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Ohio Lottery

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bows out of
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...... Sports, Page 4
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Pick 3:
50S
Plck4:

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Super Lotto:
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Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Thursdty, February 29, 1996

A Gannett CO. Nlw rp f rr

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Eye~ on/ the 'prize--. Bradbury schoo_
l may be closed

~ ··

••

Plan call$ for moving students to Central Building In Middleport
. By JIM FREEMAN
'SenUnel new• ltaff

much nicer building, Buckley said.'
The complaint, filed by the parent
Currently, Bradbury Elementary of a special education student. states
houses fifth and sixth graders from . that special education students are not
the Middlepon area in addition to housed in rooms comparable to those
kinderganners.
utilized by other students.
Bradbury's fifth grade classes will
Currently, $pecial education class·
be moved to Pomeroy Elementary es at the school are housed in a porSchool while the kinderganners will tion of the building that is more than
attend school at Salisbury Elemen- 100 years old. According to an earli·
tary.
·.
er study, Bradbl!fY is in the worst
The timing hinges on completion shape of all the district's buildings.
of the Central Building renovation, he
Buckley wants the board to consaid. The school board needs to sider a middle-school concept for the
make its decision by the end of next · sixth graders Which will eliminate the
month, he added.
traditional hell schedule allowing
The proposed move comes as the kids to spend more time with their
result of a complaint filed through the teachers.
U.S. Department of Civil · Rights in
"Academically it's a much better
relation to the facilities at Bradbury move for our kids," Buckley said.
Elementary, according to B~kley.
"(We can) develop a closer relation-

By this fall, Bradbury Elementary
School may be closed to students in
-the Meigs Local School District.
· Disttict Superintendent Bill Buck·
ley explained the possible switch during a re1ular meeting of th~ Meigs
· .Lociil •BOIIfd of .a&lt;Jucation held
Wednesday night at Salisbury Ele·
mentary s.chool .near Pomeroy.
Approximately 3S teachers and parents attendeil.
·
· Plans call·for relocating all district
~ixth graders to the Central Building
adjacent Meigs Junior High School in
~ MiddJepon. The Central Building
~ill be renovated during the summer
with new windows, a heating system
and other lidditions, making it a

ship between students and teachers."
Buckley. also addressed parents'
concerns about their children .
The move will be better for Bradbury fifth graders and kindergarten
students, he explained. Pomeroy,
where the.fifth graders would go, "is
a much better facility," he noted.·
In addition, most of the kinder. garten kids would eventually attend
Salisbury Elementary.
11
Contact between sixth graders
and other junior high students would
be minimized through separate lunch
hours and different bell schedules.
. Many parents were supponive of
tlie measure.
"A lot of thought has gone into
this," he said.
Continued on paae J

Dairy plan stopped but,
; I

I I I PAIGEISIXTEEN.

JJ%BRIDALEDITION

.
'
Continued from page IS
In this century, marriage has
evolved from a union with e}Jiphasis on economic necessity .and
reproductive purpose to a more
companion-based tie, Bulcroft
says. The role of the honeymoon
has changed in step.
At t!Je tum of the century, honeymoons provided a chance for
-newlyweds to practice their marital roles, she says.
"People would go and cook on
their honeymoons, and it was the
bride's opponunity to son' or fulfill
her new role," Bulcroft says.
"Today, we marry our best
friends, and honeymoons are supposed to be much more intimate,
romantic and ·cenainly more emotional."
Smeins is panicularly· interested in the advenising an.d tourism
industries' roles in these changes.
"Honeymoons are now perceived as a major focus for the
tourist ind'ustry because it's a very
lucrative area," she says. "Honeymoons are becoming more and
more expehsive and couples are
investing more ·and more into the
ritual." ·
.
·
·,
Smeins cites a· 1994 Bride magazine repon which said I. I million ·
couples would honeymoo.n that ·
year, spending an average of
$2,946;. with a range ~tween
$2.~nd $8,000 for· most couples. · · ,'
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Cypress ·Gardens ·
lures lovebirds with
wedding gifts. .
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Honeymooning wasn't afways
such a spendy enterprise. .
Bulcroft interviewed married
folks Who honeymooned in the
1930s, '40s and '50s
. Back then, people often honeymooned under conditions of economic austerity, Bulcroft says.
Plans were simpler, and the automobile was central to their postnuptial retreats.
"There were Jots of road-trip
honeymoons where couples got in
the car, drove .until the money ran
out, then turned around and came
home. Lots of women said their
'honeymoons were spent in a tent
under abysmal conditions." Suicroft says.
The war years cast a pall over
honeymooning, she says, but peo.ple went ahead with them anyway.
Many couples honeymooned
knowing the)" d only spend two or
thfee days togeiher before the husband was shipped off to war.

....

" " H II;j

l FEBRUMW llj1996 1f II

Black lace and promisc-~ity
By WILUAM LOEFFLER
North Hlll1 News Record
Before white lace and promises,
there is black lace and promiscuity.
Bachelor parties- with pornographic films, massive quantities of ·
alcohol and a female guest of honor - have 'been pre-wedding traditions for years ..
But a growing number of
prospective' bridegrooms are saying no to getting that bachelor's
degree and the hangover that
comes with it. Tougher drunk' driving Jaws, the fear of sexual diseases and changing attitudes
toward Women have caused some
men to skip,this tradition.
In many · cases, golf outings,
bowling and weekend camping
trips are replacing the usual bawdy
send-off. ··
'
.Milke no mistake: The bachelor
pany is -~till a thriving business ..
· Recently, for example, Blondie
~ Ci\nlpany, a booking agency in·
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By The Associated Press

accompanied by gov-

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limits ·keep U.S. sugar prices too
high.
They cite a repon by the General
Accounting Office, the congressional watchdog agency, that said the program raised the cost of sugar and com
sweeteners $1.4 billion a year.
But sugar growers and their allies

pushed the jobs, trade and Cuba buttons, arguing that ending the program
would mean a flood of low-cost, foreign sugar and eventual high prices
enjoyed only by foreign growers.
"It's time to realize that the United States isn't writing all the rules,"
said Rep. Roben Torricelli , D-N.l, a
member of the International Relations Committee. "Fidel Castro's
Cuba will reap the benefit. ..
The peanut program withstood a
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regional onlen that prottct higher pnca for drinking milk in
some regions.
The Ho. . voted.%58·164 Wednesday to pus the biH.
A "yes" vole Is a vole for the plan.
Voting "yes" Weft seven Republkans, iocluding Gallipolis
·.Frank Cremeans, and .Jwo Democrats.
Voting "no" were six Republicans and three Democrats.
"X" !lenotes those not voting.
The delegation's vote was as follows:
Republicans- Boehner, Y; Chabot, Y; Cremeans, Y; Glllmor,
N; Hobson, N; Hoke, N; Kasich, N; LaTourelte, Y; Ney, V; Oxley,
N; Portman, Y; Pryce, V; Rqula, N. ·
Democrats- Brown, Y; Hall, Y; Kaptur, N; Sawyer, N; Stokes,
X; Thaficant, N.

~a:..~ts~h~.America fromArgenti-

Critics cited a GAO report that
said the program, with its production
-limits and price guarantees, adds
• $500 million a year to the cost of
. peanuts.'
"
Peanut-state lawmakers countered •
: that peanut costs scarcely make a
. dent in store prices of everything
. from candy bars to peanut butter.
They say manufacturers just want
·cheaper raw ingredients.
"This amendment is for the candy manufacturers of America and it
Continued on paae 3

Forbes, Dole ey·e' crl·t.·cai _N
_ew
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prl· mary
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scaled down by House ·

Rttp• • Cremeans vo.tes

~·-""'":~~~fr~~~ s~iidiliffoi'm'ajbf. ·

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. What co!lld . he better iharl ·a
wedding ·in a fairy tale settl11g ...
that.'s free? Cypress Oanlens will
open its gates to loveblt$1 with
~~~ge licenses,' fqr free;~ oi)-Feli.
29. - the1:&lt;tay IJilil ma~es 'I 996,a,
leap year. P.., ~y oihei'·day, ·o;Qq· .
pies have .to pay adtriission·. li\
But if you , don'i mlnd. being
among a crowd, all you .have to do
is bring your marriage Jl~;e. mill
. betwejln noon an4 S_p· ;~l~~.~
day,fd ·h~d

.

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farmers fixed, declining payments
isy TOM JWNTER
roadWiy' down a 50-foot embank- over seven years. The Senate passed
' 'sentinel Newt Stall'
.
ment. 1lle nearly $1 million pr9ject its version Feb. 7 by a 64-32 vote.
. Work is expected to get underway will include complete excavation
The House was continuing work
~jthin the next month on two major and rec~.struction in the slip area, on its bill today.
. 'highway projects in Meigs County, and perm~nl upgrades to the local
Both the Hou'se and Senate mea~lth the restart of cbnstruction on the detour, Orange Township Rd. 294 sures scale down the peanut and sug·
iJS 3311-77 Connector Project and the (Old Seveq Road).
ar programs. But free-market con·
of new two lane construction ·
Damage estimates on flood dam- servatives and consumer advocates
eiound the slip damaged area of Slllte aged ~ i~ the district, including who wanted to kill the programs out·Rhute 7 nOrth.
;
State Route 124 between Portland right say they have no business at all
.~ : Ohio Depanment of Transport&amp;· · and Long Bottom, have been sub- in a bill that claims io make the
Ji!ln and Kokosing Construction offi- mined it to the Ohio Emergency biggest change in farm law in 60
~ials are again working at the Rock Management Authority, according to years. ·
;~~ngs field offices on the $12.3 mil· Yoacham.
2.25 mile four lane highway
The estimates, used primarily by
'PfOject. "We expect construction to the Federal Emergency Management
.
il!tiutup by the end of March, We&amp;th- Authority in determing eligibility for
~(permitting," stated OOOT District federal ai4ji for assisted counties,
NEW . YORK (Af1 - Steve
j O public information officer'Nancy includ'e ali costs associated with Forbes wtll go head-to-head aga1nst
:Yilacham.
clean up, labor, and minor repairs.
. Bob Dole in Ne~ York's primary
" : Plalls for the S976,000 state Route
.
under a coun ruhng that giVes the
.!f ~lip repair aild reconstruction proEstimates.furthe affected counties publisher a critical chance for anoth.,F.:t were submitted to the ·llepan- in District
were: Meigs County er early victory to fuel his campaign.
4ni:nt of'I'I'ansponation central offices $63,828.38,, W~shington County
Earlier this week, Forbes got a
:in: Columbus eatlie'r this week. and $67,699.75, and Monroe County much-needed boost by winDing the
!Y!;.roval is expected on the project $12,443:45. Pallia County did not Republican presidential primary in
il s for emergency status by next incur any e~tra costs, as damages · Arizona. Although he's campaigning
·l"~k. according to~ Col11r, wetehandled.underroutinemainte- inSouthCarolina,GeorgiaandNew
pPOTDistrjct IOproductionadmin- nance, according to Yoacham.
England states that hold their pri·IStrator.
ODOT District 10 has never maries in the next several days,
;. : A 500 foot section of the busy received FEMAmonies for total pro- . Forbes is pinning his best hopes on
) tate highway has. been.closed since jeet reconstruction due to flood or New York's March 7 contest where
·~b. 12, due to a shp which pulled the disasier·darnages. Yoacham added. i only he and Dole will appear on bal~
lo~,statewide.
.
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In New Yort we have a very cnt·
~eg· lnn·r~·rr''ln '·1998
icali'Orttary ... ~I think I'm going
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By .cOlLEEN MOORE ,
I '

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"This is a big-government program and it no longer needs to
exist," said Rep. Dan Miller, R-Aa.,
whose effon to phase out guaranteed
sugar prices failed 217-208. Though
· the subsidies are financed by the
industry, critics say the price guaran·
tees. production quotas and impon

on Meigs .road projects. : : ~=:v:.~ ~!a~~\~ggiv~~

&lt;. FLORIDA TODAY

J

· Boaa- (40)·watc'- lle plly,

(25) llllpa hi• eyn on the ..rget .
while. Eut'• Du•tln c.rwr (3) r1c1e1 ht• hlp cturtne WldnHdaV nlgllt'e Dlvlelon IV IRIIonal f11111l COI.-I on the Unlver·
ally ol Rio Gnlnde campue. The TOI'IMICioea boWed out with •
61-46lole. For the etory end eddltlon~~l pholae, -Page 4.
. (Sentinel photo 1W Tom HUnter)

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:WASHINGTON (AP)- Moving
towll'll a major overhaul of subsidies
for~otton and grains, the House nar·
' rowly defeated efforts to kill sugar
·and peanut programs that critics say
keep big government in place and
raise food prices.
The House did, however, stop a
dairy plan that would have reversed
• the long slump in _farm prices but
raised consumer costs along the way.
The so-called Freedom to Farm
bill
decades-old system of

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Ross, Pa., dispatched strippers to ~l!lr party, says Davis, althoug~ the
90 celebrations.
degree of revelry varies wi~ly.
Owner Beverly Simcic says ··
"I think it makes you more
business is better than ever. "It's masculine not to have to stoop to
booming now. It will stay busy · that level," says actor 'Tom
(except for winter)," she says.
Schaller, who recently celebnited
Others, however, are toning his second wedding anhivefSary.
down the. revelry. Couples now "If the actual bachelor wants to
marry older, which means the have that kind of celebration,
groomismorelikelytobelow-key maybe he shoul&lt;ln't be gelling
when bidding his single life good- married just yet.
·
. ·
bye, says Mary Joe Davis, a psy"I've been to o~ where there
cholog1st and mamage counselor was a stripper. It was emllarrassing
.from ~ranberry, Pa._ . . , . . • fl!f.\\,Yecybody more than anytlling
. Bndes have more mfluence else " SchaUer adds. ··
•
thiln ~ey di,d 20 y~ : ago, she
Before his wedding, Schaller
says. I~ YOJI. re watching a woman got togetl!er with some college
stnp,-that altitude has to carry over buddies but says it was nlore to
to your wife," she says. "You'can- 'reminisce than to drink.
not separate women out by saying · "We just kind of collectively
that h~k~rs an!l ~ppers de~rve . met the day before the wedding .
one kind of treatrnellt and w1ves We had been through college and
m,td ~others deserve a different ~ tliat'kind of tapped .us' out pretty
kind of ~spect and ~atrnent.·"
much," he says.
Blue-collar men ru:e. more like· ~ bi¥:helor pai'ty can present
Iy ~rv.e the ~~n~ bach- a ,~l:mma J~ '~ · fVOOIII· ,

Let Peop;es. Baatr:·:,u.t-~You. ID:.~(
New.,Ho~e For",:~:~)y! · .
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who lives in New Jersey.
ed a lot oftime and m9ne~ in the state
A poll released today showed a because of Its potential mfluence m
tight race in the state between Dole ·the nominating contest and because
and Forbes. The survey for the New of its 93-delegate pnze.
York Post, the Buffalo News and·sev- . "New York is the Big Kahuna for
eral New York television stations bad us," Morgenson said. "We have a
Dole the choice of 31 percent of 330 huge commitment there and we are
likely Republican voters surveyed, licking our chops to get at Dole
with Forbes at 27 percent. That's a there."
statistical dead heat given the poll's
A three-judge panel of the 2nd
margin of error of 5.5 percentage U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals said
points.
Wednesday that U.S. District Judge
Pat Buchanan trailed at 16 percent Edward Konnan was right to order
with 26 percent were undecided.
Forbes onto the March 7 ballot in
The survey was conducted by four congressiooal districts where he
Mason-Dixon
Political/Media had been unable to collect enough
Research of Columbia, Md., on Mon- signatures to meet GOP rules.
day anc;l Thesday.
"This forces the governor and the
Forbes spokeswoman Gretchen Legislature to rethink the whole elecMoraenson said·the campaign invest- lion law," said Larry Rockefeller, the

cnvir~nmental lawyer who brought
the anginal lawsuit against the state.
"It's in effect saying it's time to
open up the ballot and not just limit
it to the handpicked party candidates. " he said.
Rockefeller, a nephew of the late
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, was
.knocked off the ballot in 1992 when
·he tried to mount a GOP primary
·challengetoSen.AifonseD'Amato,
who this year mustered the state's
Republican leadership behind Dole.
Wednesday's ruling also helped
Buchanan, who .was on the ballot in
13 of the state 's 31 congressional districts .. After learning of the appellate
deciSIOn, Judge Korman added
Buchanan 's name to the ballot in fi.ve
more districts.

ling changed his mind about cooperating after speaking by telephone
with his lawyer, David Doughten.
"AII I can say now is he has
agreed to give us a sample, and we
Cuyahoga County Assistant Prosecutor David Zimmerman said Eber- are working out the paniculars. the
when and where the blood will he
drawn and where blood will be sent
to he analyzed," Zimmerman said.
A telephone message seeking
comment from Doughten was left
with his secretary, who said Dough!· ,
en w~ out of town on business.
An attempt to intervie'f Eberling
.on Wednesday in the·,Cuyahoga
County jail was denied. Sheriff Geraid McFaul refused Eberling visiting
privileg_es.
Sheppard, a prominent osteopath,
was convicted of murderine'his wife
in a widely publicized triaL H~ was
acquitted in 1966 after Serving 10
years in prison, but the crime never
was solved,
.
Shepplrd'sson•'SamReeseSheppard. '48, 'Of. Oakland, Calif., filed a .
nequest for the blood evidence in his
effort to clear the name of his father,

who died in 1970.
The younger Sheppard wants a
judge to rule that his father was innocent of killing his mother. A finding
of innocence could be the foundation
of a wrongful imprisonment lawsuit
that may be filed with the Ohio Coun
of Claims on behalf of the Sheppard
estate.
"Well, I'm very glad that they are
going to take the blood sample," the
younger Sheppard said Wednesday
by tel.:ph~ fro111 Oaklaod. t h,.,viously hope that it will further Ollf ,
case , althoughl~izethatourwn- :
pie from the house could be moldy.
It, was not·l{eated the way it 'should
have been through the yem."
..
His f~ always maintained that
Mrs. Sheppard wis bearen to death
by.a mail with bushy hair, and that he
struggled with the intruder before the
man fled. 'Ole case wu pan of the
inspiration behind the television
~ '"l'!le Rqitive." The seriA
foctiJed bel lloctor Who evlllles police
to PfOve that a one·armCd intruder·
killed his wife.

I'. 270 w'l •.l. ..
~e expanded to·ei·ght.lanes · ·• Cuyahoga Couhty awaits inmate's blood sample

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;: · COLUMBUS (AP) .:.._ A portion
"We are working on a plan that
Clnterstate 270 'in northern Franklin will allow us to do two additional
:tbunty ·Will be expand~ frcim four ·lanes in each direction instead of.one
~o; - eight _l~nes when die road is. without raising the cost of the pro~n~ m ,a three-year project to ject," Ohio ~panment of Tra~s. .In 1n•1998.
ponation spokesman Pieter Wykoff
Affected will he a four-mile said Tuesday. · '!
~tch of the highway between the
, .
C~velarid Avenue and ~io1 161
Wykoff estjjllated the project's
:e?'lts· That pan of the road IS one of cost at $96 milljbn, which would be
:ll!t most congested areas of interstate $12 million less than an estimate
~ghway in Ohi.o.
. made sev~.ral ye~ ago. . • · ·

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CLEVELAND (AP) - A man
convicted of murder in another case
balked at providing a blood sample
that could clear the name of the late
Dr. Sam Sheppard in the 1954 slaying of Sheppard's pregnant wife.
· Ric~ll'll Eberling, 66, had refused
to prov1de the sample Wed~sday Jlt
· the Cuyahoga. County Jail,. then
ch~ged h1s mmd after speakmg to
his attorney. Officials said the s~pie nugbt bi: taken tooa;r. ·

QISimS.tuOWni wi~=~w~~~.:mrn::

'::, \YASRINOTON (Afl - The 391,000. Many analysts,.liiif eltpeci: inve'stigilion of the beating death of
•QIImber of first·tiiRC claims fOf jojl- ed a drop of about 12.000 lut week.' Marilyn Sheppard in the family's
l~is benefi~ ~'ell by 23,000 last,week · The latest figUre was the lowest horile in B~y Village, a' Cleveland·
~~ the Joweai Iev~l in si~ weeki: I~· since clai!JIS totaled 3l6,000 d~ng , suburb: .
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E~lmg was liken from the Ori· ·
wu thO largest since claims fell by ent «;orrectional Institution 'in PickN~ ~~~~· for bnemp1oy• 23,000 during the week ended Feb. 3. away County . about I~ · miles to
f!tml IDIIUI'IIICC lotaled 1 aeuoilally
The four-weelunoving average of Cleveland· on Tuesday to ~amply
8ijuated 359,000, do'll'n from a· new w.kly jobleill c(aims also fell with a court order to provide the samJWmed38Z,OOOdllrilll.lheweek.e.a.:. 1111 ~ dowa ~to 3n,250. · pi~ . .

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__ Commentary

Thul'lday, February 21, 1998

Pege2
... Thul'lday, Februery ~. 1 •

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Frldii,Y, March 1

·· Tile Paily Sentinel Watch ·that m·~ck . fiY--.:.....---'£sttli1fisliei ui l948

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
81C-It2-2158 • Fax: 992·2157

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A Gannett
Co. Newspaper
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
0eMr11 Manager

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MARGARET LEHEW
Clllllroller

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JJior - • - , . , •

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,. ,..,._ !.olin . - • "'fOtld - .

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torscomplainthat comparisonwitha
well-known figure is giving them a
bad name, it may be time for that
well-known fig~~re to consider some
wider lapels.
Dear Cu
•
L1
rmudgeon:
·It's
b'··- ear ~ · li
F;~,"""'"
the
•-·~
.orof
lW'pigs
nes.that~...
re
was
theYpassel
were so
flatulent they set qff fire alarms and
forced the plane 10 tum around. Then
there was the group of ,18 rowdy BritS
· h0
·
•--~ figh and bad
·,L.
w got
tnlo
a
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to
bdued b • 11 t
""
su
Y
•C
ow
passengers.
N I --~ bo t. h b
th
ow1 ft,....,
u a am urger
at
ot
· a all
and the
g
e
m
a
g
ey
oven
smoke forced an emergency landing
Wha · ?
Del
· Delra ·
t gtves . ••
~y tn
y
Beach
Dear Del .in Del: AB a. sweaty.
pal fl' I'd
h rathe L- the
traims hter, the toast"·muc
· r"" on
Dearn
w Curmen
, ·"'-~r,"-~·
to
7
.....'_·_.._as_·-w_....;....,.

Acc:uWeir.~ forecast for

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/:Two recent events
[~ :::have a major impact
:.:. ..on river communities
Lately we have observed two recent events we believe may have a.major
positive impact on Meigs County communities surrounding Pomeroy and
Middleport, and the nearby West Vtrginia community of Mason.
' We refer to the increased Iikeli,hood of local telephone service between
the Pomeroy and Mason telephollf exchanges and the expected establishment of local Internet access in Meigs County.
.·. · : For Mas&lt;in residents, the developments could represent a double-savings
· ' 'Windfa11.
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: · · If the average telephone in Mason is used to make more than J.7 phone
calls a month to the Pomeroy/Middleport area exchange, as the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio maintains, most all Mason telephone customers
will notice direct cash saviri&amp;s each month. Furthermore, computer users in
Mason will have local access to the Internet via an as-yet-unnamed provider.
' Of course, Pomeroy-area residents and businesses stand to realize some
·economic benefit as doing business on both sides of the river becomes a less
·expensive proposition.
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With local Internet access, compitter users will have service almost equal
to that provilled in the country's largest metropolitan areas. This seems to
·. ~ 'be one area where Meigs County is leading the pack compared to other rur-.
al areas.
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• For local calling between the communities, telephone customers can thank
. ·· • ·Congress lllld President Clinton for passing the historic Telecommunications
N;~ of 1996 earlier this month.
: · · · Despite the hard work and efforts of citizens on both sides of the river,
·· · · 'establishment of inter-local access transport areas (prior to the Telecom, . ·munication N:t's passage) rested in the hands of fedefal judges who were
· · · ·somewhat hesitant to approve them.
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' • ' .. Credit for local Internet access rests squarely with members of the newly formed Technology Development Board, the Meigs County E!;onomic
Development Office and the hundreds of computer uSers who took the time
• • . 10 fill out an Internet q~estionnaire •• apparently convincing an access
~:;, : : provider of the profitabilfiY, of setting up service in Meigs County.
: :•: •• With the technologic~ updates affording area resi~nts better and more
: : : :.. j;ost effectiv41 COfiUDuniCations,
we look forwud to wall:hing as events unfold,
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~(:Letters
to the editor
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County officials praised
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Letters·to the editor
Kids ·worth every dime
Dear Editor.
I am writing concet:Jling the Southern Local School bond issue.
Unlike most who have written, I
am 110 pen:ent for the levy.
I graduated from .Wah111!18 High ··
School, which is about to' be conso)· idated with PoinJ Pleasant and Han-

buiJt worth keeping open,.
.
I know 6.1 mills sounds like a lot
and 23 years sounds like a long time,
but our kids are worth every dime. If
our home was appraised at $90,000
we would end up paying .apprpximately $4,SOO over 23 years. I ask
you, whose children aren't worth ·

·MICH.

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Herman C. Martin

SlroWfHS T-slonns R.tln

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.It's Leap Day and

Today's .lives.to.ck report
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Time to.s.upport the children

Support Southern levy

leaders

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Hos~itaf news

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -A
Gallipolis woman, who was on probation for charges in Mason·County,
has been ordered to serve time in the
West Virginia Penitentiary, according
to Prosecuting Attorney Damon 'Morgan.
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·Circuit Judge O.C. "H?bby"
Spaulding revoked ,the probauon of
Debra Lynn Issac Brown and ordeR!~
her to ·serve one to I0 years in the
penitentiary for a 1993 charge of
obtaining money by false pretense
. and one ·year in the Mason County ·
• Jail for a 1991 conviction of recciv- .
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'The Daily Sentinel i
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hblillte4 every aflemoon, Mooday om..sto
Fridly. I 1-1 Coart S1., Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Oltio Yalley Mlilltinl eon...arlll- Co.,
Pomaoy, Oltlo 45769. 1'11. 1192·2156. s..o.,.t
claoo pootqe paid 11 Pootcroy. Olllo.

New-

Mftllhtrl 1\e Auocillal Preu, and the a.Jo
Auocillloo.
POSTMA.STBR: Send ICiclteu ClOI'IeCtioDI to

Tile lllily Sentinel, Ill ,CO.n St., Ponwoy,
Oltio 45769.

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SUBSCitlmON ItATill

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Dorothy E. Sedgwick

DOrothy Evelyn Sedgwick, '79, Tuppers Plains, died early this morning at Veterans Memorial 1-lbspital in Pomeroy
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Arrangements will be announced later by White Funeral Home,
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Coolville.

Bradbury school..•
Continued from page 1
The best scenario would be the
construction of new elementary
schools, lluckley SJlid.
"I think Eastern and Southern are
in an admirable position," he said,
referring to the drive to build new district-wide elementary schools in
those districts.
The Bradbury building will likely be used in the future as district
offices and a bus garage.
In an unreliued matter, Buckley
said some teaching jobs may be cut
due to declining enrollment in the
district.
"The worst case scenario is that
two jobs will be cut."
Buckley said the district has 70
less students this year than last year.
In personnel. matters, the board
hired toni M. Hudson and Nancy E.
Scarbrough as substitute teachers for
the remainder of the 1995-96 school
year and granted maternity leaves to
Carol Mabr and Teawana McCaulla.
Keith Eubanks was hired as assistant high school track co~ch and
Mike Kennedy was hired as head
girls track coach. Kennedy's resigna·
lion as head boys track coach and
Ron Drexler's resignation, as boys
eighth grade basketball coach, were
acc!epted.
A year's leave of absence for educational purposes was approved for
Lori Barnes.

ing stolen propeny.
Accordin&amp; to Morgan, Brown was
credited with time served and that
completed her year in the county jail.
In unrelated action, a Gallipolis
Ferry m~ was sentenced Wednesday
on a cdhviction of manufactunng
marijuana, Morgan said.
Shawn W. Hill, 22, was sentenced
to one to five years in the penitentiary
by Spaulding. The judge then susUnits of the Meigs County Emer·
pended the sentence, placing Hill on
gency Medical Service recorded 13
probljtion,
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Terms of his probation include 60 calls for assistance ' Wednesday
days in jall and community service, including six transfer calls. · Units
responding included:
Morgan said.
COLUMBIA VFD

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Coa~'!ed.rro.·paae 1

. over seven years, earmarking $36 btl·
hon for grow~ of corn, other. feed
· gratns, cotton, nee and wheat. At !he
:end, Congress would have to dectde
:what kind of support, tf any. farmers
!should get in the future.

Stocks
Am Ele P -.......................43'!.
Akzo ......................................55'0
Alhland 011 ...........................37\
ATIT ..................................... 63~
Bank One ..............................35\
Bob Evan• ............................ 16'1.
Borg-Warner ...........................33
Champion Ind.........................16
Charming Shop ..................... 4'!.
City Holding ............................24
Federal Mogul ....................... 18'ia
Gannett ,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,, ...........u,,68'.1.

Goodyear T&amp;R :.......................47
K-mart .......................................?
Landa End ............................. 17'1.
UmHed Inc............................ 17'•
Peoples Bancorp...................23
Ohio Valley Bank ....................39
OM Valley ............................. 32\

Rockwell ................................56
Robbins &amp; Myers ....................29
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 138'1.
Shoney's Inc...........................&amp;'!.
Star Bank ................................64
Wendy lnt'l ............................ 18'k

Worthington Ind ................... 21'!.

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Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Meigs announcements
Organizational meeting
· will meet at6:30 p.m. al Pagevi lle.
The Meigs County Board of Elections will have an organizational Dinner set
meting Friday at 9 am. at the office.
A ham and turkey dinner will be
held al the Southern High School
Sunday with serving to begin at II
·Trustees to meet ·
The Letart Township trustees will a.m. Sponsors are the Southern junior
meet Monday at 6 p.m. at the office class and the Portland PTO.
building.
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The Orange Township trustees Smorgasbord Sunday
A smorgasbord dinner will be
will meet 1\Jcsday at 7:30p.m. at the
held at the Louridge Community
home of Patty Callaway.
The. Scipio Township Trustees Center Sunday with serving to begin
at noon .

Barges strike Parkersburg bridges
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP) - ·
Several barges broke loose from a
tow boat on the Ohio Ftiver and
struck two bridges, forcing them to be
closed to traffic today. No one was
injured.
Authorities closed a railroad
bridge and the U.S. 50 bridge, which ·
connects Parkersburg and Belpre,
Ohio.

Also, the board authbrized Buckley to hire tutors for health handi·
capped students for the remainder of
, the school year.
In other business, the board:
.. Set graduation for June 2.
•• Approved an overnight field lljp
for members of the Distrlliuiive Education Clubs of America to Columbus
An ruptured gas . line was the
for a state convention.
apparent cause of an early morning
trailer fire Wednesday at a Columbia
-· Met with Melinda Strong in ref- Township residence.
erence to parking problems at
According to Columbia Township
Pomeroy Elementary School. Strong Volunteer Fire Department chief
wanted board members to sign a peti· James Gaston, the fire caused light
tion stating their approval of mea- damage to a trailer owned by Roger
sures to resolve the problem. They Mace on Leading Creek Road. The
declined, stating the meeting was not fire began shortly after 6 a.m., when
the proper venue for signing the peti· a gas line ruptured and ignited the
lion.
trailer. Units of the Columbia Town• Approved borrowing $200,000 ship VFD responded to the scene at
in anticipation of receiving tax rev· 6:19, and extinguished the blaze
enue.
within minutes.
· •• Authorized a )ietty 'cash fund
No inj~ries were reported.
checking account for middle school
athletics and the application for a
credit card for administrative expens, es.
IICHAEL DOUGLAS IN
-· Met in executive session with
THE AMERICAN
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes
PRESIDENT ...Q
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
and allorney Steve Story to discuss
RICHARD DREYFUSS IN
pending litigation.
MR. HOLLAND'S
Present were Buckley, Treasurer
OPUS ..
Cindy Rhonemus, bou d President
ONE
EVENING
SHOW 7:30
Roger Abbott and members Scott
Walton, John Hood, Randy
Humphreys and Larry Rupe.

The empty barges struck the
bridges about II :30 p.m. Wednesday,
police said.
Authorities said they were not sure
when the bridges would be reopened.
A state highway inspector and the.
Coasl Guard were going to inspecl
the bridges for possible structural
damage and retrieve the barges.

Trailer fire causes ·
light damage

Meigs EMS logs 13 calls

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guts the little peanut farmers," said
Rep. Charlie Rose, D·N.C.
In a third vote, 258-164, the
House stripped language from the
farm bill that would have raised the
minimum price of drinking milk and
required it to be "thickened" with
added milk solids other than fat.
The Agriculture Department said
the plan would have added more than
20 cents to the cost of a gallon of
low-fat milk over two years and
added more than $1 billion to the cost
of school lunches, food stamps and
other fcedin~ promuns over seven
years.
lnslead, lawmakers adopted an
' amendment by Reps. Gerald
Solomon, R-N.Y., and Calvin Dooley,
0 -Calif., that would phase out government price supports but keep in
place a complex system of regional
" marketing orders " thai regulate
prices.
The orders, though their number
would be reduced, would give a price
advantage to fanners in New York
and Florida over those in Wisconsin
and Minnesota, say lawmak~rs from
the Upper Midwest.
.. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman has recommended a veto in part
because the bill ends the old safety
net that pays farmers when crop
prices fall but not when prices rise.
Both the House and Senate bills
would cui farm payments 20 percent

6: 19 a.m., Laurel Ridge Road,
structure fire at Roger Mace resi· .
dencc, no·injuries.

ROBERT

REDFOilO

FILM DEVELOPING

··~-...·regoinglo

lhank me lor iL••

MIDDLEPORT
8:41 a.m., South Third Avenue,
Gladys Walburn, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
·
8:29 p.m.. Page StreeJ, Mary .
Davis, VMH.

12 Exp. Roll $1.99

15 Exp. Disc $2.99

POMEROY
3:40 p.m., Pomeroy Cliff Apartments, Amber Lohn, dead upon
arrival.

24 Exp. Roll $3.99&gt;

RUTLAND

Herschei•Hickey•
.Edison ·Roush

12 :4~

a.m., Leading Creek Road,
Betly Lemley, Pleasant Valley Hospilll;
S:43 p.m., North Main Street,
Martin Bowland, VMH.
SYRACUSE
II :4S a.m., Second Street, James
Gibbs, PVH,

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Fs ltc=•tu
•Kat · Cola w •''•
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Come see tnt yourself

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Ada P. Rickard

Herschel "Hickey" Edison Roush, 83, of East Letart Road, Racine, died
CorriH .. - · . 12.00
Ooe - .,
..................................................
OoeM-................................................ 18.70
1\Je,sday, Fel!nJary 27,, .1996, at his home.
.
o.. v................................................ SI04.oo
Born Janyary 31 , 1913, at Letart Falls, Ohio. son .or~ late Rtchud and
Josephine Rood Roush, he was retired from the Umon of Operaung.EngtSINGLE COPY I'RICSI
Doily ................................................... 35 Cetoot
neers Local 18, a member of the Metgs County, Ohto and West Virgtnta Fox
Huncers
Association, and .a member of the 1931-32 Ractne basketball team
Sulloalben 1101 deolriDc 10 I'll' ... corrler 1111)'
remit In ldvii!&lt;:O diiOC( to Tile Dolly Selllii!Ol
and a lfaduate of Racine High School.
.
on 1 tine, alx cr 12 month biAL CroWl win be
Surviving him is his wife of 56 years, Etleen Boyd Roush; three ~augh­
ters and sons-in-law, Pauy and John Pape Sr., Sally and :Thomas Htll, and
~~
NCI oaiN&lt;rip&lt;loo by Ullil ........... lo . 1iunara and Jeff Hill, all of R~~~:ine ; seven grandchildren, John Jr., Allen (Car·
ol) and Lisa Pape, Angio, Julie, Jordan and Kevin Hill; four great-grand.
MAtLSllliCaJPTsoNI
children, An4J,U, Joshua, Chelsea and Adam Papc; and several nieces and
. ""'*Mollo C..,
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nephews.
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Jl ......._ I .......
t... .....,; _, .. ,,,,_..., ..S21,M
He was preceded in death by his brothers, Lawrence, Darrell and Virgtl
. . .....:....~....,..;.;...............................l~.a
n - .................................,.....sJOU6 Roush and sister Leora Young.
--Mollllea.r
. Services are Friday, March I, 1996 at I :00 p.m. at Straight, 1\tcker &amp;
I$,_...~.....- .......,.................. $29.:ZS
" -............................................ 134.~
Roush Funeral Home with Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Viewing hours
52 - . ..................................... 11Cit.72
.are froin 2-9 Thursday.

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'iJ,el'svotefor~Whowi!lllb ··

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Gallia ,county resident to
·serve time in prison
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VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY
Admissions: None
.Discharges: None

RA'tlllds 'n terrible con61"ifl'll ' . .
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cents higher; demand moderate on a
moderate supply.
U:S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.0047.SO, a few 48.00; plants 47.0048.50. .
2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.004S.OQ.
So)VS: under SOO lbs. 50 cents lower; over 500 lbs. steady.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 29.5031.50; 500-650 lbs. 32.00-34.00.
Boars: 24.00-26.00.
Estimated recei)lts: 39,000.

COLUMBUS (AP) - IrlianaOhio direct hog pricu at SC'Iected
• . buying points Thursday by the: U.S.
Department of AgricultUre Market
News:
Barrows and gi hs: finn to 50

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Cloudy

er 20s in the northeast to the upper
20s southwest.
The skies will clear out tonight,
ending the lake-effect snow. Lows
will be in the single digits north to
near IS for some locations along the
Ohio River.
Friday will start out niostly sunny
but become increasingly cloudy.
Highs will be in the 30s. snow is possible by Friday even,ing.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
statiqn is.70, set in 1976. The record
low'bezero was set in 1884.
Sunset today will be at 6:23' p.m.
Sunrise on Friday will be at 7:04a.m.

By The Aaaoclated Preu
Leap Day brought snow and chilly
temperatures to Ohio.
Wind chills across the state were
near or below zero this morning at
Mlll)Y .reporting stations. Flurries
were ,widespread in the southeast and
the north.
. Snowfall totals in the northeast
snow belt ranged from Ito 3 inches.
With snow showers expected lo continue in that area today, those totals ·
coulc;l incre~ by another 3 to S inches .
Must of~ state will be partly to
mosdy s~n~y by this afternoon. High
temperatures will range from the low-

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February bowing
out like a lion

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'Ai8"'t/flllah" 11
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wn'ti~D~Utthe

Surry

f:lcrman C. Martin, 82..Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Feb. 27, 1996, at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy:
A retired employee of the Red Anchor Department Store in Pomeroy, he
was born AprilS, 1913, in Pomeroy, son of the late Stephen T. and Cora A.
Young. He anendcd the Methodist church.
Survi.ving is a brother, Leo Martin of South Point, and several nieces and
nephews,
He was preceded in death by his wife, Betty Martin.
Graveside services will be held at Rock Springs Cemetery near Pomeroy
at a time and date to be announced later. Arrangements are by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Extended fo~t .
Friday uight. .. A chance of snow.
Ada P. Rickard. 91, of New Haven, W. Va., died Tuesday, Feb. 27, 1996,
Lows in the 20s.
Saturday... A chance of snow. at her residence.
Barn Feb. 8, 1905, in Cottageville, W.Va., she was a'daughter of the late
Highs in the 30s.
William
E. Morrison and Sarah E. (Nalley) Morrison. She was also preceded
Sunday... A chance of snow. Lows
.
in
death
by her husband, Adam P. Rickard, three sons, James, Roland and
15 to 25. Highs 25 to 35.
Ralph
Rickud,
and three brothers. ,
Monday ... A chance of rain or
She wu a cook at the Semel Solvay Division and member of the Peniel
snow mainly north. Lows in the 20s
United Methodist Church .
and highs in the 30s.
Surviving are three sons, Paul A. Ftickard of Shamokin Dam, Pa.; Ronald
H. and Betty C. Rickard of West Columbia, W. Va.; Donald·C. and Naomi
Rickard of Rising Sun; daughter, Mary R. and Gerald L. Beers, Hatboro,
Pa.; 18 grandchildren and 34 great-grandchildren.
,
The funeral will be Saturday, I p.m., II the Foglesong Funeral Home with
Nancy: Mayes and Rev, Michael Lamben officiating. Burial will ·be in the
Graham Cemetery.
FriendS
may..call 81. the funeral home Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. .
.
.

Today...Partly sunny ... Brisk and ·
cold. High 30 to 35. Northwest wind
10 to 15 mph.
T,onight...Mostly clear. Low 15 to
20. 1\Vinds diminishing 10 light and
variable.
Friday... lncreasing cl!ludiness.
High 35 to 40.

World.,,'

vi~i~g ~cry

Ice

Southeastern Ohio

SciJools important to industry

b. UIQatiP.n.~Of . lliv~lins

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Flum.s

TQ(Iay's·weather forecast

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Genuine fellowship

f.O
.· 'rr;. p'

Amber A. Will Lobn, 8S, Pomeroy, died Wednesday. Feb. 28, 1996, at
.'
A fanner baker for the Wehrung Bakery in Pomeroy, she was born June
9, 1910, in Meigs County, daughter of the late James M. and Mary Thoma
Will. She attended the Lauiel O iff Free Methodist Cburc~ and was a member of the Meigs County Senior Citizens,
'
Surviving is a cousin, Mary Thoma Reider, Iowa, who was raised in her
home, and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Otto Lohn, and by sisters Laura Schaffer, Edna Heilman, Margaret Houdashelt and Ella Smith.
Graveside services will be held Saturday, 10 a.m. at Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy with the Rev. Peter Tremblay officiating.
Friends may call Friday, 7-9 p.m. at E1Ning Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

IMansfield 132" I•

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Paper carrier praised

Amber A. Will Lohn
her home.

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~e~ry·s

This
is tearing
thebut
hearts
of $4,500.
this a real :
anan.
lot of
people
I know,
try asout
they
bargain. I' would, consider
.
:::: : Dear Editor:
Committee Meeting. .
.
mighi, lllfre doesn't seem to be any.
I love my kidS and I want the very
The Belleville Locks and Dam, thing ·they can do about it. The same best for them. That's why rm going
: :: ' ' With the approaching primary
•:: · . election and the recent filing of can- Forked Run State Park, and our veg· thing is_going to happeD in Meigs to vote "Yes" on March 19.
~::: : didates for various offices, we · are etable and flower growers attract County if we don't get some schools ·
Mewue Simp11011
Dilring our recent .flooding and bring a covered dessert (coffee and
;... : · reminded tbat we have been negligi- many tourists to our community
Racine
cleanap
of our stores and property, I tea will be furnished) to the Trinity
::: • : ble in thanking publicly a few present throughout the year. High ~hool
•
saw a genui~ fellowship between .Church basement Sunday, March 3, 2
-::: : county office.hotders for supporting graduates in our county are benefitto 4 p.m. (casual dress).
everyone involved.
::; : : aur continuing effort to reestablish the ing from the many scholarships
Note: Our town. workers who are
People who have never given their
: •: Reedsville Voting .Precinct.
afforded them through the Kibble Dear Editor, .
ingredient, our county will lose. We
::: . · . Last April, during a re~~ar meet- Foundation. The benefactor, the late
I am writing to encourage the vo1- have many great assets in Meigs neighbors the ti1fte of day or a pleas- helping IYith our cleanup a special
•: • . ing of our county com101sstoners, a Mrs ..Stewart. native and resident of ers of So4them and Eastern local · County. But when businCS$. looks at ant "hello" were now working togeth- invitation, do not bri"11 anything
except yourselves.
:;: : .mocion to endorSe Reedsvill~'s recent Re~sville, is remembered by c:om- school districts to vote "Yes" on their · our schools, they .tilrn their aitention er as a unit.
· Hope to see yqu there so we can
I
went
to
our
new
mayor,
Frank
effort to restore the precfnct was monity members for her.initiation and school levies. .
elsewhere . ·
.
1
contin~
our much needed fellowShip
::: '· unanimously endorsed. We were support or projects which promoted
If we are to have a fighting chance
It is a victous cycle. No jobs, no Vaughan, and together we came up
together.
with a wonderful idea.
•·: .• : pleased to learn that Ms. Howard had . the betterment of our community. So, - in attracting industry to our county, future, no children staying.
Also please bring past flood picMayor Vaughan has declared SunYou, the voter can break this
; -: ,seconded the motion stating that the Reedsville does have its attributes we must have the right ingredients. R.
::: removal of the voting precinct had with tax-paying citizens who are Weaver gave us those ingredients in cycle. For the price of a can of pop a day, March 3, as "On Old Fashioned tures, stories or anything you would
like to share, ·
;: : ·created hardships for the residents. entitled to a convenient voting place. his Feb. 22 letter to the editor:
day, you have the chance to improve Fellowship Day."
Sarala Fillaer
We
would
like
to
invite
every
one
·
•:., Ourcomnuttee~herd~play.of
In closing, we do want to repeal
-land availability and cost
the educational facilities of Southern
:: : ·concern for her ~o~smuents 1ft sptte our thanks to those county officials
• transportation
and Eastern local schools, I.only wish of the merchants, building oWners, or
·~ • of her party affibabon and we extend mentioned above who have recog·tax incentives
we. had this chance at Meigs Local. anyone else affected by the flood to
:::. out thanks to her and the other com- nized our need and feel that we are
• labor Pool
Please vote "Yes", March 19, for our
'
'·:·:missioners, .Hartcn~h an~ Hoff- ·deserving. We hold high regard and
• schools, housing and recre&amp;!ion - future .•
I ,
· man. for thetr supportive action. ·
respect for them and greatly appreci- opportunities.
.
:~&lt;· . We wtsh to thank Howard Frank, ate their kind support.
lf·we are missing just Ol\C crucial
Dear Editor,
.
'
build modem schools? !'know there
1';': • ~Meigs County Treas~r. who also
Moine Whitehead
It
my
feeling
that
~ome
of
the
are
a lot Qfcaring·and concerned peo.:
bOldly supPorted our last . spring's
Rutb Ann Baldenon
adults
in
'the
Southern
l.pcal
School
pie
in our district. Many are more
·• attempt to seek reconsideration by the
co-dutlrman
seem
to
have
forgotten,
the
·
than
willing to do their part 10 mike
District
election board. This show of copcen:~
The Commlltee fM Reston· .
Dear
Editor.
its
schools.
There
is
nothing
wrong
most
important
reason
to
vote
for
the
sure
all of our children receive the
was eSpel:ially encouraging following
lion
On
March
19,
the
voters
of
Southabout
the
concerns,
of
the
people
who
Southern
school
building
levy:
the
'
very·
best education. I personally
a cold reception given three. of .our
o1 the Reecbvllle Volin&amp;
em
Local
School
District
will
be
espouse
a
back
to
the
basics
philos.
children
of
the
COIJIJ;i!Unity.
They
are
.
have
seen
.many haid wo.rking iQ!Ii·
~
active citizens when presenttng the
Precllli:t
faced
with
a
very
imponant
c!ecision
ophy
of
education.
This
idea
has
~n
·the
most
valuable
assets
we
have
.
viduals
give
much of ~ir lime ·llllcl
'
issue at a ~vlous county Democrat
•
that will effect the future of this area useful and wls,an important part of becau5e they are the futitre
of e.~rgy t? make ~urethe public is get. .. ,'
for generations to come. I am of our past. However; if we are 1~ .this country. Everyone deserves the bng 11M! correct 1n{ormatidn not facts
course referring to the scllool bond progress in any ·manner whatsoever : very best education possible. Why pulled out of a hat. I applaud them on
; Dear Editor:
' ' thought there wis ito way he would levy for the new school. We often the "basics" must inclUde the very not our own? Let's face it, they are· their positive efforts.
· ·
'WihenyoungpeopledoiOmet!ling l be able to.make it, bot he did.
speak whether in our capacity as par- best in the quality of our education, sitting in school ~ .desperately
If you have questions or doubts,
. . wrong, there is usually much talk '
If I am outside at delivery tillte, he en~. public ~fficials, or ~ leaders in the facilities~ and the technology that · need up~. Now l"rit no ~k~t go to one of ll!e public buikllllg com~; .abOut iL Most of the time, they can . alway• likes · time to talk awhile. our commumty of wanung the very we can provtde.
scientist· but is seems to me 11 wtll : mittec meetings. After all, that's what
: . , do aood lH1d no one mentions it.
How many 19 year olds WIJUid do best for our students in our district. I ·.
I cannot even begin to count the cost a lot mt;li'C monej to renovate : this group is for. It is my opinion that
1 ',
•1'1tis 'is why·! wanno praise Brjthis.
to all of us the time has come number of times I have been to meet· five different building• (kindergarten, J· the recent letter writers on this issue ~
Rmlolpj.. our Sentinel carrier, for
Mi-.lncl Mrs. Randolph, you have siggest
t,o put up or shut up on this iss'ue. No inss and dinners and have heard the . Portland, Letait, Syr.acuse, ·junior do not have all.their facts right My ·
, , hiJ ~on to getting his papers. a son to ~ J*9ud of. I wouJJi say you matter what bUr station in .life, :young words, "It's time for Meigs County to . high) rather than build one.
!gli~ls . is t~y have not made ·'ant~·
to
his
c~
tlvougbout
:
h&amp;ve
tauJht
hiJ!I
t1Jat
whateve!
he
or
old,
parents
or
childless,
the
sucmove
forward."·
For
the
voters
of
How
will
weeverbeabletollllact
: attempttoat!Cnd lhelenteetinp: \be _
1
this winlll',' no mat1er what the weath- 1 does to give it his very best. He must cess Of failure ~II' 0111; community ~ou~~ I:.ocal School District ~w { new businesses and fimilie~ to the 'Yes' for our children.
· ·
er. . .
respect you and listen to your lidvice. depends on the type of education .we 11 the .tunc= to put these words tnlo · area if they see a communtty who
ReV Coil•~
·, · ·J haVe no idea how many eus- , You all are to be c0111mended. .
give the Children of that community. action, to Jlace educatiOn It the t isn't willins to put f~ the effort to
. (loztl -d
• ._..he hU, and there were clays I . • · , ·
.
laa Our sense of COIIIQIUnity must go forefront of our COIICCI'lll, and to say · ·
.
.
.
,
,
.
•
. ,.,
,·
, ......, . r ,
'
beyond·~· sChools at Ponlad or yes to the fulure of ~·chi~n.lt is
' :
Sy~use or Letart .01' formerly often and correctly wd that' people
• '!I'R
''
..
:
Will "'. .
.
• ' 1
'
•
•
• Raci~
, wijmut vision wilhurely perish. Pro- Delt Editor
·
·'
~~ he · · · ' · ~
1
,u,
in our schools also prothe
beat, not ,the buic : .......
condition of.
t I tht?nkn 't carti p uts a URIVC ' t
•
•
~
vi• an ocotiOIIIic benefit to the 11\lrumum u the most tmportint
''"
•,
,. . ·
J n
• ts me o put p:ave
cOminunicy,All~ auhey II'C. vision any ~i~ can have fdr its' . ~ tosld (~~k s Road). It .ts tn a ~· on. or make
. us a ~ road l~e ,the
'M .1.,""'
· · ·" ~w hi&amp;h'Naysalont will ndt be !hi hildren IJ'beit fqture 8nd that · 1 . nblc condltton and hu IJeen for • od!er IOiids. It's no uaeto.com~n to .
d.te{ ' in ~ ~,o•;..,:
~. ~~Qii.~M tltlJ . .c~. ~ in
'of !be: '50uV:
._:: long time.·~ have plowed ourselves. ; our officiltls, they lllready tao.V a'nd ,
~ "' ··
' •
'1boie IIIUIIIIIo ' bll .. a liboi' 1po(i( ot Locll voren. The rene ia II()W 'ihe I out of lbe snow ·.ill ~nter, .8nd jlow they dOn't care. I sure woo1cf )ike 10 ,
C!l' hiiruy
WGterl to fiU
.chbil,e il
'\bte
plowinl OUt df the mUd. It hu . ,know
where our
clollvi IR
1
•='~ lad and AWit": '•Y new illduatry is ro ~ a this •vote yes for our chlldteD; 1(~ yes for , ~le11n It you could I • a wheel. 1aolng. .
,,
• . ,
widl'
llldr.a lind - -· ' - - l ki:ow (ram 111111)' , . . o( the Southern LoCal School bond
.. rm slid 10 ...,. we haven't had a .; . I hope tn llie future people Will .
"'llllllbbrr •••"' lblt tlil lint t!UI• SdiiJcr ICY,
·
ftre or an~· It w~ld ~too 1Diab a chlnae wherJitheX 10 to VOII. ·
111111- . •
...,. wiD•••111
"'it ed eUiplor«doeliiafow.tiahilellltc• "
latqettiliJ up this !'Oid·•n :unc. I
·1.aara .wtJ ~ ~..ea.ra' ' dell lito look • the cj::lllity of the
el T. Slnsble think the people out here ·~ a C4I'C if our fO!Id for a dllnp.
.i '
·
t!r.~
.
· ' ·
ldiOOI.,.._atlledep'eeOfqom~. ,;
.S•-., better SOlid toclrivl! on.
I
,._,_.. ,
·~
,m~ • 1l~\ I ~·
mitment diM tbli cOmmunity hu for
~
· My dlu&amp;hler already buited ·•
·
h a •••

'' ·

conditions and high

· see Phil Gramm drop out of the

Republican race. I just don't '!Urik J
could have listened to that cotto~mouth drawl for four years. •• ElSie
in El Paso
Dear El in El: I could abide the
drawl. What I couldn't endure is four
. years of those dadgum Dicky Aatt
stories.~
Dear Curmudgeon: My colleagues
al·Work lilte offbeat histonCal quiUICS.
The other day, the question was:
Name some good things to com•~ out
of World '"ar
"' n. The top "'-uu"" were
•omputers,
J
.
ets
and
nylon.
What
~
woitld you say? •• Bob in Braintree
Dear BNB: Spam.
DearCurmudgeon:Thiscorpora'te
advertising busineS!I is really gettins
mit of hand. The~ now is to pos.t
ads t' n tm'let slllls. NoJO·ke. In Cb:-•••
go's United Center, WheR the Bulls
and the· Blackhawb pl.ay,'·lhey lie
1
1now displaying ads in the restrooms.
' I think this is one i~ that shOuld be
flus~. -- Ftickin·Rockford
,De¥ ~: True story: The Curl mudgeon once ·worked ip an.office
1
comiJI!IIIded by a woman. who was a
I' fien:e
Washington Rcdskins fin. A
'
. will\ Dallas
. friend
would come by
Cowboys stickers, and the office
manager would stick them in toilet
bowls. She took great pleasure. she
said, 'in providing Redskins fans the
· opportunity to· vent their wrath on
their favorite foes.
Dear Curmudgeon: So what if !he
·Browns are "'ovins to Ballimore?j\t
:least we'll be keeping the name and.
·the logo all!lthe brown-and·prange
color scheme. •• Calvjn in Cleveland . '
Dear CNC: I know, dam it. 'Wee
BaltimQre ms were 10 hoping to call
the team Browns. And those colors?
How wiiJ·we ever live without diem?
I notice the Bqwling Green Univer·.
sity Falcons use oranse and brown,
too. My guess is, it's some· kind of
Ohio thing that the rest of us would
never understand.
I just read over what I' ve written,
and I think everythin&amp; is much clearer with the muck en~. H'ope ~ou
agree.
JORph Spear Is a sya4kated
writer for Ntw~paper Enterprile
Alloc:latlon.

The Dally Sentinel • Pige 3

Peanuts, sugar..

OHIO Weather

' ' ~--~--------------------~

I'msure y(,u've~ ofFox 'leleDe. Curmud&amp;-: Does Dour
, visiQ!I'a . -.hockey .puck. Vtewers Bob Dole Sllnd a clwtce apinlt Bill
were complailliDJ that the~ c:ouldn 't' Clinton7 He looked truly cadav111011s
1 follow the linle rubbetdisk as it flew ~rhe gave the GOP response. to '
! around the ice rink, so Pox developed
a "puck enhancement" system. Now
Jo~e~nh
.
I"
the thing !!learns and glows lilie
. ...
--'
-those mc
_...ent toys the kids twirl ·Clinton's State 'of the Union speech.
on the beach. '
•• Fran in Fresno
The Curmudgeon is very familiar
Dear PNP; What is it about the
with the problem the ~levision wiz; . man from Kansas that reminds everyards are confronted wtth here. Often; one of death? Time magazine called
pcopie complain theycan'tfollow my him the "National MortiCian."
.
logic. So The Curmudgeon, an erst·Newsweek said be "looked like a
--~ funeral director." A resourceful
ho
has
ad
while muclct'aker w
van...,..
1· of hell-raising, reporter for the Baltimore Sun called
to the higher calmg
has developed a· "muck enhance- some morticians and discovered they
: ment" system. Now, 1'f you s)are-at were mortified by the. comparison.
these wOOls long enough, they will They think of themselves as upbeat,
talle on. a green color and begin to warm, carin" people, the Sun reportglow and eventually mike sense.
ed, certainly• nothing like the dull,
Let's give it a try:
dark-suited Dole. 'Wihen funeral direc-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'
POMEROY
Nettr P'omeror l'ls 1n Bridge
882-2SII

..

'

'

VINToN

Glllll CCiunly qllpley Yanl
15511Htst.

•

"

•

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ports

The Q,aily
Sentin.,!J
.
,

i,J boys' Division IV sectional final action,

··

.

Thursday, February 29, ,1191

.

.

Portsmouth East hands Southern 61-49 ·defeat
.

.

.

c•

'

•

~

The Dally SeuiiMI • P • l

.'

.

~

•

.

,l

Tile fUture: East (13-6) will face

jy TOll HUNTER

tain a four point lead. East tried to Tom.does· to, retake the lead. Jay the Bast lead to five. After an Bast gime, but our shooiing and offensive
establish the perimeter ·shooting ·McKelvey cllliiO liP big with a steal turnover, ~outhern . had another play was not there tonight. I'm par- Fairfield (16-6) in the; district tour: : Chris Boggs, Portsmouth East's game, but ~ forced to go to and double pump Jay-in with 2:34 opponunil)' on· the offensive end. · tJcularly prood of !he way that we hit nament at thC Convocation Ceater in
l\1-foot-S senior center, poured in 38 Sparks on th(baseline for a jumper left to give Soutbem baek the lelll at Rizer went to the free throw line to the offensive boards," said Caldwell - t.~ns Wednesday nigltt at 8: IS
~32. ~oggs stepped up c1n the othshoot the bon~ that could l)ave cut , after the game.
the Tinans' 61 paints as Bast to cut the score to 20-18.
· The Bobcats will f~~Ct Beaver
er
end,
belitinsthe
press
and
a
dputhe lead -to ~. but came up short
"It's a shame that everyone in the
iiukc away from the Southern TorJay McKelvey nailed a bucket at
Eastern
(14-8) in lhe;districi ioumable
team
on
a
lay-in
to
lqlot
the
pme
on
the
first
sfiot.
·
·
·
state
of
Ohio
is
going
to
lose
their
4fdoes midway through the second the 4:08 mark to put Southern up 22A bis tht'ee-pointer by Evans )ast Blime; except for the state ment at the Convocation Center in .
)l!llf to claim a 61-49· win and the 18. Rizer continued his tough play at 34-34 .
Boggs continued his secOnd half with 4:07 left cut the East lead to cha!nps. I feel especially sad for our Athens Wednesday night. at 6:15
. !liJper bracket championship in the on the tall double,team of Boggs and
tiivision IV sectional tournament at Walbqm, as he weaved through the inside dominance with a buc~t at one, 45-43. Jeremy Carver connect- seniors, Spike Rizer, Jay McKelvey p.m.
.. .
·' .
·SOUTHERN .... A1an ~:{oms 1and ~ohn Hannon, ·.because 1this
~University of Rio Gnlnde's Lyne lane for a bucket with 3:30 left to the 1:42 mark to put Bast I!P 36-34. ed on a three-p9inter for East
Sbuthern worked the perimeter for a moments later io put the ~ ~p club's record c!idn't really show tbe 2-010=8, Jamie Evans 0:3:...tl6:13,
Denter Wednesday night. ·
~give Southern a 24-18 lead, their
, · Coach Rick Hopkins' Tartans biggest lead of the night.
.
final shot, but a Boggs steal and 48-43: After a shot ~Y Buckley just contribution they made'IO the pro- Jesse Maynard ~-0-010=6, Spike
entered the game, their first game in '
After ·a Southern turnover wtth breakaway bucket save Bast a 38-34 rolled off the rim, Man Ketter hit a gram. These three guys·' have made Rizer 5-0-115=-11, Jay Mc~elvey 2tournament plily, with a 12-6 record 2:28 remaining, East wlllked the ball lead with 51 seconds left.
breakaway lay-in for East to extend
some substantial ·contributions to .O-Ml=4, John tJarmop 1-0-l/4=3,
and their fifth Southern Ohio Con- inside to Boggs .for a tum-around
Boggs capped the la,te charge by their lead to seven.
the program and we are goin8 to 1Tyson· Buckley 0-0-112=1. Totals:
Southern Ieist Rizer to his fifth -miss them. The kids really hustled 11144.5n1·7117oo46
ference Division II title under the jumper with to the Tornadoes' lead to East, as he hit a running 35-foot
tonight 'and they left it put on the . Tot8t F'Ga: 17-65 (26.1%),
belts. Souihem, which closed out the 24-22. East.had a chance to tie it at jumper at the buzzer to extend the · personal with 2:12 remaining,
'R ..Wncli: 22 (Rizer 8, Evans 7)
season with a 9-13 record, ·came into 24 moments later, but Dustin CarY- Tartans' leld to 41-34 at the end of ' ·putting Boggs on-the line to convert floor," Caldwell concluded.
Steals: 10 (Maynard 3) ·
"Boggs ciune to play tonight. He's
this game "more prepared than . · er missed the front end of a bonus, three. The Tartans would ride that ,. both free throws for East. Ty Sparks
Tumoven: l3 ·
had big ~k·to-back games for us
before any game of tbe season," head I Bast .took advantage or a second wave ot emotion into the final 8:00 put Bast up by 12, 55-43, with a free
Fouls: 21
of
play.
·
throvl
at
the
1:"57
mark.
With
I
:36
and
this
is
·pro~ably
the
best
fourth
eoach Howie Caldwell stated before.! chance to tie seconds later, as Bog1
In the opening moments of the remaining, Tyson Buckley convert- quaner that we've played ils a team
the contest.
.
gs scored on a breakaway .with I :32
PORrfSMOUTH EAST .. all year. We took the game to a
: : Caldwell's comments held true left in the half to tie the game at 24- final period, a quick three-pointer by ed on one of two shots .to cut the East
Maynard cut the Bast lead to 41-37. lead to 55-44. Evans hll both ends of • quicker tempo ih,the second half. It Dustin ·Carver 1-1-1/3=6, 1eremy
tliroughout inuch of the first half, as 24.
took us awhile, but that'$ 'what we Ketter 2-0-2/4=6, Matt Ketter 3-0il!e Tornadoes looked like they came
Boggs hit 2-2 at the li~ to give Boggshitunderthebucketloextend ,the bonus to cut the lead "tO 56-46
needed to do. Coach-Caldwell had 010=6, Chris Boggs 12-1-11113=38,
\o play. After East took an early 4-0 Bast a 2~24le8d .with less than I :00 · the Tartan's lead to 4~-37 with 7:10 "with just over 1:00 to play, but the
remaining.
Boggs'
string
of
hot
Tornadoes
would
get
no
closer.
.
his
kids prepared, and they, gave us 1Y Sparks 1-0-112=3, Billy Walburn
Iliad, Southern took a 5-4 lead with' left. The Tornadoes showed a lack of
shooting
at
the
foul
line
ended
with
"We
were
ahead
24-18
in
the
first
a
tough
game like we expected them 1-0-0/1=2. Totals: · 2tl45·219·
S;02left on a Jesse Maynard jumper. concentration on the offensive end in
15123=61
. - Ryan Norris drilled a three-point- the final stages of the first half. A · 6:4lleft, as be missed the front end half, ~n we had 3:30 stretch with- to," said Hopkins after the win.
Total FGI: 22-54 (40.7%)
In the late 'pme of the doubleer .with 4:30 left to extend the South- Norris miss off the left side of the of tbe bOnus and Southern pulled out scoring a poi,nt. That was the
Rebounda: 30 (Boggs 18)
turning point in the ball g11111e. I header, Green (11- JI)def~~ Ironem lead to 8-4. Bast countered with rim was the Tornadoes final chance down "the rebound.
Steals: 12
4'bucket and free throw from Bog- at knotting up the score before half- . ' With 5:041eft; Evans hit a three- thought we played very, very hard. I ton St. Joe 57-51 for the1 upper
Tumoven: 12
bracket Sectional title.
~~. to cut the Tornadoes' lead back to .time,~ the buzzer sounded~ Bast poi,nter on .the baseline. immediately think we played a great defensive
Fouls: 17
~·7. Norris connected again just
went 1010 the locker room w1th 26- following a Southern lime out to cut
.,
'
afler the 4:00 mark on a IS-foot 24 lead~
.
jUmper to give put SHS '!P 10-7.
. ~oth teams struggled with shoot,
The hot shooting continued for 10g m the openmg moments of the . .
Norris with a three-J?Ointer at the second half. Southern cut the Bast
3:'28 mark to give Southern a 13-7 lead to 26-25 on a Evans free thro.w,
lead. Boggs was fouled as he hit a then Bast began to concentrate their
bucket with 3:22 left and netted the game on their strong point of the first
free throw to cut the Southern lead half, Chris Boggs. Boggs hit both .
to 13-10.
ends of a two shot foul with 6:571eft
Southern did a good job of coun- in the third peri~X! to extend the Bast
tering the size of Bast inside during lead to 28-25.
the opening moments of the game,
Around the 6:30 mark in the third
with good rebounding and boxing period, t.wo quick buckets by Jesse
out under the boards on the Tartans' Maynard put Southern back atop the
big men, Boggs and 6-foot-4 Billy lead at29-28. Walburn countered for
Walburn. Boggs scored on a break- Bast on a bucket off a rebound in the
away lay-in to bring Bast .within one pa101 I~ put East back up, 30-29.
with less than 2:00 to go in the open, Evans h11 1-2 at the hne momen.ts lating period.
er to knot the game back up at 30Southern played the relllllinder of 30, then Boggs hit on the trip down
the quarier out, looking to ilet up a floor for the Tartans to put East back
final shot opportunity.· A Jamie up by tw~ at 32-30..
Eyaos. th~ pointer with fell shan in
Tenacious·defens1ve pressure by
11M closing sec'onds, bu\ Spike Riz; Caldwell's troops gav~. Southern
l;r was ~nder the b)lcket to convert many second opportunlhes 10 the
Jivans' sltort.shot into an alley-oop opening 4:00 of the half. ~ Torpass. Jlizer's iip-in fell through the n&amp;;does were makin~ their biggest
·J1Ct at the buzzer to give Southern a m1stakes shooMg m the second
J·S-12 lead after one.
hl!lf.
; : As the second period ~ned up", ·- -. Joh~ Hannon went 0-2 a~~ line
Southern took. advantage of w1th less ~ap 5;00 to go, m1ssmg an
·., Portsmouth Bast turnover in estab- · opportunity to tic the score·at 32-32.
·lishlng a lead early. Rizer connected Continued hust!ing play by Southern
lin a floating jumper from the elbow' forced East. to make several
• , with 6:091~tto put Southern up 18- turnovers dunng the m1ddle of the
I'
&gt;
·,
. 1~. Bosgs countered for East at the ~riod. ~armon rede~med himself
.
I·
~
~:52 mark, with a drive and bucket
w1th a b1g bucla:tto ue the game at ·
LOOKS
TO
PASSSouthem't
JeltH
Meynerd
looks
to
put
the
RIZER
SHOOTS
~
8cJI!!hlrn'1
Splice
R1z1r
(23)
e-te
In
trOnt
of
:
iiiside the lane.
32-32 with 3:16 to go in the period.
beelcetblill
to~ open •m~~~~a during Wecln11dlty nlght'l Dlvlllon ..,_ Portlln®th !lit ~to put up the ehot oUt of thtlr.I'MCII ·:
:: Southern came roaring back ..with
Another East turnover off of a bad
IV HCtloNII flnelactlon ~g~ln" POitlmoulh 1111 qn ~ Unfvll'llty , . during Wldt~eett,y n~ DIYIIIon IV 1iCt1on111
In Rio :
another Rizer jumper with to main- pass set up an opportunity for the of
Rio
Grande
cempue.
The
Tarllne'
e1-48
win
tridld
""TOrnldoel'
.
Gran•.
wile!•
P~
e
..
t
won
e1-48.
(Sintlnel
....
Tam ,
'
.
~-'
-eon. (Sentinel photo by Tam Hunter)
•
Huntar) ,
·
·
...,
'

·1linllnel St8lf Writer

.. lk

IN CONTR()L - Adam
(on top) g.t1
,..dy to pin an opponent In IUt Mllc'eeect~on­
al tournament ac:t1on 8l: Warran local 11111h
School. ShMtl, who won the MCIIonal chlmpl-

In Division II.

. .

.Melgs qualifies five wrestlers
for Division 11' d·istrict meet

-·-·-

The Meigs Marauders advanced · the 130-pound class. Also qualifying for the Marauders and placing
five wrestlers to district tournament
fourth were 160 pound junior
action scheduled for Friday arid
Michael Parker (11-9). 215 pound
Saturday at· Buckeye Valley High
senior
Craig Knight (22-11) and
School in Rayland.
·
268-pound
junior Josh Roberts
Adam Sheets (30-3, 29 pins)
(18-11).
was sectional champion in the
To advance to the state tourna189-pound class. He is ranked
. ment at Wright State University the
eighth in Ohio in Division U.
wrestler must place in the top
Sophomore Adam Thomas (278 with 26 pins) finished second in · three in his weight claSs. The state
tournament will be held ' from
March 7 to March 9.

Alum~i

game
·open gym set
for Sun~ay

· There will be an open gym for
participants in the Eastern Alumni
Game on}Sunday, Match 3 a,t 8 .
p.m., at Eastern High School. The
annual alumni game is scheduled
for Saturday, March 9 at 6 p.m. at
Eastern High Schc¥&gt;1.
The men's game will immediaiely follow the women's game.
For .t;nore .information on• the
game' and practice times, women
are asked to contact athletic direc"
toi- Pam DOuthitt at 985-3329. Men
are aSked to contact Tim Baum for
information 985-3301 .

Leque Mixed

Early Wednesday

'Iealllllandlnp- F.O.E. 2171

(54-26); Tony's Carryout (5:1-28),
Thundtlf Al~y Cats (48-32), Captain
O's (~34), Meigs Golf Course (4238), D.V: Construction (32-48),
Chainaaws &amp;. Roses (:~0-50) and
R&amp;.B Beads ( 12-68).
hlp serlel - Thunder
Allevi"CI1ts (2106)
hlp pmc - .Thunder

.

c

•

·in AfAC men's basketball action,

.

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·~~

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.......-C...,lassified•
........

at

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TopiM•••acl,call
992·2156

lly TIM PUET .
the will to win," Braun said.
: AIIOCialed Prell Writer
.Oenq Ford led Ohio with . 20
: Eastern Michigan has clinched •t pomts.
.
. least ·a tic for the Mid-American ·
With one regular-season game to
clonference regular-season title, but play, Eastern is 13,4 and Western
··dhiomadcsuretheEagleswouldn't Michigan is 12-5, with both having
· ~lt.the easy way.
·.
. ;' ·
clinched a l)ome game next week in
·• Eastern had to go into two over- the firSt ro11nd of the conference
tKnes before taking away an 81·77 . playoffs. ~iami of Ohio and&lt; Ball
~ctory Thursday night against the State are II ,6 and get the other two
~beats. Brian Tolben scored 39 home games if they win Saturday,
~in)l and made the difference for but BaJJ State m~ play at Ohio,
!lie Eagles in the end, coming- up whicli, at I0-7, is still in the hunt fQr
,qith a pair of ~-point plays in~ . a game at liome.
~ond extra penod. Derrick Dial
Toledo Bowling Green (both 9closcd out the scoring with tw9 ~- . 8) and ~1· (8-9) round out the playlf!r~.ws.
.
' off f~eld. Central Michig~rt (2-IS)
• That was_ a gutty, gutty wm. for and Akron "(0-17) will finish their ·
~ guys agll!?st ~ goqd team m a seasons Saturday.
geed league, Sllld Eastern coach
In Wednesday's other MAC ~
,~. Brau~.
..
. . games, Western nilled past Akron
, Both guys (Tolben and D1al) hit · 89-49 Miarill edged Bowling Green
h,_e shots. They both have _big SS-56: Toledo IUI'Viv~ a dooble- [
hNrts and they compete. They s•m- overtime tliriJier,with Central Michi- 1
pty come out for the moment and gail I03-102 and Ball slate beat Kent!
PtaY hard.':
.
: .
66-S2:
,
.
.
. : ;~'!astern _won de$plte h1tt1n~ 27 · ' : ·. Western's victory over ~n was1
percent of 1ts shots m the .fint half 'the Storie&amp;' fifth atraisht triumph.''
, ~.36.5-~nt for the P'!'e.
'They~ 63 ~nt:oftlleir shots.
. ,. '. Ol!r. shp~ . weren t .always 'whiteholili11JtheZipsto34pen:ent.&gt;
f~!tnJ, but we sun fought. W~; had
' Jason 'Black · and Joel Bums
I

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scored 15 points apiece, while teammates Saddi Washington had,J4 and
Russ DesErmia had 12 for the BronCQS. Akron'i George Phillips led all
scoren with 18.
·
Damon Frierson's eight-foot bas·
ket with three seconds to play
enabled Miami to defeat Bowling
Green. Miami started the second half
.with a 12:2 run that resulted iii a 3927 lead, but the Falcon~. began .nar:
rowing the sap and eventually
moved ahead 56-54 before Miami
IJOI the last two. baskets.
Devin Davis and Kevin Beard
scored 13 points apiece and Landon
H.ackim had 11 for Miami. Antonio
Daniels scored 19 and Jay Larranaga 14 for Bowling 'Green.
Craia,Thames scored 37 points seven of them in the·final four minutes· of the second overtime - as
Toledo held off central. Six of those
points came consecutively ' and
enabled the Rockets to move from a
98,95 deficit to a IQ1-981dvant&amp;ge.
They.held on to the lead the rest of
the way. ·
,
Kevin Baker finished with 23
points for .ToledO. Nate Huffman
scored 38 and 'l1lomu Kilgore 26 for'

the Chippewas.
Ball State .came back
- from
-· .a 33-

., "'""

Price

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•

28 halftime deficit to defeat Kent
Bonzi Wells
28. . points\l
. had
.
..
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Garage
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8

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EMU tops Ohio in double
OT to _get share of title)~
.

...

. Individual hi!Jh pme - Smith
(244) and Susan Mossman (217)

:
{

.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
AlltLEllC ASSOCIATION

Alley Cats (744)
. Mea
Individual blgh serlel - Larry
Morgan (621) and John Tyree (553)
IDdlvldual high pme- Morgan
(233 and 215)
·
Women
Individual hicJa series - Margaret Eynon (523) and Betty Smith
(507)

'

•'
. 1995 96: All gamea
.
Team
W L TP OP ·
Wheelersburg ... ... 20 1 1662 1228
Chesapeake,.. ..... 20 1 1513 1214
Loga~ ...... ....... .....15
612451110
x-Manena ....... .....15 6 1245 119~
Greenfield ........... .14 61332 12!j6
Fairland .... ,....... ...14 613591191
x-Jackson .. ....... ... 14 714131319
x-Meigs ............. ...12 91373 1345
South Point .......... 12 9 1387 1256
Warren Local... .... 12 9 1271 1136
Point Pleasant .... .1o 12 1295 139Q
x-S~uthem ......... .... 9 131402 1484!
x-R1ver Valley ..... ...9 131258 13~1
!Athens .. ...... ...........8 1311951208
x-Gallpolls .............5 161096 1246
1
:x-Portsmouth ......... 4 151164 1~1
x-Vinton County ..... 2 19 1397 1599
~
......... )8')
'x-Complated Mason
.,
·
'wedneaday'a reaulta
Pt . Pleasant 50 Parkersburg South ,
48
.
.
Portsmouth East 61 Southern 46 · •
Green 57 Ironton St. Joe 51
Tuesday's gamea:
'$-.--. Ito•:
Tonight's games:
....
,_...
Dlvlalon 3 Dlslltct m OU
Zane Trace vs. Minford, 6:30 p.m. ,
Wheelersburg vs. Ross-SE, 8:15
p.m.
'
Friday's games:
·•
,-....a .,_, •
Division 2 Dl1trlct m OU
t·
• ......
'· .. ' .,,
Warren Local vs. Ironton, 6:30p.m...
South Point vs. Greenfield, 8:15 p,m.
Division 1 Sectional
Finals at AHS
Chillicothe va. Logan, 7 p.m.
DISTRICT CHAMPION - Melga 1111lor Adam &amp;""'- (18ft) Ia picSaturday'a o-a:
Dlvtalon 2 blmrlct m ou
tured with hla father, Jim Sh8ete held ..Uing ~lor Melglafter
SIIMtl won the cllatrlct chlmplonahlp. Adam 11.30-3 on the yeer with Rock Hill vs. HYisboro, 7 p.m.
Athens vs . Fairland, 8:45p.m.
• .
29 plna and Is renked eighth In Ohio In Dlvl1lon 11.

Ma$on Bowling League results
. .
(Results as of Feb. ll)

Thoma• (130 pound clan), Josh Robart~ (hetl'll.nlght), Adam Sheets (1811), Craig Knight (21.5)
and Michael Parbr (160).
'

Cage standings::

The first round of the tournament will begin Friday at 4 p.m.
Thomas will wrestle Ian Hochstettler (13-17) of Dover. l&gt;arker will
go up against junior JQhn Keller
(23-10) of Bellaire, Sheets will
wrestle John Estep (16-9) from
South Point. Knight will wrestle
Kyle Carreon (26-5) of Edison
Local. Robens will be paired
against junior Carl Gerber(21 -9) of
New Philadelphia.

title:

.

'NO:;:;;;;:;; QUAUFERS qualified five
wrntlen to !hit dlltrlct m.t,
.. schedul8cl
lor Friday and Slturdlly at Buclceye Valley High
School In Rayland. From 18ft to right are Adlm

OMhlp IO the 189-pound ell.. and le 30-3 on the

,..r with 29 pins, 11 ranked eighth In the 1t1te

•

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10fflt. 16" O.C. wall studs. 24" O.C. engineered rooltrusses. 3'0"
\
service door. 7118"x4'x8'
OSB
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sheathing.
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/
Architectural plans for
easy aaaembly. Cement
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Alt for IIIU11t11tlve purpoHII only. Not exactly H ahawn.

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These prlcea are for deck
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~to

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the llilwniiiRaw•ue 111:"1ce.•
AMENDED ,, ..

•

Rll11JRNS

.I filed my 1994 IIX retum .on
Q•time,
I fOIJII(. however.to ln-

• Alldlnca nit Windowl

· • Slllllcy Doorl

I1IOI"C tn, or YQU may get a ·small

.

refund, dependlna on how. much

• 2x6 Exterior Willi, IIi ln. On Centl!r
0 .Armitron&amp;IOiariM, ~'J\Ie ,
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' you earned, ~ how much lax wu

wJt!lheld. YoU ..-wi I rebim by

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Y011 qy lilt! an amended retum
for '1 variety of reuona. l'or
example, If you remember a
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return will~ lhF error ... net
you a reflind: Generally, you have

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• 2ll0 Roar JoiM. 161n. On -~

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lojlllllll' ·• MllkrT-IOet Vl""l SlclinlwiUtidiill! Wai•..Y.,

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0,... PI Ius Are 'Die.l.;owlllt ~~Area.
t

,our return -to file an amendment.
If you flied 1 state
also have to amend that

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store Houn: Mon•• Fri. 7:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Sat. 7:00a.m. to 3:00p.m. ·
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........ The o.tly 815111'*

Thul'lday, February 21, 199&amp; ·

Pomeroy • Middleport: Ohio

"' ~

·In Top ·25 college IM•ketbtlll,

:Thu...Uy,
February 21,1•
,.
.

.... .

.

.

tJ lht AIIDclllld PIJU

.

St. Joseph's had a S8-S21ead with with a IS-0 mark: ,
Ooin&amp; crazy enlliled Camby hit·
The visitina Scarlet J{nighu (9tina a turn.round jumper in the lue 2:01 left, but didn't score qain 'in
with I :441eft to bre11t !163-63 tie ..·He regulation. The Minutanen tied it on 16, 6-tt) ted by 15 eu,ly in me:111110
tllen went dowiiCOiln and resJstered 1 shot in the Jane with 3.6 seconds and were atilJ aheall SS-57 with 7:4S.
the mileltone block. He rebounded left by Donta Bright, wbo had IS left when Allen slaJted 111 11-0 run
be.
with a three-pointer. Damon Santia. · Tho aec:ond·nubd Minutemen the second of two missed IRe throws points and IS Jdlounds.
go
led Rutgers with a career-hiJh 27
needed five extra minutes to beat St. by teammate J?dlar l'ldilla with 16
"We'.e just in a little bit of a funk
lOICIJb 's 68-66 Wednesday night, · seconds ~ft 111d the Minutemen right now," Cali~ said. "I'm &amp;lad points.
No. U Peaa St. .78
we're in a funk right now and we're
~ fourth ovea:Wne victory of the (27-1, iS-! Atlantic 10) leading 67Nortllwatena 6Z
66.
Padilla
went
biCk
tO
the
line
and
not
in
a
funk
'
i
n
two
weeks."
~ and the llJb IUiiJht overtilne
Pete
Lisick)i
!l8d 29 points iS the
win, • llll'elk that dltD&amp; to Peblury made one of two for the final marIn other games involving nnked
Nittany
Lions
(20-4,
11-4 Big Ten)
gin.
1991.
teams Wednesday nisht.- it was No.
kept,
a
live
their
slim
chanccis
of win·:· "No one's been in more games
The Hawks (13-11, 8-7) went for 4 ConnecticUt 78, RutcerS 66; No. !2
ning
the
confmnce
title.
They
trlir
lib that than us this seuon," said the win at the buzzer, ·btU Terrell Penn State 78, Northwestern 62: No.
Myen' three-point attempt bounced 18 Qeorsia Tech 83, Aorida State 68; two-time defending·champion ~­
~us Camby, wbo'had 21 points,
No. 20 Iowa 69, WISConsin 54; Mar- due by two games with th(ee tQ play,
IS' rdlounds and his 300th career off the rim.
blocked shot in the IlleSt over-40Myers 111d Reggie Townsend quette 80, No. 21 Louisville 79;-and · Genu Carlisle and Joe Harmsen had'
each had 14 points for St. Joseph's, K111sas State 92, No. 23 ioWa Sla!C ] I points each for the visiting Wild~utewio.
.
cats (7-18, 2-14).
,
· . : It wu MUSIChusetts' lmt game which won its four previous games. 87.
No.
18
Georpa
Teeh
83
No. 4 Coanectlcut 78
Hawks coach Phil Martelli let his
since losiq its tint of the season last·
'
Horlda
St.
68
. $iturday to Oeoqc Washington.
team know it had a chance for the
Rutaen66
a.,y Allen had a career-high 39
Matt Harpring scored 22 points
· . "In the end, when we needed ii. upset it almost got.
; Man:usstcppedupand went crazy,"
. "I told them they had to lose two points and a career-best nine three- and the visiting Yellow Jackets (19~ Massadlusetts coach John Calipari
in a row $0me time, so why ·not pointers as the Huskies (26-2, 16-1 · 10, 12-3 Atlantic Coast Conference)
. Big East) closed their home season clinched the top-seeding for the
now?"
he said.
: slid.
.

.
M.siChuseas doesn't !ole IIWIY
'*""'"II pales. When the Min. • u~n go ovenimc, they never

toque IOtlmllllent and at least a
llhiR of die 1:011feiaK:e title. The
win, Clecqia 'ndl's lixth slrlight,
· also made Bobby Clemins the winningest COICb in schOol history with
• 293-170 recoid.J- Collins had
14 pointa for the Seminoles (13-12,
.'S-10), whO were without center
Corey LouiJ, who was suspended for
two games fol"violating team rules.
•
No. zt Iowa 69
·

WJecons!n 54
Jess. Settles scored 25 points.
includiq 10 straight at one point, as
the H!lwkeyes (20-7, 9-6 Bia Ten)
. ov~ a 43-34 deficit with 13
..minutes to play. Sell! ·DelllflettY had
1 career-high 22 points for the visit. ingBadgen(IS-12, 7-8),j..hiteJere. my Hall mau:hed his careCif best with
19.
Marqaette 80 ..
No. Zl LouiiiYIIIe 79 ~ 01')
Aaron Hu11:hios hit a.Jilb.point·

er fmm the comer widt tine secoads
left in •tbe' second overtime to Jive ·
the Bqlea (19-6, 9"" Confeience •
USA) the viotoly and ..,Od the return
of Louisville cenier SIJnaki,Walker.
Walker had 24 pqiins and 12 .
rebotlllds .ctei' missing 10 games
while the schpol conducted an inves·
ligation into the p,urdiase ot an
automobile by his fatlth:·l;lutchins
finished with 23 points ~ visiting
Marquette.

'

STAI;IT YOUR DAY OFF RIGHT WITH A

&lt;1.

'

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

•

..·.
...."•
-.......

slips past St. Joseph. 68-66 in overtime

~assachusetts

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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K·-·SL92
No. 23 Iowa St. '87 (OT) .

,.,.

Elliot Hatcher .an4 f ~n
Swfrlzendruber each scOI'ed 22 :
points for the visiting Wildcats (If!.
9, 7-6 Big Eight), who made alSea- · \
son-hi'gh 13 ·thiee-pointers. Kansas
:State rallied from an It-point deficit
'ill tbe f"nt half and was down five in
'the final2 112 minutes of regulation.
Kenny Pratt had a season-high 31
' points for the Cyclone$ (19-8; 8-S).

•

'

·Fans struggle to get glimpse of Gretzky;s _first practice ·:with.Blues
. ,,

''

:By BETH HARRIS.

• · 'VANCOUVER, British Columbia
: \AP) - · The St. Louis Blues went
:from heing Brett Hull's team to
: Wiyne Gretzky's in a quick chang. inl of the guard.
; :The hoopla surrounding Gret; zky's first practice with his new team
: Wednesday rivaled·that of any rock

.s'*..

.

· ; •Security guards pushed back fans
; slrlinins against plastic cords to get
i a jlimpse or a touch of Gretzky as
· : st&lt;p!led off lhe Blues' bus and into
: 8-Rinks lee Sports Centre.
• Little kids clull:hed Gretzky trad: inJ cards. Adults clicked cameras.
: T.V camera crc:ws jostled to record
: ~ Oreat One's every m01ftCnl.

It was a bit dizzying even for
Gretzky, who kept his ~ad down
while striding through the mec,tia
gauntlet.
"There's been so much going on,
I'm just starting to concentrate on the
hockey now," he sai~.
Gretzky's rtrst game with the
Blues tonight against the canucks is
sold out, and scalpers found a ready
ticket market among buyers eager to
see hockey's career si:oring leader
paired on a line with Hull.
"He's the greatest player to have
played the game," Hull said. "He's
got more skill than anybody and he's
a great person beyond that, so he
adds everything."
Blues coach Mike Keenan admit-

ted the stakes to win a Stanley Cup
shot up when Gretzky's trade from
the Los Angeles Kings went through
Tuesday night.
"Our expectations and the expectations of our fa11s have increased
dramatically," Keenan said. "Those
~ssures are what drives the best
athletet in these games. If it doesn't
come to pass, I don't have any reservations about acquiring Wayne."
Oretzky has yet to sign with the
Blues, but Keenan expected negotiations to begin as early as today: He
denied that businesses in St. Louis
would subsidize Gretzky's contract.
Agent Michael Barnett said there:
is no timetable to reach an agreement.
·

"We haven't even discussed the
two, three, four years,
I'm not sure," he said. "I think we'd
rather just hear what the Blues feel
is appropriate and reasonable."
Barnett did not rule out Gretzky
agreeing to give up his marketing
rights to the Blues as a way to
finance his contract, a5 other NHL
players like Sergei Federov and
Jaromir Jagr have done.
Asked what the trade would do to
boost his income from souvenir
sales, Gretzky chuckled.
"There's going to be a whole new
barrage of memorabilia and merchandising that goes on, It's a capitalistic country," he said. "If I'm
going to be successful, the Blues are

term yet -

going to be successful, and .individual' store. owners are going to be
more profitable."
Mirko Die rushed from school to
the arena in surbtirban Burnaby,
where he chased around trying to get
Gretzky's autograph on a trading
card.
·
"He's better than Gordie Howe.
My mom likes him, too," the 11year-old said. "I'm going' to the
game tomorrow and it's soins to be
a lot'of fun."
That feeling disappeared f9r Gretzky in Los Angeles, where the Kings
a1e struuJing to avoid missing the
playoffs for the thinl slrlight year.
"To go to the rink witll a team
· that was hopeful of being a .playoff

contender just Jeally didn't satisfy his
competitive needs," Barnett said.
"He much more needs to go to the
rink with the belief lhat he can compete for a Stanley Cup, as opposed
to hopefully sneaking into the play-

EIIGi El

offs."
Gretzky is the latest addition to a
.St Louis team Keenan has torn apart
and rebuilt since arriving as coach in
Jun~ 1994. ·
"You play this game with a
chance to compete for a champi·
onship," Gretzky said. "Nobody has
a guarantee of )!!inning, but I know
for sure that Michael and the St.
Louis Blues are going to 'tiy to win,
and that's what it's all about."

~Cleveland's
Baerga set to begin season wfth 1,000-hit mark itJ
.
.. reach
.

'

.
. WINTER HAVEN, Aa. (AP) _
:Sometimes eclipsed by the power of
:Albert Belle, the youthful style of
:Minny Ramirez or future Hall of
• Falne credentials of Eddie Murray,
•

Carlos Baerga still stands out as
Cleveland's Mr. Reliable.
And even though the second
baseman for the Indians hasn't

Scoreboard
..

BilskctbJ II

. NWJ:A stmcliDp

--

·

EASTERN CONFERENCE

. ra.
ll
Orlondo .................41

L fill.

15 .732
· Now York ..............32 23 .!82
Mloml ...............c... 27 lO .474
•Ieney ............24 31 .436
Wlllliopon ............ lA l2
. . ........................... 20 36
: Pllilodelphia ........... II 43

.429

8.5
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16.5
21
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FarWHt
Touroamonlll

NoiiMu Conl....-11..........
LonJ llland Uftiv. 12. St. Francia,

Cftllrli D I Chic.o............... lO 6 .893

N.Y. 6.1

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, ' Toroooo .................. l4 -40 .259

.

MAC men's standings

3!

Coni.

Ila

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J)oo- .... ............... Zl

I~

II
20
31
36
39

Ji
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Ill

.669

2

.426

14.5
19.!

Dollaa ..................... li
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· ' M - o ............. l6
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: v_..... ............. 11 42 .:lOS

1.!

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Sconlo ................. ...43 12 .712

' .. .....-

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J27

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W. Mlclipn 89, Alaoo 49

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Ell* 5:1. COHill 42
Fl...., !1, Doll- )I
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r.c- V111101149, Col. Ncnt' 135
Tol. St. John'• 77. Sylv11i1
Soudlvlow 46

Ne,r: York II Ullh.l p.m.

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Wedlllllday'a~CGnS

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Orbodo 116,M-112
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Sallie 94. Detroi!BO
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LA. Labn 99, Vancouver 80

7
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K................. .B 9
Ceol. Mich. ...2 IS .Ill
Alo&lt;io ........... .O 17 .000

22

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17
24 .:!64 11.5
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. · . -................... 36 20

• CLEVELAND ..... 32
•. All1111ra ................... JI
Decroit .................... .w
a-- . ..............l8

t
hard llld lov!l the game. You•can't older has to take better care of him·
have a Jot of days when you ~e to self, but Carlos is gl)ing to have to do
the park and don't play beCause an even hetter job at it. Oenetically,
you're sore."
the way he's built, there is more of
Baerga has already proyen ,,. will- a ch111ce of his body getting. •way
·. Baerga has time on his side. ingness to play with pain. He J!iayed from him."
He'll play the entire 1996 season at much oftbe postseason last Y"5'!Vith
Baerga has average&lt;! 178 bits per
age 27, and given his record of dura- a bone spur on his 111kle.
·,:r
season over the last five years.-apaee
llility - he's played in 711 of
n,e iJ'calest threat to hislo4&amp;evi- · that would put him over 3,000 hlts'
Cleveland's 743 games over the tymaybllhisweight.Builtlikearue 12 years from now. H~ will get his _
past five. oaeasons -JJC .lllJy ·have. :.'fiYfiilt;; lle~mes IM liiiiisl';tf ""'l,ooodl fiit'ilt11ia lt'ielllll ~t;~ ·· '
another 1~ .or 13 productive years get a biJ too round.
· •
as Murray did back ih' 1983.
ahead of ham.
.....,..,., fJ!iJ
·
"It's guys like hitll (BIIerga) w.lfil
.. ' '' 'i"&gt; ' '""'!'" .,.,, "·'
. vih'lit'iif'Poi\'fi'l!art
.··
' hlVo a ~ ~ger 1
To reach 3,000 .h•~· ,you ve ~ot takea c..,e of himself, he
.Mike H~ovt .said. "I{ Qjrlilll
to play 18 or I~ years, Baerga s'!'d. cnt ~o do it Every player
stays healtl\y, 1 thmk he can." .
")\'hen you loOk at the guys who ve_
.
done it, they are all guys who play

League players: Wade Boggs (.334),
Frank Thomas (.323), Kiri!Y Puckett
(.318), Edgar Maninez (.313) aqd
teammate_Kenny .Lofton (.312). .

Colondo78. N&lt;WMka64

17

.204

He'll go -into this season with a
.305 ca~eer batting average, which
uails only five other activel\plcrican

Alobula 911, ArUaw 19
lloylor 101 , Rice 88,
Houloo 62. SOUihem Melh. 59
Old...... So. 89, Ollohoma 67

Ill

.357

Southwest

reached 1,000 career hits yet, he's
still able to dream that his reiiability means he someday can reach an
even greater milestone: 3,000 hits.
"It will be very hiii'Ctto do," Baerga said. "You've got to ,have the skill
and be able to play for a long time
without getting hurt. But if 1 stay in
shape, I think 1 can do it."
Sometime this spring,!lfeiswitcb. hitting Baerga)s likely tdket his 29th
hit of t!Je.. season; ·which,:tt'o~!!t!!§!,'
be the I,liOOth of his careu.~·

I

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1111

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

·A beautiful face may end Ull costing wOnian ari arm and leg
Ann
Landers

!"'· .... -

, _ , _ .. o..
-~

By ANN LANDERS
,
. Dear Ann Landers: I' m a SB-y~old w~. Three IJIOI)ths ago, I bad
~ f~ _l.tft. ~doctor was board cerhfied tn plasuc su_rgery, and the pro.~ure was done 10 a reputable has. !ltlat.
·
I was horrified when I discovered
: ~ the doctor did not do my upper
,neck •• the ~ di=dy IInder my

chin -- where I had quite a lot of and 'feel cheated. I doo't have the fortunately, this is not a major glill:b
loose skin. When I asked him llbout money to pay for.another proqldure. Uld ~ be easily c()!'leCted. It's ju,st
it, he told me not to worry Uld said Since I didn't get the C01J1P1ete race· 'PI to take time Uld 11101e money.
that I looked fine. ·
lift I paid for, ~think I'm entitled 10
o- Ann Landen: ~'Ed" ud I
I wrote a letter of complaint a !elund. I Clllt afford 10 take 'lllii have been m..-ried for rilne ~· I
~&amp;ailllt this doctor 10 the medic.J._ doctor to court. What should I do? - love him a lot, but sometlliii,S is
:co~mnilree, and l'am still waiting 10 • Niagara Falls, N.Y.
bothering me.
heardw =ult:
.
Dear Niagara: Accept the fact
Ed has a serious weigllt problem,
Oa my next visit, the doctor said that your plastic ~urgeon !lid a poor which . he recognizes. lte feels .he
he h.d heard about my letter of com- job and start lp save money for ,a should handle this on his own and is
plaint and offered to do liposuction remedial procedure.
.
anpy and frustnlled becauSe he jm't ·
• on my neck free of charge. I cOnsult~ \ · M you kllow, court battles are. makiog any beadw~. Whenever I'
ed with two other slirgeons, and both co'sdy, time-coosuming and often · ·Jmng up the subject, I geL&amp; ~d .
agreed that my doctor took a short. gut-wrenching. Be awu;e lhat lipo. ~tare and icy responses for' the
cut and 1iposuctibn wiD not jive 111e suction·is a prqcodlll'e.pw su&amp;s the remAinder of the evening. ij~'ref)lsthe contour I wailt.
fat out of a' specific afea;·rt will not es·to get a checkup and has11't seen a
What I really want is some of II)Y help correct the problem of loose doctor i.n almost three years.
money biiCk so I can have another skin.
,·
. On two occasions, Edilas lost a
surgeon 4o it right. I'm depressed . Sorry about your toui~ luck, but great deal of weiaht on liquid diets,

: : Hig~ .sqliool counselor ·speaks

J;ach time, he hu jained mOSI of it
back. Aside from the fact lhat these
fad diets can be dangerous, it is clear·
that they do not work for Ed.
· I make healthy, low-fat meals,
and he seems to enjoy them, but I
have found J:~~~dy wrappers and
empty pastry bags in the bouse and
in Ed's car. This is very upsetting to

counseling 10 deal with his addic:·
tion. Overeaten Anonymous would
he pat, but you can't ctrag him. ·
'
I sugpst that you attend a few
meetinp and con~t with ~
who have this problem witb their
spouses. Can't hurt. Might help.
Good luck.
me
f
, ··• ·
·
. ve ~ed
. to .tgnore
.
.
Gem ·more
o the
· 0 the
ay: _...ness ts
. •I ha
the. sttuanothina
than
habii of rest"
lion, but this makes me feel bke an ing before you·get tired
'' enabl,er." It would be helpful if I ·
,
:.
·
'
could fi.nd a support group simil!lr 10
•••
1
-At-Anon, but I haven't located any
so far. Can you IIClp? --Stumped in
Sellllqullldoul roAnn~
D.C. ·
' CiUton Syadlcatl, 5777 W. Cea\ 0u:r D.C.: Understand that you ~Blvd., s.Jte '700,
Aaplel('
are P!!'ll¥~1ess to help .Ed. He ~ . Calli. 90IM5
,
..

'1-

·

opens new office in Gallipolis.

Saundra nms wis the hostess committee chairman.
·There was • disc~sion on retire·
ment, finances and , transitions. :
Attending from Meiils·County were:
Mrs. Grimm, Mqi ·perrjn", Mi~ Stq- '
ry, Mrs. nllis, !1\vila Childs, Nellie ,
Parter AAd Paula Whitt. · · ' .
·
.
.

The Frond\ Ch)' Child Ca,o Con-

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·New~.

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(114) 1102-6535
• 11'14 1192·2753

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. ously employed as ail emergency
,medicine physician at the Kaiser
.,
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Pe~anente S-outhern ca111orma
Medtcal Group in Bellflower, Calif.
While in this position, she worked
in hi&amp;h volume, inner-city atmosphere where she was exposed to a
variety of medical and traumatic
emergencies. She also served·as tl)e

Dr. Rush bas three cllildren, Robby 14, Danny 8, both students at
Chri s1 A cademy ·m .-om
n · 1 PI
easant,·
and Alexandra (Sasha) 3. She also
has three step-children, Nicholas 8,
Scott 6, and Jamie 6,.'J!I'ho reside in
Calif. ·
· ,.. • ·
Her parents, America and George
Jordan, live in P41riot.

Fund

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RINGt AND WATCHES

Serv-U (619) 645- 8434

(Lime Stan.
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HAULING

304-87S.77ol9.

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'Very loveable Pan Collie, Part
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Make Goad Squi&lt;ol Dog, Or Pet
814·251H14•5.
Wood &amp; Coal Furnace 81 4·441 -

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Serv-11
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FOUND: Jericho &amp; Rr 2, smal l
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Water

~!(.(~ .~ Equlpn~ent
,.

the comer of the aur ·f.
ll8!tln IIIII Dru&amp;Aie 1'. -.run I~!W!ofore;
and Oren .IOnH , _ c1t1
Ill&amp; Mil IIIII of Ill&amp; lllcherd

· lost: Bladl: &amp; Brown Ran Terrier,
last Seen Around Will Creek

Area, Famil)' Pel. 814-441-1155.
LOST : female Oa1me1ian, en Eck·
ard Chapel Rd ., answers to
retta", has Dlue collar. 304 ·675·
8404 or 304-fli75-1331

-ae.

Utllltlaa

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All Kinds of Earth Work

lost Gold Male labrador ·Bas·
sen Hound. 5 Years Old. Answers
To Peach, Vicinily : Po1eca1 Road,
Addison Township, SSO Reward!

992-3838

•!~!'~*

,,
'fl!e

Hollow Rd.
Mlddlepon, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

32124 Happy

•

IHI;t-we&amp;t3QIHI;

thence aoutll 201 ~feet;
I certify the fOllOwing thence north 111-314" ,...t

report 10 be correct end 241 r.et to 1 locuat &amp;bitt;
true, to 111• bill of my tlllnce north 31 1/2" wtal
knowlt"De.
Ill fHI to a ,&amp;tall&amp; -In tilt

TII•STATE WATEI SYSTEMS, INC•

water lleatmenl company cordially Invites · you · 10
participate In a free, no obllga;ion, c;ompr~ water
~nalysis. WE WILL TEST THE FI'ILLOWING:
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Pies•• cell R"i•S•JI at ttz-"472 or 1-IOCHOI-3313
to Mt up your ""weter llllllyale.
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Remalllllng
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land milr-e-. "Bid tor
•••rgencr Amlaul•nroe•.
Jllolder ·11\Uit folio"'
~ er;clatld In bid

~ 1:~ ~oarcl ·of ~ouii!Y

. e-nilll'- miy IICCePI

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P.M. 1699 McCatmiell Road.

Friday, Saturday, 9:30 A.M . ·5:00

lladle lllaeK Dealer

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Middleport
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day edition 1o:ooa.m. Slrurday.

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825

Friday &amp; Sawrda~. 9 to 3, in old
Pomerov High School auditorium.

1/Stllfn

P.O. Box 587

find IIUio perta.

Palnung
Alao Concrwte Work

.614-882-4060

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG 111

Public Notice

. 192-e215

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Vlll•g• ol Pomeror
. will be accepting bltlli for
fifty (10) omementel &amp;lrHI .
llghte end ••venl"n (17)
. bract&amp;! a tor ped11trlen
a.. tlng. Both It!' In I
r•'-• ere mtn~

. Pom•roy, Ohio

Certif ied UIG Welders nealed .
Immediate openings in sensiti ve
situaTion. Huntington area . L0dg mg prov ided. Apply m person :
5407 MacCorkle A.ve., SE . Char·
lesion, WV. Tues 2127. thru Fn 3/

145.000 income potemiaL Call , _
000·513-4343 Ext 0.9368.
'

legal Secretary neede&lt;S. Corrlput·
er skills required. Send res"fmo:
Boll: R-27, %PI Pleasant Regisler,
200 Main St., Pt Pleasant. wv
25S50.

lor licensed tlectrk:fans .
, &amp; dry waller a IO gtve
Contact'Ter.
~v · Tech Hous,ing ,

Hi''-"*
lftAM r ,,
rv&amp;vw..

. . . IN' lk
,._ (3041 61S.,76S1

Something from the
honey's
Live girts 1-to-1
conversations
Hl00·288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/mln.
Procall Co. .
(602) 954-7420

,.,_&gt;
IOIEIT IISSILL
CONftiUCIIOI

773·5033.
Paper Back Book The Fabulous
Waterloo Wonders By Dick BurdeHe, Phone : 614~46-7432

Top Price.s Paid: Old U.S. Cotns,
Silver, Goid, Diamonds, All Ol d·
Collectibles. Paperwetghts, Etc.
M.T. S. Coin Shop, ,51 Second
Avenue, Gallipolts, 61&lt;1 · &lt;146--~42.

(No
J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Plumbers &amp; Pipelitters l.U. 1577
Will Be D istributing Apprenlice
Applical ions Beginning Februa ry
19, 1996 Through March 1, 1996.
Applic ations Can Be Ptcked Up
At 1236 Galtia Street, Portsmouth.
Ohio From 7:30 A.U Unttl 4 :00
P.M. $35 .00 Appltca!lon f;ee

EEO

•

'

Postal &amp; Gov't Job s $21 iHr +
Benel tts, No Exp. Witl lram. , For
Appl And Info 1-800-536· 3040

AN Superv1sor To Manage Cerh·
fied Passport Prolltder. Full Ttme.
Benefits, Call614-441 -1779.
·
Sales Rep For Snap On Tools.

EOE, 606-926-6128.
Secretary /Receptton•st For Pb1n1
Pleasant, Mid March . Part-Time
To Start. Very Detail Ortenletl A
Mus t. Will Prepa re Reports , Do
Tracking &amp; Report ResultS' To
Home Office . Mail Resume To
AOW 328 112 Sevemh Str9c1 ,
Suite 16 , Parkersburg . WV
26101, Attn: Ms. saunders. ' '

Wanled : 12 Overwetghl BoreO &amp;
Broke Couch Pot aToes Who
Want To Change! Call 1-800·507 .
7546 .

180

Wanted To Do ••

Babys111 in g ln My Home Cet:a(e ·
nary Area . Experi enced W~t h
CPR Tra1ning, 614· 446-3047.

Etectr~cal . Plumbtng , Conc reto
Foundalions. Garages, Room Ad ·
diltons. Remodel ing. Oavtd . 614 256-6949 , tRoger 614 -886·91 78:

General Ma 1n tenance. Paintfllg ,
Yard Work Wmdow s Washed
Guuers CleanQd lighl Ha ul~g.
Commeri cal, Re s1 dent1al , Steve :

614-388-0429.
Georges Por!able Sawmt ll, don'!
haul your logs to the mill JUS\ call
~4-675-1957.
'
In Home Ca1e lor Elderly. We
spec1al ize in Alzhe1mer"s Care·
gving. 304·762-2544.

*·

loving _and learning Babysitting,
done tn my home, relerencea
available, 61.t·992·4092.
•
Now taking new sludenls for beginner and intermediate piano
lessons. Call Nancy at 14-992·

e

;

...... Eatlrnrltee
31Yen!lp.
A 111 anllbla Ralatl

8111-4188

Used furnilure· an!iques, o ne
ptece or complete estates, Osby . ProfessionlTree Service,
Marcin, 614-992-7441 .
plete Tree Care, Bucket l'f14ck
Service .-so Ft Reach, Stump R'e·
Wanted to Buy Used Mobile mo11al , Free Estimattsl InHarne&amp; CoM: 614-4ol8·0175
surance, 24 Hr. Emergency SefvWanted To Buy : Good Usod lola· ice ·Call And Savel No Tree Too
Big Or Too Small I Bidwell , Oftllo.
torized Treadmill, e14-446-3~37 .

C~m­

949-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

814 - 388-~.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Wi th
Or Wilhoul Motors. Ca ll larry

Lively. 814·388·11303.
Wanted Ta Buy: Ljttle Tikes Toys,
Sand Bo• . Picn1c Table. Play
"House, 614·24S-5887
Wanted To Bur : Scalfling Iron
Skillers, ClOCks, Pocket Watches,
Knives, Toots, Furniture, Tractor

EqUipment 814-379·2160.

'sc:.t..
llldtettttl
Beef and Hog

Wan!ed ro Bu)': Sllndlng Timber,
Any Amount 814~1111Ce.

A NNOUNCE1,1ENTS

But (304) 882-2756

Res. (304) 882-3328

waetcO!umbJa wv.

005

PwloMII · . •

";:=======~··
a.,,
&amp; a•••
1
HO-Sl'S7
Ert"""'
42011,Artl,
U .IIV1·800·
/Min.
. 11110

L~••• Pod 602

IVIIY SUNI•v
·
AW

•

.....:;

.COmplete
Remodeling
. Stop &amp; CompaiW
...,UA~s
FREE Es ' _,..

v-

,. •Strv-11. 8lH4H43t.

..... '=lfl111

•New Homes
•G..........
'••

•-•"

- · .,. II .:.W p.&amp;
Luolty Ball S200.00 lnd
. RIIIIW $50.00 lech
wk. _ __.,. eo

Pri-

Now

Shlpmon~ 01

Adult Video'• 81H48-2S01,

1310 e...,
wpo~~~
SWM 33 Uiuto D~ncina, Movtto;
Quitl Evonlngo At Homo. Steks

Averu•.

SWF 21·43 Wlfl Slmt lnttrtlll,
Writt: P.o. Bor 533, Gtlllpollt,
01145&amp;'11 .

30

Announcements

11
r•r
Evtn RoMI, MAGICIAN. Paru.t,
lila numlltr of plllf- . Churchet, Schooll. 304·875Kelp ad fllr FAIE 08ld 1147•

985-4473

~-

.,
I'

(

derly Handicapp8d Man, ~ust Be
Good Hou1ekeeper. References
Needed, 614-446-6788.

vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304 -

614-992-7643

Help Bll'llld Out \1ctlms
Socka $1.75 per pair
' . Plul50 c.. l'olllge
Send~ lllanoy Ordtr to
lox120, on-_ ArtL 72431

Call 99~-31187
for

.

Wanted to Buy

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buy ing sal·

~

'rJs.vb

Need Part· Time Or Full -Time L t·
cenSed Barber To Do Hair Cuts &amp;
Perms Or Just Hair Cuts, Flell tble
Hours, Call Carl Or Shannon 614·
~68:.:2:...:-6.:.:784:...;_
. -----Person Wanted To 811 Wnh El ·

Ch1ld care m my home. e.c. rdtcr ·
ences. Any hours. 304·675· 736rt: ·

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks , 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1900 East ern Averue. Gallipob. ·

Garages
. • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Rd., Pomerov. 011&lt;5769 Eoe.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
·run 11me auctioneer. complete
,auction
service.
Licensed
168,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304·

Antiques, cqllecTables; eslates.
Rivertne Antiques , Russ Moore,
614-992·2526.

,f4ew Homes • VInyl Siding New

preferred bu.t wrl l considefthe
rtght candidate. Mus t be wtthi}Q to
worM as a team member Wtlh an
eicellent stat! ot theraptsts and
nurses that have a h 1story ol 5
years wtlhOut any regulaiOry e;om·
pliance issues. E•cellent bef.lelit
pac"lwge. Rotating shills required .
Call 6, 4-992·6606 or .send" re ·
sume to Rocksprings RehaD!tita·
tion Center. 36759 Rockspr tng s

Brothers COnstruc11on &amp; Hom e
Improvements. 614 · 388· 899 7
Contac t: Steve ()!" Btll.

90

-

LPN par t time pos1t•on ava•lable
lor progress•ve RehaDililation/
Sk.•lled ICF facility. Expe11ance

1!111fthandiu. Ed Ftazier 930.

773•5785 Or 30&lt;1·773-54'7.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

COlin WI

.

"l

7pm_ E..., Sawrday 6pm_ R! 2·33
."Crossroads". Groceries. new

owner.

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
87 Mill St"1
t·~=======::::::·;
aport

..

·Mt Al to Auction , Every Friday

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig baaementa, put In septic
systems, lay'llnes, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

a.

I

6903.

byT&amp;. . Met.llndue~

Using tht Claslifitili·
r_
· tIs II$ u.sy
liS. • • ·.,

Boggs Auction Service. 6,4 ·446·
77fiJ .

Recine, Oh. 45771
Jamee E. Diddle

ltUSONA811 JL\DI

Public Sale

and Auction

J.D. Drilling Compatly .

•Room Addition•

Finders of hard to

.

Sunday odl!lan · 2:00 p.m. Friday

Inside Sale : 4 Rooms. Full
Clothe!, Chairs /Uisc ., Thursday,

CARPENTER SERVIa

•New Gar•ge•
•Elecl!le&amp;l a Plumbing

' ' Nd
,..jdlnl
..
. llhlpc-y
~'
cOtawa lalla Nil •
. , 22, a; 2TC '
.
,)

the day b&amp;lore the ad tS to run

A5bahelle ·5 New At l..,les lleetronfes

YOUNG'S

•Rooting .
•lnmlor &amp; Exterior

~~?fEJe
....;.~:

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m

urday.

between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon.- Sat.

•

•or-typal~

All Yard Sales Must S,e Paid In

FAX 773-5881
Mason, WV

Monday edition - ,0:00a.m. Sat·

Call .992-4025

•

DE LUll

t•

Ph. 773-9173
108 Pomero Street

and any metal
materials.

, RMIIaMIIng
R-Addlllolilt
Sieling, Rooting, Jlatloe

Bid quantify ilh..U. ere
m•t the a1111llable et the Vlll'll• ol
·co nd Ilion 1
and ,_trOy City Hell&amp;nd,- t
:apeclflc&amp;tlone •• follow• be obtained to be
•1nd eech ,bldd1r muat . conalcltrecl •• • nllcl bid.
:1nc1~ t• percent (IK) Bid ojlelllng will be ~lcl 1 at
.bJd.bolid with tiMir bid10:00 a.m. on Mondn.
•. Speclflcetlona, mey be March II, I tH el the
:olltlllned froM the Melga Pcitn&amp;roy Ylll'll• Hen, 320,1.
•County lmerg~y lhdical· ll&amp;ln Str&amp;&amp;t.
;
· 'S.rvtcee Ofllce, located on (2128; (3) 7; 2TC
1.
:Mulberry Height&amp;, Poet
' Office Box 741, Pomeroy, I--------~
~Ohio 41"' or Phont (114)
'
-I·H17 during normal : ·
·,·
!bullneMholri.
• .Vehlcl&amp; to IMI- 111

Yard Sale

GalllpoHs
&amp; VlclnHy

We wi" worit within your budget

992-5042 or 742·1120
Polly or Chrla

furnaces; batteries

------~--,.~
. ~·~··~~~
--=Pu~bi:::;IC,.:.:N:::;otl;:::C;:.,t' SPOil'S CD

.

70

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

Pick-up discarded
washers, clryers,
hot water tanks,

lntume • Expe'*-d
c.u Wayne Neff

• MI'VIcel wlllcle.
; Each bid muet

---------''
lost: Saturday morning on Hysell
Run . Beagle/ BII.Je "Tick mi• . 7
marllh aid lemale, 61&lt;-992·5275.

• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Servk:fs • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool D1"818ing • Omamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Pallo Fumlture, Fireplace
Items, Plarlter hangers, Trellises &amp; Iota ol other stullll

FREE '

Mull Be 11 Yn.
112-44011 ·
PROCALL CO.
For''" EeltiiiiU•
; L._o~;eua;w.;flli;;4;,o7~4211-._ _. L------.;~;;;-;;;.a,

lneum~ to .lh&amp;

TFN

67S·7S15,

Authorized AQA Distributor

12 Rutland
Room aboard tor
aenlora • dlllblad.
Stale llcanHCI.
Lola of TLC. FamHy
home lllmolphera.
Reuonable RltM

80

NEH REMODEliNG

. . . . 1)1. . . . .~:~

.....
·•••• l0741
.,.,. pet"m n.

614-742·2193

LOST: Large male shepherd type
dog, tan w/black markings, Mo ·
dock-Gallipolis Ferry area . 304-

614 446 4462

BIIINisawMII

Diltribwed by

..... ''1'0' teet;
thence~··
weat 110
r.t 10 til&amp;
of the Ctltho.llc
Ca-*Y; lhene&amp; north nt

8aby sinor needed tor seventeen
month old, prelerably In the Flocksprings area . Call 614-992- ~292
after6pm.

60 Lost and Found

Trucking-

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

Serv-U (6 I 9)645-8434

H&amp;H

Wlllemaon ·tann'; lhlnoe
- t .110 1/2 1011; ........ .

vtew.

30&lt;1-875-3307.

Howard hcavatin

IIIIIIOI·ImiiOI

Ext. 6057
$2.99 per min.
Must be -18yrs.
Touch Tone Phone
Required

9er.U..18 845 8434

31, , . _ 1, ....,..
13, of the Olllo CDIII!IIftY'I
Purehau; · lleg_.rilntl at •
poet Wltll I n*'-o Mille •lli:lell!i'

4 People To Set Appts . For Local
0 111. Pay &amp; Bonus. Call For Iiiier·

0558.

1;9oo-ns-o1oo

I-90H56-2600 bt.
3U6, 2.99,... .... +
II yn., allllstel to

ext. 7823
$2.111 per min.
Muat-. 18 Vi'~·

HELP WANTED .
T~ Tutor neadad
,10th grade 1tuc1ent it
...M.H.S. lnlegJlted Maltl &amp;

\

from March 1 thru 29)

IWV010212

I"'

BOOTS

Parr Pit Bull puppy, 2moa . old.

Bring In minimum of 50 1111. of aluminum cana to
reglller for Bu11n Cotleemaklr to be giVWI away.
Drawing will be held on March 21111,

Frw lbttmat..

f': :- •·•' •

: Melge . County •oard of
' Commltalonere In their
fofllce loceted In the
icourthout•, third floor,
, Second Street, Pomeroy,
; 0111o 41711 until 1 p.m. on
•llc!ndav, Mereh 11, 1....
·The blda will be opened at
:1:00 p.m. Dr! the Hille dey
•1nd retd. IIO.ud for the
'following
or newer
:-e onergtncr
"'edlul

..

Middleport, Ohio

Upcllted Every 15 Min.

• '!-•&gt;'*•

11111 Stele of Olllo, 1111t1g

NEEDED IMMED,IATELY

Home Typists, PC users needed.

. (Special Prlce,oh·Aiumlnum Cens

Fu~.

NOTICE TO
• AMBULANCE DEALERS
~ In ec:Cordence with the
; 0111o ReviMd Code, l&amp;ll&amp;cl
! bl* will be recelwcl by the

~

503 IIIII street

~~~~a:n~d~M
nufactured
Housing
·.Air
CondllloMfa, ..
Hell!
Pumpe,
Q!.r" -J -. ...

or

APPOINTMENT SECRETAAI'
TEIEMAAKETER

' · 9tm-Spm. 304-92S.4747

NewFIYeS..
L Vagas Pldl Sports Eatert.-llt

PUILIC NOTICE

'

F i . -. 304-875.-6720.

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge Sports
Entertainment Linen

All equlp!Mntln atock
for lmmec!l. . ln811111811on.

rlghte
or
convenient to the mining ·
and working of the aame

were Jean GillipMesan and .Bill Dyer,
Jeff.Dint, Frank Brod·
Blackston; Elvis Zettle

l.oY8atie, 614-388·9306.

614·44~3,

=·13,

r

Female Great Dane. 1 112 Vear1

Old, Ta A Goad Homo Onlyl Voty

992-3894

CA1lii110N SIIIGLES)II
flolartiWIWasl
Siltplrcall

WICKS

recordeild

'
;l'.'

homes an~. »&gt;-87S.48SO .

61&lt;·388·8526.

:nrttmo.

without

Black &amp; wh ile, emo . old Beagle
mix. Brown &amp; white. 2yr old, Beagle mix. Indoor pets, 10 good
Cul ligan Water Tratmenl Set ,

for Detalll

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470 .

...........................27,112.71

• llaf!Mtra J. o,.,...,, Clerll

male, 1514·388-8107.

Priee11

1127 Mllldodl A..:
21101

Req.

·.

.,

DepoeHorj B!lllftC!I ........

'o;;;d;;d'i.;Or.

Lowe~~l

•

Rap.

Yard Sale ilems, musl take all.

Jlnuary I, 1~ ... 31,111.11
Fund Caeh Balance, TOWII8hlp,
elluet&amp;d Cou~
In tallallury
o-nber 3l,
ll&amp;lgl,

OUI&amp;tenctlng

Beagle lolixad Pupa 5 Woel&lt;s Old,
Had First Shft.!l, 3 Males, 1 Fe ·

PAIIIUiVIG NISSAN INC.

Cetl992-3967
:attn mo.

Gtvtaway

Appro1: 208 wide mouth Micaela

Ni1110 Headquarten

WBGS. 303 8!h Sl. . Pt PllasAm.

Able
Avon RepresentatiVes
needed. Earn money tor Ci'lrisl·
mas bils at hom&amp;'at woriP1 ·800·
992·8358 "' 30•·882-2845, l~d .

. Wtjp jtr~ 304-87S.3454.

WE OFFER GENERAL H11ULING
.Um•tona, Sarid, Gravel, Coal a Water

1 full 11mt account execuuve.
Bnn" or matl r• sume 10 WffYGt

814-448-4o487.

2 adOrable &amp; fluffy 11n colored

Pomeroy a Mlddttpo,t
Deya:
,,.,~2.4~~r&gt;
Nights: tit

CIBIIBI

. 1·90HI4-2100

.'

'

.Beteno~ ........

a•............

Help Wanted

wv. No phone calls.

"""""· 814-8112-8315.

Dilly, -illy a monthly rentalnttla.

...........................(7. - . . )

Le•

NIW SHIPDNT·,.
NilE AND ·' GUESS

awn...:

Sports Funll
Scores POint
Spreads and much
more. ·
1-900-nS-0100
Ext. 7830 $2.99 per.
min. Must be 18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone

Children &amp; Adult

SUMMARY 01' CASH
San Clemente Medi-Center (San director of the Disaster Planning
BALAHCU, RECEPI;I
Clemente, Calif.}, and Laguna Beach Commillee for the Belleflower
AND EXPENDITURES
Community Clinic (taguna Beach, healthcare facility.
Calif.).
·. .
· ·Dr. Rush is a .member of the
r ..................... 11,111.n
Beginning in 1991, ~ was a American Medical Association
lntarvcmmm&amp;nlal
wellness physician for tbe ·Family (AMA), Wildemes~ Medical Society
...............71.111.11
Weight Loss Clinics il! Huntington . and the AmcrlCan·College of Emer- · Rtotlptt
lnc.reet ............... 1,413.77
Beach, Garden Grove and Santa Ana, gency Physicians. Sbe is board eligiAll 01tt1r Revenue ............ ·
Calif. Her responsibilities included ble for emergency medicine.
· .................................. 23.01
nutritional counseling and general
"Opening my own office will give
TOTAL RECEIPTS ............
healthcare for individuals. She also me the opportUnitY to build' long-lastincorporated fitness program pre- ing relatior(ships will! the residents of
scriptions into patients' lifestyles and · the Ui-county ma," explained Rush.
monitored their heal~ and pro~. "The majn obJe.:tive for both PleasOr. Ru5h possesses extenstve ant Valley Hospttal and myself is to
l!nowledge and practical experience offer quality bealthcare services to
in nutrition, health and fitness but the local community."
··
places special. emphasis on prevenDr. Rush and her husband, David
tive medicitie; including herbal and Surdyka, M.D., an onhopedic sur........................
·
ed
·~"h ·
·
PVH
I
'd
.
Ri
Total
Reoalpte ...... . ·
II
we ness-~nt ""' mq"'s.
. geon·at . , current y rest em o . (Unclli) Dltilureementa

·

...

Kick Boxing
Training
At Big Bend
~alth &amp; FHneu

~ofM&amp;Ig&amp;

In addition, Dr. Rush was prevt.. Grande".

o

let, Convenient Hours, And Loca·
ti on For More lnlormallon Call

4o

PO..EROY, OHIO
Truh l'liinoval • Commerclaf or Retldantlal
Septic Tanke CIHned l Portable TOI!eii'Rentect.

54,.

· ~~~~

... .

DR. AURILLA RUSH

CWI'SWCO.
Starting Sun: lhnt Feb.
2t Sr. C"luM Special
F• for day ntll8,
$1.00 per petwon to

· •Roofing

~=·

i

IAII
Harry a Donna ct.r~~

•Addltlona
•New Gar~~gea
•RIIIIodellng
•Sieling

·lOW11111Pl'OR FISCAL
YEAR ENDING ·

DI!CEMBER 31, 1 Bedlerd TIIWII&amp;hlp,

11

Choiot. ,~;~304-675-1~29.
l ~A~II~A~•~••~•..:__'~S:h~~'•:Y

ffeetlf BMf
· USDA
Cuatom
p.~t. -wrappM
I frozen .
11.311/tb. c..bd'o Grocery_ 304·
175-5404. l

to sorority on~. life skills,-· econo~'ic ·cha~·g~s

: Shirley OrallaD!, high school ers, and IIOW to the infOIJJ\alion ~· and conswner scietice. Skiits and be required along with p~ges.
Brooks, Alpha Delta state preiident.
cOUnselor in Vmton County, spoke on ll:ochnical infonnation beyond high planning of wort was emphasized.
Applications fill' new tnembers Mrs. Orimm conducted the c~~ '
:. life skills, career and econoll)ic school for 90 peri:ent of;WOlicers will ·.
Fern drininJ, president, spoke of will be read at.1!\e ~h meeting, it appraisal which inc1ucklil all chapter'.·
: · changes when sbi liddressed mem- be required in the funn, she i!Qted ln. the recent deatl) of Lucille Smith, a · was' noted. Rosalie Story; social activities. ·
·; ·
: . bers of Alphi Omicron Chapter, · talking abo~t·eomputet skUis, speak; .•. chaner member of.lhe chapter. ~em- affairs inemliet, gav~·ditections ro the · &lt;:;ay 1 Perrin gave the invocation
· Delta Kappa Gamma tit.Dale's smar,. : ing and writing skills~ ihe abi)ity . bers signed afriendship card for Mar- Grace UMC at Waverly where,that befo~ 'the .~.&gt;Tables. w_ere,deco-g&amp;bord in Gallipolis Saturday.
to communicate. She wiU illlf(xluced garet Parsons, the last living charter meeting will be held Masth .23-' II 'raced in' .a valentine mouf. Pav~
: ' ·. Graham said ih• Ohio now man- . by Roma Nickels. profession~laffalrs· ·. ~~~ember.
·'
·
.
'a.m. Speaker will be Dt. R!lth~ were . ~ candies an.;J key riqgs.
· . dates an individual can!er plan for ' commiuee chaiirnan. 'I· ·
•
Carol Eberts announced tbat 'the
.
·' . ·
.
·
.
· ·every student. She spoke of changes
Also speaking at the ~eeting was international Delta Kappa Gamma
through the years -- from farmers to Nancy Kibler who tallced on home meeting will be held in Columbus,
· ~omestic workers to industrial work- economics which now"called family; July 23-.27 ad that .250 hostesses will
FIIWICIAL IIIPORT OF

:· Rush
..

30 Announc:emtnll

f'eld!llwm

'

EMPLOYM EN T
SERVICES

614·367-7010.

aualilied, experienced, CNAI
HHA, able to care tor the eldtVI)'
in lheir home, please call 614 -

1192-2049.

Re9iS1orod Nurse Will Do Bab)'·
ainmg In Uy Home. For 1 Cftild
Vicinity: Holzer Hosptial, 614-44$ ~
337~.

Sun VaHey Nursery Scho:OI.
Childcare U ·F Bam-5:30pm Ages
2-K, Young School Age Ourirfg
,Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini mum 61 4-446· 3657. .
8aby1itting in my home, flt1l~
Rtllonabla r•t11, 11.r.e

Cloae

to ocitoall.

light hauling,

••

'

�Th~. Februlry 21,

1186

~1

:rhursct.y, Febnulry'29, 1996
.

A•.I.EY OOP

The Deily Sentinel e P!r 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

•ama•

NEA Cro1aword Puzzle

'

.

PHrr..LIP

ALDER

I

.

"'-•"CiliA . . . . ...

l

.I

·BEAtTIE BLVD.~ b)l B~ . .Uie

KIT 'N' CARLYLU by i.an:J WrtPt

NORTH

AII.IMI-D ..... IQin

' '

aA K I 53

· So I oiAT'S WHY

. . ,.. lf.41¥ei • NJjlc:t to
... Ftlr IIQuolng Act
.,,.,. - - tllogll
10 ldoer1IM "'ny "'"".......

;~,J"~·

·'

CAa.l.-101). " .

~l-DW F1.i H ...

·f!£lQIIL
lfl't', .

~nMd*~~
. _ on II!», color, religion,
-flmllol·llltuiMnellonll
Or tlrf lnllnlioniO

9Q t

WEST
aJ 9 z

.

•2
•A K 8 52
EAST
aQ 10 7 a

986
•A 9 3
•AKI0985
•Q
•Q 7
•J 10 8 8 3
SOUTH

.; ottilln.

··-IT'OsM!M1or~•
tlrf IUdl prelareoa,

•• J
u
••

--··•tor

'111111 - - wll not

•K

-9faccept

10 7 5 2

7 8 4 3

!MI-lt
WNcll'llln -~ol
the lew.

01!1'- l1'8hellby

. lnlomoed thet II d\o... IJii

211

=:=:..
:1i
lot

-

Houae

-

DOWN

27 Nollllll
31 Hucltllbarry32FM1a.,.a
33111ou
34-.!ft-&lt;1111

18Mireeound

I Nourllllel
• Com lily

,_.....,

2 Believe - -

not

7-~-

4 IArtgt ••

tltfold
L11V1 'flllllct1

I

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
South
West North Eut
t•
Puo
19
z• za
Pate

~lnthltnoo­

IIIIW:'I'ole 01 an equal
QA)OnUI'lty-

39

REAL ESTATE

WHAT WDilD,
ZONIE MAE?

..

~ '

410 Houses for Rent

440.

Apartments
for Rent

630

Livestock

71 o· 'A utos tor Sale ,

Pass

t •

. All pall8

Opening lead: • K

An employer's
delight
By Pbllllp Alder

Tbil ia the favorite dt,y of tbe year

I

Andy was fu-zzy.

420 MObile Homes
'

'

Thtee bedroom home ·In ' country.
Whi1W Hll Rd., Rutland, ono balll,
ln.gmund poal, 814-992·5067.

~

Mo!llle. HQmll
tor Sale

tor Rent
12)180 2 Bedroom Partially Furnished, In Bulavllle Area.. 814·

367-4544.

.

IT'S A ~I·TT4J &amp;..ATf
. FOIC AN: ANTIJIOTIC..
ft/OW··l. ·TOL.P YOU
TO l&gt;O 50MfTtfii'IG

1074 12&gt;cll0, 2 br., good ooo\dlllon,

Juot

outs~«»

Ruland on New Uma
dapoli~ 614·

.Rd., $250/mo., $150
14&gt;70 Vlndalo Mobile Home wt 742-2086.

E•pando, 314 Aero, Cheohlr"' 2
Buildlnea. 'Rural Water. Central
Air, Cllll8614-387-()303 ·
. .

14•70 with 18x30 adcltion, on hall

acr~ rot, three bedroo.m•.· In Ru~tnd, liking $18,000, ·01~·11112·

•826·
1&amp;72 :i Bedroom, 5101801. Whh·
trtDrytt, Very Good Condition,
L - MesAge 614-i1411-1440.

2 S.droon\o &amp; 3 Bedrooms. NO
Pefo, Rollrences Required, 614·
245-6582, Alter 5 P.M. Cell 81424S.5eUO.

we,e·

wttt~f T~fY
51 14~ ..AMPtfiiiA/11$/

MlRC HANDISE

2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath, Gat Heat,'

12Q51Mo. Includes Water, Gor-:
bago, Mo Pets, Deposit, 614-441·

0000.

510

Household
Goods

2bedroom nner w/Washat &amp; dry· ·
.... 304-773-5246.

1878 14&gt;70 Schuliz 1978 12r28·
Vomco Add Room Many Exttaol 2bodroom; Sandhill Rd. 304-875-;
.
Erctlltnt Condition, Price Ra- 3834.
ducodl614-448-8034, ·

y

I l-1~1Et)'!O DO

·

•

'!Ill~

ro.wrnc. IU.

~ ~-~~
- 1-nWI'(I.I'fi.le£.
R..cu~

~

for ey emplojer of salaried ltalf. He
geta 1111 extra day's worlt for no extra
pay.
H.L. Meneken Aid IIOIIIiltblnglunny
about money: '"The impul8e to create
beautY ia ratber rare in literuy men.
· Fir ahead of It comes tbe yeamJnc to
make money. :And after tbe yearning
to JIIUe money comes tbe yearninll to

makeanoile."
· .
Moat bridle players, tboup, play
tbe game in tbe bope of produciJIIl a
beautiful P-lay, not to make money.
Soutb certainly fowula pretty pll,y on
today'• deal.
Tbe deelarer wu Johannes Brun,
playing for Norway against Austria in
tbe 1833 European Championship.
Againlt four hearts, West led tbe dia·
mood king: two, queen, four. Now
Weat switched to a trump, Eut winning with the ace and returnlns a
trump.
.
$outb bad nine tricks: two spades,
live be,arta ed two clube. But irbere
was number 10? Not in dlamoada,lliv·
en West's OYei'C8IL Soulll bad to eatabllab a long card in a black iult and
teacb 11. But did East bave four
spades or four clubs? Judging that
East might have bid one spade with
live, Soulll won the tbinl trick wllll Ute
beltt llliiTiill'll c:aibed'lbe heart jack,
discarding a club from the dummy.
Now came a BJIIde to dummy's .king,
tbe spade are, on whlcb South threw a
diamond, and a spade ruff. Back to
dummy wiUt a club to Ute king, declar·
er called for Ute spade five, diac:ardlng
a dl8mond from band.
Eut bad to lead a club to dummy's
ace, giving South a«ea to tile estab. liabed spade eight. Admirable!

wrwoor

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,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '1/ Have nothing Ill say and I am saying it/ And thai
Is poetry."- Jolin Cage.

'::~::.' SCC~o\\~-4£~s·

------Hito~

of
0 .........
four OCrQmbled -d•
low to form four worcb.
~etten

lor ClAY

..

.,.

WOlD

I. ~ - - - - - -

tho
bo-

I
-~ I I I t
LIFTH

r-------------.,~

~ INAI Y~ rG TI 1-.,.
.,
fD.~~mploto
I "TI"=a.,·lr-rl'::-rl--,11"'-i
=,·

A wise oid man once told me
that, 'It's harder to live up to
...- - - -..............- - , principles than it is to ••••• for

IT eEl~ ~51lr.l~

~ cr.o610tol ~
.. DO liEWJCJ(. ~

CHITEC

.,

1-::-7

.

.... .

_

_

_

_

_

.

'--L-.L..--1-..L--'-..J

"

the chuckle quoted
by filling in rhe miSSing words
rou develop from step No. 3 below.

·I' I' I. Is I' I' I' r I
I I I I I [oRl I I I I

8 m~:RrUM8fRED I
1985 Balck Someroat White, 2
Door, Loaded, Low Miloo ·on A•
built Englno Asking: $1 ,400, 614446-()211.

·~RAMBLE
nces

SERV ICES

SCIAMUTS ANSWIItS

11185 Chry•er Le Boron. lo,ks &amp;
rvno good, $2,00CJ. aG&lt;~-882:2482.

Sovtnes You'H Find In the

. Clossifled SectiOIL

!THURSDAY

1WIO &lt;;"'~=~: elda Sllnnldcl
350,
•- M ·&amp;
lr•.5oDi!.
illl.t:87S.S81S
304-8153317:

~ Mrnlnils wiN~· Gel With
!Mproglam. '
VIRGO (Aug. ZNepl. 12) Do not make
any major dec:islons today before tall&lt;lng
11tem _ . In delall wtlll 'fO'I mate. He or
the miy catch llhi1go you've CMIIOOked.
UIIIA (8lpl. D-Ocl. :13) Do nolllt your
cbnlldenc:e be lhlken today Ngardtng
the outcome or a crlllcal event Think
poe~~ve IIOUgllllllld
to behave

conanue

Jlke a .......
ICORPIO (Oct. 24-fto¥. 21) II yool've
c;ontempleled beComing Involved In a

...

,_ IOCilli cin:le, . . wll be a good day
to atart!M proem. Begin IIV eotllle:ting
the right people.

IAGmARIUS (Nov, 2H1M1 21) Allhll
Hrne, try to Clilenglge yourMII from an
.apoiiiMble ~ 10 that you can
make room for iucrltiYe endMVOr'l.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ll ....n. 11) You
could be extremely lucky at thla time
f9l'dlnD ,_ enclllaYOra or projec:la you
Gll(jlo-·GI pet . . . . . dncl.
'I IIII"•• c-, ..... 11) You mtglll
,.,. beliw than you originally thought

II,. . . . IW fiF Wlllll~ ot In old Clbilp
llan. HillA llghlri l'lilpetorllt belt

t

I'

Damage • Jingo • Honey · Wreath • GARAGE
"Of course I get exercise from walking," one cutie told
her friend. "I have to qet to the GARAGE don't I?"

�•

ntursdey, Ffbn*Y29,11MMS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh,

.~ethodists obse.rve·Ash_· Wednesd~y

Stover
.

.

named
·
..

.director

..

:at PVH

Olristina Stover has m:ently been
. . named Assistant Executive Director
.91 lnteanted He&amp;lth Services at
~leuant- v.Jicy Hospital.
' While continuing her assignment
al ldminilllnltor of Pleasant Valley
·Nuisina and Rehabilitation Center
{PVNRC), Stover wiD assume the
·..dditiOoal rCsponsibilitics of Pleasant
Valley Home Care Scrv~ (Pleasant
·~ley Home Health Services fnd ·
: . : ~lc Medical Equipment) and
: • :Rehabilitation Services. ·
· : • : .Stovw: holds a bachelors degxcc in
. : lpcial wort and a master's degxcc in
.busine.. administration from Mar-

Rio Grande
men .edged
by Cedarville

'

Members of Alfted, Chester and and Gary Johnson and Nellie PIOter. Florence Spencer u prosnm leader
Tuppers Plains Churches gathered at
It was noted lhat the February and Clutrloae Van Meter u hostess..
the Alfted Church last week for Ash United Methodist Women mee,ling
Memben of the Alfred UMC
Wednesday services led by their pas- was canceled due to flooding. Martha attended scivices 11 v;teralis Memotor, Rev. Sharon Hausman.
Poole selected Amy Sue Hansen in rial Hospital Bxte~ Care Facility
The program included ·• call to laity work, Kansas City, Mo. for the conducted by John Taylor. O!her
worship, repentance, the reception·of prayer calendar and sent a birthday Alfred church members attending .
ashes at the altar, and holy commu- card to her on behalf of lhe society. were Nina Robinson, Sarah Caldwell,
nion. Joining Rev. Hausman in the Next meeting will be March 19 wilh Richard and Florence Spencer,
program were John Taylor, Brenda

.Gerlnldc Robinson and Melvin Tra·
cy.
'
.
.
A soup meal will be held followinJ the workshop service on Man:h
19 by the Alfred UMC. Announced
was the SOih wedding anniverury of
Eloise and Russell An:her to be held
onMirch23, 2to4plR. at the Alfred
Church.

I

CHRISTINA STOVER
shall University. This newly-appointed assistant executive director has
been a member of the ''Family of Professionals" since 1990.
She and her husband, Tim, a cer~
lified public accountant, haVe IWO
children, Sarah 14, and Joey 10. The
family resides in Point Pleasant, ·
W.Va.

shru~:i~ee~~~~b!~ ;:!~~0::~
erect stems. It has fragrant reddishbrown flowers that are produced in
late May or early June. It grows to
nine feet tall and does well in sun or
partial shade. ·
The spirea matures at 18 inches
tall. It enjoys full sun and is a deciduous, dwarf flowering shrub of great
merit having mint green foliage.
Summer flowers are pink to rosecrimson.
Sweet gum is a pyramidal, highly

~M. orissette, Ho.otie &amp;
:th~ Blowfish grab top'
~honors at Grammys

ornamental. deciduous tree valued as quantity and milst be ordered by
a speeimen ·for excitingly rich fall March 20 from the Meigs SWCDLA
colors. It grows rounded with age and 11 33101 Hiland Road,- Pomeroy OH
mature height is approximately 15 4S169.
·
feet.
Also available this year are quanThe flowering quince is a low lily bundles of a sinale variety of
growing deciduous sllnab producing white pine, SCotch pine, Colorado
fiery scarlet blooms in early spring blue spruce and Norway spruce with
before foliage appears. It does well in 25 seedlings in a packet for $9. ·
sun to partial slu!de and where soil is
Fruit tree packets contain one
JIIOist, but well drained. It grows each ·oc Red Haven peach. Hale
~ to six foot tall, depending on the Haven peach, Oamsoa plum and
vanety.
Santa Rose plum for $21 .
·
The oakleaf hydrangea is a decid- • Crown vetch ground cover plants
uous round shaped shrub grown for are 72 for $21. Crown vetch is a_popits oalcleaf-Iike foliage. It produces .
.
:white flowers in s4mmer and does
well in sun or shaded areas where lhe ,
soil is moist. It grows to four feetlall. ·
Packets are available in a limited

ular perennial ground cover plant that
beautifies problem areas. It needs no
maintenance or mowing. II thrives in
any climate, sun or semi-sha.je. It is
.winter hardy, and provides effective ·
,erosion control, actually improving
the soil.
The wildflower seed packet contains one ounce·of seed to plant a
2SO-square-foot area. The packet
sells for $3.SO and contains a blend
. of 20 different annual and perennial
wildflower varieties that will give
you many .different vivid colors as·the
.~oils change.
'

· .By GEORGE GEDDA
· Aaaoc'-'*1 Pruil Writer
WASHlNGTON - 'The Clinton
lldministration says it will take stem
'IIC:tion against any American civilian
· pilot who peneuates Cuban airspace
:cluring a memorial service Saturday
bff Cuba's coast. At the same time,
. the White House is warning Fidel
Castro not to interfere.
. The Federal Aviation Administralion issued a directive Thursday night
11Sserting lhat violators are subject to
· immediate loss of their licenses,
· seizure of their aircraft and possible
• ·fines or imprisonment.
The directive was one of several :
measures announced Thursday, to
ensure a safe and peaceful late after• noon memorial service planned by •
. Cuban exiles for four companions
· :who died last weekend north of
·· Cuba. The two small.planes iil.whicll
~y were·.!Jyi~{ w.ere s~ down by
MaG figlitcrs over what U.S. officials
· ~ay was international waten, ·a point
disputed·by Cuba. '.: · · ' · ·
. . The tiiJII)!nis~iOJI.,COupled the

Keith Ashley of Rock Springs was
recently elected ,to lhe post of historical general of the General Society of
the War of,J812.
The society is composeil of men
who can-trace their ancestry to a person who served in lhe American
ftJR:es during the War of 1812. The
·society was forme4 by ac1ual veterans of that war in 18S2.
Ashley bases his lineage on four
War of 1812 veterans: Isaac Newton
Flesher, David Curtis, Henry Wolfe
and George Holter Jr.• all of whom

'*

are buried in Meigs County.
After joining the society as an atlarge member, Ashley l'el!Ciivatcd
the Ohio society in 1988 following a
73-year dormancy. He served a5 the
society president for five years and
has recruited m\I£C lhan 30 members
in lhat time. He assisted the General
Society last year in ceremonies at the
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in
Arlington Cemetery last year in the
presentation of the society's medal to
the museum. He now serves as the
Ohio Society secretary-treasurer.

- .· Community calendar .- -

:acu

,:· 'N91

IQ:

.ve.er...

•n

I

fr

......_ . .

Ja't

•

l""

I"'

. ~I

~'

to

tel 7 Do Dip llllilms.
•

~

\·

'

I':

•wuc- .
•

,!&gt;

'

·

. ·

\"!"

1994 LiNCO\N
TOWN CAR

1994 OLDS
DELTA 88
4 Dr, V-1, auto, A/C,
AMIFM cua, tilt, crul",
P,S , PB, PW, POL,

aMt,ittc.

SJ

COLUMBUS (AP)- The state's
22-cent-a-gallon gasoline tax should
not be used to support the State Highway Pauol, Gov. George Voinovich
- reiterated.
· , Removal of the patrol and other
. Don-construction programs from gas
tax funding would free up about $170
· ;nillion for needed highway projects, ·
Voinovich said Thursday in a news
, release.
. "These' projects help spur ceo-

1993MUDA.
626 ES
V..,

auto, A/C,

AIIIFU

cala, tilt, cruiH; PS,
PW, PDL.,' .tc.

\tU'lt.AND -- An indoor camp
meeting, spons~ by the Meigs
· Area Holiness AssoCiation, will
beheld from ~arch 4-9; 7 p.m. each
1evening, ud March I0, 6 p.m. 11 the
I

Rutland NBZ81'e11C Oiun:h. EVWJplist

. will be the Rev. Richafd Sllickland
with song evangelists, Ralph · alld
JoA:nn·Dunmire.
TliBSDA\' .
.
. · MIDPLBPORT &gt;. Mit!dlepon
Maa~lic LA!dae, TuesdaY· 7;30 p.m.
11 the temple.
.
·
'

·

Meigs
receives
housing
funding

Officials said the FAA initiated
proceedings last sumll)er to strip
Basulto of his license but an appeal
has held up a final decision. Under
the new regulations announced
Thursday, Basulto 01 another violator
could face immediate forfeiture of
their licenses.
Wl\ile encouraging restraint on the
. part of both the Cuban government
and the memorial service .partici· pants, McCurry said the even\ has the
administration's blessing:
"This is a very appropriate way to
commemorate the lives of four victims of this barbarous act by the
Cuban regime."
In other developments Thursday:
• Cuba dismissed as "conuadictory and absurd" President Clinton's
decision to strengthen the U.S. ·
embargo against Cuba and to suspend
chaner flights. He took those measores in retaliation for last Saturday's
incident.
• A United Nations report criticized Cuba for widespro:ad human
rights violations while alsodenounc-

Meigs County has been awarded
a $20,000 New Horizons Fair Housing grant to provide financial and
FLOTILLA BRIEFING - U.S. technical assistance in fair housing
Coast Guard Adm. Roger Rufe activities to benefit residents of
Jr. spoke to the media Thursday Meigs and Vinton couaities, the Meigs
In Miami Beach, Fla., during a
County Commissioners announced
press briefing that made public today.
the Coast Guard's participation
Fair housing activities in the two
1 th c b
n e u an flotilla saturd.!iiy in counties will be coordinated through
honor of lhe downed Brothers to
the Meigs County Fair Ho!Jsing
the Rescue pilots. (AP)
Office at the junction of State Route
ing the U.S. embargo against the 7 and Union Avenue near Pomeroy.
island as a " languishing relic of the Fair Housing Coordinator Jean
Trussell applied for the grant to the
Cold War.' '
Ohio
Department of Development.
• Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., assert- ·
The
grant will develop funds to
ed that Air Fo&lt;ee jets at Homestead
establish
a fair housing consortium in
Air Force Base in Florida were
the
counties,
develop and distribute a
denied permission to scramble last
Fair
Housing
Resource Handbook,
weekend after learning that Cuban
MiGs were in the air. The Pentagon tenant/landlord brochures, conduct an
analysis to impediments to Fair
denie_d Burton's claim.
Housing in the rental ma1kets in both
counties, establish a toll-free telephone number exclusively for housing/fair housing issues, purchase a
computer and display racks to facilitate the operation of the program and
to advertise fair housing rights.
The cooperative efforts of both the
Meigs and Vinton boards of county
commissioners were directly responsible for the appr&lt;&gt;val ·of the grant
application And could possibly result
in funds being made available annually fo1 fair housing related projects,
commissioners said . .

Poll: tax hike
plfln favored
by slim margin .

pulled a tow and 12 barges sideways on the
river late Wednesday. The nallroad span and the
U.S. 50 bridge connecting the two cities were
both cloaed overnight while crews Inspected
the damage. The bridges later reopened. (AP)

Voinovich backs ~nd of gas tax fundin.g for state patrol

4 Dr, V-8, auto, air cona.
AM/FII cau, PS, PB;
PDL, tilt, crulaa, etc.

nomic development and job creation," he said.
He said he would include a proposal to remove funding pf the J)atrol
in his next two-year budget, due July
I, 1997.
Voinovich will look at a number of
options to suppon lhe patrol, including the general revenue fund, said
Kathie Fleck, a spokesman for the
governor's office. .
.
Voinovich in January proposed

using money from the state's income, office said.
jccts around the state it cannot afford
sales and other taxes for the patrol,
In addition, Voinovich said he to build. This must stop," he said.
but House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, wants to work with Rep. John Kasich,
He blamed the shortfall in feder·
R-Reynoldsburg, said she could not R-Ohio, to see if Ohio can get a bet- al money on Washington 's bureausupport that.
ter return on 1he $1 billion in federal cracy.
"I'm very concerned about the gasoline taxes i1 sends to Washington
Last year, Voinovich told the
dollars lhat are available to go to what each year. .
House Budget Committee, chaired by
our top priority is, which is educa"We only get back about $625 Kasich, that more money could be
tion," Davidson said.
million in higbway funds at a time returned to the states if Congress
Davidson was not available for when lhe Ohio Department of Trans- downsized or eliminated the Federal
comment Thursday afternoon, her portation has dozens of critical pro- Highway Admini stration.

Farm subsidy elimination bill faces revisions
Bv FIOMRT GREENE
AJ1 fMII Writer

MONDAY

'

·

4 cyl, auto, llr cond, A111F11 caaa, crulae, PS, PI, PW, POL

RUTLAND -- ·Rutland Youth
League, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Rut'land Fire ~nt. Election of
oft"ICers.
' ..
·f'IUDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Round and
square dance wilh C.J. and the CoonGentlemen Friday, 8-11 p.m. ~t
Hall. Free admission.
AJI

JAR•• aemce.

!'?:·

1994 MERCQRY CAPRI CONVERTIBLE

day. Rev. Lamar O'Bryant to speak.

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closed Thursday by Coast Guard 'officials.
Two C-130 cargo planes will also
accompany lhe procession, one to
monitor the seaborne flotilla and the
other to fly with the aircraft that take
part. U.S . military forces will have no
direct role in the event.
The stiff penalties contemplated
for pilots who ~nte~ Cuban airspace
was directed pnmanly at Jose Basulto head of Brothers to th R
•
.
e esc~e.
whose aarcraft were shot down last
Sat.u.rday. .
h
S
I
)' omet
· • dmg may go bewrong.
he
1
rea tze II s angerous to
re,"
Ba&amp;ulto said today in a: CBS interview. "We'.r~ taking.it very seriously. To me, II s very amporta~t to go
back there tomorrow. It's not a
r,rotest It's ~ ~eremony" for the
assassmated . pilots.
.
Cuban officaals have noufied U.S.
authonties lhat Basulto has vaolated
Cuban airspace on three occasions,
including last Saturday. ~e esca~d
harm but his four compamons flyang
1n other aarcraft were less fortunate.

. By PAMELA BROGAN
· people who elected him," Kelley ·
Garjnett tWs Slrvlct
. said. "I thiM he's lost tbe l&gt;lue-colWASHINGTOt-1· - Bob Kelley · Jar vote: rn\ here ~be' a servant of
sa)'i . he IS tfilllengtiig Kl!"publican-~tliepeople: ••
.
' .
Rep. Frank Cremeans in Ohio's 6th
But David Payne. Cremeans' disCongressional District · because of' trict director who also serves as
Cremeans' tics 10 multimillionaire ! ._forbes' Ohio coordinator during his
publisher M&amp;k:olm "Steve" Forbes, personal time, defends Cremeans.
who·is seeking the GOP presidential
"I don't think that's a reason to
nomination.
run against somebody, do you?"
Cremeans is one of Forbes' three asked Payne. "They've (Cremeans
national campaign chairmen and was and Forbes) been friends for 10
the 6n;t U.S. congressman to endorse years and share many of the same
•Forbes. So far, Forbes has collected ideas."
'60 deleg~ in the presidential race,
Payne took · a leave of absence
ahead of Palrick Buchanan's 37 and from Cremeans' staff from midSenate ~~ty leader Bob Dole's DecemberlhrooghJan. I9toheadup
36.
a petition drive to get Forbes on the
. "Cremeans has made a serious state ballot.
mistake," said the Portsmouth resiPayne said a decision will be made
dent and Scioto County vocational shortly on whether he will take
teacher, who ran against Cremeans in i another leave of absence from Crethe last election and will face him ! means' staff to run Forbes' Ohio camBRIDGES CLOSED - A string of three
again in the M&amp;Kh 19 primary. ,
paign.
""
barge• rested agalnat the CSX Railroad bridge
"He's ilienated a lot of people
Jlarry Bennett, Cremeans' chief of
that apana the Ohio River between Parkershere because Cremeans is playing up staff, said he doesn't view Kelley as
burg, W.Va., and Belpre on Thuraday. Strong
to corporate America instead of ihe
(Contlnuad on Page 3)
·
wlnda combined with awHt river currenta

ALBUM OF VEAA • Alenla Uorla..a.IIICI record produoer Glen
Balla'd ICcept tha-d for "Album of the Yllir'' It the 38th annual Gr"mmy Awardl at lhl Shrine Auditorium In Loa Arlg~IM
Wedneaday. (AP Photo)
.

-------It's time for a reality check.
Unless you want the doors to clos!!
at Meigs County's hospital, I have a
feeling that it's time you make yourself heard.
I've received a "goodly" amount
of favorable comment from a recent
colun'm that I devOted exclusively to
Veterans Memorial'Hospital. That's
~t. I needed the encouragement.
However, if indeed, you feel that hospill~~ should be a part of our lives in
'
Florida. 3161~0334.
Meigs County, then you should
The Com•unlty CaleDdar Is
•·
express yourself in some way other
publlabed
as a f.-ee service to noa·
~;ly does it appear that I will than telling me. Write a letter to the
profit
sroups
wilhilt&amp; to ~~~~MUD«
·Jiave music in my life but I'm getting editor, talk to your county commismeedns
aDd
apeclal eveats. The
,IOIIIC "lood stuff" thanks to friends. · ilionen, take some positive action.
• • Joe Gloeckner of Pomeroy sent
You know we're talking a lot about caleadarlnotdesiped topi'OIIIOte
or fund ral!en of any type.
::81ons another tape. This time all of tourism an'd economic development aala
lteau
are printed as space permiiB
. ·•1he lllll.lic: is by ~antovani llid all of in Meigs County these days. Do you
and
cannot
be paraqteed to run a
. :1114! songa on the tape are world reilly think !hat a company would
spedfk
lltllllber
of daya.
. . • : fUtous wiltzes. Good stoll
select Meigs County as a site for a
·
;:: ·' ..And· Kenny King dropped IIY 1, plantifthecountydidn'tevenhavea
. •. ·.•taJje by .dtet Atkins who has been hospital· facility. And could a' com- THURSDAY
LETART FALLS
Soulhern
" , · '·; •;~bed. u.the most·.'~ inatru· m11nity wichout a hospital really
Local
Building
Committee
meeting
• ,• : •~~i~~intalsoloist ofilllirile. Atkins waa become a tourill atuaction? SomeTh'!nday.
7
p.m.
at
Letart
Falls
Ele1
1 • ; )he yOimp persOn to be ind1,1Cr,d .• liow.lli!J!I:i ~nk
As l,mcnlic!ncd
mentar)i
School.
All
loci!
residenrs
~·· .ij1t0 dte
Music Hall ofl;.me.: ·to you before: Nrhlpi, YO\! don't use '
;. :11e 'baa worked ill other the world ! theservicesofyourloCalhospitalbut ~ncouraged t01auend.
· ' 'Wldl
I!I'Cilestraa ·incluilia1! .l hll doesn't meallthllsomelime in an
the BoltOII .Pops illllergency situ&amp;tion you WOII~ have ·
POR'!LAND -- The Lebanon
too. I hope )'OU .,. just goiPJ to be . Township liustees, 7 p.m. Thursday,
the picture of heAlth forever, but trust township building.
me, there ~ be a time JWben yQiJ11
·
be 1lad the hospitals there 10 d01e.
POMEROV -- Pon)eroy Group of
~ cannOt con- Altoholica Anonymous. 7 p.m.
tilllle on .its Pl-.ellt ·c:Oune.-l'lqse Thursday, in the ~nt of Sacred
· dQn'tj..llit idlllllbill! !he ciounty Jci... He~ Calho\it Chun:h, . Mulberry
es anclth.cr facjlii)&lt; and Mtvii:O. ; A.v~ .• P!JIDC!I'!'Y·
-'
ifave11't'" '1leen ~ d&amp;e that" '
.
eaot ..... t1me11 •'"""""'?
.. . 1 • P9MERO,Y -- ~ei• Ministerial
~-- ' ,~'~-I ·,' '
i
. Aaociltion
Poinoroy
·Have
Jieea berhied ·Y!M
f"'"ll of,the Nazarene, 7:~ Thurs-

yO..

1995 FORD
T·BIRD LX

measure wilh a warning to the Cuban
government not to interfere with the
service.
~'In plain Engli~h. the United
States of America will not tolerate
unacceptable behavior by the Cuban
government," White House press
secretary Mike McCurry said Thursday. The warning was delivered to
Cuban diplomats in Washington and
Havana Thursday night. Cuba has
promised to keep a hands-off
approach as long as participants S!BY
in iniemational waters.
Using boats and planes, a coalition
of exile groups plans to converge at
the site o( last week's downing.
About 20 boats are expected to take
pan and will get help from I 0 Coast
Guard cullers ranging from a 378footer to HO-foot patrol boats. From
southern Florida. eight to 10 hours
usually are required for a hoat trip to
waters .off the Cuban coast.
Vessels that depart Florida and
enter Cuban territorial waters wilhout
authorization will be subject to
seizure under a new measure dis-

·_for Forbes draws.fire

lhat has seen lhe award in the last
lhree years go to "'The Bodyguard"
soundtrack and "Unplugged" ~ord­
ings by Eric Clapton and Tony Bennett.
Backstage, Bennett wasn't taking
it personally.

chance of anow, hlgha In
the 30s.

4 Gannett Co. ,._..,..,..

.

·.cr~.nl~~~n~' support

tality, a lot of popularity, were sprinkled through" these categories.
.
"The panel's decisions were
reflected not only in nominees but
some of the winners."
As evidence, Morisseue capped
her night wilh the album of the year
~oJII!y. a major reversal of a trend

Uoatly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In the 20s. Saturday.

35centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 1, 1996

.

crulaa, PS, PI,
PW,PDL,el.c.
3 TO CHOOSE FROM

by Bob Hoeflich

ec.alrY

Buckeye 5:
9-21-26-28-32

W-h.ite House warns Castro not
-to block pilgrimage by refugees

Dill, tilt,

Beat .of the Bend ...

.

Pick 4:
G-5-0-1

:1 I~ a~"l, 10 l'llllle ·

v.., auto, air concl, •AUJFII

Ash.ley named to nationalpost in War of 18.12 group

• Perhaps, ·some of you remembe1
former Meigs resident, Donald Pool·er.
; : His sister, Mrs. Edgar Pullins of
Silver Ridge, reports that Donald
·ll~ni a lung transplant in Flori·da,on Feb. IS. Isn't it amazing what'
.die mOdi~ profession can do these
.•days. 'Donald is doing well.
· • ·, ·1~U~Iy he would liiJPI'CCiate
J1elrinl frPm you. Cards may be sent
..., .bini 111, !!hands H;ospttal, P.O. Box
; )00034•.
2524, Gainesville,

().6.5

~ Vol• ..., NO. an

· Aa~

1'995 FORD
MUSTANGGT

Pick 3:

•

By JENNIFER BOWLES

· plaints that winners did not reflect the
Prua Writer
most vital elements of contemporary
. · ; !.,OS ANGELES (AP) ~Alanis music.
·.,.orisseue's "Jagged Liule Pill"
Morisseue, backed by an tJR:heswon best· rock 11lbwn and albuin of tra, performed a toned-down version
,the year as the Grammy Awards of "You Oughta Know," about a
·l)roke wilh tradition and embraced woman reeling with jealousy and
'the not-so-romantic view of life.
betrayal from a lover's duplicity, dur. ' ·. Olher big winners Wednesday ing the lhree-hour CBS telecast from
oisht included Hootie &amp; the Blow- the Shrine Auditorium.
· ·fish, which won awards for best new
The song, filled wilh graphic sex. · irtist, and pop group vocal perfor- ual references, was performed word·mance for "Let Her Cry" from for-word but the network bleeped out
t995's best-selling album, "Cracked the most flagrant four-letter violation:
Rear View."
Carey. who opened t)le show with
· • Seat's "Kiss from a Rose" won her "One Sweet Day" duet with
for record and song of the year, and Boyz D Men, came into the show lied
· · hC also grabbed the award for best wilh Morissette for a leading six
male pop vocal performance. Vince nominations.
Qill,the trio TLC 110d Stevie Wonder
Carey's shutout exemplified the
:'captured two Grammys apiece.
National Academy of Recording Arts
·. Frank Sinatra collected his f1rst &amp; Science's shift away from maincomp:titive Otimmy in 29 years stream music. Her album "Daywith his "Duets R" album.
dream" was lhe kind of lush, roman- Morisseue, the 21-year-old Cana- lie recording the academy usually
dian. hauled away a leading four loves.
· . 'Grammys, two for her chart-topping
But the academy changed its nom. U.S. album debut and two - .best inating process this year - the first
• t!lCk song and female rock vocal per- lime in its 38-year history.
. · :tonnance- for her lyrically raw sinIn each of the top four categories
: · ;jJe "Yo!! Oughta Know."
- record, album· and song of the
: · , "I accept this on behalf of anyone year, and 'best new artist ·- 20
:· ·Who'• eVer wriuen a song from a very ·- antrie(l with lhe most votes fro~ the
pure pl8ce, a very spiritual place," general membership were submitted
Morissette said · in thanks for the to a 25-meniber' blue-ril)bon panel
ilbum of the year award.
picked by the academy. The panel
·' • Seeking to shake its stndgy repu- · reviewed entries and selected nomi'talion, the recording industry shunned . nees by secret ballot.
:the mainstteam .:.._ Mariah Carey was
"It was real simple.•" academy
:i.ero for six nominations - and President Michael Greene said. "For
:Qloked to others to counter com- · years, we felt that a lot of sentimen-

~

Sporte, Page .4

SWCD auxiliary offers shrub/tree packets
The backyard packet available
from the ~eigs Soil and Water Conservation District Ladies Auxiliary
this year contains two each of the following: sweetshrub, spirea, sweet
gum, flowering quince and oalcleaf
hydrangea.

Ohio

.·

: WASHINGTON - Wilh spring
planting iiii'Udy under way in some
.areu of the· nation, Congress is
,JIUIIing fin;ktouches on a bill that
~uld end· market-based subsidies
'aqd production .controls for major
crops in favor of guaranteed. but
'dciclining, p~~yments to farmers.
' . 'The House. by an easy 270-ISS
~margin Thursday, approved the mea~ure. which' House leaders touted as
~ndiils60 y~ of sovemment inter·terence in asriculture, while adding
signifacant · environmental protections.
' · · The mcasi!R wu expected to go
next week to House-Senate negoliatll(l who must work oul differences
wjlh a venion·that passed the Senate
'op Feb. 7.
·
.
. The Hous~:· bill ~losely matches
lhl1 Sop-. on the way it deals with
com and otl!er 'fecda p-ains, colton,
rice and ~ Bctlh 111111 susar and
ptanuts the ~way. trimming bOth
but not ell!llllh 'f .-list) criticS who
~ bOch re.uJt qa h!Jber.pricel for
• '

.. 'it

f

'.

programs, research and rural development !hat aren't in the House bill.
House Agriculture Committee Pat
Roberts , R-Kan., said these matters
should be handled quickly but separately, with food stamps belonging in
the welfare 'bill. ·
The House on Thursday added
conservation and trade language
close to what the Senate approved
and lhe administration sought. Those
include $200 million for cleaning up
the Florida Everglades and $1.2 billion,to control pollution runoff from
agricultural land.
Those changes and othen;, meant
to broaden support, also raised costs.
Those will have to be trimmed once
month. ·
"'lb: president and I bolh believe negotiators get; a plear picture from
lhat new farm legislation is urgently budget writers 6ow much money
needed for producers to make sound agriculture has to ·work with .
. Also, because of drastic changes
planting decisions." Asriculture Secretary Dan Olic. . . said. "I would In recent crop prices, the fixed,
caution .that the time constraints ... declining payments~ are to replace
should not be used.as 'an excuse for the uadilionlil subsidies lied to price
seildina an incomplete piece of let sWings could give growers a windfall.
That's because crop prices are foreisl.~ to the president."
to mov~ up beyond earlier esticast
The Senate bill contains provisions on food stamps, other feeding mates, driving price-based subsidies
consumers.
But other issues remained, including what to do about dairy programs
and on the overall costs of lhe massive farm bill .
Spring planting )\as ·begun in the
Sooth, adding urgen~y to the neelj for
final legislation, which had been
tangled for monlhs in lhe Hoose ·
because of the Republican budget
light with President Clinton. But the
basic agxccment on core elements and
goOd prices for most crtlflS have made
grower choices less dependent on
congressional action. Still, all sides ·
agxcc the pressure is on, with a final
bill possible by the Jlliddle of this

way down.
"The so-called reforms in the
House will end up costing billions of
dollars more than current programs,"
said Kenneth A. Cook, president of
the Washington-based Environmental
Working Group.
Glickman said there has to be at
least a guarantee that farmen; grow a
crup in order to get a payment.
The House bill has a price tag of
about $46 billion over seven years.
compared with about $52 billion for
· the Senate version . The 1990 farm
bill cost $52 billion over five years,
the Agriculture Department estimates. ·
The House measure also lacks a
guarantee that Senate Minority
Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,
deemed critical -that a future Congress could reinstate uaditional programs if lawmakers have a change of
heart.
"In seven years there will be no
government commodity program
whatsoever ... and the safety net for
farmers and rancbers across America
would be gone," he said.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohioans
are not wild about a proposal to ll'ake
it tougher for elected officials to raise
taxes, a poll indicates.
By a slim majority, people surveyed for an Ohio Poll favored
increasing the number of votes
required for legislators to 1aise taxes.
Fifty-two percent favored mali:ing the
standard a "supennajority," rather
than a simple majority.
The poll was sponsored by The
Cincinnati Enquirer, WLWT-TV and
the University of Cincinnati and was
conducted by the university's Institute for Policy Research .
A random telephone survey of 803
adults was taken in January. Results
are considered accurate within plus or
minus 3.5 percentage points.
Twelve states have supennajority
requirements, meaning that taxes .
may be raised qnly with the approval
of 60 percent to 75 percent of the
members of the state legislature.
In the Ohio Poll, 52 percent of the
people questioned favored raising the
standard; 43 percent were opposed.

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