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Monday, March 15,1993

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

:Your Social Security
ings limit.
Under the law; an owner may
receive retirement benefits if he or
she hires someone to manage the
If y~ own a business or are an bu.siness or to perform certain
off~eer or a corporation, especially activities thai the owner performed
a .family-owned corporation, you prior to retirement. The owner may
can ex~ct to spend some extra then reduce his or her w..a~es to
lime w1th a Social Security repre- take into account the reducuon in
sentative when you file for your duties. Sometimes an owner simply
retirement benefits. The extra time turns the business and lill the earnwill be needed to fill out some ings over to his or her spouse while
forms that are designed to elicit retaining control and continuing to
information about your business, wo~ and manage the business. In
any services. you still perfo1,'111 and this situation, the person is not
the compensation you receive for actually "retired" and Social Secuthose services, and the arrange- rity "retirement" ,benefits will not
ments that have been made to be paid.
.
replace you.
·
Many self-employed individuals
Not surprisingly, Social Security set up these arrangements with
"retirement• benefits are paid to their spouse with the best of inrenpeople who have "retired." The law lions, figuring they've discovered a
permits Social Security recipients way to collect Social Security and
to continue to work and receive retain their former role in their
their full benefits as long as they business or corpomtion. Only when
keep their earnings under certain they talk to a Social Security reprelimits. For people age 65 through sentalive do they learn the arrange69, the 1993 limit is $10,560. ·Peo- ment is improper. Unfonunately,
pie under 65 can earn up to $7,680. by then extra time and effort IS
· However, if you're self- needed to file amel!&lt;!ed uix returns
employed, we also consider tile and adjust Social Security records.
amount of work you perform in And on top of that, processing of
your business and the payment you the. Social Security retirement
receive for your semces. This is claim may be delayed.
then comllllled with the·amount of
The best advice is 10 check with
work penormed and the payment Social Security wei.I before you
you received prior 10 your retire- plan to file for benefits. And
ment. We do this because business remember: you have to "retire" to
owners and corporate· officers are collect "retirement" benefits -. or
!n a position to. conliOI ~\r earn· ~t least significantly reduce your
mgs and there 1s a poss1bthty that mvolvement m your business and
they will conlinue to operate lheir .keep your earnings under the limbusiness full time while paying " its. The Athens office is localed at
themselves a red~ salary just to 221 112 . N. Columbus Rd; and the
stay undel; the Soc1al Secunty earn- phone number is 592-4448.
.

Community calendar .

By ED PETERSON
Sotlal Security
M•!!tllfT In Atbens

POMEROY • F.O.E. Ladies
Auxiliary No. 2171 wiD in~t Tues·
day 81 7:30 p.m.
.

Community Calendar Item•
appear two da)'ll before aa event
and tlle day ot that event. Item•
mut be received weD Ia advaate
to asure publkatlon In tbe cal·
eadar.

SUSAN MASH

SABRINA WHITE

New employees named
Tri-County Community Action
Agency's Head Start Program has
hired Susan Mash and. Sabrina
White as Home Base Teachers for
the Coolville site.
·
·
• Mash is a native of Pomeroy.
She has ten years of experience
working with preschool children

and has been li\Yarded her certifica·
lion as an educational aide by the
State of Ohio Department of Edu·
cation.
White comes to the Athens area
from· Davisville, W.Va., and has
her bachelor of arts from the College of Education at Marshall University.
·

Audiences are ducking
into family films and ·
studios wanting more

~ACINE

• Racine Village
Council wiD meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill

Park.

RACINE • The Racine Youth
,League
hold sign-up for the
1993 ball season on Monday from
6-8 p.m. Final sign-up will be
March 20 from 9 a.m. t6 noon;
Sign-up wiU be held at the South·
em kindergarten building. Registra·
tion fee will be $10 for softball
players. $15 for baseball players,
not to exceed $2S per family. Anyone who di.d not participate in the
Racine Youth League previously
will need a copy of their birth certificate.

will

I
I

SYRACUSE • The Third
Wednesday Homemakm Club will
·meet Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. 81
the Syracuse Municipal Building.
Cindy Oliveri will speak on MHow
You Feel About YoUrself." Basler
egis will be made. Bring a Styrofoam e~, material, scissors and a
dull parmg knife.
·

Ohio Lottery
•
•

Pick 3:

030
Pick 4:

WEDNESDAY
COOLVll..LE • There will be a
bunters safety course on Wednesday, Friday,~ 24 and 26 at the
Coolville Lions Club Building
from 6:30-9:30 p.m. Call Bob
Pullins, 667-3831, Ed Rood, 6676348 or Eel Wigal at 667~7 for
information.

MONDAY
C}JESTER - The Chester Base·
. ball Association will meet Monday
at 7:30p.m. tit Chester Elementary.
All interested parents are invited.
RACINE • The Big Bend Farm
Antique Club wjll meet t.Jonday at
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.

'

Cavs
are ·beaten
105-101
Page6

0007

.

Science fair held
• Tuppers Plains Elementary held
its' annual science fair recently for
fourth, fifth and sixth graders.
Receiving outstanding placement were fourth graders, Dean
Ale~ander, Joe Brown, Matthew
Grubb, Dustin Kebler, Wesley
Shafer; fifth graders, Meghan Avis,
Matthew Caldwell, Molly Heines,
. Leah Sanders; ·sixth graders,
Stephanie Evans, Joshua Hager,
Sarah Householder. Sari Putman,
and J.T. White.

NANCY MANLEY

Manley honored
Nancy Manley has been named
March Employee of the Month for
Overbrook Center.
She was chosen by her peers for
her dedication and service to the
residents and the facility.
The progmm, designed to honor
those with the qualities necessary
10 care for the elderly and disabled,
has proven to be successfuL
She has been in the nursing
department as nursing assistant
since Overbrook first opened in
· October of I 988 and has been a
nursing assistant for nine years.
When asked what her favorite part
of .her position. is she answers "I
just love the residents." She has
resided in Middleport for 24 years,
where she and her husband have
raised two daughters, Crysral ·Dexter, 23, and Tmcy Lawson, 21. She
enjoys cooking, baking and crafts.
She has two grandchildren, Timothy and Stephanie. ,
.
· Among the gifts 'she will receive
include dinner and overnight
accommodations at the Laffayette
Hotel in Marietta. She also will
receive a reserved parking space at
· the facility. A certificate was presented to Mrs. Manley by Lmda
Briggle, adminiscrator.

Crowned queen

Show sold out -

'

--Names in the news--

WADE, M.D. INC.

Fifth birthday

DOWIINI CHilDS
MULUI MUSSII

INSUUNCE

5tcoH
YOUR IIDIPIIDIIII
'AGENTS IEIYIIG

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coum
IIICI1161.

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:~~~:::MENT

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Vol. 43, No. 224

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday,

Copyrlghled 1lltl3

Ma~h

~.

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24 high school campers
still _missing -in Appalachians
sltowmen, and some did more creative tblags
like building a fort. Here Danny McCloud,
inside, Sean Powell,-lef't, and Clayton Oblinger
work on their Lincoln HiD fort of snow.

.·Panel calls for overhaul of
:. nation's education system
. ., WASHlNGTON (AP)- A fed·
Injll_ed folbigger tax breaks illiteracy rate was 20 percent com, GGL1i091mluion that ltudiod ways for busineSiwto boOst the coun- · pared with 1 percent ·for fapafl
- -rm~·~ for- ' try's investmenf&gt;ft~~U. It said· the . ~while u.s. students rank belo.,;
tune$ Clllcd today Cor an ovemaui president also ileeded a prosram 1 those of Canada South Korea
of tlie U.S. educadon syStem and !'Jat w~ld not only cut the •ficit Spain and Taiwan' in both scienc~
increases in IOI)B·tenn investment 10 ha,lf 1n four years, as he hal! pro- and malh proficiency.
and the I!Bvings rate.
,
posed, _but. would eliminate it alto·
''The bottom line is simple: if
The Competitiveness Policy getl)er 10 e1ght years.
we want a higher standard of livCouncil advocated rigorous' pcrforIn !he ~ducation section, ·the in g. we will have to earn it by
mance standards for schools and council sa1d th~re was an urgent !mproving the education and trainstudents, including creation of a ·need 10 change expectabons from 10g of our work force " the council
uniform blah school transcript to minimum competency 10 high satd.
·
'
eni;ourage employers 10 review job achievement both for collegeC. Fred B~rgsten, an economist
applicants' academic performance. bound and work-bound students."
and chairman of the council said
It also said colleges should gradu·
The council &amp;cknowl~ged' t!'at there was widespread agrc;ment
ally increase their admissioos stan· proposals to C;"e&amp;le a un~fonn high that high school students have no
dards.
school transcnpt and nabonal stan- incentives to study hard because
The panel of six Democrats and dards for schools l!"d ~tudents were college admission standards are so
. six Republicans 'cnerally'praised coiltrov~rs1al, but It SBtd the current · low and the 50 percent of students
~resident Clinton s economic pro-· educauon system badly needed who do not go pn to college never
gram as a good fi!St step but said refonn. ·
. ,
ha ve to show their high school
much bolder actions were l!CCded. . It noted that Ame11ca s adult grades to prospective employers.

:L awmakers assured reforms
~not linked
social changes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP).,..
Gov. George Voinovich and
Instruction Superintendent Ted
Sanders took stqjs to assure skeptical lawmakers· that an educahon
reform plan is not intended to interfere with family respensibililies.
They said Monday that while
the plan seiJ! certain goals beyond
b~sic education, the Legislature
w11l have a chance to debate.

to

change and vote on the details.
At a ne\vs conference, the governor also said be opposes a delay
in requiring students to pass ninthgrade proficiency tests. Passage
will be required in 1994 as a condi·
tion fo{ receiving a high-school
diploma.
Among 01her things, Voinovich
blamed what he called a draft of
goals, cireulated in the Legislature,

Sixth body found in
·Trade Center rubble
NEW YORK (AP) -. Searchers
. in the rubble beneath the World
Trade Center found the body of a
hotel purchasing a_gent who was
last seen in the parking area minutes before tile bomb exploded.
The dellh toll was niaed to six.
The body or 37-year-old Wilfre~ Mercado -the lasttriluing victim - was found Monday, more ·
than two weeks afrer the blast. The
first five victliils were found within
hqurs of the explosion on Feb. 26 .
under the 110-story twin towers.
A ~lion Wllrkcr removing

debris saw a bcot slicking out and
called Port Authority police. The
Port Authority owns the trade center.

The discovery ended a painful
vigil by Mercado's wife, Olga, who
had come daily .to the trade center
to await word of her husband's
&amp;~.

~

Repeated searches .with do~s
had failed to uncover Mercado s
remains, which were at lhe bottom
of a crater filled with ·tons of concrete and other debris.
:

Man injured in accident
A Racine man was traDI~
to Veteru~~ Memorill Hoepilll by
lwleias County Emerpncy Medlcil
Service 1foilowlna I two-vcblclc
accldint ln Sllisbury Tow01dlip,
' the Oa!Jla..Meip Po1t or the Stare
Hllhwl)' Pltrol reported. '
'koaer Spaun, Jr., 47, Vine
Street, RaciDe, waa treated and
releded, a hoapital lpOkeawoman
laid.
.
Accord ins . to the accident
report, Spaurl was westbound on
• ,J

that lists good family relationships
as one measure of what Ohio students should be like when they
graduaLC.
He sa id employers have told
·him lhat reading, writing and arithmetic are not enough for today's
gmduates and that wotlcers must be
honest, self·disciplined and able to
get along with others.
The draft was not intended as a
formal recommendation and the
Legislature can help decide how to
reach such goals, Voinovich said.
Some members of the House
Finance Committee, headed by
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, said the proposal appeared to
measure character and other personal attribuLCs that are the -responsibilities of families.

Sta~ Route 124 wlien a vehicle
driven by Timothy W. Zwdler, 20,
Route I, Letart, W.Va., backed
from a private drive and struck
Spaun'a vehicle In the ftont.
Zurcher was cited fbr failure 10
yield from a private diive. Spaun's
vehicle suStained heavy, disabling
damage and was towed from the
scene. Zurcher's vehicle Slllllined
Ulht damase and remained' at the
scene.

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. ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - today. as lhe othm dilL
A teacher who was with one of
Parents today awailed word on the
The campers froni the C.ran- the group~- that etRerged on Mon;
·fate of 24 campers cauj!ht in the brook Kingswopd Up(Jill School in day was hospitalized in seriou~
blizzard over the weekend wll.ile on Blo?mf.icld· Hills, ¥ich., we~e 1 conjlition with hypotbennia. Five
a high school outing in the . mak10g an annual spnng break tn_p students in his group were hospital;
Appalachians·. The storm's death based on the Outward Bound Rh•· ized overnight for observation.
·
toll reached 173, and crop losses losophy of ·building dls~i~line .\&gt;y , Mean\Yhile, insurance compa• ·
mounted.
' , confronting natural challenges.
. •nies· received lhousands of claims.
· Road-clearing in the storm-rav- ,
Parents and teachers Jathered at for storm damage. A.M. Best Co~ ·
aged East gained urgeJICy as crews•' lhe prjvale school outs1de Detroit the leading rating agency for tfl~.
worked overtime to reach the to wait for news. They said the stu- insurance industry, eslimaled tJtaC
snowbound.
dents had received wilderness sur- the storm caused ui'Wards of $800
"We're still getting !I number of vival training.
million in insured~;
:
calls'' from people in remote areas,
''I feel upbe~t,'' said Nancy
Crops were .damaged across the;
said Charles Colw_ell, emerg~ncy Shapiro, whose IS-year-old was Soutjl, with heavy losses to fruii's·
director in Kentucky's Perry Coun- unaccounted for. "I lhink the kids and vegetables likely to drive '
ty. "All our off-roads are still just are coming out."
prices up in the supennarteL
about im,passable.' '
'''The wailing ga111e is killing
The storm and tlje cold that fo'tIn addition to the deaths evcryQne," college student Chris- lowed ruined such crops as peachreported from Cu ha .to Canada·tian Schultz said moments before cs, blueberries, tomlj!OCS and straw:
32p ew111M.were missi11g after I! -{ear']it~&amp;.,h~~ 17;year·ol4 sister 1, 1 b\lrrics.-lllld k!!ocked juice- oranges
fre1ghter sanlc'.Monday off Nova j(lm,bellfy; was ~e.
, ·
off trees in 'Florida: .
Scotia, and 16 sailors were missing
off Florida.
' ·
S~chers on Monday failed 10
find the 2 I youngsters and three
teachelli in the Grear SmOky Mountains after dozens of others on the
trip trudged through deep drifts to
After around-the-clock opera· · ruau ar&lt;:a~ 10 maKe 11 ~er for cars
safety. The air and ground search
tions
since Saturllay. a spokesman · to pass. He said that snow mnoval
was to resume this morning.
for
Meigs
County Engineer Bob by the highway department's work
Bob Miller, a park spokesman,
Eason
~pons
aU 2SO miles· of was racilitated because mQSI '
said the campers might even hike 'the county toadthatsystem
haYe been motonsts cooperaled by staying of{
out of the woods as .scheduled gone over once with ~w
mnoval the roads during the sn'ow emer•
.
I
equipment and that a second time gene y.
•
lj(I)Und began today.
State highways in the county are
It was reported that all of tfie clear, and township trustees have
work has been done in-house , reportedly got equipment out on'
thereby not jeopardizing lhe county · those roads.
·
·
highway depanment budget. In
With melting of ice and snow:
By The Asslicialed Press
fact, David Spencer,, an admlnistra· from temperatures in the 50'S:
The last snow emergency was tive assistant there, said that the today, some schools are expected&gt;
lifled Monday and forecasters were roads are in better shape than if the to open Wednesday.
:
predic ling a break in the weather county had gone out and hired con- ' Meanwhile, cl~~nup from the:
that set record-low temperatures tractors !0 come in and help. He fire damage at Meigs High School·
across Ohio.
• ·
was highly complimeritaly of the is underway today llld !hose class '
Road crews .were clearing the county's workers.
rooms will be resdy for studenls'
remains of the storm tJult hit half of
Today coumy workers started Wednesday, Supt. James Carpenter
the state on Saturday.
'
the pro«;esS of widening the cleared reported.
In Meigs County in soutbeastl:m
Ohio, the last of the snow emergencies was lifted Monday afternoon.
Up 10 22 inches of snow fell in the
region over the weekend.
Meigs Sheriff James Soulsby
said some county roads were still
limited to one lane of traffic
because of drifting snow.
At one poiqt during the week- ·
end, 25 counties -had imposed snow
emergency orders and banned
motonsts from icy roads.
· ~
But as crows cleared awar the
snow, colder weather moved 10. In
Mansfield in northern Ohio, a 33year-old record fell when the tem-o
perature dipped to 1 degree below
zero Monday morning.
No deaths or severe injliri.es
were reported.

-

All Meigs ,roads have .
been cleaned off- Eason

Last emergency
order lifted; record
lows are recorded

Housing starts up 2.$
percent' in February
WASHINGTON (AP)- Hous·
ing starts rebounded 2.5 percent' In
February after falling a month earlier to the lowest level in six
months. the government said today.
Construction of single-family
houses and apartments rose in
every region except for the South.
The Commerce Depanment said
starts totaled 1.21 miOion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, up
from 1.18 million in January. Many
economists had expected starts to
rise 10 1.23 million.
The revised 8.4 percent drop in
January was even larger than the
initial 7.2 percent estimate. It
pushed statts 10 the lowest level
since they toialed 1.11 million ~t
July.
.
Analysts had attribuled the Jan.

••

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·weekend bliz~ard
clinlbs to 173
SNOW CREATIONS· Wilb lime on their
bands and moderate temperatures young people
ever.)'wbere too.k to tbe snow fllr re,creatlon
Moaday. Some went sleiJh riding, some built

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A MuiUmedll
InC. lis u peJI!W.
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16, 1993 .

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1 Sectlan,12..._.,21_ta :

Death·toll ·from

New data on aspirin
and cancer examined
by puzzled doctors
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press Writer
ATI.ANTA- Doctors say it'.s
. too early to start popping aspirin 10
ward off cancer. .But a new study
found deaths from stomach, esophagus. colon and.rectal cancers were
lower among people who used
aspirin every other day.
Earlier research by the American Cancer Society cancer society
indicated that aspirin lowered the
risk of colon cancer alone. The lateSt study was released by the can·
c;er society on Sunday.
· Dr. Michael Thun. who con·
dueled
both studies on the same
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' POMEROY - The· Middlepon
Liteiary Club will meet•at 2 p.m,
Wednesday at the Meigs County
Public Library in Pomeroy with
Mrs. Roy Holter as hostess. Mrs.
James Diehl win review "Alice and
Edith" by Dorqthy Clarke Wilaon.
For roll call, tell of "The woman
behind the man."

TUESDAY
·· . J:'()MEROY • The Meigs County S-hepherd's Club will hold its
first meeling Tuesday at 7 p.m. 81
.the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Anyone talcing sheep 10
By JOHN HORN .
"I think you can just look ai the · the fair should contact Buddy and
AP EDtertalnment Writer
results," said Columbia Pictilres Sally Ervin at 949-2136 or Tom
LOS ANGELES - Hollywood Chairman Mark Canton. "And the and Judy Avis at 985-4443.
has rediscovered the value of the results are that you can do better
family - mom, dad and the kids with these ltind of movies and you
CHESTER • Chester Council
coughing up an average of $5 should make more of them."
No. 323, Daughters of America,
apiece for movie lickcls.
Tom Pollock, the chairman of wiD meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. QuarSex, violence and raw lang~ · the MCA Motion Picture Group. terly birthdays will be observed.
are giving way to inoffensive taleS Universal's parent, pegs the phe- Pol'luck refreshments will be
of stranded pets, hapless hockey nomenon on a "demographic served. Practice for the spring rally
teams and sfobhering dogs. Even bulge" in the audience for family on ApriL3 at Logan will be held.
BiD Murray'' latest folm, "Ground- films.
Dislrlct 13 practice at Logan wLII
hog Day," is rated PG, and the
be held March 28 at I p.m. All
635,000 Americans, said the new makers of Eddie Murphy's next
PAULA HAYNES
"Over the past four or five members are urged 10 attend. Disfindings indicate aspirin may inhib· "Beverly Hills Cop" sequel.want a years, there has been a huge growth · lrict 13 lodge members have Easter
·
it tumor growth o'r bcost the body's PG-13 mait.
of children of the baby boomers," candy available. Order from any
This
bumper
crop
of
family
Pollock said. "These parents don't member.
narural cancer·fi$hting cells.
Paula Haynes was hopored
"But these fmdings need 10 be fllrns is proving hugely profitable want their children to fO to the
recently
at Valenline Queen or Xi
confllllled," he cautioned. "People and studios are scurrying tO snare a movies and see violence.'
POMEROY • the annual birth· Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma
The Sleven Spielberg-direcled day celebration of the American
shouldn't just start taking aspirin new generation of young moviegobecause of its potential toxicity, It ers. Films once destiried to be rated · dinosaur story "Jurrasic Park" Legion wiD be held by Drew Web- Phi Sorority, at the annual Heart
causes ulcers and serious side- . R arc being re-edited for a less (June II) is the most celebrated of ster Post No. 39, Pomeroy, at the and Hand meeting held at the horne
of Ruth Rifne.
restrictiv~ mark.
effects in some people." ·
·
Universal's family films.
senior
citizens
center
on
Tuesday.
She was prescnled with a crown
At Universal Pictures, a brief
When Thun ·published his first
Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. and rose. She has been a member
study on aspirin and colon-cancer nude scene was cut from the
The studio's ·"Beethoven," a· All members and their spo116es or of the sorority for four years and
risk in 1991, doctors touted it as upcoming "Dragon: The Bruce 1992 release about a slobbering St. friends lite urged to attend.
has served on various commit.ees.
substanlial evidence to prompt clin- Lee S191Y." Ov'er at Warner Bros., Bernard, made more than $57 milHaynes. is an honor student at
ical trials of the possible link . . several swear words were replaced lion at domestic !hearers, and $86
Hocking College· and wiD graduate
with less bawdy inttrjections in million overseas. A sequel should
Those lrials are under way.
RED BANK, NJ. (AP) -· Ger- in June with an associ!lte degree in
The new evidence IS a little May's "Dave." Both should be be !n .lhesters by Christmas.
aldo
Riven! will tape two editions medical assisting. She has two chi!·
more puzzling, said Dr. Peter rated PG-13.
Columbia's ·"Groundhog Day,''
of
his
television talk show here 10 dren, Matt and Kristi, and two
Few studios have done better has been a smash, collecting $43.4
Greenwald, director of cancer pre·
raise
money for a financially grandsons, Jacob and Garrett Rifvention at the N ationa! Cancer with family films than Walt Dis- million in its fu'St month.
ne.
strapped
theater.
·
ney. While Disney's G-rated aniInslitute in Bethesda, Md.
"It would be unusual for one mated musicals "Aladdin" and
thing to be protectant against all "Beauty and the ·Beast" are
four cancers, but it's not impossi- unqualified smashes, 'tile studio is
ble," he said. "The gold standard making huge profits with modestly
of evidence in cancer research are budgeled live-action fare. These
clinical trials. This is very interest· releases entertain with a skillful
ing suggestive evidence but we mix of simple Story lines for children and wit for 8dults.
really need those clinical trials."
Aspirin already is touted as a
"The Mighty Ducks," a PGweapon against heart attack rated story about a comically inept
because it nelps prevent blood hockey team, ~s skated past $50
clots.
million. "Homeward Bound: The .
Studies on animals and small Incredible Journey," following two
groups of people also suggesled it dogs and a cat traveling over
lowered the risk of colon cancer, so mountains, has 1J111de almost $30
Tbun studied 635,000 people millio!l in five weeks.
between 1982 and 1988.
• 'While violent and adult
Those who took aspirin at least movies have their place, what our
16 times a month had a 40 percent culture is saying is, 'We're Sllluratlower risk of dying of colon can- ed with material of lhatsort,"' said
cers than non-users. he reported in David Vogel, executive vice presi1991.
dent of production for Walt Disney
For the new study, published in Pictures. "People are looking for
the journal Cancer Research, Thun movies that make them feel better
looked at ~s from any type of - they want to be uplifted."
cancer in these same people. He
Current and upcomin$ livedid th~ foUowup because new ani- action Disney family films mclude
mal experiments suggested aspirin "A Far Off Place" (opened Fricould affect numerous cancers, day), "The Adventures of Huck
Finn" (April 2), "Hocus Pocus"
even breast and lung cancers.
But the only possible link he (July 16) and "The Three Muskefound was between aspirin and teers" (Christmas) . A "Mighty
digestive-uact cancers - ·not other Ducks" follow-up is in the works.
The push for family films is
types of lhe disease.
driven
by economics than
The risk of dying from colon, concern more
about
society's betterment.
stomach, esophagus and rectum
According
to
a recent study by
cancers was 40 percent lower media analysts Paul
Asbley Boyles, seeond arade. Back, Tiffany
STUDENTS HONORED • These ltudenta at
Kagan Associamong the heavy aspirin users, he
Speacer,
third arade; Matthew Grubb; fourth
Tuppen PlaiDs Elementary School were bon·
ates, 41 percent of PG-rated films
found.
'
·grade;
Matthew
Bissell, nrtli srade; Sarah
ored at a recent assembly as students or tbe
Thun then artificially increased grossed $20 million or more, while
Householder, sixth grade: Brlttney Rucker, K;t,
month for February. Tbe students are, front, 1-r,
the risk factors for those types of 27 percent of R-rated movies
wuabsent.
·
Chrissie
Gregory,
nrst
grade;
Mark
Guesa,
K-2;
- -- -cancer - obesity. high-fat diet, passed that benchmark. These days,
PG-rated movie is almost three
smoking 31\d use of alcohol ~~ atimes
more likely to reach $100
computer «i see if it affecled
JOHN A.
million
than an R title.
rates in his srudy.
woman
at
110,
doesn't
smoke
or
NEW YORK (AP) -+ Emma drink and says "moderation in
"The trends of decreasing risk
Thompson,
nominated for an Oscar everything" is the key to her
seen for aspirin alone ... were
EAR • NOSE • THROAT •
for
her
performance
in "Howards
unchanged or somewhat stronger,"
IOnF,CVity.
· '
ALLERGY
End,'' says she's still starstnick.
the study said.
'Live
well,
help
others,
and
· Travis Hubbard, son of 'rcresa
"I had great difficulty not
BOARD CERTIFIED
and David Hubbard, Aiken, S.C.,. falling to my knees when I met have plenty of friends," said Scott,
SPECIALIZING IN
and grandson of Harold and Char- Clint Eastwood and Gene Hack· who celebrated her birthday on
lene "Thomas, Middleport, celcbnt· man,' • Thompson said in the April S~dbom in ~din 1883 •ADULT I PEDIATRIC
I·
issue ofJ adios' Home Journal.
ed his fifth birthday teeendy.
became a schoolteacher in ALLERGY
Thompson received' the Oolden and
A pizza party was held at his
Belfast
AIDS
home with a "101 Dalmailon" Globe award as best dramatic the 20th sbonly after the dawn of •HEARING
•RECURRENT EAR
actress for her portrayal of the
theme.
ceo ~·------,
INFECTIONS IN CHILDREN
Attending were Rick, Sherry inder;ndent wife in "Howards
•ASTHAM
and Ryan West, Kayla Carson, End' In January, when Bulwood
Judy and Carrie Reynolds and and Hackman were recolllized for
:=~~~c~:E
the revisionist Western ''\Jnfcqivfriend, Misty.
• He received a call from his en. ''
OF SKIN I
grandpar.cnts who sang "Happy . Thompson. 34, got bet start 12
Birthday."
.
Ill
St., Po•eroy
FACIAL LESIONS
yean ago ,dOing comedy llkllt~:hea
Otben ~ending cards and 11ifll at CambricJ&amp;e Univenlty, followed
MEDIC~~~~ENT
were hit srandparents, Tim by Slllld-up comedy and the lead in
Thomas and families, Harold, Sue London's hit musical "Me 111d My
~.
675·1244
and Cindl Roush, Deb and Junior GirL"
Offcnbelger, Adam Triplett, Ann
s~~te 112.
Dr., 1 1 .
and FeUx Moi!llllt, P.N. Miller, Jeff
REAY,Scolland(AP)-Annic
Pt.PINH1t,WY.
TRAVIS HUBBARD
and Julie Hubbard and family.
Scott, Scotland's oldest living .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,

Low lonJabt .... 30. RaiL
Wednesdoy, nla,ltlgll Ill apper

' uary plunge to unfavorable weather
·and an unsustainably high level of
construction a month earlier, a 1.29
million annual rate.
Mapy observers believe the
housing industry vmt continue .to
improve as the economy ·~=
strength and mortaut IIIII 111
low . But they saia the pace
hollling llartS would llow II¥
10 about .l!alf of Jut ,_., 18
cent annual incroue.
Indeed, llouslaa 1tartaler
first two months o( !99! .'11
down 3.2 perc~nt from tho
period a year earlier.
Mort,IIJC rates aver~ eel 7.68
percent m February, bel jUII 7.$1
percent durins the woet 111111111 Fib.
2S, the lowest silllll IIIey bit 7.Sl
, percent in early febnllry 1973.

�I

Tuesday, March 16, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

.•

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-3

"'
••
••,

.••
~

!Commentary

Page 2-The DallY Sentlnet
Pomeroy-ddleport, Ohio;:
Tue8day, March 16,1993 . ;,
r,

The Daily .S entinel

Some
accuse
Reno
of
be.
i
ng
a
zealot
..
·
.
.

~

' 111 Coart Street
Pomef01, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO 1'HJt I1'CTZilBirl'a OF 11llt IIEJ08-IIA80N A1WA

MIAMI (NEA) One
widespread criticism of recently
confirmed Attorney General Janet
. Reno is that she sometimes loses
all objectivity and becomes a
zealot. This is especially true in
cases where she suspects child

seemed not to warrant iL :
Said one current prosecutor in
her office: "If the subject is child
abuse, Janet will push it well

Robert}. Wagman

abuse.

In the 1980s Reno established a
Children's
Assessment Center
Publlsher
·
within her office;. Staffed by coun·
· selors and specially trained attorPAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
neys, its job is to investigate sus·
Assistant Publlsber/ControUer
General Manager
pee ted incidents of child abuse.
The unit has become a national
.
I..ETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They lhould be less than 300
model, and it is Reno's reputation
wonls. All !etten are aubject 10 editiag IUid must be iigned with name,
in child abuse cases that first
lddress and lelepbooe number. No unsigned lettets will be publisbed. Lettets
brought ·her to the attention of
sboukl be in &amp;ood taste, llddrellillg i11ues, not penonllitles.
HiUary Clinton.
In sharp conlnlSt to most of the
cases being prosecuted by her staff,
Reno took a perionlll interest in
many of the ~ conting through
the Children's Assessment Cenler.
Critics both on her staff and on the
'
.
ByWALTERR.MEARS
outside say that on more than one .
,.
AP Special Correspoudent
occasion this interest bordered on
. WAsHINGTON ) - For President OiniOO, blurred' lines in foreigl) zealotry, and that Reno forced '
jxliicy could crcaJe a mirrOr image of the b'Otlbles George Bush faced over prosecutions when the evidence
ln indis&amp;inCI domestic program.
.
· On problems at home, the Clinton message is drawn sharply and
iepeated regularly. Not so on matters abroad, although overseas issues are
lligh on his agenda, and a summit is on his schedule. .
:. Bush concenlnlted on foreign policy, said he pefened it, and paid a
' ~litical penalty wben he sought te-election in a campaign dominated by
~ c:conomic concerns.
:. Clinton said he would keep a laser-like focus on the economy, but
)vould nat ignore international problems which, untended, could worsen
400 demand fuU time attention.
'
·
.
-. He's done bolh, but the kind of attention and explanation that can build
• .
bas been dedicated to his ewnomic
. So his taU
and energy taXes is household
his guarded
jlolic:r on the possible use of U.S. ttoops in an international force in
llosnia is not so widely understood as he suggests it is.
;. After c:onfening with French President FllUIOOis Miuerrand on Tueshy. Clinton said he had "restated the p,osition of the adminislnltion,
which is now well known in the public, ' on the possibility of sending
.~cricans to join.an inlef!Wional force if lhl:re is a diplomatic sculemenl
in wllat was Yugoslavia
·: Clinton said that position is that the United States will not use ~in
ihe current civil conflict in Bosnia, but wOIIId be interested in joirung a
United Nations force to help guarantee a peace agreement if there is one.
~ To gain support for a military mission as controversial as that surely
iwould be, the adminiSinltion will need to convince Americans that it is in
·!he nalional interest, and that there's a way out as well as a compelling
O:ason to go in.
•
;. Candidate Clinton had said he would use air power against Serbian
~ besieging Bosnian Muslims: ai; president his policy has been mm:
cautious than that, but more assertive than that of the Bush adminiSlnltion.
~ Clintm now is seeking to lighten the economic embargo against Serbia
tO inflict pain and a price for aggression.
· The Uniied States is airdropping food and medical supplies into east~ Bosnia, a humanitarian eftcin that continues after iniual mixed mespges from the ailminisuation itself. . • , . .
.
;. Secretary of Defense Les Aspin had said the initial drops achieved a
The forced, face·saving rcsigna·
/,'symbolic p" by showinl\ the Sems.they should stop blocldng U:M. tion of NBC News President
~lief convoys, and the opelllbOII was being suspended. A day later, ClinMichael Gartner didn't unleash any
1011 said the air drops would continue as planned. Aspin said he'd been
paroxysms of sorrow or regret.
misunderstood.
·
Somebody had to be sc:apegoated
: Clintm is worlting to gain support for his effort to increase U.S. and for a news·divisionJ1isaster that
~ied aid to Russia, saying it is essential to prevent economic and demoplaced the producers and reporters
qratic reforms there from foundering. He said the United Slales should be of
the newsmagazine "Dareline"
tilling to&lt;ipelld a tiny fnlctioo of whal it cost for.Cold War defense in an ' somewhere on an ethical spectrum
effort to preserve democraty Ill a fonner communiSt foe.
Richard Nixon and
•: The administration will seek about $700 million in technical assistance between
Michael Milken.
Ox Russia and other foriner Soviet republics, an increase from $417 that
But that's not the tragedy or
was in the budget. Presideni Clinton also plans to recommend Russian Gar1ner's dCparture. The lnlgedy is
clebt relief and steps to make it easier for that govemment ·to borrow from the permanent tarnishing of the
jplemationallending institutions.
·
career of a man who had been one
. Delailed J)!OilOSals are due before his scheduled summit meeting with of our profession's most respected
Russian President Boris Yeltsin in Vancouver, B.C., April 3 and 4. newspaper people. Television
Yeltsin is struggling to hold his powers and colitinue his market reforms; giveth and leleviSton taketh away.
Secretary of State Wl!lfell Christopher said ~ursda&gt;: the adminislnltion
But don't simply mourn for
will conlinue to support him, and hopes hts postbon w1U be strengthened.
Gartner. Mourn for a profession
· Clinton discussed Russia policy with Bush for 20 minutes on the tele- that inlegrates sleaze into its news
Phone Monday, and met privaJely at the White House lhat night widi for- coverage
as frequently as the sun
mer President Richard M. Nixon.
rises. Mourn for a public that laps
: That may help him muster Republican support in Congress. . .
.
up sleaze as comfortably as a
• But foreign aid always is a. hard sell •. doubly ~ as the adm!"tstration
senior citizen rocking on the front
s',eeks taX increases and cuts tn domesuc spendtng. At a Wh11e House
porch on a summer evening. Mourn
briermg on foreign policy, a question made the connection:
for a nation's loss of iis ethical
: Would new taxes go into increased aid?
.
. ,
moorings. Gartner was only Ihe
: "No new taxes are being requesled for ass1stance to Russta, the
messenger delivering the message
qnswer came. Even the question pointed up the problem.
to salivating viewers who can't
seem to get enough tabloid sleaze.
' EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R. Mtars, vite presideat aJid colusaWhere are the Francis Pharcelnist for The Associated Press, bu reported on Wubingtoa .. d
U.tional politics for more I ban 30 years.
·

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Do Americans knopw what
:Clinton's foreign policy·is?

~SI.~~f..:ome

beyond what can be supported in
court or in conscience. She can,
and has, lost all objectivity when
dealing with child abuse allegations."
·
Just ask teen-ager Bobby Fijnje.
In a celebrated 1991 case he was
accused of dozens of acts of sexual
abuse of children while he was a
baby sitter at a nursery school run
by the Old Cutler Presbyterian
Church. At the time the alleged
acts of abuse started, Fijnje was 12.
Wilen. he went on trial in Janpary
1991, he was 16.
The case started in July 1988
when one or the children at the
day-care center started having
nighunares. The 3-year-old told her
mother .she was "afraid of
Bobby." Her mother confronted

"'

the church' s pas10r with br:r fears
that her daughter had beell1exuaiiy
molesled. The mother aiJo bepn to
· ·question other parents. Shortly
their collective fen rept11Jed
to Reno's child abuse botline.
. Psyehologiscs queationed all tbe
children • die c:enler. A1:aJn1iD1 to
later cotirt testimony, the 3-yearold who started the whole thing
told interviewers that she was
afraid of the baby !liner bcqat1se be
played too 111111h. She said nothing
at all about any sexual abuse, and
in fact not one or tbe children
reported anything that even
approached a suggestion of abuse.
. Reno's office then dloppcd the
case. However, several motben
kept pusbina the invesd&amp;ation.
FinaUy Fijnje was brouaht in for
questioning. As It would later be ·
shown, the .boy suffers from diabetes and was in hypoglycemic
shock wben be made sever1I
admissions that police said wcm
tanllmOUDI to I confcaion: Fijnje
said be told the police wllat tbey
'told him to say bee•11 ¥ theY said

C:

::•••

~·
•'••

ru::

he would be ft'l lied IIIli giva.
medicine.
•
:'
At this point Reno jumped ilt
with both feet. She . ·pee~ aqar~
let or .her top prosecutors to ~·
cue. A small army of psycbolo.!
&amp;ists began repeated interviowl •
with every young child at the ~'
care ceater. What emerfed wert:
innumerable stories p orgiess•
satanic rites, ritual murders an.a:
gra~yard alxminations.
~
Despite.the fact that not OJC!C;.
shred of eVIdence beyond the chil:.
dren's stories was IIIICOYaCd - ne;
adult eyewitnesses to the ~~~
murders and rituals the c:hil'"""'
said they were subjected to, net
physiCal eviCiel~~:e - Reno person:;
ally pushed tbe case forward. 1•.
November 1989 Fijnje was indic~; ·
as m llluh oa 108 all8liS of chikf. ·
abuse api!JII17 cliffc:RIII c:bildiCii:a:
When Fijnje's pareall ob~
=ly to what was happening, .
stories began 10•...-- thaC:
they, in fact,- child poi~·
phers wbo r&amp;D an iJiternationaf:
. .
"'
bi1d
C
I Ipoi
O I I.....
.....Ynng.
&gt;,
Finally the case came to trial ~·
Jurors never heard the OUIIandisli::
charges that most of the thiJdrel&amp;·
made. Instead the coaata wereo
reduced to eight, invotYiDa linG::
young girls. Then, on the eve oC:
trial, se-.1 more c:ounll invOI.vinlt·
one of the three were also chopped.~;
The trial took four months :
Experts in child intavicwin&amp; tesli~.
fied that the ch.ildren bJid bee..:
coerced into their storiea witlt
promises of rewns IIIli daeaiii oJ:
punislmlenL At one point proeocu!;
tors offered Fijnje 1 clql, If h(·
would plead auilty to a ain,h; :
count, he would be sent 10 • ~
hospital for line yean, gi'lell c:red-.;
it for the 20 111011ths he had abead)ll.
been held without b&lt;ind, and bil
released with' oo criminal record;·
He S8l'd no.
. ...•.
Alia' four .111011ths of tcslimonyt:.
the jury quickly acquitted Fijnje•·
Reno insists to this day th8l she ancc;
her oiTJCC did nothing WJORg.
Robert Wapuutls a SJIIdlcatt
ed writer for Ncwap.1per Enter. ,
prist Associalioll.
~
·:

'l

Shop

"Proud To Be .
Community
Minded."

Wednesda,
Mareh 17, 1993

Join The Savings
Our ~ompany' s 13

••

.TYSON • HOLLY FARM'S

Jumbo Split

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~:~~:_

(.

Board president seeks input
Dear Editor,
I' m beginning my eighth and
imd probably last year as a member
of the Meigs Local School Board.
This final year of my second
;erm will be different from the previous seven. Mostly due to the fact
that I have been placed in the posi·
lion of board president
There are three possible reasons
for this selection:
1. To honor me.
2. To punish me.
3. It's my turn.
You can take your pick, I did.
Quiie honestly. some truth probably exists in all three.
. ·
One discouraging fact a new
board member soon discovers is
how little control they actually
have. The vast majonty of our
vows arc already mandated by stale
and federal requirements. Some of
you probably feel that what little
we do control is stilh10 much and
sometimes that's lrue.
Most of the seven years have
been plagued by negative public
relations. The bad always seems to
be magnirled and the aood ignored.
This shouldn't surprise us too
much because we've become a
negative society. Most conversa·
tions center on controversy.
Unfortunately,
negative
thoughts creale stress, fear, hatred
and failure . Negative tho~ghts
(

V,

about the school system also create
stress, fear, hatred and failure.
the foundasince our students
tion for Meigs County;s future, we
arc also creating sb'eSS, fear, hatred
and ultimaooly failure for our county. Meigs County is by no means
unique in this trait. However we
live here and hopefully we can correct it
The ohly way 'to improve is by
taking the first srep forward.
You elected this school board to
administer the education of our
children I'm asking your help. I
want your constructive - not'
destructive - input What would
you change? How would you
change it? Don't call me, wrile me,.
I want time to read and study what
you say . I' ll even reply .to you
either by personal letter or through
the newspaper if lhey'lllet me.
We have already started 111n
employee recognition propm.
There are a lot of fine, dediCated
people workina for you in this
school district and it's past time
they be recognized.
There are als'o employee
involvement progrsms planned,
Divided and nothing will ever
change. United and light bulbs
begin 10 come on,
Thank you,
Larry W. Rope,
MiddlepOrt

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EASTMAN ' S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON
1

POTATO :

Ius Churches of 19931 Church was and ~'those ·ol"'t6i18y is tlie ~!" r 'lbat Aiex Haley;; ' 'Roots"-is it\
· the New York Sun editorial writer frequency w1th which today s pnnt hoax, tUICOCiled out of non-ei·!s·~~
who wrole that historic "Yes, Vir- journalists and electronic min- facts, plaaiariad chaplen, f
ginia, There is a Santa Claus" edi- ·StJijstS cross the .line lJc:hVCCII .fact genealogy IIIII fraudulent~
an:!f)'fantasy. The1r lerg1versa11011s - But f'lhil* the media's
confuse the reading and viewing s~:!"atic: patten! of unethic ·
public, which doesn't know who or a
goes l.:k to the ruNcoa
what to hetieve.
CI'IJSICd in }988, when - y priC
NBC News has been especially · journalists and electronic min;~
egregious. First, it used filmed strelists swarmed into 1 feedi;
·
iorial in ·1897. When young Vir· footage of a rigged fiery pickup frenzy on Gay IWI's sco: life.
.
ginia O'Hanlon asked her father if
'· crash ron .story on the safety weren't compJFtely wrona (H
there was ·a Santa Claus, he told o
neral Motor's side-saddle gas 'had recklessly cballeaged th
her, "Wrile the Sun. If it's in the ta . s, then· it turned around ¥d • media to follow him), but th · '
Sun, ifs true."
misidentified footage on fish ,sup- Peeping Tom escapade did lllllhin&amp;"'
In 1993, to whom would Vir- posedly endanaered by overcuuill&amp; to ennoble us.
'~
ginia's father suggest she write? of Idaho timber. After the sec:ooil
In a democracy, newspape~
·~
NBC News? The National Enquir- elecU'OIIic m~. it mapziiles, television and sadio
;
er? The Star'! Larry King? Geraldo obviou.s Michael Gartner had not operate in a vacuum. E!b ·
'
Rivera? Rush Limbaugh? It is that stayed 100 long.
. behavic;~r, like charity, begfns
;
bad.
But all three networks are~ home. "Physician, heal thyself,'~~
But things haven't disintegrated of similar photoRrallllic: lJIBIUJIUia- says a scriptural commaad.~.w
completely. A national poll by the lions. They just dOn't act CIIJIIIL
And until the American
'(
Los Angeles Times Mirror found
If the media occasionally divest themselves of their
• ;
that one "odd couple" with the transgress ethical boundaries,IO do ~ vul~ imp..lw, Ibe
same "dismal" B.Q. (believability so111e !Jf ·our most respected wall COI_IIl!'UC to fec:d lhcrJI wit!' 1114
quotient}· were Geraldo Rivera and authorS'. One of the mosl h[lart- joumaUsuc garbage tJJqi IOlnchiX
George Will. There may be justice breaking stories to be reported in deserve.
•, . 1.
in heaven, after all.
the past few YCIIIll is the recent rev·
Cbuclt Stone is a syaiidlaited
The difference between the jour- elauon in Philip Nobile's impres· wriler for Newspaper Eaterprile .,
nalists of Church's era (and they, siyely documented anicle in the AuDcladoD.
~S
too, were guilty '!f ethi~al lapses) Village Voice, which demonstrates
::

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A story of a good guy and a b~~-~m~~.;..J

My native stale of Maryland has
been in the news recently for the
exploits of a saint and a sinner who
once resided there.
The good guy is John Lucas, the
new coach of the San Antonio
SpuJ;S of the National Basketball
, Association. He doesn'tlrnow me
from Abel, but I know him. He
came to the University of Maryland
.from North Carolina in 1972 and
proceeded with the help of a few
ot her superb. p1ayers t o t urn my
team into a force to be reckoned
with. A six-foot-thtee·inch, left·
handed j!:Uard, he moved with
speed, dtShed off with flair a11d
rang up respectable points with a
unique push shot I would RCOgmze
in a somnambulantll'llllte.
Lucas was twice selected an All·
American. He was chosen first in
the 1976 NBA draft and moved on
to a notewonhy 14.year profession·
al career.
•

rne catch: He did ii while play- the Rockets fired him the nexL
ing for nine different teams. The
Lucas sobered up and stayed
reason : He was an alcohol and that way. He returned to the NBA
cocaine addict who fell off the deep . and played three more seasons.
Meanwhile, he established a variety of drug and alcohol trestment
,
programs in Houston, which
numerous professional athletes
have atlended. Last year he bought
erid three times. He could never th.e Miami Tropics of the United
accept the fact that he wasn' t per- States Basketball League and
feet, Lucas has since said, and his signed up a number of RCOvering
rcco.very began the' day he s·.,.,.....,...
~~
pia
· top r0 v1'de
· yers. Th e 1'd ea 1S
trying Io be the besL
them with a bridge back to big
Acwally, it began on a night in league ball.
.
March 1986. Lucas was taken out
Now Lucas is coaching the
of a Houston Rockets ~arne in a Spurs and doing an exlniOrdinary
manner he found humihating. He job. His players respect and admire
started drinking and snorting him, and the addicts he has helped
. cocaine, drove into downtown bring back from the abyss love
Houston wearing five pairs of ath- him. To them at least, Jobn Lucas
letic socks and no shoes, blacked is the nearest thing to a beatified
out and came out of it while wan· soul lis they are lilcely 10 see this
dering the streets in search of his side of New J ··-•ern
·
H
~..... · •
car. e failed a drug test that day~
The bad guy is Spiro Agnew,.
fonnerlovemor or Mlrfland and
Richar Nixon's first VICe pmident. He resigned in dispace in
••
By Tbe Allllltlated Press
. October 1973, after federal prolecutorl came up wilb evideace be
Today is Tuesday, March I6,the 75th day of 1993. There are 290 days had accepted cub pa~ 11a1.n
leftinthCiyear. .... ' Hi,
. ·•
conlnltton whiJc _ _,
Today's Higbli.,.t m stOry:
IIIli that the JliYOID
con
Twentv-five )'CII'I ago, on Man:h 16, 1968; the My Lai Massacre toolc nord'ed · hilc'he wu __._ •,.,...:
place durlnllbc Vietnam War as U.S. troops commanded by LL William
He opted (; ~~;;;:.
L. &lt;raJiey Jr. Cllried out the ~of men, women and children. A U.S. lendore - . 10 IIIli ev111on cbqe
Army ~ later said at leait 175 people had died and that "the numb!% _ in other \vonla, he ldalkmay exceed '«10." The Vietnamc8e pu1the figure at 504. ' •
ted taldn&amp; il1epl money, only dill
On this date:
·
he didn't pay taxes on it- and
In 1521, Portuguese navlgator Ferdinand Ma&amp;eUan reached the Philip- split for Rancho Miraae, Calif.,
pi~~~ he was killed by nativ~ the followiJ!g month.
where he has
Jived the pxl

· ·ID
•
.r-r;
J.O d.ay

Russet

\ Carohna
~:::· r~~l Turkey

Yes, Virginia, we ~ave be:~9J.J.l,~ ~~l~a.~e . . .. i

:Letters to the editor

U.S. NO. ONE

FROZEN GR~DE 'A'

Joseph Spear

4

b.IS t ory

·

':J:

-L

si.

•

1

GREEN lEANS • CORN •
SHELLIE BEANS • PEAS

1
,l.
·~

· In bis new life, Agaew ha.,~
helped Saddam Hussein IJuy unl~
forms for his army, represented
German arms firm that supplieit4'
missile
lnqthe
(hem;.;~
hai•
not beentechnology
associated-towitiJ

sile proaram) and couned tbe
Argentint military junll that mut.i,.
tiered !J!MllllllW'I:d thouSirids of i!J&lt;t
0 -srnUJII of the Bal~;:. .
Slin
y turned up aotc lha( :
1
•~w Willie to an~
.......-· "' ...-.
era! in whic:b the fOIIIMI' vice prest.; '
dentguided
~::,~~~~~ :. ~ ~~ '
u"' w • -.....,...
establishments
objective view will
and talco
ceasea more
tlleir .••: ·

I

, __

PLASTIC
GALLON

CDS

EASTMAN'S

=

J'
:.~dried attacks on your C:OUD- •1:
Rec:entlv; 56 boxes of Aancw
"an:hivca'' wen: ofticlally
at the Uaivenity of Mary&amp;ud. ~
-AgnewhadKCCSStothemllralllll
_ _._ - .....h:.........._, ___
- ... · - -.. ._. __
in&amp; wu found.
A jock or veep - whlcb one
matalhil Marylander poud?
I'll take the recoverina addict
any day.
J-,11 Spear Is a •,lJidlcat
~}~New ;aper Ate p;lle

$

14-15$
oz.

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Pure Sweet
Sugar·

Orange
Juice

Stokely
Vegetables

.....
middlem...
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A&amp;new has mnained UIICOIIIritC,~
Two yean ago, he coatended
=~=~s!.!¥1:! :;re nev. ••:
•
..
YC:OOYJC.:
~r'~reconle
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,,

~··

�•

•

Sports

......
. Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday, March 16,1993

The Daily Sentinel
•

Tuesday, March 16, 1!MI3

•

SUPPORT THE
•

EIGS COUNTY
ERICAN CANCER SOCIETY

•

•' .•
..
•
•

ATI
AL
ER DAY!
EDN,E DAY,
RC 17, 1993

•

'

7
WARNING SIGNALS

••
,.
··'

THAT CAN SAVE

"

YOUR LIFE ••• IF
YOU SEE YOUR
DOCTORI

·"

..
..·

'peake's Dempsey,
Persin get top honors
I

~-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
player and a coach from state poll
champion Chesapeake are among
the headliners on the 1993 Associated Press S_outheastem All-Disirict
)lays high SChOO! basketball teamS
released tQday.
' James Dempsey, !I 6-foot senior
· who averaged 24 points a game,
was chosen player of the year in
the districrin Division III for UJ}·
)lea ten Chesapeake. His coach.
Norm Pcrsin, was selected as the
district's coach of the year in in
balloting by a media panel from the
district.
.· · · ,
• Terrell Baker of Washington
~ourt House Miami Trace, a 5·&amp;
i&gt;enior who hit for 18.3 points a
game, was chosen the top player in

tib:ld8r habib.
2. Asore that does not

,.

heal.

3.lklusual bleeding or

THANK YOU

blaclst or ai111'Nhere.

In swallowing.
6. Obvious change In wart

7. Nagging cough or

.-,,

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hoaneness.

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•

SOCJE1Y*

•••
••J.

AMERICAN
CANCER

t.

"HOW YOU LIVE MAY SAVE YOUR LIFE"
)

Ewing Funeral Home
.· 992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

'

·Smith·Nelson Motors, Inc.
992·2174
'•

POMEROY, OHIO
'

Downing~Childs

Mullen·Musser Insurance
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality·Print Shop
992·3345

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Brogan•Warner lns~rance
992·6687 ·

POMEROY, OHIO

Prescription Shop
992·6669

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

Ingels Furniture and
·. Jewelry
992·2635

Sr.,l7.1.
C~pa.yen ~ the Jnr: Mike ~llh, MarltUa. and Ry•n Browa, Chlllkolbe.
Coach or the ytlr: \Jack GnathOUMo Lin-

cuter.

NOTE: Only one ~ Jelcctod due to amaU

lllllf!h!:a' of le&amp;rill in dduid.

.

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Ridenour Supply
985·3308

CHESTER, OHIO

Adolph's Dairy Valley.
992·2556

POMEROY, OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
POMEROY

992·2155

.

The Shoe Place/Locker 219 Swisher•Lohse Pharmacy·
992·5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2955

Dbl•kwiU

MEICS, '·11 Sr., lt.71 Joe Leith, Itontaft. 6-4,
Sr., 17.3; Tnvil Robauon, W ..hiDJ'OII Court

HOUle, S-8, Jr., t•.O: Maa Walbum., Jacbon, S.
10, Sr., 21.4; T11vll Br~dlonl, -....do Woot,
l·ll, Sr., 22.0; Nolhoa
R"'* Hill, til , Sr., 22.0; Iorey Spurloc:k.- l'llior, 6-2, Sr..

Ki.._"""""

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....: Sunny__~alu.. Atherui, 6-S, Jr.,
15.2; lonuo ~ Hillll&gt;on&gt;, 6-1, Sr.. 11.4;
D....U l l i o l h , - 6-1, Jr., 1!.4; R;dUo
Hi&amp;hl~y,

Orecn!icl4 McClain, 6-0, Jr., U .!J;

Ohio ,.5~, Ph. 992-~156. Soconcl. CIUI
..-t.aac p.td at Pomeroy, Ohio.

~Member ; The Aataocilt.ed Preu. aDd the
~Ohio Ntw~pt~pcr- Asaociation, Natioul
),Advcrli11ing Rcpre~cntltivc , Branham

POMEROY, 01110

Nfwapaper

Sale~ ,

733 Third Avenue,

Now Y011k,' ~York 10017.

K&amp;C Jewelers

_Baum Lu,..ber Company
992·6421

CHESTER, OHIO

Crow's Family Restaurant .
992·5432

POMEROY, OHiO

. POMEROY, OHIO

992·3785

Sugar.Run Mills
992·21 15

POMEROY, OHIO

POSTMASTE!l Send ..W.... duo.,.._ 10
The Doily Sendnel, 111 Coun St.,

~THE .
Gravely Tractor
GRAVELY .
,'
992•2975
SYSTEM
PO•EROY

Fisher
992·5'141

Fune~al

;pomcroy, OHio 467119.

One Week.. ......:............. ....... ............... 1.60

&lt;&gt;ne Month ................,........................ts.INII
()ne Year.................................... R. ~ ....I83.20
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'Sut.criben not. dMirin1 to pay &amp;he eaft't.

cr rMY nmt&amp; ta -tnanae direct ta The
Daily &amp;n""el on a Lht~~e, -'• or 12
,monlh bA•I•. Cmdlt will 00 g;von emiC1'

Home

Fruth Pharmacy

ll-lo

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992·6491
i

MIDDLEPORT, Q. .IO

FAIMEIS BAll
tiS·UIJ

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l•tas fUllS, OliO

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992·66 I I

MIDDLEPOII, OHIO.

b1 oMl1 pmnilled in
whOre horria •nicr .am~ II

JUNCTION
RT.33&amp;!95

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Ht·l116
NiiPRDT, -

NEW 14'WIII! .. STOCK S141.44 - ·

MChwnek.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Valley Lumbar Co.

SUII8CRJPI'ION BATB8
By Carrier or Motw Ro.te

·

•

•

'

F.Jrat tum: Tendl Blkct, Miarqi Trace., 5-&amp;,
Sr., 18.3; TREVOR HARRISON, POIIIEROY

Iowa's'Fostt:r tops
all-Big Ten women's
team; OSU's Smith
heads second team -.

This Page Sponsored By These 1\tlany Fine Community .Businesses!

•

Ol•lllo.l .
Flnllelrw: Mike Smith,. Muiccta, 6-f(IOt. $e.
nior, 19.5 ~inU ~ aamc; RyaRBtown, Chillicalhe. tH!i, Jr., 18.2; Scoa. Miller, Lancutcr, 6-2.
Sr., 18.6; Tom Smkh,!Ap'n. 6-3, St., 11.7; Kevin.
Brown, OU.Uicolhe, 6--2.Jr., 10.2; J01h. Sd.Won.
Llncancr, 6-6, Jr., 14.0; Ben Knic., MlriCIUa. 6-2,

'UnCertainty rules Reds' bullpen

~..-

••
••
,.
,.••

Press all-Southeast District boys
team, as selected by a panel of
sports writers and broadcasters
from the district:

member panel of writers and the final regular-season poi!. He .
By JIM O'CQNNELL
broadcasters
on a 5-3-1 basis. That averaged 21.9 points and 6.1 re:·
AP Basketball Writer
was
one
more
point than Cheaney, •bounds while shooting 54 percent ·
.~ Even with three underclassmen
the
Big
Ten
player
of the year. He - 44 percent from three-point
'on the 1992-93 Associated Press
•was
listed
on
the
first
team on 62 ninge. He made 80 percent of his
~11-America team, there could be
ballots,
one
more
·than
Mashburn.
free throws and wasn't slowed by
o~~nly two repeaters neixt year.
''I'm v~ry happy with the selec- the Big Ten's .physical style as In~ Juniors Jamal Mashburn of Kenlucky and Anfernee Hardaway of tion," he said. "This is a great diaoa went 17-1 in the league.
Hurley led Duke to that same
:fvfemphis State, and sophomore honor aod I share it with my team·
Chris Webber of Michigan ·were mates beacuse they made it possi- record, but it was over a three·y~
named to the team Monday, along ble. Right now, we're less con- period in the NCAA tournament.
y;ith seniors Bobby Hurley of Duke cerned with individual honors aod That meant three national champiawards. We're concenirating on • onship games Md tides the last two
and Calbert Cheaney of Indiana.
seasons. The 6-foot ~uard played
; Mashburn, a 6-foot-8 New York winning a championship."
Mashburn
led
the
Wildcars
to
a
for his father on a natiOnal champiCity native as comfortable beyon.d
No.
I
seed
in
the
NCAA
tournaonship high school team and sur·
ihe three-point line as he is underment
by
avemging
21.3
poinrs,
8.6
ptised a lot of skeptics with his
~bath the basket, already has said
he intends to play in the NBA next rebounds and 3.6 assists. He. shot continued success at the collegiate
49 percent, including almost two level.
~son instead of returning to the
three-pointers per game.
Wildcats.
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski
Cheaney, a smooth 6-6 left· never had any doubts about Hurley,
• The Southeastern Conference
haodcd
shooter, led the Hoosiers 10 · handing him the ball at his first
player of the year received 3'1 7
a
No.
1
seeding aod the top spot in practice four seasons a~ .
points in the balloting by a 65•'As far as accomplishments go,
certainly he has accomplished as
much as any player to ever play in
'
the ACC,'' Krzyzewski said.
are auditioning for fill-ins.
: . PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) Hurley, like Cheaney a thirdThe auditions aren't going all
:Three weeks before opening day,
team selection last season, is the
!he Cincinnati Reds' bullpen that wen: ·
NCAA's all-time assist leader,
remains one of their main concerns.
handing out I ,060 while -compiling
The Reds still aren't sure who
a 114-24 record as the Blue DevilS ·
will help set up closer Rob Dibble .
prepare to defend their tide for the
They're encouraged' by Jeff Rear·
second time. This season, one iq
don's recenl performances, but
which Duke's depth was sorely
~on 't have a proven left-hamler to
by a late-season injury to
tested.
pitch out of trouble in the late
Grant
Hill,
l{Jirley averaged 16.3
mnings.
.
CHICAGO (AP) - Toni Fos- poinrs and 8.2 ass1SIS, while shoot·
. General manager Jim Bowden is ter, who led Iowa to a tie for the
mg 41 percent from three-point
trying to·downplay the uncenainty.
conference championship and a range.
·
, "I don't think it's as bad as peo- berth in the NCAA tournament,
He was named on 58 fli'St teams
ple say," Bowden said. "A lot of headed the 1993 All-Big Ten
aod had 309 points, 32 more thao
people get the impression we have women's basketball team.
Hardaway, who was an honorable
· no middle relief. A lot of media
Foster also was chosen on Mon- mention selection last season, as
people have been asking me thaL I day Player of the Year.
1
was Mashburn.
think we do have some arms here."
Joining Foster on the ieam
Hardaway, who was on 44 first
: The trouble is, they've been selected by conference coaches
teams,
might be the most versatile
largely ineffective arms.
were Carol Ann Shudlick of Min- player in college·basketball. The 6: For the ·first time in four 'years, nesota; Nikki Keyton and Averill
Jhe Reds Jack the solid setup-Closer Robens, who helped Ohio State· to 7 Memphis native. averaged 23
combination that made them tough a share of the title; and Robin points, 8.7 rebOunds aod 6.S assisrs
as the focus of every opponent's
io beat in clos,e games. Randy Threat of Wisconsin.
c!efense.
r
Myers and Norm Charlton - the
Vivian Stringer of Iowa was
Webber
jumped
into
the nationrest of' the "Nasty Boys" trio with named Coach of the Year, and
al
s)lOIIight
as
'Michigan
made its
~ibbl~j- are gone, aod the Reds · Katie Smith of Ohio State,' Freshrun to the title game la.st season
man of the Year. Smith average with five freshmen swters. He was
16.7 poinrs per game.
on 42 fim teams and received 270
· 1 TI.e
Daily
Sentinel
Smith headed the second team, poiniS.
•
.
.
(USPS 213-880)
which included Katina Mack of
The 6-9 Webber shot62 pacent
• PubHIMd CVI!T)' 11Remoon, Monday
Penn State; Nancy Kennelly and this season, a result of being above
. through Friday, Ill Court Sl.. P"""'"'l'·
Maureer Holohao of Northwestern; the rim for most of the game. He
Ohio by' Lhe Ohio Vallily Publishins
and
Trish Andrew of Michigan.
Corripi!~)'IM.ultimedia
IDO., Pomeroy,
'

FOR HELPING US
FIGHT CANCER•

or mota.

-

MICHAEL EVANS

RUSSELL SINGLETON

TREVOR HARIUSON

W-

CHAD BARNt.:S, GALLIPOLIS GALLIA
ACADEMY, 5-9, Jr.., 13.4; J111oR KinJ, Mi..U
T - 6-3, Sr. 11.7; Rondy
Wovedy, S·
I, Sr.. 1S.4.
Third leUII: Jeff Sword, WuhinJl&lt;l!ll. Coutl
Hou1e, 6-4, Sr,, tS:S; Juon Cade, Irontm lloek
Hill,~ Jr., 19.•: J.,.. llanU,
Waren,

V'""""

5-11, Sr., 21.0; ROI !=ANADAY, CHESIDRE
RIYI~ VA.LLEY, ,.3, Sr-t 11.2; NATHAN
MILLER, CALUPOUS GALLIA ACADEMY, S-1, Sr.,13.7; Trnii _W•.-:~· Alban)'
Alaand•, 6-1, Jr., 13.1; Will Fife., McDcrmoc.t
· NonhWCit, 6-4, Jr., 13.0.
PlaJtr of lhe JUr: Tcrrdl Blkcr, Miami

T-.

Coach r1 Ute )'Ur: Gary Skltf'er, Wuhinp
Cmut.Home.
,
H....,...lllt menllon1 Hank Jllelchor, Soulh
l'ain&amp;i Sblwn Vilor, PodlmOIIlh; A11011 Nidloll,
Wh111rly: O.rU:tYn TD9fnbt 1 Wnvly; Shawn
Lonpuetb. Hillltioro; Pat COleman, O:cenficld
MA:Ciolo; Olio Shaffer, Woohirlpn Court Houoe;
Juon. Hal'ril, Wullinpc:m Ccwt Hou~ Nathan

25.4; Scoo. Keller, Chil\icothe Huntinatm, 6-S,
Sr., 21.2; EM H.oU, 11&lt;1..._ 6-5, Sr., 15.0; Andy

TollB, Ncnh Adam~, .5-10, Sr., 16.6; Miko C:roUy,
LucuviDo Valley, 6-3, Sr., 16.1; Bt:njlo Lewil,
Oak.Hill,5-IO,St.,I4.8.
.
Second team: Quct Gar.-ey, Belpre. 6-2. Sr.,
14.3; Brien Runyon, Chcnpoate. 6-b, Sr., 14.4;
Pat Be~rd, Chilli.COiho Z.nc Trace. 6-3, Sr., tS.S;
Brian Toot&amp;, Narth Ad IIIli , 5-9. Sr., 14.1o Mall
McOrlw, Ponanoulh Eaat. ~2. Jr., 17.6; a.m.
Wud, Chilli~olhc Unio\o, 6-S, Sr., 17.6; loah
Arey, Peebles, 6·1, Sr., 17.4; Shaw-. White,
Ctoobville. 6-2. Jr., 23.0.
Third lum: Jeremy K.lt~Mc:h, Scuth Webncr, 5-9, Sr.• 17.1 ; Oui.1 Siml*lft. Oak Hill, 6-1,
Sr., 17.4; lolh Andcnon, Btinbrid&amp;e Paint V.Uey,
6-!i, Sr., 11.7; Deric: Newlmd, Bai.nbridae. Paint

v.uey, 6-S. Sr.• 12.6; Jason CNIO, Ch!lJic:o&amp;M
Unio&lt;o. 6-7, Soph.. IS.O; hfilco Cook, Wboclal·
burs. 6-4, Jr.• 6-4, Jr., 14.7; Todd .Holllnd,
PoctlmOUib Eul. 6-3, Jr., 11 .4; W• Corriell, Min·
roa~. H. Jr.• 16.4.
Pl•ytr ot tht Jttr: Jama Denpey; Cheta·
peoke.
C01ct, ol the )'tar: Ncmn Pen:in, Ocupr.Ue.
UOnorablt mtnllon: M.trk Oft!, Belp~ Seremy Duncaa. Pite~em: Briln Blackmoa, Oak Hill;

Wilt«, Hi1lJbwo; Juan BW'ftiUIIII, Vincl!lnt Warrea~ Mart SwiMing, Waverly; Pat MeHu&amp;h,
A&amp;hons; Jllllla ~choU, Atha11; Jason Wi..l.lbma,
McAnh'II!I' 'Vin~~~n County; Nolm YalCII, M;AMu.r
Vinton Countr..JOHN BENTLEY, POMEROY · J01h J«isaaon. Peebl.•; Janalhan Eaton. Wh.-..
MEIGS; KEViN IIUNT, CHISIOAI RIVER bwa; Eric lclln-. South Webotcr; Jolla R1c'bmond Dl!e Southeulem; RJan Graham,
VALLEY; Scoa. C.pmll],,' Albany Alaunder.
FnnkfOI'l Aden•; Greg Swartz, Cor.l Grove; Bob
Dr•IIIOnW
Flrtlllam: Jam• ~· Oeupeakc. 6- Hall, Coal Onwe; Erron Archer, Proctrovillo Fait-

0, Sr., 24.0; Cnia Kcrru, Blinbridae Paint VaUcy,

6-5, Sr., IU; Scott Chellh~· Wcll..,on, 6-7,Jr.,

land; Chad Stewllitt, Procunville F•irland; Mike

Tomlin, Cbclapcake: Jason Johnson, B.umridp
Paint Valley; CniA X..yser, Minfm:l; Out Miller,

Croob rille; Juft&amp;n.Oail, Ndlon¥ill•York.

DIYIIIon IV
Flnl lum: Paul Cui~i1.on, L~chbu~~ ~

2, Sr., 31.3; Marty Cochenour, Baver

~

3, Sr., 18.1; ·frank Butdleuc, Porwmoulh q,y, 63, Sr., 17,3; Ryan Morrow New Botton. S.IO. Jr..

17.1; MICHAEL EVANS, RACINE SOUTH·
ERN, S.It Sr,15.6.

Second

lt1m: Jerome FuUcr, Willow Wood

Symmca VeUcy, .5-11, Jr.• 20.•; Chuck Joaa,
Ironton St JOKph, 5·7, Sr., 13.S; Brilft Olw.,
L)'llchbura Clay, 6-0, Sr., 18.9; Mike Kelly ,
Pmmmulh Clay, S-10. Sr.. 16.R: R1ut:e. T.annin1.
llomlodt Millo&lt;, 6-1, Sr, 11.0; a..d R....U. t.th·
am W-.m,6-S. Jr., 14.4.
Third tam: Jum Rimer, New Boaan, 5-11 ,
Sr.. II. ~ ReUIMrl r.iale, rn.u..r Trimble, 5·10,
Sr., 14,4; Mike Sunpean, Pranklin Fu.mace ar-t,
S- 10,

Sr., ·6.0;

CHARLIE

BISSELL,

REEDSVU.LE EASTERN, ~Z. 'S r.,l.f.t; TnN
r-...-..Faidi.W.6-I,Sr.. l9.0.
P11yer oltM ,._., Plu1 Clu.1on, L~
Clay.
.
Coado o1 lho JUr: HOWIE CALDWELL,

RACINE SOLITIIBRN.

Honorable mentlo•z Raymond Smilh,
L y n - Clay; Bdobr Cool«, Loll.- w-.;
O.ad Ric:liaaond, 1..-bura Faidicld; Andy r.r.
110111, Latham Wetlem; Randy Mc:Cl1y, Llth1m

Wcatem: Brim Oakea, Fnnk1ia Futn~ce Green;
Brlftdon AltJwr, Polumouth Notre Dune; Juon
Mollett, Ironton SL JOMPIJ.; Rit.ty DiUon, Wmiaw
Wood Symmu V•ller; MAIK ALLEN,

RACINE SOUTHERN; RUSSELL SINGLE·
TON, RACINE SOlmiERN.

~Three underclassmen selected college first-team Ali.,Ariter.icans

coum, OHIO

5. IMIO&amp;SIIcl'l. or dltllcutty

.•

Division II: Washingto-n Court
· House's Gill')' Shaffer was listed as
· the coach of the year.
In Division IV, Ly_nchl!urg
Clay's 6-2 Paul Cluxton won the
top honor$. The senior averaged
31.3 poinrs a game while shooting
58 percent from the f.eld, 50 percent on three-pointers aod 86 percent at the line. Racine Southern's
Howie Caldwell was picked as the
coach of the year after a 16-4 season.
In Division I, Marieua's Mike
Smith and Chillicothe's Ryan
B,rown shared the player of the year
honors. ·. Smith, a 6-0 senior, aver·
aged 19.5 points a game, while
Brown, a 6-6 junior, hit for 18.2 a
game. The coach of the year was
Jack Greathouse of Lancaster, who
Jed his team 10 a 16-4 record.
Here's the 1993 Associated

•

discharge.
4. Thickening or lump In

CHARUE BIS.S ELL

JOHN BENTLEY

.~eigs County gets six players, coach o~ all-SE District teams

1. Chauga In bowel or ·
.'

• ~ 't " ~

MARK ALLEN

)~

.

.

40

SETWEEN

·LOGAN
. AND
NELSONVLLE

averaged 19.2 points and 9.8 rebounds for the Wolverines, the preseason No. 1 team aod a No. I seed
this weelc.
The second team featured junior
forward Rodney Rogers of Wake
Forest, sophomore forward Glenn
Robinson of Purdue, senior guards
J .R. Rider of UNLV and Terry Dehere of Seton Hall and junior center
Eric Montross of North Carolina.
The third team had three seniors
- guards Nick Van Exel of
(:incinnati and Allan. Houston of
Tennessee and forward Chris Mills
of Arizona - and juniors Grant
Hill :or Iiuke (a f01ward) aod Billy
McCaffrey (a guard) of VanderbiiL
They were teammates on Duke's
first national championship team
before McCaffrey transferred.
Here's the !992-93 Associated
Press All-America basketball team
with key season statistics aod total
votes in parentheses. Voting by a
65-member nationwide panel of
writers and ,broadcasters was on a
5·3-1 basis.
Flrirt team

Jamal Muhbu.m, KentUCky,

~~.

2.40, junicw,

21.3 PPI. 1.6'1'1. 3.6 'PI (317 po;m.).
C.lben Oioaney, Indiana, 6-7lll. '209,RniOr,
21.9 Pl'l· 6.1 rpa. 54.0 FO pc1, 43.6 three-point
F0pc1.,(316).

Bobby HLlrley, Duke. 6-0, 16.5, nnior, 16.3
!'Plio 8.2 •Plio 1.9 -~ 41.3 threo-poin&lt; FO peL
(309).
'
An!omcc Hudawa)', Memphi1 State. 6-7,19S,

jwtior, 23,0 PPio 8.7 rpa. 6.S •PI· 2.3 -.Lt. 37.3

minuta (zr7).
Chril Webber, Michig•n, 6-9, 24.5, •ophamor&lt;, 19.2 1'1'1· 9.1 '1'1· 2.1 •PI· 62.4 Rl pcl.. 2.5

blotko (210). .

Second team

Rodney Rap, Wlke Forc.t. 6-7, 235, )anior,

1.s

:10.9 '~'~· S4.6 Rl.,... uu&gt;.
Glenn Robinaon, P\lrd11e, 6-8, 215. •opho- '
""""· 23.7 PP1Jo 9.3 IPSo 2.1 ...U (176),
J.R. Rider, UNLV, 6-5, 215,1Cnior, 29.1 ppJ,
1.9 'PI· !H.5 FO pet., 40.1 three·point FO pet.
(172).

Terry Odlcre, Seton H,U, 6-4, 190, aenior,
21.1w1• 2-' 'PI· 41.2 &lt;Juoe.poha ~ ""' &amp;1.3 fi
pCt. (148) .

Erie Mm\ruu, NoM C~rolin1 , 7·0, 270, junior, 15.6ppJ. 7.1 rpt. 69-9 FG p&lt;S. (124).

Third team

Billy McCaffrey, Vanderbilt, 6-4, Ill, junior,
20.~ PP&amp; 3.6 •P&amp;. 5S.l FO pet., 52.2 lhrec·poina .
FO pa.,16.! fi pet. (91).
Grant Hill, Duke. o.a. 225, jwli.ui, 11.2 m.
~lop!/&gt; 2.3 ,...,., S1.9 FG poL (91).
N1ck Van Exd. Cincimtti, •1. 111, Ienior,
19.1 ppg, 4.0 'PI• 2.8 three-point FG per aame
(83).

Chril Milll, AtU:on•. 6-6, 21.4, aenior, 20.4
ppa, 8.0 rpa:, !2.2 FO peL, 49.1 lhree-poinz FG
...... (77). .
Allan Howton, TennasH, 6-6. 200, nnior,
22.3 PPio 4.1 'PI• 3.1 .,.. 17.8 fi ...... 41.4 th-

poWFG pa., (6.5).

Hooo.rable mention

Vin Btkor, Hartrord: Puri•h Cuebier,
Ev~n•villc; S•m C11wford, New Mexico State;

Bill Curley, BOltOn College; Yinka Dare, OcofJc
Wuhington.
Tony Dunkin, Coull.! Ctrollfta; Acie Earl.
low•: Doualas Ed warda, Florida Slate; Michul
, Finley, Wilcoruin; hrnr£ Forn~~t, Ooorz.i• Ter::h.

Jamie Gladden, Xavier, Ohio; Grea Onhlm.

lndilne; Brian Grant, Xavier, Ohio; Ja.h Ormt,

UW.· Thornu Hill, Duke.

iuwan Haw1rd, Michif1n; Bobby Hopton.
Waaner, Lindsey Hu.IIICII, IC.ksan Su.&amp;G; Ervin
Johnson, New OriCIOI; Adonis Jon!m, Kanau.
Ja10r1 Kidd, Califamia; Warren Kicld, Middle
TCnnca~ce State; Oeotao Lyn~h. North C.rolina;

A•nm McKie, Temple; Darnell Mee, WCIIcm
KeniUCky.

LlwRnce M01an, Syracute; Stacey Poole,
Flarida: Bryant R.eevea. Ollihoma State; Jamu
RobiniClft, Alabama; Jalen Ra~e. Michia•n.
Slevin Smith; Arizon1 S&amp;att; Durick Suber,
Rider; Bob Su.n, FloriU ·State.; Dedm Thornu,
UNLV; O.ryTIOil, Br\ahlm Youna~
Rn W11ten, Kan..t; Clr.utie Ward, Florida

s.....

�By The Bend

Blazers edge Nets 110-94;
.Bullets slip past Cavs 105-101
ay CHRIS SIIDIDAN
AP 5,.a W1leu
The New JCney Nels liDIIIy 'Ciul of . . 3,000 miles fJiJm home.
• Playiaa • 1111 pme of a surpnlinaly successful four-game

warm swin&amp;. New Jency llaycd

• :·1
~.

.

: l'oint suard Rumcal R~binstln
waS I lipdy Jqadcd sub JUSl two
.wcCks aso. Then saartcr Kenny
Anclcnon went down for the sca9011 with I broke!• wrisL RCJbimoia
}lfll\iCd up to ~ 213 points,
-cisht assists, 4.6 rebounds and
'llric steals in lbc fii'Sl tbrcc games
:bf the trip and was named NBA
:playfr of die 'MlCL
• the Trail B,lazen pulled away
:apinst the N• widla decisive IS,4 run that J11U diem on 10p 94-SS
. ;wilh S: 11 remaininJ. Cliff Robin~on wu 10 fill' 17 in the second

St·orehoard
a.mr·

lntheNBA•••
WL

....

42 II

.100

---21 :n
nr ,

.All

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Ylll .

a_

_,
. .a. "''
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21

-_ -_ -_ .,19
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32

.!110
A7S

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2.5

11.5
13

-- ·--·4 "'
-~

E. Clavalan• Shaw ,9 2, Lyndhurat
BNdt 90
Ma11illoft hckaon 36, M111illoft

II

w""""'"" 45 71, 0..
N. Roy allan

WESTERN CONFERENCE
....

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4.5

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10. Bal SUoo I. NE I.c..uoiaaa 7,

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DIYiolonD
BellavYe 65, WiDan164
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Dl•lllon IV
~»~,1: v~, Chr. 92.

.. .

Contoo',"'·

OHIO STATI! 6, · - 6, , _ 4,"

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.

32

· M

·2,PJOw' 1

Ohio U.S. boys' cage
pairings &amp; scores

'

Ohio H.S. girls' cage
pairings &amp; scores
Oll.llMBUS, Ohio (AI') - Hae uo
the po;Mp ror the lith .... liril buk&lt;l·
balllnmamont, to be hald'Thunday

, tluauah SalW'di.Jil St. lobo Arena:

Dlvtslon l

Picll:erinJUift (16.0) v1. Eaallall:c N.
(24-Z), I'rilloy 7 pm.
w...... (24-1) ... Milfoo! (2:1-2), Fri·

.

dl)'9p.m.
Oumpionlhip: Saturday, 9 p.m.

DlvlslonU
OrMlle (Il-l) va. Weal
2), Fridoy 2 pm.

WediMidaJ'•-

w........ . .

Division m

____
•lllllo.' ,....,.30_

(26-0), Th~,..,.f 9 p.m.
OtltnplOnlhip: Sawrday, 2 p.m.

S111 Aftlooio " LA. LUcn.. 10:30

~:
theNHL .••
'

Division IV

Owwillo (»5) vo. Upt&gt;a' Sci"" Vall
(25-0), Th"""'f2 pm.

'' WALES COI'WERENCE

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1 n+' 2
- - n r1 1 13211239
'N.Y. ~-· 31 2111 73:161 2SO
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--

CAMPBEU. CONFERENCE
T-

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Monday's regional action

(17·5). ~,. 6:311 p.m.;

(IJ. ,)

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... (17-6), n ........J. 6:15
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Mor(l7-6).~.·n

42

Dl"olonU
W. Holna 32, 0.... 31
. Dl•IILon m
UbonJ·Union 61, Richmond Dolo SE
Dfvb:lon IV

Upper Sciota VaU. 66. Buckeye CenlnllS"
.
Z.nenille ROHCranl 62, Pranll:fon
Adeno3.1
•

Transactions
Baseball

•

At

(

1

. ,

Saliaday, 12:30p.m.

StooJl)leDII ·V._... __ 11 n ' ., mm
Colplr.-..... .. :M 10 12174240
Lao Aoeoi&amp;- 31 31 7 " 2M 211

Amtrtcan Lup

BO!TON RED SOX - Sent Walt
McKeol ancl Scou Hauebera. ca\Chea;
ond Polcr HOJ ond left' Plympton, pilchcn, to 1heit min&lt;¥ leapa camp for_..
ai.,...,L Optimod $Mn ROllo oud'ielder,
10 Plwwcka ~ lhc lnlanaticnalla&amp;Uc.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - SMt
Frtnciseo Oatrta&amp;, lhnhall Boa and
Rafael Novoa, pild\cn, and Mike Slefv.·
ki, et:tchcr, 10 ahcir minor lea sue camp for

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

. .....,. ___ 31 :13 6 61151211

..-...,..-t:,:
,............

MINNESOTA TWINS - E~t•nded
the cornncu of An.dy MacPhaiL pcnl
manaaer, lbroa&amp;h 1996, and Tom &amp;dly,
mll\laer, throuJh 199S.
OAKlAND ATHLI!TlCS - Reu·
lipd Todd v., Poppd, Todd R....UJ
ond llovW :z.u-..... ,........, .......
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, _ ... ·-· 21 43 5 4'1 211111 261

.

VI.

mns {)1-2), Thund•y 4 p.m.

PotrlekDI-

Now-··-·
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(23-

Akron St.V-St.M (2.3-4) VI, Sherwood
Fairview~). Thu.U.y7 P.·rn.
M.r:ra•retta (25· 1) v1. llberty:Union

n..,;,· Dolilo, 1:30-

;r-

Holme~

Avoa Lake (23 -2) va. Urbuu: (24-2),
Friday4 p.m.
O.ompiootohip' S.tunloy, 6 p.m.

A"-•Now~1~,...
7:30p.m.
Mllw.i••W... :lOp.a
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·---"'

I

Brid&amp;et Davis, Alison Gerlach, Lori Grimm,
Missy Wilfong, and Jeremy Hartson; third row,
Jacob Da\'ls, Mike Witrohg, Bill 'faundas, David
Toundas, James White, David Duncan, Jared
Stewart, Dodger Vaugban, and Aaron Hock·
man. Other mem be.., not pk:tured are Heather
H~n, Joy O'Brien, Jared Warner, and Ryan
Rowe.
·

The district eventually hopes to
provide at least five computer worlc
stations in every classroom that
· students can usc at any time.
The distri.c t approved the
$500,000 laptop computer plan in
January. It chose 30 teachers Is
trainers last month, and, on Thursday, small groups of reachers ~re
Connally introduced to the Macintosh PowcrBook computers,
" I take it with me everywhere"
said one of the trainers, Lory Bah·
ney, a Jdndersarten reacher atlndian Meadows J:!lementary School.
. " l~'s ~Y a big part' of my organi·
Zillion.
Sahney uses her computer to
record Jr8dcs, keep traCk of letters

studies for studeniS that misht nee¢ 'if
extra help, and plan lessons. Jf
~calls, all the iliformation, illt, ;
at her fingertips.
: ""
· " In the future, I C8J! see studen!Jo..,
taking these home instead of text;11
books," Bahney said.
· ·~
.Teachers are being trained ~'ld&gt;
the computer in three phases wi!f\01;
the last group coming o'n !ine'early.'w
next school year.
. · ,~
"We're putting a tremendous~'
resource in our teachers' h3nds,:.' 1
said Superintendent Dave }{ales? 11
"We trust our teachers will makC\~.
good use of the tool, esp~ia::t::
since technology is one of them
importsnt change agents in rcStritc- '
turing education."
· · ·rJ,· · •·l ·~
~
'lln

f.';

. Teen choir perfqrmances slated
presented pro~rams at Westside
Church of Chnst in Cleveland and
the Waverly ChiliCh of Christ; and
will be at the Gallipolis Christian
Church on March 21.
DIIDR\.
Tlil: publi\: is invited to Friday's
Each year the group presents a
pesentation which is free.
different program. Taped contemc
Qpaized about five years a~o porary Christiari music is used for
the. teen choir has performed m Jhe musicaVdrama.
&amp;.oral! other communities. They

more, where tbe Buliets won-105-101 ia part
because or Gugliotta's game-high 23 poiata and
10 rebounds. (AP)

.

'

.Community calendar

NCAA's top tournament seeds, AP
Top 25's first four teams the same :

Dhillortl
Ai:onF'-74,ModWS!
·Otillia&gt;lhc 52,Ncwl'llibdclpbio44

.4!0· 14.5

--~ :JI .M

,_

"~·-·---·--"'"
7,....••r=nza t o

HOLDING DOFSN'T WORK on the Wash·
ington Bullets' Tom Gugliotta (right), as Cleveland's Gerald WllkiiiS finds out in the second ·
quarter of Monday niaht's NBA 11ame in Balli·

Monday's dlstrkt 1&lt;llon

'

• • a.dtled

.. ....

*:tSalulda,,J:30pa.
~
'C-

C.lni-

o..ii:----ZI

.

FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) Computer·literacy besins at the
front of the classroom in the Southwest Allen County Schools, where
ceachers are ~ving laptop compu~rs to orgamze lcssm plans and
mouvar.e ~tu~nts:
. .
The d•~tnct •s equ1ppmg all
teachers With the portable comput·
ers as part of a plan to make comPUlf[ h~y a c~m norm.
Th1s •s the rust step of our
overall_tech~olosy plan," said
Steve R•ethmtller, computer ~.dmator for the school system. It
allows teachers to recosnize tech·
nology as a too! for.themselves, as
~ell, ~s a mouvahonal to~ for
kids.

struggles and problems f!lted by
reenagas and how they continue to
liUSt 6od to help diem make a dif·
fi:mlce and live life to the maxi-

W-~J,Im . .
.
. . Fri&lt;k~.7:30 p.m.
Uoi-JcitTLima Caalral Clth. (2):0) YL Canvoy
C...tview (21-1), Toood.,, 6:30; Millor
City (19-4) vo . North c .. u•l (16-6),
'J'ueoday, ! :IS pm.
ChomJi••*it" Fridty, ,,30p.m.

1
. !U

Chloooo..----•s :ID .as
aJ!111!lAND- :zz .w
o ••-- ..» a .sc1
-_

H

iaaA C +MM -A

FWI&gt;ulb (»3) : . PNopoo LU&lt;(11·3), W........y, 6:15; Lya"'bwti Coy
(22-1) va . Caul Win~heatu (10..3) ,

Ca

.4!0
.m

'!, , - -..20 ,

w

,.

~•c-

~~CE
T-

Tuesday, March 18,1813
Plge .7.

.Allen County system outfits
teachers with laptop computers~~;

half and scored 15 in the fourdl followed with a free throw to put
San Antonio in a 9-poinl hole. The
"~ir intensity in the fourth, Spurs got oo closer than five the
QIIIJ1a' JllSI 0\'er)IDwen:d us," Nets rest of the way.
taiCh Chuck Daly said.
·
liuJts 101, CUppen 94
. In olhet ~ Mooday, WashAt Chicago, tbc Clippers dccidmston surprised Cleveland, 105- ed to double-team Michael Jordan
101, lbc ~ Anselcs LUers beat and Scollie Pippen. That left BJ.
San Antonio 92-87, Oiil:ago beat Armstrons wide open, and the·
theMiaml..c!s Angeles Clippers 101-94, point suard responded with a
. • edged Denver 103-100 in career·hish 28 points.
·
o~ and Ulab defeated Dallas
Horace Grant returned to the
109-96.
•
Bulls' startins lineuP after misljng
Ballets .lOS. Ca•aliers 101
two games with tendinitis in the
. At Baltimore, the Cavaliers Iert knee. He finished with 17
. missed an ~ly to stay I If}. rebounds and 15 points.
~ ~ the Bulls m the Cen- ·
Jazz 109, Mavericks 96
tral DiYJSion.
.
At Dallas, the Mavericks moved
· • Th~ lead changed hands seven one game closer to tying the NBA
limes m the fourth quarter before record for most consecutive losses
W~shington scored 10 straight in a single season- 20.
pomts to take a 99-90 lead with
Karl Malone put in 36 points
4:21 Ieft. Cleveland then went on a and Jeff Malone added 17 for Ulali.
9-0 run and tied the game at 101,
Heat 103, Nuaets 100 (OT) ·
but Harvey Glllnt hit a IS-foot fallAt Denver, Miami rallied from a
away jumper a minute later to give 7-point !leficit in the extra period
Washington the lead for good
for its ninth victory in the past iO
l..akers 92, Spurs 87
sames.
San Antonio has lost only six
Glen Rice, who finished with 30
home game:' all year, but two have point_s, hit two three-pointers in
come asa10st th~ Lakers. Los overume. The· last one came with
Angeles got 24 poiniS rrom James I :32 left to put the Heat ahead to
":onhy and 17 apiece rrom Vlade stay.
.
Divac and Byron Scott.
Denver's Dikembe Mutombo
The Lakcrs led 76-71 with five had a career-high 23 rebounds, but
minutes to play when Anthony only eight points.
Peeler hit a three-pointer and Divac
QIIIJ1a'.

,widll'llrlllnd un.lil midwa dlrough
the fourth qurter = y aipt
bd'mc lolint 110-94.
• ne loa to Ponbnd JJIQbably
won't be foremost on t&amp;c Nets'
iniildl 011 lbc fligbt bome. JnsM:ed.
the Iaiii can Jelisb ils wnnina 31~ilu win It Plloenix, ils 12-point
.wilt it Golden Saate and iu 11point vil:lmy apinst lbc Los Angeles Clippers.
think this Western trip
1lf0ved lhal you can't take us Jighily," forward Derrick Coleman

The Daily Sentine

m early December.
.
Nprth Carolina (28-4), which
held the top spot for two weeks
before losing to Georgia Tech on
Sundily in ·the Atlantic Coast Conferen'ce.championship game, had
se~en fllSl·place votes and 1,488
pomts.
The six No. I teams were one
short of the record set in 1982-83, a
season capped by North Carolina
State,'s improbable NCAA champions~lll·
.
A:tizlina (24~3) wa~ fifth' Hiis
week. Next were Seton Hall
Cincinnati, Vanderbilt, Kansas and
Duke.
Seton Hall (27-6), which enle(S
the J':ICAA tournament on an 11·
game winning streak, had one firstplace vote.
Florida State led the Second
Ten, and was followed by
Arkansas, Iowa, Massachusetts,
Louisville, Wake Forest, New
Orleans, Georgia Tech, Utah and
Western Kentucky.
The final five teams were New
Mexico, Purdue, Oklahoma State
New 'Mexico State and UNL v ·th~
only team in the final poll not i~vit·

Liberty
Union beats' Ross
SE
.
.
68-42 •;n b..
cnrlS' '•egJ•Onal
QCti.On
'
Reg'na Osborn ted Southeastern
with 1~ points.
The game-winning point for
West Holmes was the only basket
by Charity ·Carpenter. The game
was tied 31-31 with four seconds
left when Carpenter scored from
the free throw line for the win over
· Dover, which finished at 20-5.
Jodi Martin Jed West Holmes
with 11 poiniS, and her twin, Julie,
scored 10.
.

· Slate Auto's alreadY
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IFIRIBIB
CJLA§§H!FHIB!D) AJD)
This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For 1100.00 Or Less ·
And Advertl$e It FREE.
Simply Oip This Coupon.(Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
You Ad Will Run For One Week.

CNOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUSI' BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES Nor APPLY TO YARD SALES)

NAME: __~----------~--------------~--PHONENUMBER: - - - - -:..--- : - - - --

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MAIL TO:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court. S~et, Pomeroy, OH 45769

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POMEROY
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Elementary were treated to bauds-on learnlna
about the heart OD Thursday mornina. Jolla
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research. as "a well-designed and
well-conducted study/ '
"It doesn't neFate the evidence
that precedes it,' Savitz said. "It
isn't the final word on the issue,
but it is. an important stud,Y iii the
sense that it is more sophisticated
... than previous studies." ·

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ltcscarchers didn't · find an
cuessive number of cancers
a a ; '-"'··
•-,:•ypoup, iDCiuding 12,CXXI
.c:a·a .rz? J_
c:aplbyecs with high exposure to
tlic.ia:tisiliJc fields.
·· Oillla' '
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University of North· Carolina
firMs . . . •• - EIIFs, •i •
eilb af
• . . cpidr:miologist David Savitz, who
I "el'•· Jal I Slillfy that found hillh
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ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
MliDDLEPORT - Middleport Springs Better Health Club will
Youti'o I!.caguc will hold sign-up meet Thursday at the home of
Wediicsday from 6-8 p.m. and on Agnes Dixon at 1 p.m. Frances
SOiJim:la.y from 9 am. to noon at the Goeglein will have the program
ll4iiilkport Council Room. Regis- and Helen Blackston the contest.
tmfum is, $10, not to exceed $25 Club members will pay lheir yearly
p:,-'f'amily ..
dues this month.

I

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A commit... 11

RACINE - The Racine Ameri- .
can Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday. Supper is a 7:30 p.m,
with meeting at 8 p.m. . ,

11HURSDAY
POMEROY • There will bC: a
CHESlER • The Chester Base- public dinner at the Meigs County
fJalll Association will meet Thurs- Senior Citizens Center on Thursday
day
ar 7:30 p.m. at Chester Ele- from 5-6:30 p.m. Cost i.s $3 per
•
• SYRACIJI'SE - Tk nilll mentacyc All interested parents are person for baked steak, mashed
W I ' §B
sCZolltwill i'nlri'rcd
potatoes and gravy, cole slaw, ·
green
beans, roll and choice of pie
- w 5 P;alii:1Daa.a
-.es,.• n -- 5n=s
and
beverase
..Music will be proMIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
(liolly ONoi . . , ; _ .. ,.;. f liDint High, Academic Boosters vided by The Classics. A free will
Y• fil:d Allll.- Y,
W• Jr3cJIJ:II willl tru:cl. Thursday at 7 p.m. in the offering wiD he taken for the musicas MElle
Sl!a- sellooJ cafeteria. Everyone wet- cians. Pub~c invited.

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POMEROY - Pomeroy Elemen·
CIEJ' I1'1'0will meet Wednesday at 7

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Job l1 wh•n you w1nt 1 raiM,
1nd how vi18l wiMn you Wllnt a
d8y off.
•
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P'-~~~'· at the school cafeteria.
~' n _&lt;2...:'
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, J!Ollllli(OY - F..O..E..··I :efirs weli:orncc · · ·

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Georgia Tech, New Me~oo llliCI ..;
Western Kentucky were new this ·'
· week, replaci.ng Xavier ,of Ohio,
Tulane and Bngham Young.
Changes didn't just happen at
the top this season.
1'
Forty-eight teams appeared in .:1
the poll this season and II were CJ
~mong. ~ranked from s1art to fin· .~
•sh. Mich1pn, Kansas, Duke, lndi- ·;
ana, Kentucky and North Carolina · ran the table as members of the .:
Top Ten. Dulce has been in lbc Top
Ten for 43 consecutive. polls, the
lon~t current str:e:at. and the Blue •'
Devils have been 'I! the final Top . •
Ten five of the last Silt seasons.
1'bere were five one-week wondet:S, teamr s '!'at dlopped in and out
· qu•ck y. Mmnesota and Boston
Collese did it die same weet and '
were later joined by Lons .Beach
State, Houston and Kansas State.
·
The fmal poll looked quite dif• ·'
ferentfrom the ~me. Nine •
teams that were ranked in mid,- ' : .
Novem!Jer _weren't ammg the Top
25 leading 1nto Man:h Madness.
Memphis State.-devaslated early '
by th~ I,oss of David Vaughn to a ' '

East- No: 12 Georgetown, No.
16 Connecucut and No. 18 Syrac~se - and three from the Big
E•ght- No. 15 Oklahoma, No. 19
lowaStateandNo. 25Nebraskaweren't around at the end of the
rsea:;:::so:.::n::;,._..__ _ _ _ _ _""'

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. POMEROY - The Pomeroy
. POMEROY • The Middleport Group of AA wiD meet Thursday at
..
e; ns $ . . . . . . . ll.iter:tt)&lt; Club will meet at 2 p .m~· 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Wednesday at the Meigs County Church. Call 992-5763 for infor· '
li'III'IIic Library in Pomeroy with mation.
•' ')liE . y
M'n'. Roy Holter as hostesS. Mrs.
1'01 • Ill'- 1lo:
0 . . James Diehl wiD review "Alice imd
RUTLAND • The , Leading
~;
I I ....sOoiiMIIflllclils Elfitli,'" by IDorothy Clarke Wilson. Creek Conservancy Distri~t will
lliaa . - 'li a 1 a 7.-.a Foe' ron call, tell of ''The woman meet Thursday at 5 p.m. at the
lt1lc llll:iip c . !t 7 '§ I ] , ia llebind the man."
.
. water offiCe.

~eeks before giving way to Dulce . ed to the 64-team NCAA touma- ·"

By JIM O'CONNE!LL..
· AP BasketbaD Writer
A season 9f change in the mnkings ended with the poll and
NCAA tournament grid in agree"
ment ·
.Indiana, Kentuck'y, Michigan
· and North Carolina, the top seeds
in the NCAA tournament, finished
as the top four teams in The Associated Press fmal college bask¢Jall
poll Monday.
·
. .
The Hoosiers (28-3), one of six
teams to be No. 1 this season
regained the top ranking wiih 39
first-place votes and 1,580 points
from the nationwide panel of writers and broadcasters. Th~y had
been atop the rankings for four
weeks before giving way to North
Carolina two weeks ago, and their
five weeks as No. 1 matched Dulce
for the most weeks on top this season.
.
..
Kentucky (26-3), No. I for just
one week this season, finished second ,with nine fust-place votes and
1,580 poincs.• 62 more than Michigan (26-4), which also had nine
ftrst-place votes. The Wolverines
were the preseason No. 1 choice
al)_d held the top ranking for three

By The Associated Press
Zanesville Rosecmns is headed
to a state semifinal rematch after
defeati.ng Frankfort Adena for a
Division IV regional championship.
The division's defending state
champion will meet Danville (25·
I) in the semifinal Thurs¢1y. Last
year, Rosecrans beat Danville 4037 in overtime on the way to the
small-school tide.
This year the Bishops (24-2)
advanced to the semifinals after a
62-35 win over Frankfort Adena
which finishes 20-5.
. '
Several regional championship
games sc~eduled over the weekend
were postponed by heavy snow.
In other games Monday, Upper
Scioto Valley defeated Buckeye
Central 66-SS in Division IV; Liberty Union beat Richmond Dale
Southeastern 68-42 in Division Ill;
and West Holmes defeate&lt;f Dover
32-31 in Division II.
Second-ranked Upper Scioto
Valley (25-0) will play Ottoville
(20-5) in the semifinals Thursday.
Liberty Union (26-0) prepares for
Margaretta (25-1) the same day,
and West Holmes (23-2) will play
Orrville (18-8) on Friday.
With the help of Ashley Bland's
20 points, Rosecrans led Adena 3119 at halftime, 42-26 after the third
quarter and oulSCOred Adena 20-9
in the fourth quarter.
Adena had 25 turnovers to four
for Rosecrans.
Emily Hammond led Adena
with 13 points .
Upper Scioto Valley moved into
the semifinals with the help of 23
point&amp; from Gwen Hurley.
Buckeye Central ended its season at17-7.
Ashley PosiOn scored six of 12
consecutive points by Liberty to
secure a 42-20 lead early in the
third quarter over Southeurern (1610). She also scored a career-hiBh
32 points.

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(OFFER EXPIRES 6/21 /'13)

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Ill wife has second thoughts
about a promise.she made

tcold
reception
•
•

: HINCKLEY, Ohio (AP)- The
• Hinckley Reservation of the Cleve; I &lt;Old .Metroparks lived up to its
motto: "No one spoJS a buzzard till
the ·official buzzard spotter' spots
: oDe flJ'SL"
:
: ' By tradition, buzzards have
• returned to Hinckley every March
: l§ since 1818. Folklore says the
i turkey vultures were attracted by
1~~cd carcass~s after the ." Great
ckley Varrnmt Hunt" to protect
livestock from predators.
Ranger Capt. Rog.er Lutz spot·
the fiJ'St migrating scavenger at
:41 a.m. Monday soaring over a
-Spine tree. He saw two others a few
r moments later.
.
E "We dOn't see buzzards till
~ Capt. Lutz sees buzzards," said Jo
~ Becks of the Hinckley Chamber of
~ Commerce. "He has the magic
~ c,yes."
·
:2 '/ Lutz agreed. "You never spot a
~zzard ti ll the official spotter
!:IVOts a bu zzard an~, l never see
'o4fem before the 15th.
,
Believers of the Hinckley leg-"'ld say a buzzard flock migrates
~ north each year from some
t unknown southern place. U that's
~ the case. the buzzards might have
t been wise enough to fly north
~ a~ead of the storm that created
: blizzard conditions in many eastern
• states.
.
About six inches of snow fell
:
: during the weekend on the park
t about 20 miles southwest of Cleve- land. The overnight low Monday
; waS 3; the normal low for March
: J ~ is 28. ·
·
• JJ "I expected to see blizzards' and
"'We did," Mctroparks Chief Natu·
•?.ilist Bob Hinkle said. "The prob: 1iin more than anything is that the
• air itself was so cold."
: He said that although little is
known about where the birds go in
the winter, naturalists believe they,
go south until there is no lon.gcr
snow on the ground. He said t!Jcy
: may go as far as Louisiana.
• The return of the buzzards has
: become a community event over
.: .the years.

Dar Au baden: Yean 110.
w11en my blqbml m11 ma
mauled, we dilcu.d wlllll would
1111JPe11 if one or us died.
We-.: bodl 'in our 301• the
lime, 10 I didn't conajder Ibis a

I

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'

1\.teed!y. March 16, 1993

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

their cords are longer.
According to the Consumer;
Proc!uct Safety Commi~, irons!
IIIII clothes steimers alone sent over·
53.000 peopiC to hospilll emeagency
rooms from 198810 1990. ~­
bum injuries, and many of tha
Yictims -.: chilcRn. Ail ~ I(
440 depea Jalllira cinly a bclioq

Ann

Landers

tmoloua chit. "1immy" IIIII I botll
pmmi""' ne\'er 10 -.ry if one of
us lhould Pill away. I felt greatly
Jelievcd, !w:w••l 11M him 10 much
I couldn't bear tbe thought or

HARtWOOD
Seasoned·

Names in the news
CHICAGO (AP) ...,. Frank
Zappa sounds stoic about tbe inoperable prostate cancer that has kept
the rock star·from touring in recent
)!ears.
" What can you do?" the 52year-old said in the April is8ue of
Playboy. "People get sick. Sometimes they can fiJt it, and some·
times theytan'L"
Zappa has undergone several
grueling rounds of radiation and
chemotherapy since he was diagnosed with cancer in 1990.
He continues to compose and
has experimented with styles ranging from rock and jazz 10 classicaf.
"I do it to amuse myself," he
said. "If t like it, I release it. If
somebody else likes it that's a
bonus."

NEW YORK (AP) - Playwright George C. Wolfe .- with
the help of actor Kevin Kline ;.vill try to tum around the .flagging
fortunes of the New York Shake·
speare Festival, one of the nation's
leading non-profit theaters. ·
Wolfe was named Monday to
succeed the fu:ed JoAnne Akalaitis,
whose year and a half as artistic
director was marked by a decline in
funding and subscriptions, a sporadic production schedule, and
mixed critical success.
The 38-year-old Wolfe wrote
and directed the Broadway hit
"Jelly's Last Jam."
.
Unlike Ali:alaitis, he will have
control over both artistic and
administrative matters, just as festi·
val founder Joseph Papp did. Papp
died in 199L
Kline will join ·the theater as an
artistic .associate. He starred in
some of the festival's best-received
productions, including "The
Pirates of Penzance" and "Ham·

By LYNN ELDER

AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - Ambulance-chasing, if not drama, may be
raised to new ~eights by television's increasingly frenzied scramble to tum headlines into movie
fodder.
Networks are lunging for quick·
ie films spun from New York's
World Trade Center bQmbing and
the deadly ~ tandoff in Waco,
let.
Texas, and various and sundry
other ·human tragedies and triLOS ANGELES (AP) - Now umphs.
here's a conversation that's sure to
READ about it in the press. SEE
be interesting, if hard to f~;~llow: it on
news. MARVEL at the
Hunter S. Thompson interviews tabloidTVgossip.
And then, perhaps
Keith Richards.
in
mere
months;
GO BEHIND
Thompson ,_and the ·Rolling THE HEADLINE'
S with an
Stones guitarist were to tape the "inspired by" TV movie- or
interview this week in Aspen, two, or three (if Amy Fisher is
Colo., to air Friday on "ABC in
Concert." The show will include a
performance by Richards and
behind-the-scenes footage.
CINCINNATI (AP)- A rock
Thompson, whose books
singer
pleaded no contest to disorinclude "Fear and Loathing in Las
derly
conduct
and paid $145 in
Vegas," gained fame as a practifines
for
dropping
his pants during
tioner of freewheeling "gonzo"
a
Jan.
11
concert
joUI1ljllism.
Jesse James Dupree, leader of
LOS ANGELES (AP) _ She!· the heavy-rnetal band Jacky!, was
Icy Long, whO won an Emmy as charged with indecent exposure
the intellectual barmaid Diane on . following the concert at Cincinnati
" Cheers," returns to TV comedy Gardens. Prosecutors reduced the
with " Good Advice," co-starring charge in exchange for his plea.
Treat Williams.
·
Hamilton County Municipal
The series premieres .on CBS Court Judge Edward Donnellan
April 2 and stars Miss Long as a ordered Dupree to pay the maxi·
marriage counselor who shares mum $100 fine and $45 in court
. h d"
l
costs
.
off 1ces Wit . a •vorce awyer.
D~pree was charged in Long
played by Williams.
,
Beach, Calif. with public indecency
Miss Lon~ left NBC s . and public nudity following a con"Cheers" in 19 7.
cert last month. Those charges are
Williams has starred in such pending.
·
· movies as "Hair" and "Prince of
Dupree said Monday .the
the City."
charges won't persuade him• to
keep his pants on during concerts.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
"Any time you come in contact
hard-living Waylon Jennihgs goes with the law, it makes you think
after a whole new audience with · twice about anything," he said.
his next album - children.
" But we're the hardest rocking
The country star said he wrote band in show business. and the
"Cowboys, Sisters, Rascals &amp;
Dirt" with his 13-year-{)!d son and
Jessi Coulter, his fourth wife. It's
A meeting of the Alzheimers
due out in May.
.
Disease/Related
Disorders Support
"It was always something in the
Group
will
be
held
from I to 3 p.m.
back of my mmd," he said. "I
Wednesday
at
the
Senior Citizens
wanted to do something that ta11cs
Center.
A
video
and
discussion will
about being a kid. We don't think
deal
with
how
to
safely
transfer and
it's OK to remember when we were
position
patients.
kids.''
In recent years Jennings has
kicked a $1 ,500-per-day cocaine
habit and given up cigarettes.
Sc ience Day at Meigs Junior
Along the way he banled hepatitis High School scheduled for tonight
and diabetes and underiNent heart· (Tuesday) has been postponed until
bypass surgery.
March 23. Du.e to road conditions,
schools in the Meigs Local School
District were canceled for today.
II

Call992-2156
MoN. tJU.u F'lu. 8A..M.-5P.M, • 8AT.8-12

•'•

'

iFlfrhNb:~;d~y
I

TRISTA SIMMONS

Turns four

Trista Simmons, daughter of
T.T. and Dee Simmons, observed
her fourth birthday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Danny McDonald.
The theme was "Beauty and the
Beast."
'-lie Mermaid."
Attending were paternal·grand_ Attending were maternal grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Simparents Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Sim- mons, Angie, Mindy, Tiffany and
mons, Angie, Mindy, Tiffany and Danny Jr. McDonald, T.T., Dee,
Danny Jr. McDonald, Lee Morris, Thomas and Tyler Simmons, Kathy
r. T.. Dee, Thomas, Tyler and and
Amanda Jeffers, Melanie Dud;;.Trista Simmons, Melanie Dudding ding and Lee Morris.
and mother, Kathy Jeffers,
Also presenting gifts were
Others presenting gifts were maternal grandparents Mr. and
Mildred Jeffers, paternal grand· Mrs. Raben Sanders, Deleah and
mother, and Belly and Kenney Jonathan Sanders, Lavina Brannon
Longstreth,
and Mike and Debbie Holbrook.

:

Amanda Jeffers, daughter of
j John and Kathy Jeffers, observed
· her fifth birthday at the home of
j Mr. and Mrs. Danny McDonald,
l ·Rolland. The theme was "The Lit·

Meet Wednesday

Event postponed

;•

•

i.

i•
••

. 1f

THOMAS and TYLER SIMMONS

Twins celebrate birthdays

Thomas and Tyler Simmons, Sanders, Tuppers Plains; Dan,
l twin sons of T.T. and Dee Sim- Judy, Angie, Mindy, Tiffany and
'}!'Ions. observed their eighth birth- Danny Jr. McDonald, Lee Morris,
·~!lay recently at the home of their Melanie Dudding, Kathy and
· ·
• 'sternal grandparents, Mr . and Amanda Jeffers.
I Mrs. Tommy Simmons, Rutland. Others/resenting gifts were
I ~The theme was "101 Dalmatians." Mike an Debbie Holbrook,
1 Attending were T.T., Dee and Deleah and JQnatllan Sanden
Lavina llrannon. :
1 • Trista Simmons, maternal grand' parents Mr. and Mrs. Roben
·

I

,m

Birthday
celebration
held
Tiffany McDonald observed her
third birthday at ihc home of her
paternal grapdparentl, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny McDonald, Rutland.
The theme wu 'The Cittle Mer- ,
maid."
Attending were Angie, Mindy
and Danny Jr. McDonald, Lee
Morris, Mr. and Mn. Tommy Sim·
mona, T. T., Dee, Tbomu, Tyler
and Tria Slm1110111, Mdlllie Dud·
dinJ, Kathy IIIII AmandaJefrm.

Prllloy Poper
S"undoy i'llpl!r

• Ado ........... co•ty yov od . _ •ulbo pnpoiol

.... 3 ..,. ...........
• Prio.ol od for oU oopltolle.- io double price of od -•

• 7 palol Hao typo ooly ....t
• Soodoollo - ..po,.il&gt;lo for ernn oftor flrot day (chock
for.,.... flrot day od"""' io P"per). CoU hero"' 2:00 P·• ·
day oltor p!lltliootioa 10 .Uo •-lion
• Ad. al.t•.a he paW ia .d•aac••n:
Cardof Tlwdro
U.ppy Ado

~oillpai!O

888-Vt..ooa

.....,riuo

· '
lia
y,,u...
• A clo.IW ..._ , pto.ed io lhe c.Jipolio Doily
T-.. (aoopt Ctu.lllod Dlopioy, B..i..- Cud or LtpJ
No-);wUloloo oppoor iD U.. Poiol Plouool R.ptor Oad
... DoiiJ S...dool, ...
18,000 ..._

25fi ,_,_ .....
645-AroWo lllot.
179-'IVol•t

w.. ·-

Rate

1
3

15
15
15
15
15

6
10
Monthly

?

247-LotonFola
9-1.9-Rodae
· 742- l!otloaol
667-G.ol.ole

BB2-N_B_

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

a9S-Looo.,
937-B.Irolo

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
667·6628
3-8-83 1 mo. pd.

HOWEll'S
BOOKKEEPING
· &amp; TAX SERVICE

32- Mobile Hom• 'lor Sole
33--.Farnu for Sale
34.- Baoineu Builclioll'
35- Loto &amp; Ae,....

UCINEGUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES

36- Rool Eototo 'IVoalod

Auloofor Solo

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY .
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

PHONE 99

.

Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY

Trucb for Sale
41- HoUiel for Relll
VA lUI &amp;: 4 VlD11
42- Mobile Homafor Rent
, Moton:yc~
43- Farnu for Rena
44- A,.rtment for Rmt ~ 17 &amp;- Boata &amp; Moton for Sale
AuiO Porto &amp; Aocc..
45- Furailhed Roo1111
Aula Repair
46- Space for Rent
47- W...lod lo Rent
C.mJ&gt;bil Equi,..at

3/111

ori•l

2-ln jlle-ry
3- ADJIOUDCementl
4- Ci•eaway

THE BOOK
BARN

II-

Help 'IVa alod
12- Situation~ Wanted
13- IMurance
14- 8.,1,... TrolaiDf
ts- Saboola &amp; la~truclion
II&gt;- Rodio, TV &amp; CB R'P"ir
17- Mt.eellaneou.
IS- Vloolod To Do

S- H; ppy Ad.
.
6- Loit ud Found
1- Loll aad F~UDd
8- Publie Sole &amp;
. Auction

9- ·w••i..d .. Buy
' .'

IUY • SEll • TUDE
, 317 N. 2ild St.
_..ddltport, Ohio

lloft.·Frl: 1Oz00.5t00
S.tarday 10:00·6t00

CloHCI SaJMiay
992·3577
.,

B l' LLETIN BO.\ I{()
l.,lLEnll BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Howard L Wrftesel

. ROOFING .

3~

949·2168

a.aet in

t.

Meigs Alumni
Association Is
looking for current
addr&amp;S¥s of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing lor Alumni ·
Dance on
May 21!, 1993.
Mall addresses to·
. Meigs Alumni
_Asaoclatlon, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohlo45760 .

\

j'\ I

. ,.

·'

~• '-----------~-----------',
---.----~

=--~P~ub~ll~c~N~ot~I~ce~-~

~

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ,

:'1

~

'

M~~:"c'Jif:TY

: DEPARTIENT OF HUMAN
, '
SEIIVICES
·: S..tod propooala will be
. r.celvod •by the Melgl

· ; county fommiaalonera,

,, Polllll'oy, · Ohio 1t the
{Ciork'e O!ftce untD 12 noon
• on tho 21th day of March,
' 1tn, elld 11 1:00 p .m.
~ open.S b'/ lhe Clerk ol ..ld
~ oard lor Merc1nllle
'"obberylond.Burgtory Food
, .,.
&lt;
,

:

_...~....

______

' ..:1;::;Cini~~GJ~·~Th~a=n~kl=,

~r
:
~

·Thefamllyof

Mae Hubbard

.n

the ' lrlenda "'"'
nolghbora who ...,.. .....
their oymplllhr through
their proye11, flowere,
. . . Mid lood and

..,.... ll•w.may .....

,..,••w.

Public NotiCe •

Stamp co;voroge to prolact
themoolv• ogoinot robbory
1nd burgl1ry to01 In the
1mount of $600,000.
SPECIFICATIONS
PURCHASE: Morcenlil•
Robbory end Burglery Food
Stornp lriouronce.

co~:'~:~=c=~=;~eld

covereg• con be broken
down lniD 5100,000.00 unlla
wilh ct..sucdbl!• of 5800.00,
St,ooo.oo, 1nd $2,500.00

Al~-r'r{~..;·~

DATE: Marc!&gt;
27, 1893 . 11 12:01 A.M.
Eootem Stanclord Tlmo.
TERM: Thla policy 1hould
be iuued lor • thr••vear
poriod, with 1nnuol, or
aornl..,nnuallnltatlmonll.
Sepor1to end lndlp.,donl
bld1 will be r.celved wllh

reapact to the lneurance

requir.cl ID be purch•ed u
provided by lhe apea~
cotlono. Speclllcaaon1
lnolntctlona 1o - . . may
bo obtained lithe ollloe of
lhe Clerk el the Melge

County Commleelonera,
Pollllroy, Ohio.

htd Board of CommiOIIonere roaervee the
right io wolve '-alti• to
accept and
pwla or
ell olony Mid a I bld1.
Miry Hobellttllr, Clerk
Mllge County lon of
Commlell(3) •• 11, 2lc

'"!"'

e.

.

HAULING .
'LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE . .
992·5858
696·1290

...,....

eNewH....
'

-c...,...
• ........li••
sto,&amp;c.,.,.
FilE ISTIMAYEI

985-4473
667-6179

I

3·16-93-lfn

BR llfll P10porty.lncludol 4,800 sq. it farm
Call 814-11112·7104 fer

742·2360

.FREE ESTIMATES

!!atint. 4 BR, 3 balhl,·2 QOIIIQO&amp;, rented 1
bldg.

FuU Insured

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

owner ftnanclng of up ., 80% of. purcltM&amp;
.....nt may bo poulbla for qualifying par·

nice home on

THE

NEW-REPAIR

•
PIC R
01
Tho P&lt;ice hao boon reduc:od 11&gt; 168.900 and
10n ID buy 'flfy

CARE FOR

IISSELL &amp; IURKI
CONSTIUCnON

~JAYMAR

QuaiiiJ
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992· .
6637
Sf Rt 7
'
'
c•····~, OH.

L:=====~~
i

Rates
JOE I.SIYRE

Ferlilzing, WMCing, Md
Seeding.
Shrub IHtd Trw :rrtmmlng
• Rornovol

3-4-93·1

Am'-'j ntlal a COrnmercl.ll
FrMEMt,.....

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
-

TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER BITES,
LANDCLEARING,

DRIVEWAYS INI!TALI.I'D
LIMESTONE·TRUCKI«l
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

8111'1211

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

PH. 614·985·3949

'-

4H69 St. Rt. 241 e I Yo Mile Off Rt. 7·.
n.... (..iter •• Rt. 241
'.

NOW OFFERING.-...
OIL UD LUll .SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR 1111 ROTATING

2/15/tl/ .....

Gingerbread

SCAWolleBed
16 Session $25
Depot St., Rutland
742·3190
Call for
Appointment

LICENsED IIIII ~

112211 mo.

Pl. 614-992·5591

\•

~

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE

.,..

·S N - - . ! A IIIddlapart. Ohio WIO

''

t••
Op01i•1 •••ir : ·
l•faat/Toddlar Pro.r••
::-

AniiOUIICII

of

We will NOW serve children
6 months to 12 years of age.
Call us for more information
(614) 992-7328

.
.."

Shade River Saddle
CUSTOM SADDLES,

...
..
·~

LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR . ·

'

..;•.•
•

Chester, Oh. 45720:
985-3406
•
3/lllfn

Guaranteed Scholarship Money·"
for all college bound students. ;
*regardless of income
'regardless of grades
*plus $20k guaranteed loan ~
*regardless of cred~
To collect your scholarship money
call614-985-3556
··
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-7 or Sat 10-4
Vi.. &amp; Maotw C•d

3112193

.-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ~
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
··
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

"

(Nos....., cilia)

-

CARPENTER SERVICE

2112182Jtfn

Addllland Plumbing

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE

Exwior
Painting

ACCIDENT INSdUNCE

(FREE ESnMATES)

V•.C. YOUNG-Ill
992-6215

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health .~
••
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage :.

Rocky R. ,Hupp, D.C.U. • Ag•nt

NOW OPEN

POMDS

..
··'
;'

614·992·7643

YOUNG'S

lox 119

•

~~

.-•
~

Middleport, Ollio 45760

:
(614) 843·5264 11201113/ttn::::.

Auto-llmt.ls
W.AtooHa..

, •.:::.~v.:._

Sprint n ....

.s.,.c,.l

w.Aioo7111

RODIEII 1-llmE

1418 State RL 7 ' 614·441&gt;·0736

GeiRpolle

12·5-lln

WICK'S )IAULING
SERVIa

SUMMII

36910 Bal R•• Read
P•-.ro;, o111o

2 •IIH H llpell
......... OH

$I ZED UMESTONE

992•3470

IMAGES .
1

,._Rt
12 ,..,
11"1u~ S20
16 leulou $2J

~
-

Snodgrass Upllolstery
"Hslphtg YouTh /Uce- Yow lt.MilJMri"
Church, Home, Truck, - . Auto
and Ofllce SLIIIIIg

-·--..-·10 .
Approl. ............ ofQIIM$ II

o•o

. OWNER:
. 92 2487
UCIIII,
' U ll Dft. 'hn ollt. M . 7 . . .
9
'd•t•PIII.._,
.......,..2
Jeff Wlcbt....
•
614·949·2202
61
m.... onrtght.
---------~·-ll··"~ll____~a~4~a~1~~----------~~------~~
'

\

·: ·.

"

FREE ESTIMATES

POIIIII'OJ, Ohio

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES &amp;
BASEMENTS
HOME SITES
HAUUNG·.'LI----na,
,_,,
0111, Gravel and CO.I

BUUDOZING ·

949·2391•r
1·100·837·1460
Lawn Mowing,

MYSTIQUE
TANNING

R&amp;C EICAVATING

KEVIN'S. LAWN
.MAINTENANCE

Rea101a•la

,,

. KELLER'S CUSTOM
.
BENDING

36;158 SR 7

'

: the Srr•uae lire dopl,
· the otall . at VelrWio
MMiorllll HhJitlll, .
Ewing Fu+,r_lllttorH and

I

576-Applo Gro,..
173-M-•

I \i:\1 'I i'l'i II&gt;
,\ II \ I "' i I li 1,

GET RESUI.TS • FAST!

wlah t lo ;expteea their
•''~ elnc..
; pn Dillion to

"

985 a
hr
84S-PortJ...d

lil\1\1.'

129.95 +Tax

675-1'1. " - " '

MUI;c.J hutrumen..
Fruito &amp; v...,lableo
For Sdt or Trade

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

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

1

USED RAILROAD TIES

O,ver 15 Words

'
. I

•

(614)

1,

TIJIPANY MCDONALD

Prices Start••1 at

RATES
Days : Words

'

20 Years Exp.

STRUT &amp; SHOCK
2 Fr..t Siruts • L•Hr
• 4 w•HI AliJ•••t

.

,--- -'--l

'

'

BUILDERS::

POOR BOY TIRES

BILL SlACK 992-2269

458 Leon

Pomeroy

2"-RioGruole

Totals reported

742·22111-800-837-«1217
3~ mi. off Rt. 7 on SR 124
Rutland, Ohio

992-ltlddleport/

. li67-Choohlre

TR

, ,I

•LIGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

Gallla Coanty Melp Coanty Muon Co., WV
Ana Codo 614 Ana Code 614 Area Codo 304

Rates are for conse.:utive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
/

This Is a list of prizes for the upcoming Rutland
Furniture Savin'.().The-Green Lucky Number
Glve.:Away. Be sure to check this newspaper
'Tuesday, March 16th for your copy of our green
and white flyer with your lucky number dn It
Just bring your flyer to Rutland Furniture bet·
ween 9 A.M. Wecln•day, March 17th through
Saturday, March 20th and compare your ll,lcky
number to our 1181. Match the numbers and you
win! No purchase necessary.

SHRUB TREE
•TRIM and
REMOVAL

Clma4fied page• eot~er the
" folltnekw telephone eseJwmse•· ..

• lleooll. -...,,for odo paid Ia od......
• Fnolll.t Gi_.;.y ud F.....! odo lU!dor 15 _,. Will b.

'

Vaughn Bassett Cherry 6 pc. Bedroom Suite
.Broylll11 2 pc. Uving Room Suite
King Hkk!KY 2 Pc. Uving Room Suite
· Rediling Loveseat wI console
Oak Gun Cabinet wI alri
Rolltop Desk
,Catnapper Chaise Recliner
Daybed w/brass "cents
Magnavox AMIFM Cassette Boom -Box.

DAYBEIQRE PUBUCATION
I :00 p.m. S.turday
I :00 p.m. Moacloy
1:00 p.m. Tueoelay
1:00 p.m. Weclneoc!ay
100 p.m. Thunday
I:OOp.m.,Pttday

Thursday l'llper

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCiEs

Rock singer pleads to charges

•

COPY DEA[)!.INE
Moacloy Paper
T--uy Paper
Wedneoday Paper

..,

involved).
attorney in Waco, said he's
Producers jockey to buy· rightS. received eight or nine offers for as
Facts are sliced and diced into a mUch as $100,000 for'rights.
script. which may have a tenuous
'.'TV movies, miniseries and
link to reality. Production is ·hwried (thea~cal) movies. This is pretty
so a network can emerge ftrSt with amazing since the guy might be
the melodrama promising the dead," Coker told the1Daily News
REAL STORY.
. of Los Angeles.
.
Even as Branch Davidian sect
The NBC "Line of 'Duty" segleader David Koresh kept Army mont, at this point. is baSed solell
tanks at bay in Waco, NBC on public records, said leen Kau •
amounced a dramatization to air as man of Patchett Kaufnlan Enterpart of its "In the Line,of Duty" tainment, the project's' producer.
movie series about slain officers. No right$ have been purchased.
Four lawmen died in the siege.
About 20 people, including fireAn NBC film on the Feb. 26 fighters and teac)ters, have sold ·
Trade Center bombing also was their stories to Wilshire Court Proannounced and could be broadcast · ductions, which is doing the trade
as early as May - one of four center film for NBC.
,
impOrtant "sweeps" periOds used
Four skiers rescued lasbn'olith
by local stations to set ad mtes.
after three days iri the C,olorad~
Gary Coker. Koresh's former wilderness have signed , with a tal4:
ent agency to tum their ·ordeal inti\:
a movie, while a fifth Slier in the;:
~Y with a conflictin~ story to te!Ji
IS being pursued by a nval ageni:y. :
show must go on."
••
His lawyer, Louis Rubenstein,
said the plea agreement allows the
~
group to finish the last three weeks
•
A to1a1 of 23 patients were seei
of a tour with the group Damn
Yankees.
during the cancer sci'eening at ~
' 'To go lhrough a trial on this Meigs County Healtll Departmei¢
with three wee~s of tour left, it during January and Februarn
didn't justify the expense and time accoiding to Norma lorrea, R.N.;:
to ·return back to Cincinnati," director of nursing at the healtlt
Rubenstein said. "And he hu more ~enL
'
v.
serious charges in Long Beach."
Ms. Torres also reported that 2l
Assistant Prosecutor Kevin patients were seen during Mon~
Donovan said authorities weren't day's visit of the Ohio State Uni~
sure th.ey could prove ~upree ' s vcrsity Mobile Mammography
actions on state constituted public Unit The neat date for lhe mObile
indecency.
mammography unit will be May
17.
•

Spec..l Early Bird
.. $100 Payoff
Thia ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

· 12/3111121tfn

To place an ad

DEAR ANONYMOUS: k - tJwoush the flab.
'
The Couumer Product SafetY!
llllllhcrWOIIIIII tlkina my pllce.
10 me .._ couple~ wbo llllly lowe
· We 1ft now both pushing SO,IIId one another~ Wlllllhcir....,. Olmmillion I'OCOJ!I-* buyinJ;
I am ~Y ill. Lut night u we to
whlla one or die adiar applian~ with cords just long
were Silting by the firqJiace,1imJliY . f1111e1 away. To ocbltl a .,._. U!OUJb 10 reiCh a c:ounta'· lllp oil
brODJht up tlle subject of our 110110 mna•y ~be the ubi- Ooor-lnel oudet. Please lcll, you(
readers 10 position appliance&amp; ~
promile iiiid uapec~ me.that it still ma1e act of ldfidmen
'Jianda My lp)llion is Ibis, Ami Am
kil inpwiblctopleCiictbowODe cioiC as poaiblc 10 a wall and kY,
I being muealiltic iiiid *lfiab to find wiD leelwuall ,_..down die IOIId. make sure the c:m1s 11e OUt of the
connfort in Ibis pomiae? I don' dlink People'• idCiw clw'l' It -*1 be way. Remind pafents that a UUJci1
it would be too hard on him, cxtmndy ~ 10 tie lip a fORIIJoiilht Clll keep their~
becauoe be'n Wlllbbolic IIIII didn't Dille with mcb ·a pnmi111, IIIII I from bein&amp; one tug away from
ngedy. - ED IN ELMHURST;
marry me until he was in his would definilely IIIYiw api• iL
'l
• '
. ~'
ILL
mid-30s, We alao have no children
Dear Au Laadera: As a
De~ ED: 'l'hallb for aValilabJe:
and are devOICd to each lllher.
piOduct lilbj)ity lawyu-, I Clli ·lcll
Are there lllher couples who have you that too many small c:bildlal lelier. Pareds also need 10 !mow !bar
made this promise and been able to are injtnd IIIII horribly disfi8taed there are inexpensive 'devices:
keep it? Are there couples who made by bot awJiances becauac jWUJts available 10 wind up Wlll-10111 canis&gt;
this promise and later regretted it? I fail tO place cords wbeR ..ey ,ml Fl them safely out fA. the way~
~for writing. ' ·
,
,
am tom betwoeu the guilt I feel !hal cannot be reached by lillie hands.
Lottesome?
Take
clulr~
of
yow';
I may be depriving him of futwe
By pulling on anlessly pllad
years of happiness and yet wanting cords, children have scalded life IJIId f!lnl il tuoiiiiiL Wrilt fo~
so much 10 know that I will have themselves with bot PC8IIe from Cry AM U»tders' MW booklet, "How to!
been his only true love. I. can ~~ llld boilias coffee and had Mate Frietlds a11d Slop Bei11g
Lonely." Se!ld a se/f-addresmJ; lo11g,
honestly say that if Jimmy died houoesaers fall on their beads.
tomorrow, I eould easily live a
Mlnaflclulers bave tried to belp, bJISiMss-siu tflvelope alld a clttct
purposeful life without ever having Cords on tiJday's elcctrie coffee pots or lfiOIIeY orMr for $4.15 (llis ill·
another man.
are often u short as two feet. cllliks postage atld halldliftg) to:
Frie!lds, c/o AM IAndtrs, P.O. Bru:
What is YQUI' opinion, Ann? ·since However, not all applaa cords n
neilherofourfamiliesknowsoflhis getting shorter. In fact, some 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-()562. (/11
promise, please sign me - ANONY• rnanufacturers advertise the fact that Canada, ~nd $5.05.)

AND EVERniiNG UNDERNUTN• :•

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.

(614) 992·5449

ROOFING·..'

WE DO

'"'

CLUB

. Dellv•rad.

of a second of coniaCt 10 btli'i\

Competition for fdct-based dramas
. rag~s hot and heavy among media

. EAGLES

$40.00 a load

•-•r

T·SIDRT WINNERS • Pomeroy Elementary students Kristina
Kennedy, left, a sixth grader, and Julie Spaua, a flfth grader, were
winners ia a t-sblrt slogan contest for children's book week. The I·
shirts. were handpaiated and presented to .tbem by their school
librarian, Carolyn,Nicholson.

EVERY THURSDAY

\

. '"

�~--1~n.Dmly~Se::n:tl:n~~~~~-=------------~~==P~o=m=er=o=y==M=IdTd;l~==rt;·=O=h~lo~==~r:::~~:=~~~:::::-----~--~~~.Ma==~~h~16~·~1~::
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

51

Household

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

71

'

Tuesday, March 16, 1993

AutOI for Sale

Goodl

NEA Crossword
ACIIOIS

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

NORTH

•Ku

J.ll-11

••\970

YOU GOT A

IT JEST WOIC6 UP
AN' IT'S HONtiRY It

PRESSURE
CDOICIR?

jijjj,anco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

•"- day tMiore the ad Ia to run.

Sunday tdltlcn ~, 2:00 p.m.

773-5715.

AehabUitatlon

,

·

304·773-5343.
Want to buy old eiectrlc trains,
Lionel AmeriCIIn Flyer .qr H.O.,

614·1149-21H.

C.nter,

F1 nanc1al

21

Two pallid llnlaod VMIIna

Wanttd IJI.ncllng , timber, top
prices Plld, tree ntlmlt..,
· licensed logging company, 304·
895-3055 ofH5-~8.

WOuLDN'T IT BE FVNN'f IF IT
TliRNED OOT TIIAT VotJR GLOVE
WAS ON '(OVR !-lEAD AND 'I'OL'R
CAP ON TOP 01: '!'OUR 6LOVE?

buU., ....... a- .,.,. 1M
11mo. bull, ·-lng otoak, 114-

Business

·--·-moo.

Opponunny

38751

.

Ren!J is

INtt.r Interior, tak• ovtr
or lnlll• attar, 3().t..

Chevrolet, Forct, Dods• plckur.
boOt. Short or lon9. No rut .
304..75-12111.

Guar~n­

Tony

&gt;

F,mn Suppltc•s
&amp; !_i'ICSIOck

Women: Mab more mortol)'l

FrM alght wtolt)ob proparaUon
program about nonlradltktnll
With Or Wltlloul Molort. C.ll omploymanl, (ONOW), 1 Larry LI¥Oiy. 614-388-!1303 •.
e31-6508.
2
Tap Prfoao Pold: All Old U.S.
Situation
COins, Gold AI._ Sliver Coins, 1
Gold Coins. l&lt;lT.S. Coin ShOp,
wanted
1!11 Second Avenue, Oalllpolla..
Wantld to buy: uud mobllt C.ll: Gontltman Looking For
Room I Boord In GtiRpcUo.
hDmll. 814-4*0175
N - Htlp With ~
Hou11hold Dutln, La
.

73 Vans &amp;

&gt; &gt;

4 WD's

Wantld To Buy: Junk Auto&amp;

Employment Services

PleiN Call Lave

M~

ROium Catl614-146-3658.

tt~Y/ Ttll$ At.PttAieT
$0\JP IS TOO

TtiiN/

bam
broughl down I out of th, way?
Will remove fOf talvasJt. 014S.ll Avon Cllll14 441 'w.
2541-6Q6.1.
AVON I All - · I Slllriay Dour and Bobc:.at worfl, by ti1CI
Spe.ra, 304-t71-1421.
Euy

'

hour, lownt 1'111, 014-843-!123

Wootd bcollont Ptyl At- :;"':,:6:::14':"0::4C:,H;.2=:1:,:9'=·=-=-=~

ttniblo Procfucta At - · C.U E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. T-ng,
Toll FrM, 1-IOO-W7-55M, Ext. Trimming, lrH Removal, Hedge
313.
Trlrru,lng, Fr.. EIIIMIIItl lf4.
L.oalclna far a rotlablo ftr- to 3B7·7DS7 Aft or 4p.m.
help put up 40 ac,.,_ at ~~ G.orgn Portable Sawmill, don't
My n.. r Dlxter,I14-"M2·2Ifl.
haul your logs to the mill jvat

Makt Big llonay From

-=

$800 -lcly Frum Homal Send

$2.00 + SASE To: DI:A Suppllll,

PO Box II, Hlnaboro, 011 48133.

H1vt vacancy for e..dfl.._ or
Hml lnvllid lady, rtaaonabll
nursing care, 614·949-2276.

lhls newspaper IsM~ to
lhe Fecloral Fair Houslr9Acl

ol 1968 whim malcas Illegal
to acNenlse ·any preterenoa,
lrnllallon or &lt;llscrtmlnallon
basad on race, color, religion,

Want to:
PIN clown EXTRA

se• tamtllal status or nallona.l
origin, or any lnleniiOn to

make anv such prererence,

NmHatlon or dlscdmlnallon:
\

Ci\.&amp;H?!I

Thb newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advartlsemenlt tor real estate
whictlls k'l vlolallon ot the

76

.I

Wom1ed that all dWelllhgs
adVertised In INs newspaper
are ava~able· on an equal

Auto Parts &amp;

Declarer could

t--IE.V€R.

:...·~

.-

"'-. IT... IQI
DO'(().)

22113, P~..,y: 11f:e92-stoo.

N. . _111 tanke. ona
.
ton truck ·

wh-, rodlato,._ floor mots,
otc. D I R A~lplay, WV. 304- ;
372-3933 or 1
:11M3ZI.
,

79

PL/o.'H

•

CamP.rs&amp;

'I'HC VIL.l.AIN RlT
Hie ~Eii!R '10

8715-4082,

opponunlly baSis.

L.ADv' E\..L.8Nls

1m Prowler 28ft camper. 1SI80

Honda 700. beth 9ood cond,

I

THE

need to leave•your home. ·
Plpce your clpojfiBd ad todaY.!
15 word. or le11, 3 dgp,
3 pcmen, f5.4Q paid in admnce.

ClA~CIFIED
-~Bod-Homo.1CorAI·

Cor

.

.

7. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
6~------------

32 Mobll1 Home•
for8ale ·

Slatplna rooms' wHh cooking.
Alto trill• eplee. AI ~·Uj»,
Call after 2:00 p.m., m4·77).

111111. llaaoil WV.

eon.. 5I

ut tm

nothing."

•

ESDAY

Serv1ces
81

Home

lmprovemlnts

Or

Houaehold

114ltlll,lContorwy

machlnt .,.0. 304APP.LJANCU
d.,_
...,......"'.!.,.
,.._, tllca1110
GOOD

w.-.

"And then whim! Thle thing IIIIIrighi out Of left lltld."

USED

Appll~

Ylna 81-,pift.,._.n., 1·
800-4...,.....
'

..

G.Uipolk Dally TribaDe
~2342

11144.

-- ~

-~-

S5

lulldlng
. " 1111

-WY

•

=.:=t

loptlc Tanll ..........
EYANIItm
olackaon,OH 1 _ . . _

Utllllv !I&lt;IIJ. lklle,
llof: Gllu..._.
··PIIInfecllteil

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

lcllan nrpata. 8-11144.
AU Canlotl Vlnrl On Bolo. llcllollan Carpoto, Rl7 N. 8 -

atllor "'"'*- .....
-•llllllanca
304-1714:111 Ohio

Pomeroy Dally Seotlnel

992-2156

Pt. Pleaeaat ftetlkter
675-1333

_.,., .

~

BERNICE _ .
BEDEOSOL

,

llool-, '1 1'd'Stotl...,,r
llan Ooor, af&lt;M • - INit
" - ....... ; 111111 1141. .
Wll build potlo - · ~

=-:,
'l:T' =-~~~~~-:. .•
24MtU.
82

H)You
by mailing $1.25 plus a long, sell· more ••sceptible to peer ·preaaure lhan
addressed. -stamped envelope 10 llalro· , usualloday. II you lack resiatance,
Graph, c/o this newspaper , P .O. Box · a chance you'll be encouraged to do some91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428 . Be thing that doe~ not seMI your best inter...,. to state yoor zodiac ,;vn. .
esls.
ARIES (IWcll 21·Aprll 11) II yoo're too UIRA (Bept. 23-0ct. 23) Do not be undu·
insistent on having everyone do tl\ings your ly improued loday by tltfes or lhe trepplngs
way. you could ereale a reaction lhe oppo· ol power. There'a no .-tor you to kow·
site of what you hopi lo ac:l11eve. Don't lilt low to someone who Is mora ayml)olic,lhan
poor tactiel defeat your pu,_.
~ authoritalive.
TAURUS (Aprllao-illly 20) It willsaiYII no SCORPIO (Oc!. 24·Nov. 22) There's a
usef•l purpoae loday 1o hold a grudge il poaaiblllty today lhaf you might become
you're 1nvo1w1c1 wilh BOmCIOI!e Whom you've InvolVed in a heated dillcullion over a aubrecenlly exchanged cross wortla with. If ject that neilher you nor your ldverNry le
you can't lorgive, al least lry In foq)el.
· woll-versed ln. Don't ,.,., time.
GEMINI (-., 2t-.lune 20) Be exlremefy IIAGITTMIUI (Nov. »-DDe at) Be carecauuoua In your ....,_ICial affairl Ieday. f•l in money matiere today, aapeclallv
Tllore'a a cllance you might think you'N where there are frlentla lmlolved. II 111e
operating from atrang111a lhat could HSify aocount lan1 halldlatl oou; I lilt, _ .
be~ a n d -·
. ona ml(llllfod liP angry.
CANC1R (June 21-July 22) Both you and ' CAPIICQM (Oio.INIII. 11) Try 10
your mate mlghl be a bit more tempere · engaga yo•rHII lrom an arrangHIInt
mental than ~aual - Y· Each mual be today where you ' - 10 daalll!llla ...y
very caralul not to bring ~P luun lhal Clem-.g panon. ft'l unlltlly thai you w11
could reignite an &lt;*lllgllmlnl.
ha"' lhe PI II . . to loltlllll ifil Lttlo"dd-.I
LIO (oiiiiJ D-Auf, D) Left to your own AQUAIIIUI (,_ • ,._ 11) . . . . . Ill
clevleea, you'll bo eftectlvety lndllatrtoua 1nc11na1- today 1o - • utlf'IUIIII'Y
loday. However, tha ..,.. might nol be ptobleu• lor )'Oinel, • ,... • lot' your
1111t 1NIIIII you .,. ~ aupal&lt;l t You co-_...... OOn't gen11a11 ooniplloedlao11
~ be len!ptad 10 p t - your - -none-·

,.,re·••-1

Aon't TV a...too, ,._......,.
In Z.nlth l'loo ~

9;_.,....'"'"'"'"_ _ _ _ _ _-:"

18~---------------

Goods

~:::::;::::::::::::::::~~~G,M;ip,;~~~~~~~-r~tM;i

Cc. -

11~---------12·- -----------------

lx12 carpel 1150, h1Z vlnvt 1150.
Solo on atl nrpotln otocl llcl-RiollaJ

OUT.

4, 304oi'JII..dleo ... m . •

8._......,..._.,......________

10·~-----~-~----

MerchJnrl1se

1t72 12110 fn dam llobl"
Homo, Goo Hoot l Aallfl! -

3 -.
Rotd,IM-m-2110.

!Tc.AMS

C.mpot lor - · Good cond, •

2. ____________'· ------~------------

114441 111:1 Aftllr J:a.

HELP!'

KNOW !-'ON

.1-----~-.,.---

I

~. II11Reiat
don.~ Phoni: 111

HELP ME!

A. No, it isn't. The weatherman may
be using humor to make a point about
no precipitation, but "no nolhing"
forms a double negative, as in "J don't
want no trouble." Notice that NOTHING already has a built-in NO. To .use
the term correctly in formal English,
you'd have to drop the NO that precedes NOTHING: "no rain, no snow,

NEveR ·

Unat-

toahacl o.ngo ~ smaw oa..
dan • - · 0
Plant I Rlwlr VIIIOJ To
H.S.Gavin
f1431,.11M.

H&amp;LPI H&amp;L.P!
OH,PL.&amp;ASE

NOW I 1L.L

51.......M11, No Arww.r, PI•M

Thm your clutter into c011h,
Sd it the eHy way... by Rhone,

IIChtd ~ 2

F;I.IR T11A06.T.
HELP!. CRIED
1..,10( ElrL.2N •

'EEEEK!

wHh OlrfiOL :lfM.87S-1731.
11111 Mallard Sprlntar 22'
Loadtd With Extrao, E.C. tall

..
--.
;::r.

loncer score

Q. Our weatherman says things like
"no rain, no snow, no nothing." Is that
right?

molar homo. $2$,000. loadtd

....

110

By Jeffrey MrQualn
A foolish person or blockhead is a
CLODPOLL I "KLOD·pole"): You
won't, how~ver, be ~~sidered foolish
.for using the variant spelling of this
noun: CLODPOLE.

Jl€MI)a;:

rebullt, all typn, llartl"\11 $19j ..:
owner 614.24s;.aen 14-3'7J. ,.

Special, 11
fool
MountalnHr truck camper, 3CJ4..

5 . _ _~~------

'

... ,n

.. ..

:-2tl....,llal£

club ace: West n1ffed lt.
Perhaps East was trying for a
trump promotion with the fourth
spade, but that doeia't detract from
the suc:eeaful del-. How does ~t
upresaion go about belnC clever or
lucky?

Budaot Tronomlulona, Uood I :

rw

·- -- --- - ...

.......

21 a•• .,..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
b7.....,.. '*"*',...,.. .........

. , _ , - OUM)PIOifi_.......... CINMid hm .....

Cblr

'Birthday

Plumbing •

Moidl1t.1113

Te~fy and conale;.ney ore exlremlily
important in tht year ahead in endeavors
lhat are me.,lnglul 10 you. II you per..·
vere, ., cen• ill Hklly, oven lhOilgh ~ ntigtll
not comeiMrnlght.

PIICII (feb. 2Hiarch 20)11 yo• gel
IIWOIYiil In an actlvjty IOday thtll hal tit·
ollrifnl!ly oonipllfltion, kHP belting
· 11111 ollhe picture. Once ttaktt are ~·
duced, lhe tun mlghl end. Pitctl, trea!
yGI!tMIIIO 1 bl--, !lift. Sind lor l'llcltl

,.,

*'

...

'

I

'ZCOY~EN

J.

•

Eec:tl ..... In tht ...... _.lor . - .. Todly'• tat D . . . . 8.

.

.

01 ' aXVPYGOEN

.a '.

.
.. .,

.
.... ,. .

, ~,

YGMY
O'V
MEl

O'UP
M

MF1!MLI

ACPMYOUP

VL

OEIYOEAY

JPCIXE
OS

-

I

.,,

· PERXLPI .

.. &gt;.
'·

YX
~

AC P M YP. '

....

D P E
A X E P I •
"'"
\
, ,j
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " ACquaintance: a peraon wtooin we k - anouglo to bOrrow from, but not anoug1o lo land to." - Anlbroee:".."~

C P J •

Bierce.

•

'::~:t.~' S~tl(l1J-l££tfs·
CLAY I. POUAN
Rearrange leHtrs of the
0. four
Krambled words be_____...;._,;; 141tt4

I

~y

low to form four slrnplt) words.

. '"

I

USEAT

I

I

I. I. I. I.

TA 1NG

I

4

.

.. ,

.""'''

;

~=====~·~

r·

"My wife is so touchy,'
shrugs the fellow, "tl)e least
thinq_ I do.staps a fight. • "Lucky
·you, replies his friend, ·my
wife starts her own ...... 1·

r. . ., ,:;R:. .10~..:s;1,.:.H:. .;:U5ITN~~s-110

Complete the chuckle quo1ed
.
bv filling in the missing words
_
•
L..J._J......J._.J.........I....J you develop lrom ·srep No. J below.
~ !'~IN I NIIMPHW t EllERS IN
~
IH!SE SQU ARES

UNICRAM8LE ABOVE lEITER S
10 GE l ANSWER .

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
• ·•r
Ermine • Tenor • JQist · Fetish • INTEREST
My husband is a person who goes overboard in ev. erything he does. Granny says that a (anatic is someone
who is enthusiastic about something you have no

NTERESTin.

..•
......... .

RAFDAI

·

Hunlers

3. _ ___,...._ _ _ _ _ __
4 . _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

i

is
I

Motor flomes ·

2210.

By GARY LARSON

i

g

Acce880rles

law. Our readers are hereby

•""'· -.rto - · ACJ ......
rofrlaontor,
•-Homt
Nat'flank, Raclno,
011.·
814-941-

'"'........

::_=:·:r;
.....

C)._. . . . . . . . . DIUU ISH AIIIL

191-1 Wlnnabogc, 30 ft. Chloftsln

I

VOweL1

Y·Boftom · Flohlng Boat, 2
MotOfWJ . INti, Anchor, 1110
S.cona, Gtlllpollo. ·

1lilll Sq. Ft., .. . .... .... 2118
Wdl, z complalo botho, •nine
ro-m, Avina room, Slxlrm., ..a.
In o - . , loolly oarpotad, Z -

'

AIIOTtl~~

,f : I .

prlca nagatlabla, 304'-al'842t6.

I

-

~~~49~·--~~--~--- ·

All real eslala •dval11slng In

coii30H75·1957.

DEAl

•

l-

. 22 IIIM:IIIJ ,.&lt;
21 Calllel

sidered the epitome of capitalist deca·
dence. Kowever, addicts managed to
play in secret. The imagery ol
clandestine games brings to mind
Intrigue of war movies. Now that the
Soviet Unloa bas become many differ·
eat nations, brld&amp;e bas been allowed to
come into the open. And if the
from this part of the world are u good
at bridge u they are at chess, ·there's
.
to be keener competition for top
!Jic~:s 111 International e¥ents.
Today's deal took place during the
Estonian Trials for this year's European Cbampioasbips, wlllcb wi..;l;al.ubel:~b~e 1ld'· l
in Menton, France. It was ...
defended by Kaarel Kaldjarv,
and Yuri Aiva. .
At almost all tables, the final contract wu four bearti by South. All tbe
declarers except ~ got home on a
Cl'll08l'llff. Tbey took their three aces,
three diamond ruffs iii the dummy 8lld
four top trumps in band.
Do you see how Kaldjarv and Aava
defeated the pme?
Kaldjarv WOtl trick one witb the
spade qlieea. He continued with tbe
spade six, Willi by East's 10. Alva
cubed tbe spade ace, on which West
threw tbe club eight. Tben Alva produced the killing thrust: He led anoth~r spade, on wlllcb Kaldjarv discarded
tbe club jack.
·
·

~~~~~~~~~ ·
14' llborglatt tithing boot, fOhp
motor and tr.U., t7DO, 1~'742·

•

81rn r.maval: n.ed an old

viANT TO IVY

Ree l EstJtc

W IL

Bobyalttlng In lly Homo, 614-

440-81137.

r&gt;o ·vou

·~

'

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

'AVON' ALL AREASI Short your
tlmt wbh ... You'll lova 111&lt;1
ccmpony. 1-..a-6318.
5 1..oc11ao Who Would Uka To

10 Slutnllm
11 llowt

East

111

aft• 11:00 AM .

45769.

lood Solary Contoet:
Walkor, At: 6t4-448-9228.

1

1LL 60 I-lOME AND LOOK ·
AROUND A6AIN .. IF I CAN'T FINP
IT, JUST START WITIIOL'T ME ..

Mazda Nliwlo, tully loaded,

appllcanta will be coneldertd.
S.nd rnurne or appUcltlon to
P.O. BJ&gt;ll 111, PollllfOy, Ohio
T.a.tnarlcetar NMded

""....

T,..,'•n..:.:.
201'ltn..r.;,-

In tbe former Soviet Union, bridge

Rocksf:rinal Ad., Pomelor, OH.
9 wanted to Buy
457119:EOE'.
J &amp; D's Auto Porta and S.lvagt; S.rvlca Tochnlclan nlldocl, Gil
also buying JuM. DIIIW I tNCQ. CtrtMicollon prolorrad, but otMr

.,

11

Hart
g 11 oz.

was illegal. PJaylnc-eanls were con-

medical r.cord .clenCII prefer.

Riek P.. roon Auction Company,
lull time auctionMr., oom••
auction _ . _
Llcoilood
tee,Ohlo &amp; vqlnla, 304o

on

whirlwind
5 Roman ohlp

1rllllltllno

lntriiiUI -

11~...... '

By I'Wip Alder

bed:::=

Nd. w. oHor tho quallfloCI candldoto · ..,.....nlvo !llllorJ' ond
bonofllo, continuing tducallonj
and ca,.., growth apport•n~laa. lntorooled ~.
fwrward
,......,.
&amp;ncluclng
quollllcotlont and ulorJ ,......
lotlono to Pomo..,y Nunolng and

Public sal"
&amp; Auct I

wlolrl •

4 VIolent

.'"".

13Beer

and

A•hlbUHitlon C.nter hM I 1
DOiftlon available for a lloclcal
Recordl Clerk to' maintain the
rHGrdl tor our 100
Exportonca In macflcal
In a long ttrm car. flcllhy, ,at•

ctlltnl organlutlon tklllt! and
Q09d ·co.mm'fnlatlon eklle ,...
.p.:;:m:;.•:;Sa:;;lu:;;r;;;da;!y~.'! -..:....;·_ ·_ _ _ I cpd..-1. Oroduott of • achocol ol

ft-r·

8--caH
71ft proper

3Give--

Atia
31 OecoraUve

I.

__
.,..._-

,_

1 Of IMdlclne
2 Boclal-club•

No longer cards
of capitalism

Friday. Man day ~~ahlon • .2:00

-

DOWN

3•
Plu
''
Pus
Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • Q

BARNEY

:':AL'- Yard Salea Must. Ba Paid In

Nortlo

=~ad

... c.

lhrub-

V\Llnerable: Iloth
Dealer: East

Nursing

47

28- Knox
2t Country 01

.10

Pomeroy

45 BoWline

26 Perch
27 S.a810lt

SOOTH
.542
'AQJU
tAJie

-.

40L..

41 TJpe
421ona 43 C~ndrlcal

23 Plungaa
24 Sc:r-hea

tQ7
.KQUZ

..

12' W1tllout

. 22 Eac:lt

'K

Pass

3e GIYaa farlh
frilly
38T:ol

21l!.qiCT

.AJIDI7

z•

37 Signet •••

Terow

Arthur

EAST

-~

11

• ~g
14 Willow
ts Country of
l!IWope
17.Colllgl dig.
18 111tt1r v1tch
11 Ugllt
oarcatm
20 Actreu -

•wuz

Sootlo

8 Oblecla of
adoration

,,

Pu~:zle

Aa•.., te Jl'ileula u ......._

:U Pitt deern
3~ Centera
3e Tltat , . ,

1 Foot

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclniW

'

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

7

...

'

.... .
...-,
. '.

.,,
. .,

•0.. "1 11;

�e111~

WednfSday; March 17 ·
•

fell over parts of the South and · ing, wherewinds!lftemoon th~paer:rms
By The Apocl•ted Press
Midwest.
·
and high.
were an t
·
It~ be a bit windy and cold
Cold
air
pushed
snow
flurries
.
Dayume
te
.
mperatures
we~e
Wednesday for marchiDg in the St.
from the non1tem Plains rowud the expected 10 range from l:'W zero.m
Palrick's Day parade.
And forecastm said 1101;11e snow Rockies, prompung a winter storm the l&gt;.!kOI8S to the 40s tn the Mid·
may mingle with the green in · watch t!uough Wednesday for pans west. Most of the South was to
of ColOilldo and Utah. The cand.,
northern Ohio.
Periods of rain are likely Mounllins in Washington state also
statewide tonight, possibly turning had IIIOW.
In Browning, Mont.: 16 inches
to flurries by daybreak.
of
snow fell by nightfall M~nday
The reconl-hillh temperature for
·
and
was blown by wind toppmg 65
this date at the Columbus weather
by Bob Hoeflich
mph
ihto drifts up to 3 feet high.
station w~ 79 degrees in 1945
Flakes
fell
this
morning
in
Great
while the reconl low was 4 in 1900.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:39 p.m. Falls.
Rain was forecast from the Gulf
and sQnrise Wednesday at 6:40
Coast
northward to the Midwest,
The Clinton adminisuation has
a.m.
where
precipitation
was
expected
announced
the locations of some
Arouad the natioa
to
turn
to
sleet
and
snow,
It
was
'31
military
bilses
to be closed and
A late-winier storm dumped
raining
in
New
Orleans
this
mom·
.
now
comes
the
uproar,
the usual
snow in Montana today, and rain
story when it comes to cutting gov ..
emment expenditures. It's okay 10
do that just so it doesn 't affect me.

Accu-Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH.

134• I•

SUiny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

~-Area

Lodge to meet
There will be a special meeting
of Shade River Lodge No. 4'53
F&amp;AM on Friday at 7:30 p.m.
There will be work in the F.C.
degree. Refreshments will be
served.

Celebration rescheclultd
The annual birthday celebration
of lhe American Leg10n by Drew
Webster Post No.- 39, Pomeroy,
Extended forecast:
scheduled for tonight (Tuesday) at
Thursday through Saturday:
the senior citizens center, has been
Thursday, fair. Lows from rescheduled
for March 23. Dinner
around IS north to around 25 will be served
at 6:30 p.m. All'
south. Highs' in the upper 20s to
members
and
their
spouses or
low 30s. Friday, a.chance of rain or
friends
are
urged
to
alll:nd.
snow. Lows 25-30. Highs in the
40s.,Saturday; a chance of rain.
Sub sale postponed
Lows 35-40. Highs around 50.
The Meigs Blind Boosters have
rescheduled the sub sale for Mon·
day.

deaths-Rev. Kenneth Watkins
tlev. Xeaneth G. Wilkins, 68, ol

=:

Low tonight
10.15. •
Clear. Tbursdoy,aunn,, blah In '

mid 30s.

Squads respond to eight calls
, Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls ror assis·

Am E1e Power ....................35 1/4
Ashland Oil.. ................... ,..29
ATA:T....................... ;........58 1/2
Bank One ........................... 53 1/2
Bob \'!vans ......................... 19 3/8
Charming Shop.................. l4 1/4
Chmp Indusuies................ .l2
C!tHolding. .....................22
F ra1 Mogu1 .................... 17 3/4
GoodycarT&amp;R ..................75
Key Centurion ...................23 l/4
Lands End .......................... 28 3/8
Umited Inc....................... 25
Multimedia Inc; ................. 34 1/4
PointBancorp................... :l3 1/2
Rax Restaurant................ :.S/16
Relillrice.Elecuic ................22
Robbins&amp;Myers ................21 114
Sltaney'a Inc ...................... 24 7/8
Star Bank ...........................36 3/4
•Wendy lnt'1........................ 13 1/2
Worthington Ind................ 25 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.ra. qnotes provided by
Ke111per Securities, lric., o
Gallipolis. Bank One and
Worthington Is ex-dividend
today.

'

•

Vol. 43, No. 225

. Coprrlghted 1su

River on the rise,
but no major flooding
expected in region
Despite the weekend's heavy
snow up and down the Ohio River
and some taln overnight, there are
no predictions for flooding in the
mid-Ohio Valley at this time. ·
That was the word from the
National Weather Service in
Charleston, W. Va. Wednesday
morning. ·
A spokesman lhere said that the
river will gel a rise because of not
only melting snow here but that
which fell in Pennsylvania, particu·
ll!fiY around the Pittsburgh area.
He said that heavy rains or
more snow could change the picture but the light rains being
received in the area now pose no
'threat

. HOUSES COMPLETED - Pictured here Is
one or the eight houses, all in different styles,
constructed In the Betsy Ross Housing Subdivi·
slon In Middleport. This bouse races Covert
· ' Lane which wiU cross the lot trom Williams to

With 'Tuesday's temperatures in
the mid-50s much of the snow not
already removed by J!.lows melted
off the roads; allowing all schools
in the county to go bilck into ses·

Constructioo has been \X)mplet.'
ed on all eight houses in the Betsy
Ross Subdivision between Fifth
and Sixth Streets in Middleport
' Jean Trussell, Middleport's
housing specialist, said Tuesday
that the only tllings left to be done
are pouring concrete driveways 10
the houses and Coven Lane which
goes through the center of the subdivision between Williams and
Palmer Sueets, along with some
landscaping. She said lhe weather
will have 10 improve before either
can be done.
Trussell said she anticipates that
in early May sevetal of the houses
wiU be occupied.
Seven of the houses have been
sqld, pending financial ap)ll'oval
through the FmHA, accordmg to
Trussell, and the purchasers have
selected their houses. A representa·
tivc from FmHA is expected to be
in town soon to . complete

Better Health Club scheduled for
Thursday bas been canceled.

Lottery numbers

Palmer Street. One·or the houses Is still tor sale
to a low-income family . Information may be
obtained from Jean Trussell, housing specialist,
at Middleport Village Hall.

The soup supper to 'It lleld at
the Rqck Spriags Ualted
Methodist Church Friday
'evening bas been Cjinceled due to
IUness In the aelghborbood.

appraisals on the houses, a step
toward finalizing the loans.
Applications are still being
· taken for lhe eighlh house. All are
lhree bedroom but the designs vary.
Contractor for the project which
got underway in early October was
Valley Lumber and Supply, Mid·
dlcport
.
The project has been geqred to
providing homes for low·i.ncome
families. The lots were provided
free by the village and th~ loans
through FmHA are for 33 years

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
sumer prices rose a moderate 0.3
percent in February, the government said today, supportin~ the
belief of many anal~ that mflation wiU remam inc
nuary, the
steepest since a 0.6 percent SIII"SC in
January 1991. The February
.advan~ was about what many analysts had been expecting.
The department said that the
cost of apparel and upkeep, which
had fallen slight! y during the last
half of 1992, jwnped l.S pefl:llnl in
·February and accounted for about

Man cited in two-car wreck
A Dexter man was cited following a two-car collision on East
Main Street near the McDonald's restaurant in Pomeroy Tuesday
around 11:55 a.m. ,.
According to a repon from the l!omeroy Police Department,
Mil:hael Hudson, 20, driving a 1984 Buick Centory belonging to
Linda Bailey of Langsville, made a left tum from the McDoitald's
parking lot onto East Main Street into'the path or an eastbound ear,
driven by Erica Robie, 16, Pomeroy.
·
Robie's car, a 1980 Oldsmobile Cutlass, .then struck the rear and
left llide ol the car Hudson wu driving, a police spokeswoman said.
No injuriel were teporiAld'.
:. . Damage to Robie's ~ar was listed as light Damage to the car
" Hudson was driving was listed as moderate.
·
Hudson was cited fill" failure to yield.

earlier. Your completed return will be electronically processed and sentfaster than ifyou had

filed by mail. Ifyou choose to direct deposit your refund into your Bank One checking or
savings account, you can save even more time. It's that easy.

•

Need the money in a matter of days? Bank One has the Refund Anticij)Btion ~:"'

When~ Bank One EleCtronic fu Filing is confinned by the IRS, we'll advance YQU the
run amount of your refund, from $300to $3,300,lelis a small processing fee.

Police examine accident

Th 1eam more, come into Bank One today or calll-800-395-0070' for a free brochure

No Injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident at the
' iriteraectloa of U.S. 33 and State Route 7 in Pomeroy Tueaday
around 3:09p.m.
According to a repon from the Pomeroy Police Department,
Raymond 0ucon Jr., 29, SL Maty, Pa., driving a 1984 Mack auck
owned by Eagle Expms, wu SlOpped at dte interseCtion when a
1979 Chevmlet driven by Dlvid Reel, 18, Pomeroy, W1S unable ID
· ~and IIDICk die IW ofOucon's truck.
:
Damqe ID Gacoa'1 truck wu listed as light Dalllage 10 Rees'
. vehicle wu li8led 111110derate and wu towed from the scene.
No cilationlwenluued

on all Bank One's tax relief options to help you witil your taxes this year and next. We"ll see
I

if we can't maJie .tax season a lOt more fun. ~U. almost fun anyway. ·

vv.hcUeverittakel.
Member FDIC
''

Cl~

SIR!ii!OOt .t'=I/2"Weett ago

kept him fiom participating in the
ftrst.face·to-f!ICC meeting between
negotiators and cult members, the
FBI said.
"! think his condition as he and
others have relayed it to us ... is a
progressive downhill condition,"
F(ll special agent Richard Swensen
said Tuesday. "He's played a lesser role. Less time on the r,hone,
less preaching on the phone. '
A "slowing down in the pro·
cess" of phone communicanons
led federal agents to suggest Mon·
day's meeting, Swensen said.
The tallcs lasted about an hour
and included McLenn11n County

with the interest being subsidized
by the government
All eight houses are selling for
between $5 l, 700 and $56,900,
Trussell reported. .
The project got underway just a
year ago when the Ohio Depart·
ment of Development gave Middle·
pon a $150,000 grant That money
was used 10 pW'Chase the dilapidat·
ed Betsy RoS$ building and lot, to
remove the asbestos, to raze the
structure, and to prepare the land
for construction.

Sheriff Jack Harwell and an
unidentified negotiator, Swensen
said. They met with S!Cve Schnei·
. der, a rop lieut.e11arit to cull leader
David Koresh, and Wayne Martin,
a cult member who is a Harvard·
educated lawyer.
The cult's. Mount Carmel compound 10 miles east of Waco has.
been surrounded by law officers
since the Feb. 28 shootoul that
begaJ) when agents with the federal
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms uied to serve search and
arrest warrants on Kdresh.
Four agents were killed and 16
wounded, and authorities have said
as many as I 0 cult membcra may
have been killed and several
wounded.
Koresh has said a bullet grazed

his arm and another entered his
stomach and exited through his
back.
1
A sutwe kit Blld' olher medical
supplies were delivered into the
compound early into the standoff,
but officials say funher medical •
attention is necessary for Koresh
and other wounded cult membm.
In another devell)pment Tues.
day, Kathy Schroeder, one ol two
adults who left the compound Friday, appeared at 8 COUrt hearing:
and asked to be released from fed-.
era! custody. Ms. Schroeder, who is .
being held without bond as a ~
rial witness, was brought into court
in leg irons and handcuffs.
·
Federal Magistrate Dennis
Green was expected to rule on hlii. request tod8y.

half of the overall CPI increase.
Price increases in each of the
other six major categories ·slowed
from a month earlier.
Food prices rose 0.1 percent in
February, down from a 0.4 percent
gain a month earlier. The madera·
tion was attributed to a sharp
downturn in prices for fruits and
vegetables.
But energy prices fell 0.4 per·
cent after jumping 0.5 percent in
January. A decline in charges for
energy services more than offset an
increase in petroleum products. ·
Excluding the volatile food and
energy components, the so-called
core inflation rate rose 0.5 percent,
~eflecting the s.harp ~arel price ·

CY
H untin'gton
woman shot
to death

tncreases.

license pla!e which reminds motorists or the hot- ·:
line available to report Intoxicated drivers. ·
(OVP pboto by Kevin Pinson)
~

GRAB DUJ-·Sgt. Dale Holcomb of the Gal·
lla-Mel11s Post or the Stile Highway Patrol
shOW! orr Ills cruiser's new '1'800-GRAB·DUI'

'

Cruisers now sport 'GRAB-DUI' reminders -

The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
• HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
Stale
Highway Patrol announced
- A woman recently arrested for
Tuesday
that 1·800 GjtAB DUI
prostitution was shot to death after
license
plates
are now being
a niaht of paftying with two other
mounted
on
all
patrol
ears in the
people, Police Chief Gary Wade
state.
l-800
GRAB
DUI
is a tollsaid.
No arreata WCIC made by Tuea· free hotline tbat citizens can use to
day night in the death of Martinez contact the patrol and repon alcoEstepp, 25, of Huntlna10n, who hol or drUg impaired drivers or
also used several other names, other emergencies. Calls made to.
the hotllne are routed to troopers or
Wade said.
Wltneues were being inter- to ljlentiea widt appropriate juris·
dicuon.
.
viewed, he ald.
Thomas
W. Rice,
Colonel.
Estepp and another woman were
superintendent
of
the
patrol,
said in
picked Ul! Monday night in ·
a
)11'1111
releue
that
the
hotline
has
Charlestoa by a tltinl penon, Wade
proved
very
IUCCCIIful.
·
said. He did not Identify the other
"We have received over 1200
twoPOIJP(e;
calls
to the boUine since it wa~
The ihree made several slOps
betweea Cbarleaton and :Huntin&amp;- established in OciOber of l99l,"lle
said. "We know 1hat lives have
ton,he~
'

been saved because of ~e public's
help in removing impaired drivers
from our roads. The l-800 GRAB
DUI hotline provides an opporwnity for citizens to directly affect
highway safety.•
Lt Robcn Woodford of the Gallia-Meigs Post said uoopers will
continue to monitor CB channel 9.
"CB channel 9 has provided a
safety link for Ohio's citizens
1977, he said in the release. "1·800
GRAB DUI provides an addi\ional
method that the public ~n utilize
to contact the Patrol. We have been
very successful in reducing the
number of altohol and drug
impaired drivers on our highways
but to improve upon our success,
we must continue to receive pubUc
support and assistance."

.mce

01993 BANC ONE CORPORATION . Loans sub)ect to crtd1! apprOiiaL 'Monday-Fri(My 8 a.m.-6 p.m. EST: Sa1u1day 9a.m.· 3 p.m. EST

J

•

I

WACO, Texas (AP)- Federal
agents say Bmnch Davidian leader
David Korcsh 's wounds from a

Consumer prices
up in February

r.---Local briefs-___,
With Bank One Electronic Tax Filing;• you11 have your refuf\d check back weeks

sian lhis morning.
stage and was climbing one-li:nth
Around the area
of an inch an hour. A dam
/ The Ohio River, which reached s~kesman said Racine Dam offi·
near flood stage in the Tri-County . cmls released some bilckwala' this
Area March 7, was on the rise 'morning. "We'll have a better idea
again today, but no major flooding of what's coming later in the day,"
is forecast according to the Nation- the dam spokesman continued, but
al Weather Service, Charleston.
added, "no major flooding is
Rain late Monday and all-clay expected atl.his time.•
Tuesday, coupled w1th last week·
A spokesman at the Galli&amp;·
end's 21-inch snowfall in ·the Meigs Post, State Highway Patrol
region, could lead to some minor said all roads in Gallia County aPe
flooding in low-lying areas. around clear. An ODOT spokesperson said
Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties, water was about to come over Rt
.but if the temperatures continue 10 5S4 behind Cheshire around 9 a.m.
fall below freezing at night, the He had ·not received a repon from ,
snow will pack and absorb most of the Cadmus area on Rt 14 I.
the precipitation, causing a slow
Tonight's forecast sars it will be
melt This, according to the NWS, mostly clear in South-CCntral Ohio.
will prevent any major flooding.
Low will be between 10 and IS
Gallipolis Dam officials said at degrees. Thursday's high wiD be in
9 o'clock this morning the Ohio the mid 30s.
River on the lower gauge was 24.3
No more rain is in lhe forecast
feet, 12.3 feet above normal pool until Saturday.

Negotiatio\ns continue in Waco

,H omes in Betsy Ross Subdivision
expected to be occupied by May

A meet1n1 or the Rock Springs

Informational meeting

2·Sectlon~2 Pages 25 cento
A lluiUm
Inc. NewopaJ*

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

;

Cancellations

An informational meeting on
Alzhcimers Disease will be held
Friday at 7 p.m. at the Rock
tance on Monday.
At 6:10 a.m. the Middleport unit Springs United Methodist Chutch
went to Overbrook Center ror by Lenora Leifheit, R.N. who
Peggy Lewis who was transponed worlis with the programs relating to
those with Alzheimers and related
10 Veterans Memorial Hospital.
disorders
for the Meigs County
The Pomeroy Fire Deparunent
Council
on
Aging.
and Squads responded to a two car
The
program
will emphasize
motor vehicle accident at 7:19a.m.
how
to
identify
the
disease through
on Route 124. Tim Zurcher refused
symptoms
diSplayed
and diagnostic
treatment and Roger Spaun was
procedures father than how to treat
taken to Veterans.
or handle victims.
At 8:13a.m. the Middlepon unit
responded to Stonewood Apar!·
ments for Charles Pugh. He was To close Friday
The Meigs County Board or
taken to Veterans.
Elections
will be closed Friday so
At 9:05 a.m. the Tuppers Plains
that
employees
may auend a dis·
unit went to Route 7 for Tony
uict
meeting
to
be
held in Athens.
Jones. He was taken to Camden
Clark Hospital.
The Middleport unit, at 3:39
p.m. , went to South Third for·
Zachary Harris. He was transponed
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
10 Veterans.
Monday
night's Ohio Lottery
The Middleport Fire Departselections:
ment responded to a ear fii'C at4:20
p.m. on South Second Avenue. The Pkk 3 Numbers
0-3.()
auto was owned by Connie
(zero, three, zero)
Vanllelman.
Pick 4 Numbers
The Rutland unit went to Meigs
0-0.().7
Mine No. 2 at 6:49 p.m. for
(zero,zero, zero,seven)
Emmett Long. He was transponed
10 O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
Benjamin Harrioon, the 23rd presiAt6:51 p.m. the Middleport unit
dent
of the United States, was born
went to Hudson Street for AShley
Aug.
20, t833. in. North Bend, Ohio.
Smith who was taken to Veterans.
(

'

---

G
. a.;

(

13-16-18-19-33 -

1993

Hospital news

Stocks'

bt-·

9216
BuckeyeS:

Navy dependents from Guan. tanamo ·Bay, Cuba • during the
Cuban Missile Crisis.
Since 1969, Carla and her husband have resided in Arlington
.where Capt, Klein spent his last
two tours of duty in the Navy
Department and the Department of
springs United Methodist &lt;;burch.
Former Middleport resident, Defense.
,
Everyone welcome.
Carla was treasurer of the Naval
Carla Clark Klein, died at the Klein
home in Arlington; Va., on Feb. 25 Officers Wives Club spring festival
Democrats to meet
and was buried in A~lington at the historical Washington Navy
The Meigs Cwmty Democrats National Cemetery on Feb. 25.
Yard in 1974 and 1975. Later, she
will meet Thursdar at 7:30 p.m. at
Somehow an obiruary sent from was associated with the Washingthe Clrpenters Hal in Pomeroy.
Arlington didn't arrive until days ton law firm of McDermott and
later and then was a bit sketchy. Russel in 1976-1978 and then
Dinner rescheduled
Friends here probilbly have won- became office manager for the
The public dinner of · the . dered about Carla and her husband, American Hotel and Motel Associ·
Burlingham Modem Woodmen has Peter F. Klein, also formerly of ation's Washin~ton Offoce for Gov·
been rescheduled for Saturday at Middlepon, over the years. They emmemal Affmrs, retiring in 1988.
6:30p.m. at lhe hall. The camp will were married in 1949 and his par·
Besides her husband, Carla is
furnish spagheui and meatballs, ents, the late Francis and Pete survived by two sons and their
salad and drink. Bring a covered Klein threw a fantastic engagement families : Peter F. Klein, Jr., of
dish. A meeting will be heldat7:30 party honoring Carla and "Fritz" as Crofton, Md., and Richard H. Klein
p.m. concerning a ftre department he was known to his many friends of Arlington, Va,; three grandchil·
for Bedford Township. A represen· and classmates. The years flew by dren and her brother, Rear Admiral
tative from the Scipio Township and Caila and Peter were busy with Arthur Clark, U.S.N.. also formerly
Fire Department will speak. Every· their careers and their family . I'm of Middlepon, currently stationed
onewekome.
sure they visited their folks here in Norfolk, Va.
but you know how that goes.
Many residents will, of cOurse,
Dance planned
There's the trip in, a shan time 10 remember Carla and "Fritz" since
There will be a round and visit and then back to the grind. they and their parents were so wei!
square dance at the Reynolds Carla was the daughter of the late known in the Middleport communi·
Building in Hockingport on Satur· Judge and Mrs. Cedric Clarlc.
ty and county over th!: years.
day from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring
music by Out of the Blue. Ronnie
Peter's career with the U. S.
Did you catch Jennifer Buck of
Wood will be the caller. Everyone ,Navy con~ludcd at his retirement Pomeroy, an 'Ohio University stuwelcome. The dance will be can- as a captain. However, after that dent, on WOUB television Monday
celed in the event of snow or high he was employed by Vitro CorpO- night? Jenny, was handling one of
water.
ration of Silver Spring, Md. But the phones during the station's
this is about Carla and friends pledge campaign. She phoConcert planned
should know about her active life tographed well.
The New Directions Quartet over lhose years. She accompanied
will present a concen at the Laurel her husband to natal station and sea
So we got our share of the SIOl1ll
Cliff Free Methodisl Church on duty assignments in Norfolk, New· of the century over the weekend,
Saturday at 7p.m. Call Pastor Pete pon, San Diego and Long Beach. but again we didn't. fll(e all that
Tremblay &amp;!992-5326 for informa- During this iime she was the span· badly compared to other locations.
tion.
sor ror two enlisted women's wives However, lhe storm kind of takes
clubs on lhe USS Wood County the edge off of our stories to the
Library notice
. ·
and the USS Joseph P. Kennedy, younger generation. You know.
March is fine free month at the Jr. She was designated a "Destroy. The one.about walking to school
Meigs County Public llibrary. er Lady" by the Commander, for miles in waist deep snow, for
Those with overdue books may Destroyer Flotilla Four. She was example. Let's hope that storm was
return them with ·no penalties. This actiye as a Red Cross volunteer and the last "hurrah" before a beautiful
does not include videos.
assisted with the relocation of spring. Do keep smiling.

Coaches meeting
A coaches meeting for the Mid·
Clara V. Kauff, 72, of Middledlepon
Youth league will be held
port died Sunday, March 14, 1993, Malon, died Friday, Mlrch 12, March 23 at 6:30 p.m. at the Mid·
at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point !993, at I akdand tle&amp;iooll Medi· dlepott Council room for anyone
cal Center, I akeJand, Fla.
.
Pleasant
·
·
interested in coaching.
·
A
n:liled
United
Methodist
mini·
Born in Rutland on April 30,
19~0. she was the daughter of ster with 42 years widt the W.Va.
Dance planned
Frank and Effie Grogan Still. She Conf~ ol the Umted
round and square dance will
Methodist Church, he WIS a be A
was a homemaker. .
held Friday from 8-11 p.m. at
• She is survived by three daugh· llf8dlallle ol W;Va. Wesleyan Col·
Long Bottom Communily
ters and sons-in-law, Violet and ~~ and m:eivetl his Maslm's ol the
Building. Music will be provided
· Larry Jeffers of Pomeroy, Dorothy Divinity des- from Wesley by Buzz Sloter and Out of the Blue.
SemiDary
in John Russell will be the caller. The
and Burl Henry of Columbus, a~d '11teolo&amp;il:al
Wuhington,
D.C.
During
his
42
Sandy and Chester Johnson of B•d·
ol miniStry, be served the fol· dance will be held weather permit·
well· a son and daughter-in-law,
~
loc:ltlons: ROIIIOke cin:uit; ting.
cart'and Shirley Kauff of Middle·
Manninp Gnicc
port and a son, Ernest Kauff, Mid- Gnflon;
Meeting postp~ed
Keyxr;
Summersville;
Mullens;
d1eport; 14 gnindchildren, 26 great·
Chester Council No. 323,
Hamlin; Hurlsvi11e; Bethany,
grandchildren. :
Daughters
of America, will 111eet
. Besides her parents, she was l'altenblq; Cross Roads, Hun· next Tuesday at 7 p.m. rather than
·preCeded in dealh by her husbilnd, linglOQ; ·Aldmgate, Charlestoo; tonight as originally scheduled.
Cliffon!T. Kauff, in 1986, and sev- Wlteellntl; Z. Warner, H1111tington; Quarterly birthdays will be
Clifton cluqe: JIIIC uw; Mason· observed. Potluck refreshments
eral brothers and sisteiS.
Services will be held Thursday IOWII; Laurel Point, New Mar- will be served. Practice for the
at l p.m. at the Fisher Funeral tinsville.
Born March S, 1925, in Pee Wee, spring rally on April 3 at Logan
Home. Burial will be in Riverview
will be held. Disuict l3 practice at
Cemetery. Friends may call at the W.Va., he W1S a son ol the late f.-ogan will be held March 28 at l
funeral home Wednesday from 3 to 'l1tllntls S. Watkins and Prudie p.m. All members are urged to
(Brown) WilkiiJs. He wu also
5 and 7 to 9 p.m.
attend. Disuict 13 lodge members
~ in death by his first wife,
Otm (S . ) Walkins, and a have Easter candy available. Order
from any member.
daughler, C.Y lellt R~erson.
Sunivon include !til wife,
•
Veterans Memorial
Dance planaed .
; MONDAY ADMISSIONS · Pamela E. oee-nsl Watkins; son,
A round and square dance will
Clara Haning, Albany; Alfred Kenneth G. Walkiits, n, Atlanta, be held at the Old American
daughter, Mn. Stan (Donna)
Young, Pomeroy
Legion Hall in Middleport on Fri·
~ MONDAY DISCHARGES • Baker, .Columbus. Oltio; son-in· day wilh music br CJ and Country
David King, Melvin Tracy, Carole law, RUSICII Rogerson, Harrisville, Gentlemen. Admtssion is free. No
toleman, Melissa Kmg and W.Va.; three lllep-soas, David alcoholic beverages permitted.
Keams. New Haven, · Brian and Children welcome with adult
Michelle King.
:HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Chris Kearna, Mason; sister, Mn. supervision. Bring soft drinks arid
• March 15 disc:barges - Flora Mayaard (Liura Kalhryn) Craw· snacks.
Pltillipi, W.Va.; five
Howard, Chalmer Tiller, Harley fool,
gniiCichlldren, .
six
stepYoung, Mina Swisher, ~anda Bur·
Support group to meet
dette Nina Burks. Roome Mercer, grandchildren, and five stcp-greatThe Alzheimer's Disease and
Mary Wolfe, Doris Brown, Bob glllldcllildmt.
Related
Disorders Suppon Group
The funenl will be Wednesday,
Roberts, Mary. Beatty! Denver
will meet Wednesday from l-3
Thompson. Enc Harnson and 10:30 a.m., at the Oiftoo United p.m. at the Meigs County Senior
Melltodilt Chun:h widt the Rev.
Darus Scragg.
Terry
Alvarez and Rev. Oaa1d Dot· Citizens Center, weather permitMarch 15 birth- Mr . and
ting. The program "How to Trans·
Mrs. Michael Stearns. son, Leon, son ofllciating. Burial will be in the pon and Position Your Client" will
FrieodsiUp IOOF Cemetery, Berlin,
W.Va.
be p!C$Cnted. Everyone welcome.
W.Va.
,
Friends may call at lhe
Divorce sought
Seminar planned
Foglesong
Ftmeral Home Tuesday,
An action for divorce has been
Lenora Leifheit will present a
filed in the Meigs County Coon or 2 to 4 and 7 10 9 ~;~.m., and one hour seminar on Alzheimer's Disease on
Common Pleas by June A. Powers, prior to the aviCC at lhe chun:b. Friday at 7 p.m . at the Rock
Pomeroy, from Robert F. Powers, Conuniltal aervice at lhe cemeler)'
will be at 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Manchester.

Clara
.
.V. KautT

792
Pick 4:

--Meigs announcements-

:------Weather-----"
Soutl!-Central Ohio
•. Tonight, periods of rain early
:tonight. Flurries also possible
, :toward daybreak. Low around 30.
• ;Chance of precipitation 80 percent.
·Wednesday, becoming partly
:~unny. High in the upper 30s,
"

have highs in ,the 50s and 60s .
Highs in the 70s and 80s were forecast across the Southwest
The high temperature for the
nation MondaY was 88 degrc;es at
Thermal, Calif.
•

Pick 3:

Beat of the Bend...

W. VA.

..

Obio Lottery

Happy
St. Patrick~s
Day

Cold air, wind will return Wednesday

OHIO Weather

!Mansfield

Tuesday, March 16, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

12-The Dally Sentinel

•

,I

'

1·800 GRAB DUI licensl
plates wUI be mounted on lhe reir'
of all patrol cars and CB channel 9·
license plale$ wiD be moved to the·
fronL
Lt. Woodford said impaired•
driven often exhibit cltarw:lerillici
that the public can Watdl for,IIICb ·
•
' as Straddfitia the centcrllno, 110po
ping .in the IOIIdway without c:mae; ·
bralcmg cmtically, drlvin' very
slow or very fast, and lliaaallllllhe
opposite direction of a 1UnL
He advised wbea reportina
impaired driven, callers abould
s.ive a clear doacriplioa ol the
(including tlte l i - llllllller), the '
high.way l!'d direcltlon of !ravel,,
and if (IOSSlble, a clelcripliaa or tile
driver.
•
·· ·

car

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