IIA 1%: Thla
Tralnlnt Partnorahlp Aet of p1ogram will ...tea Older
1M2, lectlon 104, tho Workoro 01f11 56 ond over
following Job Training with actlvltleo almllu la
P~r~ IIVIIIable for th-lor ItA.
, _ ,.....,.
C. Tille IIA 1%: Thla
PY •a
r.rosrram will a - •lull• In
GAll lA COUNTY •
ong tornt tr•lnlng at
IIElGa COUNTY PLAN
pulilicly funded • etato
(11 Tho lroftton-....,_. (ContinUOd on Page13)

••leo

'•'

'

3-1 &amp;-93-tfn

Shade River Saddle Shop

HAULING

-

.....

Hraell
lull loa• Off
Rt. 124 .
$20
12

s.......

16 Seaaio•• $25
992-2487

KEVIN'S LIWN
MAINTENANCE
- lng,
Fertllzlng, Weeclr!g, and
-lng.
Shrub and Tree :rrlrnming
&amp; Removal
Lawn

Rttldenllll &amp; Comrnerdal

•HewNOIIIeJ
•Gor... s
oCo~lete ·

UCIHE, OHIO
614·949·2202
614·742·2996

•••••li•a

.
NEW LISTING SR 325 near llenvlll• 92+ acre larm with

mobile home with.buih on addition, lirepla, eetlar, bam,
garage, paved road. Nica Joying land consisting of hayland;
pasture &amp;wooda. $72,500
.
· NEW LJSnNG· Pomeroy· Approx. 3 loll ol vacant ground
used u mobile home site. All hool&lt;-upa avaiable immedi. ate posse11lonl $2,500
'.
RUTLANI). Brick St.- Nice affordable home with 2 bed. rooms, bath, gas hut, 1 car garage, garden space, lruil
trees, peVod otreel, lot ol 66 K 100, appliances. Asking
$19,g()Q
.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS· Great location for 1 commuter tD
Parl&lt;orsburg ete. well mainteined hialori.,_. home with 3
bedrooms, 2 firaplaoe&amp;, 1+ acra, lanead back yard? Ollara
soma vary unique laaturesl ASKING $49,900
How aboula buotnoao bulldli\g In POMEROY? 2 otDry
unil, main atreat enlrance, large l!ont &amp;howmorn, large
room upalaira possible apertrnarit opace, loll of oloroge.
ASKING $15,000
UNION AVE.• Alol ol house lor 1 Wllie rnoneyl1 112·story
home :1-4 bedrooma, carJ)911wood flooring, fireplaCe . largo
lront porch, ASKING $11,m
IF YOUR TIRED OF PAYrNo RENT COllE IN AND
lEE OUR HOME UITINO BOARD WE HAVE ALL
SHAPES, SIZES l PRICEI-IIOIIETHINCIIIIOUNO
TO 8UITE YOUII NEED81 .
WE NEEO USTINOIII
HENRY E. Ct.EL.ANO.......................................... II2..111
KATHY CLELANO ..........:.............................-. lt2-81t1
TRACY BRINAGER ..........;...............................NII-2431
OFFtcE ...............................................................H2·22H ·
.
·- · · · -~·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vlnyi .Sidlng
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

EAGLES
CLUB

FREE ESTIMATES

OWNER:

JeH Wkkersltarn

3-11-93

(No Sunday Calls)
2112192Jtfn

MICROWAVE OVEN
•••VCR lENlR
All UIES
Ill Or WI
ck~~

'"11'

KEN'S AP lANCE
SEIVICI
992·5335 or
915-2561 .

...... · - . . . , Offld

217 LS.C•HI.
POIIIIOY, ONtO

317 .. 2llllllt.

M11hlleport, Olllo
Sar.nlaJ I OtOG-6100
CloMCI I•IHI•y , ·
,92·3577

HOlE ll'rEa-

TIWI.SIIITEB,

LANDCLEARING,

DIIVEWAYIINITAII EO
LlllliiiC:E TRUCIQNG
FilE£ DnHATE!I

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and •
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Accidenr •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky ~. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent.
lox 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1120193111n

:J.II.I31 mo.

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound students.
' regardless of income
' regardless of grades
' plus $20k guaranteed loa n
•regardless of cred~
To collect your scholarship money
c·an 614·985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10..7 or S8t10,.4
Vlu &amp; Mator Card
ltl2m

. "'-"-

Announccmerlls

C-1011 I 111111111011

c...................
_~a-

hrl""'lco

coa .,..,.. at "2-sm
20o Yn. bp. lowloa

~=~c:=:::'':::::":''J~

3 A

nnouncements

- - I D For QuoNited ONO.Whol
No lnvoatmont.
Po 0n1v
For
You Soli. Adil
Fool
Sotltng ........ Anllolol
F1awoiw Tav... P-l.lfto or
llorchllndloo.
l1ongo F"""

Rot.U

Prlcoo

.... Yo t21.M.
CompoiMivo With . , . _
Sloroo. High OuttM=-·
You

Con . Add

-

To

N-000.00 To Your -

:.~.::=a:,.:~
~P.O. ho 10l, 0ott-,

992·7553
POIIIIOY, 01.

'

Jm/a/1ftiiQ

3-12·~1·1-

HOWEU'S
BOOIIEEPIMG
&amp; Til SERVICE

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG

129.95 +Tax

RWONAIU RATES
'2SHOUR

IIDL•frl. 10100-SzOO

12131112/tfn

BULlDOZER, BACKHOE
-lltlCKHOE WORK
AVM AIILE
SEPTIC IYITEIIB,

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6628

SMAU DODR WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
.. ,I UMESTONE
DEI.MRY SERVICE

BUY • SELL • TUIE

. ILL HARDWOOD
SHIOIUtd .
$40.00 a Load
Dtllvtrtd.
(614) 992-5449

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

CNAILIE'S

THE BOOK
BARN

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

1

614·992·7643

Meigs Alumni
Association Is
· looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates fc)r April
mailing for Alumni
Danca on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addresses to
Meigs Alumni
ASS9Ciatlon, P. 0 .
Box 25, Middleport,
• Ohlo45760

992-3470

4 Wll"l Ali1o1111nt
Price• StnrffiiJ at

Life • Medi.care • Cancer · ·Fire • Health •

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
i
Special Early Bird
$100PilYOH
Thi• ad gOOd for 1
' FREE card.
LiC. No. 0051-32

Sto~t&amp;C=re
fill EST
ES

•

3131131fn

Church, Home, Truck, Boa~; Auto
and Office Seating

EVERY THURSDAY

;

742-2328

:'Helping You To Recover Your lnl'l!stment"

BINGO

.

20 Years Exp.

e

12·5-tln

· BISSELL &amp; lURlE
CONnRUCTIOH

BUIL·DERS
2 _, ,..,,...........,

PH. 614-992·5591

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

SIZED LIMESTONE
. 992·2259

45720

Snodgrass Upholstery

LICENSED ond ~

FrM Eatlrn.tH

TRO

·~

BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LANO CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
ltASEMENTS &amp;
• HOMESITES
HAUUNG: Urnestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

'1·100·137·1460

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEAIH

3/8/tfn

R&amp;C EICAVAnll&amp;

949·2391or

Chester, Oh.

ROOFING

WE ·DO

985-3406

3-4-93- 1 mo.

3-4-93-1

36970 Bal Rua Road
Pomeroy, Oltia

~

36358 SR 7

JOE H. SAYRE
SIDE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

WICK'S HAULING
,SERVICE

·

CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COIL
Reaso•••le

011

3/24/93/1-

Galllpolla

949-216'8

985·4473
667·6179

Real Estate General

NOW OFFERING ••••;.
Ctll AIID LUBE SEIVICE
TIRE REPAIR AIID ROTAnN&amp;

MnltlrCard

$55,000

LOOKING FOR A COMMERCIAL LOT? - Juol Off the
main street. You really need to eheck this one out.
Located on 3rd SlrMl, Midcl~rt.
$10,000.

aervicM to determine anCI

•il••

PH. 614·985..3949

614·446·0736

1419 State RL 7

FREE ESTIMATES

IMAGE~

.

· Twenty-seven Meigs County
youth ~ecently attended the High
School Teen Institute sponsored by
Health Recovery Services. The
program was held March 12
through 14 at Cllilier's Cave 4-H
camp in Jackson, Ohio and served
approximately 70 students from six
Southeastern Ohio counties.

NEW-REPAIR

SUMMER
2

Thru Ch11ter o• Rt. 241

Auto-Rentals
SprinrTfme
Special

p-RODGERI E-1
W•AIIo Have
7&amp;12

OFFICE 992·2886

71- AulOI for Sale
72- Truckl fo r Sale .
41- Ho.... for Reat
42- Mobile Home. for Rent 73-- Va111 &amp; 4 WD'•
74- Motorcycle.
43- Faf'lltl for Real
Boall A Molon for
44-- ApartJMat for Rent
Auto Poria &amp; Acc1-rl011
4$- Fondlhod Roo,..
Auto Repai'r ·~
46--- Space for ReBl
~plaJ! Equip.....
47- W'a~r~ted lO Rent
48- Equipmeal for Reat

51- H........ ld Goodo
52- Sportlq GOod.
53-Aadq....
54--Mioe. Mer&lt;bandioe
55- 8wldi111 SuppUe.

ROOFING

312511 mo.

I\I \ I \I &gt;

\II 1\1 II \\lll"l

47269 St. Rt. 241 • I Y. Mile OH It, 7

HowCI'd L Writesel

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
·TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698

I \1\\1 '-l 1'1'1 II"
,\II\ 1.'- I&lt;H 1,
3~

nA~ SVP.ERIOR FUELS.AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Diesel Supreme... Try it, there is a
d ifference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel In winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
.MARCH 1STHthru MAY 31ST
Special farm Ierma with payment4 time~ a year
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CI-IARGIO.
Larry E. Miller
1-80().598-5654 .
614 446-1167

GlngerbrfiCid "ouse

THURSDAY NITE IS

.

GOOD SERVICE IS
OUR BOIL

ATtENTION

Quallg
• .... o.

'.

FOR SALE
Call 614-992· ·
6637
CHallire,ON.

31111 mo.

•J

•

SHRUB
TRIM and
REMOVAL
, •LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

.C. YOUNG
Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY

St. lt. 7

.J

CARPENTER SERVICE

Quarterly and
Year-end R:;ona
REASONA LE
RATES

SIZED WIESTONE

992·3131
..,..,,mo.

YOUNG'S

992-6215

POIIIII'OJ, Ohio

BILl SLACK
992-2269
•
USED RAILROAD TIES

, . _ Choal, 1117 lllltnll; Pl.
Dptn All.....
......
, ........
......

rwdlcJJI ....., att.r IIIIi'
... Jd lM8 at . . . . . . . ...

- doiJr.- T-.tlau
-~-~"!'.........
1:10 I'll.
Cloood
J

••.

"

�Page 14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomarov-Middlepart, Ohio

, 1993

WedneSday, March 31, 1993

Sentlnti-Page-15

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright .

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

I RID OJ:
ACIIOU

PHILLIP
ALDER

r-·-··

I w11 old pqpl , 1111 Lob &amp;
lrlllany SpaNo! "' gaod - .
- · wllh - . toad pooloo-

I

NORTH

+7

• :;r"'"•

tQI09&amp;3
+K7eU

w-• Ftlmod
Wonda1MLI1. Ul •
44

lcol: Anldo lroclol Slartlng Sllv•. tMarll Around lt. 1~318a

Apanment
· for Rent

ladr~

+Q 101

.KJ10876~

,._,

• 75

1-::===::::=====T-=======:::::~ Slo,._
~.Rot. Fumlol!od,OiM
-.
SZIUio.

vicinity othoch a....., Rood 111 11

31

Help Wanted

Homes for Sale

Dopoilt Rlqullld. SM-ZIIl

Yard Sale

alblo

A

lobplllo&lt;

a..on School ...........

GaIll poII s
. I 1ty
&amp; VIc

In

Ro-.

-·-. P.ll.
- · e-46-4313A._4

-ltY.

-:-:-::-==="~== Our . _f'uii.T1011
In
.,, 0111ao. -ion
-orlal
All Yonl - • I I • lo Pold In And c..n.tulw 81dllo Roq,.rod.,
Advanco. I)EADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Sond - • ..., I, 1113

now - . ; wn&gt;Ughllron atorm Porttyo Fumlohld, - y
-.,
ooroao. corport, "-'-" --u~· -·--·~
ll~lldln\'1; cori\or lolln ...,._• ...., ·-· ·~~.
llldd
, e 992·3145, 114- ·z Rooma I Both, No Kkchon,
112-3
.
IZODIIIo. All UIJIIdoo lncludocl,
Dlpoo1l Reoulrod, OM-441-ms,
llouu, 1 vz ocr•. 3-4 bod· .814 411 ·~
roomo 1 both, 2 cor oorogo, IX·
oollonl locollon, $59,50!J", 614- 2btlnn. opts., total oloclrlc, .,.
Mt-3021.
plloncu I U - , II""*Y
"""" locllll• oto. to .........
Privata, 4 bedroom bome, 2 In town. ~&amp;on. ••Uabll
..,., 15 yro old, 1.1100 kltchon, II: VlltoaO ~Gillii Allll. Ml .,
woodaurner in buemant, •bove caiiiM-11247'11 EOH.
g10und pool, oaiiiiHe,.I mlln
·
'
·
out Sand Hill; 304-8115-J024.
2br Apo~monl, Roidu For ()o.
1 ero;f
C
~!'8 ValLey Area, O.k Drive, cup~~ncy.
n
"
tty,
Brlck 3 hdroomo 1 112 Botho, IZOGIIIO.I14--M.
Corport, AC, Gao Hoot, Full BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
a-mon~ Roeonlly Romodolad BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON

tho cloy bololl tho od II to Nil.
·- , "'""
s...doy odlllon • 2:0G p.m. 1'-o:
!7.'!,JaiiiFIIHn~J:!l'••
Frldn. ~ odftlon • 2:00
IIH, OH -~
' " -·
p.m. htu,.y.
Women: IIUe men rnoMJI
F- .._... Job -~Uon
Th~ At Clq Twnl cuae,
...,...
,...__.Loll,
~vorythlngl
nonlndHionlll
• (a«JW), 1._.
3 Fomlllti, Tllulldoy Frldoy,
April 1-'. 2nd. 1 Mt't ?: c.n..,..
vlllo On lrood ll Noor v- 0... llarehly 1noomo111 ·
llothodloiChuNh.
--hAI-"""'::,~.·!\~E-~o~.
•- "
gf.A
";VII•,
8oxl1,
Hillsboro,
ThrouahoYl Price: 1141800, 814a
Pt. Pleasant
411 •
44H411.
&amp; VIcinity
Business
14
32 Mobile Homes
~-·-Solo.
Training
for Sale
A,.nt\2,13. . . . :lah Sl, 10:!10

:=-:-

Rig--·
-Ill

:::::::-:-:::-::::::::-;:::::-:::::::-:::

ESTA!,!!1 . 131

.....

..old born
" - - I:ON:OO, Ftl &amp; !lot. 11om
~~~~- &amp; out of tho way?
lunlolt• -... w~ IJIOII WMI rwnova tor 11lvap. l'ttf..
oarda. Ct I a., ....,ry, fum~ 2111014.
o- ond Bobcat watll. by tho
..... - · olrlcond. - hOur, ..... 814-143-5123
Pomeroy,
or 111 111 12111.
Middleport
E.IR TREE SERVICE. TOIIIIing,
Trimming, Ttoo Ramovol, llidgo
&amp; VIcinity
Trimming. FrM Eetlmat..l 6'fOI.
All VOid Soioo II.,. lo Pold In -NSTAior 4p.m.
Ad..,.,.. Doo41no: 1:00pm tho Or · , _ Partabl. S.wmlll, don't
cloy bor- tho od lo to Nn, houl ,..... to tho mUI IIIII
'$uildoy odkion- 1:OOpm Frldoy,
Clll304-175-1l5'1.
llondoJ odHion 1G:OOo.m.

.•. .

vacancy for
or
8ellll

bedlalt
lnvllld,
- b l o ...... 614-1,4..2278. .
lliM Paula'l O.y Cl,. c.nter 1
llodl w.. Of HIIC On Jocuon
Plloo M.f I A.ll. -5:30 P.II. II
Duol1ly And Explllonco to Tho
11 Conoem For Your Chlkl'a
COrw. Col U. For A VIol. Infant
Haw

Hugo aoroao/YIId •II-

Ap!tl 1,

z. f; A[ Mf, '110 mile from At. 7j

-r

llllor, .... - - · .... fur.
ntture, collectlb&amp;ea. mudl ft~G!W·

-1 112m!.
P'IIOO
-·
Wod.
&amp; Tllur.
Hjllll
R101.
Womon'o

-P·

pMient

tD acr• of ground, e:r.,..,.t

condlllon, prego, oulbulldlna,
control air. Approxlmotlly "'2
KrN In lawn and aarden, rttt
wood~cfty
w.ter,
NUCNIIbly pnaH, 114-187-3018.

I•

118G mobllo homo, 2 bodrooma,
304-875-

lrool614-361'-7041.
1184 Nuhua mobl~ hom. t•x70

dopooi1, '10 - · 114o1417-3083.

1 1J2 Bath, Gaa Held, Many Ex~

whh 7x24 1Xp8ndo, 3 bedrooms

all oloc., CA, fully oqulpj;d
ldlchon, undorplnnlng, Z docka,

cond, InUit be
movea. 304-875-2568.
'

U1rtl 1 IXC

11188 Skyllno Holly Rldgo 14x70,

all ettc, 2 beelroome, AJC,
covered porch, kitchen W.nd,

Looking Fot A Deal? Conaldtr A

Rlct! PooiiOIIAucdon ~. ~~ houHcloanlng, Pr..OWnod lloblla Home, llrgo
fuM t&amp;rne
ocrr' ,, ~~· ,,.., $5 tv., S.toctlon1,_' - - llonay Down,
F111 Sol·"'' And Dollvol)'. 1-1100•uata. 1 lliii'Yic&amp; Ua 1.
581-6710.
•
...,Ohio • Ylrglnlo, W111 Do -loonlno ~··· Lib new 1988 Mx75 mo*
TIWYII..:.:.;;,;;~-""':"~~--I ·~.cl;."'"
Roloronca, eM- home, 3bdrm. 2 blth, 1 112 acre,
COli1 Dlllblo.
1
Racine/ Baanan aru; 12x05
9 Wanted to Buy

•ucl....,,

I

SchuHz, 2bdnn., goad cond., on
rented lot, Raclntl Bashan ara,

F111anc1al
Business
OpponunHy

21 .

Old tumkwo, IP•, chino,

ar; ...-1 · 'da1 toot..
1- llortln,
lumllln
~~~. Oo~
114-

nMIII,

112·~.

Wlntod To •y: J'"* Aut•
Wkh Or Wkhoul llaloro. Coli
I..IITy llvoly.IM 311 1103.
Top PrieN Pold: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Rlnao, Sl- Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Cain Shop,

f14-14WZII.
IIUII uerlllco, 1993 14xl0 Rad·

run with 5 y..r warranty, In~
oluct. dell.,.ry, ..... atlp8

INOTlCEI
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Land JHanw O.vaiOpment, El...-mondo that you do bull- . . Hama C.ntar Wlll Show You
, . . with pooplo you k.- and Howl Your New Slngla Or
NOT 10 aond monav through tho DoubltJ. Wall, Septic, Found•·
mail uri.ll you hava lnnMfgatllll tfon &amp; urtvway, Atlln Ona L'*1
lhl olloflng.
Packaqa Low RatH, Open Latt
With lighlod Homos. 1-614-mlocol -ng Routo: $1,200 A 1220.

""'"""'!. lluat Soli. 1 -

Wool&lt;
U3-Vond.

U Acrn, Co. Rd. 28, Apple
Grovel Dorcas, Racine, Ohio.
Slplk tlnk, city wat•, $6000,
SM-te7· 31183.

Real Estate

.... Q.olllpolo.
buy: uood mobiio

2 Lots. 96'x177' Each on Dttnlt

Drive, Ott Roura 35, City Sehool
Dt.trlct. 15,800 For Both lot•,

614-448-01111.

Employment Serv1ces

11 Help Wanted
•AVOIW All AREAII- raur
11- with .._ Yau'H tho
oompony.1.----.
1 LodiM Who Would Uu To
SeN-Avon Cllll1'1 441 3358.

niNe c-1or To

Aloohol

Counllllng, Ed.-lon.
Pr-otiono, Etc. In An Out
Podont
In Gal-

Soiii'Z, .._...
... Coumy. Act.lar-. tt.grw

Profwrod, 11!.....- Dooliod.
Sond Rooumo By Aprtl I, 1113
To: Foe!!.. 1770 Jocuon Plkl,
. 1-1."" 4M14,111FIH, EOE.
AVON I All Allll I Shl~oy
SpooiO, 304-t15-1421.

looutlfullloow

Hood llvoln oomponlon old lor •
lad¥. mult haw ,..... II I'M-

446-1171,

~411

001"1

or

~75-

1341.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

45 wooded acrH, county wat•r.
In Gallla County, 304o87S.5104.
All reBI estale adVertising In
this newspaper I~ subject to

!he Federal Fair Housing Act
o11968 which makes 1 llegal
to ae!Vertlse •any preference,
llmMallon or dlscrtmlnanon
based on race, co lor, religion,
sex familial slatus or naUonal
origin, or any lnlenUon to
make any SUCh preterence,
limMalion or dlscrlmlnaUon.•

Tl'lls newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adver1lsements lor real estate
which Is fl violation otlhe
law. Our reader$ are hereby
lnfonned lhal all ctwenlngs
adver11sed In this newspaper
are-available on an equal
. oppo~unlly basis.

114-MHIOI, 614-311-Zl'IO.

3 Y•r Old Pur. Ired .a-u.

c-o ·Willi COMo,
a.aoo ,-.All. OM ue 1011.
3/1 Chi, 1111 Angw lull, bloak,
I _Y1M old IPPI'OL

=

- .. .-oso;.-·
3540. .
Atp~n~Dooaom........, 1112.

Holot.

lllloplno , _ . . wHh -"1iig.
Aloo 111111•
- ·p.m.,
AH hooll-upo.
Call
... ., 2:00
J04.7T.J..
For Solo Or T10do Drou Sotll1111, Maoon wv.
lllo Syotom WHh 10 Fl. Dloh &amp;
46 Space for Rent · - . -•., •• 413101. .
For Soil- lodiM wlntor coot, lUll
Troller Spoco AI Eowg11111 For length, groy wlplald ocorl1 hoo
Rlll11 $100/Mo. Dovllmo: 114- - . dl)' cleanoct, 130, 114·992·
441..111, E-.ingo, d14-448-7167: 2421.
For 811f- Size m1dlum lldln
49
For Lease
~-=--.,...----.- Wlnt•r coat, denim w1 l••tl•r
For Nlll or - · - Y trim, llltl· NW, wu SSIS, now
f40h~ld $15G; oloo mloc.lldln
......
- ylid --~~
•.._ lociallon
hom e5pmlot ngi call 814-SII2n·2155, tIn Rlploy, WV. ldoot
orliM-1494204 a ., 6pm.
I~ ••-• with ........,... pt~rtdng
For Solo: lWo Antiquo llmpe
II lrGnt -porldng.
· R-hom
icC&amp; $211; Crute- Ulltl ""':
Coli
omployM
North
IH 441 41171, Or 114-44
•
St. Mu.t bl . .n 10 appr~elat1.
123 Coult St, Rl;loy, WV. 304Fow truck llrol, f40: .,_ llroo
312-&amp;188.
.
on - •1 S211: _ ..tc rnqtor,

Coull-

:::i.

314 horM1 135i IM-082...a282.

Merchandise
st

- I a Nutrtllon Producto
INturlng Amino Ackl ,Body
BuUdlnQ wotaht ond fat
bumor lormufoo. Avolloblo oxclualvoly 11 Rlto Aid Phormoey.

Household

The ...... ., to dlll:.

Goods

J.C. Ponny woddlng g....,, olzo

~£-rpot I Vlnylfl70nNiolo. llol- . 314, $100. 304-773-5432.
_._., Caf'PIIt. A
• I~
JM.C.
KenmON
Port1ble Waahlr,

•ued• jacket
Womana pink tur ca.t
brown

Enl-lnmont Contor'o $141 Or
$5.52 WMk:_BcaklhllvM Sttn-

080. 3114-1171-2048.

Arid Chon 1131 Dr ,,.,13

Llt~n~l

aa.ts; oocllnora

$1211".._~

Wook; CoiiM And End Wkh

Dooro $118

e• Tablo With 1
Cholro (All wood); Wlllloto,
Dl}'-. ~.11(111, Re-otor'o
1131; - .: -y-latwdoy
~;

ctrt
Bottom
SutJ:.DI..-Ialon.
Clyde Bowen, Jr. 304-571-2336.

GOOD

wanted
Wlltod To Buy: - t y
Reiocotod Couple Soab Hoow
With 2 Cor Clorooo And
W-hop IPOCO. O.IITpollo Or
Noarby fiG ·$130K Rl"'l" P.O.
Box M1, Oolllpolla, OH 411631.
Wantld To Lla11, Buy on

Donate U.. 01 14 Ac.... To t..
oil lluuloloadlll() Rlllo Club For

ASliootlng AII!OO. Coi1614-Z4S.
1195·Akorll P.ll.

Rentals
Houses for Rent
2 bMiroom ttom., !Jirv- yard
201 Thlnl SC, Hovel\ W

MaiW NordQ tid boola NAMO,
1111 I, 111. •xc cond, 304-'TT.I-

Reel"- $40.00 114-448-1422

. .....-

_ . . . ,. ""' Ap-

~'r.= Exl.
In
-I CoM
21t-I
011111.
A.ll. To

P.ll. 7 Doyw.

7504. . .

3 B1drDomeL Spill L..vel, San·
doro Driv!1 •01fohod FR, 2 112

NOW
Hall Pump,
Molnlononco F-1 lfi,IOG Into 11¥1 In woh _ . , lody S -no Apjltio-, -e.2111.

NM honii_IL d1p1ndabM IHy

=. ,~-~~t'zf~
==..: ----

w.ek7W

No ~-1 N00 To -

FHA
1
:MHoon.

Pl'aa

'•

OWii
...11103·
Ext.213.

Bolho,

I Homo, loth, Ulllky
-il1 Cor Allochod Garage, 2
Cor

IIOIIochod

Cle~~g~,

WIW

ClrDIUna CIA. Qae Fumace,
Cllriton Spoco. CioN To Govln
Ptllll, Rlvw Yoltoy High SchoOl,
JM,IOCI.IM-111'-.,.14.
3 bedroom trick, I mlnutn
"""' Pl. Ptl (Ill. Rl 2 North).

Nt,IOD. lhown by appointment,

304-118-1301

ly owner, Mx70 w/2 blth1, gar·
don tub, lollnd kllehon, oun-

room, bock •-k. contal o1r
lruk oollor, 2 cor garage, w'i2
unllnlohad roorno upotaiiO, 12

frul t,_ on 3 112 aCNe. Very

1u1o1 loolllon, Racoon,
Ohio. 304-812·2147.
p!tco,

UH-HUH.

-.

tonk, ....t _, ltltio, olllopo olx.

.•..

5102.

'-M112.

'

•

• •

...n At: 1014
Rodnoy Plkl Rood, 1 -

·~1112-21U

..... lpm.

c-

'
Shor-hl

rotc•-

21 Unc.Mtr
27 FOIIt p8r1

R~od

Enatllh Bull !Jog,
·
..... 100 lpoy
Av-""'\-1Ut.

Nn Comm•rcla! Tanning Bid,
Fac• TanMra, 28 Bulb, li4-441- - - pot. t.lllod p1go,
$1CIIIooch, IM-lU·ZOIIO.
4033.

Now lrragulor )aano, $5 oll-k, '5T
Paggy, 132 ButtornU1,
Pom•or, Ohlo.

81

I•

•

...

·- RIFF

recur.

good

""* .....

II I il l

·

Folrtono 2 Door, Trophy Wlnnar Gilt.

'..~~========:::;-'
ABTRO-OaAPH

U.IOD.I14 4414412.

Musical
Instruments ·

·lien romance? Tho Altro-Grapl) Matchrnlker
can help yoU understand wllaiiO do 10 make
the relalionship work. Mail $2 plus a long , ~
sell-addressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker. P.O. Bo• 91428, Cleveland.

~ ••• I:OO PM.

:'..'":r
,::;:-,:.,;·~
oldlng "' trollor illdrtlnl- 1

Gttand ~ooo ;.,..., ~
:L,·~ oond, ~ 82 PILIIIblng &amp;
8011 tollofi:OO PM.
-

Heetlng

1117 Ponlllo lolw..-., exC
eond,

!!..II!G.... 080.

fiZiwo-n.

-=

304-671-

Ellctrlcal &amp;
RefrigeratiOn

or ooeu uulll
"tru-:r or '- " GOO. - · ",500, ,_,... A - ._,...,
•~-.tolon.
wm 121
- n Po\J1 1 lpiii!IJ~

R_..,....

=::;

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

UBAA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) An optimistic aniIUde is ~tialloday in both your business

and linaooal aHairs. Don't ontyo lhink "win ,"
dare to think "big" also. They complement

one anotner.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-How. ZZ) Your probabili·
BERNICE
TAURUS (April zo.May ZO) A way 1o gel to . lies lor success are exceptionally good
BEDEOSOL !he llld ol the tunnel might present itsell : today, because you have 1t1e abil~ 10 p&amp;r·
today in a s~uation you've had difficuHy in · ceiYe oppot1uMits that others might over·
malizing. '-'!dv Lud&lt; could play a big role in . 1ootc or ignore. ,
ltlisendeavor.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. ~3-0.c. 211 Give
GEMINI (Mity 21.June 20) What you can't .,.,....,. lo your cornpasolonate instlnelt
accomplish on your own today could be today, and put the coheems ollo)'ed ones :
~ lllrough llle assistance ollliendly and 1riends above your own. lronicaHy, you'll
emiasaries. It will be up to you to tap the will- bo the one who is okaly to gain the moot in :
. ill() ~rs.
lho long run.
:
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Your eaming CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jin. 18) You are ,
poiOIIIial is quite hqlallhilline because of what you think you are today . II you feel
yotJ' ability 1o "'""'"'" that wllicl1 is already )'Oil'nt going to be lucky, you p.-ty will
loprtll,1113
, successiUI. Utilze !his gilt In aa mony ways be. Put ij to 1t1e lest with ~ that you
•
·
. .tailed II previoosly.
88 ptlllible.
· ~our desire to elevate your status in life LEO (July 23-I.Ug. ZZJ SUCC08alul•esuns AOUAAIUII (Jan. »Ftb. 11) Try to spend
~-IJI911 9'0W lt/'0111101' and stmuger with Noh are indicat8d regarding cou 881 or ooncepls limo today wllll people who are opflmlolic?
--month in tho year ohead. These feelings you~ today. Mai&lt;e your_,_,. · and lnteretted in boHorino their lolln Ina.
OOUid ir'liOI you to aim higlor than you ever lations; don'lllt others inttrcitle on your Sornelhil(l beno6clal OOUid ntiUH from ' have in lho post.
behan.
·
auoeiationl.
ARIES (!Ierch 21·Aprl111) A fortunate VIRGO (Aug. 23-lopt. ZZ) Be logical and PISCES (Feb. zo.March 20) Soma favor·
. clovelopmont could happen lor you today practical in your material affairio today, but able chingol could lllrt o1inlng today in alt., ihrouglllho machinations of a dole. ptriOO· don~ ignore or troat your lniUIIIvt petcepilona uallons that alfect yoyr wort&lt; or career. In
•8 1 -. nmay be aame111ing you'Wwarrtlo idlhnlii1Dy. YourhUnclloocouklbellbriglt Nch CIM, lho ~are apt to be inHI•alloro
Trying to polch up. a bro- .. your lhotqlll.
.
· attd by OlhoiO.
•
CHi 44101 ·3428.

- F i l l ar, 1ow mlllagl, 304-

with-..

•
•

31 .... ""
42 Eur. lent·
451-

",..,

J'

41 A"t'l.'*l
47 1,01 '
llomln
41 Lullrlcele

. ...... _
Gedd11
50 Alto

52 Co111p alw
53 ...........

=bull'•

55 purctr...

.v

y

Ill

I J

MC

F Ill

XCI

TZCTAZ
MLYV

T Y0 M

UFOZPMCO,

MC

IZ

YOZ . •

ICMFDYMZ
IZMMZO

M L F Y W

MLZ.I

CH

CAFDZO

MLZ.I
IIIMCYZ.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I - · 1 one of thoM kkls who saw a lot of
movleo. I've ntMir - . an o - movie nul." - Wllhlm Defoe.

....

WOlD I

I
I I I' I r
s L AT A

I

HM Y P L

I

mate, "Intelligence reigns suprams in my family!" The
L.__,_.___.
_ _..___.__.. '1
classmate stares back at him
.--------~,and says coldly, "You must
G R u D D E · lhav~ been born during a ...

5

I' 1
. 11

I1I
7

18

I I

-.!o..ompl~te

lho chuckle quoted
by f 1lltng 1n the mtss.ng words
L-...L-L.....L-.L.....L--1 you develop fr om step No. 3 below.
•

I

I

I

I

I

•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
J- &gt;•
Amount • Dregs - Rhyme • Unborn • MY HUSBAND
I had attended an exercise clasS and heard one
woman tell another, "The only way I'm going to lose
excess weight is to divorce MY HUSBAND!"

·~,W-:':::E~DN-:':::E~SD~A~Y_ _ ; ; .&lt;rl_,-,.,rv-o.,..;_a
'"'"_""''S:;.._
'·,.•: F wonn
,- . TX.;;;;;.__~M~A"""""RC~H-3--.1I

,.,.

Home
Improvements ,
IAIEIIEHT
WATIUIPROOI'ING .

condftlon. new tlf'llil:, $100. IM- Uncondlllonat ........
too. IMII ro-.. IUrillohod.
441-7041.
'
Coi~OriM-DJ.
1m IIUIIIIII(), v~ 302, now 04~~· .. - - l i n g....
..
1171.
.\
- · han,
- 114-1112--240'1.
otortod ....
11100,
CUrt.. HomllmptoV.nentL NO
1Job Too lla Or ImaM, v..,. lbDIIIonco bn Oldor loddklonl, Founclollono
1180 Codliloc 2 Door, Robulli lfomoo.
Rooflllll, KHchono ~Ho. _:
llalor, $1.200; 1111 Fold IUr'M.
"free hllnw.tn. 1'14-31).

conftlct

33 , . . . . . . .
37 011181rt

•••alil•

A. We may not like REOCCUR, but
the dictionaries have begun to accept
the verb. The simpler RECUR, mean·
ing "to go back" or "to happen again,"
coven the territory well and has been
available to Englisti speakers for five
centuries. Even If pj!Ople agree to stop
using REOCCUR, though, you can
expect this problem eventually to

~

1m Chovlllo, good oonc1 2
-lyo, .••.-.soo. 304-175-2457.
top, W/Conotll il.a~
Ylr)l~

HA.~A

•

Serv1ces

71 Autos for Sale

1171 Pl~h Fury,

J OON'T
THEIW.05.

•

20 llxllt221lnter1IoM
24Attackw
25Serlel0111e-

Pass

Q. There is no such word as RE·
OCCUR. Should we .nol tell speaken
that the acceptable word is RECUR?

,,

. . . -:Jig...
- -.. . -.-r

blk't,!!\'; ,.• ...,..

...

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINmROP

m.

-------1

s•

Jel'frey McQuain
The Australian LARRIKIN indicates any young ruffian or thug. Gang
up on those who fail to pronounce this
slang noun LARRIKIN "LAR·ih·kin ."

1187 - d -

...._

21~=•

Eaat

The name of today's computer
package, Borel, is an acronym .for
Bridge Omnibus Random Experimental Laboratory. Borel Is also the name
of a co-author of the cjassic book
'Tbeorie Mathematique du Bridge.•
Available for the PC. the Borel
package doesn't play bridge. It shuffles and deals the cards before checkIng whether the generated deal satis·
lies your preset p~~rameten. If it does,
the deal Is saved. If not, the computer
reshuffles and redeals.
Borel progriD!I contain arithmetic
logic statements. They are well ex·
plained in the eX&lt;ellent manual that
accompanies the software. It is avail·
able fqr $200 from the auth&lt;~r, Jllhn
Lowenthal, at 201 West 70th Street,
Apt. 32E2, New York, NY 10023.
Suppose you h&lt;!ld the South
·today's diagram. East opens
hearts. Should you bid three no-trump
or, as a respected writer claimed,
pass? Thinking tbree no-trump . was ,
right, I wrote two Borel programs.
Fint, I made East open with a disci·
plined pre-empt. Then I gave East an
average New York three-beart open·
ing: 13 cards and a map of Mecca.
After analyzlna tbe deals, I found
that three no-trump wu the percent·
age actiOti. Totlay's generated
containl a simple point. Against
no-trump, West leads the heart lour.
How do you play?
1'ltWe II a tUilllriJ NIICtlorl to play
low from ·the dummy at trick one. But
that risks East's wimlinl with the
and ewttcl)lng to a spade. You
,
rise with duaimy's heart aee and
mediately attaclt diamonds. You IIJAr·
an tee Dine trl~ one ap~~de, one heart,
four diamonds and three clubs.
C&gt;~....,,..•,=•

Elch, C.n h

::;Now
= . -=w='..,'=:.,.
::--:lld=d:-lo-,"'"'---n.
SWAIN
&amp; Rotond
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 1Z uMCI onc•t blanket I brldfl. Boklwln
Koybotlrdll Manln I Olivo Ill., Clolllpollo. - &amp; UMd f350. 304-6 S.l21M.
Guko10 And lluch - . IUmll ..... hootlll, Wootom &amp;
304-812·3712.
Olive grun gae wall 001•n. ISO;
w""' 11oo1o. 114.446-3111.
dehurrilditllr, $10; humidifier, lluolo, Jocuon, OH 1
3 ledroom Haul• Whh Clareae;
,lilt.
$10; fM-1112-8146.
Nowty Doc011tod, Clolll- ISoy 52 Sporting Goods
SchoOl DlatriciL uao Pluo
OM ba• r.dl~ boob, $5
-. ConllliDn
Dopollt, f14-448-IIZ1,
Compound Block ... r.z, ~UIN; one white 2 pc. tonat, Iundy
Clltl,._1121.
.'
IIGIIt.
llovon
Euton
Qamo
Clollor
$11; IM-992·3430.
5 1100ma full . baMrnent, 311
Qlo
..
l40,
114-371-211Z7
SoYIIIIh St, Pl. PH. 1271. por mo Altar I.
Point toll GIW\ 111to ,.., mony thin
pluo clop. 1 rot. 304-67H1711.
...,... $100, .....7-Tnt ...., t100, 114-lli
......
IIIIIDrllogln.
-3pm.
Nlco In Pomeroy, 2 bothl 53
Antiques
nlco lot, wutw/ dryor, control ::----_;_ _ __
I
oi'LUSOimo., pluo " - " &amp; luy or HH. lllvortno Antlq-, Pinch pitl!od d,_IM, llnod,
,....,111~ 1 no pele In houN, 1tf4 li. M.an III'Mt, on At. 124
rt rr'l ~-;"JfitJ ! It &lt;...,
bolgo looro,
· - -fU. :104'""
cfudto.!l,.•""m
114-lllol244.
- o y. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 120xl4
1171-1ooo.
(\ 1 \/(''l!ock
a.m. to 1:00 p.m., lundly 1:00
lo 1:00 p.m. 11&lt;HI2-2128.
Powor
whlalo 12 voH, 4 whHior,
42 Mobile Homes
~ old, f71, glOat cond, 7111
for Rent
54 Ml~eellaneous
'
61 F1nn Equipment
Prom Dr- Novy With Whho
Mercl!andlse
111-.lllo: 3 Bod-, Po~ly
SOlin
Malchl'!(l Nolr - · Slu
Fwnlohod,
IZOOIIIo
Pluo I4K Sollllhill And INomond 1,
•eo, Wow. onoe, 104ol71-1m.
UIIIHioo.I14-Z5f-ISlll.
w~ b: 5. Prico: ....
Prom drMI, "-"1 wlwhltl ... In
Nlco 2 llodroom T101'4!!o Lo"" Anytlmo~:.=~15 Aftor I, &amp; motehlng hair plo.-, olu I,
Yonl H Porch St-. ,..._
IlliG. 304-8TS-1170.
114-448-11173.
.
1Kl41
IJonol IIOin . .
•,rwufuc11• and other ecce.
1Wo
bedroom
with oorloo, IZOO.I04-87U411.
w-ldrlo!,~,_4 mlllll hom
·-·
..........
ptuo ZO" alrl'o
dopollli,.,.,_ no pile. blko,'liD; Z0"
Jio, ~n·
·Avolllblo lm,_IOIJ', 114-113- oollont aondhlon, 114-14
o

An-.

.. -

BORN LOSER

-- - """"'=

FE0£AAL LAW ENFORCEMENT. I ,Bedroom~, 2 B1tt., 2 Car
,.., Pooltono Awolllblo. No Gorago Stat• R.Ua 1110, &amp;14-367·

,ore7

•

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Trcmsportation

Eootor Bunnloo FOf lolol ts.OO

Maater Cl'llft mowtr, 31• cu1 ·12 Roglol- .

5321 an• 11:00.

•

Ground _. corn, raur uckl, 110 cond, -.f117 or liZ·
2881.
:!OM7N443 oftor 4:00 Pll.
...... County· 1121 lb. lollocco 11U llalill'd Sprinter ZZ'
- · l o r -. SO.porlb. 304- loodod With ElllrOO, E.C. C.U
114 ttl 1411, No An1-, Ptea11
111Wl'M.
LMvelhl•ag•.

pupo, • - block, ono -m.
Houll: llor&gt;Sot, t-5. 114-441- hp Brlage I Slrotton eng1no, ono
...... 1o1o of wrlMioo, 1140322, 3 mlioo oUt -YIIIo Rd. $5GO. llio now, 304-611-41102:
IMI-27tl:

PICKENS FURNITURE
NoWIIJiod
Hou- 1Umlo!11no. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Ad. Pt. PI-nt. WV,
col1304-lli-MIIO.
Sm.. old wooclan 141.oo,
Hondmoclo lllllow 1111 $15.00,

•

· 151, fw·
etove. ~.
bathroon~ .,.......• ...a .,...,

T,_

FrM O.llv1ry.

'

naee,

APPLIAIICES for more lnforml11on.
lowol)' Clonlo Organ, Good Fioh To.., 2413 Jocuon Avo.
.._ . sua. lopptiiiiOII 71 CondHion
Point P-nt, 304-lltl-2013,
1 $\DOD; H lnleratM
Vlno SI-,_Cilll14-441-73ii, 1· Call MlckUeton
lllh blnlo,
E.ttatn, 114-4* lUll Uno
800-419-34n.
arnall IRimale and euppllll.
2283.
Hot~nt 20 cu ft chllt frMzer, Man•• brown teathlr r.cllner Rag. blocll lalo lor otud, tiOO,
chair, $25, 814-Mt-2522.

wt40 ttAVt YOU
GoT AT Ttte
tto1P OF ttt~

•

1114 Wlnnobo(IC!, 30ft. Chloftoln
motor
&amp;21.000. wllh .......
~'J'i.1J11.

Wa..._., .,_., refTigeratora.,

11 • 304..&amp;7Pr11'i'1.
LAYNE 'I RIRNITURE
Comptoto homo IUmllhlnoo.

Sale

COMPU'l'SR DA"nNG

I

5-. ,

WMb. CaU 114 441 D23i.

t,,.,

USED

for

go;;;
.....
;;;;m-;,ond;d'iau&lt;;t!:;;ii1;d'ia~ihhop;p:jPIIp;j
IJw.~nti':;T:;oitl;=!;;•~:!131i"ilr.;o~tt~o;ce~o
GlOOming. All
olyioo. Pou~ Will Ply .40; A 79
lame Pel Food o....r. .Julie Pound. 11t 2M 8 tiT.

45" high, oil tormlco, f525·
oHieo wolll, 3 NCIIono 4'x5', ~

light plnll

75 Boats &amp; Motors

'

Pill.

acQuatable ......,
...... rolat.. and loeb, sm·
Slln counter,_ l'x25•dT an~

6622.

FRANK AND ERNEST

For Ale • tnldl: 1183 Honda
- . 12.000 mlloa on bllt,
11000, 114-,.2-3404,
•

_,w,...

36"x25"dSt',

f""" droa, now
clean, llze 1 $71. 304.a85:-337i

Real Estate

-

teoo. IM-251-1223.

c.r-

file or display Clblnet,

No Dopoell On R""·2-0wn;
Nothi,..lnr Prllbanad.

36

=-:;: :.-.r::i..r.:

$71.

w1ter. 1 acre ~ whh
approvld • ..,uc aptam Maf·

, pubtlc

~or,

.....,_,

PO.

.-ctlona 4'x4' 1 3 • • •rt.o.,
SSOOi .a.ctrla algn 31"x21"' with
3 lfz• ot ...
SiOai 114-112-

Buslnna or reeldtntlel 2 acrn
whh 254 ft Rt. 2 frontage bet·
WMn Aahlon &amp;. Apple Grove,

118'1 KaW.Nid 440 LTD, 31000
lloltory I.

111111,

Frooh II- .7, 1111. ColO&lt;:
Block And Whllol t70 114-311- 18' opon bow wHh 1211ip..
13111.
. Johnoon OUibotlrd, troller, convorllblo lop, - . f110G. 114IIZ.-_
•
......._.,.,.
And .Chi-Ana...
Pr1cod. -Slalo
WhHo· Nlt'lgorotor, $100; oloclrlc ~=:-Ohla IM- For 1111 or lrodo: 1180 ·GaiMHIIW
bold,
Mft.
1
llbotglooo,
t
.t
Man:uty
onytltM.
CIIIII
Noullll():
AnJIImo, fool conlrollod trolling ..- . . : ·
Anyw11t110. Chuck Wllllomo, · lroll.lr, lito )oelwto, $1200, IJ4WHITE' I METAL DETECTORS
l
l'Ncltlng, 114-24&amp;- '112·34G4.
Ron Alltoon1 • 1210 -ond =~
Avwluo, Oolllpolio, Ohio, 1M4411o4331.
Goo! Kldo For 4-11. A1oo Hon 76 Auto Pans&amp;
IIHklng Nonnloo, P - Coli:
Accessories
W......,_, Z.Srlc. · HMrth 111 Ill 'lltl, For Din c1' ne.
With TOol !lot, f14.&lt;14e.7712, 1014 Trolnlng $171111o. Or 2 1m Tovoto c.Uca ar 1or """"'
Second ~enUI, SIO.
Montlw For aoo. 1,._ 311 1111. ZOR oncilno, I lpoodil t100. 3tft4Youngt-.. lloln- •-twin
6'11-1SIIIhftor
ioUnGI}' lubo, good eond, MO. Plga lor 4-11 a FFio projOCIO,
ICI4-Il'l-4111.
wOonod,
•otrotod. Budaot T~~~~~mloolonto, Uood~ &amp;·
140. -h, En,., WY. 104-372- 10bulH, all lypt11, olortlna .....
owner 114-24~ ._...._
11711·
55
Building
l
Plga lor - · 1-'12 - . ald. 2283.
Supplies
PrieN
Dual
and
olngll
oxhoull,
O!'
J
I!vary. ~·
ploto. FHo DDdgo pick,., ¥,1,
8loctc, brick, _ . , DIDoo, win- Roglol- Wollltlr $711 ' ond 141, 114-lQ-3020 oilir
- · Hnlole, Ole. CloUdl Win- Roglot 1111 111.- lpm.
I-, Rio Orondo, OH Call 114- lllcl. Hoi 11gl1- Ton~~nu
Wllklr mora. AH - ..,_ ,.;
Pets
for
Sale
riding. 304-a'll-2001 onor I:OG
56

VI'RA FURNITURE AND loP- Good Condftlon, S7S, 614-258·
1838 ·
PUANCES
114-441H4ZI OR 114-448-31111
;;Ko";lc"'r"'an::-..-,...--c,:-:$2:::5-:.-:.,:-.-. .
lng

Motorcycles

3 Youno

1100

A-tor ront - - o r month.
· · 0.1111

-..

lull, 11441Ht17.

AWonuo,

Rooms
Slortll1ot
11t
1 IISIO.

74

LivestOCk

63 .

H ; So- llllw• lojdgo Plua
Or 4 lllloo Out 141 On Uncoln
PI Ito.

41

31 Homes for Sale

ti?'SimO.,.

YEAM.I CAN STILL
SEE THE LOOK ON
I-IER FACE!

11.-

45 · Fumlshecl

ond oklrtlng, f165mo. Call 814·
385-2434 oal&lt; lor Mlka.
·

-·-18
-

Wlntod to

Pomeror,

TMEIR PITCMER WAS
IN TOTAL SMOCK ..

11111 Ford ConY- VOn, Fully
loodod &amp; Escollont Condlllotor
Acluol . liN•, $12,000.

~

-

nice, 1

Pass

Mautll8 Sptrillh llr.

By Pbllllp Alder

1177 Ford F2IG MW ltr.81
S1ZOG, f14-Mt-211l
,

J oom ..nm~~~te,
1ble fWil 304-I'JI..
20U Of' 1171-4100.
Ono bedroom 1-monl, $228;
bod-., •300: UIIIIH tncluclod, no plio, 114'112-2=!18.
4

Pus

votciiiO

38 Olt..•rlnlt'

Deal the cards,
computer chip

1 TME BALL CAME R16HT
OVER THE PLATE ..

$101. Coiii--IISO. EOH.

Ono - - Spring

StoL':.::

... 4U Daa.

11

1t84 14x70 Clayton 3 Bedrooms

chlkiNn'o clol'-,
otorogo blda undorponnlll().
n-.
"" chOop
pol1od
- . , IToddlera 111 111 em. Pm- llloo now, 304-lis-2414.
moor lhl"'l"o
pricoo, 114- chaarm ~ Age &amp;14-446112-1271.
1110 Mlr.lon 14x70 Moblla
1224."
Homo Whh HMI P'""p 114-387·
-8----P-ub_l_lc-s=-a-:1-e_..._l • • Br
c.ro, com- 7044, Upgrodlld Appllancn, 2
DIICollwn
WI Do h All, ·~· 2 a.n..
,

S. AuCIJoil

opo~-

3NT

7 Hiwllllin

311ormed

PEANUTS

vt-

Menor
and
Rtw.r.lie
Ai*fi'MI'Itl In MkkhiDort. from

Nortlo

I Fllller
10EIIIIft.)
11 ~ncorel
17--11 Soullll 01

21 ......

ROOM~

"!1-31

til' Area. 114 388 1000.

,_

38 lui, In Stliln

West

Dl.lne 5 loc:orrecl
I NIIIMIOr
lrellnd

-·

+KJ42

Sotttlo

eves

hom .......... Walk 10 ...... '

1110 14x70 wllh approxhutely

llttlnlttited

30~~

Opening lead: • 4

,.

........ Colll14-441-2111. EOH.
Fumlohod 3 Roomo 1 a.dh,
VotY CINn, Wator Pold, In Por-

Gntolt1t11 living. 1 ond 2 bod-

7813.

THE

'leks an Plkl

homo, $2,500. 304-675-2722.

te,500. good eond,

WAStiiH6roH~

Skltnbertnt

FOLLOW YOU AROUND

-IISoulhlootom , $152.17 jlOr month tncludlno alx
tift
1:00. ·~
- - Rotroln
......
I ~· IUmkuro,
EffMI•nGJ
107
hoi.Cihold item~~ I much more. . _ . . _ ~. Bpdna V•llay montM trn lot rent, new 14x70, Fum!Mecl
Plua. Calli Todniii"M-441-43170 deUvered and •It up, llldrtlng Seoond Awnue, O.lll~all•,
--1,1,10.
ond otope, 1.fl00.837-1825.
. Sh110 hlh $1e5; UIIIHIM Poltf,
114 ~ 41 4411 After 7 P.ll.
~ ...., S.t, 1:00 • 5:00, I
1~5. 3 ........... 14X70 mobil•
mlloli Nol1h on Rl. z. Roln can. 18 Wanted to Do

.....

17117 YOU EVER
NOTICe tiOW GeORGE

- Mc1181toft

Next to Sun.

34 Wiilllll
heiltliphe!l

Vulnerable: Neither
Oealer: East

....

21
23
24
28

+A65
.Q83

4AQS

I
•--- I
2 Pn d ocim UpWII,. Aputment,
.a r ~
· moon., v nyl · UnfllinMiwd, No _P11t1, Depoett
TikiAI: whHo
oldln§' ltoml
block wlndOWI,
ohull-, . :-_,un-.
II•-~~'-~·~~~~~~~~~-:-~... .Aaollcotlono
OiiiDo
ntW w'.ndowa,
Domlnoo Plizl.
1pollo.
- - gun-. now rOollll(), 2 •llod1110m1 lir 1 8odnlom

Rutlllid, 114·1112·2131 ar 114-1'1122721.
·

15 Porformecl
II Solo
17 - olllirch
18--ilmb

32~=
lind

+9
SOU1'II .

..._,

- ..

1

1104.
lcol: Ap!tcoC Poodle, 1or1g hi~. 1·

181 -

. -··

,._,.,.

20-P-

EAST

1 bociiOOIII lpl, 2.011 SoY- Ill,
_ . , . - l o d • .,_.,..
suo -lor Lot.

Lost&amp; Found

·-Y·

•n-tl

• .\2

So- 01c1

ond

4-.,.,.

' AtiDIY lightly

13llltlki

robbll c1o9; ~T.MO.
To ~. IM-2Se-

7

1 Actor .. Gillon

12 llliiMntlllll

llloltw doa I Z DUt&gt;Dioo. -llot
good

AMINI' to Peosh11 , _ .

�Dally Sentinel

March 31 1993

Ohio

.,

YOU'LL NOTICE THE SAVINGS

SEE STORE FOR DETAILS ABOUT MANUFACTURERS

DOUBLE

·-.DURING OUR
BIRTHDAY SAL

GOUPO'NS

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4 LB. BAG

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28 29 30 31 1 2 3'
SALE GOOD THRU SATURDAY

11111

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1'110

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1111 -Ill 1111 1111 IPI IPI Ill

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FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

University of Rio Grande • Rio Grande-Community College

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Peak
1 Pinto
Beans

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A PLJBl.ICATIC)N (JF RIC) CRANDE

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Community College Expands Evening Course Schedule
·S!artlng In the fall of 1993, expand«! course oft'erlngs In the evenings Will be oft'erecl through Rio
Grande Community College to help serve the neede

THRU
4/3193
LIMIT 1 WITH .COUPON AND $10ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
--

FOOD LAND VALUABLE COUPON

1'•h

o! o',n

12 OZ. PKG.'

Kraft
American
Singles
RETAILER: _Mall to
Kraft,
CMS Dept.
.
"--"""'"0...
Dol Rio,

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1184o

LIMIT ONE COUPON
PER ONE ITEM PUACHAIED

In-Ad~
IIC3-311

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--- ·------COUPON GOOD THRU APRIL 3, 1993

aen1cell and financial ald.

•
Since the report's submission to Dr. Dorsey In
January 1992. registration houn have been exThe
action
being
taken
on
the
recommendation
a
special
committee
which
of~reglonsgrowingnon-tradltionalstudentpopu­
pand«! and more nlght counea placed on the schedule.
lation.
examined how t_h e institution could better serve a segment of the uudent body The emphasis on the non-traditional student waa
The act.lon Is being taken on the recommendation of
a special corwnlttee which examined how the lnsutu- that "will hcwe a significant impact" in the coming years. according to the one of several major lnlttatlves announced by Dr.
Dorsey when he assumed the presidency of the
tlpn co1,1ld better serve a segment of the student body
committee's report to RGCC President Dr. Banv M. Dorsey.
Institution In .1991.
that "W1ll haw a stgnlftcant Impact• In the coming
The committee, chaired by Dr. Raymond Matura',
yeara, according to the committee's report to RGCC
profeuor of sociology, concluded that non-tradl·
President Dr. Bany M. Dorsey.
Non-tradltlonalatudenta are JdenUfted as those who the major recommendation of the committee as It non-tradltlonalst~,~denta at Rio Grande Is well below Uonalatudenta "come to Institutions of higher learndelay entry, begin' part-Ume, or do not begin their looked at waya of attracting and retaining a major the national average.
Ing with renewo:d vigor. dedication. aertousneas, and
poat-secondazy education Immediately after high source of student tecrullment at Rio Grande as the The committee also recommended additional regis- high levels of maturity.·
schooL The average age of the non-traditional stu- traditional pool of college-gOing students In the age tration hoW'S to accommodate the scheduling needst OJiertng Improv-ed servtcee to these students fullllls
dent at Rio Grande Is 26.
18-to-22 range shrinks. Current enrollment ftgures of non-traditional students, and suggested as long- the expanding mission of the Institution to serve the
Additional course offeTlngsln·the evening holll'8 was for Rio Grande lndl~ted that the partlctpatlon rate of range lniUatlveslmproved accesslbWty, recruitment, needs of the area, the committee saki.

GOOD

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Summer Hours Scheduled For Rio Child CaTe Center
Grande pei'lonneL With 11, regl!lar
ewnmer break.
Since Ita opening In September staff of nine people and an awrage
1992, thecenterhasenjoyednear- of 10 etudenta per quarter gaining
~ enrollment and ~tly practical experience In the EarlY
received approval from the Ohio Childhood Dellelopment program,
Department of Education to~ the center encountered no dlfllthenumberofchlldrenlt'sallowed culty in obtaining the state's pertoservefrom38to47. Atpreaent, miulon to Increase Ita dally enthreealotaremalnopen, Prlceeald. rollment.
'The state found . that the
She noted that the center'a eorollbulldlng'a
IIIZe wu adequate to
menlll at ItS greatest every day of
meet
the
needs
of that amount of
the week except Wednesday, the
oll-day for clR'"';' -,t Rio Grande children. and our equipment, toya
durb1g the ~8&amp;1:1emit yeat.' 'iii)'(I'OthetiiDltl!rlalii we~ all'lo!P to .
She Ill also urging mothers Inter- standard, • Prtce laid. 'I think that
eated In d$f-care on a one-day In Ierma of equipment, we haw
baal&amp;totakeadvantageoftheopen- gone beyood atate standards In
what would be expected of the
tnge.
'"lbe scheduling 18 the big con- typical day-care situation.·
'
Equipment and material dona"The kids and their en· cern for us from quarter to quar- tions
from some local &amp;genctea .
ter.~ ehe explained. ·"That's parhelped
the center get oft' Ita feet.
ticularly eo If people graduate or
jogment what we
,_ • _
mber
lind joba, so w.. face some dJID- Gallla-Melge Head Start contribJer 1-5' Our nu
-OJle cuJty In aCCO!JUllodatlng dlft'erent uted materials It no longer needed.
houn for the -children and their while Items from a discontinued
aduertlsement."
program at Buckeye Hills Career
parents.•
ciiiLDENENROI TED lD the
Care center at Rio Grande co-utty coueae an!
Center Dlrecto{ The center 18 opec to the children Center found thett way Into the pic~
at play d'llrla&amp;a recreation period. The cent• will malatala 11UDIDer houn from
.
Sharon Price of Rio Grande etudenta. faculty eenter'e lnwntory.
A formal dediCation and open 7:80a.m. aaW 11 p.m .. MoadqthroaCJl friday, ua putofl.. eoatlaalal~emce to the cliy
and. atalf. with remaining elota
cue aeedl of Rio Gnade uul the et&gt;•mualty.
gtven to the chJ1dren of non-Rio Coptlmwtl.oa Pee 4

_ For Rio Grande Community &lt;;.oilegeetudentawhohavep!acec!thetr
chll~n wtth the new on-campus
cplld Care Center, the good news
Ia that the center Will continue
operation ,durtng the SU!IImer
, mo!ltha' at Ita regulat schedule of
7:30a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
But with the student attendance
down durtng the aurim)er, the center Will have a number of open
elota for chlldren of community
..e.:~nta. ·a&amp;!d·shaion Price. the center'e director~ who Je encouraging people to utlllze the center
during Rio Grande's three-month

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To Meet Need$ OfAdult LeA9JCT$

Rio -Sets Special Hours For Pre-Registration:
CTIONS

Incoming and returning Rio
Grande Community College students ~ get the opportunity to
register early fur summer and fall
claaaesdurtngapeclaleventngand
daytime houra set dut1ng Aprtl. .
Regular pre-registration fur currently-enrolled etudenta will be
conducted In the E.E. Davia Technical Careem Center on Monday, Institution's owrall commitment
AprU 19 through Thurad$)', AprU to meeting the needs of new and
22, but evening houn have been adult students. F;xpanded course
set aatde forThureday and during offeringS are planned for faU to
the daytime Frld$)', Aprtl 23 for better serve those etudenta'lnternew or returning students enter- eata and echedulee. The adult
lilgRio'Grandeeltherduringaum- learner has been recogntzed In recentyeareaa thealgnlftcantgrowth
mer or fall.
The evening houn on Thursday area In college enrolbnent.
will be 4-7 p.m. On Friday. regis- "We haw! made a concerted eft'ort
tration wtll be available from 9 to be available for a wide lange of
a.m. until noon and 1:30·4 p.m.
atudenti. from those entering col'Rie apectal houm were lint es- lege for the lint Ume to those who
tablished In 1992 as p8l1 of the are returning to freshen thelredu-

M~yer

EASTMAN'S

BIG

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Cooked Ham

D
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$1''
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We Rmrve the NghUt

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Will IIIII CDU~DII WIIIIJ.lDU bUJ. •

OlE WILSO WHuLE IIAM .

t=l==r&amp;,...
( 6 LB. SIZE) 1-. - - I
Olllr Qoocl-•
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Elleotlwa11vu IIIL, Apdt 1,41111'• USDA Food tltllmpalllld
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Coordinates Services For Adult Student~

Klngeley Meyer, the head olConllnulng Education at Rio Grande
Community college atnce 1989.
hu uaumed additional duUee
lnwMnC the coordination of lei'·
VIces for non-lradltlonalatudenta
and the admlnlatratlon of the community college.
Meyer'• new tiUe 18 Director of
Adult and Continuing Education ·
and Coordinator of-Community
· COllege Servlcee.

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calion or receiVe additional trainIng.· explained Mark F. AbeU. executiW!dlrectorofAdmiMionsSerVIces and Flnanclal Ald.
Additional reglltratlon hours In
the aprtng are •a good and
one wrty to meet the needs of the
adult learner; AbeD added.
The special houm replaced earlier
regtatratlon peJ1ods for new and
adult leamen held on dales dlft'erent from the traditional open reg·
lstratlon days held before the beginning Ofeach term. Recorda staff,

admissions counae!cin and faculty advlaon are on hand to 11111118t
students during the expanded
houre on Thursday and Frtd$f.
The April pre-registration period
allows students to enroll fot
courses offered In summer, fall,
Winter and aprtngofthe u~ ;
academic ~ar. explained 1erea8
Preston, director of the omce of
Records. Incoming freshmen are
ge!lerally advl8ed to enroll for one
term until they haw! become familiar with the registration proce•
dure. she added.
Preaton said the epedal houre :
haw drawn a number oflnqutrtai
from .potential students.
•
"When people found out the special houre on Thunday night and
durtng the day Friday were accessible, there was quite a bit of Intereat,· she saki.

'1beeenew-~retlect

the lnetitullon'l commitment to
the need• of' our region," . Rio
GrandePrelldentButyM. Do~~~ey
uJd In umouncln&amp; the ,applllntment.

Ohlo wtll 110011 be heaTing more
about Kingaley'a work with adult
leamen as we attempt to Improve
the aervicea proVIded to - and better meet the needs of- thlagrowtng
group of etudente.
"We want all adults In our ecrvlce
area toundenland that'ft exllt to
help them to lmpnM! Job eldlla. to
complete academic cfeCreea, and
to oll'er counea that olmply promote penollRl enrichment..
'Rio Grande Community College
--•dlvenepopulatlon,'Meyer
uJd of bill new appointment.
"Our enrollment Ill rapidly changIng from atudenta entertng college
dlreetly from high aehool to an

'

older etudent group.
"'beae adult students have apeeta! concerns and needs for serVIces quite dllJerent from those
oll'ered by IIChoola just 10 yean
earlier." he added.
"The adult and continuing education olllce Will oooullnate educatlonalleiYioea on behalf o( these
etudenta.•
MeyerjOined the UnlllemltyofRlo
Grande In 1988. He II a B'dcft/
EdllcaUon paduateol\Wmlngton
COllege.~ earned a M.Ed. degree
In higher education admlnlatratlonfromOhloUm-.ttyln 1988.
Meyer mcMd to Oallla County In
1977. when he bel .... ProtiJam

Cooldlnal«- Bob EvaM Fum.

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