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Poineroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Star Bane Corporation named one
of America's strongest companies
·CINCINNATI· For the second
consecuti~~e year. Star Bane Corpo- .
ration· has been named as one of
"America's Finest Companies" by
Financial Training Group (FTG) of
Charlotte, North Carcihna, which
publishes an inycstors gu.ide of
publicly-traded U.S. comparues.
In addition, Star Bane was also
recognized in the second annual
editillfi of "America's Strongest
Companies."To be named as ooe of
the strongest publicly-traded U.S.
ccxnpanies, Star Bane had 10 _have a
Standard and Poor's A plus mvest·
ment quality rating. the highest.a
canpany can receive. Star Bane IS
one of only 74 canpanies named to
the "Strongest" lisnng in the 1992·
93 edition.
. ..
America's Finest ComJlll!lleS IS
the only investor guide hsting .all
publicly-traded U.S. compames
with at least ten straight years of
higher earnings and dividen~s.
Approximately 15,000 compan1es
were considered for this honor of
"Finestfl with only 434 compilnies,
or less than 3 percent of the companies under consideration, making
theIngrade.
. the •.1st of "Amen.
selecung
ca's Finest Companies,"FF'G considered the following areas:
price/earnings ratio; dividend yield;
consecutive earnin!ls pe_r ~hare
increases; consecutive d1v1dend
increases; dividend coverage; and
dividend reinvestment plan.

Based on return and risk f~IOn,
Star Bane Corporation ranks 12111
among the 100 largest ban*g
companies in United SIIICS llalileT
magazine's 1992 listin' of the .
country's soundest financial insti·
tutions in overall perf~. Star
Bane ranks 31st amons the !'f. SO
stocks for the decade of the 90s,
according to the premiere issue of
Smart Mooey, the WaR Street Jour·
nal magazine of ~ bnsi"SS
Star Bane, the SIXth highest rated

Farm Flashes

banlt on this lilt of "future high·
fliers: - ~elected from a field of
~~ Clllmll. biOid stock issues.
Sla' Blnc Corporation, a lllulJi·
stale bulk baldinl campany incor·
porated in Ohio, lias its heldquar·
ten in Cinclnnad, Ohio. Star BIIIIC,
with appnlllimlllel $7.71 billioa in
10181 usets, u ·: /year-end 1992,
hu 10 hankfua Pdw'dltries which
currently operate 197 Sla'r Bank
offices in Ohio, Keruucty ancllndi·

ana. .

Burley tobacco crop notices are due soon
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
burley tobacco producers sho.uld
expect to·receive their 1993 nouces
soon after the March •12 mailing
date, according to E.A.(Lisa)
Collins, County Executive Director
of the Gallia County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Ser·
vice.
.
Any burley producers not
r'eceiving their notices should con·
tllct the ASCS offtce for guidance.
Some of the ~ons that a notice
cannot be maili:d include:
-The 1992 Burley tobacco Marketing Card has not been returned
or the form required when market·
ings are completed has not been
filed.
•There is a pending farm recon·
stitution (either a combination or

. division). Example: Sale/purchase
of land.
•The ASCS office may not have
your cOrrect address: .
. .
Note • Any nouces contammg
ropte numbers cannot be delivered
b)l the postal service. The 19~3
basic quota for each farm w1ll
reflect a 10 pen:ent decrease from
1992. Tbe reduction is the maximum permitted by law; and is
needed to adjust the toial supply of
burley tobacco.' Burley tobacco
producers approved poundage quo·
tas for the 1992-1994 tobacco
crop$ in a February 1992 referendum.
.
For additional information on
the burley tobacco program, please
contact the ASCS office at 446·
8686r

Precautions to take with bears
•

.

Tar Heels
roll over
Blue Devils
'

..

Some farmers indicate interest in trying
limited acreage of warm season grasses
'l

;

.

.'

testiJig usually ID&lt;IICate levels of
70.90 ~nt infestation. Dilution
of the mfected fescue is often the
•
most simple solution. The ~'!on nece•~
of medium red clover to existing · Ed oDborll Is GaiHa Coun· r
'escue sod 15
• ...__,ng a common ty's measlon agent, agriculture. :
••
""""''"''
•
practice. Annual applications ?f 2
'
~unds of clover seed or a hltle
~higher rates on a every other year
basis have produced !lood results.
Continu~ trom D·l
,
Farmers have also s~enJood
results fr~ close mowmg fe!!· Clinton uilde11tands that a hClllthY ~
. cue sod durmg early summer. This commercial real estate indus!ry :·
peJ111its !he sunlight to _g.et to the
to a healthy economyt Gar-· :
experiei.cc
-soil and wproves the ability of the leads
nes said·
. ·
·•
Natlv~ warm-season grasses clovers to compete ·with thefescqe.
The-~dministration 's emphasi$· ;
sueh as Big Bluestem, Indian gniss, Some fanners have rotated lbr!&gt;Dgh on infrastruc!ure developmeQt is .~
and Switchgrass make nearly 70 their pasiiJI'es esch year mowmg a important. In areas that focus _on ~
percent of their production after portion of the pasture very Ci?BC: 1f high-quality infrastructure, the J9b' ~
June h The Ohio Department of you plan to add seed to ex1sung . maiitet is vibranL Where employ•
Naturaf Resources have ·made ~the earlier the be~.. .. ' , ment numbers are healthy, so IS the "
switchgraas seed (Biackwel,l vari·
Tobacco flll'll!~ are wat~g the demand for housing.
~
ety) available for demonstranons.
1993 Quota mailing. ASC wtlt. be
"This economic rec:Ov~y pack·. ~
'rhere may be better choices mailing notices oil March 12. If age certainly is not without pain. ~
available such as Cave-in-Rock you do not get your card soon after . However, along.with !he ,bitte~:
Switchgrass or Caucasian that date, you need ~ contact the medicine, the plari contai!'s 1mpor • • •
Bluesiem. Seeding warm season ASC office to delernune the Jlll?b- tant investment incentives tltat-·!
grasses is a very difficult taSk. !em. Several problem areu exiSt. merit careful consideration,n Gar·;:. ,
Seeding depth is very important These include marketing cards that nes said.
... [
and the fluffy nature of· the seed have not been returned, farms ':'181
The Southeaslml Ohio Board of :
makes eyen disttibution difficulL are being considered for reconsntu· Realtors is one of more than 1,800 1:
The O.D.N.R. Division or Wildlife, lion, and incorrect addresses. If you local boards and associations that. •
tbrougb their office at Deer Creek · have questions call the ASC offtce comprise the National A$sociatlo!l '"
State Park have offered to make at 446-8686.
of Realtors. As the nation's largest ·~
their "special drill" available to · Attention beef farmers in Meigs trade association, NAR Is "The {
local farme11 that want to ll'Y a few and surrounding counties. Dr. .Voice for Real Bs®e." represent.. ~
acres of warm season ~rasses. I Steven Boyles, O.S.U .. Extension ing nearly 750,000 members r
will coordinate their ume here. Beef Specialist will lead the discus- involved in all aspects of the rClll ~
Please call if you are interes_ted.
sion on the topic of "Beef Cow estate indusiJ'y.
·
:! '
Fescue management IS very Nutrition". The session will be held
imponant to farmers in our area. in the library of Meigs High
~
s~ples col_l~~}or e~dopbyte School, on Monday, March 15

Clinton's .. ~

' vol. a, No. 211

" eo,,, luMid 1m

TROMM BUILDERS·.

20 Years Exp.

th Buick·Pontiac

r

u;s.

ENGINE TUNE·UP '72

~·}l1

lUKE SPECIAL 96

'!I

VOTED. # 1 FOR
CUROMIR

FIONT·END ALIGNMENT 19'

II

•

'•

TEST DRIVE THII
TRUCK....

Ou11lty and Price
Why Go A~yplace Eleel

.,

Fully ·lolded, you
mull - ·this to
appreclltll whit •
r..ltruckla.

See Herb Smith or Vernon BarYe)'

SMITH'S G~t'C TRUCK CENTER, INC.
135 PINE STREET

"'"2532

GALLIPOLII, OHIO

----------'---o-

Q

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LUBE, OIL CHANGE, FILTER '19" TRANSMISSION TUNE·UP •••bi
Ollar good until 311 S/93.

(Rag. $85.90). Oller good unti.l3115193.
• Drain trwnisston lluid • Alljulllnlllll 1inlcage
• fleptace pan gasll8l • Cleln 11111 • Cllecio -~~~~ !j1tem
• Re!Jlar.ehelllltrwmisston ttu~ • Conducl roacllell

lnclu116 up to 5 qts. GM Goo&lt;h&lt;reoch Motor Orl AC
Duraguar~ Oil Finer ana compt01e chassis tube

ITH UIC
•

1900 EASTERN lVI.

.........

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Iii

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TIIC

GALliPOLIS, 01.

'---~----

mid -'lOs

Roads around
compound sealed
'

GROUP .-aOTESTS ATF • Steven May of
· Dallu wavea u American ftag durin&amp; a protest
Suaday at the Waro Coaventlon Center. The
IJ'OUP at l5, includlngiiOIDe members or the Lib·
erta.rlan Party, were protestin&amp; tbe Bureau or

~Bosnian
•

Akohol, Tobacco and Firearms and what they'

see as a lessening or their rlcbts. The ATF Is

heavily Involved Ia the standoff against tbe
Branch Davidlans. (AP)
.
·

army commander boycotts talks

TUZLA, Bosnia-Herzegovina

• (AP) '-:-'Bosnia's ar:;:fi,~mllllder
. pulled out of truce
today and
: lnsicad ordered his troops to attack
· in C8Siem Bosnia to free thousands

: of civilians besieged by Serb
: fortes.
-- Relief agenies made new
appt:ljla..:ftir_emcq~y.-~ to JJ1e
wounded and alck m the eastetn
· enclave of Srebrenica, w~ich is
held by troops of the Muslw-led
• IOVCfiiiJIODL
,.
•
. The order to attack by BQsnian
commander . Sefer Halilovic
.· a~ to put a formal, end to a
unilaleral ccaae-fue declared sever·
al weeks ago by government
forces.
.It ca!D~ amid an up~urge of
sn1~r fue around SaraJevo, the
capll,al,, and followed what t~e
· Serbn81d was an offer by Muslim
commanders of ·the Cerska and
' Zepa enclaves to surrender to

aii8Cldng Serb forces.
based in Tuzla, should move iitto
U.N. Secretarjo.Oeneral Boutros the~ and Konjevic Polje area.
Boutros·Ghali said Sunday a fail· Serb forces· overran Cerska last
ure of the warring factions to week, forcing thousands of ,esi·
accept a peace accord might mean dents to flee, and have ·been
U.N:· members -would have "to shellinll Konjevic Polje.
send troops on the ground" to·
force a settlemeaL But there w~
Hal1lovii: said government
no·signs the Unitec}·States l!r· othlir&lt; ~·'1ilili106palil
-ill in,tbe•t illbllllh'llppottllll'
· powers were inclihed to commit offensive to lift the siege Ql Xonje·
trOOps.
··
vic Polje and the city of Srebl'enica,
European Community officials where 60,000 residents and
met in Bhlsse~, B~gium, today to refugees are ruMing low on food
ducuss the suuallon in Bosnia. and medicines.
Several called for increasing presHe ordered the mobilization of
sure on Serb leaders to agree 10 the police in eastern Bosnia to bolster
U.N. peace plan.
army strength.
· U.S. Air Force cargo planes
At the same time, a U.N.
dro!llled more than 46 tons of food spokesman, Cmdr. Barry Frewer,
and medical supplies into eastern said Halilovic puUed out of talks on
Bosnia today, the eighth such· mis· a truce for eastern Bosnia with the
sion QYI!rthe war-torn region:
commander of U.N. JI"AACd""pen.
. Halildvic's order, broadcast on G Philippe MoriU and Bosni
Bosnian radio, said all available ar:'~ mlfitary com':inoor ~
troops of his army's 2rid ·coi'J!S, Mladic.
I .

..

:--Local briefs--...

· R1chard Smith. has resip!ed as superintendent of the Eastern
Local SchoOl Disttict·effecuve·Mart;.h 17.
Smith; superintendent f&lt;r the past three years, has accepted the
position or Region 6 area coordinator for the State Depanment of
Fducatioo. Region 6 covers a 12-counry area which includes Meigs
County.
' .
Tbe Board of Education met in special session last week to
aocept Smith's resignation. An execunve session was also held to
discuss personnel matters. Attending were Ray Karr, president, Jim
Smith, Vice president, arid Ron Eastman, Bill Hannum, and Mike
.Martill, members.

WACO, Texas(~)- Authori·
ties sealed off roads around the
Branch Davidian compound this
morning, but declined to give
details of the efforts to end the
siandoff that has stretched over
nine days.
/ ''There has been a tactical-type
operation not on the com~ but
associated with it," wd Sharon
Wheeler, a spokeswoman for the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
· Firearms. "Tactical ... in military·
parlance indicates smaller-scale
maneuvering.
She said details would be
released later this morning, but said
the roads were sealed "for everyone's safety." There were no shots
·fired or people surrendering, she
said.
Hundreds of reporters have
. gathered on the roads near the com·
pound since the stalemate began
Feb. 28, when ATF agelits tried to
serve search and arrest warrants on
cult leader David Koresh. Four
a¢.ents ·were ldlled, aloog with pes·
s1bly 10 cult memben. Officials
believe the cuh was liDDed off.
The Closing of roida prevented
reporters from entering or leaving
their staging area some 3 miles
'

from the compound. Wheeler said
the closure would last about three
hours ..
Negotiations to end the sjege
have hit a standstiU, the FBI bad
said Sunday, With Koresh rejecting.
seulement offers and even propos·
~ he earlier Sllflested.
"We are g01ng through a very
frustrating and disappointing pen·
odin the nesotiation process," FBI
agent Bob Ricks said
Koresh has shown "a state of
irritability that ... pops up almost
without notice, and then be will go
back to a cabp paiod of religious
discussion," Ricks Slid.
In lengthy telephone wscussions, Koresh harangues negotiators with stories about his chil&lt;l·
hood and religious beliefs, and says
he's concerned that his side of the
Feb. 28 raid is not getting to the
public, Ricks said.
He also started played loud
music at the cult's compound out·
side Waco, apparently recordings
of his own music, while continuing
to insist he and his more than 100
followers will not leave the com·
pound until he gets a message from
God.
"We offered him wbat we

thought was a reasonable compromise with an item that was of most
concern 10 him," Ric;ks said. "And
the offer included from our side
was the total release of all the people inside. And that offer w·as
rejeCted."
.
He did not reveal details of the
rejected deal.
Agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Fire3rms raided
the cult's compound to arrest Kore·
sh on weapons charges. Four
agents were killed, along with possibly 10 cult members. Officials
believe the •cult wu tipped off to
the raid. .
•
.Koresh has released 21 children
and two elderly women. He says 90
adults and l7 children remain in
the compound.
At one POint. Koresh refused to
release a 6-year-Qid girl after she
told authorities she wanted to
leave, Ricks said. He then reJecled
a delivery of millr: that prev1ously
had been demanded, he said.
K~halsocmimsavi~ta~

provided by authorities ~f the chit•
dren who have been released was
blank, Ricks said. Parents in the
compound wanted the videotape is
proof that the cbildren were well. ·

Clinton takes
plan to mayors

Smith resigns Eastern post

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton is honing his sales
pitch to protect Whire House economic proposals against growing
criticism from Republicans and
conservative Democrats.
His keen public relations effort
has generated positive Raetion out
•
· of the blocks for the ovaall budget ·
LEADS .PROTEST • Rabbi Avi Weiss,
In the World Trace Center bomblna. "We are
'
program. But as the package moves
rlaht,
president
of
the
New
York-based
Coall·
here to condema this place and this mosque,"
''
closer 10 critical votes in Congress,
tloa for Jewish Concerns, leads a protest SDDday
said
Weiss, who emphasized that be was not
the carping'threatens to undermine
aeross
the
street
from
a
Jersey
City,
N.J.,
attackln\t~~rellglon ot ls.. m or Its adhei'Cilll,
•
his early work.
mOBque that hu beta linked to the chief suspect . but only
lc fundamentaUslterrorlsts, (AP) .
,
Republicans say the package is
A ~g of the Meigs County Soap ~ Derby offtcers,
too dependent on tax increues. and
ciVic arou,IJS. fmancial institutions, merchants, parents or any inter·
not
enough spending cuts are
C8llld ~ or individuals interested in sponsoring a car m f8r1ici·
Some conservative
planned.
~=-Rf in the event will be held 7 p.m. Wednesday at ·the Blue
Democrats
recently joined the
Cab office on ~orth Second Street in Middleport.
grumbling.
The derby needs SJlOIIS011, financial assiStance and volunteers 10
Other naysayers point to a string..
assillt
with building ears between now and race day, June 26 and 27.
••
of
positive economic figures and
The local Winner will go 10 Akron in August to participate in
wonder whether the short·lerm 530
world com~tion • .
'
billion
economic stimulus pacJrar
·.'
isncedod
,
NEW YORK (AI') -investiga· the jagged edges of concrete floors student who SliD lived in the raided
a~cident
Clinton dispatcbed ~ Cabinet tora began a slow descent into the for charred remains.
apanment, The Journal reported.
members 10 a National ~ o{ shaky crater beneath the World
But the teams bad yet to reach
No charges were filed against
; _
Three people were· transpOrted to Veterans Memorial ijospiral
Cities meeting Sunday..to tout. the Trade Center aa the se.cb contin- the sub-basement floor where much him, FBI spokesman Joaeph Valiafter the car they WIR in became II'IIPPed in bigh water Satmday. ·
program. He was ltiglllightin• the ued around the world for clues to of th~ rubble seitled, said John · queue said.
Al:cordins to a repon from the Mcip County Sherifrs Departprogram's spend:;::_ cuts 10 a who was behind the temlrist bomb- O'Brien, a spokesma'! for the
In Jordan, Salamch's relativ~
lilent, BulB. Woodruff, 27, RaCine, was northbound on Pine Grove
ing.
.
speech to the gro~
y.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and said they were convinced of his
ROI,d in Sutton Township and drove into backwater. The 1987
'' Chevrolet s~ he wu ..:riving went in10 a ditch and became
Transponadon ~ Federi·
The FBI searcbed an apartment Firearms.
innocence, and denied he was a fol•
co Pcna, former .may(Jr Ol Denver, . in 1eraey City, NJ., on Sunday and
More than a week after the Feb. lower of militant Muslim clerio
:' . lllm01t ~submerged with only the rop.tleing vmblc.
.
said that without I lllbltantial rein· took one' man into custody, 26 explosion, the question "Wbo Omar Abdei-Rahman.
WOOdruff an 4-year-old Tyson Clark were reportedly swept
• vestment in America, "We will althou&amp;h ncl chqea- ftled ..
under ~ wala' and had to pulled out before being II'IUISpQrted to
bombed the Wm-ld Trlldo Cenll!r'l"
SaiJmcb, a Palestinian with a
have I COuntry in tbe year 2000
'• Veterans Memorial Hospiral by the Racine 1111uad of the Meigs
Tbe apanment belonged to a wu stilllaiJely unanswtnd tpclay. Jordanian passport, came to the
that we may nat II!COIDize, a coun- suspect Iii the trlde center bombCoanty Bnwgency Mediclll Service.
The blast in an underground United' States five fCUS ago hi
try thai we may not lib."
' inc. wllo. moved out two or three parking ~e killed at least five hopes of IIUdyina business, accord·
.
A
thlnl occupant, Bill Pritts, 24, lllldJas unreported, "'!Ill also
'' ~
Housing an~ Udlan DevelOp· mootbs qo. Tho Jertey Journal of people, Injured more ~ 1,000 ing to hii mother, A~ who livell
ment
Secretary Henry Ciaaetoa , Jeraey City iepoiled today, quotiJI&amp; and lhut ~ 1be world I aocond· in ZarQa, Jordan. • He wanted IIi
A l'owth occupant, Roben Clark, 110 and adlhu unreponed wu
Joille!l
Pella to }110111010 the admln· IOII!CCI k didli't ldefttity.
tallest bu1ldmga for at lean a fulfill lila~~ in America." she
'IIOIINoiljiGtcd.
.
1stlation'a
JJQ)OIICIIIImulua pc~t.
Tbe New Yorio: TliMI.qiJOI6d an mooth.
Woodruff-wu cited on a cbarae of failure to obey a traffic
·
said. "He Is notalelrorilt."
IJe u Joni.:CSOlayed Rilef for lbo investiaator today u aaying tiM!
device.
i
Two doga aaiffmg tfuoaab the
·
citiea.
raid turned up three amall moral rubble Sunday turned up no nee • Relsdvca aaid he bad no criml,
allrm clocb, wbicb could be llllld of a building emploJee at111 lislod naiiiiCOnl ~ no history of poli~
1
thee=,;,
.
U lirnq devlcel for I bomb.
as missing. ·
cal activism -an uaeument con- .
11M Gallia-Mela Poal of the SIIIO Highway Palrol clied twO
the elictoclleat'terl at 1,.4011 . MeaiiwltUe, with 18 new steel
Polic:e havo so f• ••eated one finned bv Jord4niu authorities. ·. ·
-lbr lkfvinlucllr the inOace Suadu~
.
cli~und IOWIII.
·
main
Mohammed
•
~- trlde c:erl«'l Salamcb,auspectj
lelmy I. S~M~150l Jividell Hollow, Middiepon. UrbiD olllclala ba.. emb~Ked. beaml
25, of eney City, N.J. · In Calro, E&amp;YDt'a foreign miniJ.
allllr.ea
1111 ~tiYOI dlld far D.U~ and
to~ rotJowiq 111 Keideot Sunday
Clllllllll'l pia ID lflp up I}IOIIdlq able to :&amp;and air aearcb for He Ia being bold witbou1 ball on ter said lbat i{ilie United Slllel is
aftelnr.on on
33lalledlonl Townahlp.
.
. on aucll ~· ·public lloni;. cl'* Su y iniD the llve-atoq· charcea of aidlac die bolllblaa. lliC c l'illln deDonili.R Abdei-Rab&gt;Acalrdlq ID lbo ..-, SlaweDr was IMIIK'IIIMI whea he llld off
IDJ, Helil
aid Child lmmu· deeD bolo CJII DMd by tbe blaiL '
ln.....WpMn
dllied the van man, be would face criminal
tbe rf&amp;bt aidt ollbo nJid lllil IIIUCt a lip, dllll a ditcll and a cui·
11Hdon1. 'l1le leaae'a eaecllive .
Standlnj on "lpider ICaftolcl· · thatc:ailed the
b. . . .
charges in B&amp;YPt- the govera.
Wll.
j
. bon ........................ .
Ina" - IOJDethlas Ute wlllclow
The man taken into cuatody ment'a flnt confirmation that It
cleaert' platform• - apnta SUilday In J-y City wu idenll· wu
to move. apiDit 111e
IOCIIii!J
far rutute
..... ~ .......
"necet1ary
to lllllllftltc-lc
warbcl their w.y cloWn, ciWHna fied U Awlwd ~bed, 1 collqre blRfet;ric.

'•

.

Soap box derby meeting slated

Trade Center bombing: A
global sear~h for answers

Dtputies probe high water

::r=.::.

Two citedfor.D.U.I.
u.s.

a'

Low tonJabt 18 upper lOI
Partly cloudy. T!lesday,biP Ia

1 s.citlon, 10 Pagee 21o.nh
A lrluhlmodla Inc. Newepe'*

Po!lleroy-Middleport,
.
. Ohio, .. Monday, March li, 1993

W. aNNAM :

·COMMERC.IIL RESIDEIInAf •

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614-221-GIII :

•Roo.fing •Repltacement Windows·.
•Siding •New .Homes .
•Garag•s

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269838

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WE DO IT Al.l.

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Kicker:

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9658
Super Lotto:
8-2M5·36·38-43

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soon

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Pick 4:

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1992 eorn program p(lyment . f'h,
rate is 73 cents per bushel

am

387

Page4

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mother is watchi{lg you from som~ all of them do not go l&gt;ack. . .
By Wmdell Tope
direction. As soon as you start
As Illavo Slid before beln are
Eartb Team Volunteer
walking
away
she
knows
that
you
mastcn
at camouflage. To begin
GALLIPOLIS • BelieVe it or not
we have Black Bear in our area. are not going to disturb her cubs with their coat of hair is hard to
~.!.""""L
They are sometimes called, Bro~ and never attack you. She will be identify when tbey are lying in
Bears. depending on which area m hiding close by and you will never heavy brush or tall grass. Therefore
ATIORNEY AT LAW ·:
a person can almost step on them
eastern U.S. you live. The Black know whe!e.
Bean have the best camoufiltlc before seeing them this mistake
'
Bears habil8t extends tbrougb most
8 Ealt Broad Street,
POMEROY • It has been deter: 8s
of Eastern Canada,down the or method of sight deception; 1f could prove fatal for a person. For
as possible.
Suite 800
· Atlantic coast to. Florida and you see a cub, its mother will be . instance, people while going on · mined that the average price of the
To matt::e an appointment or for
ColumbuS, Ohio
•
through the whole Appalachian hi&lt;jing. There cannot be enoug_h hikes or strofls through fasture 1992 com crop was $2.02 which additijmal information call 992·
«10
811
OLAW
•
1
,
1
range of mountains. They· have said about mother bears and theu fields, woods or areas o heavy means that the payment rate for'
migniled into our area to get food cubs for they are masters of pro- weeds must be alwal!:~: the alert those producers ~nrolled in the
for theBe are ideal p
for sows 1992 Corn· Program will be .73
for their' young cubs. The!' they lecting their \)abies.
·,
· stay in wOoded areas. Th1s IS why
Having spent time with people· to rest with their cubs. Regar&lt;lless cents per bushel and Will be issued
March
15.
The
final
payment
to
.
they are seldom seen. Feeding who live in a country where the of where the cubs are, the mother
mostly at night time the Black Bear Black Bear numbers are higb, I Jl!ll will always be ·some where nearby Meigs County producers will total
is a very strong animal weighing fortunate 10 have been instructed m. ready to come to the cubs rescue in $135,672.
Signup is now underway for the
from three to eigbt bundred pounds Black Bear ·behavior and how to case of trouble. This is the most
depending upon their adult age. curb their bad bebavior they some· clanBGoUS silllatlon a person can be 1~3 Feed ·Grain and Wheat ProThey feed on both animals and times exhibiL The fiShing trips thst in wlien a bear is protecting their . grams arid will continue through
, plants which ~ives them a large I enjoyed in Northern Canada were yoUng from a person. They run at a April ·30, ACR (set aside) for com
variety of nutntious foods to .live something that l)lls country boy person and their frorit legs will be is 10 pen:cnl of base and no ACR
really enjoyed. Tbose people·who swinging motion with all their required· fm wheat, barley, or oats.
on and a quick growth to matunty.
Black Bea11 are considered very do everything possible 10 make energy and force. Wben the front t•aet prices are corn 2.75, wheat
·
strong animals. They are sl9w to ones time enJoyable because leg and foot hits a persons head its 4.00, barley 2.36, and oats 1.45.
The projected payment on com
pidt a fiabt with otl!a' animals, but wildlife is their '!Jkald and Butter"' furce or slap will knock a person 10
&amp;
w(len they do they use both front and their main objective is to make the ground. They then maul a per- will be 72 cents a bushel with SO
percent being available as an
1egs in a swinging motion. Because ones time enjoyable so.you wjli son to the ground. One never
,
oftheir super Slrengtb they can l!at· come back year after year and knows which direction the sow advance paym_enL Producers with
ter other animals to the ground thel) bring your friends with you.
came from. When. we see cubs bases arc advised to come to the
use their loog sharp teeth to finish
Their first joy wben you get feedin~ in a corn field or elsewl!ere ASCS Office and examine the
the kill. Very few animals ever sur- there is to instruct everyone on bow · you will never see the sow for she 'options for 'their farms. Appoint·
to live with Black Bear and they do will be hidden in the area and no . ments are available to reduce waitvive such an onslaugbL
.
· Bears are often classified as a perfect job doing thaL The fust one knows until she strikes. This is in&amp; time; but walk ins are serviced
clamsy animals preferring flight thing they tell you is if you see a whit m~ bears so treacherous is
radiCt than ba!tle, w1th one excep- Black Bear is to stop in your lral:ks, their ability to hide in places where I'"'---...;,-•----- ------ _.-------;.,-------:
tioa when they realize their cubs turn halfway around and walk they cannot be seen.
' I
·
· ·
·
()
are in danger. Then they wi~ light away from iL The chances are the
All children and adults should
to the bitter end. 'They run wtth son bear will not come toward you. ·be told when exploring places 1
of shuffling man!'er wh~ch ~n .a You probably saw it before it saw whtze bears and cubs are biding, of- 1
sense is a deceivmg action 11 t.s you and will never move unless it these articles prevent a single case .
' often to their advu.ntage in most 1s a sow and she hu a pair of cubs. of bear attack of an adult of child it . I
cases in defending !heir young. If she comes in yoilr diRction keep' has been worth many times over I
• Most bear can climb treeS, leap and walking fonhe will never go far ·the time put in its publication. '
land on animals. The object is to from her cubs and will return to .
I
jump and land oo approachit:tg ani· them. If she comei closer to you,
mats crushing them 10 the ground. never start to run,
just keep
I
During late summer and fall they walking because no human can out
1
go on an eating spree which builc!s .run a hear. If when you see. she ii
ind stores large amounts of fat m going to catch you, fall to the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) I
I.
•j
their bodies. In summer the sows ground, face fU'St ·and lay perfectly Directlivcstilclq!rices and receiptS I
roam widely teaching their cubs still. She will come a shon· dis• ,at selecte'd buying points Friday by 1
.~ '
: how to shift for themselves. In tance, stop, stand and look at you the Ohio Depariment of Agncul· I
winter they find large cavities in for a few moments then leave, if ture:
0
·
hillsides and by lining the cavities you stay motionless.
Come in today to take advantage of these special values IJ.Onor of Presidents' Day. You'll
·Barrows and gilts: steady to I
with leaves and other debris makes
, find e~perienced professionals. traditional service •.and genuins GM parts, too.
Most bears we see in our area weak; demand.moderate to light. · 1
for a rather comfonable sleeping are sows with cubs. They .-e beas
1·2, 230·260 lbs., country
place in cold win~11. BC!~fS do not searching for food for themselves points, 43.50-44.50; plants 44.50. I
'
go iniO complctc hibemBbon.
and their cubs. Bears are similar to 45.50, a few 46.SO.
I
00
72
1
It was once believed that when hogs they carry a substantial
U.S. t-3, 230-260 lbs., country 1
.
bean were appoached by humans amount of fatty material under·
ts
42·00
•3
50
P.!lm
'
·
.
..,..
'
I
(Reg.
$107.00).
Ollar
good
until
3115193.
o c!J
•
(Reg.
$80.80).
Offer
good
until
3115193.
tblt they were just as afraid. of you, neath their hide. This enables then
• U.S. 1•2, 210-230 lbs., country
u you were of them. Nothing was to float on top of water preventing points, 41.00-42.SO.
I • Replace plugs • Replace a1r liltflf • Replace PCV valve • Set r~le
• onsped -~ • tnsped llheel cylii'GJIS
·
.:!: I
.: farther from the truth. The fact is drowning. In our area and adjoin·
• i1lSpiCt grae Sills • fleplace Iron! t1isc pad$. Hoe
I
'i-1
Receipts Thursday 6,700. Esti- 1
• Replace li!fllrller• Service emission controls • Cho:k bells,
•
t~reao
Drake
SllOIS,
ilrequited
•
T\lffi
diiCS
• bears are not afraid of anything. If ing states that have a substantial
•
Set
ign
iuon
tim
ing•
Creek
cap
&amp;
rotor
•
Clleck
qutron
w
rnng
milled receipts Friday 6,500.
or rGIOIS, i llqUilld • tnspm sys11m tor 1e11ts
~
: that were so the bear family would population of bears in winter food
Prices from The Producers Live- . I
• For 6 cyl. with air condihonino. 4 c~. sll~ly lower:
have becon:e extinct a long time becomes scarce which results in stoclc Association:
'PriCe ino:ludls Olllf&amp;nnl oflrorol,iji1o: ~':'l.t,.
::'1
8 cyl. SIIQhlly hlgller.
•
1 •
I
brai11
si!OII~r~lidri.SCI(ne
111011e1s
may
II*
.
"
I
ago. The thing that bothers !De sows and their cubs swimming the
Cattle: s_.y.
-·-·•
1
most is our lack 1&gt;f understandmg river to feed on the com li1eIds lhaI
Slaughter steers: choice 73.00of bear habits. I'm saying this espe· hhave been phicked . Akt the endsth of . 81.00; select 70.00.77.00.
1
• cially to young folks, boys and . t e rows w ere p1c ers tum ey
s 5
Slaughter heifers; choice 72.00. 1
; girls, if you come upon cub bears leave a small amount of shelled 80.75; select69.0Q.76.00.
1 (Reg. $22.50). Offer good until3115193.
· never,never, n~ver walk toward
. Camoer &amp;castei adjustment • Toe adjustment
them. Always tum slowly around c~have seen three sows in ibe last ~s0S7~ixf a~ :;:,;n~ lower; al~ I
·
th
b
'
ed'
o
1
•Steering ti•'~
and walk away from them . The Ihree years WI cu s •C mg n
Bulls: 2.00 lower; all bulls ·
...,... check • Tire Clleek • Sllock absorber Clleek
SATISFA~TIONI
0
' danger lies in the fact that the
sha•rered corn. Once here I sure 65.00 and down.
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.L.·vestock
report

Pick 3:

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starting at. 1:30 p.m. Plan to. be a -::
part of a good program and good·
fellowship. No reservations ire

By El)WARD VOLLBORN .
. GALLIPOLIS • Spring pasture
management, spring. f?~age se~·
· and all ·"-· acu nes leadil\g
lllf,
'"'""'
VI
·
to good pasture and hay nroducnon
are on most farmers schedules as
soon as soil conditions improve.
Several fanners have expressed
intmst in IJ'ying a limited acreage
or warm season grasses. These
grasses ~n being proposed to offset
the mid-summer slump that many
of our cool season grasses such as
Fescue Orchardgrass and Brome

Ohio Lottery

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�Monday, March 8, 1993

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-Commentary

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Pege-2-The Dlilly Sentinel •
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday,~ 8,1993

"

\

Ac:cu· Wllllber• forccall for

By Tbe Associated Press
Snow is likely in the northeast
tonight, while clouds and a chance
of snow are possible in the south·
west. Lows are forecast in the 20s.
Flurries are likely northeast
Tuesday, clecreasing to clouds else·
where. Highs should ~nge from
.the upper 30s norlheast 10 the mid·
40ssouth.
'
The recOI'II high on this date in
Columbus was 80 in 1974. The
~low was 2 below in 1960.

and high

MICH.

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The Daily Sentinel

Fa,rmers. pe.nalized ·by bidl!rigging dairi~s :

WASHINGTON - Farmers, ly frozen Olit of the decision-mal&lt;· Fecleration.
damage on to the farmers, .who ·
schoolkids and taxpayers have been ing loop by lhe co-ops' board of , Lut rear, farmers were only each have to pay over 5.12,000
111 Court Street
milked by a widening bid-rigging dim:tors.
·
getting si:l: cents more per 100 ~?warda the: fine. by relurllmg parPomeroy, Ohio ·
scandal
that
might
be
dubbed
Not
a
single
farmer
has
faced
pounds
of milk they produced uons ofthetr orofi~ each n:tontcbedth. :
DEVOTED TO 11Dt lii'I'BRE8T8 OJ' TIU 10108-MAIIQN AREA
· "Dairygate."
($13.11) than they did in 1980. But
Trantham 1w ~ IWl
to :
So far, the Justice Department
l
.l
this time, the retail value on that ~ cq.op, which ha~~ tD ~
has flied 83 criminal cases against
JQC .
amount of mUir; was $36.42. The f~mg m'?re than $10 .miii.IDn, m'
47 dairy companies for conspiring
farmers' share of every consumer f1.nes for 111 own role 1n b1d-ng· :
to rig bids to sell milk to public
dollar spent on dairy products had gmg. B~~wcen the two co,o~ i
schools and other institutions.
ll.l:u;"
shrunkto36cents.
TJ:anthain.s share C?f the fines
•
ROBERT L. WINGETT
There are 34 grand Juries currently
.tr.ll
•
•
"Fewer and fewer of the con· cnppled hun financially.
'Publisher
investigatina the Industry in 23
somers' dollars are going to f.he
"The bottom line is lhat when ,
states,
and
the
Justice
Department
criminal
charges
or
been
accused
dairy
farmer,"
Peter
Vitaliano,
you
have Ibis•kind of money com· ,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
has won convictions of more than of wrongdoing io the scandal. But chief economist for the NMPF, told
·
and 1evtm
.... fines ·m
· their punishment has been Dncon1·• olD'~wriate Ed Hcnrv.
General Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
30 corpomuons
' ing off the rop of a co-op
door a com·
the •
excess of $40 million.
au: passed·along pena)ties for bid· onsider the plight of Torn pany it just has to filter wn to
'
d
·
·
·
the did
·
·
·
·
dairy fanner and it win affect how '·
,
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
Independent a1ry compantes nggm~ Y• not t'arllCipate m, Trantham; a South Carolina dairy . much money he'll get for his prod· :·
· words. All letters are subject to editing ""d must be signed witb name.
divvied up entire regi.ons SCl o~ly :•me. when thetr income is farmer who cans hiniselfa "double, uct," said Jom... Barr, head of tl!e ·,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letlet's will be published. letterS
one company would b1d on a milk
tg
loser" becaase he has spent lime
_ ....,.
· should be in good taste, l!4dressinz issues, oot personalities.
contract with a particular 'school
In 1980, dairy farmers across wilh two separate ~oopenttives _ · NMPF. "The dairy fanners own
districL Without competition, com· the country received an average ol each of which has been convicted the co-op so when lhe·co-op getS j
panics submitted inflated bids $13.05 for every 100 pounds of of bid-rigging in the last couple of fined, the farmers take their Bhare
knowing they had corner~d the milk they eroduccd. But by .the years. "The sad thinti ia I didn't of that lick ... just like the st&lt;iclt:•
market and could reap wmdfall . time that milk was processed 1nto benefit at all from it,11 said ,Tran· hoi~ of a company do.''
.
~fits.
.
. ·
various dairy products and .deliv- ·tham: "We're bei~g fined and
·==s~~ ~~
In some cases, compantes col· ered to the grocery srore, It was penahzed fac somethmg thai some· duce more mt'lk and make ends
luded with "cooperatives," w~ worth $25.10. That means that 52 oneclsehasdone."
One of the cooperatives is the meet. He secure,d a loan last year ...
are groups of farmers that jointly cents of every consumer dollar
market their prodtJCts because they spent on dairy products went ro the 132-farmer Coble Dairy Coopers· for nnore lhan $28,000 in order tD
ByWALTERR. MEARS
can't make it bn their own . farmer, according to Department of lives lnc., which was convicted of r purchase the cows from a friend
AP Special Correspondent
Although the co-ops are o~ by Agriculture. figures .as interpreted bid·ri~ing two years ago and fmed who was going out of business. So
WASIDNGTON -Now it's a three-way stretch in a two-party town: the farmers, the farmers are typical· by the Nattonai M1lk Producers $1.6 inillion. Coble has passed the now, Trantham is milking cows for ·
ll1i exua three hours a day, risin$ at;
Ross Perot remindi(!g Democmts and Republicans that lhey are not alone
S a.m. and c:alling it ql,iits· ~ 9 ···'
-not 1!/hile he's around ro c:all a snake a snake.·
p.m.
There are no Perotist seats in Congress, but he leads a political move. "We'd love to think there's a
ment thai could influence votes lhere, in part because ncbody is sUre. just
40-hoJD' work week out lhere loolc·
how strong he is. The Perot cause does seem reflecred in the surveys thai
ing for as," said Trantham, who is
favor the tougher budget-making style he advocates, in mistrust of the
• now milldng 77 cows '\'l'ith the help
federal government he constantly CriticiZes, in the defmntial handling be
of just a~ of helpers. But the·
usually gets at the Capitol.
. .
laws of supply and demandJare not
That same uncertainty led the major pany presidential nominees tD
favorable to farmers. The harder;
cata' to him before be retUrned to lhe 1992 campaign, and to go easy on
dairy fariners wort, 1he more they
him when he did.
seem to auuggt'e. · • · ''4't.... .~·""""
So President Clinton's economic plan is up against pressures from
·"We just try tli 'Diilk~~ ~
three directions.
out
of everything,'' saici"MMItlliiiG,
· While Democratic leaders are solidly with ~Urn, party conservatives
"We
just buy more cowa and 1rf to
want the administration to come up .with additional cuts in federal spend·
milk
our
way out of it, and it JUSt.
i11g. In the divided Republican minority, one bloc is content to replay the
doesn
'l
work."
complaints of tax·and·spend habits lhat didn't work against Clinton dur·
ing the campaign, anolher is at work on GOP counter-proposals. .
Then lhere's Perot, now as critical of lhe Democratic administration as
:rrantham, a former grocer, was:
be was of its Republican predecessor, and cranking up the mo~nt thai
shocked recently wbcn a lll,an that,
won him 19 percent of the vote as a third presidential cllndidate.
just opened a grocery cham near
VNCERTAIN
. Tbe president can win in Congress with the votes of the DemOCJBiic
Trantham's farm raved about his .
majority. But bipartisan backing of the economic plan would be more
dairy depanments' profits. lit fact,
effective in buildin~ economic confidence than party-line votes or narrow
the grocer told Trantham that the.
· ~oogressional margms.
new stores were. built with dairy.
Maybe thai should be tripartisan, counting PeroL
depanm~t P.rofi!J. :rranthaln· cor-}
Congress is goinjlto pass an economic program, probably by midsum·
reeled him: I said, No,lbey WCB1.
mer, so 1he debate ISn't about whether but what tD do; about 1he halance .
built out of the dairy farmers ',
lietween cuts in spending and increases in raxes, and about the scope of
backs.···
. '
deficit reduction.
.
SEEN
IT
Jack Anderson lind Michel .
In the circumstances, the demands to do more could work ro Clinton's
Binsteln are writers for United.
w:~
advantage by spreading 1he responsibility and the political risks of stepS
Feature Syndl.aate, Inc. .
that aren't going to be popular, for all the polls reflecting a mood for
action. Every dollar is going to have to come out of somebody's benefits
ol 10111ebody's pockeL .
,·
.
So Clinton has been telling the critic$ he's prepared to get tougher and
cut more, if lhey will get specific and show the administration where.
Some are, some lire ~
Tbe devastating explosion at the unknown is in marked contrast to Center's da)-time
quit and the press's attention.
Perot, who had applauded Clinton's Feb. 17 address to Congress, came World Trade Center m New York the concrete facts that are known. sought cmploymtnt elsewhere.
has shown the .-.y in
ro the Capitol on Tuesday complaining thai it .,..asn 't detaUed·eriaagh, and City was not, unfortunately, a Seven levels of concrete and steel
But
1here
are
no
signs
of
nationas
have various other offii:illl ril;lt 1
} saying thai Americans "do not want a program where taxing and spend·
shockipg surprise. It occurred after at tl:te base of the World Trade al hyateria and few politicians ·try· as Secretary of' State Ww'D
ing occurs firSt," with cuts promised later. That's been a Republican line. more than two decades of intema·
_,.
ing to exploit the situation for Chrislopber. Their eillnple llh9uld
He spent 1hnee hours before a joint coml!liuee on congressional reform, tiona! terrorism had made bomb- u .I..I"
short-term advantage. Thai may be heeded. most ~c:,ularly by
brushing its topic and lecturing mstead on the economy and the Clinton ings, hijackings and the random nOuulng
change somewhat when and if the gatelceepcq of televiaion. F~.
pogrmn. That kind of leeway is not available to just anybody.
murder of innocent civilians a com·
identity of the terrorists or let us lio~ that those with the
Perot used it ro complain about Washington-speak; saying Americans monplace on the evening newa. It Center were reduced to a huge deranged killers is established, but responsibility for such things are ~
Want plain language on lhi!Jgs like tax increases and emergency appropri· came after Beirut, once noted for crater wbcn the bomb went off on not·by mDCh. As noted earlier, we working even no'\'1' on plans to con-.
·alions thai add to the defiCit but aren't counted by Congress.
. its civilized charm, had been tom Feb. 26. Five or more people were .have become sophisticateS in the lain the inevitable consequences if.
"Let's just call a snake a snake," he said. He also .advocated calling asunder by terrorism and JBised 10 killed. Several hundred were- matter of terrorism. It is a reality, the World Trade Center bombing is :
dogs dogs and elephants elephants, all in a performance that drew an the quasi-respectability of civil injured. And50.000 ~I.e at work enlarged somewhat in popular fie· only the fust of many.
unusual rebuke from a Democmtic senawr who said Perot was delivering war. It brought home to 1he Unifed in the two towering buildings were lion, television dramas .and movies,
Almost as terrible as the explo8IIUIId bites inslead of details.
Statcs what has become sickcniit!l· . imperiled by a b~t lhat was. clear· but familiar to virtually everyone sian itself is the unavoidable trulh
:; "I think you shoWd start checking ~ racts a litde more and stop lis· ly familiar "? Great ~ritain, prevt· . IY intended ro. bll and .m~tm far as a fact of modem life. ~ving lhat the list of potential culprits is a.
telling to lhe applause so much,'' Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada told him.
ously the qwntessential symbol of more human !Jeings than It did..
watched Europearut and lsntelis and long one. Cause-driven zealots ·
. That did not dampen the 8J!Pla1SSC of Ptlqt's supportm. It is a sign of decorous law and order, from Lon·
The m~ effects aJe obvtous. Turks and countless others Wl'cstle speaking in a wide vitriety of lan- •
the support that makes politicians pay $pecial heed to him. Perot made a don ro Nonhcm Ireland.
The 350 .basincsses lhat have ~ terrorism to no better lhan a dmw guages and seekin~ wildly different
point of telling the. committee that be knows the mood of America !-&amp;r&amp;ely ~use the fact of ter· housed IR the Tn~e. Center .w1.ll for so long, most of us know that goals are united m rCJiarding the
fruslnlion and distrust, be said- bec:•nse be !!oes state to slate, sees five ronst assaults ts so commonplace, . lose upwns of a b!llion do~ m there are no easy answers to its United States as the chJCf obstacle•
Q. six groups of avemge citizens a weekend. His United We Stand Amcri· thebombingin¥anbauanneednot revenue and relocation~ C1o/• infection. ~care .not going to.be in their way or the. "great Satan"
c;a has pun:hased television time for a national rown hall broadcast on have an cndunng e.ffect on t!le state an~ f~eml authonue~ Vftll stampeded 1n10 police state reacuon responsible for their troubles. '
March 21: He said his organization is going to stan citing samples of port nation's p~yche. While we WO!Jid spend millions of dollars ~1fung merely because of one bloody acL
Deranged individuals responding ro
i)arrel spending to call attention to government waste.
all be conslllerably betler off with· through 1he wreckage for evidence
However if the bombing jn Voices that only they em bear walk
· It adds up to influence and political clout, hard to read. le~ alone bar· out t,he incessant speculation that and !fliCking down lh~ ~· downtown N~w Yark turns out to lhe streets of most towns and cities. • ·
ness.
bas Jammed the newspapers and It will~ tens of m!IIioris of dol· have been a cleclamlion of war,the
But we know this, and have .
:. Sen. Roben J. Dole, the Republican leader, suggests that Perot be clutlered the ai~aves, even that la!S, ~ more, to repau th~ damage consequences for civil liberty could known it for a long time. Ameri·· ·
made chainnan of a White House commission to dig out wasieful spend- babble has testtfied more to t~e and 1.mprove the clectncal a.nd be severe: Metal detectors and cans arc no lonacr innocents
Ing. There's no hint of imerest in any such assignmenL
near-banahty of the. even~ m ·secunty systems whose defective other forms of screening put into abroad in an evil world, if we ever
:: But there is a reason for such suggestions. "You know," Dole said, today's world than to ns untque design was exposed by lhe bomb· place in American airports afler were. That is the Chief reason the;
;'the Ross Pero( voter out lhcre is very important.''
distinction.
ing.
. hijacking became fashionable public has reacted so calmly 10 the•
As Ibis is wriuen,lhe identity of
The psychological effects are could become as familiar in com· lclhal horror in New York. 'It Is also
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and colum- the criminals who planted the less tangible but no less real. For mercia! buildings as they are. in the best reason to !Jelieve that if.
•ist for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and bomb is unknown. So is the exact the tbouslnds of men, women and executive branch departments in more is 10 come, we win behave no'
ilational politics for more than 30 years.
natwc of the bomb itself, which ~hildren who were temporarily Washington today. Tbe temptation less mtionally.
•
had the blast effect of up to 1,300 tntpped in their offJCCs, on eleva· to mount a witch hunt might be
pounds of dynamite. That has not tors and in the stairwells high irresistible to officeholders looking
Hoddlng Carter III, rorllt'er .
deterred the mass media. Abhor· above polind. recurrent nighunares for a popular issue. We Americans State Department spoke1man·:ring a vacuum, they have filled it will be the least of their problem. have done worse with less pretext and a~·wbml• reporter, edl- ::
'
with expens - self·atyled and real For 101110. lifetime uaWDa is gu&amp;r· in the past.
, tor and publlsber, .. praldent or '
•''
- advancing..tbeorics of nre inge- anteed. Fer others, wariness about
That is why restraint should be Main Street, a Wuhlngtop, D.C,. .
nuity and flimsy substanCe. Rarely 1he safety of lheir environment will the order of 'the day while the bued television procluetlon com· ;
~ave so !DilDY hobby-horses been almost surely ~ve WJ!Y 10 f~. A investigation goes forward,
pany and a ayndicated writer for :.
n:ldcn w1th sw:b abandon;
year hence, It w1U be mstrucuve ro reatraint by the press no lass than Newspaper Enterprise Alsoda· •
The theorizing about the see ho)V many of the World Tmde by those whOse voices command . tlon.
·
~~

B:y

•

k AnuerSOn
d

an
hae·l Binstein ·.

In a two-party town,
Perot makes three

•lco1umbusl41•

'

-------.Area deaths-.- -

!m;

me

"',er

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Saturday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Super Lotto
8·22·25·36-3843
(eight, twenty-two, twenty-five,
thirty-six, thirty-eijht, forty·three)
Tbe jackpot is $4 million.
Kicker
2-6-9-8·3·8
(two, six, nine, eight, three,
eight)
. ·
Pick 3 Nnmbers
3·8·7
·.(three, eight, seven)
Plck4 Numbers
9-6-S-8
&lt;nine, six, five, eight)

Joseph Perkins

LUre.,

;

~

Steel and aavenine.
For lhe beaec JlBrl of two JC!Ifl,
1he equanimous Salk baa indulged
1he likes of Venturi and other aft·
ica within the architecture establishment. He baa 10110 10 considerable lengths to Incorporate
IIOIIIC of dJClr ~: Inmislnt: the clbtlnce
con the new
blilldina aad the ICahn buildlnJ.

~:w~~:~,.:;..~~~~~-=

~the new •~ lOwer

Yet tbe ICahn zealoll retiain
unmolll1io4 It 111111m IIDl 10 them .
tltat ~ dtree deca+l lite ICieD·
dall 'lt Salk have OUipiWD lbeir
quaNr~. Or that' the mut« plaD

JCallll cnw up bllCk 111 1962 llidcl·

Cloud Cuckoo Land the an:hitec· :
111re cliQue ~e,.,_, They 111e Inter· •.
asted only with dte l'anit of build-' :'
lnp, JIOl dte lilll:tion. To diem, dte •;
dclip il the llliq. Tho people who ::
mlllt live or wort wlthii a IIUiidina :•
are~•ahaalhoeaahl
:~
Wltal we •ve wkrnu~ in the •'

OftiOied by IJteir _ . ..,

IIMI•T•

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·:
:·

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.,.. To wit, I NCIIIl p' lid 1111111-: :;
ikiu to lbo ICihD~ KlmheJI •'•
M 'IIIII Itt Part W.
r.M,- •·
qnaobod. Aid a Jec:ellt r,zoud 1:
eapaniiDD of Marc:elll.r'l :
Wbltally Mueum In New York: •:
•

later c:onltruc:don of the , City WM dnianecl.
bulk!lnp tot wblcb S.. II alloiK 10
,bnllt JIIOIIIIII. Tbelr IIOie COIICCID Is
lhll JCallll'l oriPI8I wort remain

' ~ted

·

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a.. - ...........................................11.80
a.. Mantlo ........................................... .

&lt;lne V..r...........................,_.,___,,.188.JO
IDIIlL&amp; COPY
....,
PalCB

JIOI"cd Marpret Nic:boll to VloGL

O.ily. ..................li'··· · · ···············~--21 c...

'
~""'oto.lrirw 1a poiy 11oo -~

may tendl in advance dinct ID The
Doily !lonlinel 011 I lhNO, lb • t2

-~
Ncr ' Hell
Am~• when!

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be"... -

• lt)' IMfl
l'lomo

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ODe wonders in what kind of

v

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·

•

Sunday • 1:57 Lm. MlcJd1eport 10 Villa&amp;e Manor ApaiDiletlll for
Shirley Jlooalt who was 11UD to I(MC; 6:'38 a.m. l'omeloy to Lin·
c:oiD ID1I for A.Jl. KniJ1b1 wlio - rateD 10 Jllee'¥1 Vllley Holpi111; 12:2!1 p.m. Middlepoct 10 Mlt1belry A~ for llBtb MaDk who
wU taken 10 HMC73:02 p.m. Middleport Ill Lolau Street for
Oeorp Skllr who - t1bD.to VMH: 3:50 p.a
10 Clrlelco SIIMt for LeoDa HuiJIJanldo Wll liken 10 VMH; 4:08 p.m.
Hkld'tp"l to 0raJ MilDor
Ill for TOlly Uttle wlto W!l5
llillaiiO HMC; 6:44 p.m. MI--.- 10 O..oabtuuk Catter for Mil·
dNd Fowler who wu
l'VH; 6:54 p.m. Mlcldl~ to
Pllmcr SINe! lor RabiD Pride111001o who - lllltiiiDSplilted to
ChildND'IIIaltilllln Calumbal Yia OriDt LiCeFIIIht,
Maldlr • 2:49a.m. Mlddlepgrt 10 O..oabtuot~lor J Spnt* w6o- traDipllrlld 10\'Mit

411'

- - - Ctootil

No injuries were repon.ed. The vehicle sustained hea vj, dis·
abling damage and was towed from the scene.
•
John T. White, 31, 6S Tarklin Road, Lancaster, was cited early
Sunday morning for D.U.l., fleeing and eluding, no operator's
license and resisting arrest.

Uttill of the Melp CoUnty Emergency Medical Service respond· ·
.
' ed to 13 calla for essi•anre during 1he weelceDd.
Saturday - 10:30 a.m. Pomc:roy to Puituoy Nursing Rehabilita·
lion Ccnra for Marpret Reipi who waa tranSported 10 O'Biencss
Memorial HOipitallD Athens; 3:2S p.m. Racine Fire Department
and 1qlildl responded 111 Pine Grove Rciad for an auto.~lc in high
Wlla'. BID Priltl, Bill Woodruff llld TyiOil Clark were triDSJIOI1ed
10 Vellllllll Me111or1a1 Holpllal; 4:5S p.m. Racine to Pomeroy Pike
for S.. Smldl who wullkeD 10 VMH; .5:30 p.in; Pomeroy and
RlclnD lqllldlllllhe Mlplw Allu1mCIIII in Pomeroy, Racine ll'IIIS-

'!'he 0111y Sondnel, 111 C...rt St.,
Poon«oy; OHio 4676ll.
.

-

in the grant money, is on making
learning a life-long interest.
In her talk to the at!visory board
which met at the Meigs County
Public Libmry, Curry emphasized
die necessity of marketing the program through news releases, .paid
advertisements, and olher methods.
She discussed methods of con·
ducting the assessment to deternUnc needs and interests. Tele·
.phone calls, written questionnaires,
mailings, sending materials home
wilh school children were all sug·
gested. She said that the best the
committee can expect is a one·lhird
reiW'II rate. .
The needs assessment is
required as a part of receiving this
year's grant from 1he Ohio Depart·
ment of Education and is consid·
ered imponant in determining the
types of community education programs 10 be offered. It was suggest·
ed that existing programs should be
considered and drawn under the
umbrella. Programs for children
right after school have proven popular in some. places, she said.
Curry tallced about her program
in BeiJl!C which sometimes offers
free classes and always uics to ,
keep fees low. She said instructors
are paid the same hourly rate
regilrdleis l!twut:stibjcerci bow:

Metzenbaum may run again

EMS responds to 13 caUs

Now Vorl&lt;, Ntooo York 10017.

., eu.tor ot

.
Shade River Lodge No. 4S3
F&amp;AM Will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the lod'-e hall in •Chester.
RefreJ!Iments ~ill be·~~.e ,"'

.A Chesler man was injured but refused treaunent following a
moton:ycJe.vehicle acc;ident Friday evening, 1he Gallia·Meigs Post
of the SIIID Hi&amp;Jtway Patrol reported.
.
. .
According to tbe report, 1odd L. Lee, 22, Scout Camp Road,
Chester, was wellbound on Swe Route 2A8 in Chester Township
riding an off·nlld motn!Cycle with no liahts when ·an eastbound
'vcbicle drivCI! by Bryan D. Dint, 23, ..51615 S.R. 681 Reedsville,
auanpled·lll tum left into a parking area and was struck by Lee.
Lee was cited for no mocoo:ycle endorsement and failure to file
vehicle registration. Tbe moton:yclc and vehicle both sustained
light damage IIICI 'were driYCD from the scene.
· •

Member: 'Mte Auod&amp;Lid. Pt.i, and lhe
Ohio Ncw•papr ....._.lian, Natiaul
Advertiai"' Hepnlentati¥e, Bnaaham
Ne-por Solow, '133 'l1rirol .........
P06TMAST£R:

Lodge to meet

Man injured in accident

Poi•••

,,

No. 9053 ·.vm meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at tlJe post borne. AI\
members are urged to attend.
'

COntinued rroin page 1

(lJ81'8JIMIII)
l'ob)iohod every, oftomoon. Moncloy
tlo._h Ftitlooy; Ill C... SL , ......MY.
et.io by Ill• 01110 Valley Pul&gt;Hohlrw
CGmpAny/Multtrned'- Inc., PaiWIO)I,
Ohio 45769, Ph . 11112·21158. Socond ct..
~paid •~
Of· Ohio.

;·.

laat two declldas or 10 II fonulloD
of wbat mlaht be called a Dead
Arehilecta Sclc:lety./uty popowl tD
add or IUbtncl fnllll lbo work of
late great an:hitecll II ~

!

..-~Local briefs ... ___,_. .,. ......

The Daily Sentinel

7

Berry's World

Architecture: form over function?

Ways to carry out a local assess·
mcnt of community education
needs were discussed by Karen
Curry of Belpre, Southeast Ohio
regional di(ector for the Ohio Com·
'munity Education Association, at
Thursday's meeting of the Meigs
Local Community EducatiOn Advi·
soryBoard.
Needs assessment is a fust step
in setting up a community educa·
tion program funded wilh a grant of
$2,500 from lhe State Department
of Education and a matching
amount from the University of Rio
Grande.
.
Janet Bolin has been hired as
·local director of the program which
is geared to develop plans for pro·
gnms which can be implemented
next fall. The emphasis, as poinred
. out by John Amott who asstSted. in .
writing lhe progran\ which brought

CLEVELAND (AP) - Sen. published White House Bulletin
Howard Metzenbaum,· D-Ohio, that he isn't e9K:ctcd to seek a
:
says ii's possible thai he might run fourlh term in 1 .
"I was irritated, but I don't
for a fourth term in 1994. . .
' 'There is stili a real
sibility think I was mad. I am pretty thick·
that I may run," the 7~ear-old skinned,'' he said referring to the
Metzenbaum · said in an interview newsletter. It said Metzenbaum
published Sunday in The Plain was promoting his son-in-law,
Cleveland attorney Joel Hyatt, as a
Dealer.
successor.
"My opinion is if I decide' to
Metzenbaum could not · be
run, the people would not feel I
reached
Sunday night for corilment.
reneged on a commitmenL''
Tbe
only
phone listing for MetMetzcnbaum said in 1988 that
zenbaum
in
Cleveland
is 1he senahe would not seek office again ..U:
tor's
office,
where
a
!DCSsage
was
elected. "That is a long time ago,"
left seeking comment There was
he told the paper.
•.
Metzenbaum said be was iJritat- no answer at his Capitol Hill office.
VFW Puet to meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post ed over a report in the privately
•

Lottery ·numbers

\

coast. IW'IIing 10 snow ovemighL

Sunny skies were expected ro
stretch ICIUSS the soulhem tiel" and
up to ,the Dakotas in the nation's
midsection . In California, wbere
temperatures have soared to near
90 the past few days, a cooling
trend was expected to begin.
Scattered li~ht rain was expect·
ed in the Pac1fic Northwest as a
weak Pacific disturbance moved
onshore today.
Temperatures todaY were fore·

II

year, tripling ihe felony arrest rate
- to I 00 in December alone and creating a genentl atmosphere
of fear.
A series of crack-cocaine stings
and drunken-driving checkpoint
arrests helped force some of the
crime-bent workers out. Many
moved a half-hour north to Home·
stead, which was hit haid by the
storm.
"It's a big problem;' said Jack
Seagel , who beips run a campgroun.d here. "There's. a lot of
drugs, a lot of drinking."

Community needs speaker's to.p·ic

announcements--

niO'.iiJil
m:;g"'

C'--4 Ill

Clellan Siders •

Clellan George Siders, ,8S, or
Leona Mae Hubbard, 68, of
860
Logan St., MiddleJI!Irt; died
College Road. Synlljuse, died SunSunday,
Mareh 7, 1993, ur Veter·
day, March?. 1993 at Veterans 8111 Memorial
Hospital in Pollleroy.
Memorial Hospital,
·
He
was
born
dctob'cr 20, 1907,
~om on Sept. 24, 1924 at
at
Middleport,
of the late
Racine, she was the daughter of the William and Nancyson
Elizabeth Good
late Edgar Sayre and Minnie
Siders.
He
never
married.
McNickl~s. She wu a housewife
Mr. Siders is survived by a great
and a member of the Syracase Mis·
nephew
and a great niece, Kevin
sion Church, the Ladies Awtiliary and Matsha
Siders, Middleport. .
of the Disabled Americ111 VeterBurial
will follow at dte·caJVe·
. ans, and the Auxiliary of Racine .niencc of the family.
',
Post 608, Americattl.ei;ion.
Sbe il survived bY liet husband.
.
Meig~
Oris Hubbard, Syracuse; three
daughters and SOilS-in·law, Ltnda
Boosters to meet
and DOOald Vaa LangCII of Colum·
bus,AnnandltobertFeltyOfMari·
The Southern Junior High
....
and
R....__
A-'"boosters
will meet Tuesday at 7
and
eua.
""""SODSuu""
• . hi h hool
ny, Jr. d reggy
COlumbuS; two
and p.m. at ,,._
u .. Juruor g sc
.
a daughter-in-law, Wayne A. and
..
·
Shirley Hubbard, Pomeroy, and
Dance planned ·
Michael Hubbard, Syracuse; 13
There will. be . a round and
grandchildren, 111 great-anndchil· square dance Saturdal. fro~ 8· ~ 1
dren; and three slsteri, Ccn Wal· ·.. P·!D" .at the Rus~ll jluildlDg
lace of Racine, Edith Hoppes of Mtl1~1eld. Ram.bh!l Country will
Phoenix, Arizona, and Gladys provide lhe mUSIC.
Swinck .r i Brady Lake.
Dancellated
Besides her parents, abe wu
There
' will be a round and
preceded in clealb by three biOtltCrs,
square
daace
at the Old Legion
Everett. OliVer and Dale Sayre, and. Hall on South Fourth
Street in Mid'
two sisters, Mabel Pickens, and
dleport
on
Saturday
from 8-11:30
DeUaBnnch.
. .
.p.m.
with
music
by
CJ an&lt;l the
Funentl services will be held at · Country Gendemen. Admission
is
I p.m. Wednesday at the Syracuse free. Children are welcome with
Mission Church. The Rev. Roy
Mike Thompson will officiale and . adult supervision. Bring snacks for
·
burial will be in Plants Cemetery, ' the snacluable.Racine. Friends may call at tbe
'
Granae to meet
Ewing Funeral Home Tuesday
·The Rock Springs Grange will
from 6 ro 7 p.m.
.
·
meet Thursday at 8 p.m. There will
be special singing and tbe baking
contest will be held.
.

A.L

reside~

Jonas Salk baa set the IIChitec· your receat makeover of the San
tore cstablilhment atwitler by mov- DiCJO Muaeum of Contemporvy
ing forward with hi~ pfann~d · Art, which orl=y featured the
· OUL
expansion of the La Jolla, Callf., an:1t1tecttn or
~h comDiex that the late mod·
ernia Lcuil Kllhn dnlpecl for 111m
30 yean 110. To IIOIIIC minda, the
idea of adding atruclllrel to the
The museum .renovation waa
Salk INtitute II u Ulllltlnbble u praised - rilhtfully so - for
attaching arma to the Venua de beina respectful to am·. orialnal
Milo.
wort. By dte.-IObD,Ibe JliOAmon4 the :more prominent poied new east building of the
voices 10 1nvdllt apiJIIt the Salk Salk, designed by lll:hiiiCIIJac:k
expansion i1 die notecl 'arcbltec:t Mar•J••IIId Devid Rillebln, Is
Roben Venturi, who 11 one time cJasavm, d pnil8 for Ill fealty 10
studied under Kaha. In a recent KabD"• )lleriwnicllt. ·
published interview, Venturi·
Jona1 Salk eapre11ly cbo1e
blared: "I am llllllted at lite lack 11 M'riJU 1 llld R!NJwt 10 diiiJD
culture and the UfOIIDCe lhat •1 the •IICIUiw tar ltili!Ud'PM
behind this cleclllon. lt'l an an:lti- because lhoy worked aloDplde
tecltftl npcly...
Kahn OD 1M orillnal belldinll.
Why ye1, of coune, Mr. Yen·
arliiDII tiiiJoi!Dit, the new
11111. a .. you'D fcqive lite lllifler· • • IU&amp;as 'fllllt~M two 'tWinp ~
ina from t1ae 11 . . . . 6tl1 to •
lllliod by I Dlt 111*1 pluL Tltiy
1he dilfmnce betw- die pllmled a110 wtfl " ballt •atitly or conlldditiolll to the Salk Jllld!Die and c:Jile, wilb .....Ill of gila IIIII

W.VA.

&gt;Tqru~t, lliOidy cloudy. Low in' snow. Lows in the 20s. Hi~s in
the IIpper 201. Cl!anU of IIIOW is' · n!id·30s ro mid:.COs. Thursday, a
chance of min or snow. Lows in lhe
2(l percent. Tuesday, Plft)y cloudy..
Tbe ~Ugh in 1he mid-4lls.
. . upptt 20s to mid·30s. Highs in lhe
upJier 30&amp; ro mid-40s. J:'riday,. a
Extended forecast:
•
chance of snow. Lows in the 20s.
Wednesday throuah Friday:
Highs around 30.
·
.

Restraint needed after NYC bombing _~ :;..-'~~:

.•

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP)- proble~ - an!! crime.
" We have attracted all kinds of
Hundreds of unskilled laborers
flocked to south Florida in the people to the rebuilding effon,"
aftermath of Hurricane Andrew, said Joe AbreU, spokesman for We
expecting to be welcomed with Will Rebuild, a private group coi&gt;r·
open arms and steady work.
. dinating hurricane . recovery.
Many have ended up inslead In "Some of them have been terrific.
ramshaclcle camps, scrambling for Some of lhem have noL"
Many of the estimated 2,000
whatever work lhey cap fm"' while
avoiding ripoffs and fighting a rep- OUt·Of·State workers initially settled
utation - justified in some cases in the laid-back Upper Keys, where
they picked up the "roofers from
-as the "roofers from hell."
. ·
Authorities say many of those hell" rag.
They were ~lamed for one of
who arrived looking for work
brought wilh lheill drug and alcohol only two murders in the Keys last

_.._......;----Weather---~Wednesday, a chance of·rain or
· ~lh-ce~tj.aJ OliJo

Leona Hubbard

Sunset tonight at 6:31 p.m: Sun·
rise Tuesday at 6:52a.m.
ArOUlld the aatloll
Winter held 011 to the Northeast
today, while much ol the rest of the
nation wu expecting Spring~·Jike
weather two wcdts early.
Snow, rain and fog were report·
ed early today over the Great Lakes
region. Up to 2 inches of new snow
was expected from Lake Oritario to
the West Virginia mountains.
Scattered rain showers were
expecred near lhe Middle Atlantic

:'•.... '

.

cut to reach the 20s in 1he Upper
Great Lakes, the 30s and 40s fnlm
New England to the northenr •
Plaina; the SOl and (lOs ·lhe ;
nation ' s midsection and in the :
Pacific Northwest; the 70s from •
California to lhe Gulf Coast, wilh :
80s in parts of ihe Soulhwest and :
south Texas.
•
The high temperature for the ;
continental United States on Sun· •
day was 89 degrees at both Glen· :
dale and Monrovia, Calif.
:

•

'Roofers from Hell' haunt rebuilding efforts

. I

H51TANT

.·..
.•

I

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BILL CUNTON'S AMERICA

I)?WTI:UL

""·

%-

30

••'•

Parts of Ohio may get snow this evening

OHIO Wedthcr
Tuesday, March 9

\

The Dally ~ntlnei-P&amp;QII 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

s,.-

·

Failing grades
are blamed for
shoc;»ting incident

HALTOM CITY, Texas (AP)
- Failing grades and the discipline
that followed apparently provided
the spark that .caused an eighth· grader to open fire ftom his bed·
room window, killing a policeman
and serioasly injuring three neighbors before being shot dead.
Juan Ramon, 14, began shooting
Saturday afternoon and held police
at bay until early Sunday, when
they srormed the suburban home
and found him dead from a bullet
to the head.
·
Inside lhe barricaded bedroom,
police Cmdi:. Wayne McQueary
said the boy had stockpiled high·
powered rifles, handguns and shotguns belonging to his father.• a
police officer in nearby Hurst.
The eighth-grader ap11arently
had (Ceeived bid grac1es on a recent
report card and was ~ about
being disciplined by his parents,
McQueary said. Tbe parents report·
edly went out and left the boy
home ro ltUdy.
Earlier, Ramon had complained
about his grades, said a friend,
James SinJ!leton It.
"He failed three clasles on his
report card, ~ be Wa&amp; ~ng me
how much he hates to fail and
everythiq," Sinalelon said. ·
·
Neighbors in the quiet Port
Worth subdivision desCribed their
encounters with Ramon • coune·
Olil.

.. Yea tn1'am, no ma'am, 00,..
are you today," wu bow lleighbor
Cindy Coltm fOIIIOlllllcred
lllions with bini. "HI wu a vuy

COil-·

gobd kid.:'
ofticer
- Inhitbi1
-c:ar
·
al Tbe
times
wbilekilled
altling

after IDIWerina a call reponln,a
IUilfiro in 1he - . HI - idoatti·
fled • Gary Hllol, 48. • 18-yoar
pollco-.

...

many students they teach. Getting
the cooperation of janitors and
other auxiliary personnel is. impor·
tant ro the programs, she said, as
wen as involving local businesses
which sometimes provide scholar·
ships.
Members went into small
groups where they worked on lists
of item.s which might be included
on a potential local needs assess·
ment questionnaire.
During the business rneeting,
Bolin appointed Ruth Powers,
Mary Wise, and Kimberly Willford
to revise the proposed by-laws. Sbe
also announced lhe need for four
advisory c;ouncil members tD attend
a two week training session in
Hint, Mich, July 13-23. The grant
money will cover the reJ!istration
fee which includes lodgmg and a
meal allowance ~ well as training
supplies. Mrs. Bolin, and Suzy Car·
penter, secretary plans to attend.
Anyone else interested in going is
asked 10 contraCt Bolin.
·
Next meeting was:set for March
~3 at 7 p.m. at lhe libmry. At that
lime the local needs assessment
questionnaire win be developed.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions • Roberta
Thaxton, Racine;' ·Sara Smith,
Pomeroy.
· Saturday discharges - Thomas
Anderson, Mi(!dleport; Pamela
McKinney, Middleport; Mildred
Arnold, Pomeroy.
Sunday admissions • Melvin
Tracy, Coolville.
Sunday discharges · Gladys
Walburn, Middleport·, Roberta
Thaxton, Racine.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
. Discharges, March 5 - Alice
Shipman, Bpnnie Adkins, Miranda
Smith, Linda Aldridge, Christopher
Hill, Kendra Hill, Glenn V amey,
Mrs; Ronnie Maxson and son,
Hazel Brammer, Doris Adams.
· Amber Bazell, Terry Stephens,
Mrs. William DeWeese and daughter. George McCausland, Carrie
Saxon, Rosa Coughenour, Shawn
Cox, Katliccn Elliott, Janet Pettus,
and Trish Mitchell.
Birth~. March 5 • Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Barnette, daughter, Podlt
Pleasani, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. John
Roach, daughter, Hartford, W.Va.
Charles Shipman, son, McArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Stevens,
daughter, Oak Hill.
Discharges, .March 6 • Jessica
Burton, Terry Smith, Charles
Mugmge, Courmey Tibbetts, Callie
Turman, Ian Bapst, William
Woomer, Lyronda Delpdo, Jewell
Laudermilt, and Sue Wtnston.
Births, March 6 • Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Patricks, son, PatrioL
Discharges, March 7 - Chera
Beaver, Lenzy McCain, Jeremiah
Howard, William Vanco, Ramona
DaviS, Ricky Brooks, Mrs. Charles
Shipinan and son, Mrs. John Roach
and daughter, Mrs. Shawn Lanhart
and son, Destiny Laudersmilt,
Amanda McFann, Russell Johnson,
Kenneth Wood,• Ora Woods,
Melvin Sargent, and James Kinne·
man .
Births, March ·7, • Mr. and Mrs.
Kensey Elliott. aon, Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs. Robert vanHoose, cJauah·
ter, BidweU.

'

•
For their pan, some of 1he work· •
ers complain there has been vinual· :
ly no effon to help them fmd sbel· :
ter or steer them to work.
•
" I just came down here to help :
r.ut lhe place back together," said :
'Pops,' whose fust name is Pete. •
He didn't want to give his last ;
name.
!
"There's signs ail around that.
say 'We Will Rebuild.' Then wb~ ·
don' t they help the people wllq
came here to help them?'"
Prjvate groups have set up 1J8in,;
ing programs, but they have con~
centrated on helping Dade County'

==t~~:~!t:~;s~:rc;:

ting bogged down in trying to
obtain permits and not being able
. to get recovery work.
,,
Because the jobs are sporadic,
many of the new arrivals can't
· afford ~Is or apartments.
·,,
William Nickdow, 44, from .~
Lancaster, Pa., lives with his wif~ •
Faye and .their tw 0 mixed·breedi
puppies under a tarp.buik tent in a ·
clearing just off U.S. 1.
"We're surviving, but it's not,
what we were expecting." Nick··
dow said, thick smoke blowing
from the bum' wood being ased .
to cook a pot o'fL::.
Police have cleared some of the ,
camps after re~ J)ll)blems witlr :
excessive dnnking and alcohol,.·
related brawls.
,
On Feb. 3, a 29-year-old Ohio
man died when. his pickup truck'
was engulfed in flaines·thal spreadfrom his campfire while he slept in
lhe cab.
·
'
Police say he and olher worketshad been drinking before going to'
sleep, leaving the rue unattended.
"Pops," 49, said be's worked at
landscaping, painting, Sheetrock~
wywall and concrete jobs, "any ~;
. lhmg I can get my han~ on, •• since
arriving around Thanksgiving from
Huntsville. Ala.
'·
He said he's learned 10 demaitif
cash pay at the -end of each work·
day.
·
,
&lt;
"Some people will take advan·
rage of you," he said. "One boy:,
war~ 40 hours and lhcn 1he guyrook off and never paid him."
.
Like others in the camp, he said;
he likes 1he warm weather in south
Dade County and isn't anxious to" ,
leave.
·
•
"I
bee
d ··
d
got
ran Cigarettes an
.
anything you want to.eat,'' he said,'
stirring a savory-smelling brend of,
ground turkey, ravioli, spaghetti
and jalapeno saocc over his Cole-'
man stove. ''IIik'e it here. All I ..
need is a steady job.''
.•

Stocks
Am Ele Power....................36 1/8
Ashland Oil........................28 3/8
AT&amp;T.. .................. :............56 7/8
Bank One...........................51 7/8.
Bob Eo:ans ......................... 18 ,
Chamung Shop.................. l6 1/8Chmp Industrics ................. 11 ·
City Holding............. .........2l 3/4
Federal Mogul... ................ .l6 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 72 S/8
Key Centurion ...................22 1/2
Lands End .......................... 2A S/8:
Limited Inc.............. ......... 25 7/8
Multimedia Inc..................33 3/4
Point Bancorp ....................13 l/2'
Rax RestaUJBRL .................. I/4
Reliance Electric.................21 3/4.
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 191/Z.
Shoney's lnc .......... ............ 22 1/4 ·
Srar Bank .......................... .37
Wendy Int'l ........................ l3 1/8
Worlhington lnd ................ 2S
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Securities, Inc., o ·
GaUipolis.

JOH" A.
WAD£, •• D. INC.
EAR- NOSE -THROAT •
ALLERGY
BOARD CERTIFIED
SPECIALIZING IN
•ADULT &amp; PEDIATRIC
ALLERGY
ottEAAJNQ AIDS
•RECURRENT EAR
INFECTIONS IN CHILDREN
•AITHAM
•HEADACHES
-RUNNY NOSE

•INORINQ
-MANAGEMENT OF SKIN
FACIAL LESIONS
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT
ACCEPTED
•

675·1244

Slltt 112, Ylley Dr.,
Pt. Plel•t, \ft

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By BARRY WILNER
· career-high with 24 points and Ray in 'the Sun 8elt Cooference semifi:
AP SporU Writer
. Owes added a ciUCCr·high 19 for nals. He SCOied J4 ol his 18 poiniS
in the second half as lhc Privaleel!l
It was a day for low-profile pro- Arizona (22-3, 15-1).
(26-2) won !heir 14th in a row.
' grams perlulps the last of lbc seaNo. 7'K•n••s 74
No. 16 LouilvtJJe 8J
son. '
'
No.ll OklahOma State 73 .
Sure top-ranked North Carolina
·Rex Walters bad a career·htgh
· Notre Dame68
beat No. 8 Duke 83-69 and No. 6· 27 points, with three key threeThe visiting Irish ICOied the fii'St
. Arizona took Stanford 94-80. No. 7 pointers in lbc closing minutes in a 14 points of the game, but
Kansas finished the Big Eight regu· game
lbc Big Eight's top . Louisville charged back behind
Jar season by edging No. 21 Olda- two teams
irs 1DJ1 two players. · Dwayne Morton's 14 points and
homa Swc 14-7:!'.
Host Oklahoma State 7-footer G~g Minor's 13.
.
Most of ihose 1e1111s will be in Bryant Reeves, considered the
Notre Dame (9-18) closed its.
lbc NCAA tournament. but none Of front-runner for conference playe~ season wilh seven straigbt defeats.
them clinched spots on Sunday. of the year, had 28 poiniS and nine
No. 20 Massach•tts 75
Tennessee-Chattanooga did. So did rebounds. But Walters turned the
St. Bonaventure 61
COJ)pin State and Northeast gameforKansas(24·S,ll-3).
At Philadelphia, Derek KelLouisiana.
·
The Cowboys ftnished 19-7, 8- logg's career-high 19 points helped
Chatlanooga won·the poscseason 6.
Massachusetts (21-6) survive a
No.13 New Orleans 73
tournament in the Soulbcrn Cmfershaky start. Five pili~ scored in
ArkaiiBU State 59
encc, beating East Tennessee Swc
double figures for the defendilig ·
At Biloxi, Miss., New Orleans' champion.Minutemen (21-6).
86-75. The Mid-Eastern Athletic
IOUI1ICY went to Copp_il! Swc, 80- Reggie Ganett came out of a slump .
53 over Delaware 'State. NE
Louisiana was an 80-66 victor over
Texas-San Antonio for the South.·
land crown.
Already in the tournament are
No. 2 Indiana, winner ·of the Big
Ten, ind No. 6 Arizona, which has
.clinched the Pacifit·lO crown. Ivy
League champion Penn also has
made lbc 64-lellll field, which will
be announced next Sunday,IS have
Coastal Carolina in the Big South
and Tennessee State of tho Ohio '
Valley. ,
.
Tonight, berths in the Metro
Allantic, Colonial Athletic, Missouri Valley, Sun Belt and West
Coast will be decided.
In other games involving lllllkcd
teams, No. 3 Michigan took Michi·
gan State 87-81 in overtime;
fourth-ranked Kentucky beat Flori·
da 85-77; No. 13 New Orleans
moved into the final of the Sun
Belt tourney wilh a 73-59 victory ·
over Arkalfsas State; No. 16
Louisville manhandled Notre
Dame 83-68; and No. 20 MassachusettS won a fli'St-roemd game
-in the Atlantic 10, beating St.
Bonaventure 75~2.
UT'-Cbattan~ga 116
E. Teanessee St. 75
The Moccasins (26'-6) ended
. East Tennessee's 14-game Southern Conference tournament winning streak and avenged a loss' in
the 1992 tide game to ETSU. Chat·
ranoo~a. which led by IS many as
22 pomts in the opening half, bas
won 10 straight games and 22 of
24. The two lo~ were by a com·
bincd duee points.
.
T.OO LATE - Duke's Bon, Hurley (left) Is too late to ltop
CoppiD SL 80, Delaware St. 53
North Carolloa•il Derrick Phelpl (14) from m•kla1 his JDOve to the
The nation's longest winning boop duriDg SUDday's ACC &amp;ame at Chapel HW, N.C., ·where the ·
streak continued as Coppin State llost Tar Heels WOD 83-69. (AP)
,
·.
won its 16th straight. Stephen
Stewart scored 24 points in the
MEAC championship game:
Coppin State (22-8) l!eld
Delaware State to 27 pm;er~t shooting frQm the floor.
NE Louisiana 80
New Orleans, A.rkansas. Utah, .
By JIM O'CONNELL
Texas-San Alltonio 66
Louisville, Iowa, Purdue, UNLV .
AP Basketball Writer
At Monroe, La., Ryan Stuart
North Carolina, l'lhich capped and Massachusetls.
.
bad 23 points and ll ·~bounds for iiS ACC cllampionship regular seaThe last five were Oklahoma .
Northeast Louisi8r!8, which won its son with an easy win over Duke, Swe, xavier of Ohio, Tulane. newfounh straight Southland Confer· easily held tho No. 1 spot in the comer New Mexico State lind
ence tournanlent Northeast (26-4),
o11 basketball Utoda
Brigham Young.
winner of 12 in a row. set a school c
Tar Heels ~3) ~ over
record for victories.
lbc top ranking last week and then
New Mexico Swc (23-6), which
, Keith Johnson scored 14 points beat Wake Forest and the Blue clinched the Big West title this
and had seven assists and seven Devils to fmish 14·2 1nd win what week, returned to. the nlnkings for
steals for the Indians, who scored was considered lbc riation's tough- the first time.since the last 11
24 poiniS off 19 turnovers,
est conference by two game~. They weeks of the 199()..91 seuiln when
No. 1 N. Carolina 83
received 59 first-place votca and the Aggies got as high as 11th .
f:lo. 8 Duke,69
1;617 points from the nationwide They have won their last five,
A 16-0 run to open the second panel of writers and broadcasters.
including a 90-88 victory over
half lificd top-ranked North CaroliIndiana (26·3), the Big Ten UNLV.
na over iiS local rival. The host Tar cb,ampion, held second with four
.·
Heels (26-3, 14-2) already had No. 1 votes and 1,541 points.
St John's (17-9) dtopp¢ froia
clinched first place in the ACC; Michigan, which su.staincd half Its
the
poll after being 2'th last wcet, · ,•
Duke (23-6, 10-6) could only rmish tosses thia season to conference ~oe
The
Redmcn, the surpriac 1111m of.
third
in lbc Williams
leaauc. had a career· Indiana, moved up one place to
Donald
the Big East, had a chance 19 tie
high 27 points for the Tar Heels.
third. Tbe Wolvennes (24 -4) got Seton liall for the title, bupho
Pirates prevailed .92-73 in lhe regu- ,.
No. 3 Mlcb1aan 87
lbc othez two fli'St-plac:e votes.
·
Mli:h~an State 81 (OT)
Kentucky (23-3) and Vanderbilt Jar-season finale.
,
(25-4) gave the Sontheastan ConLouisville
(18-8)
·
and
Purdue
Juwan owatd had five of his ference the fourth and ftfth teams
(17-8) made the week's blgc~t
19 points in overtime for Michigan, in the Jillion. The Wildcats (23-3), Jumps,
each improving six plces
an NCAA finalist last year 11111 is who moved !IP 0110 place, flllishcd
m
die
voting.
The Caldinals, wllo
hoping for a top seed this March. one game behind vanderbilt (2S-4)
woo
the
Metro
Conf~ with 10
Michigan (24-4, 13-3) took a quick in lhe SEC East The ComiiiCICims
11-1
league
mark,
beat Virginia
79·76lead on a free throw by Chris were sevenlh last week.
Tech
and
Noue
Dame
1111t week to
Webber and Howard's lay-in in
Arizona (22-3), the Pac-10 move to No. 16. 1)le Bollerm8ters
~
overtime.
,
champion which had its ~~r,e evened ll!cir Big Ten reccrd at 8-8
Webber led Michigan with 21 winning streak snapped by · or·
wilh wins ovet Michi
Slalc and
points. ·
nia lilt week, dropped from lllird Iowa
and
jumped
ro
No. 4 Keatucky 85, Florida 77
10 · th Kan as (244-!") th B1·
Kentucky blew most of a 17- Eight
••xchamp,
·
us up.,.one
• toe sev-g
moved
point second-half lead be(ore male· enth and was followed by Duke
Utah (22-S)' had alleady locked j
tnjl 12 free throws in llle last five . (23-6),
East w1nnc:r Scion Hall np the Western Athletic Collfor24 -6)
m~~ Prickett made five free (Stale
ACC runner-up Florida ence litla when it lost to New Mex· :
(22-8),'
.
ico and TelW-El Paso last week.
throws down the stretch and T!fvis
Cincinnati led the Second Ten The Utes fell six places torl:Sth, the
Ford added three to finish wilh 23 and w11 followed by Wake Forest. week's ~t mop.
points. Jamal Mashburn, acoreless
from the r!Cid in the second half,
when he lOOk only one shot, had 16
Tax Levy
HouseTralle.n~
points for Kentucky (23-3).
·No. 6 Arizona !14, Stanford 80
All owner. ol haual trailers having a ••ua In
AESPOIIBIBIUlY
The visiting Wildcits avoided a
th1 Stilts al Ohio ·•nd aubjiCI to the tu ••
Cll'
HOUSE
second straight upaet In the Bay
provlclld .tlove MUST register such 11111111 1
TIIAUR
Area·. Ed Stokes matched hia
Willi the County Audllar an or priOr to lhl date
OWNERIIIIIIX Is dtll in$1 pay~.

a·

7
7

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DOWIIIG CHILlS
MULUIM-11

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Upc~n the tranlfer of
tralllr the Dll'lllcale • ·
· shall 11P1111, and th1 -~111.1
.lmmiCiallly I1IIIICM
trdlr. .
.

IIISUUNCE
111 Sec••• S t . =
YOUIIIDIPIIII
IIIIITI.IIIII

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Every operiiOr of • houulralllr CIIIUit ar park
or •verr owner of PICIPIIIY UNCI tor !illoh
puiJIC!II wh111 lhtM 11 no ope1ew lhllllii'IJ
a nigllllit alllll . _ t11111r1 whlah lllliM uu
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« PfOPtrly.

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. IIICI1161

.,_____;,.,~:.__-_..:...___~----

'

. Matt Powell fired in a career
high of 41 points, but it Wllln 't
enough for. the University of Rio
Grande Itedmcn to overcome an
aggressive shootinj!: performance
)ly Urbana Univ~lythat resulted
in a lOS-89 loss for lbc Rc:dmen in
the Dislri&lt;:t 22 Division I semifinals • Urllana Saturday.
:rhe Blue Knights (24-6), the
second-highest 1e1111 in the diyi.
sion, will f.:e the top-soeilcd University of.Findlay (25· S) Tueadav
at Findla for lbc diviaion cham '·
onship. ion Niekamp's Oilen ~
who 1ast beld a District 22 champi·
onship in 1986 - buried fourthplace Cedarville 88-66 .in Satur·
· day's olher semifinal game, also
played at Fmdlay.
.

••

••'

t

'•
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· Third-seedecf Rio Grande exiled
the playoffs and caUed an end to
the 1992-93 season with a 25-8
.showing.
Powell, the 6-4 sophomore
guard from Barnesville who
eniCrcd lbc postaeason game will! a
pct•IIIDe scoring average of 23
points, w.- only one of duee Red·
men allowed by Udlena's defense
to break into double tigw'CS. That
defense, c:aptaiucd by lhc veteran
trio of Jerry Ligon and brothers
Wade and Wyatt Goins,.comple·
menred the Blue Knights' shooting
game by forcing the Redmen to
foul oo lbcm early and often.
.. Not only did this tactic give
UrbliJII more chances at the free
throw line (21 of 28 attemptS for 75

percent to

Rio Grande's nine of 11
for 8t8) butJt also resulted in tile
fouling out of Rcdmen slllrU:d" Jeff
Brown IMld Jack Morgan.
Urbana shot out to an early lead
and was 71.4 pen:ent from lbc field
to lead Rio Grande with a 28-poinl
margin at the half. However, the
Redmen stayed in the game and
came as close as nine in lhc ,f'Uial
nine minutes of the second period
lhanks to Powell's shooting pcrlormance, in which he scored a dozen
two-point goals, four duee-pointers
and all five of his foul shot
attempts. In addition, Powell
brought down seven of llle team's ·
37 rebounds.
.
The loss of Brown and Morgan,
coupled with high scoring from the

Ooinses, Ligoo, forwanl ·Art Jamea
and center Marc EvOI'Sley kept Rio
Grande from 11euing over the hump
in lhe game's fmal minlllel.
·
Brown sc&lt;ml IS points, added
seven boards to the tolll and was
credited with six assists, while co. Troy Donaldson ended with
rmarkers, 10 rebounds and
another six assists for Rio Grande.
For the Blue Kni11hts, James bad
eight and Eversley ·seven of the
team's 30 rebounds, while Wade
Goins contributed nine assists and
WyatllJoins chipped in with sevcri.
Rio Grande shot47,9 percent on
field goals (35-73, 10-32 from the
duee for 31.3 percent) to Urbana's
58,5 (38-65, eight of 22 from the

outside for 36.4 percent). Rio
G.randc endured 23 tlimOvers and
Urbina beld its loael to IS.
Box ICOI'e:
URBANA (105)' - Wyatt
Goins, 6-2-3-21; Jerry Ligon, 4-2·
4-18; Wade Goins, 3-2-8-20; Rod
Bendcy, 0.1·1: Chris Miller, 1-2.{}.
8;'1ulian Emt.ey, l-2-6; Art Jamea,
7·2·16; Marc. Eversley, 7-l·lS.
TOTALS 30-l·ll-105
RIO GRANDE (19) - Bre:.t
Coreno, 1-2-1·9; Jack Morgan,().] .
1; Walter Stephens. 2-1-0-7; Matt
Powell, 12-4-5-41; Jeff Brow~t, 33·0·15; Troy Domi.ldson, 7-0-14;
Jason CurtiJ, 0.2-2. TOTALS zs,
10·9-89
.Halftime score: Urbaaa U,
Rio Grande 37 ·

I

MATI' POWELL

•

In NBA action,

'

}leat burns Pacers lt4-99for sixth straight win; Cavs ·beaten
By Tilt Associated Press
ing up witll the big plays and the big baskeiS.''
Maybe there's some thin&amp; strange in the moon
Miner hit S of 6 shots from the field and 7 of 8
over Miami. The Heat can't lose. .
·
ft«&lt; throws;
0. Sllllday; lhc lJe8t won Us sixth slrBight game,
"It felt good to be out there down lbc stretch," he
.a 114-99 decition over the Indiana Pacers, a 1e1111
said. "Everyone was involved. We're confident
record. It was also lbc eighth ·consecutive victory at
down the stretch."
home for the Heat. another franchise record. .
Down 80.79, llle Heat sbJrt!:d a 17-6 surge lllat
. Why the'lUdden nm7
.
,• ·
feawrcd six poiniS by Miner and putlbcm ahead 96'' ' ti.ti~mi ia JIOillldina 'the boards, hifting iiS shoiS
86 will! 6:06 left.
·ancUtandling the hall int~elligendy.
Miami bad three players with at least20 points for
Apinst the Plcen,.Miami mau:hed a club record
the third straight game: Grant Long scored 24, Glen
by makiJ!g just six turnovers. It also was tl)e ninth Rice 22 and Rony Seikaly 20 despite sitting out lbc
.
.
straight game, and 15th of the last 17, in which . "last riod.
Miami baa oulreboonded iiS opponent
·
~Pacers also bad a 20-or-more trio- Dedef
"They did a peal job of ICboundinj! and killed us
Schrenipf (25), Reggie Millrz (21) and Smits (20)onlbc boards," lndialu! CCIUr Rile Sm1ts said.
but still lost their sevenlll in a row on the road.
'l'1lcR also was Harold ·Miner, who scored 11 of
"One of the keys ,to beating them was 'to keep
.his 17 points in the fourth quarter.
them out oJ the middle of the floor and in front of
"Miner played terrific," Heat coach Kevin
us," Pacers coach Bob Hill said. "But Rice got by
LoUghery wd. "He was under con1r01. He was comus, Steve Smith got by us, Miner got by us, Long got

byus."

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In other games, Boston defeated Cleveland 96-88,
Orlando downed the Los Angeles Clippers 112-95,
Detroit .topped Mil.waukec 98-91, Portland beat
,Golden State 113-96 and the Charlotte edged the Los
Angles Lakers 105-101.
Celtics !16, Cava~n 88 -Reggie Lewis, returning from a back injury that sidelined him for two
games, scored 17 paints to lead the Celtics to !heir
sixlll victory in seven games and eighlll straight at
home. Cleveland, which had won seven of iiS last
nine on the road, was led by Brad Daugherty's 22
poiniS and 10 rebounds•
· )\faglc 112, Cllppen !15- Nick Anderson scored
36 points ·. and Shaquille O'Neal added 23 and 15
rebounds to carry .the Magic at home. Orlando bad
lost its previous two games. The Clippers have
dropped four of their last five. Dann·y Manning
scored 18 points for Los Angeles, but only four in the
second half.

Plstciu !18, Buckl 91 - Joe Dumars ICOml 3'
points and Dennis Rodman had 25 rebounds to help
Deuoit end a 12-game road losing streak. The Pistons, .who rallied from 11 jlOints down in the four1h
quarter, won for the first time oo the road ~Jan.
2. Eric Mwdock pace.d Mi!WIIIkec with 25 poinls.
Tran Blazen 113, Warrlon H - Rod Strickland's 18 points and 14 assists sparked lhc Trail
Blazers in Oakland. Ponland won for only the third
time in eight games. Golden S~, ~ to a I!CIIIOI!·
low 36 points in the first half, slipped farther from
playoff contention will! its founh Joss in five gaillcS.
Victor Alexander's season-high 23 points led lhc
w~.

Hornets 105, Laken 101 - Alonzo Mourning
sc&lt;ml 27 poiniS and Larry Johnson 20 as Charlotte
overcame a 20-point fii'St-half deficit to win for the
fllllt time in six visits to llle Forum. The Hornets beat
the Lakers for first time in 12 tries. James Wcirthy led
Los Angeles with 25 points.

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In NHL action,

.. Patrick Division race tighter with wins .by Islanders, Devils
•

BJ KEN RAPPOPORT
the run,'' Islanders coach AI
AP HQ!:key Writer
Arbour sai&lt;\. "You look at the cliviMarch Madness? It isn't only sion - it's four poiniS up to seccollege basketball - try the ond place -so that's 110me diviPalricll: Division in lbc NHL.
sioo, isn't it?"
Benoit Hogue scored with 4:14
Hockey's most competitive
. divi1ion ughtened up even more remaining in the lllird period to lift
Sunday as the New York Islanden the Islanders over the Capitals.
lmockcd off the Washington Capi- Marty Mcinnis had a goel and an
tals 3-2 and the New Jersey Devils assist and goaltender Glem Healy
beat lhe Philadel!'hia Flym 7-3.
made 23 saves as the Islanden won
The combination ci those results their fourth straight
Cll8pllited the DevilS ovez lhe &lt;i:apMichal Piv.onka and Kevin
itals into second~ and moved Hatcher scored for the Capitals,
the Islanden witliin point olthe who feU out of second placC in lhc
fourth-place New York Rangers. div.ision for the first time since
THe four teams are separated by Dec. 27. Washington is winless in
ontr, four points.
.
iiS last five games (0-4·1).
:neso, IIR!•character-builders, , Hogue took advantage of the
- ~ we need.lllot of clwacter for Capitals' inability to clear the puck

a

in thei~ zone to score the gamewinner. Washington's Sylvain Cote
tried to clear the zone, but tipped
the puck to Hogue, who scored on
a wrist shqt from between llle faceoff circles.
Elsewhere, it was, Chicago 4,
Ottawa 1; Buffalo 2, Winnipeg 1;
Detroit 7, Minnesota l, and San
1ose·6, Edmonton 3.
Devils 7, Flyen 3
Dave Barr, Srephane Richer and
Alexander Semak scored in a 76second SJ11111 early in the third p&amp;iod'as the Devils scored six times in
lbc fUial 20 minutes to beat lhe Flyers.
Despite being outshot 28-12 in
·the first two periods, th~ Flyers
went into llle third period tied 1' I

because Tommy Soderstrom was . deflections and a tough defense to
outstanding in goal and Philadel· keep the Senators winless away
phi a's penalty ' specialists blanked from home.
Sabres 2, Jets 1
New Jersey on its fllllt six powerAlexander
Mogilny continued
play chances.
··
After lbc Devils took a 4-1 lead, his assault oo lhe Jets, scoring boll!
Mark Recchi scored his 42nd and goals on assists by Pat LaFontainC
43rd goals of the season to hell' the . as the Sabres ended a five-game
Flyers cut New Jersey's mqm to winless streak.
The Sabres continued lhcir masone. The Devils then j!ut·lbc game
away oo goals by Scott Nicdermay- tery of the JeiS at home.
LaFontaine, the Nffi.'s scoring
er, BW·Guerin and Scott Pellerin.
leader with 120 points, broke llle
Blackbawka 4, Senators l
Jeremy Roenick scored 17 .sec- Buffalo team record of 75 assists,
onds into the aarnc and added a set 1ast season by Dale Hawerchuk.
power-play goal later in the first LaFontaine now has 76.
Red WIDp 7, North Stan 1
period as the Blacll:bawks extended
Dino
Ciccarelli burned his forOttawa's road winless streak to 34
mer Minnesota teammates for two
games.
.
The Blackhawks used three goals mid two assists, reaching llle

Pontiac 400 results
• RICHMOND, Va. (AP) _; lion, N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 395,
. . . '
Results of Sunday's Pontiac $6,225.
22. (35) B'obby HamiltC)n,'
Excitement 400 NI&lt;SCAR stock
car race, with starting position in Nashville, Tenn., Ford Thunder.
parenlheses, tesidence, type of car, bird, 395, $8,100.
23. (26) .Michael Waltrip,
lapS completed, fCliSOII rut, if any,
money won and winner's aversge Davidson, N.C., Pontiac Grand
Prix, 394,$10,975.
speed in mph:
1. (14) Davey Allison, Huey~4. (19) Terry ~bonte, Archtown, Ala., Ford Thunderbird. 400. dale, N,C., Chevrolet Lumina, 394,
$70,125, 107.709 (br~aks uack $10,850.
.
record of 105.397 set in Feb. 1991
25
.
.
(18)
JUck
Wilson,
Bartow,
by Dale Earnhanll).
Fla.,
Pontiac
Grand
Prix,
394,
2. (13) Rusty Wallicc, Concord, $7,700.
N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 400,
1 26: (32) Kenny Wallace, Con$31,550. '
cord,
N•.C., Pontiac Grand Prix,
3. (6) Alan Kulwicki, ConcOrd, 394, $6,525.
N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 400,
$39,225.
27. (23) Wally Dallenbach Jr,.
4. (9) Dale Jarrett, Conover, Greensboro, N.C., Ford ThunderN.C., Chevrolet Lumina, 400, bird, 393,$7,600.
· $29,050.
28. (30) Bobby Hillin Jr., Har·
S. (7) Kyle Petty, High Point, risburg, N.C., Ford Thunderbird,
N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 400, 392, $,5,975.
.
$21,600.
29. {20) Bobby Labonte, Trini6. (8) Jeff Gordon, Charlotte, ty, N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 382,
N.C., Chevrolet Lumina, 400, $5.950.
$14,700. ·
·
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30. (31) Lake Speed, Kannapo7. (12) Mark Marun •., lis, N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 3~9,
J~stown, N~C., Ford .Thundet- $5,920.
·
bird, 400,$18,150.
,
.
31. ,'(2i) Sterling Marlin,
8. (S) DancU Waltrip, Franklin, Columbia, Tem., Ford ThunjlcrTenn .. Chevrolet Lumina, 400, bird; 337. $10,475.
PONTIAC 400 WINNER - Davey Allison or HueyiO'II'Il, Ala.
$18,100.
.
32. (4) Brett Bodine, Harriscelebrates'iD tbe victory circle shortly after winning the Pontiac 400 ·
. 9; (34) Harry Gant, T~ylorsville, burg, N.C., Ford Thunderbird. 327,
Sunday'Ia Ricbmoad, Va. Allison won by averqblg 107.709 mpb OD
N.C.. Chevrolet Lumma, 400, $10,445.
the 314-mlle track. (AP)
$17,300.
.
33. (25) Bill Ellioll, Daw10. (11) Dale ~ l)oohe, sonville, Ga:. Ford Thunderbird,
N.C .. Chevrol,ct Lumma, 399. 227, en&amp;iJ!e failure, $16,260.
$17,000.
.
34. (36) Jimmy Hensley, Ridge.
By BOB GREEN
said. "I'm ~euing there. I'm getll, (10) Ernie Irvin, Rockwell, .,way, Va.. Ford Thunderbird, 190,
MIAMI (AP) - For Greg Nor· · ling closer.'
·
N.C., Chevrolet Lumina, 399, clutch, $4,850.
·man, Jbat's one goal reached and
He led or shared the lead
', $16..rllt) Geoff Bodine Julian
35. (2) Rick Mast, Roc~ridge
. thro~gh all four rounds. ~is win• Baths, Va., Ford Thunderbird, 68, an unspecified num~r to go.
. •d
" I'D tell you that one jloal was ning IOta1 of 265 was • ~I 23
N.C.. .Ford Thunderbu • 399 , engine fai.Jure,$11,315.
·
·
$13,300.
.
· .
36. (29) Dave Marcis, •Avery's to win early this year, wm in the under par and by (ive shots tho '
. 13. (24) Jimmy Spencer, Creek, N.C., Chevrolet LIDIIina, 54, four tournaments befo~ llle Mas- lowest score over yielded by
ten," Nonnan'saidSuilday. ·
Doral's Blue Monstm course. Ovez
Mooremllo, N.C., F«d 1bnndcr· . •naiovo failure $7,350
bird,398,$12,850. .
That tarfet was reached,) n the last 18 holes, no one e,ver JOl
record-breaking fashion. in a four- closer than four.shots.
14. (3) Morgan Shepherd,
Cpnofer, N.C., Fcrd Thundelblld,
Time olri!Ce: 2:47:07,
stroke triumph In the scoring
After aVerqlng 65 ovei the fl(ll
398,$11,650.
.
Marcia or wlc:tor;r: 4.38 sec· explosion that was lhc Dorai-Open. three days, he nceed oolJ a clos.
But there are 4llher targcls, other · ing 70 10 wrap up Ilia aecond Doni
IS. (15) Ricky Rudd, CbeSI· onds.
peate, Va.. OleVIOiet Lumina, 398,
Casdoa flap: 3'for 191aps.
goals for Nonnan, who said he victory, his IIIII on the Amoric:an
$13Jll1J35, · ·
.
Lead c..acea: 12 al)long 6 · established a seven-year program PGA Tour and his 6lat1101111d lbo
16. (28) Phll Plnonl; Lake Nor· dri~
.
when he re-dedicated himself to world. .
111111, N.C., Olevrdol Lumilll, 398,
Lap lead era: Schrader .1-7; JOif.
·
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~ ml]le lmponant tbas lbc
$9,275.
She~ 8-25; 'D.Wallrip 26-59;
"I have gOjliS for the week, $25:;ooo. first prize - • c:onflr.
· 17. (16) Tod ~. TIOut· Pett;p60-67: D.Walirlf 68·69; aoaJs for lhe ml)lllh, pll for the madOn .._ dlo 01e111 While Shark
~ ~::C., Panl1Jiiaido11ird. 397, Pe&amp;IJ 70-171; Allilon 72-174;
year, go~l for lhe IOVOII years," Wll, inCietd, beck rnJm dlo alump
, .S
~.
.
·n.WalatD 175-184; O.Bodine 185; Norman llid.
·
. that began In~. 6.7-76 trouneinl
.
· I. (33) Hut Slri&lt;:klln, Calera. Poay llf6..243; A!Uron 244·353;
He won'tlllk about them. how·' by Nlct Flldo ia lhe lblniii)UIId cil
Al~-~ord Thunderbird, 396, D.Vialtrlp 354-358; AW1011 359- ever. "They're my pa." be laid the. 1990 Brkilb Open and
then.
ed undl his Canw'(p O!J!r!
SllJD'.
400.
•
But in the aftermalh of his front· last fan. . .
. ·
.
19. (t7) Detrito CCJIIt, Cblr·
sm.lolat !alden: Jarrell
!'{~ Panl
396, 490; p !!'Ardl489; Marlin 456; . nmnjftalrilnllpb ll Dural, the AlBJn addition to Norman's
$11$0.
.. O.Bodlnll 44~!M't ·422; ICBI· trallan aca - on~ No. 1 In the explolta, Paul Azinger and Mark
20. (1) Ktn Sc:brldlr, Oo till, wield 415;
391; A1111on world btfcn his lllido Into frultril· McCumber broke the old coune
N.fithovrolet Lamina, 396, 315: Mallrlvt 311: GordOn 371: ed ~!'!"~ JII9V~ ~ hi!:, JeCOnl ill lbclr tit for ICOOIId at 269.
'I I
SpRDiiHl: T.Labonte 355: Par'""'
me·- 1 m ,......
SQuth Alrii:ia David Float was
Dick Tdcldl. lnln.S. ' . . 354: lmD 352; Sclndlr 346. "lo of ·cetlinclt bM'It," Norman COQI'Ih alone at 68-270.
·
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30-goal plateau for the lOth ·time '
and leading the Red Wings over the 1
NonhStars. ·
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Steve Yzcnnan scored his 49th
goal and assisted on three others
for lbc Red Wings.
CiCCRili now has 31 gcals Ibis
season and 475 in his 12 1/2-year
NHLcareer.
Sharks 6, Oilers J
Linemares KeDy Kisio llld R.ob
Gaudreau scored two goU&amp; ~
and San Jose won consecutive
game$ for lhe first time thia season.
Kisio had two goals and two
assists, 1111d rookie Gaudreau two
plland one assist as lbc ICCOildyear Sharks woo two in a row for
llle fli'St time since Feb. 4-S, 1992,
and for the founh time in two seasons.

Three of yesterday's hero~s
tryiq,g to make big-league teams
By Tbe Associated I!'reas
So far so good for Bert
Blyleven, Mike Marshall and Pedro
Guerrero.
All three vererans an: trying to
impress early in spring training to
win a job oo a major'league roster.
Blyleven, attcmpdng to rnalce a
comebaclr: wilh Minnesoll, pitched
two shutout innings to help the
Twins beat Boston 12-7 Sunday at
Fort Mym, Aa. .
Blyleven, 41, needs 13 victories
to reach 300 in his career. He was
8-12 for California last season will!
a 4.74 ERA in 24 starts,
Blylevcn last pitched for Minnesota in 1988 ind helped the
Twills win the Wodd Series in '87
wilh a 15-12 record. .
Marshall, who played in Japan
last season. had two hits .and drove
in IWD runs for Seattle on Sllllday,
but it wasn't enough IS Milwaukee
scored eight runs in lbc third iming
en rou~ to a 12-7 victory at Olan·
dler, Ariz.
.
Gue11er0, 36, singled in lbc goahead run in ·the .lOth inning for
Chanos de Jalisco of Mexico, but a
Colorado Rockies split squad rallied for a 3-3 tie in 10 innings at
Tucson, Ariz.
For every case of a veteran try-

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ing to bang on in spring training, ,
there is also a prospect trying to •
stick.
.
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Tim Salmon drove in two runs :
with a single in the seVeolll inning ,
Sunday as California rallied to beat
Oakland 7-6 at TeJI!pe, Ariz. •
Salmon was lbc 1992 minor league :
player of lhe year.
'
"I'm not nervous, but iCs being· '
over-aggressive that always kills' &gt;,
me," Salmon said. "That's what '
happened when I popped up with ••
the bases loaded.
"I have to remind myself that I
don't have to go out there and hil a
home run every at-bat. I just have
'
to relax and 111lst my bands,''
Manager Buck Rodaen said
Salmon will not only be 'the I
Angels' starting right fielder and •'
No: 3 hitter, but he figures to get •
300 to 400 at-bats.
•
In olbct exhibition games Sunday, il was Philadelphia 8, Cincin- . :
nati 4; Detroit 6, Kansas City 4; 1
Montreal 6, AtlaDia O; Florida 10,
Cleveland 3; SL Louis ·3, Baltimore
0; Texas 9, Pittsburgh 0; the New •
)'ork Yankees 9, tlie New York •
MeiS 3; Houston 9, Los Angeles 4; •
Coldrado (ss) 2, San Diego 1; and '
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Chicago Cubs 5, San Francisco 1.
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Norman wins i&gt;oral Open title

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TM Top 2S
'Ibe A• .__.
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poll.--.
place
in. putatheMI, I'OCOf4&amp;

The Daily Sentinel Page

Urbana beats Redmen ·105-89 in playoff action

Page-4

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E. T - I L " - G : a : : p 'D.D ., a

Ohio women's college
basketball scores

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North Carolina rules roost .
on_ AP's Top 25 cage ~cene.

Lo Sollo 57. Do,.. 57
AllliiDd "· N. I1

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-Coppin State, NE Louisi~na
make NCAA tournament field

-~73,-lk.59

w.. c. . c 7

6
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c-.1: Qiaoo..----AO II -

. aJ!VBLAND_ ..sa

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DtspiU Powell's career-high 41 points,

Monday, March 8, 1993
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Monday, March 8, 1993

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618 E. Main St,, Pomeroy, ·oH. 45768 .
992-6674
Hours: t:Q0.6:00 MorldiiY"fl'lday, Satwdly t:GM:OO
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�By The Bend

D~y Sent~el~

The

Monday; March 8, 1993.
P-s~e

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Boy.'s behavior
is
unacceptable
.

Dar Aaa Luders: I

1.111 tbe
bom out of
ftdloct Ill two diJrmal - . I
f'ltbnd 011C wbcD I will a lee~Hp,
IIICl tbe ...,MI wu bona durin&amp; a
relalloalbip Ia collep. Althc!o•p
both WGW Wlllled lllllriqe, I fell
it would be a mi•*e bec:en• of
my immalurity and lack of rii!IIICial
security.
.
I've been a 'hands-on" father, even
t!loush both bo)'l have llep(atben.l
pay cbild IUJIPCllt 8lld keep informed
about tbclr ldlool plde&amp; IIIII aporu
ICtivities. My J111C111S also lake an
active intaat Ia their lfll!dsons.
A year ago, I met tbe rialtt woman
and finaUy aeuled down. Siooo''my
marriap. tbe lnlllgOIIIOIIt widl my
.110111 has 1101 cbangeil. They spend
every weelcald at my home. I also
take lhc:m out 10 dinner or a movie
at least twice a month in between
weekend visits. We all ~ve a good
relationahip. 'l'hC boys proudly carry

father of two

•
OPENING NIGHT ·Actor Mlcbael Douglas,
; (right), shares 1 smile with mother Dlaua Dou• ~las, (left), aDd son Cameron, during tbe open; mg night party for the off-Broadway play ''fhe

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Best of Friends," 11 Sardi's ID New York Sun·
day. The play, co-produced by Michael Douglas..
features his mother in the leading role. (AP
photo)

my ll\lfii&amp;IIIO.

Tile problem is my youngest son,
"Damy," who is now 10. He,hu
been giving my wife a very bard
time. On w:el eads, he refuses 10
lake any cxdcn from her, includiag
simple lblnp like turning off the

/&gt;ost 12s announces guest speaker
· ·W : Dean Scholl of Lancaster,
American Le~on executive committeeman, will be the speaker at
Feeney-Bennett Post I 28's· annual
dinner in observance of the AmeriCan Legion's birthday.
·
·
: The celebration will be held

:

Wednesday at 6 :30 p .m . at the
Legion Annex, Mill Street, Middle·

port
· Scholl was elected for a two
year term at the Legion's 64th
annual state conveniion held in
Cincinnati in July, 1982. Prior to
being named to that position, he ·
served four years as the Ohio
Legion's al~mative natio~al executive committeeman. He ts also a
past state commander of the
168,000 member Ohio Legion.
A veteran of World War II, he
joined the Legion in 1946 in his
hometown of Breman as a member
of the Oscar Me Veith Post 20,
where· he continues his membership. He and his wife, Wanda, have
twq married daughters and all the
women of his family are members
of the Auxiliary.
At the birthday party post everlasting, a memorial·semce which .
honors deceased members of Post
128 wilt follow Scholl's address. A
dance will conclude the evening's
festivities with music by Silver

CARL\' JO OLIVER

• Carty Jo Oliver, daughter of
Earl and Vicki Oliver, celebrated
,
lier first birthday recently at her
home in Burlington, N.C.
: Helping her celebrate were her
P.3fentS, her sister, Kerianne, Mike
and Tammy Buzzard and Justin
aitd Jesse.
·
• Sending gifts were paternal
grandparentS, Jim and Wanda Oliver, Mt . Alto, W. Va. Maternal
grandparentS, Bill and Jean Yoho,
New Haven , W .va., and great-

·

Public Notice

RESOLUTION
NO. 203.113
ARESOWllON
• AUTHORIZING THE
MAYOR OF THE VILLAGE
: OF POMEROY TO
DESIGNATE A PORllON
. OF THE CENTRAL
BUSINESS DISTRICT A

RESOLVED
BY
THE
COUNCIL OF THE VIL·
LAGE OF
POMEROY,
OHIO, THAT:
SECTION ONE: Tho Moy.
or ol the Village ol Pomeroy
be and hareby Mllhorfzed to
declare the Pomeroy
c tr 1 B ·
Di trl 1
on • uoonoao 1 c •
Thla Rea·
olulion Ia an emergency
roaolution nec•aary lor tho
proooorvotlon ollho public
paace, hoallh, aalety and
walloro· and lor lurthor
raaaon thot tho doelgnation
Ia required to be m. . prior
to •••••••, 1 .....
~ a 0 tha gr.,1
applicollon fundi may ba

AC~~~~~gl:~ ~HE blife~.;'J~o:
STATE OF OHIO'S SMALL
1

• CITIES COMMUNITY
"PEVELOPMENT BLOCK
· GRANT COMPEllnVE
DOWNTOWN
REVITAUZAllON
• PROGRAM, AND
• DECLARING AN
:
EMERGENCY.

WHEREAS, the Pomeroy

releuecl.

Central Bueinna Dlatric't,
Paued thla 1ot day ol
(doelgnated •• tho orao oJ F,~ru""' 1 tho VII~ that Ia bounded .., -" ·~·
._..
Lltryol
WahNng,
01) tho eaal by Sycomoro
Pr•ldent
Counc"
Street, on the weal by
"
ATTEST: Kothy Hyaell
h
BCIUernut Avenue, on t • ClerkofCouncil
..Orlh by Second Stroe~ and
Approved lhlo 1tl day ol
on tho oouth by lhe parking Fobruery, 1993.
lo) wall ia a blighted area ,
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
whero ninety (!ICW.) percent (3) 8 12 21c
oflha building• and ninety 1.....;' -·-----(f!J,%) par~ont ol public
Public Not'1111provementa are In • 1-__;..,;;;;~~~~dilopldltad and/or dlterloRESOLUTION
rated condition aa dolined
NO. 1207.112
b!· the Revitalization ANTIDISPLACEIENJ: AND
Poegrem and lllualrated by RELOCATION ASSISTANCE
a ~ defined

oonlinuoue

PLAN

TABLE 1-t

b;,ndlry ohown on tho

a~hedmop; and

-ldontlal

WHEREAS, tho Pamaroy
~1111 Buolno.. Dlatrlct Ia
•Ofh on aroo whoro thoro
a~oe bulldlnga or im p,.vamanto, wholhat raald4htial or non·rHidonllol,
w lch bo rooaon ol
d pldolion or daterlor·
1
11111 or obeolooo••••·
1
... provlalon lor
v tilallon, light, olr,
ali\llallon, or lho _.,_.
ol oondillono which on·
clinger life or pr.,torty, by
flro or oll!or - " · o r Ia
dalrt-lllto public '*llfh,
aojotr. morolo or Willore;
onil
WHEREAS, tho Pomeroy
Contral Bualnaaa Dletrlot
orl!a alao h• lruodlquato
parking, deteriorated •lley~

w;j.v • and aidowalk o,
deleriorated curb• and lack
ol ' rampa, dotorlorotlng
woilortlnn and _.,., laok
or · lighting end atrool
1um1fure;
:
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

port
The Carpenters have three other

daughters, Brt' ttanv. Valerie and
Olivia.

Lodge to meet
.
Th R .
L d
N
· e acme o ge o. 4 6 1
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m . Work in the fellowcraft
degree.

Antkllaplac-tlnd
RelocoUon Alalatinco Plan
under Sootlon 104 (d) oltho
Houolng 1nc1 Community
O.Voiopmont Act ol1t74,
••Providing for On•lor.Ono
Roplocom.,tlJnltland
Rolocalioto Aaala-•
Tho VIllage of Pomeroy
will roploco all oaouplod
ond vaunt oooupleblo
lowiModoroto • Income
dwalll"'f unlta clomollahocl
or· oonvan.d to 1 Ilia othar
than aa low/moderatoIncome houolng • 1 drool
rMult ol 101Jvlti• Molalocl
with fundi provided under
the

Houalng

end

Community Dovalopmont
Act or 1874, •• amondld, •
daacrlbod In 24 CFR
570.~11 1 (b) (1~
AU roplaoomont houalng
will 11o proviclod within lhrw
ynra ol tho com-

Public Notice
mencement ol
the
demolition or rohabllltadon
relating to convoralon.
Before obligating or
expanding lunda that will
direclly rooult in ouch
demolition or convoraion,
the Village ol Pomaroy will
make public and aubmit to
tho Ollie a ol Local
Gov•rnment Sorvlceo tho
following lnformolion in
wrldng:
'
1. A detcrlptlon olthe
propoaed aaaialed acdvlty;
2. Tha gonarallocatlon on'
a map and approximate
number or dwelling unlto by
alzo
th (numbar
Ill be dol bedroom•)
II hed
al w
emo '
or
converted to • u•• other

than •• low/moderate •
Income dwelling unita •• a
clrect reoull ollhe ouioted
acti'vlty. ·,
3. A lime achodule lor lho
commencamont
and
of

lhe

demolition or convaralon·,
4. The general local1on on
a map and approximate
number of dwelling unlta by
aile (number ol bedroom•)
lhll will ba provided ••
replacemant dwoili:'Y unita;
5. Thdo oour::,~1! undl ng
and a me ac.- 1o 1or 111 e
provlalori ol roplacamant
c1Wellin9 unJta; and

, B. Tho baala lor
concluding that each
roplacamont dwelling unit
will remltln o lawlmodlrar•
Income dwelling unit lor ot
loaal10 yoaralrom tho dlta
ollnltlal oocuflllncy,
7.
An ' analyolo
dotarmlnlng wholhor a
dwelling unit propoaod to
ba
domollahod
Ia
occupilblo or noL
I.
An .anolyalt
dotormlnlng whether o
dwalllng unit propo..d to
be clomolahed or oonvartod
Ia
oonaldared
o
low/modlro...mo- uniL
The Vlllogo
will provide
ooolatonoo, •
570.411 a (bl

low/moderate

or Pomeroy
raloootlon
dotorlbeclln
(2), lo •lfh
~

Income

houoohold claplacod by tha
doritolltlon of hcualng or by
tho converolon ol o
lowlmadoroto-lnooma dwolling to onother uao aa a
direct raault ol ltalatad
ootlvltloa.

''
f

Whither, all or Lincolnton, and
Mrs. Raymond Wal,b upt, ,,Middle-

•

complelion

r

"llop' and barely IOUChea

EmmoteHIIallllltoll
Recorder, Melp County, Oblo

--.::-:-~~~--1

Public Notice
_ _....;__ _.;,.;.:,__1
Conalabtnl with tho goo
ond objacUv• or I!CIIvltiM
aaalateil'uncler tha Ac~ tho
VHiogo of Pomaroy agrMa
to pro~dl aubabtndlllevela
ol ••-lalanco to peraont
dlaplooed by HUIHaaloted
progrma 1nd will further
k 10
11 1
dl
•••
m n m zo
•·

Ia

r.::~~':i:O:~.=.ter::::n:..•
Tho arractive dole ollhlt

plan ond cortlftoottlon Ia
FebrUilry 1, 1193, tho dolo
of tha aubmlnlon or thlo
oppllcatlon.
Bruce J. Road, M.yor
Reaolullon 1207.t2 plaaed
F-~ru- '
.., .. • 1 , 1 ._
(3) 8, 12, 21c

ANNIANDall
"Df2, Loo A S I

n..s, •.
c:n..-

hilfOO!l
The lind llmv -

two .....

ctrpel Ia liuat of Ill)' wile. He
llioo'lht i t - f'uaoy. l - ' t home

-

at the limo.
•HiJ modler IOld 111 tblt Dlnny 11M

Wibilcd 110 hc:llavior or d!K ipline
problems at home or in IChool. My
wife bu done nothing to d
O"C
this lbUic. ~he ICCIIIIID liD her.
What lhould we do?- NO STATB,
NO mY, PUWE
DBAR NO CITY: 'l'blt 10-year· .
old is Ia de&amp;(M• Deed of COIN r l
ina- He liiUit he lllllle Ill . . .illiid
that his bcbavior Ia llllally ... c....
abie and 11111 he IDIIIt lllk cpell1y·
about hia IIIIIY fcelinp in Cider to
Jet rid of them.
Meanwhile. your wife IIIOIJid DOt
he a cloornlll. She his the ri&amp;bt Ill
insist that Dadny show her the prq~er

home.
Dar Allll Llllden: I have been
lalding yow c:olullln _. siDco I
wu Ia jllllior biah and am DDW tbe
mother or three cbildren, two of

Morrison, LeiiWt

Bates, Bedford.
.
William R. Hayman, Jr., Lillian
M. Hayman, 10 80/100 A ••
William Michael Haymcn, Virginia

formerly the Ruritan Club, were
Haymen, Lelart.
.
elected at the group's recent · Leland E. Clonch, Rcatha V.
·
s M'll p k
mccung at w • ar .
Clonch, parcels, to John Edward
Clonch, Rutland.
Officers arc Frank Cleland,
president; Kathryn Hart, viccJohn Edward Clonch, Amanda
president; Lillian Wccse, secretary;
Clonch, Leland E. Clonch, Realha
Tonja Hunter, treasurer; and Libby
V. Clonch, )llltdl. 1D Jol)n Edward
Fisher, public relations.
Clonch, Amanda Clonch, RudlnL
New by-laws were distributed
Robert Gropn, et al, Sheriff's
deed,
10 Bruce E. Dourm, Donna L.
Racine Village Council 10 be used
Dourm,
Olive.
for repairs on .the women's
restrOOm.
Randy o. Dliddina. 10.00 A. to
The possibility of presentin" a Fanners Bane and Save Co, Suth'
s h HP h ton.
scho 1ars tp to a out ern •g
School student was discussed.
A yard sale will be held at Star
Mill E&gt;ark picnic area on the frrst
wCekend in May. Donations wiD be
accepted · and pick-up can be
The Racine Youth League will
&amp;mltlged. .
.
.
hold signup for the 1993 ball seaThe group wt'll be starting
8
son Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m.,
neighborhood watch programb ~d
March 13 from 9 a.m. 10 noon, and
road sings are presently _emg
March 15 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
secured.
The
last. date to sign up \Viii be
New members are welcome.
March
20 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
Meetings arc held the fourth
Signup will be held at the
Tuesday of lhe month at 6:30p.m.
Southern kindergarten building.
A meal is served before the
Registration fee will he $10 for
meeting.
softbil1 players and $15 for base. The possibility of hold a tomato
ball players, not 10 exceed $25 a
.festivliwillbeexplored.
family. Anyone who did no1 participate in the Racine Youth League
before
need a copy or their
birth catificatc.

Signup slated

will

.

Timothy A. Baum, Martie Y.•
Dawn, R/W ,to,Columbus Soutbem ·:
Power Co., Chester.
~
William C. t.Jiller, ltose Mary
Miller, parcels, to Richard A . ..
Hagcrtr, Dorothy Hagerty,
Columbia.
Je- M. Brannan, Lot ISO, to ;;
Billie A. Davis, Ruby A. Davis, ,
Midd. Vill.• .
Charles K. Stewan, Vera SleW· art, .3 A, 10 State of Ohio, Salis-

bury.

.

Carl Dean Johnsi.O!I. Cindy Jo
Johnston, parcel, 10 Garnet John- ~
stan, Lebanon.
·, ~
Edgar f . Thomas, ~·d. aft"HI, ,1
10 Greua M. Thomas, Midd. VUI. ~

Walter K. Dillon, IWen S. Oil- :.!
Jon, Tracts, to Charles L. Harris, •4

Sr.,pnve.
.
~
James McKnabb, R{W, to ,..
Columbus Southern Power Co." 7

Columbia.

.

RESOLUllON
NO. 201.13
A RESOLUllON
ACCEPllNG THE
CENTRAL BUSINESS
DISTRICT DEVELOPIENT
PLAN ANO DECLARING
AN EMERGENCY
BE IT RESOLVED BY
THE· VILLAGE COUNCIL
OF POMEROY, OHIO AS
FOLLOWS:
SECllON ONE: VIllage
Council accopta tha Centrll
JARED SHEETS
Bualn•• Dletrlct O.Vatopm..t Plan, which comp,.._
a document on Qle In o
OllicH ollhe Mayor and tho
Sorvlca Director.
Jared Sheets, son or. Jim and
SECTION TWO: Thlo . Jennifer Sheell, Hanisonvillc, WU
Reaolutlon Ia • an emor- selected u
of Ohio Sraee Unigency neoooaery lor tha versity's top 75 ICllion to be recotr•
lmmadiala praaorvatlon Of
'--A .t....nn oO.,
......... ~.T
tha public poaoo, hoolth, ni...u - u .. ""' rl-tt ~
oolaty •.nd welfare, ond lor SaliM 10 Underpaduale Academic
lha lurthor purpoto of Achievement Jli'DIIE•
complying with oorlaln tiona
' Shoel4. who has a 3.92 srade
limits antllled In lhe CIIY't DOint avtftiC will recolve a '*lleappllcatlon lor • gront t.. lor's depeo In nutrldon
tbe
tho downtown rnl-'lllltton Collep of Aark:ulan 1a J - . He
prP::.':d thla 1at dly ol bu been ICCeDIId ilttho Ohio Slltll
Fabruery, 1193. .
Unlvenity~l C:::OUep of Medicine
ATTEST:
for faD, 1993.
Kllhy Hy...
The 75 bonored union were
Clerk or Council
.
nominated~
deans or lhcir
lorry Wohrung,
II
and
_, __..
Proaldonlol PDI'IIatOy respec ve
- - 011
VIRago CouncA tile bull of Jllde (!Olat .I YtriP,
Approved thlo 1at day of extriCutricullr actlYitiea, and aerF~IG.
vketothe~.
,
,
2tc
•
J
.
Road,
Mayor
Sbeeta II a Metal IIIah Scbool
131 8 12

Sheets honored

one

·:

Trustees Columbia Township, "

R/W, ID Columbus Southern Power ~
Co., Columbia.

·
Steven 0. Stout, R{W, to
Columbus Southern Power Co.,

Chester.

PUILICAnON

Board of Education of Meigs .~
Local School District, parcels, to ~
Village of Pomeroy, Poni. VUI.
•
Tholl!as Charles Yarbrough, ·M
parcel, to Charles 0. Landers, : ~
ClanlbcUc Landen, Minenville.
•,
Alexander Coutadis, affid., 10 ·"
Alexuder &lt;;ouladls, Tamara •1
Couladis, Richard L. Cou1adis, v
MeipCo.
·~

,.
,~

.,
"r

..

,'

.,,

•Ntishvllle Netw~rk

.\)'

•liS
•TNT

J
&gt;

.'

-Disney Ch•nnel
•ESP ud much more..

COmpletely

-

..
·~

'";II
•·
••

installec;f

for Details.

1

210 MILIIIIY AR.
tt2·2tOJ

EVERYONE

Public Notice

ATTENTION!

· 'tuRKEY HUNTERS!
Wild Turkey Seminar

SAT., MAR. 13- 11 :00A.M.
Guest Stleakera Will include
PRESTON PITTMAN
National and World
Charrc:&gt;ion Caller
ALSO DOOR PRIZES and
TURKEY CALLING CONTEST
$2.00ADM.-Under 12 FREE
Located at WV Nalional Guard
Armory, Rt. 62 North, Pl. Pleasant
Sponsored by Chief Cornstalk
Chapter ol N.W. T.F.

I

l

~~~------~~J

36358 SR 7

. A REsoLuTioN AUTH·
ORIZING THE MAYOR OF
THE VILLAGE oF POM-

DEUVERY SERVIa
POmiOY,OH.

St. Rt. 7

. '

6637

~.

:.c•e••ire,

to

thank

contributions,

"Helping You To Recovu Yo111lnW1stnumf'
Chunih, Hnme, Truck, Boat, Auto
· end Office Seating

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
61

Plus FlEE llottle af

lotion

Go.~

&amp;

Little Cht'iS

Ea1ate

General

n.,... ~ Feltrnry

.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE

949·2823

::::::::::1

BISSELL &amp; IURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHo••
-Garages

oCo111plete
Remodeli•g
Stop&amp;Cempare
flEE ES111WES

915·4473
667·6.79

MICROWAVE OVIN
••II YCR REPAIR
llllllkEI
lrl...!f_l• Or . . .
KciiU
KEN'S APPt.AIICE
SERVICE
992·5335or
915·3561

FU
. Trionmlna.
Topping,
Rilmoval
Reasanable Rates
Full Insured

,

PH. 614-992·5591

.MTS IIQUE
T.f\NNING

118/'t2/1

WE DO

UCINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
·sUNDAYS

20 Years Exp. .

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

742·2328 .

KELLER'S
BENDING

.

47269 St. It, 241 • I Y. Mile OH Rt. 7 .
Uru C..iter o• Rt. 241

PH. 614·985·3949
lOW OFFERING......
OIL AND LUll SEmCE
DIE REPAIR AND ROTADIG

$20
12 16 S.ssie•l $25
992•2487

·Call for

BUILDERS

'

1:00 P.M.

~-sslo•l

7 ~ 2_ 3190

ROOFING '·

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH ~.

Ru•a:.O::cOff

15 Session $25
Depot St., Rutland

Olllio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1120/83111;

992-3831

2 •iles o11 Hysell .

seA. wolfe Bed

Middltpo~t,

FREE ESnMATES

SU
IMAGES

NOW OPEN

Box 189

==g

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.
992-5858
696-1290

PONDS
SEPilC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
· WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
·HAUUNG: Llmeatono,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ancl TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOIE .SITESTRAILER SITES, .

THE

R&amp;C EICIYITING
IULLDOZING

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

F,_hatlfllco

PERSONAL
CARE FOR

11::::="~:•:2:·2:16:0::::~:.1 r~:::=::::::-1
MMER

· Rufus &amp; Beulah Cline

..

Snodgrass Upholstery

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

2/15/13/1 . .

3-4-9 • mo

Ap.pointment ·

31

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

to

-Ia-•

Raullt!IZitlon Proar-; WHEREAS, 'tho tounoll ol
tho Villago,of Pomaroy, Ohio
h• tha outhorlty to apply
for ftnonclal ooolatanoe 1nd
to lldmlnl1ter the •mounla
racolvod from tho Sbtto ol
Ohio, Deportment ol
Development through Ita .
Smoll Cltleo Community ·
Dovolopmtnl Block Gront
Dowtllown R"llollzotlon

"'=~~ lho Council ol
lhe w._ of Po_.,. 111uat

· direct ind oulllorlzo tho
Mayor ol Pomeroy to HI In
oonnaotlon with tha
opplloadon ond to provldl
auoll ICkllliotl!!l lnlol'llllllon
.. may "" required;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

Fertilizing, W,-g. Md

REASONABLE
· RATES

Sllrub and,._ :rrimmlng
a Removal
·

992·2259

GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTY! - Located in
Pomen&gt;y, 3 atory building lhat with • little work could be 3
unit apt, good location, with 50+ x tOO flllrk ong area.

$28,500.

.

CLEAN I AFFORDABLE HOME located on Plaasant
Ridge. 1\S otory with 3 bedoooma.two Iota, decking, IITlaD
lront porch. $18,900. Owner may conoidlr rwasonable
one~ .
'
SYRACUSE - 1981 modular ·wtlh 4 bedrooms, balh,
decki119.o aorno appllancea, part lanced yard, metal storage bYoldlng, y, acra lot, oo~tral air. Need 10 - to appra·
ciota114MOO.
'

JUST OUT OF RACINE - 12+ acrat ol nice ·wood
. , . _, Mtke good hunting or horno~ra. •10,000.

The Lawrence
'
Johnston flmlly
with to expresa

MANUEL RD. - One acra or groo~nd lhat could be uaad
iorinobllo homo or bldklnll ·lita. f3,1500. Maka on olle~
REEDSVILLE - Cute 1 floor block homo wilh 2 becloooma, t cor gorago, rur ........., po..,h, nice roont
yard, 111111 ptll(boo building. Alklng 118,000.

•

IELPI WANTiiiD- PAOPERTIEI OF ALL SHAPE&amp; 6
IIZEI IN IIIIGS ·COUNTVI WE HAVE IUYERI
::.~:.COULD IE YOU HAVE WHAT THEY WANn IF
roU'AI READY TO IELL GIVE Ul A CALU

••

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or 915·3139
(lo

.,

••••r Callsl

YOUNG'S

EVERY THURSDAY

• EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY

CARPENTER SERVICE .

Aaa111Adlltlol•
-Work
-EioGirloll tnd Plumbing

!=aExtartor

8:46p.m.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

1

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL'
(304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

POIIII'IJ, OltiD

8-1 O.fl2·trn

HAULING

1'RIM•tld
REMOVAL

.....

aUGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

IAYII
614-742-2118

992·2269

JOI I. MDI

..

=·MATES)

Special E1lly Bird
$100Peyolf
Thla ad gctOCI for 1
. FREE c1rd.
Lie. No .•0051-32

3-4-113-1
\~ '

.'

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

FIREWOOD FOR
......2~1nl

NEW LlliTING - Rouah lana In Cheohlro - 1+ acra
with 1870 mobile homo, block elfociency opt., two addi·
tionallrailer hook-ups. Grwat rantallnvntmonH $24,900.,

loved one.
OOCIBieuYou.

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports

New Homes • VInyl
New Garages • Replacement
Room AdditiOns • Roofing

R-Ial a commarolal
FrooEO!-

card of Thlnk8

Of our

&amp; TAX SERVICE

SatdhiQI.

.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

HOWELl'S
BOOKKEEPING

949·2391or
1·100·137·1460
~-lng,

Bloak Gr•nt Downtown

'"

~-

ploco(!oJ

lhe

de•lr••

toss

_,~

CALIFORNIA
TANS .

partlclfllllo In tho Progrllll
.to raoelve llnonclol
lor Anltlllution
undar tho Smoll Cltlea
Community Oovelopmont

the

C•ll614~992·

2~

purpoaa of eddr-lng loo'al
nooda;and .
WHEREAS, tha VIllage ol

1

RWONAilE RATES

992·75.53

p·.m. "' - ·"

Dovalopmont provldaa
llnancill oatlatonce to local

Pomeroy

Wewll.

15 S.ssiO..s 115

'::=======::c:;:::=====~

f9r

......

SIZED WIESTONE
FOR SALE

..IUMESTONE

Call304-675·4340 Ext. 405

MUNTY DEVELOPMENT
BLOCK .GRANT DOWNTOWN
REYITAUZATION •

government•

/c./Jual
I
r.:::. .,:.
'
:r;; ·

Quality
Stone Co.

WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK

Speaker.
Everett Wray M.D.
Topic: Cardiac Catheterization
imd Angioplasty

Gratefully and Sincerely,

"'W:s.
tho State or
ol
Ohio, . Deporll'l!ont

c...-

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

SMALL DOZER

Community Room

loss of our home to fire.

W:\~ lJ$ ~~r~YF~
:::xrf'PA~~1 1 N co'":

· _ Monday-Friday, 8:110-6:00
lno. Wllllo
Wtlcomt, FborGiut Wllllo,
Aepaiiog &amp;
Rtfinithilg, F...,.~· Cuttom
Sa.-.aing, M111i1 Sanour llbc~~g Systom
~E._, ClulllyWon,

CHA_DUI'S

Pleasant Valley Hosp~al

lt"ke

for

367·7444 • 446-6644
1·100·926-2032 (Ollie o..,,.

3/l/lln

HEART TO HEART
CARDIAC SUPPORT
GROUp MEETING
· THURS.• MAR. 11-7 p.m.

gifts, cards and prayers, especial·
ly the VFW • Post of Tuppers
Plains for the shower, due to the

RE~~~C:

our thanks to all
our ftlenda tor
the klndne . .
shown us ~urlng

'

POIIIIOY, .OH.

w 'o uld

- . . AH's•• Jllb•• P9dff, oa 4ftJI

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOV~ REPAIR

.

We

LABRT'S JIODY SHOP

\,

'TTF!I'I'
a·

•

rr-

~-

11.....

MPWOiut

Shade River Saddle Shop

4:30 P. M. DAY IEFORE

For Information

ciorti-Tr-urer

Charles H. Bartels, Joyce L .
Bartels, R/W, to Columbus Soudt- ·~
ern Power Co., Chelter.
Charles E. Sayre, Clara L.
~~· to OTE North, Inc., :;,

C.ble System
-Unlcten receiver with remote
-6' Dish with patio mount

Call

'

properly
· by
DIABETES SUPPORT
W•lay
Dovl•
J.
30. And
GROUP MEETING
........., Ill• 11!"'"·
TUES.; MAR. 9 -1
i~"P"weir · ..~~...d
Morch 9, 18113 1nd recorded - - - - - -.......Topic: Diabetes Services
In Book 76, ot P~~~~t 320 of
Public Notice
and Financial Issues
the Deed Recorda ol Malga -~-----­
County, Ohio.
Mason County Library
. Ralar.,ce Deeda: Volume
RESOLUTION
Sponsored by Pleasant
159, P•g• 211 ond VoiM umo
NO. 2112.113
1
Valley Hosital
t5t, Pogo 212,
a ga
~ RESOwnON
County llood Recorclo.
ACCEPTING
Call 304-675-4340
The rul eelllle hu bMn
RESTOR"'TION
Ext. 281 or 448 lor
ualgned Auditor'• Parcel
"
Number 07-00804.
GUIDELINES AND ,
infonnation
DECLARING AN
Said real oobtte io aubtect
EMERGENCY
to occrued real •tate taxea
BE IT RESOLVED BY
lor 1893.
THE VILLAGE COUNCIL
REAL ESTATE opprai_, OF POIEAOY, OHIO AS
at: 117,500.00. Tho rNI H!ate FOLLOWS:
Public Notice
1 card of Thankl
cannot bo aold lor IMa lhon
SECTION ONE: Tho · Vlllwo-lhlrdo the epprolaed lage hereby ocoepta the
RESOLUllON .
The family of
va11ue.ERMS OF SALE: Caa.~ Reatorotlon Guldollnea,
206.113
'' which Guidoilnn aro more
BE IT RESOLVED, by the
FREEMAN ROUSH
" '""'&gt;.. latallood In a document Council ol the Villaga ol
on dlllvery of dood.
would like to thank
olomea M. ~:~:;~I
the olllca ol the Pomeroy, all member.:
·
our !'118ny friend• and
,
SherilloiMelga ·
That the· Vllloge ol
(2) 22; (3) 1, 8, 3tc
ii-1tnN TWO:
Thla Pomeroy hereby aupporto
neighbor• for their
Roaolution it an emergency tha Ravitallzation Program
aupport · during our
-aary lor thalnimocliabt !Or the VIllage ol Mlclcileport.
recant lo11; your
Public Notice
pr•orvoUon of tho public Thla program would be
thoughta,
prayara,
-oo, health, oalety ..,d bonolicial
to
all
food, cards, flower•
RESOLUllON
wolfuo 11111&gt; lor th11 further communldu Involved.
and being with ua. ·
0301.113
purpooo of OOIIIPIYing with PASSED: Feb. 1, 1193
BE
I T RESOLVED -lain llmlta anlallod In tho
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
Special thank• to
whereto tho VIllage ol VJIIIgo'a application . lor a
Larry Wehrung, PrealdM&gt;t
Pastor
George C.
Ia conctfrnthed grant lor 1 Downtown Kathy Hyaell,
0
Weirick
and Paotor
about
future o
. Rnlbtlliation Program.
Clork/Treaaurer
Richard
Bonds-Krug.
Puaed thla 1•1 clay of (3) 8, 12, ~·
Pomoroy
•
Fehiy,
1193.
.j....:.~_:.:.,__ _ _ __,
May, ~od bleae all of
link between Mlddl-rt,
Larry Wehrung
you.
Po.....,, anSd MathaoVInl.'- I
Proaldent or Po-r.Y
Brother, Mr. &amp; Mre.
WHEREA , •
....,... 0
Vllillllt Council
Pomeroy roqu•t• tho Ohio A'R!;ST: Koth!' Hyooll,
Lloyd Roush
Deportment
ol ClerkolhCouncH
Sister, Mildred Fry &amp;
Tranaportotion to conoldlr I
Approved thla 1at clay ol
·
Family
laaalblllty atudy lor the
11193 .
AD
rep~tnl olaald bridge. '
'Mayor
PASSED: -oh 1, 1193
WI!
Bruce Reod, Mayor
RMDY"C'ASH
lorry Wehrung,
Pr•ldlnt or Po-roy
1 C8rd of Thanks

Chelter.

The G5 Personal

System -

For-.

(31 1 t 2, 21c

'Don't let cable companies choose your channels. Have your own cable company and choose . .•
your ownchannels.
•!'

Complete

RESOLVED BY THE VIL·
LAGE
OF
POIEROY,
0 HI 0,
AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION ONE: Tho VIIlogo Council of Pomeroy,
Ohio oulhorlz• tho Mayor
• tho olllclll ropn11 ntlllYo
ol tho Vlll~~~~t of Pomeroy,
Ohio to miUopplo lkMi to
porliclpoto In tho a- ol
Ohio, Doporttnonl ol .O.
volopmont smoll Cltlea
Community DevelopMent
Blook Gronl Downtown
Rovlllllzltllon Program, and
to provldl all lnlormaUon
and ~montatlon roquired
In aold . AppllcoUon for
aubmloolon.
SECTION TWO: Tho
Council haroby opprovoia
llllng on application lor
flnonclol •••••..,•• undlr
lho SrnoU Cld• Community
Dovolopmont Bloc!! Gront
Downtown Rovltaliz"llon
Progrom.
SECTION THREE: Tho
CouncH horol!y undentandl
ond
ogrno · that
flllrliclfllltlon In ... Progrom
will require compliance Wllfl
progrom guidolinM end .
• ..urancoa.
SECTION. FOUR: Tho
Council horaby commlto ·
lbttll to provldl tho local .
aharo funding aa clooorlbed
In tho application.
Puaod . thlo 1at clay of
Februery, 11193.

----=========----:,

Kenneth Neigler, RfW, to :
Columbus Southern Power Co., '

BACK IN BUSINESS SALE
•HIO
eCinem•x
' .
•Showtlme
•The Movie CINinnel
eCNN ·USA

NOTICE OF SALE
By Ylrtue of on Ordar of
Solo loouocl out of tho
Common Plooo Court of
Molga County, Ohl!l, In tho
cut of Borth• .r. Prollhl
ond .loo
Plllntlfl,
va. E - Guy Long. at II.,
Dtlondanto, upon 1
JudQIIIIIII lharlln rtndored,
being C.. No. t2-CV·113 In
alld Court, I will offer lor
ella at tho front door olh
Courthouoe In Pomeroy,
1111p County, Ohio, on tho
26th cloy ol ...,.oh, 1113, at
10:00 a.m., tho lollowlng
lando and tonemonta,
loooled In tho vicinity of
Townahlp Rood 131, Trouble
Craok Rood. A oomploto ·
logtlclaacrtptlon o,.... rOll
a lollowo:
· Tho loPowlrig dooalbed
reel eatate In l,obanon
Townahlp, .Molgo County,
Ohlo, lncl In Soollon No. 30,
Townahlp No. 2 and Range
, No. 11 of tho Ohio Com·
flllni"a Purch11e ond
boundod • foUowa :
The &amp;at Hill altho North
Hall of the Northwott
Quorl8r of Hid Soc:Uon No.
30, containing 4214' IICraa,
more or re..; oleo tha
No, 2 Md Range No. 11
tho Ohio Compony'a Purchua, In Lobonon Townahlp, Molga County, Ohio,
being two (2) acr• oil tho
Eioat lncl ol a 20 aero lot
tha nDfth olcla ol tha South
Hall ol tho No.r thwaat
Qu- of Hid Soc:Uon No.

Kathy Hyaell, VJilago Council ..

..

..-...-----------------.
BEST RECEPTION

Public Notice

Public Notice

thi~oa~m~e~~~~~~~~:~: ::~~::,Ill

respcc:t. · She should allo have
your pennission 10 punish 111m u
you would if he misbehaves in her

· Greg A. Winebrenner, Paiae
Winebrenner, Kenneth B. YOUDIJ.
Betty Young, JIIIICCl, to Reba Gail

Public Notice

•-I•

.,.;. wllliii!IO wi ,WI~ tile .....

GeorgeS. Hobstetter, ~ Maxine . Sam N. Pearman, dcc'd, Ccrt. of
Hobstetter, Fred W. Crow, Jr., . Trans., to Mabel Pearman, Paul
R/W, 10 Colwilbus SoUthern Power Pearman. Midd. ViU.
_
Co., Chester.
Herman Otis Grossnickle,
Hickorr_ Hollow Trust, by Dec •d, affid, to Margaret Ruth
trustees, R/W, toColumbus South- Grossnickle, Olive.
ern Power Co., Olive.
Merwin E. Smith, Marjorie
Smith, parcels, to David Alan

Officers elected
Mr~.~t--~=~~rW:n~oili~ Ar~Cg~;:~i~f~~?ai~~).

-------..,.--------r--------,

Public Notice

'

,
Todd and Jill Carpenter, Uncolnton, N.C., announce the birth of a
daughter, Carly McMechen, on
Feb. 6.
The infant weighed seven
poundsandtwoounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Carpenter, Lincolnton,
N.C.; llld Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walbwn, Middlcpcxt.

service to God and Country and its
aims include upholding the Constitution of the United States and consecrating the comradeship of its
mTh~~gion influences veterans'
. Ia.
h
th G
Bill f
1egts
uon sue as e · . 1.
o
Rights, and lobbies for veterans'
hospitals,pensions,andotherbenefits for veterans and t)leir families.

pdparents, Don and Enna Yoho,
!'!:&gt;mercy.
·

maa. full of her elfCll1l, c:alll her

cookin&amp;

Compiled by:

New an;ival

all legionnaires, auxiliary members, Sons of the American Legion,
and their gliests.
'
·
Chartered in 1919 , the American
Leg'1on 1·s ded'cated
to peace time
1
·

television or getting ready for
breAkfast He luis tOld her, 'Shut up.
You are 'not my mom.' I demanded
that he ilpologize, but his l!eluivi,or
has not improved.
'
My wife goes 10 great l~s 10
prepare nice mells for his visits. He

'

Wi~~~~~~ and dance is open to

}!irst birthday

--7-....:....-----0

It also sponsors annual youthtraining programs to teach the principles of American self-government, conducts a nation-wide
school oratorical contest, awards
medals to encourage grade and
high school studentS and sponsors
national baseball competiuons for
teens, boy scoutS, and studentS to
Buckeye Boys State.
Another emphasis of. the organization is to activelr fight subversive influences within the U. S.

Aim

10D1

Monday, March 8,1993

BILL SLACK
USED RAILROAD DES
l \1

'

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

"

..

"

I

Guaranteed 'Scholarship Money
for 811

college bound students.
'regan:lless ollncome ;
'rag8RIIIU of {11811es

HABWOOD
S..HBH
$40.00• LHII
- Dtllvutd.
(614) 992·5449

'1*1• $20k guarantaid loan
'regardleaa of crec11
1b.oolllc:t your acl'lOIINhlp money

.
CIIH 114-181 Mil
Open Mon.·FrL 10.7ora.t.11H

121311'112Mn
1

'

.I

a.n-...,..
'.

•

�....
·- . . . .

- ·-. ..........

. ...

·-

,.._

::; Monday, March 8, 1993

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

•

Ohio

The Dally Sentinel Page 8

-ALLEYOOP
•

. . . . . lor

~--Oool-U,

=..=-1~~
"IE&amp; 12.11 ,.,
. ... .Yno.

PHILLIP
ALDER

~eo.--.

4. ,~ : Glvuway

tll7--

NORTH

111? ~~At;, .... ~ :
C
A•Camstio, II,~ ,
lllil.
I •• .I

l l ow...o,

w-

·-03.
~ 81•

F....,. With '
111 Como 111 Servo.

6

Ai ... ~--rllllng In

ID-.. .

·'

Lost&amp; Found

•-m3. .

= =··

.
_T
o Shop,
hi 411 '235.
Loot:
.• Malo
I~

::.~onAt.1 ~"'&amp;!:;
2

,....,...,I"-·

.
•.':.JI!'!"'-

lmltallon"' cloal--"

AVON I AU I Shlrtor
8poors,304-1711-1421.

Hove , _ In a nloo cloin
-homo,
I.OST: Ring. .Approx. vtclnlly
·Lr,.... c.m.r, fUo Qrancle. CLERK OF PUBLIC AFFA!AII: wh lcl'olr, bociitJot or othoroQoinput
And 8 okk
ina - - CNA on dutY II al .limn,
RMtarcL 114 211 Ia.!
EJI:perten~ld
and 20 ,..,. U •
Dutloo 01
Clork. 24- porlot101, eoN hl~ll-.11111
7
Yard Sale

o.htcc::..a
w.,...
""'

~ ~

30

ALL Vin: Salol MUll 8o Paid In

"""""""· DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

·

~ ~:;··,.'-.;;:',.·...:.&amp;:;.Au_,;:.·ct.--,..lo:.;..n..,.....,......_l
·•

T~~a~
lt:"'m!i,
unlclpol .J:'f1
I• • IlL 101 £oil

conwyor.

PQ"!'11'

PreW HAZ-MAT II

I 1:00

11

:rloa!

~

Wanled: Gall~ll ANI
• ....._ a-king """ nmo

J111i101o! -~.. - • ·
.\ -....,;joord """""· oilloo oquip. ito!JI.

Hol"":i

Or

- . lloro :-ro: 10 to 1. lOCI lileolotcal
81- · - Ptua, At. 7, .....,.
loll!o.
ll~po~li!:_I!t14-4t!!~l~t~5t0!!:,_
.
- T o: .0. 1o12+t, Gal"
llpofla, OH 4!131.
,;;9...,...;.W...;a.,;nt.;,ed.--,...,.to;....,Buy...:._._1Join lho - I n lho c-umor
Old ..... trains fDr pirtL flnuw:lllf S. rlc II lndu.trY.
Inn 1 tt
oppoftuniiY tor
Fly • • Lionel. -.. .....
11'11..-cilnclvldu.J to . .
-:;~'~~-:::,:11'12.:.=--:-::::-::-=:-::--,.,.--1 oumo 1 cilollenglng poahlon. No
.IUnlt. hi
Ball UoAppl.._
Your Non-'l""""''-n•~
Woitdng
llajor
v• • .,.
CoW
TY'o
Rllolgoralors, - . t
avail
.
,,... vcil·o. Mk:twa- P I - oau Ki¥ln SmMh,
Air c;.;.!H..,.rs, QuHar " - • lloNII"~ 114 112 2111 iar 1mEtc. 814-256-1238.
modiOio cono-lon. Smolal
:::;~~:.,;:;,:.:;.-=..,--1 frM and dRl!l froo onvtron"*ll.
J ' D'o Auto and Solwago, EOE.
· oloo Junk caro I truclio.

---1

:=--..-''"'I!Y· =z:eorn.

Don'

Pton·Timo t11wt111 AI Hair
WANTED Slandlng tlmber • ply HrpPt-.1 C.n Bee un Hotn

:tot-Tl'WM3.

W.---

oro

·

CMh c. when -..Net , elgned • Of N 1M ... "!!.

.

. au.r.,...

21

Opportunity

........... ,... .......
INOilCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUIUIHIHCI CO.
--~you-and

... _....

NOT to Mild-~~i:to
... you n... invllotTgoiod

Guide to holM ernploJiiMit, H
you •Ill 10 IMU JiooCI " - "'" oorn1or1 o:.rour own
homo. ruah .. ond BASE tortn-loolto: CiC ~
P.O. lox 111, . .,..._

41771.

""""'*'

41 HOU881 for Rent

-

,..,

~~~=~~~~~~~~nelghborln
bediiDOIII
d~pln. • •I
aod, rw~or

==---...,..,...,...,,......,.I
=::'.t=:~vwoo~~
..-:;-=;.:,.o;n&lt;t;::eoo,...
_=m.:...;~~2=rm"';,..,.._ 1

-::

4Homo,
ilod-.
Country Sitting
13711lio.IJ4.3'1't-21M.

dillon, Air Co11dlllonlna, eon.
With
M.OOOOIO, 304-

-

--Homo,=-Stope

lor ilont· 2 or 3 bod-.,
RooiN aroii,IJ4.ti2.IISI.

1188 BllyUno Holly Rli:ll" 14o70,
- . 2 boil-, AJC,
- - ........ kltchon loiand,
llonogo blda. • ...........,...
UM - . ~M.

21 - · . - -.~~~;.
.._ J _ Nf11uor.IIDr,
cino-

:IOUo•w••
--~.

gcoowl - ·
~For A Doo!? C.....r A
Pn 0 Iood La,..
lol 01'4n, low !lonOJ Doom,
lot-Up And Doil'tory,

Homo,

-.mo.

:"!··

1-

Lot, 1121S111o.
t1octor11Y
'"""
Cllllfl&gt;ollo,
UrgeDopolll
-·

Rolouoo101, · 114 ut 22311, eM!
4.. 2511.
.

2 lod-, Moc!om llolllio
.__ In Euroka, All Eloclrio,

w~w~.:,""-"""'1
...

•'lhJE,

At•s.J!•'"-"
• Pilono: 114-

qulroll
Ill. . $22

+ti~401Aftor7 P.~

UIIUIIITiD; -

-r
-- ...
,

• tho,..._. ""high mullwileJI!IU? W• ... I

Yllllinill'o~ ntoll
gonlullon -Ina of ntoll

of -

_.lono In W•l
to our tremendDut growth ower

•:=:,t.

Do Vou lDYE To Coole? An Ea·

citing Concot&gt;t In Homo
Ptorty Plan - n g Ambltloue

lndiVIduato In Vow _.... To

T-.

O.nonlblte "Quality KtlcMn

•AVOW A!.L AREAS! Shwo JOUr
I liM •Kh ue•. You'll love the

18 Wanted to Do

compony. 1-aoo.M2-t351.
5 Ladloo Who Would Uu To
Sol A_,_
CaN 114-+tl-33511. ·
Appl- Wanlod- 11 lo 20
houro ' por - . 14.110 plua

=..

tr1WI,

M•er:

,......_,

mute

t-•
lioro. call 114-141-at:l or olop In
- y o u r -n

ond
J.D.

Olllo

an apt&gt;llcallorl at
Hng Cornpony, Roclno,
.
'

llou~lllonoJ From Homo:
1800
From Homo! Send
$2.00 +-SA To: D&amp;A Supplloo,
PO lax 81, Hllloboro, OH 48133.

Mo&lt;kl! Record Tran10rlPIJoftlot
• Part-dme temp. poehlon. Mutt

have know~• of Meclcal

Ttrmlnology &amp; Anllam)'. Mu..
M ablltto wM a dlgHal dlclatlon

oyoton(l wOld pr-. Mull
tllrlocrtotlon toot. Send
auf larMr, Pt....
Valley ' HoODital, 2520 Volley

,.....,o

m

Drive". hint Pleaaant, WV 21150
Adilt.
.~ .....t'24ii
;r
. •'

-

ltH I n - • - ·aner
board
l
7:00
•

No ~I llOO To llOO
w•lr·' -ontlol Proc-ng
1'HA Mort- Rotundo. OWn
Houra. ! 1.f01~e •• 0503 Exl.213.

Ah';a~ -ng.

....

:1.

ACT'
-·

'

1n 11m 4pm. No

·•= .

Mol.oool'a

Pol
PnJiu
c, ::;-;;;
......_ ItS· CoeUr

8. _____________________
9. ________________

c:..~~,!"':r;.':"!J

10~--------~------11
. __________________

t~,

,...Sa..,.le~J:;,;;.i).! ..
I'
~"":S.:..a.eoo.
. . - nil'!. ',
·~···-·

.·
lrmc, :;::.P,UJ.oo:ytilod~ ~i ~

·-1
I

--....
~
I
1fl9 C:.vy 1
Ton '!Nck,1 12 I
Fl., Orotln lod, 4
Ex~ '
..... Concltlon,
24. ' :
I

tJi

I, .......

1110 F-110 I

~

12 _________________

I

·~-..
ACtC TAILICKI. Chowo

~·

For"""'.-·

alito nutrl-

=

~ -ohlnoo, - Mnllon,o.I!J,I-l1141.

64 Mlteellai'MIOUI

'to ochool,

Mlrchandlll

304 •

10ld2 In I Ill llrllal PoNti
Wlh ca- Wk dna 2 Doan.

:r:.~~~"V,if.'';;

ADI:s, No. c-1 or 31'11. E.O.H.
,

~Dryer -~·

.

!loafing, Rlltl
2120.

a..... •-

14· ------------------~

15~----------------Gallipolle Dally Tribune
446-2342

.........

-- ....,..

.~

'•

.

...

FJrm SuppliL"
S. Lrvt' ,lock

'i
~

61 Fann Equipment
-~4WD14HP,­

End .....,, M

~

twc•U. a.all

I

~Nor:· c.": A~

•

Furnlohooi 1 bdnn., 1~

M.-.

Fumlohod I - . , . ' Both,
Yooy. Cloan, Wotor Paid, In , _

,., lrea. 114181 1000

=:c'
:.,:::'"PIMia.
.::1z:S
Ill d r1t
Fl

74 .

~· : Ohio

m~ no rind, I'IIIIII-IIilo noWII

DlaU;.

I

I

'· . '

,.

Holland 4llltor bind. JoM
0oore110 allogowagon.tnt...,..

76

63

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~~ling,_
~lluiL · -

=•:!:rl1

:1111 Chi, ......... lUll,-.

=--·o;lpo~lltcfo

1 1011 trono- dloc. All
good oond. JOol.ll'l..4,21 ~

LIVestOCk .

t=..,•.&amp;;.'"~:

==

"=IOrleS

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ludall T_loM, l*d-.

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, oo'=f

2213. P.......,. ti4

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.....
:::
:::;..,_,..,,--___,-,.,.--=--1 79 camperS &amp;
ilnglloh·--IOoFor ·
~o~~, 114 • au a .
Motor Homes

"'·

"'

;:,I
• I

l

'SOIAEQ/o.Y, r.'M
·eotNS 10 e.e
I'RE61D6NTa'

I

THE UNITED
eTATE6.

WHY610PTHERe?
WHY NOT' f!IE
EW.PRS65 OF THE

'

.

ONe. sr=P A'i
A

v.t::JIO!L.D1

Ptlnl !tono, Z1 - . old., WlnnO~ 30 II. ChlollaiJ!&lt;
-. . . . - ...... I1W'INAO. .......--~- loorloii !
" - - ~ oattlo ' whhut~~~·
• 1

i:.n.r.~~ilo·~i11bu~ho~,~and~~o;o~wo~,~-~·

112 It

•

111ao111

Col 'a JMnt

b:

!.oodod MoWith EoJno,
E.C. &amp;i; I
1111
lprin!or
Itt ttiii11,No-.-- l
1
.... LaneMnnga
', '

llanhd,AifP.M.1,111 I :1 ...... . -ng •
Hiild Of CIEtalas ,e r- Cllttlt.

• 'I'Miiint:
ltllra.
tfti- .. DII,10

Flu

'•• AB , _ 11Ja lpl!t

Do!IV- "" Plok-U;t l.o!M.

,., -.._--.lui
II1WII-1Itl.

:::a:~"% ~-oo:~J:'

1121. .

1111.

=r:.r-.-

2D RtilllfiB

Home·.
Improvements

22=23Acn.
'
WIRDAI24F-

IMinoI

TIME.

ItiiR\tl

21111111

1+
Allpass

The success of a contract may depend on the presence or lack of a key
1 king or queen, but sometimes it
doesn't - as in todly's deal.
Declarer bad four potential loeen:
one heart, two diamonds and one
Honver, after East's opening bid,
wasn't worried. After Winning
one with dummy's club ac;e,
drew two rounds of trumps endiJII
the dummy and took the heart flaesle.
Unexpectedly ,it lost. West led his
·second club; East won· with the jack
and exited with a heart. Now South
bad to find the diamond jack. Thinking
East muit bave that cant to get up to
12 points for his opening bid, declarer
played a diamond· to dummy's kiDIEast won with the ace and returned a
dian!ond. South finessed his 10 and fifto
ished one down.
North was , unsympathetic topartner'• proteetationa about
luck. • After drawing trumpe, )lilt
~ka club.'
"But East wine and switclles to a
beart. Tbe flaesle loees ....'
"Wbat finlise? You don't fine-.
That -queen is a right royal
ring. You Win with the ace, ruff your
laat club and exit in hearts. Whoever
wios with the king must lead a dia·
mood, finding the jack for you. • ..

28 Dl1•11n
30011111
....
321tnt_.,
331111eol

35~:: 1

31r::r

40Midcllei!HI,

:Z -·

44V.....

44PICftlclelllld
44DoH-41C1t)'OIIIIte

o.tiibe
.
501111lllletel.

52 ... Wl'llt8II

54=.. '

58 !My 01 WII. '
. ,..... !IICJ,
II .,.,. lOr ;
tin

·v

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M N f J K

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UYWII!VL

EN M W K

XMFXU

INNXR

SD

AVJ

UVR

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F.umllhld
Rooms

IDINMD

HNX

PXII

ZVTDR

AVWWVHUVJ .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Dorothy Klraten wu sn artltl I lldmlred very
much and a great- lady oi lhe at age." ~ PIIICitlo Pomingo.

........

'::~:~' S@~~lA-4"E~s·
Nho4 loy ClAY I . POI&amp;AII
Roorronge lo...n of
_ . _ . , ~-"""0 lour .w;rambied word1
low ro form lour ~mplo 'f'OfOI-1

•

I

Roome tar rent ·woittor OIOrllh.

,,. ••••o.

8tarti"'lll --.GoNia Holll.

Slooplng
AIM trllller- . - .- AU In ~­
1 I upa.
Coli alor 2:00 p.m., 304-n,.

------=

71

A. Yes, it's a mistake. The verb
COMBINE comes from the Latin
prefix COM·, •together," and BINI,
"two by two." With the sense of "to·
gether" already included, this verb
should not be combined with TOGETHER, or there will be redundancy. From no.w on, feel free to
"combine• tnot "combine together'')
things that have been separate.

I rI I I )

T U R Y S ,..

.I

"I've called you eve:y nanie

~he~:r·;c~··=

Ie

_ _ _ _ _ _..;."., smllef" ,"It's aasy," the guy
r
M I p D· I L
says, "I was an -····."
.

I 15 I 16 I

L-'-·_.__--'.1 .-...1.1.-...1.--'

e

Compltle lila ehucklo quo'-&lt;!
by fill ing In lile miuinJI -ds

you d...,elop from step No. 3 bolow,

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'
· . THESE SQU,O.RfS

I

I I• I• I•

... UNSCRAMBLE ,O.BQVE LETTERS
V
TO GET ANSWER ·
•

_I

..... PWII PI
.....__

he

:

• Round . . . .

114-

Auto' for Sale

BERNlCE
BEDEOSOL
.
.

........... wv.

47 Wanted to Rent
Family L.oo!oin1 To 2 To I
lod- ...... In c.. "'"
'P
- I -OutDooo • Ho!roHi
Call Colfool: ltWia'

Aatro-0..-pll Matchmlltor

tnston;;y ,..

...., wllk:lt ligna ... romonttclily pet'•.
, :.ct lor you. Mill t2 pi,. along, llil'lld·
dr-.1, ll&amp;mped enwtcpe to
MIIIOhmllt•. c/o !hla newep-. P.O.
Box 111421, Cll! Piland, OH 44101-3421.
AND (. . . . 11·Aprll11) A Plltr*- ·
lhlp •••.'U8'••ll that you're ......,.lly
lmlolvN In
work out ..n tocley,
PIIMdld boiii 01 you . . operating on
. !l1e limitable. II not, the ,_Ita
OOUid lie d=atnttng.
TAIIIIUe (
Ma; •1 Blrlve to lit .

'*'

a

. cllpltlmallc llld ~ loclay- yqllr

-

001-IMIII. Avoid Qlliatldng
-

biOI IH tlllo ooukl -~·
prDbletnt tllabldlo'l

r.1 r r cr ll r 1cl i ~) r
5I

Household

Goode

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Pomeroy Daily Senllnel

992-2156
Pt. Pleuant Resieter
675-1333
r

I

he

THIRSTY.

.~'

IIIII, WY. -

J

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
' ·!'
Plight· Youth • Tramp. Scorch· THIRSTY
My uncia always waHed until the last minuta to do
things and then everything would go wrong. His dad
told him
should learn to dig his well .before
got

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

....
-11_ -.,.~
....
2111h. JlolrW l'lut, IIOii I n

•

P UC E

,,

·GRAPH·
IICI ...... Duo: C..
Allof'lll
1'14441
1111. - . •4 zp ,

.

•

rr" 11 spot t;1t ron
45

L11M- -":
,...,

11

$2•• U-50.

For - ·

.

~-

41 CoiiPlH~

llquort - . ....

IUD &amp;trow

•

aal:::ld
:
110111

RIFF
1

•

.......... :

....
"" .......... bolo.
12111.,
114-11:1-3121.

' ~!or
-....r.

.

I

Servtces

;;;:;;.:....,.......,.......,.......,........,....,......_1 81
114 Hay &amp; Gralil .
:..;,~;:;;..~;::.:;~;.,......-1

-

2 AHAIIOut-

3 Pro- (for
the time

1

'

-I~

Com tar•lo, ....'1112-2410.

,.,,Getwt•r
.....
.......

_,..IlK

1 ScotiWI

Eut

Q. I've been criticized for using
"combine together." Is it really a mistake?

,!'l

f

31,...., .

I

By Jell'rey MJ:Qualn ·
One sense of NESCIENT is "ignoranl, lacking knowledce": ''The leader
kept his nescient followers in the
dark. • Speaken who are in the know
pronounc,e the ailjeetive NESCIENT
"NESH-unt."

Auto Parts"
~

,......, .

11 UftltorJ

DOWII

OUR LANGUAGE

lllllti, (400 aciutl

11-1111. . '

34FIIII
35VHI ...

MR I C P

- ·ca..-. w

Troolor 1 ,....._ Ollw_ , li4UIIIII*II.- fllltl .1112
dllwn -

11140.
- . lrio, ·..,. lon tn\CIC
Clltlo
Haul!ng:
Arwll. ., :~~J~ A,.A~~~!
...,..... ChUck Wllfl.. 3'72-3H:J •1
• •: I
Trlilo CroH Truoldna, 114-246,
I

....

the r1ver, 111 utiiiU..
,
$250/mon., ftOO clopoolt, 114-

13 . ~----------------~

...
:,;·•:.:a·=
· =-·.....,p ..
..,...-....,.
MIN P-·o 0., C... Cordar 1
Waot 01 HMC On .locMon
Pika ._, I
P.ll. n
And E ; lou• lo Tho
11 CGnoom I'Or , _ Clllid'o
ear.. Call Uo l'or A Yloft. ln/Toddlon 114 ... 1237. p cha a.. ,. llchoGf Age 1M-44f.

1,.

..

mo.

oortlllod, n ·
1,1111-.

I

lf! ,

=.::=·

Petlnkln "

Way.'"

Motltar Nabn'o
, AakMG-·

Tnttlo . -

•-lito

to
.... "" - " In dioir
home. S.VIces prowldl d lnetude: l&amp;gf:lt -... clunlno,
homo -lng, .... rn

~

tOtll - · -

iont""'!',

In lown. ADDIICOIJona
tl: VII- ·c,_ Alllo. 141 or

6----------~-----7. ______~------------

DUSl : :;.,: '...,: .-i,:-:c~-: -: . : - ~
- A.l . DOllARS OUolliJ

· ·. WITH A

2 Bade oom _ Apatt:...m Fl,..
Avenue, Galllpolla, 114 44'1 1221
2 bodraom Town ..._ .,..,

2bd1111. opto., IGiol - . : . , apIIImlohoti, loulldry
,_, fllcllhloo1_. _ - to oohoOI

5 •. ___________________

Sunday----

I

eom-..--

Antlqull

plilncoo ·

4 . ____________________

:t04-175-7117.

TO TOll POCK.

a

Flllllitlft ......, • mtnlohod,

~

-=ct••;1
..w
of LC, IM-

-Ill"

~tll0,11ttall40

13 - forT"o

The Britisb royal family receind
more bad publicity in 1992 than during
the previous ZOO yean; since the reign
of Georce III. But I think the queen is
guilty only in that she trained ~er el·
dest sons too well in the ways of the
monarchy. ·
AS Neil Shand said, "Prince Charles
is planning to record his own venion
of Frank Sinatra's bit 'My Way.' He's
going to call it 'One Did It O.,.'s

'r'"'

-

t.

32 llo!IIIInt tor

. too many

;orloo.101'171o

I .T.W. H
Lltl. to 1:110 P.'!!;,"""'"' 1:00
tD 1:00 p.m. Itt 'lllliil ¥24

2-·--~--------------s. ________________

""
- and
24hr.
M.A..............
..... .....
H.fth

......- . .......

-080,

:a. . . .

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

....,_
'1:''*'8 In Pereonal Care
Hoino n Woot Coi!Oftble, W.Y.,

rianft:
~· _,
lpv.llo I~ ...,.• Do-

-=-

.... -

plolod.~.

,........ care,

.w.......

_.,. -

Tum your clutter into em~,
S!Jl. it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified qd todaJ'!
15 word&amp; or le11, 3 dan,
3 papers, $5.40 paid in advance,

:24:-::,.:·======:.J ...-•Wllo 1-looldna
. "SI181R
• --

•••ees. I

81- Mlddloport, Ohio,
aot. m • c10p, p o l c l , - -.
lroa-.kll ~rt:nenta, 1 Bid-.,
Stovo
Rohlgorator,

171-7117.
Oso:gw P~•bls S.wmll.; don"l
houl , _ to lho moll 1...
coli :!OW7S,tl57.
Hondyman haoiNOk, 1 -, loll- · Rill! Yory _
.....
NHOMblt. Work dnlely • COfl'to

'Jit2·2'711 1M

hudlull'll. -- -

-

-~,

=;t.:=.-NIIIl
::r.a::.

-------"'::.=::-...""''"·
Ouwi*-Witlrbld.llaal "

1 -.

tho

SJ,~

aid~

W; . oinoll~
.._
&amp;illie
.....-~z:r

Cali-1423.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMEN18 AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 1H .._.., Pllao
tram $208/mo. Walk to """" •
movlouo. CaH 114-MW5e8. EOH.

~ lor- on dairy, liOOI,
hoy !lim or~. col Ed 304-

D1p1rUMnt

·

COli t14.ftWT!1. EOH.
.
Aport- ,., _ , 1 .....
room, FirM Flaor, In Gllllpolll,

...... ..... II1U43-!123
orl14 143.UII.
EiR TREE SERVICE. T-ng,
Trimming, rr.. - . 1 , HOell"
Trim~. F- Eotl.,.lnl I~
:~Po
After 4p.m.

,.... ..,en and

1-

l oln -

1om - a l : . - an old 11om
ilr&lt;Might- • out of tho waY?
Will · - "" ........ 1'142511014.

Experien~•d ..,...... '

r,::e,

luy or uP. - . . Anllqun,
1121 E.
on Rt. 12t

Monollno,

O...r ond lloboal WO!It, by

··= ':.it·

:::=..,

Pus

Norllo

I I - FIITOW

82 Actor-

queen

• - · .. ....
..,..,.. 11,100, Firm. 14-441-otSI, - 1
PICKENS FURNITURE
$31; . . _ lom-lpm,
..... -'1'187.
' ·\ 1
-••
t1ar won, oa11 COoiwiilo, 1114.... hold - · · 112 mi. tiUitl.
1111 pick..........
. '
~~ Rd• Pl. PI
•a, WY• o . - Plllce Pet ..._
1111 Ford
i
-~
(" -~-ooii311Ml1-'
• . ~tno.c.Murah¥~~
~ -~·~·- ' :
o.- o1ao wotw. bod ..'Ill.- llpoBI. - - I.M -ot41-. 1011.
1114 . Dodgo Dakola,
IJ4.448.
..,....,
'
..... ~i

53

Coil RITA Allor 4:00
1114-:rnl-4033 (cou.ECT)

w-: lloka ...,. monoyt
F- olght -lob proporopR&gt;irorn - . . _,.n.dlllonal
~· (ONOW), 1-aoo.

L()WEEZY II

~-14··--

CA8H?H

No DoiiYorloo, No Cluolao,
DolormiN Your Own Hrw, NO
GIMMICKS.

BABY

Joiw!Doorel\oo,_Rw

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

EARNGREAT.II

tlng!on o..O -Jon. If rou .,.
thO- ond 1ltUd to bo Mthlho
t..t, call or write Wtltwood
Home Show, Inc:. 5898 At. eo
Eoot, BarbouraviiiO, WV 251104,
304·7:11-3888.

- . . - •·

..,.. old

Vl'rginlo. Duo

tholo111Z-hoWOWOIng uloo rope for ow H..,_

·. Vi::"ii'..:."§

iumlhn,
!!!'w.... - .~~-~.._

AU~«~,ILIGII4Z.

OH 4811iS:
....,.. Reprnwtltlveetf
Dooo ........... ol , ... -

~~f.!~l~VW~

AUCTION a FURNITURE. a
Ollw8t,Goillpollo.-·l*d

TilE PAMPERED CHEF

=
I
,._,o:a:

Weol

-

eoa.=·l

Opening lead: + 9

112,804p,

''t'"'_

...

--·""•liPJII-.

BWAII

-33Y1 111 S. U1 adu•ay, N.

"'loooo Big Bucko" WO&lt;II AI
R..., S.A.S.E. 110 To
D&amp;ASu.-, lox 81, H - .

~~~~~~~;
Nolhinli E- PnOWIIod.
..

1224.
-·

=uont
::::om·.:.OF~=·'rit."=

Help Wanted

~ntlll; .... Cia- ..
- Orondo, OH Call 114-

' '

.,n,...,TN,..,...ckt-=-fo--=r
N; \iii,'; ....
;;;;:
Or 4 Oool 141 On . _ _ 111W~aiiii~Cai~~81~4:!44~1~C!;2S~1-:.,.,.---I 1173 Dodgo DuiUip Tuuoio, Plloo.
...~

-.. · -

2 b i - . dininG ........nl,
..m.flnlshed
To ~~P Cam- ~:::...
--:.':;."'!!.,
Upotalrs, a- - , -101 lfr,
"iiH'ctod.
Call
=====------IIOD•.ane·Eid.R141L
vinyl olclng, ..pa ·-~ oarpolod; axe I
'!op Paid: AI Dlcl U.S. lei
____.._.
~ doli!o,
COiiftltGold RlnaLSUvw~IIPirtC41 • - . -"' loclliono, 2114 .locMon Avo,
:tot~
oftori::IO
M
·F.
Gold Co1no. II.U. Coin B!Io;o, - P lt,_ ~~.loll m,
GOVERNMENT HOMES Fram 11
l!ISaoond--. GaillpoiiL . - · ·- - • START IIIMEDIIIIEL'II lam IJD (U iloWl.
Tu
NOO /Wit l.ablllna -nfo
Employment Serv1ces To
Friooto Noooo. lot "V- Oem
Houro. No CluolaL Wr!Jo: " - 10111 For C..rrorrt Ropo Llot. ,

11

lum~

',
1111 Ponllac GNnd ;Prix, ~r, :
15,000 lllloo, r F¥i!t , .......,.., I
...• •
'T.Dt. ' .
1111 :&gt;Oillac a..noi

""l..'it"'i ~ ~ - · 5.':::; .

Fumlohod, z or :lbdnn. tof.In Country llobllo PartL-horl tlqwe. Hoe hold
..._, WY. 304-71NMt.
.
--.,~'3.*2351
21'7.
i
'W227.
loll,
'11111111
IOblo ,.....
• • Oiiiih, """'

......_ott

. -- ..8':"-.

Hood Fondw

etttll!llllto' ·

~~~~ Wlwlfto

2t1112L

I.

:;;tc: 1~~~0::,:l!:i:,~=

.

-~
- · .........

. ,..,_
A., .. _ _

Gw•iiMf, ..&amp;d. Muioo. Paid

&amp;::1 :;.. t""--

c.un ..... Or

·' Mitro,.
. .· ·.lrlaltl ·· ~ocl~

42 Mobile Homas
Fllh Tank, 1411 J•a'
a Ava. alum. •:~,... ,.,., ~·,
·
R im
•-·
.
for Rent .,
IIOi- - Rooking
lnohoo C..otalno
Point
-~~~.
30M71-Z0113,
Fibo; ,
. Wlln S!tooro $20, Phono: IJ4. tun 11M T~ flolt, lllrcto, wnh l!glot. lit t 11 :11'11.
1181 Ptllrmont llabMe ~ 2
· MdiDOIII
tumlthed, 444~1~m~lt.!!;7.:=-:===
I
1
2 IUndorponnlng.
J - - . 1 lath,
11/C,
$200.~71- h ;;......
UIED . - .··~E!oc.
-_,
Allar -~-.
pi,_ utiiMIOo, m
l clop.
- - IIIRIIo~ kill-. -lo, bom T.!_hos'l,l':J i!:.:fo- ~· I

111 aoea .or-t~Aal.
• •
Ad .,
1W , ' l l 'R
nngll
Woniod To Buy: J101k Autoo
41111. EOE.

With Or WHIMMil Motora. Call
• Laruy I.Mir:·a14 3at nn ·
·POIIITIOH8

EnlortoiiiiiiOftl

1173 . . _ ......, t2d2, 1114-

all

Real Estate

~

SHill

1111 0.

Building
SUpplieS.

lull

"'!w;;.;;;ofijftiiOji;d,1jiij;

Good,
,__ Stuclv,
Wan'f -~­
LMl 1~4

'

114-&lt;MIJ

llogotlalllo.

-·
booamant wflaundry 11.1111-Lhoh•&gt;A•
golv.
• .
•
roo: and
Rullo•• .......J!:olll -onamollnd
32 Mobile Homes
hook-upo. ::cM-m-e'TIII or I~ 1!'11-.n;
Mel
Cholro
.
.
Or
.....
.
orm-.
·
II
a,..y
Qftoillool,
,...
31111.
toolca~-.n
I
for8ale
-; 'And lind s
bodroom, z botho, tun - .
56 Pats for Sals
"
'
W
·
._,
1114-'
!
2317. ,
I I
tiiiiiJ7 1101' . - h lnciucllna 111 . - , $300. por mo a clopoolt,
0...
and
··
~"J·
'Pot
0...
;WoalfrMIOI-.- .~170. .304..711-3112.
~
atovo,

!·~~~~~~~~4~t~ti~IM~M~.
, --=-~~ ~
,
1114 : ; . - . 1411lQ whh 141x11 :2~1od:::;=,_=m=-;ll::c,c::b:::lle-::
lloo_m_•~.-::-No

VENDING 1KlUT11i: Clol 'illoh
Quioic? No Wort But Wo Ha.. A

114-44C"31tl.

IOhan Carpoto, 1117 N• . _
'JII+t.
•·
llooll, IIrlck, -

--.:,:~ 1 both, 1Zx14 In- - . 0opoo11 • Rollrwnoa ..._
.... !Eiodrlo - - quir..:, 114-256-1122.
On 112..,._ -.114? ailor I
P.'!ll· .
2 l1droome FumiMed, 1 MI..

-·

·-

cariiot ito, h12 .tnyt ..._ i1oo11fta BlatM,- Cond•Jon,

IOhan
tJ4.146.11144. ·
AI car;oot 1 YI""Ol-. 11o1- 55 '

Rentals

. M,OOO,

s,.c..,.

57=oz.

31 C1111Uc

31=1caUOit

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

PI, TW, CC, AIM'II ...,_..;

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ACROII

BRIDGE ·

.,

1

•·

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, u.rctl&amp;, 19SP

·Your Social Sec_urity

... ·'

f.
~

;

... · // l
MR. and MRS. EARL (CYNTIHA) SANDERS

Hazleton~Sanders
HEMLOCK GROVE • Mr. and
Mrs. James A. HazeliOII, Hemlock
Grove, announce the marriage of
their. daugt\ter, Cynthia Ann, to
Earl Raymond Sanders, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rayl)lond E. Sanders,
Brookfield.
The bride is a 1985 ~Uaduate of
Meigs High School. The groom is a
1983 graduate of Hubbard High
School. Both are graduates of Kentucky Christian College in
Grayson, Ky.
.
The couple was married Aug.
29, 1992 at the Kenwood Church
of Christ in Livonia, Mi., with the
bride's brother, Michael Hazelton,
officiating.
The bride wore a floor-length
gown of crepe satin with a sweet·
heart neckline. puff sleeves aceent. ed with bows and lace and a lace
covered drop waist bodice with an
attached train. The skin and bodice
were also accented with lace trim
and pearls. The gown and veil were
made by the mother of the bride.
The maicj-of-honor and. !lttendants
wore pink or aqua floral tea-length
dresses with sweethesrt necklines ·
and bows and carried white lace
fans accented with flowers.
lane Hazelton, Livonia, Mi., sis·
ter of Lhe bride, served as maid of
honor and the altendants were

ByEDPEI'EilSON
Social Seau ity
M~~~qeJ: Ia AlMas
"Older Arnericans and their
families may be interested in
knowing about a nationwide infor·
matian 8Dd referral service that is
now available," said Ed Petcnon,
Social Security manager in Athens.
'fhe Eldercare Locator is a
nauonaJ toll-free number service
that cm help fmd appropriate community rcsowtes for older people
any"!'":re in the country. "Simply
by dt~lmg the toll free number, 1800-677-1116, you will be referred
to a local number for such renior
services as nursing homes, legal
assistance and fD1811Cial aid," Peter·
son said.
'_lbe Eldercare Locator service,
~hich is ftmded by the Administra1!00 ~Aging, began limited open·
Ill?" m May 1991, but went nationwide only ~ past November. Mr.
Peter.son pointed out that early
expenenc:e shows about balf of the
Clllen to the 800 number are family ~emben interested in locating
asststance for_the care ,of an ol'!er
JIII'tofnt or relative; 8Dd about a third
the callen ~ older persons whQ
~ themsel~ tnle!CSted in loca,t•
mg commuruty remces.
The National Association of

Area ·!Cm,nc:.,on Agency, which
helPI
· ·
the IOU-In=e Rllll·
ber lei'Vice, SlaleS thai "The Bider·
care I.«ator.. .is a acrviQC wboao
time has come."
The Association notes that
improvements in life expeciiDCy
ancl health care bave helped to
make Americans over the aae of 85
the f8SieSt growing ~nt of die
U.S. popuialion. And u is this aae
group that is most lilcely to need
assistance from caregivers and/or
aging ref\'ices.
"If you call the atdercare Loca·
tor," Peterson said, ''you will speak
wilh a trained information specialist.lfthelines are busy, you will be
told that the next available specialist will take your call and be placed
in a waiting queue.
• ,
The information specialist can
• help you defme exactly the type of
. service that you .are looking for,
and referJOU to the nearest service
provider. .
The Eldercare Locator toll-free
number, l-800-677-l116, oPerate$
l'rom 9 am. 10 6 p.m. (eastern time)
every business day. During nonbusiness hours, an answering
machine will Jake your call and an
information specialist will contact
you the following day.

Girls SEO
All-District
team named

Society started

Community calendar

Pick 4:

7304

Yai..U, No.218
CoA;Ightld1183

BUYS TICKETS • Roter Smith, (left), porch- 0., nry tint
ticket ror the April 17 Phil Dirt and the Dozen concert at the Rutland Civic Center. Presenll.nJI Smith with is ·lickel is-Rutland
Mayor Ed Martin.

.Concert ticket' sales unUer:way ·

The ftrst ticket for the Phi' Dirt land Elementary·PI'Q will be proand the Dozers concert was sold to vidins conceaions for the OOIICe!"~
Roger ~mith of Rutland. The cOn·
TickeJs are IY8illble at the Rut·
c~r~ wdL be held a_t the R~tl~d land Civic Center, Meigs County
Otvtc Center on Aprill7 beginninJ . Chamber of Commerce and at
at 8 P~· .
. ..
•· Fruth Pharmacies in, Midd,lepon,
"This
w1ll
.
b
e
an
exctung
.show
. Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
saying their students cannot be
for
Meigs
County
iuJd
the
ptuceeds
W.Va.
'
blind.
Further information may be
- Ms. Fisher's lawyers say the .Wilth.'I !Je1P do some JDaintenance on
.
e
c1vic
cente~.
replied
Bd
Martin,
obJained
by callins74~-2121 or the
folll'·Year dispute could wind up in
Mayor
of
RutllijJd.
Meigs
County
Chamber of Comthe U.S. Supreine Coun.
'fhe .&amp;stern Band Boosters, merce Office 992-SOOS.
Me1gs Band BOQS!Crs and the Rut- ·
'

The Long Bottbm Community
· Association met recently with Janie
Fitch, vice-president, conducting
Lhe meeting,
. The meeting opened with the
Pledge of Allegiance.
· ·Officers reports were given by
'Mae McPeek and Melody Roberts.
A collection was taken to pay
for the ,evening supper. Ruby
~ Brewer and Phyllis Larkins
prepared Lhe evening meal.
Another round and square dance
will be held at the community
i.JSA STARCHER
building on Friday with music br,
Buzz Slater and ''Out of the Blue. '
Ronnie Wood w'ill be the -caller.
,Lisa Starcher,' daughter of The cost is $5 per cou'ple or $3
George andJudi!h S!lircherofWest single . Everyone is welcome.
Columbia, was named 10 the dean's Refreshments will be served.
list at Marshall UnivetsitY. for the
Prizes for games were
fall semeste~, 1992. She is a sopho- purchased by Melody Roberts and
more there mlliorlng in special edu- Janie Fitch. ·
cation. Usa is the granddaughter of · A vegetable soup supper
Mary Slaleher, Pomeroy.
preceded the meeting.

On dean's list

The Ohio Supreme Court has been asked 10 clear
. the air over Ohio Power's "scrubber" plan at the
Gavin Planl in Cheshire.
Industrial I;nc:rgy Consumers, a coalition of 11
~ electricity UICfl, appealed a decision the Public
, Utilities Commission o£Ohio DUlle Nov. 25, approving the installalion of $815 million worth of aircleaning IICnlbben It the Gallia County plant, an article iii today's CobnnbuS Dispall:b Slid
The industrial group, wbicb includes General
.Motors. BP Oil and Anheuser-Busch, charged that .
. the PUCO's decision allows Ohio Power 10 CODtinoe
burning "unreasonably expensive" high-Sillfur Obio
; coal and is costing cotiSUIJiaS "hundreds of millions

m

year by ·.u parties except the indwitrial
and the
Ohio Sierra Club, will save the jobs of about 800
Meigs County coal miners. The plan is estimated to
hoost electric. raJeS by 6 percent hetween 1995 and

of dollars in excessive fuel costs."
A statement issued by the coalition said Ohio
Power, with the blessing of state regulators, is bpying
expensive coal from its own affiliated 'mines when
less expensive coal is available from other sources.
"We are asking the Ohio Power not be allowed to
subsidize its coal business at the expense of its customen," the statement said
.·
· ThC apPeal is part of a continuing legal battle over
the plan by American Electric Power, Ohio Power's
parent company, to burn Ohio coal instead of switchmg to out-of-stale coal to meet tough new requirel!lents of the federal Clean Air Act.
The plan, as outlined in an agreement si~ed last

2000.

.AEP spokesman Mike Mahoney said company
offtcials "believe the stipulated agreement of Ohio
Power Co.'s coal costs deserved the approval it
received from the Public Utilities Commission." He
said the company plans a legal response to the .
Supreme Court appeal.
'The commiss1011 Stal!ds by its decision in the case
and will await the Supr,eme Court ruling, PUCO
spokeswoman Stacie Oilg said.

.

Dance·'platined
There will ~I!. C0tJ11!rY we li:m
dance at MiddiC!port Elelilillwy on
March 13 froni, 8-11 p.m. lpOnsored by .the Middleport Arts
Council. The - . 11.$5 per COIIIIe
or $3 sing!O, FeiiUi'ed " - i'ill
include die 1'eUJi,two-siiJi, liile
dancing and clo'!!;f· Food 111c1
soft drinks wUibe
:•

'

.

Dustin Hoftmalt won lb~ lt88 A,eattemy Award for Beat ~tor for bliJer·
formance in "Rain Mltn." · ·

IN"ALLING NEW LINE· Worken were
basy liistaiUaa a aew water llae alon&amp; West
Main Street UDder tile Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
M!lnday. AccordiD&amp; to VIllage Administrator
John Anderson, the aew line replaces a line

plaeued bJ rrequeat leaks. Here, equipment
operator Jeremy Rose, Radne, places gravel
over a section of the new line while Doug Warden, Racine, watches. (Sentinel photo by .nm
Freeman

Koresh says, "We are ready for war"
WACO, Texas (AP)- The FBI
moved tanks into place after an
'increasinJ)y wlalile David Koresb
- seemtngly eager to fulftll his
apocalyptic propllesies - boasJCd
of having powerful explosives.
"We are ready for w-:,'' the 33year-old cult leader and self-pro·
claimed messiah was quoted by the
FBI as saying.
The 67-ton Abrams tanks, the
Arm:y' s heaviest, were rolled into
posiuon outside the Branch Davidians' compound Monday strictly to
give law officers protec:tion, FBI

spokesman Bob Ricks said. The
tanks will be lDI8fllled, he said. .
Koresh had told negotiators he
has explosives that would blow the
FBI's Bradley armored personnel
carriers "40 or SO feet into the

.

l!U'-

''

.

"Because of some intelligence
indicating he may have stockpiled
other than just automatic weapons
- there may be explosives and
perhaps even rockets within the
compound - we are taking additional defensive measures," Ricks
said.

,....--Local briefs-worker injured in fall .

' ,.
'
,-

•• •

A construCtion 'lOIOrlc« was trllllSp011ed to the intensive care unit
of Cabeli-Huntington Hospital Monday after he fell .approximately
15 feet while workins near the Ohio River at the Gavin Power
Plant, 7397 State Route 7, Cheshire. ·
A spokeswoman for Russell Construction reJKlr!Cd Monday
ChesJer Roush, 55, 2635 S.R. 7, Gallipolis, feU from a river cell
onto rocks.
A holpital spnte"Ml01811 reported the worker was in fair con&lt;li·
lion this morning and is being treated for multiple trauma.
Roush was first transpOrtied by Gallia County Emcqency Medi·
cal Service 10 Holzer Medical Cen!CI' in Gallipolis.and was later
transferred 10 cabell-HuntlngtoD. ·
The Michigan-based construction company is installing river
cells for a lime loader ll the power plant, the spokeswoman said.

Alan injured in wreck
· A Syracuse 111111 was injUred but refused lrealrllCnt following a
two-vehicle accidmt Monday artanoon, the Gallia-Meigs Poll or
.the Stile Hi&amp;hway Paaol reponed.
Acconlin&amp; 10 the accident report, Richard D. Ash, 38, Glen
Street, Syr11euae, wu eastbound on State Route 124 in Sutton
TOWIIIbip whlln bellowed doWII for a-oouad IChool bUI which
waa about 111 ItO() and was ltrUCit from behind by Blmer L. Pickens,
66, 49443 Stile Jtoare 338, Rlcine.
.
Pickens wu cited for fallure to maintain an a~ured clear disJance. Both vehiclel allllained moclenre dlmqe and wore driven
from the-.
'

.

Turkey permit deadline extended

.

'

•

The l1lltey peualt c!eec!Jine tm the l9931mkey au~ has been
extended 10 Mildl 28, .......... County Game Prolector Keith Wood
. llid Maaday.
".
.
.
' The original dedllne ror turtey permita wu Monday, Wood

llid.

''
'.

The POCO said the scrubher decision was made
on a "pure economic, least cost basis.• Regulators
subsequendy turned down requeSts by the industrial
group and the Ohio Sierra Club to reconsider the
decision.
SIB!C law permits opponents 10 appeal directly to
the Ohio Supreme Court after appeals through the
PUCO have run their course.
The Ohio Offioe of Consumers' Counsel, which
represents residential utility corisumers in the state,
backs the scrubber plan and does not support the
indus~ group's appeal, spokeswoman Belh Gianfortaro said.

London Pool will be in
operation this summer

The meeting closed with the
Lord's Prayer.
Attending were Rub[ ll'rewer,
Phyllis Larkins, Dorse Larkins,
Stanley, Juanita Well; Janie and
Brandon Fitch; Melody ltobens,
Judy Holter, -Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek and Delores Hawk ..

.

1 Section, 10 POll" 25 cento
A Multlmodla Inc. Newopaper

· ohio Supreme Court asked to ~crub 'scrubber' plan

., ...

I

Low tonJabt In 30s. Cklucly.
Wednesday, blgb Ia upper 40s.

Pomeroy-Middlepo", Ohio, Tuesday, March 9, 1993

Long Bottom area news

DAVtomeet

' .

567

•

Community Calendar items forming in the dinner theater at
appear two days before an event Southern. High School will be ·held
and lhe day or thai eveaL Items Tuesday at 6 p.m. in the high
must he received weU in adV81lce school bandroom. All parents are
to assure publication ill the cal· urged to auend.
en dar.
REEDSVILLE • A community
MONDAY
education meeting will be held
BURLlNGHAM- The Bedford Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Eastern High
Township Trustees will meet Mon- School.
day at 7 p.m. at the 10wn hall.'
POMEROY • The Meigs CounPOMEROY ·The DAV will ty Board of Elections will meet
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall. Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the offtce.
124 Buncmut Avenue, Pomeroy.
POMEROY - The Su11ar Run
CHESHIRE - Women Alive School Restoration Comm1uee wiD
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the meet at 6:30 Tuesday evening at
Kyger ,t;:reek Clubhouse. Juanita Trinity Church.
Roush'· will be the devotional
spea ker~ 'Jhere will be a craft
· POMEROY - There will be a
demonstra~on and refreshments.
Sugar Run School meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Trinity Churcfi.
TUESDAY
Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepan Youlh League will hold signMIDDLEPORT - The Preceptor'
up for the 1993 ball season on Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. and Satur- Sorority, will meet Tuesday at 7:45
day from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up p.m. at the home of Velma Rue, 72
will be held at the Middleport South Third in Middlepon.
Council chambers. Anyone who
did not participate last season will
WEDNESDAY
need a copy of their birth certiriSYRACUSE - The Syracuse
cate. Registration fee is $10 per Youth League will meet Wedneschild, not to exceed $25 per famil~. day and March 17 from 5-7 r.·m . at
Syracuse Eic:mentary Schoo . RegPOMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi IStraUon fee IS $12 per child, not to
Chapter, Beta Sjgrna Phi Sorority, exceed $25 per family. First time
will have a progressi ve dinner partici\)ants must provide a co_py of
Tuesday . Meet at the parking lot their binh certificate. Further mforacross from Dollar General at 6:15 mation may be obtained by conp.m. Salad course is at Sandy · tacting Jim Lawrence at 992-3282.
Butcher's, main course is at Julie
Dillon's, dessen course is~ Sherry
POMEROY : Pomeroy MerChapman's.
chants Association will meet
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the conLETART FALLS • · The ference room of Bank One in
Le tart/Portland PTO will meet Pomeroy.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Letart Falls
Elementary.
RACINE - The Racine Youth
League will hold sign-up for the
REEDS VILLE - Riverview 1993 ball season on Wednesday
PTO will meet Tuesday. Refresh- from 6-8 p.m., on Marth 13 from 9
meniS and babysitting provided.
a.m. to noon and Marth 15 fnm 68 p.m. Fmal sign-up will be Marth
HARRISONVll.LE • The Har- 20 from 9 a.m. to noon. Si$n-up
risonville Senior Citizens Club will will be bdd at the Southern kinder·
hold a free blood pressure c'linic on garten bijilding. Rt!ftistration fee
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 1109n at will be $10 for soft
playen, $15
the townhouse. Mel!lhers will hold for basebaU ~yen, not 10 exceed
a potluck after the clinic, weather $25 per famtly. Anyone who did
permitting.
not participate in the Racine Youth
League previouslY. will need a ~PY
RACINE • Racine Lodge No. of their birth catificate.
· 461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Work in the' fellowcraft
degree.
The Disabled American Veterans will hold its monthly moetlng
RACINE - A meeting for par- on Monday at 7 p.m. at the 'hall.
ents of students who will be .per- 124 Buuemut Avenue in Pome10y.'

'

Pick 3:

Page4

Blind student fights medical·
s~hool requirement for sight

Jaima Hazelton, Salineville, niece
of the ~ride; Mrs. Gayla Horinek,
LeWISVIlle, Texas, cousin of the
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
bride; and Mrs. Cassandre Griffm
woman who decided she wanted to
CuyahOga Falls.
' become a doctor when physicians
· Flower girls were ianet Hazel- were trying to save her sight is
ton, .niece of the bride and Brett . fi$hting a medical school ban on
Allen. niece of the groom, both of blind students.
Livonia, Mi. They carried white
"They're creating limitations on
baskets with flowers.
themselves and me by their ignoThe groom and groomsmen aU rance," siid Cheryl Fisher, 29.
wore dark gray tuxedos with bow "Somelhin$ I [lear all the time is
lies and veSts.
this patronizing, 'It would be so
J.erry Sanders, Martinsville, hardont:;'"
.
Ind., brother of the groom, served · The
Western Reserve Unias best man ·and the groomsmen ~ity medic81 school in Cleveland
were Daniel Vargo, Virginia has denied Ms. Fisher admission,
Beach, Va.; Jeffrey Sagstetter,
Gra)'son , Ky.; John Sprankle
Lowsville; and Gregory Fasnacht:
A local chapter of Alpha Beta
Dayton.
Gamma
been chartered on the
The ring bearer was Michael campus has
of
Hocking
College for
David Plumbley, Livonia, Mi.
business
honor
students.
Forty-two
The traditiol)al wedding ceremo- students are charter members
the
ny was followed by a reception in organization and advisor'of
s
are
the fellowship hall of the church.
Aiken and Marc Newman,,
The bride and groom honey- David
Local students 'include Sltaion
mooned in Toronto, Ontario and
Gary Snou(fer and Steve
Niagra Falls, Canada, and now Johnson,
Donahue,
of Pomeroy; and Amy
reside in Livonia, Mi., where she Hill, Longall
Boaom.
wodcs as a receptionistlsales secreAlpha Beta Gamma is an orgatary for Hydna-Flex, Inc. He is the
nization
for two-year colleges and
associate minister at the Kenwood
students
must have completed 12
Church of Christ.
credit hourS and a minimum grade
point average of 3.0.
·
An installation ceremony will be
held spring quarter.

Ohio Lottery

Coatln!Md oa.pqe 3 ,

As the standoff dragged into its
lOth day, a judge was to decide
today whether 21 children already
freed from the compound would
remain in temporary siB!C custody.
Relatives from as far away as
Britain and Australia were expected to seek temporary custody o( the
children, who range from 5 months
to 12 years.
.At times, they ·have expressed a
desire to be reunited with parents
still ·inside the compound, officials
said. The youngsters have been
kept together . .
"Under the circumstances, the
kids are doing line, but it's a diffi.
cult time for them," said Bob
Boyd, a progrlun director for Children's Protective Services.
An additional 17 children were
believed .to be amons more than
100 people still inside the 77-eae
compound. Gun battles between
fedelal agents and Koresh and his
disciples Feb. 28 left four agents
dead. Ten cultists also may have
died.
"It's our helief that he believes
that his prophecy will be fulftlled if
the government en~es in an all·
out ftrefight with him in which he
is executed,'' Ricks said
"He has made such statements
is, 'We are ready for war.' 'Let's
Jet it on.' 'Your talk is becoming
m vain.' ·~·m going to give you the ,
· opportuntty to save yourselves
before you act blown away."'
Negotiators agreed Monda&gt;." 10
let the cult bury one member ll:ilied
. iii a shooiOuL 1be victim's identity
was being withheld.
Ricks said negotiaiora have .
talked with 33 people inlide the
compound. "Those that we spoke
wilh on each occaaioo verified that
Mr. Koresh had indlceled thai the&amp;
individuals were free to leave at
•y time," he said. "And we Jot
confirmation lhll they were staying
there on their II'Nal'ree will. ••
However, negotiators also
talked wilb a Wllllll11 who said she
8Dd her ftve children would like to
leave, but those tiJb broke down,
Ricks said.

chlorine·pump is needed along with She also indicated that sbe may try
By KATHRYN CROW
a diving board, and that the pool to requit funds from other sources.
Sentinel Correspondent .
: Maureen Hennessy asked if the
Syracuse Village inay lack needs painting.
In talking about operating village had I!Sked the Commissionfunds to operate London Pool but
no one can say that the residents . expenses, Pape said government ers to be placed on the list for .1994
lack spirit or the determination to regulatiOns now ~uire that liquid funds. «;:ouncil replied Lhey had not
see that the pool opens, come May. chlorine be used. Ltquid chlorine is asked for next year but had asked
At a public meeting Monday more expensive than other water twice for funds and also had written a Ieaer to them about the probnight held by ~yracuse Village chemical treatments, he said.
lt
was
suggested
that
Council
tern.
Council, it was apparent that many
get
together
figures
on
what
is
Jack Williams, council member,
residents, not only those in the vilneeded
and
the
costs,
and
then
stated
Lhat willl the pool operation,
lage but around the county, l!fe
work
toward
raising
the
money
losing
money, the village could get
willing to pitch in to keep the po61
from
the
private
sector.
itself
in
a situation which would be
open.
'
.
Several
J?COPle
at
the
meeting
very
difficult
to get out of. .He also
After hearing that the Meigs
had
suggesuons
on
how'
to
handle
mentioned
that
there are many resiCounty Board of CQmmissioners
the
financial
problems.
Mrs.
dents
in
Syr11euse
wl!o are renior
would not give any f11110cW supMichael
P,
f
t:n$i$1
stated.
that
she
,
citizens.
on
ftxed
inc:OJnes:
port to S)'racuse for the pool opera· .
David Lawson noted that the
lion, residents at last nighi's meet· would be wilhng to pay more for
pool
passes,
Lhat
the
pool
was
one
.
pool
bears the expense of all lighting expressed a willingness to work:
together to keep the pool in opera- of Lhe things which encouraged her mg at the park. Council said this
family to move to Syracuse.
should be handled another way.
tion.
Phil Hill staled that he would be
Harry Leflle who operates CanFormer Syracuse Mayor Eber
happy
10
chaperone
any
extra
activDo
Maintenance said that he will
Pickens offered his service in the
ities,
such
as
dances
or
othec
types
donate
40 hours of work:. He said
main!enance department. David
of
teen
activity
held
at
the
pool.
shutting
down the pool because of
Deem, w._ has been a guard at the
Mary
Powell,
director
of
the
apumpdoesn'tmakesense.
pool for a numbCr of years gave his
Council asked for volunteers to
support and listed some of the rea- Meigs County Park District, noted
that
she
had
contacted
Sen.
Jan
work
with the pool committee from
sons he felt the pool was hurt
Michael
Long
8Dd
was
informed
by
Council.
Volunteering were Mary
financially last years. These includ·
him
that
there
have
been
similar
Pickens,
Don Shaffer, Phil Hill,
ed the problems with the haby po&lt;il
problems
in
other
towns
and
that
Kay
Tackett,
Bob Wingett, and
as well as leaks which caused the
there
might
he
a
"hidden
source"
of
Carla
Wallace.
This group will
lose of chemicals and the weather.
funds.
The
Ohio
Public
Recreation
meet
with
Council's
pool commitDeem also suggested that the pool
deals
with
pools
and
might
be
able
tee
of
Bill
Roush,
Dennis
Wolfe,
be more family oriented.
to
come
up
with
funds,
she
said.
Kenny
Buckley
8Dd
Katie
Crow.
Carla Wallace offered her sup·
pon and asked,what it would cost
to, get the pool ready to open .
Msyor James Pape estimated that it
would take approximately $5,000,
EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio (AP) ... you can very easily see where
but added that the problem in the -A trial burn began today at a there's 75 people who wouldn't
past has resulted mostly from oper- hazardous-waste incinerator that have a whole lot to do," Zeli.k said.
ating expenses. He said that a new has been the subject of court lights
Some staff would be needed to
and protests by opponents who keep the hailer operating, do mainhave Died to stop it from operating.
work and provide security,
The trial burn hegan as officials
of the Waste Technologies IndusThe appeal asked for an emertries plant continued to appeal a gency hearing on the issue by
judge's order prohibiting commer- Wednesday. WTI said delays in
cia! operation pending analysis of starting the incinerator have cost it
the trial burn.
~5.75 m~lion and have jeopardized
Plant Manager Jeffrey Zeli.k said mc1neraUon contracts and financin a news release that the trial burn ing.
began about 8 a.m.
Opponents, including the envi" lt was determined laiC Monday ronmental group Greenpeace, had
WASHINOTON (AP) evening that the facility was reidy asked Ms. Aldrich to block the trial
Miami prosecutor Janet Reno and alf the appropriate authorities burn . They contended the test
pledged at her confumation hearing were notified of our intention to . would pose an unacceptable risk of
dioxin contam1' nau'on. D1'o•;n
today t hat 1'f con f'umed as t he proceed,""'·"'·
........., 581·d.
~· 1's a
nation's ftrst woman attOJney genIn Washingron today, opponents suspected carcin\)gen.
era!, her top priorities would be had planned to seek a meeting with
U.S. Environmental Protection
"attacking violent crime, drug aaf- Pres1dent Clinton 10 block the trial Agency officials had Jestifted durlicldng and public cort'l!pti&lt;in. "
burn. Vice President AI Gore ,had ing a hearing that WTI ordinarily
In prepared testilnony before the said during the campaign last fall would be allowed up to a year of
Senate Judiciary Coromiuee, Reno that he wanted a congressional operation while the test results are ·
also pledged strong civil rights · investigation before the plant could analyzed.
·
enforcement and added: "I want to start burning waste.
lelik said Ms. Aldrich ignored
do everything I can to endwe ~ual
U.S. District Judge Ann Aldrich testimony from William Farland, ·
oppclltunities for all Americans. '
on Friday said the plant would have the head of the EPA's risk assess-·
Reno was the only scheduled to shut down after the trial bum ment office, and Laura Green, a
witness and the committee was while the results are analyzed, a ri.sk assessor hired by WTI. Farland·
expected to act swiftly to·ratify her process that could take a year.
· said•the cancer risk would he 10
nomination. President Clinton was
Operators of the plant on Mon- times less than allowed under other
hopins for a quick Sena!C vote to day appealed the order 10 the 6th EPA programs. Ms. Green's analytiU the last vac:aney in his Cabinet. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, ask;- sis predicted an even smaller risk,
Clinton's first choice, ZOe Baird, ing that the appeal be heard imme- Zellk said.
withdrew h~r nomination in Jan- diately.
"The court didn't accept the
aary after admitting ahe had hired
Appeals coun spokeswoman conclllSions of these highly regardillegal aliens as liouschold employ- Debra Naaei said today the coon ed scientists,' ' he said.
eea.
had not made any dccisiotl on tlie
Ms. Aldrich was out of her
C~veland office Monday and not
Reno, a 5-'-year-old HarVlrd case. including when 10 heir iL
lawyer who bas been Dade County,
The $160 million lncinaator is aviilable for COillmen~ a secretary
Fla.; s!MII llllllmey for the lul 15 along the Obio River near OIUo '1 said.
years. faced little or no orpni:wl border with Pennsylvania and Wcat
Mick Harrison or the GovemOI1POiition u she lciUled mto the Virginia. Residents in all three rnent Accountability Project in
wttne11 chair.
.
staJeS have oppoaed the incinetaiOr. Washington, D.C., said Monday
"Attacking violent crime, drug . Zelik said Monday that plant that opponents were not surprised
traffictlns and public corruption · officials would be IQ start laying , by WTI's W""l His I!IIUl'. II rep-.
mpst be the flnt priority of the off man)' of its 104 employees .if ICIIIIIting l\)jJODelots in the dispuao. .
deputment, and if you confjrm me. the incmerator couldn't beg1n
"We believe the judco wu very
it will be," Reno said In her pte· money-mating operalioDS. Plant reaDIIble, and that tlxnl w• suf.
ptlred lllllimony.
offtciall have said the compiDY II ficient evidence in the record 10·.
Reno also promlJed to f!Jbt 011 losing SliS,OOO a day while tho suppon her decision, •• Harrison.•
behalf of the environment as aaor: incinerator is idle.
.•
said.
· ::·
ney general.
"If you're not recetVI,IIII wute

WTI plant starts trial burn

:=

Reno
hearings
begi~

(~I'

,l

~I

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