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.f'lae" 16-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle rt, Ohio

M·ates of workaholics
have to find some fun
"fromDtv Ann Landers: The letter
'
the woman 10 her husband

who worked aU lhe time really got
to me bec•nse rn y husband is also a
workaholic. He regularly works on
Saturdays and often Sundays as well.
He averages 10 to 12 hours a day.
. Our three children are grown
)IIIII doing well. We have purchased
annuities for them and our four
~dchildren . We give generous
g1fts of money for birthdays and
Chrisunas and enjoy the fact that
we can.
We have two cars. a lovely
horne, no debts and approximately
$1 million m assets. Sound good?
Well, we also have no hobbies. We
haven't had a vacatiOn in years
except for a couple of weekends
when we visited our children''and
their families.
I was a professional woman and
worked both inside and outs1de the
horne. We are both in our 70s. When
does the fun start? .. THE BIG Q
DEAR Q: The fun started for
your husband a long time ago .
Workaholics would rather work
than play, which is wh y they do it.
Mates of workaholics must make
their own fun . If you're 1n your 70s
and haven't discovered that, you're ,a
slow Ieamer, honey.
Dear Ann Landers: AIDS is
not about sex or drugs. It is about
knowledge and educauon. Parents
should explain to their children
what nol 10 do in order 10 av01d
contracting this deadly virus, but
riley also must teach them about safe
sex. If parents fail 10 do this, they
are gambling with their children's
lives.
.
Even education is no g\lljptntee.
Magic Johnson is an educail!d and
knowledgeable adul~ but he made a
mistake which, even if it doesn't
kill him, has tragically alt.eted his
life. Nonetheless, it is an absolute
cenainty that children stand a better
chance of avoiding AIDS if they are
infonned.
If you gamble that your children's
ignorance will not kill them and you
lose, you will pay a heavy price.
You'll spend the rest of your life
suffering from guilt.
If you are not capable of teaching
)OUr children, then see that they
are taught by someone who is
knowledgeable and competent.

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

_..,... llEM I'OUCV·Each ol t - ad\lllliood h..,. io required to be readily
avoilable lor ult In toch K~ Start, oxctplll opociflcoMy noted in mil ed. II we
do "'" out ot an l&lt;hlllliood hom, we wll ollet you your choict ol o comporoble
hom, when ovlilable, rollocting the umo uvlngo or 1 roinchec:k which wllonthlt
you to purcheu the odvortiood itom at the adverlloed price wilhin :KI claVI. Only
.,. vtndor coupon will be occeptad per hom purchaled.

COPYRIGHT 1811Z • JHE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES 1;1000 SU~DAY,
MARCH I, THROUCIH SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1811Z,IN Pomeroy

Redmen lose
to Urbana in
tourney

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANmiES. NONE SOLD TO

DEALERS .

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

• Sandra Dale Dennis was born in
J{astings, Neb . After a stint at
(llebraslca Wesleyan University and.
iome experience with local stock
tompames, she headed for New
)'ork and the Actors Studio and
10011 began appearing in off-Broad-

WaY·

Her films included ''Come Back
10 the Fiv.e and Dime, Jimmy Dean,
lim my Dean," "The Four Sea·

$paghetti dinner
to be held March 7
A IPI(heui dinner will be held
Slllldly from noon to 6~~
Plnl
Blipcill Cllwdl in '

fPIIIIIOied by the Comcntone

WI·

flY ,Sebool CluL Bat-in Ill' carry-

0111

is avllilable IIICI deliveries can

&amp;e made in the Middleport and
' Pomeroy area.

•

•
'

'

'·

J.s

Low tonight In 40s. Chance or
rain 60 per~ent Friday chance or
rain 80 percent. High In mid-60s.

your children. Do it for
)Ourself. .. R.W., CARPINTERIA,
CALIF.
DEAR CALIF.: If parents are not
v.·ell enough informed 10 talk to their
children about AIDS, they can send
for a free booklet by writing: The
AIDS Prevention Guide, Centers for
·Disease Control, National AIDS
Clearinghouse, P.O. Bo~ 6003,
Rockville, Md. 20849-6003.
Another bit of valuable 'infonnaoon appears in the next letter:
Dear Ann Landers: In a minor
news story, buried in the back of the
paper, I read that the Food and Drug
Administration was forcing condom
manufacturers to change their
labeling. Only latex condoms
provide protection against AIDS and
other sexually uansrnilled diseases.
"Natural" condoms (lambskin, for
example) do not.
It seems that the natural .condoms,
while effective for birth control, are
porous and therefore will· not slOp
the uansmission of diseases like
AIDS.
Ann, please use the immense
power of your column to let everyone know that if the condom isn't
latex, it isn't protection against AIDS
or any other venereal disease . ..
G.C., MARBLEHEAD, MASS.
DEAR MARBLEHEAD: I also
want to let my readers lmow that
the failure rate of condoms is
anywhere between II percent and
13 percent This means even "safe"
sex is sometimes not so safe. Only
total abstinence is 100 percent safe.
Planning a wedding ? Whal's
right? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxiety. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $3 .65 (lhis includes
pos1age and handling) to: Bridts.
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562 . {In
CaMda , send $4.45.)

sons" and "The Indian Runner."
Her stage credit~ included "A
Streetcar Named Desire" and "Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof."
Dennis lived for many years
with jazz musician Gerry Mulligan;
they separated in 1976. She was
also romantically linked with actor
Eric Roberts.
Survivors include her mother
and a brother.

Services slated
The Pomeroy area churches will
be gathering for a series of Community Lenten Services beginning
Thursday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene with Rev. Ron Shreffler
preaching.
The series continues March 12
at 7:30 p.m. at Trinity Congregational Church with Rev. Laura
Shreffler preaching; March 19 at
7:30 p.m. at Grace Episcopal
Church with Rev. Kris Treintong
preaching; March 26 at 7:30p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church with
Rev. Roger Grace preaching; April
2 at 7:30p.m. at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church with Rev.
William Hoback preaching; April 9
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church with Rev. Glen McClung
preaching.
The community is invited to
observe the Lenten season with the
area churches in these worship services.

nalional,

VQlma Rue and Joan Corder
will be holle11es for the next meetin..
Refrelllmenla were leiYed at the
close of the meeting by Maida
Mom and Clitice Knl~.

25conll

Thursday, March 5, 1992

Senate approves new
congressional districts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
compromise plan creating 19 new
congnessional districts in Ohio has
passed the Senate over the objections of some senators and reservations expressed by Gov. George
Voinovich 's adrninistation.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg, said he expected a
favorable vote today that would
send it Voinovich for his consideration.
Senators approved a joint conference cornmiltee's report
Wednesday night but members of
both parties assailed some of the
changes and said they resented bav·
ing to vote without seeing detailed
descriptions of districts.
In order 10 meet a Friday dead·
line set by Secretary of State Bob
Taft to prepare for the May 5 pri·
mary, senators voted on a computer-generated map that did not
include precise boundaries.
Taft said if the bill is delayed
any funher, the state wiU have to
hold a separate congressional primary later at a cost of $6 million.
"1, for one, don't want to be
responsible for that. We have to get
this process moving," said Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R-

•••••
I

I
I

partly circles Franklin County and
extends from Fairfield to Union
counties.
Earlier versions placed Miller in
the same district with Rep. Douglas
Applegate, D·Steubenville.
That plan was abandoned by the
Legislature following protests over
the loss of representation for ec~r
nomically troubled southeast Ohio.
Although no Democratic incumbents wound up together in the
same district, the plan absorbs the
districts of two Democrats who
decided notiO seek re-election.
One major compromise
involved the splitting of down10wn
Cleveland between Reps. Louis
Stokes and Mary Rose Oakar, both·
D-Cleveland. Earlier versions gave
the downtown to Ms. Oakar over
strong objections from the backers
of Stokes, Ohio's only black con·
gressman.
,
Reps. John Boehner, R-West
Cheslet', and WiUis Gradison Jr., RCincinnati, wound up with their
districts changed but mostly preserved. They had been paired under
a Senate version that drew criticism
from Greater Cincinnati, one of rhe

fastest growing areas of the state. .
Senate Minority Leader Roben
Boggs, of Jefferson, was among
Democrats opposing the bill. He ·
deplored what he said was a process of political accommodation,
such as rhe splitting of downtown
Cleveland. "Tilis process doesn't
serve the people,' 'lie said.
Sen. Charles Henry, R-Bunon,
said the ~ewly created 11th District
deprives his northeast Ohio area of
meaningful representation. "I
thought we were not going to vote
on any more abortion bills this
year," lie said.
Ohio wiU lose two of its 21 seats
in tile U.S. House next year
because of national population
shifts recorded in rhe 1990 Census.
The reali~n~ent ~as required to
keep the dismcts vinually equal in
population.
The negotiations were made easier by the decisions of Reps. Dennis Ecltan, D-Mentor, and Donald
Pease, D-Oberlin, not to run for reelection. Eckart's district was .
absorbed and Pease's was realigned
so as not to have an incumbent.

c

lb.

$12,952. Those Meigs Countians
who receive D.A. benefits have
Sentiael News Staff
been
certified as disabled by a
Elimination of General Assistance benefits on April I will physician, and are not effected by
"wreak havoc and devastation" on the cuts. However, a semi-annual
the lives of 675 Meigs County G.A. physical examination for D.A.
recipients, according to Meigs cases will be required to deterrn ine
County Depanrnent of Human Ser- continued eli~bility.
vices Director Michael Swisher.
G.A. recipients are sin~le or
Swisher and Gallia/Meigs two-person households Without
Community Action Agency Direc- children who are' ineligible for SSI
tor Sid Edwards discussed the and/or Aid to D"ependent Children
impending cuts with the Meigs benefits. In addition to a $100 cash
County Commissioners at the assistance check, each 1110nth, G.A.
board's regular meeting on clients are enridcid to $111 in food
Wednesday.
stamps and a medical card.
The cuts were ordered as a part
That medical card entitles the
of legislation passed in 199L That bearer to medical care, prescriplegislation restructured the fonner tions and other medical benefits.
G.A. program, dividing it iniO Gen- Fees are paid to local health care
eral Assistance and Disability and prescription drug providers.
Assistance. Under the new pro- The average total medical bill for
gram, G.A. recipients are limited to Meigs County G.A. recipients is
six months of benefits per year.
$80,000.
.
During the month of February,
The new G.A./D.A,. legislation
Meigs County's G.A. rolls totaled went into effect in Qctober, 1991,
833 cases, receiving $84,866 in and those who were receivin$ G.A.
state arid local money, An addition- benefits at that time will be
al 100 D.A. cases received removed from the G.A. rolls on
By BRIAN J. REED

U.S. GRAD! A CHICKEN TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

Split Chicken Breasts
COOK'S WHOLE 114·18·LB. AVG.I
WATER ADDED

Lenten Special!

semi-Boneless
smoked Hams
POund

AVg. Of 13·15

Grapefruit
Per sag

CONDmONER OR

· suave
Shampoo
16-oz.

KROGER

Kroger Chilled

111-Ct.

Gallon

Large Eggs

orange Juice

,,'
.

ASSORTED VARIETIES

CDUiltrv Club

FrDZen YDJUrt
~.,

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
. CAFFEINE FREE DIET P£PSI,
DIET PEPSI

Pepsi Ctila or
Mountain Dew
2-Liter

.

U.S.D.C. INSPECTED NORTH A

Fresh·ocean Perch

•
•
•

uc;•

.
0

\

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it

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'·

mula used to determine program
funding and would provide that
Sentlael News Staff
The Meigs County Commis- information to the board.
The public hearing is required in ,
sioners approved the continuation
each
county served by the J'f.PA
of the Me1gs County Job Training
program.
Pannership Act (JTPA) program
Hilhwar Department
during! theu regular meeting Tuesday.
'
. Meigs County Engineer Philip
JTPA Representatives George Rolierts submitted a request on
Arnott, Dave Gloeclatet, and Torn behalf of Royal Oak Reson for a
Reed presented a proposejl JTPA speed limit sign. That n:quest must
program for two years beginning in be submitted to the Ohio Depart·
July, along with a~ bu~eL meat of Transportation by the comThey also gave a brief overview missioners.
,
Robens also reported that his
of the pro~am and those Meigs
Countians 11 serves, providing job department was now involved in
a:aining and re-trainin~ for displace hand patching, grading and dry
workers, and summer job programs patching on gravel roads in the
for area youth ..
county, and .was cutting brush
A considerable difference wm needed, as well.
·
bptvleen OaUia and Meigs County
"The county's
bridge
proJl'llll funding was questioned inspecdon and invcn • wOrt is
' by Commi$11oner Ricbard E. Joael. now com'*""'- acciJrdlniiD Highfor example, in one of the J1'PA way Office · Manager David
prog!8111S JJI'OI)OSed, Oallia County Spencer.
funding wla $202,072, servinJ .68
Tho commissioner•. diltusaed
with
Roberta and Highway Superc~enll. !II MFJ&amp;s Cou!dy, !13 ~18
are to be served, but propoaed intendent Ted Wamer which
fundini il ,$1!17,681. Slmilar ·clis· brid&amp;es.were in noed of repair or
crepancies exist In Olher prog111111 replacement in the county, with
pellltiag IIICI Giber wert needed on
he would !he ~ Bridge near Mil\tDeport
seek further explanation of rhe for· ~·lielna ·~ly.
By BRIAN J, REED

"IN THE DAIRY Df.PT."

Grade A

April 1.. At that time, they wjU COR·
tinue 10 be eligible for Federal food
stamps, but their cash assistance
and medical card benefits will
cease.
When their silt-month ineligibillr period ends, those recipients
wi be penniued to re-apply for
G.A. benefits for another six month
This will create a six month
'on" period, followed by a six
month "off' period.
Projected monthly savings· due
10 cuts in cash benefits, according
to Swisher, is $67,000, and for
medical benefits, $50,000.
Sid Edwards, Director of Gallia/Meigs Community Action
Agency, said that his agency anticipates a large number of former
G.A. recipients to seek benefits
fromCAA.
However, Edwards said tllat
CAA only offers one-time assistance in specific areas. No cash
assistance IS available through that
agency, althdugh a one-time food
voucher or a $175 HEAP heat
Continued on page 3

Eod.

JTPA program ·approved .
by Meigs County Commission

WIT/I Pfl/CES LIKE Till$. .• WilY SHOP
ANYWIIEI?E ELSE/

lb.

Cincinnati.
Se~. Jeffrey Johnson, D-Cleveland, objected that the map does
not indicate the impact on black
voters. He said he intends to confer
with the Black Elected Democrats
of Ohio 10 see if a lawsuit will be
needed to prevent the dilution of
minority voting strength.
The bill emerged late in the day
after what was described as many
compromises between the Democratic House and Republican Senate.
The vote in the Senate was 24-9,
witll five Democrats and four
Republicans voting against iL
A top aide of Gov. George
Voinovich, Michael Dawson, said
he could not confmn that the governor will sign it. "A lot of
changes were made today," he
said.
The plan generally protects the
districts of all the state's incumbent
members of Congress, with one
major exception.
U.S . Reps. David Hobson, R·
Springfield, and Clarence Miller,
R-Lancaster, were paired in a new,
horseshoe shaped 7th District that

Agenc·ies -discus-s impending-·
General Assistance cutbacks ·

•

\

Kicker:603306

' I

Founders Day
plans discussed
Plans for Founders Day were
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held at
the Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
Founders Day wiU be held April
30 at lhe Sportsman in Athens.
It was announced that Cindy
91iveri will speak 11 the next rneetmg on March 12 and a lasagna dinner will be held March 26 at 6:30
p.m.
Reports were given on !he Prom
Fashion Show sponsored by Riverbend City Council of Beta Sigma
Phi.
.
Velma Rue reported a city council meeting she aucnded in Texas
and on a Valentine dance were one
gid ft:orn each chapter, nine total,
was crowned Valentine Queen. ·
Applic:alloni were given out for
quili ·and cuy recipes for a new
cookboot being publithed by !nlet'-

2-12-21-26-29-45

PageS

" IHI, Loo Aocoloo
TlmtoSyn4-aad '
Creakln S,.MMcMe.''

Sandy Dennis dies at 54

drip. t ~

Pick 3:603
Pick 4: 1200
Cards:
7-H; 6-C; K-D;
Superlotto:

•

WESTPORT, Conn: (AP)Sandy Dennis, who won an Oscar
as a whimpering wife in "Who's
Arraid of Virginia Woolf" and
played a tourist on an everything·
goes-wrong visit to New York in
"The Out ofTowners," has died at
54.
Doris Eltiolt, a longtime friend,
said she learned of Dennis' death
Monday from the actress' agent,
Bill Treusch, but didn' t know when
she died. Treusch did not immediately return a call late Tuesday.
The actress had lived in Westpon, but it wasn't immediately
known where she died. She had
suffered from ovarian cancer, said
another friend, speaking on condi·
lion of anonymity.
Dennis made her film debut in
1961, playin~ a supporting role in
Elia Kazan s "Splendor in the
orw:" but emerged as a star on
BrOadway. She won Tony Awards
:tn slijicession for ''A Thousand
9owni" and" Any Wednesday."
.... sl!e:foUowed that with the 1966
Academy Award for best suppon·
in~· ac~ress for "Who's Afraid of
Vttgil)ia Woolf?" The searing film
about a bickering couple also
starred Richard Burton, Elizabeth
:raylor and George Segal.
• Dennis played the wife of tile
;.oun~er of the two faculty couples
who tndulge in an all-night drink·
ing spree.
She starred as a teacher in a
tough New York school in "Up the
Down Staircase" in 1967.
• In "The Out of Towners" in
1970, she starred opposite Jack
Lemmon. Every time a disaster
,befeU the couple, she whined, "Oh,
my gawwwwwwd ''
Some critics found her intense,
almost nervous, mannerisms and
her muttering delivery irritating.
Pauline Kael of The New Yorker
pnce complained that Demis "has
inllde an acting style of postnasal

Ohio Lottery

:

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- ~~'thai
r

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/!

According to Roberts, tile
bridge is within the corporation
limits of Middlepon, but remains
the county's responsibility because
it is part of a business route.
Warner also said that the depart·
ment was preparing for an equip·
ment sale, to held later this spring,
and Jones said that the commissioners would have an auwrnobile
and other merchandise to sell at
that time, as wen.
Other business
In other business, commissioners:
- AppJ'l)~ed a lease for office
space accupied by the Meigs County School Board at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building in the amount
of $!100 per month; '
- ApprOpriattid a donalioo to the
Meigs·CoUnty Parks District in the
IDIOWII of$ 1,200; ·
• Appointed Meigs County
Chamber of CornrnC~te lillecutive
Di'rectot/lieonomic Development
Director Paula 'l'hacket as a member of a reaionll adviaory commit·
. tee for OhiO Department of Development Rqiol\11' .
·Present, in addition to Jones,
were Co111mlssioners David
KobleDtz and Mannilla K. Roush,
and Clerk Mary Hobsleller•

schools later this month. Second doses or the
vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella will be
orrered free or charge to all sixth graders. Linda
Vanlnwagen, R.N. will also be assisting with the
immunizations.

PLANNING IMMUNIZATION PROGRAM • Norma Torres, R. N. nursing director
ror the Meigs Couaty Health Department, left,
aad T. C. Ervin, R. N. assislaal director, look
over materialS which they wiD be laking Ia to the

Immunizations for Meigs sixth
graders will begin later this month
Sixth graders of Meigs County
will be given the opportll!Iity for a
second dose measles, rnurops and
rubella (MMR) immunization at no
cost through a Meigs County
Health Deparunent program beginning in late March.
Norma Torres, R. N., nursing
director, said because the rnijority
of measles outbreaks in Ohio over
the past several years have
occurred among adolescents and
young adults, the school immuniza.lion requirements were recently
amended.
Beginning _in August, 1992, all
students en!Cnng lhe seven~ grade
must prov1de documentatiOn of
receipt.of two doses ~f MMR vaccme pnor to the openmg of school.
This, she ·said, will have an
immediale impact on reducing the

risk of measles outbreaks in sec·
ondary schools.
Money for purchasing the vac·
cine are corning from federal
Immunization Grant funds and
through the state budget. Three
nurses of the Meigs County Health
Department will be going iniO the
schools to give the shots.
While the MMR second doses
will be offered at no cost, students
must have parental permission.
Schools will be sending home slips
for approval prior 10 ·ihe ~heduled
immunization dates. Torres said
· that doses from a private 'physician
cost approximately $44 in addition
to lhe office visit call and encouraged parents to take ~dvantage of
the free immunization.
Torres explained that approxi-

mately 95 percent of children are
rendered immune to the three diseases after receipt of the first MMR
dose, but the other five percent
remain susceptible. This five percent of children constirute the over.
whelming majority of cases in out·
breaks, &lt;:S)JCCially of measles.
ln. Oh10 over the past several
years, virtually all outbreaks of ·
measles have occurred in highly
immunized junior and senior high
school and college populations.
Torres said that irnplerneotation of
the two dose MMR requirement
should over time virtually eliminate
school based outbreaks.
The nurse said that there is no
danger in giving a second dose of
MMR vaccine to a person who is
already immune.

Weekly jobless claims fall to 437,000
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Americans filing fJtSt·
lime claims for unemployment be"efits fell to 437,000 in the week
ending Feb. 22, the lint decline in
three weeks, the ;~ovemment said
today.
The Labor Depanment said new
claims for jobless'benelita declined
by 21,000 Croin the 4S8,000 level
in lhe previous week, puUing them
atlheir lowest level since late January•

,

••

However, analysts cautioned
agaiiiSt reading 100 much into the
'.lecline, which they expected. It
occ:urml during a week that included the President's Day holiday,
which left jobless wOikcrs with one
less day lha!l usual to file claims.
The claims number can bounce
around from week tlJ week in any
case and economists look instead to
a moving four-week ·average of
. ~laims to dlseelil lfCI1ds, And, that
has te~~~ainedessentially stuck.
The average' edged down to

.,..

445,2!10 in the latest period, from ~ · ·
448,!100 for the four-week sttetch ·· • ;
ending one week earlier.
··
Despite hints of an economic
upiUill from other sta1istics - raetory orders, home sales, the government's index of leading ceonomic indicators - employment
has mnained in the doldrums.
New benefit applications have
fluctuated within I narrow ranp,
'430,000 to 480,000, for four
months now. ·

II
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�Thuraday, March s; 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

'What now?' many wonder
as GR cuts become effective
In Gallia County, many people on General Relief recenU&gt;: received
their last check. People on GR in Ohio now receive benefits SIX months
out of the year.
·
Governor Voinovich and the Ohio General Assembly want us to
believe that GR recipients will now go out and find jobs.
Voinovich told Ohio University graduates last June that they and other
college graduates would have to be satisfied with poor paying job~ un~er
the assumption that better times are just around the comer. Vomov1c_h
even admitted times were hard on his own farmly. He srud, to a ~b·
cally sympathetic crowd, that he even had to get a loan to put hiS son
through law school.
If the governor realizes jobs are few and far between, even for college
graduales, how does he expect people on GR to find jobs~ .
Many of the victims of the GR cut are not able to realisucally ~mpele
in today's job market Of the few JObs available, most are part·ume JObs
paying minimum wages- most w1thout health care benefits.
Area law enforcement officers are also concerned about the cuts. Every
law enforcement officer interviewed expressed the same concerns: that
people will, if they have to, rlo anything to gel food. Even if it means
stealing from others.
Many law enfortement officers belief we 'II soon see people stealing
not for money to buy drugs, but for food or for money to buy food.
You can cut GR. all you want, one said, people will have to make up
the difference some other way.
.
Aceording to the Gallia County Welfare Office, about 200 people m
Gallia County have lost !hell' benefits unul October.
The 1rouble with these cuts is that people have to eat.12 mo11;ths out. of
the year - not six months out of the year as the Vmnov1ch admwstrauon
seems to be~eve.
This "tough love" approach by the administration is nothing more than
a "tough break" for GR recipients.

Letters to the editor
,.

Urges governor to stop cuts
Dear Editor:
On behalf of our organization, I

wish to express our outrage and
dismay over the elimination of
General Assistance benefits to
more than 150,000 men, women
and children in Ohio for six months
beginning on April I.
~
The timing of this action by the
Ohio General Assembly and Governor George Voinovich could not
be worse for the stale's poorest citi·
zens . It is highly unlikely the
majority of these individuals will
be able to find employment g1ven
the state of our region's economy
and scarcity of jobs available. As a
result, lhe majority of these needy
Ohioans will be without any assis·
tance whatsoever. For those persons who require medication and

It's good that Pat Buchanan is
running for president He is a man
who has shown an ugly disdain for
democracy. And, yet, he is advancing democracy. Mysterious things
happen.
About Buchanan the anti-Dt;mocrat I offer a personal incident. In
1989 I wrote a column suggesting
it was time to switch bumper-stickers from "anti ~communismtl to
"pro-democracy."
Buchanan wrote a snarling
rebuttal, railing against democracy.
He praised dictators, auotocrats,
absolute monarchs and fascists. He
saluted Franco, Pinochet and Mar·
cos. He lauded South African
racists and Arab feudalists. Why?
Specifically because they were
non-Democrats. He claimed Americans historically supported monarchs. (Which would surprise George
III and George Washington.)
Can such an anti-Democrat
advance democracy?
The New York Times reports:
"Somewhere lxl~~een. New Hamp-

Should Ohio taxpayers be
forced to suppon privale sectarian
schools? Most citizen s would
undoubtedly say no, yet that is the
effect of a bill scheduled for delib·
eration soon in the state legislature's finance and appropriations
comminee.
H.B. 635, sponsored by Rep.
Michael Fox, would create a fiveyear voucher "experiment" that
would funnel millions of dollars in
public funds to parochial and other
privale schools.
This scheme raises clear constitutional problems. It violates the
principle of chun:h·state separation
by diverting money collected from
taxpayers of many religious perspectives to pay for the education
programs of a handful of religious
denominations. The federal courts
have ruled repeatedly that tax rev·
enues cannot be used to subsidize
sectarian education.

Ben Wattenberg

Ci:ISI"el/.f "'2.
~KY """'-

r,JBW&gt;. ,je&lt;J
311

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...

How to characterize the current
commotion over the line-item veto?
face no medical assistance, the out·
Put it this way: If all the gab
look is life threatening.
were a rainbow and you followed it
For those persons who rely on to the end, what you would find
the small cash assistance of $100 would not be a pot of gold, but it
~ month to pay their rent and uti I·
might help you grow some prize
11ies, the outlook is homelessness vegetables.
and despair. Is this the way a corn·
The Republicans claim the linepassionate society should treat item veto would be a painless cure
those who are less fortunate? for the deficit problem and a shackWould you want to be treated this le on a spendthrift Congress. That's
way?
some pure stuff, and it would probWe urge the General Assembly ably produce three-pound toma·
and the Governor to stop these cuts toes.
from takin$ effect next month
The Democrats say it would be
unless or unul a new safety net is in an unacceptable and perhaps
place. People' s lives are at stake unconstitutional encroachment on
for God's sake.
congressional power. That stuff
would generale some tall com.
Roger W. McCauley, Director
The simple truth is the line-ilem
COAD, Athens
veto is a sham issue. ,It is an easy
subject to demagogue - which is
why tub-thumping politicians love
it, especially in an election year.
But depicting it as a budget-balancing tool is a trespass on the good
sense of the average citizen and it
In addition to transgressing the should be outlawed.
U.S . Constitution, the plan also
For the uninitiated, a line-item
violates the Ohio constitution, veto would allow a president to
which staleS that no religious group strike individual items from the
may have control of any part of
funds raised for public education.
Fox's "experiment" is intended
to open the door to full public
funding of private religious
The ceremony to retire Magic
schools. If enacted, Ohio taxpayers Johnson's jersey at the Los Angewould eventually be foreed to sup- les Forum was powerfully moving.
port two school sys1ems-ooe pub- Coming so soon after his inspired
lic and one privale.
play at the NBA All·SW game, it
Almost 90 percent of Ohio chil- was especially difficult to see
dren attend public schools. Public someone so brilliantly talented cut
resources and attention should be down by something as senseless as
focused on im,Proving those educa- AIDS.
tional instituuons. Ohioans would
I've thought about Magic quite
do well to insist that sectarian a bit since the announcement that
schools be paid for by the religious he tested positive for HIV, the
groups that sponsor them and reject virus that causes AIDS. I've been
Rep. Fox's misguided plan.
trying to make sense of my rollerSincerely,
coastering feelings. How can you
Dr. Robert L. Maddox, be so saddened and sympathetic
Executive Director about someone' s misfortune one

prickly pear and mesquite research
in Texas.
Think about it. George Bush's
huge, lake-it-or-leave-it appropria- most recent budget proposal protions bills the Congress sends him jects a deficit of $399 billion. To
for signing. Its primary target balance it, he would have to slice
would be "pork-barrel" expendi- off one prickly pear project every
tures - the extraneous grants and 10 seconds of every day around the
projects that powerful members of clock for one year, three months
Congress wangle for their home and 10 days.
districts.
With a line-item veto, said
But here's the dreary secret that Coats and McCain , the president
presidents never tell you and could have saved the public $70
Congress never seems able to billion over a five-year period from
impart: In the context of trillion·· 1984-1989.
dollar budgets, pork-barrel spendThink about it. That's 700,000
ing is peanuts. To argue that you prickly pear projects. During that
can remedy the deficit problem by same five-year period, the aecumupurging pork is to argue that you latcd deficll came to $1,059 billion.
can drain the ocean by scooping That's 10,590,000 pricldy pear prowith a cup.
jects. Even with the line-item veto,
Examples are endless, but take we would've gone in the hole
just one that was offered by two 9,890,000 prickly pear projects.
Republican senators who recenUy Some solution, the old line-item.
failed in yet another atlemptto pass
Here's something else to think
a line-item veto measure. If our vir- about: DurinG· that same five-year
tuous president had line-item period, the cumulative inlerest on
authority, said Dan Coats of lndi- the national debt came to $1,019
ana and John McCain of Arizona, billion. That's interest alone;
he would have been able to cut money down the tubes. Does it
from one recent budget such never occur to the dunderheads
heinous waste as $100,000 for who lead us that real reduction in

Joseph Spear

Sarah Overstreet

March 6 final date for grant proposals

.Today in history

,,

,,

conditions and

MICH.

' '''

orado debate, four of the five
democratic candidates cravenly
endorsed the anti-meritocratic idea
of a 50 percent:plus quota for
women in the president's Cabinet.
(Only Sen. Bob Kerry had the
courage not to pel the Pander.)
It is said that social concerns are
not "real" issues. Dreadfully boring politicians of both parties say
their voters are "hurting," interested onl~ in "jobs, jobs, jobs" and
other 'real' issues like "health
care," Heducation" and "competi~

•

"' ' ' '

' ' ''

IMansfield Isa• I•

IND.

~
'''' '

PA.

•I I

•I Columbus

59•

•
~·,
'' '

tiveness. ''

...

Sure. That's why Georgia
Democrats crossed. party lines to
vote for Buchanan af1er he flew the
banner of social issues. Sure,
Americans don't care about religion. And parents don' I Cllre about
guns in the classroom, or Jiggly ads
for adult-hour programs aired during lciddy program hours.
If, alas, everything must be seen
through an economic prism, note
that our educational shortfall comes
more from home life than from .
school life, that AIDS is a social
disease, that welfare erodes the
work ethic, that criminality cuts
competitiveness, that quotas create
turbulence in the workplace.
A government that won't stand
up to interest groups in the arts,
won't stand up to corporate spe- ·.
cial-interest groups, or labor, or
environmentalists. ''Anything
goes" is not the slogan of a society
ready to discipline itself, &amp;QCially or
economically.
The social issues are complex . .
Buchanan's answers are ham-fist- ·
ed, mean-spirited and often wrong. ·
But these tortured issues can only ·
be dealt with if they are raised. ·
They can only be raised in a demo- ·
crauc process. BUchanan has raised
them. Maybe he is now ready to ·
recant his anti-democratic blasphe·

...

W. VA.

Ice

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

01992 Accu·Weather, Inc.

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, showers likely. Low in
the upper 40s. Chance of rain 60
percent Friday, occasional showezs
with thunderstonns possible. High
in the mid·60s. Chance of rain 80
percent.

Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday:
A chance of showers Saturday
and Monday. Fair on Sunday.
Lows 35-45 Sawrday morning and
the 40s Sunday and Monday mornings. Highs 65-75.

--Local briefs--Trustees to meet
The Bedford Township Trustees will meet in regular session on
Monday at 7 p.m. at the town hall.

Alumni game set

.

An alumni basketball game will be held on Satuday at 7:30 p.m.
at Southern High School. The game will be preceded by three elementary school games beginning at 5:30 p.m. Information is available by calling 992-5117 or 992·5082.

my(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute, is author of "Tbe First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press.

Divorce filed
A divorce action has been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Donna Lynn Williamson, Rutland, against Robert Lee
Williamson, also of Rudand.

Marriage license granted
A marriage license has been granted in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Douglas Eugene Warden, 32, and Lori Richelle
Adams, 24, both of Racine.

Snouffer to appear on ballot
William Snouffer, whose petitions were declared "invalid" by
the Meigs County Board of Elections last month, will appear on the
May 5 Democratic Primary ballot after all, as a candidale for Meigs
County Commissioner.
Snouffer's petition was rejected on the basis of insufficient signa~. According IQ Board Director Rita Smith, a voler registration error was found and corrected by the board, and the error correction brings Snouffer's petition signature total to 50. That petitiQR
was re-certified by the board, making Snouffer once again eligible
for the primary.

the national debt might be a better
road to solvency than whining
about prickly pear research?
The line-item veto makes sense
for only one reason, and it has litde
to do with honest deficit reduction.
It would constrain the most powerful members of Congress from dispatching unfair shares of pork to
their districts . People like Sen.
Robert Byrd, D·W.Va., say, a
career politician who vowed in
1990 to ship $1 billion worth of
bacon back to his home state by
1995 and surpassed his goal four
years ahead of schedule.
It surprised no one when Sen.
Byrd recently took the floor to
voice clamorous opposition to the
Coats-McCain line·ilem veto measure. It would save little money,
thundered Byrd, and it was "quack
medicine which would be better
denominated as snake oil."
Indeed it was, and he might
have recognized it because it was
oozing from his pores and puddling
at his feet as he spoke. Or was that
the stuff that makes the garden
grow?
(C)l9~2
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

encounter. Rambo sighed as if real·
izing he'd forgotten to floss before
bed and said that gosh, no, he
hadn't. He said he'd been a "child
of the '60s and '70s" and just
wasn't motivated to ohange when
unprotected sex s'-"~d meaning
much more than herpes. •
King didn't challenge him,
dido 't ask him if he felt like a
chump for what he's probalily
passed on to friends. In our sttuggle to ensure an atmosphere of
compassion for AIDS victims, we
shrink from hard questions lest the
affiicted think we don 'I care and
the politically correct think us to be
homophobic.
AIDS is a sentence no one
deserves, and maybe that's why we
hesitate to tiring up the question of
responsibility. If we label a victim's behavior inconsiderate, selfish and sapheaded, we' re,afraid
we're back to saying, "He got
what he deserved." He didn 't get
what he deserved, but in cases of
AIDS eontntcted afiU the risk was
known victims do reap the conse, quentes of the RuSSJart roulette
thel're playing.
·
wonder how mix:h or a behav- .
ior chanse Maslc Johnson will
eauso in thoae who look up 10 him
as he Is por111,ed now, the bellthy,
smilln1 victim of dutnb luck. He ·
should be admlrotl for~ lnvery
and positive attitude In dealins
with hilnpdy, but be owel110re
than that to thole who would emu·
late him, and to the women be left
behind.
'
(C)l'tl
NEWSPAPER '
ENTERPIUSE ASSN.

By Tbe ~ed Press
It still will be unseasonably
warm, but showers and thun~erstorms on Friday may cool thmgs
off a bit on Friday, the N~tional
Weather Service said.
Highs of 55 to 65 will be about
10 degrees cooler thlill they have
been recently.
But.Ohio's flination with sum·
mer y.oill resume on Saturday ll:"d
conunue through Monday )VIth

NEW YORK (AP) - The
bankruptcy judge overseeing the
reorganization of United Press
International says the news service
could be out of business by the end
of April.
UPI management missed its
Wednesday deadline to file a plan
for emerging from Chapter II
bankruptcy protection.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Francis
Conrad refused the company's
request for a 90-day extens1on and
instead allowed creditors to devise
their own plan.

.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS JtS-11110)
Publiahed every aRemoon, Monday
lh-" Fridoy, lll Co•rl St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Publiohlng
Company/Multimedia IDe., Pomeroy,
Ohio 457691 Ph. 9112·21158. Sooond clau
poo!Ap ..ia Iii Pomeroy, Ohio.

Memb«: The Auocial&lt;d p,.,.., and tho
Ohio New1paper Auociation, National
Advert.t1in1 RepreHnl.a\ive, Branham
Ne,npaper Salu, 733 Third Avenue,
New Yodl, Now Yorit lOOt 7.

POSTMASTER: Send aclclreoo chanBU to
'Tho Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
PomeroJ, OHio 45769.
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Daily.. ,. .. ,,,,..,,.,,.,,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,,.,,. .., w~•2fi Cenll •

Soboertbon no&amp; dolirl"i to ..y.l!lo earrl•
er miY nndt. in adY&amp;noe direct to The

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vailed across the Southeast and
much of the Midwest early today,
but Houston got a respite from
damagmg stonns.
Snov.: extended over the Rocky
Mountatns this morning, and rain
was scattered along the Pacific
Coas~
Rain and thunderstorms extend·
ed over the Mississippi Valley,
parts of Oldahoma and Kansas, and

benefits.
"Sure $100 isn't much,"
Edwards said, ''but bow will these
people cook the food they buy with
their food stamps? How will they
pay their rent?"
"Believe it or no~ l've ·met people living in Meigs County who are
living in plastic and in stonil eel·
Iars. What price do you put on suffering. is it$165,000 a year?"
"Theanswerhereisn't'getthem
a job'," Edwards said. "There
aren't 675 jobs available in Meigs \
County for those people. The
answer is long-term education and
retraining, but JTPA (a branch of
CAA) can't handle the influx."

Hosp.l"tal DeWS

VetUIDS Memorial
Wednesday Admissions: Gladys
Taylor, Pomeroy; Darrell Thomas,
Rutland; Marion Smart, Pomeroy;
and Bertha Baylor, Middleport.
Wednesday Discharges: None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharge, March 4 • Lorri
Barnes, William !loath, Richard
Darst, Kylie Dum bar, Melissa
Estep, Mrs . Rog'et Grover and
daughter, Lester Hawk, Winona
Hoffman, Bernice McMahon,
Elvarie Rose, Brenda Ross,
Clarence Ross, Lowell Ross, Kimberl y See ' Mrs . Thunnan Stanley
and daughter, Mrs. David Swain
and son, Kasey' Winter.

"I live in fear .• there will be n&lt;i
reorganization plan at all,:the losses
will get worse instead of better,"
Conrad said at Wednesday's hearing, noting that the company is losing $100,000 a month.
"The hard, cold facts of the
financial data ... says to me there's
a very real possibility (UP!) won't
be in business at the end of April."
UP! executive editor AI Rossiter
Jr. would not -comment direcdy on
the judge'.s assessmenL "It's certainly no secret that UPI 's been in a
precarious financial state for the

Marches, rallies
protest welfare cuts
,,

CINCINNATI (AP)- Activists
from around Ohio are stepping up
efforts to persuade Gov. George
Voinovich and the Legislature to
restore cuts made in General Assistance payments.
About 50 protesters rallied
Wednesday at the Statehouse in
Columbus. In Cincinnati, activists
said they plan to leave March 21
from Cincinnati's Washington Park
and walk to the Stateliouse in
Columbus, arriving April I.
Protesters said the cuts will
deprive recipients of access to
Medicaid as well as cutting off the
$!(~)-a-month in welfare.
Many of the recipients are dis·
abled and cannot work, and the
cuts are likely to dump greater
numbers of needy people on
already overburdened social service agencies, said Ed Ritchy, volunleer coordinator for the Home·
less Hotline of Greater Cincinnati.
"You don't have the money for
rent and food, either," said Joyce
Rogers, who plans to walk to
Columbus· to protest the cuts. She
works at Santa Maria Community
Services, an agency which provides
emergency rent assistance.
The marchers want to meet with

lawmakers and might try to erect a
tent city on the Stalehouse lawn,
said Berta Lambert, 50, who is
organizing the walk and expects to
participale. About 20 people have
pledged so far to walk all or part of
the way, he said.
·
Lambert said Cleveland activists
plan a similar walk from that city,
starting March 25, for an April I
arrival at the Statehouse. Other
activists plan a similar walk in the
Athens area on March 25, he said.
The cuts will cost an estimated
140,000 people statewide their payments after April!, Ritchy said.
But the Ohio Department of
Human Services said the number of
recipients losing benelits would be
about 70,000. Department
spokesman James Bruney said
there are 130,000 people on the GA
program. Not all recipients remain
on the program for a full year, he
said.
Under the cuts approved by the
Legislature, those pushed out of the
program April I must wait six
months before receiving the payments for another six months.
Voinovich and legislative leaders
said ihe state's budget crunch
foreed the cuts.

_Meigs announcements __
Cemetery clean-up to begin
The Letart Township Trustees
will begin cleaning' cemeteries and
those wishing to save flowers and
other items should remove them by
March 15.
.
DAV to meet
The Disabled American Veterans will meet meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut Ave.
m Pomeroy. State Representative
Mark Malone will be at this meeting.
AA meeting
There will be an AA and
A!Anon meeting on Thursday at 1
p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Chureh.
Auxiliary to meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post

EMS squads make 12 runs
Twelve calls for assistance were
answered.Wednesday and Thursday morning by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service.
At 9:58 a.m. Wednesday the
Syracuse squad responded to a call
on State Route 124 for Stacey
Eakins who was taken to Velerans
Memorial•Hospital. At 10:07 a.m.
the Rutland unit went to State
Route 143 and transported Pearl
Estep to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens.

Agencies... _c_o_nli_'nu_ed_rro_m_..:._pag.:..e_1_ _ _ __
voucher could be available for
some of tt.e former G.A. cases. All
of the assistance offered through
CAA is available only once a year.
Edwards stressed that CAA could
not possibly offer significant assis·
tance to all 675 of the cases being
dropped from the G.A. rolls.
Swisher told the commissioners
yesterday that poorer, Appalachian
counties will be the most effected
by the cuts in G.A. benefits.
"The pen:e~e of A~achian
county participauon is h1gher than
in Central or Northeastern Ohio,"
·swisher said. "However, Human
Services legislation in Ohio is
crafted to serve the 10 metro counties in Ohio. In those 10 counties,
there could be more of a safety net
,(for former G.A. recipients).
'"To lose basic medical care may
result in disability and further
expense for the DHS," Swisher
said. "Some people may die. I think
it's that serious and that graphic."
Edwards also expressed his con·
cern for those wbo will lose their

the northern half of the Plains.
Texas was battered Wednesday
by thunderstorms, hail and high
winds.
Bayous overflowed, motorists
abandoned their cars on flooded
freeways and water gushed into
dozens of homes as thunderstorms
dumped up 10 8 inches of rain
around Houston.
,
Rainfall of 2 10 3 inches was
widespread across southern Texas.
A tornado touched down near .
Kingwood, but lhere were no ·:
reports of injuries or damage. Golf ·
ball-sized hail fell west of Weather· ·
last few years," he said by tele- ford and in Liberty Hill and
phone from Washingtoll.
Georgetown . Large hail also hit
Lawyers for the 18-member Wilson, Okla.
creditors committee, which
Mostly sunny skies were foreincludes AT&amp; T, the Wire Service cast today for the region, although
Guild and divisions of GTE and more thunderstorms were in store
General Electric, praised the for the rest of the South.
judge's decision.
In Colorado, 20 inches of snow
The creditors, who collectively fell Wednesday at Crestone and
are owed $60 million, had argued Villa Grove. South Fork had 15
that UPl was more interested in inches of new snow and Alamosa
reor~anizing internally and pregot I 0 inches.
servmg present management than
Wednesday was unseasonably
finding a buyer.
warm for much of the nation. High.
"I don't think it was really for . temperature records for the date· ·
sale until today," said Dennis included: Beaufort, S.C., 82
O'Dea, a lawyer for the creditors degrees; Burlington, Iowa, 72;
committee. "We'll take offers Jackson, Ky., 80; Mansfield, Ohio• .
from anybody."
15; Moline, Ill., 71; Muskegon,
Mich., 62; Newton, Iowa, 69; and
He estimated the company was Ottumwa, Iowa, fb.
worth between $5 million and $1 S
Today' s forecast called for highs
million.
in the 40s in New England, the
"We want it to reorganize and Great Lakes region and the Rocky ·
get it into friendly hands. We want Mountain states; the 50s in New ..
to see the enterprise survive," York, Pennsylvania, much of the
O'Dea said. "This is a chance for Midwest and the Pacific Northsomeone to own a great American west; the 60s along the midnews service.''
Adantic Coast, Southern California
UP! attorney Remy Ferario told and the Southwest; and the 70s and
the judge that UP! had recently
begun talks with lnterPress Ser· 80s in parts of Texas and the South.
The high temperature for the ·
vice, an Amsterdam-based .news
nation
Wednesday was 92 degrees
agency that focuses on Third
at
McAllen,
Texas.
World countries.

temperatures reaehing ·the mid-70s
most places. A chance of rain will
continue.
. . ..
The reeonl high temperalure for
this date at the Colum?us weather
station was 78 de~ 1'1 1983. The
record low w~ 1m J?78.
·
Sunset .tomght ~til be_at6:28
p.m. Sunnse on Fnday will be at
6:57a.m.
. Around the natloa
Ram and thunderstorms pre-

UPI may be out of business by April

'''''

•

Magic's plight elicits ~ix~d .feelings

to MaS!c and !JIIght be at nsk for
AIDS, .'s for h~J!l to '!IY· "Do you
all realiZe how mcredibly STUPID
minule, and want to shake him till I was?. All those women, all those
he needs DentuGrip,another'l
one-rt1ght (and one-afternoon)
I haven't heard all Magic has to stands, Y~ after th~ dC:X:tors _told
say 00 the subject of his infection, u~ thartind of behavior IS a rocket
so I may have missed something tnp '? AIDS? Wba~ ~y ~ught to
truly riveting. But what I've heard do With my JerseY. Is put u.on the
has been more on the order of, C?ver of~ mag8Zine, With .~t
"See, if it can happen to me, it can S1lly-lo~lc1~g fr~ckle·f~ced k.'d s
happen to anybody," which 1 ~ead suckmg o~t of It saymg,
haven't found too reassuring from What, me WOr:f?
the man-who-would-be-role-model.
"And just th~ .what I've probWhat I'd really lilce to hear.from ably ~ll:C to other hves, th~ women
him, what 1 think might make a dif- I was With after I became mfected.
ference to everyon_e who looks up Not only do I th!Ow my own career
and maybe my _life down a~ bole,
I take them With me. I don t sup·
--:----:----.
pose thel ~:th,ere's much about
me tha~ s mag1c anymore, and I
Dear Editor:
6th is die fmal date for the receipt doubt 1f an~ of you people o~t
Thank you for including the of those grant JlfOPOSals. They can there screammg your beads ?ff !n
many years ago.
To the Editor:
information
regarding the Child be mailed to (or taken to) Shirin th~ Forum wou.ld, either, 1f I d
Write President Bush at: The
We've all been working hard
d?ftC the same thmg to you or )lOur
ttvoughout the coal industry. to get White House, Washington, D.C. Day Care Grant and Loan Project Nuggud, 186 Nonh 2nd Street (at SISter
or your daughter or your
offered by Meigs County Depart· the Gingerlxead House Pre-School)
o11r senators lllld representall.ves to 20500.
mother.
WHAT ON EARTH
Write your senators at: U.S. ment of Human Services and or to Debbie Ellis at the Human
s~ the bills lhat will help keep
O.D.O.D. in your (February 9, Services Def)artment at 175 Race COULD I HAYE BEEN THINK·
ahve the health be~efit fpnds for Capitol, Washington, D.C. 20510.
lNG?" '
Stree~ Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Write your representative at: 1992, Beat of the Bend ).
UMW A pensioners and orphan
' . A few weeks age I heard Lany
For
anyone
who
might
have
Sincerely,
miners that the coal companies U.S. Capitol, Washiogto11, D.C.
missed
the
original
information,
I
Kiaa
1nwv~ew. &amp;ClOt Dack Ram~
Nonna Ann Tones, R.N.1B,S.N.,
20SJS:
have dumped.
~!ho
has·alsQ
reeendy tested JlO!II·
Call your senator or representa· refer then to that date's newsplpCI'. M.S.Ed. Meip Childcan: commit. At risk is the well being of
Uve
for
HIV.
King at one potnt
It is important to 110te that March
tee member
120,000 UMWA retired millen and tive ~at 1-800-872-2551.
asked Rambo how many partnen
Please act now before the
their widows who draw bcneriiJ
he'd had in the last few .years and
120,000
are
without·
health
care.
froiD the funds. If those fuods go
months
and Rambo answered,
broke, where will they tum for Ask your friends, fiiDity and nciaJl"Just
about
anyone .who didn't
help? 1)ey need all the help now ban to do the same. Tell your ~move
Cuter
tllan
I did." He and
By The Allotlaled Prell
·
thai we CID poaibly give them. It IIIICilt 111C1 docl« too-their liveli·
Kina
then
llllted
"heb·heb·behs."
hood• are at stake. AJid, if your .
~oday is Thursday, Marth 5, the 6Sth day of 1992. There are 301 days
could be Ill DRL
King then liked Rambo if he'd
senator
or
conJlessman
supports
left
JD the,Y~·
. ..
I urp the public to lllpJIIlrt the the bit~ t1!a!1k him.
·
Today
8 Highlight 1D Hisllly:
considered
chiiiRinl his behavior
tWO·biiiJ befue Conareu (5.1989
.
Sinceiely
On
Man:h
5,
1770,
the
B0111in
Massacre
lOOk
place
as
British
soldiers
lfter
we
lamed
liow euily an~
1114 H.R. -4013) to help keeJ! the
Don
Nwley,
reWed
coal
miner,
·
who
had been IIUnted by a crowd of colonists opened~. killins ieYCral
uaeouldconlnlCIAIDS,
even
1a1t benefill fii'OIIliJc4 to nunen.
ROUie 2,Giousrer people.
a, slnstc unprotec~d sexual

Seeks support

forecast for

;Line-item veto is a sham issue

Public dollars for private schools
Dear Editor:

NEA chairman John Frohnmayer.
But, in the way of Washington, that
was dithered with. It was pointed
out, don't you understand, that so
few NEA grants went over the line.
shire an d Georgia, the economy Then Buchanan ran one ad about
dropped off the screen and was
replaced by good old-fashioned federally funded homoerotic biasChristian values."
phemy - and, boom, Frohnmayer
·
history.
Exaggerate d· The economy IS wasBush
also took half a dive on
still around. But Buchanan's primal
screaming, often wrong-headed, quotas. He had issued a principled
has brought values, Christian ones threat to veto the Civil Rights bill
and other ones, into the spotlight. of 1991 if it encouraged properValues are our most uncomfortable tionalism. But Bush negotiated
and most important issue.
with softy Republicans. He ended
Consider The National Endow- up with less than half a loaf. His
ment for the Arts (NEA). Minimal squishiness helped draw Buchanan
federal funding for symphonies and into the race, from which vantage
Shakespeare may be all right. But point he now calls Bush to account
that idea was mugged, mostly by as a quota-monger.
some in the "arts community,"
How sad that only a right-wing
who confused sponsorship with extremist storm raises these issues.
censorship. In the name of freedom The Democrats don't bring them
of speech, we were told that. if an up. Too often they are the perpetraartist makes pee-pee on a crucifiX, tors, which is why they lose regutaxpayers must fund it '!'hey won't. larly. They preach racial "healThey shouldn't.
ing," but they are afraid to set the
President Bush had years to.,fi...
ue.........b-o_ne_w_it_h_"_m_e_ri_t._"_I::-n~Ih_e_c_o..,t_,-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

-Rain expected to cool thjng~ off a bit

Olli(J I!Vt~illhe r
Friday, March 6

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.
Thursday, March 5, 1992

Is Pat doing the right thlng?

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Middleport SQ,Uad was
called to the Holzer Clin1c .on Mill
Street at 12:03 p.m. and from there
took Jessie Haggy to the Holzer
Medical Center, and .at12:35 p.m.
went to the office of Dr. James
Conde for Martha Buckley who
was·also taken to Holzer.
At 2:08 p.m. Marion Smart was
transported from the Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
to Veterans Memorial ?ospital,
and at 2:18 p.m . the M1ddleport
unit took WiUiam Gibbs from his
residence on Ball Run Road to the
Holzer Medical Center. George
Qstermyer was transported from
West Main to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 3:47 p.m. by the
Pomeroy unit. At 6:09 p.m. the
Rutland emer~ency unit was summaned to Metgs Mine 31 for Don
Marcum who was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.
The Salem Center Fire Department responded to a caJ1 for assistance from the Wilkesville Fire
Department at 4:38p.m. to the resi-

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 30 7!8
Ashland Oil ...................... .31
AT&amp;T...... ...........................37 5/8
Bank One............................48 3/4
Bob Evans .........................26 7!8
Charming Shop...................28 5!8
C~ Holding .......................17 1/4 '
F raJ M~ul.. .................. 16 1/8
Good6ear &amp;R ..........,.......621/2
•
Key enblrion ............~ ..•... 18
l.ands End......................... 30 S/8
Limited Inc....................... 28 1/4
Multimedia Inc .................. 27 3/4
Rax RestauranL ............... ,..I 9/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ l9J/4 .
Shoney's Inc......................25 3/4

dence of Charles Conrad on State
Route 124 where there was both a
brush and structure rue.
At 6:34a.m. Thursday, the
Pomeroy unit went to Lasley Street
for Michael Hubbard who was
taken to Ve!erans, at 7:29 a.m. the
Middlepon squad transported Kenneth Maden III from his home on
Zuspan Hollow Road to the Holzer
Medical Center, and at 8:24 a.m .
the Syracuse squad went to the
Mormng Star Road residence of
Clara Grueser and transported her
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary ·will
meet tonight (Thursday) at 7 p.m.
at the post home.
Potluck planned
The Burlingham Modern Woodmen of America Camp 7230 will
have a poUuck on March 14 at 6:30
p.m. at the woodmen hall in
Burlingham. The .camp will provide the meat, tossed salad, rolls
and coffee. Door prizes of food:
ilems wiD be given.
Women Alive to meet
Women Alive, Kyger Creek,
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. There
will be a devotional speaker and
Pat Elison will be the craft demonstrator. Refreshments. Call 9922469 for further information.

-------------~------------

SMART MONEY SALES EVENT

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Wortltingtoll Ind....~ ...........22 318

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.11. quotel provided Blunt,
. FJIII and Loewl or Gall polls. .

bl,

•'

'

'

1988 CHRYSLER l991
NX
5th AVENUE
2000 JUST liADID

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'

�Sp
· o'rts

The Daily ·s entinel
Thursday, March 5, 1992
Page-4

North Gallia, Southern to meet for last time in sectional finals
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stair Writer
Nonh Gallia and Southern will
meet for the last time in the upperbracket championship game or the
E&gt;ivision IV Rio Grande boys seciional tournament, which will be
played at the University of Rio
:Grande's Lyne Center. Friday at
6:30p.m.

.

The lower-bracket title game,
slated to follow at 8:15p.m., will
feature Tri-Valley Conference
members Hemlock Miller and
Glouster Trimble.
Pat Stout's Pillltes (10-10) broke
into the post-season win column
with victories over Southwestern
(74-57 last Thursday) and Eastern
(64-57 last Saturday) for the frrst

time since Bruce'WiliilO's 1987-88
crew (K~ith ~urnette; .Rusty Denney, Blaine G1lm&lt;re; Don Mays, et.
al.) knocked off Crooksville 77-60
in the Division IV Meigs sectional
semifmals on Feb. 25, 1988. This
year's sailors are headed into an
encounter with a Southern squad
that spops a 14·7 reeord and has a
seven-game winning streak on the

Score boar((
Bill St. 63, Toloclo ll
CtnL Mldlllan n,Ohlo Ual•. 61
Miomi, Ohio"73, B. Midti&amp;an 63
W. Midtipn 9l, Bow!ina 0....16

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUMIIc Dl.tllao
Team
W L I'd.
Now Yad&lt; .............. 36 :U .610

GB

801ton....................J3 26

.S59

3

31
32
32
40

.47S

8
9
9
17
22.5

l'llilodelphio ..........21
MWni ....................27
Now Jcncy ............ 27
Wuhiftstml ........... .l9
Odando ..................J4

.4l8

.4S8
.322
.233

46

Cenlral DIYIIJon
Chicoso..................48 12 .800

Clenfand.---ll
DeuoiL ................... 3S
Atlanta ................... 29
Milwau.koc .............26
Indiana ...................V
Charloac ................22

19

·"'

11..5

29
32

.448

18
21

2.5

13

.SI3
..500

34
3&lt;1

.443

Utah ...................... .40

21

Major college
basketball scores
East
Conncaicut 15, Syncuso 78
Dellware 72, Druc166

Mu11chUICUI96., Rhode Wand 88
Rlllpt 74, St.J*Pb'a 68
Tanplc 92, Gootge \Vuhing10n 70
Ve:rmmt 64, Hanford Sl

Gil

.S93

4

Houslal .................31 28

.S2S

8

Denver ..................20 39
Oallu ..................... l7 41
Minnelot.a .............. ll 46

.339
.293

19
21.5

.1 93

1J

Pacific DIYUion
Pollland ............... ..41 18 .69S
Golden Slllte .......... 39 18
684
PhO«ti1 ..................38 22 .633
Saulc .................... 33 26
S59
L.A. Wcn ............31 21
SlS
L.A.aippen ......... JO 28 .SJ1
Sacnmenw ............ :z.o 39 .339

Sooth Aorido 78, Soutltem Milo. 72
Tcnnc:ISCC 67, Gcorgil66

8

10

Midwest

10.5
21

Ball St. 63, Tilleda 5I

Cent. Midtipn 71, Oltio U. 62
Clew.ltnd SL 93, You.nptown St 70
lndianl64, Iowa 60
Iowa SL 70, IC&amp;ni• 66
Muq-73. Dol'ou16S
Miomi, Ohio 73, E. Midtiaan 113
MinnMOU76, Wisooruin ~7
Mo.-KwuCky71, NEillinoU 66
Noinuko 91, K..- SL 62
Oklahcxn• 8I, Miuowi 67
W. Midtiaon 9l, Bowlino 0....16
W'u .-Gnlcn B1y 71, Wii.-PubidC 45

Wednesday's score$
Botton 125, Orlando I00
Philadelphia 107, Atlmt.l 102
Detroit f 10, Indim• 101. or
Owloac 119, MilwW.cc llO
Portland 129, Denver 100
UWt 102. San Antonio 93
L.A. Llkc:n1 101, New Jer&amp;ey 92
Clenland 109, Sacrammto 101

Tonight's games

'Oklahtna St 69, Colorado 63

Tuu A&amp;MS8, TcusTcch S6

Tournament action
Mld-Euttm Allllttlc Conftrtntt
nnt round
Be1huno-Cookman 90, Md.-E. Shore
10

Ohio high school
basketball scores
Girls-tournament ac:don
Dh'IIIOII I
Cln. Mcn:y 45, Sidney 3S
Cin. Sycunore43, D1y. Dunbu36
DOOwueli.Cd.Nonbbodll
Lotan 72, Zanet'fillt 41
Pickcringt.on 10, Col. Independence

: In the NHL...
WALES CONFERii:NCE
30

DivblonD
VASI 70, Aohubula !Wbor2S
Jdfenon 61 , W. Gcau11 57
Motin•!lilhilnd 67, WumtMilc48
N. Royo!tm l6, Krmtm 4l
0~

n

Adami [Mwldon
38 22 I 14 226167
B..tm ................ 30 26 9 69 221 2Zl

,.Mon..., .........

Dlotoiao m
Milan EdiJon S6, Colonel Cuwford

36

Qu- ...............

Dlvlolao IV
Adtna 4A, FnnkJin Fuf'llllct t:;mn
lf

. CAMPBii:LL CONFERENCE
Naorll Dtwlllon
' Tum
W L T Pll. GFGA
DdrniL .............. 3&lt;120 9 81 T/1200
SLI.ouil ............ 31 26 9 71 233218
Chiaoso.............. 21 24 13 69 209195
M;M-......... T1 33 s 59 20l 'I:II
TomnW) .............. 24 36 6• 54 196244

Smrtho DI.Uiao
Vancouver ......... 3S 21 9
!aAoptao...... 30:1413
l!dmonlm .......... 30 30 7
· WIMipo&amp; ........... 26 29 II

· c.tauJ ..............

79 237199
73 :M7:14S
67 248:149
113 202 201

BuctcycCaltnl41, Tilfin Calvert32
Now Ricacl61, Sutdttoky SL Mlry'o

47

and lim Lewil. pitchln,

ICANSAS CITY ROYALS - Apood

with Jeff Conine. flJit buemtn,
on • one-year ~et.

lo tcnnl

MILWA!IXEE BREWERS- An·

nouncod lhal Dick Hat:kctt, 111i1Wlt to
lhe preaident. illeavina;·hiJ day·to-d1y
du&amp;iw tM. wUl bo...mod.u a COfiiDI.WtL
MINNBSarA TWJNS - Aped to
t.crm1: wilh Soon Lclu1, lhird baseman~
Paul Smeato, ftnt buan1n; and Tom
Edatl, ..............,.., .....cu.

NI!W YORK YANKEES - Rc ·

newod lhe ctmll'lCU ri Kevin Mau, des!JDate4 hitter·flut buem1n; Ch1rlle
Hay01, third Rieman; Bcmic Williamt,
outftcldcr; Iolulaw-, "td!cr; ond Jdf
1ahnl&lt;m 111d Wade Tnlor, Wcbera.
_
OAKLAND AniiEI1CS - Signed
Mib Bordick, Wielder, to a one-year

- .

TEXAS RANGERS - Aa10cd to
and Rob Mturer,
inf'Laldcn, and Jadl: Dauf)leny and Juan

OOillalU, outflolden, oo one-year con1ncu, Namld Manin B. Conway vice
prai4mt of mubtin
to

N..,.-S,N.Y.IW&amp;"'4

Lot Anaclcl4, S1r1 Jaac 3

ono-ye~r ooatr~ct.

Nallcttal Leap
A11..ANTA BRAVES - A&amp;Rf!C.d to
..... widt O.Vld ltlllioc, otttlioldcr; Mult
Lanic and c.~nwo. Wicldcn;

Bdan H.,._,

Toalebt's games

CIDCAOO CUBS - Sipod Fnnk
C11tillo, La• Dic:Uon, Mite Harkey,
Bob Seanlan t1td Ttult Wlltdoll, pltdtm:
V'tllulucwl, - . Ptodni Cutcl·
lano. Bivin Ptnl!ino, Ray Sutcltez, lloua
Sl.rlrl~ lOd Jc:.o VizcUno, infieldea; llld
Doua 0....... Cod Laadlum and Dcrridt M.ty, anfittld.,.

atChicaao,l:35 p.m.
43

Friday'•&amp;• ....

w..,., llonlina 8l, Wdolt leouit 80,

Cin. Tutpin SS, Ci.n. Purocll· Mariln

. MAC cage standings

l.ou1JYillc 14, Plidou Sl
Lovtland 61, llamlha!
67
Olrnl1od P.U. ~.Brecbvillc 60
Ro... I2.CNI1WOOdl7
Rocky Riuor67, Flirwicw Pad: .54
s.tan 61. Pdand 43

.

Triw1y S9, Can1e1n S. 56

R'"'

SL LouiJ 11Edmon1011, 9:35p.m.

PiclltMJb 1t San J~ l0:35 p.m.

Coof. &lt;mrall
WLWL
• , .Jollarni, Ollio............. ll 3 19 7
B.U $&lt;. .........................11 4 22 6
MidL .....................10 5 19 7
OW.
11 t

· T-

w.

1

: il-cliDcbed tie for rf~Ular·ICUCIG tbJe

Middleport

CINCINNATI REDS - Aped to

on• year conU'ICL Renewed lbe contnCI
of Joe Olivet, cdcher.

LOS ANOELES DODGERS -

Sianed R1mon Mut.inez, pitcher, to a
......,.. ....tnct.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES ST. LOUfS CARDINALS - Apood
to lm'mt with Oeronimo Pctla, te.cond
and Cni&amp; W'Won, Wiolder, on
ot10-'Jf161 CGnttiCU.'lwwed the Cll:lriMCU
of Brian Iordtn, outfielder, tnd Mark

~:tr:'\&gt;ii:oo PADRES -

Siancd

bocll.

Buketblli
N•UtNII•Uiball Aloodolloa
OOLDBN STATE WARRIORS Sipod Billy~. rorwcd. to • II).

d•y

oontncl.

MlLWAVKEI! BUCitS -

Siped O..val'ol»an, fonn.td, ~~ IO-ci1y
conLI'IId.
JCIICIDIILinc, fonrud .
PHil.ADFJ.JIHIA 76ERS - Aetintocl Jclf Rlllaa4. oen11r. from die injured
lill Pl.ac:ed DIWI lloppen, eenter, M tho
injtuod Uot.

wuvea

FootiNIU
Nollottal F-U .......

CHICAGO BEARS -

Siancd

Riclwll Fila, ddniw bock.

ClJ!YEI.AND BROWNS - Nunod
Uonel ViW INilCGIIL
NEW YOU GIANTS - Nomod
Ruay Hawley nnlor direc\or of mama-

ina.

13
14
II
lO

19

SOUTH FORK

Sherldu U. VlnlOft Couatr .U

PRESENTS

WtthlftlloR CH 13, Miami Trace

"

DI-W
Be.cltwood 93,11"""" 61
BeUaUo l4,1odiut
41

v.n.

BLITZKRIEG
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY

Bcllbraalt7l,BiancheotetS7

ComphoiiMcmoriol 61. Soutblllt .....

cal49
Collkrtley 7 6 , - Pllino ~
Coi.Rudy61, W. loll'ot~at'7

MARCH6&amp;)
10 P.M.·2 A.M.

3 Mllea North of Pt. Pleaaant on
Route2

: · EFFEaiVE MAROil, 1992 THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP WILL BE A
,ARI'IOPAnNG PHARM4CY IN THE AETNA PRESCRIPTION PROGRAM FOR:
-st•l IUCHIIS IITIIIMIIT SYmM (nRS) .
efJUILIC IIPLOYIIS UTIIIMIII SYniM (Pill)
«•L .IIIPLOBIIIIIIUMIII SYSIUI (JIU)
.-st•l
PAIIOlllfiiiMIIT SYSIIM ISHPII)

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AH have adjus~e shelves,

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WP79801- Whitt, gae.................. 369.911
WP79808-Aimond, gas ............... 379.911

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• Automatlc... tums on, cooks, cleans;

lums off at preset Hme
GE93211-WMe ........................ $389.99
GE93218-Aimood ..................... $399.9\o

glue-covered crl"""rs
20.1 cu. II. tap-mount moclol

• Ice maker
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GE71 1li1-Whllli ........................$669.99
GE71 158--Aimond ....................... 679.911
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GE51241-Witllo ............. .. ..........
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GE512~ ....................... 899.911

-...,.tldt

...

PRESCRIPTI NSHOP

Urbana overcomes Redmen 111-99 -to advance in playoffs
Urbana University guard Jerry
Ligon exploded for a game-high 30
points Wednesday at Lyne Center
to hand the University of Rio
Grande a 111-99 loss in the first
round of the District 22 Division I
Playoffs.
· The Blue Knights, now 23-8,
face top-seeded Findlay Saturday
in a semifinal contest at Findlay.
The Oilers (23-6) defeated
Shawnee State 83-60 Wednesday,
while at Canton, third-ranked Malone (25-7) handed Central State a
99-88loss.
Malone also advances to the
semifinals this weekend, but will
meet second-seeded Cedarville
(25-4 ), which had a bye from the
opening round competition, at
Cedarville. Rio Grande exited the
postseason at22-IO.
"Urbana's athleticism is tough
to match,.and obviously, we had a
tough time matching up with them
all year," Redmen Coach John
Lawhor~ commented. "Urb~a is
very qutck, but at the same ume,
we pi~ye_d hll!'d, ~tayed with them
and didn t qu11. I m very proud of
our guys."
With the lead rocketing back
and forth by a matter of points ~n
the begm~mg of the fust half•. R1o
Grande lied the score four limes
before Ligon's three-pointer at
10:54 put Urbana ahead 30-27.
The Blue Knights held onto the
lead for the rest of the period, but
the Redm~n. boosted by doublefi~e sconng from Jeff Brown (14
pomts), Brad Schubert (II) and
Troy Donaldson (10), and outrebounding the visitors 23-12, trailed
by two entering the second half.
The period opened encouragingly with a three by Brown cutting
Urbana's lead to one (55-54) at
19:08, followed by Brown's
jumper at 18:22 to give the game's
control back to Rio Grande. The
Redmen grimly hugged the lead,
but Urbana's defense, highlighted

__

---on-.v""""'"'-·

9-14-99.
URBANA (111) - Wyatt
Goins, 5-1·6-19: Jerry Ligon, 7-44-30; Wade Goins, 3-1·7: Damon
Knight, 2..()-4; Many Socha, 5-1..().

13; Todd Charles, 4-1·3-14; Art
James, 4-0-8; Cornelius Woody, 8:
0-16. TOTALS 38·7·14-11.
;
Hatrtime score: Urbana 53r
Rio Grande 51.

TO THE HOOP - Rio Grande postman Troy D1111aldson (left)
goes to tbe hoop for two of his 14 points durillg Wednesday night's :
NA,IA District 22 playoff game against Urbana, wbicb the Blue :
Kntgbts won 111·99 to end the Redmen's season at 22-IO.
:

Miami beats EMU 73-63
for share of MAC crown
By DEB MARTIN
Associated Press Writer
For Miami coach Joby Wright it
was a game of intensity - almost
not enough - and emotion almost too much.
"The first half we didn't play
with as much intensity as I like,"
Wright said after Miami, Ohio,
defeated Eastern Michigan 73-63
Col at least a share of the MidAmerican conference regular season title.
"We're really fortunate to get
out of there with a 'W,' '' he said.
"EMU played with emotion and
you know they wiD be back."
The Redskins are 19-7 overall
and 12-3 in the MAC and lead Bali
State (11-4) by one game with one
lO play.
Elsewhere in the conference
Wednesday, Ball State beat Toledo
63-58, Western Michigan defeated
Bowling Green 95-86 and Central
Michigan topped Ohio University
71-62.
Miami led 34-32 at halftime in
Ypsilanti, Mich., and built a 40-34
lead with 18:20 to play.
The Eagles (9-20, 4-11) kept
cutting the deficit to four - eight
times in the second half. They
trailed 67-63 with 2:16 left but
couldn't score again.
Miami's Jamie Mercurio hit two
three-pointers to open the second
half. He was 4-of-5 from threepoini range.
"Mercurio got away from us
early in the second half and that
gave them some breathing room,''
said Eastern Michigan head coach
Ben Braun.
"We worked the ball inside and
we missed some key layups," he
said.
"We'll probably play these
guys again (m the conference tour·
nament) and I hope our players

remember the opportunities we had
to beat them."
In Toledo, Ball State (22-6) took
its first lead at43-42 with 13:17
remaining on a free throw by Chandler Thompson.
The Cardinals led 61-53 with
5:42 to play. The Rockets (7-9, 3- ·
12) closed to 61-58. But two free
throws in the last 28 seconds
clinched the victory for Ball State.
Toledo had opened the game
with a 12·2lead.
"The way we started the game
tonight was unexplainable," said
Ball State head coach Dick Hunsaker. "We didn't come out tOnight
as a championship team.
"But good teams are able to
regain their composare, which is
what we did in the second half," he
said.
Toledo head coach Larry Gipson wasn't disappointed in his
team's showing.
"I think if there was a team that
played up to its potential tonight it
was Toledo." he said. "Ball State
pressured, denied and switched
well on defense. We worked hard
in practices to counter their
defense."
In Bowling Green, Western
Michigan never trailed.
The Broncos (19-7, 10-5) went
. on a nine-point run to lead 29-17
with 5:27 to play in the fii'St half
and led 41-32 at halftime.
The lead reached 58-41 with
12:52 to play. The Falcons (13-13,
8- 7) CUI It to 79· 75 with 3:38 left
but never got closer.
In Mount Pleasant, Mich., Ohio
University held Darian McKinney
to four points but couldn't keep the
win from Central Michigan.
McKinney, .whose 18.8 scoring
average was second in the MAC
entering the game, played just 23
minutes.

By SCOIT W01FE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Eastern Eagles girls baslretball team will put its 15-6 record
on the line ionight at 6:30 against
Lynchburg Clay in the frrst mund
of the Division IV district basket·
ball tournament at Jackson High
School.
Eastern has five seniors Tabby Phillips, Jennifer Roush,
Ruby Burte, Tiffany Gardner, and
Lee Gillilan - wishing to extend
their season. Gillilan is probably
out for the season with a knee
injury, but she could be back if the
Eagles keep on winning. Bjlstern
will miss her defensive hustle as
wen as her perimeter shooting. .
Tabby Phillips, •· S·9 senior
IUW, Joel Eutem in the sec:tiona!
finlls against Southe!'ll. Sbe is a
great OUISide scoring threat. a good
river and a good ball handler.
Roush is a peat inside force at 6fbot-2, averaging over 10 rebounds
per II!De. and is good from the

Sometimes starter Ruby Burke,
a S·foot-10 senior, is a good inside
player, good rebounder and a good
defensive force.
. .
Jaime Wilson, a 5-6 point guard,
will again start out fronL She is an
· accurate shootet from the key and
elbows as well as a s•y passer.
Only a sophomore, she does a great
job of ruming the BHS offense.
Junior swing guard Michelle
Metzger is a great driver and key
pan of the BHS fast break. She can
open up the half-court game with a
gOod outside jumper ~d in the last
game had three big assis_ts. ·
Other players are Debbie Gray,
Melissa Guess, Penny Aiker,
Mariko Tayama, ,Nora Eastman,
Michelle Schultz, TBII Congo and
Am Rcdovian.
Wa!tman and Aoiker have seen
valuable playinJI time latoly and
their added dqJtll makes Eastern a

~ardner, a S·foot·lO postman,

conner

a

led EHS the lalt time out with 14
rebounds and is often a doublediJIISCXRt 8s welL Gardner worb
btat alonl the bNeline, but can hit
the IIJ.foota' as weD.

253 NORTH SECOND.AV

II

by its running game and infliction the Hne for .56 pertenL
Schubert, 3-4-6-24: MaU PoweU, 2of 18 turnovers (to their 12) on the
Box score:
. . 2-6: Brett Coreno, 0-1-0-3: Jason
hosts, stalled Rio Grande's
RIO GRANDE (99)- Kyle Curtis, 2-1-S: Jeff Brown; 8-2~2al!elllpts to get a run started.
Schroer,l·l..Q-5; Matt Erslan,4-l- 24; Tim Christian, 2-1-5; Troy
Wyatt Goins' free throw at 0-11; Walter Stephens, l..Q-2; Brad Donaldson, 6-2-14. TOTALS 29·
11:18 allowed Urbana to get back
~
·
into the driver's seat by one (7675), and while Rio Grande held the
visitors' margin for a time, scoring
by Ligon, Wade Goins and center
Cornelius Woody boosted Urbana
to a 12-p()int lead (97-85) by the
4:36 mark. Bob Ronai's team built
on that momentum to post an 18point margin (109-91 at 1:33), its
largest of the game.
For Schubert and Mark Erslan,
Rio Grande's senior co-captains,
the contest marked their last with
the Redmen program and Lawhorn
.was upbeat about their careers.
Schubert, who led the team in scorin~ this season, hit 24 points
against the Blue Knights (as did
Brown), while Erslan pumped in II
points and eight rebounds.
"I'm especially proud of our two
seniors," the coach said. "Brad and
Mark have been exemplary on and
off the court. They will graduate
this year with honors, and they
have been a big asset to our program these last four years."
Brown also had eight boards ·
against Urbana but center Troy
Donaldson brought down 10 for the
team total of 44 . Urbana ended
with 27.
Ligon's scoring output was supplemented by Woody, Wyall
Goins, Marty Socha and Todd
Charles. Wade Goins had 12
PLAYING KEEP-AWAY while looking to passto an open teamassists.
mate is tbe objective of Rio Grande gulll'd Matt Powell (left) in his
The Redmen were 47.5 percent
encounter with Urbana's Wade Goins during Wednesday night's
on shooting, making 38 of their 80
NAIA District 22 playoff contest at Lyne Center, which the Blue
auempts, including nine of 35 from
Knights won 111-99 to earn the right to face Findlay in the semifithe three for 25.7 percent. I'roiJI the
nals.
line, they connected on 14 of 20
triesfor70pen:enL
Urbana was 65.2 percent from
the floor (45-69) and made seven
of 18 attempts from the three for
38.9 percenL They hit 14 of 25 at

fROM

395
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Eastern to play ·Lynchburg ·
Clay in district action tonight

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

NOTICE
!

Senior David Swanson,
wrestling in the 112-pound weight
class for the Meigs Marauders, was
the on! y Meigs wrestler to qualify
for advancement to the combined
district Division Ill and IV tournament to be held at SteubenviUe.
Swanson won the fust rolUid by
pinning Mitchell of Athens, but lost
his second match to Sherdian's
Ulmer 5-4 with a takedown at the
closing buzzer of the final period.
Swanson won his next two matches, pinning Warren Local's Duvall
and defeating New Lexington's
Bernard by a score of 10-2.
Swanson, 24-7 overall, is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swanson of Rutland. He plans to join the
Marine Reserves after graduation
and to attend the University of Rio
Grande this fall.

Coplcy6l,llobon 64
lnotlon II, Roel&lt; HIIIC

New -11 Buffllo, 7:ll p.m.
Winnipcs at w~ . 7:3S p.m.

13
12
I
9

Swanson advances
to district meet

tamJ with Hal Monil, fint buunm, m. a

Boys-tournament action

Dlv111ooD

TOIGIUO at Cali:UJ, 9:~ p.m.

QUALIFIES FOR DISTRICT
- Meigs wrestler David Swanson qualified for district action
with a second-place finish in last
week's sectional tournament at
Warren Local High School.
Swanson, wrestling in the 112pound weight class, is shown
defeating New Lexington's
Bernard by a 10-2 score.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS -

Woodol9

ar

lila"""""'" Koot MeRit·

er, pitdlu; 1nd Ore~~· cttehcr, on
ono-you ocatncw.
· od the contnC\
of Dcion Smdon, outfielder.

Sb'Uipvillc 71, I..aklllwood 49
W. O..ct~.er LUcu 61, Cin Winton

VADCC~tVer 11 io.wn,7:35 p.m.
MinnedlltOctn:ril, 7:3! p.m.
~ nlbnlanl, H~ p.m.

TOROI'IJ'O BL~l! JAYS - Apood
wilh Juan Outman, pitcher, oo a

tcrm1

Aped to k:tm1 with T~or WU.m and
Dno Mu1ea, ~en, oo crw-ycar coo-

S.... 78, Ncrmondy 68
0c. lldaltt158, Solon S1
E. C...W.d Shaw l6, Ocncvol2
l!utlokcNDlth Sl, Oc. EutSI
Flyria 71, Laaln 6S
Gnm.mc 74, Foi:bom 70, 20f
HunilUXI 69, Ml.dd.laown 58
Hubc H1a. Wtync 64, Troy 46
ModlN 71, Atnto C..·Hower61
N. Roydtoo,Cic. Uncoln·Wat60
Sholtcr IJ.iJ)u ll. Oc. Katnody Sl

Tamnw!J:. EGnmlDn 2

r.-...........................3, 12

Alan MUll, Anlhony Tollood.lim Poole

l7

Wedntllday's scores

c.. Midl.....................6 10
._, SL........................5 10·
1. )lloh. ....... .................4 II

BasebaD
Ametlaat..aauo
BALTIMORE ORIOLEs- Si&amp;ncd

Retular·auaon •ctlon
Cle. Hc:llth Cam:rs 37, Cle. Science

Dlvloton I
Abo! Km""""' fiJ, Covcd..r 51
Allitncc 67, M1uillon Wuhinaton

:2531 9 l92372SI

V•l•·--'
BowiUw
a-. ............. ! '7

Transactions

JtM Mclmdcz and Rich lloddpez, puchon; R1y Holbert and Gllillcrmo Ve·
laaquez., inNldm.tta m&amp;-)'CUc:MttlldL

14

SmJGK ............. 14 46 S 33 170290
· x·clinohed playoflbcnh.

N.Y. kl~

m.lolon IV
Anna 43, Runla 42, ar
Col.wnbian1 S9, Betlin CCiltcr We~t­
omR....44
Cuyahoga Htt. 60, Flitport Harding
47
Leocoaio 49, Mdlooold 40
Sl:ywe 13,1kidppon71

who tied Peck for team scoring
honors with 15 points against Eastem, will put his height and reach
against 5-foot-8 senior Scot! Lisle,
who burned North for 21 points
when the teams met at Racine.

Apo4 to \mml wilh JOIC OoJctUI ll'ld
I um Orimoley, pitdten.

Wyn{ood lO, Htuoo 47

59 232 246
20 32 11 Sl 200225
134110 36189259

· Buffdo ............... 24 30 II
lbnlord ............

64

tc1rm1 with Jtff Hwon

Southwest

L.A. Qippen:•~ New York,7:30 p.m.
Dallu at W11hington. 7:30p.m.
~CifO at Minnelotl, 8 p.m.
Mitm1 at HOUltOn, 8:30p.m.
Sc.ulc at ~oaili. . 9:30p.m.
Clndand 11 Golden State, lO:lt
p.m.

Patrlck Dhillon
Tum
W L T P11. GFGA
N.Y.Ran&amp;ea ..... •2 21 • !1269215
Wubinp&gt;n........ 37 :U 6 80 TI6'1:II
Now ItnC)' ........ l4 22 9
:lAS lD7
Phut.qh ..... ..... 29 T1 8 M m 247
N.Y.'Wandcn .... T/30 7 61 :U2 249
Philoddphio .. ..... :lA 30 II 59 194 212

Vololo M, Ma-91
Utico 73, flidield VniCD 48
Wltoelnbu'lll, hoblao ~
Younl. Liberty 70, Jacbon·Milton

;rt"

1

Friday's games

ROOIIIOWD7S, a.a-v;n, 80
SpartolllUiaa4 43, N, Uni011 T1
1\W.aw Sf, Waynodale 52

Soutb

Alablm114, Miui . . 83
llltic 91, Oatuon
Acrid• 79, Kmtueky 62
Mcmnhil SL 61, Tuhno ~
Min'lippi St. 77, Aubum 70
North Carolino 79,Gco!Jio Tcclt 75
Sdm Roll 90, Milmi 82, OT
South CUolina 77, Vmdcrbilt 68

3.S

L.A. Oippcn 11 801tm, 7:30p.m.
O&amp;lW al Philadelphia, 7:30p.m..
lndianaatAdanu. 7:30p.m.
Miami at OUe~ao, 8:30p.m.
Orlando at Milwaukee. 9 p.m.
Detroit 1t Dmver, 9 p.m.
New lct1Cy I t Ulah, 9:30pm.
Sacnmento at Partl~r~d, 10 p.m.

N. Vaion 64,l!lain ll

Oborlin M, Avon s~
PnlbloShaecoSJ, Onlc:newiew 4S
Rivw 71, Malvem S4

Bowtfnt: Green at Ohio l!nlw.
Non-conrtrfftCI
Cent. Michigan at Wii.-M:ilw1ukCIC

.6S6

San Antonio ........... 35 24

43

E. Michi&amp;m 1t W. Michigan

WESTERN CONFERii:NCE
Mktws1 Dfy .. lon
W L ret.

'

LouimDe Aquinu 63, Abo! sp,;n1,

Tolcdo ll Miami, Ohio
Kent at Ball St.

2U
2S

.379

ll

Satunlafs ~ames

~uanc71, Wrst Vi!Jinil 64
MilneS~. New Hampthia 39

Tara

Ckuwilll 12. Aluuit.OMaoc:t S3
Loudc.Yille 65, Akron Manche~tcr

Wednellday's scores

In theNBA ...

the fore on the fast breaf.?an be
line.
Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes matched by few players in this
have been the victors in the last area, and unless the 5-foot-11
four meetings between the two Evans can execute his part in a
clubs, including a 70-48 road victo- Tornado man-to-man defense, Peck
ry over the Pirates on Dec. 21 and may be able to run the fast break
the better half of an 83-61 decision often and productively. The sixat Racine on Jan .. 31. In those two foot junior had 15 points - nine
games, the Tornadoes, who have on three-pointers - against Eastaveraged halftime leads of 11 .5 ern last Saturday, so if the fast
points in their victories (tourna- break doesn't work, he can shoot
ment action included), led at half- treys.
Agpinst Kyger Creek, Evans
time by 20 and 18 points, respecwas,
as he has been thmughout the
tively.
season,
one of many facets in the
Southern also puts eight to nine
Southern
scoring machine. The
men in the scoring column per
Tornadoes
will need more points
game, which was one of the factors
in the Tornadoes ' 76-36 win over from him and from junior guard
Kyger Creek in last Saturday's Rio Mark Alien, who had II points
sectional semifinal. Fresh players against Kyger Creek, especially if
throughout that game helped the Pillltes pay primary attention to
Southern get on top and stay there. Roush or Roy Lee Bailey.
Bailey, Racioe's 6-foot-1 senior
Will that be a factor in this game?
center
who also had II points
It could be if North Gallia's
against
Kyger
Creek, has the speed
ever-improving starters don't avoid
and
strength
coming
from his days
foul trouble, because the exit of
any of the starters - guards Darin at forward that Pirate postman
Smith and Charles Peck, forwards Kevin Hunt will have to keep out
Rob Canady and Ryan McCarley, of the paint. Hunt's biggest advanand center Kevin Hunt- could be tages are having played the posithe barnacle that slows down the tion for at least the previous two
Pirates',potential for the fast break. seasons and doing so with fellow
Why? Most of North Gallia's frontmen Rob Canady and Ryan
bench played on the reserve team McCarley. By comparison Bailey,
that tied Southwestern for posses- the sole survivor from last year's
sion of the basement in the South- Rio Grande lower-bracket sectional
championship team, has had just
em Valley Athletic Conference.
North Gallia's best chance for this season to get accustomed to his
victory is to lead Southern at half- new position and his new team time, because the Tornadoes are 1- mates.
Bailey will get relief in the form
6 when ll'ailing at that poinL Howof
6-foot-3 junior Russell Singleever, the last time they fell behind
ton,
a solid rebounder and an occaat halftime, they came back to beat
Eastern 74-58 at Tuppers Plains in sional scorer, and from 6-foot-5
senior Michael Russell, who also
the season finale on Feb. 22.
occasionally
scores but provides a
The matcbups
height
advantage
around the edges
Smith, a six-foot, 200-pounder
of
the
lane.
Singleton
and Russell
who is North Gallia's only senior,
combined
for
12
points
against
will be hard pressed to keep up step
Kyger
Creek.
.
for step with either senior point
Hunt,
a
6-foot-4
junior,
has
been
guard Jeremy Roush or junior
shooting guard Michael Evans, held to fewer than 10 points only
once this season (nine against Oak
Southern's guards.
However, Smith has three years Hill in the season finale). Southern
of varsity experience to see him isn't likely to keep him down that
through (the reason Stout put Smith low, especially since after he had
at point guard) and the ability to I 0 points at home a~ainst the purmatch either for scoring abilily, ple haze, he racked up 17 at
inside or outside. He has a shot at Racine. Will he get more this time?
Time will tell.
drawin~ Roush, the Tornadoes'
The 6-foot-2 Canady, the
three-pomt specialist (he had three
Pirates'
leading rebounder, will
of the Tornadoes' six deep strikes
probably
put his long arms to use
en route to a game-high 17-point
against
an
equally well-armed cusnight against Kyger Creek), while
tomer
in
5-foot-11
senior Joshua
Peck should 1rack Evans.
Codner.
The
6-foot-1
McCarley,
Peck's speed, which comes to

The Dally Sentinel-Peg~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 5, 1992

••

I

It-·&amp;
....
A~.ooM

.......

Nl RE I W
'

lOUiher squad.
.
£astern is coached by former

Oblo Ualvenity IIIIW Dawn Heideman and usistai!ls Laura Redina
(Heldemla'a
Bobcat leanl·
me) and Tammy Capehart,
. · Eastern was second in tho
SVAC and was lho Division IV
Meigs sec:tional clulnpion . .

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

::0':':; . , ,

lioN houoa: 1:30 a.m. 10 1 p.m. llondloy _,.,..
e:30 1,111.101 p.m. ....,...,, onc1 • a.m. lt 1 ,....

•=:r.:;,-

. GALUPOUS

-

1-

'

I

••

'
.'
I

•

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P8ge 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday. March 5, 1992

·companies, schools!. brace for computer virus trigger date
· · NEW YORK (AP) _ Like a
mugger hiding in the closer the
Michelangelo virus is lurlci~g in
personal computers nationwide
awaitingFriday'slriggerdate.
Companies, government agencies and schools are talcing JXOOIU·
tions, but expef\S said Wednesday
not every compuler can be examined in time and the invader will do
some damage.
"We can't go out and inspect
every PC on every desk •' said
Andy Myers, a spokes~an for
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
Co.
The phone company said it discovered a few infected PCs after
dislribuling special software to
employees that can detect and
deStro 'the virus.
"~u're more likely to spill a
cup of coffee on your keyboard
than to get this virus," said Peter
Tippett. chainnan of Cenus International Inc .. a maker of anti-virus
software.
"There's definitely hysteria,"
said Marianne Guntow, a compuler
'analyst at the Univmity of Chicago. "We get people that call up and
are absolutely panicked, and after
talking to them for a while we find
out they have a Macintosh (computer) and aren't affected at aU."
The virus has been found sitting
dormant inside IBM-type personal
computers awaiting the PC's internal clock to reach March 6, the
birthday of the Italian Renaissance
artist. Once the PC is turned on that
day, the virus can destroy programs
and data on the compuler's hard
disk.

Viruses are rogue pi~ces of viral programs, too, but got another
com puler software dev1sed by shipment Wednesday.
pranksters. They can e~ter a PC . The. Compulerw~~ouse chain
ti!Tough software. conta1ned .on a IS offenng a free ann-viral program
dlsk"lte ~ tranSRIItted to the com· ~people who drop by With a blank
puler ~~er the _phone ~a com- diskelle to hold the software. Hunputer bulletm board or other deeds responded to the offer at the
sow-ce.
.
.
Computerw,arehouse in Cherry
A survey of 300 DUIJOC busm~ss- Hill, NJ., Sllld markenng represenes liken by Dataquest Inc., a high- IBilve Greg Persun.
tech. mar~et research firm, found
":!te phones~ ~~ging off '!Ie
the 1nfecuon rate for all computer ~all, ~rs~n srud. And th~y re
vuuses rose from 5.5 percenl at the JUSt sw1mmmg m here. They re a
end of 1991 to 18.2 percental the littl,~ bit fri¥htened." .
.
end of January. .
.
The VlfiiS problem IS gomg to
. Some compames and org~IZ8- get worse and worse and worse.
uons that are extremely cauuo~s
about w~ software .IS used m therr
P&lt;;s beheve they wiU be spared a
Michelangelo attack.
"Cro.~s my fingers, ~y a few
pr~yers, sa1d Debra ~stopson,
ch1ef computer executive for the ·
Stouffer hole! chain. .
Numerous compames, sch&lt;K!Is
and goverments. have reponed discovery of the vtrUB on some computers. Among them are the state of
Nevada , the U.S. Agnculture
Department and the San Jose
(Calif.) Mercury News newspaper.
Esumates of _how many of the
50 m1lhon PCs m N~nh Amenca
are mfected range w1dely, from a
few thousand to millions.
"We are utterly, compl~tely.
totally, 100 percent sold ou~ S81d
Lee Rock, an employe.e of rhe
Egghead Soft~are store m downtown BosJ?n. The media whipped
RENEE FIRESTONE
peOple up m10 a fre,~Y and they are
stormmg the gates.
,
The CompUSA superstore m
Dallas Sllld 11 had sold out of anu~ ---

a~e these people th~t, write these

The only way to ftx the problem is Winn Schwartau, an author and
for people to get proper security lecturer on computer viruses.
measures in their machines," said.
"All il's going to due is encour-

kmds of programs, sa1d Andy
Seybold, a Dataquest consult.anl.

H0 1ocaust survivor addresses
sc h 00I wh ere b oy gave H ItJer speec h
0

o

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
(AP) - An Auschwitz survivor
was sent to give youngslers a lesson about the Holocaust after a
fifth-grader put on a swastika and
muslache and delivered a speech
porlraying Hitler as a victim of
mistreatmenl by Jews.
Mter the boy's address, which
won a prize in an oratory contes~
school dislrict officials limited slu·
dents to speeches about historical
figures who have had a positive
influence. That drew protests from
teachers who said the policy "sugarcoats" history.
Meanwhile, Jewish leaders said
they fear the speech spotlights a
growing indifference lo the death
of 6 million Jews at the hands of
the Nazis.
On Wednesday, the Los Angeles-basd Simon Wiesenthal Cen1er
for Holocaust studies arranged for
an appearance at Westlake Elementary School by Renee Firestone, a
survivor of the Auschwitz dealh
camp.
.
Firestone showed pupils the yellow star she was forced to wear by
the Nazis to identify herself as a

Jew and the number her captOrs tat- northwest of Los Angeles, awarded
tooed on her forearm at Auschwitz. a second-place prize to a boy in the
The session was closed to school's annual oratory contest
Feb. 24.
reporters.
Students were assigned to select
"I told them Auschwitz was not
a
historical
fi~ure and give a
just a concentration camp," the 66chronology
of
h1s or her life, with
year-old woman said later. "This
the
focus
on
speaking
skiDs rather
was a place which the Gennan gov·
than
conlent,
said
fifth-grade
teachernment referred to as a desb'Uction
camp, where people were brought er Susan Boyce.
The unidentified boy, who wore
for one reason - to be lcilled.''
Firestone said she told the stu· a swastika annband and fake musdents how her younger sisler cried tache, said Jews had mistreated
when they were separated from Hitler when he was a youth. The
their parenls. She recalled that speech acknowledged Hitler's
when she asked a guard when they responsibility for minions of deaths
would be reunited, he pointed to but didn' t mention his program of
smoke emerging from a crematori· genocide against the Jews. .
urn chimney and said, "There are
Michele Newman, a JUdge m the
your parents."
competition, said the speech didn't
After the speech, children said praise Hitler. "Absolutely. it was
the talk cleared up many of their not a sympathetic portrayal," she
questions.
said.
"I think it was good," said 11·
Rabbi Abraham Cooper of !he
year-old Tracy Stone. "It Wiesenthal Center said historians
explained a lot of things about the have documented that Hitler's
Holocaus~ about how many people
mother was treated unsuccessfully
died. ' '
for breast cancer by a Jewish docThe controversy began when tor and that Jews sat on the admisofficials at Westlake Elementary in sions board of the Vienna art
Thousand Oaks, about 25 miles academy where he was rejecled.

Michelangelo poised to strike

Five mfl~on IB~compatble personal COfTllulert could be aflec!ed when lii811110rtd on their
hard disks are wiped ou1 by Michelangelo, atlmt-bomb 'lllrua Itt lor Mirth e.

It destroys data

How viNife transmllled

MldlalangaiD

1. An lnlectad floppy disk Is

lost for

ovenwltes aN data
on a hard disk ~th
retrieval impoHible. It is
when lhfl internal clock
March 6. The virus cano" IP••ad
OYII

networks.

YOU

I

Defense against the viNs

8 Uae one ol ttle many anti-vin,a

and procection programa available.
They are ~ld to llf1d and
dMtroy vlrusea.. Somt electronic
bull811n·boatdl allo ot1er aueh
program~ free ol charge .

fl ccipy 111 11111 on the l'llrd cllk

omo back-up lloppy dilkland avoid
llartrlO or f8SIIfting the PC at any

tm. on March 6.

DOS verfiOn 3.3, setting the
h7 Ban
clock to March 7 and res.et1Wlg rt to

r::::v

3. All Oll'ltr flOppy disks inuned

•

the next proper date 58'o'8111l dlyl
tater ma~ work OUt ia not a su re

cure . This does not WOik on 3.2 or
earlier va1110ns.

8en a&amp;landard e.w~&lt; computer,

by the virus. They in lutn

vlrul in the

·study: routine exam
could cut colon cancer
death rate 30 percent
.

ISMCII: Pt• NofM ~. toe., S.. Mol*a, C. . ; NIW YOflll'lrntl;
U.l . ..... I~ AIOGI1

The Issue:

Restricting imports
EDITOR'S NOTE- '(be Associated Press asks tbe major presidential candidates a queslloa eacb weekday about tbeir views on a
particular issue and assembles tbeir responses.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are the views of the major presidential
candidales on the question: "Should the United Stales impose further
resaictions on the importation of textiles, shoes and apparel?"
DEMOCRATS
-Jerry Brown: "As president I would continue working through (the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade}, but keep my options open
regarding transition rules that impact American jobs."
-Bill Clinton: A spokesman said Clinton does not support the lextile
biU before Con~, put instead believes "we need to upgrade manufacturing and reii1W1 workers through a partnership between government and
America's textile manufacturers."
- Bob Kerrey: "In J990,I voted in favor-of Senator Hollings' legislation to limit growth in impons of textiles and apparel to I percent per year
and to freeze imports or footwear .• '
- Paul Tsongas: "No. I do not believe that the United States should
impose further reslriction on these imports."
•
REPUBLICANS
-George Bush: Vetoed a bill in 1990 that would have restricled
imports of textiles and shoes, saying,_ "This highly pro~ctionist ~ill
would damage the national economy, u~erease already arufic1ally h1gb
costs to consumers of several basic goods and abrogale our inlemational
agreements."
.
- Palrick Buchanan: "We believe in free and fair trade - with
nations that practice free and fair trade. No more unilaleral concessions:
We will demand reciprocity. Nations thai adopt a closed-door policy to
America's exports should not expect an open-door policy to America's

POMEROY ASSEMBLY •
Quality AJsemblies receatly presented "Juggling Jefr" to stu·
dents at Pomeroy Elementary.
Tbe presentation featured juggling and unlcyclin1 aad delivered a message to studeats on
sell-esteem. Pictured with "Ju1·
glln&amp; Jeff'' Is Justin Robsoa, a
third 1rade student.

- David Duke: "Yes. If a nation is a dumping its goods on the American market below cost~ if they are using slave labor, those goods should
be reslricted by a tariff or a quota."

Eldersville, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell, Mrs. Virginia Smith,
Joshua and Mica Dawn, David
Ried, Rodney Ried and Tammy, all
of Pa11sk•la; John W. and Belinda
Dean and James, local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Racine.
Other visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Wells, Bidwell.
After dinner a birthday calce was
enjoyed.
The honored guest also received
a card from Presidenl.and Mrs.
George Bush.

Three free law seminars for the
public, involving landowners, individuals and families. The three
seminars will be presented by the
law firm of Porter, Little, Sheets
and Lentes.
The three meetings will be held
at the Meigs County Public Li~
on March 23, March 30 and April
6. The seminars are open to anyone
wishing to attend. The sessions will
begin al 7 p.m. and conclude at
8:30p.m.
Some of the items covered in
the first session include wills,
estate administration, powers of
auorney, living trusts/wills. Session
2 talks ~ut real eytate law, deeds,
easements, foreclosure and mineral
rights,eu:. The last session will be
· family law. Some of the topics covered will be divorce, dissolution,
child .supPOrt. adoption and more.
The meeungs wiU be informal and
will aUow time for questions.

Fellowship meets

F.OODLIND AD SHOULD HAVE READ

ORIGI·NAL FAB DETERGENT
420t
. BOXES

s

WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INC
ENIENCE
TillS ERROR MAY HAVE CAUSED!

TJtbl1 Jlllt A Partial Lbtinl Of Saa.l....,l

LA

-People in the news-

Lenten breakfast held

-.

Seminars slated

markets.''

'

If getting up earlier to nx a good
breakfast isn't your idea of fun why
not try the foUowing: .
START THE DAY OFF RIGHT
. Prepare it ahead of time: Check
recipes in cookbooks for some deliMorning is lhe prime time to cious ideas. For instance bake
refuel your body's energy supply in ahead and freeze some low-fat
preparation for a new day. Having apple or oatmeal muffins. Warm
some breakfast nourishment is one up in the microwave and enjoy
energizing and with a liule creativi- it with a refreshing glass of skim
ty can be an exciting way to start mille.
your dAy.
Keep it simple. Try ready-to-eat
Breakfast literally means to cereal with, strawberries and milk,
break the night's fast Even as we peanut butler with sliced banana on ·
sleep, our bodies continue 10 use graham crackers or plain low-fat
nulrients and burn calories. Eating yogurt sprinkled with cinnamon,
breakfast helps our bodies to get along with juice and a slice of
the nulrients needed for the day.
toast.
Because your blood sugar level
If you are me adventurous
drops during the night, eating experiment with new food combibreakfast can raise it back to nor- nations. For instance, blend partmal helping to gives energy for the skim ricotta cheese with honey and
day ahead. Also, some research has raisins and spread it on rice cakes.
shown that breakfast eaters think Or try French toast topped with
and learn be Iter. are more produc- unsweetened applesauce and cinnative, and tire less easily than people mon.
who usually skip breakfast.
If you aren':hungry early in the
What is a good breakfast? It mommg eat something light such
should include a variety of nutri- as raisin toast and milk or cottage
JUNIOR HIGH ROYALTY ·Amy Jones aad Tony Harris were
ents and nutritious foods that you cheese and pineapple. Another
enjoy eating. Choosin~ a variety option is to brown bag your breakselected Valeatine Priacess and Prince ror the seveatb grade and
Heather Knlgbt and Brent Hanson were selected Queen and King
helps you obtain essential nulrients fast if you work outside. the horne
that may be harder to get if break· and eat it later at work. Bring along
for the eigbtb grade at Meigs Junior High School during a Valen·
fast is skipped. A good breakfast a biscuil, sliced fresh fruit or 1{2
tine celebration attbat scbool.
,.
should contain variety and prefer- bagel with peanut buller. You may.
ably some carbohydrates to fuel be less tempted then to indulge in
your body early in the day. Also, it the sugary danish or doughnuts.thai
should be satisfying so that you're your coworkers are eating! ·
less likely to overeat at the next
As you are planning menus for
NEW YORK (AP) -The Boss doesn't play on the "Beller Days" meal.
your
family, don't forget breakfast!
is back.
single, with Springsteen handling
Bruce Springsteen released his the keyboard chores on that Song.
first new music in 4 f/2 years
Wednesday, a pair of singles from
NEW YORK (AP) -A fleeting
a pair of new albums: the title uack encounter with a good-hearted New
Trinity Church of Pomeroy held floor of Trinity Church was covof the "Human Touch" album, and Yorker has made Broadway star its annual Ash Wednesday Break- ered by flooding water of the Ohio
"Better Days" from the "Lucky Spiro Malas "The Most Happy fast yesterday (Wednesday) in the River.
This year's service feaiUred
Town" album.
Fella."
church social hall.
words
of welcome by JoAnn WildThe albums are due in stores
This was the 30th year for the
Matas, appearing in the musical breakfast
man
and
special music by the TrinMaroh31.
which was attended by
revival of that name, writes of his approximately
ity
Women's
Chorus comprised of
130 people. Twentyexperience in the "Mctropolilan three churches were
Mary
Skinner, Irene
Lois
Burt,
represented.
Springsteen, 42, has gone Diary" section of Wednesday's
The first breakfast was held 30 Bailey, Mary V. Kautz, Alice
through a lot of changes since he New York Times.
years
on March 7, 1962 with Globokar, Diane Hawley, Dottie
released "Tunnel of Love" in
"Standing on the subway going Carrieago
Kennedy,
then spiritual life Musser, Linda Mayer, Carolyn
1987. He's been divorced, remar· to work, I glanced over the shoulchairman
of
the
Women's Guild, Thomas and Pat Holter.
ried, become a father, and moved der of a very nicely dressed young
Scripture was taken from the
planning the service. That breakfast
from New Jersey to California.
man and couldn't help but notice was attended by members of three Book of Micah 6:6-8 followed by a
His biggest change musically that .he was reading the one lessspirilually moving meditation by
came when he split with the E than-favorable review our show churches.
The service has been consecu- Mrs. Wildman.
Streel Band, the seven-piece group had received," Malas wrote.
A hymn, "Open My Eyes," and
tive for 30 years with the exception
which spent most of the past two
" ... For some reason, he looked of lhe 1979 service when it was unison benediction closed the serdecades louring with The Boss. up, saw me and did a bit of a douvice.
Their departure explains why the ble-take. He must have recognized postponed a week as the lower
music on the new songs sounds lilte me because he looked down at the
nothing Springsteen has done magazine, politely closed it and put
before: And he's rediscovered his it in his case.
electric g\litar.
•~ He did it in a manner as if to
The only E Street Band sur- protect me. I was very touched,''
vivors are his wife, Patti Scialfa, wrote Malas. "Now tell me that
and pianist Roy Bittan. Even Bittan New Yorkers don't have hearts.' ;

The sludy, conducted at the
Kaiser Permanente Medical Care
Program in Oakland, Calif., was
published in Thursday's issue of
the New England Journal of
Medicine. Another study in the
journal, exploring the use of the
. test after polyps have been
removed, was conducted by Dr.
Wendy S. Atkin and others from
the Imperial Cancer Research Fund
in London.
. In an editorial, Dr. Bernard
Levin of M.D. Anderson 'Cancer
Center in Houston said Selby's
findings ''provide the strongest
evidence to date of the value of
screening sigmoidoscopy."
The study was based on 261
members of the Kaiser program
who died of rectal or colO!) cancer.
They were compared to 868 others
of the same age and sex.
They found that only 9 percenl
of the cancer victims had undergone routine sigmoidoscopy
scrcenin~ before their deaths, compared w1th 24 percent of. the comparison group.
The scope goes far enough into
the colon to spot about half of all
colon and reclal cancer. Routine
use of the scope reduces mortality
by about 60 percent from cancers
occurring in the part of the colon
and rectum reached by the scope.
This amounts to a 30 percent overall reduction in colon and reclal
cancer.
"What's 'very encouraging is
that this suggests you can screen
for rectal and colon cancer at very
large intervals, perhaps every five
to 10 years, which has implications
in temis of patient compliance and
costs,'' commented Dr. Roger Oraham of New England Medical Ceoter.
Among organizations that recom mend regular sigmoidoscopy
are the National Cancer Institute,
the cancer society and the American College of Physicians. In general, they urge lesting every three
to five years.
However, the U.S. Preventive
Services Task Force recently said
not enough evidence existed to
urge regular scree!liog.

Mrs. Vermon1 Marlcins celebrated her birthday Sunday at the home
of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John
A, Dean, Wolfe Pen Road.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reid, Pataskala; Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Smalley, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobie Smalley and Jessica, Wierton, W.Va.; Mrs. Judy Jones and
daughters, Angela and Karen of

MASON FURNITURE CO.
2ND STREET

'

~..

773-5592

•

MASON, WV

The Meigs County Women's
FeUowship recently held iiS monthly meeting at the Dexter Church of
Christ with 33 present. '
Devotions were read b~ IWU18
Stump on Christian livmg with
scripture from II Corinthians, Gala·
tions and Colossians. ·
:the opening song was "Jesus is
Coming Again." Elenor Hoover
had lite opening prayer.
•·
Kathryn Johnson presided at tbC
btuiness. meeting with officers
repons 11ven and new prosrams
preaealcd for the C(lllling yw.
Angle Brictl~s was elecled as
the new a-easurer.
The topic for the evenins program was "gpnealogy" with Vada
Hazelton speaking, Ann, Lambert
hid a readlas on1senealoiY and
poYided the closins prayer.
.
The next fellowship meeting
will be at tho Poineroy Church of
Ovist.1aaet Bolin will be the guest
apcater on AmoriFlora '92.
Re&amp;e,hmenll were served.

Thursday, March 5, 1992
Page-7

Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extension Agent

'

By DANIEL Q, HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Doctors
could lower the death rate from
colon and rectal cancer by 30 percent if they checked all older
Americans once every 10 years
with widely available viewing
scopes, a stu'dy concludes.
Many health organizations
already recommend routine use of
this exam, known as sigmoidoscopy. However, some experts
disagree, and the new research is
the first carefully conducted study
to show that it actually saves lives.
"We now have clear-cut evidence of a very substantial reduction in mortality risk associated
with screening," said Dr. Joe V.
Selby, who directed the study.
Using the sco~e. doctors and
nurses can see ommous growths in
the colon and rectum before they
become cancerous. Removal of
these growths, called polyps, climinales the cancer risk.
The exam costs about $100 to
$200 and is now performed on
about I in 5 older Americans.
"There has been a huge debate
over whether sigmoidoscopy ought
to be routinely done," said· Dr.
Daniel Nixon of the American
Cancer Society. "This seems to be
good evidence that indeed it should
be."
Doctors say lhe biggest drawback to the exam - and the reason
many people avoid it- is its discomfon. The slender viewing tube,
inserted through the anus, can produce a feeling similar to severe
abdominal cramps as it navigates
turns in the bowel.
The risk of colon cancer starts to
climb around age 55. The study
suggests that typically the polyps
take 1.0 years to become cancerous.
Selby recommended that everyone gel this test around age 50 and
have it repeated once a decade.
' 'If we screen al age 50, we will
catch all these cancers in a premalignant stage,'' he said.
The American Cancer Society
estimates lhat 58,300 Americans
will die from cancer of the colon
and rectum this year,

The Daily Sentinel
Contemporary living

Markins birthday celebration held

Jun CHKOSK. a software ulllny that
cornea: w!1h your COrrputer. II the
dllk II ckMin. CHKDSX. wiU51\cw
*'655360 tacal byt11 memory: lf lh•
CHI&lt;OSK 1howa '153312tota! bytea
mtmory,• tiM virus may be present.

into the memll drlveartlnleded

.•

By The Bend

Meigs County land transfers
. Compiled b)':
Emmogene Holstem Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Obio
Roger Reed and Christine Reed,
right of way, 10 Buckeye Rural
Eleclric Corp., Inc., Bedford.
Alex Eugene Birchfield and
Janey A. Birchfield, right of way,
to Buckeye Rural Electric Corp.,
Inc., Rutland.
Gregory Walburn and Jacqueline Walburn, right of way , to
Buckeye Rural Eleclric Corp. Inc.,
Rutland.
Merlin Tracy and Mabel Tracy.
.22 A., to Merlin Harold Tracy, Jr.
and Stella Louis Stone, Salisbury.
Carl Planer, Jr. and Kay Platter,
lot, to Dorothy McCloud, Middlepun Village.
Home National Banlc, .20A, 10
Samuel E. Curtis and Mary E. Cur·
tis, Sutton.
Consolidated Rail Corp., Master
ease., to Ohio PowerCo.,Meigs.
Edward E. Sigler, sewer ease.,
to ViUage of Rutland, Rutland.
Joseph C. Bowland and Pauline
N. Bowland, parcels, to Charles
Cundiff and Paulette Cundiff, Middleport Vill;lge.
Alan L. Pugh and Jill Pugh, .
pareels, to Cecil I. Walker Machinery Co.• Suuon.
John R. Hunnell and Violet F.
Hunnell; 4/10 A., to Mary J. Mur-

ray, Letart.
Burl J. Walker, Sr. and Karen
Lee Walker, 1/2 inl. Parcel, to
Helen F. Han, Bedford.
David L. Huddleston and Marv
Ann Huddleston, Lot 7, to ThomaS
F. Cummins and Sandra E. Cummins, Racine.

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Deborah McDaniel nka, Deborah D. Clay and Mark A. Clay, lot
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Geneal Dunkin, parcel, to
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Bertha Conde, dec' d, cen. of
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�ll!uraclay, March 5, 1992

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) was expressionfess as the lengthy
To some women, Cecil Jacobson verdict was announced, but fater
remains a godsend, a "wonderful" told reporterS "I spent my life tryand dedicated medical pioneer who ing to help women have children.
helped them bear children when all It's a shock to be found guilty of
other hope seemed lost. Others say trying to help people."
the physician's conviction on 52
"I have no scheme.. ,. I did not
counts of fraud and perjury was break any Jaw," Jacobson said. His
exacUy what_he d~erved.
sentencing was scheduled for May
After dehberatmg four days, a 8.
federal jury on Wednesday fouitd
''He got what he deserved,''
the former infertility specialist said Christine Maimone, who restiguilty of every charge m the bizarre fied against him.
case, including the fraudulent use
But Elizabeth Trotter, who testi·
of his own sperm to inseminate . fied for the defense and had a
patients and lying to other women daughter under Jacobson's care,
about whether they were pregnant.
said, ''It's almost inconceivable
Jacobson, 55, could face a that that would happen to this man. .
. prison sentence of up to 280 years He is just such a wonderful perand a fine of up to $5.00,000. He son."

port Youth League will hold signup for the 1992 ball season on Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the
Middleport Council Building. Cost
is $10 pez child, not to exceed $25
per family. Any child not playing
last season will need a copy of their
birth cenificate Membership cards
will also be available at this time
for a cost of $1.

THURSDAY
. SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
Y.outh League organizational meeti~g will be held Thursday at 6:30
Jt.m. at the elementary school in
Syracuse. Call 992-5483 for further
information.

RACINE • The Racine Youth
League will hold its sign-up for
baseball and softball on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to noon. If this is the
fust sign-up for a participant a birth
certificate copy must be furnished.
The cost is $10 for girls softball
and $15 for all others.

REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Thursqay at 7:30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire House.
RACINE - The American
Legion Racine Post No. 602 will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
post home.

Jacobson is credited with inuo-•
ducing l!mniocentesis in the United
States to diagnose defects in
unborn babies.
But prosecutors say he may
have fathered as many as 75 chi!dren by using his own sperm to
artificially inseminate patients,
many times after claiming donors
had been matched to their busbands' physical and even religious
characteristics.
Witnesses also accused him of
using hormone injections to tonvince them they were pregnantand hence his care successfulwhen that was not the case. Jacobson admiued he erred in some
cases, but he insisted other women
were indeed pregnant and later

POMEROY • The Trinity
Church Youth Groups will meet
ThurSday at 5 p.m. at the church.
All children are urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT • A spaghetti
dinner will be held Saturday from
noon to 6 p.m. at the First Baptist
Church in Middleport sponsored by
the Cornerstone Sunday School
Class. Eat-in or carry-out is available and deli vcries can be made in
the Middleport and Pomeroy area.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Top·
pers Plains VFW Auxiliary will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

POMEROY - "Elsa The
Lioness" and "Kid From Borneo"
will be presented at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m.
and at the Middleport Library on
Monday at4:30 p.m. All children
are invited.

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Christian Boosters Club meeting, 7
p.m. at the schooL All parents and
boosters invited to attend.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Chicken noodle dinner sponsored by the Evangeline Chapter No. 172 OES will
be held Friday from II a.m. to 7
p.m. in the basement of the Middleport Masonic Temple. Eat-in or
carry-out Cost is $3.50.

CHESTER- District 13, Daughters of America, will meet Saturday
at 1 p.m. at the Chester Lodge Hall.
All members are urged to attend.
Plans will be discussed by Betty
Biggs, District 13 Deputy, for
spring rally at New Lexington on
May 30.

LONG BOTTOM • There will
be preaching and singing at the
Faith Full Gospel Church on Friday
at 7 p.m. featuring David Dailey
~nd the Dailey Family plus other
local talem. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public. Fellowship will
follow.

ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
Springs United Methodist Women
will have a bake sale on Saturday
at noon in the basement of the
church.

: ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
i;riday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange HalL Harrisonville
Grange wiU serve refreshments.

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange and Slar Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall on County Road I near
Salem Center. The fourth degree
obligation wiD be performed on all
candidates. Potluck refreshments
will follow the meeting. All members are urged to attend.
.,

.: MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Community Association will
!Jleel Friday at noon at the Middleport Village Council chambers.
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a round and square dance at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Hall on Frillay from 8-ll :30 p.m. sponsored
by VFW Post No. 9053 and Ladies
"uxi!iary. Music will be provided
bY CJ. and Country Gentlemen.

RUTLAND - There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from Sp.m. to midnight with
music by CJ. and the Country
Gentlemen. Rar Fitch will be the
caller. The public is invited.

SATURDAY
. MIDDLEPORT • The Middle-

Meigs County Plat Books available
ject is deposited in interest bearing
accounts. The interest is used to
help 4-H members attend various
activities. The principal remains
invested, so that scholarships will
be available today and in the future
for deserving Meigs County
youths.
To purchase a copy of the plat
book, stop by the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service
located in the basement of the
County Home on Mulberry
Heights. Office hours are 8:30a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

: The Meigs County Plat Book
has been rccenUy published and is
now available.
The book includes information
on each township in Meigs County,
lists road, property owners of five
4cres or more, and is a source of
information for perspective home
liuyer.;, investors or the curious.
· The plat books are a joint effort
of local businesses and the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service.
&lt;::ost of the book is $10 and all proceeds wiD benefit the 4-H Scholarship Fund.
·
: Money raised through this pro-

Days

Lena Yoacham, a fourth grade
student at Racine Elementary, has
been selected as the first place winner of the Dental Poster Contest
sponsored by the Meigs County
Health Departmen~ the Ohio Dental Hygienists' Association and the
Ohio Department of Health,
Bureau of Dental Health.
Other winners - all fourth
graders - are Kimberly Conde, second place, Salisbury Elementary;
Autumn Thomas, third place, Syracuse Elementary; and Autumn HiU,
fourth place, Letart Elementary.
Tbe ftrst place winner received a
certificate and $15 donated by
Meigs County Treasurer Howard
Frank. The second place winner
was presented $10 donated by
Meigs County Auditor Bill Wickline. The third place winner
received $5 donated by Dr. Margie
Lawson, D.D.S., Meigs County
Health Commissioner, and the
fourth place winner was also presented $5 donated by Jon Jacobs,
Deputy Health Commissioner. In
addition all four winners received a
recognition plaque.
The theme for the conres~ held
in observance of National Children's Dental Health Month, was
"Secrets of a Supez Smile!" Its purpose has been designated to promote oral health and prevent dental
disease through the use of positive
oral health practices. Srudents and
reachers have been encouraged to
explore current and accurate information about a total preventive oral
health program which includes fluorides, sealants, a well-balanced
diet low in sugar, daily oral
hygiene and regular professional
care.
Posters were judged on theme
relativity, scientific accuracy. visu-

al appeal and originality.
Yoacham's poster will now be
sent to the district level and if
selected a winner will go on to the
state level where the finalists will

receive a bicycle, helmet and $50
savings bond for first prize; $75
savings bond for second; $50 savings bond for third; and a $15 cash
award for fourth.

ad

COPY DEADLINE

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

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Arthur
who covered the Persian Gulf
War for NBC, and reporter Deborah Roberts will join the staff of the
network's planned news magazine.
"Dateline NBC."

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES.
•

~da ou1.1ide GaUia, Maaon or Meiga countiet mlUt be prt~paid

I :00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
IOOp.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

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run 3 day• at no ch.rge.
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Gallia County Meigo County Maoon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304 ·
446-GoiGpoGo
367-Cheoh;•e
388-Vlnton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Did.
643-Anbia Dill.
379-W.Inul

Tribune (except Cla11ified Oil play, Buaine11 Card or Legal
Notice~) will abo appear in the Point Pleuant Repter and

6 7 5-Pt. Pteu.nl
458-l..eon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Haven

992-Mlddleponl
Pomeroy
985-Cbeole•
843-Porlland
247-Lolarl FaUo
949-Raclnc
7 42-Rulland
667 -Coolv!Ue

lhe Daily Senlinel, reaehins over 18 1000 home~

IT\\\( I \I

56- Peu (or Sale

2)- Bu1ineu Opporlunily
22- Money to Loan
2~

Service~

57- MuaieallntlrUMenll
58- FruiU &amp; V~t~et.ablet ·
59- For Sale or Trade

F\B\1 :-1 1'1'111 :8. 1.1\ L:-1111 1,

Rates are for consecutiveruns, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

Classified pages cover the
foUowing telephone exchanges ...

• Receive dUeount for ada paid in adwance.

• 1 point line type only uaed
• Tribwae il not re.ponaible for error• after firal day (cheek
for error• ftrat day ad runa i.n paper). CaU before 2:00p.m.
day after puhHeation to make correction
• Ada that mtut be paid in adnnce are:
.
Card ol Thanb
Happy Ado
In Memoriam
Yud Sale.
• A clutif.ed adverti.ement placed in the GallipoU. Daily

895-Letarl
937-BuiTalo

3- Announ ~ emenu

11- Help W:nted \

4--- Giveaway
5- Happy Ado
6-- Lo..t and Found
7- Loat and Found
8- Public Sale &amp;
Auction

12- Situa\iom Wanted
13-- ln1urance
14-- 8111ine1a Trainir!i
1:&gt;-- School• &amp; hwtruc:tion
1~ Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
11- Miletllaneow
18- Wanw:l To 111

9- Wanted to Ruy

I B I \'1'1Ill I I I Ill\

Ill :-. I \ 1.:-

71- Aulo.l for Sale
72- Trut:kl for Sale
41- Howea for Rent
42- Mobile Home~ ror Rent 73- Vana &amp; 4 WD'•
~ Fan11lor Rent
74-- Molon:yckl
44- Apartment for Rent
7~ Boaa.. &amp; Moton ror Sale
45- Fumilhed Room•
76- Auto Parl.l &amp; Acce•llon,..
46- Space for Rent
17- Auto Repair
47- Wanted to Rent
78- Campin8 Equipment
48- Equipment for Rent
:- I· H\ II I :49-Forl..aue

8
51- Hou..hold Good.
52- Spo•li•B Good.
53- Anliq...ea
54- Miac. Merchandiae

55- Building Suppliea

l

•

p
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Exc&amp;Yaling
Electrie~ l &amp; Refo·~e ..uion
Gen eral Hauling

Mobile Home Repair
Uphol1tery

Business Services
IF YOU WEAR n: HEAR
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BULUnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
"ILICATION

3

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Cut 2~

39l5.,_,5

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614·992-6637

Acetssodts

BILL SLACK

BAUM
LUMBER CO.

USED RAILROAD TIES

OH.

CHEnE I

BRa, 2 baths. Mll'lr. many added fHturea.

992·2269

.

2J2CIIH/3 mo.

rtOWOPErt

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING
I Yt MI. oUt New
LIIna Rd.
Rutlaad, Olllo

742·2341

15 Sessions.... ~ 5
Plus 1FREE

Hrs. 8·1 0 Mon. thru Sat.

NEW SCA WOlFF lED 24Sl
1. . . l'rldtlcts AvalaWt
EqoiWMo r1N
M7•1iquo • in Taru&amp;~nr.
cal fill' AJ~iiiwll.

2·1w

:V14ft211 mo.

frame
NEW &amp; USID
FOR ALL MAKIS

PO~E-~~Y, OHIO

&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or

$87,500.

&gt;

69'1 :.:s

• Dual~~~

112·1142

143·318

BUY FROM THE WOBLD'S LARGEST ElECTRONiCS RETAilER

JUST DO IT. 'l

POMEROY - Hapdlcepped accessible home wilh 3 BRa;
baNment, large ldlchtn.
J34,fl00.

LETART- R.modeled 2 ototy home, 3 BRa, 2 acrM of
'llvel fllllllld,large strawbe.ny pak:h.
'

PLEASANT RIDGE- 111.! tlol)' homt :1-4 BAt, on two
lola of !Ox100 eec:h.
Alldng 121,000.
'
.

MI!)DLEPORT - Remodeled 111.! olol)' homt. Good
locadon, ftnctd yard, 3 BRa, ttorage building, closet
II*'·
SIt,SOO.
POMEROY -2 slot)' block home, 3 BRa. large fll)nt

'

'

~

FRIDAY NIGHT D.ANCE
12:00
8:00 Rutland
AMERICAN LEGION HALL
(Ma~ln's White's Hill Band).
Elvll Pmley, Jo~ Cuh,
Qeara- Jon... Mtrlt aggwd,
· Randy Travil, Wllllt Ntllon,
Loretta Lynn, S•mmle Smkh, and
· Jtll11t PIUIII ~11110).
Admllllon 13.00,
Ita 15.00
l.lrar 12,11.00
Corne On OUt and 1-t.v"Fun!

·t

porch. licmaln good conclllon.
~

•

992·5553 ·
OR TOlL FREE
1·100·841·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

:

SHOOT

TROMM
BUILDERS
-New Conatructlon
- Remodtllng
-Cabinet Work
-Commtreial·
. Realdtntiaf
FREE ES11MATES
20 Yur. Experience

614·742·2328

RACINE ,
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building

Sept. 28

12

Facloiw Choke

C::,i~i,.~:::~~~J

Homu-Pet•WI dl t. .
Motorcyc~Eic.

1(_'atliryn

Meac/Dws
"SPECIAUziNG IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Roed
Pomoroy, Ohio 457&amp;1

Welcome Slates
$20.00

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
and mACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
mAtlER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

Custom Pllndnge
614-H2·2242

.

.....e:s:_;___
________
.
_
_
_
..........
______. . ....
01111

.) '

Homes

1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS
Starting Sepl. 22

12 Gauge Fadory
Cho~e

·

985a4473
667a6179

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

, U8T YOUR HOME?

FIII8T: Call Cleland Rlltlly. W. have pror.efonel
~ 10 111nc1t lilt htlna
of Y!111r honiL
MCONDI W. wJI·..,.,...., ehow and enewer all
..-lon•-=••oiJIIIIrproptl'tJ. ·
lHIRDI Yeu elsiPIJi aal b!!Ok 11id · lei ul- hancle
...mltlna.ncl bell Of II. ..You don't lilY • 1 otnt
uidiH tMIIIOtlfiYieMidl 1-a . .,. 11 lei Give ue
I . . II yeN n..-....lllout ..-ngl
•
ttz..tl1

_..:. .....--.:...

GUN SHOOT

BISSELL &amp; BURKE ·
CONSTRUCTION

~--~-w.~t-·~· I L--~_!~~

WHAT DO YoU DO IF YOU WANT tO

..

RACINE GUN
CLUB . ·

Stt~

and••

219 N. SECONOtMIDDLEPORT-992·5627
I

S2t,fl00.

POMEROY - 1\\ 1tory home 3·4 BRa, on two tote of
&amp;Ox100 HCII.
Aaldng S14,540.

Incorract data was in the
Moose NIIWI Letter.

.SM•30

CUt '50·=

r,

C11tnaUal hell Gld •

Maay Colors

In Custom

ft~.

THE MONTHLY
MOOSE SENIORS
LUNCHEON AT
. MOOSE LODGE IS
MONDAY, MARCH 23
AT 12 NOON.

Rtii-

• Fits Under Most Dashes 12H518
MIQIIIl-MIIal Aioltnn1. Reg. 26 95.
121-940, 111111.1111

NOTICE
SENIOR CITIZENS

Save '120

~EAL1Sf1~

30·Watt
Clr Cllllttl
•18 Prllell

FOR SALE

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

NEW USTING - Foreet Run Rd. Older 1 floor frame
home 4 rooms, 2 BR1, on 2.28 acrea of land.
Aaictng $24,100.

Beepel'less
PIIDnl Answerer

Air Shoy.- MCS

I WEill DELIVERY

NEW LISTING -Beautiful log homt on 4 acrws. Includes

DUOFONE

.RUBBER •AIR SHOW MCS

SIZED LIMESTONE

Cut To length

992·2259

608 £ASU1AIN

SHRUB &amp; TREE

WAKEfiElD'S

IL 50 Wos1, A..... Olio •5!3-3115

NEW LISTING - Por11anci-Wella Run Rd. 1 lloor frame on
acreo.
$1,500. MAKE AN OFFERI

Our Best 3-Way
Spaker System

• Speed-Dialing

I(

TROY·BI£T
Ou.Sprine Sloipm.., Of .
Tror-Biii1Wen Nowla S.•ek.
~~&gt;- Lo..l t!!f:M f}foW

2.81

Feature-Packed

White, 143·$81 . Almond, 143·582

&lt;•

S1«1iog at '225 ,_614-992-5528 .

lmptrial R. Metal

AUTO
PARTS

125-5142

OPTIMUS

29~544.11

POLE BUILDING
MATERIALS

112/tfn

Low Price

Ita t11elllaek

Cut 33"'

COUNTRY MOBILE HOME

3 Nice Mollllt Haos ltr Rill
Jvd Nordt ol P-•r

TRIM and
REMOVAL

Cheshire,

Mo~hor Extra

1699.90. 125-161014044. Sale 1511.110

11114Mn

St. Rt. 7

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3/4/W1 mo.

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It 50 Will, Ailoos, Olio •l93-3115

539 Bryan Place

614-992·2549

Ow Stwlni SIU_.t Of
'Imen ~ow Ia Stotk.
foUl' l.ocol n!f-Mihol.r

~•1-Bih

WAKfflllD'I

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742·2097

Quality
Stone Co.

Call Now
Ja800.422a4983.

"

-6 p.m.

MUST PRE-REGISTER
HAS: Mon.·SIL 10 om-5 pm
Sunday 1·&amp; pm
For MoN lnlo Call

Call

$1999

1~

Low AI $40 Per Month•

Real Estate General

Local • Nationwide
Start Up To $351

WlndOWsfr MkrnoU
WOrltl tGf Wlndowll
lndudHMouH

Hard Drive

AndMOUM

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

NtCtlllilry

NEW! 25MHz
486SX PC With
120MB Power HD

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•Insulation

1:00 p;m,
MARCH 16: Sl1te Tole
Painting - 7 p.m.
Stop To See Siompl• ·
MARCH 24 - Bukll Cbooa

TROY-B&amp;T'

Help Wanted

. TUNSPORT
DRIVERS
· No Experience

Sill Price Ends

RENEWAL

NO SUNDAY CALLS
2114!92/1 mo.

3-5-'12-1 mo. pd.

LO'I'I As $15 Per Month *

• Hear Police, Rail, More
• 10-Channel Memory ' 20-:lm

15 Sesll••·----'25.00
12 Sosll•s.---·'20.00
6 Sosll•s..----'12.00
1Sotllotl..----'150
FREE SISilOM WITH IVIIY
Sovwal kids of lttloas
SCA WOLFE liDS
211711 mo.

INSULATION

MARCH 14: Fr• Demo
Jacket Swulahlrl Cllu-

CALL 742a2778

614·742·3090 or
304-773·9545 '

J&amp;L

CUFTS

NewUma Road
In Rttland

New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Garages, Porches
JRII ESTIMATES

AlSO COMPLETE AUTO
REPAIR SEIVICI.d 24
HOUR TOWING.

WltU-6120

SUN'S UP
TANNING

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

A&amp;E AUTO

lr, PLAY ITt uSE IT or
NEE•IY

• Includes Case and Accessories .,, .ao,

Officers were elected at the
recent special meeting of the Fraternal Order of Police, Gallia·
Meigs Lodge No. 95, held at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building.
Officers are James Stacy, president; Russ Fisher, vice-president;
· and Ellen Rought, secretary·trea·
surer. Ray Manley was appointed
activity chainnanc
Members are reminded 1992
dues should be paid to Ellen
Rought, 158, Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy.
The next ·meeting will be held
Mareh 18 at the Pomeroy Munici·
pal. Building. Any new member
interested in joining the lodge
should contact James Stacy at the
Pomeroy Police DeparunenL

'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedn"'lday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
SL iay Paper

Call992-2156

Ken~

Officers elected

•UCS KEYSTONE
•WOMEN'S
KEYSTONE

.,~ .....,~an

Kent joins NBC

Lena Yoacham wins poster contest

MET Al•AIR SHOW HIGH

I

Front, l·r, are Lena Yoacham, first place, Racine Elementary;
Kimberly Conde, second, Salisbury Elementary; Autumn Thomas,
third, Syratuse Elementary; and Autumn HUI, fourth, Letart Elementary. Back; 1-r, are Carol Guinther, administrative assistant at
the health department, and Jon Jacobs, Deputy Health Commissioner.

POSTER WINNERS • Pictured are the county winners of the
dental poster contest at the Meigs County Health Department held
in observance or National Children's Dental Health Month. The
contest was sponsored by the Ohio Dental Hygienists' Association
and the Ohio Department of Health, Bureau of Dentat Health.

NOW IN STO(K.

and Track Shoel .

JONATHA~ NEWELL

RATES

BASEBALL CLEATS

ALSO: Running Shoes

Jonathan Zaekaria Newell, son
of Pamela and Jeffrey Newell,
Syracuse, observed his second
birthday on Feb. 16.
.
A "Teenage Mutant Ninja Tur· .
tle" theme was carried out
Family members auending
included grandparents John and
Mary Newell, Long Bottom, and
Wayne and Norma Wright of Belpre; great grandparents Hobart and
lnzy Newell of Chester and Millie
and Bob Wright of Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Others auending were Misty
Newell, Mike Newell, Wendy
Wright, Sheila, Billie Jo and
Eugene Long, Elmer, Darlene and
Jeannie Newell, Barbara Wilcox,
Mark Gaddis. Bob and Judy Gibbs,
and Carol, Megan and Joel Clelland.

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

RACINE - The Southern Local
alumni basketball game will be
held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
high school. Three elementary
games will be held before beginning at 5:30 p.m.: Letart agamst
Ponland; Racine fifth against Syracuse fifth; and Racine sixth against
Syracuse sixth.

MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
Junior High Academic Boosters
wiU meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
school cafeteria. Parents and reachers are urged to attend

Birthday observed

miscarried.
Defense attorney James Tate
indicated an aroeal was lilccly.
Deborah Giegory, who sobbed
while testifying that Jacobson
tricked her into believing she was
pregnant three times, s&gt;tid after the
venl-ict: "He emotionally devastat·
ed myself and my husband and
many other ~le, and he deserves
to be punished. '
Former patient Jean Blair, who
said Jacobson led her through false
pregnapcies six times, waited severa! days at the courthouse for the
· verdict and cried after it was
announced.
"I had no idea they would find
him guilty on all counts," Mrs.
Blair said.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary
will have a soup supper with vegetable and chili, hot dogs and
desserts, on Saturday at4 p.m. followed by Euchre Tournament at 7
p.m. Pub~c invited.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
High Alumni Association will meet
Thursday at Pomeroy Village Hall
at 7 p.m. for a planning session. All
graduates of PHS are invited to
anend.

The Dally 8entlnei-Page-8

Jury finds infertility doctor guilty of fraud

Ohio

Community Calendar items
appear two days before aD event
and tbe day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in tbe cal·
endar.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-----------liSt

Ho•••
•
Yl•yl Slcll•1
New Gan•• • ltplace•••t Wi•clows
N•w

Air Conditionera
&amp; HeatPmnpe
•1 00% 2 yHr partallabor warranty
•1 oyr. hell pu~ COII1)I'Hitr. warr.nty
.,.... atimit• .

... .

Home Hea1Cina

"'""•

Roo• lclclhlols • Roofl11 .
teMMERa.u. •• IU!SmEN'D.u
~U'IDL\QS

614·949•2101

or 949·2160

Cit IUJIJ Clllsl

�Plge

1~The

'
Sentinel

Ohio

by Bruce Beattl~

Annou nee men! s

31

Homes for Sate

44

Apartment
lor Rant

1992

Mar ch

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Thursday, March 5,1992

BORN LOSER

low to form four slmp·le .words.

--

I:GO (2) G . (I) (I) G !Ill 0 G
11J Nawa
®VIdeo Power
~ Square One TV Stereo.

IIIIo ployor w/5 bond graphic
equ1llzer, maroon, heavy duty
opringo, COfliO light, $10.000.

~--1-r-j L;_,:;r~K~---~1 1
·I
-,:.U....;L:.-:::-S-;O:......;,Yr-lr· J
;,;-:AI

~e~~I;I

304-67~660.

4 WD, 11163 Full Slzo Fonl

I REMEMBER NOW!W~EN

T~EN

WE LOS T QUI{ LAST
GAME, l SLAMMED M~
GLOVE ON T~E 61{0UND!

I KICKED

AND T~ERE IT IS, RIGI-lT
W~ERE I LEFT IT 1

IT ACROSS Tf.!E
FIELD!

~
.lt..v

r

"I'm allowed IO eat danish
on my second diet," an ·
.
.
nounced lhe overweight
.--- - - -- ---. woman . "b e cause my first diet
GR 0 R E F
doesn 'l give me
to eat! "

Dlnalde Itt Senior PClA
Tour
1111 Wootd Today
10 Rln TJI1 Tin, K·t Cop
Stereo. Ljl

RATS ! I
COULDN'T CRAWL
FAST ENOU6~ ..

I

• 1 1
•I •I •
.

_
0

I

l--r~-r~-,;~51"""r.l6r-rl-i

8:05 (I) lleVelly Hlllbllllel

8:30WG 11J NBC Nan~
(I) Slvecl bY the llell
(I) (I) G ABC t!twa
(!) Wlkl Amarlcll

.....

Willi

Roarrongo ieft•ro of tho
0 four
ocramblod . wordo bo·

I

THU.. MARCH 5

----=EV~E::.;N::.;,;INO:.;;, -

1g110 GMC Slorro SLE long bod,
350, Fl, AC, AT, PS, ~a. sliding
rear window, tinted __ _gJaas,
crul .., tilt whHI, AM~- cu·

$2,1100. &amp;14-258o625f.
For Sale or Trldo: 19'13 GMC
lruclt. Runo good. 614-441-01171.
Solo: 1A7 Nl010n Plck·Up, 4x4,
9EV6 AC, $6,400. 614-446-8138.

'=~:;~' S@~c{llA-J£~t{fs·
----~..;; 1411d ..,. ClAY l . POUAN

Television
Viewing
•

Bronco, 4 Spttd, $2,100i 1987 D50 Plek~p Dodao, 2 wtl,

The Dally Sentln~!-Page 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

•

•

•

.

Q

Comple1e lhe chuckle quoted

you

develop from step No. 3 below.

•

'---'-......J'---'--'---'-......J

t:l

A PRINT

\II Square One TVStereo.
I liZ. CBS Newl I;l

mu•

by fi lling in the missing words

NUM~EREO LETTERS IN

I

THESE SQUARES

Ql'

.0 • Andy Qrilftth
iiJ Scooby Doo
@UpCioH

JA:l)J'f YOO Wl!lH '!'DO
~A PillA DWVtll'(
/ltAJ:l?

FOUND: In Rio Grand• 1m1H $250447S por wookl 33 million
champagne colored female dog.
No collar. To claim call 814--441- Amtrlune (up 22% ov• ltlt

3217.
Found: malt, ytllow tomcat by
Pomeroy Cliff apts., very

friendly, no 1alt, 614·g92·3863
anytime
d~,
~fondly,

LOST larga malt blk &amp; 1an

tomlfy

pot,_

answtra

vory

'' uoblt",

REWARD,

304-67~734 .

yoor) wonc lull or pori Umo ol
homo umlng oxcoll/enl poy.
Munclloclo ot componloo nHd
ho-kort Now! Coli for
.roeordld m-g•. 804·761-8173.
1350/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1-600-2155-0242.

lilt

Yard Sate

'ALL Yard Salot Mull Bo Pold In
'Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
'tho doy bolort tho od to to Nn.
SUndoy odHion • 2:00 p.m.
Fridoy. Mondoy ldlllon • 2:00

lnalda Edtuon Q.
MacNall~rer
NawaHour
Cll • Cand Camera

(I)
(!)

p.m. Saturdly.

able.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
C1ntenary Townhoutt, Satur-

iloy Only, ClothH, Antiquo
Chair, T.V., Tupperware, Guitar,
Home Interior, 9-5.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Yard,

Blkt, Cr11ft Salt. Mt.

BSW

preterrtcf.

35
W111'1 Gun1 1158 112 Stall

Rou1o 7, Nonh, Chuhlro, Ohio.
Ordoll Only. 114-387-0438.

14

Business
Training

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lolt tor

tale~lllrt

49

For Lease

S.cond Floor Apartment For
Loaso : L.R., Ono B.R., Bath,
Kltch•n WI Stove &amp; Refrlg.
Water Furnllhtd. No Patt. Cor·
nor Soeond &amp; Pin~ Golllpoll1.
IVIilablt, 304-675-2722.
$230. Por Month; uopooll Roqulrocl. CoU 614-446-424g, 614loti In New H1v1n • 100% 446·2325, Or 814-448-4425.
owntr fln~nclna at $101.46 per

lib/e. 304-675-•r.u.
L.oll In Galllpollo Forrt • 100%
own1r tlntnclng 11 $08.&amp;4 per
month, any one of four lots

month buy1 1lllhree lo4t, a 304·

6711-2722.
lolelolnlng Point • 100'4 owrwr
llnlnclng at $101.46 per month
buys en lhrH Iota. 304-67527.22.
Nice 2, 3, 5 Acre P1rc11, Rt.35 W.
Aodnty, (Unrntrtcted) L..nd

51

Household

Contract, 614·245-1448 o\ppt. To
Goods
Sao.
Q piece Duncan Phyf1 DR tuhe,
Ovlf 112 Acrt, 3 112 Mil•• From !5 llfl: oak DR table, 3 piiCI
Town. Sot Up For Mobile Homo. 1930 • LR 1ul1e, c111 Joan Wolte,
CINnlng
Explritnctd houM &amp; office Roclucocl: $2,000. 814-441-6842.
dar-&amp;14·gl2·2133 or nlghl-614·
HouHklepel"', earn to 1550wk., c"anl_na. hive refnncn, 304·
Tnlllw lot tor rent. W1ter, aewer 94g·2153
oil .,.., port- limo ond lui~ 773-113211.
and 11nllollon Included. 8110 Big SOYingo On All Carpot In
limo, 1-600.221-8207
G - Ponoblo Sawmill, don't month. 304-675-1806 or 175-5037. Sloek. Cooh And Corry, Mol·
Fri, Sol, Sun, 331t8 How limo CONSTRUCTION All TRADES haul yoll' logo to tha mill luol
lohen Carpet•, 614-446-)l44.
All SKILLS
Ad, Auttlnd OH, toolt, fumlh~ra,
coii30U7S·1157.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
clot•, appllanc:Mc, air cond, Motor lnlornallonol Pfotoclo1
Rentals
Mull Rolocato. Houolng Ana Mloo Poula'o Doy Coro Conlor.
W11Mn, dryer•, retrlpr1tor.,
tttct.,%&amp;more.
rangn. S~ogga Apptlaneoo,
Tra'llllng Expo- Paid. Excol- Sail, affordoblt, chlldeo11. M·F
lnlkle, Wid. &amp; Thur1., 1 112ml., /enl 8allrfoo And SonofHo. Coil 8 o.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2l'P10.
Upper River Rd. Bnldo Slono
Hyooll Run oH SR124, Ru11ond, Wnkdoyo I A.M. To 7 P.M. Sun· hlofw, after echoot Drop-lnt 41 Houses for Rent
Croot Motet. Coli 614-448-7396,
efloop prteu, 8-4pm, 614-W.Z· doy Noon To 5 P.M. VICA CORP. wllcorne. ISU Ul 8224. New Ina
1-800-4119-3491.
font Toddler C!IN, 114-448-6227. 2 Mlfoo South, Rou1o 7, 3 Or 4
5215
30!-13WO'ro.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
BICiroomt, 1 Acre, Oackh Now
Drummer to form or Join group Porlonlhlfl donee lnolrucllon Apf.lloneu
CIIY Se oolo, Comptete home furnis hings.
doing cwntry rock, John Peck, -llzlng In .,. on ono In· Ro wonco, bopooH, $490/Monlh. Hour~ : Mon-Set, 9·5. 614-446lt.
Public Sale
0322, 3 mllat out Bullvlllt Ad.
814-198-2083, ncelll,. aqulp- .truaUon, ballroom, country 614-441-4gQO,
wootorn, latin, contomporory,
FrH O.llvary.
&amp; Auction
mtnt.
tr. otyle. Coli oftor 7:00 PM 2-bdrm houn tor rent, 814-992·
626!
Matching Couch, l.ovesaat,
fUek P.. rson Auetlon Compiny, Eaay WOffd Eocollonl Port Ao- o304-f15.3184 lor Anno or Jim.
Chlilr, $250, Good Condition,
fuM tlmt avctlonHr, complete umbl• Produ.cta At Horni. Clll
3br HoUN 112 Mile From City 614-446-6271.
'auction .. rvlca.. Llcenud Ohio, Toll Fr10, 1-600-487-S!IM, Eld.
llmHo, Gr10n School Dlolrict,
313.
Ylrglnlo, 304·173-5785.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Rot•onco And DopooH A•
Allor 5 P.M. 114-251-6$10.
qutrld. l14-441~841 aHor Sp.m.
Now!Uoocl
Consignment Auction and AN ExeHing Naw Cor10r Dppclf•
Marko!, Sol. Morch 7, 10:00 AM lunhln With lotdtng Coomolic Wanlocl: Hou-nlng, Roll· S Roome And Both, AI 44 Olivo Mouoohold fllmlohlng. 112 mi.
16.4:00 PM altho Arlxleklo Sloro Compony Eopondlng Into Tho ablt, Dopondoblo, Honott, 614- StrOll, GoUipotla. lnqulro At 916 Jtrrlcho Rd. Pt. Pl1111nt, WV,
coll304-67.6-1450.
.olj Rl. 12, 1 mile ot IMn, WV. Aroa. Coli For lnlorvlow: 814· 448-1142.
Second·Avenua, Galllpoll1.
·Aucllon 11 1:00 PM eon· 446-61g4.
Will Coro For lldoriy, Hight .Or
Alrlg•rator Froet Fr11 Surt
·llanmento llkon Frl March 6th,
Exporioneod Corpol lnllll/er, Day, In There Home. 6f4-446- Fumiihed 3 room cott1ge In Wllh leo Mokor, Eloelrlc C/olhn
-c:~ to 6:00 PM and Stl 1:00 1111
10t0,Aak For R1mon1.
town. No pelt, depoalt • rei. r•· Dryor, Color T.V., 814-2!6-1238.
·noon. FloO morkol opoea 17. or muat hl¥1 own vlhlc.. , looll,
114-448·2543.
WV
contr~ctera llctnM, Ret.
$10. wnoblt. Info call 304-458Will Do 8abyol111ng In My Momo, 1..:.-SWAIN
nHdocl.
Sand
roaumoo
lo
PO
1114. Come HI what 's hl~n­
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
tn Potriot Ar11, Ohio. 114·379- 42 Mobile Homes
Sox
801
Ravonowood,
WV
: l!lg In ARBUCKLE.
2428.
Olivo St., Gol/lpolll. How I UHd
281&amp;4, Hrloualnqulrlll only
tumhure, hutera, W1111m &amp;
lor
Rent
~· gordono In Maoon
Work boola. 814-441-31!g.
wanted to Buy
MVACIR Sarvlco Man Noldod. WIU
.,..,
m-1312.
2 bedroom mobUI homt com.
Mull Have Elptrilnce In Com·
.Aitll Chalmtr'• D-14 mowtr, 614· morclol And lluldonl/el Ropolr.
plllaly tumlohocl, Wllher &amp; Two 3 pe bedroom ou/101 t124.
304-175-669SI.
dryer, 1lr cond, no p1t1, 304· IICh.
1'12·2014
3 YHrs Exptrllnce A~quiNd To
.,.------~~- .
Apply.
Sind
Rnumo
And
Poy
'I'T.WUI.
Autom•tlc wnhers, $75 to $125i
Don1 Junk hi Soli Uo Your Honoloclrlc dfyoro, 17S to $125·
Wonclng Appllonen, Color TV'a, Roqulromonll To: Box CU. ~J
2
IR,
Mkldloport,
Ohio.
Froot Fr10 rofrigorotoro ond
Golllpotlo DollY T~buftl, l;m
VCA"I, Power Tools, Etc. 614- CIO
Rotoronoo I dopoaH roqut rod. aldololdo, 1'15 to $150; oloelrlc
Business
Third Avonuo, Clallfpotlo, OH 21
. ae-1238.
304-182-3217.
45631.
fi~H , $75 lo $150i gu renge~,
Opportunity
2-bdnn mobllo homa In llkf. 175 to 1150; dlohwaohor1, 115;
Wlnlod To Lotoo Toboceo lmmocllolo oponlnga ovolllblo
t'
alnk countor top
dllpoit, I14-IH-S118
INO'TICEI
- ·· Coli Anyllmo 614-388- lor lull~l. . 11·7 AN Shift Su,::.:::;:..::,.:.:.:,=.:.::::;:,.,-,-1
whh coblnlla,• 1300. Dolbon
llll.
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISHING
CO.
porv,_, CompoiHivo wogoo,
211r Untumllhod Mobile Homo, · Swlohor'o Uood Applllneoo,
Wlnlod To Buy: Junk Auloo dlfforontlol wRh oxporloneo, rocom- th.ll you do buai- Holitt Hoopllol, No Poll,
of Rond ond Pon:h St.,
RHI
with
pooplo
rou
know
and
.With Or Wllhoul llaloro. Coli lloxlblo achldullng avail-.
I2CIO/w10.
$100
Dopoal1.
. 114-448·7473.
HOT
to
oond
monoy
ttwough
tho
Comocllho
Dlroclor
of
NuiO!ng,
Lorry uvo~r. 114-3811303.
Plntcr10l Cort Conlw 171) moll unlit you hovo ln-Tgolod Rotwonco. 814-441-3117.
Tap Prlcoo Pokl: All Old U.S. Plnocr101 0r1.., aotltpotto, tho oft•tng. ..
211r, Alnl, • Mil" Out Rl.211, 53
Antiques
~ Oold Ring~ Sllv• Colno, Ohio. 814-441-7112. EquolopporS20Citlo.
Do-'1
Ana
1,100
Sq
Fl.
Com
.
.
re~l
9poco
111foronco Roqulrod. ll4·258- Buy or 1111, Rlvorlno Anllquoo,
Qald Colno. II.T.ll. Coin Shop, IUIIfly employ•.
Slrlp Mitt, HI Tr11flc Aru. For
,.. Socond A-uo. Gohlpollo.
12!1.
~:...~-M~w. 1~1:':'i.!~t':l~
Mort 1-mollon: S14-ol*f157.
LlborWor~
to 1451 wttly., PT· FT, will train , Rlllouranl Equl]lmlnl, Toblo Furnlohld 2
mobile p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 8:00 p.m.
oloco wort now IYolllblo, 1.80C). And CholrtJ..I~ lloehlno, I Ft. home, $210. per month, water, 114-V!12·2621.
343-'N41
Fumhll'o
I lrooh tnoludad, 304- WhHo'o Anllauo
Walk 1n . . - , au artn, Ropolro And Aoflnllhii!G. (25
Load guitar ployor tor oo- Rotrlgoi=O:lle:J!i Tobit~- Pluo I'IWI12.
Yooro Exporlanco) 814-245'~.
I Aft• op.m.
lobll- variOiy bond, .,.., bo limo. I
44 'Apartment
pn:-~ 3114-455-61:10.
VENDING IIOUTI: Got Rich
54 Miscellaneous
for Rent
Local -1UIIn1 Saoldng A Quick? No Wort lu1 Wo Hno A
Good,S~dv.Affo&lt;dab~uol·
Merchandise
R~blt POrion For A
RHI. Won1 Laot. 1
284· 1·bdnn opl. In lllddteport,
ullhleo rum, dfp roq, no P!Mo.
:.'iit~"ro ~r~~ R;"~; 1313.
aon. Bond LIHor Of Int-I And Vondlng.llaoolo: l.ac!ol. Wo Hovo
Wonc Exporlonco Alorig With
N - Machi-, Moklng A 1br Unfllmlohod .
SaloiJ Roqu~- To: CLA Tho
Nloo
IIHdv Cooh lncDino. ·1· Wllh lllovo And Ro.,....or, No
Box 101•-c/o Golllpotla DollY
- · ........ Wol• lnciudocl.
TrlbunoJ..!'!"8 Third Avonuo, Gol$100 DopooM. 114-44W817.
llpotlo, "" 4!831.
2 bodroom •Pl. u111111ao pold,
Real btate
CABLUDVERTISING
Hud ............. 30U7.6-2722.
Coble Ad¥1111olna Rop
:Hidrm •PI In Syroc ..o,
For Tho Cliillpotii/Pelnl
1125mo, pluo ulllhtu, top, 114Pi...,.
·
Wo'ro
Soolllng
A
Clnclldllte WhD PNJ 1111 Eft.
tn-6732
lhuotum And W11111111- To
Wort Honl. loloo lxporloftoo,
Cold CoNing lldllo. - - Clol"" .Sllflli ,..;;;;;,,. JCOm • 'an ~ /AIIo•••
tlawrla:. llncf
In c..
tldonoo To: 2110 .......

::~,~~=':'a A~~;,

s.

·9

'""'pod

-oom

1--221·

-..-....

Trl County Sports Shop, 304·
87.6-2988.
Wt Buy, Sell, Tradt, Uald Harleys, P1rt1 And Accessories
Available. 614-4711·7055.

..

0

..

•

111111 UTIIA IIIOHIY IPIIIIG? loll Avon 1om AI
lluoll AI Yau flood. 1 - . .

GfrAS.&gt;f.s.

.

TELL ME

crothlng. Frl, Sat, Sun, Noon •
1;00 PM. S.m Somarvu~· 1 , 5

._11=..,A:-ut~Q..,s:-f-,o_r.,S=a:-l.,..e~­
~
1974 Monte C~rlo, "n 305 en·

mlln E..t of 1-n, Ravenswood, glne, 4 barrel, $600. 304-875·
WV. by 9ondvvlllo Poll OHico, 4283.
other hout"'-cflyl, :J04.273-5655 :19::81::-:;C:;-ho-vy--:Co
:m-or-o-,v"'-"&amp;",-g-ood
--;
Union

m1de

advertising

55

Building

tptelthiH and matchH.
WATER
WELLS DRILLED:
WATER CIAURAHTUD. 114-686·
7311.

Supplies

tim, runt ~1. $1100obo. 19n

Camara gOod tlrn, $650, 614·
949·2585,
:::::-:::-:'-:-::--::-::-:-::--::--=1882 Colobrily, P.S., A.C., P.B.,
AMIFM, Auto, 0.0 , Ntw Tlre1,
Exeollonl Condhlon, L.ow Mlloo.
$1,750. 614-446.-350.
1183 Cullan Bupnmt, new
poln1, 304-6711-2011.

llll Wl1HI

'•

. .........

7:35(1) Slmford a Son
8:00 III D Ol Cooby Show
Pam's grades keep her from

i

ing to a school on
harmaine's list. (R) Stereo.

WA8 GORGO, KING
OF "Ill' DINOSAURS?

NBA Baokllfblll Chicago
Bulls at Minnesota
Tlmberwolves (L)
(I) (I) D Columbo ColumbO
matches wrts wilh an
arrogant TV crime-show
celebrity. (R) Stereo.

Block, brick, MWif Dlpt:l, wlndOWI, llnt111, etc. C:laudl Win· 1183 MUida OLC,.!Ii tDMCI, rune
toro, Rio Grlllde, OM Col/ 614· good, $100. 304-7T.I-aiot.
245-6121.
1114 ~ AriM, 4 door, ~aek,
s-Ial· Two cor gorogoo, AMIFM, CO-l; 4 cyl, now OX•
2412419• $3V!I6!.. 2~1127'119: hau.t, 114-H2-7238, • ..,.....
$41V!I 27ll32x9. ...VII, Prnl· 1114 Dodao Chorgor, 2.2 IH•,
alon P"'l Frome Bulldol'l, 614· good coni!., omltrii rldlo, Nno
1192-3541
good, SIBC/0 080, 814-192·71135
UIIIHy Bol/dlng, 30x40a10 10x12
olkllng door $58V!I.OO, 24x40x10 1184 Pontiac Gr1nd Prix, V-6, Air
10x10 olldlng door $41100.00, Cond., PS, AMIFM Catlttte, 2dr,
Precision Poil F111m1 Bulldert, Good Condition. $2,000, Or
D.B.O. 114-245-11011.
614-W.Z-3541.
1t84 whHa Floro luaaaao l'lek,
56 Pets lor Sale
ILitO, AC, PW, Pl. ·AV·FII cast,
CB,
$3,000. firm .
1 Fomo/e Chow Puppy, 150· 2 304-6~kf"dll
or r75-NI4.
Fomalo All Torrior Pupploo, $21
Eoeh. 614-379-2568.
1g8! Buick S1111. .110t. Rogal,
lharp, $1,150. 304-6711-2457.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming. AM broido, olyloo.
limo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
Wobb. Colt 614-4fl-0231.
AKC Baolll puppln, r10dy to
F.A. Bondum, 114-687·

J:sfOO,

AKC lwlndlo Boxor Pup, 14 wb
old, 304·182-3397.

1885 R101uh Auto, Air, New
TlrH, 18,000 Mll11, S850; 1188

T0'/101 P.U. , 46,000 Mlleo. 614448-t111.
AKC Gonnon Shophlrd pup- 188! Town Cor, Slg111luro
pin 304-115-5724.
Sorin, Good Condition, s ....
!::::::!.'=~==---­ root, lallher Interior. Qood
Fomolo Bluo HoaiOr pup, 304· TIFIO, $1,000. 614-44e-26110.
::6711-:.:. :31::11.::·:...__ _ _ _ __
1U7 Chivy QO Spoclrum, 2
Floh Tank, 2413 Joelooon Avo. honlbock, IXC cond1 _ 8
Point . PINNnl, 304-675-2083, IIOHd.~., 80,000 mlloa, $2,11110.
tun llno Troplcol floh 1 blrdl, 3114-6}1).1238.
omolf ontmalo ond ouppl•.
Arloo, auto, $2,400.
Full Bloodod Rod Chow For 1g17 Dodge
Plymouth Horiaon, 40
Sail: 3 Monlhl Old. 114-318- 1187
ml/eo gal, 1,700 tow mllaa, 304;:;603:::g;;.·- - - - - - - 8711-2440.
57
1gU Dodao Doylono 45,000
Musical •
MIIH, Ono~. 114-441.0731.
Instruments
11IIV'I Pontiac Lomono, rod, 2dr.,
Eloc1F11111o orgon: 11 fUll a1u 4op., 1mlfmlc-noj ~000111 ,
km· alond • fool podol. Cool 1-nor•• oxc cond, 5 • 114$
- . Will lake 1250: 114- 1141-2177
388
~1•
1181 8Mt11 S.E. Auto, Air,
Lowroy orgon, oxc oond ollldng -room - 1 2,000 Mllea,
$550. If lnf-locl 304-4175-32'73 $10,300 Or Toke Ov• p,,_..,_
or171-30114.
114-441-1312.
'
1112 Eacort. loodod, vory • ..,
lOw miN, 304-4711-4241.
F.lllll SupJlltc';

304-67~699.

Motor, $1,200. 614-446-88111, AI·

ter 5 P.M.

5I

BOATERS
GufiVII Mercury Morino Sorvlco.
Mercury, Mlrlntr, MlfCNtler
opoeloHII. llon:ury conlf/ed.
Mobile, WI come to You, 814259-11979.

Budget Trantmlaalonl, Used 6
rebullt, 1t1rtlng 1t $99• tront
whHI drivo ltlrllng ol St4t.OO
614-245-5877, 614-992-6293.
Four 14 lneh Chevy ·arumn elot
WhHII, $100. 304-675-7595.

79

(!) Struggle lot Pelce.

lllfMfla and P11t11t1111an1
Ordinary men and women
work in diHerent ways ,lor
peaceful reSQ!.uijon art both
sides of the
.
lsr8eii·Pel&amp;slinlan conflict.

EEKANDMEEK

Aulo. Parts &amp;
Accessories

a0 Thll'ally
Ptltt1111owa I;l
Dog Stereo.

11171 Continental '14 h, complng
tflller, 2 GWrwr, attlpt llx, bef-

tery or •c hook-up, new u,..,,

camper $8,000. linn w!84 Ford

TRICk $10,500. 304-675-11401.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Services

' ll-lE !!lACKS~ ."
THAT!; IIE(N F/..lf'.N(...
HAHA .

Home

YOU Baing StMCI?
«D D Dre•oll'a CIMI Otis

(!) Are

MOOT ANTS
ARS eA-SIL-Y

takes over the 11111nagemen1
of Melissa's band to make
&lt;!!Jick money. Stereo. C

M.l.l6EO.

Improvements

,..

Stereo.
10 You Aoked lor It, Aa-tn
Stereo.
t:OO III G IIJ CftHrw Sam sends
Carll on a revenge mission
agalnst!/.1 landlord. (R)
Stereo.
(!) (!)
steryl A girl takes
a trip and .Insists on ca.rrylng

~·, 11 1, ......,~ ,

'• ' r '~ '· '

Compltto Mobile Homo Stl~po.

Rlpllrt: Commerlcal, Anklintlal Improvement•. Including:
Plumbing, Electrical. lntur1nc1

C.lolmo Ai:coplod. 614-258-1111.
Curtl1 Homt hnprovtmenla:

Y11r1 Experience On Older &amp;
Ntwer Hom... Room Addtllon1,

Founclol/on Work, Rooll"'l
Khchono And Sotho. Froo ~
tlmoiHI Raloroncn, No Job To
Big DrSml/11614-441o022!.
RenovaHone, Add On1, Repair,
Painting, QuoiHy Wor~l Coli
R - AI: 114-44f'8518.
Ron'o TV Sorvtce, apocflllizfng
In ZonHh afoo IIIYidna moOt
olhor brenda. Houa co!Jo, ..,., opp/1._ ropolra. WV
304-671·23N Ohio 114-448.2454.
DIYII
hw-V.c
Service
Cloof!IH c'"" Rd. Parte,
plloO~ pickup, ond dotiVOfY. 114441..,2114.

~r liZts:'.t11esWa,

BARNEY
CAN YOU
PATCH THESE UP
FER ME, DOC?

LOOK AT THEM
WHOPPER
CHOPPERS It

BERNICE ·
BEDEOSOL

SHE'S TERRIBLE
SENSITIF!!

...
.._,

In the year ahead. ·send ror Pisces' Ai.tro-Gri!Ph predlcllonl loday by mailing
.1.25 p1u1 a long, self-lddresaed,
11amped envelope to Aatro-Grlf)h. c/o
this pewtpaper, P.O. Bo• 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be 11.1re1o stale
your zodt.c olgn.
Alllll IMerdl 21·Apotl 11) If Y.""'re
catted on by aiOCial antllallon you're in. volwd In 10 uaume additional dulleS,
get a JOb deKtlptlon flrlt - or elae you
could getln over your held.
·
TAUIIOS (Apltl 211,..., . , There's a
potllblllly you mlghl ge't inYOIWCI In a,
new endeavor at this lime. II you do participate, kMp a low profile end mike,
your contrlbulion from behind the

'iil•iil•••••.

&amp;

Upholatery
~.. ilphof·~ ....... .
~-,-a,..,., Tho
l1iil In lul1illtn .............
Col .w7HI14 "" fl'lo · ...

44 H&amp;trtd

46 Stlfllh

Collin a
8 -de mar

111110n

50 Balort court

25 Actrna Lam orr
29 Stomoch
3D City In Penn·
oylvonla
32 By way or
33 Conoumed

food

34 Without
36 Alrcransman
37 Game fioh

proceedings

52 - Llll
53 Labor org.

54 Let- (So&amp;Utl

album)

55 And othero
(2 Wdl .)

56 Wltld
57 AfriCin

counlry

58 lmltato

DOWN
t FIOWIII
2 Aclor Tamlroff
3 Pltaltn all
4 Riding
IKIIChoS
5 Ear (comb.

6 Maf bOok

12 Sowlikt part

7 No I IOUI

17
19
22
23
24

(2 Wdl.)

8 Wotk hard

9 Fttd tht

kiHy

10 Aclor llojora

form)

l .

-·

QIU'?l 111117 21-.ltN 211) An Old, ....
Uld lrltndlllip that hill
cllulld by
dt.IMCtiOoktllkl " mlaf11 be resa-•ated. ll'o wllh ., tndMdull w110 may
mow blck to your IOCIIe.
·
.
CAIICIR

'*"

(,_.11..,.., Ill Owing to an

.. .........., 111111 In concllttant, thtno you'wo ~ "'1111111 to do, but
..,. ~ unebll to_._,, OOUid

'* 1me
today.

men aehll•lllll

IIWtlng

LIO(....,IWIIIII)Pwb•lhlperou
.uur· 1n 11111 c,dl Willi lndMdulll of
~-My llld llllent ODilllt work out vwy
lUI cur~lly. S. to II thlll your oohorta
p ! 1 IUCII qtlllitiM.

YIRQO (Aug. 23-sept. Zl) An endeavor

which Is nol your principle source of In·
come ean bo e•panded now to - · II
might eventually equal or exceed your
pri"'lfY font or umlnga.
UIIIA (Sept. 2$-0c:t. 23) There Is
IIOfMon8 you've met reoenlly who you
are an•lous to know bet1er. Take lhe
lnlllallve, because lhla IndiVidual lan'l
likely 10 call yOU. The ball Is In your
court.
SCOIIPIO (()ct. 24-llcw. 22) Your financial trends lOok rllher llronQ during
this cycle. Toke pooltlve 111M8Ureo to do
all you ean lo a-rei• more ...nlngs
while ll*t opportunttlel l)lnltt. ,
8AQITTARIUS (Nov. 23-llec. 21) If

you've beln contemptallng 1111 Involvement with a ntw IOCiat circle, h's time to
.do something abOut II. Thla Ia a good
day to mike an lnllllllnroad.
CAPIIICOIIN (Dea.INIIL 1t) Your II·
. nanclll plclure loolcl rather encour~g­
tng II IIIII time, but you might have lo
diMnglge yourae1l !rom unproduallwo prooldura Ute your IngenuitY
.to flllkt t1t1 call reateter rtng.
,AGIMNUI ( a . . . . . 1t) K you
_ . 10 II1I'ICI1 a - ....,.,..., blgln

H--

tlldng poaiUV._,.)Oday.
•· kalp In mtnd"" 11110111 you lllmld
from paat mlatok•, ao you don't l'll*f

tltam.

Nof
Wox
.
Stdallvo ·
Reduce
YIIHhaPtd

jug

26 - KnleY~
27 Terrible .
28 Balli Of

burden

29 Nlekn1mo for

tSCot ·:

31 Pllnltd ·
35 Stocking •·

mlahap -

• Nltlltv* Now Stereo.
Urry 111ng Uvel
10 fltltt!..Dowllng llylleliel

38 Newap-

~.: : , ~.e FM. (R)
Stereo.
al
Baokdlafl T8XIS

43

notJce
40 Fairy-lilt·
creature •
42 Containing

l:~mon
surn1me

44 Spoken •

45 COYirtcf with

It Rica ( )

Refrigeration

ft7

1 Plan

4 Actrtll

stereo, GJ

DADSURN
LOUD If

Eut

Antw., to Prewloue Pu11..

Stereo. GJ
·
t:3G (2). IIJ Wlnga Joe worries
after Brien reports UFO"

&amp;

'

Norlk

a

•

Electrical

West

(!]). llrielfy Hilla, 80210
Brandon anti Steve are
conned by IWO women who
steal Steve's car. (R) Stereo.
9 MOVIE: Colttfllentll
lllvlde (PG) (2:00) Stereo.

NOT 50

,up:

Plumbing
Heating

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

39 Entwltle
41 lnfieldlt

(2 WdS.)

Ill Amtrfelll Mualc ShOp

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondHionol llfollmo gu1ron·
IH. Locat flf.,.ncu tumlahed.
Fr10 ,ottlmatoa. Coli collocl 1·
814·237-0466, doy or night.
Rogn B1u ment Wat1rpr. .
ling.

ACROSS

lnatrur:ltnls
13 Dkactor
Prtmlngar
14 Unit
15 Marah
16 Type ol rock
t8 Sully
20 Anoint
21 Rlltl
23 Havo courage

(4:00)
1:30 III D 11J Dlflltltll Wootd
Freddie lnsuHs an executive
where WhiHay works. (R)
·Stsreo. t:l

r- ~~ -~~

"" 9prtnlor n•h whool 24 ft

.A

1

Pass
In yesterday's hand, the lead of an ·
· Pass 4 +
Pass
unsupported jack lulled an opponent l •
4
•
Pass
Pass
Pass
into a misdefense. Today's hand features the same theme. It occurred dur·
Opening lead: • 7
ing the 1979 Euro~an Championship
match between Italy and Israel.
The Italians, Arturo Franco and '--- -- - - -- - -- ---'
Dano de Falco, were sitting North and
East had shown up with the K·Qof
South. Opposite the four-card-major clubs and the diamond king. U he had
opening, North's four-club response the·spade ace as well, he would haye
showed the values for a raise to game o~ned the bidding as dealer. So West
with a singleton or void in clubs.
had to have the spade ace. The conWest led !be club seven: nine, queen, tract appeared doomed, but de Falco
ace. With three top losers, it looked as set a trap: He called lor the spade
though declarer had to find East with jack. East should have drawn the
the spade ace. But before relying on same concl.usion about the spade suit,
that possibility, South tried to learn but thinking that South migbt have a
more about the hand. Immediately he guess in the suit, he played low. Tbe
led back the club jack. When West jack drew the ace and the contra~!
played low smoothly, de Falco placed was home.
East with tbe club king. Declarer
This play won the Bois Brillia n~ y
~uffed lb~ club jack . in the dummy, Prize for de Falco, "!bo was eu r•~te
drew trumps and· led a diamond to to his second European Champlor.. tip
dummy's jack and East's king. Back victory.
·
came the diamond 10, West winning
@ 1tlt, . . . .MIItaii:USWA. . . . :
with the ace and returning the suit.

11 HIWIIIII1

1:05 (I) MOVIE:~ Sft......

nlco, 11,100. 304-1182-3236.

A knavish play
that jack

Tbe World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle:

(!]) G The Slmplonl"14oe
could make millions of

dollars alter steall~omer' s
recipe. (R) Stereo.
"
i1J Munlli', She W .,.
Ill On Stagt Stereo.

Cortor'o PI~
FowdtondPino
Goillpotlo, Ohio
814-441-3888

==·

M·A'S·H

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

82

Coullor pickup, 4 .,..
11,200. ... oonc1,

1111 1121• Top Copa A
canadian cop busts a
terrorist group by working
undercover. Stereo. t:l

~AL~ ...

&amp; Ltvcstock

1111 -

(1 :00)

A r::Q\11£SftC

VJHY 1))'-1111-\E.Y TAt;:;t 11-\£
f.iU.ralS m:M 1Xft'05£ (U1'5 "
::WD 1J.V:: UUNIROriD 10

SOUTH
.K 9 7
"KQ83
+654
J 10

Soolb

Fortuna I;1

Ill Be a Star Stereo.
IZI Collaga Balkotball
Michigan Stale at
Northwestern (L)
1111 Cro11flre

20 Ft. 2 Seater S11r1, 10 H.P.

76

K 10
tKQ643

By PbiUip Alder

IIJG Family Feud

1964 Chria Craft Covallari_32 h,
dull motort , good eond, p,OOO.
suroluo, rontot, donlm, ormy

•u
t

tAI!3

•s 1 s 2

W
MacNalll':rer
Nawlllour

~OW'P YOU KNOW
"lllAT BIG V... RMINT

lor Sale

Transportation

- ·--

ALDER

7:30 WD lUI JeopardY! C .
(I) Now lt Can Be 'r0k1
(I) Enll!!!lnment Tonight
S\ereo:.GI
~ D Moirleci...WIIh Cftlldren

ALLEYOOP

tatMiddill1oln ..._., ~
(1M _ , A'TTN: RllliOn-

In,...,, ............ ." '
.toololorl 1'111,

~---··

75 Boats &amp; Motors

A••-

......
""- - .._
MRACE-FIIl
OFSTIJF

Ajloft-.'

call

Tobacco poundege, Mtlgt Co.,
Clll 114-G92-!533 1ft1r 6pm

Merchandise

oF A61NG

EAST
tQ812

7:05 ()) Acldamo Family

- - :t ftGI..IflE-1&gt; our WHY :r
SL.fff l.E·.Ss AS :r: GflOW
Ot..l&gt;ft --·~ folf-EI) THf
f)t.f/lA TlMf fO{l
LOOJfiNG fO~ MY

Hondl XR 250, IXC: concl, $1,200.

ac e t p.

WEST
.Al063
'f7

10 The Wallona

..---T/'It f&gt;YNAMICJ

12

PHILLIP

1111 8port8Cent*
Monaytlne

Top•c:

r11ume
to
Admlnllln~tor,
Plrwcrest Cara Center, 170
Plnocmt Dri,., Gai/lpotlo, OH
4!631.

Ml.......
aT ,_ A !'tAiy .. tw'
flhl II I • Offloo Loll. Geoc1

tQJ7 2

=

fONIGHT:f

Flowor School, Rl. 87, Moreh
llo7, 8:30.3:30. MI. Floworo
PaNntl.

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA

.9

IIJG E~ Tonlgl1t
Slereo. C
iiJ lllacGJylt I;l
.

Send

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
P1y,
Banelltl,
Tronoporta/lon,
407-292-41117,
Ext 571. to .m.·10p.m. Toll
Rotundo d.
AVON I All Ar10o I 9hlrloy
Spool'l, 304-6711-1429.
AVON got In on tho ground floor
or Avon• new earning etruchn.
1-IOO.W.Z-6358.

.AJI096S

~'A"' Tlie Nail

FRANK AND ERNEST

1-i-11

.H

!£:'~,Affair~

AVON • All trill, C.ll Marilyn

111 bed long term cart flcl111y Ia
INking *lal worker. Full time
position. Berwt• p~cklg~ avail~

NORTH

BRIDGE

(l)~illlalhloU~

0242.
$800 WEEKLY POSSIBLE/ Work·
lng AI Momol 37 DIHoront Ooporlunllleo. Ruoh $1 And Soli·
Addr101ocl Slompld Envolopo
To: Thoma• BtiVtra, Rlt5 BOx
373 Morlona, OH 4!5760.
Woav• 304-882-2145.

Three cuties were giving the once over to the new
beauty in the office . One cutie purred, "She gol her
good looks from her father . He's a plastic SURGEON ."

(lj The Ja"-'tu:l

BNglt, t-10 VMra. lall SMn $35010ay procetslng, phone or·
dlr1l P.aplt cell you. No exptrltnct neetsaary. 1w&amp;OD-255-

.7

&gt;·~

Kitten - Eight - Royal - Trusty - SURGEON

1:35 ()) Andy Qrlfllth
7:00 G IIJ Wheel o1 F-na

L.oll Or Stolon: Trt.colo&lt; Male

Mon:h 2nd, BolwHn Rl.554 And
N.G.H.S. 614·388-8751.
Loti: Lorge Moll Rlddloh
Brown pog In Patriot A,..a,
Chltd'o Ptl, 614-379-2562 After
!:00 P.M.

SCIAM.:a.ETS ANSWERS

10 New Zono Stereo. I;1

moisture

47 Ytry 111111.1

10:00 III • l!ll LA. Law \/an
Owen claehn wltlt her
co--attorney on 1 woman's

quantity •
48 Brtok ~

m:r~
CD
if

ruddtAir • •
49 llytll
.•

50 Yount tNi
51 Allb garmenl

Robin

Hood
Undaf'Fire

(I)

a•

Knoll Undlnll
Paige HMCI1II IOf a doctor
to hel~ wratyzed Sumner.

111

i'ic!i-....9

Ill 700 CUI With Pat

no•snaon
10:30®Nnw
(!) Al*tcln ........
Sterla.
• Crook and CltaM

'VQZP'W

11:GO~:: lllG Ill GIG
I

~

::eo:-.:

ZMFOP

PQFWD

r;l

Aitelllo Hill Stweo.

F.
. I=.:.;;...,.

11GA Clalf Dcnl Ryder ,
• 111 Round, from Miami

.

WZB

.

'

Oft~,

ciEWPFNI . RFI!HR

JZAIHR
ANZCII'

NFYW

PGD
FJ

Z . MUZHX

PF

YFIEDW7

ZUU

WDZPW
WANDDHJ

- •'"' NFMONP

YIPA80Y.
•
PREVIO.US SOLUTION: .. .._;,.. no1 men by Sundayo, wllt1ou1 181111 dltV :
""' do all 1111 walk after." - Thomao Fuller.
:,

-.
•••
••

r;l

!1:3D(J)-- Q...

..
••

�March 5, 1992

OhiO

U.S. faces shortage of deli pickles
By CLIFF EDWARDS
CHI~AGO (AP) - Restaurants
and delis around the nation are in a
pickle: Rain wiped out the Mexican
cucumber crop, causing a shortage
of the deli dill.
Some places are offl'ling substit~tes such as pickled peppers or
ptckled tomatoes, but others don't
relish the idea.
"There's no question of changing," said Hal Horowytz, a manager at Zabar's delicatessen in New
York Citr. "Most of the customers
~refer th1s tYI'." of product, so we
JUSt pay a ltttle more
. eat the

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
girls are
beaten 76-40

cost We manage to get enough to rants try to palm off processed or
fresh-paded dills for refrigerated
keep our customers haPI?Y·"
pickles,
Hentschel said.
Cucumbers for p1cldes are
A
processed
pickle is stored in
imported during the winter only.
fermentation
tanks
for months
Some come from Nicaragua, but
before
being
flavored
arid put in
Mexico is a major SUI?Piier.
"It rained and nuned and con- jars. A fresh-packed dill goes
tinued to rain for about a month directly from the field into a jar
and essentially drowned the along with spices and flavors and is
fields," Richard Hentschel, execu- later heat-processed and stored.
The refrigerated, or deli pickle,
tive vice president of Pickle Packers International in suburban St. also goes from field to W' but is not
Charles, said Wednesday.
heated and is refrigerated for only a
few
days before being sold, allowPersnickety pickle lovers with
as many as 36 flavors to choose ing it to keep its crispness and its
from can tell if delis and restau- greenish color.

•

J-S

Low tonight in SOs. Chance or
rain 100 percent Saturday

chance or rain 70 percent. High
in 60s.

Vol. 42, No. 213

Copyrighted 1~2
TO COMPETE • Bradbury Elementary 5th
and 6th grade cheerleaders will take part in a
competition at Federal lfocking on Saturday,
March 7th. Pictured In the front row rrom left to
right are: Michelle WIDiams, Brabara Whitting-

Pick 3: 628
Pick 4: 5751
Cards:
7-H; 6-C; 3-D;

2 Socdono, 14 Pageo 25 oonto
Allulllmodla Inc. N""'lfiiiP"'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, 'Friday, March 6, 1992

House fails ·to approve redistricting bill

ton and Chandra Moon, Second row (l·r): Jessi·
ca Evans, Sandra Young, Carrie Harston, Mel·
isba Swisher and Terra Dowler, Back row (l·r):
Kristen HiU, Karab Winter and Amy Younker.
Not pictured are advisors Sherry Swisher and
Michelle ~hi.!'i~li!!t&gt;l~.~

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Ohio's lawmakers apparently
can still complete passage of a congressional redistricti~g. bill in time to avoid the n~ for a separate,
$6 million electJOn after the May 5 pnmary.
A Senate-passed bill stalled in the House Thursday in a sea of bipartisan protests over the shape of
the 19 new districts that generally were crafted to
protect incumbent mernbers of Congress.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg,
adjourned the House until Tuesday, despite an earlier
warning from Secretary of State Bob Taft that he
needed the bill by today to make preparations for the
p~ary. . ,
.. .
. ·
We don t have the votes, R1ffe S81d.
. He said 42 Democrat~! and four Republicans were
wtlhng to support the bill, with 50 needed for pas-

Riffe said he thinks there still is time, despite
Taft's warning. He said candidates do not have to
have seven days to file petitions, as Taft had requested. "We could give them 48 hours," Riffe said.
Taft later indicated agreement wit~ the speak~r.
But he sa1d, "We are raptdly reachtng the pomt
beyond which there will not be sufficient time" to
nominate congressional candidates May 5. Taft said
he needs all the details worked out, including candidate filings, by March 13.
Those opposing the biU included 34 of 38 House
Republicans, who apparently heard an appeal from
Rex Elsas, executive director of the Ohio Republican
Party, not to support it.
.
Tbe speaker said all .of the II blacks Iii his caucus
were opposed to the btl!. They ObJected to changes
affecting Franklin County where, under an earlier
verswn, they may have been_able_to elect a second

black congressman to join l{ep. Louis Stokes, DCleveland, in Washington next year.
"We've only had one black congressman in the
history of the state of Ohio," said Rep. Ray Miller,
D·Columbus. "We have surrounding. states like
M1ch1gan, and llhno1s and Pennsylvania that have
anywhere from two to seven black congress people. I
think it's a shame that there's only one black congressman in our state."
Assistant House Minority Leader David Johnson,
D-Canton, said there was not much support for the
final version of the bill.
'
' ' We are concerned about splits. There were, like,
24 cdunlies that as you know, were split, and a lot of
concern and .~iscussion about the process and how
we got there.
The Senate approved a joint conference ~om":'ittee s verston of the btU 24-9 Tuesday, wllh ftve

Democrats and four Republicans vot.ing against it
Ohio will lose two of its 21 seats in the U.S.
House next year because of national population sh1fts
recorded in the 1990 Census. The realignment was
required to keep the districts vinually equal in popuIauon.
·
Stokes said Thursday that " in all probability we
. will have a lawsuit" as a result of the redistricting
plan, which he said may not meet the requirements of
the federal Voting Rights Act That law is designed
to preserve minority districts.
"!plan to consult with our lawyers over the week- ·
end " Stokes said. He declined to say what specific
problems he had with the redistricting.
Although Stokes has sought to get all of the black
voters he could in Cuyahoga County, he also has
sought control of white suburbs that include liberal
voters.

Syracuse residents asked to take part
in annual fix-up, clean-up campaign

sage.

By Kathryn Crow
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Mayor James Pape
Thursday night called for residents
to "pitch in" and take part in a two·
week spring fix-up, clean-up of
their properties beginning March
14 during the Syracuse Village
Council meeting.
The mayor said "I appreciate
cooperation of residents at all
times. However, during this twoweek cleanup period I would like
all residents to ~o all out to
improve the village.'
In regard to rental propeny, the
mayor said that it is first the

CHERRING FOURTH GRADERS • Tbe Middleport-Bradbury
Elementary 4th grade cheerleaders will take part in the Federal
Hocking cheerleader competition on Saturday, March ·7th. Pictured in the first row rrom left to right are: Bethany Boyles, Ashley
Burton, and Jennifer Neece, Second row (1-r): Ashley Vaughan,
Brandy Tobin, Mindy Halley, Brandy Stevens, Third row O·r):
Crystal Leach, Cindy Lewh, Missy Cremeans, and Renee Stewart.
Pictured In the back row are advisors Vickie McKinney and Connie Burton.

responsibility of the renter to do responsibility , of the property
cleanup work, and then if the renl!'r· owner.
Continued on page 3
fails to comply, it becomes the

Pomeroy man found dead
A Pomeroy man is dead following an apparent suicide on Thursday evening.
'
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, John
Carl, 23, of Kingsbury Road near
Pomeroy, was found dead by
deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Deparunent, after a call was
received by the derarunent at II
p.m.

Sheriff Soulsby and County
Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter were
on the scene, and according to a
news release from the sheriff's
department Hunter' ruled that Carl
died from a self-inflicted gunsnot
wound.
Susan Carl, the victim's wife,
was outside of the residence at the
time of the incident, Soulsby
reported.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
The first week of March and
daffodils in bloom? Now that's
incredible.
On top of that where else but in
Beat of the Bend would you learn
that congratulatory cards from
President and Mrs. George Bush
are available to note weddings,
50th anniversaries, 80th birthday
and upward, and for the IOOth
birthday, a special greeting?
Due to the numerous requests
that the volunteer-staffed office
processes, written requests are
required four weeks prior to the
event Send requests to The White
House, Greetings Office, Room 39,
Washington, D. C. 20500. And
you did need to know that, didn't
you?

Parkersburg, W.Va.
A graduate of Warren Local
High School, she was a standout at
Rio Grande. She excelled both in
academics and athletics and held
scholarships not only for her academic ability but also for being an
outstanding athlete. She is the
granddaughter of Mrs. Victor
Brown of Minersville and Mr. and
Mrs. Hllyman Bamitz of Pomeroy.

-Not exaaty as shown. 11W rester wUI hetp you put
stress on hold. It lealuresa pub-back bade, son pillow
comlort, waling delals and a side pocket to hold
magazines.

CHECKING THE BOUNDARIES • Rep.
Vernon Sykes, D·Akron, lert, and Rep. Tom
Roberts, D-Dayton, discuss a map or proposed

Unemployment
PrHcenr MXII: force,

Dr. Mark Brown has returned to
his medical practice in Maine following a visit in Meigs County and
in Columbus. His new address is
P.O. Box 243, Bar Harbor, Maine,

of

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Jobl~ss

rate jumps
to 7.3 % in February

::~;:~:r£i~E~~~~r~~

~Local b~i;r~Lynch.

ODOT workers comple'e project
Meigs County Ohio Department of Transportation workers have
finished installing 278 feet of pipe to impf'QVC drainage along Route
7 north of Chesrer. Repairs to the storm drain and call:h basin were
done by local workers over the past few weeks. ·
The project was difficult because the trench for the pipe had to
be dug deep and the ground has been niuddy. At times, trifftc at the
project site was controlled by naggers.
Clean-up is now underway at the site. The ground will be reseeded as soon as weather pennits:
.
.
.

Show makes move

taiDment. And USA Today report·
ed today tbat PIOdacen of "M.I·
lock" are in
with ABC
about possibly making a similar
switch
. for their show.
. '

), .

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment rate leapt
to 7.3 percent in February, the
highest point since the recession
began and the worst level in 6 In.
years, the government said today.
The new rare, up from 7.1 percent in January and the highest
since July 1985, came despite separate data showing employers
expanded their payrolls by a morethan-expected 164,000 jobs.
The two statistics are derived
from separate Labor Department
surveys and can sometimes conflict. The unemployment rate
comes from a survey of American
1"'--"M...
A_.M...
J -"JuAR.lllsuo,..NuoLJLilll.J households, while the payroll data
1K1
is culled from a survey of business-

04609

John Madson, whoever he might
be, must have fared well with his
Application deadlines for the detailed story and photos of a trip
scholarships to be awarded by the on the Delta Queen.
Middleport Alumni Association is
The story which mentions and
April30.
sometimes is accompanied by phoThe Susan G. Park (requires a tos of Pomeroy has appeared in
3.5 grade point average); the numerous mlijor newspapers across
McComas-Moore (major must be the United States.
education) and the Lewis-Gray
Lois Harris who has two sisters
Scholarships are the ones awarded living in Houston, Tex. received a
by the Middleport organization.
copy of the stDry from her ~isters.
If you'd like to know the pea- The newspapet was in the Houston
. pie involved in committees dealing Chronicle. Charles Lochary of Illiwith the scholarships they are Judy nois sent along the story as it
Arnold, Carol Brewer and Joe appeared in the Chicago Tribune.
Young, the Park; Nancy Cale, Mary Powell r=ived copies from
Jeanette Thomas, Judy Crooks, the Sunday Star-Ledger in Newark,
McComas-Moore, and Nancy N. J. and another copy showed up
Beavrz and Lewis-Gray.
from the Orlando Sentinel in
Applications undoubtedly are Orlando, Fla Earlier Floyd Clark
available through these people, at of Oregon had sent a copy from a
the Meigs High School or from large newspaper there.
·
Alumni Association Officers.
So Pomeroy has had some
Transcripts of grades as well as national publicity thanks to Mr.
college acceptance acknowledge- Madson and the Delta Queen.
ments should be filed with the
Now does lhal mean that people
applications.
will be streaming in to look the
The scholarships are open to the community over? Probably not.
descendants of Middleport High Do keep smiling.
School grads or ·someone who
, sl8lted school in Middleport before
COIII(l(idation.
If. the annual M.H.S. Alumni
BURBANK, Calif..(AP) - This
Reunion isn't a success this year it is Andy Griffith's last season play·
wila't be lJec•ure Pre5ident Iva Sis· ing a wilv Southern lawyer on
01 iJn 't worting at iL Br. the way, "Madock,!' atleul en NBC.
and "In the Heat l'l
the AlumDi Band is sun on the the"Midock"
Night" were canceled by NBC
bumef. The JroUP will don on~~ge
.... wbeli they IJilPW to pneeat Tuesday beca~e of low ratings,
· 10111C l'l die old M.H.S. ~ p~e­ bill th8t isn't the end of the IIIX}'.
"In the Heat of the Nilbt" will .
ClGIIinllhe biDCJuet lf you'te mrer...,.s COIIIICtlva at 742-2187 or move to CBS for lhe.l992-93 &amp;ea·
, Ro!er William• at 992-6782. - trepalug Ill Octobtr, lllid Jetr
Sapillty, ~t of CBS Eatu- .
111111 ala willlllll in April.

seasataJ/y adjusted

legislative redisiricting at the Statehouse in
;! Columbus Thursday. (AP)

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Arrests .made by local department .
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby teports !hat several
amsts were made on Wednesday and Thunday,· ·
Harold J. Howard of New Bolton u teiUmod 10 ~igs Countj on
Wednesday to face a hearing in Meigs County Common Pleas
.Coun. He was ¥ctet! 011• charie of lliltteking in drup.
is being held in the Meigs County Jall,pending' a hearing
m the Common Pleas Court.
,·
Ml:OIIIb, Beech Grove Road in Rutland, was amsted on W
y on ac:bllp of domeatic vio!Cace.
. Micllld Dellaville, Jr., of Jacks Roed in Rutland was arresred on
'1111nday morning on a bench _ , flam Meigs County Court. fa
falltn topay,his $342.10 line IIIII COlli on a ~oua charge.
. Conduuejl oa pqe 3
.

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.
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.
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OII.IVIRY
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.

'

· "The key thing here is not that
the employment rate went up, it's
that employment is fmally growing
again,'·' he said. "That's not ID Say
we're in a strong recovery.
Rate up In Ohio
Ohio's unemployment rate
jumped ID 7.2 percent in February,
a 0.5 percentage point increase
from January, a report released by
the Labor Department in Washington said Friday.
Unemployment in Ohio was
pegged at 6.7 percent in January.
Despite the increase last month,
the jobless rate for Ohio was less
than the level recorded in nine of
the nation's II major industrial
states.

Retirement funds will be returned
to ·LCCD for use on spe.cial projects
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
More than $120,000 set aside as
a retirement fund for fanner Leading ~reek Conservancy District
f7es1dent Jack W. Crisp will be
g1ven back to the district for use on
spetial projects.
.
The Meigs County Commission·
ers met wilh 'members of the current LCCD Board of Directors .
Wednesday to di$1:uss the money
now held by the commissioners and
p!ans for disbursement of that
money.
~ a condition of a plea t.rgain
agreement approved by assigned
Common Pleas Judge ROger Jones, ·
an annuity held by Midland ID.!ttr·
ance Company and establiShed by
the now-defunct Leading Creek
Watershed Association was transferred to the ~igs County General
Fund, along with approximately
$4~,000 in anticipated excess
reurement funds for Crisp and his

wife, Glenna, who served as the
district's General Manager.
Another $20,000 was forfeited
by Jack Crisp as costs of prosecution. Commissioner Richard E.
Jones said Wednesday that he was
unwilling to fum anything other
than the annuity over to the district
because of an appeal ftled by Crisp
and the anticipated legal costs
involved ID the courity.
· The annuity, howe,ver, will be
assigned to the LCCD board as
soon as a list of~ is submitted to the commissioners.
A power of attorney granting .
Special Prosecutor K. Robert Toy
has been .executed, and Jone5 said
Wednesday that the lssignment or
lhe annuity fUnds to LCCD woul&lt;!
be in place shortly.

Diatrld's plllns

Board members Robert SDOVi·
den and Charles Barren outlined
the district's plans for improvel
ments on Wednesday, and indicai·
···f,

.''

'.

Bruce Reed as he signs the proclamation are,
seated, J.r, Autumn Phillips and Andrea Neut·
zting, both of Junior Troop 1309. Standing, l·r,
are Misl Neutzling, senior troop, and Jessica
Hooten and Sara Moon, Brownie Troop 1271.
(Sentinel photo by Julie E. Dillon)

PROCLAMATION SIGNED· The week of
March 7-14 has been declared Girl Scout Week.
March 1l is the 80th anniversary of girlsrouting
and troops will celebrate by decorating some
store windows. Pictured wltb Pomeroy Mayor

ed that the annuity funds could be
used on some of those projects.

Lanha~

(Fenton Taylor, the third member
Continued on page 3

pleads not guilty

David L. Lanham, 50, of Point no date has been set.
In a signed confes.•ion, Lanham
Pleasant.. pleaded nm ~uilty during
his arratgnment tn Sc1oto County, said he actually shot Oliver,. whose
Ohio Thursday for the aggravated body was found Feb. 15 in Fmnklin
murder of Lewis Michael Oliver, Furnace, Ohio. Oliver's sister
40, of Point Pleasant a.ccording to reported him as missing on Nov. 8,
a SPQkesman fQr the Sc1oto County 1991. She told authorities he was
.last seen with Worthy G. Siders Jr.,
Prosecuting Attorney.
Lanham was indicted by the 47, of Henderson.
Lanham implicated Siders in the
Scioto County Grand Jury on
murder.
Siders refused arraignment
Tuesday, Feb. 25. He was arrested
on
the
charge
of aggravated murder
in Mason County on Feb. 17 and
was arraigned Feb. I8 by Mason on Feb. 18 in Mason County. He is
County Magistrate John S. currently housed in the Mason
Reynolds. Lanham waived extradi- County Jail .
Mason County Prosecuting Attion and was transported to Ohio on
torney
Damon B. Morgan· Jr. said
Feb. 18.
According ID the prosecuting at' the county is waiti~g on extradition
tomey's spokesman, the ne~t step papers from Ohio for Si.dcrs.
for LMham will be a pre 7tr1al, but
vi

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