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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, February 16, 1993

Pro.ducers _h9ping to cash
in on Oscar riotninations

QUILTER • Adrian Rigney, 78, continues his
wife, Helen's mission, sewing quilts for needy
babies at his home in Holland, Mich. His wife of
57 years died a year ago and has taken up her

. By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES - Confident
their films will be winners. the producers of "Howards End" and
"Unforgiven" have assembled
elaborate marketing campaigns to
begin within minutes of Wednesday's Oscar nominations.
The quicl!:·hit strategies include
newspaper ads, television C(lmmercials and theater bookings. Fresh
advertising materials are mostly
complete, with blank spaces left
where the number of nominations
tan be inserted.
''The
nominations
are
announced at 5:30 a.m. At 6 a.m. ,
we can start our ads," said distribution chief D. Barry Reardon,
whose .Warner Bros. made "Unforgiven: ·
.
Both "Howards End," an adaptation of E.M. Forster's novel
aboUI c)ass and love, and "Unforgiven," a Clint Eastwood Western,
are considered shoo-ins for Acade.
my Award nominations in the best
picture category.
·
Sony Pictures Classics feels its
"Howards End" may collect up to
eight nominations; Warner Bros. is
hop in~ "Unforgiven" earns at
least s1x. Emma Thompson is seen
as a sure-bet for best actress in
"Howards End" and Eastwood is
favored for best actor and director.

cause. The patchwork quilts end up with babies
who have AIDS, are mv positive, or were born
addicted to drugs. (AP photo)

Breast cancer risk now 100 times
that of Stone Age, say researchers Names in
the news

By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
BOSTON- Stone Age women
began menstruating later, had children earlier and more often, nursed
more and had earlier menopause·all of which made them 100 limes
less likely to get breast cancer than
today's Western women, a
researcher says. · ·
The findings suggest ways of
sharply reducing breast cancer, ·said
Dr. S. Boyd Eaton of Emory University in Atlanta. an expen in the
.new f1eld of evolutionary medicine.
The field's cenual tenet is that
human society has changed drastically since the Stone Age but
human biology hasn 'i. As. a result,
humans are out of sync with their
envi'ronment in ways that lead to
disease.
Eaton was one author of the
study presented Monday at the

annual meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement
of Science.
The reproductive traits of the
Stone Age woman lower breast
cancer 'risk by reducing the rate at
which certain cells divide in the
mammary ducts inside the breasts,
Eaton said. Faster cell division is
associated with a higher risk of the
out-of-control cell reproduction of
caneer tumors, he 'said.
Eaton said he would not recommend that American women begin
having children at age 13, as Stone
Age women did.
But hormone injections could be
used to mimic Stone Age condi.
lions, possibly producing dramatic
declines in breast cancer rates, he
said. Such treatment could also
lower the risk of endometrial cancer and ovarian cancer, he said.
"We by no means advocate

doing this willy-nilly for all women
now," he said, recommending further studies.
American women face a 1-in-8
or l·in-9lifetimes risk of develop·
ing breast cancer, according to the
National Cancer Institute in Wash·
ington. The risk in Stone Age ·
women ·was about one in 800 or
one in 900, Eaton said.
Determinations of Stone Age
lifestyles come partly from fossil
evidence, but mostly from studies
of preserit·day tribes of nomadic
hunter-gatherers, Eaton said.
Other researchers are using the
evolutionary perspective to try to
understand why some babies cry
excessively and whether childbearing practices can be improved.
Or. Randolph M. Nesse, a p,sy- ·
chiatrist at the University of Michigan, is trying tb see how evolution
sheds light on mental illness.

Auxiliary _makes contributions
Contributions were made to
CARE, and organizations serving
blind and hospitalized veterans
when the Lewis Manley Auxiliary
263, America.n Legion, met recently at the home of Luella Pauerson,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Dinner at Dale's Restaumnt preceded the meeting. Margaret
Bowles. Americanism chairman,
gavc the history of the Ohio flag.
She said that flags are more than
just emblems of our country and
state, they arc syiJlbols of the
American way of life, freedom and
truth. Ohio's official flag was

adopted by an act of the Ohio Leg'
islature May 9, 1902. John Eisenmann was the designer. Mrs.
Bowles described the flag as havin~ thee red and two white stripes
w1th a white circle and 17 stars signifying that Ohio was the 17th state
to come into the Union.
The white circle with the red
center, she said represents the letter .
"0~' and suggests the buckeye. She
gave a quiz on Ohio' s emblems,
state that the stat's motto is "With
God All Things Are Possible"
taken from Mall. 19, verse 26.
Florence Richards gave a repon

from The Firing Line. Sl!e said that
at the American Legion National
Convention held inChicago in
August .it was tesolved that it
would assist the families of POWS
and MIAS and see that any infor·
mation concerning those veterans
be given appropriate consideration
by the Department of Defense. It
was also resolved that the American Legion would urge the president tO appoint a high level official
to carry 0111 the primary control of
POW-MIA activities.
.
Lorrene Goggins, president, had
the closing ceremony.

Sears dishwashers pose fire hazard .
WASHINGTON (AP) -. Owners of 400,000 K~nmore di_shwashcrs should stop usmg ~em 1mmcdiately because an electrical problem
with the•rt•mers could cause them
to catch fue. Sears, Roebuck and
Co. says.
Scars said Monday that leaks
caused timers on 30 machines to
short and overheat. Four of them
caught fire, causmg smoke damage
to the surroundmg countenop and
cabmets,Searssrud. .
Searssa•d•t•ssendmglettersto

customers who purchasea one u• 587.1550590; 587.1574590;
the Kenmore dishwashers between 587.1630590; 587.1640590;
February 1990 and October 1992.
587 .1641590; 587 .1650590;
Owners who have not rece1ved 587.165.1590.
leners should c~eck the model
The dishwashers should be
numbers, Sears sa1d.
unplugged or their doors unlatched
The numbers of the affected until they can be repaired Sears
models are : 587 .1400090; said
'
587 .1400190; 587 .1400890;
Owners can arrange for free
587.1400990; 587.1440090; repairs by calling a toll-free num587.1440590; 587.1469089; -bcr.
587.1469589; 587 .1510590;
The number for consumers 10
587.1511590; 587 .1530590; . callis(800)998-8470
587 .1540590; 58J. I541590;
·

ZEROING IN • Project director Robert
Lewis holds 1 volume from 1 Middle Enelish
dictionary in his office at the University of

Michilan In Ann Arbor. Lewis and his staiT 1re
nearlqe completion of the dictionary ror 1 language abandon~ · 500 years ago. (AP photo)
'

Other leading contenders for
best picture ir!clude "A Few Good
"Men," "The Crying Game,"
"Aladdin," "The Player" and ·
"Scent of a Woman."
The best actor race, particularly
close this year, could include Eastwood, AI Pacino for "Scent of a
Woman, " Denzel Washington {or
"Malcolm X," Jack Lemmon for
"Glengarry Glen Ross," Stephen
Rea for "The Crying Game," Tom
Cruise for "A Few Good Men"
and Tim Robbins for "The Play-

Susan Sarandon for ' ' Lorenzo's
Oil," Miranda Richardson for
"Enchanted April," Mary MeDon·
nell for "Passion Fish" and Gcena
Davis for "A League of Their .
Own.'' Outsiders include Shirley
.MacLaine for "Used Peopie."
Considering their budgets and
early box-office projections, both
"Howards End" and "Unforciven" have done well so far. The
inexpensive " Howards "End" has
grossed more than $18 million
since its release in . March, and the
er."
. .
costlier " Unforgiven" has sur·
Likely to join Miss Thompson passed $15 million sinee its release
in the best actress category are in August

Compiled by:
Emmogene Hamilton
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Isaac D. Jaclcson, dec'd, aflid, to
Doris V. Jaclcson, Olive.
Kathryn Wildermuth, Lot 206.,
to Thomas A. Oldaker, Pomeroy.
·Janice E. Ebersbach: parcel, to
Randy B. Ebersbach, Jennifer Lynn
Ebersbach, SuttOn.
Kevin M. Graham, Cheryl L.
Graham, 2.015 A. S.17, T-2, R-13,
to Carl Douglas Bobb, Tammy S.
Bobb, Salisbury.
Thelma Barton Campbell,
&lt;lee' d, Cert. of Trans., -to Austin
Barton Campbell, Rutland.
James M. G:omell;· Bernice E.
Cornell, Lot #J, to James M. Cor·
nell, Bernice E. Cornell, Lucretia
M. Stobart, Midd. Vlll.
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec'd, Ceri
of Trans, to Hlirotd A. Barnhart
Olive.
'
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec'd,
affid, to Harold A. Barnhart, Olive
, Cynthia M. Hartenbach, Lo't
111224 (55I), .to Stephen R. Hanenbach, Porn. Viii.
,
Da-.id L..Chesher, Janice L.
Chesher by P.O.A., parcel, to Nursing Corps., Inc., Salisbury. ·
Kenneth R. Guinther, Carol L ·
Guinther, parcels, 8 A. S.12,"T-2;
R-12, to Richard D. Hill, Wendy
HiU, Sutton.
Robert C. Bailey, Wilovene Bailey, Tracts, to Robert C. Bailey,
Trustees, ,Wilovene Bailey,
Trustees, Salisbury. ·
Roger Stewart aflid. and Linda'
Stewart, Meigs. .
Ardis R. Waggoner by P.O.A.,
F.33, S. 27, F. 24, S. 28, 69.979 A.,
. T•7, R-14, to William R. Donahue,
Shane M. Donohue, Scipio. '
Bruce E. Davis, S. 36, T-9, R·u, to Mona 1. Perry-Davis, aka
Mona 1. Davis, COlumbia

Pick 3:
181
Pick 4:
7686
Buckeye 5:
8-30-31-32-33

Inside today

Paruy c~ooot~y IGnfl:bt. Low
near 10. Tbunday, sunny. HJcb
In the 20s.

••
r

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•Vol. 43, No. 20~

Copyrlghled 1H3

3 Sectlono, 22 Pagea 25 oenta ·
_A llluldmedla Inc. .._,.....,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 17, 1993

•

Regular HEAP deadline Feb. 26
The deadline to apply for Regular HEAP during the 1992-93
, application period is Feb. 26, leaving about10 days to apply.
HEAP helps . low-income
Ohioans meet the' high cost of
home heating during the winter
months. It is a federally funded
program wtlich assisis households
at or below ISO percent of the fed. eral poveny level. Assistan,ce from
this program is limited to once per
heaung season and .those who have
applied since August 1992 should
not reapjJJy at this time.
The Emergency HEAP program

Clinton plans to visit
Chillicothe Thursday

continues through April 2. Low
income persons With heat r~lated ·
utilities disconnected or threatened
by disconnect, or bulk fuel persons
whose supply is less than 10 days
meets the emergency requirements
of the emergency HEAP program.
For further information residents
may call 367-7341 in Cheshire, or
992-6629 in Meigs County. The
Gallia County Outreach telephone
number is 446-0611 and the Meigs
County_Outreach number is 9925605. The toll free hotline number
for regular HEAP inquiries is I·
800-282-0880.

Southern Ohioans have an economic message

Kevorkian
aids 13 suicide
•

By SHARON THEIMER
not walk, could not go out of the
Associated Press·Writer
house."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)' ROSEVILLE, Mich. - A 70Kevorkian, 64, was charged
Sandi Patti's 11-year reign as the
Gospel Music Association's female year-old invalid killed himself with with murder in the first three suivocalist of the year comes to an Or. Jack Kevorkian's help in what cides in which he hel\)ed. But the
Kevorkian's lawyer 51!id was the charges were dismused after
end this year.
The veteran singer wasn't even latest in a stream of people seeking judges ruled Michigan has no law
nominated Monda'y; giving way to his help before a Michigan ban on against assisted suicide. No charges
were brought in the suicides·since
perennial contender Amy Grant, assisted suicide takes effect
In
the
13th
suicide
in
which
he
then.
Cindy Morgan,. Kathy Troccoli,
has assisted, Kevorkian was preMacomb County Prosecutor
Susan Ashton and Twila Paris.
sent
Monday
when
Hugh
Gale
.
Carl
Marlinga said he was con.Grant also was nnminated for
inhaled
carbon
monoxide
through
a
cerned
about the increasing, freartist of the year, an award she won
mask
at
his
home.
quency
of
Kevorkian's assisted suilast year. The four other fmalists in
,
It
was
the
fifth
suicide
·
c
ides.
that category are Steven Curtis
"I think Dr. Ke~orkian is on a
Chapman, Michael W. Smith, Kevorkian had attended since Dec.
15,
when
Gov.
John
Engler
signed
crusade
and a lot more people will
4HIM and Michael English.
Paui hasn't gone on tour for the a ban on helping someone commit !Jie," he said.
The ban on assisted suicide will
past year and hasn't.recorded a stu- suicide. The law takes effect March
.
be in effect for IS months while the
dio album since 1990. "She's 30.
excited for the nominees. Most of
''The Legislature has made Legislature studies the issne.
The law makes helping someone
them are personaUriends of her," these people more panic-stricken
said her spokeswoman, Pamela and a lot of them feel that if they commit suicide a crime punishable
Muse.
do~'t do something_quiclaly they'':~: by four years in prison. Kevorkian
gomg to be forced mto some tem- 1las threatened to defy the law, sayLOS ANGELES (AP) - Kevin .ble ~iony _and pain," Kevorkian ing it is ,irn"!!ral.
Costner got a .razzing for his scalp attorney M1chael Schwartz said.
.
Gale s w1fc, Cheryl, was present
job in the movie ''The BodySchwartz said Kevorkian has at her husband's death, Schwartz
guard."
been contacted by hundreds of peo- said. Gale.had five sons, ages 34 to
Costner's haircut was nominat- pie interested in committing sui- 1S2. They were not present.
"I knew he was sick and I knew
ed Monday for a Razzie Award in cide. .
the "worst new star" category.
Gale, a· former security guard, that he's never been out of the
Despite its status as a box-offiCe suffered' from ~mphyscma and con- house," said Cheryl Kennedy, a
smash, "The Bodyguard" led the gestive heart disease, Schwartz neighbor. "I saw Jack Kevorkian
field with seven nominations, said. "He was in terrible pain," the leave the house Thursday night and
including worst picture, worst lawyer said. "He was on oxygen I told everybody and they thought I
screenplay, worst actress and worst 100 p'ercent of the time - could was nuts."
actor for stars Whitney Houston
andCosmer.
Miss Houston - all of her joined Costner's hair in the worst
new star category.
Winners of the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation's 13th annual
spoof of tlie Academy Awards wiU
be announced March 28, one day
before the Oscars.

Recorder posts
land transfers

Ohio ·Lottery

Tax
information
guide

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OUR SPECIAL
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WAY OF
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THANKING YOU!
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Prcstnllhis ad with your
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admlssionJtcketstub at our
consaslon sund and rccltvc a I
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fRESRl.X
popcorn. I
popc.om (/Her c_xpirco 3/IS/~ I

POPCORN

'fillT'

..... - -.- ---'
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-

LIRA ON A RECORD LOW • A broker of
the Duesseldorf money market notes Wednes"
: !Jay's otncialltallan Lira exchange rate. The .
Italian currency went down from. 1,0640 to

•

1,0525 marks, marking a record low against the
German m11rk. World markets are cautiously
awaiting reaction to President Clinton's tax proposals. (AP ph(&gt;IO)

..

.

.WASHINGTON (AP)- After .
"weeks .of preparation, president
.!!lihtOf! is.coming forward with a
stern economic package offering
$500 billion in tax increases and
spending cuts. A proposed energy
tax would cost middle-class tax. payers as liltle as $10 a month, an
aide said today.
·
While the White House braced
· for an onslaught of lobbying
_ : against the package after Clinton's
announcement tonight, several
aidCs tried to downplay the impact
on the middle class.
" There's been a lot of talk
. abOtit·how-much the middle class
:\fill pay. They will pay virtually
, nothing," Deputy Treasury Secre-

Altman said todaY· •
The adrilinistratioii'icknowl·
edged Tuesday that all American' . anticipation of a major lobbying
householdS making more than effon against it.
.
$30,000 a year would feel a pinch.
"We'll see the phone line.s
But Altman said th.e proposed · jammed because that's the way it's
energy tax, expected to 'be the pri- done these days and that's too bad.
mary levy on the middle class, will But I think were going to beat the
cost abqul $10 a month for people ·special interest groups,". Treasury
earning tess than $75,000 a year.
Secretary Lloyd Bentsen said on
The president unveils his eco- CBS today.
.
nomic package in a nationally teleLabor Secretary Robert Reich
vised address to Con~ at 9 p.m. said while "everybody is going to
EST.
'
be a.liule nervous" he expected the
Even before Clinton for!llally public to rally behind the package
unveiled his $500 billion deficit- once everyone "understands that
reduction package, controversy every American is going to have to
over its tax features lie!nt the stock contribute."
market reeling, produce~ taunts
tary_Ro~

Carey throws support behind strike
·ginia, Illinois and Indiana began
Feb. 2 after the union's contract
with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association expired.
"I've told (UMW President)
Rich Trumka that as far as the
Teamsters are concerned, this isn't
just the UMWA's fight, it's labor's
fight," Carey said:
Meanwhile, Eastern Associated
Coal Corp . says it may join
Peabody Coal Co. in sh1pping
stockpiled coal to meet customer
demand during the strike.
Firefighters of the Racine Volunteer Fire Department responded
"We haven't decided on that
to two fU'eS overnight.
.
yet, but I'm not going to rule that
•
The department responded Tuesday around 8:45 p.m. to a mobile
out yet," said Eastern Associated
home fire owned by Donna Stobart on Yellowbush Road ncar
spokesman Terry Whin i~
Racine. Twenty-three men and four trucks responded to the sc~ne
Charleston. W.Va. "We look at
and remained pntil about II p.m.
·
·that every day."
,
While no cost estimate has been established, the trailer was conPe&lt;;body Coal shipped stock• ~· sidered a total loss. The Syracuse Volunteer .Fire Department assist· · pile&lt;~ coal for a third straight day
, , ed. "
Tuesday. Peabody Coal. President
••
No injuries were reported. The blaze is currently under investigaGeorge S, Shifleu said the Lyn'
.. lion.
·
nville .Mine near Lynnville, Ind.,
,Around 7:15 this morning, the department was called to the
sent coal to Indianapolis Power &amp;
• • scene of a chimney fire at the Fay Westfall residence on Long Run
LighL
. ·
: Road in Lebanon. The call was canceled in route. The Bashan Vol·
'Peabody Coal spokesman Joe
• unteer Fire Departrnen! assisted.
Krmgl said decisions to ship stock-•
piled coal will be made from day to
•
day.
.
Jim Grossfeld, the UMW's
t •
•
Connie Kanl:hnik, R.N., will conduct a free skin testin~ clinic at
national spokesman, said the union
· , : theAIColumbia T~~h!P Fire Deparun!nt Monday from 6- p.m.
'is monitoring the shipments but
. ,
. 1area rest.....ts, mcluding booster club$, PTOs, chwth group~
sees 110 reason to worry.
• and other residents who are in food·service are urged to take advan"The impression that they 're
.
·
: tage of this service.
trying to give is that it's business as ·
For the convenience of working _parents, this is an opportune
usual, and it's not. ll's anything
time for a chile! entering kindergarten next year to receive their skin
but,"
Grossfeld said. "The strike
'tesl.
'
,
has been and remains very effecThe furids' for these clinics are provide(! through the tUberculosis
tive."
,
:
.. : levy and !here is no charge for any of our services.
· Meanwhile, the UMW said it
Questions should be ditecteid to the Meigs County Tuberculosis
reached a five-year contract with
Office at 992-3 722. .
•
Omar Mining Co., a West Virginia
suJ:&gt;sidiary of A.T. Massey Coal
Co., which is not a member ot the
Bi!Uminous Coal Operators AssociIn a cue ftled Thundly in the Mei*s County Co\11'1 of Common
ation.
. Pleas, Arthur Knight ~ Chariue Kmght, doing business as C&amp;A
UMW field representative Paul
· Auto, 606 E. Main SL, Pomeroy, are leekins $5,624.60 from Light·
Ritchie
said min·eri at Omar
ning Rod Mutllll InsUJWtCC ComPIDY of Woocter.
approved
the agreement earlier this
'
According to the complalnt filed. the Knlglus' business sustained
month
by
a 59-18 vote. They will
' damage in a June, 1992, haiiBtonn that was not paid by the iQsurreceive
·a
pay
rai~ of 5 cents an
ance company.
·
hour with the same benefits as in
'--~-----...;..------~.;....-----J
the l~tcontract.
.
the strike "is about issues that
affect ev'ery union family and is a
cause that deserves the suppon of
every union household.''
The United Mine Workers strike
against Peabody Holding Co. sub~idiaries. . .in Kentucky,
. .. - . West Vit' (

RVFD responds to two fires

•

Enjor a feature film in luxurious comfort.

.. . Free skin testing clinic slated

:--------------------~
· WINI WIN~ WIN
'
1 Pleue re111r11 tllil 01111)' form 10 dlo SPRI~O VALLEY
CINIIMA bar. olftco for a d!an1.: 10 WIN a dinner rex

-~~tho f&amp;mOIII STOWAWAY RESTAURANT A
LOUNOB iniUIOIIc dow1110wn Ollllipolio.
I llnt'ldn&amp; wW be hold Mm:11 1, 199'.1 at die SPRINO .
1 · VALIJ!Y CINEMA.

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IIOWAIAJ 1

'"~""''""'I

Namc---------'---Phone _ __

I
Addr---------------..:.. I 1
I C l l r - - - - - - - -" ' - - - Stalt - - - I

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:

Seeking judgment .

,

.

GEORGE WRIGHT

he hardly earns enough money in
the banquet department to pay his
bills, including child suppon. He
lost his maintenance job at the
motel six inon ths ago when room
reservations dropped.
"But I have to do it. I have to
pay my suppon.:I can't be a deadbeat dad, .. he said.
Census figures for 1990 show
that 17.7 percent of Ross County
residents were living in poverty,
compared with the statewide nile of
12.5 percent fhillicothe, the county seat, is abOut 50 miles south of
Columbus.
Nearby counties . deeper in
Appalachilr had poverty l'lltes above
20percent.
·

'George Wright eyes seat
on Pomeroy Council ·

- George L. Wright, Unioil
Avenue, Pomeroy, is making his
first bid for a political offiCe.
Wri~ht. a Republican, has filed
a petiuon asking for his party's
nomination to a seat on Pomeroy
Villllge Council in the May Primary.
- Tliete will be four seats open on
COtlheitll\is Y'W since the terms of
Betty Barnock, William A. Young,
and Thomas Werry, Republicans,
and Larry Wehrung, Democrat, are
expiring. If enough candidates ftle
there will be both Republican and
Democrat Primaries on May 5 with
·the candidates nominated then to
be on the ballot in November.
In announcing his candidacy;

. .

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

POPCORN

hopestogetajobthatoffershealth

jC[inton to deliver stern
·economic package tonight
.

By The Associated Press
.
Teamsters President Ron Carey
today threw the union's support
behind a strilce by more than 7.000
coal miners in four states.
Carey told the nation's labor
leaders m Bat Harbour, Fla., thai

·----·------1
I

~-·

CHll.LICOTHE, Ohio (AP) .illsurance.
Health ~ and jobs II!C two conClinton is expected tO arrive in
ce!'ls restd.ents wo~~;ld ltke to share · Chilli~othe Thursday ev~ning and
":l~h Pres1dent Chnton when he spend the night at .a hotel. He is
v1s11s the ~ge of one of the state's · scheduled to speak with Chillicothe
~~est regaons. . .
High School students, staff memIt would be niCe •f there was a bers and others in the school gymhealth plan ava1Iable to anyone IUISium Friday morning .
regardless of income," said Katri''It's a no-holds-barred frank
na Snyder of Waverly.
·discussion between middle AmeriMs. Snyder and her husband, ca and the president of the United
Richard, a welder, don' t have med- States ,., wd Tim Barnhart Ross
ical insurance. They're expecting County Democratic Party ~hair­
their fourth child and are trying to man.
pay off a $20,000 hospital bill for
Roger McCloy of Pleasant Valone son's knee operation a few ley wants ·to take advanllge of the
years ago.
. OpPOnunity and tell Clinton abo1,1t
Ms. Snyder, a freshman at Oh•o h1s struggles to make a living.
Univ~tsity's. !=hillicothe branch, is
The Holiday Inn employee said
studymg elementary education. She
'

Wright said that he thinlcs Pomeroy
is at a point of "waking up" and
that his interest is in assisting how
ever he can with improvements to
the village and the quality of life to
residents in the Bend area.
Wright, retired for four years
from American Electric Power Co.,
hll,j long beet! m~ in communitY and civic affairs. He has been a
scout leader for over 20 years, and
is active in the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church . .
He and his wife, Nellie, have a
daughter and son-in-law, Susan and
Joe Clark, Pomeroy, a son, Chuck,
of Gallipolis, and a foster daughter,
Sherrie Southworth, Cplumbus.

Howard
Only three candidates have
appqin{ed
fi,led for May Primary thus far
BHRC&amp;Drep
- only·'Asthree
of late Tuesday afternoon partial term. before going off coun,
candidates had filed

Commissioner Janet Howard
was selected to represent the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners "at
the Buckeye Hills .Resource Con·
servation and Development Council during its regular meeting this
morning in the Meigs County
Courthouse.
~oward replaces Commissioner
Manning Roush as commission
representative to the council.
In addition, the commission
received a petition from Noble
Summit Road resident Ray Fowler.
The petition, signed by 25 residents and land owners, asks the
commission to accept the Rutland
Township portion of Noble Summit
Road (formerly Shotgun Hollow
Road) into the county road system.
Currently the road is split between
RuUand and Salisbury townships.
Fowler explained that the road
is often used as a flood road due to
frequent floodiQg on State Route
124.
Roush said the commission
would meet with County Engineer
Robert Eason and the Rutland
Township trustees to discuss the
situation.
.
'
Present were commissioners'
Howard and Roush and Clerk of
Commission Mary Hobstelter.
Commissioner Robert Hartenbach
was unable to attend ~ue to illness.

petitions for village positions
where terms are up for re-election
in November.
·
The deadline to ftle for the May
S .Primary is 4 p.m . Thursday. Several petitions p1cked up earlier this
month are still out, according to
Rita Smith, director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
In Pomeroy George Wright and
Thomas Werry, both Republicans,
have filed for seats on Pomeroy
Village Council, and in Middlepon
· the only person filing for a seat on
Middlepon Village Council has
been R~ben Gilmore, Republican.
Gilmore served two terms and a

cil several years ago.
:
· In Middlepon the terms of Judy
Crooks, Dewey Horton, and Paul
Gerard, Republicans, and Jaek Satterfield, Democrat, will expire this
year. Pomeroy council member!!
with terms to expire include Betty
Baronick, William A. Young, and
Thomas Werry, Republicans, and
Larry Wehrung, DemocraL
Petitions can still be picked up
at the! Board of Elections orfice on
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Fifty
valid signatures of members of tlie
candidate's party or undeclared
voters are required on petitions.
The.re is a $10 filing fee.

Pomeroy man cited for D:U.I.

Pomeroy !'Dlice are investigating a hit-Skip accident on Ea~t
Main Sueet OCCurring about 4, p.m.
Tpesday.
Linda Moore of Syracuse
reported to police that she had
parked her car at a meter, was gone
about 15 minutes and when she
returned found the damage to the
frOnt passenger side.

Donald E. Russell, 42, 38740 Syracuse, was eastbound when he
State Route 684, Pomeroy, was · lost conirol and went off the right
cited for driving under the inllu- side of the road and struck a fence.
e!K(e and failure to control Tuesday
The patrol cited unsafe speed as
afternoon following a one-vehicle the contributing factor of the acciaccident on State.Route .143 in Sal- dent.
isb\11')' Township.
No citations were issued in a
AccOrding to a repon from the two-vehicle accident early Tuesday
Gallia·Meigs Post of the State morning on State Route 7 in
Highway Patrol, Russell was north- Chester Township, the Galli&amp;·
bound when he lost control in a Meigs Post of the State Highway
curve, ran off the left side of the Patrol reported.
road and struck a bridge.
.
According to the -patrol report,
No injuries were reported. The Joey R. Sizemore, Jr., 23, 356 1{2
vehicle sustained heavy, disabling Palmer Street, 1\:fiddleport, was
damage and was towed from the stopped on the berm of S.R: 7 raescene.
ing north when a northbound vehi•
The pattOI also in¥cstigated two-- cle.driven by Sbql,~,·~
accidents in which no injuries were 5728 Calvert Boulevard; St.
reponed.
· Leonard, Maryland, lost control on
A Sr_racuse youth .was charged the sno~ cov~red roadway, weni
.with f01lure to control following a off the nght s1de of the road and
one-vehicle accident Mon4ay after- struck the left rear of Sizemore's .
.
.
noon on County Road 26 in vehicle.
Chester Township.
Both vehicles sustained light
· According to the report, Richard damage and were driven from the
E. Friend,, 16, 1315 Bridge Sueet, scene.

News Hotline

House destroyed by fire ·

"

Hit-skip crash probed

For news tips or to offer
story suggestions, call the
Editorial Department.at
. 992-2155. .

.

The one story frame home of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Freeman ,
Story's Run Road was destroyed
by f.re just before midnigllt Tuesday.
.
.
· MiddlCJX)tl Fire Chief Jelf Dlrst
, reponed that his departmet!l was

called to the scene at II :35 p.m. fi'e
said the fll'e started around a fuel
oil furnace, that all of the houaehbld furnishings were· destroyed ·
and that the family had no insur•
ance.

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Wednesday, February 17, 1993

.Commentary

'

WASHINGTON -It's unlikely that Hollywood will ever ~ a
Pomeroy, Ohio
movie romanticizing the exploits of
DEVOTED TO THE Ji'I'I'IRDT8 OF Till!: MEIGS-MASON AREA
health-care fraud artists, yet there's
growing evidence that a "medicah
mafia" of sorts has sprung ·up
across the country, engaging the
. FBI in one of its most urgent law
enforcement challenges.
ROBERT L. WINGETf
No one "family" or " godfaPublisher
ther" directs the medical mafia.
Yet it's adding millions of dollars
PAT WHITEHEAD _
to the health-care burden already
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
breaking
the backs of American
Asslsblnt Publisher/Controller
General Mapager ,
families. One government estiinate
shows that'fraud and· abuse add
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
some 10 percent to U.S. health-care
words. All letters an subject to editing and musl be signed with name.
costs,
which currently approach $1
· address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
trillion
a year.
;·,
,
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
If accurate, that number suggests health-care fraud is shaping
up as the savings and loan scandal
of the )990s.
FBI officials say such abuses
include fraudulent billing schemes
by medical equipment suppliers;
nursing home scams; hospital
billing frauds; psychiatric hospilal
and diet-clinic rip-offs; and
DyALANFRAM
"rolling lab" swindles that prey on
Associated Press Writer
. the elderly and loot Medicare as
WASHINGTON- You're a member of Congress, and President well as private inSurance.
The FBI has redeployed 150
Clinton is about to unveil a paclca$e of higher taxes and spending cuts
agents nationwide on health-care
sure to infuriate many of your constituents. What do you do?
Easy. You blame the other guy.
That's the exercise already under way in Washington, as Clinton prepares to outline his economic plan in a Wednesday night address to
Congress and the nation.
,
· The package is expected to be brimming with .everytlling from deficitcutting energy tai&lt;es to road repair funds that create jobs. But its accent
will be on trimming monster budget shonfalls, which means it will taste
more sour than sweet to most Americans.
As a result, Democrats have been honing their message: Although
everyone will have to share the pain, it's the rich who'D get whacked the
hardest because GOP administrations have coddled them for a dozen
years.
"Everybody in America is going to be asked to sacrifice a little bit, but
people at the top are going to be asked to sacrifice a lot,'' Labor Secretary
Robert Reich said last week on CNN's "Larry King Live."
Republicans have th~ir theme ready, too. It goes something like thiS:
· ·'Clinton's package will be heavy with taxes because Democrats still don't
·: get the message that government over-spending, not under-taxing, is the
' · problem.
· · ·.
. ·· "What we need is to address excessive government spending because
· it is excessive spending that is creating the deficit," says New Mexico
~ . Sen. Pete Domenici, ranking Republican on th~ Senate Budget Commit'
.. tee.
'
Democrats know they are on the defensive in this fighL The economic
plan has been written by a Democratic White House and will have to be
· approved by a Democratic-controlled Congress. Their job will be to per. - suade people to accept shan-term pain that they say will benefit the econ. omy in the long run.
.
·
So Democrats are doing their best to grab the political initiative by
· using history to explain how the country got into this mess in the rrrst

..

Democrats, . Republicans
gird for budget war
..

.

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..

The Ohio Legislative Service
Commission (LSC) anoounces tha~
they are recruiting applicants for
the 1994 LSC intern program. 1994
will be the 31st year that the Commission has sponsored the intern
program.
The LSC intern program is open
to any recent CO~ge graduate, ll!ld
are fulltime, paid· employeespf the
Commission. LSC interns earn
$18,300 annually and, during the
period of their internship, are fulltime state employees.
To apply, a person must submit
an application form, college transcripts, .and three letters of recom-

has assigned 10 new pos1tions to
the job and formed a heai.Jh care
unit within its cri111inal division.

By Jack .Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
. But ~pite evidence of widespread
white-collar looting, prosecutors
have not gone after cases they
regard ~ promising mere ,pocket
change. Many prosecutors apparently .only accept criminal healthcare eases that involve $100,000 or
more, because the workload from
the savings and Joan scandaf and
drug cases has so taxed resources.
·Here are some of the scams contributing to tlie $80 billion:a-year
health-care crime wave: ·
Rolling Labs. According to the
FBI, the vulnerability of the health
care system to fraud is most vividly
illustrated by California schemes
that have involved more than $1
billion in fraudulent billing frOm as
many as 200 physicians and other
providers. The schem~ revolved

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~fl=~~~~ 'd::'

::'C: ~

a Post source: "He talked about
how he was a fat kid when he was
five and six and how the other·kids
taunted him)'.
..

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~~
ill 11111 NEll. Inc.
by

"Are you here checking out the spring break
action?"
1..- - - - - - - - . . , . . . - -

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around getting people with health taxi and shuttle.bus. serVices billed
insurance to visit mobile labs, as ambulance stirvices to iliSW'IIJICC
called "rolling labs," where non- companies.) Patients are required,
invasive tests -such as health and however, to submit to psychologiblood pressure movements -were cal eXatns, a series of blood tests,
conducted. The labs an4 doctors and X-reys, which ·are billed to
. use phony diagnoses when submit· insurers under th~ .false pretense of
ling the insurance claims; Although a fabriCated psycholo~ical malady.
some of the owners of these labs Under the guise of ' group themhave been suecessfully prosecuted, py." trips ate taken to shopping
no money has yet been recovered. malls and amusement parks and
Some six similar schemes are still then blUed anreatrnent for menial
known to be operating in Southern illness to private irisurance carriers
California.
. .
as a purported psychiatric diagnoDurable 'Medical Equipment sis.
(DME) fraud and kickbacks. DME
Psychiatric Hospitals. With a
firms pay kickbacks to health-care rising tide of insurance claims and
roviders including doctors nurs
government benefits involving subP
mg homes and hospilals in 'returh stance abuse, alcoholism ·lind
· for obtaining supply. contracts. depression, this has become a gold
MediC11te and private insurance mme for .fraud. Patients who would
firms are easy prey. These be better served by out-patient
unscrupulous businessmen also . treaunent are steered into in-patient
employ telemarl::eting scams, and · hospiralization. Other patients have
fraudulently bill unnecesSaty DME been fon:ibly admitted irlto psychisupplies and services.
atric treatment programs even
Diet Clinics. Patients are solicit- though they poSe no threat to the
ed through prom~s of weight loss community or themselves. They
at normal expense. Sometimes are subjected to a battery of blood
patients are even provided free air· teals, X-rays, shock treatment, and
fare to country club facilities, something called "wave therapy."
which can include chauffeured Though relath:ely painless, it is·
limoosine service to the hospital. very expensive. The doctor, with a
(Investigators commonly discover single wave of his or her hand dur,
ing a routine exam, submits bills to
....... govem(llent prognims and insura~ce com~anie~..for $125 in indiBIO , . rt NoT
v1dual therapy.
.
·· .
· . : :. "NI'!. ~
CHELSEA WATCH - Earlier
~- ~:;~01 1..:1 tO
this month, Chelsea Clinton apparl.!leT THe. cofFe.e. · ently suffered a minor injury while
attending her private school, Sidwell Friends. The ensuing controversy has been anything but minor.
According to one accilunt, :when
'
the school nurse went to notify
Hillary Clinton, Chelsea responded: "Call my father instead. My
mother's too busy today."
The story sounds to usmore
apochryphal than accu{ate,
although there's liU!e.dQubt thai ihe
First Lady has kept very busy in
her unprecedented PQlicy role.
Calls to Sidwell were ine011clusive.
One Sidwell nurse, who didn't provide the first-aid to Chelsea, said
she had heatd the same story but
had no rliSt-hand knowledge. However, the nurse on duty that day
refused to SP.C3k to us, dismissing
the flap as a rumor run wild within
the school.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror United
- . . - Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'·

w.''L I'•.f

By Tbe Associated Press
Tonight there's a chance of flurries across nonhern Ohio wi th
squalls possible again in th,e northeast
The southern part of the state
was forecast to be partly cloudy,
wah lows throughout Ohio from
zero to 10 above.
Thursday will be partly sunny
south, while oorthern pans of the
state will see variably cloudy skies
and scattered flurries. Highs will be
15 tO 25.
The record high today was 67 in
1911, the record low was 7 below
zero in 1979.
Sunrise Thursday will be at 7:20

conditions and high

IND.

., ' •
•lcolumbusl23"

Sen.]an M. Long

Do you realize the import of
this? At liistoric Camp David in the
Catoctin Mountains of Maryland
- where John Kennedy pani~,
Lyndon Johuon schmoozed,
Riclllrd Nixa. .,,.J.ed llld Itonald
Rea1• niOttc4 dli downfall of
commulim - tile new Ieeder of
the free world sat around and
"shared" fat-kid sloriea.
Gagmewithastlckofincense.
If we had been pavinli attention, .
'· P
we would've seen th1s coming
when he went on that Rcnai~e

Weekend thing. ~e have e~tejl a
New Age pre~1dent ..Not JUSt. a
Boomer. Not JUSt a ktndhearte~.
Christian soul. Not just a genenc

Joseph s.near
r

conducfe&lt;l .in which participants are
asked to he down in a dark room
and do deep-brel!thing exercises.
. -:--Maharishi Mahesh Yogi is
mvued to the While House to
demonstrate levitation.
- The Maharishi is granted his
s.tanding requc~t for an appropriauon of S100 milhon to crca~t lasting world peace by keeping 10,000
meditators meditating around the
c~k at.~ Maharishi lntcmational
Un1vemry 01 I~wa. ·
. - Hillary s new health l)lan
mcludes funds for such cunous
alternative medicines and remedies
as shiatsu, ayurveda, retl~xology
and crystal healing.
·
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1

foot of snow in places, bogged on Friday, threatening the state
down highway travel and closed with flooding, mudslides and rockschools as it mov_cd across the slides.
Plains and Northeast on Monday
Extreme cold gripped the nonhand Tuesday. Several uaffic falali· ero Plains and Great Basin. Moth·
ties were blamed on the snow.
ing lows dipped well below zero :in
By Tuesday night, 21 inches of the Dakotas , and Denver and
sqow had fallen at Montpelier, Vt; Omaha, Neb. , had subzero lows.
20 inches covered Rome, N.Y.; and . Wisdom, Mont., chilled to' minps
19 inches had been recorded at 32 Tuesday, breaking a reord for
the date.
:·
Bradford, Pa.
Alaska, meanwhile, was haviilg
California was in for another
soaking. The latest storm was its version of a heat wave. Ki4g
expected to produce rain across the Salmon reached 48 on Tuesd~ .
state today and snow in higher ele- breaking a record for the date. COld
vatiOIIs. And an even more power· Bay was anything but, hitting;·a
ful storm was expected to follow record-tying 41.

Eight wrecks reported
by sheriff's department

Eight accidents occurring ov~r the roadway on the right side strikthe past three days, several result· ing a road sign. There was light •
ing in citations, were reponed ·by damage to the front of his vehicle.
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
At 8:30a.m. SatUrday on CounSoulsby
today.
·
"
ty Road 35 west of Spiller, Bonnie
He said that reports were not Brewer, 46, Portland, was traveling
taken on several other accidents cast in her 1986 Men:ury when she
which were due to slick roads but lost control ami her vehicle skidded
resulted only in vehicles in ditches off the road')'ay on the left and
without damage.
slruck an embankment. There was
Saturday at 1:30 a.m. Matthew moderate damage to the left front
South-Central Ohio ·
Friday, chance of snow. Lows T. Finlaw, 20, Long Bottom, .
Tonight, partly cloudy . Low zero to 10 above and highs in the reponed that he was traveling cast of her vehicle.
At2:15 p.m. Saturday, John C.
, . near 10. Winds west~ to 15 mph. 20s. Saturday, chance of rain or on State Route 248 in his 1993 NisMaxson,
Locust Grove Road,
1 Thursday, partly sunny. High in the snow. Lows in the 20s and highs in san when as he topped a crest of a turned onto the Stiversville-Bald
. mid-20s. ·
the mid 30s to mid 40s. Sunday, a hill several deer were standing in
chance of rain. Lows in the 30s and the roadway. Finlaw said he Knobs Road and struck a west, . Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
highs in the lower 40s to lower 50s. swerved to miss the deer, went off bound vehicle driven by Andrew J.
Hawk, Pine Grove Road, Racine.
Maxson was cited to Meigs County
Court for left ·of center. Moderate
JUST LIKE FROSTY - April McKown, 12, left, and ber
damage was listed to Maxson's
younger sister, Morgan, slide down a bill near their Independence,
.Elizabeth Ackerson
Roberta Caruthers
Ivan L. Van Matre Sr. · 1990 Nissan pickup and to Hawk's Ky., bOrne. Tuesday afternoon on tbeir bellies after the area
Roberta
Caruthers, 55,
Elizabeth L. Ackers011, 96, MidIvan L. Van Matte Sr., 68, of 1984 Catnero.
received several inches of snow overnight. Citing lack or a sled, the
Feb.
16,
Pomeroy,
died
Tuesday,
'dleport, died Tuesday, Feb. 16,
Sunday morning around 12:30 girls said they were ~iding down "just like Frosty does it.'' (AP)
146 1/2 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
· 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital. . 1993 at Ohio State University Hos- died Monday, Feb: 15, 1993 at his a.m. James Hupp, 49, Manuel
She was born in Branchport, pital in Columbus.
Road, Racine, struck and killed a
home. ·
· Arrangements
will . be
··,N.Y., on Dec. 1, 1896. She was a
He was bam on June 5, 1924 in deer that ran into the path or his
' daughter of the late Tyler and announced by Fisher Funeral West Columbia, W.Va., the son of 1986 Nissan. Damage was listed as
· ·Georgia Ainesworth Paris. She was Home.
the late Homer and Margaret light to the right front fender.
' a homemaker and a member of the
(Gowen) Van Matte.
Sunday's accidents included one ,
Emanuel Episcopal Church. in Carl Nelson
He was a retired U.S. Navy vet- at I: 15 a.m. on Beech Grove Road. '
Carl E. Nelson, 64, of 90 Park eran who was a member of the Partlow was backing his 1974 Mer.
:··EI111yra, N.Y. She was a graduate
St.,
Middlepon, died Tuesday, Feb.. VFW post in Mason, W.Va.
Sixteen calls for medical assis- Lincoln Street at 5:18p.m. for
.of Meekers Business College.
· cury from a private drive. He
16,
,
1993,
at
the
Veterans
Adrninis'
She is· survived by a daugh~er
· He .was also preceded in death backed across the road and into a tance .and three fire calls. were Alfred Roush. Another Middlepon
.·and son-in-law, Patricia and Robert . tratiQn Hospilal in Huntington, W. by two sisters.
creek. There was moderate damage answered by' units of the Meigs 11nit was called to assist at 5:32
.Jones, ·s hade; a sister-in-law, Va.
Survivors include two sons to the vehicle. Partlow was cited County Emergency Medical Ser- p.m. Roush was taken to Veterans.
He was a painter and custodian (Ivan L. Van Matte Jr. of Taftville, for driving under the influence of vice Tuesday and early Wednesday
The Middleport Fire Depart."Eleanor Ackerson, Elmyra, N.Y.;
at
tile
Meigs County courthouse. ·
morning.
·
ment
responded to a trailer fire at
.grandchildren, Robert and James
alcohol,
no
operator's
license,
and
Conn. and Homer (Tam) Van
On Tuesday at 9:03 a.m. the the Etta Wise residence at 5:20
!)ones, Shade, Carolyn Korn, . Born on Apnl 5, 1928 at Matte of St. George, Utah), one failure to maintain control of his
Rutland unii went to Old Lower p.m. Units returned to the station at
: Pomeroy, Jacqueline Roush, Langsyille, he was the son of the granddaughter, one sister, Laura vehicle.
~Greensboro, N.C.. Dana Ackerson, late Charles Nelson and Mamie Johnson of Chester, W.Va.; and
At 6:45p.m. Sunday, William Route 7 for Anna Shoemalcer who 5:35p.m.
At 6:39 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
, .Troy, N.Y .. and Donald Ackerson, Steele Nelson,
M. Jones, Pine Grove Road, was was transponed to Holzer. Medical
three nieces and two nephews.
he is survived ~y his wife, Mae
Center.
·
went
to Route 681 for Teresa
, ·Greensboro, N.C.; and II greattraveling
on
Forest
Run
Road
in
his
Services will be Thursday at I
Barrett
Nelson
of
Middlepon;
At
10:58
a.m.
the
Pomeroy
unit
Wolfe
who was uansponed to Vet·
19~1
Chevrolet
pickup
when
he
' .grandchildren.
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
four sons ljlld daughters:in-laws, Pomeroy. The Revs. Alan ,Ritson struck a deer. Damage was light to respooded to Gold Ridge for Renee erans.
· Besides her parents she was preStone. She was taken to Veterans
At 7:54 p.m. the Rutland unit
! .ceded ill death by her husband, -Larry and Dolly Nelson ·of Pine and Titus Lehman will officiate . the front end of the truck.
Grove,
Ky.,
Roger
and
,Debbie
NelMemorial
Hospilal.
responded
to Route 684 for Fay
Floyd Dean Pullins, Long Bot·
Burilil will be at Graham Station
1 Vern Ackerson, and a .son, !ohn
son
.of
Kettering,
Ca'iJ!IIIl
R,ay
and
The
Rutland
unit
went
to
Meigs
·
Mitchell
who
was taken to Holzer.
Ackerson. • '
,
.
Cemetery in 'Graham Station, tom, was cited to Meij!S County
Sue
Nebon
of
Taylor,
S.
C.,
and
Mine
No.
2
at
II
a.m.
for
Raymond
The
Middleport
unit went to
Court on charges of hit skip, no ,
Services will be held at a later·
W.Va.
John
and
Tammie
Nelson,
of
RutManley.
He
was
taken
to
Holzer.
Overbrook
Center
at
8:31 p.m. for
operator's
license,
and
failure
to
·
date in New York.
· Friends may call the funeral
land;
two
daughters,
Cheryl
and
11:49
a.m.
the
Middleport
At
Pauline
Hudson
who
was
transpon·
Local arrangements are by Fishmaintain control following an acci·
home today from 7 to 9 p.m.
Chris
Smith
of
Tampa,
Fla.
and
unit
went
to
South
Fourth
for
Hilda
ed
to
Veterans.
dent at 4 'a.m. Monday on State
er Funeral Home in Middleport.
Brenda and Brian Johnson of Mid- Corre~tion
The Racine and Syracuse Fire
There will be no local services.
Route 124 near the Barringer Ridge Weber who was taken to Veterans
dlepon;
10
grandchildren;
two
sisMemorial
Hospilal.
Departments
were called 8:34 p.m.
l William E. Bosworth
'l.Jnintentionally omitted from intersection.
ters Hildred Carson, Middleport,
The
Racine
unit
went
tO
Lovett
to
a
trailer
fire
on Yellowbush
According to the report, the
. , William Everett Bosworth, and Mildred Riley, Middleport; and the obituary of Dottie Lou Smith,
Road
at
12:06
p.m.
for
Lawrence
Road
at
the
Donald
Stobart resi49, Middleport, who died Monday, 1967 flatbed truck went off the Johnson, dead on -arrival.
: Athens, 93, died·Tuesday, Feb. 16, several nieces and nephews.
.
dence. According to Racine Fire
roadway on the left, struck the
:1993 at O'Bieness Memorial HosBesides his parents he was pre- Feb. 16, 1993 at Veterans Memori· McKelvey Farm sign and also a,
At 12:40 p.m. the Rutland unit Chief John Holman the trailer' is
pilal in Athens.
ceded in death by three infant . a! Hospital, was a sister, Betty
responded to Route 684 for Paul listed as a tolalloss. Holman stated
Born ih Meigs County, he was a daughters, and a sister, Freda McCarthey, Gallipolis; two sisters- new brush hog that was there. The Anderson who was taken to Veter- an investigation is continuing as' to
in-law, Dolly Mowery, Middlepon, · vehicle left the scene with a Oat ans.
son of the late Enos and Ida Mae McGhee.
1he cause of the fire. There were ,28
and
Valorie Bolyard, Bethesda; and tire. lt was later located on Bar· Shumway Bosworth. He was forHe ~as a veteran of the· U. S.
The Pomeroy unit went to firemen on the scene with two
ringer
Ridge
about
a
half
mile
from
. merly a farmer in the Shade area Army, and as member of feeney- a daughter-in-law, Dana Haning,
Pomeroy Pike at 12:52 p.m. for engines and a squad. Holman staied
the scene.
"' who retired from National Cash Bennett Post 128, American Mh!dleport.
Sarah Smith. She was taken to Vet- there were no mjuries. The units
Monday
night
about
1:15
p.m.
, Register of Dayton in 1960. He Legion. He was alsi&gt; a member of
William B. Hysell, Pomeroy, was erans. At1:56 p.m. the unit went to were on the scene for appJ'Ilxima,tc•
. was a member of Harrisonville the Middleport Church of Christ
.
traveling west on· Middleport Hill Route 143 on a motor vehicle acci- ly two and a half hours.
Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM.
Funeral
services
will
be held Household, clothing
dent
were
Donald
Russell
refused
At
10:
II
p.m.
the
Racine
u;tit
when he lost control in the snow as
· · Mr. Bosworth is survived by his
1' wife, Vivian Ellis Bosworth; a Friday at 3 p.m. at the Ewing
he rounded a curve. His 1976 vchi· treatment. 'At 2:39 p.m. the unit went to YeUowbush Road for Brian
Funeral Home. Mr. AI Hartson will
clc rolled over as he left the road- went to Second Street for Judy · Dill who was taken to Veterans. :
• daughter, Mary Meyer, Stow; son, officiate and burial will be in the items are sought
The Middleport and Pomeroy
way. The Middleport emergency Sayre. She refused treaunent
Wayne Bosworth, Lancaster; five Robioson Cemetery at Langsville.
An appeal is being made for squad transponed Hysell and a pasAt
3:56p.m.
the
Racine
unit
Departments were called at
Fire_
grandchildren; and two great- Friends may call at· the funeral household items and clothing for
to
Elm
Street
for
Michael
went
11
:35
p.m. for a structure fire bn
senger, Lillie E. Lambert, Middlegrrutd,children.
home
Thursday
3 to 5 and 7 to 9 the family of Donna Stobarl whose port, to Veterans Memorial Hospi- Allen Clark. He was taken to Vet- Story's Run Road at the Gerald
Besides · his parents, Mr. p.m. Military graveside services home on Yellowbush Road in
Freeman residence.
'
Bosworth was preceded in death by will be conducted by Feeney-Ben- Racine was destroyed by Hre Tues, lal for trcauneni. There was heavy crans.
At
4:09
p.m.
the
Racine·
unit
This
morning
(Wednesday)
at
damage to tile vehicle.
a son, Roy Bosworth; one grand- nett Post 12!!, American Legion.
day
night
went'to
Route
338
for
Henry
Lema.m.
the
Racine
and
Bashan
7:23
daughter; a sister, Della Jones; and
Persons with items to contribute Hosp~tal
ley who was transported to Veter- Fire Departments were called fof a
. ·two brothers, Milton and Earl Drew Smith.
are
asked
to
call
Mrs.
Stoban's
sisans.
chimney fire at the Fay Westfall
' Bosworth. ~
'&lt;Cprew Smith, 61: a resident ·of ter, Edna Hunnell, at 949-2338.
The Middleport unit went to residence oil Long Run Road. Units
Veterans Memorial
Services will be Friday at I' p.m. Plaza Care Center in Toledo, died
Stoban
wears
a
size
II
or
12
in
were.back in quarters at7:44 a.m.
Tuesday admissions: Michael
~ ·HI Jagers and Sons Funeral Home
Tuesday, Feb. 16, 1993 at his resi- pants, medium tops, and size 7 1/2
Custer, Pomeroy; Janet Henline,
.in Athens, with Pastor Glenn James dence.
or 8 in shoes. Her son; Seth, wears Pomeroy; Renee Stone, Middle, ·officiating. Buril(l will . be ill
Arrangements
will
be a 32 waist iQ pants, Jart!e shirt, and port; Paul An.derson, Pomeroy;
Burlinghatn Cemciery.
'
announced by Fisher Funeral Home ·a 11 1'/2 or 12 in shoes, while Gladys
Parfitt, Middleport; Alfred
Friends may call at the funeral in Middlej)\lrt
another son, Shawn, wears 36 waist Roush, Middleport.
1· home on Thursday from 7-9 p.m.
pants, a large or extra large in
Lawrence Johnston ·
Tuesday discharges: Leona Wal~ .Masooic services will be c011ducted
State Senator Jan Michael Long
"If we,,as a state, expect our stilshins,
and a 10 1/2 in shoes.
lace, Pomeroy; Thomas Kelly , (D·Circleville) today announced dents to excel, we must provi~e
Lawrence M. Johnston, 73, a
by the Harrisonville Lodge on
Coolville.
' resident of Lovett Road, Ponland,
; ·Thursday at 6:30p.m .
that he will inuoduce legislation adequate facilities to allow them to •
·died Tuesday, Feb. 16, 1993, at his
allowing the state to finance the learn," Long said.
.
home.
repair and replacement of public
"
The Daily SenliDel
Accordmg to Ohio Public
A retired laborer, he was born
school facilities through the sale of School Facility Survey, done by the
,
(UIPIIU.NI)
Jan. 18, 1920, It Long Bottom, son
tant direcior, at 949-2917 or Beuy general obligation bonds.
syraCuse council to meet
Ohio Department of Education Ill( a
:· PUblithecl •••r:r at\ern(IOII, Monday
of
the
late
Charles
and
Goldie
Smitll
at
992-3578.
Bruce
Wolfe,
a
•
Syracuse
Vill11ge
Council
will
LongUs
bill
was
initiated
after
result of the 1990 passage of Senthroap Frida)', 111 Coart St:.r.l'omenf•
Hilton JohnstOII.
Ohio by tho Ohio VallO)' l'llbllohlna
meet in continued session Thursday · dancer $t Walt Disney World an Ohio Department of Education ate Bill 140, "The assessment of
Com,.ny/Maltillllldla Inca, Pomeroy,
He is suniived by his wife, Gar· at 7 p.m. at tile village hall.
Resort's Magic Kingdom, is the report showed that OhioUs public buildings indicates over $10 billion
Ohio 46789, Ph. 11112·3166. Soc:ond oia..
.
net Bush Johnson and three sons,
director
of the group.
schools are in desperate need of up are needed to bring the existing
poo!Oce peld at PoiaarvJ, Ohio.
Missionary co~venllon
Charles Johnston, Hemlock Grove,
to $10 billion in major repairs.
schools up to good working condi·
missionary convention will be
Lawrence, Johnston, Jr., Ponland heldA at
111.......: The Auoclaled · ... tho
Meeting
set
"I
don't
see
how
our
schoolchiltion. or this total amount, approl(i·
Chapel Wesleyan
Ohio Nowo~Aaoootalloa, Nall....t
and Carl Johnston, Antiquity; one · ChurchWhite's
The
1993
Meigs
County
Market
AdYriliDI
Dtadft, "BraDham
dren
can
be
expected
to
learn
with
mately
$5.3 billion for elementary
in Coolville Saturday
New.,.par
ea, 733 Third Awenae,
sister, Evelyn Icenhower, Ponland; through Sunday
Livestock
Sale
and
Show
Commit·
the
ceilings
and
walls
of
their
classschools,
$1.7 billion fbr
at 7 p.m. nightly
Naw Yon, Naw Yodl10017.
three daughters, Mrs. Gary (Karen)
'
tee
will
meet
Tuesday
at
7
p.m.
in
rooms
CNmbling
in
around
them,"
middle/junior
high schools, $3 bll·
'. P08'1'MMTER: - - •
Bowen, Nelsonville; Mrs, Don and !0:30 a.m . on Sunday with the Meigs Higb School Cafeteria.
Long
said
.
lion
for
high
schools
and $14 7 mil·
Tllo Dally S..ltnol; Ill Courl St.,
(Sharon) Cremeans, Pomeroy, and Rebecca Bibbee from India. Public
.
"The
Ohio
General
Assembly
lion
for
vocational
schools
were
Pc m•nw. OHio 41'711.
·
Mrs. Bony (Vicky) Zering , Maple- invited.
Dance
planned
·
assessed
as
needed."
not
only
provide
a
quality
must
IWICUPI'ION
.
a,.c_..r
_UTili
__
wood, N,. J., two brothers, Roben
Dem~eet
There will be a square dance education for our children, but we
"This is ·a fmancial tool that his
Johnson,
Woodville, Fla., and ·
The M ·~s County Young Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. in must also maintain a safe and been needed for a long tiine," Lollg
• 0no Waak. .......... ,............................... tt.eo
Ono M..nb....................................,.......911
Huben Johnston, Columbus.
Democrats 111 mcel Thursday at Hockingpon at the Reynolds Build- healthy environment in which to said.
.
Ono Yur........ ........................... - ...... .20
Nine grandchildren and one 6:30p.m. at the Clll'pellters Hall.
ing. "Out of the Blue" will per- learn," j:.ong added.
IINGUOOPY
Long is in his second term in the
PlUCI
'
great grandchild survive. .
Cloalnl try-outs planned
'form. Ronnie Wood will be the
LOIIg illustrated the need for his Ohio Senate, representing eig~t
Dlillr.............................................25 c ..ta
Preceding him in death besides
The Midnight Cloggers touring caller. Everyone welcome ... '
school building improvements bill counties in sout~ern Ohio. Long
his parents was a brother, Harry, entenainment will be conductil)g
8ah crtben aot duirtltl 10 PI)' &amp;1M cani·
with photographs and a .Yidcotape has served 011 the Sefllle Educatidn
II' may ~'aft' fD ..YUIOI •tr.at to 'n.
and
a sister, Mildred.
the grouf's auditions and inter- Name conte.st winner
documenting school disrepair at Committee few five years.
'
Dolly llonllaol Oft a throo, tbt or 12
He was a member of the Faith views o persons interested in
, ,_Ill bull. Cndlt will be li"• carrier
Roy Holter was the Feb. 7 mys- Nelsonville-York Elementary
Long
was
joined
by
Senale
.
Fcllowship'Church, Long Bottom, becoming mvolved with the clog- tery farm conte~t win.ner having School in Athens County. Long's Minority Leader Robert .J. Bogjs
and a World War 1I veteran and a ~ing team. Dance auditions and correctly identified the farm pic- bill establishes for the first time the (0-Jefferson).
No ollllooripllono by mall pmnlllod In
.
''
anu when hOlM carrier aemce ''
life member of dte Disabled Amer- mtcrviews for .show support staff tured in the Feb. 7 Sunday Times- state's ability to include: local
av.ulable.
ican Veterans.
will be held at the Pomeroy Village Sentinel as that of Donald Mora. school repair and replacement as
ltblti-Funeral services will be held Hall Auditorium on Feb. 25 at 7 His naroc was selected by Jouery part of its capital improvement
'
-.. CouiJ' = .N
Friday, I p.m. at the Ewing Funeral p.m. Individuals wishil!g to' audi- from several who make the correct bond program.
t3Woob.........................................
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
:t8Woob......................................... .11
Home, Pomeroy with Rev. Steve lion as clog dancers Ire advised to identificatiOII. As the winner o( the
Under the proposal, voters Ohio Lottery tickels show the ri&amp;ht .
52 Woob......................................... .71
Reed officiating. Burial will be in wear appropriate dance attire that is contest sponsored by the Meigs would be asked to allow the state to five-number combination in Buck'
O.tal. . Melli CoiUIIJ'
ts w-.........................................
Bald Knobs Cemetery.
'
both comfortllble aud warm. ·Fur- Soil and Watet Conservation Dis- issue bonds IO,raise the necesSaty eye 5, and each entitlea the oWnlt
JIIW-.................:.......................
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral thor information may be obtained trict and the Ohio Valley Publish- money to Tcb~.ld and repair deteri- to 'claim 11 $100,000 prize, the llf52Woob....,..................................... .40
home·on Thursday from 6 until 9 by contacting Margie Wolfe, assis- ·. .ing Co. Holter will I'Cj:Cive $5. .
orating public school strUctures.
tery anoounced today: ·
!
p.m.
.

------Weather---........-

----Area·deatbs

Meigs squads receive
19 cal~s past 24 hours

news

- Shirley Maclainc is invited
to the White House to channel for
Mr. Lincoln.
- OHicial ceremonies arc
planned to welcome' the coming
millennium with a "Celebration of
a Cosmic MomenL"
And one final thing, Mr. Clinton. Where were you on Harmonic
Converfence weekend Aug 16
and 17, 987?
'
•
Careful how you answer, Big
Guy. If you say you held hands but
didn't chan~ it's going to be Strilce
Three.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enterpr~
Association
,
·
'

Long launches school
building improvements bill

- -·Meigs announcements--

.

Today' · ·n hi·s·tOJ:'Y.

3!\e.

a.m .. sunset at6: 11 p.m.
Around tbe natlol
Remnants of a mammoth storm
that blanketed the Midwest and
Northeast dropped snow today in
scattered sections of New England
and eastern Great Lakes region .
Another strong storm headed for
California.
Snow fell early today in lndi·
anapolis, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and
Caribou, Maine. Freezing rain fell
in Ponland, Maine. Flurries were .
forecast for the mountains of
upstate New York and New England.
The storm dumped more than a

.

Ohio program has gained a national
reputation as providing an excellent
opJlO(tunity to learn the legislative
ptocess. Most applii:ants had a "B"
average or higher.
•
Many LSC interns have g011e on
to public service and related rtelds
such as, Legislatl_ve Ai!le, Legislative Liaison, Consultants, Lobbyist,
and in my case, State Senator. •
If you l1fC intemsied in the intern
program, please contact my office
for a program outline and appliea- ·
tion. Again, my number is (614)
466-8156, and my address is, Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio 43215.

"new ager," but 8 bona fide,
retreating, facilitating, sharing New
Ager.
Here's what 1 think about that:
Dedicated religious folk so on
"retreai$"; aging flower children,
ESTers, zen zealots, meditators
and pot smokers who inhale !lO on
..!I retreats"; airtleaded academicians
and trendy corporate managers go
on "retreats." But presidents of the
United States do not 'go on
"retreats" and "share" fat-kidsto- .
ries. That's what 1think.
.II
Consider yourself 011 notice, Mr.
·
Clin!OO. It Will. be S~e Two for
· By Tbe Aaodated Press
:
rg:.tyfe:s~y ume during ihe next . . Today. is Wednesday, Feb.' 17, the 48th day of 1993. There are 3117
·
.
days left m tbc_~_ear.
. - The _name of your mountam · Today's Higtlli~
· ht in History:
hideaway IS changed to the Camp On Feb 17 1
the us s
c . . ed . ..
.
David Center for Spiritual
., · . 1
•.
• • upreme oun !Ssu . ~~ one man, one
R~ and Renewal. .
beote ~ISIOR~f!Jling that .eongreuional distncts w1thin each state mu~t
- Any_visitor to that facility • ~J
m population.
reports the aroma.of patchouli was
I 1801 th. us H
fR ·
·
· · ' ·
in the air or that anyone was heard bel n 1bo e • · ouse o c~sentalives broke an electoral tie
chanting 'amm, or that discussions B w;am masviceJetTc:non and Aaron Burr, electil)g Jefferson presiden~
were held about "The Mayan Facurr
c
~nL.
·
·
.
,
tor" and "S.urfers of the Zuvuya."
In 1817l a ,street m Blllumore became the rliSt to be lighted with gas,·
from America sfliSI'"'• com
..,.. Any guruJ are asked to con- . I 1865 C
,Dpany.
..
.n
• . olumbia, ~.c.. ~ as the Confederates moved out 111cl
duct seminars for the Cabinet on
Quanwm Healing ew the Druid Path Uruon fon:cs began moVtng 01. (It s never been determined which side set
in the Modem Wewld,
the blaze.)
.
.
•
_ E••edllions • - • · · " to
In 1897, the forerunner·of ihe National PI'A, the National Coogress of
-..-Mothers was founded in Wasbln..search few .POP circles in the fields
In 1904 Giacomo Puccini' 1 •-" "Madama B , __, "
·
around Calllll David.
l
·
opera
· u....... y ~tved a
- Mr. B'u,llt's "acf9bic golf," poor ~nat liS premiere at La Sella In Mllln, Ita!Y· · .
.
in which be ran after the ball, is I' ~l93 ,60yeanqo,theflnt'-ofNewawccltmapz~waspuJJsupplanted by "Zen golf," in IS In i~7' the Voice -• America be ._,,.,._,.__
So .
"' '
:which you become the ball. , ·
·
•
.
"':
enca oesan - - o a to the viet Umon•
_ Stress reduction seminars are. . Chin ,197~, President N1xon departed Waahington Q.C. 011 hja historic trip
•
to ma.
.,
,

I

W. VA.

.,

mendation. Letters of recommenda- December I, 1993 through Decemtion should not be from elected · ber 31, 1994. LSC will assign
officials, unless the applicant interns to a particular caucus, and
worked directly for the official. the caucus will decide how the
intern is used.' In some cases, the
intern will be assigned to work
with a specific member of the General Assembly.
lniems are hired solely on their
Application materials must be qualifications, and persons assistreceived prior to the April 30, 1993 ing in the selection make every
deadline. Application forms can be effort to avoid any personal or
obtained by contacting my off'jCC
political favoritism in the 'selection
a~ (614) 466-8156. Applicants will
p~.
I
be interviewed in May, and selecLast year LSC received 434
tions will be announced in June.
applications for 22 intern positions.
Interns will be employed from These numbers indicate that the

The Dall y Sentlnei- Page-3

Temperatu_re will drop to 10 or below tonight

•

Clinton retreat was a bonehead play
Strik~ on~!
. .
.
Tha! s w~ .Mr.W1~1atnJefferson Chnton JUS! took m this Curmudgeon's b.allpark. I can live
w1thout the m1ddl~ cla!'s tax cut I
thought Zoe Ba1rd wo.uld have
made a perfectly fine attorney genera!. If he wants to let ~o/"osex~
fight for thetr country, 11 s fme With
me.
But this "retreat" stuff is unacccptable, _beyond the ~e. I~
of ~he thmg the president o the
Umted States d1d on th~ last w~kend of Janl!afY. ~e detatls of wh1ch
were ~ontamed. 10 an extraordinary
Washmg~n Post expose. .
.
Mr.. Chnton .hauled h1s Cab1net
and hiS top atdes off to Camp
David for a "retreat." It was not a
conference, you understand. It was
not a meeting. It was a "retreat"
with nice li'ttle touchy-feely exercises planned by professional
"facilitators." And this group of
mostly strangers sat ar11und and
"shared" personal experiences
desi~ned to build trust. And the
Pres ident or the Unl'ted s·M- ~w
..... - •

Berry's World

-

. Weather• forecast for

Intern sought for program

--

•

cases, while the Justice ~nt

.

. EDITOR'S NOTE: Alan Fram, who covers Congress ror Tbe
· ·Associated Press, focuses on budget and economic Issues.

.•

Page-2-Ttie Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 17, 1993

'Medical mafia' adds to health-care burden

u 1 Court Street

. . ,Place.

OHIO Weather
Thursday, Feb.18

'

The Daily Sentinel

. ·. As they tell 11, the culpnts, predictably, are the Republican White
'· ,Houses of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush - .and their rich
·friends.
·
.
· ' Democrats note that the national debt- the government's tolall.O.U.
- mushroomed from about $900 billion when Reagan was elected to S4
'•'trillion today.
•
·· Citing figures from the nonpartisan Con~sional Budget Office, they
say that during that same period, ·the richest I percent of Americans saw
·: lheir tax burdens ease by 5 percent. Everyone else saw their levies stay•
. . about the same.
.
' When it comes to the new effon to reduce federal red ink, they say it's
'·: time for the rich to bear the greater burden.
'
"No logic of equity or history dictates that sacrifice fall equally on the
:
- rich and poor alike,'.' Senate Budget Committee Chairman James Sasser,
' ·b-Tenn., wrote recently in an op-ed article.
· ' Republicans have their own explanation.
c'
Usmg figures from that same Congressional Budget Office, they note
•\hat the fastest growing pan of the budget is the benefit programs, such as
. Medicare, Medicaid and Social S.ecurity. It is the growth of these pro-.
· · 'gnuns - fully half of the $1.5 trillion budget- that is driving deficits
' "skyward, they say. That spending needs to be controlled, the GOP gospel
goes,
· · With that as their standard, Republicans have prepared an anti-tax
' ·offensive that's already commenced~ Taxes should be changed by shower. ' ing business and individuals with reductions designed to encourage
' .. investment and savings, they say.

Pomeroy-;-Middleport, Ohio

..._to

;

.........

.

Lottery numbers :

i

.

.

=.40

.

'

.

I

�'
WedneSday, February 17, 1993

•

Sports

Wednesday, February 17, 1993

The Unive~!~ o(.Rio Grande
RedT~ en 'th ~e .re~~ sea·

ing round of compeli~on this Sat- snatched 10 rebounds to lead the
urday, and would face tiS first post- ·offense against the Division U Pio!;On . u . Y Wl
etr
con- seaso~ !'I?JIOIICIIlll home on Feb. neers. With nearly all of its bench
~uuve wm of the season, a 71:59 22,. DlV!slOft I coaches are to m~t geuing into the game, Melone built
vtctory over host ";''alone which . Fnday_~CentralStateto~~ afive-pointleadatthehalf.
featured l~e team s trademark the· pamngs and·choose the diVIThe Pioneers' defense was suebe~h c~uu~ns.
.
f ston ~honors.
.
Red
~cs.s~ul in keeping Rio Grande's
. . ow . an m pos~sston o.
Wtth the Malone wm! the
- mdividual sconng, with the excepthetrftrsl !Wigle ~d-Ohto Confer· women have bette~.thetr 1991-92 lion of Hamilton, in single figures
ence champ10nsb~p, the Redwom~n reg.ular season fm1sh of 25:6, for the game. But Malone's toialllf
be.gal'! thts ~eek .tf! second place _m whtch had been the .bes~ showmg 37 turnovers damaged its early
DJS~nct 22 s Dtv_!SJOn l _an~ wlll the team had posted. SJIICC the 1979- hold over the lead, and more trips
a~~tword on the1r standing m the 80 season, when Rio Grande went to the line worked 10 the Redwomdlv~SIO~ playoffs, scheduled to 20-5.
.
.
en's advantage, as did Gef1i1 Norris'
~gmthtS weekend.
. .. .
Redwomen s~r Lon Hamtl- nine assists, which put her in a tie
Coach Dave S_malle~ tndtcated ton br~ke out _for 24 pQtniS Wtlh Stacey Ritter for. the most
that tl witS posstble Rto Grande mctulimg an e1ght of ~0 perfor- made in a sin~le game thi·s season.
would reeetve a bye from the open- mance at the liee throw line - alld In addition, Rto Gmnde recorded a

Page-4

Rio overcomes halftime deficit to hand Cedarville 101-97.1oss :
Twice last season, Cedarville effective defense, allowed the Redthe University of Rio men to overcome a 13-point deficit
Grande Redmen losses, both at at the intermission. Rio Grande
l.yne Center and on its own court. shooting master Matt Powell
This year, it was Rio Grande's turn burned the nets for 28 points to
to reciprocate.
lead all scorers, hitting seven of 12
· With all of its lltnch contribut- three-pointers. Firing the ball from
.ing to the scoring - and a slrollg the ootside was one of the lceys to
sho)Wing on ihe boards - Rio Rio Grande's success, as Powell's
Grinde wrested a I 01 -97 victory total accounted for the bulle of the
over the Yellow Jackets at Redmen's 17 of 37 performance
Cedarville Tuesday to snap a third- (45.9 percent) in that category.
Place tie in the Mid-Ohio ConferRio Grande, 24th last weelc in
ence between the teams. The Red- the NAJA's top 25 listing, found
fnen had defeated Cedarville 110- itself bumped from the nnking this
91 llist month when Don Callan's weelc fqr the flrst time since Jan.
club invaded Rio Grande's court 25, with the Yellow Jackets occufor the ftrst of its two conference pying their fonner position (Urbana
meetings for the season.
· . is 14th). If that proved to be a
A herculean shooting effon in ·demoralizing effect, it was not seen
the second half, in addition to as the !Wo"rival~ .l)ntered battle.
~ailded

.

....

The Yellow Jackets were armed
with their own army of effective
shooters as Ken Rucker and Jaden
Callahan ¢ach exploded for 24
points, while their teammates capitalized oo the Redmen •s total of 31
rebounds to stay in the game. But
while Jeff Brown's 10 rebounds for
the Redmen were matched by
Cedarville's David Barnes, each
member of the Rio Grande bench
made a conuibution on the boards
to lead the Redmen to a 45-31
advantage in that area. Cedarville
held its turnovers to 15.
Besides Powell, Troy Donaldson added 19 points, Brett Core.no
14, Brown 12 and Kyle Schroer 11
to highlight Rio Grande's scoring.
Donaldson and Coreno each added
nine rebounds to the offense.

El Seabra put 16 nwlters on the
scoreboard for Cedarville, follow\l(l
by Mark Combs' 14 and 12 from
Barnes. Combs' 13 assists helped
boost the YeUow Jl!Ckets' game.
The Redmen managed 48 percent on field goals (36-75) to
Cedarville's 55.7 (39, 70, eight of
14 from the three-point for 57.1
percent), and both were nearly
equal at the free throw line. The
visitors sanlc 12 of 16 attempts for
15 oen:ent (with Donaldson hittin.~~:
five of silt) to the Yellow Jackets'
68.8 (I H6), where Callahan was

•
ORK

,.

up the pace (19-9) and the lead at
33-30 going into the final frame.
Eastern continued its blitz in the
final round as it coasted to the 53·
45 win. •
Federal hit 18-57 from the field
overall and 3 of 17 from threepoint range. They hit 6-11 at the
line. Eastern hit 17-53 overall and
was 16-24 at ihe line.
Eastern had 28 rebounds, led by
Bis.sell with 12, and had 16 fouls.
Federal had 17 rebounds, led by
Myron Hart with five, had six
assists, II steals (Bentz and Bennett three each), had eight
turnovers and 22 fouls.
Eastern won the reserve game
42-36 led by Jason Sheets' 11.
Marie Whiting had 17 and Chad

11 :2-24; .David Barnes, 5-7-12; El
Seabra, 3-2-4-16; Matk; Combs, 42.0-14; David Whisman, 0-1-0-3;
Matthew Reynolds , 2-0-4 .
TOTALS 31·8·11-97.
:
RIO GRANDE (101)- Walter
Stephens, 0-2-0-6; Jeff Brown,,S-212; Troy Donaldson, 7-5-19; Jack
Morgan, 0-2-0-6; MaitPoweU, 3-71-28; Lyndell Snyder, o·-t·0-3;
Brett Coreno, 3-2-2- 14 ; Kyle
Schroer, 0-3-2- 11 ; Jason Curtis. l0-2. TOTALS 19·17-12-101.
Halnime score: Cedarville SO,
Rio Grande 37.

Ill

Eastern tops Federa.I. Hocking 53-45.
OutseOring Federal Hocking 39·
24 in the second half, the Eastem
Eagles boys' varsity basketball
team rolled to a 53-45 come-frombehind victory over ihe Lancers
Tuesday night
' Eastern was led in scoring by
tharlie Bissell with 17, Jeremy
Cline with 12 and Robert Reed
with eight.
Federal's Brad Bentz tallied a
game-high 20 points, Brian Bennett
added 10, and Brant Schaller eight .
r
Federal took a 7·2 lead in the
first quarter, and increased their
lead to 21-14 at the half.
Eastern coach Greg Ullman
gave the Eagles the pep tallc they
needed at the half as Eastern picked

three of (our and Sea bra four of si~ .
In other MOC games from
Tuesday, Urbana dumped )Valsh
86-60, Ohio Dominican slipped
past Ti£fin 86-79 and Shawnee
State squeezed out Mount Vernon
Nazarene 73· 70.
Now 24-6 and 9-4, the Redmen
end the regular season S!llurday at
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene .
Cedarville (21-7. 8-5) hosts Ohio
Dominican Saturday.
Box score:
CEDARVILLE (97)- Jaden
Callahan , 6·3·3·24; Ken Rucker,

Nelson had 13 for Federal 'Hocking.

I: I I,

•
BOOTS
I

N

I I'

I

II

1/o

In the NBA •••
AU..UcT.W L Pet.
Now Ycd. .............. ll 16 .613
Nn J_,- " ''"N"''30 21 .511
Bc:.ton ....................26 23 .531
Odondo ..................ll 23 .soo
Phlltd.ljlh ..........11 3() .375
Mi.ani ................... .l7 31 .354

w.....,... . . . .

.ts 3l

GB

"

1

8.5
14.5
lS.S

CefttniiMwilioft
11 .61&gt;7
CIJ!VI!LIIND .......33 19 .635
~ ................26 22
.SI3

oo.aao..................:w

A11M.LI •.,......••.......•24

26

;480

lndioao ...................22 28
Douo;t. ................... 21 28

.+10
.429

M;J...a. ............. 20

30

l .S
6.5

9.S

ll .S
ll
13.5

:400

Dl•blon I
Cin. Oak Hilbl79, Cin. Wcmm Hilll

42

Big Ten

Dl•lllon n

Iowa 68, Ohio St. S4

u.s

.300

Tournament action

Ohio men's college
basketball score$

OFF

Mid-Ohio Conrerence

.,

...·'

Like Erie at Malane, ppd., mow

National college
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mlllw•t Dlwllloa
TWLI'd.GB
s.i Anklaio ..... ......33
llloll .......................32
........... ......29
Om- ...................20
MinlwcLa .............. tt

llollu........................

IS
17
21
29
lli
44

.681
.651

1~

.401

llS

.sso

s

.m

21

.013

29

6
6.5
ll.S
13.5
16.5
21

Co1Jeae 7 9 , - 5 6
C.C..L C...octi.c:m SL 87, Now Hamp-

ahi.re 71

HuUon! 91' lbtv•td72

~'&gt;avid.... 75. Mdml60

S• Pola't 63, Foirficld 56

NewVotl!ll7,fl.u.ul1
New Jcney J00, Milw1ukee 18
llcuoit 124, Orlondo 120 (OT)
-110,&amp;a.n97
149,l'IUJ&amp;dolphia Ill
- 1 12. Wuhinaton 102
GoLiirll\ Slate 133, San Antonio 112

DI.Uioo 01

Tonight's gaptes
DeUoif. It M.ilmi, 7:30p.m.
New Yolk 11 Owlotte. 7:30p.m.
D&amp;llultCLEVELANO, 7:30p.m.
S•czuncnto 1t lnclima, 7:30p.m,
Utah •t OUctao. 8:30p.m.

thursday's games
Stenmmto It Minnetou, 8 p.m.
lJI.ah It Milw1\lk.cc, 8:30p.m.
8oAon It HCNiton , 8:30p.m.

f'hil.addpbi• 1t Sm Antonio, 8:30p.m.
Allanu 11 Photr~i.J., 9:10p.m.
(
Staulo u Oo&amp;dcn St1t.e. 10:30 p.m.
W11hinston 1t L.A. Clippers, 10 :30
p.m.

LA. Lakc:n 11 Ponland, 10:30 p.m.

In the NHL •••
WALES CONFERENCE
Patrkk Division
TW L T Pta. GFGA
Piu•bluJh .......... Tl 15 S 79 241184
Wlfhincton ........ 29 22 6 64 2:14207

N.Y. Rqera ..... 15 1A 9 S9 226221
Now Jency ........ T1 24 4 S8 19B195
N.Y. blanden .... 26 2S 6 S8 231207
PIWid&lt;lphlt .. ..... 19 21 I 0 41 218 232

Midwest
DePaul SS, Ali.-BltminJham 44
Jawa 61, Ohio 5\. S4

11 6 76 240191
l8 9 f&gt;J 2JOlOS
22 S 67 231206
22 6 ~200
37 4 l4 110256
Oaawa ............... 7 41 4 II 1342'17
-

............ 35
&lt;lue* .............. 30
Botton ................ 31
Buft'.to ............... 29
Hatlfofd ............. IS

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

,..,.. Dl•ldon
W L T Plt.
C~K~&amp;o. .... ......... 32 20 8 72
o.,oit ................ 31 21 1 M
_
............ 29 21 8 60S

T-

TaNnto .............. 'Z7 22 II

CFCA
lOS 1M
254201
202190

62 19 1174

SLl.oW ............ 25 26 8 58 200209
Tampa Bay ........ 19 JS 4 41 1110216
S•Jihl Dll'klon
VaMOUva ......... 32 17 8
2A6176
Calpry .............. 31 19 I .70 2311 95

n

LoaAnlelot ....... 2S 2S 7 57 224 239
Winnipes ........... 2S 26 6 S6 207219
Edmontm .......... 21 30 8 lO 168222
SanJqN ............. 7 49 2 16 155290 -

Tuudoy's ooor..
N.Y. ....... 7,Edm""""'2
~ •• CIJ&amp;ory4, "' .
Wuhin~~G~•· San lou 3

Tonight's cam ..

8CIIkln 1t Momnal, 7:-iO p.m.
lutl'alo 11 Hadfotd, 7:40p.m.

Souohaa Mooh. 60, T011 Clviailo 53
TctJ\CIUCC 101, AtbRIU 91
V1. Cammcnwca.lth 66, Teua 60

Far West

•

0Uaw1 •t ~.7:40p.m .
St. Louitll New Jmey. 7:40p.m.
~at Too:rio. 7:40p.m.
T-B•yotllcuoi~ NO p.m .

Lott....,...,,.-..,.uop.m.
Thundoy'o1a"* •

II. Law. at N.Y. 1 - - . . 7:-40p.m.
l!4lmGrMn It pjti.Jbutah, 7:4() P,tft.

.;

·. 1~1

an

..

Ohio high school
girls' basketball poll

• ., t

~------------------_J
.., '
._.·~

,.
'

'.

.. '

•

Canal ~chau:r 94, Hamiltm Twp.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How •

vota IR parm.Lht~~e~):

DMslon I
Ttun

Pta.
t ·Pickerinston (19) 19-0 .................... 213
2-Kotky llivc:r P-hgnificat (3) 19-0 .... 181
3-WotMtet 17-1................................... 163
4-G•rl'leld J111. Tritlity 1&amp;-2 ............... 1SO

S·l.OOAN 18·2 .................................. 140
&amp;Cin. Mlllker or Mcn:y 19-1 ............. 103
7- ColumbuaSo~nh 19-1 ....................... 11
1-Youna&amp;&amp;own Ro.rdman 16-3 .......... ..41

9-L&amp;Itewood 16-2 .................................43
Nort.h 17-.2 ...............
42
H

•I

•

Dcnoc:r 53, New Phil~Ocl~a
Euclid 69, J.akewood ~6' __,
Flirficld 6S, Cia. Ca
S7

........

Olhen "'Ctlvlna ll or more polnll:
1l·Mcdin• 20. 12-FaUbom 19.

Division IT
Plio
1-H•mil\on B1din (12) 20-0 ............... 191

2-C...rocld (4) 19·0 ............................. 176
:3-Urban• (4) 18-2 ............................... 161
4-0 aywnCarroU19-0 ........................ 12A

S- AUi•nu Mulinaton 19-1................ 106
6-Millmbura w. Holmer; 18-2 .......... tos
7-St. M•ry~ Mcmoriall7-1.................. 87
8·SJ'rina!'&lt;&gt;'&lt;&gt; 19•1 :. ....... ............... ........ SS
9-Cle. Villa Anacla-SJ IS-4 ................. 39
10-Cin:lcMlla Lotan Ebn 11·2 ............. 35
OUwrt rec•lwlna 11 or mcwe PGI•ll:
II ·Avon Lake (2}..33. 12-ntE PLAINS
ATilENS II. 13..0,1\Und Llke.view 14,

60

Louilvi1le 66, E. c..., S1
L.ynchburJ. eta, 93, Western Drown
68
•
Muiau 66, PmonbuzJ. w.v•.
M•YIYille 70, Philo ~s

Team
Pta.
l ·Coldwl\01' (1 1) 17-1....... - .............. 190
2- B•ltimore Ub. Union (2) 20-0 ,....... 165
]. Utic.t (l) 2!&gt;0 ..... ,............................ ! S2
4-Venailla: 19-1 ............................. ...144
5-Doy1st.ownChippow• (2) 16- 1......102
6-Cln. WrMlina (2} 11-1 ............ ~ ....... 91

7-Rctver Eu1em 11-l ..........................83
R-Wellsville 11·1.................................. 56

6-Nol\h 81'1\imcn 15·2 ........................13
7· Sua•IC!'Oek O.taw•y 1i-2 .................74
1-Newllwy (1) 17-3 ..............................61
!1-Muil Skin Marion Loe.IIS·3......... l3
tO.Cin. C..U.ry O.r 17· 1..................... 32

I

~
•

.

I ,

'I
:~

.

•!

'

Baseball

j

MILWAUKEE BREWERS - A.,_t
with Rick)' &amp;w., pilcher, on a
tW~)"'Or contrlcl., and Cadal Maldonado
and An&amp;ol Miranda. pilcherl, on on•)'oar

10 \CII'Iftl

c:ontnQY .

OAKLAND ATHlEllCS -

tn 1am1

A.,.ed
wilh Edwin N~r~c:z, r.·ld\er, on •

minor-lc.auc c:ontntl, and COLt Baker,
Mib 'Monter, Kitt Ojala, CurtU Shaw,
Tan)'on Suuuc, and D1vid ZanCinlto,
pitch~n; lu.y Molial, gleh.-, •nil Seo.t
L)'dy, outfielder, on on•yw- conaracu.

TOROI&gt;n'O BLIIE lAYS - A - " '

temn with Du1ne Wud, pitcher, on a

.

Buketball
Nadou.l 811kllbaM Allodallon
DALLAS MAVERICKS - Sianed
Morlan Wile.J, pard,lo a lO·da,- cor\·

......DETROIT PISTONS ...-- Acllvatocl
Oenni1 Rodmtn, forw•td , from the in·
jwed lilt. Placed Juilh Morri.a, fOtwltd ,
on lhc in.;w.d lia:

FootbaU

N...... t reocball Leu ..

DAU.U ~OYI-N..,..Iohn
Blake detn... Une ODOC:h.
DENVI!It BRONCOs - N...ect &amp;b
Fc:rpaan had tJt lhe IOIIIIdn:&amp; &amp;pnrnent
and direnor ol p~~,. p•
tel

Hoc:key

Once the account is set up, 'spa- :. ;
cial Equiline checks will be.issueq t
and your line of cred~ will be avail· : i
able for any purpose at any time. :
Equiline is a muhi-purpose line of
Payments can be made In monthly in-";
credit ~ ali thA equity in your
stallmenls or in lump sum. Simple in- :.
home. It wOrks like a checking
r,· ---·- ·-..
terest is charged on the account's • i
account lor homeowners.
I'!!·"Wj~:f1lif:;::.&lt;.~
..L·_ _ _ _
dally balance at the rate.of 1.5% r ~
It you qualify, Peoples Bank will ~ ~
over the ~all Sireet Prime Rate ~
set up a line ol credit of up to
1- ~
~~
and 1s subject to change monthly. •·.
75% of the appraised v\llue of
......... - :J¥(j00.~
Once you have Equ[Line you can &gt;;•
your home less the outstanding
' ... :.: ;;..,_.~~
wr~e checks based on~ equity in.•
mortgage balance. For example:
~~ ·your home whenever you wish-no •
Appraised Value
$100,000
... --~~ . need tO'apjlly fora loan. For full ':
_. ~
___......- disclosure, discuss Equlline with a ol
75% of appraised value
FS,OOO
loan officer.
'!
)l
less balance of mortgage $40,000
Peoples~ will waive closing
Potential line of credij
$35,000
on EquiUMIDldl Aprlll5, i9')3: · . '.
~

cOs1s · ' !

.,

.

l'!a~Joo~J-rt.ooeuo
BU FFALO SABR ES - R~called

..-

=::

Doua MKdmud, ...,,.
llochot,.,
Ame:riean H~y 1
1
e.
LOS ANOELBS liNGS - Seat lim
Thomt011. ri&amp;ht win&amp;. to Ph~b o( 1M
o( tho

•
'

Equiline can provide cash for any
purpose-a new car, a vacation,
family heanll-.and the inleresl
may be tax-deductible.

.·

...'

.....

tm ....u.u-~ill..

SAN lOll I ARKS - Roc•lled
Dun ' ltolaad, .,....,.., and Mic!MJ
· ~ ...... ,., Kana.. City"' the
lnoem•tionlllfadtoy ........

MAIIITTA

ATKINS

IILPII

37HI55

593·7761

~13·7516

•IDDLIPOIT

99J-66fiJ . .

'

NILIOJHIUI TNI ·P L.4.1NI TDD ONLY

75:1-1,5

797·iH7,

.376-71)5

•.

and he hopes the MAC wiil qualify
as one of the 16 conferences
expected to gel bids to the 1994
tournament.
Parker said his Jllaycrs wiU benefit in· other ways frotn conference
affiliation.
"Now, our players also will be
able'to receive all~onfetence hon·
ors," Parker said. "It's something
else that our young players can
shoot for. It certainly means more
recognition."
The MAC soccer race only will
include six of the- conference's 10
schools. Ohio, Toledo, .Kent Stale
and Ball Stale do not have soccer"
progtams. Benson said the 9ther six
soccer schools will compete in a
regular~season conferen&lt;:e schedule
and a postseason tournament
Akron was 9-10 overall last season, but was 5-0 against MAC
teams.
"I think we feel confident in the
MAC environment.'' Parlter said of
the Zips' chances for winning the
. first MAC soccer championship
next fall. "Bul we also feel confi·
dent in the total collegiaJe picture."

.

mating period
f to start on Ohio's north coast
~~

I,

In 29 games, Gena Norris is
third in free-throw percentage
(80.2% on 65·81. shooting); sixth in
three-point percentage (34.2% on
52-for-152,sh001ing) an4 ninth in
· assists-per.game avemge wjth 3.1
·per game.
,.
In 29 games, Tricia Collins is
eighth in rebounding with 6.93 per
contest
In 26 games, Stacy Riuer is
sixth in assists,per-game average
with 3.9 per game.
Note of remembrance: Jenni
Wessel, Shawnee State's 6-fOOI-0
sophomore center and Division I
leader in scoring average (20.1
ptsJgame) and rebounding avemge
(9.6 per game), is no Str!J,nger to
Hamilton, as the two tangled in the
Division II district tournament at
Chillicothe in 1989 and ' 1990
before getting together on Jan . 1J
and Feb. 2.
Wessel wore the Waverly ·
Tigers' black and orange, and
Hamilton played for Gallia Acade·
my's Blue Angels.
Redmen among leaders
Five ~n made it among the
leaders in the NAIA District 22's
Division I.
In 29 games, Troy Donaldson is
first in total field-goal percentage

~ Bald eagles~

'

Transactions

AMerica11 Leape

i

'

,,

w. M.W.awn S6, Shorid.. S4
Wick.liffo 12, WiJlouahby S. 64
ZlneTrace 79, Aden• Sl

DETROIT TI GERS - Aareed to
tern11 wi.th Mike Hau~eman 1nd Mull
Lcile:t, pi~e:n. on on.. ,...- conlliC\I.
.

Zips soccer coach Steve Parker
is happy that his players can now
play for MAC trophies, just as
other ,b.kron teams have for the past
few months.
MAC commissioner Karl Benson said the !~ague's presidents
;-: have voted to make men' s soccer
( 'an official conference sport begin~ nin~ next fall.
•
'I certainly am pleased that the
; cooference will recognize soccer as
' an official sport,'' said Parker; who
coached the Zips to the Division I
t national championship game in
' 1986 before losing 1-0 to Dulre.
~
"It wiU give us another avenue
~ to pursue ge)ting back to the
t NCAA Tournament"
~
The Zips haven 'I qualified for
• the NCAA Tournament in the wt
+ five seasons.
i~
Benson sai,d the NCAA plans to
~ expand its 32-team postseason
tournament field beginnin.11: in 1994
i

N. AdamJ 14, W'hileoU. S6
Plint Vall. 80, Piketon 59
ReediVille E.t.attrn 53, Fcdenl Hock·
in&amp;4S
Richmond DaleSE 91, Uniow 80
R.uuell, K)'. 64, lrtLnton S4
S. Paint 77. Rock Hill 62
Solm 70, Maple fht, 61
Su.bawille C.llt. 7S, Wintcrlvillc 65
SU\llhon 46, Pubnd4S
Tbl. C.tbolic 54, Tol St. fnncit !52
Tol. Seou 99, Tol. Roaen 52

Pll.

l·S. Olar1~ SE (10) 20-0 ............. 197
2- UpptrSci~~tt~VaU. (2) 18·0............. 178
3-D•nvillc (1) 18-1............................. 167
4-7..aneiiYiUc Rosecnuu (!li) 18·2......... 1S4
S-Colwnbill\a Ctetlview (2) 11· 1... ... 121

J

Middlefield Catdina173, Briltol66

9-Caaatia Mar!alt:U.I ('2) 11· 1 :'"'I''""'SO
IO·Brooldidd () 16-2 ..........................25

O'hen rlftl•lnt ll .., ~ polnu:
ll·Broohill~ 19. 12 (tio)·Chlllicothc
Uni~. Minf&lt;trd, Zanctvill~ Wan MUsk·
inll.lnl 15.

'.

so

thteo-)'C&amp;r conlract.

Divlsloo m

;.

m

01raway 61, T1.11caraw11 V.U. 46
Goahen SS, New Riclmond 47
Wliln Vall63. Cll1rf~ont60
Little Miami 73, C111. N. Callegc Hill

IItle panol o( ~ria wriWfl and bro&amp;d•
cU\ers ralel Ohio hi&amp;h ac:hool &amp;itll bll·
ltrJ.baU wm1 in t.he firul11993 weekly
reauln·ICUon ~~ !Of The Auoeialed
Praa, by Ohio HiJr1. School Athlctk Aaaociation dimi«N. wilh won·loat ICOOI'd
throuJ.h aama of Feb. 14 (flnt·place

same.

.

Cin. Glen &amp;~e. II, Bclhd·Tat.e 54
Cin . t&lt;Jorthwcsl 60, Cin. Mount
Ha.11lty 53
Cin. S1.11'nmit67, Batavil49
Cin. Winton W o o d i' ?
. LaSalle

55

Colondo 81, Ktnsu St. T1

Te.am

0

Cin. Christian 61, Cin. Landmut 53
Cin. Elder 72, Cin. Oak Hilla 66

Southwest

Division IV

• •

AKRON, Ohio (AP) ,.... The
University of Akron began compel·
ing for championships in .the MidAmerican Conference last fall.
Now its soccer team can do the

SALE EIIDS FEB. 28. 1993
OPEN NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS

OHIO RIVER PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ohio high school
boys' basketball scores

S4

1'urn

,\d. . Dl•ilkNI

.

.

SIZES 7·12.

. AlcaandCII' Sf, Trimble- S4
Aahland, Ky. 61, Poltl.m41th 56
llclchwood 72, Riohmmd Hll. 48
Bodt'ord .71. 0rtnac49
Bclllirc St. lohn'166, Shady1idc Sl
Bm-lin Hiland '109, Tuacarawu Catb.
63
C...brid 9S, B.U.U.17

Md.·E. Shan 99, Bryan 89
Som!Onl 79, NE lllinoii7S
W. Kanuck)' 71, l.aai.lville 11

1 0-Eaa~c

'

I

Pi£keri11&amp;1an 16, Whitehall l6

Panlind lOS, Atlant.t !X)

Denver at Orlando, 7:30p.m.

I'IIIJI ,IILIIIJI

PICWAY

Regular season

.-

Tuesday's scores

&gt;PIC1:!IW"

Cia. Wyomina 11, Cin. Dea- Park 40
Eutcm Brown Sl, Cin. Finne )'\Own 43

lli.IJIIII'. 1111

When y.ou come across a solid . rugged work boo! (as seeii above) . you khow
ir - genuine top grai n quality l ea rher . a . r~lnfor ce d roe· bo':' area . s teel
s hank suppOrt . GoOdyear&lt;l'l Weir c onstrUction , fully cushioned Insole,
rully lin e d. light weight. and oil r esista nt outsoles .
You ' ll save 2 5% on Elkland® work boors . regularly prlce.d up 10 -44 . 99·.

Cin. N. Colleac Hill 43, Cin. St .
Benwd41
CUI. S• U..W. 65, Cin. l'lll&lt;&gt;d1 Mrin

East

South

PKitlcDINm
~ .................. 37
JO .787
Scaulo .... ................J2 l7 .6.Sl
........... .................:ro 16 .652
LA: Lobn ............ 26 22 .542
I.A. Clippen .........25 25 .soo
Golden St.te ..........2J 29 .442
SacnmmtD ........... l7 32 .:147

IIKI'I'JII

St. Olinvillc 9S. SleUbenville 29

lll•k... IV
wa1afont 49, Sh~01h c1 (3

basketball scores.

:,'

Tri·VIlky 71, Meadowbrook 62

ll

Non-c:onference

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Akron's soccer team can play
. for MAC title in six-team setup

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Curolltoo. Sl, Li1ban Buve:r 42
Plillo n , C&amp;mbridae S9

Ohio Dtini.nit~t~ 16, Tiffin 79
Rio Gnnde 101, c.daMlle 97
Sl)awncc St. 73, Mount Vernon
N•:urenc70
um... 86. Wtllh 60

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· Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE

'·'

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Sco t"e lloa I"d
. Lol Anat* "CJDc.i,o. 1:40 p.m.
Phillddpnia It VUICOUver. 10:40 p.m.
W¥pea•t ~Jo.e. I 0:40p.m.

The success of the University of
Rio Grande's basketball teams is
spelled out in more ways than just
the team's records- 26-4 for
Dave ·smalley's Redwomen and
26-6 for John Lawhorn's Redffien.
Eleven players are numbered
among the staUStical leaders in the
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics District 22's Divi. sion I, according to statistics updat·
; ed Tuesday. Of these, silt are Red: women.
: In 29 games, Lori Hamilton
· (Gallia Academy '90) is first in
: field-goal 'percentage (63.2% on
230-for-364 shooting). second in
rebounding average (9.4/game,
though she leads in total rebounds
with 272), third ~ scoring average
· 19.7 ptsJgame) and flfth in freethrow percentage '(70.5% on 110for-156 shooting).
In 29 games, Stephanie Gudorf
is seventh in scoring with a 14 .I
points-per-game average and ninth
m three-point percentage (32.7%
on 67-for-205 shooting).
In 29 gameS, Michelle Crouse is
fourth in assists-per-game average
with 4.1 per contest, eighth in total
field-goal percentage (44.2% on
121-for-274 shooting) an4 13th in
scoring with a I 0. 7 points-per·
game average.
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By JOHN WISSE
Dlvllkia ol WlldUie
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Sunny days and m\ld temper3ltlfCS
mean Ohio's bald eagles n ~n­
nina their mating !JCUOII, the Division of Wildlife says. Last year, 20
pairs of nesting bald eagles produced a·record 31 eaglets.
The birds are abundant in Alaska, bul are endangered throughout
Ohio and much of the United
StaleS. The wildlife division's goal
is to have It least 20 pairs o( nestin'g bald eaatea established by the

year '2000.

1.

A pair of mates have been
reported in the Sbenlngo Wildlife
~ Area in Trumbull County. The
~ remainder of Ohio's breeding
• easlea R expected 10 begin mating
: in late Febnwy. If the Shenango.
, ··nest sire is a pvxeasful one, Ohio's
~ new crop of eaglell may hatch as
Cll'ly as mi4-March..
.
· The incubation. period for bald
castes is five weekL
1 When hatching does •begin,
watching eaate neats becomes vital
for wifdlife biologists. In the
19801, the Division of Wildlife
developed a niOIIiiOrin&amp; I)'I,Jem in
S!'ihich voluntcen collect iJR'portant
• data.
.
' · A group of more than SO volun: teers devotes hundreds of hours
; each year to anilt in the eagle
~ management project
~
"We do not have the number of
~ Division personnel we really need
) out thete in the fteld, so we must
•· enlist the IUPJlOil of theae iledicat:. ed voluatllers to moniJar ~edvitie~ ·
~ In the nest belen llld lfter bleed:· lng and hatcbins," said wildlife
•· biologist Malt Shleldcastle.
:. . As the bald eaales beJin mating,
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ShieldcasUe and other biologists
will conduc} aerial surveys to
locate previously unidentified
nests. Tbe are reports now of a
large nest potentially belonging to
bald eagles along the north side of
Sandusky Bay. There have also
been sewral potm~Jial nesting sites
rejlorted elsewhere.
"Some of the nest sites turn out
to be those or a red-Jailed hawk,
but we are always looking. Last
year, we spoaed from the air a new
eaate belt site in c;~..,a &lt;;ounty.
Our aerial survoyJ IR partiCularly
useful in northeast Obio where
much of the potential eaale nesting
habitat in inaccessible from the
ground," Shioldelstle said.
Of the 20 ccmumed ug~e nesting silel in Ohio, the site farthesc
inland from Like Eric ia located on
· the Killdeer Plains Wildlife Area in
· north-cenlral Ollio. In early wint«,
the Killdeer Plains eaate nest was
deaboyc:d in a storm, bul the e&amp;~~les
these h&amp;ve Mapt.ed to a nearby pial·
form built by the Division of
Wildlife.

By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - .
For the ftrst time in its 66-year histo~, the National Association .llf
Baskeiball Coaches publicly con demned the firing of one of its
members as it came to the support
of Lou Campanelli on Tuesday.
The NABC accused the .University of California of treating.Campanelli unfairly and called his fll·
mg "a shock to the college basket· .
ball community."
•
"The NABC is not a judicial
body, but the association must be
concerned wiih the treatment of its
members," the NABC said in a
prepared staienient.
"We can see no evidence of
coach Campanelli being granted'
rights that everyone deserves. If his
employer had concerns regarding
his job performance, he was entitled by fair standards to be
informed and·notified of the seriousness of those concerns in a
timely manner and provided an
opportunity to respond.''
Campanelli unexpectedly was
fired..Feb. 8. His young team, led
by star freshman Jason Kidd, was .
10-7 and had beaten several highly
regarded teams , including UCLA
and Louisville.
The NABC's 16-member board
of directors met for almost I 1/2
hours by co~ference ~all ~onday

(68.1% on 239-for-35 1 shooting);
second in total rebounds and
rebounding ave{llge (347, or 12.9 .
per game) andfifth in scoring av~rage (20.5 pts./game). . .
.
In 1 9 games, Jeff Brown leads
in free-throw percc;ntage (85.5% on
71-for-83 shooting), fifth in threepoint field-goal percentage (44 %
on 59-for-134 shooting), fifth in
rebounding average (7 .3. per game).
fifth in assists-per-game average
with 5.4 per contest and ,lOth in.
scoring average (15.4 pts./game).
In 25 games, Breit Coreno is
fust in three-point percentage (49%
on 47-for-96 shooting) and seventh
in total field-goal percentage
(56.4% oplOI -f\)l'-179 shooting) . .
In 29 games, Matt Powell is sec·
ond in free-throw percentage
(80.2% on 69-for-86 shooting),
third in scoring average (22.9
pts ./game), eighth in three-point
percentage (43.3% on 103-for-238
shooting) and total field-goal percentage (53 .4% on 246-for-461
shooting).
In 23. games, Jack Morgan is
sixth in individual assists-per-game
avemge with 4.8 per contest.

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) Standings after the ftrsl week of the
89th Ohio Men' s State Bowling
Tournament, with hometQWn and
scores:
,
Team handicap
1-Chancey•s ·Food Mart, Syracuse, 3,205
2-Pigs 5 Different ·Ones, Warren, 3,190
3-Bissman Company, Mans field, 3,164
.
4-Troyers Trail Bologna, Dover,
3,143
5, Morsels Lounge, Cleveland,
3,141

Team actual
· ''
1-Bissman Company, Mansfield
3,164
2-Liberty Financial, Mansfield,
3,099
3-Troyers Trail Bologna, Dover,
3,038
·
·
. 4-Lex Lanes I, Mansfleld, 3,014
5, Clayton Auto Parts, Dayton,
2,903
·
Doubles banditap
1-S. Alsbaugh and C. Hyer,
Washington C.H., 1-452
2-G. Anthoey and J. Bloomer,
Washington C.H., 1-392
3-M. Snyder and T. Le'ppla,

.

to discuss Campanellt and what . 18 of23 senior student-athletes had
they view as a trend toward mid- graduated.
.
,
. season dismissals.
"Two who have not graduated
"We will .be loolcing at all fir~ are presently completing their
ings," NABC executive director degrees," the statement said.
Jim Haney said. "Whether we like "Coach Campanelli has had nQ
it or nat, we know there are hirings reported NCAA violations- qual·
and firings in this business an!J,that ity freshmen and sophomore stuthe firing part may not be an aspect dent-athletes have been recruited.
ti.at's always palatable. But it's one Eighteen months ago, Campanelli
th.a t d,oe.s~exist and we have to sigiled a new five-year contract io
aecept that
coach the team through the 1.996
"As we look at these situations, season.
we' llloolc to see what happened
"After beating UCLA on Jan.
and try to support the coach."
24, coach Campanelli receil!ed a
Cal officials have said Campan- communication from director of
elli was fired because of abusive athletics Bob Bockrath commendbehavior toward athletes following ing him for the good work he was
recent games.
doing," the NABC said.
. ,
Cal athletic director Bob BockThe NABC has no real clout
rath flred Campanelli hours after . within the college community and
meeting Monday morninj! with a is trying to increase its presence in
group of six players who &amp;red their the rule- and policy-making procomplaints about the coach. Bock- cess.
rath deni\ld the meeting represented
The statement also praised interanything close 10 a player insurrec- im head coach Todd Bozeman for
tion, although he did say some being "supporrive and loyal to
players 1thrl}atened to leave the coach Campanelli and his proschool.
gram'' as an assistant
The NABC said Cal's action
"The NABC board acknowlwas ''particularly disturbing due to edges the authority of-any institucoach Campanelli's history of suc- tion's administration to hire and
cess at James Madison University fire coaches," Haney said. ·"The
and at Cal."
NABC does not contest that role.
The NABC noted Campanelli's
"What the board is coiicerned
record at Cal was 123-108, that he with is the coaches be provided due
had earned postseason berths in process, as all Qther employees Ot
four of his seven seasons, and that the university would be provided.'':

Millersburg, 1-380
4-T. Hartranft and G. Hunter,
Circleville, 1-371
5, J. Henilc and K. Whitfield,
Warren, 1-377.
Doubles actual
1-P. ·sedar and D. Taylor,
Cleveland, 1-321
2-T. Dull and D. Johns, Mans·
field, 1-309
3-G. Beachy and J. Dudek.
Dover, 1-299
4-V. Parker and 0 . Cline, Mansfield, 1-292
5, J. Miller and B. Hamsher,
Dover, 1-281

Singles handk:ap
1-Dan Hubert, Mansfield, 746 ,
2-Mitch Snyder, Millersburg
729
•
3-Gary Grice, MiUersburg, 727 ;
4· Terry Simpkins, Mansfield;
726
•
5, Bill Rentz, Milnsfield, 726 •
. Singles actual
1-John Kastanis, Cleveland, 718:
2-Tim Sherwood, Mansfield;
707
1
3-Scott Davis, Mansfield, 700 ,
.4-Bob Glandorf, Hamilton, 70S •
5, Ollie Cline Jr., Ma~sfield,:
701
:

Pickeri!fgton among girls' AP state basketball poll champions
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio'(AP)- It's
girls basketball tournament time in
Ohio, meaning it's time 10 again
present an Associated Press state
poU trophy to Pickerington.
For the fifth year in a row ,. the
Tigers of coach Dave Butcher have
walked away with the Division t
poUchampionship.
Joining Pickerington as a 1993
poll champion is another familiar
name at this time of year, Soulh
Charles~Qn SouthC3$tern. The Tro·
jans have won the last two Division
IV poll crowns and have finished in
the top th!ee the last five seasons.
First~ champions are Hamilton Badin iri Division U and Cold·
watc:r in Division .m. E!ich will
recetve1J plaque ·stgmfymg they
were selected as the No. 1 team
.during the regular season by a
panel of Ohio sports writers and
'broadcasters.
Pickeriogton,' l9-0 on the year
through last Weekend, also has won
three state championships on the
floor: in 1985, 1990 and last-season. The Tigers have also flnished
fifth twice and second once in the
four re~n preceding their ~ of
poll udes.
The Tigers led the poll from
stan ·to finish, eventually beating
out Rocky River M&amp;gnificat by 32
poinlll for the title. Wooster was
third, Garfield Heigh ~r.inity

·fourth and Logan fifth, as the top poiilts'for the title.
five teams held their positions from
The top 10 teams .held their
last week.
position in the division from last
Southeastern. 20-0 in the regular week.
has won the last two Division IV poll' crowns, finished ihird
in 1991 and second in both 1he
1990 and 1989 polls.
The top five teams in the the
small -school division also
remained the same ffOm the preceding poll, with {,Jpper Scioto Valley second, Danville third,
Zanesville Rosecrans fourth and
Columbiana Crestview fifth.
Like Pickerington, Coldwater
has won two of the last three state championships, in 1992 and 1990.
The Laill Cavaliers were sixth in
last years poll and won the chamI
pionship a month later, and were
I
fourth in the 1991 poll. They were
I
unranked in the final poll before
I
winning the championship in 1990.
Coldwater was trailed by Balli..
more Liberty Union, Utica, Versailles and Doylestown Chippewa.
OUR SPECIAL
Last year's poll champion, Ver. sailles, lost its last regular-season
WAY OF
game and fell back from a close
THANKING YOU!
second - nine points behind Cold·
water- to fi)uith place.
Preoent thiJ ad with your
admission tlcketstub at our
Badin has never made it to the
coniCSSion stand and r«leve a
state champiQDship Jlllle an~ bas ·
46 oulzr cup of
never rmished in the top 10 m the
FI!~Y~popcom.
poll. But the Rams went 20-0 to .
po~o.m qffer,oxplres ~115193
edge unbeaten Canfield ~.Y E.
___________

season,

HIGH SCHOOL CLASS Rl:o-.GS

SAVE 35°n

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Olymplc:l

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I
WINl WINl WIN
1 Plouc
1hlo IIIII)' form 10 dte S""NO VALU!Y
I CINEMA box om.. f... a , _ til WIN a dinner for
two II tlte fiUIIDIIS STOWAWAY RESTAURANT .t.
LOUNOB in li11G1ic dow-n O.Wpolil.
.
lhwi"l will bo held Non:h I, 199311 lite SPRII!O
. VAUJ!YCINEMA.

mum

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Jr.

HJclt Rlnp alto .vlllable.

Add~----------~---------------- I

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Urbana, which won wt year' ~
state championship, was third, fol~
lowed by u_ndefeated Dayton Cat~
roll and Alliance Marlington.

~njoy a feature film in luxurious comfort

-

!\ TLANTA (AP) -

,.,

3-2-8; Deb MGyer, 3-3-1 -16· Am
Santee, 1·0-2; Meg han O'Ftani.
gan, 3-0-6; Angela Santangelo, J••
0-2; Holly Allen, 3-1-7. TOTALS
23-3-4-59.
RIO GRANDE (71)- Tricia
Collins, 1-0-~; Stephanie. Gudorf,
1-1-0· 5; Lon Hamilton , 8-8-24;
Gena Norris, 0-2-1 -7; Michellt
Crouse, 4-1-9: Kim Sowers, 4-0-8;
Stacey Ritter, 3-2-8; Ginger Smith,
4-0,8. TOTALS 25-3-12-71.
Halrtlme store: Malone 32&gt;
Rio Grande 27.

Chancey's Food Mart bowlers first in men's ,state tourney

Sports briefs

.
Turner
Broadcasting System Inc. and Capital Cities-ABC are discussing a
possible joint bid to broadcast the
1996 Atlanta Olympics, officials
with both companies oonrrrmed. ·
The Wall Slreet Journal reported
thil the eotnpanles may tdeVJJC the
1996 Games on four netwotks:
ABC; ESPN, a spons channel that
is majority owned by Capital
Cities; and TBS and TNT, cable
networb owned by Turner. Neither
company would confirm that
report.
.

cent) to Malone's 38 .8 (~6-67,
three of nine on the outside for 33.3
percent). At the line, tbe Redwomen netted 12·of 18 attempts (66.7
percent), with Ritter hitting all two
of her tries, to the Pioneers' 57.1
(four of seven), where Tanya Erb
was also two for two.
Malone, which fell to 19-9, is at
Urbana Thursday.
Box score:
MALONE (59) - Kathy
O'Dell, 5.0-10; Tracy Wellcer, 2·04; Pam Oswald, 2-0-4; Tanya Erb,
·

·NABC' condemn·s Campanelli. 's ouster_;.

11 players among Division I leaders

. ''

EASTERN
(2·12·19-20=53)
.
Jeremy Cline 1-3·1=12, Chad
Savoy 1-0-2=4, Pill Newland 1-04=6, Charlie Bissell 6 -0-5= 17,
Jeremy Buckley 1-0-0=2, Wes ·
Arbaugh 0-0-2=2, Matt Manin 1-0- ·
0=2, Robert Reed . 3-0-2=8 .
TOTALS -14-3-16=53

slim edge over Malone on the
boards, posting 46 to the hosts' 45.
Deb Moyer led Malone's
offense with 16 points (including
all three of its succesful'trifecta
attempts) and seven rebounds, in
addiuon to five as~ists. Kathy
O'Dell added 10 pomts. For Rto
Grande, Ginger Smith brought
down seven boards and Tricia
Collins added six.
Rio Grande shot 38.4 percent
from the field (28-73, three of 14
from the three-point for 21.4 per-

.Rio .Grande teams' success places

1 1 '1 1 1

FEDERAL MOCKING
(7·14·9·15=45)
Brad Bentz 7-2-0=20, Myron
Han 2-0-2=6, Grant Schaller 3-02=8, 'Mike Mollohan 0-0-1=1.
Brian Bennett 3' 1·1=10. TOTALS
- 15·3-6·=45

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Malon·e win gives Redwometi S(!ason's 14th straight victory .

The ·Qaily.Sentinel
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�' .

, Wednesday, February 17, 1993

:~ Barnes, ·Earl,

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

'
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·
RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
GOOD SUN., FEB.14 THRU FEB. 20, 1993

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$499

Cubed Steak~-.. . . ._......
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USDA CHOICE BEEF .

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Sirloin Steaks.-..............u..

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Leg Quarters. .....
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KENTUCKY BORDER CHUNK
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Top Round Steak................ta.
$4 29
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KEN~UCKY

.-·

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99(

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SUNSHINE
(, HEEZ·ITS~
~

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"
"It's, a very ill!portant game ·out t ere, I'll remember the last
f' from the standpoint lhat we are II· shot I hit and where everyone was
(. 9 and we are struggling to have a when I made it,"· he said.
'• wi~g season. _We need a victory
Another member of that 1989
:: here, CaUett said.
. .
Oak Hill team was Marshall for·
;. M~sh~l, meanwhile, IS 15-6 ·ward Swff Lynch, who plays sum•,; headmg mto th~ annual_gam.e mer pickup gaines wuh Moun,• between the state s two umverst- taineer guard Tracy Shelton and
•: ties.
.
forward Pervires Greene, also Oak
. :• "Marshall is having a pretty Hill alumni.
good ~n:: CaU~ said.
"It's going to be·a fun 11181Chup,
.• Basey, a JUmor, 1s eyemg to a playing against playeJS you played
:0 ~match with Brown, 1 sophomore against in high schoOl. It's a riv~
·: irl his filS! Season with the Thun- for us that is continuing in col~ der.ing Herd a.f~er a stint at Fork lege,"
Basey said.
•• Umon (Va.}Military ~Y·
"It's goinj! to be fun coining
·~ ._Brown scored 24 pomts t.o back !Oglelher, 'Lynch said. · ·
';
But Catlett and Marshall coach

ington. .
.
·west Virginia won last season's
meeting in Charleston by a 90-76
margin. The teams have split 12
m~lings since the 1980-81 season.
'tyrone Phillips leads Marshall
with 24.1 points and 6.6 rebounds
per game.
.
Forward Ricky Robinson leads
West Virginia with 14.4 poiniS and
7.8 rebounds per game, while
Greene is second in both categmes
at 14.2 poiniS and 5.7 rebounds and
Basey is thinfin scoring at 13.8.
West Virginia will be withoul
center Jeremy Bodkin, sidelined
since he aggravated a leg injury
Feb. 4.

c

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Skelton paved the way in lhat game
with five long-range shots.
At Carver-Hawkeye Arena,
SlceiJOn's early bombs aave OSU a
i6-ll lead over the natfon's No. 20
team after 8 1/2 minutes. A few
minutes later, Alex Davis hit two
consecutive three-pointers for the
Buckeyes. But that was it for the
game as phio State (ll-10 overall
4-8 Big Ten) lost its second
straighL .
Iowa (lS- 6, 4 •5) snapped a
· j
ale h' d
three-game losm11 stre be m
Val Barnes' 20 points, Acie Earl's
12 and Lookingbill's 11. Earl also
had 10 rebounds and blocked four
shots.
"Compared to the first game, I
think Barnes and Earl have stepped
it up. They're (the Hawkeyes) as
competitive as anyone if those two
keep stepping jt up," Ohio State
coach Randy Ayers said.
Bame·s mired in a shooting
slump the Past three games, broke
out with a 5-for-10 performance
from three-point range. Barnes,
who averages nearly 16 points a
game, scored just 10. 10 and seven
points on 11-of-39 shooting the
past three outings before finding
his rhythm ·against Ohio State.
Iowa coach Tom Davis said he

'
ofipeni!'g game. C~~.:'~set ~
· ~t ~gam~ to WI
r ami·
.fymCll'C_Ievtlle.
"I thmk about my dad ~v!lry
tim~ I steP. O)lt on the court.. an.~
basiCally I '!' J~ P!&amp;ylng for h1m,
Cooper sa1d. It s really tough
bel:ause it seems to unimportant,
yet I llnow h,e would,;want!'le. to
play. So that s why I m finlshmg
the season."
.
The )unior has anotha: season of
e~gibility lefL B~t COOper said she
. wJII graduate m May with an
accounting degree and return home
for 'good. ,
.
. . .
~lson has wd !'e will keep
a s holarship open tn case she
reconsiden.
·

'

Va!. Barnes M~Crge as a good scorer. Davassaid.

r----"":"'-----,

that, sal~ Ay~. who hasn ! won
at Iowa City smce a 79-73 vtctory
during his fll'St season at Columbus
in 1990.
.
'
•'Our shot selecuon wasn t
good. We ttied to ~ it too much
one on one," he wd.
Baskets by Funderburke and
Derek AJ:Ide~n closed. ~e gap to
56-50 w1th 3:04 rematmng. The
Buckeyes could only mak_e two
more baskets, while Iowa h1t 8 of
13 free throws to keep Ohio State
away.
.
leased 'th B
Dav1s was. p
w1
llflles
and the other guards, including
freshman Mon'ter Glasper, who
made his fust start in place of point
guard Kevin Smi\h. Smith missed
class lime and was punished by losing his starting job for the game.
Glasper didn't score but led the
Haw keyes with five assists. The
Hawkeyes had only eighttumovetll
for the game.
''lthink we've been getting
preuy good guard play on both
ends of the court. They're handling
the ball better and playing better

We Have
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from Ohio
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Spring
Planting. ·
PICKENS
•

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WV.

;e:fe:n:se~.~Th;e;n~y~o;u~see;:g;uy~s~I;ik;e~=~~;.~~~=~

T'"
v
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=~.:a.!!..,tu-...old"

::r:~~ls~!l~trn:eu~~·=:;,
Davis said.

"I think we're convinced if we
can spot him one or two minutes,
he can shoot better,'' the coach
said. "We're trying to encourage
him to get mcire quality time rather
than quantity time...
Barnes rarely shows any emolion on the court and his post game
demeanorwasnodifferenL
".We iusttook.the shots rhey
gave us,'r he said. "I wouldn't say
I took over the game."
. . .
.Iowa fought back from its early
deficit to grab a 32-31 halftime
lead and James Wintm' basket to
start the second half increased the
lead three 34 31 B the B k
to
• • · ut
uc •
eyes scored 12 of the next 16
points, capPed by Lawrence Fun·
dertiurlce's Jumper, for a 43-381eacf ·
with 13:07 remaining. Funderburk:e
finished wi!h 14 points while Skel·
:on had 16.
Iowa answered Funderburke's

OF THE WEEK
WIIU lU IIWS AlE AVWIU FOI

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KARL KEBLEA, EA

WiltnMr,... ,........... ..,.. :-lilt._ -

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.

Sarah Evans and led on the court
by forward Tracy Krueger's 14.3
points and 7.6 rebounds a game, is
12-9.
"It's a scramble to fmd the right
combination," West Virginia
coach Scott Harrelson said. "In
some games I say, 'Wow, we can
beat anybody·.'. At other times
we're out there and it's like, blanlc
stares, as if we don't\now what 10
do."
·
·
Adding.to the.problems are the
peraatal diff'teulues of Cooper, the
Moun1aineers' leader in scoring
and rebounding with 14.4 points
and 7.9 rebound! per game.
Cooper's father, Danny, died in
a logging accident just before the
·
·

.,.,..

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

"""'"

the road this season: West Virginia
is 1-8 away from MorganiOWD and
Marshallt's 4 _6 away from Hunt-

:;Mars a , "est _.,zrgznza women to start
~ tonight's game with mirror-opposite marks

•'
{

ARMOU.R

BOX

·

Dwight Freeman aren't as happy.
Catlett said he dislikes playing a
. non-conference game in the midiJ!e
of his Atlantic 10 Conference
·SChedule. · ·
"It's ,lust the timing,o~ playing
now that1s bad for us. It s JUS! really stressful," said Ft'eeman. whose
team plays in the Southern ConferenceN.et'the·r •··- has done well on

'
:; . CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP}
t· -The Matllha1l and West Vitginia
t.. women's basketball teams meet
' tonifht in a preliminary to the
&gt;: men s game bewteen the state's
two universities.
"- West Virginia won last season's
'game also at the Charleston Civic
:. Center, by an .89-73 margin en
route to its best finish ever. It
• wound up 26-4, with its season
• ending in the third round of the
·NCAA iOUmllillCnL
.
.
This season·. however, with
:· ' guard Christy Cooper the only
;~ returning SUUter, the Mountaineen
.... are struggling at 9-12. Marshall,
I" coached by former Gallia Academy
l:,. and
Stanford University player
- · ·

$129
.~

·

wh~ ft.ntshed wnh etght potnts,
whtch ogmled an 18-3 ~n as Iowa
o~:;Qed a 56-46 lead w1th 5:08 to

~!~~afterlowa's6S-S4viccory ~~~~r:~~J:n~:~;~
Pretty well indeed. In tlieir Jan.
"I thoug~t Iowa dtd a good JOb
~fa:'~~o::o~s~~~
~~c~ ~~t~~?·t~in~ ~;'~e~ ~~~:
jloint shots as they won 92-81. man,., and we didn't resp~nd to .

Basey's 23 in theit 1989 meeting,
also at the Charleston Civic Cen~.
!'He's quick and ·~~e Stays on the
floor instead of goin' in 'the air and
~assing the ball,'. Basey said..
'He's a. r~ good penetrator and
can shoot the ball."
.~ champ1o~h1p.
"It can't get more exciting than
•
Baseh s current coach, Gale this. I'll be really pumped playing
'• Catlett, opes the outcome is dif- abeg~ns!.gBuys I've.dplayed against
., ferent when Basey leads West Vir•
oore, rQwn S8l •
ginia. against Brown and Milrs.hal.I
"I haven't played on that floor
h
h Ch I t
since we won the state cham pir tontg t •t t e
ares on 1v1c onshi~. I'm sure as· soon 88 I 8,.,..

~

JTM

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SALTINES .

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(AP}
._ - The Ia at time point guards
• Marsalis Basey and Tink !'lro~n
met on the comt, they were m htgh
school and Brown's Woodrow Wit' son team beat Basey's Martinsbqrg
~-team ~or t~e I 989 Class AAA

RCCOLA ,
UCTS'
.

Ohio S)ale's Jamie Skelton quickly meeting this season between the the outside. I th~nk th~y thought
reminded Wade Looldngbtll and . twoieams.
. ·
"..
they would do 11 agam, but we
the Iowa Hawkeyes of the first
"They really hilrUIL.bad. from defended it pretty well," Looking-

By GREG SMITH

1'•.: . •·CHARLESTON , w. Va.

•

..

Lookingbill pace Iowa to 68-54 wi~ oyer OSU

We.st. v.·rg•·n•·a •~:·Marshall men to "'"'ce
Ja
:·l·n· ann·ual Cha.rle·ston me·eti·ng··ton·I•ght

89(

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

• IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP}: rwo _early three-point shots by

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1: . Hdme Equity Loan;·we pick you don't get with other types
f. up the tab on closing costs that of financing. .
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~ would nonnallyrunyou hun· Stop by your nearest Bank
;. dreds of dollars: You pay no .One and ask for a home equity
~- points, and no attorney's fees. applicat~on.
~ And no appraisal or title"search
Or cal1593-6681 orl-800:; fees, either.
677-4994 if you prefer. In clos- .
~~
Get your home equitY loan ing, it won't cost you a thing~.
now and your timing couldn't
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Bank One, Athens, NA
Member FDIC
::•• is tax deductible in most

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•

Obio University

CoUege of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

I

Qutsllon: I'm in my
and
Individuals with flexible flat
·have had flat feet since I was a feet have foot pain. because of
child. My feet haven't bothered me strain 10 the ligaments and muscles
:-much until lately. They get quite of the feeL Flexible flat feet can be
'•be after 1 play basketball, which helped by wearing shoes that have
· l·'ve done. on a regular basis for a good heel cup. This helps reduce
sevetal decades. Whlll can be done the tendency for the heel .bone to
·for fl!ll feet'l
tum outward. An arch support also
·'· Answer: H:aving flat feet is a helps the arch work in a more norcommon complaint. Flat feet can mal fashion as one walks or runs.
be idendfaed by lookinl! at the foot
Good quality and proper fitting
~bile the individual 1s standing
shoes are al.l that is necessary for
=balefoot on a hard swfJice. A nor- .many individuals, but some may
) mal foot has some space where the not get adequate relief without spe• foot doesn't touch the floor . cial support devices called·
; between the heel and the ball of the orthotics. A podiatrist or sports
' big toe. An individual with flat feet medicine specialist can custom
( has lost this normal longitudinal make a sports orthotic that replaces
t arch of the foot so that his or her the liner in the regular spons shoe.
1 ~illht causes the foot tO. COntaCt
The device may improve both COm•
~ die floor along this entire surface.
fon and performance.
From your description, it
The O!her ~of flat feet, called
#!i'Jlpcan thai you have what's called · "rigid flat feet, looks like the flex~t'llcxib!e flat feeL" Individuals with
ible variety when the person puiS
~Piia 1110$1 common type of flat feet
weight on his or her feet . But
~~to have a normal arch when when the person is "non-weight
~llieir feei are not supporting weight. bearing," a rigid foot still looks
s,:a is usually present from early flat. The problem of a rigid flat foot
~=hood and seems to have a
results from artbritis or other bone
:
·wy cause.
abnormalities at the connection of
~~ One pan of the abnormality that
the heel with lhe other foot bones.
~jlroduces flat feet is an angUng of
The type of arthritis that causes
!'.!be heel bone. When seen from rigid flai feet usually oeeurs later in
behind, a normal lower leg and life and only rarely in childhood.
,..bee! bone will appear to Ill: diyided . So, it is quite likely that you have
~ID equal halves by the line of the
flexible, not rigid, flat feet.
~illes tendon.
Individuals with rigid flat feet
~ In the individual with flat feet,
usually have uncomfortable feet ·
: the heel bone is turned out so that whenever they are standing on
: the Achilles tendon appears to t~em. Treatment won't produce
t attach more to the inside edge · healthy feet -just feet that hurt
instud of to the middle of the less. Custom-made shoes or shoe
bone. From the arch pan of the foot inserts similar to spans onhotics
forward 10 the toes, the flat foot is can help reduce the stress on the
~ tumed out to the side. This combi- · sore fOQt parts while anti-inOatn: nation CIUIItS the longitudinal arch matory medications can help with
: of the fQOI to fall so that the per- the inflatnmation and pain. In the
• son's weigbt is supported along the worst cases, surgery can be of
Zentire inside edge of the foot.
some benefit.
· ·
Questloa: Why do I get the pain
So be thankful that you have
only when I play baslcetball?
flexible flat feet. Examine both
, Answer: Playing basketball your athletic and "street" fOOtwear
• puts a significant demand on the C!~fefully for proper fit, SUpPOn and
:parts of the arch, so I'm llot sur- s1gns of wear. If you contmue with
•prise,l'fou get discomfort after font pain, I'd recommend that you
: playing. You may be geuing foot seeapodiauistorasponsmedicine
: pain now becauiiC your basketball specialisL
h hoes aren't providing the support
"Fatnily Medicine" is a weekly
t you ~ Yoor old shoes could be column, To submit questions, write
' worn out, or yotlr new sltqes may 10 John C. Wolf, D.O .•. Ohio Uni:not provide you with the nece•••ry versity College of Osteopathic
: support, or you have gained weight Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens
~ and therefore put more strain on Ohio 45701.
·
'

tbt

CHECK THE

I

!I

\

n the service

Navy Fireman Marvin E. Bick~,
ers, son of Edith A. Hubbard of
c; Army Pvt. Roger E, Partlow Route 3, Racine, is currently
ently arrived for duty at Fort deployed aboard the dock landing
shtp USS Tonuga, homeponed in
ood in Killeen. Texas.
Partlow is the son of Gloria 1. Little Creek, Va.. and is assisting
bbs of 26 1/2 Railroad St., Mid- the U.S. Coast Guard in carrying ·
out U.S. Immigration policies and
:Jleport.
;i~ He graduated from Meigs High to protect the safety of Haitians
attemping to reach the U.S. by sea.
·: "hoot in 1992.
The five-ship task group's mission
is to suaJport the U.S. Coast
Robert L. Findley has been proGuard
in conducting alien migrant
in the U. S. Air Force 10 the
interdiction
operations and search
ainnan rtrst class. He is staand
rescue
or
Haitian imigrants at
at .Ram stein Air Base,
sea.
The
ships
and
their crews have
lautem, Germany.
provided
temporary
emergency
'" Findley, an information manass1stance
at
sea,
including
medical
~Mement specialist, is the son of
care,
shelter,
sanitary
facilities,
a-d ward Findley of Racine, and
. »etsy Wood of 28966 Hufford food and other comfort items.
The task force will provide
Joad, Perrysburg.
He graduated from Perrysburg humanftarian assistance to the
Haitians as long as this support is
Jh School in 1991.
required by the Coast Guard.
The task group's mission in the
o., 1st Lt. Paul E. McConnell has
en decorated with the Army Carribean is an example ofthe
ornmendation Medal at Fort flexibility, mobility, and capability
of naval forces. On short notice
ainwrighl. Fairbanks, Alaska
., The medal is awarded to those they are poised 10 respond to cri~
';;di;iduals who demonstrate OUt• in ~istantlands, from the
The 1989 graduate of Southern
fiancting achievement or meritOri·
ous service in the performance of High School joined the Navy in
theifduries on behalf of the Army. · August 1989.
~ McConnell, a flight operations
o£fk:er. is the son of William G.
lnd Ethel M. McConnell Of 17671
· Sylvanil Ave., Nelsonville.
There will be a turkey hunting
~ His wife, Linda, is the dau~hter
safety clinic on Feb. 27 from noon
t~r David R. Riggs and Glona K.
to 5 p.m. at the Forked Run Spanskloes, both !X Pomeroy.
; The lieutenant is a 1983 gradu- man Club, Curtis Hollow Road,
of Nelsonville- York High Long Bottom. Only 50 people may
hool, Buchtel, and a 1989 gradu- register. To register, call Keith
Wood at 98S4400.
OI"Ohlo lJnlvel'lity, Athena,

f

-

E

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIIV FED BEEF

~-

.

ADOLPH S
DAIRY VALLEY
w••••• s..

FIS~ SQUARE SJ 29

(

.

•
: Community Calendar Uems
appear two days berore aa event
:and tile day of that event. Items
(must be rec:elved well In ad Y&amp;nee
•t!i BS5ure publication In the cal:endar.

GOLDEN RIPE

.Whole Boneless
Round steak · ,

•;/~. -· ....; Dole·sansn¥:". ;r,." ' i"'~
.: FULL CA~~ ... 512.00 fSAVE 10%? ·

~~

we ctaC1./Y ~'
Accept rour.
'- ....-. ' Federal Food·
Stamps

.

• I

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·Miracle
I

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REGULAR OR LIGHT

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24-Pack ··
12-oz. cans

UIIIIT ONE JAR WITH COUPON AND $10
DF .
ADDinONAL PURCHASE
I
SO UIIIIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

J
; COUPON tiOOO M. ,_ 14-SAT. FB. 2(1, 1JIJ ,

3-lb.

can

CAFFEINE FREE D/fT PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW ;'

________,

Armour
canned Ham

·

. FRIDAY
.
LONG BOTIOM , There will
be a square dance at the LOng Bot•
tom Community Building on Fri••
day from 8-11 p.m. Music will be
WEDNESDAY
c RUTLAND • 1be·-itudand Fire ·pfOvided by ''Out of the Blue."' .
Depanment ~dies Auxiliary will
SYRACUSE : Weekend revival,
meet in regulat session Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the rue station. All Syracuse Nazarene Church, Friday
members urged to auend.
· ~gh Sunday, 7 p.m. nighdy and ··
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- Wesley B. Frederick, speaker. Mel
port Literary Club will meet and Mary Felts, special singers.
Wednesday at I :30 p.m. at the Public invited.
home of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs. '
SATURDAY
Wilsq.n Carpenter will review
"Mapa Callas" by Arianna
TUPPERS PLAINS • The
~tassinopoulous. For roll call mem- .Wines Family will present a conbers arp 10 tell of a favorite musical cert at the Tuppers Plains •Church
of Christ on Saturday at 2 p.m. feaperformer.
I
turing "Kevin. and His Wonder
SYRACUSE • The Homemak- Horse. A covered dish dinner will
ers Club of Syracuse will meet at be held following the program. ·
l
the municipal building at 10 a.m
Wednesday. Members are to take
REEDSVILLE· A cornbread
and bean dinner will be held Saturcooldes.. A quilt will be tied.
'
.
.day fn_&gt;m noon to S p.m. lit the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene, ·
THURSDAY
POMEROY • Meigs County ROUIO 124, poss fJqm the Forked
Democratic Executive Committee Run State Park in Reedsville.
,meeting 7:30 p.m. at the Carpen- Coleslaw, fried powoes, hot dogs
and chips will also be available.
tersU Hall.
There will be a free-will offering.
'
RACINE - Racine American
HARRISONVILLE • Har~Legion Post 602 meeting·at 8 p.m.
risonville Lodge No. 4 i 1 F&amp;AM,
,Supper at 7:30p.m.
annual inspection, Saturday, 6:30
~
.
I .CHESHIRE • Revival at th~ p.m. Baked stealc supper. Work in
!Believers Fellowship MiniJI!y, one master mason degree at 7:30 p.m.
;mile from Gallia-Meigs County All master masons invjted,
.Line on State Route 7, will contin:ue through Thursday. Pastor Mar· , . CHESTER ·• Stealc dinner sponsored by Pomeroy OES, Saturday.
~garct J. Robinson invites the pub5-7 p.m. at the Chester Mason1c
lic.
Temple.
I
'
A · ED • The Orange Townhip T ustees will hold a special · PQMEROY • Belles and Beaus
eetinjl at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at W~ Style Square Dance Club,
dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m. Tom
;the hOfC of Cleric Patty Callaway.
Poe, caller. r-efreshments. Public
•~ HAkRISONVILLE • Har- · invited.
' '
1risonville l,.odge F&amp;AM No. 41J,
NITRO, W.VA. • Liberty
pecill meeting, Thursday, 7:~
.m. Work in master mason degree. Mountaineers, Saturday, Cin-San
efreshments. All master masons Theatre, Niuo, W.Va.
_nvited .
SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange
and Star Junior Grange,
~· LONG BOTIOM • Special ser·
Saturday,
6:30 l'.m.. potluck supper
!vice, MI. Olive Community
burch, Thilrsday through Satur- and work project. All members
Y at 7 p.m. nighity with Evange- attend. '
l Larry Nix, Ashville, N.C. Pas·
HENDERSON, W.VA. : Gailia
tor Lawrence Bulh invites the pubTwirlers
Wes1ern Square Dl!nce
lic. 1
Club, darlce, Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
CW!STER • Special' meeting, Hendersqn .Communitr, Center,
Shade River Lodse No. 4Sl, Henderson, W.Va. Btll Bush,
F&amp;AM, Thuraday, 7:30p.m. Work caller. Public invited.
in the master mason degree.
ReffC4hinents. All master muons ~
we Iepine.
•

Only·at
. these stqres:

SILVER .BRIDGE PLAZA

~

I

----

.

.t .

Addltloiul
Ollanttties
I
!1-o.r.. $1.11.1

52-oz.

Heart Catholic Church. .Call 9925763'for information;

.

(!!§)

sea

Clinic planned

~

[ Co~unity cale~.qar

....

...

•
nt?t cr'!shed. Mirrors, window,
wtndsh1eld glass, ceratnic, crystal,
oven ware, milk glass or drinking
glasses are not acceptable Wigg~s
said..
'
')
Tm food and juice cans should
have the IO,PS and bottoms open~
and flattened, corrugated should be
Oattened, aluminum, steel and himetal pop cans need not be
crushed, accorlliog to the litter controt chairman.
..

ishe

Garden Club ·
j'iews gardening program

Aboard ship

papers, like funnies, grocery and
shoppers ads, and flyers should be
bundled separately.
Caps, lids and rings should be
re!J!oved from plastic contai~ers
~h1ch .are to be separated tnto
s1zes. Stze numbers are located m a
small recycle trtangle a~ the bottom
or underneath the container.
As for glass, beverage and food
containers they should be separated
by color, clear, green or brown, but

The

!

...

devotions, the members
How Great Thou Art" and
'!1iad a poem, "Who Makes the Gar;;Jcn." The devotional part of the
eeting was closed with a prayer
Mrs. Dolores Frank.
The program was a video shown
~
gardening. It showed how to
seedlings and plant bulbs, the
:Jpmc1 way to. water plants, how to
d the garden, control of pests
diseases and how 10 cut flowfor arranging.
The program was prepared by
ai'ilyn Hannum and Ruth Anne
alderson. Roll call was answered

n.

a.:w

~iverview

by members telling "What I'm
lool::ing forward 10 in 1993." Plans
were made to prepare fruit trays at
the next meeting.
.
Games were played and prizes
awarded. Margaret Grossnickle
received the door prize. An article
. on perennials was given to each
,member and perennial seed was
given to those attending.
Refreshmen!S were served to the
above named and the following:
Mary Alice Bise, Betty Boggs,
Marlene Putman, Nancr Wachter,
Maxine Whitehead, Jamce Young,
Nola. Young, Opal Harris and
Pauline Myers.
.
The next meeting will be witjl
Janice Young.

An
.

Landers

tyourf&lt;!el

The Riverview Garden Club met
at the home of Mrs.
lldys Thomas. Co-hostesses were
rs. G~. :Weber and Mrs.

~ Au l.aDdera: "Mary" hu

Recycle Day will be held Saturday from 9 a.m. until noon Satur·
day on th~ Kroger Parking lot in
Pomeroy by Meigs County Recycling and Lit~r ~vention.
Kenny Wtggms, who heads up
the Inter control program, said that
most all household items will be
recycled that day. He emphasized
that all1tems should be rinsed and
separated by category.
· .
lt~ms which will be accepted are
alumtnum, steel and tin cans soft
~rink plastic containers, pfastic
Jugs, newspapers, corrugated cardboard, and 'lass.
Pr~parauon. of items to be recycl~d ts very Important, Wiggins
satd. Newspapj:rs should be tied in
bundles. Those in paper bags will
be accepJed but the preference is
for bundles. All insens in Sunday

DEAR MOM: The admissions
otTICC It WCillaD Maryland College
,
,her. for a '1/fZ'J .long time and
said, "Yes, that suggestion did
I tbouihtn waUid be nice if we JOt
indeed appear, along with other
.,. toseflaer.IInYit.ed her over,llld she
unusull ideas fat raising money, but
brought her 13-~~ 1011, who
..f:t~:
it ~meantasajoke. Of the 1,400
· pl~y~ aicely, with my .older
Tillla S1D!IIcol&lt;
..
brochures we· sent out, only one
I1c~. We bid IIi..- topdler c,..,.., Syadlcllt" •· ··
pmon took it seriously:·
111(1/lhcn they watt home.
'
What do I think? [ think it is not
A1ll:r
they
left,
I
disc:overed
one
too cool for a urtiversity to be send1
of lny son's hllld-~ eleclrottic
,
· in&amp; out material that has jokes In il
g&amp;llle,8)'Stems wu m111~ .I
Too bid you lie no longer speit. ,•' Hwnor .has its' place, and literature
Mary 1 1011 bad played with n wh1lc iDBto Mary I 1q1e 1n time the rift acquainting the public with a
1he was here. 10 I called and asked ' heals lild
you will invite her ID college should .not be fiUlny.
,":here he might ~ve left iL.He told visit apin and bring her 1011 He
Gem of the Day: If you think
lhiainotherbeput1tbackinmy1011's ' needs IIIDiher chance 10 show· that ~ducati,on is expensive, try
This
eflll:
; bedroom. We~. and it wun\ he can be trusled.-..
tgnorance.
·
: ~!ned Mary...__,_ and __.., _ _,
Dear Ami~ ll!dera: I am ui'!l'e · Is aiCbhQI ruining your life or the
·
--.
............... mothcrofiWIII"'"'•wboue-.ora life of a lo~~ed one? "Alcoholism:
i that one of the C8f1!id~ from the in .l!igb school. They want ID lltend How to Recognize It, How. to Deal
;P"'~.sy~ was mi5Smg, also. H:er college. Coming up wid! tuition for With It;/:ldw to Conquer It" ctlllturn
:son·,admute.d !-"•t he too~ the two is no easy matter. Twas things aro1111d. Stlld a stl/·ad·
.
,cartridge but Insisted that he did not appalled. bowt\'Cf,ll wball rCceived dressed, long;biiSillus-siu e1111tlope ·
~WITH FRIES..... $1.99
"" :take,the game.
in the mail from Westem Maryland ·IJIId a check or Mont)' order for .
; Fqur weeks later, Maty sent me a College in Westminster, Md. .
$3.65 ·(this includes postage alld
8
,ne_w pmc YS!C"' and returned the
This college sent me a flyer · luurdling) to: .Alcohol, c/o AM IAn,
musmg Cartridge. I phoned and listing reasons I should send my ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 1/1.
,R,Jggested thai her~ should apolo- child there. They also seni informa- 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
:giZC to me for taking the game in tion on fin'ancial aid sucb as $4.45 .)
,the first place. Mary said, "He scholarSbips grants IDd ~·IIUIJy
doesn't ~Ito talk to you. Please · Jli'08I'8rils.
following suggestiOn
•respect his feelings.~
a1a0 · ludcd: ·
By Order 01 US Bankruptcy Court So D•stnct o1 NY Case rts 90B·11233 Through 90B·11285iHCBi
Ann, I MD 10.~ that I !'Ill w~Send ":letter to 200 people
:no longer "11"*~110. Maty.l think promising them good luck if lhey
handled the suuallon badly. Not mum two bucks and send .the 1c11er
'·
t=~rc::~r't!U: to to or their mends. (The p..cccds
should ~ lllldc him y, .
should cover arad school tuition,
•
I apologize... 100.) Remind them thai bad luck will
Whit do roo lhink'l-- DISGUS'lliD come their way if they don't act
IN JERSEY • [
'thin tiVC._
., ......,.,• _.,
•·
i
WI
3
DBAR D 1 80IIJ!dl as if.
M8ly • What do you tbinlc of an "'insliiUhas her blllds fUll wilb that kid. Of lion of Iilalier lelming" lhlt wOuld
=i~J.::m===!""· send such material? .. NON- .
.
,
,
II as, PLUSSt;ID IN EDISON, N.J.
:

I

~:eatly

Wednesday, February 11,1993
·Page-9

•

I:::my friend for 20 )'fllrl.l hldn'l

jr

'
I

.

The Daily Sentinel

Lbng~time.friend should have· , Recycle Day scheduled for Feb. 20
[hbr ·son apo~ogizefor stealing

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
Medicine

i

.

By The.Bend

FROZEN, ASSORTED
VARIETIES

Fox DeLuxe
Pizzas
7-oz.

Diet Pepsi or Pepsi Cola ..1~
"IN' THE DELl-PASTRY
.
SHOPPE" · '

. "IN THE DAIRY CASE"
CHILLED REGULAR OR
COUNTRY STYLE

Donald.D~Fk .,

orange Ju1ce
114-oz.

. Chi.Chi'S :. ·
Tortilla ChiiS

,;

11-oz.

•'

~

ROCK SPRINGS • Middlepon
Child Co!DeMJion 14gue, Thurs. day, 7 p.m.l.ltock Springs United
Meihodilt \,;burch. Plan• wlll be
made for Husband's Nlaht in
Marcb.' "Brown b8J" sale. KiUy
Dint 8nd Xelli Snyder, hoswm,

I

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Vlcllion Money '

GALLIPOLIS,OHIO

.

.

IT'S BUSINESs-As-USUAL AT ALL OTHER AMES STORES

~MilROY • Pomeroy Group .
of AAr Thursday, 7 p.m .. Sacred.

SLICEO FflEE

ONLY AT THESE SELECTED STORES

\\MT ADS bring

SALE CONDUCTED BY NASSI-BERNSTEIN COMPANY INC. AS AGENT
. '

.

~

'

'' '

I•

••

�February 17, 1993

Ohio

-

- - - - - -•

~

»

n

•

JENO'S PIZZA
70L

$1 !~

.

"
•

BIG BEND FOODLAND • 614·992·2891 ·

"

ODLAND

I

12 OZ. FROZEN CONCENTRATE

FLORIDA GOLD ORANGE JUI·CE~ :·

---

-IIIJII

1

1S
1S
1S
1S

-

SMALL DOZER
. WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

CARPENTER SERVICE

REASONABLE RATES

.C. YOUNG

Addition•

and Plumbing

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00

$:20

6:45p.m.

992·7553

$6.00

$.30

$9.00

s .42

$13.00

$ .60

1a1111111011• DEMUNE
4=30 P. &amp; DAY IEFOIE
fiii.ICITIOI-

day

Suf'HJay M o n~av - Close d
Tuesaay · weanesday • Ft ld•Y - 9 JO am . 5 : 30 o m .
Thuaaay · S.lturd.tY - 10 : 00 a .rn . J ao P . m .

HOURS

FU TIEE SEIYICE
Topping, Trimming,
Removal
Reasonable Rates

Quality
Stone Co.

Insured

742·2360

SIZED LIMESTONE
. FOR SALE

21919

LAYNE FURNlTURE

Call 614·992·
6637

~SELECIK&gt;NOF

I
'

LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA and CHAIR

'

··

RACINE GUN
. CLUB ·
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

PRICED FROM

St. Rt. 7
Ches.ire, OH.

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

3111lESOUT llJI:AVILLE RD.

-- -

. . . . . . . . II ;tll:e.....,.bldalor•
I of watar ••oJeal· oolled
• I I ef "'t' SPill THE
WELL

Go0411hrough Feltrusty

949·2823

. . CIIJie D ;

-a

1

C... 51Gr. Tille ptOIPtlu
sal 5
S ef . . ·..we· oanltoct lor
C1 I •I 1IIe . . , . .
I 1 lty llualn. . . enter·
...... - . . . ................ "woolc
a
'a n
ol .... poojotcl lor
3

•

J1U11

ef

a':::'.... • ,,.
I I

I
...
.,_
..&amp;.
_.
...
c
1
. . IMnl .. • ....., ef

....

I

t

h

1 ........

-Lit.,
.. C'

••

.......... hat Ollie•

;o-.a ....... 1 llanlil Mlhl
R
1 CIMoollloo11n;ol

r-o=;Bo..-.u
..
a
I L 7
• noT

d Jo
IIIL

217 L kc•oiSI.
POIUIOY, OHIO

...........

...-,

1111 flarlt. Council
njecl
.., ...... bide.

C....,. m,

.... ......

-

. . .....

......a
=-~·
..••
I 5I
I

CTeollll'--

..... o1 RodM, Olllo
PJ1l,lll, 21,31c

..

-

liiSEllltCS
DUSt
... DCilARS

•

IIIHA

.

-.
,_

.,.•.

113'/, W. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. t5769
llh•• loll ......

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

c •:i r

ro ute m yotJt nflrqhborhoo d

I\CtH5,'i'

;::nn E-.t

jj, twCP!~ lC :1111 -b p111 r~l rJ rl

dOi

(614)
667

Speelal

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

14 SESSIOIS- I14

Box 189

Limit 2 Per Customer

20

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

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE .

PERSONAL
·CARE FOR

36970 Ball Run Road

THE

Pomeroy, Ohio

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE•
992-5858
696-1290

SIZED LIMESTONE

992·3470

EOE

OWNER:
Jeff Wickersham

Real Estate General

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping You To Recover Your lnve&lt;tment"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

· Mt. Dew • Pepsi Free • Diet or
IIP5IIJIII) a cw..............
h 3

.

614·949·2202

;,':::f.:·
. ., _ago,_

NEW LISTING- ST 7 Pomeror, 2 sJory frame homo with
3 bedrooms, carport, cenll'al air, 3-4 aeres .
ASKING $39,000

___ ......,......_.,., __

. . . . . . . ..._..,._.,._,,..,ldilga,elc
lheh -wilhMh? if,. OAifOX 2300CUF·
.,1
'IICRa. 1r • wfD ....,..., 2 ice ere""'

_,

c

5

e= E &amp; GE _ . , _-..._ &gt;!0 .... of land. wliicll

POMEROY· Wright SL, Beautilul A-Frame home with 10
rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 balhs, 2.725 acres, Nre~lace,
decking , garege, patio, oUibuilding, woodburner, privaM,
yet clooelo lown.
$95,000

- . . • - - llollle. 11115 a bllrlw"'-tlolland' an
........... ....._. , . . . - -electric OYailaiM.
~
1
tor, .,imalo.
11:!, cCF.:.,Cii!EAFIIWICINGI ti!O,IIOO

MIODLEPORT· 2 unit apanment building w~h both units
currently rented thla io good investment properry.
$13,1100. If truel)o inMrested... makit an oflerl
.·

...-1·--.,.,. .,. . . .. . .

SCIPIO T~ liP· Large ateel building 9600 oq. of
willl cement noor and foundation, appro•. 7 yra old .
Hoa oleclric and water well on lite. Located on 24.93
.... In the country. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!

ONLY $1t5,1100

-

150Z,

u

GLADE PLUG·INS

\

$

F'- 1

.

:

'

I

~

F_OR

ft:

....... will sq'ipp-1ploca

$42,500

- .....

. . . . . . . . -~---'*"'"""
........ sis

-·

7

$31,100

..

GLIDI POWDER FRESH•SUPIR FRESH

4

.........

,

. . . ,

............_.
• • , , . . . . ...

Yinyl aiding; TPC walor &amp; well. aome fenced acraage,
moat puiUre and tillable. lncludeo barna, lhacl, oul
ASKING 75,000
buldnga, lruk treea.

.

........ _... ""'_ .....

Tll8 PLACE IS REALLY HOPPINOI TO OET IN ON

,.,.._,

THI! ACTION GIVE U8 A CAt.L ..WE HAVE BUYERS

'IMAT ARE BUYING AND SELLERS THAT ARE

SEU.I!(ll WHO SAY'S WINTER IS SLOit?l

114.1100

' thru ~L, ...b. 20, 1883 • USDA l'oocl Stemp1 1ncl WIC C0~1por11 ACGII!IIiilf7
'!I• Ra.rve the Right to Limit quentttl.. • PriCH Eff.c:tlve

•

I

'I

·.

New Homes • .VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

COMMERCIAL aud RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

(614)' 992·5449
·

\

. I,

614·742-HO,U

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

(No

Stlllday Call~)

12/3119211fn

KELLER'S CUSTOM
' BENDING

HAgLING

LOG Hlllll&amp;,
LUMBER, or
FLATBED WORK

47269 St. Rt. 24i • 1Yt Mile OH lt. 7
t•rw c•esler oa II. 241

In State or Out
Of State.

PH. 614·985·3949

S &amp;L

I.IRY E. CLELAND..........f .... ....... . .......IIM111
TRACY IAINAGER......................_ .......t41'24311
oiiAN TRUBIELL ...._ ..............- ......-Ifill
KATHY CL.ELAND...........................- •••.HJ.t1t1
OffiCL ............ :.~ ..................................H:I-2211

••

&lt;

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

TEXAS RD: 23+ uaea 2 IIOfY home 3-4 bedrooms, balh,

S:M.!IOO
"•tor•,.,..or
......lls?TIIia •• ,.,. Ha 1%1111-

·
·r · - -w-ff

.

89

1

WI-S..fM-.._U_..,cblchama,
... , ....... lllolk . . . _ _ ... .....,,. . .. .

' FREE
SPRAY aoz.

-

..,,.._

BUY ONE, GET ONE
'

-

u ee:..'lbll'l_.., _ _ .,relalclnlhe

_ , _ ..... 2

&amp; WARMERS

RUFFLES
BIG

- Oil
.,.,....

75

ASST. VARIETIES

9 oz.

RACINE, OHIO

•tdA-n.

- OH
.....

Check our Price or We Both Lose
~~· LOCAnOII TO SEm YOII lEnlR 1•8 •1

~

PONDS

7

Dual bhaust with Gloss Pacb
$109.95 +Tax
Computer Balancing • Struts, Shocks,
Carnbor lrrushing

614-742-2138

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;

•

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843•5264 1 ~l931tfn

HAULING

R&amp;C EICIYITING
BULLDOZING ·

.....-

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

1-11-'113

\ h ru h t

AMERICAN DIRECTORY SERVICE CORP.

AD

· swetth~~rt

6181'92/1 mo.

Deliveries Stan Lata FebNary
90 people needed to deliver the new Ohio
Valley Telephone books in lown and rural area in .
all Gallia and-Meigs counties including Albany
and Coolville.
_
To b.ecome an independent contractor you
rrust be at least 18 Y,ears old. have the use of an
insured car, van or truck,and be available a minirrum of 5 daylight hours daily.
Fk~;.•rvr ;1

Bnshan Rtl., Racine

l•••r•ac•J

•TRUCKING

To

GENERAL LIFE and ;
ACCIDENT INSURANCE

992·6193

No Experience Necessary

10111tPOCKET.

•-

•Payroll
SERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINE$SES

DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS

. . . . . . . . -2120.
..
Con~~yB L .,.._,

1 a a •..,., A
LS

111., . _
R....,., 0111o
45771. PI\. (114) Ml-2485,

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

•Income Tax Preparation
.Sookkeeping

Wanted

11

2·11mocl.

WOLFE&amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING

992·3838

316190/lln

51 ..
..... •
Rnt b
• - ·z ·..
..... end apa~:llcldone
~--,. • 7• _ , ~ obtained from
~-~
Ia ._
L ,_..,127 Fn

ljllool;- 11 n r ..... 11

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

KEN'S IPPLIIIICE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

&amp;.&amp;.oa25F....,_
• ..._ ....... , Cllead
. , . . Quit pt1or to 5:00

.. ...&amp; - ......,,

.... -

·ALL MIKES
lrlqlt In Or ••
Jilek ~p,

llldd•o ot t:OO

.......f/11 ........... ,..............

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

MICROWAVE OYEII
•••VCR REPAIR

•• J .. •_, ...

.

Plus FREE bottle of
lotion

You Don't Hove To Look For
PIIIIUC N011CE
To Spy the Best Buys In
111e VIII G of R..m. Ia
the Clossifieds.

:; Pt•c MIIEE
•_
_,...., 0 1

·regardless of income
. ·regardless of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan •
'regardlessof credH
:
.To coHect your scholarship money
call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 1D-7 or sat. 10..4

15 Sessions '15

7'~PII~·~..
~c~lll~~r"~ce~= _ ___,Pub__,;...:Uc..:N..:ot..:l..:ce~-

Mone~;

for all college bound st1.1dents.

Vafatfne Speef11l

1128193/tfn

•

Guaranteed Scholarship

CALIFORNIA
TANS

. 1:00 P.M.

- . 1HAIJ Sill'. """H 446--0322

150Z ·

Lie. No. 0051-32

9-1

15

Full

r

l12 NCIS *3.291

FREE card.

PDn!lroy, Ohio

104 Mulberry Aver1 1JC
Pomeroy . OH 45769

$1150.00

2 LITER
:BOnLE

S100 Payoff
Thia ad good for 1

992·6215

POMEROY, ON.

CIASSD'It:IIS
GET RFStJI,TS • FAST!

,- SOFA and RECLINER

Swc:c:pstakes
'

Special Eerly Bird

cha'l!ed for each day as separate ads.

LANE MOTION SETS

·vos Will Pay Your Taxc:&gt;"

.' EAGLES
CLUB

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

$450.0010$995.00

PEPSI COLA

EVERY THURSDAY

IN' POMEROY

IH ILLTL\ BO.\RD

I
I
I
I
WITH
COUPON I

'
•-----

Wonts

3
• 6
•• 10

'

BUY ONE, GET ONE

Monthly

RATES

"Days

EASTMAN'S

BINGO

YOUNG'S

~

•

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

11 '

;. , ' "'· , __ ~-.' '. ,""·Si&lt;
• i · *-r~'t.~,-~ ' •~ ' ;

CHARLIE'S

•The Area's Number l
. Marketplace

•

+

M
~ ~ !~ . .,,.,.,;,_.
~
~ }; ,~.

.
•

•

'
The Dally Sentlnei-P

NOW OFFERING.....
OIL IIID LUIE SIRYICE
1111 IEPIII 1111 IOTAftH

TRUCKING

2115/91/1 •1111
•

I

•• •

�Ohio
32 Mobile Homes

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
Announcements
GIRLS Ill LIVE Ill 24 Holn A
Dayl Talk One One Onal Call
1111-800-l'I0-33H Exl. 4110.
' 1111 Pef llln. II uol Be 11 yrL
-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by~ Wright

Furnished
Rooms

for Sale

3

17,1993
64

Ohio

ALLEYOOP

H•y &amp; Grain

•

The Dal

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1152,17 I * .-h lnclucllna 111 - l o r ...... .. _..h,
monthe rr.. tot rwtt, n.w 11x70,
•
..,.
.....
·
Holll.
dallvored and Ill up. old~lng 114 4~1110

ACROSS

ondatapo,1-UI2~

~ Wanted to

Co.I02-131~11.

35 LOts &amp; Acreage

. CHATLINE 1.-.'110-331111
-..t. 5141. U .llll Por .Min. 'W 18 Yro. Unlotar Co. (t02) PI·

11AcrlllloroOrLHI,~h

Gallla

UIIIRIM

)115 .

High

8chool

Avollallle,

......

Proflu':RII Couple Want To

h1erchandtse

FlMnclng, 114 3M 8181.

51

PHILLIP
ALDER

Tr zmsporJJt 1011

=.!.~lalho, No

Ownar

Rentals

Rent

71

NOIITII

52,:100,
IN - 1._1:00,
· - Pll.
4 ~,
30W'JU1112

=

Goods
3 pc. ook bod. IURI., 21 ' Z.nllh
oolor t.v., Aetrlger.lor, waaher,

-

dryer. 1114-311·2:fllll, 379-2243.
All Carpal &amp; VInyl In Sloell Dn

u-.

114-Ha-3410,

.

20Cat111

EAST

10 ~

tto
.KlOZ

JUS!" CHoa::x.A'Tt. 7

SOOTH'

.,

I W#J'T KmJJ ...

••sz

,

.AK1063

tKQ9Z

Sot!llo
I•

Fruth Pharmacy.

· BARNEY

country and rock; exctlltnl ..

qulpmonl, 114-618'2416 or 614198-6212.
4
Giveaway
NMdod: SO Paopla To ~
~. Booutllut Puro Black Po~ Lab
Wolghl. No Will Powor Noodod.
~borion Huak~ 3 ~. ;
1~ Natural, 100% Guarantaod.
Ftmalt, 114-211-1737.
Call303-465.. 213.
I
Boo.. llul Pupo: Collie
/Eikhound Croeo, 614-311-1335. No Erpo-1 t500 To • •
Wllkly_ !Palanllol Prac~
Darllnp pupplllt, wW mafct U• FHA lloflgogo Rolundo. Oorii
eO)Ion polL 1 moJo, 1 lomole. Hour-.. 1-401 141 otM bt.21S.

All real eitate adwrtialng in
thia newspaper IS aubjecl to

to odvertiaa "1111' profotonco.
limitation or dilcriminatlon
~on rooo, oolor, rollglon,
MX familial statu&amp; 01" national

MHou,._

614 111 1531.

Flvalroo puppleo, 114-11115-4382.
. Six adonble
nood a
hqrno. c.ne14-44~.
SIX pupo, 1/2 Shophord, 112 ColIto, 114~358.
,

pu..,...

oCooptl"'l application for
JMI ahop work; Mnd rwume to
P.O. Bor 106, Galllpolll, Ohio
45131.
Ook Hill TNCkl"'l Compony
Sookl"'l ErporioncOd Over Tho .
Road Soml Tractor /Tnollor

origin, or any lnwntion to
make 11ft audl prwletanc:e,
limitation or ciiCfimiMtion.·

lilw. Our madera are hereby
lnlormed lllallll dwellings
adwrtiood In 11111 nawop-

1113.

ara llY&amp;IIable an an equal

=

VInton

2

Ar•,

All

Elactrie. No Land Contract. 114-

441-1240.
Loti: am111 doQ, T•rrler, Ndcllah
brown. 21131t'3, Irick Sti'MI
vicinity, name: Bloaaom, l'lof..
992-3581.
I
. .

7

Apanment
torRent
1 BR apa-,.ment · In

llaoon. WY. 304-173-5341.

Puppy

SWAIN

Point

unt. Ou'-IJ._ private, good

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo 81., Golllpollo. N- &amp; Ulaod

neighborhood. 1250 por monlh. rumHwe, Mldert, Weet.m
Wori&lt; boolo. 114-441-3151.
61~1 or 304-171-1550.

&amp;

EARN GREAT S S S

A~ Ex·~:~~~~~~~~=

'H'11 day biiDre the ad a. to run.
Sunday ltdltlon .. 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edhion • 2:00
p.m. Satun:boy.

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Individual• In Your Ar.. ·To

O.II\OI'mflte OUIIHy KHchen
Toola, No O.llvertn, No Ouot11,

Determina Your Own Hrw, NO

GIIIIIICKS.

Coli RITA Aft or 4:00
114-275-0033 (COLLECT)

Want~: Rnponolblo /Saloo Hoot Air, Newly Romodalod lnPei'IOn Needed Wtth Good Driv· tetior, Carport+ Rural Wit.,,
lng Roeo&lt;d, Roloroncu No~ Cable, 8385 9 ATE ROUTE 7,

progr1m
Rout mo,.
nontrr.dltlo'\11
Women: Make
money!

omoloY-, (ONOW), 1-I00-

J a D'e Auto Parta and Sllvage,

131..50a.

otso buying junk ••,. &amp; trueh. 18
304·773-5343.
":"'-

IJ4.441.3144. •

LQt wllh utllltl.. lncludld In
Middleport, 61 "1.·992·2861
Wanted •landing timber, top
prlc.. paid, frH 11t1matas,
lleansed logging company, 30418!5a3055 or 895-3838.
-

Wanted To Buy: .Junk Autos
Whh Or Without Motort. Call
Larry Llvoly. 114-3111-11303.

Top Prien Pold: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Rlng'!t Sllvor Coins,

Gold Colna. M.T.~. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
W1nttd: 22 Callt&gt;er Pump I
t..v•r Action Altln, 12 &amp; 410
Oauge Pump Shotguns, Solid
Or Vent Alb Model• Only. Gunt
1170 And Older, 614.-146-1822, 8
P.M. Or Later.

Employment Servtces
Help wanted

•AVON• ALL AREAS! Share your
ttMe with ut. Yau'll love the

c(pmpony. HIOO.H2-11351.

L Ladltl Who Would UU 'To

Sill Avon Call 614-446-3358.

lo!ri4•~~~-~·~~~~~
HouM for Hie with 7 rooms, 2

-k, Boe'¥. lor appolnlmonl
-· ..7•7••
11173 Forrt101 Pari&lt; 12115 2 Bod·
=-~.;,-:=;-:;;.;,·=="""':-'-,--I roomo, WB, Total Eloclrlc,
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping, St.RI.%18, 2·112 Aerwo MIL. 814Trimming, TrN Aemoril, Hldgit 251-12112, 814--379-2741.
Trimm~. Fr• E•llmateal 114_ .. _ •n ..
111'183 Fairmont Mobile Home,
_,.,. "' lr .,p.m.
14170, 2 Bedrooms~_ 1 Bath,
~- Portabla Sawmill, don'l Elec. Hut, Uncll!lMnnlng. After
haul your toQs to the mill I'* I P.M. 114-14&amp;..3044.
call304-&amp;75·1b7.
1988 Skylln• Holly ~ldge 14X70,
Mitt Paula't Day Care C«tttr 1 an tltc, 2 bedrooms, AJC,
Block Wnt Of HMC On Jack.an cov.r~ porch, kitchen leland,

Pike II·F e A.M. ·5::10 P.M. II llorogo
llkt new,

:::!'-1~24&amp;4.
undorponnlng,

1110 Fthmont Fantaay, 14x80, 3
btdroomt, 2 bllht, gardtn tub,
br1nd .,... hut pump, 614-84t-2105.

Prolo-ol eo~ltled nuol"'l Looking For ADoll? Conoldor A

aid wanta ta do In horne cart,
reasonable rat•. 304-e75-7110

far Eric.

Prlo()Wnld Mobllt Home, Large

~~-=Up'::, ~H:Yrr. ~:W~

•..a110.

Couch with 2 matching chalra

$125. 304 ..75-11147 loovo
OIQL

I . living. 1 ·and 2 bod·
room •partmenla .. Vlllag•

Mtnor

and

Rlvertlde

Aparttnenta In Middleport. From

1116. Caiii14-11112~UO. EOH.
Complatly Fumlshod Small

HouH.J. S3001ma. • Ulllhln. No

m""

Flnwood: All Hordw- SpiH
Dollvorod $411 Plc:k-Up Load.
114-251-1311.
Fl.-......: All Hordw- SpiH
Dollvorod $411 Plck·Up Load.
814·251-1318.
For Slle• Lldlel winter coat, full
length, groy wlplold oearf, hN
Han drj cManed, $30, l14-tl2.

0338.

63

Livestock

Ont
blclroom
apartment,
raflrtnc" required, na pete, Pt.
Pluunl •ru, 114-ti2Q58.

Two bod,_ In lllddlopor1,
$210/mo. r.i S350imo. with

uiiiHIII pold, 114-11112•7878,

:~~..lor~J.~. =~~.~~

==--bolo....
Hoy lor lpm.

. _ _ . , att.r

Owner:

lnvacare

1H1

Door

SummH, 2

Hllcfl
· Aulomotle
Trantmloo , Air Conditioning,
R•r O.tra.ter, Exotllenl concn.
lion, P,HO. a14-371-2121.
5 Cltav-, Aula, Ru.. .Qood,
POO, 1m GrMCI Pr[l!J
Runo Good, Rought SZao

t,...; lnv~e~~re Wheelchair,
Removable Arms; Lift /Rtellntr

Alto trallw space. All hook-upa.
CIU after 2:00 p.m., 304·773--

HI1,11a-WY.

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

lluol

W:

11111

Clio-

=~.:::-~"m'':m:'9'

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

-'ork, rawlrlng and trouble

CA~H?H

a-.... ,,.

Womn•y, Call Wuhor &amp;

DrYW

4.. ~144 • .

WI- a i r - · 1S,OOO btu
Whlrpool qulol mloor, bnsnd

,_, •IH In boa, utended WI,..
,."", 10,000 blu 1

rr

Did,

WhiH..... qulol mleor ha I yr
u~..- •~n~ror. 10,aao btu
Whirlpool 1 yr Old • . , _
- ,. I,OGO lrlu A.., 1 yr·
old a yr
warranly.
I,OGO btu ~.Jr.,":.;­
dodWirllllly,
IIVII Fri ony1lmo.

nt-

Waadllu

'*•

wlchlmnoy,

1 :00 Pll.

55

likl

~183

•

Building

-..-.....
,.... Rio
SupplieS

-

new

attar

-

llnlalo, .... c:t.Udo Win-

Orondo, OH Call aM-

aAa-812\

I

•

;

DID 'IOU HeAR "T\-IAT OUR
NEW SCHOOL- eLI'3 DRIVER

QUIT?

ALREADY~
f-ION L.ClN6 01 D

( A6CUT 61)( 131-00&lt;5.

He LAST?

J

used ever since for

Jl

Tra;w ' 'rne, UMd I

'

- - - . - t a n true~' '
- . .....- . mala,~
ole. Da RA~~·- ,:
~or1

•

Ser vtces

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sdl it the easy way... by phone,
· no, need to lea11e your ho~.
Place rour clQMified ad today!
15 word. or (!Is, 3 den,
3 Ila9ers, $5.40 paid in adwnu:e.

81

11

,,..

-IIINT
WATERPROOIIIIB
UI'MIOI IIIII aHill aihlllme ..-,ran-

••Ia• •OrfumWt.d.
114-231'

0411

Rogera

Tlllil

I

*"-""'·

- ~mpr
.,... ~rportor.,.
Dn.........
Oldor •,
--R-Addlltono;

~""ln.. 't':i.. f.:"~

tkMI•I R...,_ 11, No Job

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

Too llg a- lmolll 114-•1-0111. ·
om- Bo:oring llacfllno And

3 . ______________~-----

~.~~.,...

7. __________________
8. ________________

~
·/
~---

9. ___________________

10~----------~-------

11 1,________~---------

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

13.~----~--~-----14-..._
_______________

Vacwrn CIMnar Ropalt, ,,..

1111: IO'l!40'xt'

you lo understand wlha\ to do 10 make
1he relationship work. Mall $2 plus a
long, 8811-addresaed, stam!*l envelope to Matchmaker, P.O. Box 91428
Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
'
PISCES fFeb. 20) Things
should begin lo look up for you today
regarding a siluation wlhere the odds
had appeared to be working · agalnS1
you. The change could be due to Lady

- -. 11"d'ltool - · I'
Man Door, P,444 E - 1nM1

AIIII!S f-.ctl 21·Aprll 11) A more
binding re)allonshlp may soon develop

-llldge.
Wll loullcl Pl11o
-t·..-~~
..........
pu
Yin~
1,_ lltlrflng. I

Quaintance. The change will require
time to untold, buill will be laating.
·uuRus fAprll 20-MeJ 201 You have
the potential to achieve lmpor1ant objeeti- wllhout the help of oll..,o today. H"-, a concetned ally will be
wa1chlng In lho wings, Just In case you
lrlp.
GIMINI IIIIIJ 21-J- 201 This Is a
gOOd clay to do more than merely con·
lemplate your tuture plana. Take whal
you hiYII devlaod thuelar and put i1 Into
ocllon wl1hout fu1'1her delay.
CANCitl f.lune 21-.iuiJ 21) ~hen deal·
1n11 wllh your opeclll- telodly, try
to be protective wilhoul being
alve. II you are uneble to perCeive the
line of demarcation,' you could disturb
the relationship_
·

I

C l l h o r - - oaJro, Olio
oll!&gt;llanco ropol... WV
304-4714316 Ohio1 -.
lottlle Tonk , _ PD Galtla
Co. RON EVANIINTERPIIISES,

•

BERNICE ,
BEDE OSOL

.loo-.OH1~.

Utility

~

1-·-·

Luck's intervention.

PlllnCed ltMI lktee, ,CWVtiUIMl

ft;'

with someone you conalder a mere aca

82
, .... ,., 1113

I

GaDipolla Daily Trib-~
446-2342
Pomeroy Daily SeaUael
992-2156
Pt. Plf!"MIII R.,Pter
675-1333
'
.

ASTRO·GRAPH

_ .. TV - . J
llslna
In Zonllh ..... - - . . ....,;(

15~-----------------,

IWEDNESDAY

'

84

ElectriCII &amp; ·

In 1he year ahUjj, you will nave greater
opporlunltlee to .-me more direct
control over maHero lh11 - e prevl·
Olltlly rogullled by othera.
AQUAIIUI (JM• .....,_ 11) Subllln·
t'-1 otrldes can be mllde today toward
lldvencing your pereonal ln..,..to. ·In
ordet' to do 1hla, you mull De lingleminded and locuted on your objacltvea.
Trying 10 pa1ch up a brolcen romance?
The Aslro-Grapll Mltchmaker cen help

.

po--

...

~

LEO (JuiJ ZS:Aua. 211 When making
decisions today that could affect you
and your mate, try 10 slanllhem In his or
her favor instead of your own. This Is a

way to assure lhat both or you will benefi t.
VIRGO fAug. 23-Sepl. 21) Compllce·
tions could begin to d~op It you form

a romantic attachment with someone at
work . Keep evaryl~lng slriC11y business
today.
·
LI811A flepl. 23-0ct. 23) Your e~trava·
gan1 urges might . surface today and
. tempt you to apencl reaourceo when you
•·shouldn't. Oon'1 let unruly impulses die·
.
tale imprudelltactlon.
. SCORPIO fOci. M-Nov. 211 Yoo are
now entering a cycle - r • your luck
lltould begin to show a markod lm·
provemant. However. II you stll'1 to
coast, II could turn out to be counter·
produC11ve.
.BAGmAIIIUI flloY. :13-Dec. 21) ldeaa
you con~vetoday could be ouperlor to
those of your assoclataa. They will be
more receptive to you r thoughts It you
make them ~ they are co-autnora.
CAPIIICOIIH (Dec. 21-Jen. 111 Finan·
clal lndiC61ora 10o1c very encouraging
lor you today, and tnla meana you
ohould giYII lop prtorlly 10 mllllerathat
can either make or save you money.
.

'

I,

I'R

OAUCZK .

8

FGVVZVE

TODWUABVH

OGG

F Z U I

H U AW H

MABZOVHH

OGG

XU B Z X

OPUCW
0 Z K

WY8ZXH .

U T

OZZV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Sexism is a polson we've been drinking tor too
long." -

{Cable News Network anchor)

Bern~rd·

Shaw.

'::~;::~' S©~(llA-LGt.trs·
by CLAY I. POllAN
Rearrange letters of the
0 four
scrambled words be·
_ _ _ _....;,_,;;

WOlD
iiAMI

l~llo~

low to forin four simple words.

DOONBY

I I
S P WE T

I I" I I
N1J 0 T

I .

Overwrought mother to son,
"I'd like to go through one day
5
~ without scolding or punishing
L......J.L-..1.-J.._1._....J. .
you ." The bratty son replied,
. . - - - - - - - - - - . "You cettainly have my ....... :
J-..;.:.~..:..,,;.....:.-~

I I 1I

I0

CORRET
J.-...;1::...:;,16,.::...;1,~;.I...:."TI-l

L-L..l.-LJ._.J._....J

Complete the en "'kle quoted

.•

~Y fill ing in the missing .words
you develop fi-om step No. 3 below.

eye

taining an extra Gl lor large specta·
cles.

'·

Ca8 1~

prot~tive

verb came the modern noun (Con-

Home
Improvements

.... Local

Q. When m~· son works . he has to
wear GOGGLES. How did we gel that
word"?
A. GOGGLES came into English in
t 71 5. and this plural term ~as been
coverings lhal can be seen through
when worn. As early as the 16th
century. a verb GOGLE twith no
doubled G l was used to mean "to
roll the eyes" or "to watch with
bulging eyes.-· Probably !rom I hal

-r··~=-~~"'lt~.
2213, p_,, I'll ID IIDD. '

6...____________________

~

l

forgood
porfl,
lrano., .........
lnlootor.

S o - Wood, 140 Dollvorod,

Wo"'- &amp; Dryoro, $75 &amp; Up, 30

IS

114-241-11428. .

lnvnlod, Alkl"'l - · a--.

Twa Cam bumlng Do.. Toeh
ltOV,!!1 new, Morgan Farm, 304137-..,.1.

flOW
~JC£

! l;dl~~~~

1.. ·-

737'1aler I.

114 441 0710.

By Jrlfrry McQuain
TENUITY t "ten-YOO-it·ee"l refers
to a lack of thicknes s or substance [
"t he tenuity ol' lhe li ght !abric'·t. To
spell this noun properly every yea r.
end TEN UITY like ANNUITY.

'
NCHW

. GVOAZVK

3

~

1183 ~r~·. u Mil·
..,blshl RIOtor,
lpd•. trana.,.
....~'_-. _
plot&amp; 4144411-t&gt;n

·a

be--

mow .

Acc88ll0rlei

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c:etMlrity ~crypt...,._ . . Cll'..e.d frOm quotations by III'IWIUI ~. put 8nCI preeent
EICII"'*In lhl Cip1W MllftCtl tor lnOthlr. rocMy'l CIWI: ltl aquM P.

u.., .. PbJJJJp .._, Itt ,.,,. olllll Tlloy Clll
011/t ....... !be""'"""'·
If)-. . . . . . . . . . . = .. ....

ooe;s
AI«ONE

AutoPana&amp;

=

Z-1.1

•'

1171 Ford Bronco •14, AutO.
Paint, ~linl llhopot

76

\.-tAVE.&gt; .

- ~ ~.

-than lnood-114.ft2·TIII.

4 . _____________________
5 . __________________

SNr11 lrNchnlll, 2 yr. w•rranly
left, edru lnclud~.z._over 1100

.

drive .. ,... bit. wlter coofldeJ:c, cond.• runa like new~ More

2 . _____________________

Financial

•

·BORN LOSER

11m1CJ.5 "-· 304-171-2101.

All pall

aee.

Sttt'S BUY-1.-I,..,GUAL/•

1NII Ka-ltl LTD 4154- Mft

In

and ruldtntlal, new

.'

OIO,CaU~

Semi-

Homlttlt 150 chain NW Oregon
Furnished
chlin, 11.. bar w/caM, in.., lite
Rooms
· - · 304..1$-3410.
Slaoplng roomo wRh -ng.'

'" WII, Dougilt1l ... 1'""'*during 111e exam
your eyes -.n't exactly rOIIIIng thla way end that" ,

=:

1110 Plymoldh Acclaim •LE 4
Door, P,IH. 1_._11112.

E octrie Bod, With Rolla, llal·

45

;WANT
ADS
WORK!

Fonl E - LX1!_Door, Air

1;;;14-:;..::256-::..::-;:;·: _._ _ __
Laraa - . t1l. witt .,..
Motorcycles
3500 lncluolrtol Fonl ....... and ...a, --6353 • ~-· .,'..
=..,.,;.;.;.:.:.:;,.,.~:;:.~::lo~·=d•:•:l:"'":m.:::%n::4·:::::::JL~:::·::::~::::::::~ 1~ Knn.PI caR~ Mft
dttvon otrlll btkl, 2,400 11111001
~~~· cond, Nnl Hko MWII
114-.....11115.

:.

AC. "Rh ConlrOito. Swivol - ·

-.,ootlng. Apply at Banka Con·
teructlon Company, 124 W.
Mtln, Pomeroy, Oh. 114·902·

-

Condlllon, Aldo, M.- 114-4410111.

'

cluolvoly at Alto Aid Phonnaey.
Tho Hto WIJ 10 dill.
Homo llodlcal Cart Equlprnonl

Br.

Coralca LTZ. 1,1100 mllol

loldod, 3CIU'II-1125 """' 5:00
Pll.

eta-61110.
........ - · and · - 114- 1m Chovr 1 112 Ton Trucll, 12
Fl., Grain Bed, 4 ll=d1 E.Condition, I14-24Wo24.
Hay&amp;Graln
64
... FoN,IIadp- ~
-304~281.
or long. No ~·

For Sal• SID mHium laclea

o..-

-

SAY, KID.. THE TEAC~ER WANTS
TO KNOW WI-lY '(OU ' ~E
CRAWLING OUT T~E DOOR __

72 TruCks for Sale
- - ! . - . Clllle,

Comptolly Fumlohocl mobile winter coet, denim wl ..athtr
horne, 1 mill below town ov..-. trtm, llkl new, wae $115, now
looking rt...r. No Pata, .Cl. 114- $40t paid $'150i alao mle. lall•
441-4338.
Clolnlng; call 114-112·21155, •
North Third llkldl_., Ohio, 2 5pm ot"B-•2214 oftor 8pm.
btdroom, fumlthld or unlur·
N..rHion Producta
nlohad opt, Dop &amp; rt1l. :104-682· featuring Amino Acid !lady
2565.

814-441-4150.

•••

.

Polo. ""II Bolora 7 P.ll. 114-441- 2428.

Cha1!1• Patt_y S..t; ~airway Uft,

expltl'ltncH

tiTI;

2116-1144.

61 Fann Equlpmem

home, warm nutrlllou• m•l• lot, 304.aa2·3287 after 4:30PM.
piUI! enackl, structured ac·
llvltl• run Ulte • day cara, 15 32 Mobile Homes
yeara experience, 3 openings
a.tt, $35. per child or $55, lor 2
for Sale
chlklren from ..,.. t,mlly par

PTO llon.uro
Cam
-.
WhMI ~*Mi

-

Hano ploia;
olollnDMN2Anci4-Cam
Planlano; Qlhar Flold llaod&gt;- E.
!1-"P•II,
Howe"•
Farm
- . , , olackoorl. Ohio 114-

&amp; Livestock

Atter~Uone, · Sewing, Mending, full b.ths, tlraplace, new Lenoi
114-24J.t213.
haat pump. 2 car garaB:, .brick
Child care provided In my front wJalumn aldlnQ, 1 x200 ft

QualhJ And Erperitnce Ia Tht
f1 Concern For Your Chlld't
Cart. Call Ut for A Vltlt. Infant
fToddlt1'11 s 14-44&amp;.8W. p,..
ch~.,.. /School Age 114-4418224.

1171; 1 Spr

Farrn Suppltes

Wanted to Do

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

61ectriclan,

.

&amp;

wanted to Buy

~mmarclal

Worm.d, Shott, $200, I~
13U

A.llslcal
Instruments

a••

11

Shop.

Loealod In G.C. 11....... Co. 001llpolll.- - · 114-141-.
Roglatortld Dolmoll'"' PuDo.

t1251L, 614-317-7200.

CHESHIRE 3 - _ 1 Bath,
Now lnoulalod Wlndiowa &amp;

Alck Pearson Auction Company, Roaponso To: CLA 257. eJo Gal· Choohlro: 3 BRI 1·112 both,
lull time auctlon11r, complete llpotlo Dolly T~buno 1 • H5 Third hortlwood lloorw ull boll mont,
Clrport, lldlng, CA, natui'al
auction · aarvlce.
UcenMd ~"""'· Glilllpolll, OH :45631.
hNI1 :;~~~ 147.000. 114-387·7111
1166,0hlo &amp; Wool Ylrglnl-, 304773-5785.
FrM olgltt wNk job propOnitlon

9

Pol

Twa Rega.t..-.d a,_ pvffl
Sldlnl, O.t Heat New Central

aary, Mutt 81 Reliable, HonMt
Will Groomod, Send

Polaco

Roglllorod Female Pomontnlon,
lllnlat"!!, .1 112 y..,. Old, &amp; I 62 wanted to Buy
Wllk uoa IIIII Pomontnlan.
614-251-11128.
Wonlod to buy: junlc lllloe,bo ,_..., 114-la-1172.
Slboriln Hlllkr P - FullB - . Beo'"llul BtU. Eyeo &amp; warolng 10 buy on-_.._
lnlolllgonl,
$100 Each. · - or r...t • 1at far • Mm trailer,
3681,
114-1123154..

cHift9
Do YouNew
LOVEConcept
To Cook?In Home
P.rty Plan St•klna Ambltloue

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Soln lluat Be Paid In
Advoneo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

-.

A. &amp; I. Fumlture. NM, UMd, antlquoo; fumllhi"'IL

44

PI H.

Yard Sale

, ""'I=&gt; DO ME A I=AVOR ... .
THAT LITTLE RED·HAIRED
IF SHE EVER GOT THE
TINE I SENT J.IER ...

·

you oan
PICKENS FURNITURE
own 1 1113 Mx70 Redman with
NowiUMcl
5 yNr wari'Uity, • • · .-clrllng1 Houoollold lumllhl"'l. 112 mi.
dollvortld end lllup lor t115mo. Jerrieho Rd. Pl. P l - . WY,
Call lot lnlormatl..,, 114-38&amp;- caii30Wll-1410.

12 .-cr.a,

ledrooma,

private lot, alto lol IP'C. for
small trallw or camper. 114-441-

1121aoklorlroncla.

'.

PEANUTS

Unfurn., 2BA mobile hOft'MI on

Why poy rent -

Homes for Sale .
,

I'll·~

3210 ofllr 5 p.m.

-~nltybuil.

31

New 2 Bedroom• &amp; 1 Bedroom
Mabile HonaN, No Pete,

Roloronce Roqulrld.
4345.

Belgium
8 MIP book
9 Aviator Earhart
10 Click beelle

Eut

Whatever else you feel about him,
you have to agree that Woody Allen
has written many funny lilies. I Uke
this one: "I'm not a fighter: I have bad
reflexes. I was once run over by a car
bein1 pushed by two IUYB."
Many bridle deals require rapid reflexes . Some declarers, when they
need a misdefense to make their contract, will play very quickly. This Isn't
kosher, but it oflert works. However,
when defending, don't be hurried. Say
that you want to lake some time to
think thinp through.
Rather than rely on speed, the declarer should play his cards deceptively so that the defender doesn't see tbe
trap in time.
Playing ih four ~earts, the ingenu·
ous declarer wins the first trick with
dummy's club ace, draws trumps and
plays a d\amond to -the kin1. True,
against some opponents this will work.
West will lead a second club, allowinl
So¥th to ruff and discard one of dum·
my's ·spade losers on the diamond
queen. But against more sophisticated
defenders it won't succeed. First, East
will have played his two trumps In the
order ~2. trying to show a top honor in
spades. Second, West will see that the
club queen can wait. He will recopize
the possibility of a discard and switch
to the spade four itt trick five.
As South knows East bas the club
kin1 and Is marked with a top spade
(West didn't lead the spade king), West
must hold the diamond
A more
deceptive approach is to lead dum·
my's diamond at trick two and put In
the nine, H West falls for the trap, later South can rulf out West's 'diamond
ace and 1et his discard.
~ .,.._iDviled to arrJ.f'lor q-

2187. lM..aaU227.

lain vlolalon ollhe

ftllt

6 Neon symbol
7 Alver In

2 lnHCUCide
3 Gorden
ftowor
4 Bridge on the
Alvtr5 Snakelike

of a snail

In Country lloblo Porto. -horl
dryer, alr1 J2361 rnon., 114-11112·

advertl..,nentl fat realeatare
wh~

1114-311'-7110, 114417·7m.
3 • - Traitor In Canlonory
t2101Mo. Roll,._ • Dopoon
Roqulrt~d, t14 446 •35 Aftor 4
P.M.

Norllo
4•

DOWN
1 Ortnrt' org.

The reflexes

TH' SCHOOL MA'RM
' GAVE HIM SOME
EXTRY HOMEWORK

Fumlahed, 2 or Sbdrm., fDr rwtt

This newspopor will not
k,_i"'IIY aocept

DriYirw, Excent.- Per, 814-182-

IT'S .IU&amp;HAID II

5ETIIN' OVER
THAR?

2 Bedroom Trailer, UnfumlaMd,

Db!.

IIIII

Opening lead: • Q

WHO'$, THAT

the F - Fair Houtlng Act
ol 11188 wlidl mokoa k IHogal

W..t

IIICIOiure
21 Hewallan
IM!rumonta
23 Roman 101
24 Strike
27 Ntckpllct
28 Plant '
conlllnera
30Wyatt31 Allornetlve
word
32 Goblet

Janeiro
311 J'ollowa
41 Characlllltlk Of (Iliff.)
42 Awlll
M!Uellltftl
43 TJf)IOfflbrlc dttlgn
45 Exlot
48 UghlhoUM
48 Angry .
51 Baolck
52 PIVHion
54 WWIIaroa
55 Club58- Plrk, CO
57 E1Nopl111

34 ExtiiiOIIIQn
35 Of aircraft
37 Wild hog

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South
REDUCEi Bum oft fat whllt you Mutlclane drumm.,. wan11 to
''"P· Take OPAL, tvallablt at jcHn or to~ group doing

Smalitt

LIJ., of lOll
Kellledl'lllll
Delec:Uve
OuMn

.A764

HaJJ ~aw A
PERSO\J S(RJ(V~ ().)

Adko tool

111 52, Roman

•••
.K
•u
au

~mo_'4·000 ..110ill••

11114 POntiac l'llrlolonno, exhauet, 1.0 Iller,. V., englna,
Mic:h.
'II,DDD p1.. mltea,

S.le. Mollohan Carp.te, Rl7 H.
e--.11144.

1-ll·tl

.J71
.QJt74

- · 1100 Ill Turllo

City
4 Afrtcan lind
II FillS

12
13
14
15
17

Autos tor Sale·

11M C I I lly CL, 11,000 ......

Household

1 Oklllloml

38-cla

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
&lt;·•6
Muslin • Tenor· Drift· Halves · FEELS
Young man just before his wedding, "Is it true that
married men live longer?" His ·future father-in-law
laughed, "It don't think so, it just FEELS longer"

F~BRUARY 17 f

�Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt, Ohio

·v of A meets

Wednesday, February 17, 11193

•

in Chester

I .

'

District 13, Daughters of America, met al the Chester Lodge Hall
l'lith Mildred Lowery, Logan, district counct!or, presiding.
·Mary C. Moose, New Lexington, dis trict JPC, read the 87th
flsalm. The pledges to the Christian
and American flags were given in
unison.
Betty Wolfe, New Lexington,
WI$ appointed from District 13 to
serve on th e national ways and
means committee. Joyce Otting ,
Cincinnati, is the chainnan of that
committee.
· Margaret Cotterill, Syracuse,
thanked the members for th eir
cards she received while in the hospital. Mary C. Moose, Junction
City, thanked the members who
sent her cards at the deaih of her .
brother-in-law.
The Spring Rally is April 3 at
the senior citizens building in
Logan. A district practice is March
28 at I p.m. at Logan. All members
are asked to be getting their gifts
ready for the various tables for the
rally.
Esther Smith and JoAnn Baum
were appointed to serve on the
National Convention Committee.
They discussed some money making projects.
Bette Biggs , district deputy ,
spoke briefly about several subjects. She named the following rallies. The first Spring Rally, 1993.
will be March 13, District 15 at the
Days Inn, Dayton . The second
rally, March 20, District!O, wiU be
ill Tate High School. Bethel and
third rally, March 20, District I, at
the Quality Inn in Norwood.
There were several practices
held during the meetin~.
Helen Wolf was dtstrict pianist
for the meeting.
Refreshments were served by
Guiding Star Council NQ. 124.
Attending were Betty Wolfe,
Mary C. Moose, Perry Council,
New Lexington; Mildred Lowery,
Mary Nelle Gano, Logan Council;
Margaret Cotterill, Betty Spencer,
Beuy Biggs, Nathan aiggs, Esther
Harden, Bob Harden, Eileen Clark,
Janice Lawson, Guiding Star Council, Syracuse; Elizabeth Hayes,
Ethel Orr, Betty Young, Lora
Damewood, Marcia Keller, Faye
Kirkhart, Thelma White, Opal Hollon, CJwlotte Grant, Everett Grant,"
Mary ~ . Holter, Esther Smith,
Erma Cleland, Kathryn Baum,
)oAnn Baum and Helen Wolf,
Chester Council.

MU72-65

Pick 4:

4001
Super Lotto:
3-8-37-4046-47

Kicker:297586

Clelll' IOIIIgbL Low our 5.
Friday, sunny. Hlab In mkl-38a.

•

I

a
VOl. 43, No. 210

Copyrighted 11113

2 Sec:tlon1, 12PaQH 25 cot\li

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 18, 1993

A MutUmedla Inc. Newop~~per

Pr-esident mobilizes party to sell tax plan
Republicans not happy
with Clinton's proposals

Whole or Half

U.S. No. 1.

'•

Thompson White or
· Red Flame ·

Rib
Russet
Po Loin Ba ing

See·dless
es
...
Potatoes

lb.

I

39
,
Slicecllnto Chops..... 111.

.

Bag.'

PreP,riced 5. 99

1 Roll Pkg:

Lavnory Detergent

Food· Club
Absorbent
All
CoHage Liquid ScotTowels
Cheese
•

'•

Gal•

I.

For··

Jug

Limit 2 Per Family, Please

limit l Per Fomily, Please .
;

Tyson Holly Farms Fresh Chicken

Regular, Diet or Caffeine Free Diet

' Food Club Oil or Water Pack "

Drumsticks or Thighs

World Classics Cola

Chunk Light Tuna

. .

Prepriced 1.29 Dishwashing

Dove Llqulcl
22 oz.
Btl.

•

Corned Beef, Pastrami or

Roast Beef
Pr. . our

D~llc•aH~

$ .

61~= 2 ... J

6 Pack 12 oz. Cons

r.

.

Two polls
support
Clinton plan

, 0-lb.

24 oz. Ctn.

Five present
UMWprogram

Prayer requests were taken with
Sharon Folmer leading Jhe group in ·
prayer.
.
. Closing thoug~ ts were national
and international connec tio ns by
Pandora Collins. Mary Showalter
gave the closing prayer. Refreshmen ts with the valentine theme
were served by the hostesses Iris·
and Pandora Collins.

252

'

Hillside Baptist Chw;ch held its
fourth annual sweetheart banquet
recently at the senior citizens center.
The catered dinner was seliVed
from deCorated tables. Photographs
were taken and games were played.
Entertainment was provided by
the Children of God and the
Redeemed Quartet.
. The evening closed with a message from Rev. James R. Acree Sr.
· Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
James Acree Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Justus, Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
' Mr. and ~ - Dan Hood, Mrs. Ellajane McDaniel, Jeff Workman,
Tammi Jon es , Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Re.ynolds , Mr. and Mrs.
Denzil Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Clonch, Mrs. Kathleen Clonch,
Mrs. Sue Larkin, Ryan Clonch ,
Venda Reynolds, Mrs. Barb Pratt,
Mrs. Shelby Rutter, Mr. and Mrs.
James Acree Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Humphrey, David Johnson . Sarah
Dean, Heather Cutlip, Rev. Mike
Willet~ Angie Willett, Travis Curtis, Mrs. Mae Roach, Mr. and Mrs.
Greg Willett, Linda Jones. Paul
Wears, Mr. and Mrs. Max Lauderlnilt, James Dean, Amy Hill, and
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Wilson.

cause.

Pick 3:

Page4

Banquet held

Seventeen members attended the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Women meeting held recentl y at
the church.
' Lou ise Bearhs presided and
opened the meeting with the reading of Psalm 91 and the Lord 's
Prayer in unison.
: Devotion s. "Brea d of Life
'Brings Gladness " were given by
Pandora Comns.
The program , "Ru ral Crisis Everybody's Crisis" was presented
by members . Taking part were
I:Jorma Baker, Frances Goeglcin,
'Fern Morris, Iris Collins and Pandora Collins.
· Lenora Leilheit and Dec Rader
'were appointed chairmen to organize the group to conduct church
services on Sunday.
• Virgi nia Wears read an article
;concerning a need for toys for the
ill and crippled childrcn m Russia.
A contribution is being sent for this

. pbio Lottery

Mountaineers
·hold·on to top

3"

lb. .

· ~

Dispose e _

.

.

'

"

News Hotline

26to5·f849
Count ·

For ·news tips or to offer
story suggestions, call the
Editorial Depanment at
992-2155.

session of Congress 'Wednesday in the House
chambers. (AP)
•

'

Library petition drive
beKins in Meigs County .

By The Associated Press
Two surveys taken immediately
after President Clinton's address to
Congress found vi11wers strongly
supported his economic plan.
Of 514 people who saw the
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News StafF
speech, 79 percent favored the
plan. with 62 percent supporting
The "Libraries Worlcing for Us"
the proposals enthusiastically. petition drive if well underway in
according 10 a Gallup poD done for Meigs County, reporteq. Librari!IJI
CNN l!fld USA Today. The margin Ruth Powers, wlio says that libJary
of error was plus or minus•5 points. patrons have until the end of the
It said 16 percent opposed the month to '"stand' up and be countplan.
The remaining 5 percent had ed".
.'
1
noopinioo.
Petitions hav,e been placed in
· An ABC-Washington Po~t sur- the Meigs County Public Library,.
vey fotind 74 percent of the people in the Middlepon branch, on the
who had watched the sreech bookmobile, an'&lt;f in several busiapprovea of most of Clinton s pro- nesses around the county. ·
· The petitions 'along with others
posals. Eighteen perpent disapproved, 6 percent had mixed feel- from around the siate will be presented io the Ohio Library Council
ings and 2 percent had no opinion.
Fifty-three,percent of viewers in on March I0 and then passed along
the ABC-Post poll said they to the Ohio Legislature.
When initiated the purpose of
. thought the president's proposals
would not help their own financial the petition drive was to jlet
. restored full funding for libranes.
situation.
Eight percent said they thought
it would help them a great deal, II
percent said a good amount and 26
~rcent said just a little. Two percem_had no opinion.
..r
• ·:~ telepoone pol~· of 59! peo! pie --:"00 percent of w~om wate~CII
the liddreaB - had the same margin
of error as the CNN-tJSA Today
poD.
In the CNN-USA Today poD, 68
percent of respondents said Clinton's pliln would reduce the deficit
~nd 72 percent said it would
tmprove the economy.
In the ABC-Post survey, 15 percent said the plan would reduce the
deficit a great deal, 35 percent said
a good amount and 33 percent said
just a little. Thineen percent said
. notllall.
The ABC-Pos! survey said 85
percent of its participants \bought
the prtlJI08als .WOuld help the economy to some dep'ee.

Huggles Dlapen
1

'

CLINTON ADDRESSES CONGRESS President linton prepares to address a joint

a multitude of funding priorities 10
consider as they wrestle with
developing the new state budget,"
said Powers, who stressed that the
peti_tion e~for; by libraries is a way
wh1ch w11l let them know how
much libraries mean to Ohioans.
''Our message to the legislature
is - do away with the freeze, and
in the new budget, preserve the
funding -formula. Give us the 6.3
percent formula which provides a
stable funding base with growth
potential as economic conditions in
the state permit," said Powers.
For Meigs County that funding
base has brought a new library
building, a good collection of
boolcs and other materials, a return
to the county's own bookmobile
community program, and
service,
get.
numerous
other benefits .
''Our swc elected officials have

Funding for 1992 was frozen at the
1991 level. The freeze was scheduled to be lifted last month but due
Ill fioancial problems in the state,
the freeze was extended to June.
This week, Powers said, s~e
receiv.ed more discouraging news.
Gov. George Voinovich has
proposed in his biennium budget
that funding be decreased from 6.3
percent to 5..7 percent of th'e state
personal illcome tax.
This would mean thousands of
dollars lost for libraries in Meigs
County, Powers said. Libraries
have had the 6.3 percent of state
income tall funding for about six
years. Prior to that library funding
came from from intangible taxes
rather than tl'Jough ihe state bud-

By STEVEN KOMAROW
said.
Associated Press Writer
Overall, taxes would rise about
WASHINGTON - . President $246 billion and spending would
Clinton mobilized his administra- shrink $253 billion comparett"with
tion today to sell his $500 billion the current policy for the next four
package of tax increases and years, the White House said.
·
spending cuts to the American peoThe program would impose
pie. "This economic plan can't higher energy taxes on every
please everybody," he acknowl- household, but tho~ with incomes
edged.
of less than $30,000 would see
From former President Reagan- them pfl'set by an expansion of the
to the minority leadership in earned incom e tax credit. The
Congress. Republicans made clear administration calculated the ener• they weren't happy with the taxing gy tax would raise $71.4 billion by
side of the plan.
1998.
·
•
The president outlined his ecoIncome tax rates would jump
nomic proposals in a nationally significantly - from 3 I percent
televised speech to a joint session now 10 36 percent nellt year - for
of Congress on Wednesday night. families with taxable income over
He was heading today to Missouri $140,000 and for individuals over
and Ohio to continue the task of $115,000. Clinton said that would
selling it to the people .who will affect only 1.2 percent of taxp~y;
have to pay thecosL
er.s: A '10 percent surtax which
Sixteen adminisb'ation officials Clinton had promised to impose oli
were fanrting out across the country millionaires would be applied IQ
on the same mission - sell Clin- taxable income over $250,000.
toil's proposals 10 revive the econoSenate Republican leader Bob
my and cut the federal deficiL Key · Dole of Kansas told NBC that the
members of his economic team GOP could not accept the CliniOli
· were testifying before the congres- program "in its present form .I '
sional committees that will review Dole called it " very heavy on the
the plan.
tax side and· Yery weak" on spend:
Vice President AI Gore made ing cuts.
the rounds of morning television
The fllSI public opinion surveys
shows; telling ABC. "Now is the taken after Clinton's speech found
time to really belly up to these strong viewer suppon for the presitough decisions and start beihg dent's economic proposals.
resp(lnsfble and shaping our future,
According to a Gl!llup poll done
creatingjobs and getting our econ- for CNN and USA Today, of 514
orily mavin$ again.':
people who saw the speech, 79 perThe president outlined his vision cent favored the plan, with 62 perof smaller deficits through higher cent supporting the proposals
income taxes on the wealthy. enthusiastically.
increased energy taxes on everyone
An ABC-Washington Post surand selected spending cuts, includ- vey found 74 percent of the people
ing a one-year freeze on federal who had watched the speeciJ.
pay.
approved of most of Clinton s pro" If we do not act now we will posals. Eighteen percent disap;
not recognize this country 10 years proved, 6 pe~ent had milled feel=
from now" as the national debt mgs and 2 percent had no opinion.
approaches the size of the nation''s
Both surveys had a margin of
annual economic output, Clinton error of plus or minus 5 points.

AEP files for acid rain permits
.

American Electric Power filed
acid rain permit applications and
compliance plans with the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
pursuing a program approved by
Ohio utility regulatois last year.
According to AEP, these filings
met the EPA's Feb. 16 deadline for
all utilities to disclose their strategy
for complying with Phase I of the
Clean Air Act's acid rain provisions.
The centerpiece of the AEP plan
is construction of flue gas scrubbers at Ohio Power Company-' s
Gen . James M. Gavin plant in
Cheshire.
"The AEP plan seelcs to minimize compliance costs by using
options allowed by the EPA and
the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990," John M. McManus, director
of acid rain compliance for the
AEP system, said.
"At some plants, we .must

switch to lower:sulfur fuel to comply. Installing scrubbers at Gavin
helps us comply elsewhere in the
AEP system without Installing
costly equipment or switching fuels
at some other locations. Also, we
are worlcing 10 maximize the number of !tulfur-dioxide emission
allowanc·es we are eligible to
receive," McManus added.
One sulfur-dioxide emission
allowance allows a utility to emit
one ton of sulfur-dioxide per year.
Allowances can be transferred rrom
one generating unit to another, and
they can be bought and sold.
.
By installing scrubbers at
Gavin, AEP can apply for Phase 1
extension allowances, sometimes
called bonus allowances. Obtaining
these allowances will allow utilities
to continue to operate plants in
compliance with the Clean Air Act
while the scrubber projects are still
under construction.
.

.

--Local briefs--..
Woman held in Indiana jail

-- ·
.

I'

•
.I •.
•

.1

~ ..\

SIGNS PETI'J'ION • A1nes Db:oa of
Pomero7 llldlller to a Jilt flaeveral Jnm.
dred otller Melp Couatlau wbo are c:aiUna tor
. an ead flluadlal cuts to libraries and for retea-

'

1.

I

\

'.3

tloll or..,
pereeat fl ,........ Jaca.e tu for
Ubrlll'iel. Petldou frollllill over the statnrDI be
preaented to the Ohio Ltlllllture by the Ohio
Llbrau CouncU In e~rly Mardi.
· .

..

A woman charged with passinff bad checlcs in Meigs County is
currently being held in an Indiana Jail on a felony charge of utteripg
a forged check in Meigs County.
April A. Wesolowski, 26, of Millcreek, Ind., formerly of
Charleston, W.Va., was arrested Wednesday by lndiana.officecs on
the warrant from Meigs County, Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reported.
Soulsby advised that information leading to the arrest was
obtained by Deputy Robert Beegle who faxed the information to
Indiana authoribes.
.The felony charge resulted from a check Wesolowski allegedly
presented to tlie Mizway Tavern in the name of Connie Stone,
·
. Soulsby repot ted.
Local officers began looking fqr Wesolowski in May when sbe
allegedly pessed a forged check at WhaleyUs on Ohio 681. Soulsby
said.
·
Indiana authorities said Wesolowski refused extradition to Ohio
at her hearin~ in Indiana Wednesday. The Meigs County Prosecuting !Attorney s office will prepare paperwork requesting a ffOvernor's warrant ordering her return to Meigs County, Soulsby S81d.
She is currently being he let in the 1.!1 Pone County Jail in La
Porte, Ind. Soulsbv said.

•
•
•
•

•

•

Deputies probe criminal damaging
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanmmt took a repon
Continued on paae 3

.·

&lt;

.,
•

I ~

••

•

,,

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    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
