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                  <text>Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt, Ohio

·v of A meets

Wednesday, February 17, 11193

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in Chester

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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. .

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Dispose e _

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

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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-

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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.
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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.

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

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Thuradey, Feb!UIIIY 18,1993

:C ommentary

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The. Daily Sentinel

Dark days of 1930s recalled

the $Uests on "Nigblline." He asking aboUt Grover Cleveland or
receoved only a minority of the C8lvin Coolidge. What about Cliopopular vote. On "The McLaugh- . ton? If he ends up deserving a senlin Oroup" the panelists stress that tence in future hisrory texts, it' will .
.
not be about his· stumbling stait,
nor his diminished app.rpval ratings. It won't be about Zoe Baird,
or Kimba Wood, or about how he~
. Lincoln's high voice robs hini of botcbed the handling of gays in the
the ability to inspire people. On military.
That i~ not the stuff of history,
PBS, Gergen and Shields agree that
but
of media fire-storming driven
Honest Abe is "off message ."
by
the
expanding "electronit news
Rush Limbaugh says, "Even
hole."
I gran! that scandalizing our
Republicans are disappointed.''
personag~
offers a perverse
public
How are presidents judged? The
and
hypnotic
sort
of fun, but most
late Clare Booth Luce said that
every important president ends up of it i$ trivial. Sii what might Clinwith only one sentence in the histo- ton's single sentence be? Is it the
ry books. Less important presidents economy •. stupid? I am dubious.
are ignored. Thus, it is said, What will spark this economy is
"George Washington was the the new wave of almost-raw capifather of his country." And, "Lin- talism. The layQJfs, closings and
coln saved the union and freed the restructurings can be temporarily
slaves." Teddy Roosevelt "busted tragic for individuals. But our 6usithe trusts," Franklin Roosevelt nesses are sleek, stripped to the
"ended the Depression and won waist, able to compete for.champithe war," Harry Truman "con- onships. That yields more prosperitained communism." Don't bother ~Y for individuals. It is the hide-

Ben Wattenberg

'-

SHE'S AN
~t'QUttiNTED

YlJRKER.

MU£T

SHE

LEAVE?

Cage team goes unbeaten
in ·20 years that the eighth grade
has won the 'championship. You
guys are the best!
Cecil and Debbie Maynard
Ann and David Zirlde
Racine

: • Dear Editor

· Well Meigs County, how about
anew bridge.
It sure would be nice but don't
look for· it too hard. Look at the
highway to the bridge to nowhere. I
J!lighl say that there isn't anything
here because our state has seen to
that over the years along wilh our
elected officials that didn't want
jobs here. Bul the push is on now
for the new bridge.
A new highway in the county,
we shouldn't ever stop pushiilg for
il and we need to push to get water
to our people in the county" I feel
our county has been left OUL
: Columbus doesn't even know
where we are not to say even our
senators or congressmen. I feel
they too need to be called iilto look
at Meigs Counly.

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We need to ask why we can't
get anything. We have the river, we
have the railroad, and maybe someday we'll have a highway system
that just stops in a field . .So look up
Meigs County, at least we don't
give up and that's sayin$ something for our area. Keep wnting letters and making calls and maybe
someday we will land some jobs.
But remember the key to growth
in Meigs County is supplying
water, highways, utilities and support from the county. No mauer
what the business or industry is
because it spells jobs and that's the
green word in ·our depressed area.
Don't give up; keep trying.
Yours truly
Floyd H. Cleland
·
Rolland

-

roday in history~
.
By The Associated Press
: Today is Thursday, Feb. 18,the 49th day of 1993. There are 316 days
left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 18, 1861, Jefferson Davis w115 sworn in as president of the Confejlerate ~tates of America in Montgomery, Ala.
. ; ' On thiS date:
.
:.: In 1546, Martin Luther, leader of the Protestant Reformation in Germany, died.
. : In 1564, the artist M.ichelangelo died in Rome.
• In 1885, Mark Twam's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was publt!hed in the United State for the ftrsl time.
• In 1930, the ninth planet of our solar system, Pluto, was discovered.
In I953, 40 years ago, "Bwana Devil," the movie that heralded the 30 fad of the 1950$, opened iii New York.
- In 1960, the Ei~th Winter Olympic Games were formaUy opened in
~uaw Valley, Calif., by Vice President Richard M. Nixon,
: In 1970, the Chicago Seven defendants were found innocent of conspiring to incire riots at the 1968 Democratic national convention.
·: In 1972, the California Supreme Coun struck down the state's death
pl'llalty.
··: Iri 1977, the space shuttle Enteiprise, sitting atop a Boeing 747, went
p'n its maiden "flight," reaching altitudes of up to 16,000 feet above the
Nfojave Desert.
• In 1984, Italy and the Vatican sigtled a reviSed concordat under which
!iOman Catholi~ism ceased to be the swe religion of Italy.
: . Ten years ago: The White House and congressional negotiators
~bed a compromise enabling investigators for the U.S. House of Representatives to see withheld Er\vironmental Protection Agency documents.
Jibout 1,000 Muslim villagers in Nellie, India, were massacred by
!ISsamese Hindus.
; Five years ago: Soviet Communist Party leaders dropped former
r.sosoow ·pany chief Boris N. Yeltsin from the ruling Politburo. Anthcmy
M. Kennedy was sworn in as the 104th justice of the u.s ..s~preme Court.
: One.year ago: In~ New Hampshire pr!mary, President Bush won the
RJ:pubhcan coolest wh1le challenger Pamck Bucloanan placed a consideraiiJy strong second; 81)1011g DemocratS, Paul Tsongas came in forst. .
:-Today's Birthdays: Actor Jack Palance is 73. Cosmopolitan editor
!Mien Gurley Brown is 7 I. Actor Oeorae Kennedy is 68. Sen. John Wamei; R-Va., is 66. Movie director Milos l"orman is 61. Siilger Yoko Ono is
60. Acuess Cybill Shepherd is 43. Singer Juice Newton is 41. Actor John
Travolta is 39. Game show hostess Vanna While is 36. Actress Greta
l SCacchi is 33. Actor Matt DiUon is 29. Actress Molly Ringwald is 25.
·
:Thought for Today: •'There are plenly of fools in the world; but if they
had not been sent for some wise Jlll11lPSC, they wouldn't have been here;
and since they are here they have as good a nghtto have elbow-room in
the world as the wisest.' ' - S~ Edmonstone Ferrie't, Scottish novelist
om-I854).
·

Continue~( rrom page 1
Wednesday evening from Renee Richard of Bald Knob Road.
According 10 a repon·from the sheriffs department, Richards
reponed she discovered the back glass on her 1981 Ford had been
shaW:n:d by a rock or,pellet possibly Tuesday.

by Bo~J Hoeflich

r.lcH.

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I am stunned to the bouoms of have happeoied if the headlight had
my socks by what staffers on the not broken and the toy rockets
':Dateline NBC" program did in HAD starled the fore? Would NBC
pursuit of a TV news story. They have told us about the rockets theil?
allowed a testing company to affix
small toy rockets to the underside
of one of the embattled General ·
Motors pickups suspected of tend- •
iriS to burst into flames when hit
from the side. Just before the pickIn any event, the netwodc issued
up was smacked broadside by an apology on '"Dateline NBC" in
another car in a taped demonstra- early February for what it called
tiQn, testing company personnel "the inappropriate demonstraignited the rockets.
tion," and announced that it had
NBC claims it only wanted to settled a deflimation suit flied by
ensure that "sparks would be pre- OM.
· sent when a Chevrolet Citation
Some .of you may not understruck the truck's side-mounted gas stand what I'm so upset about,
tank," according to a New York especially if you aren 'I journalists.
Times account. The network fur- You may be inured by 100 many
ther maintained that the rockets years spent in supermarket checkwere irrelevant, because a broken out lines reading headlines that
headlight in the Citation actually never let the facts get in the way of
cauSed the resulting fore.
a good story, or too many episodes
NBC hasn 'I gone public with of "A Current Affair" or "Inside
evidence of why it believes the Edition." You may have come to
headlights started the fire and not think journalists regularly play fast
the rockets. However, it didn't and loose with the facts, and sacrimention the presence of the rockets fice accuracy for sensation.
to viewers of the original program,
- But every time one of us does
and one has to wonder: If it is true something like what the NBC
the headlight· caused the spark that staffers did, the broad brush splatignited the gasoline, w~at would ters a litJ.Ie on all of us. I'm dumb-

Sarah Overstreet

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bound economies of Europe that
now must reform.
(Anyway , "He shrunk tile
deficit," is less than a lrUD(pei of
historical glory.)
Might health care be Clinton's
call to greatness? If Clinton proposed ·dramatic socialized
mediCine, and if it worked wonderfully, that might do it. But he
won ' t, because it doesn't. The
socialized German system is in
deep trouble. America will pick at
the edges to make a good system
bener. 1 tl!ink BiU Clintoo's poten- ·
tial for a great sentenCe will come,
if it comes, from the idea that "he
saved liberalism from itself."
· The fruits of 60 years of liberalism gave America much that is
good, and now much that is trciu·bling. A welfare system that helPed
create "a culture of dependency"
saps our spirit and our purse; an
erosion of discipline in our schools
has "dumbed down" our children;
the unraveling of the criminal code
triggered a crime wave. Republican
and/or conservative presidents havenot (yet) been able to reform the
excesses of liberal1sm. Clinton
could do it if he's tough enough.
He has foolishly made his task'
more diffocult by appointing only a:
handful of the "orthodoxy
busters" whO shaped his campaign.
But his term is young; that might
chan!\e· There IS .another mildly
plausoble stratc;gy: instead of fi~l­
ing the troglodyte libetals, he moght
convince them to change their ·
minds, for their own good. After
all, liberals these days don't beli~ve
in much, and it is easier to convert
people with little conviction. Fail~ '
mg that, Clinton may not get a
Washington-style or a Lincolnslyle one-sentence verdict of history, but something like this: "Bill
Clinton served during an era of
one-term presidents."
.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel~
low at the ADierican Enterprise
Institute, Is author or "The First
Universal Nation,•.• published by
The Free Press and a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Sensationalism isn't journalism
•

How about a new bridge? .

Beat of the Bend...

Accu-.Wt.ather• forecast for daytime conditions and

•

This bt!ing Pnlsidential Birthday
·
Weelc,
let ois consider how George
111 Court Stleet
Washington and Abraham Lincoln
Pomeroy, Ohio
might have· fared uild!ll' 11\e present
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
rules of the road, and let us see if
there is a lesson regarding Bill
Clinton's stewasdship.
It is 1790: In the capital
(fhiladelphia) the scribes ask
"how's he doing?" Not well. Sam
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Donaldson
says, " George WashPublisher
ington lacks vision .' ' The Los
Angeles Times is checkin~ the
CH,&lt;\RLENE HOEFLJCH
PAT WHITEHEAD
cherry tree story, a credibolityGeneral Manager
Assistant Publisherl,ControUer
buster. The call -ins on C-Span
focus on Washiogton' s nomination
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lm than 300
of a man who was not a horse thief,
' words. All letters are subject to editing and must. be si gned with name.
but knew one. The New Republic
address and' telephone number. No unsigned tellers will be published. Letters
intones, "Americans no longer
should be in good taste. addJ'l!ssing issues, nOI personalities.
think their children will do better
than their parents." George Washington's approval rating is down
seven points.
It is 1861: The capital (now
named, interestinglY,, "Washin,ton") is asking, 'How's he s
doing?"
CNN reports that Honest
We made do with what we had
A story feaUured on the front
Abe
is
swmbling.
No wonder, say
page of The Daily Sentinel, dated and sometimes found new ways to
,January 14,1993, informed your enhance common farm products
·readers that a nutri'tion program into a new recipe. The ones we
:from the 1970's is being reintro- learned that day were American
·duced to help families eat better on Chop Suey and Apple Crisp. More
than 50 years later I still use the
a limited budget.
The article spruked some memo- Apple Crisp recipe. The American
pes of a~ dating back to the Chop Suey recipe is gone, lost dur1930's. During the dade and dreary ing some of the many limes I have
~TVIUY
:winter of 1936-37 Meigs County moved. I do remember that, inSielld
of
bean
sprouts,
we
uSed
cooked,
·Extension offered a cooking class
.in local areas throughout the coun- whole grain wheat. Possibly old
ty. At that tiine I still lived at home, records in the Meigs Coonty Extenout of school and with no job so sion files still have these recipes or
when my mother and grandmother someone who attended one of those
went to an all-day extension rneet- meetings may still have her copy.
I now live in the midst of the
·ing, I accompanied them.
: The group met in the borne of wheat fields of Kansas and whole
1'!eva Bradford (Mrs. Judd B.) in grain wheat is readily available. It
the New Lima Community. The would be a "fun time" to cook
name of our Extension Agent at American Chop Suey once again.
~hat time escapes me; however,
Thanks for listening to one more
·what she tau~M has bee,n in the story from The Not So Good Old
:bac;k of my mmd and,- like-'&amp; com- Days.
Helen Musser King,
puter when it receive,s the passBox74 Riley, KS 66531
word, I remembered that day.

Con,gratulations to the eighth
grade junior high basketball team
and the coaches, Jim Lawrence and
Mick Winebrenner. We are very
proud of you for winning the championship game at Federal Hocking
High School. This is the first time

Friday, Feb; 19

.Clinton sentenced to one:·. ·sentence

Letters to .the'editor
•

The Dally Sentinel-Page

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, Februa 18, 1993

••

!
---Local briefs... ------

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,

Robert]. Wagman
leading broadcast, and asked for
OM's and Ihe public's forgiveness.
There are several compaoies
that conduct crash testing in modem, high-tech environments. The
federalgovemment'sowntestingis
done by these forms on a contract
basis. However their services do
· not come cheap. The cost ·Qf doing
a fully instrumented crash test is
about $30,000, excludin$ the cost
ofthevehicleorvehiclesmvolved.
But NBC was reportedly willing
to pay only a small fraction of this
amount. According to sources at
NBC, producer Bob Read had to
search long and hard for a company
that would d9 the test for whiu
NBC was wiiHng to pay. TISA, a
company specializing in accident
investigations and re-creations; but
with no actual crash test facility,
came forward and said it would
stage NBC's re-creatiOn on a nickel-and-dime budgeL
.
TISA was a61e to acquire the
four test vehicles for less than
$2,000 from local Indiana salvage
yasds. This source for the vehicles
left TISA, and NBC, open to criticism as to !heir condition. Then the
lack of any sophisticated testing

'.

W. VA.

..__ _ _......__Weather-------

"tabloid TV" shows have blurred
the lines of credibility so much that
~any vie~r/readers Cl!l't ~~~ thci
difference between responsible
reporting and romance-novel writing.
·
Part of !hat owes to the fact that
as journalists we haven't done our
job of documenting the tabloid
news shows and pointing out to the
public just how far they miss the
mark of ethical journalism. And
second, I would unhappily have to
conclude, is that sometimes we
allow to go on what happened at
"Dateline NBC" and then look the
other way like a bunch of old auorneys conducting a closed bar invesligation of a longtime crony.
:
NBC's buffoonery slaps the
good names of the thousands of
AmeriCan journalists who despite
deadline pressures and competition
are able to deliver the goods and
follow the rules. Team NBC is the
Dallas Cowboys of journalism, the
flashy folks in the spotlight repre.senting the rest of us you never see.
Fumble.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndl·
cated writer ror Newspaper
Enter.prise Association.

'

instrumentation, \md the absence of
multiple high-speed film cameras,
made it impossible for TISA and
NBC to refute GM's claim that the'
impact speeds were much higher
than NBC claimed.
Auto safety consultant Byron
Bloch was asked by NBC to come
to Indianapolis to .be interviewed as
to why the GM pickup's fuel-tank
design was faulty. Despite NBC's
contention that he was among the
consullants it relied on in designing
the tests, Bloch had no role in the
test's planning'or the staging. But
he did witoess: the evenL (A brief
disclaimer: Blcx;h, who has been
thrust into the center of the COIIII'Oversy by both 'GM and NBC, is a
friend of more than 20 years of this
reporter.)
.
"When I arrived at the test site
on a country road," Bloch says, "I
noticed that •external sparking
devices were ~ing attaChed to the
undersides of the trucks. That
didn' t surprite me because such
. devices are occasionally used in
crash tests. But I didn't think they
were ncc"""":Y.
"It appeared to me watching the
test in whiclt-the rue oo:wred, that
what caused the rue was gasoline
from the tank hilling the
surging
·
f{ont of the Citation and being
ignited by itt hot, broken headlight
filament. That Is a very common
ignition source, in real world accidents and in documented crash
!Cats of vehicles, that results in fore.
"Later when I inspected the
truck and car, their condition

Saturday, a chance of rain .or
snow
south. A -cbaDce of snow
. Tooigbl, cllw and cold. Low .S
north.
Lows 1.5 to 2.5. Highs from
to 10. Southwest winds less than 10
the
lower
30s ~ to around 40
: mpb. Friday, mornio&amp; sunshine,
south.
Sunday,
a cbmce of rain or
then ·
· cloudiness. Not as
snow. Lows 1S to 30 lmd highs mid
30s to mid 401. Monday. a chance
of
SDOW. Lows in the 20s with
' S.turdiJ IJmMI&amp;l Maay:
highs in the 30$.

Sooaa.cntral Ollio

'
I,

'

cm~~!:r-

·- -----Area deaths----'

Roberta Caruthers
Roberta Jean Caruthers. 55, of

' t
'

'

founded that producc:rs of a program so respected as "Dateline
NBC," which has ,a .budget those
of us in loeal news-can only slobber over, would even consider
pulling such a stunL '·
,
1 guess uimptatton knocks at
every salary level and some of us
open the door. l'vc•experienced the
pressures in local news to beat a
competitor, and a•news director's
lust ror t~e facts to conform to a
sexy story line he'd already written
before I could. get back from the
field to tell him what happened.
The heat to produce, to get it on by
5 and beat the other guys, is an
aphrodisiac that not only seduces
the ego but can rioean a livelihood.
When 0
t' t'
· "60
Minutel-• ~c~~J,io':~~!',;~uessing the pressure is~about five to the
tenth power.
Nonetheless, NBC couldn't
have picked a w'orse time to go
sticking toy rockets under pickup
trucks involved in a serious lawsuot
and then smashing them into Citations. First, you can't listen to a
radio talk show without hearing a
caller complain about how biased
the media os. SeCond, the National
Enquirers of t)te world and

'

At first NBC News stood by its
repon, but less than 24 hours later,
NBC caved in, issuing abject
apologies for w~at it called a mis-

•ICoiumbusl28" 1-

·

NBC done in by ·own pen:ny-pinching
. WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
old adage that you get what you
pay for has been proven once
a~ain . Within journalistic circles,
' NBC News" has developed a
reputation for being parsimonious.
Now it appears that in their dispute
with General Motors, "NBC
News" was done in by concern
over their own bottom line.
The outline of the dispute is
now well known. To illustrate a
story on its show "Dateline NBC,"
on the potential danger of fuel tank
placement ·on OM pickup trucks
made between 1973 and 1987,
.NBC contracted with The lnstirute
For Safety Analysis (TISA) of
Indianapolis to conduct two tests
featurinjl a Chevrolet Citation
crashing mto the side of GM pickups of the 1973-87 vintage. The
truck's fuel tanks are vulnerably
mounted outside the main frame
rails.
In order to ensure that any
spilled fuel would ignite, TIS A
strapped .several tiny toy rOcket
engones to the bottom of the trucks
and set them off an instant before
the impact. Two crash tests were
completed. In one, at what NBC
says was 40 mph, no fuel spilled.
In Ihe other, at what NBC says was
30 mph, fuel spilled and a fire
occurred.
·
Because of the usc of the
igniters, and other problems that
GM claimed existed with the test,
the automaker not only cried foul,
but filed an unusual defamation
suit against both NBC and TISA.

,.

I

I

Pomeroy, died Tuelday, Feb. 16,
1993 a Ohio Stale Uaiversity Hospital
•
, Born in Ashton, w. Va. on May
10, 1937, she was the dauglllier of
Verna NowiiD Sturgeon of
Poineroy, and the lallrPaul D. Sturgeon.
.
'
•· She ,.as a personal care assis, tant and atll:nded the Rutland Fn:e
· Will BaJ1!ist Chwch.
.
. Besides her mother, she IS survived by her husband, Richard
• Caruthers, Sr, of Pomeroy, a
, . daughter, Barbara Caruthers of
' Pomeroy. two daughters and 90115·
·· -in-laws, lenni and Terry Adams of
Columbus, and DeiJra and Russell
Burns of Middleport; a son and
tlaugh~er-in-law, Richard, Jr. and
Mary Caruthers of Pomeroy; a
brother, Paid Sturgeon of Letart,
W• .VL, seven lf8Rdchildren, and
' ~~ei81 aunts, uncies, nieces and
nepheWs.
Besides her falher', she was pre. ceded ' in ' death by a brother,
William E. Sturgeon.
· FuDeral services will be held
Saturday a 11 a.m. a the Rutland
Free Wlll Baptist Cburdl with the
Rev. Paulfiylor olficialiaa.}Jwial
Will be • Map Manory O.dws.
~ 'Friends may call at the Fisher
. FUIICilll Home in Middlepan. 2 to 4
" and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday and one hour
:·prim to the services aa the chun:IL ·

• Helen Edwards ·
Helen Edwards, 87, formerly ol
; Gallip()lis, died Wednelday, Feb.
17,1993,atOverbrookCent«.
: She- btn NoV. 28, 190.5 a
•: Mt. SterliDg, m., dau&amp;hter ol the
~ late Robelt and Lyda Pcny.
:- · She wu a di~tiaa aa Holzer
·, Hospital from 1930-.41, ,..ci also
WOited at K•Iwazno Slate Hospi.:, tal, Kalamazoo, Mich. Sbe ldttuded
: area chun:lles-and wu a paduate
:· Of Battle Creek Collese. Battle
• Creek, Mich.
.
' Surviwn include two sisters-in:· law, lftda' Edwards oC M'tddlepcxt
:.. and ~I Edwards of Commg;
: and ~verll n.ieccs. nephews, aad
' COUSUIS.

appeared to conform to me that the
headlight was the ignition source.
Weeks later, after the broadcast,
when I watched frame-by-frame video of the test, it seemed clear
that is what h~. The use of .
the sparking devaces is totally irrel-.
evant''
NBC used the test to show how ·
a fire .often immediately ensues· ·
after a crash. But to Bloch, and .
many other auto safety experts, the·
NBC-GM dispute brought on l!Y
the way the tests were staged has
diminished the lmpaet of the NBC .·
s~.

' The NBC story contained
scenes from OM's own ~iously -.
secret crash rests showing fuel-tank
leakage. and footage and photos of
actual real world accidents in '
which people were killed or horri- ~
bly burned," Bloch points out. ·
''These teSts were not central to the '
story. Unfortunately the cheap and
unsophisticated hurried tests have '.
diminished what was a valid and '
powerful presentation and diallliCt
from the hazud that these pickup trucks still represent"
·
A jury in Atlanta recently '·
ordered GM to pay $105.2 million
to the family of a man who died in · ·
the fiery crash or a GM pickup !hat: :
had fuel tanks on the side of the r
vehicle. In addition, federal author- -" .
ities. are still investigatina the over• '"
all silfely ol these pickups.
Robert Wqman loo 1 ayndlcat·
ed writer for New.paper Enterprise Association,

: Sbe wu JRCeded in death by
:. her husband, lferben R. Edwwds,
on Jul~;;m. one bioda, Dell~ nis R.
, and two half brothers.
:. ()rill Pcny and Plwolde Pary.
Selwicel 'will be held 1 p.m. SatID'day at Willis Funeral Home, with
lbe Ittv. J - A. Sc!Mc •• olficillling. Burial will be in Gravel Hill

Howard Johnson
""-!! L. Jolmson, · 80, of
Point Plm'I'M, died 'Tuesday,
February 16, 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was a retired guard for the
~ Services Administration,
Point Pleasant Depot, a U.S. Army
veli:I'IUI of WWII, where he
received the Purple Heart and a
Brame Star, a member of the
American Legion, Mason COunty
Post 123, a member of the V:F.W.Comsialk Banack and a member of
the Good Shephe.td United
.Mctbotlist Cbureh.
·
Born December 6, 1912 ·in
Kaylong, WV, be was the son of the
late Morris and Floieuce VanMeter
JohMOD.
Surviving are his wife, Eunice
Tbonlas Jolwon; one niece, Margie Grinslea!l. Mason and two
nephews. Jackie Johnson of Arbnsas and 01ester Johnson of

EMS responds to 10 calls

Wow! Would you believe that plelion of their cadet training and
four of the 67 cadets graduating the fmt probationary period, all
from the West Virldnia Stale Police four have satisfactorily.completed
Academy in Charlilltoo «*''ier this the curriculum required by Mirmonth· are graduates of Wahama shaB University BDd the West VuHigh Schoofat Mason, W. VL
ginia State Board of I:tegcnts to
Tbe four include Edward B. hold the degree of Associate in
Starcher, Paul D. Reason II, Applied Seience.
• ·
William K. Marshall III and
Congratulations to the four
Richard.L. C1art..
young men and to their parents.
Starcher, Hesson and Marshall
all graduated from Wahama in
Wednesday marked the 43rd
1987 ani C1art. in 1986.
day Paul~ Middleport counStarcher is tl!e son of GCO!Je cilman and an employee of the
and Judy Starebc:r, West Cohimbia, Meigs County Common Pleas
and is a 1991 graduae or Cont:orci Court, has been away from home
College. He bas been stationed at due to his serious illness.
Spencer.
. Paul has been contined to RiverHesson is the son of Paul and side Hospital in Columbus undercarolyn Hesson of New Haven and going treallllent. It's too early to
attended Marshall University. He determine the effectiveness of the
has beeD stationed . in South treatment However, Paul is optimistic as is his wife, Niese!,· who
au.teston.
· The SOD of Karen Johnson of stays right at the hospital unless
Mason and William
. Kyle Marshall there's a necessary trip back to
n of Meigs County aneaded Park- Meigs County to take care of bUsiersbuiJ Commnnity College and ness matters. Paul and Niesel have
will be Sltltioned with the Hunting- heard from so many of you and
Niese! who was in Meigs County
ton detachmenL
.
Wednesday
commented that
Clark, the soD of Ralph and
Patty CJadt of New Haven llllended you've done so much to keep their
Manball University and has been spirits lifted.
.
It's been a long haul for Paul
assigned to l'altenburg.
The cadets began their training and it's iin~ble to say when he
in July. The iDtaose coune iilclud- will be getilllg to return borne for a
ed lJl.S bourJ.of clkssioom studies spell. '!'he address is Room 757,
covering 126 subjects helping them Riverside Methodist Hospital, 3535
to beFome pfofessional law. Olentangy River Road, Columbus,
enforcement officers. UpQn com- Ohio. 43214. These young folks
certainly deserve and need your
encouragement
Dale F. Phillips, 1927 South 7th
St., Chickasha, Okla., 73018, is
seekiag genealogy information on
George and Susanna Dyer Phillips,
1725-1786, Lunnenburg County,
Va. Their children left V~ia and
went into communities 1n other
states; He is looking for descendants of Mary .Phillips Elam, Elizabeth (Betsr&gt;· Robert and John
Phillips. I you are amQng the

and one sister, Eulah Bracken.
Services were held Tuesday at
- Bope-Thomas Funeral Home, Sammet, with the Rev. RObert Blaine
officiating; Burial was in Letart
Falls Cemetery,
.·

California.
·
Ser •ices will be held at 2 p.m.,
Friday, February 19, at the Qow.
HusseD Funeral Home with the
Rev. R.C.. Browning officiating.
Burial will follow in Suncrest
CemeteryinPuintPie nt.
Friends """' call at the funeral
home 111 ~. FdJrulry 18
from 6 _,9 p.m.
Milillly gno•:aide riles will be
nnlw • ~by tbD Amcril:an IqionMuon eo.xy Poll 123.

Carl P. Norris
Carl PbiiJoo '!'{orris, 82.- Junc-

3

~:' .&lt;!'tisc!,!.-;ctu!:~ay, Feb.' 14,
Ho was btn Nov. 13, 1910, in
!:r'Eila~.C::4~1ate Philson

A residenht ol JIIIIC1ion Cbity forf
46 yean, e was a mem er o
Mount Zion Brethern in Christ

Alfred Roush

Alfred (Pete) Roush, 81, of
Middleport, died Wednesday, Feb.
17, 1993, at Veterans Memorial
....,.,.,.tal
'"if~ in New Haven, W.Va., on
Dec. 2.5, 1911, IJQ was the son of
the late Lee and Naomi Kirby
Roush. He was a retired security
officer from Kyger Creek Power
Plant, a 1931 graduate of Middlcport High School, and a member of
the Middleport Church of Christ.
He was a purple heart recipient in
World Wrt: U, lmd a life member~
the Disabled Americalo Veraans.
He is survived by his wife,
Mary Elizabeth Russell Roush, to
whoin he is married on Aug. 27,
1934; a daughter and son-in-law,
Maida and Roy [;ong, Pomeroy;
three sisters, Dorothy Young.
Jolanda Root, and Catherine
Brown, all of Middleport; and a
brother, Charles Roush, Des
Moines, Iowa; a daughter-in-law,
Emma Roush, of Pawtala; and
four ~· Ricllard Cline,
Cinconnati. Larissa Long of
Pomeroy, Brie Roush ~ Ashville,
and Clwistopber ROil'lb of Parila,
several nieces and aepbews.
B,ides his pmuts he was preceded in death by his son, RusseU
Roush. .
Funeral services will be beld
Saturday at 3 p.m. at the Fisher
Funeral Home m Middleport. Mr.
AI Hartson will offociate BDd burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
FrieDds· may call ill the funeral
home Friday 6to 9 p.m. lmd until
- ol
s ......_
tome setVICCon a--7-

f.~:';·i~~~?;i~z~:,~:::

=n~~-wouldapprecia~

Well, don't frown at me. I
didn't ask for.the snow and cold. I
thought you did. However, just
look around on the ground - those
are actually sping flowers coming
up. So do keep smiling.

Hospital news
.
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Janeoa
Radldn, Albany; Charles R. Aeiker
Sr., Pomeroy; Jody Hayes, Racine.
Wednesday discharges - Freda
Casto, Ada VanMeter, Betty Frazier, Michael Custer, Renee Stone
and Fannie DursL
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Feb. 17 - Derek
Oliver, Samantha .Yiers, Richard
Darst, Joseph King, DaneU Haney,
Effie Walters, Thomas Lambert,
Mildred Sherwood, Derel: Rodgers,
Linda Pugh, Otley W'f8111., Patricia
Burdette, Walter Yinger, Ruth
· Bishop, Mary Wilcoxen, Angela
Teaford, Walter Harvey, Bradley
Hunt, Billy Starkey, Charles
Zerkle, Nola Swisher, and Ralph
Jackson.
Births, Feb. 17 • Mr. and Mrs.
La
,._..,..
Rae'
wn:nce'-•ouu•, son, me.

i

Meigs announcements--

machinist in World Wrt: IT. He was
later cmJik!yed by' lUcns Machinery Co., m I • • t" .
A lllesll• for Scotten DiUoti

Tolllcl:o tlllli1 be retired, Mr. Norris was a put member of the
machinist uDion and a master
craftlman wflo built homes, furni-

Recycle daJ
· The Meigs County Litter Control Oftice will hold a RICyc1e day
Satunlay &amp;om 9 a.m. to 110011 at the
Kroger (8kiug lot iD PwiCioy.
Aluminum, glass. plastic. newsp.pers, cardboard, cans and most
household recyclables will be

~=i'%:'1 . are'his wife of 63

Ts

Rn. Butnagton to preacll
Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis, will be guest speaker Sunday_at
10:45 a.m. at Naomi Ba~lllst
Choncb in PoRlOJ- Public inVIted.
·

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Selvice responded 10 10 calls for assistaace overnight:
Wednesday • 9:31 a.m. Middleport to Lincoln Street for Margaretha Wolfc who was transpOr1ed to Holzer Medical Center, 3:34
p.m. Racine to Pearl Street for Michael Champion wbo was trans- •
ported to HMC; 3:37 p.m. Rutland iquad to Whites Mill Road for
Julius McOhec who was transpcrled to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and later tnnported by Skymed to Ohio Swe University Hospital;
507 p.m. Racine ~ Main Street for Lisa Haggy who was transported
10 VMH; 5:07 p.m. Middlcpout to Happy HoUow Road for Verna
Sturge011 .who was tranSpOned to HMC; 10:57 p.m. Racine to Letart
for ConDie Morris who was lnUisiKllled to VMH: 11:39 p.m. Syracuse squad to Bridgeman Street ror Beatrice Lisle wbo was transported 10 VMH.
.
Thunday - 2:06 a.m. Pomeroy to Stonewood Apartments for
John MeUger wbo was ii'IIISpmed to VMH; 2:52 a.m. Rutland to
Carpenter Hill for Edward Maksemizek who was transported to
HMC.

Man injured in accident ·
A Pomeroy man was reportedly injured but not treated in an :·
accident Wednesday afternoon oo State Route 7 in Addison Town- .
ship, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported. _
Harold F. Lenlley, 48, 118 1/1. Main Street, Pomeroy, was northbound when he struck the deer, lost control of the vehicle and slid
off the left side of the roadway where the vehicle struck an embankment and overturned.
· ·
Lemley was cited for not wearing a seat belL The vehicle Sus·
tained moderate, disabling damage and was towed from the scene.

Suit filed in common pleas court
A suit flied Wednesday in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow III, Jeffery A. Karr, Canal Winchester, and Darrell R. Karr, Columbus, are seeking judgment against ·
Daniel Karr, Circleville, Pamela F. Moody, Circleville, and Kim D: ·.
Brown, Grove Cit}'. ·
'
The plaintiffs allege that on or about July 3, 1992, they entered
in10 a conttact with the defendant to construct an easement right ol
way on propeny belonging to the defendant in Meigs County in
exchange for $2 and the defendaruUs executing an easementagn»ment in favor of the 'plaintiffs authorizing Columbus Southern
Power Company 10 ex~d electrical service to land held by the
plaintiff.
.
Plaintiffs seek execution of the easement or S25,&lt;XXl to seek an
alternative easerqenl
Editor's note: All names, ages and addresses are pubUshed ;
and spelled as they appear on law enforcement and other reports.
·
·

L--------~------------....;.J
.

Family seeking clothing,
other household ite·ms

An aq)peal is being made for
clothing and household items for
the family of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Freeman whose home on Story's
Run Road in Cheshire was
destroyed in a fue shortly before
midnight Tuesday.
Persons with items to contribute
are asked to contact Mr. Fn:eman's
. !Jaughfer, Sissy Freeman, at 9?2·
2946 whe~e they are cwrendy staying. .
Needed are: women's pants size

Dissolutions;.
divorces filed

,

medium and 16-18: blouseS sized
38 and medium; men's pants sizte4
40130 and 38130; shirts med exll'l
ll!fge and large; women's shoei
sized 7 1/1. and 7 and men's shoes'
sized 9 112 ,and llEEE.

Pablla~

"'"'7 ·"""'-· lti.....J
" " - " Pridq, ID &lt;:o.i St. P
Ohio _., t11e OWo v.qe, Ms

Msl

CompaayMIIItlmedia IDC., Pomno1
Obio 46789. Ph. 9111-2166. ...,;.
,_... .... KP
UJ, Ollio.
M

I

•

'!'be llooodalatl - . .... tile

--.- •
a.~.~..-.·
Ne•V,:;" ~7u Thi'rd ~-. ·

ObioN

The following petitions for dissolution of marriage were filed
Tuesday in the .Meigs Couniy
Common Pleas Court of Judge
Fred W. Crow ill:
Mamie D. Harmon and James E.
Harmon,, both of Dexter; Connie
Jean Maddox, Racine, and Gerald
Ray Maddox, Long Bottom.
In addition, Connie Jo MeHaffey, Albany, filed for divorce from
Patrick L. Mcl;laffey, Wilkesville.

--

COLONY THEATRE

-

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wllen ltoee carrier Hrrice U

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112 Weob ........._ •._.........--118.40

THE DISl1NGUISHED
GENJLEIIAH R
FIL, SliT.,- 7:3111 1:111
-llliiUliUIS.

requested tbat newspapers
be tied in bundles or in (llper bags;
glass containers rinsed, caps
removed ud separated by color;
plastic separated by number and
caps removed
ofPoiiiUU).
Gnat preadler
Cemetay.
He wu preceded in death by
Rev. Norman Butler will be
~
bil!l!!qs.
Edwin
Nouris,
Tom
·
guest
speater at tbe Long Bouom
·~
!IJI'
/
.'
1
.
call
at
tbe
.fioncral
f
~ ~~!~~i~·~ ·. l ~ !'~;. Norris, Mid 'the .Rev. L. T. Norris; United Methodist Church on Sun•
' '
li
day. 7:30 pJUL Public iavited.
!:Jf &gt;'., , ·11
,l'lt . ' '
yean, Sybil Rollins Norris; one
tlauahter, Lee ." AdeleM Burges of
Columbus; one granddaughter,
Ralei&amp;IJ C. Btqea ol Los Angeles,
Calif.; IIIII one biotber, Ross Norris

~

Drew Smith
Dnlw .D. Smith, 61, of Toledo,
died n-lly, Feb. 16, 1993 at the
PlaD CaleCa. ill Toledo.
Born on Dec. 31, 1932 in
Pomaoy, be- die- ol the late
Denver Smith aacl Nellie Smith
EDia. He held I ~·1 ciepe in
llOCiolcJiy- '
.
·Ho is lllnived by a half-brother,
Ed Ellis, aacl two half-siioten,
Ca11ill Rawlla11 aad MeliDda
Elli1, all of Or:J:•· Ohio; two
allllll, Evelyn F:
of WanllinJ1011, and Leola Smidl of "-01.
and five
i I
•
B lhwllil,._loo- pieceded Ia dellll by . . . . Mildnld
!!cotrill_, aiiiCie; Rllpll Satllll;

lliJ Plllnll ....-..,.... NeUie
and baall Stiltli, . . ltilll ...
.. 1
Pral ...... \
Olau · Ide
will be held
~- lctlll ...... the a-CentlteiJ. Anup..
~ • by Pilller l'WDII Hame,

'*'· ••lws

lOCk ...

MiMtt iL

J1UDAran4

ALL

~- CROSS
A 1· R

TRAINERS

•I'S AID WOIUI'SJ
'

30%oFF
ALL COLLEGE
SWEATSHIRTS
'

30%lOFF

211
N.SECOND

3 LB. BAG

·try Our Macaroni &amp; Cheese

APP-LES

UfREE" With

ss.OO Mlninum Purchase and
·
ThisC-.on

c

7'14 OZ. Box

REG.
EXP. 2121/93

BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST

19'

$149
11.

HOURS: SUNDAY, II A.M. - 6 P.M.
MONDAYHU
9A.M.·IP.M.

PTP EPCMI, OH.

112 JBZ7

/
•I

•

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,I

•

•

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•

Sports

·The- Daily

-

ThursdaY, February 18, 1993

Sentinel ~.~

!he

Cleveland rolls to 124-97 victory over Dallas; Bulls also win

.

Ira ·ohio college hoops,

xa·vier shakes deficit
·.fo top Evansville 74~63
~

: ' By JOHN McCARTHY
~ ~lated Press Writer
~ Evansville coach Jim Crews
~w down to the minute when the
momentum shifted ~o Xavier of
oliio's favor.
·.
~ XaYicr climbed back late in the
first half and wore down Evansville
w)th free throws in the second half_
for a 74-63 Midwestern CoUegiale
Cilnference victory Wednesday
niJht.
•"We played weU in the fliSt half
for about 17 minutes and Xavier
Clline on in the last three minutes,''
~ws said. "They played better in
~ second half. That's why they
wen·· ... We just made too many
miStakes in the second half and we
h$1 poor pacing."
• Brian Grant scored 23 points,
including II free throws in 11
at~mpts, to lead the Musketeers
(l;p overall, 8-1 MCC).
•Xavier overcame a 36-31 halfdeficit and took a 43-41 lead
oo a 10-foot jumper by Tyrece
W)lker with II :38 to go.
· Evansville briefly reclaimed the
leid 20 aeconds later on a layup by
Cl);aka Chandler.
\ But Xavier took a 12-point lead
with 33 seconds to go on the
strength of Grant's 9-for-9 freethiow shoocing in the second half.
; "I think the lccy for us was to go
in-the locker room only down by
fiVe," Xavier coach Pete Gillen
s8iiL "We were down by 15 at one
point and I thought that might be
Wller1i we would be at the half, but
wO made a nice run to end the

time

. hllf."

.

«vansville (16-6, 8-2) played
wOhout leading scorer Parrish
dp:&amp;ier, who broke his right hand
dl(itlg practice Tuesday. He had,
bc!R~ing 21.9 points a game.
~~ ·:You've ~t to give Jim Crews
l IPl of Credtt. They're a tremendqJI team, even without Casebii-," OiJicn said.
)amie Gladden added 15 points
Xavier and Steve Gentry had
II),;
'
jfcott Shreffler and Todd
CdChcllotar each had 14 points for
B,/lnlvllle.
:Ja a liOn-conference game, Corle
BJC~a!tt. Nick Van Eicl and Curtis
11o.t1c led a 15-0 run early in the .
aeload half and No. 8 Cincinnati
bn$.0 IV(BY from South Florida 72-

tot

50;

In tile Mid-American ·Conferenoe Wednesday, John McKenna
IC6rcd 16 points as Miami ·beat

..

'

'

Central Michigan 87-68. Duran
Watkins and Bill Davis hit key baskets down the stretch to lift Kent
past Eastern Michigan 61-55. Steve
Payne had 16 points ~nd 12
rebounds as Ball State defeated
Bowling Green 66-50. Sean Wightman and Leon McGee scored 13
points each in Western Michigan's
66-51 victory over Ohio University-. And Tim Schirra had 21 points
as Toledo beat , Akron 75-67,
extending the Zips' losing streak to
10games.
Ohio Northern captured its first
regular-season Ohio Conference
tiUe since 1987-88 with an 88-73
victory over three-time defending
champion Otterbein. Mark Gooden
led the Polar Bears with 29 points.
Nick Gutman had 29 points for
Otterbein.
Elsewhere in the OAC, Ryan
McConkey scored 38 points as
Muskingum beat Hiram 91-88 in
overtime. Blaine Roush had 21
points to help Capital beat Marietta
89-58. John Bufford scored 25
points as John Carroll topped Heidelberg 82-70. Willis Brown had
24 points and 19 rebounds to lead
Baldwin-Wallace past Mount
Union 62-45.
In the North Coast Conference,
Matt Croci scored 16 points as Wittenberg rallied in the secolld half to
defeat Kenyon (i()-56, Ohio Wesleyan scored the flfst 18 points of
the game, including eight by Rod
Mitchell, and the Bishops rolled by
Earlham 112-75. Leighton McCoy
had 17 points as Case Western
Reserve handed ·Oberlin its 20th
loss, 80-71.
In other non-conference action,
Carnegie-Mellon beat Denison 6142, Findlay defeated Bluffton 9773, Wooster topped Wilmington
83-68 and Malone overwhelmed
Lake Erie 109-82.

Sports briefs

Reggie Miller led Indiana with
27 points, 13 in the final 3:05 .

Dedef Schrempf had 25 points to

ana post a 53-41 advantage off the :
·
•

go with 11 !C~~ds, helping lndi- · boards.

own twist on the ms1de-outs1de
routine.
·
"Pat left, John right," h~ said. .
Mourning, lbe Hornets rookie
center who followed Ewing at
Georgetown, led Charlotte with a
career-high 35 points. Johnson
added 31 points.
They led the Hornets to an 8875Iead late in the third quarter.
Ewing started the Knicks'
comeback by hitting two free
throws with less than one minute
left in the quarter, narrowing Cbarlotte :s_lead to 95-86. He scored six
more points during a decisive 14-0
run.
" We were down 13 and we just
started playing harder," Riley said.
''Pat and John simply went off.''
J
Magic 111, Nuggets 99
ShaquiUe O'Neal had 24 points
and 18 rebounds, and Orlando used
a t6:poi~t run to start the second
half against poor-shooting Denver.
Leading 57-54 at the break, the
,
Magic took command when the
Nuggets missed their ftrst 11 shois
of the second half. Nick Anderson
.,
led the decisive run with eight of
his 22 points.
.
Scott Skiles had 21 points. and a
season-high 19 assists for Orlando.
Chris Jackson led visiting Denver
with 25 points.
Bulls 114, Jazz 96
Birthday celebrant Michael Jordan scored 27 points in three quarters on his 30th birthday, then took
the final period off as Chkago won
;
for the seventh time in nine games.
Karl Malone led the visiting
Jazz with 20 points. BJ. Armstrong
.
had 15 points fQr the Bulls and
~
Scottie Pippen 14.
Heat 111, Pistons 107
.~
Glen Rice scored 33 points and
Miami withstood a late three-point
WHO'S OPEN? - West Virginia's Marsalis
' !ng Wednesday night's Mountain Stale matchup
bamige to beat outmanned Detroit.
Basey (rigbt) looks ror the open man as Mar·
10 Charleston, W.Va., which the Mountaineers '
All-Star guard Isiah Thomas
shall guard Tink Brown guards on the play dur' won 72-65. (AP)
:
played only a minute in the second
'
half before leaving the game for
•
good with a strained Achilles tendo.n. The Pistons also lost Orlando
Woolridge, who fractured a hand
against a backboard in the third
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) average.
.
final 2:21 to h~lp ensure the victo- ,
quarter.
Ricky
Robinson
s.
c
ored
21
West
Virginia
(12-9)
was up 30- ry.
f
Mark. Aguirre led visiting
points, including West Virginia's 25 at halftime and used an 1~ -0 run
Shelton scored 13 for West Vir- •
Detroit with 29 points.
.
first eight points of the second half, midway through the .second·half to ginia. Michael Peck added 12 !
. Pacers 125, Kings 99
MarshaU (15- points for Marshall, which commit- ·
Indiana snapped a sevn-game to lead the Mountaineers to a 72-65 . Lake a 13-point
victory
Wednesday
over
cross-state
7)
rallied
to
withinr
three points ted 25 turnovers.
... ' )
losing streak - 1t's longest in four
rival
Marshall.
·
·
twice;
the
last'
at
66-63
on Shawn
West Virginia plays in the .,
years.
, Robinson also helped limit Mar- Moore's Iar-in with Jr.04left.
AtlantiC 10 &lt;::onference arid MarKenny Williams came off the
shall
forward Tyrone Phillips to 15 · Mountaineer guard Tracy Shel- .shall in the Southern Conference. ,
bench for 16 points and a careerpoints, nine below his team-leading ton hit seven f~ee ~!lrows in the The MountaiJleers lead the series t
high 12 rebounds.
15-6.
'

3 North CarOlina downed Clemson and Michigan (20-4, 9-3 Big Ten)
80-67, No. 5 Michigan stopped built a double-di~it lead early and
Penn State 80-70, Oklahoma top- · won on its fllSt mp to PeM State.
pled No. 6 Kansas 80-77, No. 8
.
Cincinnati beat South Florida 72Oklahoma 80, No.' Kansas 77
50, No. 9 Florida State held off
Terry Evans set· the Big Eighi
Nonll Carolina State 72-71, No. 10 career record for three-pointers . .
Wake Forest defeated Maryland
Evans broke Steve Henson ' s
88...64, No. 11 Vanderbilt beat'LSU marie wi!h his 24lst three-pointer
87-66 and No. 24 Marquette topped early in the first half. Evans fin Notre Dame 69-61.
ished with 26 points and made six
of 10 three-point tries.
No.1 Indiana 93,11Unois 71.
The SoQners (17-7, S-4) won on
Calb.e rt Cheaney scored 29 the road for the first time this seapoints and sparked an early spun son.
No. 8 Cincinnati 72
that led Indiana II&gt; its 28th straight
home victory, the' longest streak in
South Florida SO
the nation.
.
Nick Van Exel, Carie Blount
The Hoosiers (23·2, 12-0) are and Curtis Bostic keyed a 15-0
off to the best start in the Big Ten spree early in the second half and
by any team since the 1976 Indiana Cincinnati won on the ro&amp;!l.
squad. which went 18-0 in the conThe Bcarcats (19-2) trailed 38ference for the secOnd straight year. 37 with 18:07 left before brealcing
•
No. l Kentucky 87
. away.
No.
9
Florida
State 72
South Carolina~
North Carolina State 71
Tony Delk showed off the
Sam Cassell and Rodney
shooting touch that made him the
highest scorer in Tennessee high Dobard each. scored 18 points and
school history the last two years, the Seminoles, playing without two
scoring a season-best 18 points l!Dd suspended starters, held on to win
in Raleigh.
leading Kenrucky at home.
Dellc made five of sill shots. His
Florida State (20-6, 10-2 ACC)
two three-pointers led an 8-0 run in was minus leading scorer Bob Sura
the second half that helped th~ and top rebounder Doug Edwards.
Wildcats (19-2, ·9•2 Southeastern Both were suspeoded for one game
Conference) break away from a 49- for missing classes.
41lead.
. No. iO Wake Forest 88
No. 3 North Carolina 80
Maryland 64
· Clemson 67
ACC scoring leader Rodney
North Caroliml beat Clemson
for the 39th straight time at home Rogers had 28 poin~s and 13
re.bounds as Wake FO'rest pulled
behind Eric Montross' 22 points.
from a three-point halftime
away
lirian Reese had 18 points for
home.
lead
at
North Clrolina (21-3, 10-2). Chris
The
Demon Deacons (17-4, 8-3)
Witney made eight three-point
have
won
eight of their last nine
shots, one short of the ACC record
held by DeMis Scott, and finished ACCgames.
No. 11 Vanderbilt 87, LSU 66
with 24 points for Clemson (12·9,
Vanderbilt reached the 20-win
2-9).
No; 5 Mlchlaan 80, Penn State 70 marie for the first time since 1974
Chris Webber scored 20 points with a victory at LSU.

. In the NBA ...
\

In the MA.C •••

EASTERN CONFERENCE
TWLMGB
llow Y..t .............. 34 16 .680
lin Jeney ............ JO 21 . ~88
4.~
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Qdando .,,,., __ , , .. ..24 23
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W....._ ........... IS 35 .300
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Chiooao..................3~ 17 .673
CI1!YI!LAIID....... 34 19-. .642
Charloaa ................26 23 .S31
Allaat.a ........... -.....,2.4 26 • .~
lndYBa ...................n 21 .4SI
DoaoiL.................. .21 29 .420
Mllwaubo .............20 JO .400

lead:

1.5
7.~

10

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13

14

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WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tam
W L
Sao Ao................33 IS
Utoh ..... ...........- ....32 II

-

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lleowr ...................2l1 JO

'&gt;

W L PeL

MWni .............. ll 2 .146
Boll St............ ,IO 3 .7(/J
w. Midl ............ 9 • .692

Ohio .................. 7 6
Tolodo ...............7 6
BGSU ............... 6 1
E. Mich. ............ S I
Kent SL ........ .5 I
c.Midl ............. 3 10
Akn&gt;n ............ ...2 II
w ..

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Dollu........................
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Wednesday's ICOftS

Otbaclo Ill, non- 99

-11l.Doaoit107

llowY..t t:M1 a..doao 116
&lt;UMIIAIID l:M,DollM 91

lndianll%5,.
• 99
Ctloqo 114, u... H

Boll St. 66.

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A-.ot ........,9,3Clpa.

I SetuleatGoWenSialt. !0:30p.m.
............. It LA. Olippcn, 10:30
p.BL
.

LA. UU.otl'aoload.10,30p.m.

starts.

iO 14 .411

.315

.231

. I~

813 .381
7 14 .333
7 14 .333

Jackson, who underwent hip
replacement surgery last April, ran
the bases. took batung practice and
fielded grounders at fmt base during a 40-minu~ session at Ed
Smith Stadium.

'
WALES
CONFERENCE
T-

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Bafralo.........·..... JO 22 6 &amp;I :IS1203
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OU.wa ...... -....... 7 "" 4 II 131213 ,~

1"1pp City 31, Bdlcfonu.inc 11
n1•1..,m

KenutTolodo

II~ &lt;W, .Pik""" 36
Lucanillo V..U. 66. N. Ad~m~4S

Fmi'oyo~~.Rid-43

Ohio college
, basketball scores

- - 46,Dllo
- SE
-...
36
Ric:bm'"'d
S~. WollJion
3l
S. ~~~-53, Coal Orovo 42

MldWHI CoJJeclate
Conferen&lt;e \

DMI!ooiY
Ad«tJ S9, s,...... V11L 23
foirllold &lt;IJ, l'mlouth E. 20'
F - t..lleland 00, Conotton Voll
42
.
NeW Boston Sl, Port•mouLh Noue
Dome 32

XaYic, CJh!,o 74 •.Ev.wvillo 63

North Ca.t Coaftrtll&lt;e
eu. w.-.10. Obedin 11

Ohio woo~ey.. n2, Eulhom 75
Wi...... «J.Iat,...$6

Reaulor season scores
AkJon E. S6. Hudfcrl WCitC:m Ro&amp;avc

Ohio Conference
Blldwift·W.n.c. 62, M01ant.Unit.a4S
C.pilall9,- ~·
Jolin Cmalll2,-. 70
M•'dnp 91, HiNm II {OT)
Ohio N - I l . 01tabeUt 73

40
""""""' ... Al1on E. &lt;W (OT)
"""' 42, WollinJtcm 39

AVOIJ Llb61, Rooky River 2S
Bcrot 65, Midpazk &lt;W
BowllnJ a.-. 57, Anthony
5S
B-S6.ElyriJW. 34
'
Caatao Codt. 54, Mloerva 43
Chudon56,BodobUo43
Chudon ~ SS, JCa.t.n SO
C1e. Collinwood so, -.. lloo. &lt;W

w.,...

Clacirinati 12, s. flaridolO
Flndky 91, Blulllao73

MoDo109, t..llol!De 12

w.-.n.w.-...,.~

Fainolow 64, 01motod FJIIJ «J

Finlaztdl&amp;t.~48
· F«tlomlnp &amp;3~J?o!Pb"' Iclr.,O Z7

OuNani11i 59,

39

Auburn 13, MiuiuiWi SL 77
Cincinn.lti 72, Saudi Florida 50
Florida 94, Miilillippi 47
Florida SL 12, N. Catolinl SL 71
Furman 91, Appalachian SL81
o.o.pa 73, Alihama 70
OeocJia SL 19, Floricll Allantic 10
Oocqio Todt 65, Richmond 60

lARin ae.m- 49, Oberlin 44
ManillCD r-, 4S, Now Pltlladolpltil

STOCK

130236'

Mayfield 61, Oad1o1d llll. 43
McComb &amp;3, ... S7 (OT)
79, C1ov&lt;du1'..,

-LWC.dt.49,LIUN141
-62,Vonnlllca34
MilaaJldlJon Sl, S"""'*r--.,49
Mowf: Verrtaa 30, Dealwae 21

* 7-Passe~ger wfD•fA Captaltt Cltcirs XL
** Speed
Privacy Glass·
CHiroi/Tit Whel ·

N. Oimatod 73, Bar 3S
N.R..... Sl, -..m.&lt;W

South
41

.....,...Sl,-Lab40
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SaDd..ty Sl,I.AIIin ~- 31
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V.U., Forp 65.l'Jmta Normandy 41

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Transactions

Mldwist

BaD St. 66, Bowllna o.- 50

B•biD

A•-•Loo...
CAIJFORIIIA ANOELS -

B...U.yS3,1ncllaotall:36
foolilu 93, I!HooY72
Iowa Sl. 61, MiPouri ~
K.u.61,E. Michia•SS
Mu9&gt;- 69, N.u. Dome 61
M.nJ&gt;hi! IL 77, Sl. LoulJ 69 ,
Miami, 0It;o 17, Cont. MidtlaM 68
lofidUpn Sl. ll,Nonli-5l
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.
Toledo 75, Abuo 67
Xariw, Ofuo 74, Ev1111vW1 63

39

Lonia Adtn. Klq S6, II. Rldaovillo

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Mounl SL ...,.••• Md. 19, Amcrkan
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NiiJin. 85, Silnl T1 (l 0'0
Seoin llall9~. St. John'• 8S (01)
WCIIl VirJinia 72, Manh1U 65

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Kirla' bUketball' scores

-·

XL PLUS WAGON 2 WD
•

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El~ 51, t.cniJt 36

Colp .. 73, Panlham ~
o.n.ctuwa 61, vw.nov• u
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I.ohilll12. Amty 61

Clo. Cillo lllo76.

199.2 FORD AEROSTAR

CoLW-57,W-S.~O

·

National college
basketball scores

FM'Wnl

night's Bi&amp; Tea caae Ia BIOOiiiiactoa, lad '" '

where tbe 11011t H-asww 93-71. Clleuey ted ; .~
all scorers wittll9 paillls. {AP)
·
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Muon 11, Lanon-Monroo ll
Sp:rina. Stwwnee~, Indian Lake47
Sioftn&amp;bon&gt;l3,11anUlton ~ 45 (OT)

TOIIIUMdt ICOI'II

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Cin. Nonhwat Sol, Cin. MeNicholu

Aluander.&lt;W, Fedenl Hockin&amp; 30
B01vor Eucorn 66. Painl Vall SS
fairland"· Oat Hi1140

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GRABS REBOUND -Indiana's Calbert
Cheaney (40) pulls dowa a rebound behind Ulinols' Deon Thomas as fellow Hoosier Alan Henderson crowds the lane durlna Wednesday

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Washington, DC 20240

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Col. Whemone 41, Col. ,MarionF&lt;Jnldin 30

scores

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Box USA

Cin. Winlon Woodl 68, C"u1. RanUM
.
Day. Dunb&amp;r 6S, Wctl C&amp;trollcon 39

T~

Budlnel193, NaYJ 64

In the NHL...

1-800-US PROUD

utes o( the second half and won 11
.:
Damon Key scored 18 poinl$ fO(
the' Warriors (18-4).

South Bend.

failbcm .5.1, WayDC43
Fainnant68, Miamimbta 29
Sidney S6. O..y. Stebbinf 27

12 9 .571
10 II .476
912 .492
9 12 .492

Southw..C

BasebaU
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)- Bo
Jackson took a few more steps in
his bid to return to baseball with an
artificial hip, working out at the
Chicago White Sox camp a day
before spring training officially

61

East

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19 6 .7«1

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Take Pride in America. Today. Or the greatness ~f
our heritage will be history.

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Tolodo 7S, Abuo 67

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If we each donate a little time and talent to restore
our national treasures, we can make their neglect
and abuse a thing of the past. For more ideas on
how you can help, call Take Pride in America at

No. 24 Marquette 69
Notre Dame 61
.
Marquette held Notre Dame to
only five baskets for 18 1fl min-

c;., Ma.oy 67, Cin. Cot.nm 45
Cin. Prine:- 49, Cin. WolnUt HiUJ

Saturday's ,1ames ·

r-------~--------------------~--------~ ·

While Amerioms allow historic monwnents and
sites to deteriorate, we're giving our children
something to ~ember us by.
.

Bruce Elder had 21 and Ronnie
McMahan 20 for the Commodores
(20-4, 9-2). LSU (17-7, 6-5) had
been tied for the SEC West lead.

Scot·eiJoard

i

West Virginia hands Marshall 72-65 loss

i.

..•

Kentucky, North Caroljna rack up victories

By
Aslociated PJ;ess
By B1g East standards, It's been
a down year.
Georgetown isn't ranked. Nei·
ther is Symcuse, which is on·probation. Connecticut has been a disappointment, an&lt;l so has Seton Hall.
· Until now.
The No. '16 Pirates showed
Wednesday night why some had
projected them as a Final Four
team, rallying from a 14-point
deficit in the second half and going
on to beat No. 25 St. John's 95-85
in overtime.
Terry Dehere scored a careerhigh 41 points and became the con·
ference's career three-point leader
as Seton Hall tied St. John's for
fmt place in the Big East.
"Believe me, my guys were uyc
ing to guard him, btit he was just
unbelievable," St. John's coach
Brian Mahoney said. "We uw the
Seton Hall team everybody's been ·
waiting for."
Dehere scored nine pointS as the
Pirates overcame a 65'51 deficit in
the last 10:28 of regulatiO!I. at
Madison Square Garden.
Dehere hit three three-pointers
in overtime and was 6-for-11 from
long range. He set the Big East
record with his I 46th three-pointer.
"It just shows that hard work
really pays off. When you're shoot·
ing all alone in the gym you wonder whea all this ,pays off,'' he
said,
Seton Hall (19-6, 9-4) has struggled to be consistent this season,
often playing a poor game after a
good one. St, John's (14-7, 9-4),
meanwhile, was picked to finish
ninth in the conference in a preseason coaches' poll.
. Shawnclle Scott led the Redmen
with 20 points and 19 rebounds:
In other games, No. I Indiana
beilt Illinois 93-72, No. 2 Kentucky
defeated South Carolina 87-66, No.

In NBA action,
second half.
Asked about his winning sb'lltegy, Knicks coach ~t ~ley put .his

Page

•

Indian~,

,.

a long time, so we ' re going to
come out ready for the next game.
An(j if we have to make some
changes, we wiU."
Terrell Brandon led Cleveland
with 20 points, althouRh 11 of them
came in the fourth quarter after
there was no doubt about the outcome. Mark Price scored 16 points .
on 6-of-7 shooting, including three
three-pointers. Danny Ferry had 16
points and 10 rebounds, and Gerald.
Wilkins scored 14.
'' I thought the. team was
focused," Cleveland coach Lenny
Wilkens said. " You don't want to
take a game for granted, and I
thought when we stepped on the
floor we were ready to play. I just
kept telling the guys to play hard
and keep the rhythm going. Sometimes it is hard to keep up the
intensity in.a game lilce this."
Randy White scored 17 and
Terry Davis 14 for IIi Mavericks.
Elsewhere 'in the NBA, it was
New York 124, Charlotte 116;
Orlando 111, Denver 99; Miami
111, Detroit 107; Indiana 125 ,
Sacramento 99, and Chicago 114,
Utah 96.
Knicks 124, Hornets 116
Patrick Ewing and John Starks
played as if they were Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis - Mr.
can)'
..
Cleyeland. which has won four Inside and Mr. ·Outside.
straighi and nine of its last 10, took
"It's nice when you have two
conuol wi.th a 10-3 run at the end guys hot at the same time, especialof the first quarter and was never ly when i.t's one inside and one outchallenged again. The momentum side," said Starlts, who scored a
carried into the second period, career-high 39 points Wednesday
which began with a 23-10 Cleve- night. He also had 13 assists and
land spurt that widened the Cava- five reboundS.
•
liers' ICid to 20.
.
.
Ewing performed the inside
Dallas got no closer than 17 in damage, getting a season-high 43
the second half.
points as he led the New Y.ork
"They have no spar!&lt; out there .Knictcs to a 124-116 comeback vicat all," Cleveland's Craig Ehlo tory over the Charlotte Hornets.
said. "It is understandable, but that
The Knicb started the run ll'llilshould be their mocivation, to play ing 95-84. Starks ended the spurt at
Ia little tighler defense, to deny the 9:4 7 with a layup.
ball Qll defense, to pick guys up full
"We kept our composure and
court. I didn't see any of them get kept fighting," Ewing said. "We ·
· excited out there."
had excellent help defensively on
The Mavericks were playing Larry (Johnson) and Alonzo
their third consecutive game with- (Mourning.)"
out leading scorer Derek Harper,
Led by the pair's torrid shootsidelined by a strained hamstring, ing, the Knicks hit 67 percent of
and they were coming,off a lopsid- their· shots in the decisive fourth
ed loss Tuesday night against the · quarter, when they outscored the
Hornets 34-21.
Knicb in New York.
"Thank God for the All-Star
Ewing and Starks were so hot
b,!eak." , !;Ieard saJd. "1 think tlie that they outscored the entire Charguys need a break. II' s been a laue team 57-52 in the second half.
rough 49 games. We've got two
Ewing, who also grabbed 12
!lays to. p!1Ctice
for
the
flfSt
time
in
rebounds,
scored 31 points) '! the
. .
~
.

The Dally Sentinel

In Top 25 action,

Thursday, February 18, 1993
·
Page-4 .

By CHUCK MELVIN
· RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) OpPonents. who might otherwise
take the Dallas Mavericks too
ligl!lly have found a new source of
mocivation: fear of embarrassment
"No learn wants to lose to the
Dallas Mavericts. As much as they
get ·up for us, we should be getting
up for them the same way," Dallas
coach Gar Heard said Wednesday
night after lhe Mavericb cQ!Itinued
their much toward an NBA record
foi ·futiiity by losing to the Cleveland Cavaliers 124-97.
The loss was the Mavericks'
seventh straight overall, and it
dropped them to 0-22 on the road.
At their current pace, the Mavericlcs (4-45) will win a total of seven
games this season, worse than the
marlt of nine set by the Philadelphia 76ers in 1972-73.
"People ask me about the
record and things, but you've got to
start-somewhere," said rookie center Sean Rooks, who led the Mavericks with 19 points and eight
rebounds. "Even teams that are
gn:at teams now ,like the Cavs, had
to swt somewhere. Obviously this
year, w,hether we break the record
or not, this is the pits. We have to
uy ;IP improve in whatever way we

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cia.,..' '

J

CINCIIIIIATl li!DS:- Apod lo
..... wltlt;llm'Baloltor,pltoMr, .... _

to-,..,oonllld.

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Forged Allmill1m YAeols

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$

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20,102.00

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�\

•
Page

6 The .Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursday, February 18, 1993

Lack of commissioner, television cQntract dominate baseball scene
By RONALD BLUM
this year.
Wednesday's major league
PHOENIX (AP) - It was hard
There is no indication there will meeting - the sixth in six months
to discern progress as baseball be a new labor agreement without a - saw the following actions and
owners left two days of special worlc stoppage next year.
.
inactions:
meetings on the eve of spring aain·
There is no .industry' wide
- Former Oakland Athletics
ing.
framework for affirmative action, admininstrative assistant Sharon
Nearly six months after Fay or a response 10 boycott threals by Jones admonished owners for their
Vincent's forced resignation, there the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
behavior IOWard minorities, sayirig
still is no commissioner or even a
However, there are a lot of com- some employees called team
job description. There's no succes- mittees.
· offices "sweat shops," "sna~e
sor to National League president
"Governance by .committee is pitS" and "plantattons." Sehg
Bill White, whose term expires not a good way to govern in a nor- called her speech "sincere and
Marc h 31, or American league mal situation," said Milwaukee blunt."
president Bobby Brown , whose Brewers president Bud Selig, chairOwners unanimously
tenn expires Dec. 31. .
man of the executive.council that approved a resolution saying there
There is no television contract took power Sept. 7. "This is aber- is linkage between revenue ~ng
for 1994 and beyond, or a plan 10 rational. We are exploring all the and player compensatidn. But they
start World Series games earlier areaS of baseball's business."
dido t addtess what the linkage was

Starting todtly,

or how much money th~ largc,r
clubs arc willing 10 split with the
smaller teams, who say they cari' t
compete for free agents or afford
salary arbitration. Donald Fehr,
head of the Major League Baseball
Players Association, was bewil·
dered, saying: ' It's certainly not
hostile: It sort of is."
- The restructuring committee
voted on its report - due last Nov.
I - but decided to forward it ftrst
to the executive council before siving it to all owners. Riclwd Ravitch, management's chief !~or
negotiator, wants the commissioner
stripped of his labor authority, or
the hiring of a commissioner

.

delayed until after a new labol"contract. Selig said tile owners
wouldn 'I vote On the report until at
least two meetings rrom·now.
- The commissioner search
'Committee. headed by Atlanta
Brave·s ·chairman Bill Bartholomay,
had its fast in-person meeting and
Bartholo!Jiay said the group didn't
feel any time pressure. " It's hard
to search if you haven'i written a
job description," Selig said.
-Selig a(lllOinted Toronto Blue
Jays chairman Peter Widdrington
and baseball special assistant Dick
Wagner to run the commissioner's
office after deputy commissioner
Steve Greenberg leaves in April.
. Greenberg quit because owners

refused to include him in decisionmaking following Vincent's ouster.
" I think when all the commit- .
tees are done you will see a reasoned. change m the landscape of
major league baseball," Selig said.
It's still unclear whether the
larger clubs want the landscape
changed at all. Although the Los
Angeles Dodgers have told Ravitch'
they suppon his plans, the New
York Mets are said to be staunch
opponents and the other big clubs·
have shown only slight interest
· " It's early," Atlanta Braves .
president Stan Kasten said. "And
having a concept is beuer than not
having a concept."
'

Battery players to report for first workouts at spring training camps
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The longwait is over, baseball
fans.
·
Mter another winter ftlled with
too many things. that only serve to
draw the focus off the field, IOday
is the day that everyone waits for:
Spring training start!!
At HoHoKam Park in Mesa,

Ariz.; at Joker Marchant Stadium
in.Lakeland and at Holman Field in
Vera Beach, Fla., it's time for
pitchers and catchers to reporL
More than half the. 28 teamsincluding the e~panston Colorado
Rockies - begtn Cllll!P IOday. By
Friday, tho~e clubs wtll be on the
field for theer first workouts.
"I don't think I've ever looked

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Several resources responded to
last week's column and article
about the Pomeroy-Racine rivalry
·
of days gone by.
In 1966-67 Pomeroy defeated
Racine 49-47 in a barnburner at
Racine. Pomeroy won the reserve
contest 33-24. That game piued
brother against brother as Larry
"Liule Fooze" Wolfe, coaching
Pomeroy. defeated older brother
Hilton "Big Fooze" Wolfe, coach
at Racine.
Turnabout was fair play as
Racine went to Pomeroy, where \he
Tornado reserves won 30-27 to
even the brother:brother series.
· Russ Moore was the head mentor at Pomeroy. His Panthers
claimed the last win in the ~ries'
rinal game at Pomeroy, 44-32 .
That was the last ever meeting
between those two schools.
Craynor Sloane. was tlui head men. tor at Racine.

1966-67 Southern roster
Sherm Cundiff headed the Tornado roster that year with 275
points-scored in 20 games, a 13
point average. Amos Wallbrpwn
was next with 266 points and a 14point average in 18 games. Bob
G111eser had 104 points, and John
McCiiniOCk had 102. Tom Diddle
had 88 points. Other players were
Mark Beegle, Ray Proffitt, Bob
Diddle, Randy Proffitt, Willie.Sellers, Jim Lawrence, Gary Norris,
Tim Cozan, Mike Hayman, Frank
Proffitt and Tom Smith. .
Gary Norris paced the reserves
with 150 points. Bob Diddle, who
had 107, was followed by Mike
Hayman (82), Kenny Thetss (70)
and T. Proffitt (58). Other players
ffi
were Steve Sbuler, Rand y Pro tU,
D. Sauvage, H. Crow, R. Johnson,
Dan Hill, B. Sayre, Melvin
Lawrence, G. Lawrence, Bob
Adams and Billy HiU.
That same Tornado yearbook
lis!ed the "Purple Tornado all-time
·
·

forward .to a spring tra!ning mo~e . So what?
.
IOday, and that means Nolan Ryait
than thts year, '' Ph•ladelp~ta
(lecause starting today, Wlf!S wiU soon be in Port Charlotte, Fla.
Phill.ies preside!'! Btl! Gtles satd, and lo~s will again be coun~ m At 46; this will be the last t:Pi!ndup
echomg the, senument of "!any.
the standings, not the salary arb•tra- for the Ryan. Express, who wtU ~t
So there s ~ comnus:'•oner. S? uon charts.
., .
h.s 51st maJOr .le~ue record th1s
Marge Schott s suspenston. hasn t
E~ though 11 s still a long way year by playmg m I_Us 27th season.
take~ e!Tect. So George Stc•nbren- to openm~. day on Apnl 5, or. ev.en
Ryan,ll see'!'s, !s one of the few
ncr IS about 10 come back. So c!)n- the exhibtuon openers on March 4, players wh~ dtdn t change teams
tracts .~ve zoomed even more mto there's plenty 10 watch.
..
dunng the wmter. .
.
the millions of dollars.
The Texas Rangers open camp · Inc~ you mtssed readtng the
transacteons column for a day !lr
l\YO. here are SO!"e of.the Stars ID
new places thtS ·spnng : Barry
record" as 738.-236 for a 75% win- ley 59-27 Wednesday in the tour- Bonds, Greg ~ux, Andre Oawson, Dave Wtnfiejd, Dave Stewan,
ning percenrage.
nament's ftrst round.
Otto ends fine career.
Eastern sophomlte center Char- Paul Molitor, Wade Boggs, Doug
Eastern senior center Stephanie lie Bissell had a great game against Dra~ek, Jimmy Ke~, Jim Abbott,
Otto ended a fme basketball career Federal Hocking recently. He Dav•d Cone and Kevm MitcheU.
with the fmal regular season game scored 17 points and grabbed a
The World Series champion
at South Poiht Monday.
career high 30 rebounds, possibly a. Toronto Blue Jays were one of the
Otto grabbed 12 rebounds and school record. Bissell out-rebound- busiest teams, lidding. Molitor·and
pouring in 26 points in a great ed the entire Federal Hdi;king team, Stewart and losmg Wmfield, Cone,
effort.
which had 28. The Eastern $1J!Iisti· Key, Tom Henke, Kelly Gruber
Eastern's girls will go to cians and WMPO radio had the . and Candy Maldon~do . The
Alexander for the Division IV sec- eitact same numbers on Bissell.
Atlanta Braves.• losers m the last
tional Tournament finals next
two
World Senes, added Maddux
Until next time see you in the
Thursday. EHS plays Frankfort Victory Circle!
and lost Lonnie Smith and Alejan·
·
Adena, who defealed Symmes Valdro Pena.
.
If recent htstory holds true, a

• t ory CIre
·· · 1e...
··
I0 th e VIC

South Point girls beat Eastern

field and 9-17 at the line. South
By SCOTI WOLFE
Easten Head Coach
Point
27 of 55, including 15-21
Division II South Point for 71 hit
percent
from the field in the
outseonid Eastern 36- 17 in the fast ·
first
half.
The
winners hit 6-16 at
half, then coas••" to a 63-45 mrls'
the line.
,....
..varsity basketball victory over
Eastern had 28 rebounds (Otto
Eastern Mooday nighL
12, Aeiker 6), six assists (Wilson
Eastern se,nior Stephanie Otto 4), three blocks by Ouo, 13 steals,
led the Eagles .(7·13) with a garne- 25 turnovers and' 14 fouls. SP had
high 26 points and 12 rebounds in 38 rebounds (Layne II, Pennington
l'
her last regular season game. Otto 8), eight. assists, IS steals, 16
Symmes VIIUey ~venged an t:m"Amber Ohling~ 1-1-4-9, Aimee ~~~n~ee~~~~~il~ !a~~~ turnovers and 20 fouls.
South Point won the reserve
her lo~s. to Southern by defeaung · Mil!s · ~-0-4, Sherrie SlOver 4-0-8, maintained pace with the Lady
game 40-36. Stephanie Lowe led
the vtS•ung Tornadoes 48-35 Mon- Chrisu Cooper 0-3-3, Bea Ltsle 2· Po'nters
(14-6)
1
d~y J)ight in a high school gJrls' , 0-4,Jennifer Cross 1-0-2, Becky JJiimcf WilsOll notched nine for the winners . w.ith 21 .J?oint.s.
vars•ty baslcethall contesL
Moore 1-0-2, Andrea Moore 1-1-3. Eastern while Jessica Karr added Michelle Schultz and Jesstca RailSymmes (3-17) outscored SHS Totals-12·1·8=35 ~
four, Amy Redovian two, Tara ford led Eastern with nine points
(2-18) 34:19m the mtddte two
, ·congotwoandNiooleNelsontwo. each and Tara Congo had seven.
Eastein plays Frankfort Adena
qu~ en mute to the wm. .
Symmes Valle;r
. K ase Shoemaker notched ~0 in the
Division JV sectional .touma: :Erio.Se!ls led Symmes w,t.th) 8
·
(6.i,Zl·l2·8=48) . . • · · ·. palrlts lead South Point, whife
ment
finals
nellt Thursday at 6:30
pomts, while ~ber Ohbn~er had
Mandy. C~ 1-0-2, Ang•e Pack senior Markes'sa Layne added 19 in
p.m.
at
Alellander
High School. All .
mhe and She'r'e Stover etght to 3-0-6, Julie Wtlson 1-3-5, Heather her last home ganie. Jennifer
tickets
are
$3
at
the
door.
pace ~outh~ s attack. Bea L1sle Copley 3-0-6, Lee Ann Shepherd Naegele had seven, Christy CrcssandAimeeMiUseac~addedfour.
1-0-2, Erin Sells 8-2-1.8, Sarah .well four, while Stephanie Lowe,
Eastern
Smyyes Valley h1t 21 of 52 for Wtseman 2-0-4, Shelly Wtlson 2-1- Yolanda Pennington and Julie
(10-7-11-16=45)
40 percent !1om the field and hit 6- S. Totals 21-0-6=48
McKinne each had ihree.
Stephanie Otto 10-0-6=26,
16 at the hne. South~rn htt 13-61
·
South ~intjumpcd out 10 a 12Jaime
Wilson 4-0-1=9, Amy Redof~r 21 percent and hu 8-28 at the
4 lead, but Eastern came back to
vian
1-0-0=2,
Jessica Karr 1-0-2=4,
!me.
12-10. The Pointers made a late Tar;~ Congo 1-0-0=2,
Nicole NelSo~thern ~bbed 28 rebounds,
period rally to lead 18-10 at the
son 1-0-0=2. Totals~ 18-0-9:45
had e1ght ass•sts, 18 steals, 26
buzzet
·
t~movers and 18 fouls . Sym':"es
Eastern High School athletic
With Otto on the bench most of
South Point
VaUey had 35 rebounds, IO asststs, director Pam Douthitt announced the second quarter Eastern was
(18-18-13-12=63)
28
II steals, 25 turnovers and
that Parents' Night for varsity and outScored 18,7, falli~g 10 36-17 at
Christy Cresswell 2-0-0=4, Jenfouls. Andrea Moore had 6 junior varsity boys' basketball the half.
nifer
Naegele 3-0-1=7, Stephanie
rebouilds for Southern and Jo.nna players will be observed Friday
Eastern kept pace in the last two
Lowe
1-0-1=3, Kasey Shoemaker
Manuel had four. Sells had etght between the JV and varsity games . quarters, but never really threatI
0-0-0=20,
Yolanda Pennington 1- .
for Symmes.
with Fairland.
ened the winners. SP led '49-29
0-1=3,
Markessa
Layne 7-1-2=19,
Ohlinger. had seven steals for
Parents are asked to be on hand after three frames and sailed 10 the
Julie McKinney 1-0-1=3, Christy
Southern.
by 6 p.m. tb finalize planning for 63-45 win.
. There was no reserve game.
the event. The reserve game begins·
Eastern hit 18 of 53 from the Moore 1-0-0=2. Totals- 27-1Southern travels to Alexander
6=63
tQday for a ftrsi round Division IV at 6:30·
sectional tournament game with
Game rescheduled.
Miller at 6:30 p.m . Crooksville
The boys' varsity basketball
game between Eastern and Hannan,
meets Trimble in the nightcap at W.Va. will be played Tuesday
8:15 p.m.
evening at 6 p.m. 'at Eastern High
School. There will be no reserve
Southern
game.
That event was postponed
(6-12-7-10=35)
from last Saturday evening due ·to a
flu epidemic at Hannan High
Meigs boys to host
School.
Eastern wiU travel to Alexander
Vinton County Friday
to face MiUer in the boys' Division
The Meigs varsity boys' basket- IV Sectional IOurnarnent Wednesball team will host Vinton County . day·
in the Marauders' final home game
Bissell's slats corrected
A new b.r11th analyzer Isn't d11lgnad to tpot drunk drlvara. !
on Friday evening.
Eastern's Charlie Bissell , a
lnllllld, It '""''"" breath c:onqionenta that alg1111l cartaln liver
Seniors playing in their last reg' soph()more postman, had a red-hot
and kidney dl11aaat. Raadoula '" almolll lnlllllnta11110ua from
ular season game will be John night from the floor and on the
lila device now baing davalopad at Battalla Memorial lnlllltutl In
Columbut, Ohio.
Bentley, Trevor Harrison, Jay Crc- · boards.
means, Bobby Johnson, Todd Dill
Bissell grabbed 30 rebounds of
&amp;11"11 yogurt flghta mora than juat v.glnal yaaat lnfectlont.
and Kyle Simpson.
th.e team's 48. and led ~he Eagles
Sclanllllll
at the Unlval'llly of Clllfornla/Oa¥11 found thai utart
, Paren\5 night will be observed, wtth. a team·htgh 17 pomts. I~ had
of
yogurt
containing
live cultUru produc:ad lour timet 11 much
11\d tbe:pewly crowned TVC cham- earher been reported that Btssell gamma lntarlaron aatholl
who Ita hut-trlllad yogurt or nona 111
pfpn ' .Meigs Marauder fresqman had a team-leadmg 12 reboun~s.
Ill.
tilisketball ream wiU be introduced. but ~hat nu.mber represented B•s•••
The reserve game will start at . , sell s f1~s1 quar~er performance.
Padlatrlclana In Maywood,llllnola, have found .an lltllllllllvt to x6:30 p.m. and the varsity at 8:00 The Darly Sentmel regrets the
111Y to check younaatar• who hive awaltowad colna: they 1111 a
error.
p.m.
metal dataclor. II the awallowad coin hat r11chlcl the lllomach,
the child can UIUIIIy pal It aafaly and 10 Ia out of dangw.

SymmeS Valley girls ton Southern

J,

·

few more big names might be D'ad- .
ing places iri the next month or so
·once teams figure out what they
need and what's available. Also,,
there are a couple of well-knoion
free agents looking for jobs, with .
Pedro Guerrero and Jeff Russ'ell '
leading the list.
Colorado, holding camp in Tucson, Ariz., and the Florida Marlins;
who headed north for spring traininginCocoa.Fia.,arefulloffamil-:
iar names, including Charlie:
Hough, Walt Weiss, Andres Galarraga and Charlie Hayes.
·
" I want to let· thelll know
they're part of a chosen group;' '
.Rockies manager Don Baylor said.
• 'They're not here because of
chance. We want them here We
put a lot of time and 'effort.into
evety player we drafted."
Baylor is one of a few first-time
managers this year, along with
Tony Perez in Cincinnati, Dusty
Baker in San Francisco and Kevin
Kennedy in Te~as. Lou Piniella,
meanwhile, has moved from
Cincinnati to Seattle.

Belcher, Reds ink contract
CINCINNATI (AP)- Pitcher
Tim Belcher agreed 10 a one-year,
$3.75 minion contract Wednesday
with the Cillcinnati Reds, avoiding
an aroitration hearing that had been
scheduled for IOday in Chicago.
The agreement came on the
heels of arbitrator Richard Bloch's
ruling that awarded second baseman Bip Roberts $3.9 million for
the 1993 season, a decision that did
not sit well with Reds general manager Jim Bowden.
"Once again, a non-baseball
person decides how'lnuch money a
basebaU club will spend," BOwden
said Tuesday. "The system continually breaks new ground for the
players. It is a disgrace.'.'
The Reds had offared '$2.7 million to Roberts, who made $1.5
million last year.
Belcher, who had a 15-14 record
and 3.91 ERA last year, had submilled a $4 minion figure for arbi·
tration, l:ampared· with the $2.1
million he made last season . The ·
Reds had offered $3.3 mUlion.

· Belcher, 31, started 34 games
and pitched 227 213 innings last
season. the most in both categories
among Reds pitchers. His contract
left Roberts as the Reds' second- ·
highest paid player after inftelder
Barr)' Larkin, whp will earn $4.3
million.
Roberts batted .323 with 44
stolen bases and made the NL AllStar team last season, his fast with
Cincinnati. He led the club in bat·
ting average. runs, hits, doubles
and siOien bases and started games
at second base, third·base, left fteld
and center fteld.
He was expected to start at second base this,year, the Reds having
cleared the way for him to settle
into one position by trading Bill
Doran to Mllwaulcee in the off-season.
In his arbitration hearing,
Roberts' agen~ Scott Boras, argued
that Roberts was worth more than
any other leadoff hitter in the
Nation(~! League.
. .
. · ...,

Eastern notes...

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

...

-----------------------Support The Rutland
•

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I

Fire Department

I
I

The Rutland Fire Department is sponsoring· a fund
I raising program to raise money ·ror needed equipment.
I
Persons representing your Fire Depirtment will be
· contacting all homes In the area over the c;omlng weeks,
I askln1 for a donation of $20.00. Persons will be going door 1
1
to door lUld will carry Identification or an I.D. badge.
The Fire Department wishes to thank everyone for their 1
donation by giving a complimentary certificate for an 8x10 1
color portrait to be takel\at the Fire Department.
This fund raisln1 pnlgram Is legitimate and your Fire
Department asks for your support,
I
••

-- --- --- --

~

GET A LOW

PRICETAGON~­

A MAVTAG!
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG

WASHERS ··

·lasls longer. nee!ls !ewer
rc;1a1rs and costs less to
ser\lice
• No . 1 prelerred OrancJ'

DRYEA$

,. No 1 prt!.,IC OrW'I!I"
· DePtnc~tO. I 11Y ~cw.n 111
Commt!CIIIII""""rlft
• f'OlctlJI.n tnlmet

'

DEPENDABLE MI.YTI.G

DISHWASHERS
'NOOocly gtll C•I!'IH CIUI"'ir

• ~ let clt1r11ng

rrnacy

- ...... ..

._. to:OO •·• •• •-o•, • .

_.............. .

l'lliiCWI'IOIIe
I .. .
rtrltttwwilt

'" 112-2111
,..._.., OH.

Pag&amp;-1

Squabbling siblings should set
aside problems for their parents
Dear ADD LaDden: u.y 1
resppnd 10 "Cheverly,

.••.

lmgtime !Mw!c!ies Short of avoiding
dlmer with tbem apin, which is
dam !lear impossible, bow would
you bindle this? ·· SICK OF BEING
SIJFFEDINDENVER
PEAR Sl IFFED: Yau can insist
on lJel*liiO chel:ts or accept lhe fact
that iii tbe inltRst of peace on tbe
home
you'lc going
hit
andfront,
be...,...;,,.
about to
iL lake the

Mel-..

.

'

.

'

who
rcCu!cd to go home for tbe holidays
because be couldn't atand his
family?
.
lam one of five childml. We Ill
ANN LANDERS
live in cWf-.t 11a1a Wo'vc bad
"tm. Loo Anc&lt;ln
our problems, llld 1 have llways
Tim .. Syadlca,.
~
........
•~
-·y
away
from
most
Cnaton S)'llllicat•"
..___ .., ...
family get- tog~thers because,
r-·frantly, they are a pain in the neck. LOVE FROM ANNE MARIE IN
Gem of tbe Dly: Sign )IOIIItd in a
Wen. from now on, I'm going to 1EXAS
lllllllbasilless:Ifyouthinkthedead
e\lel'y one of lbcm, -.1 here's why.
DEAR AliiNE .MARIE: The never come beck 10 life, you should
This . past Thanksgiving, a messageisclear.Siblinpwhomn' comearound.quittingtime.
reunion was planned Ill my parents' fond of each other would be wise 10
Is life pti.Uillg )'OK ITy? W411l to
house. It would be the ftist time in put aside their differences at ~)'0"' social skills? Wrilefor
t3rrarslhatlllofthesiblinpwould holiday time for. the sake of lheir . Atutl..ollders'newbooklet, "How to
be under 1be 111111e roof. To mate parents.
·
Make Friends arrd Stop Being
the situalion even more friglut.ning,
Having said that. rm swe to be Ltwty. •Stlld ast/f-addrtsstd,IOIIg.
we would be 10gether fer four days, blasted by readers recounting the b!UiMss-siu trrve~ aJid a check
22 people in Ill; inclUding grand- muen things a brother li sisrer did. or IIIOIItY ordu for $4.15 (rhis inchildren ages 8 to 15. Two of my They will ask, •y011 expect me 10 · cllldts postage aJid htuullirrg) to:
brothen bad not spoken to each other overlook rltat?" My atiswer 10 all of Fritllds, c/o AM Llwltrs, P.O. Box
for years. We were aU dieading this you is yes. It could be tbe best (and 11562, Cllicago,IU. 6061 UJ562. (In
get·IOgether but agreM to show up last) gift you will ever give your C41111da, Stl1d $5.05.)
10 please our parents.
parents. Go back IIQd read Anlie
When the last sibling arrived, · Marie's leuer again.
having suffm:ct through all the hugs,
Dear Ann Llllden: My busbaild,
kisses, lies and !Doniness, I looked "Lou," lllld I are baying an
The Meigs County Veterans
up and saw the most woodelful sight. argumenL Will you please settle it? Service Commission will meet'
There, • the edge of this $1l8rling
When dining wilh aitolher couple Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Vetermob scene, were my parents. My recently, we got Sluek paying fOr ans Service Office in Pomeroy.
mom was tugging at Dad's sleeve, part of their dinners, since what we
and there were tears streaming down orclefed was much less espensivc. .
her face. She kept repeating,
When the biU came. I put~
·•They'lc Ill here, Dad. Isn't this just money on the table to cover our
wooderfull They are reaDy aU here!" dinners, plus tax and 1 IS peii)Cltt
They both looked happier than I hid tip. Mter several dirty looks from
seen them in years.
the other couple tw1 from Lou. I
After witneuing the joy that added an extra $4 10 cover our
·resulted from the unselfish ~ we , .friellds' llwe of the tip since they
bad given our parents, J docidlld dill failed 10 figure it in wilh their COIL
fromnowonl wiD showupalevery
Lou liells me, "Don' be peUy.lt's
family occasion no ma11er what. It'&amp; , 110 big deal.• If that's the cue, I'm
the least I can do fer my parent~. onlerWJg loblla' nellt time.
Ufe is too shan io do otherwise. ••
Lou and the other man are

•
•

VSC to meet

PIG OUT • David Millette or Boston sits with
his Vietnamese pot bellied pig ''Osc:ar Meyer" at
liis Boston apartment Wednesday. Millette, wh~
cried when he beard tbe verdict that his 60·

pound pig and mascot of Boston's 1992 Rib Fes·
tival may have to go, is appealing a court deci·
sion evicting the pig from his apartmenl. (AP
pboto)

•

I

DAR to celebrate 85th
anniversary in March
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution met in regular session al \he borne of Mrs. Margaret
Weber in Rutlmd.
In the absence of the regen~ the
meeting was opened in ritualistic
form by the vice-regent, Eleanor
Smith. Maye Mora acted as chaplain. Following the sal11te to the
nag and the American's C~. the
Star Spangled Banner was sung
with Donna Jenkins accompanying
at the piano.
·
,Officers reports were given by
Frances ·Roberts and P.hy!lis Skinner. There were 10 members present. Donna Jenkins read the president peral' s message.
Miss Smith discussed the March
meeting which will be the 85th
anniversary celebration with all
state officers 10 be invited·as well
as surrounding chapter-s. The lun •
cheon will be March 20 at 12:30
p.m. at the Holiday lop in Gallipolis. Reservations are to be made by
March 13 to Eleanor Smith. This is
also the month when the American
History essay awards as well as

Good Citize!IS Awards are present·
ed. ·
Maye Mora made a motion to
contribute money 10 ~lp pay for
cookies Rae Reynolds made for
srate conference with Grace Eich
making a conttibution.
. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Cleland
presented a flag to Mrs. Weber 10
be used in Rutland Village.
The program wu presented by
Dean Weber, soil conservationist,
Hocking County. His topic was
"Prehistoric Man and His Tools."
He displayed many arrowheads and
other things made of flint and sandstone, He spoke on be~ng able to
identify the location where he
found many of the items. or particular interest was a necklace of flint.
He said there arc 14.Jndian mounds
in Meigs County.
.
Refreshments, following ~
valentine theme, were served by
the ho~tes5es: Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Clinton
Fisher, Mrs. Stephen Jenkins. Mrs.
~~~bert Jewell and Mrs. Dayton
Parsons.

---filii'
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m 1 w
11073

...
fss

,.PCVVIInl

E~LowPr~

Salt ·Lake City; Utah, "Voices
Israel," Israel, and in ''Auraq," a
leading magazine of Pakistan.
Miss' Fowler is a member of The
Voice Group, Israel, an!l of
Amnesty Jnremational. She aacnds
The Fairview Bible Chun:h where
she sometimes teaches lessons on
The End Times and relllled events.
She was recently nominalcd by
The American Biographical Jnsti:
tute, one of the fomnost publishers ·
of Who's Who in the World 10 be
one of their WOII!en of the Year for
1992 and wiil be receiving a decree
to that effect in the near future.
Two of her poems were recently
accepted into the permanent collection of S.S. Hitbrt of New Delhi,
India, who collects handwritten
poems from poets throughout the
world and exHibits them once a
year.

2!?
•.......
•••

'

loNi!JI ,. do!T*tiC

'nle·~iors Soil and Water Con- and Empire apple for .$21.
servation District I ad!es Auxiliary
Ground cover plants available

·

...... Man ,. .. R.'tt.'
liM. tfW J• e :OOun tel.p.m

Thursday, February 18, 1993

Tree packets available
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG

--llloC="!'·-.. .......

Sentine~

•

. Sandra Fowler, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Okey D. Fowler, West
Columbia, W.Va., has had a chapbook of her poems published tn
Aligarh, Jndia. The boolc. is entitled
"Ever Sun9Cl."
It was produced by editor, poet
and uansfa10r, Baldev Mirza and
come out under the imprint of his
Skylark Publications.
This is the third chapbook of
.poema she has had ~blishcd. Her
fll'St QDe is entitled 'In The Shape
of Sun" and was also published in
Israel in the early 70's with a sec- .
and printing, also in Israel in 197.5.
Her second book. "The Col0111 Cry
in Rain" was done here in the United Srates by Apollo Books, Inc. in
1983.
Her work has most, recently
. appeared in "Appalachian Heritagct Berea College, Kentucky,
"Ellipsis". Westminster
. . College,

•••

~'l1t1

.

The Daily

Fowler has book published

Bacau11 reMarchara have found that the liver producaa
cholllllrol molllly In the waning, they recommend taking anti·
eholm-1 madlcatlona IIIII In the day.
.
• •*
You alwaya gat good advice about your rMdlcatlona from the
ph1rrnaclata Ill SWIIhar • Loll• Pharmacy. When yciur doctor
pra-'IIH the blat, • do the rnt.

SI.U 15HER...,[OH5E

'

By The Bend

dl~

DEPENDABLE MAY TAG
RA~GES
•E&amp;I)' IO CIIM
· ~tllolll

holes more

FlEE
. Dthtry

I

RUTLAND FURNITURE CIC

'7
742•2211
s~room•

. 1•100-117•1217
OHIO

11

I

11

is once again offering for aa1e tree this year include the pachysandra,
packett.OOJI'DIIIIdcoverplanu.
SO plants for $1.5; Baltic ivy, SO
Sln&amp;)e varlelies packets avail- plan~ for SIS; llld crown v~. 72
able this year include white pine, plants for $21.
25 lleedlings for 58; IICOII:h pine, 25
Any of these packets may be
seedling• for $8; Coloraao blue ordered at rJ:1e Mcip S~CD 011ice
~e 2!1 ~:lttfor $8; Nor- at33101 Hiland ROlli m Pomeroy
way
..,Nee 2!1
1p. $8; Mag- or by mall with checlc or money
no11a, five sCecwnp, $5.
order to the listed addre11. All
Variety packell laclude the orderl mUll be pai~ '!"when sub. ~kyard packet which coatalna milled. There is aluntted supply of
1two CICh oliWOCIIIbnlb, aed flolrf. IJICbtl
• erlfti.CLuince, Redollet doaWoocl . l'lcbll wiD be in and lad)' rcr
and pink flowuinl almolldlor $7; Diclam 11101111C1 Malcll19. AD exact
and the t'ra.lt tree packets wblcll illre for pick up wiD be IIIIIOUIICed.
caalllna two eec11 or~~
I'

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o/;

OPEII lEVEII OAYI A WEEK

u.........

StoN -ro: 8:301.111. to I p.rn.lllooMioy ti!!Ougll !'fldly,
1:10 •.m.lo 7 p.m. a.turd8y, . . ILift.IO I p.tn. lundiy

IALLIPDLII

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Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Community calendar
Commualty Cateadar Items
appear two daY~ before u event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well Ia lldvanc:e
io assure publication in tbe cal·
endar.

THURSDAY
· POMEROY - Meigs County
Democratic f\xecutive Committee
meeting 7:30 p.m. at the Carpen!ersU Hall.
RACINE - Racine American
.Legion Post 602 meeting a1 8 p.m.
:supper at 7:30p.m.
; CHES HIRE&gt;-Re.~Unl .at the
·Believers Fellowship Minisuy, one
:mile from Gallia-Meigs County
' Line on State Route 7, will contin: ue through Thursday. PastOr Mar: gllret J. Robinson invites the pub: lie.
ALFRED - The Orange Town,
· ship Trustees will hold a special
meeting at 7:30 p.m. ThUrsday at
. the home of Clerk Patty Callaway.
: HARRISONVILLE • Har:risonville Lodge F&amp;AM No. 411,
special meeting, Thursday; 7:30
p.m. Work in master mason degree.
Refreshments. All master masons
Invited.
: LONG BOTTOM - Special ser:vice, Mt. Olive Communily
:Church, Thursday through Satur·
. "!!ay at 7 p.m. nightly with F.vange: lisl Larry Nix, AshviUe, N.C. Pas·
.tor Lawrence Bush invites lhe pub·lic.
· CHESTER - Special meeting,
Shade River Lodge No. 453,
F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Work
in lhe master mason degree.
Refreshments. All master masons
:Wekome.
. ROCK SPRINGS - Middlepon
Child Conservation League, Thursday, 7 p.m., Rl]!:k Springs United
Methodist Church. Plans will be
made for Husband's Nigh! in
March. "Brown bag" sale. Kilty
Darst and Kelli Snyder, hOSieSSC$.
•
. · : POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, Thursday, 7 p.tn., Sacred
Hean Catholic Church. Call 9925'763 for infonnation.

~ehall.

:: POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
ly Young Democrats will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at ·lhe Carpen~= Hall.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM • There will
be a square dance al the Long Bol·
(om Community Building on Fri·
day from 8-11 p.m. Music will be
f11'0.vided by "OUI of the Blue,"
SYRACUSE· Weekend revival,
Syracuse Nazarene Church, Friday
lhrough Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly and
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Suml3y. Rev.
Wesley B. Frederick, speaker. Mel
and Mary Felts, special singers.
Public invited.
.•

• LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching al)d singing
Friday, 7 p.m., fea!llring local tal·
ent. Pasl(lr Steve Reed invites lhe
public. Fellowship will follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No , 9053 and
Ladies Auxiliary win hold a dance
Friday from 8- 11:30 p.m. with
music by CJ and Country Gentlemen , Everyone wekome.

SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The

Poet's corner
Livlag is sorrow
Wbile walking along
On a bright sunny morning
SIOOd a little brown church
Beside of the road

And there at the door
An old man was crying
Praying 10 God
To lake his soul
•

• And as he prayed
!carS

on his cheeks

With a little shaggy dog
. , Laid deld at his feel
A praying 10 GQ!I
He didn'l understand
The last friend he had
He held in his hands

I walked up and lried
To comfort the old man
• He looked up and smiled
•, .He reached out his hand

He said !hank you Lord
For onswering my prayers
He lried 10 get up
And then he feU dead
•
UvinJ is pain and sonow
To 1f0W old this way
011 folks has feelings
• Make friends with someone

'r'*Y

Frank Drehel
37496 Leading Creelc Road

Middleport, Ohio 45760

•

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ORDINANCE NO. 1~

d

r

Public Notice

Public Notice

Be 11 ordalnod lly th
CounoH of the Vlllogo of
llkldlopan ulollowa:
Wines Family will present a con·
s
1 clloo 1. ESTABUSHIIENT
cen at the Tuppers Plains Church
OF DESIGN REVIEW
BOARD.
of Christ on Saturday a1 2 p.m. fea·
1
In reaognlllool of tho nood
turing " Kevin and His Wonder·
tor the ..llllllahmont of 1
Horse. A covered dish dinner will
pullllc body with the
be held following tile program.
outhorlty to advleo upon
chngeo 10 otruct~- and
REEDSVILLE • A cornbread
objeclo In the lllddllport
Contnl Down- Buolnuo
and bean dinner will be held SaturDlotrlct In order to
day from noon to S p.m. at the Fel·
chengu lhllore
encouroge
lowship Church of the Nazarene,
compotlble with the
Roule 124, across from the Forked
r..torotlon mov-1 JIOW
Run State Park in Reedsville.
In progreeo, the Deaton
Coleslaw, fried po~aoes. hot dogs
Review Boord lo hereby
Hlllllahld.
and chips will also be available.
Secllon I , PURPOSE.
.. There will be a free-will offering.
CouncM, being mindful of
proud ·hlotory of the
lhe
HARRISONVILLE - Har, · lllddlepdrt
Control
risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM,
Dowft- Buolnuo Dlotrlct
. annual inspection, Saturday, 6:30
and of tho Importance of
beauty In the every day
p.m,.Baked Slealc supper. Work in
· master mllSQ!l degree at 7:30 p:m. · 11v.. of our cltluno heraby ·
doclar.. •• 0 matter of
All master m"5sons invited.
pullllc policy that the
preoorvallon, reotorotlon,
CHESTER • Steak dinnei spon- . rehabilitation end overoll
sored by Pomeroy OES, Saturday,
...thelia Improvement of
S· 7 p.m. at the Chester Masonic the downtown dletrlct ore
mottero of pullllc - l t y
Temple.
Involving the hulth, 011ety,
Proaporlty ond wollore of
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus
the people. The purpo11 of
Western Style Square Dance Oub,
lhlo ahlptor lo to:
dance, Saturday, 8- tt p.m. Tom
(I) llolntlln ond enhonco ·
tho dlotlnctlve character of
Poe, caller. Refreshments. Public
the Central Downtown
invited. ·
Buelneoo Dlotrlct by
oaleguordlng
the arch I·
NITRO, W. VA. - Liberly
tocturel Integrity of tho
Mounlaineers, Saturday, Cin-San
vorloua period atructurea
Theatre, Nitro, W.Va.
wlt.hln II, and to prevent
lntruolona ond oltorotloRo
within lhla dlotrlct thol
SALEM CENTER • Star
-uld
Ill lncompotlble with
Grange and Star Junior Grange,
.th
..
utebllohld
chlroctor.
Saturday, 6:30p.m., potluck supper
(b) Provlclelor 1 .meaeeoof
and work project. All members
deelgn review for other
auend.
oapecta of ·community
development within and
HENDERSON. W.VA. · Gallia
oround tho Central
Twirlers Western Square Dance
llcwft- Bualnooo Dlotrlct
lhlt will lie of ony
Club dance Salurday 8 It Pm
He
'C m n ~ t • Cenie ·•
•aolollnco 'In ochlevlng 1
n erson om U 1
r,
more pt..olng environment
Henderson, W.Va. Btll Bush,
'lor tho reeldento of ond
caller. Public invited.
vloiiOrlto tho Vllloge.
Slctlon Ill. DESIGN RE· COOLVILLE • A missionary
VIEW BOARD.
convention will be held at White' s
(a) J'he Ooalgn RCIVJIW
ehapel Wesleyan Church in
· Coolville Saturlla:y and Suilday at 7 I
p.m . nightly and 10:30 a' '"· on
Sunday with Rebecca Bibbee from
India. Public invited.

: THURSDAY · Syracuse Village
Council will rnee1 in continued sestion Thursday at 7 p.m. at the vil-

; Wilh

Public Notice

Boord, .._.,,.. ,.,.,od
to •• tho Review Botrd, ,
oholl conolal of aenn
m.,bon.
The Mayor of tho Vlllogo
of lllddlopOrt ohiR, with lhe
evloa' ond ao""""t of tho
vua.ge Council, eppolnllho
1Bo11ordw:lng mombere of tho
01
1. One member of the

VIllage Council.
2. One 111mbar of tile
VIllage Planning Com·
mlulon.
3. One owner of private
rul property locotld within
Central Downtown Pre•·
erwadon Dlotrlct.
4. Two proprietor• or
monogero of retail buol·
nHHo locotod within tho
Central
Downtown
PrellrYIItlon DlotrlcL
5. One regletered otch·
ltect or other deolgn
prot.oalonel.
· 8. Ono member of the
Middleport Merchant A..o.
elation Hloctod from 1 llot
aubmhted by the A•
ooclollon of thr.. ourrent
m.,barothlrlol.
AU memllore of the Boord
oholl Ill clllzono of llelga
County
1 here 1
' IXCIP
member
with • corloln
pr0 f 1 1
11
1
••• ono exper 11 0
d•lrouo,
ouch mernberahlp
on tho Board oholl be
permlllld and plaold on tho
boerd by eppolntmont of tho llayor. At lout four of tho
m - . ofthl Boord ahiH
111 reeldento of the village.
(II) Each appointed
member oholl eervo 1 term
of 1wo· yNro and moy 111
reeppolntod for termo of
two yooro,uooptlhlt ol tho
Initial oppolntmonto, thrM
member• oholl be •P·
polrftod ~r 1 one yoor torm
andmoybereoppolnlodfor
tome of two yoore. · .
(c) The memlllrl ohlll
IIIVIIwlthoutoamplnOidon
tram tho vtlloJ: ond may 111
t:emovod for uotoeuu by
tho lloyor with Council
approval.
(d) Tho memlllre of lhe.
Boordlhlll oleel:
1. One memlllr to -ve
.. Chllnnon.
2. Anothor member to

Public Notice

•• Yloe CiialiiMn to In whloh they oholl 111
ao Acting Chairmen In ' pro-led. Theoe orlterlo
the ollaence of lhe aholl lnalude opeclflc
Chllrlllln.
oanolder..ono 10 111 given
A Boord ,..,...,, ohlll " to building molorlola
Ill "pointed by ... lllyar
londocoplng, ligna, llghtlnsi
with Council oppronl and end orchlt.cturol elylo for
lhll d ..lgn.. aholl · - · tho propertleo within I
~':!!"1 .;. DUnES OF THE Plooervetlon Dlotrlct and
__.,, •·
proporUeo odjooont 10 1
REVIEW BOARD.
PIIIII'YIIIon Dlotrlct. SUCh
The Review Boerd oholl crllerlo, ruleo · ond
hove the following dutlu:
rogulotlono oholl not 111
(I) Tho Review B!~ord odoptod until oflor review
ohlll ,.,._ and oct upon and reoammendltlono by
Ill appllcotlon for ' I he VIllage Planning .
cortlflcotoo of approprl• Commlulon and oppro..l
ateneeo •• required In ' by CounciL
Slctlon VII of thlo Zoning
le) The Revlewlroard lillY
Code.
recommend 10 lite Planning
(b) The ReviiW Boord Coromlaelon end Council,
lhlll 00 ~~ 01 or""""" to Ill leglolollon that would ..,..,
conduct-. or •••lot tho -veto .,..uUfy, p........,e,
oonducllon 1 1 oontlnulng rea tore end dovoloo the
· ourvey of Ill •-•·
VIllage. Towordo thHe
llulldlng.o, otructurea, endo, the AeviiW board
homel,-rbofartoro- oholl work with 'the ·
object• of environ men Ill 1 opproprllll Vllllge olllcllll,
and ...lh!lllc In-tin Ill• ' employee• and depart•
VIllage which lila Boord on • mente ond Joint m•tlngo
tho llul• of lnlormodon 'with ouch oHtclolo, am·
ovola.bte or ,...,.. . to It, · ptoyHo and deportmenla
hlo reooonto 111111¥0 are cir 1 may lie held far thlo
will lie ellgllllo lor pu~
·
deolgnatlon •• • Pr••· ,, (f) The Rr.ilw board may
ervotlon Dlotrlcl. No .make reoammendotlono 10
Preoervotlon Dlolrlct ahill '' Ih• PI onnlng Commloolon
Ill ..tobllehld n~· I upon and Counall for lddhlono or
tl!e approvol ol ouncll · rev1alone to thll Zoning
oner review and recom- Code.
men dation by the VIllage
,( II) Tho . Ro.vlow Boord.
Planning Commlulon.
may, wllllln Ill copobllllllli,
(a) Tho ·Review Boord
porlorm auch o - doolgn
•hell work for tho ,1'8view ,.....,. lUte oo may
oondnulng lducotlon of tho be required lly the01
,..ldento olllle VUIIge with Preoarvotlon ond Doelgn
ruplctto lhe orchlteoturol fevtew Rogul ..lono and 11
and hlotorlc herllege of • 111ay 111 roquootad or
Pre11rvotlon Dlotrlct deof8· outhorlzod by tho Vllogo
nolod under tho promlono Pionnlng Commloolon or
of thlli chopler, ond ohlll 1~uncll.
moko every · oiiO!I to · Section V. ORGANIZA·
Improve tho overoll dHign liON AND RULES OF
and
envlronmonlll REVIEW BOARD.
awor-.o of lho people. ·
v (a) AH mllllfRiio oholl Ill
(d) The Review Boord held 11 tho cell of thl
ohllllncludotho Socrollry Chlklrmononcht•uchoof lntorloro "Stondordo for ·tl~o •• the Boerd ehlll
Rlhollllltollon" guldelln.. · determine ond eholl lie
to Hllblloh criteria, ruiM open to the public exoopt
ond regullllone not when an necutl.. -olon
otleerwloe Included In thlo lo aulhorlnd lly low. A
chop tar for evoluollng quorum oholl Ill p-ont
lppllelllone for cartiiiCIIH Wllon II ..... four (4) of the
of opproprloteneoo oub- m.,lllro ore preoonl
IRPIIIId 10 It and tho man(II) The Review Board

°

pi•-·

Public Noelce
iliil iiiOili &amp; - ,_of:;

I{ I&gt;

~-=~===rr-=====~
Public Noelce

••

nd....... .

Public Notice

4:30 P. a !NY IEFOII

CALIFORNIA
15 Ses1l0111 '15

.....

o-~n-

POOL

•

Starts at 12:00 noon on
Sunday, February 21
Open Bowling
12:00 noon

lhe VII-Zoning~

(o)P..allngConlui• cr
Prior to eny required •
oppllootlon horeund•, •
proopoatlve appllaont 1UJ
requeot • prell•lnery •
milling with tho IIOIIrd to
preoont a-1 ~Jiui&amp;wtkln
on Intended ociUOftl lnd •
r-1•• gonerolluldlnol ·.
from tho Boor llelore
--~I ng wllh ou II-·
proc....
oldollgft. The
--~-u fum,_,_
- 1 • 'I• •
rfC101d of the guklorece IJ
provided at ouch COJI•
lonnco otlhl roq-t oA the .
proepacllv. opplcllll.
.

-

_

........ _

SHRUB&amp;IREE
TRIM and
HAUUNG

I

•FIREWOOD

llllll,tOOond

....
,_._._oq.
leer.

~~~-In

-4111.S
2UIIIUI
· - -......
-.. ,..-1
ft. .....

.......,

.
Coi81..-710Uor

USED RAILROAD TIES

eGis.....,

IEYIII'S LAWI
.IUIII,TEIIIIICE

e(·~··
......li•l

,,.

.. 5

FlEE UTIIIAYES

~Mceeil._

915-4473

To, ovoid undue delay ·of .
Downtown deveiOpllkltRRt.
projecto, the llulgll ,..._
Boord oholl meet to ,
conolder en opplloolion IDf·
Boord epprovll within lhlrty ,
(30) doya of tha dele • ,
comr,leto ond acceereto ·
opplcotlon !hereof hoo ,
been lied. The Boord lhll ·
wlth.lil olxty (80) dlyo ol
ouch llllng dote either ,'
approve, oondiUollllly op, '·
prove, "r
the .
oppllcolon.llo
oA 116
lpptlcltlon Ia luuocl, the
boord aholl opeally ·In
writing the IIRiniiiiUPII ·

667-6179

2-7·92-tfo

Willi

-dOW&amp;

'el

Gl'tlade.

•BACKHOE

HAULING

•TRACK

::'Z.

LOADER

UMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Rets•able Rates
JOE H. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON

modllloetlonllhll, If IIIJfllkl.
10 by ... opptlcont, woulel ·

EICIVITIIIG

(Coeellkluldoo ...... l)

(614)

2==("'

--lareee
iOiiis

EQUIPIIED ..
IUTUID, ON. !
742·2455 .7,

Bedrooms, . ..Din. ,....,m~, ~r"Qg__.~mf!, ~~~~ ."
. · lfblrlpool Applianees, Sylvania TV's.

SOFA· BEDROOM
SPECIAL
SALE -Light
or Dark

HUge seloctio•
of cou•try •••
co•tomporary
stylos. Tlno
latest fallrics
a•tl colors
HIGH
QUALin....
LOW PRICES!
·Prices start

At Only

$299

O•k

.

-sturdx

Canstrsct•a"
· DRESSER
MIRROR, CRiST,
H~DBOARDr

NITESTAND
ALL FqB.

ONLY

$444
Reg. s639

UCIIIE GUN
ClUI
GUll SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 ....

C~RPET ·

SALE

.....

••tiYCIIINII
AlL . . .U
~

IEI'S=w.cE

SEIVICE

•.4~,4.
WHIRLPOOL
METAL
LAUNDRY SPECIAL STOUGE
SUPER
SUPER
CABINETS
CAPAC In

Church personnel for 1993 at
Alfred United Methodist Church
inclulle: adminislrative council,
Russell Archer, Jay leader; Lloyd
Dillinger, Sunday school superintendent; Nina Robinson. lreasurer;
Kathy Watson, education; Nellie
Parker, UMW president; Ruth
Brooks, youth coordinaiOr. Thelma
Henderson 'and Nina Robinson are
on pasiOr-parish relations commit·
tee. Communion slew.a rds are
Charlotte VanMeter and Doris
Dillinger. Trustees are Russell
Archer, Tim Spencer, Lloyd
Brooks, Lloyd Dillinger and
Richard Spencer. Sarah Caldwell
and Lloyd Dillinger are county
council representatives. Nellie .
Parker is contacl reporter.
Pat Kea10n is recovering at her
home following major surgery at '
St. Joseph ' s Hospilal in Parkersburg, W.Va. Visiting her were her
sister, Mayme Mobe, and aunt
Princess of Walnut Grove, N.C. '
Nina Robinson received work
lhat her daughler-in-law, Janet
Robinson, Belpre, had returned
from a visit io her daughler, Julie
Smith, Topeka, Kan.
Lisa and Kevin Lule announce
the binh of a doughier, Chelsa Ann.
Grandparents life} oyce and Jerry
Burke and Linda and Bob Lute.
Great grandparents are Charlone
and Warren VanMeter.
Lori and Allen Harrison, Caldwell, visited her parents, Marilyn
and Wilbur Robinson.

. WASHER
•2 speed, heavy duly
o5 cycle
-Magic Clean filler
oGentla Waah
Syolem

•Eioclronlc Dry
Mioar
oHamper Door
•End-at-Cycle Signal

of~~.:t!~mp.

Reg. $489 • w•ite Reg. $449 • w•Jte

SALE

SALE

419

5388

5

Prlceo Include delivery, allup and removal
ol old

SPRING AIR .
·BEST REST

·saaOL

lo. ·~

$1 01 f1l Ea. Pc.
$299GienStt

..._,_

SAVE •195

CAPACin
DRYER

SERTA
SERTAPmiC
5

119°~•

lo.P~

. $169 F1l Ea. Pc.
$399 a.. Set

211 L .....t~sn.
NM'IOJ.OI•

HOWARD

CHIRUE'S

EICAVADNG

SMALL DOZER

BUWIOZER, IIACICHOE

WORI;

-lRACICHOE WORK

AYNI'BLE

DRIVEWAY WORK
llldUMmONE
DEUYERY SERVICE

SEPTIC IYSTB?S,
HOSE SITES end
TRAILS! liTES, ·
LNIDCl£1. .1G,

OAIVEWA'IS _,.AUED
Lf?IE!'IONE·TRIICIONG
FIIEE ESTISIA11:5

IIEASONAitE IIAIES

992·7553

c.....,.

992·3131

PO?DJY,OL .

'

Pt111eroy, Clio

SIZED UMESTONE

BASEMENTS a

992-3470

HOME SITES
HAUUNG: LlmHione,
Dirt, GnMI? and Coal

OWNER:

Jeff w

...........

IJCENSFO Mil 8Di1JED

PH. 614-992-5591

CHESTER AGRI
SERVICE

FORIYER
BIOIIE
TAIIIIG

.rJ~JSTCr

f.iiX
·Buckeyp Ft'l'cls
·Forttll701
fJulk
.-. rJ:l c;
·Ptor1ccr SeecJs
·F;Hrn SuppltPs

........, ....laci••,.

..... ltl.,

14 SESSIOIS- 114

Umll2 Per Cullomer

614 ·985·3831

1001 IIIIIL FIL 20

. 949·2826

~JIYMIR

Quality
StoH Co.

SIZED IJIIESTOIIE
FOR SAlE

Call 614-992·
6637

St. II. 7

c......., 01.

HOURS:

Sund.ay . MGncl.ay - Closed

TueSday · Wednes.d•y . F rldo~y _ 9 : 30 a .m . _ .S : lO 0 '"
ThurSdiiV - S..turd.ay _ lO: DO
· l :OO 4). m. · -

•.m.

f·

104 Mulberry Avenue

Pomeroy . OH 45769

Calltlaets

20%

•aratntettd Scholarship Money
for all College bound students..

'

·regardleSs or iiCOI'Iie ·
.regWiess ol glades
'pkla $20k gJallteed 1o1m
·regW~ess ol ad

...

SPRING AIR
ULTU PWSH
· JUMIO

-=
......
..................

'239 Twits Stt
5
369 Fill Ea. Pc.
5439 Glee1Stt

To ®IIIICI yow~ 11101•y
cei61UI5, i
Open Mon.-Frt.11Horsat.1H

•

"r ..,
.i-t
_.,
2:
I
•

T

~~~a.'!"u - -

-

I

.........

IISSELL IUILDEIS, liCe

J:r,111eL2a ......
. . . . . . 12

-

•

,. ........

' · New Hom11 • VInyl Slclng
~

,,

•
/

.

'

..

•

·

C()MIIpCW. _. RIS~ENTIAL .
PUIC IS'l'IIIA'IU
•

. \,

.

47Ht h. II."' • I~ . . 011 II. 7
.... ~••., ..... 241

·~

Room

I

•
,•
•

IELUI'S CUSTOM
111111111

New Cnaga~l'Mid wrndowa

.,...."

n•441·•• • 141-2160

~

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND ClEAASNG
WATER a SEWER
UNES

2-4·93- I mo.

e(hlna
ca•lnets
•Wardrobes
•Utility

.....

.......

992·5335•
915-3561

PONDS

36970 tall Rn RIIIPCI

11281931Un

•ctowan on•

Deli•••
..
(614) HJ-5449

I&amp;CUCAYAnH
IUu.DOZING

SERVICE

ENFORCED

· 15 Patterns
' of VInyl
Floor
Covering On
•.Sale

••••••••

$40.00•L•••

•

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE

20 Styles of
Carpet On
Sale

ILL MI..._.

PERSONAL
CARE FOR
THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSE
·WE CARE.
992-5858
696-1'290

..._and•adll•ol

SALE PRICES THROUGHOUT THE STORE!

FIIEWOOI.
FOR SALE

121:11. . . .

EOIO
&amp; SAWS
· SALES AND SERVICE
Porto lnd Sic .... for ..

.Alfred area
happenings

'

WE TOTE TilE NOTE!

IIAIIIIS
IUIIIWI .... ?IOWIII
TAIDISII PIISII MilD

KANAUGA - Square dancing
and clogging at lhe DAV building
from 6:30-11 p.m. Music by Colintry Grass and 'Bluegrass Revival
with Bobby Taylor, West Virginia
fiddle champion. Public is invited.

REEDS VILLE - Patty and
Lenny, Youth Ministry Ventrilo·
quists, will perform at South Bethel
New Testament Church on Sunday
from 6-7:30 p.m. Further informalion may be oblained by calling
985-3505. Everyone welcome.

w. ..,...... v•• ~a~~aaa,rriiii

FIIEWOOO FOR SALE

'

POMEROY • The Gallia Area
Ostomy Association will meet at
2:30p.m, Sunday at the cafeteria of
Velerans Memorial Hospilal in
Pomeroy. The hospilal will provide
heverages; and refreshments' will
be provided by members. All inter·
ested Meigs Countians are invited
to altendt

FertiUzlng, Weodlng, ancf
s ti ..
Slerull ancf Tree :r-ieeg
I Awuuwel
AFI1101IIdldell
...ll ... a Colnnterellll
fiMe.t-..

HOCKINGPORT · There will
be a square dance Saturday from 811:30 p.m. in Hockingport at lhe
Reynolds Building . "Out of the
Blue" will perform. Ronnie Wood
will be the caller. Everyone welcome.

SUNDAY

UCIIE,OIIO
614-949·2202.
6·1 ..71

949·2391 or
I·ION37·1460

sto,.ac..,..,.

·

f01a To R~cDNr YDIII' I•" •
r
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office S utiug

"H~/pint.

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
COISTIUCTIOI

';;;:~~-=::;:::~~~~~~~:::;:=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;

RUTLAND · There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from .il
p.m. to midnight. Music will be
provided by Pure Countij Band.
Public invited.

Snodgrass Up.olsterr

BILL SLACK
,92-2269

11\jo .....

c•llgoo

(f) Tl- Umlllor Aatlon

~

'REMOVAL

. . . . . , . . . . . . of ......

--..

·~

..

lox 119
·
Mhltlleport, Ollio.45760
{614) 143·5264 1mio93111n

... ,......,

949·2823

TOURNAMENT

·

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • ll••t

"" FlEE llottle of

614-992-3432

~

Life • 'Medicare • cancer • Fire. Hullh.
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

v.Jat~ul..cu

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES

•

AIIIIICAII .IIEUL Ufl ....
ACCIDENT IIISUUICE

TINS

PlaiCAIIOI

lor,...._.-

Pag' I

- - - ·

. . . . . . . . .UUII

(c) Before adoption of :
ouch- of Pll
the Rov..w lloard IUOh
ru ... ohlll Ill ""~ 1...., to
tho VIllage Plennlng
r-111111endodou and to
Council for opproWI. 8ucll
rule• ahoH nat Ill ....,..,.
without prlo( Council
appro'nl.
(d) Raqulremonta for
pulllla -tinge lllloN the
Review lroard and for pullllc
notice • - • - Ill ••
fo-: For v w - and
appoola, they ohll Ill u
provided lor ,.,...,_ Md
eppull, ,..,....,..,. under

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

n( &gt; \

H l I I I I I\

pro01dure Md ,.,..wllloo fDf -.
regular end opealal
lllllllnooiO ocaa•pltt the
~~'r" of thle Zoning

Comllllulon

•

lhlndllr. Febr1*y 18, 1893

Thureday, February 18, 1993

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

.. I

... 614-915·3949

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

IOWOFIRIII

oa •

.

I Jc.IIJ

11a SEIIICI

2/11191/1 - ...

'·

.,

'"

�18, 1993

Ohio

SNAI'Ii'"' hy llrm·&lt; llcutl i&lt;·

51

Renlals

.·-·-. 1- ........
3 Announcements
Iloilo Dolo Doll -

$40. -

Eam

-·

1

lladroom

..,.._. ... ~ou~-..auon :

Eaator Bunny

2 btdroom home, baumenl,
LAYNE'S RJANITUAE
New ......... 304-~5181 .
Complllle home fumllhlnQI.
2BA, boao-. Qolttpollo, $350 Hout11: lion-Sat, 1-5. 614-44&amp;.
par. pluo _[)op&lt;&gt;olt &amp; 0322, 3 m!IM out Bulavllll ~d.

-·

~ 'Lana 114-...,15.

olty,614-388!1!141.

E_.er Ia

• ·.:,
· =,...,-::-:-=-:-:-:-:-,..,-:--

GIIILS !!I UYE Ill 24 Houra A
!fay! Tal! 0no On Ono! Cal Now

rosr
GfFICE.

!u

1:- - 3 3 1 1 eot. . 4180.
.,_91 P., llltft. MUM Be 11 yra.
\Wid• Co. 602-631..-15.

614-2!!6-6520

O

" " D
"'

~

G••

Heat,
Waadbumer,
1300/Mo. S300 Dopo.it. 114-·

-75.

ACROSS

,..,_ !

1!115 .Dido CuiBrougltam 2 botnll~ ,
fUI · Overy opll.ft, 3015 '
V-8, $2100, 11tlll2..7tl.
,

PHILLIP
ALDER

1111-Fkoibinl--. :
$3,100, CON IM-441-7S41.

!
I

0

1111
Touruo
LX
U
,IH.
aood

W.!.':::l', " ·~· i•

1111 ct.rvor, 2.2 utor qtna,
1uto., no lfr, good cond., 11,800.
1'14o446-1168.

NORTH

t
t

lnlintalned"; 30WTSo4248.

•

675-~03.

,... O.k Furnltur•, T•~••·
t765.
Challr11, China's, Hutch", Etc.
3 BA, 2 both, ....... In etty. Colt River Valley Oak fumllure,
Thuroday A Frldoy only. 114- ~•armee Crllk Ato~d , Glllipolll,

ofltL~ .

The World Almanac t~ Crouword P.rnle:

BRIDGE

I

*•

Nelrty new full 1ize bed with
3 Bedroom Home In Chelhlre, mattma I springs, $100. 304-

.

_1

power,
kaldMI, 14,000 iftNH, j
11,100. IM--1271.

1•. F- Dotlvory.

M~rch

Autos for Slle

1-884---,N""to-.,-.""'•..,...sx""'""
. 'll"",."".w-...;
.

Mil Clil 114-446o4602

utitltla.. Avallabta

• WJ!lS;

UVE CHATLINE 1.f00.-33!19
lkl . .~94~. $3." Pw l[ltn. lluat
.11 Vra. Unletar Co. (602) &amp;31-

71

In Alo 1-11144.

-

Gttndl, Acroa From Untv.,. Killer Chwry Mctroom suit tor

......,. gho hor •

KIT 'N' (.:1\ HLY LE'•' hy Larry WriJ:hl

AI Carpot A VInyl In Stock On
Solo. liJotlollan Carpoto, An ~-

41 Houses lor Rent

• doll

Household
Goods

The Dally Sentlnei..-Pagt-11

Ohio

.Q

EEKANDMEEK
I ll I

WEST

... ,

1HE. M\RI&lt;ORS

... ( ) ...

Ohio ~4-446-4316 .

PICKENS FURNITURE
4 Room houu wlbath In Mud·
Newi\JaH
eoc Sullable tor couple or Sen.
114- HouMhotd fumiahing. 112 mi.
chlzan. Altlrwa
Jarrlelto Ad. Pl. Plu~nl , ,WV,
2~·1102
ca11304-115·1450.

•III

,....,eel.

·

~TART!kl6

lr I

10 C:/)

EAST

• 8 7z
.Q61

••\1053

.H

·~
z
t ' 87632

.109 872

.AK

SOUTH
.KJ961

.K

B!Jslness
Opponunlty

BARNEY

!NOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO. ·

4

recomfAOAds lhat you do bus!n,ess with people you know •nd
NOT to Blind money lhro~h I he
mall until you have Investigated .
the oHering.

Giveaway

~clop
3~

to • good home 614·

4 8Multful Pwe alae• Part Lllb
Slborian. -ky, 3 - · 1

F...... , 614-256-6737.

'

-

Pupa:

JEiklw&gt;uftd O.a, IM-311-1335.

Darttng .......................
~...... ~·- 1 ...... 1 .........

&amp;---.:.S31.
Fl~ .. . .

Sll
adorablt
~·· . nHd •
holM,
call 114-W . 5M. •

WO&lt;kl Eocolloot Poyl AaHmble Producls At Home. Clll
T911 Fr•. 1·800-467-5561, Ext.
313.
•

Slo pupo, 112 Shophood, 112 Col.... 6M. .s..t351.
·

Electrk: .. n, axpertencl.cl
In
commerclel and rwkllnfl.. l, MW

LoSt&amp; Found

Found AI

Btac:k - . . ,

Dot. 61W&amp;l'·7211.

Slza

•""'-

Real Estate

2!1 ............

llaogto, -

toSpuda.

Lo.l: 2 10M aokl 1153 due
ring. :mel 91. ' 3ril Sl., Mid- · 114-1112·2:111. -

·

Loot: -WI.ong R.., .,..,

........ PlllllniM, COli• W/blue

1 a g , - - k ..... "Sluy", ·-5-3310.

BE TI-lE

'&gt;l-l~lrl-l~tw

and t thoollng. Apply al Blinllt (:onllrucllon Campsny, 124 , W.
llahe. Pom..-oy, Oh. 114-192-

5001.

All roal estate advertising in
this newspaper is subjec110
lho F-at fair Housing Ad
ol 1968 which makes it ilegal
to adverlise "any prelarenm,
limitation or discrimination
basod on raoo, oolor,leliglon,

S.nd ,..ume lo: Bo• t:LAMO,

cJo Galll~lt Dally Tribune, 825
Third Av1., GIIUpolls, OH 45631.

-HoaMhAido

Home HNJih Aldtl W1nted For
Work In Galllpollt Ar... calll14569-4111 For Uottlnlonn.rlon.

se;clam~ial

status or national
origin, or any tnuenlion to
make any such prolerence,
k~itatlon ot discriminalion. •

Musicians drummer 'Winls to

}oln or lorm group doing
country 1nd rock, excel._,. . •
qulpment, 614-698-2416 or 614-

.

This newspaper w~ not
knowi"!!y aa:ept
advopi58m6NS lor real eslale
which is in violation of rho
law. Our 1'8ader!il are hereby
informed that all dwe•ings

50 · People To Lou
No Will Power NMdld .
100% GuarantHd.

..,_'901d

Local Auto
Seeking An Experienced
Manager To Haridle All
Functions. Send lnqulri1s
CLA 2S9, cJo Gallipolis
·
825 Third Avenue,

~LL Y""' SaiH Must 8a Paid ..
~dwance . DEADLINE: 2:80 p.m.

u.. dar MloN tt. lid t. ta run.

Sundoy _,.., • 2:00 p.m.

r.m.

1J

2:00

45ti31.

THE PAMPERED CHEF
EARN GREAT$$$

PUblic Sale
&amp; Auction

1

Rk:k PMrson Auction Company,
W tiiM aYdiooMr, complete
s.rvk:e.
UcenMd
auc:llon
I&amp;I,Otdo &amp; Wnl VIrginia , »t773-5785.

Wanted to Buy

9

304-173-5343.

Lot wMh uliliU.. . Included In
Mldrlllfl ort, &amp;M..ftl-2863.
Wanlad standing Umber, top

pUt,

tr.. "llmates,

loQQing compiny, 304-

115-3055 or-195-3138.

standing timMr·c•
Cllh wiMn cont...cl II
,
haM l&amp;lbllily 1-.wane• Jo n G.
Willen, Boa 315, Sardis. Otdo
43946, 6J4..48:J.1605.

Wanted

w. ..o&lt;t To auy: J ...k .......
Wflh Or Wlthoul lllalors. C.ll
Larry .U¥ely. iM-JIII.S1303.
Top PrLr~ P.W: Atl Okf U.S.
CoiM, Gold Rings, SiiQr Coins,
Gold Colnt. III.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Galllpolle.
WaniM: 22 C1llber Pump l
l.rlllr Action RH.... 12 • 410

G.uge Pump ShOiguns, SoUd

Or Vent Alb Modell Only. Guns

1970 And otdor, 614-44&amp;-1822, 8

P.ILOJ Lat..-.

Employment Services

Do You LOVE Ta Cook? An Elllchlng Naw Concept In Ho.,e
P1rtr Plln -Seeking Ambitious
lndlviduala In Your Arw1 To

financing, 304-t1S-2484.

Tools, No Oallverin, No Quotas,
Delermlne Vour Own Hrs, NO
GIMMICKS.

3 bedroom home, corner lol ,
Camp ~ey. Pt. Pft. By owner.
614-446-8148 aft• 5:00 PM.

Call ~ITA Aher 4 :00

8 room home, 2 ICret bolt
ramp, 3 bedrooms, with or
withoUt
furnhure, compl818
kitChen, hNI pump, 304·882·
2069 or·eea-2227.

Demonstrate Quality

Kitchen

•AVOIH- AU AREAS! Shar• your
llmli WMh w . Vou.ll love the

. . . . . ny. 1-800-192-615e.

AVON ! Ai ,.,.., I Shlrter
304..75-M:Ie.

WANTEO. llo9ln
••nllng 1913F SFo011on.

~DtNATOA

lac ; t

fiM Holt FMnlltel or rench

• ....,.., FOf 1 Monlh Summer

_

..., . Good S u - o l

--OH-

-

WonMn: Make more moner!
FrN •lglw wHk job prepara11on
program about nonlradltlonal
•mploymenl, (ONOW), 1· 80Q..

637-6508.

,18=.,.w=a_n_t...,ed.:._to.:._D_o:,......,....
tM2 LPN, graduate looking tor
part· Ume or full-lime job, wag••
negotiable.
614 -38a-8944
anytinw.

Allerlllono

·

S I

614-245-9263.

•w ng,

II ndl
•

ng,

CMd C1ra prcevld.d In my
home, warm nutrl11oul meal•
plu. snaeks, tlruelured K•
UviU• run like a day cara, 15
yea,. 11perlenc• 3 opening :~
'-fl, S35. per child or $55. tOJ 2
children from same tamllr .-r
WNk, Bee~ tor appolntrunl
304 ..75-785 .

Georg• Por111M Sawmill, don•t
haul~ log• to tt.. mill Just
eall

5 L8dla wtto Would Uke To
. . . ....,., Cal 114-446-3351.
~poora,

Wanted ~
Responslbla. /Sales
P•rson NHded With Goad Drht·
lng R.cord, Relareneu Necos·
sary, Must Be Reliable, Honest
I
Will
Groomed,
Send
Response To: CLA 257, c/o Gal•
Hpolls Daily Trlburwt1 •825 Third
Avenue, G1lllpoUs, 011 4563t

fllfUTt~fl&gt;.

Julie

Wllh Floo_- 9c-lo.

cal Or Wrtto LEC, P.O. Boo 261,
419-435-0717.

75 ~1957.

Mtlurw INRIIgef will babysit
weNng• and wHkendli. In Vln~on aru, rellabll, r•sp(,onslble,
have rwter1ncH. 614-388-9111.
Mitt P•uta·a 0~. C1r1 c.,_r., 1
Block WHI 01 Nlf'C On Jaekton
Pike M·F I ·A.M. ~5: 30 P.M. U
OU.Ihy And Eltpertence .. The
t1 Coneem For Vow Chlkl's
c.re.· C1ll Us For A Vlah . lnt.nt
/Toddlers 614-446-6227. Pr...
chool..-. /School Age 614-4468224.

EIR TREE .9ERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrM Almoval, li.CSg•
Trimming. Fr.- Etlimatet ! 614-

SMALL
WANT ADS ·

:J67.7157 Aft• 4p...,.
- - - - - ' - - " , - - - -1:Prce..sslonlll

certified

nus ng

llkl want• to do In home eare,
11. . . _
,..""'.,.. , ..... 304-67..-,_
tor Er~.
.

PNX

Quality ctnnlng Nrvlc:e, eomnwtlal and rMidantlol, coli

~IIi PliDf!

A-. IM-!192-JW.

TrN lopping I

trtmmino n ·

Mll-3416.

Weddl119e,
Annlv«NfiH,
-roNo ol Ill tvpoo. Oovo &amp;
DoniM, D &amp; 0 Photography,
304..75-2!114.

Will dean out attk:s, gar•oe•.l
-"" '' .--...
· ·. otc,
troo" '"' _....
"
, 114.ft•·l'IO
. .. :,

AKC Vlaehon, Dobarm1n, Min
Phwchelj_ Btoodhound, BIIHft
HourHI, HIM', Pug. Schnauzer.

114-441-.

.

~

· ·~·

Proper1y. AeposHsslons. Your
Ar.. ( 1t 805..t62·8000 Ext. GH·
10189 r=or Currenl A•po List.

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

tnl&lt;tor

28W522. .

44tHJ33a.

v.,., llvubllt room homa wllh

2-c1r . urport

on

SR

143,

$152.17 plf month Including shr;
mon1hs tree tot rent, new 14ix70,
deUverld 111d ... up, tkl11ing
1nd .tepa, 1-800-837.-6625.

1913 Forrnl

Park 121165, 2 Bed·
raoms, WB, Total Elec:urle,
St.RI.218, 2·112 Acras 11/ L. &amp;14·

256 ..1'12, 614-379-:1748.
1983 f•lrmOnl Mobil• Home,

$250/mo.

$3501mo.

Of'

utllhlls pakl, 614-19.2·7878.

45

-t

.

\

I
:::1983=-Ctta=-::-,,..,.____pa_rt'"o.-·"'2."'1-,M,-h· ~

Accessories

aubllhl motor, I .,xt. 1r1ne.,
ctutcll, a· _ou,. plato. 114-

441·7371 .,.,. 5.

t-

Pine. ·

l

114·245--1428.

I • . Truett

'

lof ulo.

CoM

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY ·DAD 511.'1'5. WHEN HE '
WENTltlOCHIXl.,HE WAS
IAL:WA'f'S FIR5T'IN H15Cl.Ae5.

"

NO... IN THE
LUNCHROOM

IN HIS

&amp;RADE:e,
YOU
.MeAN'?

L..IN5.

wKh

Furnished
Rooms

Aooma tor rllll • •ek or manlh.

new, 304-1-,..2484.

•.. _ _-·"'-- _

1981 SllyUne 281&amp;0:, 3 ~·
room.. 2 t.th• , 3 ton AC,
$27.000. Must be mov.cl. 304576~292 0 .

1990 Fairmont Fant.. y, 14180, 3

IMdrooms, 2 balh!l, garden ~ub,
brand new h1al p"mp) 614-Gotg...

2905.

·------ ... Looking For A Deal? Consider A
Pre-OWned Mobile Ham•, Largo
SoiOctlon lcM 111onoJ D-n,
FrN s.t-Up And DeMvery, toiOOlEAn •
710

=::'-:::'-:-;;;"-c=,-:-=:-::-....,.
y.,.. ...:rltice, 1tl3 MxlV AM·
•

inlln with 5. yNr w•rant:y, Ineludft deiiMry, ... up, ...,..

ond oldrt:l; . , . __ Colt 114·
315 24.. o ~ Mltto

·•
lAnd ~ O.VefODnlllitl, El·
,.. Home Cent• Wltf Show You
_ , Your Slnal&lt;l Or
Doubto:t. • ~lc.• " oundatlon a urtvoway, Alin Ono ,_,
Pactuoge, lcM Aal-, 0pon Ulo

Servtces

9580.

Sllllllna room. with cooking.

.r

Wanted to Rent

Prot..slon•l CcMtp• WMt To
A.nt, 3 BMiroamt, 2 Bllhe, No
Clllldran 614-441-3708.
Wanled To Attnt tmmedilf ..y:
Tr1ller Space Wllh Large Y1rd,
Bidwell, Cheshire, Or Gslllpol''

Turn your cluller into cash,
Sell it tlte ea.sy way... lry plwn.e,
no need to leave your horne.
Place your cla.~tiifietl atltoday!
15 words or less, .''J da.ts,
3 JmperR, $ .'&gt;.40 paid in advance.

...... 110·3118-8100,

Roglolarod

llmoualn eoltlo,
Mne,., buUI, and cuw., 114112..180.

51

Househol&lt;l
Goods

3 pe. oek Mel. autte., ~· :Z.nhh
eokM' t.v•• Aetr-ltor,

•••hlr.
d.,.r. IM-31t-21tltl, 379-2243.
YI'AA FURNITURE AND AP·
PUANCES
114-44H42e OR 114-441-8151
Ent.rt1lnrnenl Centtt't $140 Of
11.52 Wllk: looblwlv• SliM·
Ina 121 95· R•ellners 1121 Sot1
:·•
· '
;
Arid Chalr8 12l!l Or 110.13

WOok; CoHN And End With
Doo&lt;o 1199 SOt · ~ · Toblo With 6

Ch.llrs ~II 'Wood~ ·, Wnloon,
~orw, ·~"· ~trltcer'a
$ 9; Houra: onday • •turd•r
N; BlhM Silver Brld~ Plan
Or 4 Mil• Oul 141 On Lincoln
Pika.
No Dopoolt

On

-·2-Dwn;

Nothing Ever PNowned.

c-h &amp; cNir, 4 llltchan ..,..,.,
2 - i t ..,.._ :10+115-2432.
COUNTRY FUANITUAE AND
·
CRAFTS
· 1-et4-m- Wo Buy And Sol Good ~
Fumlt..... 223t Slota R- 141,

;35
~~~~~~~~~=
114-441-1422.
Lots &amp;
:::Gt:::Ot:::C&gt;=o-·=-·=-=o=-"'•"'p=PLJ=·"~=s~
v- ~ ~-5
Wu....., dfyera, ralrtt«atoro,
API&gt;&lt;••-· 11

....... · -

'IN llfMI, CiH ........... , ., 1·
1111-llf.:Htt.

:----------,
· Home
'
Improvements

Hay &amp; Gralrt

64

Bla round ...,_ of mlood hay,
1111bal&lt;l, 114-1112-.
'
Ground .., COI'II, y~~~~~o~r - " •·
Call ..... 4,.., 304-e?I-24U.

Hoy ... - · 304-lll&amp;-881t.·
lilY. oquo,. botoo S2. 1 12.10. ,

!IM-e75-31110.
Nay

Merchandise

5 P.M . 614-146~3044.

t981 Skyllno Holly Aldga 14170,

2•
I•

Pass
Pass
All pass

Scout out
the opposition
The Duke ol Wellington was discussing war, but with a small change we
can make it l'ook 3$ il b.e were talking
about bridge: "All the business of
bridge is to endeavor to lind out what
you don't know by what you do."
In other words, as you play out the
deal, you learn more about the opponents' hands · and should use Ibis
inlorn!ation.
Against four hearts, West led the
club 10. East won the first trick with
the ace, cashed the club king (the accepted way of showing a doubleton)
and exited with a diamond.
With a guaranteed spade loser,
clarer had to find the trump queeu
make his contract. Assuming West
live clubs to East's two, there were 11
empty spaces in EaSt's hand for
heart queen, bot only eight in We.1t's 1
hand. However, those odds ol u ·uJ-ol
weren't good enoogh for South.
wanted to lind out more about the
tribution before committing himself .
Judging that West would have led
singleton diamond il he had one,
clarer overtook his diamond kinli
dummy's ace and discarded his
queen on dummy's diamond que~" · l
Now came the spade .queen from
dummy ..East won with the ace and
turned a diamond .
Immediately South rulfed with
heart ace. Then be led the heart
and ran it. When it won, he 11~:~1
the heart finesse, drew the last

'

tor-·-- UN.,

1114-1112·3121.

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

NaJ lor ..,,. 114-Mt·24tt oftor
5pm .

2._""""'--------'----.J. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ __;_-'---

toool, 114-112.....313 .. - 2154.

5. '

pn'e F•rm, Rt. :11, PUny, 3041137-:1011.

6---------~

Larae -

baloo, 111, wll

Squaro Batoa
May For Sale, 114 JN 1030.

Transport&lt;Hton

f). _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

12

13-.- - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - -

14~----------------

15~-----------------Gullipoli• Duily Tribune
446·2342
Pomeroy Duily Senlincl
992-2156•
Pl. Plcoll8ttl Rcglslcr
675-1333

---.WY
Joe-.
OH t-.aD4Iill.

~

...,

~ SIMt ,SkiM, GafwlfuN
.... - . tl'... ltoot ..... :r
1113 Chewr, IC,ODO edual mlln, Man - · 11,444 • - " -

1114 C II I CL, MOOO.....
.. ..:-r, iiUIOd. - :
30i1-e71-e712 .... 1:00 ....

-

....... 1-:112--.

.......... r-.
=:

Graph predictions tod~y by mailing
$1 .25 plus a tong, , self-addressed,
stamped envejope to Astro-Graph . c/o
this newopaper, P.O. Box91428, Cleve·
land, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state
your zodiac sign.
•
PIICI!I (Feb. :10-- 20) Joint van·
tures lOOk promising for you today. You

could be lucky in hetp)ng to advance en

........ . .

Autos for Sale

. . . . . . . . 304 • • 1111.

BERNICE
B.EDE OSOL

........ Haueo! .... -

IOC ..ll-2:111 Ol!lo 114-1*2414.
. .I&lt; T.... " - t i D Claltto
Co. IVAHIINTEAPiiiiES,
Utility

71

ences which are governing you In the
year ahead. Send lor Aquarius' Astro~

Prornhlm Nay R•to $25. - · Aan'o TV SoMoo, opoWojfllnlf
kl Zenith •IM ..WCina mOll \

7.,-:-----'--..,..-----8.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

10~----------'--~
11._ _ _ _ ___;.... _ _ __

ASTRO·ORAPH

l Round- -

lio

·· '

By Jeffrey McQuain
INVEIGLE lures or coaxes: "The
con men inveigle I heir victims." Coax
others into pronouncing the verb IN·
VEIGLE correctly: "in-VAY-gul."

Auto Parts &amp;

Sllr11~ 11 S120fmo. Gallla Hoi...

14170, 2 Bedrooms, 1 B11h,
Elec. H11t, Undlrpennlng. Aher

all IlK, 2 bedrooms, AIC,
coverld porch, kttchln lll1nd,
liaras- bldat.... undl4 penning,

Pass

·CELEBRITY CIPHER

"-"J " - ""'11111..
H9D-.onorw ... CNMid frOm quottUonl ~ tMioua peopte. 1*1 and ~Eictl....,ln thldptW Nndll tor anattwr. Totllty-.ew: F . . . C.

' G

idea tfiat anoth'er person has

~OWr

ed .
ARIES (March 21·April11l Friends who

111111 build potld put·
-..·'J~
trllitar oltlrllftl••

.'Birthday

Plumbing &amp;

Feb.1t,1M3
In t1111 year lhllad, you could haw a
atronoer attrttetlon than uouaf to,_ In·
tllttlll and new things. Your ralur·
blthlld outlook will llblrlle you from
old, negadw ettltudes and ' add axel,.
"""I to your life.
AQUAIIIUI (olen.· .,..._ 11) Today
VOif have t1111 abiiiiY to expand and lm·
prOVII UI!On t1111itltU 111 $ r
radel .
c
. orn

YI(UII.Ioullllll!,lmllltt'IIW

,l iM.

.

~=nding

original~

,lltlfnll,
11111

-~

•

are invotved with you socially today will
lind you~elhin
lleeeuae ot t our sin-

cere

.

wOrds will have

Impact lleeauae you
onty' compll·
ment pale who truly_.,. praise.
TAURUS (April - y 20) Do not
waste time on ·inatgnlli..nl Oblttetlloday. You 're In a vwy good a c menl cycle, oo go after targets that are
big and meaningful.
GIMIM (Mar 21.J- 20 The wheel ol
fortune- to be oplnnlng In your direction today, and you could - t
tram II In two lnallnctlll. It will be up lo
you 10 recognize your opportunltiH.
CANCIII (MM 11-.lulr Ill Some Inter·
might occur todoty
111M .,a,)'l lit or-r-'ICI by you, but
llltly could stNI produce aiNantageo aoll

I

..una .,IIIIIP"*"•

·

yoi. designed them yourself.

LEO (Jutr 23-Aut. 22) II you have an

important matter to work out today,
avoid any committee invOI\Iement . Try

to get 10 the top dttelslon maker on a
one-to--one basis. The results should be

gratitying .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 221 Instead or
delegating assignments todoty regard·
lng matters that eHect your material security, take care of things .. yourself.
You'll do b81ter in thiS mauer than vour

appolntM.
.
LIMA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Friends who
are aiiO&lt;llated with you todoty in bold,
l"!'aglnatllll! endeavors should consider
themselves lortunale, Your luck will
carry both them and you.
SCORPIO (Oct.· 22) The -tore
of olhera il apt to be your prime concorn today~ Ewn though your motives
will be nob~. you could allo derive
fringe benllttt lrom your Hlftetlnell.
IAQITTAIIIUI ( - . lll - . 11) You
ara now tn a good Cycle lor realizing
your h-and expeclatlona. H - .
lhey con only be . , . . . , 11 you proceed tn a practtcalluhlon.
CAI'IIICOIIII ( - . ........ 11) Your
IWO llrongtll • - lor probable gallla
today pertlln to ftnanoaand ttatus. Try
to 1oeu1 on One ~both "'"houl getting
aldettiCitiCI.

Q. Is there any term for using UN·
to make a word negalive? I've been
looking for one, but I've been unsuccessful.

A. Try PRIVATIVE , pronounced
"PRIH'vuh·tiv." This terni is used in
grammar to idenlify any prefix or
suffix thai is negative or su~ests an
absence. Think ol UN - las in UN·
SUCCESSFUL) or ·LESS las in USE·
LESSJ whenever yop need 8 privative,
and you may be able to avoid the con·
tinuing overuse of the slang "Not! "

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I learned just by going around. I know 811 about.. ,

Kleenex tactories and an sorts of things." f) 1~

Princess Anne.

by NEA. Inc.

S@\\4llA-l&amp;t.~S"
- - - - - - - Edltod loy CLAY I . PDILAN
THAT DAILT

PUUUI

Rearrange letters of
0 four
Kramblecl words

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the
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I
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OUR LANGUAGE

I

IM-44f..t312.

Also-trill• ~. All hook·Upl: .
C.. •ller 2:00 p.m., 304·773-5851, Malon WV.

Wllh Llghtod 1220.

n. Nonto c..n- - . ;

bedroom
lptrtment ,
reterenc::n required,· no pelt, Pt .
PINNnt lrU, 614-9i2.ae51.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

__....

11

••

,Norltl Third Middleport, Ohio. 2
bedroom, turnllhld or unfur·
nlthed apt . O.p I rlf . 304·8822566.

.... 1

~ ~- .. _

•

75 Boats &amp; MotOI's
·tor Sale

1taa Btonco tor
new ,
lfiM.1 Mw llre1, good lntiMtor. 1

Pomaroy, Ohio. Appralald tor
$15,000, ··~lng $14,j)OO, 014·192·
3330.

llkl

bl...._ • ...,

1110. •

CA&amp;H?t!

Complally Fumlshed mobl._
home, 1 mile below town, aV•rlooking riv•r. No Pall, CA. 114·

111BB Ko-ald LTD 414- -

drtw ..,...
caaledHC. eand,· runt MU,..... M.a
- t h o n l - I!MR-7711. ,;

Two bedroom In lllddteport ,

HouM lor nil wHh 7 raoma, 2
full bath•. Hre.,.aca, naw Lenoa
hut pump, 2 ar · gar~~ge, brlek
front w/alumn siding, 1001200 fl
lot, 304.-2-3287 1Her 4:30PM.

1•
2•

Wby was .South so confident about
the hearts? Because East had oas.;ed I
as dealer aod had already shown
with 11 points: the A·K of clubs
the spade ace. He couldn't · hold
queen.as well.
®-. .....uouucu - d i l l .

l-t7!51.
I
lill- FOI!Iuoon 10110
- u-. wrp,_$4~. 150 Mi! 1112 Canlury, it ft. Cuddy 470
14,!1110. U •F1 ,.., ltv. PrO Man:M- Enotno a -.. ..... .
$3,0110. Flnanc:lng ,.
..,,_, IMeondltton. CaM 114-256- i

or44t-3532.
- -- --· ·--·-GOVERNMENT HOliES FrO&lt;n St
IU Repair). Dotlnquont T,. 0....

,...
I.
' MOfa Or LHO
WIM tlo ....._ ....,,. In ......
Hlfh llcttOol I
ctt.port!Porneror lt.a,
iiiilli.nciing, Avelllbll,
10110.
I
n
, 114-:JU.-.

,,..192.

tractor, .-tn - ·
112 milo on 218 from 217.
a.,_ """' Guyon Vtllloy
Ch~nh.
·
M.F. 30 Tractor Good \'Ins, Point Good Sllopa, Fonl J u -114-446-'7717.
Tlrao, Now Pal,., Uka - ·
300

"'*"

rooms, 2112 bllthl, liflplace,
tamilyroom, Band INa, owner

•

.~. . . . . .llmaiM, 3M-

'

tnt'!

I .other equiD11tent. At: Pl8tf'orm,

2 slory colonial homai, 3 bed·

Chnhlre: 3 BA, 1· 112 Nth,
hardwoodllloort, 11.111 blument,
carpott, tldin9! CA, nalur11 gas
haat, cable, $4~000. 114·367·1'!78

Eul

and claimed. · .,.

Sq. Fl., .18 1cre IDI. 2116
I 2 complete baths, dining
, room, living room, 3bi:trm., walk·
In closets, fully earpttad, 2 por·
chas, electric heal, AC. sto11e,
refrigerator, slereo-wired, Home
Nat'l Bank, Racine, OH. 614-lil492210.

Do1.•r and Bobcat work, by lh•
hour, lownl rale, 614-143-5123
ot 614-843-5289.

Help Wanted

11

o.a•r.

44H240.

614-275-00lliCOLLECT)

.-a buying funk e.rs &amp; 1rueii1.

lk:..-...cl

l1m11 · Pet Food

Wobb. Call614-446-0231.

$35,900 Vinton ArH, 12 Aeres,
Timber, 2
Bedrooms, . All
Eleetrle. No Ll!nd .Contract. &amp;14·

J I O'• Aulo Plr11 tnd s.tvage,

prlcM

Groom and Supptr Shop-Pet
Grooming. AI bfllds, llylet.

31 Homes for Sale

Ganlpolls
&amp; VIcinity

odhlon

·OPINIOfliS AI'IY1t10,f···
.l'Vf lt~N

Pets for Sale

are available on an 8(!ual .
opporturdly basis.

Yard Sale

lloodoy
Saturday.

I.. I&gt;Oii'T ttAVe ANY

adwertiHd in·this newspaper

fomalo cat ......
lhup liN. H ...., or lound
,..... All 114 441 II 12 A.w.rd

frtday.

AND

YOII
A
SllEEP, OKAY ,·

698-fi212.

7

PEANUTS

-t~ng

LOST . . - .._... - . Experllnc:ed 1uto bodv """·

304•7&amp;-mt ., 175-1tt3. Smal

North

Donna -

7 Godden or
discord
8 Anglo-Sexon
. money

By Phillip Alder

Eaay

you ...... -6. .22...........
.,

6

II

Vending
Route :
Recession
proof tiutln"t wMh • siNdy
C..h l~ome. 1..,.,..53-v.n.l.

puppMa, 114-tBS-4382.

W•sl

5 Longed (Iori
6 Felltlon
dellgner

Opening lead: • Ill

FrN lnlormallonl St•r1 your
own home b1sed business.
$82.38. Full or pan-time. Start
earning money within 10 d1y1.
Write: OPG, 513 Naal StrHI
Parkersburg, WV 26101.
.,

. Collie

1 Jap1neao
robe
2 Mlllilubbr .
3 Boxinlt
victory
abbr.
4 Symbol for
lhalllum

APPLE
POLISHER

GUESS WHAT I'M
FIXIN' TH' PARSON
FER DESSERT
TONIGHT

3 blaelc Saw milt with intemil·
llonal povter unit. 614-319-2724.

~~~oltly

(lbbr.l
18 Dld'a partner
19 Tapaolry
20 Thai women
21 Hall an em
22 Sm1M
•••rvraen
23 Clothes Unter
24 Mldaaorlouo
26 Slnll!lr -

w1terle11

Sooth

Pass

catl~

4D- P"o
41 Cera•ldllh
42 Kin Me43 Calm
45 MovH gently
and amoolhly
47 T•mpo&lt;ary
lltella,.
48 Dinar

, 27 Employtd
28 - Alto,
Canrornla
29 Harbors
31 Completely

.QJI
Vulnerable; Neither
Dealer: East
Smal
2 - unturnl•hed,
- - ........SZ75.
"'·
Veron Ave,
rof I clop, No Hud, 304..75-2651.

account

11 Chengaobla
12 Rlvlnt
14 Center ot
lhlald
15 InteriOr

Summer

• AI083

Financtal

1 Poll or pool
6 - Plen

17

•KH7
tAQJ 109
.6 ~3

1

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bi...,IOPieWIIHI .......

34 1111. supplies
(II.I
35 Cull away
36 Violent
whirlwind
37 ...adOW
38 StatiOns
311 Genua or

ERZFEE

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A famous poli!ician once
said to a group of voters, "The
~ most important political office
~~~~~~~h~ that a person can hold is that
SL EEp T
of privale ·•·••••· ."
~-T~:...:;,-=.,,,;6:....;cri...:..TI7'1""'1 Q Comp)ele lhe chuckle quoted

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by fi lling in the missing words

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PRINT NUMifR!O lEITERS

•

IN THESE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMelE lEITUS IQ

GET ANSWER

II

I

-

'• ••1

SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS
2 -• 7
Nobody · Swept • Joint • Rector • CONSENT
Ov81Wrought mother lo. son, "I'd like lo go through
one day without SCOlding or punishing you." The bratty
son replied, ' You certainly have my CONSENT.'
1

.

11111.11
'

'

.

�' .
•

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 18, 1993

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A few star turns fail to
make it to the Oscar dance
By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.- A
few star turns. including Tom
Cruise in a "A Few Good Men"
and.Jack Nicholson in "Hoffa."
didn't make it 10 the Oscat dance.
Instead, inllependent films got
some Of the choice invitations.
Academy Award voters were
lavish in their praise of movies
made without major studio money
in nominations announced
Weilnesday.
Big-budget productions, including "Malcolm X" and "CI)aplin,"
received acting honors bill little
else, while a third of the nominations in the best picture, actor and
acuess calegories went to independent films.
"The good thing is that those
movies are getting seen at least by
the people who are nominating
Academy Awards and that there's
no big stigma attached to them,"
said John Sayles, whose script for
the independent film ''Passion
Fish" was nominated.
In the top eight categories tliis
year, nearly half or 40 nominations
went to independent films. There
was only one such nomination a
year a~o.
,
·· ·
"It s a celebmtion or acknowledgment or salute to-a kind of film

making that exists outside the Hollywood system, that could only
exist outstde the Hollywood system," .said Stephen Woolley, producer of the surprise hit "The Crying Game."
.
The Irish thriller collected six
.nominations for the 65th annual
awards, including best picture. But
the best supporting actor nomination for Jaye Davidson threatened
to reveal one oftbe movie's biggest
twists.
·
·
The
Edwardian
drama
"Howards End" and Clint Eastwood's Western "Unforgive,n"
collected the most nominations,
with nine each . They were nominated for best picture, as were
" The ~ing Game," "Scent of a
Woman' and ."A Few Good ·
Men."

pulled the movie fr om broadcast
last week after its accuracy was
questioned. The movie is about
black soldiers who helped liberate
the concentration camps.
Best actress selections .were
Emma Thompson for a love-tom
woman in " Howards End," Susan
Sarandon as a devoted parent in
"Lorenzo's Oil," Michelle Pfeiffer
as an obsessed Texan traveler in
"Love Field," Mary McDonnell as
an invalid in "Passion Fish" and
Catherine Deneuve as a lndochi·
nese plantation owner in "Indo-

Nominated for best actor were
never-before-nominated Eastwood
for his role as a gunslinger in
"Unforgiven," AI )'acinci as a
blind man in "Scent of a Woman;"
Stephen Rea as the reluc131lt terrorist ID "The Crying Game," Denzel
Washington in the title role in
"Malcolm X" and Roben Downey
Jr. for starring as "Chaplin.:'
Among the films nominated for
' best documentary feature was age."
.
"Liberators: Fighting on Two
The awards will be presented
Fronts in World War II." But a . March29.
public TV station in New York

Vot 43, NO. 211
Copyrlghtad 1M3

' LIVING SCULPTURE· Students at tbe Uni·
versity or Cincinnati walk past some hedges
spelling out "LIVE'~ on campus Wednesday

for the plll]lOSe of aUowiilg eom.:
munity Action to construct a new
state-of-the-art food distribution
facility. Funds for construCtion will
be generated from both public and
private sources through a capital
campaign effort which will be
underway in 1993 in the hope that
construction may begin in early
1994. Pantries, soup kitchens and
meal sites in Meigs County will
benefit d~dy from such a project,
since the new facility will have
more capacity and will have the
ability to store and distribute a
wider varietv of oroducts.

southeastern Ohio.
In Meigs County over 5,500
individuals were served last year
through the food pantry network.
Meigs County has six food
pantries and one meal site which
receive prod!lc'ts from the South·
eastern Ohio Foodbank currenUy
housed in NelsonviUe.
Because of the large demand for
food, the Southeastern Ohio Foodbank has outgroWn its present facility and has been in search of a new
facility for many months.
The Cicy of Logan donated 3.4
acres of land in its Industrial Par~

searched through the night, the
boys stayed together, hugged each
other for warmth and took shelter
under the uees. Two police officers
found them huddled together
Wednesday, their dog nearby.
The boys. who spent 221)ours in
the Woods, were·taken to St. Luke's
Hospital for observation. They
were in satisfactory· conditiOil early
today. All three suffered muscle .
injuries to their legs from exposure.
Brian had blisters on hts legs,
apparently because ·he gave his
socks to Matthew after they walked
through shin-high swamp water.
"There were heroics," said Dr.
Paul Bulat, chief of emergency services at the hospital. ''These kids
did all the right things under the
circums131lces."

Costa, Cubmaster for Cub Scout
Pack , 474 in Dartmouth, said
Matthew was due to receive his
Bear Scout badge, an honor given
to third-grade scouts, at an awards
dinner Friday.
Tire boys' father , Robert
Eklund, said Matthew and Brian
had wilderness training from being
scouts, "The boys know the
· woods," he said. "1bey.playinthe
woods aU the time."
TheJmthers liad wandered severa! miles into the -swamp. They
apparenUy got ·lost when it started
snowing and they tried to take a
shortcut home, their father said.
The temperature drOPPC&lt;i to 38
degrees. Two inches
rain fell
·overnight and the wind reached 30
mph.

·-----------1

•

::: i~ ~d;:: going to do the
Continuing a cross-country blitz
to rally Americans around ~is economic revival plan, Clinton urged
his audience •' to ask the tough
questions.". .
One woman asked for more
·
dewls
on his plans for ~ and
spendin¥ cuts. 'Tm a imple
:woman,' she said. "What I need
• to hear from you is, over the next
four years how much spending,
dollar-wi~~; will we see, how much
• total revenue will be incre8sed in
our tax.es?"
. He said that in the first four
years "tho spending cuts and the
revenues increases are about equal.
If you slring it out for four more
years, if you really change the
spending habits of the country, the
spending cuts are far greater than

Present this ad with your
admissiod ticketstub at our

•

con session stand and rccleve a
M_ 02. size cup of
FRF.S Y~popcom
popcorn off~ cxp)res 3/ 15/93

I FLAiiiiNCasa \

- - - - - - - - - - - · '-:-------....J

The Fastest Income Tax Refund
AnticiCation Loan in the Areal Receive
y9ur .c. eck in as little as 48 HOURS! All
Fees can be withheld from lour check so
· you
nothing in a vance!
3 .LO ATIONS TO SERVE YOU:
17·10 Washington Blvd., Belpre
64 Main Street, Coolville
State Route 339, Dunham Square

---------------..,-----

I

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

(In Ohio) 1•800·339·5021 or
(~n W.V.) Call Coiled 614·423·4524

·-'I'

a national sales tal or a.touery. ·
Clinton said •he had always
opposed lotteris as fund-raising
me&amp;S1RS. As for a ao-called value
added tax, he said he ,ejected it as
a "a radical change in the tax systern" but said it might be consid·
ered "in the ,-""""'ahead."
He also said that the United
States "still has ihe lowest energy
costs by far" among the world's
i~!lustrial nations.
·
Abortion came up early in the
questioning, when a young man
aslted, "~ Y~ believe life begins
at co~n?
.
.. Chnton r~sponded by asking,
Do YD!' beheve ,women who have
~ a~~~d be )ned for ftrSI·
"" l"ed
·
. ~es, 1 do•" rep
• the quesuoner
..
The· president"'said
he felt the
h
ld
g~v~rnmen~ ~ ou
not. " rnak e
cnmina!, acu~tty ov~! whtcll even
theologians disagree. :
.
~n Th~rsday, C~mton. satd he
believes his economiC rev• val plan
"will. be ~?ad for vinually every

It's "not just for you, but lor us;
not just for narrow interest, but for
national interest," he told a flagwaving crowd at St. Lo!!is' histOric
Union Station.
Clinton's program would ·touch
every American. through a broad
energy tax on every fuel. .It would
cost the typical household up to
$150 a year when fully in place by
1996. Income tax rates would jlimp
for well-to-do Americans, individuals with. taxable income of
SllS,OOO·and joint filers with
$140.000.
Tax increases and spendin~ cuts
would add up to a $493 btllion
reduction in the expected deficit
over four years. However, that figure would be redqced because it
does not include the $160 billion
1he president wants to spend on
education, health care and other
programs he favors to stimulate the
economy.
,
Some ChiUicothe residents said
they would suppon Clinton's economic plan.
Joannie Boyle, 34, said she was
willing to make sacrifices "as long
11 it goes toward the deficit and to
9001e of the tl)inas he's asldng it go
10.*'
John . ijamshire, 52. a self·
employed lrilck driver, said business was bad and that it was time
· for the country to stop blaming
everyone else for its problems and
'begin working together to make,
thinf.S better.
• We're in this together. That's
the only way we're going to correct
this thing," Hamshire said.
"I'd certainly be wiUing to paY.
$17 to $50 to $liO a month more 1f
it was ·~ing !O help the entire
. country, he ·wd.
.

Greenspan backs Clinton plan

!Jay

H•w BIUiuu CINnU W•leem•f
Call Toll Free For An Appointment

heavily toward raising money
through tax increases and not nearly enough toward culling spending,
Clinton said in his inlroductory
remarks thaL •.•We did actually
increase some ftlnds."
He said the increases were in
such areas as Head ·Start, educalion~~' loans .and rwaining of work. e~ who !!ave lost jobs through cut.s
in defense spending.
"We have to do ihat beca11se.
that's whal determin~ what peopie's incomes._ ,.. he said.
One worn.;~ why Clinton
opted ftor an en..r..v tax rather than .

· .Clinton added that "I have no
Interest In raising a penny in taxes.
if we're not going to do the cuts."
Clinton held the town meeting
at the local high school, in a style ,
reminiscent of bis Successful presidentlal
campaign.
Chillicothe
with abOut 21 ()()()
'd
·
'so
res• ents, ts
mt·1es south• o f
Columbus.
Before the appearance the president Joued in 3-dcgree wc&amp;lhi:r.
'
"Wllfch I suppose means I don't
have enouah sense to be president" he quipped
Taking on criti~ism that his economic plan is weighled far too Amencan.

OUR SPECIAL
V ALETINES DAY
THANK YOU.

\

"

.

-

.

WIN I WIN I WIN I I:

..

j

-~

I' .
I Pleue retur.rthis entry form to 1he SPRING v AU.EY •
ONEMA boxoffke for a chance to .lru'l.a dinner
I for two at the famouaSTOWAWAYlO!STAURANT
1 a. LOUNGE In historic downtown GalU(l&lt;1lis.
will be held March I, t993 at tile SPRING
I Dntwlnl
VAU.EY ClNEMA.
.
I
Phane --......,
1 Name
t .Add~OU-----------~----1 City

State

WASHINGTON (AP)- Feder·
al Reserve CJ!airman Alan
Greenspan endorsed President
Clinton's economic proJIIBin today,
praising it 11 1 serious effort to
aiUICk budiel deficits lhat "threat·
en -the sta&amp;i!ity of our economic .
system ...
Greenspan's -p repared comment81 handed 10 reponers before
he ~ to appear before the Senalc
BanidJ;~:mittee, repreaented
SUOIII '
I fow CUncon'a pro-

pam flOm I

by

economjl: policy

inabr.
"Tho proaldent is 10 be com·
mended fcjr DIICina 011 the llblo for
active dellali the W. ot oar ID·
~eODinl

I

~---------~--------·--1

'.

'

By NANCY BENAC
·Auoc:lated Pr- Writer
CHILLICOTHE _ President
Clinton told a town meeting today
that he would not raise "a penny in

: the tal increllles."

.

COLUMBUS • PreSident Clin·· ton's proposed 25.7 cent tax per
million Btu of fuel would cost custamers of Columbus Southern
Power Co. and American Electric
Power Company' s six other operat·
in~ CO!Jlparues approximately $250
million on tbeir electric bills, AEP
said yesterday.
If Congress passed the administration's proposed tax on British
thermal units-Btu, the measure·
ment of the heat content of fuelsColumbtis Southern Power's average residential custolJlers would
see increases ofabout.$27 a year, a
4.2 percent increase. Commercial
customers would face a 4.9 percent
increase.
Columbus Southern's industrial
customers would experience ail
average increase of about 6.1 percent. That figure would likely be
higher for energy-intensive indus·
lries.
c.
For AEP's seven operating companies combined, the increase for
average residential customers
would be 4.6 percent Commercial
customers would face a 4.9 percent
increase, . while tlie average

Clinton says.ec·onomic
·plan in ·'national intere-st~ --+--

o(

.

opening rnaarb at aa ec011olllk: discussion this
morning a.*CbDHcothe High Sehool. (AP)

CENTER OF ATTRACTION • President
Clinton II tbe center of.attentlon as be makes_ ,

•

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT FINANCIAL .
PLANNERS

A sweetheart dinner was held
~unday at the Rock·Springs United
Methodist Church in honor of
Avery and Helen Goeglcin as special couple for the year.
A program followed dinner with
welcom e by Thelma Jeffers.
"ltoses Will Bloom" was sung by
Deana Ash. Valerie Hanstine gave
a readin~.
Spectal recognition for the oldest married couple went to Walter
and Virginia Wears for 56 years.
Youngest married couple was John
and Carolyn Jacobs fof three years.
Cour.te married closest to Valenti'ne s Day was Susi.e and Butch
Mash (Feb. 15).
Karen Sloan sang "Let Me Call
You Sweetheart" to all the couples.
Each received asmall gift.
. The reading "Here's a Small
Gift from AU of Us" and a prayer
clolcd the program.

.

Community Action secures
property; food center to be constructed

BENJAMIN C. RANDOLPH
&amp; ASSOCIATES

'Dinner held

Residential electric rates
will increase 4.2 percent
under Clinton's tax plan

afternoon. The hedges were planted several
years ago by artist Gary Rievesch,i as a work or
.·
·
·
art. (AP pboto)

Tri~County

Property trans£ers pos·ted

report on several bills that are
endorsed by the state grang~.
Barbara Fry, CW A, reported
that she has en.tries ror all the contests in 1993. The baking contest
will be at the March meeting and
used candle stubs are to be turned
in to Pamona Grange at the March .
meeting..
A communication from AOPIC
concerning the meeting at the '
Meigs County Library entitled
"How Citizens Can Help Solve the
Solid Waste Crisis."
"So Dear to My Heart" was the
theme of the progmin by lecturer,
Bunny Kuhl. Members presented
old or antique items and iold the
story concerning the item.
Mrs. Kuhl annotinced that "Citizen of the Year Award" will be
awarded at the March meeting.
Several names have been submiued
and will bC voted on.
William Grueser was reported
ill.
Refreshments were served from
tables decorated in the valentine
theme by Roy and Pat Holter.
Social hour was held' at the close of
the meeting.

mld-JOs.

2 Secliono, 12 Pageo 25 con1s :
A Mullitnadia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February, 19, 1993

I

Harrisonville news

The regular meeting of the Rock
Springs Grange was held recently
.at the hall.
. Opal Grueser gave -a legislative

Snow toDiabt. lAW In mid

teeiiS. Saturday, nurrtes. Hl&amp;b In

. ..

Yol:f,ng brothers use scout training.
to survive frigid n-ight in ·woods

•
·
h
------- N ames lll t e news

.

....

ABC's .lackson interview No.1

·Rock Springs Grange meets

Pick 4:
6726

•

Tri-County Community Action
announced today that it has secured
a donated piece of property in
Logan for the construction of its
Regional Food Center.
The center will contain a central
kitchen
for its nutrition program
. also ranks as the fourth mostIn the network news ratings, and will house
ByLYNNELBER
14,000 square foot
watched entertainment ~gram in ABC won with an 11.6. CBS had a warehouse fora the
AP Television Writer
Southeastern
LOS ANGELES. - The Alex TV history, with 36.5 million view- 10.2 and NBC a 9.7.
Ohio
Foodbank.
Here are the top 10 shows, their
Haley miniseries "Queen" helped ers.
Re~ional Food Center will
network
and rating: "Michael be The
The fifSt installment of CBS ·
lift CBS to No. 1 in the lateSt ratconstructed
to prepare meals
ings despite the blockbuster num- three-part "Queen," an offshoot of Jackson Talks ... to Opmh," AB(:,· and distribute donated food which
bers garnered by ABC's Michael Haley's "Roots," came in third. 39.3; "Home Improvement," is made available to food pantries;
An installment of "Roots'' back in ABC, 26.4; "Queen" (CBS Sun- meal sites and soup kitchens
Jackson interview.
CBS ·received a 14.4 rating last 1977 ranks as the ftfth most popu- day Movie), CBS, 24.7; "60 Min- throughout a nine-county area of
week, the 'A.C. Nielsen Co. said lar entertainment program in histo- utes," CBS, 22.5; "Roseanne.''
ABC, 20.9; "Cheers," NBC, 18.9;
Tuesday. ABC had a 13.5, and ry, witll36.3 million viewers. '
ThC special programming is part "Murder, She Wrote," CBS, 18.9;
NBC a 10.8. Each ratings point
of the February "sweeps," one of "Seinfeld," NBC, 18.8; "Murphy
.represents 931,000 homes.
Oprah Winfrey ' s live, 90 - four periods each year used by Brown," CBS, 16.9; "Danielle
.minute interview with Jackson was local stations to help set advertising Steel's 'Heartbeat'" (NBC Monday Njght Movies), NBC. 16.8.
the top-mted show of the week. It rates.
By TONY ROGERS
Associated PressWt'iter
·
•
NEW BEDFORD, Mass. NEW YORK (AP) -Whitney Dog" single was No. 1 for 11 • day. The lawsuit was filed Tues- . Four days before he was to be honHouston's, "I Will Always Love weeks in 1956.
day.
ored at a Cub Scout dinner, a 9You" has becoll)e the longest-runBetty Kelley, Annette Beard year-old boy used his scouting
ning No. I pop single of the rock
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Mem- ~ Helton and Rosalind Ashford skills to survive a frigid , rainy
era.
bers of The Vandellas and The Holmes, mem~ofdtbe Vbl!"ddebllas, night in a wooded swamp with his
The song will be No. I for the Marvelettes say Motown cheated claim Motown faile to a • e Y a two brothers.
14th week on the next Billboard them out of royalties on 1960s hits 1986 seulement to pay royalties for
• 'We're planning something
pop chan, which will be released like "Heat Wave" and "Please: their work. The group was headed extra special now," Carlos Costa,
Fri~y. associate publisher Michael Mr. Postman."
by lead singer Martha Reeves.
Matthew Eklund's .scoutmaster,
Ellis said.
The groups are suing the record
The Marvelettes plaintiffs , said Wednesday. "He's a very
In October, Boyz II Men broke company,-asking that it be ordered Katherine Schaffner, Wyonetta good lcid. The boyish grin. the front
Elvis Prestets record when "End to conduct an audit and pay any Cowart Motley and Georganna tooth missing- he's a picture of
of the Road • stayed atop the Bill- money due under longstanding Tillman, allege Motown broke ·a the perfect scout"
.
board pop chart for 13 weeks. Pres- contracts.
series of 1961 contracts by exploitMatthew. 13-year-old Bnan and
ley's • 'Don't Be Cruel-Hound
A Motown spokesman didn't ing master recordings by the group I !-year-old Robert got lost Tuesimmediately; etum a call Wednes· and failing to pay royalties.
day while on a walk. in the ,woods
with their dog and a friend. The 12·
year-old friend became separated
lSCUSS
from the brothers, made it out of
J
the woods and alerted authorities.
bach, Porn. ViU.
CompUed by:
While hundreds of people
. Mrs. Grace Weber gave several
David L. Chesher, Janice L.
Emmogene Hamilton
readings at the recent meeting of
~hesher by P.O.A., ~el, to Nurs·
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
the Reedsville United Methodist
mg
Corps., Inc .. Salisbury. ·
Women held·at the home or Mrs.
Kenneth
R. Guinther, Carol L,
Isaac D. Jackson, dec'd, affill, to
Nina Boston.
Mrs. Robert Mahr had major
Guinther,
parcels,
8 A. S.I2. T-2,
. Readings included "Love," Doris V.Jackson, Olive.
surgery
at Holzer Medical Center.
"Works of Love," and "Small Boy . Kathryn Wildermuth, Lot 206, R-12, to Richard D. Hill, Wendy
Mrs.
Laura Kreb and Mrs. Ida
Hill, Sunon.
Dilemma."
to Thomas A. Oldaker, Po;&gt;meroy.
Cheadle
visited Ruby Diehl and
Robert C. Bailey, Wilovene BaiMrs. Gladys Thomas gave the
Janice E. Ebersbach. parcel, to
Stella
Atkins
on Wednesday.
opening prayer.
·
. Randy B. Ebersbach. Jennifer Lynn ley, Tracts, to Robert C. Bailey,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Babe Whaley,
Trustees. Wilovene Bailey,
' Mrs. Boston conducted the busi- Ebersbach, Suuon.
Flori~;
Bob
Gibson,
Columbus;
Kevin M. Graham, Cheryl L. Trustees, Salisbury. ·
ness meeting. There were 38 shut·
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
R~&amp;S~w~.af~. andLin~
in calls reported and cards were Graham, 2.015 A. S.l7, T-2, R-13.
Racine,
were recent callers of Mr.
,to Carl Douglas Bobb, Tammy S. Stewart, Meigs.
sent to several friends.
and
Mrs.
Bob Alldre.
Ardis R. Waggoner by P.O.A.,
Two projects were discussed - Bobb, Salisbury.
·Mr.
and
Mrs. Doug Bishop
Thelma Barton Campbell, F.33, S. 27, F. 24. S. 28, 69.979 A., auended the wedding of their niece
repairs on the entrance to the
dec'd, Cert. of Trans .• to Austin T-7, R-14, to William R. Donahue, in Kentucky over the weekend.
church and folding chairs.
Shane M. Donohue; Scipio.
A $arne was played and a prize Barton Campbell, RuUand.
The Lend-a-Hand Circle met at
Bruce E. Davis, S. 36, T-9. RJames M. Comell,llernice E.
was g1ven. Francis Reed closed the
the
home of Mrs. Virginia Gibson
Cornell. Lot #7, to James M. Cor- 15 •. to Mona J. Perry-Davis, aka on Wednesday
meeting with prayer.
evening.
Refreshments, using the Valen- nell, Bernice E. Cornell, Lucretia Mona J. Davis, Columbia.
tine theme , were served to the M. Stobart. Midd. Viii.
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec' d, Cert
above named and the following:
Mrs . Mamie Buckley. Mrs. Pearl of Trans, to Harold A. Barnhart,
Osborne, Mrs. Diane Jones, Mrs. Olive.
Augusta L. Barnhart, dec'd,
Nancy Buckley. Mrs. Lillian Pickens and a guest, Mrs. Mary Alice affid, to Harold A. Barnhart. Olive.
&amp;
Cynthia M. Hartenbach, Lot
Bise. Mrs. Nancy Buckley received
#1224 (551),10 Stephen R. Harten'
the door prize.

Reedsvl'/[e UMW
proiects
d.

845

Page4

chine."

Pacino earned a rare second
.nomination in the supporting actor
category for "Glengarr.y Glen
Ross." Other supporting actor
picks were Davidson in " The cry,
mg Game," Gene Hackman m
"Unforgiven," Nicholson in " A ·
Few Good Men" and David
Paymer for .:.'Mr. Saturday Night.".
Marisa Tomei was a surprise
supporting aclreSS nominee in "My
Cousin Vinny." Joining her were
Judy Davis in "Husbands and
Wives," Joan Plowright in
"Enchanted April," Vanessa Redgrave in "Howards End" and
Miranda Richardson in "Dam -

Ohio Lottery
\ Pick 3:

Southern
girls advance
.in tourney·

ilrUCtDIII budget deficit,"

iecNplllllid.

gram-by-program set of recom- commit the central bank to specific
mondationa 11 dislinct from general actions, sue!\ 11 cutting interest
&amp;oals," Gree...,.nl&amp;i!L
rates, because of uncertain cco·
He slid there would doubtless nomic conditions in · coming
be debate over the mix of spending months. .
cull and tax i~ Clinton hal
But th!l central bank "recogproposed to shrink the deficit by nizes that it has an imponant role
$325 billion.in the next rour jem. to play in thiJ repnl,'' he said.
He aaid he believed geulns
That commeat. coupled with his
spendin~ control was CI1IClal · strong endorsement of Clinton' •
and he ·
CliniOII'a reform of effort&amp;. were c:etJain to be viewed
the nation 1 u.lih ayatem would u at leut an implicit pledge that
conlributo llpUlc:Mdy toWIId t1a the Fed would lllnd reldy 10 proBut, be aald, moat lmponant vide lower lhort·IIITII Interet~ . wu to movo quietly ·to cut tho to oiTMt lilY attv.R ~ mlbc
deficit, wblcli he ••ld • 'will econo111y £1'0111 Clinton 1 maulve
htcJMalnaly ~ the alablllty DI!Cbao of spending cull and tal
or our ec:onomlc ay.-n If we ccn- lnaW-1
Unue 10 lailluddret~lt."
In
prepared .teltim8ny
"How the deficltla1ednced is o1. . . . , _ llid, "I can ~
very
tJulllt
be done is or our llllred
tar die
__._lmDOIUilt,
••• r~;._
t'~
,A

hii

"Leavins aalde lhc apecific
dollill, it is • aerioul ........ Ill ..,...., .._._.....Oreen~n ~aid
bMII'ne ocanomlc -.n~ Ire
piMtlble and It II a doililed pro-

••

1!COIIOIDY -

='

increase for industrial customers
would be about 7.2percent.
"Our top 15 induslrial customers
alone would face a $40 million
increase, nearly .JO percent hig~er
than their current electric energy
charges," said Richard E. Disbrow,
chairman and chief executive officer of AEP. ''We estimate thai our
industrial customers will pay more
than $100 million in new e!lergy
tax-related fuel costs of the Clinton
proposal is enacted. ·
"These businesses employ tilousands of men and women in the
seven states we serve. Some of'
them, particularly in aluminum.
steel, chemicals and paint, are

Matney
pleads
guilty
Receives 7 to 25
for voluntary
manslaughter .
,_Gallipolis man charged in the
Oct. 9 shooting death of Olley
Angel, Mill Creek Road, Gallipo·
lis, and the shooting of his daugh·
ter; Paula Angel, in the.hip, pleaded guilty WedneSday to voluntary
manslaughter witb a gun specifica·
lion and fel011ious assau!L
·
. Gerald "Jerry" Matney, 18, Gallipolis, was sentenced in the Oallia
County Common Pleas Court ·Of
. Judge Joseph L. Cain to seven to
25 years for the manslaughter
charge, a ftrst deJree felony, t1m1e
yean for the gun apeciftcallon IDII
seven to Is·years for th~ aasault
charge. a second degree felony.
Prosecuting Attorney Brent
S111nden uid Thunday the t1Jree.
year gun apecificatlon sentence
muat be ~erved betore the other
1e11111 can bealn· It will be IPIII'Oil·
matelf. eigbt yean before Mataey
Ia olilibloUlr JIII'OieJ be added.
. Matney wu arialllally chaqed
wiih murder and reJOnioua ISSIIIII
Iller 1hoodng the AnJcli with a
.38 c"'lber auiomatlc bindguri durinl a clis1luiD In the alrldnJ: lot of
Pllza H"ut rollaurint, S'aatern
Clllllpolll.

coul not . lncnur In HviJtl•ldanll rex oar · Mr. Anacf'a family agreed to
the plea, S•tnden uid.
cidzenlover lime.

tion,"Disbrow said.

"We want to work with the pres;
ident on the tough deficit problem
and we recognize the need to raise
revenues. but it would be unfortunate to derail our fragile economic
recovery in the process. Continued
economic growth is an essential
ingredient in auacking the deficit
"Injecting energy taxes into tho
mix , to'g ether· with a possib.le
increase in the corporate tax mte; ·
could damage our industrial cu~­
tomers' efforts to meet world-class
competition," DiSbrow said.

Pomeroy voters to decide tax·~
measure in special election ·
Neither Pomeroy nor. Middleport will have primaries on May 4
although there will be a special
election in. Pomeroy to decide on a
tax measure. ·
As of the 4 p.m. deadline Thursday four Republicans and one
Democrat had filed for the four
seats to be filled on Pomeroy Village CounCil, and four Republicans
had filed for the fetlf' open seats on
Middlepon Village Council. This
eliminated the need for primaries
where the ·respective parties nominate candidates to go on the ballot
in the fall.
The only tax issue filed was by
Pomeroy for 1.9 mill levy for current expenses. The levy goes on as
a new 1ssue because the renewal of
that levy was defeated in last fall's
election.
Republican candidateS filing for
scats on Pomeroy Village Council
were Thomas Werry and William
A. Young, incumbents. and George
Wright and John Musser. The only
Democrat candidate filing was
Larry ·J. Wehrung, incumbent.
Betty Baronick, longtime member
of Pomeroy Village Council, did

not seek re-election.
In Middleport candidates filing
for the four seats on Council were
Dewey Horton and Paul Gerard,
both incumbents, Robert Gilmore
and Michael Childs. This will be
Childs' first bid for a political
office. Gilmore has been off Council for the past three years having
prior to that time served two full
ter~ and a partial term. Neither
Judy Crooks, Republican, nor Jack
~atterfield, Democrat, filed for reelection.
No one filed for the open seat
on tile Middlepon Board of Public
Affairs. The terin of Bruce Fisher
expires this year.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections will meet Thursday to
val ida~ the petitions.
Independents have until 4 p.m.
on May 3, the day before the primary elections in the state of Ohio,
to file for council seats in the two
villages or for a seat on the Middlepot! Board of Public Affairs .
Democrats and Republicans as well
as undeclared regis~red voters can
file as independents.

Clinton jogs in cold Chillicothe
CHILLICOTHE, Obio (AP) - President Clinton couldn't
have picked a more appropriate spoi for bis morning jog today
- CHILL-icothe fit tbe biD.
The president, ·lq town for a question-and-answer session
about bis economic plan, jogged three miles at a local park
undaunted by !'rigid temperatures.
'
When shivering reporters exClaimed at the cold, the president sbruaged. "Yeah, it's 3 degrees.!'
.
Does be normally do thiugs like this?
"Not normally," lie conceded •
Tben be and bis .loi!Irinl partner, Mayor Joseph Sulzer, were
orr to McDonald's;stlli dripping sweat, to chat with· residents
and grab a cup of coll'ee.
"Put a little decaf in there," he said as he thrust out his coffee cup for a refill.
.
.
Clinton was asked if it felt good to be back on a campaign
trail.
"It's good IQ be back out In tbe country," be said.

TICKETS AVA:ILABLB • 'nckets for tile etpa uaullfl'lna
flllbloillllow cl tile Poiatl107 Merdl•ts AllodatiOII1n .,_. a val·
able at ~everal loe8tlou'la Pomeroy. Tbia year's lhw, "'UYer
Elllaee," will be ~ted at Pmaero:r Blt•atary on AJitll :z. ·
Pletured are Joe Clarlt, presiclent of tbe aiMdatloa, and s Cwlt, w11o 11-qalli _ , Clflltly llninl• .._ dlaiNaa. Tickell. $4, may be pudi811d at TJae Dally lleadatl, Clarlt•a Jeweby,
Tbe Jlahrle SIMp, BllttO• IIICI lltnrl, Cblipa111 Shoet 111C1 BOlt

One.

.

. ·- .- ...r

'

looking for a strong economic
recover)! and support for their
efforts to meet global competi;

G~LDMATNEY

.A-.

,..

peltea poll"""

'

'

•

. ..

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