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Ohio Lottery

Wellston
cagers tdp
Marauders

Pick 3:
422
Pick 4:
3014
Buckeye 5: .
10-11-17-26-30

PageS
I

RIVER CURRENTS FOR

By Eatber Petenon
Traffic congeslion~d costly accideniS-doil'l happen just
on interstate highways or busy
downiOWn screets. They can happen at any side street or even in a
parking lot if an accident, faulty
stoplight or road construction
impedes nonnill traffiC flow.

plenty of distailce before returning to the lane, because truckers
need more space than smaller
vehicles to reaet.

· For maily women, symptoms
of menopause are short;lived and
without serious health 'consequence--bot flashes, chills, night
sweats, irriiBbility. But one common symptom postmenopausal osleliporosis-poses
a far more serious risk to a
woman's health.
Osteoporosis, or loss or bone
mass, is a silent disease tliat can
progress undetected for decades.
Many worn~ 80 percent of
those affected with osteoporosis
are wo.men-don~.t notice any
signs of the condition until a fracture occllrs.
Hip and vertebnil fractures-the most common fractures
caused by osteoporosis-&lt;:an be
devastating and ~ leave women
incapacitated. One-third of
women over 65 have venebral
fractures as a result of osteoporosis.
EstrogeD Aids BOlle Formatloo
Why does !llenopause lead 10
osteopotosis in some women?
In healthy bones, a natural
hone remodeling process occurs
lhat involves the breakdown,
"resorptioil," of old bone and formation of new bone..
When a woman reaches
men:tuse and her ovaries ~:- duce · ess estrogen, which Pays
an imponant role in bone fonnalion, the bone breaks down faster
than it can form and the remodel-

·-

· lures.
To prevent the effects of postmenopausal osteoporosis, many
physicians prescribe estrogen
replacement therapy.
TRAVEL AGENCY
.
·'&lt;
The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration recently cleared
Estrace, an esuogen replacement
therapy, for the prevention of
Don't forgot thll tho EARLY
postmenopaulal osteoporoSis.
BIRD SPECIAL on oUr motorMarketed by Mead Johnson
, c01ch lourt eli! d4it 10••Laboratories, a division of Brisan oxtra 5% off any ~ ovor 3
dayo. tt wiU ond , f~ 28, 1M3.
tol-Mym Squibb Co., Estrilce is
·Sonlorl rtetlve o SYi dlocaunt
the only oral estrogen replace:
on our malorcoeCh I~ thalli
ment th~y that contains only .
gOad 111ytlnlo ollho; P.r. llalh
178-estradiOI, the primary estrodiOCGUMI 1ft I gOtid way 10
gen that is produced naturally by
hove ollrt ohopplft4!inonoy or
the ovaries during a woman's
loraopocllll.....,. '
reproductive years. Thus it allows
' '
women to replace the same natuWo hiM 1 1!.--\,- Mlooourl
rat estrogen that their bodies no · trlp Juno 14-18, 11D thol wll
longer produce.
pick up In OllllpaiiL c- Join
lhllun ond muolc; Mccxlod llv
Estrate has been used since
lltonda Rouoh.
1976 for the treatment of
menopauaal symptoms, such as
WI hlvo MVIrol . . toui'l far
hot flashes, night sweats and
thll y11r, lljlrlngllmlln ~Into
vaginal dryness. ·

-

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TRAVEL NEWS

or

r,

......

- · omce

-lnil•

-

'

--

,:i~~~

Let

COMPIM MIDICAI IOUIPMI•r
101 HOMI USI
BOWMAN'S HOMECAIE MEDICAL

.;

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'

COAL STRIJ&lt;E • Peabody Coal Co,
employees stand outSide the Harris No. 1 mine
in Twilllgbt, W. Va., Tuesday duriftg the first
day of a selective strike against .,eabody. Mliny
workers wore the familiar camounage that
became the symb,ol of a 10-month strike aaaiust

Americans. . . .

Tomato. .

Seniors have~ . .

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-A strike against the nation's No.
1 coal producer idled mines in
Appalachia and the Midwest for a
second day IOday.
·
Industry analysts Sllid many o.f
the power plants supplied by the
Peabody Holding Co. have enough
coal stockpiled to hold out for
months.
The United Mine Workers went
on strike on Monday against two
subsidiaries of Peabody , HOlding
Co. in a dispute over job security.
The union said 7,500 miners
walked out in five states, including
Pennsylvania. Peabody Holding
said the strike was limited 10 S,OOO
workers
in ·four states and that it
· Pettston In 1989. Union otnclals said they want
fon;ed
the
shutdown of 22 mines in
to strengthen job security, complaining that coal ·
·
West
Vir~ia,
Kentucky, Indiana
operators are eSiablisbing nQn-union suband
llljnOJS.
·
.
sidiaries to ~om pete with their union mines.
Re~ource
Data
In.ternational
(AP)
.
•
. ·
Inc., an industry anai)'S! in Boulder,
Colo.• said most of the 12 power
stations thai looked to Peabody as a
major supplier had stockpiles that
could 111ft more than 65' days and so~ for 300days.

-

.

upper 40s•

2 S.Ctlolll, 14 Pageo 25 centa
. A M~ldmedla Inc. NeMpeper

Coal miners strike
enters second day

ing process becomes imbalanced.,
This imbalance evenl!lally leads
10 a we8kening of the bones and
they beco!DC suseeptible to frac-

On city slreets:
.
-Signal wh~n changing
lanes. Don't force drivers behind
you 10 read your mind. Aild don't
try to force your way inro a lane
if you stay alert, be patient and before there's room.
,.. drive defensively, you can cope
-Plan alternate routes or
with traffiC congestion wherever , carry an area map in case deiOUrs
it oecurs -and avoid the bsssle force you from your regular
and expense of an accident An route.
accident can possibly raise your
insurance premiums.
-Be aware of road crews and
flag people wben driving through
Here aie some tips to practice areas where ~ wort is under
way. They may not be able to
whenever ll'lffic is stop-and-go.
bear or see traffic because of conOn the highway:
-Outlipe your route ahead of struction noise and heavy
time. CheCk a map, or ask some- machinery.
,
one for .the location and num~
Aprl 20-23, &amp;.lor In Scing ond
Allow
buses
and trucks
of your exit so you're not caught
Story, Optyland HUe~ Aprli7.:U,
Fon Folr N11h¥11t ,June 8-13,
in the left lane when you see your ex;tra room to make rigllt turns.
By driving defensively and
(COIItilltted from Papll)
Abingdon, VA,, Bart.. Thootre
exit ramp just ahead. '
avoiding accidents, you can keep
· Sept, 11·12, ond.lhl Springdale
our auto insurance premiums
than the erevious model to
lluolc Pt'- Sept. 23;
-NeVer tailgare. Tailgaling is
·
improve
viSibility.
dri
ood
rom escalaling. A g
· v1ng
On the interior, buyen are
always an- invitation to an acciNow lo tho tlmllo Ml llowlll .record
can
often
lower
your
looking
for more comfortable,
dent, but even mm so wben cars insurance rates.
DEE UNGER - 'l nlmare ttaveling at bigh speeds. Stay
wltl bo
Hewllll 7 doy,
When you're shopping for
brighter and roomier living
the state-required car lcDIJihs insurance, ask your agent how to
tour
Oct.
7-15.
8top
In llld IIIII
spaces.
with Det lboultlllo wondorful '
behind, 10 allow yourself opbOIIS
· trlp. Doe 1111 boon .lo lllwoll
in an _emergency,
~~tl~u!:~~-~su:::::v:
~ ~&lt;c:-oo~tm:-.-ued--from_ ~Pag---~~1 0)=----twice llld ~ .. tho .,.....
~
age that meets your ne¢s at the
........ to- ond --to go. •
3 1/2 cups water
inch pieces
-Don't be a lane jockey. best price, :
2 2(3 cups (two 10 1/2 ounce
I package (16 ounces) frozen
Constantly switching . lanes
LOIS BREEC:H will bi -lng
Safe driving iS an .~ way to cans) beef broth, undiluted
mixed Italian vegetables
doesn't save time. Studies have
1 opeclol gelnoy to Renlro
2 cups (15 ounce can) great
shown that over a 10-milc lrip, a help control your auiO msurance
1/2 cup grated Parmesan
Volley June 21-27. Tho muoto·.
cheeSe (optional)
driver is likely 10 save only about costs. But more imponantl~. it northern beans, undrained
will bo wcoldorlu! ond ·~
lng opectiCUIIr;
2(3 cup (6 ounce can) Contadiwill protect you and yoiir family.
In large saucepan, saut6
two minutes.
·
Esther Peterson, a former na TornillO Paslc
bacon, onion and garlic until
-Give big rigs special con1/4 cup choppec! ~ey
Sltp .... IIIDN.••~•I,.
sideration. If you can't see a White House Special Assistant on
onion is ttanslucent. Stir in water,
1 teaspoon dried oregano broth, beans and liquid, tomato
truck's side mirror, chances are Consumer Affairs, serves as a
Aiello
""' .... for •
yo.tnwl ......
you're following 100 cl09ely and consumer advisor 10 the National leaves, crushed
paste, parsley, ore~ano, basil,
1 teaspoon dried basil leaves, pepper and pula. Bnng to a boil,
arc in the driver's blind spot. Association of Professional
360 Stcolllllvo.
crushed
reduce beat, simaler for 1S minWhen passing a truck, allow Insurance Agents.
1/4 teaspoon pepper
ute&amp;. Mix in vegetables, cook for
1/2
cup
dry
pasta
sheDs,
mac10 minutes. Serve with Parmesan
, (Continued from Page
8)
..
aroni or vermicelli,' broken in10 1- c~e·
ple think of- and they apply to day. And many say you should
seniors as well as younger peo- consume a glass of water about
ple. But many neglect 10 include 20 minutes before exercising and
the role of water in maintainit\g 20 minutes after.
.
·
health. Next to air, it's the subIf the quality or taste of your
stance humans need most
area's !liJI water is preventing you
_Seniors have special water from drinking more water, conneeds. The body or an older per- sider installing a water 1re81111ent
son cannot reaet as quickly. to system in your home. Such syschanges in heat and cold as a tems remove not ortly unpleasant
yoQnger person making him or tastes and odors but undesirable
our family
her more susceptible to heat chemicals and minaals like lead
help your family...
stroke and other ailments trig- and copper. For seniors congered by dehydration. And cerned about sodium levels in
because the body's thirst mecha- their drinking water, reverse
nism doesn't work as well when a osmosis and distillation 1realment
HOME OXYGEN - 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
person ages, an older person may systems can reduce or remove
·
not realize lhat.his or II&amp; body is sodium, 100.
Many people who use a watet
' becoliling dehydrated and needs
. •HOSPITAl IEDS .
treatment system find lhat it not
watet.
•WHEELCHAIRS
Family Owned
only makes tap water taste better,
Water Aids Digestion
but
it
makes
everything
made
ll Opera leri
.For older people with consti- .
..EDSIDE COMMODES
' palion problems, watet helps with , with-water -from corree and tea
•WAIIERS
both digestion and elimination. It 10 soups and cooked vegetablestaste
more
flavorful.
also increases endurance and
.UlHIOOM AIDS THIRD &amp; PINE ST.
For more information about
energy levels, facilitates muscular
and nervous activity and regu- water trealmenl sYstems. contact
fllU DEUVEilt
GAWPOUS
the Water Quality Association,
lates bodY temperature.
Doeton recommend drinking P.O. Box 606, Dept, NU, Usle,
six to eight glasses of water a ll.60S32.

Clear tonlghL Low In mid
lOs. Thursday, sunny. Hlgllln

Pomeroy-Midd"port, Ohio, WedneSday, February 3, 1893

Doctors·fight osteoporosis with estrogen

Driving safely can
save you money
.

·VoL 43, No. 199
' Copyrlghtod 1993

.
.•.

•

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e
PAGE TWELVE

·.••

:Turnpike ·commission may
.back southwest Ohio highway

'
.CINCINNATI (AP)- Plans 10 execUtive direciiJr, said Tuesday.
build a new · interstate highway
Former .com.miss.ion chairman
aCrbU soutliuSi Obio liave,.been J.ames-'.Jhcnlian,' ' of Toledo,al'illlnd'for-·a long time; bu~ now·the .resigned in ·December bul'·is com•
Ohio Tu,npike Commissi11n is ing back 10 woO: for the 'agency in
'leil4f!il ilf clout·
,
. the new job of development coordi·
· tllti·commission, which collects · nator.
.
monel from motorists on northern
Plans call for Interstate 74,
Ohio s roD road, has hired a full- which runs from the Quad Cities
time coordinaiOr for the southern area of western Illinois to CincinOhio project and others.
nati, to continue east and tie into
"There's been talk for a long Ohio 32, the Appalachian Hightime about having the commission way, somewbere in Clermont
involved in other projects in addi· County and follow that road to
lion to those along the turnpike,'' PortsmoUth.
Allan Johnson, the commission's .
An e:llact route in the eastern

"After two years of mild winters and relatively cool summers,
we're in pretty good shape in our
stockpiles," said B.J. Smith,
spokeswoman for ' American Electric Power's fuel supply divisiqn in
Lancasler, Ohio. American Electric
is the nation's largest coal consumer.
Peabody Holding said it provides as much as 10 percent of the
nation's coal for cleclricity.
Police reported no trouble on
the picket lines.
~ ·Our guys will stick,together.
We have for 100 years and I don't .
see that changing now," said miner
Carlo Tarley.,
The str1ke began after talu
broke dow.n with the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association on a
hew contract covering · more than
60,000 · miners and 150,000
retirees. The association represents
12 of tbe nation's largest Producers. .
The strike is limited 10 Peabody
but could spread, UMW President Richard Trurnka said.
,
No negotiations were scheduled.

The uniQn has accused some
coal opera10rs of establishing noaunion subsidiaries to compete with
their uliiou mines. .
"I didn't want 10 strike to begin·
with and neither did our member·
ship. We were left with ' no
opuons." Tl'lllnk,a said.
· ·~
Peabody Coal Co. Preaid.e itt
George S. Shiflett charged thai tbC
union was trying 10 bully .coil operators. Peabody Coal and Eastern
Associated Coal are the Peabody
Holding subsidiaries targeted by
theUMW.
"Calling a strike against
(Peabody and Eastern) is like biting
the hand that feeds you," Shiflett
said .
· About 2,300 of the s.lrikers iR ,
employed at I0 mines in West Virginia.
People "need to know what
we're going lhroqgh, standing out
he~e ~Y I! creekside to press ', a ·
pomt. wd Gary Massey. picketmg along the Coal River near Bald
Knob. At other mines, men hu4-dled around barrel fires into the
night.
.
-

'

:N ewDUI law allows
pre-trial p.enalties
"

New legislation pertaining to
DUI offenders recently approved
by the Ohio Legislature and signed
by 'Gov. George Voinovich could
bring penalties even before the
alleged offender goes 10 coun.
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Auorney John R.
Lentes, the new law allows for pretrial administrative s4spension
under the Implied Consent Law of
driver's and commercial driver's
licenses of persons arrested for
DUI who refuse to submit to a
blood, breath or urine teSt, or those
whose blood, brelith or urine indicates a ~hibited concenttation of
alcohol, drugs or both.
In ~ffect, this means that if a
driver accused of DUJ refuses to
submit 10 a breath, blood or urine
test, his or her license can be suspended before the defendant
appears in a courtroom. If the
defendant is later found to be not
guilty of the offense, the license
would be reinstated.
Most importantly, Lentes said,
the ·new legislation can force the

'

offender, if convicted, to forfeit the
vehicle used in the offense if the
offense at question is the defendant's second in a five-year period.
"Although I realize that forfeiture of a vehicle ' 'VOuld impose a
hardship on the offender and his or
her family,'' Lentes said, "we are
responsible for protecting the community and vehicle forfeiture is an
excellent way to do just that. I
think that this new legislation reinforces what we in the law enforcement community have always
known : that· driving under the
influence of alcohol is a serious
crime and will not be tolerated in·
Meigs County or anywhere in the
State of Ohio."
Another facet of the law which
Lentes noted is a clause which '
allows for the cancellation of a
defendant's driver's license if the
defendant fails to pay a fine
imposed by ·the court or fails to
appear for any hearings relating to
misdemeanor traffic offenses,
including DUI cases.

Senate passe~ first bill of year
COI:UMBUS; Ohio (AP)The Ohio Senate has~ its fust
bill of the year: a J)iOjJOINJI allowing
counties to create -pon authorities
even if there are olhcn within the
county.
·
Sen. Robert Boggs, D-Jefterson,
won 33-0 approval Tuesday.
Both houses of the Legialature
which convened in earlr January'
have been occupied unti now w1tJi
commiaee
intments and other

neauL
The new authority wouid
include all of the county !hal is not
in tho Jurisdiction of the city
authoritieS.
·
Boggs said Ohio's laws extend
certain IBXing, bonding and other
'privileges 10 pon authorities that
counties and municipalities do not
have.
.
"Pon authOrities have become
an important economic tool," he
mauers.
.
said.
0010, in recess Tuesday
Boggs' bill now goes to the
plans a voting seaion Thursday. ' House. It includes an emergency
Bogga •P.onsored the port clause that would give itlmntediate
autborfty bill on behalf of the effect upon approval by the goverAshtabula Counl}l commissionen, nor. '
~tbOIIIh It has statewide implica- , Neither the House nor the Sen·
uons.
ale will meet Wedneaday so that
Tbo commissioners want to mernberl 1111)' aaencl die funcnl of
• e•bUib a \lOI!I1tY authority despite C~ Rep. ·Cllll' Skeen of Aboo,
the exlJtence bhim~ entililll·in who died of cancer Saturday.
tho cltloa 9f Ashtabula and Con-

,..,

Cincinnati suburbs has not .been .
determined. .
.~~From PomiDDUib,_lhc...hiabwaY..! ~
would h~l!: I!P with' a new north'
south _expressway, tentatively
called Interstate 73, which woluld
be built between Detroit and
Charleston, S.C.
The turnpike commission also
will study the 1-73 portion of the
hi~hway through Ohio, Johnson
SBid.
• There is no indication yet that
either highway would charge a toll,
Johnson said from commission
headquarters in suburban Cleveland.
·
A law that took effect in 1991
makes turnpike authorities eligible
for fedi!ral funding. Johnson said
he is interested in exploring that.
"We're lalking about a mammo\h projecllhat is goinf to take a
ton of fmancing 10 build, ' Johnson
said.

McEwen plans

to move into
Second District

DRIVER INJURED, CAR DEMOLISHED
- Gary Arnold, Pom~roy, escaped serious Injury
but the car be was driving, owned by Tammy
Wright, was heav~y damaged. Wbe~ the ul)li·

ceased leenager lost controi the vehicle st,rpck
curbing on one side of West Main, 1 bal!k'OD the
other, and then flipped over on it top in the .
street.
· ·

BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) ~ For­
mer Rep. Bob McEwen, a candidate for the 2nd District seat Y8Caled by Willis Gradison, says be will
move into that southwest Ohio district.
McEwen said Tuesday lhat he is
selling his house in Hillsboro and
A Pomeroy man is in satisfactri-' vehicle he was driving. The car,
wiD rent a residence in Bethel until ry condition at Veterans Memorial heavily damaged and towed from
his family finds a house 10 buy.
Hospilal where he is being treated 'the scene, is owned by Tammy
The Republican represented the for mjuries suffered in an accident Wright,' Mulberry Avenue,
neighboring 6th District for 12 on West Main' Street at11 :SB Tues- Pomeroy.
years until be lost die Nov. 3 elec- day night.
Pomeroy police have charged
tion to Democrat Ted Strickland.
Gary Arnold, . 18, Union Arnold with no operaror's license,
Congressional candidates are Avenue, Pomeroy, suffered multi- reckless operation and failure to
not legally required 10 live in the ple contusions and a scalp lacera- control.
district where they run for office. tion when he lost control of the
According to the police repon,
But McEwen said he thinks the
representative should live within
the districL .
A dozen people have announced
intentions to run for Gradison's
seat, including nine Republicans.
Gradison, a Republican, was
elected in November to his lOth
term in Congress. But he quit Sunday to become president of the
WASHINO'ION (AP)- ~­ nominations'Rquire Senate confuHealth ln~urance Association of
America, ·a Washing!Qn-based lob- dent Clinron, making ~ood on his mation, "have a big task ahead of
promise· to avoid btas against them - rebuilding housing oppor' hying group. .
homosexuals
in chQosing key tunity for all Americans and re.Jl8i!Oov. George Voinovich has
the torn fabric of our nation's
scheduled a March 16 special pri- aides, is namin~:ISPOkcn les· ing
urbllt communities. •~
bian
as
bis fair
·
cfiief.
mary and a Ma~ 4 ~eneral electi~
"These four outslaliding indi·
If confumed, aoberta AchteRto choose Gradison a successor m
have the experience, the
viduals
berg
would
be
the
bigheal
ranking.
the five-county dislrict.
openly py·officjal ever to serve in knowledge and the ability to make
that happen," Clinton said In a
the executive lnilch.
.
The 42-year-old member of the
Donald Coats, Myers Road, San FranciSCO Board of SuperviPomeroy, reported Monday J!ig~t sors was 11D1011J fOlD' people pidred Vandalism probed
J.r&gt;. Drilling, Racine, reported
to the Meigs County Short!'f s by Clinton on Tuelday for high·
to
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, that somettme lovol posts in the Department or
Depar1111ent
Monday morning that
between 7:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.mli Housing and. Ulban· Development
sometime
over
the weekend some·
Amoog them was Andrew CuOmo,
someone entered his unlocke
one
had
spray-painted
on the wall
house and srole two guns • ·an 870 son of New York Gov. Mario
• oftheRacmcCilrWash.
Wingmaster and a Ruger 1022 with Cuomo. '
An investigation is continuing. •
Clinlon said the .fout. whose
scope:

Pomeroy man injured in auto wreck :
Arnold was traveling west on West
Main at a high rate of speed. The •
vehicle hit the curb on the left side
of the road, then swerved to the
right side, struck a bank, and
flipped over on its top in the street.
The Pomeroy emergency sqjlad
transported Arnold to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he is
being held for observation.

Clinton names outspoken
Lesbian to fair housing post

Guns stolen

statement "ThCy will be ·an essen- ·
tial part of my team.'' ,
·'
Those named were:
,
-Achtenberg, as assistant secretary for fair housing and equal ·
opportunity.
'
....Cuomo, as assislalit secretarY, '
for community planning and devcl~ ·
op~nL
·
-Terry Duvernay. executiv~
director of the Oecqia Housin&amp; '
and Finance Authority, u deDul).' :
secretary. He was allUD officii!
in the.Carter administtalion.
.,
-Jean Nolan, fotrnerly direCtot
of communications for The Enter· •
prise Foundation, a national fOWl· .
dation devoted 10 houlling for thi:
~· ~ assisuntsea~y

he affairs.

·

for puJi!,:
, ._
"

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�\

\

Commentary
..

111 Ccnart Street
PomeiO)', Ohio .

..
··

· DEVOTBD TO THE~ OJ' THE IIEJOS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

/

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M1111ager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All- !etten an: subject to editing ond must be signed with n~e.
lddreiS a8d telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. (..etten
should be in good Wte, addressing issues, not personalities.

Clinto.n should tread .lightly
in Social Security mine field
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
• WASIDNGTON - On the land mine, death wish, third rail of political q~stions, the alanns sounded at word that the White House was even
·

.

looking at limits on Social Security benefit increases. Senior Senate
Democrats said no to a proposal President Ointon hardly was lilccly to
make anyhow.
. .
.
.
· After all, it would contradict h1s camprugn pledges, With scant prospect
tlrat·Congress would go along.
· : Clinton's spokesman said Monday !hal there have been no decisions
on what will be in the economic P."&gt;gram h~ will de~v~ ~ C~gress and
the nation on Feb. n ..He wouldn t rule Soc•al Se.cunty linuts m or out
•· "Right nov.: we f~e tough choices, we face a difficult situation created
by a rising deficit and slow job growth," said George Stephanopoulos.
•'This is not easy, this is not something he seeks.''
It was Siephanopoulos who disclosed last Thursday lhatlimitin$ cost
of living increases in Social Security was among the options under discussion to reduce the deficit
•: The Senate Democrati~ leadership already was opposing the idea, and
the two committee chainnen with the most to say on such matters are both
against it, as well.
Unacceptable, said ·Sen. Daniel Palrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., new chairman of the Senale Finance Committee, who then went on weekend television to say Clinton's people were ·stepping ,on a land mine even by suggesting ·th!' idea He called it a death wish, said it wouldn't be fair and
would let 300,000 more Americans slip to pOverty income levels. ''Forget
it right now,'' Moynihan said in an ABC-TV interview on Sunday.
· II may be that the Ointon people would just as soon have it remembered, not as something they are going to push, bUt as the son of harsh
alternative thal could make other deficit-curbing steps easier to take.
•;: Suspending the cost of living increases that now are automatic for the
..1 million Americans who receive Social Security benefits would save
!lse government about $10 billion, by some estimates. There's just been a
·l percent cost of living increase in benefits this Year; the estimate for next
:~is 3.2 percent.
.
·
·• Moynihan said he would be willing to talk about an increase in the
Oxes levied on the Social Security benefits of retirees with at least
:p5,000 incomes, couples with $32,000. Half their benefits now. are subject to income taxes; one proposal is to raise that to 85 percent. Sen.
George Mitchell of Maine, the Democratic leader, also is said to prefer ·
milt alternative.
.
.
.
•
.,~ But Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas. the Republican leader, said that would
\teach a pact dating back a decade, to the overhaul a~roved· in 1983
when Social Security was facing financial trOuble. That s when the 50
tiercen1 tax was instiwted along with increases in payroU.taxes. The systm now is taking in more money than it pays out in benefits. '
~~~ Dole said it would be better to hold cost of living increases one or two
points bel.ow the inflation rate, but he noted in an NBC-TV interview the
®litical realities !hal would make that difficult to enact. There were only
l8 Senate votes for the idea of limiting increases when it was suggested in
1992.
And Dole's Republicans suffered politically for voting in favor of a
· frf.Cze in 1985, when only one Democmt signed on with them. The mea&lt;Osre did not take effect; the House balked and President Reagan dropped
:it 'But Democmtic campaigners made ifone of their major issues in 1986, .
'ille year they gained eight Senale seats and recaptured control.
:•: Not !hat they hadn't been warned. When he was speaker of the House,
1hornas P. O'Neill Jr. had csUed Social Security the third rail of politics
:;:, "Touch it and you die."
·
. ,
:•: But keeping it off limits in the quest for deficit reduction means the
vernment's Sinjlle biggest spending program- estimated at $310 biln this year- IS immune. Moynihan argues that it should be, as a !rust
nd of paid up insurance. And he noted pointedly that when he appeared
jii campaign adsJor Clinton in the New York primary, it was in defense of
~ial Security. In the primary campaign in Florida, Clinton had accused
"yal Democrat Paul Tsongas of favoring limits on cost of living increases
itl Social Security.
.
::: During the general election campaign, Clinton promised to proleet fuU
!)enefits and also advocated raising the earnings limit for Social Security
~ipients, a move that would increase costs.
·

•!
•,

:; EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columqsst for The Associated Press, has reported oa Washington and
it$tional politics for more than 30 years.
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:: . "... Then , at 10:30, you will meet with a delegation
::
from the Association ·of Feminist Bean-c.ounters."
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.

WASHlNGTON- Price Blum
is a 34-y--oldquadripleglc whole
·manhandling and millreabneat by
the Secret Service and police laSt
December would make you believe
!lis name was really Lee Harvey
Oswald.
.
Baum began one Tuesday moming jesting and j~ng with local
government otllcials frotb suburban Virginia, just outside of Wash,
ington, whene he was explaining
the Americans with. Disabilities
Act. He was named Disabled ;
Marylander fer 1992, and serves as
a consultant to businesses on how
to cope and comply with the new
law.
·
What the .day had in store for
him !aught him a frightening reallife lesson about just how cold and
callous the s~m can be fer those
with disabilities. Certainly Baum
never expected to spend the night
rolling around "like a pinhall" in
the back of a pauol wagon arrested and charged with ~session of unregistered ammwution.
Baum traveled to Wultington's
Union Station, where he planned to
meet some friends for dinner. He
arrived at S p.m., unaware that the
Democrats were having a leadership dinner for Bill Clinton and AI
Gore in another part of the station,

which was crawling with Secret .
Service agents. After dinner, as
Baurn headed for an elevator, jill
agent asked to insJ)ecl a small bag
· •

_.

"

Governor's 'State of the State;sets agenda :
L

distributed by the state to the vari- accurately project lottery profila'
ous school disuicts continues to and other incomes for schoOls. ThJi,
widen the gap between the richest creates an alarming issue for ow;
and the poorest school 4isuicts. state's primary and secondary
While I have said time 8lld again school disbicts.
that equal educational opportunities
should exist for all youngsters
Thus, the State of Ohio has i~
regardless of where they live, there work cut out. While the Governor
issue that confronts the state. Nev- still reolsains a failUre on the Slate's presented his agenda, it is clear that•
ertheless, the Governor presented part "? ~nd to this evef-increas- the most important agenda which·.
1
to the Legislature .the 1ssues of
the . can~~t b~ overlooked by the ·
Medicaid reform and worlcers com- mg~~ t.s.recently, of co;•rse,
..
·admmtSilation or the legislature is.,
pensation reform as being the top G
. overnor provided a li)ajor ~x responding to this educational'
priorities of the adminislration. ,
Increase to plug the state s defic•l fundin$ crisis and deali
·th · ·
While I agree that those two This was offered as a measur~ to 'immediately in a respon~~~ h~
so
as .
issues
require the attention of prevent further cuts to education. ion
both the executive and legislative As I had mentioned in a previous
if you have an ·
·
•.
I offered an amendment .
Y ques11ons ot'·
branches. clearly, the most detailed column,
· th.
.
s..w
comments about these or any other
reform should take place with ' dunng
IS tax •ncrease pac,...,.~ to
issues that confront our state . ·
resP.,ect to education funding . prevent further ~uts to education. please do not hesitate to write to·."
Schools are failing to approve Unfortunately, '!lls amendment was me, State Senator Jan Michael
levies for local revenues. At the def~ted. Now,ll appears as thot!gh , Long, c/o Ohio Senate • State~,. ,
same time, the 1110ooy that can be add•llonal culS may be forthcommg house Columbus OH 4321S · b ··
raiSed locaUy and the money that is to .schools because of a failure to teleph6ning (6l4)466-SIS6. or
Clearly; the manner in which Ohio
allocates money to the various
school districts and the adequacy of
that amount is the most serious

Sen.Jan M, Long

will

Y::

Joe knows the important stuff -

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How important? .It caught the
attention of no leas a naysayer than
Ralph Nader, who said: "This is a
costly bivialization and diversion
of the Post Offsce's main purpose:
The dependable and reliable delivery of the mail."
How important? More than 2
million votes were cast, and the
winner was announce!f at Graceland last June 4 at 6:36am., a time
seleet¢ to allow the morning tele·
vision·shows .to C8UY, it live. "It's
young Elvis by a mile," said former Posbnaster General Anthony
Franlc, masiennind of the Elvis pro. jecl And wheo the stamp was offi•
cially released at Gracebind on Jan.
8, Elvis' birthday, Ielevision crews

,

from England, Jiopan, Belgium and' ;
Germany were there to cover the ·
festivities.
,.
So here's my comment A mere ·
stamp is not enough. We have toi •
find additional ways to honor Elvis•.
Presley. A Washington Post Writer•:
recom!'len~ renaming the con- '
stellauon Onon after the singer 1
That's !lOt, bad. I would also sug: , .
~est usmg the young Elvis design 1
on paper currency and perhaps· :
droppin~ the eagle off tlie quan.er
~nd usmg the. King's likeness~:
mstead; We m1ght also consider ;
converbng Graceland into a nation- · · '
al park.
•;
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated.' ·
writer for Newspaper Enterprise : :

t·

~~lioo.

_Today in history

a ne.a- ·r

fl'rw
'J.y mild • .,
wiD • ••·
liar Ollio alllila c..
dia CXIId IKIIII•i•ea c. die wa:teod,.lire
' Slid.
Sties willlJc
Gl Tbursdly, IIIII
; M•es will climb
Om - 401, - No«"
Wealhcr
Scnicc aid. o-.ipt 1eadiu
wiD lJc ia de 20L
gs
The fmallll syslelll will bring
III!ICh c:.older liD: iato Obio and
1
Tile

•

i

request was also denied.
1
After being held lilr t11ree hours,•
Baum was transferred to a second:
Jail- only this time he was placed,
m a regular police paddy wagon.'
"They dido 't have any policies or·
procedwes to deal with people with(
special needs," he told our associ-,
ate Jan ·Moller. He described a·
scene in which several officers.~
having decided to diaca'd the sus-:
pect's own, specially designed van,.
lried to fit Baum into the llack of a: ·
wagon. Since the lift is fairly higli, ·
the officers stood on the ground:
trying to lift him, wheelchair and;
all. into the wagon. Finally Baurn·
- on the verge of being dropped.
on the ground- suggested a more;
common-sense approach~ One oft{.·
cer should stand inside the wagon.:
to assist with the lifl; ·
:.
"The officers wene going to.lift.
me into this paddy wagon over
their heads.... I almost fell out of
the chair, I had to gnlb one of the:
guards' heads to keep from falling.
I was lifted over their heads ...
about seven feet in the air.
•
"There wasn't any way to
secure me to the paddy wagon. I
asked if they would allow a~~ ·
guard or policeman to ride tn the
back with me. They said no, that~s
not policy. I had no way to- anticip·ate the. movement of the truck. I
was rolling back and forth all over
the back of the paddy w~on."
After arriving at ja1l, Baum-·
. cooled off in a holding cell where ·
on a Tue~y night up to 200 pell-1
pie were bein~ processed. Baum
had to wait unbl 4 a.m., when offi._
cers began filling out paperwor~
and askad for his signawre. When •
Baum experienced diffiCulty sign-ing, it was mistaken by the police'
as an act of resisrance.
,
It wasn't until .later that day,
nearly 12 hours after the incident '
began, that Baum was released._
Charg,es were recent!Y dropp~d
against Baum for c;arrytng unreps,
tered ammunition. For Baum, the
incidenl itself is ammunition for a
lifetimeausade.
·
"Not only didn't they (the
Secret Service and police) know
how to deal with a handicappecf
person, but they had no compassion
or concern far people with special
needs •" Baum said. ·
•• •
Jack Aadersqn and Mlcbael
Binstela are Wl'lters for Unlteil
Feature Syadicate, Inc. ,

1

If you are up on things that realDown the list of Really Imporly matter, then you know lhat tant Stuff I wenL Madonna's sex
February is a "sweeps·· month, life. Hillary's hat. The trials of
when broadcasters hire the Nielsen Charles and Di.
Media Research fum to ra1e teleVision shows so they can delermine
how much to charee'advertisers.
It is also when broadcast news
operations try to attract viewers by
.,
airing their best stuff _ the sensaThen I hit on it. The Letlermantional stories they have been silting Leno skirmish, of course. David
on for weeks in anticipation of the Letterm&amp;n of "Late Night" wanted
. Jay
sweeps.
.
·
. Leno's
C "Tonight" slot.er nothI've heard it whispered that mg. NB said no, so Dave b6lted
many newspapers also do their sur- to CBS for $14 million a year,
veys about now, to see which fea- which comes to about $60,000 per
wres and columns are most regu- on-air Itour.
·
larly read. I don't know this as fact,
How important is this? It domib~t I'm not goinll to take a chance. nated the headlines for days. Time
I will draw you lfi'CSistibly to these magazine, the very pulse of Amenwords by writing IOday about Real- ca, devoted three pages to the
ly Important Stuff. No boring "show-biz
cliffhanger."
remarks about Bosnia. Nothing New~we~t gave us the "inside
about Bil). and Hill, the soaring story" in three ~es. And the real
deficit, the decaying infrasbucture. tipofl'l America s newspaper, USA
Today ·! comment on Pro round Today, ran a phone poll and asked
Things.
,
us to "vote fer .whom you'd most
· · I have to admit, though that like to watch in the late-night
I've had some difficulty chOOsing · hours."
·,
what Really Important Sluff to disThis is clearly important stuff,
cou,rse. upon. ~ thought about but I had to ••tick with things I
rev1ewmg Sonny Bono's hook lcnow; And !hat's why I chose the
"And the Beat Goes On," bui Elvis stamp to comment on. Joe
when ,I dusted off my eopy, 1 saw knows Elvis. Joe grew up with
that I m about 18 months too laie. Elvis.
.
Sorry about that I meant to read i~
How important is the stamp
but things kept getting in the way. story? When.Postal Service offi.
Then I remembered something cials asked us to vote fer either a
about S.uperman dying and thought " o
Elvis" stamp or an "older
that m1ght make for interesting Elvl!'!f stamp, did ther do it in
commentary and went to get the Washington, D.C., capttal of the
' comic book. The dealer said he had free world? No way. They unveiled
sold his last copy in November.
t!se two designs in Las Vegas.

Accu-Weamere forecut far
IICH.

working with one of President
Bush's daughters at the Rehabilitalion Instllllte. During the Gulf War
in 1990, SCC!Jrity for the Bush chitdren was stepped up. Baum says
J 1
"' •
that at some ~nl this female agent
d
recogn~ him, but di~ nothing to
intervene 00 his behalf.
.
.
•
"I
said
to
her:
'Do
you
really
11
J.VI.IC
think I'm here to aasassinale President CliDton?'"
he was cmying on his lap.
BI!IIII'S odyssey got ugly whelt
Inside were four unused 11 12- agents decided to transfer him to
gauge shotgun shells in a toiletries the fmt of two police stations JJe .
lciL Baum explained they were left would see that night. There was
there inadvertently after a goose- some question about transporting
hunting bip on the Easrem Shore of him, and one of the officers asked
Maryland near his home. Baum him if he had a van in which he
"hunts" by having a friend plact a could be transported. "I got takeo
gun in his ilrms, then waiting until to the police station in my own van.
geese fly by to squeeze off a round ... There was a police car in the
of fire by inducing movement in front with its lights going," said
his hand.
Baum, who "felt like I was eoilling
Once the officer saw the shells, to visit.the president at !he White ·
he told Baum he would have to House.''
re~ it to his commanding officer. .
By 9 p.m., Baum was at the
It s ille~al to possess unregistered ' police Sl8lion requesting water. He
ammunttion in Washington. Soon, explains that fer people with spinal
t11ree more a~ents descended ou the cord injuries, liquic!s to flush the ·
scene, whisking him off to a hold- kidneys can be a matter of life and
ing area in the station where he was death. "I needed it," he said. "It
interro~ated by the Secret Service.
reduces the chance of lcidncy and
IroniCally, Baum recognized one bladder infection."_
of the agents during the intcrrogaBaum '.s other urgent medical

~1l'r.ill'16Jo"""'--.""·""'€'~...
, +IUUr'E
,..

This past week; Governor
George Voinovich delivered his
annual·Slate of The State address to
a joint-session of the Ohio Senate
~ the O!rio House of Representaoves. TYJileally, the chief executive
of the state presents to the General
Assembly the administration's priorities for discussion for the coming year. This year offered Gover~or yoinovich's .thoughts on legISlatiVe and executive action for
1993.
.
While the Governor highlighted
the accomplishments &lt;if his administration for 1992, he also used the
occasion to prioritize -some of the
top issues that he envisioned for
19~3: Unfortunately, the ·disappomllng approach offered by the
Governor was his failure to designate reform of the ·state's educational funding scheme as the No 1
priority for this administrati~n.

Tllul'lday, Feb. 4

IToledo I 43" I

lion as someone he bad met while · ·need was .O"fiii.$h his Catheter. This:

By Tack An "e•son
an ..
h ·l
ae Bin stein

Mild weather will continue around Ohio

OHIO We&lt;Jthcr

Page 2 The Dally Sentinel ;

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio ·
Wednelday, February 3, 18D

Joseph Spear

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IND.

• leorumbUs!&lt;W

EiPt wm:lilllllllllll six othc:n
folfciJed boads in Jbe coartolMiddlc:pallllayor Fn:d Hclli..on Mooday ni&amp;bL
•·
W. VA.

were Charles

il!iJ:

..r

ehJhol ia a aiD F I ;;'e, ... fi'Vc
days ill jlil plas COIIIl a-. ouly a chaiKC ·ol ao OJii*MIW' sljcmp:;
Rona14 J')idellolll, Pomaoy, $10
and coils. spi•••c tns; Ronald G,
. Jac:.obs, Raci.DC, $16 fiae only.
cum '"",...... n:. speedi•&amp;; Villceat K. Stoae,
Pouaoy, $10 llld - . fiailious
tt,gs; losqlb A. Cmabs, Delaswe.
SIS and costs, 51 •
n I*" J.
low 30s. Highs in low IIIII mid40L Dailey, I'Umeaoy,
$10 Mid COSIS,
Saturday, fair and lumitll c:ouler. fictitious «qs; Olidc:s Wllb:r Jr,
Lows 30-3S. Highs in Jbe mid-30s Middleport, SUlO and costs, and
to mid-40s. Sunday, chmce of five days in jail, pcuy Jbeft;
.
Jmy
~now. ·Lows in the low and midAnnslroag, Middlepoll, S1QO and
20s. Highs near 30 to the upper
COSis llld fi..e days in ~
"'·
30s. .·
.
and $SO and COltS, cnminal mis-

'•&lt;c:

c:bitf.
Fodeiliag boads wm: W"dlaid
E. Mi1ll:i, Cabnbas, S60, expilel
reg;.....;..,; Jc:ssielames 1oniS, Jr~
Georgia Wehrung
. JluMiso•s,$55
MarGeorgia Wehrung, 85, of Mid- vin W. s-fidd; Middlepod. $SS

---Area .deaths----Daniel M, Oiler
David Merrill Oiler, 12, 1345
Zion Church Rd., Gold Hill, N.C.,
died in Rockwell, N.C., Monday,
Feb. I, 1993, following a !ruck and
bicycle accident. .
.
~e "::S born March 6, 19,80, m
Gallipo~s, the ~ of Jeff Oiler of
Gold Hill and Cmdy Roten Conrad
of Ashton, W.Va. He was a student
at E~n Middle School in North
C~lma and former student of the
Ymton Elem~tary .SchoOI. .
Other surv1vors iDClude his sleptather, Roy Conrad of. Ashton. and
&amp;~pmothe~. Joyce Oiler _of Gold
l;lill; one SISter, C3!1dy Oiler; one
brother, Jeffrey. Otler; one halfbrot!Jer, Joey &lt;?•ler; one nephew,
~hnstopher D1amond; mat~mal
. grandfather, Charles Rotert of
~ewark; maternal foster grand:
IJlOth~r. Mary Beck of Dayt~n,
pate~C"al grandfather Ralph E. Oiler
of Vmto~; and several aunts. uncl.es
and cousms.
.
He WIIS preceded m death by
matern~l grandmother, Helen
McDamel~, a~d paternal grandmother,Elsoe qiler.
Semces wtll be held 10 a.m.
Thursday at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home in Vinton. Burial Will follow
in the Vinton Memorial Park.
' . Friends may call at the funeral
hom... today from 2-4 an,d 7-9 p.m.

Legion to observe event

liolld,¥H'Mg;

dleport, died Tuesday, Feb. 2,
1993, al Veterans Memorial Hospital
·Born in Leon, w. Va. on June4,
' 1907, she was the daughter of the
late Alfred Garfield and Effie Ellen
Badgley Hill. She was a llomemU:er
, · She is survived by twO sons lnd
daul!hters-in-law, Larry and Betty
Welirung and Gardner and Pat
. Wehrunl, all of Pomeuiy; two sisters. Willa Bowers and Merle
Beaedict, botb of Springfidd; two
half-sisters, Mrs. Horace (Grace)
Abbott, of Pomeroy, and Mrs. Dale
(Mary) Hysell of Middleport. scvera1 grandcliildml, great-grl!ldchildren, .and nieces and nep11ew1.
Besides her parenta. she was
pi=:ded in death by IICI' husblmd;
·Elmer Wehrung in 1972, a sislu
. and a brother.
Funeral services.will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Fisher
Funeral home in Middlcpott. Bill
Frazier will officiate and burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery, ·
Cheshire Friends may call at the
fu ral ~
Thursda
· 7
ne
me
Y everung,
to 9 p.m.

VMH
' ' approved
provider for
A etna services
•

, In commemoration of the draonatic sacrifice of four armed
forced chaplains during Worl~ War
VeteranS Memorill Hospital has
U, the Ame]ican Legion will been
accepted as an approved parobserve Religious Emllbasis Week, ticipating provider (ai:ility with
Sunday through Feb. 13.
Aetna Health Management Inc .•
· . According to Post 39 Chaplain - Hospital
Admi.nistniOr Scott Lucas
James Gilmore, Four Chaplains announced Tuesday.
.Sunday for the American Legion
As an approved provider of
Drew Webster Post No. 39, will be healtheare services, tlJc hospital
Sunday at- 9:30 a.m. at Sacred may be used by residents who 1re
Heart Catholic Church with Father insured under the Americli1 ElecWaller Heinz officiating.
uic Power Syste"' md tlJc Ohio
Legion officials and clergymen Retirement Sysrem. The effeaive
are planning special programs for starting date of the raci1ity pwticithe observaqce of the 50th annive(agreement between the hossary of the sinking of the USS pation
pital
and
the lll8llagCIIIent group is
Dorchester and the heroism demon· Feb, IS, 1993.
·
suated by four valiant chaplains,
Residents
should
be lldvised that
;I'hese four, a Jewish Rabbi, a Aetna is only offering
11 this time
Roman Catholic Priest, and two the open Choice Jnt'aial
Protestant ministers, calmly isr m . or11anlzation services to provider
covered
life-belt to American servicemen residents in the VelaiDS Memorial
aboard the troop transport after it Hospital service 11,ea.
'
was torpedoes on Feb. 3, 1943.
Administrator
I
that
They then stood calmly on the it is also his und
'ng
that
sinking ship, their arms around one
another's shoulders and their heads each member or die hospital's
medical Iliff is beilw co ••• IIIII by
bowed in prayer.
Aebla Heallh Manaa-t, IDe.,
offering each ali opponunit)' to
. The Daily SeatiDel
enter into individual ~ (IW'·

::.:::rill

!icipatins provita . .~-~~ for

IVWIIIII-_,
PUll•••• • .....,. an.nooa, Maday
Priday, 1n c-t IlL.~,· ~
Olilo by lba Ohio Vallay l'UIIobl..
Compuy/Maldmeclia 1119'.,~·
Oblo 46~':1 Ph. IKI'.I-ate6.
.....
.......
ai--.,,Oblo.

.,,

-........

·~~--Olato N~i\11....!•tie, Natl-..1

tall.., BI'IIIII!Mai

Nowu, 788 TliiN - . . ,
N.w Yen, Nft'lbrt.lOOIT.

·
By Tbe Alsoc~tecl Press
~oday is Wednesday, Feb. 3, the 34th day of 1993. There are 331 days :
lefun the year.
Today's HighligbtmHistory:
.·
Feb. 3, 1959, was ' 1the day the music died" as a plane crash near aear
Lake, Iowa, claimed the lives of rock 'n' ro~ stars Buddy Holly Ri~hie - :
Valens and J.P. "The o;a Dapper" Richardson
' ~
'
On this date:
....
. .
' :
In 1690, the first paper money in America was issued by the colou of ·.· :
~chusetts; the ·currency was used to pay soldiers tlghting a ~ar .. :
agamst Quebec.
.. 1
In 17831Spain recognized U.S. independence.
·
•:
In 1809, the territory of lllinois was created.
•:
I~ 1865, a confe~ aimed at ending the Civil War that included
President A1n1wn Uneoln 111d Confederate Vice President Alexander H .· :
Stephens took place on the Ri¥er Qo--. off the Virginia coul.
· 1
In 191~. the 16sh Amendment to the Constitution, povlding fer 8 fed- .., i
erallncome tax, was lllitled.
, •. \
,
,, j
do~_1916, Canada's original Parliament Buildings, in Ottawa, burned ~·
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•

niglllllid Sunday.

The record-high lelllptZ8!UI'e for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 63 degrees in 1890
while the record low was- 10 in
198S. Sunaet tonight will be at S:S3
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:37
a.m.
Arouad .tbe aatlon
A low-preasure II)'Stem produ~
scattered snow ~Y as It moved

Seoaal oa:jdru!s in the pet few
days ba..e bcea ilm:sliptcd by die
Meip Couu!:J Sberilt's DepantneiiL .

Aaliinlinc to a report from Jbe
dejwbaeat, oo Monday Bl 8:4S
a.m., 1lich8d .fiamc. u.m- Rwd,
~

- •·od•••"' -Rolle

143 in a 1992 TOJIIIliMIII &amp;i1ed to
mak Jbe cam:. He off Jbe
roadway Gl

ri&amp;bl slriking Jbe

-

elid ol die li*lbil. Liglit "''" i

wu listed to Jbe vehicle. Then:

- . . , injurir:s.
Oa TUesday at 3:30 p.m., Todd
MPo wJiq•sgh l.inie Jlocting, IIIII
Ruth I;. Myers, Myen Road,
Poowoy, cnllidcd 00 llc:trinB Rmd
just oft' Sihu Ridge. Aaxinfins to

A 101a1 ol S47,S37.JS ia 1992

re,c!!': ~ ':.1CC&amp;.b~

ty Recotdei.
Aa:o'lf 110 a IMe"s Jq11111
the IOIBI*'n a iw
ow:r Jbe
1991 rruipu of S4S,318.40 and
the 1990.,:::t.,otS43~10.
'The
m ol 1c:cap1s for
1992 is as follows:
Ra:udiilp $36,051.65; liliau..
ss.734; cucellatioas, $l.l 7s;
searches, $183; ud sundries

. - c:enifiel
:::S.:Iil1i'
.. .

H' ,

Licences issued

A song fest will be held Saturday at 7 p.m. at Faith Fellowship
Crusade for Christ Church, Route
338 in Antiquity. The Gospel Travelers, End Time Singers and more
will perform. Everyone welcome.
Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees
will meet in regular SCSSJOn Thursday at 6:30 p.m. al the Rutland Fire
Station. Public invited,
Star Graa&amp;e to meet
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will meet Saturday at 7:30
p.m. al ~ grange hall near Salem

'

the report, Moodispaugh was turning onto Betz,ing Road. Both vehicles were unable to stop on the
gravel. Moderate damage was liste,Sto Myers' 1986 Chevrolet.
.Moodlspaugh's vehicle, a 1983
Fold,~ light damage to the
grill. 1'bere were no injuries.
At S: 10 p.m. on Tuesday,
Sbaron Hausman, Pomeroy, was
uaveling west on Pomeroy Pike
and as she was going up hill she
reported the sun blinded her and
she went left of center and ·struck
an eastbound vehicle driven by
Erick Sams, ReedsVille. Hausman's
1979 Dodge and Sams' 1990 Toylila pickup were heavily damaged.
No injuries were reponed.

loose leaf pages so as to preserve
the m:onb and make easier access
to the p1111lic. These old records are
laJge llxl7 sheets in permanent
bound boots which go back to
1820.

Center. Potluck refreshments
(soup) will follow the meeting. All
members ·and candidate§ urged to
attend.
omcen to be elected
The Meigs County Fish and
Game Association will hold election of officers Friday at 7 p.m.
during the monthly meeting.
Dinner planned
There will be a smorgasbord
dinner at the Lottridge Community
Center on Sunday from noon to
1:30 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and
$2.50 for children under 12. Everyone welcome.
Women Alive to meet
Women Alive will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Clubhouse. Brenda Faul.li: will be
the devotional speaker. There will
also be a craft demonstration.
Refreshments will include a salad
bar.

DorA to meet
Disbict 13, Daughters of America, will meet Saturday at 1 p.m. at
the Chester Lodge Hall. Plans will
be made for the spring rally on
April · 3 at Logan. All members
urged to attend.

ICnDiFIMims

of fmanc:c ltateiKIIII fdel, 12
seardl or inGw
oa
fmmc:c st-mear{ ~IRS
lims files.. .
Ova- de ... 11 ,_s, u.aaIOD says dol
lils OM i•llbm:d
budJU
cacli yar elid to
lllierofilm old J«Gds, My sllclvin&amp; for honb, a pill-. cohinel,

A special and unusual event will
be pre sen ted at Eastern High
School Friday evening.
•
A display of student paintings
and sculptures, along with live
music performed by vocal and
instrumental soloists, will be held
in the school cafeteria. According
to. band director, Bill Hall, this il
the first time for a joint fine arts
venture at Eastern.
,
.''We .are ttying to create an ar:!·
gallery atmosphere," said Hall.
"The public can browse and enjoy·
the students' art worll: while music
is played in the biK:kiiiOIIIId.•
1
Eastern's art teaCher, Mrs. Kinl
Cooidi, bas been collecting Sllldent
work since Seplelllber in anticipar
lion of this showing.
In addition to the art work,
musicians from the Eastern Band
and Chorus will present solos they
are preparing for the annual ·solo
and ensemble contest. Music from
masters such as Handel, Quantz,.
Mozart and von Weber will be performed: Twenty student will be
featured on the musical portion of,
the program.
,
· The fine arts fair will be ope_R
from 7:30-9 p.m. on Friday
evening. There is no admission
charge.

ALL WOMEN'S
1!1 !1!1/\1\111 Ill'

beJ*

%
OFF

lbb, cbain ....... 5
Sllc bas
alsO iqJIIoed bOIIb .... .....

aBcdMIIIbci tciM•b
tJIIIIIir.
Sbe abo icpillll:d diM last ~
she llCCI 7 '
s ol deal

* ...

Units responds
to three calls
Units of the Mei1s Counsy
Emer1eaey Medical Service
rapoo.tel to dlftle calls fer assisbnlcml\

..,_
Al4:10 JLIIL Jbe M'if.4qlllllllir

I

•

c

..

•

Our:- Stylish Collection . . .
tncludes women ' s w:eS.tern boots, ankle boots 'and more

Tile Meip·Conaty Auditor's
Offic:c UIIOW ill die process of
~ Jbe 1993 Per• 11\.... l:y
Tax Form 920 to Meip C...IJ
VcacbL 11ae
*-ld lJc ·
011 •. " i · - · · 2 'r . . •eceipt
llld- doe
lalod lmlil:c
1

•-as

1• past Jear&amp;, lk allditor'l
1B Faa. 91.0

a:;; :
rao:t=JW.•=, e?*
lOA li?olfl
abe ... llcaJ !l• bJ de QloiD
D!la!.
ms o6 T•l'ioe dot doe
Alilk.. I Oftice ca m loJrlr:r Jill)office ... c
liar

I

.tllipel:
I

.

PICW/.\Y
• • •

Ad:lru.t~ill,

A marriaae license has been·
issued by MOJa• COUiiJy Probate vide dis aalriw. II is de
Court to Harry lldpr SrewM~, 37; bilil:y of rile tlqajC 5o lln&lt;e Panl
~lddlejlort, and Carolyn Jean 920 o&gt; 11 I I
so
Miller, :J9, ~
""-It~:&amp;...
:
. . . . . . . . . . . . u.i
~-··

at Picway Shoes. Right now. for a limited time,
these specially selected fashion
boots regularly a great
.
value from $19.99 to $).2.99 , are now 2 5'-t off.

.

I

I

•

G. .ols 21 Upper Ri¥81 Rd. !Ohio Rivw Plaza!

:=

Eastern to host ·
fine arts fair •

Correction
Rev. Robert Gibson will be the
guest speaker al the Four Chaplains
Dinner and Dance on Sunday at
6:30p.m. at the Middleport American Legion Annex . The dinner
begins at 6:30 p;m. followed by
Rev. Gibson and concluding with a
dance.
• The 10 a.m. Four Chaplains service, hosted by the Middleport
Church of Christ, is open to the
public. The evening din.ner and
dance is for members of the American legion, Auxiliary, Junior Auxiliary, Sons of the American
Legion and their guests.

IIIIi

3r

40s today, with sub-freezing high- .
temperatures confined to northern ·
New England.
:
Utilities in New York and New ·
Jersey set records for gas demand •
T~~y.
:
Temperatures were forecast in ·
the 30s and 40s in the central and :
northern Plains and Great Basin; :
40s in the Great Lalces region and ·
Ohio Valley; SOs in the mid- ·
Atlantic states and Pacific North- ·
west; 50s and 60s in the Southeas~ .
the southern Plains and most of ;
California; and 70s in the desert ·
Southwest and extreme southern :
Texas and Florida.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 79 at San ·
Gabriel, Calif., and Fort Laud- ·.
erdale Beach, Fla.

FASHION BOOTSI

4sa
•*•:;ra-

41

records from stored microfilm to

.

Tax forms in mail

Vttenns Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS •
Stacy
Tuppeu Plains; Alice
Walsh,
TUESDA DISCHARGES •
Geraude Stivas.

SoogFest

cqHCS,

" -..... aid .... 2,.9S6 clocu..e~del, 993 filw• e

meals
Sb'

slowly east across the cenual and
northern Plains. A high-pressure
system gave the Northeast relief
from piling cold.
Snow fell early IOday in Denver
and Rapid City, S.D. A snow advisory was posted for the northern
and cenlra) mountains of Colorado,
and snow was forecast elsewhere in
the cenrral Roclcies. Salt Lake City
got snow this morning.
• The system produced snow and
freezing rain Tuesday night over
the cenrral Rockies and pans of the
cenual Plains, creating hazardous
drivinJ! conditions in areas.
MOist air from the Gulf of Mexico pushed into the southern Plains,
and scattered showers an\1 thunderstorms were forecast for Texas and
Oklahoma. Rain fell early today in
San Antonio.
In the Northeast, where wind
chills dipped well below zero in
many areas early Tuesday, temperalt!res were forecast i~ the 30s and

Meigs announcements

Meigs County recorder's report

their ltlpeclive phyaciln aatica.
A llsli~ of VetCI'IIII Memorial responded to Soath Second for
Hqspltals medical SIBfr by special- Ne o Smidi wm - b Pit·
ty, physieiaa offtee llllhllel, ud edsov'*'.._
physiciu·telcpbone nlllllben haoe
1lic RD'Iad aais. M.B:OS t!;:
5
o Roe l7A fer~
been provideciiO the - clim:lcr
of the Aetna ~t group in m.. Jr. He- ai:J:IIso ~a'*'IIDIIIJS."'
the Wesaville offille.
.
Alll:s9 JLDL doe nwoy •
''We at Vctenal Memorial are aad Pomeroy F"tre Dcpartmeat
~
delighted that oiJr hospisal bas beea ,...,.••..,, 10 . . . . . ' •
deut
c.
West
Maia
Sbect.
Gaiy
accepted and approved.IO provide
these needed bealthcare ICfVica Araold -llbli 5o~ I 11
for residents in our - " . l..ul:as
com mente!.

, Hospital news

bond, speeding; Gale E. Wolfe,
New Castle, Pa., $460. physical
control of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs; Kimberly A. Jordan, Middlepon, $60, no operator's license;
and Donna K Martox, New Haven,
$460. physical control of a motor
vehicle while under the influence
of alcohol or drugs.
.
'

Deputies probe accidents

·-·

· :,

R.

McOond, MiddJepon, S42S and
a-.
-.ee days ia
pbysic.1 Qdtol !"a -1ldlide. wbile
udcc Jbe m O - ol 8lco'ol or
dJvp, $2S 81111 COltS, C'NildliiiJ

------Weather----Soatb-Ceatral Ohio
Tonight, clear. Low 25-30.
Thursday, sunny. High 45-SO.
Extended forecast:
Friday throuah Sundar:
Friday, fair. Lows in m•d-20s to

could podui:e 10111e snow Saturday

Middleport Court news

I

Filled

-~

The Dally Sentinel-Page_

PuoWGJ' MdcllapOrt, Ohio

'

Disabled advoc3te's manhandling raises ire

The Daily Sentinel

'•

Wedneedey, February 3,.1993

OPEN NIGHTS
AND SUNDAYS

�.

'
• ith_Cheathllm's prime-time offense,

Wed
Sentinel

Sports

J~nv1Ue77

At Jacksonville, Fla., the Seminoles waited for the charged-up
Dolphins to get their emotional run
out of the way, then wore them
down in lhe game's Iauer stages.
The Seminoles, playing without
injured point guard Charlie Ward,
fell behind 22· 7 before getting on
uack. Bob Sura led a 17-3 run early
in die second half thar put the game
away for Florida State (15-6).
Sura finished with 21 and Douj!
Edwards had 23. Nate Burrell htt
five three-pointers and led Jack-

sonvillc (3· 14) with 17 pciints.
No. 14 Seton Han 90
Providence 71
At East Rutherford, N.J., Seton
Hall broke a three-game losing
streak as Terry Dchcrc broke out of
a four- ~a mc shooting sluinp.
Dcherc h1t 10 of 17 from the field,
including 4. of 8 from three-point
range, and fini shed with a seasonhigh 29 points.
Seton Hall (16-5, 6-3) has won
11 straight Big East home games,
while Providence (9-8, 2· 7) luis lost
20 of its last 23 conference road
games.
·
No.17 Arkansas 91, LSU 79
At Baton Rouge, Lp,, Arkansas'
40 minutes of full-court pressure
wore down the Tigers and led to a
game-breaking steal. ,
Robert Shepherd stole Lenear
Bums' lazy inbounds pass and laid
it in with 7: 10 remaining to key a
J0-2 run that helped the Razorbacks (14-4,5·3 SEC) pull away.
No. 20 Marquette 69
South Florida 54
At Tampa, Fla., Marquette point
guard Tony Miller made all six of .
his field goal attempts- including ·
three from three-point range - as
the Warriors won easily. ·
The sophomore playmaker,
who's third in the nation averaging
8'.4 assists per game, fmished .with
16 points to lead four Warriors in
double figures. Damon Key score!!
14 points, Jim Mcilvaine had 13
and Roney Eford 11.
Marquene (16-2) jumped out to
a l0-2 lead and wasn't seriously
threatened thereafter. The Bulls (412) got within five points just once
at 16·11.
Other games
Syracuse closed the game with a
9·0 run to take a 60-57 victory over
Connecticut in a battle of two
teams that have fallen from the Top
25 recently. The H~skies (9-7, 4·6
Big East) had used a 14·0 run midway through the second half to get
back into the game, but got only
. two shots off in the final 2:43
against the Orangemen (13-5, 6·5).
Houston {11-5) lost its third
straight since reaching the Top 25
on Jan: 24, dropping a 65-61 decision to South west Conference
opponent Rice (12·5).
Curt Smith scored a career-high
38 points, the most for a Drake
player since Pop Wright scored 39
m 1981, as the Bulldogs beat Tulsa
96-88 in double-overtime.

By DAVE HARRIS
S.lillel C~atetP"wlnt
Scott Cheatham pourtd in ~3
points, including 10 in the final
1:30, to lead Wellstoa to a come·
from-behind 82-81 Tri-VaDey Conterence victory over the Meigs
~ .Tuesday nigbl at Well-

]liver Valley's girls' basketball
claimed two victories in 24
lloan, beating Southern 48-24 in
llacille Tuesday night after knock·
visiting w~ I..ocal59-47
nighL
. In the Southern game, the
bderl (10· 7), who scored two
(e"'er points in the first quarter
tU&amp; their hosts had in the entire
fldt half, got all but two of their
Jllltlers in the scoring column while
ieeinJ se11ior Beth Salisbury and
IIJPutm center Cindy Armstead
' tit eight points.each.
,........_ 's At' mee Mills led all
_,_..
with 10 points.
~ MIS no preceding reserve

:t'!r

• Tbe Raiders wiJ.J host South
loint Monday in their last home
poe of the season.

':

River Valley
(9-ll-23-4=48)
stead 4-o-0=8, Salisbury 4·
Meadows 3-0· 1=7, Meade
, Staton 1-1-0=5, Ward 2D-&lt;1-4. Metzger l..Q-1=3, Twyman
f.O -l s 3, Gilbert ,1 -0-0.,2,
~ ick 1..0-0=2. Totals -18~·30--'11
•
Field goals -19-46 (41.3%)
Tbree-pointera -' 1-~
1 Free thrOWII - 3-6
Rebounds - 39 (McCormick

l

9)

Alllsts -7 (Staton 4)
Steals - 14 (MtCormick 4)
T1rnovers- 21

f!1e Dally Sentinel

Page S.·

·

Lisa Spence led the Warriors
witb nine points.
- River Valley
(9-13-14-23=59)
Staton 9..0-6=24, Metzger 3-0·
2=8, Meade 2-0-1=5, Ward l -10=5, Twyman 2-0·0=4, Salisbury
1-0-1=3, Gi lbert 0-0·1=1. Totals
- U-1·12=59
Field goals- 23·56 (41.1 %)
Three-pointers - 1·6
Free throws- 12·24 (50%)
Rebounds- 13 (Salisbury 3)
Assists 3 (b Stato0 )
·.
DY
Steals-10
(StatonS)
Turnovers- 4
Warren Local
(lO·ll-11-14=47)
Spence 4-{)·1=9, Wentz 4·00=8, Elder 1·0-4=6, McCraw 2-01=5, Pierce 2..().1=5. Johnson 2·00=4, Tabler 2-0·0=4, Clark 1.01=3, Shrider 1-0·1 =3. Totals19..0·9=47 •
Free throws -9·17 (52.9%)

utes in the game.
The game was a costly one for
Phil Harrison's Marauders, as Brad
Anderson and Aaron Drummer
went down with ankl. e injuries.
Meigs. for various re~ns ; bad
only nine players dressed
The Golden Rockets (10-6, 10.
3) came out. the blocks fast and

St·orcboat·d
Col. ri. Col. South ss
Col. . Lindoa•Mt K. inlcy 64, Col.
B-47
'·
Col Marioa·Franklin 64, Col. lnd~­
pcnd..,..61
Col. NonhiJnd 58, Col. Brookhaven

In the NBA ..•
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUuUc DIYIIkln

L

Pd.

GB

NowY..tr :.............26 IS
New lcncy .........,_25 20
Orlando ..................20 19

.634
..5S6

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B01ton .. Mwoonouo"'''"2l
~ ..........17
ll&amp;lni ....................l3
l2

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CoL Wauanon61,CoL A cad~y !l
Col W-. 5161 Col WalnulRidp89
Col. Wea!land 66. Rcynoldabunl '!6

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9

.325
.216

12.!1

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CU!VELAN0 .......26 . II
A&lt;Wna ..................22· 21
Clwlaao ...............21 20
lndi... :................. )l 22
D&lt;wil..:...........- ..19 23
Milwaubc ........- •. 11 24

II

6.5
6.5

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.429

7
9
10

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Colwnbus 0~ Sl , ContinenUii 44
Covington, Ky. , .C athol ic 63, Cin,
LaSaUc 37
.,
Cratview 4l,Anlwerp 26
Cmoluville 66, Maysville 64

3~

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76

t•~

.S91
.512
.512

ClL E. Tocb 64, Cle. Kcmody 44
ae. Eut
Mulhall 53
Qe. ElieYiew ~adl. 71, Lake RidJe 20
Cl e. Hath•••r 'Browo $6,· CJe. An·
dzews4!

Col 4 iana Crat.vicw 14, E. hlinine

a.. H,y 61. a.. olomillo.a

Cle. La~o~nl 43, Hudson Waaem it...
stnc40
· .
. Co. Sl.
56, C.. Catholic 45
Qe.. VASJ it, Ak:rm Hobal 31
cte. w-. Toeh st. CJe. ~-W•
43
•.
QowolmJ 60,-38
CoL Acad'"'Y 53, lotannoth&lt; Chr. 32
Col. Brill' SS, Franklin Hu. SJ
Col. BroOkhaven 13, Col Northllnd

CuyMop Fa1J171, Alli.anc:o60

Cuyahop Hu:. 33, Rictunood Hta. 30
Day. D~t 19, Day. Jeff'Ctson 19 Cl .

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!loy. Cam&gt;U Sl, !.anon Moruoe 46
o.- 52, New Philadololtio SO (0'1')
E. Clcvoland Shaw 74, Panna ·vall.

Fcqe70(2on

Mldw•l DlvW.
Team
W L Pd.
Son An1011io ...........27 14 .6!9
Ulob ......................27 15 .613
Jk,w;ton ................ .25 II .Sil
Don"" ................... IS 715 .~
Minnoo&lt;u ................9 30 .231
Dollu .......................3 37 .075
P~llc

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3

12
17
23.5

Dhlol9n .

Fb....U................... 31 . 9
Ponland .................28 13
.SC.alo.-.. :.....__,,.21 14
I.A.
23 20

Western Re.CI"e 33

.TIS

Cli-.........

r..un ............

,. L.A.
22 '21
I Golden St~~tt ..........20
24
' Socnm.... ............ l6 715

9.5

10~

13
t6

l'utsday's scores

NO..Y..tr til!, WulriniJIOniOO
Allanl.llll, Saute 109
CLEVEI.AND 100, GolAioo s... 90
-IIS.IndioM 104
.

A1lanui 11 Miami, 7: I p.m.
CLEVELAND 'at Milwauk&amp;~, 1:30

auc:.,.,.s.

;•

•
••

•

lndi..,;

•'•

: Major college
, basketball scores
Eut

Boneless Chicken Breast

Mosld...

NewllaonoalWo 11, Huwo~ 76 &lt;on

Niapra 19, Bodfalo74
Scan Hall90, P:ruvidlmce7J
Siena 10, Ctnillu &lt;42
s,......oo,eo. in&gt;t57

1.. ,;·:;:~-~

We Gladly
Accept Your
Federal Food

A1bnaa 91, LSU 79
FloridaSt.92,1actfCIOIYillcTI
'

.:.. .. .·. :

·

Fuanan 6!, Samfool 55
M-69.S...thfloridaS4
New Odcana 19, W. Ken1ucky 80

. ..

stamps

•
~

;

,

I

•'•

Southwest

!looh..64

River VJeW 69, Sbtlidan 65
Rod&lt; HiD 92, lluffolo, W.Va. 70
R : 10~ 79, Windlllm 65
s.
s3. MWooi46
SekUla McKinley 11, Columbian• S4
Skywo67,Wooddlold46
·
Solm71,0wdon~
.
Sprina. Nonh 92, Huber Hq. Wayno
72
'
Spin,n.Jd N. 92. Wa)'M 72
Steubenville 7S, Pi&amp;1b1.1q WadnJ·
hOUM41
S~e~ubcn-dlle Cada. 61, T~ ·U
S.aw 90, aaclid S6
Sb
' c Sl. WaYdoa 31
SlndiMn67,Saleml6
Tallmadao 69. Ra_. 42
Tipp City 92, 8-41
To!. CanniiO, ToL BowabcrSS
To!. Chrialian 65, Tal. Emanuel 8'1"-

Bcrlia Hi11n4 76, S~n~bunl 66
Bethci·TIIO II, Hillobon&gt; 72
Btoc.t.CmoU 63, Teays V.U. 53
Briloii61,BJDObhbo46

U-l.calli.~SO

..

a..np;..l3, LaD... 63
Olano161, -~·c
Ow•; 'e 10. S. Poirl.12
~e61,1DR•4W

CINCINNATI (AP) .- Even
with a full roster, Cincinnati Reds
general manager Jim Bowden is
stiU looking for experienced backups.
On Tuesday, he signed freeagent ftrst baseman Randy Milligan
z-24
to back up Hal Morris. Because the
Fm throws - 2-7
Reds have no openings on their 4().
man roster, Milligan agreed to a
Aaainst Warren, the Raiders minor league conuact but was told
allook a one-point ddicit at !he he would be invited to spring trainatan of the tecond quarter and ing.
cftntually tied the ganie at 22 at
"If Morris goes down, we need .
... rtime before pulling away fo.r someone to replace him," Bowden
pod in lllc IIW)nd half.
said. "I also like the competition
1 Pacing the victory Cor the he (Milligan) will provide. 1 like
~ was freshman point guard
the idea that Chris Sabu has to look
lilllber Staton recOrded a team and back at Willie Greene, Bip Roberts
Jll!!fiOnal ~son - bigh 24 points, has to look back at Juan Sam,uel
-.ich came in part on .6-for-9 and now Hal Morris has' to look
llllootina from the foil! lme. She back at Randy Milligan."
. . die ilnly player in that pmc to
Samuel alSO' has signed a minor
tan Ill dolible nguna. . ..
league conuacL
.

Rorldag_old

.orange "Juice
1

-Gallon

•
I

WITH PRICES LIKE THIS . ..
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE?
PANTENE

Pro·V Shampoo
&amp; condltltJner
AU

.

.

cu.. Maoller61, !loy. Chamlnado-lull·

Deli Roast BeeF

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"
• CHILLED

72, Cin. Cltriltian 67

... s..

"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE" "CUSTOMER CHOIOI!"
RUSSER VA. BRAND HAM, WAMPLER-LONGACRE
TURKEY BREAST OR DtJUGHTIES

Southern
(S-6·8-5=24)
Mills S-0-0a10, Cross 2..0-0=4,
SlOVer 2-0.0-4, Manuel 1-0..0.2,
QalinJer 1..0.0.2, Codner o-o-1=1,
Moore 0-0.1•1. Totals - 11·0-

37

Cia. "'"""-Healthy 61, a.. Hupoo
•
Cia. Nooth- 67,Aololla 65
Cia. ......... 70. Millard41
CiD. Parceli-Muiaa 51, Cia. Roter
·-54
CiA. SL O....r4 ,4 4, Cin. Landmult
Chr. 42
Cia. Summh U, Cin. S.W.. Hilla 54
Cia. Tall ?6. c1n. Weiccm Hilk60
Cia. Win&amp;an Woodl J7, Cia. Olllt Inn.
S4
a.. w.- 76, Cin. 11. x..1.. 49
a..tmlk l3, Amanda.CJa «wll I
a.,.,... 61, Cam&gt;llt4l!t S6
a.. .u.m.n. Cle. Rhodoo"

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Dne

71

a.. ~w.. u , a.. w..,...
a..~W. I9, 1

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a.m.. ,..

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13-oz.

c.a.

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66. ... Jtlch·

c.a. .,

Col- 69, Col l6llliA 6! (01')

so

Rid=

w. ..-, llalan ~1.
W.Mualdnpn'n, N.., . .

60

Wattiaa Memorial.S3, Wor\hinatoa
IClll-•41
'
Wa..ty fO, Loanllla VaD. 4S
Walllollll.Mooioslt

w--.Brc.. !a,BI

I

er.SI

Arlin,... 51

W-'lloN. SS. - 4 1

w.....wa 1. 6t,Uppor

Wbiloronl '12. Oaawallilla 67
Wllii&lt;Ull 76, llllliar4 411 ' .
W'&gt;dtlltlo 41,.o - . Pallo 32
WllllamaJOua '12. Polldoy 57
6!,eano.milol9

x....
41

Y"""'

LibMy 66. Cooda4d

LU-

v...,. Cak&gt;uy 9~ Willo-IIID 71
Y...,.. Rayon It, Y-.. W-l!
v.,...Sauth92. v....,.a....,•t

lanoMIIa 73, CGtlloeull 59

,.,.....,.._Unl·

C..Cathollo6I,Ot.-N!)CL49
C.. C.W.~ II, ClL South 61
C..Eaot63,Cie.Maahall53
a.. at..rillo 92, C..ilay71
a..tw,tu
Jilomlolldy 59
a.. ~110,
'16."'""'
Clo. B. Todl61

"""""~· 73, Howland Cltr. 42
'
Vnm CO. 14, N~Yil)o.Ya:lr: 57
w. H-79,Za...m.R.Hc:nns

W-56,-..,43
Walafard IO,BeaDMDa61

47

Coori'&lt;IIIS!.-..4.5

8-

69

em. Eldllr 7!, an. McNid!olu 61
Hill~,.,

v...,..c;',..SI,Y""''. ~39

Transactions
Baseball
Amerlc:••t.e•aue

KANSAS CrJY ROYALS - Apoed
Mike Macfarlane, catc her,
on a ono-)eu contract.
NEW YORK YANXI!F.S - Apeed 10
lenni wilh Neal Heaton, pilchcr, on a miCARLAND ATHLETICS - Aa-1

to l.erml with Eric Fox, outficldlll'l, oa. a
minClt '-aue ccrunec.

SBATil..E MARINERS - Apoed 10 .
wi1h tt.uy Couo, outrlCldcr, on a

tc:rm1

ono-yeatccmtnc:t.

N1tlonal Luaue
ATLANTA BRAVES- Apee&lt;I Jo
tmm1 with Jofl Blauaer, lhoru:top; Kent
Merdlor, ph;hr. and Damon Bci'I)'hill.
cau:hw, ca OIW'-JUf QilltnCU:.
CINCINNATI REDS - A:::: lo

. tennl' with Randy

Milli&amp;an. firlt

an.

LOS ANOELES DODOERS AJf'I!Cid to termt with Ja.ly Reed, IIICond
buanln, en a me-yearcontnct.

PHILADELPIDA PHILLI ES AJIWCI 10 terms wilh Rlok.y Jordan, firlt
bucman, on a ono-ye.u contract.

Buketball
N1tlonal lukrtball Auoelatlon
NBA - F'UMICI Latty Johruon, Char-

J

~~ HorDIU forward. n.soo. for talci.naa
lwinJ at an opponent in a 1amo Jan 30
anc1 Illiah nomu, Dectoit PU:WIIll 111an1,
11.000, ,... failinJ 10 ..... the court in a
limoly mannor and Ulinl abua ivc la n·
after~ ojected from a pme Jan

636
793
860
858
932

905

913
848
921

CI.IM!LANil CAVAUERS - Aoti·
vatod John Willlama, forwud, fi'CID \h•

l0-d1y ccmnct.

cuonlina\ar.

2 - Sx IO's
6 - 5 x 7's
24 - Wallets
(2 Poses)

Children, Adults,
Families, Groups
$3.00 Setting Fee
$1 .00 Each Additional Subject
Balance $14.95 upon Delivery
Additional Portraits Available

Mill«-

Nadonal J:IOC~J _IAIIU4!

a.. P+ a 53, a.. Mo. llaallhy3!
C. . -~.O..Iopi8..,..41

ielnHocbyiAI~

'

.... Per DJ.-,def...-nan, \o :u.-.

tan.

'

All YOU CAN EAT
SOUP AND SALAD BAR
·AND HOT BUFFET BAR

,

DAIJ.AS COWBOYS - Roiaaip
Butch Davis, line CDIIcb, 10 dclcn~ive •
onlinator. AMounCDd NCII'I Turner wJU
Nnsll• 11 otr•aaive icoordin•tor and
...nod him ........ -.h. Nunodlfud.
liOn How:h oft'enli.... tina OOICh.
DETROIT LIONS - Named Hsni.
B\lllc:vah w-h.. IIOOI'Itiaa~ .
KANSAS CITY CIUEFS - Named
Aiu. &lt;Jibbl clfenliYD line coach.
• NEW YORX GJANrS - Named Ead
Leaa•~ def•nalve iin• eMch, Znen
Yanlian dtf.Wvo bleb eo~ch •nd AI
ooad&gt;.
PHli.AilELPIIlA
BAOIBI - S~
Bud Canon, dtlentiye coordinator, &amp;o 1

a.:_,
49.
a..

31

Color PortraitS

No Split Orders - Limit One Pa~e Per Subject

. F1&gt;0~ball
N,uonal Football Lat~M
CHICAGO BEARS -Nomad T""y
Wbe oJI'CNIYO Une eoadt, Bob Slowik ullllant OOKit 1nd Ron 1Umer otConP.•

PHtLADEIJ&gt;HJA PLYI!RS - Ao·
ouUodllob Wllltlo, dol..-.. llcm tha
Oeuqil ...
tutun. canaklendona and alii
him 10 Honhcy fll 1M
Amorioan
•Y IMI'!,
.
QUEBEC NORDIQUBS ~ s.. BW

-·

..

·I ~

•

NBW YOlK RANGERS - RooallM
- - d o l - . . . , l l c m l....
- .... &lt;~.,. ..........,llodtar.IMP.

• Cin. Madlmaot 67, Cin. ~
31
a.. llcAalty 51, a..Unullno 4l

Tuesday's action
Wellston 82, MEIGS 81
Belpre 38, Trimble 24
Vinton County 84', NelsonvilleYork 57
•
Alexander 64, Federal Hocking
56

SACRAMENTO KINOS - Plaood
Du..- Ca1uwcll, center, on the injurad.
li st. Siancd Hent)' Janw, forward , to •

=-:~41~R&lt;;J!!'Saud&gt;
a.. CAPIIQ, Da. Pall"
a..-. ss.a.. Low~aM 41

a.. - l l . a..Taylor 42

PA
819
1013
1147
1086
1147
llll
1144
1062
1049

(pllowed a 10-game unbeaten.
string.
•
During those streaks, one ~
remained constant: the Flames ~
level of play.
"It was a funny 20 games,"
said AI Macinnis, back in lllc Jine.:~!
up Tuesday after a 34-,ame&gt;ll
absence with a hip injury. 'Th&amp; ..;
ones we were winning, we were··&lt;
getting the bounces and couldn't do :
much wrong. When we were losing, they were scoring with .: &gt;l
minute left in overtime and. we.Jl
weren't getting the bounces."
·1;
...)
·f!

fQP

Ho&lt;key

..,.

Oail Hilla 71 , -

L PF
I 1087
6 1047
7 1115
7 1010
9 1129
9 1132
12 1021
13 875
14 867

In tbeTVC ...
Belpre ................. l2 1 881
Wellston ............. IO 3 885
Vinton County...... 9 5 918
Alexander ............. 8 5 850
MEIGS ................. 8 6 1000
Miller.,..... :............ 7 6 811
Nelsonville-York .. 3 10 800
Trimble .................2 11 699
Fedtllll Hocking ... ! 13 748

on a minor leap contract.

Amalla02,-3l
A.-Or. :12,- &lt;IUfo 9

Clil: Mt. -

Team
W
Belpre ................. l5
Wellston ............. IO
Alexander.............9
Miller... .............:...9
Vinton County......9
MEIGS .................8
Nelsonville· York..4
Trimble .................3
Federal Hocldng ...2

nor loaDc cmtna.

lwo-pu IDntiHL

Glrll

35

TVC varsity boys' basketball standings

ta lenni wilh

UVw-llilt.

v...m. 61 , Houaon49

Cin. Colanin 11, Cin. W•lmltiUUI 53
Cia. Country Day II, Cin. Lock.J1nd

(0'1')

lb.

Vondalia B-72,Sidne)'66

Calgary won its third straighr
By DA V1D GINSBURG
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - The game Tuesday night, using a 38Calgary Flames can certllinly sym- .save effort by goalie Mike Vemon
pathize with the Washington Capi· and a late breakway goal by Robert
tals, who have played rather well in Reichelto ·beat Washington 6-4.
their las~ five games and don' t have The Flames' current streak follows
an 11-game winless skid, which
a victory to show for it.
'

44

Y...... Sotlth49, Youn~~!l

.

To!. Libbey l7, Tol. Woodwanll5
To!.- 4!5, Tol. Woollo 31 ·
To!. St.l'nncia 45, Tol. Soatt.W .
Tri·Yallof IO,JIIUlo 6.!
1'liad 65, - . , - . . ,
Triwayll.-52
T..weoo~.-'ll,N-64
Tuacan- Cath,42,-Seio40
Twinalotua69,W. OwupS!
'

C...,.74,MI&amp;64
Cmoll ~. Ltmo&amp;-Mcwoa46

Cin.

W'oJlianl69,1AAina1Gn 54
WillouJI&gt;by S. 66,1-lonl..U. 47

w.-

39

Canadian teams execute sweep in-short NUL slate ~-

V~ Chr. 43, Howland Ou-. 30
Wunnville •s, Mapll H11. 36

Ro.-s.t.euy.,.. v.n. au-. 15'

B....a.tdlf,Badpo53
B""*',.71 ;A.,...41
a-,.~ 11, Lilbon- 59
CaJvon,Qu. 92, W'dJo.HillChr. 71
c.nat .,............ l9. Foir6ol&lt;l unJ..
52
.

•

(0'1')

PymatWUns Vall. 19, Fairport 10
l.aveMI Southeast 11, Mantua Crat·
woqd61

(2on

49

Tualaw ll. B. C"""" :!0 (0'1')
yPper Atlin&amp;ton 41, We~t.villc S, 43

WCIOI&amp;Cr69, Wadlworth !18
Wonhin
Chr. 56, Wcllin

TVC game, which saw the host Goldo ·Rockets •2.
win 82-81 in a torrid nnisb. (PIIoto by Catby :•
Edwards)
.

SCRAMI!LE - A Meigs player and a Well·
stan player bit tbe floor in a mad scramble for
the loose basketball during Tuesday night's

....u

49

Adlilp 60, Bedford 29
Aknan Ellol60, A.kJon Ccn.·Howa 59

·

n.

Pooumouth E. 92, Symmco YoU. t;l
Parumouth W. 65, Mdlermou NW 60
Proclorvill• Fairland 64, Coal Gnwe

•

RiceM.-61

Akmn Gufidd 61, Akmn tc..........a
Akmn N. 67, Afftin FiJoOtme 63
Alaonder 6!, FodaU Hocldn&amp; S6
Alhlalitlla l9, 0..0VIl7
Aal&lt;ulitlla 73, M«.U..O 60
Alhllkla St. John S3, Athtab~o~la
l!qcwood51
· A_.....,.Piu:h.!4, Y'!'!'J· Eatt42
Davia IJ7, New Miami 60
Beachwood 71 , Colurnbil64
S.•...... 49, Sprin~ Soooh 41
Bellaire St. John 92, Weirton (W.V1.)
MldCIMI72
Belpre 31, Trimble 2A
Benjamln Loaan II , Waynufield·

Reds acquire
Milligan from
Orioles

~60.Pl,.,ouU.49

Nanac Fa idea SO, Sandy VaU. 39
Nonralk. St. Paal68, S. Ccntnl41 ,
()ranee Ott. 47, Mcdinl FU.1 Bapt. 32
Oa.awa-Glandorf 45, Bryan34
Port Oinlaa II, Qyde 43
Rocky River Ma~ifu:.t 61, C'IPcland
Hu. JO
Sandl&amp;lty Pezkins 49, Oak Harbor 29
Shcowood FairvieW 72, Pt.uldin&amp; 21
. Spenoaville S1, K1lida 43
Stronprillc !16, Drccknil.le•:J
Swantat 77, McnlpC!Iier 31
'lllomao Woothin&amp;IGn SO, Nowadt 47
T1110 o1Life63. New Albin)' 41
TuiiCinwu Vall. 74, Akron Manch·

(01')

Boys

I

Milfanl •7, Cin. Sycamore 39

Poland 55 , Campbell Mcmorid 53

·basketball scores ·

Sta

36

P,in.o&lt;ta Woodridae 59, Moa•d«ell
Pickcrinpn 63, Thomu Wordlinp
ll
.
Piquall, W. Camll1&lt;1n 41 (0'1')

Ohio high school

•''

tl:'.''h.s~~

Medina Bucbye l2. C.. I.uth..,. W.

6!

Dd'&gt;ul6!. SL Loui&amp; 63
DnD 96. Tu~a u (l on
lllinoil St. 64.,lnd1ana St. 41
Miehipn 13, Michigan St. 69
SW Miuauri St. S4, W'iehiu St. 51
St. Bonavt111111n164, Naue Dame 61

~

ManalieldMadioon46,0rMUe43

Puma Padua 68, Garfield Hta. Trinity

Midwest

•'

LyJUihuttt Bna~h S7, Richmond Hts.

ldugiNlU 88, San~y St. Mary's 36

New B01t01'17l.lronton St.JOKph 55
Nonlonia 7S, O~rlicld Hu:. Sl
N01thridge 81 , Miltott·Union 47
Norwood 63, Glen Estc 44
Oak Glen, W.Va. S4; Edilon S. 53
OU.wood S8, 0ft1Cnevicw 53 (OT)
Od'otd Talawanda !19, Middletown
,F&lt;nwid&lt; 56
.
PaincwiUc Harvey 82. Jeffenon 80
,
Patne&amp;VUle Riw:nidcSt, Connc.m 48 .
Panna 63, Lakewood 46

' . South

Ala.·~ 61, Tanplo Sl

S!

J-litliiSinawa VaU. S9. Union City.
Ind. 52
.
Add
O.mttMllc...,
M....,;, Mi. 65,E..._Si
Mourn Vernon. 76, Fnnklin Jill. 60
N. Adams 81, Eutem Drown .S2
N•poi..., 116, Aochbold 6S (2 on

.
llllnballon T/,l.oJvlo, Md. 61
Navy S6, Amiy 3;

FRESH NECTARINES, PLUMS OR PEACHES LB. .. 99C

49

MiddleiDwn 72, Faididd 56

! !2 'l!,l.I2,,Nmtrr= 71
I

Huron 60, Milan Edilon ~9

K.inJ'• Academy 31, Elyria FU1t Bapt.
2S
.
LUowoad 4l,BCdfonl 37
Lima Sl, Findlay 36 '
Lia1lll T~~nple Chr. JS , Bcumlle 24

Minto Juaction 67, Cadi&amp; (i()

1

&lt;Joorao WuhiniJIOniOS. Ru..... 100

.

Hudlon 61, Aurora20

MataQitha Chr. 39, 0hio Dcd71
Marietta 90, Cambridge 74
Marion Calh. S4, Tree of Life 41
M..U.. FcnJ 63, SL CJaim.ille 62
MaumooValLS4,DetUvillelO
McDonol&lt;l76, Mothowa 65
Mcadowbloot 43, Buckeye Trall.fl
Medina Fint Bapc. 74, Onnae au. S9
Middlel'uold Canlinal 12, NewboHy SD

I

Bollon U. 71, Holmo 69
Dai1nloo.M lOS. Vcanant73

Thompson seedless Grapes

U.S. INSPECTED WAMPLER/LONGACRE

"s..- 1:30 p.m.

ClUaao I! LA. Clippoft. ID:lO pm.
thd at L.A. Uten, I 0:30p.m.

lb.

HillWd 43, MaryMlle !4
llill&lt;op Sl, nn... 11

LoWville Aquinu 69, Miac:rva 6S
Lowellville 63, MinenJ. Ri~gc S9 (01)
. , Malve:m 61, R.idacwood 57
M..wlcld SL FeteD 7l, RidgedaiA 4!
Mapiowood 53•.1Anlo....., 41

Thunday'o pmes

.

Hamihon Badin 63, Cin. Pum:ll Mui·
m2S

Louiavillc 69, UniOntown Lib 60

Golden Staloet New Yock, 7:30p.m.
S..alo 11 N... J_17:30p.m.

!!;

, RED OR WHITE

. """66
Li"""' OniM 63,
Limallalh 78, Allen E. 4i

took a 22-11 lead· with 34 seconds drilling a three pointer to make it a for 54%, including fO!Jr of nine
left in the period P.n a bucket by 75-68 with 4:07 left. But the from long range. Meigs cubed in .
Brad Spencer. Eric Wagner cut the Marauders toOk a seven point (77- on 19 of 28 from the line fll' 68'll&gt;.
WellstOn advantage to 22-13 when 70) lead when Jay Cremeans hit a Meigs had 20 turnoven, 11 llteall":
he canned a 13 footer with 17 sec- ·to-foot baseline Jumper with l :S2 led by Johnson with four. Cre-1,
onds left
left.
means also had five blocked shots•
The Golden Rockets took a 36The Marauders let Wellston · fortheMlnuders.
18 lead with 3:51 left on a three back into the game when they
In the reserve contest Meigs lost-.
point play by Chad Stevison. But missed four straight free throws, to Wellston 61 -57. Scott Peterson•
the Marauders carne storming bjlck, and a bucket by Cheatham under- led Meigs with 14, Travis Grate
two straight buckets by Trevor · neath ,with 28 seconds left cut lllc added 13, Benny Ewing 12. Other
Harrison, a three by Aaron Dnm\• Meigs lead to 79-78. The Maraud- Meigs scorers included Jerod HiU
mer and two straight buckets by ers turned the ball over on the with nine, Brett Newsome added
Jay Cremeans cut the ~ocket lead inbound pass and aftu Marauder seven and Jason Hart. two. Brett~
to 10 (38-28) with 1:32 left Bobby foul Cheatham gave Wellston the Fink led Wellston with 24.
·
Johnson'sbucket with five seconds lead by hitting two free throws with
In other TVC actiOn BeliR sur-,ry
left cut the Wellston lead to 38-31, 17 seconds left .
vived Trimble's slowdown game to"
but a very questionable foul call on
Another Meigs turnover gave post a 38-24 win. The Golden··
the Maraudeis put WeHston at the Wellston the hall, and the Maraud- Eagles Jed at the half 14-2. And''
line for three free throws with 110 ers fouled Jamie Lambert. The Vint.on County defe.ated Nel-, 1
time left on the clock. Brett Fink freshman calmly hit both free sonvtlle-Yorl:. 84-57.
.
'
hit all three free throws and the half throws to give Wellston a 82-79 . Meigs will travel to Federal b
ended with Wellston on top 41-31.
lead. After Meigs missed a three- Hocking Friday . Wellston will
Meigs continued !heir comeback pointer with three seconds left, tmveltoNelsonville·Yorii::Friday. ~
in the third per!od outscoring Well- Cremeans hit the follow-up shot ·
ston 28-14 m the period. Todd Dill but time ran out
MEIGS
(13-18-28-17::81)
'
~
tied the game at 41 for the MaraudCheatham led all scorers with
ers with 5:10 left in the third period 33 points, and added 14 of the
John llentley 3-1-7=16, Eric'·•
and after a steal Dill gave the Golden Rockets 40 rebounds. In Wagner l-1-4=9, Todd Dill 2-0- ,
Marauders their first lead of the the end the big 6-foot· 7, 240- 3=7, Aaron Dl'ummer'1-1.0.5,Jay '
evening five seconds later. Meigs pounder was just to strong for Cremeans 6..Q.O=J2, Trevor Harri-."
increased their lead to 59-53 on a Meigs. Spencer and Hendershott son 10.1-4=27, Bobby Johnson 2- · ~
Bobby Johnson free throw with 30 · joined their teammate in double O.l=S. TOTALS-:z5.4-19=81 ...
seconds left, before Brad Spencer figures with 10 points each. Wellhit a bucket off the offensive ston hit 29 of 68 from the floor for
WELLSTON
boards with six seconds left to cut 43%, including· four of 14 from
(Zl-19-14-:Z7::8:Z)
:~
the Meigs lead to 59-55 heading three point range.
Steve Hendershott 2-2·2=10; ·
into the fmal eight minutes.
Trevor Harrison had another Steve Radre 2..().0=4, Chad Stevi· 1
The Marauaers took the lead to outstanding game for Meigs with don l..0-2oo4, Jamie Lambert 1-1: 1
ten points with 4:23 left in the 27 points, while Bentley and Cre· 2=7, Brett Fin~ 3-J-3,.12, BracC
game when Dill hit one of two free m~ had suong games for Meigs Spencer 4-0-2=10, Scott~
throws with 4:23 left in the game. with 16 and 12 points, respectively. 12-0 -9=33 . TO:I'ALS- 25·4-·
.
But Steve Hendershott started the Meigs hit 29 of ~4 from the floor 20::81
Rockets on the comeback trail by ·

Orahun 4 3, Sprins. Nonhwestcm 39

&lt;on

Libaty Cht. ·u. Xatia Woodrow Wil·

.. Dollu, 1:30 p.m.
Dc:nvor ll U&amp;ah.. 9:30p.m.
Mi&lt;-.. .......... 9:30p.m.
cil&amp;o. t0:30p.in.

-

'•'

lb.

Mil-

p.m.

'i

·

Kirtland 4S, Orand Vall 44
Lake Ridge 71, Southwestern 53
Lak:ou 11, Cin. Sycamore 63
l..dll~ 77, Tn:ntM Edsewood S6
Lcdg...... 70; Pe.ey 44
.
· ~ 60, So.&lt;. . . Loeol54

OwlaM ll ~jl~~·· 7:30p.m.

..

B - 38
·Col SCad! 79, Col. Eutmoot 42
CoL WalnutRldao59,Col. Wootl2
Col WCIIIland 51, Rcynold•burt 36
CoJiin• WNtcrn ROJetvo 44, New
LON;Ion42
C....lfy 45, Lldian Vall. 38
Dublin 61,1Anuoier 40
Edcm S4, Fa)'CIWI41
Edt...., 60, Stryl&lt;cr 57
ElliLa 63,1Jina Sbawnoc 39
Elmwood Sl, GiboonbwJ 46'
El~ Open Door 33, Akmn Elmo 28
Faintow '12. Ptuldma 11
Fayaaeville 71, Calvary Chr. 44
Pod I"""" go l!, BIU!iu., 47
P.,. RocoYity41, SL Honry 38
Fnmont St.~ SJ, Fc.toria 4S
GaJC~ Mills Gilinour 49, Clc. Beau·
'
mcw45
_

K"'""" 79. Onnao49

Wednesday'• pmes

I

f llnklin 18
Col. L indcn· McK i.nley 39, Col.

Howland 71, YOWla- Mocmcy Sl
Hubbard til, NewtOn Falll 42
Hut~tinpn90, Manchcaer 64
hanmll, Otahire River Vall. 67
lack10111 76, PW.t Pleuant, W.Va. 67
John Olatn 61, MorJon 63

SanAnlonio Ill, New Ieae)' 93
l.A. cu_. 112, PIIOIII!x 10&amp;
Od~n.do' ftO, LA. I...akcn97
Minn-104,l'olllud91

.
Col Ccntemial 61 , Col Wheulonc 34

CoL l!u1 71 , CoL Milllin 33
CoL lndcpmdcncc 74, Col. Marion· ,

Giron! IS, W. Bnnch 64
Graham 14, fairlawn S5
Oranvillc 59, ~ina Hu.-34
Croon 92. Akron Spz!nsfield 69
Greenfield McCl.ain 56, Whitc:oak !1
Greenville 74, Troy 36
Grewe Cily 74, Col. Briw 60
H;~iltDn &amp;0, Lima17
Homilton Twp. 83, Lopn Elm 68
Hcalh 62. New Albany S3

3.S
4

.613
.667
.535
.512
.4.55
.311

64

E. UYC!tPOOl69, Wmtcnvi1Je.57
Elyria F"111t B•pt.. 1 1, Kina'• Academy
l2
.
Fairbanks 72. bcorafr )tiVcnidc fJJ
FairmCliU 72, Fairborn SO
Filher CaUL .5.5, Berne Union 4.5
Fort Frye 56, Shmandoah SS
l'ruddin l2. Minnllbura 49
Freeport Lakeland Sl. Glftwiy 39
FronU. IS Hmnibal River 60
Oatcl Milll Gilmour 62, Hudson

WESTERN CONFERENCE·

•

a

Cifl. St. Unula 41, Cin. ldeNII:bOla
.
.
Cia. Wain,. Hi1113l, Cin. Tuq&gt;in 2l
Qo, Wood wud 62, Cin. W&gt;llww 41
a.. w,..runa 72, Cin. Jndion Hill23
CircleWle 49, Miami T- 30
Qc. Adams S4, Clc. lthodot 43
06. Collinwood 73, Qo. Sc:alth 36

21

Sl

s

21
:14

'11

,.

Ctnlral Dlvldon
au..ao ..................29 1s .6!9

Reserve game - Warren Local
25, River Valley 23
Scoring leaders - River Valley (8-8): Armstead - 8.

i

The win for Wellston overshadowed a brilliant comeback from lhe
Marauden after Meigs (8-9 overall
8-S TVC) fell behind ill the ~
period by as many as 18 points. But
the final two ll9l! half quarters was
Ill Meigs, • the guest team was
able to bold a lead by as much as
10 points ~th just over four min-

'\OIL

River Valley girls defeat
Southern, Warren Local
in games 24 hours apart
1a111

rt, Ohio

Wellston comes from behind to hand.Meigs 82-81 defeat

Michigan, Arkansas
~mong Top 25 victors
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
.• In the never-ending battle for
nltional respect in college basket·
ball two teams with dominating
big 'men ani doing exactly what
tl)ey have to do in thei.r q~est to
reach the Top 25 - wtnnmg the
tough ones.
The teams are New Orleans and
George Washington; the big guys
are Ervin Johnson and Yinka Dare.
Johnson, a gangly 6-foot· ll
center, had 27 points and 15
rebounds as New Orleans beat
Western Kentucky 89-80 and
stretched its Sun Belt Conference
lead to three games.
Dare, a ·burly ?· footer With a
body like Shaquille O'Neal's,
scored 20 points and made 10 of 15
shots from the field Tuesday night
in a wild 105-100 dciuble-overtime
victory over Rutgers.
In the Top 25 on Tuesday, No. 7
Michigan edged Michigan State
73·69, No. 12 Florida State beat
Jacksonville 92-77, No. 14 Seton
Hall defeated Providence 90-71,
No. 17 Arlcansas downed LSU 91·
7~ and No. 20 Marquette beat
South Florida 69-S4.
. George Washington (13-4)
IJ1liled 79-77 with just under two
seconds left in regulation, but Dare
caught a· fullcourt pass from Bill
Brigham and converted a layup at
thebuzzer.
.
No. 7 Michigan 73
Michigan State 69
AI East Lansing, Mich., Chris
Webber had 22 points and 11
rebounds as Michigan extended
Michigan Stale's home losing
streak to four games. The Waiver·
ines (17-3, 6-2' Big Ten) never
trailed in the game, but they also
never led by more than 10 against
the 25th·r;mked Spanans (11-6, 3·
5).
·
No. I:Z Florida State 91

, February 3, 1993

j

ii:2)'" ,_

Uadur, forwml,to Hautaa ollhe '--"

,

The quick, euy way So oolorful dloorallng aohemea

'fllhout obJiallonllllle plint
odora. For llllllllrlor ......

.........

PICKENS
HARDWARE
W.VA.

DAILY 11 A.M. UNTIL CLOSING
NOW OPEN SUNDAYS AT 8 A.M.

Sonya.'s
Country 1(itclien

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3rd St.

R•clnt

949·2324

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Pega 6

The Da!ly Sentinel

•u--\

Weclnelday, February 3,

Pomeroy-;:-Middleport, Oh.lo

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· edneaday, Februa

Pomeroy-Middle

3, 1993

: ~. · amilton's-buZzer shot gives
·i :s Lori Hamilton's field goal
mpt hit lhe basket Tuesday at
ne Ceater, lhe buzzer wont
linglhe end of lhe game. For
ew seconds, silence filled Lyne
let as lhe ball hcsitated.IIYflllld
lhe rim, and lhen felllhrough.
" Then a roar went up as lhe ofli·
declared lhe shot was okay and
University of Rio Grande Red·
men dislodged Shawnee Swe
iversitx from Mt 'p ld iii the
.Ohio Confmoce With ·a 71-69
, also breakinJ lhe Redwom·
. · ~ successive stnng of losses to
~Bean for the past five yean.
" "llhought it w.as all over•." an
·~hausled yet relieved Hamilton
9jid ~terward as the fonner Gallia
-A:cademy High School standout's
shot gave Rio Grande lhe
"I can't believe it bap·
I was watching it roll
and roll around and praying
· 1go in."
Her achievement topped off a
·
conll:st !hit became

OF

orr

THE
J
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I LMTI'w mt
1 CCUON AND tiD
I . ·.ADDITICIIIAI,.
. I PUfiCHAII .

~---------·

160Z.
PKGS.

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The Dally Sentlnei-P e-7

rt, Ohio

·=
•

Redwomen top spot in MOC . :

more heart-stopping when club. HamiiiOn, who pla)'i:d all but
Shawnee St1111'1 Jc:noi Wcuelllllk "' three minutes, notched 23 ~ints
two free throws with 33 seconds and 12 teboullds of the team s tOtal
left to tie t1!e score. The Boars of 35, but was paced by Wessel,
camo biiCk from a 12.-poi!IJ deficit who rued in 22 points and bniught
earlier in lhe w:nnd hill to Slay in down 11 boards.
the game - w.bat the ,observon'
Tb.e Bears starte!l of( wi.th a
WQUld c:aD allllllbumer.
handful of lelllative leads, but con"The pme was everything we .sccutive thrce-pointm from Gena
billed it up to be," Redwomen Norris and Michelle Crouse around
mentor Dave Smalley said. "We the IS·minute,!lliJtof. lhe~half
had two great 108J11S playing their · spurted the Rildworoen onto !heir
hearts out. I have no concords · first big·lead of 12. The visiiOrs
about how it wu played, beca111e answered bac:k after a period in
what it boiled down to wu our kids which th~y were held down by
wm looking forwald to lhi$ pne. ineffective shooting and Rio
They went down the ~~ with Grande:s defen~. and were .sue·
centidalce and a look m theD' eyes cessful m narrowm~ lhe margm to
that said, 'we're going to win iL' nine at die intennisslon. ,
My bat is off to them."
Rio Gnmde remained in charge
Smalley credited the effort to mostly through the second period,.
the "posse" - his well·honed but Shawnee State•s· dOJI!ed
bench, Which tui-nod in a balanced · offense whittled away lhe margin
ped01'1111111» ill the primary areas 10 after lhe Redwomen again bit a
miuch a •imilarly concentrated higb of 12. Both teams' wills intenauaclt from Robin Hgeli·Smith's sified in .the final momenl$ to the
. •·
.~
point where the Bean trailed by
four (69·65) witlr more than a
minute lefL.Fouls called upon Rio

Grande translated into free lhrow
opportunities for Shawnee State,
and when officials whistled Rio .
Gl'lllj!e forward Tricia Collins at
38 leCO!Ids, Renee Walls lllSsed in
two at line to cut the· score. Five
seconds later, Crouse was called
for fouling on Wessel, who netted
t]Nomore to deadlock the score.
With the ball back in Rio
Grande's bands, Norris' patiently
took it down court, ignored the
clock's ineltol'ablc march to the 10.
second mart, found an open slot
and dished the ball inside, where it
wasquicldypassed offtoHamilion
for the winning~
~Our goal IS to get the ball
inside," Smalley commented. "It
was a key, point in our game and it
drew a lot of fouls, but it's wbat
we've tried 10 establish Ibis season
-if we get our inside g&amp;llle going,
then we can worry about' our outside game."
·
. Smith said she was "really
pleased with our kids because they
played hanl,and they have nothing ·
to be ashamed of. It was the ldnd of

game that was down to lhe wire from the three for 3Z percent) and ~
and JOing to be decided atlhe last 1 lhe Bears COIIIIeCtM on 26 ol S7 for ;
second. Rio G1811dc's an exception· 4S.6 percent, including four
13 :
allealll, and if this is lhe pne !hat on lhe outside for 30.8 pc2CenL Tbe :
will decide the MOC champi· visitors also led at the line wi.th I.
onship, thal.'s lhe wa~has to be." 68.4 percent ( 13-19) to Rio ~
Smith's injury-ri
team suf.
Grande's 61.1 percent (11·18).
fered 26 DlmO\Ien to Rio Grande's
Rio Grande improved to 21-4
21, which she felt was lhe key to and 9-1 in the conference and will
the Redwomen's advancement all host Mount Vernon Nazarene .,.
throughlhegame. ·
Thursday at7 p,m. Sha~ Stale ~
"But really, if you look at the (16-8, 9-2) is at Cedarville SIIIIU'· ;:
slats, everything was pretty even," day.
'•
Smith added. "'ur ldds kept their Box score: . •
~
composure, made some nice plays
RIO GRANDE (71) - Tricia ;!
to get back in lhegame, and stayed . Collins, 0-1~ 1; Stephanie Gud()rf, :l
after iL ~
. .
1-2-0-8; Lori Hamilton, 7·9·23; :
Hamilton was followed m h1~ Gena Norris, 4-3·1-18: Michelle 1•
scoring by Norris with 18 and Kim Crouse. 1·24-8; Kim Sowen, 5-1- :
Sowers, whose defensive play was ().13. TOTALS 18-8·11·71.
~
praised b.&gt;: Smalley for its. con~·
SHAWNEE STATE (69) - '
Ieney, With 13. Crouse added SIX Jenni Wessel, 8.0.22; Robin Bugg, :
assists.
6-3·15; Joy Salyen, 2.().4; Tiffany ,
Robin Bugg fired in IS points Clayton, 1-14-S; Annie Mains, 3· ~
and eight of Shawnee State's. 37 1·0.9; Brandi Rose, 1.()-2; R!IDCC :
rebounds, whlle Walls wu crodited · Walls, 1-2-4-12. TOTALS 12·4· ~
with 12 poiniS.
.
·
From the floor, Rio qrande was
Halftime score: Rio Grande :
41.3 percent (26-63. e1ght of 25 38, Shawnee State 19.
:

or

13-69.

:

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•

When you buy
•
five (5) packages, any size
(except trial size), of Luvs Phases, ·
Bounty, Charm in or Pampers Phases and
a $j5.00 purchase of any combination of
sheets, pillowcases or towels (any brand).

.. -M·

$~ OO.Rr,taaul o.ou·
~,.

•••

BONELESS

EVANS

Farm .$
Sausage

9LB.
·ROLL

Chuc.ks·
Roast ·

ony liB (I&gt;ICIPI orili liB) Ill LU'IS I'IIISit. Bounoy, Chlnnln. or Pornpen Phases 1nd
ihe Cllh rogisllr rt£Oipl (dllld- Jlnuary 11. 1113 ond Ftbruory 20. 111113)
si1owlnO 1$15.110 ,..-Ill ony c:omirinltion oi shelll, p i -.or rowels (any
Dl1nd) lnd iiliS roqultOCI ewtiiiclte.
P""' 011H my $3.011 relu!ld io:

LB.

Pork·
Roast

LB.

SCORES - Rio Graade center Lori Hamilton (~3)
between two Shawnee State players, lncludinf Al!nie Mains
during Tuesday night's MOC game at L)'lle Center, wbere tbe
~;=~~~-:::~~71-69. Hamikon finished with 13 points, includlnz

( ~!ttl

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II I IIIII II III I IIIII
"'" I I I [ .1 I I I .I I I I I I c1:. I I I I ·I I

LB.

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c

PIQ"' ••~mpH

%

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,llwfldlie ~~ ~~ ~IIIO"'t'111'4' 111ai110
'

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WttiTe SALl $3.00 REFUND
P.O. ~!!. II 91
.
Clinton, lA S2736

baskeL

W to keep major hil;tting,
llill~··laaa~ regulatio~s f()r 19.93

MIOIHI )

OTY

IOS,ON STYLE

Breasts

.

: . :II i II ! I~ Ii i II II~~~~~~
I

'

Split Chicken

Comtng
February 12

WHITE SALE $3.00 REFUND OFFER BY MAIL
EncooSid 1111110-- Codo (UPC) l'l!ftbOIIIiom ony iNI (I) po&lt;Qget,

\PIInt l rliU ;IN!ty- PI Dill'.......,~ M I COIII()IIII n

TYSON • HOLLY FARMS

•

••

•
0

In an ·auempt to persuade lllOnl

hunters to tali:e advantage of the
two-deer program, pennils will be
offered throughout the autumn.
However, permits still will be
issued an a COWily-by-i:OUIIIy basis,
with a ·~me number for each
county. .
The success of the state's
turkey-s~ program is ~I·
ed in a decision to open twO more
counties,: Waylie and Morrow, for
the,l994 -.en. .
Lorain, Medina, Portage and
Warren counties will open for the
first time"'lbll spring, bringing the
number counties where turkey
hunting is pemlitteclto 42.
This sprlns, for the first time,
hunters may lake a aecOIK! turkey
during the tbinl weet or the - ·
which begins April 26 and c:onlin·
ues tbrouih May 15.
Tbe siate llsQ .flas decided to do
, away with tbe daily bag limit of
four on I1ICCOOIIJ. ,
· Tbe doD~iee of lhe fur ttade has
Jed to lqa, punujt of lhe rKCOOn
and thus there is an abundance of
them throughout !he !ilate's wood·
lands.
Over-population is likely 10 lead
to 111 outbreak of diswe, including

Paper Gfc.p WMf Sill 13cia Atfllf'ICI Olltr Ctr11IICIIt (Wh rllllmJibDI, . ...... 11100 DIU I

l'lUII.fl Mil A00m1111AL J£11111:
: I Ltl'lltl ant Sl.DO Paper GfOUCI While Sale Flel11nd t)fl namt. aeldrts$, r.w lftvtlope lh11 Cfi! IIIQII
must aec:om!)lnv your IIQutsl.
2. Olftr QOOil onty mIll! US.A.
3. PltaStallo" &amp;·lwteks tor ~l'f .
,
4 RtProauttton. s~~- trldt.·Of puN;I!ISt of this ttrllliealt or pr o~s 01 p~~~tllue art P•OMIIItel
Proo1 o1 p11rtnaH must Dt obllln!d from prllCIOO llllftfliHd II~~~~-

S No requeits tram D•G~~ps. ctuos. or oroaan1nti0nl
II lht of muii!Pit iik1msn 01 PO. ba~ts to obtAin leldiii!YIJI refunds 11 fftud and may rtsul\11'!
prOSICIJiiOn. MIIIIIPie SIIIIIIIWDM wtll not IJt ackf'll'l•~ledQtel Of ttlurned
'
1 lntOfi'IJIIett Of lllfOIIIIIItflultU llld 1/Wllid llk!IKYS IS dtltfmllltcl by 1111 U$ PosUI ServiCe

a.....========!:"-··-------------------------------------------------"
w.lt no1 blllonote&lt;l.

'

jl!\ljiOSW to

of the 67 listed

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----------------~-,
WIN FREE LABELS. 1 ;.:
lit. l'*etiOOOOUblll

2ndl'*e25,000Labok
3id ~ cs ""-'1 a.aoo Lab1k

I School N.,.

..

eOHIO VALLEY •GALLIPOLIS
•PT. PLEASANT •TWIN RIVERS •BIG BEND

EASTMAN'S Your Community Minded,

,,_,.
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Melp ·

Colebank wilh 20 points,
Tabby Mayne added 15, No
statistics nn Belpre wore

I '*-'•Namo - - - - - - - - 1 Po~ c'ph- - - - - - · - - - - 1 Pr~ICtpii'ISigMiure

-------:---

1 Mldold
Ollr Erqonl26'13.,...,.. "'*' ........ '"" "'
... '1111 Sloie. ENI'EII NOW. Tlnlo

Low-Priced Supermarket

in

''I

II-~

~-----------------~-

DLA D

(6·11.;a..U-36)
Vema Compston 2.()..~. Lee
Hendenon 14-0.2, Lori Kelly 2Q.Sa9, Kalrina Turner 1.()..1•3, Joy '
O'Brien 2A).1•S, Milly Sbaon 3·
0.2all, Amber Blaclnvell 1.o.o-2,
Vaneua Comspton 0-1·0•3.
ToCIIII -12-1-t-36
'

lcbaola: PI••

Belpn
(1M4-15-13='1)
Kim Arnold 0.1 ·5•8,~

:&gt;

-.•

Yaurlnlrl•lt
lny al Darla.•...

Ma~

s.o-s-ts, Jamie c

8-0-4-20, Christy Banlce ).(1..2-11,
Beth Reck 0.1-4-7, Jenny ~Cruger
1..().().2, Slterry Stacey 1.()..0.2.

Totlla -ll-2-lO:o(i2
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~is Valentine's Day send someone special a
personalized Love Note. Your sweetheart, friend
.'or relative will be happy to know that_you care!

•

1

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~
~

••
~
•

~

~

per word

•

•~

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Love notes must he received by ll noon, Feb. 10, 1993
·
Add a special touch to your message with one of these elemeniS-$~:00 each

"'

~~
~
•

••

..•

~

·~

~,

ltl\ ....

•

·t•
••'
•

D. Lips

C. Valentine Heart

B. Cupid

A. Lovebirds

•

••

••

jp'~COUPOf&lt;l ~
fgood for
~ one.hug
EllPIRES FEB. 14~

,,

••
~

••
•

H. Tedd Bear

G. I Love You

••. Cou n

E. Rose

Meigs won the lCI«ve game 20'
18. Billie Bull:her led .=as with
eight Bobbie Bulcller
seven
poinrs. Other Meip ICOI'ClS includ·
ed Alitha Haggy with three and
Krillen,Dassylva and Anne Brown
wilh one ej~eh.
The Marauders will travel to
WellsJon Thunday nishL

•

•

rabies.
DrougHt conditions before last
year had a subslantial impact on lhe
state's. beaver population, leading
to a decision to dec:rea.sc the. beaver
trapping season by SO percent,
from two monllls to a monlh, last
yoar north of Interstate 70. This
law will remain in effect

elpre girls defeat Meigs 62-36

. _...
0

.2' 0¢

or

two deer in all

.

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I
1
1

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11uymcnl must acct;mpuny )OUr urder

Naunc

Number ol words

City

;&amp;.u.e YLo.te

:.

I'~Jftne

1

Add~• ----~--------------~~------

at 20¢ por word

So•r•

I·

Zll'

Mt:SSA&lt;;t: (!'lease prinl):________________ _

~

Aulement (il deliradl

~~~

1
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II

~ TolaU
Sp..·dul At1 Hlcmcnl (if

AO

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ll~sir~.·"ll

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TTWl to. LOVE NOTES

The
Daily Sentinel
.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . .

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PIQI 8 The Dally Sentinel
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By·The Bend

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY • .Cit
'

Wednesday, February 3, 1~

Paget!

~

irector: Meigs library ·~ ·
wants patrons to stand ~
up and be _counted
f:"

· ·
College of Qs~pathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

··

.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTinES
PRICES GOOD SUN., JAN. 31' thru
Feb. 6, .1993
.
'

The -Daily Sentine

Ohio University

·STORE HOURS
Mot~day thru. Sunday

8 AM-10 PM

,..

'

The Meigs County Public
Library wants library patrons to
stand up and be eounted.
Jolm C. Wolf, D.O.
. According to Ruth Powers,
Aasoclale Professor
library director, all !hey need to so
of Family Medldne
is sign a "Ubraries Work for Us"
petition before the end of the
month.
Question: I have pairi in my stenosis, h~ disk, or multiple
"Our stale-elected officials have
so bad that it wakes me at sclerosis. Some of lhese illnesses
a multitude of funding priorities to
'1'8'"· I also have pain during the -like circulatory problems - can
consider as they wrestle with
. My legs swell some when I'm cause swcllins in the lcp. For this
developing !he new state budget,"
but they don'tleave a "pit" re&amp;SC?JI• you should ask your docta
said Powers. "This petition effort
I press in on the skin and to help you figure out if one of
by our li.brary is just one of many
take my lhumb away. What these nervous system problems
might be the cause of your probaround the state which, when all
be the cause of my leg pain?
.
. ·
si..}latll!es are tallied, will let them
· Answer: The legs are. compli- lem.
know how much libraries mean to
. 4'ated structures. The bones - · and · Third, I think it's possibJC that
Ohioans."
Qte ligaments that help support cramps might be the culprit. A
"charley horse" is a gOod example
At issue is !he future of Ohio
~em - form !he basic fmmeworlc
the legs. The leg muscles fill out of the pain caused by a muscle
libraries' primary funding souite,
the Library and Local Government
~ost of the contour of !he legs, and cramp. During a normal muscle
I!Jeir contraction J!fod~ces move- contraction some of the muscle
PROGRAM PRESENTED • Sweet Mountain sound reeendy
Support Fund, Powers said. She
!bent of the leg bones. All of the , fibers are contracting, liot not till.
presented a priiJ!I'am to Salisbury Elementary students. Roger and
explained that lhe Library Fund is
Iilg structures depend on a constant Durjng a muscle cramp, most of
Mary Gilmore Introduced to the students the rollowlng instruderived from a portion of !he state
lnd well=regulated circulation !he muscle fillets contract simulta~ents: dulcimer, autoharp, banjo, guitar, violin, Jew's Harp,
budget which is !he equivalent of
~ugh the aneries, veins and lymneously, causing stress on ·the mus·
z!tber, bammered dulcimer, penny whistle and the courting dul6.3 percent of the siate personal
~a1ic system. The nervous system
cle· and its attachment to the bone. · cuner. Tbey played songs on all of the Instruments and presented a
income tax in any given year.
eoordinates !he actions of all lhese It is .this stress - whlcb can be , variety oC skil5 witb an Appalacbain theme.
. For an IS-month period that
6ther areas.
quite severe - ~ actually causes -~------.;.;.;.------------- ends June 30 Ohio's 250 library
; However, because a problem in the pain we feel during a leg
systems bav~ operated under a
,
lOY of !hem can CB~Jse ~n in the cramp.
~·
LibrarY, Fund f~eeze imposed by
leg, it's often not easy 1d~tifying
the legrslature m response to !he
Leg cramps can occur during
State's economic downturn . The
c:be ~ifJC cause of a~·s leg strenuous exercise, but they happen
11ain. In your case, three possibili- more often at night after bard activfreeze has already foited libraries
!Jes seem most likely: a ciCCulation ity during the day. They can also be
to malce cuts and defer action on
WEDNESDAY
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 plans to imp~ve service. .
.-oblem, a nerve problem. or mus' bro~ht on by a dislurbaDce In the
STIVERSVILLE - Revival at and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
.
' )lady s balance of salts, called elecwe cramps.
the
Stiversville Word of Faith dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at
·: First, let's look at how poor cit· trolytes. This happens most often
Chutch
will be lhrough Sunday at ~e post holnc. Music: will be pro·
q.llation can cause leg pain. When 8S a complication of taking medicarovelling is ~sent. . as in your con- tiOn f~¥ high blood,f!Csswe or .for 7:30 p.m. nightly with Pastor v1ded bY Smoley Mountain Drifters.
clition, t~e problem is often an heart problems. So, If ~u exercise David Dailey. There wiU be special Public invited.
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
ihadequate return of !he blood to or arc on mcdieations, 11 's tilso pos- singing. Public invited.
Associated Press Writer
LONG BOTIOM - Faith Pull
dte heart by !he veins. This inade- sible your leg pain might be the
CHICAGO - Pregnant women
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Gospel Church in Long Bottom
.
guate ret11rn blood flow can also result of muscle cramps;
can
have a few cups of coffee day
LiteraJy
Club
will
meet
Wednesday
wil.l
have
preaching
and
singing
Bone prol)lems are tilso possible
ctause the kind of pain you
describe. The pain is often brought sources of leg pain. SJress frac- at 1;30 p.m . at the home ·or Mrs. friday wilh Charlie Hall and fami- without fear of causing a miscar·
dn with exercise, but it usually tures, a hair-line break in the bone Chester Erwin. Mts. Ronald ly of Marietta and other local riage or sbJDting !he growth of !he
illkes a fairly long rest wilh !he legs produced wilhout a known injury, Reynolds will review "Rituals of singers. Pastor Steve Reed invites fetus, resean;heis said today.
Dinner" by Margaret Visser. Roll !he public. Fellowship wiU follow. • A study of 431 expectant molh·
~ to the bone, and malignant
·elevated to get relief.
call
be to teD or a memorable
ers found that !hose who consumed
j Another circulation problem and non-malignant tumors an cause diningwillexperience.
REEDSVILLE- Olive Town- up to 300 milligrams of caffeine·
111at causes leg pain involves an pain. Bone pain can be dull and
ship Trustees will meet Pridlly at daily - about three cups of coffee,
Qladequate supply of blood as it aching or i1 can be sharp a111l stab;
POMEROYPomeroy
PTO
seven cups of tea or e1ght cans of
A&amp;sses through !he arteries on !he bing. When swelling occurs with will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m . at the Shade River cola
- had no higher rates of .mis1\'ay to !he body's various cells that these problems, it is usually con- Several classes will present the Foresrry Building.
carriage
or small fetuses than !hose
~iced nourishment. This often pro- fined to the area of injured bone,
who
usc
no caffeine.
program.
A
representative
selling
SATURDAY
4uces a condition - called inter· and it usually occurs in one leg
Earlier
studies that linked cafschool
supplies
will
tilso
'be
pre·
HOCKINGPORT
•
There
will
!(tittent claudication - that results only. Since botb of your legs
feine
to
birlh
defects, miscarriages
be a valentine round and square
in exercise-induced leg pain. How· involved with yo..- leg pain, these senL Everyone ~elcome.
and
fetal
gro~th
retardation had
·
dance Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m.
i.ver, unl~ in your case, the pain bone )lrol11ems are less lib:Iy.
various
faults,
including
failure to
TtJPPERS . ~l:AINS .• T~c , • at !he Reynolds building at HockEach 'of these conditions bas a
~sually subsides after a relatively
accounl
for
!he
effects
of
!.\lief resL When !he pain of inter- different treatment. .In fact, each · Orange Township Trustees will ingpon. Out of .!he Blue will pro· said Dr. James L. Mills,smoking,
!he lead
mittent claudication diminishes, has several different treatments. meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at !he · vide !he music. John Russell will resean:hcr.
be the caller. Everyone is welcome.
activity can r~ume. This condition You will need to see your family home of !he cleric, Pauy Calaway.
"This is good news for women.
i'k commonly caused by-diabetes, physician to figure out the CIJJIIe of , · . THURSDAY
They
don't have to be too anxious
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. $lloking and hardenmg of the your leg pain. lie or she•nlay refer
about
consuming reasonable
MIDDl-EPORT· Meigs Junior Liberty Mountaineers will perfonn
arterieS".
·
you to another specialist as wcll.
of caffeine during preg"Family ,Medicine" is a weekly High Academic BooslefS will meet Saturday at the Senior Citizens amounts
! Second, leg pain can be a1 sign
nancy,"
Mills said. "For brgher
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
in
the
school
Center
in
Point
Pleasant,
W.Va.
4f irriration to the nervous system. column. To submit questions;·write cafeteria. Everyone w~lcome.
consumption, we didn ' t see any
lJle irritation to !he nerves cail be to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio UniTUPPERS PLAINS - A prom problems, but we didn't have
•
•Pomeroy dress
ceused by a gcnCllllized lxx!y-wide versitr College of Osteopathic
POMEROY
The
exchange will li held Satur· · enough people to assume they
illness such as diabetes, or by dam· Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Alhens,
Group of AA will meet Thursday at day by !he Ladies A\lxiliary of !he aren't there.''
age to !he nervous sys,tem from Ohio45701.
Mills is chief of j!ecliatric epi·
7
p,m. at Sj\cred Heart Catholic Tuppers Plains VFW Post NO.
QJnditions such as spinal canal
Church. Call 992·5163 for infor- 9053 at the post home from 9-11 demiology at !he National Institute
·mation.
·a.m . .A $1 fee per dress will be of Child Heallh and Human Develcharged. Call Merrilee Bryant at opment. The study is published in
todafs Journal of !he American
RACINE - The Racine Ameri. · 985-3376 for funher information.
Medical Association.
can Legion Post 602 will meet
: NEW YORK (AP) - Harry s~ming the cment of Prime Thursday at 7:30p.m. at !he post
The research addresses !he last
HENDERSON. W.VA. - The •
(!on nick Jr. could sing a happy MiAISII:r Paul
g.
three major questions about !he
of
home.
.
Gallia Twirlers Western Square
, tfne - but sounded a contrite DOte
''The federal govenunent seems
effects
of caffeine during pregnanDance Club wiU hold a dance Sat·
7 after a j11dge dismissed a gun lilce a liability," Gibson said in an
cy.
The
first question - whether
POMEROY - Meigs PERI will urday from 8·11 p.Jfi. at !he Henpossession charge against him.
interview llped in LoS Angeles IJid meet Thursday at I p.m. at the derson Community Center in Hen- caffeine increases birlh defects : "I made a terrible mistalce," the shown .on Australian ielevision senior citizens center in Pomemy. derson, W.Va. '
has been ruled out by recent stud·
~-year-old singer said outside Tuesday.
1 • All members urged to attend.
ies, !he aulhors said.
court Tuesday.
·
The American-born star of
The new study enrolled wonien
HARRISONVILLE
•
Har·
: Connick was arrested at "Lethal Weapon" and its"two ·
LOTTRIDGE • The Lottridge risonville Lodge No. 411 P&amp;AM at !he beginning of !heir pregnjlll·
l(ennedy Airport on Dec. 27 after sequels grew up in Australia. .A ,Community Center Association will meet Saturday at 7:30p.m. cies, and researchers adjusted for
tflling authorities he had an· U.S. citizen, he divides his time will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. Refreshments will be served. All the effects of smoking.
ooloaded 9mm pistol 'in"hls Iu,- between work. in Alnerica and his Everyone is 'welcome. .
Dr. David A. Nagey, director of
master masons welcome.
gi!ge: Judge Manin Shulman said cattle nnch in VictOria state.
maternal-fetal medicine at !he Uni·
lte gave Connick a breafbecause
Gibson criticized both Keating,'
niPPERS PLAINS • The Tup·
PO~fEROY - Meigs County versity of Maryland, said !he study
l(e wasn't trying to hide the who heads the governing Labor pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 REACT
Team Inc. monlhly meet· is important confannation of what
,eapon. .
,
Party, 111.d John Hewson, who leads Ladies Auxiliary will meet Thurs· ing will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at many doctors had n:cendy come to
• Connick could have gotten a !he opposition. Ubeml Party. Keatthe Comm11.nity Action JTPA
at !he post home.
#ar in jail for possess.ing the ing. has until May to call an elec- day at 7:30p.m.
•
building, 117 West Second Street
Yfeapon wilhout a permit.
tion amid 11 percent unemployin Pomeroy.·All members urged to
FRIDAY
• He reeently recorded a ~ublic­ meaulllld lingering recession.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup· attend.
~rvice announcement at h1s own
"Not one Australian, I should
eltpense warning peoplt about New imagine, wants either of !bose men
RUTLAND - There will be a
York's tough gun-co~;~trollaw. The to Jepresent !hem,'' Gibson said.
dance at the Rutland American
sbot played no role in the dis·
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
liissal, !he Queens District Attorp.m. to midnight. Music will be by
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Doll·
ni:y' s office said.
Pure
Counrry Band. Public invited.
aid O'Connor has signed on wilh
NEW YORK (AP) - Prime.
; LOS AN-GE-L-ES (AP) cable's Alnerican Movie Classics time ratings as compiled by the
.
SYRACUSE
•
A
rummage
sale
''Patriot Games" author Tom channel 10'-introduce its "Comedy A.C. Nielsen Co. for Jan. 25-31. will be held at Carleton School iri
laney isn't wild about Harrison Classics" film series. ·
Top 20 listinp include !he weelc's
on Saturday at 9 a.m. The
The comic IOIIJ·Ind-dance man, ranking, with full season-tocdate Syracuse
Fprd as his leading man - mostly
sale
is
sponsored
by M.A.R.C.
whose films include "Singln' In ranltinJ in _PIRI!Iheses for top 20
because oC !he actor's age.
: The best-selling author said !he Rain" and "lbere's No Busi- shows, ratings for the week and
TUPPERS . PLAINS • A
Rmt's depiction of CIA opemive ness Lilce Show Business," will be IOial bonJes.
spaghetti
dinner will be served by
Jpck Ryan in both "Patriot the. host of the Friday Jlight comedy
An "X" in pam~lheses denotes th~. youth group at the St. Paul
Games" 8lld the upcoming "Clear smes.
one-time-only presentation; an United Melhodlst Chuith in TupaM Present Dan,er'' is a stretch.
''N'' il)diCIItes the ranking was not pers Plains on Satunlay from 5-7
• Ford is "a mce enou~ suy,"
available.
· p.m. Spaghetti with homemade
LOS ANGELES (AP) dlancy said in Tuesday s HollyI. (X) "Super Bowl XXVII," sauce, salad, garlic bread, coffee,
~ Reporter, but "Jaclc Ryan is Satirist Mort Sahl has long been a NBC, 45;1, 42.0 million homes
tea and desserts will be served.
supporter of Democrats, but he
3i years Old."
2. (X) "Super Bowl XXVII Cost is donation only. Special
l Alec Baldwin played Ryan in doesn't see mucfl to like among Pregame," NBC, 36.0, 33.5 mil, music will be presented at 7:30
qlancy's "The Hunt !I¥ Red Octo- today's liberlls.
lion homes
p.m. by Jan and Kathy. Public
"What's happened is, the counbet." Baldwin is 34, Ford SO.
3. (X) "Super B.o~l Postgame,"
: Clancy also said that Philip rry has no left wins. The ltlldents NBC, 32.2, 30.0 million homes · mvited.
Noyce, who directed "Patriot co-opted by matarialllm, .. ~
'
4. (X) "American Music
Oames" aod Is in line to direct said •."lbere '1 the riJbt·winJ Cul· 1 Awards," ABC, 21.6, 20.1 million
•
".Clear lnd Pruent ~r" ·is "a ture bul lillie's no counren:ultin. •• homes
Sahl p1llta 10 lllre 011 President
B-movio dlnictor at belL '
!1. ~~~Roslll•'le.'' ABC, 21.5,
· , Paramount chief Sheny Lanslna Clinton, the women's mCIVemont 20.0 m· · homea
slid, "You would tbink that he and a holt ot polilicllluues. in a
6. (4) "Home Improvement,"
would be tltrilled that we bate been new s11110 lhow openlnJ this llliJ!th . ABC, 18.0, 16.8 miUion homes
·
allle to put toi«het the IIIRIO teanJ at the Wobood Playbciule.
7. (N) ''48 Houn," CBS, 17.9,
Tux Prices &amp;.art al
tiW made 'Patriot GIIDCI' a m~or
16.7 million homes
cr:itical as weD lis commCitialsuc7, (X) "Homicide," NBC. 17.9,
cess.''
According
to
the
National.Weathef:
16.7
million homes
1
.I
I
.
Service. a hurricane Ia a severe ey· "9. (16) "20-20," ABC, 16.9,
I SYDNEY, Auatralia (AP)- clone that originates over tropical b.'7 mllllon homes
Gibson eateiOCI tho polllical ocean waters and hal winds of 74 ., 10. (II) "Pull House," ABC,
c!fbate In his adopted 1JotDeia11a l)y milea an hour or higher,.
lo.6, 15.5 million homos
.

or

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Study: No link between moderate
caffeine consumption, miscarriage
a

believe. Many have already boe1,;!
telling women that moderate
feine consumption is OK..·&lt;
. luri. n&amp;'
pregnancy, he said Tuesday.
Mills said he had no l&gt;e•10~1a
desire to exonerate caffeil)e.

are

$ 99

.

.
C"Ommun. ty calenda'. r

"Our message to !he legislawr:
is: In the new budget, preserve th&amp;!
funding formula as it wa$. The 6.~
percent formula gives us a stable~
funding base wilh jp'Owth poteotial•
as economic eondiuons in the stme:
permit," ~d Powers.
,:
The Library Fund, whicJt:
replaced a much less adequate~
funding &amp;Jllli'C*h that was Jepealcd · .
in 1986, has proven a more cqui~,
table funding mechanism for public'
libraries ensuring that the JaOUn:CS:
will be distributed evenly in both:;
urban and .rural communities.
:::;
For the communities 5erved by__,
!he Meigs County Public: L\brary,"'l
lhe Library Fund has meant a big~~
ger and lletter library system, more· ~
materials eollection, a return oC tliC"!
county's own bookmobile. service';
renovation of the branch library,::
and many othez benefits: .
· ·::!
"We arc busier ~ we've evct:i
Jx:en, tht? demands f~¥_our services:)
climb WJ!h every j'8SS~Dg clay. ~
our staff. has to be m more pllces ~~
once: WI!'J ~O{e ~swers, ~ a '
any lime 10 hiStory, Powers laid.
Petitions .w.ill be ayailable !~
patrons to Sl~n at . the Me1gs;:
Library, the Maddleport Branch,:.
and on the bookmobile. Individuals..,
or ~ps interested in ob~g
peuuon may contact the hbrlryt.
director.
·

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Pege-10-The Dally Sentinel

Parents advised not to let their
:children
drive cross cquntry alqne
.
:: Dear A.. La•ders: Many of
:· us wm horrified by the lnltledy of

a young woman who was found

: mur~ afler she attempted 10
: · drive alone across several staleS on
ba' way 10 coUege. Parents could
·.. help save lhe lives of their college: age daughlers and sons by laking a
~ few sensible precautions. .
• No parent shoold pennit a son or
~ daughler to ckive alone across the
. courury. There Is safetY in numbers.
.. The psychopaths on lhe highways
are looking fer cars wilh only one
occupanL
::
These few lines could prevent a
·· "'""ed Please · t Ibis letter
·· PHILADELPHIA
-- Y·
pnn
READER · DEAR PHIL: Your words of
'
warning are weII wonh talnng
seriously. Read on for m&lt;Xe good
advice from your city:
Dear Ana: l'cqllc believe it when
·· you say iLPlease inform parents !hat
:: they should never leave their yDWig
·· children in the car with tl)e keys in
the ignition while !hey run into the
post office or a shop "for just a
minnie."
There have been several instances
in New Jersey and Pennsylvania
. where pareNs have had their cars
. swlen •• wilh babies in them. In
: two cases, the cars and children
: were found, but in a third case, lhe
: parents have heard nothing.
· These days •• with attackers
seizing cars, attacking women

·Ed

•

·

Falling object
lights sky over
the Southeast

printed "A Hunle(s Poem" and - ATLANTA (AP) - Ca'Uers
cmlired Lemuel T. Wild u the J·ammed switchboards at Cape
aulhct.
canaveral, Fla., and experts were
Mr. Wild lived ill, Crisfield, Mel., scratChing !heir heads after a fiery
lllll he and his brocber Steve object lit up lhe night sty over lhe
ANN LANDERS
hunters as well u two of this SoulheasL
&gt;
"199l. Los Ang,J.,
counuy'a 11101t r.aoua decoy matPeople in Georgia, Alabama,
Thoes SyDdlcatc
en IIIII CliVer I ol wildfowl.
North Carolina and Teooessee
Cruton Syodicat~·
The ·poem, ~. Will written reported seeipg an object streak
by 1'nlnln P, Reitmeyer lllll tided acrosS lhe sky about 10 p.m. Tues..
drivers and stealing automobiles "R.cmane.• Lemuel tepc copiea of day. Some said it hit the ground
with children left in their seals this poem in bil worbhop 111 give and exploded. .
pleaseusecommmsense,folks,and tovisitors.Hewalinmtisticgmius
NASA launched a navigation
avaid a ngedy. ":' PHILADELPHJA with many . talents, but writing satellite at !hat time, but the boost·
DEAR PHILADELPHIA: Thanb poetry wu. not one of them. •• ers fell diniO ": ~tlan~~ as
for a solid backup 10 the )revious MORTON AND CAROL SUE planne • S&amp;l
ary re tier, a
letter. People need 10 pay attention. VD .. UCD BALTIM""c MD
spokesman at Cape Canaveral. He
..""""a,.,
... ""'"AND...., KR. A
S8I'd ~ received hundR:ds.
of calls.•.
Dur Aoo Landen: Our next- ~D.,
.,.....
~
h
door neighbor is growing marijuana • MER: n.w for selling the
·~~at~thver alaunc:ppenh~ .:~·:::
m
' his """'""--'
I
can
It
' from
......
r·
.
..._
•
comet
.... WI our
• '"'
.
_,..,u.
sttaili'- lplndaiO u"' carrectiOO. · "But as far as we can tell, it was all
my house, so olhelS must be able to . Gem of the Day: '('here are a non-related."
see i~ too.
.
great many. men wbo owe ~ large
Capt. Mark Brown, a
One night I walked onto his JX!rt of the!r .s~ to the!f ~ spokesman for the Norlh Americ:.l!ll
PJOJIMY and up to his 'bllclf porch wife. How mterestmg that this Vf:l'J Aerospace Defense Command m
(whele the pot was growingr IIIII · sucoess is whallllniCted the second , Colorado Springs. ColO., ruled out
picked two leaves to tum over 10 wife.
, ·
.
· any manmade object
·
the local police. Soon after, a sean:b
What's tltl! truth about pot,
"Theoretic~lly it c~uld have
was made, and he was anesred.
coctliM LSD PCP cNJ&amp;k .Sf'l!l!d been a meteonte burnmg up on
Somehow my neighbor found and d~wner~? "The Lo~down entering the atmosphere," he said.
out wbo turned him in and intends 011 Do{JI!" h~ up-to-thNrlinutt ''Your .chanc.e of a meteorite actu·
10 press charges against me for . ilfol'll'ltllioll 011 drugs. Sl!lld a Sl!/f- ~Y .domg lhis,,would have to be a
.......,
..;.,.and theft of .,....,.....
.--ty. I've a ddri!UI! d• 1Ollg, b-USIMSS·sue
·
·
million
10 one. it was was pretty
-.......-...
"Whatever
been told he may hav~ a leg 10 stand envt:lope tllld a cMcJ; o~ W~~JMy· large," Brown said, noting a call
on. Is this possible?-- MICIDGAN order for $3 .65. (thu 111cludes he received from a man in Jackson,
DEAR MICillGAN: He may have postage and luuldling) to: Lowdown, N.C. "This guy was on the high· two legs 10 stand on. You need a c/o .AM lANII!rs, P,.O. Bo;;c 11562, way over Jhere and he swears what·
lawyer.
Ch~eago, Til. 60611-0562 . (In ever it was crashed there and
Dear Ann Lauders: You recently CIJIIQI/Q, selld $•1.45.)
exploded when it hit the ground."
Hayes Jackson, who lives near

recooi

.

·•

ment of Natural Resources grant
Jlloposal for $11,702 10 be used in
an educational program. Part of the
money, if lhe grant is received, will
go toward hiring a pan-time person
to do demonstration projects in the
schools and with organizations.
Cindy Oliveri of lhe Extension
Office also advised !hat an employ-.
ee there has wdtten an env1ronmental grant proposal for $3,500
and if that money becomes avail·
able it could perhaps be used in the
education program.
Plans were made for each orga·
nization to submit a column to a
review committee witliin two
weelcs. Next regular meeting of lhe
group was setforTuesday 1 p.m. at
the ASCS office.
Powell announced the Meigs
County Showcase meeting to be

otl lw Vllaaotbyof

k

· he~~:~~tc~~=~=
saw an orange flash Jhrough his

:~!~e0~i~~~rj~~~~s~a

mn outside. I walked al[ around my
held on March 2 at S p.m. at the house but I didn't see anything.''
Meigs County Chamber of Com·
Some Georgia residents reported
merce office. The Showcase is a sonic boom that shook pictures
scheduled for Oct. I S-17 at the off walls, said Terry Murphy, a
· Rock Springs Fairgrounds. PoweU meteorologist with the National
also noted that Meigs County will Weather Service in Atlanta. Police
have a promotional ad in the Ohio departments in a wide area of
Pass this year for the fli'Sl time.
Georgia got calls.
Others attending the meeting
"We're scratching our heads,"
were David Fox, ASCS; Susan Murphy said.
Oliver, Meigs County Council on
Aging; Paula Thacker, Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce/Econornjc DevelopIn 1984, for his role in
ment Director; Norma Torres, "Amadeus," F. Murray Abraham
Meigs County Heallh Department; won the Academy Award for Best
Kenny Wiggins, Meigs County Lit- Actor.
'
ter Control; Randy Wachter, · On Crete, the Bron~e A~e
Forked Run SU)te Park; Pat CJif. Minoan civilization emerged m
ford, Meigs County Girl and Boy 2500 B.C. A ~ ecoriomy
Scouts; John Reibel and John and richly decorative art was sppCostanza, Meigs County Schools.
ported by seaborne commerce.

to Tot.! Clark,
.,ovlda lor the ourrant
Treoturtr ....._,_,$13,150
11panaea and othar County Audltar't and
oxpandllultl ol tha uld
Truturw'o F.. $12,400
VIllage olllldcllaport during Auditor of SU.ta't lht ·fttcel yeor ending
F
..a 0110
O.C.mber 31, 1813, lhe Olh:'G;;;;,-;j'(iO'Y;...Mnt
~~~~~ tumo be and they
212 Employee
ore hartbr
tat
end
ft--·nto
... ooo ·
rlattd tollawe viz·
..... •............_ ... ' .
•cion 2•.~et thar~
230 Contractu••
oppr_oprlotad from tho
Blrvlcte.- ._ .....-.38,100
240 Suppt... end
GENERAL FUND·
PROGIWI 1 -SECURITY
lllterllla.--··-·18•000
280 Rtdrament .
OF PERSONS AND .
PROPERn
of Dtbt-.... ~--$81,100
:.0... Law Enlarcemant
Total OllarGenarll ·
.
"21o P oc.lll Sarvlcte
GowrnmanL-..$121,400
- 111 111rletl
Total Pragrem 'III-Ganlnl
000
Govarnl*ll..-...$217,170
: .
•............. . o&amp;o,
Oth•
u... of fundi
• : 212 mployoe
271 'nlnelara.-..$48.150
· , llanall!a..,...._ ......... 57,500 Tolal Other u... ol
:; 2!!~lllri~UII
Fundt-.:.•• _,_.141,150
•, _,cee ..... -....... 12,000 GRAND TOTAL GENERAL

•lid•

k .

TIMEX WITCHES
WOMEN~$

. Dtbt........................ 5~
~!olal Pollet Low
·
. ~~---..$208,500
:'rolal Pragrlm 1 - s-.rt~y

IIUI'OP!Iat·- from t~e
lollowlng SPECIAL REV·
ENUE FUNDS.
Straat Conatructlon; llllnof......,na end
llnonca, Md Raptlr Fund
: Property --···---$208,500
PROGIWI VI• BASIC I1TIUTY SERVICES
TRANSPORTATION
•
STREET LIGHTING
:23o Conii8Ctual .

VALENTINE CANDY

·--••.ooo

• Stnllcaa.-...

.

J'olal Olhar llnl'o Utility

• S.iloae .................. :ll~

Whitman's Red Fad Heart 16 oz. Reg. $7.15-- Only $5.39 "
Whitman's Lac~ Print Heart 1 oL Reg. $545~ Only $3.99
55.29
Russell Stover Red Fad Heart 16 oz.

.Tolal Program V.o81tlc

14,050
, PROGRAM VII-GENERAL
GOVERNMENT
.
_,.ayor end Admlnlltrltlva
Tot.IStrlet
. Olftaa
......_ . _ _ ....$13,100
1.10 ~Wsoni~Ser#lcaa
Tot.! lor Slnotl
·
~ Salt..,....ayor ......... $7,000
Conlltruallon, lllln-ca
• 211 Other 8tlarletl
and Rtpllr Fund.-$13,100
10,000 Total lor s- Hlghwy
' 212 l!nlplayeee
lmpro-1 Fund
• Blnllllta...,,,_,•••-.-2.540
ProgrMIIV• 230 Contractutl
TrtntpOrlltlon--..$13,100
• Ill ric ••-··'·-·- ..... 1.000 PARKS AND RECREATION
FUND
100
PROGIWI Ill-lEISURE
1'o111U.,.., tnd
.
TilE ACTIVITIES
: AdmlnlatraUva
Rocnotloill'ro(,IWit- .
• Olllcn....................$21,140
Golf-Spacial
l.tlilt18tlva Acdvlllao
ue)
oll)
211 StllrletiWog• ....$4,500
. 211 a••arllat .
212Employ•
llanaftta.........................IOO
~o:r;.iiV;·--- $4.000 230
Contrlctutl
~ AoUvtllel ......... - . ...... $4.000
Ser4tcee ......................... 300
· .1noo11a Tu Adnolnlolnltlon
" 211~
•

URRINGS
COMPLETE COVER GIRL PRODUCTS

: w.--·---·--·

:

~

I

:

- • - - • • • •
·

.

27 CCAN
·

S$.00 OFF .ANY PRESCRIPDON ·

~

c..tturt

.,Oo...

PKG;OF 10$1 55

COUPON • • • ... • - • •

... .

~=~-~~:

BECTON DICKINSON DISPOSABLE INSULIN
SYRINGE &amp; NEE~LES
COLD POP

11,050

·

• uau~y ~arv~---•ze.ooo

I

News notes

. fUND APPROPR~"'sE'CTiON-4~"iii;i;u;

: 2e0 Radramant of

COLOGNES &amp; PERFUMES

101 OF 100 $1499

;.._

:' ~!':f:.~.~- . .. S,OOO

•

!01

. . _ .. _ _ ,.,••••••

: 212 Enlptcyea

I·
1:

2='-="~-~~. . . . 1100
H1 Rttlremotnt ol
Dilbt----··-·..··-··-·710
Tottln-.Uon

111,000
.

.. a.n.n.._.....- ........ ...
· no Contnctutl

Program_, _ _ _ $7,•

I

CUlturll FICIIItlae-Arll
Council (Spocltl...........,
2311 Conlrlctu~
.

1
Limit 1 coupon per praecrlptlon.
1
J SWI1her &amp; Lohll ~armacy
ExplrH 2•28-83

-----------------------·

~Ki............
DEVELOPMENT

.FUND (Sptelll R_..e)
211 Stllrletl
$13.000

w.., _____

Btnellt•--·-··-

WeWUit~-to

Removal
ReDOIIIblaRIIea

Fulylnlured
742·2350

__,$ZII3,1100

L::=====~
,.

CALIFORNI A
liN.

Comp•tlllon.----1100
230 Connctull

~rvt•n----- 14,100

s

v.-.ntfnf SJHrdlltll
15 sessions '15
PI•• FlEE llottlt of .

n-.
....................
...... ._

949·2823 '
Rill Ellett General

. 992·3838

(614) 992·5449

~o't~~~.

FREE ESTIMATES

·

':=======

USED RAILROAD nES

==~~

l:Z..J0-92-111

dl
f·
regar ess o Jncome
'regardleSS Of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
'regardless of credit
•

..,

.o co

lleet

h 1 hi

your sc oars P money

call 614-985-3556

Open Mon.-Fri. 10.1 or sat. lo-4
11

L=======::::::::======~
:z-

mod. pll.

.,

~

Snodgrass Upholstery

~~~~.~~l~s&amp;

"Helping You To Recover Your Investment''
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating
·

RACINE, OHIO
614·949·2202

614-742-299'6

BINGO

Quality
Stone Co.

MASON, WV. Acrou tro. the Post 010.

FOR SAlE

Tires • Aligameats • Exhausts

.

We Specialize 11

Check our Price or We Both Lose

3rd LOCATION 10 SERVE YOU lETTER
·t-11-1 .....

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE anti
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • ttealth •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage .·

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 189

NEW LOANS
AL$9.
614-992·7523

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

I.L.-.,...:.;:.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
1

HELP THE· EFFOIT TO IUILD A PROSPEROUS

PLUMBING

949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460

nw!llln!i

·; a

Lawn Mowing,
FarUIIrhog. Wilding. end
' Seeding.
Shrub and Tr. . frimmlng
&amp; RtniOVtl
~r:l•••lld&lt;llelffnt .. l &amp;.

Commtrclll
FrH E•lltMt• ·

AREWOOD FOR SALE

'•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
'•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)

Retl Estate General

Calfel11e Pi'ee Diet Cela

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
.$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

lotion

. . . . . .,.... fellru•rr

AJiiNIVDSAilT!

Children, Grand·
children alid Great·
Grandchildren

w

.,.,.., II. Pnaldtnl of c-oli
110
p;~..::.:,::.,____.,

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE
.
·
.:12,000
Topping, Trlnvnlng,

~~---....11.eao
215llolnland Commltllon

Continuity of Cere.
Sincerely,

ond TRACKHOE.WOAK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITEs..,.

992·2269

Guarant~ed Scholarship Money
for aU college bound students.

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

c••••ire,

s.u1on----.$ZII3,eoo
SANITARY SEWER FUND
PROGRAM V - BASIC
UTIUTY SERVICES
211SIIIrlaai'Nigaa-•,ooo
2

•rretop.
IIAPPT

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER. BACKHOE

BIU SLACK

949·2826
1-26-113

2-3-13-

St. Rt. 7
OH.

v - ... IJti!I1J

S7 ~ wltblotl

POMEIOY, OH.

Call 614·992· ·

TotallorW..
Appropdatlon Fund.
Pragrlm

Department and
AuxllllfY, Syi'ICUSt
Emergency Squid,
Recine Legion and

GOOD UNTil FEI. 20

•l iGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

Llmh 2 Per Cuatomer

6637

Fund '

Spencer, Dr.

992·7553 .

DEUVERY SERVICE

SIZED UMESTONE

~.~~:!:X:IIin.m
ar

SHRUB &amp; DEE
TRIMand .
REMOVAL

REASONABLE RATES

UMESTONE

tiRJAYMAR

FUNDS:
WATER FUND
211 StllrlaaiWigee ..S70,1100

,,

"

••••• Rd., Racine
Swllfhtut Sp11l1l
14 SESSIONS- 114

~o.od

or

Jo":-J..

'

FOREVER
.BRONZE
TANNING

':::$1,

n....ue

:,''

"

ENTERPRISE FUNDS
118/'02/1 mo. 1-,!::===1=213=1
METER
DEPOSIT
.,
APPROPRIATION.$421,500
257 Refundt.----S1o.ooo MICROWAVE OVEN
R&amp;C EICAVAnNG
- ___ 100 Tollllletor Do!ooolt...$10,000
Ill
BULLDOZING
GRAND TOTAL TRUST
••• VCR REPAIR
TotaiStoleGrlnt-$17,1711
AND AGENCY FUNDS AP.
All
IIAIES
PONDS
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
(Sptoltl "--1 .
PROPRIATION ......... $10,000
Iring It .. Or W.
lAND CLEARING
211lltllrlle/Wigee.,tl1.000 TOAPTAPRLOAPLLRIA-l'ick ~p •
WATER
&amp; SEWER
21~ ___ ,
....... -.~ ....: ..
KEN'S APPLIANCE
763,180
LINES
4 100
230 Contrlctutl
And the Vlllogo Cltrli It
. SERVICE
8
"-· •
·111 ·
hereby authorlzld to drew
992·5335
..., " - - -- .000 worron.lo on the VUIIga
HAULING: Limestone,
240SuppllatMd
Treuurar lor poymenla
985·3561
Din, Gravel and Coal
lloterlllt ..------IGO from lily of the lorogolng
Acre•• ,,.. 1'111 Oftlca
UCENSED •nd BONOED
2t21n-L--·-- -1,500 lpf.roprlotlono upan 11•
217 L Sac•... St.
PH.
614·992:5591
Totti Public TrMeporca vtng proper -'IIICIIM
POMEIOY, OHIO
12·5-tln
tallon._, _ __.$17l,400 end vouchtra thoralor, ~=====316f=OO=Ilf~n
OTHER SPECIAL 1•
opproved liy tho boanl or
REVENUE FUNDS
olll-1 authorlzod by law
REVOLVING LOAN FUND
to approve tht uma, or ".n
(Sp 1 1
1
ordinance or r110lutlon ol
230 eon-.~
EVERY THURSDAY
council to inoke the
BeM•n- - --m.ooo arpendl~w•; provided tllat
EAGLES
Totti R-Iling~
no WIITIInll thiR be dmm
Fund .. -----12S.OOO or pold for oolorl•• or
CLUB
BETSY ROBS (Speciol
wagto ercapt to peraono
IN POMEROY
and
•:::rloyed by authority of
6:45p.m.
=supp
1 In •-donee with liw
· Special Early Bird
llallrltla ......- .... -$37,000 or ordlnonoe. P1ovldad
To~~ Rou.-..$37,1100 furthotr thot the tp·
$100 Payoff
REFUSE UND (Sptelll
proprlotlona lor contln·
Thla
ad good lor 1
R._,ua)
230 Con-ll
ganolae oen only be
FREE card.
.,_ ·•-.. ·
••paneled upon app•l ol
Lie. ;&gt;Ia. 0061-32
- - - · - • ' 10•000 two-thlrda vote of Council
111241'92/lln
Tot.! Rtlule Fund-1110,000 for ltame ol ax,.n.a a
UTTER CONTROL (!lpocltl contlllullng 1 logol ob·
R
·
tlg•tlon ogolnat the vllltga,
IMPROVE YOUR
240
and
and IOf purpo"" olhlr thin
·-----M,IOO thoto coverod by other
MORTGAGE
Totti Ulllr ControL-M,IOO apaclllc · opproprlollona
GRAND lOYAL IPEaAL
SITUATION.
REVENUE FUNDAPPIIO~";.~2. Thlo rtto..,:_
REDUCE
PRIATION---1121,1711 tlon ahaU tab tllact ottha
SECTION 7. Thallhtrt be
·
·
AND/OR
opproprloted fro• the eulleal period lllowod by
following ENTERPRISE ll'lottad:
CONSOLIDATE.
1en
2 1711
•
s1.;::..:::-.:-- - 2.000
240

z:.o.::=-"111111
.

tptc:lll thankl to
Rtw. Acrtt, Dr.
VlliiUIIUVI, VMH
steff, Amy Baker,
Rlc:lne Emergency
SqUid, Fire

o".:::Ororrc···

~

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK

J:i!'::j;;;.;d----...

212 EmplaJ.e
230 Con-ti

zeo DlbtS..IIIee--.1S.OOO
5
Happy Adli
271 TrMaltn..----1.100
1;:;;;;;:;~~;;:;;;:;~ lOTALOIICII

.

cardl, food, end
acts of klnclnen. A

R...lar, Diet c.la

FUNDS
CEMETERY
.
211 Bltart..IWIIget. $11,000
212 Employee
Btnlllta.. -.............. 5,850
230 Contrectuel
20G
· lllterllilt ....----3,000
Total ~ ..--.w,aso
Totalklr Other EnWprltl
127,aso

.upport during her
"'""' 1nc1 duth.

Thanks tor your
prayera, .flowers,

"New•
World Classic•
Cola

SHARING FUND
ISSUE. FUND(Spect.l
R..enue(
230 Controctuol
. Serllcee ....- ......... $271,000
Tot.!.._ n
s271 ' 000

everyone for their

EMMA E. LYONS
Would llkt to thank .

.

~~~=i&gt;iiiiff·

·-.
,..

·:~

CHARLIE'S

a.-._..............

F~IIAi:'R'Ev9iue*·

'

'

Bervlcee __,_ ...... $11111,400

-.--·--. ..... .

Tha Dally Sentinel Page 11

i

:''

Tot.! Ofb,___ $11111,400
Tot.! IOf BMIIary 8ftW
Fund AppiOI&gt;I'Iatlon
Progrem V-Satlc Udlfty

SWI. .ING POOL
PROGRAM 111-t.ElSURE
2AO .......... and
TillE ACTIVITIES
......_ ______2,000 211 s8terle&amp;'Wog•, .$12,IGO
210 c.ptlat OulaY---2.000 212 EmpJor•
_li.............._
500
lleneftta .... - ....._,.,_,2,200
230 Contractutl
..... ....__,
.... 400
.....t'l:lt----· ..........700
811-1•1 FIRE TRUCK .
240 Suppl... tnd
(Speclol Revenue)
llotlfllilt ..........- .... 4,000
230 Contrlcl
271 Tl'lnofera._....,.......150
$1,IGO Total SWimming
2t1 n.w-nt of
Pool .......... - .... - ...$23,850
o.bt_ .................. - 63,000 Total for SWimming Pool
2t21n-l..--··· ·-· 1,500 Fund Approprlttlon
TOTAL Fire
Program 111-Letture
850
300

Setrlcaa ....................S4,000 212 Employoe
'
240 Suppl... end
llenellia.----.41,eoo
230
Conlrlclull
llltarbilt .... - .....~. ..... 1,000
Tot.! Culturtl
~erv~-----·•.soo
...;F;..;•,;;d;;;u~~a;,;.•;;;·;;;·..::.··,;;;
...,;;;
.... :;··.;.:·•. :.;·::.ooo_

The Femlly Of

arrival

Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Morrison,
: Middleport, announce lhe birth of a
· daughter, Misty Ann, on Jan. II at
Pleasant: Valley Hospital.
She weighed seven pounds and ·
• 15 ounces and was 21 inches long.
· : Maternal grandmother is Nora
· Nitz. Maternal step-great-grand·
· mother, Maggie Nitz.
Paternal grandmother is Mae
: Morrison. Paternal grandfather is
·. Gene Morrison. Paternal great·
:: grandmothers are Dorolhy Thorton
·. and Vera Morrison.
:· Other childre n at home · are
:~ Brad , age se·ven, and Danny, age
.. four.

end

f
·. m::

~

TO'Tilf;'"------·

· f!Jtot ol blllo,

PUPPET PiUXIRAM PRESENTED • ne Kids OD tile Bloeki •
Puppeteers recently praeuted a show at Sallllboi'J Eleme.farJ,.
SIDdeats In the tblrd and fourth arade are tar&amp;eteci as tile audlellce '
that tbe SEO.SERRC regloalll ollke In Atbeul dlrec:tl their pro- •
grams. Studeuta hear about arthritis, bUudneu, cerebral palsy, '
deataeu, ep::r,:r• learuJul dlsabWtlea and meutat retardadou. •
The tlleme b
.each of 1ft Paws Is to show students that t11eae .
stadeats are no dlll'ereot that they are, but may jlllt aeed a 1ett1e •
help or Ulldentanctlul.

Public

Public Nollce .

FEDERAL GRANT FUND
810.1·1 FII!E EQUIPMENT
(Bp 1 • n--ut)
211 a.rln/W_ _ .$2,000
212 Pwa. a...nla. - - .300
2211 T.- Trena.---2.IGO
2311 Conhet s.,,_...;8,000

·.'

:·

·'
;
Ways of educating the public
: about Mei~s Coon~ agencies and
their role m providing services 10
, residents were discussed at a meet·
~ ing of agency heads Tuesday after:;. noon at the Soil Conservation
, Office.
Mary Powell, director of the
Meigs County Park District,
, .explained that the goal of the
, group, designated as an educatiOh
committee, is to inform Meigs
; Countians about the specific ser:· vices of agencies Jhrough a regular
: weekly column in The Daily Sen· tine!, a speaker's bureau, and
: school programs. ·
• "It's Your World" was lhe· col· umn title which Powell said had
r • been selected by a smaller commit·
· tee. Guidelines and criteria for such
;: a newspaper column were dis·
·. cussed by Charlene Hoeflich, The
- Daily Sentinel.
.
. It was reported by Opal Dyer of
the Soil Water Conservation Dis·
trict that Michael Duhl of that
. ; office had written an Ohio Depart·

Public Notice

Ann
Landers

ucat1on committee wor s
~ to inform public of services

-~ New

~~~~~~~~3~
'·~1~183~;;;:;;:;==-r=~~;;;;;==T-=~~~~~r.iii
Ohio
:.-_~PI..,;;ub;;.;;llc -Ice
Notice
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

38904 Leading
· CrHk Road

Mltltlleport, O.hlo

FUlURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUR AfiEMPT TO GET INOIJSTIY F01 ·
MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 to 6 ACRES OF RELATIVELY RAJ WID:
(I)
tt. 6 ft. ¥1111Mi ..........
121 Willi S.W... 131W Wa1•
PHONE: Patty or Ray Pickaas
· Hat: 985-4231 or Patty's

No-·

TROLLEY ·sTATION CRAFTS

614·992-7144

992·2549

10/1192

WICK'S
SERVICE·
36970 Ball Ru1 Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

SIZED LIMESTONE

992-3470
OWNER:

JeH Wldters•am

HOURS:
Sund ay · Monday - Clo:sect
Tuesday · Wednesd•y ·Friday - 9: 30a.m .• 5 : 30pm
Thursaa~ · Sa tuJ day -

10: 00 a.m .. 3 :00 p . m . ·

·

104 Mulberry Avenue

Pomeroy . OH 45769

••

.
'•

6 Pack
12 oz. Cans

'

........

cc:"'.J;' ftAi

608 EAST MAIN
· 205 North Slcond Ave.
Middleport, OH

t

lB .ilzJor . , .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Rica Run Rood - lni!Mtly
•n 1 '"'llt thla 3 biCiroom iliOdula' with 2 botths. You'l
...,. to come home to oook supper il .,. beautiful
lllldian and thWI Nlu In front ol .,. flntpl-. Thio io .
111*1(1 on~- 1.5 - • ·
Aalclng $43,500

•

.

TAMARA HAYMAN

LAIGSVIW -A .-y _ . _ Ill~ frlmehome
botaaoml, !emily rilom with I large ......... . , _ graund pool, , _ Mel pump Wid big
dtGI&lt; In - . Alto lou ., oldar garage Md celar. Hu a
nice big lat.
.
ONLY IH,OOO

·Among Who's Who

wllo 4

'

· Tamara Hayman, ·a senior at
: Souttiem High School, has been
:•nominated to appear in the 26th
··anniversary edition of Who's Who
·' Among American High School
Students.
This is her third year 10 appear
in the publication. &lt;;&gt;nty five percent of the nation •s h1gh scl)ool slu·
:dents are named.
- Miss Hayman is active at South·
'C!tll as secretary and ll'easurer of the
•. ber class; a four yeN cheerleader; a
:.ucA All-Star cheerleader' for two
· hll', traveling to London, England
: bt Decemba'·1992; two year meinlx:r ci National Honor Society. She
· has served on the prom commiuee,
,yearbook siaff, service club and
;pep club.
., After graduation, she plans 10
':attend Marshall University and
:illljor 1n heallh services administra-

IDI·

.

......
•

...

.•.

•

MIDDLEPORT - This apaclou1 3 btdloom home is juot
what ... llmily natda. h 111o:lou a large living 100111,
nice ldlahtn with a linlt nook. Hu ,_ .ool, , _
wiring, Md _,lou
Pll"'''· J. .T $23,100•

•

••

I,_-

••

!'
....

.........
Dlnnen

Vrd ~ian,, Chlcloon, Turioey,
.w "1 ot -IDol

u:33...

d-....

EAGLI RIDGE ROAD - Want 1 home with loll of
p II IIIII end 21 olllncl'l Hu 4 bldnlomt, IIIII•
dioh, 2•· 11. ~bow graund owlmmlng pool. 1PC wa11r Md
ALL FOR a&amp;,IOO

-~

•

CIII!IK ROAD - Ga. . County - TIU '*"PIIill lou
llniOIII- Md kclu{laa a .... ol R• "I Cnak lor
wa 14 end lllilng. Comn with a 1881 OMipll Wid e
............ . . Hu • mllllld .... and •• ll*lly
II ~i d d
,
111,0110.

i

•
I

~

•

'

.'•
••

'

I

f

I

(

--

ltinodeliag

. POMEROY, OHIO

BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION READY FOR
VIEWINOI c- Rd. 3 biCiroom Joome, approx. I acre,
bllautlullivlng - . ~. baemen~ 2 car garage,
cloddng,- epa:e. -room, aldewllk. ceopeting, 2
botlho, VERY NICEI 115,100
NEW USTIIG- FRANK RD.· One lloor ~e Ranch
Style homo 4 bedroom•. 2 baths. lamoly room
...... ,. e, ..... - gnge. In ground pool, 1.1·Ac. with
IWictd pool-. PNIIr home, g!UIIoc:lltlonl t41,500

PRICE REDUCEDI R1cine- ~· 12+ - • of vacant

ground, Ulililiea awillble, propel1)' l'l8eda IUMI)'ed.

AIIKNJ $1D,DIIII
GREAT STARTER HOllE OR RENTAL INVESTMENT·
1 112 o1o1y with 3 bodrooma. on two Jail of 50 X
100MCII. A.wng$18,100mayacceplrot~Ofler.

'
IIIIIIIIATE POIIESIIDN- Approl.li.0.0
5 - with .0

Stop &amp; C•pare

.C. YOUNG
992-6215
P-or,Ohlo

HAUliNG

LOG IIAILIIGr

, . .Ill, or
FLITIII WOII
In State or Out
1 Of State.

S &amp;L

)( 2t hunting - · .Vary ~. NOlie IIIII owmota.
$17,000

EAGLI RIDGE- Sir 100111 tr.me home with 3-4
blldnlonol. 112 b1m1. TPC - · 2 cor garage, 1 + on ...-I !Oed. ASKING $18,500 ·
'
'

.

-108SLL lOUII-

t.r CALL CUUII) .ui.1Y.

.. . Uif1M1-RYYYOUWH10.U
11W MD WAIT FOII'IMI "liiLD" 8101110 AWIAII
IN lOUR YOUII YAIIDI

CALL 'IODAY FOR DRTAILSIII

HAULING
UMESTONI,
GRAVR&amp; COAL
Reasonallle Rates

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

614·742·21

i

.

•Co~llte

992·2259

~
't

Peanut leller

li¥#169
'

.......

CONSTRUCTION
..........s

•

Rouncl Steak
Ill.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

•

....

Full Cut

OFFICE 992·2886

II
'

'

FlEE ESTIMATES

915·4473
667•6179 ·
2-7-92·111

•

WOLFE &amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING
~ncoma

Tu PrepW"IIIon
·

08-. .lng

•Payroll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
end BUSINESSES

113Y. W. SECOND ST.

,_,.
...
,
992-6193

POMIRO~OH.45769

,..... , ..... _r

UCINE
CLUI
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFOfiCED

•
Wt Apprultlt \'aar l•olltlll

WE TOTE THE NOTE!
WltbllllalanaiDdowD
trlde••

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement wrndowll
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL a~~d RESIDENTIAL
.FREE ESTlMATES

614-949·2801 • 949·2160

Or 915·3139'

lllo S•IIII•J C.ll1)
\

�Sentinel

Qhlo

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

1993
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

Fumllhld
Rooml

............................
---·-·111011111.
11Wt11110

84

Hey a Gl81n

-

..,, IUU I

Ohio

The

The World Almauac e Crossword

lltolli

~.,.,. nt ~~~·- ·~

.

ACROSS

Transportation

PHILLIP

1111'1mN\ICHICIIIH-

Jililii, IIIIUI.TIIn 1__.

ALDER

:anm
- tut PER .....
K 11 VIlli. ~AA CO.

r.1erchandl50

0

NORTH

t •

+AJIOB

I
I

I

~

EEKAND MEEI{

+u

+KJ

~

WEST
+Q7H
.634

...

.,

EAST

+Q64

(2 •da.)

52 Speed

creature

30 Colona

32 Unaoplolo·

Hcalod

•Ks

+Al053

'38 COOk In owen

5 Song words

6 Sounded Hkt

1 Device

contentid
baby
7 Engine meas.
8 Mo11el
9 Eartl1

dlmenllion
(abbr.)
3 1111. ochool
4 No
2 A

planta

+AKQ

.

Tranllit abbo.
ss Publishing
blundera
57 TV's Ted 59 Chltrai ·
60.Stow

34 Figure ll!ater
- Thomll
35 R-Hkl

SOUTH
+K9 8 2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

,.

Sou..

Weal

4 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I+

BARNEY

SNT
7+

MAKIN' CORN SQUEEZ.IN'S,
FIGHTIN' REVENOOERS,
SACKIN' CHICKENS 1
DODGIN' TH
SHERIFF,
'CARD
SHARKIN'
AN'

1•
s•+

Nor ..

3·+

6
Pass

''"lout,_...

49 Jockle'a 2nd
hullband ·
SOFielh
COIIIIIII

Powell

+109843
+98 72

(Jimoa Bond
movie)
42 Underworld
44 Forehoad
45 Poueao
47 Prallnd

54

27- Deum
28 S.bllkt

•wu

+J7S

11 Not IIF!IIorm
In quality

ZOD-d
22 Facl.ll
feature
23 Barrell
25 Gonerai -

.AQ J 74

•

1 Fiend

6 Spook

12 Erldlc:ote
14 - llcllaiiOn
15 llora certain
17 Smell
18 llo.hommtdon r..cler

~-11;

Anewer to

4 1 Dr. -

t;ut
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: ?

sleight
By Pbllllp Alder
Yesterday we looked at the Grosvenor Gambit, whereby a defender oiJ.
tains the normal result by abnormal
means. But sometimes a defender can
gain a trick with an abnormal clay.
The defender knows that the dec arer
caMot see through the backs of the
cards. He knows the conclusion that
the declarer will draw - and realizes
it will be the wrong conclusion.
This deal occurred during ·the 1977
Bermuda Bowl in Manila. Sitting West
was Mike Passel!.
You can see that South has to find
the spade queen to make the grand
slam. The "teitbook" lead against a
grand slam is a trump. The opponents
presumably won't have bid seven with
a hole In the trump suit, so it Is a ·safe
lead, giving nothing away.
Suppose you are in seven and don't
receive a trump lead. Wbat conclusion
do you draw? II the lead is, say, a sale
king from K-Q; perhaps there is DO in·
ference available. But il it is a poten·
tia!ly dangerous lead, probably It
means that the opponent bas no trump
to lead or be bas a trump holding from
which be doesn't want to lead.
· In this deal, if West leads, say, a dia·
monel, it would .be normal for declarer
to play West for the spade queen.
However, Passel! . could see
coming. To deflect declarer from
winning line, be led a trump at

~PEANUTS

'

.

DIDN T CATCI-l TI-lE

POLAR BEAR, I-lUI-I?

... - ............------

NO, I DON1T KNOW WI-IAT
A MOOSE TASTES LIKE ..

WI-IAT ARE VOl!
GOING TO
DO NOW?

.._ ................ Ub,

Chlllh,... '
7

Clll RITA Aftor 4:00
11to27So0033 (COLUCT)

The Plulltblrt And ..... Flttlr8
r.-1 Union Nu-l'nwtn lo
!!.hlnl Oul Appllootlono .....

Y!lrd Sale

~ ~hlp Pl!llllllll

........, ,., '"'"'FMnoooy
I, AI The Union Ho.,

Gllllpolla

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Ohio..,., ...........

.._AI: 2 1 M - - ·
-h,
Don ,_ ~ Oppoltunfty
ALL _ _ _ loPIIdln EmploJer.

----...... _=-.of--'Oiiioo&amp;VIclnHy

. . . . . . DIADLIE: 2:00 P.IIL

....

......, -

• 2:00 ......
~ ...lan . 2:00

...,...., •

-

-

'*•--.

AIOAfi~···PUStl Ttl~ ,tsfT

lUTTON .

with

iipid.;;n;:_-.
will be
M. 1111\. M••
~

puilwaid.
aaa p1 d

- : tlh,llh,Mh.

OICAY. IIOAti'S GOT· TtlfM A,_L

lo ,_ ooo:r::.~ tor...::

Town

111 out til oil Rt.7.
t o Town oi-HaaUl&amp;a PJrro..lllllla.~
~COlla. P.O. loK 117, Hawon, WV
- . - .......... old .... 111211.
I ' 0 n'\
ccnlaltw, ~~;;;\;..l!iiiiiiiii~

- . -· - . . ...._a-.-p, •-

.......... lrklle. ......

.-oty, · AllloiY

11110 MnMitbilho,
F.,.ey, '14110. 131
pto!on ......

In _ ., ......,. -

_ , Kltalliit, 'Ric~. Ololo. ' - .

Pclmeroy,

Woo,.od: Daloy · lllllor, I
....,....,., Non.moker, Nondotnur, E•porlotoood Anc!

ll!lddllport

-=---·

a VlclnHy

-

1017.

"' , ... - O.IIIM:
. . Plldthe
In
.......
1:0011m

Froo

..-, .....,. 1111 Ill lo lo run,

......
...... ~

14

~

Cfillllaa. wll
holdlor
a
IUs n 1
_.. cllllon
laturdly,

, . . . . , .. , . . . . . ., tpm.

•ltht- Job ,._lion

eorot....,.
-· - .....2 -.,...
·-- · Nollolotwootor,
• OIUio.
AIC,
01orogo
wtlng, :1CJ4.4171o
Pll.
.

33 Fanna for Sale

EIR TREE SERVICE.

81 acre country aatate with
DOnd. Ylnton. Colonial tlrm

....

houoo
-'Y - - · gorogo,
2 largo
bomo,oummw~

25M.

l5

:M'JI.7M'T'Aftor ~.m.

r~.;-:,1:.: .m~ awner.

R-

G...._ living. 1 ond 2 bodooom opo~- 01 Vlllinor
Mid .
Apo~-• In lllddlopoot. F"""
Colt~---- EOH.
llldl
; rt 1 a 2 room ••·
utiiHiil pold, clop I Ill, _ ,

18 . Wanted to Do

Trimming, Troo - ....
Trlrromlna. Fno Eltlmototl 0

r' rA WEIII!Itl(. 1l&gt; G6TTIW. !tiD~
(:Ji lll€ JKr--o'~!
I - 11M oofo=o

--1121110

'

Wllntld to Buy

....,. .....

Nt ......""'"" Gulllo ...,..,

.

:=/""' ..,. a ,........
~ I 11'11 Aoolo -

..........

p-··

__

Com-

IIIII Solvogo, • " - l$choot Ago · 1221.

loo .... -

. . 21.....

1111;

Want
to:
iQi'v.:: . : - · : - :
-·
=::.
aaz:we.•......
•
iiei: ..... . PIN tionnEXTRA
-.............
. . . . toili ...
.........
-

~mtoe-.

... .._
lhrie

Nne

11 pott•bt• oo1or T.v.'. 1121

whl
...............
-~~;---~~­

tl.,':l'

.. .......•rln .
-.. ..

- -·

_....,IIOdoyglll-

)I]

u.s.

:c=.m-==:
-

..._ Plld: "' Old

to """ -

Employment Serv1ces

-

.... _...,..... ....
,._,,.._,_"'
.,...., ___
_"'..,_
11

Fmancial

e :rtao•uN.

....

21
.

INOTIOEI

,

OliO VALLEY PUIIJIIIWCI CO.
rr~:all'tlftll• Ulll ~ clo

'*""'

Moil-~.
AS
l,tM_I_

-NOTio--1
wllh

lloo-....

tho

eel

-oro

_.....

-

!J. aDDtv In
, . _ &amp; Fit, 12:00 IIA

.

M:-r

~
With-- c.n
~ lpoclll Olllf, 1 -

I

Clll-250, bill

RDD

RPXJYA

CIJL

XJ

I J L R P X J Y

CL

-

..

SNIVRXEVK
KXEN

0 A P N U

DORXCXAR.'

,,,

I~W

KVGTL

AD

.A P I J
HXKKNC

•

' SN

I J
WIEDN.

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Don't wrlle about my successes. My !allures ar!!
much more lnter-.ting."' -

Sir John Glelgud.

.J.

&lt;'\

Cl 1113 by NEA. Inc .

:

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...

•

...

~

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;f
vl

- - 00N1. .runa 11M nNII
~
~ ~

a:

-

-

....... DR 100. .....
...... MOO.IOUJWMt. •

75

Bolla a Moto,.
tor Sill

CA8H?!I
78

Q. Is there any difference between

~RU~L.E:.6HE 0&lt;\'!SeHES
STAAVINS 10 DeATH
I

AutoPanaa

Accnnrles

YE~Y

•1! 'mo. lnotudae ul " .... $100

I CAj lEi-IT

A. There is a considerable differ·
ence. FORBEAR. with only one E. is
a verb that means "to refuse or ab·
stain." With i1 second E. FOREBEAR
is a noun that means "forefather or
ancestor" &lt;as in "She charted the line
of her' forebears") . If you should ever
be tempted to use the noun FORE~-~~...... .., 1 HIIAII as a verb, you must forbear.

,.;!!, 10:ili!
to -.:00~'!!;;,...,,.., 1'.00

toi:Gtlp.m.llt - • • ·

""*"' • ..,..,.,.... .

Fumlhn
... .._ elol .....iiil Tooltlo
~ ~ -

=:r..

...,_ItO.

Po~lolty Fumlihod Ono lodooom Ajlootmo,., Utllftloo Pold,
&lt;llop rh, No Pot!, ,21111 IIIIo

LID lllo
-lglolll
· - loilhlr
oniJ,
-Oolglnll
-.

.
e14 cce •n...............
...

~~~- ....... wlllo
- -...
.
AlootrollwAll.......,
Colt oftor 2:00 r&gt;.m.. 301·~

...,....- .wv. .

By GARY LARSON

•

FORBEAR and FOREBEAR' If so,
what?

HER CHEWINS ON HER
SNeAKeR .

St:\ Anl"'-

Poa-r. -

~

•••

lOt -

110.

1111

c...

~- ...., 1710.-

Mlsc:ella~

54

Merchandise
:10
lnoh With 'DII!IR - With ..... Door -u 1"1Rl eon.
ttltlonl114 ttl 1171 Mlr 4 P.ll.

81

Thm your clutter ineo cfUiat

SJnl. il the eau ~My...lty pbOy,
no need lo leoN your home•
Pkce ·wyr clauifjld gd Codqyl
15 U10rU or W., 3 Ml'f.
3 Rum. 15.40 poid in odwmce.
•

.... IIIIo

2l--------~----------•. ________________

' . ASTRO·ORAPH

BERNICE

~

IIICIDMI, lmh du encl

-

.... loil - . .,........

3 •. ________~--------4. ______--.,;,_;;;__________
5•._ _ _ _....:,__ ___;_ _

==·.:~
::.::a::·\:1.
=
... ,,....,..
•

-

-

CLOFJR
'1
••• .J;.,

--AI'III··"·=··-·

By Jeffrey McQuain
•
EfFULGENCE refers to bright·
ness• or brilliance, as in "the efful:
gence of th ~ sun." Enlighten your
listeners by pronouncing th e noun EF·
FUL,GENCE "ih·FUL·jents."

Buy ,.. HI. Rlw•IM
1121 1: 111111
11'1 AL 124

.:;."!.., ,...._
-PI • -.1-.aeM. .
••·-~--..
·~• .. .
o.. hm' .om :t:.."'":."' ·o.~c
_.. ll8nd . , n=• • ~~ow~
tm.Oill-..-

Furnished
Rooms

Buslnetia
Oppol1unlt)'

"""'"you=- THIFARSIDI
...
·you----tolul•·
..._..._..,..._,no

..
jjjiiii-.......
~ nn

~II\.

1ng,

HeJpWantld

•A'IIflllr ALL AREAII- ''""

..

AntlquH

Comroliltr fumlihod onobllo
l1ooM, 1 milo bot. . town . _

·-.-

-

53

=;;;;;~fi~il;;~ii;;;;;;:

dopoolt, oio polo; 11M-

............l l
-

Rentals

7'; II

................ ?

I

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

-·

Fumlihod &amp;moll
HouOo, PI!Oimo. • UtiiHioo. No
- · Coii llohoro 7 P.ll. 6t4-lleml.
'

~-- r. No~"'' 114lootd~....
~~. ""·
••• 0131.
One
ltadroo111
....-em,
I'll.... CII NlqUif'H. no Dlta. Pt.

ro.T·~=--~
t• I J. ,

&amp;..., LINfr. N

ANNJ

'ADO

·-

~

--"""

~-

J:!EDE OSOL

6--------------~--­

8~·-------------------•. ___..,:__ _ _ _ ____

Vlndlna
Route:
A'ICIIIIan
pllllll . . . _ wllh I iliidy

9·-----~~-------

.............. ,.lllv.M.

10
11·.__...;.,..
_ _~---

Rr.:il EsiJIP

.......

12_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____

.
.........

Croooolt - I R Mlltltw.................. lluy

....... ....

........
...
_
...
:f........;oj.!" .....!nt.
~._

.

~l
'1
~ ..;
.

:In'"!"*•

/Toddlo,. 111 Ill 8227. P -

SNN~

' X ' ZN

can.,,........

·1~7171h St.,
I
' IIWI7-

oqulpocl

llloo
Dov C.... Corotor 1
Block Woot 01 HMC On.._
Plb 11-F e A.ll. -6::10 P.ll. n
Oualfty
- ~--lo Tho
11
Concom
,... Your Chlld'o
Cora. Coli Uo ,... A Vloft. lnlont

..r•
T

South was convinced East bad
spade queen. After the apade 10
the lint trick, the declarer called
dummy's spa~e ace. lmagiDe bls snoc~J
wben East discarded.
C&gt;-.

to

hout ....., Iorio to lho . . juot
·~,·---~~~~~­
~
CIIIIOW7S-1tl7.
.,....., Ulld
oor35 Lots &amp; Acreage
11 Ac.W lion Or Looo, No~h ~ t14 44111171.
- Of. -unfumlohod
· a lood_ , ....... RIIoiUoYour.,.,
GiNo Hlg!1 8choot Aooo, WwM14 ~ Allllll&amp;ncw,
UIRioo
Avolillto,
O.nor
52 Sporting Goods
-Fo o ,....,_T'h.
...........
FIMnelng. 114 311 liM.
1/CII'o, lllooowoNew two bedroac&amp; ~menta,
O•argee Portable Slwmlll1_don'1

•

;-1

..:= -

.... ,... door

Ylctorlln
MX?Q,
•-14o=~pwcll,

blda, ""
1417-4:

&amp;Auction

lliAUTIFUL APAIITIIENT8 AT
BUDGET- Kr ~~
ESTATII. 131 J1al• an Plll8
ho&gt;on . , . , _ Will to """" I

t411D.

.

&gt;

one.

mov11e. c.ll t11 411 all IOH•

Business ·
• Training

Pubic Sale

8

IJonooo Rtclp, · - . 1
112 WI, hill pump. alova,
..fllaont.!!J..III• otntrto, 114.1410:.,
11~ 1.

$·":."'1~-:=

1:00plll Frtdoy,
.......
10:00a.m.

-==:~·
:

... Aoqulrod. 114-216-

'

,,.....

11~~----~---------

14·------------~

15 ____~~~~~----446-~342

9'J 2-2156
. -. ,.
(

' help you to under·
Matcl!makw. can
atand what to do to make tho relation·
11111p WO&lt;t&lt;. Mall $2 pius a long, eell·ad·
dreased , allmpod envelope to
Matchmakll', P.O. Box 91428, Clev..
land, OH 44101·3428.
PIICII (Foob. »Mirrch 2111 It Ia bell
nolto request'llvora today trom people
""""' you've luot recenUy met and ·
haven't astllblllll1ed otrong bonds ot
trlendllhlp with lflll. It could kill the
cllance ot a rllatlonllhlp.
- • (lllorolt 21·April111 a. careful
lboutlnvltlng othertto CMullly drop In
and you today unlelt you really
.,..., 11. Thlt could Invite moro dlllnlptlontthlln you can hllldlo. 1
TAUIIUS (April • . . , •1 ldMI or
llllggelllonl that you have teotec:l
yourMif oloouldn't be~ to
otherl today. ~ might good on.
p:p:. but till ""-U!y I n -·
-•C11araww.8)AVOidteklnQ i
llllllbleotadaylhat=uldaftectyour,... ,
-rcea or eooneonti'eiM'I. Lid)' Luck
mtght be In thl - . but lho could be

you. ·
LEO (.IUIJI 23-A... 221 Relying too
heavily upon your wit and charm to get
you by today could be a mlalake. II
mlght·"'!&gt;&lt;k up to a point, but 1oM ltslm·
pact whon the going geto tough .
YIRGO (Arle- IIJ.Iopt. 22) Your hopea
could be dashod today It thoy are built
upon '/IMk foundations. E111Ct your ctie ot olQ)IICtatlon·on bedrock, not 11111tt·
lng aanda. •
·
LIIIRA (tlept. IIJ.Oct. :131 Your behavior
and motlvltlonl will be clollly ocrutl·
nlzed by others today. Don't do any·
thing tooUIII1 that could detract from 1
your loniiJI.
.
ICOIIPIO (OcL :14-No¥. 22) Innately, ,
you lrl I kind peroon and lhli loon 111·
viable quellty. But today you might
- t h e duo qwhllo ,_,ding
one who lhould be IQnorad •
IACIITT.UWI (Noll. :13 Dooo. 21) To- '

GOlla you Initially ell tor Youroanln tlw[
aiJ-cl mlgllt not be ._bllllld
dayiiOIIMiortllmlglltol*youapropo~~­
mlgllt-needtobellttrec:l. Thoywlll
lion that~ nifty on tho.,..._ •
but could have hidden llrlngllltlchod.
· be ....,..,.,, - · by ob)lctlvM .
thlt .,. mont I'IIIIIIIIC llld I'Mcl!lble.
Don't be reluctant to Ilk penetrating
AQUUII,II (.lton., • , _ 1l) Tltlro II buay
out
questions. 1 •
one ol !110M daylw11111 you mlglll hlvo · CAIICIII (
21......,
A member 1 CAPIIICORN (Dec. INarl. 11) Don't i
IIICJUtllt tr...- 18111ng ..,. ot your _, o1 the
• IIIFIW mlgllt comt on . Ill othii'l dO your ,thinking today In 1111
10 don't ~extend yourNI! by rather ortrong today IIOCI, 111ougtt "" or 111-.or-tlhat an.cta thorn u Mil u ·
on Uliglllllll111 tor othora, hlr llltenllon 11 ftetlerlno, you COUld be yourNI!. The
they render
.,. rwponllbll. Trying to patch up 1 In trOuble 11 llola Ia 1111 wrong f*IOII tor COUld benallt
bul not you •
. brol!an ram-? Tho A81ro-Orlph
·

sanoth«

a)

dUl•·
'"'Ina

IUdll"*'''
"*"·

&gt;'

1

E N8 U G

I

summer my family made a
game of finding the most
s
~
unique bumper stickers .. My
L-L.--lC-..L-...
L--' Z favorite .one said, ' Passing on
..-.......--::-::-:-:-::-- ; curves rs best left for JUdges
T I Q 0 US
lofbeaufy .... -......

II

1-....;;_::,,..::...,:.....,.,-i

I I

II I I I
?

L.....l..-L-...L..-l-

A
'1;11'

A

V

16• • 0

Compl~te t he chu~kl.e quoted
by frl lmg m the m1umg WOfds
..1.--' you de..,elop from step No. 3 below.

PRI NT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE 'LETT ERS
FO R ANSWER .

I

,.,
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Bisque • Issue • Jerlry • Pauper • SQUEAK
Our new neighbors were always arguing loud enou~h
for us to hear. One evening I heard the nagging Wife
say to her henpecked husband: "Are you a man or
·mouse? Come on, SQUEAK up!"

.:r.
lio
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·&gt;

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Page 1~The

...

'

Ohio Lottery

Sentinel

People in
the news

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
The &gt; mn "10g did see his shad·
ow yesterday and yo u know, of
• course, what lhll. means-six more
weeks of winter.
· However, for our locality this
winter has been as about as ~ as
it Jets -ve~y "tol e~abl e . We
enJOyed lrv10g Berltn' s "Whtte
Christmas" all eight thou:,and times
before the only snow·came right on
cue for Christmas Day.,-and lhen,
thankfully, went merrily on its
way. So if the groundhog promises
that the next six weeks won 't be
.any worse, we' ll accept his predic·
tion without abuse.
. We' re not only Jiving longer,
but it seems to me we're looking
better.
. I ran into Pomeroy's TreU and
·Edna Schoenleb downtown the
:other day . They were so well
groomed-and as always, person.able. It's hard to believe thatlhey
are octogenarians . . And what are
they into? ·Well, they're looking
forward to redecorating their home
ibis spring.
'
And speaking of long-living,
Mrs. Mila Ramsey of lhe Racine
area will be observing her tOOth
birlhday on Monday, Feb: 8.
Mrs. Ramsey has been a resident of the Sldlled Nursing Facility
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
since July 14, 1989. She has two
daughters, Helen Burkhan of Yald·
ma, Wash., and Wilma Schultz of
Racine; six grandchildren ; eight
.great-grandchildren and four great·gi'eat-grandchildren. She was born
"a¢ raised in Mt Vernon, Ill., one
of a family of 13 children. She has
one sister still living.
Speaking of se'!iors, Jackie

Baseball
suspends

Hildebrand kept a tally of pneuliiOnia shots give !&gt;y the Meigs County . PALM BEACH, Fla,.(AP)Health Department to elder resi- · Police j"c:stloned Anthony
dents recently . A total of ISO Kennedy hrivet, a Kennedy-clan
senior citizens received the shots member hose silltcl is TV jourincluding 27 to those ~; 39. to ruilist Maria·Shriver, after a report
those 65-69; 36 to residents 70-74; his J~ plowed bushes 11 Donlld
26 to those from 75 lhrough 79; 11 . Trump s palatial estate, Mar-a.
to those 80 lhrough 84; 10" to lhose I.,ago.
Police gave Shrivu, 27, a road85 through 89, and one: ninetY·
si!le sobriety .test and be was
year-old received lhe vaccme.
allowed to leave urer lhe results
were negative. Palm Beach police
It's interesting. Most of us spokeswoman Janet Kinsella said
would be quick to repay a dollar Tuesday lhe depanment considered
borrowed from a friend or a garden lhe matta' closed.
tool from a neighbor. But boOks ·· Jlarly Sunday, Mar-a-Lago
fall into another category. ' Once ~ suoerintendent Jim Griffin
we borrow lhem, they just seem to .. iritd police he saw a J~ Olerokee
become our personal propeny-'- leave Trump's estate after a party,
perhaps, ~e jus.t conclude they're driving "through the bushes all
not wonh rewmmg.
around lhe poperty recklessly."
At any rate, Beuy Frazier of 728
Police atlhe party l'ldioed paaol
Boswonh St., Middlepon, had a officers, who . round the Jeep
· copy of "The Bible Book". She stopped some distance away, wilh
used it frequently but loaned it and Shriver reportedly standing outside
has forgouen to whom. If y,ou run checldng damage.
·
,
across Beuy 's bOok among your
An assistant 11 Shriver's Miami
belongings sbe' d be ever so gra~e- office said Tuesday he was out of
ful for its return.
town and would be Wllvailable fer
comment
Trump spokeswoman Norma
You might want to remember Foerderer said she asked Trump
Howard Johnson, Jr., ami his Moth· about the incident, but he had no
er, Pauline Johnson. Howard is comment
·seriously ill and is being cared for
Shriver's .falher, Sargent Shrivby his Mother. They formerly er, was a vice .J!teSidential .candilived in the Racine community. dlle in 1972 Wllh George.McGov·
Aunts of Howard are Laura: Circle ern and the fint director of the
and Lizzie Woods of Racine. Mail Peace Caps;
.
will reach Howard and his Molher
His mother is Eunice Kennedy
at 1212 E. Alan St., Carrollton, Shriver, sister of former President
Texas, 75006.
Kennedy.

•

Man pleads innocent in rape,
sl(lying of girlfriend's 3-year-old
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A man setup.
Williams set a pretrial hearing
. pleaded innocent to raping and
ldlling his girlfriend's 3 ~year-old for Feb. 23. Phillips could, face the
dealh penalty if convicted of aggradaughter.
Ronald Phillips, 19, of Akron, vated murder in the Jan. 18 beating
was arraigned Tuesday from the death of Sheila Evans.
Her molher, Fae Evans, 25, of
Summit County Jail via a closedcircuit television hookup with lhe Akron, has ~en charged with
courtroom of Summit County in~oluntary manslaughter and
Common Pleas Judge James could face a 20-yem: prison tenn if
convicted. She also pleaded innoWilliams.
He was the first defendant cent Tuesday and faces a Feb. 23
· arraigned under the new television pretrial hearin~~:.

. Literary club gathers
Rae Reynolds hosted the Mid· ing lheir children through lhe condleport Literary Club's recent fusing aflermalh, and fmally, lookmeeting held at the Meigs County ing .attheir world with bittersweet
Library. The club collect was led maturity.
Mrs. Buck said that for all its
by Betsy Parsons, president
· "Except for Me and Thee" by fascinating differences, their world
Jessamyn West was reviewed by confronts dilemmas strikingly conEileen Buck. This is lhe story of a tem)!orary • youthful rebellion,
family of young Quakers meeting racial intolerance; social inequity
lhe challenge of nature and man as and warfare's misery.
For roll call members gave a
the growing family travels westward, their encounter with the bit- Quaker custom. Light refreshments
terness and savagery that explode were served by ibe hostess. ·
into lhe Civil War, and later guid-

balll.

.
.(

.

Kicker:

. 9388

Clear toniahL Low ID mid
20s. Frlday, IDany. HJcb ID mid ·
40s.
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•
Fau~ Aady Mora: tblnlll'lde • HoDy Brodlr· ,
,lck, Ben Holter, Garrett karr; fourth &amp;ride •
Wes Crow, Cinda Cllll'ord, Krlllte1 Cll~er;
fifth grade • Later Parker, Cbulty Holloa, Jelsica Pore; sixth arade • Valerie ll:arr, Aaron
WUI, Bryon Ma.; L.D. • David Dilley, Milldy
Gueg; and D.H. • Heather Westfall aDll J McCartney. Teachers pictured are .Mille WUJ
1111d Ron HHL

FLAGS PRESENTED • American Le1loa
Feeney Bennett Post 128, Middleport, presented
11 nags to Chester Elemeatary oli Tuesday
l!lol'llinl. Cllarlel "Red" CIIT, aeaiQr vice commande~, along with Bruce Myen, Jobn Rose,
Ralph Ballard ud VIctor Babr, presented tbe
flap to student counc:ll repraenhltivel. ·Siudeatl
pictured, Ia no particuJar order, are.: ftnt lrade
• Jonathan Owen, Caaandra Lodwk:k, Betky
Taylor; second l(rade • Carrie Crow, Casey

lol. 43, No. 200

•

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Voinovich submits ·record budget to legislature
By ROBERT E. MILLER
· Alsoclated Press Writer
CQLUMBUS- Gov. Geor,ge
Voinovich submitted to the Legtslature today .a record $30.8 billion
General Fund budget for lhe stale's
two-year bookkeeping period
beginning July 1.
The proposed budget reflects an
increase from approximately $27
billion in this two-year period. It
would be funded in part by project·
ed inflationary growlh in revenues
and a December taX increase that
should ptoduce about $900 million.
Most state agencies would
receiv.e increases roughly tied to
in~tion, allhough there are some
exceptions. The administration
apparently lhinks inflation will he
about 4 percent a year.
Budget Director Greg Browning

By SCOTI WILUAMS
arise with CBS.
.
because tl)ere is so much competiAP Televialoa Writer
"I think th_e network is goil)g tion," McKinney said. "We hid a
NEW YORK- When do "ere- lhrough a gradual soflening of its battle wilh CBC ovu this thina and
alive differences"' slide into cen· standards because they have to, we won that. ••
.
so!Wp?
.,
.
Go ask The Kids in ~ Hall, a
bunch of cross-dressing Canadian
comedy troupers who fought and failed - last week to get CBS·
WHAT II THE · EARNED INCOME
to clear an AIDS-Ihemed sketch b
CREDIT
AND HOW 00 I
their lale-night Friday show.
QUAUFY FOR IT?
· That's funny, since it already
Tho oornod Income crodll Ia
aired, presumably wilhout controdealgned to help lower-Income
versy, on the premium cable serworking ArMrlc1n1. In recent re•ra
lho crodllhU - . lncrooaod ond tho
vice HBO, basic cable's Comedy
req_ulrementa for cl1lmlng It ha¥1
. Central and even the Canadian
clwlgld,loo.
Broadcasting Corp., Canada's
You moy qualify lor lho oornod
Income c...rlt II your adjualod gfa ..
natiooal network.
Income and urned lnconw for 1112
It points UJ? lhe dilemma for a
w.ro lou Ilion tu,STO and you livid
U.S. commen:ial netWork trying to
wtllt ono Dl """" quolllylng chlclren In
compete with cable riYals and still
· lhe Nmo homo In lho Unltod StoiOI
for mote thlln 111 monlhe or the yNr
play it safe.
(tho onuro yoor 11 tho -lilylng child
"We're not a prime-time show,
Ia your taow child).
and we never, never will he," said
The omount ol cr ...t lo wlllc~ you
troupe member Mark McKinney. · .,. onUllod II troalod 01 o poymont ol .... lhol will prov1c1o Y'fU with 0 1orgar
"Yet we've always managed to
relund or roduco lho omount Dll&lt;lx you woul&lt;! - · owo.
·
.W henever Y'fU h ... _
...... • - • how lholl- .-t-.roturn, coli yqur
fmd a paper place for lhe show."
local H&amp;R Block olllco. llotllr yol, olop by tho ono noorest you. Wo'ro ,_. .,
Last year, lhe Kida~ shows were
holpyou.
airing on four such places: the
CBC, HBO, Comedy Cential and
CBS. McKinney said the ttoupe
has had arauments .over conte~t
with all four networks, so that 11 • 618 EAST MAIN
992·6674
isn 'I surprising
.
- a problem would.
.

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

_ MIAtdl (AP) - Marjory Stoneman Douglas, the 102-year-old
"Grande Dame of the Everglades," who pushed for cnvirlln·
mental protec·tion long before it
became fashionable, was inducted
into the Florida Anists Hall of
Fame. ·
.
A journalist,. author and
women's rights activiat, Mrs. Douglas' ·1947 book "The Everglades:
River of GtUs'' warned of lhe dan·
gets of manmade di.sruption of
Florida's natural wilderness.
"You were far ahead of aU of us
in .recognizing the imponance of
the Florida Everglades," Florida
Secretary of State Jim Smilh said
Monday as he gave' her a bronz~
sculpture marldng lhe honor.
Mrs. Douglas was an early
champion foe creation of lhe 1.4.million-~rc
Everglades
National
Park,
now the
heart of the
once- r-------~--------~----:--------~--;.....--....,...-­
massive wetll!nfls dir,ninished by
decades of commerctal develop·
ment
, Mrs. Douglas' book still sells
several thouspnd copies.a year and
is read in many Florida school
classes.
"That's what we had hoped,"
she said. "It's the ldnd of thing
that's timeless, you see.
Her health bounced beck after
serious respirlloly problems a year
ago. Her vision faded away years
ago, but she listens to recorded
books and receives frequent visi- ·
tors at her Coconut Grove home.

released copies of the voluminous
document. He and Voinovich
scheduled a mid-morning news
~onfezence to explain lhe budget's
ratio11ale and ~nd to questions.
Ohio's pub he schools, which
Voinovich says are his top priority,
are down for increases totaling 8.9
percent over the biennium. They
would receive $4.60 billion in the
fust year and $4.79 billion lhe second, totaling 59.4 billion,.- up
from $8.56 billion in Ibis biennium..
Higher education would receive
a larger increase of 11.5 percent,
perhaps because they bqre the
brunt of severe budget cuts ordered
by lhe govemor to deal with a budget defteit last year.
The state-assisred colleges and
universities would receive $3.68
billion over the two years, com-

pared wilh $3.35 billicit in lhe current biennium.
Voinovicb' s l)uman services
budget totals $13.S billion. for •
inaasc of 17.8 pen:ent. k inc:JncJcs
almost $3.9 billion as lhe state's
share of lhe Medicaid JIIOIIMI, . .
inaasc of more than 16 pm:eot in
current levels.
Voinovich, keeping a promise.
did not propose a major tax

spNoting, tepwew receipts from
tbc guoline tax llld ouda)'f of fed·
eral DIIIC.hing money. Jn the past,
lhe depu btoent has hid a separate
budget.
In a leiter lhltlt:IXIIIIpanied lhe
budget. lhe governor said it builds
" on the strategic investments in
people and programs entered into
in lhe current bictutium ••• made in
a context of exlrellle fiSCal resbaint

increases.
and 0051 CODtrol.' '
He said he was funding a Sludy
Earlier this week, the depart·
of Ohio's tax llrtlCIIIre lllllllhal he mcniS of Rehabilitation and Corwould include money for lhal pD- rection and Youth Services
posal. It will include a review of · announced program expansions
lhe stare's sJuggisb eca101ny.
lhlllhey said would be fundal wilh
The governor included the iila
"Diing ltbour 25 pen;eot
DCpartmeot of TliiiSfOrtllion in ... 32 peaceut, ICspeCtivcly.
his budget. HOVr'I:Va', itS pitjJOIIed
Ill the P'CO'Id year .. the budget
$3 billion outlay, in edclition 10 1he period. ttHICCtiOIIS would n:ceive
$30.8 billion in Ge1eral Fund $762 millioa and youtb ~ices,

Weekly
jobless
·claims fall

POMEROI

--·-~ ·.iol!fe• olail!11'1~ a-dmp o

40,000 for. tllC week ending Dec. .
26. '
.
\
.
The decline was slightly better .
than economists had been expect·
ing, but they cautioned against
reading toO much into lhe imptQVe·
ment since claims offices .were'
open one less day because of lhe
Martin Luther Kin holida~.
. HolVever, anafysts satd if the
declines continue in future weeks it
would be a good indication thlllhe
.labor market is finally strengthenRECEIVES GRANT • Baelleye Hilla
recelwe a $5,111 cr-t Ina SCS Slate C a •ing after a prolonged period of very
R ource, Conservation aad Develop•e•t .......... Joe ....... cater. 'l1lt 111 '1 willie
weak actiVIty.
ued far If 1 w ,.ojeds Ia tile lt-a.Jdy uea
C uncil V.ice Chairman, Jim Yoaaa, len, 11d
An even better indicator of lhe
trill$ • ..,. Meip.
.
an~ Robert First, RC&amp;D .Coordinator, rlpt,
. job market will be ieleased Friday
when the government rcpons on
. the unemployment rate for January. ·
In advance of that report, .many
A $5,000 grant from lhe USDA Alhens, Bcimont. Fairfield. Hock· RC.W irel. Prioiity will be given
economists were Jooldng for a gain
·Soil
. Conservation Service in ing, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, to projec!S that alsO have other
of lOO,OOO ·payroll jobs, which Columbus
has been received by lhe Noble,. Perry and Washington mali•c flllds available.
would be the strongest advance ·
Buckeye
Hills
Resource, Conserva- Counties.
ftaeatly, lhe Rc.tD Cnnncil is
•since last 1uly.
,
tion
and
Development
Council,
of
Sponsors
are
lhe
County
Com·
active
ia promoting Dry Fire
The increase may not be enough
missioners
and
Soil
and
Water
which
Meigs
County
is
a
parL
Hydrant
installations ·a s pan of
to nudge the unemployment rate
.
The
grant,
presented
to
lhe
Perry
Conservation
Districts
in
the
10
mnl
lim
p•
... lion pojects. WMer
down. It has been stuCk·at 7.3 perCD~~~~ty rqion.
Coun!y
ttjllesentative
~
lhe
annual
IJII'lity
pojccts.
pumolion of aller·
cent foe lhe past two months.
Accordins
to
Mark
Forni,
meeung
m
January,
IS gtven to
lllliwe
inc•cpjiOibMitics,
rea.
The 11,000-decline in weekly
ud
RC&amp;D
Council
chairman
the
natural
assist
in
improving
8lion
llld
IUUiism
]I10illOiion.
and
jobless claims followed an increase resources and quality of life .Monroe Cotmty Commissi•ICI, lhe ; mjpere Ill local groups in rural
of 1,000 the previous week and throughout rural America. The $5,000 grant will be aed 10 impli:development 1ctivities ue all
gains of 18,000 and S3,000 beforement
high
priority
projects in lhe cnlllJ"es olRC.tD pojccts.
Buckeye
HiUs
R.C&amp;D
area
covers
a
lhll.
Even with the latest week's ten countr area that includes
decline, the four-week moving
average for claims rose to 355,250,
the highest level since laiC November.
In addition to the regular ~less
benefits program, an addtli!)nal
31,566 individuals filed initial
The lipinJ was believed to
Racine-Soadtem aii·Siale mming
By SCOTI WOLFE
claims under' an emergency benebaYO
been die lint-ever Tcanwlo
back
Rulsell
SinglrAM,
who
a
IX
Sentinel Cwi espondent
fits program passed by Congress.
signiltl
10 play footblll at a Divi·
Anxiety was at a peak Wednes- 10:30 a.m. beaded tbe list of
That also represented a drop from
sionlsdlool
the previous week, when 31,862 day for Ohio Umversity and sipccs for lhe Bobrats
Wed• r n,. known a signing
. people had filed under the emerday, die finl day tbal a bish
gency program.
achool student can commit to
ICC ji4illl a foachiJitcbolanhip.
Despile YCIMI ttHDmi_.ta and
•••••• Jcaas rli--.lhc ... il
llllC cme ..n dte rt'm sips the
ck-.llille, wllidlbepll It 8 LID.
Siqlcton beaded tbe list of
sip II )
day, I dtjq in lhe
accz.tance of a full, fonr year
•h ' h
s· .,&gt; joined die Soatbcnl
Two appointments were made at
dariaJ dte finl
WednosdtiJ'• regular meeting of
1111
.._. caacll Da'lid Gaul's
the Melp County Commissioners.
reip. SilcJel••. as a fzelllm111,
Bob Baon Wll appoiniM 10 lhe
, Ul t&amp;litJ ft• d4 IIIII yar •
Issue n lntegrlling Committee and
a
till h e - a-d_. oft"•·
to tho IOCIIIDue n commlaee.
me liP&amp; etld. Soa"o11- 1-9
Norma Tcma Wll appoiaiDd to
tllat ICI- widl a JOIIJ team
the Children 'a Advisory Boatel
OU
"
Trust Pund ~ lhe l!lipdan of
OolaJ 3-7 u a aopbomorc,
lhal politiqn lly Carol TarinehiiL
ScMh . . . s-.... pccrmto
In othor 11111ten, a new cammll·
a l"f aive ead _. liPt ead on
alollll'l .maar Wll lliiiOUIICtd foe
P.b. 22-:U.at tho Oreal South~
••
Hotol in Columbus.
AJtondlna the meetina were
Comnliaalonert Maanina Rouah,
Roben Hartenbach and Janet
Howard; and Gloria Kloes, - .
.clark.
.

!

BJlckeye· Hills RCDC receives $5,000 grant

'

Southern's Singleton first Tornado
to sign with Division IOU Bobcats

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· Tlicu tnstructor was Ivan
S•laur, are~ phyaical !hera· · J
pist from Hunicane, W.Va. He
~ ''This training was very specific, detailed and complete; the
residenta at Lakin will receive
excellent reatorllive thenpy wilh
tfte,!e four trained tec:hnicUIII."
(

\

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Whatever it takeS.
Member FDIC

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.

Coalfield business fears.
impact of a long strike :
ByMATIHARVEY
Associated Press Writer
BALD KNOB, W.Va.- BOOne
County miners were onlookers four
years ago when the United Mille
Workers' strike against Piuston
Coal Group rocked the coal indus· The union's strike against the
nation's largest coal producer,
Peabody Holding Inc., .is hitting
hard in this mountainous southern
West Virginia county.
.
"I've been around a long time
and seen different times·and different artillldes," said Grover Thack·
er,cbairman of Local 1503's selective strike committee.
.
"Ever since lhe 1989 Pittston
strike, I've seen ll)e attitudes .of
management change. I think they
.i\lst SllW .t!ollaf signs in-lheir.. ey~
and P. greedy," he said Wednesday. ;''
'
The strike has yet to spur the
bitter feelings of the Pittston walkOUL

"Right now, the feelings are
ldnd of mixed," Thacker said. "A

lot of lhe guys have never experienced this. They can't understand

why Peabody's treating them this
way, as far as failing to negotiate.''
Tbe union says 7,500 miners
walked out in West Virginia. Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois.
Peabudy Holding said that the
strike was limited to 5,000 workers
.1122 mines in lhose states.
. About2,300 of the miners work
atlO mines in West Virginia.
Convenience srore owner Daisy

•

Plasler sees bolh sides .
She has four brothers who are
union miners. Her husband is· a
foreman for one of the subsidiaries
targeted by the . strike, whif!h
entered its third day today.
:·
"ReaUy, it just puts me in tjie
mi4dlc," she said.
:
Most of Plaster's customers are
union workers, some among tJie
dunwfiagc-elad pickets who "alb· ,
ered at Peabody Sites Wednesdily;•
A sign in front of her stoic
counter reads, "This establishment
supports lhe UMWA." ·
&lt;
"From what everybody says,
it's going to be a long slrilce; I hope
they' re wrong," Plaster said.
· The longer the strike lasts, the
more her business will ·suffer.
Strildng miners must Jive on strike
pay of $150 a week, compared with
~0 a week w~n . th~y ~workIng.
.
..
"I hale lhat it's going to ruin a
lot of the business around here
because lhll's lhe sole business, the
coal miners. It 'll hurt a lot," she
said.
In past strikes, "I could see
(business) tapering off because
lhere is no money to be spent," she
said.
Union members are conc;nlllito
ing on bui Iding $u&amp;rd shacrs and
keeping warm, satd Howard Green,
a union. repr,esentative for southern
West Vtrgtma.
" The wealher is a lot of concern
for us," he said in Madison. "We
need a place for members to stay
warm and a place for lhem to get
Continued on page 3

Abandoned house near
Racine burns.to gr,ound
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
An abandoned house on Eaton
Soulsby
reponed lhll investigation
Ridge Road near Racine burned to
to
determine
lhe origin of the fllC is
lhe ground Wednesday night

Racine ·Fire Department Chief
John Holman said when firemen
arrived on the scene about 8 p.m.
tho Slrileture hid already coUapsed.
He said cause of t.he fire · is
unknown. Firemen were on the
fur about an hour.

-=-

continuing. He said that there was
no electricity to lhe frame structure,
known as the old Simon Powell
residence, and that the house has
been unoccupied for over 12 years.
The current owner is reportedly
someone in Columbus.
;

.Eason, Torres
are.named to
'com·mittees

earlier. Your comPleted return wilibe electronically processed and sent !aster than ifyou had

ifwecan'tmaketax season a lot more fun. ~n. almostfun anyway.

·•
$170 million, for buildings and nursing homes.
Hearings on the budget are io
expansions in programs to .keep
non-violent offenders from ·over- begin in the House Finance. Conimiuee Ibis week. Chairman Patrick
crowded prisons.
The governor indicated in his Sweeney, D-Cleveland, said he
State of the State speech to the expects many amendments, but lhil
Legislature last monlh that he will he hopes to have the budget ready
propose unspecified increases in for a House floor vote by the weel:
::
Head Stan pro~ for ~hoot· of March 21.
· House passage at that tinle
ers from low-incot)le families. .
He also talked in general terms would give lhe Senate more thah
about an expansion of a pro,gram two months to act before lhe Jurm
·
that helps eligible senior cittzens · 30 fiscal deadline.
remain at home rather than enter

try.
This lime, lhey 're in the middle . .

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nllll!bcr pf A,mericans filing fust·
time chiiJns for unemployment ben·.
ef!IS fen to 352,000 in late January,
the first improvement in four
y,ieeks, lhe govctnmt.nt said
. The Labor Department
lhe num)lcr of new jobless claiJns
·· ~by 1};000 for~
:. inl Jaft,,,23. It waa.lhe lint
·

H&amp;R BLOCK

Casey and Tammy. She has previ_. ·
ous training in EKG monitoring
and has auended many seminars at ;
olher state facilities. She is a mem· ·
ber of lhe Point Pleasant Woman's
Club and Women of the Moose
organization. Her hobbies include
quilting and liq11id embroidery.
Carol McClure resides in Leon,
W.Va., and has been emplayed five
years in the nursing department.
She has three children: Bobbie Jo, ,
Angelia and Ryan, all residing at
home. Her husband, Joe, has been
employed at Ravenswood Aluminum for lhe last 20 years. She is
an active member 11 Failh Baptist
Church and enjoys arts and crafts
and walldng.
Mary Pullin~ resides in Middlepan and has worked in lhe nursing
department since 1989. She has
two children: Shelia 81ld Shelly and
two grandchildren. She enjoys
movies, travel and filllCSS training.
The four women m:cived cenification after completing 80' plus
hours of course work in practical
rehabilitation teChniques which met
rederal requirements. The topics
ranged from phy~iology of the
aged, lherapeulic exercises, medi·
cal terminology and detailed medical and disease problems. They
also recei&gt;ed tmining in lhe use of
equipment including tteadrllill,
ultrasound, hot and cold paclu,
paraffin bath, whirlpools and a
variety of other up-to-dale equiP.·
ment in Lakin's newly butlt
restorative department. Their ll'lln·
ing included many hours or dllcuasion, demonstrate and practicum.
They abo toured other physical

2 Sectlono, 14 Pegeo 2S cents
A Muldmodla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February·4, 1993

Copyrlghlod 1993

'CBS.and Kids in the Hall square ·
off,·on AIDS, but not on television

tberapy.deJ!artmenll.

RECEIVE CERTIFICATION • Four Health Service Workers
employed at Lakin Hospital received certification as
ttltllntlvelpbJIIcal tberapy technicians. Tbey are, trout, Mtrele
u.talld Carol MeCiure; back, Mary PuiUns and JaDtt Cunnlng-

· Super Lotto:
1-4-14·31-36-39

Page4

Employees receive certification
Four Health Service Worke rs
Janet Cunningham, Point Pleasemployed at Lakin Hospilal ant, W.Va., has worked at Lakin
received cerrificatio n as restora- Hospital since 1967 in the nursing
tjve/JJhysicaltherapy technicians.
deparunent She has four children:
· Eligibility for the techn ician Larry, Melinda. Joan and Aleta.
classification is to, first, be a certi- She also has three grandchildren.
fied health service worker which Prior to this training, she had 480
entails 150 hours of class and hours combined training in psychipracticum work, be employed a atric aide, ~eneral nurses aide. and
to1a1 of at least years with one of working wtth the mentally rerard- .
those years being in the specific ed. She is active in the Mason
departmenl/area. and receive addi- County special Olympics and the
uonal training of a minimum of 40 Mason County Association for
hours in that field, taught by a reg- Rclarded Children and Special Ciliis.tered ,physical therapist. The zens.
training had to be approved by the
Margie Hart, employed for 13
Department of Health and Human years at Lakin, resides in Leon ,
Resources.
•
W.Va. , and has two children:

524
Pick 4:
9388

Marge Schott

.

Bet you're glad you didn't buy
that cellular telephone stock, huh?
Do keep smiling.

- Pick 3:

3p.m.EST

'

rooci.1i&amp;:-

BtJitNS TO 11fE GROUND • Tills ah'l'l'kaad ....... Ill

wa .

a ... eld 81- Powell property oa Eato1 Rld1e Roi.. . . .

R.WillttrJIId to tile p11Und Wednllllay llilbt. (Plloto by Danio •
Waite)
'

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