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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 17, 1993

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., MAR•.14 THRU ~R. 20, 1993

•

G2737
Super Lotio:

3 $1
DEL MONTE .
SQUEEZE
_USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOnOM

CATSUP

$ 49

Round Steak.....................lB. · 2 ·

· KIT~HEN PRIDE -.

. Shced -Bacon. . . . . 6 LB. Box

Kicker:

Page7

'

VoL a, No. 228
Capyrlghlld 11113

.

.

C~mmission
The Meigs County Board of
&lt;:;ommissioners approved a resolu·
uon commending organizations
and individuals who assisted wilhcle&amp;P.UP from lhe snowstorm that
struCk Meigs County, and much of
lhe eastern United.States, Saturday.
Commissioner Manning Roush
made lhe motion to pass lhe resolu·
lion ,"highly commending the
Meigs County Highway Depart-

commends county cleanup workers .

ment, Mr.Rcibert Eason (county
engineer) and his fine crew, Sheriff
James Soulsby and his deputies,
Mr. Raben Byer, director of EMS.
and his people, township trustees
and the Ama1eur Radio Club for
lhe many hours and hard worlc in
handling lhc snow emergency.•
·
"All of the people worked tirelessly during this time and have
done a very fme job,• RoU&amp;h said.

In addition the commission
commended lhe residents of Meigs
County for their patience and coop.
eration.
Representatives from the Meigs
County Highway Department met
with lhe commission 10 discuss the
bidding of road material including
aggre~ate, bituminous and asphalt
hot max.
,
The commission agreed 10 allow

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} The House has expanded and
approved a budget proposal by
Gov. George Voinovich to replace
or repair unsafe and overcrowded
school buildings.
The governor proposed setting
aside $10 million in lollery profits
10 back bonds-for bolh an immediate and long-range building
improvement program.
But under a bill approved by lhe
.House on Wednesday 94-1, the
state would add anolher $6 million
to support more bonds to help
needy schools buy computers and
other classroom technology.
Rep. Michael Fox, R-Hamilton,
whose amendment expanded
Voinovich's proposal, said techno!·
ogy should be a.key elc!ftl:nt in the
current efforts 10 amprove educatiol) in Ohio,
Rep. MichaeJ Shoemaker, D·
13olimeville, is chief sponsor of the
biU that lllp8 the lottery money. He
h8s visited schools in disrepair and
bas fou~ht for years to increase
state asststance.
Shoemaker told of a school in

TREET
LUNCH MEAT

DEL MONTE
SPAGHEUI
SAUCE
.- 26.5 oz.

MOUNTAINEER 1-LB. ROLL or

8................... 10 OZ. LINK

'VIEW ROCK SLIDE • Meigs Couaty commlsslonen Jauet Howlll'd aad Mannina Roush,
rrom rlaht, aloaa With Enliaeer Robert Easoa
and Sherur J1111e1 M. Sou lilly examined a minor
rock slide behlad the Melas County Sheriff
Department before the couaty commission meet-

lag Wednesdly morning. Eason said the fallen
material does not support the larger rocks
heJ.IIQd the .Wage or Pomeroy. The sUp prompted the temporary closing or the parkina· Jot
behind the sherurs d'epartment. (Sentinel photo
by Jim Freeman) •

Depulie,l of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigated ,

DOUBLE
~E

KEN

.

Seed Potatoes. . .5o Lb. Bag

. BR~UGHTON;s . · _

·.

S]59

2
$1
French Fr•es. ~. 5LB~
oz. ,
$,299

FOLGER'S CUSTOM ROAST
r;:--~

r---

.,

'

Ora

.
'

CLOROX BLEACH

79(

GAl.

Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu
Ollar Good Mar. 14 thru Mar. 20, 1993
Limit 1 Par Cuetomar

.,. , &amp;'t*

L

&lt;

••

.~~-

II
II
II
II
II
II
•I

$1
$2 59

·.
aAG

PAPER · TOWELS
LG.
ROLLS

Good Only At Powell'..Sup• V~lu
Ollar Good Mar. 14thru Mar.-20, 1983

----.f---::.------.
--,.
II
.. .
II

DOMINO SUGAR ;~ STARKIST TUNA !:
5 LB.
$169
··- .
$1 6.5 oz. III•
BAG
.
·.
.

.

.

Good Only .At Powell'• Super Valu
Ollar Good Mar. 14thru Mar. 20, 1883
Limit 1 Plr Cueto mer

GROUND

, BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

-

-~-~ivvPIN---~-,•

PAGE

3/$1

$189

,Juice..~. . ~ oz. 69c

FLAVORITE .

S]79

.· _

2 Yo Mllk. . . . . ~. . . . . .~. GAL.
kRAFT PARKA!,·
_ '3
Margar1ne. . . ~. :. . .LB. ·
FLAVORITE CRI~K~E CUT

ESE Pl--r
28.5 oz.

2
.

I
Good~~~
owell'a Super Valu ·
Offer
U..14 thru Mar. 20, 18113 I

--....w..

Limit 2 ~ Cuatamar

•

GROUND
·CHUCK
'10 LB. PACKAGE

SJ6110

menL Eason explained that thi fall·
icapped accessible.
The commission approved an . en material does not suP.port lhe
animal claim of $90 for Barold larger rocks behind lhe building.
Smith, Racine, who had an angus
Attending were commissionCJ;S
calf killed by dogs.
Roush,
Janet Howard and Robert
Before the meeting, commisHartenbach
and Clerk Mary Hobsioners Roush and Janet Howard,
sreuer.
·
along with Soulsby and Eason,
Next week's meeting is schedexamined a *lc slide behind lhe
·
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart- uled for JOa.m. March 26.

three aiminal damaging complaints Wednesday.
· Jr. Wilson,_Great Bend, reported that sometime during lhe day
someone had smashed lhe electric meter at his well house. Colum·
bus Southern Power was contacted 10 make repairs.
·
Charlie Barrett, Rutland, reported the glass on the Rutland
Township backhoe had been broken ouL
Deputies reported someone kicked in lhe men's door on lhe out·
door restroom at the Mount Olive Church.

Man cited on theft charge
A Pomeroy man was cited to the Meigs County Court Wednesday on a charge of peny theft.
,
Thome M. CottriU, Pomeroy, was apprehended by a loss preven-- lion officer at the Big Wheel Store near Pomeroy.
·
Around 2:30 p.m. WedneSday, Reeds SIDre an Reedsville reported that two subjects in a white Ford Mustang with Florida regastration took $18.55 in gasoline without paying.
Deputies iraced lhe vehicle and learned that the vehicle's owner
was in lhe Ravenswood, W.Va., area.

Judgments sought
Two motions for judgment were filed recently in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.
General' Motors Acceptance Corporatio.n, Mason, Ohio, is seek·
ing a $3,321.51 judgment from John M. Spih:s, Rutland.
Racine Home National Bank, Racine, seelcs a $8,296 judgment
from Kevin Barber, Reedsville.

L

ponders
future .
.

CINCINNATI (AP)- A tormer,H!Iuse member said his defeat
in a R~ublican congressional primary probably will be his last candidacy •.
"I don't antiCipate being a candidate again," Bob McEwen said
Wednesday.
1
,
McE)Ven finished secoll!l among
seven candidates in Tuesday's
Republican primary to fill the
unexpired congressional term of
Republican Willis Gradison.
McEwen, 43, served 12 years
representing Ohio's 61h Congressional District until he lost last
Nov. 3 10 Ted Slrickland, a Democrat

Fout injured in accident
A Pomeroy youth was cited for . roadway and struck Grare's vehicle
failure to yield half the roadway head on.
following an accident Wednesday
Dickt:ns' vehicle sustained
. afternoon which.sent him llld tluee heavr. jlisabling damage and
others to !he-hospital, the Galli&amp;· · Grate s vehicle sustained moderate,
Mei&amp;s Post or the State Highway disabling damage, Both vehicles
Palrol n:parled.
were towed from the scene.
Rebecca ~. Grate, 36, 36891
The paii'Ol also n~lcaseci a report
Skinner' Road, Pomeroy, and her of a two-vehicle accident which
pasae:fj~indsay R. Grate, 3, occurred Saturday afternoon on
S1111C
, and Robert F. Dick- Stile RoUie 124.
.
ens, 16, 32588 Roaehill Road,
Accordln&amp; to the~ Hazen
Pomeroy, and his passenger, Varney, 52, RL 1..!. Bwmgton, was
SleVen N. Amou. 17, 33677 Skin- · wellbourHllnd uenieva
J.
ner Road, Pomeroy, were transpOrt- Edmiston, 48,29173 Bowles Road,
ed tiy Meigs County Emergency Delller, was eastbound when they
Medical Service to Veterans met on a nanow ICCiion of IIIOW·
Memorial Hospital where they covered road and IIIIUCk eacb other.
~ lmlled and fCieaKit:
No injuriu wcte reported and
According to the accident , no Cilalilllllwac illued. Both vebllllport, Dlekeals was weatbound
cles allltlined H&amp;ht damge. VarTownshlp Road 83 when he met ney' 1 was tow.ea from Uie acene
·oute's vehicle on a hill crest. and Edmillon's was driven away.
Dickens failed to yield half of the

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Americans filing firstlime claims for unemployment benefitS fell in mid·Man:h for lhc second consecutive week, the government said today.
Claims feU by 10,000 10 a seasonaUy adjusted 351,000 durin~ the
week ended March 13. foUowtng a
lS.OOO decline a week earlier, the
Labor Department said. ·
With today'• rcpcn. the department has cut the lag time on reponing claims to just one week. Before
today, fipma were reported with a
two-week Jaa.
. 1
Prior to the latest two weeks. !he
number of fint-tlme claims had
incressecl during six of nine ~
and economists had exprcucd
so111e concern that the pace of
improvement in lhc labor-mullet
was again slowina to a mwl.
COIItlnuecl OB pap '

~

'

some of lhe co,ts and repay tl(e
state under a forptula that n:&lt;~,uirr:s
them 10 use thear own bond·assue
powers.
•·
·
There now ilre 44 districts on in
existing Building Assislallce Funil
priority lisL Dozens more are waitmg 10 get on the list
•
· The department said thill whik
many of the old buildings are in
sou(~~ em and. sou_
theastern Ohio,'
almost every district in lhe state haS
one or more that fails to meel
building standards.
The proposal was among four
that went IO_the Senate, which was
in recess.
One of the others requires le~-~
islative floor SCIISions and commit-.
tee meetings "' be open to the pub-'
lie. Most of lhem already are open,
but sponsors said the mandate
should·be specified by law.
.
Another streamlines what was
described as a cumbersome process
for seating jurors 10 hear murder
trials. The fourth mea sur~ lets
schools provide transportation for
·adults who go back to schooiiD get
diplomas.
·
.

WASHINGTON. (AP) and .working for lhe USDA's Soil
Eugene Branstool fulfilled a_boy- Conservation Service.
hood dream when he became a
For 16 years, Branstool served
farmer. Now he bas a chance to in the Ohio Legislature and com·
oversee government agencies that muted haole 10 lhe 700·acre com,
tell farmers what to do.
wheat and soybean farm he worked
President Clinton on Wednes· in partnership with his brother Ron.
day nominated the Ohio farmer and
But, he said, "My brotJ!er's
state Democaatic Party chainnan 10 been doing the vast majority of it
be the Agriculture Department's for lhe last two years."
assistant secretary for marketing
Branstool since 1991 has been
and inspection services.
chairman of the Ohio Democratic
Branstool would supervise Party - a post that brought him
agencies that guard the public some attention in high places.
against contaminated meat; regu.During lhc Democratic National
late milk prices; and set standards Convention, Bran stool read the
so that consumers don't pay top- deciding vote total, so his face was
grade prices for low-grade goods.
shown over and over in television
If be's confirmed by the Senate, clips of Clinton clinching lhe nomiIbe inspectors who decide what for- nation.
_ ,
Aftea:ward, Chnt?n s fust posteign food gets into this country
would report to Bran stool, as convcntaon ~us tour mclu~ed a .stop
would the people who check - at Branstool s fllfl!l40 .m•les~ nortb·
whether animals are treated cast of~olumbus m U:taca. Ohao.
humanely enroutc to the circus, _ If h~ s confmned 10 _lhe U~DA
laborator-Y or zoo.
JOb, he U be part of lhe mner cucle
Branstool, 56, helped put him- that's trying 10 change the way the
self through coUege by mising hogs government approaches meat

-

inspection.
That ne.w approach was sJIIIITed
by January's outbreak of food poisoning in which two children died
and close ID SOO•people were sic.._ened by the bacteria E. coli .
0157:H7 in hamburgers.
.
·
Branstool said.-he's had little ·
experience with meat inspec:tion
"aside from watching meat inspectors work," but he's familiar with .
grain inspection and "I do !tave a
sense of lhe public's right to have
access 10 safe food."
If confirmed, Bran stool willoversee lhe:
-Food Safety and Inspection"
Service.
-Agricuhural Marketing Scrvice.
.
.
. -Federal Gram lnspecuon Servace.
,
:
-A_namal ~nd Plant H:ealth
lnspccuon Servtce.
-Packers and Stockyards
Administration.
-Agricultural Cooperative Service.

•

Jobless claims
down second
week in row

ott

NeJSonviUe lhat is sinking into lhe
ground and anolher in CoaiJDn that
uses a-house trailer for a classroom.
At a hilltop school in Shawnee
in· Perry County, buses "have to
back up the mountain because
there's no place "' tum around up
there," Shoemaker said.
·
• The Department of Education
says dilapidated and overcrowded
buildings are a problem statewide.
A recent study estimated the cost of
bringing all of them up to accept'
able standards at $10 billion.
Shoemaker said $10 ·million in
lottery profits would support an
immcdaate, $!00 million bond
issue for building assistance. The
added $6 million would back
another $38 million in bonds for
new technology.
. ·
With a revised forn:tula designed
to speed payment of debts owed 10
the nearly broke state School
Building Assistance Fund, he said
the bill could generate $350 milfion
over the next tluee yeaas.
Shoemaker stressed that the
money is not a stale giveaway. He
said dislricts would have 10 put up·

Branstool nominated to USDA post

...-------Local briefs--. ~cEwen
D~P,uties examine complaints .
CHEF BOY·AR·DEE

lhe depattmentiO advCrtise bids for
lhe material.
Engineer Robert Eason met with
lhe commission and discussed lhe
proposed conversion or a furnace
room to a resuoom ·at the county
garage near the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. According 10 Eason, the
new facility will feature male and
female resuooms and will be hand·

Gov. Voinovich's school
building •proposal expanded

ARMOUR

· ·-

2 Sectlona, 12 Pagoe 28 ......
A lluldmodllt lno;. NNop11per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 18, 1993

$349

513
ch·k
·
·
·
·
Wien r
'' .en Breasts........LB.
·
U~D~~ CHOICE BONELESS BEEF $ ·
99
Rump Roasts...._,_La. . 1
ECKRICH
·
$.·139
-Bologna...........................

Pineapple. . . . . . . .2o

mid 40s.

022847

280Z.

SUPERIOR'S FRANKIE

LIBERTY

Low tonight bttwHa 10·15.
Clear. Friday, doudy, high In

ARGO
PEAS
17 oz.

Sa

Pick 3:
243
fick 4:

1-16-17-19-25-29

2 LRER BOnLE

;Monday thru Sunday
. BAM·lOPM

LB.

Redskins
eliminate
Buckeyes

7·UP
ODUCTS

STORE HOUR~ - -

Ohio Lottery

....

TWO HONORED • Dl1'1d Fox, left,
WaJ'D' Ro .., lltlller, llat.. or the Racine llftl,
wen llaaortd It a tlla11er meetln1 ot the Vetet·
aas Memarlalllolpltal ~d of Trustees held
W~ eYeaiq at Royal Oak Resort. Fox
aa~ are Ilion reeelvlag pereoullzed
clllmt
clacb from ll01pltal admln~n·
tor, Seott Laea, right, Ia rec:aplltion or thel_r

a..1a1

-~

servleal o• tile lloard. Botll
completed
ar aenlce u llolurd
hen In mz
Fa:Ja: llei'Yed u ~=:
board l'or tllree yean durlq tile
Nlae • :
coasec•tlve 1ean Is the Umlt or
a lloard::member may bat llldl a board ••ller,' :

•':r;.:

according to lly·lawl, _ ,
time lapse ot oae J'll'.

ser.e apia lifter a· :

••

�·commentary

,
•

I

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pcmtaroy-Middleport, Ohio

111uraday1 March 18, 1993

lburaday, March 18,-1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

War~er

OHIO Weather
Friday, March 19
Accu· Weather• forecast for daytime

The Daily Sentinel

B~ Tbe Assoctated Press

and

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

· DEVOTED TO 11IE INTBRE81'1S OF THE IIEIGS-I(ASON .A11BA

PA.

PATWWmHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

''

.

!Omght, w1th lows fro!R around 10
m the north ton~ 20 10 ~e soutJ:l.
.Southerly w!n~s Fnday ~1ll
brmg w~er arr ~nto the r~g1on
along ':"1th increasmg ~loudiness.
There ts a chance o~ ~n or snow
over far. wesle~ Oh1o m the aftern~. ~ghs w1ll be from ~e u~r
30s m the north 10 the mld-40$ m
the far south.

The record high on thiS date 10
Columbus was 77 in 1903. The
record !ow w~ 7 in 1941.
. Sun.set Jonight at 6:42p.m. Sun·
nse Fnday at 6:36a.m.
Aroundtbenatloo
E~stem tem~eratures dropped
~ucally overn1gh! and snow was
falling early today 1n upstate New
~ark ~nd !" New England. Dayume h1ghs 10 lhe 30s were expected
as far soulh as North Carolina.

Open meetings bill

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE I:IOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION ore welcome. They obould be less tban 300
W1lrds. All letten ore subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
address and telephone number. No unoigned l.eaers will be published. Leaers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
·
·

W.VA.

-Two big military issues,
·~ one big deadline

s-..

T-atotma

Ram

.....

Fl.;rries

Ice

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
e1993 Ac:cu-Woolhor, Inc.

------Weather-----

COJ,.UMBUS, Ohio (AP) State senarors are expected to com·
plete passage of a biU requiring the
Legislature and most of its commit·
tees to announce meetings in
advance and open .them to the public. .
The House approved the propos·
al 95-0 Wednesday, sendin$ it to
the Senate where an almost Identical legislation has been introduced
by Sen. Scou Oelslager, R-Canron,
and.co!sponsors of both parties.

Couples apply
for licenses

Wash ington and Ore son, with
some snow Hunies at higher elevalions.
,
Daytime highs in the teens and
20s were expected in New En(fDa~C~Stformostol'theregion.
land. Highsinthe50sand601wcre
Ia the West, bf;avy snow w~- · forecast across the South. CaJifO(·
ings were posted' in Colorado and nia had forecast highs in the ~.
Wyoming. Montana and Idaho 70s and 80s.
:
were expecting a mix of snow and
The high temperature for the
rainshowc:r.~. Rain was fDa~C~St for nation Wednesday was 91 deareeS
at Thermal, Calif.
·

approv~d

A majority of the meetings
already are open, with advance
notice given, Sponsors say the policy should be expanded and made a
pan of Ohio's open meetings Jaw,
as it is for other.entities of state and
local govemmenL .

Dissolutions
and divorces

J o,b[e SS...

The following dissolutions were
filed recently in the Meigs County

The followinj! COIIJ&gt;les recently
Saturday, a chance of rain . applied for mamage licenses in the
South·Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear and cold. Highs in· mid-40s to mid-50s. Sun- Meigs County Probate Court
Low 15-20. Friday, increasing day, fair. Lows 3(}.35. Highs mostDanny Jesse Howard, 24, Rutly in the 40s. Monday, fair. Lows land, and Melissa Lynn Woods, 21.
cloudiness. Hil!h in the mid-40s.
in mid-20s 10 low 30s. Highs in the Middlepon: Nathan Eddr Arnold
Extended forecast:
40s.
Saturday through Monday:
IV, 23, Pomeroy, and Mehssa Lynn
Sams, 17, Little Hocking; William
Wayne Clark, 19, and Rae Ann
Buford, 18, both of Ravenswood,
W.Va.; Jeffrey Clark Homer, 20,
Burlin Mullins
Tuppers Plains. and Tabitha Marie
Rev. J. C. Johnston
Burlin "Oliver" Mullitls, 54, of
Rev. Cameron (J. C.) Johnsron PhiUiJls, 19, Pomeroy.
36840 Page ville Road, Pomeroy.
died Wednesday, March 17, 1993, Jr., 71, Vinton, died Monday,
at the Holzer Medical Center, Gal- March 15, 1993, in Northwest Hospital, Tucson, Ariz.
lipolis.
He was a retired coal miner, and
Born on April 12, 1938 at
. Units of the Meigs County ment and Syracuse squad to SkinWorld
War H veteran, having Emergency
Penny, Ky.; he was the son of
Medical Service ner Road for a moror vehicle acciEiben Mullins and Gladies Mook served in the U. S. Navy. He was respollded to four Calls for assis· dent, Steven Amott, Robert Dickalso a musician, songwriter and
Mullins. He was laborer.
lance overnight including one call ,ens, Rebecca Grate and Lindsey
.
He is survived by his wife, author.
for
a motor vehicle accident with· Grate were transported to VMH;
After joining the ministry ·'in injuries.
Debra Quive_y Mullins, Pomeroy; a
·
.
9:16 p.m. Pomeroy 10 East Locust
d&amp;ughter, Lmda Mullins, Log811: 1950,,he became an ordained indeResponding
were:
2:28
p
.m.
Street
for Vicroria Zahran who was
'three sons. Donnie Mullins of pendent Baptist minister on April Pomeroy to West Main Street for transported to VMH; I : 12 a.m .
. Logan, Keith Mullins ofCalifornia, 29, 1956, at Welch, W.Va.
Hill who was transported 10 Pomeroy 10 Kerr Street for Harry
He was born August 13, 1921, Orville
and Gary Mullins of Florida; and
Velerans
Memorial Hospital; 5:21 Garnes who was uansported to
· four sisters, Florence Burchett of at Rhoderfield, W. Va., son of p.m. Pomeroy squads and fire VMH.
Pikeville, Ky., Billie Maksimczak:, Birdie Oma Johnston, Langsville department, Chesler Fire Depart·
Dexter; Ellen Laudermilt of Flori- and the late Julius Cameron Johnda. and Edith Blevins of Trjon, Ga. ston, Sr. He married Mary Ethel
Besides his parents, he \vas pre· GreenonApri125,1939,atWelch,
.
ceded. in death by two brothers, W. Va. She survives, ·along with
School board to meet
Regional Development District will
Walter Mtlllins and Junior Mullins, one son, Franklin Johnston, Chillicothe; five daughters: Mrs. Johnny
The Sduthern Local Board of ·be held March 3'0 at 5:30 p.m. at
and an infant sisler.
Funeral services will be held (Phyllis) Muncy, Afton, Tenn.: Education will ,meet Monday at 7 the Holiday Inn in Marietta. Highligh.ts of the agenda include reviSaturday at 11 a.m. at the Pageville Mrs. Hazert (Loneda) Varney, P·!l'·atthehighschool.
Ewin~;
~tty
Bailey,
Mrs.
Her·
.
,
;.
•
sions to the }'Y'93 ARC project
Freewill Church. Tlre.•Rev. Joe
ben
(Linda)
Bragg,
and
Trulisha
Organization
to
meet
package,
up-date pn ag_ing proSayre Will offiCiate and burial will
Johnston,
all'
of
ViniDn.
The
Racine
Area
Community
grams
and
budgets, standmg combe in Riggs Cemetery at Pageville.
Two
brothers
survive:
Eugene
Organization
will
meet
Tuesday
at
mittee
appointments,
FY'94 cost
Friends may call at the funeral
Johnston,
L~ngsville
and
Georj!e
6:30
p.m.
at
Star
Mill
Park.
New
aUocation
plan
(budgeiS)
and annu-·
home Friday from· 6 10 8 p.m.
Johnston, SaliSbury, N.C.; five SIS· members are welcome.
a1 work program, and nomination
VIrginia Grinstead
ters; Mrs. Bill (Agnes) Lamben,
Meeting canceled
of officers. This will be a dinner
The meeting of the Chester Ball business meeting.
V~~ginia C. Grinstead, 77, of Oceana. W.Va.: Mrs. Cecil (JuaniMason, died Wednesday, March 17, Ia) Epling,_ Washburn, Mo.; Mrs. Association, scheduled for tonight,
1993, in Overbrook Center, Mid- Thomas .(Mary) Arney • Gallipolis: has been canceled and rescheduled Plan banquet
Mrs. Pat (Delores) Holstein, forSunday at 3:30 p.m.
dlepon, Ohio.
.
The Eastern High School alumni
Oceana,. W. Va.; and Mrs. Larry
Born SepL 5, 1915, in Hot (Sharon) Smith, Salem Cen1er.
coordinating commitlee is currently
Program slated
making plans for lhe 1993 alumni
Springs, Va., she was a daugbler of
Fourleen grandchildren, 29 great
The
Porterfield
Baptist
Clowns
banquet
to be held June 12 at the
the late Rhinehold and Nellie grandchildren, 20 nephews and 15
will
present
a
program
on
social
h'
h
hool
(Krautter) Schwarz. She was also nieces survive.
.
s d
lg sc
.
·
1ssues. un ay at 7. p.m : at the
Any aJumni 'noi contacted withprece.ded in death by a son,
service will be held at I Reedsville Fellowsh1p Church of in the past five years should contact
Cameron Grinstead, and five · p. Funeral
m. Saturday at the McCoy- the Nazarene. Pasror John W. Dou- Brian Collins at 985-3593, Julie
brothen.
Funeral Home, Vinton, with . glas invites the public. ·
•Elberfeld Dillon at 992-2006 or
Survivors include her husband, Moore
the Rev. Raymond Lambert and
Leonard Koenig at992-99!8.
Raymond; Sisler, Barbara Mc- (lrother George Johnsron of(iciatMeeting canceled
Daniel, Mason; two brothers-in-law · ing.
The meeting of the Meigs
and sisters-in-law, Charles and
Burial will lie in the Vinton Retireil Teachers Association,
Doris Yonker, New Haven, and Memorial Parle. Military graveside scheduled for Saturday, has been
Willie and Kathy Grinstead, Bar- rites will be held by Lafayette
canceled due to high water and
toW, Aa.; and several nieces and
Am Ele Power....................36
American Legion Post No. 27.
road conditions.
nephews.
Ashland Oil........................28 518
Friends may call 'at the funeral
· The funeral will be Saturday, 1 home on Friday from 7·9 p.m.
AT&amp;T................................57 7/8
Youth League to meet
p.m., at the· Foglesong Funeral
Bank
One...........................S3 7/8
. The Pomeroy Youth Baseball
Home with the Rev. Bennie
Bob
Evans
......................... 18 7/8
League will hold sign-ups on MonStevens officiating. Burial will be Elza E. a.ussell
Charming
Shop
.................. IS
Elza E. Russell, 61, Sunbury, day and Thursday of next week
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Chmp
lndustries
................. l2 1/4
Friends may call at the funeral died Monday, March' IS, 1993, at from 5:30·8 p.m. at Pomeroy Ele- · City Holding...................... 22
Grady Memorial Hospital 'in mentary. Prices are $12 per child,
home Friday, 6 10 9 p.m.
Federal Mogul.. .................. l7 3/4
not 10 exceed $25 per family. First
Delaware.·
GoodyearT&amp;R
..................74 7/8
Friends may call 2 ro 4 and 6 ro time players will need to bring a
Key
Centurion
...................
23 1/8
9 Thursday at the McCoy-Moore birth cenificale. ·
Lands
End
..........................
27
3/4
CLEVELAND (AP) - There Funeral Home, Vinton.
Limited
lni:
.......................
24
l(l
Guest speaker slall!d
were 110 tickets sold naming all six - Services will be held 1 p.m. Fri- .
Multimedia
Inc
.................
.35
3/4
The Rt. Rev. Craig Anderson,
numbers"selected in Wednesday's day at the Morgan Cenler Christian
Point Bancorp................... .l3 lfl
assistant
bishop of the Diocese of
Super Lotto drawing with $.4 ·mil- Holiness Church, where the body
Rax
RestauranL..................3/8
lion al stake
., will lie in state one hour prior to Southern Ohio, will visit Grace
Reliance
Electric........ :.......22 S/8
services. The Rev. George Collins Episcopal Church on Sunday. Dish·
Robbins&amp;Myers
................20
op Anderson is noted for his min·
The Doily Sentinel
wiU officiate.
Shoney's
Inc
......................
24 3/4
'
Burial will be in the Morgan istry and work w.ilh Native Ameri(USPS %13·110)
Star Bank ...........................37 3/4
Center Cemelery. Military grave· cans. Worship hegins at 11 a.m.
Wendy
Iqt'l... .....................l4
~bli11had
ovary ~t Remoon. Monday
side rites wiU be conducted by lhe wilh a reception following the serlhrough PlidAy, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Worthington
Ind................25
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi11hinc
Vinton American Legion Post16I .. vice.
Stock reports are the 10:30
CampanyiM11Itinwlia lnc., Pomeroy,
Pallbearers will be Terry, Jerry,
Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Second clus
a.m. quotes provided by
Meeting slated .
poe&amp;.AiJC pid at ~roy, Ohio.
and Cary Russell, David Skidmore,
Kemper Securities, Inc., o
The regular meeting of the
Randy Denner· Bill Chapman, and
GaUl
polls,
Membr!r. The Aaaociat.ed Preis, and lhe
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Bobby Russel
Ohio Naw•pafM' Allllodation, Nati(lJ'Ial

. ti'
COrreC
On

In Wednesday's Daily Sentinel
it was reported that Karla K .
Chevalier and Dean Cl(evalier filed
for dissolution in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas.
··
It should have been JqlOI1M thai
Karla K. Chevalier and Kirk Dean
Chevalier filed for dissolution. The
Daily Sentinel apologizes for the
omission.

,. ,

.,~Letters

to the editor

'..'

.••.. Were willing to go an extra mile
•'Dear Edi!Or
double shifiS, slqit a few hours and
'.

Sympathy for the smoker

that an outright prohibition of health hazar(! akin to such killers as
I am not a smoker. But I truly the privacy of r.our room.
sympathize with lhose who dare 10
Along sim1lar lines, there is a smoking would probably be found . asbesiOS and radon and PCP.
·: During the last weekend wealh- worked another shift.- The team light up these days. They very well bill to nearly oouble cigarette taxes. unconstitutional. So what we are
One can only imagine the poor
.:er emergency we were again work that was shown during this may be the most oppressed minari· This would follow a recent 250 observing in California and other smolo:~rs who find that their non·'reminded of the caring and dedicat- trying time is something that this ty group in this countiy.
is a backdoor campaign by smoking spouses are actin~ a little
' .states
: ed employees that this facility administrator and our paticniS will
As recently as two decades ago,
the anti-smoking lobby 10 effect a differently roward them ( 'What's
: GJ&gt;ometoy Nursing and Rehabilita- not soon forgeL
smokers could tilke a drag almost
de facto ban on smoking by that you're humming, dear?
·:tjiln Cenler) is fortunale to have.
I would like the residents of anywhere they pleased - air- pcrceh! tax hike imposed on tobac- exploiting the t~;ernment's power •Killing me softly?'"). Yct, there is
:::. Even though Meigs County was Meigs County to know that our planes,
restaurants, offices. Then co wholesalers. There also is a pro· · to tax and regu
not one documented case of a per'
:·not allowing travel on iiS roads, we employees were willing to go an 10 1972, the surgeon general posalro further curb robacco adverThe anti-smokers figure that if son dying from secondhand smoke,
·:hid elllployees brave blizzard con· extra mile for the loved ones that declared secondhand smoke a tising, as well as a bill that would state legislatures raise tobacco unless one counts the Sacramento
.'ditions 10 geliD work and see that you have eniiUSted to our care.
health hazard. In the ensuing years, make it easier for California resi- levies high enough and place waiter who was stabbed to death
::dur residents received the care they
BiU Bias, administrator 46 states have passed laws either dents to win liability awards from enough restrictions on when and after he insisted that a restaurant
.•qceded. .
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita- restricting or banning smoking in tobacco companies.
·where people can take a smoke, patron snuff out his cigareue.
:· . We bad employees who worked
lion Cenler public places.
To find a more Draconian treat- people will begin to find it too
EPA's designation of passive
Nowhere are smokers more ment of smoking, one must go all expensive or too inconvenient to smolcing as a Class A carcinogen (a
besieged than in California. At the the way back 10 the 17th cenwry, light up.
cancer-causing agerit for which
same ·time that Sacramento is cut- during which period several popeS
This very-near insidious anti- there is no safe level of exposure)
I. ' '
ting health programs for the poor made it a ·policy 10 excommunicate smoking crusade was given a brings to mind similar scares it
'•'
B1 The Assocl8ted
'
- no more wheelchairs or hearing smokers, while in China, Turkey, recent boost by a shockingly irre- raised about dioxin a«'d Alar, both
'• •
Press
:; ' Today ls .Thursday, MatCh 18, the 77th day or 1993. There are 288 aids or oulpatient'!lrugs- it is lav- Persia and Russia smokers were sponsible Environmental Prolection of which were laler found to be no
'\days left in the year.
·
·
ishing $24 million on radio and TV executed, flogged or hid their Agency report. EPA declilred thai serious health risk.
;. Today's Highligbt in History:
commercials that portray smokers noses slit. Indeed, California's secondhand smoke is a leading ·
There is little disagreement
~ On March 18, 1837, the 22nd and 24th president of lhe United StaleS as Ol)ly slightly less anti-social than Department of Health Services cause of luna cancer in non-smok- about the unhcalthfulness of smolc·
~Grover Cleveland, was born in Caldwell, NJ.
' serial klllers.
boasiS proudly in ads that die state ers, causing some 3,000 deaths a .ing. But the cancer risk of second·
w
On this date:
Mea'nwh'ile, . ihe California is "the tobacco industry's official . year.
hand smoke appears 10 be negligit Ia 1766, Brilain repealed the Stamp Act
Assembly is considering a comple- nightmare.''
EPA's finding is a clear eiwn- ble at most. Stale govemmeniS will
~ • In 1909, Einar Dessau of Denmark used a shonwave transmitter to ment of anti-smoking bills. The
One needn't be a smoker to plc of bad science being used to do a great injustice to Ameriea's46
;•*vene wilh a government radio post about six miles away in what's most odious - at least from a civil wonder
whether the anti-smoking JUstify politically correct p()Jicy. million smokers if they all but ban
•!llllleYed 10 have been the fD'St broadcast by a " ham" opttator.
libertarian perspective - would crusade is going too far. ~ile the The ageilcy reviewed II American smoking on the basis of the most
~ Ia 1922, Mohandas K. Gandhi' was sentenced in India 10 six years • outlaw smoking in all public and goal of a smoke-free America may studies of spouses of smoken. In , spec:iOUJICientiflc evidence. •
~erll for civil disobedience. (He was released afler serving two
p~ivate buildings, except resibe admirable, the means by wbich 10 or the illudies, researchers found
Joetph Perklu Ia a columnist
~f
.
.
dences. Say you own a filling sta- states like California have endeav- 110 statistically significant incrases for The San Dle1o Vnlon·Trl·
~ ~ 1931, Schick Inc. marketed tho' fD'Stelecaic razor.
tion. You couldn't even ,smoke in ored to achieve this end are quile in cancer, and in one they did. That buae lind 1 sylldlcated writer for
I! Ia 1937, more than 400 people, mostly children, wer:e killed in a gas your own office. Say you checked disturbing.
• ·
one study' is 'the basis on which NtMJIIper Enterprise Assoc:Ja.
.,411.,..oon • a ~ehool in New London, Texas.
.
imo a hotel. You couldn't smoke in
The
anti-smoking
crowd
knows
EPA
declared passive smoking a tlon•
-

Joseph Perkins

.

. ·[~ [foday in history

..

II

. weeks ended March 13, up frOJD
353,250 during the period ended
one week earlier.
Still, the moving average's level
was far better than a year ago,
when it was hovering around
450,000.
. .
In announcing the fasler reporting time for claims on W~y,
Labor Secretary Robert B. Rei~h
said the department had impro~
iiS automated process of counting
claims.
,
"This will enhance our abiJ!iy '
to spot emerging trends, which in
tum will help us moniror the pulse
of lhis Dation's economy," he said.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday's admissi0£1S • Mae
Durst, Racine.
· Wednesday' s discharges Howard Damroo,l'llmeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
March 17 discharges- Lewis
Hughes, Lenora Mooney. Sharon
Spears. Mrs. Michael Stearns and
son, Charles Bowen, Eldon
Kraeuter, Valorie Clonch, Blumey
Swaney, Stephen Harris, Ruth
Avner, Sherri Grady, Mary Montgomery, Michelle Beaver and Elizabeth Davis.
March 17 bir!lh. - Mr. and
Mrs. William Wells, daughter,
Long Bot10m.

Mez'gs announcements-·-

Sarah Overstreet

sors, but almost every member of
poth parties wound up as a cosponsor.
Some said the proposal, which
went nowhere last year, gaineil
suppon when a voter-initiated law,
overwhelmingly approved Nov. 6,
limited lawmakers 10 eight years
of service.
•

Condnaed !'rom pqe 1

A four-week moving average of
claims. which many analysts consider a more reliable indicator of
labor market uends than the
volatile weekly numbers, hit a 15week high of 359,750 for the four

a

How do you take a' medium- remembers Barbara Lucks, a had executives tell us they bought
The Lady Bears had the highest :
sized Midwestern university Springfield mar·keting executive tickets just to get rid of us. We average auendaiiCC of any women's ;
women's basketball program aver- who accepted Wynn's challenge to knew if we ever ~at them there. basketball team in the nation this .
aging 741 spectators a game and hel'p build local fan following. they'dbehQOked.'
season, drawing nlorelnonegame :
build to an average of 7,204
Springfield realtor Carol Jones than six of the women's teams in
screaming, stomping, wild-eyed
had the idea of buying several hun- the Missouri Valley Conference
fans a game- in only six years?
drcd tickets and giving them away, drew all season. Another MVC ~·
Recipe: Take one major Texas
and several' of the group followed women's team, Southern Illinois.- :
women s team that had increased Conradt told the Lady Bear boost- her lead. "We told them .10 talk it with 24,000 enrolled to SMS{]'s :
auendance tenfold: one women's ets what had worked at Texas. up over coffee," Wynn sa_ys. 20,672 -averages just 531 . a '
alhletic director who believes that, Then Wynn asked SMSU mark~t- "When the men are standmg game. The Lady Bears even beat :
even though her school is half that ing instructors to give them some around talking about sporiS, pull the extremely popular SMSV :
size, her team can do it, too; and a more tips. Next Jane Meyer, a I.,ady out a couple of tickets and say, men's team for highest.game allen- :
group of women who are mad as Belji'S fan and the ow!)Cr of a radio 'Here-come."'
.
dance of the year, with 9,194to the.;
hell at the short shrift given station, agreed 10 broadcast games.
Darlecn Anderson, owner of men's 9,145.
women 's sports. Stir. Let them
"We tried 10 get the community SPringfield fitness centers, rememAs he travels around )1\e couri- :
loose on the community. Get out of to know the Lady Bears," Wynn bers when it wasn't always easy 10 try, Bruce Mason," the Big Eight ,
the way.
says. Coach Cheryl Burnett went give the tickets away: "One man and Missouri Valley Conference·:
In the mid 1980s, Southwest on the stump: the team had fan laughed in my face. The only expe- supervisor of officials, hears people •
Missouri State University's Lady breakfasts, autograph sessions and 'rience he'd had with women's talking about what's happening at •
Bears games in Springfield, Mo., post-game cookie receptions. They sjioriS was his daughter's team in SMSU. "They're surprised a .;
drew a few hundred fanS' who could also gave tickets away 10 elemen- high school, when they wen: more school the size of Soulhwest is out· '
hear their own applause echo tary-school studeniS and their par- worried about how their hair drawing the big-name schools," .
throughout the school's 8.858-seat ents. "That was one of the most looked. He went to a (SMSU) Mason said while watching the •
arena. To try to turn things around, successful things we did," Wynn game and lhen came back and apol- · Lady Bears win their conference
SMSU women's athleti~ director, says. "That would bring in 6,000 a ogized. He said he'd had no idea title. "I tell 'em, 'Southwest has :
Dr. Mary Jo Wynn, rounded up a game, and by bringing their kids, they were playfug at that level."
done a good job of promoting. • ;
group of local women executives the parents got involved."
Word spread and more men Women's basketball's main prob- •
The executive women armed began coming to Lady Bears Jem is just that it's underex~sed. :
; EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and cotum- and invited Coach Jody Conradt
from
the
University
of
Texas
to
tell
themselves
with tall:: and tickets. games. Soon lhey were buying sea- People don't realize how exc1ting it :
1' gist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
them
how
it
had
built
women's
They
had
contests
among them- son tickets. The SMSU women is."
.....;
::pational politics for more than 30 years. .
basketball
crowds
in
Austin.
selves
to
see
who
could
sell
the
made
it
to
the
NCAA
Final
Four
Sarah
Overstreet
is
a
syndi:
I" •
"Jody assured us that they were most corporate tickets. Lucks says last year and sold 3,552 season · cated wr!ter for Newspaper
right where we were at one time," they "were just shameless. We've tickets for 1992·93.
Enterprise Association.

by House

Rep. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron.
beoame sponsor of the House bill
afler he and Rep. Randall Gardner,
R-Bowling Green, introduced similar proposals. The House is controlled b.l' DemocraiS, who can control authOrship.
· ,
The bill went to the floor with
Gardner and five others co-spon-

EMS responds to four calls

basketball is winning fans

.

While the cold moved in, the
storm front that brought the
renewed snow and nd n to the
storm-battered East moved offshore. Mostly sunny skies were

Court of Common Pleas: Diana
, Lynn Staats, Syracuse, and John
David Staats, Middlepon; William
Quickel and Rebec;ca S. Quickel,
both of MiddleporL
In addition, a divorce was filed
by Jody M. Gardner from James M.
Gardner, both of MiddleporL
Lori R. Bailey, Mason, W.Va.,
was pled a divorce from Clinton
J. Dalley, Long Bottom.
· Charlene Mllrie Meadows. was
granted a divorce from Charles
Edward Meadows. In addition,
Charlene Meadows last name waS
restored to her maiden name of
Cadle.

--Area de.aths--

Women~s

Dally Sentinel ~· . 3

air wil~ ~oye into region Friday ·

~~will ~ mostly clear over Oh10

MICH.

The

.

COLONY THEATRE
10NKIHT

JEAN-CLAUDE \(AN OAIIME IN

NOWHERE TO RUN

R

STARTIIIG FRIOAY
IIEL GIBSON II

FOREVER YOUNG PO
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
AI.SO SHO-O AT 1:30

.

FilL, SAT., SUN.

JEM

a

MIDE VAN DAIIME '"
R
ADMISSION SUO
U£0123

NOWHERE TO RUN

Stocks

Lottery results

GET A LOW
PRICE TAG ON
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• lasts Jonger. needs fewer
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New York, Now York 10011.

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RUTLAND FURNITURE~ .

"

,,
&lt;I

'

I

11

�)
Thursday. March 18,1893

Page • T11l Dally Sentinel

.•

NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP 1993

portS·n.

Onily St ~ nliiwl

IIMII2D-ZI

S

"'t El l

2nd Round :

Roglonol

linate

S.mlllnolo

111 Round :

Marcl1 20-2 t

March II- J9

;

: EAST

M • T-..
lllrdt 19 a. Z1

P'

7

'

.

-. -

B~, The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, March 18, 199a
~

·Atkins hosts club meetini:h

1------·--·,

- . , N,C.
lkdl 25 l 21

The March meeting of lhe Star
Garden Club was held at the home
of Pauline Atkins.
For devotions, Mrs. Atkins
chose "On the Wings of the
Pr&amp;ycr," ~ selection from aarriet
Stemer R1ce. She also read ''Today
is SJl!in~" and "March a Mild CaL"
V~mia Nelson reported on the
topic Rhubarb - Fust Fruit of
Spring." She noted rhubarb is a
very easy fruit to grow . When
planting, put cow manure in the
hole before placing the plant, then
mulch wilh cow manure both in the
sprin~ and in the fall. She also
menuoned keeping dock away
from the rhubarb plants js very
1mportanL
Neva Nicholson discussed
"New Daisies to Get Grow)ng."
Daisies are hardy perennials. She
named some varieties that are easy
to ~row. The _Shasta daisy has
White petals with yellow centers.
Cone flower has pink petals with
rich brown cone centers. Gloriosa
copper gold petals radiate from a
dark center and coreopsis are a rich
golden flower. Daisies wUI grow in

Eoot A'"-..J, N.J.
Morch 26 &amp; 28

SyrKYM,N.Y.

~­

Mon;i119&amp;21

-.:h 11&amp;2D

CAI'IP.

'r' 31 \

, ~~ STEPHANIE OTTO

AIMEE MILLS

. Bland, Marks share top honors

Otto, Mills selected
Division
IV all-staters
,,

Ill, Lovlo

More!&gt; 25 &amp; 27

l•

By RUSTY MILLER
Here's the 1992-93 Associated
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A Press Division IV ail-Ohio girls
pair of juniors - Ashley Bland of basketball team, selected on the
Zanesville Rosecrans and· Arnie recommendations of a stale panel
Marks of Jeweu-Scio - share the of sports writers and broadcasters:
leam: Lori Reinhard, FOIIOiil St. Wen·
top honors in Division IV of the dcUn.Flnt
Set~:lor,l3J ~tJ per t•mc; ·
1993 Associate!! Press all-Ohio Ashley5-foot·ll,
Bland, ZanlavWe Rotet:rt.n~, 5-7, Jr., 20.!;
gir~!:fh school basketball team Amio Ma.rk1, Jcwatt-Scio, S-9, Jr., 21.0; Kim
!Ia• C........_ 5-10, Sr.• t9.S: lcmy Lomheft,
rei
today.
Dol1a1. 5-11, Sr. 17.0; Sarah DeLoyc, Fon LoThe 5-foot-7 Bland averaged nmic, 6·2, Sr., 19.S; Sheila Flint, South
Clurle~lon Southcallem, ,6-2, Sr., 23.1; EmilJ
20.5 points, 6 rebounds. 6 assists Harnrric:M,
Fnnld'ort Admi, S·ll, Jr., 21.1.
and 6 steals a game while leading
Second tt•m: Noceea LeAl&amp;, Gat• MiJb
Gilmour, 5·1, Sr., 17_3; Angie Baabwy,llonvilk,
defending champion Rosecrans to 6-0,
,Sr., l~L5; Heather Mu1en~c~ PiubllrJ
the state tournament ooce again.
F~~d 5-tl,Sr.,ll.~
cFGZ"M
The Bishops (24-2) meet 5OUt.n ....... ei\CID Southeu\em, 5·11, Sr., 17.7;
llppws.ioloVolloy,S-I,Ir., 19.0.
Danville (25-1) in a semifinal at 4 0-H..Wy,
Third ltiJ!II: Lctnno Hida, Vr,r; kio&amp;a
n•
p.m. Thursday at St John Arena, Vallcy,5-I,Jr.,19.1; JldieCamell.
5-1, Sr., 14.0; Tooya Mille~~', a.tia ltiwith Upper Scioto Valley (25-0) CnstYiew,
h!1d, S-5, Sr., 14.0; Carolrn Doyle, Marion
taking on Ouoville (20-5) at 2 p.m. Catholic:, S-9, Sr.; 1~.1; Staej Riley, Meehl~
S-S, Sr., 24.1, San Pwhaff', Maria SICia
The winners meet in Saturday's 11 bug,
Marien local, S.S..Jr., 19.9.
a.m. lille game. ·
_ Co-plaren at U1e JUri Aahley Blaftd,
Bland was a second-team aii- ZancllviDo ROICClllll; Am.ic Mub, Jcwca-Scio.
C - Gl Uoe year: ...,. Nub. Z...rillo
Ohioan last year.
R.a~eerana; Pea Miller, Canal WinchOitll'; Tom
· Tile 5-9 Maries averaj~ed 28 Andcy. Sprinpoold Colhollc.
Spodal ........
·pomts, 11.5 rebounds, 6 assiSts, 6.3
KoUba Berry. Lonia a..r.;.w; Alea ~.
steals and 3.2 blocked shots a Ncwbwy: Nicky n....,, Bedfonl Olond; lcMifcr
Cuyohop lila.: Krilty Lalldla, w..,...
game. A third-team all-state choice Combo,
dcn.ce; Natalia Du•ell1 Fruldla Fwr•att
a year ago, she also hit 36 three- Cr"nJ Samanth• McGraw, Jr(ew lolton;
STEPIIANIE OTTO, REEDSVILLE EASTpoint shots.
Jamie Hannlna. H~tnloek Mllllr; s.a..nThe coaches of the year. based ERN;
tha Gctm~, RiJjli.~MI\-Lewi.l; lhoob JlckhS . Meyer, Findla)ll.b
on the recommendations of a state cr, WM Un&amp;ly
Kami ROder, Norwalk St. Paul;
media panel, were Larry Nash of ert)I·Btnton;
Nicolc.lboc*blnk. Ncwllt Cllbolic: Laun Bwns.
Rosecrans, Peg Miller of Canal Milford Ccnler Foirbanka: Mary IJomi..,.;cb. Meold; lo&lt;ti Dobrlntl&lt;y, Eut c..""' u.. ~­
Winchester, and Tom Ansley ·of Don
no, LawcU-ville; Lari Kia.Lnau, SDllthin&amp;ton
Springfield Catholic.
.
Cbalker; Jodi HtU, Stnhl'filll Sb~~nandoab;
~ The only losses by Nash's RoseStacey BQnJini, New Philadelphia TW1carawa1
Catholic; Einily Mountain; Bellaire St . John;
c!ans team came in close games to SoephWe
Moyer, Beo~~M~~e..
Division II state IOWTlament qualiHonorable mendon
Clrunbo, !Cirlle~ An&amp;io Bu.., Lofi:er. Millersburg West Holmes. rain lennifa
Sue Mclteal, ThCimp50n LodpMiller. in her first year as the head mont;Cleamaw;
Tunmi• Dnilo, Ricbmund H~.t.; Cumcrl
coach, took over a 4-18 team and Shay, ThampMD t.dpmont.
Chrluy Hla&amp;ln~a.., Frankfort Adtna;
w'ent 13-7 even lhough injuries re- Kendn
Marti•, Porllmoulh Clar; AIMEE
dUced the roster to seven ptarers at MILLS, RACINE SOUTHEANi Amber BIIDlDn1 Franklin Furnace GrttDj Jun Zellnakl 1
OI\C point. Ansle)l led Springfield
Notre Dame.
Catholic to a 16-4 mark, the Porurnouth
Angie Eaqop. Sorinafield C.lhoti.; Tori lim·
sqhool's fu-st winning season since ley, Covin~; Aniie fchillins. Iacbon Center;
Holli' Sbappic, R1o~aaia; Rcaan Shipmaa, Cin .
1982.
.
Mad.U.; S1rah Willlama, Cin. Summit Counll)'
: Selected to lhe frrst team along O.y,
Abby Mihuc, Ed.......: S"'!!b DeWolfe, Dd'&gt;
wiJh Marks and Bland were: Fosto- """Ayemillo;
Rodiol.,...._ o..p. Cudinol
riq SL Wendelin 5-11 senior Lori Suiw:h; Janelle S~o~nell:, Cruillne; Sheila K.nim.,
New W11hin11D" 8\~Ckeye Cmval; IC.ri.la.a 'I'ho,Reinhard. 5-l 0 senior Kim Hess of 117U,
Convoy CrtlllVicw; Triaba McDaniel, LcipCenterburg, !r-11 senior Jenny oc.
May Bowen, Canal WinebOI&amp;er, Carey HoldLambert of Dalton, 6-2 senior t:'l· Colwnbul
T-. of Lif~ KriN'llonlo Dtnvillo;
Sarah DeLoye of Fon Lor3mie, 6-2 St.ori love. Ccnterbura;
Valerie Thimmel, Lin·
senior Sheila Flint of South ....., FiJhcrCotholi&lt;:.
Kellie H...,.., Mdlonold; B&lt;d&lt;y C.mpbdl,
Charleston Southe;lstem, and Emi- Lardatown;
IU. Cllvan•c, Eut CanlOn; AU.ha
ly Hammond, a S-11 junior from Hable, Colwnbiana Cn~tview; Chv Milharich.
Conland Maplewood; Stcpla Fr)', Dahon;
Frankfort Adena.
Slephanie Cn~ard, SalincriDo Southern.
·Reinhard shot 64 percent on
Sld'anie SLOVam~t, SuaaKreek Guaway, len·
ny Hw::her, Orayavillo Skyvuc; Chruty Waller,
two-point shots while averaging W
aledotd; Beth Jacobi, Jcwcu.Scio; Amy Ttt·
23:3 points, 4.9 steals and 2.3 as- man, :z..nc...,ille RO&amp;CCUnl.
sisiS a game. Hess averaged 19.5
pOints. 6.8 rebounds and 5.6 assists --Sports briefs-and Centerburg went 70-18 during
Footbau
her career.
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
:Lambert managed 17 points and
I t rebounds a game and had 960 York Jet.s acquired quarterback
rebounds to. go with 1,235 career Boomer Esiason from the Cincinpoints. DeLoye scored 19.5 points nati Bengals for a 1993 third-round
a game to go with 7.5 rebounds, draft choice.
The uade came one day after
w.hile Flint averaged 23.1 points
free-agent
defensive end Reggie
and 8.1 rebounds for the state poll
White
visited
Ute Jets'-complex and
champions. Hammond's average
said
the
chances
of him signing
was 22.1 points a game.
.
with
New
York
would
be enhanced
:The second-teamers included
by
the
presence
of
a
veteran
quarG~tes Mills Gilmour's Noreen
terback
like
Esiason.
Lentz, Angie Banbury of Danville.
Esiason, who will be 32 next
Heather Massengale of Pitsburg
month,
played nine years in CincinFranklin Monroe, Carrie Ferguson
nati,
leading
the Bengals to the
of South Charleston Southeastern
AFC
championship
and a herlh in
artd Upper Scioto Valle.y's Gwen
the
Super
Bowl
in
1989.
He lost the
Harley.
starting
job
late
last
season
to rook:Third-team selections were:
ie
David
Klin~ler.
U"anne Hicks of Urper Scioto ValLOS ANGELES (AP) - Steve
le9, Jaclde Cannel of Columbiana
Onmayer,
director of football operCrestview, Berlin Hiland's Tonya
ations
for
the
Los Angeles Raiders,
Miller, Marion Catholic's Carolyn
said
serious
discussions about
Doyle, Stacy Riley of MechanicsToronto
Argonauts
star Raghib
burg and Sara Puthoff of Maria
"Rocket" Ismail will begin shortly
SU:irl Marion Local.
with agent Bob Woolf.

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ROUIJ*It, Ill.

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Moldl11&amp;20

. WILL RE·OPEN FRIDAY, MARCH 19 .
•
AT NOON
•
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,ROCK AND ROLL WITH THE BAND
•

·

ing, Bruce May, Lloyd Blackwood, Jim Hill, Wi'lliam Middleswarth, and Larry Kennedy. Not present for the picture were
Yvonne Young, Lillian Moore, Paul Patterson, and Frederick
Goebel.

At the beginning oflhis century, Meigs County. There were 6
tuberculosis was so rampant lhat it reported cases of tubercu!Qsis in
was the leading cause of dealh in Meigs County during 1992. Howlhe United States, accounting for ever, the gQOd news is that lhe
means to control and ln:at rubercuabout 10 percent of all deaths . .
losis
is here and now. Twenty six
Up until the 19th century the disease was often referred to as "con- patients were prescribed treatment
sumption." Since lhe cause of the and medication lhrough our office
.disease was not known prior to this past year. Tuberculosis .treat1882 and it was not known how lhe ment is important!
Tuberculosis is a communicable.
disease was spread. no specific
and
contagious disease caused by
.methods in ln:atment or prevention
were )XISSible. ·
'
bacteria. rut;~:fs baci,Jius, lhat
from person to
Patients .were placed in a hospi. are usually
person
lhrough
the
air. When peotal called a silpatorium. At that
ple
with
IUberculocis
of the_respira·time, in 1885, treatment in the
tory
uact
cough,
airborne
infecsanatorium primarily consisted of
tious
particles
are
produced.
If
bed rest. good food and fresh air.
Isolaling die patient from the com- lhese' bactcria an: iahaled b oWr
cause an lnf~lhat
munity, .Ved as a measure to cori- people,
~.~·of tl!e.c:li.ll"4'1".- MillY.

....

•

2!?
•••
..., .

ease:

1oftJiOI'I "' ' ~t iC

SlM

U'''"ri'''~i1Mf'''

2~

••

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'.
.,

.."-.
,,

..,....

-'

1?3 ...

!1..11

·Biosphere bugs
ORACLB, ,.\riz. (,A.P) - More

' predatorY b.igs to fighl~r pe&amp;ts

·,

.,,•

will be taken inside Bi
ero 2,
the experlmelltal enclo
habitat
where sc:lentlate had hoped to
spend two years IICiicd Inside.
Predatory mites were put Into
the ateel-and·glass suuctur.e in
OciOber 1D 1111 bcoad mitei and I!Pid_er mitel that rl\Oa&amp;ed bean and
pOiato Dlanta. Now lhe predaton
cannot be found. They may 'have
gone Into blberatton, said Jim
J.,itslnger, an entomologist ·

•

.-.

10:00 P.M.·2:00 A.M.

IPEK lEVEN IAYI A WEEK

$2.00 Cover.
•You must be.21 and have a
valid 1.0. to enter.

1:....... ,,........................ ,,.... ........

--:I:IOut.IDipJIL ...illlj _ , _ ,

IIWPIUI

..... .

2111 "'::: llold

U*cli:?J~ats'~~~f=

patients aied, and many olheii
not dev~ a clinical illness
StaYed years or even dtcades in the do
because
the
y's immune sysu:m
sanatorium. Some fortunate indibrings
the
infection
wider control;
viduals were cured by their natural
however,
·infected
people
do develbody defenses· and were able lo
op
a
positive
reaction
to
a tuberreturn to their hotnes; The sanaroriculin
skin
test.
The
infection
can
ums remained the centerpiece of
for
years,
perhaps
for
life,
persist
tuberculosis conuol efforts until the
late 1960's and early 1970's. By and infected persons reniiin at risk
that time, severallandmatk events of developing diseasr at an:r time,
had occurred which enabled tuber- especially if lhe immune system
culosis patients to be treated pri' 'becomes weakened or lowered in
some way.
marily on an outpatient basis.
Key elements to effective ~ber­
In 1882, Robert KQCh, a German scientist discovered Mycobac- culosis control arc cooperative
terium tuben:ulosis or the "tubercle efforts that produce early diagnosis
bacillus," lhe bacteria that causes · and rapid reporting of suspected
tuberculosis. .He prepared tuber- and known cases to the localruberculin, an extract prepared from cplosis office. The law requires
ldlled tubercle b&amp;cilli in 1890. This reports within 48 hours.
soon became the basis.for the · Each physician, dentist. patholotuberculin sldil test which remains gist or nurse, as well as the su~­
to Ibis day, an important diagnostic tendent, administralor, or any other
tool. In 1934, PPD (Purified Pro- person in any institutioo, school or
tein Derivative) was introduced and day care center is responsible for
provided a more reliable tool for reporting suspected cases or tuberculosis.
diagnosing tuberculosis.
Confidentiality is indeed fol· In '1895 !be "x-ray" was discovlowed
when teporting cases, and
ered by William Roentgen, and for
is the only means to
reporting
thc. fii'St time, the disease process in
the
least
possible spread of
assure
the lungs could be visualized.
Ute
disease.
·
By the mid 1940's, drugs were
In cooperation w.ith nursing
being di~vered for ln:atmen• of
homes,
we have estalilished poll~
tuberculosis. By the early 19~tl's,
cies
that
help maximize protection
lllultlple drug therapy had been
for
groups
that have lhe greatest
introduced. Tuberculosis had
risk
of
developiiig
tuberCulosis. In
liecome a treatable and curable dis.
1
992,
313
contacts
wcte made in
Thcae same drugs are being
hospital
and
extended
care faciliused effectively in the treatment of
ties.
•
tubereulosiaiOday.
Due to the serious risk of nosDespite all these advances,
. tuberculosis remains a public mission, and lllbertulosis exposure,
health problem. In the United ~n:aonent services we provided free
Statea qycr 24,000 new cases were to lhe residents of Mei~s County
reported_ia 1m with Ohio having who need them. The Me1g5 COWitf
)4S new cases. Since 1985, the TubiCICim~is and Heallh Clinic il
.downward trend has stopped and
marked increases in tuberculosis
have OCCIIITed in certain popula- .
tiona. High rates of tuberculosis
exist among persons with HIV
infection, foreign born. akohol and
intravenous drug users and newly
i~fected persons. (Persons who in
the past have had a negatiVe tuberculin skin test and nowllave a positive reaction to . lhe PPD or Mantoux skin lat.)
. ~ i11 here - ¥ES_.:..i!.t

,_
....
Cli'•fl .....

-3''
1
L.lfl ...

'amu

· ~ . ~

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..
EXECUTIVE DIREC-·
TOR : Constance Karschnik, &gt; . ~
R.N. IS executive' Director for'··· ··
the Meigs County Tubercula- _ ,
sis Office: She does skin test• .. "
ing, contacts those suspected :. ·
or infection; holds clinics, .'
works with the chest clinician . .. and is the liaison between t~ " c,
.physician and the·patieut.
· ·'

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i4ABKIII

QUALITY AT THE TURNPIKE BEST PRICE!
10 REASONS TO BUY MARK Ill

1. LEADER 1H SAFETY·

~. '

1.• • •

.

The Members and the areas they
tepnsenure:
. Lloyd Blackwood, Chester,
Olive Jlld Orange Townships;
. James Hi~!. Syracuse Village;
Dr. Larry Kennedy, Middlepon
Village; Dr. Melanie Weese.
Racine VIllage; Rev. William Middleswarth, Sutton, Letart and
Lebanon Townships: Frederick
Goebel, O!ester, Olive and Oraaae
Townships: Paul Paaerson, Rutland
Village; Bruce May, Salisbury,
Salem and Rutland Towubipe;

"'

..' .

NEW" 1993 F DCONVERSION VANS!

Commlsllionen.

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funded solely through the Tubell:u- McGuire, Salisbury, ~alem and
, losis Levy with no fc:detal or state Rutland Townships; Yvonne
mooies cciming into the program. Young, Bedford, Scipio and
In order tor the clinic 10 continue Collilllbia Townships; Ida Diehl,
provl~ its' many services, we Pomeroy Village: Lillian Moore,
will n · Yll\ll continued support. Pomeroy Village; Joanne Williams,
Taxpayers will be able to save Suuon, Lebanon and Letart Townmoney if services are carried out ships; Maida Mora, Board Consul~
CHEST CLINICIAN - Dr.
now fqc prevention and .treatment tan~
.Roy L. Donnerberg of Columof t)lis disease. A greater expense
Literature on tuberculosis and · bus conducts chest clinics at
,will occ .. if IUbercu1osis is allowed other respiralory disr•srs is availthe Meigs County Tuberculoto continue uncheckled and muldple able at our office located on the
sis Clinic office in the Meigs
deaths CO!Ild occur. The .SO (one secood floor of lhe Multi-Purpose
Multi-purpose building on ·
half of one mill) levy wa,; renewed Building, Mulberry Heights,
Mulberry Heights. Here be
in 1991, thanks to your support.
Pomeroy~ Ohio. If you have ~:lj
interprets chest x-rays and
• We tue commitled to the objcc- questions. please_feel free to,
makes recommendations for
tive of eliminating tuberculosis by 992-3722.
treatment if indicated.
the year 2010. We need your con~ .
tinued S1l)ipOit to make this a joint, ·
community effort. . ·
·
. , ~h of WI must recpgnize that
this Iii a world-wide, state-wide,
and yes. county wide problem. We
must continue to have a good pi'Ogram 10 overcome obstacles and
fully realize ruberculosiJ il1 a lhreal
' 10 each of us.
Iii 1992, there were 4,888 offiCe
contacts and 3,590 skin tests
administered. We made 683 home
visit&amp; and oulaide offiCC contacts,
and 96 school visits and ·contacts.
Seven chest clinics were conducted. Rcr L. llonneiberg, M.D.,
Chest Clinician, Columbus, Ohio,
had 123 clinic visits and conferences. 1bere were 609 chest x-rays
. obtaiaed and recommendations .
were made for treatment if indical'
ed after evaluation bY the clinician.
There were 46 skin test clinics
0
held throughout the county for the
convenience pf tho public. The
Meigs County Tubercu1osia and
Health Clinic staff has enjoyed·
meeting and ·being able to serve our
~dents l&gt;y providing outclimes.
·
The Tuberculosis and Health
Office is guided by an advisory
board consisting of 13 members
appointed by the Meigs ·County

::'1&gt;:

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Tuberculosis - in the. 20th century

TunnABrix

,,

ADVISORY BOARD • Members appointed by the Meigs
County Commissioners representing various sectionS of the county
serve on the Meigs County Tuberculosis and Health advisory
board. They are left to right, front, Sue McGuire, Joanne
Williams, Maida Mora, Ida Diehl, and Melanie Weese; and stand•

t •

:ftE WAftRIIG ROLE

a dry poor soil with full Sll!l!igbt:
and bloom ·July to frost and are ~
excellent for cut flowers.
: .:
Pauline Aticins gave some up;::
about "Lazy Strawberries. AR:example was a lady who had t
wooden fence lhat she wished to ·
beautify. She planted several vari- :
eties of strawberries near the fc:ncc. :
The green leaves, white blossoms
and red berries were a beautiful
sight and the fruit was used in short
cakes and rnannolades.
Neva Nicholson displayed
fon:ed blooms of pussy willow.
· The creed, collect and club
prayer were repeated in unison.
:
· The hostess, assisted by her daughter, Sharon Jewell, served
refieshments.
Others answering roll call were~
"A Good Idea for Care of House.
Plants During the Winter" were·
Martha C~apman. Allegra Will~ ·
Estella Atkins, Mildred Jeffers and ·
Waneua Radel:in.
:
The hint for the day was·
"Remove lhe mulch from spring
bulbs when all danger of late frost
is past."
:

FIRST TO CRASH TEST

2. ,, NAnoNAL RANKINGWIIH FORDicHEVAOLer/ooooE.

3. FINANCIAL STABIUTY83 MILUON DOlLARS.IN TOTAL FLOORPLAN CREDIT LINES,
,_ NAllONALLy RECOGNIZED AS THE HIGHEST DUALITY- LOW COST PIO:JDUCER "OUR
'· ;ztl WLUON DOlLAR PRODUCT UASUTY.
8. STABIUTY- PARENT COMPANY IN BUSINESS 46 YEARS (FOUNDED 1946)

INOUSTRY.

7. 24 HOURGUAFIANTEED PARTS Ol!liVERV FROM SERVICE.
8. QUICKEST PRODUCT QEUVERY IN THE INDUSTRY (WE ARE PRESENTlY BUILDING 825 VN&gt;IS A WEEK).
t. 217 QUAUTY CHECf&lt;SaY MIIRK 111 VEHICLE EXCEllENCE ANALYSTII.
1(!. READYTOSEllcONVEASION PIICKAGEWIIH 80 STN&gt;IDARO FEAT1JRES PRICED WELL BELOW THE INOUSTRIESAVEMGE.

�.

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

.

· Thursday, March 18,1993

Meigs Athletic Boosters' Youth Tournament
SIXTH GRADE BOYS

.

Thursday, March 18, 1993

Harrisonville

Mar.19- 8:10p.m.

Mar. 20 -2:20 p.m.

Bradbury/Wyatt

Middleport

\

•

Mar. 22- 8:10p.m.
Salisbu:.:..----'

By GEORGE ROBINSON
NEW YORK (NEA) - In a
season in which several major college blukctball felms were No. 1
for a while, individual talent
abounds. But the star that shines
the brightest is Indiana's Calbert
Cheaney.
· From an MVP performance in
the pre-seaS,on NIT through his
record-breaking senior year,
Cheaney kept the Hoosiers at or
neaJ: the top nationally . .He also
powered coach Bobby Knight's ru
team to the Big Ten tide.
Now l)te 6-foot·7 lfl forward is
being honored as lhe PJayer of the

•

Mar. 25 -7:0$ p.m.
Rutland:..,_.......,_ __.

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Pomeroy

Pomeroy

By The Assoelated Press
Three days after surgery, Joby
Wright made Ohio State hurt more
than his knee.
Wright,.·who tore a tendon,in his
·ri~h1 knee last week during the
Mid-American Conference tournament, was ,ecstaljc Wednesday after
·Miami of Ohio upset lhe B11ckeyes
56-53 night in the rii'Sl round of the

I

Mat'. 20- 3:40 p.m.
" · Salisb -

Mar. 23- 5:45 -p.m.
Rutland

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FIFTH GRAD-E BOYS

GIRLS

Bradbury/Michael

Mar. 20- 10:20 a.m

Mar. 19-5:30 p.m • .

Harrisonville

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NIT.

Miami became the first MidAmerican Conference school to
'beat Ohio State in a decade and the
rtrSt Ohio school to beat the Buckeyes since 1987.
·
"Mr rear end was so dght I was
breathtng out my ears," Wright
said of the final hectic minutes.
"We just wanred to win lhe game.
I'm not tripping; I'm just happy f~r

7:05p.m.

Harrisonville
Mar. 22- 5:30 p.m.
Bradbury/Meadows

Mar. 27 - 12:00 ""'";

Mar. 2Q-11:40 a.m. I - - - - -....
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Rutland

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Mar. 25-5:45 p..m.

.

Mar. 19-6:50 p.m.
Mar. 22 -6:50
Pomerov

~m.

• Raub averaged 27.4 points, 7.3 .
rebounds, 5.2 steals and 2.1 assists
wbilt shooting 50 percent from the
f~eld, $4 percent on three-pointers
and 88 percent 'at the line.
McMillen hit for 21 points, 7 reliounds, 5 assisis and S steals a
~C-1
•
~~ Blackstone

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was good for 22.1
~JC!i!ts and U1.9 rebounds a game
W!liiC shooling ss pertCnt from the
fiOJd and 74 percent at the line.
IJ1Icrty Union went 72-8 with her
ll die Uneup over her career.
- l11100t sbot61 pcrtent rrom the

veraifug 22 points and
a

•

011011

. Ponti, head-

~ge next year,

..... 25.5 1;10inll a pme on 54-'*'r~g.
.

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Manch.
Montross is "the best pure center" in the college ranks this year,
according to Packer. Raftery
agrees: "A hard worker- he's
improved his game a lot. A good
finisher, JOOd hands. He's compedtive as heck, just a solid, old-time
prototype center, physical, getting
the little hooks and j~p_ shots.''

.. '

Masltburn has probably received
moi-e ink than any other member of
this year's NEA AU-America team.
He led a Kentucky team that often
dominated opponents. Mashburn's
ability to do almost anything on

I

LIFESTYLE FURNIJURE SHOWCASE

Anniversar, Sale-

Beaver Eastern's Stollings named
Pivision Ill girls' player of the ye·ar
:
By RUSTY MILLER
: COLUMBUS, Ohio ,(AP)Bea"er ·· Eaftern 's Marlene
Stollings, who averaged 42.8 points
a garhe, has been chosen the player
of the year for lhe second straight
year on The ~iated PreSS-Division maU-OhiO Jearn released today. .
.
Stollings, a 5-foot-10 senior,
had another huge year to earn the
honor based on the recommendations of a Slate media panel. She
scored 1,022 points -just this seaSon - and totaled an aU-time state
record of 3,514 for her eareer.
The Ohio State signee got her
shots. but she also hit most of
them. She made 59.5 percent of all
of her field-goal attempts, including 67.2 percent of her two-point
Shots and 46.4 percent from threepoint range.
She also averaged 8.3 rebounds,
6.1 assists and 2.9 steals a game.
Third-team all-Ohio as a freshman, she made the first team for
the third year in arow.
The coaches of the year in the
division were Utica's Tom Russell,
. Denny Schrock of Doylestown
Chippewa and Coldwater's Charlie
Maier.
Just three years ago, Russell was
1-20 at Utica but went 20-0 this
season, the first unbeaten record in
school history. Schrock's four-year
mark says it all: 86-6. And Maier.
who has had teams win two of the
last three state championships,
went 19-1 and won a poll championship to run his career record to
285-69.
Joining Stollings on the first
team were: Coldwater's 5-9 senior
Jenny Raun, 5-10 senior Misty
McMillen of Newcomerstown, 6-0
senior Erin Blackstone of Balti·
more Liberty Union, 5-11 junior
Tpnya Smoot of Doylestown
Chippewa and 5-11 senior Holly
Porter of Cincinnati Wyoming.
Porter and Stollings were the
only repeaters from the 1992 first

·

1------•

Mar. 20 - 1:OOp.m.
B.

Salisbury
•

our team.'

second

Lisred on the
team were;
Dana Mullir,an of O....·"n, Slter-.
"""I"
wood -Fairv ew's Kacee-Enallsh,
Karla Kaelber ot Marion Pleasant,
Michelle Chavanne of Columbus
Grandview Heights, Atwater Wa• Shannon Beac h' Verler I00 s
sailles' Mechelle Po!hast and Jennifer Hall oC Felicity-Frantlin.
Here's the 1992-93 Associaled
· )S
. · · Ill All •Oh'10 gtr
Press DtVtSIOn
basketball team, selected on the
recommendations of i slalc ......
.......1:.1
of sports writers and binW"•tm:
Jlnt.laliu M•._. !L •
. ._. ~
..., J.f-11, Sr, G.l ....lt pw- _ ,
llaub. C 'fwd«, S-9, Sr., 'nA; Milly )il~fi'..,
No~ 5-10, Sr., 21 :- Brill= *m
Blldmat. Li.b.rl,- Uni-. 6-0, Sr., 22.h Tooya
SIDCJd, Do,launm Qippowa, S-11, Jr., 22.0;
Holly IW\a', Oa. Wyeiq. 5-_ll, Sr., 2SJ..
Second &amp;ea.: o.u MuWaan. Obcdin, 5-I,
J..,16.2;~-.---.5-3,

Sr., 2A.3; l.aU K-lba, ...,_ ......... 5-1, Sr.,
2.3.2; Mic:hclle Chnanna, Cgl•nnbow. Oraad'fiow
Haa., !i-3, Sr., 22.!1; Sbannoa BIRCh. Atwaw Wa·
totloo. 6-1, s.. 23.0: Moohd1o ......._
S-1, Jr.• 19.0; llaaitw H.o. Felicity Fn km, 510, Sopb., 20.4. ·

v-.

Tlilrd •-• Nicat. McCallum, Lore CilJ

.....

,,.

Corrie Hlokll, Proclonllll PllriMdllll...

l~·........ AlbiOf
A. =~tf.~~
~ Nlldt!Voller. tAo """ _,..,., M

'

T•lll&gt;r •

~:!":'!'rl:!";,~'di:'!J~.!;

bold• a ........ v - : Lod o~ooru.....
locklool Podlwor. Bllh Tlt1l1e,
hawk; Chriali Lauahbaum, NDrth RobiD•on
eo.- en..ron; Jonolf« c..~o, Culolio Mu-

s,_... -

C -';!:,

=:

::;c~g,::i
ManoGII;Chutlellbllor o.,t• .... Chioocw•:
Tm Amrich, Vi.Cin.a• )illhewr. Danl Piihley,

p-:::•-

VolloJ; Toni
w.umuo: iteri y...,,, Z.n•Yilla w..

ZolrTillo Tuteonw.,

,

inpn:.._,_B.._liaianLocal.

-

HCIUII"'blt 18tnd011

Kmtto. w-tcklifre; Erin """.,· Orwdl

Oraad Valley; .K.eUy HilOhcoc.k, AaCiov• ~,..~ Volll7; luolio ?- Lanio Cotloolic; .
Pall)' Hriicowc, AYGD; ltobin ~. Roct:r Ri't'er Lulhertl\., Weat; Liu Knall, Rocky Rivu
Luct-n W-.
Julie Hlalu. Rll:h....d Dalt:lou'd laut....I lra..JliiUar, ChUI&amp;c. Huatlaston,
llldd Eu&amp;ertln. C01l GroYt; lulu Cnwford.
-&lt;tlle-York;JomteC-.II,Ielpre.
Beth Collett, Clarbville CUnton-Maufo;
~ B~ MeU. NaniWl,
w.. Milllll t.m.-u.u-; Jadi Nollb. SpMa&amp;old K - Ridp; -Smith, ~JomWooWn
Valley View; TOIIJI Smi&amp;h, PelicitJ'"PrW:lio.
Kn.tina Belutloldt, Tinora; SttceJ Albta,

Michelle

Bacpn~~.

Wpfonl; Faisll Alkial, Lima C..tnl

l1wlal-

•

Vacation Bible School
Wor~shop

Starting at Reg. $798.00

Mi[[St.

.

Starting At Reg. $899.00
Starting Sale ·Price '439.00
All with deluxe Innerspring
mattresses.

-

·--._

.

~~-,

-

•DINETTES
Cherry, Oak, Tile
Nice selection
of styles
Starting

.

Sale $299.00

I

•SECTIONALS'

tLIVING ROO~ TABLES ,

\

'

Select. group;. oval cocktail table, drawer
·end tabla or oval end table. Oak_or cherry.

tBook§

Starting Sale-Price. $99;00

. ··

·

oOCCASIONAL CHAIRS
•WING CHAIRS
•RECLINERS
All Starting At Sale $198.00

992~657

FRIDAY. AND
SATURDAY.
.
MARCH :19 &amp; 20
12 NOON·S P.M.
David C. Cook, Gospel_Llgh' and
•
Standard Pultllshlng
EVERYONE WU.COJOI .

TVC FRESHMAN CHAMPS - Tbe Melp
Marauder freshman te11111 llalshed with a 15-2
mark on tbe seaaon and WOJ!Ihe Tri-VaUey Coufereace fretbm•a basketball tournameut with a .
45·38 win over Southern, Team members
Included lD the front row are (L·R) Paul Pullins,

The Meigs Marauder freshman
basketball ream, under lhe direction
of head coach Gene Wise and
assistant coach Britt D.odson,
recently wqn the Tri-Valley Conference freshman basketball tournameill held at Southern High
School.
Meigs, which finisl\ed at 15_-2
overall, rolled over Miller, and
slipped past Vinton and the' host
Southern team to claim the tide.
In the opener the Little Mamuders outscored Miller 23-2 in the
third period and rolled to a 62-32
victory over the Falcons. Meigs
opened up a 15-6lead at the end'oC
the first period and increased_the
lead to 26-1 S at the half.
.
Travis Abbott paced three.
Marauders in double figures with
15 points. Gary Stanley added 12,
and Donald Yost had 10. Other
Marauder scorers included Paul
· Pullins with seven and Herbie
Bush, Brent. Hanson and Travis
Curtis with five points each. Willie
Johnson added., three for the winners.
Jenney Abron. led Miller with·
nine. Teammates JOey Duffy,Jason
Fulk and Jeremiah Keller added
seven each.
In the second game Meigs
outscored ·Vinton 20; 11 in lhe 'third
period and held off the Vikings to
post a 47~ vicun-. Vinton held a
22-17, lead at the· hal£, but Meias
held a 37·33 lead headina into the
final period after the strons third
period. Stanley led Meigs with 16
points, Yost 13 and Abbott 10.
Bu1h was lhe~nl other Meigs
SCQIW. with eight
IS.
Thad Smitli I the Vikings with
18 polnta; and teanimate Jeremy
Ward added 14. .
:
In the cbamplonshlp contest
Mcip .lumPod oat on kip 1-4-6 after
one pirtod &amp;lid h~ld off the host
Toraad001 to polloi 4S·38 win.
Southem outscmd Mc!p 11-6 In
the second perlo!lto puu to within
20-17 a1 the bait. MCip ouiiCOred
Southern 10-8 in the third period
.and held a 30-25 1et1c1 hclldina into
the rma1 period.
Herbie Bush scored nine fourth

Starting Sale Price '399.00
Many styles, colors and fabrics to
.choose from. •

Starting At Reg. $1249.00
Startl~g Sale Price $899.00
.
'
'
. Choose1rom many Styles and
....
Q)lors stationary or motion. ·

Presented by:

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Annual
Dinner and Dance
SATURDAY, MARCH 27,1993
ROYAL OAK RESORT
STEAK DINNER-6:30,PM
DANCE-8:30 PM-MIDNIGHT
TICKETS: $20 per person
Tickets available at the
Chamber Office.

RESERVATIONS MUST BE IN BY
MARCH 19, 1993

Guest Speaker
Congressman Ied Strickland

All Items Subject
· · To Prior Sale
FRt:E DELIVERY
EASY CREDIT
TERMS
OPEN DAILY
9-6
FRIDAY9-8

••

COINII Of IU &amp; OUR nREDS
446·1045

..

~·

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'

-..

our

Willie Johnson, Brent Hanson, Travis Curtis,
Mark Mills alld Amos McCoy. Ia the second
row are Herbie Bush, Donald-Yost, Travis
Abbott, Steve Vance, Gary Stanley and Ryaa
Smith. Not pictured Is coach Geue Wise.

•

Meigs fresb~_en win.TV C championship

•SOFAS

•SLEEP SOFAS

ward David Vaughn was no small
tribute to their do-everything shoot·
ing fuard.
.
' He· s absolutely the best,"
Raftery says of Hardaway. "All
aspects of his game. This year, he'd
score, have to run the team on die
floor, then he'd have to score
again." Packer notes: "As· rar as
tDtal all-around basketball abilitr,
he may have as much as anyone m
the country."
. The collcg.e baskctba_u
ll players ·
who were awarded honorable mcntionbyNEA:
Centers: Vin Baker, Hartford;
Spencer Dunkley, Delaware; and
Acie Earl. Iowa.
Forwards: Josh Grant, Utah;
Grant Hill, Duke; GleM Robinson,
Purdue; and J.R. Rider, NevadaLas Vegas.
Guards: Travis Best, Georgia
Tech; Allan Houston, Tennessee;
Jason Kidd, California; Jalen Rose,
Michigan; Nick Van Exel, Cincinnati; and Rex Walters, Kansas.

FOURTH ANNUAL

thing

.I

•DOOR PRIZES
~ Come ln .and register for a
Cumberland Oak Ladder
Back Rocker, naa,rtlcal stripe
thrQW and·more. "
•We now have a nice selection of Southw&amp;st Pottery AU on sale now.

'

the 20-victory barrier without for-

..

!

.

CDiumhlo S111iaa Columbil; Teul Enot, hrTr.

Bld:oyo Trail, '·II, Sr•• lS.O; ~ Jtu.eieiL Cia.
Catholic; Mickie Froy, Mouat Bltnchard
SL &amp;.nud·EIImWOOII P\lloe. 6-0. Sr., 16.6;. T Riwrd&amp;la; Sanh HamilWin, C.Wia Mlrpmal;
Q;IJcn. B.....W.. ~ So-.. 20.0; lAmitto Pukin- , lvt-.7 All.....,, """'"son. Jle.lth, 5·1, Jr., 20.1; Suo Cbomol, Broak~ •
TNII 8~. w-. Jeftenon; llalllhw Dia.oD,
ftCld, 5-10, Sr., 11.2; Am7 Canlpll, Alt.., S••
0nnv1Ua; Amuldo IWI'P, Spot'llliiJilond; T~VIncOIII'S.. Maty, 5-10, Sr., 11.2; MJ Http-.
cia Llhudo, Uticl; l.awo l'otw, MottJRidplllo.
w• I - . , S-1, ...... :10-1.
lllai'J ' - Mlaaolltldp; Slwtnoa SoltPia,..-tiiMJWl--.. 11utJ. M•W..Ttolow;LvoN'-.R-;
Eutan.
a.- c.po, """'""""U.utod: s....,. Pspno.
Coubu or lhe ,.art Tom Ru...U. Utica; ·Oirlnl; Naaey HClU.Ilcllu., Waaua Kcnraedr, x.o.
Charlie Maier, ColdwaUir; O.U)' Schrock,
~eDeii......,,Cuyabop VaUey.Ouini&amp;nACidoDoy-... o;lr·_,-.
·
1111'·
_ . -lloo
,
Joy - · Caldwoll; Xtimno Ll'iat. lbmiMetinda Oiblon, Cobambia Sllbcm Columbia;
bal Rinr; Kriatie Pullie, Wellnille; JCelHe
Lynd1ay Prank, Midd.leriold Cardinal; Terri
Mellliaa. Z.n•rille Wut Mulkinaum; Hoidi
B--.
Nioolo b,-_ Falmow
Todd, Lon Ci17 Bact.,. Trail; Ttnille Bw1&lt;11u1.
Puk Faitvi.e.w; La1eaa c---. C... &amp;n.rirr.
Zouvillc TuiCUiwll V11lc.y; Miuy Spindler,
Debbie Huahu, Welli•11on; Joanaa Peilch,
BendrPonPrJ-.

MIDDL£P()Rl,

.

offense was a key.
"He is one of the most multitalented guys in the country," says
Packer, "a guy who a lot of JlCOille
think will be a No. 1 pick in the
NBA. " Raftery adds: " It's amaz.
ing how he can shoot and handle
the ball. He 's got a powerful,
(Charles) Barkley-!YP,'I game. Runs
well. Great strcnglh. '
As lhe floor leader of'Dute. the
defending national champ, Bobby
Hurley - coming off an outstanding NCAA tournament- had a lot
to live up to this season. AltltouP.t
the highly regarded Blue Devtls
were knocked off recently in the
ACC Tournament, it wasn't for
lack of floor leadership.
"It's incredible what be's ·
done," Raftery says of Hurley .
"He makes the break wort, the
half-court. He steps up for ,big
shots."
Hardaway was the mainstay of
Memphis State, a team that was
severely hampered by injuries.
That the Tigers lll8!U!8ed to break

P.'!k·" ·

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Pomeroy/Price ·

l

Mar. 27- 10:30 a.m.

.

Miami Redskins make history . .
in 56-53 victory over Ohio State ·

..

Harrisonville
Mar. 20 -9:00 p.m.

Center Eric Montross. a 7-foot 1965.
. junior at Nonlt Carolina.
"That's a great pick," says
Forward Jamal Mashburn, a 6- CBS-TV anal~ill Raftery, a forfoot-8 junior at KentuCky.
mer coach. "
· won (the SEC)
Guard Bobby Hurley, a 6-foot outright, which is a major accomsenior at Duke.
plishinenL He has a solid team, a
Guard Anfemee Hardaway, a 6- terrific passing team, unselfish.
·They don't waste motion and
foot-7 junior at Memphis State:
NEA's college b•Wtball selec- time... .
tions, made by a panel of sports
The 1993 NEA All-America
experts, were distributed to more college basketball second team:
than 600 U.S. daily newspapers.
Center Chris Webber of MichiEddie Fogler of Vanderbilt was gan,,a 6-foot-9 SOphOI!!Ore; forward
chosen as the 1993 NEA Coaclt of Rodney Rogers of Wake Forest, a
the Year. His team was nationally 6-foot-7 junior; forward Chris
ranked through most of the season Mills of Arizona, a 6-foot-6 senior;
.
sq uad:
won ait unexpected SEC tide, guard Terry Dcberc of Seton Hall,
' and
the school's first outright since a 6-foot-4 senior; and guard Bill
McCaffrey of Vanderbilt, a 6-foot- ·
4 junior.
Cheaney and Hurley were secon.d-team NEA All-Americans last
. year,
Raftery believes that Cheaney's
greatest strength is his abllil)' to get
free of defenders. "The other
things are more obvious, but the
Jamie Mahaffey scored 16 ·Arizona Staie. On Friday, Jackson reason he's able to do what he does
points and made Miami's last rwo State is at Connecticut, Houston is with the ball is because he moves
field goals. Scciit Belyeu led Miami at Texas-El Paso and Pepperdine is so well without it," Raftery says.
(21-8) with 18 point~ and Matt at UC Santa Barbara.
"~{cads his screens well,lcnows
Kramer added 10. Derek Anderson
Minnesota 74, Florida 116 ·
what type of cuts ·to usc. That's
paced Ohio State (15-13) with 15
AI Minneapolis, Vashon Lenard what nuilres the other stuff go."
points.
~ored 15 points and Randy Carter
Most of all, Raftery observes,
In other games, Minnesota beat added 14 for the Gophers (18-10).
Cheaney leads by example: "It'll
Florida 74-66, West Virginia
West VIrginia 95, Georgia 84
be a different way of beating you
defeated Oe9rgia 95-84, Rice
At Morgantown, W.Va., Per- each ,Ugh1 - 30 points one night,
downed Wisconsin 77-73, Okla- vires Greene scored 22 points and another night, running down a big
homa beat Michigan State 88-86, Tracy Shelton added 20 for· the rebound or stepping up defensively
and Southern Cal topped No. 25 · Mounlaineers (17-11), who led 48- for a big
UNLV90.74.
25 ear~y in the second half.
While
nted low-post centers
Tonight's schedule has Virginia
Rice 77, Wisconsin 73
were few and far between this seaCommonwealth at Old Dominion,
At Madison, Wis., David son, Tilt Heel pivotman Monb'Oss
Boston College at Niagar&amp;, James Holmes scored a career-high 32 emerg¢d as a major force in the
· Madison at Providence, Auburn at points, including a pair of free paint. He's an importjlnt reason
Clemson, Alabama-Birmingham at throws with 26 seconds left, as why Dean Smith's Nonlt ~
Alabama~ SL Joseph's at Southwest Rice (18-9) won after wasting a 13did so well, befoie falling short in
Missouri
State and
Georgetown
at pointlead.
the ACC Tournament in mid.
.
.
Year in college basketball by
Newspaper Enterprise Association.
Cheaney leads the NEA All-America tear.l for 1993.
" He has pl11yed ou~standing
basketball in every big game that
Indiana has had this year," says
CBS-TV hoops expert Billy Packer.
Cheaney finished with the Big
Ten career scoring marie. Many call
him the best flayer ever for Indiana, a schoo that has won five
national titles.
Here is the rest of NEA's 1993
All-America college basketball

In NIT first-round action,

Mar. 27 -9:0Q p .• m.

Mar. 27-1:30 p.. m.

The Dally SenUnei.-Paga-7

·NEA puts Indiana's Cheaney at top of All-American heap

•

FOURTH GRADE BOYS

Bradbury/McClure

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

_
period points to lead the Marauders each and Curtis with two.
to the win. Bush led all scorers
Jay McKelvey scored 12 to lead
with 17 points, with 15 coming in Southern, and Jeammate Ryan Marthe second half. Abboll added 10 tin added 11. John Hannon added
and Pulljns had eight. Other six, while Jamie Rizer, Nick Smith,
Marauders in the scoring column . Jason Shuler and Jay Day all added
were Hanson and Stanley with four two. Chris Proffiu added one point.

CY
TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

•••

How do.. aaplrln work? Reaeerchera at the Unlveralty of
Callornla find It blocka communlcllllon bei-n .,• .,.. and the
aplnal cord.
••,
Early reenrch Into bulimia by the National lnatltute of Mental
H•alth haa linked the problem to exceaalva level• of • brain
hormon•, vaaopreaaln. Next atap; aclei!tlata My, Ia devlelng a
medication.

•••
Similarly, In t..ta at 13 ~leal cent•rel the antldapreaHnt drug
•

Prozac proved efftiCIIve In reducing b ngHind-purge behav.lor.
Side effec1e - • milk.
·

•••

Th• federal Center• lor DIH•H Control Ilea noted a rlae In
occurrenca of rubella-iellll.,t birth 'deftiCII In children of women
Who were not veccln8ted aglilnat O.ma11 MeMIM.
··

.

(

• ••

.

What'e new In the world of IMdleln•? W• kMp up whh current
eventa, the bettar to eerve you Ill ...

'

....,...c:-::;~ :;:..,. •""

.........
.
. '"

---

,

WhenyougetaBankOne cases:That's an advantage
Home Equity Loan~we pick you don't get with other types
up the tab on closing costs th3t of financing.
' would nonnallyrun you hunStop byyournearestBank
dreds of dollars: You pay no
One and ask for a home equity
points,
no attomeis fees. application. ·
And no appraisal or title search
·Or call593-6681 orl-800·
feest~ither.
· . .
· 677-4994 ifyou prefer. In clos. Get your home equity loan ing, it won't cost you a thing.
now and your timing couldn't
be better. Because interest
rates are still at some of the
lowest levels'iri years.
.
And as You pt'OQably know, · Whatever it takes:
interest on home equity loans
Bank One, Alhens,NA
Memberfl&gt;IC
is tax deductible in most

-·
BANKEONE.

1m tt IC01ttn

,.••cur•- . . _ ..... ....._.OR
.........
.
....-liiiiiiiiiiiiii
lilllot

closing
:There aren't an~
I

Firat there waa Roboeop. Now thar•'• Robodoc, en automaton
chalgned to provld• • atNdy "hand" and comput•r-a.. leted
knowhow to mill • preel.. ctiVIty In a bone to eccapt a hi!J
replltcement. It may be uaed In other aurgert•a, too, NY IBM and
Ita collaborator companl•a.

•

IS

111 2111

'

'

Qc 1993 BANC ONE CORPORATION ' Consul1 your tax advisor lor specilic con~ilions and. details. SubjeCt to credit :,
111!111 aoproval. Offer e•pires March 31 , 1993.

•

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�!-G•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Dally Sentinel

,•

Community calendar

·:

.

Gays protest exclusionfromSt. Pat's parade
bcca • rar SUDtJay. wu postponed
.-it dis coming weekend becanse
oldlr: ........ belliered the East.
Tile Hew York protest was
•
. 1
die Irish Lesbian and :
GaJOotz Mi&lt;», whose demands
111 ~ ,.. wed mlilan:h under their
....
had thrown the 232nd
iDID turmoil and· tied up the
a.IS fill wwbs:

By !\AMUEL MAULL
: Community Calendar item11
:appear two cla)'ll before aa event
·and the day o( tllat event. Items
:must be reeeived weD in advance
\to assure publication In tbe cal·endar.
THURSDAY
~ · CHESTER • The Chester Base:ball Association will meet Thurs;day at 7:30p.m. at Chester Ele,mentary. All interested parents are
: i!~vi\Cd.
POMEROY ·The Meigs Alhlet·
ic Boosters winter sports banquet
be Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the
: hiR!'t school. Meat; rolls and drinks
• w)ll be furnished. Each family is to
' bring two covered dishes.

:will

MIDDLEPORT· The Meigs
: Ilmiot High Academic Boosters
: will meet Thursday at 7 p.m; in the
· school cafeteria. Everyone wel: .~e.

: :·. POMERQY - th'e Pomeroy
: Group of AA will meet Thursday at
· ; ·p.m . at Sacred Heart Catholic
' Church. Call 992-5763 for infor•.mation.

.

'

, POMEROY - The Community
: Lenten Service, sponsored by the
. Meigs Ministerial Association, will
: be held at the Pomeroy United
· Methodist Church at 7:30p.m.
: Rev. Glen McClung will be preach: ing,

.' .
RUTLAND

- ·The Leading
; Creek Conservancy Districi will
: nieet Thursday at 5 p.m . at the
• water offoce.
RACINE - The Racine Ameri•-c:an Legion Post 602 will meet
;~ursday. Supper is a 7:30p.m.
:~th meeting at 8 p.m.
.

POMEROY - There will be a
: public dinner at the Meigs County
; Senior Citizens Center on Thursday
: from 5-6:30 p.m. Cost is $3 per
::person for baked steak, mashed
·: P!&gt;taloes and gravy, c~le sla~.
:.green ·beans, roD and chmce of p1e
·'.aod beverage. Music will be pro•
; ~ded by The Classics. A free will
•'Qffering will be taken for the musicians. Public invited.
.
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun.; ty Democrats will meet Thursday
: at 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters Hall
·. in
Pomeroy.
.

.. .

.
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
· Athletic Boosters will hold an
: emergency meeting on Thursday
: immediately following the winter
: sports banquet.
·
.
· FRIDAY
· ·.. · RUTLAND • There will be a
· dance at the Rutland American
_ Legion Hall on Friday from 8 p.m.
:: to midnight. Music by Pure Coun:: tr¥ Band. Public invited.
.'

·
CHESTER - There will be a
:: special meeting of Shade River
;: Lodge No. 453 F&amp;:AM on Friday at
t; 7:30 p.m. there will be work in the
:: F.C. degree. Refreshments will be

:.: served.
1••·

LONG BOTTOM - A round and
~: square dance will be held Friday
i' t;rom 8-11 p.m. at the Long BottDm
:: ·community Building. Music will
be provided by Buzz Sloter and
:·Out of the Blue. John Russell will
• ·be the caller. The dance will be
: beld weather permitting.

SUNDAY
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
RACINE - The Racine ElemenLadies Auxiliary will sponsor a
round and square dance Friday tary PTO will sponsor a dinner
from 8-11 :30 p.m. Music will be by Sunday begin ning at II a.m.
Turkey, ham, mashed potatoes,
the Smokey Mountain Drifters. .
homemade noodles, slaw, green
beans,
roll, dessert and drinks will
HARRISONVll.LE - The Harrisonville Youth League will hold be available for $4 for adults and
its final sign-up on Friday from 6-8 $3 for children under 12. Carry-out
p.m. at the Scipio F'ue Department. will be available.
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis, will be guest
SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Youth speaker at the . Naomi Baptist
League second si~nup for •1993 Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
baseball season Will be Saturday 10:45 a.m. Public invited.
from 1-3:30 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center. Anyone who 1\id not
·POMEROY - There will be a
participate last year will need to . hymn sing at Hillsi~e Baptist
bring a copy of their birth certifi- Church on Sunday at 6 p.m. E\·erycate. Registration fee is $10 per one welcome.
·
child, not to exceed $25 per family.
MIDDLEPORT - Rejoicing Life
·BURLINGHAM • The public Christian School will sponsor a
dinner of the Burlingham Modem spaghetti dinner Sunday from noon
Woodmen has been rescheduled for to 3 p.m. at the sclloollunchroom.
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the ball. Cost is $3.50 for adults and $2 for
The camp will furnish spaghetti children under 12. Take-out orders
and meatballs, salad and drink. available. Call 992-6249. A silent
Bring a covered dish. A meeting auction will be held for an "Around
will be beld at 7:30 p.m. concern- the World" quilL
ing a fire department for Bedford
POMEROY - Country l ine
Township. A representati,ve from
the Scipio Township Fire Depan- dance classes, Pomeroy Village
ment will' speak. Everyone wel- Hall, Sunday, 2-4 p.m. Donation
$2.50 Call 992-7853 for informacome.
tion.
HOCKINGPORT - There will
POMEROY - An hour of gospel
be a round and square dance at the
and
contemporary singing, piano
Reynolds Building in Hockingport
solo,
trumpet trio and saxophone
on Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring music by Out of the Blue. solos will be held at the Meigs
Ronnie Wood will be the caller. County Public Library in Pomeroy
Everyone welcome. The dance will on Sunday at 3 p.m.
be canceled in the event of snow or
ATHENS
Old Time
high water.
Square/Contra
Dance,
Sunday, 8POMEROY • The New Direc11
p.m.
at
the
0.
tJ.
Inn
Ballroom
in
tions. Quartit will present a concert
Athens.
Music
will
be
provided
by
at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church on Saturday at 7 p.m. Call Wild Asparagus.
Pastor Pet€ Tremblay at 992-5326
STIVERSVll.E - There will be
for information.
a hymn sing at Freedom Gospel
LCTTRIDGE • Fish fry, Satur- Mission Church on County Road
day, 5-8 p.m., Lottridge Communi- 31, Bald Knob Stiversville Roocj.
ty Cemer, $4 for adults and $2 for Singers will be the Conqerors, Ripchildren under 12. Carry-oui avail· ley, W.Va. Rev. Roger Wollford
invites the public.
able.

Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK - Hundreds of
marchers protesting the exclusion
of Irish homosexuals from the SL
Patrick's Day Parade staged a
countermarch today up Fifth
Avenue and at least 135 were ·
anesled for violating a court order.
· The demonstrators began
marching an hour before the start
of the annual ll8fDde and got lbout
two blocks before they were met by
a line of police. .
.

1••

Rn
Cadlolic.opposition has
leJI( pys from marching under
lkir-1\Mmer in the parade.

INGELS F

Mo11. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12 .

.ou'll save cold cash!

v.

• r-

'

••t

SAVE 20%, 30%, EIEI 50" Mill&amp; OUR
CLEAUN(E SALE OF Ill .1M2 DISCOIIINUED
MEICIL411DISE!
BARGAIN
DEIICBT

T.U..... (_,o Cluolftod Jlloploy; B..._ Cud or~
N.-) will aloo appoor 1o lloo Poiat ........,lleptOr ODd
lloo Doily S...!bul, noclolal•- 18,000 t.o...

Days · Words
1
3
6

15
15

15
15
.15

10
Monthly

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

ZU•

773-11-·

643-Arololo lllot.

949-Racl.e
742-Ratlalul

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

I

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
----1

32- Mobile Homoo for Solo
33- F•rnu for Sale
34- 8UiiDNI Buildinp
35-Lo.. &amp;Ac .....
36- Reol Eo1ata Wuo.d

Muaical lmlrlllllenll
F.,;;,. &amp; V"'"tollleo
For S.le or Trade

ALL HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

\1\\1 .~ 1

(614) 992·5449

1'1''11 ~
,'\ I I\ I ~ I I II 1,

12131192/lln

n

Wanteclto Buy
63- Li..-e.loek
64-- Hay &amp; Grain
65- Sood &amp; Fertiliser

YAIIDIWI RiDING MOWER
YARDMAN PUSH MOWER
2 Cwdo ... 4 Cylo
1010 TRIMMERS ' SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE
Porta ond Service lor all
mokoo end modota of
lrlc,tora and form

42_.

EQUIPMENT

11- Help Woao.d
12- Situatiom Wanted
IS- ln~arance

Auction
!I- Wno.d to Buy

17- Milcellaneoua

Plum bins &amp; Hooting ·

15-~ehooll

ExcuaLlDs ·
Electrical &amp; Ref•·ice~•tio~

A IDIIr'Uclion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapoir

18- Wono.d To Do

~LI.Snc...'

bldg.

Cai&amp;1'-IIG2·71114 for

· · •·

1.

' NOWOPENI
BOB'S MARKET &amp;
GREENHOUSE, INC.

TANDY

Gallipolis, Oh. Location
Will Open
Thursday, March 18th
"Check Us Out for QuaiHy Plants
and Produce and All Your ·
,Gardening Suppfi.es"
March 1-!ours:
Mon.-Sat. 9 am:e pm

PubUc Notice
Sicker ll'&amp;phics let YO&lt;NICO •Ihrough\Wfaster than some 486SX PCs! G111b the ~

Public Notice

IN THE

and get buay-MS Worka is already frWtatlecl.

COUNTY COURT OF
MEIGI COUNTY, Ohio
. ROGER HAYMAN,
Plaintiff

125-1823

or

otherwlae
required by tho

•

...._

WILUAII DUNAWAY
Defend1nt
C•• No, 13 CYF 18

BILL SLACK
, 992·2269
tJlEifRAILROA~ nES

!2-30-92_111

NOWOPBN

roapond ••
Ohio Rulu of Civil
MYSTIQUE
PubliC Notice
Proc~uro, Judgment by
d•l•ull will be rondtirod
TANNING'
l.oglaln,ol you lor tho rotiei 1...-onr•c TO CONmACTORS
SCA Wolfe Bed
STATE OF OHIO
15 Session $25 ·
DEPARTMENT OF
Depot
St., Rutland
TRANSPCiRTAOON
COlUII\bUI, Ohio
742-3190
2
In Memory
~h5, 1!113
Call for
Contract
Legal Copy No. 93 235
Appointment
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
In Loving Memory Of
· 112211 mo.
::,So~:~":'~~ otpropooalo
wilt
bo
GLADYS WINES
tho olftco ol tho
of tho Ohio
Who Passed Away •
HOWARD
Mareh 25, 1984 and of
~~~,:t~~:·~ of TranaEXCAVATING
CLYPE WINES,
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
•ncl mACKHOE WORK
SR .
AVAILABLE.
Who Pa11ed Away
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
Morgan,
March 2, 1985.
HOME SITES and
Ohio for
TRAILER SITES,
No morning dawna,
Noo.
LANDCLEARING,
no night returns
Stot• Rout•
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
That we do not think
13, Section 0.0., ATH-550LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
0052, on Sll11• Routo 550,
of you.
FREE ESTIMATES
Section
0.52,
ATH-320-0386
When ·Iinke of life are
992·3838
on 8111111 Roull1 329, Section
broken, ·
3.81, Route
ATH-612·0215,
on ' ~=======~
Sll1to
682, Section
And loved onea have
MEG-7-0580 on State
lo part,/
Section 5.10, MAGh leaves a wqund that
on Stale Rout•
never heals ·
23.Q9, and
LIMESTONE,
on Stat•
To a broken heart.
Sec:tlon .1.87 by
GUYEL &amp; COAL
When evening ahadt•
l
.'!.'::~t.~!~:~!
docka
with
are falling
Rea10•able
1',
modtllad
And we all all alone,
con~rete and performing
Rates
To our heana comea other r.totod work.
"Tho dol• ••I lor
JOE I. SAYRE
th Ia' feeling comrtotton of thlo work
II you -re only
....1 M •• aot forth In lh• SAYRE
home.
blddlnll propoo.t."
614·742·2131
Pl.••• and Speclflcatlona
Sadly mlaaad by
are
on
fit.
In
lho
Deportment
daughtara, Eileen
ol Tronaportatkin and tho
Grueaer and Kathleen
olltco ol lho Dloblcl Deputy
Dirac tor.
Holler and their
JERRYWRAY,
familiae.
Director of TrMaporlollon

· Quallt.Y •

Stone Co.

CUT
c."'7i'ijfii
Cl _881
__
,_,..,,

SIZED LIIIESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992·

• AMIFM 1ler.o wilh 30 111tlon preset&amp;

Pteo. nt.H 112·1848

6637

obJ•ct of th•
~~::'~~
· ~=- to ..aklng
I·'
wtuamount
.. to of
loon
11,000.00, and aoaldlltl
doaog81 lor atonga
cha..- In lilt -unt ·In
••-• of S1 ,IOD.OII, Md all
I olll10r rollol which may lltt
poralltad by low or In
ilaulty.
.
Yoti •• h•oby r.qulrod
to anawor tho Complaint
within twalltr·alghl (21)
daY• alter ••• laat
pt611eallon of thla notto.

90 OAVS SAMl: AS CASH!

·.-. . __.........,.
;;:;;;;;:;::;::

j

wltleh wiH M

pulllfalt~

.,... a wook for alx (I)
IUIIIIIIvo woob. Tho . .t
plli!Hollllotl wll M modo on

Lorena Oikr
We Love You!

:

&gt; .

D. A. IOSTON
EXCAVADNG ·
(614) 'o
667·6628 .'.'·
mo.

HOWELl'S .
BOOKKEEPING·
&amp; TAX SERYIC~
Quarterly and
Year-end Report$'
REASONABLE ·
RATES

FlEE ISTIIWIS

915·4473
' 667•61

PHONE 992·7036
Jeanie' Howell, EA

N.OTARY .

Association Is
looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addresaes to
Meigs Alumni
As~iatlon, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohio 45760

... 124 .
12 ........

uo

16Seulou $25

Mom, Dad&amp;:

992·2417

K~

3 tl3·1

ROOFING:.

WE DO

AND EVERfliiNG UNDERNUTI· .

.

TROMM BUILDERS·
742-2328

20 Years Exp.

..

313113 tin

36970 BaD Rln Raad

Pomeray, Ohio

SIZED LIMESTONE

992-3470
OWNER:
JeH Wkkersham

2 Front Struts a L•••r
• 4 ••••

an,......

. Prict1 Startrng Dl
1129.95 +Tax ·

..

R&amp;~ut~::~:~ING
sEPTI~::TEMs
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,

D~fJE~:e-.r:Jcg~t

PH. 614·H2·5591
"======1=2=-5=-lf=n~

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

6 14·992·7643
(No

S11Hity Calls!
21121921tfn

ROOFING·

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
3-1~93-lfn

Shade River Saddle Short
CUSTOM SADDLES,
· LUTHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

AMERICAN GENEUL liFE and..·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health .,

992-6215
Pomeroy, Oltlo

Accident •Annui.ty, IRA • Mort~age :•

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent :
Box 189

Middleport, Oltlo 45760
(614) 143·5264 1120183111~
Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound students •.

KEVIN'S
.MAINTENANCE
949·239iler
1·100·137·1460
Llwnllcalt4,
r:.rtlttllng, w tdlll1o and

Sudtng.
Shrub and T,_:rrlmmllltl
• AomOvol

d... a Commerallll

FreeEeltNiei

2•11tsHIIpell
....... Off

'

WICK'S
SERVICE

FIEWOOD FOR BALE

SUMEI
IMAGES
Happy 18th
Birlhday

•TRUCKING

3-1-131

Reinotleliag
Stop &amp; Co•p•re

AMI~•

St.lt. 7
Cltesltlre,

""'a

.'

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

FACTORY ·CHOKE
ENFORCED

oe...,..,,

I

(3) 18, 22, 2110

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY

CONSTRUCTION

"=======::; ;- Howard L Writesel

Dotoid thla loth day of
March, 1993.
Undll S...tz, Cl•rk I'

(3) 18, 25;
(4) 1, •• 15, 22,611:

.........
•G•r••

-

HAULING

Closed Sundays thru March
Phone ((114) 446·1711

.-E'411

Public Notice

~..~~l~ftnllieeompraliit

GUN SIOOIS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

I

Roclno. 4 BR, 3 ballw, 2 Ooralloa, ranbld 1
BR ,a pt p.,pony lncludol4,800 aq. ft. farm

• a· long-throw woofer
Atil· 11.15 I..O·.o:Je

Uphollle~y

ihll :llild day ~fAjiitl, · •nd tho twonty..tghl (281
day• lor onoworlng wit
anawer

•LIGHT
•FIREWOOD

Soloo

The pt1ce hu-. taducodiD S81,1100 and
financing of up 1D 110% of purcl\ale
........, moy bo pooalble lot quallfying.l'O'·
aan to tiur very nD home on 3% acres In

• GenuiM walnut linist;

General Haulins
Mobile Home Repair

Public NotiCe

•••• ol your failure to

CMnllf

1·, 111·6 ' J ..

S2- Sportlns Good.
53-AnaqU..
54- MiK. Merchandl.e
55- Rulldi111 Supplloo

commence on that date. In

E I

IIM.F PRICE/

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

p

14- Buia.a Traininc

Ohio Valley Ostomy
Association Meeting March
21, Sunday, at 2:30 P.M.
PVH Downslllirs Confotonco Room

.TANDY'

' RUTLAND, OH. !!
742·2455' ;!.

Aulo Repair
.
. Ca•pins Eq-.ipan~Dl

Topic : UpdotAI on X-ray Technology
Speakar. Connie Davis
Public Watcomo. •

• Auto-llop

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

89S-I.etut .
937-BaiFolo

71- A11too for Solo .
41- HoUIN for Rent
72- Truclu for Sale
Mobile Do ..• for Real 73-- Vam &amp; 4 WD'•
43- F&amp;niUI for Rent
Motorcyclel
Boata &amp; Moion for Sale

3- AanouDCemenll
4-Ci..away
s- 'Boppy Ado
6- Loot ODd FoWid
7- Loot and FoUftd
8- Public Sale 4:

IUT • SEll oTUDE
31711. 2nd St.
Middleport, Ohio
Mon.•frl. 10:00.5:00
Saturdar 10:00.6:00
Closed Sundar
992-3577

· •DOZERS

31111 mo. pd.

882-New L••

1\1\1\1 ..'

2-l•M.-ry

I

8

'
-,

84S-Pordnd
247-Lolu&lt; F.U.

$
$
$
$

BULUIIN IOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY IDORE
PUILICADON

[Helen Hayes dies at 92..

245-lio «;naolo
256-G.,.. lllot.

4511-1Aoa

Auto Par,. &amp; A,.,.,.,,ri..l

••. -.e.c:••.•.

-,.....

576-Applo c.....

.Over l!i Words

Rate

.• Bl' LLETI:\ B&lt;l \RD

MIDDLEPORT - A round and
square dance will be held at the
Old American Legion Hall in Mid·
dlepon on Saturday wilh music by
CJ and Country Gentlemen .
Admission is free. No alcoholic
beverages permitted. Children wel·' come.
'•
come
with adult supervision. Bring
•
'·
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full soft drinks.and snacks.
Gospel Church of Long Bottom
: ;will have preaching and singing
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
• . Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed Youth League will hold sign-up on
invites the public. Fellowship will Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the
· follow.
Middleport Council Room. Regis·
,
ua1ion is $10, not to exceed $25
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- per family.
'
.
'

98S-Cioeooer

667-Cooi.W.

•

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

4 DAYS 0/VLY!

675-PI. PI_,.

992-llltWiopol'll
Po,..erl.y

379-Walat

·,

INGELS FU

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thi• ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051•32

Melp County Muon Co., WV

446-Golllpolb
367-0oeoW...
388-VIatoa

EAGLES

CLUB

RATES

LIVING ROOII, IE...... -lOOM,.
DEN/FAMILY RGG.. IIIJII 1-IPPIIII:CE·S•
Every Item I~ Our siOD,DDO
Solei

,__,.,On

,

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

YordS.t.
• A d·e•W ......,...., pJ.aed ill tM Gdipolie DUly

••

EVERY THURSDAY

folloUJing leleplwnB B:cchfllllfel ...
G.Wa County

RACINE GUN
CLUI

· BISSELL &amp; BURKE

Clau4fied pag111 Cm7Br thB

et--r

THE BOOK
. BARN

2-M3

1;00 p.m. Tueaday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunoday
I ;00 p.m. Pridoy

Sundiy Paper

la~rlon

IELD 0111 . . . . . 3/31/13

t:OO p.m. Sotur~y
I ;00 p.m. Monday

Pr!~yPaper

• A.cll•~ tJ. coaty yo•r ad nuu
be pnpaMI
• R..o.i" diNG• for acb pOl i• adwaDCe.
.y,,
...t Fo.....r ado woder15 -n~o wilt J,e
naa341r.,.ot .. cloorp.
• Prioto of od f.., 011 oopitollot- u cloul&gt;!o prico of od coot
• 1 poloalloo oypo ooly.....!
.
• S..doollo- _,...u.to for onon- r.... olr.y (choU
lor....,.ftrotdoyodruolapopor). Co11Wore2.00 p.n.
olr.y olt.r puWb!!o• to noh ........,....
.
• Ado tMt '"" ... poJd Ia .... ........,
Cud at Tlouloo
BopPJ Ado

992-5858
696·1290 .

DAY BER)JU! PUBLICATION

ropy DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueaday Paper
Wedneadlly Paper
Thunday Paper

CLO~ED SUNDAY

POUCIES

ROCK SPRINGS - Lenora
Leifheit will present a seminar on
Alzheimer's Disease on Friday at 7
p 'T\ . at the Rock Springs United
Methmlist Church. Everyone wei-

ness. And the toughness," Kerr
By RAYNER PIKE
said.
''And all of it made a hell of a
Assoc:lated Press Writer
lad
:·
•
NYACK,. N.Y.- The bright
broadway
marquees
were
lights of Broadway dimmed in
dimmed
for
one
minu'f
Wednesday
, memory of Helen Hayes, the
: beloved actJ:ess who at just 5 feet night in a tribute.
She last appeared onstage in
•; !lill .invested her roles with lofty
I
971,
yielding to chronic asthmatic
authority and became a giant of
bronchitis
that the atmosphere in
; ·stage and screen.
theaters seemed to aggravate. Her
t
Miss Hal~~ widely known as theater swan song was in the
1 "The First y of the American demanding
role of the drugged-out
j Theater." died Wedne~!Jay at
mother
in
a
Walihington production
1 Nyack Hospital, where she had
of
Eugene
O'Neill's
"Long Day's
~ ,been admitted March 9 for congesJourney
into
NighL"
: -live heart failure and an irregular
She COIItinued to worlc, appear·
• liartbeat. She was 92.
ing
as recently as 1983 in a TV
:
During a career that spanned
adaptation
of an Agatha Christie
1 eight decades, she received the
mystery.
~ highest honors of stage, screen and
Among her greatest triumphs on
i television - three Tonys, two Broaclwax
was tbe 1936 "Victoria
' Oscars and an Emmy. She even
Regina,
'
in which Miss Hayes
; won a Grammy.
·
80
yeats
of Queen Victoplayed
~
Author and playwright Jean
ria's
life
in
2
lfl
hours.
She l'layed
• gm, hearins her friend had died,
the
last
scene
with
cotton
m her
said Miss Hayes "was as interesting as any character she ever mouth to age her rich, vibrant
voice.
\ phi~ed- ••
: ,. 'More interesting, i~J a way,
Her daughter, Mary MacArthur,
; because there were 110 many sides
• ·iD her: the charity and the sweet· was born in 1930 but died at 19 of
~ ness and tbe tartness and tbe sassi- polio.

To place an ad , · ·

&amp; JEWELRY

. ..
,
:
•
:
'

CARE FOR
THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.

'r

NITRO, W.VA. - The Libeny
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at the Cin"San Theatre in
Nitro, W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapler, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
observe tbe chapter'~ 85th anniversary with a luncheon at 12:30 p.m.
Receiving line for Ohio Regent,
OSDAR, Mrs. Ralph B. Bush Jf. at
noon. She wiU present "Reach Out
and Touch."
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Style Square Dance Club
will sponsor an open dance at the
senior citizens center in Pomeroy
on Saturday from 8-11 p.m. Roger
Steele will be the caller. Refresh- '
ments will be served.

· p~RSONAL

Call992-2156

SYRACUSE - Born Again
POINT PLEASANT - Scout-0·
Believers
will be singing at Asbury
Rama, Saturday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
Meihodist
Church, 11 a.m.
National Guard Armory, Point ·
Pleasant, W.Va. Free admission.
Demonstrations, showmanship,
largest boy/adult registration, for
all programs in Mason, Gallia and
Me•gs County for 1993.
.

POMEROy • Easter craft pro-·
gram for children at the Meigs _
County Public Library. Michelle
Garettson, instructor. Register by
calling the library. Regisuation fee
is $4 for materials.

•

Till. . At, " r:h 18, 1993

au ._.. •.
....,.\
I!IIIIID

IIN'ilWDAicl ·
IIIVICI
tt2-531Ser
. tiW561

'regardless of income .
'regardless of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
'regardless of cred~
To collect your scholarship money
call614-985-3556
Open MOf!.•Fri. 10-7 or Sat. 10-4
. Ylao •-twC•d
NOW OI'DI!

lARRY'S IODY SHOP
JN6AM........••Gtllllpella, 08. 4"JI ;

367·7444 • 446-6644
1·100·926·2032 10•1o Oalrl

· Monday·Fri~.:;oo-&amp;:00
Colf4)IMrlzod ElllrnoiM,
' Work, lnl. WOlf&lt;
Wllcoma, FborGiut Work,~~ Rtpoiriog &amp;
Rtf•lithlng. Frwno Sir~, Cutlcm
Sal tillfinv. Millin s-ur MIKing S)'IIOm

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�SenUnel
~~

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SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

J 'I

!

March 1 1993

· Thursday, March 1 1113
32 llablll HomII
lorSele

5I

KJT 'N' CARLYLE® bY,. Larry Wright

I

•

Hoi•lhold
GooN

BRIDGE

'

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2 . . . . . - ,. . . . . - .
Clft_ .............. I

F..-..
- .
. 17121DI

The Dally SenUnel Page 11_ •.

PHILLIP
ALDER

=-.

Doollt

...

...

NORTH

~~

__

I.A'Mi't FURNITURE
Ca11 • ·o lane tumiiii...,._,liok.
..

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OS22, I -

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Aeldng . . . . . . 1·'
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Coli -1-4311.

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l DONE IT
TODAf PAW H

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l JEST TOLD
ELVINEY SOME
GOSSIP SHE

NEVER
HEARD II

Con:
..

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MdOIIr,t . . . louiiiCif
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A5K ~IM II=' MA'I'BE

LIKE TO BE .

OUR BAT BIRD..

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Financtal

,,.. . . \lot,
'
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Business

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Top -

Polcl: AI Old U.S.
Col~ Goid Rl!lll, 111- Colno, Loaklng lot • Nlllblo Oold Col111. II.T.S. Coin S!1of&gt;, pu1 up 40 ICrM of aood
,..,. Dot•, 114o-1U-21h
151 ....... Clolllpolll.
· Wlnlild to bur. Ulld mobile
homM.. 111111 Dr71

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OHIO VALLEY PUIIJII.JQ CO.

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(!wlo. SIO, AT, old

Want to:
PIN do~nEXTRA

lnlormed that all dwellingS

adverUsed In this newspaper
are avalable on an equal

CA~H?H

opponunl!y ba91s.

.

31 Homes tor S81e

..

Sq. Ft....... lol, 2d
....._ 2 compht• bldha. dniM
-.,NYingL\&gt;om,3_,_
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.
pRODGERI 1-Z RIDE
State Rt. 7

614·446·0736

WoAIIoH7112

lllawe,
.a..o wifed, Home

45

Galli poll•

KELLER'S CUSTOM
L
BENDING
47269 St. lt. 241 • I Yt Mile OH lt. 7
C..iter o• It, 241
•

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PH. 614·985·3949

•

liM OFfiiiH-".
OIL AID LUll SERVICE

Jill IIPAII AID ROTAIING
2/15/fJ/1 ......

Gingerbread Hoase
PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
514 Nollh 9oconcl Avonuo

Middleport, Ohla 45710

Opt1l11 of tlltlr ·
l•fut/ICNIIIItr Proan•

AIIIIMIICel tilt

••

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We will NOW serve children
8 morith• to 12 years of age.
C.N Ul for mo111 lilformatlon
(614) 892-7328
~

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41 Peroon of
ICtion

50 PUlpit
51 Bulgorlan

klndl
20 Domelllc

moner

animal•

22 Pronoun
23 Bumpkin (II.)
24- Piper

52 Ireland
53 John Lln-

non'aiOn

Clrrilgl l

54 Enterlllner

btera·-·

2 Cflnracttr In

-Sumac

1 Canled out
8 Lilli! color. - '

Othello

55 Sluggllll

a--

3 Module

-.....

4 UMxcltable
5 Potter'•
materlll
6Cnre1Mm·

DOWN
1 English baby

11 .,.,..,••• : •..

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21

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' Ya.l .ARE AN HONEST,.

=·r.
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2281.

A~VO:,~Ie.'.IATIC

PERso-l WITH IMioiY FRiENDe.. .

tan lruoll

'AND'IO!J WILLMAR~ A
~. wt;At.,n-t( 1-MN
AND 1-\A~ FIVE CHILDREN.

I

W~ tx)INQ- PR&amp;TiY

600D '1'1-IEA:, FOR
A MINUTE! .

campers a

11114 ~~~- ChWbtln •
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.......
000.
1711. IDildld ' .

Tum your clutter into caah,
Srll it the epu way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
PWce
. your clonitied od todpyl
. .
15 wo~ or leu, 3 dpp,
3 papen, 15.40 paid in odvance.

,~
.. ·
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........
12'
Wllh
E.C, Coli .
114 •• Mil, No Anlllw, ....... I
~.ansa

21•.~--------~----_____________
3 •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

4·----~----5 •. _ _ _ _ _~----6~--~~----------7•._______________________ ,
8._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9. ______________
10___________________

11··---~-----------12--~~--------~~-

13~~---~--~-14----~------~~~-

15~--------------~~
G.Jilpc6 DaiiJ Tribune
446-2342
· PomeroJ D~J Senllnel
992-2156
Pt. Pleu•nt Repter
675-1333

380wer1J~-

Viflneron led the club king. Declarer
won with the ace and played a low
trump. His plan was to duck this to
East, win the return {East was known
to have started with a singleton club),
cash the spade ace and play on diamonds. He would lose just three tricks:
spades and either a heart or a club
at the end.
However, Vigneron threw a tuningfork into 'the works: He put up the
spade Iring.
U declarer ducked, West would
two club tricks. So dummy's spade
Will played. Declarer continued with a
low, IP."de fl'!lm the dummy, but now
East won with the 10 and cashed
queen. This left dummy with only one
trump and declarer with only nine
tricks.
·
Fire the ~ter who wrote the
lyric 'ilecolld )!Ud low.".

"''*""' :

38llullnlnfl . .
31 Arrow polacil)~

40 S•lltiiM'IIn - . •

Alnkl

41 llut!cal

IMirument

~

42 Edible

43 tTrtlned

-

44 Ft.nlall

n.at::-

45 Slletched
··
48 Alllronnut'1 •

terry

- :

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. CELEBRITY CIPHER
Cotlebrity Cipher~ . . cr..-d from
I'"•• byTodlly
t.n1M people, J*t Md ~·
EdtMt•lnN . . .
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YCRMKY

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Ireland Is a counlry In which the probmle - - - .
happens and the lmpoUible always dooo." - John Pentland Mlillally. : : •

'~~:~:~' S©~(llA-l££!fS•
----...:.;;.~ l~lto~ ~y ClAY I. POllAN
O Rearrange

WOlD
tAM I

letters of the

f®r scrambled warda be·
tow to form four simplt word1 .

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"en ~AM·urd.'\,

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W . LETTERS ·
.

. . UNSCRAMBLE FORI
V

ANSWER

•

I

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I I III I I II

SCIIAM-LETS .ANSWERS
• · ''
Vicuna • Delve • .Berth • Keenly • HAVE the BELL
First old gent: "I love to lie in bed and ring for a valet."
Second old gent: "I didn't know you·had a valet.' First
old g11nt: "I don'!. I j1,1st HAVE the BELL"
.

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u.-..llfiiiiLnl ........ '
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RIFF

Improvements

0411

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81

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OUR.LANGUAGE AD-VICE': Check
out the hotel chain that takes today'k
Ad-VIC!' Award for its advertisement
about ~ing "located exclusively in the
south." A di-tion is not usually capitalized: "The hikers decided to head
south." When that direction refers to
a specific area of the country, however, the word should begin with a cdpitalletter: "Hurricanes have damaged
the South." From now on, uppercasing ·this "South" cas 'in "located exclusively in the South") would be a
capital idea.

,

1

.•

title

this term

roltullt, Ill!%= alalllnlllllll;

Arled~t ·

uone" .

7IS

Acc111crlla
luclllll Tlawu 't I u-., "-1 I

.,.

30 Ethiopian • •

By Jeffrey McQull•
A person who's charmed or filled
with love is ENAMORED: "He is enamored of his childhood sweetheart."
·Charm,~our audience by

Auto Parts &amp;

·~

SleaPiftg - ~

32 lilnt
35 Genuaof111ta

~~=uwuawraa

80COnl, Oolllpc:IIL

' .

10 lltlatlng tO: .-: •

28.Her• (Fr.)
,
21 Genn111 IQJ. .

lor Sail
V--- F-.a - . Z
!lal-. _., .lnohor, 1110 :

01

...~

llllytllm

26 Concllllloll -~
27 TllrottiiJ . -

OUR ·LANGUAGE

Colt~

•

rntrllnt

24 Calif. time '
25 3, Rom111 · -

Some 40 years ago, Tom Lehrer
wrote many amusing songs. During
one of his shows be commented, "It is
l•. s.~be1rinR to'consider that '"hen Mozarl
was my age he had·already ~n dead
lor a year." Maybe Leh!er found this
harder .to bear than anyone realized,
for almost as quickly as he ~ame into .
show biz, he returned to the world
mathematics.
U Lehrer had been an ardent bridge
player, I tbink he w011ld have known I
when to play higb and when to
Another person who ~ ... ".
differeoce is Frenchman Claude
'lle"!l'- Today's deal is from an i. lIter·· I
club mllch .in the·Marne valley.
West's bid of two no-trump showed
at least 5-5 in hearts and clubs. It is
surprising that East didn't' sacrifice in
five hea~ts : Perhaps she was hoping to
·receive a couple-of club ruffs to defeat

~&lt;?

MotorHom11

·-----.......... .... ,...........•... ,·

2NT

Pass
All pass

,.,_, '•

rw•!Jit*t• OH.=:..lank,-.

32 Moblll Homll
for Sale

CIIEC.)(. ft..'(

74 Motorcyclll
'
~~-~·"!y:0;.::;::
.. .:.:..;:.._;.:w:.;.
:;ri.::....,.,11,..,.000,.,. :

79

heM,~

IIIIH Ill

'(()() 60NAA

llWnlort .

""'

Auto-Rem tab
SprineTfme
Speefol

BORN LOSER

75 Boats &amp; Motors

, Which Is k1 vlolatk&gt;n of the
law. Our readers are hereby

-.,....no

t--- .
.

111111 ... Jlw LX, LMdod, AI
Polnr, LIM ~~ Prlol Nogo- ~

llfiMIL .....,...... lllr

frl'l -

knowingly accapt

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
614·7j12-~!996

Autos lor 88le

L-CIOPII.

a\1\lenlsemanrs for real estate

Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

-~~~-~

--CUI!-. I,,__
~-- ........ -·-'

71

TNs newspaper will not

"Helping You To Recover Your Inve&amp;IIIUJnl"

·~ ·-"';:

'U,4WD 2 - ..........

to adverlisit ~arry preference,
MmHcitlon or discrimination
based on moe, colOr; relglon,
Hx tamlllal status or national
origin, or any lrienllon to
make any sudl Pf8ference ,
limitation or discrimination:

Snodgrass Up.olstery

-I • )

1111 IIIIC S.ll . . - , . U 111or '1

ol 1968 whk:h makes l Jl:egal

~

6

'

.

_,.. t-!Ave YOll

TIIS WORLD
OF
PUNCTUATION

-=...-:.'=~In'
9IIOVJ-.- ..... •,

All real estate advenlsing In
tills newspaper is sut&gt;jed 10
the Federal Fair Houstng Ad

,,=::.-

421rand new
48 Look llllllfl

151!1~..

33 Eoplonage

fours~des.

' AND ERNEST .
FRANK

71-

1111.

•

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ndlna
Roulo:....
$1,200
A
_ ..
_
llil_
,_

EmpiDI'mrnt SNVICe5

3BAII-..
word
31 Fr-lrom

By Plllllip Alder

58 Pits for Sale

SlwL':i:'Woc.n:.DolcLlwn
AI,
;:::• .,

13RMIU
14 Bile ol Tlj

Second hand
low or high?

-.~:r~o~~,-c:r::­

Ml1121.

lntNet~

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Eut

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34ColllllwM
38 llot.l

Opening lead: ·+ K

_Door _ _ , _

~t~=- OM

llfOducto
1211-ve

gr-·
32 lllde pigeon

West

to Pac;' r

37 Rlltort to

31 Tran•·

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

1+

5 Aclot'ulgn81

271nnke~P~r

tJU
tAH

Sootll

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18 or dilloront

EAST

•U16 3

PECA.E CCMRAI"-l ABooT
. NEEDING nl£1R clUJ 51k£.. .

I

6 . Loll &amp; Found

+9863

EEKANDMEEK
NO MAmR HOO Mll01

1P~'iume

wonder
17 LtiVIin
water

IAKQ 76

a 4 c,~
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.......

PICKENS RIRtiTUAE

1-11-11

tAJ73

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N:SA Crossword Puzzle

~~~~~~~:j

Or- .
'lllmwl

JfSTRO·GRAPH·

lind it The Astra -Gra ph Mat chmaker VIRGO (Aug'. 23-S.pt. 22) In arrangemenls

. '

'•,

in~tantly reveals which signs are romanti· where yo!J liM yourself in a managerial

,

- ~ERNICE ·

BEDEOSOL

~Oabur
'(fill 'Birthday.

cally pertect lor you. Mail 52 plus a long,
selt · addressed , s.tamped envelope to ,
Matchmaker. clo this newspaper. P.O. Box .
9t428, Cleveland. OH 44·101-3428.
' ,
ARIES (March 2) ·Ajlrl111) Your probabili·
ties for fulfill~g your ambitious expectations
look good today: Your b1gges1 assai could
be your instinctive know-hoW in skirting
obstructions.
.
1'AURU8 (April :ZO.May 20) You have lhe f
ability tQ accurately perceive the good q~~li- ,
ties in others' today. Equally imponant is lha ;

IOday. bend over backwalds t~ be lair. This
will evoke the ·resulls you desire from subordlnatos.
•
LIBRA (Sept 23·0c1. 23) II you arrange
your agenda property.IDdliy, you should be
able to finalize two matters that you've left
dangling. Do them now, wh~o you're still in
a good accomplishmenl cycle.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-NIW, 22) In addition to
your other favorable aSIIII. your diplomacy
will work to your advaotage today. When
you pour on tne charm. you 'll have every·

fact that you're a good learner, so you : one pu~~ ·

should be able to ellaclively emulale the
posilive trallslhat you 'see.
March 17, 1113
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) .Your grealasl
asset Coday is your adaplablllly. You might
The most memorable events in lht year . heve to uae this lo ldjull 1!811 to a shilling
ahead are likely 10 be thole lh.. 6re precipi· condition lhat might occur wllhoul warning.
latod through friends. They could be CANCI!R (June 21 ·July 22) Try lo keep
l1mughl into being IIIIOugll an unuouaJ cNin everything in proper !&gt;alance ktday .. Be neio1 evenm.
.
.
thor overly nsonlve nor unduly complaPIICES (Fib. JO.IIItch 20) , . . _ . ,11 . cent Your moat propitious course is right
with others w~l ooolhe ·your restltll sp:ril down 111e mlddl&lt;!.
IOday, so don't be 1 lOner. The spo/ltnntoul LE,O {July_23-Aul. 22) Co-workers are
activities in which you panicipalt are the likely lo m:rror your mocda today. II you
on11 that are llklly 1o b• lht moat tun. · oxpr11a yoursel :n a grumpy mannar, don1
Know whfii'O 1o look for romance ar1d you'll expect a honey-dipped response'" retum.

h

'

•

··

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2:H)ec. 21) Rewards
ara poUiblll at this time lor something you
did awhile back Chal was never
acknowledged . You 've been
long, so try to be potion! for lillie .
lOnger.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 11) YOUI
a!Shi9 qualllies are lillY pronounced today,
10 1Ue chlrge Myou find youl'lllf in a
lion lhal _,olo lack direction.
AQYAIIIUI (.len• ..,._ 1.. Tlil II
of thoH tortunote \layl where you
dertle !Mineflll not from 11\e lhlngl you do,
but'1roni thlnge Olhero do tor you. Floo(
evenll, no matter what occurs .

�Pege-12- lhe Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thuraay,lllrch 18,1983

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Winter
athletes
honored

612
Pick 4:

Low IODight Ia upper 30s.
Rain. SaturdaJ, c.loudy, bleb In

2064

Pages3-4

upper40s.

•

e-

·.

1 Section, 10 PoaeJ 2S cen~

•

VoL 43, No. 227

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March19,.1993

Copyrlghlld 11113

A llulllmedla Inc. ~paP!!'

Roberts named interim
superintendent at Eastern:
'

•OA'IS
ONl1
Gruner. BeiiiDd IMai are ebeerleaders Michelle

· ALL·TVC ACADEMIC TEAM -Meigs
l!ltlllete. aDd clleerleadera llpaored for belDI
selected to tile all-TVC acade111IC tea111 were
· (froDt row, L-R) ~r Matt Clark aDd cheerleaders Becky Meier, Kelly Doid11e aad Kelley

~House

TAKE AN ADDITIONAII

YouDg ud CI'Jalel Vauglula, wrestler Adam
Sbeetl aad haketball players Katrina Turner
aDd LOri KeUy.
~
.

Richard L Roberts who served
as superintendent of the Eastern
Local School District for .eight
years is returning to Eastern as
interim superintendent wr the
remainder of tru. school year.
Roberts w&amp;S·hire4 for. the posi•
lion by the Eastern Local Board of
E~on at a this week' s meetin,.
Today is Richard D. Smith s
final day .as superintendent of lhe
DisuicL Roberts will move into lhe
interim position 011 Mooday. Smith
1resigned a monlh llfio after accepting a position as area coordinator
for the Ohio Department of Educa· tioil. He will be working out of an
Alhens office.
Roberts retired last year from
lhe position of principal of Federal
Hocking High School, lhe job be
took when he left lhe Eastern DisuicL
At the meting Ray Karr, b&lt;&gt;ard
president, discussed House Bi11264
which is lhe legislation allowing ·
· sch9QI districts to tiorrow money in
order to make improvements resulting in energy savings. The loan
repayment is made possible
through energy savings. No action
was at the ~eetlng although the

OKs ·clinton's budget Environmental groups
appeal ~se _of. scrubbers

: WASHINGTON (AP)- Hause $16.3 billion "emergency" jobs
· Democrats delivered for President bill~ including money for summer
Clintlln, J!MiiniJ his bud&amp;et and his youth jobs, highway projects and
jobl bUill\ a single day: Now, it's other progi'HII&lt;t&amp;11Ut people to
)IJ), tR tho Senate, where .~t could be worlt.
·
.
, atouJb~ofweeks.
Only a few hours earlier in the
·' '' Al,l ey~s will be on whether marathon. session. the r House
they wUIJlve President Clinton a passed Clinton's five-year, $500
ch~." said Rep. Nancy Pelosi. billion deficit reduction plan~ an
0-7,alif..
.
!""algarn 0~ p~oposed e~y and
I think there will ~ a ·fight m mcome tax mcreases, mtlitary cutt~e Senate,, ~ut the victory Ia~~ backs_ and a shift in d~mes.tic
JIIght w~ an unpcl'Wit ftrSI step._
sp~n.dmg toward e~ucauon, JOb
Rep. Mike Synar '· D-O~la., said tratnmg .and con~ttuction.
today of lhe late-mght victory for
'Ole measures passed by nearly
Clioton's economic prolp'8IDS. .
identiCIII votes mostly along party
The House early thts mornmg lines, 243-183 on lhe budget and
completed its version of ·Clinton's 235-190 on the spending bill. ·
1'The great debate looti: place.
economic legislation by passing a
0

The Republicans won ihe debate
and the Democrals won the vote,"
Rep. Richard Armey, R-Teus. said
this mornlnl.'.
·
The le~tiim _PB!sed just over
a month after Clmton requested
action in his economic speech to
Con~ss, and party ·leadeis based
their appeals most suidentl,y on lhe
public support enjoyed by lhe new
president
.
"llhink ~is an example lhat
gridlock is over and were trying to
move the country again," sxnar
said on "CBS This morning. ' "I
lhink lhe American people support
and want this president to sueceed," he said.

World Trade Center t'ower reopens
NEW YORK (AP)- Breaking
Sheik Omar Abdel-R.ahman Thursday, one offour back-to-back
two weeta of silence, i radical preaches at a Jersey ·City, N.J., interviews. "I came to America as
MuSlim claic y.ohose name has sur- mosque where two of the suspects an immigrant in ~ to attack lhe
fliced repeatedly in the pobe of the worshiped.
Egyptian regime. lt dilesn't stand.to
World Trade Center bombing
"I had no knowledge of this . reason that I would like for the
de!'ied any role in the attack and explos!:&gt;" and tm not ~ib!c • place in which I live to be unsafe.:•
SBid he doesn't knOw the suspectS fo~ It, the~~~ Egyp_lian oJe~~
Also Thursday, one of the twiD
under arrest.
satd on AliC s Primewne Live
110-story towers shut since the
· '
Feb. 26 blast was partially

a·

EV

SA

T.E

~::·=q~~-=~~~
in~ectin¥ his 57th-floor office

r-----Local briefs
't •

.

PVFD responds to fire

,

A fumlce ma1func:tjon was listed as the probable cause of llrlle·
ture fire Tburadal.:mnd 11':30 p.m. at the residence of Dorot!ly
. ~'oiJPoint
inPomeroy.
· •· ;
~ to Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Deparunent Chief Danny
Zirtlo, c11m1a1e was confined to the furnace area with the exception
· of IIDoke dunage.
··
Tine PVFD trucks and a truck .from lhe Middlepon Volunteer ·
Ftre Department were dispatched to lhe scene. Zirlcle said. About 23 .
ftreflgbt.en wee on the scene.
· '
.
Accordin~ to the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service,
Harden IIIII · birley Temp!Dn ~fusCd treabncnt.
,
·

Deputies profJe theft

'

Th,lrteen bags of Pro-Mix .and several cast iron weights were
reportedly SIOlen from a gnge along State Route 338.
Accordinl to 1 report from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart-ment, SIDphenJenldns, Adams Road, Letart Falls, reported the theft
,.._. • .
.
.. . Thunda
. Y... .,..m
•
•
.
An mvCIIigatiOII IS continwng.

Man bound over on charges

REGISTER TO WIN
OUR •2100 GRAND·PRIZE.z.
A TRIP TO DISNEY WORLu
&amp; OTHER PRIZES

:
A Por!lmd man c:harJed with breaking and entering was bound
· ' over to the Meigs County Coun of Com111911 Pleas fonowing a hear,
ing in Meigs COunty Coun.
.
·.
Sky Flynn, 19, Is chal:lcd Wilh the breaking and entering of a
. cabin owned by Norman Hamlin, Dayton, and a building owned by
c--. Conpr, PortlancL.The incidenll oecuned on Sharon Hoi- .
, low Rolli Ia Lebenon TQ1Jmlblp,
'
·
Cowlty Out Judge PMrick O'Brien set bond at $2S.000 with 10
percent lllowed. Plynn remalna in the custody or Meigs County
. )IIIICI M. Soullby in )leu of bond.
.
,

SATURDAY BONUS
BUYS AND
CASH·BACK .REBATES

"

·, Man atresiedjor shoplifting

(Detail• In store)

,

\

'

'

aecGrtty

Til,

wcahl. .

'

.

A ttlddlepon IDU wa ~m~ted for ahoplifting and resisting
• lrl'llt Wedlllt~IY lftllt10011 in Olllipoli*
• A&amp;lcord!Dito a ~ ftom the Gall~lil Police Dei*Dnent,
&amp;;qy J. RliOid" 1., 892 SOuth Second Ave., Middleport, wu
imilecl after
at Bil Bear Silpermlrtet. 31 Oliio River

Pia,

b&lt;&gt;ard decided to discuss it again at
Meeting with the board was
the next meeting.
Nancy Larkins, high school reac~Some certified and non-certified er, regarding the community educaemployees were hired during the tion activities.
·
meeting. Gregory Cooper was
She reported lhat surveys have
employed as a substitute buS driver been sent to businesses and comon a probationary contraCt, Rose- munity leaders asking for their
mary Fluharty was hired as a sub- involvement. Approximately 0
stitute custodian for lhe remainder attended a meeting on March 9 at
of the year to be used on an as- lhe high school and Larkins rqxnt· .
needed basis, and Lesley D. Carr, ed that lhe seasion 2enerated some
Scott L. Walton, Palrieia S. Goukl, very good ideas. She said that
E. Jean Smithem, Cynlhia L. Face- hopeful~)' the group will sian some
myer, and Jody L. Taylor were classes m May. She also informed
added to the list.9f substinne teaeh· !he board that the University of Rio
ers.
Grande will present a conference
The b&lt;&gt;ard heard a repon from on "Collaboration for Ecoriomic
Pam Douthitt, athletic director, Development in an Era of Educaregarding estimated costs for fresh- . tiona! Reform, on Frida~April 23.
man basketball. Arch Rose, trans- Anyone inrerested is
to con- ·
portation coordinator, also met taci Larldns at the high school fi&gt;r
wilh lhe board to discuss removal more information.
of underground storage lanks in the
Thursday at 4 p.m. was set for a
disuicL
·
'
special meeting 'of lhe board at the
The first reading on a policy high school to discuss personnel.
regarding interdistrict open enroll- The next regular board meeting
ment and a polity on inlradistrict will be held on April 20 at 6:30
open enrollment for the 1993-94 p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
school year was approved. Bids on
Attending were Karl. president,
a new school bus were reviewed at Jim Smilh, vice president, and
the meeting and some appropria- board members, Ron Eastman, Bill
lions weie revised.
Hannum, and Mike Martin.

ftljXIIW lie lllegedly

.

II10ie 1 canon of cigareues

.~un~~~~~~m~~:ci ~P~

speed and thoroughness of the
cleanup.
"lwillrepontomypeoplethat
they are free to come """k and it
will be safer than before,Tohe said.
Egyptian authorities say Abdel·
Rahman. 54, is lhe spiritual leader
of a violent band of foodamentalists, that wants to .overthrow the
Egyptian government and install an
Islamic regime.
Through his lawyer. Abdel·Rah·
man · previously had denied
involvement in the bombing. But
he had not made any public corn.ments since the blast lhat killed six
people · and injured more than
was ordered deported by a 0 .S.
immigration judge In Newark, NJ.
The IJI'(lCCedinas were not connected tO the ll1de bombing.
But accordinl; to The Star.Ledler of Nowuk, U.S, Immigration Judge Daniel Meisner Aid in
his sealed order, "There are rea,sonable 1f0unds for ~lng the
.applicant to be a danger to the
leCW'ity of the Uniled Slltel."
The juge llid Abclel-Rahman '1
followers in BIYPt.inwlved
in the 198) IUIIIinldon of Preal·
dent Anwrl Sldslllld other "spec:·
,IICular 1em11iJt lctividCII,"
The lmmigratiOD and Natural·
izallaa ServiCe souallt die llheilc;'s
deponltion bealn• Abdei-Rahman
did not dlacloae that he Ia a
polypmlal and that he WU COD·
vlctad of falalfyiDI 1 check in
Em"- Hia lawyer uid he will fiaht

•.

I'

dioxide emissions from lhe plant to
reduce the arnooot of environmentally damaging acid rain.
"In effect, lhe PUCO completely i~nored AEP's ratepayers in
making this decision," said Ned
Helme, executive director of the
Washington-based group. Helme
said AEP could save its customers
$820 iniUion by 1999 by switching
to low-sulfur COlli.
"It doesn't matter to AEP."
Helme said. "Whatever lhe cost,
lhey get lhe consumers to pick up
lhe tab;"
·
- AEP officials considered
switching to out-of-state coal but
eventually chose the scrubbers,
which they said was the least·

expensive alternative: .The scrubber
plan will save the jobs of 800 coal
miners but is estimated to boost
eleclric rates by 6 pertent between
1995and2~.

.

No date has been set for the
Supreme Court to act on the
appeals.

The appeal filed Thursday was
the third appeal filed with the
Supreme Coun against the Nov. 25
decision by PUCO. A coalition of
large industrial elecuic customen
had filed two appeals. contending
customers will be ovcrt)larged_millions of dollars because AEP is
using l)igher-priced Ohio coal from
its affiliated mines in Meigs County.

White to retire
WASHINGTON (AP) Supreme Coun Justice Byron R.
White said today he plans til retire
soon, giving President Clinton an
early opportunity to make his fust
appointment to the nation's highest
court.
White, in a statement released
by the court's public information
office, said he would end his 31year high court tenure at the end of
the current term, in June or Jul)' .
"After 31 years. Marion (Me~.
White) and I lhink someone else
shoukl be pennitted to have a like
experience," White said in the
statemenL
White said he was Informing
President Clinton of his retirement
plans in a lelll:r to be detivered to
the White House today.
"It has been an interesting and
excitin~ CXJ.lerience to serve on the
court,' White said.
He and his wife plan 10 remain
in Wishington.

•

·

DISCUSSING DEVELOPMENT • CoagressmaD Ted Strickland,
left, Meigs CouDty Clulmber of CommerceiEconollllc Developmeat
Omee Director Paula Thacker and Meigs County COIIIIIIlsaloDer
JaDet Howard dlllc:uased ecoDomlc development, highway projects
aad IIOCial ecoaomlc eoiiCei'DI'durlag a recent meetlag at tbe chamber
ollke. StrlddiiMI wll be tile pat ~~pe~~ker at the Meigs Chamber of
,ComJDerce Allllual Dlllller DalKe OD Marclll7.

~---.......

l,(X)().
"'
•
On Wednesday. Abdei-Rahman

cleJlDrtadon.

j.

JV

COLUMBUS, Ohio' (AP) Two environmental groups want
the OhiO Supreme Court to reversea decision on American Electric
Power's plan to meet federal clean
air laws while burning Ohio coat
The Center for Clean Air Policy
and the Ohio Sierra Club say- the
construction 9f air-cleaning scrubbers at AEP's Gavin power plant in
Cheshire was not the "least-cost"
solution. The non-profit groups
favor a switch to low-sulfur, outof-swe coal.
The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio approved the construction
of the scrubber system, which is
expected to be completed in lhe fall
of 1995. The system is sujlpose to
remove 95 percent of the sulfur-

EASTERN GIRLS' AWARDS- WIDDIII
Eallttra'a alrll' alllletlc awards at Tlluraday
IIIPt'a wltlter 1p01 II biiiQIIIt wen (L-1) JaiDie
wl• (But
Jiblyer), PeDD:J Atlker
•

o,....,.

'

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