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                  <text>Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

March 15, 1992

Society agrees to Justice Merger chief says tough part is trimming 600 jobs
Department's demand;
merger set for Monday
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Cincinnati bank will buy the 28
branch offices Society Corp. was
force d to shed under a consent
decree with the U.S. Ju stice
Department that clears the way for
Society's merger with Ameritrus t
Corp.
The agreement specifies. that
Society will sell the offices to Star
Bank NA, along with about Sl billion in deposits and about $400
million in loans. The transac ti on
will net Society about $20 million
in profits before taxes and finalize
the merger.
"Society and Ameritrust will
merge on Monday, March 16,"
Society Chainnan Robert W. Gillespie said at a Friday news conference.
"This is a red-letter day for
Society, for Ameritrust and - we
think - for Star Bank Corpora-

Gillespie said Society had anticipated the need for the divestiture
when it began planning for the
merger and was willing to resolve
the Justice Department's concerns.
Two of the offices to be sold are
in Lake County, the others in
Cuyahoga County. ,
Federal banking regulators had
approved the merger last month .
Shareholders of both companies
voted for the merger Jan. 29.
Un(jer antitrust law, the public
will have 60 days to comment on
the government challenge before
the court rules on the requested
consent decree. But the merger pro- .
cess will not be delayed, Society
and the Justice Department said.
Society Corp. has assets of
$15.3 billion and deposits of $11.6
billion. Ameritrust has assets of
$10.6 billion and deposits of $8.7
billion.
Under terms of an ag reement
reached Sept. 12, each outstanding
share of Ameritrust common stock
will be converted into 65 percent of
a Society share. The outstanding
Ameritrust preferred stock is to be
exchanged for a newly created
issue of Society preferred.

tion," he said.

The Ju stice Department's
antitrust division said it objected to
the merger based on concerns that
combining the bank h oldin ~ companies would reduce compeution in
the market, making it harder for
small businesses to obtain loans.

Peoples Bancorp participates
in 'Partners Plus' program
MARlETTA - Officer of Peoples Bancorp Inc., has announced
that Peoples Bancorp is participating in a new program designed to
offer customers tax-deferred annuities and selected life insurance
programs . "Today' s Bank customers have a variety of invesunent
and savings needs," said Evans.
"Our customers are looking for
alternatives that fit their individual
financial goals."
To provide these al ternatives,
Peoples Bancorp is participating in
the "Partners Plus" program. "Partners Plus", a cooperative partnership between the Ohio Bankers
Association Service Corporations
and Nationwide Insurance Company, enables Financial Horizons 10
market annuities and other investment products within the Bank.
These products are available at
specified Peoples Bancorp offices.
Many arc tax-deferred. "In selecting an insurance company to provide our customers with invesunent
choices, we looked for a company
with a reputation of strength and
profitability. Financial Horizons,
like their parenL company -Nation-

wide Life, has such a reputation,"
said Evans .
·
Peoples Bancorp recently kicked
off this new program with a reception for bank personnel at th e
Lafaye11e Hotel in Mariella. The
reception was held to welcome
Financial Horizons Distributors
Agency, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Nationwide Corporation,
and to announce the new investment programs now available at
selected Peoples Bancorp offices.
Peo ples Bancorp hosted the
event along with Financial Hori zons President, Tim Murphy, and
Midwest Regional Vice President,
Nick Ma sse y. Completing the
Financial Horizons sales team, who
will be headquartered at Peoples
Bancorp's offices, are Account
Executives Sean Ragsdale, Edward
Drcu and Jim Gerritsen, area manager.
Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a Southeastern Ohio bank holding company with headquarters in Marietta.
Banking offices are also in Athens,
Belpre, Caldwell, Chesterhill, Lowell, Middleport, McConnelsville,
Nelsonville and The Plains.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mev·
ing some of Merchants National
Corp. processing operations to
Ohio will improve efficiency, but it
also will cost about 600 jobs, says
the man in charge of the merger.
"That's the most difficult pan
of it," Vincent A. DiGirolamo of
Cleveland-based National City
Corp. said Friday.
DiGirolamo, who is coordinating the $640 million merger
announced in October, also said he
might take a permanent senior
management role at the subsidiary.
At least 50 employees in targeted jobs have been offered new jobs
within National City operations,

but an unknown numbir of Merchants employees will have to lind
other jobs. Many workers in targeted jobs could get new positions
through a job placement program,
he said.
The Indiana Department of
Financial Institutions approved the
merger Thursday, but federal regulators still are reviewing the deal .
Merchants and National City stockholders will vote next month.
Merchants' 17 banks, which will
take on the National City name,
will be allowed to set fees and rates
based on local market conditions.
DiGirolamo said. .

He· said that while Merchants
has tightened some loan underwriting guidelines to more closely
reOect those of National City, local
credit will not dry up. Merchants
charged off about $30 million in
bad loans last year.
· "The speech I've been making
to our loan officers is, 'We want
more business, not less.·
" We are here to be a part of the
community. The reason we wanted
to come here was not to get the
deposits. We can buy those on the
market anytime," DiGirolamo said.
"The deposits we get in Indiana
will stay in Indiana to make

loans."
The 54-year-old DiGirolamo,
before coming to Indianapolis last
December, chaired a National City
program to cut $50 million to $100
million in expenses within the corporation.
Asked about Merchants Chairman Olio N. Frenzel Ill, whose
family has operated the bank for
decades, DiGirolamo said, "As far
as I know, Nick is going to stay."
Two other senior Merchants
officials have resigned: James D.
Massey , president of Merchants
National Corp., and James W.
Magee, president of Merchants
National Bank.

Pick 3: 804
Pick 4: 9169
Cards:
2·H; A·C; 9·D;
A-S
Super Lotto:
19-35-36-41-43-45
Kicker:182543

l' PageS

Ohio Beef Expo slated March 19-22 in Columbus
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
Extension Agent
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Beef
Expo runs March 19-22 at the Ohio
State Fairgrounds in Columbus.
This year's expo will be the fifth
one since the start in 1988. This is
an excellent place to gain information and compare genetics of 15
different breeds that will be displayed at this year's expo.
· Ten breeds will offer high quality breeding stock in their sales on
Saturday. The Ohio Beef Expo
Judging Contest will be on Saturday, March 21 starting with registration from 7:30-8:30 a.m. The
Gallia County Cattlemen's Association will pay the entry fee for
youth wanting to participate. Call
one of the directors or the Extension Office for more iriformation.
Pesticide Applicator Certification testing will be held in neighboring counties a couple times next
week. The Lawrence County
Extension will conduct a session at
the Lawrence SWCD Building former Higgins building) in Linville
on Route 217, on Thursday, March
19, 2-6 p.m. Two testing sessions
are planned in Jackson County to
be held at the South District Extension Center just south of Jackson.
Sessions will be held from 2-5 p.m.
on Tuesday, March 17 and again
on Monday, March 30. Reservations are requested for the Jackson
testing sesstons and can be made
by calling 614-286-5044.
In a recent article, Dr. Peter
Thomison, O.S.U. Extension
Agronomist discussed seed corn
size and its effect on performance.
With the introduction of plateless
plahters corn growers arc better
able 10 plant seed of any size/shape
combination without major
mechanical problems. According to
Thomison, medium Oats or large
flats still remain the chpice or
many farmers despite greater cost
This preference is due to concerns that small and/or round

size/shape combinations may not
have the same performance of
other seed classes. Small com seed
ha s been associated with slight

Farm Flashes
delays in tasseling and/or silking
but this has seldom translated into
yield losses.
A recent study found evidence
that emergence was reduced 5-15
percent in small round seed compared to small flat and large rounds
under such stressful conditions as
early planting, no-till, and soil
crusting. Under other conditions
such as water stress , small seed
have show an advantage over large
seed. Thomison recommends that
corn producers should focus on
genetic potential, seed quality and
seed price rather than a specific
seed size/shape combination when
selecting a hybrid.
Ohio farmers currently grow oat
varieties developed in the Midwest
and Canada. O.A.R.D.C. in Wooster has just released the frrst new oat
variety in Ohio since 1929 . The
new variety, "Armor", resists lodging and yields 4.5 percent more
than Ohio's most popular oat varjety. The bad news - seed won't be
available for widespread use until
about 1996.
Final Burley Tobacco sales were
scheduled in Lexington on
Wednesday, March II. Net sales

for the season stood at 656.2 million pounds at the end of a week
earlier sales. The season average
price on gross sales stood at
$178.77 per hundred. Just over 42
million pounds or about 6 percent
of sales have gone to the "pool".
Dave Samples, Jackson County
extension agent, has offered a special invitation for Gallia County
farmers to attend the Monday,
March 16, Farmers Club meeting to
be held at the 4-H camp starting at
7 p.m. Dinner reservations are
requested. The program will be a
herbicide update presented by
O.S.U. Agronomist, Dave Savage.

CONGRATUlATIONS!
CARPENTERS'
LOCAL UNION 650
100 YEARS IN POMEROY
MARCH16
1892-1992
Wish You Many More.
HENRY C. PEERY
Business Represeatative
1954·1979, Retired

TICKETS ON SALE· Tickets for the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce's annual din·
nerldance are now on sale. The event, a major
fund raiser for the chamber, will be held Satur·
day at Royal Oak Resort. The cost is $15 for
individuals and $30 for couples, and they are
available at Farmers Bank and Savings Company In Pomeroy and from any chamber board

member. Pictured as ticket sales got underway
on Friday . are, left to right, Chamber
Diredor!Economic Development Director Paula
Thacker, Farmers Bank associates Iris Payne
and Linda Mayer, Chamber Executive Secre·
tary Pamela L. Newell, and, back, Ed Durst of
Farmers Bank. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J,
Reed)
·

Gas prices down since January
PORTSMOUTH • The national
average price of self-serve regular
unleaded gasoline slipped .5 cent
this week to $1.051 per gallon,
Ruth Robbins, Auto Travel Supervi_sor, AAA South Central Ohio
reports.
~ :.All-A's . Fuel Gauge report
shOWs lha~ except for the last two
weeks in February, the average
price has dropped every week this
year. At the start of 1992, the average price was $1.097 per gallon.
The Fuel Gauge Report . based on a nationwide spot check

of gasoline stations - was conducted by AAA by Computer
Petroleum Corp. of St. Paul, Minn.
Regionally, the average price of
regular unleaded fell in New England, the Mid-Atlantic, Southwest
and West but rose elsewhere, AAA
said.
. ·- .
-· ..
Nationwide, the average price or
self-serve regul•r leaded gasoline
increased .2 cents to $1.054 per
gallon. The self-serve mid-grade
unleaded average is unchanged at
$1.151. Pr~mium unleaded dipped

.I cent to an average $1.237.
In addition to surveying for the
AAA Fuel Gauge Report, Computer Petroleum Corp. publishes the
National Petroleum Price Index,
which monitors more than 50,000
daily wholesale and retail gasoline
prices throughout the- United-Slates' and Canada.
AAA South Central Ohio has 14
offices providing its more than
I 16,000 members in Southeastern
and Central Ohio wilh travel, insurance, financial and auto related services.

Democrats' debate erupts into vicious feud

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CHICAGO (AP) - Jerry
Brown and Bill Ointon clashed in
a vicious, personal duel as Brown
accused the Arkansas governor of
directing state business to his
wife's law ftnn. Clinton called it a
"lying accusation" from a desperate candidate.
" You're not worth being on the
same platform with my wife,"
Clinton snapped at Brown at the
Sunday night debate.
Brown said Clinton was
involved in· a " scandal of major
proportions," saying Clinton, as
governor, was "funneling money
to his wife's law firm for state
business."
Hillary Rodham Clinton, a partner in the prestigious Rose law nnn
in Little Rock, Ark., has said she
avoids conflict of interests and
refuses her share of t~. e firm's
income that comes from its state
clients.
The dramatic confrontation by far the nastiest moment yet of
any of the Democratic debates came with litUc more than a day
left in the Illinois and Michigan
primary campaigns. Clinton is

poised for a sweeP. that would
make him the prohtbitive Democratic favorite.
After nearly an hour of familiar
debate, Clinton suddenly found
him self on the defensive over
Hillary Clinton's law fll1ll and the
clients it represents before
Arkan sas state agencies run by
Clinton appointees.
Paul Tsongas stayed out of the
fray during tht debate, but then
jumped in later, telling reporters
after the 60-minutc debate that
Clinton's involvement in a real
estate deal with a man who owned
a state-regulated savings and loan
was "indefensible."
Brown kept up his attack later,
too, sayin~ Clinton has a "seandal
a week gomg here. ... I plan to continue this tomorrow, the next day
and right up to the convention."
Brown said his attacks were "relatively mild" compared to how the
Republicans would come after
Clinton in the general election.
The three rivals planned all-day
campai~n swings today in Illinois
and Mtchigan . Late polls show
Clinton with big leads in both

.....--Local.briefs-.....,
LCCD meeting changed
. · The regular meeting of the board of directors of Leading Creek
Conservancy District, set for Thursday, has been changed to Men·
day, March 23 at 7 p.m. a~ the LCCD office on Comhollow Road in
Rudand.
·

87 PARK AVENUE

.

Low tonlghlln 40s. Tuesday,
partly cloudy. High near 60.

1 SIICIIon, 10 Pill• 25 _ ..
A llutUmedla Inc. Newlpll!*

March 16, 1992

House members to check ·
accuracy of bank records

If there is interest, perhaps we can
car pool. Call first thing Monday
morning.
Update! More than 50 soil samples have been delivered to the
extension office thus far in March.
Return time is still good (about I0
days). Let's break the 100 marie for
March.
March 15-21 is National Agricultural week. A number of special
activities and awareness releases
arc planned. Agricultural week is a
good time to reflect on an abundant
food supply and to take time to
than.k those that make the high
quahty and abundance possible.

1991 CHEVROLET CORSICA 4 DR.

•p.,~ment baaed

Ohio Lottery

·NCAA
basketball
••
pa1r1ngs

.

Gene Johnson

DROPS
THE

f
!

ODNR grant awarded to Pomeroy

s'tate Representative Mary Abel (D-Athens) announced on Monday tlw the Ohio Dcpanment of Natural Resources has awarded a
gnnt of $4,600 to Pomeroy for Special Litter Prevention and Recycling programs.
The funds were .provided to 58 ccmmunitles throughout the state
and 11e used to fund litter J)reverilion and ~ycling education pro·
~·· Utter collection,' illegal dumpsite cleanup, containment,
Offace rccyclina prqgnms 111d membership in the Keep America
Beaudfulsystcm.
,.
·
''This mone~ts our commitrnentiO keeping our COlllmuni·
del clciln lllll
y," Abel sald. "Even in tough econonlie ll,n'ies ·
like ~ our c:ammlanent 10 the environment must continue. Prcveatinl litter ltlcl p10111oting recycling helps us save money 111d
· energy in the klitiiDD by preaerving our llllW'8I ~." · .
' Tlte pal)ll&amp;~e awanloil by ODNR, .00 ~~!~ministered thtoltih its
Division or L~ Prmlntlon 111111 RecycUng.
·
' .

·WhitliJtch to head group

All Ohio IIIII Well Viqlnle labor coalldon was organized at a

meeilq or anion reprqenlllivea held Saturday afternoon at the

'
Ceatiued
on P11f 3

states . Brown was threatening to
overtake Tsongas in Michigan for
second place.
Prestdent Bush was making a
campaign swing to Chicago and
Milwaukee today for fund-raisers.
Challenger Patrick Buchanan was
continuing his attack on Bush in
Michigan.
The Brown-Clinton verbal
fisticuffs came at the end or a
debate in which the Democrats
sparred anew over their various
economic revival, trade and tax
policies, and generally agreed in
auacking Bush's handling of the
Gulf War's aftermath.
But the personal attacks
between Clinton and Brown overshadowed all that.
It began when a panel questioner asked Tsongas and Brown if
Clinton had electability problems, a
reference to character questions
that have dogged Clinton over allegations of marital infidelity and
avoiding the Vietnam drai'L
Tsongas has said in the past !hat
these troubles make Clinton
unelectable, but this time he
declined to engage, saying he
would support whoever gets the
nomination.
But Brown immediately jumped
Continued on page 3

WASHINGTON (AP) Scores or House members ~~elike­
ly to stampede the ethics committee this week to check the accuracy
of the bank records used to brand
them as writers of rubber checks.
Rep. James V. Hansen, R-Utah,
ranking GOP member of the ethics
panel, said the committee kept its
doors open this weekend so me~
bers could review their data.
Across tbe country this wee
end, member after member attribu ed rubber checks to the sloppy,
slipshod bookkeeping of the House
bank t1w they swd rarely bothered
to notify them when tbere we.re
insufficient funds to cover a check.
The checks didn't acblally bounce
- the bank covered the overdrafts
with money from overall deposits.
Rep. Benjamin L. Cardin, DMd., another member of the panel
which sifted through the banks's
records, called them "hopelessly
inaccurate.'' Cardin and Hansen
spoke Sunday on ABC-TV's "This
Week With David Brinkley."
"A complete mess," agreed
Rep. Fred Grandy, R-lowa, another
member or the committee.
The panel has identified 296
current House members and 59 for·
mer ones as cashing at least one
bad check. It has focused on 24
current and former members as
"worst abusers" - those who
wrote so many bad checks their
next monthly paycheck would not
cover the deficit at least eight of
the 39 months covered by the
invcsiigaiion. · ·- .'
-·- •
The Associated Press learned
the names of 22 or the top 24 from
congressional sources on Saturday,
and Rep. Mickey Edwards, R·
Okla., added his own name to the
list Sunday .
"What really bothers me is that
if I'm guilty, I don't mind 'fessing
up to i~ " said former Rep. Tommy
Robinson of Arkansas, identified

Qakar, Feighan
are Ohio's worst
check offenders
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
Cleveland-area members of the
u.S. House are listed among !hose
who wrote substantial numbers of
bad checks on the House bank,
although one insists there is a mistake.
.
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar and Rep.
Edward F. Feighan, Democrats, are
among those on • list of 296 current and 59 former members who
wrote bad checks at the defunct
House bank during the 39 months
that ended Oct 3.
Ms. Oakar, a Cleveland resident,
had written 217 had checks in the
39 months under investigation by a
House Ethics Committee, according to a list of the worst abusers
obtained by Ute Assix:iated Press,
and Feighan, of Lakewood, W70te
397 bad checks.
Ms. Oalc:ar, who first admitted to
six overdrafts, then upped that to
13, but she said her account must
have been confused with someone
else's.
Continued on page 3

by congressional sources as the
bank's worst abuser, writing 996
had checks.
But Robinson, whose initial
reaction was complete disbelief,
said he was never told of any problem with his bank account during
his six years in the House.
_ "I JUSt (have the) suspicion

trom the bol!om of my heart that
money from one congressman's
account was used to pay someone
else's hot check," said Robinson,
who was elected to Congress as a
Democrat but who became a
Republican in I989. He said he
would asic for the records on which
the list was based.

BUZZARD DAY - Ellen Hill, lef't and her brother Brian or
North Olmsted, Ohio, check out a caged turkey vulture in the
Hinckley Metropark during the traditional "Buzzard Day" festivi·
ties Sunday. (AP)

Buzzard watchers cold,
but not disappointed
HINCKLEY, Ohio (AP) -The
air was frigid, but the symbols of
spring at the Buzzard Roost came
through as anticipated.
More than 100 fans of the
famous flock of turkey vultures
gathered around drum fires in the
35-degree temperature ncar
Whipps Ledges of Hinckley
Metroparks Reservation on Sunday.
It was 9:24 a.m. when Ranger
Capt. Roger Lutz, the official buzzard spotter, confirmed the first
sighting. A second sighting came at
9:30, and seven more or the scavenger birds were seen at 9:47 a.m.
The buzzards disappeared into
ledges where they wtll live until
November.
The first buzzard last year did
not show up until2:30 p.m.
People have been coming to this
community of 500 people 10 miles
southwest.of Cleveland for the buzzard wau:h each year since 1957.

"This is a special occasion.
People all over the world know
Hinckley because of the buz zards," said ·veterinarian Jerry Harris, who wore plastic feet and a hat
with a big buzzard head.
Hinckley also holds a pancake
breakfast each March 15, which is
Buzzard Day even if the birds don't
arrive.
The birds appear regal in the sky
but are plain, with wrinkled, red
heads and black bodies.
" I love the buzzards, but I wish
they'd come closer," said Jeremy
Lane, 9, of Cleveland. "My dad
said if I stood real still, it might ·
land right on my head and he said
they wouldn't hurt me or any·
thing."
According tO local legend, buzzards were drawn 10 Hinckley in
18 I8 by the Great Vllrmint Hunt,
when residents killed animals that
had attacked farm stock. The birds
feasted when carcasses thaWed in
March.

Group says Ohio officials should explore all options
before agreeing to dump site for radioactive waste
Sahli welcomed the bill's introCOLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) duction,
and said his informal
Ohioans should not rush into agreepoiling
of
environmental groups
ing to become the dump site for
low-level radioactive waste from showed withdrawal from the multisix Midwest S!ates. a state environ- state compact, created under federal law, to be a popular view.
mental group said.
"It's important that we start
Richard Sahli, executive director of the Ohio Environmental talkina about the options, pulling
Council, said the state should out of the compact being one, cer·
explore all its options before agree- tainly looking at diffcn:at disposal
ing to like contaminated mlllerial oplions. fronl medjcal waste, which
from regional nuctear poy.v plants, . is fairly ituiOcllcl!iS. venui the DUke ·
hospitals and melldt llbtnJorics, . ~t Wlilte, which is m081 the
Sabli said a decision may be i'adioactivity, most of the volume,
reached ln May on whelber to l!UP- and most long-lived," Sahli said.
(Jillt a bill introduced by S.. Neal
Compact groponents conteJid
Zimmers, D·Dayton, that woul4 Ohio would are better under the
have Ohio withdraw from the Mid- · apement bet•tsc the dwnp woUld
west lrltonwe ComJIIICt on Low- be llllllt:d 10 IIIIOiher state every 20
level Radiooctive Waste.
years, and Ohio could refuse to
Zimmers' bill also would bloclc accept \'IIIlO from outside the com·
other slllelliom dispcillng of their pact regiori.
waste in Ohio. .
ZiJIIIIICn' bill is opposed by the

or

,.,

;).

·.

.

-

..

feet," Suppes said.
Ohio Department of Health.
Roger Suppes, chief of the DiviLobbyists for agricultural orgasion of Environmcnlal Health, said
.
nizations
and businesses promote
leaving the compaCI would
increase, not reduce, the amount of their interests year-round at the
Statehouse, but lhc industry make$
waste for Ohio to handle.
"ntis will occur ·because oper- a special effort this week to influating a regional facility within the ence legislator.!. .
Midwest Compact will mean Ohio
Ute annual Ohio Ag Day Celewill have. to dispose of 67,000
bration is 10 be Slaged Wednesday.
cubic feet~ year, for a 20-~ tbtal
Ohio's ~q~t of Agriculof 1.34 milliOn cubic feet. ' S • ture will be joined by~ companies
said in a teller 10 Zimmcn. The job and commodity groups in pro¥idwould go 10 other states over the
ing food and infOIIIIIIion 10 invited
following 80 years,
guests ~ho include government
Suppes said that under Zim- . officials, agribusiness executives
mers' plan, Ohio would have to •and consumers.
·
. dispose of its own waste for the
Most of the program will 11Q
entire ceniUI')'.
plat:c inside 1 1111e office sower
"Since Ohio generates an averbut farm madlillery will be oa ,....:
age of 24,000 cubic. feet per ~.
lie display on the StaJehoulo 11w1
'I!OinB it alone would mean clispos. to make COIIIUIIeiS IWII'8 Ill w1t1t
1111 of at lcut 2.4 million cubic
is Involved In IJI*iDI GftiiiL

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111 Court Street
PomeiOJ', Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

LETiliRS OF OPINION ore weloome. They should be less tban 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed witb name ,
addtoss and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leners
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Primary season produces
surprise package for voters

" " ·---------w
- -·-- - ·- - ----Monday, March 16, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

'

Paga--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March 16,1992

Tuesday~ Mardi 17
Accu-Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

Stop outgoing guns to stop incomi-ng drugs
WASHINGTON- The Second
Amendment is preserving the right
of Colombian drug lords to keep
and bear arms. When it comes to
buying weapons for their deadly
business, drug lords rely on errand
boys in the United States who simply walk into gun shops and buy
retail.
At the recent San Antonio drug
summit, the aim of the U.S. delegates was to cut the pipeline of
drugs into the country. But the
Colombian government is equally
concerned about the pipeline of
weapons flowing the other way. In
their minds, the problem is clear: If
the United States really wanted
Colombia to beat the drug lords, it
would stop arming them.
Jack Killorin, chief spokesman
for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms, says the bureau
believes "the predominant source
of weapons for the narcotics organizations in South America is the
U.S. retail marlc.et"
Last year, more than 8,000 U.S.·
made weapons were seized abroad

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - After 20 years of reforms, deals, tinkering and
tuning, the Democratic system for selecting presidential nominees is
hurtling toward the early decision party strategists sought- on a candidate the voters don't yet know very well.
Gov _Bill Ointon acknowledged the problem .
" We all have just burst upon the scene," he said after taking command
of the dwindled Democratic field heading into the Illinois and Michigan
primaries that could prove his clinchers.
Not that Clinton ts a newcomer; he's served for II years as governor
of Arkansas and remarked the other day that in that time he has known
about ISO people who have been state governors. But that dido 't put him
on a national stage.
His debut there as a presidential candidate - he'd considened it and
opted against it in 1988- was promising; Clinton was anointed the likely
leader before the ftrst vote was cast. Then came the personal con troversies, filS! over a woman's claim of an illicit affair, published in a supermarket scandal tabloid: then over the draft stabls that kept him out of the
Vietnam War. Now Clinton's campaign has ammged a lawyer's review of
a controversy involving his personal fmances, seeking to quash that one.
Clinton claims to have dispelled those problems with his eight-state
victory on Super Tuesday, saying Southern voters heard the worst about
him but voted for him on the issues.
But that hasn't calmed concerns among elected Democrats, who worry
that there may be more.
"I'm the most investigated, examined, gone-over person running for
president," Clinton said.
Struggling to catch up and keep going. the second-place Democratic
campaigner, Paul Tsongas, is trying to use the character issue while professing innocence.
"Whatever vulnerabilities I have are on the issues," he says. 'They're
not vulnerabilities of character and judgment.' •
" ... I'm not carrying baggage," he said in a PBS television interview.
"Bill Clinton is just one story after another. You don't think the Republicans are doing all the research into all those things?"
Tsongas claimed he hasn't gone after Clinton on character but said
Republicans wouldn't be so genteel.
That's the sort of savage gentility the Democrats had hoped their
hurry·up nominating system would avoid this time. Ronald H. Brown, the
party chairman, had said the Democrats would avoid the litmus test batAnd then there were none.
tles over political philosophy that have hampered their tickets before. But
Here we are, deep into the winan in-party argument over the character of the man most lilcely to be nom- nowing, as we search for one inated may prove more damaging.
just one - prospective president
"I've always been in favor of an early nominee, and it seems to me who ' ll run with integrity and
that we still have a chance of achieving that goal," Brown said after decency, as well as vision and
Super Tuesday. Clinton is the only one of the three candidates who can strength. Suddenly, the candidates
win early: a Tsongas comeback or a Jerry Brown upset would take until have winnowed us right out of
summer.
prospects.
:But the contest may be settled before the questions are. The Democrats
Even a few days ago, things
overhauled their nominating process for the 1972 campaign in a reform looked better. This nation of 254
mqvement that stripped power from state party leaders and kingmakers million people seemed to have
and gave it to voters. That made the primaries, not the political club- rejected 253,999,998 as lacking
rooms, the forum in which earlier candidates auditioned and won support either quality or integrity. But at
for the nomination.
.
least there were two who seemed
That's been the system since, with revisions including a guarantee that willing to steer their bandwagons
pJi!nary election losers usually share in a state's delegates, and with slate along the high roads of '92: Mr.
and regional efforts to strengthen their influence by altering their sched- Paul E. Tson~as of Lowell, Mass.,
ules.
and Mr. William Jefferson Clinton
It is the process that produced the curren~ front-loaded schedule, with of Little Rock, Ark.
more than half the pledged delegates to be chosen by the end of this
We've rejected Jerry Brown,
month, and more than 70 percent before May . There also are 772 whose everyone's-a-croolc-but-me
superdelegates, officeholders who are not bound to any candidate, a theo- campaign transformed an innovaretical swing vote which in practice is likely to line up with the primary tive pol into the most irresponsible
election winner.
demagogue to run in Democratic
Twenty-ftve Democratic primaries 31\d caucuses were bunched into the primaries since George Wallace.
two weeks that ended Tuesday; two giant tests are just ahead. While the Meanwhile, the Republicans fieldDefllocratic rivals have detailed, written programs on economic and other ed no one attempung to run with
issues, they've been campaigning in shorthand and in often hostile televi- integrity and decency - no Jack
sion advertisements on a pace too intense for close attention to specific Kemp, no Bill Bennett, no Pete du
Pont; just Patrick Buchanan (whose
ccincems.
:According to a network-sponsored poll of Super Tuesday voters in ftve racist appeals differentiate between
states, 40 percent of the Democrats who cast ballots weren't satisfied with Jews and Americans and warn
theif options and would like to see somebody else in the race.
·Clinton says that is because "none of the candidates are all that well
known yet," which makes running on issues all the more important.
He's described it as "buyer's remorse," saying it won't persist. ·
~s a springtime symptom, that's manageable. The Democrats' risk is
As an experiment, I once asked
in the possibility of a recurrence later, when their ticket is set
a group of women in my church
not to pniy for two weeks. I wanted
them to report back, at the end of
that time, on whether going without
prayer had made any noticeable
difference in their lives.
It smprised me that none or'the
women would agree to try the
experiment. Prayer, they said, was
so important to them and brought
such manifold blessings that they
couldn't thinlc,of doing without it
for even a day, much less two

- 7,453 of them in drug-poducing
countries. The U.S. Customs Service also seized 1,57 I weapons
headed for LatiJ! America last year.

Jack Anderson
The majority ol the guns that end
up in the hands of drug lords are
assault weapons bought from U.S .
stores.
Colombia has frequently raised
the issue in response to U.S.
demands that Colombia be tougher
on its own drug cartels. In 1989,
during the heat of the bloody war
between Colombian law enforcement and the Medellin drug cartel,
then-Colombian President Virgilio
Barco pleaded with the United
States to halt the flow of deadly
weapons to his country.
Senate Democrats, led by Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., responded
with a bill to ban 14 kinds of
assault weapons with little or no
sporting value. The senators cited
the mayhem on U.S. streets, plus

M9Kl1RS OF AN

the arming of foreign drug cartels.
A Gallup Poll showed that 72 per·
cent of Americans were behind the
ban. But the National Rifle Association wasn't, and neither was the
Bush administration. The bill failed
to paSS the House last year.
Drug violence is down in
Colombia, but the weapons traffic
remains "constant," according to
Killorin. Customs·and BA1F officials say the guns are bought in
small lots from gun shops across
the country by well-established
middle-men for the drug lords .
They are often exported through
the same channels that brin~ dru2s
into the United States.
The BATF has established a
new office in Colombia, which has
increased the case load for both
countries. But, Colombia is still not
sa~fied the United States is doing
all •t can, according to Gabriel
Silva, international affairs adviser
to Colombian President Cesar
Gaviria Trujillo. Silva told our
associate Dean Boyd, "The United
States has to do a better (job) at

IN~I~IBl.t PRE~IDtNT

MICH.

controlling these weapons,
because, though they are produced
for domestic purposes, many are
ending up in our country." Silva
also said some U.S. weapons are
being routed to Colombia through
third countries.
Colombia made its point at the
San Antonio summit and won a
pledge from the United States to
tighten export controls. But that's
the same pled~e the Bush administration made m 1989 while ruling
out a. ban on assault weapons. And
nothing has changed. Silva diplomatically told us he had "no opinion" on whether a ban on assault
weapons in the United States
would help to solve his country's
problems. ''This is a _domestic
1ssue for the United States to
decide."
Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Joseph Biden, D-Del.,
thinks the DeConc)ni bill would
have made a difference. The continued flow of U.S. weapons to the
drug cartels, Biden said, is "one of
the most glaring flaws in the
Andean plan" -the U.S. master
plan for stopping the flow of drugs
from Andean countries.
HARASSMENT PRIMER After the Clarence Thomas fwsco,
it has come to this - federal agencies publishing primers for their
employees on what constitutes sexual harassment. Apparently com·
mon sense doesn't cut it any more,
nor does the Supreme Court standard of 'Til know it when I see
it.'.
Employees of the Federal
DepOSit Insurance Corp. recently
received a communique from their
Equal Employment Office. It
reminds them that "actual or
attempted rape or sexual assault"
is a no-no alon$ with cat-calls,
wolf whistles, pmching, stalking
and "elevator eyes."
The FDIC advice is to not refer
to an adult co-worker as "girl,
hunk, doll, babe, or even honey."
Don't give a neck massage or stare
at someone in an "amorous" manner on the job.
And never, never, never engage
in a variety of suggestive facial
contortions, among them kissing
sounds, howling, smacking lips,
winking, throwing kisses or sensuousty licking one's lips.

Martin Schram
ticking seems, by companson, subtle).
Just as our quest settled on
Messrs. Clinton and Tsongas:
Clinton began finding horrible
fault with a Tsongas economic
plan, quoting out of context an old
Tsongas promise to be "the best
friend Wall Street ever had.''
Tsongas began calling Clinton
"cynical and unprincipled." This
came after Clinton defended his
middle-class tax cut (which
Tsongas opposes) by telling
reporters off-handedly: "We cannot put off fairness under the guise
of promoting growth. It won't
work. It's not America (or 'American' as some journalists heard it)."
Tsongas howled that this was
somehow a "code-word" anack on
his Greek-American herita~e.
Clinton's campaign literature

began distorting Tsongas'
admirable record of supporting
Israel. It said Tsongas voted a
decade ago against halting economic aid for Syria - never adding
that six of seven Jewish senators
voted the same way Tsongas did.
Tsongas perpetrated the dirtiest
deed or I 992 by airing an ad on
Georgia's black radio stations
aimed at deceiving black voters
into thinking Clinton (who is one
of the best friends blacks have in
the South) is some kind of antiblack SOB -as in Son -Of-ABuchanan.
·
It happened after Clinton's outburst into an open microphone,
when so.meone erroneously told
him Jesse Jackson endorsed Tom
Harkin after promising Clinton
he'd stay neutral. (To me, Clinton
actually proved himself to be most
unprejudiced in that flash of anger
- he never mentioned Jackson's
race. How many others would be
so pure in their uncontrolled rage?)
Yet Tsongas personally
approved the idea to blm that ineident into a racial attack ad. In i~ a
voice with an identifiably black
accent says: "He didn't wait for
the facts. No. Bill Clinton didn't

5hOWBts T-sronns Rain Flurriss

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...b .... MGiiiBp . . . . - ,.~you
twn prM:tiCing SAFE DISK?"

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, increasing cloudiness.
Low around 40. Southwest winds
I 0 to 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent. Tuesday, mostly
cloudy with a slight chance of
showers. High around 60. Chance
of precipilation is 30 percent
Extended forecast:

Meigs County Emergency Services units answered 12 calls for
assistance over the weekend.
On Saturtlay at 10:47 a.m., Rutland squad went to Larkin Street
Avanelle George was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. AI II :21
a.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to
Joppa Road for Amanda Boso and
Cindy Browning, who were taken
to St. Joseph Hospital. Jessica Boso
was taken from there to St. Joseph
Hospital by Pomeroy unit.
On Sunday at 2:16 a.m.,
Pomeroy unit went to State Route
143 for a gas odor at the Marge
Fetty residence. At 10:09 a.m.,
Racine squad went to Wells Run
Road . Neil Barber was taken to
Holzer. At 3:30p.m., Pomeroy unit
went to Rock Springs Road. Mabel
Pickens was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 5:04 p.m.,

forecast for Oregon and Nonhero
California.
Scattered thunderstorms were
expected in west Texas.
Flurries were forecast for the
Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The
snow was expected to stop cast of

Lake Ontario, where some areas ·
have received up to seven feet
since Wednesday.
Readings in the Northeast were
expected to remain 10 to 15
degrees below normal today.
Warmer weather was anticipated
for tonight

.Sylvia Burnette
Sylvia Burneue, 82, of I 104
Adrian Ave., died Sunday, March
15, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center
after a year of failing health.
She was born on Feb. 27, 1910
in Columbus, daughter of the late
Charles W. and Addie Sanders
Rice.
·
She was a 1928 graduate of Rio
Grande College and attended Ohio
University. She began tenching at
Waterloo School and retired from
Southwestern School in 1974 after
40 years of service. She was a
member of the Gallia County
Retired Teachers Association and
attended Calvary Baptist Church.
Survivors include her husband,
GranviUe Burnette, whom she married Oct. 6, 1928 in Pomeroy; one
daughter, Mrs. Neil (Adelaide)
Sanders of Gal)ipolis; two grandchildren, Neil Sanders II and Mrs.
Hollace (Ann) Moody; and five
grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
one brother, Fred.
. Services will be held 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the First Prcsbyteri·
an Church, with the Rev. AI Earley
and the Rev. Earl Dale officiating.
Friends may call from 5:30p.m.
until the time of services on
. Wednesday.
.
Graveside services will be held

George R. Plagenz

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or' may nmll "irt ........ diftcllo The
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Meigs County Court Judge costs; Roy F. Roush, Coolville, seat costs; Ricky A. Laudermilt, Long
Patrick H. O'Brien fined 28, and belt, costs only: Richard Timblin, Bottom , DUI, SIX months in jail
two others forfeited bonds last Guysville, seat belt, costs only; suspended to 10 days, $450 and
David Windland, Guysville, s(l8t_ costs, operator's license suspended
week.
Fined were : lames B. belt, costs only.
for one year, no operator's license
Delbert
Hendricks,
Albany,
Hawthorne, Long Bottom, speed,
six months in jail suspended to Hi
$21 and costs; Sheldon Capehart, failed to display HUT sticker, $25 days, concurrent with DUI charge
Coolville, seat belt violation, costs and costs; Tma Hendricks, Middle- $75 and costs: Danny Lantz'
only: Frank Jeska, Centerville, par~ disorderly conduct, $50 fine, Coolville, criminal mischief, $250
speed, $20 and costs; Forest $40 suspended, costs, one year pro- and costs, ten days in jail, suspendQualls, Middlepon, seat belt viola· bation, restraining order issued; ed, one year probation, obstructing
W. VA.
tion, costs only; Cteon Pratt, James C. Hensler, Middleport, official business, $250 fine concurPomeroy, speed, $21 and costs; speeding, $30 and costs: Tina Hall, rent with criminal mischief charge,
Troy Meadows, Mason, W.Va.,left Rutland, passing bad checks, eight costs, I 0 days m Jail, suspended;
of center, $10 and costs; James R. charges, $25 fine, suspended on Andrea M. Wright, Rutland, failure
Reeves, Cheshire, seat belt viola- three counts, costs and restitution, to control, $10 and costs; Crystal
tion, costs only; William L. Foley, $25, costs and restitution on R. Sayre, Reedsville, seat belt vioPomeroy, no operator's license, rema!ning charges, probation of lation, costs only.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
lc8
$75 and costs, ftve days in jail sus- one year; Robert E. Hupp,
Forfeiting honds were Brian D.
Cheshlle,
no
operator's
license,
10
pended
upon
the
condition
of
a
Hicks,
Ewington, seat belt violaC1992 Aceu-Weather, Inc.
proper operator's license within 60 days in jail, suspended to time tion, $40; and Don Howard ,
days.
served upon the condition that the Pomeroy, stream littering, $335.
Roger E. Brunton, Shawnee, defendant provide the county with
seat belt violation, costs only; a valid operator's license within 60
Wednesday through Friday:
Glenn
W. Tuttle, Racine, seat belt days, $75 and costs; Brian Beeler,
Wednesday and Thursday, a
Continued from page 1
violation,
costs only; Thomas Long Bottom, operated a vessel
Veterans Memorial
chance of showers or flurries .
Coole,
Bidwell,
DUI,
$350
and
"It's
just
a
terrible,
terrible
misSATURDAY
ADMISSIONS ·Highs Wednesday mainly in the
without a current registration
costs,
three
days
in
jail,
operator's
take,"
she
said.
Sharon Hubbard, Racine, and
40s, and 45 to 55 Thursday. Lows
(water craft), $26 and costs.
She is seeking an independent William Quivey, Pomeroy.
··
mid-20s to mid-30s Wednesday license suspended for 90 days. failCharles D. Reitmire, Jr. ,
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - .
and in the 30s Thursday. Friday, ure to drive in marked lanes, costs Pomeroy, DUI, six months in jail, review of her account
"I'd face up to it if I thought it None.
fair and cool. Highs in the upper only; John 0. Blake, Pomeroy, seat suspended to 10 days, $450 and
belt
violation,
costs
only;
Norma
costs, operator's license suspended was true," Ms. Oakar told The
20s to mid-30s and lows in the 20s.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - ·
Eakins, Pomeroy, seat belt viola- for one year, two years probation, Plain Dealer. "It's difficult to Octa Ward, Syracuse.
tion, $20 and costs, stop sign viola- alcohol assessment, no operator's believe it's accurate. I'm not denySUNDAY DISCHARGES
tion, $10 and costs; Samuel P. license, six months in jail suspend- ing it, but I am taking steps to get None.
McKinney, Rutland, seat belt viola- ed to 10 days, concurrent with an independent audit''
Ms. Oakar said Saturday that HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .
Tuppers Plains unit was sent to tion, costs only; Karen L. Moore, DUI, $75 and costs, two years proDischarges, March 13 - Melva
Dry
Ridge,
Ky.,
seat
belt
violation,
committee
staff members were to
bation, left of center, costs only;
State Route 7. Tony Jones was
Bennett,
Patricia Duncan, Teresa· ·
costs
only;
James
P.
Lusher,
Gal·
notify
the
top
abusers
Friday
but
Kenneth F. Mitchell, Langsville,
treated but not transported.
Gauze,
James
Johnson, Darlean-. ·
lipolis,
speed,
$20
and
costs.
she
was
not
notified.
She
said
her
DUI, six months in jail suspended
At 2:28 a.m. on Monday, RutMcClain,
Dorothy
McGuffm, Betty - ·
Jason Nottingham, Long Bot- to 10 days, $450 and costs, one monthly salary is about $5,500
land unit went to State Route 684.
Patton,
Brian
Reed,
Stephanie
Carol Russell was taken to Veter- tom, operating a water craft with- year operator's license suspended, after taxes and it would be unusual
Thompson,
Constance
Thrapp.
ans. At 3:55 a.m .. Tuppers Plains out a current valid registration, $26 two years probation, failure to con- to write check s exceeding that
Binhs, March 13 - Mr. and Mrs. .
.
unit went to Mile Hill Road Twila and costs: Edward G. Smart, trol, $20 and costs, drug abuse, $50 amount.
Bedford
Wrigh~ a son, Rio Grande.
Albany,
assured
clear
distance,
$10
Fcighan
explained
his
checking
and
costs;
Mike
Henry,
Ponland,
Clark was treated but not transpon·
Discharges,
March 14 - Lillian.... - ....
and
costs;
Robin
L.
Nance,
Racine,
problem
by
saying,
"
I've
never
domestic
violence,
$300
and
costs,
ed. At 4:56a.m., Rutland unit went
to Meigs Mine 2. Donald Bobo was seat belt violation, costs only ; six months in jail suspended, two had a bounced check. I did have Harper, Mrs. Ted Hayes and son,
Carolyn
Kelvington,
Barbara
·
Phillip
L.
Anthony,
Columbus,
years probation, alcohol assess- overdrafts. I don't know how
taken to O'Bieness Memorial HosMullen, Dustin Nash, Mrs. Richard
many."
pital. At 8:45 a.m., Pomeroy squad DUI, $450 and costs, 10 days in ment.
Patterson
and son, Layna Rodgers, _
He said he was "stunned and
Thomas Grady, Racine, no drivwas sent to Pomeroy Cliffs Apart- jail, one year license suspension ,
Anna
Sharkey,
Janice Stanley, Zel· ments for Eva Schreiber, who was no operator's license, $75 and er's license, $75 fme, $40 suspend- obviously quite embarrassed" to be
don West.
taken to Veterans. At 8:55 a.m., costs, 10 days in jail, concurrent ed, costs, five days in jail, suspend- named on the list.
Births, March 14 - Mr. and Mrs.with
DUI
charge;
Ronald
R.
Cared
if
valid
operator's
hcense
within
Feighan
said
he
con1actcd
the
Middleport unit went to Zuspan
Charles
Marks, a son, Wellston.
roll
,
Coolville,
speed,
$22
and
60
days,
no
registration,
$10
and
acting
chairman
of
the
House
Hollow Road. Kenneth Madden III
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mike Coy, a daugh-'
Ethics
Committee
,
who
verified
was taken to Veterans. At 9:19
ter,
Hamden.
Feighan's place on the list.
a.m., Pomeroy squad was sent to
Discharges, March 15 - Daphne
"I knew I had written checks
Mount Olive Road. Louella Driggs
Barry,
Debra Cleland. Teresa .
with the knowledge of overdraft
was taken to Veterans.
McDonald.
·
at
the
Rock
Springs
United
Meeting planned
protection, but I did not know the
Births,
March
15
Mr.
and
Mrt.
•.
There will be a special meeting Methodist Church. Lenora Leifheit exact number of checks over that
Randy
Philkins,
a
daughter,
Point·
.
~
of Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 F will be hostess and Dorothy Jeffers allowance," he said
Feighan, saying his monthly Pleasant, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs .- ..
and AM on Saturday at noon . will present the program . Nancy
Grueser will have the contest.
Work in the master mason degree.
salary was about $5,500, said he David Nibert, a son, Point Pleasant, •
Final sign. up
sometimes paid about 40 bills at W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Tay"· . ·
CCL to meet
II a.m. Thursday at Mound Hill
Syracuse
Youth
League
will
The Middlepon Child Conserthe end of the month before his lor, a son, Mt. Alto.
Cemetery.
hold
final
sign-up
on
Wednesday
next check was deposited in his
In lieu of flowers, contributioos vation League will meet Tuesday at
may be made to the Youth Mission the Rock Springs United Methodist 5· 7 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary. account. He said his House bank
trip to New Mexico, c/o the First Church. Husband's night will be Registration is $12 and a birth cer- account served as his family's
Presbyterian Church, 51 State St., held with a potluck dinner at 6:30 tificate is needed if this is the fllSt major checking account. He said
p.m. The "Baffoon Clowns" will be sign-up.
the checks were not for large
Am Elc Power .................. 31 l/4
Gallipolis, 45631.
Dinner planned
the entertainment.
Ashland Oil ....................... 31 311! •
amounts.
A dinner at the senior citizens .
Donald Mills
Lilerary club to meet
"The largest check would have
AT&amp;T.............................. ...38 l/4 •
center
in
Pomeroy
will
be
held
The
Middleport
Literary
Club
been
my
mongage,
and
that's
about
Bank
Onc ........................... .45 3/4
Donald Wesley Mills, 70, MidThursday
from
5-6:30
p.m.
The
will
meet
Wednesday
at
2
p.m.
at
$2,400,"
he
said.
Bob
Evans
......................... 27 1/4
dleport died Friday, March 13,
cost
is
$3
per
person
and
menu
the
Meigs
County
Public
Library
in
Charming
Shop
..: ................29 3/8
1992 at North Collier Hospital in
includes oven baked chicken,
Pomcror,.
Mrs.
Eileen
Buck
will
C~
Holding
......................
l9
Naples, Aa.
mash~d potatoes and gravy, peas,
review
'Fortune's
Children
"
by
F
eral
Mogul..
..................
15
3/8
Born in Jaekson, he was a son of
Continued from page I
cole slaw, roll and beverage. Pie
Anhur
T.
Vandelbilt
II.
Roll
call
is
Goodyear
T&amp;R
..................
62
the late Shirley and Nora Vaughan
will be available for 75 cents. on it, citing a Washington Post
Key Centurion ................... 18 1/4
Mills. He was a retired personnel to tell about a mansion worth a Music
by The Classics will be fea- story about Mrs. Clinton's law fllffi
visit.
Lands
End ........... .. ........... .36 l/4
director from Foote Mineral Com·
tured
with
hits
from
the
40s,
50s,
and
Arkansa
s
state
·
busine
ss
.
Democrats to meet
Limited Inc....................... 27 1{2
pany. He was a 1939 graduate of
Among
the
clients,
Brown
said,
and
60s.
A
free
will
offering
will
The
Meigs
County
Democratic
Multimedia Inc ..................28
Middleport High School and later
was a poultry firm that allegedly
be
taken
for
the
musicians.
Public
Executive
Committee
will
meet
Ra~
Reslaurant .................. I 11/16
Ohio University where he was a
pollutes the state's waterways.
invited.
Thursday
at
7:30
p.m.
at
the
CarRobbins&amp;Myers
................ 19
member of Phi Delta Theta FraterThe Post story focu sed on the
Revival
planned
penter's
Hall.
Shoney
's
inc
......................
25 5/8
nity. He was a World War II navy
Rose law fllffi of which Mrs. ClinRevival
at
the,
Rutland
CommuRacine
Legion
to
meet
Star
Bank
...........................
30
1/4
pilot and a member of the .Ameri·
ton is a partner and the work it did
nity
Church
will
be
held
Friday
The
Racine
American
Legion
Wendy
lnt'I..
..
:
...................
l2
3/8
can Legion Feeney Bennett Post
for the state of Arkansas. It did not
Worthington Ind ................ 25 118
No. 128, Middlepon. He was also a Post 602 will meet Thursday at through March 29 at 7 p.m. nightly. say that Clinton funneled money or
7:30p.m.
at
the
post
home.
Rev.
Billy
McCoy
is
the
speaker.
Stock reports are the 10:30
member of Middlepon Masonic
slate
business
to
the
fllffi.
D
of
A
to
meet
Rev.
Dewey
King
invites
the
puba.m.
quotes provided by Blunt,
Lodge No. 363, the Pomeroy Chap"It's not only corruption. It's an
Chester
Council
No.
323,
lic.
Ellis
and Loewi or Gallipolis.
ter Bosworth Council, the Oh10
environmental disaster and it's the
Daughters
of
America,
will
meet
Clean·up
to
begin
Bob
Evans declared a 4 for 3 ·
Valley Commandry, the Alia din
kind of conflict of interest that 's
Tuesday
at
7
p.m.
Quarterly
birth·
The
Salisbury
Township
stock
split,
paya_ble April 24.
Temple Shrine and the First Presincompatible with the kind of pubdays
will
be
observed.
Potluck
will
begin
clean-up
of
Trustees
byterian Church of Middleport
lic service we expect," Brown
where he was a fanner trustee. He refreshments after the meeting. A township cemeteries and have said.
was a life member or the Middle- producL! party will be held after the requested that all flowers and con"You ought to be ashamed of
port Fire Department and he was meeting with proceeds to go to the tainers be removed by March 25.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
yourself
for jumping on my wife,"
miscellaneous
committee.
Youth league to meet
also a former scout master for
446 ·4514
.. . ... ,
OF.S to meet
The Middleport Youth League Clinton shot back. "Jerry comes
' ''! ' "'
•.
Troop 245, Boy Scouts of America.
here with his family wealth and his
Evangeline
Chapter
No.
172,
will
hold
a
coaches
meeting
on
BARGAIN MATIN U~ 1l'MOAT ' SUHOAY .
Mr. Mills is survived by his
BAII:G.I lk IHGHT TUESr.iAT .
SUOO suits and makes a lying
wife, Patricia Shennan Mills, Mid- Order of the Eastern Star, will hold Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Middle- accusation about my wife.
MARCH 13 thn. II
thr11 l HURS!IAT !
dlepon, whom he .married April 8, its annual inspection on Thursday pan Village Hall. Anyone interest"I
never
funneled
money
to
my
1948; a daughter, Cynthia Ann at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport ed may a11end.
wife's law firm . Never. Never,"
OAPSEtomee
Mills, Middleport; a son and spe· Masonic Temple. Deputy Grand
OAPSE No. 453, Southern the Arkansas governor said.
cial friend, Sherman Mills and Matron Kay Spencer will be
Tsongas, left out of the feud,
Local, will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
Belva Miller, Pomeroy; a brother inspecting officer.
joked
about it later before joining
Health club to meet
at Southern High School. Everyone
and sister-in-law, Raben and Joyce
in
on
Brown's
criticism.
The Rock Springs Better Health urged to attend.
Mills, Chester; a grandson,
"Those
two
got into the dispute
Nicholas Mills, Middleport; a Club will meet Thursday at I p.m.
that you're all going to use on the
cousin, Ruth Ebersbach, Middlenews. I was out of the picture," he
port; an aunt, Vivien~e Waddell, r - - - said.
Middleport; and several nieces,
The debate was sponsored by
nej!hews and coUsins.
Continued from page I
the Chicago Sun-Times, WLS -TV
Services will be Tuesday at 1
and the Illinois Democratic Party.
Rutland Civic Center.
p,m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Officers elected were Max Whitlatch. Meigs Mines, Local I857,
IV!iddleport with Rev. Kris TrienUnited Mine Workers, president; Woody Call, Ravenswood Alutong and Rev. David Bryan offiCi·
Sotmtfsirre q®:s .Nways Coofjne ~t
minum, Local 5668, United Steelworkers of America, vice presiating. Burial will be in Riverview
dent; and Chad Young, International representative, United Food
Gemetery.
.
and Commerdal Wolters of America, secretary.
Friends may call at the funeral
Pu.rpose of the cOl!lition, according to Call, will be to create
home today (Monday) 2-4 and 7-9
union solidarity, to work together and help each other when labor
p.m.
.
problems arise, and to endorse and campaign for political candi·
Memorlll contributions may be
dates who support labor.
.
made 1D the Mclp County Public
Next meeting of the coalition was set for I p.m. Sahlrday at the 1
MQNPAY-Baked Ham Sanctwich, French Fries, &amp;ql65allll
Library, Meias County Humane
Civic Center. Call said at that time representatives will be named to
DIE$DAY · G~led Chene, Flllllt:h Fries, 8014&gt; &amp;Salad Bar
Society, Prcsby~rlan Ministry of
"seek out" ctindldates who are •stron_g suppdrters of labor. Those
MciJs CQIIlll)', Pint Baptist Ol111th
"f'lMlMAY •ALL-VOU-CAN·EAT SPAGHETII _IALLDAY)
candidates will then be invited to speak at a coalition meeJing in late
of Middleport, Oreenpeacc, Boy
April.
.
IHMAY • LlWr &amp;onons, Choice ol POliti, &amp;ql &amp;Salad Bar
Scouts of America, and Firat
Other plans discussed 81 the meeting include a union rally to be
Southern BBDiilt Chun:h. Pomeroy,
FBI!AY •ALL-YOU.CAN-EAT FISH (ALL DAY)
held at the RockS= fairgrounds in late May.
Eaton to succeed lacocca Anlong diOse
ng at Saturday's meeung were Whitlatch,
Order 2lggl A1rr Styli Will lion-a llulllrmlk IIICUIII,IIICI Collw ..
Young,
Din
Slidhan),
president
of Local 5668, Ravenswood Alu.
IWI.IMXII•MIIWIII'EXIIA
HIGHLAND PARK, Mich.
minum,.United Steelwottcrs of America; Jim LiUiejohn, Piketon
(AP) ._ ~ J. Baton, General
Uranium, Local 3689 Ohio Chemical W«kcn Association; Bill ·
Motors Corp.'s top executive in
Oiler, COMPAQ. United Mine Workers, and Floyd Sayre, vice
Europe, was named today as the
president ofLocal644, Goodyear, United Rubber Workers.
eventual suace11or to Chrysler

Oakar...

Hospital news

__ Meigs a.nnouncements--

Stocks

Democrats...

FRtOA~

The Daily Sentinel

.. •'• "

TemperatureS in the Great Lalces
and Ohio Valley were forecasi
today in the 40s and 50s, as much • as 20 degrees higher than Sunday. Cool but sunny weather was
forecast today for much of Florida,
with highs in Miami expected to
reach into the 70s.
A cold front will end record
warmth in Montana. On Sunday, 10
cities in the nonhero Plains repon· •
ed record high temperatures for the -•
date. Sunshine and strong southerly :
wmds helped push readings into the : _
60s and lower 70s in the afternoon. •
Record highs included 65 ~:
degrees at Williston, N.D., 70
degrees at Worland, Wy ., and 72
degrees at MilesCity, Mont.
Forecasters today called for tern·
perahlres in the 20s in Maine; the
30s in New England; the 40s in the •
northern Plains. mid-Atlantic states and Great Basin: the 50s in the · •
Tennessee Valley and Nonhwest; •
the 60s in the South, Southwest and •
Southern California; the 70s in -·
Florida, the Gulf Coas1states and
much of Texas and southern Kri: -:
zona; and the 80s in southwest
Texas.
The high for the nation Sunday
was 89 degrees at Laredo, Texas.

--Area deaths--

want to find out it it were true. He
just attacked. The man he anacked?
Jesse Jackson. Rev. Jesse Jackson.
Clinton, before he got all the facts,
accused Rev. Jackson of- quote
- 'back-stabbing, dirty doublecrossing.' ... Help elect a president
who respects OUR community."
(If Bush or Buchanan did what
Tsongas did, the national media
would be crying "Klan I")
TSongas campaign manager
I?enni~ Kanin, a decent pol who,
hke h1s boss, knows right from
wrong, clearly isn't proud of that
ad, as he says: "You do a lot of
things in the heat of a campaign,
when things are coming fast and
furious. Whatever people think of
the Jackson ad, Paul's being held to
a different standard than the albers." Precisely. That "different
standard" - honesty, decency,
candor - was the core of Tsongas'
unique anti-charisma charisma.
In our search for integrity and
decency '92, Bush, Buchanan and
Brown are three-bees beyond salvation. On Nov. 3, we'll probably
vote to send Clinton or Tsongas to
the Oval Office.
But today we feel like sending
them to their rooms without supper.

But by far the biggest organiza- their being is the infmite power and
tion of those who pray for others is intelligence of God, ready to flow
called Silent Unity, an arm of into their lives. Once they underUnity School of Christianity, a stand this, the circumstances in
loosely-knit denomination devoted their lives change, says Freeman.
mostly to healing. Its I ,400-acre
A woman who phoned Silent
complex, called Unity Village, is Unity when her husband had a
located in Missouri, 15 miles from heart anack was told: "All is well.
Kansas City.
God is there and his healing power
then?
Silent
Unity
gets
two
million
is 81 work in your husband's heart
Well, you can get somebody to
prayer
requests
a
year
an
averand
he is healed."
. pray for us. Many churches pray
age
of
40,000
a
week.
There
are
She
was told to copy down that
for the sick at church services
200
full-time
Unity
workers
who
affirmation
and to pray it herself.
· where the sick are mentioned by
staff
Silent
Unity
24
hours
a
day.
Meanwhile,
for the next 30 days
name. The TV evangelists often
Forty
of
them
answer
the.
nearly
afflmUitions for the m111' s recovery
w~.
· flash a telephone number on the
Still, there are times when even screen for diose who want prayers 2,000 phone calls for prayer ihat were said in the Silent Unity prayer
come in every day.
room. He fully repined his health.
the deepest believers in prayer find said for them.
Even in the middle oC the night .
If we believe it was those
there are always no fewer ihan four prayers that did the healing, the
persons on hand to deal with prayer question still remains, "How did
requests. Do all two million people the prayers being said hundreds of
who turn to Silent Unity each year miles from where the man lived
By Tbe Alloclated Press
have their prayers answend'l
raK:hhim?"
•~oday is Monday, March 16, the 76th day of 1992. There are 290 days
Probabfy no~ says James Dillet
"I've thought uite a bit about
le.t 10 the year. .
Freeman of Silent Unity: "But we that question 0~ how rrayer
Today's Highliiht itt History:
.
.
get dtouslmds and tbousandl or let- works," says Freeman. " don't
Two blllldrcd yean IJO, on March 16, 1792, Sweden's King Gustav llJ ttts in response that mention SOOie leally know. We're dcalina with a
- lhot and IIICIIIIlly WOIIIded c!arin&amp; 111111q11e111de party~ he died 'I3 bloains m:e~• ..
mystery. J lhlnk pray,W for Qlller
days later. (The 1UU1inod1111 illlplntl the Oluteppe Vetdl' opera "Un
Wby II Slleat Unity •~eccaful peoplo IDlY work llet:ailtle WI are
bl1lo in IIIIIChell," «,"The Mubd Ball.")
·
·
In gottin&amp; pnycn answered for Ill linked toaether In way• we
On lhll dale:
people whoM own pnye11 have doll'! undenllnd. CenalnJy Jove is
. In 1521, ,.,.,..,_ naviplor Pcrdlnand Macellan raK:hed the Philip- failed? To IIIIW« thl1, )'011 haw 10 a llnlc between pooplo. ltecaa10
JliiiN, wllllt he Wit killed by nadvea the followinlllllllldl.
underllllld Ually'a 4lCIIIC II I ~ Ood healla1 tltoaabu ua Ievina
In 1'7SI,JIDMI MllliDI, die fOIItb pn!lident ol the United Statea was - the CI'Oid• foi'de 1111110 uniwne
bominPortCalway, VL
'
'J1ioli wbo ......... ,...
worts th=u hurnu con·
In 11102, c:ca,ms audlorized the elllblishment of the U.S. Military 'w~o
bly
u lndlffaNIIt to nw It bapSCIOIIIIIIII Cl'
,
Acldemy at Waa Poilll, N.Y.
Silent Unity 1riclto chlnao .JICO' IICIICd U Wit the blilltllllll J01111
In 1827, the fUll neWiptlper ediled for and by blacks "Freedom's
pie's
tblnklas bv 1~n1 tTJom to helped. "Alii kaow," bo llld Ill
Journal," wu publiShed in Now York.
·
'
•lOll llial, "Ia l1.a
know dii"UU111' 1 111D111 dllmlelvea thole who
In 1836, the Republic d Texas~ a constitution.
wbile
blind,
DOW I-.••
- !hat at die COlO aad center or

'

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
A cold snap continued in the
Northeast this inorning, with dawn
temperatures well below freezing.
Clouds over the Pacific Nonh·
west early today threatened another
day of rain. Showers also were

EMS units answer 12 calls

their prayers aren't working times when God seems far away
and out of reach. Our world is
falling in and he isn't there to help.
Or so it seems. What do wl$ do

I

Cold spell continues in northeastern states

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

Today in history

.

Snow'

Vis Associated Pr&amp;u Graph·csNet

Do prayers for others bring results?

Berry's World

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~:

Judge 0'Brien processes 28 court cases

Now there's no one on the high road
about assimilating Zulus into Virginia) or David Duke (who makes
Buchanan look like a UNICEF
poster child) or President Bush
(whose code word/scape~oat poli·

--- --- •-Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wt~ctiiH:r

Of IIU

·- ~-· ··•-

Local briefs... --....,

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT

1

-·---~ilri·-----·-···111-

Corp.pbainnlll Lee lacocca
~

�Monday, March 16, 1ssa

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

Monday; March 18,1992
Page-4

Pom~roy-Middlepon,

Scorcboar·d

in spite of recent loss, Southern exceeds Caldwell's expectations

No. 16 Michigan State beat Iowa
64-53, and No. 21 Georgetown was
a 56-54 loser to Syracuse in the Big
East tournament championship
game.
In other conference tournament
title games, N.C. Charloue edged
Tulane 64-63 for the Metro Conference title, New Mexico State held
off Pacific 74-73 to win the Big
West championship and Houston
won the Southwest Conference by
routing Texas 91-72.
The Tar Heels (21-9) lost in
their 20th ACC tournament championship appearance.

loss to Indiana by costing the
No. 3 Kansas 66
Hoosiers
a share of the Big Ten
No. 11 Oklahoma St. 57
title
as
Woody
Austin hit six
Re~ Walters and Adonis Jordan
led a late 13-3 run that carried the straight shots.
Jayhawks to their first Big Eight
Three free throws in the final 35
title since 1986.
The Jayhawks (26-4) had won seconds by Matt Waddell kept Pur·
the regular-season title by three due (16-14, 8-10) in front as the
games over Oklahoma State and Boilermakers atoned for a 106-65
two other teams. Kansas held the pummeling at Bloomington on Jan .
Cowboys (26- 7) to 38 percent 29.
shooting.
The loss gave Ohio State the
Purdue61
Big Ten title and the No. I seed in
No. 41ndiana 59
Purdue avenged its worst-ever the Southeast Regional. Indiana
(23-6, 14-4) was seeded No. 2 in
the West
No. 9 Kentucky 80
No. 17 Alabama 54
Kentucky returned from a two·
year
exile to win the SEC tournahalftime, and Sacramento got no
ment
behind Jamal Mashburn's 28
closer than 17 points during the
points.
final16 minutes.
The Wildcats (26-6) dominated
Rockets 106, Jazz 97
The Rockets withstood a sec- the second half. outscoring the
ond-half Utah rally to beat the Jazz three-time defending champion
Tide (25-8) 51-22.
behind the 28 points and nine Crimson
No.
16 Michigan St. 64
assists of Kenny Smith.
Iowa 53
Utah' s Karl Malone scored 30
Anthony
Miller
scored all of his
of his 36 points in the second half, 15 points in the second
half as
including 18 in the third period, as Michigan State earned a share
of
the Jazz tried to tome back from a third place in the Big Ten.
25-point deficit
Mtchigan Slate (21 ·7, 11-7) led
Vernon Maxwell complemented 24-19 after a defensive first half
Smith with 21. points, six rebounds and 34-26 with 16:28 left before a
and four assists. Otis Thorpe added 10-2 run by Iowa (18-10, 10-8),
12 points and 12 rebounds.
which finished fifth. Miller and
Malone had 16 rebounds. John Shawn
Respert then scored six
Stockton backed him with 25 points each
in a 14-4' run.
points and 16 assists.
Syracuse
56
SuperSonics 109, Mavericks 100
No.
21
Georgetown
54
Ricky Pierce scored 10 of his 23
Dave
Johnson's
foul-line
points the last five minutes, lifting
the SuperSonics over the Maver- jumper with six seconds to play
gave Syracuse its first victory over
icks.
Georgetown in five Big East tourShawn K~mp came off the
championship games.
be-nch and added 20 points and 15 nament
The
Orangemen
(21·9) had met
rebounds for the Sorties.
Georgetown (21-9) in four previous
The Mavericks lost a franchise· title games and lost each time.
record 20th straight road game and Syracuse
clinched its third Big East
ninth straight overall.
title.
,
Rolando Blackman led the MavUNC·Cbarlotte
64, Tulane 63
ericks with 25 points.
Henry Williams made two free
throws with 1.6 seconds to play,
lifting N.C. Charlotte over Tulane
in the Metro Conference champi·
onship game.
N.C. Charlotte (23-8) rallied
Dalton.
from
a five-point deficit in the final
Jenny Lambert with 15 points
was the only player in double fig. 2:14 as Williams scored the last
seven points.
ures for the Bulldogs (14-12).
Ayersville's Laura Brose scored
18 points to help the Pilots to a 57.
47 victory over previously unbeaten Findlay Libeny-Benton.
Tara Worthington added 14
points and Kim Okuly 10 for
Ayersville (21-4).
Chasity Shumaker scored 16
points and bad I I rebounds for the
Easles, whose 2S-game winning
streak ended. Teammates Allison
Recker and Stephanie Meyer
scored 10 points aptece.

Ailing Bird leaves Celts to double-OT victory
By The Associated Press

Even when he's hobbled by
injuries to his back 1 right Achilles
tendon and right thtgh, Larry Btrd
proved again why _the B?ston
Celtics are hobblt.d wtthout hun.
Bird scored 49 points as the
Celtics snapped the Portland T~l
Blazers' seven-game wmnmg
streak with a 152-148 double-overtime victory Sunday. .
.
Bird played 54 mtnutes, ftve
more than anyone else on either
team. and rescued the Celtics with
16 points in the fourth quarter,
including an off-balance threepointer at the blllZer that forced the
first overtime. He also had 14
rebounds and 12 assi'sts in his
eighth game since a two-month
layoff caused by an inflamed nerve
in his lower back.
"I felt all we had to do was get
the:ball to Larry," said point guard
Jolin Bagley, who had 10 assists.
Celtics coach Chris Ford rested
Bird for three minutes in the first
half, then for another minute at the
en4 of the third period.
1'1 was ready to play," said
Bitil who sat out Sawrday's prae·
ti~.' "Nobody ev.er mentioned to
me- whether I wouldn't be playmg.
Chiis k~pt caiUng mv play. If I get

35 shots every night,' I'll score 40."
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Cleveland 100, Denver 91; Phoenix
118, MinnesoiA 113; the Los Angeles ClipJl&lt;'l'S 131, Sacramento 105;
Houston 106, Utah 97, and Seattle
109, Dallas 100.
It was the most points for Bird
since Feb. 15, 1988, when he
scored 49 at Phoenix. His career
high of 60 came against Atlanta on
March 12, 1985.
"Larry was sensational," said
Portland's Clyde Drexler, who had
41 points. "Any time you have
Bird on the noor, anything can
happen."
Reggie Lewis scored 23 points
for the Celtics, while Robert Parish
and Kevin McHale had 22 each
before each fouled out. Terry
Porter had 29 points , Jerome
Kersey 23 and Danny Ainge 19 for
Portland.
Cavaliers 100, Nuggets 91
At Richfield, Ohio, Lenny
Wilkens became the rtfth coach to
reach 800 career NBA victories as
Cleveland beat Denver behind
Mark Price's 29 points and 10
assists.
Wilkens joins Red Auerbach,
Jack Ramsay, Dick Motta and Bill

Fitch as the only coaches to win
800 games. Wilkens is in his 19th
season of coaching, the last six
with the Cavaliers.
The loss was the II th in 12
games for the Nuggets, who got 26
points from Winston Garland.
Suns 118, Tim berwolves 113
Phoenix won at Minnesota for
its third straight road victory after
an eight-game road losing streak.
Jeff Hornacek led four Suns
with 20 or more points with 26,
induding II in the third quarter.
But the Timbcrwolves led 105-103
in the fourth quarter before baskets
by Hornacek and Kevin Johnson
gave Phoenix the lead for good.
Scoll Brooks scored a careerhigh 21 points for the Timberwolves.
Clippers 131, Kings 105
Ron Harper scored 18 of his 20
points in the first half as the Clippers coasted past the Kings and
eslablished a club record for home
victories in Los Angeles with their
24th of the season.
Harper made nine of, his ftrSt II
shots to help the CI ippers built a
51-31 cushion with 6:30 left in the
second quarter. They led 63-44 at

Versailles,
Heath to play in girls state tournament
.
.

: By JEFFREY BRODEUR
; Atloelllted l'rfa Writer
•ftfcchelle POihasl found out that
free-throw practice can mtlly pay
off when the game is on the ltne.
oftlSaturday, it paid off twice.
· l&gt;othast sank a pair of free
thr))ws in regulation and two in
o~ 10 lead VcrsaiUes to a 4443 Nict«y over Gandview ':~
in Stille Divisiell Ill bip
I
flllli

... I l l . , ewtf•

10 111o Divilloa m

.

Jobnloll's tllree-point·
Cf
Gill •!nule leA in the Cilia
..tDd .... die hlbidl die lead
.-- ~-

.

for good, and Loudonville went on
to beat Brookville 46-43.
The teams ended regulation play
tied at 41. After Johnson scored,
Angel Koss'-layup with 30 seconds
left Jar Brookfield made it 44-43.
Amy Zuercher of Loudonville
made a pair of free throws with 15
seconds remaining to eod the scoring.
Zuercher scored 13 points and
Jenny Allerding IO for the Red·
birds (23·2). Nichole Kelley had 12
-pclintl and Sus111 Chomos 11 for
the Warriors (19·.5), who missed 14
of their 22 free throw attempts.
Io other Division III action,
Denise Picltenplugh scored 32
p~~inU 10 lead top-ranted Heldt to a
68-43 victory ov« Wellsville.
Cynthia Slinlon llldcd 12 points
·as Heath (26-{)) led from stan 10
. tlllilll Cor it1541h IIJiiaht viCIClry.
Pldlie bid 11
for

...

Spun

added 10

Heath will play Coldwater at 2
p.m. Friday in a semifinal game at
Ohio Stale University.
Amy Slefring led Coldwater's
ICOI'ers with 19 poiniS Satunlay, as
the Cavaliers advanced by 'defeat·
~

ing Bucyrus Wynford 79-50.
Jenny Rauh added 16. points,
Nikki Mescher I I and Karla Thobe
10 for the cavaliers (24·2). S1acey
Alban • scored 16 and Missy
Greenick II for the Royals (19-6).
In the Division IV regionals,
Heather Smith scored 12 points to
lead Zanesville Rosecrans to a 6143 victory over Lynchburg Clay.
Rosecrans advanced 10 the divi·
sion semifinals against Danyille.
The Bishops took an 11-6 rtrSt
quarter lead, then used a strong
press to wear down~~ (16·9).
RoscclliiiS forced 20 s
and 35
turnovers.
Danville's Kristin Long was
perfect in Jetting ber 17 points
against Covtngton. She was 6-for-6
from die ~eld and s-ror-s from the
free throw line as Danville won 6227.
Danville (2S-1) got off to 1
quick 16-6 Slalt and never lost the
lead. 1bc Blue Devils held CovinB·
ton's Lynette Roeth to 1 point 10
the ftrSt balf and 16 for the game.
She had been averaging 23 _points
per game for Covington (18-7):
Missy Heydinger scored 22
poin.ts for Buckeye Cenlril (21-4)
10 a 47·32 Division IV vic,_ over
M/

W L

NawYad! ............39
a .........................36
Milml .................... 30
Pltilodolptio ........... 30
NewlCIIIO)' ............29
WullinJtoo ............ n
·OrlandO .................. ll

~

GB

INSUUNCE

~

111 S.Cond St., P011eroy
YOUR,INDEPENDENT .
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNn
SINCE 1868

· Southfutun C01rennce
Semlflnall
Allban• 90, Azk1n111 19
Kc1uucky 10, LSU 14
•
Southwest Conrertnce
Sanln•all
Hoo110n 87, TexuChristian 84, 20T
T~•• 97, Tu.uTocb r7

u
13
22l
23.5
24
Z75

Wrstern Alhlfll( Conrertnee

Clllmpl.... lp
Briaham Ywna 73, Tct.u-El Paso 71

Ohio high school
basketball scores

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•l Dh·blon
Ttlm
W L PeL
U11h .......................43 23 .6l2
Sm Anwni.o .......... .40 24 .62S
Houston ............. "..36 30 .545
nc.,., ...................21 43 .321
DaU.. .....................l7 48 .162
Minnoo011 ............. 11 l2 .17l
P~rlnc

Dhillon

Ponland .................46 19

Ooldat S~1e ........ ..42 20

.708
.677

Aloom ..................42 24
Se.ule .................... 36 29
!.A. Labn ............ J4 30
L.A.Ciippon ......... J4 31
Samm.m\0 ............20 45
1 ..tinohocl playc~ll••nh

.636
.554
.l31

.m

.308

GB

Girls-regional action
DIYblonW
Coldwlt.Q' 79, Bucynq Wynford SO
Hach68,Wollsville43
Louclonville46. Bn&gt;at!i~d 43, ar
Venaillec44, Grandview Hts. 43, OT

2
7
21
25.5
30.5

Dlvlalon IV
Ayonville l7, Libcny-BonUlll 47
Buck~~eCentra147, Daltoo 32
Danvilk 62, c.,;,..,. Z7
Z•nc&amp;YIIIt Ro1tcr1n1 ,1, Lynch-

ll
4.l
10
ll.l
12
26

buraCIIJ 43

State pairings
Dlvlllon I
Thumlay: Guficld HciJ}ns Trini'y
(25· 1) vs. Pickerinaton (25·1), 2 p.m.;
Lotan (l4-2) Yl . Vandtiii· BIIIkr (2S·
0), 4 p.m.
ChampiOMhlp: S1turd1y, ll 1.m.

Saturday's scores
L.A. Labn 92, WuhlnJton 19
Chica&amp;o 112. Orlando 96
Allanll liS, Miami 102
New Jmcy 96, N~" Yor:k. 94, OT
Sm Antonio J 13, Ulah 106
Milwaukee tiC, Ailladd~ia lOS
Dcuoil89, Sacnmatt.O I~

Dbiii.. D
Frldty: Urbana (2£.0) Yl. Columbus
B«&lt;hcroft (22·3), 7 p.m.; Shdby (23·2)
w. Cm!icld (23-2), 9 p.m.
Champlon1hlp: S11wday, 9 p.m.

Sunday's scores
BoaUin 1S2.PMl•nd 148, 2 OT
Clntlud 101, Dcnvcr 91
Ptlomi.ll. Ill, MinnCIOia 113
Houatm I06, Ullh 97
L.A. Oippen 131, S1mmm10 lOS
Soaulc 109,D&amp;llu100

Oh111onm

Frldlyt Healh (26-0) vs. Coldw1tcr
(24·2), 2 p_.m.; Loudonville (23-2) v1.
Ven•illel (24-2), 4 p.m.
Chlmplonshlp: S1turday, 6 p.m.
DM1lon IV
Thuuday: D•nville {25-1) n
:Z.nCIYillc RaiCICftM (24-1), 7 p.m.; New
Wuhlnaton BuQcyc C~nu.l (21-4) VI.
Aymvillc (21-4), 9 p.m.
Chtmplonahlp: S1turd1y, 2 p.m.

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE

Boys-dlstrkt 11&lt;tlon

Palrlck Dlvlllon
Team
W L T I'll. GFGA
l·N.Y. Ranaen .. 44 23 4 92 288 226
1-Wuhin.... .... 40 24 7 i7 293 239
N~wleney ........ l4 26 to
71 256222
PicobwaJ&lt; .......... J3 29 I 74 301 Z70
N.Y. l.tandon .... 30 33 I 68 259m
Pltilodolph~ ....... Z7 32 11
6l 212 233
Adami Dlvlllon
l-Montral ......... 41 23 8
1-Bo&amp;on ............ 32 29 I(I
•·Buffalo ........... Z7 !2 11
lladlonl ............. 22 J6 11
Quobec: ............... 16 43 II

New Mexico St. 74, Pacific 73
William Benjamin made three
of four free throws down the
stretch, giving New Mexico Slate
its ftrSt Big West championship.
Benjamin hit both ends of a I·
and-! with 44 seconds remaining to
give New Mexico State (23-7) a
73· 70 lead, then added another foul
shot with 17 seconds left after
Pacific's Randy Lavender had hit
two free throws. Pacific (14-16)
missed a chance to send the game
into overtime when Lavender
missed the second of two free
throws with 3.6 seconds left.
Houston 91, Texas 72
Derrick Smith scored 15 of his
17 point.s in the second half as
Houston rebounded from two regular-season losses to Texas to win
the Southwest Conference touma·
ment final.
The Cougars (25·5) overcame
an 11-point first-half deficit and a
29-point, 12-rebound performance
from tournament MVP Dexter
Cambridge to win their first SWC
tournament since 1984 and fifth
overall. Texas (23-11) fell to 0-6 in
title games.

Dh1li01l
Akrm FU"Ulaalc .57, Wad1w0dlr. .51
Can\on McKinley 6S, Mluillm Jttklon 64,ar

•
CUL A;tcon 79, Hul&gt;erHca. Wayne6l
Day. Mcadowdalc 71, Bcavc:n:na. 54
Euclid 10, WUI,.Jhby S. 51
Hamilton 78, D1y. Belmcnt68
Lim• Sr. 81, Fmdlly 75
Shaker Hta. 74, C1L Adaml67
Tol. St. John't 71, ToL Whitmer 53
Valley Forp 84, Cl~. St. Ianatiut 78
W. Chc.lel' Lai.Oll 6S, Cln. WoodwudS9

90 247177

74
6l
ll
43

237 242
252 267
211 24l
218 282

I&gt;'YitiOI 0
Ctmbridac 80. Tri-VtUey 6.5
C1c. VASI80, W.
l6
lronlcm U. FaJrllfld 5
T&amp;Umadgc 41, O..C..bwl 0.... 43
Van Wen. 61, St. Mary14l
W, BRnch 70,1AWM11c64
Wuhlnaton CH II. Waftl'ty 'S
Willanl63, Galim ll
Younc. R•ym62. Canfield .so

Ocau'f'

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NOI"''U Df~lllo•
W L T P11. GFCA
I •Oettoit .......... .. 37 2311 IS 28S2JO
Chic:aao .............. 31 26 14 76 228212
SL loUit ............ 32 30 9 73 2A6 241
Minn01011 .......... 30 3J J 6J219240
Tonmto .............. 26 31 7 59 212260

Teaoo

Dlvbloam
Col. Hal1lcy 76, Utie~72
Columbia 58, Locain Co &lt;It l4
OrrvWo 73, Tual1w 54
Spuu lliJhlacd 48, CoL RCidy 4J

Smythe DIYIIIt:~t
1·Vmcouvc:r., .... 39 2110 II
Loo An 1e~ca ....... 32 v t3 -n
EdmoaCGn ......... 32 30 I 72
WiMIJ&gt;el ........... Z7 31 13 67

259210
259 263
2li 255
211217
Calpry .............. 26 34 I 0 62 257 Z73
SanJ01c ............. 16 49 S ']7111l08
...liacbod piayolf bOith

DM1IoniV
Heath 74, Fairblnll 60
Pleuant 62, Fisher C.th. 58
Trimble ,1, RaclM Scw.&amp;lhen .5!

Saturday's scores
Philadelphia 3, Waahiftgton I

Mi...-aoi,O.O.Ui
N.Y.Itl&amp;ndaloi,Bulfalo I

ar

Boolal l, Quclooc 4,
l!dmoo,.. l,IIU1ford I

Vmcouvcr 6. C.lauy 4
M......tl, Loo o\naclco 2
T,...to 6, PiuobwJh 3

N.Y. Ranpn 6, SL LoW&amp; 0
San Jr:.e 3, Ncwlcney l

Sunday's score1
Wuhina10n S, N.Y. blandezs 2
Dcsroic l, Winnipea I, tic
801~ !, l..ol Anaelal
Buffalo 6, Quclooc 4
Pi"'bwah •. OU&lt;aao 3

Major college
basketball scores

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.

Sunday's 11&lt;tlon

.EAR·NOSE·THROAT
ALLERGY

R•ular ~til6ft·Midwt~t

Michiaan SL 64, Iowa .53
Purdue 6l,lndianal9

R~lonal

Ada•lk Caul Ca.ferenc:e
Champlooahlp
Duko 94, Nodh Cuulina 74

•Adult &amp; Pediatric Alergy
•Hwlng Aids
•Recurrent Ear Infections
In Children
•Asth.a
•HHdaches ·

11a Eut Conrerenct
Champ!Gnahlp

SynC111cl6. Occq""""l4
111 Eltht ConfertnCt

Charwpklnlhlp

Ktftul 66, Oklahtml SL S7

p.m.

Chtmplonl~pl

Saunlay, 7:30p.m.
At Columbus Falrarouncll
TuHdiJI But Uverportl (2.0-3) Yl.
Lim•Scnior(ll-l~ 7~m.
Wednud~]_: Newark (21·3)

n.
Mount Vernon {ZZ-2), 7 p.m.
·
ct.o.olan&amp;hlp: Saurday, 7:30 ~en.
At Wrlallt Stile U•l'f'll'llly

Wodnllda): C......aol A;tcao (20.4)

va. Oaylo~ Mudowdale (13-9), 6:U
p.m.; Harruhon (19--4) va. Woet ChD~tar
LaicOII (20--1~ I p.m.
Clllmp1onahlp: S01urdly, 7;30 p.m.

Dl'llllco II

AI Oltlo U11lm.IIJ'

AICuiiMFkkthoul

N.C. O.adcac M,TI&lt;I.., 63

sootloM~....i·coo~...­

Facial Le•ns .

At Unlrenlt{, el T
Th•r•daJI Tal m•da• (18 ·5) ••·
WU!ud (20-4), 6;30 pm.; Olmaled Falla
(11· 13) ,., Van Wed (»3~ l :ll p.m.
ClllmploMhlp: S•wday,.tp.m.

South-c...r......

Metro Athletic Co..rerence
Chllftploolhlp

•Mauge~~lllf of Skin &amp;

9), 6:1l p.m.; Bdc;c Ylea Branoh (21·2)
vs. YCJUn&amp;Rown RtyCII (20-3),1 p.m.
Chlmpla.htp: Sallarc~~J'e;_rm.

a.... p~cou~~lp

Cllaooplonohlp
New MWco St. 74, Pac:ii'IC U. 7!

•Snoring

v•.

At You..,townSIIII Unl"nUJ
Thurld1y: Cleveland C.!llolic (20-3)
Cleveland vm. Anael•St. Ja.eph (14-

Thunda,r: Columbu• Linden·
McKinley (21-1) vs. Wuhinp Coun
Heu~• (19-4), 6:ll p.m.; loan""' (16-7)
"' C...hri&lt;lp (22- 2~ I p.m.
Cha'"P'-hlp: Sawday, 4 pm.
At WriaJ!t S111e Univmity
Tburad•J: O.)'ltll'l Dunbtr (16-7) Yl.
Cincinn1ti Turpin (16-7), 6:1S p.m.;
Columbo&amp; SL CMtloa (22·1)"' K«tcrin&amp;
Alcor (17-6),1 p.m.
e~~a...-~lpc Saurday, 4 P"'·

Bla w..t c...,.,_.

•R~Nose

Kmtuek)' SO, Alablm• 54

llEDICAIIISSIGIIIIIIm ACGI'TID

CII&amp;Mplonlhlp

675·1244
Wtt 117, v•r Dr.. Pt. ""••

HouMn 91, Ter.11 72

Saturday'• actloit
Rllular.,.....Mktwtlt
Midllpn 61,llliocill9
Nmh-76, w-..ln 6l
Ololo Sl. N, Mlo-13

Far West

Dl•loloolll
Wed•uday1 Onvill• (23-1) 't'l .
Youna•town Libaty (16·7), 6:15p.m.;
Akron St. Vlncen~St. )bry (11-4) v1.
W;clclltrc (21·2),1 PJL
c~~omr'-h!p: s"uro~aJ;

l:•JO ,....

A Uni.....Uy Gl T
WtdiMidaJ: Hamlet Ptlridr: HCiftf)'
(17-6) "-Now London (22-1), 6:ll pm.;
Colllll'lbil SltLion Colllmbit (20·3) "'·
HaYiland
r .... (»-3), 1 p.m.

w.,..

o ......... Sa-y.t1:30p.m.

a..ac.

CalifcnUal7,
76
........ C.l70, AJizana 611
Sllnloo176, Onp S..l6
, tJCI.A as. All.- s..
Wuhlnpo SL 7l, Wuhin.... 57

n

, Toumamellll

Attaoac c..., c..r......

-~
Dukol9, ~
Ted\76
Nmh CuoliniiO,l'lmid1 SL 76

AIOioloU-J
Wed•tldj:: Plkelo• (21·l) n .

WheolortiMI'I IS-I), I: IS-~­

Hiabllnd (19- ) ••· Bollw. (19-l), l
pm.
a...p~ooo~o~p: Satordo1, t2;30 p.m.
•
AIValdaMa
Wotlon ... JI Bollbroolc (16·7) " ·
Cinclmlli (ll-9), 6;1! p.m.;
CclUIIIIHoo llatlloyl21·3) ... CaoaloWII
Milmli!Mt (11-4~ I pm.
•
Oms I I \ !...Uy, 12:30 p.m.

III 'Eul Conlennco

Osca,a,on--~

"·St.,..• "

I'JI~~

JtM.MI$,&lt;»',tm•67
,'llfl'he·IL ",Iowa S&amp;. 60

.

:

J

VALLEY LUMII. and
SUPPLY CO.

••••t t um

i'

lrl" h

.'•

hal8oU.II,UC-6P

•

I

555 Park St.

_,·-·
--Cwfa
=.
.. --c
lll_.c.,' tlle r' Nz

I

&gt;
,..

992·6611

n

0

I

';15,11.63

r r

•

I

•
1:

" ,.

palrlnp

Dl.Ulont
AI Akron Unlvti'IIIJ
Tue&amp;dlfl Toledo Sl. John'• (20·4)
v1. Euclid (21-2), 7 p.m.
Wfllnaday: Shaker Hei&amp;hll {20-3)
vs. Akron Filutone(ll -2), 7 p.m.
Champlonahlp: Sawday, 7;30~m.
AI C11tlon Chic Ctnltr
Tue~elly: Lorain Adminl Kina {II·
13) n. SlOw (22·2),1 p.m.
·
Wtdnuday: Penna Vllley fQrae
(21-2) ~•- Canton McKinley (22· 1), 7

Tournaments

lOUD aRnFIED
SPKIAUZING IN

S-70,s-Hall~

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Mldwutern Collfll•te Conference
Champloltlhlp
E~anl'lillc 95, Buller 76

.609
.ll4 · 1s
.&lt;1&lt;52
9.l
.%2
9.l
.4S3
10
.338 11.s
.231 24.l

2S
29
3l
3l
35
43
lO

Centr•l Dlvlllan
1-Chica,. ........ ..... .S3 12 .Ill
Clt..w\d,___ _..z 11 .rn
Doooil. ...................40 25 .6ll
Al!lall ...................30 34 .469
lnditna ...................30 36 .4ll
Milwaube .............2S 3S .444
Clwl0110 ............... 24 38 .387

Duke·routs North Carolina 94-74 to capture ACC championship
thing we can put under our belts,"
said Laettner, who with senior
classmate Brian Davis took home
the title in their fmal ACC appearances.
· The victory earned Duke (28-2)
the ACC's automatic NCAA bid.
In other top-25 games , No. 3
Kansas took the Big Eight tourna·
ment title by beating No. II Oklahoma State 66-57; Purdue upset
No. 4 Indiana 61-59, costing the
Hoosiers a share of the Big Ten
title; No. 9 Kentucky beat No. 17
Alabama 80-54 to win the Southeastern Conference tournament;

AllaoUc DIYII!oo

Tum

start the second half, then controBy SCOTI WOLFE
versy struck. Before Southern
Sentinel Correspoadent
The Southern's boys varsity could get set defensively, an unusubasketball team fell to Trimble 62- ally quick trip by the official to the
scorer's ~able resuhed in 'Trimble
5~ in the title game of Division I:-'
district tournament play at Oh10 · inbounding the ball and geuing a
University's Convocation Center quick uncontested score.
Rather that SHS having a shot at
Saturday.
a
possible
29-24 lead, Trimble
Recapping some of the action,
this story will add to the summary trailed just 27-26. A shaken SHS
in the most recent Sunday Times· crew coughed up the ball and Trim·
Sentinel and give a more in-depth ble quickly scored again to lake a
28-27 command.
cOverage of that game.
Southern head coach Howie
· Southern ended the season as
Caldwell
commented, "I want to
district runner-up with a 16-8
end
this
season
with some p(Jsiti ve,
record.
but
that
play
was
pivotal in the
To open the game, Trimble's
Reuben Kittle took the otx:ning tip game. It really shook us for a
and drove it in for a qutck score. while. It really took our momentum
r:iave Gatchel hit an in-lane jumr,:r. away. We were up four and I think
and brotller CharUe Gatchel nailed we ended up down two before we
a three-pointer at the 5:48 mark to got refocused. We were never really ourselves after that."
give Trimble a 7-0 cushion.
At the 5: 19 mark, Kittle hit a
After two scoreless possessions
long jumper that gave Trimble a 9by
both sides, Jeremy Roush nailed
0 advantage. Southern's Marcus
a
trey
for a 30.28 SHS lead. Char·
Allen broke a string of four aborted
lie
Gatchel
tied it on a baseline
possessions, when he put SHS on
tile board and pulled them to a 9-2 drive, then SHS took a 34-32 lead
on drives by Allen, and one by
deficit.
, Evans hit a three-pointer and Evans, who led the team with 17
then a follow-up jumper at the 3:16 points.
1991-92 DISTRICT RUNNERS-UP -The Southern Tornadoes .· 'E:vans. Standing are assistant coach Scott Wickline, Kenny Rizer,
marie. Neither team scored until the
To Trimble's favor, the game
completed
their season at 16·8 with a 62·55 loss to Trimble in the Roy Lee Bailey, Michael Russell, Russell Singleton, Joshua Codner,
1:41 mark when Roush nailed a became increasingly more physical.
Division IV district finals. Seated in front are (L-R) Mark Allen, Scott Lisle, manager Kenny Clark and head coach Howie Caldwell.
Trimble increased its pressure
trey and Bailey hit one at the
Chad Wise, Jeremy Roush, Ryan Williams~ Billy Davis and Michael
buzzer for a 12-9 SHS lead.
on its 1-3-1, but Southern was still
: Remarkably, Southern shut out unsteady offensively. Gatchel
this scribe heard the Nelsonville the Iauer half of the frame down as ·Jost today, I think these kids
Trimble for nearly the last six min- nailed his second three-pointer to Trimble abead 42-38.
sportscaster
say, "Right now, Trim- much as 10 points.
achieved more than anyone ever
SHS
scored
the
first
points
of
put his club up 35-34 at the 2:49
utes of the frame.
ble
is
playing
defensively
like
they
thought they could achieve. When
the
last
frame
to
pull
within
two
at
Ironically,
Southern
was
whisTbe second frame was a see-saw mark. Bailey hit a free throw nine
have
never
played
before."
we
were hovering around .500, I
42-40.
Kittle
and
Dave
Gatchel
tled
for
22
fouls,
while
the
more
affair and was tied on three occa- seconds later to give SHS a 36-35
That
summed
up
a
fourth
period
was
doubtrul myself. These kids
physical Tomcats garnered only 13
sions; 17-17, 20-20 and 22-22. upper hand. Meanwhile, SHS gam- then brought out the pine box for
that
saw
Trimble's
zone
pressure
had
a
great stretch at the end of the
personals.
Although SHS squandered many bled a little too much out front, the Tornadoes as they buried two
Caldwell said, "We didn't play season and we beat some fine
straight three-pointers, and Kittle the perimeter and seal off Bailey
scoring opportunities, Evans hit a allowing Trimble to penetrate.
and
Singleton
inside.
Southern
our
normal game. We didn't shoot teams. They deserve a lot of credit
hit
another
driver
to
spark
an
8-2
three-pointer at the 1:06 mark that
Southern tied the score at 38-38
pulled
close
at
50-45
and
'58-52
at
well
at times, and our defense just for putting forth a ~~effort.
run
to
put
Trimble
ahead
50-42.
·
gave SHS a 25-221ead at the half.
at the 2:07 mark, but never again
the
2:39
mark,
but
spent
much
of
wasn't
up to par. Even though we
Southern
called
a
time-out
and
(See TORNADOES on Page 5)
Southern took a 27-22 lead to led . The third frame ended with

By Tbe Associated Press
Duke's seniors already owned
an NCAA championship ring. Now
they have an Atlantic Coast Conference tournament title to go with
it.
The defending national champi·
ons had made an ACC tournament
championship their main objective
after taking the league's regularseason title. The top-ranked Blue
Devils settled that on Sunday, rout·
ing No. 20 North Carolina 94· 74 in
the championship game behind 25
points from Christian Laettner.
"We finally got it. It's some-

Mld.Amerlcan Conference
Ch&amp;lf:lpiOMhlp
Mi1mi, Ohio 53, Ball S1. n

EASTERN CONFERENCE

h

N.c. a.....?J,.- Nlu. '11

DMolcoiV

AtC_n_
T......, O.:.lllllo Ollmau (11-S)

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(17-6~ I p.m.
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AIUol.....ytfT-

hoodor&lt; Weot Ullily HIDioo 121·3)

"'Lima Cailoollo (IJ.3), 6e30 p.ft:.; Kd·
da ,(21' 21Y&amp;.ComiOJ c-.ti• (Il-l),

''"lf..., '•• !!:t 'r•r· 7:10
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"·
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p.m.; Coolamtto
"· ottow

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(l~· ll)

f;i
tw~y.7:30p.a

s~ oa.s~ 1

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-6.

NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP 1992
111 Round:

2nd Round:

March 19-20

March 2t-22

Tul111e 87, V1. Cammcn wealth 69

lntheNBA ...

Ohio

Roglanalo

Stmlflnals

National
Champlonahlp

Roglanala

Stmlflnalo

2nd Round ;

111 Round:

Marth 21·22

March 19-20

M!PW£$T

EAST

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Orttnlboro, N.C.
March 26

~J.!,!qh.l.u!')..~!,. l~.!:!lf
March 27
12) S.W. Mo. St.
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March 2G &amp; 28

Kan... City, Mlaaaurt
Marcil 27 &amp; 29

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March 26

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March 27&amp; 29

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Boise, Idaho
March 26

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MarCh 26 &amp; 26

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1

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R~tt~~d

Choosing teams
for NCAA
tournament
thankless job
ByJIMUTKE

AP Sports Write'
Memo:
To: Roy Kramer, chairman of
the NCAA selection committee
From: A couple of interested
observers
Re: Filling out the 64-team
bracket for the ftrSt time
Roy:
You're probably feeling bad
because you had to leave a few
deserving schools out and right
now it seems like a lol of people
hate you.
But lake our word for it, only a
few ~pie hate you. Besides, they
won t feel that way forever.

HOME

You can't walk a single step, let
alone a mile in Roy Kramer's
shoes. But then, the questioo arises,
SHOWING THEIR SPIRIT - These young day's Division IV district championship game
whr would you want to?
ladies sbow wbicb team tbey like the best while against Trimble, whicb the Tomcats won 62-55
'Because there's not many
staading beblnd one or the scoreboard,! at Ohio to end the Tornadoes' season at 16·8. (Photo by
things that give you a greater sense
University's Convocation Center during Satur· Scott Wolfe)
of accomplishment," said Wayne
Duke, the former commissioner of
~(c_onu_
·nu_ed_fro_m_Pas.:::..e...:..
4l _ _ __
the Big Ten and Big Eight who
held Kramer's job from 1978-81.
Allen four, and Chad Wise three.
"For the beuer part of three
"Next year, I don't Wl\flt to go usual game."
"Another thing that hun us was
Accounting for 31 points
days, you eat all YOW' meals in one away as district runner-up," he
that
we
never
got
to
use
our
runbetween
them, the Gatchel boys led
room. You stare at statistics and added. "We have three experienced
ning
game
like
we
wanted.
We
also
Trimble.
Dave had 19 and Charlie ·
television sets, weigh this factor players coming back, a good point
·
d
'k h' gua{d coming up and a good never got many offensive 12, while Kittle ended the night
and that an ... try to strt e I IS reserve team moving up. We're rebounds, especially in the second with 17.
very delicate balance. And when going to improve ourselves this half."
Closing out their careers were
you finally walk out of the (comSouthern hit 16 of 34 for 47% seniors Roy Lee Bailey, Jeremy .
miuee) room to announce the SWf!~~ seniors are responsible for from the ncor, but dipped into the Roush, Michael Russell, Billy .
field,'' he added, "it almost feels much of our success. I wish them cellar from three-~int range at 6 Davis, Joshua Codner, Scott Lisle ·
:~ht:,?u're walking out into day- · well. I've never had a club grow as for 26. SHS also httjustS-12 at the and Chad Wise.
·
line.
Those
seven
free
throws
could
Cynics might suggest that Duke much from stan to finish as this
have tied the game.
.,
FOR Hm.IEO\'mtRS lr-.SURAr~ ! E
simply had mistaken klieg lights clu~::eu concluded, .. As bad as
Trimble hit 15-37 for 43%, 7-12
for the real thing. But apparently we played the first half, I thought three-pointers and II of 20 at the CAlt.
noL
h
Jim Delany, the Big Ten com- we were still in good shape w en line.
Jerr w..,.., IDIUnaee
..·,..
Southern had a 36-31 rebound·
..
missioner who stepped down last we led 25-22 al the half. We didn't
113 W. 2ad
season as chairman after six years get to penetrate like we wanted, but , ing edge, led by ~ussell Singl~ton
Pomeroy, Ohio
. .
on the selection committee, didn't when we did get shots they didn't with 14, Evans wtth 11, and Bwley
614-99.2-5479
.nQJ Cl
......
use such glowing terms to describe fall. Their 1-3·1 hurt a lillie, but with six. Kittle, Day, and Dave
Gatchel
each
had
cighl
for
Trimble.
,__..._._c.....,.. _c...
his service. He told the Chicago basically we just never played our
IMIOIDI: CMI ...... illui.CIUIIM.G!G11 .
Behind Evans' 17, Bailey added
,.._
Sun-Times in a weekend inteiView SV:I\C cage standings
13, Jeremy Roush 9, Singleton 9,
that he was more than "ready to
~--~'*==·~~~·=-=·~·~·=·~---J
give someone else an opportunity
•
to have their judgment judged.''
(Overall-Rna!)
"But obviously," Delany Team
W L PF PA
added, "for a person who loves Oak HiD ............ 16 6 1493 1242
basketball, and f13S been a basllet· Southcm ............ \6 8 1701 1417
ball fan his whole life, being on the Eastan .............. ll 10 1409 1460
North Gallia ...... 10 II 1306 1413
committee is a grea1 experience.''
Hannan
Trace .... IO 11 1300 1397
Yet, no matter how it's
resolved, you are liking cash·out of Kyger Creek ........ 8 13 1144 1282
somebody 's pocket - $250,000 Symmes Valley ...6 15 1219 1353
'
Southwestem .......2 19 1127 1504
for a fiTit-round tourney team and sticking a pin in their puffed·
'•
(Conrerence-lillal)
.
uP communal chest,. And tho~e
smne people'dori't hesitate 10 set m Southcm ............ 12 2 1065 784
touch.
' I
Oait Hill ........... .12 2 998 793
"I'm sure 1heard froni plenty of Hannan Tnlce .... 10 4 943 891
'
people," Duke recalled. "But in North Gallla ........8 6 938 930
the whole time I was involved, I Eastern ................7 7 925 94S
'•
SymmesValley
..
.4
10
817
902
ani y had three really memorable
tun·i~s. You just can't worry all Kyger Creelc ........4 10 771 816
the lime what people arc going to Southwestem.......o 14 728 1064
TOTALS
56 56 7185 7185
think."
'
One time, he left l,oyola, Ill.,
(SVAC reserves • ftaal)
.without an invitation and COICh
W L PF . PA
Gene Sullivan threatened 10 meet Team
Southcm
............
l4 0 802 47S
him It the airpon with IIOIDCthing
Eutem
:
.............
10
4 644 575
or a lynclt mob In tow. Duke got
Symmes
Valley
...
9
S 617 626
around that by IIICIItlngln on an
Banker~
Oait
Hill
..............
8
6
636; 600
earlier fllaht.
.
.
•••
The secCIId time, be called cur· Hannan Tllee ......4 9 547 632
Kypr
Creek
.......
.3
10
501
S74
•••
rent ESPN' brolldcllrer and Conner
University' of Detroit ceileh Dick North Gaiiia ........3 11 50S 661
~, , ;
. Vitlle to let him tnow It wu oo Southwestan.......3 11 501 610
TOTALS
55
5$ 4753 4753
S~tter
ao. and aot hiJ ean bumed for !he
effort. Dull:~ subsequently found
,
' ,
'
'
out thlt Vltlle put the call on a
SaJmlay I touriii1HDt ICOl'f
I1IOibnlboDe u 1 WI)' of easing · At Obio Unlv. - Glouster
·'l .
h1s own· emban'assment
1fmble 62, Racine Southern 55

Tornadoes lose in finals ...

.

=

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

..

Is this the very embarrassed
sailor who misunderstood the
command of all hands on DECK?

This One
.
·TiJne Anchor
Clankerls
Now Your
Local
.

Torpedo
· 4th ClasA

.

HAPPY 531
0. E.

•

•

••

�Monday, March 16, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

Monday, March 16, 1992
Page-6

Being a responsible driQ.ker can
apply on the ground and in the air
Dear Aon Landers: Whenever
my husband flies on business, he
goes first class so he can have an
unlimited number of free drinks. His
pattern is as follows: He has two
beers before boarding a flight from
Chicago to Dallas (about two-and·
one-half hours). When beverages are
offered on the plane, he orders two
beers immediately so he won't have
to wait for the second one. A short
time later, he asks for two glasses of
wine. The flight attendants serve him
these drinks, no qumions asked.
When he gets off the plane he
drives a renlal car to the hotel m
town . If he should kill someone, will
the airline be liable?
Th1s worries me because I have
neve r seen atrline personnel refuse
a dnnk 10 anyone, no matter how
drunk the pa.1scnger was. I ~·as on a
01ght recenDy with several people
retttrmng from a football game. They
drank all the beer and liquor on the
plane w1thm an hour. Although some
of the passengers became loud and
obnoxious. no auempt was made to
res trict the dnnking.
Smoking is no longer permiued
on planes, thank heavens, but
apparently passengers can get all
the booze they want, Why? ··
WORRIED WIFE IN fLLI.KOIS
DEAR WORRIED WIFE: My
office contacted James M. Guyeue,
execulive vice president of field
services at United Airlines, George
Mueller, vice president of customer
service at American Airlines, and
Robert Harper, manager of public

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1991, Lo!!i Angeles
Thnes Syndicate
Creators Syndicate.' '

relations at Delta in Atlanta. All
three said the same thing.
The airlines have alert, welltrained personnel and no passenger
who appears to be inebriated is
permitted to get on the plane. They
do not set a ~mit on the nwnber
of drinks a passenger may have,
but flight auendants are taught
to recognize the signs of overimbibing.
If passengers exhibit slurred
speech, belligerence or unstc&lt;ldiness
or arc ialking unusually loud and
usmg profanity, they arc told lhey
may not have any more alcohol.
Although I'm a frequent flyer, I've
never seen it done, but all lhree
airlines sa1d lhcy've received letters
of complaint from disgruntled
passengers whose dnnlcs were cut
off.
I have never heard of an a!fhne
being sued because an intoxicated
passenger got into an accident wh1le
driving from lhc airpon into town.
The possibility of this occurring,
however, seems very real to me.
As a lifelong bluenose total
abstamer, I may not be compe1Cnt
to judge, but in my opinion, two

'Silence of Lambs' gains Oscar
momentum with weekend prize
LOS ANGELES (AP) The top prize from the Directors
Guild of America gave "The
Silence of the Lambs" and its
director, Jonathan Demm e, a
valuable boost for the Academy
Awards at the end of the month.
The guild on Satwday named
Demme best feature film director for the drama about a serial
killer.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
MONDAY
POMEROY · The Meigs Athlel·
ic Boos1Crs will sponsor their winter sports banquet on Monday at
6:30p.m. in lhc high school cafete·
na. Bring two covered dish, one
vcgelable and one desscn.
RACINE · Racine Village
Council wi II meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m. at lhe council chambers at Star Mill Park.
TUESDAY
POMEROY • American Legion
Drew Webster Post No, 39 ,
Pom eroy, will celebrate the
legion's birthday Tuesday at the
senior citizens center, Pomeroy.
Dinner at 7 p.m. followed by meet·
ing.
POMEROY · There w11l be a
meeting of all 1952 Pomeroy High

With only three exceptions
since 1949, the winner of the
Directors Guild's award has also
been named best director at lhe
Oscars. Last year, Kevin Costner won both awards for
"Dances With Wolves."
Oscar-winning directors usually see their films win best picture as well.

drinks should be enough for anybody before lunch or dinner, and
af1Cr that, one glass of wine is plenty.
Dear Aoo Landers: My mother
is 67 years old and seems to be in
excellent health. Although she is a
little forgetlul (she loses her keys a
101), I am reasonably certain there is
nothing wrong with her mind. She
has always been outspoken and this
is what I'm writing abou~
When Uncle "Jerry" (Mom's older
brother) celebrated his 50th wedding
anniversary, she sent him a sympa·
thy card and wroiC, •you deserve a
medal for staying with that battle-ax
all these years." His wife saw the
cand and blew a gaske~
Mom said she has no sense of
humor. What do you say, Ann? ··
NEW JERSEY
DEAR NJ.: I say 20 wallops with
an old joke book for people who
say mean and hunfullhings and then
when the v1Cllm complams , ask,
"Where's yow sense of humor?" A
plague on all lhCir houses, summer
and winter.
Wha1 can you give I he person who
has every1h1n g? Ann Landers'
booklet. "Gem&lt; ." is 1dea/ for a
n.lghiSiand or coffee lab/e. "Gems"
15 a colleciiDn of Ann Laru1ers' mJJ.\1
requeslfd poems and essays. Send a
self-addressed, long, bUJiness·size
envelope and a check or money
order for $4.85 (lhis includes
poslage and handling) 10: Gems,
c/o Ann Laru1ers, P.O. Boz 11562,
Chicago, Ill . 606ll-0562 . (In
CanadiJ, send $5 87.)

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
Arts Council will sponsor ballroom
dance classes beginning Wednesday. Cost is $7 per session.
Advanced dancers at 7:30 p.m.
with beginners al 8:30 p.m. Call
992-2675 for information.

RATES
••'&gt;

..'

IJI."'"I(; an ad
Call 992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M •• SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
' Ada ouUide GaUia, Ma~on or Meig1 couDliet mull be prepaid
• Receive dUcounl for ada paid in adnnte.
' Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 wordt will be
run 3 dayt al no charge.
' Priee of ad for all eapilallctten i1 double price of ad coat
' 7 poinlliuo type only Lned
' Tribune it not re~ponaib)ll'! for errou after fartt day (check
for errort firu day ad runt in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
day aflll:r publication to make correction
' Adlthat mUll be paid in advance are:

BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP)The sidewalk benches at Glenn
Close's coffee house are coming
inside to help quell complaints
that crowds of young artists,
musicians and students often
block lhe way.
The actress, her sister Jessie
and wri~r Barbara Moss bought
the Leaf &amp; Bean last year. Since
then, Jessie Close said, she has

Good of Order, Faye Hoselton ,
Betty Wolf, Lora Damewood; District Deputies, Erma Cleland,
Eileen Clark, Essa Varner, Albena
Hartshorn, Sylvia Bowers; National
Ways and Means, Charlotte Grant ,
Faye Trowbridge, Mary Jo Barringer; State Ways and Means,
Margaret Couerill, Mary Moose,
Kathryn Baum, Marcia Keller: registration table, Mary K. Holter,
Betty Spencer, Ethel Orr. Members
are to begin gelling items ready for
the tables.
The dinner at lhe rally will be
potluck with meat, rolls and table
service furnished by the district.
There will be another district
meeting on April 25 at I p.m. at the
Chester Lodge Hall.
Helen Wolf was pianist for lhe
meeting. Refreshments were served
by Chester Council. Opal Hollon
and Belly Young won the door
prizes.
Attending were Belly Wolf,
Perry Council, New Lexington;
Mildred Lowery, Logan Council,
Logan; Margaret Coucrill, Eileen
Clark, Bette Biggs, Janice Lawson,
Esther Harden, Guiding Star, Syracuse : Ethel Orr, Marcia Keller,
Mary K. Holter, Jean Frederick,
Thelma White, Sandra White,
Erma Cleland, Lora Damewood,
Opal Hollon, Kathryn Baum,
Esther Smith, Belly Young, Elizabeth Hayes, Helen Wolf, Chester
Council, Chester.

So the new logo will appear
on city slationery and most city
vehicles bul will be altered to
read "State of Ohio" on police
cruisers.
The logo, recently adopted
by City Council, was designed
two years ago by a graphics
firm . Council set lhe lo~o aside
while a contest for a destgn took
place. Members recently decid·
ed to adoplthe original design .

ROYALTY • Heat• H1illoa and Kyll Sellers were crO'II'Iled
S'!'eetllarl Klaa ud O.eeu OD ValentiDe'a Day.at a celebratlou
after ~elp Hllb Sdlocil'a Jut bome lwketbaU pme. They were
clloHI by p0p1llr vote. HudiOD Is tbe IOD of Mary Hadaoo,
l'oeeroJ, ud tile lltl Bryaat HadiOn. StUera Is the daag!tter of
,_ Sellen, Middleport, aDd t•e late WI~ Sellen.
·
~

Band director William Hall
said "This program shows a
wide variety of musical styles,
The RAF march shows the
refined British style of writing
and it's the first lime we have
played a march of this style.
Also, the Mena Mountain is a
beautiful ana challen,ing piece
of programmatic ltterature.
We've really enjoyed rehearsing
this selecuon because of the
contrast or styles and dynam-

ics."
The pUblic is cordiaiJy invit·

ed to .attend this free ce&gt;ncert,
and to come to Athens on Frlctay
evening to support the Eastern
Band in its bid to return to the
state band eontelt. Elstem plays
in the Athena High School
Auditorium al 6:15 p.m. There
is no clwge for admiasion to
either the COilCel't or the COiliCIL

received about five anonymous
complaints, and two were made
to police.
The complaints upset her, she
said. "It's just a peaceful group
of people who like to sit in the
sun and talk 10 each olher.''
Steve Schn'ee, president of
the Downtown Bozeman Association, said Close need s to
encourage the young people to
be more sensitive to other
pedestrians and not spend the
whole af1Cmoon there.
·
"I don't know how she is
going to tactfully handle it," he
added.
RACINE, Wi s. (AP) Kevin Cronin, vocalist for lhe
rock group REO Speed wagon,
is marrying a woman who was a
high school freshman when he
was producing hits like "Ridin'
the Storm Out" in lhe 1970s.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday .
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
tOO p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS STATE Of
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbut, Ohio March 6,
1992 Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 92·257
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
S.aled propooalt will be
received at the olllce of tho
Director of the Ohio Depart·
menl ol Transportation, Columbua, Ohio, unUl 10:00
A.M., Ohio Standard Tlmo,
Tueoday, March 31, 1992 for
Improvements In:
Meigs County, Ohio lor
Improving various sections
of United Slate Route 33, VIllage ol Pomeroy, by pav•

Cronin, ~0. will marry Lisa
Marie Wells, 29, next month in'
her hometown of Racine, the
couple said.
Cronin said some of his close
friends would perform at his
wedding. He wouldn't reveal
their names, but Wells said
singers Richard Marx, Eddie
Money and Dave Crosby are on
the guest list.
Wells, director of music pub·
lishing at Geffen Records in Los
Angeles, said Cronin asked her
advice on how 10 propose while
she was cooking dinner. The
couple met three years ago at a
St. Patrick's Day party.
Cronin asked tf a man
proposing to a woman would
have to have the ring already,
and if the dale had to be set right
away, Wells said. She said she
answered both questions, "Not
necessarily."

menl planning and reaur·

lacing with aophall concreto.
Prolectand Work Length:
14,0981lnoor loet or 2.67 mile
Pavement Width: various
Bidding on this proJect Ia
restricted to Minority Buslnoso Enterp~teii(MBEoi certified as MBEoln tccordance
wllh Section 123.151 (B) (2)
of the Ohio Reviled Code by
the Stale Equal Employment
OpportunltyCoordlnatorand
qualified to bid with ODOT
under Chapter 5525 ol tho
Ohio Reviled Code.
"Tho dale sellar com pi•
lion of this work than be as
sot torlh In tho bidding pro·
posal."
Each bidder shall be r•
qulred to Ole with hit bid's
certified check or caahlor'o
ehock lor 1n tmount equal to
tlvo per cent of hit bid, bulln
no event more than flfty thou·

"

"

"

11nd dollar•, or 1 bond for

.,

ton per cent of his bid, payable to the Director.
Blddero must apply, on
the proper lormt, lor quallfl·

446-Galllpoli•
36 7 -Chelhire
388-VInton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oiat.
643-Arabia Ditt.
· 379-Walnut

992-Mlddleport/

67$-Pl. Plea.. nt

Pomeroy
985-Cheater
843-Porthnd
247-Letart Falla

458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Haven
895-Letart
937-Bufralo

~49-Radne

742-Rudand

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•R.mlaeement
in dow
.

992·2259
608 £AST.MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Brownies earn badges
Members of Pomeroy Brownie
Troop No. 1271 recently spent time
earning their "Good Food" badge.
They read ingredient statements on
boxes and labels, checking the
amount of sugar and salt in their
foods.
On the "An to Wear" badge, l·
shirt magic was held with members
painting their own t-shirts. They
mixed colors and learned a steady
hand.
For Valentine's Day they wove
two colored papers together forming a two-tone hean as pan of their
"Colors and Shapes" badge.
A t-shirt style show was held
with the girls modeling their own
shirt. Brenda Neutzling of Junior
Troop 1309 was the judge and
awarded first place to Ashley
Hamilton with a golden glittery
motorcycle ridden by a green shiny

dinosaur. Emily Stivers was second
with geese in front of a hean and a
rainbow with a flying dove. Ashley
Hannahs was third with a purple -:
dinosaur kicking a soccer ball.
'
Members made preparations for
Thinkin·g day by representing the
country of Germany. They found
the country on ihe map and slarted
making aprolis and flowered headbands worn as traditional dress at
special ceremonies. German
recipes were brought in and dis·
cussed. A menu of sausage,
sauerkraut, German potato salad,
apple strudel and root beer were
•
selected.
The group will also decorate a
window for Girl Scout Week, Two
•'
service projects to help the commu·
nity will also be done during the
Weelc,

l

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
11114/tln

REDUCED: Two story frame home with 2 112 baths, 3 BA's,
1car garage w~h workshop, shed, 2+acres wlgarden area,
buill1n shelves, deck, lireplace, lull basemen! A VERY
NICE HOME.
$29,900

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

REDUCED: R1gg Crest SubdiVIsion· one lloor ranch style
home 3 BR's, 2 baths, anached garage, electriC F.A. heat.
$39,900

New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Bams, Painting,

REDUCED: Twostoryhomew11h 4 BR's, 2baths,enclosed
porch, well insulated. original wooct.vork. new paint &amp; ·
outside repairs. Located in Racine.
$41,900 AGOOD DEAL!
One Hoar frame home that's both in and out oltown, 3 BR's,
natural gas lumance, central &amp;If, WBFP. New roof, new
deck, t car garage, lull basement on 2.13 acres wlgarden
space.
$31,900
CREW RD.· Pomeroy, t976 Bamngton Sect1onal, 3-4
BR's, 2 baths, F.A. electric heat, WBFP lull basement.
Patio &amp; appliances 1 1/2 acre, nioo in ground pool

$57,000

AN EXCEPTIONAL HOME IN MIDDLEPORT· 2 story
lrame with tO rooms including carpel &amp; drapes 5 SA's,
fireplace, t car anached garage, patio wllurniture. Many
1tems too numerous to mention.
ASKING $79,900
COME SEEIThiS is a real beauiy!

Garages, Porches
FREE ESTIMATES

614·742·3090 or
304·773·9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS
2/14!9211 mo.

HENRY E. CLELAND............................................9~2·8191
TRACY BRINAGER..............................................949-2439
. JEAN TRUSSELL ................................................949-2660
OFFICE-.................................................................992·2259

The Director reserves the
Public Notice
right to rofectany ond all bldo.
Jerry Wrty
DIRECTOR OF 2739( Docket 13; Page 368.
TRANSPORTATION NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
(3) 16, 23; 2TC
OF FIDUCIARY
Revloed Code, Sec. 2113.08
"On Merch 6, 1ti2, In tho
Public Notice
Mel go County Pro bah! Court,
Cue No. 27394, Joye'e
PROBATE COURT Of
Schullhelao, 2!005 Chapel
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VIrginia Swill Ridge Road, So. Bloom·
Burke, DecMied, Cue No. lngvllle, Ohio, 43152 ond

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

15
15
15
15
IS

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

Public Notice
Gerald W. Burke, 4050t
Sumner Road, Reedtvllle,
Ohio, 45772, woo appointed
Co-Executors of the eatste ol
Vlrglnlt Swill . llur~e decooled, late of Ortngo Town·
ship, Tupptfo Plains, Meigs
County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge,
Lent K. NH~Iroad, Clerk
(3118, 23, 30; 3TC

100 YEARS IN POMEROY
MARCH 16.
'
1892·1992
Wish You Many More.
'

HENRY C. PEERY
l•llllss·l ....•llllvl
1954-1979,'Rtlhtl

I

•

I

2- In. Memory
3-- Announce;menu.
4-- Giveaway
5- Happy Ad•
6- Lo.t and Found

I·

7-

J~

Loat and Found

Schoolt &amp;

HI

\T\L~

58- Frui11 &amp; V"'!elabloo
59- For Saie or Trad.

I \l;\1 '' 1'1'111'
,\ I I\ I ·' I I I I J,
nn qup
Wanted to Buy

'.

Live.tock

Hay &amp; Crain
Seed&amp; Fertilue&lt;
Autoa for Sale

41- Ho\llu for Real
Ti-uck1 for Sale
42- Mobile Ho•u for Rent
Vana &amp; 4 WD'•
43-- Farm• for Rent
Motorcycle•
44--- Apartment for Rent
Boat. &amp; Moton for Sale~
45-- Fumi.lhed Room•
Auto Partl &amp; Acc ....
46-- Space for Rent
Auto Repair
47- Wanted to Rent
7t- Cam pins EquipiHIII
48-- Equipment for Rent

I?- Public Sale &amp;

16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

Auction
9- Wanted lo Buy

17- Mia~ella.neoua
18-- Wanwl To Do

:-IH\HI .'

49- ForLeue

•

\11 I; Ul \ \ I ) I:-; 1·.
51- Houaehold Gooda
52- Sportins Good.

ln.~truction

53- Antique•
54- Miac. Merthandtte
55- Bualdill8 Supplies

HAULING

porv

Plum bins &amp; He~~ti.Ds
E•cavatins

Electrical &amp; Relo·ifmotio~
General HauiU.s
Mobile Home Repair
Uphobtery

P••••r

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Lieensed and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

12·5-tln

{Ai:~
IIIIHI .
ADS7

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

ESTONE
LTURAL
LIME
REASONABLE RATES

742-2138

.~aDD.• ·DOLLARS

TO YOUR POCKET
ITH .A

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
~lo

CARPENTER SERVICE

.floom Ackllliona

A&amp;B AUTO

ROOFING

MUON, WJ,

Downspouts

Specializi1g 11
Co•plete Auto
Up.olstery.

Gutter Cleaning
Painting .

AlSO COMPUTE AUTO

NEW -REPAIR

-Gulllll' Work

-flectrlcll•nd Plumbing

.flooftng

-t!IMiot l Emrlor
Pointing

(FREE ESnMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

Pomtroy, Ohio

3·t3-92-lln

R
Quality

Sunday Calls)
2112182

Howard L Wrltesel

Gutten

ITts, . . ••tl.tLI

FREE ESTIMATES

RfPAII SIRVICE _. 24

949·2168

1·304·773·9560

316/t2/t mo. pd.

HOUR TOWING.

Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992-6637
St. Rt.7
Cheshire, OH.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Cho~e Only
9-6-tl

T&amp;T lAWN SilVIa
ta

SUN'S UP
TANNING
•••U•aload
Ia l1tlalllf

IENlWAl
Stv•ai...U of latl•s
SCA WOlfE liDS
2117/11110.

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

HOWARD

1ROY-Bili1

EXCAVATING

Our s,..... Sb!pnoeno or

Yowr lMolt!.n-BU. O..Ur

WAKEIIIID'S

li.lO w..t, Aih"' Olio•ll3·311l

pm-

2I20J02I3 mo.

;::rpr:oo pm-

HOWOPEH

Sh~T..:l~eatSTER

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

HAS: Mon.-811. tOom-5 pm
SUnclly 1-i pm
FarllarolnfaCoN

I \12 MI. out New
L111a Rd.

. \TTENTIO~

742·2341

\1 11hi l, .\!lou hi&lt; 111d &lt; llolll &lt; I )\IIIli,
.

15 Sessions.... ~5

[

Hrs. 8·10 Moa. thru Sat.
tolii'K&lt;&lt;~ AII~I'QX.K'TS

T&amp;M BUilDERS

Boet P~ l Sorvloelor
PootFr.,.. .~,

a.m.

Choice ol12 color.·
allclng 01 roNup deon

llndMI lo unlllnl*! ol-

a stytoo

10:150 •ulld for

llll[orloill:
tnopoc~tlon

n.l:TSaJeSIIIIIII
742·2072

DIIWIN,

3-16-1 mo pd

Imperial R. Metal
Clll To Length
1 WEEI DEliVERY
14Wy(Ms

C....Wi.tlltl•
.

BlUM
LUMBER CO.
CHESTER

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Ott Dl ,.,_,
-IIIU• Dt II Fir 'fw'

~aloiN M

CONSTRUCTION

~NewHo•e•

eCoMplete '
Re•od•ll•t
Stop&amp; Co•pare
.FlEE ESnum

REWARD

..

SSDO for l•forMallo~
leading to of
tht tiii'Jerspa
"'"' and "
convkftoa
Dr Jl¥.1011 lnvalv ltllllt

~~-t.:·~U"~ .

tult of ltYt~
~rtklei '""' tu ......
Jlslutltnt. Jtl lafo1111tkll
wdl•• ~t coafltltltiGJ.
Call 614·949·2671
lht

2-3-'92·1 mo

TROMM
BUILDERS

-New Conatructlon
-Remodeling
INTERIOR &amp; EXnRJOR -Cabinet Work
37632 Wtst SW..Rood . -Commercial·
R•klentlal
Pomtroy, Oltlo 45780
lefort6paltavtlts. . . FREE ESllMATES·
20 Ynra Experlenct
lltw·6pa

.

614-98s-:4110

915-4192 .
1-lt-lmopd

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

•to yr. heat pu~
compresser warranty
··Free estimates

1391Saffwd Sdtttal RL
GIt sMs, OW.
(4(614)446-9416 • 1-800-172·5967

In

POLE
MATERIALS

.,

Bennet~ Mobile Home Healing &amp; Cooling

2·1•

FOR All MAKES
&amp;MODUS
992-7013 or
992·SSS3
OR TOll REE
1·100·148·0070

I

hi'ICICes

NEW SCA WOlfF lED 24Sl
Tctlllitt1 PrH.ds AYcilaltlt

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

.

P1mps 110 Yr. c.,r.....
W.-r•IJI aaa .

Plus I FREE

(. ,. ~···"'·

'

'

992·3838

31419211

Rutla1d, o•lo

Eqorv.,..,. rio.
Mr•!i9u•' in Ta.....-....

BUUDOZER , BACKHOE
tnd TRACKHOE WORK
AVAII.ABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES .,d
TRAILER SITES,
l.ANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-2549

CALL 742·2771

15 Stssltls....--'25.00
12 Stslltls....--'20.00
6 Stslltlt.---112.00
1 Ststhl.--1150
FlEE SESSION WITH MIT

SHRUB TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

3-5-'H·t mo. pd.

1)oy-DIIt11Den Now In Scoek.

UI372-t697 W
1-800-531-1440

..

COMMERCIAL and RESmENTJAL
mEE ESTIMJ\'RS

Cuotom Pllntingo
614-992-2242

YOUNG'S

Top 8o1t 111'*-

"SPECIAUZING IN Sl,ATE
OR CANVAS"
39Bt5 Gold Rldgo Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768
Welcome Slates

$20.00

3·15·'92·1 mo.

.nmMIInl.....
11Mt• La , r'

!Mea.tfows

1111 AIIMIINIIl

··suBTRACT.• · THOSE
GATHERING DUSt

..
Hew Homes • Vinyl Siding
Hew Garages • Replacement Wi1dows
Room Additions • Roofing

1-(atfiryn

985·4473
667·6179

I•·

Opportunily

22- Money to Loan
23- Profeuional Servieet

l l - Help \1'anl..t
12- Situation~ Wanted
13- huurance
14- Buinau Training

eGara..s
I .

Buabte~a

56- Pell lor Sale
57- MY~icalln•tnune•ll

n..l

Acctlslfitt

CONGRMULArlONSf
CARPENTERS'
LOCAL UNION 650

21-

GET RESULTS • .FASr!

'fOU!,J'P.,'!!'-·-

1!1...~,...

11\\\U\1

32- Mobile Homu for Sale
33- Farm• for Sale
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days Will be
34- Bwine.J Buildrng.t
charged for each day as separate ads.
35- loti &amp; Acreaae
1------------------~ 36- Real Eaute \l'aaled

COUNTRY MOBILE HOME

3Nlct Mobdt Ho11t1 for Rtftl
Just Nord! ol
Starling at '225,. ...
Call614-992·5S28
or 385-8227
2/3 92 I•L

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

rector.

.,..

•Insulation

992·2772 or
742·2097

bld1 In accordance with

T-SHIRT. WINNERS ·These members or Pomeroy Junior
Troop 1271 were the winners in a t-shirt decorating contest. Pictured, 1-r, are Ashley Hamilton, first; Emily Stivers, second; and
Ashley Hannahs, third.

•Roolln~

JAMES KEESEE

to the date set for opening

.··

Over 15 Words

Business Services

Real Estate General

cation allealt ten day• prior

Chapter 5525 Ohio Revised
Coda,
Plano and opectncatlont
are on ftleln lhe Department
of Tranoportttlon end the of·
lice of lhe Dlotrlct Deputy Dl·

Rate

Galli a County Mei81 County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304.

667-Coot.iUe

WONDERFUL LOCATION !

1
3
6
10
Monthly

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

the Daily Sentinel, reaching over 18,000 home.

---People in the news---

EHS band to perfonn
The Eastern High School
Band's annual pre-contest concert will be held Tuesday
evening at 7:30 p.m. in the high
school gym.
A highli$ht of the program
will be mustc performed on the
band's newly purchased marimba. The concen opens wilh the
Eastern Marimba Quartet performing "La Spagnola" which
eat'ned them a superior rating at
solo contest last month. Also
featured will be Vicki Warner
playing Bra.~m 's "Hungarian
Dance No. S.
1
The band will perform its.
district contest music including
The Royal Air Force March
Past" by Dawson and Davies,
•.•Anthem for Winds and Perc us·
sion" by Claude T. Smith, and
"Mystery on Mena Mountain"
by Julie Giroux-West.
. ,

Card ol TLanlu
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sale.
• A cla.. ified adnrliaement placed U. Lhe Gallipolil Daily
Trlhune (except Cla.. iried Dilplay, BUiinCit Card or Lee:al
Notice•) will alao appear in the Point Plcaunl Regillcr and

Creative and Cheerleader's Choice Award;
Penny Aeiker, Most Improved; and Anita Calaway, Most Spirited. Amy Well also was rec~g·
nized as a senior cheerleader and as captam.
Absent was senior Monica Adams Chadwell.

EHS CHEERLEADING AWARDS- Eastern High School's varsity cheerleaders gained
special recognition ror their outstanding efforts
this season at Thursday night's winter sports
banquet. Pictured are (L·R) Amy Well, Most
Outstanding Cheerleader; Tracy Murphy, Most

Loveland police don't
love 'Sweetheart' logo
LOVELAND, Ohio (AP) City officials may love the new
promotional logo adopted by
this Cincinnati suburb. But the
police don't.
Officers don't want to ride in
cruisers Jl'caring a heart-shaped
logo with the words " Sweetbean of Ohio."
Thai could lead to ridicule,
Chief Howard Espclage said.
•'At one time 11 was on cruisers and they had a problem with
that," he said.

Words

Days

District 13 D of A
plans for May 30 rally

District 13, Daughters of America, met recently at the Chesler
Lodge Hall wilh Mildred Lowery,
district vice councilor, in charge.
Eileen Clark, J.P.C. protem,
read the 23rd Psalm. Pledges to lhe
Christian and American flags and
the Lord's Prayer were given and
lhe national anlhem was sung.
Received officially were Esther
Smith, junior past state councilor:
Bette Biggs, District 13 deputy;
Margaret Cotterill, natiohal representative: and Opal Hollon, state
credential committee.
It was reported Mary Moose,
School alumni on Tuesday at 7:30 district councilor from Ps:rry Counp.m . at Pleaser's. Plans will be cil is in St. Anlhony's Hospital in
finalized for the class 40th reunion. Columbus. Faye Hoselton, Belle
Prairie Council , is scheduled to
POMEROY · A swine selection, have back surgery in May. Helen
care and feeding clinic will be held Wolf's husband is home from the
Tuesday from 6:30-8 .m. althc hospital.
Meigs High School cafeteria. Dave
Bette Biggs spoke briefly conGerber, district swine spccialisl, cerning the rally to be held May 30
will be guest speaker.
at New Lexington. Guiding Star
Council will do the balloting. The
POMEROY· Ve1erans Memori- district officers will do the receiv al Hospital ladies auxiliary will ing of national and state officers.
meet Tuesday al 2:30 p.m. in the Logan Council will do the memori conference room of the hospital. al. Chester Council will do the preThere will be a pig-in-a-poke sale.
senting of colors and Perry Council
will do the silver shower.
CHESTER · Chester Baseball
Mrs . Biggs also named her
Association will meet Tuesday ~~ tables for the rally and those to
the Chester Elementary at 7:30 work on them: Guess What, Doris
p.m. All parents of Chesler base- Grucser, Esther Harden, Thelma
ball and softball players urged to White, Dorothy Ritchie; District
aucnd.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

614·742·2321
2·2t-1MO,

GUN SNOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT•
•••••• lvlldl•t
mRY
SAt NIGIT
6:30P.M.
Startlat Stpt. 21

FICitiJ Cltlb
12 .... ~·,..,

ltr1"1' lafirct4

.,

t-13-'11-lln •
...'

�a

Page

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Flllwood

3 Announcements

,.,pan.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
lor Rent

Modom 2-bdrm

ojll~.

111ia Pontloc Sunblrdl oulo, PS,

~. -

In Mid·

$15,009. 814-141-7523 or 304·
875-1488.

YuaoeU.wlln,

Joponooo High Scliooi Ex·
••• Arrtvlng

Auguot .... H09T FAMILIES
NEEDED! Anoorloln lrtotcu~urol
Slucloni Exchi!'P. Coil lltllndo
&amp;-Nl'M or cau 1.fi)O.Si.
BUNG.
MEET SINGLE GIRLS
In Your ~Mal ArM. 1·f00.40l'
1004, 12.1151mln. MUll Be Ovir
18, Fonpolt Irvine CA.

N11t &amp; nice 3 bedroom,

lar~:~e

kitchen, dining room, lamDy
room, 2 porch••• mid 50't, 304·
675-3030 por 675·3431.

32 Mobile Homes

oqulppod

kltchlno.

rwo
bedroom
tpar1mtntt tor rfftt. 304-175-

1117 AT,
Dodge
· 2cyl,
olr,IUIWOOf,
-··4
- . 71,009 miiH, 304.f1S.
7151.
' 'I
11U ~~- Stonu GXE, ' I
loldld, 111100, 114-1'f2·2175
.
·•
1111 Oldomoblto CVtto11 · .,

Pleaunt upstal1"8 A,pl, 501112 $,

whh blu• rnterlor,
985-4418

One

,,
'

lftd

Supreme, aood cond. whHt

2053 or 875-1100.

3rd 511•1 Mldthpo~,Ohlo­
llvlng rm1 f_-bdrm, kltchln, blth,
lg yonl, IJIIOmo 6 utiiHIII, 614185-1231
I
Ront f1H untM April 1, Ill v...

$1,500. ar best oHar. 304-675- l'llf fum\lhlld,

IXC

114-

...:

~ ,,f
' ./,

.

REDUCE; Bum Oft Ftl Whilt
Vou SIMI!! Take OPAL AYIIIable
At: Fruth l"hlrMICY.,

ceo~~~w~

.
T~E't' SA't'

D065
HAVE NO SENSE
PASSING
OF TIME ...

C Hltl b) M£1.. 1""

I TOLD YOU THAT IN
OUR HOU5E 0065
MEN'T ALLOWEO ON
TI-lE ~URNITURE ~

1 THINK IT'S
SEEN A
1-!UNDREll
YEARS ..

'

' 0 .. . . ,
'

1D Aln Tin Tin, K·l Cop
1:30(2)e 1111 NIC- Q
(!) ....., by ......

10 8coabJ Doo

@UpCioH
ID New Zono Slereo. Q
8:36 (I) Anctr Olllfllll
7:00 (2). Wheel of FOliUM Q
(!) I DfNm of Jeannie
~ ,lnolde Edlllon Q

, .'

'·'

'

..

3!12192. Pa/1 Ub, Malt, On Slate
Routt 218, Gllllpolts. 614·446·
536~

Losl: Female Dog On O.J. White
Rood• Gtlllpollo, 112 Nonnlgn,

p.m. Saturday.

Stereo..Iii.
• Mairied.•Wlllt Ch-

TAt.JclNG SCA'·f. 11
SAY.f, ".:Z: L.OVE you
ull.fT T'Ht WAy
yov AfiE ·:

WISt Vlrglnll, 304-l'T.I-5785.

,•

..

Wanted to Buy

7:30~L~~Ji
(I) e El!!!ftllnmeltt Tonight

•· ANP 1HIJ 1$ OVP
/ MOJ'T' pop/J/..A~

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Ptarson Auction Company,
full lime auelionMr, complet•
auction Mrvlee. l&amp;c.ns.d Ohio,

Don't J~nk Ill sell U1 Your Non--

Working Applilnca, Color TV'o,

a lla I

Stir Stereo .
@ College llalltelball
Toumament lpeclet
Ill Croeallre
7:36 (I) NIIA llalltllbiR AUanta
Hawks at Detroit' Pistons (L)
8:00 (2) e 1111 Freall Pltnc8 ol
llai-Air Will's mother forbids
him to attend lhe wedding ol
1!!¥ Aunt Janioe.(A) Stereo.

VCR't, PoWIIr Tool1, Elc. 614·

Smtll Handt 50 motorcycle,
mull bo In good oond., 614-W2·
6254 Mon.· Sol. l-5!1m or 814992-6991 ovonlngo &amp; Sundlyo

ALL~YOOP

llalorcyclo Ilia RM 250 Suzuki
Wtntld: Utld farm equipment, For Solo. 114-388.f3!11.
anything you Wlnt to 1111. Clll
614·2511-1:108, 2511-8040 '"" 6 Yomoho Yl-100 dirt blkl
p.m.
W/lxtlll, powerful, 304-675-

Used Mobile Horn.1, Call 614·

446.0175.

WAmarlcan II Allk Seeds
of Hope (1:00)
(I) e (I) 8 FBI: The Untold

5088.

Wtnttd To Bur: Junk Auto•
Wilh Or WlthoU: Motor•. Call
L1rry Lively. G'M-388·1303.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Pold: All Old U.S.

Storieo The FBI recruits a
Naval officer to pose es a
double agent. Stereo. Q
rD ([I Nltlonal ~phlc
Spec:lel Stereo. D -

1111 Bell Trockw Tl·~ ~P
Evlnnrdo, ptuo lhp E mony olllrao,
ktpl, iioOO
llrm, 814-W2·
1981 Pro Craft tl ft, 11th 6 okl,

Coins, Gokt Ainga, SitYef Coins,

Gold Colnl. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Seccnd AVIOUI, Golllpoll1.

Nv?

G~~e

Fllr Plgo, 140 Eoch. 614-2561145 BllwHn 7 A.M. &amp; 6 P.M.

5:00.

-'

Moxum 18 ft, fnbolrdloutbolrd, low hro. gorogo

lt90

kept,

liD

ttMI lop
llloauonl pkg, rlldy to go, prtci
$9,§95. 304-5711-2950.

Help wanted
lm!Mdlata Opening For Ptrt·
Tlmt RN Su.....,ltor, llutl Be

Avolllblo To Work AJIShllll And
81 on Call. CompotMI.. WtlfO!,
Dlfftrantlot WHh Expuftncl, E·
AVOII • All or~,. Colt Mlrllyn quo
I a-~unhy Emptoyo&lt;.
WN'41« 304-812..&lt;tMS.
Conllct:-Dlroctot Of Nursing,
Aftor sclmol ihtor tor I Ptnoc1111 c... carw... 110
&amp; 1t yr. old, Chllter INI, &amp;14- Plno..,st
Drlvo, Ollllpotlo,
!185-1141
Ohio. 614-446-7112.

TransportatiOn
Rentals

76

PIN down EXTRA

CA0I1?!!

1 bdrm. 1pt. In Pomeroy, $1501
month; 3 bdnn, hoUM In

Pomeroy, $2001 month. IM-ID2·

High Country Com00101d Bow;
LDi1dtdl 814-146-lt31 Alk For

2

bedroom

mobUt

home

wtlcomo. 114-141-8224. NIW In· Southoldt, 1210. mo Stoo. 54 Ml
font Toddtor Core, 81H4H22l dopooH or wl~ 1111 111,1100. 304·
see11aneoUS
&amp;711-5502.
Merchandise

Fmancta l
21

Business
Opportunity
INOIICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING GO.
rocommondo that you do bull·

Tum your clutter into cash,
SeU it the easy way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 papers,$6.00
Call nur nffir.~ {10r paid ia adMnr.n role&lt;!

,.. with poopto you k,_, ond
NOr to und ......, througn tha

mall until you have lnvntlgattd
lht offering.
AIII'P ModiCII Billing. Oppor-

tunltr to quollfY 11 • tTctn'" In
your aru for 1 nttlonal
halnhCiro
COI11PI"''·
Do

eltctronlc mtdicll lnturtrtet

clot.. procllllna lor moclcol
-~-.
$30l!Oo.
portcom.
tlmt
lo
- fiO,OOO.
i'.:in tlmo.
pony 1ralnlngl In/till copilot ,..
qulrod 15,111. pt,. PC. For In·
lortlllllort by 111111, coli 702·3534241 (241n).
'
FIIIIIIY OlaCiry Ell. 1ttl, p1tont

114-1611-3300 orl-5 3845

--Jilt-.
Prlvllo

Poy

-

Routo,

Ufltirne AMidull Income, Call

1~----

2 . .;_....- -- -

.'J.------4.~---5.
_ _ _ __

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

8-----

Real Est&lt;Jte

(J).

Auto Parts &amp;

Budaot TronomluiOM Uttd &amp;
rebuT~, otortlng 11 lftL)ront
whlll drivo llortlng II ...1.00
11+241 5117, 114-W2.f213.

52 Sportl ng Gooda

Coli 814-245-588~
3086
Brian.
E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. TOPI&gt;Ing, ;:2~BR;..,-:P-:ol-:nl-:Pfl::-111-n-t---."'2&amp;:-3 Solo-flex exercltt m~chine.
Trimming, Trtt Removtl, Hedge BR· C.mp ConJty lrta. Clll good ilhiPe. accepta 111 attlchTrimming. Fr• E•tlmal••! lf4· 304-176-3812.
monto, 614·1112-1877
»J'.~
~~~~~~~--5
ROC111II And Bllh, At 44 Olivo
~ Po~oblt S.wmlll, don't StrNt, Gotllpolil. lnqulro At 1111 53
Antiques
haul your toa• to tho mill lull Sicond Avon .. , Golllpollo.
:::---,....,,.;:...,.:...;...,.....,..CIII ~71i·tl5l
Buy or 1111. RlvtriM Antlq..o,
Ml11 Poull'• o.y c.ro cantor. 42 Mobile Homes
1124 · E. Motn Stroot, Ponwroy.
s.r., eHordablt, chltde~ra. M·F
I
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
e ' ·"'· • 5:30 p.m. Agll 2 ~ 10 . l:;--::::=:-=o~r.:.R;:e::nt~~~ g;~~z':/1 :00 to e:oo p.m.
BetON, afttr school. Drop-Ins

a

Accessories
41 Houses lor Rent

Witt Bebyell In My Home. Rodney ArM. Relerwnces Avtlltble.

1171 Elcamlno, SUf*' Sport,

Good Condition, 11.1100, 114-2561t45, Bolw-7 A.M. 610 P.M.
1182 Camlro, 11182 Flroblnl:
bolh

WATER WELLS DRILLED:
WATER OAURAHTEED. 814-81117311.

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allloon 1210 Slcond
AVIOUI, Olll{polll, Ohio, 114·
44&amp;-133e.
'

55

Building
Supplies
2 bedroom~ ,,.,.. , needa IICN'M 1 Y11or Old 55 011. Floh Tonk,
With C.biM4, Comptotly Equtp. Block, brick, uwor olpoo, winwo11c
con
do
wo11c
for
·
prlvllo, $115. mo. 304-711-&amp;252. podl$200. 1114-441.0412.
dowa, llnttlt, etc. dtuclt Win·
2 BR, Mlddloport, Ohio. 2 Gn Cool St- For Silo. tera, Rio Orande·, OH Call 114·
245-etn
Reterenc11 l dl~tt required. 114-14U112.
30H82-3217.
·
Rott• 01 carp~~, aood Cond~ 56 Pets for Sale
2•bd rm mo blto homo In Mid· ztlonl
11x15 a 11xt1. 614-4411- -:---;...,...,.......,.....,.,.....~
dllpOrt, 514·W2·11158
IHS.
Groom ond Sullllfy ShoP"I'II
2br Mobile Homo, Roltrtnclo z Wltw Bodo: King Sill; a.- Grooming. All &amp;i-, llylll.
And Dopoon Noldld. 614·367: 1150: 2 CoforT.Y.'III" SIOO; 13• lomo Pol Food Dtlltr. Julio
78&amp;&amp;.
1150; 1 End Tobit, Glltllop, $20· Wtbb. Colt 814 -448-0231.
Khchan Tobie; 2 Chal11, $20; 2 I wk old · ltmolo O.lmotlon
Choolor o........ 140 Eoch. 114- puPPf, S125. 304-1711-5731.
44
Apartment
ZIM3I1.
for Rent
7==~:---:----1 Dot Hciuoto For 1111: -~~
::-::~~~~:;;.,;;;.......,= I rollo 1112" 1-illllntuilllon 11... 1 112 Milo 0111 Rt.141, Qol·
2 bdrm. opt. In Syroc-, $155 $110. Codlr krllll d = coli Upolle. Woynt Shoom-. 814·
lncluct. 101111 utllllln, depoth w/4 $110.
cord 411.0813.
114-ltrl-7211
' lnoprtntor for lloro 820.
8tith11111 J.1X rille F-lo Dlchihund, ....a, lull
2 bldroom lpl, utRIH pold, w/t'anglflndtr$70. 304-f11..1011. blooded, 14 months old, 1100.
Hud lpproo'Od, 304-e711-:m2.
30447Hoet.
IEAUTIFUL APARTMEHTI AT 7aolloltor
.. - 1:00PM
- · ·SM-17W'It7.
$2.50 - · =-c'-=-'--'--~-­
Fllh Tlnlt, 2413 Jocklon Avo.
8UDDET PRICES AT JACKSON
Point Piolllnl, :IOH7S-2013,
ESTATE!,.,_Ul ,...,_, Plu
lull llno Tropicll 11th, lolrdo,
email anlrnatl•nd •uppt•.
from 11wnno. Willi to ollolt &amp;
movllo. Colli--. EOH.
Musical
Cornplllly F u - -II
Houot, PICIImo. 1111111!'~.
And ~. 114 441 01131. "'"
Btlott?p.m.
EJ1ro Nlco 1 Bed- Clrpot·
~..... .... Trllh PwnWIId,
Dlpoell RllqUirH.IM-441 •tt ,.,.._

And lith

Furnilhod 3 -

Upltllr11, Cltin, No . Pel1,
Riltr .,... And DopOIIt ....
quliN. 11+4*111t.

tw••·

-.
f~
•r
to
Ulnry, ,.,.,.,
_ ,1111:
.1~
,..,.. :n · 114 Ut Oftl.
7p.no.

~

condMiort, bolh rlon

,
81

Se rvtces

•'

- .'

...
''·

',
"'

Home
Improvements

aood. Both v.e. 12,1100 ooch.
lt..-11770.
IIASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
1182 Pontile Bonnovlllt llltlort
wogon, !!11• PB. 6 cyl, $1,200. Uncond~lonll llltllmt g\01,...
:JO(.e71&gt;0 r52.
tH. i.OCIIroltronctt luri1lllttd.
Frtt lllimllfl. Coli co1ttct 1·
lt83 Z·28, Nlco Cor, AC, CC, 1\4-237-0488, dly or night.
Foctory Prom. Scund sr:, Auto Aogtn~ . laNrr.nt Wtlerproo.

'
I

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
ON THE 50T'TOM OF
THE SCJ-IOOL. UJNQ-i

DID 'IOU NOT'ICE

THE:' R&amp;I.L FINE

IT 5A,Iq •CA~T E,lliT'ER !'

Movie (2:00) Stereo.

rD Ptler, Peul and

•a
25th Annlvereary The
enduring lolk trio gathers to
celebrate their anniversary
with renditionS ol ciiiSICI
like Ill Had 1 Hammer and
BloWin' In the Wind. (R)
(2:00)
([I Nova Whalllfe Is like on a
shUttle mission and a View ol
Earth from apace. Stereo. Q

'·

'

'I
"',,

1114 BMW, 3181 73000MI, ounroof, auto, antifm ltereo, ,..,
1nd dlmogo; $3400, OBO, 114·
14t~~ lftor lpm

(

.,.

1N4 Dodgo Ariel, 4 - . bltck,
Alln'll, ..,_,, 4 •rio ,... OK•
......., 114-112·72311, 1YIIIIngl

'

'

BARNEY
l60T TH'
VARMINT
THIS

1114 Floro BE. fllcl.niltld Win~l.!!h o!Cwt.,
Sunroof, AC,
PW,· A..,.•
CUt, $2,500. 8142511·1778 Evonlngo.
1184 Ford Elooft, 4dr., 4 optld

TINE II

.

HARK/I
THAR GOES MY
WRISTWATCH
ALAIN I!

S O'"OCK
QUITTIN'

-. ~

....

.....,

' .'" "

~ .

~ I

-

, r~

' •

..... ...

S.ll-H

~

'•

.. .

WEST
+Q2

EAST

.J

+AJ987
.J107S

• 813 2
t K 42
• 9873

' . ..

... l'• . J

.....":...:

tB

. ..
•· ·~

+Q J 10

.'

'

SOUTH
+K3

Is it one chance
in two?

.Q96
t A IS 3
K6 S2

+

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Phillip Alder
When you have two cards in the suit
led, and only one is correct. you·mighl
that there is at least a SO percent
l·ch:anCE you will find the better play.
But today's hand would trip up most
players.
Even though you've been given a big
hmt, you can still test yourself by cov·
ering the East-West cards and plan·
ning the play in three no-trump. West
leads the spade queen and East encourages with the nine .
South 's two-no-trump response is
debatable since he has only two
spades. But the alternative bid of
three diamonds (or a two-spade cue·
bid, if you play that as a high-card diamond raise) isn't exactly appealing .
Besides, South was a rubber·bridge
player. He had an aversion to the mi·
nors, so he made a game·invitational
bid in no-trump. North was happy to

Soutb

Wesl

Nor~

1+

East
1+

2 NT

Pass

3NT

All pass

Opening lead:
L..

••
'

.....
.......
\.

•.. •c 'l''

+Q

-

'

....' ,,......,,
.

_ _ _ _ _ _ __J

-' "' ~

. . ..

~

b~t disaster

struck. West won with the .. . ,-,.
kmg aod returned his second spade to ····"
defeat the contract
·
True, East rated to have the dia· ..v:
mond king. Yet the key point is thai .... ·declarerdoesn'tneed a spade trick for : -~.
his contract If he pl ays his spade
three at trick one. he ca n't be defeat·
ed. Assuming West lea ds his second ~
spade at trick two, dummy's spade 10
acts as a stopper. And when the dia- •- "
mond finesse is taken into West, hr
won't have a spade left. Declarer mu· ! •
raise.
score nine tricks by way of thr&lt;
South won the first trick with the hearts, four diamonds and two clubs. .. "':
spade king . crossed' to dummy with a
Always consider all the alter· .• ,, ,
.. .. ~
heart and ran the diamond queen - natives

·:1

'

'

· ~~

.........
..
..
~
-~u

.

"'

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle · ..' ,
•

ACROSS

Ananr lo Prewlol• Puulll

35 Flnnlah llrol
name
36 Swollen
gland
37 Exhlualedly
39 Pulalorth
40 Ba lick
41 Jau ployer
Kid42 Promontory
45 Japanett
Ulh
46--Ciear
Dar
49 Yoko50 Untvtn
53 BIHball
pl1yer lltl 54 SUppary
55 Orledup
56 Kentucky
blut Grill
57 Hegolltreo
58 Announceo

1 Campua area
5 Tobacco
CheW

9 Popeye'o

lrlond Olive
12 Hawaiian
lood lllh
13 Soviet Union
Cabbr.)
14 briYerl' Ofg.
15 Drunktnnooo
17 Cmty
1a CIOH friend
19 Type ol beln
20 Cciloredo
.park
22 -to Joy
23 Yoo
24 Small ont
27 Gathering ol
people

31 Chop32 Mlnotrol

. .. .'

lmplemenl
34 lira. In
llodrld

.., .

M. 4 Small
quanUty
5 P1par
meiiUfe
6 Stcondhand
7 Blllevar In on
lam
8 TIIMU

DOWN

33 Boat

~"I.!.

1 Jeol
2 Arm bone
3 Author Jean

-.·,_,. ,
~·

•

••
.'•

.

IIJIOIIft Shelly's mother
vlslls and IlOilo!! aa tier ·

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iL"':"~··Off
Road Cltlrn~lalllltlp Grind

,. '

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._ '

-...

a•
•• MurpltJ aMu'fllty chdenges the

· TINEII

1111W011&lt; and cuts Iter hair

shOrt. Stereo. 1:1

10 WWF Prime"l'1me

8lllndtnl, aaacl cand., mike of·
..,.~2M1

t.OO (2) e 11J MOYIE: 'In the

(lj Newo Spacial
(I) g (I). MOVIE: 'l1toH
Seclell' A8C Mondll£1fW11

'
'

1111.

On SUIQe Stereo.
~ filicic Siltllon Stereo. r:;1

fl.

••

OD, T-Top1 TIH, Whle With ling.
Bluo Int. U,IOO. Coli 814-146·

i

LIM of Ottty: A Cop lor the
Killing' NBC Mondllr Night
the Movies (2:00) Stereo.

MENU TOI:l'~

PRINT...

Wreotllnllllrltlsh Bulldog ve.
Shawn Mlchllil.
fJI Nallwlle Now Stereo.
@ NHRA liNg Racing Slick
50 Nationals lrom Houston

,.
'

'

"r

~ La"' King UWI

Pt:.O~Dowtlng Myltlrln

t.soae =•~

ASTR0.0RAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL·

• • • r-,
=:
,,_ ,.... .,. wm
Wll -

polio ....... -

..

oklrtlng, .,..

'

Plumbing&amp;·
Heating

llerch 17, 1112
•You could bt quill lucky In the year
alttld In Mill'liJ or promoting ufl\loual
producla.l!telhOd• or ayslema. It looka
like you ntiY be Involved with \WO or

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

a

1-lw. .. lHE-~
IS Tt.JRIJIIJG PFC&lt;JklD-:::,·;.;...·~.....

For Silo: 14 Fl. John loll, With
Tr-. Minor Ropolll,
Atklng: 1400.114-:MW829.

Regllttrttlon 180-0$-12748.

Want to:

,,'

m.a....

Rllraln
Now!!!South11tt1m
,---- -----..1....------- --J Plou.
But lnne Coltege, Spring V1111y
Call Todoy, 614-146-136711

Wanted to Do

,.

e MOYll!: 'Doing tiM

on Mljlle Dflvl' Foa Nigh! at
the MoviM (2:00) Ster12., Q
10 Munllf, She Wrole 1.,1
On Sllge Stereo.
@ Wortd CUp Siding Aspen
Wlntemational, super·G lrom
Aspen, Colo. ~
PrlmeNewa
ID PrinCe Vall Stared. Q
1:30 (2). IIJ 8loUom
Blossom's reputation Is
damaged l a boy w1to lies
about her. R) Stereo. Q
(I)
A-.ICIII
Detective A grendmOIIllr
deals drugs out of Iter own
horne. (R) Stereo. 1:1
GilD 11:11• MIJOr'lied POlly
ts slclt so Mafor Dad helps
r write an anlcle. Stereo.

EEKANDMEEK

BOATERS
GuiMI Mtrcury Morino Slnrlco.
Morcury, Mill..,, Mtrcrulttr
-lotlll. MIICUI'Y clrlllltd.
Mobllo..i...Wt como to you. &amp;14-

Dooptllllly wonting to odopt •
child, unborn « lnlont, pto111
, ...
_II,;.11,;.4',;.:,.,;.2·,;.1:102;,;,;;,_ _ __
'14
Business
Training

18

••lnlua

D. Evetllng 8ltede

Wood and Ave are not happy
with MOlly's choice 011
boyfriend. IRl Stereo. C

•

exc cond, 30447'1·7188 efllr

EmploymP.nl Serv1ces

e Wheel of FOIIUne Q
e Fantllr Feud

;

2511·~ .

11

PHILLIP
ALDER

~~~---

II

'

+A4

10 The WIIIOno
7:0&amp; (I) Adcletno Family

Fridoy. Mondoy ldhlon • 2:00

~ I

...-.

tQJ1096

@ llporiiCsntlr

FRANK AND ERNEST

..

'AK

10 MltcOJver Stereo. Q

Sunday .dltlon • 2:00 p.m.

Top Prlc10

NORTH
+10654

stereo.

AL.I. Yard Salt1 Must It Paid In

.

..

BRIDGE

F.-I~~
Q

.--...

'•'

SCIIM\.I.ITS ANSWIIS
' · •t
Sphere • Mixer· Venue • Weaver· EXPENSIVE
"I forgot my wile's birthday ," I informed the clerk at the
jewelry department. "Sorry sir," the clerk replied, "but we
don't have anything that EXPENSIVE ."

1111 Famlij WOIIII

AdvtnCI. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy boloro tho od It to non.

9

PRINT NUMBERED
lETI~RS IN SQUARES
AN S W~R

Gil. Curnnt All* C

,,

j~

"

'

•'

~ UN SCRAM8l~ FOR

Newa~
c;"nctit es...,.

Yard Sale

B

e

&lt;ll •

112 lillrman Shephard, Short
And Fal; Very Fritndly. 614-44&amp;2713.

7

.-

~=TodayFlag

'jS Square One TVStereo.
!Rie:=~~Q

Found: Black Qog Thursday

•,

Stareo. Q
6:0&amp; (I) lla.,.rty Hl._.a

t; ,,

Lost &amp; Found

..,.

B£;?_FQ
~~Hd~=~Q

6

•·"· ' ,..,

(!) VIdeo Power
~Square One TV StereO.

Evon Flo Cor SNt, ExCIIIInt
Condhlon, $35. &amp;14 448 4429.

PharmiC)'.

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1:00 (2). (I). (I). • •

Goraood, 2,1100 Mltoo, $10,100
Pay on.814-141-1:112, 1:oo-1:oo.

cond, :J04..

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1tt1 Sent1'8 S.E., Air, Auto, EIC,

675-4580 .. 1711-111112.

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1981 Pontloc Orond Prix, '•'
30,000111, whlll wlgroy 1.-, ' •'
1uto. lround etftctt, loldtd,
sa1oo, t4-m.eo'/81 m-2178
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lor Sale
101155 tl'lllllr, must be moved, non Ave 3 rooms, bath. alow 1:

Reduce: sat. I fist with
GobeR tablttt I
E·Yap
Olu,.tlc, IVIIIIbll It FnAh

moJmnod, -

dl•pol1, . 2-blth•, w/d hol$-up,

Ret.renceiDIPDIII
r.qulrwd.
814-185-4441
1ner ·
5 Roome, Comer Lot, 311 Hen· Phone
del'lon S1rwt, Hende,..n, WV. 1:00pm.

MAKE A FRIEND ... FOR UFEI
Scllldlnovlon, E u - South

16, 1992

7t Autos for Sale

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Quoilllld Buy.,, 8f4-148·235t.

mrown.

chang~: Studiintt

Art~, . Pomoroy,

Country Home, New Kitchen,
Both &amp; Corpotlng. Low 130'1,

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&amp;ibM tar any dMta att.r than

American,

44

31 Homes for Sale

Anno unr:e111~ nt s

Monday, March

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ollliO) Vou might
derlft 101M Ullu..... benellta today
1111aug1t a jOint •ICIII¥01 with on 8119clalewltlt'WhOm you've- bMn pre'OIOUIIy allglled. Know wltefiiO look lor
~ llld ~·11 find it. The Aatr_oQrapll 'MtiCitrttlkar lnet111111y - · "
wltlch . . . . r-tically parlect lot

you. Mail $2 plus a long , sell-ad- though .
dressed, stamped en•elope to Match· VIRGO (Aug. 23•Stpl. 22) A pleasant
maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo• surprise could be in the offing socially
today. It will be a unique type ol oppor·
91428. Cleveland, OH 44101· 3428.
ARIES (March 21·April 18) If you 've tunity that must be acted on promptly.
been stymied by delays on an important LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) Do not make
project, discard old methods and pro- any changes today in an arrangemenl
cedures tooay. Seek fresh approaches that appears to be mo•lng toward a dethat can help you circumvent these

obstacle,.
TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) Keep your
social calendar as unstructured as possible today. A spur-oHhe-moment de·
velopmenl might suddenly occur that
could turn into something rather
exciting.
GEMINI , (May 21·June 20) An une•·
peeled upturn In llnancisl trends could
IUddenly occur today. ThiS shlh will
prove to be benefiCial, especially where
yciu and a lrlend ere concerned.
CANCIR (JuiM 21.Julr 22) vo~·re like·
' ly to be better oqulpP.e&lt;~ to handle Intangible sltualiona today than you will
be to cope with tangible ones. Focus o~
the ilrea lhat olfers 1he b&amp;sl probablli·
ties lor ouccaa.

L!O (JuiJU.Aug. 22) Your poaalbilltles
lor generating heftier r~turns lrom your
prll81ll sour"' ol earnings look good
loday. The eame might hot be true
wllere new channels are concerned.

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sirable end . Your alterations could

throw things olf course,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) There's a
chance you mighl hear from a lrlend tO·
day who has an Idea that could Involve
you. Hear this Individual oul. because it
could nave hidden merits.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·11ec. 21) Lady
Luck ls ;ln your corner today where li·
nancial and career goala are

con~

earned, but she won't pul up .wlth any
dllly·dallylng. Make up your mipd and
move swiftly.
CAPRICOIIN (llec. 22-.lln. 11) You
might get Involved In a commercial ar·
rangemenl today that won't be con·
dueled along conventional linn. This
could turn out to be profitable lor you
both matarlally and educationally,
AQUARIUI (Jell. :ZO.Feb. 11) You'll
have your own unique w1ys ol handling
things today that s11ould oerve your best
lnternta. Utilize them regerdlels ol how
unuoual thay may appear to others.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Mt, H I can't ,bloW liP \he World lri lite tlrll. ltn
MCOndl, the lhow II a llop." - Irwin Allen.

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�Monday, March 16, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Annual science fair held at MJHS

. SUPERIORS • These students received supe·
: rior ratings at tbe annual science fair at Meigs
·· Junior High School. Pictured, 1-r, l"ront, are Jay
· Gannaway, Erin Smith, Dodger Vaughan, Ryan
Smith, Roxanne Williams, Ryan Crisp and Lori

GOVERNOR'S AWARD WINNERS
Receiving Governor's Awards at the annual science fair at Meigs Junior High School on Tues-

Russell. Back, Teresa Simpson, Michael Franckowiak, Angie Hale, Matt O'Bryant, Kristen Das·
sylva, Tracy Sharrer, Suzanna Henderson and
Dorothy Leifheit. Absent from photo is Bethany
Cohee.

day evening were Jake Gannaway, Michael
Franckowiak, Matt O'Bryant and Dorothy
Leifheit. Absent is Bethany Cohee.

Celebration set
POMEROY · American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, will celebrate the birthday of the American Legion with a
family dinner and special program
on Tuesday at the senior citizens
center in Pomeroy.
A special guest has been invited
and all members may bring a guest.
The ladies auxiliary is also invited.
Dinner will begin at 7 p.m. with
meeting to follow.

BEST PROJECT ·Jake Gannaway was the winner or the
John Mora Memorial Award for
the best project at Tuesday
evening's science fair at Meigs
Junior High School. Over 400
people attended the fair's open
house.

Luncheon slated
The Meigs County Retired
Teachers will have a luncheon
meeting on Saturday, March 21 at
12:30 p.m. at the American Legion
Hall opposite the post office in
Middleport. The speaker will be
from the state teachers retirement
system on health insurance. All
retired teachers are invited. Further
information may be obtained by
calling 992-3887.

Over 400 people attended the
recent annual science fair at Meigs
Junior High School under the
direction of science teacher Rusty
Bookman.
Sixteen students received superior retings and were presented special recognition awards. Those students, their projects and award presenters were: Ryan Crisp, "How
Does An Airplane Fly?" Meigs
Junior Hi~h Science Club: Rox·
anne Wilhams, "How Safe is the
Air and Water in Our Community,"
Meigs Litter Control; Ryan Smith,
"How to Locate an Earthquakes
Epicenter," Meigs Junior High Sci·
ence Club; Bethany Cohee, "How
Can Leaves Make Photographs,"
Meigs Junior High Science Club;
Angie Hale, "Do Plants Produce
More Oxygen in Stronger Sunlight," Veterans Memorial Hospital; Erin Smith, "What Ingredients
Act as Leavening Agents," Meigs
Litter Control; Kristen Dassylva,
"Can the Lack of Light Cause
Depression?" Southern Ohio Coal
Company; Suzanna Henderson ,
"Tes t the Water You Drink," Dr.
James P. Conde; Michael Franckowiak, "Which Type of Water Can
Plants Grow Best In?" Meigs
Junior High Science Club; Jake
Ganaway, "Which lOw 40 Motor
Oil Has Ideal Viscosity Characteristics?" John Mora Memorial
Award;
Teresa Simpson , "How Does
Water Temperature Affect the Respiration of GoldfiSh?" Meigs Junior
High Teachers: Dorothy Leifheit,
"How Biodegradable is Your Laundry Detergent," Meigs Junior High
Academic Boosters: Lori Russell,
"What Is the pH Level of Different
Sources of Water in Meigs County," O.A.P.S.E.; Dodger Vaughan,
"How A Hovercraft Works," Ohio
Power Company; Matt O'Bryant,
"Growing Tomatoes Using Hydroponics," M.L.T.A.; and Tracy
Shaffer, "What Is the Best Insulation," Meigs Junior High Science
Club.
Those receiving superior ratings
are now eligible to compete at District Science Day at Ohio University on April II.
Of the superior rating winners,
those receiving Governor's Awards
were Bethany Cohee for Environmental Science Research: Michael
Franckowiak for Agriculture and
Food Science Research: Jake Gannaway for Energy Research :
Dorothy Leifheit for Recycling and
Litter Prevention: and · Malt
O'Bryant for Water Resources
Research.
Students receiving excellent rat-

ings were April Childers, Candice
Walker, Susan Couerill, John Cle·
land, Deana Grover, Amber Bennett, Mindy Patterson, An~ela Fish·
er, Keawana Qualls, Nikki Bentley.
Israel Grimm, Nick Haning, Bonita
Barley, Amy Harrison, Todd Hawley, Darlene Doerr, Jennifer Carpenter, Butch Bradshaw, Nick
Mills, Palma Wiles, Corey Darst,
Jeremy Coleman, Megan Clark,
Marlene Capehart, Brent Hanson,
Terri Fife, Lee Williams, Cliff
Thomas, Amanda Brinker, Michael
Jarvis, Brandi Hysell, Tabitha
Swearingen, James White, Ricky
Metheney, Alison Gerlach, Willie
Johnson, Anne Brown, Erica
Phillips, Steven Vance, Gary Stanley, Cindi Stewart. Paul Pullins,
Sara Roush, Bobby Mash, Kenda ·
Reynolds, Dorena Hom, Jim Hens·
Icy, Daniel Russell, Tonya Phalin,
Cynthia Cotterill, Autumn Conde
Donald Goheen, Jeremy Hartson,
April Halley and Bryan C~lwell.

Good ratings went to ~tephanie
Wood, Angela Ward, Jeremy Hub·
bard, Shara McLead, Heather
Knight, Melissa Erlevine, Kim
Crites, Chad McKinney, Tim Priddy, Jonathan Keesee, Bert Mash,
Dianna Cannan, Becky Ackerman,
Shelly Sinclair, Natasha Slater,
Tanya Taylor, Ricky Curtiss, Gary
Canterbuiy, Fred Heldreth, Richie
Gilkey, Matt Gard, Tara Fitchpatrick, Heather Blanks, Phyllis
Clark, Paul Searles, Herbie Bush,
Alicia Haggy, Terri Smith. Donald
Yost, Travis Abbott, Jeremy
Honaker, Sabrina Dress. Morlty
Hunter, Ellen Lewis, Travis Lipscomb, Jason Marcum, Mark Mills,
An~ela Powell, Rana Justis, Ryan
Dailey, Stacy Amott, Chad Bunon,
Brad Swisher, Shawn Whittekind,
Deangelo Thompson, Jessica Stubart and Marla Hall.
Receiving satisfactory ratings
were Jon Mattea, David Cunningham, Michele Price, Travis Curtis,
Travis Sprowl and Travis Gilmore.

zling. Instructor was Brenessa
Phillips assisted by Amy Wright.
A court of awards was held in
February with eight girls attending.
The received the following badges:
celebrating people, Andrea Neutzling. Melissa Houser, Bethany
Cooke: arts dabbler, Jennifer Heck,
Melissa Houser, Bethany Cooke,
Andrea Neutzlin~ . Autumn
Phillips, Amanda Mtller, Jennifer
Heck, Autumn Phillips, Melissa
Houser, Andrea Neutzling, Aja
McGlothin, Bethany Cooke: theatre, Andrea Neutzling, Bethany
Cooke, Amanda Miller, Melissa
Houser; looking your best, Melissa

Houser.
Investiture and rededication was
held for Aja McGlothin and Jessica
Hensley. Guests attending were
Tana and Lacey Kennedy, Debbie
Cooke and Teme Houser.
Thinking day was held later in
February at Eastern High School.
Pomeroy Troop 1309 had the country of Ireland and served Irish Stew
and Brunies. Daisy Troop 1292 of
Pomeroy shared with the junior
troop and provided Irish Scones.
There were six juniors and six
guests for the troop. Daisy Girl
Scout auending was Angela Wilson
and co·leader Misi Neutzling.

Pfeiffer, the nerdy 16-year·old
played by Josh Saviano on television's "The Wonder Years," is
about to lose his virginity.
"I'm sure we're going to get a
lot of letters from parents,"
Saviano said in the March 21 issue
of TV Guide.
He said the episode doesn't
focus on the sex, but on the reaction of Kevin Arnold- Pa\Jl's best
friend and narrator of the ABC
seri es. Arnold is played by Fred
Savage.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Civil
rights activist Rosa Parks met one
of her high school teachers at a
book signing here in honor of

"Sending Forth as a Service to
God" was presented at the recent
all-day work meeting of the St.
Paul United Methodist Willing
Worlcers.
Glenna Sanders, president,
opened the meeting and program
by reading from the book of Mark.
Prayer was given by Joanna
Weaver. Readings were given by
Edna Harmon, Mary Jamison, Mae
Vineyard, Evelyn Spencer, Mildred
Brooks, Glenna Sanders and Joanna Weaver.
Those attending learned how to
put together and set up the Dresden
Plate for a fuwre quilt. Each member took home two blocks to complete on their own for the May

Vol. 42, No. 220

Council will continue
talks to purchase old
junior high building
.

REPAIR WORK TO BEGIN • Tbe con·
struction signs went up Monday and work on
repair ol' the piers of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
by the Ohio Department or :rransporatlon was

expected to get underway tOday. During part or
the work the bridge wiD be restricted to one-way
traffic. The repair work Is scheduled for completion in early summer.

Officials say J(lney killed in line
of duty; family awarded benefits
Public Safety Officers' Benefits
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) A sheriff's deputy shot while Pro~ram of the U.S. Department of
moonlighting for an insurance Jusuce that said Janey died in the
company should be considered an line of duty. Federal officials
officer who was killed in the line of agreed.
Richard J. Condon, claims
duty, local and federal officials
officer
for tl)e. .federal benefits
said.
~. ,porelltror · Pulliam Cbunty · program, said the'Janey ~ompensa·
Officer Jonathan D. Janey were tion was justified.
"Officers have authorities that
awarded $103,890 from a special
federal compensation fund, al- transcend duty hours," Condon
though Janey was not working in said. "They are clothed with ·
his official capacity the night he authority 24 hours a day. They can
be called back to duty at any time.
was shot to death.
·
One
way is if a crime is committed
"He was off-duty for the
in
their
presence or if there is
deparunent up until he saw a felony
was ·being committed and then he's reasonable cause to believe a crime
working for me," Sheriff Delbert is being 'ommitted.
"They roven back to active
Harrison said Monday.
Janey, 32, was working for status and an action taken is con·
Nationwide Insurance Co. watching sidered an action in the line of
a house where the company duty," he said.
Condon said it was not unusual
believed arson would be committed
for
a moonlighting officer's family
when he was shot in the head and
to receive benefits. "That happens
chest Aug. 17,1989.
Harrison filed a report with the quite frequently," he said.

The $I 03,890 was the rate paid
by the fund for all officers killed in
the line of duty in 1989.
Three men were charged in the
deputy's death.
.
Robert Gray of Gallipolis, Ohio
is serving a life sentence with
parole'at·the West Virginia~ Pcniten­
tiary. He has appealed his first·de·
grcc murder conviction to the state
Supreme Court
Robel;! Bates,, also of Gallipolis,
was acquitted of first-degree mur·
der.
Raymond Huck of Hurricane
pleaded guilty to second-degree
murder and is serving up to I 0
years in prison.
Prosecutors contend Huck hired
Gray to bum down Huck's home so
he could collect the insurance.
They said Bates drove Gray to the
house, which was being watched by
Janey. Gray shot Janey when he
came upcn the deputy, prosecutors
said.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The Village of Pomeroy may
purchase the old Pomeroy Junior
High School building .i f the Meigs
Local School District and Mayor
Bruce Reed continue ongomg
negotiations.
Mayor Reed discussed those
negotiations at Pomeroy Village
Council's regular meeting on Monday evening, and received permission from council to continue the
negotiations.
Under the current offer from the
school board, the village would pay
an unreleased price for the land and
building, and would also allow for
"additional rent concessions" on
the office space now rented by the
local school district in ·the Pomeroy
Municipal Building.

I

If tlie property is purchased agrees to provide parking for high
from the school board, n would be school football spectators, the deal
used for storage, for office space could become "less of a bargain."

for the street deparunent, and as a
facility to repair village vehicles.
The pun:hase would also allow the
village to demolish a storage building located behind City Hall, hence
providing more parking for
employees and visitors at City Hall.
However, as another condition of
the purchase, the village would be
committed to maintaining the park·
ing area behind the building as
parking for Bob Roberts Field.
Several council members
expressed their approval of the
ongoing negotiating process: however, some conditions of the offer
were less than popular.
President Larry Wehrung, for
ins1ance, said that if the village

Wehrung also expressed opposition to the proposed expenditure of
monies wilhin the village water
deparunent which could be used to
purchase the property, saying that
those funds should be used to
"improve water quality and expand
and replace water lines."
Councilman John Blaettnllf, on
the other band, opposed the propo~d rent concess1ons. . .
Council also discussed the problem of asbestos removal and other
necessary repairs at the structure.
Negotiations will continue, with
Reed representing the village.
Thacker visits
Paula Thacker, Meigs County
Continued on page 3

Construction of new
homes up in February
Bx.DAVE SKJDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASIDNGTON - Construction of new homes and apartments
soared in February to their highest
level in nearly two years and indusuial producuon rebounded after a
three·month slide, the government
said today, providing further cvi·
dence the economy has pulled out
of its stall.
The Commerce Department said
housing starts surged 9.6 percent to
1.30 million units,. !he highest level

Meanwhile, the Labor ,Department .said oonsum.er prices rose a
moderate 0.3 pc:rcent in Fel\ruary,
pulled up by htgher food and clothing costs. The increase, although
the biggest in three months, followed a slight 0.1 percent gain in
January.
For the first two months of the
year. inflation was advancing at a
2.2 percent annual rate, well below
the 3.1 percent gain for all of 1991,
the deparunent said.

since March 19~0 . It was the
biggest gain in a year. Increases
were registered in every n:gion of
the country.
The Federal Reserve reported
that total output at the nation's factories, mines and utilities advanced
0.6 percent after declines in
November, December and January.
It was the strongest increase since
July. About 'half of it was accounted for by incn:ased activity on auto
and truck assembly lines.

Clinton, Bush aim midwestern
magic to stifle challengers

1he
may .have
up to $2,020 for youl
You may qualify for the Earned
Income Credit if in 1991 you:
• Earned less than $21,250 from a job,
and
• Had a child living witp you for more
than 6 months.
Even if you do not owe any tax, you
might still get money back.

DETROIT (AP) - Michigan
and Illinois voters rolled out to set·
tie presidential primary contests
today that seemed destined to move
Bill Clinton and President Bush
closer toward a November head-to·
head confronuttion.
But both front-runners faced the
continued pesky threats from candidates with revolt in their hearts
~Jerry Brown on Clinton's left
apd Pat Buchanan on Bush's right.
· Brown declared just as the balloting Wll$ getting under way that
he would have "a real hard time"
supporting Clinton for president
even if he wins the Democratic
nomirlation "unless he can own up
ta his own failures and stop trying
to point his finger at everybody."

·Refusing to back away from his
assertioos of the past two days that
Hillary Clinton's partnership in an
old·line Arlcansa's law firm that
raises questions of conflict of interest, Brown insisted on CBS' "This
Morning" that the MicHigan primary was "about worlcers ... losing
their jobs completely abandoned by
a governing elite like they have
down in Arkansas whete their pri·
vate business, where the people's
business gets all tangled up.''
While polls suggested Brown's
insurgency could land him a second-place finish in Michigan,
Buch.anan's Republican revolt
appeared in danger of losing
strength.
Jobs and trade were the domi·

.---Local briefs-----.
: Police probe Monday incidents
·

Two Monday night incidents on East Main Street, Pomeroy,,are
under ipvestigation by Pomeroy Police.
'
.
Police reported that a showroom window at Smith-Nelson
• Motors was broken out about 9 p.m., and that about· an hour later
the mon~y changer at the Food Shop car wash was damaged in an
• apparent auempt to remove money.
It was also reported to police that sometime between midnight
. Saturday and Monday ~~g. money wss taken ~om lhe Messen. ger newspaper rack at Rue Aid Pharmacy, East Main.

.

For more information call the
'
lntemal ).tevenue Service at

: Elections office to close
The Meigs County Board of Elei:tions will closed Friday so that
staff members may attend a district meeting.
··
·

1-8()0-8,29-1 040.

ARC'seekS volunteers'
,,.

,

1 Secllon, 10 Paget 25 conll
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 17, 1992

Copyrlghled 1992

March 25.

...

dentl durlna the Raeloe FFA aardea Jraetor
show held during FFA week.
·

Low tonight near 40.
Wednesday, rain. High In low
SOs.

March 17

SALISBURY • The Salisbury
Township Trustees will begin
clean·up of township cemeteries
and have requested that all flowers
and containers be removed by

CREDIT

•

J-S

Clean-up to begin

EARNED
INCOME

meeting. Beulah Zumbach assisted
with the material cutting.
A thank-you card was received
from Pat Hall and Mildred Caldwell was welcomed back after a
two month stay at Western Hills
Rehabilitation Center.
During the lunch hour the group
celebrated Mae Vineyard's birthday and.St. Patrick's Day greetings
were exchanged.
All day quilting will be done at
the church on Monday and Tuesday with members to bring sack
lunches. The spring bake sale will
be April IS at 9 a.m.
The next regular meeting will be
Aprill4 with an Easter theme.

Pick 3: 839
Pick 4: 6109
Cards:
8-H; 4-C; K·D;

"People were outraged that anybody as sweet and modest as love! y
as she was mistreated like that,"
Alberteen Campbell said about her
former student, now 79, whose
refusal to move to the back of a
segregated bus in Montgomery,
Ala.. in 1955 helped spark the civil
rights movemenL

FOR WORKING FAMIUES

Willing Workers to hold
spring bake sale April 18

Happy
St. Patrick's
Day

--Names
in
the
news-RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Paul Women's History Month.

Pomeroy Junior Troop 1309 news
Donna Schmoll, Farmers Bank,
was a guest at a recent meeting of
Pomeroy Junior Girl Scout Troop
1309. She discussed various functions of the bank and what skills
are required to work in a bank. She
also talked about different ways of
saving and investing money. Mem- ·
bers then had the opportunity to ask
questions.
The troop met at the leader's
home and began work on the
Health and Fitness Badge. Girls
were measured for strength, flexibility and endurance. The girls are
then required to increase their
physical activity and also begm an
mdividual fitness program.
The members met at Pomeroy
Elementary for an aerobics class
with Debbie Haptonstall. Giris and
adults attending were Jennifer
Heck Melissa Houser, Jessica
Hensiey , Amanda Miller. Aja
McGlothin, Andrea Ncutzlmg,
Michelle Kennedy, Autumn
Phillips, Bethany Cooke, Brenes~
Phillips Terrie Houser, Debbie
Cooke mid Brenda Neutzling.
The troop met at the home of
Brenessa and Autumn Phillips for
instructions in candy making. Girls
learned how to paint the molds,
pour candy and various other pans
of candy making. After learning by
watching the girls enjoyed making
their own candy trayS. Attending
were Jennifer Heck, Melissa Houser, Bethany Cooke, Autumn
Phillips, Jessica Hensley, Amanda
Miller, Michelle Kennedy, Andrea
Neutzling and Aja McClotbin.
Adults attending were leader, Bre~­
da Neutzling, co·leader, Debbie
Cooke, and senior aid, Misi Ncut·

Ohio Lottery

'.

..

The Americln Red Cross is seeking volunteer illlj'SCS and medical lab tcclttticllns ftr Its bloodmobile 81 Meigs High School Thursday.
L~sed practical nurses, registered nurses and MLT's who are
intelelkl'd In vol~;~~~leeriJ!a on Thursday from 9 a.m. unlil2 p.JII. are
·
Coatltued 01 ,·3
·
. ,...
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nant issues in the weeklong campaign to win the struggling Rust
Belt, although the Democretic race
was spiced at the end by the politi·
cal ann wrestling going on between
Clinton and Brown.
Clinton hoped for a Midwestern
sweep to add to last week's Super
Tuesday blowout. Well ahead in
late polls in both states, the
Arkansas governor was poised to
become the prohibitive favorite for
the Democratic nomination.
Buchanan himself established
Michigan as ~erfect proviri~
ground for his 'America First'
message, but late polls showed he
was more likely to have a tough
time matching past showings.
Buchanan abandoned his talk of
toppling Bush and returned to his
battle cry that a vote for him would
"send Washington a message to
wake up."

BUDDY &amp; HIS BUDDIES • The American
Red Cross llloodmoblle will visit Meigs High
School on Thursday from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.,
and "Buddy Blood Drop," a mascot from the
ARC, visited with students on Monday to promote the event. Pictured with Buddy (Love
Batey) are student council members, 1-r, Yvette

Young, Robbie Wyatt, Melanie Qualls and Carrie Bartels. In addition to student and faculty
blood donors, the ARC is also seekinF. volunteer
nurses ror the eveat. Intersted R.N. s, L.P.N.'s
and M.L.T.'s can contact the ARC at (304) 422·
7527. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed) .

Check bouncers pressed to explain wrong doing
'

WASIDNGTON (AP) - They everyone was doing it, or that
don't match lhe classic simplicity members were merely borrowing
of those famous defenses - ''The from one another," he said. "That
devil made. me do ·it," "The check justdoesn'lcutit."
is in the mail" and "The dog ate
Cut it or not, feeble a: not, those
my homework."
are the explanations.
'Rep. William Ooodling, R-Pa.,
But members of Congress,
prtssed to explain their check-writ· wlio says lie wrote ooe bad check,
mg proclivities, are coming up with offered the everyone-does-it
iJusinalive combinalions of expla- defense.
.
nation, mitigation and ci)ntritlon.
"Most of us did exactly what
The corridors . of power have was SI!PJlOSe4 to have been done,
bec()QIC alibi Iilley . .
· accordmg to what wo were told ,
. No excuse will do, Rep. Jim was !he Wily lhe Cj)Opelative ~,
Kolbe, R·Ariz., said in 1 swemelit atcd," Ooodling said. ·
he put into tbe Congressional
Other oxplanatipns fall into
Record the night the House voted these broad Cllepies:
to name overdrafters at the mem-It wasn't a bank 81111.
bers' .bank in the Capitol.
"The House bank was aciUally
"The feeble defwc of this out- not a bank. but a disbursing office
ngc ltu been thai it .waan't a bank,
"

that also provided check-writing
and check-cashing services," said
Rep.aew.cu~.M tth F M H h D N...
Y
who headed the invesugation and
found himself among the misereants, for one bad check.
,
"I will not call it a bank, I will
call it a cash club," said Rep. Fred
Grandy, R-Iowa.
"We call it a bank, but it was
not a bank," said Speaker Thomas
Foley, D:Wasb. ~'lt did DOt ·pay
interest. It did not provide overtlraft
coverage. It did'not make loins. It
was not insured by the FDIC. It
was 1101 under the regulation of the
Comptroller of the Currency and
the Federal ReservC."
-.-What · ~:.~ aone bad been

and perhaps tor ~uch longer, the .
bank had a pract1ce of honoring
most . overdrafts on members'
checking accounts.''
-:-The bank was shy about
reUmg members when they were in
atrears.
.
"Too muc~ deference, not
enough overs11ht," said Rep.
Portci J. Goss, R-Fla. "Oversigltt
seemed more like overlook than
look over:'
.
- The bank was sloppy.
.McHu1h; "It's recordkeepinl
was hapltuatd, itS internal accounting controls were lax llld its Clll·
urea to promulpte and distribute
fortnal guldeHnes and lliOCedwea
10 tltosC wlto JUed the bank COG·
tribuled to the problems."

!lone for ct·cns..

McHugh: "For at •least40 yean,

... ."

,.,

.

'

.

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