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page D8 Sundar llme• SanUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH Po.l nt Pleasant, wv

February 14,1993

Farm. Flashes

.

Third annuaJ.open steer, heifer show to be held Feb. 21
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN ·
GALLIPOLIS - Nice weather
the past couple weeks Iended to
pulllhe season forward. I found
myself
pulled
between
preparing/conducting the traditional wiruei"Classes and doing spring
type peak work load Ia the last 10
days. the Gallia County Exiension
office has had more than 70 soil
samples submitted for testing.
Keep up the. flow, this could be a
reco(ll year.
.
A spcciallhanks to the SO-plus
· people attending the Monday
(February 8) beef meeting. Dr.
Tom Turner, Professor of Animal ,
Science at O.S.U., instruciCd local
producers and youth on topics such
as "Quality Grade" and "Yield
COMPLETES TRAINING • Semi aemben or tile Reliance
Grade". He used these topics to
Motioa COIIb ol Mala••aace lllall' ftftlldJ a~~~~pletecl 31 bours of
traiDIJJ&amp; ill balk illdlllltrial ca~~trols. ne training program was
help exphoin cattle j~in!l. 4-H
desiped by Reliaace M_Oiioll CODtrol ud the University or Rio
and FF.~. ~embers !1fe mvt.ted to
Graade. Tile flllll' llolus ptr wwt progrua II beiJII coaductecl by
attend a Judging pacbCC scsston on
iiiStnlcton rr- tile lllllm sity. Tile ~Uft,.part program illcludes ·
Monday evening, February 15, 4
Basic Indastrial Controls, Prograaaallle Controllers and
p.m. at the Bob Evans Hi~ Val- ·
Hl'dra•llc Compoaeats aad SysteiiiS. Left .to ri&amp;llt ate: Dave
ley Ran~~ show barn on Green
Valleyotive.
Meaige, Doll Blab. Mike ~ Bobby HW.., Ivan Powell; Dave
MapesoD lUld Jact Grilli.. .
.
A member of the O.S.U. Gener·
'•

al Livesaoek Jlldgina TCIIII will tie

on hand to discuss the practice
classes. The Gallia Co!Jnty Cat11emen's Association has agreed to
pay ~entry fee Cor youth !*licipaling in the March 20 Judging
ContestattheOhioBeefExpo.
The lhitd annual .Gallia County
Preview Open Steer and Heifer
show will be held February·2J at
the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. In its short ll'lldition, this
show has been able to auract some
of the top show01en and cattle in
the country. Heifers shown in last
year's "preview" have gone on this
season to win some major shows
including a breed, c()ampionshiP. at
the Norlh AmeriCan in Louisville,
Ky.
I have also heard that the champion steer at he recent "Denver"
show, waa shown here la~t year.
The owners of bolh the Ohio State
Fair Cham{Jiop and Reserve steers
were participantS in the 1992 Gallia
County Preview. The local e-:ent
allows our youlh to show agamst
some of lhe most competitive cattle

Various types of mills used by early·· settlers
By WENDELL TOPE
Eartll Team Voluteer
GALLIPOLIS - The water
wheel was used by a variety of
mills as a source of energy for wet
and dry milling of maily products.
For instance, oil mills. paint and
graphite mills were for grinding
materials for paint tanbark and
gunpowder. Mill consuuction
began with lhe up and down saw
mill followed Iaterby lhe ghrist
mill, carding and fulling mills. The
paper mill, woolen mills. plasler
and lath mill and other mills came
along laler as the need for them
developed. ·
The need for wooden broads
was appareilt from the very beginning of the fust seulemeots in our
country. Food and shelter were the
first priorities. Food was the easiest
10 get since the forest was full or
wild animalS and wild pwns, but
boards had to be hewn from _logs
CUI from lrces. The logs were heWJ1
into boards before proper shelter

.
could be builL ~ thing." The amazing thing the saw water rX&gt;wereo canllng mill. The
Many of the;61d log cabins and mill was perhaps used in America mill consisted .of cylinders to which .
barns are still standing today as a commercial tool before·il was were attached leather cards carrythough they are hard to identify used in Europe where it was . ing a great number of tiny hooks.
because they have been remodeled invented.
Tbese cylinders revolved close
wilh modem siding and finished on
Howeve~. the circle saw was together, but did not touch. This
the inside wilh materials lhat have not used .until some one decided' to permi!ted the cards to draw the
covered their existence. ' \
build one inside a ghrist mill and .w.~l,fibers into slubbings (slightly
The up and down·sawmill was power it with the water wheel that twtSic;d strandS of textile fibers) for
_possibly invented and used in ran lhe ghrist mill. Once the idea 'the W9fkers to pick fi:om the yam '
either France or England in the caught fire huildreds of them were creating a product that could be
16th century. The human race has build across our couruy.
·spun into wool cloth. The common
Ibis hard to understand chancteris·
Anolher type of a mill was the name for 1he cloth was linseytic,we have always been lhc last to carding mill. It was used in pro- woolsy. However, the proper name
accept the new and the last to cessing wool after it had been for it 8fter it was colored by cloth·
throw away the old So it was with , cleaned and picked. II was neces- ing mills was ser~e, a beautiful
the fust saw mills in this country. sary that wool be carded before it · colo~ when woven miO a dress suit
When the first up and down could be spun i!"' ~ This was a from bolh men and women.
sawmill was used in this counuy no
one knows, but a wild guess places
it in the middle of the 161h century
and was called the "Devils 'Play·

Business briefs.;.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton asked A.mericans . 10
. rally behind his economic plan,
Find potential market including an increase in lhc top tax
WA:SHINGTON (AP) - The raiCS for both individuals and corU.S. Feed Grains Council says an porations.
He also told business leaders
elhanol trade team that recently
traveled to Japan found a large Thursday to expect some form of a
broad-based energy tax.
potential market for the fuel:
.
The team met with Japan' s
WASHINGTON (AP)- While
EnviroomentaiProlection Agency,
the
well-to-do will pay higher
the Jap811CSC Auto Research Insti•
income
taxes under President Clintute and lhc Minisuy of lnterna·
ton's
deficit-reduction
plan, most
tiona! Trade and Industry (MITI),
Americans
likely
will
feel
the sting
the council said in a m:ent release.
mainly
in
the
form
of
higher
energy
Team members "learned lhat
prices.
global warming is the primary
Any of the proposed enerlly
problem to address in'Japan. and
taxes
being weighed by the adminare convinced that educMillg MI11
istration
would raise prices of gasoon the benefits of ethanol over
line,
heating
oil. gas and electricity
melhanol will lead to the opening
and
those
taxes
would nudge up the
of a large, new market for the Unitprices
of
most
consumer
gOOds. .
ed StateS," it said
' PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
February 6,1993
STOCK STEERS:
60.00-109.00
300-undcr
57.50-107.00
300-500
•5()().700
65.®-8125
60.00-71.00
IIO().over
STOCK HEIFERS:
58.00-99.00
300-undet
55.00-80.00
300-500
50.00-79..50
500-700
47.00-63.00
IIO().over
STOCK BULLS:
5&amp;.00-1 04.00
300-undet
54.50-104.00
300-500
5~ I,~~- ; j(l
500-700
4i .: :~• -t • ~. 1 5
Slaughter Bulls
525.w-lll0.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
40.00-63:00
Bred Cows By#
325.00-815.00
Bred Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
•
46.00-49.00
High Dressing
42.00-4(&gt;.1 I()
Utility
39.00-41.(1()
Canner &amp; Cutter
75.00-105.00
Veal - choice
69.00-74.00
Medium
..
58.50-68.00
Good
35.00-161.00
Baby Calves BH
44.50-66.50
HORSEScwt
80.00-300.00
Ponies B.H.
36.00-40.00
Hogs· 300-500
22.00-25.00
Male Hogs
6.00-49.00
Goats
Horse &amp;Tac Sale Fri. Feb. 19th, 6:00 .m.\

in the county without hav\ng to or .current certified applicators
leave home. Plan to attend.
wan,ting to add a category should
The Annual Tobacco Producers'
attend. A similar tasting session
meeting· has been scheduled for
will be held in Meigs County on
Tuesday, February 23. 1130 p.m. at F~ 24. Call for details.
Hannan Trace Elemenl.liry School.
. Don t forget the Forestry proLast.year's annual event in Mergram tlfbe held Thursday, Febnlcemlle attracted more than 200 · ary 18, 7 p.m. at the C.H. McKenproducers. The primary speaker for
zie AgricultWlll Center. The Gallia
-the evening will be Dr. George
Soil and Water District implementDuncan from the University of ed a forestry program several
Kentucky. I)r. Duncan will cover
months ago to help both farmers
concepts of tobacco housing design
and the forest industry in Gallia
or renovation that help in the curCounty. The Thursday program
i~g o~ quality IObl!cco. He will also
offers several really good speaten.
, h1ghhght new ideas with tobacco
Call Cindy Je~ns - {446-8686) for
cutter&amp;. .
dttails. Plan to attend.
The A.S.C.S. County Director . The Gallipolis F.F.A. Alumni
and a representative from the
will be sponsoring an educalioaai
O.S.U. Plant Pest Clinic will also
meeting on Tuesday, February 16 ··
·give shan presenuuions. The 1992
starting at 7 p.m . in the Gallia
tobacco crop is almost all marketed
Academy Vo. Ag. classroom. M,.
· wilh only a few markets still open.' Don Davis, instruCtor at the TriThe February S market report County ·Vocational School will
showed season net sales of over
speak on the topic of Farm Law.
689 million ·pounds, some $Z. 70
Attention Dairyrilen! A mid-day
pc:r hundred higher~ last year, · piogramisbeingplannedforSatur-·
w11h 18.4 perceru gom~ to the pool
day, February 21. Bruce Brocket,
(5.5, perccnl a year earlier).
Extension Dairy Specialist from
A reminder of the Private Pesti- Canfield. Ohio, will be the

Lucst

~1r'r!~~;~~~~~:~i: ·~i~~E:!~~~
McKenzie

Center.

Edward M. Vollbonl II Gallili
County's exteiiSion •ce•t. agri·
culture.
·

Pe~s~ns

.
trammg sess1on,

Ohio Lott~ry

Southern
defeats
Waterford

Pick 3:

990
Pick 4:
9344
Super Lotto:

•

1-2-13-14-21-29
Kicker:
733864

Page4

l.cM tonight In tow 30s. Saow.'

Tuesd!ly, rain. Hip near 50.

•
.
VaL 4S, No. 207
Capwilghllld 1913

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 25 coni•
A Munlmedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 15, 1993

Icy road conditions cause of three weekend accidents
Ice covered bridges were responsible for three
aa:iderus over lhc weelcend,lhc Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol reported Ibis morning.
An icy bridge in Salisburr Township was the
cause of tWQ accidents jusl mmutes apart Saturday
night oo State RouiC 7. Two injuries were the result
of the accidents.
A Syracuse woman was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by Meigs County Emergency
MMic•l Service following a two-vehicle accideni on
the bridge.
C.OiynJ. McCoy, 43, Sixlh Stree~ Syracuse, was
trealed and released. a hospital spokeswoman said
this morning.
According to lhe report, Mrs. McCoy was was
northbound when she lost conrrol on an ice covered
0

bridge. A semi truck fol19wing behind her, driven by
Barry W. McCoy 11. 23, Sixth Street. Syracuse, was
unable 10 stop in time and struck her vehicle. ,
· Mrs. McCoy· s vehicle sustained heavy. disabling
damage and was tOwed from the scene. Mr. McCoy's
vehicle sustained moderate damage and was driven
from the scene.
A Tuppers Plains woman was also transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital b~ Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service followm'g a second two-vehi·
cle accident minutes later.
Nancy R. Cole. 48, a passenger in a vehicle driven
by Homer E. Cole, 51, Tuppers Plains, was treated
and released, a hospital spokeswoman said this mom·
ing.
·
A£cording· to the report, Cole and a vehicle driven

No citations were issued. The vehicle sustained
light damage and was 'towed from the scene.
•

by Victoria s : Rood. 39. 41803 State Route 7, Tuppers Plains, were northbound when Cole stopped for
vaffic and Rood struck her from behind when she
could npt stop on the ice.
Rood's •chicle sustained light damage aild Cole's
was not damaged.
No citations were issued in either accident

A Middleport man's vehicle sustained light damage Sunday evening when it struck a deer on State
Route 124 in Salem Township.
.
According to the report. Hugh D. Thompson, 51',
38044 Zuspan Hollow Road, Middleport. was eastbound when he struclc the deer:- which then left the

A Rutland man escaped injury early Sunday
morning when he lost control of his vehicle on an icy
bridge.
According 10 the report. Jason R. Black, 21. Rl. I
Rutland, was westbound on County Road 174 when
he slid on an icy bridge, regained traction on the far
side or the bridge, went off the left side of the road
and struck a ditch.

~ene .

No injuries were reported and the vehicle was
driven rrom the scene.
A New Haven, W.Va., woman was cited by the
state highway patrol early Ibis morning for driving
under the influence. Sharon R. Edwards, 40, was
cited in Salisbury Township.

Veteran Rotary Club member

.

I·

Rice receives Paul Harris.Fellow Award

GaUipolls.·••

my neighborhood.
for the put 28 Y-1, I'VIIIIIti helping my nelghborl .
herein GallpoU• )lro1ec1 the lhlngelhey value with
Stalll F - I n - . i'm praud ollhil Cllllllllunlty
and g,...ful for my many friend• hn. .

CAROLL SNOWDEN
342 s--ui Ave.
GaiDpol... Oh.
Phon1 44&amp;-42110
Home 448 4518

John Rice, long-time member of
the Middlepon-Pomerpy Rolilry
·Club, was presented the Rotary
International Paul Harris Fellow
Award at a recent meeting of the
, local club held at Healh United
Methodist Church. .
Club President Gene Riggs
made lh.e plaque presentation to
Rice. The award includes a $1,000
gift of money to Rotary International in the name or the recipient
to be used for vario\ill Rotary projects.
The plaque presented 10 Rice
cites his years of exemplary service
and commitment to lhe precepts of
·1!-otary in the theme "He who
serves best. profits most".
The retired Meigs County extensian agent has served 12 years on
the VeteranrM'emorial ·Hospital
Board. is currently on the Meigs
County Liller Control Board. has
served five years on the Mental
Retardation/Developmental Disabled .Board, and is active in St.
Paul's Onited ¥ethodist Church.
on the second nonr· Sunday in Cieveland:the
FIVE KILLED· Job WWilims, a neilbbor,
He also ·cUrrently serves as a direcchlldrea ranged in age from 1-6. (AP)
loob Oftl' the charred remalas of a hoii!C where
tor of the Mei~s Soil and Water
~ ud • boy died Ill a fire while trapped
Conservation DtStrict.
The making of a mandolin, from
the rough wood to the finished
product, W!IS explained by Robert
White of Near Alfred in a program
he presented at the meeting.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Five nery today identified lhe victims as floor without a battery, Lee said.
•
White said that he used curly
The
fire
sUllied
around
8
a.m.
on
cbilcRn wae tilled in a bouse ftre Gaylen Lavelle Stafford, 6. and his ·
for 1he sides of the man·
maple
the
first
floor.
where
the
caretaker
that apC:tly began when an brother Jerred Emanuel, I; Sytima
dolin.
The
wood was cut into thin
eb:lrit:
ignited a couch. ftre StOwers, S, her brother Eric. 4, and lived. An electric heater was 1.00
strips
and
lheil
soaked in hot water
close to a couch and set it on fire,
ollicials -said
sister Nicole, 3.
,
before
he
used
a
hot iron 10 bend it
Fire already had engulfed the 2 ·
Doris Stafford escaped wilh her . Parries said.
The caretaker, Luther Mason. into the shape of the mandolin.
112-story. wood-frame bouse on lhe two other children. William. 7, and
city"s SIIIIJiheast side when the firSt Bryant, 4, said Fire Department tried to put out the fire, then tried Bass wood can also be used for
fare crew arrived shortly after 8 spokesman Jonathan Parries. Ms. to pull lhe burning couch out the mandolins White explained.
a.m. Suaday, a Cleveland Fire Stafford and the two boys were front door, Parries said. When the because it is eaSY 10 cut and flexes
fire began to spread, Mason ran out easily.
DCpanmeat official said. The treated at a hospital and released.
·
bouse lacked a functioning smQlce • Ms. Stafford. her sister Ametra of lhc house and called 10 lhc fami- . The top of a mandolin can be
made from spruce, cedar or fur,
clr!can".
and the children lived on the sec- ly on lhc second floor.
Parries
said
Ms.
Stafford
and
the
White
said. Some of the wood
"When the fust fm: truck rolled ond floor of the home and a caretwo
children
jumped
out
a
Window.
uses
in making mandolins
White
up onro die scene; there was fire taker lived on the firSt Hoar. ArneMs.
Stafford
told
fue
investigatorS
from
Alaska on an island
comes
coming out all the windows," tra Stowers had gone to the store.
the
other
children
panicked
and
called
Citca
and is called cilca
Assi-Qiid'BillLeesaid.
She returned to find firefighters
would
not
jump
out
the
window.
spruce. The finger board is made
The idealities of the victims searching for her children's bodies.
waelllll n1l rd pending comple·
The youngsters had gathered in By the time firefighters iurived, the from ebony and comes from
Africa, he S8Id.
tioa of the Cuytlhop Co!lnty, coro- a front room, just a few feet from a fire had spread through the house.
A ·neighbor told a Cleveland
As a part of the program Bob
- · · illwniptioo. A man 111 duty · porch roof lh&amp;t could have led them
television station that the fire played on a mandolin he and a stu•
' at tlae coroner's office Sunday to safety, ftrefighters said.
illghl said 1111 inbmation W&lt;Juld be
A smoke detector was found in department did not ·respond dent made that has a value of
$3,500. It was made during an
n:l · duntiliOday.
the upstairs suite. but it had not promptly.
"The problem we h,W was lhat apprenticeship program wilh Rick
F"dib 1\analioo ChiefEilerd Kin- been mstalled. It was lying on the
the company that would be normal- Boring of RCC!Isville. Funding for
ly first to arrive was on another 1he apprenticeship came from the
alarm and the company lhat nor- Elijah Pierce Graru. White was the
mally would come second was the first recipient of the granL He said
firSt to arrive," Lee said.
, that making that mandolin took
Lee said the frrst frre crew was about lhree weeks of work.
on the scene eight minutes after the
Discussed by Gene Riggs, presi·
fire was reported.
dent, were several projects of the
BARNESVILLE, Ohio (AP) to organize companies other unions
Damage to ·the home was esti- local club. One is sponsoring Adam
mated at $60.000.
The United Mine Workers of might pass UP·
America is trying to increase mern·
In ·Barnesville, lhe union target·
benllip in the coal mines, as we!l ·ed 39 workers at Shamrock Conas otllcl' indoslries.
duit Products. an electrical equipTwo Meigs Countians have by the Board of County Commis·
Ill southeast Ohio. the victories ment maker in eastern Ohio.
include worters • a nursing home
"I doubt if a lot of unions been nominated .by the Meigs sioners as charter members of the
for the mentally disabled in New would have made the time and the County Recycling and Litter Pre- advisory board and are now start·
Lcoillgton. a fal:tory in Clmbridge effort to organize something like vention Advisory Board for the ing their II th year with the pro·
aad a small water authority near this," said Jim White, who over- "Keep Ohio Beaut~ful" award, a gram. Wiggins said that during this
Aihens.
·
saw the UMW Shamrock drive.
period, Meigs County has received
suite wide recognition program,
The union abo bas organized oil
The UMW said it got raises
Nom ina ted for the award were comprehensive grants from the
Wlllkeii ill Utah and city employ· 55 cents an hour for most employVictor L. Brown of 42960 Su11e Ohio Department of Natural
ees ill Wyomin&amp;, Slid Larry Deeds. ees during the first )'l:l!f of a thrc.c- Route 124, Minersville. and Roy·E. Resources, Division' of Litter Pre·
the UMW's • t11em regionll din:c- year pact. wilh smaller raises the Miller of 45610 Miller Road near vention and Recycling, totaling
over a hlllf·million dollars.
··
a.
.
next two years.
Chester.
Xeilll a.nhudt. deputy director
The union plans to emphasize
According to Kenny Wiggins • . Brown, long-time area business·
of tbe UMW"s nonhcast region. · job security when it giles to ·the program manager for Meigs Litter man and. community leader, resides
t :I' oa the union caa reQDit tens bargaining table wilh the Bitullli- Control. to be eligible for an award' in Minersville with his wife. Alice,
ol•IIM• ••'1111 or WCIItaS oatside of nous Coal Operators Association, the nominees mllsi be involved in and has four children. He is active· ·
lXIII.
an industry grOup that employs activities lhat c~ange communi~!&lt; ly involved in his church and lhe
waste handling habits ,' thereby Meias County flistorical Society.
In tbe 19!101 and 1960s. tho most UMW members.
unioll W .,..., 200,000 members
• To pressure lhe industry for job reducing litter and also encourag· He is a former Board of Education
a t•He *'coal indu!lry, including security. the UMW struck the i~g r~ycling and promoting bea~· member. ·
Miller, well-known lhroughoul
New Yodtcabdriwen. Union lead- nation's largest coal producer. llficatlon.
.
as 1a1er decided to sUck to coal Peabody Coal, when its contract
, Both' no!f!inees have been lhe county, has been involved with
llllllalllld 0¥111' llllli-lltlniiiiiiiiii!J:erl expired earlier Ibis month. About actively involved in the Meigs the Meigs Soil and Water Cohser·
todllllgin!SII!eiWCIIbn.
7,500 miners in West Virginia, 1111· County Recycling and Litter Pre- vation Cooperative Exletlsion Ser·
.uon - says il is willing nois. Indiana· and Kentucky ar'e on vention Program .since it was start· vice, Farmers Home Administra-'
strike.
ed in 1982. They were appointed lion, Buckeye Hills/Hocking Val-

.
RECEIVES 'A WARD.
' Rice was presented a Rotary
International Paul Harris
Award in recognltloa or bls
exemplary work and commitment to the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club at last week's meeting. Gene Riggs, president, made
the presentation.

roar

Insurance Companies • HomeOIIices: Bloominglon . lllinois

Five children die in house fire

like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.®

~

YOUR
CHOICE

S-··'"''''
'·ot

ONLY

~ ''''! .

f\\ s"'''" s-~·

I

·UMW expanding
recruitment drive

..

'

FULLY
•Power Windows
•Power Door Locks

•Tilt Wheel
•Cruise Control

Sheets as a RotarY Exchange Student to Italy. Adam is the son or

James and Jennifer Sheets of Rutland.

Brown, Miller are Meigs nominees for state award

1992 BUICK CENTURY
-

MANDOLIN MAKING • Robert white explained the process
or making a mandolin lo the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
and then entertained the group with several selections.

•Balance of 36/36
Bumper to Bumper Warranty

BUICK·PONTIAC
1900 Willi IVIIUI
iAWPOLIS, 011. 446-2212
·,

.

of

no

ley Regional Development D·istrict,
Farm Bureau, and the Gallia· Meigs
Airport Authority. He is a 50 year
member of the Pomeroy Masonic
Lodge 164. R. and A. M. and Yqrk
Rite and Scottish Rite Masonry. He
resides in lhe Sumner community
with his wire, former teacher, Maurita, and they have one daughter.

awards will be mailed to the rccipi·
cnts while the awards or excellence
and distinction will be presented at
the recognition luncheon to be held
on April 2 at the Holiday Inn East
Hotel iQ Columbus.
·

Driver cited

Charles Van CoonH, 76, of
"Bolh nominees have made out- Middleport was cited for improper
standing contributions to lhe suc- backing as the result of an accident
cess o( the Meigs County program. · on Page Stroet. Middleport, Sunday
They have been active in site coor· afternoon.
dination activities of the Ohio
Accordillg to the report from
River Sweep and the elementary Middleport police, Van Cooney
recycle poster contests. They have backed into a vehicle driven by
bolh also been actively involved in Mary Coleman. 48, Middlepoh.
the numerous clean-up, beautifica· There was minor damage to bdlh
lion and recycle projects of the pro- vehicles. police said. Barbara Colegram over the years." said .Wig- man, a passenger in the Coleman
vehicle, was taken to Veterans
gins.
Memorial Hospital where she ,q.
The "Keep Ohio Beautiful" treated and released.
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Commentary
The Dally Sentinel

~M:o:n:da::~:F:e:b:ru:a:~::15:':1:~=:::::::::::::::::::::~~~-------Po~m--er_o~y-~--~~d~dl~e~p~ort~,~O~h-l~o------------------------------~T~he::D:a~ily~S~e:n~t~in;e:t::P•:g~e::3:;~

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Page-2--The Dally Sentinel ::
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Monday, Februa~ 15, 1~

•'

Tuesday, Feb. 16
• Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conaitions and

Human r~ghts must come before diplomacy

MICH.

WASHINGTON - When Pres· any country that shows a "consls· " much greater emphasis on prob- out:•
Strategic imperatives mate it
iC!enl George Bush hosied a stale tent pattern of grosa violalions of lem prcvcation rather .than crisis
111 Court Street
· likely that .the Clinton aclmiilistra·
dimer for Morocco's King HasSan internationally recognized human ma~~agement. "
Pomel'Of, Ohio
lion JVill continue clianneling secuPiesidenl
Clinton
campaigned
rights."
II, the menu featured medallions of
DEVotBD TO THE IN1'EJtD1'8 OP THE MEIGS-MASON AREA.
rity assistance to countries like
on
a
platform
ot
human
rights
and
salmon in champagne jelly and
Turlccy,
which gets more than $500
pilloried
President
Bush
for
pan·
·
caviar sauce. One thing that wasn't
million
each
year for mi)imry edu·
dering
to
China
after
the
Tianan·
on the menu was human rights.
cation
and
training.
Turlcey is yet
men
Square
massacre.
Regardiilg
While Bush was praising
ally
that is get·
another
Gulf
War
China,
Clinton
has
distanced
him~
Morocco for its help in the Gulf
ting
a
generous
return
on
its invest·
self
from
these
promises
faster
than
.
War and its "commitment to
ROBERT L. WINGE'tr
meal,
despite
reJX&gt;IIS
that
torture is
he
ran
from
the
middle-class
l8ll
shared ideals," more than 700
Publisher
common
pracuce.
The
methods
cut
.
Moroccans languished in prison.
With more than 4,000 career most frequently used there include
Several hundred " disappeared"
Veteran foreign-policy hands
CHARL~ HOEFLICH
shock ttcalments and beat- · :
PAT WHITEHEAD
Moroccans remain unaccounted for blame this time-honored hypocrisy foreign-service officers below him, elecnic
.
'
·,
General
Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
in a country where torture is report· of American foreign policy on two Christopher may not be totally in mgs.
'"fbe question (in the ~t) was ·
edly common.
. ·
major factors : Cold-war politics charge. But he understands that
LETJl!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less !ban 300
Morocco, which will receive and "clientitis'l - the practice of "clientitis" is to blame for some of 'do they hold elections? " James ;
wordS. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
more than $40 million iii U.S. 18ll· some foreign service offiCers to put the lliggest foreign policy fiascoes, O'Dea. director of Amnesty Inter· ·
llldress and r.lepbone number. No unsigned letr.n will be publisbed. lettm
payer-financed military education the needs of their host country including the failed .courtship of national's Washington office told .
our associate Jan Moller~ "If the)' ,
should be in good Iasio, llldressiq issues, not penonalitiOJ.
Saddam Hussein.
and training in the current fiscal above the U.S. national interest
"There are eight levels of did, we didn 'I worry much about · ·
year, is merely one of'18 countries · Secretary of State Warren
.
which violate human rights with Christopher chided adherents of bureaucracy below the president," death uads."
o
k
:
G
ON
THE
JOBA
•
impunity, yet still receive slices of clientitis duriilg his Senate conftt· said' one former hil!h-nnkiila State
bureau
of
the
Department
of
lnteri·
~
·
the $7 billion security-assistance mation hearings, calling it a "mala· Department official. "Reagan,
or
has
a
funny
way
of
.fostering
pie. Every time a check is cut fQr dy characterized by undue defer· B!JS)I ·and even their very top advis·
By WALTER R. MEARS
Morocco, a U.S. taw is 'being via- ence to potential reactions of other ers weren't the ones Sitting there sobriety in the federal workplace: .
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Four weeks from the ceremoni!ll splendor thai lated - since laws forbid the eli§. countries," while promisiilg a new reviewing whatever the assistant Getting employees so .drunk they .
began his term, President Clin10n delivers a more crucial inaugural me~­ bursemeilt of security assislanCe to era of diplomacy that will place a secretary for human rights put can't walk sllaight
Last Decemller, three Minerals
sage Wednesday night, launching the economic program central to hiS
Management
Service officials val·· ·administraiion - and J1CC.!1a1&gt;s to his political future.
unteered to SC(VC as guinea pigs in
11 has been a month of lrial balloons and iiltermitlelll tribulations, over
. what an Interior spokesman
8::1?f'dN' •~
social issues as majlr as gays in !he military and as unlikely as the rules
;;:}cK't /"tn'.t.
defends as "an educational effort"
on tax 111yments for Cabinet baby siuers and bousc~eepers. .
· ·
C'l~I'T
Nc!JJ.i·~J
to urge employees not to drink and ,
. Cliilton has had 10 back away from some campatgn commtttnents, and
drive.
Instead of videos and pam- .
Be
$ad\'eW
CoW$!
may wcll have to explain away another one, a tax cut for middle-class
phlets
the conventional form of .
Americans who may 1nstead have to pay mo~ for some of the things they
such
educationMMS threw a .. ·
buy.
·
amounting
to a drink· .
"seminar"
But those early problems and missteps w~l f~ when !he Clinton ecoing
binge.
The
three
volunteers
:
nomic plants presented to a nationally televised JOIDt sCSSJon of Congress.
were
put
in
a
conference
room
and
.
·
.
The tough stepS he vows in order to simultaneously promote economic
plied
with
a
six
pack
of
beer,
a
bot·
.
growth and deficit cuts wiU draw protests and stir con1r0versy, but on a
tie of wine and a botlle·of schlllipps . :
central, not side issues.
·
,
mixed with bourbon.
The laggard economy was, after all, a major factor behiild the cliange
After consuming the alcohol,
in White HOU$C command. It is the -problem Clinton said would get his
they
were paraded out on to a ~e •
lascl'·like attention.
r
·
·
before
hundreds of bemused MMS
"We must do what no generation hjiS had to do. before," Clinton sa!d
em(lloyees,
and videotaped. A
in his ,inaugural address. "We must invest more m our .own people, tn
pollee
officer
was on hand to :·
their jobs, and in their future, and at the same time cut our massive debL"
administer
sobriety
tests, which
Now he must say how.
·
·
· they all flunked: And the three .
It is a vital keynote to his presidency.
vt.ere provided rides borne. There ~ :
Only one of !tis three White House ~ ~on a, second IC!ID·
wu a brief scare when one of the ,
And Ronald Reagan was the only one who began with a clear, specific
drwik volunteerS llttiiYed. bcc:Qmiilg .
economic plan and gal it lhrOugh Congress:
lost in the. auditorium until found ··
Clinton had said as a candidate that his proposals to il!imulate the econ·
by a search party 45 miiluteS later,
omy, create jobs and promote investment for growth woukl be ready on
"The purpose was to demon- ,
Day One of his presidency, on congressional desl:s the momiilg after the
strate
what can happen to you when '
· inauguration to open an explosive 100 days of action.
you
imbibe,"
a suppoliedly sober .
But CBI!'~fll .plomises ·do not translate that easily into specific pro·
told ~ .
•.
agency
spokcspcnon
posais for ~on.
·
·
·
Jack
aaderson
aad
Michael
•
So the Clmton plan wasn't ready that soon. II won't be approved that
.
a
re
writers
for
United
.
,
Blastein
swiftly. And ileithet will make any difference so long as the president and
Feature
S~te,Ine.
·•
the Democratic Congress agree on a program, get it dooe and make it
'
.
l
WOOL
.
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Pan of thai effort is the sales job Clin!OO r.mtched with his national
' 't
call-in town meeting, televised from suburban Detroit. lie promised fair,
shared saaifice, a pledge symbolized by his emphasis on raising taxes on
the we8lthiest Americans while culling Jllyrolls and pelts in the governSo what Is til be clone? Again, • :·
Tate a system of vitill impor· as many proposed solutions as The United SlaleS is t!le only ind~s· ;
ment ·
ihere
are
ial
interests.
Only
the
·
'
trializ6il
nation
that
doel
'not
'guar'
the
theoretical answer is quite
tance to all Americai)S that costs
That way, even with taxes thai affect middle America, 1i1te an energy vastly more than any other compa- pteaidenl~ the podium and the antee health tale for all its·citizens. clear:"Wc need to· put.·a basic' ·
tax the administration can point to sharper increases at'the top.
program in the world, is on power to decide on one and Shep- It is the only one that tolerates health-care flooi' under all Ameri· ·: ·
·Then: also may be some fmc print involved Cliilton vowed as a candi· rable
'
active discrimination by health· ~ as a niaaer or PJhL And the :
the road to breatiilg the Treasury herd it into law.
date that be wouldn't raise middle-class taxes to pay for new-programs he and fails to deliver even minimal - - - - - - - - . . - - - tale proviljers and insun:nl 8fU:rlst go ..em"'ent needs etther to cap
wants but he never said never. And it is going to tate more than upper services to tens of millions of
u
g
the poor, those with pre-extsting beallh-care expendiiURS or provide ·
income or corporate tax increases to stan cutting budget defiCits.
illnesses and other subsets of the the states and private sector with · · :
Americans. You can assume it is n 0 uJn
Clinton started toning the message a week in advance.
~·••u·oniiiOSI
at-'·'"
·
the tools to ~orce costs cloWn.
·
. Defming the problem is easy. In ......
,..._
When a woman questioner at his TV town meeting worried that he broke' and needs fixing. Call it 1992,
the
United
States
spent
It-aeeds
10 be said for the record
There
are
many
toeds
to
both
·
•
health
care.
might renege &lt;in his pledge against raising middle-class w.es, he con·
Then take President Clinton's $838.5 billion - 14 percent of its that America's medical care is the objectives, 100 many to cover in . '
fmned her suspicion. "I wish I could tell you that I won't ask you to pay
decision to appoint his wife as total economic output - on medi· best in·the world for those who can one shan column. But in ll)e end, '" ·
any more," be said.
, ·
chairman
of a special task force cal care. That includes everything afford it. Our research facilities there is only one way to reach both, ·
On the defiCit, too, Clinton had to temper his campaign pledge of a 50 wilh a 100-day
mandate to come up from drugs to hospitalization to havo J been the advance guard · just as there was only one way· to . ·
percent cui within four years. But ~ and numbers will countless than with recommendations for reform· insurance forms to doctors. This against illness and disease. Our put the Medicare and Medicaid ·
progress, and Cliilton will earn credit for that with any significant curbs
ing the system. You can just about year, the Commerce Department medicalteclmology produces near- systems into place .in the midon the budget deftcits that soared under his predecessors. ·
1960s. The piesident'of the United · •·
the farm that he h~ decided to estimates the figure will ~ump miraculous results; ··
bet
A year ago, it was Geor~e Bush who went before Congress wi~ an make
another
12
percent,
a
rate
four
But
the
trend
lines
·
arc
all
States
will have 10 spend a vast •
health-care
reform
a
domes:
economic revival plan, but his modest package of tax breal:s and busmess
times
the
tale
of
inflation,
to
·
wrong.
During
the
1980s,
some
15
amount
of political capital to
incentives did nothing to spark his re-election campaign, didn't pass, and tic priority second only to thai bas·
$939.9 billion. Unless there is fun· million new jobs wme added to the ·cajole, coerce or lead Congress into ·
probably carne too late to help him politically. He never dispelled the ket of problems subsumed under tlamenlal
reform that inCludes cost CCOIIIIIIIy, but 5 million Americans adopting a comprehensive plan that ·
the
general
title
of
"the
economy."
Democratic charge thai he had no real domestic agenda.
By contr11Sl, Reagan sought and got the giant l8ll cut he'd promised iii You can also safely assume that if containment, the nation will be losi.Jtheir health insurance. Our wiU inevitably require new taxes · •
the 1980 campaign, won sharp, if temporary, cuts in domestic budgets, he delivers, his early missteps will spending $1.6 trillion on health infant mortality rate is relatively and gore a number of powerful
.
rode out an early term slump, and rolled to a second term on a surging soon be as forgotten as last sum- care by the year 2000, roughly 20 high llld our childhood-vaccination oxen.
percent of the nation's gr(1ss rate. sb~ly low. Medicaid,
Consultation and compromise, '·
mer's
stock
lllliCket
performance.
economy. .
·
meant to
the health needs of at which Bill Clinton excels, will
Then mix iii the tact that virtual· domestic product
The last Democratic president, Jimmy Carter, never managed to put his
By
comparison·
,
in
1990,
Canathe
poor,
in
fact
covers less .than help, but determination and politi· · •
ly
everyone
believes,
some
with
stamp on an ·economic program. He wound up promising an economic
da,
France,
Germany,
and
Sweden
half
of
all
Americans
who are 'eli! courage will be essential. This '
reform
considerable
urgency,
that
revitalization plan in the second term he couldn't wiil.
cannot be postponed any longer. spent about 8 percent to 9 percent below the poverty line. On the is the place for him 10 draw a line '
1
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· Corporate executives and labor of GDP on health care. Japan spent other side of the ledger, after in the dust and state the future of "
union officials agree, as do most 6.5 percent Great.Britain, home of adjusting for inflation, real per his presidency. Hillary Rodham •·
·nisi ror Tbe Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
politicians,
professors, health-care " socialized medicine," spent 6.1 capita health expendiiURS grew on Clinton's high-visibility role is an
national politics for more than 30 years.
professionals and working Ameri· J!CfCent, exactly half of the Ameri· avemgc 4.5 percent a ye1r between encouraging sign that he has.
:·
cans.
can figure.
1960 and 1990. The averaae rate ol
Hoddlna Carter Ill, former · · ;
Put all this together, and it
growth for the economy as a whole State Department spokesman ·
. But high cost mighl ·be accept· averaged I .95 .percent during the and award·wlnnl"g reporter, edl· · ::
should spell victory for a compre·
By The Auoeiaied Press
hensive overhaul of our crazy-quilt able if we had an efficient health· same period. You do not need a tor and publisher, Is president or · · ·
Today is Monday, Feb. 15, the 4Wt day of 1993. There are 319 days
health-care system. 11 ain't neces· care delivery system. We don't. Nobel Prize iii economics to figure MalnStreet, a Washington, D.C•.' · • .
sarily so. The trouble is thai while About 35 million Americans have . out where these trends are taking based television production com· · •
left in the year. This is Presidents' Day.
pany and a writer for Newspaper ·
there is general agrj:emenl that no health insurance. Another 20 us. ·
.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
Sixty years ago, on Feb. 15, 1933, Prestdent-elect Franl:ltn D. Roosevelt
Enterprise ,\ssociation,
something is badly wrong, there are million or more are underinsured.
escaf.ed an attempt on his life. in Miami, when shots rued at him. by an
assailant missed. However, ChiCagO Mayor Anton J. Cennak was lcilled.

•
IToledo I 30' I

1

By Jack Anderson

PA.

INO.

and
Michael Binstein

• IColumbus!4o• I
W. VA.

aLl.

Health~care

!

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reform needs leadership

d' ,.,.

Carter Ill

Today in history

Berry's World

1•rm s middle-class guy whose taxes are going
up. What do you suggest?"

Thurgood Marshall and the cJtief
" Inscribed· above the front
entrance to the Supreme Court
building," said Chief Justice Rehn·
quisl at 'the funeral services for
Thurgood Marshall, "are the words
'Equal justice under law.' Surely
no one iildividual did more to make
these words a reality than Thur·
good Marshall."
Seeing the chief make that trilh
ute on television, I kept thinking of
what Marshall had said 21 r,ears
ago in Furman v. Georgia: 'Our
'beyond a reasonable doubt' bur·
den of proof in criminal cases is
intended to protect the innocent,
but we know it is not foolproof:
Various studie.s have shown that
people whose innoCence is later
convincingly established are con·
victed amj sentenced to death."
~nd in this century, at least ~3
actually innocent defendatl.ts have
been executed before they were
proved innocent, according 10 the
research of professon Michael
Radelet and Hugh Bedau ( "In
Spite of Innocence," Northcaltem
University Press).
Thurgood Marshall was unalter·
ably against the death penalty. He
was afso passionately concerned
that due process - fairness - be

accorcle&lt;feven the vilest defendant
Arguments about both were vividly
present in a case, Herrera v.
Collins, that the Supreme Court

NatHentoff
decided three days before the
funeral services for Marshall Jus·
lice Rehnquist wrote that decision
condemning Leone! Torrea Herrera
to death - unless the governor of
Texas grants clelilency.
In 1982, Henera, a clntg dealer,
convicted of Jcillincf:.'~ wlicemen,
was sentenced 10 ·
. He said he
had been beaten iilto a guilty plea
and a confession. (Court papers
show he wu holllltalizld after two
police beatings wben in tllltody.)
In 19911, new. CYidcnce bepn to
CIIICflle that Herrma's brother, Raul
- "ho was shot to death in 1984
..,.. had commiued both murders.
Nina Tot~nberg reported on ·
National Public Radio that Hector
Villarreal, 'a lawyer and former
judge, had liiiiCd an atfldavlt that
Raul Henela w eonfeaeil to him
that he had killed ihe two pollee·
men. And, said VIllarreal, he
believed Raul was teUinJ the truth

'because, burdened with guilt, he and the Supreme Court now held ·
was acting against his own inter· . Leone! Herrera's life in its hands.' · ·
ests.
Sp_e&amp;:king for a ;6-3 majority, ••
In 1991, Raul's son. who was 9 Wilham Rehnqutst- who wAll •,
at the time of the murdcn, said he SQOil to praise Thurgood Marshall
had seen his fatbc:t Shoot the offi• for matmg "equal justice IInder
cers. He had waited all this time to· law" a part of people's actual lives •
come forward, the son explained, -refused to remand Herrera's .
because be wu afraid of what the case for a hearing on the new evi- • · ~
poHce might do to him. He c:laims (lence. • 'Claims of actual in no· · '
police were involved with his cence bued Ofl:lllewly discovered
father and liiC1e In drug Dlflicking, evidence," ~ llid, m111t be
and biB testimony as to that coulil denied habeas rehef unless thero is .· .•
lead to an investigation of tho10 abo "an indeoendent constitutional :.;1
cops. Three other people made violation.'' He added that when ·, •.
statementS 1IOintlnl to R8ul Herrera .habeas corpus is granted - and
Rehnquist clearly believes it has .. ,1
11 the llllll'lfliror. In 1992. Leonel Hemn present· been granted much too often - it • ·
ed claims for a .habeas corpus is liCit concerned with eorrecting , ,.
review to federal dlsuiet Judge "erron oii'II:L"
·
,
Ricardo Hinojola. lflrrdly soft on
I would expect that Thurgood ' ,
crime, HinOJOsa was a ~:fan Mulhall would have vlgotously ; i
appoiiltee wbo has bcoa U
on dl~a~~reed with the chief. Like ' , ,
occasion as a poalble choice for \WiiiiiiD Broanan, Mmhall oCtcn ;
the Supm110
Jud&amp;e Hinojoil cited "thO .evolvlna IIIDdlniJ of •.
ordered a Illy of eucuilon, •yina deceGc)' that 1llllk tho POIJCII of .a . : .
that a .. _
of tlimcll and· due ma&amp;uriiiJIOI:-y."
· •
process" made it IICCCSP')' for 1
Nat Htatoff Ia I DltiOIIIIJ' .' ~ ·,
ptate coun to listen to Hemra.' s rtDOjli•• utllori(J on Ole Pint :
evidellce of lnloce11ee.
· ~••ad••t lad lh rllt or tile , .,;
The 5th Circuit Court of Bill ol Rlallh aad 1 wrltea' tor ...
•-·•· overruled J""- HlnOnu · Nnr~paper hterprile "-1•· : ,
.........--~
'""'"" tlon.
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eoun.

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't' .

.u

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Dy The Associated Prks ·
Snow is likely to spread rapidly
over the state tonight. Warmer au.will surge in to southern Ohio
overni ght changing tl\e snow to
first sleet and then rain.
H,nvy snow may fall p_r ior to
thi s and dump several inches in
so uthern Ohio . before .lhe
changeover occurs. The snow may
change to min over centr11l Ohio by
daybreak Tuesday and over pans of
northem Ohio during the day Tues·
day.
.
The preci pitation will change
back to snow over most of the state
Tuesday afternoon as colder air
wraps back into the region..
•
.It appears that northwest Ohio
will gen hc brunt of the snowfall
based on the forecast track of the

storm. Parts of west cenual Ohio
and the northwest afpear in line to
get 6 to 12 inches o snow. Four 10 .
!I inches appear possible over the
remai nder of northcr.n Ohio with
around 4 inches posSible over the
south toni~ht..
•
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Tmvelts h~ely to bel:o~e q~lle
hazardous tomght and ~mrun diffi.
cult over northern Ohm on Tues·
day.
.The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus. weather
station was 70 degre~s m J.954.
T~e record low. was- 4 '':' 1978.
Sunnse thts mornmg was at
7:25 a.m. Sunset will be at 6:07
p.m.
Around the nation
Snow fell from the Rockies to
the Great Lakes early today as win.

ter stonns moved across the nation.
Generally clear skies in the East
were expected to give way to
clouds today as the storm system
approached.
Up to a foot of white was
ex pected to fall in the Midwest.
Wmter storm warnings and ad~i·
sories were up today ·in parts of
Kan!as, Oklahoma and the Texas
panh~ndle/ w.ith heavy snow and
freeZing ratn likely. ·
Further south, tropical air was ·
expected to bring thunderstorms to
Louisiana and cast Texas. Some
tornadoes were possible by tonight.
Wit:tter storm :watc_hes were
posted .Lhrouglt tomght tn pans of.
Missouri; Illinois, Nebm~lca, Kentuclcy, Tenne ssee, Indt ana and
lower M1ch1gan.

~

Snow advisories were issued in·
the Rockies from Arizona to Mon~&lt;~na. Eastern Colorado and north·
cast New Mexico were under a
winter storm watch today.
Anmher blast of winter was
headed for the Pacific Northwest
today, bringing much colder tern·
peratures there.
Highs today were forecast to
range from the J.CCnS to below zero
in Lhe northern Plains in the 20s
and 30s across the rest of the north·
em tier and in the midwest in the
40s and 50s in much of th~ South
and parts of California, and in the
60s. and 70s along the Gulf Coast,
south Texas and the southeastern
United States.
The high temperature Sunday
for the continental United States
was 79 degrees at McAllen, Texas.

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Investigator: No profile of serial killer · --~

A few words on the economi-

lrleY

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Snow for~cast for most of Ohio tonight

OHIO Weather

.

Vis Associalsd Prsss GrapficsNet

------Weather----.
Soulh• Ce~tral Oh10

Extended forecast:
·
.
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of flurries northeast
B Sno~ tom~hl, he~vy at ttmes.
th:~ommg. mtxed ':"llh sleet a~d . Wednesday. Fair elsewhere. Lows
. changt~g to nun !!fOund mtd· mostly in the teens. Highs from the
m~ht. Low m the low~~ 30s early lower 20s north to tile lower 30s
wtth the tempenuure nsmg to near Sbuth
40 by daybreak. Southeast ~i':'ds
A 'chance of snow Thursday.
1,0 to 20 mph. Chance of prcctptta· Lows 5 to 15 above. Highs in the
tton near 100 .percent. Tuesday, · 20s.
occasiOnal _ratn. Htgh near 50.
Friday, a chance of snow. Lows
Chance of ram 90 percent.
15 to 20. Highs 25 to 35.

----Area deaths
Harland Aleshire

M

argare

t n H1
·r ,

·

d
Or en

Harland "Snalceman" Aleshire,
Margaret P. Harden, '90, two
Jr .. 57, of Bailey Run Road, year resident of Shepherd of the
Pomeroy, died ·sunday, Feb. 14, Valley Nursing, Niles, formerly of
1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospi· Colu!llbus, died Saturdily, Feb. 13,
tal. .
.
1993, ,at St. Elizabeth Hospi\al,
Born on Feb. 12, 1936 at Yolyn, Youngstown.
W. Va., he was the son of Harland
She was bom Feb. 17, 1902 in
· Aleshire, Sr: and Vonnie Jeffrey Clifton, W.Va .. dilughter of the late
Aleshire. He wail. a coal miner and John Murre! and Mary Margaret
a member of the Meigs County (Moody) Purdum.
&gt;
React C.B. Club.
She was a retired teacher f~om
He is survived .bY a daughter, the Columbus School for Girls, a
Wendy Lulcacs, Wtthman, W. Va.; member of Southeast Christian
two sons, Paul and James Aleshire, Church in Columbus, attended
Holden, W. Va.; five grandchil· Wooster College and Capital Unidren, two sisters, Carol McKenzie versity, taught the Anna Chamber·
and . Christine ·Reed, both of lin Sunday School for 60 yeari, and
Pomeroy, and a special friend, •was a member of Jolly Time Club,
Brenda J'empletori, .Pomeroy.
Eastern Star, i\ltri~ian Club, and
Besides his ~ts. ~ was pre- Chris~ans Women'.s Fello)"Shlp.
ceded· death by, a twin brother,
Survivors include one son,
Howard· Aleshire, and a sister. William P. Harden of Yorba Linda,
Loretta Burgess.
Calif.; one daughter, Mrs, Anne
. Graveside funeral services will Hale of McDonald; 10 grandchil·
be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the dren; and 15 great-grandchildren.
Highland Memorial Gradens,
She was preceded in death by
Chapensville. W. Va. Friends may her husband, Dr.ll. Cecil Horden,
call at the Ewing Funeal Home on Jan. 10, 1979. They were mar·
Tuesday· from 6 to 9 p.m . and for ried June 13, 1925.
one hour prior to ·the service at the • She was also preceded in death
·' by one son; Thomas E. Harden~ on
Highland Memorial Gardens. ·
May 22, 1978; two sisters; and two
Nathaniel E. Fink
,· brothers.
..
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday
Nathaniel Eugene Fink, 2 1/2

in

r3~~~~3.~~~~.!~ttoin, died Feb. ~e~~~~::~~~·

'

He pleaded innocent to two
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - · A When you meet them, you see right
man who helps investigate serial away why they are so suc'cessful. counts of aggravated murder in the
killings says people who commit They have an ~bility to put you at shooting deaths of Claude
· Hawkins, 49 ; of Mansfield, and
such crimes do not fit a specific ease immediately," i\nlcrOm said.
Bradley,
44,
of
profile.
Anlcrom, a special agent for the Gary
Larry Ankrrnn, an, FBI agent, FBI's National Center for the Anal· Williamstown, W.Va.
Ankrom said serial killers often
helped Ohio authorities investigate ysis of Violent Crime in Quantico,
the slayings of five outdoorsmen in Va .. helped Ohio authorities iri have no reasons for their actions
eastern Ohio. He said most serial their case against Thomas Lee Dil· other than it was something they
.
lcillcrs don't fit the profile imag- ton, 42, of Magnolia, charged in liked doing.
_'.'It's
fun;
it's
exciting;
it's
chal·
ined by the public.
the slayings of two outdoorsmen.
"These 80l people in our society Dillon also is suspected in three lcnging," he said. " What makes
at every level. They're bright; other deaths in the area, authorities them so disturbing is that they are
very indi scriminate who they arc
they're intelligent; they're funny. have Said.

Latest legislative assault on
drunken driving: Lower thresholds
Dy ARLENE LEVINSON
Associated Press Writer
Many state lawmakers are pandering social arithmet~ in the latest
round of legislative assaults on an
old menace, the drunken driver.
Bills inuoduc(\d this year in 31
stales reflect a push for more deter·
rents and stricter punishment for
intoxicated drivers.
The most common proposal is
lowering the intoxication level
froin 0.10 percent blood·alcohol to
0.08 percent- about a one·drinlc
difference. Another popular cause
is tighter penalties on young drunken drivers.
"It's reached a point where
most of the states have !13nctions
they consider reasonable and effcclive," said Jeanne Mcjeur, a policy
analyst at the National Conference
of State Legislatures in Denver. ·
"They're. saying 'We've.done
what we can without impinging· on
people's rights. Now what can we
do to get the problem drinker off
the road?' "she said:
State criminal code books .are
filled with fairly new anti·drunkcn
driving laws, enacted at a clip of
about 150 a year between 1982 and
1990.
, The years of new legislation,
combined with education programs, have changed altitudes and
driving bcha~ior to 'help cut the

bl~med

carnage
on alcohol.
In 1982, alcohol accounted for
57.2 percent of the 43,945 traffic
fatalities . Last year, drinking
played a pan in 46 percent of the
39,500 road deaths , according to
National Highway Traffic Safety
Adminislration estimates.
Washington state Sen. Adam
Smith has proposed a bill to let
drivers know they face harsh pun·
ishmcnt if they drive while drunk.
"We want to tell them : If you
get arrested you'll lose your
license. If you 'rc convicted, you'll ·
lose your license plates," he said.
· "And if you're convicted again,
you'lllosc your car."
The standard for legal intoxica·
tion in 45 states, 0.10 blood-;:llco·
hoi, 1ranslates for a 160-pound man
into five drinks within an hour on
an empty stomach.
·
More ,than a· dozen states may
lowc'r the lcgat definition of'dlunlc·
en ness - Pennsylvania from 0.10
blood-alcohol to 0.07, and 13 oth·
ers .from 0.10 to 0.08. Among t~e
five states alreadY.· set at 0.08 ·,s
Oregon, where a btll proposes low·
cring i~ to 0.04. .
.
,
Whtlc body stze, mctabohsm
and alcohol tolerance make it mis·
leading to say how many drinks
produce a 0.08 blood·alcohollevel,
research shows that level impairs
anyone's judgment and reflexes,

Vehicle struck by
deputy's cruiser

No one hurt· in two auto mfshaps

Home, with the .
Bor!l Nov. 21, 1992, at Holzer
Friends may call at the Wood·
Two wrecks with moderate left of center.
Medical Center in Gallipolis, he yard East Chapel, Columbus, on damage
10 ' two vehicles but no
The second accident occurred at
was the son of Charles E. and Sher- -. Monday from 24 and 7·9, and one injuries on
Satur~ay were investi·
5:15 p.m. at the intersection of
ric Lawson Fink.
, hour prior to services at Fisher gated by.Pomeroy Police.
West Main and Ebenezer. Joanne
Beside his parents, he is sur- Funeral Home. Burial will be li n
The first wreck occurred at ·Tatterson, 66, Pomeroy, was
vived by two ststers, Canney Ann Riverview Cemetery, Middleport . II :08 a.m. on Route 33 across from preparing 10 pull from Ebenezer
and Charley Nicole, both at home.
Donations. may be made to the
car lot ncar the corporation line. onto Main. Due to an obstruction
Also surviving are: maternal Woodland Parle United Methodist the
1981
truck driven by Mark she eased out of Ebenezer to check
A
grapdparenls Robert and !.ollie Churcli, McDonald, or to the Dlclcson,Ford
30, Marietta, was suuck traffic and in doing so struck a car
Lawson of Reedsville and JOhn and Southeast Christian Church in on the driver's side front by a 1986 driven by Lori Jordan, 26.
Shirley Dunlap of Williamstown, Columbus.
Chevrolet driven by ·Wells
There was moderate damage to
W.Va.; paternal grandparents
VanDyke,
74,
of
Stewan.
Dickson
both
vehicles, the driver' s side
William and Beab'ice Fink of Mi~­ Reta C. Lau~ermilt
was
traveling
west
on
Route
33
,
right
fender
and front area on the
dlepon; maternal great-grandparReta
C.
Laudermilt,
77,
o( when VanDyke pulled froin the car Tatterson car, and the passenger
ents Olive Lawson of Portland and
lotintothepathofthetruck ·
· side or the Jordan 1986 OldsmoGerald and Hallie Sellers of Beech Grove Rd .. Rutlan(l, died ·
VanDyke was cited for driving bile. There were no cilations.
Feb.
14,
1993,
atherremdcnce.
'
Pomeroy; paternal great-grandparA certified nursing assistant, she
ents Owen and Anna Fink of Mid·
dlepon; matemal grcat-grandmoth· was born Nov •. 23, 1915, in ,
.
· er Janie Congo l)f Middleport and Pomeroy, daughter of the late .,
Clarence
and
Marjorie
Smith
Bing.
;
special friends Paul and Avone)l
Evans of Racine.
Surviving are daughters Reba I
Services will be held II a.m. Board of Centerpoint and Edna
Tuesday at Ewing Funeral H~e King of Athens; daughter and son:
Carolene and Lee Bing of
,
with the Rev. Lawrence Bush offi. in-Jaw
Pomeroy· sons and daughters-in· .,. Twenty-one calls for assistanCe Beech Grove Road for Reta Laudciating. Burial will follow at the law Louis and Mary Uiudermilt of r were answered during the weelcend ermilt who was dead on arrival;
Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Pomeroy, Larry and Virginia Laud· ' by !lfe&amp; frrefighters and units of_the 3:26 a .m. Racine to Racine ' for
Friends may call Tuesday at the ermilt of Wilkesville, Ronald and Metgs County Emergency Medtcal Michael Champion who was trans·
'· funeral home from 9 a.m. unlit Cindy Laudermilt of Mason, Service.
·
·
ported to VMH; 5:55 a.m. Chester
funeral time.
,•
•w. va·. Donnie and Donna Lauder· , Saturday: 8:58 a.m. Racine to Fire Department to Baer Road for a
mllt o'f Rutland and Danny and · Bigley Ridge Road for Nathaniel suucture fire at the Paul Boer resi·
Karen Laudermill of Senecaville; 1Fink who w~ dead on arrival; 9:33 dence; 7:57a.m. Middleport to
'
28 grandc;hildrcn; 27 great-grand· .. a.m. Pomeroy _and Syracuse to Overbrook Center for Gladys Par·
children and 3 grcat-greal·grand· · Welsh. Town Ht.ll Ro.ad, Syracuse fait who was transported to VMH;
"
children.
transported. Justin ~hne to Veter· 10:38 a.m, Rutland to Pagevil'ie
She was preceded in death by: . an~ Memonal Hosptlal; 12:10 p.m. Road for Berlin Mullins who was
WQVS
husband Lewis Laudcrmilt; son Mtdd'leport to Park Street for transported t.b VMH; 2:50 p.llk
'J
Mark Laudermilt; two brothers and ' Naomi Hocher who was ~rt· Middleport to ~age SVcet for a
By The Auoelated Press
one sister.
· ed to VMH; 1:43 p.m. Mtddlepon motor vehicle accident, Barbara
At least a::rple liave been
services will be 'held 2 p.m. • to Overbrook Center for Maxine Coleman was trarisportcd to VMH;
· killed iii wee
traiTu: accidents, Tuesday at Ewing Funeral· Home' Philson who was lr~nsported to 3:23 p.m . .Middleport to Bailey
the State Highway 'Patrol saia Sun· with the ·Rev. Allen Blacklfood VMH; 5:S8 p.m. Mtddleport to Run Road for Harold Alshire who
day. ... ·
'.
ofrtclatilig. Butlal will folio~ at the • Mtll Street for Brenda Jeffers 'Yho was transported to VMH; 4:43p.m.
The patrol counts falalilies from Roc:k Springs Cemetery.
was -11'8nsported to Holzer Medical Middleport to Ebn Street for James
6p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday. ·
Friends may call from 2-4 p.m. -Center. ~:53 p.m. Middleport Fire Johnson Jr. who was transported to
The dead:
·
and 7·9 p.m. Monday a1 the funeral I?epanment ~squads to intersec· VMH; 4:47 p.in. Middleport to
SATURDAY
home .
·.
It on of Leadmg Creek Road and Fourth Street for Palty Shane who
Dave H
t'
'
Ohio 7 for motor vehicle accident, was ueaied and not -ft~"'""', 8
RA"'CL""""URO
Speak~~~3{. of Loadonberry:
transported Caroline McCoy to T p.m. Pomero7 to ~irl:;;ue
driver In 1 0110-~lcle acc:ldent on
•
HMC and Nancy Cole to VMH; for Oeorge Molpen wbo was trans··
1
Ohio 671 in Viilton County.
CLEVEL).ND (AP) - The !1:47 p.m. Middlcpon to Ohio 124 ported to VMH.
MEDINA- Stoll T. Rlaley, Super Lotto jackpot will grow to . for Joyce Farley transilorted 10
·Monday: 4:11a.m. MiddiQI!Oft
27, of Wadsworth, driver in a Ono- $16 million for Wednesday night's VMH; 9:49 p.m. Middloporl 10 to Fairlane Drive for Tim Bater
vehicle accident on a Medina Ohio Lottery drawing after no one Pomeroy NursinJ and Rehabllita· who was lrlllsported to VMH; 5:47
County road.
came up with all six numbers ltion Center for Vrrginia Phaliil who a.m. Salem Vol!lllteer Fire Depart·
FRIDAY
picked Saturday night with $12 was transp,orted to VMH; 10:43 ment to Painter Ridge Road for a
' p.m. MiddlepontoOverbrookCcn- sb'UCture ftre at DenniJ lWfc:Kinney
FAIRLAWN- Ruth B1811,47, million at stake.
hometown unavailable, driver in a
He~e are Saturday night's Ohio ter for Ada VanMeter whq was residence; 5:57 Lm, Rutland called
two-vehicle accident on ~ city Lottery ~elections:
transported to VMH.
to assistatiiii'Ucture fn on Painter
street In Summit County.
. , · Super Lotto: 1·2·13-14·21·29
, Sunday: !2:03 11.m. Rutland to Ridge Road.

A Middleport woman's vehicle
sustained light damage Saturday
evening when it was struck by a
Gallia~ounty Sheriff's Depart·
ment cruiser at the intersection of
State Route 160 and County Road
35.
According to a repon from the
Gallia·Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Pauol, Teresa R. Dunfee,
32, 462 S. Fifth Ave., Middleport,
was northbound from lhe drive to
Ohio Valley Bank and turned left
onto C.R. 35 when the tnlffic light
cltanged to green for lhe north ·
bound lraffic.
Dunfee was struck by a east·
bound marked sheriff's cruiser
driven by Michael V. Wells, 22,
2354 Georges Creek Road, Gal·
lipolis.. The cruiser, with its emergency lights activated, ran the red
light and suuck Dunfee in the right
fran~ the ropon said. The vehicle's
siren was not in usc.
No injuries were reported and
no citations were issued. ll\e cruiser sustained light damage. Both
veliicles were driven from the
scene.

M etgs
. squad S·answ
. er
21. weekend calls

' · k l"lled "
Th ree
O'n ·Oh WO

•
h
h J:g .

L

.

,

b·
·
0 tery num erS :

said Jim Fell, a science advisor at
the federal highway safety agency
in Washington,
Taking another tack, bills in six
states target drinking drivers under
21, threatening yearlong license
suspension and cummunity serviCe
if their blood-alcohol is 0.02 which results from about one drink
_or, in Indiana, o.or.
Ignition interlock devices,
which ·keep a car from starting if
drivers have alcohol on their
breath, are proposed as pan of pun·
ishment plans in seven states.
The drunken driver's debt to
society· would be added up in real
doltars under bills in Arizona, New
Jersey and Pennsylvania that would
charge drunlcen drivers for the cost
of police and medical rescuers.
So who would.argue with curbing drunken drivers?
Some believe enough already
has been done to combat highway
in10xication. South Dakota already
heard a few tliis session- a bill to
require !lrunkcn drivers to perform
community service died under the
weight of complaints it would bur·
den the bureaucracy.
· ..
And a bill to tower the bloooalcohol limit to 0.08 was thrown
out for being unfair to responsible
drinkers.

To meet Thesday
Chester Council 323 , Daughters
of America, will meet Tuesday at 1
·

~~~Th:il~~e~:S:n~a'!ti~m·

'

going to attack. They ' ll go into ·
mainstream America and snatch
somebody."
A c.ommon behavior among
seriallcillcrs is that many are abu· .
sive to animals: Ankrom said. ~
Many also are involved in arson-··
type fires, he said.
· •·.
Investigators found dozens of ..
horses and cows were killed in the , '
area of the outdoorsmen's slaying. "
Taskforce .members also are iilves- •. ,
ltgatmg Dtllon IR more than too·.
arson fires in five counties since ~:

1986.
'.
Information from Anlcrom's
interviews with serial killers is-:·
added in the Violent Criminal:
Apprehension Program computer. ~
The computer has information on ..
about 8,000 violent crimes.
.
New information can be cross· '
checked in seconds to see how ·it ·
may resemble another case in terms .
of method, time frame, victim, ;
weapon, geography and other evi.'
dencc.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday
' c'.
Admissions: Betty Frazier, Mid····
dlepon; Gina M. Philson, Middle· '•
port; Clifford Connoii.Y, Racine;
William C. Chapman, Pomeroy; · ~
Dortha Handley, Langsville.
·
Discharges: Ernestine Williams; •
Ruitand.
:·
Sunday
•
Admissions: Ada VanMeter,
Middleport.
·•
Discharges: Dorothy Ritchie,'"·
Racine.
.~.
HOLZER MEDICAL GENTER "
Discharges, Feb. 12 • Ross ...
H~mrick, Jonathan Skidmore, Ruth
Lambert, Betty Perry, Charles Mur--.:·
ray, Mrs. Bryan Wolfe and daugh- .
ter, Mrs. Terry Timmons and ·.
daughter, Mrs. Randy Wise and
son, Mrs. John Johnson and son,
Jessica Henry, Amanda Richmond, ..·
Margaret White, Jason Walter, .. •
Alexander Long, Goldie Smith, . •.
Shirley Mitchell, Anna Barnett,
Leslie Combs, Sasha Buttrick, ·.
Beau Adams and Omar Henry.
..,
Discharges, Feb. 13 • Juanita ·,;
Norman, Rober! Proffitt, Betty
Bush, Tensil Cllecsclirew, Helen ,
Cutlip, Mrs. Denny Lively and son, ..,.
Edith Basham, Mrs. John LeMaster .,.
· and son, Wanda Auxier, Frederick ~:
Morris, James Loar, Mrs. Daniel
Lantz and daughter, Okey Schar- .,,
tiger, Mrs. Steven Bachner and son, ·,:
Ray Chattin, Don Russell, Harold ..:.
Roof, Terry Dray, Mrs. Dwain
Edwards and twin, son and daugh- .,..
ter, an d .K y1e Dmy.
·"•
Births, Feb. 13 • Mr. and Mrs.
Barry Peters, son, Gallipolis.
Discharges, Feb. 14 • Nora i ~
Durham, Robert Caruthers, Wayne "·•I
Capehart, Amia Harkrader, Jeffrey - ·
Lindsey, Patrica Lee, Thelma • •
Rakes, Alice Thacker, Laura:.
.Melton, .Morris Ncwtzling, Goldie
W'll'
E h M · 1c R
1
tams, st er ustc • obcna .
CuUip, and Nettie James.
, .
Births, Feb. 14 • Mr. and Mrs. :·' ·
.
David Dcrcnbcrger, daughter. Point
Pleasant.
'· ·,

The Dilly
Sentinel
,,
(VBPIJia.a.l
Publi•hed ·
aRemDDD, Morully
Fridoy, u Coott S&lt;., •.,.
Ohio y the Ohio Valley PubliahiDI
Compan/./Maltimedta Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 46 88, I'll. 9flll-2166. cluo
poatap ~at Paiaw"', Ollio.

e.-e1

u.::-:

Member: The Allocialed Freoa, ondlllo
Ohio NewiiJIOtl: Allociatiorl, NoliCJftal
AdTif1latDa
prueatadn, Btaahaan
Newv:r,; Salu, 789 Third A...,..,
New
.-'11&gt;11t100t7.

POSTMA!II'IR: .... - . ...._ ..
The Dati&amp;.Sentinel , U 1 Coart St.,
p
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io.48719.
•
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�-

Monday, February 15, 1993

\Sports

ddleport, Ohio

The Daily. Sentinel
.

•

•

•

p

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

:~ Sout.h ern records 80-64 victory over Waterford in home g~me
By DAVE HARRIS
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium.
•
~nlinel COI'Tespondent
The Tornadoes jumped out on
; . Soul'hern (14 ~ 4) placed three top 20.13 at the end of one period.
.players in double figures and 10 in Southern held a 18-11 scoring
:the scoring column en route to a advantage to lake a 38·24 lead int.Q
·.80·64 victory over Waterford (9· the locker room at the half.
:·10) in non·conference basketball • It was more of the same in the
;action Saturday evening at the third period, as the purple and gold

held a 58·40 lead·heading to- the
final period_ Garrett 'Powers' Wild·
cats outscored Southern 24-22 in
the final period for the final 16
point margin.
Michael Evans led Southern
with 16 points, Mark Allen added

14 points, 12 of those coming from
three point range. Ryan Williams
added II points. Other Tornadoes
in the scoring column included
Russell Singleton with nine, Robert
Reiber added eight. and Mason
Fisher seven. Other Southern scor·

;'

11! the NBA •••

Ohio Conffl'tMfi

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allan II&lt; lliYioloo

Team
N,.. Yo.&amp;

W L Pd.
....... 32 16 .667

New Jc:ney ........29
8QILan
...........26

2l
22

.510

4
6

.Sot:)

13.5
IS.S

Wl,thington

17.5

..... ., IS

34

.306

Ccd.atville. 66, Tilr&amp;n S6
Moum Vemon Naun:ne 7S, Walsh .SI
IUo Gnnde 96,
71
ShaMIIIC Stl7,0hio o.:.ninican fiJ

I!-

--...:.:.···..... 33 11 .660

CLEy~u

.32 19
..........26 21
....••..... 24 2S

Chulouc
AtlanUI
lrwli.ln.a
........... 22 n
O...i1
............20 28
Milwaukee
....... 19 29

.6n
.SS3
.490

1.5
S.S
8.5

.449

.• 17

10.5
12

.396

13

Wrif'tt SL 9&lt;1, 111.-Chlco.. l l (01)

Non-confenna

Xa\llcr, otUo 5]o Dayu.a 46

Sou lit well

WilminJIIOn, Ohio 77. Mal..,. 6'
Midwest Division
W L PtL

San AniMi.o

Ullh
Houston
llen'ler

MWoooooa
Dallu

....... 32

14

.696

............ 31

Sunday's scores

17

.646

2

.571
.417

5 .5
13

........ 11 34

.244

20.S

............. .4 43

.085

28.5

Paclnc: Dhllloa
\0

.783

17
16
22

.64&lt;5

24

Oolden Stale .......22 29
....... 17 31

16.5
20

'
Sunday's scores
York 100 (3 OT)

O.ulotte 111, Detroitl01

New Jene)' 117, Mi..U Ill (OT)
LA. Clippon 96, I'Onllnd 16

IS . UNLV ............ ....... .16&lt;3

16. SetMHoll ............... ll~

17.1'itubtttJh ... ,........... IS-S
18. Tutono .................... IH

LA. l..U.m 13S, Atlmta 96

CoWcm Su.w 114, 't'uhin:Jtm 94

19. Moooodtuoato ........ t7-4
20.1owa........................ 1«
21 . New Odeans ..........,17-2
22. Lottio.W. .., ............ I...
23. Yirpnia .................. U ·S
2A. Marqueue ............... I7~
2S. S\. JoM's .............. .. l4-6

Monday's gam.S

S.cnm~m10 a1 O.icaao.

3:30p.m.

lndiml at Cl.EVELAND, 6 p.m.
Denvert~MWni.7:30p.ni .

Utah at Mitulaou, I p.m.
Oladaae at Milwaukee., 8:30p.m.
San An~o at L.A. Clippers, 10:30

p.m.

Tuesday's games
DaUuatNewYork,.1:30p.m.
MilWaul•atNew lflfKy, 7:30p.m..
·Odando at .Detroit. 7:30 p.m.
AUiaddpti.iaat HouiWWI, 7:30p.m.
Bo.ton ac Pbocni.Jr;, I p.m.
Wuhinp at Sean~. I 0 p.m.
San AnLDnio at Oolden Slate, 1'0 :30

24
1.5

0\'ffall
W L
15 5
18 6
11 9
10 10
9 11
8 12
10 13
713
713
7 13

801\00 U. 82, Maine 73
Bmwn.72, Harvard 71

B..&amp;nell82,Anny63
Bufl'alo 14, Cent. Conncicticut SL 57
Columbi171, Princt:~m 69
C(Winoc\icut 88, Miami 12

••

..
..

Non-oonfertMt

Miami, Ohio 6S, IDinoit SL 55

'..

Sunday's score

Toledo 1t AkrtJn.
Bowlin&amp; &lt;men at Ball St.
E. MichiJan at Kent
Ccn.L Mich.isan" Miami
Ohio 1t W. Michigan

...,...
·'

•· Ohio college
· baskelball scores

(01)

Rider 67, st Fnncit, Ps. 63
Sel.on Hall6S, Yillancwa 59 (OT}
SL John's 65, Boston Callege 61
Temple 79, Wat Virginia62
Tow1011 St. 98, RAdford 90
Wapr ~. Morvnou\h , N.J. S9
Yale Sl, Dartmouth 42 (011

'

Men-Saturday's aollon

•·

BlaTen
Michiaan SL 11 , Ohio St. 66

Creal Mkhnsl Confuence
CinciM.tti 64, SL l...ou.is 39

·'

Mid-Continent Conference
Ocvdand SL 76, E. Illinois 75

C
an

..

W. lllinoil 92, Youn1:stown St. 78
Wria}a SL 96,111.-chicaso II (01)

·'·'.

North C011t Confertnee

.

Ca~e~

Racrve 75, Eartham .S9
Wiucnbeza 113, Oberlin 41
WOOI\cr 83, Ohio Waleyan. '7!i

.

..·,

..-·•
...•••.
•'

..
,·

.•,

-•••

..
•
•'
,..•'

I'

••'

:·
•
•,.
••

.

I

Ohio Conftrelltto
Capital65, Baldwin· Wallace 41
Hiram 14, Mlricua 70
Heidelbcra 81, Musk~~ 77 "{011
Ohio NoMcm 61, Mount Union 46
o...t&gt;oin I OO,Iohn Cam&gt;1196 (01)

Crnt Lak• Vallej Conrrrence
WPV·Ft. '-":aync 89t. Ashland 60

Mid-Ohio Confll'tfttt

Ttlfin 99, CedoMtlc !I (01)

Uiban·a 91, R,io Gran4c II
Walah U, Mou• Vcman Numno 7l

70

' SundaJ'• action

Mld-AIM'Ieu Cenrt~
Miami.OUoS9,0hloU. S4

Womn-S.turday•s scores
Mld~lan

c.nrrnnce
0...11, Katt 71 (01)
Mlonll.lllllo 76, Ohio ..

•

: JIIWtll c.ut C•'*'"'ee
-10.-JS6
011io w..,. 61,W- 52

Aorido St. 17, Mo;,lond S.
CeotJ.i.178, Ti!Aas10
Ocoraia SL 100, Ste~~m. 19
J.cbon St. 83, Alcorn St. 69
James Madiaon 99, William &amp; Mary
LSU 75, Allbum 73
Matshalll5, W. Carulinl81 (01')
Md.·E. Shote69, Dclaw~ St. 6S
Mot= 93, Ccntcmry 82
Miooioappi 9$, 0n1 Rot&gt;ato 79
Miaillippi SL 83, S011~ Carolina 63
Mmbead St. 92. SE MiiiGUri U
N. C1mllna St. 14, Tc:nneuoe 12

N.C. OaadeK~al4 , Va. C'..omrnonwuM

19

Colt.

of

NE Louil:iaM 94, Sl.ePhcn RA1.11tin 74
NW Louili.au 11&lt;4, liM Houlton St.
•
a ; - S., Olol DootUolon 10
S. Coroliao Sc. 72, N. C...tlno Alt.T

61
SW l.CIUilianall, Lauidana Tlldl 59
South Aorida 17, Virainia TICh SO

Tn.·Oiauanooaa 93, VMI 10
Vlllderbilt 11, Middle Tenn. Sl
Virs)nia 83: Clemson
Wake Forat 91,1Aake 86

7•

Mldwesl.

Ala.•Binninahm'l44, ~eu 38
Bott .So.S., C.... .... 1
Bowliq o.- .,, Katt "' .
CincirNii M, 1&lt;. Lottio 39

.

37

110; Libmy Union

C..~.W.I05,El,.;a69

C.. Catltolic 77, 0.. VA-5165

36

..

.

.
a.. South"" ~2.

a-.

s-.. 30 ·

Col. ...... II. Col.
61
ColdW11c:t I.S; Sc. Henly 29
·
CollinW'OOd 44, Beachwood 34
CO&amp;hocton 65, SL CWrmU. 60 1
Cre&amp;wood 11, Windham SS
Dot... •s.s.-.£.37
Dutville S6, Mlnd'dd St. Pitas 35
!loy. Cmol141, T - 31
!loy. Chriotion 61, ~While 4S
0.)'. Nor\hmont 46. O.y. OlarnWdcjuli"""' .I
.
Oclaw... 43, r.tat)'IYillc 41 ·
llov..
Philoddprua 28

El '

a.. HoiaJu 7S. r:....;, Mninl Kina
.

.'

w_,.,s5

"'·Now

SS,Lanin~30

Far::!nb 49, Rid~ oM
Fa~m. 69, Spfin&amp;. Calh.. 49
Fainicw S3, Rocky Ri¥cr 31
. F'ldd 46, JloouLOWn 40
Findlay S3, l..ancutll' 44
F'u.hcr Cath. 34, FairfiCld Union 32
Fon Frye 61, Marietta 62
FrcdcricktoW'rl .S6, Riverdale SO
Garaway .S8, Malvern 35
Or.nd Vall. 56, Fa~ 22 •

'

Otmd\liew 42, Cal lbhlc)' 31

OnnYillo63. Lickio&amp; VoU."
OR~Cra 52. Tallrnadao4S

On&gt;c:noviow 53, Woohin- 0131
Orov• Ci1y 57, Otov&amp; Porl4S
lli&amp;h4nd 57, Rcv.ft 52
Jowou·Scio 52, Stn"""J.41
1o1m Olena. 55, CroobYille 2S
01)Kidron sa. Cuyottoao
ss c2

Colonel Crawlor4 71. ·
e 51
Ctatvicw 66. Wa)'DCTrac:e S2

~~ ~~.n:~~·;~

v.u. a...

Doy. -..6S,FoUI&gt;om4S
Ddlonoo? I, m.o.y 5S
Ddpho. Jeft'enon 77, FOI\ JCIIUlinp .56
Eaten 69, Tri Cowny N. 60
&amp;ton &lt;IS,Aitl""'P 43 (01)
FairfWd 6!,Fai.ancd .C7
Fairpor\ Hanlin&amp; 64, Clc. Lud!.cnn E.

20

Labwood 72. Shsbr Hu. 32
London 62, Sprin~,Norlh- SO
Lorain Admirll Kinp sa, Lorain Sr.
U..in Calli. 63,

MI'Ve 41

Fon RocovS) 69, Aaoonia 65
Franklin 63, Mlddlcown MadiiOI'I 60
(&lt;71')
•
Fndaici.wwn 61, Man&amp;field SL Pr:wn

34

H~o~dlon

Senior Vema Compston playing
in her last regular season game
poured in 20 fourth-period points to
lead the Marauder comeback. She
hit four shots from three points
range and went eight for eight from
the line in the period ..
The Marauders were facing a II
point deficit with a minute to go
whel! Verna bombed two three
pointers to cut the lead to fiye.
Younger sister Vanessa then .got
into the act by drilling a three 'and
suddenly it was a two.point contest
After a missed Buckeye shot
Vanessa was fo.ulcd with nine seconds left in regulation. The sOphomore calmly walked up and hit
both free throws to force the overtime.
Meigs received a bad break in
the overtime when Vema.hit both
ends of a one-on-one with nine seconds left. But the officials waived
the second one .off on a question.
able lane violation call on Meigs.
· That set the scene for Crawford's
heroics. ·
Crawford led all scorers with 30
points, she was joined in double
ligures by Undscy Shumway with
17. The Buckeyes hit 26 of 62 from
the floor for 42% and hit 14 of 31
from the line for a cool 45%. Nelsonville had 33 reboun'ds led by
Christina Wnrrcn with eight
Vema Compston led Meigs with
29 points, Lori Kelly added 15 and
Vanessa Compston added II.
Missy Sisson
seven for

O..oo "· Elm..X.. S2
Oilmout67, lAo COih. 31
Onndview 59, ~Reedy 41
Gnnville 62, Uc:kina. VaD. 36

a..cnm... SO, E. l.'!iotoo 46

a-villo S2, s.. ...,.. .,
Onwo PM 90. !.apt..,
lbwkat 72, 0.. U.lt.no W. 69
Heritoao
7S, m,.;. 0pon Doo.&lt;ll
llillodok..,, Now'- 3/1
llilttap ~ Mon ;diL oM
.
Hollondelw. 571~-{Po.)Co. S.

a...

SOUTHERN
(lP·lll-20-22..80)
•
.Mark Allen 1-4-0=14, Ryal(
W1lhams 1-2-3=11. Jeremy Dill 10-2=4, Michael Evans 5·1·3=16;
Andy Grueser 0-0-4=4, Trenion·
Cleland 2-0.2=6, Robert Rieber 4.:
0.0:8, Jamey Smith ().0-1=1, .Rus:
sell Singleton 4-0-1=9. TOTALS·
- 21·7·17..80
.

Jacbon ~59, Berlin w..~em . .

THIS WEE

GAMES
EASTERN EAGLE.S

Meigs .
(7-13·8·35'6=70)
•
Verna Compston 2-4·13=29 ;
Lee Henderson 1.()-0=2, Lori Kelly;
5-0-5=15, Katrina Turner 2-0-Q..4,:
Missy Sisson 3-0' lz'7, Amber;
Blackwell · 1·0-0=2, Vanessa·
Compston 3-1-2=11. Totals -11.:
5·21:70 .

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

SOUTHERN

. Nelsonville
(11·20·21·11·7=71)
Sarah Ogg 1-0-0•2. Susan:
Crawford 6-4-6=30, Jill Shafer 1-1·:
0=5, Christina Warren 2·0·2=6 ·
Lindsey Shumway 8-0-1=17:·
Heather Gat! 2·0·1=5, Melissa.
White 0·0-2=2, Denna Blackburn
1·0·2=4, Totals.-ll·S-14=71

OES

BOYS
~ FEB•.19 - Fe~eral Hocking - Ho•e
FEB. 20. - Trim.le - Away.
.,

IGS MARAUDERS
'

FEB. 16 - Vinton County- Ho•e
,

GIRLS
.
.
Finished Regular Season With 16·4.Record
'

'

JOHN A•.
. EAR· NOSE ·THROAT •
ALLERGY

1.992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. 8-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-AT ATHENS
DEC, 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 1.8-PELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL: HOCKING
JAN. 9-ATHENS .
JAN.12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-ALEXANDER
JAN. 16-I:IUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN. 1~AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER '
JAN. 26-NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB .. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-50UTHERN .
FEB. 16-VINTON COUNTY

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7-VINTON COUNTY .
DEC. 10-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-AT MILLER
D!;C. 17__:BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9--EASTERN
JAN. 11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 20-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

BOARD CERTIFIED
SPECIALIZING IN
•ADULT &amp; PEDIATRIC
ALLERGY
•HEA.RING ·AIDS
•RECURRENT EAR
INFECTIONS IN CHILDREN
•ASTHAM
•HEADACHES
•RUNNY NOSE
•SNORING
•MANAGEMENT OF SKIN I
FACIAL LESIONS
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT
ACCEPTED

1

675·1244

Suite 112, YaDey Dr.,
Pt. Pleasa11, WY.

®~~· ·
When! America Goes 'R&gt; Rebx·

~nt•1r

t:or Just Pennies A Day.

BAUM LUMBER ,

QUALITY PRINT ·sHOP
255 Mill St.

Middleport, Oh•
992·3345

1

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
'AND RADIO SHACK
106N. 2nd

I

Middleport, OH.
992·2635

WONm Rc-

Bank

Announcements.

3 CONVENI,ENT LOCATIONS

1121

WILL .,All CIRI OF ALL
YOUR I.IURAICE .liDS

DOWiiiNG·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
111 SECOND AVE

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

::~:~~~ /K//ljf-0.~
. . 992·543_.2
1

POMEROY
992·3381

POMEROY

&amp;

SIGH EREaiON

VALLEY LUMBER

555 P•rk St..

.

. .llleport, Olllo

FISHER FUNERAL HOME

,,
P. O.Box 683

• P011ero ·, Ohio 45769

FISHER- OwHr/Operetor

.
.
Prescr.lplaon

' .

•

Sllop

-"1,

SW..,63.....

a.,..,
52

,..L_US,I,~SI

_..,

...,... 37,11olpo 21

0

...

'l1laalll

21

.

.Lob.w.

w....... "·Cal w......

TOll. ~ 37,1lao"""'

_.-......._

(614) 992-6451

JUST DO IT.

,.~a14.c:.arvw.:n
lho•4l. a...lool lila. • 2
I!Wooc4 P~ 601
Sl

s.a ·

r;..:::

li::;==~====~========:==l'. ~,=~=.=AI:DI:A:IL::::::::::::::PH:ON:E::~=============~=.;~====~

=

--71

G:J-·

SECOND STREET JACKSON AYE.
5TH STREET
·
Pt. Pleasaat, W. Va. New Haven, W. Va.

p:; ::.'"f:..all....... ~~

~Sl,PU&lt;-W.Vo.32

'

Peoples

When The T"rme ComfiS ..• See Us
For Your 1993 Graduation

32
Clpa 0.... !56, Canoiot llortlop 43
,....!1&amp; mudt8

Libony a - 10, aldiiln,.
LibonJC-65,-41
Limo Cath. 6S,I!tiola 45
. Limo Pony 71, Allort E. S3
Limo Sha- 62.C.W- St
Liulo Mlomi 6 1 . - - 59
J....ondon 66. I ak Wuad 59

0

WADE, M.D. INC.

:;:;;;;:n:: so,-:~ a...

""'""' Ridoo 67,.,....- 62

.

NOV. 30-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE.-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21- AT FORT FRYE
• DEC. 23-AT TRit./IBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 20-MEIGS
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK ·
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB.4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

-64.~5()

Jol&gt;..-.81,-59
KontR-75, Cotllo...... 119

1992 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN
· DEC; 12-MILLER
DEC.18-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC.19-UNIOTO
·.
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE-At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. 30-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. ~ASTERN
·
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-.JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 3G-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH .CLAY
FEB•.12...AT MEIGS
FEB. 13-WATERFORD
FEB. 19-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 20-AT TRIMBLE

'

GIRLS
FEB. 15 • Symmes Valley -,Jway

BOlS

NOV; ~AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3--FAIRLAND
DEC. $-UNIOTO - 1:00 p.m.
DEC. 10-AT WATERFORD
DEC.12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14--AT BELPRE
DEC.1 7- TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
JAN. 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 8-AT MEIGS-3:00p.m.
JAN. 11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAL 'HOCKING-1:00 p.m.
JAN.'2t-WATERFORD
JAN. 23--MILLER - 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. 1~AT SOUTH POINT

SOIJftiERN

BOYS
FEB. 16 - Federai·Hocking - Home
FEB. 19 - Fairland .;. Home
·

.

.

'"'..... Caih. 61, Cot ...., 56
Newbor) &gt;65, ar~aot 40
~WAiiopniUMl ~ c,id...U 43
-SJ.Ihoak.w.52

.....42
hfi.....,IOI,-10
.
J•-~Scial6, Uloan N. S6

•

FEB. 15 - So~th Point • A~ay

Meigs, Kauina Turner added four
and Lee Henderson and Ambei
Blackwell added two each. Meig!{
hit 22 of 62 from the floor for 35%&gt;
and added 2·1 of 30 from the line
for 70%. Mei$S had 27 rebounds.
led by Kelly w1th 12, Vema COf!Jpston added nine and Turner seven.
Meig~ won the reserve contest
by a score of 34-27. Melissa Clif·
ford led Meigs with II. Angie
Phillips also had II for Net!
sonville.

19'92·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 5-AT MILLER.
DEC. 1FAT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC.18-WATERFORD
DEC.19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 8-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT ·
,JAN. 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 26-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN: 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12-AT WATERFORD
FEB: 13-HANNAN, WV•
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

GIRLS

N"'~S9,-SI

MU.&amp;cr 56

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE .

WATERFORD
(13·11·16-24=64)
.
Tyson Powers :2-0·2=6, Greg
Doak 2-0-0=4, Ed McCutcheon 7.
. 2-6=26, Tony Schwendemann 3-32•ol7, Chad Ponchak I '0·0=2,•
Steve Miller 2·0·0=4, · Kenfey: ·
Schwendemann
2-0- 1=5: •
TOTALS ..,.19·$·11=62

l..ordiLown 43, Berlin W eACIIII ~•

sl

EAGLES

Southern will host Federal
Hocking on Friday evening before
heading tQ Trimble to close out the
regular season on Saturday.

Manafadd Madison SO, MaliiWI Hanl·
ina n
.
Ma&gt;JuotlO oil, Bo&lt;koyo c.u..t 37
Manm. Aouant 72. N. Union 67
~~ IS, M;dpak 33
Miamisbl 61, Cldiale 60
Midviow
N. RUtaovillo ss
Millbtory Lake ••· O'ok !!arbor oM
Minsut 67, FranJdin. Mmroe 42
N. C'"""' 63, Cootan S. 39
N. Cattnl Sl, 16olmoillo 39
N. OintolooiS:J."""""':M •
N. R.,ot""' Sl,
31
NoioonYiiJa.Yaot&lt;71, . 70(0f)
Nowlloat&lt;»62,
,K,. 61

Oollipollo 71 , Wtto.1mbtq 60
0.1a Milh Oilmow: 67, Mc:rnor Lab
C.th. 31

I

Kevin Turley added 12 . Shawn
Hice led the Wildcats with 24.
'
The I 933 Racine basketball
team that advanced to the state
tournament was alw'reconized Sat·
urday. Th~ last three surviving
members were present and were
presented plaques. They were Clif"
ford Hill, Jack Sargent and Bill
McKelvey.
··

Nelsonville-York
hands Meigs 71-70
defeat in overtime
By DAVE KAR~IS
Sentinel j::orrespondent
Susan. Crawford hit a sbort
jumper jn the paint with four seconds left in overtime to Nel·
sonville-York a heart-siopping 71, 70 win over Meigs in girls TVC
basketball action Saturday evening
at Buchtel.
Crawford's bucket overshadowed a stunning comeback from
the Marauders to force the over
time. Nelsonville .headed into the
final period with a 52-28 lead but
the Marauders came storming back
to outscpre Nelsonville 35·11 in
the period tO force the overtime.
With the loss·the Marauders finished in a second place ti~ with
Nelsonville-York with a 12-4 conference record. 'The Marauders finish with ·a 16-4 mark overall.

1192~1118

..

Loudonville 61, Marion Elp. 43

ss

==~£.o&lt;-er.= 11

43

Carroll 41, Tecumteh 31
Cootorl&gt;uiJI 7J, Johnaowo 45
CenterVille 5J, Di.Uc S2
Claymorn 74, Clrroliton 56
Oe. Luthcttn W. 42, Cle, S\. l0111ph
Ooverte~r 61, Brtcbvillo 46

72(01)
• .
.
Clc. Nmdl- 52, Fu- l6
Clc. St. lpd.u 70, Wunn Hardin&amp;

Lcnlo.
n , w.' '7il:,~.,
Lou4anri111173,
LouiPillo S4,
&lt;llooOttt 52

BucUJcVaU. S6,Bia Walnut39
Can~e~~ C11h. !7, AkrOn Eima 26
Cmton OlcnOak 42. Union&amp;own. I..&amp;ke

CanWWI McKinley 41, MuliDon Jade-

Cin. Widuow 13, Day. Paa.tam S6

c-.

.
Athena (IJ,Circlcwille 41
Avon Lake S4, Weala.ke «&gt;
Ayomillo 73, MilltorCily S4
62, Port Clin.... 60 (011
Boniomio 1.opn sa. Ri•...ut. 20
Wo,llilon&lt;f 66, llMJte....,j ss
Baudinan 66, Alliii'IC:e 40 .
B...t1,..2,Hawt•2l

• 101'1

6' a...pookc 79, "'"""""" s.. '"""'
Oaahhc River Vall.~. Fairlmd 60
Cin. N. COIIcp Hill 66, Cin. Seven
·. HilkS2

JactiOil Ccrtw OJ,

Glrii-SaiWday
Ccnt-Hoo;or 4 0 , - &amp;..tht&lt;l

Bucl&lt;•yoTni153, a.....,, Loootoil

"'-"mll.VoiLV..,.59
Aldlbold. M, Tinon 49
BoyS., Otmot.ot F.U. 35
a..u..ur. 61, Sltod,.;M S7
Belloito 7~, St. Cbiis.;&amp; 68
- 6 2 , Pon Cl1otao 60 (&lt;71')
llt&gt;&lt;byo !56, Blaok tu.. 33
a...uy. c-.t 65, Luou 60 (01)
c.- CotiL 12, El,.U C.th. 71
CW...=7S,:1:; Doo.oll
~Po ...~&gt;IO (2&lt;71')
CentsWJe II, Troy Sl

52

-

a.......,. 46. u..... 42.2 or

CoL Tree Dl ute S4, TpJ;C:Z· 39

. N.C.·Oro•naboro 70,
CharlMOn 51

Noa-conremtee
Qarioa M, Lake Erie12
l'indlo1 101, h!;onopalio 19
MJ.ni. Ohio 65, lllinoU St 55

au."· Ohio s.

Cot Hutloy 69, Baloy 63
Col. ...... 60, z.-.illo 5S

Fb. lntemalion.ll!lil, Samford 47

Ohio DorniniCIIn 61, Shawn• St. 51

.. 92

Cotc.n....w~.Cot.

Charleaton Southern 91 , N.C.·
A•heville 12
Ci ~o~dci7S, A~lachian St. 71
Coa~tal Carolini_74,Win\hrop 70
S.. 93, Aori&lt;lo AolM 70
Oavad101'176, fum"Jin 64
E. Kcmucky 91, Mumy St. 82
E. Tenneu.eo St. 93, GcoiJia Southern
81 (01)
Eul Carolina 81, Ocorae Ma10n 51

Wilminpn 71. BIWfton 63

39

M-

""-'~

Youna. Mooney S5, Steu.bcnville46
YCIWIJ. Unulil\e st, Warren Kennody
ZanCIIYillc Rosec:nn~ 65, Caldwell !56

Ohio high school
basketball sc'ores

(01)

Mideast ConftreMt
Def'uncc 13, Tham•• More 13

41

.
Mcatpltil SL 79, ll•P•uHi
Nottlt CotOiina 77, o.q;. Tooh 6tl
UT-Chot-13, Moattoll69
w. Coio11no·a.. VM1 St

C1.c.. Univ«&lt;ity 16, Whec:lin&amp; (W.V1.)
Lind,60
Col. ~T 61, E. ICDoz &lt;II
.

Alabtma St. 86, Soud!.em U. 82
Adunus SL 86, Jacksonville 73
A~KLin Puy 61 , Tenn.·Mntin 59
Bcdn~ne-Cookman 103, Morsaa St.. 93

.

w0011« 12, Mandi.dd Madison 57

E. Tennc.oo St. 76. Ci&amp;ldcl54
o.o.p Soutltom 92, Al't'"l"""" St

·Jndiaa 93. -

T~w 53, Del&amp;oin 4l

u ..... 63, Sprina. Shawn• so
VoacryO... lOO,Cotvaryllopdl
W. a.- Lokoto 16, Tolow.... S9
WolohJ..Wt 79, 010nol76 (01)
WuhinJLOn CH 12.Paint. Vsll. 65
W1Wnl Manorial61, Tea11 V.U.. 41
Wawconll.Ouctoll
·
Wlvcdy70,AU.C.M
Wolloton II,Jockson69
Wectlab J7, AVGn Lake 36
. Willard 75, Shclby~.59
.
W'&gt;lmin
S3, Kinas 51 .
W~ 82, Barnea¥illc 5S

Sot! tit

61

!?'Pr"'

Allqhm1 67, Deni&gt;on 56

.•

'I

Sunda~ octloa

South

Colkgiak conrenntt
X1vicr, Ohio 53; Dayton 46

T........t&gt;50,11dlofoottaino47
Tot. S...t 60 0 Aiot (Mi&lt;h.) Northom

H.owoii
Ullh St.
Santa Barban"7S
(&lt;71')
W!'hin .... S.. 97, Arilaoo St t&gt;1

Al1bama 93, Arll1n111 12

Mkl._.~ttt~

St. Xa~ .Sl,lliJhlmcla 48
Swan~an.51, Br,-anSS

&lt;au"" 62, 77, UC60

41

Md.-Baltitnore &lt;anty 90, Liberty S.S
Mount St. Mary's, M4. 96, Robcn
MonU7.S
Nisllrt9l, SL P«cr'1ll
Northealtcrn 73, New H.mtr-hire 4S
Penn 66, Comcll6.1
ProviderK:C 68, Ooorpown SO
Rhode ldand 83, SL Bonaventure 11

Wednesday's eomes

N.........,.S6
Sprinaboro 61, Mum 59
SL Hauy ~.Von Wat 59 (2 01)

.......... 63,Soltm4S

Mauachuscus 68, Oecqc Wuhina~Gn

65

Shaker Uta. 15, Padua13
Sprina. Northwestern S9, Sf'l'i.na .

Santa C.. 63, ~ Sl
Soutltcnt Co169,
S..·60
UC Irvine II, Cil L·Fullcnon 16

u

E. 63, Norwalk SL Pau160

..... &lt;19

Now-76, W,......60
New~ Sl. 60, San J010 St. SS
Son DJoao 59, Lo)'Oio ~~sa
Son Fruiaoco 94, P&lt;tttlond II

Manhattan 75, CanWus SS
Marill79, SL Fnncis, NY 62

Miami, Ohio 59, Ohio S4

Son~

$had'Jiido 76, Hud10ao Wca&amp;em Re·

tdoboS..94, w. . $1. 19
'"""'S&lt;. 91. No..d,112.
M.....,61,lolaho65
Maowta St. 73, E. Wu!On.... Sl

Lone lolond U. 76, FWieiaJ&gt; Dick"""'

73

S. C.o.- SE'i2, Woynoi~·~

S.W-73,&amp;.vcrl!ul0m61
Sandullly Petkins 10, Elyria W. 68.
Sond1 Voll. U, C...OW.. V.U. 56

r.....m....

La Salle 88, Buller 66
Laflyeue 6S, Nny 60

.

Preble Shawnee 12, Twin V1Uey S. 75

Rl&lt;ine Southetn 84: Watterford 64
Rocky Rivcr75, Fairview 38
Ruuia 60. Corina!Oft So4

Bo,..SalunloJ

Dcbware. 81, Vennom 73
Imu1 76, Hottfoai 71 (01)
Evan1Yi.Ue 74, Duqua:nc 71
Fairfield 6t,l.Dyof1, Md. 51
fordham 93, Lehiah 74
Holy Cn:al ,91, Cciiple 9.S
lena 18, Sien1 13

Bowlin&amp; Green 49, ~ 48
Ball SL 84, Cent. Michipn ll
E. Mic!tip'165, Toledo .SO

.

UCU97,~90

EaO!

.J.so

Pottamc"nh Notte Dame 5S, Sympte&amp;

v.u... '

Far Wilt
Colllooniol6, St...roni 61
Louimllo 90,1JNLV 16

American U. 106, N.C.·Wilrnin&amp;t.on 99

.3W
.3W

-.outh E. 69, Minfonl64

F.. w...

Miomi.

Saturday's action

Pet.
.750
.7SO
.550
.500
.450
.4110
.409

Polum:oulh Cay 79,ltonton SL Josepft
43

Ro- 90, S.. kocpt'oll

Other reulvlna votes: Briah1m.
Youna 16, Oklshoma ~."A VIER.,
OIDO 52, lllinois 41, Mem~is St. 41,
Oklaham1 S\, 29, Ncbnlka 25, Boston
CoiJep 22. ~ Tom lll, N•• Mm·
. co SL 19, Michipn SL 17, M:inncllcu 10.
New Muico 9, Syracuse 9, Southern
Mdh. I, Ocorp. Wash.inJIOn 1, LSU 6,
W. Katttu:l&lt;y 6, MIAMI, OIUO 3, JUc. 3,
Wiscon~in 3, Kansas SL 2. Alabama 1,

w. Michipn 60, Akron 44

•.••

191 '
178
111

In the MAC ...

•

••

13
25

Pickainaton 74, Reyncidsbura ss

Air Fcwce 61, p_,. St. Sl
AriEma 11, W=h'np-72
lloioo S.. Sl, N. """""45
Bripom y._lsiO.Soo~Sc. 73
cs NaWidp ' • . IJtolt 6J
CokaoloSt.l2.
77
'Ooctuu79,StMary'o,Coi.SS

'

Saturday's scores

•

3%
278

Palrioll Hauy 57. Holptc43

68

19

National college
basketball scores

Conf.
W L PeL
Miami .............. lO 2 .833
Ball St. ..............9 3 .150
w.Mid&gt; ............ i 4 .6!&gt;7
Ohio ..................7 S .513
BGSU ................ 6 6 .SilO
Tolodo ............... 6 6 .SilO
E.Mich. ............ .S 7 .417
Kent SL ............ .4 8 .333
C. Mich .... ......... 3 9 .250
Akran .... ........ ,... 210 ,167

•

11
20
22

226

w.,.......

u.
_ _l_.... Ott&lt;willo62

Tulsa 95, Date 12
W. K..twc:k'/ 91, Tau-Pan American

12

Manhauan 1, NE Louisiana 1, Washita&amp;·
tonSt. lr .

Team

'

SSI
531
529
%7
4SS

p.m.

Atlanta •• Pottland, 10:30 p.m.

65

Lut
Tum
W-L Pu. Week
l. lndian1 {59) .............22·2 l,..S21
I
2. Kcnwcky ................. t8·2 1,351
2
3. NollhCo..W... (1) ... 20-3 1,341
6
4. ArizMo (1) .............. 17·2 1.305
5
S. Mioltil"' ... ............. 19-4 I ,281
4
6. Konooi ..................... 20-3 1.27S
7
7. Ou.lle .................... :... t9-' 1,132
3
8. CINCINNATI ......... 19·2 1,114
I
9. Aori&lt;lo S.. ................ l9~ 1,064
I0
10. WakeForat ........... l6-4 1,029
9
II. Vandcrbilc .............. 19_. 929· J1
12. Utoh ........................ l9·3 7~
16
J3. Ati.aru:•a................. l~S 69S
14
14.1'urtluo .................... IS·5 565
II

Saturday's scores

1~ No~

Tcr.u·Arlin,SJOn71,r.kNeenSL 75
Tau-San Ani.Onio 67, SW Tuu Sc.

raniina:

H011Mn 97, Minncsot. 18
CLEVELAND 116, Chiuao 111
PhiWielpbi~ 119, Dallu 96
San Ansanio 90, B011an 15
Mllw.W.ce 117,lndiana li.S
Denver 123, Wuhinai.OI'I 104
Allonta 121, IJIOh Ill
Se~ttle 95, ~oenU. 94
Goldaa Sl.* 111, Sacnmerno II 0
Ozbndo

The Top 2.5. teams in The Auoclatod
Prcu' colleac buk.Clblll poll. wiLh first·

pointJ for a fint·plaee vote lhrouah one
point for a 25Lh·placc. ya~.e; and previous

125

.~

Nicholls Si. 19,NonhTeauTI
Oklahoma ll,lowa St. 77
Oklohomo St77, Coiondo S9
1Ucc61, Teus Cbrillian SO
TQ.u Soulhcm 69, Mill. Valley St. 6t

pla ce Yotel in parenthcaca, records
lhrou&amp;h Feb. 14, IOU! poinu buod on 25

6
6.5
11

.644
.542
.SIO
.431

AP Top 25 college
basketball pOll

White

O.....Citr. 69,1Ads;•S.
Ozoaon C.y 61, An
Wayno 60
Omillo
3

Ark.·Ualc Rock 85, South Alabama
lb)'kw90, Tc..u~ AI:M: 12
GivnbW.. St. 19, Prairie V'aew 11
Uou110nfl, TeauTcdl76

BlaTqn
Ohio St 72, Purdue 61

CB

.........28 21
..........20 21

Phoenix
..........36
S..ul•
............31
Portland
......... :J!J
L.A. Laken ......26
L.A. Cippo11 .... .25

79

f4, ·o.)l. Colonel

Mid41ccowo0... 10.-59
MiJon Ediociot 60, Norwolk·SS
Miller Cily65, Cmy-Rawtori 41
Milton-U.U.. 15 , llWo S7
N. Ccntnl72, E d - 69
N. Olmud 66,-65 {01)
Notionol Tni161, a.-.;u. Foith S4 .
Ne.wulr. 54, Thomu Worthinsam SO ~
NoMridp 79. !loy. OtriiUan 64
N«wolk 60 Milon Ediooo ss
Oalr: Hill, Vi.a6, Triwsy47
OI&lt;IFoo\ t&gt;l, Eutwood 52

~:a~.~=,:""
Putd~. W~in

Ctt1t. St, ~ 8.S,lnd·Pur.·lndpls 80

Tum

.M iddletown

15

11 (201)
S.lllinoil71, lnditnl St. 66 ,
SW Miauuri SL 6!, CrD.&amp;htcn 62
Vllpl.railo 12. N. IWnois 61
W. lllinoil 92, Younpltnm SL 71
w. Michiau60, Akrna 44

Blufflc:m ll,Olivet61

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Muoillonl'ony 16, c.. South66
MoCIW.76, ...... so

N - o 80,KanwStS9

lnd .·P\u.·Ft. Wayne 67, Aahland 51

MooOot Cot1L SS, Iloovilk%

...,m.....

(01)

M&amp;d·Eul Cooft'~nte
Dctw.cc78, nw.nuMore69
Crtall.ak• V1Uey ConfHtate

Cbr.

Moo&gt;otlludioo 65, U...lloth S9
Moo&gt;otl.ocol41,u.o..-31
-PI-S3,ElaloS2 '
90, Mandiold 10

M;cbiaon S.. II. Ohio S.. 66
Minn--. 91, Iowal!li
Mo.-rc.n.u CUy 13, OU..ao St 69
N.Jow1ll, Bradley 76
NE. Illinois !U, Wii .·Milwa\lkee 16

Mld-ConUAenl ConrenMt
YounpUNn St. 71, E-lll:inol• 56

. Centr•l DhWon
~·l!l'.

K-yi.I,Nouo0....6l

Mki-Ohlo Confennte

1.s

O.iondo
......... .23 _:u_ .m
Pltilodelp!Ua ........ 18 'W .313
MWni
.......... 16 31 .340

90

MianU. Ohio M.lllinod st 's

Mlulcinpn72,~65

GB

Mapo1ia. W.Va. 97, Pmntia il
M~aehrv 95, Curalloa• ValL

a...Jond 5L "' E.lllinoU 7S {01)
o..,.;, ...... 65. J..o,alo,lll. S6
E. 1'1'-i 65, Tca&amp;edo 50
Koouo ,-..a63

c.piJat 67, Boldwift.Waliaao W
Jolin Cmol112, Ouat&gt;oin 61
M.ri"'I 70.11inm Col 47
Mount Union 63, Ohio Nonhan S9

ers included Trenton Cleland willr
six, Jeremy Dill and Andy Grueser
with four each and Iamey Smith
wilh one. .
,
Southern hit 28 of 60 from the
floor including seven of 17 from
three point range for 46%. The
Tornadoes went to the line 25. tiJ1!es
making 17 for 76%: Southern
pulled in 30 rebounds, with Singleton grabbing seven. He also led in
steals with four of the team's 14.
Southern committing 20 turnovers
and had eight assists with Reiber
leading with three. The Tornadoes
were called for 16 personal fouls.
Ed McCutcheon led Waterford
with•26, Tony Schwendemann
added 17. Waterford hit 24 of 62
from the floor for 34% and II of
17 from the line for 64% . The
Wildcats pulled in 31 rebounds led
by Kenley Schwendcmann with 10.
McCutchen had seven of his teams
16 steals. Waterford turned the ball"
over 25 times and were called for
26 fouls.
"It was a good win for us,"
Southern head coach Howie Caldwell said after the game. "We were
coming off a big emotional win
Friday evening over Meigs, plus
everyone got to see action."
Southern defeated Waterford in
the reserve contest 50-37. Jeremy
Kill led the way with 15 points,

OL

BIGB

. Monday, February 15, 1993

The Dally

•

618 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH. 45769
992-6674'

SAliS • SIIVICI • PAI1'S

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I. 2u AVE.

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MIDDLEPORT
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~All' fo'ur Prcscr1jilio'b anit IUJ~Cft,. hds

25~ N~ S.co•ll

•

Houra: 9:~:00 Monday-Friday, Slturdly 9:01H:OO
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See Us

IIWIIIa,ert, ..

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~,February15,1993

.

.r;fhe Daily s·e ntmel
/

•

·

Bl ILL'II\ BO \1{1&gt;
IUlUftl lOUD DEADLIIE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUILICATION

Monday, February 15, 1993
• . Page-6

~

.Reader gives advice to man who .
hasn't had a date since his divor~e
~Au ••·dtn: Your miDd
m'Ust 11ave acne on vrarion befcn
ycubody did. TllllJUY wboban't
had I dale siDce bil di~ 10 yellS
lgO told you be thnu&amp;bt-only int.cnllcd ia I 111111'1 loob.
Yon told him be.Millllde4lelrific and
to hang ia there becaUJe aome
day lhc right wqman wou1d come

along.
Why didn't youldl him the same
thiilg you t d J - wboCIII'I get
a dale - lhat aomedlln&amp; aboul him
must 111m thc:m oft. Here's a list of
quCstions for him:
1. Aze you well-groomed? A lot
or men who reel they - ' t hind·
110111e give up on their loob eatirely.
. Do you bathe ud change your
clolhcs regullrly'f II your hair clcln?
Aze you Slill-mg the glli!IS )'011
had in high school? ·
2..Aze you ilt:lllible l\JOUI c!ict and
exercise? A 300-pourul couch
potato im't going 10 llltniCt a lot of
. NOT FOR LOVE ,\LONE • Cafe singer San·
. dra Jordan begins hour four or her record-book .
: quest for notoriety sinaloa 18 hours of 1930s
· l~ve songs Sunday morning in the nearly desert·
ed bar of Letizia Resitorante on Manhattan's

Upper East Side. The audience was expected to
grow by the time she reached the end or her .
tuneful tour at about 2 a.m. Monday morning.
(AP photo)

Freeze-drying
preserves pets

---Names in the news--: -HOUSTON (AP) - Prince
Charles may have separated from
his wife, Princess Diana, but he
still has his Valentine's Day admir·
ers.
Three children gave the prince
handmade Valentine's Day cards
Sunday upon his arriyal in HousIOr( The visit was the last stop on
his three-day trip to the United
,States.
I
'
About !50 people gathered at
.the airport hoping to catch a
glimpse of the future British Icing.
· Cl!arles spent about 10 minutes

.....

• tarmac,
chatting with people on the
including the children .who gave
him the cards.
"He was happy to accept
them," said Jenny Earp, whose son
and daughter were among the chil·
dren. " We love the Prince of
Wales."
Charles had a private luncheon
with Enron Corp. Chairman Ken
Lay to discuss The Prince's Trust, a
charity for disadvantaged children,
then left Sunday afternoon fpr
Mexico City.

{nbreeding poses little risk
flf
.. childhood disorders #

· ly in Japan, likewise found only
By PAUL RAEBURN
small increases in death and disease
AP Science Editor
: :BOSTON - Health pro'blems rates · in children of marriages
il:lilted 10 inbreeding appear to have betweenJII'St cousins.
"There is much more inbreedbeen exaggerated, say researchers
ing
than ever today," Nee! said.
who call for the abolition of laws .
"There
are ill effects, but they've
4gainst marriages between cousins.
probably
been exaggerated in rhe
• As many as half of the mar·
past."
iiages in some paris of Asia and
Mica are \letween first and second
cousins, but studies found a lower
However, a stlllly· of Mormons
ihan expected rate of birth defects by Lynn B. Jorde of the University
~nd hereditary .disorders in their
of Utah found thai children of flfSt·
offspring.
cousin marriages were 70 percent
: "I really don't think the death more likely to die before age 16
(ales warrant the intervention of than were children of marriages
rather heavy-handed legislation," between unrelated people.
iaid Alan H. }littles of the UniverThe researchers satd they could
Sity of London.
not explain the discrepancy .in the
: ' ~ 'Those laws were not passed findings. Jorde said that inbreeding
fQJ biological reasons," said Dr. was common in Mormons at one
James V. Nee! of the University of time but is almost nonexislent now.
Michigan. "There was some reliThe studies also suggest that
gious motivation."
inbreeding might have lldvantages
· About 30 states in the Uniled over the long term, Nee! said.
States have laws against marriages
between either first cousins or first
"Inbreeding is not a bad thing,"
and second cousins, Binles said. In he said. "In a population with
several states, such marriages bring - inbreeding, you are Oui hing out a
qiminal penalties, he said .
higher proportion of deleterious
· Biules and Nee! presented their genes !han in a population that is
siudies Sunday al the annual meel- nodnbreeding."
.
ing of the American Association
Nee! uncovered evidence on
for the Advancement of Science.
inbreeding as part of his classic
, Jn a study of the Punjab study, begun in the 1940s, of the
~tovincc in Pakistan, Bittles found
genetic consequences of the atom
tllat childhood death rates were bombs dropped on the Japanese
~liout 16 percent in marriages of· Cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
uilrelated people, compared 10 World War II.
ab!lut 21 percent rn marnages
He found !hat the frequency of
ltclween cousins, most of which major genetic defects waS only 1.5
wi re marriages between fint percent higher in marriages of
cilusins.
cousins than il was in marriages of
·: Neel's study, done independent- unrelated people.
•

- ': .. PubliC Notice

..
MQ]'ICE TO CONTRACTORS
·• ~ STATE OF OHIO
··· DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
•

Colu-.

Ohio

February 5,1183
Cantnocts.tee

Lepl Copy No. 113-UIS
.UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
:Stelld propooolo will be
received 11 the olllce olthe
Director of '"' · ·Ohio
Deportment ol Traneportedon, Columbuo, Ohlo;&gt;
uRill 10:00 A.M., Ohlo
Stenderd Time, Tullday,
llloroh 2, 1883, lor lin·
piall'lmanllln:
Vlaton.• lltlgo County,
Of$ lor Improving vorlouo
~·of BR 124; SR 124
~ ol Wllltllvlllt, by
eolng ll!'lth 11ph111

=
'l~l

dale eel for
OCflllllllllon of t~le work
..... be 11 eel fDrlllln lhe
!r*lng propooll·"
,..., end Speolllcallone
ere on flleln the IMjiartiMftl
of'Trenoportotlon end the
olloe olthe Dletrlot Depu1y
Dfr 65 r.
'
.IERRY WIIAY,
Q!reallrofTNnlp 1 •••
(2) u, 22, 210
·

•

l

Public Notice
PUBLiC NOTICE
Tbellelgo lnduotrl..,lnc.,
which lo o prlvolll nonprolll
corporollon lntondo to
oubmll en oppllcotlon lor o
cepltel gront under the
provlolono ol SecUon 18 (b)
(2) ol the Urban lluo
Tronitportatlon Act ol 1914,
•• emended, to provide
. tronoportetlon oorvlcee for
the olclarly ond handicapped
within Melge, Golllo, Ath••
count111 ln Ohio and Maoon
County In W. Ve. The grant
eppllcaUon will requeottwo
alllnclard vonl and two way
rodloolor ellotlng v••·
It Ia proJected thot 100
elderlJ ptt'aona or peroone
with
hendlcopplng
condltlono will uoe the
awvlce even·clayo per weelt
for verloue ~ eotiYitl••·
Including tranoponetlon to
jobo · elleo, medical
IPJitOlntmenla
ond
recreotlonlleloure ootiYid11.
Thellllp lnduolrleo, Inc.
lnvll11 com menta end
r,ropoulo
from
all
nlereoted public, prlvale
end por1111noll operolore
lno!Uclng IIIII optratoro, lor
tha. provlelon
ol
treneportatlon ..viol 1o the
elderly end hendlcepped

Ann
Landers

within our Hrvlce a,.a,
Operaton who are·
lntereoted ln ollorlng
propoaala t'c provide
aorvlce ahould conlact
David llllllken, Adull
Service Director at llelga
lnduatrlaa, Inc, 1310
Carleton St., Syrocu11, Ohio
45nv lo obtain lull dollllla
of tho type oltranoportiUon
oervlce thai Ia needed prior
to preparing o propoaal.
Written comment• or
propoaala
muat be
aubmlttod within 30 dayo IO
the agencY. at the above
addrHa, w th 1 copy to the
Ohio Deportment ol
Traneponatlon, Dlvlolono ol
Public Tranoportotlon, 25
South Front St., Room 718,
Columbue, Ohlo 43218·
0111: Allantlon Deputy
director.
•
(2) '· 15, 2lc

l.eaal Copy No. D-143
UNt PRICE CONTRACT
S..lod pro-alo will be
r-rvod at the omo. of the

· Director of the Ohla
Department of Trana·
ponallon, Columbuo, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., Ohla
Standard Time, Tu11clay,
March 2, 1883, lor lm·
prawmenllln :
Athena, Qallla, 'Hacking,
Melga, Monroe, Morg1n,

Noble, Vlnlon, Walhlngtan
Cauntleo,, Ohio lor lm•
pr_avlng MCtlono ATH 315.10 on United 811111 Route
33 and ather •rtaua and MCilone by lnllllllng
and lurnlehlng rafted

,._,........... llilllltela~

"The date eel lor
aomplatlon of thll - ' !
ahall be aa 101 fDrlll In the
bidding propull, ..
Plana and 8paalllaltlona
"'" an flllln the Doparlmllll
ol '{rana,OrJallon nil the
Public Notice
alii.. ol the Dlatrlct Dljouty
Director.
·
NOTICE TQ CONTRACTORS
J!RRYWRAY,
STATE OF OHIO
Director ol TraMporllltlon
DEPARTMENT OF
(2) 15, 22, Ztc
.
TRANSPORTATIGIN
, . . _ . buutn' In"'"
CG!ula-ua, Olllo
.........,1,1113

eo.........

MNTADS

e.-

1.1.-y Buck
Joyoa Bunch

l.evlnchia Cain

Edna Carmen
Betty Carpenlar .
Mary AM Caruy.
Martha Chlmbltl
Mlroolo Chepman
l.ally Chu-.
Malinda &amp; Manley Chriilly
Lula Cirdo
Edna Cfl!k
Evelyn Clartc
Lola Clartc
Gal8klln1 ClelAnd

:a,..c~:,.11

ct. . Conray
Joan Corder

Mn Conrlll
Rulli

Agnea Dixon
Connie Dodson
Dorolh Downie
= ' E. Downie
Wanda Eblin •
HaM)' Erlewi~a

Ch_. Manley

Wea Manley
Jealil Martin
Don &amp; Betty Maurer
Eslhar Melcall
Kalhryn Meb:ger
Sue Metzger
Betty Milhollft
Wayne
Mabel '

Paul Neue
Polly Ogdln

Ray Olill8r

Cindy Oliveri
Ellie PJc¥.na
Alice Plantz .
Can1e fl!lrnolds
Paulina Riclanour

~n

EVIl RobNorman l Janel Roush

cmar

. Mae c Sara Culluma
Leo Devldaon
Wile &amp; DoralhJ o.vlo
Evo Dll•rar
Ida Oilhl
Qlldrl Dllan

Wilma S. 111111
David &amp; Qc&gt;rotll)' s.y,.
Viglnll Sooa
Gaorve 8lllen

Goldie Graham

Richard l Marty Oren ·
Margaret Gn&gt;unickle

CIIIOI Guinlhar
Kathryn Hall
Rhoda Hal

=~

Nelle l'ldleld
Darla Hlwle)'
Jlnlle HliWIIIY
Dorol!y Henctlcko
Jo HiMI
, H-101
Bill&amp; Elizlbllh llobdrftor
DIMd I Dolno Hollar

-Hollar
•Nadine Huclaon

Wloe 8ft'!.:!..
'l'llonne - ·
John Joe Shein
Mulnlo 8hlln
Mqnt Sheela

Ellie 8mllh
Lao• Smllh

w.a ts.._.._ .. n . . . wc••••u•.t••&lt;

......

s•

•11111•

U8A

'I'
a,._...

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

P-oy,Ohlo
9·10.92-tln

2 '"" .u ,,..
ECHO TiiMIIIRS &amp; SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE
Porta ond 8tnrlce lo1&gt;oll
makea and mcdolo ol
trsctors end lllrm
equipment.

NOnCE 10 BllDERS .
The 8oerd ol Edltclllian ol
E•tern l.oCIII Schaal Diahict deoilrH lo receive
•••led lllda on the
lohslllg:

Bulldln!ll and Peraonel

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Pl'aPJ riJ I • aNOia •
ln order to be conetclelld

all 1ealld · blda ehell be
r-ed in lhe -re&lt;'o
omo. by 12 !''clock noon
on:

. lllln:h 10, 1tl3

'

a-d of Education
&amp;111m Locol School

1

i

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOt.IDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.

Said · Board ol EcluGation

Card of Thanks

'

'Public Notice

614-g92-7523

~110.111

ORDifANCE

All OIIDIUNCE to 111ke
~pntprldana for CUnent
••••••• - and oilier
ElpeDdiMw of .... Vlllge
of Pauaroy,81811 ol Ohio,
....... the ftiCil year
. . . . .,. l•lrer 31. 11111S.
8eotloa 1.
Bf IT

••P••••

DUll- 31. 1183 .....

Ia II ... ........ they
ere .._..., eet eelde and
. r,roprloted •• !ollowe,

th•• ...
Ihe

OF

FOREVER
BRONZE

~:~fJgTt~~pl~~~&lt;).

TANNING

PRlATIOH ..- .......57,322.73
Section 7. Thet there be
ilpproprlated !rom the
following ENTERPRISE

lashan Rd., Racine
Swttthart Sp•lal
14 SESSIOIIIS • 114
Llmh 2 Per Cuatomer

· Real Estate General

GOOD UITil IlL 20

I

'

'

l•

lEW 1.8TIG- IT 7 Poorooaii), 2 &amp;lilly 1rBn1e home wl1h
3 w-na, CIIJIOI1, Clnlr8l Blr, 3-4 acres.

•'

~EROY· Wright

I

OciaWIId

Allee Wtunllay
Mae Weber .
Margaret Waber

j

Gwinnle Whita
Helen L While
....... &amp; \llrgiNa Whillech
Ger-'d a l'llye WlldennUih
Norman l Alllgra WI
- Joanna Wlilmo
John &amp;· Ann Wllarna
Fred • Donna WllamiiOI'I

:1

UCI"E
CLUI
GUN SNOOTS
SUNDAYS .

IlL. IIHu1llul A·Frame home wllh 10

,_., 5 bodo_,o, 2 balho, 2.725 acres, 6reploce,
t II ijj, a-cJI, palo, ~ilcllng, woodburlw, t&gt;rlvota,

115,000

,.. . . . .., laWn.

1:00 P.M. ,

I

IPIDLEI'ORT· 2 unit "'*'""'c bulking with both unlll
_......,. IWitad lido Ia good lnveeanent propan,.
113,000. I trua1r ~•••tad mllklt an o~l

.

11CIPiO TOM.IP.. Large ollll buldnil ectOO oq. ft. ol

...--mr•Cioorancl...,_, _
_7yraold;
H. ·Ill t*lc .,.. ... on oita. Lacelld on 24.83
- I n Ill CCIIIIIIy. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I
. 111,1100

OPEN "170 PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY. CHOKE
ENFORCED

21101y homl3-4 blaooma, balh, .
aiding. TPC &amp; .... 110011e lenml ~~cre~~g~,
......,. .,.. . .lila. r.-a blmo, lhlld, out
IllS •lfll,
AIKING 71,000

Nell Wlllon
~II.

WaHl
VIew. AUae WaHl

"'*-· .

'1111 ~ • REALLY HOPPING! 10 GET IN ON
'1111 ACrtDIIIIGin•• A CALL-WE HAVE 8UYEIII
1ltAT Alii IUYINCI AND II!U!RI THAT ARE

.;:r·. .

Jean
MiMWriQht
lAIVoung
Undo Young

SRI .WHOMY'SWWIEI!•IILOW?I

Nellie Zlrlda

' r ..... .._..
,I

'

Jeff Wickersham

Life • Medicare • Cancer 1 Fire • Health
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

Rocky R. itupp, D.C.U. • Agent ..
Box 189

for all c,o llege bound students . ...

ofncome Tax Proparalion
-Bookkeeping
•Payroll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINESSES

• regardless of income
'regardless of grades
'plus $20k guar;mteed lo im
•regardless of credit

113/', W. SECOND ST.

,992·6'193
...,.....

POMEROY, OH. 45769
IAhvo Joff Wer11r

To collect your scholarship money

call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.·Frl. 1G-7 or Sat. 1G-4
2-11

RIC EXCAVATING
BUlLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
IJOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Din, Gravel and eo.!
LICENSED •nd BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

•• •ttrHIIII v......,....,

TOlE THE NOTE:.
dowD

or trade.

BISSEll BUILDER!, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wh
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801 • 949·2160
or 915·3839
(lki Santlar Calls)

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

HOURS.-

Sund.ay - MOnday - Closed

Tuesaay - Wednesday - Friday-9:30a .m . . 5 : 30p .m . :
Thu rsday - Saturday - ID :QO a.m .. ~ : 00 P. m .

....

1b4 Mulberry Avenue
Pomerov . OH 45769

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE. ·
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

CALIFOilNIA
· TANS

MICROWAVE
•••VCR REPAIR

15 Sessions •15

KEN'S RIANCE
SERVICE

"Helping You To Reco¥er Yolll' lnrestmenl''

915·3561

Church, Home,- TNck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating
'

AlLUIU

lri~.. OtWe

vam.ttii• s..efld
Plu1 fll,l ..tilt of
·lotion

Goad 1'11r••" hllr••rr

Acnu ·-hal Office
217 L ...... st•

Qu•ll2
SIOBI o.

47269 it. lt. 241•1Y..IIe OH II. 7
""' c••••, •• lt. 241 .

SIZED .STONE

Pl. 614-985·3949

FOISAU
Call614-992·

IIOW OFflllll,_.
OIL liD LUll SEIYICI
n11 ..Nil AID lountle ,
2/11/9111•

6637

~

a A#UMCdiiDI

.....,.,

St. II. 7

Snodgrass Upholstery
UCINE, OHIO

POIIIIIOY, OliO

CUSTOM
• .BENDING

..

...

992·5335 or

949·2823

TEXM AD- 23+ -

Mlrlllta wa-.

OWNER:

1·26-9

ASKING 113t,OOO

*""

992·

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

992-3470

You Don't Have To Look
To Spy rfte.&amp;st Buys In
the Clanlfleds.

992·22$9 .

j

.-.w...n

2,3-93-

WOLFE&amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

SIZED LIMESTONE

I
I

j

TRUCKING

Middleport, Ohia 45760 ·
(614) 843·5264

949·2826

36970 Ball Rua Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Catol Lunalard
\lltgil McQo)'

L

614-742·2138

(614}
667·662

1·26-83

•

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; (OAL
Reasonable Rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

PERSONAL
CARE.
. .
BECAUSE
WE tARE.
992-5858
696·1290
'
2-9-93

Fund
Other Dab!
D-X-7 260 Building
Fund ....." ................7,872.67
Tolol Olhar Debt Service
Fund ........~.............. 7,872.ffl
GRAND TOTAL DEBT
SERVlCE .............. $7,672.87
Section e. That there be
approprloted !rem the
following
CAPITAL
PROJECTS FUNDS.
Fodenl Grant Fund (Sewer)
250 Caplllll Outlay.$7,322.73
To18l Fod•al Glint
Fund-.................57,322.73

REIIDI.IIED .., ... Cotincll
of ._ V... of Po••my.
allotoo of Ohio, thai, 10
provide tor tha current
end other
..plftdllll,. ol the aald
Vfllge of PonMroJ during
lha n.., yeer enc!lng

l

992·7553
'POMEROY, OH.

12·5-tfn

NIRIAL APPROPRIA110H

!••

S~&amp;

REASONABlE RAns

HF83

YARDMAN RIDING MOWIR
YARDMAN PUSH MOWER

' ;

State or Out
Of State.

HAULING

(2)1,t,15;3ic

.. , •• ,,..... ,.. 'u

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

'NUa IUS I DB

-lnllrlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

(1)25; (2)1, !1,15, 41oc

=MnOiiMI!Wtlod

, . _ Humplnya
Norma Jawet ·
Edfl Jivldon
Ann Johnaon
Bartha F. ~n

-RCK&gt;fing

HICIOSA7

'lllcl v.nco-y

~~r

-Room Addition&amp;
-GubrWork
-Eieclricaland Piumbing

An dnile,.Ohio 45772

Mae McPeek
Moruaret Thompson
Maxln1Tuc118r

Edna F'ober
Helen FWw
Anna RoM Filch
VlrgiNa Qibeon

CARPENTER SERVICE

ProbltooJuclgt
K.llro-rocl, Clerlt

2.

In

WORK

Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

YOUNG'S

- E . BUCk,

.

FLAilED

614·949·2202

TRIMand ·
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

61•-7•• -29~ttt

eo.,...,

JIU SlACIC 992·2269
'

.

'

I

•

12/31/9~fn

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On .lanllll')' 21, 1..3, In
the IIIIa• County Probell
Coull, l:aee NO. 27714,
Blubeth Culler, 832 E.
lloln sa-t, Pomeroy, Olllo
45781, wae appointed
&amp;acuter ol the eelete ol
Thelma A. Dll~ d-oecl,
1111 of I Third Stre.l,
Ohio 45771.

. . birla.

LOG HIULIIIG,
· LUMIII, or

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load

Ptmllc Notice

~

SMALL DOZER
WORK,.
DRIVEWAY WORK
•d LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
$peclal Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thia ad good for 1
FREE card
Lie. Nq. 0051·32

avr-...

HAULING

CHARLIE'S

6-25-'U&lt;In

EAGLES
CLUB

,

lilatrial

PearlaneLee
Joseph Lieving
Mary Usle
Mary UtUe

f'IREWOOD FOR SALE

EVERY THURSDAY

\

Elrna Louka

Aet,idantl•l• Commerol•l
FrHEitirMIH

2-7·92-1111

EloieeBoeiOn,T..-rer

Vlrg111ia Kidder
J e - Lawronce .
L8elae

Jane Teaford
Roberta ThaxiDn
Don.a Carolyn Thomaa
Et,ancr Thoma•
Gamal Ervine

L.wn-lng,
' Fertilizing, W-ng, lli1d
Seeding.
Shrub and Tree :rrllnmlng
l Removol

BINGO

..., -

~18IK&amp;Mody

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949-2391 or
1·100·137·1460

•Co111p te
.....li••
Stof.
&amp; c:zaro
F IIIII
ES
985·4473·
667·6179

el.,......

Eftie Johnson
Roy l Eunicle Jonas
Aaron &amp; Iris Killion

Calhy Erwin
Alia Fenett

,:;:lhoan

Suoan l

Sarah $pencer
Unda Slalnaker
Francea Slarr
Rull Staama
Rosalie SIDry
A- SbaiiUoo
Joe Slrubla

' Mlna Swiohar

John Manley
Nonnan Manley

VIola Rumllllald

" - Council
Mary Cowdery
Bill Lalft Cozart

Beneflte ................ 17,toO.OO
230 Contrectuol
••

....n... .... right to .:c.pl
or njKt lily.,..
of

TREE OF LIGHT DONORS -1992

Marjoria

2~j;i;;y;;"'"" 75,000.00

1

1992 TREE OF LIGHTS .

Public Notice

co1mucno11
..........
eG••s:•

2118elarllll

985-9996

,., - I

Public Notice

BISSELL I lURlE

LOST

weeks.

'

FUNDS.
WalllrFund
Olllcl
E1·5-A 210-PIIIOI\11
Sarvlcee .

EASTERN BoY'S CLASS RJNG
Size 11. Dark Blue Slone
-'
: REWARD
Call 985-3929 or

REFUNDS,
QUICK!

,., ~;..,.
. " ··,.. .. ..
5 ·;'',. '' .;;'·/

Public Notice

10,000.00

INCOME TAX

Emma Adans
Martha Andlraon ·
Poll&lt;, VICIU, a Wao Ault
Lcr8tta Beegle
Paul Beegle
.
Robatt a Marlha Beegle
ChiM1eo &amp; Daisy Blakasiea
Ada BIIHII
Elm8rl!lianclt
· Jeanne Braun

FUND APPRO.
PRIATION ........ $448,850.00
Section '· Tho! there be
. the
l epproprlated
follow
IAL

VI-

' Dear Ann ·LaDders: I wrote this
essay ·when my daughter was born. ;
I hope you will print it for ·the :
benefit of other parents of handicapped children. ll could give them r
an adircly diff-.t peaspeaive. And j
ANN LANDERS
"l-991; L• ADI'Ics
thanks, Ann, for all you have done.
Tima Syndicllle
VALERIE J. GEARY, ,
CftaiA&gt;n Syodi&lt;ale"
BAKERSFIELD, CALIF.
l
· DE1Jt VALERlE GEARY_:~'._
women.
a·beautifulessay! YourcootnbuliOII
3. Do you talk about yowself all 101his space is sure 10 do more'good· ·
evening and never ask a question?
than you know. Bless you. Hero it
4. Ale you informed aboul world is:
llffllin, or do you rtad only the sports
My Perfect Child
page?
.
•
.
As my children, were born, -I
5. IS yc:iur idea of a "fun evening• · wanted them 10 be pcrfccL Whm
four houn in front of the tube with they were babies, I wanled thcm to
a six-pack?
,
smile IIIII be conlalt playing wilh
6. Are you self-centered and
their toys. I wanted them 10 be hippy
stubborn? Do you insist on having
llld to laugh CO!!linually ialltad of
your way and grumble if you don't
crying and being dcmandins. I
get it'!
wanted them 10 see the btauliful side
.
· oflife.
. ~·.Can you discuss an issue in a • As !hey grew older, I warned them
a~ manner and perhaps ~ven ·to be giving ~ of selfiSh. I
admtt you were wrons once m a wanted them 10 'stip the ICrriblc
while?
.
· twos. I wanted them to stay
B. Do , you come off looltiag innocent forever.
~IIIC? It's a •andlld ~As they became teen-agers, I
bOll tllal women want to get IIIIWried wanled them IO'be obedient and not
and men avoid ~mitment, but it's rebellio\IS, mannerly and aot
been ':'IY .expenence that oflen ~e • mouthy. I wanled them to be·fuU of
opposue IS true. Most w~ wtll love, gende and tinciiC8rled. •
be scared off by ~ man w~ ts ~
"Oh, God, give me a child -~
~er !0 g~ mamed,,especiaUy if this" was ofl~;n my prayer. One day
hiS last marnage was nnsrx;cessrul.
he did. Some call ber handicapped
Finally,lhis guy rrads the Jll23lli!BI ... I call her pcrfecll
ads looking for a woman. Tell h1m
Ann Landers' latest booklet
!" get a !ife. He should beco~e . "Nuggets curd Doozies," has everJ.
mv&lt;!lved a:' .chwcb or commllf!lty thing from the oUITageoruly /IUUIY
affairs, poltucs, a clu~ or: a c.harity. to 1~ poiglllllllly illsiglttflll. Selld a
A~ w~ eXJ?CCU his .Jirl~~ 10 se/f·addm~d. long, bwilless·siu
pnmde him wttb a IIIICial hfe IS no · envelope curd a check pr mDMY or- ,
prize. .. HIGHLY DUBIOUS IN tttr for $5 (tlis illcllltks pow~ curd
SANTA FE,~~
.
haNilillg)·ro:Nuggets,'cloAIIIILiut·
·.J?EA:R H.D.. ~ghton. ThankS for dtrs, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicagd,lll.
Slttmg Ul my chair today.
60t511.&lt;J562. (In CIUIOiia, &amp;erid $6.)

COLUMBUS' (AP) -· Your dog
just died and you can't bring yourself 10 saying goodbye.
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Bill ·
For a price, Joe Kulis, proprietor
Moyers, the PBS journalist and for·
of Joe Kastaway Kulis Live Freeze
mer ~hite House press secretary, . Dried Bait, will freeze your dogs
says he was approached by the
for posterity.
campaigns of Bill Clinton and Ross
Perot about the vice presidency.
Or your squirrel , pheasant,
But Moyers turned them both turkey, deer or horse.
down fast, he says in this week's
Kulis' dog, Suzy, was displayed
·TV Guide.
at the Columbus Sports, Vacation
"I got entreaties from the Perot &amp; Travel Show at the Ohio State
camp as to wheiher I would be Fairgrounds las! week. ·
interested in running," Moyers
said. " But I didn'tlet them go far
Freeze-drying is beuer than taxi·
. enough that it was ever serious.''
dermy because it preserves the sub·
As for' Clinton, Moyers said, ject better, said Harry Cunningham,
" There were some feelers .... I told who was overseeing Kulis' operathem the same thing I told Perot: tion at the show. Freeze-dried game
'I'm not available. I'm a journal- won't fade or deteriorate, he said.
ist.,.,
The process is not new, CunMoyers also denied he was plan· ningham said. He noted thai Roy
ning to 1nove tO CNN. He satd he Rogers' horse, Trigger•. ended up
planned 10 remain with public iele· that way. But the process is becomvision "as long as I can raise ing more popular.
funds."
Moyers previously worked for
"We do about 100 10 150 dogs,
CBS and as a press secretary to .every season," Cunningham said.
Use FAST FUNDS -·~,
President Johnson.
"It's for people who don't want to
bury them."
for nonnally 2--4 day
NEW YORK (AP) - "Beverly
Freeze-drying animals is similar
Hills, 90210" star Shannen Doher- to freeze·drying coffee, Cunning·refunds or
ty has her own newsleuer, but she's ham said. You take what is providprobably not happy about ir....,
ed by nature, freeze it and draw out
Electronic Filing for
The ''I Hate Brenda" newsletter the water.
is named after Doherty's " 90210"
The jlfOCCSS involves placing the
reflmcls in about 3
character Brenda Walsh.
animal m a gianl vacuum tank. ~
The first issue, which has sold
operation is in Bedford, a Cleveabout 7,000 copies, is devoted 10
land suburb.
the 21-year-old Doherty's "seemingly en\iless runs of hissy fits, "
Posing is important 10 the proaccording to this .week's People.
cess
for pets or trophies.
ll began as a joke last fall when
"The
way you put him in is the
Dar.Jif Romeo and Kerin Morataya
way
he
comes
oul, and you can't
faxed some negative press clip·
change
it,"
Cunningham
said.
pings about Doherty to friend s.
They realized they'd hit upon
something big when people called
with their own stories abodl the
The Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc. extends their .
tempermemal actress.
appreciation to the following for supporting the
At times, Romeo says, they feel
a pang of guilt
"What if Shannen, like, read
'
our newsletter
and killed hcr:;cH'!"
project. All proceeds were used to provide meals and
she says. "But then people call and
tell me all these horrible run-ins,
homemaker assistance to the·homebound elderly.
and I feel belter.:·
,
Doherty's manager, Michael
A special "thank you" goes to Fred Willlai;Q!on who made
Gurscy , called the newsleuer
''pathetic.t•
and contributed the wooden oma[J'Ients for the tree.

GEl SOME BREAD
WllH AWANT AD

Pllbllc Notice

,. .

,.

•

'

�Page 8

Pomeroy-MICidleport, Ohio

.

Announcements

Wanted to Do

18

Monday, February 15, 11111~
KIT 'N' -CARLYLE® by Larry Wri&amp;ht

Rentals

"''

41 Houses for Rent

!&gt;U~&amp;TII'I4

Monday, February 15, 1993

71 Autos for a.ll

1tl0 Iuick Rotll Umitod, good ''
cond, 304•71-2432.
1814 Pontiac SUnblniNOO; 11187 ·:
Chtvroltt £1irooport 11,800; ·

a,,-.,

Ati:e
1../."Z"',
IT IS N~&lt;:h#\R'/ 10 bll'&gt;l "\~ ~ liMe \o 1i~~ ...

The Dally Sentinel-Page-a.. .

BRIDGE

18U Etcort LX S\100, 114·441·
0731.

'

•

PHILLIP
ALDER

1H5 Dodao Dorton~~ T.. bo z
Loaded, l'un Powor, AMIFM
Caa..tte, S 8~, N1w Tlret,•;

a

Look• Grwatl 814.-44 ....

NORTH

&amp;-1'-tl

+KH
.AKJ4
I K 8 :•
+7 62

~IDIWH;

KIPO!tJG

WI!ST

EAST
+At&amp;

•• 6532
1754
+ to9 a

•Qt087
• to 9

.•.

+AU3

SOUTH
+QJ632

614-912·2883.

Toll FrM, 1.J00-417.a1M, Ext.

313.

Hom• Hea~-. Aide

Homo HOIHh Aldo Wonted For
Wort&lt; In Golllpollo ArN. Coli 614·
561-4171 For M~re Information~

21

Business
· Opportunity

.Local Realtor. Wlil Be Hlrlna I
258, cJo Gallipolll Dally Tribune

the ottarlng.

825 Tt!lrd Avanue, Galllpalla, oH
45631.
Muticilna drummer wants to
Join or form group doing
country and rock, exeelltnt •

HERE
COMES TH'

mell until you havf'lnvntrgated

PARSON
!I

$1,000 WMidy Income Sneck
/Soda Aouta For Sale Cheap 1·

800-375-Vond.

All -;ell Mtale adv.rtislng in
· lhia newap8per ia IUbject to
the Federal Fair Hauling Act
or~- whic:tl makes it IUegal

Hours. 1-501'646-0503 Ext.213.
~ours.

Now acc:tptlng application tor
pat shop work, Mnd NIUmt to

Thio

POSITIONS STILL AVAILABLE

law. Our ..- .... hotebr
inlormld 1!\at all dWellings
ld'llniHd in lhisriawspaper
are I'VIiablt on An eqUIII ·

POSITIONS UNLIMITED. Ruoolo1

Germany, Saudi, Mtxlco. Pala
Houalng /Btntfltt. lup;l'rvlaora,

finn. Good eecrettrlal eklllli •

Want to:
PIN clown EXTRA

CA&lt;£&gt;ll?!l

Typing, dlctltlon, word
proeessif1g, etc: Wrltt Box H.t,
care Pt. Pit, Regfater, 200 Main
St, Point Pleaaant, WV 25650.

q~o~l..a.

Po~y

Pion Saeklng AmbHiouo

Toole, No Dellverln, No Quota!!

Determine Your Own· Hra:, Nu

GIMMICKS.

Call RITA Attar 4:00
614·275-0033
. (COLLECT)
.
Wanled: Carln11. Gentle"- Mlddlt

Aged Woman To Care t"or A 3
MOnth Old Babr On A PI~·Timo
Boalo, wookdoro on1y. 114-441·
0418.
Wanlld:

RHt&gt;OnH To: CLA 25tCio Gol·
lipoUo Dilly T~buno IIZI Third
Avenue, Gallipolla, OH 45831.

Women: Make mort money!
Fret elgl'f wHk

Hour~~ Mon ..frf If You 'Ha'lt
Good Work Heblta, Rttertnces

And Own Ttantportatlon Call
114-311-110&amp; \Onlr Taking Ap.
pllcallonl Unt I Wodnoodoy Fab
17).
-

Wanted to Do

Alllratlono, Sawing, ...ndlng,
114·245-t2o3.

10 ________________

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

12--------------

or. 7 P.M. 114-441-

ChHhlro: 3 BRiutt1·112 bath,
hardwood Hoora
carpor1, aiding,

baHmtnt,

CA: natural aas

R•pair); Dlllnqu•nt Tax
Propertr· ftepo.S.aslon•. Your

(U

Aroo (1 805·962·8000 EXI. OH·

10188 For Curr•nt Repg List.
Houu for tale with 1 rooms, 2

full balha, ·fireplace, new Lenox
heal pump, 2 car gar11ge. brick
Ranch atyl• hom•, 3 btdrooma,

1 bath, Mtachtd garaga, New

Furnished
Rooms

Anderson windows, central air, Roomt tor rent • week or momh.
good neighborhood, Maaon. Star11n;
at 1120/ma. Gallla Hotel.
304-773-5150.

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
$152.17 per month Including elx
montht Ire• Jot rent, new 14x70,
delivered and set up, tklr,tlng
and tttpt, 1·80~837·6625.

12x60 Wa•her Dryer, Slovt.
R•frlgerator, $31000. 614·367·

614-446"-9580.
Sleeping rooma with cDOkJng.
Alao traller epace. All hook-upe,
Cell after :2:00 p.m., 304-Tn5651, Ml8on WV..

47 Wanted to Rent
Professional Couplt Want To
Rent 1 ~ Btdroomt, 2 hlht:, No
Chllaren 614-441-3708.

7904.

Merchandise

1973 Forr..t Park.12x65, Z B•d·
room•, WB, TOII!I E1•ctrlc,

SI.Rt.218, 2·112 Acru MIL. 614·
256-61112, 814-378-2748.
11n'4 2 BR. 2 bathe, 12xe!l, all
eleclrlc:.L &amp;5,500; Ho1.111 &amp; Lot In
Crown cHy, 112,000. 114-441·1511.
1888 Skyline Holly Ridge 14x70,
au tlec, 2 bedrooma, AJC,
covered porch, kltchtn leland,
ator.ge bldaL underpennlng,
llka new, 304 ·~ ~2464.
1i90 Fairmont Fantasy, 14x80, 3
bedrooma, 2 bathe, garden tub,

51

Household
GOOds

All Ca_rpel &amp; VInyl In Stock On

~---

15~~----~-------Gallipoll. Dally _Tribune
446-2342
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
. 992-2156
~. P!eu•nt Hepler
675-1333

'

i

0

DP Meg• F111 exerciH machine
with buHtrfly, tttpper, and how

to ueo vldao, 1150, 6ttt-m.Z217.
Dual chlnnel Ttne Systtm with
oxt11 liattortee ond ~~"'· onlY
uMCI a ftw Urnea! i
010,
614-8M-122l
-•

51 Bllkltblll
0\'053 Collector
55 Slower
58 Stacking
61 SlultMtrle
62 lrrll1ted
64 Author An111

21 Section or
org.
22 Sorrow•
24- 1ndm1
26 Rom1nllc
• llploll
29 Broedcllt
31 IIJtwHn

65 Foot Plrl
66 Mullcll

4•

All JI'ISS

Hunter
Grelll letter
C11ftlly
Rom1n 51
AclrHI
Gardner
8 Repair

67 Opening

DOWN

35 Theiler llgn

(lbbr.)
37 25th letter

2 U111 needle

3
4
5
8
7

drama

34 At home

t Swift elrcrall

(abbr.)

9 Ointment•

Opening lead: + 10

'···
'SF J

'

MORIV MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

EK

YOU'Re
601N6101HE
U61CW2Y'?

For Satt· Ladl" wlnler coat, tun

longth, g11r. w/pllld ocarf1 ltaa
NM dry c ..ned, $30, 11.. .812·
2428.
For Sola- Slzo madlum toll•

~

HO.v CONE. YOU'RE
ALWA"I'S 601N6 TO
THE LISRAIZY?

powers described as CIRCEAN. Wbat
is that supposed to mean?

CALL ME. A eEEKER
OF WISCOY. AND TR1.1TH.

•••

winter coat, dtnlm wl leather
t(lm, like MW1 WB $9!, llqW

f40l paid 11!0; alao mlao. ladl•
clothing; call 114·1m·2155, t-

Serv1ces

81

Home

63
Livestock
~_;;;,;,;;,;;,;,;,;,,.;.......,...
Llmoualn dttle,
helterw., bulls, and cowa, 114·

Reglaterld
1111~-6180.

ABTR,O·QRAPH

BERNICE
B,EDE OSOL

Oltto ~- ....-

. I

whk:h signs are romantically perfect for

serving might' altempt to pressure you

you. Mail $2 pius a long, sell-ad- Into doing something lor him or her tod r -. stamped envelope to Match~ day that you've refused to .do in the
maker. c/o this newspaper, p,o_Box · past. ·If you comply, it would be a bad
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-34~8 .
choice on your behalf.
PIICE8 (Feb. 20-Mitclt 20) Keep a low VIRGO (A. .. 21-...... 22) Just because
ptoflte 1n your group involvemenls to- a friend ol yours Is on the outs with
dar. rather than trying lo run the show. someone you like. don't lei this jeoptrYou'll have a biller time. and your . dize your retstlonlhlp with the mlllgned
· friends willapP,eciate it If you're not 1he pal. Be your own person and make your
czar.
own judgments.
ARIEl (Merch 21-Apnt 11) Guard LIUA (llepl. ZS.OCI. 23) Make it a
ag11nst inclinltions today to allow yo~r .point not to bring problems that occur
pride to light for somethirtQ that could outlide' or your houH Into your hOrne
produce 1 hollow victory 11 you win. Be today. lt isn't fair to sublect famlir membolh dlacernlng and rational.
bers to alluatlona for which lhey:re not
TAUIIUI (April 20-Mir 20) The . riiiPOnllbJe.
and opinions ol thoH you'll be involved .. ,~0 (Oct.
12) II you HI
wtih today lll'e 11 Important to them aa yourHtr up u an IUIItorlty on a special
your own views ar• to you. 11 you want ,..~teet today, you lhould bue your
respect you muat Hrsl be reopeetful
· atatomenta upon recti. You could run
caDIINi (MIJ 21-J- 20) If you are Into t10111e011t whO doeln't think you
preHntlj Involved In a joint venture ·know wttat you're lliklnQ about
wttere)ltu are responaiblelorthegrut· IAGITTARIUI ( - . 21-Dec. 21)
., portion of the coots. it's time you ,....
you like. bul wtto II 1 poor
• ev-te this lltulllon 1o 11 you rllk, might pr- rou for aloin tOdey. If
lhould get out.
you rttt youcon't tli&lt;ethecltance, hive
CANCIR ~~- 21-JuiJ 22) 11 you hive tilt gula to aay "no."
trouble In rour personal relationlhlps CAI'RICOIIN (Dec. 22-.lan- 111 Plrtlodly, the rtull could lie with you rather nen oou1d tum out to be 1 lllndriiiOI
than Wlllt othets. Be hon_, In your u- rather t1t11t a twlp todey, 110 think twtoa
-menta regarding wno Is to bla,._ before )'Ou Involve IOIMOntl In
LliO (~ulr :a-A111• 22) someone uncle- somelhing you're qulla Clplbte of tlk1ng core or on vour own .

24---

r--

In lilt
aheed, you might· have two
1111 oltotlll)o unrelltld ernbltlone. RHI
........S. h - . th1t eeclt will hive a
· good CltanGe ot being gtlllfted .
AQUA•• (...._ ..,.... 11) Strive to
dO llvon tor ot1tarJ todey, but dO 10 In
• wey- . _ ttotlftlkeltoam,lttl obligated. 1'hey wtH - t lttllng Indebt·
eel to )'Ou. K - - e 10 took lor romonee and you'll lind il. The Astro- ~rsph MltCittTIIker lnatlntly ravel!•

'"

_a on-

. A. CIRCE, pronounced "SUR-see,"
was a sorceress in Gree'k mytltology.
In Homer's "Odyssey." she turned the
companipns ·or OdysseUll into swine,
but he "forced her to change tbem
back. To descri~ a magician's power,
the ft4111e Is lui-ned into the adjective
CIRCIMN &lt;or sometimes CIRCAEANl, :ovhich is pronounced "surSEE-un."

AME

A - MBBJG

WVLLJG

BHEPKE

TFK
FKT

BFME

w.

FJ

FMU

"'"
,,,,

AMPJ

KXXNDVJP

VS,

UAMBB,

"

...
"

TMU.

-

-~

"'f

ZKfEUKE.
0

•'•

..-, .'''
0

0

I

••

' .

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•'
•'

S AG RY E

I

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PLAMC

II
3

I II

ti U Y 0 G ~
h:~--i-'l-:r.
15 .:...r--T-I-lr"

I

_ _ . 1
_ _ ._
'--'--L-'---'-...1.,

,...-H_U_R_A_'::-T-0- _
;,_,

-'
Disappoirited man to his
auto .mechanic, "What 1 really
need is a money machine."
Laughing the mechanic says
~?.. ~~~· "I already have one.

'

J

-·

i

1L -.L--L--L--L---1--J
I I I 1.6_ 17 ·10

· Q. 'J read about a magician with

,.

D G J U V P J E.X H

J I J G H

By Jelll-ey McQuain
IMPRECATION indicates a cui-se
or evil words. Even if somebody does
not pronounce this noun "im-prehKAY-shun," you should not decide to
use an imprecation.

Electric hot waltr huter and •
gaalumact, 114...1-2288.

Spm or ~14-M8.Z204 onor lpm.
OtnHII Nutrition Produeta
INturlng Amino Acid lodr
Building walaltt· and lit
bumtr · Vormul"a1. Avalllbl• ex·
clullvoly II Alto Aid Pharmocy.
Thlaata wa)' to dltl.
H.O. monitor/ ~6obuln In VCR,
with ...,Ole,
L Cold Spot
S.artl frMUr, t1w; I'J4..892·
:1200.
J A B TochnolooY IM-441-0050,
Ueld T.V.',_ - YCFI'I For Solo:
Zantlh 4 HHd YCR I11U6;
Ema100n VCR lli.H; Sllorp
vcR s7u5; RCA e o - ~.v.
SMIU5 Srlvonll COnoota 1125;

An anonymous person once said,
"What he doesn't kno.w would make a
library anybody would be proud of."
Well, anyone who knows everything
in my bridge library would make a
partner anybody would be proud of.
For. sure he would know the correct
way to play today's four-spade
contract.
West .guessed well, leading a club.
After East has played three rounds of
tbe suit, how should South continue?
East opened with a weak no-trump,
which is popular in those parts of the
world tbat used to be known as the
British Commonwealth. Soutb overcalled in his major; North had an automatic raise to game.
South must assume the trumps are
breaking 3-2, but,he must avoid walkinto a trump promotion.
wrong play is a spade to dummy's king. "If East can win .tbat and
lead the 13th dub, the defenders mtist
get Ute trump promotion.
If East has only two spades, declarer can su~ by leading a spade honor from his hand at Irick four. But
witb the11 given distribution, East wins
witb the ace and leads the last club.
West's ruff effects the trump
promoti&lt;in:
The correct play is to cross to dummy with a diamond before leading a
low trump to the queen. (Tbe diamonda must be H. If West had a singleton, surely lie would have led it at
Irick one.) Finally, play tbe spade jack
from hand. ·Now ll)e contract is ensured. You can ruff the 13th club low
In band, overruffing in the dummy if
necessary. .
Look for a line of play that will
work whatever the lie of the cards.

OUR LANGUAGE

•

.I

f

uge~

Sale. Mollohan Carpets; Rt7 N.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
.;....-;,;.;...,;.~,.;....,.....,~
614-448-11144. •
Tann CQA COiftpuler Monhor · Big 'fOUnd bal. . at mlxH hl)'1
VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP· (Cole~ $12UI.
115/bllt, 114-'1112-3014.
'
•
PUANCES
,
614-448-4426 OR 114-441-3151 . LoHr HI •11 Mltl W/ VGA Hlir, aquaro bolas S2. &amp; $2.60.
Monitor, 40 Ml Hord D~vo. Now
Entertainment Centar.. $141 Or Ovar 11,100. Only 1 Ye1r Old 30!1-175-31110.
Juat18150.
IM-iMHtat.
brand new htat pump, 614-t4t- $5.52 WHki BookahtlY.. Start•
Hly for lilt, equu. bait IZta.,
2t01.
ing $29.115{· Rocllnon 112lli_SOII One RainbOW 111 attachi'nente, 614·1192-3&amp;26.
And Cho n 1295 Or 110.113 atlll under warranty, l7&amp;0:- 11rm,
Looking For A Doll? C-ldoo A Wttk;
Large round balae, 115, will
Cotloo And End With
Pre-Owntd Mobllt ~om .. Larg1 Doors $198 S!!i I' Toblt ,With 6 304-678-1721.
~ad, t14·n2-6383 Or 014·141S.lactlcn, Low Money Oown, Chair. tAll wood); We•hen,
2754.
"
0u1n
For
Sale:
Ito
614-446-4201.
FrH Sti·Up And Delivery. 1-aoo;. Dryoro, ~lngH, ~otrlgerot«'o
Primluni
Hliy
Rollo
$26. Mor518-5710.
$269i Moura: llond•y · Saturday Saelonld Wood, 140 Dollvond, gan'• Farm. Rt. 35, Pliny, 304.MUM aacrlflc•, 1183 14X70 R•d· i-6i Btlow Silver, Bridga Plan 6i4-441-07711.
137-2018.
man with 5 year warranty, ln- Or 4 Miltl Out 141 On Lincoln
S!eto top poot tobla , 1800. 304cludn dellvtry1 allup, atapa Plko,
171-6171.
and eklrtlna. $165mo. Call 014·
Transporta11on
No Dtpotlt ' On Aent-2.owt1j
385·243.4 aSk for Mike.
Two
Com burning Dova Tool!
Nothing Evar Proownoct.
ttovee, new, Morvin Farm, 104Nashua 14x70 Expanoo, 3 Bid·
.
1
137-2018.
Couch
•
chair,
4
kitchen
chalra,
rooma, lath·1. '112..1. Garden Tub,
Autos tor Sale
2
IWIVtl
roCkert,
304-G7&amp;-2430.
Flrapllco, Front uock, 114·245ton, 114-241-11234.
1114 Ford VICIOI'ta Rune Gnat,
COUNTRY FURNITURE AND
231 v.- Dood kotarlor, CRAFTS
looodt Good Aoklng tt 500,
We Bur And Sail Good Uoed
010, Aftar 1 P.M. 114-2!18-tn:.i. .
Furniture. 2231 Stell Routt 141,
814-446-1422.
1m Corvatll, 4 a - . 12 ooo
Millo. 81111 Org. Call Anrtlmoo,
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
114-m-1106.
Wuhan• doy011,
ringH. oltaago Appillnctl. 71
Ylno St~_J:att IM-448-iiN, 1800-otllll-...._
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compltto lloma lu-inR
Hourt: Mon-1111, H. 1*"'0322, 3 mltM IIUI lh1acllt Rd.
Freeo.ttvary.
Building
H.- Oolt ~ Tabtae,
8uppllll
Chelrl, China e._ Hut.Ohtl, Ito.
River Volt., 0o1t Furnllwo,
a - CroOk Rood, Dollfloalla,
ult or rent- Mobile Home,
complng trollar lola •llh
utlt"'"• •50-$7S par month, 114·
m-mo orll4·112-2ut.

;

Couch with 2 matching choln
1121. 304-671-1147 loova ......

Holland 7ft hoyblltl. HoUond tft hoyblltl, 1 tlonll
1011 .....pori dleo. Geltl
446.0338.
.
Flrtwaad: All Hlrdwoodt Split
11
gnmla.,, Hotllnd
Dallvorod
$40
Pick-Up
_
Lood.
North Third Middleport. Ohio. 2
Super 71 bal.,.. All g~ oond.
114-251-1318.
.
bedroom, fui-nlahld or unfur..
nlshad apt. Dop &amp; rof. 304-&amp;&amp;2- . F1uorncent dghtt (2,, four 30W73-42115.
2568.
bulbi tach, lncludtd, 24x41 ln('O:::
n•=---b,.o..,d-roo-m--o-p-artma--nt, chn, J,35, each. 304-875-15CM.
rtfertncts required~ no peta, Pt. For Silo 10 Stott PlltHil tm
Plaaaant ar11, 114-192-1811.
·11181; 2 Judr Galllnd litH,
Prlco RNaonabta,l14-441.ot7U.

45

.i

- ·- . • TH~'~~E~ Z.··IS

rat...,...,.,

13~----------_____

I

lob prtp1r11tlon

progr1m about nontrHitlon11
ompiOymont, IONOW), 1-800137-6101.
Woritendera Now Hiring Etrn
Up To $7.00 /Hr Atxlble Daytlm•

~~
·-----

.,

IStiH

P&lt;lroon NMdod With Good Driv-

B·,-----------9. _______________

14•~__;

Anponslblt

Ing Record, Raftrtnc" Ntcta·
ury, Mull Ba Aell•ble, ~oneat
I
Wtll
Groomed
Send

18

6~~------------------7.______;__;__________

umlohed Small
• + UtiiHIH. No

..

tot, 304_.82·3287aftar 4:30PM.

lndlvlduala In Your Area To

5 . __________________

............3644.

front w/alumn aiding, 100x200 fl

O.monatrat1 Quality Kllchen

1--------------------

Cobia, 1381 !1ATE ROUTE 7,

GOVERNMENT HOMES F10m $1

Do You LOYE To Cook? An Exciting New Concept In ~omt

2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

CHESHIRE 3 Bedrooms, 1 B.,h, Graclou• living. 1 and 2 bed·
New lntulaled Wlndowt I room apartment• at VIllage
. end
Rlvtrallle
Siding, Gas ....... New Central Manor
HNt I Air, Newly RamDdt&amp;ed In· Apartment n Middleport. From
ttrlor, Ca~ Rural Water, $196. Call 61 ·lm-5858. EOH.

Up to $339.84 P• WINk. Amaz•

EARN GREATS SS

IT'S CAl.l..tl&gt; "Tt4E
t4AVL OF FAMf",

·-

Stay Home. Makt Money, A•
semble Our Producla And Elm

•

1Um your clutter into cash,
Sd it the easy way... by phone,
no ne~d to leave your home.
Place your classified gd todaj'!
15 words or less, 3 dgn,
3 pavers, 15.40 paid in advance.

No Lind Contnct. 114·

Completly FUmlahld mobile
htatJ ceble, S41,000. 614-317-1178 home, 1 miM tMiow town. over•
or 446-3532.
lookln1 river. No Peta, CA. 114-

lng Reeordtd M•uge Aavaalt
Dttalto 7118-657-3160,
Styllat Wanted, .For Buay Salon.
Hourly Wage Up To $200 A
Wuk. Ctror, e14~46-8922.
- THE PAMPERED CHEF

/' '. $43 Mil-LON. C:.EGI&amp;.. .
. fltLI&gt;t,, $% MII..I-ON.
fiYNt SAIII&gt;IE~G, t 7-'
Ml&amp;..l-01'1-·· TtiAT'S wtfY

- ---·--- -

$31l000 VInton Ar.., 12 Acrtt,
TlmDer, 2 Bedroama, All

441-1240.

'1-fT'S ~ff... BA,;y BONI&gt;S,

SXHIBITS· .

31 Homes for Sale
Elect~c.

• '

FRANK AND ERNEST

Real Estate

Dealer SHklng An Experltnctd
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Secretary • RecepUonl.. tor laW

';I

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EnglnHro, Medical, Bookkoop.
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800·llli5·8M ~~~- R2524.
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South
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For A Science . Education~
Reform Leadership Team. Ph', D.
I" Phy•ICt Or Qhtmltlry Prefer.. •
re~. Application D..tdllne •
February ~6 '1913. Addre11 In·
qulrltt And At~llttt •r.:rucatlon
Packet From: Dav
Todt 1
Regional Coordlnalor, Pro)Kt
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wllidtlo in violaDDII ollhO

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61RL 15 AT
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6613.

Gallipolis, "" 45631.
SCIENTIST /EDUCATCfR

APRIL FOOL!!

~AIR~D

butd on rae., atlar, religion,
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make llf'J ouch proforonco,

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TI4AT LITTLE

to-... •..,.""""'"""'·
limitation or dtcriminarion

P.O. Box 608, Gallipollo, Ohio
45631.
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CATIIERII DUSt

Pass

..,

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OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINO CO.
recommtndl that .you do busl·
n... with ~PII you know and
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New Anllora, Rttume To: CLA

I.

Soudo

40- blue

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48 Willi drink·

12 Nolle•
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Ingredient
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Vulnerable: North-Soui h
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Ohio

Complere the chuckle quoted
by fill 1ng. in tt1e missing ' words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

·,

SCIIAM-I.ETS
Hookup - Check - Prick - Double - CHECKBOOK
"h seems that since our son has left for college;
sighed the woman to her husband, "that the only comwe .have with him, Is through out
.

"

.,

.._,

.•

�Page-:10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, February 15, 1993
-

-

Your Social _Security Par:k-service cutbacks end 30-year program
By ED PETERSON' "
Scx:iol Securily
Manager in Athens

"prematurely aged." Residents of
,..
· '
·
Icelanll must wait until age 67 to
By KATHERINE Rizzo
Recreation Area can't buy all the cuts."
the helm, Interior Secretary Bruee
collect their retirement pensions.
A~iated Press Writer
supplies its budget initially
The Park Service has long com- ' Babbitt, has a new approach 10 the
(By the way, beginning in the year
WASHINGTON - Outside allowed.
plained that Congress adds 10 the chroQic problem.
·
What do Bolivia, Congo, Japan, 2000, .the age at which U.S. citi- Chillicothe, Ohio, a national park ·
Hopewell cut one seasonal · park system and provides money 10
Babbttt says the parks can be a
Morocco, Switzerland, Venezuela, ze ns can collect full retirement cut back on maintenanCe, lost two mainteoance position and two sea- . operate the attractions but doesn't vehicle for boosting· the CCllllOilly.
and about 140 other countries benefits begins 10 climb from 65 to rangers and canceled tlie special ·sonal ranger position,s. As a resuh, g1ve enough to jlrevent them from He wants to iet in on President
around the world have in common 67.
programs it used to give on sum- · visitors who want to see the earth- deteriorating.
Clinton's propos·ed $15 billion
with the United States? Th ey all
People born in 1938 will have 10 mer Saturday nights.
works may have to go to lhe visiBy contrast, a commiuee in infrastructure and job stimulation
have Social Security programs.
be 65 and 2 months, people born ·in
•'It was kind of nice to get peo- tors' center to find a ranger, Gibson Dayton is at worlc selling up a new paclcage.
·
My guess is many people are 1939 have to be 65 and 4 months, pie out for something special," said.
nauonal park. The $50,000 allocatAt his fim news conference,
surprised to learn to is. Perhaps etc., until the full retirement age Bonnie Murray , administrative .
"You may find a maintenance ed to plan for the Dayton Aviation Babbi~t proposed using some of
some assume that Social Security is reaches 67 for people born in 1960 officer at Hopewell Culture Nation- worker mowing the lawn. He could National Historic Park wasn't cut that money to atlaCk ·lhe backlog in
a uniquely American concept while and later.) In Czechoslovakia, men al Historical Park in southern · tell you where lhe rest rooms are because Ohio's lawmakers put a maintenance.
others might think that only the can retire at age 60 but women can Ohio's Ross County. "Unfortu· and where the first aid station is, special line in the appropriations
Babbitt said he was,preparing to
western industrialized nations have start collecting retirement benefits nately, those are the first things that but he wouldn't lie fully apprised bill guaranteeing the money.
give CliniOn a list ofthe Parle SerSociiil Security programs. Quite the betwccn the ages of 53 and 57 go."
of the signficance of lhe site. The
When the park honoring Orville vice's most urgent needs.
opposite is true. As a mechanism depending on the number of chilFor more than 30 years, the pro· contact staff would be in the bUild- and Wilbur Writht was being conCliiton hasn't said whether he ·
for meeting basic human needs, dren raised.
grams. provided free instruction on ing," he said.
sidere4, the Par SefViCe opposed agrees that spending money on
Social Security programs have
such things as understanding .the
Park Service spokesman Dun· it. •
· ·
·
parks is a good job-creating move.
achieved near universal acc.eptance.
Another interesting aspect to the stars and the ways of American can Morrow said many small parks
The park nearlY was defeated And even if he 'ives the parks
Almost every country in the world universality of Social Security pro- Indians. HopcwcU preserves earth- · had to go from operating seven because many lawmakers didn't · extra c~sb, there s no guarantee
( in fact, 146 of them from grams is a set of agreements the works created by the continent's days a week to six because of lhe want to burden the Park Service Ohio would gel a share.
Afghanisuin to Zimbabwe) offer United States has established with early inhabitants. ·
cuts.
with another long-term commitGibson said 'the Park Service
some form of social insurance for 13 countries (so far) that help coor- ·
The programs had to go when
"We have had complaints. We ment. Lobbying on lhe House fl.oor asked for ideas {or a sort of wish
their citizens.
dinate taxes and benefits for pe9ple Hopewell was force to find a way knew we would," he S3ld. "But: we and within a crucial Senate com- list of how -to use jobs-program
Of course, the kinds of benefits who work in two different coun- to absorb its share of a $34 million went in with basically a bare-bones mittee saved lhe projecL
• money if it becomes available.
offered vary widely from one coun- tries . These agreements, called National Park Service budget short- request to Congress, wilh lhe least · Now, a new administration is
His teply to Washington: hire
try to another, but there are many · "totalization agreements," general- age.
we
could
responsibly
afford
to
taking
Qver
siewardship
of
the
three.
seasonal rangers and three
similarities. Almost all countries ly eliminate double coverage so · Park Superintendent William spend. You don't have an option parks and responsibility for the ,seasonal
maintenance workers for
offer some form of old age, sur- that employees and employers pay Gib1;0n said the park's $406,500 when you have to start making parks' budget. And lhe person at Hopewell.
vivors, and disability coverage. taxes to only one country's Social operating budget was cut by 0.8
Many also provide worker's com- Security system. They also help percent in 'December and then by
pensation and unemployment bene- employees who have worked in the another I percent in January.
fits, an~ some Social Security pro- u.S. and another country, but not
"It doesn't sound like a lot, but
grams mclude_Sickness and mater- ,..long enough in lhe U.S. to qualify it is when you have a small park,"
mty care. As m the Umted States, for Social Security benefits. ·
' (AP) - Marley Mark
Ms. Murray said. "Take away sevBOSTON
almost all Social Security programs
In many cases, credits from both eral thousand dollars, that's a lot."
says he beat a Vietnamese man in
are financed by a tax on earnings.
cbuntries can be combined to pay a
At Ohio's Park Service units: •
1988 not because he's racist, as
Some of the countries have "totalization" benefit from the U.S.
. -· Perry's Victor&gt;: &amp; Jf\lerna- .
Community Calendar items Southern High School,Voag Build- · authorities contended, but becau~
interesting qualification factors for We 'currently have totalization Ilona! Peace Memonal canceled appear .·two days before an event . ing in Raei.ne on Tuesdlly from 7- he was drunk and high on marijuabenefits. For example, if you were agreemen\S with Austria, Belgium, plans to expand visitor hours.
and the day or that event.• Items 10 p.m.
·
na and wanted the man's beer.
a citizen of Burkina Faso, a land- Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
-William Howard Taft Nation- must be received well in advance
The 21-year-old rapper, whose
locked republic in Northern Africa, the Nelherlands, Norway. Ponugal, al Historic Site in Cincinnati can't to assure publication in the cal- . PAGEVILLE • There will be a real
name is Mark Wahlberg,
you could receive an old-age pen- Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and fill a maintenance job, ,
,.
endar.
sp·e cial meeting of the . Scipio served 45 days of a 90-day sensian at age 55, or as early as 50 if the United Kingdom.
'
-Cuyahoga Valley National
Towns!lip Trustees on· Tuesday at tence for the beating.
6:30 p.m. at the Pagcville TownWahlberg, who is white, also
MONDAY
hall.
was involved in two attacks on
RUTLAND - The Leading
black elementary schQDI children in
Creek Conservam;y District Office
WEDNESDAY
June 1986.
will be closed Monday in obser. RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire
He and two others followed the
vance of President's Day.
Department Ladies Auxiliary wil1 children shouting, "Kill the nig·
meet in regular session Wednesday ~ers" and throwing rocks, accadRACINE - The Big Bend Farm at 7:30 p.m. at I)Je fire station. All mg tD coon documents.
Antique Club will meet Monday at members urged 10 attend.
Wahlberg signed an agreement
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.
that
he would refrain from racist
By TONY ROGERS
was in ~allege when his girlfriend asks female students to list the
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- attacks. However, he called that
was raped by another man. The same thing, "and the list goes on
Asscx:iated Press Writer
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- port Literary Club will meet
"il yellinf match between
BOSTON - Ask Craig Nor- attack left her unable to be inti- and on"- everything from having ty Republican Executive Commit- Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at· the incitle1Jt
me
and
some
kids. '
·
berg-Bohm why he joined the mate, and the couple's year-old a man's voice on the answering
tee will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at home of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
Despite
his
$S.!urances
lha1
he's
machine to not using parking
expanding ranks of -men working relationship was shattered.
the Meigs County Coun House.
Wils·an Carpenter will review not racist, two anti-bias organiza·actively to end violence against
"When somebody is rapclll;"all garages.
"Maria Calla.s" by ArJanna tions plan a rally in New York·Cily
women, and he 'II say it was just the lhese trusts go away," he recalled.
"The blackboard gets filled up
TUESDAY
Stassinopeulous. For roll call mem- on Thll!'sday under a billboard for
right lhing to do.
About 15 years ago, he helped with things they do everyday to be
RACINE - Recertification class- bers arc 10 tell of a favorite musical Calvin Klein underwear that feaPress him a little, and he'll start a counseling center for mal~ safe," Katz said. "Seeing it up es for currently licensed pesticide performer.
tures Wa!Jlberg's picture,
recount the day his former girl- baucrers in St. Louis called Rape there so starkly, i~ makes them see applicators will be held ·at the
friend was raped.
and Violence End Now, or how unfair it is."
His experience isn't uncommon. RAVEN. The clinic helps men
In California, members of the
More and more, lhe fathers, broth- understand how sdcie[y conditions Oakl3nd Men's Project have holders, husbands and male friends of them 10 be violent, but the empha- ing anti-violence workshops everyrape or assault victims are taking sis is on holding them accountable where from prisons to workplaces
•
their l:ue from women's groups and for !heir actions. ·
since 1979. Along the way,thcy've
"The man who comes in usually learned what works with men, and
venting their rage p~oduetively by organizing.
puts the respcnsibility on others," what doesn't.
Across the country, men are set- said Norberg-Bohm, who now lives
"The touchy-fcely stuff doesn't
ting up counseling groups and sem- in Boston. "He says, 'She put me go over well," said Allan Shore,
inars to try to halt a growing num- in here.' We want to change !hat."
the executive director. "Companies
Often, men must first be per- don't like women telling them
ber of rapes, wife beatings and
domestic homicides.
suaded there is a problem. Katz, about !his. The old boys' network
Their goal: to help men under- who speaks at schools and colleges wants'men to tell them abOut lhis.''
stand the roots of their violence so about violence, begins by drawing_
Not everyone is interested. Katz
they will stbp. Their method: man- a white line down lhe 'tniddlc of f1' endures plenty of name-calling
to' man talk that gets down to· blackboard.
from men when he hands out
bl!SiCS.
On one side of lhc line he asks lcallets on Super Bowl Sunday or
"I can say, 'Listen guys, ... let's male students to list things they do at concerts of comedian Andrew
be honest," ' said Jackson Katz, each day to avoid being sexually Dice Clay, whose brand of humor
who in 1988 formed an anti-vio- assaulted.
.
has offended women and minori"There's-giggling, if not blank ties. Michael David Gordon, of the
lence' group in itoston called Real
I
•
..,
Men. " That' s something women stares," Katz said. "Then someone group New York Men Against Sexcan't do."
says 'Nothing,' and I say, 'Thank ism, received a death threat on his.
answering machine when he orgaNorberg -Bohm, a 41-year-old you. "'
sortware engineering consultant,
On the other side of the line he nized an ·ami-violence workshop at
. Columbia Uni.ver:sity.

Community calendar

Ohio Lottery
•
Pick 3:
021
-Pick 4:

clulane,
New Orleans
post wins
•

.

Vol. ol3, No. 208
Copyrighted 1993

home
prodf!Cis IS

..

There aren't any.
.
WhenyougetaBankOne
Home Equity Loan;~we pick
up the tab on closing costs that
would nonn31lyrun yoJJ. hundreds of dollars: You pay no
poin~;and no attorney's fees.
And no appraisal or title search
fees, either.
·
·Get your home equity loan
now andyotir.timing couldn't
be better. Becau~e interest
rates are still at some Qf the
lowest levels in years.
And as you probably know,
interest on home equity loans
is tax deductible in most .

f'J!I
J!JJ
t'

'~I
y

I

'•

. lOOR

lR~

SEEKS SUPPORT • Lots of telephone calls
and letters to Sears C:Ould make a difference,
says BID Haptonstall, posing !)ere beside a sign
outside his business. While the catalo1 business

"

•

'

~

•

requires studeats to see life from tbe periP«tive
or the physically challenaed. Witb her 1re
seniors Joe !Juzako or Elrama, Pa~ and Trk:la
Rice~ right, or Lind wood, NJ. (AP photo)

Mia·aieport seaJ?s store

An effort to save the Middleport
Sears Store, not as a catalog store,
~ut an appliance store, is under·
way.
..._
Cus10mers are being encouraged
to call Sears at 1-800-7334537 or
to write Sears Roebuck and Co.,
Sears Tow_er, ChicagQ, ~II. a~king
that a store be .retained m Middlepert.
Bill Haptonslall, owner/operator, said Monday that he has
received indications from Sears
that a store will be located some-

•

where in this area He said !hat he
has indicated his interest in having
an applia.nce store in Middlcpert.
Public supper! could make the
difference, said Haptonstall, who is ·
encouraging telephone calls and
letters of suppert for a Middlepcn
location..
_
In late January, Haptonstall
received word that tbe Middlepert
Sears catalog siOre would be ope of
more th~n 2,000 in the country
closed this year. He expects 10 ~­
advised later this- spring just !"hen

Ninth graders attending Southern Local High School outperformed ninth-graders attending
other Meigs County schools taking
the Ohio Ninth-grade Proficiency
Tests. . 0
According 10 tbe Ohio Department of Education, 41 percent of
Southern High Schools ninth
graders passed all four tests compared 10 20 percent an&lt;! 15 percent
for Eastern and Meigs, high
schools, respectively.
Statewide, about 39 percent of.
ninth graders-passed all four tests.

·About 25,000 high school
juniors statewide still need 10 pass
one or more of the four tests to
graduate, the Ohio Department of
Education announced recently.
This year's. junior class is the
first that must pass all required
parts of lhe tests 10 earl! a diploma.
Students are reQuired 10 show proficiency in writing, reading, malh
and citizenship.
Just over 8,500 of the 33,354
juniors who last November were
still taking the tests passed them,
according 10 the deparunenL

cases:That's an advantage
you don't get with other types
of financing.
Stop by your nearest Bank
One and-ask for a home equity
application. ·
.
.
Or cal1593-6681 orl-800677-4994 ifyo1,1 prefer.fu clos- ·
ing, it won't cost you a thing.
.
.,. ·

By JULIE _E. DILLON ·
Sentinel News StarT
A discussion on plans for the
former Pomeroy Junior High building was held at Monday's regular
meeting of Pomeroy Village Council.
Village council has purchased
the property from the Meigs Local
School Board and has approved a
right-of-way back to the. school
board for use by the pubhc wh1le
auending functions at Bob Roberts
Field.
.
Members of council were in
agreement that lhe filS! steps 10 be
taken should include securing the
building and repairing the roof 10
prevent further deterioration of the
structure. Mayor Bruce .Reed
reperted the sehool is now removing items from the properly ani)
!hat a general clean-up of the building will begin soon by fine workers
from Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick 0 'Brien.
.
Councilman John Blaeunar
repcrted the ftrst shipment of glass
for some of the windows in the
building should arrive early next
week. Replacement of·the window
glass wiU be completed by village
workers. Blaeunar also repcrted he
had received estimates on two furna~es for the structure in the
ainount of $2,144. No action was
taken on this matter.

Mayor Reed appeinted a build- · Main Street could begin as early at
ing committee of Blaettnar, next week. Completion date,
Thomas Werry, Larry Wehrung according to Anderson, is May 15.
Other matters
and Bill Young 10 assess the struc- ·
Mayor Ree.d reported two ,of
tore and repert back 10 council with
three stolen .vehicles had been
their recommendations.
..
recovered in the same area of the
Drug tests to be pur~based
At the request of the police village over a short period of time.
department, council agreed '10 pur- The lhird vehicle was recovered in
chase drug testing plates. This pur- a different location.
Council discussed a traffic probchase will be made wilh the understanding !hat Patrick O'Brien, legal lem on Ebenezer Street. Possible
counsel for lhe village, is in agree- solutions to the problem will be
investigated. Joann Patterson, vilment with the pro{K?sal.
The plates, wh1ch cost $10 each, lage resident, has requested council
would be administered by a pelice to investi~ate the problem and remofficer to a suspect to test for edy the Situation as best as pcssj;
cocaine and mariJuana, as well as ble. Her complaint is that when;
pulling off Ebenezer onto Main
other drugs.
Street, an obstructed view of,trafft&lt;:
Trame ligh-t discussed
Council approved the ~3,894 makes· the area a dangerous situa~
purchase of new solid-state traffic tion.
Repcrting on the parking meier
light for end of the Pomeroy Mason
situation,
Mayor Re_ed stated 17
Bridge. Council agreed the present
pcles,
13
double
meters and seven
light at the bridge is becommg 100 ·
single
meters
are
needed
wilhin th~
costly 10 repair and that ·100 much
village
to
repair
the
inoperable
money has already been spent on
meters.
:
repair of the traffte light.
Council
member
Betty
BaroniCk
Water department updat'
Approval was granted at the requested some type of curve sigD
request of John Anderson, village or indicator at the upper end of
•
administrator, to have lhe screen on Monkey Run.
. Werry reported he had heatd
one of lhe weUs cleaned. Anderson
stated this is a part of normal main· many positive comments on t~e
tenance which needs to be done clean-up of lhe river bank at Kerr:s ·
Run. Mayor Reed discussel\ the '
every three 10 four years.
Anderson reported work on possibility of developing some type
replacement of the water main on of mini-park in that area
~

Riggs again denied probation
motion allowing Riggs to supplement records and granted Riggs
leave 10 provide and ftle copies of
all letters of reference, documents
and pjltitions lhe defenSil submitted
or cause tD be submitted but were
not ftled.
Crow also decided that copies of
Riggs' SEPTA evaluatiOn(~)
should be placed under seal by the
clerk of couns and forwarded 10 the
court of appeals.

Classes in area are canceled
because of overnight snow
midnight and worked throughout
lhe nighL The streets were in good
condition when residents began
going 10 work Tuesday morning . .
Neilher of lhe villages reponed
any snow-related accidents.
The deparunem of Meigs Coun·
ty Sheriff Jaines Soulsby reperted
one aecident on State Route 143 in
Salisbury Township . An Ohio.
Dep~nt of Transportation truck
equipped with a front-end snow
plow was out working on the roads
when it ·slipped off the .highway,
struck a mailbox, and stopped in .a
ditch. There was minor damage to
the front of the vehicle driven by
Donald Folmer, Jr.

Americans making less than ·$30,000
are:. likely to escape higher taxes · .·

·BANKEONE.
Whatever it takes:
Bank One, Athens, NA
M~berFDIC

••

Pomeroy Council to repair
old junior high structure

the actual closing date will be. He
"AI the sentencing hearing,
By JIM FREEMAN
knows it will happen sometime
(Riggs) admitted his use of alcohol.
Sentinel News Staff
before the end of 1993. He hopes
A Reedsville man who pleaded Since (Riggs) did nol stop at the
the·catalog s10re can be replaced no contest to charges of aggravated accident scene and avoided arrest,
wilh a Sears appliance store.
vehicular homicide, gross abuse of the issue as 10 whether (Riggs) was
Meanwhile, he stressed, "it's a corpse and tampering with evi- under the influence is raised.
business as usual."
dence in 1990 was once again Assuming (Riggs) was not under
Haptonstall has operated the denied shock probation in the the influence, th·e court is not
business since 1985 when he pur- Meigs County Court of Common inclined to grant probation. The
chased the business from Greg Pleas.
intent of lhe legislation is clear and
Gibbs. A Scars catalog store has
Jason Riggs was sentenced to that intent is lhat (Riggs') conduct
been operated in Meigs County for .five to 10 years in prison for his should not be condoned.''
more than 30 years.
However, ·Crow did grant a
role in the death of 82-year-old
Vic10r Will of Canal Winchester.
Will was struck by a pickup
truck occupied by Riggs and Douglas Harris in Chester lhe night of
June 2, 1990. It was the night
Sixty-two percent (15,501) of before Riggs' high sehool graduathe juniors who failed tests in tion.
Overnight snowfall of about
November have only one test yet to
Will, who was attending his four inches caused cancellation of
p_ass, That's the good news, said high sehool reunion, rolled over !)le classes in all schools in Meigs
Ted Sanders, superintendent of truck iniO the truck bed and was County, but apparently few accipublic instruction. .
transported from the scene. His · dents.
"We have a limited time frame body was found two days later on a
Schools in Eastern, Meigs and
to help students pass these test,S creek bank at West Shade.
Southern, as well the Carleton
Sanders said. "Knowing that a
In lhe entry filed Feb. 10, Judge School/Meigs Industries, and the
large number of students have only Fred w. Crow 111 wrote:
Christian school in Middleport
one test left tD pass presents a tar"(Riggs) was convicted of were closed because of road condigeted focus for intervention. The aggravated vehictllar homicide in tions.
pressure is mounting to help lhese. violation of Ohio R~vised Code
Also canceled was a boys basstudents pass lhe .tests" we're sum- Section 2903.06. Paragraph (C) of ketball game between ViniOn ~nd
moning as manr. community which section states ... if in the ' Meigs scheduled 10 be beld IOmght
resources statewide as we can commission of the offense the at Meigs. The game has 'been
find.'
offender was ... operating a motor rescheduled for Friday with the
Mathematics is the test most vehicle while under the influence reserve game to stan at6:30 p.m.
·
juniors have yet to pass. Of the of alcohoL. he shall not be eligible
Crews in both Middlepert and
24,828 juniors who failed at least for shock probation.
Pomeroy were .called out just after .
one test in November, 20,390
failed malhematics.
The department has been able 10
track several trends in the data
available. For example,.!he class of
19% (current ninth graders) did not
perform as well on their first
auempt at reading and writing as
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- all in !heir taxes.'.' Steph~uloS
did lhe classes of 1995 and 1994.
dent Clinton is working to build said on CBS' Th1s Morn1~g. !fc
However, the class of 19% did momentum for a $500 biflion pack- was not more specifiC, saymg Omoutperform lhe other two classes on age of tax increases and spending ton was still working on some
thetr first auempt in both mathe- cuts warning the price of standing details of the plan to be unveiled
matics and citizenship.
still,"is far higher than the price of Wednesday night.
.
.
Performance of students who change.' • The White House said
Stepbanopoulos ~so S3!d Chnhave taken each of lhe four profi· today all Americans. making above ton hoped to have h1s entll'e ecociency tests continues to improve. $30,000 a year are likely 10 fool the - nomic plan enacted by the end of
Thirty·lhlee percent of the class of pinch.
tbe year.
.
.
1994 (current juniors) passed all
Republicans offered to ~ooperClinton. IOday was ~ng With
four teS~ on their fust auempt in ate on slashing the def1c1l after DemD!=~~c congressional tea&lt;t;ers
1991, and 41 percent of lhe class ~f Clinton's ftrst prime-time address and viSltmg a road construCtion
1996 passed. aU four teSts on the II' to the nation Monday night, but projeCt m 10wn 10 demonstrlte tbe
fusuuempt in 1992.
,were skeptical about his approat.h. kind of _publ.ic works ~jects ~e
Additional tutoring and one-on- "What the president his ~ econom1c sumulus pertwn of h1s
one moni10ring will be offered in so far is not}shared sacnftce' bui plan ~ould f~.
.
upcoming weeks 10 each of lhe · raw punishment," said Sen. Phil
ClintOn SBI~ the short-lt:l'lll ~nearly 25,000 high school juniors Gramm R·Texis.
ulus pan of hts plan :- $16 billion
who have not yet passed the profiWhiie House communications in spending on .JI!Ibh~ works prociency tests.
.
director George Stephanopoulos jects and $15 billion to tax breaks
These steps and others are pan said today higher lilies would like· for businesses -. would create u
of Project Pass, a statewide cam- ly be required of all Americans many as 500,000 JObl.
.
paign launched recently by the except those making less than
But most of hu 11-mmute
depanmenl of eltucldcn.
$30000
nationally bnle&lt;!"ISI.~.was an
Aeconllng 10 a ~nl press
•'•under the president's plan, ef!ort 10 explam h1s dectStons 10
rcleaso, Project Pus main goal is people making under $30,000 are ft!!SC lilies lind cut government ser·
Continued OD Jill' 3
very likely .10 have no increase at v1ces and programs.

Southern tops county in test results

-

~ c 1993 BANC ONE CORPORATION 'Consult your tax adVisor 10! spkilic conditions and details. Sut,iect to cridll

!Ill approval. Offer expires March 31, 1993. .

will be gooe after Ibis year, Haptoasii!U is hop·
ing to get a Sears appliance store located in Mid·
dieport.

:Effort under~ay to save

The lltllllltted oumulltlve
ROLLING ALONG • Tracey ·white, a Lock
Haven, Pa., University senior from
Williamsport, Pa., travelS In a wheelchair earlier
this month as part of a .clus exercise that

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents
A Mulll111odla Inc. Newspaper.

" Pomeroy-P.IIIddleport, Ohio, Tue~day, February 16, 1993

violence aimed at women

•

nurrle._ Wednesday, doudy.
HiBbnearJO.

•

Men joining ·fight against

our

I

Low lonlgbt In mid :ZOO. Snow

·:.1575

Page4

Marky Mark says
he's not a racist

thing

•

Pl!lllna ,... 11 cetcullttd by

IUIIUdlnt,PINinatllltllttOdlttbytht
11t1m1te or the mahnum IUIIblr or IIUdlnta

"This is nothing less th_~ a call
to lllll!S, 10 restor~.lhe vt'!JillY of lhe
A"!~ncan dream, he.sa1d.
e
The ~nee of domg the same
Contmued on page 3

.Ill!

..

PRESIDENT CIJN'roN ''

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