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                  <text>By The Bend

The .Daily Sentinel
·

Monday, January 11,1993
•

Page-10

Tips for those unwanted guests·
Dear AIID I aWl'S: My husbind
and I own a home in a reson
an:a. For 10 yem, we've been taken
advaJUae of by friends and family.
We finllly decided to write to you
and oulline specific guidelines for
guests. Hele IIIey are:
·
I. Make sure you were invited
and 4idn'l invite 'younelf. Was the
invitation specific and sincm, or a
casual "come see us somclime"?
2. A visit longer than thne days
will wear out ·your welcome and
your friendship.
-1
3. Go to a hole! if you want to be
waited on and don't wish to clean
iap after yourself. House guests are
expected to pi~eh in and help.
. 4. Don't kfep the hosts up too late
if they must go to wcxk. Remember,
it's your vacation, not theirs. ·
· •· S. If you don't like the food, you
hllve several choices: (a) shut up and
·· eat it, (b) buy the groceries and nx
it yourself, (c) take everyone out to
~

6. Don't help yourself to anything
in the house. Ask first.
. .1. 1C you've f~ JlC"Oil8l care
items, go our and buy lhem. It is not
up to )'OlD' hosls 111 supply you with
shampoo, tooitbpastc, deodorant, ere.
8. Treat your hosts' belongings
with respect. If you damage some- .
tl!ing. offer to rqilace it oi repair iL ·
9. Leave your pets at homC or in
a kennel. Animals do not always
behave I00 percent in unfamiliar
· surroundings.
10. There is no such thing as a
"free vacalion." Insist on chipping .

Ann

Landers
ANN LANDKIIS

"utl, Lao ADa....
'l'tmtl S,...uc.&amp;e ood
C - n Syacll&lt;lle''

and groceries.
After you leave, the bills for
electricity, heat and waler will be
higher. Of course. you should pay
for your long-distance telephone
calls.
1I. Your hosL!i have a right to
control your children if you won't
12. Don't invite other people to
your hosts' home. -- THANK GOD
AND GREYHOUND YOU ARE
GONE
DEAR GONE: Hooray for speaking for those who are too timid to
speak for themselves.
Dear ADD 1-..ders: I began
drinking when I was 13. Within a
ye¥. I started smoking marijuana. ,
ljy the lime I was 16, I was USing
everything except crack cocaine and
heroine. I avoided needles, thank
in .towa!d expenses

God.
I fmally reached a point whi::re I
\vas sick and tired of. lying to
everyone and being broke aD the
time. I had dropped QUI of high
school when. I was 16, so I decided
111 get my GED.It was the best move
I ever made.
Studying for my GED exams gol
me interested in education. I mel

MONDAY
KYGER CREEK - Women
Alive will meet Monday at 1 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek Club House.
There will be a devotional speaker
and craft demonstration. Refreshments will be a salad bar.

7 p.m. at the school. The spring
carnival will be planned and other
events discussed.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet
Monday at 4:30p.m. at the office.
'

REEDSVILLE - Eastcm Athlet,
ic Boosters will meet Monday at 1
p.m. in the high school cafeteria. ·

TUESDAY
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
' POMEROY • The Disabled will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
-American Veterans and the Ladies Meigs County Senior Citizens CenAuxiliary will meet Monday at 7 ter. Jack Slavin will present a prop.fl\. at the hall, 124 Quuernut gram on art. Becky Triplett and
Becky Trent are hostesses.
Avenue in Pomeroy.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 1
p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
PORTLAND • Portland llle.mentary PTO will meet Monday at
•

HARRISONVILLE - Har.
risonville Senior Citizens Club will
meet aild hold a blood pressure
clinic Tuesday, 10 a.m. to noon, at
the town house, weather permitting. Those attending are to bring a
covered dish, Dues are payable.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Junior Fair Sale and Show Committee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at tfle Meigs High School Cafeteria. Meeting open. to all junior fair
market livestock members, parents
and advisors. Prpgram for 1993
will be discussed. Call 992-6696
for additional information.
MIDDLEPORT .. Ballroom
dance lessons, Tuesday, Middlepon Arts Council. Cost is $7 per
couple per session. Beginners, 7:30
p.m.; advanced dancers, 8:30 p.m.
Gerald PoweU, instructor. Call9922675 £or information or to register.

MARY ANN RANKIN

Ninth birthday

TUPPERS PLAINS · Ladies
Bible Class of Hickory Hill Church
of Christ, "Friendship Day" Tues. day at 10:30 a.m. Betty Miller,
retired teacher from Ohio Valley
Christian College in Parkersburg,
W.Va. , will be guest speaker.
"Love Your Neighbor" will be the
program. Call 667·3074 for information.

· Mary Ann Rankin celebrated
her ninth birthday recently at the
home of her parents, John and Connie Rankin, Tuppers Plains.
·
A troll theme was carried out
POMEROY - Meigs County
and cake and ice cream were
Cham
bcr of Commerce will meet
served.
'
Attending . were Jeff and David
Rankin, Tony and Shirley Jones
and Leroy and Mary Fryar, Randy,
Anietta and Tyler Fryar, Taylor and
Charles Barrett Jr. was elected
Kelsi !3oyd, Chrissie Gregory,
president
of the RuUand Township
Amanda Parker, Jessica and Bill
Trustees
during
their reorganizaScarberry, Nathan Hogan.
tional
meeting
held
recently.
Sending gifts were Judy Jones,
Charles
Williamson
was elected
Keith, Brenda and Mike Weber,
as
vice-president.
Bill, JoAnn, Andy, Billy and Susie
Regular meetings were schedFrancis.
uled
for the fll'st Thursday of each
She also went to Pizza Hut for a
month
at .6:30 p.m. at the RuUand
birthday celebration with her famiFire Station.
. ly.

-

President elected

Library lines
January is National Hobby
Month and the Meigs County
Library is offering space for displaying your favorite hobby. If you
· are interested in sharing hobby
with others, call 992-5813 or come
to the library.
The holidays are over and 1992
is a fading memory, so now we
turn our thoughts 10 taxes. Remember the library has tax forms and
this year beginning Feb. l, the IRS
(

..

uar45.

•

.a 1
Vol. 43, No. 182 ·

Copyrighted 1993

1 Section, 10 Popo 25 c.~to
A lluldmedlo Inc; Newap~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio TUesday, January 12, 1993

Middleport's 1993 operating
funds are below '92 figure

DEAR NEWPORT: Thanks for
wriling. One word riom you is mor:e
effective than 100 from me. After
all, I'm from the "oldeq days." What
dol know?
If you have a hunch that Newport
News may be r.alking to you, she is,
so listen up. It's time for a realily .
check.
An alcohol problem? How can you

help )'OIIJ'st/f or someOM you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
How to Deal With It, How to
Conquer It" will gi~e you the
answers. Send 11 self-addressed,
long, busi~sNize en~~elope alld 11
check or mo~y ortkr for $3.65 (this
inciUihs postage IJild handling) to:
Alcohol, clo AM l..twlers, P.O. Box
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Susan
11562, Chicago, II/. 6061/-056'1. (In · Sarandon says her image as a sex
Canada, selld $4.45.)
symbol always has amazed her.

People in
the news

I

Your Social Security
By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager in Athens

I

benefits are subject to tax," Peterson explained. "If, after completing
the worksheet, you have questions
about your tax liabiiity, you should
call the IRS toUfree number, 1-800829-1040 and ask for Publication
915, wliich contains tax information about Social Seclirity benefits.
Beneficiaries who file an individual tax return may owe taxes on
some of their benefits if their com. bined income exceeds $25,000.
(Combined income is an individual's, or married couple's, adjusted
gross income as reported on the
Form 1040, plus nontaxable interest, plus one-half of the tollll Social
Seclirity benefits received· for the
year.) .Married couples whb file
joint tax returns may have to pay
taxes on some of their benefits if
· their combined income exceeds
$32,000. Married couples who live
togethfr but file separate tax
returns probabiy will pay taxes on
part of their benefits.

"Social Security beneficiaries
"It's so funny that 1 can hardly will receive statements in the mail
IJIIk about it without laughing," the in Januar~ showing the benefits
46-year-old actress said. "But it's they rece•ved in 1992," said Ed
always been there. Playboy has Peterson , Social Se&lt;;urity manage~
been asking me to do a nude layout in Athens. This statement should be
, used to determine jf any benefits
. for 20 years.
fuesday at noon at the Pomeroy
"And they haven't stop""~ ask- are subject to Fedenil ilicome tax.
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
"""
At least 9 out of 10 of those 'who
Lunch will be available at a cost of ing, even after the birth·of my third receive the statement, Form SSA
~~~!~· "Maybe I'll do it when I'm 1099, will. not have to pay taxes on
$3.
Not that she hasn't had sexy their Social Security benefits
PORTLAND • Portland and roles . She was a prostitute in because their total income is less
Letart Elementary .Schools will be "Pretty Baby," shimmied in lin- than the taxable ceiling. "If you
hosting an open house on Tuesday gerie in •'The Rocky Horror Pic- receive Social Seclirity benefits as
from 6-7 P·l'"· Public invited.
ture show," made love to Buri your only source. of mcome, you
Lancaster in "Atlantic City" and are unhkely to..owe Federal ~es
W£DNESDAY
taught fledgling baseball players · on the benefits, Mr. Peterson s~d.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Mer- about curves of all kinds .in "Bull
An Internal Revenue ~erv1ces
chants Association will meet Durham."
·
'
·(IRS) wo,rksheet, IRS .Notice 703,
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the conIri her latest film, "Lorenzo's ~ames w•th the benefit statcment.
ference room of Bank One.
Oil, " Miss Sarandon plays 'The worksheet shows .YOU how.to
Michaela Odone the real-life determme 1f your· Social Security
RACINE - The Village of woman who defied•doc!llr5 to find
Racine will be collecting pine a cure for her gravely ill son.
Christmas trees on Wednesday.
Racine residents are to have trees at
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)
,
the curb by 8 a.m. on Wednesday.
-Frank Sinatra received the Palm
Neva Nicholson received first
Springs International Film Fesli- place in the Heath Coffee Cake
MIDDLEPORT • Texas dancing val's Golden Palm Aw.ard at dinner baking conleSt held recently at' the
lessons, Wednesday, Middleport attended by many of the crooner's Star Grange m~ling. Maxine Dyer
Arts Collncil. Cost is $7 per couple show business friends;
received second place in the conper session. Beginners, 7:30 p.m.;
" Whoever put this all together . test and Patty Dyer received third.
advanced dancers, 8:30 p.m. Ger- - it's absolutely thriUing. I loved ,. Winners in t)le young married
ald Powell, instructor. Call 992- every minute of my life in show young ~ult peanut butter banana
2675 for information or to register.
business. Every minute," Sinatra muffms contest were Patty Dyer,
said Satt11day.
first place, and Opal Dyer, second
Last year's · honoree, actor place..
.
·
Jimmy Stewart, presented the
W1~ner m the youth crunchy
award. "Folks all over applaud you bro~me bars contest was Alan W.
for being such a special man," he Smith:
II 1111
told Sinatra.
Winners in the junior chocolate
Among the 700 people atlending brownie cooleSt in the five to nine
the gala were Robert Wagner, Jill age group were Chelsea Mont- ·
St. John Wld former Palm Springs gomery, first place, and Emily
Mayor Sonny Bono.
Ashley, second place. In the 10-14
a{e group winners were Rachel
Ashley. first; ~ric Montgomc:ry:
.
second; and Whitney Ashley, thud.
Hope Baptist Church presented ley, Jessica Justice, Nancy Marlow, · During the meeting conducted
its .Christmas program, "Hark, the Carrie Michael, Rachael Ashley, by Master Patty Dyer, legislative
Herald Angel" recently at the Emily Ashley, Chad Dailey, Jason chairman Eldon Barrows discussed
church.
Riley, Matthew Justice, Jonathan a bill .being sponsored by ihe
"Joy to the World" opened the Owen, Peter Dilly, Nicholas AARP.
· ·
program.
Michael and Tricia Richards.
It was repomd that containers
The preschool program opened
Members of the nativity cast are in place in the grange hall for
with three songs. Giving recitations were Nicole McDaniel as Mary, the coll~clion of used candles for
were Nichole McDaniel, Michael Jam in Riley as Joseph and Michael the- State Deaf Activities CommitClay, Justin Coleman, Carrie Owen.
Michael, Emily Ashley and Jamin
Several songs were sung by the
Riley.
choir and other cast members.
The program closed with the
Paul Ditty played the part of
singing
of "Silent Night, Holy
Hark . Mark Michael portrayed
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
Night."
.
Gabriel. Choir directors were
- Michael Jackson will talk next
Refreshments were served and month with Oprah Winfrey in what
Denise Michael and Judy Riley and
everyone
attending was presented a ABC executives said would be his
, choir members were Whitney Ashbag of treats.
first live TV intcrview.
The interview, part of a 90minute special, will be seen world·
wide through a dism'bulion agreement. Miss Winfrey will talk with
the recJusive pop star at his ranch
in the Santa Ynez Valley north of
Los Angeles.
Jackson's manager approached
Miss Winfrey with the 1dea, ABC
Entertllinment President Ted Harbert said Sunday. ·
. "I think he wants to have a
direct pipeline" to an international
audience, 'Halbert said.
The lnlerView is io air Feb. I 0 at
9:30p.m. EST.

Grange contest winners named

t1(B\

~

·

Ch rtstmas program presente

d

tee and non-perishable food items
for the grange. s community service
project.
· Lecrurer Eldon Barrows presented a program on "Outlook from
Yesterday, for Today and Tomorrow," He gave his new year's resolutions and discussed the past, present and future.
Master Dyer reported · that
drapes had .been donated .to the
grange for use on the new stage as
well as windows in the dining hall.
Refreshments for the February
meeting will be soup.
The next fun night will be held
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the grange
hall. A potluck supper will be held.
Thirty-six mem.bers, juniors and
visitors enjoyed potluck refreshments following the meelin~.

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK
A811 POCHI

Interview slated

DOWNIII ClllDS
MUU•IM.SII

INSUUICE

S.e•• St.,= .
,........
-IUIIIVIII

111

.... cou•n
SIICI1161

JOHN WADE, M.D~, INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAr •AllERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
STUDENTS OF THE WEEK ~ The followln1 studeats wtre
selected as stUdents of the week for the moath of December at
Mel11 Junior Hlab' School. This honor Is .ehleved tbrouah aca,
demlc e•cellence and Improvement In behavior. They are: JUOD
Frecker for art, Tara GraeHr for band, and Adam Smith tor
!BUSic. Not pictured Is Anna Thompson for math. · ·
I

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ,
Sentinel News Starr
Funds totaling $1,753,990 were
approprialed for village operations
in 1993 at Monday night's meeting
of Middlepon Village Council.
This ~ear's apl!fOPrlation shows
.a reducuon of about $289,000 over
last year's figures, according to
Mayor Fred Hoffman. He also
noted that part . ~~ the_money,

Three:year-old Aric S.chmltter sat beside Bryan
Canterbury just-before the start of the 1ame.
(APphoto)

LITTLE DRUMMER • The Obio State band
round itself with a difl'erent drummer duriag the
women's basketball game in Columbus, Sunday:

By RUTH PowERs

has P..ovjded a trained volunreer 10
help senior citizens and low
income families with their tax
returns. The volunteer will be at the
libl'liry every Monday night 6-8:30
p.m. from ,Feb. I through Aprill5.
The Meigs County Library
Youth Council group is very active
right now. They lllll malting plans
for a Teen Talent Show to be
staged sometime in early Spring.

Lmr toa!pt ll'OUIId 45, wltb
nla. Weclllllday, raiD, hlsb .

4271

•

'

•

•

413

Page4

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to auure pllblicalion in the calendar.

Pick 3:
Pick 4:

my husband just before entering
COSmeiOlogy school. "Scott" didn't
!ell me 10 stop using drugs, but he
made it clear that I couldn't be
around him if I continued. It's been
seven years, and I've been drug-flee
ever since.
My advice to leen-agers is this:
You must WQ/11 to be drug-free, or it
won't happen. Then you must get
help. If you go for treabnent, stick
10 the pmgnun. "Friends" who use
drup aren't your real friends if they
ridicule you for tt)ing to get clean.
And if they try to get you back into
the drug scene, cut all lies. They are
envious of the strength and courage
which they lack and will try 10 drag ·
you down to their level ... LESSON
LEARNED IN NEWPORT NEWS,
v~

Ohio ~ottery

Kansas
outlasts
Oklahoma

G••"iii' F!1t' F111ll

Medicare &amp;UMWA AsslgM~t~~t Accepted .
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
I'

~pproximately $271,000, is in
anticipated Issue 2 monies.
The first reading of the appropriation ordinance was given at last
night's meeting, the second readlng
is scheduled for a special meeting
of Council at 4:15 p.m . today
(Tuesday), and the third reading
and adoption is set for a second ·
special meeting to be held at 4:15
p.m. Wednesday.

Appropriated into the various
funds were general, $500,620; fire
truck, $66,300; street maintenance,
$83,1()0; cemetery, $27,850; recreation, $23,650; public transporta·
lion, $178,400; water, $203,600;
litter control, $4,800; Arts Council
$5,000.
•
Meter deposits, $10,000; sewer,
$166,400; fire equipmeii~ $18,400;
economic development, $17,670;

mini-golf, $7,200; Issue 2,
$271,000; revolving loan fund,
$23,000; refuse fund, $1 10,000;
Betsy Ross housing, $37,000.
Dewey Honon was re-elected
president of Council and also
named l!S Council's representative
o~ ~e Middleport Planning CommiSsron.
Hired as village solicitor for
Continued on page 3

Shelter's board up~ated
on planned legislation

. RE·ELEC:TED • Dew~y Horton was re-elected president or
Middleport Y•llage Council at Monday's night meeting. He was
, al~ ~amed to represent Council on tbe Middleport Planning Com, miSSIOn,
·

By JIM FRii!li:MAN
attorney general's office, will dou- director Hilda Tirado said. That
OVP News Starr
ble the ponion of marriage license amount will increase to $28,000 if
"Domestic violence is the single fees going to domestic violence the.legislation is made into law.
largest cause of injury to wonien in shelters from $1710$34.
"Marriage license money is the
this country. One out of five
The $17 increase in marriage only basic source of hard money
women filling emergency rooms . license fees will raise $1.67 million that shelters can count on," Ogg
said
.
.
are battered women."
statewide, Ogg said.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) see changes befor.e giving more
Bill Ogg, regional liaison for
The legislation, if passed, would
The governor's office won't aDow money to education. The state's
Many people mistakenly think
Ohio Attorney General Lee Fisher, most likely result in an increase in shelters are funded by federal or
· tl)e Department of E4ueation the 28 next two-year budget is expected to
percent spending increase it asked lie tight for aU agencies and genershared those statistics with the price of marriage licenses.
state goveml)lent, which they are
for, but the ag~ncy's leader says he ally contain only small increases to
Serenily House Bpard of Directors
However, Ogg pointed out, taX not, he added.
will lobby the Legislarure 10 get iL
keep up with inflation.
duiing its regular meeting M&lt;J!IdaY and insurance savings more than ·
Ogg sajd the legislation was
night at Grace United Methodist make up for the expenSe of a mar- introduced during the last legisla"There is a lot we simply can't
Voinovich has said he is considChurch in Gallipolis. .
riage license.
. do" with tlie budget Gov. George · ering a ballot issue that ·would
ture but was not acted upon. The
Serenity
House
is
a
shelter
for
"It's
a
one-time
expense,"
Ogg
~novich is .preparing,' said Ted increase t!Je state sales ~q. 10 ·pay
bills will be re-introduced this
· BILLOGG
·battered women serving Gallia, · said .. "You have to rene'!" your term.
Sanders, superintendent of public ·for ed.ucauen.reforms.
.
Jackson and Meigs counties.
driver's license, your hunting' . Ogg encouraged the board to
instruction. "The realuith is \ve
Oliver Ocasek, the state school
In addition, according to figures license and fishing license•. but you write its state representatives and
just simply cannot carry out the board's new president, said Monaggressi ve agenda we think is nee- day that II!IY new taxes for educafrom the attorney general's office, don ' t havt: to renew your marriage senators to promote passage of the
essary ~ith that few dollars."
· lion should be passed by the Legisone-third of all Ohio police calls licenSe."
legislation.
The department' wants to lature, not put on the ballot
are in response to domestic vioShelters fll'St staned to receive a
"Get staned now," Ogg said
''I've never been in favor of the
increase spending 10 $4.83 billion
lence complaints and one out of $10 ponicin of the marriage license "because it's proposed doesn'i
by 199S from $3 .76 billion this Legislarure passing the buck," said
five police officers kiUed in the line fee in· 1980. In 1984, the fee went mean it's going to happen,"
'
year.
.
. ·
Ocasek, a former state Senate presof duty were killed responding 10 up-to the cwrent level of $17.
State Senator Jan Michael Long
(AP) - Peace llllks domestic violence calls.
But Sanders said the governor ident. "They'.re elected to male-the on GENEVA
The
total
marriage
license
fee
said
this morning he will :'probably
Bosnia-Herzegovina broke
has proposed an increase of 4 per- decisions."
Adding
to
the
problem,
Ogg
varies
by
county.
For
example,
in
an increase in marriage
support"
down today after Bosnia's Serb said, one out of every four women Gallia County it costs $29 for a
cent a year. .
Sanders said much of the money leader
fees
if he can be guaranteed
license
refused to accept a compro- are turned away from domestic vio- marriage license, $17 of which
· Mike DawsOn, a spokesman for the department asked for would be mise plan
that
revenue
from the increases will
10 end the 9-month-old
the governor, said Voinovich won't spent on filling the gap between war, European Community envoy lence shelters due to a lack of goes to Serenity House . The !&gt;e distributed on a by-need basis
space.
remainder goes 10 the counly. Sev- mstead of a per capita basis. Long
publicly discuss parts of the budget rich and poor districts. The state is Lord Owen said.
Ogg said shelters need $1.69 enteen dollars from each license
unlil the entire proposal is released facing two lawsuits chaDenging the
Regional Serb leader Radovan million slatewide to keep operating sold in Jackson and Meigs coun1y, said basing the revenue on a per
latee this month. • .
constitutionality of the school aid Karadzic
"said no" to a compro- . at the current level or service while which cost $29 and $27 respective- capita basis is unfair to rural areas.
Voinovich has said he wants to formula.
State Representative Mark MaJ.
mise plan on a new constitution for an extra $1.3 million is needed to ly, also goes to the shelter.
one
was unavailable this morning
the besieged republic, "and as a provide additional recommended
Serenity Hquse receives about for. comment on the planned legis.result of that the proceedings have services.
$14,000 annually from marriage lation. A message was left at his
been adjourned for the moment,"
A
pending
biD,
suppoi'ted
by
the
licenses sold in Jbe three counties, office.
co-mediator Cyrus Vance told a
news conference.
Hard-line Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, considered a key
in the peace talks, and Dobrica
Cosic, the federal president of
Yugoslavia that includes Serbia
and Montenegro, accepted the
compromises as "reasonable;"
said Vance.
Vance, a U.N. envoy and former ·
U.S. secretary of slate, said he
would report the deadlock to U.N.
'
I
Secretary-General , Boutros
Boulros-Ghali, "making it very
clear ... that the only one who has
said flatly no" was Kantdzic.
!
Karadzic's forces have taken
over about 70 percent of Bosnia ·
since a war that has claimed more
than 17,000 lives and led to aDegalions of the forcible eviction of lens
of thousands of Muslims began.
Vance and Lord Owen have pro.;
FINAL PAYMENT ON COMMITMENT. Chris Wolfe who
posed a peace package including
; pledged bls lint year's salary as Letart Township trustee io tbe
Bosnia's
division into 10 provinces
; Letart Falls Sthool, fulfilled his commitment Monday. He presentwith
very
wide powers, a perma-ed the last of ll monthly cbecks for $338.76 to Roger Rousb;
nent cease-flfC and troop pollback.
; teacher. The year' a contribution totaled $4,06S.IZ. Wolfe, len stlp·
· Any amendments to the consti: ulated that the money be used for ''something for the kids.'' About
•
tutional
plan would need approval
: J!alf was spent on reCurblshina and rep11vlnl the outdoor basketfrom Bosnia's· Muslim-led govern· ~all court. The money has been handled through tbe Letart PTO.
ment and its Croats, bQth of whom
COMPUTER DONATED· Home National
Ofr'K:e. Pictured with the $1,100 system are 1-r
have approved the prosx-J princiBank of Racine and Farmers Baak and Savings
Paula Thacker, director ol'the omce; Bill N~
ples.
Company of Pomeroy have contributed toward
or Home National Bank; Jo Ann Williams of .
. Agreement on constitutional
a aew computer system for the Meigs County
Farmers Bank; and (seated) Kathy Adkins,
issues would allow talks to move to
Chambe• or Commerce/Economic Development
chamber secretary.
·
provincial boundaries, which the
·:
Aa RqUired by law, Meigs County Common Pleas Court· Judge
. mediators' designed to avo.id a
· · ~ ~red W. Crow III has approved, by emry, a 1993 salary apploprla.
crude ethnic division of Bosnia.
:. bon from the Meigs Col!"l)' General Fund totaling $82,926 for stiff
These talks will be "very diffi·~ members of Prosecuting Attorney John R. [efltes. The staff
cult," said the mediators'
:~ includes two aslistant prosecutors, an investigator, and lhtee clerical
spokesman, Fred Bethard.
: staff members.
,
:
Lord Owen said he and Vance
:;
Actordina to Acting ~udlto~ Masy Hobstetter, other salary
expect to continue efforts 10 bring
~ SOUI'CCI exist for the office,IJl.cluding a portion of the Furtherance of
peace 10 former Yugoalavia.
· Justice Fund, the Law Enforcement Truat Fand, and a fund eatabIn an interview earlier today
''The chamber/economic develThe Mei@ Counly Chamber of
"In 1992, the office spearheaded
. lished for the collection of deHnquent real estate taxes.
with The -Asaocialed PRes, Kanldz.
opment
office has received tremenCommerce/Economic Develop- · a drive 10 obtain a medium-securily
lc said the Bosnian S~ "~ ment Office has received a new prison in Meigs Counly," Thacker dous support liom locaJ ~
accept a take-it or leave-it princiIBM-compatible com~r, pur- said, "and the new system will and citizens," Thaclter continued.
ple. We ha~ the wiahea of our own chased with donations
Farm- enable us to store information "Meigs County is now actively
The folloWlna have been aPJ!Olnled as deputies by Meigs County .
state, our ~~ and our peo- ers Bank and Savings Company obtained from research compiled involved in 11101e rellk!riaJ and 1tatc
.• Shariff Jamea :r.l Soulaby: Jefli'ey Allen Miller, Isaac M. Mohler,
ple 10 r.cxgider,"
issues which will benOiit our comand Home Nadonal Bank, as well from the proposal."
• Randall L Arnold. ~C. Leonanl, Ralph E. TrusseU, Kevin R.
Only a day earlier, Karadzlc as individoal ~tributions.
"This will also help u·s start a munity. The donations from the,.
. Meadow1, Harry R. L)II!D!, Scott B. Truaell, and Robert E. Beegle.
dropped dCmanda fgr ~~ICC
Accordina to C'lwnber Dltec10r database for companies and indi- banks and individula help lbow
Appointed as lpeCial c!ePutlea were: John M. Spires, Charles E.
wldiln
Bolnla
and
the
ri
t
10
Join
Paula
'Ibacker, the chamber will be viduals who need Information or that people know bow villi It Ia 10
CODtlnned 011 pap 3
.
Serb-domlnated Yu1 avia fn a able to I!SC the new $1,200 sys1em statistical repons on Meigs Coun- have nece•:y cqui)llilent IIi mate
.'' lfOIIU Serb~''
ty," Thacker said.
·
to store research information.
the office functioli J*OJM)y." ·

:Gov. Voinovich slashes
proposed education,budget

Peace talks
breakdown

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Local briefs-.-· -----.

:; Salaries approved

C~amber

and development
office receives new computer

: Deputies appointed -

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Commentary
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T"'esday, January 12, 1993
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

OHIO Weather
VVednesday,Jan.13

TUesda~January12,1993

Accu-Weather• forecast

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WASHINGTON - If the food
slalilp
program were run like the
111 Coart Street
federal
government's college loan
·
Pomeroy, ObJo
system,
grocers would be getting .
DEVOTED TO,.._ IN'l'BRB81'8 OJ' niB MEIGS-MASON AREA
nch, tile needy would go hungry
and at least $1 billion would be
needlessly spenl
.I"Ul'i-mA.INC.
So why do Democrats and
Republicans tolerate the student
loan program? Sen. Paul Simon, DROBERT L. WINGETT
Ill.,
blames special interests. This
Publisher
federal program, which provides
relatively small loans averaging
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEIIEAD
$3,000 a year .to students is easy
. Assistant I'UbUshor/Controller
. General Manager
money for the two middlemen in
'
the $6 billion a year student loan
, LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
maze: banks and the Student !pan
. words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
Marketing Association (Sallie
' addless and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
Mae),
should be in good Wte, addressing issues, not personalities.
Banks make $1 billion a year
issuing student loans, a.nd Sallie
Mae officials pay .themselves
salaries that m1ght make Mike
Milken blush. In order of profitability, student loans outpilce auto
loans, mortgage-backed securities,
adjustable- and fixed-rate mort·
gages and U.S . Treasury securities.
Only credit cards and commercial
By wALTER R. MEARS
and industrial loans ranlc higher for
AP Special Correspondent
· profitability, according to the
WASHINGTON - When the time comes for some last words from - Deparunent of Education.
.
the White House, they usually include warnings, like President Bush's ;
Wtth commercl31 bank prof1ts
paning advice against isolationism on one hand and P9licing the world on
tlte other. ·
That's. hardly as memorable as Dwight D. Eisenhower's farewell alert
against undue influen~ by the mili18JY.·industrial complex,
. But it HIS a pauem that holds regardless of the circumstances in which
wesidents leave office, whether in defeat or in retirement. ''There is a
~t tradition of warnings in presidential farewells," Ronald Reagan said

Last words from
the ·White ·House

. EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

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THIS CARTOON·CONTAINS~

n:.f(OL..

NO CHOLES
NO SALT
NO SUGAR

NO FJ\1' tZM-l,. ~0 IDEA.
(Ill ,.CU&gt;fU&gt;A~~ \.OI'TM ~~
'l'l(o"M
-1-~•e1.w~G R\1\..I!!S)

·•Ill

~~
.,., bf NEA. !no-

and high

MICH .

8::1 S1e i,., •9S

~ Mrl\l.l\lews ·r.Jea

. ...

Dickens' report to attorney
In 1842, Charles Dickens visited
the Eastern Penitentiary on the outskirts of Philadelphia. "The system
here," he wrote, "is rigid, strict
and hopeless solitary confinement." The prisoner "sees the
prison omcers, but with that excep·
tion he never looks upon a human
countenance, or hears a human
voice. He is a man buried alive; to
be dug out in the slow round of
years."
Dickens had seen cruel prison
conditions before, but he found this
American model utterly depressing
and frightening: "I hold this slow
and daily tampering with the mysteries of the brain to be immeasur·
ably worse than any torture of the
body ." And because no outside
auention was being paid, Dickens
denounced this "secret punishment
which slumbering humanity is not
roused up to stay."
Ther~ are now, in .America,
more such remote prisons where
inmates are being buried alive. The
keepers of all our prisons no longer
waste .much time in attempts at
rehabilitation. Theit mission is
punishment. And when prisoners
are violent or otherwise difficult,
they must be controlled in separate,
even more rigid institutions that
markedly resemble the prison
Dickens was chilled by in 1842.
As the journal of the ACLU's
National PrisOn Project poiniS out,

Office says we can save more than
a SI billion a' year."
To be sure, his most withering
Hre is reserved for Same Mae omcials.
Sallie Mae was set up by the
Nixon administration to increase
the volume of student loans by ere·
ating a secondary market. Although
a federally chartered corporation, it
has laken on ·a political life of iiS
own by vociferously resisting any
changes that would cut it out of the
action. Sallie Mae officials arc
fighting for their self-preservation,
anti here' s why:
General Accounting Ofnce Hg·
ures show that 'Sallie Mae President
Lawrence A. Hough earned more
than $2 million in 1991 .(about 10
times as much as the U.S. prcsi- ,
dent) and Albert Lord Jr., Sallie .'
Mae vice· president, received Sl.7
million. · The No. 3 official, Mitchell Johnson, earned total
compensation of ':'lore thltn ~
$826,000. Even the ftfth m~n on ·.
Sallie Mae's totem pole earned
more than twice what the president
is paid.
••
"No wonder they are fighting
chllllges in the student assistance
program," Simon told us. "This is
a student assistance program, a
higher education assistance pro· .
gram, and not a Sallie Mae assis- .'
tance program. ... One of the thingS '
we have to keep in mind as we ereare these entities (is that) they may
be created to help students 91 to
help some other function, but at
some point they start getting interested in self-pewetuation rather
than the miss10n that we created ·
them for."
Hough believes that his agency ·
can be the Clinton administration's .
•'best allies in accomplishing his
policy objectives" and that the
"present system of private capital· :
based educational credit ... continues to be the best vehicle through
·which to serve the nation's students :
and their families."
The bou.om line is that the government spends $3 billion a year, ~
$1 billion of which could be saved
if Sallie Mae and banks we{e cut
out of the process. With' that kind .
of math, the current student loan
program deserves a failing grade. ·.
· ~ack Anderson an~ Mlchael
Binstein are writers for United .
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

IND.

''''' C'-ol-um,_bu_s..,.l-39-,
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Middleport...

Ocasek selected
president Of State
edUCatiOn board

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

Hospital news

Cases processed

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EMS units answer calls

Search continues for ai'r man _ , Meigs announcements--

airlines, some of the nation's circulate fane prices before they are
largest carriers gave a real world announced to the pu~lic . This will
example of how this process works. end, it believes, the frantic giveMost of the carriers announced a and' take between the carriers that
$10 to $80 increase in one-way resuiiS in near identical prices.
·
short-notice ticlcels, the Idnd usualSo far two airlines, US Air and :
ly pun:hascd hy business travelers. United, have agreed to end the : ;
The increases had been stamd by practice of advanced, fane-change : j'
Continental, whose spokesman, . announcements. Northwest says it ·
Don Messing, explained it was an is studying the matter and might •
attempt to return fares to the level agree if J usHce makes some · •
they llad ldn before the industry- cllanges in its plan. Six other major · :
wide, half-price sale of last sum- carriers, however, say they are :
mer. By the time the Continental doing nothing illegal or unethical, . •
decision was made public, the and that they will fight the 'plan :
.~
increases had been matched by even if it means going to conn.
American, United, Delta, North·
Justice Department iosiders •
west. 1WA IIIII USAir.
• beljevc that the bulk of the airlinei · !
At the .-.e time American Air· are resisting entering into an agree. :
linea 'laid that it will niise 7-day ment so they can see bow the new l
and 14-day advanced _purchase Clinton Justice Depanment will 1
1
farea - the Idnd -used by leisure view the matter.
travelers- by $10 to $40. It is
In one of the strange inCOfl·
exl'l:':ted that othu carriers will gruities of cunent political philosoquickly fall info line.
.
. phy, while the rather far-right Bush ·I
Airlines
that this process Justice Depanment hu vigorously 1
is only good
-,:liiiCIII. American pushed ultn-eon~ervative social I
Airlines~ AI Becker calls
agenda, ill complete advocacy of .
it ~Y "na:ting to the m.tet-. fRe.lllllbt doctrine hu resulted in .. 1
plact, • But Jllllice does 1101 think an agreuive anli-lntll policy.
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10.
The new Clinton Justice ~. · . •
W!lat JUSiice wanu is for aU the ~ ~ corporate lawyer Zoe Baird, · • 1
lirliDel to apee 110110 IIIIIOliJICe or •• will likely revene the current con- • ,
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smative apprilach to .social issues.
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ments with the 10 companies
amount to $151 million.
ThC agreement stems from lawsuits filed by states and private
interests in California, Arizona,
Oregon and Washington. The
claims were eventually combined
into a single federal case.
The lawsuit, which deals with
allegations ihat date to the 1950s
and '60s, accused oil companies of

--Area deaths-~

Nat Hentoff

Roberti. Wagman

Southeast and in New York,
Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.
Portions of upstate New York,
Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska and
MisSOuri received freezing drizzle.
Heavy snow was. likely from
Nebraska to the upper Mississippi
Valley and the Great Lakes region.
The forecast called for rain in
cenUal and Northern California and
lighter rain in Southern California.
Northern New England was out Q[
harm's way today.
11
Highs in the single digits and
sub-teens were Predicted for the
northern Plains. Temperalures were

Court orders reporter
to report to jail Friday

· ''there is an accelerating move-. more, the cells are so designed that
ment'' to build "supermax'' facili· the prisoners cannot see oul
ties where these prisoners "are
· When they leave their cellslocked in their cells approximately for the hour and a half of exercise
in a small,,concrete room or to the
law library- they "never emerge
·
without being handcuffed ·and in
chains."
Just as in the prison Charles
23 hours a day."
Dickens visited, prisoners get their
One such unit in particular food from a slot in the cell door.
Pelican Bay in Northern California The convicts in that 19th-cent_ury
near the Oregon border - is often Pennsylvania prison could at least
visited by prison officials from diSIJilct themselves from the awful
other states and counbies. They see · solitude during hours of wor~ in
it as a slate-of-the-art paradigm of their cells - at a loom, a bench or
how to totally control and b~ the a wheel. (Dickens told..of. a new
spirit of even the toughest convtcts. pnsoner who begged, G1ve me
When former California Gov. some work to do. or I shall go ravGeorge Deukmejian dedicated Peli· ing mad.")
can Bay in 1989, he proudly preAt Pehcan Bay, how~ver•. J!le
dieted that · "it will serve as a hours are Oat and empty. Acuv1ty
modelfor the rest of the nation."
is sbictly limited," Jan Elvin notes.
In Pelican Bay, there are some "The~e are no training programs
3.250 prisoners of whom 1,056 - , for pnsoners, no co~spon~e~ce
those requiring the most control- courses, and no vocationallrall!mg.
are in the inner prison, the Security ... No ~ calls ~ permmed
Housing Unit. There, nothing has unless there ts a ven~able emer·
been left unplanned. No sunlight gency such as a death m the famt·
enters the SHU. The prisoners are' ly."
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locked in their 8-by-10-foot cells
After hts 11me at the Eastern
22 I/2 hours a day and - as Jan Penitentiary. Charles Dickens preElvin writes in the National Prison dieted that "those who have under·
· Project Journal - "Officers com- ~one this punishme~l must pass
municate with prisoners through mto soctety agatn morally
disembodied speakers in the walls. unhealthY. and dise~."
... Every move is monitored by a
Speakjng of Pe~can Bay, James
closed-circuit camera." Further- Parle, a former llSSJstanl warden at

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Ever that, effective next Friday, it will
wonder when you see those full- cut the cost to go from point X to, Y
page newspape.- ads from compet- by $100.
.
ing airlines why their "sale" prices
Next day, Airline B
are usually the same? Have all the
airlines somehow, independently,
arrived at the same prices for seatS
on the same routes?
Airlines say this is just the result announces that it will cut its fare on
of sound business practice. The . the same route by only $50, but
Justice Department, however, says will also cut the price between R
it is the result of illegal price-nx- and S -a popular route of Airline
ing. Essentially, the Justice Depart- A-by $100.
mentis accusing the nation's IT!ajor
- This sends a strong measage
air carriers of price-Hxing through , to Airline A, which responds by
' the use of li complex, computerized · agreeing to withdraw half of the
fare-uacking system operated by proposed cut on the X- Y route.
the airlines' jointly owned Airline However, at the same lime, it sends
Tariff Publishing Co.
·
a counter-measage 10 Airline B by
Each day its emplqyees enter announcing it will not mall:h the
thousands of proposed , price $100 cut that B is ptoposing on the
. changes on the ATPC computer R-S route and inslcad will cut the
system, which is seen only by air- fane only $50.
-Next day Airline B effectivehnes. This allows competitors to
see proposed fare changes. and ·ly agrees, and announces it will
react to them, before they are only cut the R..S fare by SSO. 1be
~~MOunc¢ to the public.
·two then announce lndepolldcndy
In announcing the action, Jus· to the public that effective dip llllllt
tice lawyers gave a hypothetical day the fms both Will dtarp from
example of bow the price-fixins potnt X to Y, and from point R 10
process wcxb:
S, will be c• by the 1111111 $50. ·
-On a Monday, Airline A · On the&lt;very day that Justice
announces on the ATPC S:Ystem announced it w~s going after th.e

at 5:28p.m. and sunrise Wedneseday at 7:52a.m.
Around the nation
Snow fell today in paris of the
M,idwest and rain dampened the
East after a storm dumped piles of
snow in Utah.
Other Western states also
received snow Monday before the
storm system traveled east into the
central slates, bringing with it more
heavy snow and freezing rain
today.
Boston, Chicago, Des Moines,
Iowa , and Bismarck, N.D., bad
snow, while rain fell in parts of the

forecast in the 50s in California, the
high 30s and 40s in the Northeast.· ·
into the low 80s in Florida and :
from the 20s to the40s in the Mid·
west.
·
In Utah on Monday, the N'lllional Guard was called out to help
with removal of snow from canyon
avalanches and clear streets in
downtown Salt Lake City. The
storm shut down governmeni
offices, businesses and schools.
Heavy snow collapsal roofs, but no
injuries were reported.
The nation's high Monday was
87 in West Kendall, Fla.
·

conspiring to r"' the prices of gaso- sl8lelllent that the oil company had .
line and other products and of con- committed "absolutely no wrongtriving a shortage of gasoline to doing" but decided to Iettie
W. VA.
justify price increases.
"given the financial risks inherent -'
The tl7 million settlement con- in presentin¥ such a ci&gt;mplex IIIII·
sists of $65.5 million in cash and ter to a jury m a lengthy trial," , ••.
Settlements were reach.ed prevt·
$11 .5 million in vouchers or
coupons that businesses and non- ously with Exxon, Arco, Uoocat;
..t'1ll!l
proHt or'ganizations will be able to Texaco, Conoco, Amoco an( ·
.cez
Phillips, California Deputy AIIOl'..
redeem for gasoline.
Ice . Sunny Pt C/ojJdy Cloudy
"This sends a message to busi- iley General Tom Dove said.
To be eligible for a voucher, (
nesses that might be inclined to
C11193 Accu-Weolhor, 111&lt;.
engage in the same kind of alleged business or nonP.rofit group mu*
anti-competitive practices ... that have bought otl products from
--~----~-VVea~er---------there's a big financial risk in doing Chevron, Mobil, Shell, Alco. Uno- ·
that," said John EUi!, a Washing- cal, Texaco or Gulf Oil, which is ·
South-Central Qhio
Extended forecast:
ton state deputy attorney general.
now part of Chevron. between
Tonight, occasional rain. Tern·
Thursday through Saturday:
Prosecutors
said
Monday
the
1971 and 1981. Customers can Jet
peratures holding nearly steady
Thursday, a chance of snow
up
to four $5 vouchers.
..; •
.companies
did
not
admit
·
any
MIAMI (AP) - · Rebuffed by !empt of court sentence sland.
around 45. Wednesday, rain likely nortl). Fair south. Lows ;!0-25.
wrm\gdoing.
'
A
federal
judge
in
1m
Angelea·
·
Media attorneys and news exec·
especially in the morning. High Highs in the upper 20s to the low the. U.S. Supreme Court, a rtewspa·
will
decide
how
the
cash
por1ion
of•:
Char.les
Renfrew,
Chevron
vice
near 45. Chance of precipilation 70 30s. Friday and Saturday, fair . per reporter has been ordered to utives said they were surprised and
·
presidenl for legal matters, said in a the settlement is used,
percent.
Lows 15.20. Highs in the mid-20s report to jail by Friday to -serve a disappointed.
"•
"It had the effect of avoiding a
30-day. sentence for refusing to.
to low 30s.
divulge a conHderitial source in a decision that might very well have .
Continued from page 1
child-custody case.
weakened the protection of
The high court on Monday reporters when they use conHden,refused to hear 24-year-old Tim tial sources," said Richard Win· 1993 was Linda Warner at $350 a a subsidy for ttie taxi. service, an(
$11,000 for the recreauon pt0811111.
Roche's appeal, ·letting his con- field, a New Yark a110mey fo'r The month.
Kenneth Basim
Carl.Brannan
Arnold Johnson was re-appoint·,.
Council
also
hired
John
Ander·
Associated ,Press and other news
Kenneth William Basim, 77, of
Carl E. Brannan, 79, of Mi~
ed
to the nx:reation commiuee for 1 :
son
of
Pomeroy
at
$500
a
month,
organizations.
Reedsville, died on Monday mom- port, died Monday, Janpary I •
·
on a month-to-month basis, for , full five year term.
----ing, January 11. 1993 at Arcadia 1993 at Veterans Memorilil HospiOn the suggestion of Council1, •
"At the same time, it leaves technical assistance on the water
Nursing Center in Coolville.
tal in Pomeroy.
.
slanding !! _very p~blematic lower and sewer system. Mayor Hoffman man Jack Sauerftdd, it was decid·',
l:Ie was born in Torch, son of
He was born in Ell~nsboro, ·
court dec1s1on wh1ch has a purpose reported that Anderson is a ceni- ed to Send letters of ap[llel:iation to: :
the late Sherry and Bertha Dunfee W.Va. on November. 9, 1913 • son
or effect of punishing a reporter for Hed technician and will provide the David Koblentz and Richard Jones
Basim. He was a cmpenter.
of the late WiUiam R. and Margaret
having published accurately a pub· same service to the village which for their ciloperation IIIII assistance ·,
Surviving are a sister, Ruth Riggs Brannan. He operated a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) lie document that he obtained law· an out-of-county engineering rJJ111 to the village during their tams as ;
B · 0f M ·
d
garage and was an auto mechanics Former Ohio Senate President fully
.... On balance, it's an unsatis- haS been provided for .$1,0~0 for Meigs County commiliioners. ·,: •
aslm
anena, an several instructor at Meigs High School.
Oliver Ocasek has been chosen
nieees and nephews.
Roger Manley met with Council
factory result"
the past several years.
Besides his parents, he was pre·
He was a member of Middleport- pr&lt;;sident of the revamped State
to
discuss trash pickup and cost.
Hiring of Anderson, Pomeroy
ceded in death by a brother, Paul Church of Christ and a veteran of Board of Educ'ation.
· ·
The
question 'of reducing thtl:In 1990, a Martin County judge village administrator, is another
Basim.
the U.S. Navy during World War
Ocasek, of Northfield, was
cooperative effort between the two charge had been raiaed by Council
Services· will be held on II. He was a member .of Feen~y- elected Monday by the 11-member found Rocbe in conteml_ll for refus- communities, the mayor said.
after the landfill tipping fee hact:
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at White- · ~enn~u Post 128 AmenC!I" Legton board,, which elected Virginia ing to say who let him see a court
been iliscontinued tn September:
He
also·
noted
that
Middleport
Blower Funeral Home in Coolville, m M1~dlcpon and Mtddleport Purdy of West Union as vice presi- order telminating a mother's rights Village employee Bill Browning is However, Manley reported thalth!l .
to a girl whose 3-year-old half-sis·
with Rev. Seldon Johnson ofnciat- Mason~c Lod~e 363 F~AM. '
dent.
studying to become a certified tipping fee in the same amount :
ing. Burial will be in Torch Ceme·
· He IS surytved b~ hts wife, Jessa
The board also drew lots to ter was beaten to death.
Such information is confidential technician and will be taking the came back on as of Jan. 1 to give: •
tery. ·
M~e "Mazt.e" Rus~ell Brannan: determine the length of each memthis spring.
the 'district operating monies.
•· ·
Friends may call at the funeral Mtddleport, four sisters·m·law. ber's first term. The board previ· under state law, but Roche's'paper testCouncil
accepted
the
offer
of
Also
discussed
with
Manley
was
home on Tuesday from 2 to 4 p m Clyda Allensworth_ and Flora Dell ously was made up of 21 members, at the time, The Stuart News, quot· James G. Mourning, CPA to the village's recycling program.:•
and 7 to 9
· · Grueser, both of Middleport, Susan one each from Ohio's congression- ed from the order iti a story on the
review Hnancial slatemeniS for the Manley says that he hopes to keep
case.
p.m.
Rollings of Delaware,_Ohio, and al districtS.
pas! ·two years and the budgeted the recycling center&lt;in operation·.i •
; Edylhe Jay of Columbus; tivo
financial stptements for 1993. He noted that he is currently pick·' .
' nieces, Debbie Gerlach, MiddleMourning volunteered to perform ing up recyclables in Mason Coun~ ;
port, and Dorothy Roach, Pomeroy;
.
the
work on a no-charge ltasis as an ty and rectiving compensation, and
two nephews, Richard Rollings,
Continued from page 1
as'ked consideration of that from· ,
interest
in helping the communily.
. Mason, W.Va .. Charles Dotson,
Veterans Memorial
Rife, Robert J. Jacks, Kenneth E. Hayes, Dana J. Aldridge, Thomas.
Middleport. The lack of markel r~ .;
Mourning
said
that
after
the
Pennsylvania, and Charles
L. Dorst, Sr., and SteveR. Hartenbach.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
recycled
materials has resulted in
review,
he
would
meet
with
council
Nicholas of Michigan; and several
Mary Haggerty, Middleport.
•
and
present
findings
and
recomvery
little
profit. Manley said.
'· •
other nieces and nephews.
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
No
decisions
were
made
as
tG mendations.
Then
if
additional
Besides his parenas, he was pre·
Diana Starcher, Robert Moore, and
work is required, he would set forth whether the recycling program will
ceded
in death by two brothers and
An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in Meigs
Richard Friley.
the
speciHc scope of thll! worlc so continue in Middleport or whethe~ .
four sisters.
County Common Pleas Court by Carl William Carmichael,
the village could request a pro- · the village will be able to come UJI.that
Services will be held on ThursPomeroy, and Terri Lynn Carmichael, Pomeroy.
with some compensation for Man-·,
posal
from a CPA.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
day at 1 p.m. at Fisher Funeral
A dissolution has been granted in the court to Charles Bryan
Icy:
·
• ·
Downtown
Revitalization
..
Home in Middleport with AI HartWolfe and Mary Kay Wolfe. A divorce action has been granted to
After
hearing
a
complaint
fro111.
•
second
reading
was
given
to
A
Discharges, Jan. 11. - Brian son officiating. Burial will be in
Chiistina Marie Gambrel from Roger Wayne Gambrel.
the ordinance setting ~p a design Virgil Phillips on early-morning-..
Wilbur, Jessica }:loward, Nola Riverview Cemetery.
review committee which will work noise from and near the Blue Tar-, •
Bradshaw, Marlin Nibert, Aprir
Friends rna~ call at the funeral
in
conjunction with the downtown Jan, Council agreed to ·pauol the '
Masters, Dakola Russell, Charlotte home on Wednesday from 2 to 4
revital1Z3tion
project
area more and also to contict Mar· .•
Carringlon, Geraldine Parsons. p.m. and 7 to ·9 p.m.
Emergency Services units answered the foHowing calls: MONThe
purpose
of
the
committee
cia
Terry, operator, to see if shC::Marlena Schaniger, Mary CaldDAY, 10:35 a.m., Racine unit to Valley Bell Road, Cecil Rosebeny
can
get her customers to be less ,
will
be
to
see
that
all
work
is
being
well, Anna Fulks, Debbie Smith, Gilbert Fitzwater Sr.
to Holzer Medical Center; 12:01 p.m., Pomeroy unit to Second
done in aceordance with grant noisy when they leave her eslab· :
·Corbin Sellers, Cecil Roseberry
Street, Carl B{annon to Veterans Memorial HosP,ital; 12:10 p.m.,
lishment. Phillips and his family
Gilbert Fitzwater, Sr., 61, Rou~t
requirements
an~ lldd flavor to the
and Aline Ellenwood.
Syracuse unil to John Street. Deidra Carleton to 0 Bleness Memorireside
near the bar.
_·,.
I,
Ewington,
died
Tuesday,
Jan:
12,
overall restoration project.
Births, Jan. i t - Mr. and Mrs.
al Hospital; 4:02p.m ., Pomeroy to New Hope Road, Otis Casto to
The mayor.'s report showed. :
It was reported thill four dona·
Kenneth Hill, daughter, Bidwell, 1993, at Grant Hospital, Columbus.
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 7:54p.m., Syracuse unit, Tammy Parsons
Funeral arrangements will be
lions
have
been
made
to
the
receipts
of $4,283 for December. .··
and Mr. and Mrs, Harry Kuhn, sbn,
to Pleasant Valley from station; 8:41 p.m., Racine to Vine Street.
Attending
the meeting were
announced
later
by
the
McCoy·
the
revilal:
sueetscape
portion
of
OalcHiU .
April Hudson, Ueated; 9:54p.m., Middleport to Cole Stn:et, Jamie
Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
ization project. Donating were Mayor Hoffman, Clerk· Treasuret
Hudson, treated• .
Holzer Medical Cenler. $750; Teri Hockm8!1, and Council mem, .•
Farmers Bank and Peoples Bank, bers, Horton, Sauerfield, Jud.y..;
'
$1,000 each; and Columbia Gas Crooks, and lames Oatworthy.
$100.
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) murder in the Jan. 4 shooting of his
Plans are moving forward to rue Committee to meet
Senior Citizens Center on Jan. 28
Lodge to meet
- The search continues for a Myr- estranged wife, Marie Willis.
the
revitalization grant request for
from 1-4 p.m, and 7, 10 p.m. Class·
The Meigs County Republican
Harri~onville .Lodge No. 411
tle Beach Air F6rce Base senior
Mrs. Willis, 30, was testifying
up
to
$400,000 with the Ohio Executive Committee will meet 111 "
es
will
also
be
held
on
Feb.
16
airman from Ohio who is accused in a military hearing that her hus- F&amp;AM will meet Saturday at 10
Department of Development.
of killing his wife in the base's band burned her with a propane .. a.m . for work in the entered from 7·10 p.m. at Southern High Deadline for Hling is Feb. 5. Jean 7 p.m. on Wednesday at the COurt·
house. All members are urged to. ·
legal affairs ofnce; but police say torch and choked her in two sepa- apprentice, degree. All master School Voag Building. in Racine. Trussell who is heading up the pro- . auend.
· .,,
For
other
times
and
locations
in
they have no le8ds.
·
·
rate August incidents, The Sun ·masons invited.
ject for Middleport is currently getneighboring
counties,
contact
the
Police stepped up the search News of Myrtle Beach reported.
ting commitments from business Bookmobile schedule
extension ofnce at 992-6696.
Grange to meet
Although MyrUe Beach Police
Monday by distributing posters of
and building owners on what they
Meigs County Bookmobile
The Rock Springs Grange will
Jeromy Willis, who is charged with initiaUy thought Willis remained in ·
will db and ho'!V much money they "!illThe
Trustees to meet
make
the following stops this
the area, they now,say he·may have meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the
The Olive Township Trustees will put into the projects. Grant · week: WEDNESDAY, Racine, 12
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
left
the
Qrand
Strand.
.
The Daily Sentinel
will meet Friday at 7:30p.m. at the funding is on a dollar-for-dollar noon to 5 p.m., Portland, 6 to 7
Police distributed a wanted flier Radford.
Shade River State Foresii'Y Build- match basis.
p.m.; THURSDAY, Rutland, II
(U8P8 llMIIO)
that includes a photo of Willis to
Other Business
ing to discuss 1993 appropriations.
a.m. to 3 p.in., Dexter, 4 to 6 Jl.m.,
Club to meet
Publilbed OYOrY aRomOoa. Monday
local businesses over the weekend
Mayor Hoffman reported that he Bradbury, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.; Tuptht'O\IIh Frt4oy, 111 Court SL~ ~roy,
The Third Wednesday Homeand on Monday.
has
requested from the Meigs pers Plains, 12 noon to 3 p.m., SucOhio by lllo Ohio V.Dey 1'11Diiahi,.
Dance planned
Police also are distributing makers Club of Syracuse will meet
CcmpanyiMaltlln.tia · Jnc., Porne1oy,
Counly
Commissioners, $6,000 as cess Road, 3:30p.m .. to 5;30 p.m.,
There will be a dance at the Rut·
Ohio 4157881 Pt.. 1192-2168. 8ooond eta.
posters through the U.S. Marshal Ian . 20. Bring iteins needed to
pootap·polaal-...,., Ohio.
Keno, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.; SATURServi.ce to police departments make uays for February including land American Legion Hall on SatDAY, Syncuse. 9 1.m. to 2 p.m.,
red and white con~truction paper, urday from 8 p.m: to midnight.
Mambar: The Auoolalod Pnu, ... llle , across the counuy, according to
Ohio N..._ - - . , Natl....t
Harrisonville, 3 to S p.m.
Myrtle Beach police De!e(:tiv_e Joe red ink pen or marker, glue or Music will be by Pure Country
Adntllol"l - ~nlatlve Bnnhom
Ban&lt;J.
Public
invited.
paste,
scissors
and
ruler.
.
•
Vella.
.
· Newopaper Bat•, 733 iiii'nt Annae,
New York; New V..t 10017.
In other developmeniS Mondlly,
BaUard anniversau:y
,
~ Power.....:..............J2 1/2
Health Department to close
the Slate Law Enforcement DiviPOSTMASTBR: lionel- ..._to
Harlan
and
Alia
Ballard
will
celAshland Oi.L ••:....................26 7/8
The
Meigs
County
Health
sion said it ciluld rmd no record of
Tho Dolly I!HtiDOt, 111 Caart 81.,
ebrate
their
50th
wedding
anniverAT.T
.................................S1 SIB
Poma* OHio 415'1tll.
Department
will
close
Tuesdar
to
Willis purchasing a 9mm pistol in
honor Meigs County Audnor sary Sunday with an open house II
Banit One...........................so SIB
IIIUCIUPTION JIATU
the slate.
,
.,. Oonlor .. ...."' ••
Any gun sold in Soulh Cjuolina, William Wickline who died Satur· the Long Bottom Community . Bob Evans .........................21
On• w.t.
..- ...........:............ ~ .........
,..,1 .80
Building from 1-4 p.m. Th.e couple
Olanning Shop........:......... I7 114
including those in pawn shops, day in Gallipolis.
Ono
M.95
requests
that
Bifta
be
omilled.
0..0. Yoar........................- .....•.•.•...113.20
Cty
lloldin1.................:.... 2t
must be regiltered through SLED,
Mcmbels
of
the
Chester
Council
Tesll
to
he
given
Fcdelal
Mo2UL ................... I7 718
Any gun legally sold In the slate
- ~~~Jr"
No.
323
Daughters
of
America
are
Ooodyg-T&amp;R
.................677/8
The
Ohio
DeJN!"IIlent
of
Agri·
o.ny.............................................25 Cenu
would show up ln.SLED'f.il:co'ds.
invited.
·
Key
Centurion
...................
21 1/2
culture
will
be
gtving
tests
for
new
Base offlcialt said lut week
nol dootrilllto -tho ..m.
Lands·
Bnd.
.........................
27
314
peaticide
applicators
on
Thursllay
• 1M)' nmll hi ad.._ ltirool to Tho
they had no record showing Willis
Club
to
meet
Umiled
IDe.
...................
:
..
28
Sl8
DollY . _ _ . . . - · ..... t2
(rom
J.
7
p.m.
II
tl.e
Meigs
County'
owned a gun. Personnel are sup-~~~-. Cndll wlllbo lhonThe
Past'
Councilor's
Club
of
Mllllim•lnc
..................
32
~
Extension
Ofrtce.
People
desiring
posed to I'Oiister their JUDI if they
Chester
Council
No.
323,
Daugh·
Rill
RcalluranL
.................
J/16
to
take
the
toll
ahould
have
live on base. Willis had been living
No -.,&amp;lono by IIIII pormtllod In
Relilnce Electric............... .22 1/8
received study materials froln the ten of America, Will meet WednesIn a bale dormitory since August.
..... " - •1111&lt; ..
day
It
7
p.m.
at
the
home
of
MarRobbins&amp;Myas
............... 161/2
Meigs
County
Extension
SCIIVlce
City police have a special hot·
sha
Ketrer.
Other
hostesses
are
Shaney'slnc
......................
23 1/8
line set up, but Detec:tive Tommy prior to talcin_a the test. Call the
JoAnn
Bawil
and
Laura
Mile
Nice,
S11r
Bank
...........................
34
314
Chestnut said they received no new exlonllion offtce at 992·6696 for
ts
Wcndf
Int'L
.......................
I3
1/8
• w.......................................- .. .16
calls Monday. Te.n Myrtle l!each further information.
a 'filllki.............................H........... .76 police' lnvcltigators have been
Orglll111tlonal meetltla
Wortlungtort Ind................23 112
OiJUWaJiolp CJou1F
The
Board·
of
Trustecl
of
the
Stoell reporll 1re tlte 10:30
R-rtlllcalloll
cluaes
usianed
to
the
case.
ta-..: ......................................
.........................................
Recertification elauel for cur· ~eip County Public Ubrary will - · qaotea provided 117 II
Willla, a 23-year~ld grounds
u - .......................................... AO
~eel WednesdaY.
IIIII
Loewl
technician, is from Ironton, Ohio. · rently llconlad JICIIIciM lppllcaton · libnry
In Pomeroy.at .S p.m. at the . .._
_ud
__
_vi
_GalllpoiiL
_ _ _• .
will be bold It the Meigs County
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)Three of the nation's biggest oil
compl!Dies - Chevron. Mobil and
Shell - have agreed to pay $77
million to settle price-fiXing alleg~­
tions in four Western stares.
If approved by a federal jvdge,
the agreement will bring to 10 the
number of oil companies that have
settled similar lawsuits. The settle"

•,

gen~r.a.I

.-::1

By :rhe Associated Press
A cold front sweeping across
Ohio will tum the rain into snow
late tonight and Wednesday, the
National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will fall during
the day from higlts ar.o.und 40
degrees, forecasters said. Readings
will remain on the cool side head·
ing into the weekend, but skies will
become fair.
Tbe record-high temJ!~:rature for ·
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 67 degrees in 1916
while the record low was 13 below
zero in 1918. Sunset tonight will be

Oil companies-agree to $77 million settlement

U.S. may ground airline price-fixing

Berry's World

•
•

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

.

They rend to be general enough to survive even a change in party con·
uol, and the concerns they cover bear striking similarities dating from the
paning words of Harry S Truman,
·
The Cold War, and East-West diplomacy, link them. In his 1953
farewell address, Truman recalled the American withdrawal into isola·
tionism after World War !'and the world uoubles that foUowed, contrast·
ing that with the U.S. stand against com'munism after World War II.
Bush cited that history lesson in his farewell speech series. He said
u.s: leadership and sometimes the use of military force will be essential
to a new world order; that a 'passive America would risk violence, chaos,
the rise of dictators and tyrants.
·
· He also recalled the ftrst ·presidential farewell, George Washiilgton 's.
.·"Two hundred years ago another departing president warned of the
dangers of what he described as 'entangling alliances,:" Bush said at
West Point on Tuesday. " ... But what was entangling in Was!lington's
d8y is now essential." ·
. Bush tempered that by saying that the ·United States should not be the
world policeman, that "the fact that America can act does not mean that it
must" in every case. Bush said militar:Y force makes sense when the
stakes warrant, it can be effective and limited in time and scope, and the
beneHts justify the cost and sacrifice.
· Fonnulations like th9se echo through the farewells of post-World War
II presidents.
·
· The departing Truman said the historians who date the Cold War from
his term ' 'will also say that in those eight yeans, we have set .the course
that can win it ... " He said communism had a fatal flaw that would yield
to the strength and ideals of the Wesl
· Forty years later, the depaning Bush celebrated Cold War victory. ''In
the end, Soviet communism provided no match for free enterprise beyond
· its borders or the yearning for liberty within them,'' he said.
. Eisenhower sounded the most noted of farewell warnings, 51!ying the
Cold War had made a permanent armameniS industry and a vast military
establishment vital, and that America must beware iiS impacl
,"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition
Cif unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military·
industrial complex," said the general who became president. "The poten·
tial for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and 'will persist."
Lyndon B. Johnson, a man of Congress prior to his presidency, chose
to ·leave it in 1965 with a Hnal Staie of the Union address to the House
and Senate. So did Gerald R. Ford, after his 30 months as the unelected
president.
··As he parted in 1977, he told his former congressional colleagues not
to ·intrude on presidential prerogatives. "There can be only one commander in chief," Ford said. "In these times, crises cannot be managed and
wars cannot be waged by committee, nor can peace be pursued sOlely
through P!l!'liameniary debate.•'
dimmy Carter's farewell included a warning that the rise of single
interest politics could distort the national purpose, a disturbing factor, he
said, because the national interest is not always the sum of all special
interesiS.
• Ronald Reagan said there was a warning on his mind as he left office
- ·"our spirit is back, but we haven't reinstitutionalized iL" Indeed, by
the time Bush made his unsuccessful bid for a second term four years
later, the national mood was bleak and pessimistic.
After two foreign policy farewells, Bush may deliver a final finale
From the White House befbre yieldin~ it to Clinton in 10 days.
For lasting last words, one of LBJ s parting observations will do:
. "That phone doesn't ring at 3 o'clock or 4 o'clock in the morning
unless there is trouble.··

:·•
·:•..

sening new records every quarter community service.
During the campaign, Clinton
- the total for the first nine
months of last year Jegistered at said h.e su~ an approach aimed
$24.1 billion - student lending at "simpltfying the swdent-aid program by eliminating banks from
the process and making direct loans
to SIUdeniS through their colleges."
The Bush adrriinisttation grudgingly approved a very limited direct·
lending test prograllllast S)IJIUiler.
Simon thinks Clinton Will tackle
the issue in his first 100 days.
should have a larger public purpose Simon's meetings with Clinton
than serving as a profit stream for Cabinet designees indicate strong
the Chase and Citicorp, which support for the idea, and an even
enjoy a disproportionate share of stronger revulsion toward the cur~nt sySjein of middleman exploita·
the business.
This middleman racket would uon.
be replaced with a system of direct
But transition ream officials are
lending if Simon and Rep. Robert already tasting the lobbying war
Andrews, D-NJ., get their way. that looms. Sallie Mae officials, for
Though there are m_any several example, recently traveled to the
variations or the djrect-lending ht me of one transition orficial to
concept, it would essentially create make the case for the status quo.
a system of direct lending from the
Simon is happy to have a White
government to college campuses . House ally after years of lonely
that would bypass the banks. struggle, but fears that the recent
Simon calls for collections to be full-roun press by Sallie Mae and
handled by the Internal Revenue the big banks Could scuttle chances
S,C!Vice as part of withholding from for reform. Simon says he underpaychecks after graduation. Or, srands "that in politics yoo can get
under one Clinton .proposal, the in just so many fighiS. But tliis is
debiS could be worked off throu~h one where the General Accounting

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Snow ·forecast over_part of Ohio tonight }

Sallie Mae in need of an overhaul

The D-aily Sentinel

m~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stocks

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::1!--llo
w-.. . . . ..IW,.e. . . . . . . . . . . .. . .=.84

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�•

Tuesday, January 12, 1993

Sports

_T he Dailyru~§a~J~!~~~1~J.

I

Page--4

J(ansas,
Seton Hall notch.wins over Oklahoma, Syracuse fives
..

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP S~ Writer
Monday mght was Justification
Night for Kansas and Seton Halt
•

The· No. 4 Jayhawlcs and No. 7
Pirates each faced a conference
opponent ranked in ihe Top 25, and
both justified their higher ranking.

For Kansas, lhe OPIKJMol was
No. 10 Oklahoma at )De Lloyd
Noble Center in Norman, Okla;
The Jawhawks feU behind 48-39 at
!t&amp;ftime, but used a 26-7 run early
m tbe second half to quiet the
I !,372 fans en route to a 96-85
WID.

For Seton HaJI, the opponent
was No. 24 Syracuse, a team duit
had won 26 of the previous 28
m_atdlups between the S~:hools. The
Ptrates never trailed but had to
w!lrk in the second half for a 8().73
Wtn at East Rutherford, NJ.
Jn the onJy other Top 25 game,
No. 18 UNL V topped Missouri
101·84.
.
Adonis Jordan led the comehack
Co~ Ka~sas, scoring an of his 17
pomts m the secood half. The key

was a halftime pep ta11c from coach
Roy Williams:
·~I got on, him a little harder
than the other guys because in the
rust half I didn't thinlc he did anything at all," Williams said.
·
Jordan responded by making all
six of his sl!ots in the second half.
"In the fllSt llaJf I had the atti·
tude that I would talce what the
defense gave me," Jordan said. ·
"In the seconiJ half, I took what I
wanted.,,
Terry Dehere scored 24 PQints .
and Arturas :Kamisbovas added 18
on 7-of· 7 shooting as Seton Hall
( 14-1) il!lproved to 4..0 in the Big
East- its best start since the
league was formed in 1979. Syra·
cuse (9-4) dropped to 1-4 in the

league, its worst' stan since 198().. win on the road. Then it will be
81.
more clear-cut how good we are."
No. 4 Kansas 116
No, 18 UNL V 101, Mismurl84
No. 10 Oklahoma 85
The Runnin' Rebels opened the
Jordan and Richard Scou scored second half with a 10·0 run to
eight points apiece during a 26·7 break open a close game. UNL V,
run that saw Kansas (12-1, 2-0) · which had a 29-game winning'
!urn the nine-point halftime deficit strealc snapped last week by Long
!nto a 6~·55 lead. Rex W!llters fin· Beach State, increased its home·
tshed wtth a season-high 23 points. court winning strealc to 53 P,DieS.
Te~ Evans led Oklahoma with 24
J .R. Rider led UNL V wnh 32
potnts.
. points.
'
No. 7 Seton Hall 10,
Other 11amea
No. 24 Syracuse 73
The Morgan State-Nonh Caroli·
Dehere's 24 points moved him na A&amp;T game was Suspended after
into ,s~cond. place among the a bench-clearing brawl because
school s all-ume leading scorers. bolh teams had only three players
"We're playing one game at a left after· officials handed out ejec·
time," Dehere said. "We've only tions. Morgan State led 35-31 with
played one game on the road so far. I:SS left in ihe first half,
T'le real test will come if we can

;: MINE! - W11iJe Kansas defender Steve Woodberry (left) watch·
,.es the play, Oklahoma's Pete Lewis (20) grabs the rebound with a
•:ven11eanee· from tile Jayhawks' Patrick Ricbey (long arm visible)
: ·l!urinl MODday Dil..'l BJ1 Eillat matcbnp Ia Norman, Okla. · where
: ~e fourth-ranked Jaylaawkl beat tbe Sooners 96-85. (AP) '
'

.....

Scoreboar(l

.·

Monday's scons

In the NBA •••

Vucou.w::r l,N.Y. bnac:n l tie
TmJatD 4, Tampa Bay 1
'
S&lt;. Low. I. Doavil 0

EASTERN CONFERENCE

:·

A!!MIIc Dhtoloo
TW L P,:L
Now YGit ............ l9 12 .613
Ioney ......... ..11 15 .545
B - ................. 17 17 .500
Orlando ..............~ ..t' 14 .500
~ .......... 11
II .319
MWmi,, __, , ........-10 21 .323

w.......,.. . . . ..1o 22

Tonight's games ·

GB

Buff"ala.\. Bostoa, 7:40p.m.
Lol AnacJts at Onawa. 1:40 p.m.
C.Ipry_11 N.Y. hlanden., 1:40 p.m.
Vmeouver•tNew Jcney, 1:40 p.m.
OUaso·•t Minnesola, a:top.m.
S~n J01e at WiMipes. l :40 p.m.

2
3.5
3.5

7
9

.313

9.5

Wednesday's games

CeMnJDIYWon
Olicqo................ .23 10 .fiJ7
CU!VELAND .......20 13 .606
~ ............... 11 14 .54&amp;
Douoil .................. .l6 16 .500
ladWia ................... I 5 17 ."69
Allaftt1 .~ ................ 14 17
.452
Mllw..W. .......... .l4 18 .438

3

s

Hud'ord u Mmtrell, 1:40 p.m.
Wuhinaton "N.Y. Ranacn. 7:40

p.m.

SLLow."T-1,40p.m.
Bay at Drc:troit.. 7:40p.m.
Winn.ipc&amp;ll Edmantm, 9:40 p.m..

6.5

T~mp~.

7.S

8
&amp;.S

Ohio men.'s college
basketball scores

WESTERN CONFERENCE

-

..

MWw•t DI•Won.
T....
W L Pet.
thah .......................2t 10 .rn
~ Ant.onio.. ......... J a IJ
.!lSI
Houi\CI'I ...... ~ ........ .ts t6 .484
Denver ..................... &amp; 22 .267
Minnc&amp;au ................6 23 .'1J:f1
Dollu ........ ...............l 'rl .069

CB
J
6
12.5
14
II

Padfk DINion
........... ......23 5 .821
Scaalc ....................22 R .733
.,,..:..........20 10 .667
Golden State .......... ll 14 .563
L.A. J....akm ............ ll 14 .563
L.A. Oippm ......... l7 16 .SIS
s.eramauo ...."...... 13 11 : 4~3

2
4
7
7
I.S

Mid-Continent Conr.

.QeveJand St. 9-C, W.lllinW: 75
E. lllinoU.16, YIQIJW:toWn St. 75
111.-0\i.cqo B.5,_Wft&amp;ln Sl82

Non--conference.
Cue WCJtcm 11, NY\J 71 (OT)
Louisville 76, Xnie:r, Ohio 7l
Waynmbw); 66, Dyke 64

Major college
basketball scores
Eost

Buffalo 64, N.C.-crccnlbolv 62

11

Dn:td 70, Fonfham 6S

Fairfield 57, Y•le41
F•irleigh Dicitinson 73, Ride- 63
Hanford 13, CcnL. Cannraic:ut St. SJ
lAfayette 89, Sw.nbmore1S

Monday's stores
San An&amp;onio 109, Oetrolt 91
O!.•doae 132., Dallu 113

LdU&amp;h 80. CoWmbU 79

TOillcbt'saames

lAna kl&gt;nd U. 17, M"""""""- NJ. 62
Mlllhaaan 8.5, Colaate 11
Mount SL Mary's,"'Md. 90, Mtrill74
N.try 65, LOyola, Md. 62 (01)
Old DomWon95,Am&lt;ricon u. 88
Rhode Island 86, West Vi.Jainia 82
S.O.. IWI80, Synaae1J
I' ~venture 7B, Dlqueane 73
SL Francia, Pa . .53, Raben. Morris SO
Towaan St. 15, N.C.-AshCIViJle 64
Waana7B, St. Francii,N.Y. 13

Mihnukec1t W11hini)Ort. 7:30p.m.
0Ucltptt0dando,7:30p.m.
Oolderi Sta.. lt Allantl, 7:30p.m.
BG11Maa.E~ .1:30p .m .

l'hilldrJpiU atlndlanl ,1:30 p.m.
Miami. It Ut.ah,' p.m.
PhoeaiJ.atSettUe, 10p.m.
HOUIUlllM LA. Clippm, I0:30 p.m.
New YOlk It Saenmento, 10:30 p.m.
Dalvcrii.Panland, IO:lO p.m.

p.m.Golden State at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
O.llautDcroit.7:30p.m.
San Amonio tt ~. Bp.m.
New Yod!: atDernter, 9 p.m.

WALES CONFERENCE
hlrld&lt; Dhtoloo
TUM
W L T hi CFCA
I'll....... .......... 29 11 4 62 196149
w................. 2217 4 "' 172154
N.Y. . . . . ..... 20 U 6 46181175
- - . ....... 21 11 3 45 141138
N.Y. .... 17 21 4 38 164162
~ ....... 1619 6 38 160162

_.,.._
IS 5

55 115152

24 14 6

S4 111161

OU.•• ...............

•
'
'

•

--

l921SO
160152
133 189
91201

- ................ 23 19 3
- . . . .......... 21 15 6
T.-10 .............. 19 17 1
II. ..... ...:....... 17 20 6
T. .poBay ....... 15 rl ' 2

., 114157
.. 150143
415 14ft41
40 149156
32142168

SmJIIM Dl... lon

v.k:oU.. ......... u u s

.57 194126

1M""""'·· .... 21

41117171
40 147160
3J 1Ill16

Col~ ..............

25

14
16

4 54

5
~............ ..... u 20 4
''
o. ......... 14 ::M 7

169t:W

1•11................ 6" 2 ·14 l23210 '

'·

&amp;3
Li.beny 60, Owia1on SCMbcm 49
Louin-ilk 76, x•
Ohio 73
Md.-E. Shore 71, Be\bllne-CoolmM

6!

.

M""!'hio SL 109, SE ....._,.,58

N. CUolina St. 6J, O.'l'i.d~t·a 58
New c:&gt;rlcaM BJ Ta.,.hn ArncrX:an
62
•
Radford 14, Co.tal Catolina IJ •
Ric:hmcmd 74, ElllCarolinll65

S. C...W..SL6l,Ho..udU. S6

SE-.;90......., ..... 761

SW L.aaiaian• It , South Alabama 76
·· Sot.nhan U. 71, Mill. Valley Sl 11
Sldlm 63. Florida Adatlic 60
Tennc.ce SL 80. Mum1 SL 76
Tenne~Me Toch 97, Mord'let.dSt. 79
W. Ke:mucky u4,t.am.rB9
Williun A M&amp;ry 92. Geo.Je Muon 89

Midwest··
Bullet 64, La Stile S9

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
.
TWLTPMCFCA
~............. 23 16 6 52 149122
.

CalL florid1 16, Ccnla!U) 73
CoiL otClw......,56, Ma=SS
Delawlle St. 74, florida A&amp;M 71
E. Ke:nnu:ty 80, Middle Tenn. 65
Jame~ "Madilor~. 99, N.C.-WilmingtOD

.ne:r.

In the NHL ••.

Butf•lo ............... 21 U 6 41
llaiiCWI ................ 2217. 2 . 46
Hartford ............. 12 26 • 28
4 37 3 11

....,

.

Tea•
W-L
I. K&lt;ntu&lt;kr (SO) .........11.0
2. M;dUpt (14).......... 12·1
3. 1luU(l) ............. l0.1
• . Kmuu ................ ll-1
S. N&lt;nth C....... ........12·1
6.1nd.iana.....____.._ ...... ll-2
1. Sdon.HalL ............. IJ.I
I . Ga.opTed\ ............9-1
9.AIUnlu ... - ............ JI -l
IO. Okloh.... .............. ll -2
li . CINCNNA11 ..........9·1
12. Ari&amp;ona-·-·-·-...- ..7·2
ll. lowa. .......... - ......... .11·2

1,601
1,545
1,496
1~95
1~2A

1,323

1,244
1,199
1,03.5
1,014
974
7.50
. 701
14. Viq.inia ...•• - ............9.() 681
IS. Casnca:iN. _ ...........7-2 594
Ue.uaJ. .....- ........10.3 594
11.........................9·2 511
II. VNl..V ......................6-1 Sl6
19. Miaw ma ...............IO.l 441

:ru;,,...................l-2

21. OIDO ST••.•• - ..... .9-2
22. Bc:.lm Cal.lep•• - - ..9-l
23, MidUJaa SL .........-. B-3
24.5,...... .................9·3
25. Uuh ....................... l0.2

299
260

226
157

t46

Cleveland St. 9-1, V.:. Illinois 7S
DnU 66, Wiehit.t St. 62
.E. DJ.inoU: 76, Youngfto'Wn Sl 1S
lll:·~caao 85, Wri&amp;ht Sl. 82
Wincu St. n , s. lllino!J 74
Indian• Sl 80, CreiaJdon 63
• Mo.- Kintu City 101 Wuhi.naton
•.
•
N. D.linoia 73, V•lpartUo 6.5

Mo. 62

Southwest
• Allbama Sl 96, Prairie View 92

Ark1nus Sl 60, lacksmviUe .SS
B•ylor 89 , SW TenS St. Ill
Hou.ston 83, Wyoming 56
Jtc.kson St. 84, Te.tu SoUthern 13
(OT)
•
•
96, OklahOm•
TulN 66, Bradley 43 .

ICJJu••

•s

.

Lorain-''· Loroift

C.th.39
t...cuvillo Vall 63, OU 11i11 U
·.
U.th.,. E. 52. Failpocl21
Modioal39, "'"'-iilo IUvenicle 37
Muondw Ott. ••• Del.. Ott. :w
Mui.on. Local 50, New lnHville 31
Moy(IOld 54, Salc•d3
~bormou NW 61, Pon&amp;mouth Clly

Pts. WHk

2
3
I

•
6
.5

51
. Mcl&gt;ooold
46(2ar)

1

11

49. Pctenbwa Sprinafidd
MeiJI ss, Fodort!IL&gt;cba 19

16
20
8

Nellcovillo-Ycd&lt; 69. Milllr60

10
13

Mn- Union 43, Troy 26
-49.Amoo31

Northmor 40, fledridti.OMI 29 ,

25

Sorildtll , Tot. WoodWI1d 29
Painc.villo IUtvey 60, Geneva 42
Richmand Dalo Souahcutern 61 Me·
CW.49
.•
Ripley59,LIW.m w.-..45
Jtioter 61, Wamn Locll 34
5L a.u.v;n. 63, Steubatville 35
~

19

IS

9

12

11

Ed-

14
21

145

Othen nccl.-lnJ ntn: Vandctbih
139, florida St.ltc 122. florida 114, TY·
lane 11. Lona Bach Sate IS. Nebruka
611, MU....n 45, Plasbwp 39, LouUville
25, New o.v.n. 21,
\ S.
Memphis S11tc 13, H®lllan 9, LSU 9,
M.t-.qucuc 9. Wake- Forwt I, XAVIER,
OHIO I, Clemsan 6,. New Muic:o State 6,
Southcm Cal 6, Mauact.ICUI 4., Temple
-4, WEST VIRGINIA 4, Tennessee 3
Btilh•m~Ya.a 2. Cati(oml• l, low~
S...te 1. Oklahe'WNI Sute: 2. Allbl.tna 1.

s""""'" nUno•

46

SM&lt;IyGde 66,
N. 41
Shtn.....,..61, Fnwior51
T.U...d .. 43, Akron OurtdlllS
Tanp)oChr. 51,M...... 42
Tot. N-Dtme 53, Tot. Stet SO
Tol. SL U - 61. Tol. Libbey 29
Tot. Sccu61, Tol. RopnSl
Tl)l. WU. 61, Tal. CerllAJ 44
llbriduvWo CllymDm ,7, Ridaernun

Union Local61, WirncmWe 33
V.U., Viaw 13, J.Mnon.Moarot25
Va Bwt~t S., PIDdon.-Oilboa 41
V-45, Mceamb 34
.
Weilo1on41, Tdmblo3B

Welll.rue46, Minao 25

W....... Sl,Elpi• 39
Wbeelmbwa6S,Pillaon41 .

Wktliffo Sl, C&amp;o. Hlwkcn 45

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

Wodd Htn'CIIt 70, QUo Daf 10
. z.n.mllo 61, Combridp41

Transactions
Bueb.U

AJcom St. 16, Orambling St. !J

Wuttinlloft 11iJ,OI\Oft,1:30 p.m.
•
CLEVJ!LAND 11 New Jersey , 7:30

-.u .......... 25

...w..'

U&gt;pn62,- 34

· South

Wednesday'• pmos

~ ........,......

Leil*e 5t,liberty-Bmtcn 37

poinl. for • l51h-pl..,. ,.... ond p,...;oo,

ByHOWARDSINER
"
Today's questions in the world
of sports:
• Who will be sitting in the

·

Amn'lcooLuaue

SEATrlJ! MARINERS - A,...t,.
tcrrna with Kerry Wood•on •nd Mlkc

R...._,pildtoa,on_,__

"'............

and Miie fitzten.ld, cttcher, .on a minor·

11!X.U RANGERS - S;ped Dooa
O.rif. ... - . ""' t&gt;oua Stnnae. Widd·
a-, IG CDI.tncll wbh ~City o( the
~

.Americq Aaocilti.an.

-Dutch-....

TORONTO BLUE lAYS- s;1ned
Tony Cutillo, pildlc:z-, 10 a minar-IDI,ua

NL -

Nailon.. Lupe
Announced the rel.iremenl or

p;...

SAN DIEOO PADRES - Siane4

v.,••

""Everybody feels confident
now," said Morton. "We wanted
to win it We knew defense would
be the key to winning.''
In other games Monday involving Ohio schools, Sum Mitchell
scored 24 points and Gravelle
Craig added 23 to lead Cleveland
State over Western Illinois 94-75 in
the'Mid-Continent Conference.
The Vikings (6-3 overall, 2-0
MCC) led Western IUinois (3·9, ()..
2) by a score of 4140 at ihe half.
The Vikings shot 60 percent in
the second half compared with 46
percent by the Leathernecks.
· . Shane Teagarden led Westem
lllinois with t8 points. ·
In other MCC action, Derrick
Landrus bad 18 points to lead East·
em IUinois to a 76-75 victory over
Youngstown State.
Landrus made two free throws
with II seeonds remairting to give
the Panthers (3 • 7 overall, 1·1
MCC) a . 76· 73 lead. Antoine
Woocls made the final baslcet for
Youngstown State (2·8, 1'1).
.r
In Chicago, Shere!! Ford scored
29 points in leading Dlinois-Chicago back from 13·0 and 32·9
defteits 10 beat Wright State 85-82
in iheMCC.
.
Wright State (8·4 overall, 1-1
MCC) was ahead 5Jc37 at halftime.
Down 61-47, the Flamea (6-6,
2..0) used a 15·.3 run to pull within ,
64:(i2. During ~ spurt, Ford hit a
pwr of three-pomters and a tip-in
baslcet to account for eight consecuti~e points for Illinois-Chicago,
whtch was added by Wright's total
of 27 turnovers.

Foodland will sponsor
Redmen game Thursday

OSU's Smith, Simpson
Big Ten's top players
PARK RIDGE, Ill. (AP) TwQ..freshmati $Uards from Oliio
. State are the B1g Ten basketball
players of ihe week . .
Katie Smith earned the honor
Monday for the second consecutive
week after averaging 21.5 ·points
and 6.5 rebounds. She made seven
s.teaJs, and committed only one
turnover.
In Ohio State's 70·67 loss at
Vanderbilt, Smith led the Buckeyes
with 25 . points and had. six
rebounds and no turnovers.
She scored 18 points, grabbed
seven rebounds, made four steals
and sank eight of 11 free throws in
an 87-57 defeat of !Uinois.
Greg Simpson made 12 of 15
field goal attempts - including
eight for eight from 3·point ran11e
- and made only two turnovers m
the Buckeyes' two wins last week
to earn the men's award

MEIGS CO. DUll CLUB
WILL START
WINTER QUARTER

IEGIIIIIIIIG CLASSES
011 JAIIUAIY 13
.

AT 6:00 P.M.

COOLVILLE ELIIIIIIIARY
AIID 011 JAIUAIY 14
· AT CAILnOII SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE AT 8:00 P.M.
For Mor. tnfonnllllon

C..l992-6139

Juan AJO.Ia, plldler, 10 a lllin~IMP-C
· contr•ca with "Lu
of 1M Pactfic
Co;a~ l.equo and in¥ued him 10 tprinJ
1liWISIU I

ftCIII·-- play.,

•

Buketb.U
N1Uonal J·•d"' Aa.datlon
COLDEN STATB WAUIORS AeQVIOOd BillyOweot. lonnol.Cnm the
~ liA. PIIOIII V"dor A"'··dw, o.n·
HR.

~

*·MINNI!SOTA
......... TDIBEitWOLVES -

.

CAll US

• DY
I

... ~TODAY!

992·2124

P'uod,._y......,_Nonoo!Sid·

...,~-.--. .

I

'

HoclteJ

"·-J!oobr
80STON
BIVINS-.......
•• ,...

J ..._

aotliwwtii-~­

LOI ANGEUI IUNOI - Sen't
O.Yid-. ......... ODd ......

M';;!.1Q;- "thO ......
NEW

~VD.S -

Recolled
T... ~loll ...., Cmm Utko ol the

"--.,Loa....
'
NEW TORI: ISUNDBIS - R•·

_
,.
~Am&lt;ri...;
._..,

Sotlla:
1Mllloloonl
Pilon.
·OIIWiaio
laom Cootoal Dlllilot o1

llocby t:ao-

.

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS.
. .$
99
Wfth1 ..ml

10

·

stands at Super Bowl XXVII?
. Only fans with the right connecllons or plenty of money will get
mto the Rose Bowl on Sunday, J&amp;n.

Columbus Chill to remain
at o!d Ohi? State Fairgro0:nds
Cohseum.Indefinitely
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ·With plans for a city sports arena
apparently .on ice for now, pfficials
of the Ohio Expositions .Commis,
sian and the Columbus Chili are
skating around the issUe of what to
do with the city's popula,r hockey
team.
Plagued with faulty icemalcing
equjpment, an aging Ohio State
Fairgrounds Coliseum and scheduling conflicts, bolh sides are won·
dering bow much improvements to
the co~seum are going to cost, wbo
tS gomg to pay for them and··
whether they are wonh it.
The Chill and the commission
are in the second. year of a fiveyear agrooment. Under the contract,
the commission will take rcsponsi·
bility this year for, the ice equip·
ment, wh1ch the C~ill bought, if it
meets·commission specifications.
Th~ ponable icemalcing equip·
ment 1s 10 workmg order, said
David Paitson, Chill president
"It's.certainly going to need .
work on 11. But I wouldn'! say there
is a five-year warranty, either," he
S8ld.
The commission has said problems have arisen because the
equipme~t is put down and taken
up repeatedly to make room for
oiher.ev~JS in ihe cotii!I'Um.
Instead of taking resPQnsibility
for equipment that might not last,
the commission is considering
whether to buy permanent equip·
menL
,
.
Fairgrounds maintenance super-

intendent Charlie Wilson "has
been investigating the cost of new
ice equipment permanently
installed in the concrete floor •'
said Carol Ruslcowski, commissi~n
marketing director.
The commission also is consid·
ering whether to update the arena
with new dasher boards along the
ice and higher Plexiglas for safety.
Total cost of the improvements
is being estimated at nearly
$400,000, Ms. Ruskowski said.
Officials bope they can save money
if items for the coliseum are pur·
chased in connection with the
Chill's plans for a double practice
rink in Dublin.
"We might have some buying
power for the dasher boards and the
P.lexiglas," Paitson said.
But that would be the end of the
Chill's investment in the fair·
grounds building, he added. "We
made our investment in the ice
equipment. In all, we've put in
more than $250,000 in this deal
with the commission," he said.
. When its contract ends in 19%
the ChiD has the option 10 renew ii
for five years. But speeqlation con·
tinues that a larger sports arena
might be built in the city, so Pail·
son. isn't about to commit to an
extension.
"We intend to do out ftrst five
years there at the fliirgrounds," he
"d "B ·r · h b ' ld"
ut I anot er Ul mg
sa• .
comes to town, we'll take a look at
it. We'd be stupid not to."

•

.
!heY gtve
the Big Ten seven teams
m the Top 25. Mi~hi~an. Indiana,
Iowa, Purdue and Mtch1gan State
were ~dy ranlced. The Big East
has f~ve ranl&lt;ed teams and the .
Allanuc Coast Conference four,
The other new teams were
Boston College, which beat Viilan!&gt;va and Georgetown, and Utah,
wh1ch downed Texas-EI Paso and
Brigham Young. Boston Colle11;e
(9·2) had the longest absence from
the rankings. 1'he Eagles were last
in the poll late in the 1984,85 sea- ·
sonwhentheywere201h.
Minnesota ( 10·1) was 20th in
thefmalpollofthel989-90season
and Ohio State (9·2) and Utah (10·
2) were both ranlced laSt season, dje
Buckeyes
third
thefilljl!
polldrop·
and
the Runnin'
Utesin 19th
before
ping out early in ihe season.
The teams dropped from the
poll were No. 18 Vanderbilt, No. ·
•

Kansas was fourth, North Carolioa and Indiana swapped places

h

31, to watch the NFL title game.
About 101,000 spectators will
attend the 1993 Super Bowl. The
face value of a ticket was set by the
NFL at $175. But you won't find
any left at that price.
·
About 72,000 of the tickets to
SB XXVII were to be allocated ·
through the 28 NFL clubs. That
includes 35,000 tickets to be split
between the two competing teams
- the champions of the American
and National Football Conferences.
It also accounts for more than
10,000 tickets divided by the two
host teams: the Los Angeles Rams
and the Los Angeles Raiders.
All of the NFL clubs nonnally
distribute a, large portion of their
Super Bowl tickets to holders of
their own season ticlcets.
· Tbis is how the remaining
29,000 Super Bowl tickets -those
left after all of the NFL teams
receive their share - were to be
allocated:·
The NFL office distrib~tes
25,000 tickets to sponsors, .advertisers, networks; media, charities,
and its affiliated companies and
organizations - such as NFL
Properties, NFL Films, NFL Alum-·
· ni and the NFL Players Associalion.
Some 1,500 tickets were sold at
· a random drawing in September.
The Super Bowl XXVII Host
Committee was allowed to buy
2.500 tickets to raise money to
enhance the Rose Bowl and pay for
special events.
The host committee does not
sen individual game.tickets - ·only
the NFL can do that .offteially. But
the Los Angeles-based group does
offer a varietr of VIP Patron Pack·
ages, which mclude tickets to the
Super Bowl.
For instance, for $1,750 per person,yougetaseat,preferredpark,ing. a celebrity brunch, a .pre-game
·
chalk talk by an NFL coach, post·
game dinner, and such souventrs as
a Pe~ Max ·Commemorative print.
Lesser packages sell for $1,250 per
person and for $995 per person.
Meanwhile, brokers - who
offered premium prices on the open
market for Super Bowl tickets were reponed to be re-selling them
. for up to SI,SOOeach. Scalpers will
reportedly be gening up to $2,000
bythedayofthegame.
The Super Bowi ·has become an
annual sell-ouL But it didn't begin
that ~fYY· 61 ,946 fans attended the

from last week and Seion Hall
remained seventh.
Georgia Tech, the team that
ended Duke's 23-game winning
strealc on Sunday, moved from 14th
to No. 8 and was followed by
!"rkansas and Oklahoma, which
Improved. from 13th and 11th
respectively.
'
Cincinnati led the Second Ten
and was followed by Arizona,
Iowa, Vtrginia, Connecticut,
UCLA, Purdue, UNLV, Minnesota
and Georgetown.
OhioStateledthelastfive,fol·
lowed by Boston College, Michi·
gan Swc, Syvacuse and Utah.
ganMinnesota,
State and which
Purduebeat
last Michi·
week,
and- Ohio State, which beat Penn
S~te and Iowa, were among the
four new teams to this weelc's poll.

0

&gt;

~··

\

I

•

22 Massachusetts No 23 Florida
State and No. 24 Pittstx'.rsh.
•
Vanderbilt (11 ·3) lost both iis
games last weelc to Memphis swc
andFiotida
Massachusetts (6-4) dropped
two of three last week and in the
consecutive losses to 'cincinnati
and Temple, the Minutemen
showed how much they miss con,
terence player of the year Harilel
Williams, who is still out with
broken right hand.
•
Florida State (9-5) split ill :
games, losing to VirJiinia beforp:
beating Walee Forest tn overtime •
Pittsburgh(9·2)wasranlcedforjuii:
one .weclc before being beaten~;
StJohn's.
••
Virginiateam
(9..0)in isDivision
the onlyI,Dlliet:
unbeaten
and:•
the Cavaliers, who jumped frodr!
25th to 14th, play at Duke on,SUJl•:
day.
,·.

a

• •
...

Minnesota Timberwolvesfire Rodgers;~~
Lowe appointed as interim head coachspil(l::~:

By MIKE NADEL
MINNEAPOUS (AP)- Given
the choice between building for
tomorrow or winning today, Min·
nesota Timberwolves general manager Jack McCioslcey prefers the
latter.
Because coach Jimmy Rodgers
was doing neither, McCloskey
ftred him and promoted top assistant Sidney·Lowe as interim coach.
When winning and developing
pl!'yers come into cQnflict, where
w1ll Lowe lean?
"Winning," Lowe said Mon(lay
at the news conference to announce
the change. "Winning the game,
no question about it."
Said McCloskey: "Winning is
the bottom· line, and that's wnat
we're going to do."
.Winning is somethin~ the Tim·
berwolves have done httle of, so
McCloskey felt obligated to act.
Minnesota became the second
NBA tearilto ftre its coach this season. San Antonio dismissed Jerry
Tarkanian last month.
Only Dallas (2·27) has a worse
record than Minnesota's 6-23. The
Wolves have lost 16 of their last 18
games, their two victories over
Dallas.
Low,c, who turns 33 next weelc
and is 'the NBA's youngest coach,

is the third in Minnesota's 3 l(l·
· year history.
.
Bill Musselmaa guided the club
to 22-110 and 29-53 records in its
fllSttwo seasons;'but was fired for
refusing to develop young players
and for a perceived inability to
communicate with the team.
. In Rodgers' first season, the
Tunberwolves were an NBA-worst
15-67. His 21-90 record here ranks
last among· league coaches during
that ~n.
,
T~ts seasons struggles came
despne a series of moves thatMcCI&lt;_&gt;sicey thought would dramall·
cally tmprove the team, most sigmficantly dr!!fting Christian Laet·
mer ~d liadin~ for Chuclc Pe:son
and Micheal W1D181Ds.
But the Timberwolves are 3-12
at home and have lost eight games
by atl.east 20 points after suffering
only SIX such blowouts all last sea•
son.
· .
,
"I tliought this team could win
25 home games," said McCioslcey,
who has changed two-thirds of the
. roster since arriving in June.
"That's not too realistic now."
All he asks of a coach, he said,
is to "make sure we lUll every
chance to win.·'
7
He said Rodgers didn.' t do that.'
And, McCloskey said, it wasn't as .

if Rodgers was losing io ihe
of building for the fliiUre.
:·;
The coach had all but s~:
using centers Felton Spencer*
Luc Longley - the team:• tof
draft choices in 1990 ancl 1991 ....,
and had rarely played 1992 second;.
rounders Chris Smith and Mari()JI';
Maxey.
.;:
Lowe, Musselman's startinJI:
point guard in the Timberwolves-:
tnaugural season, said: "If we're.·
winning, some of those younr :
players are going IOhelp us."
.'·
. Rodgers, under contract througli:
the 1,993-94 season, did not:
respond to messages left on hi 11•
telephone answering machine. . :
Laeuner, whose play
been"
called selftsh at times by ms .tcaJm.
mat~s. was unsure what wn1"a
result from the change.
"We
be Bble to put tltiii1gi ~
together
we mit&gt;ht
bad as we are ·
lr·be
·

WALLP.IAPER
M
AND BOAD'E

Hornets, Spurs NBA's victors

DALLAS (AP)- Lariy John·
son's return to his native Dallas
included a home-cooked meal and
a feast on the NBA's worst team.
The Charlotte forward scored 24
points and had seven rebounds and
seven assists as ihe Hornets handed
the Dallas Mavericks their 12th
consecutive loss, 132·113. San
Antonio beat Detroit 109-91 in the.
only other NBA game Monday.
"It's my hometown team and
I'll never say anything bll!l about
By JOHN KREISER
timl;S during a five-game goal-scorthem," said Johnson, who bought
NEW YORK (AP) - Most ing streak.
ttckets for more than 250 family
teams rely on their fans for moral
Though the Canucks are on a
members and friends . "But we
suppon. One fan in the crQwd at roll, goi11g 9·1·2 in t!leir last '12
couldn't afford to come in here and
Madison Square Garden tried to games to move into first place in
slip up. It's not like we're one of
give the New York Rangers some the Smythe Division and second in
the teams who are better than
extraThheRip.
.
the overall standings, they still
everyone else."
·
e angers appeared to score can't beat the Rangers. New York'
Kendall Gill finished with 20
the winning goal with 22.3 seconds is 10..().3 against Vancouver since fllSt Super Bowl on J&amp;n. 15, 1967,
points and Alonzo Mourning had
left in overtime Monday night · Feb. 21, 1988.
at the Los Angeles Coliseum,
20 points and 10 rebounds for ·
against the Van~ouver Canucks
In other games, 'it was SL Louis which was just two-thirds filled.
Charlotte, which won for the third
when Marie Messier took a sbot and I, Detroit 0 .and Toronto 4, Tampa Those spectators watched Green
time in its last four starts. The Hor·
a puck was suddellly in the net with Bay 2.
B~y defeat Kansas City 35- 10.
· nets had seven double-figure scor·
the red light on.
. Maple Leafs 4, Lightning 1
Ticket prices: $6 to $12.
·
ers.
Unfortunately for the Rangers,
Glenn Anderson had a goal and
• Which college has won the ·
Dallas' losing strealc is its secthe puck in the net wasn't the puck three assists to lead the surging most national championships ever?
ond 12-game slcid of the year. Only
being used by the players. Instead, Maple Leafs past the Lighmin~ in ·
Despite its recent setbacks in
the Denyer Nuggets have had a
a fan threw a second puck out of Toronto for their fourth stratght football, Southern Cal is still the
longer slide (14 games).
champion in the history of intercol·
the stan(ls and past. goaltender Kirk victory.
Hornets coach Allan Bristow
McLean - a' fact confirmed by
Nikolai Borschevsky scored legiate sports.
. !Old his team they had to play as if
video review. Neither team got twice off passes from Anderson,
The Trojans have won more
11 was a home game.
another shot in the 3-3 tie.
who also assisted on John Cullen's national titles- 74 men's and 13
"You've got to come in here
"Whoever threw that puck in goal - the first of three straight women's- than any other univerand win these games," Bristow
ihe net should get a look from the .power-play goals in the second sity in the nation. In fact, from
said. "That's because our competi·
Yankees for a tryo'ut," Canucks period bY the Maple Leafs.
.
1959 to 1985, USC athletes won at tors come in here and win and we
assistant coach Rick Ley said.
Mark Bureau and Brian Bradley least one national championship for
need to keep up with them. And it
"That's a heck of an ann."
scored for the Lightning. .
26 academic years in a row. .
wasn't so long ago that we were
The .I_tanger~ were happy
Blues 1, Red Wlnp q
Southern California has won a sitting where the Mavericks are,
enough With the be after ove.teom·
Rookie Guy Hebert earned his total of six National Collegiate All· struggling to get a win against any·
ing three one-goal deficits. Mike fllSt career shutout by stopping 31 Sports Championships, a ranking body."
Gartner pulled New Yorio: even for shots as St. Louis won its fourth duit is based on combined pcrforCharlone, off to its best statt in
the final time when he connected straight with a victory in DetroiL· · · mances.
franchise history, surged to a 28-16
with 11.5 seconds remaining,
Hebert made an early goal by
Through the years, USC also lead after the fllSt quaner and a 21·
extending the Rangers' unbeaten defenseman Gurtb Butcher stand up has produced m()fe U.S. Olympians ~int lead at halftime: The Maverstreak aga:inst Vancouver to l3 as Detroit ,lost for just the founh than any other college: a total of tcks never ·got close in the second
games.
time in 14 games.
2!)4 men and women. It's the only half.
''When you come back like that,
Butcher got the only goal of ihe university in ihe world to have at
you ~~ys feel like you've stolen game at 7:46 of the first period, least one gold medalist in every
a !!Gmt, wd Ganner, who 5Co/ed . beating Tim Cheveldae from the. ·Summer Olympics since 1912.
OU's Trent, BG's Scott
. twtee and now has connected etght top of the right circle.
• What team is .the pre-season
week's best hi MAC ·
favorite in college baseball in
19937
TOLI;DO, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
- - - - - - Sports b r i e f s - - - - - - · Louisiana State is the early pick
to
win
!he
College
World
Series,
University's
Gary Trent and Bowl·
Buketltall
Sabatini of Argentina defeated
ing
Green.'s
Talita
Scott have been
accordin_g
to
Baseball
America.
ATLANTA (AP) -Atalanta Kimiko Date of Japan 7-5,6-2.
The
publication
cites
.
the
return
of
chosen
the
players
of the week in
Hawks . forward Dominique
Skilna
·
LSU
regulars,
in'
c
luding
the
Mid-American
Conference.
seven
Wilkins, wbo wu expected to miU
.G A R M I S C H •
Trent, a 6-foot-7 freshman from
si• weeki after breaking a fmger on PAR TENKIRCHEN, Germany three startin• pitche:s. ·
It
also
pomu
to
the
leadenttip
of
Obetz,
scored 47 pdiots and had Ill
· his right band on Dec. IS, will be (AP) - .Daniel Mahrer of Switer·
Louisiana
State
coach
Skip
Ben·
rebounds
in the Bobcats' wins last
activated for tonight's game against illld edged Peter Rzchak of Austria
weelc
against
Toledo ancl Kent . He
Goldcli Swc.
by 0.31 seconds In a World Cup m111, wbo guided the Tiaers to their
first
national
title
in
1991.
He's
hit I 5 of 24 shots from the field
NEW YORK (AP) - Seattle downhill to capture his second
SuperSonics forward Sbaw Kemp. career victory on ihe tough Kanda· taken LSU to the Omaha, Nob., and 17 of 2S free throws. He leads
.tournament in five of the last six the nation in field-goal shooting
. wbo aver&amp;Jed 20.3 poinu and 13.3 har course.
(73 of I02 for 71.6 percent) and
rebounds in three games last week,
The 31-year-old Mahrer, who seasons.
"We've bee~ there before,'' also leads the MAC in scoring and
was named NBA .player of the also won a race on the course in
week.
·
1991, had a winning time of 1 said Benman, on bein' ranked No. is second in rebounding.
Scou, a junior from Akron,
, Te•nla
minute, 53.26 seconda. Rzehak foi- I. "But gosh, to so wue-to-wire is
, scor~d 4,2 points and had 19
•
SYDNEY, Australi• (AP)'- "lowed in 1!53.57 and Franz Heinz- going to be very rouah:'
Other Baseball America rank. rebounds m three Falcon viclllries
Michaol Tebbnll, an Australian er of Switzerland was third in
inp:
2. Arlzonl; 3. Southern Cal; last week. The 5-10 forward made
qllliifier ranked 870th in the world, 1:53.75.
4.
Miami;
and 5; Olclahoma Stare.
19 .of 27 attempts from the field,
upset sixth·seedecl Sergi Bruguera
Heinzer took the lead in the
Defending
cbamp
Peppcrdine
is
·
includin1
7 of r in u 84-48 win at
ol Spain, 6-7 (0· 7), 7-6 (7-4), 6-4 World Cup downhill standing• and
picked
10
fmish
14th.
.Akron.
Sho
also bad 10 illel11, aix
in the ftntiOIIIId of tbe· ~ew South Marc Oirardelli af LuxembOurg
(C)I9.
9
3
NEWSPAPER
assists
and
twa bJockl for the
Wales Open. In a women'i ftrSt· finished •fifth to Clltend his O""rall
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
.
.
•week.
round match, .toP-seeded Gabriela lead.
·
""'

Vancouver, N.Y. Rangers
tie 3-3 in limited NHL action

free bags of grO'ceries to ticket
holders whose numbers will be
announced. The tickets are also
good for Focidland's 90-second
shopping spree promotion.
. Foodland is a member.of the
R1o ~ran~e Athletic Boosters orgamzauon and lias sponsored Redmen games for a number of years.
Its annual contribution to the boost·
er club has helped the University
attract quality studeilt-athletes
through scholarships.
·
"Food! and and Ohio Valley ·
Supermarkets have been a long and
loyal supponer of athletics at Rio .
Grande and their interest in our ·
programs is always appreciated "
Dr. Clyde Evans, Rio Grande ath·
letic ~trector, said. ''nirough their
donauon to the bOOsters' &lt;J?Bniza·
ti~n. Rio Grande can conunue ,to
bnng students who perform well in ,
the classroom and on the field of
competition,.students we know will
become a credit to the institution."

. Ohio Valley Supermarkets and
Its local FoodJand ·stores will spon·
sor the men ' s basketball game
. between the University of Rio
Grande and the University of Find·
lay Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in .Lyne
Center.
Tickets for the game are available at both Foodland outlets in
Gallipolis, its two ·stores in Point
PleasanJ, and at the Pomeroy and
Wellston locations. ·
Anhe halftime, Foodland will
sponsor a cash scramble and offer

team at the top f the eek1 • U
K
·
"The more ~ood w Y~ ·
fi ejtucky (11·0) rece1ved. 50
1
ou stron er
p~ure e .Ps trSt·p ace v~tes ~ 1,608 po~ts
r'It's bet~r :;:e~ta~~~k ~eNsaldi fro~b:wtde pailel ?f wnt·
0·
earl than 1atec ,
e
e~
r . ~rs to easily ~l·
fhe last No. '! ran1ti for
. distaNce Michigan (12·1), wh1ch
lUcky came ju~t after ~g y Ke~- ~~S o.. 1 on 14 ballots and had
Day 1988 That lasted elw ear s
.
0 ~mts.
as the
Wildcats
°~
a week
~:J;
whteh held theN!&gt;·
Auburn • . 10.s1 a orne to 1. spot . g utlast~ and m
53 52wlll~~~·~r~
Kentuclcy
five . 0!.e•ght polls thts season,
1
the N'b"
,
as recetv..,. ~ne f'!'sl·place yote and
1
Vanderbilt~~::;.~~f~ays
at 1j 496 pomts tn droppmg two
·
P aces.
•

.
·
.
k
't
•
d
t
$175
•
SUper
.
w
.
IC
e
s
p
·
rtce.
a
Bo
t
.. pected·toI beco.
me· r· ar·e .·.t·ems
ex

Louisville catches fire . late to top Xavier 76-73
By MIKE EMBRY
they turned up the juice, and got a Keith LeGree came from behind to
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP)- little shook," said Xavier coach strip the ball and stepped out of
Louisville isn't n:ady to Jose again. Pete Gillen. "They made a couple bourids with 28.9 seconds left
The &lt;;ardinals posted their of set plays by Minor and Monon
"He came into the lane, showed
fourth straight victory Monday that coach (Denny) Crum called. · me the ball and I just stripped it,"
mght, rallying in the final minutes We didn't switch and that's why said LeQree.
to defeat Xavier of Ohio 76-73 in he's won 500 games. He's a great
Nine seconds later, LeGree
Freedom Hall.
coach."
· .k nocke d the ba1I out of
agam
LouisviUe (6-4) has not lost a
Xavier (8·2), losing its second bounds as Xavier maintained pos·
game since finishing 1992 with straight after starting the season session.
losses to Georgia Tech and !darY·· with eight consecutive victories,
Louisville keD! liD its defensive
land. Besides Xavier, its viclims tn · cut the margin to 72, 7) on Brian pressure, and this time LeGree was
the new year include Oral Roberts Gn~nt's two free throws at 1:43.
fouled by Hawkins while wrestling
South Florida and North Carolina:
Morton, who finished with a for a loose ball on Louisville's side
Charlotte.
season-high 26 points, came back of the midcourt line. LeGree hit the
''It all started with Maryland with a dunk off a 60-foot pass from decisive free throws with 8.5 secwhen we Jost our fourth game " Minor for a three-point advantase onds to go.
· ·
~d Louisville guard Greg Mi~. nine seconds later.
"I thought our defense was
The guys gOt together io a team
Jamie Gladden was called for about as good as it can get down
m~ti.ng and decided to go on a carrying the ball with 1:24 to go; the strercli," said CIUm.
wmnmg streak. We wanted to but Louisville failed to capitalize as
Steve Genay then drove to the
!ippro!lch the game different set Minor put up a desperation 25· left wing, but lost control of the
different SUIIIdards.
'
footer as ~ shot clock was about hall while going up for ihe paten·
"That's wbat we're doing right to expire. •
tial game-tying shot Louisville's
now. We're coming out with a dif·
Michael Hawltins was fouled by Clifford Rozier came up with .the
ferentauitude."
James Brewer on the missed shot ballastimee!lpired.
"It was just a prayer anyway"
Louisville rallied from a 69-64 and hit two free throws with 39.3
deficit to go up 12.f:IJ on Dwayne seconds left as Xavier trailed 74- Gillen said of Gentry's sbot. "We
Monon's three·pointer from the top 73.
tried to get the ball to Gladden, but
of the key with 2:06 left in the
Gentry then stole Minor's pass he just cotildn 't get the shot off.
game.
at midcowt and passed to"Giadden We played as hard as we could, but
"We IOf a linJe tcatative when driving toward the basket, but we can play better."
Rozier finished with 14 points
and 12 rebounds for Louisville.
Grant, who had only three
points at the half, scored 23 and
Far West .
Gladden had 19 for Xavier.
-!'.7a6:t. W....,on142
Ponlud 63, ~10 S\. 59
Foot Lonmic 54, SL llavy !10
"They came in here and played
Fnat1in FurMc:e Orem -42, S. Wcbt:ter
IJNLV 101. Miaowi 14
their hearts out," Crum said of
36
"'-UbWu149, BotW.oS.. Iclu&gt;
. Xavier. "They put more pressure
AP Top 25 college
61
on us than anyone we've played.
llantia
NOl1bem
44,
~a
34
basketball poll
Hilloboco61,.Williunlbwa43
Xavier can match up with most
INUan-55, C1o. Andtewt 32
The Tap 25 lMml in 1lte Auociucd
Xavier gave. us all we
anybody.
ladtlcn 56. Vinta~ Co. 45
Pnu' collep haktllb.n poU, wilh fmt·
,-.,.52.
ConneoUl
40
wanled.''
·
place Yatu in pnenthcaea, recorda
Keucrina. Plimum174, Day. White 42
throulh Jill. 10, td&amp;l pQnU bisod on 2S
KU!p 4!, Clin....)o(ouio 43
pojnta: for 1 ftnt·pl.ce '4'0U. lhrouah one

Ke~tucky replaces'Duke .as top. quintet in.'AP ~ollege cage polt

Sports Probe

In Ohio college hoops,

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

In taking No.1 for first time since 1988
By The Associated Press
.
Guess who's No. I? Remember
Kenrucky?
Nearly four years after an
NCAA investigation tore open the
sch~l's program and five years
after 11 was ~t ranlced No. 1, the
Wildcats clatmed the top spot in
col!~g~ basicetball on Monday.
. It s an honor being No. 1,"
wd Kentucky coach Rick Pitino
"But.it's more important being No:
I attheendoftheyear."
But he doesn't mind seeing his
·

In college action,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· Just Arrived!

Last season, the Hornets did not
win lheir 17th game until Feb. i9.
Sean Rooks paced the Maver·
icks with 20 points and Derek
Harper added 17.
Spurs 109, Pistons 91
A! Auburn Hills, Mich., David
Robinson had a poor shooting night
and Dennis Rodman grabbed 26
rebounds · for the third straight
night. Despite those two factors,
San Antonio came away with an
18-point victory;
Robinson scored 18 points, six
below his average, but eight of
them cam.c as the Spurs were
puning the game away in the fourth
period. He also had 14 rebounds
and four blocks.
Dale t:Uis .led the Spurs with 23
poiritS.
Joe Dumars. led Detroit with 20
points.
·

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The. ·oally Sentlnei-Page-7

I

•

•

By The Bend

I

The Daily .Sentinel

(

· t

·

Tuesday, January 12, 1993
'

.

•The Area's Number 1
·•

Marketp,ace

Page-6

Believe it or not, .the story's true

BRITISH STAR • Veteran British film and .
· · television actress Anna Lee, is joioed by feDow
: ''General Hospital" actors John Reilley, left, and

John Beredino, right, as she received a star on
the HoUywood Walk or Fame, Mopday morning.
(APpboto)

•

---Names in the news--,
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
: -CBS' entertainment chief is
cmlfident David Letterman will
. defect to his network.
.• "We've been pursuing him for
; ·six monlhs and it's all going to pay
: off," Jeff Sagansky said Monday
• during a news-media preview of
: the network's new programs .
t :·we're .~oing to get him .... He's
, our guy.
• CBS later issued a .statement in
' ease Sagansky came off as a little
roo sure of himself. ·
·
"While we feel confident that
we have made a very srrong pro·
• posa1 to David Letterman and are
f optimistic, we have not received
• any confirmation that a proposal
: lias been accepted and any such
1
inference at lhis time is in error,"
l tile network said.
t
Leuennan's late-night talk show
; follows Jay Leno on NBC, which
' has until Friday to counter a CBS
; offer to Lenerman worth a teiX&gt;rtcd

•

•

'

$16 millioo.
CBS guaranteed Letterman the
11 :30 p.m. time slot, which would
put him opposite Leno and "The
Tonight Show."
Stephen Rivers, a spokesman
for Creative Artists Agency, which
re~sents Letterrnaq in lhe negoti·
allons, wouldn ' t comment on
Sagans!cY's remarlcs.

on CBS.
The program will be taped
Wednesday at lhe Grand Ole Opry
House.
Other acts appearing include
Aiabama. Clint Black, Su:i:y Bogguss, Mary-Chapin Carpenter;
Vince Gill, Wynonna Judd, Patti
LaBelle, Lyle Loven, Reba McEntire and Travis Tritt.
·

Dear Aaa Laaden: If the
following item bidn't been an
Amr1eted Press m' K ,I would not
have bc1icva1 iL I ~ going to sh£
IICvaal Unca of this news m'ea!c
· wilh you, IIIII fd like your opinion.
Heae it iJ:
.
From Rlehmond, Texas: "The
· body of a man who died from
eaneer wu dumped on his son's
doc118rep when the 1011 wa unable
to pay the run price for ercmalion.
The body of George Bojarski,
covered only with a sheet, waa
fciund at the door of his son's
aplll'tlllenl, according to the Fort
Bend County justice of the poace.
Bojarski's son, Larry, called the
police and aslred what to do wilh
bls father's reillains.
"Bojlnki, 66, died of cancer of
lbcesophagus. Hewupicked up by
Evans Monuary. Larry Bojarski said
be paid $299 or lbc $683 he was
charpd for bls father's ercmalion.
When he went 10 lbc mMUary to
scule the biD, he was told the pice
wu $2,000, and if he didn~ come
. up with the money, lbc body would
· be returned 10 him. They carried out
their lhrcat.•
Is this America, Ann? I cannot
believe IIIICh a dling could happen.
Please -look into dlis and roll me
if it's for real. I lost my molbcr to
cancer last year, and this news story
gave nie nighllilares. •• PAM IN
TEMPE, ARIZ.
DEAR PAM: That story is real
an right We checked wilh KRIV.
TV in Houston and were informed
that 'there wu a dispute between
Evans Monuary and Larry Bojanki

better. Yelling at her IIKI making
~ feel "like a S-ycar-old" wu not
a professional respoiiiC. A calm
discllllion regarding what may have
caused lier reaction, including
ANN LANDIIII
sensitive questioning about any
"J.m. LooAactl.,
poaiblc bialory or IIIXual abuse.
'l'llllot s,...u... oac1
would have l)ccn more appropria1.c
CrulonS)Ddkole"
andCOIIIIrUCiivc.
Wilh Slllistics showing lbat per·
· which landed io lbc courts. A grllld bapa aa maay as 25 percent of
jury has indicled;Newcn BVIIII b
women have been acxually lbuled,
"abuse or a COipSe, "If cooric:led. be any bcallb care providu Clriq b
flcca 1 $3,000 fine 11K1 up to I ye. women .-!110 be aensilive 10 this
injail.
laue, especially when performing
Dear Ann Lallden: fd like to gynecological cums. - CHERAW.
respond to lbat leuer from "I.R.." S.C.
thewomariwhobitherdoctorwbcn
DEAR CHERAW: Thank you
he accidentally pinched her wilh an for an inltiC$Iing theory. F'lfty·five
insllllmeilt durifig a pelvic ellllll.
olhers offered aimilar explanations.
I am a women's bcalth pillelilio- My tbanb to an who wrote.
ncr. My first lhougbt when I
Gem of the Day: During a healed
read ·that letter was that the ugument in lbc U.S. Senate baclc in
woman who wrote• might be a tbc 1920a,onem.toldlmlleque
survivor of childhood -ua1 abule. to go to beD. The aiODishcd ....,.""
Many women ~ uneomfOI'!Ible qllellionecl Vice Plesident COolid&amp;c,
with pelvic exams, but abuse who wu presiding, as 10 lbc propri·
survivors may experience parliCW. cty of lbc remark, Cooliclee, who
discomfort since the exain may had been leafing through a bOok,
tri8Jer memories of their early looted up and said, "I have been
abuse, oven if those memories arc cbcctio11 lbc ru1ca manual, and you
not conscious.
·•
don't have to JO."
J.R.'s "childish" reaction· to the
lAMIOtM? Take chsrge if. your
sudden pain she experience!~ during life and 1ur11 it arowrd. Write for
a gynecological exam may have A,.,. LtwJm' MW booklet, "How ro
arisen from buried memories of a Make Fritllds a11d Stop Btillg
childhood rrawna. She might want Lonely." Stlld a ulf~na. /o11g,
to amidcr counscliog.
biiSillt1Nize tltW/ope alld a clwc:k
While I can certainly S)'IIIJlllhize or mouy orur for $4.15 (tlli1
with the doctor's anger at . being illcllllfts postllgt alld lttutdli11g) to:
billal, an lnciWed a - of Fritlllb, cloAMJ.twJcrs,I'.O. Box
!ICllual abuse and its aftereffects may 11562, C/tit:Qgo.IU. 606ll.a562. (/11
help him undersland her behavior Ctulllda, ulld $5.05.)

WILLIAM JOHNSON

I

'

Fellows~ip class meets
The Fellowship Class of the
: Rock Springs Umted Methodist
.. Church held its Christmas party ar
' -Dale •s in GaUipolis. . .
A program and a white elephanr
·gift exchange was held with Betty
W.eyersmiller, Nina Cumings and
;:fandora CoUins in charge. . .
·• - Fern Monis opened lhe program
': liy reading "The ABC's of Christmas" and "Oh To Have Been a
; 'Shepherd." Dorothy Jeffers read
• "Choosing a Minister" wilh Nancy
Radford reading "Christmas Shop. "
•• pmg.
.
: · All lhree teachers of the class
: attended the party: Harold Black-

•

•

~~Tree
'

-Puce.

6

10

To place an ad

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FBI.

8A.M.-5~.M.-

SAT.S-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POU&lt;;IES

• Ado .... ~o~e lho .......,. "'"'ad .............. propolil
• lleeeift.diecouat f'or ad. pUcl ia adft.IIICe,

•F.... Ado: Ci--yuodF.....!oulouadwl5wvrd...Wbo
""' 3 cia,. ..........
• l'rioo of ad 1.. al eapkal......., Ia doulolo priee olod !"'"',
• 1 poia lioo type oaly oood
.
,
• S..liatllo aot,.poaoJhloloronon .,....f',..lda7(•bock
lor orron lint da7 ad,_ ia p&amp;por). CaD bolo10 Z:OO P·•·
Uy aflar puW•·tiee ao .U. eorreelioa,
• Ad.lllat
be paW la aciw...,. are:

••t

Card ol n..w

Happy Ado
lo 11-..
Yard Sal.
• A clauillod odtoio !'
1 pro..d lalho Callipolio Daily
Trit.u•a (a..pt Cluollled Dloplar, a...; - Card or Lopl
Nollceo) will aloo appoor Ia ... Polat Pleuu1 Roptor ud
lho Doilr S...liatl, ....

$ .20
$.30
$ .42

$

sa- Fnallo A V..,.uiloo
· 59-F.rSaio ... Trado
I \1;\1 'I ~'I": I ·
,1, I I \ I ' I I H j,

.6()

$.05/day

a....

'

Rates are for COllleCUtive lilns, broken up days will be
·charged for each day u separate ada.

A....,.

Wutodt.Jiur
u-toek
jQOo- Doy It Graia

'

AFiiUi

1:1\1 \ 1:-

GET RESULTS • FAa'f

41- Bo._ for Beat
41-lloloile a - for R. .t
41-Fonulorii..l
-Aport-a! for a...
4&gt;-F....... Roo.,.
46- Spoce t.. Bent I
47- Wutod to B••
48-· E,.upo-t for a-a

GliiUa County Melp Co_,.r Muon Co., WV'
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Ana Code 304

2--IDM-o.,.
446-Golllpolle
367-CI&lt;oobire
381-VIal...
24!&gt;-Ria Graode
256-GII)' .. Dloo.

992.11lolollapoJtl
Pome"roy
98SO ,.,

458-Looo
$76-Applo c......

843-Portlu.

775-11-

Z47-l.olart F.O.

·882-New·H··-

64S-Aroloio DloL'
374).'1i'oobNI

949-11......

89S.U..r1
937.Jioll'alo

742-L......

3:1-- Mol&gt;ile
lor Solo
lB- Fonu for Salo
34- a-;- Jlu•W•p
35- Lo11 a

j------~,.~-=-='===-=------1 36- B..JEo.... Wutod

. CW..4fied pfllle• COller the
folkmintf 1elephone eschonfe•...

w., · - 18,000 .....

PUBLICATION

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gar•r.•
•Co•p •••
·
Reinotloliag
Sto" &amp; co:zare
F EE ESTI
ES
985·4473
667·6179

Roclno. 4 BR, 3 bolhs, 2 _ . _ NIUCI 1
BR opl P,_ty lrK:Iudoo 4,800 oq. R. farm
bldg.

-

675-Pl. l'loU.al

3-- A.ouac....U
_ 4-Gi~way
5-Bappy.Y.
&amp;-Loot aad Fouod
7-J:-taadFouod
II- Nolie Sale A:

Auelioa
9- 'II'aatod lo Buy

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.

. GARRY'S
GENERAL
liiAINTENANCE

A. BOSTON

742·3305

EXCAVATING

AFTER

(614)

7:00P.M.

12·17·'92

667·662_8 ..

Cal 614-992·710ot lor AI&gt;Pt

'
11-HelpW......
U-. Situolio• Waatod
13,-J....n14- Bm+-- Traiai•
IS- Sohoolo It J..li'UCtioa
!&amp;- Radio. TV A CB Repair

17- M;t:tdt....,.
18- Waatod To Do

s,......

5:1-Cooclo
_U- Aolilt- .

54- MJ.c . .........

ss- B.,iWi•• s.,pn,.

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.
232 2atl St.,
Pomeroy
992·2036
Cheek wHh us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Program. ·
12·1·2llle. ptl

R&amp;C EICIVITING

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED :.
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE '"
'.' '
RACINE, OH:1
949-2734 "

BUlLDOZING
PONDS

• &gt;

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
L!CENS£0 ond BONOED
PH. 614·992·5591
12·5-dn

12·1·'92·1

..

.

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZEl

' lEGAL NOTICE' ·
SHied propoeela will be
received at the olftco ollhe
Mayor, Pomoroy City Hall,

320 Eaet U.in Sl, Pomeroy,

"Ohio,until 11:30 Lm. local
time on February 1, 11193, lor
furnlahing ell labor,
materlela and equipment

neceeaary to complete the

project known aa the
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
MAIH STREET WATER
UNE REPLACEMENT PRO·
JECT,. end at allid time and
ploc•, publicly opened end
reed aloud.
The

propoaed

WORK
DRIYEWAY WORK
1ml LIMEnOIIE
DELIVERY SERVICE

Public Notice

Public Notlco

comply with the Minority·
Bualneoa Enlerprioe (MBE)
requirementa ael forth in • 5••11 lo:ur Work
Section 164.07 of lhe Ohio • $25.00 Per Ho•r
Reviaed Code, and Rule · IIASONAILI UUS
164·1·32 .of .Mit . Ohio
Adminietrative Code. In part,
thia me11n• that any bidder,
POMEROY, OK.
to the extenl lhat it
11-13-'92·1 mo.
ai.Jbcontracta work, ahall
award aubconlrliCta to atale
certified Minority Buaineao
Enterprla• .In an aggregale
dollar value of no lela lhlln
live percent (5%) of the
BINGO
prime contract. Bidder
EVERY THURSDAY
procurement activltlea, to

·992·7553

work lhe

extent

that

the

lncludu inatalletion ol 3620 contractor p11rch- malar·
IHl of 8" PVC water main. iala and/or ae'rvl.cea, ahall
The enginHr'l ntimate. lor reault In the award of

conalruction of the Project procurement contracta to

Ia $204,420.00.
Copi• of Drawing• and
ContrliCI documenta may be

atale certified Minority
Efiterpriaea in

dollar value of no
two percent (2%)
prime contract. The
provide
on theae

obtained or eumined etlhe
Office Dlthe Mayor, Village
Hall, Pomeror, Ohio . A
$16.00 lee wll be required
lor each ael ol Drawing•
1nd ·contr•ct document•
t1ken from

the

All

contractor•

EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
StOO Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051 ·32
11/241'92/lfn

MICROYMYE OVEN
anti VCR REPAIR
All MIXES
lrl.....h In Or Wa
·
ck U
KEN'S APPtiiNCE
SERVICE
992·5335or
985-3561

.............
,om..
217 L Stc•d St.

POMIIOT, OHIO
316f90/tfn

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE ,

HAULING

ALL HARDWOOD
' ·seasoned ·

GR~V~L &amp; COAL
ReasOiiable Rates

$40.00 a Load

JOE N.SAYRE

Delivered.
(614) 992·5449
12131/92/lfn

SAYRE TRUCKING

LIFE

AMERICAN

and"
.- .

ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

LIMESTONE,

'

!I j

'

Life • Medicar~ • Cancer • Fire • Health __~~
· Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ,,,

Rocky R. Hupp, D~c.u. · Agent : .
Box

189

·

'·

Middleport, Ohio 45760 ..
(614)

614·742·2138
1·11-'93

'•'

•

.;

....

r.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 NOON
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Only
10.19-92

-F«reelgas
~
llew hiler
J anti T G11 Service
•100 lb. Cylinders

SHRUB

&amp; 'TREE

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

•VenUeu He..era

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Iii• 124, Raclno
614-949·2072

USED RAILROAD TIES
I 2-311-92-lftt

· •R.V.'a

•Gao Grill Tanka

HELP THE EFFORT TO IUILD A PIQ~P
FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUR ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY
MEiGS COUNTY
.
WANTED: S to 6 ACRES OF RELATIVELY FLAT
Ill 8e - · .._ 6 fi. ,.._. • eltwaritll

121 Wlllt s.w. Ill w war.
PHOIIE: Ptlfty or Ray Picko111

.

H. .o: 915oo4231 or Ptlfty's
TROLLEY STATION CRAFTS
992·

and

above 1ubcontractora involved

·oillcea. Chacko ahal! b• with the projec! will, to the •
mada payable to tho Village extent practicable UH Ohio
of
Pomeroy,
Ohio. Producte, mat•lala, aerv·
Pro.poaala
muat
be ices and labor in the

aubmitted on the Propoul
Forma contained in the
Contract documonta.
Each blddar Ia required to
·turniah with ita
· Bid Guaranty end

lmpl;,mentatlon of lheir
project. AddiUonal, con·
tractor complillnco wllh the
equal employmo.nt. op·
portUnlty requiromonta of
Ohio AdminietraUve Code

Bond in accordance w lth Chapter 123, the Governor'•

Section 153.54 of the Ohio
Reviaed Code. Bid Security
lurnlahod · In Bond lorm,
ahall be iuued by • Surety
Com,.ny or Corporation
liceModin the Stata ol Ohio
to provide uld eurety.
Each Propoul . muat
bontaln the lull name of the
perty or pertiee eubmitllng
tho pr-""1 end IIi I perf01t8
inleree1ed therein. Each
:. bidder mual submit
evidence ol Ita oxperiMto•
on prolocta of eimilar alzo
ond oomploxlty. Tho ownor
lniOnda and requireo thai
thie project be complolOd no
la18rlh.. llay 15, 11193.
Readr•quired

J&amp;L INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
olnaulation
JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
539 lry111 Pl•c•
Mitlllleport, o•io
12/1/U/tt.

Executive Order ol 11172.
and Governor'o Executive
Order 114-8 ahall be required.
Biddera muat comply with
the prevroiling wage rete• on
Public Improvement In
Melge County and the
V'~lego of Pomeroy, Ohio ••
determined by lhe Ohio
Department of lnduelrlel
Roilltione.
Th'e Owner ruerved the . . - - - - - - - - ,
right to walvo any
UCIIIE GU_.
inlormalltlea or Irregular!,..
end to reject ony oral bide.
CLUB
John A. Anderaon
Admlniotrator
GUN SHOOTS
VI liege of Pomeroy
(1) 5, 12, 19, 3tc
SUNDAYS

'"Best Seller

..
I' •

1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED .
1211111 mo. pd.

HOMEMADE
PIES
ORDER NOW
FOR THE
HOLIDAYS
985.:,4107
1211411 .... pd.

_BISSELL

DAVIDSON'S
' PLUMBING

New Homes • VInyl
New Garages • R:ifclacement
Room Addlt ons • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~
FREE ESTUKATES .
••
614·949·2801. 949·2860
•
or 985·3139
lllo S•IMI•r Calls)

nv~!!'l"«

-~

31904 laadlna
CrMk ROIId
MlddlepGrt, Ohio
614·992·7144 .
10/1/92 tfn

2/1219~n

KEVIN'S lAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2398or
1·800-837·1460
Lawn-lng,
Fertilizing, W-ng, end
Seeding.
Shrub and Tree Trimming
&amp; Remove!

WICK'S HAULING

-nllol &amp; CaoMtan:lal
FrHEitlmttH

992·3470

-SERVICE

36970 Ball R11 Road
Pomeroy, Ollio
SIZED ·LIMESTONE

$9.50 Ton

FIREWOOD FOR BALE

BUILDE~S,

MASON,

WY.

OHk,

Acrou fr• the Post
We Specl•lize 11

',:

nres. Allpmeltl. Ex..usts .. &gt;1
Check our Price or We Both Lose '· "
3rtl LOCATIOit TO SERVE YOU lmER·J")
-8·1

12-9·92-111

1-241-'82-Hn

.,

" "
&lt;

F&amp;l

SERVICE
Topping, Trimming,
Remov•l
Re.oneble~

Workshop planned

FullyiMured

Quail~

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
end TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE. ,

SEPnc I'VSTEMS,

HOllE IIITEI and

TRAILER SITES,
LAHOCLEAAING,

Call 614·992·
· St. 11; 7
Cllea.lre, OH.

''

,

FOISALE
6637

1'

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

SIZED UME$TONE

••

...

tfllJAYMAR
SloH Co• .

742·2HO

~ ..... ~

,.

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

PololorSalo
Mooicalr..-

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

c

'

Monthly

Over 15 Words

BUUEniiiOARD DEADLINE

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before im event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure -publication In the tal·
endar.

''·

l:OOp.m..Solurday
1:00 p.m. Monday
• l:OOp.m. Tu.lay
1:00 p.m. Wedn.....y
100 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Pridoy

667.Coohoile

· - flnonclng ...... lo 80% ol purctwM
........ may bo ~tor quallytng .....
11011 to .,uy wry nice home on 3~ aCnl In

Animal rights group protests
transplant from baboon ·

DA)' BI!JQRE PIIBLICATION

M011dayPaper
TUooclay Paper
Wodneoday Paper
Thunday PllJ"'f
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

15
15
15
15
15

Rate
"

Bl'LLETil\ BO:\RD

Community calendar-

packets are available

New this year 10 the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Ladies Auxiliary rree packet pro• 'gram is a backyard packet which
: contains two cech of red floWering
• quince, Redosier dogwood, pink
~ floweiing almond and sweet shrub
I ata C0S1 of$7.
'
The fruit tree packets which
; contains two each of Melrose apple
: and Ep1pirc apple are ·available for
• $21'. ·
.
;
Single vari~[ies packe!s av~ll ' able this year 10clude whn~ pme,
i 2S aeedlings for $8; scotch p1ne. 25
' .accdlings ror $8; Colorado blue
o :ljlruce 2S seedlings for $8; Nor:.. way
25 seedlings, $8; Mag-

3

PRICE REDUCED!

Bible Class of Hickory HiD Chun:h 'ty ReJ?ublican Executive CommitNASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) LOS ANGELES (AP)- Anna
of
Christ, "FriJ:ndship Day" Tues· tee will meet at 7 p,m. on Wednes·
The Country Music Association is Lee, who plays matriarch Lila
day
at 10:30 a.m. Betty Miller, day at the courthouse. All members
marking its 3Sth anniversary with a Quanermaine on "General Hospi·
retired
reacher from Oh•o Valley are urged to attend.
two-hour TV lribute to Dolly Par- tal." got her own slllr on the HollyChristian
College in Parkersburg.
ton.
wood Wallc of Fame.
THURSDAY
W.Va.,
will
be guest speaker.
. Glen CampbeD, Emmylou Aar·
Mel Torme and Cesar Romero
POMEROY
• The Pomeroy
"Love
.Your
Neighbor"
will
be
lhe
ris, Willie Nelson and Kenny were on hand for the ceremony
Group
of
AA
will
meet Thursday at
TUESDAY
pro~. Call 667-3074 for infor·
Rogers will appear and Parton will Monday.
POMEROY
•
Ohio
Eta
Phi
Sacred
Heart
Calholic
Chun:!t at 7
· mat1on.
receive the CMA's first Country
Miss Lee, 80, began on the ABC
Chapter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority,
Call
992-5763
for
informa·
p.m.
Music Honors awanl.
. soap io 197&amp; She has been in show
tion.
wiD
meet
Tuesday
at
7
p.m.
at
lhe
POMEROY • Meigs County
"Dolly's bri!liance, virtuosity business for 65 years. She has
and lovelin~ g1ve us lhe consu"!: · appeared in .two dozen movies, Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen- Chamber of Commerce will meet
ter. Jack Slavin will present a pro- . Tuesday at noon at lhe Pomeroy
ROCK SPRINGS ; The Rock
mate candidate for lh1s tribute,
includ.ing "The Sound of Music "
gram
on
art.
Becky
Triplett
and
.
Nursing
and
Rehabilitation
Center.
·
Springs
Grange WiD meet Thursday
said Irving Waugh, executive pro- "How Green Was My Valley•• and '
Becky
Trent
arc
hostesses.
Lunch wiD be available at a cost of at 8 ~'!'· : at the hOme of Mr. and
ducer of lhe special airing Feb. 6 "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir."
$3.
Mrs. illiam Radford.
·
HARRISONVILLE • HarriSonville Senior Citizens Club will
PORTLAND · Portland and . POMEROY • The Ohio Depart·
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) meet and hold a blood pressure
of Agriculture will be giving
- TV viewers can expect more clinic Tuesday, 10 a.m. to noon, at Letart Elementary Schools will be ment
tests
for
new pesticide applicators
ship Program.
fare like the Amy Fisher story the town house. wearher p~rmit· hosting an open house on Tuesday on Thursday
from 3·1 p.m. at lhe
from 6-7 p.m. Public invited.
The scholarship is designed to because, well, that's what they
ling.
Those
attending
arc
to
bring
a
·
Meigs Count~ Extension Office.
help a student interested in becom· want, says the president of ABC.
People
covered
dish.
Dues
are
payable.
desinng to take the test
WEDNESDAY
ing a professional automotive ser"I ' m not embarrassed by
should
have
received study materiPOMEROY • Pomeroy Mer. vice technician further his educa- ABC's involvement with Amy
POMEROY • Meigs County chants Association will meet als from the Meigs CoWlty Exrention and to help meet the demand Fisher," Rober I lger, who was
for qualified service personnel. ABC's programming chief11ntil his Junior Fair Sale and Show ·Com- Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at lhe con- sion Service prior to taking lhe tesL
Call the extension office at 992Iohnson will use the scholarship to Jan. 1 promotion, told reporters mittee wiD meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. ference room of Bank One.
6696 for further information.
anend classes at Washington Staie Sunday a.t a preview of the ner- at the Meigs High School Cafeteria.
Meeting
open
to
all
junior
fair
RACINE
•
The
v
'
i
llage
of
CommWlity College Ibis year.
work' s new programs.
market livestock members, parents
. POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
FEL-PRO, one of the leading
ABC was joined by CBS and and advisors. Program for 1993 Racine will be collecting pine Beta
Chapter, Beta S•gl!la Phi
Christmas
trees
on
Wednesday.
manufacturers of mechanical gas- NBC in recently broadcasring
will
be
discussed.
Call
992-6696
Sorority.
will meet Thursday at
Racine residents are to have trees at
kets and chemical sealing products movies about Miss Fisher, the New
for
additional
information.
7:30
p.m.
at the home of Maida
the curb by 8 a.m. on Wednesday.
for lhe automotive aftermadcet, has York teen-ager who shot the wife
.
Mora.
long taken an interest in lhe educa- of her aUeged lover.
MIDDLEPORT • Ballroom
MIDDLEPORT • Texas dancing
tion of automotive rechnicians.
The ABC movie rated lhe high- dance lessons, Tuesday, MiddlePOMEROY • There will he an
This scholarship program, which est. It was seen in an estimated
lessons, Wednesday, Middleport
port
Arts
Council.
Cost
is
$7
Per
evening
Social at lhe Senior Citi·
awards money .for use towards 18.2 million homes.
Arts Council. Cost is $7 per co.uple
couple
per
sessioo.
BegiMers,
7:30
zens
Center
in Poineroy &lt;in Thurstuition to qualified students in colAsked whether the networks p.m.; advanced dancers, 8:30 p.m. per session. Beginners, 7:30 p.m,; day from 5-8
p.m. The Classics
lege-level vocationallrechnical pro· have a responsibility to offer loftier
advanced dancers, 8:30 p.m. Gergrams. is an extension of FEL- shows, lger said: "lt"s really an Gerald PoweD, instructor. Call992~ ald Powell, instructor. Gall 992· will be playing old time favorite
PRO' s commillilent io improving interesting chicken-and-egg Situa- 2675 for information or to register. 2675 for infonnation or to register. music. A free will offering will be
taken for rhc musicians. Bring
the quality and availability of auto· tion . ... Do we tclllhe viewer what
TUPPERS
PLAINS
·
Ladies
snack
foods for the refreshments
motive service.
POMEROY
·
The
Meigs
Counthey should watch, or do we give
table to share during the evening.
The scholarships are adminis· · the viewer what they want to
Pu\)lic invited.
rered by the Citizen's Scholarship watch? It"s a little of both."
Foundation of America. an inde·
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
pendent organization.
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Porn s111r
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All
Nina Hartley was among 14 people
membels arc urged to attend.
arrested for th·e ir part in what
IX&gt;Iice described as a wild live sex
By JEF.FREY BAIR
implanted a baboon liver in a 35·
ston, Pearl Carsey and Mildred show before hundreds of people.
AssoCiated Press Writer
Jacobs.
Police said they shut down the
PITTSBURGH _ Animal- year-old man, who lived 70 days
Winning door prizes · were show Friday in a tent behind an rights activists cari-ying signs Wilh before dying of an infection.
'The latest patient probably
Nancy Radford. Rita Radford, adult bookstore after Hartley and such slogans as "Frankenstein
would
have died of hepatitis B
Roger Walkins, Harold Blackston, other actresses began performing lives in Pittsburgh" criticized the
sex
acts
with
each
other
and
with
within
30
days without the operaPearl Carsey, Mary Showalter. audience members.
transplant
of
a
.
b
aboon
liver
into
a
tion, which was completed M~n ­
Betty Wills, Louise Radford 'and
·
"They were really doing some dying man.
day, said Dr. Iohn Fung, lhe chief
Pandora CoUins.
stuff," Lt Bill Young
"I don't think an animal should surgeon.
Others attending were Avery off-lhe-wall
said
.
be
used as spare parts," said Pat
Hepatitis B patients are normaland Helene &lt;:loeglein, Durwood
Vice
officers
attended
lhe
show
Knezevich,
who
was
among
IS
ani·
ly
.rejected
for liver transplants
State Auto's already
Cuminjls. Iris Collins, Frances
Goeglem, Eloise Walkins, Robert after receiving fliers passed out at mal-rights demonstrators outside · because lhc disease quicllly atlacks
low premiums can be
the University of Pittsburgh Medi· lhe new organ. Baboons, however,
and Jenny Burdette. Helen Black· the Consumer Electronics Show.
redllCIId
even more by
Police said some 800 to 1,500 calCentcronMonday.
ure highly resisrant to the virus.
ston, Matt Morris, Thor Carsey,
l'*'ring both your ear
The unidentified, 62-year-old
Doctors have also said that such
Louise Bartels, Ann Mash and people had crowded into the tent.
home with the State
·
and
Hartley
and
10
other
porn
partient
remained
in
critical
condi·
transplants could ease a critical
Dwight Cullums. .
Auto Companies.
.
acrresses were charged wiih lewd· lion today. Docrors said Monday he shortage ofhuman donor organs.
ness and conspiracy to commit was gl'oggy and responded to com- More than 2,500 people died io
prostitution, police said. Arrested mands to open his eyes. The liver 1991 while. waiting for organs,
. Let us teR you just
on pandering charges were the ·· was "'Irking well, said Lisa Rossi, . mostly hearts and livers.
how much yQUr savings
show's promoter, a bookstore a hospital spokeswoman.
Protesters
on
Monday
carried
canbe.
·
nolia. five seedlings, $S.
oWnc:r and a video cameraman.
The operation is lhe world'S sec- signs wilh ~ch slogans as "Stop
Ground cover plants available
'
ond transplant of a ·baboon liver the monkey business·· and ."End
lhis year include the pachysandra,
and 31st Involving animal organs the sufferlnJ now.''
50 plants for $15; Baltic ivy, 50
since 1963. Pitt surgeons last year
loan Iordan said lhe transplant
planlli for $15; and crown vetch, 72
KA!eping lbe fallh
surgeons "remind me of modem·
plants for $21 .
First-century Judaism embraced
day mad scient1111."
· Any of these packets may be several sects, including the
"I undersland di4t IIley do lhls
ordered at lbc Meigs SWCD Ofrlce Sadducees, the Pharisees and the
at no charge, and lbat ia wonderful.
at 33101 ~~d R!!ad in Pomeroy Essenes, Messianic fervor led to
But look at lheir mQii.V.tion," she
214 EAST MAIN
A finandil aid workshop will said. "~hey w.ant to achieve
or by ma1l wnh oheck or money unsuceessful rebellions against Rome,
POMEROY
order to the listed address. All resulting in the destruction of the be held Jan. 18 at 7 p.m. at the •mmorta!uy m h1story books and
Meias
Hiah
School
library
for
all
orders must be paid for when sub- Temple. To avoid the dl11olulion of
892-8687
teXtbooks.'
mitted. There is a limited supply of the faith, a program of codifjcatlon of Meip County aeniors and parents.
During lhe operation, doctors
packets.
•
law was begun at the academy of Guest speatcrs will be John Hill of injected white blood cells from lhe
Packets will be in and ready for Yavneh. The work continued for about tho Umvmity of Rio Grande on baboon's bone marrow into the
piclcup around March 19. An exact 500 rear:s ln .Pal.estine and Ba~lonia, lhe Financial Aid Form (FAF), and patient in an attempt to heir his
date'for pick up will be announced. end1ng 1n the !mal redaction of the Melooy Greenwood of Bank One body accept the organ.· He wil also
·t111uranee Colll(llanloa
'
·
·
• Talmud,
• on student grants iu1d loans.
·
receive four llntl-rejection drugs.

Words

1

n. ~ hu boon roduood 10 $88,900 onc1

l Johnson receives scholarship
, : · Williiun R. Johnson, Racine, has
- been named a recipient of a $500
scholarship from the FEL-PRO
Automotive Technicians Scholar-

Days

Ann
Landers

. '

DRIVEWAYIINITAUED

UftEITONE·TRUCKING

992-6215

.PotWOy, Ohio
.

.

FREt: ESTDIATES

992-3838

1/111'1211

mo.
I

'

'"

Snodgrass Upholstery:~~
"He/pi11g Yort lb R•corn Youi•NIIIINIIt'' : •.
• Church, Home, Trucl!, Bolt, Auto ·
end Office S•etlt 11
-,
UCINE,ONIO
614·949·2202
61
. !.

,,

"• r

..

•

�Page

8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

41 Houaes for Rent

=·

Household

,71

ALLEYOOP

Autos tor Slle

The World Almanac "' Crossword Puzde- ~

Goods

4 - -. F - AIJ)go, iiorng.,ot..-, No Polo,

=~3.Dopoolt

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohro

12, 1993

Tuesday,January12,1993

-;-&amp;~~Roos~ss----:::~----------~AM~.;.~,.;,;r;.,;~;
••;,;~;u.;.;~~--- ··
.38 Still

..

PHILLIP

New 2 Bedroom .._.. Total
Eloctrto, Hoot Pump, Wall To
WINCirp.t,l14 3881-.
Ato Qronde, 3 lA, 1·112 both,

ALDER
&lt;;XUY .t.NO

.

42 Mobile Homes

becoming a star on the footba Ateam ."

1----------r-----------l

•-= -

a-,

,....nb

. -.,.

;:,"'..nl-

:fit·

B
.
u

E.t.R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
~nunlng, y,.. Aornovot: ~
!l1onclng - · lt4 Ill U33.

~mmlna. F,.. Eallmlltosl 114-

IP-7151"Aftor 4p.m.

don,

~~ hameL Clll 114- Qa argee Ponable Sawmill
~
· ;.::..:.,:.:.;"--;:--:::-:::-=;:-;== 1hlul yow toas to tho mill

Wonted To luy: Junk Autoo

With Or Coli
...., Uvoly. IM.IU I'!! I
Top Plld: AI Old u.s.
~ Gold Ringo, Sllnr COino,
Clold Colno. II.T.S. Coin 8hop,
111 - A - Golllpollo.

Employment Serv1ces

luot

11 · Help Wanted

.:,;.,=...,.,-,.:..,.,==::----

-

11 Concem For Yow Child's
Coro. Coli Uo For A Viol. lnflnt
troddlen e14 ue em p,.._
chaclarw JSchool Age ~~

=nee.

'T,..roo_t_cp-p,-lng---::l-tri,..m-m.,..lng-.-..
lrM ... lfMtN, 304-

--~~~~-

Wll do bobyohtlng In my homo:

en-hire ar-. EJ:per. • mer.
IM-317-0227.

Will Do C . - Work Now
Building,

~ng,

Framing,

Ea...- I I - ·
'K.U, ~ointing.
.lob llllop .......
roqulrod. Dry
ROoting, Etc. An lmo: HoM
R•~,••,l~l
•
-hlnlot

mMJnt ,.... ..,.

....... ... .... CeP'bb of
-.. pr1nlll. Top PlY .t.

-

Fmancial

- - · - - t o P.O.
loa - · · Point PI
II, WV

21

Buslne81
El.peilei Cld.
Ywul ..
llocltfnlol /loot lllkor, Pa~
Opponunlty
/Ful-n-. Sand llaaponN To:
tNOTICEI
CLA 2&amp;1.1... o/0 Clolllpollo Dolly
- L . A 5 Third A..nuo, Qal. OHIO YALLEV PUILISHINQ CO.
............ thol you do .......
llpolll, unlo 45131.
with pooplo you knoW ond
NOT 1o lliMI __,througn1 tho
moll until you hove lnvesugotod
tho ollorlng.

Fill THE

•

-

VII-

.+AKQJ 2

Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: South

t-

--nol . . .

52 Sponlng Goodl

1711•..a.::IDW7W1A

Mobile Homes

53

1.:aoo.a37~25.

Ill elec, 2 bedroome, AIC,
covered porch, lkltchtn illand,

bldg, underptnnlng,
llko - . 304-17&amp;-2414.
t090 Fal,_nt Fantasy, 14a80, 3
bedroom•, 2 bathe, garden tub,
llnnd now pump, 114-141121115.
.

ston~a•

=--::-:,.:....,..;..,.....,-Buy D4' 0011. A - Anllquoo,

UUIU Aftor 7:00 p.m.
Floli Tol)ll. actl olockoon a.._
Polnl Pleioont, ~-:a.

t124 E. llokl StrMt, on Ill. 124.
Pomeroy. lloin: II.T.W. tO:OO
a.m. to 1:00 p.~_eundo, t:OO
to 1:00 p.m. l14 ... 2128.

=---=--~~::..=..~

Furnlturo:

Ful bl:.:dtd .collie pupe.

rollnlohlng ond
-~~ wo IPICIIIIum church

~-will buy; co11111

...
m

::th~~old JaCk R,_
aonnon Shophord , . , _;

11112

54 Miscellaneous

-=
=:•
Sal~
~~'1
241-1117.

St- Dovlo -

Produc:tfon
~-

Gilt ond

Jon. .... 1

-.zlU.

M~ fn~M.:a.,eo.:=:

........ ---~

__

$100,1~

T.1 T-blrd, one owner, g60d con- _ _ _ _....__ _ __
dhfon. COionlol ,_lng, ·
humlclfto.., rod - r - - 61 Fann Equipment

304-171-4004.
1877 AC, Di1111 Troctor,
I Monnin ~~ Puc d•l, With
. . _ , 1M Hro, '?,500:
COIIoctor Dolo, Front 111 AC Round ......
CUrto Cablnot, Jewlory, Qold fi,IIO-'--FtnonolngI AWaUobfa,
114Dto...-., T-. PIOriO, 114- -luz.
388

II~.

'

Colornon&amp;!:
........ 81,000
BTU,
condHton, -

only..............

2130JD- "'=~lhii'J: JO
. . . , - .. - ....... ;2030JO
-111110. ......... avofl.

llbla.I142MI'"
1 ft
-==$2.51
.... lkiiN
eo.

TransportatiOn

11111

71 Autos for Sale

3 Bodroorno In Qalllpollo, tJn.
tumlohod, C.iport, 1335"10.
•300 Socurii.Y Dopooll, e.....,..._
0332 11-5, 11-y .Sotu~y.
Chomboro Rklaa llood, e 'room
klr ront.laO month. :t04&amp;JI-2301.
For IIOnt: Nlco l lodroom Fur·
nlahod Houoo Avollablo Fob
41h. For lloro Into Coli 114-4411;51.

Fumlohod Houoo t350 Pluo
UtiiHioo, 3 BR ttl Founh
AvonUI• Clalllpolro, li4 441 4411
Aftor 7 1'.11.
·
Largo 2 otory, comor lth a
llolit, Pl. Pft. 3 lai'Gf bod,_,.,
2 lull botho, kftchon, dining,
,family, living, laundry - ·
$450. por month, ..........
·dopc4H rwqulrod, 114-446-ZIG&amp;.
Avollablo ~~~ Dooombor.
f

-

Chowolot

sttw•octo

ott..l!qufpmont. -'ii form
... DhiMIW1 . . . . . _ . , Ohio,

Nn Haven 2 bedroom ~!"~

niahtd or untwnllhlcl,

Pllorw: 114-- 1144.

&amp; r•rence, 304-882-2511.

:::::."c.$30Gimo.

t+ou-

Cool, S50 A Ton Dollvo...d, 114Contpfolly Fumlahod mobllo 441_,,
home, 1 mUe blloW town overlooking ~ver. No ...... Ci.. 114~:131.

S22S/mo.
Ono
bedroom
lnctudll utiUtloo,
- -ttoo
·
-urtty dopc4h, no poto; 8!;4,

lluot Sa
. A: Bloutllul Full l.anglh
Whfto Shodow Mink Coot, Appralaod: $7,500. Nog. 114-

1177 Ford LTD Good Condition,

::faJ:•••plu, AI. ""· ,,...

:114

Cliowrotot, Ford, Dodgt:- •
- . 8hOrt or tong. HO ruol.

304-a7N211.
Bl&lt;ytortc, 304-1711'

.

FRANK AND ERNEST

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD's

1111 ....... AX7 4 Cytlndor, 8
Spood, Air Conclttonlngi=-· 11180 Full liM'..!~ XLT v..,
SiJpor c1oon, t\111, or
01- Automotlc, ......... c.-~."::

w-. -

fw, 11+441-05M.

W....todva:t uomago. tt.200,
-

-.

as,ooo. • -

.._ lu&amp;ck I

DIMIIII.

~-~~~

U.UWMilj I

I,. . ,.........

Cont.-. .,.. Or

1ng 121.11; Rocunn tt»L1o1o

Arid Chon t2ll Or lJIO.II
- : Colloo
End Wlh

55

w

="~¥:,

DfY'. .,
12111· Hours:

1

M ; htow 811Yor
Or 4 111111 o.. 141

Piko.

.....

•

No DlpaOit On --2-0wn;
Nolhlng Ever Pswausud.

441-1422.

•. /1

BORN LOSER

,

.
111\ (.()I(WI£l) ~ 11-.Y FUTUR£
1-m.... WAAT 'HITII N.J.. 'II*' tY.£
(X~~
1'0
REI'lJa ~I
_ _...

I'D BE ~ P!!E.'SS£0 1'0
Fl(IIP A ~INE/lllNDOE5
~Ta'(~l*&gt;!

Having good intermedia~ oards
(the lOs and nines of this world) can ·
make the difference between success
and failure in a contract, especially in
no-~run\p . Yet we give them no value
when adding up our high-card -points.,
The time to. look fondly upon them is
when you are borderline between two
bids: Overbid with good intermedi·
ates; underbid without them. 'However , even when you have good interme~
diates, it can be important to use them
correctly.
Every year the Bois liqueur company sponsors a Bridge Tips competition
in which leading experts and journal·
ists offer snippets of advice. Today's
deal comes from Englishman Eric
Crowhuril's tip.
Against three no-trump: West led
his fourth-highest spade, South ducking his ace until the third round.
To make the contract, declarer had
to find East with the diamond ace and
somehow collect two diamond tricks.
which seemed impossible. However.
South found a play that made life diffi·
cult for East. At trick four, be led the
diamond 10, overtaking with dummy's
jack. Next came the diamond king .
East had seen West's diamond five.
Worried that West had started with
the !&gt;-2 doubleton. East withheld his
ace again. Soon after, declarer
claimed nine tricks.
Note that if,Soilth wins the ·first dia·
mond trick in his hand with the 10,
East will have no problem. He will
have seen bis partner play first
five, then the six. Knowing West has
three diamonds, East won't duck his
ace a secoad time.
··
Try to make an opponent commit
bimseU before he bas seen a signal
from his partner. .

OUR LAN"GUAG'E

•
:t L-IVE: IN et,.JCI-I
A l-IMITeD,

NARROW v.oi&lt;L.D. .

Auto Pana &amp;
lulok ¥-1 Engtno, A1ic1 ~

ottor, 114-

1!1-. otmlna Mhi;a

tanka, -

1011 -

olc. DAR~tloo!..~

I

~

:
~

•·

1-Aroae- rooe
2 Doubll-3 Glacio! epoch
(2 wda.)

Thm your clutier into·ca.h,
W it the ecyy UJGy... by ghone,
no need to leave your
Place your daujtied qd tOda.y!
· 15 aoord. or leas, 3 dau,
3gqpeu, 15.4Q paid in advance.

Campers a

79

MotorH011111

home.

,,

Serv1ces

_me____ ::'

~81~~Ho
'
7

Improvements
BASEIIENT

WATERPROOANQ
~
Unoo1 IIIII nal llllilltM ~ ·'

···=-=lllumlohod,
1---------------------2·------'-----Coli 1
...

3._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ _ ____,_ __
5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

R.-rt

W.'fapuwn.w.

Orlaun•ll

~

Yacuwt a.ner•••••
...,..,, ,,..
Doli
...... .
Plcll.U. And Drlltwr;, GillfW

CrMktloed,l~

6--~---------

1. _~---~~------8.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _...;........:.-_
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:.-..:......;._

10~~--------'---11~~--·~----------.

12~--------------

18~------------14--....;_,....,--_
_ _ _ _.......,...
15 ____~~~~----

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

=:t·.tt::.."''::..~

Cortttlool
·11 . II p tlal ~.
alll ........
-....:u:
,.,t.
I

'""""""

446-2342
9J2-2156
. '
675-1333
y

plus a long, Mlf•
would
· addresaed.
envelope io Astro- nallze can
, wortced
Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Boa smoothly lodoy. OYtirci!me· your fear
, 9t42B, Cleveillnd, OH 44101-3428. Be and face tho lion In his den.
. sure to state your zodloc lign.
LEO (July IS-Aug. 22) Vour mentol proAQUAIIIUS (,_,, :.Fob. 11) You have cesses could be.both inter'!lltlng and ef.
BERNICE
a rare khack today for taking compllcat- tective today. First you'll establloh an .
BEDE OSOL eel Ideas and II\JIIQeetiona of oUOCiates . oblectlve, orld then you'll come up with
and determining their root values. You'll a profusion of bright Ideas concerning
make sense out of whal is nebulous to how to ochltive 11.
them.
•·
VIRGO (Aug. 2:1-Sept. 22) Your flnanPISCI;.S (Fob. 20-Merch 20) If Lecly clal dpecla look encouroglng todoy,
Luck lias an Inn- o- your ogenda' because you'll.hove the ability to genor·
today, tliere'a a strong poulblllly ahe · ate aamlnga ond thl-om 10 spend
may put you In lhe right spot at the right ' thorn wilily. Buying and selling to your
time, end you will - t from 101'1'1!1- :
tee.
.
thing you didn't originate.
(hpt, 21-0ct. a) Succeoa In
Allll8 Cllercli 21-Aprtl 11) Th• MCtet your .nc~eavora lollkety todoy, provided
to your MICCIII today lo to ohow • co- you do not delegate to olhlta Ullgn·
operative 11111ude to people you're In· ,_,.you're more CIPIIIIII 01-lng
-.13, 11113
volved wllh . II you take thltroubll to youl'lll1. Kltlll a tight ~d on a1 uoot a good ••ample, tlley'l try to outdo pocts of tho oporotton.
•
'Things lhould begin to look up for you
you.
·
ICOII'IO
(OcU•
Nor.
22)
If your 11t1
In the yoor oheed -·your llnoncea TAURUI (AprtiJO...., 20) H you ex- tandtottngtublttodly,ltooutdbebeare concerned. Some of the endeovora press your Innate artistic ond creotlve cauoe people wllh whom you're ctoeoty
that you've laid foundatlona for cen.now· urgee today, It Is very "kety you could I n - .,. uy1ng nice thlngt lbout
be bUilt Into 110r118thlng larger ond mora produce oomethlng thlt wll not only you. ACt IIUtJ)rloed If you 1eom tibout
lmpr..-.
•
thMI later.
cAPIIICORN (Doc. 22-JMI. 11) Pro· · plasoe you, but plene ot...,. u '11/811.
CIEJIINI
C...,
21-June
211)
Pleooent
tllC·
SACIITTAJIIIII
(*v. a DIG 11) Jull
gr- will come more Molly today II you perlen&lt;:ee are likely tQ!Iay, p r - you
..-o may,_. your _ , .
try to Hnd onloyment In your tlllkl, even
out ct commercial lnvOI-to " - . . a bit out-lh, don't moee of 1 •ioua nat~re. Wltlatle while stay
with
friends
..Try to enjoy what - h has Ililt 18 en IICUMtO- your eXI)ICIA•
you .,ork. Capricorn. treot yourself to a to oH81' In his
or her way untllnted by tlonl. You're tn a good cyclo tor fcirtubirthday gift. Send tor Coprlcorn's Aomundane atrlnga.
nota achl-•ta.

ASTRO·GRAPH

f.l..':

82

•·

bee•,..

'I

'"

8=~·
lnetrurn,nt

,.

J~ffrey

McQuain

Q. Can you tell me exactly what
STATUS QUO means? I hear it used
a lot, but I'nt not sure about it.
A. STATUS QUO is a Latin phrase
that literally means "state in which."
Use this phrase to indicate the cur·
rent or existing state of affairs .
STATUS is pronounced "STAY-Ius"
(or often "STAT-us"), and QUO is pronounced "kwoh." This term is hardly
new; in fact, it's been part of the
STATUS QUO in English for more
than 150 years. ·
·

IOJ9+-t--

'R

VWGJ

YRFP · EYZMRKD

LHB
'

tM

NHWKJaM

LHB

Z

JPZt

ZKA

EYZMRKD

RKQJPZA

HL

• 0

····'
...

ZK

VPKKRLPB

RKARURAWZV.'
NZEaRZJR.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Growing old II like being Increasingly penalized ;-:;;
for 8 crime you hlven't ,committed." - Anthony Powell.

won

.....-

"' • -~

lAIII

''· ~.

. ...,

.' "'''
"

IrIIl
HUI:BS

I

W0 R P E

,.,

I

·r· 1

I I

~

l

I I I 15 I e

Complete the ckuck:le quoted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

·

&amp;· PRINT
NUMBERED LHTERS
THESE SQU"-RES ·
A

V

....

~

......
...

.

·-

IN

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
.
·

.. ....

~

..

Remand • Chalk · Decay · Lethal • HEADACHE
My brolher-in-law feels he is righl abOut everything .
One evening alter an ar~ument. my sister told him that
wearing a halo too tight gtves others a HEADACHE too.

JANUARY 121

....

...
,, .
,

''• '

SCJIAM..LETS ANSWERS

Ft Worm. TX

.

-..
.. ..

The sign in • the ·travel
agency window convinced the
,
elderly gent to take a trip. The
..-------:--:-'::---,sign read: "Why don't you see
·1
....· __._R__,E__K,_U__,_Q_A_,_.,....I the world before you ..... it?"

·

0 1912 TV UttinQ Inc .

~­

m-au:..~

Groom ond lluJiltlr . ~~ .

i

Pass
All pass

PLUSSAGE &lt; "PLUH-sij") refers to
an extra amount or surplus ( "the
plussage of this year's earnings"). Remenlbering to double the S in the
noun PL USSAG
E is a plus.
.

Work, 114-311-2171.

=r-

=..;.;;;;..------56 Pets for Sale

- .. ...
old. 411114
.,...' .

3 NT

••

....

411ormon
State
5 Nogallwo
prefix
e Ancleilt city
7 ......lighted

DOWN

awner ~~ ~ '
2213, Pome,.,: 1M . . 1100.
~

llnl. ••

-Pol--.
........... ,, ............

' G-AVIAif I l&gt;UGIC

A I..'Oifi4N6t ....
IT MUST BE
.sweEPS wft~l

~

East

! .

Making
the commitment

By

1IR 4 WD 4 - . Hondo

"'buT•. oil

Suppllll

~

'1M .,..,

441-3701.
ludalt Tranemllelane, f.Jiell

i"t'..:.r
.

GrooutlncL AI

.

114-2oii11S.

llnao AobuiM, -

-·*·

FURiiTUAE ANO Weltlt.CIIIII4 UI121L
CRAfTI
Wotlovoc:r.ttoWOrotllup- tdtn1~t1 aftus ' MF "-'a
· Aloo Wll IITJi!tn
Yow-WoluyAridlil
IIIII.
Good Uood F-urw. Coinoloo 10W71-4410o. . Uo AI 2 2 2 1 - - . 141, 114- AkC o. .......,.., P.UPI. ,,

COUNTIIY

..

111112 - 1 CIR-211, bolt
' d~von otrllt bfko, 2,400 .......
mlloo1 nc cond, runo filii -n

231

IBiock,.,...,_cr!QwtnWino
:. . . . .

I

---rs-tnc.. ,

Building

.

-r

PATf

Ac;cessorles

wdoy ;foro, Rle Orondo, OH Call 114Pflzil ::14Nt21.

on u.-n

I

.: ..

Nortb

.

76

-- -

7142.

\.•· \.. v.. /)!NtfEF
5_--- L.OISTEF TtttlfMit&gt;OI/
·. · .. . .
.
l&gt;t FOIS. GI/AS ftL\J6A

Motorcyclll

74

3110, -

Morwr Bock auarontNdl Buy

r,1erchand;se

11R Ford

Automotlc Wllh Air, AI p.,;;;,
AIIJFil 84,000.
114-211-12711.
.
.. olr,-.. ..oondltiDII,
- · $3500 11R Ford . _ X~T, ¥-1, PB,
nogotlablo. 11,000
304-171-3141.
pa, PW, PDL. AIIIFll ..
Min n&gt;Pf, ...r ond ,whb~ 4WD,
fl'l!:o llducod; 114-IMI 2051

CA&amp;H?!! .

HOW ~E DID IT...

111 llilaun King cab, 4 OYL, I :
opd., 414. ---~21m.

color, 114 141 ann,

Want to:
PIN ao'W n EXTRA

Coal, 141 A Tan , Sloker

WJ.IEN YOU'RE
HOT, YOU'RE
1-101'!

~71-14121.

~d..:..=--~
m

:=:

ONL'( ONE IN OUR CLASS .
TO GET A PI:RFECT SCORE
"TRUE OR FALSE ' TEST

TWENW OUT OF
TWENW .. NO, SIR ,
I ~AVE NO IDEA

ton, 4 - drtvo, Nko - . 304-

du Bona 450 SL
Honlop eon-tlbfo, ....... In
1173 lliw

1111
4312. -

I GUESS M'{ DOG WAS T~E

- .. -w.___

DRAIN CARE At: Thomoo DO ~
Centw, 171 llcConnlck Roecl,
154S, Athena.
-------,.------- . Gllllpollo.
HOUHhold
T - 100 mlc,_ve, ~; 2
Rentals
ond • - a. colloo tablo .... 2
Good
.
I
ond tabloo, ttl both; iiM-jli:
2017
3 LA ouho. ~ld ook
·
41 Houses tor. Rent
wlllor bod wlh matching night TrNdmllll.tkolllnllll, With DIGital
llonhor.
- · h5, IM-:111Z B-11, Lorge Uvlng otond. 304..111-3813 ott.r 4pm.
Room, Khchen, Dtnlng Area, 'II'RA FURNITVRE ANO AP- t13711.
Blthroom, Corpott $ot00.11o.
PUANCU
Uood Ditch wttch T....,hlr
114-245-11083 Att.r 8 ~.II .
114-441-44~ OR 114-441-3151
Dllltit
Wlhoul
114-188-4251.

1111 Cho¥Y 5-10 Pick-Up T - .
Wll Eq..ppod, Colt 114-441IIM.
,

DollY-

r:

partly tumlohod, priVIIo sitting,
$250/ month, pay own utlllll10,

YES, SIR .MR .PRINCIPAL ..
MY TEAC~EI&lt;. SENT US
f.IERE TO SEE '(OU ...

Hap For . ., 114 IU OW'.

.

FJnn Suppl'cs
&amp; L've,toc:k

42" Wldo luck Stovo Wlh t5' TrvDia Wollod Plpo,

~-

Pom~roy,

814-211-t:JII.
,.. DodaT 1 ion ...too bod, •
XX -.'t7,IINI.IIoy- 114-7311

Merchandise
Hay, 1111"""' Ia... $2.50.
t6.2 Cu. R. Clloot '!YPI, Whir- HominOnd argon, Loolla oound - · PDO. 304- doy
Round
· Satur......- up p), pool " ' - • • IM-44M4tl Att.r 175-3381.
SP.II.

:t.camor.

In

1983 QIIC 3141on 4 WD, 12,1100, ·

t..orgo lrlld, 64 Hay &amp; Grain
m tt4 ueer.om.
1283
1,.,.--...:.,,...,.....,,...,,...,.,,.,.

2 /Qulin With Hooc:lboord IF... With Bro•
-dboord Comtna !Iango.
Ceram~Tite.lidlw:J lN.

11180 Ford pick up, 112 ton, lcyl., '
runo aood,. asking
PIUU, 1'1441~·714f
'

!..".!!, PI,

8rod
Opon - - For Cototog, Coli

-·-·good . . . .

hoUH

72 Truckator Slle

Co. Flfrg--

Biocft ....

-.
1111 Clayton Trallar, Vory Good 1112-2218.
Price, Phone: 3Q4..1'75..3414 Atl1r
Ono bedroom apt, ground tloor 251-1011.
7 P.ll.
~VIte entrance, lalchen l 11l OuNn .t. twin bod room oulllo,
2 BodroCMn llobllo Homo, 12Xt0, utiiHioo Mnlohod, $2711, mo. ~- couch • cliolr,
..
• dryer, 304-475-t171.
Sitting On 1 Aero 01 Lond...._!llco 304-87WS413.
Big CIOrogo, 21 tl2 W1do ,... tl2
Alllflllc outfit, oquolluoJ
Ft. Lona, Rural Wat•, Raccaon 45
Furnished
TOMilohlp, Butler Rood, 114-388dual,
·
·
lloCh
o
Rooms
1317.
opoalcoro,
mo,eM-1112-bO!ono~~pn.
2 8odrooma10I52 Tral*. $1.200 Roomotor ront.· - or month.
114-132·2872
~:7:711 1120/mo. Gallla Hotll. Sam tloiiMWIIIo.. lottTootod Army SurtiiUI, I
115110.
Sa~lll Pool Oftloo (E. ~771.
33 Fannator Sale
Sun _ , • 1;00 Pll,
Stooping wlh cooMng. F~.
Aloo
troller-·
All
hook-&lt;Jpo.
" .... ~
41 A, 8 Room B~k Rench 3 ean aft• 2:00 p.m., 304-~ Orhor
lll!lpmont rontoi coworalll,
BR, 2 lotho, 3 FIIODio..... full 5151, lllleon WV.
dacron
lneullled.
, . . cov. .ll8
a-mont• 2 Blmo, Work .....,,
$21.15.
Crib WHh "hod. 114-441-2310.
46 Space tor Rent
S..... 30" Eloctrlc Ringo, eon.
35 Lota &amp; Acreage
OHico Or Buolnou s.,-, 68 tlnuoua Clean, Advacado, $150,
Strot!o Phono: lt-t- 114 4411351
~Acre Troc:to For- On Ad7051,
I
A.M. 10 5 P.M.
SEPTIC TANK BACKED UP'!
dloon Plko laO.OOO Low! Lind
UN ENFORCER Saptlc Tonk
Cloorod, 114-317-0111.
OFFICE . SPACE FOR RENT: Traotmont
lock-Up,
oHicoiUMoln Buoinooo Foul OrtoroToWProvont
Nlco Building Loto For s-:.-.~ llodom
~ Your
I
Pn&gt;t..tonot
Building
,_
Slate Route 150 Hoar R
Rlolrlotod, 114-44t-G54t Allor ii ovallablo. Coil MorN Huklno, ~=c::r::,.;-w•=r!"l
P.ll.
114-441-2131 or 4441-2112.
AI: · - ·.. , . , _ . . ,
OvOf an aero ftot lend po~
Upollo.
Claibuilding oH~, on Frank ~d .. Wllh C Wanted to Rent
outokla bullolng, 114-041-20611.
BLOW DRAIN87
Wa- To Ront: Motor Homo
i - - llnlno.
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS: For
~f
tloilh -DRAIN CARE
YNrO 01 8UIIduli In
County, SaiOm 1\rp,l Blond, Coil Poll1 11 7111.
Plpoo And 1-. lolo To Uoo.
ec,., Rernoc., beautlfu

2bd"'!..

, _• ...,., Iuick PW Av....a.
Oldo U floaonoyo, wiY.., PW,
PL., crul8e, lf4.7112-31o2
,

Hoy For lllo, A - Blloo,
Stondln 11om, Con Dlllvor, 114-

F---·· 112 llonlho, llooUtlliil ...;...;.;;..=~----.....,­

ond
At...ldt llAS /PROPANE 110~000 BTU Fonnol H TNCIO!r 3 Paint - .
Apo
. nmont•. In lllddllpon. From Emplro F-otanclrla Fumaco, 2
Wogon
· """'
Ptontoro,
ttll. CoH 614-1112-8110. EOH. . y...., Old.IM467·70211.
Dloko,
Na'""!V'!!oro.

land; woodl, puture and h1U1.
Call for goOd rn1p. 1..a'M-513-

By GARY LARSON

M Floro, 51,000 mltoo, 4 cyL, 4 .

DnopiWfiMI Cottsry: CFA p.,.
lllnl I Slam111 Kta-. 114-

Antiques

2NT

Pass
Pass

(poet.)

19 - Ewereot
20 Joyful
axclsmotlon
.21 Ukoly
22 Same (comb.
lonn)
23 iiii!IUIII
25 High card
26 Mlnlltor'e

Opening lead: • 5

I SHORE AM
TtCI&lt;LED
TO HEAR
THAT!!

IIICI.. lillY trodo. Ezcollont COR- I
d)ttoit. ttiOO. 304-1711-10111.
•
W.lilod: tll3 or Copitco

175-at32.

.-m

Complotly . Fumlahod Smol!
+ UIIIHioo. No
t!lll Slcyllno Hotly Rldgo 14&lt;70,
II !lolaro 7 P.ll. 114-446-

and at.,.,

BARNEY

.lld,

12 Wine-or pump. · - • Coakor ·~Ill 7
WNko Old, Bul, .711 £ictt..114Door Slayor. 1271• .,. au. :t04- JIIIW

2314 • 3"· IWo bor..UO. 30" '

West

1+

1\ino Uti.
,
Condftfon, .2,400-114~ .,
till 8uboru OL, 4&lt;11', MOO; tm
well,
I ft4-a..3383.
1,_, lull olu, 4WD, PB,
· 314 ton plctt-up, $100;. 1113
IM-112-21108.
PI, aulon•llo, ... ·tlrM.. new
FlNwoad: All Haulw ~ 2111 8pll ............ WV.
:JIU'I.
mUIIW,
GOOd
_.ion,
M0 Plck..Up . LoOd. - T - - . - u . c . 1112 Y [I
IPft JIIHL CaM efo ..t Cld IO ftlOCI 080, l'\4o.llt2..
114-2116-1318.
.
7733.
H.D.
1'1•.·
- tor I p.m., iit'4414151.
-111 Ful
till1tWill
RaPt
Good Col dldonl tiO,OOO 304- tta c - Y-1. With T-Topo, 1114 ~· Pr 1 ctor nn.
1711-7111.
'
AuiiOIIIIIkl, air, PI, All.1fll c-.
tt.200
- - - : ·StO.Hondo Nawk
400
oc.IM.
-F
1hoyrokoll
· 304-17114fll.
Allor 4pm,
For,..._ 81&amp;1
111111 typo PT0 d:l- I - · ......., 1114 - · PI,..,PB, A111F11 -304..71-14tl.
'
caelllle •leNa, MO, 302 •Uio,
winter coet, denhn WI tNtt.r
_.. 114 141 2041 or 114-MtFumlahod, a Roomo a.' Both, t~m. ftonnollnii)IL Uko now. ooa..n, No Polo, Aofwonco l
corn pfcltor 1 - . 304 411 1tfl • 2171.
klng NO, pold - : misc.
Dlpoofl Aoqulrod. 114-441-1510.
ladloo clo1hlng; COl IM-9112· - - H o y i n g E...l - , 1111 Iuick ContWll 4 o-,
Wpm Ql' 114-84...2204 af.
G..,.louo living. t and z bod- 2155,
"' Bill a.1or,
Nay Qcod Concl1fon... _~,Ooci lllloo,
,_. oponmonll 11 Vlllago tarlpm.
Bind, le ,' Oom P"*-'

=

ClA~~IflfD AD~
THIFARSIDI

lll'lllry/ dining, 3bdrm., 2 batt.,

IIIIo Poula'o Do Coro Contor 1
B - Wool 01 Hl.c On Jackoon $1S2.17 por month Including ola
Plko 11-F I A.M. -8:30 P.M. H -lrM lo1 ront, now &gt;b70,
OuaiHy And Eapmenco lo Tho dlllve...d and Ill up, sklnlng

WUI•NIDr eldlrty in niJ' home,
1141121111. .

t-

SELLER PAVS ALL CL.OSIN&lt;I
COST: llodlrn codar ronch,
..,.k~n Uvlng room, hordwooa

for Sale

WIN Do BlbYsfttlrlg In My Homo.
Bldwoll
Arlo,·Any -Anllilblo.
. . 114-245-5421

ot

Flnonoa, 1-·2513.

~:tl"::n..jlrlvol• omo ..... 32

•A'ION' ALL AREAS! Short your il-~4~..!:,._-:-:-:--:---:-tlmo with ... Vou'l tho :::=·

nt· 1400 Ia 1311.

+to 2

South

17 Unlock

2r1"lioog1
21 HoWWII-know?
21 Contplllnl
32 Tri mlnuo ono
33 Poycfllltrlat
35 Collago deg.
38 Ancient

+A83

pump, - - 2 car
r=;,
"!'n:.co:".,m.185,500, 1M-ncy ... oldorly lody, . =====;_____ I l l -

~colf=304-1.:..:..;:1711-~:..l-t:.:..:;tlrl;....---:-:-:--:-7'

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1122~

t•

+10 9

.A9%

---------1::
=

:t=..:'

a

Cnr

I A 73

86~
86~

SOUTH

,.,_.,_, I'M~M-1011.
Z Bodrocm Mobtlo H - For
Aont Dopollt, Rolo,.ncN R•
qulrod. No Polo, Call Allor 2 P.M.
~~~~·~44~1~~~~~·~~~~~
2 bodroom, lumlhlld, woohor l
dryor. :t04-773-SZ48.

=::,_ -·

EAST
+Q 10 2
•Q7613

WEST
+K97SI
10

Eur.U, an It Rt.7. No .,.t1,

:l:.

1

I JUSt GRE14.J UP
i\.l A OOFLY 200E.

14d0 · :i Br, · t milo South ot

._.7143.

=;

+713

coll--2312. '
"The only hope I have to pass this course is

t-1!-IJ

·JI
+ K Q~J 9 1

12 x eo trailer, Ponwoy .,..,

, _ Chlttuoh111, To OUIIIflod
Homo Ontr. llodlcol AI· 11
Help W anted
21
Business
1ontton; . , _1121•
F1ltllr . puppt11 mothor end
Opponunlty
zai droorn tro11or On R-• 180,
liolh nry ~ wotch Hudod: 110 Poopll To toM
AI Pot:tor, $178/llo. With All
No Will Power Vondlng A-. AIIC..ton proof Condllfonlng,
114-381-13711
' 114-1112-4103'
a-~ An"'l••• tOO% buolnooo Mtlh • oludy ...h lri- :::---:•==-·-,.,..,,...-,--'c-:--:-:F-: S P"l!l' ,
Notur:~ : - GuarontNd. Coli como. HI00-8 5II313.
2. BA portlally fur!1'ool, oab1o
3•
0,.0 I Month Old Doa, N - 303-1
VE
. ·NDINQ ROUTE.· f t - Rich avallablo. BloutiiUI rtvor In
Homo, P - t Sowo HOr Fn&gt;111 8111w noodld IDr 10 _.hi old
Konougo, Dopoolt • Aoforonco
Till Pooindlltl 111 4111
=-A ,.,111 Scltool a..._ 2•3 Oulck? No Wayl But Wo Have A Roaulrid - · , lloltlle Homo
- - -·
Good,
Stoady, Allordoblo, Buof. Pork. 114-441-tl02
PIr~
Pt.,pllll ·:l Montt. Old, YlftoW
- - . _._,.,..,__
,_,~ Won't Lut 1-800-284Lo• a. lrloh lloltor, Mlucl, 114- aomoono To 111 And Clio For 1313.
2 BRtrlltortori'IIIL Ro,...nc..
441-n..
Eldo~ lion -•·
n.:-, 114 111t534.
WOLFFt•uNINCI
BEDS
.t.
dopoolt. 304-17&amp;-10111.
s....t lllao 0 1 - • Ciolfi- Un._y 01 Rio Orondo Hu - Com,_lal- Homo Unlo, • 2 IR t"'llor, t225 mo. ~~
· F- wotor. 1141n1J: I14-44U1ae.
.
Opontngo For Po~-nmo ill&gt; trorn t t - . Lompo, Lotlono, ._n '
countfnil lnolructor For 1\ro Ac-110. Monthly poymonlo 1901.
1
lln-nd.,----lo_., · I'M
~home,
I'M Clooooo
Fow
Tlmoo
A Wook. iow oa tti.OO. Coil -~E -:-A:-bo-.Mio-:-nodc-:--c-fwrille,
to good
BechekM''I
·~
In Accounta
Color
C.tolog,
t~
Ookwood
.moblo
homo, MdO.,
IM--7110. .
i!1V Aoqulrod. CPA p,.fornd.
'
bod--.
novar
llwod In, 111!;
True- C)oncnll p - For _..., A Po~-nmo llotkotl!&gt;o
o- poymonto, :t04-731-3400.
...
·
-14.
Comrnunlcotlono
fnolructor
For
;.;'""::;.::•~-::..:..;•-:;;.;.;;___ _ _ . Ono a.. 01 Per- Four
Real Estate
FurNihed, 2 or 3bdnn., lor IWII1
In Country llobllo Parte. Wuhlr/
6 Lost Found
~.::._-~
dryor, olr, 12311 mon., BM-1112·
t , _ Tonlor t Rod Aooumo 'lind t.oaor ot ln1o,_ · 31 Homes for Sale
2117. t14 ~·~ !1227.
- . Tovtor Ad or lloloro Dltdlnl 01 .fan!*~' 22
Wny Ad
,
,•roo. REWARD! 114- To Phvlllo 11-. PHR, p.....,_ tHI Sq. R., ~~ aero lo11, ZX11 44
Apanment .
m-a111
nol Olfloo,!, UniM- ot Rio wallo, 2 -.ptoco botho, ..nlng
Orondo, ~&lt;0. loa ~..t Rio room, living ,_,, 3bdrm., wllk··
for Rent
LIWI Or
~~011 4111'1&amp;. E"" '"" In_., lully oarpotod, 2 por- 2 bedroom lfMt Nfenlnct,
2 YN"' O l d , - - · Employer.
- · AC 1 otovo, dopool, no poll, 3044711-1112.
:rut.
WAHTED; Full-limo or Ponollmo choe, -~·
·-·-..,~
Nol'flank, _.,., 011.
........
-trlc, ....
to PM .t. onldnlg!ll
. 2bdnn
Yard Sale
7
lfllfta. To wwk with
In zno.
p11a._ lumfohld, laundry
ICF loclll1y. Rllllblo houra.
toclllloo c1ooo to schoOl
Sallty _, _ _ wflh a· M'....... 3 ~- t112 ,_,
In town. Applications ovallablo
botho,
2.1
owfmporiotnco. EdMlOIM bonolft mlng pool,
It:
Q..,.. Alllo. Ml or
.aaf4.Docbgo.
Contoc:t
Amber
cllll14-h2-371t. EOH.
Gallipolis
Flnd..y, AN, DON, Laldn Bla 5 BR Dlkolo Form Homo
4 R - .t. Both, Untumlohod;
Hooplto~ 304-1711-2230_, 11&lt;1 42,
bull on your lol. $31,V15 a. up. Cantorolly
&amp; VIcinity
~Mated, No Polo,
llon-Fd, I:OOAIH:OOPM.
114-886-'f.ht.
, lloolooH, Rofwonco
ALL Y o r d - - Bl Plld In Wo'l Pay You To '!YPI Namoo By - ....., 3 BA, 2 botho, fooatod _
AoqulrOd ltoM4W444.
-tho doy boloow
· DEADUNE:
2:00
p.m.
And
AddFrom
Homol
Slndy
ttelgtrte,
Pt.
t'leaeant.
tho ed to to run.
evenlnge. Price Apon-.t For Ront: 0no 1 BodSunday llllltfon • 2:00 p.m. ~.00 Por tooo. Callt-800 lfiMI 304·783-3021
room, One ·2 lldroame Flnt
nogotlablo.
ltt.49
llln/1.,..,.+)
Or
FridaY. Monday ...ton • 2:00
Annue. Balllpalll, 114 ul 822 L
Wrtto:
PASSE
•
33Rf.
l6t
9.
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Page--10-The Dally Sentinel

.Tuesday, January 12, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Four 'Supermen' are back
and there's going to be trouble
· By ROBER'( HARDT Jr.
Associated Press Writer
Perhaps the reports of Superman's deatb last November were
somewhat exaggerated. The supposed! y immortal Superman met
his "demise" last year battling a
superpowered monster named
Doomsday.
111 a scenario out of "To 1'ell
The Truth," four men, all claiming
they'.re Superman, will appear in
DC Comics in April, said DC
spokeswoman Martha Thomases.
Does this mean Krypton' s
favorite son is baek?
"I don't know ," Thomases
said, then added, "I hope so. I have
'an 8-year-old who asks a lot of.
questions."·
·
In an issue to be released in
April, Jonatban Kent, Superman's
foster father, will have a near-death
experience and become convinced
that his son is back, Thomases said.

FoUr beings will then simultaneously appear, all claiming the mantle of the lale great Superman.
According to . a statement
released by DC, the prelenders to
the throne are: John Henry Irons, a
black sleelworlcer buried alive during Superman's epic struggle with
Doomsday; a cyborg from space
who "proclaims himself a Superman retoole4 for the future"; a
super-powered teen-ager who
appears to be cloned from Superman; and a "cold super-being"
who "relentlessly takes the law
into his own hands.••
The characlers will first be previewed in the SOOth issue of
"Superman: The Ad.ventures of
Superman," and then each will star
in a special issue in May,
Thomases said.
·
The. four monthly Superman
comics will go on a semi-vacation
next week when the final memorial

\ssue comes out for th~ dear and
departed superhero.
.
.
. Between then and .APn.l, DC
Will put out ~~n pmup ISSues,
memorial edtb~ns W!th other superheroes lamenung ~e !?ss of the~
friend, and a spectal M~tropohs
Newstime" new~ magazm~ th~t
will resemble Ltfe ~aga~me s
Kennedy a.ssassmatton tssue,
Thomases S81d.
.
.
The · sp·okeswoman satd she
doubted a rep~rt that t~e four
"Su)!C?r:men" wtll be of different
.ethmctnes.
:
.
' 'John Henry Ir~ns wtll b~ng
with h!m the exP;Cne~e of bemg
an African-Amencan, Thomases
said~ "As for the others, I'm n~t
100 percent ~ but l really ~n t
think they're gomg to be of different raees.
"Technically, Superman isn't a
Caucasian," she added. "He's a
Kryptonian."

Not-so~cheap
HEART TRANSPLANT • Dr. Jack
Copeland, (rourth rrom ldt), prepares to
implant an artificial beart, held by unidentifted ·
assistant at right, Into Sharoyn Loughran, a 46·
year-old motber, at University Medical Center

in Tucson, Ariz., Monday. Tbls IS tbe nation's
first sac:.. opention ill nelll'ly two years. .Plans
are to give Lougbran a buman heart in a montb
or two, said Dr. Copelllnd, tbe hospital's cbid
cardiotboradc: sorgeon. (AP pboto)

•

:Woman receives artificial heart;
first such operation in 2 years
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
TUCSON, Ariz. -A gravely ill
woman received an artificial heart
in the nation's fust such operation
in nearly two years.
Sharoyn Loughran, 46, was in
critical but stable condition today
after receiving the plastic-andmetal CardioWest pump Monday
night during a (our-hour operation
at University Medical Center at the
University of Arizona.
Doctors said the implant was
meant to keep her alive until she
can receive a human heart in a
month or two.
The operation was supervised
by Dr. Jack G. Coj&gt;&lt;:land, the hospital's chief cardtothoracic surgeon. lil 1985, he became the first
surgeon to use an artificial heart as
a bridge to a heart uansplant. The
patient received a human heart
after nine days on a Jarvik-7 device
and lived for 4 1/2 years.
The air-driven CardioWest heart
is based on the Jarvilc, which the
Food and Dru$ Adtninistrati~n
banned except 10 emergenctes 10
1990 because of mechanical prob-

!ems and banned al10gether iri.l991
after its maker went out of business.
Like the Jarvik, the CardioWest
heart doesn't offer much mobility.
It is powered by a unit tbe size of a
large TV set. Pneumatic tubes run
from the unit into the patient's
chest.
Also Monday, doctors at tbe
University of Pittsburgh Medical
Center implanted a baboon liver in
a 62-year-old man in tbe world's
second such operation. The rust
patient lived for 70 days last year
before dying of an infection.
Mrs. Loughran was admiued to
the hospital Wednesday. The
Scottsdale woman had sufrered
from a viial heart infection since
1989 and had prOJressive heart
failure. Copeland S81d only medication was keeping her heart beating.
Copeland said the operation
went well.
''There was no bleeding, there
were no complications, we were
very happy with the way the device
fit 10side her body and the way it
functioned," he said.
The implantation was the first in
•

the United Stales by CardioWest
Technologies Inc., a joint effort by
the hospital and M~orte Research
Foundation of Salt Lake City,
which is affili.ated with the University of Utah.
Last fall, the .FDA gave CardioWest approval to perform an
experimental series of implants.
The Penn Stale Medical Center
in Hershey, Pa., also has FDA
approval to implant its own socalled Hershey heart in humans,
but docton there haven't implanted
the air-OOven device for nearly two
years while they concentrate on
perfecting an electronic version
that was placed in a calf last year.
Hershey last implanted its artificial heartm a human in April1991.
The recipient, 42-year-old Ronnie
Crawford of Mechanicsburg, Pa.,
survived on the device for 18 days.
He died while awaiting a hul)lan
heart transplant.
The world's first artificial heart,
a Jarvik, was implanted in Barney
Clark in 1982. He' lived for 112
days with the device, which was
intended 10 be 11 permanent replacement.

thrills: Top
Gun fantasy for amateurs ·

By ED SCHAFER
Associated Press Writer
ST. LOUIS - Bungee jumping
no longer gets your blood racing? ·
Now you can li~ a ,"Top Gun fantasy" by engaging in m.oclc dogfights in real fighter planes, with
videotape 10 prove you did iL
"You take the best amusement
~k ride you can f10d and multiply
11 by 100," said one satisfied customer, Dr. Bob Kulacz, 32, a dentist from Ridgefieli!, Conn.
This is no video game. The
ur.settled feeling in your stomach is
real every time. up becomes down
and 0-fon:el! suclc the blood out of
your brain. More than. one customer has lost lunch.
It's offered by a company called
Air Combat U.S.A. While it isn't
for the faint of heart or wealc of
storrulch, anybody with $695 and a
primal urge to prove they're not
over the hill can do it ·
No experience is required, since
the planes have dual controls, one
for a professional who .can take
over whenever needed. One of the
biggest customers·is a 9-year-old
girl who is nearing the Red Baron's
mark of 80 kiDs.
"It's the biggest thrill you can
get short of Joining the militarY and
flying jet ftghters," said Kulacz,
who has flown with Air Combat
several times durinll ~acations in
California. "It's hving the Top
Gun fantasy."
.
Kulacz, who flies as a hobby,
said he plans to fly Air Combat

again as soon as he·gets·a chance.
''It's·that addictive.''
The compahy operates out of
Fullerton, Calif., but two of its
pilots, Desert Storm veteran Dave
Armstrong and Marie Hession,
were iD" St. Louis recently on a
barnstorming trip across the country. The company hopes to expand
somewhere in the Midwest and the
New Yorlc City area, perhaps next
year.
.
The experience starts out with
two "guest pilots" - I.e., paying
customers - sitting through several hours of briefings. The sessions
cover safety, basic air C\)mbat
manuevers, instructions on· how 10
get out of the plane in an emergen-·
cy arid how to pull the ripcord on
their parachule.
·
Then it's time to climb into Italian-made Marchetti SF260 fighler
trainers, small single-engine, propeller-driven planes that some
countries use as armed fij!hters.
Armstrong and HesstOn handle
takeoffs and fly the planes away
from high-traffic areas, giving .
more instructions as they go.
Then the two planes separale
and are turned toward each other.
When they pass at a combined
speed of about 400 mph, the game
is on and the guest pi!Qts take the
'•
controls.
The object is to peel off, roll
over and get in behind the other
· craft, trying to get it in your gun
sights.

fJ!fa~~.~~~~~r
NEW YORK - Finicky comial

~~~~ti~: ~i~f~~!;:eer

·
h' f
.
h
who rocks, t e operatiOns c te·
who scuba dives, the bank prestdent who knows a good Scandinavian folk song when he hears one.
' wt'th
One fll'lll insists on goI.ers
a 10 handicap or less. To get hired.
·
by other choosy corporauons,
you
might have to run a marathon or
' or
walk a dog, sprout some hali
shed some weight.
In a survey, mem bers o f the
Association of Corporate and Professional Recruiters listed unusual
.
. ed . ,
job requuements
they 'd recetv
Execuuve job specs seem to have
gotten more and more specific and sometimes downright bizarre.
"In the '80s, companies would
say, 'Get us someone who's bright
J B
.
d "'

~~~. ~x~~~e~~~·hea~~~~te~ an~n~

director of the rccrutters assoctation . ''But since. the recession,

more

employers have gotten· much
precise. There's no more, 'Get us a
Warm body. '"
. Now, it's " Get us a warm body
who has knowledge of fiddle playt'ng and trad1·11·onal Scandt"nav1·80
'olk songs and 15
· also a ..........
''
~1~
- the stated requirements for running a small savings bank in the
ft"ord·s of western Norway, where
that's e.ntertainment.
Wha·t em· ployer would -•use
to
'"''
·lnterv•'ew anyone with even a bit of
a paunch?. A manufacturer of
weight' loss products. Ignore the
bald ?. A shampoo makec.
By the same logic, "a keen and
discerning sense of smell" is probably not 100 much to as1c of a marketing executive who would have
to evaluate- personally- the
effectiveness of a new line of
antiperspirants.
Some employers demand unique
combt'nau'ons of skills. A fi·- .digging a subway in an As;;;~· city
needed a chief of operations who
was also a certified deep sea diver;

n.....

a company developing a computer- school. Should he superb scientist and be willing to relocate 10 rural
ized music synthesizer wanted an with comprehensive knowledge of area."
engineering vice president who was· five therapeutic areas. Must be
"We call these 'oxymo:ron
· ·
· d th e recrut ter.
also a roct mUSIC1811.
, entrepreneur and capable of, ultispecs, "' exp1ame
Most job specs are not so CIOter- mately, becoming the corporation's "Bench scientists tend to be introic, hut recruiters say those exceP,- CEO. Must accept significant ruon vetted, and entrepreneurs are out·
,--- gmng.
· "
t10ns
•'II ustrate a trend : ·After two . of compensatio~ in stock opttons
of
·
1
£ 1
·
years
recesston, emp oyers ee
free to aslc for executives who can
wear
moresr
ihanmed-do
one hat
• 0n
staff, peopla tmha broaderwn corporate
ve
b'l" ·• ande eed
'd responSIarra of ·
uues
n
a
WI er
Y· a
1
"
·
p
1
w·
be
1a en15 • says au
tn rry,
·
'd
N · 1w
¥ICe prest ent at auona
estminSICI' Bank. And since the "slim"ha flooded th · b
ming-down
s
e JO
market with qualified execs,
"employers want IIi ~e advantage
ofthatsupply."
For headhunters, there are more
missions impossible. These specs
recently were submitted by a pharmaceutical company, which in def. erence to its recruiter must remain
anonymous:
·
"Seeking medical doctor with
MBA from leading business

079

Pick 4:

2092

a,

:Meigs Local Board approves deficit budget
' By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
Sentinel N~ws Staff
• A budget showmg a 1994 fiSCal
year deficit of $694,587 was adopt.ed by the Meigs Loc~ Board of
:!"ducabon at Tuesday mght's meet~ng in the board room. ' . .
• Total general fund anbctpated
't'evenue for fiscal year, July 1,
1993 through June 30, 1994, is
-$8,245,884. Expenditures for the
·YCilf BJe expected to he $8,653,475,
Jane Fry, treasurer, reported. She
,said that the budj!Ct reflec!S a three
percent 10crease m expe~tures. ·
·. Fry noted that ~ .IS a spendmg reserve (tangtble tax settle.ment) of $260,603 which lhe board

can lxmlw against wben it moves
into .a deficit position. The .sta!e
reqwres that local boards m81Dtam
a spending reserve..
. The treas~r explained that it
wtll be later this month before she
~ws the amount of ~I fundmg 10 come miO the district from
the State Foundatioo Fund, and that
she is also in tbe process of securing from tbe auditor's office figures on local tax money and
increases bec•tse oftbe reappraisal
of real estale.
Sup!- Jame~ Carpenter talked
abou~ current expe!!ditures and
anllctpated expendttures due to
building problems. He reponed that

•

-.
a 50 foot section of steam pipe at corrective work, Carpenter said. He
Pomeroy had to b.e r~placed also reported that Bradb~. Rutbecause of a malfuncuon tt caused land and Pomeroy have mmor roof
with the new furnace. He said that leaks and repair expense can be
school w.as out for a day fo~ the anticipated. None are _currently
work whtcb mvolved knockmg a · under warranty, accordmg to the
h?le in the building to get to the superinten~nt
.
ptpe.
. A gas !me at the football field 1s
He also reported mat the Envi- also in need of·replacement , he
ronmental Protection Agency bas said.
given its ~proval for a lift station
Several other financi;ll matters
a.t the Salisbury School and that were considered by board memEngineer Eugene Triplett is prepar· bers . Fry reported that there is a
ing ~id specifications. Estimated carry-over in the Pomeroy Safety
cost IS $25,000.
Patrol fund of $527.85. Since the
· The Rutland Elementary Sch"'!l patrol is not a fund raising group
was out a day because of an electn- this )'ear and will not he taking a
cal malfunction requiring some · trip to Washington D. c. in the

spring, it was requested that the graduation a school remembrance
money be. transferred to the and a scholarship. The class no~
Pomeroy pnncipal's fund.
has $880 77 Fry reported
· Action on that request was
A di~us~ion was also held on
tabled by the board. It was noted the effective schools money and
that the principal's fund already balances from the $5 000 planning
h~ a balance of $4,400 and several money which wentl~t year 10 each
board members felt that a determt- school in the district and the
nation as to the use of the money $5 000 which was given to each
raised by last year's safety patrol school this year to implement proshould be clarified before a transfer grams
.
is made.
· Otber Business ·
. The board did approve the budThe board adopted a resolution
get of the 1.993 graduating class. • to Reinvest in America which calls
Funds are rrused through class dues for Teordering federal priorities. 'It
and the senior class ~lay, ~nd are asks that "f~deral budget savings
expended for ·graduaumi ptctures, made possible by the end of the
color in the yearbook, progntms for
Continued on page 3

Rupe to head Meigs Local Board·of Education

..

Larry Rupc was elected president of the Meigs Local Board of
Education at its annual organizatioqal meeting held Tuesday night
in the board office.
Elected vice president of the
board was John Hood.
Rupe, who served last year as
vice president, has be~il on the
scnool board for seven years and is
now in his last year of his second
four-year term. He succeeds Bob
Barton who was president last year

•,

and has served in that capacity for
five of his 13 years on the board.
Regular meetings were set for
th~ second an~ fourth Tuesday's of
each month with the second meeting of e;teh month to be held in one
of the district's school. The Jan. 26
meeting will be held at·Salem Center.
A service fund of $500 was
established for meeting and travel
expenses of board memberS during
the year.
'

.

.

• The treasurer was authorized 10
•

The superintendent or his
pay all bills as they are presented,
designee wlls designated as the
provided that funds are available; agent of the board to apply for, .
and to n:port monthly 10 the Board receive, expend and account for
of Education those bills that were federal funds.
paid.
Membership v.:as renewed in the
. She was also authorized to Ohio School Boards ~ssociatio~,
secure advances from ihe auditor . and the treasurer was authorized tQ
when funds are available and· renew liability insurance for Boar:d
payable to the district, and 10 invest members, the treasurer, school
inactive funds at the most produc- administration. and certified and
tive rates whenever inactive funds
non-ccrtifted employees.
·
are available.

.

Bush to take military action. against Iraq
'

NEW PRESIDENT - Bob Barton, retlrinJt president ol' tbe
Meles Local Board or Education, left, congntalata J...arry Rupe,
who was elected 1993 president at Tuesday nipt's ~g.

'

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidenl Bush has decided to take miliwy action against Iniq because of
threatening moves by Saddam Hussein, an administration official
says. the ·secretary of state, con-

.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. SouiSby reported Wednesday
that a four-wheeler siOien from Gene Jeffers of Albany was recovered on Saturday morning behind Wells Cemetery at Pagetown.
Also fonnd was a four-wheeler belonging to Rex Cheadle, Jr. Both
were stolen lille Friday ni~t.
· Investigation will conwwe.

JUJ WARNER INSUWKI

113 w. 2111, ,_.,
992-5-479

Thefts; vandalism reported
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies discovered on Sunday that
somecine had damaged a sign on the gate behirid the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.
·
James Kee;~ee o( Price-Strong Road of Vinton repmted Sunday
morning that sometime during the night, a five ~Crafts-.
man air compressor was taken from the porch at his restdence.
On Monday, the office received a report from Southern Ohio
Coal Company;s Mine 31 that sometime between 3 p.m. Saturday
and 7 p.m. Sunday, someone SIOie a toni box rtlled with Craftsman
·toots, valUed at $2,000.
On Tuesday, a report was received from Rosalyn S1ewan of
BradbUty Road, who said that during tbe day, someone bad taken ·
the two center cap!l from ller son's rally wheels. The vehicle was
parked at Meigs High School.

Units of Meigs Emergency Services.answered the following
callS: TUESDAY, 10:11 a.m., Racine to State Route 338, Jeff Connolly 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital; 12:48 {I.JD:, Middleport units
to State Route 7 for a tractor trailer fl{e, no injuries; 3:26p.m., MiddlepOrt unit to BradbUty Road, Anna Frant to Veterans; 4:51 pm.,
Racine unit, Mario Snyder froni station to Veterans; 10:46 p.m.,
Racine to Blind Hollow Road, Joey Forester to Veterans;
WEDNESDAY, 12:24 a.m., Syracuse to State Route 124, Eura
Largent to Veterans; 3:12 a.m., Rutland units to Dexter Road,
smoke odor, Robert Verion residence.

-,:

Two injured in accident
'

ADVERriSINO DEADUNE

'

2 Secllont, 14 "';-• 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. -!!"per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, January 13, 1993

Four-wheeler recovered

RE1\REMEN1
PL"NN\NG
GU\OE

.

No. 184

• Copyrighted 1m

EMS calls answered
•

..... 30.

•

a1.
:. Vol.

Low toalpt In lllld-301, wldo
saow nurrtes. Tbunclay, blp

1·11-17-20-33

Page4

~

suiting with allies in Europe·, also Eagleburger wouldn't discuss the
sounded an ominous .note_and said, timetable, but time was running oui
" the United States is poised."
for the .Bush administration, which
·There was an air of expectation leaves office a week frrim today.
action could come in the next 24
The other official, speaking on
hours. Secretary of State Lawrence condition of anonymity here late

.----Local briefs-__, Buckley discusses education

Odd job specs: Managers who dive, engineers who rock
·

Pick 3:

BuckeyeS:

'

When the pilot squeezes the
trigger on the control Stick, a transmitter on the plane sends an electronic beam toward the target
plane. If tbere's a bit, the beam
turns on a smoke generator on ·the
target plane.
Customers get a videotape of
their flight reeorded by three cameras. One camera shows the customer in the pilot's seat, a second
looks forward over the cUSIOmer's
left shoulder and the third shows
the view through the gun sights.
"We·get mostly professionals
- doctors, dentists, lawyers, airline pilots," ·Armstrong said: " And
a lot of them ai:e regulars.''
Denny Jackson, who has been a
pilot with the company since it
started in 1988, said one of the regulars, 9-year-old Katrina Mumaw
of Lancaster, Calif., outshoots
some veterans.
"Now she has her own little
flight suit and helmet," Jackson
said. "Every time sltC gets a kill;
her father has another star put on
her flight suit."
Jim. Mumaw, a businessman •.
said his daughter is deadly in the
air. •
. "She looks like a parachute
wearing a helmet, bu.t she routinely.
beats the big guys, including Armstrong," Mumaw said. "The nex1
time she goes up will be her 30th
flight with Air Combat ·and she is
just oqe kill sl!ort of topping The
Red Baron's record of 80."

Ohio Lottery

Marauders
drop 75-68
tilt to VCHS

A Racine man and his passenger sustained minor injuries in a
one-vehicle accident Tuesday afternoon on County Road 34 in Sutton Township.
Marion E. Snider, 40, 305 1/2 Third Street, Racine, and Patrick
H. Snider, 36, 305 Third Street, Racine, were not1realed for their
injuries.
.
·
Damage 10 tile vehicle was. listed as heavy and disabling and it
: was towed from the scene.
·
Details of the accident were not available at press time.

.

issues with Meigs Chamber
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
William Buckley, the newlyappointed superintendent of the
Meigs Local School District, was
the guest speaker at the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
. membership meeting on Tuesday
afternoon.
Buckley )las been named to sue. ceed James Carpenter, who will
retire from the position effective
June I.
Buckley addressed several
issues relating to the public education ~ystem, including the county's
Rural Demonstration Grant, which
is being used in all 19 of the county's public schools.
The $500,000 grant is the first
of its kind in the state, and tinks the
county's three local districts with
resources at the University of Rio
Grande. The goal of the demonstration grant is to develop ideas to
address problems unique to rural
school systems, and .then duplicate
those ideas in other rural counties
atlihle or no cost, Buckley Said.
The program targets student
self-esteem, stresses parental
involvement and puts special
emphasis .on the success of voca-

'
tiona! education. Each school is
responsible for developing its
grant-funded program .
. Buckley also explained the proficiency testing now required for
successful graduation. He said that
the first ninth grade class to take
the test will graduate this sprinj!.
The test consists of sections tn
mathematics, reading, citizenship
and writing, with nCience section
to he added in the near future. Students must successfully pass all
four sections of the test in order to
receive their diplomas.
Similar tests are being dev~l ­
oped for students in gra~es four,
stx and 12. Students scoring exceptionally high on the twelfth gmde
test may 9ualify for a special higher-order dtploma.
Mathematics has been the area
of lowest scoring on the proficien..cy tests in Meigs County and
statewide, and revised curriculum
is heing initiated to improve scores
in .that area, Buckley said. The state
chamber of comm~rce is actively
involved, Buckley said, in the Ohio
Department of Education •s revision
of the state curriculum.
. "We are seeing an influx of
rapid .change in the public education system in Ohio," Buckley said,

"and the legislalure has begun to
mandate cenain things that should
happen, instead of waiting for the
state and local school boards to do

iL"

Horace !Carr, who serves on the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council's Highway User's Committee,
updated the membership on activities of the committee, which met
last month in Jackson. The CapiiOI
Corridor remains the number orie
priority of the committee, which
serves as an advocacy .group for
highway construction on behalf of
economic development agencies in
Southeastern Ohio.
Karr said that the environmental
impact study required for the project is heing readied, with construction on the first phase of the project
to hegin sometime in 1994,
New officers were introduced
for 1993. They are: Depny Face- ·
meyer,' president; Paul Reed, Vice
President; and Kenneth Ut~ secretary/treasurer.
Executive Director Paula Thacker thanked the Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Home National
Bank and individual donors for
purchasing a computer system for
the chamber, whtch has been in
place for two weeks.

·Tuesday, said the president has
agre.ed "in principle" to strike.
The official gave n() indication of
the precise timing or scale of the
altaek.
At the White House, press secretary Marlin Fitzwater declined 10
discuss ihe president's plans. "I
don't want w characterize our attitude at this point," he said. "We
obviously are very concerned ...
They continue to violale the U.N.
resolutions. They continue 10 move
missiles around and take other
actions in defiance of the (1991)

Youth dies
·of apparent
suicide
.

.

A Patriot youth died early this
morning at Holzer Medical Center
after apparently attempting to kill
himself Tuesday afternoon.
According to a re~n from the
Gallia County Shenff's Department, James Tomlinson; 16, 215
Kingery Road, Pairiot, was at a residence near Little Bullslcin Road
Tuesday afternoon when he apparently shot himself in the chesl with
a 12-gauge shotgun. A three-page
suicide note was found at the
scene.
Tomlinson was taken by Gallia
County Emergency Medical Service· IO Holzer Hospital where he
was admitted in critical condition.
He died shortly after midnight, a
ttospital spokeswoman said this
morning,·
·Acting Gallia County Coroner
Dr. Daniel Whiteley said this
morning he sent the body to
Columbus for an autopsy.

~---:-r~~~~

.···Police recover.stolen vehicle
.'Containing escaped juveniles

IS JANUARY 20, 1991

'

Brown of Chillicothe, was ft!COVered
before the owner reported it
two binls WJth 0110 11011e this morn.
Ing when an officer l'ulled over a stolen.
Police pulled ~ tbe 1ldlicle at
SUBpicious vehicle which turned out
to be stolen and contained five approximately 6:30 IbiS mornina
Olcapees from a juvenile detention on Neil A - lw:en"' the OCQIfCDier.
.
.
panll were "actiq anpiclrns," the
spc
+oa•uaid ,
.
' The ftve juvenilel had '*'ll!'ed
are
beina
held
The
juveniles
from the Roweton Rehabllitallon
today·
at
the
Oilllipolis
Police
Center in Chlllicodle. .
•' A ~~Diice spoblmail said this Department until Ross County
momtna the vehicle, a 1982 . authorities 131 pick lhem ..,,
Old liDobile 0wned by Donald P.
G&amp;!llpo~ police manag~ 10 kill

C.Q V.1r AMrtlllng Rlpflllllll.,. For Rift tnlotMiflon ·
series or trials where .Dorothy races various
cbarJtllll·tile deatll of tile Wkbcl Witcb of tbe
WesL na. par1lcialllr lrial nded ill acquittal on
first-dqree m~MI·D&amp;hter charges. (A,P photo)

OZ TRIAL - Oz character Dorothy Gale,
portrayed by 11-year-old Syracuse, N.Y., student Kristen Allen, listens to a prosecator's
charges Monday artynoon at Syracuse's Blodgett School. Students are participating in a

••

The Daily Sentinel

. 'J

rhone (6t4) 992-2155- At fot P. J. or Dave ·
..
I

(

i

..

•'

.

FINAL TRIBUTE • Melp County omelals and employees
catbered on tbe courthoan steps at noon Tuesday ror a silent
• p~a,er hi tribute to Auditor William R. Wickline. The courthouse

li

beU tolled 46 times, once for ~h of Wlc:klllle's ,ean: Offtees were
closed so tbat emplo:Jfti eoulcl attend fuaerll servlcu ror Wlc:kllne
wbo died Saturday ni1ht at the Holzer Med!cal Center. .

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