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\
•

•

'

OH Point Pleeeent, WV

Time• Sentinel

'

Pork producers urged
to become more efficient
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Pork 1992. However, he said production
• . c::.::rs must stay competitive has shifted to the larger prod~.
COIISWIIer dc:mand for podt
Hennessy said Oliio is the
is expected to increase nnly a little nation's ninth-largest pork producin the near future, a researcher er, accounting for 4 pcn:cnt of the
sayt.
·
U.S. total in 1992. He said the
· Tom Hennessy, a rese&amp;Ither for number of hOgs produced in Ohi&lt;!
A.L. Labora1DricS of Fort Lee, NJ., feU 6 percent.
$Bid Thursday that farmers must tty
According to the Ohio Pork Pro- ·
to produce leaner pork an.d improve duccrs Council, the S~&amp;te 's 11,000
~ III'IICIIY
hof farmers brought in more than
·· "The ~ line is we need to $4 S million last year, topping both
be the production-cost lcadc111," beef and J)OU!tty prodUCCill•
.Hennessy saicl. "The U.S. swine
Diclc fster, executive vice presiindustry is changing. Producers dent of the council, said be has
mu~t change and adapt to sue- seen a jump in pork consumption
cced."
over the past few months and is
Hennessy spo~e at the Ohio QPtintistic about the fututc. He ssid
Parle Conpess, an annual confer- the incrtasc is due to a lot of pork
enec that features worksiKips and a beinJ 011 the market, making It a
trade show. About 6,500 pork pro- good bul for consumers . .
ducers from Ohio and surrounding · "We ve 101 to do everything~
Sl81eS arc expected to attend this · can ·to keep the price of pork down
JCI!'Sconfem!CC.
so more peopk can enjoy it," Isler
"Per-capita consumption of said. "I think more and more pea. pa,k and podt ~ucts is projected pie arc getting the. word that podt' s
to increase shghtly." Hennessy a lot leaner than 11 used to he and
iiid. "~production will contin- lower in fat and lower in chotcsue 10 con.olidate, with fewer and tcrol."
1ar1t1r pmclllccn."
·
An animal-rights group has
1fc lllid a survey taken in 1989 scheduled a demonstration Saturshowed that nearly half of U.S. hog day to proteSt what it caUed "inhufumcrs were 45 or older, with 13 mane fac~ farming systems,"
IJCICC!It over 65. Less than 3 perAccording to the PeopleAnunals
cent were under 25.
· ·
~ Network, two-thirlls of aU pigs pro. "I think it teUs us there's going duced in the United Slates spend
tO be some chaliges in the way. we their lives in confinement systems
rm.t hoJS, because we're going to that restrict movement
have diffcient people raising them
But Isler said many animalfive ·to 10 .years from now than rights activists have little k~owl­
~· we've got today," Hennessy ~e about raising hogs.
lliid. ·
'Farme111 really do care," he
. ·He said podt Ploducersnation- said. "Many of them realize the
wide declined !tom 470,1100 in importance of humane treatment."
i978 to fewer than 200,000 in

President bas a selling
job
•
That experience soured many
By JOHN CUNNIFF
Americans.
and presents Clinton
AP BuSIDess Aulyst
NEW YORI( - After the with an additional obstacle. Not.
uproar, a sober and unemotional only must he convince Congress
qucalion will emerge: Will the eco- his program is wise, but he must
nomic plan presented by President overcome the dismal mi:mories and
Clinton rcaUy cul the budget deficit consequences of 1990. ·
Those memories are open and
.and stimulate the economy?
It could do one. both or neither, sore. They are accompanied by
and because of this it will be a fear, and a sense among many voters that they were wronged,
'IOU&amp;h seiling job.
•
· The promised spellding ~uts
,~ ~ore ominously, could it
never
occurred (spending actually
·~ slow econonuc growth and
wilkin the defiCit in the manner of grew), the economy slumped. jobs
the 1990 l8lt increases, when the were lost, the anticipated revenue
So-called budget summit negotia- 11ain turned into a loss of revenue
mstead, and the deficit worsened.
'.ton ~ised to all but eliminate
deflClts by 1995?
•'·"
PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
FebruarJl3, 1993
. S'OOCK STEERS:
60.00-109.00
300.under
57.50-107.00
300-SOO
65.00-87.25
45()0.100
ro.00-71.00
8QO..over
.
. STOCK HEIFERS:
58.00-99.00
.. ~under
55.00-80.00
300.500
50.00-79.50
. 500.700
47.00-63.00
. S()().over
· STOCK BULLS:'
58.00-104.00
. . 300.1inder
54.50-104.00
300-SOO
53.00.82.50
500-100
.
' I
47.25-62.75
Slaughter BuUs
525.00-810.00
COws .t; Calves BH
40.00-63.00
Bnxl Cows By#
325.00-815.00
BIIXICowsBH
. Slaughter Cows:
46.00-49.00
i Hi&amp;h Dressing
42.00-46.00
Utility
39.00-41.00
· Canner &amp; Cutter
75.00-105.()0
: Veal - choice
69.00-74.00
Medium
58.50-68.00
Good
35.00-161.00
Baby Calves BH
44.50-66.50
HORSEScwt
80.00-300.00
Ponies B.H.
HOGS:
36.00-40.00
301).500
22.00-25.00
Male Hogs·
6.00-49.00
· Goats
HORSE &amp; TACK SALE- Fri. Feb. 19th,6 .m.

I

row. .

Pick 3:

493
Pick 4:

0716
Super Lotto:

5·21-28-35-40-47
Kicker:

Page4

121227

Cloudy tonl&amp;bt. Low Ill mid
doudy. High In
mid-lOs.

ttODS. Tuesday,

..

•
"Beat the Spring r~sh and highe~ prices by
shoppin@ Smith's durjng our. 39th Anniversary Sale
-Now. in ·P rogress"' We have many '93' Buicks and
Pontiacs arrivipg· ~oon and we inll8fmake room."

Eplin named to post
GAU.IPOLIS - Dan Eplin )Yas
recently appointed to the position
of manager of Woodlancl Centers'
Our House Youth Crisis Intervention Center located in Jackson.
Eplin worked for Woodland
Centers' Children's Residential
Treatment Proaram in Gallipolisfor eight years. .
.
He attended the University of
Rio Grande where he· obtained a
B.S ..in Social Sciences and earned
his Education certification. }le
pllduated Magna Cum Laude and
1s an Academic All-American
sekctee.
Eplin. a Vietnam era veteran.
operated the veteran •s office in Rio

Grande.

:v..... llv..211

"Cap; ld

ALL.CARS II ST.OCI REDUCED!

DAN-EPLIN

39th ANNIVERSARY ,
\

.

.

.

Farm program
signup slated to
begin March 1
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Agricultural Stabilization
. and Conservation Service will
begin accepting applications for the
1993 farm piOgtams on· March I.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is requiring acreage reductions
of 10 percent fQt com and zero percent f~ wheat, oats, and barley.
Farmers who meet acreage
reduction and other program
requirements will be eligible for
price support loins and deficiency
payments. Producers inay request
50 percent of the estimated total
deficiency payments in program
crops when ihey sign up for the
1993 p!'Ognlllls. The advance payments will be issued in cash, and
will be limited to the farmer's
intended prosnun acreage.
·
The 1993 programs have flexible planting features, the same as in
1992. Up to 25 pen:ent of the crop
acte~ge base or fkx acres, may be
planted tp any progial1l crop, any
oilsc:Cd. illdllllrial, or experimental ·
crop desianated by USDA. or any
other crop e~ fruits and vegeaa. bles. Crops whiCh may be planted
on flex acreage should .be verified 1
with the ASCS office.
For additional details on these
and other 1993 farm program provisions, farmers may contact the
Gallia ASCS offiCe at 446-8686.
Tile 1993 farm program sign-up
.eni!S Apri130. •
·

Researchers shoot
for bigger., more
efficient harvests

'11D

-Tornado-like winds damage ~alem Center

.

..._ IDirlllld win reports
Tonlado-lilte winds ripped
'-lluoucb Salem Ccmete.ly S..xlay
e•eUiglk:saoyilifamollilebome.
disaupriuc elecmcal service and
ii••:qint::J.alem Center Ele:
m- •y
c:P"ing a school

SELL-A-BHA'FlON! .
.

FEB. 22, 195\4 tO FEB. 22, 1993

92 BUICI&lt; REGAL 4 DR.

will reQPCD. Lisle said. Workers are
stiU assessing damage, he added.
Three people escaped serious
injurywhentheirmobilehomewas
blown off its foundation and roUed
several times before COOling to rest
partly on State Route 124.
~. lllday.
·
According to Salem Volunteer
· Aa:udin&amp; D Salem Cenu:r. Ele- Fire Department Chief Dick Lammeatuy Sc:bool Principal John bert, Charlene Crisp and two chi!1.isle, ..e roof was completely dren sought shelter in the trailer's

units. Crisp was treated at the scene
by the Rutland squad, Lambert
said.
.
Workers used a back hoe to
push a section of the mobile home
off of State Route 124, Lambert
said.
·
This morning, the wrecked trail·
er lay about 75 feet away from its
foundation, while men worked on
the .roof of the nearby Pick and

throughout the linle community.
In addition, the tops were blown
off several silos at. a nearby farm.
Several outbuildings were 'toppled
and several homes sported
tarpaulins covering damaged roofs.
Electric service to the communiIY. was also disrupted by the storm.
Ernie Sisson, manager of Ohio
Power in Mei~:s County, said high
winds and lightning caused a

SciotO Counties.
Buck~e Operations reported
betweeK""I;CXlO and 1.500 customelli
were without electricity when the
storm hit at 6 p.m. Most of the
power was restored by midnight.
Tornadoes killed two people in
· the South and injured more th-an
100 othelll whi~ weekepd travelers
were stranded in the Rockies by
avalanches and blindinll snow. Col-

destroyed, and thousands or people
remained without electricity today.
authorities said.
In Cedartown. Ga., a man in a
trailer was lcilled by one or at least
two tornadoes that tore through
Georgia Sunday night, authorities
said . At least 19 others were
injured.
High wind damnge was .reported
across South Carolina. A suspected

in sir:wuai odlcr k• • • •
k
i• wheB the school

Shovel
grocery,
whilerested
cows,
in a
field across
the road,
peace·
fully among debris scattered

poweroutngearound6:30p.m.
settherr
sights
on
Workers were on the scene until orado
findingrescuers
five missing
skiers
today.
3:30 this morning, Sisson said.
· The West Coast got a temporary
Approximately 200 Ohio Power reprieve from he!lvy rain and snow,
customers were effected, Sisson aUowing flooded communities time
said.
,
to shore up river banks as a new
In Gallia County, Buckeye storm approached.
Rural Electric Cooperative reported
At least half a dozen twisters
numerous widespread outages fol- touched down Sunday in eastern
lowing Sunday evening's high Tennessee, including one in Lenoir
winds and lighming.
City thai killed an elderly woman
J Hardest hit were Lawrence, and injured nearly 100 people.
Jackson and GaUia Counties. BRE
Ten. people were injured in a
reported, but scattered outages torpado that hit nearby Tellico
were .also reported in Meigs, Plains, Tenn. Across ·the regio·n,
Athens, Vinton, Pike, Ross and dozens of homes were damnged or

tornado but
hit Belton,
S.GA
.. causing
damage
no injuries.
tornad9
touched down about 40 111lles east
or Lexington, Ky., causing linle or
no damage.
Rescue workers were to resume
their search today for an IS-yearold 1"3" whose canoe ovenurned in
a storm-swollen creek in Rush,
Ky., police said.
Another man was missi.ng in
Virginia after faUing into a mging
creelt. Heavy snow that tum~ to
rain Sunday filled rivers and
creeks, causing scatte!'ed flooding.

is-.,.
~

~~off~~the~·~-~~i~•~·i~mn~an~ld~tom~-""~~th~tu~b~be~rore~•~·t~w~as~'b~l~ow~n~o~v~e~r.~
Lamben said a faUen tree hampered the arrival of e!llergency

\

Loaded, low mllea, balance of
warranty.

~!11,888
92 GRAND PRIX SEDAN
or her dau11tter's mobile ' home which was

.

'

' Factory Demo'e.
2-Low mileage,

Tilt, crulee, power windows, ca.seette,
rear defroater.

.s,.,.

Sam Crawford. Chairman of the
SEORC
Industrial Development
Gon:uur's CJ6ice of APP!"rija
Committee,
stated that the new
wiD be tl!r: f - u l 4 I H whca
Wage.
Benefit
and Labor Survey of
sof6eSe •?
aObio
11
eoundes
is
the' rust lime that a
Rei I Crwcj) llald d!eir- wimcr
publication
of
thil kind bas been
_.;q aa tile· Uaivnsity of Rio
for
an entire region.
aa:omplished
Grwde m~Tiwsdliy. MIR:b 4 .
He
added
the
booklet
would be
llollistcr is Cllpecll:d to talt
made
available
to
development
abont prcscat md future
An.. ,.., ft·w•• dcvdopmeal groups and Cl\ambers of Com-

"-'Y fWii

SAVE

=

• Dilec:IOi ol the

'

::;:-Bet£~!!=

the SOORC said.

o·
FROM

$1.6,980

No one hurt
in
'
two Sunday fires

91 Lesabre Umited

White with blue velour Interior.
Loaded. 93 Park Avltnue trade.

White wfth red leather trim,

$.9,900'

According to Crawford, who is
ail Obio State University Develap-

ment Specialist, 94 manufacturing
fmns provided confidential information pertaining to wages and
benefits to make' this publication
possible.
·

f

90 Buick Park Avenue

mercc.

Evaas stated m,.J, d!c SEORC
would ase lilt •• • ·~ " 10 rdca1c: a
Wqe, B fit .a Labar Survey, a
32 ,-ae booklet. of a 11 county
RIJCia, aad. also a series of new
. Kenner Bush, publisher of.
hi&amp;l!waY lwodloaes '!IJIIId be made • the0Athens
Messenger and ChairawiWte
'
·
man
of
the
SEORC
Highway Users
Tile Gallia Couaty Cbamber of
Comminee,
stated
that
a series of
0M!IWN$De will Kt•JIIIIas for Jk
four
brochures
depicting
the
m i'C Wl!idl 'llill SEORC SEORC Highway Agenda would
-ben from II rmaties . Ron
McDade, presideat of d!c Gallia be made available to the public at
Couaty Cllaalber of C0111merce, this meeting: The four broc'hures
include an overall master with the
said a laoJiclaiiRiill- exp:aed

Family vehicle. Several In stock.

s
.
,_ 13,90

demolished rn the storm. Mrs. Davis' daupter,
Charlene Crisp, and two c:blldren reportedly
·sought shelter In the trailer's bathtub and
recelYech•IJ mlaor ·~ (Seatbiel phOto by
Jim Freeman)
'
•

..Unio·n miners stage
rally in1 Charleston

Hollister speaker for March 4 SEORC meeting

OILY

eptire SEORC Highway Agenda
and three corridor brochwes; Route
23 from Columbus to Ponsmouth
and Htmtington, W. V•.; Route 35
from Dayton to Gallipolis and to

Charleston, W.Va.; and ~oute 33
from Columbus to Ravenswood,
W.Va and Charleston. · .
Bush praised the highway corridor sub commiuees for an excellent
job' in presenting the Council's
agenda m brochure form. He added
that the brochures. indicated time
tables for expedited planning and
construction on the different region
hi&amp;hways and hoped the brochures
would be out or date in two years.
Area· Utility Development personnel ·applauded the efforts of the
Highway Commiuee and the Industrial Development Committee and
as importartt to the future development of southeastern Ohio are
encouraging other regional development groups to duplicate these
effons.
· ·
A press conference will be held
prior to the dinner meeting at
which time. Bush and Crawford .
will funher explain the Highway
Agenda and the Wage, Benefit and
Labor Survey.
.
Tickets for the meeting are $10
dollars. for the hospitality and dinner and may be purchased frQm
local Chambers or Commerce.
Reception is slated for 6 p.m.
and dinner 6:30.

Climate control A/C. Power
seat, luggag, rack. 93 Park

Avenue trade.
BEAUnFUL CARl
•

90 Pont. Bo..vllle SE

11,000 low mllet,loaded.

$10
, . I 900

Immaculate ~ndltlonl
Comp..-. To N•w and Savel

owner.

includes 12 of the largest U.S. coal reflects a l)igger picture. ·
CliARLESTON, W.Va. (AP
companies.
•'We did it to protect our market
- Hundreds of miners streamed
Contract
.negotiations
have
share,"
he said. "And i,!l doio~
into. a Ul!inn hall today !0 learn ~e
Sll!lle4
sipec_
mid-December
over
that,
We
protect
d!oSc Coal miDCill
sta~ of PeaotiiWons lietwctn the ·
United Mine Wotkers and ihe Bitu- the union's request for information jobs."
Shiflett also said he is struggling
minous Coal Oper410rs Associa- on corporate structure.
The UMW wants unionized to keep jobs for 6,000 Peabody
tion, said union Vice President
companies to stop creating non- employees despite the dwindling
Cecil Roberts.
About 7,500 miners have been union subsidiaries to which they marlcet.
"l.'m not union-busting," Shion a selective strike ~gainst shift reserves and purchase orders.
Meanwhile, Peabody Coal Co. flett told The EvansviUe Courier on
Peabody Holding Co. Inc. since
Feb. 2 Jn West Virginia, Illinois, President George S. Shiflett says Sunday. "That' s not on my agen- ·
his decision to ship stockpiled coal da, now or in the future."
Indiana and Kentucky.
Miners from West Virginia and
Ohio were dressed in camounage
fatigues at the meeting. Many wore
baseball hats with the (WOrds
"UMWA Solidarity" on them .
Others carried signs that read,
"Solidarity. Peabody unfair 10
miners. ••
John F. Musser of Mulberry
Many of the milK)rs were not on Heights has announced his candi•
strlke but attended the meeting to dacy for.a. seat Clll Pomeroy Villnge
suppon the union.
Council.
"We stand ready to do whatever
This is Musser's first bid for a
it takes," sald Ed Patterson, a political office. He is a Republican.
worlcer at CONSOL Inc.'s mine in Since there will be no primary in
Pomeroy, Musser will be on the
Benwood.
The minelll planned a demon- ballot in the fall with George
stration tod.ay outside peabody Wright, William Young. and
Thomas Werry, Republicans. Larry
offices downtown.
"We're going to urge them to Wchrung, Democrat, and any indebe. ~ceful in the strike," Robens . pendents who might file between
satd.·
now and May 3.
'
Musser said that be is running
The UMW called the strike
against Peabody subsidiaries for one of the four scats on Council
Peabody Coal of Henderson, Ky., because he is "vilaUy interested in
and 'Eastern Associated Coal of the Pomeroy-Middlepon area. seeCharleston. Peabody, the nation's ing restoration and beautification, ~
largest coal producer, is a member and working toward economiC ·
of the coal operators group, which growth".
The candidate has worked closely with the Pomeroy Merchants
Association and Pomeroy Village
JOHN F. MUSSER
Council on the revitalization pro- iax inves\igator.
ject
He is affiliated with Trinity
Musser is pan owner of Down- Church where he ,serves as an
ing Childs Mullen Musser Insur- ·elder, on the Churcfi Council, and
ance or Pomeroy. He and his wife. sings with the choir. He is a also a .
Dottie, employed with Farmers member of Drew Webster Post 39,
Bank, have a son, Steven A. Muss- American Legion, and the
er, who works with Eaton Indus- Pomeroy-Middlepon Lions Club,
tries in Ashville, N. C. ·
and serves oil the Strategic Analyl'rior to going into the insurance sis Team for the Meigs County
business 14 years ago, Musser Vocational Education Planning
operated the Meigs Inn, and was a District

Musser files for seat
.on Pomeroy Council

•

Lancaster police officer ·
shot, killed; suspect held .

92 Mazda 626

Ruby red,· loaded With optiOne, IIUfll.
wtt-ale, coneo1e lhlft, loc.l *'Y 1·
Extra OIHn.

lnclucM8 sunroof.

,

.

Thank You For 39 Years!
'

I Section, 10 Pogeo 25 ...,,,
A llulllmocllo Inc. No-popor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday; Februal)' 22, 1993

Storms pound U.S., numerous · power outages reported locally

·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Agriculture Department scientists arc
trying to unravel the mystery of
how genes cause plants to shed
their leaves, flowers and fruiL
Once they learn the secret, the
scientists believe, the discovery can
help to make harveats bigger and
more efficient.
"Today, fruits often fall off a
plant before the harvCIIcr gets to
iheni," says Mark Tucker, a
·molecular biologist aa the Agricul- ·
tural Research Service's Plant
Continued from D-1
Molecular Biology Laboratory in
Beltsville, Md.
industrY. which lost $8 billion .in
Major economic .events schedIn some cues, he added, plant
lhe past three years, due to declin- uled for next week ·~elude ~cbru­ leaves illtcrfere with the harvesting
ing ridership and cutthroat fare ary's consumer cons1dcnce mdex, of fruit
eompetiliQn. .
'for release Tuesday. On
Tucker is testing forms of a
Wednesday ... m•d-February auto plant gene that makes ccUulue, an
TICKER:
'- Word of Clinton's economic sales and January durable g&lt;X?ds enzyme that breaks down the bioplan initially sent stocks plunging, orderS. Thursday ... January exlst- chemical glue binding leaves and
··wit~ the Dow Jones rndustrial
ing home sales report.
nowers to stems.
AVerage falling 82.94 points on
st
tueSday. Stocks stabilized later in
.the week while bonds ralliedon.the
See Pnzzle on Page D-2
ex~talions of.aJowcr !leflc1t.
Fi=lleral regulators charged the
' chairman of" the New York Mer. ~eaatlle Exchange, Z. Lou
,Gut\man. with commodities law
•violations. Guttman later refused
hia hoard's request to step down
folkiwing the charges. The nation's
labor leaders urg'ed Clinton to
reject the North American Free
·Tr1lde Agreement with Mexico and
Canada, but the AFL·CIO suggest•
ed the United StateS should uy to
join the European Communi!~.
laconomic reports released th•s
week offered mixed news: inflation
rose a J!wp 0.5 percent and while
'new housing &amp;tarlll tell 7.2 percent
in Jilnuary, while the trade deficit
swelled 29 percent in 1992 to $84.3
billion. In rontrast, industrial production posted its rourl~ monthly
gain rismg 0.4 percent. m Jan'!MY
whiie jobless benefits clums
dropped for the third week in a

Hillary...

Ohio Lottery

WestNBA.
All-Stars top
East 135-132

21 1193

.

(

RECYCLE J)AY HELD • A. recycle day wu
lleJd s.a.nlat ..,.lnl at Krtllft''l parklne Jot
Ia ,_ero,. Tile nut wu •p-red b7 the
Melp C..t)' lteeyelllll, ll!ld Litter Prenntlon
PI ; • · Aecordllll to ltenny Wlal111, director

litter coatrol olllce, ap,roxlmate I:O!lectto. toals were fol!r tons ol Dnnpaperl, 6,000

Ill

d• v1 dar eJui, AO poundl ol areen &amp;Iaaa;

p
•

400 (IOIIIICII o1 b!'DWII ...... 280 pounds ol mixed
steelaa alumla. . ~ 4C)O pounds ol dn ca111, · ·
100 pounds vi mllll .lap, ~ JIC)UDIII ot Utcr bot·
ties, 50 pounds ol ftJb ll'llJ'I, 10 pounds ofllastlc
l"oce!7 bap ll!ld 50 ~ ol compte cardboard. Wlqlns stated tile eve
. nt. prodac:f!( far
beyood m:flldq expedtcla It bi'OUillt Ia about
three times u mllny rec:,elab~s •s pre:vlous
days.
·

LANCASTER, Ohio (AP) - A
"I will not rule out asking fo~
man being held in the robbery of a the death penalty," said Prosecutor
convenience store faces additional David Landefeld about presenting
charees in the slaying of a police the case to a special grand jury:
orrx:er, the Fairf~eld County prose- "We want to look very closely a~
cutor says.
it •·
Officer Brett Markwood, 30, .
Police Chief Tom Chilcote said'
died at 4:32 p.m. Sunday of il gun- Markwood was the second orrocer
shot ~ound to the hea(l. said Mart in ~ent history to be .lcilled in'
Hopktns, a ~pokesman 11 Mount the bnc of duty and the fnt since·
Carmel East Hosplllllln Columbus. 1909.
Markwood was pursuing a susLandefeld said he planned to me
peel in a convenience IliOn: robbely a charge of aaaravated robbery
when he was shot in the face at _ with a gun specification aaai.nst
1:53 a.m. Sunday. ·
Frazier today _in Municipal COurt.
John W. Frazier, 29, no addresS
A Deily Marl 1101e oa the city's
available, was being held in the west side was •obbed atlboutl:30
city jail on one count of robliery. a.m. Sunday. said police Capt.
Additional charges were pending. ·
William Parrisli. ·
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Commentary.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
\

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhlisher/ControDer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETfERS OF ' OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
. .
1· • words. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
address and ielephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste. addressing issues. not personaHties.
·

:~Letters

spokesman ·calls his first public
comrflents on the Democrats' fami·
ly feud, Obey acknowledges being
only "blunt and hones.t" and.called
other characteriZations of the con·
From listening to the Clinton versation "distortions."
Administration and Hillary, one is
No .one is quite sure how AID, a
led to think lhat the American peo- . scandal-plagued, fraud-ridden
pie themselves caused this run·' branch of the State Dcparunent that
away spending, An example of
why money has been handled like
'creek water is that three-story
building in Middlepon staffed by
bureaucrats giving away the peo'
pie's money. Just realize that this
same thing is going orl all over this
counuy.
As an addendum let me add that
I have just snaked in a huge sassafras root to keep us in tea~ Our
old cow is giving a quart of milk
night and morning. We have saved
enough little potatoes to plant a
patch this spring. Fuel (no tax) is
for the cutting. I ca11 half sole
shoes. A county boy can survive
and so can a county girl if she marries a country boy. Come on Presi·
dent Clintan we are in out of the
rain.
Gayle Price
POrtlarid

Reader feels we don't ne.ed another WPA
4fte ears.

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' "Get the economy moving again
and get our people back to work,"
Gore says.
We don't need another W.P.A.
again in this country. The only
thing that brought America out of
the Groat Depression was not the
W:P.A. It was World War II. You
would think from the stuff we are
hearing from !he Clinton adminis·
iration that the American people
are the culprits and have to start
coughing up to stave oiT disaster.
. Part or the roasoo, and the principal reason, that we have !his run·
away deficit that they want to scare
us to death with, is that people lilce
AI Gore and Byrd of West Virginia
Sat in !he Senate Bl)d pork barreled,
raised their pay and perked this
c'ounuy into what it is today. Read
~ ~ the March Reader's Di,{!est about
our "Foreign Aid FoUies.

WASHINGTON- With Presi·
dent Clinton diS1!11Cted until recent·
ly by his search for. an attorneY,
general, congressional Democrats
have been fighting among themset ves for !he spoils of victory but perhaps in no case so bittlerly
as over who wiD head !he Agency
for International Development.
At the heart of this controversy
is a 30-minute telephone conversa·
lion between Ruth Harkin, who is
in the running for the AID post,
and House Foreign Operations
Appropriations Subcommittee
Chairman David Obey, D-N.Y.
Harkin is the wife of Sen. Tom
Harkin, D-Jowa. According to
sources close to both Harkins,
Obey was rude, bullying and even·
"chauvinistic" during the conver-

sati~g his silence with what a

to the editor

;. Dear Editor,
•. From the baby talk AI Gore is
~iving us, one would think that the
:11verage American is not dry behind

· Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio:
Monday, February 22,1993

over who

~ill

McHugh enjoyed the supporl of
senior House Democrats, who went
to bat for him at the White House.
Late I!ISI month, according to
close associates, Ruth Harkin
placed a courtesy call to Obey's
administtative assistant to confll'lll
that she desired the job and that she
understood that Obey wasn't
·
pleased.
Harkin was startled that
1
her ·p hone call was promptly
. returned - but not by a staffer. It
was to be .secretary of agriculture.
was Obey himself.
After losing out to Mike Espy,
" Obey returned the phone call
Clinton telephoned her last Decem· and started ranting at her about not
ber to ascertain her interest in AID. being qualified and how he had his
Harkin, a private attorney in Wash- own candidate," said one source
ington, was also backed by her who consulied with Harliin shortly
close friend' Hillary Rodham Clin· after the conversation. "Siie was
ton. The two women grew close quite taken aback by !he level of
while !heir husbands slugged it out his questioning her credentials and
during the Democratic presidential the vehemence with which he was
primaries, before Harkin's with· promoting his own candidate for
drawal in March.
. the spot. She's a fotmer prosecutor
The emergence of Harkin as a so she's used to strong language,
contender for AID clearly rankled . but she was taken aback by his
Obey, whose handpicked candidate . (Obey's) demeanor."
·
was close friend a,!ld just-retired
While Obey enjoys a reputation
colleague Rep. Matthew F. as a serious and honorable legislaMcHugh ~ D·N.Y. In addition to tor, one former committee chairObey, whose foreign operations man with whom Obey worked
subcommittee oversees AID,

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

·Dear Editor,
This letter is in reference to the
Meigs and Southern freshman
championship tOurnament held at
the Southern High School Gymna·
.sium.
First of all, both officials who
'officiated the game are from the
Southern area. In my opinion the
officials were more than a little
.partial toward the Southern players.
,: The Meigs players showed a lot
of heart and overcame the obstacle
,of the officials apd went on to win
the game by !he score of 43 to 38.
What these officials need to recognize is when they show partiality

toward a certain team, they are ·
only hurting the kids in the long
run.
I realize that Southern supports
their basketball one-hundred percept, and I admire that as a fan
myself and wished that Meigs was
as supportive in all their sports.
·As a Meigs fan, I felt the way
the championship trophy was presented to the Meigs team was in a
sore loser attitude. In closing, I
would like to say it is easy to bask
in the glory of victory, but it is just
as important 10 be a graceful loser.
Dan Dodson
Pomeroy

Resident worried about shootings
Dear Editor:
was believing. I had two bullet
On April II , 1992 someone shot holes in my front ·room, Four buliny house five times and one bullet . lets are in the house yet today.
came through my 14 foot room and
The one or ones who shot my
went in another wall. I called ·the house may not have to answer to
sheriffs office and a deputy came the .law or me, bui will answer to
· but it was "hush" in the paper. God. Some nice people came to my
Then on Aug. II, 1992, someone home to help m any way they
came and shot my house one more could. They know who they are
ti me. I wonder if it will happen and I thank them yery much. I
again. I am very upset with the ter- praise the friends very h1gh. I think
rible ordeal.
Meigs County had better wake up
A former sheriff was in office and make it a safer place to live.
.a11d someone smashed my new
I want to thank everyone who
•itorm in. I called the sheriff's helped comfort me ~nd for their
~ffice and they told me a bird new
prayers during my terrible ordeal. I
;Jilto my door. But someone said I eSP._eeially thank my brother and his
~as "crazy and don't pay any
wtfc for being good to me and their
:auention to her." The sheriff never understanding. God Bless all.
;iame to sec about my door. But
Beny Eastman
·»-hen I got my house shot, seeing
Porrteroy, Ohio

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Berry•s World

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Lighten up. It's happy hour. you know. '

head AID

MICH.

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IToledo I 22" I

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IND.

The DailyiSentinel-Page-3

By The AsSociated Press
The Natidnal Weather Service
says snow is e~ted across north·
east Ohio ton1ght, with cloudy
skies and a chance of flurries in the
rest of the state. Lows tonight will
range from around 10 in northwest
Ohio to around 20 in !he southeasL
Mosdy cloudy skies and nurries
are forecast for Tuesday. Highs
will range from around 15 in the
northwest to near 25 in the south·
east.
Early morning skies were
cloudy across Ohio. Flurries and a
bit of freezing drizzle were falling

over sections of the statc. Tempera·
tures were in the upper 20s to low
30s.
.
· The record high temperature for
this date at the CQiwnbus weather
station was 70 degrees in 1930.
The record low was 8 degrees
below zero in 1963. Sunset will be
at 6: 16 p.m. Sunrise Tuesda,Y will
be at 7:14a.m.
Around the nation
An ·intense weather system that
brought" thunderstorms, tornadoes
and heavy snow across !he South
and Midwest moved East today
with a mix of winter precipitation.

Another low pressure system
over the PacifiC Ocean was headed
for shore today, threatening to
bring more heavy rain and snow to
the saturated West.
Some of the coldest air of the
season was spreading across the
northern Plains siates today and
was ellpected to spread eastward,
while along the Gulf Coast temper·
atures were forecast in !he 70s and
80s.
.
freezing rain and snow was
falling early today across much of
th.e Northeast The storm was moving across New England and was

forecast to be out oyer the Atlanti~
by late today, with temperature(
warming somewhat behind the-·
front

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On Sunday the storm front ~
duced violent thunderstorms, largO:
hail and several tornadoes in thC:
South. Two people were killed and'
dozens of homes destroyed or dam.:
aged.
•
A winter storm watch was u~
today for pans of northern Califor·
nia, including the Shasta and
Siskiyou mountains and scctioos of.
the Stema Nevada.
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-:-------Weather------. South-Central Ohio
•
· Tonight, cloudy with a chance
of flurri~s. Low 15 to 20. Tuesday,
.J?Ostly cloudy. High around 25.
E'xtended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
Wednesday, a chance of snow in

the northeasi and fair elsewhere.
Highs mosdy in !he 20s. Lows 5 to
10. Thursday, fair. Highs from the
upper 20s to the low 30s. Lows
mostly in the teens. Friday, a
chance of r11in or snow. Htghs
mostly in the 30s. Lows from the
upper teens to the' mid 20s. ·
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COMMUNITY BAND PERFORMS • The Big Bend Commu·
nity Band, under the' direction of William R. Hall, performed a
targe crowd Sunday afternoon in the auditorium of Meigs Junior
High School. The band is coordinated by tbe Middleport Arts

....---,__,_-Area deaths----,Elza Birch

_ George Carson

'

Ethel Priddy

were so few black managers in :
baseball was that blacks might lack ·
"the necessities" -the btains -&lt;
for so intellectual· a job. Campanis
was instantly fued.
Had there been time for :
response to the denunciations· of
Campanis, it would have beeti :
noted that - as New York DailY:
News sportswriter Mike Lupica .
wrote during the Schott event ....:.. .
"AI CamP.Mis had spent an entire :
baseball hfe doing as much to open .
up !he game to minorities as IIIJY· .
one." ·
·, :
But because of the words he '
said on "Nightline," that part of .
Campanis' career disappeared, and ·
he wu doomed.
.
In Marge Schott's case, there t
was at least enough time for call·
. and-response 10•that she hurriedly
hired a Cuban maqager, Tony
Perez, and employed minorities
throughout her organizatibn.
Nat Hentorr Is a natlonallj :
reno-ed authorlt7 on the Flnt. 1
Amendment and the rett ·or tile :
Bill or Rl1bta and a writer rot t
Newspaper EnterprlH Auoela·
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A sizable crowd attended Sun· Ethel Virginia Priddy, 76, Mid- day afternoon's concert of the Big
Elza W: Bir~h, 88, of Vine · George·A. Carson, 67, or West
.Street, Racme, died Sunday, Feb. Columbia, died Saturday F~ . dleport, died early Monday mom· Bend Community Band held in the
21 , 1993 at Veterans• Memorial 20 1993 at Charleston
Medi· ing, Feb. 22, 1993, at the Holzer' .. auditorium of Meigs Junior High
Extended Care Facility.
cai Cen~
·
Medical Center.
School. The band is under the
Born on March II, 1916 in Rut· direction of WiUiam R. Hall, Mid·
.' The retired. superintendent of
Born oCtober S, 1925 in·Ripley,
D_ravo Corp., Apple Grove, M_r. he was a son of the late John Edwin land, she was the daughter of the dlepon, director af Eastern High
.B1rch was hom 01_1 Dec. 12, 1909 m and Jean c. (Armstrong) Carson. late Earl Ltwi and Rebecca Vir- School. The band is sponsored by
.Lebanon Tow!'sh1p. J;le was the son He was a retired dairy farmer and a giniB' Morrison Jacks.
the Middleport Arts Council.
She was a homemaker and a
pf the .late Wtlbur Bm:h and Darla school bus driver for Mason
Selections during the perfor·
~arl Bm:h.
.
County Board of Education for 22 member of the Full Gospel Light· mancc included "America the
. He y;as a member of ~he years. He was a past member of house Church in Pomeroy.
Beautiful," "Ovenure in B Flat,"
She is survived by •a daughter, "Selections from 'Man of LaM.itn·
Meth~ISt Church and the Racme Western Soil Conservation District,
~n!c Lod!!e F. and .A. ¥·
Southern States Co-op, Federal Cledith Arvella Sinclair of Cam- cha •," "The Vanished Army."
.He 1s S!lfVIVed by hiS w1fe, Cora Land Bank Associatioo, Meigs bridge, four daugh!Crs and sons-in· "American Folk Rhapsody No. 3,",
Homer ~trch, Racme; a da';!ghter County Farm Bureau, Dairy Mens law, Mae Maxine and Clarence Jor- and "Themes Like Old Times"
and son-m-law, Betty and Richard Co-operative Sales Association dan of Pomeroy, Flora Virginia and including selections from "Aiellan·
'Roberts, Lawton, Okla; throe sons Milk 1
M'llc Mark ·
WV George Bing of Lancaster, Carolyn der's Ragtime Band," "Peg 0' My
·and daughters-in-law, Larry and
. • . nc., 1
eung,
· Sue and William Van Meter of
Dorothy Birch of Pueblo, Colo., ~ficlal Brecdel;l Co-op, Board of Clifton, W. Va., and Marolyn Lue Hean." ·a Want a Girl," "Silvery
~Robert and Carol Birch, Belleview, Dtreetors t;&gt;f SU'C P.ower, State and Charles Rife of Wellston; a sis·
'and Roger and, Sharon Birch, Board of Dtreetors·~ Herd~­ ter Dolly Cleland ofRutland, 20
Rllcine; nine grandchildren, 13 pro~ernent Assocl8bon, Dairy . grandchildren, two step-grandchil·
great-grandchildren, and two sis- .SMile Club. .He was a fire fighter dren; 30 gri:l!t·grandchifdren, and
ters, Augusta Powell of Ton:h and for 43 years, 'a member of the four great•grcat.grandchildren. .
Hazel Shuck, Lake Wales, Fla.
Muon VoiiiiiiM' Fire ~~
She was preceded in death by
Besides his ,parents, he was pre- where he served as fire ch1ef from her husband, Roy G. Priddy, in
ceded in dcadl by three brothers, 1969 io 1~3, he was fire fighter of 1988, and a daughter, Linda Carol
Jack and Ralph Birch. and Ernest the year tn 1982; was a charter Sinclair, six brothers, and one sis·
Clark~ and two sisters, Daisy Pran member · of the Muon \'illunteer ter. Burial will be at Miles Cemeand Erma Birch.
Rescue Squad, a ~ember. of the tery. Services will be held Thurs·Uiiits of the Meigs County
Funeral services will be held Mason Town Councll for Sill year, day at I p.m. at the Fisher Funeral
Wednesday at II a.m. a( !he Ewing was ~ secretary of the Mason Home. Friends may call at the Emergency Medical Serv'ice and
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev. Recreauon C~ter•. a.member of the funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 volunteer ftre departments respond·
ed to 15 calls for assistance .during
Roller Grace will officiate and . ~~ Counctl C!vt! Defense, In· Wednesjlay.
·
the weekend.
bunal will be in Letart Falls Ceme· ternati!lflal · ~18Uon of Arsl!n
tery. Friends may call at the funeral lnvesugators, B1g Bend C~ ~
Saturday • 6:53 a.m. Tuppers
home Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 10 Club. Carson was a bus driver mPlains to State Route 7 for Homer
Veterans
Memorial
.9 p m
structor for the Mason County
SATURDAY ADMiSSIONS· Cole who was transpori.ed to Cam· ·
Board of Education, a representaden Clark Hospital; 12:13 p.m .
Sarah
Smith, Pomeroy.
tive of -the School Service Person·
Pomcroy· to Pomeroy Pik'e for
SATURDAY
DISCHARGES
•
Gtrorge Molden
tiel and a member of !he Army NaSarah Smith who was tranSported
Janet
Henline,
Gladys
Proffitt,
·
, George A. 'Molden, 79, of Oak tional Guard.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
He
was
also
preceded
in
death
by Kenneth Brown.
Street, Pomeroy, died ~aturday,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - 12:52 p.m. Pomeroy to Darst Nurs·
Feb. 20, 1993, at Darst Home· Care a sister, Mary Jo Riley, and a Woodrow Hall, Racine; Mildred ing Home for George Molden who
brother, Clifford Carson.
.
following an extended illness. ·
dead Ol\ arrival; 3:20 p.m. Racine
Arnold, Pomeroy.
Survivon
include
his
wife,
Joyce
Born oo Jan. 5, 1915 in Rutland,
to Riverfront Road for James
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
he was the son of the late Minter L. (Roush) Carson of West Colum· Charles Aiker.
Rhodes who was transported to
and Ususla Folden Molden. He was bia; two soos and daughters-in-law,
VMH; 8: 13·p.m. Rutland to Salem
a retired coal miner and farmer, Ed and Carol Carson and Dick and
Street for Jessie Grueser who was
transported to Holzer Medical Cenand aU. S. Army veteran of World Hermetta Carson, all of West HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Columbia; ooe daughter and son·
ter;
9:46p.m. Racine to Bucktown
Warll .
.
Discharges, Feb. 19 • Brent
: He is survived hflve sons, four in-law, Beverly and George Knapp Davis, Eva Bloomfield, Anna Tim- Road for Woodrow Hall who was
daughters-in-law, 1'!'grandchildren, of Letart; four grandchildren, mons, Leslie Coinbs, Gladys transported to 'VMH; 9:58p.m.
loigha Gregory, John Gregory, Angel, Georgia King , Thelma Syracuse to Dewitz Run Road for
II groat·grandchildrClll ,
Besides bis plli'CDIS, he was pre· Cody Knapp and Jennifer Carson; Gunter, Eva Pinkerman, Lewis Mildred Arnold who was transport· ,
·
ceded in death by his wife, Bernice three . step-grandchildren, J.R. Hardesty, Eva Dessaure, Mrs. edtoVMH.
Hysell,
David
Knapp,
and
MeHssa
Mot?en in 1984, a son, a daughter,
Charles Barrett ancj son, Pamela Sunday - 2:51 a.m. Reedsville
Cozart; and five step-groat· McCreedy, Lydia Smith, Isaac Volunteer Fire Department to Slate
a grandSon, and a half-brother.
1 Graveside acrvices will be· held . grandchildren.
Peed, Louise Caynor, Ida Arthur, Route 681 for a structure ftrc at a
Service wiD be at II a.m. Wed· and Joshua Casto.
Tuesday at I p.m. at the Bradford
residence occupied by BiD Nelson.
Cemetery with the ·Rev, ~obert' E. ncsday, !i'ebnwy 24, 81 Foglesong
Births, Feb. 19 ·Mr. and Mrs. The Tuppers P4Uns Volunteer Fire
Smith, Sr. officiating. There will be Funetal Home, Muon~ with Rev. Marshall Sprouse, son, Jackson. . DcJ?artment was also called for
no calling hours. Arrangement are ·Jerry Scott and Rev. 1l:rry Alvarez
assiStance; 3:36 a.m. Racine to
being handled by Birchfield Funer- officiating. Burial will be in Pine
Adams Road for Jack Adams who
Discharges,
Feb.
20
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Bonnill
Hill Cemetery, Ripley.
al Home, Rutland.
was transported 10 VMH; 9:12 a.m .
.Isaac,
Fred
Lutl!ln,
Michaela
Bais·
Friends may call at the funeral
Middleport to Pearl Street for
den,
Mrs.
Scott
Sword
and
daugh·
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
ter, Forres! Swisher, Ashley Bay· Martha Stewart who was transport·
The Daily Sentinel
and 6-8 p.m•
lor,
Mrs: Tracy Lee and daughter, ed to HMC; 1:09 .p.m. Middleport
In lieu of Dowers, cootributions
(UIPBIII-1110)
Robert
McDaniel, Margareth to Riverside Apartments for Connie
can be made to the Mason Fire
Pabli•hed every .-nemoon, Monday
Wolfe, Jerry Morrison, Charles Scholderor who was 'transported to
1br9u111 Friday, In Court 81., Pan....,.,
Department or Rescue Squad.
Truglio, Tamara Lorubbio, Mary .VMH; 2:58 p.m. Tuppers Plains to
(lhlo by tho Ollto Volley PubHohl~l
CompUy/Maltimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
'
Johnson, Andrew Van Matre, Smith-Baker Road for Melinda
Ohjo 41176!'1 Ph. 8112·21116. 8eoood eluo
Wade
A.
Littl~
Jacqueline Trney, Keith McCarty, Smith who was transported to
paolltp poiG ot l'omontJi cOht~
Dean Crawford, Lena Lambert, HMC; 5:54 p.m. POmeroy Volun·
, Wade A. Little, 37, 363 1/2 John Swain, Jalene Allen, William tc;er Fire Department and squad to
Mo-:
and the
Obio NtWI_pl__pet Alaodadoftr Natianal
South Central Ave., Columbus, Norris, Alexander Ewing, Bruz State RoUle 68! west for a structure
.APertiliDI RepnHDtatl•e, Bruham
died
Saturday, Feb. 20, 1993, at Gibson, Cody Snyder, Nicole Lam· fue at !he Liman Stanley residence.
N.WIPipel' 8&amp;1•, 733 Third AveniM,
Mount
Cannel West, Columbus. · bert, and Debbie Cundiff&lt;
1'1"" Y.n, N.,.- t0017.
The Scipio Volunteer Fire Depart·
He was born June II, 1936 ig
ment was caDed to assist; 6:11 p.m .
. Polrt'MASTIR:Sotod- '~ ..
Meigs County, son of the late
!l'lto QoUy e.. ttnet,· 111 Ooart 8t.,
Salem
Volunteer Fire DeparUnent
Discharges, Feb. 21 • Pamela
!Ww.,, OHio 48768.
·
Berlin and Eva (Price) Little. ·
and
Rutland
squad to Salem Center
Warren, Clara Dust, Marjorie
•
liUIIIIC8IPTION IL\1'18
Survivors include four brothers, White, Ginger Evans, Christina for an ovenurned trailer. Charlene
a,c-. .. ~~atar-to
Kenneth Little and Carroll Little, Kline, Rachel Wilson, Jerry Hamil· Crisp was treated but not transport·
o.o
suo
both of Columbus, Harland Lit!Je ton, Donald Lyons, Orville ,Palmer, ed; 8:04 p.m. Middleport to Overc.. ...da..........,,,,_.,, ••••••••••••••••••••.te.$16
Ooo ...............-·-·-·-...........,_.......:10
of .Cheshire, 'and Paul Little of Brandon Carey, Miranda McKin· brook Center for Josc:ph Leach who
IDIOL800PY
P11nama Cit)', Fla.; and several · ney, and Dianna Eads. ·
was transported to VMH.
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p.ii7...................................-.-IIIC..Io •
nieces lilid nephe~s.
He was preceded in death by
nol-·lo fll1lllo-·
one sister, .Itean Casto, and one
, ""'
• _,
nlllltlll
.,.,_ • - lo Tho
" DoOJ . .llool ae • lllroo, ota or 12
brother, Gerald UU!e. ,
I
Crodtt w01 bo tift• carrier
Services will be held II a.m.
·Ear, Nose I Throat •Allergy •Hearing Aids
Tuesday at Willis Fimeral Home,
No ouboortpltooo by moll porndtl.t In
·
•Held I Neck Surgery ·
with the Rev. John Jeffrey off'teiat·
'e.NU 'Wilen laome 'carritr tent. il
ing. Burial will be in Gravel Hill
&lt;i•atlol&gt;lo,
Ql,IALITY CARE FOR YOUR FAMILY
Cemetery.
--..~
Friends may call at !he funeral
11 w-. ........................................
home one hour prior to services
as w-.......................................... .te

Area

EMS units

Hospital news

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Council and anyone wltb an appreciation· for music is invited to ·
participate in the group whlcb practices every Monday (with the ·
exception of tonight) in the bandroom at Meigs High School.

Sunday concert draws good crow&lt;l

respond
to 15 calls

Hodding Carter III

and ·once you'l(e learned how to
fake that, you've got it made."
The one person in all this cast·
· ing of s~~ w.ho dese~es special
respect IS CIIICmiiati relief p1tcher
Ron Dibble. I hope Jesse Jackson
- · who keeps spreading himself
too thin - paid attention to !he
intrepid Dibble when he said:
"We've gota lot niore problems
in society worse than words. We've
got kids killing etlch other in high
school. We've got people starving.
It's a sick enough world without·
making such deal out of somethingaspettyasword$."
Some words are not pCtty. They
hun. But Dibble is right. All this
furor about Marge Schott's words
wilt do nothing to stop kid5 from
killing each other in high school.
And the official punishment -.
rather .thin letting a national
exchange of o~ions decide !he
matter- can
to more JX!ople
experiencing !he fate that betelfAI
Campanis, who wu 001111 owner
but a disposable employee of the
1 Los Angeles Dodgers.
Campanis, as almost every
schoolchild knows said on
"Nightline" that the ~son there

IMansfield l23• I•

-

BiD Clinton didn't exactly break suggest falsely !hill he was in the
But the other point is equally rather than from the "New
the mold with his economic revital· dark last year when promising no- importanl Just as we share respon- Democrats'' who were so visible in
ization proposals last week, but he pain solutions that were patently sibility for our current national Clinton's campaign.
:
met the basic test imposed by the absurd when offered, such as the condibon, we must share the cost
As a result, most of the noise in
of fixing it, and the shares must be the coming weeks is going to be
current economic sauation . He
talked specifics and offered a
proportionate. Those who bcnefi!Cd made by spokesmen for groups
vision of change and growth based
most in the recent past should prop- seelcing exemption from the·')5reSi·
on what appear to be real numbers
erly give back more !han those who dent's proposals. Let's hope· they
and honest projectiofis. Now it's up middle-class tax cut. But in the bepefited least. Those who-bcncfi(. fail. Hts program is an integraii:d
to Congress either to accept what main, his was a serious presenta- ed not at all should not be penal· whole. It will live or die on the
has been offered or provide a work· tion of a serious program that i~ anew.
basis of shared costs for shared
able alternative.
deserves a fair heilring.
The point is not to ·dcmand sac- pain. :
•
What the president didn't do
As the deb~e pr?Ceeds, we need rir.ce for the sake of sacrifice, or
All of which explains the presiwas as important as what he did do. · to keep two potnts m mtnd. FtrSt, tf taxes for the sake of taxes. The dent's orchestrated cam~aign of the
He didn't offer pie-in-the-sky. He you want to find a scapegoat, look point is to revitalize !he econom:y, J!BSI several days. He IS uying to
didn't try to sof~·soap reality. He in the mirror. Second. if the intri· restruc(llrethegovemmentandslay reach over the heads of our multi·
didn't promise.anyone a free ride ·. calc balance ofpl!in and gain in the the twin monsters of deficit and pie special interests and appeal to
as the nation begins the hard job of president's package is lost, you can · debt. If !here were a painless way each American as an individual cit'
climbing out nf the deep economic kiss real reform goodbye. Sacred to do all !hat, it would have been izen responsible for and to the col·
hole that ·we have dug for our- cows are out.
.
done long ago. But there isn't- lective national interest
selves.
As to the point, it is time to give and it we all kni&gt;w it. Pretending
Some observers claim to be
For the most part, he talked up the f!l"'iliar game. of PB!SJithe· that you can get something for appalled by Clinton's approach·.
common sense to the American buck. 'I'ogether. we bu1lt the :&gt;4 b'll· nothing put us where we are tod3y.
I'm not. What we have today is a
people. The estimated economic lion debt with our credit-card
The president's plan includes sinking ship, and the president is
growth rate underlying his figures appwach to the national budget. provisions that are certain to enrage swnmoning all hands to the pumps.
was realistic, if not downright con- Together, we looked the other way just about everyone. The public has His approach may fail. But the old
servative, He came as close to while the public schools deteriorat· said repeatedly h doesn't like an approach most assuredly has
offering the public the unvarnished ed and the economy's need for energy tax, even one !hat protects already failed, and no one else has
truth as any president in recent well-trained workers intensified. the interests of poorer Americans. a different answer or the will to
memory.
Together, we .decidcd to treat inter· Corporations thought !hey had been impose one. If you doubt that, look
And, a few rhetorical nights of national leadership and economic promised that the tax code would at the last 20 years.
demagoguery ·notwithstanding, the supremacy as entitlements instead not be reopened after the 1986
Hodding Carter III, former
basic message was not markedly of as hard-won products ·'o f the rc(orms. So did most wealt~ier State Department spokekman
self-sen"ing. He dwelled too lqng sweat and -vision of earlier genera- individuals. The original theory and award-winning reporter, edi·
·
·
behind Social Security was that ii tor and publisher, Is president of
on the sins of the past 12 years tions.
without examining the mistakes of
And st about e.very one of us was an insurance program, not a MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.·
the decade lha~ pfeceded Ronald at one .e or another was tempted graduated welfare system. Some of based television production comReagan, though .partisan poHtics is to act though "I've got mine" the, proposed new regulations pany and a synd1cated writer for
hardly a cardinal fault in a democ- was c me national Seal instead of · appear to come straight out of the N~spaper Enterprise Assocla•
racy. Occasionally, he seemed to "E F .ibus Unum,"
playbook of the "Old Democrats," tkin" .
•

Tt;&gt; avoid official punishment for v,igorous session on !he matter of
her JUnkyard la~guage, Marge Marge Schou before she was .instiSchott, the sem~-d~fene.strated tutionaUy b&amp;stiJI!Idoed. From sea to
-+-~owner· of the Cmcmnau. Reds, ~a shinmg sea, in print, on .televiould n~ call on the protceuve arm ston, on the clamorous radto talk
of the FtrSt Amendment. B~ball shows, Marge Schott became a
1s a pnvate pre~rve .. She m1g~t, household word as the woman who
however, have tried to mvoke Ohv· would henceforth wear the scarlet
letter B.
er ~end:eD Holmes:
I th~ that w~ should be eter'
I would 'think it sufficient pun·
nally v1g1lant aga~nst attempt.s to ishment for anyone to know that
check the e~resston of opm1ons for·all the rest of her days there
that y&lt;e loa e ... unl~ss the~ so will be a large albatross aro~nd her
!mmmently th!eaten 1m mediate neck.
,
Interference w1th the lawful and
There is, furthermore, a dimenpressm~purposeso~thelaw.lhatan sio~ of her punishment that
1mmcdtate che~~ IS, requ1rcd to remmds me of the re-education
sav: ~eJ:::'b:r~· that an uncheclr.ed camps set up by !he North Viet·
.
.
namese after they won !he war.
Marge Sch~tt ~as an tmmm.ent Only a few Americans, led by Joan
threat to the sumv~ of ihe 11811011. Bacz, proteSted senteriCing people
In any case, her pun!sh~ent by~ to undergo lhoupht control. Marge
masters of.ba~ll tndi~tes agatn · SchoU, u part o .her rehabili~.
that ~re.ls hltte enthuS1,8S111 any· must attend mulb~ullllral tralru. ng
where tn the country far tile recan, programs !hat presumabll will
mendatio~- ~by Holme.l!ld purge~ ~ing demons o iiltol·
other beh~VI~tlm the liu marker-,. erance w1thin.
Marge Schon will grimly attend
place. of tdcas - that .the most
effecuve way I? deal wtlh loath· these ;'CUions, 111d what abe will
so;:.;s,eech t~ to openly and learn 11 the usefulness of that old
re
Yrefute 11.
.
show-busineu adage: "The most
The free marketplace was in important thing. is to be sincere,

•

•• •

. It'~ wh~t B.ill Clinton didn't say ·

NatHentof['

•••
• • • •

more

Schott could use Holmes' het'p

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high

If she truly cared about AID, he
told her, withdraw her name from
consideration. Harkin protested to
Obey that he had "misconceived
ideas about me," but to little avail.
When word began filtering out
about the confrontation, a stream of
senators phoned with support for
Harkin. As many senators rallied to .
her side, one senator remarked tb
Harkin that she was lucky because
most people don't know wbo their
friends are until they die - but at
least she knows now.
"i told her that I had nothing
· against her, but I also told her very
frankly how I thought her appoint·
mcnt to an agency that vulnerable
would be used by enemies of t¥
administration 111d enemies of the
Harkins to make passage of the for·
eign aid bill
difficult," Obey
wrote in response to our questions.
" ... any implications !hat I .was
abusive of her in. any; way are i1181l·
curate and outragCO\IS. If •someol)C
wants to shoot the m~senger
because they don't like the honest
message, I see that in this town
everyday, and !here's not much I
can do about iL
Jack Anderson and Micha~l
!\ Dlnstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
.. '

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· - - - ·· - - --···

Tuesday, Feb. 23

Con~."

Important to be a graceful .loser '

- ..

OHIO Weather

closely said he was also a "hothea\1
and has a' very short fuse.'' A sec·
ond source close to both the
Harkins alleged that Obey, whQ
had nevu met or spoken to Harkin
before their phone conversation;
unleashed a string of expletives II)
make his point that McHugh was
more deservinl!; and that Rutb
would be a liabihty to AID because
of her husband's liberal voting
record.
.
It was perhaps this second point
that piqued Ruth Hru:ldn the mosi.
She felt judged solei&gt;: oo the bas}~
of her husband's voung record 1n
the Senate, though she has a distin;
guished -record of service in her
own righL
'
"It's sort of like your husband'~
a raging liberal and you must be
·o ne," Harkin told one intimati:
later. Obey, according to this
friend, also told her that liberalism
had become a '.' real hot button
around here" and she was "certainly wrong for the position
because she was so controversial
and liberal that she would fmd it so'
difr.cult to work with members &lt;if

dispenses· about $7 billion in foreign itid &amp;Mually, ever became the
subject of such politi~al desire.
Clearly, Ruth Harkin's first choice

··- ------------- ~~--

Monday, February 22, 1993

.

Demo~rats fe~ding

The Daily Sentinel

..

· -- · · - - - - -

Moon," and "l2th Street Rag."
trombone; Keith Ashley, Crys~i
Members of the group are Joyce Donahue, baritone; Linda Warner;
McCarthy, Charleoe Dailey, Susan Louise Michael, tuba; and Vicki
Wolf and Lenora Leifheit, flutes; Warner, John VanReeth and Ryan
Michelle Hall, Dawn Foley, Baker,percussion.
Meredith Crow, Rhonda Raymond,
The group will now begi~
Stacy Wellington, Twila Buckley, preparing for its spring col)cert ip
Julia Will, Pat Wolf and Pam April or May.
:
Crow, clarinets; Carol Cross, bass
Small ensembles from the grou~
clarinet; Letitia Holsinger, Karen will be performing chamber music
Lodwick, Chris Neel, Sam Cowan, . in observance of Music Apprecia;
saxophone; Dave Bowen,- Michael tion Month at !he Meigs Count)(
Hall; Frank Smith, Steve Jenkins, Public Library in Pomeroy o~
Daniel Russell, Jane Russell, Roger March 28 beginning at 3 p.m.
·
Rccb, Marilyn Spencer, uumpets;
. The band practices on Mooday
Chris Hall, Chad Carson, ~haron ' evenings from 7-9 p.m. in the ban·
Hawley, French horn; Andrew droom at Meigs High School. Any·
Wolf, Jennifer Sheets, Kelley -one interested in becoming a part
Grueser a.nd Dorothy Leifheit, of the group is welcome.
,

'Meigs announcements · :
1

Dance planned
The Royal Oak Dance Club will
hold a dance Saturday from 8-11

p.m. at Royal .Oak Resort. George
Hall will provide the music.
Garden club to meet
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet.Wednesday at I p.m. at
the home of Janet Theiss. There
will be a white elephant sale.
Meeting planned
There will be a special meeting
of Shade River Lodge No. 453
F&amp;AM on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
with work in the E.A. degree.
Refreshments will be served.
Scottish Rite club to meet
The Meigs County Scottish Rite
Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Refreshments will be
served. All Meigs County Scottish
Rite members· invited.

hostesses, Kill\ Frank !fAd Phyllis
Larkins. Bring fruit for the fruit
trays and articles for the auction. 1 •
.
'~
Pancake brunch
A pancake brunch will be held
at Carleton School in Syracuse on
March 7 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. · '
OAPSE to tneet
Meigs 1...0cal OAPSE Chapter 17
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High School.
oups to sing
,•
e Clark Family and the Dai~
Icy amily will perform Saturda~
at 1.30 r .m. at the Stiversvillc
Word o Faith Church . Pastor
David Dailey invites the public. ..

F

Guest speaker
Kerry Drennan, Palestine,
W.Va., -rill speak at tht
Stivcrsville Word of Faith Churo~
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor
David Dailey invites the public. ·

VFW Post to meet
The Coolville VFW Post No.
3478 is having a gun shoot Sunday
a1 noon at Ralph's Gtm Club on·
Route 50 West of Coolville.
MADDtomeet
The MAD D group wi II meet
Tuesday at 6 p.m, at 119 Butternut
Avenue in Pomeroy. Public wei·
come.
Commillee to meet
The Community Education
Committee of the Eastern Local
School Disuict will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the Eastern High
School cafeteria.
Garden Club to meet
The Riverview Garden Club
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home Janice Young with co·

The_,..-·

w.-. . . _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

-u.-.
--

Use FAST FUNDS·
for normally 2-4 day
refunde or
Electronic Filins for

'JOHN WAD M.D.,' INC.

refilllldil in about 3 weeb.

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w-..........................................
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11

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' nz.ta.

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Pa!t~arera will be Earl Cald·

Medicare &amp; UMWA Anlpmenta Accepted

well, Frank Caldwell, Cecll .Cook,
Ray ~hes, Mike liughes, ,and
JoeY
•

Suite 112 Valley Drlve1 Pt. Pleaaant,

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~,: Sports

Th~ DailyM~~!!~~l

.:' :--------~--------------------·------------------------------------------~--------------------P_a~ge---4
•

Stockton, MaloneNBA
All-Star Game's MVPs
Jn West's OT win .o' ver East

••

::..·.. In the NHL ...

·-·-.
'•

• .

WoU.£$ CONFEIIENCE
Plllrld!DMoloo
Tum ·
W L T PI&amp;. CF GA
Pitllbuf&amp;h ...•..... n n s st lSI t96
Wuhinclm """ 31 22 6 61 206 212
New Jcncy "'M" 21 2.5 S 61 2011111
N.Y. R"''en .... 26 24 9 61 232:111
N.Y. Wondon &lt;. V 26 6 60:143 213
Plill.oddplti.o ...... 20 29 tO SO 223 239

Indeed, several longtime partici·
By MIKE NADEL
pants
called 'it one of the best AllSALT LAKE CITY (AP)Star
game$
in recent memory. Few
Seven times John Stockton saw
players
were
given clear paths to
Karl Malone in the clear. Seven
the
basket.
as
lhe lea~e·s top centimes Stockton and Malone conters
preferred
dishmg out hard
nected. Bounce passes, lob passes,
fouls
to
being-dunked
upon.
·
orllim\rY passes, great passes .
"That
was
the
best
defensive
It 5eemed just like any of their
thousands of practices together d~!f­ All-Star ~ame that I've ever played
ing eight Seasons of happy coexiS- .i n," sa1d .New York ' s Patrick
tence with lhe Ulah Jazz, just like Ewing, the East center who saw
all those games at the old Sail most of the playing time down lhe
PaiacC:, just like recent times at the stretch while O'Neal rode the
bench.
new Delta Center.
.. ·
Added Chicago's Michael Jor·
There was so much talk about
dan,
who had 30 points for the
Shaquille O'Neal, Larry Johnson
Ease
"Everything surrounding the
and the rest of the NBA's "new
order ." Yet it· was one of the All-Star weekend was built around
league's oldest, most reliable com- Shaq and Lilrry Johnson ... and I
binations thilt carried the Western thinlc that's good for the game. Bur
Conference to a !35-I32 'overtime everyone wanted to be at thei'r
victory over the East in the 43rd best''
All-Star game Sunday.
Stockton-to-Malone in front of a
sellout crowd at Delta Center.
What could be simpler?
'
"Stockton is the best point
guard and Malone-is may"e the
Hll.LIARD, Ohio (AP) -· Brid·
best power forward," said West get Andre-.vs led Pickerington's
coach Paill Westphal, choosing his scorers witJil 20 points Saturday as
words carefully so as not to offend the Tigers began defense of their
his own All·Star forwBrd, Charles Ohio Divpion I championship with
Barkley. "Give (Uillh coach Jerry) a 105-5 victory over GroveportSloan credit. I just stole his plays." Madison in fllSt-round action of the
The most popular play was a Centtal District tournament
simple clear-out and post-up for
The Tigers set school records
Malone.
for points scored, fewest points
"I don't know how many times allowed and largest point differenWestphal ran that," Malone said. tial.
''He ran it to death.''
The victory was the 40th
Malone and Stockton were straight over two seasons for Pick·
named co- MVPs.
erington, which is 21-0 this year
Malone scored 28 points on 11- and has won its fl(th straight Asso·
for-17 shooting and added 10 ciated Press large-school poll
rebounds. He also had two blocked championship. The Tigers also won
shots - including an "In your state tournament titles in 1985 and
face, Rookie!" job on O'Neal. 1990.
Stockton, the NBA's all-time
Pickerington led 34-0 al'ter one
assists-per-game leader, had IS quarter, 61-0 at halftime and 71 -0
Sunday. He also scored four of his before Cheryl McClish hit a three· ·
nine points in overtime, grabbed pointer for the Cruisers (2-19) in
six rebounds and
two steals.
the third quarter. Erin Gibbs added
"There were a lot of young a basket later in the quarter for
guys who wanted to go out there Groveport, which UliUed 83-5 after
and win as bad as anything," said three "ods. .
SlDCktoo, who entered the league in
"I~ never witnessed anything
1984, one year before Malone. "I . like that and it really wMO't much
think everyone in the so-called fun," Pickerington coach Dave
older group was competing very Buu:her said. "II wasn't something
hard, so it made it a lot of fun for we really wanted to do, but you .
everyoneJ'
·
can't tell ~ur kids not 10 play.'

Adams Dlv'-IM
Mona.ol ........... 37 19 6 10 2:5 1 203
Quebec .. .. ,_,,, .... 33 11 ' 7~ 247 214

...
•

80JtM __ .,. ...•.... 32 22 6 70 240 212B..Jfolo. ............. 30 22 7 67 2:54 206
Hartford ............ 16 19 .. 36 193 261
Owiw1 .. ............ 7 SO 4 Jl 142 2U

••

AP Top 25 college

,.•

C~BELLCONFE~NCE
Nerrll DMaiolt

Tum
· w L TI'IL CFGA
ChicaJO ............ 34 20 I 76 216 171

Dcuoll ~ ............ 3:) 21 I 74 264 206
M.innelcu ......... JO 23 1. 68 213 206

•

Toronto-·······-·· 29 22 9 67 203 111 ·
St LouiJ ........... 26 21 I 60 209 220
Tampt Bay .... 19 31 4 42 lU 221
w.

•

SanytiM Dh..klft

-·•

V1t1¢0UW:l' ........ 33· II I 74 2S2 111
Colp:y ............. 31 21 9 71 239 206
Loo Anp!s ...... 26 V 1 S9 239 251
Wimipea ...... .... 2S 21 6 56 212 221
E&lt;!moncm .. _ .... 22 l2 • I S2 179 237

•

.

.

Sanl01e............ I SO 2 11 164 299
Wultin- 7, Ia Anoeloo 3
Hmf'mf 7, Bdmaruan.!
N.Y. bllnd..,4,Pilloboqh 2
Mlm- PltilodolploU 2
Qod&gt;oc 5. Tompo B•y 2
VantOU¥er•. Winnipq. 2

,•

•

Lui
T.._ .
W-L Ptl. Wllflk
I. lndiau (63) ........... -24-2 1,620
I

2. K-y (1! ...........20-2 I J09

2

3. N.... c...tioa(t) ...22-3
4. Arizmt...•..•. •...•.......t9-2
~. I'IKiqm -- .............21 ..
6. Floci"" St .............. .21_.

'
4

N.Y.Rmp6,S...Jooe4

Sunday's scores
WuhinJCOn 5, SL Louis 2

Jaw,

Man~ 4, Edinoraon 3
Q.acbec 6, New
3

T onlght's games
Dctmit vs. Philadelphia at Clevclmd,
7:40p.m.:
La Angel.e&amp; at T. . Bay, 1 40 p rn.
Ouawall Wiruupq;, 8:40p.m.
Toronto at Vancouver, ]0:40p.m.

N.Y. Ranaen vs, San J01e 11 Sactammi.O, Cali!., 10:10 p.m.

Tuesday's games
EdmanLM 11 Quebec; 7:40p.m.
WuhinJtOn u N.Y. hlanden, 7:40

p.m.

. New Jersey at Pilu~,P. 7:40p.m.
Mootielf at St. LoW, 1:40 p.m.

BGSU ................6

E. Mio:h. ........... 5
Kent St. .............!ii

c. Mich .............)

r.

Akn:n ................ 2

2:5 . Pi""""ah .............. .IS-1

103

17

Other reeel"ift&amp; YOUI: Oklahcma St.
87, Olin aU 13, Geaq;ia Tech Sl, Okl•homl 55, W. Kentucky 41. 1AWsvi1k 21,
SL John'• 20, Michipn St. 19, Southc:m
Melh. 19 , Connectu;ut II, UCLA 16,

Boatoa Colleae 14, Memphi.• St. 13,
Rhode hb.nd 10, New MWm 7, NtDruu 6, Oooo)o Wultinaton ~. LSU 4, Rico
4, lloultcm 3, New Mea.ico St. 3, Ball St.
2. lowt St. 2. MIAMI. omo 2. Old Dominiaa 2. S)'l'lewe 2, NE LouUiana 1.

National college
basketball scores

....

Saturday's ~etlan

made

Colwn!U47, Yolo46
Ovtrall

L Pc:L

4 .71.

W L Pc:&amp;.
11 s .773
20 6 .7~
ll 9 .59)

6
6
8
9
....9
II
12

1012
9 13
10 IS
8 1•
1 IS
7 IS

.571
.571
.429
.357

11 11 .500

.3S7

.364

C~t ll.PhllbwJh

~==":i~~66

.455

.409

l..afa)'dSC 71, Fordbam 1•

.400

P...ni2,D........,63

.318

-

_............
·-- . .

-•.a-at

-1D.a.-.•

Maria 11, Monmou!h, NJ 61

Nloaua 72. Loyola, Md. 66

.318

63,llunnll7

l'r&lt;widonce 14, V'""-' 59

R.hodB Uland 11, Ma..chUICW 68
Rider II, Mwnt St. Mary' .. Md. 71
Roba&lt; -.;.14, Looa Island U. 64
Rutaen 12. St. BoaaY~ 61
Sient 14, Manhauan 76
St. Fnne:ia, NY 71, SL francil, Pa. 66
SL Pal:r't 7&amp;_ lant 66
,
Syn&lt;U~C67,B,.il"' Collqc64
Vcrmex1t 12. ~ 74

Wednesday's games
Bowlin&amp; Ottc:n at W. M.ichi:g•n
c. Miehipn ·~Ohio
E. Michigan at Miami. Ohio

80

Faltlei&amp;h OickUuon 7j, WaJ.T'IIll 72
Ooorac Muon 73, American u . 66
Hri~ 69, New HampUUre 56
Hoi)' Croat 90, Navy 71
lllinoU 74, Penn St. 66

Toledo 66, Kent 58

-1

CLLadeJ. 61, Manhall 52
CoU. of0lada10r162. Nerca61
Ocla..,an: St.16, Bcch~an 11
E:. K.r::nbdy to, Tcmeaee Ted\ 66
Aaridl A.uf ll, t.W.-E. Sho~e 6l

Mid-Continent C onftr~nll!e
Clevd•nd SL 115, Vdpu1illo S1

Florida SL I02. ClemJan. 92
Ooo.p. Suulbom 69. VM163

DI.·Oticaso 88, Younptown St.. 74
Wright St. 98, N. IllinW S6

GooiJia Tedl69, Wake FotatSI

Mldwatern Collqlatr ConrertiK"t

J..UO. Stl9, Onmbliq St. 76
Jlr'ftel Madilan 78, Richmmd 73
Kon"""y 86, Go&lt;qio 70

Evansville 11, D1yton 36
X•'lier &amp;0, Butler 66

Libeilr 13, Md.·Baltim~m County 11
Milmi.ll, SL John't 77
MWiu;ppi 13. Ab"""" 12 (Of)
Moftftud St. II, Middle Tenn. 59
Mumy SL 88, Allllin Peay 69

All~)'

Ohio Conference
C..pital6S, John Unoll61
He~ddbera
Hiram 76

n.

M1.11ltinprn 79, Mount Unioo 66
Ohio Northern 78, Mariett..1 59
()ucrl)ein 7S, Baldwin-Wallace 70

Midt11t Colle&amp;• Conrtrenu
Derancc 95, Wihnington 52
Mid-Ohio Conrerentt

Cedarville 33. Ohia Dominican 75
MounL Vern on Nuucne 9~. Rio
Grandt! 12
Shawnee St. 57, Walsh 55
Tiffin 92, Urbana 88

1

N. Carolinl AU 90, Howan:l U. 80
Nicholk St. 70, McNCCK SL 67
Old Daminian. 73, Eut Cuolina 60
Radf!Xd 98, Willlhmp 11
S. Cuolinl St. 12, MOrpn St. 61

Samford 71, Oeor&amp;ia SL 61
SowhAlabuN t®,JteboftvWe 86
Soulhcm Miu. 16, N.C. Chulauo 69

Stc:Uon 79, SE Loui1iana 74
Texu Souahem 17, Southern U. 16
lff·O.•~ 85, W. Carolina 66
ToWIOII St. 75, N.C.·AtheYillc 60
T,.,. &amp;7. F1orido Allanllo 62
Va . CMUnooweallh 95. Sou\h Flcrida
91 (Of)
Vtnderbih 12. Floridl64
.W. KcnG~cky 67, A*.IMU St. 61 (01)
Willi'"' A Muy 103, N.C .•WiJmina·

10015

Public Notice

Southern beats Trimble 83-39
t

By SCOTT WOLFE
period scoreboard smoking with a
Sentinel Correspoadeat
22-10 score.
.
Playing to ncar perfection, the
Allen· had one three1lQinter and
Racine-Southern Tornadoes rolled hit two other field goals in the
to an 83-39 non-league boys bas- srreu:h, while Michael Evans comketball triumph over the defending pleted a tbree-point play (five
district champion Trimble Tomcats points), and Robert Reiber added
Saturday night in Glouster.
four. Kitde had six for Trimble.
Southern's defense was more
The two teams will meet again
Wednesday in the fiCSt round of the than tenacious, tantalizing and fius.
Division IV sectional tournament at trating the more burly Tomcat
Alexander High School at 8 p.m.
players. Southern grabbed sixteen
Tenth-ranked Southern 1s now steals on the night and forced 22
164 overall.
Trimble turnovers.
Coach Howie Caldwell said of
Southern continued its .pace,
the win, ''We wanted 10 leave a lit- rolling to an ·ini'prcSsive40-22 half.
. tie bit of doubt in their (Trimble) time score. Reiber ended the half
minds; Right, now our club is flay: with II points, Allen had 12, and
· . ing about as good of basketbal as a Evans had eighl Kittle bad II for
. lea1l1 can play. We've been playing the Tomcats.
· well and playing together as a
Southern never let up, but still
team."
01anaged to worlc all of its players
· Southern's scoring was again into the line-up1in the secood half.
very balanced. Robert Reiber again SI:IS outscored Trimble 43·17 the
had a big night, scoring 20 points second half. The Tornado defense
and grabbing .10 rebounds, while held Trimble to ·under twenty
Mark Allen added 18, Ryan points and held Kittle scoreless.
Williams 13 and Michael Evans 12. Kittle, Trimble's big gun became
Singleton had nine blocked frustrated after picking up his
shots, including tbree on one pos- fourth foul in the third frame.
session and grabbed seven Before he .could be replaCed, he
rebounds. Williams hit 5-5 from picked up his fifth foul and thus did
the field, Allen 5·6, Reiber 9-12, nor.see action in the fmal round.
while Allen also hit 5-6 from the
Reiber and Williams led the
foul line.
third period charge with six points
Trimble was led by Tom each, as Southern scored 22 points
Hardy's 13 and Reuben Kittle's II . in the frame. The Tornadoes came
Southern's fine tuned offensive back in the fourth round with 21
machine went to work early as it points . Nine · of Trimble's 11
•, has in all of its victories the last fourth-period points came on threehalf of the season. The Tornadoes pointers, rwo by Hardy and one by
put together a fast brel\lcing, Tom- · Richards.
cat brealcing drive that left the fllSt
.

, lr

Southern hit 30-.59 from the
field, hit 3-11 three-pointers and
was 14-18 8l tbe line. Trimble was
12-47, hit only 4-21 threes and was
3-4 11 the line.
Southern had 4.5 rebounds, led
by Reiber (10) and Singleton (7),
while collecting 16 steals (Evans 4,
Williams three), 14 turnovers and
had 11 fouls.
Trimble had 29 rebounds, 22
twmvers and 20 fouls.
Southern won an exciting
teSe~Ve pme. After leading by 10
goiag ill II! the fourth quarter,
Southern allowed Trimble to- tie the
seon: late in tbe game. Tied at 3838, Jeremy Hill hit a three-pointer
with three seconds remaining to
win the game 41-38. Hill had 13
and Turley 10 for the winners,
while Mark Patton had 16 for
Trimble.
Southem plays in the sectional
at AJeundec Wednesday.
SOUfHERN

(22-11-22-21:&amp;3)

Mark Allen 5-1-5=18, Ryan
Williams .5-1-0=13, J~y Dilll0-0=2, Michael Evans 3-1 -3=12,
Andy Grueser 1-0-2=4, Trenton
' Cleland 3-0-0=6. Robert Reiber 90-2=20, Mason Fisher 1-0-2=4,
Russell Singleton 2-0-0=4 .
TOTALS -30-3-14=83
TRIMBLE
(10-12-6-ll=39)
Rusty Richards 2-1-0=7,
Reuben Kittle 4-0-3=11, Tom
Hardy 2-3-0=13, Adam Irwin 4-0,0=ll- TOTALS --12-4-3=39

Redme·n lose.season's finale
with 95-72 loss to Mt. Vernon
n

'The thought that has been on the
· minds or every Mid-Ohio Confer· · cnce coach Ibis season has been:
· that on any given night, no matter
. · how good your· team might be, it
can be beaten by another confer·
ence member.
That.proved to be the case for
the University of Rio Grande Red~
. men Saturday when they ended
their regular season wi.th a 95· 72
loss 10 Mount Vernon N82llferlll on
the Cougars' court, in spite of .the
better shooting efforts of Rio
Grande •s sw fo111some. of Mall
Powell, Troy Donaldson, Jeff
Brown and Breit Coreno.
Scott Flemming's Mount Ver· non club, already a victim of the
Redmen in its fllSt MOC meeting
at Lyne Center list month, came
off a loss last Thursday to Shawnee
! State (the first of the Bears' only
two conference wins of the campaign) to turn around a Rio Grande
assault in the filS! half.
With Coreno,;B~n and Pow.ell leading the sc'aringl Rio Grande
held a narrow lead throughout the
first seven minutes, overcoming
two ties with the Cougars (at 10
and 16). But Eric Pennington's
three-pointer ar 13:08 put Mou,nt
Vernon within one (19-18), with il
Russ Jewell jumper at 12:08 giving
the Cougars lhe lead. Jeff Korbini's
trey at 9:12 gave the hosts their
first breakaway of the game at 2418, and from there, the Cougars
remained in charge to post an IIpoint halftime advantage. .
Mount Vernon went ahead for

its biggest lead (85-59) with 4:39
left, in spite of strenuous inside
play by the Redmen starters and
from Kyle Schroer and Walter
Stephens off the bench . The
Cou~· defense held to limit Rio
Grande's scoring to five players,
although Mount Vernon suffered
25 turnovers to Rio Grande's 14.
But rebounding proved to be the
key 10 the hosts' offense as Mount
Vernon snatched 46 (eight by
Chuck Speelman, seven from Jewell) to lhe Redmen's 31 (six each
from Donaldson and Coreno, &amp;lid
five supplied by Powell).
. Helpmg mauers for Mount Vernon was its success at 'the three·
·point range, where it connected on
12 of 30 attempts for 40 percent
Rio Grande san.k seven of 27 (or
25.9 percent. ·• ·
.
Pennington, who led all scorers
with 22 points, also put 13 assists
to his credit, while Rio Grande's
Jack Morgan served up seven to
lead the Redrnen•defense. Backing
up Pennington's efforts were
Korbini with 18. points, Doug
Speelman with 14; Chuck Speel·
man with 13 and 10 from Jamie
· Perozek.
•
Brown and Coreno were the
high meil for lhe visitors with 18
apiece, while Powell ended w1th 17
and Donaldson chipped in with 13.
. On field goal shooting, Rio
Grande was 43 .9 percent (29-66) to
Mount Vernon's 51.4 (38-74). At
the free throw line. the Redmen
connec.ted on seven of nine

Public Notice

· The University of Rio Grande day's confereace coaches' rneeling.
Redwomen will host Shawnee "But we've had a great couple of
State University in tonight's Divi- great practices and the kids are
sion I semifinal game at Lyne Ceri- very healthy. Things have fallen
into place with our ending tbe sealer, startinpt 7. ·
The thtrd-seeded Bears (21-9) son on a JIO'Sitive note and a 14coached by Robin Hagen.Smith game winni'ng streak, so at this .
·defeated stxth-place Northwood · point we have to go out and create
; · University in the opening round of our own destiny by playing well.
. "I10ld the kids that it'll be a sil·: .,playoff action Saturday in
uatioil
where twQ great· tcalns will
· &gt; Portsmouth. The Red women &lt;li: &lt;4), now top seed in the division, get together, and the one that keeps
.: :;and second. place Centi-at State (~2- its composure will be the winner;".
'. : 4) received a bye from the fmt he added. "Our kids are.looking
forward to the challenge."
. .. 'round
&lt;· The winner of tonight's game
At tlte MOC rqeeting, RedlfiOIII·
: • .enters the c·hampionshlJ)· round en center Lori Hamilton (junior,
·: Wednesday with the winner of the Gallipolis) and forward Stephanie
:; :central State/IUPU-lndianapolis . Gudorf (junior, St. Marys) were
· • game, also 10 be played tOnight at named 10 the AII-MOC rust team.
·:- Wilberforce. Should the Redwom- Starting goard Michelle Crouse
.•~ en win, the. lide bout will be. Staged Ounior, McArthur) was given honorable mention. Stacey Ritter, fust:' at Lyne Center, stB!'ling '! 7 p.m..
:
Rio Grande spht a Jl8ll of ~d· year backup guard from Sidney,
• Ohio Conference 11ames Wtlh was named· the MOC Freshman of
.
.
· Shawnee .State during the resular
· season. including lin 87-84 loa to
•: the Bears OIIJ an. 9 and a 71-69 win
~· :on Feb. 2 that knocked Shawnee
'•: ·State out of rust place in the MOC,
: · :Whicll the Redwomen won ouuiallt
: : more than a week aao.
.
• · Memories of tbe conference Iitle
T·
.: ~ battle arc-still suona with Dave
. Nelsonville- York won the n• ' Smalicv's club, which is prepnd
Valley 'conference wrestlinJ lOUr·
. , : for ..:tl'on, S..UCy ,us. Jk idded
held last wcekelld with 196
tlW the Beitlr wlio Wet'e lllfrcriiiJ ~
ld place
rrom inlurica at thO time or that
Belpre rmlshed ill .
·
1
game, &amp;ave their entire bench · ~~.:
~~
healthy again. Prcahman forward .
with 1 team 10111 of t4S, foJ,
Molly Linvillo, 1beent €lorn the Rio
(91) and
Grande mtledna, hu ~turned to
owed by Federal Hocklna
acdon and scorc4 23 points for the
Vinton Coutlty (72).
Bears in Satu~day's postseason
Second-plac:e finishers for
Meigs included Jason Geo'le in
game.
h
h d f II "
the Il2 JIQUIICl cl8a, Brent StDidt ll
"We'll ave our an s u •
u 9 Jorod Coole at 125, Chris
said SmaDey, who was cholen the
Swan' son •• '130, Adam SMola at
MOC Coac:b C!f the Year at Sun·
-

'

Hooe.IIIUI1IS)' Ill the IRS. n """"WI7S 10 Increase l""r tax
)OIIr taX bill, on )OIIr.1992 return:
1'1111111'
• CNtlt. 'bu may be entitled 10 a credit of
op D$lll1 if )OUr adjusl.t ps Income !Siess than $22,370

may' be dlductiblt.
Eldlrlp or Dlllblod. 'bu may be able 10 claim this crwdlt If
)OU're 65 or older; or~ )011 are retired on disability and were
permanently and totally disabled when )'OU retired,
.
Eliot wllcfl!ifll. Thiswon\SMI""~burwiiiFt)OUa

...._ 1111 dou

..,.,_,_a·qllllifyinc dtild.
.
.............. 'bu may be able !Opostpone the cax
refundfuter.usualiyaboutthreeMII&lt;safterweret~~twthertturn.
• pert =-all Ill )I'!Ur pin, or moybe _, Ft greater breaks ~ T~ere are many more creel ill and deduct 1om )'OU should •
,..,.. S!illi' ttiiiO&lt;
'
know about. cau us !Oii-free at 1-DTAX-10«1 for answe" 10
c
•• .:-Louessuffmd
1_:___, Reunue .,_...:.... aforny d~
ql uestlon. Seeof )Our ~ju&amp;t
flwt-sudluflres.!lll"llldctes.
•wilson any the mo,~,......ing .
lwo D1111, flaodl and ar aa:ld.n11
Ans...en. AsSistonce. At ~'Set...ice. tipsabcM!.
:

fit n-•-·

·--

CLAIMS FOURTH-GRADE TITLE - The
Tuppers Plains Bulls claimed· !be fourth·&amp;rad.e
boys' divisioa title in· tile Syracuse Preview
Tournament. KDeellDt Ia froat are (L·R) Gary

Veiling, Travis Adams, Dea11 Alexander and
Bradley Willford. Staadlnt teammates are JC~e
Brown, Wes Shafer aad Josh Kehl. Behind thmt
are coaches Ruter Willford and Gary Kehl.

CAYfURES SECOND - Trimble nnished
in the fourth-erade boys' division In the
Preview Tournament. In front are (L·
Adam Faires

and Jdt Trace. Standing teammates are Mike
Jago, Timothy Snyder1 Josh Shafer, Bobby,
Trace and Alexander :;hust. Behind them is
coaeb Ron Snyder.
-.
:

ancmpts for .8 percent and the
Cougars hit seven of II for 63.6

percent.

In other MOC action from Sat·
wday, additional upsets were seen .
as Tilfm ed~ Urbana 92-88 and
Jiin Arnzen s improving Shawnee
State crew upended Walsh 57-SS.
Cedarville slipped by Ohio
Dominican 83-7S, while in nonleague Division I play, Findlay put
away Central State 86-71.
Mount Vanon ended its season
at 12-18 and 3-11 in the MOC,
while Rio GlllndC is 24-7 and 9·S.
The - - . will end this Saltlrday
with remaining Division I action.
John Lawhorn's coaching staff
believes that if standings remain
the same t.llis week, third-seeded
Rio (irande will probably face
sixth-place Ma1o!Je in Lync Cen1er
for the rust round·of the division
pta~;;.:ednesday, March 3.

MOUNT VERNON (95) Jeff Korbini, 3-4-0-18; Chuck
Speelman, 3-2-l-13; Doug Speelman, 4-2-0-14; Eric Pennington, 72-2-22; Jamie Pcrozek, 3-1-1-10;
Troy Gerber. 1-0-2; Russ Jewell, 40-8; Sam HamptOO, 0-2-2; Rocky
Rockhold, 1-0-2; Eric Thome, 0-11-4. TOTALS U-12-7-95, ·
RIO GRANDE (72)- Brett
Corem, 6-2-0-18; Jeff Brown, 6-618; Troy Donaldson, 6-H3; Mati
Powell, 4-3-0-17; Kyle Schroer, 02-0-6. TOTALS 22-7-7-72.
Halftime score: Mount VerDOII "'• Rio Grallde 35.

tbe Year for her efforts during the
season, a designalion Smalley said
he was poud to see going to Riner,

who has the third highest threepoint fdd goal pen:a11age on the .
team (eight of 25 for 32 percent)
and is second in assists (3.9 per
~).

MOC Player of tbe Year honors
went to Cedarville's Amy Zchr .
Hamil!liD W8S a tiRe-time conferencc player of the week during the
season and was Division I player of
the week once.
· Admission for tonight's game is
$5 fCH" adults and $2 for students.
Season passes will DOt be bonoral.
A•IOradll&amp;

CHANDLER, Ariz. (AP) Eddie Hill edged Pat Austin by
0.006 seconds in the Top Fuel rmat
of the Mnton:rafi-Ford Nationals
on Sunday. Hill finished in 4.924
seconds ·with a speed of 290.04
mph.

N-Y wins TVC wrestling meet;
six Marauders capture second

••

The Dally Sentlnei-P~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

) Rio Grande, Shawnee State
· .~ will meet tonight in playoffs

LSU81,T~74

GrnllAket Valley Conferen tt
Kcntw:k y St. 93. Ashlind SO

Woocter 90, Oberlin 56

(Ill Brands) ·

(OT)

Bla Ten Conrenm:e
Ohio SL 80, Wisconnn 70

Wi ~64.~S4

gim'basketball scores

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC

AJcom SL 100, Prairie View~
Appolacllion St. 79, O.&gt;idwn 76
M.-Liule Jlock 81, Tenn.·Mar\in 67
CII'IOU.J') &amp;4, Fll. lnlc:rnationalll
Cllul....., Soulhcm 13, C""pbcl!IO
ChicaJO St. 91, N.C.-Oreauboro 88

Ohio college
basketball scores

North Coast Conference
59, Kt:nym 52
Ohio Wesleyan 68, Cue W~ S4

Ollio bigb school

Ala.·Binninpam. 14, SL Louis 45
Alabama St. 93, Mila. Valley St. 81

Kmt II .Akron

Men-Saturday

FREE INSPE&lt; 'TI&lt; ):\

S..lh

Toiedo'at B&amp;l.l St.

Public Notice

n

23S

1&amp;4
125

Ohio 75, Aklon 67
W. Michi&amp;on 99, C. Miclqon 79
Ball St. 71, E. Michigan 51
Miami, Ohio SO, Bowling Green 44

•

281

23. Bfiaham You.na ......ll-5
1A. XAVIER. 01110 .... 18·3

Saturday's scores

t

21
24
19

Maoqueae ............... t9 .. . 313

B...:kncll 90,1..dUah 110
Coiauo 79, lonny 68

Conr.

.214
.1 43

II
14
20

531

500

In the MAC ...
3 .786

13

639

527

Winnipe.s 'o'l. Ottlwa at Suk.atoon,
Suk.·, 9:40p.m..
Calsuy l l San_Iose, 10:40 p.m.

2 .857

762
612

22. vupm. ..................l6-6

Dctroil4, Minnc:ao&amp;a I

6

11
.. 1.
I
12
10
JS
16

ISO

21. Muudlwc:u&amp; ........ 11-5

a.;., go •. c.~pey 3

9

763

19. New Od.cans ...........20-2

Pickerington bombs
Grovepor,·Madison
in CD tournament

s

1,401
1,240
1.222
I,I:ZS
1,103
1,07.
932

17 . Purdue .................... IS-6
ll. lowa ........................16-6

21),

PiwbwJh 4,1Urt!m! 3

Te•m
W
Mia.mi ............,.ll
o.n ~L ............11
W. Mich.......... IO
Ohio .................. 8
Toledo .... ........... &amp;

1,4S7
1,423

13. UNLV .................... 17·3
1• . s...n Hall ...............:!(kl
15 . Ark~n~u ................. J7-6
16. Tw.n. ....................20-4

Mmurcal 5, Ottawa 4

·

...tina:

u.., . . . ... . . . . . ..

Tormto4, Bc:cm 4, tic

'

plate vatu in parentb&amp;n-1, rec-ords
"""""' ...... 21, ..w ,...... buod ... 2:5
paiall far I f&amp;m·placc WIC thn:lup '*:
poiat fOI' I 2SUI·placc v«c ud p!CYioal

!O. CINCINNA1I ....... .2Q.l
t t.
.21·3
12. WtbF...., ........... IH

s.

..
...

'l'bcc Top 23 - i n The AIIOCiarad
p,..• ..u... bult..U ,.u. - lint·

7. 1Conou .....................21 ..
8. Vandcdlib. ··········----21-4
9. Duke ....•........•..... -...20-5

Saturday's scores

.•''

basketball poll

Monday, February 22, 1993

·-·
- ---'------ - -- - ---'---'

!'

...,,.,...

I

·- - - - - ----+-·----"---

=t

:J:n
1!i?t!:
clace

160 and

heavyw~isht

Jan

fiaishen for Meigs
ty Rca ll 13S, Chris
fl41o!!M ll 14S, Heidi lfldlm at

inclllled

15laud5h t••S..Sill89.

Nel1011villc's Jeremy Sheets
was~ tbe wufaeaoe's most
vallllhle wrealtir. st I is tile fifth
pcnotl ill COIIfaetlc:e t • ;wy 10 wia
four saaisht illllividllll cballlpiC!uhi~. The 171-pouad SCDIOr

-a21.o..ttllil-auda
129-14-1 11111t overall. Buc:tcye
Qdl Taal Md . . . . . -~~~ec~­

adllle-'~-,...

TVC RUNNER-UP MAT·
MEN Metes had six
wrestlers IIDislt In HCond place
ia their respectlve welpt clasli·
es in the rectDt Trl- Valley COli·
·fereace wreslllnt tournameat.
Pictared ia the froat row are
(L-R) Jerod Cqok . (US
pouads), Brent Smith (1.19
ponds), Jason Georae (112
potiDds). In the sewad row are
Chris Swanson (130 pounds),
Jake Kennedy .(beavywelaht)
nd Adam Sheets (160 pouad5).
The Division II sectional tourna·
ment will be held on Saturday, Feb.
27 at Wamn Local Hiah School.
Friday's issue of Tile bally Sell·
riMI had the wrong dare.
.

Weigh-in will be held from 8:39
a.m. until 9:30 a.m. with the CQI!Ch·
es 111d seed meetings starting. at
9:30 a.Jil. With first round acuon
~under ~y ~t 11,:30 a.f!!.
·Teams paructpaung w1ll be
Athens, Gallia Academy, Jackson,
Meigs, Nelsonville-York, Vinton
COUIIly and the host Warren Local
team. Admiasi1111 is $3 per session
IJid S5 for the aU-day stamp.

I

618 E•.Main St., Pomeroy, OH. 45769
992~6674 .
Hours: 9:00-6:00 Monday..frlday, saturday 1:00-5:00

----~--~:_~-~~~_jtLl____~·~·~---------~-----------------~·~·~-------------------------------~--~-------~-------------~

\

'.
----~--

�(

•

.-

Monday, February 22, 1993

•

"

Dally Sentinel

Mon~y. February 22, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

RIIR SCHOOL BAS

.•

IN l,.OVING MEMORY

OF

1112-1113 '

'

I'

'
I

.••

-

•
l•

•'
••
..

.___'_

'

'
•'•
•

•

t:&gt; 4 YEARS AGO

I

:
;

t

. BOYS SECTIONALS

1

(Records are Usted at time of drawings)

TODAY
Coming home only to
find
.
R - t • ol you olill
. linger
On the l!ir.
Rlllllo plays a aong

and

.

I' m back in your arms;
A ta!ftiliar · phrase is

8p0ken
And
echoes
your
charm.
Wa11ting lo see your
:
smile,
Hear your voice,
Feel your touch,
No rillltler what was
. .idordone,
I elill mi8• you so
much.
Sillily mined by
her daughter, Nicole
•

At UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
'
VVednesda~February24

7:00p.m.- Vinton County (9-9) vs. Meigs (8·10)

Sat)irQay, Februay 27
6:30p.m.- Upper bracket championship game: Gallipolis (I) (11-5) vs. Vinton County•• Meigs winner;
winner advances to district tournamem at Ohio University Convocation Center to play South
Webster lower bracket winner Saturday, March 6

8:15 p.m.- Lower bracket cbampiooship game: Clicsbirc River Valley (2) (10-6) vs. Jackson (9-9);
winner advances to disrrict tournament at Ohio University Convocation Center to play Chillicothe
upper bracket winner Saturday, March 6.

DIVISION IV
AT ALEXANDER HIGH SCHOOL, ALBANY

j

I

Wednesday, February 24
6:30p.m;- Hemlock Miller (2) (10-8) vs. Reedsville Eastern (2-14)
8:15p.m. - Trimble (4·13) vs. Racine Southern (I) (12-4)

GIRLS
.
FEB. 25 - SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
At Alexander High School
Adena vs. Eastern - 6:30 P.M.
l

Public .Notice

,

I

•

(Records arc listed at time of drawings)
DIVISION H
AT OAK HILL HIGH SCHOOL

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,I

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•'

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••

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Thursday, Fel&gt;ruary 18
7:00p.m. - Jackson (2) (12-4) vs. Cheshire River Valley (8-7)
Thursday, February 25
6:30 p.m. - Lower bracket chamrionship game: Meigs (I) (13-2) vs. Rock Hill (10- 7) ; winner
advances 10 distri_ct tournament at Chillicolhc High School to play Dawson-Bryant appcr bracket
winner Tuesday, March 2.
,
·
'l x:IS p.m. Upper brackei championship game: Gallipolis (11-5) vs. Jackson-River Valley winner;
winner advances 10 district tournament at Chillicothe High School to play Unioto lower bracket
winner Monday, March I.

MEIGS MARAUDERS

{~
s

1

Hol$pl'ing·
Pr&gt;nablt Spifs

Where America Goes lb Rebx -

For Just Pennies A Day.

BAUM LUMBER

•

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND UDIO SHACK
Middleport, OH.

106 N. 2nd
992·2635

255 Mill St.

Middleport, Oh.

992·3345

111 SECOND AVE

POMEROY

992·3381
GUARDRAil
&amp;

SIGN EREOION

.
'
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Bank

3 CONVENIENT .LOCATIONS

·
.

·
@. .

SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.
5TH STREET
Pt. PleaSGit, W.Va. New Have1, W. Va.

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST ////~
992·5432
ftt1AIN ST.
POMEROY KFC.

555 Park St.

II Mltldleport, Ohio

Y• Local

ST/Ht:
1--~......-:
Dealer

WITPRICE.......,,.....,,
S•led prap a ... wiD be
r hodlllhe-ofllllo
Dlrec1or of the Ohio
D•P•!!~•Colunt obuol TOIIIoporto-,,
m •
•
unlll 10:00 A.ll., Ohla
Slandard n••• Tu10dar,
II arch 2, 1813, lor lmpro
In:
A - -..Galla
Hoc*l
~--.
•
ng,
Monroe, Morgan,
Loin""'
W
• Yinlon,.,._
Counll.., Ohio far lm·
Pf0Mvlnong'~~Tr;!-~
..,_ - - . _ .
:13 and .,._ -to uo etcdoooo Illy lnelalllna
a11d lumlohlng ralaod
pe I oal _ .... -Iori ..
"The date ••• for
oomplollon or lhlo _,,
be ao 001 fDr1ll In 1M
bldll,.pupnd·
Plana _. Spa £JIIcaUone
-onlllelnlheD p • ol TranoporiiiiDa and lho
olllae of 1110 Dlolrlcl Deputy

5

'

Pubic Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 118
A1!1NUAL APPIIOPRIATION
ORIIIfAHCE
An ORDINANCE 1o rub
ap-rlalono lot Cuoranl
•. Expenooo and olher
ElqoandltwM of ... Vllogo
of PaRIONJ,81810 Dl Ohio,
during lllo lloaat year
•:ololll D
~or 31,18113.
Sactlo• 1.
BE IT

PHONE
(614) 992-6451

Services.

' "-'--••

100000·

T.:i~ G;;;;;;;:;j '

'

P•.o. Box 683

.... ... ..
.
s-1
1 R_,.
olrUC11on-.......-t15,218.9t
81-&amp;-C Slrool Cloenlng,
-ondlciollo!Hnt
240 SuDD(Ieo ond .
........................ 2.000:00
Tolol Slnel Cl•nlng,1 Ice RMIIOnl
2 000.011
,,_, '
Tolot Sino! Conotrucllon,
llalntenonco and Repair
'
Fuild...- ......_ .. 117,218.11 ,
12+1 240 Sup....., and
,....8,357.12
llaterlolo_............
Totot Sl81e llghwoiy ond
lmprovomonl
Fund ......._..............8,357.t2
Tolol Program VITronoportatlon $125,574.03
PROGIIAII 11'- PUBUC .
HEALTM SERVICES
113-:Z..A C..-.y
.
210 " - l S.VIcos i
211 Sotarlaol
w
toy
... ..........$800.00
00
2121
Bonollto
150 00
....................
·.
2
:=~~~ 13,8011.87
Toll! Came!My ...... 14,8511.17
Tolol Program I - PubUc
He.llh Sao ... 14,158.17
PROGRAM II-PARKS &amp; ·
RECREATION FUND
LEISURE TillE

b

JUST DO IT.

N. 2nd AVE.
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
.MIDDLEPORt
tt5-uo•
==~~~o~•~oy.b====d9~9~2-~s~•2g7~====L

PrescriP-tion
Shop

\

..

253 N. Stco•tl

OWNER:

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

!-~::::::::~:~:~:~:~~~~~!;~~~~~

Public
__
_ _Notice
_.;_;__

Olhor Debt Service F~nd
().X.7 260 Building
Fund ....................... 7,672.67
Total Other Debt Service
F d
un ....................... 7,672.67
GRAND TOTAL DEBT
SSeERVICE ..............$7,672.67
cllon 6. Tho I there be
approprlaleci from lho
lollowlnn
CAPITAL
PROJECTS°FUNDS.
Fodorot Grant Fund (Sawor)
250 Capll81 Oulloy $7,322.73
Toto I Foci oral Gran I '
Fund.... ,_..,...........$7,322.73
GRAND TOTALCAPITAL
PROJECTS FUND APPfiO.
PRIATION .............$7,322.73
Sictlon 7. That there be
approprlaled from the
lollowlng ENTERPRISE
FUNDS.

......

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK.

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
1

::r:j;i;,-;.-.. . .

CALIFORNIA
TANS
VG ....t.fne Specllll
15 Sessr~ns '1 5
P111 FREE .bottle of

lotion
Goo4 fhraugh F•••,• •rv

=--S12MOO.OO
'

......______:15,0110.80

GENERAL OBIJQATION
FUND

THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSe ;:

WE CARE •.,
992·5858 ~•
696·1290 •~

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m •
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff ,
Thio ad good tor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32 .

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
All HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a load
Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

Remoaliag

· Stoll &amp; Compare
. F.EE ESTIMATES

915·4473
667·6179

992-6215

. Pomeroy, Ohio

12/31192/lfn

IIOWIR
YAIDIWI PUSH MOW1R
2 Cydo •ol4 C)fo
EOIO TiiiUIERS &amp; SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE
Porlo ond Sar\ice lor oil
molt• ond onodolo ol
llocloro ond linn
oqul~menl.

MORRIS

FOREVER ~
TANNING ~

lalhalll.r laci.;

HOME SITES and

TRAILER SITES,
lANDCLEARlNG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

S.Htb1rt .Spnll,l

14 SESSIONS- '11

Llmil 2 Per Custom~

10001 Ulllll FEI. 20
949·2826 ~

992·3838

1·2 .

RACINE
ClUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M. ·
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

· Qualit_y
Stone Co•

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992·
6637

POOR BOY TIRES
ALIGNMENT • 4 whee
Dual Exhaust with Gloss Pocks
$109.95 +Tax
~
Co11puter Balo11ci111 • Struts, Shocks, •
Co11bor li'ushiag
:
Check our Price or We Both Lose
YCII 11m1

Guaranteed Scholarship u"'""""'
. for all college bound students.

A'P't.AICE

992-5335 or
- 915·3561

•regardless of income
'regardless of grades
f
'plus $20k guaranteed loan t
'regardless of cred~
:
•

217LS-dSt.
POMEROY,

DEPOT STREET
RUTLAND
742-3190
Call for

Appointment
1122/1 mo.

"'

!10

To collect your scholarship money
call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 1G-7 or Sat. 1G-4.

........... ,_, Offko

NOW OPEN
MYSTIQUE
TANNING

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SERVICE

742·2J60

•

ar• LOClliON 10 SIIVI

St. Rt. 7
c....
.,.,,••

MICROWAVE OVEN
otad VCR REPAIR
KEN'S

Full Insured

t

BRONZE

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,

ALliiAIES
....,..,, .. Or We

949·2823

:

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2•tt mod.

CHARLJEf$
SMALL DOZER
WORK. .
· DRIVEWAY WORK
aad LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

. BISSELL BUILDER!,

INC. -~

New Homes • VInyl Siding · ·: :
New Garages • Replacern.e.n t Wlndptl,s
~~

Room Additions • Roofing

a

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
t~

614·949·2101. 949·2160
or 915·3139

RtASONABLE RATES

992·7553

(No

POMEROY, OH.

Real Estate Generai

;;
~:

S•llll•y C.Hsl

"

2-3-93'

~
Snodgrass Upholstery

I

"Helping You To Recorer Your lnPflslmenl"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Se~~tlng

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
61
VACANT ~OT· Located on Spring Ave. all utilities arv
Great site for mobile home. Immediate possession I $5,000
ava~able ,

MIDDLEPORT· Great little slar18r home or ranbollnytll·
manti I floor from home has 3 bedrooms, bath, lull balemen~ one ear" garage, appliances, F.A.N.G. heat, attic
1~ and addeil insulation. $ 22,000
,
HOURS.~

Sunoay · Mond~y - Closcli
Tueiday · Wedneid;n- · Friday - 9: 3D a .m .. S : JO

POMEROY· Ooborne 81. 111oor frama home 3 bedrooms,
.

bath, lull ~nilhtd basement ASKING $101000

o . m. &lt;o~

.Thu r,aay •.Sa 1urd.1y - 10: 00 a .m . . 3 :00 P. n,.

GOLD RIDGE RD .• 54.25+ acoeo of va::antllildf Includes
30 x 30 house . MoiiiY limber, lllectrle avlioabla, minaret
. rights wilt: propoooty. $~4,500
FARMI Bill Run Rd.• 1 1/2 otooy frame hQme with 4
btldroomo, LCD water, 206.8t+ acoes, ooma flonce&lt;l, moot
timber, 8 producing oil a Gas wells, '""'gu to house, Iorge
bam, otoraga lhado. ASKING $125,000

104 Mulber ry Avenue
Pomeroy , OH 45769

AMIIICAN GENIUl
•nd
ACCfDEJtT ·INSUUNCE COMPANY

MIDDLEPORT· One floor frame home 2 bednxnna, lull
bNsmenl, applehft, gar,age, Cute aafloliloble. $18,000

Life • M_adlcare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
.Accident' •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

WE WANT YOUR U8T1NGIIF YOU'RE THIIKINQ OF
. BUYING OR SELUNO GIVE US A CALLI WE'RE
ANIIOUBE TO HEAR FROM YOUI

...,

..-Siulrzenll

234 Tox ........................200.00
:ratot Police Dtoobllltr ond
Ponolon Fund ......$5,713.12
PROGRAM VII -GENERAL
GOVERNMENT
Entlowmontfund
Cainelery """'""':42,918.57
,Other Endowment Fund
Perpetual Caro ...... 4,811.56
Tolol lor Endowment Fund
ApprOpriation ....$47,530.13
GRAND TOTAL TRUST
AGENCY FUNDS APPRO.
PRIATION ...........$53,243.25
TOTAL ALL APPRO.
PRtA:noNs ... $1,328,758.57
(2) 8, 15, 22, 3tc

=-=~-~~--4,401.tl

211PwWftlla.utaea

P;w

Shlre•••••••"''''''"'''''5,513.12

Tolol bcNIIIon

Al-1-A PoiiM LMo
El*"
4

211

Section 8. thai there ba
approprlalod from the
TRUST AND AGENCY
FUNDS.
POLICE DISABILITY AND
PENSION FUND
PRoGRAM I-SECURITY
OF ~~~~~A~D
8·11·212 Emptoyero'

115-3-A R-tlon Program

2

........

I

Public Notice

___;_.:::::;~.:.:.:;.::.,_

89

~~TY SERVICES
Sank.., Saw.- Fund
01t1ce
·
EZ-5-A 240 Supplleund .
Motorlalo .............. 85,825,17
Total Olllce ........... 85,825.17
Olher u- ol Funde
EZ-5-J 280 Noto-Dobl
S.VIce.......:....... 55,000.00
Other UNo
F181d ....................:55,000.00
Tol81 Sonl•·- r Sewor Fund
~rledon .. $150,825.17
"--ol18
E...,. A 240· ...,...
Ralunded
Guoronly melor.:.25,0t3.84
Toto! Udi!IM Dtpoolto
Fund Approprlotlono .................$25,013.88
GRAND TOTAL ENTER· '
PRISE FUNDS APPRO.
PRIAnON ........$538,303.94

JeH Wickersham

CARE

SHRUB &amp; TREE

AcnvrnES

Piog.-...- .......... 4,401.18
Tolol Prog,.11 IU - Loloura
,._ Acllvllleo ...... 4,401.18
OO..Spr clol Rennue
Fundo
111-3-AFire
210 ParooiiOI Sorvlcao
211 Sotarloo/
5,5011.00
RPOlVED bJ lie Council
of lhe . _ of Po•oror, llonoll18 .................... 100.00
S1a10 ol Ohio, thol, to 240 SuppiiM and
prowld• lor lha curreoll .......... _ .._____ ....13.54
axpenoae and other 234 Ta Dlolrlbu; ".. ,..of lllo oald llon----·-........ 7,000.00
of Po-ror during T58,111.54
the n-1 y•r *"ding Be+J Fino Trudt
Da a ••"' 11. 1HI, 1he HO,...Dtlol
Sarwlcoo----..32.000.011
- heraby ~~ aolda and T- Fino Tnoclt .... 32,000.00
:r:""'lalod ao lollowo, 111-1-A Salely
212 llnllann•-- -5.214.11
111-7-A:IIIO
the

211'

Fot• All Your Prescription and Sundry Needs
Sec Us

992·3470

•Garages .

\':mp...

....,............. and...,

Pomero , Ohia 45769

•

Rootctontlot &amp; Comm-t
FrM Eltlm.t•

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

2

Flno-···-......

snHL ,, ,. .

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

Coc*wl Saloo

1-'Cator~!~

JEIIRT WRAY,
Dlt c!HoiTrMopao111on
(2) 15. 22. 2lc

'

36970 Ball Rin Road
Pomeroy, Ohla
SIZED LIMESTONE

CONSTRUCTION

= ~~:Bion~~olft518:·~~~~:~20~,000::·: T:~~~~7~[i~·

DltW.

"

VALLEY LUMBER

' "
Tolol aork1
Trooo.................. 17•500 ·00
A1·7·A Sollcllor
230 Conuoctuol
~--•- · -.................2'000 ·00
Tolol Sotlcltor.......... 2,000.oo
Other Ganarot GovamrMnt
A1-7-G 234 Audllor'o &amp;
Trouworo Fooo.... I,OOO.OO
A1·7·X 230 Conlracluat

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

' :::,Y:•·

Peoples

SERVICE

BISSELL &amp; BURKE .

Go••louOA! ........ 10,000.00
I
TOiot Program VII-Ganorol
!
Gov.,..ont .... $131 ,250.00
I
Othor Uo• ol Funcla
'
A1·7·A 271
~
Tranalera ........... 1'00,000.00
A1·7·1273 Worknoen'o
~
Componoollon .... 18,000.00
•
Tolot Other Uooo ol
~ s .. nd•rd n.... Tueed•r.
• lla1ch 2, 1813, lor lrn· Fundo......_.,....$118,000.00
3.
there be
: pro-In:
I he Water Fund
1
VInton, MMga County,
FUND
lor
conOlftce
. . Oltlo lor IMproillng lor
nol E1·5-A 210 Paroonat
• - lana ol SR 124; SR 124
lor, lo ~
VIllage Dl Wlllloevllle, bJ
In ocoordonce 211 Sallorleot
\ .raouriKing w_llh aophah
provlolono or =~;;y;;;· 75,ocio.OO
"The dale oet lor Sactlon 5705.40, R. C., the
Blonollto ................17,1100.00
, oornplellon of lhlo work oum of $440,1150.00.
GRAND
TOTAL
GENERAL
230
Con1rae1uol
t ahatl. be ao - In IIIIo
S.VIcos ...............10,000.00
blddl,. prapoa.._•
FUND APPRO.
240 Supplleo ond
11olert:oilo............ 150,481.11
· . . onlleln._D : b:a• PRIATION._.,,$440,850.011
Sacllon
4.
Thol
thoro
bo
250
Capl18t,Oullloy 24,673.28
of Tlwneponalon encl lbe
approprlolod lrom· lhe Tolol Olllclo .......... 278,084.U
! · - o f ... Dlolrlcl Dapu1y lollowlng SPECIAL E1-5-EPumplng
.
; Dli claf.
REVENUE FUNDS. Slr"l 240 SuDDIIeo nd
l DlltctGJ of JJERRYWRAY.
....pastalatl Conolroocllon, Malntenall.., llolM'I:oilo-~.....-t5,000.00
- Ropalr Fund.
TOIII Pumplng ....... 15,000.00
~ (2) 15. ~ 21o
PROGRAM VIE1-5-J Dlolrlbudon
TIIANSPORTAnON
-Debl
PUblic Notice
_ _.;_;_..;_...;.;_.;_;__ 11-41-B Strwl Conotrucllon
S.VIce.................ss,ooo.oo
and R-.olrUcllon
Total Ololrlbullon ..85,000.00
NOTICE'!Qi~ITILI~l!ISI210 Penonot Service
E1+GMetero
'
211 Sall!rteo/
STATE CF ot10
240 Supplleo ond
DEPARTIIENTOF
ao,ooo.oo
llolortalo ....- ......... 2,400.00
2
TIIANIPORTATION
Tol81 Meloro.......- ...2,400.00

'

304·882·21

WILL TAKE CARE OF
YOUR INSUUNCE NEEDS
.
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE

~

=~:

Thursday, February 25
,
6:30 p.m. - Upper bracket cbampionsh game, Adena vs. Eastern; winner advances to district tournament
.
at Soulbeastem High School to play Alexander lower bracket winner Wednesday, March 3
H: IS p.m. Lower bracket championship game: Southern vs. Crooksville: winner advances to district
tourname01 at Southeastern High School to play 1\lcxandcr upper bracket winner Wednesday,
March 3

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

-ICound~

210 Paroonot Sarvlceo
211 Salarlao/
Woga ...............,.... $,500.00
212Employoo
Beneflta ••••••••••••••••..••250.00
Total Leglolotlve
·
Acdvhl.................5,750.00
A1 ·7·D ClerltfTrooourw
210 Poroonot Servlcn
211 Salorleol

'r;r:ptoy-....;;......

Thursday, February 18
6:30 p.m. -c# Hemlock Miller (2) 0·.10&gt; vs. Racine Soulhcrn (2·11)
8:15p.m,- Crooksville 0 ' 16) vs. Trimble 0-15)

Annomtcernents.

.,.,.,.5,11n
Coc•wSelle
...... Capr No, 113-1115
UIIT PRICE CONTRACT
S.led prapanlo will be
it luodel ... _ofllllo
Director of lhe Ohio
Depart•anl of TraMportatloll, Coluinbu•, Ohio~
until 18:08 A.M., Ohio

. ,...,.

Wednesday, February 17
7:00p.m.- Adena (I) (12-4) vs. Symmes Valley (3,11)

Your 1993 Graduation

llonollto ............... 14,500.00
220, Trovot Tron•
portatlon .....J. ........... 5oo.oo
240 Supplloo ond
lloterlolo ....- ...._.38,000.00
240' Relur&gt;do ........... 1,000.011
"J;otallloyor and Admlnlo·
tnllva Olllceo ..... 911,000.00
A1·7-B l..oglolodva Acllvi-

=== .....

AT ALEXhNDER ·HIGH SCHOOL, hLDANY

It's Time To Order

::t:~~YW'"'"'" 42,000.00

!

DIVISION IV

BOYS
·FEB. 24 - SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
At University of Rio Grande
Vinton County vs. Meigs·
GIRLS
FEB. 25 - SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
At Oak Hill High School
.,elgs vs. Rock Hill - 6:3,0 P.M.

c-u ' l-. Ohio

:

GIRLS SECTIONALS

GIRLS
FEB. 25 - SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
At Alexander High School
Southern at Crooksville - 8:15 P.M.

TIWISPORTATION

a

.

tr1Uve Wf1cet

HAULING

949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460

Lawn-lng,
For11Hzing. W-g, and
Saoding•
Shrub ond Troo Trilnmlng
'llomoval

SENIOR PHOTOS
PUBLISHED. IN . THE
1990, 1991 or 1992
graduation editions ·
may be picked up
during office hours at
The Daily Sentinel.
Also available are
photos from Desert
Storm, In Memory, ·
· Birthday and
Cards of Thanks.
All photos not picked
up by March 31. 1993
will be discarded .

210 P.....lServlceo
211 Salliiloo/

J!.:'~~~. . . . .

NOTICE rocotmiACTORS
I STATEOFOIIO

BOYS ·
FEB. 24 - SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
•
•
At Alexander High School
''
I
Trimble vs. Southern - 8:15 P.M.
'..

UnUTY SERVICES
A1-5-A Eloclric Ullllty
240 Supptleo Ond
llo..noto ................ 3,500.00
A1-5-A Gao Utility
240 Supplleo ond
llo..noto ................ 1,100.00
TOiot Prog,.m V- Bloolc
Ut!Uty S.VIcos.... $4,800.00
PROGRAM VU -GENERAL
GOVERNMENT
A1·7·A lloyor and Admlnlo,

KEVIN'S lAWN
MAINTENANCE

w-..............-. 1s.ooo.oo ~======T=====~~ •Complete
2 500 00

Tuesday, March 2
7:00p.m.- Championship game; winner advances to district tournament at Ohio University
Convocati.on Center to play Valley High School vs. Jackson winner Tuesday, March 9

girls high school tournanient ·pairings

BULLEnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30
. P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

2

.

-SOUTHERN ·TORNADOES.

Bl 'LLETI:\ IH ).\RD

"'=FiAil"v~:~~-oo

I

DEPAR11IENT OF

•

Public Notice
llo!Miolo,.. __ ,,:.30,000.00
Toll! Polce Lllw
Enla-1!....$182,000.00
Toll! Prog,.m 1Securlty ol Penono ond

:

DIVISION D

BOYS
FEB. 23 - Hannan, W. Va. cit Eastern
FEB. 24 - SECTIONAL TOURNAMENT
At Alexander High School
Miller vs. Eastern ~ 6:30 P.M.

•••
•

,

1•

..;b;;.;o;,ay~s;..;h:;l:s;f;:.:h:..;sc:.;;
· ;.:h:.;;o;.;o;.:l..;.t.;;.ou;;;;r;;.;n:;a:;m:=e;::o:::.t..a:pal=r:.:i:::n:!:!@::.....__JI '

4

EASTERN EAGLES

•
•

•

JACQUEUNE BUNCH
WHO PASSED AWAY

You're not there.

THIS WEEK-'S
GAMES

I

In Memory

2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

HENRY E. CLELAND ......................................812-1111
TRACY BRINAOER ......................................,.. 1414438
JEAH TRUBSELL .......................;.................... 141-28111
KATHY CLEI.AND ........................................... 112..111
OFFICE ............................................................ 112•22St

lox 119
Mlddle~tort, Oltlo 45760
' 143•5264 II'ZOI93Mn
- (614)
'

\\

I

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

47269 St. Rt. 241 • I Y. Mile OH Rt.

Tltru c•es•t! o• 11. 241

· PH. 614·915·3949
IIOW OFFIRING......
OIL liD LUll SERVICE
Till RiNII AND HTATIIIt
2/IS/ft/1•

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

/

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
18

35 LDII • Ac...agt

Wanted to Do

-

Ohio

KIT 'N' CARL \'I.E!&lt;• b) Larr) \\ riJ:hl

The Dally Sentinel~

s -1 AoN 'n'lcle On 'dt'un

ao.-

,.... . . _ . - Lond
Far '&amp;ah Troe~. 118-MJ.

•I

\

'

.

ACROSS

fien1a Is

I--.

41 Hou181 for Rint

21

31 Mueeum
32 Portumo

bOt\(e

35 Bond of color
38 wom.,
30 Jaekla'a 2nd
. hulbond
41 Shoul
42, One, no mot·.
tar which
43 Maka

rim

•

11!10 o.paon, 114-44•1:1441.

NORTH

;:. EEK
!ADII:.S MlO G&amp;Jn.EMEIJ ...

..

12 Alma
14 Mil. offlcor
15 Not ahort·
Mved
17 Symbol for
colclum
18 Motorloto'

Z·l!·tl

• K9 8 7
.QJ 6
tA76 12
+J

1W. ~SICVJT OF 1H~

UIJITE.D STATES

EAST

•1u
.1098 7
+10

.IIKI2

+QI09713

+KB

+QJ98

SOUTH
+AJ61

50 Holen-

52 Frankfurttr
54 P"WMof
old DOdgera
55 aread
Ingredient

Dlllll(llo

26M-ngor'o
chore
28 Perlorm
txcenlvelr
30 Complla pt.

• 53

e K 53

~A 6 52

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
S..t~

1mend1

el(lrenlon
·21 Timid
22 Lorge ovett
24 Cloth
ll!lltura
25 Namalh and

+Qn

•

45 UnhiPPY
46 fMighbor of
GA
47 Shorply
40 - plua ultro

Org.
20 Focial

WEST

ANwer la PI&amp;UIIIil , . . _ .

COftltnll

1 Mountolno of
SOuth
America
6 Conductor
- Provln.
1 1 Prolocllng

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Bod,_ In Rio
011n&lt;11,- Fr- . u~ ....
oily,
1 Bedroom •Houee, 25 Mill
Craok. Oolllpollo, 1110 lloNh

Bu11neu
Opportunity

The World Almanac ®Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

m•

•

3 Gllletlc
!erial (obbr.j
4 Brtakfut
lie me

DOWN
1 Star In AquHa

5 Appeared
6 Capa Kenn•

8 Excavall
II MD'a
ahlolant
10 Enorovtd
wlllt acid :

7 Oppollle of

13 Arbltrerv

dy rocket

2 A continent

(abbr.)

11 Snowpartiele

some

IIHrtion

MHWeot
· role
19 Evan now
21 Oulck rlkli
23 ..;,flelf1811
25 ActorLIWII
27 New (pre!. I
28 Lorge lub .
32 Uquor
, eonllltlor
33 cavalrY
16

West

1 NT'
2+

Pass.
Pass
'l2·14 points

Easl
Obi.

1111 pass

Opening lead: + 10

WHDTOLD

YOU THAT?

....... wv. -77.W141.

By Phillip Alder

Rw: dt'lna ........ 2lollll 2
Chairs I ..... IIIIo- 114-2111101 .

imaginative person . The mind meanders and stumbles onto new ideas.

~

SWAIN
6

RIIIHIT\,IRE. 12

· I!= I CAN'T SA'&lt;

DON'T EVEN

IT,

T&gt;IINK IT!

I· HAVE TO

THINK IT ..

•· FRANK AND ERNEST

HSALTH
.
'
CLUB ·
SYM

&amp;.oyl.holy.I1UM

Aulao

Coli

Complooly Fumlohod mobllo
home, 1 mU. bllow lawn ovrer-

'·

~~~~

l'op -

_, AI Old U.8.

1111 lq. Ft., .11 - - lol,, 2d
waite, 2 compiM• bitt., a~nl-.
room, llftng room, 3bclrm., Willi·
In c-a. lully carpalod, z por·

Colnl,- Rlnaa.- Colna,
-

~ II.T.S. Coin 8llop.

,.. - - . Oolllpolla.

_

. - . -rio - . ~j .......
refrlaerltor, • ..._..,,.... Home
Nat'flank. Roclno, OH.I,.:I412210.

=

.., 2 2 - ''""".

~---121410

~".:\':'C~.
117D And~. 114-4*-1122, I
PJI. Or Ullr.

·

-r

2 • ..., colonial homoi\o!pl':"
2112 botha,
..
hrmllyraam, land llnonCing, 304~711-2414.

' Employmen1 Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

EARNGRUTU$
Do You LOVE To ~? An Ex·
cMing- ~In­
Partr Pllln -~~~~ Ambltlouo
lnciYklualo In Your Ana To
Damonllralo Ouolftr Kftchan
T-, No Dollverloo, No Ouoara,
Dlt.,ml,.. Your Own Hl"'l, NO
GIMMICKS.

6-----------------7. ____

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

8. ____________________
9. __________________

10·-------·------------11 . _______~---------

12·---------------13 . _________________

altar 5:00

114-

,.~~TIE V€~~~.,
'1'00 loiER£ 1-11~ IN
Til( F!~T

TwO Mdrooin In Mid# r art,
$250/mo. or 13-. with
utllhloo pokl, 114-112·71178.

45

., _ - - lnlo

Rooms

- loool.
-.zono~•--.
2
llmpa. Anllauo c h i d,................

I room tx.m., 2 acres boet
ramp, 3 t.drooma, whh or
wfthout lurnhuro, comploto
kllchan, haat pump, - ·
2011 or 812·2227.

-...., ..... ·-Of monlh.

Slor11ng II 112011110. 0.1111 Holal.

1883
2.1 1111·
lllblohl . . - , I opd. tiiM.,

-r.m

clul~• . -

a

... 4"-11110.

plala. .,...

allorl.

Q. I know lhc rr's a long word for
.. rule bv the wor&gt;t men .'· Ca n you tell
me-wh~l. it Is·!

140S, NO;burner

OO'IERNMENT HOliES From 11
Ropolrl. Doll~": Tu 51
HousehOld
Propenr. Aepoeee
. Your
Coli RITA After 4:00
Good a
114-271.0033 (COLLECT)
ArM 11
- Ropo
- Ext.
10111
ForCurr•
llll. QH.
3 cuohlon floral oot., ... _,...
FOI' Solo 0.. Ront, 2 Bodo $250.
WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF 1001110
L.ocatod
South
01
Ga~
COIIIIUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC. llpolla On StOia Routo 7, Call
VI'RA FUANmiRE AND tiJ'.
TOII(S) to taach • - IM-441·1tt7.
PUANCES
11\Unhr and
al&lt;lllo lo
aduMo .. h foaming llmftlllona Alnch etyle holM, 3 beclroome, 114 ue .4421 OR ~•
In
lllolgs.
HOURS:
Aa 1 bath, anochod garage, Ent-lnmo111 Conter'a '"' Or,
Khldullcllaa nMdtdi i.am. Andlnon wlndowii, central air, sa.u
w..kj lnhahelv•awtOOOd neiahbocttc cd, Maeon.
-gllta
304·773-11511.
lng 121.11; -~-· 1121'Lweekdiyala
lntonnai
And ctoaon Dr .,o.a
IU

-to

......r..

Ay....... ex·

SNVICCS

81

Horne
Improvement•

~

ekll to Othera, wha .,. c,...
llvo, and willing lo H
of an onorvotlc 11am.
~
8Chaal ...,._, valid drhw 1
llcenH, ay,.. *lYing ,..,
parlance, ~ 'driving r.cont,
and
lldjqU81e
IIAOftl ablla
DCuaap
'hf.:lred. Selary:

.f:

•:,;.on1acl

M .711/h0ur. II I
e-lla
•
'
' ·21112.
Doodllno lor opptlconlo: 2J2111J.
EOE.
"

= 1w._., llau

more _,.,. ·

$1W7 per month lnclucllnl all:
ha 1ne
~

=.rod a.:=~~-.all~

· ..

18 Wanted to Do

M; ... _ _
Pluii
Dr 4 Mil• Clul M1 On Lincoln

I'OCM'ftli, WI,
TotaJ ~:tectrlc,
SI:.Rt.211, 2·112 AcNa MIL 114211~711~, 11W71-Zl118.

1883 Fairmont Mobilo Homo,
14170, 2 Btclrooma, 1 Bath,
Eloc.
. Unliorpan"'""
s ~• 114-441
304 ·-... Aftor

Nolltlng E-

-nod.
~~~~-

Couch
- · 4 104.ello2412.
........
2 awlval..........

FUIINITURE AND
CRAFTS
,
Wt ,., And lol Good ~

COUNTRY

Fumtl.... 2231 a.ta Route 'Mt,
114-44&amp;-1422.

•

W.llrprooflng.

Curtlli

Lorolla orlgl. .l ........
prom drill, II• 1, worn once,
114o71f2.2117.allar lprn,

Tra nspor1o11 on

:.

Home ll'nprolla::wrca:

-lool
-

Pika.

. _ ...... -On Oldar ...

R::l

- - R - AddMiono,
KMchona And Wotll,
latllo. Froa '
IIIHtMI lalaa I, No

Too Big DrSmaiiiiM-11~1.
Davia Iawing Machlno Alii!
Yocuum Cloonor Aopalr, Fro.
fllcii.UD And Dol.....-. Gailr •
CrMk Aoed, 114 'lti-MI4. ....

·-mill

RCA CDiartru l.w. 171, .......,
$10,
tiiiO,
"""""
....
chino, $JO IIU
..w.
114-441-

1330.

Ron'a TV ........

lalo /Troda: llolkl Ook Klnt IIH
Wotorloool, - · Nlahtlland
loctlonollola, ~~- ...

In

Z.nnh

oloo •

'':I. 'fiiOiil
-

LAVNE'I RIRNITURE

Qo.lc-.

1171. ,.

Rn1har, Clllle,

flOG, 1144rlll'

111M 200 ax T"""' illl
· fM.ZN-vrv.
llr, ~14,000-.
ft,IOO.
.
'tll4 PaniMc PlfiiiiN. . , _
· u ...!"!.!... v~
onalno,
llloh.
pha nilioo,
IU Ml410.
·

t-. -

)tel--.. . . . .

-.._......

11117
._,.,.flOG;11,100;

ctoa..- ._ u

11,100, · - ·

'

446-2342
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
Talrlae,
CttMa. Qlfna't. Hu1 c,._, •
-

Pt. Pleasant Register

675-1333

Qok

, __

Qok Oalllpollo,
""""t:'la!foy
Cnilll Raad,
Ohio
.......

a-

r

I

~!!~!a.

.
Plllnlod
. . Roof,
- 1l'd'lloal...,
-a·

.........

Man-·~HarM
...... 400 112-tMI.

WIH

lould

pallo

. . . . . '"""· pUI

:Jar ·- """':;. •
a2

Plumbing 1
Heltlng

Eltcti'ICIII
RtfriQII'Itlon'

Suppllll

--..
••

'

~Mill or Olfllftailllll
Mlllii' u•• lid
'

, .....

=:r~-·
.

Feb. ZZ. 1113

.

•

,,..

'

ll '

romanllcally l)tl"""t lor you. l\1all ,$2
plus a loog: self·addreased , sllml)tld
envelol)tl lo Malchmaker, c/o this
-aper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 441Q1·3428.
ARIES (MIII'Cit 21•Apri1111 You'll be. al
your besl today when you're able 10 pul
your personll imprlnl on sltualloos and
do lhlngs the way you feel they ihould
be done. Avoid restrlcllve Involvements.

"'!"!'", oloo~

C I Itle, I 1,., .... 111M.
Ruotta .--~•­

992-2156

.

BERNICE .
~EDE OSOL

!JtiiMy l!ldg _tlpl: 11'110'11'

~.~,'"V..M:.~

GaUipolia Daily Tribune

you'll lind it The 'Aslro·Graph Malchmaker instantly reveals which sigf1S are

'=•'="

.loc"-l1 0H1~.

Compltla tummi-lillnt~&amp;•
Hou,.: Mon ..., .... 114-4110122, J mlloo out BuiiWIMa Rd.
frwDollvorr.

ASTRO·GRAPH

_..IZina

flltrllc
Tanio P Co. -EVANSENTI
......_ 01111.

•

;:-..&amp;'9:..~1:.

ttrl P.M. · .

..._nd,
•
- 30Uf0o2414.
... undarponnlng,
llko ....

An~r~ J.-... llondlng,

..• ..

cthar branclo. Houoo

oo~1red ~. lr.llc._n

IM-

aldo will t o - - · Will- 24 h WIII do CIHnlng I cooking. All
onytlma :IOW75-7710.

1111 5l:!h I

~.::.
':~;
Woal~
$218;-.:
• ...,

and • • · 1-800-13
a.
1m Far- Pork 12XH•211od· No llopoolt On Ront.z.own;

F- olgltl woak job PIOPIIItfOn ~·~
· ~~~~~·~·;;:;:::-:::-=
nontooclh- 1111 llryllno Holly Rlclgo Ml1711,
.• ~. IONOW),
all - . 2 boil,_, lAIC,

Certlfloll -

BASEMENT

Woak; Colloa And End Wllh

Doooa

RIFF

WATERPROOFING
"
Unconclnlonol lllotiiM g.....;,.
Local ......
luriiWMill.
, _ Hey Rallo 121. . _ ....
Coli ,___,. Or IM-ZU~rm, lit. 15, Pliny, 0411
~
lnun..,.

. .

32 Mobile Homes
tnlof
olhar
fo r Sa1e
• -cont-hvlrlouo

'

011 '""" II Rhe Aid Phlmllcy.
'"!o
...
eliot.

_.1

=.'::f· .=-w.~:~

6/NE{L.E: SC~"Tt:H .

campers&amp;
· MotorHomtl

-.7W244.

I

A. Th e word that you want is KAK·
ISTOCRACY . ·pronounced "kak ·ih ·
STOK-ruh ·sec ." Thi s noun mean s
" ~overnment by Ihe wo"t citizens." &lt;
"G overnm ent bv th e bes t" was the
original meaning of the opposite term ,
ARISTOCRACY. I ~·irst used in English in 182!1. the term KAKISTOCRA ·
CY comes from lhc Gree k KAKOS .
"bad.'' and the same ending. -CRACY.
used in·DEMOCRACY to mean "rule ."
Think of KAKISTOCRACY as a good
word for bad government.

LO'Tl5 OF BROKEN
BON5e, F.tUT NOr A

:vpur aoi:lolllfa will moot likely be moro
•ar:tlvelltan uiUIIIn lhe r-r lhead. Thll
... be oounterbll•~~*~ by 11'1111·
. tiona Md Objeell- In lbt worlceday
-'d.
_III8CIII Chlt.IO lllr uiiiO) In 0ft1er to
... what ,......,.. eniMIOid 10 todap. you
_ , . - IO be a bit ,..... - l v e
lhM _.e. • - up for your rlghla or
lbty might not M ICICnowledQicl.
Know ._.. 10 lOOk for· romonaa and

*•

"

TAURUS (April 20-Miop :101 If someone
you like Is In need of your asalatanceloday. don'l walt lor lhis person lo aah for
help. Milk.e your, "10V&lt;I II IIIII lime yOU
Hrll senee lhal lhere Is a problem.
GIMINI (Map 11.- 2111 This Is a
gOOd day lo launch nti!O endeavors or·
IIIIIII'PriHI, HpeCially llfyou feel your
plonnlng warronlllt. Aclln oceordonce
wlllt your Jlldgrnenl.
CAIICIII (,_. 11-.luly Ill CllaJ-.g.
or competlllw -opmenll mlgh.-!ntlr!lldall Olhn toda~. but nol you. Rea l i - or oppoolllon apurs you on to
Ollellrlllorte.
LIO (....., II-MI. Ill You're a qu1c1&lt;
IIUdy IOday, ond you have Ihe lllllty lo
relllll knowledge Of lnforlnlllon you IC·
quire. Focus Oft lltlnge lhal contrlluto
lo Improving your HIHIY(e.

.

.)
I

II

•

VIRGO (Aug. 23-lopt. 221 Don't be dis·
turbod by shlhlng condl1ions loday
where · your work or career is con-

cerned. Changes 1end to work ,for your
ultimate benefit, even if they aren 't init ~­
atod by you.

LIIIIA (lopt. 21-0ct. 231 You.are &amp;l)tlr·
.On who knows how IQ UI!O partnership
arrangements and collective efforts
conSirucllvel~.

Today you mighl have a

chance to use your gift In two areas.

8CilRPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) This could
ba a very rewarding day for you, provld·
ed you l.aka pride In your work. Proceed
In a manner that will mahe you proud to
antx your signature to whatever you

produce.

8AOITTARIU8 (Now. 2J.Dec. 211 Try IO
lind some lima IOday to ponle;lpala In
ICtlvltiOI you lhoroughly enjoY, Having
fun .to rechorge your benerles
ond help1 you lace the rOll ol the ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..,_ 111 Belore
111r11~

on MW .eneleavora IOday, llrlt

try to"""" up mottell IIIII .,. . . - t•
ly UIIIWIOI*. You'M 01*818 11101'8 ef•
loctlvely alter lite deelta ore ciU'*',
AQUAIIIUI (.IM. 10 .... 111 Be very
IIIICtiW today .... chDDIIRg people

wlthwllom to dl-yOilr _ , ldMt
An tnthu~ 8dvllor
wiN motlvale you Wid help i)lve you tbt •
momentum you now need.

lnlllntenttona.

l

- Carre

53 Con. prov. ·

.

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
r.mou.

Celebrity Ci~ c;ryptogram1 n crN1ed from quotll~ b:t
PtiOP.f&amp;, _past lnd pre.ent.
e.ctt letter In the clpMr ttandl fOr •not'-- To&lt;Hy's ~: v equMI C.

' ·DIP

GUHDHI. B

FPPJHWN

DIP UP

8

v s y z'
WA

H I

s

s

l p

'
DSYPWD

UPZBUFSOYP

CUSWFYHW

p l p

CAU

w

RIP W

VUHIHI .

OAWPI.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There's something to be said lor a snow 'on
J .

which nothing of serious social impon ever happens ." -

Shales.

·ltllto~ ~r

I

(TV criUc) Tom

!=~:~~~,. S©~~lA-l&amp;t.~s·
CLAY E. POlLAN
0 four
Reorran_o&amp; leners of
scro.mbled wordS

WOlD

IAMI .

low to form four slmple VtOrds.

R0L FAH

II
I

2

1 I I I

I 1I I I
TRAEE
3

I'I.J.C£

-•

I ReAD !HAT A ~ FE:L.L.
OFF H 15 RCOF AND DIDN'T
GET A ~RAT~.

Slooplng , _ wtlh coolllng.
Mloo.lacl•
... 1141122111, ..
Aloo t11llar - · AH --upa. Col · afttr 2:00 p.m., 3o1-m. lpm or M-81W21Mollarlpm.
IISI,IIa-WV.
.
o.r.lo
Pnoducta
llllu!fng Aonlno
Aold
lolly
lullrl""
_..,.
and
Ill
Merchandise

True. most of these willbe-useless.·But
occasionally something lhat sounds bi·
zarre will work well. For example,
suppose the dealer opens the bidding,
your partner doubles and your right·
hand opponent passes. Jeremy Flint
suggested that you should treat a one·
level suit response as forci~g (or one
round. The bid doesn't guarantee any
values; it is just forcing . Sounds crazy,
but when my partner and I gave it an
extended run, it worked extremely
well.
However, t here is a down side to all
strange ideas: The opponents are lis·
tening and might be able to profit.
This applied in today 's deal, whieh OC·
curred during an international event
in London last year.
East's double of Stayman showed a
strong hand (a normal treatment when
one is defending against a weak no·
trump) but also suggested short clubs
(an unusual agreement).
West led the diamond 10. The de·
clarer was Glyn Liggins , editor of
Bridge Magazine. who received the
Best Played Hand prize for his perfor·
mance. He won in hand with the king,
drew trump!;. taking a finesse through
East. and ducked a diamond. Back
came the club king. Declarer won with
the ace, played a diamond to d~~Z'!:
ace, ruffed a diamond in band, 1
elub in dummy and cashed the
mond seven, discarding a club.
East bad only hearts remaining. The
lead of dummy's heart queen end·
played East. He bad to concede the
contract-fulfilling trick to the heart

ESTIVAL &lt; "ES-tuh-vul"l means "of
or relating to summer." Celebrate the
spelling of lhe adjcclive ESTIVAL,
which is th e end of FESTIVAL.

FDf-IIHmociUMwtntor - · - . . w1
llllhar
trim,MMMW,
..
,_

14·~-----------------15~·--------~----~--

I

Challo- -a.

I-

Fumlshed

'1.1.-·
•

Hgo.

THE PAMPERED CHEF

3., __________________
4 . _____________________
5 . __________________

.

-.a

4 """"a haH - . . . . . now
corpol, li'r-cand, 177 Park Drlvo,
304~7S..512 .,_............

'AVOW AU AIIUII- your
. .h ... Yau'l lha
OCiftlltiii!J· 1 . 0 - 1311. .

1----------~------z.
___________________

~-.

3 Mdrooen home. comer lot,
Co~oy, Pl. Pit.
11

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sdl it the easy way... by 9hone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3Dal!ers, $5.40 paid in advance.

rmr. No

eh•octer •
35 Wiry
3&amp; Mora or
Venua
37 Church
offlelll
40 Docor
.
43 Hllllt eerd~
44 AulliOrWleeel. '
47 Glngor48 CFJ of .
affirmation
51 Aulltor Jolin

Bridge is a great game for the

Olivo II, Golllpalo. I~
lumM- - ... Wlllom I
Wortl booll.•, .... S'lll.

""'*

3!1 Etaontlal .

lltio doling Kit-. calllnoloiiif
Elootrlc ...... 1 - old
cloonlng lor Hlo. 114-245 t110

.._
llnglo - · loool ...
d......,.I-.U1 .4Dit ·

.,.,.... To IUJ:
With Dr Wll- -

·-r

A strange call
helps declarer

fl. I I. Furniture. New, u.d, •n-tlquN. Houllhokl ~·

n1 E D S

I

I

I. I I ~~ I .:

?:.·

..

,..--F-0,...--E-.C-I_F__;_...,,

"Why can't we save any
money?" the husband asked
his wife. "Well", repfi!!jd the
wife, "I blame il on the neigh·
txirs. They keep buying tl'lings
we can't ...... ,.
'

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Com plere lhe chuckle quolod
by fi lling in ttle missing words

L--L-.1...-L-.L.......t.--J you develop from sfep No. 3 below.

A

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PRINT NUMBERED l!11ERS IN
THESE SQUARES

C) u~~~t~~N~~~f tmus

·I I I I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
, .,,
Vesper • Libra • Fudge • Imbibe • BEEPER
Granny says that everything has taken great strides
lorward, even opportunity. People now expect opportu·
nity to arrive via a BEEPER!

�•

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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Dear, Aaa Llaclen: All my life,
I've had a fear of,docton, hospitals
and havins shols. I hav~\ been 10 a
doctor 2S Years. rm afraid lhat
when I die lherc may be an IIIIOIJSY,
and I absoluatly do IIIli want this.
I am not married, but I've been
living willa a gcntlcman rriend for
several years and trust him
ccmplcll:ly. If I diC a natural death
and am lucky enough lhat no one
knows I'm sane cxcqx my iOn and
my F.ndeman friend, WOUld it be
possible 10 a~id the coronet'll wish
to have my remains cremated and
the ashes spread around in my
favorile places ..
I need to know if, by following
my wishes, either my son or my
friend would get in trouble with the
law. If I put these insauctions.in my
will, would that make it legal? I have
no valuables or life inswance, so
there would be no reason for the ,

m

police to suspect foul play. Please
help. -FEARFUL IN LAS VEGAS
DEAR FEARfUL: We spoke
with Hirvey Lapin, a Chicago
attorney and nationally recogniZed
authority on Cemetery and funeral
law.
Mr. Lapin said, "The woman
could probably be privately
cremaled, but most staleS and some
local jurisdictions require permits,
which must be oblained in advance,
and may require the assistance of a
licensed funeral dilector. Sbe shOuld

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

will be a free-will offering. Pancakes, sausage, desserts and drinks
will be available.

POMEROY - An arthritis aquatic program will be held at Roy!ll
Oak Resort in Pomeroy beginning
MONDAY
Tuesday. The program is open to
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- people in the community with
ty Veterans Service Commission arthritis and includes gentle exerwill meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in cise activities in the swimming
the Veterans Service Office in pool. Sessions wi11 be held rwice a
Pomeroy.
week on Tuesday and Thursday
from 10•11 a.m. for nine weeks.
MARIETIA- The Washington The fee is $20. Further information
State Community College board of may be obtained by calling 593trustees will meet Monday at 7 2518.
p.m. in the college's board room.
. R_ACINE • 'fl!e ~erican AssoRUTLAND - Rutland Garden ctauon of Umverslly Women
Club will meet Monday at I :30 (AAUW) will meet '!'uesday ~~ 7
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl Den- p.m . at the Racme tJmted
nison in Rudand The program will Methodtst Church.
be "Attracting Birds to Your Feeder" and "Winter Care of Birds."
POMEROY - The 1993 Meigs
Mary Powell, Meigs County Park County Livestock Sale and Show
District Director, will be the guest Committee will meet Tuesday at 7
speaker.
p.m . in the Meigs High School
Cafeteria.
MIDDLEPORT - The 0H KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
RACINE - Southern High !;:lass
Burkett Barber Shop .in Middleport. of 1968 will meet Tuesday at 7
A social hour and trading session . p.m. at the high school to plan the
precede the 8 p.m. meeting. Plan- 25th reunion.
ning March 21 coin show. Refreshments. New members welcome.
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
RACINE - Southern Local will hold a pledge party Tuesday at
School Board will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
7 p.m. at the high school.
in Pomeroy . Members bring a
poduck dish. ·
TUESDAY
POMEROY - There will be a
. WEDNESDAY
Shrove Tuesday (Fat Tuesday) panPOMEROY - Rev . Deborah
cake supper at St. Paul Lutheran Hogeboom, Free Methodist CanaChurch m I:"omeroy beginning at 5 dian Missionary to Zaire and
p.m. The public is invited and there Burundi, will speak at the Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Public invited.
Members of th e Meigs Hig h
POMEROY - The annual
School Chorus participated Saturday in District 17 Solo and Ensem- Lenten Breakfast of Trinity Church
will be Wednesday at. 7:45 a.m.
ble contest at Ohio University.
Receiving "excellent" ratings in Reservations may be made by callClass C for solos were Kelley ing 992-7765, 985-3842 through
Grueser, April Halley, Travis Oren- Monday.
ncr and Becky ~ nowd e n; for
POMEROY - Pesticide Certifiensembles were G'Ftchcn Blaine,
Susan Cotterill , Becky Snowden, cation Tests will be given by the
Ohio Department of Agriculture on
Carletta Carr any April Halley.
Receiving "excellent" ratings in Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the
Class B for solos was Phil Green; Meigs County Public Library in
for ensembles were Cynthia Cotter- Pomeroy.
ill, Michelle Young, Susan Page,
Mary Grueser, Kelly Phelps and
POMEROY - Meigs County
Julie Young.
.
Public' Library Board of Trustees
"Excellent" ratings in Class A will meet Wednesday at I p.m. at
for solos were Tracey Grueser and the library in Pomeroy.
'
Angela Searles.
Receiving "superior" ratings in
POMEROY - Ash Wednesday
Class A for ensembles for Tracey services at St . Paul Lutheran
Grueser, Kelley Grueser and Church in Pomeroy will begin at 7
Angela Searles.
p.m. The public is mvited.

know lhat Nevada law demiDds an
Bartels recently pr e~e nt e~ a
Ed Bartels was recently selected
autopsy ollly if the penon or neltl of
to pre~nt a hands-on math lesson hands-on math seminar to the Midkin Jequesll it, if the peiiOO dies
ai the stalewide Chaplet I Spring South East Ohio C~r. 1 ln:ser. Ul!(lcr suspicious Cin:IIII\~S, or . Conferen·ce on AprH 16 at the vice Group at -Maraetta. He was
if her body is donaled to ICic:nce..
chosen as on or six 'in-service facilHyatt Repmey in Columbus.
· Mr. Lapin Jliggested that you
This as Bartels ' 30th year of itators for-the southeast Ohio
indicale in your will that you do not classroom teaching. He has taught region for the Ohio Model for
want an autopSy and make sure your at many pade levels and is current- Excellence in Matfl. He also was
friend, son and anorney each have a ly teachmg fourth, fifth and sixth chosen as the Meigs County mat!'
copy. He also made it cU lhat whal grade math at Salisl!ury Elementary teaCher of the year In 1991. In, addiyou have &lt;in mind imposes a heavy School in the Meigs Local School tion be is a participant iri the southDistrict in POII)eroy.
east region training proJect, "Math
bwdcn on others.
.
Across the Curriculum.'
Dear Aaa I aMen: I just read
Bartels has been involved in the
Salisbury Elenien~y's Effecthe lettu from "Perplexed in the Lead Teacher Project tlarough Ohio
tive
Schools grant has paid for parSoulhwest.• She lu!d been diY&lt;llted University for the past foil!' years.
ent training sessions for math and
for three yem:s. and her ex-mother· This program w;ts with a grant science. Bartels has_conducted the
in-law warned the wedding gifts sent through the National.Science Foun- math sessions and Kaf,pn Walker
by her sille or the family returned to dation which enabled him 10 attend has lead the science sessions. Par·
her son.
classes on hands-on math. He has ents are trained on a wide variety
"Perplexed" ~te the y.ooman a held in-service meetings in his of hands-on activities that will
scathing letter and asked you if she building through this program as enable them to help out in the
should send it. You !Old her that well as holding grade level meet- classroom when lhese acti.vities are
ED BARTELS
writing the letler was good therapy ings on;J~ dislrict-wide basis. ·
presenled 10 the sllldents.
and now she shol!ld toss it in the
garbage.
Ann, I could have sworn lhat was
my story. The "wonderful" man I
NEW YORK (AP) - The er of the theatel', where the Beades
married went even further. He brigh~ li~hts of Broadway apparent- made their U.S. debut in 1964, con,
refused to let me have my wedding ly outshined California's sun in the fumed the deal.
.
dress until! gave him all.the things wooing of David Letterman.
"It's a very gOod tbing that's
in the house lhat he wanted.
The !'ate-night comedian has happening for New York and it's
I had paid for o..- beautiful (and decided to move his talk show to . good for the thejlter," Niles told
expensive) wedding and made the the Ed Sullivan Theater on tlie
down payment on our home and all . Great White Way - ratl!er than
the furnishings. "Gary" made just Los Angeles - when he leaves
enough money 10 cover the bins l!e NBC for CBS this summer, according 10 se.veral reports today.
had run up before we IIIB!ried.
Since signing a multimillion·
When Gary left me, I was devasdollar
deal to switch networks last
taled. HiJ demands wen:~
month,
there has been considerable
Not permitting Gary the pleasure speculation
Letterman would go
of getting me to sinlc to his level West for easier access to HollyNE'W HOURS: .
1
gave me an incredible boost of wood guests and studio space.
self-esteem. Ann, your reply to
MONDAY -THRU FRIDAY
But CBS was expected to
"PerPlexed" was jlerfect - THE announce today it will spend $4
6:00A.M. - 7:00 P.M.
. BElTER RJR IT IN PllTSBURG, million to buy the landmark Ed
• CALIF.
SATURDAY and SUNDAY
Sullivan Theater specifically for
DEAR PITI'S.: The templllion to Letterman, The New York Times
' 6:00 A.M. - 3:00·P.M .
strike back when we have been reported.
·
wronged is often overwhelming, but
"Everyone is eJr,ciled about this.
the one who wins big time resists We intend to make this a showthat temptation and treats the person caSe," CBS Broadcast Group pres:
who has wronged him with civility, ident Howard Stringer told .the
39239 BRADBURY ROAD
' ·MIDDLEPORT
if not kindness. That is harder 10 Times. "We'll light up the marendure than any act of reprisal. Trust quee on Broadway."
David Niles, owner and. managme.

018
Pick 4:

8177

PageS

Cold tonlabt. Low between 510. Wednesday, sunny. High In

upperlOs.

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Vol. U, No. 212

..

1 S.Ctlon, 10 Pageo 25 Clttllt

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, February 23, 1993

Copyrlghlld 1$113

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Middleport Council wants
commitment from ODOT

•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair
A resolution calling for the Ohio
Department of Transp~rtation
(ODOT) to take some acuon npw
which will insure replacement of
the Pomeroy-MaSon Bridge within
a reasonable time was passed by
Middleport Village Council Monday night
Tbe resolution also requests ~t
the bridge be constructed "at or
very near" .to the present l?C&amp;tion
of the old-bridge smce l)lovmg the
location in eitlier direction would
· drastically affect the economies of
the communities of Pomeroy and
Middleport, Ohio, und Mason, W.
Va.
It has been estimated that 'over
40 pen;ent of the work force. and
citizens of all three commumues
are dependent on .the bridge as a
means of reaching their places of.
employment or purchasing needed
goods and services,
It also asks that ODOT provide
a schedule for the replacement of
the bridge to officials, and that
quarterly reports on the ~pess be
made to all three commumbes.
Gov. George Voinovieh and
West Virginia Governor Gaston
Caperton are being asked to coop-

'SIS lOW
OPEN FOR DillER!

·~ MILLIE'S

992·7713
L---~--~~----~------------------~.

erate in the replacement and location of the bridge. This is especially important, according to officials,
to provide for the stability of the
economy in communities in both
states and in ord¢r to provide easy
access between the two states for
their citizens. In view of this officials are asked for "top priority on
the replacement." _.
It 1s also being re~uested that
ODOT schedule a public hearing as
soon as possible to inform the citizens of the area of any plans concerning the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge so that the public may have
an opportunity to express the~r concerns.
.
Also requesled in the resolution
is lhat ODOT seek financial assistance or the federal government in
the immediate replacement of the
bridge since it is a vital link
between the states of Ohio and
West Virginia and since a federal
.highway. (U.S-.33) crosses the
bridge.
The Mason County Commis- .
sion passed a similar resolution last
week. Other communities on both
sides of the river are expected !O
pass similar resolutions within the
next few weeks.
The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge is
one of four bndges crossing the ·

Ohio River which is maintained by
ODOT. While a regular program of
maintenance is carried ou~ the resolution points out that the bridge
has been considered by "ODOT
engineers to be substandard so far
as width and load carrying capacity."
.
Sen. Jan Michael Long was in
Middleport recently to djscuss the
bridge replacement with officials of
Middleport, Pomeroy, aild Mason.
Copies of the resolubons will go to
him along with ODOT officiaJ,s.
legislators, and the governors of
both Ohio and West Virginia.
Projects Mayor Fred Hoffman repor-ted
that funding is now available,for
the Wheeler's Run sewage line.
reP.lacement and that the village ·
wdl advertise for bids. .Total estimated cost of the project i~
$154,784 with $139,304 to come
from Issue 2 funds, and $15.480
from village funds . The 18 inch
sewer line which has deteriorated
over the yeais,will be replaced witll
a 24 inch sewer line designed for
today's service level, it was pointed
out About a thousand feet of lin&lt;
will be repla~.
.
The mayor also reported that the
village has received a second place
Continued on page 3

\

DUPONTSTMI~TER

EXTRA HEAr(

lUCKLESS
.
CARPET

TRACKLESS
CARPET
-24 Colors
-Luura Dupo1t StaiMaster
-Warraated: 5 Yrs Mft. Defects
5 Years Stall Reslsto1t

SALE

s2 299

Sq. Yd.

I ln.t..IMI

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wiped

BE Rift
•

Stai!tiiOSter

-FHA Approved

· s1'599

-18 Colors
-Scotc~gard

Protectio• Plus
-FHA Approved
-10 Year Wear WO!Tll!lty

s1299
SALE

Sq.' Yd.
tnatalled

Sq. Yd.
lnataiied

SALE
.

wlpad

8 BERBERS
ON SALE

•

Our Most Popular Style

-Big Loops, Patte11s, Sc•~ptlrledsl
-12' al!d 15' Widt~s ,,
•

SALE $1199 TO
PRI.CED
$
Sq, rd.lulallt4

2099

•

SCULPTURED
.CARPET

REGULAR $11.00

LEVELLOOP
CARPET
1
· -18 Colors

20

"""Sculptures,
Trackless, Level
L_oops, Berbers,
Commercial
Carpets
-Expert
Installation
-We use h,eavy
"Life of the
Carpet" warranty ·
padding. ·
-Free removal of
old floor ·
covering/quotes,

STYLES

ON
SALE

'

-Adva!Ketf Gelteratio1
Oleli11 .
-1 0 Year Warraaly

SALE

$949
,

Sq. Yd.
Installed

LEVEL LOOP
PATTERNED
CARPET
-Stait Reslst01t
-5 Year Wear Warra.ty

-olefl• Pile
-3 Greot Styles .

SALE$

10 ~n~t
9

•

-16 Great Colors
-Easy C.-e Certified

KITCHEN &amp; FAMILY ROOM

Your Social Security

'(

.·

Pick 3:

Reports: Letterman show staying inNew York .

Students compete

plete an "Application for a Social
By ED PETERSON
Security card," also .called an "SSSocial Security
5," and provide at least one original
Manager in Athens
Quick ... what's your Social document or certified copy that
proves your identity, such as a .
Security number?
Many people know their Social driver's license. If you were hom
Security number without having to outside the Uniled States, you must
rummage through wallets or purses show proof....af J.Jnited States citito find their Social sec itrity?'card. zenship or IaW!Iil alieh status.
The transaction may be accomIf you know your number by heart,
that's good because you're often plished through the mail as well.
asked to provide it. But it's also Call Soci al Security's toll-free
bad because if you don't need to number, 1-800-772- 1213 business
refer 10 your Social Sec'itrity card , days between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.,
you may lose it and not be aware and ask that an "Application for a
Social Security Card" be mailed to
that it's missing.
Since you are likely to change you. Remember to ask for the
jobs several times during yo ur address of the Social Security
working life, it's smart to make office where you should return the
sure you have your Social Security completed form and the original
card handy because employers are document or certified copy that
required to ask for it10 verify your proves your idiAiity.
You should receive your
number and to make sure that
replacement
card about two wcdts
you're eligible 10 work.
after
the
Social
Security office
If you discover that you've lost
receives
your
information.
The
or misplaced your Social Security
Athens
office
is
localed
at
221
1/2
card, here'S what you ShOUld do.
You should visit yoUJI local Social N. Columbus Rd. and the mtmber
Security office, ask fbr and.com- is 592-4448.

Rio women
eliminated
from.tourney

Monday, February 22, 1991
.
Page-10

,-Woman wants to avoid going Ed Bartels ~o -bring 30-years~
.to the doctor, even after death , of teaching to conference

Ohio Lottery

J

Search for helicopter expands
to starr
southern Gallia County

Sq.
lnatalled

~d.

W4Md

and wire reports

Gallipolis voiunteer fire depart· ments converged on Clay Ele~n tary School at 8:30 a.m. to begm a
ground search of the Hazel Ridge
and Eblin Hollow areas near Mercerville and Eureka.
,
. SimultaneOusly, the army, highway patrol and Civil Air Patrol
searched from the air.
The helicopter an OH6 twoman army helicop~ left Huntington between 5:30 and 6 p.m. Monday destined ror W~ington , D.C.,
and was last seen on radar heading

CARPET
-12Ft. Wldt.
-HeotSetYan
-5 Yeor Weor WII!TOity
-Attfi.Statlc, Scotcllganl
-20 Colon

Police investigate car thefts

Sq. Yd.

:;~~led

ryial! capacity is concerned,-is a vitaJ link
between the two states where 40 percent of the
work force and citizens depead upon it to reach
their place of employment or go to shop or
transact other business.

Southern board
to
post
.
.
.
EMIS coordinator position
American history without credit take courses preparing them for the
until they pass, Ord said.
•
other three sections of the profi Contemporary world affairs and ciency test: reading, writing and
American history are already math.
offered at the high school, Ord
Substitutes, others hired
sa ill.
The following people were hired
Ord said students attending the as substitute teachers: Thomas L.
high school are already required to
Continued on page 3

Two vehicle wreck probed

·PLUSH~'

s
1
599
SAU

TIME FOR REPLACEMENT • Officials in
both Melp aad Mason Counties feel that it's
· time for replacement or the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. Built In 1928, the bridge, nnw consi&amp;l·
ered substandard as far as width and lo11d car·

northeast. officials reported.
The search began 10 rural ~n
County,
and was expanded 10to
Local authorities, rescue teams
southern Obio.
and army officials coordinated their
The U.S. Army Special Operaefforts in southern Gallia County
tions Command at Fort ~rag!!,
early this morning to search for a
N.C.,
confumed that one of us hellmissing military helicopter
cop\C'S was overdue.
. .
believed to have crashed Monday
'
I
do
not know the desbnauon,
'
evening.
unit
identification
or
anything
U.S. Army officials, Ohio Stale
else•." said_ Carol_ Jones, on-c~ll .
Highway .l!atrol, Gallia and Mason
pubhc _affatrs o_fftcer for s~ctal
county sheriff's departments, Galoperauons,
whtch encompasses
Iia County Emergency Medical
elite
units
like
the qreen Berets.
By JIM FREEMAN
Service and Guyan Township and
Donald Kapp, dispatcher for the
Smtlael News Stair
Mason County Sheriff's DepartThe Southern Local Board of
men~ said officials wen: searching
Education voled Monday night to
a hilly, tree-covered terrain near post an opening for a_combi~ed
Arbuckle afler hcarins an emergen- education management mformanon
cy signal from lhat area.
system (EMIS) and data coordinaEmergency crews ftrst heard the tor position.
.
Classes will be held tomorrow at Salem Center Elementary
signal about 7:45 p.m. Monday,
According to Supetmtendent
School, ,Meigs Local Superintendent James Carpenter satd th1s
and it still was going off this mom- Bob Ord. the EMIS and data ~r­
in(!', Kapp said. , 1
morning.
.
l'k
. d . d
dinator position is a full ume
The building was damaged when tornado- 1 e wm s nppe .
Gallia County Chief Deputy administrative position. The penon
through Silcm Center Sunday evenin~.
Bennis Salisbury said the signal hired for the position will supervise
• According to C~~~penter, the building remains structurally sound.
may be coming from the southern and coordir\ate activities necessary
The auditorium will remain closed for two addition_al weeks and
part of the county, but interf~e
to control records for the state
children will eat lunch in the classrooms, C~~~penter satd. .
is preventing rescuers from pm- department of education.
'
In addition, winter weather forced the closing today of all East- , pomting its exact location.
The
district
is
required
10
have
em, Meigs and Southern local schools. ·
. · Salisbury said he believes power an EMIS and data coordinator in
tines are interfering,with the signal: order to receive state aid, Ord said.
An inch of snow on the ground
Board member Scott Wolfe,
is
hindering
the search somewhat, who cast the sole opposing vote,
No injuries·or citations were reported by Pomeroy police foUo'!'milting road cOnditions in the rural objected to posiing the position
ing a two vehicle mishap at the Riverside Food Mart on West Main
areas
tteacherous.
'Street Monday around 11:25 p.m.
because of the costs involved.
A
spokeswoman
for the sheriff's
Acconl.ing to '8 report from the Pomeroy Police Department, a
· "It's too much money," Wolfe
1 · 1989 Geo Tracker 4rivc11, by Bryan Zirkle, 26, Pomeroy, backed
department said this morning an said
investigator with the department
· Board member' Denny Evans
into the Jeft.front side of a parked 1989 Chevrolet van operated by
slid
on an icy road and overturned mirrored Wolfe's sentiments that
Christopher Nee!, 17, Pomeroy.
·
his vehicle in a creek near Bladen
Damqe to Neel's van, owned by Gary Nee!, was listed_ as ~ght
~~
saJ::.on will offer lit·
Road off State Roule 7. The man
No damap was reported to Zirkle's vehicle, owned by Juhe Zirlde.
was not injuml in the accidenL
who was a ~nger, police reported.
,
Currlcalum chaaJes l!llde ·
•
Curriculum chanses it the high·
'
school for the citizerithlp portion of
the Ohio Proficiency '!'est were
Offlcen of the Pomeroy Police Department investigared two
approved.
.
reported' Cll thefts overnight
'
lncomins freshmen will be
Acccnlinl to a police clepartment~pokeswoman. Johnny Nelson.
The American R.ed Cross ~equirect 10 take a for-credit course
t&gt;Omero.y, reported around 1'2:50 r .m. ~t hjs dark red 1983 Dodge
Bloodmobile will be at the Melfi in ccnempoqry world affairs, Ord
Aries wu IIOlcn from the Krocer s parking lot
.
County Senior Citizens Center 10 said. Students who fall to pass the
Police have CO!IIliCled other area law enfcn:ement o(f'JCes to be
Pomeroy on Wednesday afternoon citizenlhip portion of the leSt will
on the kx!Jm'lt fur the Cll and have enteled the car into the LEADS
from 1-5:30 p.m.
b e = to ta1te Ameri_can histocomputer ayaem. As of this morning, the car has JIOl_been recovAnyone between the ages of 17 ry
. IOpllomoro year. .-, . i .
and 70 who weight at least 110
If they condnue to f11 1ft c u •
eree!.
~on~lnued on paflt 3 ·
pounds may donale blood.
· zenihip, they will condnue to.take
From

Damaged school to reopen

•

s1499
\

Elemeatary of the area being searched for a
missine U.S. Army helicopter. Looklnr over
Evans' shoulder is Commander Robert Wood·
ford or tbe Gillia-Melgs Post or the patrol. (OVP
photo by kevin Pinson)
·

--Local briefs-___.,

-2 Styles ·
-13 Colen
-100% Nyloi
-Staill Resistaat

SALE

· SEARCH EFFORTS - Slate Hi1bway
Patrol Trooper Larry EvaDs, left, Chief Deputy
Dennis Salisbury or tile GaiDa County Sheriff's
Department and an unidentified U.S. Army ofticilll examine maps Monday morning at Clay

.

Bloodmobile to visit
Meigs Wednesday

SHOVELING SNOW • Gfel Kaapp, left, aad Mark Lewil were
busy sboveUn1 I Upt dllllln1 of IHW &amp;IIIII mornlac n« sldtnllui In
the vUIIIJt or
s- flllllnJ overnlcht cloled scbools Ia Easten, Melp and Southen loeal scbool dlltri!:ta.

._!'OJ.

•

l

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