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                  <text>Page-:10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, February 15, 1993
-

-

Your Social _Security Par:k-service cutbacks end 30-year program
By ED PETERSON' "
Scx:iol Securily
Manager in Athens

"prematurely aged." Residents of
,..
· '
·
Icelanll must wait until age 67 to
By KATHERINE Rizzo
Recreation Area can't buy all the cuts."
the helm, Interior Secretary Bruee
collect their retirement pensions.
A~iated Press Writer
supplies its budget initially
The Park Service has long com- ' Babbitt, has a new approach 10 the
(By the way, beginning in the year
WASHINGTON - Outside allowed.
plained that Congress adds 10 the chroQic problem.
·
What do Bolivia, Congo, Japan, 2000, .the age at which U.S. citi- Chillicothe, Ohio, a national park ·
Hopewell cut one seasonal · park system and provides money 10
Babbttt says the parks can be a
Morocco, Switzerland, Venezuela, ze ns can collect full retirement cut back on maintenanCe, lost two mainteoance position and two sea- . operate the attractions but doesn't vehicle for boosting· the CCllllOilly.
and about 140 other countries benefits begins 10 climb from 65 to rangers and canceled tlie special ·sonal ranger position,s. As a resuh, g1ve enough to jlrevent them from He wants to iet in on President
around the world have in common 67.
programs it used to give on sum- · visitors who want to see the earth- deteriorating.
Clinton's propos·ed $15 billion
with the United States? Th ey all
People born in 1938 will have 10 mer Saturday nights.
works may have to go to lhe visiBy contrast, a commiuee in infrastructure and job stimulation
have Social Security programs.
be 65 and 2 months, people born ·in
•'It was kind of nice to get peo- tors' center to find a ranger, Gibson Dayton is at worlc selling up a new paclcage.
·
My guess is many people are 1939 have to be 65 and 4 months, pie out for something special," said.
nauonal park. The $50,000 allocatAt his fim news conference,
surprised to learn to is. Perhaps etc., until the full retirement age Bonnie Murray , administrative .
"You may find a maintenance ed to plan for the Dayton Aviation Babbi~t proposed using some of
some assume that Social Security is reaches 67 for people born in 1960 officer at Hopewell Culture Nation- worker mowing the lawn. He could National Historic Park wasn't cut that money to atlaCk ·lhe backlog in
a uniquely American concept while and later.) In Czechoslovakia, men al Historical Park in southern · tell you where lhe rest rooms are because Ohio's lawmakers put a maintenance.
others might think that only the can retire at age 60 but women can Ohio's Ross County. "Unfortu· and where the first aid station is, special line in the appropriations
Babbitt said he was,preparing to
western industrialized nations have start collecting retirement benefits nately, those are the first things that but he wouldn't lie fully apprised bill guaranteeing the money.
give CliniOn a list ofthe Parle SerSociiil Security programs. Quite the betwccn the ages of 53 and 57 go."
of the signficance of lhe site. The
When the park honoring Orville vice's most urgent needs.
opposite is true. As a mechanism depending on the number of chilFor more than 30 years, the pro· contact staff would be in the bUild- and Wilbur Writht was being conCliiton hasn't said whether he ·
for meeting basic human needs, dren raised.
grams. provided free instruction on ing," he said.
sidere4, the Par SefViCe opposed agrees that spending money on
Social Security programs have
such things as understanding .the
Park Service spokesman Dun· it. •
· ·
·
parks is a good job-creating move.
achieved near universal acc.eptance.
Another interesting aspect to the stars and the ways of American can Morrow said many small parks
The park nearlY was defeated And even if he 'ives the parks
Almost every country in the world universality of Social Security pro- Indians. HopcwcU preserves earth- · had to go from operating seven because many lawmakers didn't · extra c~sb, there s no guarantee
( in fact, 146 of them from grams is a set of agreements the works created by the continent's days a week to six because of lhe want to burden the Park Service Ohio would gel a share.
Afghanisuin to Zimbabwe) offer United States has established with early inhabitants. ·
cuts.
with another long-term commitGibson said 'the Park Service
some form of social insurance for 13 countries (so far) that help coor- ·
The programs had to go when
"We have had complaints. We ment. Lobbying on lhe House fl.oor asked for ideas {or a sort of wish
their citizens.
dinate taxes and benefits for pe9ple Hopewell was force to find a way knew we would," he S3ld. "But: we and within a crucial Senate com- list of how -to use jobs-program
Of course, the kinds of benefits who work in two different coun- to absorb its share of a $34 million went in with basically a bare-bones mittee saved lhe projecL
• money if it becomes available.
offered vary widely from one coun- tries . These agreements, called National Park Service budget short- request to Congress, wilh lhe least · Now, a new administration is
His teply to Washington: hire
try to another, but there are many · "totalization agreements," general- age.
we
could
responsibly
afford
to
taking
Qver
siewardship
of
the
three.
seasonal rangers and three
similarities. Almost all countries ly eliminate double coverage so · Park Superintendent William spend. You don't have an option parks and responsibility for the ,seasonal
maintenance workers for
offer some form of old age, sur- that employees and employers pay Gib1;0n said the park's $406,500 when you have to start making parks' budget. And lhe person at Hopewell.
vivors, and disability coverage. taxes to only one country's Social operating budget was cut by 0.8
Many also provide worker's com- Security system. They also help percent in 'December and then by
pensation and unemployment bene- employees who have worked in the another I percent in January.
fits, an~ some Social Security pro- u.S. and another country, but not
"It doesn't sound like a lot, but
grams mclude_Sickness and mater- ,..long enough in lhe U.S. to qualify it is when you have a small park,"
mty care. As m the Umted States, for Social Security benefits. ·
' (AP) - Marley Mark
Ms. Murray said. "Take away sevBOSTON
almost all Social Security programs
In many cases, credits from both eral thousand dollars, that's a lot."
says he beat a Vietnamese man in
are financed by a tax on earnings.
cbuntries can be combined to pay a
At Ohio's Park Service units: •
1988 not because he's racist, as
Some of the countries have "totalization" benefit from the U.S.
. -· Perry's Victor&gt;: &amp; Jf\lerna- .
Community Calendar items Southern High School,Voag Build- · authorities contended, but becau~
interesting qualification factors for We 'currently have totalization Ilona! Peace Memonal canceled appear .·two days before an event . ing in Raei.ne on Tuesdlly from 7- he was drunk and high on marijuabenefits. For example, if you were agreemen\S with Austria, Belgium, plans to expand visitor hours.
and the day or that event.• Items 10 p.m.
·
na and wanted the man's beer.
a citizen of Burkina Faso, a land- Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
-William Howard Taft Nation- must be received well in advance
The 21-year-old rapper, whose
locked republic in Northern Africa, the Nelherlands, Norway. Ponugal, al Historic Site in Cincinnati can't to assure publication in the cal- . PAGEVILLE • There will be a real
name is Mark Wahlberg,
you could receive an old-age pen- Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and fill a maintenance job, ,
,.
endar.
sp·e cial meeting of the . Scipio served 45 days of a 90-day sensian at age 55, or as early as 50 if the United Kingdom.
'
-Cuyahoga Valley National
Towns!lip Trustees on· Tuesday at tence for the beating.
6:30 p.m. at the Pagcville TownWahlberg, who is white, also
MONDAY
hall.
was involved in two attacks on
RUTLAND - The Leading
black elementary schQDI children in
Creek Conservam;y District Office
WEDNESDAY
June 1986.
will be closed Monday in obser. RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire
He and two others followed the
vance of President's Day.
Department Ladies Auxiliary wil1 children shouting, "Kill the nig·
meet in regular session Wednesday ~ers" and throwing rocks, accadRACINE - The Big Bend Farm at 7:30 p.m. at I)Je fire station. All mg tD coon documents.
Antique Club will meet Monday at members urged 10 attend.
Wahlberg signed an agreement
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.
that
he would refrain from racist
By TONY ROGERS
was in ~allege when his girlfriend asks female students to list the
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- attacks. However, he called that
was raped by another man. The same thing, "and the list goes on
Asscx:iated Press Writer
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- port Literary Club will meet
"il yellinf match between
BOSTON - Ask Craig Nor- attack left her unable to be inti- and on"- everything from having ty Republican Executive Commit- Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at· the incitle1Jt
me
and
some
kids. '
·
berg-Bohm why he joined the mate, and the couple's year-old a man's voice on the answering
tee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at home of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
Despite
his
$S.!urances
lha1
he's
machine to not using parking
expanding ranks of -men working relationship was shattered.
the Meigs County Coun House.
Wils·an Carpenter will review not racist, two anti-bias organiza·actively to end violence against
"When somebody is rapclll;"all garages.
"Maria Calla.s" by ArJanna tions plan a rally in New York·Cily
women, and he 'II say it was just the lhese trusts go away," he recalled.
"The blackboard gets filled up
TUESDAY
Stassinopeulous. For roll call mem- on Thll!'sday under a billboard for
right lhing to do.
About 15 years ago, he helped with things they do everyday to be
RACINE - Recertification class- bers arc 10 tell of a favorite musical Calvin Klein underwear that feaPress him a little, and he'll start a counseling center for mal~ safe," Katz said. "Seeing it up es for currently licensed pesticide performer.
tures Wa!Jlberg's picture,
recount the day his former girl- baucrers in St. Louis called Rape there so starkly, i~ makes them see applicators will be held ·at the
friend was raped.
and Violence End Now, or how unfair it is."
His experience isn't uncommon. RAVEN. The clinic helps men
In California, members of the
More and more, lhe fathers, broth- understand how sdcie[y conditions Oakl3nd Men's Project have holders, husbands and male friends of them 10 be violent, but the empha- ing anti-violence workshops everyrape or assault victims are taking sis is on holding them accountable where from prisons to workplaces
•
their l:ue from women's groups and for !heir actions. ·
since 1979. Along the way,thcy've
"The man who comes in usually learned what works with men, and
venting their rage p~oduetively by organizing.
puts the respcnsibility on others," what doesn't.
Across the country, men are set- said Norberg-Bohm, who now lives
"The touchy-fcely stuff doesn't
ting up counseling groups and sem- in Boston. "He says, 'She put me go over well," said Allan Shore,
inars to try to halt a growing num- in here.' We want to change !hat."
the executive director. "Companies
Often, men must first be per- don't like women telling them
ber of rapes, wife beatings and
domestic homicides.
suaded there is a problem. Katz, about !his. The old boys' network
Their goal: to help men under- who speaks at schools and colleges wants'men to tell them abOut lhis.''
stand the roots of their violence so about violence, begins by drawing_
Not everyone is interested. Katz
they will stbp. Their method: man- a white line down lhe 'tniddlc of f1' endures plenty of name-calling
to' man talk that gets down to· blackboard.
from men when he hands out
bl!SiCS.
On one side of lhc line he asks lcallets on Super Bowl Sunday or
"I can say, 'Listen guys, ... let's male students to list things they do at concerts of comedian Andrew
be honest," ' said Jackson Katz, each day to avoid being sexually Dice Clay, whose brand of humor
who in 1988 formed an anti-vio- assaulted.
.
has offended women and minori"There's-giggling, if not blank ties. Michael David Gordon, of the
lence' group in itoston called Real
I
•
..,
Men. " That' s something women stares," Katz said. "Then someone group New York Men Against Sexcan't do."
says 'Nothing,' and I say, 'Thank ism, received a death threat on his.
answering machine when he orgaNorberg -Bohm, a 41-year-old you. "'
sortware engineering consultant,
On the other side of the line he nized an ·ami-violence workshop at
. Columbia Uni.ver:sity.

Community calendar

Ohio Lottery
•
Pick 3:
021
-Pick 4:

clulane,
New Orleans
post wins
•

.

Vol. ol3, No. 208
Copyrighted 1993

home
prodf!Cis IS

..

There aren't any.
.
WhenyougetaBankOne
Home Equity Loan;~we pick
up the tab on closing costs that
would nonn31lyrun yoJJ. hundreds of dollars: You pay no
poin~;and no attorney's fees.
And no appraisal or title search
fees, either.
·
·Get your home equity loan
now andyotir.timing couldn't
be better. Becau~e interest
rates are still at some Qf the
lowest levels in years.
And as you probably know,
interest on home equity loans
is tax deductible in most .

f'J!I
J!JJ
t'

'~I
y

I

'•

. lOOR

lR~

SEEKS SUPPORT • Lots of telephone calls
and letters to Sears C:Ould make a difference,
says BID Haptonstall, posing !)ere beside a sign
outside his business. While the catalo1 business

"

•

'

~

•

requires studeats to see life from tbe periP«tive
or the physically challenaed. Witb her 1re
seniors Joe !Juzako or Elrama, Pa~ and Trk:la
Rice~ right, or Lind wood, NJ. (AP photo)

Mia·aieport seaJ?s store

An effort to save the Middleport
Sears Store, not as a catalog store,
~ut an appliance store, is under·
way.
..._
Cus10mers are being encouraged
to call Sears at 1-800-7334537 or
to write Sears Roebuck and Co.,
Sears Tow_er, ChicagQ, ~II. a~king
that a store be .retained m Middlepert.
Bill Haptonslall, owner/operator, said Monday that he has
received indications from Sears
that a store will be located some-

•

where in this area He said !hat he
has indicated his interest in having
an applia.nce store in Middlcpert.
Public supper! could make the
difference, said Haptonstall, who is ·
encouraging telephone calls and
letters of suppert for a Middlepcn
location..
_
In late January, Haptonstall
received word that tbe Middlepert
Sears catalog siOre would be ope of
more th~n 2,000 in the country
closed this year. He expects 10 ~­
advised later this- spring just !"hen

Ninth graders attending Southern Local High School outperformed ninth-graders attending
other Meigs County schools taking
the Ohio Ninth-grade Proficiency
Tests. . 0
According 10 tbe Ohio Department of Education, 41 percent of
Southern High Schools ninth
graders passed all four tests compared 10 20 percent an&lt;! 15 percent
for Eastern and Meigs, high
schools, respectively.
Statewide, about 39 percent of.
ninth graders-passed all four tests.

·About 25,000 high school
juniors statewide still need 10 pass
one or more of the four tests to
graduate, the Ohio Department of
Education announced recently.
This year's. junior class is the
first that must pass all required
parts of lhe tests 10 earl! a diploma.
Students are reQuired 10 show proficiency in writing, reading, malh
and citizenship.
Just over 8,500 of the 33,354
juniors who last November were
still taking the tests passed them,
according 10 the deparunenL

cases:That's an advantage
you don't get with other types
of financing.
Stop by your nearest Bank
One and-ask for a home equity
application. ·
.
.
Or cal1593-6681 orl-800677-4994 ifyo1,1 prefer.fu clos- ·
ing, it won't cost you a thing.
.
.,. ·

By JULIE _E. DILLON ·
Sentinel News StarT
A discussion on plans for the
former Pomeroy Junior High building was held at Monday's regular
meeting of Pomeroy Village Council.
Village council has purchased
the property from the Meigs Local
School Board and has approved a
right-of-way back to the. school
board for use by the pubhc wh1le
auending functions at Bob Roberts
Field.
.
Members of council were in
agreement that lhe filS! steps 10 be
taken should include securing the
building and repairing the roof 10
prevent further deterioration of the
structure. Mayor Bruce .Reed
reperted the sehool is now removing items from the properly ani)
!hat a general clean-up of the building will begin soon by fine workers
from Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick 0 'Brien.
.
Councilman John Blaeunar
repcrted the ftrst shipment of glass
for some of the windows in the
building should arrive early next
week. Replacement of·the window
glass wiU be completed by village
workers. Blaeunar also repcrted he
had received estimates on two furna~es for the structure in the
ainount of $2,144. No action was
taken on this matter.

Mayor Reed appeinted a build- · Main Street could begin as early at
ing committee of Blaettnar, next week. Completion date,
Thomas Werry, Larry Wehrung according to Anderson, is May 15.
Other matters
and Bill Young 10 assess the struc- ·
Mayor Ree.d reported two ,of
tore and repert back 10 council with
three stolen .vehicles had been
their recommendations.
..
recovered in the same area of the
Drug tests to be pur~based
At the request of the police village over a short period of time.
department, council agreed '10 pur- The lhird vehicle was recovered in
chase drug testing plates. This pur- a different location.
Council discussed a traffic probchase will be made wilh the understanding !hat Patrick O'Brien, legal lem on Ebenezer Street. Possible
counsel for lhe village, is in agree- solutions to the problem will be
investigated. Joann Patterson, vilment with the pro{K?sal.
The plates, wh1ch cost $10 each, lage resident, has requested council
would be administered by a pelice to investi~ate the problem and remofficer to a suspect to test for edy the Situation as best as pcssj;
cocaine and mariJuana, as well as ble. Her complaint is that when;
pulling off Ebenezer onto Main
other drugs.
Street, an obstructed view of,trafft&lt;:
Trame ligh-t discussed
Council approved the ~3,894 makes· the area a dangerous situa~
purchase of new solid-state traffic tion.
Repcrting on the parking meier
light for end of the Pomeroy Mason
situation,
Mayor Re_ed stated 17
Bridge. Council agreed the present
pcles,
13
double
meters and seven
light at the bridge is becommg 100 ·
single
meters
are
needed
wilhin th~
costly 10 repair and that ·100 much
village
to
repair
the
inoperable
money has already been spent on
meters.
:
repair of the traffte light.
Council
member
Betty
BaroniCk
Water department updat'
Approval was granted at the requested some type of curve sigD
request of John Anderson, village or indicator at the upper end of
•
administrator, to have lhe screen on Monkey Run.
. Werry reported he had heatd
one of lhe weUs cleaned. Anderson
stated this is a part of normal main· many positive comments on t~e
tenance which needs to be done clean-up of lhe river bank at Kerr:s ·
Run. Mayor Reed discussel\ the '
every three 10 four years.
Anderson reported work on possibility of developing some type
replacement of the water main on of mini-park in that area
~

Riggs again denied probation
motion allowing Riggs to supplement records and granted Riggs
leave 10 provide and ftle copies of
all letters of reference, documents
and pjltitions lhe defenSil submitted
or cause tD be submitted but were
not ftled.
Crow also decided that copies of
Riggs' SEPTA evaluatiOn(~)
should be placed under seal by the
clerk of couns and forwarded 10 the
court of appeals.

Classes in area are canceled
because of overnight snow
midnight and worked throughout
lhe nighL The streets were in good
condition when residents began
going 10 work Tuesday morning . .
Neilher of lhe villages reponed
any snow-related accidents.
The deparunem of Meigs Coun·
ty Sheriff Jaines Soulsby reperted
one aecident on State Route 143 in
Salisbury Township . An Ohio.
Dep~nt of Transportation truck
equipped with a front-end snow
plow was out working on the roads
when it ·slipped off the .highway,
struck a mailbox, and stopped in .a
ditch. There was minor damage to
the front of the vehicle driven by
Donald Folmer, Jr.

Americans making less than ·$30,000
are:. likely to escape higher taxes · .·

·BANKEONE.
Whatever it takes:
Bank One, Athens, NA
M~berFDIC

••

Pomeroy Council to repair
old junior high structure

the actual closing date will be. He
"AI the sentencing hearing,
By JIM FREEMAN
knows it will happen sometime
(Riggs) admitted his use of alcohol.
Sentinel News Staff
before the end of 1993. He hopes
A Reedsville man who pleaded Since (Riggs) did nol stop at the
the·catalog s10re can be replaced no contest to charges of aggravated accident scene and avoided arrest,
wilh a Sears appliance store.
vehicular homicide, gross abuse of the issue as 10 whether (Riggs) was
Meanwhile, he stressed, "it's a corpse and tampering with evi- under the influence is raised.
business as usual."
dence in 1990 was once again Assuming (Riggs) was not under
Haptonstall has operated the denied shock probation in the the influence, th·e court is not
business since 1985 when he pur- Meigs County Court of Common inclined to grant probation. The
chased the business from Greg Pleas.
intent of lhe legislation is clear and
Gibbs. A Scars catalog store has
Jason Riggs was sentenced to that intent is lhat (Riggs') conduct
been operated in Meigs County for .five to 10 years in prison for his should not be condoned.''
more than 30 years.
However, ·Crow did grant a
role in the death of 82-year-old
Vic10r Will of Canal Winchester.
Will was struck by a pickup
truck occupied by Riggs and Douglas Harris in Chester lhe night of
June 2, 1990. It was the night
Sixty-two percent (15,501) of before Riggs' high sehool graduathe juniors who failed tests in tion.
Overnight snowfall of about
November have only one test yet to
Will, who was attending his four inches caused cancellation of
p_ass, That's the good news, said high sehool reunion, rolled over !)le classes in all schools in Meigs
Ted Sanders, superintendent of truck iniO the truck bed and was County, but apparently few accipublic instruction. .
transported from the scene. His · dents.
"We have a limited time frame body was found two days later on a
Schools in Eastern, Meigs and
to help students pass these test,S creek bank at West Shade.
Southern, as well the Carleton
Sanders said. "Knowing that a
In lhe entry filed Feb. 10, Judge School/Meigs Industries, and the
large number of students have only Fred w. Crow 111 wrote:
Christian school in Middleport
one test left tD pass presents a tar"(Riggs) was convicted of were closed because of road condigeted focus for intervention. The aggravated vehictllar homicide in tions.
pressure is mounting to help lhese. violation of Ohio R~vised Code
Also canceled was a boys basstudents pass lhe .tests" we're sum- Section 2903.06. Paragraph (C) of ketball game between ViniOn ~nd
moning as manr. community which section states ... if in the ' Meigs scheduled 10 be beld IOmght
resources statewide as we can commission of the offense the at Meigs. The game has 'been
find.'
offender was ... operating a motor rescheduled for Friday with the
Mathematics is the test most vehicle while under the influence reserve game to stan at6:30 p.m.
·
juniors have yet to pass. Of the of alcohoL. he shall not be eligible
Crews in both Middlepert and
24,828 juniors who failed at least for shock probation.
Pomeroy were .called out just after .
one test in November, 20,390
failed malhematics.
The department has been able 10
track several trends in the data
available. For example,.!he class of
19% (current ninth graders) did not
perform as well on their first
auempt at reading and writing as
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- all in !heir taxes.'.' Steph~uloS
did lhe classes of 1995 and 1994.
dent Clinton is working to build said on CBS' Th1s Morn1~g. !fc
However, the class of 19% did momentum for a $500 biflion pack- was not more specifiC, saymg Omoutperform lhe other two classes on age of tax increases and spending ton was still working on some
thetr first auempt in both mathe- cuts warning the price of standing details of the plan to be unveiled
matics and citizenship.
still,"is far higher than the price of Wednesday night.
.
.
Performance of students who change.' • The White House said
Stepbanopoulos ~so S3!d Chnhave taken each of lhe four profi· today all Americans. making above ton hoped to have h1s entll'e ecociency tests continues to improve. $30,000 a year are likely 10 fool the - nomic plan enacted by the end of
Thirty·lhlee percent of the class of pinch.
tbe year.
.
.
1994 (current juniors) passed all
Republicans offered to ~ooperClinton. IOday was ~ng With
four teS~ on their fust auempt in ate on slashing the def1c1l after DemD!=~~c congressional tea&lt;t;ers
1991, and 41 percent of lhe class ~f Clinton's ftrst prime-time address and viSltmg a road construCtion
1996 passed. aU four teSts on the II' to the nation Monday night, but projeCt m 10wn 10 demonstrlte tbe
fusuuempt in 1992.
,were skeptical about his approat.h. kind of _publ.ic works ~jects ~e
Additional tutoring and one-on- "What the president his ~ econom1c sumulus pertwn of h1s
one moni10ring will be offered in so far is not}shared sacnftce' bui plan ~ould f~.
.
upcoming weeks 10 each of lhe · raw punishment," said Sen. Phil
ClintOn SBI~ the short-lt:l'lll ~nearly 25,000 high school juniors Gramm R·Texis.
ulus pan of hts plan :- $16 billion
who have not yet passed the profiWhiie House communications in spending on .JI!Ibh~ works prociency tests.
.
director George Stephanopoulos jects and $15 billion to tax breaks
These steps and others are pan said today higher lilies would like· for businesses -. would create u
of Project Pass, a statewide cam- ly be required of all Americans many as 500,000 JObl.
.
paign launched recently by the except those making less than
But most of hu 11-mmute
depanmenl of eltucldcn.
$30000
nationally bnle&lt;!"ISI.~.was an
Aeconllng 10 a ~nl press
•'•under the president's plan, ef!ort 10 explam h1s dectStons 10
rcleaso, Project Pus main goal is people making under $30,000 are ft!!SC lilies lind cut government ser·
Continued OD Jill' 3
very likely .10 have no increase at v1ces and programs.

Southern tops county in test results

-

~ c 1993 BANC ONE CORPORATION 'Consult your tax adVisor 10! spkilic conditions and details. Sut,iect to cridll

!Ill approval. Offer expires March 31, 1993. .

will be gooe after Ibis year, Haptoasii!U is hop·
ing to get a Sears appliance store located in Mid·
dieport.

:Effort under~ay to save

The lltllllltted oumulltlve
ROLLING ALONG • Tracey ·white, a Lock
Haven, Pa., University senior from
Williamsport, Pa., travelS In a wheelchair earlier
this month as part of a .clus exercise that

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents
A Mulll111odla Inc. Newspaper.

" Pomeroy-P.IIIddleport, Ohio, Tue~day, February 16, 1993

violence aimed at women

•

nurrle._ Wednesday, doudy.
HiBbnearJO.

•

Men joining ·fight against

our

I

Low lonlgbt In mid :ZOO. Snow

·:.1575

Page4

Marky Mark says
he's not a racist

thing

•

Pl!lllna ,... 11 cetcullttd by

IUIIUdlnt,PINinatllltllttOdlttbytht
11t1m1te or the mahnum IUIIblr or IIUdlnta

"This is nothing less th_~ a call
to lllll!S, 10 restor~.lhe vt'!JillY of lhe
A"!~ncan dream, he.sa1d.
e
The ~nee of domg the same
Contmued on page 3

.Ill!

..

PRESIDENT CIJN'roN ''

�•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stnet

..

Pomeroy, Ohio

· DEVOTED TO THE INnJU!liTS or THE IOtiGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WIN.GETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ge11eral Manager

LEmRS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less tban 300
words. All letters are subject to editing arid must be signed wilh name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. LetterS
should be in good taste, address ing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
The three Rs
Dear Editor,
It appears the first section of

"The Connector Road" to
· R;~venswood may be a reality next
year (1994), but 'I am very concerned. the other three secuons to
the "Bridge to Nowhere" will be
delayed and it just might be too late
for Meigs County.
·
Athens and Ga!lia counties are
pushing to finish Routes 35 and 50
to ,Interstate 77 in their counties.
Why not? Just think of the development that occurs as the result of a
· good system.
Governor Voinovich has made
statements, in the past, that he
wants to help Meigs County. There
is a way the governor can help, and
that is to finish the connector road
completely and rebuild Route 33
from Darwin to Athens.•

· Please everyone, write to the
governor at the State House in
Columbus, Ohio, 43315, and urge
him to expedite the road commit. mcnt 10 Meigs County. Everyone
wOtting together can get this done.
For years in our schools we
taught the three Rs, • reading, writing and route 10 Columbus.
It is time for Meigs County to
. be developed so our bright young
students can get a job at home. ·
Our future depends on our
young people, and their future
depends on us working to keep
them home.
Remember to write the governor. If we do not speak, we will not
be heard.
John Weeks
Pomeroy
.

Wa~ jury
DENVER (NEA) - Members
of a. fed.eral grand jury who, for
three years, have heard evidence of
environmental law violations at the
Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant,
believe tbe Department of Energy
and the DJP3rllllent of Justice are
engaged-'m a cover-up. However,
they have been stifled in their
efforts to reveal their findings by
threats of prison terms for violating
their oaths of secrecy.
From 1975 to 1989, Rockwell
International operated the flant,
located 16 miles northwest o ·Denver. Activists long charged that
serious environmental law violations were occurring behind the
locked gates. On June 6, 1989,
agents of the FBI, Environmental
Protection Agency and the state
raided the plant.
·
· On Aug.' I, 1989, a 23-member
federal grand jury was empaneled,
and began receiving evidence from
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ken Fim·
berg and his boss, Denver U.S.
Attorney Mike Norton. Early last
fall the grand jury was suddenly
disbanded; Norton announced that
his office aoid Rockwell had agreed

Hunting on Sundays
Dear Editor,
I've read about Marlin Wolfe's
wanting 'to open hunting on Sun. days. If people would'~o to church
and repent of their sms, and let
Jesus come into their hearts, and
serve Him, there would be no
thoughts of hunting on the Lord's
Day. Because on Sundays there is a
lot to do for the Lord. We have
Sunday School ~d church on Sunday morning 9:30, and in the afternoon at 2:30 p.m., we have prayer
meeting, and we go from there 10
different places. Some to the rest
homes and some to the hospitals,
and some go knocking on doors to
invite people out to church and
Sunday evenings we have ,church
. services at 7 p.m. So that takes up

our Sundays. ·
I believe God is going to destroy
America, because Of all the
wickedness anjl sins that is going
on. And I believe that Jesus is coming anytime. People had better
wake up and get right with God,
before it's too late. Only the saved
and sanctified, who have had their
sins fGrgiven, and their hearts
cleansed in ·the blood of the lamb,
"Our Great Shepherd," will make
it.
.
So instead of wanting to hunt
on the Lord's Day, get your heart
right with God and have peace an&lt;t
love and joy in your heart. Read
Second Chronicles chapter 7:14.
Mrs. Doris Richmond
MiddlepOrt

Can't be everywhere at once
Dear Editor,

Lets talk about our law officials
that we have in our counties, toWns
and villages. They are always out
there doing their best making
arrests and proteCting the people
.who live there.
But they can't be everywhere at
the ·Same time when something
happens.
A few years back here in our
town in Middleport I know of a
woman that was foreed into a vehicle and was taken off in10 the country and was physically raped, and
was robbed of her dignity, lost her
pride and life, and her husband and
her loved ones.
She was afraid to report the incide'nt because the so-called rapist

threatened her life and harassed her
by phoning her. But by the time, sh~
· came to her senses and reported 11
to the law and this person was
brought in for questioning he
denied everything to her story: But
the harassing went on for a while.
I do think there ought to be a
law in our judicial system that people who are'caught and punished of
so-called rapes should be _castrated
and given the same pumsh11,1ent.
But like I said, our law off1cers
can't be everywhere at on~e. S?•
America, let's put people hke th1s
away and clean up our county and
towns.
Dennis Hunt
Pomeroy

Berry•s World

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

IToledo I 24" I

&lt;

wrote a scathing ·report perhaps the grand jurors. He also accused
unique in the annals of federal the jurors of accusing public offi· ;
cials without regard to a lack or
grand juries.
evidence,
and of engl!ging in
Addressed to U.S. Disl.rictJudge
social,
legal
and political argument ;
Sherman Finesilvcr, the feport
R b · rl }. uT.
accused' Ljle Department of Energy outside its scope of authority.
0
rrllgman . and Rockwell of engaging in a an Norton, who is leaving offiCe so
"ongoing criminal enterprise" and · that a Democrat can be appointed,
The. government trumpeted the recommending that eight individu· said the report vindicates his handling of the case: "we were as ,
· settlement, pointing out the fine als bo indicted and prosecuted.
was five times greater than any
Portions of the report were then &amp;$gressive as we codld have been
.:
ever paid by a company for an leaked to the press. Various grand .g1ven the Jack of evidence."
The two most serious charges::
~nvironmental violation. It said that jury members, especially foreman
i.he extensive investigation had Wes McKinly, a rancher, gave contained in the grand ·jurdrs' .
failed to uncover evidence of the statements decrying the settlement report were uivialized in lhe gov- ·
two most serious charges against aitd accusing Norton of a cover-up. em(llent response:
.
, - The grand jurors called. the
Rockwell: that it secretly burned., The government responded by
nuclear waste at .night and that it defending the settlement, and by way DOE was storing waste at the :
dumped toxic chemicals into starting a formal investigation of plant illegal, and thus a "cpntinu- ·
streams lhat flow through and ncar the grand jury ljir secr~y vioi~- mg criminal enterprise." The gov. :
cmment said the grand jurors had·
the plant.
.
lions.
.
1
.
The g~ver~ment saod the most
The report itself rem.ained been told that .Rockwell had comscroous· voolations uncovered were sec:ret. But in I'Qsponse to a lawsuit plied with various DOE ·orders and
that Rockwell had let small by news organizations Finesilver regulations, exceP! in minor areas
amount~ o~ liquid waste in solar has now released an ediied version. for which they prud the fine.
- The grand jury said the June
ponds seep onto crecks,and allowed
Finesilve'r blocked out the
blocks of liquid waste mixed with names of individuals the grand 6 raid uncovered compelling evi·.
concrete to disintegrate.
jurors recommended for prosecu- dence of serious law violations.
The gf!!nd JUry was outraged. It tion, and interjected detailed point- The government dismissed the
gathered on the law offices of Ken by-point responses from lhe gov- findings as much less then com• '.
Peck, a grand 1ury member, and ernment to each charge raised by pelling.
Many of the grand jurors are ·
still angry, but the threat of years in··
jail has effectively silenced them.· .
Foreman McKinly commented that
"in this form the repon is more the
government's than ours." He also
noted he coul!l say nothing more:
"I'm looking at 20 years of hard
time, and that's not an encouraging
thought."·
Another juror, who asked that
his name not be used for obvious
reasons, said "nothing in the government response has made me
·change my mind one bit. Both .
Rockwell and DOE employees '
should be prosecuted for the way
they ran Rocky Flats. I am con-.
vinced the Justice Department were ·
not prosecutors here, but acted as
defense counsel for DOE and its
conlrliCtilr, Rockwell.''
McKinley, has requested a pardon for all the grand jurors from, ·
President Clinton and a full-scale
congressional investigation into the ·
operation or Rocky Flats. ,
Robert Wagman Is a syndical- ,
ed writer for Newspaper Enter· .
prise Association.
, · .·

e

.

loday in history

Joseph Spear

An unhappy look has crept
across the face of Vice President AI
Gore. He appears to have gotten his
first whiff of rotten eggs. Actually,
he is about to commit his first official lie.
It is not, to be sure, one of those ·
Washington whoppers like "I am
not a crook," or "I was out of the
loop." It's just one of those Washington-business-as-usual lies -the
sort that we, who are at the center
of a politically polite universe, sniff
at as mere "dissembling." '
11 happened on ABC News'
· "This Week With David Brinkley," after George Will asked
about President Clinton's quest for
an attorney general: " ... A lot or
Americans 'are puzzled as to what
exactly Judge (Kimba) Wood did
that was w,rong, thP.I disqualified
her from this job.... Can you dilate
on that subject?"'
Gore's dilation began with his
nostrils, spread to his eyes, finally,'
his answer: " .. .It's not as if she
was P.icked for the jol! and then dis·
quahfied from the ]Ob. She was one

of several on a list lhat was under
consideration ... .'~ ·
. Will, often bow-tied but never
tongue-tied, followed up. After

Martin Schram
eliciting the fact that Kimba Wood
broke no law, Will asked: "Are
you saying she never was more
than just one name on a list?"
A possible reprieve - but alas,
those hoping for a simple political
truth saw their oxymoron Gored:
"I'll tell you this, that lhe president
did not select her or anyone else on
that list in the last week or so."
Say what? Everyone who'd followed this bouncing newsball
knew:
President Clinton HAD settled
upon Wood. His advisers calculatedly leaked to reporters that she
was his top choice, barring any
unforeseen disclosure - to see if
that drew unforeseen fire, lest they

On thil date:
In 1804, LL Stephen Decatur led a successlitl raid into Tripoli Harbor
to bum the U.S. !ilavy frigate Philadelphia, which had fallen Into the

'

I

.

C19931\ocv-Woolhor,Jnc.

-.

--~---Weather----South-Central Ohio
Light snow likely tonight. Low
in the mid-20s. Northwest winds 10
to 20 mph. Chance of snow is 70
percent. Wednesday, cloudy· with
scattered flurries. Higli near 30.
Chance of snow is .SO percent.
• Extended forecast:

Thursday through Satun!ay
Chance or snow north Thursday.
Fair south. Lows zero 10 10 above.
Highs I 5 to 25.
Friday, a chance.or snow. Lows
5to 15. Highs 25 to 35.
A chance of rain or snow Saturday. Lows 15 to 25. Highs lower
30s to lower 40s.
·

--Area deaths .". . - Harold Aleshire, Jr.

Dottie Lou Smith ·

A change in funeral service• · Dottie Lou Smith, 49, of Midarrangements for Harland "Snake- dleport, died Monday, Feb. 16,
man" Aleshire, Jr. or Bailey Run 1993, at Veterans Memorial HospiRoad, Pomeroy·, has been tal tn Pomeroy.
announced by the Ewing F\lftl:ral
A homemaker, she was born in
Home.
.
GaUia County on Jan. 19, 1944, the
The services Mr. Aleshire, Jr., daughter of the late Bert and Neva
57, who died Sunday at Veterans (Manley) Mowery.
Memorial Hospital, will be held at
. She is survived by: a son, Ken2 p.m. Wednesday at the Free Will neth E. Haning of Middleport; two
· Baptist Church at Holden, W. Va. daughters, Carla Smith and Kas.i
Burial will be in the Highland Smith, both of Middleport; three
Memorial Gardens, Chapmanville, stepchildren, Rick and Niclc Smith,
W.Va.
both of Gallipolis, and Shane Smith
Friends may call at the funeral of Logan; ·and one grand-daughter,
home tonight (Tuesday) from 6 to 9 Brittany Haning of Middleport.
p.m. and for one hour prior to the
Also surviving are: a sister,
service at the church.
Connie Casey of Middleport; a
brother, Carol Mowery of MiddleHarold F. Hill
port; a half-brother, Rick Bolyard
Harold Franklin Hill, 54, 2420 of Bethesda; and four step-grand·
Cora ~ill Rd. , Ga.llipolis, died chiJA-n
'tueSday, Feb: I~ 1993, at Pleasani
· fu'~diuori'. she is s~iv~ by:
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, mother-in-law, Margaret Waush of
W.Va.
Gallipolis; sister-in-law, Joan
He was born Dec. 27, 1938 in Siders of Gallipolis and several
GaUipolis, son of the 'tate Harold A. n'iecC$ and nephews. ·
andGoldieM, Hill.
.
She was preceded in death by ·.
He .was a retired deputy for tjle her husbanc!, Carl Smith, three chi!Gallia County Sheriff's Depart- dren and one grandchild.
ment, retiring m June, 1991 du~ to
Services will be held 1 p.m.
failing health. He was a U.S. Army Thursday at the Fisher ·Funeral
veteran, member of VFW Post Home in Middleport, with Horace
#4464, and prior to working in Gal- Abbott officiating. Burial will follia County, served as a lieutenant low at Gravel Hill Cemerery.
for the Pomeroy Polic!'l DepartFriends may call Wedne~day
menL
from 24 and 7·9 p.m. at the funerS!lfVivors include his wife, Alta al home. -'
•
Naoma (Bush) Hill, Gallipolis, who
' '
he married Feb. 10, 1961 in Lock- Ivan VanMatre'
port, N.Y.; one daughter, Mrs.
Ivan Van Ma~. 146 Mulbtrty
Edward (Cynthia) Campbell of Ave., Pomeroy, died Monday
Gallipolis; two sons, Stephen R. night, Feb. IS, 81 his residence. The
Hill and Dennis A. Hill, both of Pomeroy emergency .squad
Gallil!QiiS; two granddaughters, resoonded to a call at the residence
Stephanie D. HiJI ·and Tiffany Ann at '1:31 p.m. but Mr; Vf!n Matre
Campbell, both or Oallipolis; and . was reportedly dead on arrival.
one sister, Mrs. Paul "Buck" (Eve- Funeral arran11ements are !Icing
lyn) Montgomery or Gallipolis. .
liandled by Ewmg Funetal Home. ·
He was preceded in death by
.,
one infant son;·
· Correction
·1
' Seryices will beheld I p.m. FriTh
.
e. name
of.
a
SISter
of ·
day at Will 1's Funeral Home, with Nathaniel
E~ne Fmk 2 1\ month
the Rev. Willard B!ankenship offi•
.
Burial
will
be
iii
Cen•~"""'
old
son
°~
aries
E:
and
Sherroe
C'•ting.
~
- - , Lawson Fink who died Sat rda
Cemetery. Full military gruvvside
·
'
. u Y'
services will be conducted by VFW w~ IDC!'!'fectly spell~d In ~onPostll4464. ·
.
. • day ~ ediUOII-?f The D8lly Senunel.
Friends may call at the funeral Th~ mformauon was prov1ded by
Ewmg Funeral Home. The correct
home on Thursday from ~9 p.m.
spelling of the name is Courtney
~embers or the Gallon County Ann. In addition to survivon listed
Sheriff's DeJliii'IIDCnt will serve as -in the obituaey, several aunts and
pallbearers.
uncles survive.
.

..
.

get burned again. (First-pick zoe. who insisted that the judgQ had'
Baird provoked public outcry by given Clinton aides the full details
revelations that she'd violated all along . .Clinton aides disputed
immigration law by hiring illegal that; the next dlty, Wood disputed it.
aliens; apd neglected to pay Social too. The source, identified by the
Security taltes.) •
' Times as a man, seemed as kno!"lIn Wood's case, on.ee again, edgeable about the events as"the
Clinton and his advisers failed to p~incipals who livcjl them: Judge·
ask lawyer-like, detailed questions. Wood herself and h~r husband,
They spoke to Kimba Wood in a Time magazine political columnist
Wash-spe~k shorthand. Clinton Michacl ·Knmer.
Meanwhile, Commerce Secreasked: "Do you have a Zoe Baird
problem?" Wood simply said no, tary Ron Iirown admitted on TV·
which was legally factual. She'd · that for yean he hadn't paid Social•
hired her illegal alien just before Security tallea for his·domeslic' help
the law prohibiting it was enacted; · - violating the law othen obey.'
she'd paid all rcqu'ired taxes, filed Yet Lawyer Brown has his safe·
seat at the Cabinet table. But Judge' ·
all required forms.
who broke no law, sits outor course, Wood's most forth- Wood,
side
on
the bench.
•
coming answer to the question
Now
straightest-arrow
AI
Gore'
·
about a "Baird problem" would
has
been
rcjluced
to
dissembling
on
·
have been: "No. I did hire a
. woman whose visa expired ...; but the small stuff. And perhap1 the ·
that violated no law because.... " most ominous sign of all: Clinton':
Clinton's advisers learned of the brought in campaign adviser Paul
expired visa only after they'd Begala, who promptfy went on
NBC's "Today Show" to declare
spruna their leak. ·
-'
that
cvcrythina is fine - the probIn thil cue, either CliniDII conlem
·is
the preu. "The truth Is•that
cluded Wood was unwilling or
unable to reD him ill he needed to the media llirnetlmes gets ·distract- ,
know, or hil polilicallldviaers bolt- ed," Bepla said. " ...The system •
worlccd/
··
ed In rea- or a new public outcry To
which,
Bryant
Gumble'
:
orbolh.
The epiJode ended with a bit or replied: "You realize how much
theater of the absurd. The New · that 1011nda like the sona we've
York: Timea led its Sunday edition been pttlq for the lut ll yean." · ·
Martla Scbr• II a ayndlalted · •
with a IIOry quoeinl• anonymous
writer
for Ntw~paper Eaterprbe'
source clo111 to WOOd - familiar
.
Auoclallon.
with her White Hoialll dealings ll,

Sunny sues wen: IC.IIpccld
today in the hcific Jlianllwa,.•
SOUthern Thus aad 9 1 w 'Rllli-

da.

. :

Temperatures were fc~Rcast
today to in lhc 1CCMS ... 205 iaNor!hwest, ·across ...m of die
Midwest and across die Gaat
Lakcnnd Neall •tt: ill* ]lh_.
40s in ·the Wllilwn Plaias. aua
Valley and ·mid-Adaft:: »qiiaM;; ill
the 50s and 60s ill die 5c . d
along .the Gulf Coast ... ia ck
South; and in die 10s -.1 1111 ill
soulhcm Texas !IDd......,. fbi..
~

At-

.

:
•
:
:
•

•

:
•

:

•
:

. :

. The !high temp
Mwlaj •
for the continent:aJ Ullilal s - :
was 95 degreesatlMcAJb, ThiB. :

--Local briefs----.

S~y ~-ce:z . C~y

so at the time- the Clinton White undocumented household worke!S
House refused to place her name in here than anywhere in the country,'
nomination.
and not a single employer of one.
According to White House here has ever been arrested. How
sources, the subsequent search many members of Con8J:ess do you
turned Lip scores of female attor- suppose have hired illegal domesneys who were qualified in every tics~ How many reporters who are
way but one: They failed the now covering the story? Zoe Baird
Nanny test. One unmarried woman and Kimba Wood were savaged by
without children was all but hypocrites." ·
announced, said one source, when
Meanwhile, oil the "Larry King
it was discovered that her pizza Live" show, House Minority Whip
delivery boy was an undocumenteil Newt Gingrich, R·Ga;, 'claimed
Sri Lankan.
"the Democratic nanny problem"
In Dalhis; former presidential was worse than had been reported.
candidate Ross Pe101 called a press When King asked, "What do you
conference to blast the Clinton pro- make or this nanny thing, Newt?"
posal. "The War .on Nannies will Gingrich waved a sheaf of papers.
be just another expensive bureau- "I hold in my h1111d the names of
cracy," he said, "We don't need a 17 employees of the Rural ElectriNanny Czar running around in
fication Administration who are
thousand-dollar suit and alli~ator employers of illegal nannies," he
shoes. Give me a dozen pnv.ate shouted, "and they're all
eyes and I'll have the nanny probDemocrats."
,
lem solved in a week. It's that simThe show ended in a minor dis·
ple."
·
turbonce when a young man ran in
Joseph Spear, president of the and threw a custard pie in GinSpear Foundation, a small but grich's face. The pie thrower was
. resourceful Washington think tank later identified as an intern with the
which has been researching the Spear FOilndation.
nan_ny problem for weeks, said,
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
"Nannygate is the swpidest Wash- W~"iter for Newspaper Enterprise
ington crime-du-jour ever ta come · Association. .
down the pike. There are more

.

The record high temperature for
The heaviest accumulations - ·
this date at the Colambus weather up to a foot - were expected in
station was 72 in 1883. The reconl New England, while farther south
low was- S in 1904.
the snow was expected to tum to
Sunset to~y will be at 6:09 rain and sleet by midday.
"
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
Strong winds accompanying the
7:22a.m.
storm were expected to cause
Around the utioa
coastal flooding in areas.
A winter storm that dumped " Winter weather watches were
more than a foot or snow across posted through tonigl!l from eastern
much of the nation' s midsection Pcnnsylv111ia to New England.
nioved toward the Northeast today.
Anothet Storm prompted winter
Rain and thunderst.orms rolled . weather watches today in Nevada
across much of the South today.
and the mountains of Southern CalSnow fell this around the Great ifomia. Flurries were expected in
L~es. Wamings for winter weaththe northern Rockies across to the
er and heavy snow were posted . Dakotas,' where temperatures were
today in parts of Michigan, Illinois, not expected to rise above the sinNew York and Ohio.
gle digits.

House destroyed in blaze

,·

President Bill Clinton today be financed by achcu spending, the
launched a "War on Nannies" and president said, prompting an immepledf:ed to' put .an end to the epi- diate reaction from Senate Minority
demic of illegal nursemaids his Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan. "We
administration uncovered in its
search for a woman attorney general.
'"It is time to stem the scourge
or illegal nannies," he said in a absolutely arc not going to borrow
press conference called to billions to pay for the Wartfn Nanannounce the new endeavor. He nics," he said. "Some other
said he will ask Congress today for Democratic program will have to
a $5 billion program that would be terminated to finance what is
establish a new Office of National essentially a Democratic problem." .
Nanny Control Policy, headed by a
The Nanny gate scandal erupted
Nanny Czar and supported by a in mid·J.anuary, when Clinton's
force of Nanny Police who would first nominee for attorney general,
be responsible for tracking down corporate attorney Zoe Baird,
husband! and wives who have admitted that she and her husband,
hired illegal' immigrants as baby a law-school professor, had hired
sitters and failed to pay Social two undocument6d Peruvians to
Security taxes and other fees for baby-sit her young son. An
them.
•
avalanche or faxes and calls to
The president also said he Congress and talk shows doQmed
wbuld,appoint a National Commis- ~ the nomination and Baird withsian on Illegal Nannies to explore drew.
policy options and to suggest addi;
New York federal disuict Judge
tiona! courses of action. The com- Kimba Wood was the next likely
mission would also direct an inlcr- selection, but when the White
agency project to develop a u{ine House "veuers" lcarticd she had
test that would assist the Nanny employed an undocumented immiPolice in the detection or offenders. grant as a baby siucr - even
The $5 billion_, PFOgram would though it was pcrfc~tly legal to do

I

W. VA.

Nanny Commi~sion ready. for action

:
· 87 Tile AIIQcillted Press
: Today is T. .y. Feb. 16, the 47th day of 1993. Tllere are 318 days handsor·
.
Jjjfti. .Jeyea'.
In !~Benevolent and Prolective Order of Elks wu organized in
!rode'• HIJbllghtln History:
New York City.
.
dl M. 16, 1862,
Civil War, about 14,000 Confederate solIn 1918, 7~ yqn qo, Lithuania proc:lairned ill independence.
cliell wtutdered at Fort
!son, Tenn. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's victory
. In 1923, the burial chamber or King Tutankhamen's recendy unearthed
elfiMII him the nickname. "UIICOIIditional Surrender Grant."
' tomb was unsclled.
··
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.

dwlnf,!:

•lcolumbus!2r

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By The Associated Press
Snowfall is expected to taper off
to flurries tonight, but it will be
much colder.
Lows will be in the teens and·
lower 20s. Overnight lows today
were in the mid- and UpPCf 20s.
_Flurries are likely m northern
Ohio on Wedne$day. It will be
cloudy with scattered flurries elsewhere in the state. Highs will be in
the lower 20s to about 30.
A winter storm warning is in
effect for most of the state today.
Snow accumulations are expected
to reach 4 to 8 inches south and
northwest and 6 to 10 inches elsewhere in"Dorthem Ohio by tonight,
tile National Weather Service said. ·

MICH .

muzzled in nuke cover-up?
to a plea bargain in which the company admitted to some minor environ mental violations, and paid a
fine of$18.5 million.

·.

••

Accu-Weather• forecast for

'

Tuesday, February 16, 1993

S

.S now expected to taper off over Ohio

Wedntsday, Feb. 17

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel P g

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OHIO Weather

.Knock on Wood? Leaky dissembiing

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, February 16, 1993

tonum.

·

Selections will include: The
White ROIC by J.P. Soua, Overture
in B-Oat by Giovannini, The Vanished Army by K. Alford, Selec·
tions from Man ol LaMancfia by
Leigh/Ericbon, Themes Like' Old
Times by Baxter, American Folk
RhaJIIsody by C. Grundman and
America, the Beautiful by Samuel ·
Wa¢1Caqnen Dralon, ananger.
The concert will beain at 3 p.m.
The pubUc is invired. Admiuion is
$1.
z
PleiiiDtatJoa plai!IIDed

The Wines Family will Jn.SCIII a

coacert at tho Tuppon Plains
Church or Christ on Satuntay 11 2
p.m. featuring "Kevin and His
WO!IIIer Hone. A covuecl dish dinner wlll be held following the pro-

gram.

;

..

··-

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
responded lo nine calls for assistance overnight.
Monday: 10:12 a.m. Racine to Elm Street for Beffie Ervin who
was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 11:01 a.m. Racine
to Williams Road who was transported to VMH: II :06 a.m. Middleport 10 Pearl Street for Dottie Smith who was transported to
VMH; I :45 p.m. RuUand to Salem Street for Robbie Eads who was
transported to Holzer Medical Center; 4:42 p.m. Racine to Broadway' S~ to Shirley Roush who was transpor1ed to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; 6:30 p.m. Racine to State Route 338 for Pam Wise who
was transported to VMH; 1:31 p.m. Pomeroy to Mulberry Avenue
for Ivan Van Matre who was dead on arrival; 8:09p.m. Middleport
10 Zuspan Hollow Road for Timothy Wise who was transported to
HMC; 11:22 p.m. Middleport to Bradbury Road and transported
Bill Hysell and Lillie Lambert.

Americans...

Continued from page 1 · _

Stocks

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Lottery results

S th ern...

AUTO

earrna,:t:ro~~·sr.rstphase.com-

H ME

Iii·-

Hospital news

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

No_,_
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lleaa dlnDtf
_
A COfllbreacl and bean dinner
wiU,lle beld ,~ Dom 110011 10
5 PA!Ili¥Pellowlhlp Clluldl d

EMSresponds to nine calls

old thing is far higher than the ing beiween $30,000 and $100,000
would see "modest increases
price or chan~e."
·
across
the board" in their taxes.
Clinton will formally wtveil the
Gauging
likely pubUc opinion to
foUr'year plan - which will
the
increases,
Stephanopoulos said
ihclude a new tax on fuels and
"peollle
are
wary
·at· first but they
sources of ener~y and an increase
WINTER WONDERLAND -Howard Reyaaldlilw»
• • •
are
also
willing
to
pay their fair
in the top individual and corporate
by
snow-flaked
trees
as
be
shovels
sidewalb
iMOBIIay
ill ·
income talt rate - in a Wednesday share." As for Republican opposiHays,
Kansas.
By
mid-morning,
Hays
b.ad
l'ecd"al
.._lift
·
night address to a joint House-Sen·\ tion, he said Clinton "hopes if they
Inches
or
snow
In
the
latest
or
winter
·
s
torms
to
•it
·
...
aa
.
:
listen to his plan. look at it, exam·
are session.
Kaasas.
(AP)
·
•
And while the proposed energy ine the specific they'll join him."
...
tall - to be based on.heat content
Solid waste seminar of various fuels- will proportionSenate Minority Leader Bob
ately hit middle-income Americans Do.l.~, R·Kan., in a .televised GOP
scheduled Thursday ::.
the haidtst;· tliriwrl'siid 70 piitcer\t resPC)nse, questioned whether C!inAm Ele Power....... ! ... :........ 34 318
"of the taJtes'I will propose 'fall on ' ton would malcei deep enough cuts
Ashland Oil........................26
Citizen paniciparinn ia uw;.c::·
the shoulders or those who make in 'overnment spending before
AT&amp;T................................. S3 1/8
the solid waste crisis will lie IIIC .;
more than $100,000."
asking for more taxes.
Bank One........................... 52 1/8
focus of a forum 011 Tlna:wlaj at
A.:Whitei House official said
"We'll be worlcing ... to make
Bob Evans ........................ .18
the Meigs County l'iu'blic Ullay ill
Clinton's comments did not certain that 'sacrifice' isn't just a
Charming
Shop
..................
17
5/8
Pomeroy.
address total revenues to be gener- presidential code wotd for. more
Olmp Induslries~ ............... .IO
The seminar, die fa.n.ll iM a
ated, but rather that seven out of 10 taxes, more spending and more
Oty
Holding
......................
21
1(2.
five-part
series spo•••allly lk
lalt increases woitld be aimed at the mandates from Washinp," Dole
Fedcnl Mo_&amp;lll..............:..... l8 3/4 . Appalachian Ohio IJ'ublit: I
ca ~
wealthy.
said.
GoodyearT&amp;R ................. ,691(2.
Center, the Onio Emvinw·m..a
In the past, Clinton only has
Clinton tolhiy was visiting a $3
Key Centurion ...................22 S/8
Protection Agen~y ud tile Eari-- .
said he would raise the income tal&lt; million road repair project in
Lands End.......................... 24 3/4
ronmental Ellueauon Fllllll.. wiJI .·
tate from the current ceiling of 31 • Washington. Some 85 percent of Limited Inc....................... 25 3/8
last from '9 a;m.IIO•i!:JO p.a
percent to 36 pertent on house:. the funds are federal.
Multimedia Inc .................. 33
holds earning inore than $200,000
Clinton told the nation he'd
PointBancorp.................... l2 3/4·
The goal of the ifonam is 10
and individuals earning more than hoped to CBJTY o~ campaign vows
Rax RestauranL.. ................J/16
.
cate
citiZens on lhil1iS _ . as lk
$150,000, and impose an additional 10 reform he'alth caie, improve eduReliance Electric................ 22 3/4
solid
waste debate, how 10 . . -.
surcharge, probablr, 10 percent, on cation andbeer up the nation's
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 18 1(2.
compost marketlib1e _.,. ..... CJLflc(.:
incomes over $1 mi!Uon.
infrastructure "without asking
Shoney's Inc ......................23 1/8
communities ~cr,e doiDz abotl1
Monday night's address was the more or you. And I have worked
Star Bank ...........................36 1(1
household hazardous WilleS.
first time Clinton has used the harder than I have ever worked in
Wendy lnt'L.......... ,.......... I3 118
Keynote speaker• .ram Han. ..., :
$100,000 figure.
my life to meet that goa!. But I canWorthington Ind................26 1(1
is rrogram m~orPtoy~...
White House p~ess secretary not. Because the deficit has
Stock reports are the 10:30
ty s Litter Preventi011 Md ltl:cy• Dee ~e Myers .sBid. today some increased so much."
a.m. quotes provided by
cling program, will :speak . . tk ,
Amencans makmg m the upper
Kemper Securities, Inc., ~~
ethics of solid waste.
,
$100.~ range hkely would also
The deficit, $290 billion last
Gallipolis.
In addition. ,enwia,c•m• u1al affi-·"
see an mcome taJt Increase.
- . year, is expected to soar to .$327
"The top marginal rate will go billion this year. . ·
·
cials from areund ~ tSJaiC will ,
address the merits ,Gf ~ _. up somewhere below $200,000, but
· Clinton said the 500,000 jobs .
it's significandy above $100,000," woutd·.be cr~ted over a two-year
how citizens can set up a cabsidc
she said." She did 'not specify
·
d
D
·
h
·
h
recycling
program.
Pick
3
Numbers:
0-2-1
·
peno . unng t e campa1gn, ~ .
whether the threshold would be for vowed to create that number of
Piclc 4 Numbers: 1-5-7-5
Participants ·can ~ far
laltable income after deductions or jobs over four years. and as recentThe Ohio Lottery will pay out S2 or pay $3 ·a~llhc door. Ques1ioas
on gross income.
ly as Monday moming, other White $505,811 to winners in Monday's about registrati0n shoul41oe diRaStephanopoulos said those malcHouse officials were putting the · Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales edtoAOPIC.
in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
job-creation impact of the stimulus $1,255,188.50.
In the other daily
plan at closerl0200,000 jobs. Clin·
game,
Pick
4
Numbers
players
OU
ton did not elaborate on .where the
wagered
$274,915.50
and
will
c
higher figure came from.
share $144,500.
(lnlinued from page 1
to have every student in the ciass of C01il production down
1994 pass ·the proficiency tests and
The Daily Sentinel ·
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
(UIPIIJS.-)
- Domestic coal production
Publitbad e•ery afternoon, Moa..y
munity volunteers will be assigned totaled 19.9 mi!Uon tons during the
~ l'riday, Ill Coan St. l'ammiJ,
the Nazarene, Rouse 124, across to individual students as their week ending' Feb. 6, down 6.1 perI . . . . . . 'I ,
Ohio by lhe Ohio VoDey PUblilbln&amp;
.
'
from the Fotted Run Stale Park In "Ieamer advocates." Then, over the cent from the 21.2 million tons proCompa~~~/Malttmedla l11c., . PoiDU'OJ',
Reedsville. Coleslaw, fried pota- summer, department staff will duced the previous week, the U.S.
Olrio ";!:!Ph. fiiii.Jill6. -.s •._
.,......
atPaaiMG), c;*o.
toea, hot dop and chips will al.so work primarily with volunteers Department of Energy reporte!!.
Slate Auto's a1readr
be available. There will be a free- . from the Ohio Retired Teachers · The U.S. coal industry produced
low~c::M . .
Tho -lod "'-· ood lho
will offering.
Association to design new tutoring 20.1 million tons in the same week
reduced--by
Ohio N....,..C: - - N .W.ertialq ~tattoo; Braalwn
insUringbolbyu..-ar
New~
u, 783 Tid ... A._-,
Guest IIJM!IIker
,
.
programs and coordinate them with last year, according to the departNow
· New\lftl0017.
ment's Energy Information Admin·
. and home Will the Slilla
Rev. Norman Butler will be existing efforts.
. Auto eomp.nies.
..
istrution.
POII'I'MASTIR: llend- .._,.,
guest speaker 81 the Lona Bottom
Wyoming ranked first among
The .Dat~Sentinal , 111 CO'IIrt S&amp; .,
t:Jnited Methodist Church on Sunthe 26 coal-producing states with · PorMfV¥, ia f118Q.
Let us left 'Y(III:jusl
day at 7:30p.m. The public is
.IIIIIIICIIIPTION
a:rt:
_ _ _JIATII
_ta
4.4 million tons produced. West
·how
muchyotnauiii!JS
invited.
Veterans Memorial
Virginia was second at 3.1 million
o..
woot.
....................................
:
...
jl.eo
canbe.
·
· Monday admissions: Samuel toQs and Kentucky was third at 3
0.0 MGDILI .............. _.._................... . .Ill
·Dance plaaaed
, Williams, Shade.
0.0 Yoor. ..........- -............... - ..UUO
million tonS, the agency said Mon·
IINOUIOOPr
There will be a square dance at
Monday discharges: Dortha day.
PUCII
the Long Bottom Community· Handley, Langsville; Clifford ConDomestic coal production 10 rar .o.ny........................................ ,_,a5 C.tl '
Bui!diill on Friday from 8-11 p.m. , nolly. Racine.
this year is 110.9 million tons,
_ _ _,..........
toTho
Music will. be provided by ''Out or
about 4 percent behind Jut year's
~Blue."
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER , production at t!lil time.
Doll' lloaNoll 11 o lh- ola • II
.
'
-.~willbopu.m.r
Discharges, Feb. ·IS - Testa
The week's production accounts
Guest preacher
Adkins, Donald Buraer. william . for bitwninous and lignite coal.
b J - pamltlod 0.
214 EAST •NN
Rev. Eildie Buffington, Gallipo- Hamon, Gabrielle MJnkin, Mrs.
anu where home curiu ••,..._ il
....rtoWo. ' ·
lis, wlll lie 11Je1t speakcc at Naomi Barry Peters .and son, Herbert
POBUiCY
Baptist Church in J)omeroy on Sun- Clark, Wacouta Darst, Alice Game postponed
The Meigs-Vinton bOys bllsket·
day at 10:4S a.m. The public
invit- Rainey, Anna Shoemaker, I:'hyllis
.
II W...U. ......- .... ,, ......................
ed.
Baird, Bette Smith, IUld Phoebe ball same sCheduled 10 be played
• w-........................................ .11
tonight II MeiJS Hi&amp;h School has
a w-.......-............................. .M
Olhm.
0 :uolil .
been ·postponed because or the
·
Binhs,
Feb.
15
-Mr.
and
Mrs.
The Oroville Dam. which Is located
11
aaAO
'
weather. It ivill be playedoa Friclay
Walter
Cutlip,
daughter,
in California and Ia the highest dilril
'I'IIYIMieC
J
5
I
SIW-......._ ..... .a....- ...........
in the United Statea, was completed Langsville. Mr. and Mrs. Todd . with the reseric aame to start 11
'
6:30p.m.
.
Kitchen, son, MaSon, W.Va.
in 1188.

- -· Meigs announcements
·"
Concert planJied
Tho Big Bend Comm.-ily }iand
will present a public C(li!Cert Sunda~ at the fFias Junior High Audi-

No injuries were reported following a structure fire that
destroyed· a one-story frame house in Salem Township Monday
morning.
,
·
.
According to a Salem TQwnship Volunieer Fire Department
spokesman, approximately 10 ftrefighters and three trucks responded to the blaze on Painters Ridge Road arowtd 5:30a.m.
. The Rutland Volunteer Fire Department was called in 10 provide
mutual.aid.
·
1
The house, owned by Archie McKinney or LanCaster, was unoc·
cupied at the time of the fll'e.
· ·
A coal-oil furnace was listed as the probable cause.

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�Sports

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel·

•

·Miami Heat_, ends OT hex with 130-129 win

Tuesday, February 16, 1993

.

Page-4 .:

By Tbe Associated Press
\he monke~ off our back.'·
The Miami Heat's inability to ' Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
win in overtime was overshadowed Chicago 119, Sacramento 101;
b&gt;; the Denver Nuggets' inability to Cleveland ItO, Indiana lOS; Utah
112, Minnesota 91; Milwaukee
wm on the road.
.·
The Nuggets, taking the road 128, Charloue 122;,an'd San Antoafter winning their lOth consecu- nio 102, the Los Angeles Clippers
tive game at home, got a break at 99:
Steve Smith had 21 points, 12
the end of re~lation to force overtime at Mi~1 on Monday night. · assists and 10 rebounds for the
Glen Rtce, however, scored nine Heat - joining Rory Sparrow as
of his 18 poir\'ts in two extra peri· the only Miami players with a
ods as the Heat, after six consecu· triple-double in franchise histoiy.
Four points'by Rice gav,e Miami
tive overtime losses this season,
a
127
·121 lead, but two free throws
won 130-129 and handed Den~er
each
by Reggie Williams and
its 22nd defeat in 25 road games.
Rice scored five of his seven LaPhonso Ellis made it 127-125
points in the second overtime on with 1:01 left in the second over· free throws, including two with 11 time.
seconds left that guve Mjari!i a 130·
Williams, who scored 25 points
1291ead.
·for the Nuggets, then stole the ball
' ·,.1 told myself that I needed to and scored to tie the game with 54
be more aggressive," Rice said. "I seconds to go. .
was mad at myself. I started taking
Chris Jackson, who finished
it to the hole and making them foul with 27 for Denver, followed a free
me."
~
·
throw by Rice with a layup, giving
Miami had a two-point lead and the Nuggets a 129-128 lead.with 29
the ball with 1.8 seconds left in seconds left.
regulation, but a hlrnover and a · After· Rice's go-ahead free
buzzer shot by Denver's Oikembe throw.s, .)he only shot Denver could
MutombQ, forced the overtime.
manage w~ an·off-balance 3-point
"We just wanted to win one in try by WiUiams.
. .,
overtime," Hea·t coach Kevin
Brian Shaw scored 23 points
Loughery said. "We just had to get and Grant Long 22 for the Heat.

Thlane, New Orleans post .
Top 25 college• -triumphs

SYRACUSE TURNOVER - Connecticut's
Do.nyell Marshall (left) forces a turnover from
Syracuse. guard Scott McCorkle (3~) during tbe

first half of Monday night's game at Syracuse,
N.Y., where the visiting Huskies won 80·76. (AP)

"Willard, Chesapeake top AP ratings
COLUMBUS. Qhio (AP) With just one week remaining in
the 1993 Associated Press boys
high school basketball poll, two
nt:w teams - Willard and Chesa·
peake- moved up to No:I positions to join Stow and Lima Central
Catholic.
•
Will;lrd took advantage of a loss
by season-long No.I Whitehall·
Yearling, which fell to Columbus
Franklin Heights 74-65, to take
over the first slot in Division II in
. balloting by a state media panel.
Chesapealce, which won the poll
title a year ago and then promptly
16st in tournament play, climbed to
No.I in Division Ill when Dayton
Oakwood lost to Tipp City 70-54.
Stow maintained its ranking in
Division I, while Lima Central
Catholic continued as the top tean:t
in Division IV.
Champions in each of the four
divisions will be chosen in Monday's fmal poll.
- Willard went into the week 28
points behind Whitehall-Yearling,
which lost with 6·foot·9 center
Samaki Walker on the bench with a

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
With Mardi Gras going atJ'ull
speed, it only seemed filling 1\hat
the best action in college basketball
Monday night took place in
Louisiana.
The nation's longest winning
streak came to an end at 16 games
as JackSon State dropped an 87-74
decisio11 at Baton Rouge, La., and
the only two Top 25 teams in
action .,- No. 18 Tulane and No.
21 New Orleans - both won at
New Orleans.
Jackson .State's lo~ cost i.t an
honor that was held at different
times this season by UNL V (29
ga01es), Duke .(23), Virginia (16),
·Niagara (II) an.d New Orleans
(10) . .
Southern ended· the streak,
thanks to a 17-0 seeond•half run
that broke a 52-52 tie with 11:18
left.
"A few of their players were
· not thinking of us as a threat," said
Vincent. Jones, a gu&amp;r!l for South·
ern. "They were thirudng about
theU: 17th win. After that, we got

pumped up and ready to play.''
Southern (14-8, 7-4 Southwest·
em Athletic Conference) held a 5933. rebounding edge, and se.nior
center Jervaughn Scales had a
cancer-high 29 points and 22 of the
rebounds:
·
"We are disappointed, but this
is not the end of the season," said
Jackson State's Lindsay Hunter,
fifth in the nation in scorin~ at 27.8
points per game. "Everybody
knows .the streak has to end. They
p)ayed on that other level. They
wore us down and beat us.''
"I ~ow something positive is
goin¥ to come out of this nega·
tive, • said Jackson State coach
Andy Stoglin, Southern's head ·
coach from 1982 to 1984. "Our
main Toclis now is on the (SW AC)
tournament. We'll take this loss
and get refocused. I don't worry
about this bunch. I don't thin)c
. we 'II roll over and die."
,
The longest winning streak in
the country now belongs to Arizona, winners of 15 straighL
Arizona, ranked fourth, plays
host to No. 8 Cincinnati on Sunday.

No. 18 Tui~U~e 63, Canislus 41 . • ,
Tulane knocked off Canisius·'
despite turning the ball over 18'
times and hitting only 28 of 66
field goal attempts, including 2 of
15 3-pointers.
Carlin Hartman was Tulane's
high sco~r with 15 points. .
,
The' Green Wave (~·4) fell •:
behind 10-2 as they failed to score'
a( basket in the opening 5:55, but •
came back to take a 33-19 halftime :
lead and were comfortilbly ahead .
throughout the second half.
•
No. 11 New Orleans 69,' Louis is·&lt;
·
na Tec:b 41
New Orleans held Louisiana
Tech to 13 points in the first half
and took cohtrol with a 26-6 run ·
after the score was tied ~-4 .
Melvin Simon led New Orleans '
with 19 points. .
;·
New Orleans (19-2, 13-0 Sun:.
Belt Conference) has won 16 of its
last 17 games and is tied with No. 8.
Cincinnati for the second-btst·:
record in the Top 25. · . ·
•.
The ijulldogs' 41 po1nts were:the fewest allowed by the Privateers this season.

Tyson will remain in jail
at·least two more months

foot injury. But the Crimson Fl$h· · dusky in the big-school division.
es piled up a 49-point lead over Toledo Whitmer was third, Cleve,
I
Gnadenhuuen Indian Valley, with land Heigh~ fourth and Canton
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- Mike reporters and spectators, Der· weighing evidence, as the defense
Wauseon also moving up a spot to McKinley fifth as the top five held
slip into third.
· their positions from last week's Tyson is expected to spend at least showiiZ headed a defense team that would have you do,'' he said.
two more months in jail before an criticized Marion Superior Court
Neither Tyson, who is serving a
Whitehall dropped to fourth, poll.
Court
of
AppealS
panel
lodge
Patricia
J.
Gifford's
handling
six-year
prison term, nor his accus~
Indiana
with Louisville holding its spot in
Celinneturned to the top I0 in
-rules on the appeal of his mpe con- of the case.
er, Desiree Washington, attendeil
fifth . Washington Court House the.No.lO position ..
Gifford denied a jury the nec(\8· the hearing.
made its first appearance in the
The top three remained the same viction.
The three-judge panel heard sary tools of evidence by blocking
No. lO position, while Ravenna in Division IV, with Lima Cemral
Tyson, 26. was convicted last
Southeast made the biggest jump in Catholic holding a 45-point lead more than two hours of arguments testimony from three defense wit·
nesses
and
refusing
jurors
a
chance
year
of mping Washington in his
Monday
from
Tyson
defense
the division, advancing three spots over No. 2 Sebrin11 McKinley . .
lawyers,
who
said
he
deserves
a
to
consider.whether
his
accuser
had
Indianapolis
hotel room in July
to seventh.
Berlin Hiland was third. .
new
trial,
and
from
state's
attorconsented
to
sex,
the
former
heavy·
1991.
She
was
a contestant in the
Portsmouth Clay wa fourth,
Chesapeake, unbeaten in the
neys,
who
said
his
conviction
weight
boxing
champion's
lawyers
Miss
Black
America beauty
regular season for the second Findlay Liberty-Benton was fifth
, said.
pageant, .and Tyson was in town to
straight year, needed an overtime to and Racine Southern climbed into should'stand. ·
"We want a new trial in which
"It is obvious if they had these promote the event.
·
beat Ironton Rock Hill 73· 72 and the top 10 for the first time this seaall the evidence can be presented to tools, they would have acquitted
then vaulted into the top spot The son.
In a seParate but ~lated appeal,
a jury,"· Tyson attorney Alan Der- Mike Tyson,'' said Nathan Der·
Panthers, the only undefeated team
showiiZ told a group of law stu· showitz, another defense attorney Tyson's lawyers said Gifford also
listed in the Top 10, went from a MAC players honored
dents after two hours of argument and the brother of Alan.
should have granted a new trial
40-point deficit to Oakwood to a
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Bowl- before a three·judge appeals panel.
But prosecutor Lawrence M. after discovering evidence that
I02-pointlead over No.2 Granville.
!Aside the state Supreme Couri Reube·n said there wasn't a legal Washinjlton had signed an agreeOakwood was third, with Bed· ·ing Green's MiChael Huger and
Western
Michigan's
Kina
Brown
chamber,
wh\lre the hearing was basis for an appeal.
ment w1th a lawyer who tater left ·
ford Chane! and Gates Mills
have
been
chosen
the
players
of
the
moved
to
accommodate
scores
of
''This
a[!peal
is
'nOt
about
te·
the case.
·
·
Gilmour each climbing two spots
weelc
in
the
Mid-American
Confer·
.
:
.
:
.
:
.
.
_
_
_
,
:
_
_
.
:
.
_
_
_ _ _ _ _ __
to fourth and fifth, respectively.
1
ence.
Wellsville made its first visit to
Huger, a 5-foot-11 senior from
the Top I 0 coming in ai No.I 0.
New
York City, scored 34 points in
Stow's lead .dropped only five
two
games
last week, including the
points to 55 over second-place Sangame-winning basket in a 49-48
victory over Kent. He made 13 of
23 shots from the fteld, 8 of.lO free
throws and added five rebounds
and six assists.
Brown, a 5·11 sophomore from
Chicago, scored 32 points and had
20 rebounds in two victories last
Division I
week. She also had seven blocks,
Team
Pta.
I· Stow(ll) 17-1 ................................. 359
six assists and four steals.

Scoreboard
In ttie NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allantk DIYIIL0111
W L Pet.

Team

NewY!D .............. 32

16

GB

.M'J7

New Jcrsey ............ 29 21

.sao

4

Bo.wn .................... 26 22
Odando .................. 23 22
Philodelphio ........... IB '1'1
Mi.mi ................. ... \7 31
WubinJton ...... ..... .!l 34

.S43
.Sll
.383
.354
.306

6

1.S
13.5

IS
p .l

Ce.tl'll Dlwlslon

Chie•l" ... ,...~ ... .'.... 34
Cl.l!VE1-'Nll .......33
Owl.oui ................26
Allanta ................... 24
Indiana ................... 22
DruaiL .................. 20
Milwaubc ............. 20

28
28

.IL&gt;7
.635
.543
.490
.44()
.417

9
11.5
12.5

29

,4Q8

13

11
19
22

25

U
6.5

~· Sond""'y

(8) 16-1 ................... ........ 304
Whiuna 16-1 ...................... 2S6
4-Clevcland Hta. 15-2 ........................ 246
.5-Cantm McKinley tS-1 ...................191
6-LOna Sa!ior 1.5· ~ .... ,....................... Ill
1· Toledo S.OU (I) 14-2 ...................... 131
B·-15-4 ................................... 76
9-Da)'lOn Meadowdale 14-3 .................61
tO-Celina 17-1 .......................................43
~-Toledo

15-8\ae)'TUI WynteR 23. 16-Bioorn-CarrolllO. 11·Su.man Nonh Aciln16. IS-

CEDARVILLE, Ohio (AP) Urbana's Mare Eversley and Central State's Antoinette Vinson were
chosen the players of the week in
NAJA District 22 Division I.
Dyke's Robert Kuhar and Georj~e·
town College's Tammr Kindnck
were selected the Diviston II play·
ers of the week.
Eversley, a 6-foot-8 sophomore
from Brampton, o ·ntario, had 38
points and 14 rebounds and shot 74
percent from the field in a pair of
Urbana victories.
Vinson, a 6-0'junior from Wash·
ington, D.C., scored 53 points and
grabbed 18 rebounds in a pair of
victories. She shot 66 percent from
the field and 88 percent at the line.
Kuhar, a 6-5 senior from Cleve·
land, put tol!ether a quadruple-dou·
ble and a tnple-double in three out·
ings last week. He opened with 31
points, l4_rebounds and II assists
m a 127-115 loss to Wilberforce,
then had 25 points, 20 rebounds, 14
assists and IUI,eals in.a 99-88 victory over DiiemClr.1ie made all 17
free 'throws for the week and shot
61 percent from the field.
Kindrick, a 5-9 junior from
Greenville, Ky., totaled 51 J.K&gt;ints,
16 rebounds and ei~ht ass1sts in
three victories, shooung 63 percent
from the field and 84 percent on
free throws.

Dhilslon IV

Brown, Wessel honored

OUten re«tvlna 12 or mot"t poln&amp;t:
ll·Allianoo 40. 12·Cin. Colerain 29. 13
(Ue)-Paineaville R.ive~~ide , Cin. Winton
Woods 22. 15-Lorain Admiral Kina 20.
16-Cin. Woodward 19. 17-Eatt Liverpool
(1) 15.

Division II
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•t Dlvllton

Tam

W

L

Pet.

San Antonio ......... .. ))

14

.?02

U\.lh .......................32 17

.6.53

Houatm .................28

21

CD
2

.57)

6

.40&amp;

14

- . . . .............. 11 3l

.239

J)allas .......................4

.0&amp;5

21.5
29

Dalm- ................... 20 1!J

.

.

43

Padnc Dlvllkxl
10 .713

~amix .................. 36

S..ulo ....................31 17
Portland .................29 16
L.A. I...aken ............26 22
L.A. Clippcn .........2.1 2.1
Golda!. Sialc ..........22 19

.646

SM:Rmcmo ............ l1

.347

32

6

6.S
11

.644
.542 '

.500
.431

13
16.S
20.S

Mondayts scores
OW:ap 119, Sacametao 101
a..EVEU.ND 110, Indiana lOS
Miami 130•.Dcnva- 129 {2 011
Uuh11~..,._..9 1

Milwallkcc 128, ChartOue J2:2
San Antonlo 102, LA. Oippm 99

Tonight's u:ames
D.U.. at New York. 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at New Jcney, 1:30 p.m.
Orlando • Deuoit, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Houatq'l, 7;30 p.m.
BOltOn at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
W11hingttwt at Seattle, 10 p.m.
San Antonio at Goldm State, 10:30

p.m.
.
Atlanu IL Portland, 10:30 p.m.

Te•m
Pia .
I· Will11d (23) 18-0 ............................3S6
2-Gnadetl. Indian Vall. (5) '18-0 .........307
l- W1useon (3) 11-0 ............................281
4-'W'nit.ehaU-Yu.rlina (3) 11~1 ............~~
S-Lcuisville {I)

Denver at Orlando, 7:30p.m.

Naw YOitn O!adoue, 1:30 p.m.
o.llu11~. 7:30p.m.
s.cr.mcaao at lnda.ana, 7:30 p.m.
UW1 • Olicaao. 1:30 p.m.

Ohio high school
boys' basket~all poll

........
bot•
k..t.D....,
OP elaht
......--Ifr Hlp'"""' .......

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- How a

-

.,~-...S-d·
. . . Ollio hip tchool
bl.a-

...., ,..,

Ullh• aevenlh
r • palll for Th• AIIO(lojo

.. .\1111111.._ 41~, wilb won•loct
__. ~ replu-~an ,._of

1'1 -f.. ........................m

6-D•yton Dunbar l.t-3 ....................... 13S
7-Ra.,enna Souther.1t 17-1...... ............. .91
8-0ev. BenWctine 14-3........ .... ..........81
•9-Bellefonll.ine 16-3.................... ........ .58
16-Wuhinawn Cow\ Howe 1~2 ........ .40
Others rttelvlnJ U or nu:.-e polntl:
ll -YOWIJitown Soulh (2) 3S. 12-NeW
Cmword John Glenn 33. 13-Cambridae
21. l4•BelleY\1e 18. l~ · Clcv . Villa An·
ela-St. loteph 17. 16-Canfield (I) IS.

lHRONTON ROCK lOLL 14. 11-Pon
Clin\a\ 13.

Dl•lslon m

Team
PU.
!·CHESAPEAKE (30) 19.0............... 363
2-0ranville 17·1 ................................. 261

3-Dt)'tOn Oakwood (3) 16-1 .............. 246
4-Bedf...O O.•oel (1) )6-2 ................ .186
S-Oatea MillJ Oilrnour 16-1 ............... 183
6-B""*f&gt;dd 15·2 ............... ,............... 154
7-Bainbridae Paint Vall. 16-2 ............ 132
l-8dp,.IH ..................................... ll7
9·CAPE (1) 16-2 ............................... lOti
1{).

w.u..m. (2) , ..3 ...........................42

Others r..:.h'lna 12 or more polntl:
11-0AX Hill. 29. 1'2·Lorai.n Catholi&lt;: 21.
13 (tie)-Columbua Hirtley, Poeblea

Archbold IS.

Wednesday's games
Ddzoit It Mi.nti, 7 :30p.M.

Eversley, Vinson.top
District 22 honorees.

2.5 .

.

Te•m

PU.

I·.Llnu C.... C•lllolic (31) 11.0 ........ 3!3
2-s.brina lokKinloy (l) 11·1............. 3011
3-Batin lri!.nd.(l) 1l-3 .....................217
4-PORTSMOI!THCI..AY (1 ) 16-2.... 216
S-F'tndlayUbctt_y-llcntM 16-1 .......... 173
6-Cin. Cowau,o o., 16-3 ................... .133
7·f""""'t S..looopl!l-2 ................. 12.1.
l-f"'"P"ffiAbbnd 16-3 ..................... M
9-0MI Windl-14-3.--+-................. 69
10-RACINE,SOtm-IERN 14-&lt;4 ............ 46

Ollwn rtttlvhll 12 or ..,. polntl:
ll·Lelpoic 31. 12-1JeUW. SL John'o 33.

13-Lync.hbuiJ CJ•1 29. 14-Middletown
Fen'llriek 25. 1!-Caavey Crutviow 21 .
16·N.w lie&amp;e119. 17 (tie)-FM ROOOY·
..,, Milford Con~a Flilbonb 16. 19-Fon

Lorimio 1!5. 20·Anaonil 14. 21 (tie)·
MeOufreJ Upper Scioto Valley. New
XnGkYille 11.

Allin 7IJe
WAITA0J
.,

· • CEDARVILLE, Ohio ~7.1')­
Walsh's Todd Brown and Shawnee
State's Jenni Wessel have been
chosen the players of the week in
the Mid-OhiO Conference.
Brown, a 6-foot-4 junior from
Canton, totaled 55 poinu and 22
rebounds in helping Walsh clineh
at least a tie for the MOC title with
three victories. He shot 62.5 per·
Cent from the field for the Cavaliers, 25·2 and ranked second in
NAJA Division D.
Wessel, a 6.0 sophomore Cro!n
Waverly, hid 64 points and 38
rebounds .in three VICtories, includ·
ing 27 points and a school-record
17 rebounds in an 86· 70 victory
over Urban&amp;. She shot 58.3 percent
from the field for the week and 80
percent at the line.

The Dally

.

LONDON, Ohio (AP)- It's a
"We played Tecumseh High
record
Dick
Bogenrife
has
held
for
Schoolthey were almost a Class
'
40 years, and may hold for another A·School, and. we had just 30 boys
EYEING TWO MORE - Cleveland guard Mark Price (25)
40.
at our school.'·' he said. "They had
He holds the Ohio high school a guy named :Wayne Embry (the
beats the Indiana Pacers' Dale Davis for two of the former's gamehigh 25 points·in Monday .nigh!'s N~A game in Richfield, Ohio,
basketball record for the most current general manager of the
where the Cavaliers won 110-105. (AP)
··
.
points in a single game, scoring Cleveland Cavaliers) who was 6·
!20 poin~. Bu.t wh~n asked about f~;8and2S~or260pounds.
n, ~~genrife ':"'II sm1l~ and s~rug:
. It took htm ll!ld another g~y to
. }I wa~n t my htgh pmnt '.n hold me to 2?, pomts. I was pretty
hfe, ru: S81d by telephone from hiS proud ?fthaL ,
.
home m Leavenworth, Kan.,
Whtle Embry ~ent on to star m
recently. ' 'There's a lot more to the NBA, ~geMfe ~done more
· basketball than scoring a lot of year at 'Mtdway . Hts average
points. I don't even consider it my increased his senior year lO 32
pom~ per game-. he averaged 26
greatest basketboll achievement.
"The 120-point game just hap- as a JUntor- as hiS team won the
,By JIM DONAGHY
State and also play ArizOna prior to . pened. It wasn_'t P!~nned, it just county tournament.
.
.
AP BasebajJ Writer
the game against the Angels on the happened that n_tght.
. M.td~ay lost to, Mt. Gilead m.
, Jeff Reardon, baseball's all-time I Oth. The Angels also have a . After the Mtdw~y High School the dts~t tournament held at Capsaves leader, has a different look. spring training game with the JUmor struck for ~IS record-settmg ttai,YmverstfY· ·
.
He has shaved off his trademark Chicago Cubs &lt;in the lOth.
·
figure, Bogenrife didn't have time
~y sen10~ Y~ I nev17 scor_ed
. beard so he can play for the Cincin· ·
ProCeeds from the Angels-Notre to rest on his laurels. The next that htgh agam, Bogennfe satd.
nati Reda.
Dame gall!C will jlO to various . night, Midway was soundly beaten. "I do remember that ~e should
, "I've been clean-shaven for a Tempe Diablo chartiies as well as
week," Reardon said. ''I'm not too the Boy's and Girl's clubs in
used to iL I'm not real happy about Tempe . .
iL
Fighting Fernando
"I still have my moustache.
Fernando Valenzuela, whose
That'll come off the morning I brilliant career with the Los Arlge·
come to camp. I've got to leave les Dodgers eqded in 1990, is try·
ing our road trip to Arizona last
something on. I feel naked without ing to squeeze a few more ~real
By DOUG TUCKER
weekend after which I heard Cam·
something."
performances mit of a weary arm
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) patielli
addressing his players &lt;in an
,
Reardon, who has worn a beard 1 and hopes a major league team will The board of directors of the
abusive
manner after both games,'·
thr:fho11t ~is 14-year career, . sign him..
.
National Association of Basketball
Bockrath
wa$ quoted in p3rts of the
. agr
to abide by the Reds' ban _ Valenzuela . pitched in the Coaches inet by phone fof I 1/2
letter
published
in the Sao FrafiCis·
on facial hair when he signed a ._Caribbean World Series in Mexico hours· Monday, talliing•about how
co
Chronicle.
"His
abusive behav. minor-league conlractlast January.
and was a favorite 'of the fans and and w,hether to protest the firing of
ior
was
not
tolemble
in my estimaThe Reds take a hard line on players. But few believe he will California coach Lou Campanelli.
tion.''
facial hair. They were interested in make it back to th~ majors.
With a 10· 7 record and a young,
"Coaches are hired and fired
talking contract a few years ago
"I fdt good and had good con- promising team, Campanelli was
year," Haney said. "We
every
'with Rollie Fingers ·- the man trol,'' Valenzuela said of his work unexpectedly dismjssedJast week.
have
to
accept the fact. But at the
with the handlebar moustache in Mexico.
"Our hope at this time is to
same
time,
we have concern about
but lost interest when he refused to
But those who remember.him in issue a .statement Tuesdily, ~ • Jim
consider shaving.
h~ glory days say Valenzuela has
Haney, NABC executive direc!O!:, •
When pitcher Jim Kel'l) wanted lost consistency and speed, and his said. "This firing of coaches 'iC' M:~igs
traded in 1982,- he started growing . screwball no longer is enough.
mid-season is an issue that we have .
"I wish he had more of a fast. to address. There have been ·four·so ·
a beard. That was the ticket outgam~
. he got his trade.
ball to hide his other pitches," said ' far this·.year in Division I, and we
Reardon, 37, had trouble finding . Angel Figueroa, scout sur.;rvisor understand two 'morc ~ve not been . .TI!e Meigs varsity boys' basket·
a team that would give him a clos- for the Pittsburgh Pirates. 'He has announced. ·
·
ball team will host Vinton County
er's role, so he agreed to the minor- lost about eight miles on his fast·
•'In this particular ·case,. there in the Marauders' final hOme game
league contract- and •the whisker ball."
are a couple of bases left for ns to tonight
removal- with the Reds. He's
Figueroa said the Pirates aren ' t touch before we say anylhing.':
. Seniors playing their last game
The NABC is powerless to stop wdl be John Bentley, Trevor Harri· .
expected to be a setup man for Rob interested at the moment
Dibble and part-time closer.
In•the boolb
.
the firing of coaches, who answer son, Jay Cremeans, Bobby JohnWhat was it like to see himself
Chuck Thompson, who began to the chief executive officer at son, Todd Dill and Kyle Simpson.
clean-shaven for the ftrsltime?
announcing B~ltimore Orioles each school. The coac}les' ~roup
Parents night will be observed. ·
"I had to laugh when 1 lookCd games ~~en before the team joined could bring embanassment w1th its
The reserve game gets under,in the mirror when I was done," he the maJOr l~u~s. has been named command of widespread 111edia w.ay at 6 p.in. with varsity game
following at 7:30p.m.
saill in an interview from his home the 1993 rec1p1ent of the Hall of attention. .
'
·
in Palm Beach Fla. "When I Fame's Ford C. Frick Award for
"We're· very sensitive to ·the
walked out, my ;,..ife jaughed and broadcasting. The . award will be fact that the presidents have the
~Y kids laughed. But· everyone
formaUy prese~ted m Cooperstown authority to . make decisions,
around toWn says I look younger."
~n Aujl. I dunng ~e Hall of Fame whether we like the decisions or
· Heavenly match •
tnducbon ceremomes.
not," Haney said. ''We'~ tryil1g to
• The California Angels will play
For several decades, Thomp- get a.sense for wbat happened arid
Notre Dame in a spring training -~n·s smooth style has been heard how it happened and develop ~
lienefit 11ame on March , 10 at m the Balumore area and alo_ng the appropriate response. The bf(lllder
'Fempe Diablo Stadium in Arizona. East Coast on the strong mdio sta- issue of coac~· being fired in-seaNotre Dame ftnished 48-15 last lions carrying Orioles games. He son is a great concern,"
r.ear ·and received a preseason rank· retired as a full-time announcer
Campanelli, who signed point
By
mgofNo. 1~ in the nation this year after the 1982 bson, but filled in guard Jason Kidd, one of the most
1&gt;y Baseball America.
on radio and worked som~ telecasts highly sought 'prospects in the
.: The· Fighting Irish open their for th_e next seven years befo~e nation last year, won 19 or more
Grate
5eason on Marth 8.. against Arizona rcturnmg as a regular m the radw games in four of his rust five seaof
;
bOoth in 1991 .
·
sons.
,

\

Reardon's moustache
to vani.sh upon arrival
at Reds' training camp

.

radon is quick and easy. And homes with
high levels of radon can be fi11ed.
·
So, if you haven'ttested, call for more
·nformation today, or pick up a iesl kit
this weekend.
·
·
Because fixing a radon problem is a lot ·
smarter than living with it.

radwacll ve gas that finds tts way into
millions of homes .all over the courury.
You can't see or ~mel! it. But it's the .
second leading cause ·Of lung cancer'in
America.
·
Fortunately, testing1your home for

(Ill

1-800-501-UDOII.

•
•

in-season firings because it is
inconsistent, in our view, with what
i~tercollegiate athletics is all
a~··

pan of my junior year. I'll admit
my sophomore year was a trying'
year. My high point game in college was 21 or something like that.
But I came from a very small
school to a college mnked in the
top 10.
;
"(Playing in the NIT) was ll
thrill. It was nice being raied pretty
high, maybe even in the top five.
The finals were probably on.
national TV, and that gives you a.
feeling of importance.
;
"A lot of people 1 played witli'
went on to the next level. ... I went '
to UD and then spent 20 years .in :
the Army. I've been in real estate
and development since 'then."
·
Bogenrife was a player-coach ,
on a team that won three ,infantrY.
division championships in Hawaii'
in 1959-1962. But you won't find
him trying to live in the past.
·
"!like to watch 'the playoffs,
but that's about it," he said, "Has ..
it changed~ Somewhat. But thQ:
bucket's still the same height. The
players today are quicker and
they're faster, but that's relative.
The people I played' with could :
play in the same league.
"But you know what my great· .
est thrill is? ll's ·having a granddaughter. Her name is Kristen, ana
she's 5!'

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Cleve- Hilgenberg, younger brother of
· J H'l be
land Browns coach Bill Belichick Browns center
ay t,gen r11.
FereniZ said he did not llunk his
has added former Maine head
C'oach Kirk Ferentz to his staff as lack of pro experience would be a
offensive line coach and former problem.
"I'd like to think I've been
New Mexico head coach Mike
well-schooled
in all phases of l(ne
Sheppard as an offensive assistant
play,"
he
said
in a telepholle con·
f'erentz, 37, and Sheppard, 41,
fe~ncc"call.
"Now
1 have to go out
will he coaching in the National
and
prove
mvself.
It
better not take
: Football League for the rust time.
too
long
or
1~11
be
in
uouble. Real"
' "Kirlc has built a strong foundaistically,, l'm eonfldentl can make
tion at Maine and helped make that
acljustment "
them a winner again," Bill
l&gt;erentz
replace~ Hal Hunter;
Belichick !aid Monday. "He is a who wu fiJCd.
COIICh 'we've looked at for while.
Shepplrd was offensive coordi·
He's had obvious success at teach· natorqtiarletbeckS
coach at Califor·
ing ~level players." ·
· ilolichick said Sheppard nia in 1992, after spending five
• 'brings a lot of· experience of years u head coach 11 New MWworking with one-back and no- co He also worted as head coach
' Lon( Beach State for three
blck ....unna offense~ at the colleae at
years
level.r.'-tcz ~bed Maine for the . Amons the playen he coached
Pill t1uee ye~~~,aolng 6-5 in 1992. in colloae were Jim McMahon,
BetoN dial, 'ho wu the otrenaive Mare Willllll and Bob Gagliano. In
· line cotiCh 11 Iowa far Dille _ , Clovcland. he wiD help ill a number
and 11 Pllllllurah for 0111. AliiOIII of offe111be areu blit 'fill focua 011
·· ·
· •
tile u•..,.
-Jimllo tight ends.
Cover&amp;, Ru11 Gri
and· J(lcJ

a

·=.

to~;~~~~~~~n~~;n~atili~~~~
wasn't given any hearing before

Rutlad
Ful'lllt1re

they fired
him,''
Iowa State
coach
J.ohnny
Orr, said
p~sident of the
NABC. "On the 24th of January he
g01 a Phone ~I f~m . the chancel·
lor congratulating hun on the good
J'ob h.e was doing. He got a letter
.from the guy who fired him saying
good job, keep it up: Then two
wedtslatertheyftretheguy." ·The NABC board consists of 16
coaches, including Duke's Mike
Krzyzewski, Kansas' Roy
Williams, South.ern Cal's George
~~~!ng and Louisville's Dennr

Pltllnt "So JOU
by~?"

a

I IOGIIWI•ICI

ay,.... ""' .......

- · ''Yfl.
OIIIOr, l1o ,..nlry, ond l1o pl-

perlor."

.

•••

People hoe '!dlxuue,_ that tt.y
.., fllol tllo dtvlt, but tlloy ..,., fool

... ...-..

•••

A Uallata 1 bull ond . - . A ' hoonl t11o nolao ond l1o lion.
llorol: you're lull of bull, Mop

.--~~~-•••

Pooplo who .., 1f1r11 on _ , ,

tunnr ......

. Haney denied reporU the NABC
was cOnsidering trying .!O blactblll
Todd ~man. !he llliatant COICb
who was named mterlm bead coach
· to rep~e c.::ranclll. Boze"!an
has been~
by tome of trying
to ~~nn,tne Campanelli.
It s difficult even to respond to
~at," _Haney said. "For 11;1 to Oflll·
mze mto somethlnl hke that,
fra~kly, would be appa!li~g. It's
ludicroua to ~ven. ditcuss 1L
Cal athleuc director B~ Bock·
rath wrote to ~Y den)'lng Boze.
man had anythmg to·do w1th Campanelli '1 dismissal.•
"I came to that decision foQow.:

..
-''•
..••

••
.,

0

Every lime we

.

ann,ou~ce me appointment of a new Agent .

we feel we have improved our formula for success. We 've
We 're The Shelby Insurance Group . We have over a hun·
dred years of experience providing dependable insurance
protection for famil1es and bus&gt;nesse s. We are "'~resented
by local indepe nd~nt A.gents who provide face-to-face. per·
sonal ser11ice ... r.ight tn your ne&gt;ghborhood .
You ·know . we 're proud every time we can mtroduce a new
Agent. Not every Agen t can be a Shelby Agent . Shelby
Agents are carefully ~elected for their knowledge. proles- ·
sionalism and their ability to recommend ttie right Insurance
coverages you need . They f:milg a lot of fresh ideas and
new perspectives to share with us ... and with you . And what
llo you get when 'you mix lt]ose Ingredients with Shelby's
superior service and .experience? Simply the best of both
the old and

DAVIS·
.QUICKEL

•••

K - wlllt t
If ,OU
......., 1ft1P dtaiiii'OL

.

.

'

I

added something that makes us " new and improved ."

on -

,..,. ....... =-"
.

One the
best .things about
SheJby· Insurance
IS a new, not-so-secret
ir:-gredient

=
.
.......
..•.

......, ....

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.

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AGINCY

-u.u _ _.., .....
••r'IJIIIIII_--MI-.•WI!If.

....... u.v.

114Court SL
Pomeroy

IEYeiJIIaJ LaW PrloaL

992-6677

Wlin,..~._teiiiUn•
R.S.V.P.~•

.'
.'
~

'

IIHUIIt

Rutland Fumlture
Rt. 124

Al,ltllnd, 011.
742-2211

.·

..

to host
Vinton 'County in
final home

,

~ado.n is a naturally ~curri'ng, deadly

have won that game at Capital.l'm
noi sure why we didn't," he said.
Bogenrife went to the Univetsi·,
ty of Dayton, where he played on
three teams that went to the National Invj tational Tournament at
Madison Square Garden in New
Yorlc.
He never scored .more than 120
points in ;1 season-. much less one
game- but although he averaged
only 3.1 points in his career,
Bogenrife remembers the his college days fondly.
.
"The basketball.experience at
Dayton was one .of the greatest
experienc·es I' ve ever had," he
said. "I learned more about life
than any academic setting. It taught
me to hang in there and play the
last two minutes. ·When you're living, working hard and down and
out, just hang in there.
"The only yeat I staried was

NABC deciding ways, means of'protest
about firing of Cal coach Call)panelli

.Cleveland Browns add
•stan.
t
coaches
assl
two
'

FOR

one scored 19 point$ and John •
Stockton had 12 assists.
:
Chuck Person had 26 points fO!"
the Wolves.
•
Bulls 119, Klnp 101
Chicago snapped a three-game
home losing streak and pulled iniei
a rust-place tie with New York iiithe Eastern Conference, beatiag•
Sacramento behind Michael Jor-:
dan's 32 points and Scottie Pippen's 26 points and seven steals.
Pippen 's three-point play;
capped a 9.0 run at the Start·Of thO
fourth quarter, putting the Bulls.
ahead 94-78. Jordan scored 2()..
points in the second quarter, help-:
mg Chicago take a.61-46 halftime:
advantage.
•
·;
Cavaliers 110, Pacers 105
Cleveland banded Indiana itt•
seventh consecutive loss as Mark
Price celebrated his 29th birthday
with 25 points and John Williams
scored four of his 23 in.a four-sec-:
ond span late in the game.
•
Indiana pulled to 104-102 with·
36 seconds to play, but Williams
sank two free throws with 23 seconds left, then stole the ensuing
inbounds pass and made a layup.
with 19 seconds remaining, sealing·
the outcome.
.
:

Bogenrife says record ·was not high ·p oint in his life ;_

Dave

•••OR TEST YOUR

Spurs 102, 'Clippers 99
San Antonio continued its spoetacular record under· coach John
Lucas with a victory at Los Ange.
les.
David 'Robinson and Dale Ellis
sco~ 22 J.K&gt;ints each for the Spurs,
who surv1ved.a 14-point fourth
quiuter for their eighth straight victory, their 16th win in 17 games
and their 23rd .in 26 outings under
Lucas.
Bucks 128, Hornets 122
Frank Brickowski scored 2o
points and Milwaukee-'s reserves,
led by rookie Jon Barry, .held off a
late rally.against Charlotte.
Barry, playing 17 minutes
because of an elbow injury to Todd
Day, scored a career-high 18
points, including 12 in the fourth
quaner.
Alonzo Mourning had 29 points,
12 rebounds and six blocked shots,
while Dell Curry scored 24 points
for the Hornets.
Jazz 112, Timberwolves 91
Karl Malone scored 16 points
on 7-for-7 sho01ing in ihe third
Quarter and finished with 38 points
and 12 rebounds for Utah at Minnesota.
Malone made 16 of 20 shots in
the game for Utah, while Jr:_fr MaJ.

SIIU BY
,,

PrO&lt;idly repreHflrmg The Shelby
Insurance Company
.

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ll

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The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, February 16, 1993
Page-6

'•

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· ------------------------------------~-----------------------------------------'

\Doctor thanks patients.who ·show
1up on time for an·a · tment
;' Dear ADa Ludera: In 1 m:ent
l ~lumn, you asked physic- til

Ann

; lliey have an 1pp0intment. I would

Landers

.v...

•_o~ !,.......,_,
til ....
who com..a.:.
~t'-na
~.,.....,
ibOut having til wait even though
til tcply.

Loo .....oteo
1. Emergencies always take
n.
..
SYJ!dllcai&lt;. ODII'
~ priority and C8IIIIOt be aebeduled
Cnalon Syndltal(' ·
~ 2. Many patients have an extta
~ problem to discuss, something that
From Sheboygan,
I 1D1 1
~ "just came up."
primary Clle physician who always
~ 3. Patients phone and insist !hat runs lale. Why1 Bec•tle evay oda
. lhe doc~ call tllem back immedi· "pa&amp;ienl has at least IWO addilionaJ
~ .at.ely.
complaillls he m- sbe wants to talk
:--:;jl. Hospital patients who are lbout, and llniiJt listen. In my opin•~~ritical need to be seen at once. ·
ion, listening is tile most important
- S. The real culprit is the palient pan of the doctor-patie_nt relatiQII·
who comes in late and lhrows lhe ship, and listening lakes lime.
:"'entire schedule off.
Kearney, Neb.: I am a doctor who
.Afteueading )'QUI' column, Ann, conli!Jues to keep patients wailing. I
1 went over my records for one ·full work 12· to I~ days. I also
month to see if 1 could detect a pal· work nights and weekends. My
1e111. Sure enough, one out of threi! .phone wakes my children at night,
new patients arrived an average of but I don't dare tum it off. One or
: 17 minutes late after having ~ ..the most common reasons for
• instructed to come in 15 minuteS! getting behilid is because someone
, early 10 fill out forms.
is very ill and does not have an
~
While I'm at it, I want to thank appointment When .people tell me
lhe two-thirds of my patients who !hey are.desperate, I can't tum them
·
, always show up on time. •• down.
I have waited 10 see other profes! ·J£lNATHAN BALDWIN, M.D.,
""-B9WLING GREEN, KY.
' sional people -- accountants•,
DEAR DR. B.: The responses lawyers, dentists and business
1 tnim doctors' who wrote 10 acquit consultaniS - and am sympathetic
J lhemselves was.predictable, butlhe to ·their problems. It would be nice
volume was staggering. Mercifully, if tlley letumCd lhe Courtesy.
most of lhe leuers were typewrilren.
Tulsa, Okla.: Having ninCd at
Read on:
Coole County Hospira'J in Chicago,

!

f_,_

Community Calendar items
1 appear
two days before an event

~·lind the day of that event. Items
1 must be received weD in advance
e to' assure publication in the cal·
' endar. ·
: •
; •
.
TUESDAY
:
! POMEROY • The Meigs County Republican Executive CommitI tee will meet Tuesday at 1 p.m. at
~ the Meigs County Court House.
•
• ·
&lt;
RACINE • Recertification classes for currently licensed pesticide
p pplicatqrs will be held at- the
~puthem High School Voag Build'
, in~ in Racine on Tuesday from 7-

at7:30 p.m, at the' rue station. All
members urged to auend.

Days
1
3
6
10

Refreshments were served by
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny ·wyant Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas DeBord, and Jane
Wise.
· .
·

t

seai~d

front, Jilli and Jenni Young, and back, ·
Z~ck Weber, Josh Ashley, and John Bentz, .left
to right. -

Roclne. • BR,

.' '..
'• .•

Movie review
By Kevin Pinson

: Ever since Old Yeller, Disney
I has had a penchant for movies SJ.V·
rring animals. It's as if Dr. Doolittle
•is· on staff and translates animal
: behaviors and mannerisms into
:English so we can all relate.
~
Wi lh incredible, inspirational
~scenery from tile mountaintops and
E::emess of northe.ril California
the backdrop, Homeward Bound
the~tale of three pets making
lhoir way througl! tile rilgged Sier·
:,.. in ~h of their family.
: Fierce loyalty and unconditional
ttove keep the trio going through
[oblt8clel such as mpids, wild anijmals. •!'d forest rangers in their
. ~b for home.
i StilTing the voices of Michael J.
fox, SaUy Fields and Don .t~;meche ,
flomeward is the Look Who s Talk~111 of domesticared animals.
rUCIIIY pup named Chance
a wizollod old dog named
(Ameehe) and a priasy cat
Susy (Fields) talk as we

: .1.-

S

ras.

Homeward is obviously aimed
at children, with a Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtle level of humor that
offers plenty or jokes .about butt
sniffing and tree RCCing.f
It is stiU a treat to watch, especially for animal lovers and pet
owners who can truly appreciate
some of the commentary on
human-animal relations.
Homeward Bound is ttaditional
Disney entertainmeill.
Kevin Pinson. is a starr writer
for Ohio Valley Publishina.

Check our Price or We Both Lose

:1r• LOWIOII 10 SEIVE YOU IEml

KELLER'S CUSTOM
. BENDING

Public Notice

Public Notice .
P-..y, Ohio 45718 undl
12:00 noon on tho 3111 day
of MoiGh, 1113 onct Jll 1:00
p.m. oponed by.,. Clork Of
oold Boord onct r•d oloud
lor tho looalng of o 11t3
outomobllo lor the Melgo
County Doport111ont of
Humon Sorvtcoo. Sold bldo
IO be qUCIIod lor I lh...
loeoo r:;:niod:=;·~~=1i.m::.~·:
lor •• ••
lilly
obtained
ctirll
lh:,:.::r.I~:.:~;!Y Boord

H OURS::

47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Y. Mile Qff Rt. 7 .
Thru Chester o• Rt. 248
·"
.-.•.
PH. 614·985·3949
...
NOW OFFERING......
OIL AND LUBE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND ROTATING .·"

S u...S.\I'·IIoncln -Cio su

Tll!eSiby- Wccll d "Q' - Friday - ~k3 0 a.m . • 5 : J O'P.m .
TlluRGay- S.t ..
J O: OOa.m .- 3:00 p : m .

W.•-

2/15/93/ I •o·pll

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

«?~

between
1:30 o.m. ond
4:30 p.m., llondoy through

•.aoo

I

1l• 11 11 10 Jhe obove octlon,
MEIGS COUNTY COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
order of oole tn
POMEROY, OHIO
lfoorocllooure from the
1 Coull of
llln.k Pne, Ath.,.,
. N.A.
Plalntllf :~~~::.~~~P~t;h~ Ohio,
ond
VS
tho
AIIMI B. Allmon, II ol.,
Deftndonta
NOTICE FOR
PUBUCATION
c - No. t1.CV•Z32
DATE OF SALE
Notice to horeby given
THE BALANCE WITIIthat 011 Frldoy, the tilth cloy
(30) DAYS. THE
of Morch, A. D., 11t3, ot tho DEPOSIT SHALL BE FOR·
hour of 10:00 o'clock A.M., I FBTED IF THE BALANCE
will offer for eato 11 public IS NOT PAIP WITHIN THE
· ouctlon litho front door ol THIRTY (30) DAY PERIOD.
the Shortff'o Building, 104 ·
Glvon under my hind thlo
E••• Second Street, 3111 doy ol Feltrue.-,, 11t3.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
the · Jem• II. Souloby, Shorlll
following ,.., hlo.t e o!Juote
Mila• County, Ohio
ln the County ol Melga ond
Br: Uea Rouoh, O.,uly
SIIIO ol Ohio, ond In tho Robert J. Goll
Townohlp al Columblo, Jo • Allomey lor Plolndff
wit:
(2) t, 18, 23; (3) z, 9, Sic
PARCEL 1: Slt~oled In
Frocilori 33, T. I, A.· 15,
Columbia Townahlp, Melga
County, Ohio, and bolng
pori ol o troct ol lonil 11
dncrlbed In volume 251,
. PubliC Notice
page 100 Melga County
OHd Rocordo ond . being
NOnCE OF SALE
more portlculorty deocrtbod
By virtue ol en Order ol
oololowo:
Silo looued out ol lhe
. Beginning ot o polnl Common Pion Courl ol
where tho Eoot Uno al
Oh
1 1h
Froctlon 33 lnleroocta' wllh Molgo County,
Ia, n
cno ol Homo Notlonol
Townohlp Rood 11; thence Bonk, Plolnllll, egolnal
otong oold Froctlon Uno D
G s 1
1
North 457-75'to on Iron pin;
M!IIJnl ' tut er, et 1 ·•
Dolendanto, upon o
thence N. T7 dag. 31' oW" W. Judgment Jhoroln rend-.
327.10' to 1 point In . being Cou No. tZ-cY·231ln
Townohlp Rood 11, pooolng oold Court, t wilt oller lor
on Iron pin oet ot 312.10' oole, 11 the front door altho
thonco otong oold rood S. .Court Ho~oe In Pomeroy,
Ot dag. 51' OS" E. 485.03; to Ohlo, on the 111h doy al
I point lhlnco S. 41 deg. 51' Morch, 1813, II 10:00
58" E. 58.28' to I point; o'clock A.M., the following
d
ta-w11
thonco B. 88 dog. 04' 15" E. 1 d
181.14' Jo tho polnl ol
on • an -menta,
:
Slluote In lho Townahlp ol
beginning ond contolnlng Orongo, In tho county of
3.00 ocreo.
ond Stole ol Ohio.
SubJect to ol euomento
In rena• No, 12,
ond rlghto olwoy of record. l~ttclli&gt;_n 33, Town 4 al Jho
Deed Reference: Volume Ohio Compony'o Purohau,'
288, Pogo 201, Molgo ond bounded ond daoctlbod
County lleod A-•· ·
•• lollowo:
Beglnntn; ot Jho South. PARCEL It: Sltuoted In
Frocilon 32, Socllon 27, T. eoal corner ol tho tendo
tN, R. 15W, Coluinblo formerly owiled by J. A.
Townoh~, Melgo County, Wutloll In Soctlon No: 33;
' Ohio en bolng I poii·OI 1 thMti:l North 101 rado to
118.03 acre t11ot dncrlbod 1h 1 c
A 1c1 th
oun;r. 0 : once
tn Volume 221, Poge 113,
Melga County Deed north ee egrHo Wnt 11
Rooordo ond belnL:'ore rodo ond 11 IInke; thonco
South 71 dagr•• wool 15
polllcutorly dncrl
•• IOdo ond 14 tlnko: thonco
~::.'nnlng 11 I he Soulh 411~ degreo1 Wnt21
lnteroootlon altha W•lllno rod• ond 23 llnko; thonco
South 17 d~·- w... 37
of Froctlon 32 ,wIIh I h• rodo onii'S llriko 10 the lorltl
centerline ol Columbia of tho rood: thence 110uth
· Townahlp Road 11; thence 8 ~ dog•- &amp;ot 41 rodo
olong oold Froci1011 Line ind 4 Unko; thenoe South
North 457. 71' Jo on Iron pin
d
&amp;
27 ad
~-n- N. 5I d-. 15' ev.
I "
' •
••1. 1 ...
-·
lnd 11 link•; Eut 70
41" E. 358.21'10 on Iron P!n rod•· end 11% tlnko Jo Jhe
HI, I - S . 43 deg.10 E. ploce • ol
beginning,
504.51' to on Iron pin oet, contolnlng lorly·llvo (45)
thlllco .B. 411 dog. 38' W. ..,.., mOll or !Mo.
530.11' to I point In
DEED REFERENCE:
conterllno al Columbto Volume 330, Pogo11, Melgo
Townohlp Rood 11, puolnp County Deed Rooordo.
on Iron pin ut ot 107.13 •
Audllor'o Porcel No.: 10.
t - with eald rood N. 74 00314
Sold reel eotolo lo
dog., 21' 1r W. 25t.er to
the polnl ol beginning ond opprolood ot: •2o~soa.oo.
oontollllng 1.771 ""'"·
Tormo ol Solo: cooh
lubJoot to oU uoamento
Rut oototo aonnot be
ond rlghta ol woy ol ,_rd. oOid for t011 lhon ~hlrdl
Dootl Refer•noo: Bolrltl ol.the opplllood vlluo.
_.._ 11. Souloby,
port ot tho Voreol ••• ~
dnorlbed In
tumo 2•••
Shorlll olllelga Cou.,!ty,
Pogo Ill!, Molgo County
....Ia
lleod
Rl.ltoferanco:
do.
u-•
11,_
23,_
3111 _ _ __
Deed
·-um• (2)
. _t,_

I

CHF.&lt;&gt;TER CHAMPIONS • In the spelling bee at Chester Elemenlary School last week, lbe winners were from the left, Valerie
Karr, s~ond, Jessi~a Po~e,lirst, and Jessica Marcum, third. Jessica Pore correctly spelled "foolprOQr' and "foreground" lo win the
bee over the ~2 contestants from grades.fourth, fifth and sixth. She
will participate in the county·spelling bee to be held Feb. 25.

I'

for all college bound students. -~

,.

'

which

Tho .Cammlootonoro
ro..,o tho rlghl to rofoct
ony oU bide end/or to.....,..
Jho boat bid lor tho lntetldod
PUIJIOM.
Mo.-, E. Hobota-. a.rtt
llolp County
CommlooloneR
(2) 11, 23, 2lc

130,411.81
Tolll

.

· ~·

:t·.li' •.• ~·

'

217,

Pogo 711, Motgo

County Deed IIIMrdL

Tho promloeo to be
oonvorod ... toxed ••
Peraol Number 01-otl004
endGI-GGIILOOt.
·
The pMMI- 111 ~ted
oil Roulo •• Allloy, Ohio.
Tho ...... IIIJ IUpprelaod II
•
- thouoall4 dolllll
1
(17,1101.10), ond - t 1M

10111

Public Notice

will bo
lllo IloilO
rei
ol

TWO-I :~~:5~i:!~lnIn ththo
..r

fDr lui tllln
niAIIIoftiiM·L

1llo "'"' · lr loto.,.IO!tl

lanaJI Ides
JOE N.SAYIE

(Under)

OTHER
SOURCES (USES)
Other Soul

'

Roc. I

tntergo-nmont.l!l

llecolpii .... - ....., .. 42,4M.It
In-t.......:................ 348.37
AIOihw .

oe.

O..(u...)
lllab.• Othar

1Jooe._:___.l(15,u:o.11ZJIII

Fund.CMh •lana.

J1n.1. 1113..-

42,us•

R-•.............30,57Z.7t
TOTAL

Fund C.oh • Doc. 31, 1tt3.-..27,421.83
Dopooltory

....... _ _____ ......871.10

~~~--11..--~.Z.l'IIIJIII
ToiiiT,_....,
. B•l•n•-----21•.-.a
TOTAL BAL-.-..:..27,421.11
SUMMARY OF

fiECEIPTS .......... 110,947.5t
DISBURSEMENTS:
Gonerll .
Govommonl ......... 30,337.t7
Publlo Soloty ......... 17,052:17
Public Worb ......... 78,t35.40
Clpllll Ouuoy ............. m.a1
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS ............... 127,781.01
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
OtllliSollrcoo/
Row~r••

.........I -.._. 1,300.00

Tote! o Reo. Other
Sou.-. o- (Uncler)Dlob.
• Other u--(15,533.421
Fund Cooh llolanGO
J111. 1, 1l1N-..... -H,a1.51
Fund Cooh Bo.-

~~~------24.121.11

INDEBIWI
Outaloncllng,
JML1,1112-- -52,2"GI
llolhcl.----·- 5, IGI
Outatoncllna
. Doc. 31; 11it2._41,40f.
I -rHy thlo , _ t to IJo
0011801llnd'trua, to ... or my lcnowt• tar
Opot L .,_,Clod!
llt1la

Dea. at, 1112-1t,IN.ot (2)11,110

P.O.BoaAutlond, Oh. 457J5
ett-7-

Reasonable Rates
Fulllnsurod

742·2160

SRUATION.
REDUCE
ANDIOR
CONSOUDATE.

NEW LOANS

To Spy the Best Buys In
the Closslfleds.

CALIFORNIA
TANS .
l'GiftlflteS.,_,.I
15 S.ulons '15
Plus FBI llottle of
lotiH

.............
,...."
949·2823

........

.IISSILL &amp; lUilE
COISTIUCftOI

===···••e•··
':1frf::Z:r
1

tii•447J

667-617t

Quality . ··

.IOIZE

Stone Co. : "

TIIIIIG
hai.Hrl SpNitl
Limil2 Per Customer

-

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

Hnlfll.20

949·2126

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

949·2Hier
1·100.127·1460

•TRUCKING

Lanllualsag.
"N . . . md
I
A+
Shrub oncl Troe :r.llu;lng

D.A.IOSTON
UCAYIONG

."""""""'

Call 614·992·
6637

14SEU...S-'14

oBACKHOE

R•'f•lllaC

SIZED LIMESTONE·
FOR SALE ..

I ••rU.,I.ci•

lEVIN'S UWI
MAIITENAICE

•TRACK
LOADER

FertiUzh~g.

You Don't Hove To Look

FOREVER

IIIPROVE YOUR
'MORTGAGE

ALSO.
614-992-7523

ea•-

Take Pride in America. Today. ~n't it
time we'all said "stop?"

U.S. Department of the Interior

(614)

.....

HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

1....

(614) 992·5449

frMF.'m I I

...,

F1IIEWOOD FOR SAlE

CHIRUIE'S

SMALL DOZEI

WOIK.

MICROWAVE OVEN
••IIYCR REPAIR

SERVIa

.

DRIVEWAY WOII

ad UMEsTOIIE

DEUVERY SlbKE
IIUSOIIAill IllES

·992•7553

PINIIIIY,OI.

T•PL 5

.
._...

e u ,-a

.......

"lti':ua IUVIIIIALS
IIJ:.!.aBI. &amp;

rt

If. a 4S7H

IJ2 6113

llliiiiU
lrl.. _It ,_ Or We .
lii!U~~t_
...

36970 WI• Rtllid .
••

.,, O.iD

SIZED UMISTONE

lEN'S APPLIANCE '
11mc1
·

992-3470

915·2561

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

992·5335 or ·

OWIII:

'

"

217 L locoH lt. •
POIIIIIOY, OliO
318/'eomii

Jeff .......

HOWARD
EICAVlnNG

EVERY lMURSDAY

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE

EAGLES

oncl TRACKHOE WORK
AVItiA UILE. ·
IEP1IC IYSTEIIS,'
la.IITEI oncl

.CLUB
IN POMEROY
8:41p.m.

Spec,_,&amp;rtrBlrd

I100Pwruft

Th'- ... JIDOd tor 1
FREE CMl
Lie. No. 0051-32

UCII( GUN·
. CLUI
GUN SIOOIS :
SUNDAYS ·
I:OOP.M.

mAILER IOEI,
LANDCLEAAIIO,
DAIVIWAYIINITAU.ED
I 7 mMCE TAUCICINCI

OPEN 1'0 PUBUC
12 GAUGE ONLY

992·3131

SNFORCEO

FlEE E8nMATI8

FACTORY CHOKE .

,

fll/'tl/1

I ainti • - .

..!· . •

..!,

•

~

.,.

Working together, we can curb
vandalism by passing the word about
the waste and destruction it causes. For
more id.eas on how you can help, call
Take Pride in America at
1-800-U.S. PROUD.

Box USA
Washington, OC 20240

$.05/day

or •

Americans pay more than one billion
dollarS each year to repair and replace
vandalized highway signs.

1-800-US PROUD

109.95 +Tax
Co•puter Balandng • Struts, Shocks,
. Cambor Bruihing

111
~=~=bldG=
·
~Cd~B~1
..
~99;2T·7~10&lt;~
.
~
1or~;·;;~~=~
F~:·
bo111d Commloolonorit
by 1011...1 taw
~ Public Nollce
·p10hlllllo oontroctlng lrom
Public Notice
on ••••bllohmont 1hoy
--------1
funlly m...,bor moy hove •
IN THE
.h
t he property ol the ftnanclol In-ln.

•

IN

S•IHI•J C•llsl

GET RESIJI..TS ·PAST!

°

TAKE~

(llo

===----

botlla. 2 garaaea. rentod 1
BR apo. Pmpony lncluclea
aq. lt. farm

I

' lime)

$ ·.20
$.30
$ .42
$ .60

ownw financing ol up "' 80'JI. of pu'cl1ase

'

would imagine our own pets do
when we're not around.
The furred uio are the pets of
Jamie, Peter and Hope, rest?OCtively, whose mother remarr1es and
moves her family to San Francisco
where her new husband has landed
a temporary job.
Unfortunately for Chance, Shad·
ow and Sassy, San Prancisco is no
place for them. The pets are talcen ·
to a ranch ran by tile mother's old
coll~ge friend and do not understand they-are just being temporarily baby sat; they think they have
been abandoned.
Altllough tile ranch owner treats
tllem as kindly as if tlley were her
own, the threesome misses its children and lakes the initiative to find
their way home, which is somewhere on the other side of the Sier-

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

$1.30/day

15 .

or 915·3839
.

Rates are fur consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for !!llch day as separate ads.

amount moy be poa~blt lor qualifying pet·
eon to buy val nk:e home on 3~ 1cre1 In

.

: Homeward Bound:
: The Incredible Journey
: Rated G ·
· ••• (out of five)
: Wiilt Disney Pictures
) (I'{ow playing at the Spring Valley
.• (:inema 7. Check local listings for

Over 15 Words

PRlC REDUCED!
The ~k:e has boon ~uoed to $88,900 and

CHESTER - Chester Council
Daughters of the American
Donna Jones hosted a valentine
; Rt\volution will meet at 1 p.m party for Preceptor Beta Beta
: 'Pucs~ay at the hall. The Good of Chapter, Beta Stgma Phi at her
\ ~be Order comiuee will have a home recently.
::Silent auction.
As a pan of tlle,evening's activities, valentines were designed to be
: ·: POMEROY · Middleport Child delivered to members unable to
:conservation League wiD meet at7 auend the meting. A round-robin
;p.m Thursday atlhe Rock Springs card was signed for Mary and
•United Methodist Church. There George Morris who are observing
~ will be a brown bag sale. HostesseS their 25th wedding anniversary.
·will be Kitty Darst and Misti
Joan Corder presided at the
:Gibbs.
meeting during which time committee reports were made . The
WEDNESDAY
1993 convention of Beta Sigma Phi
was announced for May 14-16 at
• RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire Toledo. This year's theme is "A
•Depanment Ladies Auxiliary will Trip on the Orient Express". Dead:m:ect in regular session Wednesday line for reservations is April 14.

: :&amp; Homeward Bound' traditional
:Walt
Disney
entertainment
...

15
15
15
15

Rate

BULLEnN lOUD -DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

..

~ 323,

-.

Words

Bl'LLETIN BO.\RD

It was decided during the meting the sunshine fund would .be
donated 10 the Heart Associ;ltion. A
sympathy card was signed for Neva
Nichols and son, Ronald.

Pauline Atkins, worthy matron,
and Larry Well, worthy patron.
presided ~t the meeting. Past
. matrons and patrons of Har ~
risonville Ghaptered were presented along with those' having grand
appointments, honored Masons,
Robert Reed and Harold Rite. Also
50 year members 'were presented
and welcomed. The birthday of
Well was ob!;erved.
·

Monthly

RATES

Donna Jones
~osts party

(

614-949·2101 • 949·2160

IAC.E,OHIO
. . . .49·2202
614-742·2996

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

OES to make
HA donation

MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleRACINE • Racine American
port Literary Club will !Jleet · Legion Post 602 meeting at li p.m.
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Supper at 7:30p.m..
home of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter will review
CHESHIRE · Revival at the
"Maria Callas" by Arianna Believers Fellowship Ministry, one
Stassinopoulous. For roll call mem·
t
bers are to tell of a favorite musical mile from Gallia-Meigs County
Lme on Stae Route 7, will continue
performer.
through Thursday. Pastor Margaret
J.
Robjpson invites the public.
SYRACUSE • The Homemakers Club of Symcuse will meet •'
_ALFRED • Th~ Orange Town·
the municipal building at 10 a.m
sh•p
Trustees will hold a special
Wednesday. Members are ·to lake
ineeting
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
cookies. A quilt will be tied.
the home of Cleric Patty Callaway.
~ IOp .m.
THURSDAY
POMEROY
· Meigs County'
I.
l PAGEV!LLE - There will be a Deffiocratic Executive Committee
.; special meeting of the Scipio
, Townshtp Trustees on Tuesday at
16:30 p.m. at th'e Pageville Town~ hall.

:r.. To ll«oHr Yow lrtreslment"
..SOllee Silting

rr

meeting/ 7:30 p.m. at the CarpentersU Hall.
·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

. Cbuldl. Hon•, Trudl, Boat, Auto

you,

! ~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~==========~======~==~~~====~~
1

"'H~

Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where tile doctors often saw
more than 100 patients a morning, I
am quick, efficient and accwate. I
get to my office ahead of time and
bire ICCRiaies and nurses who .are
. COU1'ItlOUS and patient-oriented. .I am ·
proud 10 be I doctor and do what I
.can to keep tile professional Sian·
danls high. - Pblllp Diggdon, M.D.
Doohrr, Mass.: I know what it
is to wait bec•ne I have been a pa·
lientas weD as a doctor, but 1don~
mind waiting because I know thai
when my tum comes, I will get as
much time as I need.
·
I'm pl~g for qnderslanding, ·
Ann. Tell your readers it's OK to
hate waiting, just don't hate the
doctor, the nurse or the receptionist.
If you don't get the lrlnd of aaenliOil
you want, by all means fmd another
doctor who suits your IICC!Is, but. I'm
warning
you will JII'(Jbl!bly have
TROPHY WINNERS • Six youngsters of lhe
10 wait for him m- her, 100. - Monica
Sunday
School class of Angela Hall at the VictoOglesby, M.D.
Baptist
Church received trophies for memoWhen pllllllling a wedding, wlto
r~zing
ilnd
quoting
books or the Bible.
were
pays for wltol? Wlto stands where?
. 'Tif! AM Lal)ders Guilk for Briks"
luJi all the Q~~SWers, Send a st/f-ad·
dru.sed, long{bruwss·si.zl envelope
lllld a check or money order for
$3.65 (this includts postage and
lrtutdlillg) to: Briks, c/o Allll LanInitiatory work was held and
ders, P.O. Box /1562, Clricago.lll.
Mary Stein was welcomed as a new
60611-0562. (In Canada, send members at the recent meeting of
$4.45.)
Harrisonville Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, held at lhe hall.

Community calendar

I

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
· Room Additions • Roofing
~

S.....ra,s Upllolstery

Charity H~i131 in ~w Orleans and

ANN LANDERS

.ISSELL IUILDE,S, INC. _

I

:

�•

8 the Dally Sentinel

Page

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes

........... -1-....
GliLI Ill LM! tn 14 -

A

0.. 0.. -

Doyl -

,.

Coli

,....

"""111 - - b l . ......

'IJnloWCo. - - .
Lift QUITIJNE
Eat. .,... ......... lo 11 Yrs. UnioW Co.11021.,_

-

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

11.. Eaoort LX &amp;\100, 114-441...

.....,.._ t' ..............
Dallllt •
;
rllCflpe. .....
_
.. lllo-CIIIIIoiL

" I don't

I need help kicking my habit of

imll----------'f"'----------l
going to places to breathe secondhand smoke ."

'=="~ t1;;l
~
I

.... e:.ro;: 1M 111

llEMIIPEREDCHEF

NEW

Calor

1117.

Cotalog, 1

412 ·

~~-iiiiF.,.;nl;f,iM;;_;.W,v;&amp;ion,ii:';-n;;;H4!jijj

Ohio ~-6-4:116.

448-4222 d•ya, 441·21,. ..,.•._

Real Estate

EARll CIAEAT I I I

~-~~~
"' .......
~
Arnthhue

-

--To

-=~::~o==• o-.

T-,llo IWcwloo, No
--OWnllrs,NO

C

CKS.

Coli RITA Allor 4:00

~(COLLECT)

All ......- -rtillng In
lhia I1IW p p U il IUbjiiCUO
lho F-.. Foir Houolng Act

ol1111wlichrnollooltlhpl
. , -. . . . . . . . 100.
imiladan or cllcriminmion
D!1 rooo, color, rlllgion,

larniW 1181U1 Ot nMDnal
origin, or ony lntordian"'

IU

...... ..,. oudl ...- .

linilalion,.. docrlmlnallcn."

'"*••• ptparwlllnot.
"'--ngly-

od--tlforrOIIOIIala
which to in vk&gt;lollon 'ollho

. . Our-· ..

horob!'

lnformod . .t llldMUingo

8dwt1iled in fia nan r r r
11e ....-on on equal

opportUnity bull.

,._. 2 Bedrooms I. 1 ledroam
llobla. Homn, · No P..a,
Refarenc. Required. 114·797-

41145. .
Unfwn., 28A rnoblll homo on

ptfwte lol, aiM kM ·~ce far
amtll tr~Jier ·or camper. It~
UIG afttr I p.m.

t

4 long prom· dro- ol- 510,
8/10, 13114, 15111. Lana ...,.
811• S,M,L, 304-175-7111.

SA opanmont In

neighborhood. $2&amp;0 !'Or month.

tM-446-01115 or 304.a71-1580.
2 BR e:.~mon,!c__Clolllpollo
7&amp;-.....

-·

Couch whh 2 matching cltolra
1'125. 304-875-1147 lllvo m..

Dual chonnll Tono Syotom with

recently r11modalad,

Eleetric hoi .WIItlr heater and 1
gu furnaa11, t14.MI-2211.

utllltl . .,

•

614-1116-1227.

""'*'

1m- Park 12115 2 soc~- •

AVOIIIAI_I_..,

........ ~-

CQORI*ATOIIWANTm......
h
1WI s-on.
AMI .... Fit
For FNndl
•udlnll ,., 1 ..._...
,,
r
2

.....

7

_ __

WI,

W
--

-

a••=

CloMICllnUng. . . . . _ - .

F1nanc1al

=."'~7 rt;s;:c ;:

Col O r - LEC, P.O.- ...

1

i .. OH4410141t-111 Nl

...

~3 ,--~ F Maul Pa,1 &amp;
Tall FrM, _ . . . . . , bl.
:liS.

21

Business
Opportunity

_
..
__
, ....
.....
----='
.....
...,........."-..,,..
.

tloctrlc,

-~jg~~2-~112~Ac~roo~lli~L.~6~14-~
. 114-37!1-21111.

llntlng
011......
......
... lob
.....

~ • w:a.

Total

-Sky"""

Hotly Aldgo

14x7V,

.. .-:, 2 hJdroot~il, AIC,
couaMI porch, khct.n llllnd,
-bldG,· underpeunlng,
........ ~2414.

____

•onoe

,_F..._
l'antooy, 14110, 3
" " " - 2 llolho, gordon
tub,
,........
2101.

CHO VALLEY PUBUSHNl CO.

a. A

1--To:d..\

_ , ,•• SIDE

,..,,

•

.
._. .......
""" . -- -..

-~,.,-- ...... 011
·411:11. .

n~&amp;

==-·..---.. .
""""' _, roe!~;

7 ••

'1001.~ 'IOOIIJI,Qe
ea~-.-..:am

...........

.-

.

I

PI.I IAnl ••• 114-182-6858.

- ,_.

Laoor 311 ·II IIIR WI VQA
Monitor, 40 Ill Hlrd Drlvo, NO... tt,eoo, Only t ,,., Old
Ju.l l 1810. 114-44f.at81.
-bort 500, 12 guogo, 211"

.rug ...,_
roi.IZ!t.l-..7317.
Qulh Far - :·SilO 6-208 .

rnodHiod - - + :14"

lett. lldfll lncl~l....over

seoo

lnVOIIad, Alklng oaw. t14 .......

Sl01plng rOolno with cooking.

7'371 after 1.

3500 lniiUOirlll Font troctor ond
-.1114-371-2724.

Promlum Hov Rallo S25. - .
~~:""• lit. 311, Pliny, 304-

SooiiOIIOd Woad, $40 Dlllvarocl,

tt..-.ono.

Two Com , buml119 Dove Toch

lforil, new, Morgen Farm, 304131-2011.

47 wanted to Rent

Drjor ShoppO, 1-4144.

·•

......_ 1....-;ltl DIDI bi:J11

Day Wananly, Call Wa.n.r &amp;

•--'!lVII.

r,1erchandiSC

Whl~poal •rronty.
qu~ - 10,000
hlo I ' '
ollondod
blu
Whirlpool 1__ yr ilfd mondod

HOusehold
Good&amp;
3 pc. Olk
cotor

Woo- l llfyoro, $71 &amp; Up, 30

WindoW olr - · IS,OOO Mu .
Whlrpoat qu~ m':r, ,!""nd
now, d "' boo, ut 1 ww-

I

""" - - - - · OWi

t.v.,

bod. MIMI.,

,.~

•

21' Zenith

Refrigerator, wnher,

dryor. 114-3JI.HII;·37t-2243.
VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP.
PUAHCEI

10,000 btu 1 ,. old,

-·•d). . . . . btu ~- 1 ,..
old 3 yr utondod worronty.
8,000 btu A - I yr old Olton•

dod worronty. 104-f75.2117 Mon

thru Frlanytlme.

,.,.

UNDER
TH' BED!!

'

, :;

.z :.

1888 Uncotn Contl..,.ollllfll
-1216.

'

'

' ,••

PEANUTS

IIBV Ponlloc Sunblnl, OWM~

Out at Work, MUll Boiiii14-:ZU.. .,,
5104. .
·' l:
1180 Ccmla LTZ. 1,100 ml.... •••
',ll
loeded, ~1121 after 1:001 ··
PM.
.

DOES '(OUR SISTER

A66RAVATE '(OU 1

WkO ARETHE'r'

kOW MAN'r'
ARE IN THE DAY?

TALKING ABOUT'

·i
ij

.:,:01~11=-=-....,..-,--:--,....,-

:!:;

tallt E:t Sum,.., 2 Dao&lt;
Hltchbac
AUtomMic
Tranem
, Air Condldanlna.
RNr o.tro.ler, Excetllnt ~

dopondolllo

,1

,.

;I,.

gu

Building

Pet1tor Sale

-end.._
AI llt'lidt,

lh......
tllyiH.

-log.
lome Pot PaGII Dlolor.

Wobb, C.U14 441 1231.

JUlio

~.

,.

,.,.

lenll Coltcltlon,I'M4UM24.

,,

1114

"

Ct.vy

8-'10

...... ''
AmlftGen ll

- .. Cii--. ....... ··I'·
""'·
Chfirol•, fonl,
r:::r. :·~~
with

Dodge,

=-~ ~

tong: NO · ·

•

van• &amp; 4 WD'I

73

1mtCJ.IJ-304-67WIGI.
•--~

11-

-

.,

-nKaw-·
814-205-lt 15.

. ~TRNIIItD

=

~

~,;,~

Auto Pans &amp;
AcciiSOrlet

·•·y,u

MORTY MEEKLE AND .WINTHROP

1113 Chollongor -o, 2.1 IIHJ
eubllhl motor, I IIMl trans.,
ploto.

114- :I

..,=

,._lotlono, - - • .
1100.

! VYONDER

~

l

•,

~-- ·

81

WV. -

',
,•

Home

Improvement•

IAIEIIENT ·
· WATIRPROOI'INQ
II~

TO GET ANSWER

.. .

..

.. .

....-•,.

--------~----------~-----------------------------:·
Tbe World Almanac® crossword Puzzle :~~

.
......

'

ACROSS

35 Between VA
and SC
37 Firo opal
40 Symbol lor
nickel
41 Mimic
43 \.ad
44 Mire
46 Lana
48 Spelling

1 Police alert
abbr.)
4 owrcity
8 Suitable
11 Rock
tclentlot
13 Sound at
Halloween
14 South or

!

coni eat

Silk.

50 Seidl
53 Conc1alad
55 Norma57 Ocean
58 Baking tin
12 wdl.)
6 t Mill center
abbr.
63 Tranoil abbr.
64- Landtrl
65 Coursol or
study
68 Actrell Welt
6g Tropical tree
70 Exist

15 Foderalogcy.
16 South Dakota
capital
18 Roman
bronze

20 nmberlrae
22- Grinde
23 Former
Runlan
ruler 1var.1
25 Kind or curve
27 Mulliclan Shankar
30 Drinking
V81HI

32 Comedian

DOWN

34 Performed

1 Yellow lever

c.....

'

v

Antwer 10 PNYio81 PilUle

·· Men· ~ coats" is l.'urrcct. but "ladies

CL.OCK
FIXED.

' eoats" need s changing. Even though
MEN and LADIES ilre properly plural.
Mt: N'S is a possessive and LADIES
is not. To form the possessive nf that
piUD'al. place an apostrophe after the
S. Wrap uP the proper lorm by using
··men's a,nd ladies ' coats."

~~~

l!a4£f~MI&amp;

.

,

E:JUU UUL!IrJ..:.J UUrJ
[)[][] [!]l.!IU~[j rJUL!I
ilCJI.1lJtm u L:J ~ l!l [j u
f.J[!]rJL!IrJ l!lU~
;:J[!][]D m!li.!J ~[jEJU
r.JD[J[]l!l [;jrJL:J uu~
o lJ DLJ [!] wm.:1 e1 LJ
mn:. ~[!] u [j l!ll!lUI..:I
iJ[J!:JlJ L:JU~ Ur.l~U
L:Jllr.l urJ~L..JLJ
~[!]lJO[jlJ

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t.:.J u L:J

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(&lt;lr.liJ

(•][J[ o)[;lr]

mooqtito
2 Rl..r In Italy
3 Sondwlch
abbr.
4 Wide open
5 llullic
IJIIIble
6 Sixth oenot

7 Mix
80VIIfHD
•
II For (Sp.J ;,:;:
10- the liM ....
111nucl
,o
12 E1181
· •
17 Goddnl of ·· "
IIUMng

fabbr.)

' : ..

19 Uncle'21 AJII!Y&amp;II
24 Carpet
-26 Ftrnlle rat. ~, ,,.
2B CoqiiU-

a- Anitn

·•

31 Crane 1n11 ~:: ~
pert

33 - .,.. ....

...Lr+--+--f

~

35 Sllort ...... :
31 Acct.
·"- •.
38 c-lllt IMtC
311 HlltJt .
-- 42 FrtJII ~.i
45 Aulltttt iloltn-•'"
47 Joint
.
48 Tidlll"'·
..
r , ··~ ......•1
51 MInon- .o~,. .....

_,

__
:w

52-LH

54 , ......at..:;::

...-+--+--4

fllh
58 Spire

.. ~

........... - '

58 TIII"'-JIIIIY!!,!

- Shrl..r , •••
Cllllre
. ..

SGActren

60 Lulltp
... ~l
62 ·Soifel
"'"'
68 A~ ~ :..::!
67
'

rn:llj:.~

c.llbrHy ClpMr ctyptOQtMll.,. Ct.-d from tf~IOtllltA4 br '*"«lul peop6e., pMI tnd ~•·
E.:t! .._. kl IM cfpMr
Tod.lf'• '*'-.• S ...,._. M.

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I A 'FA

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KAVPJVE

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.....

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ll

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IMJKDA
JPMITVI

N 1J I .

...

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has made every

man who

than he

Lrndon B.

wu." -

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;
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... tlnko,_ ... _

6oN4 lbll{ 80I«i
15()1&amp; 8aollt
lle)lli 1!0116 ~

16.

OUR LAI)IGUAG~: AD ·VICE :
"Men·; and ladies coat lo\" wins an AdVil'r Awurd for 4:1 clothing stOI'C .

TIME. TO
GET THE!

6olllf ~If

WHAT .
TIME IT

'

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS

.

By JeiTrey MeQuai~
ERADICATE uproots or eomplele·
tv removes : "Eradicate those weeds
irom th e flower bed ... Remove any
doubt about the pronunciation of the
''erb ERADICATE: it's "ih·RAD·uh kal&lt;•."

'

~. .

,.

'

... ,.

78

•

l'r1•rr1 . ...
IIIII! ..

PRINT NUMBERED lEIIERS IN
THESE SQUARES

.OUR LANGUAGE

YJ'( ,.\tiD

.

1111 Ko-kl Lll) 414- lloat"f·
drive ltf'Mt bl-. ...., oOOIICI-t .,r
••· oancf... ~ Nk• ,_. u..1.,.,;
"po.:::w::•;;.•~•han=.;.;'n;:;:::;d:..;.,.::.:-:::;:·11M;:.:;;;,;·•iri

. ••
.

you develop frOm step No. 3 below .

@-.~~ . .rrtiLIMW...
-01 AOIII.

I&gt; etlwe:€1'1

I !·

.

'
•

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

- Local Nflrlnlll fWIIIIIIIII. ~ '
C.l 1-.af7.GIN Or ,.
••
....,......
t ' t-r;\
-

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I

..

HoeM .....,.,. I 111.::..
y.,. IIJ lw100 On Dltlor Ali!

Curl..

=.."::-'
_,. .. :0,1'"'
KH.._ w'=-. r...·~

1----~-------------2.
____......;.._____________
3._--:-_::,.._ _ _ _ ___
4. ____.;......._ _ _ _ __

t.::.~ Or~••,.:.t..r"

5---.,.._....,----.__,.-

othorllrondo. -

GaDipolil Daily T~e
446-2342
Pomeroy Dally SeaUnel
992-2156
Pl. Ple'aaaDl Hepler
675-1333

Fifo£ Ulole.

blkl,
:t,400 -now111
1 ,~
mlllo1 oxc cond,
runo.,.

-· .....

10·~--------

,..-~A

r

Clll.aeo, .... :

!

...

l

"
.....•'

,~ •

LX,

lla. D il A Autotll6a'!
17241Uor1

9 •. _ ....-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I

'.
',.

r'O

-

6 __~--~-----------1. _ _ _ _ _ _- - : - - - - 8 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _--:---

vllr"t4 Mr:/

_.,
"-,
18,000 Ill too, Womnty, _An • •'
~~~~~~~ ....-,: ::
.,..
Motorcyclel , I' , ~~

22113, Pomo""'

Thm your clutter into c03h,
Sdl it the ea•y way... by plume,
no need to leave your home.
Pla~ your clauified a1l todaJ=!
15 word. or le&amp;•, 3 dC!)'f,
3 pageri, $5.40 paid in adpa~ce;

t&gt;ON'T GtT IT -·-FI,ST YOU $AY
/ TO It tM,t&gt;-wO~~I"'G ANI&gt;
F'vGAL. A,.,l&gt; NOvt
YOV SAY l
GAN'T T Al'f IT ·t

i

..... Grain ..... 4 ...... hclet- :;

=

14·--.....;_~-------------

58

· ··:

72 Trucks tor 8ale

:.....· ·~m:~
....

12--------~--------13 •._~---------------

Suppllel

tro~

flan, 1400,114-4141-21104.

+K

In tournament bridge nowadays, al·
most all players bid much more than
they used to. Putting pressure on the
opponents to try to force errors has
become almost de rigueur.
One weapon in this armory of attack is the five-card weak two-bid. It
isn't really my style, but it does have
its moments, as in today's deal.
North was aggressive in bidding
lour hearts, but he was expecting a
six-card suit opposite.
West led the diamond king: five,
three, four. He continued with three
rounds of hearts to stop a diamond
ruff in the dummy.
To make the contract, South had to
establish a spade for a diamond dis·
card, an&lt;\ he had to lind the club queen.
He played a spade to dummy's king,
cashed the ace and ruffed a spade in
hand.
'
Declarer judged that Wesl had three
diamond honors, the A-K-Q or A-K-J,
because East hadn't played a· higher
diamond at trick one. Along with the
A·K of hearts and spade queen, that
I·..... .._~ at least 17 points. Clearly East,
not West, had the club queen. Howei"
er, South had to be carelui.-He led tbe
club .seven to dummy's king. Next
came the club jack. East dictn't cover,
so the jack won tbe trick. Now fol·
lowed a spade ruff, the club ace, a club
to dummy's 10 and the fifth spade lor
a diamond discard.
If East covers the club jack, declar·
er wins with lite ace and plays the club
nine to dummy's 10. Then, after a
spade ruff, the carefully preserved
club two is led to dummy's four to alldw the discard on the spade 10.
Count the l&gt;oints and watch your
spots very carefully.

2 D;-. ~ lntmwaculalo 1... ..

114-

"'

~uored
by lilting In the miss;ng word•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
z.,r
Greasy - Clamp · Young - Aulflpr • YOUR CAR
Disappointed man to his auto mechanic, "What t really need is a money machine.· Laughing the mechanic
says to man, •t already have one.. YOUR CARl"

"II pass

..

...

By Pbllllp Alder

Interior, -........ . . . .
--~ orul• controL t;

til
111,000, 3GH7W404,

Eut
Pass

The start was
wild and woolly

_ , -rythlfta. 'JVL - - , •:

... _

MW

15·~----~-----------

I

JUMP

,... -• -Tllllndorblnl
- -:·,•
Coup
chorgoor. I · cyl,

- ·- lor ,..,.. - :

11 . ____~--~---------

114 ••• uae OR,,. 441 1111

,

'

.

I'LL GO RUN
TH' VARMINT
OFFH

QUICK !I

HEAD
OFF!!

. lf14.4tla7ll,·,,,,
' •·

,...,."!
lbl, gOod lntlftor.....
114 :ld 1421.
... \

·

Alto trailer 1pace. All hook·upe.
Clll afttr 2:00 p.m., 304-7735151,MI:.,.WV.
.

A"'!' 1 3 Bldroomo,_~ B~ho, No
Chlloron

5

·...W'
lvenlngit,

1 1 1 0 0 , - - .. ~

Ohliln, 11"' bar WICIH, filM, '1118

Start treadmill, 2 'If· war,.ntr

~=~'::f It ftZOIJno, Qolllo Hotol.
I
t!IIO.

flo I 1 ~IOOIIotNOOP To. ~

,

Furnished
Rooms

Prollltlonal Couple Want To

fJ rfr&amp;l: 10 ....,._ To .....

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

refarencts l'fiqulred, no pela. Pl.

45

By GARY LARSON

................ eMoau esa

HOIMI.. 150 ahlln IIW. Oregon

...

dopooll, - · - 3 .

-

tt4o44&amp;o1ftl :.j l

lunrool,

W tl YORE
DOG IS ·
GROWLIN'

·I

Nardi
' t•

Weal
ZNT
Dbl.

Opening lead:

HIS ""

.. Ciullo, Til, Low -

-

alulch.
l -44a-nTI•fterL

guldo, 304"U.i1410.
I I Toclwlolooy 114-441.oal0,
Polo. COli Before 7 P.M. 614-441- JUood
T.V.'o, VCR'o For Sell:
0338.
Zenith 4 Hood VCR 1111.81;
Complltly Fumllhod moblll Emoroon VC!!.,J7UI: lhon&gt;
home, 1 mill below town over- VCR 171.116: """ Conooto T.ll.
J'c~Aivonlo COn- 1121:
looking rtvor. No Pota, CA. 114· 1141.11
Tuan
Computer llanMar
444HI331.
tColorl 1121.15.
North Third lllddloport, Ohio. 2
· IMdroom, tumlehld or untur· Klmblll -trtc player plano.
nlohod opl. DIP &amp; ror. 304-8n· Con, play llano- grwot, puoh •
button oiMI tot thO ro111 r.:_y,
2511.
~ cond ton,
One
Mdroom
apartment, =%.~·

Aoon. for rent • WHk or month.

.,,.,.a =• n - r - .

--GT-C..'

;::o_:.::;_::,~,=.,::=.;;,.,;::-=- r'

•utomalla.

1811 AOHA BIG Rod Aoon W•
tom P . _ lito 11111 AQHA

Houee OODfmo. + Ulllhl... No

Two

LM~t-Wio-1

...... A

1'1116. Coii114'112.S858. EOH.
Complltly Fumllhod Bmoll

utllhlot """'· tM-1112-7878.
bedroom. ... h..t,
P-ar1 . .12711 month, 1100

r 1annendl 1hll ,0.. do bull-

Hly lor ..... 114-1414411 ollor

llj1in.

1nd

Twa bedroom In lllddloport,
U50/mo. Of 1350/mo, With

INOI1CEI ,

.. ,.
PIL.~Hc~~ .lntlrior; !t'

BARNEY ·

boll-..
11711 ChoVJ 1 112 Ton Truck, '12 &lt;'
.

CA&amp;H?I!

Clolllpollo. 114-441-31145.
Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bod·
room apertmentl at VIllage_
Rlvarslae
A~mtnl•ln Mlddltport. From

.., .. _1.-a3'J.II25.

61 Farm Equipment

lor-·-

Hoy
111-1121128.

Want to:
PIN ctownEXTRA

EHiclencr,
All
Paid, Shere lath,

Manor

r

drfYo,

.......

1112

UtiiiU•
$'135/Mo. 111 Second AnnUli

t .,_ l.loo To
Sel Awn Call14 4tl ,1'M

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltveslock

~;.:....... 12. &amp; 12.10.

:::1·

lfllt7 p.M.

1'152.17 ,.., month lncluillng •••
...antha t... kit rem. new 14x70,
iloolcorod ond 001 up, ofdrtlng

-.u 0L. 4 ...... tilr, till AIM'II

1VBI

..''••

•

1110 Fonl E- LX,!,Oaar, Air
COnditiOn, Autio, 14,-w 114:446-

Fl.-: All Hlrdw- Spill 4000 Fonl TriiCior With''
Dollv- $40 Plck.Up Lolld. Font LNdor 11,100; 21110 JD
t14-2M-t3'18.
lra nsportJtion
TriOlO&lt; WtJb . Loldor, $4,500.
Flnanclno Avilllblo, 114-2111122.
CAl Alita Cllol,.. oomblno 71 AutO&amp; for 8ale
ltlllno( E. prapollod. Oliver
114 grain l tortllllor drill. John 1110 luloll. Rogol Umllod, goad
DOirt 4M a 4111 A - oam Mrld, 304.all44:12.
c::'"!..~
~dkl~ teM Coiibrlly CL. 11,000 mltoo,
ohop. 3Q4..'1N081.
t2,300, Oil - · · lutOL 4 door,
304.S7U'It2 ollor 1:00 •II.

•

"AVOW' &amp;ILL AREAS! - , . , . . .
tkM """ ... _.. tho
"'!'* ¥£21J, 1 - - " "

I

,

DP Mega Fte1 aurolH enachlne
wHh butt•flr, ...pper, 1nd how
to - vlcllo, $'150, 614-11124217.

Very CINn, W111r P1ld, In Port• ........ 114:388~000.

for Sale

-

~

Fumlollod 3 Roomo &amp; Both,

Mobtte Homes

82 wanted to Buy

SO.Ib
2•
Pass

IVBI Font Lll) C:.own VlctOfla ·'' ·
llko now, 4 ~ o11 -r,,v.a il :·
, _ lilnl, At;l player, NO. 1- ·
COfldlllon. 27,000 mlloo. 114-446,

flnonclng, 304-8~414.
•
75 Uncatn Cant, lull ,......,,

extra bettwtn end chara-, only
~ a t.w 't lmH, IIGO 010,

FUm...._.

,,••

.1111.

•

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

!I

lion, SS.II!IO- IIW7WI23.

..,..., oldlng, CA, nolurol gH
hellt,
14"1.000. 1*317-7'171

HelpWinted

-

Wonting to buy an lond - 1 lol fOr a 14K7D trailer,
114-112-:1154.

Fuml- Apl: I BA, 120 4th,
t2BO, Utllltloo paid. 114 446 4410

11

$400,
..::'J.
ZIIt.

or rent

~: VI IIIlO , OrMn Apto. 141 or
calll14.f82·m1. EOH. ·
5 room• upolllre, panly lui·

t · ,
11-F I A.11. -6:JII P.IL II ClloohiN: 3 BR 1·112 both,
0 . . , And F J 11eea .. 1ht lwdsaod ..,_, iul bn rnent,
., Caueauo For Your a.lcra

Em ployment Serv1ces

';J -~~~:!

Point

...., .... ar.-ca.

7

Boorw10:
-Mowar,
· """'
I

·*"'·

~....nt. Qu~. oriv~•. ~

=~

CPIU&amp;"

roglotorocl, 135, 304-77iiiii1
Puppy P-o P.. Shop.
Located In o.c. llurohv Co. a.~
lpolll. - opon. li4-t41.o404.

,,

,

'longer"
·
Comp lete lhe c"uckle

15 t)

tlot

+A 9 7 2

2 .otory cotonlll -.:p.t:d "{:

BEAUTIFUL APAATIIEHTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE~,;_I31 Jockoon Plkl
from IIV"mna. Walk to ohop &amp;
miwlot. Colli~. EOH.

11214.

.QJ 1096

2112 llotho,
.. ...
flmlly,.m, lend ...... .,....,.~~!

§W Pu; , p S.MO.... dan'1

Old8Lidealefi11

Hlmalapn
oat,
-...tlful,
neutaNd, dl-cllwecl lillie no1

t2181.
.... like ....., 5400, .

Apartment
tor Rent

44

111..

c=

lord- and cato. AlQ FEED I
SPLY, 814-1124114.

C.ll lor lnlormotlon, 114-:JIS.
11621 ••k for Bnnda.

cable paid, ovonln.. 304-875·

Of' 441

500
Bind
: Pord
teOO:

Ooldon Rot"-;;'a.":'l,P'•·
No qui-nt,
- · ·Qlllo......
llochlnory, .lockian,
11410.
211-8144.
.
HAPPY . JACK TONEKOTE: LJ.
quid faDd •••plement prcwldel Ono pair of 15.111311 ,_ .......

own a 1H3 14-'0 Aed1111n wllh
5 yur wtrranly, lttpe, aklrtlng,
dollvond and ollup lor tll5mo.

nllhed, private entrance, care*,

t•

:::LJ-.ac
. .. Up~

HH
417
Mawar

Peparw, 15011

Why pey rent when yau can

room flollhiH oloM to ~hoot
In l'own. Appi!C8ilon1 anllebla

Cono. Clllllll'ar A - - ll'odllllnl 1M
LUL f»Na..
eft I II a Jle7lool Ael ..........

Now Hollond 711 ·hoyblno; NoW
Hotlond ' II hoyblno. l n l - ·
- · 101 tronoport dloo. II gri- mllor. Iuper 78 bllor. All .QON- Mrld.
304-273-4215.
'

Pllfttlra; Olhlr Alkl ......, E·

fuq'llture, O.b1, I*H2·111.t1.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

61 Farm Equipment

I I I I

".,.
.."

Young man just before his
wedding, "Is it true that married men live longer?" His tuture father-in-law laughed, "It
don't think so, it just ·-·-

~
1
·I.-L.
-L.-L.-L.-L.__.

•a z

'

Fomiol H Tre• 3 Point - ·
1171: ..... PI'O ........
~ tm: Com Picton.
Hirro galara: WhHI DIIM:
John 00... 2 And 4 Row Com

nut,...,te tor 1 warm wlnt• 0011

I~

...•

~

3

SHELAV

SOUTH

oond, '·

NowHolllndRliUndlollro,

cludoo
toot
bod tram#,
-~
box ·
lprfngo,
choot al
clroworo,

St-.

2bdnn. 1~, Ioiii IIIIM:Irlc, ..,..
pllanctl fumllhed, leundry

. . . . ....
____ .,..C.._1

In,

304.a75-2t11.
Buy or ootl, Rlvarlno Ant'-••
on At. 124,
2 hdroom Tralltr, Untumlahed, 1124 E. llllln
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
814'3417·7580, 614-351'·7671.
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sundlr 1:00
Fun11ahMI, 2 or 3bdrm., lor rwnt to 1:00 p.m. 814-812·2521. .
In Cou..._ry M~ll Park. Washer/
dryer, 1lr, 12351 mon., 114-112- Fumlluro repair I Nllnlohod,
buying old llntoml Trottlo
2167. 614-315-8221:
001flng rnochlno~1 Dl~ brokln

Forry, WV

a

bedroom aulll,
lull •••• hold 1

vtnltr wflound mln"OW, $300.

4l! Mobtle Homes
fOr Rent

To Cookt An Ea- ·

Antique

Mutt ... to appraollte.
7121 even~nte.

I 1I

· · .,
~

L.--1.-J..- - ' · -...
· --'·,..

tJ98763
+QI5

canver81on. L.oedM, . ow1oni
paint, IIC. aond., kM enln. ·,

PICKENS FURNITURE
NowAJood

Il

.73

':

...'·...

I

FRI 0 T
J-:-..,.;.....;.;..;;.,...,,_-1

~

auto., no 1fr, good 001111., ti;IOO.: .
·-1111.
•,

Rlvor Volley O.k FumHuro,
Qoorgoo CrNk Rood, Clolllpollo,

Rio Orondo, 3 SA, 1·112 both,
$450/mo. Dlpooll roqulrod. 614'

+KJ 104
.1

::13.::;100:;:·:-::Co=".:::'':.:.•-:•.::·=-=-::-::=--...,...~ ,,
ltl1 Chorgor, 2.2 ... onalno. ...

c Gt••••r

=

u

•

.~••...

~mple

I NEROT I

1-JI.II

•su

G.T.B. TUrbo, 114....
,.
1111 Rod F l - - - ,

1Qrondo,.Acrow
Bedroom HouM
Rio Haunhold turnithlng. 112 mi.
From InUnlv.,..
oily, t14 ••• 1141.
Jerrlcho Rd. PL PINNnl, WV,
caii:IOW75·1450,
21
Business
A. I B. Fumlturo. Now, uood, ..,. 56 Pets tor Sale
~To- - . ...,11,...,.,._He_.:;lp_W..;a_nt.;;ed;.;:,.._
Opportunity
Houoohald lumllhlng1. ...;._ _;:.:..:;..;:.::..::=:;_-3 l•dlcwuw, UnM lnrm.nt, llquoo.
Largo Yonl, Nlo brondo Aroo, Ma.on_ WV. 304-7'73-5341.
3 black OIW mil With Intern• No 1&gt;111, Roro- AOQUirocl
,_, unii.IM-378-2724. noo '"' Month, eM-24&amp;-ao..O
2 AKC Roglolorod Oormon
Shophor&lt;l PuOolol. Sho4o. VII.
Dora.
WCIU'F TANNING BEDS
Chocked. 114-3i7-7V5t.
-from eom.r-totUnHo,
IIH.OO. Lorn"", Lotlortl,
k c c...... llontmy paymentt
tow .. $18.00. Coli todiJ,CREE
Antiques
53 '

• S.A.S.£. IN
P.....,QII_

EEKANDMEEK

IO&lt;m four

'

+AK10U

4222, 814-441-21111.
•
1811 4 Door ChrYolor Loll-;' •

Nllw 0.11 FumHIIN, Tablet,
Chalra, Chlna'a, Hutchle, Etc.

41 Houses for Rent

NORTH

to

•

II

~:
~ Do= .,;....Ji~
~~• • ~.~~~~ ....~ ,J l
Au,. I._.,_,,,........

LAYNE'I FURNITURE
11 AcrM llorw Or Lea, North Compt.to homo lumlohl-.
Qattlo High !k:hool Areo, Hour11: f:lon.Sat, H: I~
Utlllllot Avallobll,
OWnor 0322, 3 miiiO out I-IIII Rd.
F""""'lng, t14-388oll681.
Froo Dlllvory.

Rentals

PHILLIP
ALDER

'""b

VJne Street, Call 114-441·73M, 1·
IOO..II-Mtl.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

low

114-113-341 '
....
1114 Pontloc Sunblnl $100: ttll7i•·:
Chovralot Eurooport 11,100~ · 1,

COUNTRY FURNITURE AND
Land IMoml Dftelopln•nt, E..
CRAFTS
IN HofM Cent« WIU Show You Wo Buy And loll 0- Uood
Howl Your Now Slnglo Of Fumlture. 2231 Slett AOUII'M'I,
Doubll Will, llopllc; FO&lt;Ifldl- 114......1422.
tlon &amp; i)-..,, Allin Ono Loan
Pocbgo. Low !11101, Opon Uti QOOO USED APPLIANCES
With Lighted ·. 1-814-772· w.......c.drylrl, ,.,...-~
rong•. XIIII.. Applllncoo, 1t1
1220.

•••

0 four
Reorrange tatters of
scrambled words

19M PonUac Parlallnne, , _ :·
eJ:Nult 1 4,0 ltter, v.. tlf'MIInl, 1,
lllch.
71,000 ,... 01111o, '

~oN ANIMAL.'&gt;

uu.

,.

1114 NIIMn 2011 .IX Tllrbol Ill
- · at~ ~fa14,000 m 111,

'1/E. I~Wt'JHT HE.'t&gt; '
e:\IIJoV MAl&lt;I t,'Ei

TIIAT DAILT
PUZILII

BRIDGE

.•.j •''

....

The

Ohio

71
Autos for Site
r
::.:......;;.::;;:;:.;:;.;,;~,;;;;;;.;__":: ,.

Fo~

11111 2 IR. 2 blthl, 12dS, oil
tlactrlc $5,500: ........, &amp; Lot ln . All Co- &amp; Vlnyllnltoclt On
Crownl:ky, $12,000. 1-.,1511. S.lo. llollohon C.rpoto, An N.
·-11144.
.
Nlcl 2 lo!lroom lloblll Home
And Cotnor Lot, Pot1or Aru For ~ 1 choir, 4 kitchen chalro,
S.le. 114318 1029, Or 11~45- 2 owtvol rock.,., 30W75-2430.

1993

ALLEYOOP

KIT 'N' CARL YI.E® by l.arry Wright

Household
GOOd a

for ~ie

'

3 Announclmii'D

Tuestlay,

Tuesday, February 16,1993

Devle ~ M1aNn1 ANI ...

Yocuu11 Clio- llopol;, Froo
Plck..U~

c.-

Dol ....... o••_

114~14.

.ASTRO·ORAPH

Aon'o. TY 8oMco, ~lltdoc •
In Zenith 1110 - b

Moil.

•

,-. .

BERNIC~

OIIPIIInce ........ W¥
30WlWHI Qlllo .,.._1414.

BEDEOSOL

loJMioTonkP_tao_

._..31'.._

Co. RON IVANSINTINP
.locltoon, OH

I.

,

-.....

I

UIIH&gt; lldg ~· II'Mif'll
PlintH .....
• .....
11•1 Roof, tFd 810.. Pltlor, I' 'li'
.... Oaar, 14.444 · - Iran

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

'YoUr

_~ ~

'Birthday

:=..;~ ·
'

~

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

,,..
....··-~~
-lion
1110····'

And
~
c.utlld. Retfd1n1111. Coaaa- ....
eloll14411-1111.
•·

~~---·~~
84 Electrtc:al &amp;

gift . Send for Aquarius' Aslro-Graph
predittiorts for the year ahead by mail-

storming today between you ,and your
co·worl&lt;ers could produce some rather
Ihis newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- . ingenious ideas. which increase pro-land , pH 4.,01-3428. Be sure to state ductivity and lower stress.
YIRQQ CAug. 23-S.pt. 22) Unusual ciryour zodiac sign. ·
PISCEI CFeb. :IO'March 20) You are cumstances might surround you todaV ·
with a person· whom you recently mat
now in a fortunate cycle for establishing
and wa:nt to know better. You will lind
constructive relationships. You and
that you have much in comMon.
-.your new friends will alt'ernate roles beUIIIIA Clop!. 23-0ct. 23) Something
tween students and teachers.
·
1ARIES CM•rch 21-April 11) Unique op- can be finalized tq your satisfaction. but
it will require full use of your imagination
1 portunitles could present themselves
and resourcefulness. Fortunately. these
today where your work or career is con:.
· corned. They are apt to be ol alleellng are two of your· better aneta today.
SCOIIPIO (Oct. 24-llov. 22) Thore'a a
hature, and If you don't reapond quick·

ing $1 .25 plus a long, sell-addressed.
stamped envelope to Astro· Graph, c/o

ly. you may mles the boat.
AUIIUI CAprtl
20) II someone
T
, .... 17, 1113
who presently r - l a r away !rom you
In the yeer lllead, you could be more Is on your mind tOday, there could be
SUCCMOiul thon you have been In the good reesono 'lor getting In touch. Folput, -'licitly wtten lullflllng your se- low your incllnattonl.
. crot ambittoo,t. You already hova the GIIIINI ( - 21-.lune · ail) Thlngo
bl~rlnllln your mind. and now. you'll shOuld work out to your satlift&amp;ctlon to..:
day, due to your ability to•plck up on the
know I\OW to use them.
AQUAJIIUI
20-l'eb. 111 You may thoughts or others and use your per·
be - t o 1111 u~ critlcalsltuettpna with ception In 'helpful ways.
' ·-able accuracy today. owing ·to CANCEl! (J,... 21-.l~ly 22) You may
111 opportunity today to win over a
yovr ability to resolve dilemma have
new ally by ignoring any bi!J_ _white
througn Doth dllductlon and Intuition.
· Aquarius, treat you(sell to a birthday discussing a mattilr ol mutua!Concern.

211-...,

&lt;•·

,,

B frank and forthright.
LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) A little brain·

I·

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

-

cnanoe you might experience a rather
unusual turnabout tOCIIY When

some-

one you try to advise ends up beirtO
your mentor.

.

\

IAGITTAIItUI C-· 23-Dec. 21) Big
rewardl could come In smOII packageo
today, so don't re)ect 1888 compensation than you afltlclpated. More could
be In the pipeline.
CAPIIICOIIN CDec. 22-.lan. 11) You
might be able to move much tiller than
people you associate with today. Instead of letttno them set the pace lor
you , disengage yourselland ~ate on
yourown .

~~~
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�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, February 16, 1993

Pro.ducers _h9ping to cash
in on Oscar riotninations

QUILTER • Adrian Rigney, 78, continues his
wife, Helen's mission, sewing quilts for needy
babies at his home in Holland, Mich. His wife of
57 years died a year ago and has taken up her

. By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES - Confident
their films will be winners. the producers of "Howards End" and
"Unforgiven" have assembled
elaborate marketing campaigns to
begin within minutes of Wednesday's Oscar nominations.
The quicl!:·hit strategies include
newspaper ads, television C(lmmercials and theater bookings. Fresh
advertising materials are mostly
complete, with blank spaces left
where the number of nominations
tan be inserted.
''The
nominations
are
announced at 5:30 a.m. At 6 a.m. ,
we can start our ads," said distribution chief D. Barry Reardon,
whose .Warner Bros. made "Unforgiven: ·
.
Both "Howards End," an adaptation of E.M. Forster's novel
aboUI c)ass and love, and "Unforgiven," a Clint Eastwood Western,
are considered shoo-ins for Acade.
my Award nominations in the best
picture category.
·
Sony Pictures Classics feels its
"Howards End" may collect up to
eight nominations; Warner Bros. is
hop in~ "Unforgiven" earns at
least s1x. Emma Thompson is seen
as a sure-bet for best actress in
"Howards End" and Eastwood is
favored for best actor and director.

cause. The patchwork quilts end up with babies
who have AIDS, are mv positive, or were born
addicted to drugs. (AP photo)

Breast cancer risk now 100 times
that of Stone Age, say researchers Names in
the news

By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
BOSTON- Stone Age women
began menstruating later, had children earlier and more often, nursed
more and had earlier menopause·all of which made them 100 limes
less likely to get breast cancer than
today's Western women, a
researcher says. · ·
The findings suggest ways of
sharply reducing breast cancer, ·said
Dr. S. Boyd Eaton of Emory University in Atlanta. an expen in the
.new f1eld of evolutionary medicine.
The field's cenual tenet is that
human society has changed drastically since the Stone Age but
human biology hasn 'i. As. a result,
humans are out of sync with their
envi'ronment in ways that lead to
disease.
Eaton was one author of the
study presented Monday at the

annual meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement
of Science.
The reproductive traits of the
Stone Age woman lower breast
cancer 'risk by reducing the rate at
which certain cells divide in the
mammary ducts inside the breasts,
Eaton said. Faster cell division is
associated with a higher risk of the
out-of-control cell reproduction of
caneer tumors, he 'said.
Eaton said he would not recommend that American women begin
having children at age 13, as Stone
Age women did.
But hormone injections could be
used to mimic Stone Age condi.
lions, possibly producing dramatic
declines in breast cancer rates, he
said. Such treatment could also
lower the risk of endometrial cancer and ovarian cancer, he said.
"We by no means advocate

doing this willy-nilly for all women
now," he said, recommending further studies.
American women face a 1-in-8
or l·in-9lifetimes risk of develop·
ing breast cancer, according to the
National Cancer Institute in Wash·
ington. The risk in Stone Age ·
women ·was about one in 800 or
one in 900, Eaton said.
Determinations of Stone Age
lifestyles come partly from fossil
evidence, but mostly from studies
of preserit·day tribes of nomadic
hunter-gatherers, Eaton said.
Other researchers are using the
evolutionary perspective to try to
understand why some babies cry
excessively and whether childbearing practices can be improved.
Or. Randolph M. Nesse, a p,sy- ·
chiatrist at the University of Michigan, is trying tb see how evolution
sheds light on mental illness.

Auxiliary _makes contributions
Contributions were made to
CARE, and organizations serving
blind and hospitalized veterans
when the Lewis Manley Auxiliary
263, America.n Legion, met recently at the home of Luella Pauerson,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Dinner at Dale's Restaumnt preceded the meeting. Margaret
Bowles. Americanism chairman,
gavc the history of the Ohio flag.
She said that flags are more than
just emblems of our country and
state, they arc syiJlbols of the
American way of life, freedom and
truth. Ohio's official flag was

adopted by an act of the Ohio Leg'
islature May 9, 1902. John Eisenmann was the designer. Mrs.
Bowles described the flag as havin~ thee red and two white stripes
w1th a white circle and 17 stars signifying that Ohio was the 17th state
to come into the Union.
The white circle with the red
center, she said represents the letter .
"0~' and suggests the buckeye. She
gave a quiz on Ohio' s emblems,
state that the stat's motto is "With
God All Things Are Possible"
taken from Mall. 19, verse 26.
Florence Richards gave a repon

from The Firing Line. Sl!e said that
at the American Legion National
Convention held inChicago in
August .it was tesolved that it
would assist the families of POWS
and MIAS and see that any infor·
mation concerning those veterans
be given appropriate consideration
by the Department of Defense. It
was also resolved that the American Legion would urge the president tO appoint a high level official
to carry 0111 the primary control of
POW-MIA activities.
.
Lorrene Goggins, president, had
the closing ceremony.

Sears dishwashers pose fire hazard .
WASHINGTON (AP) -. Owners of 400,000 K~nmore di_shwashcrs should stop usmg ~em 1mmcdiately because an electrical problem
with the•rt•mers could cause them
to catch fue. Sears, Roebuck and
Co. says.
Scars said Monday that leaks
caused timers on 30 machines to
short and overheat. Four of them
caught fire, causmg smoke damage
to the surroundmg countenop and
cabmets,Searssrud. .
Searssa•d•t•ssendmglettersto

customers who purchasea one u• 587.1550590; 587.1574590;
the Kenmore dishwashers between 587.1630590; 587.1640590;
February 1990 and October 1992.
587 .1641590; 587 .1650590;
Owners who have not rece1ved 587.165.1590.
leners should c~eck the model
The dishwashers should be
numbers, Sears sa1d.
unplugged or their doors unlatched
The numbers of the affected until they can be repaired Sears
models are : 587 .1400090; said
'
587 .1400190; 587 .1400890;
Owners can arrange for free
587.1400990; 587.1440090; repairs by calling a toll-free num587.1440590; 587.1469089; -bcr.
587.1469589; 587 .1510590;
The number for consumers 10
587.1511590; 587 .1530590; . callis(800)998-8470
587 .1540590; 58J. I541590;
·

ZEROING IN • Project director Robert
Lewis holds 1 volume from 1 Middle Enelish
dictionary in his office at the University of

Michilan In Ann Arbor. Lewis and his staiT 1re
nearlqe completion of the dictionary ror 1 language abandon~ · 500 years ago. (AP photo)
'

Other leading contenders for
best picture ir!clude "A Few Good
"Men," "The Crying Game,"
"Aladdin," "The Player" and ·
"Scent of a Woman."
The best actor race, particularly
close this year, could include Eastwood, AI Pacino for "Scent of a
Woman, " Denzel Washington {or
"Malcolm X," Jack Lemmon for
"Glengarry Glen Ross," Stephen
Rea for "The Crying Game," Tom
Cruise for "A Few Good Men"
and Tim Robbins for "The Play-

Susan Sarandon for ' ' Lorenzo's
Oil," Miranda Richardson for
"Enchanted April," Mary MeDon·
nell for "Passion Fish" and Gcena
Davis for "A League of Their .
Own.'' Outsiders include Shirley
.MacLaine for "Used Peopie."
Considering their budgets and
early box-office projections, both
"Howards End" and "Unforciven" have done well so far. The
inexpensive " Howards "End" has
grossed more than $18 million
since its release in . March, and the
er."
. .
costlier " Unforgiven" has sur·
Likely to join Miss Thompson passed $15 million sinee its release
in the best actress category are in August

Compiled by:
Emmogene Hamilton
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Isaac D. Jaclcson, dec'd, aflid, to
Doris V. Jaclcson, Olive.
Kathryn Wildermuth, Lot 206.,
to Thomas A. Oldaker, Pomeroy.
·Janice E. Ebersbach: parcel, to
Randy B. Ebersbach, Jennifer Lynn
Ebersbach, SuttOn.
Kevin M. Graham, Cheryl L.
Graham, 2.015 A. S.17, T-2, R-13,
to Carl Douglas Bobb, Tammy S.
Bobb, Salisbury.
Thelma Barton Campbell,
&lt;lee' d, Cert. of Trans., -to Austin
Barton Campbell, Rutland.
James M. G:omell;· Bernice E.
Cornell, Lot #J, to James M. Cor·
nell, Bernice E. Cornell, Lucretia
M. Stobart, Midd. Vlll.
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec'd, Ceri
of Trans, to Hlirotd A. Barnhart
Olive.
'
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec'd,
affid, to Harold A. Barnhart, Olive
, Cynthia M. Hartenbach, Lo't
111224 (55I), .to Stephen R. Hanenbach, Porn. Viii.
,
Da-.id L..Chesher, Janice L.
Chesher by P.O.A., parcel, to Nursing Corps., Inc., Salisbury. ·
Kenneth R. Guinther, Carol L ·
Guinther, parcels, 8 A. S.12,"T-2;
R-12, to Richard D. Hill, Wendy
HiU, Sutton.
Robert C. Bailey, Wilovene Bailey, Tracts, to Robert C. Bailey,
Trustees, ,Wilovene Bailey,
Trustees, Salisbury. ·
Roger Stewart aflid. and Linda'
Stewart, Meigs. .
Ardis R. Waggoner by P.O.A.,
F.33, S. 27, F. 24, S. 28, 69.979 A.,
. T•7, R-14, to William R. Donahue,
Shane M. Donohue, Scipio. '
Bruce E. Davis, S. 36, T-9, R·u, to Mona 1. Perry-Davis, aka
Mona 1. Davis, COlumbia

Pick 3:
181
Pick 4:
7686
Buckeye 5:
8-30-31-32-33

Inside today

Paruy c~ooot~y IGnfl:bt. Low
near 10. Tbunday, sunny. HJcb
In the 20s.

••
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•Vol. 43, No. 20~

Copyrlghled 1H3

3 Sectlono, 22 Pagea 25 oenta ·
_A llluldmedla Inc. .._,.....,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 17, 1993

•

Regular HEAP deadline Feb. 26
The deadline to apply for Regular HEAP during the 1992-93
, application period is Feb. 26, leaving about10 days to apply.
HEAP helps . low-income
Ohioans meet the' high cost of
home heating during the winter
months. It is a federally funded
program wtlich assisis households
at or below ISO percent of the fed. eral poveny level. Assistan,ce from
this program is limited to once per
heaung season and .those who have
applied since August 1992 should
not reapjJJy at this time.
The Emergency HEAP program

Clinton plans to visit
Chillicothe Thursday

continues through April 2. Low
income persons With heat r~lated ·
utilities disconnected or threatened
by disconnect, or bulk fuel persons
whose supply is less than 10 days
meets the emergency requirements
of the emergency HEAP program.
For further information residents
may call 367-7341 in Cheshire, or
992-6629 in Meigs County. The
Gallia County Outreach telephone
number is 446-0611 and the Meigs
County_Outreach number is 9925605. The toll free hotline number
for regular HEAP inquiries is I·
800-282-0880.

Southern Ohioans have an economic message

Kevorkian
aids 13 suicide
•

By SHARON THEIMER
not walk, could not go out of the
Associated Press·Writer
house."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)' ROSEVILLE, Mich. - A 70Kevorkian, 64, was charged
Sandi Patti's 11-year reign as the
Gospel Music Association's female year-old invalid killed himself with with murder in the first three suivocalist of the year comes to an Or. Jack Kevorkian's help in what cides in which he hel\)ed. But the
Kevorkian's lawyer 51!id was the charges were dismused after
end this year.
The veteran singer wasn't even latest in a stream of people seeking judges ruled Michigan has no law
nominated Monda'y; giving way to his help before a Michigan ban on against assisted suicide. No charges
were brought in the suicides·since
perennial contender Amy Grant, assisted suicide takes effect
In
the
13th
suicide
in
which
he
then.
Cindy Morgan,. Kathy Troccoli,
has assisted, Kevorkian was preMacomb County Prosecutor
Susan Ashton and Twila Paris.
sent
Monday
when
Hugh
Gale
.
Carl
Marlinga said he was con.Grant also was nnminated for
inhaled
carbon
monoxide
through
a
cerned
about the increasing, freartist of the year, an award she won
mask
at
his
home.
quency
of
Kevorkian's assisted suilast year. The four other fmalists in
,
It
was
the
fifth
suicide
·
c
ides.
that category are Steven Curtis
"I think Dr. Ke~orkian is on a
Chapman, Michael W. Smith, Kevorkian had attended since Dec.
15,
when
Gov.
John
Engler
signed
crusade
and a lot more people will
4HIM and Michael English.
Paui hasn't gone on tour for the a ban on helping someone commit !Jie," he said.
The ban on assisted suicide will
past year and hasn't.recorded a stu- suicide. The law takes effect March
.
be in effect for IS months while the
dio album since 1990. "She's 30.
excited for the nominees. Most of
''The Legislature has made Legislature studies the issne.
The law makes helping someone
them are personaUriends of her," these people more panic-stricken
said her spokeswoman, Pamela and a lot of them feel that if they commit suicide a crime punishable
Muse.
do~'t do something_quiclaly they'':~: by four years in prison. Kevorkian
gomg to be forced mto some tem- 1las threatened to defy the law, sayLOS ANGELES (AP) - Kevin .ble ~iony _and pain," Kevorkian ing it is ,irn"!!ral.
Costner got a .razzing for his scalp attorney M1chael Schwartz said.
.
Gale s w1fc, Cheryl, was present
job in the movie ''The BodySchwartz said Kevorkian has at her husband's death, Schwartz
guard."
been contacted by hundreds of peo- said. Gale.had five sons, ages 34 to
Costner's haircut was nominat- pie interested in committing sui- 1S2. They were not present.
"I knew he was sick and I knew
ed Monday for a Razzie Award in cide. .
the "worst new star" category.
Gale, a· former security guard, that he's never been out of the
Despite its status as a box-offiCe suffered' from ~mphyscma and con- house," said Cheryl Kennedy, a
smash, "The Bodyguard" led the gestive heart disease, Schwartz neighbor. "I saw Jack Kevorkian
field with seven nominations, said. "He was in terrible pain," the leave the house Thursday night and
including worst picture, worst lawyer said. "He was on oxygen I told everybody and they thought I
screenplay, worst actress and worst 100 p'ercent of the time - could was nuts."
actor for stars Whitney Houston
andCosmer.
Miss Houston - all of her joined Costner's hair in the worst
new star category.
Winners of the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation's 13th annual
spoof of tlie Academy Awards wiU
be announced March 28, one day
before the Oscars.

Recorder posts
land transfers

Ohio ·Lottery

Tax
information
guide

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OUR SPECIAL
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WAY OF
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THANKING YOU!
I
Prcstnllhis ad with your
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admlssionJtcketstub at our
consaslon sund and rccltvc a I
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popc.om (/Her c_xpirco 3/IS/~ I

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LIRA ON A RECORD LOW • A broker of
the Duesseldorf money market notes Wednes"
: !Jay's otncialltallan Lira exchange rate. The .
Italian currency went down from. 1,0640 to

•

1,0525 marks, marking a record low against the
German m11rk. World markets are cautiously
awaiting reaction to President Clinton's tax proposals. (AP ph(&gt;IO)

..

.

.WASHINGTON (AP)- After .
"weeks .of preparation, president
.!!lihtOf! is.coming forward with a
stern economic package offering
$500 billion in tax increases and
spending cuts. A proposed energy
tax would cost middle-class tax. payers as liltle as $10 a month, an
aide said today.
·
While the White House braced
· for an onslaught of lobbying
_ : against the package after Clinton's
announcement tonight, several
aidCs tried to downplay the impact
on the middle class.
" There's been a lot of talk
. abOtit·how-much the middle class
:\fill pay. They will pay virtually
, nothing," Deputy Treasury Secre-

Altman said todaY· •
The adrilinistratioii'icknowl·
edged Tuesday that all American' . anticipation of a major lobbying
householdS making more than effon against it.
.
$30,000 a year would feel a pinch.
"We'll see the phone line.s
But Altman said th.e proposed · jammed because that's the way it's
energy tax, expected to 'be the pri- done these days and that's too bad.
mary levy on the middle class, will But I think were going to beat the
cost abqul $10 a month for people ·special interest groups,". Treasury
earning tess than $75,000 a year.
Secretary Lloyd Bentsen said on
The president unveils his eco- CBS today.
.
nomic package in a nationally teleLabor Secretary Robert Reich
vised address to Con~ at 9 p.m. said while "everybody is going to
EST.
'
be a.liule nervous" he expected the
Even before Clinton for!llally public to rally behind the package
unveiled his $500 billion deficit- once everyone "understands that
reduction package, controversy every American is going to have to
over its tax features lie!nt the stock contribute."
market reeling, produce~ taunts
tary_Ro~

Carey throws support behind strike
·ginia, Illinois and Indiana began
Feb. 2 after the union's contract
with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association expired.
"I've told (UMW President)
Rich Trumka that as far as the
Teamsters are concerned, this isn't
just the UMWA's fight, it's labor's
fight," Carey said:
Meanwhile, Eastern Associated
Coal Corp . says it may join
Peabody Coal Co. in sh1pping
stockpiled coal to meet customer
demand during the strike.
Firefighters of the Racine Volunteer Fire Department responded
"We haven't decided on that
to two fU'eS overnight.
.
yet, but I'm not going to rule that
•
The department responded Tuesday around 8:45 p.m. to a mobile
out yet," said Eastern Associated
home fire owned by Donna Stobart on Yellowbush Road ncar
spokesman Terry Whin i~
Racine. Twenty-three men and four trucks responded to the sc~ne
Charleston. W.Va. "We look at
and remained pntil about II p.m.
·
·that every day."
,
While no cost estimate has been established, the trailer was conPe&lt;;body Coal shipped stock• ~· sidered a total loss. The Syracuse Volunteer .Fire Department assist· · pile&lt;~ coal for a third straight day
, , ed. "
Tuesday. Peabody Coal. President
••
No injuries were reported. The blaze is currently under investigaGeorge S, Shifleu said the Lyn'
.. lion.
·
nville .Mine near Lynnville, Ind.,
,Around 7:15 this morning, the department was called to the
sent coal to Indianapolis Power &amp;
• • scene of a chimney fire at the Fay Westfall residence on Long Run
LighL
. ·
: Road in Lebanon. The call was canceled in route. The Bashan Vol·
'Peabody Coal spokesman Joe
• unteer Fire Departrnen! assisted.
Krmgl said decisions to ship stock-•
piled coal will be made from day to
•
day.
.
Jim Grossfeld, the UMW's
t •
•
Connie Kanl:hnik, R.N., will conduct a free skin testin~ clinic at
national spokesman, said the union
· , : theAIColumbia T~~h!P Fire Deparun!nt Monday from 6- p.m.
'is monitoring the shipments but
. ,
. 1area rest.....ts, mcluding booster club$, PTOs, chwth group~
sees 110 reason to worry.
• and other residents who are in food·service are urged to take advan"The impression that they 're
.
·
: tage of this service.
trying to give is that it's business as ·
For the convenience of working _parents, this is an opportune
usual, and it's not. ll's anything
time for a chile! entering kindergarten next year to receive their skin
but,"
Grossfeld said. "The strike
'tesl.
'
,
has been and remains very effecThe furids' for these clinics are provide(! through the tUberculosis
tive."
,
:
.. : levy and !here is no charge for any of our services.
· Meanwhile, the UMW said it
Questions should be ditecteid to the Meigs County Tuberculosis
reached a five-year contract with
Office at 992-3 722. .
•
Omar Mining Co., a West Virginia
suJ:&gt;sidiary of A.T. Massey Coal
Co., which is not a member ot the
Bi!Uminous Coal Operators AssociIn a cue ftled Thundly in the Mei*s County Co\11'1 of Common
ation.
. Pleas, Arthur Knight ~ Chariue Kmght, doing business as C&amp;A
UMW field representative Paul
· Auto, 606 E. Main SL, Pomeroy, are leekins $5,624.60 from Light·
Ritchie
said min·eri at Omar
ning Rod Mutllll InsUJWtCC ComPIDY of Woocter.
approved
the agreement earlier this
'
According to the complalnt filed. the Knlglus' business sustained
month
by
a 59-18 vote. They will
' damage in a June, 1992, haiiBtonn that was not paid by the iQsurreceive
·a
pay
rai~ of 5 cents an
ance company.
·
hour with the same benefits as in
'--~-----...;..------~.;....-----J
the l~tcontract.
.
the strike "is about issues that
affect ev'ery union family and is a
cause that deserves the suppon of
every union household.''
The United Mine Workers strike
against Peabody Holding Co. sub~idiaries. . .in Kentucky,
. .. - . West Vit' (

RVFD responds to two fires

•

Enjor a feature film in luxurious comfort.

.. . Free skin testing clinic slated

:--------------------~
· WINI WIN~ WIN
'
1 Pleue re111r11 tllil 01111)' form 10 dlo SPRI~O VALLEY
CINIIMA bar. olftco for a d!an1.: 10 WIN a dinner rex

-~~tho f&amp;mOIII STOWAWAY RESTAURANT A
LOUNOB iniUIOIIc dow1110wn Ollllipolio.
I llnt'ldn&amp; wW be hold Mm:11 1, 199'.1 at die SPRINO .
1 · VALIJ!Y CINEMA.

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Namc---------'---Phone _ __

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Addr---------------..:.. I 1
I C l l r - - - - - - - -" ' - - - Stalt - - - I

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Seeking judgment .

,

.

GEORGE WRIGHT

he hardly earns enough money in
the banquet department to pay his
bills, including child suppon. He
lost his maintenance job at the
motel six inon ths ago when room
reservations dropped.
"But I have to do it. I have to
pay my suppon.:I can't be a deadbeat dad, .. he said.
Census figures for 1990 show
that 17.7 percent of Ross County
residents were living in poverty,
compared with the statewide nile of
12.5 percent fhillicothe, the county seat, is abOut 50 miles south of
Columbus.
Nearby counties . deeper in
Appalachilr had poverty l'lltes above
20percent.
·

'George Wright eyes seat
on Pomeroy Council ·

- George L. Wright, Unioil
Avenue, Pomeroy, is making his
first bid for a political offiCe.
Wri~ht. a Republican, has filed
a petiuon asking for his party's
nomination to a seat on Pomeroy
Villllge Council in the May Primary.
- Tliete will be four seats open on
COtlheitll\is Y'W since the terms of
Betty Barnock, William A. Young,
and Thomas Werry, Republicans,
and Larry Wehrung, Democrat, are
expiring. If enough candidates ftle
there will be both Republican and
Democrat Primaries on May 5 with
·the candidates nominated then to
be on the ballot in November.
In announcing his candidacy;

. .

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

POPCORN

hopestogetajobthatoffershealth

jC[inton to deliver stern
·economic package tonight
.

By The Associated Press
.
Teamsters President Ron Carey
today threw the union's support
behind a strilce by more than 7.000
coal miners in four states.
Carey told the nation's labor
leaders m Bat Harbour, Fla., thai

·----·------1
I

~-·

CHll.LICOTHE, Ohio (AP) .illsurance.
Health ~ and jobs II!C two conClinton is expected tO arrive in
ce!'ls restd.ents wo~~;ld ltke to share · Chilli~othe Thursday ev~ning and
":l~h Pres1dent Chnton when he spend the night at .a hotel. He is
v1s11s the ~ge of one of the state's · scheduled to speak with Chillicothe
~~est regaons. . .
High School students, staff memIt would be niCe •f there was a bers and others in the school gymhealth plan ava1Iable to anyone IUISium Friday morning .
regardless of income," said Katri''It's a no-holds-barred frank
na Snyder of Waverly.
·discussion between middle AmeriMs. Snyder and her husband, ca and the president of the United
Richard, a welder, don' t have med- States ,., wd Tim Barnhart Ross
ical insurance. They're expecting County Democratic Party ~hair­
their fourth child and are trying to man.
pay off a $20,000 hospital bill for
Roger McCloy of Pleasant Valone son's knee operation a few ley wants ·to take advanllge of the
years ago.
. OpPOnunity and tell Clinton abo1,1t
Ms. Snyder, a freshman at Oh•o h1s struggles to make a living.
Univ~tsity's. !=hillicothe branch, is
The Holiday Inn employee said
studymg elementary education. She
'

Wright said that he thinlcs Pomeroy
is at a point of "waking up" and
that his interest is in assisting how
ever he can with improvements to
the village and the quality of life to
residents in the Bend area.
Wright, retired for four years
from American Electric Power Co.,
hll,j long beet! m~ in communitY and civic affairs. He has been a
scout leader for over 20 years, and
is active in the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church . .
He and his wife, Nellie, have a
daughter and son-in-law, Susan and
Joe Clark, Pomeroy, a son, Chuck,
of Gallipolis, and a foster daughter,
Sherrie Southworth, Cplumbus.

Howard
Only three candidates have
appqin{ed
fi,led for May Primary thus far
BHRC&amp;Drep
- only·'Asthree
of late Tuesday afternoon partial term. before going off coun,
candidates had filed

Commissioner Janet Howard
was selected to represent the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners "at
the Buckeye Hills .Resource Con·
servation and Development Council during its regular meeting this
morning in the Meigs County
Courthouse.
~oward replaces Commissioner
Manning Roush as commission
representative to the council.
In addition, the commission
received a petition from Noble
Summit Road resident Ray Fowler.
The petition, signed by 25 residents and land owners, asks the
commission to accept the Rutland
Township portion of Noble Summit
Road (formerly Shotgun Hollow
Road) into the county road system.
Currently the road is split between
RuUand and Salisbury townships.
Fowler explained that the road
is often used as a flood road due to
frequent floodiQg on State Route
124.
Roush said the commission
would meet with County Engineer
Robert Eason and the Rutland
Township trustees to discuss the
situation.
.
'
Present were commissioners'
Howard and Roush and Clerk of
Commission Mary Hobstelter.
Commissioner Robert Hartenbach
was unable to attend ~ue to illness.

petitions for village positions
where terms are up for re-election
in November.
·
The deadline to ftle for the May
S .Primary is 4 p.m . Thursday. Several petitions p1cked up earlier this
month are still out, according to
Rita Smith, director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
In Pomeroy George Wright and
Thomas Werry, both Republicans,
have filed for seats on Pomeroy
Village Council, and in Middlepon
· the only person filing for a seat on
Middlepon Village Council has
been R~ben Gilmore, Republican.
Gilmore served two terms and a

cil several years ago.
:
· In Middlepon the terms of Judy
Crooks, Dewey Horton, and Paul
Gerard, Republicans, and Jaek Satterfield, Democrat, will expire this
year. Pomeroy council member!!
with terms to expire include Betty
Baronick, William A. Young, and
Thomas Werry, Republicans, and
Larry Wehrung, DemocraL
Petitions can still be picked up
at the! Board of Elections orfice on
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Fifty
valid signatures of members of tlie
candidate's party or undeclared
voters are required on petitions.
The.re is a $10 filing fee.

Pomeroy man cited for D:U.I.

Pomeroy !'Dlice are investigating a hit-Skip accident on Ea~t
Main Sueet OCCurring about 4, p.m.
Tpesday.
Linda Moore of Syracuse
reported to police that she had
parked her car at a meter, was gone
about 15 minutes and when she
returned found the damage to the
frOnt passenger side.

Donald E. Russell, 42, 38740 Syracuse, was eastbound when he
State Route 684, Pomeroy, was · lost conirol and went off the right
cited for driving under the inllu- side of the road and struck a fence.
e!K(e and failure to control Tuesday
The patrol cited unsafe speed as
afternoon following a one-vehicle the contributing factor of the acciaccident on State.Route .143 in Sal- dent.
isb\11')' Township.
No citations were issued in a
AccOrding to a repon from the two-vehicle accident early Tuesday
Gallia·Meigs Post of the State morning on State Route 7 in
Highway Patrol, Russell was north- Chester Township, the Galli&amp;·
bound when he lost control in a Meigs Post of the State Highway
curve, ran off the left side of the Patrol reported.
road and struck a bridge.
.
According to the -patrol report,
No injuries were reported. The Joey R. Sizemore, Jr., 23, 356 1{2
vehicle sustained heavy, disabling Palmer Street, 1\:fiddleport, was
damage and was towed from the stopped on the berm of S.R: 7 raescene.
ing north when a northbound vehi•
The pattOI also in¥cstigated two-- cle.driven by Sbql,~,·~
accidents in which no injuries were 5728 Calvert Boulevard; St.
reponed.
· Leonard, Maryland, lost control on
A Sr_racuse youth .was charged the sno~ cov~red roadway, weni
.with f01lure to control following a off the nght s1de of the road and
one-vehicle accident Mon4ay after- struck the left rear of Sizemore's .
.
.
noon on County Road 26 in vehicle.
Chester Township.
Both vehicles sustained light
· According to the report, Richard damage and were driven from the
E. Friend,, 16, 1315 Bridge Sueet, scene.

News Hotline

House destroyed by fire ·

"

Hit-skip crash probed

For news tips or to offer
story suggestions, call the
Editorial Department.at
. 992-2155. .

.

The one story frame home of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Freeman ,
Story's Run Road was destroyed
by f.re just before midnigllt Tuesday.
.
.
· MiddlCJX)tl Fire Chief Jelf Dlrst
, reponed that his departmet!l was

called to the scene at II :35 p.m. fi'e
said the fll'e started around a fuel
oil furnace, that all of the houaehbld furnishings were· destroyed ·
and that the family had no insur•
ance.

•

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