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.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport CO•IIIpolla, OH ~oint Pleeunt, wv

Sentinel ,

DB

.

February 28, 11183

USDA blames marketing for food cost rise ·
WASHINGTON (AP) ·-MarJceling costs have been the driving
force in pushing up the price of
food in recent years, 111 Agriculture
~t study finds.
. .
'Whlle consumer food~­
tures incleasecl oni.Y 2.7 pertent ill
1991, food JllllkedDg c:qs11 ... rose
4.S pen:ent 10 $361 billlpn," said a
report by USDA's Economic
Researeh Service in F~view

~erketing

. MYSTERY FUM- This week's mystery
' farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
COIIIei'Yallon District, is·located somewhere In
GaUia County. Individuals wishing to partlcl. pate Ill _.., weekly coatest may do so by pesling
tile farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
auess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
' Pomeroy,' Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 8%5- Third Ave., Gallipolis, Obio,

45631, and you IDaJ win a $5 jlrlze from •he
Oblo Valley Publlslllllg Co. Leave :rolir aame,
address and telepboee number wi_.. )'OIIr card
or letter. No lelephoae calli will be accepMd. AD
coa•ea enbies llhould be -.rned In ro • newspaper otrlce by 4 p.m. each Wedaesday. in qiiC
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
·Next week, a GaiDa County farm will be realured by the Gallla SoU and wa~~:r Coaservatlon
District.
'
.

ASCS announces .
•
·
Program d ea
.
.dl
. IDes

counted again becau~e the com is
judpd to be of a lower quality due
10 a grading formula that considers
test weisbt
Under the new policy,loan raiOS
will be reduced by whichever is
higher - the di.,....., for low tUt ·
wei&amp;ht or the diacount for the lower
graae caused ·by the low test .
weighL .
· ·
The loan rate is what the gov- ,
emment lends fanners per bushel
to let them hold on to their crop
until tpey can get a better price.
The diSCOunt based on motsture
content remains unchanged.
. .....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . ,
Agriculture Departmcllt a&amp;yll growers who receive government loans
10 hold their crops for later sale
. will be penalized less for low teat·
weight com.
Tbe' end of the "double discount" policy was announced
Monday by Agriculture Secretary
Mike Espy at a raeeting of the
National Com Growers' Association in 'San Antonio, Texas. Tbe
department bepo notifying growers of the change Feb, 1:1.
·
At present, the crop loan rate is
discounled just because of a low
test weight. The rate can be dis-

bill includes
costs associated with procesr:::«·
wholeaeli11g, dislribuling and
•
ing of foods produced by U.S.
and
eaten
by U.S. con. farmers
sumers, the
report
Slid.
.
"Over time, the marketing bill
has been the driY!nl force in food
expenditme inct')sll," it said•
Between 1981 and 1991, the
marketing bill for food grew 7S
~t, ac:counting for 78 percent
of the cost of food; it said.
.
Riling Iabar C0S11 have account·
· ed for almost half the increase ·in
..the marlceting llill over the ~ade, ·
the report said
·
BreakinJ down the .l991 food

Key Centurion ~"fo;~:-;::;::.'3~:0:;
aniJ.OU. nCeS
labOr costs, 8.S cents by pacbging,
4.5 cents by intercity transporta·
tion, 4.S cents by depreciation, 4
Apr1•1 d•lVI•dend ·cents
by .advertising, 3.s cents by
CHARLESTON • .The Board of fuels and electricity, 3.S cents by

By USA COLUNS
.Directors of ~y Centurioa Bane- before-tix profits, 3.S cents by rent,
15.
GaDII ASCS Olllce
-L993 tobacco notices will be shares ,Inc . (NASDAQJKEYC ), 3 cents byJinterest, 1.5 cents by
GALLIPOLIS • The Agricultur- mailed on Friday, ~h 12. ·
. West Virginia's largest bank hold- repairs arid 6.5 cents by olhei costs.
al Stabilization ·and Conservation
-Your 1992 burley marketing mg CO!RJI!IIIY· has declared a quar"Em(J!oymelit In the food
Service is going to be a very busy cards must be returned before terly di~nd of 17 cents per share industry grew ooly 0.13 percent (in
place during the month of ~h. ASCS can issue your 1993 tobacco . 'Fhe d1:v1dend, declared at the 1991), compared .w~th ,an annual
. Gallia County producers are , notice.
. . Board'.s Febflll!l'Y 22 mo!Uly meet- average 2.5 percent nse over ... 10
reminded that calling Tor an
-Remember 1993 will have a mg, will be paid oo A,PriJ1, 1993, years," the report said. "This
appointment can help alleviate the 10% reduction in basic quota.
to sharebolden of record oo Marth small increase resulled from slugfruslration of stsruling-in-line at the
-The conservation· cost-share 12,1993.
.·
.
.
gisb retail sales growth during the
COURier.
program (ACP) runs on a continu- . K~y ~enl'!flon. wtth $~. _2 b~- recession. Employment rose in
WHAT'S GOING ON??
ous basis Funding is limited • sign lion m assets and $323 million m food processing and distribution,
• Feed grain and wheat signup up now!i These are just a few of shareholder equity !I' Decembcl; 31, but i~creues were muc.h small:
begins Monday, March 1. Official the programs available at your , 1992, has enlered mro !I definitive tl*,t mrecent, yean, particularly
aerial phOIOgraph ill ASCS 0 ffi For addi 00
· na1 details merger agreement wuh BANC eaung places.
.
: acreagesbe
·
e··~
••
s;""up.
Y
w
ICC.
ONE
Corporation,
Columbus,
A
.
verage
weekly
ear.
nings
1
·~· ..... .. ..,..
on these llJid other farm program
•
2of
3
•
- Wool and mohair filing dead- provisions, producers may contact Ohio. Terms of the agreement WOlken in oOod procesll"f, rose .
line is Monday, March I.
the Gallia ASCS office at446- include, among other items, provi- . . percen~ In 199!·:~ht y below
:
-1992 dairy re(und payment pro- 8686.
siohonllfor ~1-~.~:.!!?'ofbCcBoANaeCa . 1990B~!~tax
l*~tfi• -~·"'"d •or
' gram deadline is Monday, March
w Yo..,..., • - - • ·
''""~
.. ~~·- ''
ONE in an exchange of BANC 'over $15 billi(lll, or 3.S percent of
ONE COIRIIIOII s1tare,s for Key~- the marketing bill in 1~91. Th~t
1 ,
turion common shares. The amounled 10 a 6 pc:n:cnt .IIICreue m
exchange ratio is designed ro·pro- profi!J. CO!Rpared with the 16 ~- ·
1

l. t takes moPe than a
'gobble' to attract turk,ey·
:; ·f . LOUIS (AP) -

Strutting,
squawking, gobbling and 'hooting,·
the dozens o! parading people may
have looked a little silly. But they
were, after all, trying to impress
turkeys, ·not humans.
"It' s fun for the crowd, but
these l!uys are deadly serious,"
said B1ll Harding, pre$ident of the
St. Louis chapter of the National

'

.
i·

Wild Turkey Federation. "The
turlcey is not an easy bird to call
in."
·
About 1,000 people turned out
earlier tbis month to watch the
1993 Mid-America Open Wild
Turkey Calling and Owl Hooting.
Championships 11 a SL Louis cOn·
vention cenler.

PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
February 20, 1993
STOCK STEERS;
60.00-98.00
300-under
'
62.00-95.00
300-SOO
65.00-91.00
500-700
66.00-76.00
80().over
STOCK HEIFERS:
. 71.00-100.00
300-under
51.00.82.00 .
300-500
58.00.78.00
500.700
51.00.71.00
80Q.o\&lt;CI'
STOCK BULLS:
62.00.101.00
300-under
. 69.00.95.00
300-500
62.00-87.00
500-700
•
58.00-60.25
Slaughler BuDs
550.00-905.00
.
Cows &amp; Calves BH
43.00-53.50
Bred Cows By #
350.00-775.00
BredCowsBH
Slaughter Cows:
46.00-~1.50
High Dressing
42.00-45.00
Utility
37.00-41.00
Canner &amp; Cutter
95.00-1 OS .00
Veal'- choice
87.50.94.00
Medium
70.00.86.00
Good
SHEEP-Ewes
24.50.30.25
:
30.00-45.00
Rams
Baby Calves BH
37.50-190.00
41.50.55 .50
HORSEScwt
Ponies B.H.
35.00-44.00
38.00-41.00
Hogs - 200-250
15.00-2.400
PigsBH
•
41.00.74.00
Goats

~en!~~~~=t·~::g:f~ CeDtJumpm 990,there~said.

a share in BANC ONE SIOCk, subject to a BANC ONE market price
range of $46to $50.60 .
The merger has beea approved
by the ~est Virginia ~nt
of Banking. However, It IS sub.JCCt
to additional regulatory review as
well as sh~~;reholde~ approval. A
Key Centunon special shareholder
meeting bas been scheduled for .
April 12, 1993 10 consider the proposed ll'llliiCdon. .

Project two years
ahead of deadline

Continued from D·l ,
' Bruce Egbert of Botkins, Ohio
' placed fifth: in the Gallia County
Steer DiVISIOn, champion went. to
Nccnab Hill and reserve champion
' 10 Todd Bryant. '
~ · In the Open Class Heifer Pre' view the overall champion went to
Neenah HiJ! of Bidwell, Campbell. co of Ced8rvillc, Ohio showed the
reserve champion preview heifer.
Dale Coclceral of W.aynefield, Ohio
placed third. In the Gallia County
Heifer Division, champion went 10
' Neenah Hill and reserve champion
' 10 Kevin Manin. ·
The judge for the event was
·· Curt Rin&lt;:ker of Matroon, Illinois.
The Gallia County Preview is
aponsored by the Gallia County
· CaaJemcn' s Association with help
from several local' business and
orsanizalions. The Gallia County
Caulemcn extend a special thanks
to the following: Sta( Bank, Ohio
Valley Bank, Bank Qoe, Ohio Valley Visitors Center, Carter' s
Plumbing and Heating, Gallipolis
Vault CO., Gallia County Deputy
Sheriff Aaeociation and the Gallia,
Colmt.y Agricultural Society.
~

r.dwud M. Vollborn (J GalUs

· C1111aty'1 exteDiloD agent, a11rl·
' ealture..
.,
·
I

That's w~at you get when you add the
years of experience and expertise of
Kelley Green Lawn care and Lawnlords.
'

.

,

Now, the new and Improved Lawnlords
will provide the best service In the area
for all your lawn and landscape needs.
And, we will match any w.rltten prlce. f~m
a licensed competitor for lawncare.
Call Andy Kallay or Jim Blhl at

574-5296 or SOD-877.0050
For A Free Estimate

LAWNLORDS
'7,. GUIIrdiiiM of thll

Environment•
\

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agricultme Depiunnent is increasing fees for some inspection, grad·
ing and ccnification procedures of
~fruits and veaetables.

..

.

The increases involve certain ·
-:- or industry-requested
-services.
The basic rate charged users
whO have ~ signed term contracts
for services Wi1f rise from the current $34.50 to $31 per hour. The ·
· basic hourly rate for ovc:rliine wUl
· ·be one and one-half the new hourly
rate.
~olWitary

Pick 3:

136 .
Pick 4:

eliminated

7776
Super Lotto:

S-20,.36-38-43-44
Kicker:·483296

PageS
•

•

e
•

,.

SPECIAL!
S.U9
a.ate 7

.tate

CaiDpolla, Oldo4J651 .
614 441 IJJ6
M..r J:aanp Dalw..Da

Partly d oudy tonlgbL Low In
JOs. Tuesday, cloudy. Hlgb near
50.

.

Vol. 43, No. 211
Copyrighted 11113

1 Section, 10 Pogao 25 centa
A llultlmedla Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 1, 1993

Six die
in Texas
·shootout

UMW calls
out 1,700
•

more miners

By TERRI LANGFORD
Associated Press Writer
WACO, Texas (AP) - A
wounded cult leader and his followers maintained·a· tense standoff
with law officers early today following fierce guo battles that left
four federal agents and two cult
members dead.
The violence erupted Sunday
inoming when 100 federal agents
stonned the fortified compound of
the Branch Davidian sect 10 search
for guns and arrest David Koresh,
the cult's 33-year-old leader,
authorities said.
After the 45-minute exchange,
the two sides negolil\ted a ceaseftre thatlasled lnro the evening.
But about 6 p.m. , three cult
members emerged from the compound and began shooting, said Les
Stanford of the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco .,.c1 Ftre111111s in Washing-

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Aasoclated Pre&amp;&amp; Writer ,
CHARLESJON, W.Va. About 1,700 miners at five compa·
nies in three slates joined the picket
lines today as the United Mine
Workers expanded a month-old
selective strilcc by 7,500 other miners at Peabody Holding Co. operations.
The striJce now ineludes selecled
mines of six of the nation's largest
operarors, including Peabody Hold·
ing of St. Louis, the nation's largest
coal producer. Peabody workers
walked off the job Feb. z. whe!l the
UMW's contract expired with the
Bituminous. COI!l Opemtions Association.
UMW President Richard Trum·
lea said.Sunday night the strike was
ron.
. ,
expanded at 12:0L a.m. tod!!Y
The second shootout lasled only
because coal operators refuse to
minutes; and no shots have been ·
provide information about corpo·
fired since then as negotiators conrate structure, coal land ownership
tinued talking by telephone with
and
other issues needed 10 ensure
Koresh and another cult member.
job
security
for union miners.
Koresh, who changed his name
"The
information
we've
from Vernon HaweD and says he is
requested
is
material
we
have
a
Jesus Christ, reported that his 2legal
right
ro,''
Trumka
said.
:'It
is
year-Oid daughter was among those
outrageous that we have to strike to
killed and that he was grJvely
get that information, but it does
~ underscore..exactly how fearfql
~· ~n.J.!Iot.,, f m jl\efilljog
these companies are that their shell
b8d;~.' he told Dallas radio s.Jation
game
woukf be exposed."
KRLD as a baby was heard crying
The UMW wants to halt the
in the background. "I'm go.ing
practice it calls "double breast·
home. I'm .. going back to my
COMFORT. AND AID • A wounded AJro. Suncl8y mornlnJ. Cult Dlembers opeaed fire on
mg;" in which unionized coal
falher."
bol, TobKco and Firearms agent Is comforted tbe ageats as they attem)lted ro execute a·search
o~rators set up non-union subKoresh began releasing children
hy a comrack at- tbe Mount Carmel compound · warrant, leavlni four a11ents and two cult memSidiaries and transfer coal reserves
held inside about 9 p.m. Sunday,
of the Branch Davidlans cult near WIICO, Texas, bei'S dead. (AP)
and ·sales contracts to those sublettilill them go in pairs. Eight of .
.
sidiaries.
·
what are believed 10 be dozens had
The operators want the IDiion 10
been released by early IOday, said a
·agree
not 10 use the informalioo for
McLennan County sheriff's deputy.
organizing
new mines or anything
Armored vehicles from nearby
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sales 4.09 million in May 1979. ·
The Realrors ani forecasting furFort Hood and a special police of previously owned homes
Analysts said the recent ther rate declines.
weapons team arrived after dark, dropped 6.4 percent in January, advances
"President Clinton 's attack on
sales of both new and
joining 250 fed~ra1 agents and pausing after four straight monthly previouslyinowned
the deficit will yield lower intetest
homes
had
been
dozens of state police.
a real estate trade group driven by falling mortgage rates rates, which wUI ensure the continThe ATF said four agents and mcreases,
reported
IOday.
and rising consumer confidence in ued rally in the housing market,"
one sect member were killed in the
predicted William S. Chee, the
Sales
fell
in
every
region
of
the
the economy.
.
firsi gun battle. Two helicopters country.
Realtors
president.
Sales of new homes jumped 6.3
NEW YORK (AP) - Ohio
were hit by gunfii'C, and a TV news
The National Association of percent in the final month of 1992.
But consumer confidence levvan and a newspaper photogra- Realtors said sales of existing sinnative
Lillian Gish, whose acting
The government will announce the eled off in JI!Jiuary, ~~~:cording the career started at the dawn of
.pher's car were also hiL
Conference Board, a New York moviemaking and kept pace
homes nationally totaled January figures on Tuesday.
"It sounded like a war zone, gle-family
3.78 milhon at a seasonally adjustAccording to surveys by the business research group, and tum· throu&amp;h the age of television, is
people were being hit, you could ed annual rate, down from 4.04
Federal
Home Loan Mortgage bled this month as Americans grew dead at the age of99. ·
hear people screaming with the million .in December. It was the
increasin~y edgy about their fman"She was film. Film started in
agony, the pain of it," said John first drop since a 1.2 percent dip Corp., fixed-rate, 30-yeer mort- cial secunty.
·
gages
averaged
8
percent
in
Jan1893,
so did she,'' manager
McLemore, a KWTX-TV reporter last August.
Still, elllsting home sales .in Jan· James and
uary, down from 8.~1 percent a
Frasher
said of the silent
who witnessed the initial shootoyt.
uary were 14.9 percent higher than film star, who died
· But December sales were
in her sleep SatOne sect member was killed lind revised upward from a 4.02 million. month earlier. Rates had fallen to those of a year ago.
urday
at
her
Manhattan
home.
,
one captured in the second rate in the Realtors' initial estimate 7.53 percent by last week, the lowThe Realtors are projecting 3.69
Early beginnings as a child
shootout, Stanford said. A third last month. The revision made the est since they averaged 7.51 per- million sales this year, the most
stage acuess preceded a film career
man apparenll y was wounded but rate the highest since sales reached cent during the week ended April since 1979.
6.
1973.
that spanned '75 years and in,ciU&amp;!ed
retreated back to the compound,
more than 100 films, culmmaUng
aboqt 10 miles east of Ww;;o.
1
in
1987's "The Whales of
At least 16 other ATF ap;ents
' produced by Mike
August,'
and three cult members, including
Kaplan.
Koresh, were injured, the ATF
'She was the best,'' said
said:
Kaplan.
"Her performance with
:rhe asssu!t came one day after
Bette
Davis
in that film was the
the Waco Tribune· Herald began
publishing a series on. the cult,
quoting former members as saying
the Koresb may hav.e abused children of group members and
claimed 10 have at least IS wives!
Alllhorities said about 15 people
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) were Iii the compound, but Koresh
Slate
officials want to beer what
said din were many more, includ- .
people
think about the ·continued
ing children of all ages.
generation
of hazardous waste the
·• ~There ere a lot of c~ildren
Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion
here," be rold CNN. "I've had a
PlanL
lol til bibles tbe8e past two years.
Officials of the Ohio EnvironIt'• .._ dill I do have a lot of chi!mental
Protection Agency and the
. · dial and I do have aJot of wives.' ·
state atromey general's office will
meet with the public at 7 _p.m.
tonight in the Vern Riffe Joint
Vocational School near Piketon.
The state also would lib to talk
about
what it conslden vlollliona
WASHINGTON (AP) - Per·
of
hazardous
waste rsgilladons in
sona1 income and SJJCnding in Janthe
cootimpng
cleanup It tho planL
uari both rose modealy, the gov"Tbla
time
we're goloa to give
ernment said today, showlna conthem
~citizens)
the Qliiona, !IC~
tinued steady but unapectaeuler
their
mput
and
then negotiate,'
growth In the-Y·
said
Jack
Van
Kley,
tho top enviIncome 'rote 0.5 percent to a
ronmental
lawyer
In
tho aaomey
annual nte of
general's
bl1ice.
$521
• followina • 111'0118 1
The idea for the meedu pen:e.ot lncnue In Dec:emller. It
from cltlzeils' recoliunenCTatiooa
hal rilen In every month ll8tlng In ·
are reqanted ro Mad tile vi tlltlr hjlooree
FUND RAJ8EJt • M•ben vi. WODitll's
about 1 cleanup
ill ClliPdN•y 1991, except In Novem·
and
IIIODeJ
tv
tile
W-'1
AuxilarJ'I
Veterans
Anlllary
at
Veteraaa
Mmorlal
Hospital
are
fomla,
but
this
Is
time
suc1t
her, wbOn It wasl81cbilnged.
·
Memorial
H01pltal,
115 E. Mmor al Drive,
eomplediiJ
wwJt
011
tllelr
&amp;ecOIId
aaaual
.
.
.
a
meeting
h1s
taken
place
in
Consumer apendin&amp;_ advanced
·
P
omeroy,'
H011on11
will 1M alna
''GoOd
Eu
Trees"
f1111d
nJ!ser.
For
$5
ruldellts
lldvance
of
lep1
neJOiiations.
Yan
0.3 pen:ent to a MIIOilllly adjulted
aouveall'll after Iuter. Sllon preparl~ the
Kleyald. .
.
caa place tile aame vi tllllr favorite ''Good Ia"
annilal nte of $4.13 triUioo. Tbat
ttp for tile Inti .., l'tom tile 11ft J•le WIIHe,
He
Ia
leading
Ohio's
effort
to
oa
paltel
tiJI
wltkh
are
ned
ro
decorate
ifie
followed a 0.8 percent Jump a
Libby Fl1ber, Jeallttte La,eace 11ld Betty
trees
In
tile
llolpltallobby,
cafeteria
and
Ullled
renegotiate
1
1989
corwent
decree
month earlier ..-1 wu the fffth con·
Slyre. Tbe trees wiD 110 In place tllll -~~.
between the uate and the U.S.
nunlna facility. TIICM wlshln11 to participate
ICCUiive increase.
.

Existing home sales decline in January

other than negotiatin~ a new c.ontract. Trumka has Slid the UMW
wants the information " without
strings attached" because it is use·
less if it cannot be used to enforce
the conbaet.
Thomas Hoffman, spokesman
for CONSOL Inc. and the coal
operarors' negotiating committee,
said today the coal ope~ators are
unwilling to let the umon have
"carte blanche use" of the information.
·
"We took them at their word
that they needed this for a collective bargaining agreement. Our
intention was to give itro them for
that purpose and that purpose
alone," he said.
·
·
Initially, the strike uffected only
Peabody Coal Co . and Eas~ern
Associated Coal Corp. operauons
in West Virginia, Kentucky, Iridianll and lltinois.
The expanded strike includes
mines in West Virginia and Ulinois
operated by CONSOL Inc. of
Upper St. Clair, Pa., Ziegler Coal
Holding Co. of Fairview Heights,
Ill., Arch Mineral Corp. of St.
Louis, Rochester &amp; Pittsburgh Coal
. Co. of Indiana, Pa., and Freeman
Energy Corp. of Marion. Ill.•
Those pperations Include CONSOL's Shoemaker mine in West
Virginia and Rend Lake Mine in
· Illinois; Arch Mineral's Kathleen
mine in lllinois, Freeman Energy's
Crown No. 3 mine in Illinois,
Rochester &amp; Pittsburgh's Emilie
Nos. l, 2 and 9 Mine, Jane Nos. 1
and 9 Mine and the Keystone
Cleaning Plan~ all in Pennsylvania, ·
an~ Zeigler's Mjne No. 26 in llli·
nots.

final great role of one of the great·
est actresses ever ·to grace the
screen.~·

News of Miss Gish's death
came on the same day Hollywood
lost another star from its golden
past. Ruby Keeler. star of Busby
Berkeley mu·sicals in the 1930s
such as "42nd Street," died Sunday at her home in California.
Miss Gish was a favorite of
director D.W. Griffith and charmed
generations of moviegoers as the
pure-hearted dauf!!ter in his 1915
Civil War epic 'The Birth of a
Nation" and as the battered waif in
his 1919 " Broken Blossoms."
The large-eyed, porcelainskinned actress displayed an
indomitable spirit throughout her
life.

Agencies want to hear from
public about waste generation

I+ I ·= 21
I

Inspection fees going up

Meigs
Marauders

Lillian Gish, silent
screen star, dies at 99

.

Spring...

WASHINGTON (AP) - The

Rodgers E-Z Ride \
Auto-Rentals

Ohio Lottery

Personal income,
spending are up

aea101':?J.:Uusted

tile.- •

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:adoa
ftm

Department of Energy. plant operaIOni.

Eugene Gillespie, Portsmouth
site manager for the Energy
Department, declined comment on
the consent decree.
·
The facility in Piketon is operating only because the Ohio EPA has
granted it several exemptions, the.
latest of which expires in May. Van
Kley wants the decree renegotiated
before then.
,
'
The problem he wants 10 solve
concerns 25.000 drums of radioactive mixed waste bein~ stored at
lhe plant and the addihonal waste'
genentcd diily as a result of the'
plant'• uranium enrichment P.ti!·

cesses.

··

The waste can't be put in hazardous landfills bcc•ae it is
roo 1'11dioaalve.
,·
A srnallllllOWitofthe \valle lial'
been sent to a zpeciaUy desipelt
Encr11y Depat bDent incinerator It
Oalt Rldp, 1'enn.. but the incinera101' ls Inadequate id bam all waste
from the de}llnment',f plantl.
The department is working on·
technology to tn111 the waste, but asolution could be )"CCIrs away. ..
~ -

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
.

111 Court street
PomenJ1, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'I'E~ OF THE IIEIGS-IIASON .\REA

ROBERT L. WJNGETI
Pub Usher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant P11blis her/ControUer

1

CHARLENE liOEFLICH
General Manager

'

LETI'ERS O F OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
words. All Jeuen are subject ro editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publi$bed. letters

-

should be; in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
·Complains about system
Dear Editor,
they work on "tbe pump or when
· I want to complain again about they dig up pipes.
·
tbe operation of the Rutland VilOnce 11 spewed on the lawn
lage Sewer SysJem.
.
when the lid was off the tank. This
We now have bad these on · is a health mauer.
In the beginning, when the vilgoin~ problems for I 0 months. The
· origmal problem was the pump lage was having informational
malfunction and then the valve meetings, one or the things they
· stressed was how much safer and
clogs. We still have iL
· On Feb. 8, the village had the cleaner the community would be
contractor and the engineering w.ith a new system. That hasn't
associates here working for two happened at our place.
·
· "ft is Sunday, Feb. 21, and as I
days. In four days, the same old
look out the window I can see Mr.
trouble was back again.
The village emplo)leeS are here Hart pulling the pump again.
Stay tuned.
nearly evetyday to pull the pump or
Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Johnson,
just to checlc on it. When they work
here, raw sewaRC gets spilled when
~
Middlepon

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::

By The Associated Press
I, the 60th day of 1993. There are 305 days

~ Today is Monday, March
~ft in the year.

,•, Today's Highlight in History:
·
~ March I, 1932 the infant son or Charles and Anne Lindbergh was kid·
iiaPDed from the family's home near Hopewell, NJ. (Remains identified
'!IS "tilose or the baby were found the following May.)
... On this dale:
~· In 1781, the Continental Congress adopted the Anicles of Confedera:~on.
'
.
;,;, In 1790, Congress authorized the fii'St U.S. Census.
~ In 1864, Rebecca Lee became the first black woman to receive a medi·
·cal degree, from the New England Female Medical College in Boston.
'• In 1867, Nebraska became the 37th state.
.;. In 1872, Congress authorized creation of Yellowstone Natiooal Park.
·• In 1940, " Native Son" by Richard Wright was ftrStpublished.
• In 19S4, armed Puerto Rican nationalists, firing wildly from the gallery
~f the U.S. House of Representatives•. wOunded five C&lt;!ngressmen.

•

:'
~

••

Berry•s World

health departments in 17 states.
State and local community coalitions will use the money to apply
proven anti-smoking strategies to

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
population groups which ·are at
high risk for tobacco addiction. The
coalitions will educate local officials about public health policies
that combat smoking such as
restricting tobacco promotions,
raising cigareue taxes and limiting
access by minors. ·
A decade or cancer research, or
more than 60 large studies, will be
drawn from in devising niethods to
help people stop ·smoking and prevent nonsmokers from staramg.
With the American Cancer Society
chipping in $25 million, ASSIST
hopes to reach 18 million smokers
and prevent 2 million young people
from starting. NCI officials believe
they will save 1.2 million Americans from premature smoking-

THEJ)BO'ME5 Wll1l AN

I:)(CEllENT HEALTH CARE

PACKA6E • 9UT...

NO~LARY.

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••
•'

':••

.J'o' SLow

...•-·
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~.
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••
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"•••'

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GUESS WHO WILL PASS TA' INCREASES ON
TO THE CONSUMER.
1'1 '

'

nn

l

FOIA)."

Jack Anderson a!ld Micbaei
Binstein are Wl'lters for Unlte4
Feature Syndicate, IDe.

Today's· young defy easy labeling
. Pity the .younger generation,
those' in thetr late teens, 20s and
early 30s. They have been discovered by the people who specialize
in such things, put under the delinitiona! microscOpe and found tenninally lacking. Grungy dressers,
politically cynical and existentially
pessimistic, their resentments are
said to run as deep as. their aspira·
lions run low.
My advice to the so-called Baby
Bust generation is to take no
notice. Ignon: the naaering as best
you can. ·1be old folies 1I'C engagm~ in relatively harmless groupthtnlc which, despite its long, diS·
honorable and heavy-breathing histo11~0115·cauaresesn'tliherds
'ttle realandharmlabel. sGenearen~-t ·

a

prison bars. If the past is any guide
to the future, most or today' s
young are going to defy the stereo·
typing and do their own thing in
r
d h
' II
wtlys 'rhahastWall. cobeenn
outhn t e
ex~~· .t
ways tha theus.
IS IS not to say
t
current younger generation does not
march
h' h to
beadifferent
th drums
rh ththan• those
the
w tC
t out e Y m aor
Baby Boomers. The Boomers. the
immediate predecessors of IO(Iay's
Busters, are a statistically unique
set of people. Born .between 1946
and 1964 in the greatest population~
leap in American history, they are
75 million of today's 253 m1'llion
Americans, aome 36 percent or the
total.
More importantly, they came
along during a time of unprecedented economic expansion. The
nation was growing at home, lead·
ing abroad and engaged in mortal
'th h s · u ·
strugg Ie w1 t e ov1et mon.

what Life ~~gazine . called us' .in tim· o'r tholie who·'wen:',Wined bf
1957, the year I graduated from supj)oned the New Left. Aild riiuch
college. We were bunoned·down of!he leadership of the social revoconformists, went the line, who lutions of the 1960s was provided
wanted nothing so much as 10 join by-•'silent" men and women from
u .1.1'
the orpnizalion, follow onien and my much-maligned generatioli.
u
tend our privaie gardens and ramiOur seven c:llildrCD wc:rc all ben
lies. There wasn't a rebel in the in the 19S0s and 1960s, which
begail to soar. Sexual activity"stan- bunch, ure suggested.
means thai. some are statistically
ed earlier and became far more · Within fiv~ years journalism · within the Baby Boom getleratlon
open •.A new world was supposedly had discoveri:d and discarded the and some are among the Babx
abommg.
"new conserVatism" on campus, Busters. But the generationaJ tags
That has not been the back- then rushed tq detail the advent of · have nothing to do with the way
ground upon which contemporary the "New 4ft." After that, the they view life or the way they
young Americans have been asked deluge. There
the "greening of behave. Far more important than
to perform. They are tbe children America,· • bell-bottom trousers group dy'namics are their individual
of divorce. Economic growth has and all, then the "me generation," characteristics, opportunities and
stagnated. Smaller in n~bers than and then the Yuppies. The measur- · choices, which have been dramatithe BablYBkoomefrs, thedYdothnot cur- ers and inventors or such things cally different from one to the
rent Y 1oo orwar to e same told us that young Americans went other.
bright vistas that greeted the from being sell)ess to selfiSh within
That's the way it is with all their
Boomers. Their generation has wit- a decade. some now announce
·
· ·
nessed more public failure than ·
r
d ba lc
d th
contemporanes, magazme JOurnalsuccess, more scandal than mota! stgns 0 a tren
c towar
e ism and pop psychology to the con·
r
altruisJic.
trary. No generation is a bag of
triumph. The bindmg glue o the
Even when the labeling is half- Valencia oranges or a bunch of
Cold War has not yet been replaced , right, it misses the poinL Despite seedless grapes, uniform in exterior
by a unifying equivalent. The sys· our youth-besotted culture's eager characteristics and internal consis·
tem doesn't seem to work as well insistence to the contrary, the tency. Each is comprised of' unique
as it once did.
course or nall'onaiii•e
· · d ua1s whose present and
·
h'
" 1·s not
1nd1v1
But memory is a qutrky 1 mg, set by young people nor muc
future will be defined by personal
and in our country, we lend to for· · affected by them. Occasionally decisions rather than by' a shared
get-the past almost as quiclcly 8s we they act as shock troops on the cut· era.
leave it. Other generations have ting edge of change, but for the
· It's y.torth remembering as you
faced bad times. Virtually every most pan they are impelled by it, contemplate the facile psychobab·'
generation in this century begin· not its originaton.
ble about the "twenty-somening with the "Lost Generation"
As for the quickie labels them- things" that has descended on the
or· the "Roan· n~ Tw_enties" has
national
been given !abe that were more selves, their claim to univenal or
. dialogue. As always, most
facile than accurate. And genera· apMplicattion hasAalways beet! a tlhie.
iHtISdhodtl air.C t III f .
0
lion after generation has derted the
os young mencans m e
ng ar er
, ormer
categorizers and confounded the 1920a did not drink bathtub gin, State D:gartment spokesman
analysts.
d~e th eir nigh ts away or re.be I 1111tod anclwa -.~nin&amp;reportedr,edl·r
1
1 speak with some personal agams 1 conven 110na1 mor,a 1ny.
r a pu .....er,ls pres ent 0
authority' as a member of the Most colleg~~age students 1R the MaiDStreet, a Washlnaton, D.C.·
"S' I
G
· "Th 1
1960swc:rcn tanywherenearacol- based televlalon pi'Qductlon eom.
1 ent enerauon.
a was leae and only 1111 infmitesimal frac. paay and a writer i'or NEA.

Secial mores wc:rc being strcll:hed,
ripped, altered and redefined in
ways that reverberate throughout
today' s society. Divorce rates

Ouuzng Ca·rter JJJ

,.as

usuallh ·

. lo

Word of the dismissal of New
York schools' Chancellor Joseph
Fernandez has gone around the
nation. He was even celebrated as
he feU, by Peter Jennings as Person
of the Weelc on "ABC News."
Most or the stories about him WOO•
dered how this boldly innovative
educator could have been treated so
unfairly. His ally on the New York
City School ,Board, President H.
Carl McCall, said to Fernandez on
the fateful dale: "Maybe we didn't
deserve you."
Editorial writers and columnislll
explain that Fernandez had been
the victim or a eonspilacy by right·
wing bigotiJ. Yet durina the final
public meeting on Fernandez's
fate, a black man from Brooltlyn
provided the actual reaaon eo many
parents wanted Fernandez OUL
· Fernandez had roraotlen that
compulsory public educ•im does
not tnclude tho llale'sllllhority 10
cancel a (*elll's rilbtto deal with
the moral educatioP Q( a child. Said
the blaclt parent: "I am tryin&amp; to
_raise two boys, 8 and 6, and
nobody from the government is

•

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an

NatHentoff

u

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01~i3Accu-Weather, lnc.

------Weather----, Soulb·C••tral Oblo
· To~ight, partly cloudy early,
becommg cloudy late with pau:hy
!lense fc:ig. Low in the I ow 30s.
Tuesc!ay, cloudy . .A slight chance
of rain late. High around 50.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
. Extended forecast:
Wednesday throuah Friday:

Wednesday, niin lilcely South. A
chance of rain north. Highs in the
40s. Thursday, a chance of rain,
possibly !llixed with snow north
and west Lows in the 30s. Highs in
the upper 30s to mid-40s. Friday, a
chance of snow and turning colder.
Lows in the upper 20s to mid-30s.
Temperatures faDing from highs in
the upper 30s and low 40s.

-:----Area deaths-~ylton

Harry O'Dell

Longstaff

Harry Calvin O'Dell, 65, of
.,_ Hylt,on Longstaff, 65, Point . Rutland died at the Holzer Medical
(" neasant. died Saturday, February . Center Sunday, Feb. 28, 1993, 'foil ·!z7, 1993 at Holzer MediCal center lowing an extended illness.
1n Gallipolis, phio.
Born in Logan, W.Va., Nov. 9,
: He retired in July, 1992, from 1927, he was the sort of the late
Kyger Creek Power Plant, where he Harvey R. O'DeU and Mary Eliza·
had been a chief chemist aitd per- beth Southern O'Dell Gibson. At
formance engineer. Reared in the age of 12, Mr. O'Dell moved
Windsor Heights, he mQVed to with his family to Meigs County.
Point Pleasant in. 1955. He was a He grew up on a farm on Noble
veteran of the u.s. Navy; a mem- Summit Road and in more recent
~ of the Main - Street Baptist years lived with and.cared for his
Cb h
h
he
ed
mother in Rutland.
·
·
•member
urc ' ofw the
c:rc Boardserv
as
a
He
served
1
'
n
the
U.S.
Armh
in
of Deacons,
Trustee Board A s nda School Korea during the Korean con let
teacher and
Yof the and workell all of his !if~; in the
Masonic Lodge.
coal mines in Ollio and West VirBorn July 17 1927 in Neffs ginia until becoming disabled in a
Ohio, he was
son of the
mining acc.ident in 196~ . He
E. ..l!!ld, ~en (l.owtber). ·. =~ ~ohness .ch~rches ~n the

:n-:ne!ber

!au;

me

f!:!li':!r

· ~:m~g are his wife, Ann
(Brown) Longstalf· one daughter
Rebecca Ann Nigh V'~enna· tw~
grandchildren, JessiCa Ann' Nigh
lind Jamea Hylton Nigh; one sister
Audrey Tyler, Powliatlen Poin~
Ohio and one brotbet W"dliam
J,.ongstaff, Fostoria, Ohio:
,
Scrvicea will be held at lp.m.,
Wednesday, March 3 at the Crow·
Hussell Fuenral llolilc with the
Rev. Donald w. Johnson official·
ins· Burial wiD follow in Kiddand
. J't'lemorial Gardens near Poinl
Pleasant.
·
. Friends may tall at the funeral
.home today from ~ to 9 p.m. There
· wiD be no visitation on Tuesday
·

J,.ottery numbers
. CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super LOtto jackpot will grow to $8
million for Wednesday night's
drawing, after no one came up with
all six numbers picked Saturday
night with $4 million at stake.
, Here are Saturday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Super Lotto: ·s-20.36-38-43-44
Kicker: 4-8-3-2·9-6
·
Pick 3 Numben: 1-3-6
Pick4Numbers: 7-7-7-6

The Daily Sentiuel
(U. . . IIJ.IIDI

'

9:U·
-· l!lpoday
CoQrt It;.,

~Friday,

•
or sOmething very much like it to business.
A parent, for -instance, cannot
be chosen as altemati ves by local
wrong.''
,.
force
a school to prevent an entire
boards and approved by him ·
i:lass
from
reading a book. But.
On the same day, a young black was llllllldaloly. And it had to swt
in the first llllde. A hairdresser in alternative book can be prqvide4
.
Queens, witli a child in the second that panicular child.
Although Fanandoz grew up in
grade, was bewildered. Her kids,
she said, "think rex is kissil!f To New Yort,later matiJJ8 hlslqJIIIlli
woman, also not from Manhattan teach them that homosexuabty, a . tion as an educator in Miam1, he
- where Fernandez hid his boy ldasin1 I boy, ~OK - I think seemed to have fOI'gllllen thlt lherO
strength in the West Side liberals they're too young to W1dentand. '' · are othc:r borouaba llesidcs Mmhat•
and newspaper editorial wrilm FemandCz would not be moved tan. In Brooklyn, Queens, tho
said furioilsly: "I aend my children until it wu too late - until large Bronx and Staten Island, lbe edko;_
to school to learn math and numbers or~~~ outside of Man- rials or The New York Times anc1
Engliah, not to read 'Heather Has hattlll ftaeely rebelled It the chan- the Villa&amp;e Voice - among thoaa
Two Mommies."' ·
cellor try,lnato take away their demlndlng that Fc:mandez stay Olj
Fernandez's intentions were authorlly u parents iti thele mat- -' don't have mucl) clout. And
admirable. Children, be stronJly ten. Finally, he said thai the cur- thele outer.IJorouah ,.._. believe
believe~ ; muat learn that because riculum was not muclatory after
that the wbile Weat Side Ulteral.
people 1re different - i1l c:oiQr, in all; i t - advisory.
supportin1 Pemandez have theli
..
:
religion, In sexual preference But there parents aJso remem- 1ddS in priVate IChilola.
they should not be regarded as bered their losina baale with the
Like the tidal wave that ~
alien. And ao, he instituted the cballcellor over malting condoms
Zoe Bainlaway, tile cbucellor Wll
"Children or the Rainbow" cur- avail•ble in the hiJh schools. Fer- enplfed in a clus wu. Oltside of
Manhattan, blliCk Baptist parents
riculum with such JCDIIc boob as nandez did not understand that
"Heather Has Two Mommies," SOllie perenll WMled the option to
and wukila.c:Jus )lllelltl of vart:
"Daddy's Roommate" and "Glo- keep lbeir owa cbildrea out of the
IIIIi colon- in...........
:
Nat
Hentort
Ia
a
ayndlj:ate4
ria Goes to Gay Pride."
progrUI. WHt other parents did
writer tor Newlpaper Enterprise
Tbe chancellor 1ave tho c:lear wasn 'I any of their businesa, but
Aaodatlon.
'
impreuion that this curriculum tbeir owa kids were certainly their
~
'
il

PA.

W. VA.

Pubttolaed ...

going to take my place in telling
my sons what is sexuaUy right and

.

By The Associated Press
Winter storm watches were and into the desert Southwest. in
March came in like a Jamb in posted for IOIIight through Tuesday the 40s farther inland, and in the
Ohio but could tum into a lion by across the parts or the Olclahoma 30s from far northern Idaho to
Friday, farecaslt2S said.
and Texas panhandles and southern through Utah and Colorado.
In the meat\u me, gentle south- Kansas.
In the Midwest, highs in the 4 0s~
westerly breezes wiD raise temperClouds also were forecast for warmer than usual, were forecast
atureS into lhc 40s and possiblY. 50s the nort hern and eas tern Great for the DakoJas and parts of Monthe next few days. Rain is lllcely Lakes reg ion an(! the extreme tana, Wyoming , Nebraska and
Tuesday lind Wednesday.
Minnesota. Elsewhere in the north,
Northwest.
But the National Weather SerIn the West. highs wm r~ highs were expected in the 30s. In
vice says the rain could start turn- in the 50s aild 60s along the coast Oklahoma and Texas, higs in the.
ing to sleet or snow on Thursday.
SOs to the 70s were predicted.
And by Friday, a. full-blown snow
storm could hit the state.
By then, temperatures will have
dropped bailie inJO the 30s.
NEW YORK (AP) -. lnvestiga· secure.
the record-high temperature for
tion
o( the bombing thit rattled
The smoke-damaged New York
this date at the Columbus weather
New
York
City's
psyche
is
being
Commodities
Exchange Center,
statio.n was 65 degrees in 1972
hampered
by
the
instability
of
the
·
housed
in
one
of
the.center's smallwhile the record low was 2 below
twisted
rubble
beneath
the
World
er
buildings,
got
permission to
zero in 1967. Sunset tonight wiU be
-Trade
Cemer.
open
IOI!ay
as
the
financial
center
at 6:25 p.m. and suniise Tuesday at
Bomb
sleuths
exam.ned
tiny
limped
back
to
work.
7:02 a.m. ·
specks coUected from the perimeter
Law enforcement officials have
Around the nation
of
the
100-foot-wide
crater
s8id
they found traces of nitrate, an
Comfortable temperalllreS were
punched
out
by
the
explosion
in
a
ingredient
in dynamite, at the blast
forecast for most of the nation
parking
~e
below
the
center's
site.
Some,
speaking on condition
today, though more wind was· presignature
twm
towen.
Five
were
of
anonymity,
told The New York
dicted for the New Eltgland toast
lcil1ed
aad
more
than
1.000
injured
Times
that
investigators
have found
aS an Atlantic storm continued its
in
the
Friday
noontime
blast.
no
traces
of
chemicals
associated
slow climb north.
One person wa, still missing with plastic explosives.
But clouds were predicted
Determining what type of explo·
across much of the southern mid- Sunday. Another missing person
was
safelb:.;counted
for
Sunday
sive
was used and how it was trig·
section, thanks to steady onshore
nigltt.
far
the
blast
site.
~ered will help investigators trace
winds and a jet SIJ'Can.l dislurbance.
The towers, the world's second- tts source. If it was a car bomb,
Rain, sometimes heavy, was forelargest
buildings, will be closed for authorities wi!l attempt to recon·
cast from the Telias coast to southat
least
a week until saJetY. and, , struct .th~ _veh1cle, JUSt as they do
ern Kansas, - nd heavy snow was
security
are restored. Contractors when JCiltners are bombed.
,
predicted for the higher parts of the
welded
steel
beams
and
other
sup.
"The
work
could
take
months,,
Southwest. Seven: thunderstorms
were said to be possible for Texas • ports into the trade center's under- sa1d James Fox, head of the FBI s
ground area to make it more · New Y~lc City office. "(~ut) 'Ye ·
GulfCoasL
never.g1ve up. Whoever d1d thts,
•
we will call:h them, even if it takes
.
20years."
.
He could only speculate about

for now

In the East, highs were exjlected:
to range front the 20s in far north- :
em New England to the 40s south •
of New York, the SOs in the mid· :
South and the 60s and 70a in the •
deep South.
:
There were no repons of heavy :
rainfall or snowfall during the six •
hours ending at 7 p.m. EST.
:
The high temperature for the ·
nation Sunday was 76 degrees at :
Miami.
:

Clues sought in Trade Center bombing i

1

,

The Dally S.nllnel -Page--3

March weather gentle as· a lamb

Tuesday, March l
MICH.

(NCI) are folies who want to dis~
related deaths• .
criminate
against the customers of
Public health officials call this
our
member
companies." '
:
education; the tobacco industry
"
The
anti-smoking
community
calls it taxpayer-sp!l!lsored lobbying - and haS launched an inten- has an action plan of raising our
sive counter~ffensive on the feder- smokers' taxes, limiting their
opportunities to smoke," the
al and state level.
Although FOIA is a popular . spo~ atgued. "So obviousresearch tool u'aditionally ly it's in our interest to know
employed by .iouml!1ists and histo- what's going on.... We are ~g
rians, NCI oifteials believe that two for public documents. If they are
separate FO!As filed by the Tobac- doing something they·'re trying to
co Institute over the last 18 months keep secret with public money,
are designed.IO head off the public- they ought to be ashamed of them·
selves."
. health campaign.
The FOIA factor, accordmg to'
The tobacco industry spends NCI officials, has thrown public
nearly $3 billion each year promot· health officials off balance.
·
ing and advertising through riJedi.
''It docs rq aome exlent parafyze
ums ranging from sponsoi'Qip 'of . them beciMJSe it takes a very small
~ennis tournaments to billboards. ·
staff and diverts them into ~
But the tobacco juggernaut papers," said one offteial.. 'AmJ·
seems to be losing steam, suffering 1t's a little intimidating to get some
from shrinlring market shares and of these things. We'lcoow lhllt there
unable to block anti-smoking initia- is somebody out there wfio has
tives on the state level. ASSIST access to information, very much
poses one of the greater threats to inside informalion about important
tobacco's turf.
public health programs.''
A Tobacco Institute spokesperSome officials . believe the .
son confirmed that two FO!As extensive, wide-ranging requests
have been filed becani!C they want were designed to intimidate and
. "to know what's going on. These · slow up the NCI. The materials
first have to be retrieved an4
checked for privileged information;
then checked by various institute
officials. Finally, an institute
employee has"to spend several days
I
or weeks copying the documents.
"The requests have srecific
dates in them and they cal everything by their right names. They
aren't haphazard. When they
request these materials they are
getting copies of our playboolcs;-they are geuing copies of what people want to do on sites to control
tobacco use," one offiCial familiar
with the FO!As told us.
.
Regarding the tobacco's !JSC of
the FOIA weapon, an NCI officia!
reOected: "All of us who love freer
· ) dom believe in the public's right 10
~m. But in a SllualiOJ.Il® this
when the government is Honating a
substantial limount of money to
head off the leading cause of P!'c·
ventable death and disease, it is a
somewhat perverted use of (the

Chancellor Fernandez didn't _g et it

"
~

OHIO Weather

Cancer fighters .protest lobbyists'
use
of
FOIA
.·
WASIDNGTON - On the eve
of one or the most ~ve lllti·
smolring campaips ever launched
by the government, the National
Cancer Instiwte fears that tobacco
lobbyists are snoopinf through its
ftles, gleanin~ gems o information
about upcomtng tactics and strategy.
And it's all proper.
Far from employing some sinis·
ter !)lack·~ technique. the Tobac·
co lnstiDite IS relying on the Freedom of Information Act to lceep
tabs on NCI plans regarding the
American Stop Smoking Intervention Study, or ASSIST.
"We have competition between
the public health system and the
tobacco industry," said one NCI
source. " Through the. Freedom of
Information Act, the tobacco indus·
try has access to the plans of the
communities in this country who
are attempting to reduce tobacco
use. I can think of no other reason
they would want these things other_
than to obstruct the achievement of
public health goals. This is very
consistent wilh their behavior.''
Under ASSIST, $135 million in
contracts were awarded to public
"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Accu-Weather• forecast for

'
[)ear Editor,

Joday
in .history
.,

Page 2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio :
Monday, March 1, 1993

••

·"
Favors new school buildings

sit back and let our school district
:. In .PaSt years Meigs Lo.cal fall into the stone age as the rest or
Schools have seen many problems the county has. Let's push for a
1111 our school buildings are growing
new school system in our county
vety old. We all can see.the disre- with buildings we all can enjoy and
.pair and we can all say that our be proud of without crowding or
~~:hool board has let the buildings
breaking down.
So for all the children that
go.
.
, But how many times can you deserve a clean and updated school
repair a building? The time has to learn in, I feel it's lime we, as
· ~e for Meigs Local Schools and the people of Meigs Loc:al Schools,
tlle parents of all children to push should provide them with just that
for some new school buildings. I; because without the tools and the
for one, say taxes are high enough rest you can't do or learn the job or
but for our children to go in a even as much as teach iL So wake
school building with cracked walls, up • our children's minds are doing
furnaces that break down and elec- without. all because of the voters of
lrical wiring that shorts out at Meigs County.
limes, one wonders whatjs nexL
Yours truly,
r, Our local school dtstrict has
Floyd Cleland,
property to build new school build·
Rutland
mgs on, such as the old Rutland
' Editor's Note: ·Whlle several
High School building site. As for hulldln~s in the Meias Local
the junior high, it could stay in School DiStrict are old, lllld whUe
Middleport . There is plenty of some breakdowns of equipment
room at that location. As for a do occur, tbey are safe, accordin1
grade. school in the Pomeroy or to Supt. James Carpenter. Build·
Middleport area, our school·district ings are regularly checked ror
· has property for it as well.
safety by tbe Health Department,
·; , 'the- time has come for Mei$S State Fire Marshal, tbe O"o
J:.ocal to act, and as a parent I will Industrial Commission, and the
111pport such a project if only to see Ohio Environmental Protection
our children put into a modem Agency. As ror bulldin1 a new
school with new school equipment scbool or schools, efforts by the
that is up to date.
Meigs Local School District to
Our childten can't vote. We, the pass a bond Issue ror fuading
!fOPle of Meigs County, shouldn' t have failed on several occasions.

Monday, March 1, 1993

At Ohio Vollof

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'

Tha DaO~IInal, 111 Cour St.,
Pumao;,
411111.
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Mr. o:neu !s surv!ved by two
brotherJI and Slsters· m-law, Roy
Eugene and Bebea O'DeU of Rutland, Harvey R. a~d Mary O'Dell
of Albany; three SISters and broth·
e';S·in-law, Joyce A. and Fred Leddmgham of Groveport, Carol Fay
an~ Bill Williams .or Ann Ar~r,
M1ch., and Rauhne and M1ke
LehmanorGro!CJIOrL.
Funeral semces wtll be hel~ on
Wednesday at II a·!"· at the Ftsher
Funeral Ho~e! M~ddlep~rt. The
Rev. Amos TilliS w1ll offictate and
burial will be in Sunset Memorial
Cemetery, South «;harles~n. ~.
Va. where a gr&amp;VCSI~ scrvtce will
be held at I p.m. Fnends may call
at the funeral home Tuesday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. ln lieu or flow·
ers friends may make contributions
to the mission of their choice in the
llallle of Mr. O' Dell.

Deanna K. Parsons

ND 1 ' Qt:la 1r .,. llildl paliiiillllW l8

-.-taonto-ouriornmooll

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.10
.40

EMS responds to seven calls
Units of the Meigs County Emt:igeucy Mediral Sc:nice responded to seven calls for assistance during lbe weekend
Sablrday - 4:04 p.m. Pomeroy to Willis Hill for a car rue. Car
owned by Vicky Miller; 4:07 p.m. Tuppers Plains to Rye Road for
Sue Ann !'OweD who was tniiiSported 10 St. Josepb's Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.; 8:48p.m. Syracmc to Plri: Road for Cllrence
King who was tra1ISpolted to Vetenms Meniorial Hospital.
SunCiay - 10:44 a.m. Rolland to Com Hollow Road for Sheila
Goheen who was transponed to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 11:11
a.m. Middleport to Overbrook Center for Helen Kennedy wbo was
transported to VMH; 12:52 p.m. Pomeroy to Locust Sueet for
Richard Ward Jr. who was transported to VMH; 7:50p.m. Pomeroy
to Wright Strea for James Farley wbo was transported to VMH.

DI·vo•ce
,_ ' ' filed
Kenneth Yeau1er, Cheahire,
filed Frlda:r in the Meip County
Court or CommQtl Pleas for a
divoree from )Uta J. Yeauaer,

ClellWe.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Federal "sin taxes" on top of similar state taxes could force some
Ohio business to move to neighboring states, some business groups
say.
..
Last week, President Clinton

In a suit r.ted Friday in the Meigs County Common Pleas.Coun.
Columbus Southern Power Company, Columllus, is seeking a
$2,414.62 judgment apinst Christopher George. BidweU.

-Meigs announcements-Wednesday and Thursday from 9
DofAtomed
Chc;sier · Council No. 323, .a.m. to 3. p.m. The church is local·
Daughters of America, will meet ed oo County Road 30. .
Tuesday at 7 p.m. The cbaru:r will
Aatdetnic: boosten to meet
be draped in memory of Zana
The Meigs Junior High AcaGainer. Members are to wear
white. Members bring gifts for the demic Boostcn wiU meet Thursday
tables at the rally to be held on at 7 p.m. at the school cafeteria.
April 3. Practices will !JC held aflel' Kathy Shibley will be the speaker.
She will discuss parenting skills.
tlie meeting.
Everyone invited.
Youthleagnetomeet
· Duceplaued
The Racine Youth League AssoThe Gallia Twirlers Western
ciation will meet Wednesday at
Square
Dance Club will hold a
6:30 p.m. at the Racine kinderdance
Saturday
from. 8·11 p.m. at
garten building. Anyone interested
the
llendenon
Community
Center
in .helping witll baseball or soCtbaU
in
Hcndt:lson.
W.Va.
Mark
Clausis encouraged to attend.
ing will be the caller. Everyone
welcome.
Soup bean diner
· There will be a soup bean dinner
Tnasteei to meet
Friday in lhc basement of the MidThe Olive Township Trustees
dleport Masonic Temple from I I
a.m. to 7 p.m. by Evangeline Otap- wiD meet Friday at 7:30p.m. at the
ter No. I 72, OES. Soup beans, Shade River Swe Fon:suy Buildcornbread, pie, tea or coffee will be ing.
available ror S3. Eat-in or carry-out
Services set
available. Call·992·5330 for inferServices at the Fellowship
malioo. Every!JOO welcome.
Church in Rac ine will be held
Thursday throilgh Saturday at 7
Lecion to meet
. Tfte Racine A:merican Legion p.m. nigltdy. n- will be special
Post 602 will meet Thursday at 8 singing nighdy. Don Buah will be
p.m. Supper will begin at 7:30 the ev~~~gelisl. Pastar Cluwles Bush
invites the public.
p.m.

will

-

Some groups oppose :
federal sin taxes
·:

CSP seeks $2,414.62 judgment

Deanna K. Parsons, 47, 86 State
St., Gallipolis, died saturday, Feb.
27, 1993, at Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal, Point Pleasant.
She was born May 29, 194S in
Gallipolis, daughter of the late
Gomer Ben ana Leora (Wood)
WrighL
,
.
_She was ,a former employee of
Rummage sale.
•
Price and Sons P11111macy, a homemaker, and was of lbe Btipdst faith.
The •Forest Run United
Survivi&gt;rs include her husband,
Methodist Chun:h..js having a nunJames B. Parsons; one daughter,
mage ,sale at the church on'
Julie A. Parsons or GaJiipolis; and
three sisters, Norma West of Hospital news
Springrteld, Maipret Price or Gal·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENI'ER
liPoW, and Aldeth Strausbaugh of
Feb. 16 dl~eu:,;e• _ Jared
Albany.
Services 'will be' held 1 p.m. McKinney, Stella
less, Mary
Tuesdaf at the Silver Memorial Alban, Zachary Kisor, Donald
Freewil Bapdst Church, Kanauga, ·Wllhn, ·Kay Adkins, ~ary Brown.
with the Rev. Jack Pauoni and·the Mrs. Malt Rees anddiUghll:r, Mn.
Rev. Dcnnil Paraons .officiating. James Davis and da!Piet, Ri1;hant
Burial will be in Sliom Coliletery, Janovec. Lillian McCormick,
· · Gage
,
Sheila Henry, Louise Cheaffc.
nearfrlcnds.
call w h Hal
Verna Sturgeon, Effie Johnson,
may
at aug • • Tina Cowdery, I oe Whitwright,
ley-Wood Funeral Home on MOll· Waller' MorriiOD and Mrs, Paul
day from 6-9, and Qlie hour prior to
rervices 00 Tueaday.
Finnicum and 1011.
.
Pallbearen
be Gil Price,
f'dl. l6 bir!U - Mr. and Mn.
Kent Price, Howard West, Jerry Chris Maness, son, Jackson. Mr.
Strausbaugh, Steve Strausbaugh, and Mra. Micbael Morgan, son•
and John Slaman. Jr. . _
Jackson. Mr. and Mn. Jerry Bat- ·

..-.::JL•. . . i£!: ij ,= Hospl'tal news
. ,.._ - - ...C
·==
I

...---Local briefs---

com, daugltter, Vildon-

Felt. 17 diaell•flea- 1&gt;ore1
Arnold, Carrie Miller, by Barringer, Gladys Patton. Mn. David
Daniell and 1011' J..uta Norman.
Lowell Crow, James Smith, John
~=·~b~entz •. Bcinnie
Pft, 27 111r111 - Mr. and Mn.
8 fllllflwni110D·daqhtet·
Peb. 21 dllelltuj.et - Pabicia
Holley, Charloa Wanh, Ja••

v-...

AA 1J1M1Pill-'

.

The Pomeroy Group of AA will

meet Thursday at 7 p,m. at the

JTPA building in Pomeroy. Call
992-S763 for information.

proposed increasing taxes on alco·
hoi and cigarettes to help pay fQr
health care reform. Last year, the
Ohio Legislature approved simila!'
taxes to help eliminate a S2SO mil~
lion deficit and balance the state 't'
budget.
·:

•

The federal sin ·taxes, applied
e.q_ually to all states, could increue
pnces in Ohio and send more busi·
ness to bordering stales, said An
Arnold, spokesman for a group
called Border Ohio Business Coali•
tion Against Higher Taxes.
·:
By T.he Alttociated Press
- States with lower taxes on such
Weekend traffic accidents in items willloolc more attractive. to
Ohio killed 10 .people, including consumers if federal taxes drive up
three in one wreck, the State High· prices again, he said.
·
way Pauol said.
. Sin taxes would hurt business
The patrol counted fatalities mor~ than they would improve
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight access to health care, said Tom
Sunday.
Jackson, spokesman for the Ollio
The dead:
Grocers Association.
,
·
SUNDAY
. "One more tax and I think theie
YOUNGSTOWN - Dominic are going to be ~le consideri!IB
M. Benedis Jr:, 36, of Lowellville, a mutinous revolt,' Jackson wd:
in a.two-car collision on Ohio 164 "That may sound funny, but to me,
in Mahoning County.
people are just taxed to lbeir ears. '•'.
SATURDAY
But Mary Yost. a spokeswotnall
TIFFIN - Gains A. Jeter, 63, for the Ohio Hospital Association,
of Dallas, Tex., when his .trhctor· said taxing people with unhealthy
trailer rig was struck' by a train at a habits to pay for health care is
crossing on a Seneca County road.
appropriate. The group wants sia
COLUMBUS Tiffany taxes earmarked for health care.
Moon:, 6, of Columbus, a pedestri· particularly ror preventive care. .,
an hit by a car on a city sJJett.
' \,
'
ALLIANCE - Brian Metts, 29,
of Beloit, a driver involved in a
two-vehicle crash on a township
road in Columbiana County.
MASSILLON - Beatrice M.
Sanlcbeil, 81, of Canton, a passen·
ger involved in a two-vehicle sccident on Ollio 172 in Stark County.
CLEVELAND - Fiore B. Discenzo, 62, nf Cleveland, a pedestrian struck by a car on a city street.
KENT- Charles B. Call, 31,
of Lakewood, in a one-vehicle
accident on Ohio 43 in Portage
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
BUCYRUS - Melissa J. Sigler,
17, Randi L. Sigler, 2 months, of
Upper Sandusky. and Randy L.
Banks, 15, of Bucyrus, in a two·
vehicle collision on a 'Crawford
County road.

Ten killed in
highway wrecks
over weekend

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.

Tl asttes to_.
The Onmge Township TrusteeS
wiU meet Wedt• my at 7:30 p.m.
• the borne or the ciat. Patty Calaway.

•Ear, Nose &amp; Throat •Allergy •Hearing Aids
•Head &amp; Neck Surgery
QUALITY CARE FOR YOUR FAMILY

.Stocks
Ani E1c Pbwer..... ~ .............35 1(1
Ashland Oil. .......- ............ .26 3/4
ATI:T................................55 1/4
Bank One...........................S2 S/8
Bob E - ......... ~..............18
Charminc Slql..................l4 314
Ounp kwll Diea; ................ IO 3/4
~~-·--;. ......,..... 21314
Moaul-~- ......... 17 1/8
~TU·----···-681/8
Key Cc:ubnla ~-·-~·~-·~··22 l(l
Lands End...... -··-··-~···-·25 1/4
I imiled In!:.·-·~ -·~
~. 2S S/9
Mnltil ·dia Inc. -~· ..........33 1/4
Poilt Bww (M]t· - -•o ..o oo uooo~ J3 1/l

Medicare &amp; UMWA A••iKnmcnll Accepted ·

Suitt 112 Valley Drive, Pt. Pleaaant,
GET

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·
3)Yo•MI•oywlll .. lllroc1Mio,_

Til CIOICI IS YOHSI
To co11oct yHr aciio-.W,

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wll
614·915·3556

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MONEY &amp; UP TO A COMPLETE
FREE EDUCATION

1,..,.

........

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S1700 .NIMUM IN SCHOWSHIP

YHro'a . ...... ..-1 of acltoleraltlp ••d
....,, 291tl•• ........ wortlt, tlllt 1m .....
lie rep.l.. Ptrrl .. IIIIa
Ia youn. TIIo llociiiH
,.. -ko .....u................
1J It al8ya n•re h II
ol IIJXI

RoNi ,,.,_ ___,.,..... 19 l(l
.
~··lnl:.---·····-·-....22
Star Blnk --~:..--··-~··.38
Vet~¥ Ml'linrilll
Watdy lal'l-~-- ..... ~ ..... .13
Saturday i4m1Jslona • Goldie
=~=· s':i.~ . WortN•••Ind. ·--- ·-..26
Lil~~ • None. . Jerry Balcom and dallllller, and , Stoek reports ore tH 18:341
qaotn ,ro•lded
Sunday admlas ons • Marv1n Glenda Bn.f"ldd.
Ke•per
Secarltlea, lac., 1
~~epon; Virlinla Sayre,
Feb. 21 lllrtll - Mr. IIIII ~
c
"r
lr
, Bronson Laudennilt, daughter,
, S
y diiC~ • N~. .
Middleport.
'
'
.

=

who planted the powerful device:
and why, but Said the magnitude or•
the blast indicated it was the work:
of a group rather than a crazed;
loner.
•
" This was a bomb," Fox said.:
"II was probably unlikely it was a:
lone individual.''
More than 50 telephone calls -:
from people claiming to represent•
evetything front nationalists in ~
former Yugoslav republics to
Colombian drug lords - have beet\
received since the ,blast. Tapes
from the calls will be analyzed for
accents and other clues that might
lead to those responsible.
.
The explosion two floors under•
ground was in a strategic localill!,l
that knoclced out power, c0111muru-·
cations and security systems.
Port Authority executive director Slanley Brezenoff told reporten:
Sunday that a sbtdy done in 198S' ·
86 had recommended that parking
lots underneath the World Trade•
Center be closed to the public
because they were vulnerable to a:
bomb attaclc.
:

Opo• .....frL 10.7 or lit. ·IN

.

•
-· ~

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.... .. ..

~.

·--

-

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..

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•

�"Sports
.

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, March 1, 11193
Page 4

In theNBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Alllodc Ot.toloo

Twn
W
Nc.w YOlk
......,36
New Jency ....... 31
8011lM
··-··· ....29
Orlando
......... 26
Mlaoi
....... ..21

•"

L
11

G8.

~S64

1A
2S
2.5
32
Philadclpltio ........ 19 33
Wul\ioa1&lt;&gt;n .. ,.... 16 31

'

Pd.
.667

!I.S
7
8.5

.531
.51 0
.396
.365

14.5

.296

20

Chi&lt;all" . _.. ........38 11 .691

"

.

CIJ!VEUIND

.37 19
..........21 2.5

.661

1.5

Chuloue
Atlanta

.528
.473
.i473
.434

9

lndilna
DcuaiJ;

Milwaukee

...........26 29
...........26 29
"" M0U00.23 30

.......21 34

J'Nhl6.5Wwnee57, V.U., View 53
Sloubonrillo Cath. 64, T..,.to S3
WeUMUes;7,SaftdyVall33

Soulll
Ah.·Birminaham 67, Cincinnati 60
Ahbaml '17, Sooth Cud.ina 80
Aobnw ~~. MiaWO&gt;Pi 63
AlbnNa St. 60, SW t.Ou.iaiana 59
Allltin Peay 80, Ttnneaee St. 71
Beth~Coobnan 70, flori da AAM

17

.312

Cin. CAP£ 17, Eaum Brown61
Cia. Taylor 46,11ipJor 44
Day. OakwOod 63, E. Clinton 54
Katlm1 Ridp 45, Sprin1- Noothcutan
43
N. Aduna 67, MWonl66

Yale 68, Huvud 58

11
11
14

66

OlvlaloaiV

an, Marioment 90, F•yeUeville 111

Cin. S-13, Cin. OuUtian 39
&lt;Joors.etown 53, Cln. Landmark Chr.

41

Sltywe65, W.,..a.fiold 45

•
Cen.L Florida 64, Flt. Intemtticwta160
Chu,_ Soulhan 94, Wm!luq&gt; liT

:zu.vw. -...13. Wataford70

ReauJar- ac:tlon

Clemson 81, MuylaDd 73

Mklw•l Dl'illoa
Teim
W L 'I'd.
Slll Antonio .....•. 35 11 .660
Houlton
......... 33 21 .611

Utoh

'DcnYa"
-

•·

o.nu

-·

........... 33 11 .600
......... 22 32 .¥n
........13 31 .155

. ~········-··4

.m

41

GB

2.5
3
IJ.S

78

•

Pboailit
:.....•...40
Seattle
............37
1U11ond
..........32
LA. Lalun ......28
L.A.
, .21

24
26

.169
.61!1
.629
.538
.519

....... 11 l7

.321

Cli- ..

12
17

' 19

Ooldoo s.... .. ....24 32 .429
Saerammo

..

•

11
30.S

4
7.5
12
13
18

2J.S
10

Atlanta al New Yodc; 7:30p.m.

Miami............. .l3 3

w. Mich..........II

5

Ohio ............... .lO 6
Toledo ........... 8 8
E. MiclL ...........7 9
BGSU ................610
Kent St. ............. 610
Cem. Mich. ...... .4 tl
Aboi\ ................ 214
N ..

Overall
W L PtL
.813 22 6 .786
.813 II 6 .750
.681 1410 ~·3
.625 13 il .542
.500 10 14 .417
.431 12 IS .444
.375
9 IS .375
.375
9 IS .375
.250
8 16 .333
.143
1 18 .280

47

•I

Ball Sc. ·~ Akron

••

Kent at ~i. Ohia
TolDdo at W. Michigan

:~
r

.•

47

•••

Arizono SL 76,_0,..... St. 61
Baile SL 61, Mc:dlfta S&amp;. 60
c.ur..U.76, Wuhln~l
Colondo!IL 19,S., '
SL 78
~St. 60, Teua·El
51

•,,

.•"., '
'•'
~

•·~

••

••'

'

44

Cllamploouhlp
WOOIItcr 64, KS!JCIR 41
Ohio conrerace
Ch.,.ploolhlp
Ou..boin I01 , llciddhaJ 12

Ohio women's college
basketball scores

61

Tlllrdplaco

s...anna1o

.\

•

IJhloConf~

·•''

llocknellll~

,,'•

,,~

••

•,•
'•

~

••

· LaSalloiii , ~M
tara,_17, Mny 67
Mri•ttanl'l. Fairfield 71
Marl•l5, SL Pnncil, Pt. 66
Ni.lpm17, St. Ps.'a 63
N.,.,.._, 64, 11odfmd 62
Ponn 74, Columbia 67
Jlidunond 69, Amenc.n U. 63
Rider '79,'Maunoulh. NJ. 73
Robert Moail 65, Faidi!F Diddnooo

55

S.. HaD 12. r

:t'

II.,..

w•rne36

B""*fidd 61, Wkklilre 31
Cin. Wyomin&amp; 59, Foli&lt;i1y S7
Col. Reody 48, UWn v.u. 46

41

Columbia SZ, Avon
Emem Brown 57, Cln. Mariemont 47
Elmwood 72, Rivanllle 65
Fabviow Pa1t 68, W..,.,_lS
a....a..... 65, Hoath 51
&lt;lnzMIIa73, ldadloan !'laiN 43
...... 6Z, Milut l!dioon 45
Kanlu Lakota~, Mcilawk 41
U'baty Union 13, Faizfield Union 39
LoW!ville Aquina141. Jacbon-Milton

34

~ 67,Son.-.ty St. Ma')'• 30
Marum
72, Mui&lt;x~ Pleuant 46 .

Eastern alumni game
slated for Saturday

Bl&amp;in

Middlollold Culinol M, B•dF S4
Obediot so, Lonilt Cath. 34
.
Cath. 19
Rid&amp;..tol&lt; SZ. Fooderi&lt;&gt;town 31
Rocky River Lutheran W. 72, Cle.

M..., "·Lima

c2 an

The Eastern High Alumni game
will be played Saturday at Eastern
High School.
.
'
The women will play at 6:30
p.m., wilh lhe men's game to follow. Men's sign-up and a practice
will181c:e place during the week. .
For more information, please
conlact Tim Baum at 985-3301 for
the men's team or Tammy Capehart at 985-4140 for the women.

Erilftitw30
Sputa HJahlond 46, Mowtt Giload 1!

spn.,. L.Ocal34, E. Pdioline 21
Utiea 61, Jduw1own 38

W•,..W. 31, S"""'villc 35

Dl•lllon IV
c.no~ W-62.Lickin1 ""·57
~ 63,MiriootC.th. 44
DaiUtn 67, Mnp.a-1)
'
IAnville 73, Treeofllte 22

Dlrillool
&lt;'hilliooetw 5J.Lopn 43
Col. Marion- Franklin 65, Tham11

-

IWyC""'99
ColpiO 90, LobJab 80
Cooiooll 54.- . . ...
llulmoulll "· ..... 64
Pon!hlm57,Nny4S
a.... '79, Loyo~a,ldd. 61

DIYiaiaftW
"'
AktOD St.V·St.M 65, Wooater Not· '

Namhall 81, Punnan 14
N. CIIQlial SL 61. Gecqia Toch 60 '
UT-Ch.t- 91, GeOop Southem

Saturday's tourney scores

Fort Lonmie 47, Bndford 42

W-51

...._,.,_49

Cal.f-63, W.......W.S. 61

Bolton CoUete 70, Miami .51

.•

W. llolm•74,1ndWtV.U. 35

~59, 1fd-S3
UttiO·Miomi~.F_,..43

Saturday's scores

•

Citaael79, W, Carolina 70
DavWoon 14, VM170
Ne 78, UCLA 61

DI-D

Wiuenbal. 61, Ohio We~lcyan 60

Lcun24

otlk4l .
W. BRIIcb:Sl.CantonS. 31
' W. Geaup 59; Pam..vw.Huvcy5l

Day. Chamina6&amp;-lulienne: ~.Hamil·
ton Badin 43
'
l!ataft 62, _.,.,...58

Ch ..., ....., .

60,1'1tno....alt :a

u-.s ,

Dhllloo I
Cin. SL X•vier 59, Amalia 54
Cin. Waodward 51. Cin. Withrow 47

Oeoct.etown, K,-. 82, Tiffin $9
!ilart.h Cod: Conftnnce

National college
basketball scores

.:.' '

Venuilian6Z,

Sunday's tourney ac:tlon

Thomu M~ 67, Bluffton 63
NAJA DilL 12 DIJ. D

Ch.,.plonlhlp
Capital7 3, Heiddbera ~

Soutlo
Alabl.ma AA:M 97, LeMoyne-Owen

Ohio high school
boys' basketball scores

o.r...,.. ] 4, Wilminalon61

''
'•'•

SLSSS~B
49
Tri-Val
51,
n41

•. -

F•W•

A•od•Uo. ofMidmdCollfiN
Champloolhlp

••

Pl..bu.p 51, a.a.p.own 41

Raula57,ModtanlcobuqS2

Jdaho 71, N. Arizcn• 51

Tournaments

..

Drucd 67, Maino 57
Ge&lt;qe Wuhln.... 74, Rulpn 12

...... 51, " - 2 7

l.anur 113,Lwiliana Toch 76

Bowlin&amp; a- 8Z. Ohio U. 55

. Butler 89, Xavier 80
Kent 89, Ball SL 40
Toledo 84, Miami, Ohio 6S

.•'

so.

--

Saturday's

,•

llilllborn43, w.uru.. 34
Mueot59,-abooo53
McDmmou.kW]t, lraum 48 (OT)
Mcip 67, Rook llill43
MinetYa
M£cadorc Field 46
N. Royalutn 63, 'toollmada• 61
Olmolod Pallo 42, Obediri FUoland• 35
""'Clnlon61,Qyde42

M-t
),!ldUpn 116, Ohio SL 64
Ww:auin 74, Jllinoia 66

n~ulor-seuon. acdoo
Alhla nd 84; SL JOIIJPh't,lnd. ?4

•

·'J

29

Hamiltcn Badia 61 , Olfoat Talawanda

!"e.•~64,Delawm62

North COUI Coar.-enee

.'

0..11iP.O'i•70, JlCUon 60

laot .

otUs:"ri::can

.

Canland·I..akcview oW, Youna. Rayen
Day. Chamin•dc•Juliennc 2$, Day.

SuDday'sacUon

TLffin 91,
15
W&amp;lah 17, Mount Vcman Nazannt 73

'

Cle. VA•SJ 17, OwdOD ND-CL 'II

c.n.n IS

w..,.,_

AuDclatJotl otMI4eul Colltps
Olunplooololp
Thorn• Mote 82, ~W~W I t
NAJA DUL l l Dh. 0

•

31

..

Marion Franklin 65, Thom•• War·

-51
N.. Ph''·~· 51, z..n.,m~..,
I

- i l l.
W-111Qo57
lttrln• Seothl6. Do1. s-.. s2
t1PJ* ~ II,Ccl Eaa ..
ate. '

b70~=61

Athena 53, V'IIICint Wltt'WI47

BelW.uiM 62. SPiinl;. Shawnee 31
O..ttinl Rivw .v.d. 70, J•ckiGII 61

g:~,=~72(0T)

.

" ' - 80, Oolh.. 61

MllmiT.,.62,~Sl

Oahood 63, E. Clmlal54
P t a lllll.Pw -rtW.70

S.-'JO,RodtiiiDlS .

•·

':_
.L.,;. .----""·-----------.,..,-----'''

-IDftCE-

squad 86 Tuppers Plains Is looking
for persons Interested in taking an
E.M.T. class to run with the squad.
There will be a meeting at the
Tuppers Plains squad bay,
Tuesday, March 2, 1993 at 7 P.M.
'

No.4 Arizona 99, Oregoa-68
At Tucson, Ar,iz., Arjzona
opened a big early lead as it
extended iiS best-in-lhe-nation winning slreak 10 19 games. The Wild·
cats (21-2, 14-0) led by as much as
40.
.

scoreless over the fma12:52.
No.9 Duke 78, UCLA 67
AI Durham, N.C., Bobby Hurley
scored 19 poiniS and handed out 15
assists after having his No. 11 jer·
sey retired. The victory was the
80111 suaight at home over a nonconference team for Duke (22-5). .
Saturday's scores
No. 1 Indiana 86, Minnesota 75
· At Minneai'Olis, Greg Graham
scored II of h1s 19 poiniS during a
26-4 run lhal began late in lhe first ·
half and Indiana (25-3, 14-1 Big
Ten) built a 17 -point lead before
swviving a fllllf)' of three·poinlers .
· No. 2 Kentucky 80, Auburn 78
At Lexington, Ky .. Rodr-ick
Rhodes made a IS-footer with
three seconds lefl, giving Kentucky
(21·3, 11·3 Southeastern Confer·
ence) 1he win, Aubugt's Wesley
Person got off a . 25~ooter !hat
rimmed ou1 as the fmal hom sounded.
No. 3 North Carolina 86
No. 6 Florida St. 76
At Tallahassee, Fla., the Tar
. Heels clinched at least a share of
the ACC title. Brian Reese scored
six slraight points to key a 15-2
North Carobna (24·3, 12-2) run
late in lhe second half lhat broke·a
56-56 tie.

~54. Pumal'ldua39

SatuC...17,Sanl'nnctim&gt;76
UNLV 94, t/tlh :1\. 56
Utoh 59, Brialwa Y..... 13
St. 57, Suman! 54
Weber f t. ll,B. Wuhinpm 73
Ww.-Mi1....&amp;•11, s.cnm..w St. 76

Tournaments

•

62

S. ULIIa 11, W. N.w MWoo 64
San Jlioeo 7Z. St. May'~ CaL 6.1
San Jaoo St. 60, Cal St.·FullonM Sl

Findlay 92. Urbana 71
Malt:mc 119, Shawnee St. 80
Mm:yhunt 109, Ccdanillc 72

••
••

24

NcwMoUcoSLS1, NoYada66
PaciRc U. M, UC Irvine 56
l'oo1lutd 69, Loyola Marymowu 66

Grut Laka VaUt1 Conffl'tftce
St. J01eph.lnd. 92, Aahland 90 (4 01)
Non-conferenn

i•

. INJIIIa. U

New Molico80, Air P,...60

N. .minoil 61, Cleveland St. 6l
Wii.·Grccn Bay 67, YounJ-Itown St.

By The Associated Press
Norlh Carolina and Arizona
bolh have a shot at lhe No. I spot
· in the AP college baskelball poll.
Wilh No. 1 Indiana and No. 2
Kenruc~y each losing las1 wee~. it
appears there will be a shift at lhe
10p of the ranldngs. If either lhe Tar
Heels or Wildcats move 10 No. I,
they would be lhe sixth team to ·
hold lhat :qJOtlhis season.
The lhird-ranl.:ed Tar Heels won
one of their roughest games of lhe .
year Sat11rday, beating Florida
State 86-76 at Tallahassee, Fla.
"To win here in this environment is just oulstanding," North
Carolina coach Dean Smilh said.
No. 4 Arizona, which already
has clinched the Pac-10 title an.4 a
berth in the NCAA tDurnament,
cruShed Oregon by 33 points Saturday. The Wildcats have a chance 10
~me lhe fml Pac-10 1e3111 wilh
an undefeated conference record.
•'It would be a great lhing for
myself and lhe young guys 10 go
18-0 and get in the record books," ·
said Arizona's Chris Mills,· who
scored 23 points in just 19 minutes.
"If we keep playmg ·aggressive
like we are, we can go 18-0."
In olher Top 25 games Saturday,
No. I Indiana beat Minnesota 8675, No. 2 Kentucky edged Auburn
80-78,No. 7 Kansas defeated Colonldo 72-68, No; 8 Vanderbilt routed Mississippi State 80-39, Alabama-Binningham surprised No. 10
Cincinnati 67-60, No. II Ulah beat
No. 23 BYU 89-83, No. 12 Wake
Forest lOpped No. 22 Virginia 58·
56, No. 13 UNL:V .downed Utah
State 94-86, No. 14 Seton Hall
defeated Connecticut 82-74, No. 15
Arkansas beat t-t\ssissippi 85-63,
Louisville crushed No. 16. Tulane
94-67, Northwestern upse1 No. 17
Purdue 62-59, No. 18 Iowa edged
Michigan Stale 66-64. No. 19 New
Orleans beat South Alabama 71-62,
Memphis State defeated No, 20
Marquette 68·63, West Virginia
routed No. 21 Massachuseus 79-54
and No. 24 Xavier, Ohio beat
Detroit Mercy 93· 74.
On Sunday, No. 5 Michigan gol
past Ohio Srare 66-64, No. 9 Duke
downed UCLA 7S-67 and No. 25
Pittsburgh heal Georgetown 51-48 ..
Sunday's action
No.5 Michigan 66, Ohio State 64
At Columbus, Ohio, Jimmy
King hil two looping jumpers to
give Michigan a five-point lead,
and Jalen Rose kept lhe Wolverines
(22-4, 11-3 Big ten) ahead wilh
three free throws in the final 29
seconds.
. No.1S Pittsburgh 51, Georgetown 48
At Pittsburgh, Chris McNeal
made 1wo free lhrows wilh 25 sec·
onds left to give Pitt lhe lead for
good at49-48. The Panthers (16-8,
8-8 Big East) held Georg~town

Avm Like 12, C1e. SL A\I&amp;Uitine 32
Cu&amp;ld 113, w.,.., Champion 56
C1e. IIIII. B.nmon~ 53, Ca. Cilhatic

:l:"-":\'
...;o;....~52
Naa.- fd.bo f"t.
61,

'

ToL Catholic 68, Tol. Waite 31
Yondalio·B - 54, Ccn-m.S2
Wurm Hmlina 59, RaWIMI 3S
Wealate56,do. W•lToch49

rarw..

WrioJ&lt; SLII , W. lllinoio80
Mldwttkra Collealalt Conferaa
Loyd a, _Dl .59, DaytOnS6
Xavi« 93, Detroit Mercy 74

•,;-

~.45

Arlzona 99. O..,on 61

Mld-ContiMnt c.rerena

•,

"'""
32
Sanduoky
55, A.a.Jond 45
Thallu Wcmhinptn 41, Wcmhinptft

Tous-San Antoaio 91, TeiUI ..ArUnJ·
ton%
Tul11 &amp;0, Widtita Sl. ~3

Grut Mldwat Cenr~na
All.· BiJmin&amp;ham 67, Cinc:inn.ati. 60

••

Boa-

67, Sprina- Sooolt 51 ·
&amp;dfcn4S, o..r..w HtL 26
C..lloi&amp;Jtla S9, C.. !loy 51
Cloved.of 61, Akron E. Sl
Col. Btoakbavea 51, Upper Arlingtoa.

Col Nonhland 55, Col. Woatlond 41
Col South lO, Cal. BuaDoor l1
CoL wa"""""' 6l. Col. Eut 32
Der...... 61~banl39
Dublin 29, IJela"!''f' 2!
Fairmcm&amp;Sl, 0.,. Dunbu41
Findlay 58, Liml St. 45
- - 6 5 , Mmofield 57
o-MIIolS,FaUbam43
Kdterin&amp; Fairmont 51, Day. Dunbar
41
•
. LaUwood 67, N, Ridpvillc 22
Lea., 56, Chlllieodte 41
Muai11on 63, C...... OlmOU 52
Ma.... 46, o..p c.1 39
Modina 62, Puma 811, HoJyNIDIC46
Mount Vcrmoe 31, Ncwatk 36
N. Oblted4S,Aal'-tl4
Nwlltiladelphll49, E. Livorpeo141
Parmt Vatloy Porp ~2. Suonpvillc
47
Pictetinataa 75, W•1«Ville S. 38
.... Cinlon 61, Qydo 4l
lloc:ky Ri'ler Mlpifica,\ 69, Clc. Mar·

SWTauSt.74, NanhTau60

regular-season action

'

AkronEIIA43,
F.U. 35
Allltint.owa-Fitch 72. You.n1, Wilaon

31

Tuu SaltMm 79, Prairie VieW 7l
TCUII Tcdl17, TAU CWtiln 77

Saturday's

•;

34

'Souhtll

Ohio men's college
basketball scores

••

Dt.tolao I

AIL·Liulo Rock 71, T,.u·Pan " -·
ican 66
B•ylor 124. Onl Rob«U J(Jl
H-"'1!86. Toxu79
-90, Southcm Mall. 61

Bowlin.·&lt;&gt;- "c.nt.Miohipn
E. Michla~n at Ohio

••
..
..

Cu-

Saturday's tourney acUon

XaVler, Ohio 93. Detroit Mm:y 74

Wednesday's games

•

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

Ka.uu 7z, Colondo 61
Loyola, m. 59, Do)'IOO 56
Miami, Ohio 63, Toledo 51
Mo.-Kwu City 96, NE Illinoil &amp;0
N. lllinoia 67, C!Cvcland SL 62
Ncbrub 91, lo..,. SL 87
Northwol:tern 62, Pwdue 59
Ohio u.71,Bowlina 0recn 64
Oltlaltontl69, MWoud 61
Oltlaltontl SL 71,1Canaa SL 61
S, Illinaia 61, SW Millouri St. 60
SL LouiJ 9l, Dol'au176
Wis.--Orcen Bay 67, Youna•town St.

Saturday's scores

••

JtockJ River Lutheri n W. 12, Cle .
Luthena B. S6
.
Tmon 71. Fairview 65
Vklnly Cltr. ill, O....Yillo Otr. S7
w...... Cbontpinn 69, Cot11and·Lake·
Yicw39
Wellinaton 7•• Elytb Cath. 76

W"4f"SL 81, W, IlliDoia 80

Ball St. 77. Kmt 63
c.nc Miohigon 7S, Akron S9
E. Michiaon 89, W. Michl
11
Miuni, Ohio 63, Tokdo 5r'
Ohio 71 , Bowlin1 Green 64

•

New Philadel""ia Sl, Zlneaville 48
FaliJ S3, C-woocl lO
Pain01ville Harvey 91, Mentor Lake
Cath. 85 •
...
Panna Padua 63, O.udon ~49

Iowa 66, Midtipl Sc 64

Conf.
W L Pd.

Ball St. ........... .13 3

•
•

Minorn 9Z. E. Pallolioo13

ll.linoia St. 55, Drake 54
Indiana 86, Mi.-.75
lndian1 SL 71, Cni&amp;hlan 58

In the MAC ...

•

~47, N. Ohlted44
I M'C'., ~. Maricaa 49

Cent. Michia,m 15, Akron 59
B.lllinoio 17, ValoanUo16
B. Midlil.an. 89, 'II. Midriaan71
Evonavi110S4,Butlu72
llL-Chieaao 92. Chicaao St. 67

Minn01011.11 Orlanda, BO p.m.
San Anlmio 11 ln&amp;na.\7;30 p.m.

••

-..... n . c.um. w-.. ~~auve
46
HcriiiJO au. 60, Maitor au-.43

Mlcl....t

• ,
T..m

llaalalte 93, Owdon 79
Euawood 14, Nmthwoocl 5I

B.U SL 71, Ita&lt; 63
Bnclley 12. N.IOW'a ~

Tuesday's pmeo

•

69

W.~dtyl01,1.ctt..avillo66

OUctso It New Jcney, 8 p.m.
OaD.u at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
L.A. Lakm at Denv«, 9 p.m.
CLEVELAND at Selule, 10 p.m.
HOUNn. It L.A. Cippm, 10:30 p.m.
Phoenia.l1 Portland, 10:30 p.m.

~· ·

Cna1viow II , Soutltem Loco! 58
Cuylhoa• FaU. 76, Akron Fi.tutone

Wake- 51, VbJinla S6

p.m.

O.r. 59, Modioo FUa

B•pc. 5l

N.C.·Om:mboro 96, N.C.·A1hevilh

Philldclpllia at Goldai Sute, 10:30

-·.·

~ - (Ky .)

SE Louioilna 66, Saatloo158
SE Miuouri 67, Middle T..._ 63 (OT)
South l'lmida 19, N.C. Otarlolto 69
Soutltont Mia 13, V.p.ia Todt 19
Southcm U. 19, AicomSL 78
s...... 94. - S 1
Tn.·O..-a 95, Gtadol72
Vandtzbih 80, Mia"-ippi St. 39

Tonight's pmos

a.. Collia......a76,- 66
Colwnbua Otove 76, Mi)klr City 70

NE l..ouiliana 94, NW Lauidlnl 73
New Odea.nJ 71, South Alablma 6Z
Nicholll St. 91, St.ophcn F.At~~tin 12
North Carolina 16. t:larida St. 76
Old DootUnon 90, William,. Maey 80
Radfool19, Libaty 14

&amp;.ton ., Dc:trcit,l p.m.
O.utouc •• Utah, 9 p.m.

Lorain

Cle.lloi&amp;Jtla 75, Shak«llll. 64

N.C.·W""'"'-79, EutCarolin• 116

New Jcne:y 102, New Ymt 76
lndianr. 110, n.n.. 96
San Amonio 94. Orlando 90
CU!VEL-\ND 10 1 , - 94
Miami IOS, Iotiruadl93
&amp;oa... Ill,_,..,., 110
Denv.tJO,Charl~ 103
LA. Lakmi2A, LA. Ctiwon 112

9$,

Oo. Catholic 51. Linin Admjral Eins

54

81

Sunday' s Korn

CIB.Ion , Mc:Kinlcy

S..tltviow 65

MCIIII&gt;hiaSL61,Man,uouo63
Mioa.'V.U.y SL 97 , !1nm~ SL 82
Mo.J"' SL'71, Howud U. 69
Murn:y St. &amp;3, TenneueoTcch Ill
N. Caralina A.t.T 76, S. Ca.rolin• St.

SltftmeniO 121, Utah 117
SeaWe 109. GoWcm State92

•

50

Goo.p Southcm 90, W. Carolmo 81
Gecqia SL 97, C..tatuy 80
Jubon St. 86, Alabam.1 SL 7.5
Jun. Mld:ilon 7S, ~e Muon 59
ICMIU&lt;ky 80, Aabum 71
LouiJW!o 94, Tw- 61
McNOCIIOSL 87, Sam HoullM SL 65

MilwMoc 95. Ollllrolt 93
Olicap II Z.-.'tlma 9l
llouROn 101, Denwrr 1,02

.·

.

Pwman ss.VMI 69
Gecqia II , LSU 71

Saturday's scores

•.

E. Tcnneuoe St. 11. AftnlKhian St.
Florida 14, Tenne..ee 10

PlldllcOirilloo

c'

"-11

Allianco 13, A"- c.....
Alhland 64, Akron Komscmo 56
AVU!o ?0. N=a67
Avon Lite 69, Obc:tUn 64
Bedford, Mi. 60, Sylv..U. Notdlvicw

C-.1 Com1ino lo, CID&gt;(&gt;bell SO
Coppm St. 75, Md.-E. Sh""' 51
n.'"""" 63, MuWU S7
E. Kattttcky 66, Tom.-Mallin 56

WESTERN CONFERENCE

S3. Na&amp;ienal Tni149

Be~Unoo~t15,Bian-34

Waper71,Mount St. Mary'•· Md. 70
Wm VirJinia 79, Muaachust.tu 54

16

• Dl•..._m

-

92(201)
V1. Commoowealtl:J 90. Buff.:Jo61
Vcrmm.~.98, Boaoo U, 88

Catral Dl•ll&amp;oa

'

Ttpp Citr ll , ln&lt;hn Lake 43
IM&gt;ana 56, Groham 5I
.

Siena 74, Caniliua 61
St. Fnncia, NY 99,l.onJ bland U. 96
SL Jalm'16.5, ViUIDDVIo 62
SL JCICph'•I4,Rhodc ldand 80
SyraC\IIC 68, Providence 67
Temple 68, St. BM1vtntute 49
TaWIOO St. 97, Md.-BahimoreCau.nty

!j

bY

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
•

.·GAHS edges Meigs 6.1-58, advahces to district tournament
Gallipolis advanced 10 the Divi-

North Carolina, Arizona win
to bolster cases for top ranking

Scot·choar·d

'

llondlly, 'larch 1, 1993

Marauders close all night. Cremeans picked off a game-high· 17
rebounds, and finished the contest
Saturday night's bard-fought 61-58 with nine markers while Bentley,
sectional ~t triwnph over hittinjl from afar,led iill MHS 5cor·
Meigs Rio Glllllde"s Lyne Cen- ers wtlh 19 points.
ter.
"We did not play·very well, but
The Blue Devils. I S-6, will face we played aggressive," said
. Portsmouth, 74 5. at 8:45 p.m., Osborne. We knew they would be
Mardi 6 aa the Colvocation Center strong on the boards, and that they
inAthrn•
had some good shooters, " he
Meigs bowed out .wilh a 10-12 added. "1 felt the play of.two of our
SCI$GII JaXri. '
men off the bench .- Terry Qualls
Allhough Cooch Phil Harrison's and Mike Donnally, was important
Marauders never led Coach Jim for us. The latter probably played
Osbome's Blue Devils during the his besl game of lhe season (nine
32-minute contest (the score was points, five rebounds; two steals,
tied 6-6llle in the first period) they one assist and one blocked shot)
finished SII'OIIg, ord~oring the Rio while Qualls was able lo ge[ inside
Gnmcle scctillllll's ~seedCd ttam against them an do some damage."
22-15 in lhe final eighl minutes , Qualls, before foulin~ out with
j afler falliDg behind S0-38.
·
I :57 left to play, fimshed with·
&gt;Cremeaas, Bentley toua•
. eight poiniS, seven rebounds, two
: It was the inside play of 6-5 assists and three blocked shoiS.
:senior center Jay Cremeans and
Osborne concluded, "Horfman
.outside shooting of 6-2 senior (Eric) did a good job on. Harrison
guard Jolm Bentley which kept the (Trevor) who was averaging 20

Sioo n District Tournament at Ohio
University this W"d:end following

in

12;

No. 7 K•na•
Colondo q
At Lawrence, Kan ., the Jayhawks (22-~. 9-3 Big Eight) avoid~
ed what would have bec:D COIISCCU·
live defeats for the first time since
Novembel1990.

poinls a. game. Harrison, Meigs'
all-time lead ing pointlll;lker, finished wilh 13 'llatlo&lt;~ rs, five of them
coming late in &lt;he game.
Miller top scorer
Gd lia's Nathan Miller led all
scorers with 20 mark ers. Chad
Barnes chipped in wi th 12. Hoff.
man finished wilh nine.
Meigs' Todd Dill finished with
eight poinls. Eric Wagner chipped
in seven.
Gallipolis leq 13-8 after one
quaner and 25-19 during the half·
time inlermission. Af!Cr three peri•
ods, GAHS was up 46-36.
Donnally's lap-in with 6:55 left
in the game gave Gallia its biggest
lead, 50-3 8, AI 1h1s point, lhe .
Marauders, behind Dill, Cremeans,
and Wagner, pulled the Marauders
within four, 52-48, with 4:06
remaining.
GAHS hiked its lead tonine,

59-50 , behind Barnes and Hoffman. Meigs began fouling in tenlionally, bul lhe Blue Devils kept
missing at the line with Cr.emeans
and Bentley picking off the missed
allempts. With 21 seconds left,
Wallner hit a ahree-poinler to pull
Me1gs within four, 59-55. Miller's
two charity tosses wilh 12 seconds
remaining ico;d the victory. Harri·
son hi I a three at the buzzer.
Sratistics
GAHS sank 25 of 59 from lhe
field for 42 percenl. Gallipolis was
cold from lhe line, sinking only
ei(lhl of 18. The Blue Devils, who
m1ssed seven layups in lhe final
period, also missed five front ends
of bonus shols in the final eight
minutes.
Gallipolis fini shed with 33
rebounds, eight by Hoffman, 15
personals, 15 turnovers, 12 assisiS,

Dames

four each by
and Hoffman,
eight steals, three by David Hager
and four blocked shoiS.
Meigs connected on 2 1 of 56
field goal auempiS for 37 percent.
The Marauders hil eight of 12 charity tDsses, had 19 personals, and 31
rebounds. •
In oth er Division II Dimict
1ourney games al OU Saturday ,
River Valley takes on Miami Trace·
at 3:30 p.m., Soulh Point meets
Alhens a1 5': 15 and. Alexander bat·
lies WashingiOn CH al 7.
Other results
River Valley advanced to ahe
dislricl by ousting Jackson 78-61 at
Rio Grande Saturday night
· In other sectional games around
· lhe region, Athens eliminaled War·
ren Local 53-47, Soulh Point upset
lop-seeded Rock Hill 70-55 and
Portsmoulh down-ed Portsmou1h

Wesl, 83-70. 'Alexander oullasted
Sheridan 70-68 while Miami Trace
!ripped Hillsboro, 62-55. Washing.
ton CH ousted Greenfield Friday
night, 75-4 7.
Box score:
MEIGS (58) - John Bentley, 3·
(4)-1·19; Trevor Harrison, 2-(2)-3·
13; Jay Cremeans, 3-3-9; Todd
Dill, 2-(1 )-1-8; Brad Anderson, 00-0; Eric Wagner, 2-(1)·0-7; Aaron
Drummer, 1420 Benny Ewing, 0·
0-0. TOTALS 13-(8)-8-58.
GALLIPOLIS (61) - Ja.son
.Williams, 1· 1·3; Chad Barnes, 5-212; Mike Donnally, 4-1-9; Nalh111
Miller, 4-(3)·3·20; Adam Blair, 00-0; Eric Hoffman, 4-1-9; David
Hager, 0-0-0; Jeff Pope , 0-0-0;
Terry Qualls, 4-0-8. TOTALS 22(3)-8·61 • .
Score by quarters:
Meigs
8 11 17'22 ·58
Gallipolis 13 12 2115 ~61

Meigs girls to play
Northwest Tuesday

1oM BA1iUK

lhree-year lltarter and leads lhe
By DAVE HARRIS
team in scoring averaging 13.7
SmliDel
*lijMI=CIAt
points
a contest. Venui alSo leads
The seaJDd season continues for
Roo lAigan and his Lady Maraud· the team in steals wilh 82. Hender·
ers Tuesday evening when they son scores around tw9 poiniS a con- ·
take on McDermott Northwest in test and does an .e xcellent forMeigs on defense.
district tourDament play.
At cenler will be 5-foot· 7 senior
The contest will be played at
Lori
Kelly. Kelly leads the ream in
Chillicolhe High School's Hauon
rebounding
averaging 8. 7 a game
Gymnasium at 6:30 p.m. The
and
is
second
on lhe team in scorschool is lncated on Ynctangee
Partway in Chillicolhc. Advance ing wilh 9.6 points a game. Kelly is
tit:kets Ill: oo sale at Meigs HiJh It physical player and will not back
School for $3.50. Meigs w11l down from anyone in lhe paint.
The forwards will be a pair of 5receive a portion of all advance
foot~7 senior Kalrina Turner and
tictet sales.
Missy Sisson. Turner scores 6
Meigs (17-4) advanced 10 dis· . points a ga'"e and pulls down
trict play oo the stmlgth of Satur- around six rebounds a contest. Sisday's 67-43 Yiclory over Rllck Hill son scores 8 points a game and.
in the sectional finals at Oak Hill. pulls in thn:e rebounds a contest.
The Mohawks (~·13) defeated
Orf the bench will be 5-fooi-4
Ironton (2-19) SI-48 m overtime junior Joy O'Brien (6.5 pts), 5in the sectional finals at Coal foot-4 sophomore Amber Black·
Grove. The winner of Tuesday's well (2.6 pts) at the guards. Seeing
game will meet the wimer of the action' in !he paint off lhe bench
Athens (18-3)-Sheridan (11-11) will be 5-foot-7 sophomore VanescooleSt Thursday evmiag at8:1S.
sa Compston (3.9 pts) and 5-foot-6
With Saturday's victory, the junior Heather Hudson (2.0 pts).
Lady Manuders not only presented Filling out the roster are freshmen
Ron LoBan wilh his third sectiooal Cynlhia Cotterill (5-fool-5) and
girls aown but also his ISOth girls Anne Brown (5-fool-7).
ClRCI' victory. Logan holds a girls
Northwest will feature a taller
ClRCI' rec:ool of I SO wins nt only team the Meigs, bul lhe Maniliders
SI losses in nine seasons for a have,been the smaller team all sea76~.
· son. The Marauders score 55.6
Bench play was the key tD the points a game, while giving up 38.5
Marauders viciOry on Saturday. 1 contesl.
.. Vema Comps1011, L!lri Kelly and
This )'C8IS Marauder squad went
Missy Sisson all_.to tile bench in to the season wilh only one
the first period in foul trouble. starter (Verna Compston) left from
But Vanessa Compston, Joy last season"s TVC championship
O'Brien. Amber Blaekwell and team. Many 'people lhought lhat at
Heatller Hwlcm all playa! wdJ olf best they would go .SOO on the
the bencb.
year. But lhese girls ,have nol quit
ICaJrina Turner led lhc Maraud- and have played hard all season.
en wilh 14 poiiiiS and 13 ~ All season the ManludeB have had
VIIICSSII Compston added 13 points their backs to the wall, but !hey
and big sisler Vema addcd 10. Lori have responded.
Kelly added eight points and 11
Meigs have won lhe last two
rebounds. Other Meigs scorers district IGW'IUIDients lhat !hey have
included Lee Henderson and gone 10. The 1985-86 team and the
O'Brieawilbfourpointscach.
1986-87 squads bolh came home
The Mamudels wiD SIMI S-foot- wilh district crowns. Don't sell this
4 senior Vema Compston and 5· year's Marauder •squad shorl,
foot-4 junior Lee Ha.deasoo II the because they have made a habit of
guard position. C,ompston is a proving people wrong all year,
"·-· '
•

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WEEKLY SPECIALS
"

PIIICES EFFECTIVE

SfAR'f 1b READ

1t&gt; lEARN.'

Southern to take on

Illiteracy.
It's not
a]aughing
matter.

· Miller in Division IV
sectional title game
The nidb lllilkcd RaciJic..Southern Tornadoes boys' basketball
1e1m will meet the Miller PalrlW!•
II Alexander High Scbool for the
Division N sectiOIId title Tuesday

He,lp solve the problem.
,CaD the Ohio Literacy
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so~eone who needs help,
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800-228Sponsored by: The Dally Sentloel • Ohio Lilei'IICY Netwol1c

·

OohJmbus Soulhem Power ,

drivers.
. Allen owns ari 11.9 point aver117p.m.
• · scoring 238 points on lhe year.
.Earlier the - · Southern Allen and J;:vans sjlread the defense
defeated Miller 75-66 Racine because of their outside shooting
aRu leading b_y ooe point by 16 skills from various ponlons of the
poiDts.
.
noor.
Miller is led by ·senior point
Soulhem's greatest success has
'"'"'"' BJUce 1-ms wbo -ec~ bec:D seen as 1 RSUlt or iiS balanced
&amp;.3ipoints dill
a ~oring and iiS tenacious defense.
Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes will
locting 10 Cllablish the early iempo
iiCJIIIIY well He -lleld ICCII lrr in 1111 cff01t 10 establiSh momentum
II BairD in tile finl half earlier IIIII wear the Falcons down.
Ibis ,_-, tlal al4*d b: 17 in the
Senior Russell Singleton (8.1
tel • wl balf. In die ~··""It prepoiiiiS
per game) and Roben Reiber
llmiDiry,l.-miil&amp; ~held to jail
(8.1
per
pmc) anchor the post for
four by the~ •
·
the
T~s.
Bolh have played
Brld o.u.___ II aiJo I fOII8h
well
8lling
down
the sbtk:h, while
scorina ~ IICGiing 17 Oft .JiDRci~'s
IUCI:CIS
has
laken some of
aary 30 Racipe. Jlla&amp;kity il a
!be
iliside
pressure
olf
Singlelon.
JOOd ......,..,..IIIII toa&amp;b from die
Sophomore
point
guard Ryan
.
Eddie Pli&amp;e is a nrc-banded Williams IllS llOiiiC on strong in the
tblat fnD dJc llac. He is often I liSt half of lhe ielson, averaging
doable-djpt acoriq threat and 9.8 points per game. He is an
eacellent driver, bill htmdlel' and
a:cnd 10 ill'+:'
IWib!l threat from till outlide.
$cw•hcn will pit
~I
Southern's bench strcnath........... The
qla
lliller'a ~ li-.p ia 6-7 dloald win out om Miller, who
aoea mostly stven deep. Jeremy
..... W..JV -., I
ilf,ll'at 7 7'it j I Ill die pliDL DIU Is the flnt ofT the belich, while
.... • .,:.la ... . _ pllinl, olher key c:oatrlbutors are Andy
t.l is liCit lllli:ll fl I dnii 11M•"'e Grue.r, TreaiOD Cleland, MaSOD
d tllllt••
fnlat•lin- Fisher, Iamoy SmiJh, Jeremy
)n of Milll' lid trp • 6-211111 6- ~ IIIII Tucker Williams.
Caldwell hu bls troops well·
Ja. ..... •• sy Mert:klo and JI'IIPIIell and playing their best ball
BID McOildl nRDI CIIFl the-.. Of tlJc 11C I '"'- The Miller game will
Sot&amp;dlerD II led bJ seafor be 1 tn1e test for die Tomadoea, but
W d ..... 'WIIO- I 15.6 If die CftiiFI riJOa 10 !be top. Southpolat ICOrill awerqo. He 11u . . +IUicl be oa ill way 10 a dis40111 .. 31i pallll Oi&amp;._ lladllle trict beiiiL

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and Marcus Allen will have to have
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open up lhe inside for Southern's

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LOOKS FOR OPEN MAN • Meigs' Eric Wagner (11) 1oob
for a teammate to pass o1r to during Saturday night's Dirislon ll
sectional finals (upper bracket) basketball eame at Rio· Grande.
GAHS defender Is Jason Wlllia,ms (12). Gallipolis woo, 61-48 to
advance to dl&lt;itrld play at AthenS this weekt~~d.

MILLER FAKES • Gallia's Nathan Miller (24) fakes a sbot
before driving against Melp' John Deatley (31) duriag Saturday
night's upper bracket sectional finals ill Rio Grande. GAHS won,
61·58. Miller rmished with 20 points. Bentley led Meigs with 19.
(OVP photos by Kevin Pinson)

I

tclJ.'CHOPGIA•

•=tf

,......

-·.. ggc

.. "·

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For the Rite
. cal t

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�March 1, 1993
'Piig1

6 The Dally Sentinel

Mondlliy, March 1, 11193
•

.BIGB

AMERICAN GENERAl liFE and
ACCIDENl INSUUNCE COMPANY

1882-1883

.

1993 BOYS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL TOURNAMENTS
SOUTHEAST DISTRICT

THIS WEE '5
.GAMES

To place an ad
MoN. ~FRI.

DIVISION IV S.&amp;C_TIONALS

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES

SECTIONAL AT ALEXANDER HIGH SCHOOL, ALBANY
~

;

EASTERN EAGLES .

Hemlock Miller (2)
Wed., Feb. 24 -: 6:30 p.m.
Reedsville Eastern

·~

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Miller

..

BOYS
COMPLETED SEASON

Trimble
Wed., Feb. 24 - 8:15 p.m.
Racine Southern {1)
. -

•
~·

.

'

.
1

Winner Advances To
District at Ohio U.
Convocation Center, Athen 8

.

Southern

~

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Tues., March 2 - 7:00

GIRLS ·
COMPLETED SEASON

• Adt ouWde d. coUDty your ad nuu nuut be prepaid .
• lleeel... dilcowtlt for ad. paid in advuce.
• Free Adl: Clweaway and Found ad. under lS word. will be
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• Price of ad for aD cap~ Jette_. i• doublo price of ad cott
• 1 pobd lb. lype oaly uaed
·
• S..tiael• not n~po•lble for error• after ttrll day (cheek
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cl.y alter publicalion \9 make (lorreclicta
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1993 GIRLS HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL TOURNAMENTS

'.
BOYS .
MAR. 2 - SECTIONAL
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Atllexander High School
· Southern Ys. Miller
7:00P.M.

6

DIVISION II DISTRICT

10

Monthly

. AT HATTON GYMNASIUM,
CHILLICOTHE HIGH SCHOOL
...

MEIGS·. MARAUDERS

.

BOYS
COMPLETED SEASON
GIRLS
MAR. 2 .. DISTRICT TOURNAMENT
At Chillicothe High School
•
Meigs vs. Northwest
6:30 ~.M.

-

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High E!chool,
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Middleport, Oh.

255 Mill St.
992·3345

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
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AND RADIO SHACK
Middleport, OH.

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~ Bank ~

It's Time 'To Order
Your 1993 Graduation
Annowwements.

QUALITY PRINT · SHOP

·111 SECOND AVE

POMEROY
992·338

GUARDRAIL

3 CONYENI~~T LOCATiONS

~.

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

CROW'S
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IKIII~
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P. 0. Box 683

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JUSTDO IT.

5T/HC
,.,.._i&gt;lliii!BW:I'*"- _.. Dealer

MIDDLE PORI
992·5627

$ .60
$.05/day

11-Help Waatod
12- SitlllltioDI Wanted

~t

I'I ' I.II·. S

42- Mobile Homa for Renl.
43--- Farm• for Real.
44-- Apartment for Rent
45- Fumilbecl Room•
46- Space for Renl
47- Waatecho Raal
48-- Equipment for Rent

6
qup
62- Wnt.ed to Buy
63- Urutock ~
64-- Hay &amp;: Gro ...
65-- Seed 4 Fertillaer

, 75.--- Boab &amp; Motorl for Sale
76- Auto Parll &amp; A eeeuorie~
· 17- Auto Repair
7~ C.•piD.s.Equip•enL

Fulllnsurad
219193

YOUNG'S.

•
8
por
82- Plumbins &amp;: Heati"' .

CARPENTER

Public Notice
I I\ I \I I I I
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on Order of
,
I
, ,
Sale looued out of the
• U- JIGoMy to Looo
Common Plooo Court ol
S....lo•
.: D- Profouloul
.
Melgo County, Ohio, In tho
caoo ol Borlho J. Prolflll
Joe Foremen,
Plaintiff,
"':'-:=======~~~~~~L...,j and
vo. Eugene
Guy Long,
II ol.,
Defendants, upon a
Judgmenltheroln rendered,
being Con No: tr.!-CV-113 In
oald .Court, 1 will offer for
oalo altho front door ollhe
BULUDN .BOARD DEADLINE
Courthouae ·In Pomeroy,
Melgo County, Ohio, on the
4:.3 0 P. M. DAY BEFORE
26th day ol March, 1993, ot
10:00' a.m., the following
PUBLICATION
Ianda and tenement•,
located In tho vicinity of
Townahip Rood 13.8, Trouble
''I'
Cree~ Rood. A complete
legal deocriptlon altho. real
•t
estatolo 1 followa:
.
LYME DISEASE INFORMATION
Th• following daocribed
real eatate In Lebanon
MEETING MARCH 2 ~7:00P. M.
Townohip, Melgo County,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Ohio, and in Section No. 30,
Downstairs Conference Room
Townohlp No. 2 and Range
Dr. Jamora, Speaker
No 11 ol the Ohio Com·
For information call
pa~y·• Purchaae' and
1·800-666-0256
bounded as followo:
,'.
The Eaot Half of the North
r
Hall of the Northwest
i
,auarter of aaid Secdon No.
30, containing 42Y· acre•,
'
I
more or l•••i also the
following real
oiluoto
in
SecUon
No.
30,
,,'
Real Estate General

home or

Work·
place
appl.

only)

No. 2 and Range No. 11 of

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

E
IRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD ·

BINGO .

Bill SLACK
992-2269

EAGLES
I.N POMEROY

ship, Meiga County, Ohio,

Special Early Bird

chaae, In Lebanon · Town·

being two (2) acreo off tho
Eaat end of a 20 acre lot off ·
tile north aide olthe South

$100 Payoff
Thia ad good for 1

property convoyed by

Wealey Davi1 and Emily J.

M. Powell by deed dated
in Book 76, at Page 320 ol
March I, 1893 and recorded

CALIFORNIA
t'•Ns'
II

the Deed Recorda of Meigs

• en tlne v~peellall
15 Sessions 115
b!~~.:~ R!!~;da~elga
Plus FREE bottla of
The real eotato hu been ·
lotion
assigned Audilor'a Parcel
Number 07-00804.
Good Thr~•gh Fo.ruory
real Mtalo io aubject
. 949. •2823
to Said
•ccrued real estate taxe1 .__ _ _ _ _ _ __.

Counly,
Ohio.Deeda: Volume
Rtlerence
159, Page 211 ·and Volume

n 111

for 1993.

REAL ESTATE appraioed
at: $7,500.00. The real eotat•
cannot b• oold lot leoo )han
two-thirdo the oppraiaed
value.
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh
on delivery ol deed .
Jameo M. Souloby,
Sheriff ol Meigs Counly
(2) 22; (3) 1, a, 3tc

ALL HARDWOOD
Sec~ so ned
· $40.00 a Load
. (6141 992·5449

12-311-92-llo

1

6:45p.m.

FREE card.·
Half · of the Northweat
Lie. No. 0051·32
Quarter of aaid Section No.
30. And being the aame L---.....!~:2~
Davis, his wile, to Andrew

FIREWOOD
FOR SAlE
Delivered~

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PH. 614·985·3949
•

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6637

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"Helping You To Recover Yo11r lnv.estrpenf' _ C

.

PH. 614·992-5591

12-5-tln

mak• and models of
tractort and farm

,

Chun:h, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto '
· and Office s..ttng ·
UCINI;OHIO

HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED ond BONDED

ioiiis

TeaforlReal&amp;tate,
216 Eaat Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
(614) 992-3325
Spe&lt;:iG
' us living

IIM"IIor

.

, and a

Fot• All Your Preilcription alld Sundry N~e
See Us

253 I. leco•tl ·

2

help pay y.o ur house payment.

•DOLEPORT· One ftoor lrame home In need of re~r.
gao heat, outbuilding. ASKINO
-.ooo
Haa 2 bedrllomo, bath,
(lllllke an oflllr).

aR II- 2 otory home with 3 bedroom&amp;, ~mpletoly
· r11111ideled, nloe modernized kitchen, lncludee moot
·~~. CIA, decking and ona car garage. ASKING
li'f,OOO

.·

•

DEXTER·

1 112

•

story

home with 4

bedrooms,

cellar.

· llanlll! area, latge front porch, newly painted. Aquiet
[lome In the cauntry. 111,oao

Prescription
; Shop -

in lhis eleven room
ba....ont,
bedroom apartment

3 ac,.s. Allie. Partial

·

VACANT OROUNDo SA 1184 Harrloonville 28.289 aCAII
Ilona~ ro.ct. AIKlHO tte,ooo
•DDLIPORT- 2 110ry hmo home wtlh 3 bedrllom1, ·
~"'::~::
g. .go. locatod~llltoullide

=:.:.

IOMITtiHO YOU UKE...O!VE Ul A
CAU., WE'LL TAKE YOU TO GET A CLOSER LOOK!

• . YOU all

yuur

Rnklenttal &amp; Commercial
FrHE•IImlt•
.

Ceaeral Hauling

Mobile HoiH Repair

•ill
conw to

Fertilizing, W-ng, and
-ing.
Shrub and Tr• -Trimming

[114--Eioctrical&amp; Refrigeration

14-- Bu.iiiiUI TrahUnc
15- Scboob &amp; I .. truct;.,
16- Radio, TV &amp; CD Repair

us!
w~

949·2391or
1·800·07·1460

2·3-03·

,

Netdan

KEVIN'S lAWN
·. MAINTENANCE

REASONABLE RATES
992·7553
POMEROY, OH.

-lll\HI'

c-

Approx. _.miles North of Gallipolis
and • mUas South ot Ch..hlra 10
Addison. Twn oN St. Rl. 7 onto
Addison Pike. Body ahop appro~:. 2
mit. . on right .

CHARLIE'S.

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

1

TURN HERE

Removal
Reasonable Rates

·.

wn·.

53--Antiq54--- Miae. Merchandi.e
55- Buii.fiOf! Suppll..
S6- Peu for Sale
57- Mu.ticallnltrwnentl
58- Fruiu &amp; Veptableo
59- For S.le or Trade

Topping, Trimming,

742·2360

J

.........,.

AaY• Uud

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

2·9-93

71- Autoo for Sale
72- Trucb for Sale
73- v.... &amp;: 4
74- Motorcyclel ,

ExcavatiDIJ

17- M~la1100u
18- Wanted To Do

PERSONAL
CARE FOR
' THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.
992-5858
696-1290

,\ I I I I· ' I ' H .I'-

41- Hou.~e~~ fOr Real

13-- Iuuran.

RUUCEDI Eagla Ridge Rd.- 3-4 bedrooma. balh. 112
baaernclnt; eleclr!o I luel oil heat, TPC water, 2 car
gM~geon IIPPfOX. 1+ acre ol ground. ASKING $11,000

(614) 992-6451

SIGN ERECTION

$ .20
$.30
$ .42

$4.00
$6.00
. $9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

228 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY

PHONE

&amp;

Over 15 Words

'

614-949~2202

FRE.E ESTIMATES

614-949-2101 • 949-2860
or 915·3839

•G•r•t••

IIIIo S•ntiiiJ Celsl

•Complete
leiiNideli•g
Stop &amp; Comp•ra
985·4473
667·6179

.N'OW()PEN

MYSTIQUE
TANNING
DEPOT STREET
RUTLAND
742-3190
Call for
Appointment
1122/t mo.

WANT
ADS
WORK!

· '

New Garages • Replacement
Room Additions • ·Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

•New HOIMs

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TAACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE· TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

6181'12/t

Guaranteed Scholarship

RACINE

CLUI

for all college bound students.

GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

•regardless of income
• regardless ,of.grades
•ptus $20k guara!111d lolln
~regardless

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

o1 credit

To colllct your IChOIIirahlp money
CIIH 814 11111158

...,

Open Mon..,.,.I1.1G-7 or Sat.1o-.t

i

I

·,
•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. :

BISSILL &amp; BURKI
CONSIRUCIIOI

FlEE ESIIIWES

r

614'· 74~!·29961

New Homes • Vln_yl

WILL TA"E CARE OF ALL
YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS ·. ·
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE

992·2635

I \1\\1

· Monday-F_ridsy, 8:00-5:0()

Co11'4'Uierized Estimates.Quality Wori&lt;. Ins. Woll&lt;
Welcome, Fber Glass Woll&lt;. Co11'4'lole Aepairmg &amp;
Aellnlshing. Frame SlraiQhlenin~ , Custom
Sanw~sting, Martin Sanaur M~1ng System

POMEROY, OHIO

895-L.tort
937- Dulfolo

742- Rutlond
667-CooiYII!e

Bl'LLETI:\ BOARD

.

Thurs., Mar. 4 •- 8:15

SHERIDAN
Logan upper winner
Tues., March 2- 8:15p.m.
ATHENS
•
Logan lower wmner

•

379-Woob.ut

367·7444 • 446·6644
1·800·926·2032 (Ohio Only)

Acreu 1;.. ~.., OHk.
217 L S..oad St.

67S-Pt. Ploo•onl
458-Leoo
576-Ap... Gro•e
773-MMon
882-NII!W Hann

949-Radne

Dlot.

:

..

'

{.:iif!J

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

. :1-- Aoaou_...
4-Ci.ftaway
5-U.pPJ Ada
6- Loot aod Fouad
1- LoOt aod Fouod
II- Public Saie lr
Auellon
9- 'IV...ted .. Bay

.

MEIGS
•
Oak Hill lower winner
Tues., March 2- 6:30 p.m.
NORTHWEST
Dawson-Bryant upper winner

Words

~~.-...,

'
VWnneradvancesto
regional at Zanesville
_High School,
ZanesviHe

.

SOUTH POINT
Dawson-Bryant lower winner
Mon., March 1- 8:1S p.m.
WAVERLY
Umoto upper wmner

643-AroW.

84:1-Portland
247-Letarl F.Ua

1\1-.\1'\1&gt;

,.,

.,

Thurs., Mar. 4 - 6:30

367-Che.hlre
388-Viatoo
24S-Rio Graodo
256-Guyan Dill.

:&amp;046 A.WU.n Pilre • GiiiU,olu, OH. 4S6JI

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE ·
992-5335 or
985·3561

Gallia County Melgo County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
992-Middleport/
Pomeroy
985-Cae.lel'

LARRY'S BODY SHOP

All MAlES
Brlng _lt In Or We
Pick Up,

cover the
foUouing telephone.e"change&amp; ...

446-GalllpoU.

NOW

MICROWAVE OYEN
!lnd YCR REPAIR

Cla11i/i~d pages

52- Sporlirt1 Goodl

..

.

Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

clwpd for each day as separate ads.

.

GIRLS
COMPLETED SEASON

I:OOp.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.m. Friday

Wednesday Paper

Ralel are for consecutive runs, broken up day~ will be

.

HlLLSBORO,,•
Unioto lower winner
'
Mon., March
1 -6:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
Oak Hill upper winner

1:oo p.m. Saturday

1M Dlli.lr S..tinel, rm.chins over 18,000 home~

Days

555 P8rk St. ·

8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

3/1/1 mo. pd.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAT!ON

COPY .DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper

Call 992-2156

•

106 N. 2nd

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
. •
Acgident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage
Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent .
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760'
(614) 843•5264 1120193/tfn

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; lAX SERVICE
Quarterly and
Year-end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES
PHOII992·7036
Jeanie Howell, E~
-NOTARY

,,

~

�Page 8 The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Want~ to

18

Monday, March 1, 1993

33 Farma for Sale
- ....._ . olala.

Do

---·--. . . -r . .

• Monday, March 1, 1993

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrllbt

Ohio

BRIDGE

........ 110 _ _ _

.. ._IIUI ='1.7..
~~eo~~,, -

~

The World Almaaac•c.,o•aword Puzzle

.l!olior IIIII - . bit tho ~~wlaood
IQ,GOO. finn. All ....
· ltl
- • •...... tii4-MUI23
lloyon lmll- :1111+7271111 a..
or 114
·
·

EU TREE SEIMcE. l s
Tt ......lng,·Trw .........

ACROSS

21 shorodl

PHILLIP

Trlmmlni. ,,.. lall ....... ..

3&amp;J.711f"After 4p.Jn.
~....-

35 Loti &amp; Acruge

·

.Pott-.. .

-~don,
to tho mfll )utlt

ooii:J04.1~tl57.
..

NORTH

· CNA
duty
a1 .ti...,
1 """'·
· Electric,
Ntlr•
cII on
lnd
· 20otrear.
u- ~·
~=
-T......"IIO,Ooi
firm.
. . - - .' ... ·~1.1" •
15.
.

wEsT

18 FrllhWiter
lleh

.

20 --ofTwo

EAST

.J76

h~o

9
_HI!

+KQJ

Wanted to BUy

Old -

....... lor pan..
Llonal. -

•u.

-loon FIJ• or
171-1712.

GallipoliS·
··. &amp; VIcinity

Rentals

OKAY II I'LL PLAY
W.ITH TH'
BLACKIESI .

DON'T TR'{TO STAND
fT UP ... IT'S A
PRETTI' LAME EXCUSE

TI4ANK VOIJ, MA'AM ..
I'M 6LAD I'M
BACK , TOO ..

......_.: Non '•u ' • Ta CU.

,

C'~,

_,

.i.. FRANK AND ERNEST
'

73 Vana &amp; 4 \VD'a

"StiTRACt" .THOSE THINCS ·

NIAGARA
··· FALLS .

· 111111 Bronco H, 10,01111 mlloo,
114112 :11117.
'
1110 4 WD Fen1 Rangir Trucll,
Automotlc, AC, 14.000 llllu,
114-211 1513 .

DUSt

__,....._].,;,...,

"ADD.. DOLLARS
YOUR pt)CKfJ
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

10 ...., Cola, iowt. :II • - . - ;

010. 30M7WDlll.

- -··

All reo! Mlato -•lng In .
th11 nftlpapar Ia IUbjec!ID
the F-11 Fllr Hooting~
ol I Ilea which makol il UIOQIII
to advar11H "lllfy prelorence.
limitation or dilcrimlnation
1 buad on rooa, oolor, Nllglon.

Handlcappad lion Neada llama
Wit~

cora. No Heavy Uftlng.

~~~~- p~~.l14. .
tad Guftar Ployar For blabll- Rock, Country Bahd.
11111\1 Have Ei&lt;pOrlanoa And E··

qulpmant Ne-ry. Phonl:

11..........60, ......388-8221, 81+
388..31'"
.

No Ei&lt;perlancel Elrn Up To

11,000 .,_ W•k ProcaOIInt

FHA ao.«nmant Rotundo. i'
1501 t4t 0103 Ext.213. 24 Houl'l.
AIDE
TRAINING
PROQRAII

Pomeroy Nurolng I AehabiiH•
tlon Centar will be olftrlng ciaO-

-

llaroh 15-31~. l-4pril. Apo

otlcatlono .,. now being ....,
lad ot 367111 Aockaprlnp Rd:,
OH. 41711.
a1u

-or,
a"' Hmn.... AflPIY 1n panon .,...
wHn tho houra oltDam-3tJm, Jl.

oom-

F. Studenta that IUC Qllltully

the TCE will bo
allglble to IIPiiiY lor emptoy.

Filii Jank, -

~IOiwan Ave.

._._~,

lull IIIII T!aPJal!l flah, lllnle,

make any ouch pn~lorence.
Umitadan or clacriminatlon.•

Puppy

PotoOe Pot .......
.._.od In G.C.II""""' Co. Qal.
llpollo. ·-

~-

5HAPiP/fl&gt;
- ·JA-iuz:r..i

EAANGAEAT$$1

1-----------------Coli ArTA Aft0r 4:GO
lt4-2J5.003:1 (COL.I.ECT)

5 . ~·--------~-------

lf~A(lM

Eut
All pass

10 Tum

ttut...l 13 Painter of

••lleJ

21 UncannJ .
24 Poem of
lomenllllon
lmmlgreton

ltatlon-'
llland

35 111o" genllr

and-11117

38 Aquat :

meMmal&amp;

37 Slender '
38 Piece 01

...

,..
40rnc•u~
An interesting book, particularly
43 llledlcln..
for tournament playen, bas ~n writ·
46 Brnk
ten by Jeff Rubens. In "Swiss Match
tuddenlr·
Challenge; published by Lawrence &amp;
46 Future aiiJI.'
Leong (513.75, The Bridge World, 39
West · 9tth Street, New Yor~, NY
51 111., - lung
53 ·a.tore .·
10025•7124), you play through eigbt
58 Colille deg.
seven-board matches - Swiss match·
~ Freigfit llbbr.
es, ai they are called. You face tough
problems in bidding, openln1 leads,
declarer-play and defense. After solv·
•
ing each problem, you find out how
you did. After finishing each match,
,ou find out how your teammates·got
011 and you score up using the lnterna·
lional matcbpoint se~le. Then you retire f.,. a recuperative nap or drink.
All these deals appeared in
Bridge World magazine from 1983
~
z v
EM XV I
NXKGXRXM
1985, but who can remember that
blck? ·
a·
GO
K J D W
V 0 L
U G D L
1Y X
easiest.
Today'• deal is one of
Sitting West and defending against
YVMLXM
P 8 M W
I Y X
G
zsr.,x
no-trump, you lead the spade 10.
Rubens says, "While deClarer
G
Y V R. X
su G I • '
CIXHYXO
things over, it would be wise for Y,ou
plan your defense.•
Kx v Ds Dw.
•
U declarer has tbe K-Q of ctuos,l
· ·-~ ... ...
· ·· ·
,
· he will let borne without
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "l"m always being picked lo play these guys llvtng
Ptobebly
problem. When your partner has
on the edge of soclely. !hough. I don'l know wily.'" · - James LoGros.
of clubs, your play on tbe second
of lbe suit should vary:
WOiiD
10, sometimes not. Tbe critical
lion occ~~n when yiJUr partner
K-Q doubleton. Oa the flnt rouno,oe
clarer will finesse dUmmy's nine.
will.lose to, say, tbe queen.
ond round, you mlllt play your _10.,;',,te.t
ing to look Ute someone wbo ••
with K·lO·I. If you play low, dec:lan•rl
DAVULE
'

--

,. OUR LANGUAGE

"
i.

I

AutoPana &amp; ·

•

- . illlly- ..............

=·r.
-Jon-......
•o. ........-·

ApCI, ·No. 0.1 or 0111 - ·
3715. E.O.H.

22U, _ , , lt4-411M1011.

ALL ~y 111/E HAD~IS

eil2oNe I-IR6e. m

-· -

Fa1m Suppltrs
&amp; Livestock

79

C&amp;mpera &amp;

I HOPe

LOv'E

,

MOtor Homes :

Servtces

-·

IEAliTIFUL APAR111EHT8 AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JA~
ESTATES. ' '131
DO PIM
I

I

-~.-

..

...... Calll14 441 ZIII.IOH.

llv•.

54 . MIIICIIIaii80UI

Home ·.

MNNI.

depoalt;

114-

GCNERNIIEHT HOMES From II
!.':op!':""'~·
A 1 Dalfnctuarlt
zzitone. ·Your
A- II 105 II:WOOO EJt. QH.
10181 For Comenl Aepo Lilt
,
Prlftta, 4 bldroom. home, 2
- • , II ,.. old, lorga kitchen,
WoodDUmer In b111mant above

Tu

oalaii"•,.J mil•

out ~ HIM, 304 Ill 3124.
AIIClnal_,
1t11
FlellwOCNI, 14171. 3bdrm., 2
-.h, ,.. hut pump, wei, eeptlc, ~~- btilldlna. _ ....

...

=.

r:·
&amp;f ;

..

an.11 Unlumlehod ·~-.
Gonlpollo~ No - ·

=-"I.".......,="':'l'l

Ttcn sporlatlon

In

10--~--~--------11
•.____________

Autoa for Sale

'

.

ASTRO-ORAPH
I

t'H
IJ·

Sale

BE.RNICE
~EDE OSOL

.~.

~~"

..'1. ,

• 'WH

~

12-----------------13 ••____________
~__;_~

14--------~.~~~~--15'~~----~
·"-·------Gallipolil Dally TribUDe
446-2342 .

f.lr;1 Ci'dllcil' ,,,

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel

Houaeholcl
Gooda

99~-2156

Pt. Pleuant Regieter

675-1333
(

0

By Jell'rey McQUiia

.

The artist's EASEL, a stand ihat
holds a painting, should be ~imple to
spell. In fact: the start of tbe noun
EASEL may be spelled with ease.
OUR LANGUAGE AD-VICE : A
travel book takes an Ad·Vice Award
for commenting, "Information for
tours can also made at the center."
Always proofread your writing to
make sure tha.t no words are )eft out;
in this case, "can also made" should
probably be "can also be made." In·
formation, however, is not "made."
The writer may want to convey lbet
"Information can be obtained" or
"Reservations can be made.• Until the
travel book provides more informa·
lion, though, we should be reading it
with reservations.

I

I I~J i I
I
I=~·=·==·
'I ::::·:::·:_,
0
/

TEJ TY
s I'

I

1\

I·

I

,.L.

~~·

..

My old uncle has.been l~y
all of his life. His motto for liv·
ing is, "Never
Pl!f can
off. until
morrow
what you
get to·
•••

.·~. . .,. ;!;-:;.
~ 01-=O:...,I.:..F..:,MI;....y.:..l,...a-II ~--~~pi:,. tho c~ucklo quoted
~v filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

L.-J.-.1..-1...---1.-.L..--1 .

. . PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
... UNSCRAM~LE FORI
V ANSWER

SCRAM.lm ANSWERS
.,
•·&gt;&lt;
Bodily • Flash · Dimly • Living • HIS MIND
When my Dad was lwflnty he made up his mind to
get rich, but he never did. When I -asked him why he
said it was easier to change HIS MIND.
.
T

Men:handlle

Fumlehod 1 bdnn, I both on
tho
all ,.llllu JumliltOd,

131G1Jrion,, IIGO

iTS .JUSTONe OF

T~ ·~-Ha.JR VIRLJeE:S.I

ALL !MANKIND•.•

:·

. 31 ln1truct \
33 - ltllndl (In

will h&amp;ve
no option
to rise~~~~=~~
ace.
If East
startedbutwith
a
queen, South cannot run tbe
suit.

lludaot ,.,.,_.illlloni
. •• UMd •
owner 114-J4Uf7'1: ~,....

......... ngl_~.......fuml"!**j
atarllilg RID. Apply La.......,

32 Mobile Homu

8. _______~~----9. ___.........- . - - - - - - - - - -

•.f:NDoz.~

·Accel8orlaa

or1114
11.1lt3-a20.
""'· · -

6~------------7.~
· ______;_____~-----

lfP$ ....

i

opeo,

2 bod"""" T-n -

lotal ltllc, CIOee lo IOhool,

...Nll"flanll,
,.._.,Roclno, Ott....e...-

a-nd ......

2·--~-------3-·-----~--------4.
_____________;_____

,.

wino
18 Making dq
with · ·'

....

-TWiN .

75, Boats &amp; MOtors
for S..ie

76

1HI Sq. Pt., ~· .... lol. 211
wallo, 2 OMtploto batt., ..,Ina
IOOIII,IIvlng ,_,., 3bdrm., Willi'
In .. lully Clrpllad, 2 - .. -~• hoot, AC 1 llove,

r;

"'

I"'::•:"~II.
- · ""'".,., -n

tlnb,

... 3814.

'TV

I

1182 ~· Clll-21111, ...
dttvan billa, 2,4!0 -

D R.AUi"O:"......
":"'woi.11".1-3133 or 1~ 1

~tl~"rtll:d:C,.'::

-~Afl.f
'

CHAMfA6Nf
-Hf~·-

'

t

31 Homes for Sale

CHESHIRE PRICE REDUCED 3
led-allath-lnaulaled Wi.olow a ~clng, Qu
Haat -Ramad
- 'rd Interior,
11 car.
Air,
NeWly

THE PAMPERED CHEF.

.. f~EF

)UITE'

_.. 114-141-• .

-.EOE.

Tum your clutter into cash,
S§}l it the ea~y aoay... b l)hOM,
no need to leave your home,
Place your classified ad today!
15 aoords or less, 3 days,
3 papen, 15.40 paid in advance.

$/JI'ft

-

-.....,.and JM111P1111.

origin, or " " lnl8!lllon to

ZIIO.

'JNP •fft'NtrMOor.t

au-, la,IGO. 114~ a•.

aax larnlllolaii!1Uo or nu1or101

This newa'paper wiM not
"-inggy aocopt
'
advert1181Tientl for real ..tate
which la in vlolodon of lhe
law. Our . . - , are heraby
Wilonnad !hal all dwtllnga
advorllaadln thli n - n IIYI.Illlble on an equal
opponunlty bulo.

f10NfyMOoN

HOTEL

1111 Q ldwll!l , _ . , . 44;0011
Mil... llloGii; Radio.. -

NUR8E

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34 Annoy

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.•

.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, March 1, 1993

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

"l99Z, Loa ADaM
Tha'" Syndicate and
Creaton Syndicate"

-~"'·l·
.1
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2.'
·
...
'

~:~II

....-:

joomalist who is spending a year a1
·a prestigious American university.
This journalist has made a re11181table discovery. She wriles that most
Americans on the campus, as well
as many olhers she has met while
lraveling in the Uniled Stales, have
very liUie knowledge of canada and
no curiosity to learn. Other foreign
s'tudents at her campus have experienced the same ignorance and lack
of imerest in tkir coontries.
Since we next-door neighbors,
1 find this disturbing. Canada is lhe
second largesrcountry in the world,
with a population one-lenth tl;l3l of
the Uniled Stales. We are the United
States' largest lrading parlller, We,
·too, have large cities, universities,
state-of"the-art sports facilities,
symphony orchestras, opera and
ballet. Our lranscontinental highway .
links our 10 provinces. When the
Toronto Blue Jays won the World
Series, I wonder how many Ameri·
cans looked up Toronto on the map
and were surprised to see how much
U.S. lerritory is IWTth of us.
My hope is that American and
Canadian chil~ and Y,oung people
all over the world are being taught
how much we have in common. For

are

Comm~nity

Coqnnunity Calendar items
appear ·two days berore an event
and the dal' or that event. Items
it is those similarities rather than our must be received well in advance
differences that promole peace. -, A to assure ppblicatlon II! the cal·
LONGTIME
READER
IN ' endar.
EDMONTON
MONDAY
DEAR L.R.: Thank you for a
RACINE • Racine Village
letter that I hope will shake un a Council will meet Monday at 7
few thousand U.S. teachers. It is p.m. in council quarters at Star Mill
disgraceful that so little is taught in Park.
our schools about our neighbors to
LETART· · Letart Township
the nonh. It's time for a change.
Dear An Landers: If I spend Trustees will . meet Monday at 6
$100,000 during the year wining and p.m. in the office building.
dining a king list pf lramps, and I
POMEROY • The Salisbury
wrile it as a "business expense," I
Township
trustees wiiJ meet Mon. am entirely free to do so. But if I
day
at
7:30
p.m. in the trustee
give my darling, innocent daughter
township
building.
a gift of more than $10,000, the
Internal Revenue Service socks it.to
RUTLAND • Meigs County
me in no uncertain tenns . .Is this a Holiness Association's annual
cockeyed sys1em or what? .. B.P., indoor camp meeting will be held
HOLLYWOOD, FLA.
at the Rutland •Church of the
DEAR HOLLYWOOD: I ~an Nazarene Monday through Saturgive you beuer examples of the day at 7 p.m. nightly and on March
lunacy in our government, but April 7 at 6 p.m. Rev. and Mrs. Murrel
IS is not far.off. Let us not anger Duffie are the music evangelists
and evangelist for the camp. Fern
the IRS.
Gem of the Day: Blessed are those Grim will be having children's serwho engage in lively conversation . vices for K-6 grade. A nursery will
with the helplessly mute .. for they be provided.
shall be called dentists.
CARPENTER • The Board of
What can JIQU give tMperson who
Columbia Township
Trustees
has everything? Ann Landers' book- will meet of
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
let, "Gems," is ideal for a nighutand the fire station.
or coffee table. "Gems" is a co/leelion of AM Landers' 11WSI requested
PAGEVILLE • The Scipio
poems and essays. Send a seif-ad- Township Trustees will meet Mondresud, long, busiMss-size envelope day at the Pageville Townhall at
and a check or moMy order for 6:30p.m.
$4.~ (this includes postage and
handliiag) 10: Gems, c/o-AM Lan·
POMEROY • There will be a
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. basem_ent sale at Sacred Heart
60611"0562. (In Canada, send Cathohc Church on Monday from
$5.87.)
9 a.m, to 3 p.m.

Youth League will hold an organizational meeting Monday at 7 p.m.
at the Syracuse Elementary School.
Anyone wanting to coach or be an
officer is encouraged.to attend.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT. The Middle·
port Youth League will hold signup for the 1993 ball season on
Tuesday from 6·8 p.m.; March 6
from 9 a.m. to noon; March 9, 6-8
p.m.; and March 13, 9 a.m. to
noon. Sign-up will be held at the
Middleport Council chambers.
Anyone who did not participale last
season will need a copy of their.

"The Social Security Administration has always taken its responsibility to protect the confidentiali·
ty of personal information in its
files seriously," said Louis Enoff,
Acting Commissioner of Social
Security.
·
In 1936, shortly after the passage of the Social Security Act, the
Social Security Board announced
that information required of any
worker woulil be regarded as confidential and would be u&amp;e4 only for
official purposes. "This J~ledge of
confidentiality has been an important factor in the cooperation which
employers and employees have
shown over the years in providing
required information," said Enoff.

Increased use. of c~mputers at
the Social Security Adminislration
' during the last decade has
improved the Agency's ability to
CHESTER • The Chester Ele- serve the public while a1 the same
mentary )'TO will meet Monday at time makin~ confidential informa7 p.m. All parents and teachers are tion more difficult to protect. Infotencouraged to attend.
niation that once took days to reach
local offices is now only a few
SYRACUSE • The Sutton keystrokes away . ."With ll)e inforTownship Trustees will meet Mon- mation easily available, we have
day at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse had to find new ways to guard
Municipal Building.
against unauthorized access and
use of ir stressed Enoff.
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
Durang t.he planning for the

Pick 4:

•

•

birth certificate. RegislratiQD fee ·
$10 per child, not to exceed $25~
per family.
•'

•

"'
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle~
port Community Association wilt;
meet Tuesday at 8 a.m. at PeoplCS'Bank in Middleport.
·•
•

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e

.

CHESTER , The Pomeroy Eas~&lt;·
em Star No .. l86 will meet Tuesday"'
at7:30 p.m. at the Chester Masonic
Temple. The district heart 'repre~-­
sentative will be present and a 50~
year pin will be presented. Officers.
are to wear chapter dresses.
· •
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•

'

SENTENCING • Fred Drennen, 30, ~~r
R1veuwood; W.Va., w1s sentenced to life In
J!rlscta MOIIday after-n i• the Meigs Count•r
Court ol Com- Pleas. Here, judges Robert G.

ByJULIEE.DO.LON

SntiDel News Sllff
The ftrsl reading of an ordiunce

·,_

26x12 ...................8.52•••••.••••.•.•8.52
26x14...................SI.89••••••••••••••·9.89

WAS q
Lavan.......'6.99...$6.29

Bill Cosby to emcee annual jazz festival
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bill
Cosby returns as master of ceremonies for the 15th annual Playboy
Jazz Festival, a two-day celebration
at the Hollywood Bowl that
includes_performances by Mel
Torme, AI Jarreau and Wynton
Marsalis.
The lineup for the 1993 Prayboy
.I

..--

--

Jazz Festivai on June 12 includes
Tonne, Mamllis, The Rippin~tonll,
Dr. Dorothy Donegan &amp; Fnends,
Horace Silver &amp; The Silver-Brass
Ensemble and Buddy Guy.
The following day, Jarreau will
lead off perfotmances by the
McCoy Tyner Big Band, Patti
Austin, Les McCann &amp; Eddie Har-

ris, Dr. John and the, Pancho
Sanchez Latin J!IZZ Band.
Cosby, the comedian who broke
into TV as co-star in the 1960s
series. "I Spy," became a supetstar
with the 1980s series, "The Cosby
Show." He is a longtime jazz fiiJ
who names many jazz greats
among his friends.

'·

·

was given at Pomeroy Village
Council on Mo~y night asking
tbe Ohio Department of TransportatiQR to CQnsider a feasibility
llU4f ~ the Cui!De of the
PUniaoy~MasonBridge. . .
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed
stated he hal been in C&lt;XII&amp;ct with
John Dowler, deputy director of
ODOT District 10 in Marietta, and
tl;l3l the ordi181Ct "has the blessing
of ODOT" according to Reed.
Mayor Reed said that according to
Dowler the bridge is "structwally
very safe• and that the problem
with the bridge Is its width. Dowler
also told Reed that ODOT will be
restirfaci11g the bridge this summer.
JUIIIor hip building update
Mayor Reed staled fme work~
are jHcstoltly working in the build·
ing to scrape paint and do a general
clean-up of the building.
Councilman John BlacUnar said
the fust phase of renovation for the
building· will include securing the
structure, replacing the windows, .
repairing the roof and further

clean-up.
_
Councilm 1111 Bill Young stated
the building •seems to have more
potential than anyone had realized
and lhat the building is not in as
bad of a comdition as originally
thoughL · 1
.
·
WIUia Hill clilclll&amp;ed
Terry HYsell, a resfiient 6n
"fillis Hill, ~\tong with two other
concerned ci!izens, attended the
a+eeting to as·k for council's assis·
tance in allevilting the road problem on WIIUH Hill where slippage
'of th.e lan_d has made \he road
impassable.
Mayor Rc:c;d stated the problem
is not one that can be easily·elimilljlted and that ways of relieving the
problem hav•; been investigated.
Reed said he would see if something oould bo done to help the sit·
uation lemporarily.
·
Other matter:s
In other matlers, at the request
of Councilman Scott Dillon-for the
Pomeroy Merchants Association,
council appm"ed 1he closure of the
upper and middle ~g lots and
Court Street in Pomeroy for use
during Herita!le Weekend on June

gai~oi~~;~~~:!~~~~!~~~

12. The merchants association will a co-defendant,d'udges Fred W.
be sponsoring activities on that day Crow IIJ, Roben . Tague lind Dan
and the Oldies But Goodies Car W. Favreau said.
Club will hold a car show on the
"The prosecutor's office
parking lots.
believes that, but for the eyewitness
' Mayor Reed presenled to coun- tc_.Sti~ny of~- Drennen, the con·
cil plans~ by Jack Slavin, vactton of Mf. ~eMuter, as
Syracuse, for possible development ~hljtgcd in· the .mdicuneot, would
ora park at Kerr's Run w~ere ~-- ~ampassiNe,"L~~n~~«!.incoort
· form·er Water Works plant was papers filed Mond~y. A~ matters
located. No action was taken but now stand, the case agamst Mr.
council will keep the plans for possible future deveto)imenL .
The mayor's report for the
month was given a1 $7,352.
Council member Betty Baronick
discussed the water problem in the
Monkey Run area stalin~ her fears
that there will be an acc•dent there
·if lhe problem isn't elimlnaled. She
also asked for a Iiiier pick-up-for
the village.
Councilman Larry Wehrung discussed a problem he sees with lraf.
fie pulling off Lincoln Hill Road.
onto Butternut Avenue. Possible
~oluti!'ns to this problem will be
mvesugaled.
Also attending the.meeting were
Councilman Thomas Werry and
Village Clerk Kathy Hysell.

LeMaster is largely circumstantial."
Drennen's transcript
At. the judges~ request, Lentes
submitled a transcript of an interview with Drennen which was
recorded Feb. I I. Also at the
request of the judges, Drennen
passed a lie detector test confirm·
mg the truth or the recorded state·
ments, court papers said. Drennen said on Feb. 8, 1991,
he and LeMaster went to Meigs
· County. to make a drug deal with
the elder Halley.
Drennen said he was armed with
a 12-gauge semi-automatic shotglin
and was there "to make sure everything went OK."
At one poin~ LeMasler said the
elder Halley had a gun and ordered
Drennen to shoot Halley, Drennen
said. Drennen said he refused and
wrestled with LeMaster for conb'Ol
of the gun; which fired twice,
wounding the elder Halley.
Dretmen said he wanted to take
Mr. Halley to the hospital but
LeMasler refused.
' '
"He (LeMaster) said, 'No, let's
put him out of his qrisery, he's suffering,'" Drennen's statement said.
"I told (LeMaster), he's_not an
anim~ 1 .you can't. do tllat to the
man. Are you that stupid? He started cussing me, and then he loaded

the gun and shot Mr. Halley in the
top of the head," Drennen said
Drennen said LeMaster then
went to the ear in which Jeff Halley
Jr. sat.
.
The boy said "Billy, is my
daddy all right? Is my daddy all
right?" to which LeMaster said
"Yes Bubby, hurry we got to get
out of here" and then pulled the
boy, unresisting, from the car and
shot him, Dn:nnen said.
The body of the elder Halley
was found Sept. 25, 1991, 811d
body of his son was found April
11, 1992, several miles away.
:
Drennen was arrested m midOctober, 1992, and LeMaster was
arres1ed in November, 1992.
LeMaster faces trial May 4 in
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas and is scheduled .for a
pretrial hearing on Aprill6.
· Apologizes to ramily
Drennen, wearing a blue
sweater, showed little emotion.as
he was questioned by the panel and ·
pleaded guilty to the charges.
"I apologize for the trouble... I
apologize to the families," were
Drennen's only comments before
he was sentenced.
·
Carolyn . Burgess of Gallipolis,
the 1110ther of Jeff Halley Jr., said
she doesli "t thinlr the pumshment is
Continued on page 3

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Law officers diig in against cult

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.

. TIJue, left, Fred W. Crow III and Daa W.
Favreau pronouace sentence. (Sentinel photo by
Jim Freeman)·

.:Pomeroy Count:il asks ODOT for
.feasibility study on Bend Bridge

26x16.................12.35.:..........12.35

No matler. He gets plenty of atlen·
lion as it is.
· The l;lerd will do many of lheir
standards - . songs their big fol·
lowing simply must hear - and
some newer stuff as well. First
timers will see ,)VhY the Herd pock·
eted the SPBGMA awards. Old
timers will wonder why it didn't
happen sooner.
Tickets, $5, are available at Peddler's Pantry, 340 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, and at the theater the
night of the concert. Considering
the band's p&lt;?Pularity, it may be
best to buy tickets early.
·

· By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News StafT
A three-judge panel in the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas sentenced a Ravenswood,
W.Va., man to life in prison Monday afler lhe man pleaded guilty to
three charges of aggravated murder.
Fred Drennen, 30, was involved
in the Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of Jeff Halley Sr., 36, and 12·
year-old Jeff Halley Jr., both of
Gallipolis, in rural Meigs County
near Portland ,
. The plea was accepted after
Meigs County Prosecutor John
Lentes filed a motion explaining
that the plea was needed to convict
William LeMaster, 26, of Racine,
who has been labeled by the prosecutor's office as the actual killer.

11:«

26x1 0...................7.1 0••••••••••••!'.7.10

'

1 Section, 10 P'llft 25 COllie
A lluillm-.lla Inc. Newepe....

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tu!!sday, March 2, 1993

Three-judge·panel OKs
plea b.a rgain agreement

automation of Social Security dati
files, the Agency was extremely•
concerned about the risk of misuse.
of files that such autoniation would:
bring. Safeguards were built into ·
the new Agency systems when they
were implemenled. They include: ... ·
• providing Personal Identifica-,
tion Numbers (PIN) and a Pass•
words that allow access.to the sy~"
tem only to employees whose won:,
requires them to use the data files; ·
• monitoring :of access to col'(l,_,.
puterized files so that each time II"
particular ftle is used, the employet;~·
that uses it knows a record iS'
that will be used as evidence in ~
event the information in the file is--misused;
'
• using security systems officeJl
and regional and local field man;
agement to develop and enfor-ce !M·
Agency's overall systems and secu-~
rity policy and guidelines; ll!ld
~
• traininJ employeeS. about the
need to mamtain the security and':
confidentiality of the information.
in the Social Security files, provid·.,;
jng profiles of individuals who may •
atte·mpt to gain unauthorized v
access, and explaining the penaltie&amp;.:
for misuse of Social S,ecurity files. ~
"L_ike all organizations witht
confidential information of value to'
outsiders," said Enoff, "the infor-.
ination is vulnerable to misuse. To~
protect our information, we will'·
. continue to monitor and upgrade•
our security syslems."
!

~EilCEJ ••••••••••••••••••••1!5.ES!i .............1!i.Ei~

Year while bassisi Jeff Weaver
copped Entertainer of the Year.
The Herd went to the national
SPBGMA awards show in
Nashville just feeling lucky to be
there. Emerging as Entertaining
Band of the Year, a Herd
spokesman says the guys are still
trying to get used to the idea:
Prestigious honors aside, the
Herd's the same. There's Jim
Stack, guitar, Alan Stack, fiddle
and mandolin, Weaver, Dan
Brooks, dobro and Calvin Leport,
banjo. They all sing except Leport.

·.

Drennen gets life sentence .

5 VGal. Roofing Corrugated Roofing

By Edna Whiteley
Bluegrass lovers, circle March 6
on the calendar.,At 8 p.m., The
Rare Iy Herd plays at the Ariel
Theatre.
Unquestionably the Herd is one
of the hottest bands in bluegrass.
While bragging is not their style,
their recent Midwest and National
Society for the Preservation of
Bluegrass Music in · America '
awards certainly give them cause.
Nominated in 11 categories in
the Midwest event, lhe Herd was
named Entertaining Band of the

a1

•,

WACO, Texas (AP)- A heavily armed religious ~t released six
more childn:n Monday and authorities negotiated nonstop trying to
resolve a standoff at a fortified
compound where sill people died.
The leader of the cult, who
believes he's Jesus, told his molher
. "I'm dying, aU right?" after Sunday's gun battle with an army of
police and federal agents.
The cult Branch Davidians
allowed at least 10 cllildren to
leave. More children were believed
to be inside lhe bullet·saured com-·

four federal a,jlentS and two mem· law enforcement officer and use of
hers of the see~ one reportedly cult a farearm during commission of a
leader David )i:oresh's daughter.
violent crime, said Jim- Deatley, a
"We nego•tiated .throulJh the . spokesman in the U.S. Attorney's
night and th1!y are ne~ouating office.
·
again this moming,'' saad Sharon
The FBI sent its elite Hostage
Wheeler, a SJl•okeswoman for lite Rescue Team to lhe scene Monday,
fedcra_l Bureau of Alcohol, Tobac- said a federal law enforeemcnt offico 311d Firearms. She declined to cial who spoke on condition of
say who was •negotiating for the anonymity.
SPELLING BEE WINNERS • Wesley
cult.
The standoff began Sunday after
Thoene, a ftllh Fader II Pomeroy Elementary,
At least 75 people remained in a 45-minute gun battle with about
spelled ''rigorous" to win lbe 1993 Meigs County
the compound \lbOIJt 10 miles east , 100 A1F agents, who were trying
..
Spelling Bee 11 Soulber11 High School on Monor Waco, authorities said. Koresh to serve arrest and search warrants
day
ennhig. Kelli Bailey, a seventh grader at
· said many of the children were his.
on Koresh for federal firearms
pound.
Three people arres~ afler the charges. Later Sunday, three people
Authorities kept up negotijllions shootout were charged Monday
a day after a rain of gunfare "killed with attempted ,murder of !I federal

PLEXI LA
.
G · SS by sheet

18..124".................. ;..~ ......~: ......f.'s~20"x28"..............................7.4s ...... 7.10
20"x32"..............................a.es ...... 8.50
24"x2B".............................. 9.4s ...... B.95
28''x3oi•...........................
11.45 ..·••. 1o.as'
'
30"x32".......;...................13.4s ..... 12.70
30"x36"...........................14.4s ..... 13.70
24"x48".:.........................15.45 ..... 14.s5
36''X36"...........................17.9s ..:..17.oo
3~"x40".;..........................17.9s ..... 17.oo
30"x60"..................~ ........24.9s ..... 23.50
36"172"...........................32.95 ..... 29.95
48" 96"
X ...........:-••··..··········62.95 ..... 59.95

SOt.

•

,...

.r

Ariel corrals 'The Rar~ly Herd'

•

•

...

PANELING

The Rarely Herd

'

Vol a, No. 211
Copyrighted 11193

li

Colortone
Front St. Bircti..............9.75...8.75
Pecky Pecan ..................9.75 ... 8.75
Wilderness.................11.95 ... 10.75
Estate Oak..................11.es ... 10.75
Bleached Hickory....11.e5 ... 10.75
Winter0ak..................1t95 ... 10.75
Cape Coral White..12.es ... 11.65
T!rrace Light Birch.12.es ... 11.6S
SIIver Ash ....................12.es ... 11.65
Hickory ..........................12.es ... 11.65
Cheyenne Blue.......13.es ... 12.55
Floral Trelll·s..............13.99 ... 12 59
Georgia Peach 14 95 13 45
D · M" · ........ ' ... •
esert 1St..................15.95...14.35
Autumn Floral.........1&amp;.95 ... 15~99
Capri Floral ................16.95 ... 15.99
Cameo Floral............16.95 ... 15.99
Almond 88 ....;.............16.95 ... 15•99
Dan Rose......................1s.es ... 15,•99

Low toalgbt Ia 31L RIID.
Wednesday, nola. Hlglllll low

6396

Page4

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238

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Your Social Security
By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager in Athens

Pick 3:

~yracuse

...
••

calendar

Ohio Lottery

St. John's
rolls over

Page-10

Dad's efforts to find his single
son a girlfriend is upsetting
Dear Aon Landers: I am a
28-year-old single man living at
home with my parents, and I work
ina bank,
I am having a serious prOblem
with my father. His obsession with
fmding me ii. girlfriend is making
me eJ&lt;tremely unhappy. The man
gets the phone number of every
unattached woman he comes in
contact with and says, "111 see that
my son gives you a call." I'm not
comfortable calling women I know
nothing about, and this upsets him.
,He feels that ~e he goes to the
bOuble of gettmg the numbers, the
least! can do is pick up the phone.
Both my p!lil:nts are concerned
because rm notllating anyone. They
keep saying, •you11 soon he 30." I
can't afford to move·out of lhe·hoose,.
and I don't ~ow what to do about '
my dad hounding me aU lhe time.
Also, I live in a rural area where
there aren\ many single people my
age. What can I do to meet women?
SERIOUS IN NORTH
CAROLINA
DEAR SERIOUS: Apparently·
your father is meeting plenty of
·women, which means , they: are
around. ·
· My advice is to start calling those
numbers your dad colleCts and see
what happens. You don\ need to take
anyone 10 dinner. A coffee or cola
date after work will do just as well.
Now get off your rump and make
some calls.
Dear Ann La11ders: As a
Canadian, I am disturbed by an
article written by a Canadian

•
•

Eastern Junior High School, _
was tbe runHr-up:
Pictured with Thoene and Bailey are John
Riebel, superintendent or schools for Meigs
County, and Kitty Hazier, coordinator tor tile
Talented and Gifted Program.
.

.

tried~::::~::~.::~utofthe. Wesley

·Thoene, Pomeroy fifth
grader, wins Meigs Spelling Bee

..
'
·

· llllrnNO VBIIICLBII • A "-h •sp "''I
ult ...,. tile 1n1 _ . . fll lite M-1 c.irntel
eo•p11111d of tile ln•cii 'Dnldlans eull near

Kelli Bailey, a sev!)nth grade
student at Eastern Junior High
School, misspelled the word "rigid·
ly" !living way to Wesley Thoene,
a fifth grade student at Pomeroy
, Elementary, who successfully
spelled that word and went on to
spell "rigorous" malting him the
.1993 Meigs County Spelling Bee
'Champion. The bee WIIS held Mon. day evening in the bandroom at
Southern Hi~ School.
·
Thoene ts tho $On of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Thoene, Pomeroy. Bailey, the runner-up, is the dauJ!tler
of Mr. and Mrs. Greg llaaley,
Pomoro~. Pomeroy Elementary
will also receive the traveling b'O·
phy for tile bee. '
· Judges were Dicit Smith, s~rinlelldent of Eastern Local ~Is;
Jim Carpenler, superintendent of
Meip Local Scboolt; and Bobby
Waco, T-,1\todly. Cnlt •emhenUd l'eder·
Ord, superintendent of Southern
11 •111•11 r•llti 11 1 standolr after Sunday's
Local Schools. Don Dudding,
eun b1ttle tllat left four llfnls dead. (AP)
· Southern High School English
'

teacher, was the pronouncer for
what was one of the lengthiest bees
to he held in the county.
Other participants were: T.J.
King, Bradbury, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Tim King, Middleport; Jessica
Pore, Chester, daughter, of Mr. and .
Mrs. Michael Pore, Chester; Raina
Bennett, HarrisonviUe, daughter of
Ms. Bonnie Turner-Bennett,
Albany; Nancy Whale,, Meigs
Junior High, daughler o Mr. and
Mrs. Delmar Whaley, Middleport;
Ian Stoty, Middleport, son of Mr.
and Mn. Pat Story, Pifiddleport;
Jennifer Monis, l'llnland, dauglur
of Mr. 1nd Mrs. Bill Morris,
Racine; Roberta Sc:arbeny, Racine,
daughter of Mrs: At}ne ~,­
Racine; Michael Sobieska,
Riverview, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Uter, Long Boaom; Kris;
ten Nichole Brown, Rutllnd,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Brown, Rutland; Jessica Priddy,
Salem CC!lter. daughter of Mr. lnd

Mrs; Robert Kennedy, Langsville;

Meredith Felts, Salisbury, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Felts,
Pomeroy; Evan Struble, Southern
Junior High, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Struble, Syracuse; Kim
Sayre, Syracuse, dauahter of Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Sayre, Racine; IR,d
Jessica Brannon, Tuppers Plains,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patil
Brannon, Reedsville.
. Allemates were Becky Johuoli,
Bradbury; Valerie Kin', Cbester;
Elizabeth Ellis, Eastern Junior
Higl!; Steve Sigmon, Hanilon•ille;
Adam Thomas, Me' Junior lfi&amp;ll;
Chasity FOwler, Mi!elcpon; Adim

=

Thomas, Pomeroy; J - Hill,

~­

land; Jesse UUie, Racine; 11m Jet.
~·Riverview; Batjlmln J FoWier, Rlllllnd; Dedi ~
Center;
Brlndy ornm,
·
•
Jason Lawrence, Soutbtn Jllllfar
High; Sara Ball, ,Syr~eue; llld
Molly~ ~PIIinl..

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