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                  <text>Wedneeday, January 'Z1, 1993

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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By JtJL1E E. DILLON
S JIMI News Sbllr
. Bob Dyer, director of Meigs
·CoiiJity Emcrpuc:y 'Services and
chlinun of lhe Loc:aJ ~
.Piuniog Committee
spoke at Wedarwlay's mcc:tiog of
.tfle Meiss Comity Cnmmissioocn.
• Dyer informed me new board
:about tbc func:tioas of tbc Emer;geocy M•sa&lt;•1mt and Eraeraency Services Ar,mcy in lbe CC)III!l)'
and to obtaia tbc c:ommissiollers'
•signa~~RS 011 a gqnt lpplication.
; Byer IUfl:d he Will be submit;tinJ an application for a grant
·wbicb die LEPC ill die county is
4i&amp;iblc for each year as specified
;by lhe
AmeM.IS and
·Re-dh
. Aa (SARA) Title
·m or lhe Emugwcy Plwmiog and
:Commllllity Risht·to-Know Act).
·The . , _ o f lhe gr.- Dyer ,nil

S:t:f::i

8JIPIY for tOillls $28)150. He stated
normally up 10 30 percent of lhat
aDMNIIt is funded. He said lasi year
!he county received $9,600.
Al:conling 10 Dyer, lhe money
for the grants comes from any
which suns, manufactureS
or
bazardous materials. B yer
Slated lhe J!lllllt money· goes toward
sucb projects as fue depanment
and emergency service training as
well as upgrading of computer
equipment aiJd systems.
Speaking aboutlhe LEPC, Dyer
stated Meigs County is probably
lhe ouly county ill the area lhat has
an acuve commitlee. The LEPC
wu created af~cr lhe SARA Tide
Ill Act of 1986 which mandated
that all facilitiea dealing with haz.
ardous malerials must identify
diose materials 10 lhe public. Byer
stated there are nine facililies in lhe

feci!lrs

ON ANY VARIETY (Except Cryellll) OF
24 PACK·12 OZ. CANS

PEPSI~COLA

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Gov. George Voinovich •s plan 10
conduct lhe first study of the state's
economy and tax structure in 25
Ye&amp;!S drew support from the Ohio
Council of Chmches.
But lhe council coupled iL!I support for the study with results of uts
own n:view !hat concludes
current revenue system isinailequaiC
10 '!'eet lhe state's. n~. despite ·
lax mcreases adopted last month.
"It particularly does not provide
adeqn=fel' the ver}' poor," lhe
study . said.
.
"The drastic reduction in lhe
General Assistance program and
lhe Sialic or reduced levels of funding for od!er social programs, such
as Aid for Dependent Children, are
not consistelll widr lhe slate's duly
10 protect iL!I. -citizens
nor are they
.

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.
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.

NEW AtJJ)ITOR SWORN IN. · Nuey hrker..Campbell,
Raclae, wa .-n Ia a lle aew Mel11 Coaty Auditor on
w~- ,., Mdp c-nty c--l'leas Judie Fred·
eridl: w.
m. J..e- appointed tom tile _,Ired term of
tile late wmt.. R. Wlddille lq a~ YOte ~die Melp Couty Repalllleaa Ceamd C..wMiw

c.-

.Americans pay $14 billion
a year on ofjbeat•medicine
BOSTON (AI')- "-iraM apead abo.t 114 billloll a year
-aa1alxlk6olal' •aae1111 '•-•ddropncton,
splrllul' Irs, .... ' It aad Gllla'Jkiq'l' opeaalla1 out·
. slde•tl I
•eT•Jee,l 1 S naald ....y.
·:.
Tlle-_·'!J'ro.dtllatA
h
n!l'•---tapploacbes
;!-~llfe;~"==':''~t;;-, tod~maedles- rar
Tile d• • • ..,.
•• 1 1 tile ...., aald tile pop•"erlty of
die aile; uw b 1 1 1Itt fer dll'lkllll-to .an ...enll IlliCit liS
brkrin llllder-ea tile .... .., autiM tPinl tllcJraaPiy to
- I f •Y raiPy wwk.
.
"We,..,, an
dala to aaytlleR,are elfec:tlve or
· wortll!at. Tllat't wlen
to ao rr.. llere," ,said Dr.
Dadl M. El •s 1111"•••'• BetPt llralllltltplta!.
A• ILII' .,., w aid tile l'act t!lat ~p!e Jlade 425 mUUoa
viiJIIIDMIO.il ll!ee!Ja &amp;piii• .. - , _ - .....Pdeittpatoa.c t!naJdodiiL
"Tile palllk's eKpealn r••••ce will ..cowve•tlo.. l
•edld• II eaae f• oar prefeuioul worry," wro1e Dr.
Edw... W. C..plaL ''.We aeed to 1
DIOI'e elfectlveSy oar dedi ••• to c:ml 1 lor ISle wiloPe pallewt - worries,
;lbiWdal.&gt;!
It •
ediiDr ~ . - New EMIPud Jounal
M1u I e, wllldl pztjl 1 tile~ Ia lilldaY'tlilwe.
Tile WWSI I A rt ILat A• kaillaftft ~ COW'ftlldoaa!
•e 'h 1M - • • !eatt • " '
II -willa IIley - • lle!p
. tor lt+•' r, 't • ' t, ..._ aad ot11et ,. ..ne.t ~doe·. .
·.
ilhe ol tlleae b I I
I - J11 oh.,. c!lery," C..pJ.
ow tlid. "Siae o1 tn.. are jwat tile A••~ wrliolt or t!le
lllaPIL ......
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sioners of a possible siruation lhat
could ari'se as a result of a prosecutors' meeting in Alhens recendy. A
"trade off' situation for special
prosecu10rs between Athens, Meigs
and Washington counties, could,
accordin' 10 LenleS, save lhe county a considerable amount of money.
In such a situation, for example,
. LenleS could serve as special prosecutor in Athens or Washington
counties sod in turn those counties'
prosecu~prs could serve as special
prosecutors in Meigs Coun1y .
LenleS feels Ibis move would be m
the best inlereSt for the coun1y.
Commissioner Roben Hartenbach requested LeniU to verify in .
writin~:,! opinion on an animal
claim
October in which a dog
ldlled 35 game roosrers. The owner
of those roosters want payment
from lhe county at $100.per_ an_imal

and Hartenbac,h, on behalf of ihe will be fulling lhal vacancy as soon
commissioners, wams Lentes to as possible.
assess if lhe claim is a valid one or
David Lobo of Pottinger Insurnot. Clerk Mary Hobstetler Slated ance spoke a1 the meeting to
lhe former board of commissioners request pennission 10 give a quou:
did not acl on lhe claim because on the county's liability service.
they felt it was not a legal claim.
Commissioner Roush stated "we
Shirley Johnson, administtaiOr are very well pleased with what we
of the county's medical insurance have now." Lobo did, however,
plan, spoke 10 lhe com~ioners 10 leave informalion about what Pot-:
make the new board aware of the linger Insurance could offer.
•
cwrent plan.
In Olher mauers the commisCommissioner Manning Roush sioners approved bonds for the
was appointed 10 flU a vacancy on county recorder, cleric of courts,
lhe Area Agency on Aging which ·sheriff and engineer, and the 1er111
was left at the expiration of lhe of Hobstetler as acting auditor was
1em1 of Rich Jones as commission- canceled as a new auditor, Nancy
Parker Campbell, has been appoiriter.
A resignation was submitted by ~.
· Allending were Commissioners
Carol TannehiU for her seat on lhe
Childrens Trust Fund ·Advisory Manning Roush, Robert HartenBoard. She had been a member bachand Janet Howard, and Clerk
since 1985. The commissioners Mary Hobstetter.

:

consistent wilh lhe vision of a just
economy, which seeks til prou:ct
lhe
.. it said.
.
&amp;;ies of the study were
re~ Wednesday by lhe councU,
a statewide organization of 27
Christian
.
· David ~, director for public jlOiicy, said the council suppons
Vomovich's review as a step ~
10ward re(ormilig lhe I8X siruclllre.
. But McCoy acknowledged lhal
enacbnent of another tax inaease,
on top of lhe December package
wonh about $I billion over 30
months, is unlikely this year or
IICX~

"My own guess personally is
lhat having done what they did in
December il may seem 10 them
tllat's done now, and no more

action is needed or would be sup- Brundige said.
poned by lhe ~~Ublic," McCoy said.
"Consequently, if that belief is
" It may be !hat we're looking continued wilhoul someone slarting
not at this biennium, but atlhe next 10 say, 'We don't think it is,' lhen
biennium, I don't know," he said.
we will not swt the public debau:
The council report said that has to take place before a subincreased revenue is needed for sian live change comes about " be
•
welfare, education, day care. hous- SB1'd•
.
ing and other progrims.
. . Last mon!h's lax m~Jl!sed
i t "Offered several possible mcome taxes for people making
changes •in slate tax law to raise more than $200,000 a year
more,money, including increases in increased taxes on cigareues, sofi
the personal income and sales drinks, beer, and wine, and exlend·
taxes.
ed lhe sales tax ·10 certain services
Eugene Brundige of the West not now covered.
Ohio Conference Uniled Methodist
The council said lhe increases
Church said the council study could would not produce eriough money
be used for debate within churches 10 maintain services at Currenllevas well as lhe govemmen~
els, and would fall far shon of lhe ·
"It is our feeling that most of amount believed needed for educathe citizens of lhe state believe lhe tion and welfare refonn.
job was done in December."

Collectors snap up Sears 'Big Book'

ea..-

all Ahead For Super Bowl Party TrayOrders. We Offer Several Size~ and Varieties.

cowity that store hazardous materials and !hat lhe LEPC is aware of
and insures the safety of those
facilities.
.
B;yer Slaled in lhe event of a dis·
asler the LEPC, made up of designated people such as the EMS,
police, sheriff, fire departments,
etc.. would implement the plan to
assess and handle the situation.
Dyer stated one example of the
plan of lhe LEPC was enacted wilh
the roclc slide at Pily Me near Hobson. During that lime all lhe agencies involved with lhe LEPC came
IOgelher 10 conlrollhe situation.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John LeniU spoke to lhe
commissioners 10 investigate lhe
possibility of appointing a special
prosecu10r to upcoming cases. No
action was laken.
Lentes informed lhe commis-

Gov. Voinovich's tax study plan
draws support from church group

NO SUGAR OR LOW SALT SUCED160Z.

6.4 OZ. TUBE

•

explains LEPC functions to commiSSioners
CL ;c},

Store

2 Sectlono, 12 P8QM 25 oenlo
A Muldmodll Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, January 28, 1993

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CIDCAGO (AP) - The Sears
catalog has been lhe Big Doole for
decades. Now it's the hot book.
Cus10mers around the country
are rushing 10 get lheir hands on lhe
latest general catalog, which
became an inslant collectors' ilem
when Sears, Roebuck and Co.
announced Monday lhat it was discontinuing lhe Big Book.
Thousands of complaints about
lhe demise of lhe 104-year-old cat·
alog have flooded lhe company's
suburban Schaumburg headquarrers, a Sears spotesman said.
"The catalog has become a very
beloved aiJd respecled inslitution in
America, and it is understandable
lhat people would not like to see it
go," Perry Chiao said Wednesday.
Trying 10 hall a slide in its retail
business, Sears plans to eliminate
50,000 jobs by early 1994 and
close 113 stores and some 2,000
cal8log outlets.
John Cooper, owner of a catalog
s10re in Esc111111ba in Michigan's
remote Upper PeniQsula, said cusIOmers have deluged lhe sta:e with
complaiuus. "In me.e l1lf8i arc:as, the ~:.
IOIIChcs borne a bit more," he · .
"It's a groundswell thing- people
are. asking, 'How can corporate

Area man escapes
. injury in accident
A Racine ~ eacaped with \o

appuont injuries from a onc-vehlclii accident Tuetday on County
Road 30 ~ Slar) in Sutton
Towlllhip, IICCCll'dina 10 lhe OaJJia.
Meilll Post or die State Hillbway
Patrol• .
The )Jilrol said Brneat·P. Baker,
71, 31372 ~Road, wu - bound at 7:40 a.m. as he came
around I CUM ·~n= I acboo1
bUI. The report
Baker lnbd
the vehicle wben he apotted a
· schoor bus and alid off lhe rl&amp;ht
side of'dle 10111 into • dlldl.
The vehicle eben overtunled on
iii·IO!J, c•U. . _ c!ollllll"
Biller wu ..... Ill Hal8 MedIal! Cea111r by 1be Melat EMS, the
paaolaald. .

America keep doing these lhings 10

us?·" ·

.·

· Cooper noted Sears operates
only catalog s10res in the Upper
Peninsula. A bigger store is in
Marinette, Wis., about 60 miles
away, but the neares1 full-service
Sears is probably in Green Bay,
Wis., about 120 miles away, he
said.
''You can't blame lhe customers
for being upset," he said. "I can
only imagine what it's like in
places like Montana, where lhere
may be only one full-service s10re
in the whole state."
Fo~ in urban areas, however,
were hoping 10 make a litlle money
off lhe catalog's demise.
.

'·'People aie calling up and saying, 'Can you send me 12 calalogs,
please?" ' said R~yland Luburic~.

assislant manager at a large Sears
store in Niles.

Ex-priest sentenced
STILLWATER, Minn: (AP)Former priest James Porter was
sentenced today to at least si x
months in jail for molesting his
children's baby sitter five years
ago.
Porter has been accused of
molesting dozens of children in
three states before he left I he
Roman Catholic pries.thood in
1974.
He was convicled in December
of six counts of fourth-degree crim-

inal sexual conduc1 involving his
children's leen-age baby sitter in
1987.
' Poner, 57, was sentenced in
WashingiOD Coun1y District Coun
by Judge Kenneth Maas, who also
presided over his trial. He could ·
receive additional jail time if he .
fails 10 complele sex offender !realment required as a condition of his
probation, Maas said. The probalion is 10 last fir 10 years.
.

Refresher program offered
by Meigs·TB and Health Clinic

.'
A refresher JI'Ogr&amp;m 011 identify- showing positiv_e readings and lhree negative readings.
ing luberculosis symptoms, the
lechniquc of administering sltin
leSts, and how 10 inlap(Ct them is
being offered by lhe Meip County
Tuberculosis and Health Clinic 10
~tal and nursing home personnel m Meigs Countr..
Connie Kar1chnik, R. N.. the T.
B. nur10, began lhe new program
Tuesday at Veterans. Memorial
Hospital for supervisouy personnel
from lhe hospital, Extended Care
Unit, and the Emergency Room.'
She will offer lhe 11111110 J110P1111 at
Overbrook Ccnler and die Pomeroy
Nursing and RebabiJIIIIion Cent«.
The Ohio D~~p~~ bnent ol Heallh
requires -that all palienls enterin« a
naniog facUlty be teald for tuber·
culosls. With the dlloue 't l'elllf·
gence special emphaals· is belna
placed on identifyina syqtpiOma
and prcc:auliona 10 be !Ibn shoolld
a pail,nt .have a positive readina
from a U:ID teaL
. TEACIDNG ARM • Coule Kane~R. N2 Mtip Conaty
Karscbnik talked abou~ the
T. JJ. ._, rJalt, lloldt tile "'ee ud 1o11C11 aJtllkW w111Pe :
dnllt ~ tuben:u!olls and noUid lhe
RlODda Dalley, R.N., BSN, dlncCor olallrilll&amp; at Ve• a Mt•a ,
tremendous inc:reue over the put
rllll lialpbl, !'lldt tile live,...,.. tldii 1e111q thiL Tile ..alft. ;
yet~ ia active of luben:ulolis.
.ellllarm WM rece•tlY·PU ' 1d by tPie Mtlail CilaJatJ TulerasoJ .·:
Sho lllllll.a "tee and IOUch" tnl·
ala ud Hnlt!l C . for ue Ia teadllaa lealtll JIIOI
td :; ;
ficill arm for pw::dw readlop. On
more accllrltely read tPda llltiL
lhe arm are ftve dlftaeat Sites. two
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·. C ommentary
The D'aily Sentinel

'
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lhuNday, January 28, 1993

. Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Th..UI'8day, January 28, 1993 .

Of 110 vVcdthct
Aa:u·Weatber• forecast for

The Su_per Bi&gt;wl, I am informed, their conduct - that the homely his way onio thi team at Maey4tnd. older than the average rour roOkie.
will be v1ewed by more than 100 virtues of work, competition and
When lhe hot-shots left college;
It should be noted that, unlike .
million
Americans.
I
will
not
be
honer
hold
liUie
meaning
to•
them.
there
were
sponsors
awajting
them,
ma11y pro sports where simply
·DEVOTBD TO THE INTBRE8T8 OJ' '11m JIEIGS-IIASON AREA
one of them. I will be watching
My idea of the classic American offering 10 underwrite lbeir expens- making the ranks guaranll!es a paygolf instead. It is lhe last pro sport
es while they tried to make the check, such is not the case in pro
..
in which the athletes regularly
pros. But Funk, as it nu:ns out, was golf. Week in and week out, golfers
evince character.
a late bloomer. When .he fmished must perform. If golfers bappeu 10
When I was growing up, pro
school and decided 10 ta1ce a stab at have a bad week - whether
.
the PGA tour, he had 10 pay his they're supeutais or untelted rookathletes were real heroes. They
ROBERT L. WJNGEIT
embodied
much.
of
what
w~
virtu·
spores
henl
is
a
BllY
like
Fred
Funk,
own
way.
·
'
ies - they don't get paid. Given . ·
, Publisher
ous about Amenca. The solid work who finished among the top 35
In golf, as in all pro sports, the expenses a golfer incurs ~- ·
· ethic, the· spirit of competition, the golfers on the POA tour last year. ·many aspiring amateurs are called, scotching the country 10 compere m
PAT WHIIEBEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH.
code of honor, No more.
'
The story of how Funk overcame but vervfew ·ultimately are chosen. tounuunenrs, he actually may lose
General Manager
Assistant PubUsber/Controller
I cannot imagine any parents the most daunting odds to succeed Bcfoo: one is permitled 10 tee it up money.
,
·
today who would hold up the aver- in pro golf could have been wriueil with the likes of Jack Nicklaus or
' In Funk's first year on tour,
LETil!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
age. pro. athlete as a role model for by Horatio Alger.
Freddy Couples or Da~ Love, one 1989, he didn't get paiil often
words. All letters arc subject to editing and must be signed with name,
thetr children.
.
I caught up with Funk earlier must survive a grueling qualifying enoilghJ Because·he failed to place
addless and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be published. Letters
Certainly not Steve Howe, the this month, at the Infiniti Touma- process that eliminates 'all but the among the ,top 150 golfers; be lost
should be in gnod wte. ackhssing issues. not penonalities.
pro baseball player who ~s been ment of Champions in Carlsbad, tiniest fraction of golfers.
his playing privileges for tbe next ·
suspended seven separate ll!"es for Calif. He, has come a long .way
In his fustlhree auemprs ro join year. He was forced 10 qualify for,
drug abuse. Not Lloyd Daniels, the from. his days .as golf cQ&amp;Cb at lhe · that elite fraction; Funk feU short the rour all over again. ,
· ' '.
. pro basketb~l P.layer wlio has a ·Uni.versity, or Maryland, where I At one point, he recalls,' times were
At this point, Fullk could have
bullet lodged m his body, the ~~ fust made his acquaintance. Unlike so hard, money so thin,. that be packed it 1n and returned to the •
of a drug deal gone bad. ~o~ ~ many golfers on the pro·circuit, signed up with a temporary help security or his old job as golf'
Tyson •. lhe pro boxer semng ume Funk was not weaned at a lu~h agency. He remembers menial·jobs coach. But he persevered. He;
for raJ?lng a young woman. · .
. country club. A product of middle that were "the bottom or the bat· requalified for the tour in • 990, '
This tS the state of professt~ America, he learned the ganie on rei,'' as far away from the glamor placed in the top 100 on tout and
By WALTER R. MEARS
·sports
today. Pro ath~tes are. patd hand scrabble public·counes.
of pro golf as one can imagine. On retained the right 10 compete the ,
AP Special COITespoadent
sc;&gt; much ~oney - I;"Creasmgly
While the bot-sbotjunior goltl:n his fourth try to qualify Jar the tour, foUowing year. He ranked No. 74 ·
.. WASHING10N - For opeDCI'S, President Clinton is dealin~ wilh dif• disproporuonate to thetr ~tual per- around the country were avidly Funk finally earned his play'ing
ficult social issues - hom~ual righrs, abortion, hiring diversity -lhnt form~nce - and rece1ve such recruited by major c!)llegiate golf privilege~. He .made it to lhe big • on tour in 1991, which placed llim;
8lllllllg the top half.nf the PGA
' s~bolize change but don't advance the most urgent work of lhe new
fawmng attentiOn - no matter programs, young Funk had 10 play leagues at 32, about eight years
But Jut ye8r swted terribly (or '
'lidministralion. ·
Funk.
Through one-third bf the golf'
- Tb8t wm is economic. And the instant debate on social issues is no
season,
he ranked below the top :
llelp, only disttaeting and divisive.
ISO
golfers
and be was on the •
· It a,1so was inevitable, given Clinton's campaign promises.
verge
of
returning
to coaching.
'.. Unlike lhe rax and deficit proposals he • 10 get lhroiJgh Congress, his
' ,.
Then
fortune
turned
irs
Jdndly face
:p~es 10 end the ban on bom~uals in the military, rescind abortion
10
Funk.
He
won
his
first-ever
PGA
reslrlctions left by the Republicans, and hire a aoss-section of America to
tournament
in
Houston.
'iun the government all Cllll be redeemed by the White House, without legThat, 10 me, is a heroic sports
i slation.
story.
A guy who is a ·real under·
· : But not without beadaches. especially over the question of gays in the
dog, whOse very livelibood bangs
. ~ forces. Clinton's position on lhat collides with the view of Gen.
in the balance, posti~: victory
Colin L. PoweU and the Joint Chiefs of Staff; they insist the 50-year poli·
Perhaps'
against the longest of
· 'cy is important to discipline and momle, and sbouldn't be rescinded.
i( atltletes in other pro spons faced
. . The president met with the chiefs for nearly two hours on Monday, and
similar adversity, they too might
'
·~ he intends 10 ~ his commitment A spokesman said Clinton would
evince
ttue character:
'
'lillce stepS 10 do so wilhin a week.
.
must
confess that I was 8lmost
I
:: · Public opinion is against Clinton on that one, 53 percent 10 35 percent
as
pleased
with Fred Funk's
li'tcOOiing 10 a poU conducted for Newsweek J811. 21 and 22. Other surimprobable
triumph
as he WI!S. For
, veys have reflected the same atlitudes with varying margins.
that
brief
and
sllining
moment as M.
... Defense Secretary Les Aspin told the president in a Jan. 18 memo lhnt
marched
up
the
final
fairway 10 •
· Congress might overrule an abrupt order lifting the ban. Aspin said Senate
viCtory,
I
was
returned
10
the days
rJemocratic leader George Mitchell had. estimated there were no more
of
my
boyhood,
when
the
pro alb·
.tllan 30 sure votes for the president's position.
·
.
let.es
I
cheered
on
w~
wortby
of
So Aspin recommended lhat the policy be revised over the next six
the
adulation
they
receiVed.
.
.
'months. In tile interim, there would be congressional bearings and an
· lOIIIPb Perkins II a Cl'lumald
effort 10 set terms meeting the two aims set lit the White House - an end
for Tbe San Dleao Ualoa·Trilb discrimination while maintaining lhe order and discipline of the armed
bune aad a syndicated writer for,
forces.
Newspaper .Enterprise Assocla•
" ... We knew this wasn't going 10 be easy, but it's something lhe presilion •.
dent believes in,'" S!}Okesman George Stephanopoulos said Monday. " ...
0
•Whenever you try to 'make progress in civil righrs, in ending discnmina(.,1
•
tion, there is opposition at the front"
. . Aspin said Sunday that the question of homosexu~ in the mil!.tary
: woold have come up with or without Clinton. s pledge 10 end the ban......
, It's not just gays, it's I!Cllual harassment ... it's lhe idel!. of women in comhat,'' he said in a CBS-TV inteiview. "I mean all of these kinds of social
Scurrying to get
work after senstor asked Baird wliat she pie, and no, l)eilher; ihat at(omey '*-'hat kind of heel ~~ ~bte i
·
the
other
morning,
I
slci
by
the had known, did she understand the nor she, who would be First forapclOr'widow?· · .; -,,
.issues are part of the agenda ollhe military because they're part of the
radio,
then
stopped
short.
Did
I
laws
she
had
broken
and
would
her
U!wyer,
could
figure
oui
the
law.
A
middle-aged
bouse
c.
l
eaner
,
agenda of American society."
. While proceeding with caution on thitt issue, Clinton quicldy undid the hear that right? I backed up and lis· biealdng of Jaws impair her ability No,. she doesn't thi'lf; any or this didn't W8lll me 10 pay tuel on her.
.
will impair her abili_ty 10 enfofCC lw:anse she, .was on Social Security '
•·at~onion restrictions imposed by Republican admfuistrations over the past tened closer.
''Despite
the
disclosures
about
the
laws sbe just broke....
disability payments and didn't wmt ,
· : 12 years, just as he'd said he would. He eliminated the rule against abor·
When C-Span ~ irs phone 10 declare the~ However,.I :
:;tion counseling at federally aided clinics and all other restrictions a presi- Ms. Baird's hiring 1&gt;f iUegal aliens
lines after the bearings, it became · knew abe wu illllld lhe said she'd ·
: dent cotild rescind wilhoutlegislation. He' s already pledged to seek action and failing to pay Socia[ Security
::ill Congress to end other restrictions and guarantee the right to legal abor- or unemployment taxes on them, to enforce those same laws as the even more appare~J Zoe Baird J$USI
· fer a doctor's villt ind a.;
Clinton insiders say they expect !he highest law enfof~:ement officer in wasn't aoing to "sail through... .
or IOI1ilds of antibiptic:f that !
,..•tion.
·
.
;: On that one, there is no political downside to compare with the prob- auorney general-designee to sail the land?
Then the senators quizz~sBaird set
b8ct $ISO, and slie WIID't .
·:lem ·or gays in the military. Public opinion supporrs the position Ointon through her confirmation bearBaird's calm dem61!10f and per- began 10 get hundredaof
from eligible for Medlcm IPI~S :sbe '
.
:•described as his; wilh abortion legal but rare. Opponenrs of abortion were ings.••
fectly spoken, polysyllabic sen- angry constituents.1A lot of the paidiniOap~eottldn'taffonl.
Beg pardon? Did he say "sail tences sounded so reassuring I folks Baird would serve, profesaed My choice? Be soft on lite law or '
::qainst him anyhow; with their allies out of power, they now threaten
through"? Clarence Thomas and almost wanted 10 find the logic in Clil)ton Democ.rais included, lwd on· her. · .
· · ;intensified protest demonstrations.
:. : That may tum up the volume in a 20-year conb'Oversy. It isn' t settled, Anita Hill went through the Span- them, but I couldn't: Yes, it's couldn't follow hen logic either:
Zoe, if what you wae trying 10
&lt;but it is predictable. "Mr. Clinton isn't the economic president," Rep. ish Inquisition over the intimation against U.S. Jaw 10 Jcnowingly hire The laws were on the&lt; books. The do was help out a poor immigrant •
::Christopher Smith, R-NJ., protested in the House on Monday. "Mr. Clin- of crimes that were never proven. an iUegal alien. Yes, she knew they woman ~ho would be attorney couple,.yoa must be altind WOIIliD.
"Judge Thomas, is your favorite . were aliens. No, she had not sent in general for America couldn't ftnd · But the laws tequiring reporting of
1011 is the abortion president''
·; The diversity commitment has carried a price, lhe undoing of Zoe movie 'Long Dong Silver,' or lhe F.I.C.A. cm1tributions.required them.
income are for the protection of
It's not that I don't understand. workers who have been historically
: Baird as Clinton's nominee for attorney general. Clinton decided belated· 'Roots,' as you allege?" Did they if one pays an employee moo: lhan
: I)' lhnt she would get that nomination; he was detennined 10 put a woman honestly think Zoe Baird would get $50 in a calendar quarter, and no, the murky watm lhnt sunound the exploited, workers who work for
• in the job. While his spokesman insisted she'd been thoroughly vetted, the a free ride after brealting Immigra- . she did not pay the fedem unem- hiring of household help.
less lhan legal workers because
:·Clinton people missed the significance and misread the backlash over her tion and Naturalization, ·social ployment taX required if one pays
An elderly woman. I called for they have no .choice. They are
Security and Internal Revenue Ser- an employee wages of $1,000 or housecleaning help .wanted to he workers who 'have no benefits
::hiring of iUegal aliens for child care.
.
vice
laws? I dido 't think so.
: The whole episode seemed 10 stem from haste to make a point It was
more in that quarter, but yes, she paid in cash because "if you write because no one haS paid into lhe
When
Baird asked President had paid the couple $2,000 a month me a check my husballd wiU find llenefit programs. What on earth
•only grudgingly rewarded; activisrs said the appoinllllent of four women
out and take my money.'' Another colild you have been thinJdng?
·:to 18 top administration and Cabinet jobs was progress but not good Clinton to withdraw her nomina- plus room and board.
tion, it was what I expected.
Yes, she had just paid $8,000 in woman wanted cash because Social
This is one of the fmest legal
::enough.
.
On the day Baird's confmnation back Social Security taxes and a Security regulations requirecl, that . minds in the land?
: . Within hours of lhe Baird wilhdrawal, they were demanding another
Sarab Overstreet Is a syndl·
: woman be named to replace her. After all, they noted, 56 pen:ent of Clin· hearings started, I flipped on C- $2,900 fine for viplating INS laws. she only inakC a certain amount of
Span and found the "Clinton insid· Yes, she had consulted an l!lmley money that year, "but I really can't cated writer for Newspaper
•·wn •s votes were cast by women.
·ers" had miscalculated. Settator about ~ legality _of ~ng the cou- Jive on that and I need tile work." Eaterprlle AIIOdatloa.
•. EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, viet presidel!l and colum·
•:nisi for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
.;national politics for more than 30 years.

Joseph Perkins

·T he headline stuff isn't
always the toughest issue~

•
'
•'

By Tbe AMoclated Press
·Frigid weather is riding into
Ohio tonight on the tail of an /
Alberta clipper, forecasters said.
Temperatures are expected 10 dip
into tbe teens.
Lake effect snow squalls could
dump several inches of snow east
ofCievelandonFriday, l1leNation·
a1 Weather Service said.
The cold weather condition are
expected to extend into tile week·
end.
··
The recOrd-high tempemture for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 66 degrees in 1914

,,'
..•

Hospital news

'

uo.derstand .'.::~,r),·.~··

readJ,:d

' Sarah Overstreet

--

Point is, the press has Valid rea- . No, wait a minute. •Fact is, if
I ltllve a source over at BaslcinRobbins - Deep Dip I call him ;.... ,son to btl frustrated.
he's ready 10 stran&amp;le a few of his
who says. !hey were thinking about
It is also easy 10 see why .Bill jouinalistic tonneriren, be's got a
marketing a new flavor called Clinton might be getting a little right. I'm one of the staunchest
,•
defenders of the J){CSS .011 lhe planet
"Bill-and-the-Media." :Right now
it's known as Rocky Road, but for
and I'm primed to choke a few
;: I would like to voice my opinion disgust on the mauer: When I got the next four years it might have
myself.
1 .
:-on a matter that occurred m my there other parenrs were there. The been called Bill-and-the-Media.
It's bad enough that reporters
:·daughter's classrOom at Middleport teacher 1111! principal were rude and Same thing, different name.
testy. He has been~ by the have taken the new president to
• Elementary 1/]IJ/93.
had no respect for our situation.
I think old Deep Dip was just press on and off smce last year's task for sending his daughter to a
:· Herteacherhadmisplaced$4.25
In my opinion he should have uying to be funny. He's a 'rock- early primaries. The media's .han· private school; for his turnabout on
·:and during lunch recess she kept acted as mediator instead of choos- ribbed Republican and he's getting dling of the Gennifer. flowers Haitian refugees after lel!minllhat
:"the children in and in my opinion ing sides. The children were being a kick out or the way Bill Clinton episode was·an egregious breach of 250,000 of lhem might hit the hi&amp;h
«eused the children of taking lhe treated as inmates instead of stu- and the press are snarling at each fairness. CNN's Jiw coveragr: of a seas in their rickety. boats if lie
.:money by searching each child denrs. No wonder so many children other so early in the game. "Pre· ·Flowers press conference was an dido 't change course; for the laf·
: individually, plus searching their end up in trouble with the law Jude to prolonged conflict," he '(mforgivable lapse of iood sense. gard manner in which he 11
· book bags and makjng them empty because they will eventually do chortles.
,
The IIC(itl88tions that Clinton fun- appointing subcabinet officials
what they are accused of. I think
Truth is, each party has a tolem- neled state money1into Hillary's even though most tnaidents since
: !heir desks: '
·; After each child was searched we need more open minded.and ble case against the other. It's taw ftrm were downright inaccu: Eisenhower have had the lame
lbey were sent ourside. The money compl!Ssionste teachers instead of understandable that reporters, rate. And the CIPTCnt rash of stories problem. As weak and iiJogicaJ as
"Was ~ found on any of them. She mqu1S1tors.
who~ivelihoods depend on their about broken campaign promiiCB such criticism is, it's stellar stuff
,ihen found the money laying on her
S811!1ra Hoffman abilit to approximate truth from _ even as lhe Clinton crew Is still compared 10 some Other complaints
.;desk.
State-Route 7, Box 252 the
that is ladled out to them · . trying to find the White House that have been J.lrir.lted and alred:
. I went to school the next momCheshire, Ohio by politicians, would tire or Oin- restwoms- seem petty IIRd cheap. · - Clinton 11 habitual I)' tardy,:ing to express my displeasure and
ton'• inclination to waffle 'While
Pointls,ifCllnton'aaettingboi- reponed tbe Atlaala Conldtulioll,
00
W"-inaton Post and Olben, IIICl
g.:...gedl_y_de_n)'111_·g_he_il_doing_·""so_ ._til_e._he_'•P-•ri_gb_L..;;:.
• _ _·_
Ibis
be an IMfcrlor li!M lie
wiU nm a•Jn~~-L .
:
By Tile Aaoclated Prae
.
'
Austria.
·
.
- Clinlo1i
10 pliO a pe;. Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 27, the 27th day of 1993. There are 338
m1832, Charlea LutwidJC Dodpon, who wrote "Alice's Adventures inauaural 1ala for die nadon's
·itays left in the year.
in Wonderland" under the pen naineLewis CarroU wubornin Cheshire
mayora In Baltimore, grumbled
·. Today 's Higlllight in History:
Englancl.
'
• ' Baltimore Sun columnist Ro1~r
: Twenty years ago, on Jan. 27, 1973, the Vleinam peace accords were
·In 1880, Thomas EdisOn received a patent for his eleclric Incandescent . Simon, and tbla obvlouly n,eana ·
:signed in Paris, bringing 10 an end the lohSC;'I foreign war in U.S. history. lamp.
the new president "~!t doean't
·file agreement called for a cease-ftre to begin the next day; the withdrawIn 1943,'50 years ago, the first aU-American 11r raid apinlt Clcnnany l'l1lk DII)'Ofl bigb on
IIIIUI.._
·a1 of all U.S. b'OOpl and militM"y advisers; and the release of all prisoners durinL:::rld War II took place u some 50 bomben struck Wll· JilL"
field by both sides.
helms
·
. - The Clinton-Gore baa lrip
• On this date:
In J9SJ,;.. cQ of atomic testing in the Nevada deactt bepn u Ill Air 'from Monticello .10 Yt'uhlnlton
: . In 17S6, composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozari was born in Salzburg, Force plane droppCd a !-kiloton bomb on Pmlchman Flail.
was borinl - "BW a At's So-

..~Letters
.

to the editor

Reader voices opinion

Joseph Sp_eor

.:TOday in history....;·'---- - - -

-t

•.

. :'

,So Adventure," accerding to lhe :
tart .Maureen Dowd and mobblsb
Frank Rich of The New York
times.
- The inauguration was an
.exen:ise in mediocrity, said numer- ·
ous critics. "No expm.se is being .
spared to malt:e th11 the taekieat ·
i~~Buguration ever,'' wrote Wash. ington Post fussbuda~t ~onatbin
Yardley. His Post co~ Mary
McGrory lamented th~ 'outrigbt
~" flyover ol milillry jell at
the I tDCOin Memorial. PUat televi; •
sion critic Tom Shalea tbouaht tho
Lincoln Memorial event •'II"lanai~
ed betwoen PODderous llliCtintony
and show-biz Klitz," ancl · he
thouaht It appaJJing that tho CJin.
ton's IICtuafly enjOyed It: ' 'They •
bubbled wilh delillbl, they &amp;ipled
with~;'· they all but frothed
with ' L"
- wth tonaae-in-cbeek, lhe
Dowd-Ricb duo plectaed to avoid
!_:I!!lclam, tbea snldely mocked'
Hllllry Cllnton'a ~Day '
ba&amp; .. "die tm.l11lidendlled f!Yilli;
object tbl&amp; londed 011 Hillary Cliil-:
IIIII 'llleld."
•
What we need, lt - • 10 me,:
· II a Dawr called 0. lnt IDiervaJ _ '
10111lble vanilla . _ willl aemt. l
lweet cilocollfO - and In bold oil
011 BW--·tbo-fdedla ll1dl M1R:b •
or tbeluboutL
, I
J...,ll
ldi...
wriltr
for
NewiUI-ItidaPIIIe
AIIOdalloa. " ,. r-·

.,.r ..... I

J..

• ' t

IToledo I 23" I

..•

•

••
•

•

'·

.

•

.••••
••

Velerans Memorial
wEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
• Carlos McCall, Albany.
·.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
• Ada Sheley.

n

•
•"
•'

~

.~ .

•'

••

•
••
•

..

•"i .,
,.,

•"'

••' - - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - Swtli.Cemr.t Oblo
T!iai&amp;ht, moady cloudy. Low
•, and
25-30.
if~=le
colder.
· near 3S.cloudiness
·

:

~

;-. ax....-

:
'

:

Sljlurclay tbroap Mollday:
Salurday; fair. A chance of snow

n!!nheast. Lows. 10-20. Highs in
m1d-20s 10 low 30s. Sunday,?air. A
chance of snow northeast Lows in
Jlpper teens to mid-20s. Highs iit
low 30s to low 40s. Monday, fair.
Lows in the 20s. Highs in tipper
3.0s 10 upper 40s.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Jan. 27 • Christina
Syrus, Drew Pelfrey, Stephanie
McTeer, Christi Walter, Mrs. Clifford 'Yard and daughter, Justin
Shaulis, Mrs. 'Ron Collins and
daughter, Michael Hampton, Albert
Creech, Freemon Locke, Jason
Oliver, Hesther Proffitt, Dorothy
Wallace, Jeanie Halley, David
Groves, Diana Shephard, Christara
Lucas, Johnathan Lemman, Dwight
Bolin, Whitney Knight, Jacob
Sayre, and Raymond Kloes. · • _
Births, Jan. 27 • Mr. and oors.
Michae.l Scarberry, daughter, Ripley, W.Va.

· Dorsel Kincaid

Friday from 2-4 and 7-9,.m.
Masonic services will be bel Friday at 8:30 p.m.
Memorill contributions may be
made to the Malta-McConnelsville
Volunteer Fire Department or the
GIICC United MethOdist Church.

Dorset E. Kincaid, 78, 300
' Nonb
Fourth
Street,
· McConnelsville, died Wednesday,
Jan. 27, 1993 at Good Samaritan
.. = a ! ~~~:u~sville fol·
. Born Feb. 28, 1914 in Bashan,
be '1\'as 8 10n or the late; Newman Orion Roush
. IIRd Flolence Hill Kincaid. He was
· Orion W. Roush, 28297 Apple
a retilecl Salesman for Muskiniwn Grove-Dorcas Road, Racine, wideValley ~ or Malta llld Clib- ly Jcnown Meigs County resident,
. ~ Mea Picking in Zanesville. He •died Wednesday afternoon, Jan. '1:1,
' was currently at parkin&amp; meter . 1993, at Veterans Memorial Hospiatteadant for the Village or tal following a lingering iUness.
M~011nelsville. He was a 32nd
Mr. Roush was born in Letart
l)eJNO Mason, a member of the Township oo November 12, 1914,
aemity AmitY Lodae No. 285 of a son or the late Anhur Edison and
Reinersville, Scouish Rite Valley Sadie Mac Lawson Roush. He was
of Cambridge, Grace United unitecfin marriaae with Dixie Kate
Methodist
Church
in Webb; who survives, at Point
• McCoaneiJville. He was a former .Pleasant. W.Va., on September 5,
~ McConnelsville Village-Council· 1935.
• 111111.lle was also a.former member . • A 1933 graduate or Racine High
·, Of tho Malta-McConnelsviUe Vol- School, Mr. Roush was employed
~ unteer ~ Ile!lartment, a member witb lhe Union Barge Line when
: of the Rufus f&gt;utnam Chapter of World War H began. During the
• Royal and Accepted Masons of .war he served with the Merchant .
: BeYai)' lnd also a member of the Marines on the Ohio·and Mississip; Grand Council of Royal and Select ·pi Rivers. After leaving his work
l ~No. 78o£Marietta. He was on the river, he became a farmer
• Plat hlron of the Valley No. 19 and 'was a dairy farmer at Salem
• Order of ~he Eastern Star in Center fer 32 years.
·
, : M~:Ca!me~MJ~e.
Very involved in community
. ' He is survived by his wife, and county activities, Mr. Roush
• Geaevieve Wilson Kincaid; one was a member of the Salem Center
' dauJIIIC!I, Donna Sue Spring, Bev- Methodist Church. He served as a
erly; one ion, Bill Kincaid, Rich- leader of the Salem Center and
laud. ·Mo.; three sisters, Hazel County Boys 4-H Clubs for 11
Shum'liii!Y of Raymond, Rubal years. He was a member and presiCaldwell of TU.PJIC:B Plains, ind . dent of the former Western Local
ROII'Da HolmqUiSt, Talmedge; four School Dislrict Boanl of Education
brothers, Jewell Kincaid or and served on the Boanl of DirecLebanon, Myrl Kincaid of Rio ton of the former Ponieroy NationRI!ncho, N.M.. Newman Kincaid al Bank.. Mr. Roush served on the
Jr., Green Cove Springs, Fla., 8nd . Meigs Agricultural Stabilization
Cblrlea· KinCaid, Aln Myers, Fla.; Commiuec fer 18 years and was a
four grandchildren; three step- member of the Meigs County
llfllldchildren; one great-grand· Boanl of Health. He served man.Y
c.hild and six step-great-grandchil- years as a member and vice-prest·
dren.
dent of the Meigs Caunty Regional
Belides hia plrei!IB be was pre- Planning Commission and as a
ceded in death by one daughter, member of the Board of Directors
Miry Lou K!nnld; four brothers, of the ·Meigs Caunt)' Tuberculosis
VtraU, penzil, Donsel and Kenneth Association. He was a member
Kincaid; and two sisters, Mabelle and officer of the Rio Grande ComJChnic! and l!cel Slllliss.
mtmity CoUCjle Board for 15 years
· Services will be Saturday at 1 and wu hono,red on May 23, 1981 '
p;m, aJ tho Miller-H._ck Fur•.il'al when the colle~ Board of Trustees
Home in McCIInnelsville :with Rev. COIIfened upon him "The Master's
David ·Vlaael and Rev. J - Bar- Des- ofPIIblic'Servioe".
CUI officiatina. Burial will be in ·
Mr. Roulll wu an active memRelncnvilleCCmetery.
ber ol the Salem Center Methodist
... · Frienda may
111 th~ funeral Church and later served in numer.
:home 011 lburiday f(OIII 7-9 and ous CIJ*ilicnt the Racine United hoof Cemetery.
FriC1J.ds may Call at lhe funeral
Methodist Cburcb. He was a member ol Racine Masonic LOdge 461 , horne on Thunday from 6-9 p.m.
·1\e
Sentinel
Free and Accepted Masons. He
(UIPI h..-,
I(CfVed u a committee member fer Ward charged .
_
~;"1~
Troop 244 of the Rac.ine Boy
Theodore T. Ward Jr., 33, is
!!!
mv._
Scoutl of Americlllld aJso served 'being lteld in the Franklin County
u Scoutmalter of the Letart Falls Jail o• two wurants from Meigs
troOp. He served 011 the Board of County, charging domestic violence
'Tru1te01 at Vt~te~ns Memorial and rape ~st a 14-year-old.
.Hoapilal. an.d with the Advisory
Accorcbng tO a reJI!!I from the
Bovd of thO hqapital's Home Meigs County Shenff's DepanHealtb Servlee. He was IICCntly a ment, the incidents occurred in
member of tho Directon Board of May of 1992.
the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
The sheriff's department was
· notified ·by the Franklin County
District
'
Survlvln1 are his wife of 57 Sheriff's Department that Ward
yean, Kate of Racine; a 1011 and was being held. The report stated
daulll*r-ln·law, Victor Wayne and Ward bas appeared. for hls Rule 4
Louella Thompaon Roush; a Hearing anirwas !0 be picked up
Valerie K. Roush, by Melli County authorities this
HousloP, a.: a cllqbler and aon- mcnila ('Thunclay). ·

cau

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. , ,...... , 'hcto

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·- ----·
No

.

tl{'ll

•

..,. -

....1114 ta

'

while the record low was IS below
zero in 1963. Sunset tonight wiU be
at 5:46 p.m. and sunrise Friday at
7:42a.m.
Around tbe aatloa

. An Alberta Clipper produced
snow in the Great Lakes region
today as it headed for the Nonh·
east. The system was expected 10
bring the winter's coldC&amp;t weather
to New England by the weekend.

One to 3 inclies of snow was today.
predicted for the Great Lakes
Rain was fo recast along the
region at the low-pressure system coast of Washin.rgott state.
•
moves across, with some heavy
Highs were foi'ecasl in the teeni
squalls possible in Michigan 's and below for northern Maine and
Upper Peninsula and llOI1hem Wis· parts of North Dalt:ota and Min:
consin. Detroit got snow· early nllSOta.

Squads make five runs past 24 hours

Five calls .for .assistance were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser.vice on Wednesday and early
Thursday morning.
'
On Wednesday atll:02 a.m. the
Pomeroy
unit responded to the
The Rutland Fire Department
Pomeroy
Nuning
and Rehabilita·
wss called 10 the Harold Roush o:stion
Center
(PNRC)
for Theria
idence oo State Route 124 at 10:06
·
a.m. Wednesday. A ch'imney· fire
was in progress when the firemen Foreclosure action
An action for foreclosure has
arrived but soon burned itself out
been
flied by Associates Financial
There was no damage to the house.
Services
Company of American,
Thirteen firemen were on the
Inc.,
Parkersburg,
W.Va., against
scene with four pieces or eqilip·
Norman
J.
and
Vivian
Hamil·
ment They returned to the ftre sta· ton, ,Dexter, and other, inLee
the
Meigs
tion at10:42 a.m.
·
County Court or Common Pleas.

Rutland firemen
are summoned·

Reed fines 29, seven forfeit
bond in mayor's court

Nineteen were fmed and seven
others forfeiied bonds in the court
fPome · Ma B
Reed lh'
0
roy yor ruce
. IS
w~~ed were Teresa Alderson,
Middleport, $53 and ~osrs, failure
· to comply with a previous coun
order: Lola Whittingt.on, Pomeroy,
$25 and costs, no operator's
license; Brian·Branharn, Pometo)l,
$63 and cosrs, failure to comply 0!1
old fines charge; James E. Simpin-law, Dixie K. and David L. son, Jr., Middleport, $63 and COSIS,
Waters; a granddaughter, Tasia L. operating wider suspension; Sandra
Green, anil a gnndson, Jobn W. Darst, State Route 7, Cheshire, $43
Green, Houston, Tex.; a sister and and costs, strip sign violation.
·
Charles Micbael, Jr. ; Letart
brother-in-law, Wilma. A. and
Harold L. Sargent, Middleport; · Falls, $100 .and costs, de'sttuction
brothm and sisters-in-law, Harold of property; Terry Rhodes, MiddleG. and Margery Hill Roush , port, $313 and costs, resisting
:Racine; Garen A. and Mary Law arrest, also $63 and COSIS, disorder·
Roush, Piqua; Oris A. and Dorothy ly conduct; Danette See, Pomeroy,
Gardner Roush, Salem Center; $63 arid cosrs, failure to comply
Clifford H. (Pat) and Mary Cross with a coon order; James Games,
Roush, Racine; Robert I. and Mary ·Pomeroy. $63 and costs, disorderly
Howard,
Jean Watson Roush, Sun City, conduct; Jerome
PQmeroy,
$63
and
costs,
no operaAriz., and Sheila Shain Roush,
tor's
license,
&amp;lso
$63
and
costs,
Chillicothe. Several nieces and
fictitious
tags,
six
months
license
nepbews also sulvive. .
Besides his parenrs, be was pre· . suspension. ·
Rodney Byus, Gallipolis. $213 ·
. ceded in death by a brother, Edison
and
cost, assault; Edward King.Eugene Roush, who died July 25,'
Pomeroy,
$80 and costs, failure to
1992.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Saturday at the Racine United Methodist,Church wilh the Rev.
Roger GIICC officiating. Burial wm
Literary Club to meet
be in the Letart Falls Cemetery,
The
Middleport Literary Club
Friends may call at the Ewing
wiU
meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
Funeral Home Friday from 2 to 4
at
lhe
home
of Mrs. Chester Erwin.
and 6 to 9 p.m. Masonic services
will be held 'at .6:30 p.m. Friday at Mrs. Ronald Reyilolds will review
the funeral home, In lieu of flow· "Rituals of Dinner" by Margaret
ers, contributions may be made to Visser. RoU call will be to tell of a
the Racine United Methodist memorable dining experience.
Church Building Fund.
Spapettl dinner
Cub
Scoutl'lick 376 will sponSarah Sova
sor a spaghetti supper at the LotSarah Elizabeth Putnam Sova, tridge Community Center on Mon86, 2166 Blackwood Road, day at 6:30p.m. Cost is $4 for
Guysville, .died Wednesday adults and $2 for children and
evening, Jan: 27, 1993 at St. Joseph · senior
citizens age SS and over.
Hospital in Pilrkersburg, W.Va.
CrafiS will also be available. Menu
Bom in West Virginia, she was includes spaghetti, tossed salad,
a daughter of the late Homer and garlic bread, pies, cakes, colfee and
Florence Spaunayle Kerns. She lemonade.
was a housewife.
Mrs. Sov~&gt; is survived by two
Meetln&amp; planned
sons, Charles Putnam, Guysville,
The
regular meetin1 or Drew
and Muple Putnam, Marietta; two Webster Post No. 39, American
daughters, Ida Schwind, Hampton, · Legion, will be held ~y. DinGa., and ,Ita Vickers, Dawsonville; ner wiU be a 7 p.m. and meeting at
pne brother, Carroll Burna, Gasaway, W.Va., and one sister, Vir- 8p.m.
ginia, also of Gasaway, W.Va.;
OEStomeet
seven grandchildren and three
.Racine
Chapter No. 134 Order
great-graildchildren. '
of.the
Easlenl
Star wiU meet Mon·
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her fust husband, day at 7:30 p.m. Members bring
Durward Putnam; her sec~ hus- beans or valentine related items for
band, Donald Sova; one son, Har·
vey Putnam; six brothers and four
sisten.
.
Services will be Friday at 2 p.m.
at Wh~te Funeral Home in
Cbolville. &amp;uiial will be in VaDder-

_.....,___~--Area · deaths-----

/

Clinton and media off to rocky.start

conditions and high

t.tCH.

111 Court Street
· Pomeroy, Oblo

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Forecasters say arctic air headed for Ohio

Friday, Jan. 29

Real sports heroes are no~ a .rarity

What Zoe Baird.didn't

.

'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hendrix who was taken 10 Vetmmi
:
At 12:14 p.m. the Rutland untt
went to Woodyard Road for Carlos
.McCall who was transpor~ t9
Veterans· ·
·'
The Mtddleport unit responded
10 Mulberry Heights at 2:50 p.IIJ.
for ·Violet Jarrell. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
:
At2:51 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to PNRC for Grace Smilh.
She was taken to Veterans.
This morning (Thursday) at 1:03
a.m. the Pomeroy unit ~sponded tO
Route 7 for Joe Conley. He was
taken til Veterans.
Memorial Hospital.

No one seriously '
injured in accidents

c'omply; Ricky Laudermilt,
Pomemy, $63 and cosrs, failure to
comply; Bruce Gheen, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, abandonment of a
vehicle, also $63 and costs; failure
to comply; Ryan Gheen, Pomeror.
$63 and costs, no operator s
license; Donald Armentrout, Middleport, $15 and costs, stop sign
violation; Donald Hartung,
Pomeroy, $43 and cosrs, failure to
yield, Alvena Van Meter, Chester,
$45 and costs, speeding; Jacqueline
Whitlatch, Reedsville, $46 and
costs, speeding; and Charles
Edwards Lieving, Mason, W. Va.,
$100 and costs, Prohibition Act
violation, falsifiCation of driver's
license.
• Forfeiting bonds were Joseph
McCloud, Middleport, $63, ~­
ing; Todd Quillen, •Middleport,
$80, squealing tires; Rick Smith,
Cheshire, $60, stop sign violation;
Maria Cormany, Ellcview, W. Va,
$65, speeding; Linda Ward,
Kanaugh, W. Va., $80, expired
operator's license; Christopher
Hall, Middleport, $60, assured
clear distance; Patricia Van Matre,
West Columbia, W. Va., $5 ~.
speedin~ and Laura Fry, Pomeroy,
$63 , driving under suspension.

Light damage was in,curred ·!0
the rear of a Y!lhicle owned j)y
Pamela Riffle, 46, of Racine, ill ·a
West Main S!Rlet accident Tuesday ·
aftenioon.
Pomeroy police reponed ttiat
Riffie had stopPed her 1993 Pontiac at a stop sign then started to
move from the road under the
bridge onto West Main St, wtien
she stopped again 10 eheck traffiC.:
Lavada Barcus, 63, of Cheshire,
traveling behind her failed 10 ml!lce
the second stop llld struck the rear
of the Riffle car. Neither drivel' was
cited.
.
.
Sunday at 1:10 p.m. Pomeroy
police investigated an accident' on
West Main Street in front of the
Meigs County Library. The report
indicated that Herbert Redman, S4,
Bidwell, was making a left tu'm
into the library and his vehicle was
struck from behind by a car driven
by Sandy Hood, 19, Middleport.
Janet Redman 48, a passenger in
the Redman vehicle, and Mrs.
Hood were bolh taken 10 Vctera8s
Memorial Hospital where they
were checked for possible injutr.
Neither was admitted.
'

said

Shotgun
missing
Teana George, Vinton, rep&lt;Nttid
to the Meigs County Sheriff.' s
Department on Wednesday that
· sometime between· 12:30 and S:30
auction. The distric( heart represen- p:m. someone had kicked open llae
.tative is scheduled, to attend. back door on her trailer. .
She
reported
an
870
Remington
Refreshments.
Shotgun was missing. •
·
Special services
Services at Mt Olive Community Church in Loitg Bottom wiU be
SPRING VALL EY CINEMA -,
Saturday and Sunday at 7 p.m. wilh
446 4514
Evangeli~ David Crowell, Ravanna, Mich. Pastor Lawrence Bush
invites the public.
' '•" '
Correction
TlJMUhHII.'v
Clara Sue "Susie" Soulsby, n&lt;J4
Carla Sue So~y as reported yesterday (Wednesday) ; has been
appointed a special deputy by the
Meigs County Coon of Common
Pleas. The Daily Sentinel regrers
the error.

-Meigs.announcements--

COLONY THEATRE
fiiDAY 1111U THURSDAY ·
HOME ~~o.\1 J1.\1.'2
[( ~II•• I

''I!.'&lt;

M:

'

..

.~

SHOWniiEI '
· FRI., SAT., SUN. 7:30, 9:30
MON. THRU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.60

LOCKER 219 Welcomes •••

#teillo.el'BaJI't~fiJI(

•

ALL AMERICAN END

*19

of 1·11 NATIONAL CHAMPION
MARSHALL THUNDERING HERD

.
'

l'ree Autographed Pictures Available Whlle Supplies
Lut. Or Bring Your Item ID. To Have Signed.
We co,.,-atulate Mike on. hU Academic
and A.thletic aucceu while at Manlaall ·
Uni"eraity, and with Mike Luck in la:ia
future endeavors •
219 •·

•co•• an.

.DDUPOifiHJ-5627
••

'

�.

'

•

"'

~ports

in Top 25 action,

Thursday, January 28,.1993

The Daily Sentinel

Southern girls beat Trimble 56-43 for first win of year

·

By SCOTf WOLFE
S.tiaelCuneljloade•t
The Southern Tornado girls'
basketball team posted its first win
of the year- a 56-43 non-league
decision ovec Trimble.
It was the fust' career win for
varsity co'ach Jenny Couch, who.
has cOntinued 10 n:build the Tomado squad throughout the sesson.
Southern (1-11) was led by
Aimee Mills' 13 points and Andrea
Moore~s 12.
Trimble (1-14) willed &amp;y Cha·
sity Antle's 13 _POU!ts.
·Soutbem blitzed 10 an 11-2 fU'Sl .
period lead as Andrea Moore hit
twO free throws and two field goats
to ~ the Tornadoettes. Freshman Joana Manuel hit two field
goals in the frame and Bea Lisle
canned a free throw. Trimble's
·only tally was a field goal by
Tonya Trace.
Trimble came bllck in the secone! frame 10 puU closer at 23-18 at

Thursday, January 28, 1993

'

..

State
for
ninth
straight
victory
North
Carolina
beats
Florida
.
.

~

; By Tile ~llltd Press
: It was a vinlale Carolina come-

llick.

.

'J'railing by 20 points with. 9:30
lefi, the third-ranked Tar Heels
staged a remarkable rally to beat
No. 19 Florida State 82· 77
Wedllelday niaht at Chapel Hill.
: Gccqe Lynch capped tile come·
back wilh a steal and dunk that put
North Carolina ahead with 1:41

te018inina:"ln die ICCOIId half our defense
was I'JIOie aagressive," said Lynch.
who had 14 points. "We had to
apply more f:!J~ssure and make
them 111n1 tile
ovec." ·
.
The Seminoles had 14 wmovecs
in the second balf, including five in
~ last eight minutes.
· "We Jill tentati~ in tile second
half when they started trapping
ua," Florida Stale guard Bob Sura
slid "We felt like we had a big
enough lead to win the game,
WiUdi we ~·t, but itlllemed like
they wwo llllkiftg evecy shot."
·
Nanb.Caolilla won ill ninth in

a row and snapped Florida State's the Hoosiers ahead 56-SS.

No. 6 Cblclnaati 78
five.game winning streak in the
Xavier (Ohio)"
Allanlic Goast Conference.
In oilier Top 25 games, it was
At Cincinnati, Nick Van Exel
No. 2 Indiana 61, Minnesota 57; SCOnld 15 points and polished off a
No. 6 Cincinnati 78, Xavier, Ohio, decisive first-half filii that helped
67; No. 21 Georgetown 73, No. 9 the Badgers win their lllh in a
Seton Hall 62; No. 12 Vanderbilt row. Van Exel hit a.pair of 3-polnt82, Tamesscc 6S; SyracuSe 95, No. ers to complete a 16-2 run that
13 :Pittsburgh 79; Wake Forest 75, gave Cincinnati a 38-31 halftime
No. 15 Virginia 73;. Mississippi lead. Jamie Gladden led Xavier
State 80, No. 16 Arkansas 76 m with 2S points.
ovc:nime; No. 18 Georgia Tech ~s.
No. 21 Georptcnm 73
North Carolina State 'i4; and No.
No.9 Setoa HaD 62
20 Oklahoma 146, Florida A&amp;M
At Landovec, the outside shoot·
ing of reserves Kevin Millen and
6S.
No. 211idlaaa 61
. Eric Micoud sparked a fU'St-half
Minllaota 57
surge that clll'ried Georgetown to
At Bloomington, Damon Bailey the victory. The Hoyas took comscored 17 points 831ndiana extend· mand with a 23-5 run that gave
ed its home winning streak to 26 tilem a 38-22 lead !ale in the first
games. Trailing 58-57, tile Gophers half. Micood led Gcorge1Dwn with
had a chance 1D take the last shot. 15 points. while Tecry Dehe:ie had
But Arriel McDonald was called 16 for Seton Hall•.
for a liYe-second violation with 13
No. U VallderbiJt 82
seconds 1D play. MinDesola led tile
T••= ee 65
entire same until Bailey's ~At Knoxville, reserve Frank
point ptay with 4:14 remaining put Seckar acmed 18 poinll81 Vaodcr-

N.C. State 74
bilt ·ended a 1_3-game road losing loss in four games·. The Demon •
AI Atlanta, James Forrest scored
streak. Ronnie McMahan added 17 Deacons Olllde just oae field goal in
poinll for Vandabilt. Corey Allen the final el&amp;bt ininutea, but clutch 24 points and Georgia Tech's
.had 18 points forT~.
. free-throw llhootina bellied them . starters shot 79 percent lfom the ~
.
s,rac- 95
. win ll v· . . for only the aeiXIIId field. Forrest made 10 of 11 shots, ·
and fiahman Mar1ice Moore hit 9
No. 13 Plttlburlb 79
time since
of 10 for 18 poillts {or die Yellow ·
At Pittsburgh, Adrian AuU'y
Ml t dppl SUO .
Jackets. The Jackets led by 36 1
SCOnld 31 poinllas Syracuse used a
No. 1' Arb s 7' (OT) ·
!ale 18-2 run 10 snap tile Pantbers'
At Starkville, MiJsilsippi State poinll before State went 0\1 a ~ 1-6·: ·
.,
four-game winning streak. Syra- freshman Vandale Thomas scored run. .
.
·
No.
20
Oldaliomll
146
'
cuse turned a 64-63 deficit iniD an all seven of his points in overtime
· Florida AAM 65
81-66lead.
as the Bulldogs handed Arkansas
AI
Norman,
Jeff Webster scored ,
Wake Forest 75
its third OOIIICICulive !ali, Arbnsas
32
poinll
and
Angelo
Hamilton had
No. 15 V~ll 73
• led by 81 many as 14 points early.
26
as
Oklahoma
routed
the Rat· :
At CharlotteSVllle, Randolph Chuck Evans bad 21 pOints and 14
tiers.
Florida
A&amp;M
committed
43
Childress scored 19 poiniS as Wr£ rebounds for State. . . ·
turnOvers
and
shot
just
37
'
p
ercent
·
Forest handed Virginia its third
No.18 Georala Teeb '85

.

: In tbe NBA.u
EASTERN CONJIERENCE
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BGSU beats Western Michigan;
Central Michigan tops OU by 10
three- ;

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Pd'd \' I ......... 11 ..23 7 43 119191

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'

e 1993 c.110n Card.'l

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
: T-

''

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

s
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S3 167158
41174178
35161196

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HOURS: 10 A.M.· MJDNIQHT, IUNbAV·THUASPAV
10 A.M • .' 2:00A.M., FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
•28111 .._.a ..__.. Av• ..; Paint 'I
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·301!Jpparlllwlrlhl•,o 1$ ••·••••

.,,a w....... .,..,, l'clln• ., •Its 11a

~lol*lllr

. By JOE KAY
Xavier (12-3) opened an cady lead.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Coach Hedidn'tlikeiL
Bob H1iJa1ins made evecybody ner"I got necvous," he said. ·
vous for-71(2 minutes by benching
His teammates weren't enjoying
Nick Van Excl
.. itqmch, eill!Ci'.
.
Van Exel ..juirmed in his chair; · hWe were just kind of lost
squeezing a .red towel, while ·because Nick wasn't out there at
crosstown rival Xavier built an the start," said Erik Martin, who
early lead Wednesday night over finished with 18 points and nine
No. 6 Cincinnati.
rebounds.
Van Bxel's teammares were
uneas~ without their-leading scorer

:lav~h Pete Gillen was

and

uncomfortable, too. He was afraid
Van Exel would pop iNo tile game
at any moment and wipe out
Xavier's tenuous lead with a cou·
plc·long-range shots.
And that's exactly what happened. Van Excl shook off his second disciplinary benching this
mootb 1D score 15 points and lead
the dccisi~ run in a 78-67 victory. .
"We couldn't Stop Van '!;;xel,"
Gillen said.
.
That was no surprise. Van
Exel's clutch sbooliJi&amp; is the main
re.ason Cincinnati (14-1) has riseD
to No. 6. for the fust time since
1977. He leads the team with a
17.6 scoring average, and won a
game against Alabama-Binningham laSt Saturday with an off·bal·
ance three-pointer.
The surprise WI# that J:{uggins
would start Cincinnati's mosth~ game of the season without
hlfLI. Neithec Huggins nor Van !Exel
would say what led to his balUsh·
ment to die beach.
It was Van Exel's socond· such
punishment this month. Huqins
sat him down ·ror most or a mnepqint victory over ~veland State ·
ori Jan. 13 heranse 'he Wllll't bqs..
t1in :
'
!fhere be was ~itting again as

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Wolllton ...............8 3
MBIOS ................8 4

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as.I.P. SJtldAi ·

PF
554
670
. 612
548
397
632
491
363
397

PA
389
395
487

511
495
549
673
616
635

NuiiD!Ilvilll-Yort..3 9
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354 621

.... bucloot . . ..

...

IIOW

WAS

512I 888
.

Tonight's 1ames
Alexander at Federal Hocking
Millec at MEIGS
Trimble at Nelsonville-York
Wel~ton at Vinton County

~

\'

4d..,., ....,, V-8, air, ~"'I roof, aula.,
PS. PB, ,..... windowl. """"' 1811,
...... loda, Iii!, cnile, AIM'M
lllpo, rodials, gauge&amp;, IB

Call loll Free For An Appolnt111ent
(ln ·Ohio) 1·800·339·5021 or
(In W.V.) Cell Collect 614·423·4524

2 doon, 10ppar, a cyl., s 1peec1
slalld., PS, PB, APNFM radio, 112
ton, lholt wide bed, llllp

bumper.

IIOW

S6 8

WAS

'

1989CHEVY
BLAZER
2 doors. 4 wheel drive, V-8, air,

auto .. bucket seats, gauges.

IIOW

WAS
'11,995

WAS

SlO 988
I

IIOW

S4 488
1

I

'7,4!15

N•w Bustn.ss Clf•nts W.lemn•!
' ..

wrt o!Uig.

1986 FORD
RANGER SUPER

. 1992 FORD
F·150 FLARESIDE
V-8, air, aula., PS, PB, ,..... window~,
,.....loda, lil, cn.ilt, .uFIIslllp8, radiols, 11\! 1on, ohoo1whoelbM,

&amp;l'alwidebecl....l1lplium~.gougoa,
siding rear gloo&amp;.

WAS

IIOW

S131888

Rli.TLAND FURNITURE CO.
hlvites the Public io visit their newly
redesigned showroom where they now display
twice as many living room suites as before,
while still keeping their Everyday Low Prices
·with ·RSVP (Rutland Furniture Showcase Value
Price).
·And-don't forget about their Televisions and
A'ppliances, each with one of the largest
showrooms In the area.
i

•

•

•

•

They have a servlce•an on staff to service
what· they sell. lhe.y have been In· business
· sine• 1945, and . they're still excited about..
1993 being ·on~ of their •ost successful years
ever.
So hurry out to Rutland Furniture and see the
ielect~n, share the ~avlngs, lind ·rest ·assured,
at Rutland Furnlt1re they'll be there when
you need the•.

, RVTLAND FURNRURE CO;
r

...

1987 UNCOLN
TOWN CAR ·.

PUBLIC 10

7A2-2211

•

Nelsonville-York..7 3
Alexandcr .............7 3
Miller...............:....6 6
Federal Hocking ...6 6
Vinton County ......4 7
Wellston ...............2 9
Trimbte .........:.......o 12

•Income Tax Preparation
•Electronic Filing.
•Direct Deposit
•Full Accounting Services
-computerized Services

Van Exel powers Cincinnati
to 78-67 victory over Xavier

6 !1011
• 7 1002
8 989
7 952
11 909
Hocking...2 12 1SS
12 791

+,.,.y , _ r iHt . aai'NII'Ilenol trunk Ml •Nt. .oct- gtllrde
.,...- defogger •atorage ~ odual eleotrto Jlllrrort ollgMtd
vteor mit-. ooruiM •lllul4.11lbe oiiiCIIdng
li IIMJIM .-1e111111
beg ..tr .ndlttanlng pau•r daor
toGtlt .,n.ntng IMI 1tta1ca otpll ..w .,..r -rtty lOck d-•

tim,..,

fVffiY SUIIDIIY SPEC/Ill

L
2
2
4
5
8
9
11
12
14

,....windowt.,......._,......._,

The Fastest Income lax Refund
Anticipation Loan in the Area! Receive
your check in as little as
All
Fees can be withheld fro111 your check,so
you pay nothing in advance!
3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU:
Washington Blvd., Belpre
6.4 Main Street, Coolville
State Route 339; Dunham Square

"

'*"·Big ....

W
Belpre ................ .13
MEIGS ...............12
Nelsoilville-YorklO
Alexande£ .............9
Federal Hocking ...?
Mlllec.................... 7
Vinton County ......4
Wellston ............... 2
Trimble.........,.......l

I

4doolt, ..... ltyl,oif,.,.,., PS, PB.

I FLAiBCasa \

.•

)'0'1'

Team

1992 FORD
TAURUS

1992 FORD
TEMPOGL

BENJIMIN C. UNDCflPH
&amp; ASSOCIATES

T-

Make )'0'1' bait! a an twill a SIDwly Party Slm or Party Ptalllr.
You IIIII us tow tong you want ytNt Party Slm - 11111 wel mallll
~ welaUI ycg Party Pliler wltl ytNtflrfOIIIIIDI llicad In Iaiiy ~ ~ .. Clll Sllb..,.llld llllke planllar

Soutbtra _
(11-12·18·'ts.;!'6) ~
Amber Ohlinger 1-0-2=4,
Aimee Mills 5-1·0=13 , Joana
Manuel 3-0-0=6, Andrea Moore 50-2=12, Sherri StoYer 2-().4=8, Jess
Codner 1-0-0=2, Bea Lisle 2-01=5, Amy Weaver 1·0-0=2, Jennifer Cross 1-0-2=4. Totals- 211-11=56

In theTVC ...
rebounds, led by Otto's 19, 23
turnovers, eight steals, five assists ' MEIGS ................. 9 2 601 · 382
Belprc ................ ~-~9 _ 2 572 345
and lS fouls. .
.
comt explotts proved why they are ·
Belpre drtlled Eastern m the
now 13-2 overall 81 they rolled to reserve cdntest 47·13. Erin
a 66-43 non-teaiuc girls' basket· Humphrey had 12, and Angie
ball win over Eastern Wednesday Davis and Julie Newberry each had
r
night at Easlem.
·.
10. Michelle Schultz had four for
Belpre wa5 led by Tabby Mayne Eastern, Rebecca ~vans bad lluee,
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT &amp; FINANCIAL
witll 21 points. Team11111C Christy Beth Bay and Jesstca Radford two,
Bartlett had 18, Beth Reck had I:i Nicole Nelson one ani! Melissa
PLANNERS
and Jaime Colebank had 11.
Guess one.
. Eastern (5·9) was led by junior
Eastern goes to River Valley
guard Jaime Wilson, who tied her Thliisday.
careec-high marie or 19. Stephanie
Eastern ·
Otto had 11 points .and 19
(8·7-15-13=43)
rebounds.
,
Stephanie Otto S-0-1= 11, Jaime
Belpre led 20-8 at tile end of the
Wilsdn
S-0-9=19, Amy Redovian
ftnt period, then blitzed 10 a 31-15
2-0-1=5,
Penny Aeiker 1-0-0=2,
lead at the half. Eastern had a
Tara
Congo
1-0;0-2, J«lSsica Karr
. decent second half, but trailed 5548 HOURS!
30 after three and 66-43 at the 2-0-0=4. Totals- 1'..0·11=43
fuutle.
Belpre
•
Belpre hit 26 of 56 from the
(20·11-U-11=66)
field fa 46.4 percent and hit 9-12
Jaime Colebank 5·0·1=11,
at the line for 7.5 pen:enL Eastern
hit 16-45 for 35.5 percent and hit Christy Bartlett 9-0-0•18, Beth
Reck 3-2-2=12; Anfie Haynes().().
1710
11-17 at the line for 68 pen:enL
1=1,
Sherri
Stacy
-0-0=2,
Tabby
Belpre had 25 rebowlds; led by
Colebank with 11, had 16 steals Manye 8-0-5=21. Totals - 26·2·
(Colebank 5), 13 turnovers, nine· 8=66.
'Bs$ists and 19 fouls. Eastern bad 31

TVC ,varsity boys1
basketball standings

S..,...DI_

Pallo 1-0-0=2. Tonya Trace 2-0·
2.. 6, Chasity Antle 5-0·3= 13,
Jenny Shank 2-0-0-4, Beth Koons
3-0· 1=7, Abby Curry 1·0· 1=3.
Totals -18-0-7=43

TVC varsity girls' basketball standings

By SC01T WOLFE · ·

Sports briefs

. Frldarar.

rebounds, led by Sherri Swver with
· 11, Joana Manuel seven and
Andlea Moore with six. Trimble
had 26led by Koons' live.
Southern had 13 steals
(Ohlinger four) , eight assists, 25
turnovers. and 23 fouls. Trimble
had eight steals, four assists, 26
tumOyecs and 19 fouls.
Southern hosts Symmes Valley.
Thursday and River Valley Tuesday.
·- Trimble
(2Le·1~19==43)n....g Ki
Tarnmy mgar 4-0-v~ , m

Eastem Had COIICh • ·
The ~!pre Golden Eagles' on-

. Kramer icored 24 points to lead tying tile ~ at 78·78 ba a
By MARGARET POZENEL
Miami. Kramer put Miami ahead pointer by David Hall with nine ;
AIIIK!Iated ,.._Writer
Bowlin~ Green coach Jim Lar· on a three-pointer 1D bRalt a SO-SO secOnds left and setting up Fuller's
ranaga satd the Falcons' vic1Dcy tie and lidded six more points dur- game-winning shot.
Kent had just a 22-20 lead lil t
over Western Mic:!.l~n acutally inll a 17·5 run that gave the Red·
started earlier this w
.
skins a 67-55 mai'1in with .1:23 halftime when the Golden Flashes ,.
went on a 14-4 run to tatO,the court
vada Bumeu scored 20 points, remaining.
including four in ·a 9-0 first-half
Eastern Dailed 30-28 at the balf in the. second half ending with a
run, 83 tile Falcons rolled to a 68- but managed four lies in the second 36-24 lead over Akron. The run t
45 victory over the Broncos half - the last on Bryant was capped by a three-pointer by i
Wednesday in the Mid-American . KeMedfs baseline jumper with Jeff Anderson, who led Kent with ,
Conference. Michael Hugec had 14 8:24 remaining.
15 P.'!ints.
James Reed paced Eastern with .
'I thought our offense w83 a lot,
points and a game-high nine
17
points.
·
better
in the second half," said ,
assists.
In Toledo, Archie Fuller's three- · Kent coach Dave Grube. "We;
• 'The entire team practiced
extremely hard the last three days point field goal from 22 feet out at came out more focused, set some.
and I thought Vada and Michael the buzzer In overtime gave the screens and played with more:
both shoWed a great deal of leader· Rockets tho victory and coach intensity."
Larry Gipson · what be called
Ataon managed 1D cut its deficit ,
shi .··~said.
~lsewbere in the MAC Wednes- bi~ victory in twO years. .
1D 46-43 with 5:02 remaining. Tor-.
day night, Miami of Ohio beat
'Our team showed a lot of rey Kershaw led the Zips with 16 ·
Eastern Michigan 69-62, Toledo courage," Gipson said. "~lay· points. .
.
beat Ball SIBle 81-78 in overtime, ~ got tile ball1D the best peoeb'a. Sander Scott scored 2.1· points to •
Kent beat Akron 61-45 and Cen1ral tor on the Door.''
help Central Michigan oven:ome a '
Fullcr led the Rockets with 23 34-point, 12-rebound effon by :
Michigan dcfealed Ohio 91-81.
Topping the conference with 5-2 points, including fi~ tht!:e·point: Ohio's Gary Trent, whQ commiUed '
ICCOids are: Ball State (14·5 over- en.
nineof0hio's24 turnovers.
all), Miami (9·4), and Western
A free thtOw by Toledo's Darell
Centnl used a •2-0 run late in ~
Michigan (8·7). At 4-3 are Bowling Sizemore tied the game at 67-67 .the fU'Sl half 1D take a 41~24 'lead at
Green (7-8) and Ohio (7-8), fol- wiih 1:03 to play. Neither team intermission. In the second balf, the '
lowed by Kent (6-9) and Toledo (5· scored in the rest or regulation Bobcats got as close u 64;-59 on a ;
10) with 3-4 rec:crds. Akron (7-8), time.
'I.
basket by Trent with 5:13 remain. Ball State went on a 7-2 run, ing. ·
·
'
Central Michigan (S-9) and Eastern
·Michigan (6-12) round out tile conference with 2-S ICCOICis.
'
At Bowling Green, the Falcons' ·
... ' ...
r------M
•.. ~
•• ••
early run gave them a 2S·I4 lead
ap1111t tile Broncos; but Western
•
went on a 10-5 run capped by Ben
Handlogten',:.j;mper, and uailed
;
39-24 at the
.
''
. The Falcons took their biggest
'
lead, 62-33, on a. 10-0 run capped
by a B!JmCUjumper with 7:221ift.
.•
Handlogten led the Broncos
Browse through our
with 10 . II.
wide assortment of
At ~ilanti, Mich., Matt
Carlton Cards.'
Basketball
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - ·
Criminal charges won't be sought
against members of the Portland
Trail Blazers who had an alleged
sex party with two 16-year-old
Rirls, Salt Lake City police said.

the half. Moore had six points in
tile frame 10 aa:ount for all of bel'
points. ·
The difference in tile.game was
an 18-6 offset in the third frame..
Milb had the bot hand and notched
seven points, including a long
lluee-pciinter. Sherri Stover added
four, and Manuel, Usle and Cross
each aank twO.
Couch was impressed with both
her team's offensive ()utput in the
frame and their defensive intensity.
Soutbem hit 7-11 at tile tine to"
secure the 56-43 win. That came
despite a lCD point effort by Chasity
Antle in the fuutle frame. ·
The win avenged a loss 1D Trim·
ble just before Christmas.
·
Soutilem hit 21 of~6 fa: 38%, 1
of 5 threes and was 11 of 18 from
the line for 61%: Trimble hitl8 of
47 for 38'1&gt;, was 0-2 oil threes and
w83 9-21 at the line for 33&lt;Ji.
Southern had a whopping 45

Belpre girls top Eastern 66-43 -

Valentines With '
A Sense of Humor

...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

.

.•IUIUIID, 01.

1987 NISSAN
SENTRA

1989 FORD
PROBEG.T.

4 cy1 ., auto., AMIFM stereo
rac:ials, bucket seals, rear
defog.

2 doon, front wheel
alr,auto., PS, ,DOW81'10CIIS.
wheel, cruise,
,
ala, bucket seats, rear Win .delog.,

llf'lg&amp;l.

gaugao.

IIOW

IIOW

WAS

S91995

.551988

1992UNCOLN
TOWN CAR
4 daclll, oocllrl. V-8. oir, -

·· PS,

�·-

I

'

'

-._

Thursday, January 28, 1993

Page 6

Woman stunned by -hospital b~ll
Dear A . . Llladera: Recenlly,
my DCi&amp;hbor receivcd a dcql claw
puncbl'e from bet pet caL The pain
·and swelling which followed ~
totally UlleXpecied Sbe went 10 a
clinic near her borne at ouce and
receivcd a ICIIIIUI llhol, The I:IIICI'·
geacy 1!10111 physk:iln administered
antibiotics and ordered ber to a
hospital for foilow-up treatment.
Tbe · doctor there diagnosed the
problem as Pulcureila multocida,
which my friend was told · is a
common bacteri&amp;-Jdated infection.
She \VIIS hospilllized for four
and one-half days. Yesraday, she
reeeived the hospital bill. It was
$10,169. This did not include the
doctor's bill. The woman was

: 100 PERCENT CLUB • An assembly was

recoa··

· lleld TbU'IIIa:r at Chester Elementary to
; nlze ltJ\dent achievements lor the first ball of

the school year. Members of the 100 percent
club are, 1-r, Josh Jhle, Mrs. Martie Baam,
Tiffany Hensley. Absent \VIIS Gregory GDiilaD.

!J _'!fJ
.....
~

. ·iJ·

.c. 1'~:.r·
\J .. ••.
~

. ....

'

....

CHESTER'S PRIDE • AD assembly was held
; Tbursda:r at Chester El~mentary to recopize
: student aclllevelllents for tile fint half of the
. ' :scllool year. Pictured are members of the
·£1Mster Pride: front row, 1-r, Jonathan Loacks
aad Justin Brewer. Second row, Juli Bailey, Bea
••

Harrisonville news
.. John and Ann Williams spent II
r_

a&amp;ys in Michigan visiting lheit son
and family and Other reJati VeS.
They saw dleic fu:st grcat-llr8lldson
l\(ho is-three months old ·from
~lB. Ga.
. : Ernie Ray and Nellie Lowe
iPent a day visiting Roy Lowe in
1-l;heville.
-: "Bud" Hall, Jim Clady and
~ends. an of Bucyrus, visired Mr.
8iKI Mn. Orville Pbillips. The men
brought their dogs and did some
J!'OUSC hunting while here.
~ Bessie Graham, who resides at
Ovct'brook Cemer, enjoys visitors.
Those who have visired her recent19 were Ruth and Nellie Lowe,
Rafold Graham, Kalherine Weaver
llftd Examae Ouistian.

:': Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Latta,
Coolville, Visired the Harold Gral)am family and Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley Sunday afternoon.
~ Fifteen members of the Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club
el)joyed a dinner at Ponderosa in
Gallipolis.

·-

~~

.--

..

Holter, Cody Faulk, Brandon Buckley, Charlie
Young, Carrie Crow, Stacie Slllitb, KIM Lodwick, Charlene Zeigler. Back row, M~ Allison,
teacber,Joey Sisson, ADiie Taylor, Sean Beeker,
David Bigley, Heather WestiiiD aud April Milhoan •.

McArthur teacher speaks
to Delta Kappa Gamma .
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta to assist kindergarten children
Kappa Gamma, met recently at needing extra help to prepare for
first grade. Screening IS don~
McArthur Elementary.
Fern Felton gave. the invocation before entering kindergarten and
before the carry-in meal. She read include a complete physical and
"This Is My Prayer" by Helen mental evaluation and teacher
Steiner Rice. Tables were decomt- referral. These children go to
ed in· a winter motif and favors school five days a week. Parental
involvement is encouraged. Mrs.
were apple magnets.
During the business meeting the Fitzpatrick showed the society her
group voted to give TEFT monies t room which includes learning centers of art, discovery, listening,
the education program.
computers
and math. Children are
A note of thanks was received
directed
to
the centers they need
from Serenity House for paper
most
in
the
morning
and given free
products.
choice
in
the
afternoon.
Legislative chairman Viola GetLee Lee had the music program
ties reported on Senate Bill 170
and
spoke on the loss of music proabout school finance and Senate
grams
in the schools due to cuts in
· Bill 252 about sexual harrassmenL
finance.
Legislative Day in Columbus on
The next meeting will be at
March 30 was announced.
Saints
Peter and Paul Parish Hall in
Connie Mundry, professional
Wellston
on Feb. 20 at,12:30p.m.
affairs chairman, introduced Kathy
fronr Meigs County
Attending
Fitzpauick, kinderganen teacher
were
Wendy
Halar,
Lee Lee, Neilie
lUider TiUe One in McArthur. Mn.
Gay
Perrin
and Rosalie
Parker,
Fitzpatrick explained the program
Story. ·

Ann

dut a qnrstjoo or CC)II'UIMI'l wilhtut

Landers
ANN LANDERs
"1991, 1M AD&amp;elet
Tim'" Syndkalt

DEAR FREMONT: Thanks for
the compliment, but )'011 Me credit·
ing me with more clout than I
actullly possess If I bad $5 for
every penon who WRIIII to me ID
complain about I bolpital bill, I
COUld pay your frieod's bill right
DOW.

It uno acaet that the bellm-cSllllllled
syatem in thil country is in dire
Her room was ~ the ~nt need of overhiuling. Mole.than 37
level and looked like a ~ cen. million peOple in ·the UJtitecl swes
She could have had a .swte m the · have 110 health insurance Unleu
best hillel iD San Frm:isco with a tbcac IIDlnsured folb are
rich
private nurso in an. adjoining they are in deep trouble if
room, plus room scmcc an&lt;! !he should gel sick. Thoae who dO have
auendance of her own phy11ctan insurance often fmd thcmsclvea ·
for lhe $2~ a day it cost in that . struggling 10 get tbrougb pounds CJl
crummy bosp•1BL
p8pCrWIJit and mllea CJl red 11pe. If
I am scndin&amp; my congressman anyone. has any bright ideas, doa't
a copy of this ieuel, but it is a writc to rrie: Write 111 your ..Nun
well-~ fact that. you are the
Dejll' Au Landen: 1 need same
most cffecbve pcrsonm the country advice on how to handle a sjuw•ion
when : it comes to gelling the with my new dauglitcr-iD-Iaw.
at~nuon of . people who make
When our son married "Cathy"
things !tappen. - L.E., ~MONT, last year, she ubc1 me bow I would
CALIF.
.
like her to, addrcas me. I told her
that I would prefer 10 be c8lled
"Main:.·
It's been sill months, and she still
h!lsn't called me "Mom• or anything
else for that llllllleC. Sbe just biUtU

;uy they

VICA attends .
conference

Meigs VII;A students anended
the South Central Regional F~ll
Conference recently in ColumbUs.
Swdents patticiJ)llled in the election of regional off'~eers. The Meigs
VICA regional officer candidates
were Holly Williams·, Jennifer
ChaSteen and Virginia Shuler.
Jason Stewart, Larry Faw,
Tracey Gruescr and Mike Garnes
served as voting delegateS.
Other students attending and
taldng an active pan were Autwnn
Griffith, Kandi Bachtel, Michelle
Caruthers, Leann Cundiff, Jennifer
Barnhart, Brian Phillips, Jennifer
Rowe, Beth Roush, Amy Reynolds,
Ursula Hart, Tanya Woodard,
Steve See, Josh Heck, Man Gatrell,
Man Stewart, Jon Vance, Kevin '
Whobrey, Otarles Bryant, Michael
Pbillips, Chuck Young, Jeff Tracy,
Todd Wodanan, Charles King, Eric
White, Jerry Lightfoot, Brad .
Knous, Jennifer Bolyard, Lee Henderson, Chrissy Taylor, Dawn
Erwin, Danielle Hensley, Scott .
Gardner, Brad Haggy, Shannon
Spann, T,odd Perry and Jason Hall.
Virginia Shute~ was elected
regional parliamentarian. She will
he going to Washington, D.C., with
all other Oliio Regional Officers
for officer leadership training. Her
dulles will carry throughout the
year.

anti

Monday

monicillls

and gravcxJiggas.
Ann Llllldtrs' lartll bookltt,
"Nuggcts lllld Doories, • lias ~
1/ring from • orltragcously /fliuly
10 the poiflltllllly illliglrful. Stllll a
stlf-addrttstd, lollf. busblt&amp;s-lizt
enw:lope atid a check or moMy
ordtr for .SS (tllis Utcludu pollaft
lllld "-1/Utg) to: NUfgtll, c/o AM
lAnders, P.O. BO% 11562, Cllicaro.
IU. 60611-0562. (/11 CaNJda, 1tlld
$6.)

CLEAN SWEEP
SALE

F~

Saturday

any preface. She call PlY 1nu1wy1
"Mr.; which be feell 11100 formal,
but he il wil1ill8 10 accept it.
Cathy is a wonderful peraon, '
somewblt shy and quiet, I'm a a
loss 111 to how 10 IIJPIOICit.her or if
· iM:: d llllollld.QI~ her M iiJ..
My hn......, saya dial Iince it il'
bolherinl me, I should ask her tpin
10 Clll me "Mom.•
Wlla is )'Our ..vico? -·E. IN N.C..
DBAR N.C.: You don't say
wbctla or DOl Cltby's !ftOiher.il .
living. If 10, this might be 'the
ban&amp;·up,, In Ill)' eYCDt, )'OU might
say. "fd like you 10 can me 'Mom;
and my lllllbml 'DIId' if )'OU ~n: ·
COIIIf'onlble with that. "If lhe ~'t
a:t on lhe nu:•lon. say Jll)thlng
more about iL .ll'a no l!ig deal one
way or tile ocher.
Gem of the Day: The IOblcco
induslry reporU lbat It provides
jobs for· S7 ,000 Americans -and this docs not incl.ude
physician&amp;, X-ray tcchiliciana,
- · holpilll emp1oycos, fin:fi&amp;kers, dry cleaners, respiratory
~ phlnnaciiU,

GROUP OF

WOMEN'S .

__...·D-ESS SHOES.
•SNOW BOOTS .

•15 00 ~~~. ·
01
s
oo
·
2 PAIRS . 25 ·

GROUP OF CHILDREN'S

SHOES

$10 PAIR

GROUP MEN'S

Talle tbe day oil
Technically there are no national
holidays in the United States; each
state has jurisdiction over Its boll-

Calendar items at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. itage Express. Everyone is weiCall 992-5763 for information.
come.
a~~Pear two days before an event
aJid the day of that event. Items
PORTLAND - The Lebanon
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs County
Dillll be received weD In advance
Township
Trustees wiD meet FriWomen's
Fellowship
will
meet
tewure publication in tbe cal·
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Mid- day at 7 p.m. at the township buildeJidar.
dleport Chu.rch of Christ. Mary ing.
THURSDAY
-Jane Wise will be the guest speak':REEDSVILLE - The Riverview er. Public invited. ·
CHESTER - A special meeting
Girden Club wiD meet Thursday at
of Shade River Lodgo No. 453
7:30p.m. at the home of ~ladys
POMEROY - Free Clothing day F&amp;AM, Chester, will be held FriTliomas . Co-hostesses &lt;N111 be · will be held at the Salvation Army day a~ 7:30 p.m. There will be
Grace Weber and Frances Reed. in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10 work m. the E.A. degree. Refresh!13arilyn Hannum and Ruth Anne a.m. to noon. All area residents in ments will be served.
Balderson will present the pro- need of clothing are .welcome.
.
·p;un.
.
SATURDAY
POMEROY
- The Belles and
POMEROY • A Sugar Run
.. ·RACINE - The Racine Ameri- School meetjng will be held by the Beaus Square Dance C~b will
can AUxiliary will meet Thunday Meigs County Park District at 6:30 sponsor a half-My dance :.llllltday
at 7 p.m. at the post home in p.m. Thursday at Trinity Chwch.
from 8-11 pm. at the Senior Ciu~ine.
zena Center in Pomeroy. Billy
Gene
Evans will be the caller.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
· POMEROY - Recertification Local OAPSE Chaptcr will meet Western style dancers invited.
clasaeS for cumnlly licensed pcsli- Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior Rcfresluncnts.
cl!le liJI)!icaton will be beld at the High School in Middleport.
Meip-County Senior Citizens CenRUTLAND - There will be a
t« on Thunday from 14 p.m. and THURSDAY - The Tuppers dance
at the Rutland American
1-!0p.m.
Plains VFW Post No. 90S3 will Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
meet Thursday at 7:30.p.m. at lhe p.m. to l)lidnight. Music will be .
: POMEROY - Precel'tor Beta post home. All memben .are lqcd · provided by Pure Country Band. .
ieta Chapter. Beta S1gma Phi IOaueod.
Public invited.
sGrorlty will meet Thursday at 6
·m at the home of Eleanor
SUNDAY
FRIDAY
111= will be a 90UP sup.
CIIE!S1ER
- ''Orowing Through
TUPPERS PLAINS - The ~
' !!«·
.
.
Grief"
group
~Will
meet at Chelter
pcrs P)ains VFW Post ~o. 90S3
Uaited
Methodi1t
Churcb. Call
Ladies Auxilialy Will hold I rouad
-~ POMEROY - Pomeroy Group and
Rev.
Shlnln
Hausman
at 98S4312
aquare dance Priday from 8Of AA will meet Tlunday at 7 p.m. 11:30 p.m. Music will be by Her- · for lnforqlllian, ,
.
.
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days, which are designated by lecal
enactment or ....,utlve proclamation. In practice, bowever. most
states oblerve tbe federalleaal public
boUdays. even thou&amp;b the president
and Congress can legally designate .
holidays only for tbe Diiltrlct of c..
lumbia and for federal employees.

Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

10 LIS.

7114 oL
PIRiql
.
EYIBDIY.

(
19

--

srosJ;

, The application deadline for
: Regular HEAP is Feb. 26, leaving
. approximately one month. left 111
apply. Applications for this pro·
gram m'ly be completed by the
, !lllPiicant and mailed directly to lhe
State HEAP offJCC in Columbus or
.. assistance with completing the
· application is available at the ,
Cheshire CAA ofllce or Ga11ia and
. Meigs Outreacb ofliccs.
: Regular HEAP is a separate pro• gram from Emergency HEAP
• which was created 10 provide asais,. •tance 111 1ow-1ncome
•
households ·
, thalltC threatened with disconncclion of their beating source hive
already had service discon0::Cted,
' or have leu than a tea day supply
ofbulk fuel.
• . In most cues, Regular HEAP
. offers assistance in addition to
: Emergency HEAP 10 help meet the
: high cost of ,esidefttial home beating and applications for it are processcd at "die Stall: HEAP office in
ColumbuS. HoweY«, those who cut
: their OWn Wood or have free gas
· are not eligible for Regular HEAP
· Applications for Rqular HEAP~
. available at most county offices,
utility companies, post offices,
· senior citizens centers and CAA
offJCCS.
' Guidelines for Emergency

A 10up luncbeo.n preceded the
'.niQCillmccling of the R..xancl Gar-

•
•'

•

GOLDEN QUIK
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

than the private lessons in her
l!ome studio. She hopes to work
with the Middleport Arts Council
ani1 JICI'haps offer group inslruction
in ~hl reading, to organize a children s chorus, and teach a theory
class for interested youth and
adults.
. "Many siligen in the choirs at
local chllrches are exceUent vocalll
-but they cannot ·read music,
Sharon said, "and these group
classes would give adults the
opportunity 10 learn music basics.~
. These are the comments or' · She reports that this summer she
Sharon Hawley who has opcncd a plans to attend a session to be certi-studio in her borne at 4S9 Broad· ficl for "Kindermusik". This, she
way SL, Middleport, where she will' exPlained. is a musical experience
give private lesaous in piano and offered 111 pre-schoolers and their
voice to both children and adults. mothers and/or fathers to develop
Sharoil holds a blcbelor'a degree · music awareness and creativity in
in music cd!ICitinn from Ohio Uni- the child fostered by the parent'~
Vcr5ity with coDCCIIIIalion in both help. This is done in a large group
areas.
setting, she said. .
For her siUdio, Sbaroo has purSharon has had a lifelong interchased a Y0111g Chang console on est in music and through the years
)Yhich she will teacb piano, and a has direcred local church choirs,
Yamala Clarinova electric piano sang in Bend area musical ~­
. for her work with. vOcal students. lions, and accompanied numerous
The electric ·
has the capelriliat the iano.
.Ry of rcco~music which she
loved music classplays for use during vOcal lessons. es under
y Lacey, a former
'This, according to Sharon, means tcacher iii the Middleport schools.
ihat instead or concentrating on Sbe was in the ftfdt grade before
providing instrumental music for she got a piano and began lessons .
her vocal students, she can give full ~nder th~ la!e Norma Hecox. Her
· attention 10 the student's develop- . mterest m ptana was so keen that
menL
she would frequently sit on the
Her emphasis in both disciplines piano bench with her friends and
will be 10 ~de basic fundamen- waiCh them practice.
ta1s on which to build inlmmcdiatc
Sharon comments that after
and .advanced levels of compc- teachingafewpianostudentsather
tcnce. After students have learned home, she realized that-while she
the fundamentals, then emphasis enjoyed that ex~ence, she needwill Center on choosing an ares in ed more educauon and a knowI·
which to pursue further study.
edge of theory to tcach. She a,Iso
These areas said Sharon could wanred to advance her own playmg
·be gospel-sty!~ pop, jazz, c'ountry and singing.skills..
or classical but only after each stuShe.Studied vo•ce un~ the latc
dent has experienced a taste of Merlyn Ross, and took. p1ano and
•classical music the foundation of organ lessons from Edte Ross, of
. iiiJ music. ~ bow to impm- Rio Grande "off. and on for scyeral
· vise and transpose will alsl)'be years". Then m 1987, Sharon
· taught she said as her students decided to return to school. She
. progre~.
'
.
enrolled at Ohio University while
Sharon's goals extend fwther continuing work as a part-time

· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Ntw~ Staff
"I love 10 lillg ud 11ear otllers
sin&amp; becanu to upreu worda
. aad reellap In a 10•1 ba• tile
pinftr to toudl _.,. peeple. But
playing the pluo and lillealag to
otbers pla:r not onl:r Is tber1py
lor· me, but provides a tremen•
dous joy at seelnl odlen - . pllsh. Tllat Is wli:r I decided 10
teach botiJ neal •nslc aad
plano."

den Club held at lhe home of Pearl
· Canaday.

Mn. Canaday gave devotions
. reacti"§: "'ld Friends are Precious
•Thin&amp;l and "Uae Me, Lord." She
: cklscd with prayer.
' ~ Aikins opened~ I_DCCI·
mg read!Dg the poem Wmter
Y/OfliJcr." Roll call was answered
: with "My Pavcrile Eveapccn."
Plullno Alkillllad a lelia' from
·the Meigs County P~i!k Disuict.
~ She bad iakala ValentJDe ammge, menl to &lt;heabrook Center.
.•
.Mn. C"'!"Y 'WOJI the traveling
. Jmze fumtshed ~y !&gt;orothy
.Woodard. Steila Atkins II to fur.
nish the fem.y !Rccting.
: ·. 'The man~mcnt for the meet'IRg \VIIS f~ by Mn: ~• day. lt fcitund dried material With
;.a red biid.
Valentine sunshine for the .

A wedding 1bower was held
SIIIJr!laYforKriltiPaww,n~ of. T1m Dant, at tbe Bradford
CburcThhof~Pomeroy:
•
e evcmng bepn Willi each
•person present intnld!Jdaa thctaisolvea 8IJC! lelllDg lllelr ~
' to the bnde aad
Games
'Wote ~en played wldl wiiiiiCI'I:
~ !_~";:pt•JMIDIIY RuaiiOII,
=-:-::~ .._....._.y, r.- 9eno:r and
Goldie Gilmore.
· Prayer - utraiid 11111 reflaltmonll were sorved 10' Doaaa
llrow(llna. motller of tile bride;

lrciO•·

·=

PIIJllllleed_.lllllI BIUI, a.IY MiDK1aTh•u, llfuriiU
dri; tDaiudiE YHelleadricb, Miry

l:t :""'

b

~en
•'·

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il .

permission.

.

VIDEO SALES
· Copyright 1993. Billboard Publicatloiis, Inc.
!."Beauty and the Bcast,'"(I)isney)
2."Sister Act," (Touchstone)
3. "Cindy Crawford's Shape
Your Body Workout," (GoodTimes)
4."Beethoven," (MCA-Univer-

legal secretary for Attorney
Bernard Fultz, her employer for
many years.
At Ohio Univeisity, she studied
voice under or. Ira Zoolc and piano
under Gail Berenson. She still has
ambitions 10 continue voice ·rraining lUider Dr. Zoolc. At~ univer·
sity, Sharon was inductcd into Pi
Kappa Lambda, an honor society
for musicians and was on the
dean 's list every quarter. ·She was
also a Dean's and Endowed Upper·
class Scholarship recipient. FJ'9m
198410 1992, she direcred the adult
choir of the Middleport First BapOPENS STUDIO - Sharon. Hawley bas opened a plano and
tist Chwch where she now directs
voice
ltudio at ~ home in Middleport. Here siJe liael u apple 10
the youth choir and the adult tone ·
demonstrate
to her :roung plano student, Erla Ralston, bow ber
chime choir.
wrist and buds sbould be posilioped lor piano.
.

sal)

.

S. "Casablanca: 50th Anniver.
sary Edition,'' (MGM-UA)
&lt;
6."B!URWI Returns," (Warner)·
7." 101 Dabnatians," (Disney) ·
8.'"King Kong' 60th Anniversary,', (Turner)
9. "The Rocky Horror Picture
Show,'' (Fox)
lO."Home Al\)ne," (Fox)

al savings

DUSK TO
DAWN
SECURRY

sa=

LIGHT
H52432t

.

29''

one smoke detector enough?

lnstullinJ: and mulntuinlnJ! .. mok~ detectors cun si~~lflcantly
increase your chunccs orsurvh,lng o fire . However ,lnstullln~
one smoke detector in your home I~ not enouJ:h .

f97

Hush with
Light Tea~

Many state and local ~o&lt;h.os arc chonging to Include installing
!llntokc dctL-ctors in ull htdrooms, outside each bedroom ureu,
. und on every living level of the home. This meuns th1,1t_i~ 11
_ ihrec·bcdrooRJ , two story home with u hnl~htd bu~ment,
there should he u minimum orsb: smoke detccton~ : · onc In
each ht.'&lt;lroom (In this case th~e}, one ouL,Idt each separate
sk-epln~ :area (in thi.-. c~sc one sleepin~ area), one on coch
r.:molnlng level. and one In the flntshcd basement.

Smoke

-

• Mounts 011 Side al Stud
•

'"~

419457

• B116A

.29
ead!

How muny should you install in your home?

Alarm

21fJ•O•NwW I~" l

s...a.. Alanu ~ "'-~"'- ll•¥b~We ...... IMIIatloll ........ ,..._...., • t ...,.t '-U'")'. ~ ..._ loan. £.;y, . .ldll•tal .. do.,

21t7J'I . . . . . .

We cover all the basics.

HEAP differ from RegUlar HEAP.

:rre
ttc:'dline for Em~en.cy ~
1S Aprd 2, ~ apphcauon for 1t ;

must be made m penon by an adult
household member at CAA offices.
Assist~nce .through Emerge!!CY
HEAP u available once per heatmg
season and~ assisred since~·
26, J992 w•thm the S~!~te. of Oh1o
should not n:apply at thu tune.
A{lllliCll!ions'are accepred Monday lhrougll Th~y 9:30 a.m. 10
noon. and 1-3 . 3~ p.~. at the
Cheshire Commuru!}" Acbon A.Kency offiCe.
Outh OffiThe Galliat=ty
k
P'k
reac. . ICC, 220 1 . son 1 e,
Galhpohs and the Metgs County
Outreach Office, 393SO Un.ion
~venue, Pomeroy, accept apPhcaboos Monday throu~h Fnday 9
a.m ..to n.oon and 1·3.30 p.1ft. No
apph~ataons ~re l;lken at the
Cheshii'C off~ on ~!"days. .
Telephone mqumes are ~
at all ~ CAA offiCe l~ons.
The Cheshire office Dllll)her IS 3677341 or 992-66.29, Ga11ia OulteaCh
number IS 446-0611 ~d the
Me1gs Outreach number •s 992·
S60S. The toll:f~e~ .nul)lber fo~
Regular. HEAP mqwnes 1S 1-8~
~8:1-~8~0 ,or for the hear.mg
•mpaircd_ w1th a tele-commun•cation dcvtcc for 'the deaf (TDD) I
800 686 1557. .

Poet~

25-1=1: llouble Light"' a
3-wire grounded cord, aide out-

Cbntrot ....

let , switch.

=.•lldulk.Of'lll . . .

235105

649 ....
Angle Tulf-Lite Flashlight
with 2 batts .

l'

Clear or
White
K-S -H

Pul Chain ialnplloldor
FKo 3%" or 4" ouUol boa. 3'
lll'aldod puH coni wtlh boll.

297

111 J'MII1.

ne~d it,

we've got it.

Prismatic or
Cracked Ice

2' x 4' Light Panels.
,.....

1. . 1t

1001401'

125 tl1

101 . .

H518662

618132
666008

orr:u:c

Weatherproof Outdoor Electrical Aetellories. Quality suPplies t Q: help make your
do-it-yourself electrical project a success.
5U 090

Meigs County~ \vas planned. ·
Cards w= signed for mcmben
who were ill
·
·
Margaret Belle Weber prescnred
the j)rogram on cllicksdees.
Stella Atkins spoke on "Food
for Violets. • She said to keep
African violets healthy at the llo\ver and ~ they should be fcrtil·
ized w1th something developed
· especiaily for them ealled "Schultz
·IDSIIIIt Ferti1l2r for Violets." It is

a liquid and easy 10 use.

Ill

c a, ve

ndricb, Jeait

Mrs. Canaday rcjJorted on "Aloe
• The Healing PJant • It manufactures a vegetable gel in yellow
latex liner just under the surface of
the leal. Some comnion mes arc
burns, poison ivy IIIII insect bites.
Dorothy Wooclud pn:scnred an
article on "Spider Plants. n · She
closed the mcctlng with the poem
"A Winter Gift" and the thought
for the day
·

Dunt, Mandy Russell, Ann Van- ·
M•tre and Ryan, Janet \lenoy,
Eileen Bowers, Linda Kaylor,
Crystal Kaylor, Penny Brinker,
Kcnda While, Sbeila Caney,Kathy
Pbalin and Heather, Mary Dunt,
Goldio Gilmore, Janice Feuy aad
AJ!Widl Cherie Willlamaon Cbarlotio Hlliata,. Kadlta SlUmp: Suzie
W'JII, 1Je1ry ~lfoot, 01.- Blq,
Madellno f'lllair, Becky AdlbeiJer
and Bethany Carolyn Nicbolson
Tina McOmrellld arenc~a BoUn. •
Others ~linggifta were
Pouy Brlctlo1, Nant;y Morris,
Butch and Bonaio Lightfoot,
Wilbur 1nd TWio RowfeJ, lim
Dmt and AIJI!ee Lemley, Larry
_.Plaia Pic....., DID IIIII MMdlii
CllllninJhilii:Ieff and Carolyn
Snowden and Li1liait BurL

•

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250563

~---

FLUORESCENT

H503762

·

Wedding shower held.

RUlli :~ ol ... JNGii;

•

Here are the weekly charts foe
the nation's most popular videos u
they appear in next week's issue ol
Billboai'd magazine. Reprinted with

_Rutland gardeners meet · :These savings will brighten your da

CHAPMAN SHOES

·~ Community

,.,

'l•

&gt;

Community calendar

~

•

TENNIS SHOES
DRESS SHOES :

Y2 PRICE

Top movie sales ·

'Regular HEAP deadline nears

AT CHAPMAN'S SHOES

, CLEARANCE

The Dally Sentlnei-Paga-7.

Sharon Hawley opens music,
piano studio in .Middleport

The Daily· Sentinel

By The Bend

.

Thuraday, Janu.y 28, 1993

CIRCLITE

210880
207092

.87

Iarrared M~tio• S.aeiog
FhttQe. Bulbs not in-

3/4" • 66" Electrical Tope.

cluded.

· lh.Lieh'n~Sr• ..m

DMigf'l..t

To

Flood Lights. 7~ or !SOW.
~ise indoor or out. Clear.

Sa•• Enern'

Ivory or

Brow•

®

~·

997

Swilelo

G" n--••t Sltap LL·ht•. Includes ground·
od cord 6 pl.,. chain 6 h. -~s. Bokocl ~namel
finish. 102 P&lt;I9Ll K

.

471183
Soli Wltlle Bulb. 110/100/
JIIOW 3·way. 1200 hour
rat.od life.

•69 each
ao.....,

-

Handy Switch Box or
OutetBoL

·511-111

•

117711

Swllol•• or OUtleli
Hi022t1

11502212

H521M7

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''NM ..

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61 ..... 2-6611
Ill,. . ST.

..uflOft. 011.

$1 r ·t'l'-tl'TJIS4NMII,........

&amp; SUPPLY CO.

ESH~EE

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

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•
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Pili•

I

Thursday, January 28, 1993 •

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Deily s.ttlnel

Ohio

---Names in the news-LOS ANGELES· (AP) - Casey
Kasem has agreed.to keql counting
down radio's Top 40 as the nel\t
century dawns.
The King of lhe Countdowns
signed a new contract through the
year 2000 with Westwood One.
Ftnaneial terms wen: not disclosed.
"Sipling a new contract is like
renewtng your wedding vows,"
Kasem said Wednesday. "The only
difference is I'm not only happily
married to Westwood OIJe but also
to the hundreds of radio stations
around die world that really make
·our m~e worlc." · . .
"Casey s Tl?l' 40" for contemporary hit radto and "Casey's
Countdown" for die adult contem•
porary format report me top hits of
!he week.
His daily "Casey's Biggest

•The Area's N11mber 1

ago he wpuld step down when he
tumcd 75. His birtbdsy was Sun·
day.
Before an audience of most of
TULSA, Olda. (AP) - Evange- the school's 4,300 students,
list Oral Roberts' son is taking up Robens took his 44-yesr-old son
the mantle of his aging father, by the hands lllld asbd die R«tftiS
.assuming lhe presidency of Oral to stand as he commissioned his
son to succeed bim.
Roberts Univemty.
Richard Roberts wu executive
The school's regents unani- vice
president and has handled vir·
mously elected Richard Roberts on
tually
all of adminillntive tasks at
Wednesday ro ~me tbe second
tbe
university
for lhe piSt siX yean.
ident of the university the elder
The
elder
Roberts was ~cd
said God tOld bim to build.
chancellor
by
the
boanL He $lid be
Oral Roberts founded lhe schooJ in
would
hold
that
post
"for as long
1965.
as I live."
Oral Robe:rts

Hits," focusing on both formalS, is
also syndicated on radio stations
worldwide.

Marketplace

0

Land transf~rs posted

3
6
10

rosberts

To place an ad

M~yl'lpor

Prlday Paper
~Papor

POUCDS .

_
..
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•4oloiiiiWM ... ~- ......... - .......
....... I _lor ... poldbo..t-• r.{..y., 4ll-rudFouol ado- U ....... wtllloo

....,.: .
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• ~., ....... eap~~o~-.to
..... priao .,... .

Ga!Ua Com!ty

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

'Jhr.renen.twlinldaJ(eMek

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.c:.n., n..Jro
LoY

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ChesterVFD
ele.cts officers

I I

.
CODY WILLIAMS and BRITTANY WILLIAMS

i

.'

0

Williams birthdays .celebrated . .
Brittany and Cody Williams June Williams, Rev. and Mrs. :.
recently celebrated !heir birthdays
at home.
• Brittany celebrated her oint~
binhday and Cody celebrated his
fli'St birthday
A "101 Dalmatians" theme was
carriedouL
Attending were !heir parents,
sister, Brooke and Beth Nicole,
0

.

•

Amos Tillis, Joe T'dlis, Don, Gina ;!
and Julie Tillis. Matt and Andrew •:
Sayers, Amanda' Ellis, Trish aad ::
Rachael Gary, -Amber Snowden, :Stephanie Hartley and Lana Bar· .;

reu..

.

2Si

-

_.........
---

992 MW'

·c-.,_ Dill.

F~

PC!
or
9850' 'or

H14 •·,_ ·
188-VIaoo,.o
141 IIJo Gruolo

as-I.u a Aoa •
, . . . - - - - S6- .... Eotolo ........

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lto,a. G,..o

742-·ti.M

895-l.t.-...
9ST..Wolo

S-A.-..

I

lOUD
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BASEMENTS&amp;
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For An Application Call:

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EVERY THURSDAY

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CLUB

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Surprise birthday party held

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.t:GW.
Loa, Mieltelltt

L.MmMowtng,

••••"••

Sto~t&amp;C=re
fUIIn
II

915-4473
0. 667·6179

•Circu"-•Rated tSA to4al ..............,..

CALL 992-2550 FOR
APPOINTMENT
· WALK-INS WELCOME

SERVIa
36970 Ball R11 Road
Po_..y,OIIID

F&amp;A TIEE llmCI

'

ILLVSIO'J{S

TIME .

•

992·2156
'

..

•• #

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
· rw~

'; }f
31904 LHtll..

. c....lrtOIII

Mltlllle,.,., Ollfo
614-992·71oM

Life • Medicare • Cancer •.Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

· Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Mitldleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1/20I9:Wn
HELP THE EFFORT TO IUilD A PROSPEROUS :
FUTURE fOR MEIGS COUNTY

HELP US IN OUR ATTEMPT TO GET .IIIIUSTIY FOR
•
MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 lo 6 AQES Of IEWIYELY FW lAND: '
jl) ... - · ... 6ft••. - . .. - ·
(2) Wlllt Stww (3) W Wllw
PIOIIE: P...y or R-r Picb•s
H. .a: 915-4231 or

,.,.J'•

TROLLEY STATION CUFTS
992·2549

1011/B2lfn

SHRUI
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD

.hff Wlcbnll•

USED RAILROAD TIES

FOREVER
IROIZI
.lANNlNG

JAYMII

OWNER:

POOR BOY TIRES
~

MA$011, WV. lcrou tr. . the Po1t Olllce
W. Specialize Ia

nres • Allga•ats • Ex•a1111
Check our Price or We Both Lose

3r. LOCIIIOI 10 SERYE YOU lmER
1-8-1nm.

1·

........,w..
1!1.....,. ....1•1
14 0111011- 114

Umlt 2 Per Cuetalner

1001 limL fiL H

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SU.NDAYS

SfiV!RS.•••

1/271113

OPEN· TO PUBLIC
• 12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY 'CHOKE
ENFORCED
112819311fn

992·3470

SHOOT

I

, ' I

MIDDLEPORT

.

Avenue

UCIHE GUN
CLUI
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

BILL SLACit
. 992·'2269

949·2126

CALL

t

WICK'S HAULING

SIZED UMESTONE

Public Nollce

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

••

.

D. I. BOSTON
EICAYAnNG
(614)
667

fulrlnetnd
1.ji.JHO

'

Shrub rHKI n. Trimming
• Almwal

F-~--­
FIAEWOOD
FOR 8AU:

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKiNG

Alii Oft. . . AIIM

......
-

FerliiiJing, WMdlng, .,d
" l11dlng.

RnldiFICtll a eotnmerclll .

R-val

dangOIOUI.ollago opikOI and hOrmflJI nolle

MAINTENANCE
949·2391or
1-100·137·1460

Topping. Trimming,

o OuarGI TV, COblt box, VCR and COII11MIItl IQOlnot

104 Mu lberry

614·742·21

p_,oy,Oitlo

...-co~··
......'
..........

ThursdaV · Satu rday - 10:00 a.m .. . 3 :00p. m.

Pomeroy . OH 45769

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
'
SAYRE TRUCKING

Plumbing

IISSILl &amp; IURKE
COISIIUCTION

HOURS:
Sunday · M o nday - Closed
Tuesday · Wednesday- Friday - 9:30 .a .m . . 5 :30P.m.

HAULING

CARPENTER SERVICE

CLASSIFIEDS

'

&amp;--

15- Scboolo 4 laotructloa

16- ll..!io, TV 4: CB·Jiopair

Snodgrass Upholstery

Lot HIULIIII,
LUMIER,or
FLAilED WORI

111241'12mn

CUTBI%
rs,
•....,.,...

• Tuned.:pon ..... M.N 140-«137

'

·

r...w.a

11 M•
1B-,.: 'll'utod To Do

· HAULING

'
ILL HARDWOOD
Sealontd
$40.00 a Load
. Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

,.

• 3" tweeter • walnut veneer

'I I;\ II I '

~

1

FIREWOOD
. FOR SALE

~

• Clllndar • 24·hour alarm
• Wlllr reaiatant to 100 1eet

1~a=

8- 'Wutod 1o S..y

1

0

• Handles 100W • 10" woofer

41- Woatod lo a-t
E.pol-ol for a-t

ll-IWpY.....
18-Sitootlo•'tr.....

•••

4-Gi--.y
5-BappyAdo

Aacliooo

667.c.ohtle

BINGO

moved back to
the area after 3
years. She is
· welcoming 'her
old and new
customers at
Shear illusions.

Soollar.-

46- Fooriot.W ' 46-S-IorR•t

2- Ia M••ary

147~,. .

992-5331 or
915-3561

,_, ' .• .,.,.. ,.. · -::.:::::::
*wss••-•

.......... Booy
U:
k
lloyAGnbo .

_,
..........
-.-.rora..t

lEI'S MfiaiiCE
SlmCE

Trudy Marshall

,,

lor Sole
41- u.- for._
ju-- T1,.-, lor Sole
-llloiNio-lorR•t
A41VD'o

77a...II88J-N. . H~

64&amp; L '' DilL
179-'11'....

U- Molollo a-lor Solo
33- r .... for Sole
34- 8 .
...!U. .

II

)'"I

0

I: I \ I I I '

615-PL PI u 11

576

il "I

,\ I I I I ' II

Ratel are for conaect~tlve runs, brolcen up days will ~
charged for each day as separate ada.

121311112/lfn

Year." Devotions were by Linda
Broderick on "Orowing Old is Pan
of God's Plan" and "Ten Biggies
from Teenage Wisdom for Today's
Parents."
A donlijion will be given 10 lhe
scholarship loan fund in memory of
Thelma SiDes.
·
A letter of introduction was
received from Patti Bodimer, dis·
trict president.
Money making projects were
discussed.
Refreshments were served by
Helen Blackston and Peggy Harris.
Next monlh a ''brown bag sale"
will be held. The travelinll: prize
was won by Nancy Morris. Kitty
Datst won !he hostess gift.

TRUDY IS BACK

I \l:\1 ---! 1',

Mel!lt Comity MMOD Co., f l

11,000 ...

~j

IAJ/E

Jackson bam Flood Control' at ·
Weston, W.Va. and many small
projects. He was sent 10 Alaska for
six monlhs and finished his time at
·ihe new Gallipolis Locks and Dam
on the Ohio River.
·
The party was given by his children, Mark, Jodi and Teresa and
their families.
Refreshments were served to
friends and family.

$.20
$.30
$ .42
$.60
$.&lt;li/day

I

.:police chief Middleport
CCL guest speaker

· A surprise party was held
recently honoring Dale Smith of
Reedsville upon his retirement
flam die United States Army Corp
of. Engineers, Construction DiviJiOn with 35 years of service.
•: · He has worked on the Belleville
Lx:ks and Dam at Reedsville, Willow Island Locks and Dam in Marl.etta, R.D. Bailey Flood Control
·Dam at Justice, W.Va., Stonewall

........

~

YudSoloo
• A " . IW .. ,all .
I plooorlbo ~Coli... DoiJr
1'JIIo.o (. . . Cl ['wd .......,., 8 I
c:.ft Hi.oF
"--lwllloloo- .... N-t...._t R 11 """""
. . . n.1L •--~,1

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

· Area Code 614 Area Ccide 614 Area Code 3M

. Happy .Yo

....

Monthly

Rate · Over 15 Words

Clauified pllfle• c6Hr dae
followias celepllo~~e esclumpa...

- -... .., .. ,_. .....,..). .Cal ...... 2.00 ,.••
·~

1:00p.m.W.w'•y
100p.m. Thunrlay
1:00 p.lll. Prlday

Thunday P,por

Ci.oll!D SUNDAY

~

a

Tueodayl'lpor
W'* ••y l'lpor

MpN, lhra hL &amp;.M.-5P.II•• S.tT.6-12

• ' · t dll..a: ;

DAY BBJIOIU! I'I.JBLICATJON
1:00 p:m. Soturday
1:00 p:m. Maar!&lt;oy
1:00 p.lll. ru..t.y

COPr DllADLlNI!

· Call992-2156

Assembly held·

. Jerry Rought, Pomeroy Police
Chief, was guest speaker at the
iecent meeting of the Middleport
Child Conservation League held at
die Rocl&lt;: Springs United Methodist
Church.
He spoke of !he many problems
of children and teenagers. He stated
many problems come from ·the
home in the early years and that
discipline should start early in life.
He said to teach children to do
something constructive and to have
goal in their life.
Lin&lt;la Broderick presided at !he
meeting which opened with the
Pledge of Allegiance and Medler's
prayer. Each member answered roll
call with !heir "Hope of the New

15
15
15
15
15

1

Students attend
training se$sion
Meigs VOcational Students who
are VICA officers recently auended
a two-day olfteers training institute
in Columbus. ··
·
have the device while she .awaits a beart b'8DS·
· : MECHANICAL HEART • Sharoyn
Takillg
an
active
part
were
Lee'
plant. Lo11gbraa's surgeou said complications
• l.ouallraa, 46, the first total artificial heart
Henderson,
Holly
Williams,
Joy
could cloud her prospects. Richard Smltb, left,
ieclplent in nearly two&lt;years, jokes· with
Cundiff,
Beth
Roush,
Jeff
Tracy,
biomedical eagiueer at the center, watdles while
~eporters Wednesday In Tucson, Ariz., at the
Jaso11 Hall, Jason George, Matt
tbe drive unit. (AP photo)
monitoriag
llaiversity Medical Center sayiag she's glad to
Craddock, Jennifer Chasteen, Man
'
Martia, Larry Faw and Jason Slewart,
These officers experienced vari·
types of leadership training
·ous
CompDed by:
.
Terry C. Clark, 1.00 A; to Greregarding
the duties of chapter and
Emmogene Hamilton
gory A. Huffman. Lebanon.
regional
officers
and voting deleOfficers
for
1993
were
elected
Karen L. Neumann, C.A. Neu;
: ltecorder, 1\ftigs County, Ohio
gates.
·=·scmard V. FuliZ, Betty J. FuliZ. mann, Irene C. Murphy, Bill Mur- at the recent meeting of the Chester
parcel, s:10, to Ruby Fornash, phy, 36.289 A, T-2N, R-llW, to Volunteer Fire Department.
They are Elmer Newell, presiSalem.
Janet K. Elias, Letart.
: Ruby Fomasb, pwcel, S. 10, to
Karen L. Neumann, C.A. Neu- dent; Leonard H. Koenig, Jr., vice
An assembly was held recently
William Martin, Salem.
mann, Janet K. Elias, James Elias, president; Leonard Koenig, secretary;
Charles
Radford,
treasurer;
at
Pomeroy
Elementary during
• MGM Farm City, Inc., parcels, 36.289 A, T-2N, R-11, to Irene C.
John
Ridenour,
chief;
B.
D.
Myers,
which
Sweet
Mountain
Sound per111 David Burngardener, Pom. V.
Murphy. Letart.
frrst
assistant;
1.
B.
Ridenour,
sec·
fanned
to
teach
the
swdents
about
: Theron Workman, Mildred L.
Irene C. Murphy, Bill Murphy,
ond
assistant;
and
Larry
Cleland,
the
different
instruments
and
also
florkman, parcels, to Theron Janet K. Elias, James Elias, 36.289
captain.
entenaining
the
swdents.
Workman, Mildred L. Workman, A. T-2N, R·11W. to Karen L. NeuIn 1992 !he department respondThe sch\)ol is working with die
$cipio.
mann, Lerart.
ed
10 atotal of 29 call. Three were senior citizens in organizing volim• Bernard Dyle Bay, dec' d, affid,
Raben J. Diehl, Eloise Diehl,
to Irma Lew Bay, Olive.
0.35 A., to Edilh Hubbard, Rutland. chimney fll'Cs, four structure fus, teers to come in and read for stuJohn W. Smith, 1.19 A., to
Mary Jane Voll, dec'd, affid, to 13 auto wrecks, five miscellaneous dents in any way possible; This
and four brush ftres. The trucks will be done lhe last week of every
Anita K. Smilh, Salisbury.
Paul E. Voll, SuttOn.
: l)oris May Deeter, S.24, T-3, RPaul E. Voll, parcels, to Frank were driven a total. of 1,117 miles. monlh. Anyone wanting to particiThis included Engiae 51, 80 miles; pate are encouraged to do so.
ll, to Glenda K. Hunt, Olive.
Herald, Jr., Syracuse.
An awards assembly was held at
Kennelh Davis, parcel, to Calhy
John E. Se7;ton, Katherine R. Engine 52, 295 miles; tanker 54,
.C!Iifford. Chester.
. Sellton, 12.00 A. to Ray Wellman, 43l .miles; and !he Rescue Unit 58, !he school for honor roll and per·
410 miles. ·
feet attendance.
·:-Anhur Allen Stobart, dec'd, Salem.
.ltfid, to Lucretia Mae Stobart. SalCalvin O' Dell, Lot 15, to Roy
·1Jbury.
O'Dell, Bebea O'Dell, Rutland
•: Thomas 0. Stobart, Joan M. Viii.
·
~bart. parcels, to Lawrence W.
Ryan Scott Jeffers, Lot #70, to
)!Ia Larry W. Stewart, Teresa L . 1- Christina M. Wilson, Midd ViU.
~wart, Rutland.
Kennelh L. Longstreth, Rena R.
: Myrtle Abels, dec'd, Cert. of Longstrelh, 1.25 A. to Ryan Scott
)l81lS., to Virginia Pickens, SuttOn. J1ffers, Scipio.
• : Tmci O'Neil, FNA, Clark, S.30,
Susan E. Tracy, parcels, 10 Kenl'-2N, R-11 W, to Terrence Lee neth H. Tracy Jr., Sali~ury.
Clark
L. Oark, Lebanon.
. aka Terry
.
'

Words

Pays

12~00NOON

F'aal•rv ChoU

12 ca.uge Only

Quality

StoHCo.
SIDD UIISIOIIE
FOISALE

BISSELL BUILDE

New Homes • VInyl Sldln
New Garages • Replacement . ndciW.!t:
Room Adcltlona • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENT.IAL

FREE ESTIMATES ·

Call 614-992· .
6637
St.lt. 7

c.......,

WOIII&amp;

AUOCII1IJ
ACCOINIIH

Peqn•an

614-949·2101. 949-2160
I

J

"

or915·HS9

lle.....,C.Ial

•'

•

�•

Ohio
SNAFU® by Bruce ._Uie

41 Houlll tor Rent

44

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lllrry Wri&amp;ht

Apartment

The

The World Almanac ~t Croaword Puul.i

BRIDGE

71

torRent
..

Ohio

'28,1993

ACROSS

0

c

LAYNE'S -..nllll.

J''

1 Sound I t

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

............. N. .......
DID, I 0111
lid.

""Dtlu•wo

42 Mobile Homn
torRent

**'

14171,- ~

!'!:

..-:.....-.::

:\..,=: 116"...

PHILLIP

•Is••
.....

ALDER

n·:.,~._

1131 'lllll&amp;r, .,_,. •
AI
A~ 'retl No Pete.
._l1141, Clrl~'lll' Ull

=.,~...-...,.-t.:

..--.
___ _,_

NORTH

?IICKI?.I'U??IINIII

Hoe

-

rt ,. c

roorn apLIDM7W'7IL
2 I
N.O.H.S.
. _ l'tla. Wotw I - - ·
. . . 13110 Dopool,
.

...

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1-U-U

+ &amp;5

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1113. Pl. PI
II, WY,

9 AQ4

=
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--31.11.--,-.-

:EEKA.ND MEEK • .

+at

9KJ95
• J 10 4

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986

LIVestock

. BARNEY

Ana,. Ylllllna lulll, 114-m.aOr......-2111

In Cot bf llot'lllll Park. WMiw/

..,.,..._
*• 12111liZ- · ·~Witilll

THIS TATER
TAKES UP

RealE sl:1le
oflce
. . ,-. . . ......t n*li
Pail.c?me
·

___

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-

....: liiltor

31

AU._NY

Hom•• far Sale

.,....

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IUDOIT PRtcll AT JA~
UTAT&amp;I. U1 Pika
111 Ill 1111. ICH •

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2+
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(abbr.)
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5 Preparti for
print

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broadcooltrt

2 Companion

A. Check the spelling in the play,
because the word should be EXEUNT,
with the· E before lhe U. '1lhis Latin ·
term, pronounced " EK-see-unt,"
means "they leave," and it should be
used as a stage direction when characters leave the stage. Tliint or the
word ' EXIT, which begins Pike
EXEUNT, and you'll be beaded in the
right direction.

MI.JRI:lER VIHEN THEY'RE:
ee~"TeD FROM HtM.

/~

Kina ..................... .
Moll' rrl Willi
N,_.
3.?ahl&amp; _r;,, _
I ?Iaior,
LIM II!":1271.
Alw I 31!11.

Col?

ITHURSDAY

Po~

. 7bm your clutter into c111h~
=-a:.~­ S,IJl illlul uu ~~~ay...by .Rbone·
no need to leaH your home.
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Plqce yqur clo•;fied qd lpdqy/
Old Clrono? .... .,._ . . .
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15.40 paid in
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YoU -the 'Jiear
- d . Send :or Aquarius' Aetro-Grap/1
predlc11ona today by "*ling S 1.25 p;,.
a long, Filil?slldd.-, ......,.., lope to Aeti'O:Grap/i, c/O Phil newapa,
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cllveland, OH
44101,3428 , Beauretootateyourzodl,
ac olgn .
'
PPICEI (?leb. 'IHiarcll :101 Chongeo
thai you hiWI 11«11 or no control over
tend to work to your uhlmato lldventage
today. Be calm and confk?oul If you
ha,.. to dNI with llilfllng clrcu""
• • -AR?II (Manlll 21·Apr?? 111 lnvo?. .
manto In ooc:lal aitullltona tend io bring
out your iplrkllng qualltleo end clilrll,
ma today. You'll ba a atend out In W1Y
crowd IIIC3 baiellta could dewlop

· II will suit yOu better.

1-

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Ned..TU?ng I Pong llllk 011
?Pre bllah .-.Ia ramll'llo,
lout I - - you',.luol

· AS TR 0. 0 RAP B

LEO (:lutJ 23-Aug. Zlllf there is an ;m,
portant maHer you want to -1oday,
try to do so With the key on a
one:to-one bull. lniiMC? of &lt;1-.g
with a group or committee.
VP?IGO (AIEl• 23-lopl. 211 Today. do
. BERNICE
not Inial ·W1Y bright
you get on
wayatomakeor-you monorllghlly,
BEDEOSOL
You ere' tuned Into 'this anoa IIIC3 your
1h"""hll and COI""'t'll could prove
proiltable.
~ (lepl. ZlsOclt. D) You
abllltr today to favorably and lffecl!wly
communlca1owl1hpeop?elroma?IWI?ka
olllfe. Thla II a n?uoble _ , lhat can
be ulOid lo your lldvantega. ·
i
ICOIIP?O (Oat. .M Nar. Ill " Lucky In 1
tho Pong run" Ia., axiOm tliallliou?d 111 :
aonMCtlol._
you to I "T" today.
T
(Apol? 20 . . , 20) In a1tua- • and con•:.nt, ....: r actio bu WI: '
.111'1... 1111
110M""'"' lho 11.,._ ere rl1her aub: ner. ,.. -..:Py , _ you
.
You _ . previOUoly reticent about d'-' 111111111, :..cPy Luck tendo Po fii'IOr you · rtglit.
~ng your - ' but In the ~ ~ Poday. Guiblel IOWI't In ordOI, but 1 IAGITTAIIUI (llaw, II DM. ttl You
.,_, you will be mm pOIIt!lllend •
C!ICU?atlld rllk may lie.
could be quite fortunale toc?ay If you
(llr to ftnc? sounc?lng boM?e. Thll \•FPI tMIJ tt..._ :101 KnOWIIc?gl aubluma your ,.,.,..., and materlr?
: Chango or att?tudo will prove adVInlls Ia ~.and your greeteet ._today , mottvatlon8 and locul ~- on pros

10
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Terse Terence
teaches technique

Q. The play I've been reading uses

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Rea?i1y is tile patienl. and I am lhe doclor." - Jean,Luc Godard.
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by filling in the missing 'WOlds
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OSCILLATE swings or moves back
and forth : "The pendulum continues
to oscillate." To swing the right pronunciation of Ibis verb, be sure to pronounce OSCILLATE "AH-suh-late."

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Englishman ·Terence Reese bas
been known for over 40 years as 0111! of
the world's best bridge players and
writers. In his articles, Reese .uses a
succinct style with a very dry sense of
humor. For the improving and expert
player, his books are an excellent
source of instruction and entertain,
ment.
His latest opus to arrive in the United States is "Bridge for Ambitious
Players" ·(Gollannc:z, $12, Tbe Bridge
World. 39 West 94th Street. New York,
NY 1002HIZ4). It is a collection of
short essays. Tbe Iirst 51 deals cover
declarer-play, defense 'and bidding.
Tbe last 14 deals are Iamous in one
way or aniOther.
Reese uses eacb deal to higbligbl a
particular technical aspect of the
game. On toclay's deal, he adopted a
policy I have always followed, which
he attributes to the late S.J. Simon, aa
Englisb expert wlio died in 1949 aged
44: Wben you are the dummy,
down last the suit that was led.
Reese says that he and his oartoe1rl
"reached six spades with a speed
in these days would attract tbe atllm-1
lion of the traffic police.'
Reese tabll!ll the hearts last,
South immediately called for
queen, East won with the king and
turned the heart jaclL Now it was innpossible to estab!WI and cash tbe fiflb
club Jor a diamond_discanl.
Tbe ript play is the heart four
trick one. Then the entries exist to
make use of the fifth club.
Tbe killing lead is the heart 10. And
Reese cliides himself for failing to cor,
reel to six no-trump, which be feels be
would have made "one way or another.'~~ do you think?

M . Hay &amp; Grain

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AUNT LOWEElY !!

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SCirlM LETS ANSWIIS
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. Opiate, Flush· Shiny - Nipper, HAPPINEss ·
"You can't buy happiness w~h money," the old man
tO!d his grandson. :1 know gramps, • the grandson r&amp;
=
·:!Nt you cant buy groceries with HAPPINESS

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01E lVUei!w!nc· Ft"® IX

JANUARY 28f ..
'

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

12-llw DlillySI ....

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
031
Pick 4:
3195

Guide for
retirement
-i'n the 1990s.

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Inside today

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PROUDLY
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2 s.ctlono, 34 Pageo 25 cenlll

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 29, 1993

IRICAN ·
1GB END ·

A Multlmodla Inc. -P"I*'

Strike rumors circulate
through coal fields
.

OF -fiE
·
1·11 N 710NAL CHAMPIONS

S LL U I ERSI
U DERI G HERD
to
12
30,10
•

Clear toalgbt. Low around
15. Saturday , cloudy. Hlgb In

'

•

ACCU)ENT KILLS HUSBAND, WIFE • .
Two Ohio State Patrol omcers look over the
,wrecka&amp;e of a car lavolvecl ID a three-car accident 10 miles east or Atheos Thursday ni&amp;lil.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) affected.
- _Strike rumors cin:lllated through
The UMW avoided strikes in
tll.e coal.fields as United Mine negotiating agreements with the
Worten·President Richard Trumka association in 1984 and 1988. The
honored one of the union's leg- 1984 agreement was the first in
endary strike leaders, Mary Harris more than 20 years that was negoti''Mother''Jones.
ated without a union-wide strike.
But in the coal fields, rumors
"The wor~ of Mother Jones,
like the UMW A itself, has often persisted Thursday that the UMW
, been defined by. t!)e strikes she will strike when its wage agree·
lead," Trumka said Thumlay at a ment expires at 11 :59 p.m. Mon·
.
ceremony in Washington. D.C., day.
"Overall, it doesn't look very
inducting Jones iniO the Labor Hall
good and we're preparing our
of Fame.
"Mother Jones undersiOOd that members for the worst," said
a strike is never a goal in and or UMW District 17 President Bob
itself. It is only a tactic," Trumka Phalen in Charleston. " Our mem·
said. "It's something you do when bers don't want to strike. But make
you're forced· to and when you no mistake about it. Our members
are ready to strike if need be."
have no choice.'~
"I was hoping that they'd be
. It will be up to Trumka to
,. decide. whether to call a strike ·able to resolve their differences,'·'
when tile UMW's a'greement with said Bill Raney, president of the
tile nation.'s largest coal opera10rs West Virginia Coal Association. "I
was ho~ing we were beyond that (a
e~ Monday night
The union began negotiations strike). '
" The union is preparing ror a
Nov. 6 with !he Bituminous Coal
OperaiDrS Association, which rep- variety of options, mcluding a
resents 12 or the nation's largest strike,'' UMW spokesman Jim
Grossfeld said. He would not elabcoallliOdueers.
The contract covers some orate.
The UMW is con4ucting sepa60,000 miners in Alabama, Illinois,
rate
talks with four other compaIndiana, Kentucky, Ohio, PennsylRobert Frazee, 27, and passeoger Penny Jo
vania, Virginia and West Virginia. nies that banded together as the
Frazee, 34, both of Vleua, W. Va, were killed
Pensions
and benefits for about Independent Bitumioous Coal Barlo the craah. (AP)
·
120,000 retired miners also are

Httsballd,-wife killed·in Athens .wrec.k

o·n

Pictures (Bring Your oW.. Camara)
- Sign Up For Cbanca To Win A.-r-shirt

ATHENS, Ohio. (AP) - A
Vienna, W.Va., couple was killed
when their car hit another head-on
on U.S. SO in Athens County, an
Ohio Highway Patrol dispatcher
said.
Robert Frazee, 27, and Penny
Frazee, 34, died about 6:30 p.m.

.

'

.

Thursday as they tried to pass a
logging truck 10 miles east of
Athens, said .the dispatcher, who
identified herself only as S. Dicken.
The Frazees' car hit a car driven
by Donald Ifebb, 33, of Marietta,

Ms. Dicken said. Hebb was taken
to Marietta Memorial Hospital,
where a miiSing supervisor who did
not give her name said she could
not release any information about
his condition.
,
· 1bc driver of the logging truck
was not injured, Ms. Dickel:l said.

"We're not commenting on

anything that's currently going
on," association spokesman MorrisFeibusch said,
Thomas Hoffman, vice president for public relations at CONSOL Inc. and spokesman ·for the
Bituminous Coal Operators Association's negotiating team, was in
Washington Thursday, his secretary said. He did not return a telephone message.
Grossfeld declined to confirm
whether union negotiators would
meet with association representatives IDday.
"As has been the policy
throughout, we're not confirming
speculation regarding the status of
contract negotiations," Grossfeld
said.

EPA annu·un·ces ·wvowcleanup t~ intensify
ByAmyLeacb

Recycle Day scheduled February 2.0 . :!~;:~~;?~
·

·
,, .
,
·
announcmg wade IS scheduled to
February 20 from 9 a.m. until plastic jugs,~ newspapers, corrugat· numbers in the center located either irifensify in the near future on pasnoon has been set u a Recycle Day ed cardboard, and glass will be near or on the boctom. The number , sible containinadon at the 8,()()().
b theM · Countv Litte C trot accepted.
one plastic (liter bottles) should be acre site . of the McOintic public
Y
CJgs
·
'&lt;
·
r
on
Preparation
of
items
is
very
-separated
froq~ number two milk hWlting and fishina an:a (better
· Board, Kenny WJ8811lS, direciOr.
The recycling pro 111am will be iillportant 10 insure acceptance by and ·water jugs. All other pl.stic known as the TNT area). · .
carried out on Krogcrrs parking lot recyclers, Wiggins said. Newspa- marked number two can be put
McCiinti4; is under close scrutiny
in Pomeroy. As explained by Wig- · pers .should be tied in bundles, together. All caps, lids, or rings by the EPA, Stall: of West Virginia,
gins, outlets for recyling are althoug!) those in paper tillgs will should be removed but labels can Mason County and tbe ,City or
becoming more and more diff'JCult be accepted. All inserts in .Sunday remain, Wisgins said.
·
Point Pleasant After a brief inves10 rtnd but at tile Kroger recycling papers, such as funnies, grocery
~ ror gtass, beverage and food ti~tion of mateljal concenlllltions
day, most all household items will and shoppers' ads, nyers, and containerS they should be separated wtthin that broad area, warning
be acc:epted.
,
tabloids .wttbout staples, sbould be by color (clear, grt:en, or brown, signs indicate that there is a pasWiggins stressed that all items bundled SCIJir1lle)y.
but ':"'t crushed. Mirrors •.window sibility or contamination, it was
should be rinsed and separated by
Most pfasiic conl8iners, accord· or windshield glass, eeramtc or lab- told. State ood COWlty officials and
category. Aluminum, steel and tin ing to Wtggins, are eas~ to iden~fy oralOry, c.ry~lal oven ware, milk representatives or the EPA gathered
cans, soft drink plastic c~tainers, by the small recycle ~gle wtth gl~ or drinking~·
yesterday morning in the council
Tm food ana juice cans should room of the city building 10 discuss
havethetopslllllbottomsopenand probable solutions.
nattened, corrugated card~oard
According 10 the National
. As pan of a negotiated plea ing a conCealed weapon. Addition- should be .nauened, alum mum, Priorities List Site, lhe former West
agreement, former Tuppers Plains ally, a .25 caliber handgWl was ror- steel and bi·mc~ ~P cl!"s need Virginia Ordnance Works .;s six
Elementary School teacher, John . feited to the Meigs County 'Sher- not be
Wtggms S81d:
. mt"les north of p01·nt Pleasant The
·v. Perine, has resigned his posiiion .• ;rrs DepartrilenL
·
Ho~se Btll 5?2 .mandates that former WVOW site was eseffective this past Wednesday.
Lentes stated he was · pleased the solid waste &lt;!istnct must reduce tablished in 1942, as a United
according to a .report from Meigs that this matter could be hlindled landfill w~ d!Sposal ~ 25 per- StaleS
· ~mment-owned
County Prosecuting Attorney John without further delay and thought it cent. .f\~ W1ggans explame~ th~ (Department or
ense), contrac·
Lentes.
·
was a great savings 10 the Eastern m!R residentS recycle, the.easter 11 tor-operated plant f&lt;l' tile manufac·
~rine 'was.originally charged in School District to proceed in this w1U be to meet thati'C!Iu!!Cm~t. ture of explosives. Tbe production
Meigs County Court with assault manncr.
But men, than that, Wtggms S81d of explosives (TNT, trinitrotoluene)
and carrying a concealed weaPQI).
Eastern Local School Superin· wben residents recycl~, they create at vrvow resulted in contaminaAs pan of a negotiated plea the tendent Richard Smith also indical· cleaner,
h1ghways and lion or llie aoils surrounding
~ult charges agaiilst Perine were ed thal he was pleased with Ute out- com
conserve valuB:ble manufacturing
and
process
dropped and he was given three comeofthiscase.
polluuon, racilities, wastewater, sewer lines
days jail and a .SIOO fine for CBIT}'·
save
and the wastewala' holding
discharge area by TNT and associated ~y-products.
Additionally,. subsurface soils

,

Perine resigns teach er s post

c
.
r u. s h e
•
d

gaining Alliance. The union and .
those companies, which employ
about 6,000 UMW members, have
agreed 10 extend the agreement for
60 day~ _while negotiations·continue.
The Charleston Daily Mail, citing unnamed sources, reported .
Thursday that the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association was 10 meet
with the union in Washington
today to discuss post-ex)!iration
options, inclu!ling the posstbility of
extending the contract.

,

IIIII

posure, reasonable contact ratio and
what could occur if the area was
indeed contaminated.
The EPA admits that they wiU of.
fer a conservative assessment 10 the
public or Mason County, because
the levels or contamination will not
stay the same, and, on the average,
people wiU not be exposed at the
samerate.
.
"Citizens do not know the exlent
of the problem and that is one or
the main reasons for the. meeting,"
said Robert G. Thomson, P.E., Vuginia and West Virginia Superfund
Federal Facilities representative.
"If the local penple were at an
immediate threat, we would be here
tomorrow. If questions arise, · we
can have a public meeting," he continued.
At this point in time, the group is
in the process of establishing public
meetings, lieginning in March.
, According 10 Mayor Russell Hoi·
land, the investigation conducted
by the U.S. Army and the EPA is
still underway. The wort is
scheduled 10 intensify in the near
fuwre. He stressed thai both
representatives of the - . federal
government and the State of West
area. '
Tbe area cited ror a detailed in- Virginia have tested the water
vestigation by the Army include: supply or the City of Point Pleasant
Track 21 , YeUow Water Reservoir, and both agencies have round it 10
Acids Area, North and South meet all state and federal rePowemoiues, Magazine Area and quirements.
HoUand also commented that
the Red Water Resovoir/Sewcr
further
investigation wiU be conLine.
ducted
by
the EP~ and the U.S. ·
1bc EPA ·will conduct also
Colps
or
Engineers
.10 determineseveral risk asrssment testS thai
wiD name the contaminates, ex- whether lir not contaminants exist ·
, in the old West Virginia Ordnance
Works (WVOW) property.' Point
Pleasant and Mason C011nl)'
officials will be kepi informed by
tile investigative agencies.
ID crder to further undersulnd the
exlent or ~e incuned in the
area, the EPA presented the county
· ing out of the ordinary," Coler with two bootlets entitled, "Fteld
says
Sunvnary Report, Ground Wrll!r,
The ODOT officials believe that Surface W8U!I' aJ1d So~nt
tires aaveling ovcr ~ steel grid lnvestiption" ani! "Field Trip
where the surface of the bridge Report, Identification or Strc ed
deck has peeled off in places may Vegetadoo. • 'f'he8C jowna1s help to
be causina unfamiliar sounds. The explain the invcsligations already
deck is to be resurfaeecl with rub· cOmploted llld erial and ~lose
berized asphalt sometime this sum- shotS of evidenoe of contamination
mer which should eliminate any within the WVOW area.
souftds Coler lldda. ·
Accoldi1111 , to 'l'hoRIDI, the
No~al traffic now across the Potential Responsible Plrtiea
structwe is being llllintained.
(PRP'a) include tile State of Welt.
The Pome:t·Mason bridge is
Maul County
the ·
inspected 8JUI y by a consul~ · United St~~a Anny. Howowr,
rum which specializes in this wort. other haulers IIIII plants may tar.
be included.
and ground water have atso been
contaminated by TNT from
operations at the former WVOW.
The WVOW has been ranked as
the 84th site on the National
Priorities List under lhe Comprehensive
Environmental
Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA),
as amended by the .S~rfund
Amendment and Reauthorlzation
Act of 1986 (SARA), 42 U.S.C.
Section 9601 et seq.
In 1989, red water SCCJ.ll&amp;e, Ji.
quid waste produced during the
TNT manuracturillll process, was
observed near Pond 13 on the
wildlife station. In addition, the
ground was littered with resldues
and chunks or nitroaromalic compounds.
.:
Several years ago, a contract was
awarded 10 the Army 10 perform
remedial actions on the problem.
Field worlc was conducted of excavation IIIII flaming of the industrial sewer lines and flaming the
surface or the burning ground. A
soil cap was then plaeed over con~inated soils at the TNT
manufacturing and burning groWida

.ODOT officials say bridge
has no structural problems
Ohio Department or Transpona·
lion off'teiall repo[t that no struc-.
tural problems wero found when
theY inapecllld the Punoroy-Mason
Bridge earliet today. The inspec·
tlon resulted from repons on
Wednesday that •t least one
. mot«ist had heard stran&amp;e noises
elllllllltiDi from the IIIUCture.
An ins~ on of !he structure
by • ~
btid~ ~ c.
~~~~·- Wlllll - fll tile willie
oo'OT·~ DislriCt 1~'M.teaa, ~
to
orfktl, laid MaJor llrace Reed ' · District 10 bridge mJpeetor Jim
T~:;:~•it Overt:!,~ alllra•berJ haa •eea
Corbett, revealed no problems.
n
Ia
fllllta . .lldtq ud "•
Jam01 P'roffitt, superiatendeat of
tllemiJ'OI'...., willie to rep!Ke •
the Meiss CouJ1tYODOT.a:£e
dowiUd .,aar tile not,
was a11o on lite. "We found
•

aut*"

Vupnia,

IIIII

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