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•
-:P1g1

•

Monday; Febr,uary 8, 1993

1G-The Dilly Sentinel

BIIIB

Ohio Lottery

Eastern,
Meigs girls
post .wins

1112-1818

Pick 3:
. 005
Pick 4:

4652

Page4

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
·FEB. 12 - Waterford, Away
FEB. 13 • Hannan, W.Va.- Home

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. !HJNIOTO -1 :00 p.m.
DEC. 1D-AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE ,
DEC. 17-TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
JAN, 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 9--AT MEIGS-3:00p.m.
JAN.11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 1&amp;-FEDERAL HOCKING-1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
. JAN. 23-M ILLER - 1:00 p.m.
JAN. 27-BELPRE
JAN. 28-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1•AT TRIMBLE ·
FEB. 4-AT .FAIRLAND
FEB. &amp;.-MEIGS - 1:00 p.m.
FEB.15-'-AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19--AT f"AIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. &amp;-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL .HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19--SOUTH POINT
JAN.• 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 2&amp;-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29--SOUTHERN ·
FEB. "s-AT MILLER
'FEB.12-ATWATERFORD
FEB.13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19--FAIRLAND

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS
FEB. 12 - Meiis - Away
FEB. 13 - Waterford - Home

GIRLS
FEB.8 ...; Eastern - Away
FEB. 15 - Symmes Valley - Away

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN .
DEC. 12-MILLER
DEC. 1~AT !;YMMES VALLEY
DEC. 1~NIOTO
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE.;.At OUC
DEC. 29--AT RIO ·GRANDE :rOURNEY
DEC. 30-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9--AT GALUPOLIS
JAN. 15--SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-.JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at ovc
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 2$-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29--AT EASTERN
JAN. 30-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB.13-WATERFORD
FEB. 19--FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 2D-AT TRIMBLE

·MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
FEB. 12 - Southern - Home
F.B. 16 - Vinton (ounlL~ Home
'

FEB. 8 - Trimble - Home

'Mlere America Goes 'Ill Rel:lx··

For Just Pennies A Day.

r

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1D-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-AT MILLER
DEC. 17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. ' 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9--EASTERN
JAN.11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN.14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2D-AT SOUTHERN ·
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB. 1-AT BELPRE
FEB. 4-AT WElLSTON
FEB. 8-TRIMBLE

"Middleport, Oh~
992·3345

.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS

AND RADIO .SHACK
106 N. 2nd

QUAL\ITY PRINT SHOP

Middleport, OH.
992·2635

WILL ,.AKE CARE OF
YOUR INSUUNCE .NEEDS
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
'

111 SECOND AVE

POMEROY
•

GUARDRAIL
&amp;
SIGN EREOION

555 P1rk St.

Middleport, Ohio

P. 0. Box 683

JUST DO IT.

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

(

Ci:?

SECOND STREO JACKSON AVL
STH STREET
,asDn, W. Va. Pt.
W. Va. New
W. Va.

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST /Ill~
992·5432
MAIN ST.
POMEROY . KFC.·

It has been suggested by Principal Fenton Taylor that students in
all three school districts in the
county might use the open house as
a time to see exactly what is
offered in the vocational program.
While the open house is going
on there will also be parent-teacher
conferences at the school.
In conjunction with the activities. tl!e Meigs Band wiD be spOilsoring a chili and vegetable spup
diMer in the cafeteria. The students
will be serving from 4:30 to 7 p.m.
and the cost is ~3.

·States make deep .cuts in welfare
programs second year in ~ row
WASHING10N (AP) _ States . receives ~ood stam~. and one _in ness. One s~dy by the Urban lnstimade deep cuts in welfare pro- seven children rece1ves benefits tute, a Washmgton research group,
~s for the secood .straighl year un\ter A:id 10 Families with Depen- found that cities o,yith the m~st
.n 1992 increasing· bardships and dent Ch•ldren, or AFDC.
homelessness had no general assJSpossibly' homclelsnea for some of
Today"s study singled out five tance prosrams.
the country's poorest families a states for the harshness of their
In the Urban Institute's study of
liberal advocacy group said
1992 cuts: Maryland~ California. 147 cities from 1981lhrough 1989.
""These cuts are especially bit- Illinois•.Oiclahoma and Wyoming. the lowest _rate .of homelessness
ing because they come when the Connec:ucut and RIKII;Ie Island were w~ found m ClUes. where general
economy is weak. precisely the also c•!ed for makmg cuts that ass1~tance ~~s ava1lable 1~ abletime when a strong safety net is undenmned the safety net for s1g- bod1ed mdiVIduals, the d•sabled
needed most;"" said Iris Lav direc· nificant numbers of low-income and to famiUcs.
tor of state and local pro~s at people. .
.
·
.
'"!C ~n~r on Budget and ~li• the Center on Budget and Policy
The report sa•d other ~tud1~s cy Prionues 1s a research orgamzaPriorities and principal author of have shown a .str~ng relauonsh•p tion that focuses on !he needs of
the lqJOlt.
·
between restrlcllons on general low- and middle-income Ameri"During periods of recession or ~SSISlanc~ 11rograms and an cans. The Center for the Study of
sluggish jp'OWth, ·even many for· •ncreased mc1dence of homeless- the Srates. which also compiled the
merly middle~ poop1o have litreport, is an information clearinghouse on State finances and prolle cholc:e bat to rely on govern- Body
dleDIIUiltanco,"" Lav said.
i!rams. Findings well! based on sur: . B~teted by a rec:eaion-dri':en
OLOUS"JER. OhiQ (AP) - The . veys of state olllc:es 111d agencies.
cut 10 revenues and faced wttb ' body of a woman who had been
The report wd srate programs
swelling welfue cuelotlds. many missing since Jan. 31 wu found in aidinf the poor were cut more
11ta1es have sought to save money a cm:k in the Athens County vii- · sharp y in each of the past two
liut cuttlna aid to families witb lege.
·
. . · years !han in any•year since at least
hildlen,the cti•eb!NI ud the elderThe death of Charlet Russell. the early 1980s. ·
er atud)' found. Few states 32, of Glouster ~as considered a
But Robert Rector, policy anato illcnue tuealallt yw.
homicide, pendina a coroner's lyst for welfare issues at the Her. The economic llowdowa that investiaation. said Police Chief itagc Foundation, a conservative
tiepnlnJuly 1989hubolpodpasb Roger Taylor. He said be didn"t .lhlnk tank; questioned the study's
lbo natlon'a welfue rolfs 10 all· know how she died.
assertions about the current state of
limo hiaJta. Now one ill 10 ArnerlThe body was pulled from Sun- · the safety net.
cans, more than 26 miHion. day Creek on Monday.

lllday.

FISHER - OwHr/Opentor

Ohio 45769

Dealer

985·3308

·

an awards ceremony scheduled for
9 p.m. The district winners will
then compete in regional contests
in Cincinnati Feb. 27.
While the contests are being
conducted. the school and classrooms will be open to the public.
VisitorS are invited to travel freely
through the school. Student guides
will be available (or those who
wanttn be taken on tours. Teachers
and other school personnel wiD be
on hand to answer any questions
prospective students and parents
might have.

found in cree'k

STIHC

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

@

FISHER FUNERAL HOME

Your Local .

£.1--.JI!Ibliii!!!l!a!o"
6r1HL •. " •

An open house will be held
Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. at Meigs
High School in observance of
National Vocational Educational
Week.
As a ~of the open house, the
Vocational Industrial Clubs of
America (VICA) will be conducting district skill competitions in
auto mechanics. cosmetology. electronics. welding and nurse assisting. .
Advisory personnel from business and industry will be serving as
judges and recognizing students at

PHONE
(614) 992-6451

VALLEY LUMBER

vance are vocationai students Autumn Griffith,
Kandi Bachtei,Sbannon Spaun, Shane Hysell,
and David Hokomb,left to right•.

·O pen house to be held in observance
of National Vo-Ed ~eek Thursday

136

992·3381

:TEST

By AVIVA L. BRANDT
Associated Press Writer
A coal industry analyst says the
United Mine Workers"· selective
strike against Peabody Holding Co.
inc. subsidiaries may be broadened
to include one or two other companies but is unlikely to become a
naponal wallcout
.
Rafael A. Villagran. a·cpaJ analyst at Shearson Lehman Huuon
Inc. of New York, said Monday the
union's strike funds. estimated at
$100 million. could not support a
national strike.
."Any significant broadening of
the work stoppage is unlikely; •
Villagran said. "I think th,e strike
fu~d is a lot less than its been presented as.""
· He said the fund could be affect-

.

PREPARING SIGNS • National Vocational
Education Week will be observed at Meigs High
School Thursday and the public Is invited.
Preparing signs to promote tbe annual ohstr-

Bank
3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

-=====

992·5627

Prescription
Shop
For All Your Prescription and Sundry Needs
See Us ·
·

253 II. S.co1d

:::;:::=:::::;:::..
r

'

'

to $2 million a year; private donations totaling $12
million; a $2 mil~on loan from the Cleveland Foundation; and a $5 million grant from the New York
Rock and RoD HaU of Fame Foundation.
Petro said at least three COI'JlOI'II!C sponsors have
agreed to support the hall with a combined $1.4 million a year, but that he is sure there will be other
sponsors once the stale guarantee is in place.
He said he hopes that ali the details wiD be completed by Marth and that groundbreaking for the proJCCl, first announced five years ago. will occllr in
April.
· The guarantee was recommended by Pevelopment
·Director Donald Jakeway. who described the project
as one of the most creative and exciting he has seen.

ed. by court rulings against the
umon.
UMW President Richard Trurolea called the strike against Sr.
Louis-based Peabody Holding Co.
Inc. after the union's contract with
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association. involving more than
60,000 UMW miners.and 150.000
retirees, expired Feb. I. ·
·
Peabody Holding. the nation's
largest coal producer. is among 12
companies in the association. .
About 7,500 miners are strildng
Eastern Associated Coal Corp. of
Charleston. W.Va .• and Peabody
Coal Co. of Henderson, Ky. The
Peabody Holding subsidiaries have
22 mines in West Virginia, !Uinois,
Indiana and Kentucky.
Villagran said he expected the

union and the coal operators to
eventually agree to tenns on a conllilct extension. But he said it was
unlikely the two could come to a·
final settlement during the extension.
·
'"Both sides would benefit from
an extension," · Villagran said.
"The BCOA would operate their
coal mines without worrying aboul
~strike and Peabody could go back
to work. And the UMW could pllt
its miners back to wodc."
But he said it was too optimistic
to think the two sides could come
to a final agreement before spring
or summer.
The union and coal association
each have proposed 60-day exten·
sions but both sides say the other is
holding up an agreement.

State troopers seize record
amount of cocaine in traffic stop

Peop_les

Announcements.

programs.
Also involved will be transfers from the Head
Start and Pre-School programs of funds that t.:fs.
Tavakolian said were not scheduled to be spent until
the next fiscal year. \\!hich begins July I.
Cuyahoga County Commissioner James Petro and
officials of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum, Inc., said the loan guarantee will not cost
the state any money if other pending agreements are
signed as el(pected.
Petro ~sled other pans of the financing package:
A $I 2 million 11ond package authorized by Cuyahoga County commissioners; a $38.9 million bond
issue by the county Port Authority; a 1.5 percent
increase in the hotel bed tax designed to bring in up

Selective coal strik~ unlikely to ·
becom-e national, analyst says

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

For Your 1993 Graduation

255 Mill St.

BAUM LUMBER

.

enrollment estimates were 25.000 too low. She said
there also were 5.000 more students than previously
thought who·qualify for Aid to Families wtth Dependent Children.
·
To cover part of the shortfall. the board authorized
the transfer of $19.1 million from unclaimed prizes
along with profits from the OhioLottery that exceeded budget projections.
·
Most of the rest will come from money that the
department said is not needed in the current ~chool
.. year.
These included $5.7 million in desegregation
costs of the Cleveland City School District, $2.6 million for bus purchases, $1.1 million for special education and $8.7 million from vocational education

(

When The Time Comes ..• See Us

®~·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A Department of
Education plan to transfer money among its own
accounts to avoid a $48 million cut in state school
subsidies has been approved by the state Controlling
Board.
The board, in other action Monday. also authorized a $42 million loan guarantee to help complete
fmancing for the $83 million Rock and Roll HaU of
Fame and Museum in Cleveland.
. ··
The Department of Education said that under the
school· subsidy formula, .which is based on enrollments, it came up $48 million short of the money
owed by the state to local districts for the current
school'year.
·
Susan Tavakolian, finance .director, said earlier

.MEIIS
DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. ,_TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-'AT ATHENS
DEC. 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9--ATHENS
JAN.12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-ALEXANDER
JAN.1&amp;-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN.19--AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
JAN. 2S.:NEL$0NVILLE·YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-SOUTHERN
FEB.1&amp;-VINTON COUNTY

1 Section, 10 Pagoo 25 cents
AMul~medla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 9, 1993

·controlling Board approves school bailout plan

NOV. 3D-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC.14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21-AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT. EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN, 2D-MEIGS
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. &amp;-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

GIRLS

Vol. 43, No. 203

·Copyrighted 18113

1992 GIRU' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

FEB. 8 - Southern - Home
FEB~ 15 ~South Point- Away

'

•

SOUTIIERN

GIRLS

60.

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

THIS WEE •s·
G ES

Low .ton'abt near 40.
Wednesday; sunny. Hlgb near

Ml1lllltport, 011

.

·t

"•

·~

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: \~

•.

•

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DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- State and that a car pulled over after the
Highway Patrol officials said the mobile home was slOpped.
'"After he talked with the occupatrol made its largest cocaine
seizure ever when troopers discov- pants of both molar vehicleS. his
. ered nearly 500 pounds of cocaine suspicions started rising." said
inside a motor home during a traf. Black.
According to documents filed in
fie stop.
U.S.
District Court. Trooper S.O.
A patrol spokesman, Sgt. John
Smart
said the occupants of the
Born, said Monday that the 491
vehicles
told him they were travelpounds of cocaine seized on Inter·
ing
from
Las Vegas to Buffalo.
state 70 northwest of Dayton h8d a
N.Y.
However,
he said all three
street value of more than $18 mil·
gave
different
stories
about who
lion.
owned
the
mobile
home
and the
"lt"s the largest lhat"s ever been
purpose·
of
the
trip.
pulled off the highways in Ohio."
Black said !fOOpers then brought
said Born.
·in
a drug-sniffing dog which
He said the' previbus record
amount of cocaine seized by the
patrol was about 70 pounds. That
seizure occurred during a traffic
stop on the Ohio Turnpike last
month.
. The patrol said a trooper
WASHINGTON {AP) stopped the motor home Sunday as
· it was traveling east on the inter- · Homeowners in many areas of the
state. Two men and a woman were nation saw their real estate values
appreciate during the Octoberarrested.
Lt. Joe Black of the patrol's December quarter as low mortgage
Dayton post said that a trooper rates and nsing consumer confistopped the mobile home for fol- dcnce fueled housing demand; a
lowing another vehicle too closely real estate trade group said today.
Homeowners in Midwestern and
Southern madcets found the prices
of their homes rising 5.5 percent
and 4.3 percent, respectively.
according to a National Association
of Realtors survey of 125
Three people were transported metropolitan areas.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital folOther markets posting price
lowing a two-vehicle wreck on increases were found in the NorthOhio 7 in Salisbury Township west and in some areas of the
Monday around 7:30a.m.
Nonheast. But the aftereffects of
According to a repQrt from the the recession pushed prices in the
Gailia-Meigs Post of the State Nonheast as a whole down 0.8 per·
Highway Patrol, a sou\hbound cent
pickup true1c driven by Kenneth W.
The West suffered a 1.1 percent
Madden. 37. 38049 Zwpan Hl&gt;llow drop because of the drag of many
Road, Middlepon, was stopped for markets in California where the
a school bus loading passengen. A ~nomy continued to siruule.
following car. driven by Lutrelle F.
Both first-time and trade-up
Schoenleb, 88. of Lasley St.• buyers participated· in the fourth·
Pomeroy. was unable to SIOJ? and quarter boom, Realtors President
struck the rear of Madden's pickup William S. Cbee Said. Tho Real~
truck.
found double-digit siles increases
Madden, Schoet~leb and his pas- in 39 swea in the fOW1h quarter.
senger, Edna F. Schoenleb, 85,
•"Consumers have stariCd feel·
Pomeroy, were transported by the ·ing more confident about buying
Southeastern Ohio Emergency big-ticket items," Chee added.
Medical Service to Veterans '"We"re seeinf,!lot· of pent-up
demand beinaa
bed. People ue
Memorial ~4: trealmOnL
Dlmage to
's 1991 Toy- comingoutofthewOodworll:.""
ota was Hstctl as lighL Dam8le to
Eightee~ metropolitan ar~l!_s,
Schoenleb's 1986 tronliac 6000LE rnost of which wen~ less expenstvc.
was lislecl u heavy and disabling,
recorded doubl~it price gains
Schoenleb was cited by the belween the foudh quarter of 1991
patrol for failure to maintain and the same period or 1992.
· assured ~lear dislance.
The Richland-Kennewick-Pasco

·"alerted"' to the mobile home
before being let inside it
The cocaine was found con·
cealed in comparunents throughout
the vehicle.
·
Charged with one count each of
possession with intent to distribute
cocaine were Roger L. Kenerly, 45.
and Trudy F. Barnes. 56. both of
Las Vegas and Julio M. Somel~an.
28. of Miami. A detention hearing
is set Wednesday for lhe three. who ·
are being held in the Montgomery
County jail.
The case has been turned over io
the U.S. Drug Enforcemeni Administration for prosecution.

Real estate values rise in many areas of cou11:try

Three injured
in accident

counties of .Washingt&lt;;m state
recorded the largest med1~n pnce
mcrease. a 26.1 percent JUmp to
$94,700 ..01clahoma City had a 18.3
percent mcrease. to $67,200, and
sggkane, Wash .• 18.1 percent, to
S ().400. . .
.
.
The nauonal med1an pnce was
$103,400, 4.3 percent above that of
a year ea~lier. Sixty·thre~ areas
po~ted ~nee gams exceedmg ~he
nauonal mcrease. The medi8D pnce
means half of the homes cost more
and half cost less.
.
Pnces for t.he sinf!le -family
detached and attached previously
owned homes ranged from ,
$352.01?&lt;J 10 Honolul~, a 5.1 percent gmn, to $49,400 10 WaterlooCedar Falls, Iowa, a 12 percent
Jump.
.
.
· The Midwest contmued to be
the region wilh the strongest over•
all residential r~l estate market.
Realtors economiSt John A. TuccilI~ ~aid .. Six. cities WS!Cd doubled•gn pnce mcreases, tncluding a
15.1 percent advance to $82,400 in
Altron, Ohio.
. In addition to Oklahoma City.
Tucc11Io sa1d several other Oil
Patch 3!US o_f th_e South ex perienced hi~h DnCe IIICieUel inchlding Corpus Christi, up 16.2 percent
to $69.600; Houstoa. up IS.4 percent to $81.900. and Mobile, Ala.,
up 14.8 pen:ent to $66.700.
The West had several other
a~s posti~g double-digit price ·
.aa•ns bestdes Richl&amp;lld and
SJIOIIano. They lncluclotl BugoneSJ!riltlfleld. Ole.. up 14.9 peacerll'
to SM,900. and Albuquerque. ulf
I 1.6 pen:eatiO
-'
'
.$96,500.
.

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Tuesday, February 9, 1993

;commentary
.

'

·T he Daily .· Sentinel

WASHINGTON (NEA) '"- · iSsue has really not been a burning have been president had he f\111 and
111 COurt Street
There is a rule in Washington : one, even .among gay-rights not decided Bush was unbeatable,
.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Don't pick fights if you don't have activists), ·but the way he chose to and·that he should wait for 1996.
, · DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
to, .and don ' t malce enemies that do it and the timing.
Nunn reportedly became even
• you don't need to. In his first week ·
more unhappy when he was not
tn office Bill Clinton blithely - - - - - - - - - - given the chance to ium down the
ignored this advice in his.abortive
jobofsecretaryofdefense, ajpbhe
attempt to lift the military 's ban
didn't want,.and was not even conagainst homosexuals. In the walce
sidered for secretary of state, a job
ROBERT L WJNGETF
of the Zoe Baird affair, Clinton's
Both Ronald Reagan and .that ~e badly wanted.
PUblisher
handling .of the matter has further . George Bush knew that, while ihe . While Nunn did not want to go
damaged him and llis staff.
president might coristitutionall~ be to the Pentagon, he would like to
I
PAT Wllrn:HEAD
. CILULENE HOEFLICH · . There is a story circulating at .the commander in .chief, no presi- have been included on the shan
high levels that Clinton and his dent cam malce 311 important mili- !isiS. The uansition made it clear he
Assistant PubUsher/Controller
&lt;ieneral~anager
senior staff gathered afier Zoe tary deCision without ftrst getting wasn't. He also would have liked
Baird withdrew as attorney gener- both tbe joint chiefs and' the to have had a hand in determining
I,.ETrnRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
at-designate,
and decided to divert Congress in line. On Capitol Hill who did get the job. He .didn't.
warda. All letters are subject to edi~ng and must b~ ,signed with. name,
the
public's
attention
by immedi- that means ma.lcing sure Sen ...Sam Instead, the job went to hiS chief
address and telephone number. No unSJgned letters will be publisbed. Letters
ately fulfilling the president's cam- Nunn, D-Ga., powerful chairman rival for the role of most powerful
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not pers&lt;inalities.
,~--~----~--~--~--~~ paign pledge to remove the mili- of the S.enate Armed Services member of Congress in military
tary's ban on·homosexuals through Committee, is on yQur side.
affljirs, Les Aspin, former chairman
an executive order. This story may · ~unn doesn't much like Clin- oftheHouseAtinedServicesComwell be apocryphal, but that it is ton, It is well known that Nunn mittee
·
widely believed says much about thinks Clinton is an accidental
If Nunn does not particularly
the growing perception of the bum- · president - that he was simply the like Clinton, it is re~d that the
bling White House performance.
strOngest in a weak Democratic pri- Clintoris - and especiany Hillaty
What has appalled so many mary field. when the bottom feU out · ~don't much like Nunn. While
Washington in$iders is not that for George Bush. Nuhn believes he Nunn did campaign for Clinton in
Clinton tried to remove the ban (the should be oresident, that he would Georgia in the final weeks of the
'
By JOHN !'10LAN
·
•
Associated Press Writer
'· CINCINNATI - Parents and teachers are debating a proposal that
would switc.h the suburban Sycamore School District to a year-round
OK
classes.
·
.
· Students in the seven-school,.5,900-pupil district get their chance .next
H~RE
week to tell Superinrendent Oarth Errington what they think of the proI
posal. Then the Sycamore Board of Ed11cation·plans a series of public .
. forums lhrough mid-March to gather comment.
• · "Without pretty widesPread sUJ)porl-·· far aM away the majority of
·:people -this may be an idea whose time has not come," Errington said.
"If there seems to be universal suPJlllfl, then the board would set up a
series of committees to plan for thiS and implement it, either in 1994 or
'95."
The shotter breaks between school sessions could improve education
by giving students less time to forget what they have learned, Errington

~School district debates
•'year~round sessions

oow,wwo .
WAS
FIRST?

0\IAL

· OFF~E

said

.

: . He esti!"ated that 400 parents have called ~e school board on the
ISsue. Thelf calls are runmng about 5-to-1 agamst the extended school
"year, he said.
.
. ·.
.
•
.
· ·· "There's just no advantage to changin~. The risks outweigh the advantages-. ifthere are any advantages," srud John Klasmeier, one of about
'150 parents who formed an Opposition group called the Sycamore Con. cerned Citizens.
.
· The year-round calendar would cut into families' summer vacations
·ilnd could be a souree of su-ess for students whose friends in neighboring
-distriCts have the summer off, Klasmeier said. It also Cbuld make it hard
' to sell a house. in the district- which serves suburbs ~ontgomery and
Blue Ash -.,.- because home buyers with children might not like .the all.year sessions, !le said. ·
·
. . .
. ~embers of the 345-teacher Sycamore Education Association are split
on the issue and want to knOW more about it, said Susan Sauer, president
, She teaches atllle district's Maple Dale Elementary School.
··
"I think it's really too early to tell how it's going to come out," Ms.
Sauer said. ·" The board agreed to study the proposal. It did oot agree to do
it. ft
Parents and teachers have been included on committees that studied the
.proposal. Ms. Sauer was on the commilleli that drafted a 1990 repori. It
led to the new report preSented Jan. 12 to the schooll:loard, she said.
~arilyit Cross, president of 'the Ohio Education Association, said the
OEA. leaves it to affJ.!iates such as the Sycamore teachers group to decide .
.whether to accept year-round sessions.
.
Year,round school schedules already are used in parts of California. ·
The Sycamore plan would shift the 180-day school yel!f intO four sessions '
separated by three to five weeks of vacation.
Harold Schnell Elementary School in West Carrollton has used the ·
. year-round schedule si!lce 1973. It is one of five elementary schools in
.that diStrict The school has a capacity of 691 students and a waiting list ·
of75.
, The Coventry Local district in suburban Aleron has .discussed switching to a year-round schedule but has not adopted a final plan.

..

·Lette.rs to the editor
.

.

Wants season changed
.

Three weeks ago I Wrote an arti·

~le

concerning our hunting season.
I want to see our deer season
.changed to end the last week of
December because some of our
bucks are being shot as does as the
bucks (25 percent of them) lose
their antlers in early January.
Also some of the does are carrying babies inside. of them (90 percent of them). Who in the heck
would want to eai a doe with little
ones inside and, yes, I do have
proof of this. We have a video of a
doe with two lillie ones inside of
: her killed in muzzleloading season.
Start bOw season the last week
: in September and go through Dec.

31, 1993. Shot gun season, give
them eight days to hunt starting the
day after Thanksgiving. ~uz,
zleloading season start it Dec. 13
through the 18th. But please stop
January hunting for deer. .
I also suggest that we open deer
season on Sundays for the worlcing
man.
I need your support on this
issue.
_,
'
Go to one of the meetings on
game laws- Feb. 14, 1993, Columbus, Findlay, Nelsonville, and D3yton. We won't get this done setting
at home. We need to do something.
·
· Mar~n Wolfe
Rutland, Ohio

'•

jToday in history

,
By The Associated Press
• Today is Tuesday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 1993. There are 325 days
; left in the year.
• Today's Highlight in History:
: One hundred. years ago, on Feb. 9, 1893, what's been described as the
; world's first s.tJ!Ptease toOk place at the. Moulin Rouge, during a party
; ~wn by Paris131l stude~ts. Ao artist's model named "~ona" gracfually
.dtsrobed as part of an tmpromptu beauty competition with another
;woman; her subsequent arrest and 100-franc fine' sparlced a riot in the
·French capital.
·
·
: On this date:
; · In 1773, the ninth president of the United States, WUliiun Henry Harri•son, was bam in Charles City County, Va.
.
; In I861, the l'rovisional Congress of the Confederate States of Ameri:~a elected Jefferson Davis president and Alexinder H. Stephen~ vice pres•tdenL
·
.
.
: In 1870, lhe u.s. Weather Bureau was established.
• · Ii11893, 100 years ago, Giuseppe Verdi's last opera, · ~Falstaff;• was
fmt perlionned, in
Italy.
_
.
: In 1933, 60 yeats aao, the·Oxford Union Soc~ty at Oxford University
•debated, then approved, 275-to:-153, a motion stating "that this House
!will in noc~umSIIIICea fight for its King and Country," a Stand that was
;widelY denounced by other BritQnS. . ·
·.
··
I 1943
lhe w ld w 11
• .n
• ~ago,
or
ar battle of Guadalcanal in the
· :SOUthwest Pac' tc ended with a U.S. victory over Japanese forces, who
twere forced 10 evacuate.·
·
1 In 1950, Sena.tor Joseph McCarthy, R-W"is., charged that. the State
, . ·
.
. ~partmelll was n~ wtth CommunistS.
, . In 1964, an Cllimated 73 million viewers tuned in as the Beatles made
~ir finlllive American telev.ision appearance, on "The Ed Sullivan ,
~how." ·
,
.
•·.
~ In 1984, Soviet leader Yuri v. Andropov died at age 69 , less than 15
• .·
td
. i
· lan,

f.

so

Accu-Wealher• forecast for

. could then provide benefits or · the world.
oppqrtunities to veterans as a .-.suit
l believe that many Americans
of their holding ·this card. I Cl!IDC up are evidencing their suppori bf out
• with this idea as a result ~of tlie troops by displaying' flags, lfticnd,
·
ing rallies as well as sendin~ cards
..,.....,..._ _ _......._ _ _ __
and letters of support. Thts program will enable individuals to further demonsuate their suppon of
our veterans hi many different
ways. The program does not carry
oyerwhelrriing public support being any state mandates and is clearly
displayed toward our troops that yoluntary_ on .the part of participatserved in the .Persian Gulf War as mg organ1Z8ll0nsor merchants.
I envision this programtto be .
well as .&lt;;~ur troops no'l' serving in
Somalia and vanous other parts of flexible enough that most mer•

Sen.}an M. Long

chanis could prOvide any variety ef
benefits to Silver Veteran Card
holders, such as disc0w1ts for mer:
chandise,
admisSion 'io evenrs
and many other opportunities that
one could think of to demonsttatr
their gratitude and appreciation to
the· Qhio Veteran. I have received
widespread approval and support of
this concept from veterans, m.erchants and other legislators alike , '
I have circulaJed the legislation
seelcing co-sponsors and will inlrO, ·
duce the bill for legislative consid,
eration this week.

rree·

Welfare reform
In the Great Depression, our
federal government offered a helping hand to those citizens across .
America who were down and out
Frapkiin Roosevelt understood that
part of getting people back on their
feet was to restore their dignity.
Consequently, people who received
public assistance w9rli:ed to earn it
Over the years, many of our
public assistance programs referred
to as welfare, have gotten out of
whack. Costs are escalating uncontrollably · and a perplexity cir
bureaucratic rules and regulations
actually .discourage welfare recipients form seelcing a job.
Representative ~alone stated,
"It is time that legislators focus on
ways to improve public assistance
programs. As many 'people as possible need to be participating members of the mainstream; and many
want to be: It is our responsibility
as legislators to find ways to make
welfare a temporary circumstance
rather than a way of life."
The Ohio House bf Representa- •
tives is going to lalce a senous look
this year at how we can reform the
welfare system to make it work for
· everyone,the recipients and the taxpayers.
Ohio has a history of attempting
t.o reform the welfare system and
return it to its original role of helping people help themselves.
· In 1983, Ohio enacted "work,
fate" pilot programs designed to
help move people off welfare rolls
and into jobs. The pilot programs:

-Required able-bodied young
people to continue their education,
receive apprpval of training or
work in order to receive their wei-

.'Rep. Mark Malone
fare benefits,
-S!Ibsidized an employment
program where welfare recipients
were placed in jobs through participating employers, who receive
state subsidies to cover a J&gt;Qtion of
the recipient's salary.
,-Established an education imd '
training component that provided
funds to ~elp improve recipients'
skins.
.
,
-Created a JOB CLUB program that paid a small award to
welfare recipients who attended job
readiness classes.
Six r.ears after Ohio passed
these ptlot progfams, the federal
government followed su·it with iis
Welwe Reform Act: .
Despite some progress, many
problems still remain. Two. bills
have been inuoduced in the Ohio
Hou~ this year offering possible
solubons.
The first. bill recommends setting aside certain state public Service opportunities for p.oor
Ohioans. ThiS includes, but is not
limitejlto: I) Setting aside certain
s.tate [lUblic works jobs. as apprenllCeships for welfare rec1pienrs; and
2) allQwing w~lfare recipients to
keep a greater percentage of earned

months after succeeding Leonid Brezhnev.
.
·
Ten years afco: In a dram81i~ reversal from fifty years earlier (see
abOve). tliC Ox Ord Union Society at Oxford University rejected, 4i6-to187 •.a mQtion "that ibis House would not (ight for Queen and Country."
Ftve years ago: A day after Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
announced that Soviet troops could start withdraWing from Afghiutiatan
by the following ~ay U.S. officials welcomed the offer, but urged a
swifter timetable for total withdrawal.
.
One year ago: The govern !Dent of Algeria '!CCJaretf a siare ~f emergency to quell spreadtng Mushm fundamentahst unrest. ~astc JOhnson
returned 10 professional ba$lcetball by playing in the NBI\ All·SIIir game.
(Johnson was named most valuable player as his team, the Western Con,
ference, defeated. the Eastern Conference 153-to-113.)
..
.
Today's Birthdays: Former Setretary or State Dean Rusk is 84. Actress
Kathryn Grayson is 70. Television jOurnalist Roser Mudd is 65. Singer
Carole King ts 51. Author Alice Walker ~49. ActresS Mla'Farrow is48. .
Thought for Today: ' l~odesty is ·the conscience of the body." Honore de Balzac, French author and dramatist (1799,1850). ·
·
~

much warmer air mass for Wednesday. High temperatures will be

•

Long.introd·uces Silver Veteran· card program·:,

,

income" so that work is not a dis- be brought under control while still
cooragement til getting off welfare. providing essential service ·to thc&gt;se
Another House bill focuses on who need it. MediCaid is the fa.!lli:st
allowing an 1ndividual to keep a growing segment of the state bud·
low,payingjob' withoutlosin~ pub- get, and its cost was a major coO:.
lic assistance within limits wtth the tributing factor to the stale budget
goal. of getting people off welfare criSis during the past two years.
and mto the wOrkforce.
Representative Malone concludThe House is also expected to ed, "Public assistance should b:e
examine ways in which the sky- just that- assistailce, not a .perm~~
rocketing cost of Medicaid - a nent subsidy that locks people into
medical assistance program -can . generations of poverty,•
:
'

Berry•s World

.,

.•
'
.I

..,,

.

\

about 20 degrees above norinal.

back to normal for Thursday and

h.ved as. a .cold front Wednesday
mght wtll bring the temperatures

Rain will be widespread over
qhio on Thursday and Thursday
ntght. lt wiUchange over to mostly .
snow on Friday. Flurries and tbe
usual lake effect squalls in the
northeast will be the rule on SattD'-· .
day.
.

The warm front will usher in a ~he warmth· will be fairly short ~ Friday. .

•

a

Senator Jan Michael Long (D·
CirclevHle) announces -he will
mtrodu~e legislation that will ereate a Stiver Veteran Card Program
for the State of Ohio. The idea is
similar to the state's Golden Buck'
eye Program. The legislation, Long
said, will creat.e a Silver Veteran
Card Pro~ram under the auspices
of the Oh10 Adjutant General. Any
honorably discharged veteran
would be able to apply for a 'Silver
Veteran Card.
Consequently, any merchant,
pnvate person or organization

By The Assol:iated Pr~

conditions and high

IToledo! 50" I

general election, he all but turned
his back on Clinton during the pri,
maries. He was especially absent iri
the days following the Gennifer
Flowers accusations, which corre~
sponded to the holding of the Geor• .
· gia primary on Super Tuesday :
Reponedly, Hillary Clinton has .no(
forgi1!en him for refusing to.camJ
paign with her over several critical
days.
;
Nunn is also a big believer irj
the power and prerogatives o.f
Congress. While a president may
ha~e broad executive .powcrs,
· Nunn, like many senior members
of )loth th~ Senate an~ the House1
d.eeply be!teve I! pz:est~~nt shoula
ell;erciSe hts power JUdtctously an~
defer to· Congress wheneve~ passtble. '
.
. . .
. So .Nunn was spothng for \I
fight, a test of who really has the
power . i~ military ~alters; artd th~
mex.penenced Whtte H&lt;;&gt;use and
·P!'"Std~nt went out of th.etr way to
gtve him one on th~ gay tssue,
. ~uch the same IS true &lt;;&gt;f Repubh~. They w_ere champm.g at the
btl to find an tssue on whtch they
could stalce their opposition to the
new administration. They had been
very quiet during the conf1111lation
hearings of Clinton's cabinet for
the simple reason that, except for
Donna Shalala, they were delighted
with Clinton's. choices.. But now
Clinton suddenly presented them
with the kind issue about which
they have dreamed. Wit!) con,
stituents' calls running 70 percent
against gays, the GOP jumped a)l
over the new president.
In the end Clinton announced a
:compromise. He says that he
remains committed on. the issue,
but will wait six months to move
forward while "studies" are con?.. pleted·. What Clinton is doing is
simply caving in. and postpOnin¥
the fight for six months. Inside the
Beltway, this "compromise" was
seen as: Nunn wins, Clinton loses.
It is riot a .good way for a riew prest
ident to stiut.
· ·
'
· ·'
R~~rt Wagman is syndical·
ed writer 'or Newspaper Entel'·
prise Association. ·
·

The Dally Sentinei-Page-3

Cold front ~ill move over :Ohio Wednesday night

MICH.

Nunn wins test of wills ·on .gay issue
Robert J, Wagman

•

OHIO Weather
lVednesday,Feb. lO

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel.
Pomeroy~lddlepon, Ohio '
· Tuesday, February 9, 1993

.

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Tbe record high on thiS date in
Columbus was 64 degrees in 1894.
The record low was 17 .below in
1899_
.
.
. .
Sunset tomght at 6 p_m. SUIIllJC
Wednesday at 7:30a.m. ·.
.,
Aroun~ tbe nation
,
. A weaker diSturbance producCd
ram today l!long the l'acifte Coa;u
on the heets of a system th•t
dumped more than 2 inches on
Southern California.
•
Rain fell t~is morning in San
Sunday,' son of busineSs as usual :
.. .
.
Francisco and Seattle. Monday!s
so you can be righ( on target with
WAYNE. W.Va. (AP) - The ~· ~w~tle, pu51!ed intO IIJC
your floral arrow. While the opera- Wayne County school board voted Rockies, bnngmg mommg 5now to
to~s of the local shops probably not to renew Superintendent Denver.
·
:
wtll be pleased if you do order Michael E. Ferguson's contract, . Moist air from the Gulfof Me$flo':Vers early and permit them to .re saying the school system ha,s fat- . tco produced scauered showers
dehvered on Fnday or. Saturday, tered during his seven years in today in 'the Plains and northem
they Will also· take your orders for office.
Missis.sippi V~lle~. Freezing rajn
Sunday delivery.lsn't that SJX:Cial! _ .· ./ 'Our academic pro~ ... iuo fell thts mommg m Minneapolis,
. By the way; locally the pnce ~~our sbldents .can't even make Omaha, Neb., and Des ~oine$ .
roses ' and that's a favorite pur- application to many out-of,state Iowa. Bismark, N.D., had snow. ; '
cha~e f~r many of Y.ou romantic schools," board membCr .David
In California, todafs ·rainwis
devils ·IS not ou,l of stght. The ball Perdue said. "Our county railks expected to be a far cry from ~01),
l'3fk figures - bill do pin the exact 39th to 45tlt (out of 55) in au sec- .. day's deluge. ~ore !hail 2 inches
amount do:.vn with your favorite oodary areas l!nd they have contin- fell between Sunday aftemoon and
flonst - range from around $23 to ued on a downward trend for seven Monday afternoon in downtown
$4 ra dozen depending upon the years...
Los Angeles.
.
type roses you buy .and how they
The boar(! voted 4,1 ~onday
A farm worlc;erwas swept to his
are &amp;!'fanged; If roses !Ire not a night to ou.stFerguson after his cur- death ~onday m a~ creek in
favonte of your Valcntme, other rent two-year contraCt expireS June Ventura County, ourside Los Angefl!Jwen might)ust as easily turn the 30. Ferguson, 46, was appointed in les, authorities said.
·
Inc~., You mtght even try daisies - January 1986 after ~. Joe Nolan
In Beverly Hills, some peopic
seem . as tohow they don't tell . resignedbecauseofpoorhealth.
bad to climb atop their cars when
The cny shops probably would dig
Board President Robert Well- runoff from l!inside canyons turned
dee~ mto your wallet for flowers. man vot,ed to keep ferguson..
streets into rivers. Underground ·
So II ~ grea.t !hat Y.ou can be a . "I think this.is devastating to parking garages were flooded.
romanltc devil m M~tgs County at our educational system," Wellman
a more reasonable pnce.
sai4.
. · . ·.
· Of course, depending on cirFerguson has worked in the
cumstances, you might .simply Wayne County school system for
want to go for only a Valentine 24 Yel!fs. He was director of
CLEVELAND {AI')- Here are
card this yeai, lf .you've checked administrative services before
. Mon~ay night' s Oltio Lottery
them out at the greeting card being appointed superintendent
selecltons:
·
counter, you might be a liule
·
·
Pick
3
Numbers:
0-0-5
shocked at the prices. You'll pay as r================!!!!!!!~
Pick 4 Numbers: 4-6-5-2
much for the card 8.!1 you once paid
for the present. What this country
really needs is a good '25 cent
Am Ele Pow~ ....................34 1/2
Valentine card " with lots of cupids
and lace. If your Valentine is one
Ashland Oil........................27 7/8
AT&amp;,T........... ,.....................54 1/8
of. tho~ who "has everytliing" you
Bank One............ ,..............S2 5/8
mtght JUSt squeak by wnh the cand.
Fifteen people were fined in
Bob EV811S ........................ .18 . Rutland ~ayot's Court for the ·
Good luck and let there he peace
on earth.
.:
Charming Shop............... ,.. 18 114
month ofJanuary.
.
CIJmp,lndustries ................. 10
· Time was when I depended on
• Fined were David G. Swanson,
Pomeroy businessman Jiin Huff.
City llokling...................... 21 1/2
Rut!and, unsafe vehicle, $50;
Federal ~ogul .................... l9 3/4 !&lt;evm D. Thoma, Rulland, speed- .
man to help get you into the ValenGoodyearT&amp;R ..................7l 718
tine's . Day mode. Jim alway's
mg, $50; Michael Clarlc, Rutland ·
Key Centurion ........, ..........22 1/2 recldess operation, $200, failwe ui
. penned a beautiful poem IQ his
lovely wife, Mary, and i bonowed · Lands End.......................... 25 1/4
control, $200, .passi~g on doub~· .
Umited Inc....................... 28 1/8' yc;llow· line, $50;. John Luzan .
each year's creation. for the ValenMultimedia Inc. .........-.. ;..:.33
tine's Day therne column. l didn't
Akron, ·speeding, $54; Bobby
Point
Banc01p.................... 12 314
contact Jim for the loan of his worlc
Rupe, Gallipolis, $48; LouiS LaudRax Restaurant ......... -........3/16
for several years after retiring from
ermilt, Pomeroy, speeding $50·
Reliance Elec(ric................ 23 . Charles Smithers, Langs'Vme'
full tim!) work in the newspaper
Robbins&amp;Myers .,.... ~ ......... 1g 112 speeding, $50; Carla Wamsley'
business. However, yesterday it
Shoney's lnc......................22 718
occurred to me that Jim's poem this
Gatl.ipolis, speed, $50; Ronald
Star Bank .......................... .36 3/4 ~ter, Waverly, speed, S65; Jenyear might help set the proper
Wendy lnt'l, ....................... l3 1/4 mfer Cochran, Langsville speedmood 10 remind you to do good
Worthington Ind................27112 ing, $4 8; .. Stephan ' Clyde
this Sunday. I called Jim to arrange
Stock reports are the 10:30 Schoonover, Elkview W Va ·
for .th~ loan. Unfortunately, Jim
a.m.
quotes provided by ~peed, $53; .Paul DeSanio, Wash:
advtsed me that he gave up Writing
Kemper
Securities, Inc., o
the Valentine poems when I gave
mgton Co~rt House, speed, $52;
GalllpoUs.
up full-time newspapering. So and Malt Whitlatch, ~iddlepon
we - and t.tary • will.have td live ·
speed, 450.
•
without his inspirational words.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

IND.

.Roses are red,

I

Wayne board lets
• teodellt go
SUperiO

Violets are blue,
Failing to buy a valentine,
Could mean trOUble for you.
I know. Youhave your guardian
angel perched on your shoulder to
look after YOIJ· You have your con.science to keep you on the right
path. Then you have me. My role is
W. VA.
to bring you lillie reminders ,
sometimes even pleasant·ones c·ike
thiS Sunday iS Valentiile'~ Day, for
example.
. I would.be remiSs in my role if!
didn't remind y~ it's TIIAT time
of the year • the ·time when - if
you're a sm!lrt cookie -. you will
SUIIIIy Pi. Cloucly Cloucly
demonstrate that y® are, indeed, a
· C1993Accu-Weather.lnc.
romantic devil. Understand, of
course,
'that a "romantic devil" on
•
February 14 can and should be •
after all, the men like to know they,
,. · SOI!th,Central Oblo
.
Thlirsday, rain likely. Highs in too, are someone's valentine· male
. , Tonight, mostly clear. Low near the low 40s to low 50s. Friday, a or female.
.40. Wednesday, mostly sunny. · chance of rain or snow. Lows 25- . · ~any of you probably remem'!Jnsea:\I(Jnably warm with a high 30. Highs 35-45·. Saturday, a
ber when the day was primarily just
:near 60. ·
chance Qf flurries. Sq!lalls north. for
the kids and the young, romanExloded foreeast:
east. Lows 10-20,' Highs in the tic "couners".
However, like the
mid-20s to mid-30s.
, , . Tbu~sday ~brouRh Saturday:.
Christinas thing, it grew and grew
and we're now encouraged to "participate" from tbe cradle to the
grave. You might say it's now
defmitely politically correct for all
ZanaGainer
lowing hiS retirement, he ~ed ages to shOw they care. In fact, it
: Zanl C. Gainer, 82, &amp;.th, died two retiree trailer parks in Florida. could even get a little sticky if you
Sunday, Feb. 7, 1993 81 Wispering He was a member of the Conimuni, don't participate especially if
.Meadows ·Nursing Home in ty Christian ChiD'Cb in Sebrinr.
you're registered in with a 365
NewiD:,
Besides his mother, he is sur- , days per year, lifetime contract
·: .She was bam Feb. 15, ~910 in vived by his wife ,' Dorothy L.
Even though we know it as the
West Virginia to the late Mr. and Devol Hawley, three sons and day of hearts and flowers, ValenMrs. (name unavailable) .Smith. daughters-in-law, James W. and tine's Day remembrances cover a
She was also pn:ceded in.death by ,Lynne Hawley ·of Tecumseh, ~ide-range of items tbese days
,ber husband, Orvy Gainer on Mich.; Rick L. and Melinda Haw· tncluding the heart-shaped boxes of
ley of Jackson, Mich:; and Jack E. candies, pastries, jewelry, clothing ·
·t-Wdt 23, 1984, and one son.
&lt;· Mrs. Gainer is survived by three and Judy Hawley of Millbury; two and what-haye-you in order to
.llrBIIdc~Udnin, including Benjamin .daughters and sons-in-law, Linda
please the vaned tastes and preferG~iner Jr.; arid nine great-grand- 1... and Sam Smith of Dearborn
ences ·of your Valentine. In other
children.
, . .
Mich., and Deborah K. and Jeff . words, lllday anything goes as long
Fisht,r,
of Walbridge; 12 grandchil•' as you ref!lember to remember:
, Services will be Wwnesday 111
J I a.m. at 'Sims Funeral Service, dren, a brother-in,(aw and sister,in- The heart-shaped boxed candies are
130 North Cedar Street, Newarlc, law. Garvin and Sandy Thompson appropriately in heavy demand. for
·
with Rev. Kenneth .Pletcher olftei- of Walbridge. ·
.the occasion - candy sales rival the
Funeral
services
will
be
held
ating. Burial will be iti Kirkersville
Christmas season - nd · I'm not ·
Cemetery.
Friday at 11 a.m. at tbe Witzler- knocking. the candy marlcet. HeavFriends;,%. tall at the funeral Shank Funeral Home in Walbridge; en knows I can handle as many
home on T
y from 6-9 p.m.
The Rev. Kenneth Graham will chocolates as the next one. But do
ofrlciatoe and burial will be in Lilke let ine warn you that candy proba~Wayne Gilliand
Township Cemetery. Friehds may
., Wayne R. Gilliand, 70, 42721 call at the funeral hooie after 2 p.m. bly isn't a good idea if ynw Valentine is trying to cope with a dieting
:~alaway Ridge .Road •.Coolville, · Th.y. ~family requesis that regimen.
. · .
'- •
;died early Mondity morning, Feb. m~ coniiibutions be made to
Valentine's
Day
this
year
docs
J!. 1993, at Veterans ~emorial the Main Street United Brethren fall on Sundar and !bat seldom
;HosDital iii Pomeroy.
Church, Walbridge, Ohio or to the
, · . He was born in Alfred, a son 'oe Lake Hill School Athletic Depart: happens. In ciues, this creates a bit
of a problem for those bent towards
~he late Elza. and Annie Dusky ·ment,Millbury, Ohio.
sending
flowers. The demand for
Gilliand. He was a retired saw mill
flowers
on Valentine Day is
·wOiter. He was an U.S. Army vet·
·
tremen~ous - it i~ also right up
• l'f1lll of World War II.
Willard Mohler
there Wtth the Chnsllllas season ' . Mr. Gilliand is survived l;&gt;y his
Word ¥5 been received of the but the city flower shops that will day. Remember your el.dcrs always ·
Dance planoed
Wife. Evelyn Gilliand; two sisters, death of Willard Henry ~ohler, be open for.the most part are prob- told you, "A word to the wise is
The Tuppers Plains VFW l'ost
'Mattie l'uUins, CoolviUe, and Car- Piney Flats, TeM. He was a former ably not going to make the effort of sufficient". Now if·you don't folrie Whaley,l'omeroy; two brothers, resident of Meigs County.
deliverin$ on Sunday. However, low through on this reminder then No. 9053 !UI&lt;I Ladies Auxiliary will
Wilber of Columbus, and }Wry of · He was the son of Marie Mohler you live m ~eigs Couiuy where you might also want to recall that sponsor a round and square dance
Pomeroy; and several nle&lt;:es and and the late Willard Mohler. "'
things are just a bit more laid back. they also advised you that "You _on Friday from 8'11:30 p.m. wilh
nephews.
.·
Besides hiS mocher, Mr. Mohler FraneiS Florist, the Pomeroy Flow- rnade your own bed now lie in it". music by "True Country RamBesid~s
his arents, Mr. · is survlved by his wife, Brenda er Sbop and the Middleport FloWer And, Happy Valentine's Day, you blers." Everyone welcome.
Gilliand
was
in Hubert.
death by Mohler:
~
. Bill an'd
.
' tWQ· sons, J~ • 81 home, Shop will be doing deliveries on romantic devil!
Meeting planned
••
•
te.
and Wesley, of Blur City; two
:. Services wit! be Wednesday at I ~hildren, Larry Keeling, Bluff
There will be a meeting Friday
at 7 p.m. at the Burlingham ~ad­
~m. at !he Whtre Funeral Homei in &lt;;tty. and Regina Furguson, John.
·c;:ootville with Rev. Helen Kline son City; two brothers, Isaac
ern
Woodman Hall 10 organize a
Marria'e lieeose' iSsued
Divorce granted
. ·officiating. Burial · will be in Mohler, Piney Flats, Tenn., and
Bedf~d
Township Volunteer Fire
A mamage license has been
A divorce has been granted by
Burlingham Cemetery.
·
Roger Mohler, Johnson City; one issued by ~eigs County Probate the ~eigs County Court of Com- Department. Guest speaker will be
l: Friends may call at the funeral · sister, Cleo Ann Traitor, Wood,
Court to Terry L. Cline, 31, Racine, mon l'lc;as to Sandra Sayre Chad, Bob Byer, ~tor of Meigs Counland, Ala .; and .our
• grandchildren .
ty Emergency ~edical Services .
and Mary A. Clarlc, 27, Racine.
-,l!OfJ!e on
- T.-lay from 7-9 p.m.
well from David Lynn Chadwell.
Refreshments wUI be served br the
.
Services were held Sunday at
Modern Woodmen of Amencan
~ames Hawley
Tetricks Funeral !:fonte. Bluff City,
Divorce soagbt
RobitUOn seotenced
Burlingham
Camp. The public is
An action for divorce has been
·~ James E. Hawley, 64, of
with Rev. J_B. Hensley and Rev.
David ~. Robinson has been
;,ebring, Fla., formerly of Middle- Richard Baugus officiating. Burial filed in the ~eigs County Court of sentenced in the ~eigs County urged to attend.
port, diedunex~tedly Sunday, was in the St. Paul United Common .Pleas by James A. Court of Common J&gt;leas on a count
Dance planned
.
..Feb. 7, 1993 81 hts hOme.
·
Methodist Church Cemetery in Weaver, Pomeroy. from Beverly A. of forgery to a 12 month sentence
The
Belles·
and
Beaus
Western
: Born in Athens on Mareh 10, Bll!ff City. ·
Weaver, Pomeroy.
in a proper penal institution, and'tc
· Attending from Meigs County
}1928, he was the son of Mrs. Grace
I 8 months on counts of receiving Style Square Dance Club will
) F~ Hawley of Middleport and were Mi. and Mrs. Earl ~ossman,
stolen property and additional sponsor an open danc:e at the Mei~s
County Senior Citizens Center m
1 the late James D. Hawley. Before
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
forgery .
Pomeroy
from 8-11 p.m. on Feb.
: moving to FLorida, he resided in Mohler and son, Ricky, ~iddle­
The ~rences;' to be servild con20.
Tom
Poe
wiU be the caller. All
: Wal~dge, Ohio.
port; and Debbie Faulk, ~iddlecurrendy, have been suspended and
western
style
square dancers invit: ~r. Hawley retired in 1980 port.
·
Robinson has been plaCed on five
ed.
•from Conrail for whom he wiRed
VETERANS MEMORIAL
y~ probation. He has been given
1as a conductor for 25 years. Fol~ONDA Y AD~ISSIONS credit fQr 98 days already served in
Valentine potluck
Eliza Burke, Racine; Janet Miller, North Caro.lina and in the ~eigs
John H. Smith
•
·There
will be a valentine
Rudand.
County Jatl. He has also been .
The Daily Senlinel
''
potluck
at
the
Lottridge Communi. MONDAY DISCHARGES - ~rdered by the court to pay reslitu'
1"-ll&amp;.llt)
John
H.
'SIDith;
71,
Hartford,
ty
Center
on.
Saturday at 6 p.m.
I
.
Glen Baker, George Cundiff, bOn.
w.v~.. died ~onday, Feb. 8,1993,
I ~blilbad nery aRen.aaa, W:a1ulay
E~eryone
is
welcome.
'Coun'try
Randy Martin.
·
.
: : ; Fridoy, lD Coat !1&amp;~0),
at
Veterans
~emorial Hospital in
I1
music
nighl
will
be
held
from 7
Ololo J the Oblo Vallq
.,
J&gt;omeroy.
p.m.
to
midnight.
All
baods
are
I( Caonpuflllll•lllmodlo lne. Poinei'OJ,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
.
A.
retired
38-year
employee
of
OIUo
CIS;.':!
Plo.
8!12·21116.
s.,;,;;j
eiUt
welcome.
I ,.....
Feb. 8 dlsclllaraes - Joshua
alP
OJ, Ohio.
the former Foote Mineral in New Grubb,
John Icenhower,' Callie
''
In the .Feb. 7 Scout news feature
Haven,. W.Va., he was a member of Altherr, Mrs. Ronald Sickles and
Coiree Hoase IICbedaled .
Ill-.: Tho -led
1lle
'.I' OIUo N.,..,.L':; - - · N- the Hartford Ul)ited Methodist son, Lewis Vance, Norman Coop- in the S11nday TitMs-Sell/inel, a
A women's coffee house will be
Ajl;allobotj ~lalln, Bn....,m
and was United States er, Mrs. Travis Canode and daugh- couple of·lroop numbers· and toea, held Fell,. 19 at United Campus
' ~'~::t:r.; ... 188 '"""' . . . _ Church
Coast Guard veleran of World War ter, Viola Slone,' Lola Akers, lions.were inadvertently reversed.
• New bt10011.
Ministry, 18 North College Sueet
Troop 222 is l.ocated in Porter,
II.
He was also a member of the Leonard Oeotil, Ruby Lucas and
in Athens. The coffee house will
fOII'I'NA8TIR:not Patriot, and the Chester troop iS feature poet Ann Blackwell and
Arnericail Legion Smith-Capehan Norma Fowler.
'he DaR~Senllnel, ·111 C-t &amp;.,
I p
U),
iD 411W.'
Troop
235- not Troop 2~9 . The dancer, Missy Whaley. Also Q11 the'
l'ost in New Haven and a memlier
Feb. 8 birth- Mr. and Mrs. TitMs,SelllinLI
regrets the errors.
of the Point Pleasant, W.Va., Jeffery Clarlc, son, Gallipolis. ·
'
~IL\TD
" ~oose Lodge.
11)-c...tor•--·
·
I o.. w.......~....................................1uo
Born Feb. 10, 1921, in Hartford,
0.. llantll..,........ ,.. ...............................
- ..taUO
'II Oook ................................
he
wal the son of ll)e IIIIC John H.
-~OOPr .
"Hut" and AHce Ginther Smith.
Include: his .wife, Net- ·
l Doi!J.........................................--.25 0..111 · ·:lie Survivors
M. Smith; d!Mighler Shirley ~.
Units of the Meigs County She was taken to Veterans.
.
I I ---·toJ:.IIIo.m,
Emer;cncy
Medical Services
At II: 17 p.m. the Syqclille unit
• _, n•lllli .., •
Tho
lBdar
of Marieua; 8011,
lohii H.
ie) Smith IV of Hart- retpanded 10 six calls for auislance tres~nded to Nye Avenue for
~.tl
••
I
lloolo.~wtllbo
Cord
ilfd
four
anndcbUdnln.
.
I
on Monday and early Tuesday Davtd Httllson. l:fe was taken .to
. Service~ wlll be held 1:30 p.m. mOOIIoa.
.
Veterans.
'i Jle; • • I ll'fJt! b)' ........... Ia
Wednesday
at
Fogleaong
Funeral
On Monday at 9:59 a.m. the . The Mitklle!xll:t unit was called
I
.
Home In Mallon, W.Va., with the Racine unit went to Mala Slleet in to ()vertmxlt Cen1er at 11:201p.m.
tI ••
Rev. Rex YOUI!g officialing. Burial Racine fO!' Ragle&amp; Proffitt who was for Blizabetb Ackenon. She was
I
."11 ......~ • . .
I
. will follow in the Gl'lhlni Ceme, talcen to Holzlr Medlcll Center.
aansporled~ to Pleasant Valley Has·
tJ
~..
At S: I (l p.m. the Racine unit piral.
..................._........ •·~
.......- ..................._........
I • WellllOn'1•
may
from
24
T~is morning (Tuesday) at
went
to
Portland
Road
for
Gary
. . . . o.-q, ·
and 7.9 p.m. at the f~ home.
I' II W-........ &gt;..- ,., .... ....... .............~ •.0
Boggess. He was~ to Ve~erans 12:2$ a.m. the Columbia Fire
In lieu of floWers, contributions Memorial lfoRiital.
.
. Dep8tllllcnt responded to an aulo
i • "-......................................... .40
may
be
mille
to
the
Hanford
UnitTho Rullaod unit went to Neilan ftre at CllpCnter Hill. There wa
:
.
ed Methodist Church.
·
Road • 9: 13 p.m. for Janet Miller. no injuries.
•lcolumbus!so•

.Weather

Area deaths

Stocks ·

0

•

reJh~~~~ ~~~;y~:~

Court news

Hospital news

'
!

_...._to

•

'

'

Squads respond to six calls

...,.

=..- .. to
' ---n--Mrrioeio
''*. ....
.
;: ·"--····w-........- ...-............ . 1:"'
'

&lt;

program will be group singing led
by Cathy ~ook an~ drumming for
a~ who wtsh 10 bnng their percuss ton mstruments. Handcrafted
drums and jewelry will be on sate
by Debbie Lorz. The coffee house
will ,be from 7:30, II p.m. and a
donabon .of $3 is requesled. Free
chtld care wUI be provided..
Dance planned '
There will be a valentine dance
at the Old Legiot) Hall in Middleport on Saturday from 8-11·30 p m
with music by CJ and thC Coon'~
Ge_ntlemen. Admission is free 1l1lil
chtldren are welcome with ad11 tt
supervision. Bring soft drinks and
refreshmertts.
Meeting set
A "Sunday School Breakthru~
meeting w.iii be held at Hope Baptist Ch'!fCh tonight from 6:30-9:30
p.m.. wtth Rev. Chuck Cole assistmg m Sunday school plans for·a
year.
•

Correction ·

l
I

"OK\ buddy~ You've had enough!"

o:

Meigs announcements

r:

I

'

Rutland court news

•

-·and

-.

Lottery numbers ·.

•w-.. . .-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,

Slate Auto's already
· low premiums can be
·reduced even more by
insuring bolh your car
· and hori1e with the State
Auto Colnpanies.
·
Let us ten you just
how much your savings
can be.

J(i:Cah'

~ends

calltotmf

214 EAST MAIN
POMER.OY .
992-6887

J!1 .........
..·

,...,..~.c~

.•..,.•

'

~I

. I,

•

�•

T1,1esday, February 9, 1993

Sports

The Daily, Seniinel
1
.

.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
·. M.eigs jumped out t6 a 18-7 leatl after one period
&amp;itd rolled to a easy 70-35 win over Trl-Valley Conference entry Trimble before a parents night and
senior night crowd. '
;; Seniors playing their final home game in the
ft}aroon and gold were Verna Compston, Lori Kelly,
Katrina Turner and Missy Sisson. Meigs is now 16-3
Qi1 the year and 12-3 in the TVC.
~. Meigs placed four girls in double figures led by
elly's 16, Verna Compston's 13 and 11-point
forts by Joy O'Brien and Sisson.
Meigs hit 31 of 86 from the floor for 37% and
Cashed in on seven of 10 from the line for 70%.
Jeigs pulled in 30 rebounds with Kelly grabbing

~

.

~

seven. M~igs had 12 assists with Vema COmP;&gt;ton
getting ftv~ of those IIC!d six of the Marauders 20
steals.
Tammy Lenigar and Chasity Antle led Trimble
with 10 points each. Trimble drops to 1-18 on the
year and 0-15 in the TVC.
.
In the reserve&lt;:ontest Melissa Clifford scored 11
points to lead Meigs to a 29-13 win over Trimble.
Amy Eltringham led Trimble with six.
In other TVC action Monday evening, Alexander
rolledoverWellston37-13, Belpre rolled past Vinton
County 60-40 and Nelsonville- York beat .Federal
Hocking 47-39.
Marauders beat Rockets- In last Thursday's
action, Vema Compston poured in 27 points to lead
Meigs to a 57-28 wiD at Wellston. ·

Mei~ jumped out

to 13-4_lead at the end of the

first period and roUed ';0 the wm.
L?rl ~elly added e~ght pomts for the Marauders,
Katrm~ 1'urller added seven. Amber Loll led Wellstan w1th II.
It was a physical gliC!Ie• with the ~uders 'losing
ll~ard Lee Henderson m the firSt penod to a ankle
mJury. The Marauders con~lled the boards, w1th
Kelly grabbmg 12 and Katrma Turner added 10
rebounds as the Marauders conb'Olled the boards. The
Maraud_ers htt24 of 52 from the Ooor for 46% and
cashed m on se~n of 17fro!:rrthe !me f&lt;?r 41%. ,
Daryl Owen ~reserves ptcked up the'!" 101!' WID of
the Y.ear and the~ seve'!th conferen~ ~ID w1th ~ 3118 vtctory: M~ltssa, Cltfford and B.Jlhe :Butcher led
the way With SIX pomts each. Cyn!hla Cottenll. Bob-

By SCOTI' ~OLFE
Racine (Southern) was in January pointers and a warm 77% from the now proven himself as a pure douSealiael Corraponde1t
and .February of 1967 (school year foul line. The Meigs talent is also ble-digit scorer. Reiber is also averaging six rebounds per game. Look
Friday night, February 12, 1993 1966-61). Unfonunately at press averaging 6.2 rebounds per game.
history will 6e made as the ml-bot time, that particular volume of The
John Bendey, is both a capable for his numbers to increase as the
Southern,. Tornadoes square off Daily Selllinel was missing. (Edi- scorer and good ball handler. The season progresses. Likewise, Ryan
againl!t the Meigs Marauders in the ton note: Readers having a year- dual threat player has played well Williams. a sophomore, has always
first-ever regular season meeting book or clipping detailing the lalely and is averaging 14.1 points been a good ball handler. Lately,
between the two boys' varsity tias- results of those games may contact per game . He is capable of the
ketball clubs.
the news office or Dave Harris three and can break a game wide
This year's game will be a non- sometime this week during office open when he is on.
league contest, but much will be at hours.) .
Eric Wagner is next in line with
slake, as both clubs try to claim the • Times h&amp;ve change since those a 7.5 scoring average . Wagner
county crown. Next season, the days also. The Vietnam War was in missed some time with broken finclubs wiU meet as members of the progress, Mohammed Ali was still gers, but came back quickly and is
Tri-Vall~y Conference.
Cassius Clay,"Lou Alcindor was again in the heart of the Marauder
Southern is 1:2-4 against its not yel Kareem Abdul Jabar, and fold, Aaron· Drummer is averaging ·
toughest schedule in the histoly oC the headlines promised of a new 4.1 points per game, but went down
the school, while Meigs is now 8- four-lane 'highway through eastern with an ankle injury last week. He
· joins Brad Anderson on the Meigs
10 and 8-7 in the TVC. Mei11s had Meigs County. ·
a great Slarl and was contending for
011 November 10, 1966 Middle- injured list.
·
the TVC crown, but has since been port played Southern in a Saturday
Todd Dill last week had a 16plagued with injuries and had one football game for the last time.
point game and is averaging 7.5
win negated due to unknowingly
Carl Wolfe was the basketball points per game, Jay Cremeans
using a player that had become ~hat Middleport.lronicaUy, his weighs in at 5.9 per game, while
ineligible.
team, a year earlier, had knocked Bobby Johnson and Kyle Simpson
Southern has scrimmaged the off the top-ranked team in the state, round out the line-up.
Marauders in the past, but the clos- the Nelsonville Greyhounds, by a · Meigs has ~os1 players in one
est official bout between the two 68-66 margin on a last-second shot form or another, averaging a comschools came in 19n-78 when the by former Eastern grid coach bined 10 points per game on the
Tornadoes defeated Meigs in the Buddy Moore. Other team mem- average 811d more than I 0 rebounds
Southern ' Valley Athletic Confer- bers. were Gary Stobart, Bill '"Spi- per game. Young Benny Ewing and
ence preview 38-18. The addition der" Davis, W. Davis, George Scott Peterson were among those
of Symmes Valley to the S.Y AC Sauer, Mark Tannehill and Asa called up la~l week to fill the void.
left an odd number of teams in the Bradbury, according to th~ box
Tornado lineup
league, ~ Meigs ftlled the pp.
score.
Southern .has had Its ups and
In that game, Kelly WmebrenIn the 1966-67 rivalry between downs this season, but most recentRIVERVIEW TOURNA·
ner, a 6-foot-2 tranSfer from Meigs, Pomeroy and Middleport. the head- ly is on the upswing as a result of a
led Southern wid1 six points. Scor- lines read Middleport bombs balanced attack, That balance has MENT CHAMPS - Salem
basketball team
ing four points each were torna- Poml!roy 70-59 in first conference been spread equally across ·the C~nter's
does Steve Baker, Richard Teaford, tilt. Eastern defeated Southern 59- shoulders of sen1ors Mark Allen,
Peny Hill and ~ohn Sayre. Other 49,
Michael Evans, Russell Singleton,
scorers were Jim "Ozie" O'Brien,
During the 1965-66 campaign, Jeremy Dill, junior Raben Reiber
!;&gt;.ave Findlay, Todd Cummins, Pomeroy defeated Craynor Sloan's and sophomores Mason Fisher and.
Dwight Hill, Tiin Brinager and Tornadoes 59-56 in a real ~am­ Ryan Williams. The Tornado
burnet in Racine. The second game bench of An\ly Grueser. Trenton
Scou Souder.
Meigs players included Kenny of the year was snowed out, then Cleland, Jeremy Northup. Jamey
Young, Chuck Follrod, Tim Coats, after being rescheduled, was flood' Smith and •Tucker Withams has
Ray Andrews, Brent Stanley. Tom ed oul Tbe end of the season was excelled also, often placing memHawley, Gene Halley 8Jid Chuck pushed into tournament time and bers of this group in the doubleKennedy. Halley led the team that the game was later canceled.
digit scoring column.
night with five points. The Daily
Thai same season (65-66). MidMichael Evans lead~ the .pack
Sentinel sportswriter Dave Harris dleport cracked a six-year jinx unofficially with a 14 point averwas the manager of that team.
agamst Southern with a 65-66 win age, twice putting 27-point efforts
In the preview, Hannan Trace at Ra!;ine; Sou them, like now. was in the book. Evans is a steady three
defeated Symmes Valley 35-24, tough earlier in the 1960s before point shooter and clutch performer
North Gallia bombed Eastern 34- going into a late-decade tailspin.
going down the stretch.
Members of that Southern teain
18, and Southwestern drilled Kyger
Russell Singleton is the team's
Creek 44-18. Tifnes ha~ certainly ils indicated in the box score were top rebounder with 110 average of
changed since then as four of the Lariy Circle, Sherrn Cundiff, Dale ten per game to go'Dlong with his
above schools are no longer in Hill, John McClintock, Bob ten point offen.sive average. Singleexistence.
Grueser, Red Wallbrown and Char· ton is an. all-around athlete that
Earlier rivals
lie Mathews.
adds another dimension to the
Before the consolidation that
This week's matchup
game with his shot blocking ability.
formed Meigs, Racine High School
Meigs is led into action during Mark Allen is averaging ·12 points
and ·later Racine-Southern enier- this present season by Trevor Har- per game and is an excellent passtained a long-running rivalry with rison, the newly crowned all-time er. His ball handling and .three
the Pomeroy Panthers, Middleport Meigs scon:r and son of head coach point ' shooting make him a .fine
Yellow Jackets, Rutland Red ~v­ Phil Harrison. In 17 games, the three dimensional player. Allen has
iis and Harrisonville High.
younger Harrison is ·averaging 19.9 had games of 27 and 24 points
Tbe last time Pomeroy and Mid- points per game, hitting 42% from respccti ley.
·
dlepon are believed to have played the three point arc, 55% on two
Junior Raben Reiber is averag'
ing seven points per }lame, bul has

bi~ Butcher and Alicia Haggy chipped in with two

pomts .each..
.
.
.
.
Me1gs will travel to Nelsonville-York to fimsh th~
regular season Saturday evenmg.
·
.
.
Trimble (9trs:7-14-8-6=3S) - Tammy Lcmgar
2-1-3=101 Ktm Pallo 1-0·0=2, Tonya Trace 2:1·
O=?,Chas1ty Antle 3-0-4=10, Beth Koons 2-0-2-6 ..
· Totals -10-2-9=35
Meigs (Qtrs: 18-16-19-17=70)- Vema Compston 6-0-1=13 Lee Henderson 1-0-0=2, Lori Kelly 70-Z=I6, Katrina Tuenr 1-0-0=2. Missy Sisson 4-03=11. Joy O'Brien 5-0-1=11. Amber :Blackwell 1-00=2, Heather Hudson 2-0-Q--4, Vanessa Compston 31-M. Totals-30-1-7=70

astern girls hand.
outhern 71-33 loss

Tornado ,defense. Stephanie Otto
By SCOIT WOLFE
and
sometimes Tara Congo were
;!
Eastern Head Coach
on
the
rebounding end of the fast
~ Outscoring Southern 39-15 in
break
and
did a great job hitting the
'IILe first half, the Eastern Eagles
outlet
player.
ibared to an easy 71-33 triumph
Aeiker hit 4-8 from the field,
~er the Tornadoes in non-lea$ue
while
Karr hit6-13 from the floor.
girls' varsity basketball acuon
Southern outscOred the hosts 14Monday night before a large crowd
13
going down the strell:h.
at Eastern J:ligh School.
Eastern hit 24-72 for 33% and
Tbe scoring ·
Eastern (7-12) placed four girls hit 25-44 at the line for 56.8%.
in double digits and placed eight in Eastern controlled the boards with
the scoring column as all 15 Eagles 61 rebounds, led by Otto (16),
saw action. The Eagles were led by Aeike• !II), Wilson (7), Congo (6)
junior point guard Jaime Wilson, and II.·J ' '6), Eastern committed 27
who notched 19 points, had seven turnove..., had 18 steals, led by
rebounds and three assists. Fresh- Wilson ~~d Karr with five each.
man Jessica Karr added 17 points The Eagles had 11 assists and 22
and six rebounds, and senior fouls.
Southern hit 15-65 for 23% and
Stephanie Otto added 13 points and
hit
7-18 at the line for 38.8%. The
16 rebounds, while Penny Aeiker
Tornadoes
had 30 rebounds, led by
,added 12 points and 11 rebounds.
Moore
with
six, and Codner and
., Aimee Mills led the scoring
Becky
Moore
had five each. SHS
1i.uack for Southern (2-18) with 16
had
40
turnovers,
17 steals (Moore
points.
7)
and
had
30
fouls.
,
First-quarter IICtion
Eastern coach Scott Wolfe said,
: Eastern's Stephanie Otto played
"Southern
has shown mucti
ller last game before the hometown
im~rovement
since the first tim.e
crowd. Otto, a senior, has been
~tern's leading scorer with a 13.2 we ve played. We probably played
point scoring average and a 13.2 our best game of the year. What
we've been w.orlcing for all season
·rebounding average.
~ Otto put Eastern on the board long is just now coming together.
£irst with a pair of free throws, The passes that were near misses
l;&gt;efore Mills tied the score with a earlier were on target tonight. We
l!ong two-point jumper. Aeiker did the liUle things well. I'm really
jove Eastern a 3-2 lead, but in the proud of the girls. Hanging tough
transition Mills nailed another a~ainst several Division II and Ill
j~mper for Jenny Couch's Torna- schools has made us a good ball
does, giving Southern its only lead club. We've got the besl7-12 team
around."
at 4-3.
Eastern won the reserve game
Ouo hit another free throw to tie
22-13.
Freshman Nicole Nelson
the score. then )(arc gave Eastern a
and
Congo
led the way with six
6-4 lead on a baseline jumper. Wilpoints,
while
Michelle Schultz
son dipped off to Aeiker, Ono and
added
four,
Beth
Bay two and
Karr underneath as Eastern rallied
Rebecca
Evans
lwo.
to a 12-4 advantage.
Bea Lisle and Jess Codner led
Eastern later led 14-8 and later
had a strong finish, giving itself Soutloern with four each. Cecilia
some breathing room with the Nilssen and Mills had two each,
sc6re 20-8 at the end of the first and Amber Ohlinger had one.
Lancers beat Tornadoes
quarter.
Southern dropped, a 35-22 varsiBetween quarters there was a
delay in the game as one official ty tilt to Federal Hocking Saturday.
was stricken with tunnel vision in Southern was credited \V_ith playing
.
conjunction with a migraine a good hall game by Couch.
Mills
led
Southern
with
12
headache. Rex Cummins subbed
points.
for the ailing Dennis Brown, but
Federal was led by Alison PierBrown returned for the second half.
son
with nine points, Erin Snedden
Otto and Aeiker eaGh netted
had
six, Jenni Kibble four, Katie
seven points in the frame, while
Maxwell
two, Amanda Gaspcrs
Karr and Wilson notched five.
two
and
Missy
Bennett two,
Mills had all eight Southern points.
Federal
took
a 12-4 lead in the
Mills notched the first four
first
period
and
a 21-8 lead at the
points of the second canto, making
the score 20-12 Eastern before half. The Lancers the .coasted on
Eastern turned up the wick and for the non-league win. Federal is
outscored SHS 19-7 in the frame. now 8-9 overall and 7-7 in the
TVC.
Eastern led 39-15 at the half.
Southern goes to Symmes Val·
· Wilson had eight in the second
frame and 10 ov~rall at the half. Icy Monday. while Southern goes
Aeiker had 10 at the half for the to South Point.
Eagles. MiUs led Southern, having
Southern
12 of the team's 15 points.
(8-7-4-14=33)
Southern senior Jennifer Cross
Amber Ohlinger 1-0-2=4,
had some more bad luck just before
Aimee
Mills 8-0-0= 16, Jess Codner
the half, twisting an ankle at the
1-0-0=2,
Andrea Moore 2-0-2=6,
close of the second frame. Cross
Christie
Cooper
1-0·1=3, Bca Lisle
has been recovering from a recent
0-0-2=2.
Totals
-13-0-7=33
concussion from Southern's game
with Meigs. Southern missed
Eastern
Cross's stability in the line-up.
(20-19-19-13=71)
Eastern pulled off its full coun
Stephanie Otto 3-0·5=13, Jaime
press the second half, but still manWilson
6-0-7=19, Amy Redovian
aged to outscore the visitors 19.4 to
3-0·0=6,
Penny Aeiker 4-0-4= 12,
lead 48-19. The Eagles played JessiCa Karr
6-0·5= 17, Jessica Rad·
some of their best b;jll of the year
ford
1-0-0=2
.• Melissa Guess 1-0in the third quarter as Karr, Wilson,
Rebecca
Evans 0-0-2=2.
0=2,
Aeiker and Redovian
several Totals- 24-0-23=71
• '

ttBT~~-

PLAYERS OF THE MONTH- A pair of senior basketball
players were aamecl • Eastern High School's players of the month
for January. Stephanie Otto (left), tbe dauabter of Ron and Joyce
OUo HID, daimecl the award for 11r1 athlete. AI a 6-foot-0 center,
she currently o\lVIla a 11.6 point acorlaa avenae and averages 14
reboundlag1me for tbe young Eaales. Otto Is tbe lone senior on the
team and was praised by bead coach Scott Wolfe for lier on-court
Jeadenhlp. Buckley, the - ot BID 11d Twlla Buckley, Is a senior
forward ' oa Grea VIlma•'• nnlty tt1m. Buckley bad ~everal bil
pma lor tbe EaaJa 11 Ju1111ry. He l11lso a meber·of the National
Hoaor Society aad wa 1 1tandout
on thisI year's Eagle football
,

tnm.

I

I

EYES ON THE PRIZE- As Sol\tbem's Christie Cooper watches the play, Eastern's Rebecca Evans (10, with ball) getS between
Tornadoes Andrea Moore (10) aad Heather Hill (12) in irying to
sc:ore near _thelbouadary of the lane during Monday night's game at
Eastern _H1gb School, where the Eagles won 71-33. Evans finished
·
wilb two points. (Photo by Steve Bowen)

COME BACK HERE! - Southern's Janna Manuel (dark uniform) nnds beraeH' having to turn quickly to retrieve the ball before
an unidentified Eastern defender gets to it during Monday night's ·
game at Ea$tern High School, which the Eagles wqn 71-33. (Photo
by Steve Bowen)

In this week's 'Victory Circle,'

•

Clay-Southern game tabbed best of season
By SCOIT WOLFE
the NBj\'s Phoenix Suns.
most everyone but the custodians
Sentinel Correspondent
Rees, a longtime, devout UK and booster club members had
Being an English teacher, I fan, was on Southern's 1982 State
lhopght it would be appropriate to semi-finalist team. Brother Jay is
begin this week's column with a the coach at Alexander. The Recs's
and I were former co- workers in
voeal,lulary lesson.
.
Today's word is "barnburner"- the tomato fields .of East Letart.
an action-packed contest not decid- They played a major role in my
. ed until the final buzzer; i.e. Satur- firsr auto accident. Don· t let them
day night's Southern-Portsmouth kid you as to how we really
wrecked!
·
Clay basketball contest in Racine.
Meigs head coach Phil Harrison
If you were not one of the fonunate ones to see that game live or and several Meigs players were on
. he3r the live action via WMPO hand to .scout Southern Saturday.
radio, you probably missed one of Larry R. Morrison gymnasium will
the best high school basketball con- most likely be packed to the brim
tests of the year. Perhaps-that game for the first-ever meeting between
was the best-ever regular season the Southern and Meigs boys this
victory by any Southern team. Four Frida)''· Mei!JS has had a fine season
quarters and two (three minute) and tn the1r home environment
overtime· periods after the initial should put on quite a show.
If former Racine-Pomeroy basjump ball, Southern won 72-70 on
a last minute shot by Russell Sin- ketball game atmosphere carries
gleton.
·
over into the new Meigs-Southern
Adding icing to Southern's vic- rivalry, the contest should develop
tory cake was the fact · that into a premier match-up in future
Portsmouth Clay was ranked ·third years. For many years, my dad,
in the state in Division IV and that Hilton Wolfe Jr. (a.k.a. "Big
it was a spoiled homecoming for Fooze"), was the reserve mentor at
former Southern head coach Carl Soqthern, under several different
Wolfe, who now holds the Clay coaches. I've heard many stories
post. Clay chartered a tour bus to about the great rivalries from that
make the trip, but the ride home time; including the great fan sup.
was neither scenic, nor a joyous pon from both sides.
trip home. ·
Much like today. both sides had
For 10 years, Wolfe was Cald- their signs and banners pledging
well's mentor in the c!iaching their support. On one particular
ranks. CaldweU the faithful student. instance, SHS came into Pomeroy
Saturday was the first time the two . for a big game circa 1964-65 when
had the opportunity to meet. The Craynor Sloan ( now in Kentucky)
student taught his teacher a lesson.
was the SHS mentor. The banner
Carl Wolfe has been successful read, "Moan and Groan-Big Fooze
wherever he has gone, taking a vir- and Sloan". Racine won that panictually winless program at Clay to ular game . .
The Pomeroy-Racine rivalry
near the ,top in a few shan years.
Caldwell, at· tradition-rich South- also brings the renections of a forern, took a team that really had no mer PHS coach Bud Bi~kle. Meigs
natural sws and has blended them girls mentor Ron Logan and I
together in a way that has seen five recently gol a laugh about the time
on-court stars shine at the same . when Bickle was so frustrated with
time. The teamwork has been poor officiating that he had two
excellent.
·
players guard the referees. I've
Sometimes Howie Caldwell considered the maneuver before,
doesn't get the respect he deserves, but have thus far refrained. Bickle
but nearly 1,000 SHS fans who is now genera.! manager of the
fi lied the gym are true believers Huntington Cubs rookie league
now. I have utmost respect for baseball team.
Coach CaldweU, and in fact, credit
Reflecting on the growth his
him as one of the influences for my team 'has had in the past week,
becoming an English teacher.
Caldwell said on the radio, "a few
Overall, an estimated 1,100 fans weeks ago, Cia~ may have very
(200 tickets aloued to Clay) packed well blown us out. This week
the Charles W. Hayman Gymnasi- we've really grown up as a ball
um. The fans really got into the act club."
and played a key role in the outSouthern has been beaten by
come. Superfan Charlie Mathew's lwo state-ranked Division III
renewed his S-0-U-T-H-'E-R-N ' schools in Cheasapeal&lt;e (third) and
cheer, for the first time in quite a Oak Hill (seventh), plus lost at the
while. The cheer was a weekly ritu- buzzer to Ross Soulbeastan (Divial in the early 1980's.
sion UI) 11111 Gallipolis.
,
Racine third grader Macy Reet,
Melp' &amp;iris still bl'l'e a shot at a ,
the son of Jonathon and Missy tie for tile TVC crown delllitt a
Rees of Racine, again sana lbe lrecellt!OIIIO Belpe. The Mulud·
rl 1 1 ~~ 1 , 1 1I, I1 1
National Anthem before 1M J8IIW ers will have to depend on Neland did a ~t job. The efl'ori W.S
sonville to knock off Belpre, then
'
well-rece1yed by the huge crowd. defeat Nelsonville next Saturday to
By the way, Macy is named after have a shot at the crown.
l!Jul~tliToeo,.._.,
former University of Kentucky
What .is Southern tradition?
guard Kyle Macy, later a star with After Saturday night's game, when

go!IC ho~·e. young Tommy Smith
(See VICTORY on Page 5)

I'I''I' ,· I'I'

I

For the ftrst ume thrs season, a
pair of University of Rio Grande
bilsketball players have been chosen the NAIA District 22 Division I
and Mid-Ohio qmference players
· ·
of the week.
Malt Powell, 6-4 starting guard
for the Redinen, and Lori Hamilton, 6-0 starting center for the Redw.omen, were honored for their
efforts in winning games last week.
Hamilton has been twice named the
MOC's weekly top player this season, but had previously been edged
out for Division I honors. firSt by
Muffy Murphy of IUPU-Indi- ·
anapolis and again by Central
State's Antoinette Vinson.
Redmen center Troy·Donaldson
was named Division I and MOC
player of the week on Jan.l7.
Player of the week selections
have been announced by the division and the conference since Jan.
10.
Powell, a sophomore from Barnesville,. scored 55 points and
pulled in 15 rebounds m two wins
for the Redmen. He tallied 22
points and seven rebounds in a 7964 w·in over Shawnee State, and
then hit eight three-~nters enroute
to 33 p&lt;!ints and eaght boarcls in a
94-85 victory over Ohio Dominican.
For the week, Powell hit 13 of
20 three-pointers for 65 percent
and was 19 of 35 overall from the
field for 54.2 percenL He shot 80
percent at the line (4-5) to go along
with six aSsists and one steal. Pow·
ell also went over the 1,000-point
mark for his career and started this
week with a total of 1,094. The
Redinen are 22-5 entering ~ght's
·conference game on the road
against Tiffin.
•
In national standings, Powell is
16th in individual scoring with an
average of 23.2 points per game.
Hamilton, a junior from Gallipolia, averaged 25 polnll and 13
rebounds in three vlclllriea enjoyed
by the Redwomen. She had 23
· points and 12 rebounds, plus the
game-winning field goal ~~ the
buzzer, in 1 71-69 win ovu
Shawnee Swe.
· In addition, sire had 27 points
and 18 bolnla In an 83-67 decllioo
over Mount Vernon Naarene. and
25 points with oint rebound&amp; in a
98-BS victory over Ohio Domini-

•

•

lAKE THE KEYS.

C~ll ACAB.

.lAKEA STANO.

1 11

i I, , , 1I) I'1I1,

11

1' 'I'

can.

1, 11 , L'~

For the week, Hamilton shot

56.8 peR)8IIl (211-'0 flQm dlo lia1d
and 73.9 pen:enl (11-23) • dlo Une.
She added three aislsts, thre~

.•

blocb. and two ...... for the Redwomen, who atarted this week''

'

however, the SHS point guard has
been Mr. Clutch, canning pressure
jumpers and three pointers with
much,regularity.
.Although not adding much
offense lately, Jeremr. Dill and
Mason Fisher add stability to the

line-up, allowing Caldwell to JO
deep into his bench.
Throw all records aside. A faU
house is expected al Lany R. Morrison Gymnasirn Friday niJbt. Tile
r~serve game precedes the varsity
contest 81.6:30 p.m.

won first place In the Riverview
held recently at
Riverview
In the

fro•t row are (L·R) BriBdy :
Laudermllt; Laura 1PayBe, .
Tawny Jones, Stepbanle Kopec,
Kimberly Rltterbeck ud
Stephanie Joaes. Bellllld them.:
are coach John Smith, Rebeca:··
Smith, Lori Kennison, Slltrr)'
Jacko, Bridget Vauaban, KIBI- ·
berly Pierce, Amber Gardaer :
and C.D. Mcintyre. ·

Victory Circle

o. o

(Continued from Page 4)
asked Caldwell if he could shoot 1
few baskets. Caldwell sajd, "Sure,
grab a ball," then directing his
comments to me said, ''That's whll
. its all about. That's traditiO!\. Kids
could be dqing many other things
right now, but here they stay, late
at night and shoot ball."
The incident reminds me of of
the time when Southern came
home from their first trip to the
state. Amid the caravan ride home
through SHS territory, every kid
along the way it seemed was out il)
the cold shooting baskets. One such
boy was Andy Baer, who later
proved to be a great SHS point
guard. Maybe Tommy Smith wiU
be a future great SHS point gllllrd: ·
Hard work. That's tradition! · ·
See you in the victory circle!

...

Division I, MOC name Powell,
Hamilton week's top players

•

herGet APal

5

. Southern, Meigs boys to meet for first time Friday

Tuesday, February 9, 993'

Meigs adds .Trimble, Wellston to.list offallen·hardwood foes
·

The Dally Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,I

action at 23-4 entering tonight's
conference meeting with Tiffm at 7
in Lyne Center.
Nationally, Hamilton is tied for
fifth place in field goal percentage
at62.S.
Where tbey stand
The Redmen, who improved to
21st in the N:AIA's top 25 list last
week,remaln in third'placeinDivisian I and are tied for third in the
MOC with Urbaria with identical 73 records.
Leading the division is
Cedarville (21-4), followed in second place by Urbana (20-4). Findlay (18-5) is fourth, Malone (1412) ftfth, Central Stale (9-9) sixth
and Shawnee State (8-15) is seventh.
Walsh continues to lead the
men's race in the conference at 222 and 9-1. In second is Cedarville·
at 8-2. Taking flfth place is Tiffin .
(18-8, 6-4), with Ohio Dominican
(12-13, 2-8) sixth, Mount Vernon
(10-15, 1-9) seventh and Shawnee
Stale (0-10) eighth.
In the women's Division 1 competition, Rio Grande continues 10
trail ftrst place Central State (19-3).
In third IS Shawnee State (16-9),

IUPU-Indianapolis fourth at 8-15,
Urbana (7-18) fifth and Northwood
University (4-18) sixth.
·The Redwotnen began this week
in ftrst place in the MOC at Il-l,
but must knock qff second place
Tifftn (14-8, 9-2) for the championsh!P· Shawnee Sta.te is third at 93, fo~?wed by Cedarville (16-8, 66) in fourth, Walsh (8-15, 5·6) in
fafth, Urbana (7-18, 4-7) sixth,
Ohio Dominican (5-20, 2-9) seventh an(! Mount .Vernon (7-15, 012) eighth.
National ranklngs
In this week's national sta.tistics
for meq, Donaldson is tied for
fourth in field goal percentage
(68.2) while teammate Brett
Coreno is tied for eighth in threepoint field goal pere~ntage (50.0).
Team-wise, Rio Grande is founh in
offensive scoring (99.6 points per
game) and seventh in margin
·(17.3). Additionally, the Redmen
are eighth in field goal percentage
(53.4) and, ninth in three-point percentage (42.2).
The Redwomen are third nationally in scoring offense (87.5 pointS
per game) and seventh in scoring
margin (18.3).

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I

.•

�•

By The Bend
. '

The Daily Sentinel

•

Tuesday, February 9, 1993

.
'

6

Page

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and .
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Wife is tired of hearing·excuses
Dear Allll 1 ~ My hlllbancl
~~~beenmanied~40)'elll.
~ ... f*'. _ CIIICel', He hal · .
been m renustiJOII for llelrly rave
yeB!I, anc1 he reo~s fine.
.
. In ~ lut five yean. &lt;U 111X

Ann
Lan ders
.

·

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Hea lth •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

thil, I was told I sbould have a
rubber stamp made and opea a

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189

scpn1e ~ 11CC0U11L

I am disgusted with Ibis phony
c:omp111y. 1rql(ltCd it ro the policel
ANN LANDERS
mel they said the ClliiiJ*IY isa frald.;
Hfe, w!Jic!l was always mellent, hal
Anc....
I wro1e to lhe OOIII(JIIIY llld said if it'
been·.linuled to oraltex !w:aewe of TU.a
.
didn~ lelldmy money bacl:, 1 wouldl
. the kind of llllrJefY Barney had. He
Ctullwl Syndical&lt;'' .
..__ So ~
r ..___.,
·-"
•
........
until•'-·
JJftll
ve ,....,..,
was .._..y •llupw
u~"" )'eB!1 .
IIOihins
·1
l!30 when he felt the need for the 69, 1111 I m~1,3. I have ll!lde ....y . AI.,.,... 1b ad ~ in 11
Clliii~Y of other women.
aaanpts to supplement my pelllion newiJIIPCC wgeled tcir aemu~
I discovaed that Bllney had made with a part.cime job but have had no Cuadians. companies lite this'
19 phone calls to a form~ ~eere- luck.
exiltiUow.rCinadallldlheUnilt4J
tary •. When I q~ him, he
A few weeks ego, I read an ad in StileS. P1eue warn ~readers not;
admilled he had taken her to lunch, a local peper that aid I could en to fall for Ibis rip-otr• •• nuCKED
~!'«~and taken~ f'!"a upto$1,000awed:pcomri"8rnail IN QUEBEC, CANADA
:
ride m 01!1' Jll!VIIe ~- He JIIIIS!S at home. The ad clelliy scaled "free
DEAR TIUCXED: Ads ~ 10
they ~~;e pllt pals. . nus wornall ts suppUes.'
the one you cleacribeil IIIIPNl' in 11
40 and di'VOI'Cecl.
I sent the company 1 a self- _,many
·
ble .....,_ _,.
6=--A last .. :........ tha there
.....,_......,
oo!\"AAP"(- IICWII(lllpeiSj'
I -.
,........ .t
~ """'"""""'• stamped envelope and a . on the North Americln CQIIIiaenl.1
now two other women m the p1c· few days later .received a letter ln my opinion, they are clewty;
· ture. When I confron~ Barney, he asking me to send a money Older misleading' if nol clowarigh~
became ~ mel aid that I was . for $19.9S. The c:ompany said it frlutlulent. 1 cannot fJ~U~e out why•
overreacung and llhould know there would then send me all the the Beau Business Bureaus in dlesei
can't be any_thing IIIXlla1 Boi"' on neresnry supplies to start my home cities don't cniCk down on tbesel
beca!Jse_of his swgery.
_ . buiiness stuffing envelopes with apeman.
f
I realize what an ego buster this advertising nyas.
. If any spotespenon for a BBB, ·
surgery can be for a man, but
Even though the ad clearly Silled would lite to explain rd be hippy
Barney's behavior is humiliatilig, and the supplies WCJe free, I sent the to shale the expJanaiu. Willi my
I .lift getting physicaUy sick from money onler anyway. A few days readers. How llbout it?
~
the agpavation. What can I do? - later, I received a booldet which
Do )'011/tavt qwstiolts tlbo111
IDAHO
. instructed me to put an ad i!t .a bill 110 OM to talk to? A11111ANkrs~
DEAR ~A: You can tell ~y newspaper and call a local radio booklet, "Sa lllld 1M Tttll·~r. w
i
~t you will not tolerate hun usmg .station to buy time sayil!g I am is frallk tutd to tltt poillt. Seltd a,:
h1s surgery as 81! excuse ~ fool looking for work at home. The ~~t/f..IJIJJreslltd. /o11g, btuilltss-size ·
around and that he can go With you booklet said these ads would COSI e11w/ope tutd a clttck or.fiiDM'J or-'
for counseling and. get his act about $60.
dtr for $3.65 (tiW illcllldes posta~~
together or start packing. I hope he.
I -then inSirucled to cOOIICtl lllld Nutdlbtg) to: Teeu, c/o AM•
opts to shape up. Forty )'QfS is a broker and ask .for names and Ltutdtrs P..O BOJ: 11562 Cllialgo ~
loog time to clump in the ulan.
addresses of possible clients, which JU. 606iJ.Os62. (Ill C~ ~~trt/J~
Dear .ua LMtlen: My Wife is would COS! an addilional $SO. After &gt;' $4.45 .)
•
•'

To place an ad .

~

.

..........

·,

'c:~ "'...

..

~~

,·

•

•••
t
LEARNING ABOUT NEWSPAPERS. As a
part ot learnin&amp; about community newspapers, .
t tllele mep~ben ot Cub Scout Pack 245, Den 2, or
; Middleport visited The Daily Sentinel Monday
• ~ftet'IIOOII. Here Reporter .Julie Dillon demon-

· 1
1

~Lee,
..
(, .

f

strata tile role ot the computer ID a aewsavoni
to, from .tile len, Travis Roberts, Joey Comenus, .
Seth Rawsoa, Mattlltw McClaskey, and Chris
GUkey. Lori Ra~n Is tile troc:'P leader• .

Wolf installed as officers

,•

POUCIES

·rc lassroom seminars set

· ~-

Meigs High School Cafeteria
ChiliNegetable,
Soup(Combread/Cracl&lt;ers
Dessert &amp; Drink- $3.00 .

Dance planned

maw:rials

0.-•·

._k

'

- - bo
10n to buy ....,. nice

l*lg.

Cal614-9112·7104lor

:

. HARRISONVILLE • Har- • .
risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM '
will hold a special meeting Thurs- •
day and Feb. 18 at7:30 p.m. l'nl:·:
lice in the master mason degree.;
AllmasiC:r IIWiliiS
urged to aaend. •I
.

i

"Bad," without payintt a Ucense'
fee and that. he gave maccurate '
credits..
The judge did llQ( immediately ;
decide whether to allow the con-•
tract into evidence and said that '
Duane Folke, Zuccarelli's lawyer, ;
may be seekinJ the contract to ~
embarrass Sony mto offering a set· ·
tlemenL
Folke said the contract is the~
only document that can prove his 1

case.

.. 74e~Uj4t

Defend•nla, upon •
ludgmllfll th-n ,..,d-,

baing c..- No. 12-CV-231 In

oald Court, I will oHer for
..... et the rront door or the
Court HouM In Po.. eroy,
Olllo, on tha 111h day or
llarch, · 1113, at 10:00
o'olocll A.ll., the following
Ianda end tanamanta, to-wit:
Sllt111te In the Townalllp ol
Orange, In the. County or
llelga •nd Slato or Ohio.
Baing In range No. 12,
Section 33, Town 4 ol lhe
Olllo Company'a PurchaH,
and bounded and - -

••fol-:
Beginning at the South·

eaet corner of lhe l•nda

rormerry owned by J. A.
WMtrall In Section No. 33;
thanCit North 101 roda to
the County Rood; thence
north aa lfegr- W•l 11
roda •nd 11 Anka; thtnCit
So_u th 71 deg'"' _ , 15
r.ocl• •nd 14 Hnka; thtnCit
South 48% deg,... W•t ~1
r\&gt;da •nd 23 llnka; thtnoa
Soulh 81 degr- Wliat 37
+ode ud 5 llnu to the lorka
· or 1he rDIId; thence eouth
8% degi'MI Eaat 41 r.ocla
and 4 llnka;
South
8% deg,... Eaal 27 rode
and 11 Unka;- Eaal 70
rode •nd 11% llnka to the
place or · beginning,
contlilnlng rorty-flve (45)
..,..._orl•a.
: DEED REFERENCE:
Volu01e 3311, P - 11, llelgo
• County Deed Recorda.
· , Aucfhar'o Parcel No. : 10.

1-

7~~
By
Dm

Gmt
of
R"-1
hnll..

.

n. onlr 1lllng .......... 8Chllilng
fiiiiKiiol• II IOIIIaliliQ Min Olhera.

·,

•••

Halo: ' - St. Petit' anawen liie
phone at !he PeMy Galtl

•••

OoaM: 'How Clld -

-

. eatate

Said real
Ia
appflloed at: $20,500.00.
, Tenna ol Slle: C..,h
R.. l •tate aannol be
lipid lor ...atllen ~lrda
ol !he appniHd value.
........ Soulaby,
: Sllerlll or llelp County,
·'
Ohio
(a) •• 11, 23, 3ta

)'GUr

Palilnt: 1iow, Of whon , ..., ..... ed

.,. wW~~ngiOOfrir

l.

Friel,

wltMRCEL 1: Sit uated In
FraciIon 33 • t ' I, R' '15 •
Columbia Townahlp, llelga
Co101ty, Ohio, and being
p1r1 of a tracl ol .land aa
d
lbed In
1
2""
Her
vo ume •••
page
100 llolgo
DHd Recorda
andCounty
being
more parllcul•ly doacrlbld
•alollowa:
Beginning at a point
where tho Eaat line of
Fraollon 33 Inter- with
Townahlp Road 11; lh.,...
along aald Fraction line
North 457-75'to an Iron pin;
th•Cit N. 77 dog . 31' .... w.
327.10' to a point In
Townohlp R011d 11, paaalng
an Iron pin aot at 312.10'
th.,,. along aold roed B.
01 dog. 58' OS" E. 485.03; to
• polntlhenlie S. 48 dog; Ill'
sa• E. 58.28' 1o a point;
th.,... S. II dog. 04' 15• E.
111.54· to the point of
b2,lnnlng and containing '

on en order

IN

THIRTY (30) DAYS. THE

' DEPOSIT SHALL BE FOR·

FElTED IF lliE BALANCE
IS NOT PAID WITHIN lliE
THIRTY (30) DAY PERIOD.
Gl,., under my hand thla
3nl dau of februa~.1113.
•
J-11.
Soul
'SlleriH
llolga County, Ohio
8y: u.. Rouah, Deputy
Robert J . Gl!l
Attorney lor PlalndH
(2) I, 111, 23; (3) 2, II, 5ta

.

to
1.
and rlghta alway of .-rd.
hall ... 1 •..
Doed Relor811oa: Volume
•
r ICI
twttf.tlrf tpaalil
288, P•ll• 201, ltlelga
County Died Reaarcla.
14 SESSIONS • '14
MRCEL II: Situated In
FriiOIIon 32, Saotlon 27, T.
Llmh 2 Per Cuatomer
IN, R. 11W,- Columbia
lOOt IIITIL fll. 20
TowRahlp, llelga County,
Ohio and being • part oi 1
111.03 acre traCI_:d:n:•:•l:h:dl!===~-..:1o;:
· 28-=13:.t

949.,2826

PERSONAL
CARE.
BECAUSE
WE CARE.
992-5858
696-1290

caii614-91JS-3S56
Open Mon.-Fri. 10.7 or sat. 1Q-4

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

lloMto....po;ee: ,'vegotanopen
· So 11181 )'GU decide wl\l...
at not t ill right.
"'t...V.P. - - ....,...,, low
. . . . . . . . . . . . ln ........

Qualitj
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992·
6637

HAULING
LIMESTONE, .
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
J9E N.SAYRE .
SAYRE TRUCKING

St. Rt. 7

c••••ire,

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONs-TRUCTION
•NewHo1111s·

O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL,
REGISTERED NURSES: ,
Part-time and full time posltlona
available In our IC/CCU, Mtd/SUrg.
and Obltetrlcs Units. New graclu....
may apply. 4-8 wks. orientation
program. Competitive salary and
excellent blfteflta. Contact
O'BIIneaa Memorial Hoapltal,
Hospital Drive, Athena, Oh. 45701.

I

_

- ' lUIIe eiii.I.V.P.

I
,

l

•

Rutland Furahre ;' ·
' •
Rt. 114
"'ttl nd, OIL
702111
f

.

814-582-8227.
\I

,.

101.

HOURS :

.StOlt••...
d•li•• .
&amp; c....,.

WOLFE&amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING

flEE ESTIMATES

.985·4473
667·6179

olncome Tax Preparation
oBookkeeplng
•Payroll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINESSES

113Y. W. SECOND ST.

YARIIMAM RIDING MOWER
YAIDIIAN PUSH MOWER

POMEROY, 011. 45769

2 Cycle ... 4 Cylo

IM•r•..•)

(UavololfW.IHI

ECHO TWERS &amp; SAWS

992·6193

SALES AND SERVICE
Partaand Service for al
makaa and modale of
tractora and r.rm
equipment.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

MORRIS

949•2391 or
1·800·137-1460

LAwn Mowing,
Fertilizing, W-g, and
Seeding.
Shrub and T- Trimming
a Removal

r.::;;.~=~=:i

RMlcilntlal6 CommMcllt
FrteEIIImltM

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

AlliiiKU
.,....., •• Or ••
lick Up,

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or
915·2561

CHARLIE'S

SMALL DOXER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
aad UMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

" ' - ....... Oftlce

2T7LS..M.St.
POMIIOY, 01110

REASONABlE RATES

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and ·

POMEROY, OH.

REMOVAL

I

992·7553

9 :30a.m .. 5 :30 P. m .
Thu rs day · Sa t u rda y :- 10 :0 0 a.m . -3: 00 p . m .

BILL SLACK
992·2269

R-onlliblaAI!t.
Fully ltwuritd .

USED RAILROAD TIES

RIC EICAYATIIIG
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;

HOMESITES .
HAUUNG! limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5-tfn

CALIFORNIA
TINS

CARPENTER SERVIa
AliM Ad llui•
-GuDar Warll
-lleallll081 and Plumbing
ADDIIItg
........... l!xlorl...

............
.....
u ....... '15
~

!='InMATEI)

.... ..,........,
P111 FIR kttlt of

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

letltl

Patnerey,a.to

949·2823

8-1 0-112-(fn

I

1127/93

HElP THE EFFORT TO BUilD A PROSPEROUS ···
FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUR ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOil
MEIGS COUNTY
,:
WANTED: Sto 6 ACRES OF RElATIVELY FlAT lANDi,~
(I) Ne _.I._ 6 II. vn.c. • alnotle.
121 Will! S,War (31 AM Wot•

~

PHONE: PDIIJ or lar Pickens
Holle: 915-4231 or Pllfty's

,;:
,..

TROLLEY STAnON CUFTS
992·2549

;

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M•

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED
1128193/ltn

992-3470

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

SIZED LIMESTONE
OWNER:
Jeff Wickersham

1·26-9

'

AnnouncQmcnls

•••
3 Announcements .;..
GIFTED PSYCHICSill SENSATIONAL RESULTSII! 1 - 120
3377 EXT. , _ sue PEA 1111.
MUST 8E 18 VAS. UNSTAR on
602.031-oll15.

-.,;-

GUVSI YOU HAVE OUR NUIIBERl Coli Uo NCMI Ol~al Uve1

83:1!1
Unl
.,

1-800--3311 Ext. 5Me.
Por Min. llual Bo 18 Y11.
.Co. (102) 113i-GII5,

'

"*'

Pom- Chot coalolng
g101l
- · • bouoftt.,_ your allow 1crdoy; coil F'"Ml!

BINGO

304oi7Wt37.
.
,..rl
To Whom n lllf Conooiil'&lt;
T._,k You For llotumlna OW
Oog, C.ndy. Robyn &amp;Aoltlilo.

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB

4

IN POMEROY

Giveaway

-~

2 Pupploo, 1 Fomalo, 114-_,

6:45p.m.
Spacial Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thia ltd good for 1
FREE card.
lie. Nb . 0051-32

832C.

1 blllck r. llhtte
Mf..2123.

purr •• •

•
"·
eMJ

..

or

FLAilED WOII
In State or Out
Of State.

S &amp;L

TRUCKING

12·»-H-tt.

YOUNG'S

••

104 Mulb erry Avenue

Pomeroy, OH 45769

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD'

Topping, Trimming,
Rem~ val

Sunaay · M ond ay -C lose d

T u ~s d ay · Wed nesday · Fr id ay -

614-742-2

ee;.,
....
-c...,..••

742-23811

...,..,.._
....
,..,_.....,_loek .. )
-

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
D. A. BOSTON
$40.00 a Load · EXCAVATING
Delivered.
(614)
(614) 992·5449
667·vu•
12131192/lfn

F&amp;A

•••

S.UIIt

•regardless of income
•regardless of grades
•
•plus $20k guaranteed loan ~
•regardless of credn
·•
To COllect your !icholai'Shlp money

.2-3-13-

He blld !he flrll Joint aiDCk I*'J, ancllafold .. hll COIOtpe ....
inlllllqi dd II c '1.

.

for all college bound students. ...

937~Buffalo

Wlntecl

Check our Price or We Bocb Lose

Jr. LOCAnGII TO SEliE YOI 11m1

Guaranteed Scholarship Monei

OVEN
IE PAll

fOREVER
BRONZE
TINNING

IJ1h11Uit with
P•clcs
$109.95 + TIK .
Co••ut•r l•loncing • Strttts, Shocks,
C••bor .-rushj_.l
.

61

882-NewBa,_
895-Leton

or
•••• In
from the

roraclooure
Common Pleaa Court of
llelga County, Ohio, and
directed to me, the
und-laned
· : TEN
TERMS OFSALE
PER CENT (10%) CASH
OR CERTIFIED cHECK ON
THE DATE OF SALE
AND THE BALANCE WlfH.

'au; .u ........

11

·

($7,000.00), and cannot be
aold lor leaa lhan TWO·
THIRDS of that amounL
The jwoperty Ia to be told
u the property of the
part... to !he •bove acllon,

•••
Nooth- lhe ht bulinea.,.,.....

R.I.V.P. ~~~~~·wu• a.- PrJon. .

614·949·2202 .

c......

576-Apple
773--M-

Public Notice

NOTICE ~fendanta
P\IBUCATION
c... No. 11.CV·232
Notice Ia hereby gl...,
that on
the llllh dey
IM
rch
•
1-3 1 ,.,_
0
•
'""" •• •• • • '""
hour ollD:OO o'clock A.ll., 1
will oHer lor Nle " 1 publiC
aucdon altho iront cloor, o(
the Sherllfa eulldlng, 104
Eut Second Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, ' the
~-l•tatoaH ....
In the Countr.oiMelp and
S tale o I Oh o, and In the
Townahlp of Columbia, to •

Seiitl•r Cells)

UCINE, OHIO

"75-1'1.
458 ......

e

883, llelga County
-~~===========r-============~ Paga
Deed Recorda.
Public Notice
PubliC Notice
· Doed Reier.,,.: Volume
287, Page 715, llelga
Co101ty Deed Recorda.
IN lliE
NancE OF SALE
The promlaea to be
IIEIGS COUNTY COURT conveyed •r• taxed ••
By virtue of an Order or
OF COIIIION PLEAS
Sale laaued out oi the
Parcel Number 05.00004
POMEROY, OHIO
Common Plea• Court or
and 05-G0885.001.
llolga County, Ohio, In the Bank One, AlhMa, N.A.
The pramiiH aro located
Pllilnlllf on Routa 3, Albany, Ohio.
caae of Home National
Bank, Plalnlllr, agalnal
VS
The property Ia appralaed at
Dewayna G. Stutler, et ol., A•• B. Allman, et "'•
.aevon thouaand dollara

ROCK SPRINGS - Roek
Springs Grange wiU meet Thursday
~t 8 p.m. Members bring an old
ttem for the program.
''1'11~

por·
mm. onc,+dylng
3~ acne In

Roclnt. 4 BR, 3 - · 2 gongoa, - 1
BR opt. P-'Y ilclUdot 4,800 oq. n. farm

---Names in the news--___;

=
students honored during assembly

-~

liMn-··
....-far

PRICE REDUCED!
,.
Tho pllco I'M
1188.900 and
. ·-~~~ ..... to - .. pui'CI-.

.

,.·.1'•

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

"H~ Iping

l'leu••

p......,,

lnleraecllon or the Weot line
of Fraction 32 with tho
cen1erllne of Columbia
Townahlp Roitd 11; thllfiCit
along aald fraction Line
457.75'to •n Iron pin
Ml, thenCit N. 59 dog. 15'
48" E. 351.28' to an Iron ptn
u~ thence S. 43 deg. 10 E.
$94.58' to an Iron pin aet,
thence S . 48 deg. 38' W.
530.18' to • point In
oenlerllne ol Columbia
Townalllp Road 11, paaalng
an Iron pin 111 a1 507.13',
thence with aald road N. 74
deg. 21' 17" W. 258.87' to
the point of beginning and
containing 8.778 ac:rw.
SubJect to all oaaementa
and rlghta ol way or record.
Deed Reference: Bolng
part of the real allalo
. d"crlbitd In Volume 229,

BAND BOOSTERS
OHILI DINNER
Thursday, 'Feb. 11, 4 :00-?

"

~

Snodgrass Uphols,ery

Gallla C~~ty Melp Co1111ty Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Are• Code 614 Area, Code 304
4-46-Galllpollo
992-Middloponl
S67:G-hare
985 ° ' M
388-Vio+oa
245-lllo G....
843-Pordud
256-G.,u DloL . 247-l.elon F...
949.R..Ioo ·
643--Anlolo DloL
742- R•IIaod
379.1Vol••
667...(oo!vllle

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

1120193/lfn

•

page• c011er the
foll.owing telephone e%chongea ...

BULLEnN BOARD DEADLINE
In Volume 228, Page 883,
.llolga C.ounty Deed
4•30
P.• M• DIJ BEFORE
RRorda and being more
•
particularly deacrlbed aa
PUBLICATION
rollowo:
1-----~,;;;.;;;,;;;,;~;;,;.;;,;;;.;;.;..____..
Beg I nnlng
u · 1ha

CHESTER • Regular meeting ~
Shade River Lodge No. 45J ~
F&amp;AM, Thurday at 7:30 p.m. •
Refreshments will be served
I
.

,..l.d

Bl'LLETI:\ BO \RD

TUPPERS PLAJNS • Tuppers~ .
Plains VFW .Post No. 9053 will ~
meetThursday at 7:30p.m. at the ! ..
post home. All ,members urged to•
attend.
,,~
·

Sunday Paper

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTlMATES

(No

\

Community cale:p.dar

r«&gt;n.

Friday Paper

• Ad. oe..W. II. oo-&amp;J
rau _,.._ P*•i id
~ Lc.l"N dieeout for Ida paid ill adY&amp;Oee.
• F.... Ad.: &lt;;;_.,., ... r.....~ .......... l s -•willloo
na3daJO&amp;I.......
·
• l'rioe of od fO&lt; aD capilol..._ io oloulolo pric. of ool coot
• 7 poiDI U..~ypo • .., uod
• S..•ied .. ..t ntpo..ilt .. for e:rron afler' fnl cia)' (cl.eok
for ......,llnl daJ ool """'Ia ....~).Call loofoN 1:00 P·• ·
. da1 oltor ,..w;...lioo 1o oub -...lioa
• Ad. daata•t"lte..-,.Mlbt .d....·..,. t
Card ofn..Ju
HappJ"""
Ia M..oria·•
Yard Sal.
• A eJ-il'ood oolw.-t plocod Ia lloe GaDipolio Dai1J
Tri!Muoe (.....,.t Cluoit'ood DioplaJ, B - Card or Lopl
Noticeo) will aloo appear Ia tho Polat Plooaat R.p~er oad
lloe Doily S..lioool, ........... 18,000 ..._

wc,:

new grandson.
~L~~~~r Council No. 323 , first stanza of the Star Spangled
T!ie nag bearers escorted VirBanner
was
sung
and
orricers
'"!1"18"""" or America, met recentLee and Helen Wolf.SO the
ginia
:~» at the lodge hall with Belly repol'tS were given.
to
he installed to their new
altar
,.NOung. councilor~
Members were reminded of the
offices.
~ , Pledges to the Christian and . raUy in April and to have gifts for·
Helen Wolf was also presented a
.•.(inerican flags were given iii uni- the tables.
past councilor's pin.
The Lord's Prayer and read' It was announced that Jean
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi
Commualty Calendar Items
There will be a silent auction at
·llfgs from Psabhs were given. The Fredrick and Betty Roush has a
appear
two
~ys before an event Chapter, Beta Sigam Phi Sorority,
the next meeting. ·
will hold a sing-a-long for residCniS
Helen Wolf thanki:d those who and tile clay of tlll!t event. Items of the Meigs County lnfumary on
must
be
received
weD
in
advance
sent cards, called or gave prayers
to 855Ure publicatioa In tbe cal- Tuesday at 7 p.m. Hostesses are
for her during sickness.
Terri Neece, Mandy Russell and
endar.
·
; .
Betty Young R:8d "Just Remem·
Kathy Haley.
planning and tracking, investment ber."
.
~ A series of classroom seminars
TUESDAY
The meeting closed in regular
)lcaling with financial security for planning , rules for successful ·
POMEROY • The Meigs CounMIDDLEPORT
· Revival at Old
Investing,
stocks
and
bonds
and
form. ·
·-the future will be presj:nted at the
ty
Board or Elections will meet
AUending were Opal Hollon, Bethel Freewill Baptist Church will Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the off'JCe.
:Meigs County Public Library in managed investments: week two •
be through Saturday at 7 p,m. with
,Polneroy on Thursday, Feb. 18 and retirement planning, setting retire- Lora Damewood, Charlotq: Grant,, Rev. Marvin Markin..Rat pt.Butch·
•
'25 from 6:'30-9 p.m.
· ment goals, soci&amp;l security' retire- Erma Cleland, Ethel Orr, Thelma er, pastor, invites the publiC.
\ CHESTER -The Chester TownIT1j;nt
income
sources,
tax
planning,
White, Doris Grueser, Laura Nice,
• This comprehensi~e course.
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday at
Ada Bissell: Mae McPeek, Alta
~details the necessity of personal formula for determining taxes, tax·
• The Middle- 7:30p.m. at the town hall.
l"man&lt;:iai managements .in today' s advanced investments, taX reduc- Ballard, Mary Barringer, Ruth portMIDDLEPORT
,_;
AV~Community Association will
tion strategies; and week three • Smith, .Esther Smith , Evere_ll
'CCIJlpleX market.
WEDNESDA.Y
meet
Tuesday
at
7
p.m.·
at
the
Peo·
: Those attending will learn abQut protection planning, types of insur- Smith, Mary Holter, Helen Wolf, pies Bank in Middlepon. The busi·
POMEROY · Pomeroy MerQppQrtunities that can emile stabili· ance, determine insurance needs, Kathryn Baum. Jean Welsh, Eliza- ness meetiilg wiD be followed with chats Association will meet
, 1¥ in an e~er-ch!l"ging financial common mistakes, estate planning, beth Hayes, Goldie Fredrick, Betty a program on tourism by Mary Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the con• environmenL Shdes that outhne · distribution or the estate, estate tax- Young and Virginia Lee.
PoweU, Meigs COIBity Parle District ference room at Bank One.
: strategies for informed decision ation and wills and lniStS.
. I
director.
Registration for the course is
: making will be presenled. Coo~
TI:IURSDAY
will include a COIQr work· required and seating is limiled so
book. full of valuable information. those interested are encouraged to
register as soon as possible. To regThere win be a Valentine dance
! There is no charge for the course.
ister,
sign
up
at
the
Meigs
County
at
the Rutland American Legion
" The course outline includes:
Public
Library
in
Pomeroy
or
Hall
o~ Saturday from 8 p.m. to
:. week one • introduction, what is
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Billy million copies in the United States
phone
Jerry
Adams,
IDS
Financial
midnight
with music by Pure
~ financial management, roadblocks
Ray
Cyrus says an inner voice that and won him three Grammy nomiCountty Band. Public invited.
; to financial security and budget Services at 1-800-925-0940.
·
came to him at a Neil Diamond nations.
concert told him to give up baseI,.OS ANGEL~ (AP) - Sony
ball, buy a guiw l!nd start a band.
That was II years ago, when Music pleaded with a judge to keep
Cyrus was a 20-year-old aspiring the terms of. Michael Jackson's
balll"&amp;yer who had never sung pro- c.ontract secret.
The contract - one of the most
fe~tonally. Today he's among the
An assembly to observe the end Dusty Murphy, Dustin Kiggs and Mark Guess, Dusty Murphy, lenclosely
secrets in the
&lt;Of the second nine-weeks was Morgan Weber, kindergarten 2; nifer Hayman , Adam Dillard, bnghtest stars of countty music on industry -guarded
.
m
ay
jlrove
crucial in a
)$1cendy held at Tuppers Plains Ele- Jas on Foley, Chrissie Gregory, Lucas Grueser, Josh Hayman, the strength or his hit "Achy
an
inventor
and
dispute
between
Breaky Hearl."
JIICiltary. Several parents and Dick Andrew Upton and Alfred Zeigler, 'Dustin Riggs, Morgan Weber,
the
singer.
"Neil Diamond was saying how
Smith, superintendent, attended.
first grade; Jimmie Putman and Tonya Barber, Brent Hensley and
Sony gave the inch-thick agree. .. All teaehers presented a citizen- Tiffany Spencer, third grade; Kevin Amanda Custer; first grade, Jessica . if you believe in yourself, and
ment
Superior Court JQdge
.-~ip award, SAM (Students Keaton, Michelle O'Nail , Justin Boyles, Daniel Buchanan, Amanda believe in your dreams, then you David to
Yaffe
to review but argued
~thieving More) , and perfect
Robertson and Wes Shafer, fourth Griffin , K"vin Marcinko; Kat ie will have everything you want," Monday that releasing the details
anendance.awards.
grade; Crysral Bennett and Amanda Robertson, Nathan Grubb, Chrissie Cyrus said in the current issue of would spill trade secrets and duvw
.
Citizenship awards were pre- Wheeler, fifth grade; Jessica Bran- Gregory, Jessica Bolyard, Jason TV Guide.
"
Just
that
secood,
my
voice said the business into chaos when other
~ted to Brittney Rucker, kindernon, Lacey Bunting, Grell Burke, Coleman, Jon Grueser, Nick
stars renegotiate their deals. ·
Jarlen; Tonya Barber, K-2; Cody k t&lt;lllY Coleman, Steph3J!te Evans, Weeks, Hailee Cline, Ryan Kidder, to me, 'There's your answer. Use
Hugo Zuccarelli, creator of a
Bartram; first grade; Lisa Smith, Sari Putman and Ann Wiggins; Chris Scyoc, Andrew Upton, Jason your music to do something posithree-dimensional
recording system
second grade; Michael Benneti, . sixth grade.
Foley, Cody Bartram, Colt Eblin tive.' And I knew, right then, that called HolophaniCs, says in a law·
Jhird grade;; Gary Vierling, founh
Chapter I reading awards were and Alfred Zeigler; second grade • this was my calling."
suit that Jackson used the technoJo.
Cyrus's
debut
album;
"Some
grade; Crystal Bennett and presented to Jeremy Connolly, Jim- Brendan McCartney, Thomas Simgy oo singles from· his 1987 album,
Gave
All,"
has
sold
more
than
7
Mauhew Bissell, fifth grade; and mie Putman, Michelle O' Nail, mons, Josh Wilfong, LeAnn
Mike Tutde. sixth grade.
Chris Connolly, Patricia Shields Marcipko, Deidre McCartney,
• SAM awards were presented to: and Jaymie Osborne.
'
Chris Griffin, Aaron Yos~ Jeremy
Megan Adam , Brittney Barnell,
Anendancc and additional Shanks, Tyler Simmons, Ashley
Billy Deem, Andy Francis, Court· awards were presented to: kinder- Boyles, Danielle Thomas, Michelle
ney Jones, Jessica Kehl , Evan garten, Brittany Barnett, Jessica Thomas and Carrie Wiggins; third
McCartney, Jesse Nutter, Jaime Kehl , Evan McCartney, .Brittney grade · Michael Bennett, Jeremy
Reel , Brittney Rucker, Darren Rucker, Courtney Jones, Darren Connolly, Jake Householder, Jaied
Scarbrough, Bryan Minear, kindcr- Scarbrough, Tyler Winebrenner, Marcinko, Kimberly Mar~inko,
g:lrtcn J· Tonya Barber, Chns Con- Billy Deem, Erik Koffel, Jesse Patricia Shields, Bradley Brannon,
nolly · Amanda Custcr, Adam Dil· Nutter, Bryan Minear, Brandon Jason Miller, Janet Calaway,
lard Nathan Foley, Aaron Gillilan, Scyoc, Jaime Reel, Andy Francis, Tiffany Kidder, Nancy Pickens,
ien~ifcr Hayman, Bren~ Hensley, Chris Connolly, Nathan Foley, · Stacie Watson, Tina DeLaCruz,
Anthony Nutter, Billie Jo Welsh,
Tiffany Spencer, Ashley Hager,
,Elaine Putman and Teresa Balcer;
· fourth grade • Matthew Grubb,
Justin Robertson, Nicole Parker,
Joey Marcinko, Kevin Keaton,
Beth Bunting, Josh Kehl , Gary
Vierling, Sracy Grueser, Bradley
Willford, Danielle Spencer, Travis
Adams. Wes Shafer, Dean Alexander, Dustin Kebler; Joey Brown
and Michelle O'Nail; fifth grade •
Meghan Avis, Matt Keaton, Kirt
Spencer, Crysral Benneu, Sheena
Gi Imore, Carrie Sheets, Amanda
. ,.
.. .
I
I
Wheeler, Mau Bissell, Sarah SexMUSI.. AL PaESENTED • A 1eet1 mulcll 117 area e...rcltea
IOn, Steve Weeks, David Rankin,
, ........ I . . . ., ... llle Mlddllporl CINrdli ot Cllrlll Ullller
Leah Sanders, Molly Heines, Matt
tbe dlnc:lloa Ill Slliii'W Ste war.. Tile IJ'OIIP 1111 111110 be tnmlhil to
B~y!es, Justin DeLa Cruz; Jeremy
Clevelaacl au Wnerl7: Plebartcl,l-t:z llaek r-. •• Amallda
Gillilan, Andrew Rollins and Kay
Ha;r.ea, Carrie llanl., Stelllale See, Utrrie Glaae, Lori Grim•.
Hunt; sixth grade • Lacy Bunting,
Tblnl row, Brll! Waner, Mula Wblte, Amle llllntt, DII'WII Hoek~
Stephanie Evllllll, JCssica Brannon,
maa, Heatller Hud1oa, Brld1et Powell. Secoad row, D1vld
Sarah Householder, Heather Rock·
Toundas, Alllon Gerlacbl Bill Touadas, Missy Wilfong, Dodaer
: AWA.RD WINNERs • Pictured are Tuppers Plains Elementary
hold, Josh Hager, Tommy Coram,
Vauehaa aad Jamea Wh te. Froat row, Jeremy Hartlon, Jared
lllldellll who were presented citizenship awards recently. They
Sari Putman, Mike Tuttle, Jason
Stewart, Aaroa Hodail
_ u, Mike Wllront and Malt Beuoa. Not
lire, 1-r, rro.t row, Lilli Smith, Cody Bartrlllll, Brittney.R•cker;
Stevens, GreJ Burke, Jeaica Barplct•red •• DPid
JIICGII DaYII, Jared Waner, Brad
row, Mike Tuttle, Matt. Blsaell, Crystal Bennett, Gary Vltr·
tram , Am W1ggins,J.T. While and
Daveaport, StK7 Stewart, a,.. Rowe, Joy O'Brle•, Braadle
Steven Whidoclc.
. . 811C1 Micllael Bennett.
.
'
Ellloft alld Stet' h Wood.

Thunday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

(614) 843·5264

1:00 p.m. Solurday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tu.eoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100p.m. Thllllday
1:00 p.m. Frld.oy

Wodnoaday Poper .

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.· 5P.M. - SAT.S-12

New Homes • VInyl Siding ·
:
New Garages • Replacement Wlndowf
Room Additions • Roofin.g
~

Middleport, Ohio _45760

DAY BEFORE PUIILICA1100

Mandoy Paper
Tueoct.y Paper

Call992-2156

c--· .ar.

J

coPY DEADLINE

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ·

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE
STTUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOUDATE.
NEW 'LOANS
ALSO.

.614-992·7523

EICAVAnNG

' IIULI.DOZIR, IIACKHOE
and TAACICtiOE WORK

AVAILAIIU.

SEPTIC IYITEIII,

HOllE liTES and

11WLEA IITEI,

L.ANDCUAIIHG,

DAIYEWA'IIINITAII ED
IMEITONE·TRUCICIIG
FREE EIITIMAT£8

992·3131
.,.,.,

IIIla lioagla, I To I

-OM!
:t

Nollhup ....... _ _

8

lolt &amp; Found

�Sentinel

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

45

42 Mobile Homes

•••-•&amp;1

for Rent

Ful
.......
.,..,.,. To; ' CMMr
n••· ,.......,_
1710:

Tuesday, February 9, 1993

9,1993
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Llrry Wri&amp;ht

Furnished
Rooms

ALLEYOOP

Autos for Sale

71

The Dal

Ohio
.

The World Almaaac

BRIDGE

ACROSS

2 &amp; 3 II troame. ....... N.O.H.S.

!..'1:.-

PubliC Sale

;"' •

I Auction

.::.'1.
fllolgo,
· TrMII
Plildk ru•
n• •·-Depoe~t,e,.:.
311

PHILLIP
ALDER

• •

tnllor, fumloh"!'1
2 lA
_ , . , . ,.
:1104-77a-1240
onylloM.

2br On • • llaCaiWtlok RoH,

lor

d.,.,, .... $2311

........ 114-·

2117. 1M illl WI.

O..lor-·--·-2•
1bd.....
lor ..., $1'12.14 ...r
month. lncludot lklnlng, 110110,

~--··--­ .

Hlllnt $1210, 114..4t-2M4 ollor

51

Household

Goods

•It•

.,. • • 0140

. &lt;t

~2

d.lon,- .. _ , ~-2416

"We've made this even more scary. We show
scenes from "The Exorcist" during the ridel"

WAHTID TO IUY SAFE

onJIIrM.

t:::::::::J====::::===:J ooli~
~~~~=-7.=.~~
~"=4MQ~-~~~~··==~~~~

'i'Wu--

. tnc.

1250 ,..,.hMI
depaMI,
pump, reter.ncee,
ohJ wz111,

~ T~lll':.z .1:':,.~
3
...._
~ LJwlr. tM •

UD!.

'!'9 , _

Pold: All Old U.S.
c:utne,- R,__ Su- Colno,
Gold ceJno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
• --uo,OoHipollo.

. . _ le ....,, uood mobllo
.,,.,... 114 441 0171
"MMIIOd: 22 Collltor p...,.. 1

·~- ~ 12 1 410

,-

=..:':.:1: &amp;';. ~=
_._. - · "'"--.

8

il7lj And Olclor, IM-441-1822• I

P.M. Or l.oiOr.

i:mplovment Serv1ces
' .

11 ' Help Wlll)ted
'I'tOll' ALL AREAS! 8hanl your
tlllii w1111 •· You'R lowe tho

_.,,.1--.

.
-=-· ,., ___.,_..
=
A¥0N I AI AINo I ShlrloJ
........ :IIOoH75-14at.

11

31 Homas for Sala

Help Wanted

THE PIIIIIPEAED CHEF
EARN GREAT$ U
Do You LOVE To Cook? An Ell·

clllng New Conc•pt In Home

Po~r Pion Sooldng Amblllouo
lndiYktuale In Your Area Ta

Domonllroto OuaiiiJ Kllchon
T-. No Dollvorloo, ljo Ouotu,

Chnhlro·. 3 IAI 1·112 bath,
hordwoocl llooro, ull baootnonl,
corpor1, oldlng, CA, noturol goo
hoot, coblo, f47,000. 814·367-7178
or448-3532.
Dntom HoiMI Flnlolwd drywoll
modt.Ur, owr 1700 eq.ft.,
3bdnn., 2 bolh. '""'"::'~..
,_ l
lornllr room. Tum U. ft nctna

Detlfml01 Vaur Own HIW, NO IVIIIable. 1~ ...., . ,.

GIMMICKS.
Coli RITA Allor 4:00
-· - ~:13 COLLECT)
·-··- C

GCM!ANIIEHT HOIIU Front t1
i.':,p!'.;"'**· ~ Tn
Your
AIM 111 a .ann ut. 101M F O r - "-po 1.101.
W.ttr-a, cooke nMded lm- -1or-wllh7-,2
modloloiY. Apply In poroan:
bolho, ftrot&gt;!ocO, now !Mwx
Country kitchen, Racine, Ohio. full
-pwnp,2coreo-.brtoll
W.nlod: C.ri,., Gonllo~, Ulddio fronl ·wJalumn tlkl"1 1 1CIOdOO I
Agod Woman To Coro •or A 3 lot, 304-tiNZI7 aftor4:10 Pll.
!IOnth Otd BobJ on A Part·Timo
Bola, Weekdap Ontv. 1514-441· 32 Mobile Homes
0411.

onr. .._..,...

.

W.nlod:

Dolry

Milkor,

. for sale

Norwrnaker,

l

Non-

==

~~~=
rs:mo,:;
month. 1200 Ohio St. 30+f75.

:i::J

Al1ond Our FREE IEMINAA To
Colfti&gt;IOI• An Appllclllort And
r.-n About Tho Truoklng lnduolry And. OUr Trolnlnt

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

-.

T~-..oryl

11 1.11., 2 P.ll., U P.M.

~EJK34
Hunlcono, il!rgJnlo

1-.af-4142

USA Trucll

LPN, PH

.me.. ,..., ...

•

.,.,_ltM- to loJ
.,.. . . . of .P- P I AIJ'd% 200 IWn II, Palnl
PI

. It, WV 21180.
No '-louool $100 To $100

-~"!"... PruoOO!Intl
· own
lte- OW' Ext.213.

1'111
HoWl. 1.

24POIITIIINS STILL AVAILABLE
Te TyJ!I! And Add1'1'0111 NOO Por can

-= .

5443.
Have room IVIIIable In my
ttoml lor .. derty peop ... late of
TLC, Z0yr11. txperitnct, 614-288,IS53 any11me.
Hive vacancy for elderly,

1·-

-~~4tlltni11Yro+IOr

01-•trl
Sou4h
Rotjlon. Coillont SpoctoMII In

Pliyolcal Sot.ocoo Noodod

A Science Educatlon
Loodorolilp Toom. Ph. D.
~ Pbt • Or CIWmlstrr Pr.t•rod. Appllcollort Doldllno •

-

F - 211~ 1m. Addrooo In·
-And KIICJIIOIIAI&gt;Diicallon
From:

Dlvld

RtglaMI Coordlnellot,

Dltlcau .. (.

Shn'nee

Mldftl t'IIO.L._~

~J: ......, m

~

~~

:::.'......,_..,.,.Joo-•
=7...!:

KMm01'8 UDriaht 9wHper, 11'70 Cedilla Conv.table, r - Tonic, 24ta
Solo, B'"h Uko-Now! 614-Mfl. $2,000. 614-441-1:118.

1318,
LAYNE'S fURNITURE

Complete horne · • tumlshlngs.
Hour1: llonaSet, IH. 114-4480322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Ad.
F,.. ~Ivery.

AMponllblt
on

tMnager
w..ktndt

!'!C;"nlghta, 114·112·3257.

~-

Buy or ..u. Rl"ei'lne Antique' ....llinllnoloondo
.
1124 E. Malh Slrelll, on Rt. 124,
P...,.r.,. Houro: u:tw. 10:oo I'Gr Sola: AKC -lon Pup.

4-;.:,.:

o.m. to 6:00 ~Su. .y 1:00
~-,_.-.
to 1:00 p.m. I
·2121.
114Fumn... ropolr 1 Nllnlollod, And Wumwcl,
Whir-' """'Y dutr wooMr bu;lng old lonlorno, Tronlo :taM121 Ator I P.ll.
wH $150. cut lo SU.OO, lloylog aewlng machlftla. aid .broUn
Poloco Pol 51!DPwHhor hHvy dutr wu t15U. lumftwo, 001&gt;,; IM-tt2·lll4!.
O.C. MIIIDhv Co. OOJ.
cuto to $95.00, Kon,_ Dryor
~~-.
$71.00 Well"'""""' dryor - - h olond
Sl,.or coblnll
t150.00
eul
to
$115.00 f37S. -

~

wipll--

~

moc:hlno 110. Coi1M
~erator almond llkl new
$250. Kel"fmote refrlgtrttor frost grlndei $40. 304.aa.32GI.
00 .... lo $110.00. 30

,_ sm.

nnge white 115,00, 54
361n' goo rona• 195.00 Suggo
In' electric

Miscellaneous

--

lf1.mll.
Two
.,_ Old F.., ate, CfA
Appi!lfance• 71 VIM SlrMt 114!!ollll..........,,... c.t. ...
441·7391 or 1-I00-4111-34B
2 bath Ylnitl.., blthhab, cam.
mode,
oak
trim
red
cedar
lumPICkENS fURNITURE
-lful Cll Bit QuKo . T....

.Merchandise

ber, 12ft. metal brake, -'ding,
NtwiU•ed
Hou~thOid turnlahlng. 1!2 mi. trim &amp;. ~~aHitt. Old 01k manila.
Jtrrlcho Ad. Pt. PIMNnt, WV, 30H75-4004.
eoll ~75·1450.
35 Gollon filii link and floll

la-

-~ ..
,u-,a

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

............,. saa. •-•"·

SWAIN

=.. ....

Todt,

P~

Stat•

U.~·-· (114)
PoiloftiOI!Ih,
..-..ati
355-2239. OH

SECRETARY/
BOOKKEEPER
. .,... 10 wM at the Gavin
Power Pllnt tor a naUonel con·
11N011on firm. Dulloo wll In·
elude IJqT'OII, .orne AlP, and
olhor olftCo rololod dutiH. MUOI

hoYO tlood tJPing ond lon.Jioy
eldh with com~lw ••J*rlenn
bel~ helpful. PlatH contact

Rick 11 1.-112S-e082 lor fur·
thor olololls. EOE.

WHY HOSS
SHOES?

YOU CAN'T
MARK

'

PEANUTS

True~~,

STANDING IN TI-lE RAIN WAITING FOR TI-lE ·scflOOL sus 51-lows
A DESIRE FOR AN EDUCATION TI-IAT L~AD5 TO COLLEGE AND A
WITI-l A 616 SAN FRANCISCO LAW FIRM ..

I

Quod
1m 2 Ton Dun!'
candltlon'rConoldor Tau A 3/4
T..... On -In, Flrnood t15
I Up, -71):11.
.

1-lERE, HIT I-IlM WIT!-1

A LUNCI-l BOX !

Chivy 112 ,.., plekup. 210il

I art. outo. l.....,.lalon. Co

ollof llpon. 304-77MM1.

.

S P.lll. 114-211-1772,

- OIIC i/4 Ton 4 WD, $2,000,
114-211--.

V\..:'V'/1 ·

f ''II II :)L.ppl,r c
,\ l

'.'rH, for~

c.\:

Cltomilll, Ford, Dodgo. ..........
"""' .. long. No ruoi.

tHO Aldgo, Sbnlm., 1
112 - · ·pump, ......

~.

45

1-!AffiE, WAAT ~
I~ lliE: !lfNE ·

1113 a-, lUll olD, 4WD, PS,
Pl 1 ....omlllc 1 new th'. . _MW
- · good oondlllon, n,ooo
~-~o-010,
I

~TN-01'

nn.

Smd

INOk•

-

..

••

BORN LOSER

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I

,..

r OON'r
KHOW ...

~~?

1111

Motorcyclei

1tG Ks
'II CSA. . bill
- - ....... 2,400~.
114-2...
8115.

=-~··

83

f'llll! Or .... Ollor. 114411-

aae.

Ho~

~ u-.
H.Q. _..orl ~i- ~=
- - . .... wllh
· · :;:L
.
. . .-frMMr,
.-.uu;Cold

Nlco 2 lodrootn llobllo And
- Or Aroa
For
s.
...CorIS14 311Lot,
11021,
ISM-245-

Financral

1244.

Business

11 ...,,.. Mara Of' Leu, Norah
Oallla
High School Ar.a,
UtlllttM
Avalltbll,
OWner

- ...

11187 «
2SOtritclo
!lojon
-·
f«
ulo
lor42SOR
« 250
Ouadraoer. 304-IU..-.a.

114- 76

3200.

AL.h\OST

001-D 11-IEO
PI.)CE, EIUI'lHE

Pans&amp;
Accesaol'lea

Auto

THE eLIYER HEARD

'THAT r WA'&amp;Cl:l"t\INEr
· BA.CI&lt; NEXT 6WMM.eR.

DEAL. FE'L.l..

THR9'-f6H.

Opportunhy
Financing, 114-311 1898.
INonCEI
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.
riCOJI'IrMndl that you do butl·
,.....with people you know, and
NOT to ..nd money through tha
mall until you have lnvnHgattd
lhl otttrlng.

Etm t4 000 Monthly. Local Pay
Phon• Route. Priced Right. 1·

fl00.741-1 1M. ,

Like d.cor•tlng &amp; ..wing?
Make eaty 124,000. yelr. Work
.. holM. Entire bush•••·
uwlng room ~ulpmenl, plua
training 18,700. Huntington :J04.

'114-Mi-2088.
5 ac,..., email IM'tmtiiV. cabln,

-. ......

Rentals

S23-61n.

Vending
Route:
Rec:nalon
proof butln111 wi1h a MMdy
caah lncDmll. 1..aoo.l53-1363.

llhror, • ., ...

bonlon -

.... · - · ... 114-tfl2.3471

41 HoUIII for Rent
In

Rio

Quick? No Way! Bul We Have A GIW~J Acrollli From UnlnrOood, Steady, Atfordabla, Bual.. ahr,IS.,..311 tlecl.
nHa. Won't Laat. 1o80G-284- 3 bedroom houM, Pomeroy,
Vond.
$2SOf mon., "-n 1 ,.._,

WOLFF TANNINQ BEDS
- roqulrod, no polo, 114-MQ·
CommorcloJ. Unho. il:jllj;lca.~~Ti~;;!Mic;;:
from $111.00. Lompo, Lbtlono. 3 1 - · 2 Iotito, Full Cor·
Aect~~;rlla. Monthly payment• ..... E-.mla Hell lftll:ound
low io tti.OO. Coli locloy FREE 9wlinml"' - · . WttKo Rood,
NEW .Color Colo log, 1.-.&amp;2· Qolllpok tf4.44M7U.

"'"·

Real Estate

31 Homes for Sale
1S68 Sq. fl., .11 ocro lot1 216

walle, 2·aompl.te bath•, alnlng
room, living room, :lbdrm., walk·

s Bod-

-

In-..

.
$300
IM-4411·
Goo- . . Dopooii.
·
1711.
•

Rio •Oro... S lA, 1·112 both,
$4H.'mo. Dopooll .............. 114448-4222 cloyo, 441-Zillt ...•o.

42 Moblle~ll

for Rent

In clotlts, lully carpet.ct, 2 por~
chn, aleetrtc heat,. AC 1 II0¥1,
nlrlauator, .,.,....wlrea Homt
Nol'fBonk, Roclno, OH. f14-t4fl.

2210.

61

Thm your clutter into cash,
S,dl it the easy &amp;Day... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
flqce yqur clquified qd tqdqyl
15 'WOrd. or le11, 3 Mg,
3Jluen, '15.40 paid in advance.

1----------------~

DOWN
1 South of Neb.

2 lltdlcll
auiiiJ
~ 105, Roman
4 llore anclenl
5 New Zeoland

nallve
6 Sound of
htlllallon
7 Dandy
8 Become worn
g LOll
10 Skirt
11 Name lor

AtMn1

•'

1S Jaltlll ., ·•
18 .....,•• •••
creallott - 20 Sp;ay can
22 AltenllongetUng
oound
23 Redlllloft'~: :
moeaure~ - ,

24 1111. branch
25 Okl Fr•cl(

colft

2g Puult
3t Ntrvt

• .. ·~ :;

network ~ .. , ..
32 City In Ru'i lile
35 ~~~~~

_lttjO

38 Corntrinl ·~
38 Pertodl 'IJ~:

Bridge 101?

42 A leiter ... ·
44 Wrlllng1111lit
oMPrennt. ~ •

lime

·e

47Now--~

RIFF

....p . f '

48 lnttonce.,.~ .
49 Omomental,
pltltrn .. :.~·..
52 Actor -·Biynnw · · ~ ''
54 Inlet
. ,
55 Mlllubbr. ~

ae Oppollltut
nQ

. , '"•

598rllld·n -

(llbbr.) ~.. ,~

...

-·.,

.
CV

ZIVIHCJ
N A I

I H TV

BNJ

.

VIGGCAK

H C• R . '
KJ H W H R
K J I IA I •
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Music Is meanlngt,ss nolso unlaas II touches a
receiving mind." - Paul Hlndeml1h.
,., 1
.. l
~. - l

TIIATtAILY Q.~'O .&amp;\'11..!- Jjl't:l f::;,Q.e , WOlD
PUZILII \:)~ J.'QU ~,_
~ P&lt;f";)
IAMI
- - - - - - 1411od by CLAY I . POIOIN _;;...._ _ __
'
·0 Rearrange

letters of the
fOur scrambled words below t9 form four simple words.

SHEAIC

I
·I I I' I I.·
TAARO

,

I

...

I
"I

E G G' u 0

1---rl;;...,;i-l..:...,l'"" sri

"' '

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

A family I know has

offspring .in graduate schools.
The dad looked at the tuition
L.~~~;:::;~~
~~ costs and mumbled, "I get
~~- D 0 M L y E
poorer by -·····.'
·.

...

~

I
::...;,17-f'-TI--1 0·

f.-Ti~6~r~~T~

_

L...L-.L.....L-.I-...1.--'

.;

' ~

•• _ ... t

Complete !he chuckle quoted
by til li ng in the misstng words
you Je"elop from step No. 3 below.

f t PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS 1
Q' IN JHESE. SQUARES

6

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

:;;~~"':

·-·

=..;, tt

.__ ........

'

-•V

.~

....:\

~

·~·- ~

·• • I . , ;

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

• ·•

Edging • Holly · Queen • Obtuse • BLIND .
"Why do men pay more attention to
a girls beauty than her brains?" Date: "A guy can be
stupid, but he is seldom BLIND."
Gal to lief date:

() 1113 TV

Dell T«:tw 'c !i:e, LP.

Ft Worth, TX

FEBRUARY 91

·"

•• • ., lot'

.... ,.,

.·-.....
·"

"·

'

IAIIEIIEHT
WATtRPAOOFINO

U.eeo:idl&amp;laftll lltaiiiiM ~
tM. Local NfriNnc• ...........

Col 1-287471 Or
0411

....

.WNrproollflg.

~~

•

• .......

~·

j

.'

7t Autos for Sale

loellly. , 100 14Mwt.

5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
6 ________________
7. __________~--8. ____________;;,__

...."'.,

•-

Splnll· ....... lor ....
ToU on ....- ""J!HWilo. 1M

55

'

T1 .1 nsporl Jt 10 n

• ... ""' pool ...... ' •

4 •. ____________,._;,_,_

'

..- .

lmprovemants

.....
--114- .,--.
IID.a:Miold.. $II

'·

.·"

CAINVVCLXI

HA

NAIV1XB

..."

•'•

I J C Y I

' OWl

Home

23 .. __________
~--------____________________

~-

11••

When will we see

ITUESDAY

ASTRO·GRAPH

_.... _

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

- ...""'
!IntOr-,
........ OH
CloUdo'
,...,
Col -114241111L .

9·---~----10~--------11
••______________
12 ________________~--

13.~-----------------

Pill. 10. 1112 ·
•

I

The ve!ll' lhMd 'could .....,., wltltln
you 1
ol ~end derlnll· You might try thlngl you've
·prevtouiiV ltlemptld, ancl do ,..
.........., we11111111m.
IGUAIIUI
111 Tltlnga ,
might not go too well lor you -'YIn the
d8J - 10 ,...ling old, unproduCtiVI
proolllurW. 8t ,_.,.,. end don't
clupiOIII put mlltllldle. AQUIItul. trell
)'DtWHif to • blrthjlaY ~ill. 8to)d lor

14------------"

wlttllt ·, _ -

1~----~~~~---

446-2342
9J2-2156
675-1333

I

4 NT

ears.

Scrv1ces
1ttl Hot* Oaldwlng. ncetllnt:
condition,
· O¥w acn flol
llind, F l o - Ad., Pomoruy,

Pass

Pass

A. You're lhinking of A C~PPEL·
LA. an Italian term that mean s "m
chapel style ." In English. this phrase
is usually pronounced "ah kuh·PEL·
uh." and it originally described choral
singing without the accompaniment of
musical inslruments: now it's applied
to any unaccompanied singing. Used
in English for more than a century.
the term A CAPPELLA &lt;also spelled
A CAPELLA! can be music lo the

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
21

Pass

I.

Q. Ther e's ·a foreign term lor
singing without mu sic. Can you
remind me what it is?

11GY........ 171TiwMWI 111r.

3Q4..

Pass

'

, East
Pass
Pass ·
Pass
All pass

By Jeffrey McQuain
Try BRIO for "zest" or "liveliness."
Ask any lhree people about this noun's
pronunciation, and they should tell
you 10 rhyme BRIO with TRIO.

-.-·
.
.
.
.
.
-·---·, . . . . . -.. . . . . -1

-. .....
"""-

Pass

Nort~

OUR LANGUAGE

WAAn'

~~~.......
:lop:.t....!'lf•
...........
-3471 .......
_ .

74

poetry

47 Slc:rld
plclureo
SO CHrus fruit
51 Strvlle
lollowor
53 Eqtlltobly
57 Timber
58 Mongrel
60 Ploounl
61 Afflrmotlve
62 Treu
63 Explorer
Vaacoda-

dlllty

This is the lOISt week of columns
that 1 haye written. Don 't you think it's
about .time a teen-ager could sign up
for Bridge 101 in college• There is an
annual natif)llal junior (under-26)
championship, but. to my knowledge,
no scheduled college classes are held.
Vicky Sawyer, 17, and Chris Austin,
14, won last year's Junior Pairs Cham·
plonsblp. Both are high·school stu·
dents - Sawyer in Occoquan, Va., and
Austin in Riverdale, Ga.
To win a title, you need to play well
and ride your luck. Sawyer aild Austin
were lucky before a card was played.
Though they overslept and arrived
late. the game had been delayed and
they were allowed to enter. Then they
were favored by a helpful opening
lead and by friendly distribution in loday's deal.
Sawyer rebid three diamonds be·
cause. of her excellen( suit. She was
hoping her par.tner ·could rebid three
no-t11,1mp - which is probably what
he should have done. But with a youth·
lui rush of adrenalin, Austift used
Blackwood and bid the slam.
West made .the unfortunate choice
of the spade ace for his opening lead.
Sawyer won the heart switch in the
dummy, drew ' trumps, cashed the
spade king and took the club finesse.
When it won, declarer threw her heart
six on the C'l ub ace. 'l'ben 'iihe called for
the spade jack. East played low, but
Sawyer discarded the heart jack. She
was confident West wouldn't have led
the spade ace if holding the A·Q.
When that worked, Sl!wyer was plus
1370 and they bad a top. 1

nuckaforSale

=.:

I Wood eorrel
12 Allfty oup.plleolol.)
13 Cupid
14 Lubllctlt
15 Anttrlctn
lndllft
17 Oor
18- ••,.
21 1845 confer·
•colllto
22 Rolling
groulando
26YOUMd27 L.eurltl&lt;r
28 Fllh 1gg1
30 Thutor olgn
(abbr.)
33 Bttwttn WY
and IIIN
34 Tell
37 TtUIOitiC

me down tO

ouloo. :104~7JI.12GO.

1111 OIIC Plok.Up 301, AT, Point,
.........
· - ·eo-,
flun.
nina . . . Tim-

41 X::ry .
43 GrMk letlor
45 Seconck1te ·

By Pfli.lllp Alder

M,l!l lllioe, 111101 Sill _.,.
13,- IM-24Wnl.
Lllo- rebulldlblo-UCI

-

..._

1 FormtrNtw
Ylllt! maror
5 Winler hand

THt:M

THINGS!!

___ ,._,

n

West

AMwer ...... aliiiiJIPualil

Opening lead: + A

FRANK AND ERNEST · ·'

2905.

VENDINQ ROUTE: Got Rich 1 lod ....., -

(

NO CARDS!!
I,.ET'S PITCH
HOSS

3+
5t

C:..plolly Fumlohod ""'bllo
home, 1 mU. below town avtr•
lookl.. nvor. No Poto,
114-

41nd

Mtdlcal

Lawllllloo,$12,t115.1-TI37.
1"' - · l'lnblnl, Nil, •••
oond, 11,000 01lloo, 30M15-

It

dog. lull bloodall, yaung, $150;

AUC710N &amp;· fURNITURE. 12 304·J73.5t13.
Olivo
Sl, Golllpollo. &amp; Uaod ~A=
... ~:r.:=i:•••
;:;-froo;:::::...,=,:-==-=
ftlmhura,
hNtar., WMtam •
Work boolo. 814-441-:1158.
bonch
h wolghlo; I
to
2328oftw5pm.

will

C.r1 C1r·
Aul8tant Alto
Technlclen.
.

LUICEY II LET'S
PLAY SOME CARDS-TEN CENTS .
A GAME!!

a-. 304-

57

895-3481.
Will Pro•ld•
tlrltd NUI'M
E:':J']~lt
6
,
.

BARNEY

1it0 01.- TOtCM~ Loedtcf,

.,

\

pum-,
$50•
, LowR. I S. Fum nu ..•
r-d
-·• oroon,
tlq\ooo. Houoohotd- tumlolllnga. d . - koy
, ...... _ ............ cond
~·· 30•7-53...
all lnetrurnent 10Uncftl, 11000 104-m1421- 1:00 Pll.
M
ooon, "'· ~ •- ••·
nogotloblo; Shorpol Wri-

TrN topping &amp; trimming IX·

perilnct, frM Hlim.tu,

·

1 ·-

14111111 . . . .,...

==

Anllques

Soolb

.
Crouword Punle '

38 .... -tung
40 Underworld

Vulnerable: Both
West

~aler:

0331.

111111 Folrmont Fontoor, 14d0, 3
badi'OCllfM, 2 t.ttt., gilrdlln tub,
brood,_ -pump, 114-Hi- 448.03311.

'""""'!"!!'!t..oil . !1-'...+100;
114-141-hn «114-tii2-J.

tAKQJ1073

vollo-, Q,000

53

Oualtly c•anlng Mrvlce, com·
mercl11 and rnldtntltl, call
Adlm, 6M.i512·'M41.

Project

PacUI:

Fumlohod SmoU
HouM. fMO/mo. + UIIIIIIH. No
Polo. Coli loforo 7 P.M. 814-446-

Cornplolly

tiOB 43

t4

+9

a. Z. ~TIL • .-o, :.::

American, 21"', color, good con.
dltlon, 614~HH105. .
PurtiiMd Dd · ,_.. P.w' 'S 2

chootoro !SchOOl Ago 114-4488224.

3311 111 s . u..
......... N.-.IL110542.
8CI&amp;H1181' IIDUCATOA F«
Tho
For

ret. :JOI.882·2586.

t82
+KJ872

3

+K4
•J62

A-1 CGnollllonl 114-441-

~-*w4:00PII.
Ford laoortl Lwn11, ...._ rune
14
Rloab tiOOII.IIIO 010, 114-

Mill Ptula'l Day Cart C.nttr 1
Block Wtst ot HMC on Jtclctan
Plko M·F I A.M. ·5:30 P.M. If
Du•llly And Elpllfltnct Is Th1
11 COncern For Your Child's
Cart. Call U• For A.Vlsh. lnftnt
!Toddlera 614-441S-1227. Pr••

limo 1 11ou wlh loool
I

Handyman, Odd Job., Indoor
!Outdoor Ml.cellaneous Er·
nndll. $4.00 Par Haur. 614-245--

cute,

from home'', 614-~9-2276.

EQIIIIFIHIV

..... I

call 304-675-1957.

reatanable rates, "Homt away

(U.S.IC.no•l

full

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your toa• to the mm Jutt

=-.i0:."'""
..

Rlvor ·vanor Fumnuro, ~ 114-'171-134S C&lt;=l o!M)
- - c,.. Rood, Oolllpolio, Ewontngo.
OhlolM-441-4:111.
AKC Aogloiolod- H Z.nlth TV, Eorlr =r-.eG71......, Fob. . h , - 114'

44 - ' ApaTtment
for Rent

&amp;

=----

AKC Aoglol- l.huo AAoo,
- · olil, bolutllul mortdiloo.
VOIY -..., houoo dog, I~
Eorlr .......n ..... llloplo · - ·
- . r j , 114-211-ti&amp;L
AKC !Joalol- m• lon H Dok Fwnllln, Tobloo, ...,_ lluo 1 - ,._ Roil 1
ctt.ira, Chlftll'a. HuklhM, Etc.

,,. 111 0111 or 30447'1-1110.

.. KQB

SOUTH

1,. ce-y lwup, ~.
AIM'II- COIMI!o, cruloo
c:.nt, At:, n.ooo IIIIIH.

Pata for sale

llolchlno Plold Couc~ 1 ~lr,
Cruohocl' Bluo V - ..,..r, All

llt1Hklor ........

•l•

Control Air, 114-3'hl.'il80. .
18U Skytlno Honr Alclgo 1411711,
.. , ~. 2 Hdraorn., AJC,
- o d poroh, kKoMn lolond,
........
- . u..............
liM MW, ·
.....,._~,

56

Household
.. GOOds

own a 1113 14.17'0 Redman with
I ........,., 110110, iildrllng,
dliltweNd ancl Mlytt tar ttami.
Col 1or lnlormollon, 114·:1118-

por ..-h lncludlna •I• _571)11:..:;:·~....,._,..,..,....,...,..,..-­
Olilor And . Cll11110r drinker, Experienced And $152.17
montt. frM .. rwlt, MW ~110, ~
undir new DWnWa. -oneo Roqulrod. 614·245- dollvorod ond 001 up, iildnlng 2bdrm. apto., lolol -ric, opand llopo, 1.-a3741121.
pl.._. tumlohod, lounclry
1047.
I
,
h
cookl\.
hoetH•.
- . . locllllloo to achoOI
..._ ..... A_.,_n Women: Makl mort monty! 12 monlho FREE lof ...... l In town. ~- .,.lloblo
21idrm.,
only
ftl2.17
110r
h
.
,.,
VIIJotO
~6Niii
Aplo.
lNI «
olghl wHit lob proparollon
-0 . .Np.Jo.
m
Aouto
,.,
. 7, FJW
lncl- ~·lng, 110110 I Ml
~bout nontr.dhlonal
; · To _. harM, cab 1..00 111
CIIIIM~-37'11. EOH.
18mlklnorWIII-AvonCOII iiHi61,-"• (ONOW), 1.8QO.
71.
IEAUTII'UL APAATMENTll AT
~llpoclol011or,1121110 W -1 Qryor, Stwo,. BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
14
AolrJtonlor, oi,OOil.. 1!144D- ESTATE~+. 531 Jocbon Plko
7104
from tlll'.umo. Wllk to oltop l
.
mo-. Coli 114-441·2511. EOH.
1851
· - · or
olrlppod
""'· . Efflcloncy apo•mont, llulbarrr
good 12dl
1or 0101110
wor11o11op,
5450, coli 114-912-3479 Ito~ · A-ut, PomiiUJ, 114-112-6858.
lprn.
GI'IICiol)o Hvl,.. 1 and 2 bollo
tm Pork 12111~? l!od- -.. .,. • ....,... 11 Vlllogo
raoma. WI, Tatal ~ric, Manor
and
Rlva'rslclt
18 Wante(l to Do
· HJr!nv IEvonll
SI.At.211, 2•112 AoiU 11/L. 114- Apo~monloln Mlddlopor1. From
(No Experience Necusary,
tiM. Coil 114-112-6851. EOH.
CNA will care tor tldlrty In thtlr 2-1112, 114-3l'Hllll.
home,
hllve
,.ftraneM
and
IX•
u.n To Dnvo Now!
Middleport 1 • 2 rDDIII •pt•,
........... 114-112-32117.
• (Training Avolloblo)
~~~~~~~~~H 211111.
ulllllloO 1101d, dop • rot, 304-ill2·
ElA TREE SERVICE. Topping, :;
USA TRUCK lo Looklf!11 For Trimming, TrH RtmDVIII, Hedge
Lovll Drlvoro For Our Ex· Trimming. Fr• bllmatesl 6~ 1113 Aldtordoon 141~ loci-. -loporl, ·2 bodroom fur·
""'"'"· 2 Iotito Go
TUb, nloltod I unturnlohod apto, dop
lngRoll.
38~715T Afltr 4p.m.
Herdlm1n,

51

·you con

Quill, .........

•1o 53

aunu..._
2.1
Wlh Air,

.~.

roome, Gal~la ,_.ry, 14110 3

1 lA oponmont In Point
Pl-.
good
n 1-ibcwtl ocd. 1:.110 PI" month.

+Qiia

·
~;t~~H========T::;::~=:;:::;::;::==I Or,,._
Cn!l-,1'111.IM-251-121Q.
u.ooo ...... 13,000

14J702bollo

-

EAST

WEST
+A 7 2

, . . "'" lllh
~A-

bod,_. Pl. Pft. All f210,
""'n:""'
$100. " - ".. 304·713ItT
.

WhJ IIOJ -

tAQ

- - llrin Koobo..h,$17110,
114-

b•drootft. turnllhed In

'TWo

• 9 6 5.

-1.

0011•

z..t.t3

.A$74

EEKANDMEEK

I'Grd T""'f'', Automatic,
AL, Aoklnt $2,11111, 114-441.0'131.
1111 Unoofn Town Cer, 4dr, full
- r , wlnJI
rooNnor OHIO,
loot!w -·ng, Dolbr oytlolft, -Hlto, ..... - ·
muot1 mare. RMMr · nloe,

Two bl$00111, fl.lrnWIN ar"""
tumlohod, ......... yord, A·1

Cllorado,

lpm.

- r y IMI up. 1-411 ~71.

J I D'a- , _ IIMI lllngo,
lllo burllia )unll cara I tNCb.
304-ns;aQ:.
.

Doihot..

1..

MerchandiSe

F -. 2 « .. ront
in Co· nih w...-. Partt. WMMrl

NORTH
+JIOB

. . -.d--·a.-.--·-·

•

111

c-. • ,._

(

li

Aquarius' Astro-.Graph predictions for
the year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus a
. long, oelf·addreued, stamped enve·
lope to Astrp-Greph, c/o thll newopoper, P.O. Box 91428, .Cleveland, OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state your zodl·
ac sign.
PIICI!S (Fill. 20-Mitch 20) Someone
you like mighl do something Ieday that
!lurts yoiw feelings. lnlttad o1 dwelling
on It, be the one who lorglves, evM
lhOug~ .illlrl'l your IIIUII.
.
ARIII (1118rch 21·Aprll 11) Your lnl1111
inclination 1od8J might be to avoid
making .lfllflc:ult decillion•. HoweY81,
whwt you meet theM mott11r1 head-on,
you'll llnd.you're qulteldlpt 11 working
out proper llolutiOns.
TAUIIUS (Aprll.....,20) Co-wort&lt;11r1
miiJ!II bt 1 trifle dllllcult 10 get llong
W111t'lodoy, buill you kHp In mind your
coflectl¥1 ob~l- IM rougll IPOtl
Cllllle mtnlmflld.
GBIIIIc-J11 ........ 1t)AICMdane
may IIIIi live up to your IXf*lltlor11 tP.
dey. llllltl!l o1 mutng ., 1 - wlllt - · loauo an tM.,... w1ttre
you.,. boll! In CGOI'd.
CANCIII..._ 11-.lulr D) II your ob,JMIIVII .,. not a.rty dlllntll todl)',
you .,. rtalllktly to~~ up to your pro.
chlctlve pottntlll. "" tyttllltotlc ond
lteep rour 1arg11 In mind at all timet. ·

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Conditions in

general are rather favorable for you to~

day, but you musr be prepared to make
concessions when dullng with oth11rslf
you want them to cooperate wllh you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Btpl. 22) S1r&lt;ve to be
disCerning and prudenl lodar In the
ways you 1pend your fundi. Work on
eliminating the non-80111'!11,.1, and buy
only what you rully ntld.
U.,. (Btpl. 22-0cl. '231 In your lnvol_,ll with outllidaro todrty, you'll
lnat!nctlvely know how to bllltave In order 1o win their approval. When dellllng
with lamlly memben, hoOII-. you
might not
the some wlldom.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. IM-Jiov, 22) Early In the
day, your prog,... might be ,.trtctld,
trtd wltll you , . _ might JIOI
work out. Latw you wll lie more illlctlve, bee,_ you'll know how 10 handle

.,ow

theM ........

.

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rollon lrtllnd of 1 clelrlmtrll. You a.n
bt ~lrkebly 111c cmlul with your-·
oncl eflorta If you lull try.

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�Tuesday, February 9, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport) Ohio

Kevorkian .aids 12th suicide
On Thursday, Kevorkian helped'
By SHARON T11E1MEJt
myself," Goldbaum wrote. " I am
Associated PHss Writer
totaliJe:nfmed to my wheelChair Stanley Ball, 82, and Mary Biernat.'
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. - A and
is no hope that I will get 73 or Crown Point, Ind., kill them·
multiple sclerosis patient commit- better, just wane. I can no longer selves af Ball's house in Leland .
Ball, wbo wa5 blind. had pancreatic'
ted what she called " medicide" continue living like this."
·
cancer
and had jaundice as a result·
with Or. Jack Kevorkian's help
She added: "I am Jewish and
Mooday. It was bis 12th assisted have been raised to believe that sui- Biernat had breast cancer that had:
suicide and third in fiw: days.
cide is a mortal sin . Dr. Jack sjX'CIId into her chest, Fieger said. :
Fieger said: "I don' t think there
Kevorkian's lawyer denied that Kevorkian, your assistance in
the retired pathqlogisl is stepping medic ide will gel me into beaven.'' is a jury in Oakland County or the
up bis pace before a state ban on
Southfield police said they were state of Michigan that's going to~
tbe practice rakes effect March 30.
investigating the death. Fieger said convict Dr. Kevorkian for violating.
Elaine Goldbaum, 47, wbo was . 'police confiscated the equipment a law that's against the wishes of
legally blind and needed a used in Goldbaum's death, but the majority of the people.' • .
wheelchair, killed herself in her Kevorkian wasn'theld.
suburban Detroit apartment by
puuing on a gz mask and pulling a ·
clip thai released carbon monoxide
from a rube, said the lawyer, Geofrrey F'Jeger.
"She was asleep within one
minute,.. F'ICger' said.
· Her suicide was the sixth
Kevorkian has attended since the
U:gisJanm: ]J'ssed a law temporarily banning assisted suicide, effec- ·
uve March 30. Gov. John Engler
signed the bill hours after
Kevorkian helped twn· women kill
tbemselves in December.
Tl)ESDA,Y, FEBRUARY 9, 1993
Fieger has said a flurry of pea·
pie have been seeking Kevortian's
10 A.M.·7 P.M. .
help in dying bef~ the ban take$

Red women
capture loop
championship
.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
575
Pick 4:
3268
BuckeyeS:
5-8-ll-20-2-23

.;

Page4

LcM lolllgbl near 40.
Tbunday,cloudy. High In mid
50s.

•

HURRY TO LANDMARK'S

mock lunge at tbe oeck fl tbe fiPre ID a jokiq
reference to his latest r.tm Dracula, ID wbidl be
plays vampire-slayer Pror. Van Reising. (AP
photo)

. DOUBLE TAKE • British actor Sir Antbooy
HQPklns, rigbt, best kDowa ror his role as serial
kiUer Dr. Haonibal Leder ID tbe ntm "Silence or
t!te Lambs," meets bis wax double at London's
Madam Tussaud's Tuesday. Hopkins makes a

Gay. magazi.ne stays on the shelf

=~~~~.~~v:=~j~

and in favor of carrying The Advo·
cate overflowed seating at Monday
night's board meeting at the Springvale Baptist Church in
Goshen Township has asked the
Batavia branch.
"There's a large amount of board of trustees to ban Tbe Advoinformation we need to digest," cate. He presented an inch-thick
board member Allen Bum:Son said petition that be said contained the
in making a motion to table the signatures of 1,500 people ~
issue until a March 8 board meet· to tbe magazine.
County librarians reviewed the
ing.
magazine
after receiving three
The board allowed an hour for
complainiS.
They said Tbe Advopublic comment. Seven people
cate
is
no
racier
than other magaspoke to keep the magazine. Five
on
the
shelves.
zines
wanted it removed or children's

wuh murder 10 the fust three
d~, but charges wo:re dropped
~use. tbe sta!C. had no law banrung ass•sted SUICide.
. Oakland County. P~osecutor
Richard Tbolnpson didn t !Cium a
telephone message left at bls offoce
Mon'!&amp;y ~temoon.
. .
M1cbogan aut~or,mes have
r!lvoked Kevorkian s med1cal
bcense.
.
Gol~baum was d1vorced and
wao; being cared for by ber 17-yearold daughter, l..j:slie, Fieger said.
She died at tbe townhouse they
shared. The daughter and Goldbaum's sister were there.
In a Dec. 28 leuer to Kevcrltian,
Larkins wiU prepare Soup for the Goldbaum said she wanted to die
next meeting. Meetings an: held tbe1 because her disease was getting
last Wednesday of each.mooth.
progn:ssively worse.
A potluck was served before lbe
"The loss of dignity is atromeeting.
cious
.... I cannot do anything for
Attending were Melody
Roberts. Phyllis · and Dorsel
Larkins, Janie and Brandon Filch,
Mr. and Mrs. Harland Ballard, Ada
Bissell, Mae McPeek. Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Wells, Judy Holter,
Delores Hawk and Georgia Mounl
"Prayer" was the theme of the
The meeting closed with the
program
presented by Joanna
Lord's Prayer.
Weaver at tbe recent meeting of the
St. ll'aul United Methodist Women
ch..ch in Tuppers Plains.
Film to be presented 111 the
A video on FellowShip in Prayer
"Zamp¢rini: Stiii"Carrying the was shown. RCI[IIing Psalm prayers
were JoAnn Francis, Susie Francis,
Torch," the new documenlary fdm Heather
Rockhold, Shirley Rockfeaturing Louis Zampemi, will be hold, Missy Harris, Connie Rankin,
shown at tbe First Baptist Cbun:b Betty Cbevalier and Elsie Culley.
in Middleport on Sunday at 7 p.m.
Elsie Culley and Belly ChevaThe public is invited.
lier served valentine refreshments.
The group voted to have a
Mspring cleaning" sale on June 4
and5.
The April meeting program will
the benefit for tbe American
be
presented by Rev. Sharon Haus-.
Parkinson's Disease Association
and Connie Rankin with the
nian
and the Morris K. Udall Fund in
resunection
theme. .
Excellence in Public Pulicy at the
University of Arizona
Udall remainsundercaieat Vet·
erans Hospital in Washington.
President Clinton spoke via
videotape, saying Udall's penchant
for levity was something he came
to appreciate during a year on the
campaign !rail.
·
Clinton said his recent action or
. lifting a ban on fetal-tissue
research, a move that is expected to
help Parkinson's research, was an
attempt to repay Udall for his
lessons about not taking life too
seriously.

Association to hold dances
Alta Ballard opened the January
meeting of the Long Bottom Com·
munity Association with the Pledge
of Allegiance.
.
Cards were signed for the sick
and shut-ins. Officers repons were
given.
Stanley WeUs s.uggested having
dances at the community building.
They will begin Feb. 19 from 8-11
p.m. The cost is $3 for single and
$5 for couples.
Paul ·Hauber and Jack Carrol
were thanked for their work at the
building.
A suggestion was made to dispose of the freezer now in the
building that is not being used.
Another ice cream social will be
held in July.
.
·•
A donation was made by Mr.
and Mrs. Ballard for the use of the
building.
Ruby Brewer and Phyllis

EMPLOYEE OF .THE
MONTH • Linda Friend, health
coordinator ror the Meigs County Council on Aging, was selected
as tbe January employee or the
month. She was recognized ror
her initiative, creatlvky, rellabUI·
ty, courtesy and consideration in
her work with clients and the
public. The selectfon wa5 made
by the executive director and a
committee vi rrom tbe Council's
Board orTrustees.

water and former Gov. Rose Mefford, co-hosts for the tw()-hour tribute Sunday in Centennial Hall at
the University of Arizona.
.More than 1,800 people gathered at the fund-raiser honoring the
Arizona Democrat, who left
Congress because of Parkinson's
disease. ·
Udall's wife, Norma, attended

¥

~

DALE

AND

DEREK

TEAFORD

:fwins celebrate birthdays
#

•' The sixth birthdays of Dale and
Derek Teaford, twin sons of Dale
111d Linda Teaford, Racine, were
celebrated recently with a pany at
tlleir home.
·
· . A Barney and Baby Bop theme
was carried out with cake and other
refreshments being served.
Attending were Darin Teaford,
Lindsay Teaford, grandparents
Lany and Phyllis O'Brien and'Dale
Tealord, great-grandparents, Bqb
and Flotence Adams.
·
Others auending were 'Jim

(
•

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FRANKLIN HEAVY T
STEEL POST

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Lmt Pos1 2" lo 3"

12.75

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LOIItff Tl'lt'n LjS/ rllir

13.99
PLANS EXPLAINED • Fred Zirkle,
administrative manacer for Southern Ohln
Coal, ri&amp;hl; and Nelson Kidder, en11ineering
superintendent, explained to the Me1gs Local
l!oard vi Education where the company's equip·

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CnuntryMar~

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SEED CORN &amp; FIELD SEEDS

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939-6-12 111 ... 17UIO
9J9·b ·~ ·'· .

15'f&gt; Ga. 80 Rod High Tensile

1041 ·6· 1l 'h

151.00

104 ~ · G· 14 :1,

$12.00
HUO

932 fi· t4 ,,_.

150.00

175.00
I)IUO

......
......_ 147.00

Lifetime Fence Company

HIGH TENSILE WIRE - 200,000 PSI
4,000 Ft. '59.~5
JONSEAED
CHAIN SAWS
SALE

20-40 Turbo . . . .. 1241.15
20S. Turbo . . .. . 1475.15
. . $308.15

2().t5 16" .

53!H6'' . . . .

1311.15

JONSEAED

......
'REG .

$289.115
S349.9W

S439.1i15

STRING TRIMMERS &amp; BRUSH CUTTERS
REG .

SAL£
J260B TRIMMER .. Ult.IS

$389.95
S429.85

J3209 TRIMMER . ,11H.tl

A11 l ~l~11 Appartl iRO ~-~ll:.try f[JJI S and
Hell!)' Han50n IASIIIileG Baa,'fWUI ''"11'!1. Off• ••

APPLEGATE TUBULAR GATES
I TO 4

1 TO 4
TGIBR25004
TGIGR20000
:GI8A26008
TOI0R25010

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116.00

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157 .00

APPLEGATE CORRAL PANEL GATES
C P/6016204
CP/6016206

CP/6016208

CP/6016210
CP/6016212
CP/6018214
CP/0018216
CP/60 1821 ft

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WITH FAAMI::.
CG/6018404
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TARTER GATE COMPANY
6 BAR ECONOMY PIP£ a,.,TES
o4 ' PIPE . . . . . . . . . . . ... 824 .00

8'
8'
10 ·
12 '
14 '
lfi '

PIPE
PIPE
PIPE
PIPE
PIPE
PIP E

.. . .. . .. . . . ... 828 .00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 832 .00
.. , .. , • ~ . . . . . . e37 . 00
.. , . . . . . . . . . . . S40 .00
... .. . , . . .
847 .00
.. . . . . • . . .
. S52.00

5 SLAT STEEL PANEL Oo\TF.9

4 ' PANEL .
6'
8'
10
12'
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16'
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PANEL
PANEL
f'.4.NEL
PANEL
PANEL
PANEL
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ElizabeliJ Ann Ewing. daughter
of Ben and Doris Ewing, Pomeroy,
was recently inducted into The
Golden Key National Honor Society at Tbe Ohio State University..
Sbe is a junior u Ohio State majoring in nursing.
Golden Key National Hon9r
Society is the largest collegiate
booor society with over 200 chapters at colleges and universities
across the counuy. Membership is
by invitation oniy and is limited to
the top 15 percent vi juniors and
seniors enrolled at the university.
I~ addition to academic recog~i­
uon; Golden Key awards over
$700,000 in scholarships annually
and offers opportunities for its
members to participate in service
and leadership aclivitiea.
The Ohio State University
Chapter orfcn two service programs to its tilcmben. To ave !1Jc
community, Ohio State Golden
Key participates in the MBest of
America" poOIJam. Thron&amp;h this
poognm WI:~ local elemellllry
sc:hools 111 help m J1101Q01ina theac
children tn stay in school and
become the best they ean be. To
serve the campus, memben volunteer througll the Ofli:c llf Dilabllity Servlca 111 lUI« fellow students .
who have physical and learning
disabi61ies.

. , . 821 .00

. . . . . . . . . . . . tiO. OO
.', . . . . . . . . .. taJ .OO
. , .. . . . . , ... S41.00
, . . . . , , , . . . . S4&amp;. 00
. . • . . . I • • • • • SIU.DO
. . . . . . . . , ... S56.DO
. . . . . .. . . . . . . • , ... 00

Harrisonville news
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Coen,
Albany, were recent visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Doug Bishop.
Mrs. Sandra Foley and children,
Milwaukee, spent Sunday with ber
grandparents, Mr. and MIS. Bob

i

Pick• Up On

March 4, 1993

Plut many more itema ~INble! Call your 1o.:al1101e tor 1
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK.
llemt mll1t10 tOF , pow .-ily lor use or rep:.eklg•ng witl1out thawing .
ltJ U. ....nl of c... o.,oncf 01.11 IXIIItrol, qtUinllld afllJ ptieft .,. tuo,tcl to
""""" Good

ment Is expected to be located over tbe 11ex1 five
years. Location or eqalpmeat detel'llllines how
much tangible tax money comes into tbe school
district. Supt. James. CarpeniB Is pic:tllred left.

Kanawalsk.y se~tenced to pen
.after entering plea of guilt.y

'

Ewing inducted

O'Brien, Carol, Allen, Joshua artd
Chelsea Pal'e• Lori, Dustin and Mahr.
Mr. and Mrs. BQb Alkiluisited
Cameron Bnnager, Ashley Roush,
Monday
with Mr. and ·Mrs.
Juanita Frederick, Autumn Reed,
.
Howard
Day
Gilkey, Columbus.
Zach Conolly, Julie and Craig RanOther
callers
were Bob Gibson,
dolph, Kelly Rizer and Kyle Wolfe.
Columbus,
and
Mr. and Mrs. Ziba
· Sending cards and gifts were
Midkiff,
Pomeroy.
Dennis and Ellie Teaford, Raymond Adams, Jon and Kenda . 'virJinia Gibson spent the weet~
Campbell, Rod and Margie Grimm, end With Mr. and Mrs. Allan Gibgrandmother Wanda Teaford, and , son and sons, Columbus.
The Lend-a-Hand group met
great,grandparents Rex and Mary
recently
at the home of Mrs.
O'Brien. ·
Pauline Atkins.

·•

Wlr!Jf Supply LISIS

51 &amp; 0vM

~ -~1

ELIZABETH EWING

is working on an as-yet-untitled
film about a woman wbo dedicates
her life to humanitarian issues.

,.

20.99

5

una Poat3"" " to!)"
1·!0

NEW THIS YEAR

''Cabaret. •• and ••Barry Lyndoll;' •

~

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liS' PIPE . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . SS8 .00

PARIS {AP) - Actress Marisa
Berenson plans to lead an international program to help disabled
artists under' the auspices of the
United Nation's Educational, Scientific and Cohural Organization.
'I'he program, funded by
UNESCO's Imematiooal Fund for
tbe Promotion of Culwre, will initially organize benefits in Los
Angeles and New York, Berenson
said in a Statement Monday.
"I've been interested in the
plight of disabled anisiS for a long
time," she said. "I fmd being an
anist is difficult enough as it is. We
can help financially, help them to
be discovered, to express themselves.··
Berenson, wbose films include

J,&amp;

9 ,000

·
.
.
h' ·
Joseph E. Kanawalsky. charged would recetve credtt on ts senwith lbe Dec. 19 murder Qf Bernard !C!'Jce for .lhe 53 days I,Je has spent .
Dyle Bay, entered a piCa of guilty m ~ Me1gs County Jail.
Stnce .Kana.walsk.y 11a4 been
1Q diat charge. a fuearms specifocatiOn and attempted mllfller 1\'hen he indicted by the Grand Jury OJ! a
appeared in Meigs Common Pleas c~e or aggrav!"ed m~ which
·court before Judge Fred W. Crow wou d have carried a life sentence
IIJ'Wednesday morning.
and since through ~lea bargain
Following the plea which. was the charge was redu
to murder, ·
the result of an agreement jtrrived Judge Crow asked both tbe Bay
at by Meigs County Prosecutor family members and Sheriff James
John R. Lentes and Public Defend- S.. Soulsby if they ~ere in accord
er Mike Westfall, attorney for wtth the plea bargam agreement.
Kanawalsky, 1udge Crow sen· Both responded that they were
although Mrs. Bay expressed ·her
tenced the defendant.
Kanawalsky was sentenced by concern about possible parole. The
I udge Crow to 15 years to life on ' sheriff responded oo beh'alf or an
the charge of murdering Bay, three officer who had been shot at as
years actual incarceration on the ' attempts were being made to take
gun specification, and 10 to 25 Kanawalsk)l into custody on Dec.
years on the attempted murder 19,
In response to a questioo:o from
charge.
There was no fine since it was Judge Crow, Kanawalsky also statpointed out that tbe defendant has ed that he understood the agreeno ability to pay one. He was, bow- ment Asked if he· had anythins to .
ever, ordered to pay $9,445.90 to say to the family, he stood. faced
the Bay familY for funeral ex.pens- Mrs. Bay and her daughter, Beth,
. es. along with $1,000, the cost of and made an impressive statement
prosecution and court COS[$. .
. about his sorrow on what had hapThe judge also specified that he pened, . his regret for his actions,

•.

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sen!lnel News Starr
Tax dollars coming into the
Meigs Local School District from
the Soulbem Ohio Coal Co. are not
,expected to change much over the
next five years.
That was what Fred Zirkle,
Southern Ohio's administrative
manager, and Nelson Kidder, engi- .
Jiecring superintendent, told bo8rd ·
members at Tuesday night's meeting.
The company representatives
had been invited to come to the
meeting to talk about what the dislrict can expect in the way of tax
revcnue in tbe next several years.
While the company's real estate
taxesarestableinsofaraswhatrevenue they generate for schools, the
board's concern has betin ,with laD·
gible pooperty taxes- that paid by
tbe company on mining equipment
which is moved from township to
township and even county to county.Zirkle explained that the physical location of the equipl!lent on
Dec. 31 of each year determines
where the tangible taxes go the
next year. In other words tbe taxed
~ment must be in the Mei$S

•

five years.there will be little move- funds including $34,400 to tfte
ment .o f equipment from Salem and early retirement buyout of sevenil
Rutland townships where tax dol- teachers.
•
Iars go to the Meigs Local School
Fry also reported that she'has
District. One concern of the board received approval to borrpw
has been that the equipment might $260,000 agaonst the tan. gible'·ti.x
be moved into Columbia Township settlement from the Slate Su~where taxes then benefit the tendent of Schools.
, .:
Alexander School DistricL
On the agenda at last nigh t's
Kidder gave some assurance to meeting was an ite.m to consider
the board when he said that "the placing a levy on the ballot in ,dw
five year plans calls for basically ' May Primary. However, the b911rd
what we have how." ·
moved into executive session ·arid
Kidder and Zirkle talked about during that time it. w!IS inform~:Y
the downsizing which tollk place at agreed to remove the Item from the
Meigs Mine 2 last ·year and noted agenda, Larry Rupe, president,
that one longwall project will be reponed. He said t.l)at board memfinished lhere in May which will bers decided to see what the state
leave only one longwali job. 11iey biennium budget includes bef§'re
said that probably in 1996 some going to local taxpayers for mQre
equipment now in Salem Township money. He said that a levy' inJhe
wiU be moved into Vinton County fall is not being ruled out by the
and that they do not forsee it COlli· board.
ing back into Meigs County.
Personnel
Zirkle indicated that this could
Three coaches for spring sports,
result in a decrease in tax revenue a teacher and several others were
received by the schools in 1998 of hired during the meeting.
. :
about 35 percent
· Bobby Ashley was hired as
. In other district money matters, junior high track coach, Danny
Treasurer Jane Fry -reported on Thomas; reserve baseball coach,
general fund revenue noting that ·Mike Kennedy, head girls tra9k
while real and tangible property coach, and Scott Gheen, var-sity

o.therdertax.furcoc.~llection·;:x:
,· ~tt,on~~.l:'fia~ million,
5n8~~i8f.8~s.
~~c;:~::~han ~~ ~~1~h~;~:a~~~~~~f~~hea
she expects a decrease on

d h'
ath , the , .1
He wd tJw Southern Oh10 Coal . revenue 10 the district due to the school year for the primary learnan !5 symp Y 10r
·~I Y· pays Meigs County taxes of delinquency rate and other factors. ing, disability unit at the Rutland
l~e wd be bad aslted Godof...for~be ween $1.5 and $1.75 million She also .said that other income, School. Given contracts to tutor
g1veness and wanled tbe ~. g1vC?- and o =amount
t
Meigs Local including grants and rees,have homebound students at $11.72 per
ness.of...uhcn, .the Bay family, his receives a
e. bst year-it was decreiosed bo s24 000
hour were Shirley Van M;ter and
own, md otber family and friends.
aboUt $765
.
..
Howe:er .u~ry ~eported, the Gloria Van Reeth, bolli f6r periods
~· Bay then rea~ her stateKic(der displayed maps which School Foundation Funds have of not to exceed five hours a week.
ment m whtch she agam asked for showed five year mining projec- increased to $! 95 •937 .29 which The board also entered in an agreelife in prison for Kanawalsky and lions at Meigs Mines 31 and 2 and means that despite the decrease in ment with Francis Shrimplin to
expressed ber rear th3:' be y.'O~Id talked about last year's downsizing real and tangible taxes coming into serve as an aide at the Carleton
come back for revenge if be JS ever spawned by the American Electric the district's treasury, there is an School for a student who resides in
paroled. A statement from Bay's Power's actipn 10 comply with the overall increase in the general fund Meigs Local. Her salary will be $6
daughter was entered i~to the cte8n Air Act.
of $88•000. She said that amount an hour for each normal school day
He projected that over the next has been appropriated to other
Continued on page 3
record but was not read m open
court.
r--:----------...:;:::...=:..:.:....====::...:::...:.:.:.:.:.:..._______:....;::....__ __,
Lentes said afu:r tbe sentencing,
.,
that be is "happy that Mr. Kanwalsky's case ended with a finn senlellCC without lbe family of the victim being forced to endure the terror of a jury !rail".
"I feel that the sentence was
severe but unfortunately for the
wife and family of Mr. Bay, it
won't bring lbe victim back. However, those' in the community
should feel safer today knowing
that Mr. Kanawalsky wm be confined to jail for a violent crime
which left an innocent man dead."

Chamber speaker says program
designed to ,help women, minorities
designed to assist women, minoriBy JULm E. DILLON
ties and lower income individuals '
Seatlnel News Starr
Karen Patton, director of the who possess skiDs in business manAppalachian Ohio Micro Loan Pro- agement but wbo cannot get loans
gram, spoke at Tuesday's regular from other sources due to a poor
meeting of tbe general membership credit history or limited collaoeral.
of the Meigs County Chamber of · She said eligible applicants must
complete the business planning
Commerce.
component
of the program, plan to
According to Patton, the Athens
have
businesses
operating within
Small Business Ceiner received· a
the
30-&lt;:Qullly
region,
possess skills
loan from the Small Business
to
operate
and
sustain
their busi •
Administration to provide locallyness
and
a
participant
must
not be
based business planning assistance
on
probation
or.parole.
and small-scale loans to lower .
MieroiOIIIS ean be used by eligiincome people throughout the 30
ble
businesses for equipment and
counties of southeaslcm Ohio who
machinery,
furniture and fixwres,
arc starting or expanding small
inventory
and
supplies and workina
.
businesses within their community.
capital
needs,
according to Paaon.
Patton stated the Appalachian
The
loans
cannot.
bowtver, be used
Ohio Microloan Prqaram is
for debt resuuclllring, says Pauon.
_ There are four branch Offices of
the mlcroloan program where loan
applications may be provided: the
Marietta Small Business Devel~
menl Center, the Mid-East Ob1o
JVS Small Business Management
Program in Caldwell, the Southeast
Small Business Development Center in Southpolnt, and the Tuscarawas Smau Business Develop·ment Center in New PhllwJrlpllla.
Information on how to apply may
be obtained by contaetlna any or
these offices or tbe centrll office ·
for ·t he. prosram at the Athens
Small Business Center at 1-800822~.

K"D'Il!NPATrON
l•

AMultimedia Inc. Newspaper

Zirkle tells school .b oard tax
dollars not expected to chang~:

FENCE POST

BALER
TWINE

2 Section•, 14 Pagu 25 cenl~

•

r,,..ld wooa

Co·Op

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedne$day, February 10, 1993

Junior Fair Building Athens County Fairgrounds
West Union St. - Athens, Ohio
'
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1993
10 A.M.·7 P.M.
Grange Hall Meigs CounJy Fairgrounds

Weaver presents
UMW program ·

---People in the news--TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Political humorist Mark Russell headlined a program filled with one-liners, yams and a few serious words
honoring former ·u.s. Rep, Morris
K. Udall, who retired in 1991
because of poor health.
Political colleagues wbo shared
anecdotes about Udall's career
included former Sen. Barry Gold-

Vol. 43, No. 204

Copyrighted 1993

*

and be's IIIli going torusb things."
access to it restricted.
. . K~voman first assisted in a suiThe Rev. Randy WonbingtOO of c~ ill June l9?1J. He ~charged

BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) - A
magazine for homosexuals will
stay on tbe shelves while the Clermont County Public Library's
boar\1 looks mto complaints that
the biweekly is 100 explicit
More than 75 people opposed to

.

The terms or the mlcroloan,
accordina to Pitton, state that a
p!l)llllacJI'y note anrlleGIIrity . .
maot wW be hdd.between tbo liar·
rower and die Athlnl Small Busi·
ness Center. 1be termJ and ra1e1 of

·'

a microloan are determined ·by
case, baSC;d on the entrepreneurs
ability to repay.
Amounts of loans can range
from a few hundred dollars to a
maximum of $25,000. However, to
best meet the needs of the target
populations, loans generally are
$10.090 or less, says Patton. Any
loan request of $15.000 or greater
must be accompanied by two barJk
deniallettm.
.
Terms of the loans can range
from a few mooths to no longer
than six years. The averag~ loan
tenn is 24-36 months. Rates are
fiXed at tbe time of closing of tbe
loan and will J101 exceed rour percentage points above prime, says
Pauoo. Prepayment is available
without penalty.
According to Pauon, microloans
are 100 percent collateralized and
borrowers BRI required to personal·
ly .guarantee each long. Every
effort is made 10 meet the 100 percent nwk by creatively using the
assets the business ·fli'SI, there·
after,lhc personal assets or the borrower are couidered. The Athens ·
Small Bulness Center requirel a
linlllcll on the item1 poach..t by
the loan and whenever po11ible
with tbo other items Uled to a lOIII• •
Patton aays paymeat plans 1re
detetmiDed on a c=- ~=buis
and tbele are ao ~
fees
for the poOJWD. The applicaDI II
however, requiled to pay ror any
appraisal or tepl COIIIIIIIC
) 10
complete the application or to

LEI IERS OF COMMENDATION· The
Melli Loc:al Board vi Education gave leUers or
com11endation to two employees at Tuesday
Diehl's meeting. Here u they were presented let·
ters are from tbe left, John Hood, board vice

.President, to Karen Slolln, employed in the treasurer's office, and John Lisle, principal or Harrisonville and Salem Center, by Larry Rupe,
...
hoard president, ri&amp;ht.
(-

'

or

-·--

COIIIIaUecl 011paae 3

trad OWIItll ~y JICkle Antlld Wa..te, ,
Weill Road, Mllldla.ort. Tilt mel 1111ta~ ·
moderate dam. . 10 lilt ,_..r aide. Tllen .
were 110 lajuriel. (Selotlllel ..._ by Da.e Har·:

rill)

,: :

... ..

r

'

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