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                  <text>PIQJ 12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Archaeologists find what may be
the continent's oldest settlement
By ROSANNE PAGANO
carbon dating, the spear points and facts were distinct from the sophis~ted Press Writer
wood charcoal from cooking ticated spear points found in New
. ANCHORAGE. Alaska
heanhs were reevlllualed and dated Mexico and other Southwesrcrn
Archaeologists have discovered . to 9,700 to 11,700 years llj!O.
states.
"lpCif poinrs and cbarcoal that they
Paleo-Indian sites in the Ameri·
The BLM oversees the unpopu..y offer the best evidence yet that can Southwest date to around lated region in the Brooks Range,
Prcb~ humans carne to Nonh
10,000 to 11,000 years ago.
about 225 miles south of Barrow.
~a by way of a land bridge
"It' s nice in Alaska to have
The Mesa Site, within the
aaoss the Bering Strait.
something a little bit older," said National Petroleum Reserve, was
: The artifacts, found on a nonh- Paul Martin, a University of Ari- discovered in 1978 during routine
·em Alaska hilltop, are believed to zona emeritus professor of geo- archaeology work in connection
))e as much as 11,700 y~ old science. Martin said the discovery with oil and gas exploration. li
which would make the site the old- fits with theo~ies that early commands a 360-degree view of
est known settlement on the conti- Alaskans moved into the' American the plains 200 feet below the mesa
nent, the U.S . Bureau of Land Southwest in as little as 500 years.
- ideal for scouting out herdds of
Managcmtnt said Wednesday.
The BLM, however, said more bison and mammoth, archaeolo_ Researchers have long believed sites in Alaska are needed to bol- gists said.
.!hat pn:bistoric humans entered the ster conclusions about human
The BLM said it has recomNew World over a land bridge left migration. And Wilson said more . mended the camp for inclusion on
bare diKing the last ice aae. which excavation on both sides of the the National Register of Historic
ended about 10,000 years ago, and Bering Strait is needed since no Places, and Interior Secretary
traveled south. Under that theory, artifacts like those from the Mesa · Bruce Babbiu has be¥un the proarchaeologists believed the conti- Site have yet turried up in the Rus- cess to withdraw the Site and 2,500
nent's oldesl settlement might one sian Far East.
acres surrounding it from developday tum up in Alaska.
. Wilson said some spear points ment.
: "We now have one good, well- hke those used by pllleo-Indians
llocumen!Cd site," BLM archaeolo- had been found in Alaska before.
gist Curtis Wilson said. ''There But those were isolated spear
have to be more out there."
points that were lying on the surThe find is known as the Mesa face and had been removed from
Site. Initial radiocarbon dating of other identifying artifacts.
the Mesa Site artifacts in the late
Wilson said of 100 points col1970s showed the spear points lected frOm the Mesa Site, 13 were
.were mly about 7,6W years old.
paleo-Indian spears. They ·were
: But the BLM said that with the found a1 depths of less than a foot.
!levelopment of moo: precise radioUntil !he Mesa Site, Alaska arti-

China.
.
"I think in some ways I have
beca an outsider in America
beeN'"' of thai," Hersey said in a
1985 interview.
The family returned to the United States when he was I 0 and he
graduated (rom Yale in 1936.
"A Bell for Adano," which told
of the im)liiCt of American soldiers
occupying an Italian village, won
the 19'45 Pulitzer and was made
into a movie. "Hiroshima," published in 1946, was Hersey's most

Woman turns
to death for
lottery winners
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Birthdays and anniversaries
didn't work, so Rhonda Starling
switched to the death dates of relatives in picking lottery numbers.
She won $25,000.
"All I can say is, they must
have been watching over me,"
Starling said after matching all six
numbers in Friday's drawing for
West Virginia's Cash2S game: 4, 6,
10, IS, 16 and 19.
.
"I've tiied using binhdays and
anniversaries and everything else.
So this time I used the dates of
deaths from brothers, sisters-inlaw, aunts and my mother," said
Starling, 36 of Bluef~eld, Va.

145

Pick 4:
9287

Insert

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PviiJ cloud' to.lpt ....
lcby ..._,.,. pciMibte. Low
tbemld40o.

•
..
Vol. 43, No. 231
Copyrlghled 18113

SWINGING THE DAY AWAY - R• Cirford Jaolds lllutds with Jais hriaJ, Setll, Wl, _.
Sarah, both S, while swingia1 iB Cllllty r . t
Wednesday llfternoon in Hutch!. . .., Ku. gr.

~
..

~

~

famous non-fiction work. li ~hi·
cally detailed the destrucuon of
that Japanese city by a U.S. atomic
bomb on Aug. 6, 1945, as the war
neared its end. The New Yorker
devoted an entire issue to it
Hersey publicly defended the
bombing as a way to shorten the
war. Former U.S. poet laureate
Richard ~ilbur, a. Key West neigh·
bor and friend, saJd Hersey felt differently.
"He came out bitterly persuaded lhat the dropping of the bomb
on Hiroshima had been a bad thing
to do,'' Wilbur said.
Hersey published ,24 works of
fiction and non-fiction, including
15 novels. His last bonk, "Antonieua," published by Alfred A.
Knopf in 1991, tells the story of a
Stradivarius violin. Hersey inserted
himself as a character.
His first book, "Men on
Bataan," was published in 1942
and .gave his observations of the
war. Hersey's "The Wall," about
the destructiop of the Warsaw ghetto by the Nazis, carne out in 1950.
In addition to "A Bell for
Ada no," Hersey's "The War
Lover'' was made into a movie and
"The Wall" became a television
movie and a play.
Hersey's bonks lllso include "A
Single Pebble" (1956), "The Child
Buyer" (1960), "The Algiers
Motel Incident" (1968) and
"Aspects · of the Presidency"
(1980).
His longtime Knopf editor,
Jut!i!h Jones, said Hersey continued
wntmg even after his debilitating
illnesses began severlll years llj!O.
"I have a collection of stories
called 'Key West Tales' that I got a
month or so ago," she said. They
will be published in the winter
Jones said.
'
Hersey's fust bonks were written ~bile he was a correspondent
for Tune magazine in the Far East.
He eventually split with Time-Life
founder Henry Luce, said Henry
G~wald, fonner editor in chief.
He was a wonderful foreign
.correspondent who had his occasional differences with the boss ...
about issues that we now all undersland better," Grunwald said.
Hersey opposed the internment
of Japanese-Americans during the
war and fought for the rights of
authors.

Impeachment effort sputtering _

DERSON'S

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Sectio•als and
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1

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SPEAKS TO Cmi!:F ·• President Boris Yeltsln gestures as he
speak• to llis chief rival, parliament speaker Russian Khasbulalov,
In private llhordy before the start ot the emergency &amp;e~Sloa or the
Coqreu ot People's Deputies. Friday in the Kremlin. The efforts
to Impeach Yeltsln railed due to the lack or 11 needed two-thirds
majority In tile Congres&amp;. (AP photo)

HiJA

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linl.,28p...

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539,.., !511

lacked the two-thirds majority.
"Despite the fact that Yeltsin
deserves to be ousted, the most reasonab~ decision now would. be ~
hold sunultaneous early elecuons,
said Viktor Aksyuchits, a leader of
the hard·line Russian Unity faction.
Yeltsin's main rival for power,
legislative speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, had urged the Congress to
meet jn emergency session after the
pres1dentonSaturdaythreatenedto
impose "special" rule to brealc the
politiclll deadlock blocking reform.
Yeltsin later backed away from the
threat and did not declare any kind
of emergency rule in a decree published Wednesday.
In a report today on Yeltsin's
actions to the Congress, Constitu·
tiona! Coun Chief Judge Valery
Zorkin failed to give hard-liners
any ammunition to impeach the
president, and instead offered a
cOmpromise. ·
Zorkin proposed simultaneous
legislative and presidential electio!IS in the autumn and also suggested scrapping the Congress in
favor of a bicamerllllegislature.
Yeltsin, who has opposed holding simultaneous elections, said he
could back some of Zorkin's pro-

By BRYAN BRUMLEY
AssoCiated Press Writer
MOSCOW Efforts to
impeach President Boris Yeltsin
$puttered today after Congress
deadlocke:d in early votes and the
nation's highest judge offered a
compromise to hold early elections
anQ create a new legisla1ure.
The opening of the emergency
session of the Congress of ~le 's
Deputies, Russia's highest parliamentary body, capped a week of
heightened tension over the power
struggle between Yeltsin and the
legislative branch.
Preliminary votes showed that
the hard-liners in the 1,033-mcmbcr,
Communist-dominated
Congress lacked the two-thirds
majority needed to. impeach
Yelisin, whom they accused ofviolating the constitution. ·
The voting touched tangentially
on impeachment as a way for hardliners to lest their support, but they
never. actually called for a voce on
impeachment after reali'zing they

L&amp;IHfy.

534900·full set

.

, . . ..

.

•.By ROBERT E. MILLER
Atlodated Press Wri~
~J..UMBUS -, 9o.... Gcor$,e
.Voailo'rfi:lr'nwo-")'ear ·badget 'bill
has been recom"!ended for ~e
by the ~ouse Fm~ncc. Comm1tte:e
over clauns by mtnonty Repubh~;ms that Democ~ts made it into
a house of cards.
Still, fiye of 13 Republicans on
the com.m!ttec hupported the record
$30.6 billion budget late Thursday
night. The panel acted on numerous
amendments and approved it 23·8
for a floor vote Tuesday. All 18
~IS Stip(Xlrted 1L
· The commmce labored over
ame~cnts for nearly four hours,
adopting many of them. However, .
mQst made comparatively minor
cbanges in ~ s~bstitute bill
announced earhcr 1n the week by

.

Chairman Patrick Swee[ley, 15- islation.
Cleye~d.
·
The biggest change made by the
.h. smgle_ w:n~ndment, prepared ~m~ts W1!5 a ~ownw.!fd reviby ihe Leg1slauve Budget Office, ston ,n Votnovtcb's welfare
was more than I SO pages of mos~y ·caseload estimateS for the nc;xt two
techrucal chan~es.. .
years. The )ower esllmate,
However, It d1d mclude a $2 announced Tuesday, freed up about
millie~ additi6n for the O~io Arts $225 million.
·
.
Council budget and a requuement
Democrats spent about $25 milfor c~llege pro~ess~rs to begin lion with Thursday ~ght's.amendspend1ng more ume m the class- ments but they sll~ sa1d they
room. .
reduced the governor s budget to
The _b1ggcst of about two dozen $30.6 billion, a total provid¢ by
Republ_1can amendm~nts called f?" Dennis Morgan, director of the
sweepmg refor!"s. m the state s Legislative Budget Office.
welfare and Medicw~ ~s. .
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
However, Rep. Williaril 1'1!omp- Concord, the ranking GOP comson, R-Delphos! and others did not mittee member, said the revision
press for theu adoplton af!er was based on over-optimistic weiSweeney repeated an e~rher fare projections and will eventually
promise tha~ they will be consid- lead to deficits and spending cuts.
ered later th1s year as separate leg-

By LI!:E SIEGEL
AP Science Writer
, LOS ANGELES _Ore on's
sttorig eaithquakc was a tel!intier
that the Pacific Northwest someday
may be rocked by disastrous
quakes including major jolts right
under Portland or Seattle.
·'Oregonians have received a
wake-up call today,'' u.s. Sen.
Mlirk Hatfield•.R-Ore., said from
Washington. "We've known the
possibility exists for a major eanhquake and ret we are woefully
unprepared.'
Scientists ·and engineers echoed
that message after a sharp jolt estimated at 5.3 to 5.7 on the Richter
scale rocked the Pacific Nonhwest
early Thursday Centered southeast
of Portland,~. the quake caused
'
,

National Employ the Older Worker Month·

...... c, .,

II

m~y as

13 :·suPII!IIuakes" m~c
sunnf magn1\Ude 8 or ll rupmrea
the ,000-mile-long Cascadia.
"subduction wne," wllcre bu,e
plates of EartlJ's CtU$1 collide ·oa
the coasts of British Columbia,
Washington, Oregon and northemmost €alifornia.
Weaver said scientists fear such
a quake, measuring at least 8.S in
mllj!Ditude, will happen ~ain. but
they can't say when. Similar sub·
duction zone quakes killed thou'
sands in Chile in.l960 and Mexico
City in 1985. ·

More health care sought
for.poor women and infant~
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Advocates of a
program that provides helllth care
to pregnant women and children
who calinot qualify for Medicaid
welcome a modest expansion proposed by the House, but they say
moo: needs to be done.
The Children's Defense FundOhio, the Ohio Hospital Associa·
lion and other groups urged legislators Thursday to spend more
money on Healthy Start, a program
that makes some of the state's
uninsured working poor eligible for
Medicaid.
Medicaid is the federal-state
program that provides belllth care
for the poor. Healthy Start covers
women who are low-income but
earn 100 much to qualify for Medicaid benefits.
Helllthy Start currtntly is avail·
able for pregnant women and children up to llj!e 6 in families who
earn 33 percent above the poverty
level. For a woman with two children, that would amount to about

$12,500 under federal poverty
guidelines that iake effect nexl
month.
An expansion of the program
that was to take effect in Jantl&amp;lj
would have extended benefits to
families eamiQg 85 percent moro
than the poverty level. But the
expansion would cost an estimated
$34 million annually, and wall
delayed by the state last year td
help solve budget problems.
'1
Gov. George 'Voinovich's proposed stale budget recommended
spending for Healthy Start to cover
families at 133 percent of poverty
the minimum required by federai·
law.
An llltemate budget bill written.
by Democrats who control the
House would expand the program
to 150 percent of poverty over the
next two years, still short of the
oriiinai18S perccnt golll.
'We support what the House
did. It's an important step for-·
wan!,'' said Mark Rclll, director of
the Children's Defense Fund
1

Thursday's grand jury did not

Scftultz profile...
: '"As long u I can, I'll work,"
: said Faye Schultz, 69, of Cherry
Ridge ll'ho for the put nine yean
• has been a &lt;men Tfiumb worker It
' the Meigs County lkalth Depart·

ROPER BUILT·IN DISHWASHER
•3 Cycles •Duraperm Liner
eColor Panels

269°

minor lnjuries and scattered damage to bridges and buildings,
.!llCluding cracks in the state Capitoi101U11lla.
•'It is time for Oregon and the
rest of the region to prepare for a
much larger caithquakc,' said seismologist Craig Yleaver, regional
director of the u.s. Geologiclll Sur·
vcy's Pacific Northwest Earthquake Program in Seattle.
~PacifiC Northwest faces two
major seismic hazards:
- Numerous studies·show that
during the past 7,000 years, as

•' •t

Vetenm Memorial Hospitlll .
A number of considetali0115 preROBERT ELBERFELD
charged with giving drugs to two vented the proiCCUtor from taking·
1\ofeigsCountyyouths.
the case before the grand jury.
l
D. Michael Mullen, 1663 Un· Thursday, a spokesman for Prosc•••
eoln Heiabta, I'Oma'oy, is accused cutor John Lcntes said this mom·
•
said. ••1 ;,;,y 1.t here. I see 8 lot of of suppfyi_ng Diazepam (Trade ing.
,
Robert Elberfeld, 82; of Five
-.....
name· V 1 )
p
L
'd h
Points 1·1 employed at the Meig• ~leI used to- at the ·•-."
iris, • a 1um to two omero~
entcs 111 1 e case may ao
o
befioo: a .uture
•
·
·
1'-"cld __,_
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·museum i
qea II and I2 • on Man:h 1
""""'Jury.
. ·
c.ouruy M111ewn where be uaiats
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and
13
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Tuesday through Friday, from I·
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SPECIAL S

should rule Russia
.
His call for a referendum was
met with weak applause.
·
Yeltsin was present in the cham:
ber as the Congress convened 4n
the Grand Kremlin Palace. Ask6d
by reporters beforehand about who
would win at the session he
replied: "There will be no win~.
It will be a tie."
On Thursday night, Khasbulatov
said he was against Yeltsin's
impeacbmenL That was a reverSal
from his previous insis.tence that
there were grounds for impeachment and from his prq!arations for
such a vole.
Khasbulatov opposes the April
25 referendum and instead wanis
early presidential and legislative
elections.
Legislative elections currendy
arc set for March 1995 and presidential voling for June 1996.
Yeltsin in the past has suggested ·
advancing each date by one year'
But he has insisted that simul.
ousballolingcouldcreatead.angerou~ power vacuum and demand$
legislative elections fust, tiJlll8rellt.ly hoping to outlast-the Congreu ·.
which was elected before the Sovi!
et collapse.
. .

Case against Pomeroy attorney
may wait till next grandjury

IOPEI EUCIIIC lnEI
·e3T........... -PanwaliPI

posals, and there also were signs of
support from both hard-line and
reformist deputies. Kbashulatov
h.as previously ~reposed early,
Simultaneous elections.
Hardliners had expected Zorkin
to present the high court's earlier
finding that Yeltsin violated the
constitution by trying to override
the Congress and calling a nationwide referendum rex: April 25 on
whoshouldruleRussl&amp;.
Instead, Zork:in offered the compromise and tried to defend himself
from criticism that he had spoken
out against Ycltsin's decree before
it was published.
·
The Congress, which is dominated by ex-communist apparatcbiks and factory . directors
opposed to Yeltsin's economic and
political reforms, bas been stripping the president of his executive
powers for months. The lawmakers
say that Russia's Soviet-era constitution givps them supreme authority.
·
.
.
In a speech 'to deputies, Yeltsin
urged them not to be rushed into
"doublful actions from the ~lilical
and morBI point of view,' and he
again pressed for a referendum
next month to ask voters who

·t
.B. ouse paneI 0 K '·s b.u dge
bill, floor vote Tuesday
·Quake provides .'wake-up call'
'

SPRING AIR

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cont.
A llultlmodll Inc. Newopopor

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Friday, March 26, 1993

Spring Specials

Pulitzer prize-winning
r:zuthor John Hersey dies
By RICHARD COLI!:
Aaociated Press Writer
MIAMI- John Hersey, the
combat journalist and Pulitzer
Prizo.winning author whose books
"Hiroshima," "A Bell for
Adano" and "The Wall" chronicled World War II and its consequences, died Wednesday at age
78.
Hersey: was among the nation's
fust writers to move away from
instinctive wartime patriotism to a
. more critical view of war and
hunwlity.
.
Heney suffered a stroke a year
ago and bad cancer of the colon
and liver, said Barbara Hersey, his
wife of 35 years. His family was at
his side when he died in their Key
West home.
Hersey ·was born to American
missionaries in 1914 in Tientsin,

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Improving
your
home

DICIIIL

.

Hclllth Depanmcnt and that she's
much happier when she working
andaroundolherpeople
. bildre
n
Durini·the' Y·-· as her c
were growing ·up, Schultz worked
in a_varicty ofj'obs including a

~=n~~~~- 'fu'!t·~~~A~::

Schultz wcrb W lioun a week
doiD&amp; basic ollice work and llliat·
•jnc lit the vlrioul health progr11111 the part,1lme job at. the Health
·aniliNe tliele. She Is paid tJuou&amp;h Department, she worked in an
the federUly funded Oreen Thumb assistant to the Green Thumb

0

=

t;'of.~

..

up under the Older

· Rodring II not on her agenda for
the lllllllll\'elll yean. She llld that
down lhrouab the yean she has bad
. contact wiib people who "when
~they 'uit (wuk), ibey quit evwy-

~at'a

aot for me." aald
Scholtz, who aaid llhelovos it;• the
)1

supervisor in five Southeastern
Ohio c 0181tica.
Whell the time carne for her to
alow dClwn-al)d she knew she
wasn't ready to drop out-she
looked to Green Thumb opponuni·
Ilea for pan-time emplo)'IIICitt IDd
went to wort 11 the Meigs County
lkalth Departmeni.
~(·

•

\

El.berjjeltJ proifile .

=

VllilinB groupe and 'I'DdiFor
64
yeers, Elberfeld worked
1
at department stores .,-hicb carried
the family name in Partenburg, .
Marietta and Pomeroy. Thronah
the yean he wu involved in every
phase of the busines-!&gt;uylng,
advertising, lltCIChandiaing and display.
·
For Elberfeld, his aac gM8 ~
an lldvanrase over )""\IIIII"' people.
'"I remember lots of hi$toly. I was
theze,• Elberfeld said.
'"It's ~ood to be lim," Elberfeld . 1

:~i......,..
. . .,.eld~RW!aincd.T,C!f~urneu.o-f;~tors.
E::~
RAC to mareaka e. recogruzanccmodi:ficatt"on"~l
lllber

CXJl
Blbeneld, ~5 through the · Offtcials
•
Ravenswood
museum replel, . people from Aluminum Corporation (RAC) analliiOWitllbe world, from Sweden noullced that they have undenatcn
to Cllltornia, vilit the museum.
a project to make ~ modifica· Althousb Elberfeld enjoys his lion to the plant's S·Stand Cold
work at the museum, he said he Rolling Mill.
would like to get back into the
The modillcaliorul will increue
re~ ~- , .
, .
· the widths available for the produc·
'The sellmg bust ness 11 m my lion of can body stock to mau:h the
blood,• Elberfeld said. .
changing requircmcnll of the
marketing. The project is expected

'

to be completed ~ the next i:t
~. IIIII
COIIIDUtmeltl by
1D remain viable and commlaed to !he lllllkcti
which It serves.
ia pllt of an own!! Wide

Willi • •

"'t

JIID8IIDI which iDdedn eaJIIn•
caaenllln our CIUIIIItY m I • I I
proc n, 11 welf 11 iqulpnu• .-1

L:;:. RA'(_P'~~ Ollr)'

�·.

..

~ommentary
.
'

Friday, March 26; 1993

•

111 eoart saeei

Pomeroy. Ohio
. - DEVOTED TO THE IIC'l'EltE81'8
OJ' THit IBIGB-IIAIIO!f .UJCA
.

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
PubUsber

•
.. PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Publl5ber/ControUer

CHARLENE llOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS Of OPINION are welcome. They should be less ihan 300
: , words. All lette11 art subject to editing 111d must be sisned witb name,
·,, address and telephone number. No unsigned leltel1 will be publisbed. Lettas
:: sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not pmonalities.

The 'vision thing'
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Buoi·• Analyat
NEW YORK - George Bush's apparent disdain for lhe "vision
~hilA!'' may have been an element in his deftat, just as itis in lhe defeat of
C&lt;Q0ra1C chiefs IWDblcd from office in the past y~.
.
Wbile tbat COIIICDtioa cannot easily be documenled in politics, lhcrc is
sufficient empirical eviclence to suggest it may be true m lhe corporaiC
. ~ evidence: many corpor8IC chief executives 11e ·on lbe
pressured by their own boards, shareholders, securities analysts and ~ers
woo either fail to understand lhe chiers vision, if any, or deem it unsuued
10 tbe need.
..
.
and . '-·h·- ___........ .
A corporale chairm811's viSIOII of a company
tts '"""" - - lhe broad oullinc of its philosophy, culbue and gOals, and communicates a
sense of team endeavor to employees, directors, sharehlolders, analysiS
nnd olhcts.
. also . I
But, since it puiS lhc chief executive clearly on record, 11
mvo ves
risk. If the chairman doesn't meet tbe standards laid out in his vision, it
isn ltlong before slweholders become upset and demand c'-!Je.
To spell out a vision is 10 be beld accounlable, said Raymond French,
former head of Canal Capital Corp., but be conceded lhat if a chief is to
gl!l~ time needed to effect change, "it is a commitment that has 10 be
maile."
.
·:• Risky or not, it is vital f!)f the board and inv~ 11;1 know lhe c'!ief's
Plans and what be or she stands for, says Harry Hensbel; former presldenl
PI chief executive ofrJCer of Bulova Wlllcll Co.
:· "If I had 10 do it over again. I'd worlt even harder at this," he said
when queried by John Budd, former senior vice president of Emhart Corp.
lcld.latcr vice chairmm of Carl Byoir Co., lhe public relations firm.
'• Budd now beads Tbe Ornep Group, a public re1atioos think tank and
Corporate advisory fmn lhat mainlains what it calls a Olief Executiv.c's
Council, composed of former top executives, and chaired by Hensbel.
.• Arlee obtaining wriiiCD and oral comments from council members,
ludd reached lheae conclusi0111:
• -While tbe 'immediate cauae of the fall of chief executives recendy
has been auributed to abysmal fiiiiUICial result.s, lost invesur confidence
iia the chief and concern over lhe company's diRClion played a big role.
~ In es!ICIICC, SIYS Budd, poor fUUIDCial resulll &amp;et the attcntioa, but a
ii.cre fundamental reason might be the chief's loll credibility, benune be
licts a vision, the vision isn't popularly underiiOod. or he Wis 10 achieve

run:

~

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.

!l:ted

PRo .Life?

'oals

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on ac111111 c1115, appropriations ani!
tu incu 1 ·
B• tbe media decid:d 10 accord
~- CliiWOO a Roman lriumph any-

Berryls World

#.

,.

Sa~

war

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•

Joday in history
.

••
.;
By The Associated Press
:• Today is Friday, March 26, tb: 851h day of 1993. There are 280 days
lefl in tb: year.
:; Toclay's Highlight in History:
.!• .Orl M~h 26, 1979,1he Cam~ David peace.Jreaty was signed by Israeli
!'time Mm1s1er Mcnachem Begm and EsYJlUan President Anwar Sadat
d~ng .a While House ceremony, wilh President Jimmy Carter signing as
1\:'WIUICSS.

An ecumenical filllels repon
sars that Episeoplllius are tile
thmnest among Protestants; and
tbc • vieiL
Muyd~=boldtbe
1Dfor·
tbe
wi.sdom
Simpul,
mer ducbe11 of Wi•dsor, who
coined the saying "You can't be
too thin or 1110 ricll."
It's wron,. however, to tbint
that thOIC o U1 not lisled in tbc
Social Rc,isler aren't coaccmc:d ·
about keeping fiL
SL PlulldVOCIICd b:epinJ tbe
bod ''in subjecdora.''
~orne evangelicals blve even
taken UJl pbysical flblell • J*l of
their religioa. 'J'1ae an: ewnp&amp;al
exercise group. known • Trira for

a.-.

... ..

.; . .

I

William A. Rusher
way. (What on Clfth will tbcy do
for hint if be cw;r actually accomplab:s IJOIIICdUng'l)
Tbe realllipifDIICC of 1bc: VOle
lay, not in the Democrats' nearlOla! ·-inity, but in tbe Republi·

c.s' eQUI)Iy IIIW-fOial :r:ilioo.
Tbey v'oted as overwhe mingly
llli!oM lbe Oimon perkige • lhe
DeiDOC rats vllled fm· iL And that
Was cued)' .. it sbould be.
Tbe Rep!lblicans in Congress
foqct (as IOIIIC of them
lie all 1110 pone ID do) lhat they an:
in opposi- DOW, aDd that their
objecli~ is 10 ~ power. They
fal:e a Democllllll: Pany that con:
IJOis bolla tbc presidency and the
Coaareu (lad probably, on many
imn, tbe Soipane Court u well),
and wbolc laldet bas J*oposed an
«Q..,..,ic 1**-F that oo conscieatioos Re1Jub1ican could conceiv-

m•-

ably support· without major
changes.
The IA:IIlpwion will'be to see!!:
10 modify it; and to bait tbe hook
with promiJ:s to vote roc the result
if lhe Danoc:rats will only agree 10
ccmpromis: i biL (After all, il will
be irgued, that wa~ the Republicans can at least 'win" something.)
That would be, for the Republi·
cans, a mug's game if there·ever
was one. The only reason the
DemocratS would agree to compromise on their package would be to
snooker a substantial number of
Republicans into voting for the
resuiL But does :anybody seriously
think that eilhcr lhe Democrats or
the media would give the GOP
credit for lheir stai:Smanlike support if, by some accident, the
amended package lunled out to be
benefiCial to the economy? Nonsense; Mr. Clinton would just be
givCI) anolher (bigger and betler)
Roman lriumph, that's all.
But if the Clinton mixture of
smllll spen!ling cuts, big spending
increases and huge lax hikes has
the expecled result of stifling ecor nomic growth in the privat: sector,

: On this dale:
·
; In 1804, the Louisiana Purchase was divided into the Territory of
Orleans and lhc District of Louisiana.
·
.: In I 827, composer Llldwig van Beelhoven died in Vienna.
'• In 1875, poe1 Rob:n Frost was born in San Francisco.
In 1885,1he Eas1man Dry PlaiC and Film Company of Roches1er, N.Y.,
,. manufactured lhe fiTSI ~om mercia! motion picture film.
1:-

Him, Finn Beikven IDd 'BeJ'nercizc.
Churc!Jes today ofa p1a:e no

resttictioas on their members'
diets. That was not lllways 10 in
ancient limes.

Moses gave the IHaelites
delailed inslruaions 00 whicb ani-

mall. fub and fowl could be ealen den 10 smoke or drink, and many
do not uae lea or coffee.
and which c:ould not.
It is not lllways clear why some
But no denomination stresses
mm.Js w:re mnsidered clean and heallh u much as tb: Seventh-day
Adventists. They consider it "just
as wrong to disregard the laws of
George R. Pltigenz health as to disobey God's moral
othcls unclean. Some

reasons
or health were involved. Otheu
feel il - just a way or keepina
the Jews a "people apart," an~
them £10111 succumbing
to lbe lttraCtions or surrounding
Sly,

.--w.

cuiiiRL
.
Tbe Jldnw prollibilion against

eating the meat of the pig, ror
inunc:c:, kept the lewsseparsle
from the Guiles 111 whom the pig
was a cc••uw •• food.
Some Cbriltian deriominations
- notably ~s~• B:gtists and
Mellyylilu •
•
have discow S d IIIICikiDI and ~~ by
their IIICIIIbcrs.
sueb-jiiOiiiblliunllrCIIIt aicdy lllhcmiiO.
Cliriltiln Scienlilll sre forbid-

a..

In 1892, poet Wah Whilmall died in Camden, NJ.
,
In 19 I 1, playwriglu Tenneuee Williams was born in Columbus, MiSs.
In 1937, a 6-foot-1311 concrete swue of the CII100D characlec "Pope~~" was unveiled during the Second Annual Spinach Festival inJxysiJII
C•ty. Texas.
·
Thought for Todiy: "Ufc is denied by lack of lltiCntion, whelher it be
to cleaning windows or trying to wnie a masterpiece." - Nadia
Boulanger, French music ICaeber (1887-1979).

•

law."

Tbei( "Eight Keys to Personal
Health' • - drawn up by Ellen
White, one of the 19th century
founders of the Adventist Church
- are pure air, . sunlil!hl,
abstemiousness, rest, exerc1se 1
oroper diet, the use of wacer ana
r•
in divine power."
Iloolen Herndon, in his history
of lhe Advenlist movement. wrilea,
"Although streu on prope~ diet
would budly seem noteworthy
today, it wu revolutionary at lhat
time.''
In the 191h century, said Hemdon, "If anyone wu critlc:i1.cd ror
bis did, it wu the Ilgbt ealer. Tbe
idea tbat Oiling 100 much miJIIt be
.unhealthy WU too ridiculoull even
to conaider."
Advellti.BII who' sr: veaellrians
(and many of lhem are) qllOie Genesis I:29 In which God prescribes
for man a diet fruits, grains, nuts

.ru.

lec.

The cemral ,laSic of.tb: Republi-

cans in Congress is 10 fax responsi-

bility for what next happens 10 the
economy squarely on the Democratic Party. The Democrats are
going to get their way in any case.
The highest service Republican
,legislators can perform is to make
clear exactly how damaging that
way will be, and how sleadfastly
the Republican Party opposes iL·
On isolated issues such as the
bill to expand voter registration,
Republican senatou can quite
rightly use lhe filibualer device to
forte lhe Democratic ml\ioiity to
compromise. But on the central
issue of bow 10 deal with the economy, compromise is lhe last thing
congressional Republicans should
seek.

William Rusher is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

which :xfst on these lhings. How
much beuer 10 get this life direct
without tb: toxic substances round
.

The Adventist health program, ·
apparently workS. The life :
expectancy of the Adventist is
reported to be 6 1/2 years longer
than lhc DIII·AdventisL
An early Adventist physician
was Dr. John Harvey Kellogg
· (1852-1943). He inspired his brother 10 found W.K. Kellogg Co.. lhe
maker of cereal products.
Dr. Kellosg invented peanut
butter and the modern breakfast
cereal. .
.
.
He also made a beverage or
toasled grains 10 lake tb: plsce or ,.
coffee. He ,called it "Minute ·
Brew."
When one of.his fanner patients
at Baal: CRlelt Sanilariwn- C.W.
Post - began womng on another
coffee substitute, someone warned
Dr. Kellogg lbat Post might o!ltain

hlsSCCJet.

"By all means, let bim," said
Dr. Kello&amp;a. "Anythina that wiU
get people to ckink lclli ilolfee is aU
riaht with me...
Post' I drink WU called Postum.
It is still round on grocery store '
and~leJ.
·While 'a reasonina about vege- shelves.
18rianism was that "we receive the
Georae Plaaenz II a syndicatlife that is in grains and vegellbles ed wrller ror Newspaper .Enter·
by _eatin• the fl~ of animals prlle A11odatlol\l
1
'

sislers-in-law and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in dtath by
four tirotbers, Jack. Han:Y, Kellnelh
and Frank and two sis~ers, Al!na
Belleville and Margaret Shudic.
Services will .be held Sunday at
2 p.m. at Fis!ler Fun:ra1 Home,
M1dd.lepon, with the Rev. Frank
Smith officiating. Burial will follow ,in Riverview Cemelery, Mid-

$14,635.37; .,
-..yater ·~:.::e.!3S9 . 55, no
Vtllag~ , at the end of February,
receiptS, oo
ents:
accordilla to reports prcaenled by
Walllll, $11,301.116, with receipt.s
Clerk-l):easurer Ttri Hocbnan a1 of $17..525.32 and disbunements of
Montlay niJht's meeting Mid- $11,838.75;
dieDort 'ltilllae Council
1
SaniiiiY, sewer, $3524.78, with
leceljltS 1Dr&lt; the month tota~ · receipts
ot$13,791.37 and dis- '
$138,345.69 while disbursements bursements
of $9,930.35;
were $86,104.68.
Swi11mina pOOl, $482.26 balFive funds shoWed detici1a balno receiptS, $127.08 disances. They were lhe atneral fund, ance,
buti:ments;
.
$4,199.84; street maintenance,
Cemetery, $1,331.9S, with
$2,875.08; mini-golf, $692.39; eco- receipts
of $2,017.98 and disbursenomic deveiQpment, $1,585.36 and menu of$1,-462.51;
the Middleport Arts Council,
· Water meter lniSIS, $25,148.62
$95.09.
·with receipts of $455, and.disburse- 1
In tbc general fund receipts were mcnll of$130;
S22,8!S.S9 ror February with dis·
ODNR Waterways, $1,244.97
bursements including $10,331.38 wilh no _receipts · nor dlsburse&amp;eneral, $16,714.44 s&amp;rety (police), mcniS;
and $2,727,65, income IU.
Issue $2,879.10, no receipts nor
. The street main,.tenancc fund disbtQemcnts·
1
showed ICCCipts of $2,!125.98 with .
Revol
vtng
Loan Fund,
. disbursements of $5,146.89, leav- $14,620.07 with S917.4S
receipts, ,
ing the deficit balance . of no disbursemeniS;
$2,875.08.
.
Refuse fund, $6,114.71 with
The mini-golf fund showed no S9,221.2g in receipts, and
receipts and disbursements of $8,994.45, clisbursemenli;
•
$354.15 leaving a deficit or
Litter
conttol,
$4,194.52,
no
$692.39. As for the economic
no disblu1elnellts: •
development fund receipts were receipts,
Betsy
Ross subdivision ,'
$1,791.95 with disbursements or $9,072.78 ldnce
with receipts of
$1,866.13. Tbe Middlepon Arts $9,900 and disbursements
of $580.
Council which alsq ahowed a
deficit had recelbts of $213.57 with ·
Pollee Report
disbursements of $368.1;4.
The police repon for Februlll')'
Other funds were u foUows:
showed 53 arrcst.s being made and
Fire.~uipment, $6096.30 bal- five accidents investigated. Merance,· no receipts, $850.82 dis- chant police collections 10taled $57
buraementl;
while parking meier collections
Fire truck, $5,476.57, with no were $508. A total of 245 parking
receipts and disbursements of tickets were written during lhe
$44.60;
month.
'
Public
transportation,
Fire Department Report
$33,249.20 with receipts • of
Accordina ID I report frOm Jeff
$57,727.20 and disbursements of Darst. Middleport fue chief, a total
of 88 calls were answered dW'ing
February by lhat dcpal1rnenL This
TI1e Daily Sentinel
included 14 fire and rescue calls,
and 74 emergency medical service
calls.
Publilllhod CYOl")' A(\(lmoon ,' Mond11y
Two were saix:turc llru, one at
through •"ridAy, Ill Court St.., l)omcroy,
Ohio by th o Ohio . Vllltey Publi•hiiiiJ
Cheshire, aDd the other on Hobson
Cornp~~nyi'Multiroodi"
Inc., Pomeroy;
Drilk In Middleport. Two others
Ohio 4616Q , Ph. 992-2156. Second cl~
P'flliiiRC p11jd At l'lorrieroy, Ohio.
were brush and trash fires, two
were service rons, one a mwual aid
Membcrl The Alttodalod Ptc.a.' 111nd the

Power Plant, he was born August
IS, 1910, in Bridgeport son of the

late Charles and Mary .Siedwitz
Criswell
An Army veteran of World War
D,
be ,.._.,
l1erVed
wilhDithe. Second
Air·
borne
____
.
'-"UII..,..,., VISIOD. was
also a member of the Healh United
Methodist Churth, Middlc:port. and
a member or the Mason1c Lodge
H
.
e

Ohlo NC\WI P!'pm' AMoci11tion . N•tion•l

response, and ICVCD rescue calls.

Advcrtill!ina Rcprt!aenC...tivo, Uraillulm
NcWIPftper &amp;lM , 733 Third Aftnuc,

Meigs announcements

New Yoric . New York 10011.

.

, POSTMASTER:. Send addrc.~ ctw.,.._ to
'11ln Daily Sentinel , Ill Court St.,
Potnaroy, OHio 45769.
8!1118CRIPTlON RATES

By C.rrler or Motor Route
One w..k ............ ... .... .............. ....... ...$1 .60
&lt;lnf! Month ......................................... $6.9&amp;
&lt;lnc Y&lt;11~~r............. , ........ ......................

BINCLB COPY
PIUCIIi

ua.:z:o

·

lloily..... ...... ....................... ,............ 25 C.nlo
!olubKribr:n nM dtw+rin1 kl PI'Y the CMTi·
I'll'

may mmt&amp;•in

twiYin~

climct 1o The

Dftily &amp;I'IUMI M1 a &amp;hrM, ab or 12
mnnth hAKiM. Cf'f!dtt wll1 br. gt'lt'\n e.nter
MCh Wr!ftk,

No •ut.aiptioM by rMil pcnniUNI tn
home anliet fM'It'Yicc hi

lli'NUII wham
n~tlbibla.

Moll-crlpUh..edo Molfll Cn•nt¥
13 Wfioko ....... .................................. l2l.IW
26W...o.......................................... S43.16
5~ Wef!ki.... ... ...... .. .. ............ ............. M4.78
·
Otllcido Motp County
P Woolui. ......................................... l23.40
2S Woolui. ... ,,................. ................... f4UO
62Woob...... ....... .......... .............. ..... lll.40

'I

,GulltiJPIIlker
Darren 'Smith will be at the
Syracuse Mission Chwoh on SliDday 1110 a.m.l'lillor Mike Tbomp.
11011 invites the public.
CleU·•P•t
Cemetery c:lean-up in Olive
\ 'Township ·wm belin April I 2.
Anyone wlehing to keep flowers
lhoUid hive tbem' Jauoved by tllaJ
dale.

Rmftl
Revival II Rock S1Jrinaa United
MelbodiJt Clllueb will bi Sllllday
tbroaJh Tueaclay at 7 p.~. Rov.
Wendell Vermilllon wUl be tbe
JUCII 'PIZW. There will be ipeeial
linalnl nlabdy. Rev. ICelth Rader
invilel the puiJiic.

Saturday at 6 p.m. at the Sh~
River State Foresuy Building. •. •
AA group to meet
:The Pomeroy Oroup of AA will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
~ntiTPA ~!ding. Qa11 992-5763 tli;
1 omuwon.
Bow shoot plallllCd
,
The Chesler Bowhunlers Clul1
will •hold a 30-target McKen~i;
Shoot ·on Sunday at lhe range or(
Pomeroy Pike. Registration will be
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
·

Friends may call at the funeral
home Saturday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Masonic services will be held
S&amp;llltday at 8:30p.m .

•

He is survived by: bis wife,
C)lra Hiail Cri$WCU; two daughters
and sons-in law, Carol and Kenneth
McCullough, Pomeroy, and Dianna
Tonight; partly cloudy with
and Dannr Willdnson, Charles100,
W.Va.; f1ve grandchildren ; four pau:by dense fog possible. Low in
sr.epgrandchildren and one great- the mid-40s. Chance of rain is 20
percent. Saturday, variable cloudi·
grandchild.
.
ness with a chance of showers,

•

Weather

·•

253 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
(614) 992-5724
CALL 1-80Q-552·1990
FULL SERVICE POOL OPENINGS
. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

I

(614) 992-6402 or 1·800.552·1990

VINYL SIDING
COUNTRY KITCHEN

CATHEDRAL CEILING
5 YEAR WARRANTY

LERRANCE 2Bx« Clearance Priee....$24,885

NEW IN STOCK

.
..•

.

MUCB MUIESS SALE!!

•Featuras:
llelivO!)', sel up, skirt&gt;ng,
steps, dishwasher, lr&lt;lsf.:
lr• rtfrigeralor, S.ytat

24FT.
ABOVE
GROUND
POOL

4-llls. '15.99 16-I.IJs. '41.99
8·Lbs. 121.75 25-Lbs. 164.99•

..

·

•"

warranty, 1-year home

""'"""· no paymenls

NEW14'WIDEINSTOCK ·$141.44mo.
10% OOWN, 9.59%APR 15 yrs.

until July.

R_IV~RD~LE
w
4t::
HOMES

JUNCTION
AT.33&amp;595
BETWEEN
LOGAN

AND

OPEN

MON.-SAT.
8:30·8:00
CLOSED .

INSTALLED·

$1995°0

NELSONVILLE
385-4367
SUNDAY
"WHERE SERVICE MEANS YOUR SATISFACTION"

PilE

I

.5 BIG. HOURS.
.
.

SUNDAY 1 P.M. 'TIL 6 P.M.

,,

.•,

.... ·'

,..--~~~ ~~-

lASSEn DINING ROOM

3 Pll

· w/2 RECLINING ENDS
Ehher In brown or mauve.

9 PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE
Ught pine, country flnl1h.

*89995

. NO\ $1799.95

6 MONTHS FREE FINANCING*

SUNDAY, MARCH '''"

SOFA·LOVESEAT

FLEISTEEL SOFA
SOUTHWESTERN LOOK.
Beige and r11et II ripe.

Traditional, pale g...-n velvet.
81
. SUNDAY

$588

Not $1699.115 SUNDAY

$77777

Y4BIGBOURS
MIRCIIItll P.M. 'tiL 8 P.M.

•

.

Sold hueta only.

$~~~ 95

SUNDAY
Flore~

168

S~~~~~l8

TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS

FLEXSTEEL RECLINER

Pine fln'-h·

Wall type Colonial, leal plaid.

Not$999.95

1811

88

SUNDAY

Nostalgk Clawfoot Table

TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS

4 "-BliCk Chalra.

Oak flnlah.

, SUNDAY

Nol $799.95

568818

SUNDAY

5422 22

· SPRING AIR
SETS
SPRING·O·PEDIC MAXIMA
1WIN SETS

· FUll SUS

QUEEN SUS

IIOT $4",95

NOT $6".95

NOT Sa99.95

SUNDAY

5

22~95

5 ~2~95 SUNDAY 5~9~95
KINGSm
·

SUNDAY

IIOT $1099.95
'

Ea. Po.

navy, mauve, green.

Not 51999.95
SUNDAY

88

$399.95
. SUNDAY S

Not $1299.95

$4997

SOFA, LOVE SEAT Tracltlona

Oak flnlah.

Not$34U5
. SUNDAY $

&amp; Matching .foundation.

Oak flnleh.

Not$699.95
SUNDAY

.'

TWIN MATTRESS

DROPLEAF TAB'l w/4 Chairs

95
SUNDAY 5 4~~
.

SUNDAY 1 P.M. 'TtL 6 P.;M•
6 MONTHS SAME AS CASH*
*(Willi A;prowitl Ci'llllt)

FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP
. (WILL IIM0¥1 OLD IIIMS)

!n 1534, .french explol'llr Jac:q11e1
Cartier discovered Canada and the
Gulf of St. Lawfrence.'
·
•

Trustees to meet
The Lebanon Township
Truslees will meel Tuesday at 7
. p.m. at the township building.
Clean-up •t
Cemetery clean-up will begin in .
· Olive Township on April12. Myolle wanting 10 keep Rowers should
have lhcm removed by that date.
Special meetilla
, There will be a ~ial meeling
of lhe Oliv~ Townsb1p TrusteeS on

dlepon.

363, Middleport.

or

the De-mocrats wili be only too
happy to remind the voters that a
subslantial, perhaps •indispensable
number of Republican legislaiOrs
supported the "bipartisan" economic packl!lle that preceded disas-

in meat."

.

. A · balance of $115,648.70 was
·~ in all funds of Middleport

When religion is f~od for .thought

.

\'f ...

as a gaWre, bowe11u, tbc

vole was lllmost IOially meaningless. Tbe serious hni•
of n:vising Mr. Oincon'sJ:P'h will get
'under
wMn biD goea 111 ibe
. Senile Ibis ...-.and will mnriooc:
and in~ for !DO!!!hs tllereaftu
as bodl bodies get ~ 10 votiDg

~·

Middleport funds show
b~lance of $115,648.70

Republicans shouldn't ·compro~ise

'• ......Sharebolders rarely have the depth of knowledge needed 10 judie a
CEO's stralegy properly, "but sbsrebolders can unerringly aense u lhc
eoo·s game plan doesn't seerfiiO rilake sense."
To bear lbC oobs andllbs of 1bc:
- -"They (the executive council) believe that if a CEO is forthcoming
media,
you'd thint lbe ·aousc's
ind shares his concept of long-lellll stralegy - goals three to five years
passage
of
J'Midm! Ointoll's budQUI- he'll cam the benefit of a doubt."
.
·• -This long·leml suaiegy -lhe setting of
three 10 five years ow ~J raolulion - tbe ....... legtriumpb ror a politirallcallind tbe communicaling of lhcm - "is lhe p1votal insurance policy any l'iiibve
er
since Robert Peel ptii wW ~­
~ needs 10 succeed."
• · 'l'be lessons drawn from the former executives seem simple, but tb: liameut111 lqal tbe Ccn ~AciUally ll -lllout .. cay ..
ltnplementation is mere difficull. A vision's impact is limited if poorly
turning
over in bed - and DOl
unicated.
much more~ Mr. CliniOII
~O!:e pitfall, the executives agreed. is that it takes time to change a WIJ
eleclled
NOvember in no
Qlajor company. Massive restrUCturing&amp;, layoffs, plant closings and asset
small
part
because
combining a
sales can be implemenled quickly, but all such moves, lhey observe, are
Demoaatic
pmrident
widt a Demoihort r.enn.
·
· ·
cratic
Calgnia
II
rrM
ID offer tbe
• Jn fact. lhe former chiefs indicaled, such moves might eve11 commiJIIibest
hope
of
Clldiag
tbe
dcbililaling
;dle a sense of chaos cr be viewed as negative if lbey n not part of a "gridlock" that bas crippled the
'ioberent, clearly defliiCd and articulated long-range plan.
federal governmeat in recent
:.•·
decades. The comfnrtable Demo,•
cratic majority in the HOUIC of
,•
Representatives knew perfecdy
:well tbat tbiJ fn WIC oalbeir fel,.# - •
low Demo rat's emo...W: J*CipOIals simply bad ID go bis way. 10 it
• •
...;. ,
did.

.
.•

would have access 10 capita) markets that lhey don't enjoy today meaning more ·credit at lower
prices. lnve~tor$ would have
g{eater D\)portunity to invest in
small busmess by buying invest·
ment·gn\de sectirities backed by
pools of sm!lll business loans.
D' Amato, wbo was recendy elevaled to ranking minority member
of the Senale Bnnking Committee.
has a reputation as o~ of tile most
consumec-orieilled Seila.C Republicans. The outspoken senator made
wav:s two years ago with a bill
that would have imposed caps on
credit-card inlerest rates. Though
that measure died in lhe House, it
prompledseveralbanks .intovoluntarily lowtring rstes for preferred
customen rather than face congressionally imJ)OSC(I limits.
MARCil MADNESS ·- The
Senale's two in-house information
access channels usually feature
graphics on Senale business or
committee hearing schedules.
But for the time beina,' lhe normal ran:.bas goaen bumped by the
Men's NCAA Ba•kelball Tournament- thanks .to a special feed
from CBS. The network wrote Sennte offiCeS last month anoouncing
that "in cooperation with lhe Senate Rules Committee, CBS is
pleased to make additional early
round games ... available on two
Senale lelevision chann:Is (17 and
22)."
Until March Madness ends with
the final game April .5, tbe oddsmakin and bettin 00 Capitol Hill
have
from ~gislation 10 layups, from health care to hoops.
When lhe subject of defense arises,
it concerns the zone vs. man-toman - not the future of base closings.
· "Everybody throws some
.. money in the JX?I and it just runs
like your ne•ghborhood bar,"
explains ·one Senate staffer.
"Everyone monitors the games,
and more time (is) spent during
meetings talking .about the office
NCAA tournament pools than the
issues."
On lhc House side, at least me
office is know to have turned down
lhe volume on C-SPAN and turned
up lhe volume on CBS.
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blnstein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc. , •

In.....,

James W. CrisweU
Retired from the Kyger Cree!c

WASHINGTON - President CICCJIIIIIIIil: 'P'ttV It's when: jobs credit auncli, and be delivered~Clinton's plaa to crcale new n a n:d 1111heco•eries 11e born. lier this month by announcina rule
employment ~tiel durin But Ibis recomy Ills been difrer- changes that would trim much of
this Olherwilif'JiiHf·l JeC04U')'! enL Wbile tbe Fcderll' Ilescrve has the regulalory bwden ban1cs facejn
small-business lending. Among
could get a boost in the coming
months from an !U!)ikely IOWCC: ·
other provisions, Clinton's plan
would let ban1cs lake iniO account
Sen. Aifonle D'Amuo, R-N.Y.
His solliQoa? Take a load off
the "charactu" of lenders as well
as fllliDCial statements in deciding
small commlioay blob by Ieaing
•
on loans. So far, CapiiOI Hill and
them bundle aDd sec:uritizc their
Michael
economists have given Clinton's
small busiocss loans, crcatillg a
"SCCXJI!dlry -ut." If ........... it
plan alukewann fCSII(IIIIC.
could crelle «!!IIIJ8b deficil-ncullal been pressing all the traditional
Ironically, candidate Clinton
eo """"ic llimuluiiD lllllre tbc cur- "".., laly policy levas 10 act more said he would favor a plan similar
rent baUle Otel' ClintoD's $16 bil- money Rowing in the economy, 10 D' Amato's to creale a secondary
lion booan sbDt Sial indcYIIL
loans to businesses have been market for small-business loans.
D'Amato•s plaa- the Small tapeiUJi off. While banks expcri- · When Congress passed the SecBusiiless Loan Securitizldon IIICI all:4ld JU:Onl proftts of $32.2 bil- ondary Mor1gage Enhancement Act
Secondary Market Enblnc:c:aH:Dl lion last year, loans to•businesses in 1984, which allowed banks
Act - would cost wpayen ao fell by m2 billion in lhe past two greater flexibility in !!CUing securimoney and would crcaiC an new yellS.
• ties backed by residentiill mortgovanment tqnlaljms
it
Bankers say tbe reason they gl!lles.' it lriggered a Rood of easy
would allow community banks to aren't lending more is because of money for homeowners thaf
do what lower iniCI'CII rarcs and tight new regulations, but others .remains Slelldy 10 Ibis dly.
improved eccmmic DIBilbcrs bl~ be1ic1c inlrKsl ra11:1 are to blame.
D' Amato's bill simply calls for
been unable to accomplish: Get While short-lenD rstes are at his- eliminatin~ the costly barriers
money Row_::t iniD tbc bauds of 10ric lows, long-lerm rates have banks face ,m selling their l0811s to
small- aDd
·um-sUied hmness- ranainesl relatively high. This bas the cnpital markets. By not being·
es. D' Amato's biD lftady Ills 40 llllowed banks to achieve record fon:ed 10 1reep these loans on their •
co-sponsors, includiDJ five )llo6ls simply by investing deposi- books. banks would b: able lo origD:moaals.
ton• lllOIIC)' iniD risk-free govern- in ate many more loans without
It's DO ICCI'Cl dlat smallhmn
menuecurities.
.
having to meet difficult capital
is 1bc: engine that drives America's
Clinton promised to end this requirelilents. In turn, small lenders

By Jack Anderson
and
Binstein

Other survivors include: a sistet,
Shirley Gibbs, Griffith, Ind.; thn:c

cllcJJort. died Tbur!day. Man:h 25,
1993, at his residence.

.. you might want to hang up your getting some cardl of CIICOUr&amp;JC·
Kllchen Closed - Tired of mcnL Allen ia 91.
Cookin '" sign Tuesday, March 30
and h~ up Raci~ way where ~
Modern medicine hu worked
benefit 11 to be held at lhe Racine · miracl
ibou h beallh
Uniled Methodq' t Ch-.t~nh &amp;or Jo:
es even
g
.
en
Hill.
1m: ••
these days is an expensive "venture.
Healt!l care .ref(li'DI is toming, tb:y
Joe, 13, son of Nancy and Pat say, but tbe big thing I seem 10 pick
Hill of Pomeroy ~~Jd a student at up on is the possibility of
the Meigs Junior High School, is "rationing" health care. Somebow
~ering ~ewing sartoma and that solution doesn't appeal to me,
•s W!dergol~g tr:catments at Chil- how about you? If you're ill it
dren s Hospttal m Colwnbus. Jo: seems to me you want all and lhe
wh~ has been sue~ a talented, -.best heaitb care you can geL
active yot~ngiter m all sports
Ieanied that be .was suffering &amp;om
Schools and organizations
cancer in Decciilber; His vilalily depend so much on busiiiCIICS of
suddally wu drained and .examini- the area for support in many directions disclosed the problem. Joe's tions. And business owners do
tteattnent pro,ram includes five their best to be helpful.
treatments dallY and then three
Helpful, to say tbe least, was
weeks 1altr a very strong treatmenL Hermail Gra~e, owner of lbe Mason
He wu at the hospital in Columbus Furnibue Co., who went 10 all lhe
this week· for one of the sttong work and expense of hauling twa
tteatments. Some surgery will lovely wing bllck chairs to the Rutprobably be involved at a later land Cburch of Ood so that the
time. .
.
senior valesuine king .and queen of
. Through all this Jo: bas main- the church could b: appropriately
tamed a great attitude and he is ICited for coronation ceremonies.
back to his clas~s at the junior · Then, after tbe event be had to
high when be isn't hospilalived and mae lbe effort of bansponing the
is able 10 be lherc.
c~ bllck 10 the store. Thanks to
. So Tuesday beginning at 3 p.m., Herman and the other business
sandwiches, soups,' salads and )ICOJlle who make 110 much effort to
desserts will b: served at the be lielpfuL
.
.
Racine United Methodist Church
with )lrOC""ds to go 10 Joe. There
I tried to discuss with several
will be no chalgc for lhe food you people tbe otbet day the fact that
eat, but of COilJlC. donations will be Ruby Keelor had died. All. I got
lakcn on Joe's bChalf, Joe's boost- were these·questionin~ glances.
era hope that you'll round in and Like who's she? I didn t bother to
support the fund-raiser.
mention that Ruby wu at one time
By lhc way, Joe's grandparents married to AI 'Jolson. I felt this
arc Mr. and Mrs. llob flill of would only bring only more quesRacine and Mrs. Louise Thompson tioning g1ancel. Like who's he? I
ofMiddlepor_t.
'
keep forgettina that these names
ring abeolUICiy no b:lls for a lot of
. Many of you in tbe Big B~ people~ dlyL That sbouldn't
area know Allen Ball. Allen bas come as a big surprlse-l!ut somebeen. having 10111e health Problems how it does. You call fgnet Ruby
alld is a patient in room 400 at lbe an~linAI, but don't forget to keep
. Holzer Medical Cenler. He'd Iov9 srru g.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag$-3

---Area death,-- A-rea activities announced . ••
JIIIIICI W. Criswell, 82, of Mid·

by Bob Hoeflich

Friday, March 26, 1993

New bill would help small businesses

The Daily Sentinel

.

Beat of the Bend...

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BiGGEST SELEttiON' IN IlEA

852 Second Ave.
Phone 448-1406
Galllpolla

$~8~~ 88

...

�•
,

•

Friday, March 26, 1993

.S ports

The Daily Sentinel

Georgetown tops Miami Redskins 66-53
By RICHARD KEIL ,
foot carom near midcoun and went Monday night at Madison Square nity to inove the ball inside.
FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) - If they all the way to hoop, where charg- Garden. Provideoce, a feUow Big
Meanwhile, Georgetown used a
ever felt any · indignity playing in ing call negaled a layup.
East member. faces Minnesota in sD'DIIg transition game for most of
the NIT instead of the NCAA, the
No lllllller - the play seemed to the other game. The final is set ·ro- its points, getting the ball inside 10
Georgetown Hoyas seem to have wake up the Hoyas, who put the . next Wednesday nighL
HarringiOO more than in the game's
goUen over iL
game away by' going on a 12-1 run
Georgetown coach John early minures. Duane Spencer, HarGeorgetown (19- 12) is on the over the next &amp;even 'minutes. The Thompson has reason to smhe as rington and Chuit:hwell each had a
V(IY to the NIT Final Four after surge, which fcatwed HlutingtOO's
his seas'?n gtows unexpectedly pair of baskets during the run.
defeating Miami of Ohio 66-53 on dlllik and tliree bukets by Robert longer. His team shot a season-best
After a timeout, Miami
Thursday. For the youlhful Hoyas, ChurchweU, gave Georgetown a 62. percent in defeating the Red- regrouped and went on a 7-I 'run IQ
who missed the NCAA this year 4~-30 lead with 5:20 remaining.
skins and showed the poise and . cut the Georgeotwn lead to 20-13.
after 14 consecutive appelllliiiCCS, it
"Once that happened," Har- poUsh he 'has beeq wailing for.
Georgetown held on for a 28-20
is yut another chance to grow. .
rington said, "thmgs really got
. "We're play!"g with more con- lead at the half.
"This is good, because it gives started - the fast break, the scor- fidence now, Thompson said .
The Hoyas, who sold out their
us the ~ity to play together· ing, everything.''
"They're playing now the way I tiny home gymnasiuni Tuesday in a
a little longer. work on. the things , Including a tO!Igh, pressure hoped thev would stan playing in victory over Texas-EI Paso, moved ·
we need to work on for next year," defense that forced the Redskins, February.'~
Thursday's conlest to the suburban
said freshman center Othella Har- who shot 46 percent in the first
The Hoyas were led by Church- Virj!inia campus of George Mason
rington.
. half, to miss nine consecutive weU's 15 points and tlarrington's · Uruvcrsity in order to accomodate
Georgetown blew the game shots. They finished the game 12. Landon Hackim had 14 to pace student ticket demands. On both
open midway through the second shooting 39 pen:enL
the Redskins.
occasions, the Capital Centre,
half,.when, with the Hoyas holding
" They iust had better athletes
Miami (22-9) led 4-0 when the home to the Hoyas smce the 1981a 36-29 lead, Harrington fiercely than we d1d," said Miami coach Hoyas went on an 18-1 rear over 82 season, was being used for other
·
rejected a 12•font jumper by the Joby WrighL
the next 6:16. Duling that stretch, events.
Redskins' Scou· Belyeu. John
The Hoyas wiU play Alabama- the Hoyas used relenlless defense,
The game dre w a crowd of
.
.
Jacques came down with the 30- · Birmingham in the NIT semifmals . denying the Redskins any opponu- 2,925.

a

In NCAA tourney,

Indiana; UK, Florida State, Kansas victors·.

. DEEP·STRIKE CAPABILITY wu what KenluckylrootmaD.
J!IIDIII Mubburu (left) ud bii fellow Wildcalll ~owed in ThDrsday
mght's NCAA Soulbeasl Regloaal aemlrinal game against Wake
forest at Charlotte, N.C., where the WDdcats Dliiled three-pointer
,after lbree-poluter ea nuce 10 a 103-e viciOry. (AP) .

faces Temple (19-12).
Southeast
Florida SL 81

w. Keutuekr7s (OT)
Western Kcntucty had a chance
to tic afler calling timeout with four
seconds left in overtime. But a
high-arcing three·point attempt by
Cyphcus Bunton bounced off the
rim twice before faUing away. Darnell Mee scored 21 poinls for
Wes1em Kentuck:)' (26-6). Rodney
Dobard, playing five days after
breaking the big toe on his left foot.
had 16 points, 13 rebounds -and
four blocks for Florida State.
Keutueky 103, Wake Forest 69
The anticipated showdown
between Mashbum and Wake Forest's Rodney Rogers was as one. sided as the game. Mashburn hit all
five of his three-pointers, while
JWgezs was held to 14 poin\8 afrer
getting into early foul trouble. Ford
hit I 0 of 11 shots from the field,
including five three-pointers. Randolph Childress led Wake Forest
(21-9) with 18 points.
Midwest
lndlalia 82, LoDisYille 69
Indiana wore down Louisville
with its motion offense and tenacious defense. Cheaney, the B!g
·Ten's career scoring leader, made
10 of 12 shots from the field aiid
grabbed eight rebounds, while
Greg Graham was 7 for II from
the field and finished with 22

points. Clifford Rozier . led
·Louisville (22-9) with 16 points.
, Kan&amp;~~~93, canroru1a 76
Hot-sboqling Rex Walters outplayed freshman sensation Jason
Kidd and helped Kansas end California's golden ruri through the
tournament. Walters scored 24
points, including 4 for 5 from

threc-poini range. California (Zt-9)
won 11 of 13 games after 29-ycar-"
old Todd Bozeman was named
coach on Feb. 8, including vicrories
over LSU lind two-lime defending ·
NCAA champion Duke in the tournaf!!eitt. Kidd had 13 points. 11 ·
ass1sts and four turnovers before
fouling OUI with I :21left.

TOE
.
'

Come on in-put your
"That (first) game seems like
toes into our line of
Jbout seven years ago," WiUiarils
Tingley Boots. We 've
· said. "I'm going to enjoy this until
got famous molded
about noon tomorrow, an.d then
over·the-shoe rubber
we 'U ~ thinking about iL''
footwear, made right In
Louisville coach Denny Crum
the USA. Sturdy hand·
was thinking about Calbert
crafted over·the·sock
Cheaney after the Indiana star
boots, formerly market·
scored .32 points in an 82-69 win
ed by Uniroyal-la"Ce·
over the Cardinals in the other
ups, pull·ons, Insulated
Midwest &amp;emifmal:
and non·insulated. And
Nine of Cheaney's points caine
for the economy mind·
during an 11-3 aecond-half run that
ed the most comfort·
,broke the game open. ·
able, performance, .
"The big difference was Calbert
molded PVC over-the·
Cheaney," Crum said. "We held
sock bo.ots you've ever
our own with everyone else but
met, also made in the
Cheaney. We got it down to three
USA. All well-made. All
and then he took the game over.
comfortable. All Tingley.
That's what great players do when
The whole line is here
the game is on the line. He didn't
: lor you io put your ·
miss a shot when it counted.'' '
toes and feet into.
Top-seeded Kentucky (29-3)
and third-seeded florida s . (25·
9) advanced to the Southeast
GRAVELY TRA(:TOR
Regional final in Charlotle, N.C.,
SALES &amp; SERVICE
although they took diiTercnt routes.
204
Condor S~ •
Pomeroy, OH.
Travis Ford scored 26 points,
Jamal Mashburn had his 23 in the
IPIIII UD IIIIIID
first half, and Kentucky routed
IIIII
Wake Forest 103-69. In the other
Mon.-Fri. 9:0()..5:00
Southeast semifmal, florida ·State
Sat. 9:00.12:00
Including Products Formerly Marketed By Uniroyal ·
suuggled to beat Western Ken~,.HE .
tucky 81-78 in ovenime.
Although the~ committed 19
· tumovers and misled 20 of 38 free
.POMEROY ·
throws. thC Seminoles reached the
MULBERRY AVE.
992-2115
fmal eight for the frrst time since
1972.
"To be successful in. this IOiir:nament, you need some type of
luck. And we 'got some tonight,"
said. ~ Sam CasseU.
Keatucky continued to breeze
through the tournament with a
deadly three-t&gt;~nt attack. The
Wildcats, who
Rider by 44 in
the opening round and'Uiah by 21
in the second round, made 16 or 24
from long-range against Wake. ·
"We have absolutely no fear of
failure," Kentucky coach Rick
Pitino said. "We're very relaxed
on oiTenae and we're very intense .
on clcfcilse.'' '
The semifinals or the East and
. 1989 Chevy
West regionals will be held tonighL
At East Rutherford, NJ., VirV-8, auto., air, more.
ginia (21-9) plays Cincinnati (26-4)
IJtU~ Jltlf
and North Carolina (30-4) meets
1993 CheYJ S·1 0 Pickup
Arkansas (22-8). At Seadle, Michigan (28-'1) plays George Washing·
Tahoe, V&amp;, air, AMIFM et~aaatte, '"' bumper, alldton (21-8) and Vanderbilt. (28-5)
1989
lng rear wln!low.
•
r
Fir.st Time Buym Save $400.More
T-tops, sharp.

'

By RUSTY MI~:LER
COLUM~US .• Oh1o (AP) FoJ: the. tint~ m the 11 years or
the Oluo boys h1gh sc~l basket~ IOIII'ni;Uilent. parochial ~hoots
":IU mcct m the f~ to dcc1de the
b1g-~h&lt;?ol c'!JimpiOD. .
Cslncmna~ l!l'derS will P!t'Y Toled'? . ': John s m atunlay s 2 p.m.
;DIVISion I fmal between a pau of
: all-lJc?&gt;'s schOols, tlianks to a couple
. of b1g second-half comebacks

.

Allullc- .
T,..
WLI'd.GB
NowYad&lt; ..............45 20 .~
Now-, ... _ .... AO 77 .m
'
B.............,_,, ..H :z:t .576
1.J
Oi!ondo .................. 31 33 .... 13.5
Mlmll ...................29 36 . .046
16

.l,

Philodo1FJU0 ....:..... .21 ' ..

: SPLITS SEAM - Oblo Slate Jllllrd Katie Smith (30) splits the
• de(eDIIiVe scam Cl't111ed by Wcstcra KeDtucky derenders Trma wn• sou (44) aDd Denise Hill (21) durina Thursday niabl's NCAA East
: Reaional semifinal game In Richmond, Va., wbicb tbe Buckeyes
;:won 116-73. (AP)

.,.·
•

.

•

OSU women beat Western
Kentucky 86-73 to advance

io
.• NCAA East Regional finals
.

TaxNews

IJtlft~

*

Milwa~ ............~

NOW ONLY

I

.

$3929

If you sell property at a gam

611E.MAIN

1983 Ford Conversion Van

a-

o.aw.

O.W..IIoto~-.lpm:

Od.- a CU..,.. UO_ ~m.
Utah It SUI AniGUo; 1:30 P.ID.
MilwiLikee: al.Phoeni.l, 9:30p.m.

NewYmk1tLA. LU.~a, I 0:30p.m.
I.A. C1ippon • ........... IO&gt;lOpm.

Sa turd~!!...eo

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· Toalgbt'SIIIllles ' .
OUea&amp;OaN.:r. Aanpra. 7:40p.m.
Sc Lou;. a .V(......... I""' p.m.

..

Lo&amp; An..-ll Edmarlcri., 9:40p.m.

CaJaary1\ V~W~r, l0:40p.m.
Satunlay'saames

Sunday's pmu

NCAA men's '

tournament scores

-

AIT1MM....owla. .
Eaolluttoorfard, N.J.
.
vup;. (21-9) ... CinciMao (26-4),
7,30p.m.
North C1tolln1 (30-4) ••· Arkin~••
(22.1t JO ....... -...-......~

... _

.. Plli1odolphia,-

PoN..d ~t.Chadr· DOOIIi
WtthinJ'Gn Yl, laaa. It Hu\lord,

,

q.JM!UNO 11 DeoraM. 3,30 pm. · •
Hcullon ... ~. 3:30p.m.
01 Oo1loo, I p.m.
N.w YOlk 1\ Goldin llase., I p.m.
lodiuto" LA. UU... IO,JO p.m .

Soa-

AI Charlolla C...._.
Cloorlotto,N.C.

FlaOdo s.... 11. w-. ""'"""' 11
Konltdty 103, Wtb- 69

(OT)

.........,..utlop..e

At Cltarlolle Col!oou•
Cllotlolto, N.C.

.I

.

s .... (2!-9) "'· l[aotdy (29· .
3).3,31p... .

''

'

'

w......,...
Now,.., .......

--

''
I

•·MonbMI ........ 45 . 15 6 96 D15l
· ·........... 43 25 7 • 93 :194 252
• ·Qloboc .......... 40 24 10' 90 309 267 '

.
l

· -Bua"llo .... _ .. 36 2110 12 311 262
IWII...! ........... 21 &gt;16 , 47 :144 322
0UIWI .............. 9 60 ,4 22 177 345

.,•

f

.

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

Transactions
-·

·B~baU

Amerlc.n Leaaue
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Ar.'luired 1'MI Ltmpki.n, c.lcher, from tho
San DieJo Padral 106 future COfllidcra· '
tionl. Dalpla.S Troy O'Leary, outfidd-

a; Matt Miyscy. piLch.-, and Mike Math-

ey, catcher, Cor ft!.Uaigrtmcnt.
MIN'NESOTA TWINS - Acquired
Jeff Ciro1ewold, cllcher, from the
Phi.ladclphia Phllll• for Mica J...cv.il, OUI·
fiddcr, and ucipod Orolewold 10 Pollland ot tho Pacific c-oua ~..u 1 ue.
SEAnLE MARINERS - W1ived
Cftc Briley, llUtfiddcr, fot lhc pupo~e of

NaU..t LNaiHI
AnANTA BRAVES- Optioned
Shawn Holm1n, r,ilcher. Javier Lopu
cuchcr; •nd Me vin Nlcvc.a •nd TonY
Tuueo.. owr~• . 10 Ridunond or lhe
~lemlliOftd x... .... Seal J•f Ballor and
Ratldy St. Caire. pitc:hcn., 10 their rnirto(.

dian~poU. of

the ArneA::an A••oc:i11.ion
and Tmy AfaUt, CILCher, tnd Jeff JUiaer, ·
pi~ar. 10 dleir minor-leap camp for re-

A..ORlDA MARUNS - Placed Scott
OU...parino, piu;:hcr, en lhc 60-dly dil•bled ~ ~t Ntpl WU.on, OUlficlder,
and Bnan OriffiW and Jlmic McAndrew,
~ 10 Edmoraon ollho Plcif1c: C011t
l...pt,. lnd 0... Wlhar, pit.ebm, to lhcir

min&lt;H'IO&amp;pounplar-..,.....c
HOUSTON ,ASTROS - Optioned
5cocKer TuckCI' ht Tcay Eutebio, ~tc:h·
en; Orlando NiiJ.r, inllclder, lftd Sh111c:
ReynooW., pild.. lG TYCICIII of &amp;he Pa.c:iJ'ic: Coea IMp. S.t Jim .LinHmlo, uut·

...
____

f&amp;ald«. 0.. Hutpve~ and Mad. Otant,
inficld.en; •nd PhU Nerill, inf'Wder, to

~~~--~..................
NEW YOU: MITS
- P'Atned
..._
·
. on •

t.cnna with BNt S1brl r '

WALES CONFERENCE
PalrldtDIT,..
W .LTPioGFGA
. .................7 21 6 100 301 231
31 :II 7 13 '81 2.16
36 32 6 71 270 262 .
N.Y. Ruaoa ... 33 29 II 77 211 261
N.Y.11kri...... :W 33 6 70 293 262
Phll..tolphio ...... :II :w I I, 67 779 291

n

...,..,.....c

,.. ,..

Soulbeut ReaJonal

In theNHL ...

'

'

'VI .

Y".,.UU.-Onoinnooi ........ I :31 p.m. .

Sun!lay's pmes

Wbitehall-Ycarlina Sl, St. Muy 'a
Manorial 38
.~
- ,.,
01mo1 .JCouorioa All« ..

lcaauo """P lor ,...a...,...c
CINCINNAn REDS - San T01m1y
0...., iafaeldcr-outfJdd.-, outrif)t~ to ln-

5undaJ'I dale pml ' 1
AlTiteM ...._

s.a.m..a.

c;, Eldao 87. Stow I\
Toledo St. John'• IS , Cleveland
Hoi&amp;ft~ 66

Jivina tum hil uncmdJ.LiMI! rclcue.

East Regional
Tonfaht'• .-ntu~ll

North Carolina·Ark.dua wianer

7:30p.m.

.

Division I

Division n

New JGIIe)'• Wublnp,l:30p.m.
• _..,.. otllao.... f""' p.m.
~......,Qu.t.:.2:10p.m.
San Jt:-at N. Y.lllandca. 'J:.Ig p.m. .
. Detrcil.c Tam,- Bar. 7:..0 p.m.
Hudald at y·
. '• l:lOp.m.
OU.wa • Mmdnal, 1:10 p.m.
TOI"'OIIo'at Eda.antoa, 1:1_"0 p.m.

I.A. CUftpon ot S.alo, 10 p.m.
MUwU.•Il
10:30 p.m.
'

•

~

Eaotlolii-N.J.

· Miuni 11 A~, 7:30 p.m.
tndiaal at t:teav., 9 p.m..

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

198? Chevy Astro Conversion Van

.

llollull
7:lil p.m.
CLEVELAND 11 Philadclphi•. 7:30
p.m.
~~ouaon 1t w~ 1:30 p.m.
N• Jcney 1tl'tllllli, 7:30p.m.
Cladcilw II.
I p.m.

$7999 :·

•13,495

,.

Ohio H.S. boys'
state Semifinals -

_..,.. 01 Wlll\ln- I ,30 pm.
Lo.Aa.... OtW......... HOp.m.
Oa.w1 at Bdalo, 7:10p.m.
CMI&gt;oc 01 N.Y. ~7o40 p.m.
T - . u ~'.';;.1'1 0 p.m.
Hudord ll .
1:40 p.llt.

Tonlabt'• pmu

1992 Geo Storm
Auto., a!r, hatchback, storeo

'~:!'"'!"Bar 3, Daowo 2 (&lt;Yr)
Pi_tU~ 4, New Jcnoy 3-

29.!

,....,... 113. locnmoniO 111 (0'11

,

Finals
Wednelday, Marc:h'Jt
AI Madilon Square Cardi:n, Nev York
1111rd place
ScmifU1111ocen, 6'4S p.m.
Champlol\lhlp
Scmirlnll Winnotl, 9 p.m.

'l:bunclay'aaoores

.
Dalver 99, Oolden Su.sc U
lhoh 104, Now Yodll1
llldiona 120. S..lllo 117

2'30p.m.

.Georaato;wn (19·12) "''· AlabtmaBinninpam (20.13). 7 p.m.
.
~ (20'11) w . Mmnooou (20.
10), 9p.m.

-2.Mon.... o

~llanlol06,llouolal96

New Jcney 11 .

18 points and 19 rebounds from 63 ~ictory.
Samaki Walker in defeating St.
"We're considelably better than
Marys Memorial 52-38 in one we were then, but 1 think they are
Division II semifinal, with Girard to," said St. John's coach Ed
(21-6) holding off Kettering Alter Heintschel.
·
for a 77-68 victory in thi other.
Elder had what it took down the
Girard and Whitehall meet at II stretch to eliminate Stow (24-2),
a.m. s.atur'!&amp;y in the Division II winner of the Associated Press regchamp10nsh1p.
ular-season 1',011 crown.
·
The Division I title game will
Elder trailed by 12 points with
match ieams that met Dec. 23 in six minutes left in· the third quarter
Cincinnati, with' Elder taking a 70- but put together a 22-11 run to the
break to cut the gap to 61-60.
The teams llllded the lead until
Miller drove the right baseline,
dribbled under the hoop and
flipped
in a reverse spin with 3:05
In the NIT...
left to give Elder a 75-73 lead.
Thursday's score
They never let it go.
OcOiplown 66, Milmi, Ohio,S3
Miller finished with 30.points,
seven
rebounds and ·four assists.
SemlflllaiS
Three teammates joined him in
Monday, March 29

AI SL Louii·AnM.
Ktnlal (21~6) VI. lndi101 (31 -3), 6
p.m.
'

West Regional

v""""""

·• Nad_.I• ....,.Aoocdotlae

.

juNd till Plaoa4 Eric •

•13~995

. .,.-.........

1993 CheYJ Lumina
Only

200

mi.-.

*13,695

POME!tOY

1990 Buick LeSabre
•

'9449

.

~~

STEAL A'ITEMPT - The Miami Redsk1011' Scott Belyeu (right) :
reaches in co steal lbe baD from Georgetlnfll's Jobo Jacques (ceD· •
ter) during Tbursday.olllhl's, NIT quarlerlillalgame lu Fairfax, Va.,
where lhe Hoyas woo 66-53 to advance lo oext week's semilluals in·:
New York. (AP)
',

Miami University to study
continuing use of nickname
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) -Miami
Universit)' will study whether to
keep calhng its sports teams the
,Redskins in light of objections to
the nickname from some American
Indian gtO!IpS.
University president Paul G.
Risser said TUesday that he wants
the university community to discuss the issue.
,American .Indians have objected
to names such as professional baseball's Clev.eland Indians and
Atlanta Braves and the Braves
·fans ' tomahawk chop gesture.
Dennis Banks, a founder of the
American Indian Movement, said
that Miami might have good intentions in using the Rcdskins name,
but that fans often make a mockery
of tribal culwres and symbols.
. "I think the proper course
w.ould be to discontinue the name
Rcdskins and the uae or the mas. Cot," Banks said by lelep/Jone from
his office in Newport; Ky. "When
the·public, when the fans .begin to
make a mockery of native cultures.
then we have 10 question the name
and what it provokes and invokes.
... It's a display .of racism. It has no
place in the field of sports."
School off~tials have noted that
the university regularly communicates with the Miami Indian tribe in
Oklahoma about proper U8C of the
Redskins name. The university
offers scholarships to rribe members and has solicited instructions
from the iribe's on use of Indian
symbols and. on the dance done by
Chief Miami, the institution's mascot at athletic events.
Risser said he would decide
whether to keep the name after a
oniversity forum in the fall. Invited
representatives probably would
include campus and Indian groups,

•

•
•
alumni, student athletes and athlet-:

ic boosters, university spokesman:
Richard Little said.
· :
"There has not yet been a systematic discussion which brings aii
points of view together in a coherent fashion," Risser wrote in 'a
memo to faculty members.
.
Miami began using the Redskins
name in 19211 and formaUy adopled
it in the 1930s, according to achool, •

records.

·: :

&gt;

Little sai!l the university maileiJ
a copy of Risser's memo to FJ~· ·
Leonard, chic( of the Miami tril:ic:;
in Miami, Okla. Leonard was otit:
of his offiCe Tuesday and unavail-.::•
ab}e for commenL
~ -:
' Miami s~udents OCCaSIOnallt::
have organ1zed campus protesta ·.
related to use of the Redskinil :

~""e-·----------~----~·...
~· ·
.4 •

l.EIW. lllfiC!

.-

The Pu:kUtili1ies CommissJonoiC~ tio
has set for Public hearing Case No. 93·
02cEL·EFC, to reuiow tho i11e1 : ·.
procurement practices and policies of
Columbus Southern PnwerCompany, _:
the operation of its Electric Fuel •
Component.art~ related matters.ThiS:
hearing is scheduled to begin at the
Cor,1mission offices at 10:00 a.m. on ·
March 30, 1993.

.

All interested parties will be given an. :
opportunity to be h$ard. Further information may be· o~tained by' _
oontacting theCommissJon at i PO East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266·

0573.
THE
PUBLIC
UTILITIES :
COMMISSION OF OHIO By: Gary E • :
Vigorito, Secretary.
·•

.Dec••••..
No Man1y ·-~ ~$200 _
Down · , . . . . . .
No payments for 90 day•
ond 90day
-" •clllll FRi:E
fino ncu'19
' .
~.1
_ _j with ihe folori•

· ·l

Sic.Card~

Your choice of
$200 wortn of
Polori• clothing

Rocei.. an extoudod
"'rvice conll'act good

and occeuories.

for one year on your
,_ATV

BEST OF THE BEST II A
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
AOII1SSION $1 .50
IHOWINO AT 8::10
FRI., lAT., SUN.

--~---Soh
Llk• Cilj
ift ih• latun1tioa•l Hocke7
t..o..,. lOll.,..... N o w - - ....
~lito-.,. Hockey lAo....

LEPRECHAUN R

.........

ONE EVENING IIIOW 1:30
. AOII11ISION SUO

. -~

'

'G.OSPEL

:w .:

'MARCH 27I 7. PM

H
.,.

" .... .,.
'"

s

FAt. THAU THURS.
IIEL GIBSON IN

CALGARY fLAMEll - Announeo4

UJ

Air bag, auto., air, VB, stereo

forwud ,

Hockey

o: i

1992 Chevy Corsica

'•

Natlooalllockoy._..

. 1992 Olds Delta 88

$1

1

...... mjwotiiiiL

Only 3,000 mlle1, one owner.

V-6, auto., atereo.

COLONY THEATRE

R.oUado Blltblao, pwd, hom 11M in·

SHda)''t title aunt
At The: Kin&amp;damt, ButUt
VII'Wierbill-T.npl• wiMir VI, 0eorp
Wubinp·MiciUJ'n -··p.m.

'·

Buktlball

.

Kovach had 30 points for Stow.
Elder will advance to its third
state championship game. The Panthen won titles in. 1973 and 1974,
then lost in the semifmals·in 1980.
In the ·niglitcap; Larranaga
scored 24 points, h1uing -'' 12 of
his free throws in the fourth quarter, as St. John's pulled IIWIY·
Larranaga, s.Qn of Bowling
Green State UniverSity coach·Jim
Larranaga, rruide 4 or I 0 attempts
frqm the floor and all 16 of his tries
from . the line to go with six
rebounds and two assists. He wiU
play for his fathci next season.
His free thrOws tied the all-tournament record set by Colpmbus
· DeSales' Jerry Dcnnis.ln the 1987
Class AA title $ame. The 16 free
thrQIIVS set a blg·school record,
breaking lhe mark of 14 set by
Middletown's Jerry Lucas in 1957.
Deimy Amrhein added 23 points
and six assists and sophomore
Neshaun Coleman scored 19 points
arid had eight assists.
St. John's held onto a 58-55
lead in the final seconds of the
third quarter, then scored the next
12 pomts to put the game out of
reach.
The Titans made 33 or 39 shots
from the line; cornparcd to 7 of 10
for the Tigers.
Damon Stringer scored 12
points for fourth-ranked Cleveland
Heights (22-"1·
In the day s firSt game; Walker
lived up to his billing as the top
underclassman in the sra~e. .
, Walker, a 6-fooi-9 junior, did
everything for the Rams. He made
7 of II shots from the field and 4
of 5 free throws. le4 the team with
five assists, blocked four shots and
had one slcal.
His presence helped intimidate
the Roughriders (21-6), who like
Whitehall 'were making their first
appcal'ance in the state semifinals.
They were limited io a 29 percent
pj:rformance from the field, hitting
16 of 55 'attempts, with Walker
eliminating most second-chance
baskets and altering or blocking
other shots inside.
Meanwhile, Whitehall hit half
or its 36 shots from the field.

NEW YORI. KNICKS .:.._ ActinUMI

Toalaht'IMmmnaa.
AI T,._ Rlnadam•, S..Uie
Michigut (21-0) ... Ooooa• Wultina·
IOn (21-1~ 1&lt;&gt;1 p.m.
(21-!) ... T. .pt. (19·12).
30minu....... ..-.........

MMat.ow~o. - · ..,R.....,a
oflllo-Loop.

$12,999
tr•••· 1993
II•" Olds Cutlass Oera Value Edition
.

to

'

PHILADELPHIA PHIUJES - AI·

SaturdaY'• ddt II""'

double pgures.

At Madlioll Squr. Garden, New York

x-c~playof1bcllh

'J)unday'•....,...

$6999

Auto., long bed, air, atereo, bedtlner, aildlng ...,

window.

. II
23.5

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1993 C~evrolet YJ Ton Pickup

' LA.a - ......... 33 )I .&gt;193
0o1&lt;1111 Siotc .... ,..~ •• 27 3'1 ..&lt;lOll

,m

SII,U..DI......
'
3'1 :16 9 l7 303 239
x.c.Jp, ... ,...... 36 '0 10 'fZ 771249
Lao ............. ~ 32 ?.·' ?! 296 303
Winnipos . ........ 33 35 ' · n .rn 215
Eolmaft"" ......... 2! •2 I 5121 H9S
SonJ ............... 10 113 2 22 194 372

WuhinC:::S, N.Y. - 2
Jlt.nw · 5, s.n Jc.e 2
TorariOJ,M- . ·:J.tia
BUiroiO 6. Chi&lt;qo 4
,

5.5
10.!1
17

4!1

'

•· v...............

·-ployoll"borlb

1992 Geo Metro
5

.769

JP 25 10 II 261 liS

Sc Looia ........... 35 31 9 79' 253 2A6
~ ......... 33 3210 .,.. 250264 .
T - Boy ....... 22 41 ! ., 219 216

17
21.5

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Auto., air, stereo.

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•-PIIolnb. ..............SO -\ IS
x,S.,IIIo................. 46 ·2;1
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LA. LU.o ............ 33 :tl

921

8499

.046
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Ext. Cab, lollded.

$"

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41

TGK~nio ..... - .:" ..

12
12
13.5

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.S22

T. WLI'd.GB
.................43 :M .642
San ...........41 :M .1131
1
ll1oh ...................... 39 29 .S7. -4.5
non- ...........,...... .27 "" .403 16
MIMoiocu ....::........ l! 50 .231
77
Dolloo .....................7 !t .106 3!.5

1992 Chevy Y2 Toa Diesel Pickup

5 •peed, bucket ..ta, bright red.

4.!1

WESfERN CONFERENCE

. t'l

*-

.636

Cbuloao--·...: ....3! 32
• Indiono ..................J3 33
lloooiL ... _ .............29 36

$7995

fl••
.
.
.
1992 ~hevrolet Cavalier ·

.
, PROPERTY SALES

and receive payments over a number
derermined. The key to the transi- of years. rather than all at· once. you
tion game is rebounding. We did a may be able 10 report the sale using
better job boxing out in the second
lhe installment method. This means
half."
Western Kentucky's problem that the tax on your gain is paid as
was impatience, Wesrem Kennicky you receive the payments: thus . the
assistant coach Cristy McKinney tax is spreaq over anumber of years.
said.
In some cases. you may pay part of
"Ohio State came out aggres- the tax at a lower rate. The use of
sive in the second half. They took it the installment (11ethod ol reporting
at us hard, " she said. " We got your gain is not. however. mandaimpatient on the offensive erid liOd tory . You can report the entire gain
things snowballed.''
In the firSt half; there were five in the year of the sale even if you
ties and seven lead changes before will receive some P.ayments in later
fourth-seeded Western Kentucky . years.
If you sell the property during
(24-7) 1liok a 37•31 halftime lead.
Western Kentucky maintained a ~ear in which your income is un·
its advantage until Averill Roberts' usually low. you may prefer to report
layup gave the Bucke)leS a 48-46 the entire gain in lhe year of sale.
lead with 13:26 remaming in the Because current tax rates are the
game.
lowest'in years. paying the full tax al
Burcy also had six assists and the current rate may prove Ia tie a
eight rebounds. Smith added 20
points, Roberts 13, Stacie Howard smart thing to do. If you need to
decide which way to report a prop·
14 and Nikki Keyton 10.
Renee Westmoreland led West- erty sale. your nearby H&amp;R Block
ern Kentucky with 16 points. office can help you determine the tax
Paulette Monroe scored 14; and treatment morefavorable Io your sit·
Kristie Jordan and Denise Hill con- uation.

• RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Ohio
State's Audrey Burcy had rio uoubJe describing her performance
apinst Western Kentuclcy.
• " In the last 10 minutes I think I
vlcnt within myself to play· better.
lrworked out that I wiiS the spark,"
BWcy said after the BuCkeyes' 8673 victory · in the NCAA East
Regional semifmals on Thursday.
; Burcy had seven paints as Ohio
Slate broke a tie al S3 ·with 10:37
remaining in the game and scored
1&amp; of the next 22 points. She finislled the game with 20 points.
~ Top - seeded Ohio State (26-3) .
~IS second-seeded Virsinia on
Sllturday for the regional final. Vir·
gihia defeated unsecded George·
town 77-57 in a semifinal game
Thursday.
· Burcy's seven ~ints and Katie
Smith's six helped Ohio State take
a jO-SS lead with 5:40 remaining in
iht half.
·
The B,..ckeycs kept the lead by
hiliing 12 consecutive free throws.
;"Westem Kentucky did a good
~ switching defenses in the fll'St
half," Ohio State coach Nancy
Darsch said. "In the second half, tributed 12 each.
we .started very aggressively and

-+--· ·-- ....._,,.,

24
:16

.292

CIJ!YBU.ND ...... A2 l4
Alllnla ... _ ...;.........:IS 32

Pontiac Flreblrd

11!1 ~· • ...,.::

.323

&gt;16

..c..iral DlwW..
C!Uooao.....- ..........-, 20 .101

$6495

Sports briefs

NGrrloDIW LT PIIGfOA
n................... •1 77 9 91 3JO m
~· ....- .... "' :M 10 -90 l41201

·T -

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Wuhlnpn...........

Thursday in the semifinals at SL ·
John Arena.
Elder (23-4) defeated No. 1ranked Stow 87-81 by oven:oming
a 12-point deficit behind the play
·of left, handed magician .John
MiUer. SL John's (23-4) earned its
spot by .running away from Cleveland He~ghts 85-66 behind Jay Larranaga's record-aetling 16-for-16
.showing at the foul line.
Whitehall-Yearling (25·1) got

•

Scoreboard

In the NBA ... .

Caprice

•9188

.

Elder, Whitehall am9ng .state semifinal winners .

SUGAR RUN MILLS

GRAVELY
SYI,EM

Tenuls
MELBOURNE, Austtalia (AP)
- Wally Masur beat Brad Gilbert
6-3, 6-7 (6-8), 6-'1, 6-2 and Mark
Woodforde defeated David
Wheaton 3-6; 7-6 (7-1), 6-4,6-4 to
give A~ia a 2-0 lead today over
the defending champion United
States in the first round of the
Davis Cup. .
'
The doubles, with Americans
Jim Grabb .and Richey Reneberg
facing Woodforde and Tbdd
Woodbridge, arc sla!Cd for Saturday with the reverse singles Sunday.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

In lone NIT game,

Friday, March 26,1993

B1 The Alloclalcd Press
Indiana and KaDsas are going to
play it again, thiJ time with a Ftnal
Four berlh at~
Kansu defeated Indiana 74-69
·in the Hoosier Dome on Dec. 5..
The ranarcll will Jake place SaiUrday in the Midwest Regional ftnal
at SL Louis, where the lap-seeded
Hoosiers (31-3) and ICCOOd-seeded
Jayhawks (28-6) advanced with
easy victories l'huaday nighL
. After Kansas-beat &lt;;:alifornia 9376, Jayhawks IXliiCh Roy Williams
= e d about the tematch with

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

i

'

'

. ... '
"

......

'· --~'

'

•

~

DARREN SMITH
with luest: Crystal Powell

"I

.UUREL CLIFF
: FREE METHODISt CHURCH

'h MILE FROM BIG WHEEL DEPT. STORE~
.'
. Cell Putor Pate rr.mblay at 8U' 1321 for
·
more Info. (A,IoH otrattng will beta~)

- =..~t

I;,·! ,,·,,· lt.

•

Oll.r .rtd1 Mo ~ 31 , 1993

A'f'oiloblt only at participating

Polari~o

dealers.

RIVERFRONT HONDA
GALLIPOLIS, OH •

•
\

•

�Page

Ohio

HURCH
S.... Con. -8:45-9:15 LID.,

s.... Moa . 9:30 .....

A~ostol1c

Iloiloy Milo • 1:30 .....

Church of Chr1st
G7~olalriol

p

w.

112 Main Sl.
Pa-. Andrew Mi!Cll

Sunday School· 9:30 LID.
Wonllip-ID-.30 AnL, 7 p.m.
w.....,...y s.m... - 7 p.m.
,._,7 WIIIUiclt Clourdl ofChrllt
33116 Qildnin'o Hon)e Rd.

Sunday S&lt;:bool - II a.m.
•
Wonllip - !Oa.m., 6 p.m.
Wodncodoy Servi&lt;ca -7 p.m.

Ml4dloparl Clourdo at Clorllt
Slh ond Main
Pulor. AI HUIICI1
Sunday S&lt;:bool· 9:30 .....

:•

Wonllip- 8:15, 10:30a..m., 7p.m.
Wodncodoy SemGOI - 7 p.m.

•

I

f'rie 11'111 Jlopdll c .......

Keno Cburdl of Clorllt
Wonllip - 9:30 a..m.
Sunday Sd&gt;oai • 10:30 LID.

AlllSIIool,lo6cldlepoct ·
I
Po-.MaritMonuw
I
s...rday Semce · 7:30p.m.
' - ,.
s..Dy School - 10 lUll.
: ..,. : \ '
. Worship • 11 a.m.,
• - "- Wcdnclday Scmce-7:30 p.m.

·r-

JleuwiUow Rldae Cburdr ol Christ
Jodt Coloarovc
Sunday Sdoool-9::10 a.m.
Won1Up - 10:30a.m.,6:30p.m.
Wodnelday SeM&lt;:cl· 6::10 p.m.

Rlllluol Flntllapllll Clourcll

I ..

1•

s..Dy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · 10:45 a.m.

I

......., Pint Bopllll
But Main Sl.
Pulor: Dr.IM Morrio

7J• Cbrdlal CbriJI
Pomeroy, HuriJoa.uJe Rd. (RLI43)
:Pu&amp;or. Roaer W lliiCl1
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Woisbip • 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wodncodoy Semoea - 7 p.m.

Sunday ScMd • 9-.30 LID.

'

:

,Wonllip - 10:30 a.m.

'r

F l r l l - . , laP.Illl

I

Puur.E.~O' BJY ...
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

BnclllurJ Cburdl of Clorlot ·
Pulo&lt; : Tam Rwyon
.
Sunday Sd&gt;oal- 9:30a.m.

41172~Pike

•

Wonllip-10:30.a.m.

i
I

Wcnbip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m..
Wodnelday Seovicel· 7:00p.m.

l

.,......... Clod

,' • *•

Tupptrl Plalll Cburdl of Cllrlot
Pulor: Bill WiMI

SUDCiay S&lt;:bool- 9-a.m.
Wonhip . 9:4S LJn., 6:30pm.

6111 IIIII Pl1mer S1.C!-.1.1~ -~..
Puaor: leY. James A. Sunday School • 9:15 LID.
Wonkip . !MS a.m., 7:00p.m.
!
A.B.Y.- S:30 p.m.
l .:1.ood't ~ ... Sunday al CIICI)' IIIOIIIh.
•~ ~•...,..
,... weoloclday SeJ¥ico- 7:00p.m.

-ft .,•

~,.,:;
~

•

:•

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
M - Clourcll of Cllrlal

MillerSl.,MaiCI1, W.Va.

Sundar-. to
-::::".&amp;
- II a.m., 7 p.m.
w
y s.m.... 7 p.m.
LID.

~ .

-

lr • ••

Bradfonl Cburcb of Clorllt
SL RL 11U: Co. Rd. 5
Pado.:'Derok Slump

MLU-~
"
- : looN,

Sunday Scl&gt;ool-9:4 .....
li...... -6:30p.m.

SIOMiay School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-I0:30a.m. 7:00p.m.
Wodnelday Smviocl ·l:30p.m.

Wodnaday Sertiocl - 6:30p.m.
lllt~lrll• Boplllt

_ I I.... Clourdl ofCbrllt·

Pukir ' .... Bar\ Shulor

Pulor: JCIOilb B. I:IOokino
s-!&amp;y School • 9 a.m.
Wonllip· !Oa.m.,7p.m.
Wodnaday Servi&lt;eo-7 p.m.

Sunday Sc:hod • 10:30 a.m.
• Wonllip. 9-.30 a.m.
Thundoy s.m.... 7:30p.m.

•

Old
--=c~­
.' llotlloFno
181501 Sl.ltl.
7, M01epM
Sunday-- 10 a.m.
Bwnin&amp; · 7:30p.m.

U.beny ChrlotliD Church
0..1er
Pastor. Woody Call .

Sunday ll.ening -6:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 6:30p.m.

~y~ - 7:30

LangsviUe Chrlotlan Chordl
s ...day Scbool • 9:30a.m.

· ~t!:I1"Ch.
$l., MatCII
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.

F - RM Bapllll
, _ : Ariut Ault

Evealna • 7 p.m.
Wedncoday Serviceo · 7 p.m.

ML Mo.tah Bapllot
Foulth .t Main 51., Middlepm

Hartford Cburdl or Chrlalln
Chrlsllan Union
Hanloro, W.Vo.

Pas&amp;or:: Rev. Gilbert Cnis. Jr.

SIOMiay School - 9:30 o.m.
W&lt;&gt;rJhip · 10:45 a.m.

PulOr: Rev. D1vid Mc:Millia

Sundoy School- II a.m.
Wonllip ·9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
We&lt;lnclday SeM&lt;:cl- 7:30p.m.

Ao11Qul17 Bapllot
Panor. leemelh Smilh
S...!!"r S&lt;:bool · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:4S a.m.
Thursday Semcea - 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML M"'lah Clourdo of Cod

Racine
PutOr: Rev.Jame• Satterfield

RuU.od f'rie Will Baplill
SllanSL
Pu&amp;or. Reo. Paul Toy lor
Suaday School - 10 a.m.
E-"'8 - 7 p.m.
Wcdnclday ServiCCJ • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.

Wedneaday Servicet - 7 p.m.

Sacred Hearl Calhollc Cbun:~

161 Mulbcny Avc.,l'&lt;lmcroy, 992-S898

P1110r. Rev. Walrer B. llcint

Mm· S:30 p.m.

sr"'cu.. Church or coo
Apple ond Second Su.

·

... K&amp;C JEWELERS

RACINE PLANING MILL
Cab1net Mak 111p,

::;a~~~~

~v .~: ~~ 1 ,, 1

111 E. Main Sheet
992 -3785 . Pomoio'

i '1c:•41"fi
'

~

...

•..

~

:.

=-- ~~ ··
~

" ''• ,

...

..

Rodt~op

Rader

~.!:..-·~:~a.m.

·- .

dlySerftau - 6p.m.

l'ulo&lt;:AnharCSunday- . 9:30a.m.

Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

~ys.m--7p.m.

L3tlcr-Day Sa1nts
R......... ~ri,_Chelol
I• 1.o1tor Dar 1o1ro1o
Poniiiiii-Raeiao Rd.

Pulor: J CoiJiru
Sunday
9:30 .....
Wanlip-ID-.30a.m.
Weclnoaday SeMcoa -7:30p.m.

;:.::r.

s-c.....
Pu-. Rao

Fjoroe
Sunclay S&lt;:bool- 9:15 a.m.

Wanbip- 10:15 a.m.

s-'tllo ,
p"""" Scnilb
5unday Seboal- 10 a.m.
Wonllip • 9 a.m.

.......,

Lutheran

Puur.~Balter

'

OurS..._. I.,;..-. a.-a

Sl. Paul Lorlll&lt;rM a..dr
Comers_. • Soooad Sl.,P&lt;Pune
.....,oyov
Pu1o&lt;: Cle&lt;qo Weiridt

Suoday Sdooal- 9:30 .....
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (2nd. 4111 S...)

MtnlaiStar

Puur.~BMer

Sunday Selooal- 9:4S a.m.

Wonllip -ID-.30 LID.
_ , s...;.., . 7:30 p.ft).
'

Pa-.~8altcr

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
w-, -10:45 a.m.
3nl S...)
lutLotart

(I••

P.-:~o,_

cna.. uaw Mrtt t'r

Sunday S&lt;hoOI- 10 .....

......
.
-~a­
Wonllip • 9 a.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

'

Wonbip - 10:30 a.•., 7 p.m.
Thundoy Semceo • 7 p.m.
M.... ~d.. Porlell

1'1..- Cluolor

Alnd
Pulor. Slwulllawmon

Sonday Sc:hod - 9:30 oi.m.
Wonllip • II a.m., 6!30 p.m.
Cb-

Paotor: Slwulllawmon
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
• Sunday School- 101.111.
Thunclay Semceo • 7 p.m.

Wonllip • II a.m.
Laurel Clllr Ft. Met• Cot Chwclo ·
1'.-: PwrTnmbloy
Sunday School- !1:30 a.m.
Wonhlp- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
w t . 1 1)' Jorvi"" . 7 p.m.
1-Jiblo M-Ill

l'aaiOr. Rav.Jv.. Myen

Suaday Sd&gt;oal- 9:3CI LID.

lf-"'a-7p.m.

Weclnoaday s.m.., . 7 p.111.

Coolville Uolleol-odlot Pori•
l'ulo&lt;:HclmKJiae
Cooi.... C1o.....
Main .t PiCds Sl.
Sunday S&lt;:bool-10 a.m.
W~-9a.m.

J-

1'.-:BmldaW-

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
s-lay S&lt;:bool - 10:30 a.m.
Wodnelday Seooiocl • 7:30 p.m.

RPulor. Rav. ~- Jolm-

Wonbip ·9:30a.m.
lot .t 3nls-lay . 7:30p.m.
=~.rSc:hod • 10:30 .....
W
SeMca ·7:30p.m.

r-:J....,;,J,owio
s-Lay School-It a.m.
Wcnbip• 9-.30a.m., 7:30p.m.

T-.lay s...;.., -7 p.m.

8aWCiolorP

TD'OIIIblpRd.,468C
S...y SChool-.9 ..... .

---=

lwwd
s-lay·Sdlooi·9:30L&amp;
Wcnmp ID-.30 LID., 7:30p.m.
Wedoaoday Sonrioo ·7:30p.m.

New R••• Cborrdr of lire N w -

Faldo ,....,, I If en- lor Chelol
b¥. Pnaldin 1lictaoo
Seeoioo: Pr\olay, 7 p.&amp;

Pul&lt;ir. Glendoo Suoud
SundayS&lt;hool-9:30uo.
. Wonbip-10:30a.m. 7p.m.
Wedoaoday ~ · 7 p.m.

Feoii._H_ofPra7or

&lt;• Burlin&amp;ha
dlardo off Roulc 33)
Pulor:RollonVIIIIOC
S!lllday wonhip • 10 a.m.
WOI!neoday ocrvic:e - 6:30p.m.

'

Trtllll7 c.._..._.. Cb .....
Pu1&lt;ir. Rav.lloland Wildmu ·
O.un:b • 9:1S a.m. .

992·5141
Middltporl

2115 North Second AYI.
Middleport, OH
POMEROY - Ploaunl Ridge .~ Looking for a Nnlai or
an economical place lo live? This is lor you. has 1l-l
aloriea, 3 bedrooms, llllgll ulility room and hoi water
basebOard heat. Juot S14,000.

Daviol DUley

. Sunclay Sc:hool9:30 .....

HYSELL RUN ROAD - Need a home oul of !own? A
nice 3 bedroom home wilh woodbumer, and lois of
kiichen cabi ..ls, silting on% acN. PRICED AT ' S211;1100.

li......,·7p.m.
' Thunday SaW:e - 7:30p.m. .

Wonllip • 10:30 ...,.,

leJo!drt( Life CbSOON.W.A-.,Mi#' 1 t
PUior. Uwnnce Pol 'LM
s..day Scad. 10 .....
Weoloclday Seo rica • 7 p.m.

Tbe Salvallaor Ano1
I U Buaemut Ave., PomwO)'. •
s-lay ScbooJ • 10:30 am.
Wonhip - 10:00 a:m., 7:30p.m.
•

LONG BOTToM - Haymon Rood - Thia 7 yNr old
modut., haa 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, garden
bllth!Ub, fireplaco; iolond bar In kilchan, new hNt pump,
and 1 aum-r kitchen. All in good concilion. Also • 1973
mobile home with 2 bedroom• wilh new ca!ptll and
winclowl. NA olthlo on 3.3t acraa. 160,000.

Cllrlrdl "'~vr
1/&lt;1 rnilc ...
Nowu..U.

1:t:Z&amp;...

P-.SaroAIIdonon

POMEROY PIKE - Talk aboul a b..utiful view, wilh
MCIUilon. You lhould ..0. lhlo 1979 2 bedroom Uberty
· trailer lhara f'Hfty .bUn taken care of on this 41 acnt
drMm . haa 7 palllrra acral, 7 fenced acru, and t4
tillable .....~ Haa Iota of otoraga buildingo, and IWO cor
ga,.. lh !Hity nice. This one won'llasllong. Also has
Nllillrte drsh. JUST $35,000.

wF11Jf!i·

Faldo To....ode Cborrdl
Bailey Run Rood
Pul&lt;ir. bv. l!mmeu ........
Sunday Sc:hod. 10:00 a.m.

•..

,.... ,.,

Pentecostal

Evalins 7 p.m.

,

MIDDLEPORT- This opacious 3 bedroom homo is just
what !he family noada. II also has a large living room,

Sl. RL 114,Radae

...-.w-s-laySdoool-lo .....

Thuraday Service. 7 p..m.

nice size kitchen with a cute littfe nook. Has new roof,

now 'jViring, and oven has a now heal pump. Waa
$23,1100. NOW ONLY $21,100.

l!woiao-7 ......
Weclnelday Somioco • 7 p.m.

SJraaueMI1411 Bridpmm SL~!~~

P1110r. Roy (Mill:e) ,......,....

Sunday Sd&gt;oal - 10 a.m.
Evcninc · 6p.m.
Weclneldq Semc:e • 7 p.m.

MW'eyrt P 7

RACINE - Boahan Rood .;, Thla 3 bedroom, 2 bath ·
homo needs wort&lt;, bul could be made nice wilh .!he riglt

3I

'!bini Ave.

1

Reo. a..tilll&lt;cr

-10 Liil.

SalomSL, RUIIanol

PaMr. Roberti!. Muuer

M..adlrpi:rt,._,.....

s...y School · 9 LID,

Wcnhip - 10 LOI. , 4 p.m. (2nd .t 4do Sun.)

Real Eatate General

S-Fint~-71ariM

Sunday School· 10 .....
w.,...,.,
-II:IS Lm.,7p:m.
Weclnelday Servic:e -7 p.m.

wonbip - 11 ....._4 ...... u••3nls.n.&gt;

M - Cbaptl Chul'&lt;ll

Sevent h-Day Adventist

SupL:MitcMabm

h.-.i:fvman,.s touch . It, sUs on 1.114 acra lot that has a

DOmE TURNER, Brokl!l'.............;.............. 112-5692
BREIIOA JEFFERS ..............................,. ........... II2-3051
DARLINE 8TEWART ........................................ II2-63&amp;5
SANDY BUTCHER .......................................... II2-5371
JERRY SPRADLING ............................... (304) 1182-3411
OFFICE ............................................................ 112-2886 ,

Wonbip ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Cllr'rt'• Fellow*lp C•ter

CARPENTER SERVICE

A a am Aclcltiona
-G-Work

-Eiec:1rlool and Plumbing
-RooHng
.
-lntorlor &amp; Exlorlor

Painting

Happy Ads

r

Dagwood!

c••-......_ •.,....,
MtM.IfHI .
s.- s.- l•r Ienke

IUY • Sill • TUH
31711. 2ntl St.

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeetone,
Dirt, GriiYel and Coal
, LICENSED end IIONOED

Mon.•frl. I 0:00·5:00
S.t•nl•r 1O:OG-I:OO

UNES

Sunday Sc:bool • 10 .....

ClosatiSIHIJ
992-3577

1

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992"6215

Quality

Stone Co.

~oy,Ohlo

9·10·92-lfil

CHARLIE'S

SMALl DODR WORI,
DRIVEWAY WORK
, .dUMESTOHf
DEliVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

'25 HOUR

2·•0.• ... lyHII
RutlloadOff
Rt. 124

12 S.uio•s $20
16 Seaaio11 $25
992·2487

is
looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Danca on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addresses to
Meigs Alumni
Association, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,,
Ohio &lt;15760

•••••li•a

(:are
Fill EST
IS .

StOll I

985-4473

667·6179

mo

Howard L Wrltesel

HOWEll'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX, SERVICE
REASONABLE

RATES
992·7036

949-2168
3-t&amp;-93-lfn

36358 SR 7

Seaionetl

$40.00 a load
Deliwered.
(614) 992·5449
12131/821lfn

SIZED LIMESTONE

992·3470
OWNER:

Jeff Wkkers~am

3-11·93

ru .

Un1ted Brethren
ML .....IIU.IIM.Aw

Wanhlp. JOa.m.
·IOa.m.

loCiretlt~

TaM c
• ., off CR. 11
. Po-.lt.alsatSaoden
Sunday Sellool • 9:30 LID,
Wonllip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Woclnooday Ser•ioos ·7:30p.m.

W-y~

~--Ch­

OnadSuos

Sunday Sdoool- 10 a.m.
Wanhlp · II a.m.

Weclnoaday Sorvi001 • 8 p.m.
T-Ciourdo
Co. Rd. 63

&amp;loll .Udell .......... Ill Chrllt
1112 raiJa- of Jtoodovillc

WClllhif ·10:30 o.m.

!llmolay- • 10 a.m.

DO'J.'J'JCD
NEW USnNG- Grant St.· Mlcldllport: 2 slory
frame home wHh 3 bedroorrlli. new bath, new
·k~che~. new wiring, new electric heat pump wilh
canlral air, fireplace, atiiC space, cable hook-up,
approx. 1 aqe $55,00!)

CMSIIIC-114
-.Reo. lt.alsatMutlcy

Sunday Sd&gt;oal- 9:30a.m.

NEW . LISnNG- Sumnar Rd.· Pomeroy:
Biickllrame spl~ foyer horne 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
new carpet &amp; vinyl flooring, new heal pump and
central air, 2 diCics, fireplace, cellar, stor1f!9e
building, aecurily llghta, 2 car garage, very nrco
landscaping. 1.485 aero $89,500

Wonhio&gt; -7:30p.m.
Woclnooday som.:., · 7:30p.m.

t

MIDDLEPORT· t floor -frame &amp; vinyl home wHh 5
rooms1 2 bedrooms, balh, on two loll, some new
wiring &amp; plumbing. Close to shopping and
Pharmacy. ASKING $18,000 owner may accept
reaSonable offer.

_,.,.....

.,.......,.,.,
271 ...t • .

S.C...

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

' ~~~!~! 1~1
rrt\CJ1pi1Dn\

"lltn

Pnmtrov

.

'

PAGEVILLE· 24.93 acr11 In the . country w~h
electric and water well on sHe Includes large S!e&amp;l
building wllh cement flool &amp; foundation. Immediate
'pos,esslonl Aaklng $31,900 Owne1 wan1s Ia sell
no reasonable oller ralusl8dl

NURSES' AI,DE
WITH CPR
. TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614·992-7698
312511 mo.

"Helping You To Recover Your ln'ltlf/IIUnl"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

UCIIIE, OHIO
614·949·2202
61

LIMESIOIIE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

.....

Gingerbread Hoase
PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE

Reaso•••le

JOE II. SAYlE
SAYRE
614·742·2138

SNNallh-.sAIIIddllpot-. Ohio 45710

a••..._.,,. ••• Ope•l•l of •••lr
lafaat/TOIIdler Protr••
We will NOW serve children
6 months to 12 yea,. of age.
Call us for more Information
(614) 992-7328

KEVIN'S UWN
MAIIIRIIANCE

BW 'SlACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

·-.... ,__

IMdlng.
Shrub lllicl T,.. Trimming
AHI lailAal &amp; c:clmm.n:i.1
FrwEMtmlt•

WoAioo-

1419 State RL 7

...
.._
-···e

TR~IL-----------AI . . Aaaft."" _ _ _ _ _.,;... _ _ . . . . . , . ,

II A '

.....

OPPI

,........,._
r

; - : - - -. . . .

..

-:-~=-··~- ··-M~~~

EAGLES .
CLUB
IN POMEROY
1:45 p.m. .
Specilll Early Bird
$100 P,Yoff
Thlo lid good lor 1
FREE card
Lie. No. 0051·32

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
. Life • Medicare • Cancier • Fire • Health •
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 1.19
Middleport, Ollio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1/20/I:Wn

POOR BOY TIRES

EXCAVATING

STRUT &amp; SHOCK

2 Froat Struts • L•ltor
• 4 Wlrool AliJ•IIII•t
Pric11 StlrtiBI ..
1

129.95 +Tax

GOOD SIRVICIIS
ODRIUL

&amp;'81'12/1

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6628• .

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SNOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

KELLEI'S .CUSTOM
BENDING . ·
47269 St. lt. 241 • I Y. Milo Off Rt. 7

·

T•ru c•ostor o••Rt. 241

PH. 614·915·3949
HOW OFFEIING••••••
.OIL IIID LUll ·sERVICE
. TIRE REPAIR AIID IOTADNG
~/2• .1911:" 1 •• ,.

WE DO ROOFING

FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

20 Years Exp.

.................
217 L le4eH 11.
PUI.Y,OIIO

difference.
•
•Minimum 50 cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gal In winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 16TH thru MAY 31ST
Special farm terrne with parment 4 tlmea • year.
and NO INTEREST or ANANCE CHARGE. ;:
Larry E. Miller
•
1..aoo;.5911-5654

'

12 GAUGE ONLY

liCE

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP't&gt;lesel Supi'eme... Try It, there Is a •

AND EVERHHING
UNDERNUTH
.

TROMM BUILDERS

OPEN TO PUBLIC

992·h31er
9114111

L...----

614 ·446·0 736

EVERY THURSDAY

New Homes • VInyl Siding
N~w Garagss • Replacement Windows
Roc:im Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL 11nd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

BULLDQZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING, '
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE F.STIMATES

1111'

.

s.-ef•al

7ll2

IODGERIE-1

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

HOWARD

.....

\
' HINirt 1, ()I II At1D..----·-•·--,.IIM1f1

SprfniThn•

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

(No Sunday C•lls)

ALliiiiU

WE NEED LI8TING81 GIVE Ul A CALL TODAY
IF YOU AFIE INTEFIESTED .. BELLINO I

Aut,.;R.,.tllb

31111 mo.

MICIOWAVI 0¥111
•IMI VCI IINII

POMEFIOY· Oeboma 81.· 1 floor frame home wl1h
' 3 bedrooma, bath, lull flnlahl!d buement. on lot of
100 X150. ASI&lt;JNQ $10,000

-

Lllwn Ma ing,
Fllllilizlng, W-g, .,d

742·2328

HOW

lARRY'S BODY SBOP
:~NtAMU.. .....

a.a•••ll. oa. ••,,.

367·7444 • 446-6644
1·100·926-2022 (OW. OIIJI

c.....--

1128/nMn

POMEROY· SDn:la Ave.· 1 floor frame ham• 2
bedrooms, N.G.F.A: fuU buamenl Wilh utllily and
garage. Applillncea, cable hook-up, llllc 111*1·
$19,900
.

!111011 -

949·2391or
1·100·137·14.0

&amp;

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

..•

HAULING

NOTARY

3-8-113 1 mo.

TRIM and
REMOVAL

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
3llllfti

SnOdgrass Upholstery

992·3838

Fatt,.,~urdl
SUnday
9:30 .....
Wonllip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
W'odneaday 7:30p.m.

-~ ·

••

~

HARDWOOD

614·992·7643

NEW-REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

FIREWOOD
FOR .SALE

Jeanie Howell, EA

ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

36970 Bal R1n Road
Pomeroy, Dilio

.

Year·er:~d Reports

POMI.OY, OH.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

c••••ire, OH.

Quarterly and

992·7553
3125113/1

. SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614-992·
6637
St. lt. 7

Shade River Saddle Shop

J-12-~3·1-

SUMMER ·
IMAGES

l·lt·T

..

.....,..,, OhiG

Pl. 614·992·5591

CeH Ire... at "2-5770
2ttYoa.bp.llwlM
·

THE BOOK
· BUll

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER a SEWER

3-4-93·1 mo

(FREE ESTIMATES)

wc:nhip • II LIIL, 7 p.m.

992·5432

=====::==::;
5

POIIIDS

·-

.

Wedneaday Servioe • 7 p.m.

"F..,.,.

Houae,

Cll1110111 I AIIIIUIICIIII

Sunday- -10 a.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant
Kenrwillr Frl«&lt; Chicle•"
228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

Co uri

Second Str ..t, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45761 end !he Golllo
County Recorder, Gollia
Counly Court Houoe,
Locuol Str..~ . Ga!llpolla,
Ohio 45831 for pubhc view·
lng. WriUon comment•
Mellor requealllor on lnlor·
malconlerance may be aenl
lo Ill• Dlvlolon or Recio·
matlan, Fountain Square,
Building H-3, Columbuo,
Ohio 43114, with.in 30 dayo
of tho la!l data of publica·
lion ollh•• notice.
(3) 12,19, 26; (4) 2 41c

lanlaatic view ollho countryside. Woo $11,1100. NOW
S17,000.

/·

-

DrePiue c ... muoltJ Churcll
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 .....
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

YOUNG'S

'

......., WiJJiaoi v. Motor

l!vaUn&amp;-7:30p.m.
W«&lt;....oy Semc;e • 7:30 p.11.

Counly

lr------;;;,;,;
I&amp;C EICIVADII&amp;
IUUDOZING

...........
-c;.,....
..
ee••,....

Sdnrnllt wn athldr
-

expand lho •r•• lor room
.,d plllor unclllrground end
lull coal exlroctlon mining
by longwoll methode.
Tho oppNclllion Ia on file
Ill lhe ollie•• of !he Meigo
Counly Recorder, Melgo

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
(OIISIRUCTIOII

P-.Rav.Vlaor .......
s-lay Sc:bool9:30 ......
WDIIIhip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Woclnooday Sonrioo · 7:30p.m.

IAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER.
FUNERAL HOME

OFFICE 992·2886

" ~;'!:,..

Other Churches

HueiCom•01llJ Cburcll
OffRL 124 ,
l'ulo&lt;:EdaeiHart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Silting on your mom'a
lap at 6 month• old and at ill doing It at
3&amp;yearal
Love, your huebllnd,

.We' t.,.SeMce.. 7:30p.m.

Calo..,e...o.,..·
· -•
Pwwa"l' Pike, Co. ....

mil• aoulhwHI of DonviHo.
The appllc8tlon propoMO 1o

Hqppy BirthdtJy
DU.ne! ·

Real Estate General

Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m.
w..--y Seovicel - 1 p.m.

' Sunday Scl&gt;ooi!O un.

i

Ph. (114) &amp;44-2115. Conoult
LEGAL NOTICE
·
ORC Chap. 3745 ond OAC
Southern ·Ohio Coal
Chapa. 3745,47 111d 374'-S
Company, Meigo Mine No.
torr---to.
3t, P.O. lox 410, Albano,
Flnatloa-of~ol
Ohio 4570t hoo aubmilled
of NPOEI Permit
on application to rovlae 1
Southern Ohio Cool Co.
Cool
Min ing
ond
P. O.Box410
Reclamation Permit numAthen•. Ohlo
'
bered D-0354-2 to lhe Ohio
EIIIICtlve 0.: 01101113
Department ~f , Nalural
Rec.ivlng w.-.: Eoot
Br•nch • Recca an Crellk
Reaourcea Dlvloion of
P-It No. 01M011003"CD
Roclomotl~. Tha propooed
Thlo 111111 oc:t1o11 not , . - . coal mining and reclomo·
eel by propoaed octlon ond tion -•lion will be con·
lo·oppoolablelo EBR;
ductod In Mel go Counly,
Salem Townohip, Section•
Southam Ohio Cool Colli.' ta, 11ond 24 Gallia County,
p.,y lhlgo Mine No. 2
Morgan Townohlp, Secllon
P. 0. Box 410
t7 and 23. The r,ropooecl
Ath•a, Ohio
undergrbund min ng .,...
Ett.clive Dall 01101113
•ncoi'npaaa 83 acrea and
Receiving Watora: Ogdoro ani located on the
Run ..
Wllkeovllle 7Yo Minute
Facllty O.crtptlon: Cool
U.S.G.S. quadranglo map,
W•her
utandng 0.9 mil• aoulh ol
Permll No. OIL 00112rco
Salam Center, 0.91 mlloa
Thlo •1111 ..lion not pr~ welt of Danville •nd 1.5
ad by propoaed octlon end
Ia •-lllbleto EBR.
-------'
5 · Happy Ads
Southern Ohio Coal ~;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;::;
Comp.,y, Mol go Min a ,.
Number t
P. 0. Box 410
Alh.,l, Ohio
Efl..tlvo·D• 01101113
Rec.ivlng wa-.: Pork•
Run
·
Facllty Deacrlptlon: Coal
Wuh•
P-11 No. DILOOCI2rCD
Thlo ftllll action not pr~
od by projloaed octlon and
Ia ._lllble to EBR.
(3) 26, 1tc

More Legals on Page 10

l.ewl. W.Va. RL I

F,!lrllalad Flnt Cburdo rltllc Naanae
PUIGI: William Jllllis
Suaday Sd&gt;oal · 9:30 .....

c..-

s.u..

CaoiYille Road

Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Wonllip-10:30A.m.,'6:30p.m. .
w&lt;driOiday $etwiocl - 1 p.m.

IIDddloparlc-u!".,O..rdo
S75 Pead SL, Middleport

-~Boker

WaloulondHenJYSia.,Re--. -w.va.
~' Revo. Rldoanl.t
l'olri&lt;ia lk&gt;ndo·Jtn.a
Sanday-. 9:30 .....
Wonllip -II a.m.

p_, Rav. PloillipP'• ow
Sunday Sc:bool - 9:30 .....
Wanldp- JQ-.30a.m.
W..tnooday&amp;mae - 7jl.m.
, _ _ Ch_

10 .....
W'onllip- 9 a.m. ,
W..tnooday Se!viooo -. 10 "-"'·
Suoday--

Wonhip • 9:30.._..,
SuadlySabool - !0:30a.m.

Cbestor Clo- of lite Nua.-.e
Pa-.Reo. llabataSuaday- . 9:301.JD.

Wllllo'lc-...w....,..

Pu110: Somucl Buye

w.....-ySooviou-7:30p.m.

W, '

W-ySemce·7p.o!.

Ruualld Cb.,... at doe Nilzorele

.......7
'
1'-. Boohae (&lt;n-) )(eo
5unday Sdoaal · 9:1S a.m.
Wonlip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
~.J(oilh

Sunday- -9:30 .....
Wonhip • JD-.30 un. and 6 p.m.
Wodnooday Servi&lt;ca - 7 p.m.

p.m.

Peoot Chapel
P....-: 1'lonocc Smilh
Sunday School • 9 a.ril.
Wanllip • 10 a.m.

Wonllip , 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
'll)unday Seroice • 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.a., 7 p.m.

Wc:nhip • II Llli., 6 p.m.
Wodaa&lt;fay ~ • 7

SundaySabool-9a.a.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

HJIOII R• Rollnea Cburck
PilUle: Rabm Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

PUoar: hv. ltc!lerWillfonl

Putor: Rav. 'l1lomu M&lt;Ciuoa

Mlaa .....
Pulo&lt;:DenmNIIWNII

Wtsle71D Bible Hollnea Cbur&lt;h'
1S Pu.rl SL, Middleport.
P.-: Rav. Roy MaCarty
Sunday adoaol · 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · 10:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wodnetday Seroice · 7:30p.m.

1laW Kaab,cmCo.Rd. 31

• Churdl allloe N....-

Wonllip • JQ-.30 a.m.
Wodoeoda)i s.m- · 6 p.m.

Wonllip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednoodoy Semce -7:30p.m.

,_c.,... Mllllorl

~OJ

Beall {MWIIqart)
1'1-.Fnni:Smioh
5unday Seboal- 9:30a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

264 South 2nd

,... . . .
··~
, .\.

,_

~y~·6:30pnL

Aile Crovel&amp;blc HoiiiMSI O.urda
l(l mile off RL 31S
Pa-. Rev. O'Dell Man1ay

RuU.nd Church,of Cod

s-laySdoaal - 9:30a.m.
Wonlrip - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wodnooday Semceo • 7 p.m.

Syracaa Churdl of lire N....-Pu-. Rav. Glom McMillan
Sunday ScMd - 9:30am.
Wonbip-10:30a.m.,6p.m.
WodneodaySeovicel -7p.m.

..... Newmlll
Sunday-.
10 a.m.
Wonllip -9a.at.

Hoi mess
11- alSiwool Holl- Churck
Now Uraa Road, Rutland
Pulor: b¥. Dew.Y Kina
Sunday adoaol- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worrhip •7 p.m.
Wodnetday pn~me&lt;lina- 7 p.m.

Pulor: Rav. Seldon Jalmoon
Sunday-. 9:30a.m.
Wonlip • ID-.30 a.m.
Wodnetday Semceo ,- 7:30p.m.

Pa1tor: John F. Cormran

-

~ School - 10 lUlL
Wcnbip ·I IUD., 6 p.m.
'lbunclay SeMooo • r p.m.

0111•...., roiJowin&amp;

Laqs.-

Wonh1p- 11 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mill wo•k

Clooordr
Sl., l'aneiJ&gt;y
Rodar. Fr. BiD Lyle
Holy Eucbl!ia IIIII Sunday S&lt;:bool II a.m.
•

Sunday Sc:hool - 9:4S a.m.

Evenina . 7 p.m.
Wednooday Service~ -7 p.m.

Catholic

SoL Con. 4:45-': l$p.m.;

c...= .,.

, _ , Ouorleo J Sanday School- 9:30 .....

on-, Jr.

Sunday- . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnooday Servi&lt;ca -7 p.m.

, _ Keilb Rader

Off 114 behiDd W'rlbMlle

~ Rav. UJyd D.

leednllleFeiiOwo!.lp
Cburdl of lire N - Pulor:Juhn W. lbpa

10 .....
Wonllip • 9a.m. 6,p,m.
TuOodoy s...iocl -1 p.m.

MLOIIw U - M-ot

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

'

~School-

Episcopal

. Sl. Jolla l 'irlll•• Cloordl
PirloO.U..
Puur. 0.... Weiridt

NeMISIIIIMM'CIMtrdl

Suroday Wcnmp ·l:30~.;
1'!lrnday-. 7:30p.m.

, _ ICoioh blot

Putor. Philip SWnn
Sunday Sehool: 9:30 un.

Putor: Theron Dulhom

,,. .....

dsy~-"Jp.m.

+

Mlddllf art Clllird .tlllt N•nrese

' -lla.a.
.
Wodneoda~ -7:30p.m.

Retdsvllle Church at Christ

Chrllllari Union

Sunday Sd&gt;oal - 10 a.m. .
Wonhip · II a.m.

I•

w.

Jllnl,Cllrlrdl
rllloo
I" n ,._,
_ . L.
~

w

Sunday School· 9:45a.m.

Wonhip ·9:30a.m. (hl.t :lad Sun1
7:'JO p.m. (3td. 4111 S..)
Wedneoday Semce • 7:30p.m.

Chnstian Union
Hollaon Chun:h of Chrlalln

w

PUBUc NOnCE
Tho following -r• re! • ..,.,..,.._by the Ohio
Enviroromenlol Protection
Agen.cy (OEPA) loot WMk.
En.. uva ..... ot final
oclio!oa lNUMCe datH
of p-eel oollono •d of
draft ..uono are atoled.
Flrool octlono may bo
oppeolad, In wrllng, within
30 dar• of the cllllo of lhia
notice, to Tile Envlron-ntol ao.rd ot 'Rwllw, Rill. 300,
231 E. Town It, Columbua,
OH., 43215. NoUco of any
.,... oh..... ftlad with the
, director within 3 doyo .
. ' Propoood ocllona will
biiCome ftnol uniHo • writlon adjudication hoarlng
r - • t Ia •ubmltted wllhln
30 doyo of tho laauonce
data; or the director revia·
NIWill\dr- tha propoaod
oclloro. Any paroon may
oubmlt comm•ta and/or 1
mMing r'"11"nlin11•ny draft
..aon within 30 diyo or tho
dolo Indicated. "Action", ••
uaod obon dooa not
include r~ olo verified
complaint ltalgnlllc.,l publie lnterHt oxiota, 1 pubMc
m":l. may be held. Ao to
any
on, lncluclng riiCoipt
of vorlfiad o0111plainta, any
peraon may oblllin noa .. of
lurlh., ilctlona, and edclltlonol Information. Unleao
otherwlu provided In
Nolle•• of particular
oclloroe, Ill communlc:atlono
ohall be ....i to: H..rlng
Clorlc, OEPA, P. 0. Box 1041,
Columbuo, OH., 43266-0141

Sonloy- . 9:30a.a.
Wonl!ip • 10:30 a.iL, 6 p.m.

-Deiail~.

Sunday Scl&gt;ool -.9:30 LIIL
Wonllip • 6 p.m.
.
Wodnoldly SCMca-7 p.m.

316 Jj.

-

lotll.wJ (S,_)

New Lite Churdl at God
Qltlltr
PIIIIIAX: GaJY !linea

Un1ted Methodist

Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednadoy, 6:30p.m.

~onbi,&amp; · II a.m .. 6 p.m.
y Servi- - 7 p.m.

1

tJcaarcnc

c-.aa-

Puur. Pll H.....,
s..iday Scl&gt;ool · 10 un.
Wonhip · II lUll.
Wodaolday S.rvi&lt;ca -7 p.m.

H&lt;mloo;k Grove Church
Sunday school · 10:30 o.m.
Wo~hip • 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

I

CllurdiGtGod ...... ,~..,
OJ. Wliilo Rd. off Sl. RL 1150

Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Pastor. Chadcs Dcmigln

··-

Wodnoldly SeMca - 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbocll- 9:45 .....
Wcnbip • II lUlL

Wcnhip ~ 10:30 •.m., 7:30p.m.

....·'

. BwaUta SeMca- 7 p.ID.

··Clourdl
at Cbrlot
Putor:
EuB. Underwood

· ---~~-~
Puur. Bill UDie
Sunday School - !Oe.m.
Wonlip - !!a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodaa&lt;fay Semceo· 7:30p.m.

..

P.-: Rav. OoYi4 R....U

Sunday Scl&gt;oollllj! Wanhip- 9:30 ...,,

Wonllip - ID-.30 a.m.
Wedaeeclly SeMCIOI • 7 p.m,

Y-Pulo&lt;RidtHurio.
s..Dy&amp;Md·9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:40a.m., 7:00p.m.
WedladaySemceo - 7:00p.m.

''=

~

Ckordl atCiorlot
PU«: Ouio Siawm
Sunday Sdoool· 9:30a.m.
-

ladM Flrll Bapllll

~ ·· ~:

----------

DI
Tp;nl'lolua,_.
Pulor:..,_H===
Sunday-- 9 ....
Wanllip • 10 LID.
'l'lloldoy SerJiceo · 7:30p.m.

The Dally Sentinel Page 7

Mondlly.frld8y, 8:00-5:00
E.,_, Oully Wort&lt;.'""- Wort&lt;
Wolr:ornl, Fl&gt;orGIIIa Wort&lt;. ~ Aopairirg &amp;

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound students.
'regardless of inoome
. •regardless of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of credit
To collect your scholarship money
callll14-985-3551
Open Mon.·Frl. 10.7 or Sat 10-4
Vlu .......,

c...

!Ill-

·Rolinllhing, F..,. Sbaighllrinp. C.....
Sancllluting. Mlnin
Mlling Syolom

s.-

I

I

,..,._.'t•
I
Cllt..t•

..

Wtd .
~ ~

~j

=

�~ay.
HolaJilold

The

1lLLEYOOP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Goode

Man::h 26, 1993

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

-'= .
wv,

- .... , .. a_,._
~

Voloo177 1101101
0771 [II. 11201 lUI Ptr lin.
~

-

"You picked a heck of 1 time to
finally admit you' re nearsighiedl "

-

;:.:!~~.'"':iny "!.~~or''=

........... Lalli Df . -

-

war

Cloood . _ • - - , .

11

Help Wanted

.:..:..._...:..:::!~:.:.::::.-

IU TRD SERVICE. l~
Ir!onm!ng, Trat Romoni, .
TliAaminii: ,,.. Eollma- •

·-·
lloolle -

-

Colllo g I

---~­

,- ·~~­
old, . . , PiotC.:..-11,
=4.~111 '1M. pill

-· ·

Lolt&amp;Found

FOUNDlarga bit~.:,.~
llpollo """" wv.

LOST toroo .........
~

~

tong lloiNd

Atwwau
te
olaor 11o1, Clmtl

REWARD,~

~

7

-

..,..._

GaUipolll
&amp; VIcinity

5•

DtDI 'GITA
6000 GRADE
ON MY TEST,
MISS PRUNELLY??

.1UGHAIOU

HILJO WAHTIII: Laoli 17 - - oilaln

we

~

:

. . . . . ._

,:;.m:
lor

By
• Lawn
111 0121_

Corw, ComWa Do I All,

TWO F.iN6E~5

WllciD ...... a~JOt22:rr • M4 MIIOII.

iAI'

Buslnen
Opportunity

TU~EE

liE 'fOUR CURVE

W~ICI:I DOESN'T

1

lrlloU

........... '

CURVE AT ALi,. ..

::.....~··::Z
WV
I r ._
an;:;~:&amp;f m

FtN&amp;ERS
WILL BE 'fOUR
CIIAN6E~UP

W~IC~ l:lASN'T

~,.,

IN&lt;mCEI

OHIO YALUY PUIUSHiNO CC.
........ ...... ... Jill .. n c~ . . .,.. thai rou do ...,....
llamholoow~ParlllrnO
_ . .h paopto you
,. l'ul Cooopany "::~: ,
NOTto-.:-..yt
tha

=~~t •n;;
..:r.;;, ~

::;"t,:":

........ ,.,ha.. tha • ~...
~

......
.....

.....

1

11........,

v.ncttna Roulo: 14 000 A

Month P-.n.t. ll~at SaiL 1·
IION538303.

---·............
-·
llol....
f ...... - .
cllytlml ..., ....,

,t

Tift LITTLE
61ftll PIECfS'I
· T~AT'S
'
Q·CUNIE,.

VENDING RallEi Gat Rich
Quick? No Way! But Wo A
Good, SlalciY, Anordable, -

-

No ilporlonool' MOO To 1101

W~llllill Prau Jlng
I'IIA
Owii
Moura. 1
111 DIGS lai.ZIS.

- ' f Loll. 1..00:214-

=·"'
........ .::;; ;:;r.:
c ,. · · -.. Dunlop~

Real Estate

:14-

Qd

.........
. _ Clnlo,

1112111

114-

!!!n!nl--. Tap T!IIIIA. 4

a- ..,..._ .. :z

a. '"'" ....._

1 ano1

Minor
Mil
••
'¢ b¥4fiiJI.:= LFNill
. . . Col ttl
EOil

4111 nfn
t,-.
·u~rDtlll
.....,.,:. ;-. . .
...............
I

aa

--~~

~~--­
-.~'\:-...,:=:

I
- ....... II' .
..,...._....,I.e.~
............ Annw.
,...,
I
•
... -

1124104.

'}=:'i*Srr:ie
:lJti:L...
-.;

Employment Servrces

v..... -

I CON'rw..t.NT
lOE!!NDUP
L-IKE M--f

haiM 14,3011. -

'

•'

I
I
I

I

81

Wll labyolt In My ,.,.
ood In PJar Aroa. ExportMICod.
Ralww
Avallablo. Rodnoy
Col t14-24HIIl
Bam - a l : .-on Glol bam
~-.eMil oi lha way?

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

...

No ilopollt On Rei II Doon;

,

...

..

::Fot~,;iiO'ijaiA~ '

ASTROaGRAPH

__
I •

BERNICE
BEDE ·OSOL

-

IN!, . . . . - - . •un.

WHO-O.OaO
can help
you?

CLASSFIEO
ADS

All reaJ estate act\t~rtlahg In
this newspaper lsllb)ee1to
the Federal Fair HoustruAd
ol 1968 which makes • llegat
to adVet11se ··~preference ,
Mmlallon or discrimination
bued on race, color, rtltglon,
sex larTillalstatus or nltloflal
ongin. ct any IntentiOn lo
make q sudl pnderance,
Imitation ct Cltatmtnotton.'

no-

........=-==·=---::
-.... ..._

amrt-tn lhiS - -

.._ Or

_.,unly l&gt;:illil,

PI; -

are avalable on an ~al

Mire~ 21, 11113

·•

adVertlaementt for reallltate
'M11cn !lin violatiOn ot tha
taw. OUr roll&lt;iero artlllrtl&gt;y
tntomlld that all-lingo

TNI
wll nol
knowingly accept

the noun HEXAD.

.._Or

~

--.:1•

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

IMitl•&amp;

N
ANI -

II l'ir*

l:t" .,. -

~

l'ilii

Call - -

,!!! lhe year ahead, you mighllind lhe ways

E

mea.ne to bring an endeavor you've
IOying ~lh lor a long lime 10 a clola.

luck in lhla worthy project.
"RIEl (March 21·Aprll ttl Devole your
tflorto and enorgiea loday to maHero lhel
can anhance tha matinal NCurlty of you
l'!'d your loved onea, Sllllttanllll accorn·
!IJahments ar1 poasibte. Get a jlltlp or,. tHe
1)/ --nding lhe lnflu.nl:el ...
peming you '" tha yur rtud. Send for

••

•

UBRA (Sap:. 23-0ct. 23) Most of your
Aries' Astro-Graph predictions today by- eltorts today might be spent on doing
mailing $1.25 plus a long, se"·acldressed, lhings tor olllenl
slamped envelope to Astro-Grap/1. c/o lhis Hone"''· - . 1 is '*""Ill c1wy up. youl
newspaper. P,O. BoK 91428. Cleveland, sllareOIM!allhoygam.
OH 441 o 1· 3428. Be sure to slale your SCORPIO (Oo:t 24-ND¥. 221 wyou have to

--olio&lt;,.,.....

zodiac sign.
TAURUS (April 20·11ay 20) Adhere to
· inclinallons today lhat direct you to take
action on specilic issues. Ouanlily is no1 as
lmponanl as ~uality. Be selective.
GEMINI (llay 21-Junt 20) lt.mighl be neeessary for you to be a trifle more asasrtive
than usual today, in Older lo .ualher 1ha11o .
which you're entitled. Be bold when circum·
slances demand it
CANCER (Junt 21-July 22) Your p-1·

make 1n Important fllll - · ~- tty
10 iooia• lha
ao l c:an lie cbie
on a one·ICHirie basis. You're dynamae
-•ngwilhin 'l l i i s SAGITT-.s c-. D:Dac Z1) Donl be
reluctant to assill an associate' il il io
roqo
t You
be 01 lor a ploo...lll..l
surprise you diocovor ,_,.,. also

key.,....
""'*'

-"'""I tor.;...,..

CAPRICORN (Die, u-. II) BMig
cons-. lnd dipiatnli11c - , _ ,.,

•"-"*

~ies lor ~uteeea loolc good loday. bec:auae dollliCI hom your a
lhlm. Ptopla -

you're liklly to lie a viaionary with a pur·
pose. When rnotlvale"d by alrong desires.
anylhing ia pooailile.
LEO (July 23,Aug. 22) An Impressive
accomplishment Is indicated todly, but
you're lllcely 10 derive marl pieaaln from
striving lhan achieving. Tha tun ia In lhe

- . 1 ..
,_,.,. • ...,. ad with
know you hiVe clout, aven when you

1
•
""""" ........
AOU•Ma (JaiL »M. lit Do I yo,..
.., houi4IWJid pllljlcls
IUm out Ia be
mora tun than drudgery - Y· Scout

""'*'

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

around to&lt; •iyllil"'
clilias .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lapl. 22) People you'l PII:EICNL . . .cta28)0
. lilly••
bt lnvotved,wnh loday will have a llrong Hia ... ; '"cia _
_,._..,.
llfiec1 on your rntr11at 111iludt. If !hey 1rw
dona affairs lnd ..... furl
_ ,, you'll do your bolito outdo"*"·
Thla ia a goad . . . . . . - · -

"

I see both t:;OMMUNICATION
COMMUNICATIONS being used.

un.,.,.

is correct?

len:bantleably because both terms are
DOUDS, unlike the acljective POLITIC
and the noun POLITICS. A difference
can be detected, thout,h, when an S is
added to COMMUNICATION. The
plunt suggests more than one type of
eommunieation or a system for com·
municating. For instance, 1n expert
iD COMMUNICATION may be able to
belp you write a speech, but an expert
in COMMUNICATIONS is needed to
help bnladcaat lhat talk.
.
'

~~-

Help Wanted

dlnfata.llrwM~.

:=~',~that
total of siX. Be sure lo notice,
there are fewer than six

A. These words are being used in·

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

I

lrdlsporLltlon

...,. • • tDi IIUmmtr _ .

6lluh1mmld

2 Cruclftx
3 Byjovet

7 OccUlt
8 Deep, rolllllg

/

CELEBRITY CIPHER

OIMbrtty ~ CfJPtODr~mt . . cneted from qualalkM• b)' r.nou. peopil, Pll1 Mil~ ·
Ed .... lntfttdpfw ..Mdtfcw~. T*y'1'*-.· B~J.

'VATVKW

ZVRXWLUG

IDNLWZ

inuol-·· '

MH

CZLTZ

L

N l P .R K K X M J V,

wzv

UMJV

,,•

w zv

HMX

LEEMXRULWG,

PMRKP."

L

NREV

RONVXPMO.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '"I feet really lortunole to be moklnQ a !lYing 11
wnat I chose. and 1 !lope that'o how people thin~ ot me,'" - Rob

Morrow.

·

'::~:::~' scc:~cillA-~~~s·
141to4
CLAY
POllAN
~J

Rearrar~o• Jeffer• of
0 four
tcrambled words

·

WOlD
lAIII

~

the

..

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b+

low tc:J form four simple words

I

HEXAD ( "HEK~sad'') indicates a

1

POOROLO
DAD... ~·,5..,'-t~

lpoarw,IM:I~--

llbl:

D l:aulli .... Pial U, LaM..

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2M .....
D. a D. Photography 111111 hae

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PRYZHE

1I I I I
1

12 (

-

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AVCN I Ail Alalo I lhlrlor

ZNT

Pass
3+
All pass

2+
s•

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

1-4 roome &amp; balh, 2 ~--'IX·
oatlonl - . . . . ....-. 114-

hei•'•J!:rr.1.

Eul
r•

•• IJICO

Houoa, 1 112 .....

-'1;

Pass

split llonon, wiDDin&amp;
ace aDd finessiDC East for tile
plus 550.

MU..Ir

I

•AVOW AU.ARUIII -.your
tllile ...
tha
awnpenr. 1&lt;100 112 1351
I l.odloa Who Would Uko To
W Avon Call14 Ul 1311.
· AlooMI ,.,.,. OM nnlar To
, . _ Coo liallng, -ion,
- - . Etc. In An Cut
-nl
l.ocllod In Gal-~
,.
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r.d.
lend RUIIIM . , Apt I, 1113
To: feotl. 1770 Jaclle!NI ~

Nortll

West
Pass

-,..ruffed.........,... . . . . . .
bis baDd,and exited with a trUmo.
Tbis t!lldplayed West. He led the •dia·l
IIIOIId ja£k, but Malifield

.

lsaiJ Ill . . . . . . . .

$400, -

11

IUiftl

33 Ovtrtuma
37 Hllh ground

ciaDS. C.V.R. Tbompson 1hiDks tb.at
Waabiocton is the only place wllere
soUacl travels fasler tbail light. Bob
Hope ~ves to go there, if only to be
aear bis money. Tim McNamar, the
Deputy Secretary of the Treasury under Presidellt Reapn, found tb.at if
Jllll ask for the time there Jllll get
fereat answers from Democrats and
JlepoNicaos; 435 answers from the
Boase of Representatives; a 500-pace
report from some conaultants on bow
toteU time; ao llllftr from your law·
yer, aDd a bill for $1,000 .
Several world bridge cbampions
live in the nc. area. Ed Manlield
played today's deal in the final of the
1915 . . .blum Cup, wbic:b the Unit·
ed .Si&amp;tes WOII ll&amp;illst Pakistan.
Tile biddiJI&amp; was bizarre, East's ODe:
beart openioc was crazy, South over·
ailed one no-trump for want of ~mM~ I
thine better to do. North's two
trump sbowed a minor two·~ulter.l
East psyc:bed with bis cue-bid of
diamonds, sbowin&amp; a stn1111 ·~:~1
raise. South wasa't fooled by E
.atics, bolt West was. He doubled five
dulls aDd led a low heart.
Malifield won with bis jack .and
played the dub queen. East won with
the ace aDd switched to the &gt;pade
Dodarer WOII with bis ace, cubed
lieart ace, ruffed tile heart tbfte in

'"'

t::t·~, ~::;-"'- . _ 111WII111

waltz
5Folktalt

1BrecklnrldiiO

First and fotemost, Wasbin(I!Aln

---..
r.-•
4:'..!:....,.-1::::"".:::
I

32 Chemlcll

nc. brinp to miDd polities and politi-

wll

"'•
Ill lliulcA ~·
~....
. , _ ..... lidwldull . . . .
......... oalna~No
IIIII rlwiOI iill1id. C..

4 TIM Blue-

DOWN

The home
of the government

"'

...............=a StaJ!.':f:

MpSf . _

ltlldor

3 I Zodiac algn

Opening lead: • 4

'

HOW DID YOU
OOON YORE
TEST?

•

.n.~~o~~n~

Public Sale
&amp;AUction

::::•.:==
..............

llbl

...

t':u..,':r,.:C:
.........,:
LotooMIIIon br malt •111111-,._

8

INT

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===·, .1; r::
CIA(Io.Col1-lll

Contor. lftiCiil- ..-.aldJJIIIoft.

Yard Sale

Slatll

ttomi•
111

1111--...
...

"""
.... 'INoil COL I '
' ........
~~Jlllienoa Ani!M ~:a -

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

To
al-,_aftltlfll.
U!Mitlll
1144112-7111

6

• .,._,.. . . 4p.m.

dtvlct

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

-hour, ...._.
- IIGI.:at
me. wool!,
IM-M~'= 42 Mobile
.,_ n.·

IIOfln

5e Sioux lndlln
57 Comldliln Phlllpa
58 Plotting

24 Supportld
27 Roman

.AKJ3
tK1076
+QJI6

18 WanJICI to Do
ort1t Itt 1211.

'""

54 Dld't partner

55 Aclftu-

product

+A

........
,..,.,..,...

tilt phone

53 Furnltur..
dtcor111on

23 Neil Wtll

1

SOOTB
'lo - U

52 ..... _to

18 Cite 1a proof
20 WriUnP. plld
22 Baker a

tQU

Kt

Cl 1113 br tti.lnc..

.-rr,. - : , _ lllru

Sl-y 10,110 All • LitO Pll.

J8

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.,..

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5 E-(al.)
8 DeciYI

lfta

EAST
+Kill

Ql0$13 2
Q5 4

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a..,m 11otn·11, 111.

a.u.u

tUU
+107$32

...
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5540u:~: 10or IIIII. 111111 le II
11. Oport

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52 Sporing Golldl

NO ARIUIENTSI NO UGGINOI
JUII Till 01 Cholo.lll 1.a...... ....

PI

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IDNILvt- To- A-.

Yro.

t

411Hidow
42 Dlatr-a
45 RlliM 011
41 Ttm!*
50 Soulhern
blackbird

(2 welt.)

12 Exercill
lyStlm
13 Aclor Ron 14 Layer of aye
15 ilorll color
18 U.S. tnlaiHt
t7 Shopping

MICmOII • I'UIIInUIII. •

M::au.,
.........

40~:1110

1 TV'a lllklng
llorll

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,_

II 1
0

B

I

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3 I

I
r ;

SHUUM
j.-..,.::..;r,:,.,:..;,;,,...j

The old gent goes tp the
shoe repair mart "I should be
I I 1
a song writer: he tens 111e fel·
, low. "My shoes squeak so
~~--K-A_B_E_S_T....,.. ~~~r thai I have music in my

.,

..

I Is I I I 1e

L-l.-l.....JL-.J~.L.....J

Complete the chuckle quoted
~V filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

..

I

UNSCRAMIILE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GEl

~NSWU

a
a

.s -:u·
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·
Kettle - Agate • Shawl , Yearly - GET WELL
My sisler-in·law says that when company is coming
and she hasn'l had time to straighten the house , she
covers the coffee table with GET WELL cards.
0

I

if

•

.,
·,

�_.

-...-

·-. ......

~-

·-. ·- ·- .

·~

.... ...

.

- .....

.. .. .

...
.Pig1 1G-The Dally Sentinel

• ca1endar .
C
omm
unt
· =======~~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;~~~;;~~:;;:::;:;,;:~;;,;:::;;:;:;=~~
P'RIDAY
LONG BOTTOM. Failh Full
Gospel Ch~~rth in Long Bottom
will have preac:hing and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. Pula Steve Reed
and local Singers, Public invited.
will .
Fellowship . follow.
.
TUPf£RS PLAINS • The Tup.
rs Plains VFW Post No. 9053
adies Auxiliary will sponsor a
round
~uare dance on Friday
from 8and
·11·.3 p.m. with music by
CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
Red Can- and Melvin Croa will be
callers. Everyone welcome.

:

~

RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
p.m. to midnighL Music will be
provided by Pwe Country Band.
Public inviled.

POMEROY • There will be a
teen talent show at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
Sawrda
7
on
y at p.m.
KANAUGA • The Liberty
Mounlaineers will perform Satur·
day at the D.A. V. Center in Kanauga

.
RACINE A
o( 40 . •
MILLFIELD • Benefit music
·
•
.
group
JUIIIOI"
and senior high students from the show, Salurday, 7·11 p.m., Russell
Toledo area will present 1 JAOiullll Building in Millfield.
on drugs at Soudlem High School
on Friday from 1: l.S-2: l~ p.m. The
MILLFIELD • Round and
program is·open to the public.
square dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
Russell Buildi~, Millfield. Music
RIPLEY, W.VA. ·The Liberty will be by Out the Blue.
. Mountaineers will perform Friday
· Ripley, W·VL
atSkaleland1o
L OTTRIDG"
., ·• Th c B as han
l.adics Auxiliiry will have a smorREEDSVILLE • The Eastern gasbo~ dinne~ Sunday from II
Athletic Boosters will ~Friday a.m. 10 2 p.m. at the Bashan F"ueat 7 p.m. in lhe higb school cafele· house. 1'be menu consists of two
ria.
kinds ormeat,·mashed polatoes and
homemade noodles, green
d
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
dressing, desserts an
a dance Friday from 7·11 p.m. at drinks. slaw,
Costs arc $4.50 for adults
the American Legion Annex in and $2 for children under 12.
Middleport with music by George
Hall.
CHESTER • Chester Baseball
~
POMEROY • Revival at Cal· Association will hold sign-ups or
the 1993 baseball and softball sea·
vary Pil~ Chapel on Rol!te 143 sons
"-•·-'- y from 1·0 a.m.IOnoon
............
will be Friday through April 4 at at Chest«
Elementary. Registration
7:30 p.m. iughUy with Rev. Amos is SIS per playa. Anyone who did
Tillis and Rev. Bill and Naomi not no,..;..ipare last year will need a
.-· Tillis, evangelist and singers. Rev.
Vic10r Roush, pastor, invites the copy of their birth certificate.
public.
SUNDAY
POMEROY
-Proclaim, a drama
1
RUTLAND • Rutland Youth · and singing group from Cincinnati
League will hold an organi2llional Bible College, will present a promeelin~ Friday at6 p.m. at the Rut· gram at the Pomeroy Church of
land Civic Cenra: for anyone inler· Christ on Sunday at 7 p.m. .The
esiCd in helping with the 1993 sea· concert is free 10 lhe public.

•
=

son.

'

SATURDAY
POMEROY • Darren Smith,
with guest, Crystal Powell, will
;present a gospel Concert 01! Satur· .
·day at 7 p.m. at tile Laurel Cliff
· Free Methodist Church near
Pomeroy. Call Pastor Pete Tremblay at 992-5326 for information.
RUTLAND ·Rutland Youth
League will hold its third sign-up
·ror the 1993 baseball season on
Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 noon at the
-Rutland Civic Cenler. Anyone who
did not participate ~t year will
of lheir bilth
neet 10 provide a
cerdficate. Registc:::foo is SIO per
child, not to exceed $25 pet family;
ROCK SPRINGS • The Shade
'valley 4-H Club is sponsoring a
.beef hoof trimming Satunlay at 9
a.m. at the Meigs County Fair·
grounds. For more informauon and
an appointmmt, call667-6535.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY • Country-western
line dancing classes will be offered
at Pomeroy Village'Hall Auditori·
um on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. Dona·
tion is $2.50. Call 992·7853 or
949·2455 for infonnation.

Friday, March 26,1893

Public Notice
Public Notice
. Public Notice
not in ""'I oecutod the lheruflllr the blcl quote will Goner.r
chief uocullvo offlcer or 1M r_.ved and opened on Govern-1.........14,171.32
For infonnttion, or to register, call
FUNDfl.
other officer of :fplicont the IMt
of -h Public Solely ........... 8,2gg.S7
Bob Pullins, 667·38al31~;~ ~&lt;:&gt;d • ~c;!~=-,::'~ol•,
~~:o::=,~~~·~G .iw~~·O::
~rt•~-= Hoalth .......................2,1114.14
'
667-6348; or Ed Wig • uur"UU~ •
on or llbout April 5, 1tl3. menlll ,..,._ ncord lor the Melp County Hlghw.y c:.ptlll
Outloy..................... 1,554.1S
the Melgo County proJect indl- Oftllulon Dep•rtment. Eollm•t•d TOTAL
REEDSVILLE • The Con· Colnmlooionen wiN ,....t of • required decioion, quenllllee of liquid....,..., IIENTSDISBURSE·
.. -.-......
te
querors will perform at the the Ohio Dop•tment of finding, or olep eppllo.J&gt;Ie required, •pproxlm•tely Tolll R,MIP!a OVert
Reedsville United Methodist Development, Office of to the proJect In the •n· liOO,DIID .-.lor the .,.r. (Undor) Dlob.--.1,115.7~
Ch..-h on Sunday at ?:30 p.m. A l.oclol Government Bervluo, vlronmenlal,....... pro cor Propoulo oro to bo Fund Ceoh 1111-·
·
to rol•••• Fecler.r Fundi Objectlono muot 1M pr• returned on bid lormo Jon. 1; 1•...--S11.067.se•
potluck dinner will !'recede the undor ndel of the Houollll porod and oubmltted In aupplled by tho Molgo Fund Caeh llol•oe
program at 6 p.m. Public invited.
and Community Develop· occord•n•• with the r• County Engln•• end m.y DoC. 31,1 ......... 40,753.1 ~
mont Act o11g74 (PU3 313) qulroci prooeduro (24 CFR be obtained through the Atrtrwe for Encumbfancee.
NELSONVILLE
.. An lor tho followlng_p,........:
Part 58), ond may be En9noer'o office.
Doc.-31, 1t82 ....... 40,753.1.4
Overvl·ew of Ohio Foresm." will be
1. RUTLAND YIUAGE: oddruood to OLGS at P. 0.
Mary Hoboto-, Clerk ·
•
-,
w1 1
d Sew"or 2700 Box· 1001 Columbuo Ohio
BOord of Mol-County DepooJtotY
111111'101
................
40,753.
1~
esented al135 College
orfHI
••of&amp;" P.V.C.'
'
· eomnil.olonero
S daHall at linear
43216. •
Cuh on Hend-...... 40,753.14
ocking College on un Y at 2
2. MEIGS COUNQL ON • obj ..llono to the r..._ (3) 111. 26. 2tc
Total Tr-ury
•
p.m.
AGING: Public Servloo. of !undo on booeo other
Pu.bile NotlBolonoe.-............ 40,753.14
Pur 0 hau 2 pleceo of th811 tho. . otelod above wfll
.....,
Outatondlng
;
BURLINGHAM - Junior Mod- equipment
not be oonolclered ~ OLGS.
NOnCE 10 ASPHALT
atecka...- ..................... -o.
3. SUTTON TWP.: Strrt No obj..tion received oflor
TOTAL
"
em Woodmen wt·u have a fam 1"ly Improvement
Repovo .77 April 22, 11!13, will be
CONCREIE VENDORS.
BALANCE
......
...
40,753.11
get·IOgether Sunday at 2 p.m. atlhe mllr of rood.
conoldered bv OLGS.
Sealed bldo will bo
IUIIIMAAY OF
'
hall , Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
4. SCIPIO VFO: Fire
~Hobo._, rocolv"' by the Boord ol
INDEBTEDNESS
Sanders, Gallipolis, will have the Equipment Purchooo 40
Cl• ~
~~:~!ra~"~~'Jrt C~~::-.::: Outatondlng
program. Refreshments. Everyone pl..
s •BofAs":luAipNmYenF~· Fir•
Commllolo,.,. Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;g until ~ '· 1-.--..............-oNilw ......_ .......1,5411.00
"1 Pur 0 h~•• 4 131 2s, ltc
welcome.
E ·1
10:00 A.M, on April 7, um. Retlred
.......,_,,,•. ,_ 1,714.01
plqu
..rpmen
ohqulpment
.
·
The bldo will 1he.n bo
Outala'""'Jn
·
POMEROY
Dr. . Ri ck
&amp;. SOIL CONSERVAT10N: , PubliC NotiC$
open,.t and rled oloud ot Doc. 31,1 .........
4,771i.t1
1
Brintz-nhofe,
Fellowship Tract Fl"qu,.
E J......-L
-:::=-=~10:45
on tho
7th deythe
or
~
... -.. lnolllllallon 1 "..;,•...---....,.,.,:-_
NOnCE
TO .
April,A.M.1gu
. for
I cortlty thlo r.pon to •
League, Lebanon, on Sunday at 2 or ~~1!:¥:-o:--MEIGS: AGGREGATE VENDORS
turnlohing of v•louo grlllll coneot oi)CI " " lo U.. brt
~
p.m. Music will be provided by Adminlotration. ContrecL
Sooleci bldo will be of Alphllt Concrete.lor the of my knowtadga.
.
llerGhl3,1
.
.
Guy Priano.
8 . COUNTY OF MEIGS: reaolvoll by the Boord ol Molgo County lilghwoy
Connlo
Kill'
a.-,
Cleric
Folr liouol"'.
Mel go County Commie· Department Pro-lo oro
-IR143
ROCK SPRINGS - Revival ill
Tho .nvlronm.,tal roviow olonaro, Court ~ouoo, to 1M retumod on bid forma
POmeroy,
Ohio 45781
Rock Springs United Methodist record 11 on file at the Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;g until oupplled by the vendor. The
114-742-3121
Church will be Sunday through Commloolonoro Offlco •• 10 A.M. on April 7, 103. blcl price oholl be firm end (3) 25. Ito
'
R
W d
welloo at the Buck.ye HIMe· Tha bldo will then be In effect during tho 1H3
Tuesday at 7 p.m. . ev. en e11 Hocking Volley Regional opllfted ond rled oloud at povlng ouoon from Moy
Public Notice
Vermillion will be the guest speak· Devolopment Dlotrtct onc1 1o 10:15 A.M. on the 7th dey of through N~~VM~ber1 ...
er. There will be special singing avoHoble for public April, 11113 for tho
A Speclllcotlon Shrt
LEGAL N011CE
Notloe le horeby given
nightly. Rev. Keith Rader invites eumlnatlon.
fumlohlng of oil ldndo ond may 1M picked up ot the
lhe public.
Molgo Countr. will ••- of .....ole that m.y orn.. or the Melgo County !hot • olnale otory hcllll
undortako 11111 pro ect with ba required by the Melga Engin-.
·
togiiMr wlih .IIIProxlnuW) ·
·
Block Gr•nt Fu-..• from ..._ County Highway Depart•
Mery llo\l•to-. Clerk two
rill ••te
SYRACUSE ·Darren Smith Ohio · Dopart,.,..
u..
1 oro 1o 1M
D-... loceted otof 101
Union
of ment. propoooo
~rd. or·~
-11 eou n.,
111 ont
will be at the Syracuse Mission Develop~t~en[, 011101 of returned on bid .forma
Commlool~oro Torr•o•, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Church on Sunday at 10 a.m. Pas· Locol Government 11erv1-. ouppllod by the vendor, .,d (3) 11, 2G, 2tc
-ned ~ Ruby Sllwlll,lb
tor Mike Thompson invites the (OLGSl. Meigo County Ia will 1M oponed on 1M dolo 1.:..::.....:.....:.....----- Ruby lloooMon, · ond
drcrlbecl In Yolwme 210,
public.
certllylng to OLGS thot thoy and ploc' opoclflod.
PubliC Notice
conunt to occepl the Speclllcotion for bidding 1-FI-N-AN=a~A~L~RE=PO=RT=-:O:::F:- p... 711, wll ... lOki lithe
office of cr- •nd Crow,
REEDSVILLE • Gregory jurlodlctlon ol the Fodor.r moy 1M obtolned through
TOWNSHIPS
2nd ond Mulberry ""'·
Courlo II on octlon lo the Elllln-·o Offlc., Rook
Pomeroy, Ohio on -.ctl31,
Lenhart will present a seminar on brought to enforce Sprlngo Rood, Route 2,
For Floolll V.. Endl"'
New Age on Sunday at 10:45 a.m. rHponolbllltl• In roloUon Pomeroy,Ohlo457611.
o.-1Mr31,1~
1 - 112:110 p.m.
Bold rMI •tote wfll ...
and 7 p.m. at the Fellowship to onvlronmentol revlowo,
Miry Hobotattar, Clerk
rg~~~
oold, at not Jooo lh8n
Church of the Nazarene in declolon making, ond
BoordofMelgeCounty
..,
twenty lhoueend dollan
"Thlo
lo., u...,clt
Fl.....,lol~
Reedsville. Rev. John Douglas action, ondo that thllll l 9 26 21cCommlollonera
($20,0DO
110). lo the hlghrt
. . th
bl"
rHponolbllltiM hovo been 1 1!::3!..1!!:.;•~-::,;•=......,.--SUM,..,_ Of CASH
bidder. The ex....... ot 111e
IDVItes e pu IC.
eotlofled. The legol elhct of 1"
N I
""'"' RECEIPTS
..tote retain• the right lo
the certification fo that u~
__.:.P.:ub::;U:::c=ot:::::ce~BALANCEI,
..
~..
AND
EXPENDilURES
0
A
h
0
NOnCE 10
GOVERNMENTAL' FUNDS r..eot llfty and II bldo.
P MER . Y • n open ouse Ita opprovol, llhlp County
rill "lilt- w.. form
will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. for moy uoe tho Block Grant BITUMINOUS VENDoRS
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
applllllld at sao,ooa.oo. "
1
Albl:rt Roush, Bailey Run Road, futindfoled'ond
W Nb hlv
.._~
Sealed bldo !'Ill be T - .................... $1fl,lta.81
C.h on hend on 118J ef
1~• OLGS
Pomeroy, 10 honor his 76th birth- 11 1
rupon11 111.,_ received by the Bo•rd ol lntergcwernmenllll . .
'
. '
day. Everyone welcome. It is En~or th.:l ,.:.:~~~~ Molga County Commlo· fleceljiiii ............... S7,6W.gg
Tho eole muot be
n !""o~GenS
Y ., a Ionero, ·Court Houoe, lnlerllt............- ...... t,8te.31 •pproved by the Prob._to
requested lhat crifts be omitled.
Pomeroy, Ohlo·457&amp;g, until All Other
.,.
I 111•· '" w111 occop1
Court of llelgo County,
'
objecti1on to lto1 •1pprdooval ofd 10 A.M; on April 7, 1g93, Revenue................. 8,220.7e Ohio.
MONDAY
tho re uoo o un an. Tho bldo will then bo TOTAL;
Rolle
REEDSVILLE • Eden United acrtlcofipltlononco · IYollf ·ltbl~:r: opened ond reed aloud ol RECEIPTS ............ t7,355.14
Executor of the~ ol
Brethren Ch~~rth will have revival co ..
on
I
• 10:30 A.M. on the 7th doy of EXPENDITURE
llsallt.dun•MI
of the
following ~ w•· April • 1t93 ond ... h month DIS8UASEIENTS:
with Betsy and Peter Martindale LonoThot
I 1~1 1111, llll,, ;ou, llo
the .rtllcotlon
and family Monday .through April
4. Special music nightly at 7 p.m.
Public Notice
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
REQUEST A RELEASE OF

~

.

Wodn•:::X.

OSU women
edge
Virg·
i
nia
7
5-73
•

Getting
ready for
Easter eats

bl:'.!:n:.":..

7

-.m.

The perils of traveling in a blizzard are
noted in Beat of the Bend - B-6

-B-1

Fred Crow concludes his series on
the McCumber murder case - A-6 ·

r:

=.:v

J.

•r•

cl'8'J:lv

=

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I..,...

Vol. 21, No. 6
Copyrighled .1e83

· Thomas, 60, passed a high
school equivalency test and was
gillduating Thursday from Cocon~t
Creek High School near his
Broward County, Fla., ~om~.
Thomas also has a house m thiS
Columbus suburb, where Wendy's
.is based.
: Thomas. a high school dropout
who founded tile chain in 1969,
said he grew inrerested in earning
the equivalency certificate while on
a 26-eity tour to )AOI1IOte his book
"Dave'sWay."

Baker a apia 011 the I)TO"I1III Tllursday on Day·
toD Btacll. (AP plloto)

to overwhelming response, this Singer sewing machine de11ler

extending the sale of a limlled number of new special 1993
Iheavv duly zigzag and open arm sewing machines lhat are made
to last, and sew on all fabrics: denim, canvas, upholstery, nylon,
slretch, )linyl, silk_. EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachmeniS
needed lor bullonholes (any size). It monoorams, hems, sews on
buttons, satin stitches, overcasts, darns, appljquea and me. Juat
set dials and see magic happen wilhoul old·faahionecl cams
programmers. These singer Heavy Duly Machines are suitable lor
home, professional or schoolroom aewing. Twenty-five year
.
.

YOUR PRICE WIIH AD '169 - WITHOUT ID '2H

'

Meigs ready for April reclamation projects
· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentiael Sta"
POMEROY- Several recJama.
lion projects will get underway in
Meigs County next monlh, according to Barbara Niemczura, con- ·
struction project specialist witll the
Ohio Department of Natural
·Resolirces, Division ofR,eclama-

Middleport, reclamation of strip
min~ land a~ Pageville, landslide
reprur on Bailey Run Road, and a
reclamation project on Wilton
Creek Road 1n the Laurel Cliff

area.

The Pageville project is to
reclaim a strip-mined area of 68.5
acres. Niemczura' said that it is the
last acreage in the hu11dreds of
tion.
acres
which were strip mined at
Niemczura said that the 'projects
Pageville
10 be reclaimed. Cost of
wiU include drainage problem cor.'
tile
project
is $392,555. Complerections, one on Chestnut at Sevlion
date
has
been set for Sept. 30.
enth and the other on Fourth in
Final!&gt;8petWorkontheprojectis

.Rainfall
prompts·

being completed now in prepara·
tion 10 ge_lling t!1e \I;'Drk un&lt;~erv.:ay.
probably m A!Xil. N1emczura SBld.
The project is 100 percent feder·
ally fun~ed wit~ money CO!ftin_g
from exctse taxes on coal which IS
mined.'The tax is35 cents on stripmined coal per ton, and IS cents on .
each lon of coaJ taken from a deep
c.oal inine.
'
Contract for til~ wor!c on what
· has been titled .tile Lyon project,
located at Chestnut and Seventh
Street in Middleport, has been
awardedtoMid-StateConstruction,

Optn I to IS MondiY thru lllturdly

'

Cheshire. The project cost is
$9,670 with work to get underway.
early next month.
The project, Niemczura said,
~Yill consist of installing drainage
hie about 225 feet along Chestnul
Street. June I has been set as the
completion date.
Currently under design and
expected 10 go 10 bid in ~Y is the
Mullen project on Fourth Sireet in
Middlepon. It also involves a mine
drainage problem.
The CEPS Co. of Byesville has
been •awarded a contract for

$36,730 on the Bailey Run

R~ad

Niemczura said that the Wolfe':
swisher project o~ West Mail)
Street in Pomeroy IS slill under
design. She said that the aerial phO:
togrsphy has~n c~mpleted ~
that mapping· u g&lt;)lng forward .
Once the design is·cQIIIpleled then
the project will go to construction;
Work there will be to til conJrlll
the water which runs down Salt
Street and onto WCSI Main from an
abandoned mine on the hill above.
(Conthiued on A·8)

pro~t. It inv~lves a landslide near
the mtersect10n of Route 124.
Completion date on that project is
June 30! according.IO the consb11C·
bon pro.JCCI spec•alist.
Another reclamation projectiO
get underway ibis spring is in the
Laurel Cliff area on Wilton Creek
Road. Contraci for that project in
the amount of $9,105 went .to the
Civilian Conservation Cmps. Work
will begin there next month.

G ran d JUry
•
•IDdIC
• ts

3 men on records
tampering charges
.,

~Mason
·
.
-

.

.

:(:losings

'·.

1_

•

;,; -

and Dam. Seen aboVe Is tbe high Willer sign clos·
ing Three MUe R!lld in Henderson. &lt;T·S photo
by MiDdy Keams).
'

POMEROY - Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes flied eight indictments Friday as issued by lhe January reno
of the Meigs County Grand Jury
which met Thursday.
Steven Taylor, Long Bottom,
and Carl E. Moore, PQIIIeroy, were
eaeh indicted on twO counts of tam. pering wi.th records. Thomas Stevers.'Pomeroy, was indicted one
count of tampering with records:
• They are accused of tampering
with government records maintained by the Veterans Service
Commissions of both Meigs and
Athens counties, a prosecutor's
office spokesman said
"These importailt cases invtllve
the illegal receipt of funds designed
to aid needy veterans of our armed
forces," Lentes said.
"These funds were received by
individuals who made simullane,
ous applications for benefits in
bolh counties, alleging residence in
bolh counties." Lentes said.
"We are especially grateful for
the assistance we received from
Max Cale of the Meigs County
Veterans Service Office, who was
extremely cooperative in lhe detec ·

·tion and investigation of lhe crimes
involved in these cases," Lentes
said.
.
The charges against Taylor,
Moore and Stevers are felonies of
the fourth degree.
Also, Sky Aynn of Pmland \vas
indicted on· two counts or lnaking
and entering.
Flynn -is accused of breaking
.Into structures owned by NOimlln
Hamlin and Clarence Conger. Thcl
charges are felonies of the fourlh
degree.
Dale Riffle, Pomeroy, was
indicted on a fourlh-llegree felony
charge of trafficking in drugs,
specifically marijuana.
Rodney Klem, Pomeroy, was
indicted on one count of breaking
and entering.
Klein allegedly entered the
Lawrence Klein res•dence with thC
intem 10 commit a theft offense.
Lawrence Klein and Patricia
Klein were indicted on one charge
each of receiving stolen property,"
specifically a motor ·and au10 ...,.:
owned by Larry Klein, with a spec: •
ification from the grand jury that
the items stolen were of more than
$300 in value, each count being a
fourlh degree felony .

U.N., Serbian
military slate
ceasetire today

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PRODUCERS GAS SALES, INC.
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IUiplld.

THE
FABRIC
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· POIIEIOY, OliO • H2·2214

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NGO · DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

National
Gas &amp; Oil CoMpany

He said people_ ~ the tour~
about the coritradicllon between his
ta1kJ on the importance of cduca·
lion and his lack of a diploma.

"TJ!ey kept asking inc why I
say education is so im~t, yet I
never fmished school, ' he said. "I
didn ' t have a good answer, so I
decided io get lliy high school
'diploma."
·

17 Section 188 Pag•

A lluhlm.,.. Inc. nowopeper ·

**********

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u ... ............

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpoll.._poJnt Pleasant, March 28 1 1993

HIGH WATER- Six sec:oadary roads Ia
' Muoa (:nuaty have been closed due to bigb
water. The OIUo River crested Friday afternoon,
according to a lpOkcspenoD at the RadDe Loclts

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - Dave
Thomas, the folksy piu:hman for
his Wendy's resla'!f'allts; did :Mth·
. out a high school !liploma until last
year.

Along tbe river .............. Bl-8
Business/Farm...............Dl-8
Classified .......................D4-7
Deaths. .......................... A· 7·8
Editoral ............
.A6

.es-

•

. Passes test

Inside

L••

BASHAN • The Bashan Ladies
AUlliliary will "-ve a smorgasbord
dinner Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. at the Bashan F"uehouse. The
menu consists oftwo kinds or
meat, mashed potatoes and gravy.
homemade noodles, green beans,
POMEROY - The Meigs Coon·
slaw, dressing, desserts and drinks.
Costs are $4.50 for adults and $2 ty Veterans Service Commission
will meet Moodav at 7:30 D.m. in
for ehildren uncia' I2.
the
Veterans Service Office in
MIDDLEPORT. Rev. John
Pomeroy.
Haley will preach at the Middleport
Community Church Sunday at 7:30
RUTLAND. Revival at Rutland
p.m. There will also be special
Freewill
Baptist Church wilh Bob
singing. Public invited.
Stewl{t will be Monday and'TuesCOOLVfi..LE - There will be a day. Marvin Markham on Wednes·
hunters safety course for turkey day and thursday; and Rick
hunting on Sunday from noon to 5 Weaver on April I and 2. Pastor
p.m. at lhe Coolville Fire House. · Paul Taylor invites the public.

GYRO-GYM • Rob G~ney or Dayton Beida,
Fla., gives Ualverslty of Toledo studeat Je..l

C-1

•

national

1500 Granville Road • Newark, Ohio 43055
(614) 344·2102
1-(100) 255·6115
UCIIII 614·949·2166

By ROB~T E. MILLER
By STEVEN KOMAROW
Associated Press Writer
Auodated Press Writer
COLUM9US - Ohio's new
WASHINGTON- President
budget has triggered a political
poker game between House Clinton's jobs bill seemed well
Democrats and Oov. George protej:ted in the Senate Friday, in
the bands ofa aslf-deacribed "rus·
Voinovich.
·
tic
boob from West Virginia,''
Speaker Vem Riffe, D·Wheel·
Robert
C. Byrd.
enburg, opened the game Jut week
In
a
day of colorful rheiOric bot
by trimming $200 million from the
little
action,
the approprialions
bill proposed by the governor, a
committee
chairman
taunlcd his
Repubbcan who shines his own
col~ues,
Republicans
and con·
shoes "and don't mind beinc
servauve
fellow
Democrats,
who
called a tightwad."
criticized
the
president's
pacbge
Riffe 8lso shifted funds around
and added money to cdaratloo and but haven't found the votes to
other pro11rams that Voinovich chaniL
pvc priorities In his $30.8 billion · ..fmorson sald tllat God does
spending plan. .
.
- not manifcst himself· to cowards,"
Byrd said, .d arinathem to offer
(Continued on A·B)
their BmC!IdmeniS•.
'
l

The jobs bill includes $16.3 bil·
liop for summer youth jobs, unem·
ployment insurance, highway pro·
· ~ects, and various other c1vic
Improvements. The president is
scUing it as a Ionic for the economy
at a time when the slmlath of the
recovery is uncertain.
.
Leon Panetta, the president's
budget chief, told a Nlllional Press
Club luncheon the jobs bill was
"absolutely essential" 10 keeping
the economic recovery moving.
"The chance Is 100·great that it
will remain weak and that it could
. fallllack in10 a receaion" without
the added push provided by the
jobtl bill, Panetta said.
"This is not the right lcind of
stimulus pactage," said Sen. La1JY

•

Craig, R·Id8ho. " The only way we
rruly w!ll c~te long term, high
paymg JObs IS 10 get government
out ..of the way ... or the private sec·
tor
.
' 'I am startled, I am amazed and
chlgrincd." said Byrd. "Why cap' t
we as Democrats support the lead·
er.... Are we going 10 put chains on

and now stands toe to toe with
other PQWers in Washinglon.
"A rustic boob lhcy would say,
I su~. A rustic boob from West
Virgmia," he said. "A country boy
between two lawyers is like a fish
between two cats," he mused, a
laW)'Q' himself.
"Why, th!~re arc mough Repubhim?"
lican senators here 10 Jrnch me.
Byrd was doing his best 10 make They could ride me out or town on
sure.1t was his feDow senators who a rail," he chuckled at one point
were chained down. He maneu· when fellow Democnts were
vered .Clinton's bill so that even if somehow absenL
·an /amendment won, it could be
' He compared himself 10 .the boy
wiped out Jater.
with his finger in lhc dike, and to
Not bad, he boasled, for some· other brave, lonely fiaures iQ literaone who went to a two -room ture: '.'If he's in the ri&amp;ht, then God
schoolhouse in hillbilly country st11nds in the dim . sltadows an.d

.

holds sway over his home. So I am
~ere now," he said;
Byrd lalked about his dog, Billy, '
a Maltese tenier whom he praised
for his loralty. And, eventually;
Democrauc colleasues arrived 10
pick up the debate.
Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn .•
talked of how Clinton's plan was
like eating spinach. "That spinach
is what made Popeye the Sailor•
Man so strong." and would have
the same effect on lhe country. he .
said.
.'
Senate leaders said they hoped;
to finish work. on the jobs bill ;
work out any differences with lhe
House, and get It 14&gt; Clinton's by the eiid of next week.
· : ·:
I

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