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                  <text>Pa~1o-The

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Febru•.Y 7, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs,
Southern
post wins

Social Security to_m~ile£~'l~!~~em~y~~t~f!?,f~[!!~e!~Kr!JEm~tl!w~g~a2tLg~c!!,fm.oo
b_uS:

By FJ) Petersoa
~I Security Manager, Athens
· U yoot'~ age~ or olde~ and DOl
yet receiVIng Social Security benefits you can expect to get a statem~u sometime in 1995 telling you
about bow much you could receive
~benefits.
.
.
.- This montb tbe Soetal Secun~y
Adm_inistration (SSA) wtll begm
ma•h n, • Personal Earmngs and
BeneiH Estimate Stat~ment
(PEDES) to everyone who ts age
60 or older, bas earnings credited
:to bis or ber· Social Security n~.ber, and _is not currently receiYlilg
Social Security benefits.
.
. The initial mailings to 11:n esumated nine million people will con-

lt~ue through September. Begmnmg m October and ~acb year
!hereafter, statements will be ~nt
to people who reach age 60 during
the year. Toward tbe end of tbe
century, Social Security expects to
send lhe state.ments each year to
every~me who IS age 25 or older .. .
an eslllllated 123 ":"~on~~Tbes~ SSA-mtttated_ matbngs
are required by law. Tbetr P~
•s to belp workers mate sure lhetr
earmngs are corr~ctly repu:fd.
These reported ea"!mgs are
.to
calculate a pe~onlbas
futureatsoc:
Secunty beneotts.
t m . es e ,
st_atement a valuable financial planmng tool. .
bo the tax bl
Tbe statement s ws
a e

er(s) and tbe estimated Social you will get an estimate based on iDCOrTeCt eaminJS. report the disSecurity taxes paid The estimates your current age only .. The state- crepancy 10 Social Securi_ty's tonare based on the ~rson's date of ment also includes estimates or free number, 1-800-77~-1213.
birth and earnings reported for benefits tbat may be paid sbould When you call, be sure to have
. ort 10
. 'obs
red nder S ial tbe worlcer bectme disabled cr die youirecords oftbe oomctearnings
J
cove
u
oc
before retiremenL
·bandy-sucb as w:2s pay stubs, and
TbetyPersonal Eamin sand BenWhile your PEDES doesn't tax returns. You aiso should caiJ
efit Estimate Statcmenf sbows the guarantee you an euct amount of lhe toll-free number to report an
retirement benefit amount workers benefits (tbat will be determined incorrect name or Social Security
under age 62 can antidpate at ages when you apply for benefits), it number on tbe state~ent.
62, 65, and 70. FIX' older workers, will provide an estimate to belp
If, after you receiVe your stalethe estimates are based on the r- you plan your fmancial future.
ment, you decide to apply for
soil's current age u for exam~e
After you read lhe sratement; retirement or disability benefits,
ou're 63 our statement wili you don't need to do anything call the same toll-free number to
rbow the eltimated benefits for unless you believe the earnings arrange an appointment to speak
our current a e and for a es 65 information is incorrect. If die enor witb a Social Security represenra~ 70 If
.g 68
•11 g .
· involves recent earnings at your live.
an est~a:~o::Cboth yyo~ur
current job, oontact your employer.
You can speak witb a represen·

Securi

::C:

buSUJ«:SSdays.The lines are
early m lhl: ~eel: and early m
~ontb, so tl 5 best to caD at olheaSSA will use addresses furnisbed by tbe !nternal Revenue
Service to mat! tbe PEDES .. If
you:re 60 o~ older, not receivm!l S~ Secunty benefits, and don t
recetve a sralement b! September
30, 1~5, cail ~ toO free numbea(anyume. ineludinfc _weekends and
holidays) and ask or a Form~7004 (Rf\uest for Pe~onal
ings andy enebfit Eldsumat~ S~~:
ment). ~us ou recetve e
statemeot m four to six weeks. Peopie under beage 60 also malhy ~I the
same num r to request e .orm.

calling lhe Pleasant Valley Hospitil
Community Relations Department
at (304) 675-4340, Ext. 253.
To be eligible for financial
assistance from tbe Pleasant Valley
Hospital Health Foundation, an
individual must be a resident of
Mason Gallia or Meigs Counties.
Stud.ents must have graduated from
an accredited high scbool or' possess a G.E.D. certificate, and sub-

must also be sent to tbe Foundation
at 2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 by tbaldilte.
The Foundation established the
Pleasant Valley Scholars Endowment Fund in 1988 wilh donations
from local businesses and individuals. Interest from lhe Trust goes
toward grant-in-aid loans for students majoring in a bealtbcare
related field at a West Virginia or

mit a letter of acceptance int.o a
bealtbcare field from an accredited
institu~on. ~f bigbe~ education in
West Vtrgmm IX' Ob10. No pre-prognlms are el!gible for funding ..
Applications must ~ recetve~
by lite Foundation by Fncjay, April
14. Letters of reference from two
people ~amiliar witb tbe applicant's
academiC and/or employment ~tstory, as well as scbool transcnpts

Ohio institution of higher learning.
Tbe scholarship p~ogram is an
extension of the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Heallh Foundation's primary purpose of furthering tbe
development of new and existing
bealtbcare services in Mason County, and assisting Pleasant Valley
Hospital in its efforts to .maintain
and improve upon tbe quality of

open, SWCD personnel advise.
·
The SWCD Ladies Auxiliary
bas available for sale Crown Vetch
ground cover plants lbat are specifica)ly suited to plant in tbe small
bani'to manage areas.
Crown Vetch is a perennial
legume witb dark green foliage and
pinkish lavender to white clusters
of flowers. Eacb growing season
new foliage shoots from lhe multibranch creeping root system. Plants
obtain a beigbt of 12 to l8.inches.

The indeterminate growth produces
numerous clusters of. flowers on
long staiics fi'OIJl June until September. Each cluster of flowers produce a group of finger like pods,
containing one to many seeds.
Crown vetch reproduces by both
underground roots and seeds. Roots
spread under tbe soil to place an
start new plants. Seed is produced
each year in pods wbicb mature
about tbree weeks after bloom ..
Crown vetch cbokes out weeds,

resists drought, disease and insects.
Proper ground preparation is
essential for a successful start. Prepare a ftrm seedbed and wort to a
depth of three inches. Lime and
fertilize tbe area. For best results
take a soil sample. However,
instead of a soil sample, you can
use 150 pounds per 1000 square
feet of agriculture lime or equivalent; and a minimum of 15-20
pound/1000 square foot of 12-1212 fertilizer or equivalent. Wort

The Community Calendar IS
.publllhed aJ a free Jervlce to
non-profit group' wbhlng to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is ·not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
·specific number of days.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. All masons invited.

iliary, 7 p.m. potluck, 7:30 p.m.
meeling at tbe ball.

VOl. 45, NO. 198
Copyright 165

. BURLINGHAM -Bedford
. Township Volunteer Fire DepartPOMEROY - Pomeroy PTO, ment Committee, town ball at 7
7 p.m. Tuesday, scbool gymnasi- p.m. Tuesday.
um. All parents invited to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- FOE 2171 AuxPOMEROY - Meigs Local

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 8, 1995

State seeks

to ·cut costs
on plates

tbe lime and fertilizer into tbe soil. cious, Red Delicious, Stayman
Plant ground cover plants accord- Winesap and Granny Smilh Apple
trees for $21 . .
ing to planting guide.
This years backyard packet conCrown vetch plants are 72
tains
two each of Burning Bush,
plants for $21. Other$ items available Ibis year include quatitity bun- White Flowering Dogwood,
dles of a single variety of Wbite , Forsythia, Aarow-wood Viburnum
·
Pine, ScO!Cb Pine. Norway Spruce and Persian Lilac for $8.
All
orders
for
these
packets
or Colorado Blue Spruce 25 tree
must be into lhe Meigs Soil and
seedlings fiX' $8.
Water
Conservation District by
Also available from the AuxilMarch
10 and must be prepaid.
iary is tbe fruit tree paclrl:t wbicb
There
is
a limited number of packcontains one each of Yellow Deli. ers available, it was reported.

Hlgb near 20, snow llktly.

2 s..eolons, 12 Pages 35 C.nta
A Mulllmadla lne. Newopaptl!r

--Finishing touches-- Lemasters

appeal denied ·
by Ohio court .

COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) - A
state budget proposal dropping tbe
requirement for motorists to buy
new license·plates every five years
would save the state about $15 mil,The Ohio Supreme-court decid- ty , His original sentence of 97
UOII over lhe next fivt: years, a state
ed it will not bear a case concern- years was reduced aftc;r an appeals
offtcial said.
ing a Meigs County man convicted court struCk down a ftrearms speciCharles Shipley, director of tbe·
in May, 1993, of the double murder . fication.
-Department of Highway Safety,
of a Gallipolis man and .bis 12A co-defendant, Fred Drennen
said by making tbe purcbase of
year-old son, Meigs County Prose- of Ravenswood. W.Va . pleaded
new plates optional - and more
cuting Attorney Jobn R. Lentes guilty on March I. 1993, to three
expensive - lhe state won't have
·said Tuesday.
counts of aggravated murder and is
to make as many plates and could
William D. Lemasters, Racine, serving a life sentence with the
reduce handling, sbippjng and storwas found guilty of three charges possibility of parole in 20 years. In
age costs. ·
.
of aggravated murder in tbe Feb. 8, e&lt;change for the plea agreement,
Those wbo decide to replace
1991 , shotgun slayings of Jeffrey Drennen testified against Lemas•
their tags will have to pay an extra
L. Halley, 36, and bis son Jeffrey ters during bis trial.
$5, and state officials think most
. S. Halley near Portland in Meigs
"He (Lemasters) bas exhausted .
people will want to kee.p their
County. In addilion, be was found all state court remedies," said
plates- and lbeir'$5.
guilty of aggravated robbery and Lcntes. Tbe Supreme Court only
•
·-loo ... ~,~· •• , '
· Mitchell J. Brown, motor veltitwo counts ofkidnapping in tb~ bears cases which raise legal sub' .
"
cle registrar, said tbe extra charge
incident.
stantial issues and apparently tbey
could be considered a deterrent.
Lemasters, wbo was 26 years felt Ibis case didn'.t (raise any legal
"But in reality, we're giving
old at the time of his sentencing, is issues), Lentes added.
Workers for the Ohio Bridge 'Corporation Thursday morob)g. The bridge should be open
you tbe option," be said. "A lot of
now serving a 94-year sentence at
"Justice was done. I'm glad lhat
of Cambridge were busy putting the ftnlsblng to traffic: by Thursday afternoon depending on
people are very pleased wilh tbeir
Ohio's
London
Correctional
Faciliit's
over for tbe sate of tbe victouches on a new, $118,000 Basban Road bridge .' the weather, Eason noted. Workers will later
tims," Lcntcs said.
'plates."
over lhe frozen Shade River Tuesday after110011 • instaU a permanent wearing surface on the new,
Brown said it takes three years
Meigs County Engineer Robert Eason expects two-lane structure. A one-lane bridge at the site
to stockpile enough plates to supworkers to finish up the project today al!C!Wina a was dosed and demolished after Inspectors '
ply tbe state's 10 million vehicles.
Meigs County Highway Department crew to lily round a buckled crossmember under lhe bridge
A new standard license plale, to
a temporary lhnestone surface on the span dtck.
·
be iniroduoed later Ibis month, will
be very similar .to the current one
- blue lettering witb "The Heart
oflt All" slogan.
.
Tbe annual spring style show
A tentative schedule on tbe
But tbe all-white background
and Heritage Weekend activities "Home Sweet Home" campaign
'The village's match for tbe pro- ing the ramp and paving a new were discussed at Wednesday purchased by the Association from
will be modified slightly, said By GEORGE ABATE
ject would be about $21,000, be boater parking lot, Trussell said. morning's meeling of the Pomeroy WMPO radio was presented by
Brown. The new plate will be Sentinel News Staff
added ..Middleport already acquired Between eigbt and 10 parking Merchants Association in lhe Bank Anderson . The 88 spots will be ·
white at the top, graduating to a
Middl~port wiD get soclted with
siuid:Y.gold at'lhe bottom. ·
a black eye fiX' returning more lhan $26.000 from lbe county commis- spaces for boaters will 'be added One conference room.
done by Don Knotts, Group adverSbipfey said tbe $5 fee would $120,000 targeted for its boat sioners . This money will pay for between Walnut and Rutland
Date for lhe style show will be tising promotions In the newspapeanot be assessed to people wbo get
launch, Mayor Dewey Horton said paving tbe parking lot, Horton said. streets on Front Slreet.
announced following a meeting of for Easter were also discussed.
_The floating boatoJauncb project
new plates to register a newly purBut, village officials said they
Tbe floating launcb - which the commillec by co-chai'rman
Pomeroy's revitalization pro- "
chased vehicle. That cost will are ready to face tbe· consequences IS expected to cost S142,800, but could be used year-round- was to Vicki Ferrell. Heritage Weekend gram and its progress was reported
remain at a maximum of $42.25.
for passing up money already com- with viUage labor it may total just be made of aluminum and extend- wiU be celebrated tbe second week- on by Anderson. Every weekend
Ohioans can now buy tbe stan- mitted by state and county offiCials. $120,000, said Jean Trussell, vil- ing 30 feet long and I0 feet wide, end in J one and several suggestions sidewalk sales as_a Saturday afterdard plate, a collegiate plate or a
ul bate giving it up, but if you lage grants coordinator.
about activities were discussed at noon promolion was proposed and
Trussell added.
·
Lake Erie plate. Beginning in can ' t af'oord 11....
. " Horton Sat'd , ul
The ODNR grant will fund twoThe project is designed to help lhe meeling.
discussed with.o ut action being
April, a plate featuring tbe Pro wisb I bad a new Buick. I can-'t thirds of tbe project - or up to upgrade the village and attract
Jim Anderson, president, noted taken.
$94,900, TrusseU said. The project more people for business, Trussell that he had received requests for
Football Hall of Fame in Canton afford it."
Meeting with the Association ·
also will be available.
be completed by July 1995, said.
must
Tbe ·village will likely bave
infonnalion from a band and a.cou- was Pomeroy Village Council's ~
. .
By the end of April, lhe slate problems getting- olher state grants sbe added. The engineering portion
"It will get people into tbe com- · ple of craflsmen who migbt be representative, Councilman George
also will bave a new system for if it gives this money back, be was to be bid on soon after tbe munity and it will get U:s into the interested in coming in as a result Wrigbt. Again discussed with bim •.
property was purchased. No land forefront of launching in the area," of a notion of the observance in an was tbe desire of merchants for a "
issuing driver's licenses that will added.
• ul think it's going to burt lite bas been purchased, but easement · Horton said. "It's tbe best place to· Ohio Arts and Crafts publication. foot patrol in lhe downtown as a
mate it more difficult for people to
work bas been completed.
bell," Horton said.
get8bony licenses, Shipley said.
go out in ,10 since it' s sheltered The possibility of introducing line way of alleviating problems and
Tbe village would rather not from tbe current."
If citizens sbow interest in tbe
nder the new system, phodancing into lhe program .was pro- making tbc town safer and tbe
tographs will be replaced wilb a project, tbe village may bold a pub- have to tum Ibis money back in,
The new area will include park- posed by Dianne J.;awson, vice enforceljleOI oLcurfews.
digitized photo system. Shipley lic meeting and slall returning Ibis Horton sa,id. It already devoted ing lot for boat-launching trailers president:
said it should eliminate tbe prob- Obio Department of Natural countless hours of preparation by where tbe old Ohio Hotel used to
•
lem of people being able to obtain Resources grant, said Bob Gilmore, village grants coordinator Jean be, be added.
..
Trussell in securing tbe funds and
a fraudulent license by claiming to ·council president.
Middleport Community AssociArea boaters have verbally sup- properties.
be someone else wbo is trying to
ation President Dennis Hoclcrnan
Horton said be bas contacted a said his group is disappointed with
ported tbe docking facilities,
replace a lost license.
fe.w community members, but lhey council's decision to give up the
Gilmore said.
"There are benefits 'beyond lhe · would ralher donate money 10 tbe funding .
communities with fewer tban
From AP, Staff Reports
boaters," be said, adding area busi- viUage pool than tbe boat launch.
"It's too bad. but everybody
50.000 residents.
Two Meigs County villages
Later this monib, tbe village understands," Hockman said.
nesses would see increased trafftc.
The White House was scheduled - ·;:
were among hundreds of Ohio
"You reach tbe point where tbe should learn wbetber it will get two adding he hopes tbe village delays communities receiving federal
to announce tbe grant recipients ~
barrel is empty. It's a tough thing. state grants for the viUage pool.
a decision to sec if benefactors funding to boost tbe ranks or its today.
Tbis money will pay for. appear.
But we say we have to be fiscally
Rep. Sherrod Brown, D-Obio, .
police dcpartlnents as part of the
installing a floating launcb, widen,
responsible."
said a series of seminars be beld fiX'
cmpbasis on fighting crime.
small towns in bls disliil:t helpe4
·11te money will help hire more
officers as pan of a new program boost participation in tbe new program.
While all lbree school districts
set up in last year's crime biU.
Spokesmen for Sen. Jobn Glenn, •
in Meigs County closed today, no
WASHINGTON (AP) - Bolh College in Nashville, FoSter beaded going to have to work bard to .mate
Middleport will get $39,314
accidents were occurred overnight, Democrats a~d Republicans say a study involving about 60. women the case ... tbat this nominee'.s under tbe program to employ more D-Obio, and Rep. Paul GiUmor, R- •
according to various county offi- Dr. Henry F~ter Jr.'s nomination and fmanced by The Upjohn·co.
impeccable record will stand up officers and Pomeroy bas been Ohio, said tbat office also made a "
strong push to persuade communicials.
to be surgeon general is in jeopardy
The women, wbo were up to very well as tbe Senate begins to awarded $34,071.
Bill Buckley, superinlendent of because of uncertainty over bis eigbt weeks pregnant, were given look carcfuUy at tbe nomination."
ties to apply for tbe funds.
·
The Justice Department estimatMeigs Local Schools, said be was record on abortions.
The money - up \O $75,000 per ~
, · prosraglandin drugs in vaginal supThe Wbite House.and Foster's ed Ohio departments )"Ould get
most concerned about the side and .
On Tuesday, anti-abortion. positories, the groups said.
other supporters have said it is tnore tban $26.7 million under its deoartment - can be used to pay
bact roads that bad frozen over- groups fighting the nomination
White House press secretary absurd (or abortion Jo be a test in COPS FAST program, designed for
Continued on page 3
with recent lbawing wcalher.
stepped up 1.beir attacks, producing Mike McCurry said an article Fos- choosing a nominee.
"I'd rather err on tbe side of infonnalion indicating that the Ten- ter wrote on tbe testing was availAsked today· if the While House
safety," Buckley said. "All lhings nessec obstetrician-gynecologist able wben Foster was being consid- believes tbe nC'mination is in !roubeing equal we'll probably h'ave ted a study in lhe early 1980s to ereil. He said Foster was poring ble, McCurry said only, ''We're
school fi)Dlorrow :"
test do-it-yourself abortion drugs.
over bis medical records to be able going to have to work bard to make
All school districts have used all
The National Right to Life to answer all questions tborougbly.
tbe case .. . that tbis nominee's
five calamity days, Bucldey :jdded. Committee and tbe American Life
Asked today if lhe White House impeccable record will stand up
The state legislature probably will League said lbat wbile chairman of believes tbe nomination is in lrou- very well as tbe Senate begins to
not give extra days, unless Colum- t!te Obstetrics and Gynecology ble, McCurry said only, "We're look carefully at the nomination."
bus is bit by a blizzard, be added.
Department at Mebarry Medical
-·
The decision-to open scbool will
bave to wait until early tomorrow
morning, be said.
Eastern and Southern scbools
WASHINGTON (AP) - The 100,000 new police ollicen on tbe have to convince ibe American
will likely be open tomorrow,
House is inching toward passage of swets.
people tbat we should not bave
school offtcials said
Tbe president was announcing
I 00,000 new cops," said Rep.
Every cloud bas a silver lining, a Republican anti-crime package,
according to Soutbem Superinten-· voting unanimously to compel today tbat thousands of small Charles Schumer of New York, tbe
dent James Lawrence who said it is criminals to compensate their vic- towns ilnd suburbs witb fewer lban Democrats' point man on crime
•
fortunate lbat most snows Ibis sea- tims . More ~ntroversial measures 50,000 residents would be. getting issues. "I don•t tbink they're going
son occurred on weekends -limit- are to be taken up i.n tbe days money to bire police officers under to succeed.... We know lhat Amer. tbe 1994 crime law.
,
ica already bas. a good crime bill."
ing tbe number of snow-related ~:-:::
--:-The anti-crime legislation, part
And Democratic lawmakers I · Asked if Clinton would veto any
closings.
.
..
No weather related accidents of tbe GOP's "Contract With took officials representing some attem_pt to repeal the crime bill,
CUB R)&lt;:PORTERS - As part of nalional Boy/Cub Scout
•
America"
agenda,
aims
to
reslriiC434,000 police officers, from tbe White House press secretary Mite week, area youlhs have decorated storefront windows. Jim Freewere investigated .by the Meigs
•
County Sli'erifr s Department and ture tbc $30 billion crime law Fraternal Order of Police and the McCurry today said lhe president man, right, shows members or the Pomeroy Cub Seoul Pack 149
Pomeroy and Middleport police enacted last year. On Tuesday, · National Association of Police has "already made it very clear how to use Tbe DaUy Senlinel mmpultrs. Middleport third grader
President Clinton mounted an Organizations, to Capitol Hill .to that be dmws a very flllll line in lhe Stefan Stamper, far len, and Mall Strong, a Pomeroy third grader
departments.
,
Ron McDade; resional manager upbill: effurt 10 bead off tbe legisla- speak against tbe Republican pact- sand on aspects of last year's crime ·learn how articles are edited and processed. The highlight of lhh
.
· bill" sucb as community policing week's Boy Scout festivities will begin at 8 a.m. Saturdar at tbe
for Ohio Powea-, reported no power tion's centerpiece, a measure lbat age.
would threaten pl~_ns to put
The Republicans "are going to 'and lhe assault weapons ban.
outages.
Chester Camp Klasbuta. (Sentinel photo by Geo'l!e A batt)

-...

•

SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - Buirlingbam Modem Woodmen, potluck at
6:30 Saturday night at Woodmen's
ball. Everyine welcome. Door
prizes to be awarded.
We call our local meteorologist "lbe
whetherman." He can't decide
whether tomorrow will be stormy or
sunny.
·

Low lonlght arouDCI U .
Clearing. Thursday, cloudy.

----------------------------------------------~----------------~--~----------- •.

ni\be Foundation initiated the
financial aid program recognizing
lhe shortage of bealtb care professionals lbat' exists throughout tbe
nation, Including tbe Upper Ohio
Valley and lhe state of West. Virginia, as well as tbe increasing
costs of bigber education.

Board of Education regular meet1UPPERS PLAINS ~Vetea-ans
ing Wednesday, 7 p.m. in lhe board of Foreign Wars, Post 90~~. Thursmeeting room, second floor of day, 7:30p.m .at post hoi¥·
Pomeroy Muncipal Building.
FRIDAY ,1
THURSDAY .
'
POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
MIDDLEPORT - Bosworth
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Council 46, wort in tb~ S.E.M.
Sorority, 6 p.m., Grace Episcopal Degree Friday, 7:3(), Middleport
Cburtb.
Masonic Temple.

Buckeye 5:
6-9-16-17-34

.-

bealtbcare services in our commu-

______. . . . . .____ Community calendar

•

4000

Page4

Meigs SWCD Ladies Auxiliary taking orders for plant, tree packets.
- Early spring is tbe time of year
when bare. eroding areas are quile
evident around tbe home or on tbe
farm.
· According to lhe Meigs Soil .and
Water Conservation District, bare
·areas of soil along lanes and road
contribute bigb amounts of sediment into road ditches and streatDS.
.Getting these bare eroding areas
covered with some type of vegetation not only adds to the appearance but also helps to keep ditches

•
•

Pick 3:
378
Pick 4:

•

limeS.

PVH accepting applications for 1995-96 student financial assistance
Tbe Pleasant Valley Hospital
Health Foundation is now accepting applications for financial as~is­
tance from area students pursumg
beaitb care careers, accor~ing to
.George Miller, Foundation chairman.
Applications for tbe 1995 aca·demic year are available ffi)Dl gutd:ance counselors at bigh schools in
·tbe Tri-County area, as well as by

Ohio Lottery

•

Middleport may return ODNR·funds
.

Spring style show
merchants topic

'

Middleport, Pomeroy .awarded police funds ·

BRAND NEW CHM AS11IO EXTENDED CONVERSION VAN
FIBERGLASS RUNNING BOARDS

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Commentar

•

The Daily Sentinel

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 8, 1995

Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBEJn' L. WINGE'IT
Publlsber
MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

LEI lEKS OF OPINION ""' welcame. They lbould be less than 300
words Ion1. All letters ""' subject lo editing me! must be signed with name,
oddrao and telepbooe number. No unoignod letten will be publisbed. Letlm
obould be in &amp;ood lllte, oddlesainc iJI1101, oot ponon.Uties.

'•

: :p erils of promising, then
:~ 'n ot delivering on deficit

AMARILLO, Texaa - Savvy
international lerrorists, shady arms
dealers and ambitious thieves from
around the world know 'better than
most Americans that a sprawling
facility on the edge of this city is
the modern-day equivalent of King
Solomon's mines.
Tons of the most valuable metal
known to man - plutonium - are
stored at the 16,000-ai:re facility
here called the Pantex plant. Run
· by the Department of Energy, it is
tbe primary warehouser of all
American controlled plutonium not
contained in bombs or missiles. As
the nuclear disarmament process
continues, its stockpile is growing
with new deliveries eacll week.
Tbe security procedures bere are
so daunting that no criminal bas
ever bied 10 sleal the priceless poi·
son. Rather, U:S. government officials believe the world's worst
rogues are focusing lheir efforts on
sites in the former Soviet Union,
wbere lax securily procedures have
left vast pluiOnium cacbes virtually
unguarded.
Our associate Dale Van Atta
recently received a private tour of

the Pantex planl by DOE otraciala.
The perils presented by tbe Russian
plutonium stockpile were made
apparent after viewing the exten·

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
sive safety and security precautions
employed at Pantex.
.
''There are light years of differ·
ence,'' ooe high-level OOE official
told us. " Pantex is high-tech ,
cyber-space stuff, and Russia's
comparable facilities are still in the
Neanderthal era."
Consider tbe following conuasts
between the s~-tbe-an. Pantex
facility and Russian facilities, as
COIJlpiled from DOE sources and
AmeriCIDJ in~lligence reports:
- The Pantex facility has more
than 3,500 employees and a $140
million payroll.
The lowest-salaried employee
here, even if on minimum wage,
makes more than the vast uuqority
of workers in Russia's nuclear

materials complex. Ameiicans are
often paid 100 times more than
their Russian counterparts, so tbe
temptation to steal or assist in a
theft is far greater in Russia, where
workers reportedly have gone
unpaid for as long as six months.
- Pantex has ·an e'xtensive
screening process in liiring its '
workers.
Most of Russia's plutoniu'l'
workers are holdovers from tbe
days of the former Soviet Union,
when party loyalty was the most
critical security factor. Tbese
potentially disgruntled ex.Commu·
nist minions will increasingly
prove susceptible to the financial
enticements of Russian organized
aime groups to swipe S0J11C pluto·
nium for a king's ransom:
- The convoys that arrive
almost dally, bringing more !ban
1.000 nuclear weapons here each
year 10 be disassembled, have toted
. up hundreds of thousands of miles
without a major incident. ·
The nondescript trucks o( varying colors, are specially designed to
protect and carry the Army, Navy
and Air Force bombs and missi)es.

By WALTER R. MEARS
~ AP Spedlll Correspoadent
::
WASHINGTON - At tbe While House, they say there's no magic
•. number for deficit reduction. But congressional Republicans argue that M'{ feLLOW MeMW?S OF
NoW we Have ~aRD iF We, Faih Tile
:: ·.there is: all the way 10 zero by 2002.
THe House. fl'll~ iS .aN
Clio fees ro MaKe.
AMeRiC3tf Pe!of'!.e
.: · There's political mileage in a balanced budget pledge, but political
HiSToRic D~Y!
WiL~ Have OJR HeaD$.
peril in the 10rturous steps it would lake to get there. President Clinton
-doesn't pretend to in his budgel; instead, be's daring the Republican
Congress to. fill in the blanks, and lake the bacldasb wben people cOtmt
, tbe cost to programs and benefits !bey want.
•.
"I cballenge tbe leadetsbip of the Congress to do what we have done,"
· Clinton said Monday. "to provide the taxpayers with specific and real
details about tbe proposals they make.''
•· · He said be wants to work wilb Congress. As he presented his 1996
budget. for tbe government year beginning next Ocl I, be also seemed to
•' be working on them, trying to fon:e the new GOP majorities into making
and explaining painful cuts in popular programs in order to get to balance .. ·
Tbere would have to be a lot of tbem, about $1.2 trillion over the next
seven years. accOiding to Congressional Budget Office estimates. Thai's
in addition to the GOP's proposed tax cuts, nearly $200 billion, wbicb
Pass SIX-YeaR
sponsors think would be offs.et by tbe economic,activily !bey would spark.
. As tbe Senate debated the House-approved balanced budget amend·
Tei(M LiMiT&gt;!
; ment to the Constitution - mired in talk that wm run days into weeks ~
Sen. Bob pole, tbe Republican lead!:r, said they'd lay out lheir deficit cut·
' ro
, . ting plan in detail later, but acknowledged it will be something like a ·
' seven-year weather forecast. subject to unforeseen crises and changing
•
economic conditions . .
Clinton's budget spares significant cuts in entitlement programs, which
pay benefits by formula, automatically, to people who qualify. Those
costs bave been increasing sharply, and Rep. John 'leasich, chairman of
~
the House Budget Commiuee, Said Republicans will have ·to deal with
~
them to get to a balanced budget.
'
Both tbe adminislration and Republican leaders have ruled \)Ut changes
• in Social ~ecurity, at least for the immediate future. But Sen. Pete
Domenici of New Mexico, chairman of tbe Senate Budget Committee,
said Medicare will have to be dealt wilb, and accused Clinton of taking
"a very big walk" on that.
~ . Domenici called the balanced budget amendment a declaration of war
' · on deficits, and said it's the only w~y to win over the deficit habit. He also
President Clinton's .decisioo to Dole, his presidential rival.
; said it will take presidentialleadersliip to get budgets balanced.
abOut Congress, and that a runaway
While Clinton made bis decision
On
the
Democralic
side,
House
prop
up
the
Mexican
economy
by
Clinton
said
be
already
bas
made
major
headway:
three
straight
years
'' of lowering deficits for the first time Iince Harry Truman, imposing bud· unilateral executive action rathet Minority Leader Richard Gepbardt financial panic might develop, late on Jan. 30 on unilateral com·
affecling other de·veloping mitment of $20 billion in U.S.
get discipline without undermining the things he believes Washington than through legislation illustrates and Senate Minority Leader Tom economies, U.S. investprs, and loans and guarantees from the
his weakness in Congress.
should be doing.
.
·
wOrkers in export indusbies.
·
Exchange Stabilization Fund, SumBut it was also a true acl of Morton Kondraclce
''Now that we have brought the deficit down, we have no intention of
On Jan. 30, Gepbardt bad a 4:45 mers bad to stay up all night gel·
tJlflling back." be said in his. budget message. But this budget projects a presidential leadership that should
p.m. meeting scheduled with Gin·
•.
· Dascble supported the president's gricb, but the speaker canceled. ling inlemational backing for $10
1996 deficit about $30 billion higher than forecast in his 1995 budge~ and help bis standing with the public.
billion more in IMP loans.
· That Clinton bad to abandon original plan. but their lack of visi· Instead, Gingrich met with an all·
Republicans are making ~ a target.
Clinloo's decisive action in an
It's still far shon of prior deficit projections, due in pan to Clinton's efforts to win congressional bility and enthusiasm - plus GOP group including Govs. undeniable crisis bas won general
1993 cuts and tax increases. in pan 10 the revenues of an expanding econ- approval of a $40 billion loan guar- Gepbardt's insistence on conditions George W. Bush of Texas and Fife · praise in the United States and
omy. But it also is sh!Xt of what he'd once promised. "We can cut it in· antee also indicates a breakdown in covering labor rights - under- Symington of Arizona, who urged abroad, except among die-hard
half in the nex.t four years if we have real discipline," be said during the the tradition df bipartisanship and mined suppon and fed Republican support for the pact, plus Sens. opponents of any help for Mexico,
deference to the executive in for- paranoia that the GOP would have Gramm, Bob Bennett (Utah), Pete who now are complaining that be
1992 campaign.
.
eign
pol-icy that prevailed during to take on the main· burden of Domenici (N.M.), and Alfonse bypassed CongreSs.
Pledging more and delivering less seems to be an occupational'hazard.
·.
.
"bailing out" Clinton.
the
Cold
Wfii.
·
Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan both promised to balance
D' Amato (N.Y.), wbo opposed it
for
Long-term
political
success
Clinton himself didn't help matHouse Speaker Newt Gingrich,
budgets within a term; neither came close. Carter was the last president to
House Republicans auending Clinton partly depends upon the
ters by devoting a mere six sen- the meeti'ng, includinj! Leach ,
' send Congress a budget in lbeoretical balance, but that was oruy on paper; R-Ga, and Senate Majority Leader tences
of his State of the Union to David Dreier (Calif.), J1m .Kolbe ability of Mexico's weak presiden~
Bob Dole, R·Kan., bolb supported
the deficit persisted.
·
·
Emesto Zedillo, to make the eco·
, . Clinton s five-year projection. required in each presidential budget, .Clinton, aiving the national intereSt the Mexican plan, wben a large- (Ariz.). Bob Livingston (La:).· and nomic and political' reforms neces·
scale public education effort was Gingrich, came a\\lay thinking thai.
showed deficits averaging about $200 .billion annually through the year top priority.
~ary to attract invesunent, c~1"1e
But other Republican Party necessary.
' 2000.
.
.
even if the deal could make it Jobs,
topple
reactionary
Still,
be
acted
with
dispatch
' : Candidate Clinton talked of balving deficits in actual dollars, but the leaders, such as Sen. Phil Gramm
through the House, it might ·well be "dinosaurs" in his own pany, and
; scorekeeping emphasis bas shifted now. It is on measuring deficits as a of Texas. California Gov. Pete Wil· when it counted, and his unilateral killed in tbe Senate.
· restore economic confidence.
Gingrich called tbe. White
, ; jlercentage of the economy instead of in bonom line spending numbers. son, and forioer HUD secretary action ought 10 bolster his poll ratThe Clinton administration will
ings
and
his
standing
in
Congress.
House, informing Clinton aides have 10 work with Mexico to get
• !be president said that under his plan, the deficit would decline to 2.1 per· Jack Kemp, put politics or ideology
. Recently, congressiorull negotia- that it was impossible to meet the
. cent of gross national produc~ the lowest since 1979, and less than half of first and fed rank-and-file reluclors
led by House Banking Colil- Jan. 30 deadline. A late-night ses· that done, but it can now work pantance
to
''bail
out''
a
foreign
coun· . what it was when Clinton took office. That assumes an expanding econotry or Wall Stn:et. ·
' miUee Chairman Jim Leach, R- sion in the office of Chief of Staff ty through the IMF and, by bypass.. ~Y wUI keep the percentage declining.
, .
In town for a National Gover· lowa, thought tbey were close to Leon Panetta followed 10 resurrect ing Congress, it avoids public bee·
..
But Clinton bas lamented the lack of credit be got for the economic
' plan that already cuts more than $400 billion off deficits over five years. nors Association meeting, Wilson having a' package for submission to an alternative plan --die unilateral toring of Mexico; wbicb arouses
"Real deficit reduction is not easy," his budget says. "It forces elected · surprised Califocnia Republicans in Congress.
executive Ojltion - wbicb bad leftist and nationalist anti-rerormHowever,
a
final
agreement
; officials to i&lt;lentify specific -programs to cut and specific revenues to Congress with the vebe.mence of
lxien considered prior to Clinton's. ers.
If the Clinton plllil works, the
never
jelled,
and
Clinton
told
bis criticism of President Clinton,
·going the congressional route._
: raise."
Mexico
exercise will have provCll ·
Gephardt,
Dole
and
Gingrich
that
indicating to s001e of them that be
., · And al each step, there are bound to be unhappy losers. And Clinton's
Those aflending tlie session
anew
that
Congress can't make for·
are only a fraction of tbe cuts Republicans would have to deliver to get to plans to be a presidential candidale they bad to come up with a final included Treasury Secretary Bob ·
eign
policy
and that America needs
in 1996.
deal by Monday, Jan. 30.
that magic zero.
Rubin; bis executive a~s istant,
a
strong
president.
Clinton's
Gramm claimed that economic
The administration feared, cor·
Sylvia Mathews; Treasury under·
'
actions
show
that,
in
a
clutch..)le
conditions to be imposed ori Mexi- rectly. that Mexico's borrowing
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columsecretary Larry Summers; Panetta; ·
, .
'
can
be
one.
'
co weren'I stringent enough, but ability. CID'rency, stock market and White House · a.i des George
nlst for The Assod•ted Press, has reported on Washington and
(Morton Konclracke Is execu·
his key motive seems 10 bave ·been economic confidence was rapidly
Stepbanopoulos and Pat Griffil);
' n~tlonal politics for more than 30 years.
·
·
live
editor of Roll CaD, the "'WS•
to embarrass (and possibly rattle) collapsing as a result of uncertainty
and, intermittently, the president
paper of Capitol HID.)

..

.

¥

Mexico crisis shows,Clinton in control

..
...

.
.

-:..: Ethics problems riddle ClintQn aides--------------~--~-l

"These rules seek to change the
At this very moment, Com- (days) - be can compare notes
,· climate in Washington, and usher merce Secretary Ron Brown finds with Webster Hubbell, Mike Espy
· ,. in a new era of public service. himself embroiled in yet another and David Watkins, three other
.. These pledges go well beyond elbical controversy (following the high-ranking administration offi·
.. ~xisting ethics rules, and are
cials who left Washington under an
designed to signal a clear break
ethical cloud. ·
with existing practice."
osenh· .!;e~rkins
'..Hubbell. the. forme~associate.
· :· ~- So said the sanctimonious-ware;. -=~~:.1.1"~
~""'!!---~·~auomey general lind fnt pal to the
:. reo Christopher, who, at the time of
president, pleaded guilty to
'· his remarks, was transition director 'illegal 081Uly matter and allegatioos defrauding both clients of the infa:; for the incoming Clinton adminis· of improper lobbying on bChalf of mous Rose Law F'1111l and the f1111l'
• iration. The soon-to-be secretary of the Socialist Republic of Viemam). itself of at least $394,000. ije's
\ ·' !tale all but BSifured the public that
It seems that Brown pocketed · some vacation time coming to him
· ·' all tbe Democralic president's men $412,000 in December 1993 (a in a federal penitentiary.
(and women) would be models of year after taking lbe reins at Com·
Espy, the former secretary of
probity, in contr.ist with. the miscre- merce) from seUing his stake in a agriculture, ;tecepted unlawful gifts
,. ants who served under Clinton's company in which be had invested from the good old boys at Tyson
not so much as a penny.
.: Republiean pre(lecessors.
Foods. the Arkansas-based poultry
Well, tbe Ointon administration
Not even Hillary Clinton empire that enjoys close ties with
bas reacttro the midway point of its wbo parlayed a $1,000 commodi· the Clintons. Among other favors, ·
emjJioyment by the. American peo- lies investment•into a .$100,000 Ty,son proffered Espy plane bips,
ple. ADd although tbe press bas yet windfall .in a matter of mOilths hotels and sporting event tickets.
to declare a "sleaze factor" hang· would be unsuspicious of Brown's
Tyson also provided his girl- ·
. . ing over the Clintonites, the J5emo. financial sleight of band.
friend a college scholarship at tbe
Maybe wben Brown resigns :· cratic administration has bad more
same time that Espy's department
· .; than its share of malfeasants in your political liliemaker&lt; places tbe was considering tightening poultry
odds at 2-1, the over/Un.lier at 30 inspection standards.
~ bigb Offices.

sot

,

Watkins, a former assistant to $668,000 real estate loan last year
the presideo~ left bis White House from a NationsBank mortgage sub· ·
post after using a presidential heli- sidiary, even though be was
copter for' a $13,000 lift to a golf unqualified for tbe loan (not to
outing.
mention the rock bottom mortgage
A Clinton family friend (who rate) based 011 his salary and meabad previotisly-partoered-up-with ger net worth. .
,
the first lady on several lucrative
· He used the sweetheart loan to ·
financial deals), Watkins might ·· buy an $835,000 building at a fash:
have survived Ibis ethical breech ionable Washington address. The
were it not for the fact ·_ only property boasts a luxury apartment
recently disclosed - that the 1992 above an eyewear retail store, from
Clintoo presidential campaign paid · which the presidential adviser
a settlement of $37,SOO to a woman receives rent ·in addition to bis '
who eoinplained that Watkins sex- White House paycheck.
ually harassed ber• .
Henry Cisneros, secretary of
There are at least'two other housing and urban development,
prominent members of the Clinton probably wishes be had
adminlstration, still on the govern- Stephanopolous' problems . He's
ment payroll, who appear, in words under investigation by tbe Justice
the presidenl used in his· acceptance Departmenl for lying to federal
speech at the Democratic National agents about financial arrange·
Convention, to 'bave "cut comers menu he made with his former
and cut deals."
mistress.
Cisneros has paid the scarlet
·, Presiden:Ual a!lviser. George
woman
more than $40,000, both
StepbanQpolous received a

before and since he assumed bis
present position. Had be been more
forthcoming about the amount of
the payments during his background check, chances are be
would not have been cleared for a
~
cabinet post:---"'
If we were Ialking about a peccadillo here, an indisaetion there,
it would be unfair to cast an ethical
cloud over the entire Clinton
adminisuation . But with so many
high-ranking officials forced to
resign in ignominy (with others
soon to follow), it is clear that the
Clintonites are not nearly the .
paragons of rectitude that Christopher promised two years ago.
Joseph Perkins Is a columnist
for _Tbe San Diego Union-Tri·
bune.
'
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist •nd ot•ers, con·
tact America Onllne by caiUna tS00.8l7-6364, exL 8317.)

Snow, cold weather to stay around for awhile

Tblnllay,Feb. 9

'

IToledo !32" I
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••

• •
••

IND.

••

• IColumbus j34• I
I

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I

this mornin$ in the norlbem states. with a winter weather advisory
Farmers were flooding strawbtras Arctic au fueled snow squalls
issued ror parts of Alabama and ry fields, now In the blooming
over the Grea1 Lakes. Temperatures Tennessee.
cycle; and covering some of the
remained unseasonably cold in the
In Florida, a second wave or crops with plastic to protect them.
East.
.
,
cold air bad Carmen scram~ling to
Temperatures were expected to
In the Pacific Norlbwes~ unseaprotect crops. Temperatures were stay in lbe teens in nonhern New
sonably !IrY and warm weather was
m the 60s tbis morning, but were England and pans or tbe northern
expected today. Near-record tcm- expected to plummet into the 20s in Midwes~ in the 30s and 4011 across
peratures were expected in western northern Aorida and iniO tbe 30s in the Plains
Washington and ' norlbwest Oregon
Central Florida by tonigbl
as winds blowing down rrom the
Mi.ddle~norf
COntinued ~m P•ll• 1
Cascades were expected to meet up
I'
• ••
with strong offshore winds, creal·
salary and benefits for new officers grants ror 16 communities to hire
ing a high pressure system.
for up to three years.
•
'orftcers, Sens. Roben Bynl and Jay
Farther inland. some light snow
"Tbis shows that last year's RockefeUer said in a joint
was expected in parts of Utah, crime bill is working and should announcemenl
ldabo. Colorado and Wyoming. not be scaled back as.some are
Overall, the funds will pay for
Cold air from Canada was expei:ted proposing," Glenn said.
188 new officen in the Mountain
to cause snowfall in northern and
Among the regional communi- State. The cities of ParkersburJ and
extreme western Michigan and ties and counties receiving funding Morgantown each will hire twp
downwind of Lakes Erie and · are Athens, $75,000; Athens Con"· additional offiCCn.
Ontario.
About $1.2 million in grants
ty, $63,108; Beverly, $47,765;
Diy weather was expected Chesapeake, $28.080; Chillicothe, were distributed last October l):l
across much of the Plains stljtes.
$150,000; Gallipolis, $47,576; Gal- Clarksburg. Huntington, MorganIn ihe East. temperatures lia County, $47,902; Glouster, town and tbe Boone Coqnty Sbeiremained below freeiing as far
·
Biuer cold weather continued south as Alabama Ibis morning, $56,864; Ironton, $70,596; Jack- iffs Department.
son, $72,146; Jackson County,
$68,375; Marietta, $71,028; Nelsonville, $73,361; New Boston,
$59,274; New Matamoras, ·
$24,750; Oak Hill, $56,475; South
Point. $69,877; WasbingiOII Coon·
ty, $57,764; Wellston, $67,916;
and Wilkesville, $45,000.
In West Virginia, lbe governlbe city building," the mayor said.
POINT PLEASANf, W.Va ment
awarded $5.3 million in
Holland added there was never
Poini Pleasant Mayor Russell V.
Holland bas pleaded guilty to one any intention of embezzlemen~ or
count of misdemeanor embezzle- using the funds for personal gain.
Valentine dance planned
Morgan said be agreed not to
ment by a public official in Mason
County Cin:uit Court, but said be seek or file other unknown poten·
Faith Full Gospel Church at .
will still seek re-election this tial offenses, including use o( Long Bouom will have a valentine
equipment, materials and personnel dinner Friday 5:30 p.m. at the
spring.
Judge James Holliday accepted of lbe city of Point Pleasant outside · church followed by a humn sing
Holland's plea Monday and sent of the cily limits or on private with the Clark family at 7 p.m. Pas·
sentencing for 8:30 am. on March property. The prosecutor cited inci· tor Steve Reed invites the public.
· 23, according to Prosecuting Anor- dents of repairing a church parking
lot, painting lines on the masonic
ney Damon B, Morgan Jr.
Holland, 64, who was indicted lodge parking lot and picking up
in January on three misdemeanor leaves and trash outside city limits.
Morgan said be will take no
counts of embezzlement by a public official, was scheduled for trial action to remove Holland rrom his
position of mayor, as it would bet·
Aprill7 . .
Through a plea agreement. Mor- ter be left to the discretion of ~e
gan said be askC(\ the coon to dis· city council or voters.
miss the other two counts of
Tbe mayor allegedly casbed
three
checks, one written to the cily
embezzlement by a public official
based on Holland's admission of and two from a scrap metal compafactual guilt on the first count. . ny, totaling around $200.. The city
According to Holland, the admis- bas been reimbursed, Morgan said.
sion was on a $28 check.
Tbe misdemeanor count of
Hoiland said that althougl!tech· embCzzlement by a public official
nically he made a mislake, he felt carries a possible penalty of a
be did nothing morally wrong.
$2,500 ftne and/or up to a year in
"Tbe money was never out of jail.
By The Asloclated Press
Ohio's weather picture remains
unchanged ror the near future :
Snowy and cold.
Forecasters said light snow or
flurries were in the forecast for
tonight and Thursday, Tempera·
tures &amp;Jain will plunge into the single dipts or low teens tonight
On Thursday, snow is likely and
highs wm be around 30.
Light snow was reported over a
large ponion of Ohio overnight.
Lake-effect snow showers dumped
up to two inches of fresh snow over
northeast. Ohio from Cleveland
eastweard.
·
The record·hiilb temperature for
Ibis date at the Columbus weather
station was 72 degrees in 1937
while the record low was minus 13
in 1977. Sunset tonight will be at
5:58 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at
7:32a.m..
.

MICH.

They are escor1ed by higbly
trained. armed guards in vans, and
lhe convoys emit a satellite signal
that allows a control center to track
them within IS feet of their exact
location anywhere in America.
Highly classified Central Intelligence Agency and Defense Intelligence Agency reports onf the ~us­
sian transportatiOn Of plutomum
sometimes sound like a nuclear-age
version of the Keystone Kops.
There are reports that leaking
containers in tbe trucks have
caused long-lime drivers to lose
their hair and develop cancer. The
trucks themselves are not up to par'
for safety and security. There are
even reports of the use of regular
jeeps for conveying the plutonium
from one site 10 another.
- The two key areas in Pantex
that deal with or store plutonium
are surrounded by three 16-footbigh fences and miles of razorsharp. flesh-slashing concertina
wire. .
.
There is a clear zone between
the fences monitored by security
inspectors in guard towers, closed·
cin:uit TV cameras, separate fence
alarms, microwave sensors and
seismic monitors thai can detect lhe
slightest motion of any intruder.
The areas are weU-Iit and patrolled
24 boors a day by teams of highly
trained guards.
Across the top of the areas are
grids of aiss-crossed wire cables to
block access by an'y helicopters,
bang-gliders or parachutists. Con·
crete blocks and double steel doors
belp reinforce the bunkers in which
lhe plutonium pits lie.
And in Russia? ''The absolute
basics of physical security are
missing (in these facilities),''
reports Jessica Matthews, a fellow
with the Council on Foreign Rela·
tions. "Ther!) are no cameras or
motion detectors, no double fenc·
.ing and no radiation monitors at the
exitS."
.
Only •II pounds of plutonium
are needed for a crude nticlear
bomb that could blow up New
York City.. The evidence suggesu
that it's not a question of if such an
amount will be stolen from Rus·
sia's stockpile, but when such a
lbeft will occur.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blnsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Daily Sentinel-Peg• 3

Pomeroy-Middlepor1. Ohio

OHIO Weather

Russian plutonium is there for the taking

111 Coart Street

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.General Man~~gor

.•

'

Weclneldey, Febni.y·a, 1995

I

W.VA.

Across the nation ·

.'

Holland pleads
guilty to charge ·..

•

Weather
with snow likely in the afternoon.
Soulb·Centnl Oblo
Today ...Snow likely this morn- High near 35.
l:xtencled forecast
ing... Variable clondiness with scat·
Friday ... A chance or. snow.
tered flumes this afiCI1lOOD. Snow
accumulating an inch or less. lDab Lows 20 to 2S. Highs high 25 to
IU'DIIIId 20. Nortbwest winds 10 to 3S . .
Saturday .. .A chance of snow.
IS mph. Chance of snow 70 perLows 10 to 15. Highs IS to 25. ·
cent.
Sunday ... A chance of snow
Tonight ..Clearing. Low 10 to
15. Southwest winds around 10 nortbeast ... Dry elsewhere. Lows
zero to 10 above. Highs 15 to25.
mpb.
Tburaday ... Becoming cloudy

Area Death
Carol Toops

I

PICTURE
YOUR PET
·AMONG THE••·•
PETV
•
.

Carol Sue Toops, 42, Middleport, died Tuesday, Feb. 7, 1995, at Ohio
Stale University Hospilal in Columbus following an extended illness.
· Bom Sept 8, 1952, In Mason, W.Va., daughter of Ernest L. and
Dorothy C. Lemley Greene of Mason, she was lmployed by the Blue Tartan Tavern In Middleport,
In addition to her parents, she is survived by two sons, Michael E.
Greene llld Eric T. Toops, both of Middleport; a daughler, Nichole A.
.DeLauder of Pomeroy and three grandchildren.
Also survivlnl are tbree sis~Cn. Tamara K. Arnold or Pomeroy. Lisa J.
Layne of Amelia and Allee L. May of New Haven, W. Va; three b!~!thers,
Les11c R. Greene of Pomeroy,J(evln D. Greene of Columbus and Sainuel
L. Greene of Hanford, W.Va.; gr;mdparents Ray E. Lemley of Cheshire
and Alice V. Lemley of FoslOria; a fiance, Ellis Myers of Middleport and
. scvaalBIDits, uncles, nieces and nephews.
·,
Services will be held Friday; I p.m. at Fisher Funeral Heme with Mary
. McDani~l officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery ·in
Cbeabire.

'

---Local briefs:----.
Man pleads guilty to charge · ·

A 43-year,old Long Bottom man pleaded guilty Monday to a
charge of aggravated assault stemming from a knife attack on a
Pomeroy man in October.
·
Mark P. Zielinski attacked Jeremy Lawrence, 22, in lbe restroom
of Jinuriy's Bar on Oct. 19, 1994. Lawrence was later treated for
facial cuts.
Aggravated assault is a felony of the fourth degree punishable by
an 18-month prison term. Zielinski remains in the Meigs County
Jail pending transport to another facility. . t:: .
. .
Zielinski was represented by public detender Wilham H.
Safranek while the state was represented by assistant Prosecutor
Chris Tenaglia.
A bial in the matter scheduled for Thursday bas been canceled.

.

Friends may call Thursday from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
.
'
•

-Judge Cox rules in
~ newspaper's ·favor

CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) _A award he collected from a !987
·, jlldge has thrown out a libel lawsuit automobile accident.
: ftled by a retired judge against The
Testimony and evidence at the
, PlaiD Dealer and two staiJ writers.
trial indicated Kilcoyne bad a 0.22
·
Former Cuyaboga c~ Com- percent blood-alcohol level the
mon Pleas Judse James Kilcoyne night of the accident. Tbe legal
lllled the newspaper. columnist Joe limit for blood-alcohol is 0.10 perPotential jurors_called for duty '!bW:sday in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court are instead betng mstructed to report for JUry
Dirck and editorial page Director cent. .
,
Alex Macbaskee; president and
Brent Latkin in 1992. He alleged
duty Tuesday, according to court administrator/bailiff Paul Gerard.
· tbat two editorials and three opin- publisher of the newspaper, praised
A trial set for Thursday will not be proceeding, however the
' lou columns.were libelous.
Cox's ruling.
jurors will be required f9( another.trial Tuesday. The trial will begin
Visiting Judge DoJiald Cox,
"In order to maintain a free and
at 9 am. but jtlfOI'S should plan to arrive by 8:45 ·a.m. so that atten·
'
· d b 1h Oh 10
·
-unfettered press, a reasonable dis·
dance can be laken, said Gerard.
who was appomte Y e
cussion of issues must be allowed
Jurors are asked to Call the coon at 992-6439 Monday after 4:30
Supreme Court to preside OYer the
lawsuit. grimted a summary judg- to take place in the opinion
p.m. to bear a taped message advising them if Tuesday's trial· will
, tDent 'ihfs week in· favor of The columns and editorials of a newsgo forward. Anyone having questions about jury service should call
. l"lain Dealer before the case went paper," Machaskee said.
the coon during regular business hours, 8:30-4:30 p.m., Monday ·
. ' to Uial.
Louis Colombo, aliorney for
through Friday, be added.
Cox said he was "taken aback" .The Plain Dealer, said the la\11
...... the newspaper's criticism of a makes no exceptions for the ione of
v3
bound b Ia
an opinion column. .
rcuow jurisl but was
Y w
"Judge Cox recognized that,
to rule in the newspaper's favor.
"The articles were not false,"
with columns and editorials aitieal
Cox said. "Tbere was a lot of vine- of public officials, you are protect·
pr in the columns, which bothered ed by law wbether you are harsh
· me. But according to the taw and nasty or gentle and polite,"
s&lt;ime powers originally intended by
COLUMBUS, Ohio.(APl ·there's nothing wrong with that."
Colombo said.
Qhio lias become tbe.eigblb state to the nation's founding fathers, con- ·
TbecolumnsandediUiiatswere
- Kilcoyne's attorney, Don ller. agree to take part in a planned ferencc organizers say. The event is
In response- to allegations raised said he will appeal the case.
natioital conference in which repre" being sponsQ,red by the Council of
against KUcoyne at a criminal trial
"We think we have shown tbat' sentatives would ask Congress to State Governments, a national
In 1991. The judge was charged there was actu.al malice present, .return certain powers to tbe states.
organization of state government
with _ and later acquitted of and we think that former Judge Kil·
. The House on Tuesday voted leaders :
perjury; theft and falsifu:ation, aris- coyne has a fum and sound basis 95·2 to authorize Ohio's participa·
.IDil out of a $1 million insurance for an appeal," Iler said.
lion in the Conference of tbe
DOWNING CHILDS •
States, wbicb organizers hope to
bold in Philadelphia.
MULLEN MUSSER
Tbe conference will take place if
The
Sentinel
INSURANCE
'vt:n:RANS MEMORIAL
a total of 26 states agree to partici(USPS Zl:l-1160)
Tuesday admissions _ Kenneth pate . Seven del$lgates from each
111 Second St., Pomeroy
.
hcd
..
""
••
h
Darst.
M•'ddlepon.
state
to take
Pu bI11
every a1temoon, ~T~O ay u•rOuJ
C would create a petjtion
A~- trai
Friday. Ill coun st .. Po""'"'· Ohio, by""'
Tuesday discharges _ Roy to ongress, seeking the w;uon YOUR INOEPENDENT
Ohio Valley Publltllitlz Compony/Mutumedlo
k' H1' ld
ization of tbe federal governmenl
Inc:., Pomeroy, Ohio 45169. I'll. 992-2156
Howell, Pomero~; Jac le
eIf Congress fails to ac~ the petiAGENTS SERVING
Second '"'' po~•• paid" Pomeroy, Ohio.
brand, Pomeroy; Paul Houdasbel~ tioners could then call a constituMEl'S COUNn
Mem~&gt;«' The A11ociated ....... and the Ohio
Pomeroy; Rena McDaniel, tional convention to rewrite· tbe"
New•papcr Alsociadon.
Pomeroy; Gertrude Neece. Middle- document
·•
SINCE 1868
POSTMASTER' Send oddreo• ct&gt;rrecdona to
~LZER MEDICAL CENTER
States have been stripped of
ne Dall&gt;~ Sentinel, Ill Coun St. Pomeroy,-J..Ohio 45769.
Dlsehar1e1 Feb.- •, - -'Vio Iet
i)
Grant, Beverly Lackey, Waller 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
SUBSCRIPTIONRATIIS
Carpenter, Mrs. Roger Fisher and 1~~

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

Jurors to report Thesday

"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED MONDAY,
FEBRUARY 13'" IN

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
ONLY

Ohio ·to take part in
national conference ·

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Hospital news
Daily

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&amp;;~==::,,~: ,~~=c~ It - a~:v::EY
::::·:,1~~~- ~~·:·;:.,c.; sc!::~da-ug~!;.~!nr::: Bryan

mnit in Ollvancc diroct to The Dolly Scntinol

on a three, ala or 12 month bull. Credit will be

"''"can~.....

hw ..k

~~==~~~::::t~~. ~n .....

(Published wllb permission)

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Sports

T\te Daily Sentinel

I

Wednesday,February8,199S

The Dally SentlneJ...-Page 5·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pegl •
Wednelday, Febru.,y 8, 1995
.

.

'

--

By besting Eastern 63·59,

Tornad,oes ·sweep
series· with .Eagles
By SCOTT WOLFE
Senllnel Conwpondenl
In what looted to be a bloWQUt
• in the first balf, the Eastcm Eaales
made a great second half ccmcback
only to fall 63-59 to tbe visiting
Southern Tornadoes ·bere Tue!day
. / night at Eastern High School.
Southern head coach llowle
Caldwell said, "This was a very
important win for us. I went
through and told the kids a little
story before the game, saying
som~g about each~ "From the point guard IIi the last
person sitting on the beocb, we
went over each man's role and !be
part he was to play," Caldwell said.
"We stressed that each person bad
a role and exactly wbat that role
was. Tonight evayone played 'their
role. We tried to do s001e different
things tonigbt wi!h our offenses
and defensively wil,b the 1·3-1, but
Eastern adjusted very well."
: BISSELL HONORED - Prior to Tuesday night's Southern-East·
Eastern mentor Tony Deem
&lt;!'n boys' bukethaU game, two outstanding Eastern athletes were
said, "Southern came out witb the
bDnored with hononry f.laques for their accomplishments on the bas·
Intensity, and we were tight. The
k)etbaH court as Eastern s only members or the 1,000 point dub. East·
long
layoff hurt us and everything
WHERE TO GO NOW? ..,... Southern guard Kyan WUIIams (left}
ern vanity player Charlie Bi.,n (left) scored bls 1,000tb point In the
.
we
did,
we did very rigidly. We
Eagles' 83-76 win over Aleunder last Tuesday. With him Is Eastern . surely asked himself that question whUe encountering Eastern's Erk took ourselves
out of the game with
·standout and former 0011ch Dennis Elchlnger, who Willi honored for Hill at the three-point nne during Tuesday night's Rocking Division a po&lt;r fii'St balf at the line, but we
biB 1,400 points and more than 1,300 rebounds, also a school record. game at Eastern· High School, where the Tornadoes won 63-59. . made the·.necessary adjustments
(Scott Wolfe photo} · · •
·
WUIIams nntshed with a game·blgb 27 points. (Swtt Wolfe photo}
and the kids made a heckuva come·
back. I only wish we bad two more

f\lleigs downs Point Pleasant 65-57

~Doug

Host
•ide, but nothing fell for the Big
; POMEROY, On. - The jet Blacks as Meigs ran out to a 22-9
stream had nothing on the Point first quarter lead en route to a 65-57
Pleasant Big Blacks Tuesday night. win, their fourth straight.
B)lth blew into Pomeroy Tuesday · "You could definitely say we were
n!Jlht. Snow was falling aplenty out- as cold a~ the weather," said Point

minutes."

Southern was led by Ryan
Williams' 27-polnt assault and
great ball control. When the game
was on tbe Hne, Williams took
over, making nUIIle!OUs tbread·tbe·
needle passes off the break and
controlling t.be basketball In tbe

late portions of the game. Wmiama

bad fOlD' assisu aud five rebounds

Jeremy Hill and MliSOD Fisher
each added 10 points, while Fisher
grabbed seven rebounds In IIIIOibcr
steady effort.
Eastern WaS led by Cbarlle Bis·
sell's 17 points and 13 rebounds,
while Jeff Sldbem added 13 point&amp;
and 12 reboullds. TMII!m•!J!IS BriaD
Bowen and Micah OUo bad 12 and
10 points, respectively.
Sloppy, but scrappy play high· . •
lighted the rust part of !be game as
neither team scored until !be 5:09
mark when Jeremy Hill pabbed a
Wllll.zls pass on the breat. for a 20 tally. At the 2:56 Dl8lk, Soulbcm
led 4-2 on a Williams' baseline
j lllllJICI'.
.
Eastern's points came on free
throws from Hill and Bissell, a
striug t.bat sent Eastern on an 8-for·
18 rust balf at the line. Additional·
ly, the Eagles missed the fll'll of
several bonus sit-lions that could
bave given them a bealtby leatl or
at least made it a closer game at
halftime.
.
.
Southern went up 11-2. After a
Jamie Evans drive off the fast
break with 39 seconds left. Bissell
. rounded out Eastern scoring witb
five markers for a 13-7 tally at the
end of the frame:
Southern picked up the intensity
witb its press, gelling a couple
quick slelils to stan t.be second peri·
od. John Harmon hit a free throw ·
before Jerem)'· Hill cashe(l in on
· two thefts and Ryan Martin buried
a three-pointer for a 21-9 SHS lead.
(See TORNADOES on Page 5)

A Cardlllll· Alflllltad SupMmlrtcet

Pleasant coach Lennie Barnette.
nected on a trio of three-pointers in
. "We got off to a good start, which lh~ second period. He also added a
was important," ·said Meigs coach free throw to bring his second quarJeff Skinner. "We 've been off eight ter total to I 0 points.
or nine days, just like Point Pleasant
Meigs, however, had an answer
and everydne else.- We're. all in the for every basket and the Big Blacks
same boat. But we seemed a little would have made no progress at all
sharper than Point at the start and that if J.D Holstein hadn't found Dorsey
was probably the key."
for a three-poi nter just before the half
In a wild and exciting finish, points while Norris. bad eight and
Meigs ran out to a 6-0 lead at the to cut the lead to I 0.
Eastern's
reserves of Coach Chris Adam Roush bad seven.
6:01 mark of the first when point
The real stor'y of the first half Stout pulled off a dramatic 50-47
guard Benny Ewing hit a lean in
though was Meigs efficient offense. cOOte-from-behind win over Southjumper in the lane. That was just the and Point's anemic shooting. While em.
.
.
start for the Marauders. Meigs con- Point shot just 20pcrcent from the
Tbe game was a bard-fought
tinued to operate efficientl y as both floor, Meigs shot 42 percent.
game from stan to finisb. With 35
Ewing and Paul Pullins fed Travis
"[ thought one advantage we seconds remaining, Southern .led
Ohio Division
Abbou for open buckets underneaih
had, when we used our brains, was
47-46. Eastern called time to set up
.
Dlv, Ovenll
the basket. Finally the quarter endwe felt we. could get the ball into the ·an inbounds play. ·
ed when the Marauders made a four · post and score," Coach Skinner said
l! L
L
The play worked perfectly as Iwn
point trip out of their last possession . afterwards. "This is rea~ a good Eastern bit Chris Bailey at the post Belpre., .....................9 2 11 5
Gary Stanley made one of two free
win for us. Point Pleasant's a solid and he bai..mered it on il. for a 48- Wellston ...................6 4 8 7
throw auempts, and after chasing
team . People around here might not 4~ lead. Southern went for ~ .sbot MEIGS .....................4 6 6 8
down the rebound, Abboll hit .a
realize it, but Point is very well Wlt.b 18 S&lt; :onds left, br• missed. Vinton County ...c.... ..3 9 3 13
three-pointer from tile top of the key.
coached. They take care of the ball After a couple of tips iJ1 the Jane, NelsooviUe-Yorlc......2 8 4 II
That gave Meigs its largest lead of and don ' t make many mistakes. I the ball bolDlced toward !be outlet,
Hocking Divlllon
the game.
thought for a couple of moments in where Eastern's Eric Dillard
Federal
Hocking
.......8 2 10 4
Point Pleasant was able to make
the first half that we were on the grabbed the handle and was fouled.
SOliTHERN
..........
10 3 11 7
little headway in the second quarter.
verge of putting them away. But, we
Dillard iced the game with 14
Miller
...........
:
............
7 4 8 7
Point Pleasant's Tomm~ Dorsey
weren't able to make the plays and seconds left as be canned botli enils
Alexander
....
.............
6
5 7 8
heated up though, to keep the Big
they fought back."
of tbe bonus to create ·the final
EASTERN
................
3
7
4 10
. Blacks in the ball g~me . Dorsey con(See MARAUDERS on Page 6) score.
Trimble
.....................
2
9
2
12
Sout.bem' s Ryan Norris got off
a three, but it missed its target and
-GAME SATISTICS,
Tuesday's scores
Eastern
held on for the win.
PPHS Big Blacks
Meigs
SOUI'HERN 63, EASTERN 59
. Dillard I~ Chris Stout's Eagles
Field Goals •
14/42
21/46
Federal
Hocking 58, Alexander
w1th 15 pomts, while Steve Durst
FG%33%
46%
47
and Bailey each added 11.
3 ptrs . .
8/23
318
Miller 68, Trimble 57
For Scott Wickline's Tornadoes
3 pt. % .
35%
~%
Belpre 83, Vinton County 48
(10-7}, Jesse Maynard led wit.b 11
Free Throws •
516
11
MEIGS
65, Point Pleasant 57
FT%83%
82~:7
Rebounds.
23
27
Turnovers ..
9
II
Have you ever found yourself ...
Fouls~
14 .
8
. . . PPHS lndivid~al St~ts: Tommy Dorsey 18 pts., 1 rebs., 3 ast.; Kris
~1lley 7 pts., 2.rebs. , 0 ast.: J.D. Holstem 3 pts .. 2 rebs., 2 ast. ; Mark Oliv-wondering why you bave problems in a
e 18 pls., 6 rebs., 2 ast.; Jay Reymo nd 0 pts., 0 rebs., 0 ast. ; Jamie Stewrelationship?
art 7 pts .. 5 rebs. 4 ast.; Mall Wassel 4 P" ·· 6 rebs. 3 as t · B J Buch .
0
pts., I reb., 0 ast. '
'
., . .
anan
-feeling misunderstood or unappreciated?
Meigs Individual Slats: Gary Stanley 9 pts., 4 rebs'. ; Cass Cleland 9
pts. , 7 rebs., 2 ast.; Paul Pullins 6 pts., 3 robs., 4 ast: Benny Ewin 13
-having trouble ri.aking or sustaining
pls. , 5 rebs ..' 2 ast. ; Donald Yost 0 pts., I reb., Nick H;ning 9' pts 3 r~bs
3 ast. ; Trav1s Abbou 19 pls., 4 rebs . 1 ast.
.,
.,
friendships?
Records: Point Pleasant (8-7) Meigs (6-K).

Eagles edge Tornadoes 50-47
. TVC boys•

.

cage standings
»:

: FINDS,RIS SPOT:..... Meigs guard Gary Stanley (10) gets between
two Point Pleasant players and In front of the Big Blacks' Tommy
Uorsey (31} while taking a shot during Tuesday night's contest al
Meip High School. The Marauders ~on 65-57 In ·part because of
~nley's nine points. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
•

$outhern girls post wins
tJver
Miller and Wellston
•
•

&lt;Southern climbed back above em hit 11-25 at t.be line. Sout.bem
th~ .SOO mark wiih a S2~in was_ led ll Y ~issQn's 20, Manuel
· o~r league foe Miller Monday with 13, Brianne Proffitt's 10 and
niaJ!t in girls high school basketball Jess Codner's eight. aC!Wn at Coming.
.
Wellston was led by Mandee
.Southern was led by Renee Tur- Argaliright's 18, Nikki Downey
lefs 22 points, Jonna Manuel,'s 19 wit.b 18 and Dana Stevison 13.
ru\d Jess Codner's eight. Miller was
Southern bad 50 rebounds led
· led by Julie Lanning's II , Sandy by Manuel and Sisson with ten
H~m's nine and Halley Berry's
each and Turley and Codner with
ei81Jt.
nine each. Sout.bero had 14 steals
:Southern fell behind early 14- (Turley 4, Manuel 4), 12 assists
II; but made a 16-11 run in the (Turley 3, Manuel 3), 20 turnovers
~ond frame for a 27-25 halftime
and 27 fouls . Wellston hit 19-70
le~. Southern outscored the hosts
from t.be field, hit 1-8 t.brces and
.32·22 'in t.be SI!CODd half and went 14-31 free throws.
..
on:to the 59-47 win .
Wellston
had
34
rebounds
.
' 13
:Southern hit 19-58 for 33 per- steals, six assists, 22 turnovers and
ceat from the floor and 2· 10 t.brees, 26 fouls.
wilb a 15-24 night at t.be line for 63
Reserve noies: Southern
pCfCent. Jenni Roush's Tornadoes dropped the reserve game 32-10.
out rebounded Miller 35-32 led by Swafford had 16 for Wellston and
M~nuel's 10 and Turley's eight.
C. Walters had four. Arnott had
~ Southern had 13 steals (Turley five, - four for Southern..-- _ ___.,____
Manuel three), 10 assists (Turley
-·- tht:ee}, 18 turnovers and 12 fouls.
Southern will host Federal
Southern bad four blocked shots. Hoelting Thursday.
Mmer bit 17-51 for 33 percent was
~·-•-•2-4 at t.be t.bree point line and was
Southern
(11-16-16-16=59)
7-it from the foul line.
:Miller bad 32 'rebounds, seven
Manuel 5-1 -6=19, Codner 3-0·
2=8. Turley 7-1-5=22, Becky
assists,22turn!lversand22fouls.
· ~eserve notes: Miller won t.be Moore 0-0-2=2, Proffitt 3-0=6,
re$:rve game, 32-19, led by Amy Lisle 1-0·0=2. Totals: 19·2·
Hugbes wit.b 10. Erica Arqott and 15124=59
1eimy Roush. each had seven for
Sopthem, while Jenny Friend had
Miller
fiYC. Cythia Caldwell and Amott
(14-11 -9-13=47}
eaeb bad five rebounds.
H~rn.4-0-1 = 9, Lanning 3-1 · · 'rornildoet beat WeDston
2=11, Cook 1-0-2=4, Merckle 1-0jn a make-up game with Well- 0=2, Plant 2-1 -0=7. Taylor 1-0··
atdn.· Southern claimed a 60-55 0=2; S. Merckle 2-0-0=4. Halley
. , win, bitting 23· from the field Berry 3-0-2=8". Totals: 17-2and 1-10·oo three pointers. Sout.b· 7/11=47

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.I
I'

I

�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 8, 1995

Congress not inclined to order end to baseball strike
By BEN WALKER
WASHINGTON {AP)- President Clinton, giving up bis own
failed efforts to settle a six-montll
maj&lt;l' league baseball slriltc, wants
Coogress to "step. up to tile piau:"
to save tile 1995 season.
But witll spring training only
eight days away, Senate and House
leaders bave already made clear
they ? ' ,.,. d ined '10 pass a law
ordering an ~nd to lbe sttilce.
Labor Secretary Roben Reich
said today tbat "if tile president is
going' to bave tbe aulbority to lock
beads and force arbitration,

Congress bas got to give it to
b .un."
" If !be American public wants
baseball in 1995 tbey ve got to let
tbeir views be ltoown," Rcicb said
on ABC's "Good Morning America." Reich said Clintoo was busy
witll serious oaliooal and intcrna·
tional problems, but "a lot ol people care about baseball and tile
president wanted to give it bis all.
Alleast be tried."
·
Meanwhile, sniping between
owom and players is escalating at
an alarming rate, tllreatening to
move !be' sides funbcr apart than

tbey've been since tbe strike began
Aug. 12.
The union's No. 2 official called
mediator W.J. Usery " senile" to
bis race while rejecting a proposed
agreement . Players and owners,
summoned to tbe While House foc
meetings Tuesday nigllt. talked to
CliDtco and Vice Presidenl AI Gore
-but not to eacb otber.
"I bave done al'l I could to
change tllis situation . ... Clearly
!bey are Dol capable or settling tbis
sttilce wilbout an umpire,'' Clinton
said.
"Tbis is not a request for a coo-

gressionaUy imposdl solution," be
said of potential legislation to
require binding arbitratioo. "It is a
request for tile only process we
have left to us to find a solution
tllrougb neutral parties. And tile
only way to do tllis appears to be
foc Congress to step up to tile plale
and pass tile legislation. Unless
tlley do, we may not bave baseball
in 1995."
Two days after Sen. Orrin
Hatcb, R-Utab, said be would suppon tile president, otllcr raoltlng
Republicans said !bey did not dlini
Congress should get involved.

"The president bas apparently out regular ~or leagucn. TCIIIIS
tbrown tile ball into Congress' bave been si11nio~ replacement
court. We maintain our view tllat playen. The e!thibation season is
Congress is ill-suiled to resolving scJ!ednled to start Mardi 1. Opcoprivate labor disputes," Senate ing day is Apri12.
Majority Leader Bob Dole and
Jerry McMorris, owner of tbe
House SJICIIIIer Newt Gingricb said Colorado Rockies, said today 011
in a joint statemcnl
ABC tllat "Jbere is no question tllal
Clinton bas no le,!!al power to tbe season will start. The question
end tbe strike and needs Republi- is wbo tbe players will be on tile
can support to approve a law call- ·field."
ing for binding arbitration. It is a
Union official Eugene Orza,
bigbly unusual step, usually appeariu wllb McMorris, said be
reserved for oat1oaa1 emergencies.
tbougbt ~ odds ol a 1995 scasoa
Spring camps are set to open a were "50-SO, I dlink."
•
week: from Thursday, witll or with·
•

TornadoesMtin
... __~7o~ntin~u_ed~~~m-~~e~4&gt; · ~~~~~~~~~------------~~~----~----~~--~~~~
~tablisbing

__
Easlelll bad trouble
frame, while Eastern's offense 50 tall. Williams iiicreised lbe lead
its inside game as Southern from began to pick back up. Bowen and back to five at tbe 3:25 mark before
tile onset rallied around its 1-3·1 Ouo drilled tllree pointers, while Bissell bit a pair of safeties for a
zone, foo:ing Eastern to a perimeter Bissell and Hill nailed key jumpers S5-5'31ally at tbe 3:14 mark.
game. Eastern was cold and scored · for a 39-30 score. At lbe end of lbe
Only a two-point game, Southmostly off tbe offensive rebound.
stanza, behind Williams' 11-point em sbot and missed, but Easu:rn
Eastern made a run off two frame Southern led 45-34 as EHS turned tile baH over. Soutbern came
Bowen jumpers and a Stetbem free bad g:ilned two.
. down and repeated witll a miscue
Eastern put Soutbem on tile foul and EHS bad another cbance. This
throw .for a 23-16 scor.. However,
tbe drive stalled on Eastern's 3-6 line most of lbe final round, where lime Otto drilled a tllree-pointer to
drought at tile line tllai included tbey bit 12-16 going down lbe give Eastern its rll'St lead with just
.two more bonus attempts.
stretch. Meanwhile, Stetbem, a 2:13 Jefl
.
Souibern again picked up its senior post mao, we~ wild wilb a
Soutllem missed a tllree from
intensity witll two Williams steals 10-poiot sbooling spree that tbe comer and Eastern rebounded.
and scores. Otto bit a jumper witll sparked Eastern to a 53-48 tally . Bowen went for tbe drive and was
ten secouds left for a a 29-18 SHS
Bowen and Bissell bad two key fouled on tile follow-up jumper.
lead, bul Williams nailed a jumper buckets prior, while Southern Bowen bit !be fll'St of two for a 57at tile buzzer to retain a 13-point fought to stay in il a lbc line.
55 Ially, but missed tbe second.
margin, 31-18.
H3!111on, a key mao in lbe paint Bissell tben fouled out with 1:49
Southern went to its 1-4 offense fouled out witll 3:30 on !be clock. .left, sending Hill to tbe line wbere
and sbol Illy-ups most of lbe ihird ~~m gaiiiC!l J!O~Mioo and Eric
be bit bo1b ends of tbe bonus to tie .
Hill bit a baseline iumoer for a S3·
,
·

57-57.
Soutbern stepped up tbe pace
with an intense press and Eastern
fell apart wilb two straight
turnovers. Williams bad a steal and
jumper to regain tile lead, tllen
repeated !be feat as SHS got tbree
'shots at tbe goal before Evans was
fouled.
He bit tbe fll'St or two for a 6057 score, but Otto came b.ack witll
a lay-in for Eastern. Williams bit
!be rll'St or a bonus, but missed tile
second witll Eastern rebounding.
Otto sbot tbe three, but missed
badly and Soutllern rebounded witll
39 seconds left.
Easu:rn was hesitant to foul and
didn't get tile job done until only
14 sends remaining. Williams, norllllilly a good foul shooter, missed.
· · ..
···
·

but great bustle aupwed btm to get assists {Bowen five) and 26 fouls. ,
tile rebound. where be was fouled
Friday's agenda bas Soutllcra,
witll 10 seconds left. Tbis lime be bosting Miller F~ and Eastern
got tbe job done and put tile gii!DC hosting Federal H
ng.
out of reacb, lbe fmal63-S9.
-•-•-•Southern bit 19-54 from tbe
EASTERN
field, 1-6 tbrees and was 22-36 8t
. {7·11·lli-l5c59)
•
!be line, while Easlelll bit 20-46, 3·
Brian Bowen 4-1·1=12, Jeff:
12 tbrees and was only 10-22 at tile Stetllem 6·0·1=13, Eric Hill 3-0line, indica ling tbe game was 1=7, Charlie Bissell 5-0-7a17,:
decided a1 tbe tine.
Micah Quo 2-2-0=10. Totallt 20-:
Eastern dominated tile boards 3-lll/ll:SP
44-20, ted by Bissell {13) and
Stethem (12), .while Fisher led
1SOtrrHERN
Soulbem witll seven and Williams
(13-18-14-111=63)
bad five.
Jeremy Hill 4-0·2=10, ~yan:
Southern bad 12 steals, Marlin 1-1·1=6, Ryan Williams 8-.: ·
(Williams four), 10 turnovers, 12 0-11=27, Jamie Evans 3-0-3a9,'
assists (Wiltiams four) and and 21 Mason Fisher 3.{14:10, Jobn Har-·
fouls. Eastern. bad siX steals (Dis- . moo 0-0·1= 1. Tot• I•: 1!1·1·'
sell, Hill two),' 1i turnovers, nine 12/34=413,

Wednesday, February a, 1995

10

Basketball

Akroa Elltt 12. Akron E. 49

Far West

N~ngs

r... .

Santa Clara 82, SloCf'all'ento SL S3

All•tkDMiiba

l!: J. &amp;L

~

Orlando .................. :l6

to

.783

New York... .......... ..29

16

.644

6..S

s ......................... u 21 .400
N.., Jeney ............19 00 .38&amp;

17.l

Miam1 ................... .16 29

18.5
l9 ..S
23
24

.356
.292
.2.50

Philadelphl• ........... l.

34

WllhinjtOn ............ ll

33

Charlotte ....... ......... 30

17
18
18
2J
·26
29
28'

How I stale paoel or lp{dl writers and
booodCIII&lt;n raea Ohio hil)o ldoool Jirll ·
buk.etb&amp;IIIWnl lo the fifth weekly reau·
lat·~N~Gn 1994-9.5 poll (or The Auoclat·
ed Prsa, by Ohio High School Athletic
AuociatioD divialon1, wJth Won-loa;t
record thrOUJb aamea or Feb. S (first-

Phiomen's
college scores

place Yota in parcDthela):

Mld-Qhlo Coarenace
Malone 14, Tiffin 70
Ohio llomlalcaa II. Cedltville 6l
RIO GRANDE 116, Mouol Verooa
Nazuene l08

Dl•lslon I

X..

l- You. Boardman (I) 16·0................. 179
:1-Doyton Chom.·Jut. 18.0 ................ ... !57
of.S........,.t(l)l8-0 .............. .. ...... 132
S.W00111r 16-0 ................................ 128
'6-Col. Brookhaven 17-0......................106·
1·W...ood (I) 17-0 ...........................19
a.&amp;arllatoa 16· t ........................... :...... .!5
9-Caatoo McKinJcy 1.5'-2 .... ..................SO
10-Tol. St. UnulolJ.t ....,..........:.......... 40

Urbaaa 74, Wallh 72

CI.BVELAND .......2&amp;
IDdiana .... ............... 27
Chicaao .................. 2J
Aduta ............... .... 21
MitwiUDe ............. ll
Detrolt.. .................l7

.638

:609

l.l

.600
.500
.447
.38 3
.)78

2

.6.,

9
12
12

WFSrERN CONFERENCE

r...

Midw•t DfTWon

l!:L ' &amp;J.~

Utab .......................35
San A.btonio ........... JO
HoUlton ................. 28

12 .145
14 ·.682
16 .636

Denver ................... 20 2S

.444

Dlllu ..................... l8

'Il

.400

Miaoesota ........ ...... ll

3.5

.239

J.S

Padlk: Dlri.lon •

Phoeoil. ................... 37
Seattie .................... 32
LA Laietl ............ 28

Sacramento ........... ,25
Portlond ........ ......... 24
Golden Stale .......... l3
LA. Oippen .......... .7

10
12
16

19
20
31
40

.787
3•.5

.727
.636

.S68
.l45
.29S
.149

1.5

10..5
I t.l
22.5
36

Tuesday's scores
Milwaukee 95, New York 87
CLEVELAND 90, Philad-:_l[!,hla 84
Indiana 9.S, Charlotte 92 (UI)
Detroi1119, Wuhlngton liS
Minn~;SQta 109, Golden State 100
Phoeuia. 114, Dall&lt;£&amp; II J
L.A. Lat.m: IS, Denver 8 3
San Antonio 106. Seattle 103
Utllh 101, LA.

Clipper~

8&amp;

Tonight's gamts
CLEVELAND II Boston, 7:30p.m.
Dall• at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Wuhington at Miami, 1:)() p.m
N~ Jersey II AUanf.a, 7:30p.m.
Charlotte 11 DeUoit, 7:308.m.
New Yorlat lndiana, 7:3 p.m
Mloneaota •t Milwaukee. 1:30 p.m.
Phoenil: • Utah, I 0 p.m.
Chicaao at PortlaDd, 10 p.m.
Sau Antonio at L.A. Lakeu , IO:JO
p.m.
.
JIOUJton II SacrameotO, I 0:)0 p.m.

Thursday's games
Golden Stale Ill Denver 1 1 p.m.
01icaao at Sealtlc, 10 p.m
HOUiton Ill L.A. Clippm, 10:30 p.m.

Major men's
college scores ·
East
Army 72. t...fayettc 69 (01) •
Hofltta 68, Jhrtford 59
Rulaen 31, Munch\laettl 29, half·

tJme. SIJIP. proteat

Sdoa llall 90, St. John'• 87
SieDa 62, Cani1iua 59
St. Bonaventure 79, Georae W&amp;lhinglOD lSI
St. Francit., J'I{Y U . Cent. Colltlecticut

SL 12

St. l01eph'a74, Rhode llland 69
SO

T~le 67, La Salle

Villanova·7J , Miami 63

South
Alabama 6S, So!Ahero Mil&amp;. 60
Florida 12, Oeoraill 66
Mlrylud 16, Nonh Caroliaa 73
New Orkana 63, SW Louisiana 50
lTI'-Owlla.Dooaa 71, Davidsou 62 .

1- -0:-: -,-::•::- Mid"oot --

•

Non-conrennce actloa

• Vlr!Pnia Te&lt;:h n, WriiJiol So. 74

Ohio U.S. boys' poll
How a1111te pMC:I of~ writen and
broadc.tcn 111ltd Qaio hi&amp;h IChool bo)'l'
bukelball team~ in the fi1lb ~Y refilll·
lar·leUOD 1994-95 poll ror The Auociat•
ed Praa, by Ohio High School Athletic

DePoul96. Loyoio, D1.7l
1Vdua71, Michlau St. 69
SW Mlalourl St. 57. Wichita St. S•
V.lraJala Tech n. Wriaf11 St. 74

Cllhen recth'llll U or mare pohdl:
li·Eutlate North 28. 12-Rocky River
MuaifiCII 11. 13-CiD. We~tetD. Hilll 13.
. 14-W.Cbealerl..aioll(l) 12.

WOn-lOll
record throu&amp;fl aamu or Feb . S; rirat·
place votes in parenthaes;
AuocilliOD diViliODI, With

S.S
14
16
23 ..5

I'll.

I·Pic:kerilllloo (18) 16-1........... ... ....... 213

Division n
1-Garfteld Htl Trinity (20) 17-0 ......... 223
2-Cin. RoplBacon 17-0 .................... 179
3-Elida{J) 16-0 .. ........ ...... ,.. ....1 ........... 170

Dirlslon 1

r...
flo.
1-0evelancl Jill. Q8) 16-1 ....... ..........37S

1

~~~t~!i y;:· H~i~'(i' i'16:' i':::::l~

· 2-Spriq. Norlh (l) 17.0 ....... ..............302
3-Cantoc McKinley I ).1 .... ........... ~ ....29S
4-Tol. St. Johll'•l4-1 ...... .............. ...... 2Sl
5-E. Uverpool (I) 15· 1.............. ......... 204
~l..ana.viUe (S) 15-1 ........................ ... 191
7-Tol . Scott 12-3 ........ ........ ........... .. .... 142
8-Cin. Woodward 14-2 ........................ .99
9-WeatervUie North 13-~ ........... .'.. ........ 73
10-You. Cb~ey 11-2 .... ,.. ............... :......43

I'll.

l·Sherwood Fairview (13) 17-0 .......... 204

2-Su,..aeei O~raway (3) 18-0 .... ...... 1711
3-50, KeniOD Ridge (2) 17-0 ........ IS&lt;l
of.B
RE (I) 18·0 ......................... 117
5-Atron SV-SM (4) 16-1 ........:........ :.... 96
Doylcatowr. 0\ippewa 16-0 ...............96
7-Vcna.illr. 17·0 ...................................10
B-MiddldieldCardinall7-1 ................. 6&amp;
9-Miomll Ridae 16-1 ............ ................ 46
10-WciiiYillc 15-1 ................................. 38

· l·llova (26) 17·0 .............................. 391
2·Co•oeou• (6) 15.0 ..... ................... , .. :165
1-MacedoDia Nordollia (I) 1~ · 1 .........256
4-Ca.llfield (2) 15-1 ...... .................... ...240
l·CJ• VA·Sf(l) 1:1-l.............. .. ..233
6-Wooltef TriWJy 14-2 .......... ............. 151
7-G•field Htl. Trinity l2 -2 ............... .143
8-WaUJ«&lt;n {I) 13-2 ............................ 106
9-Vao Wert 14-2 .................... ,..............99
10-Lon&lt;loo 12·3 ............................... ...... 52

Othen rec•l•lftl 11 or more polnla:
11 ~ZaiiCIVille W. Muski~gum 22. 12 (tie}Ba~obridae Paint Valley, OAK HILL U.

OU.en rft'el"ln1 11 or mwt point.:
It -Col. St. Chutes 45. 12-TwinJbura
Ctwnberli11 (I ) 44. 13-New CooC&lt;X"d John
Gl~oa 23. 14-St. Paris Graham 22. IS·
Mim:rnl8 . 16-Bdlaft IS .

Dl•lslon Ill

14-Brooifield

:rum
I'll.
I·Da.nville (17) 17-0 ........................ ... 205
2-New Riesel (2) 17-0 ..................... :.. 186
3- S. O!ariNion SE 16-1 ...................... 157

1-Awora (29) 14·0 .......................... .. 380 ·
2-I&gt;elta 14·2 .............................. ...... .. 248
3-Creaton Norwayoe (I) 14-1 .............23.5
4-Warrea 01Jll)ion (J) 13·1......... ..... 234
' l ·Cot.llanley tl-4 ............................!]4
6-0mtille 13·2 (1) ............................... 172
7-Coltlwater 13-2 ................................ 1&lt;42 •
1-Marlon RlverVa1Jcy(1) 14-2 .......... 135
9-Gcnnantow.D Valley View 10.2.. .......98
10-Chillicoehe UDioto 13·J .................... .C2

4-Wt Canton (2) 11-0 ........................ 1~
.5-J.:bon Center (I) 17-0 ............ ....... 144

6- Lol'llin Cath. 16 ~ I ..... ...... .................... 8.5
7-Gates Mill• Gilmourl3-2 ..................62

8-McDolllld 14-2 ........ ..........................S1
9-0ttoville 14-2 ........................ ............. 44
10-Berlin Hiland 15-3 .................. .. :..... :\11:
01~·

11-Fayettevillc (1) 24. 12-ZaDeavil\e
23. 13 (tie)-BrillOiville Bristol,
McCONNELSVILLE MORGAN 14.
Roaecntn~

Ochen nuklna 11 or more point.:
11-Cin. J'!I. Colleae lUll (I ) .W. 12-L'larbbura Cliolon·M••ie (I) 37. 13 (tiel-Chill·
icothe Zane Trace. MINFORD (I) 3S. ISSeaman N.. Adams 33. 16· Archbold 21.
17-Sherwood Fairview 17. 11-Carey 14.

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

.

Dl•lslooiV

Adeu86, Pal at Val. 82 (2 OT)
Akron Buchlel 87. Akron Kenrncf'e 50
Akron Cent.-Hower 67, Ak.roo Firestone 59
AiroD Covlna:ton sa. LonlatOWII S7

'&amp;

1-Bcrlio Hiland (19) 16-0 ....... ....... ..... 363
2-Worthington ChriJli1.11. (9) 14-0 ....... 360
1-Findlay Lib.-Benlon (9) 15·0........... 316
4-Briltolville Bristuii4-0 ................... 261
5·01&lt;1 Fon tJ.J .................... .............
6-0a!ton 12-2 ........... ,............ 1............ .160

7-Centerbural4-2.,............................. 1SO
8-Coatiaelltall2-2·................................ 71
9-DeGratr Rivmidc (I) 16-0................S9
10-Holalle 12-3 ..................................... .5)

. 16-KaJidall17-0ibaonbuta: 12

APPLIANCE
RECYCLE DAY

Jac:Doa Milton 63, McDonald 61 (OT)

!2

CeDterburai07,. Danville 44
Cbordon 6.5, Quowla Filii ~~ (4 00')
Chardon NDICL S4,.Jbwtn 30
Cbillieothe 62, Miami Trace 47
Cia. Country Day 63, Cia. LoctJaad

•
••
••

· ByDAVIDGERMAIN
AP Business Writer
BUfFALO, N.Y. {AP) -The
one constant to personal finance,
Bruce Stenzel figW'I:s, i~ tbat people board change - in piggy
banks, milk jars, coffee cans and
buclcets.
Himself a cbange boanler since
be was a boy, Slenzel bas parlayed
bis passion for pennies, nickels,
dimes and quarters into a $157 million business.
Con'tinental Coin Processors
Inc. converts coins into paper cur. rency witllin minutes for vendors,
pay-phone operators, video arcade
owners and otllers wb.o just bave
100 mucb change on tbeir bands.
"People have fetishes. Some
people collect cigarette lighters or
matchboxes or salt-and-pepp6'~
sbalters," Stentel said. "I saved

change. ,And tbe tllougbt I always .
bad was, there's no way for me to
get rid of iL"
Founded in 1991, Continental
Coin operates out of a Buffalo
warehouse !bat's a coin boarder's
paradise, railed with oldtime safes,
penny gumball machines, canvas
sacks of change and dozens or
piggy banks.
Tbis month, tile company introduced self-service sorters dubbed automatic coin machines,
~or ACMs - at baolts, where people can deposit change directly into
lbeir accounts or get casb back f&lt;l'
il
Automatic' coin machines were
installed at tbree Cilibanlt branches
in western New York tllis montll;
Continental Coin said It plans to
have 11t least I 00 more m olber
banks and in supermarkets by

ureS6

.

r-t.ietta 61, Partenbtxa, W.Va. 66
ldarlla.,.. 62, Akroo Spriq, 49
Marysville 61, Mount Vernon S3
Musilloo Cu. 19, MariettaChr! 73
MayCield 61, Meutor Late Cath. 60 ·

Cio . Walnut Hills 70, Cin. Mount
Cin. Wtt.tefJl Hilla 64, Fairfi~ld .57
Claymoot 70, Steubeovllle 61
Cle. HeiJ,hta 76, Unia Adrn. Kina42
Cle. Independence 62, Richmond Hll.
61 (00')
Cle. Uocola-Wea 73, Garfield Hll. 49
Clennoat Northcutcm 71, Golhen 58
Cli.nton-Mauie 73, McClain 61
Cot. BriJ11114l, Col. Eaot"""" 39
Col. Brookhnen 71, Col. Beecher oft

(OT)

Ma)'IVille 57, W....w Rivet VieW S6
McDcnnott Northw•t 70. Portsmouth
W. S6
Mc:Dooald .54, Jacbon-Miltoo 44
Mechlllicabwa76, Fairtlanb 70
· Medina I07, Wmen Clw. 69
Meip 65, Pbint PleMant, W.Va. S7
Middletown a.. 74, Day. Norttvidae

59

Col. Lioden-McK.ialey 60, Cot. CenICDDial 46
Col. N001Johmd64,Col. Eutll
Col. South 71, Col. Marioa-fraaklio

li

Col. Wanmon 65, Col. Academy 55
Col. Wat71, Walout Ridae 64
Col. Watland 67, Uppa- AtlioiJion 64
Col. Whetstooe Sot, Col. Mifflin $3
·coldwater·60, Ottawt:-OIIIIdorf 58
Colonel Crawrord 71, Fredericktown

64

70

Mogadore 12, Strcdaboro 61
Monroe Ceatn171, Bealbville 64
N . Adam~79, Whiteoak 67

N. Baltimore 92, Nortbwooci7S
New Kuoa.ville 80, U1111 Perry 62
New LeliDJ':OD 72, Croobiville SS
New Mianu 66, Cin. Sew.a HUll 5 I
Old Fort !Ol, Oibtonb'"'l 69 .
Dnmae Oor.l9, Lo.oll.,.. E. 53 ..

67 .

Columbia SO, Brooklyn 4.5 ·
Coiumbiana18, Sebrina McKinley 60
Columbus Grove SJ, Pandora-Gilboa
41
ConDeaut 66, Plli.navllle Rlwnlde 59
Conottoo Val. BS,lewett-Scio 80 (OJ')
ContJneutal .55, PatrictHeuy 543
Cmtoa Norwayne 72, Cloverleaf 51
Cratwood 71 , Cle. SouthCMt69
Coyaho!IO 1111. 7l, Beacto..ood l9
Danbury Lakeside S7, Tol. Emanuel

•

Dil.le S7, Tri..County N. 54
Dover 67, Colhoctoo 61
Dublio 75, Worthinatoa Kilboume 68
li. Clinton 80, Bland! eater 61
E. Kno1. II, Joh..towa 7&lt;4
E. Uverpool76. Buckeye Looot lO
E. Plilestine 6.5, United ~ 62
Eutuo Drown 64, Mauchaler SO
Eaton 8.5, TwiD Val. S. II
Edaewood 64, MuO• 45

Elida 60, Un Cath. ~8
Eiyri• 6l,l.ake R;dae Acad. 60
Fairview 6S, Fayette ~4

F«tenl Hoctioa 58, Alexander 47
Field 67, Wiodtr•m 61
Findll)' 56, Uma Sr. 53
Fort Jenninp 50, Olhlvillo 49 (3 00')

••
••
•
:

Call Tol Free 1·800·634-5265 for an lmmeciate appolntmetd. •
• The tests will be given by a Uce1sed Hearing Aid SpedaRst •

:

THURSDAY - FEB. 9TH

• Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding converSation is invited to •
8 have a FREE hearing test to see If lhls problem can be helped. Bring lhis •
. coupon wilh you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
8

lOCATION: MEIGS COUNTY LinER CONTROL
UNIOII AVENUE- POMEROY
UNLOAD APPLIANCES NEAi SIGN
SIDE OF

8
•

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ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL .OTHER
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WALK~NS WELCOME

(01')

See
Pickens
Hardware
for all of
your
Regular &amp;
Seasonal
Hardware
Needs.

PICKENS

8
8

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POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 11, 1995

304-773·$.583

Unwanted or abnormal hair growth Is a disorder many women are
experiencing today. There are two types of hair· vellus (light) and
terminal {dark). Most veil us hairs are soft and downy, sometimes they
become .accelerated meaning they grow longer. Terminal hairs are
dark, course and deep seated in the follicles of yow· skin.
If you have a .hair problem be very careful what you do to lhe hair.
Light hair can be stimulated into dark hair by tweezing, waxing or using
hair removal cre.ams on your body. Waxing is just a .faster way of ·
tweezmg. Even 1f you have dark ha1r and you tweeze, wax or use
creams you're in fqr a nig.ht!'l1~re of hair and skin problems. Tweezing
or hair removal creams wJl11rntate the skin. The only defense the skin
has is to grow more deeper hair and maybe more hair than you had
before. Slop and think about the hair removal. creams . If they are
strong enough to take the hair off your face, what is it doing to your
skin. Creams and tweezing can also lead to Ingrown hairs that are
infected and can scar the face or body. If most of lhe people had the
money they spent .on devices, creams and waxes, they could have
invested it into electrolysis treatments, the only permanent hair
removal method. The devices you buy from magazines or department
stores· do they state lhey are sterilized (meaning germ free)?
As an electrologist I hope 1,this information helps you with your hair
problem. As a compassionate person who had abnormal hair growth
- ~from an adrenal deficieney-at~age~14·that-led 10 a beard;-mustilehe and
sideburns on the face I know exactly how you feel.
If you heve unwanted hair, electrolysis can help rid yourself of the
problem. Our equirment is the best that is available- our treatments
almost painless. I your treatment at this office hurts then you can ·
leave without paying. The old lale of electrolysis no pain, no gain isn't
true. Our electrologists technique and equipment using sterilized
instruments offers you the best treatment In electrolysis today. The
only people thai come to our office have a hair problem. The
electrologists on staff al Candy's Electrolysis have all experienced their
own banle with unwanted hair.

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS
..

6000 Grand Central Ave., Suite 1 -Vienna, W. Va. 26105
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 9 to 7
10% olf.Firsl Office Visil
Pffoce 295-4533/Confidential Complimentary Consultation
Liscensed in Maryland Certified Professional Electroiyllis·

I

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS
2LITER

tbe Healtll Department and a Ohio
State University trained Iamaze
instructor. Torres, who bas a master of science in edlicalioo, a bachelor's degree in nursing, a bachelor's degree in psychology and 30
years nursing experience, bas been
offering Iamaze classes since 1986.
The classes include knowledge
about labor, delivery, anatomy and
physiology, metllods and practice
of relaxation associated to pain
reduction, breathing techniques,

(
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USDA CHOICE

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comfort measurers, knowledge of
bow to reduce tbe fear/paiD cycle,
arid supportive measures for tbe
partner/coach to use, positive attitudes to build regarding cbildbinb
and parenting, and basic parenting
skills.
The classes include short
videos, slides and tapes, as well as
handouts. Additional information ·
may be obtained by calling 9926626. There is a nominal fee for lbe
classes. Medicaid is accepted.

c
3 DIAMOND
PINEAPPLE .

OU Communiversity clas~es scheduled
Space Is still available in several
Communivmity classes including,
Introduction to Touch for Healtll,
Piecing Togetller Personal Family
Historics;and Stress MaoagC1DCDI.
lntroducllon to Toucb for Health
is a simple therapy based on
ancient Cbinese accupressW'I: Jecb·
Diques. By correcting tbe muscular
Imbalances tbat result from poor
posture, stress, illness and injury,
Toucb for Healtll can belp ease

pain and speed healing, Thii wortsbop meets Saturday, Feb. 11,10
a.m. to 6 p.m.
·
Piecing Together Personal Family Histories wiU teach participants
bow to construct a family history
from pbolos, certificates, newspaper clippings, and otller bits and
pieces. Tbls worksbop meets
Wednesday, Feb. 22, from 7 to 9
p.m.
Stress Management, a new

Beat of the Bend .. ~

worksbop, will teach basic concepts about stress and bow the
body responds to stress. Partici·
pants will also evaluate possible
sources of stress in their lives,
practice a variety of relaxation
tecbniques and develop a personalized stress management plan. This
workshop meets Saturday, March
4, from 1 to.S p.m.
For more information &lt;I' to register for tllese or olber Communiversily workshops offered by Obio
University contact tile Office of
Continuing Education at 593-1770
or loll-free in Obio at 1-800-336-'
5699.

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OO 2/$)00
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Guthrie marks
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Ollar Good thru February 11 , 1995
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ST'ARKIST
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TUNA

••... ___________ ldrnlt_3.PI!.'~l!.•t.!&gt;rne! ____ ... ______ •
1

If robins, indeed, are harbingers for transplant patients and their
of sJiing, Loretta Beegle says tbal families. Altbougb she is doing
well, it may be sometime before
.
spring is right on top of us.
Loretta bad some 60 robins in Carolyn gets to return to tile borne
her holly tree al .her bome on field.
1
The beilefil is set for Sunday,
Spring Avenue. in Pomeroy TuesFeb. 19, at !be social rooms of lbe
. day morning.
.
By tbe way, Loretta will be · Eagles Club in Pomeroy. There
marking ber 86th birlbday Feb. 17. will be a variety of foods, an auction, raffles and Crossover will be
And sbe' s really goin' strong.
entertaining. The public is invited,
Peroaps, you recently noted an of course.
Anyone wishing more informaobituary 011 Charles Gordon, for.mer resadent wbo died in Columbus tion may call Sandy Butcher at
last montll. The funeral was ban- 949-2902. Also if you are ullable
died by a Columbus funeral bome to attend !be benefit and want 10
11,11d burial was in Meigs County. participate you can send your donaUnfortunately, tbe obituary tion to Sandy· at 45789 State Route
neglected to mention tbat Cbarles' 124, Racine, Obio 45771. Cbeclts
SETH D. GtrriDUE
wife, Alma Lucille Scbaefer Gor- can be made out to tile Carolyn
don, also a former Meigs Countian, Korn Benefit Fund.
bad preceded blm in death in 1985.
Alma was a_ilaughter or tile late
Former resident Olive Weber
Ed~ Scbaefer, local.
will be marking ber !IOib binbday
Sunday at lbe Obio Valley Heallb .
Children of Mrs. Frances Car· Care Center, Route 5, Box 146,
Setb Donald Guthrie, son of
leton, Rose Hill, wut entertain wltb Parkersburg, W. Va. 26101. A Troy and L~ Gulbrie ~f Chester,
an open bouse-reception honoring party open to friends-Including celebrated bis second binbday on
Frances on ber 70tb binbday.
those from Melj!.,COWII -will be_ ll!fl. 20 witll.a party at tile bome of
Tbe-eYent will be frODr2 to 4 - held-Sunday alternoon.
bas parents.
.
·~·
S
turday
Feb
11
at
tile
·
Fo.llowing
a
diooer,
a Ieddy bear
p.m.. wiS a
'
. '
Soutbem Baptist Churcb-tbat's
And a reminder tllat tbe Meigs cake, made by bis aunt Alice
!be one located near lbe Salisbury 'county Diabetes Suppon Network Hawlboroe, was served. Attending
Elementary SChool.
will be meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday ·were his paternal grandparents,
Tbe children .include Jim and in lbe cafeteria of Veterans Memo- Gerald and Juanita Gutbrie; mater·
Mike Carleton, Mary Sheets, Sandy rial Hospital. The session will be nal grandparents, DalreU ,.00 Alice
Needs and Sally Ervin, all of Meigs on foot care with free foot screen- Hawthorne, Jr. and Alice
Cou~uy..Rc!atives and frie~ds are ·,· ings by Erlco Tan, D.P.M . and Is · Hawthorne, Kimberly, Tim and
cocdiall
ted.
· diabe
. Betsy Hawtllocne, Ryan and Dyana
Y rnvt
. open to all people watll
tes as David Hawlbome, Dorolby Hawk,
all of Chester; Bub and Betty
Tbe popular Crossover Band is well as 10 tlleir friends and family. ·
planning a benefit for &lt;;arolyn
One tiling nice about tile cold Stivers, Pomeroy; Joy Swan of ·
Korn, Pomeroy resident wbo westller is tbat you don· t bave to Reectsville; and Seth's sisu:r, Mal·
.
recently underwent a bean trans- make any fashion statement. You lory, tbree.
Olbers calling or sending gifts
plant operation at University Hos- can wear about anything tbat will
pital in Columbus.
. · belp keep you warm. You won't ·and cards were paternal grand·
mother, Cookie Cassady, Paul
~lyn is now living al Unver- " look all tbal great. but no one ca,es.
ferlb House, wbicb is bousiJig near Everyone else Is doing tile same · Gulbrie, South Bethel, New Testa·
tbe bospilal designated e]!clusively .tiling. Do keep smiling.
ment Church.

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KIDNEY BEANS

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JOAN OF
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298 SECOND ST.

an expert, independent organizalion," staled Scanlin. "ACA accred· ·
ilation is ve~y important to our
camp," said Conn L. Drake, Execulive Director. "While tile program
is strictly voluntary, we owe ilto
our campers and parenls to have
!be best pperation lbal we possibly
can bave. ACA accreditation
demonstrates our commitment io
quality camping.'~
. ..Canter's Cave wi!S (oumled in
1950 and is located jUst nortll of
Jackson off of US 35. The cainp is
operational tllrougbout tile year.
Canter's Cave serves 4-H members
from Adams, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Pike,
Scioto, and Vinton counties. In
additiQn lbe facility is available for
rental to otber groups. Over 14,000
people visit Canter's Cave each
year: For more infonnation, please
contact !be camp at6141286-40S8.

A series of six, two bour classc;,s
of prepared cbildbirtll education
classes will be offered from 4:30 to
6:30 p.l)l. at tbe Senior Citizens
conference room. by tbe Meigs
County Healtll Department.
Tbe classes will be beld on
Monday.-Thursday, Feb. 16; Tuesday, Feb. 21; Monday, Feb. 27,
Thursday, March 2, and .Monday,
Marcb6.
Tbe classes will be taught by
Norma Torres, n.urslng director of

on

UNWANTED HAIR _

BapL43

FIRST BlllTHDA Y • VIctort. Zeigler, d•ugbter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Zeigler,
Sumner Road, Pom,roy,
observed her first bb1bday nn
Feb. 1 wllb • party al MeDonaids In Pomeroy.
.

The American Camping Association (ACA) annQunced today
!bat Canter's Cave 4-H Camp bas
received ACA Accredited Camp
status for 1995. The camp was rust
accredited in 1994. Currently, ACA
accreditalioo is beld by 25 percent
of lbe day and resident camps
located · throughout the United
States.
"An independent evaluation by
camp experts in very importl!lll,"
emphasized Margerr Scanlin,
Ed.D., director of ACA s Standards
program. "By being accredited,
Canter's Cave demonstrates tllat
!bey care about lbcir campers and
comply with tbe highest quality
standards designed specifically for
camps.''
·
"Parents expcctlbeir children to
attend accredited schools. Tbey
also deserve a camp experience
lba! Is reyiewed and accredited by

60

P,Ywa7a, Roaorm76 (3
Aoilo 6!, M&lt;WIIO 54
Picteriaatoo f3, Wllttlu Memorial46.
Pitdoa 7.5,'New 801toa 74
Raciu Sol.lthml 63. ReodniiiCI! Eul·
ern .59
Reyaoldabura 66, Fnaklia Hta. 61 .

~2

. STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10 PM .

Canter's Cave earns
accredited .camp status

Childbirth education classes offered

PalocsYIIIe Hiinrey II, JdfefiOQ Art!:a

Miller 68, Trimble 57

Mioera.l Rid&amp;e 63, Lowell 'Aile 61 (aT)
MiaCon170, S. Web11erl0
Milliuinawa Vat 72, Uilioll City,lnd.

I

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

year' s end.
Tbe company cbarges a 1.2 per·
cent commission for processing
coins at its warehouse in Buffalo,
and S percent for its self-operated
macbines. The privately beld company has declined to di~close its
profits.
The company bas expanded to
Rocbester and Albany,, N.Y., and
licensed its uame and equipment to
a California group tllat opened a
coin-processing center in Los
Angeles last year.
Large vendors often bave tlleir
own coin-processing setups, but
small .ones could make good use of
services like Continental Coin's,
said, Tun Sanford. executive editCI
or Vending Times, a trade journal
tbal estimates Americans spent $28
billion in vending machines last
year.

56
· Ollawalllllo91,MiumoeVII.60
Poodua Fraou:a.;aa 66, Normuo&lt;ly 31.

.

Mot-•

Bernard 48
Cio. Oat Hills 7.5, Cia. Priace.ton SS
Cin. Summit Cou11tty Day 60, Batnia

Friday February I 0, 1995
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy .
9:00·Noon

I

n.

Cin. LaSalle I.S, Hamiltoa Bldia 6S
Cia. McNicholu 60, Cio. Roaer &amp;acoo S7
Cio. N. Co~leae Hill 63, Cia. Sl.

~· HEARING AID CENTER

Joim Olean 66, Slla'idE 57
K.allol!o 73, Van Bona 61
KCIII:on 61, Adl36
Keeterloa Fairmont 8.5, W. C.rollton

LaBrae 72, Brookfield 49
Lakeview 69, Hubblrd 66
!.Ia-. 42. WIIWYille S. )9
l...ebaaon 77, Carlil.le 6S
L.eetouia91, Southern Local90 (OT)
Leipolcl&amp;, Miller Cioy l7 (2 OT)
a..-ee (Mido.) Cor. 72, To!. Chri,.
diD .53
Uctina Co. Cbr. Aa~. 57, UaeoiD·
B... ll
lbboa Columbiana Creotvlew 4l
Lopa 64, O..hire River Val. 63
LouiiYille 67, W. Brtacb S1
Louinillo Aquiau 69, O•Dcld Hll.
Trinity 5S
Madiloo 73, Alhtabula Harbor 66
61, Snbural4
ManJneld St. Pcten 13, Col. Tree or

will be aiven in M~it•LGallia ~o~m

Othert rHct"IRf: 11 or •nre ~nb:
'11-:. NevrPhiladelptiia T111carawu Cent

(I ), Spring.field Cat h. Ce11ttal 21 . 14M'IIIeraport 20. I 5-Columbua Grove 14.

Ho..tand67, Po!Oild62

1DdluCreet7l,UibooDoaver53 .

••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

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C•lh. •9.· I 2 (ti•)· PORTSMO\ml EAST

recmifta U or .....-. polal~a
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Cllrard U, Slnllhrn 12
GleDVille 102, Shaw .58
Chham 75, MUtoa-Uaion 4-4
6-1, Naroood 62

Hilbbofo 64. Wsttm Brown 62

Ccdlnille S7, SpriDJ. Shawnee 56

p. IS -Heath 12.

Dl•lslon IV

I'll.

Ium

Ium

Dl•lslon Ill

r...

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Albchl n , Oallipoli1 45

Helllhy 47

11-Belley 19. 12 (liereanraeld (I), OAL·
UPOUS OAlliA ACi\DEMY 18 . 14
(tie)-Jeffenon Area, Madison 13. 16-Carrolltoo 12.

60

Aurono82,lulbcnD W. 70
Bamaville 78, Bdl. lire St I eliDa j!j;
Btavetcr'eek 100, Day. Belmoot 61
D&lt;dlord, Mkh. 63, Fo""'ria 37
Bellaire 71, Mll'tin1 Ferry 55
Belpre 83, Vinton Co. 4i
Benjamin Lopq 63, Trt.I.SO
Berllo Center Wealeu Reaerve 72,
MllhewJ S6
.
Bowlin1 Oret.D S7,,MIIIbury Lab Sl
DuckeyeTrail8l.IDdloo Vll.7&amp;
Canal Puhon Northweat 941 Clrrolltoa
62
Caotoo S. 66, MiaCIIVI49
Canton Timiea 66, W001ter .S2

48

~~~~:;~Folr!leld

Oeoen39,
Oeoraetowa

GariWIY

Aahtablda Edpwood 69, Alhtallula Sl.
.lolul66

9-llo .... 16-2 ................... ..................... 31
10-W. .aw River View 14·2 ................. 25
points:

%, Fllher Cath.

Anthony Wayne 45, Holl•od Sprioa.

39

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li.a

Amar~da-Cie•creei

43

6-AYOD l...aie 14·2 .... .............. ...............99
7-Cu.lotl Cent Cath. 14-1 ........ :...:.......92
8-Chesterland W. Oeauga I S· I ............. 79

· Otlten reCti'Yint ll or •ort

Odten recmlna 11 or •or• PoJ,nu:
ll.Cin. Oak Hil11 27. J2·Tol. CeDI. Cath.
(I) 26. 13·Lakewoo4 18. 14-Airoo Elh:l
13.15-LOOAN 12.
'

.

I'll.

Is&amp;

ClrcJOD Clay ~Sj, ~- Rou 6U
Oreaon Striteh 72, Whiteford, Micb.

Atroa Garfidd 45, Atroo N. 42
Alliance 85, N. Canto~ 6..

The Daily Sentinei--Page-7

Lpose change: Company eases
headache of anloading coins

Marauders win •••

(Continued from Page 4)_:· :;-;:-:--;:::-:::-::;:-::-;==:--:-:--:---:--:-:--:. _·--::-:---:-:---:----:-----:-------------,-------Point was able to get back into the The game was really lost in the first
lead got down to four before Cass Stanley followed with a tip-in for the charity stripe, while Abbott
' The win raises Meigs' record to
game by scoring 23 points in the third quarter," Coach Barnette said.'
Cleland made two free throws at.the Meigs to push the lead to 58-55, On made,one of two tries to put the Big 6-8 on the season. The Marauders
quaner, but it was the Big Blac ks'
Point started to pick up the pace
end of the third for a 54-48' lead.
the second occasion it was Abbon. Blacks away.
now travel lo Belpre . on Friday
.inability to stop Meigs that eventu- offensively in the second half, but
Point cut the lead to three on three hilling a baby hook shot to keep the
"We're extremely happy with night.
ally did Point in.
Meigs scored on its first four posdifferent occasions. Meigs would- lead at five. And, finally after Dorsey this win ," Skinner said. "We cerPoint Pleasant falls to 8·7. The
"Acouple of times we got the lead sessions of the third quarter to keep
n'tlet it get any closer though. With fed Oliver for a layup at the I: 15 tainly don't consider Point an auto· Big Blacks will also take to ihe road
down to three, but it seemed like its dmi&amp;le digit margin intact. Confive minutes left in the fourth. Matt mark it was free throw shooling.time malic, and we're happy to get a win Friday. They have a rematch with
Wassel lobbed a pa'5 over-ihe zone for the Marauders.
against~ team of this caliber."
that's when we'd either turn the ball secutivc three-pointers by Gilley and
Wahama in Mason.
'
Dorsey cut the lead to seven. The
Mark Oliver who made it 56-53.
Ewin~ made both of his tries from
over or they'd get another basket.

Pomeroy-ftoUddleport, Ohio

•

•

s

90

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

weitne.day, February a, 1995

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Father holds grudge against son for aired griev~nces
Ann
.;:e ::::to;.
Landers

His father, however, was angry and without his only child.
upset and now his very little
Please advise. Everyone says it is
communication with our son. John not my business including John _
has made thrceauempts togetbaclc COLORADO SPRINGS HEARr·
into his father's life, but his fatlt!2' has ACHE
not responded. He did, however,
DEAR COLORADO SPRINGS· !
remembcr1olm'~bir1hday. .
believe John's rather should
John's cancer IS back. He ts once .informed ot his son's physical
again facing major chemotherapy condition.
and, this time, radiation therapy with
Drop him a brief note, and let the
~e hopes .of stopping this aw.ful chips fall where they may. courae,
dtseaae. His father knows nothing a n:union would be wonderful but
.of this. Ann, my heart breaks don't push it.
'
because I k~ow ther !ove ~ne
pear Aan Landers: Rcce~tly, a
another and hu father 15 JUst bemg close relative drove 2,000 mtlcs to
stubborn.
visit me and other relatives in our
My soncoulddie,and,ldon'twant town. "Alma" showed up in the wee
this to .end in .complete tragedy -· hours, which didn't bother me. What
John wtthoot hts father, and a father did bother me was that she brought

be

A•• Landen:
diagnosed with cancer in
Dear

son was

of 1993. "John's" cancer responded
well to treatment. During his
treatment, he aired 10me grievances
with me iitd his father that.be had
held bllck for many years.
His father and I arc divorced. John
tslked to each of us separately. I
undenlood whal John was saying and
felt his openness was a good thing.

or

her thre~ cats w lthout ask ing· in
advance tfwe cared.
My husband and I have animals,
and we like animals, but we do not
keep them in the ·house. We offcml
to put her cats up.in the garage, but
Alma .was horrified by the
suggestiOn. Needless to say, there
were some hard feelings.
Ann, P!e- teD ~pi~ with pelS
not to bring them unmvtted to the
homes of others. No maucr how close
you may think YO!II'ticsarc, it is very
bad .man~ers and can ~age .the
relabOOshtp. If the pets cant stay ma
kennel, the owners should~ home
with them.-- PINE BLUFF,.(RK.
J?~A~ ~INE BLUFF: In ~y
optnton, tits extremely rude to bring

pets without asking if they are
welcome. If you ~another
10 solidtfy your postbon, you ve
mine.
• 7 and
Dear Ann Landers: I am I
very close to my dad. My mother
c~ICCI .on .hi~ for 20 Y~ ~d
davorced ham 10 order 10 ~,l
"Harry," the last.guy she went Wt •
She and Harry d!~ afltl only a
month. Now she 1 trymg 10 get Dad
baclc.
I know Dad doesn't lov:Cn;;:~
anymore. He 10=~ orked
to get back the
.
w.
hard for. I don't~ this a g
enough n;ason to reunttc. I ~ow
Mom wont be ttue ~Dad. Shell be
runmng around :wuh other men .

0:

crs in the world, a computer normally reserved for professional scienlists and engineers. Tbc students
~ill have an opp.orluoity to use
bigh-endworkslalioosandproduce
state of~ an graphics and vis~tzatio.n.s m fields such as pbystcs,
tbeDUstry, and computer setence.
"Last year w~ a tremendous
success for the Oh10 Supercompuler Center's student program," said

·

.

rr:

crri

DU'I
IPPLIUCB
SBRIICB

DEARGIRL:ThisisbetMlen~

momanddad.Theyjustmightmakc
this time. I suggest that you
1
~YO
B
~ ,;a~ have qwstioiiS abolllru,
bill0no one 10 rallr.ro? AM l.tuttkr(
boo/del "SeJC and the 'Ieelt-Ager.• il
frank.~ 10 the poillt. SeNJ a ~elf­
addressed, long, bMsiness-ri:t

·

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education regular meeting Wednesday, 7 p.m. in the board
meeting room, second floor of
Pomeroy Municipal Building.

'

.

LEGAL

THANK YOU
I would like to
expre11 my heanten thanks to Mr. &amp;
Mrs. Gary Plumlner,
the doctor~ &amp;
nurses at Camdan
Clark &amp; St. Mary's
Hospital, Rev. John
Merrllle, Rev. Roy
McCilrty, family,
friends, neighbors,
co-workers, Mr. &amp;
Mrs. Larry Repp
and Michael Bailey
for their concern,
gifts, cards, vlalte,
phone calla 'and
prayers, while I was
a heart surgery
patient. May God
richly ble.. you.
Lewis Hudson

d

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 6 p.m., Grace Episcopal

TuPPERS PLAINS -Veterans
of Foreign Wars, Post 9053, Thursday, 7:30p.m: at post home.

MIDDLEPORT - . Bosworth
Council 46, .work in the S.E.M.
Degree Friday, 7:30, Middlepon
Masonic Temple.

SATURDAY
FAMU.Y TO PERFORM - The Siarlllt Family will •lag 6
·POMEROY - The Rock
BURLINGHAM - BuirlingSprings Grange wiU meet Thursday . ham Modem Woodmen, potluck at ~~~~::;.,~alttbe Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene. H•lllng fr••ml
the Sigrist liunlly performs and records across the CO\tn·l
at 7:30p.m. at the haU
6:30 Saturday night at Woodmen's I '
The
pul~llc
Is Invited lo attend the perfonnance.
hall. Everyine welcome. Door
FRIDAY
prizes 10 be awarded.

·Study: Federal weight guidelines are too lenient making for unhealthy hearts
:By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
fessionals and the general public," to 25 pounds in early to middle
:AP Medical Writer
. said Dr. JoAnn E. Manson, co- adulthood had a 65 pen:eot greater
· .CHICAGO (AP) - Lenient · director of women's health at .Har- risk than women wbo gained fewer
·federal weight guideli~es are vard-affiliated Brigbam and than 10 pounds, Manson said.
encouraging IJ!CO and women to be Women's Hospital in Boston.
"I don".t want to be scaring peotoo overweight for their own good,
:·Th~re's a misc~m~eptlon that pie with these findings, but we
researchers say.
wetght ts .a cosmettc tssue rather bave ~overly complacent about ·
A study of more than 115,000 tban a beallh issue," she said . obesity and weight gain in adults,"
nurses found that middle-aged ''Tbe·truth is that overweight is. sbe said.
·
women should be far leaner than very much a beallh issue."
She recommended increasing
the standard recommendations in
Women of averag~ weight had physical activity, lowering the fat
order 10 have healthy hearts, with about a 50 percent btgher nsk of content and calorie content Of the
even a tO-pound change making a having a hean auack than women diet and eating more frui~. vegeta·
:significant difference in risk.
wbo weighed 15 peralnl less than . bles and grains.
· ''There's a complacency about the U.S. average, the s~y f~und.
lnaeases in body fat are .linked
And WOOlen who gained JUSt 15 With inco:ascs in the risk of high
:overweight among both bealth pro· ·

blood pressure, abnormal blood
cholesterol levels, .heart attacks,
strokes and some cancers, including colon, breast, ovarian, uterine,
and in men. prostate.
. "We found that about 40 percent of all heart attacks that occur
in middle-aged women are due to
overweigh~" Manson said. Similar
results are round in men, she said.
The study, publisbed in today's
issue of The Jouroal of tbc Amcri·
can Medical Association, found
that a 5-foot-6-inch woman had the
lowest risk if sbc weighed less than
130 pounds.

· Atlhe same heigh~ a weigbt of
130 to 142 potmds carried about a
· 20 percent higher risk. At 142 to
155 pounds, it was about 50 percent higher; at 155 to 180 pounds,
it was about double; and at more
than 180 pounds, it was about3 112
limes higher than for tbe 130pound woman.
In 1990; the federal government
revised its guidelines upward for
desirable weights, saying Americans over ,age 35 could !xi significantly heavier than under 1985
guidelines.
The 1990 guidelines say a 5-

foot-6-inch wo~an should weigh
between 130 pounds and 167
pounds. Under the 1985 Sian~,
the same woman was to wetgh
between I 18 pounds and 148
pounds..
.
.
. The mcrcase was based. on ltfe
tnsurance data that fat led to
account for the fact that many lean
people were smokers or bad life·
sbortening ~lo~sses, ~anson said.
Tbe gutdehnes wtU be revised
a~ru~ by lh~ end of the year, and
wtll tnclude mput. fro~ the Harvard
researchers, satd B til Grigg, a
spokesman for
U.S. Dermriinenl
ofHealth

CU"IITII SEitVICE

• Room Additions
• New Garages
. • Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
·
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C . YOUNG Ill

llda on a anow blade
which lila on • ttvu quarter
or one ton truck will be
- - b y Rutland VIllage
Council, Rutland, until noon
Feb. 14. Council
raurvea the rtght to reJect
any and aa blda.

992·292"( 992-5914

(No Sunday Calls)

I.

~u'/1 be (looting on o cloud

with
the buys you'll find tn the.
closslfleds.

Public Notl~

Public NotiCe
NOTICE TO VEHICLE
DEALERS

l ..ltd

bide lor the
purclleu of a mobile m1111
dellveoy type vehlole wiH be
r,pelved by the Mtlge
County Commtaalonara 11
lhelr offiCt, COUrthOUie,
Second · Sltttt, Pomeroy,
Ohio 4578t until 10:00 ~:m.
Feb. 24, t.-s 11 1:00 p.m.
when blda will be opened
end r11d eloud lor the

lalowl,·
'"Hot

hot". or approved

equlveltnt, dellveoy vehicle
capeble of h•ylng
refrla•r•tlon end oven

thta vehicle may be directed
to C. Suean Oliver, Mtlga
County Council on Aging
(&amp;14)
112·21&amp;1 .
Speclflcatlona may be
obtained from the . Melga
County. Commt11lonera
offici, Cour1houae, Second
StrHI, Pomeroy, Ohio 45781
(11 4) 182-2815. Bldlllr mull
uulhtlr own bid form. Blda
ahall be ...ltd and marked
ae "Bid lor Delivery
Vehicle" end mailed or
de live red
lo
I he
Commlaitonera office by.
tlttllfo,....ld dale and lime.
Any contract awerded
under thle lnvltetlon tor bide
Ia expected Ia be lunded by
I
Ohio

Family·
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

•

Department of Development
Community Development
Block · Grent Program.
Neither the United Stetea
now eny of ha Dlptlrtmenta,
Agenclee, or employeea le,
or will be, • pert or thle
lnvltellon tor bide or· any
reeulllng contrect.
The Malga County
Commtealonert r-rv• the
rtghtto eccept or reject eny
or all bide and/or any port

'

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$fl,188**

No Doc Fees Detrveroo·

purpoll. Qlorta Klota, Clerk
!!l•tae county
Commllllonert
(2) 8, 15; 2TC

ociety
scrapbook
ALFRED NEWS NOTES
Services at the Alfred United
Methodist Church were canceled
Jin. 22 ad 29 due to the weather:
Roberta and Sherman Hender•
son, John Taylor, and Thelma Hen,

derson.

Since the laser light Is aimed
Imogene and Le~ter Keat~n
very ...-~-ly the sunounding tis- attended the funeral of Imogene s
~S: ~It ~~w4 sue ie~j;s'much Jess damage sister, Cleora Soutball at
-.us a laaer &amp;UCb .a good treat- than it would with other mC?thods ~ Qarl!:Jlon, W.Va. Mrs. Southall
mcln for w.u?
used 10 destroy skin cells. It JS also was 88.
Answer: Warts arc a very com- hot enough to bum closed the ends
. Sunday guests. of Thelma Henman
The arc an iofec- of the small blood vessels tbat are de.rson were Lmda and Da-.:e
tloo caused by the
papWo- _ present In the skin. In practical Wi!Uams, Belpre; Kathy and Stacte
111/l v1rua The virus _ by taking terms, you can think of tbc laser as Watson, Janet Calaw:f., Roger and
clt!tqe the growth or the ceUa It boiling away lhe wan-infected cells Jason Pbilllps, allloc ·
.
baa invaded_ t:rcatel tbc rough, without doing much damage to the
Janet Calaw!ly was an ovenught
failed Irregular skin characteristic healthy cells in lbe neighborhood.
gqest of Stacte Watso,.. Norma
dfawan.
·
Actually, the carbon dioxide Jean and Gcral~ Swanz were SunThe body's defense · syatem laser is a fancy "high-tecb" tool for day ~l!Csts of Ntne Robinson. They
often Identifies the wart as ao removins warts that doesn't wolk ~u'd:tted Leola and Otto Swartz at
lafeclion and gets rid of it within a any bctler than the less glamorous
·
year or two Those wbodoo't want ·methods of freezins. buroiog, or
~ose Carr is !n .a anesvll1e
10 wait for tbc Wilt 10 "~away" or cuttins them out with a knife and nursmg home and ts ~r beal~.
w1to faJllo tbc unluckY 20 percc:ul scissors. There are ?lher lasers,
Sunday guests ofand;~~~~
tliat don't have natural healing bowever, that arc quue unique in ~t.~W Jud~ Va
regardless of how Ions they walt, tbe ben.efits lhey offer those with 0
e s, · ·
w(II need to bave some type or skin problems.
·
treatment to destroy the wartArgon lasers and tuned dye
infected skin.
.
lasers can JXO(Iuce light iD tbc blue. SENIOR SAINTS
· A lucr produces very Intense green color. This imparts SIJ!liC spe- .
The Senior Saints of Rutland
llabt tbatls made up ot only one clal advantages to thetr use, Cburcb of God met ~lly at the
color. Sunlisbt, by contrast,' is. ·. because these colors penetrate the church. The meeting opened with
lnlde up of light of many diffmnt skin fairly weU but are absorbed by group reading or "Oh, LQrd, May
colors. Io.tccholcal )argon, Ibis blood aod blood colored tissue. We Come Togetbcr in Unity."
meatis that laser llghtJS of a single This l)lllll:es 11 JX!Ssible to trelit.!'Je
Bob Eads had the opening
Wlveteoslh.
cosmetically disfiguring port-wme prayer and Jackie Preece bad a
• This Is Important because IIIJIIIC stalns and other vascular lesions of poem. There was a readit)g, "Wbat
wavelengths peoetrate the skin with tbc skin thai could not be achieved . is a Saint" by M~ Lambert, and a
little difficulty, ,wbile others arc in any other way. Tbc argon laser is ~oem. "Gelling Old" by Chester
absorbed by or reflected from it. also very good at reducing the butexton.
using a laser ot the right wave- bous red nose that occurs in acne
During the business meeting
fcqth a doctor can selectively kill rosacea.
·
there was a discussion.. on going 10
Mrt clamqcd skin ..To beucr WusA laser 1s a very special tool that different place of entertaiiUIIent this
trale Ibis point, let's loOk at two call be of some help in treating Skin spring and suminer.
specifiC examples used to treat skin problems. SometlmesQas in the
Tbc com bread and bean dinner
dilordcnQcarbon dioxide luen case of wart treatmentQa laser is was success and the coordinator
alld argon lasers.
often used simply 'because it is thanks everyone for tbelr belp .
Carbon dioxide lasers create new not because it is necessarily ltefreshments were served.
lbeir liabt in tbc Invisible infrared beucr. In other diseases it has
Allendlng were Belly l(lient,
color. 'll!ls parlicular wavelength unique and desirable features that Nellie Hatfield, Birdie Jfysell,
of light Is absorbed by water. In justify the expense of Its usc.
Rena Walker, Luella Kipg, Jackie
modlcal uses tbc lasctslrikes 'tis''Family Medldne"ll • weekly Preece , Mary Romains, Alice
sue, sucb IS a wart, wit~ sucb column. To submit questions, Kirchen, Geraldine Sexton, Tammy
ill~nsity that it almost instantly
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., ·Sears, Ernest Lambert, Bob Eads,
hrals the water within the cc11 until Ohio UniYenlly College of Osteo- Homer Preece, Chester Sexto'n.
It explodes In 1 cloud or steam and pallilc Medldne, Groo...~r Hall, Mrs. Preece is the coordinator.
bnltc:li cell ftagments.
.
Athe111, Ohio 45701.
Qoeslloo: My. girlfriend had a
· o..-... off h ~ t
tl

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• Taxes. Tags. Tfle Fees AJtra. Aebale llltluded in Mle Pflte of new vel'liOe Uted where a~. On approwe~ credit. Not responlible lor ·~ amn.

•

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Racine UMWholds pledge service

• Wol EQ\Jilped!

.

~LQve

In Al:tlon" was the theme
tbc pledge service presented by
. Eta Mae Hill at tbc January meet. lag of the Racine United Methodist
W'Odletl beld at the dturdl.
Tbe proaram focused on missions and used ICI'iplure from L
Jolto. Pledge cards were distributed
for memben to make their annual
pledge for mlslioo wort. The worilbip center rex: tbc service featured
candles, a Bible, flowers and the
olfering baltel Mn. Hill read and
dbc:usscd several stories. Readers
who llllisted her were Alice Wolfe,
Cbris Hill, Margie Wcs~ Lee. Lee,
Kay Spencer and Lois Bell . The
doling prayer was given by Lois
Bell.
.
Lee Lee presided at the business
Jlleetlng which opened w ilh the
UMW Sriose repeated by the
1roup.
· s Hill. saYe ~ secre·
.tary' s repon and correspondence

BRAND NEW
'95CHEVY
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Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
.
Sunday: Noon • &amp; pm

•
•

~

HAULING

One mile out
143 from Rl. 7
Tues. • Wed. - Fri. • Sal.

Limestone

1-6

was read from the Meigs County' ~goal again this year.
Human Services Department, Good
At the annual meeting of the
works Inc., Red lJird Mission, Women's Division General Board
Mn.
and LucUie Cardone. In of Global Ministries, plans
·
the absellce of Clara Mailr Sargen~ approved for a United Methodist
the treasurer's report was given by Women's
Eaa Mae Hill. The penny fund was membership campaign geared to
coUeetcd and sick calls listed.
increase membership in each disThe prayer . chain list w~s . tricl by 10 percent each year. .
revised for 1995 ·and new prayer
The "don't toss it out" project
parmer names were drawn . Karen . will end on Feb. 28 so all items
Walker wUI prepare the new list.
should be brought to tbC cburch by
Fruit baskets will be delivered next meeting night. Sewing and
to shu tins before Valentine Day. cutting rags for rugs .is continuing
Margie West will chair the remem- at the church every Monday at 9:30
brance ~ject. A gift of undesig- a.m. .
Refreshments were served by
nated gtving wiU be sent to former
member, Mariam Bell who has Lois Bell. Get-well cards were
moved to West.:rviUe. It is the spe- signed ily members.
cia! mission recognition gold oval
Next meeting was set for Feb.
pin with a cross and a certirtcate.
27 at7:30 p.m. at the cburcb. Meet· ·
Mn. Lee advised members that · mgs are open to all cburcb women.
tbc unit 'achieved five star rating for Alice Wolfe .will bave the progr.un .
1994 arid will be working toward

Lee

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·
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8. Replace filter bag

PubliC Notice

oi

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2/12192/tfn

992·2060

Ohio University
. College of Osteopathic Medicine

aflliciwa.

614-992-7643

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(2) 3. I, 13; 3TC

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
. Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy, Ohio
'

· Vacuum Cleaner Service Special :

BISSELL BUILDER., INC.

992-6215

JJ~~::~~FT

5

0 62

TO lilt'S

10111fl1n

Sen. Long. "Students accepted into y ·MP supercomputer," added Sen.
tile program will learn to use a Long.
supercomputer, gain experience
The supercomputer program is
working on a o:searcb team and limited 10 15 stodents. Selection is
learn bow supercomputers arc based on. academic credentials,
impacting scien~es, engineering, • teacher recommendation , and
and the ~· Thts ts an ~xcellent response 10 the problem solving
opponumty for students mrercstcd section of the application. For addiin high technology_. compu!trs, sci- lion information students may cooence, or mathematiCS to gam hands tact the OSU Summer Institute
on experience with Ohio's C:RAY (614)0292-8215 or Sen. Long';
ofrtce, (614)446-8156.

Church.

Used Applla•ces
· for Sale
Call
614·992·5515

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

C
----~t;Jmmun1ty
calen ar----- ~
The Community Calendar Is ·
: published as a free service to ·
: non-pront aroups wishing to
· announce meeting and spec:lal
: events. The calendn Is not
: des'l11ned io promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
· ·are printed as space permits and ·
cannot he guaranteed to run a
· speclfk: number of days.

For IIIMalor
lra•ds

Your.Message Can
Be Seen Here!

tnvelopetvtda checlr.orr~~~~MyOI!itr
for $3 75 (rltis includes posrage tWI
handlin )ro·TeeM,cloAMLtutdtrs
PO. Bo~11S62,Citicago,/U. 6Q61J:
5 . (In CIUIQda, Mnd $4.5 .)

Fami affair--

OSU offers summer Supercomputer program
sen. Jan Michael LQng (0-Circleville) bas announced that. the
Ohio State University will offer 15
students from ~~ an opportunity
to work on Obto s CRAY Y-MP
supercomputer.
The OSU Summer Institute
Supercomputer Program will give
lhese students a rar~ cha~ce lo
. spend two weets working With one
: of the most powerful supercomput-

w•~:
you 10 help me
SllllighiCIIoutDid'sllfe.lpilniO&amp;ioe
h'm our column 10 re8d, 10 please
hi
-- TEEN-AGE GIRL NO
NO STATB
'

CONSTRUCTION
ltu1o [o m Building I Rtmodtllngl

•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
•Siding
• Roofing ·
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
992-5535

IICIII'IIPPLIIICI
IIDICI

ofactory Authorized
&amp; 5ervlco

•All Mlkat '42 Yeara
ofeot Relleble Service

-Microwavaa •Diapoaale

•Thanka Melgo &amp;

Surrounding Ara111
(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 12114/Hn

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-3879

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
'Office Houra: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alil.m. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Wlndowa, Blown
lnaulallon, Storm
Door8, Storm
Wlndowa, (;aragea.
Froo Estimates

7122/94

(Lime Slone Low Ral11)

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

WICKS
·HAULING
(Speelllze In driveway
·apreadlng)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
· Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

H. 8 J. Allft
PAINt'INO
c,Dewhto
•• h '' • Run
w. Fu
''..
Road

"You
32361

Long Bottom, OH. 45743
, Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Sleet

ug.:~A·~~~~~·

John·Krlder
614•843-5192
Harold Pe,oon •
614-843-5285

50% off

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic lanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental111tn.
Job altea ' Camp Sites ' Family Reunions a Parties
NOW OFFER IN G GENERAL HAULING

Llmaatone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A · 1 TOP SOIL FOR SA LE

Llconood &amp; Bondld 20

. It

992·3954
Enwrg c ncy Phont' 9B5 -J4 1A

",

Kenny's Auto Rental ~ · ·

Kenny's is the place to co111e ~
when you need a car rental. :
·

Kenny's Auto Center
1_800 _486_1500
264 Upper Rrver Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
,_

MORRISON~S

"In Stock"

Oregon Chain Saw Bare

949·2804
Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

BEA,IIG 8
. EPA and RSES Certified

Your authorized
American Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Available
Call992·7434 for more Information;

·-:

One Step Complete Auto Body Rep1lr

PRICISION AUTOMOTIVE

. Come Tan With
MeAt

ChUck StoHs
614-992-6223
· Free EstimatQs
Insurance Work Welcome

'34110 Sugar Run Rd.

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

CALIFORNIA T'•N·
11 s·
Long Bottom, OH. 45763

) 5Sessions SJ500
All Lotions Y2 OH
949·2823

Apanment
for Rent

1 31 1

mo.

WATERS"EDGE .APARTMI:NTS
Syracuse, Ohio
Now avallble FmHA One BR apts.
Senior, Dlsabled,-Handlcapped,
Basic monthiV Reni $269.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, AJC on -site laundry,
Community Room, Management,
MaintenanCe provided
SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL
614·992-6419 TOO

til

MODERN $ANI'fi!ION

·we·Have Cars and Vans/

Parto &amp; Service on Moat·
Makoa Racine Mower
Clinic

L-----==='120105=~-====
44

.

992-4119 AITromm, Ow1er 1·800·291:5600

•Waahera ~ Drvera • Flaftgea
-Diehweehers
-H.W. Heetal'a

•Cuttom Made
•Solid vinyl
replnement
window• ·
•Ftte Estlmtttt
•$200 lnsttlled
Ctll for Dtttllt
•VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

Porto

-Aetrtgeralora •Free••

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEA1S

"We Are Now Open For Business"

The State Certified
Pawn Shop
"Your Neighborhood Lender"
115 W. 2nd St. .- £omeroy, Ohio C .

· Tel. (614) 992-5846
"We U;Jan You Ca$h on Anything of

Value"
. 1-tl-1 mo. pd.

Graded Benefil Whole Life is now aballable. The ·
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no
physical exam and no health questlo.ns asked on
the application. Ages 40·80

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Lila &amp; Accident lne. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45:160

614-843-5264

Equal Housing OpP,ortunity ·

Life • Mcrlicore • Cancer • Fire ·
Health • Accident• Annuit • IRA • Mort a e .

�.,

The Dally Senti

iddleport, Ohio

8, 1995

ALLEYOOP

I

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS
1
·
4
8

Actor Jol1naon
ExponClock
10 TYpo of bod
13 CfrUI tau
14 ... my - gen to me ...
15 lnterm-to

PHILLIP
ALDER

Announcem ents

BEA'ITIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

31 Homes for Sale

44

Announcements

~

lloollo, f28Mio. UUI~Iao Pllld,
814 448 4411 Aftor 7 P.M.

c-

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

w.... a ,...........,.
Sand ~ To: ClA 131, elo
GIIHioolo DoJir Trl-, 121
J:or

• K Q 4 Z
• Q J 6 5
• Q6 3 2

tuMIIIt,

Fumlahed ApartiMIII, 1 a..
room, 007 Second Avenue, CW..

-F.---..
o;na-

.s
-lllt1Mfl14a
...... -

ta~~~a;

Twin Rlvt1rt Tower

• AK1087

lng appllclllono jQ; I br. HOD

aubaldlzed lpt. for ,....., end

hondlcappod.

Third AY..,.., Oolllpolo. OH

:IOU'IIIo

EOH

Furnished
Rooms

-1111·
z:oo p.m.,

Sl-Ing roomo wHri

Giveaway

hook-vpo. Call anor
304·773-IISSI, llaoon WV.

10.Gorllllo To Ohoiiwoy, Call A~
ler I P.M. 114 441 8210.
10

WMic

Male

"Hurry up and sit down ! I'm filling in for

Pelllnge•

.

-1&gt;011.

lt:hlhuohua lllx Pup, To Loving
one of the leads this
. performance ."
Homo Only,
814-:1711'
1457, 814471-2231
13 mlxod brMd . - . . . , - .
11 Help Wanted
• - . old. 114-1112·21131.
g Wanted to Buy
8old port - · -lo. ;;...__...;.....;.;.__;,__;,,:..__
loving pup, 814-912·3123.
Timbo&lt; Woi'Oad, Sol0&lt;:1 And Pol111moboolc~, - ·
Cl•r CuH:Ing Available. Fr.. On ;:::....... - r y . , _
Adonble part Chow pui)DJIM 10 Site E.. lmatn. 20 YNrl Ex•
vo~ good homo only. 304-875- porlonca, 614-367-1!1$8, Or ~14Pan~lmo ooolllon lot
25&lt;1 ovonlngo. 367-7U54.
.liED TECH or LAB TE"" lor
Black • g,.)' alrlp~d· c.t, hu 7
Ill_, Co. WIC lo
Old bullono, coot.... 1ooo, oullldil cal. 311M75-7340.
old liglll.,.lvl""' okllloio, 1110- 1lflcatlono _ . . . of porStar .,., ...... China. llclpanta. For furtt.r lnforma.
•F'foo lo good homo 11111o - Y tu,..,
tumllure, loole or complete ... lion, conl~~et the Muon Countr
8 to 10 wMkl old. found at my ta1oo,
Ooby .MIIdln, 814-082-11141. WtC Otfle1, 304-175-5271 or
hom_•J_ toaD part St. Bernard,
wrfto WIC Dlroctor, llld-Oh)o
" 814·~3445 lhlll' 1:00.
'
Wortod To Buy; Junk Auloo Vallay Holhh Doponmon1, 211
Wl1h Or Wl1- ...._
Call llh St;..., ParUr.bur9t WV
Froo To Good Homo, 2 Femolo UrTJ l.lvoiY. 8Mo38M303.
261()1, or toiOphono -..se-73111.
Puppl~, ::~~borlon Huoky,
Lob, I 4
Aftor 8 P.M.
Wanted To Buy: Standing nm. Sm1ll Local Firm SMkJng Full
ber, 614-~2758 .
· Tlmo /On Coli Cloonlng ooehHolf11"""' Slomooo klttono ond
mothw cat; ateo o• t1bby c:~~t; Top Pr- Paid: All Old U.S. nlclono. lluot lo - b l o ,
A·~ nlibll, Comndltld, WHI-o
014·949-2911.
COin~, Gok:l Rings, Sliver Colna,
To lo Tnll*l. Sand
Ovid Colnw. M.T.S. Coin Shop, lng
R..ume To SCC8 P.O. Box 531,
151 9ocond A - . Galllpollo.
K....,, OH C5M3.
.Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
VEIIliNO: Won, Got Rich
Homo, Call814-4&lt;64175.
6 Lost &amp; Found
Quick. Will Clo1 • Sloody,t:uft
· Prlco To Salt l.f00.a20.-1---120o
&amp;.o.l· lema.. Welman~ner dog,
Cherry Ridge area, If found call
Employment Services 4353.

Rf!.. !J&gt;N,

•-In _.

614-912~158 .

a.....
Lotl'l·

In

.

Rutland ,,.., mile

&amp;14-142·2045,

rowonl.

-w.ould Oallla woman th1t called
Ftld•Y evening callagaln1 collect
after 5:30.
1

l.oat· male chocollte Lab
onowor10 Caooy, lrolndl\&lt; lamHy
pol, a-h su lli!ld'-' · -

114·112·2508,
La.t: lady'• .,.. gtu. ., pink
and

biUii

~nd'Coun

caM,

II.,

..Wird, 114-112-3231.

nur

PorNray,

Loot: llolo Whllo American Ea-

klmo !1&lt;&gt;9 In Tho Mon:omllo
Area. Aewardl 114-251-1808.

Loot: 8111111, Black ub, Vonco
Road, Roc:enlly Beon Spoyod•
Red Cola.r, Annera "Angel
Pate 01e.on, 11..31'f.2510.

18
11

Help Wanted

'::':=-:-..,;,.-,-~_,.-=:.,..,...­

Wanted to Do

-and OIOYo,
-riclocl1od
hot wofor ,._k
In Prano
or~ .• col

m.,;1113,Hpm

-Ia

FREE Jot , _ Only
$1120 ond $114 por mo.
Coll1.-.a7-3231.
NEW BANK AEPOSI Only 4 loftl
- · IIYod In, 304·715-71t1.

51

I .knl L.olo For - . 4 llloo
F""" Hoi- - . t, 114-441-

_,.,Or ·~.fl-sla.

Renta ls

-

horne undor conolrucllon
-.plolo conl1ruc11on In lolu ol
Nnl, lac....t on Mo.- Cntak
Rd. on Cnlb cno1c Rd. 304-5242773.

32.00Grnl,,

Carpot • VInyl In 9- $5.00 Yd
l Up 10 P.n•ma Of Khct.n '
Carpo1
In S1ock.
ovorllollot.n
11 Pol·
tema VInyl
In Stac:IL
Carpo10, 6M-448-JII44.
........ •
........ NTRY FURNITURE
,
Codlr Bod,_ su~o. tm.
Mon. . . Sot!, 181 up. 3po. cu
Tabloo, nt up. 2pe. ~
Room su~., ••· up. Toblo, ~
Chlllro, $141 up, Curto. 4 • I
Drowor Chool.o..$44.111 up. 11111.
AI. 2 Nooth, ..._ 3048-20.
GOOD USED APPLWICES
Waohoro, dryoro, oohlgooot....,,
r o -. suac. Appllo.-_ 711
VIno 91-._Cill814-441-7118, I·
800-41111-34w.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

~:"':.O...S""':. .!S:m=

0322, 3 mlloo ou1 Bulovlllo Ad.
F,.. DoUvory.

42 Mobile Homes

nee:....,

F,..~

~1238.
*""'-•

Dryoro, ~1C. 8

J &amp; D'o AUto Parlll and Salvogo,
buying · wroc~unk aUklo 1:
lruckli. Al8a
tDr ..... 304773-1343or

p-

requiNCI.
re.ume: Box A·l, c1a Pl.
Pl-m Rogll!lor, 200 Moln 91.,

Pl.

wy 25850.

Ma1uro Be-or In Hamo,
F""" 1:30 -4:oo.L.Don Yllrylng,
For Two Small ..mllcfren In -cw.;
lloollo Aroo, -8-7844 CoM

~;~j=;~~f;i;
Elldrtc WhulcMir, Ew....
Jonnlna, b II • Concltlon,
With .... , ~. I7DO.
010114 Ul 11201
, _ f l O I oecf Plck.tJD; f40
~ llollnry, 114-17N71t

~-

57

't

l

Elootrlc furriooo -12111.

AIC Con-

A&amp;l F........._ We buy, AM ond
•, . .
11'11~tMM••hokl tum
Will bUV

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

• 11011

SoOondSI.,~WV. ­
~ Pao-.
'l'7W341.

4 Wly . - . -

,

Plno,

R., IIIII

"""

.......
t..ookL~.
El
Ooodl

ow-. ..-.,...

-,e.._nn

-·--·

114-'Jit2..21D2.

'

.:t:) 00 ...

~

5 ,,

~

1apo, .._

~~

~

I

:104-a11-U11:t

•

•~n.

, ...ldr&gt;llo
- Jr.Olllca,
-flougo.
1:00pm
Frt.eun.
-

.,

l

·-...........

304-171-

UZ1.

Auto Pans &amp;

..i

63

LIYMioclc

76

Accessories

:.:

~

Good Duort•- ,_
......... .,• •1.17.
:::'4:;:lo::l::ol::o'::P::22117S=:::::R:::II~ro~d:.:ll..,llm.=- ~
Nlw11ltllfholl tl ......... wHh • . _ _ . . , 8ZII, ciH ..!
w/IIIMtUN. ktUtld on llol lak 114-ttJ•lQ41.
I
llcl. oil . Crab Coook Ad.

Hay&amp;Graln

___ brick,_ ..........

CloiodOON
Call 114-

24WI21.

•

STRI&lt;£ A8lOW N »£ ~ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP THE CLASSfJEDS.

~~~~1!1
~Prtc~odi"''ll~ow;w;;,;hoto;;iolooi;;O;oo, !
a. Nbul«, Ill 1y- Olarl- .

lng ..... i OIWI*' 814-UI-2nl. ' .'
Johntone TNUMtln4 m And 'i

=

ROBOTMAN

s.r::J..~:ct AloD,
Andc:.h
- And '. •'

Tra

IIWI'I-'!

r ..nam~o.-.

Soul- Plck.Up ~ - . . :
Cabo, Dooro. ,_,. &amp; Moro• ..o
At.o, 4x4 Drlwa Train Parta. I ~
IIHa Soulh Of CloUipollo At Juo. ...,
lion
R1.NUMBER:
7 ' Alit~~i .'::'
PHONE
• ~'

,""

~.
ii,-~~~;;;---~-81
Home

'

-~~~~- ,~

ASTRO · GRAPH

Nlc.ly Fumlahed Apal1ment,
~br, neld to Ubrary, pa~lng ,
c1ntr11 h111, air, reference •

r•

C&amp;C

Apl.

441&amp;-. •h•r·7:ooPM

adve rt isements lor real eState
which Is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
informed that all ctwelllngs
adver11sed In th is newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

looutlful- ~
Ohio Alvor. u-r - · I &amp;*
raorno, I V.i llo1llo, Femll¥

Room, Ell"'" KIID._., Wllh

OWl 11rw And 1'rMtl COrnpeo.
lor. DINna ,._,,
Flnllhed BaniMfll wtlh F8mlly
Room, Roc. R-. i.aiiiWy
Aoorn.L_!"h Dllft fn
F... ...., ln4round Pool Wl1h
Lorgo Dock. hod 4
C. Garoa0 Wl1h Hoot. - L
20 Fruft 1iMo. Blllclc Top 'llrlvo,
looullful undoCiplng, 5 Aoroa,
114-441-1135.

a.-

••

luis.

Vllltaw

M1nor
i nd
Alv•rsta.
Aputm1nta In Middleport. From

==.....;..=--===~ .

82

U32-$355 . Call 11oi-H2-5851.
EOH, .
.
large 2br. ept,, parOally fur·
nlsfied, depoalt r.qulrwt. 304-

Nice 2 br apta, In Pomwoy &amp;
lllddloport, 114-9112-4851.

oloL IIIW8Io1111.

84

F~:;!hod

mobile
town, owrlooldrig rlvor. Dopooll, No Polo,
CA. 114 Cll 8804.
.
Ono bedroom IIA'nlahod apartmonlln lllddloport, call 614-9112·
5304 or 814-448-30111.
S1on-.ood Apartment• are now
accOj)llng appllca11ono ond ron1·
lng aperfmente for elderly and
dl11bll1y, one bedroom. all
•le&lt;:trlc,
61~992·3055,
Stonewood Ap1s., Middleport,
EOH.
~

Pkrnblng &amp;
Heming .

1'1wii_..~Coioln&amp;
..... Milo a And _ 111. Da
C.W'
,Ca:a

675-7783.

Complatly

Homo

-

llalnl... Homo
Repair. for ,_ WI allltle call
Chol, 114 liZ
I
Ron.. TV - . _ . . . _
In , . , . 1110 IIMIIIil
olhor
~
:
. . ,.
-mGOII,WV

$210.00 month.UIIUtln Dd. 120·
Foul1h Ave. G•lllpolla. 1!11~

a~rtm1nta

metal a

12 Afflrmetlve

8 Reaeue

1 mile

'

You'll Come Up Aces With
The Classifieds

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher crvJMograms are created Ifom quot.11toons bwlamoiJ5 peQJJiil , p31t and pr&amp;ee ''
Each letter rn the ctphftr sl 11nds l o• &lt;troolher Today's c!w I eouals G

' D· FISKA

· RE

'
.
VBERM .'

p .

' OFISKA ,
MZFBXK

C DK

w.

CD F C

U B.M M A S R

J N

VJACJS .

JZ · X

·U 'JREJSKA .·

XKWBEEL .

P REVIOU S SOLUliON: "A hung~ people listens not to reason. nor cares lor

juslice. nor is bent by any prayers. - Seneca.
It t 995 by NEA, !nc.

·

.

·e

T:~~;~;~' S&amp;tt~lA-l££trs·
-~~~....;.~.:. ldllod ~. ClAY I. POLlAN
Rearrange letters of
0 four
sc rambled word1

WOlD
lAIII

tht
be·

low 10 form four words

I [)

ELREG

.I IM II L ID yI' .-I~N',
•I L I .I Is I
D N E D

Twooldtlmerswerereminiscingandkeptrelerringtothe 'good
.
. .
. .
ote days'. lthink they long lor the
,.-":"S_U_P_R_U_E_,, ~~~~~~~~~~~cause they were

PR INT NU~BEREO LETT ERS I
IN THE SE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I

EHiclancy, relerence I deposit,

nKHn

1wn

vehicle
36 Up - - good
37 VlneQar

·
5 Spanloh choor
6 Groot
7 Numbero

UNSCRAMBLE LETTE RS TO
GET ANSWER

!

no pets. 304~75-5112.

EHicltincy

8 Pro - (for tho
tlmo being)
10 Map obbr.
11 unroflned

Gulagor

.

11175 Bporto10r, 814-258-41,n

l•utltul thrM bedroom H.U.D.
approved apartments, Pomeroy,
cloM to town ,2 achooll, $335
~o ., 814-il2·5331

Fumlahod

35 Hor

8

•

mila, 13400, ,814-112-1011 bot· 4

Buj or Hil;"'R I..tno Amlquoo,
1124 E. llllln ,.,..,, on AI. 124
Pomoro1. Houro: II.T,W. 10:00
•.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundlor 1:00
.1o 1:00 p.m. 114-1112·2521.

qulrod. H14-485-8804.

Not:S,

Comp le te the chuckfe 'quoted
1 .1•6 I• I• I• 1•7 G) ~'(
follon g on the moSSIMQ WOfdl
L-.:.L~.L.---L,...
\,.--L~..L....J "n" rl,.." ,..lnn f rnm """n No 3 belo w.

74 . Motorcycles
=·n=-=s..
-u"'ki""Kat,..,..._.....:,eao=-.-lod,...,..'"'1200= ~

,.... .._..... •••• ao.

.......
,-.... 'riii
Orondo,

J

~~..lt......-'---~ ! ll[Sb:::::s:d::

BIG NATE

1110 Brarioo, tult41a, Edcle ~

1!."!'....!••· cond., $11,100. -

TIIOI \oE Beli.X::.HT ~ fOP
. ~ m£R, T!V-1 1\
~Ntn.AAD

1113 Chevy Fun Size 20 llll•i!
4x4, JIG, 4 Spood,
WhHII, 8od
Excallart Cond~..... 11.1
'
...... t4,710, 114-44W781 , ... ~

u-, -

,.

··-

I'Po!&gt;T~ ~ , nlf.t.l ~.

1111 Cllovy 112 lon 4a4, v~, •
,

•Annr......_
ad

(.()f'ftf. ~ ...

.uto. cruiM. air, tilt. AIM=• •

S.m k:wv. .

Snaaned fh a

Ft~T }I( e.ooGf\T ~

n

Wklnda.

Romlnalon 1110 Rlbbod' lonot, .I -.
No Dvwr ""-- .,.._
14Q, lol on I A.ll. -1 P.ll.

- :I04-2IWI88.
blllloo .... $10.

C.OF.P

,.BORN LOSER

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

F-.60::1""

410 · lniom II Ill WltWIIo hoy

.
•
otw. •
A~
And
rw. All Au andllloned
Ancl llounnl- ttOO And Up,
Wll Dlftvwr. ...........

~

~

.220o

cellent play: He ducked the club ·in both
hands. Now he had the rest of the tricks
el(cepl one, ideal for a squeeze.
West ccntinued with his second club.
Declarer won with his ace, ruffed hi s
last spade in the dummy and ran atl his
trumps. In the end·position, the dummy
had four hearts and South held the A·6
of hearts and two tow clubs. But which
four card s could East kee p? He
couldn't relain ~oth the club king and
four hearts. He had been squeezed.
If Teltscher plays with this level of
skill and imagination at the age of 14,
imagine what he will .be doing in anoth·
er Io or 20 years .
Phillip Alder's new book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
a u lographed upon request, for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Ro~lyn
Ht s, N¥1 1517-0169.
·

MEGA·

'71 Chovy :1110 4114 Pickup, 110'-tiT_O&lt;_PI, U.. llrea:,
080 114-31HI1t ;
With
lillY '11 TOfoll 4WD plokup, $1000, .,
...... ' . . - .
Condlo

::,'!!eo

........
•.. c

:JOC-81~7~

At trick two, Teltscher made a n ex-

I
~ .

11:11 1112 Chev. . PickuP ...,. •••••~
Sapd.'- '!:-411 _ II,DOOinl., loodod.

·~._!tl!!lollo48,:tt:

Wlncll ·-

··~

&amp; ERNEST

~

ion, SIOOO, 114-

1181 · cr.vv iltvondo euoton
INCk-=llonl conclllon, muol

lion; . . Ford - - Wl1h • Ill.
Bo- ...'100. -

:,:!:"'~-~

20411.

61 Fsnn Equipment
1171 II Flit-Alii an eo. I

Gl'lcloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
This newspaper will not
• knowllngly accept

67~1333

==
..

Fell ill Su ppli es
&amp; Livestock

u.

=

~~117~~CII~IO~W~olol~~.l~~-~.=.... I
and oun :'.it2.1 v.. ong111e, :

Serv 1ces

based on race, color, religion,
se;~t lai'nili'al status or national
orlgin, or any lnten11on ro
make any such preference,
limita tion or discrimination.·

'34

Shado of biUII 3 Born
Evonlng (pool.) 4 Actor -

Many players think that only experts
can make contracts using a squ eeze.
Actually, many squeezes "play them·
selves," emerging with out any clever
play. In general , if you are one trick·
short of the number you need for your
ccntract and have no apparent chance
for the extra trick. think squeeze. •
Squeezes don't make good column
deals, however, because the key play.
comes fate in the day. Yet I wanted lo
played by a 14·year·old, Mark Tells cher
from London.
Defending,again st five diamonds, .
West led a top spade and switched to
the club'IO.
West's switch at trick two told declar·
er that East surely held the club king.
So Teltscher ~ould sec 10 llicll.s: three
hearts, five diamonds. one club and one
spade ruff in the dummy. He could es·
tabtish a second club trick. but only af·
ter losing three tricks: one spade and
tw o clubs. No .good . Bring on th e
squeeze.
.,

TITANIC 'I

t

M
Antiques

Wo•od 10 bur· '88 or :
Caprloo Claoilt:o, bo '
, _ , ...... LII.v.a.-..r,4 · •
;
-.'IM.1112-3102.

$141• One

IOD,OOO HI~'F. ... One
I·
ICIO,ZI7otiQI·

F~NK

~4~~m=·~~~~~~~·1

....
ll.l8lcal

lnltNments

='

g:
=..-~:ion~=
K__,. u.- IIT\J

,,.,I

IIIII I 'lno. I044""zrrl.

In 1own. Appllcatlono avallablo
ol: VIMago Grwn Aplo. IMI or
coil 814-9112·3711. EOH.

L.:;:::.:..:.:-==:;:..:.=:;.:::.,.-.....,,--

31
.,33

2 ExCludable

show you today's deal because it was

1

. ..

the Federal Fair.Housing Act
ot 1968 which makes It illegal
tc.o adver1ise ·any preference,
limitation or discrimination

BE SO LONELY ..

.... . ,.-.

. . . . .d
~
111g ~ W..o II, 1HZ Corolco. ....-_ •c.
Ioiii P..U On
Na oond., ltiOO. ~,.. ......1
Pa- ,_ 114 . . . . . .

F-.

;;.4pl-m..,
. ,.......,......,:---:::-"'"""':-:buv1na &amp; ootNng . Joliiooon•o Yldio, 1116111112 3411.

room f•cllhiH c:lou lo achool

31 Homes for sale

All real estate advertis ing in

'fES, THAT'S M'&lt; D06 .. .
"'E'S VER'&lt; OUT601N6 ..

a-.....,..1211. i

~~~

Qemw1

F1 ood ,.,
oow
.
oolo. 14
I M d,
dolhwo'od. 304-7l3-l11:11.
For v- -lnol Lodlao 1/Z
Clll1 -~~~ - . . . lllgh
quollty. 1100, lor bOkior
lpproiOIII 11144711-1418 agter ·

2bdrm. opto., total oloclrlc, oppll1ncel tumlthed, l•undry

Real Esl&lt;1te

this new!paper Is subject to

MA'(BE IF t'M MORE
OUTGOING. I WON'T

I

~~~..__,

·-·-:1.

·You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find In the
dassifieds.
446-2342
. 992-2156

'I'ES MA'AM ..I WAS TOLD
TO St6N UP I=OR DANCE
LESSONS BECAUSE I NEED
iO BE MORE 0Ui601N6 ..

1112 lonnovtllo IE, - . :

11011,

1r-

rar.renoe

err.. :

7.1110:=::.:,2dl::-;..:.
. :.:F:-•"'nl"""'h"'do,.._--::,,-_-=a:• .,- :

auction

Don, .lui* hi ll:oll Uo Your NonWorldng llajor . Appll&lt;plcoo,
Color T.v...l: R.rwtaoratoro,

1188 Cholt- Cor8lca, 4

:·

j

:0

Dlfloronllol WHh Exporlonco, E· 1 - , $25,000, 814-141N52t.
quolciQopodDiroctunhy_ 01
Emlllovor~. For allo or 1, _ Ohio RIWir
Nunlnc
Conta l the D
a.tor. F«truary 8, 1185
Campgrounda. on the rlv.r, 23
Plnocrw1 Coro Canl• 1711 full hoOII-upo, largo building hoo
Plnocrw1 D1tYo, Clolllpotlo, 0H 3 apartmonlo foi holll raorno
48131. 114-446-7112.
room for moro, 8150,000, wll1
c=Loc=al:..:.:-;_.:.,;:no.:.oo=-,_
- -:::h::lrt"'ng: I flnanoo, l-11-251!1.
quollflod llllgn..-rt 1ochnl::~

·

2.1"'"'
{
AKC Rrglrt _. AI,... ·P.- t3,500, ClliiM-'JU..zall.
1
.
.
lluttlalig,
Low
......
Good
- - ·CIIIIdron, EaOIIont Wotcll Dog, 811 114- Cond~lon. 8M 441 2121.
:
3111112.
1181 ...rcury Bable L1 Rune I :
L.ooU Good, High ...... ti,BOO, ,

Avon -Eam .. 414 /Hr. Ful Or

~· ·-·-·

11117
·. .....- Aut-Io,
Air,12.000.
WI, 11W41-1'001.

-·oy-.1..'

f.1erchand1Se

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

"""
r... somoo. Complolto ,..
caro, 20yro. up. &amp; lnsurod, froo t -~~~~~~~~­
Hthutea. 814-441~111'1 or 1~ 41 Houses for Rent
508.all'l.

=

PEANUTS

8'M:441-G147,

·'··

AVON I AU ArNa I Shlr1er
Spee,., 304-elS-1428.
AVON lo buy or aoll, llarilyn1 1n- Boat 1ho Sorlng Ruohl GOI Jill''
-don1 rop. 304-1112-264&gt; or tr1mmen 6 ntOWeN MrYiced
1.foO.IIV2-41351.
- a t Sldoro Equl,....., Compony. 304-171-liiZI.
AppllcaUono Aro Now Bolng Ac·
cpeted At Plnecrnt ·care Cen· Ex=-d
Caloplo
Wl1h
111, 110 PlnKrMt Orlv., .Gat.
Ao
Apo.llpcillo. Ohio 45131 For Full limo Complu to ...._ Wllllln
And ~art lima, State Testld IOml. rodloloo of Galfipollo. 114Nursing Aaal.tanta, Competltlva 245 5511S
.
Dlllororrtlal WKh Ex·
nca, Equal 9Pporlun~y Gllnorol lloln10nanca, Pol~
Yard Work Windon W
ployor.
auu- Cl&lt;!anod ~,~ghl -Nng,
AVONSMSALES
eomm~!!J Aooldlintlol, Slovo:
A - .. -fii/Hr Ptuo Fontao- 814-441-IOVT.
tlc DlocoiMIIol Sail At Work
. - Territory Oollonal. ln- Cleotgoo Portable Sa""'lll, _ ,
houl your 1o tho .miU Juot
dop. Rap. ·-'1112-4'138.

56 . Pall for Sale

- l i M Rodmon Md4, Z Bed·
room, To411 EIOC1rlc, Underpinning. AoodJ To II'Oo On
CQnw Lol. Pork Lone
Courl. Phone t'M CCfJ II De, t'M441-7187.
UIIITED DFFERI .,.. 141711 2·
3br,. $HI DOWN, No Pavmomo
aftor Sm. Froo Dollvory &amp;
lotup. I04-71H5111.

homxwnw• lnauraiiCII, •nd 8

I Terrible ·

(811otln
album)

By Phillip Ald er

814-

liM 141711~nd&amp;m. oklrl·
lng, ot-.
""· 1 roar

•K J 8

DOWN
.

It comes naturally

Moon. one Ndroorn, ou fur-

Forte. tiOO

{obbr.)

Vul ne rable: North-South
Deate r: South
South
Wesl North East
1 •·
Pass 1 •
Pass
2•
Pass 3 •
Pass
5t
· Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • K

ELVINEY'S SHORE GOT
SOME BODACIOUS
GOSSIP FER
ME TODAY!!

For _.. or Nnl· 10d0 New

· for Rent
call 304-675·1t5l
·
Part '"":
Door To Door. t- Sun Volley _ Nu.-yo SChool.
Chlldcoroii-F Blmo6:30pm Aaoo
100-127 4 lod. /Rop.
:i-K, Young SChool Ala Du!l'ng
labpMiar In My Home, Afttt:· summer. f Doyo por Wook lllri'
Gallipolis
2 Badroom T,..r ·On· Sl:ate
noon Shift 114-l4e-1172. Call lmumt'M-i~
R - II, IM~45o1812; Or Allor
Bat- 8 ill. &amp; 2 P.M. ·
&amp; VIcinity
Tommy.. Doy Co• lllonday- I C.llt14141111D.
ALL Yard Saloo lluot Be Paid In Barttndll /Waltren Wanted, Frtday, 7-:00pm. TWo
Homo On Bob
mlloO _ , o1 p _ , , L.olo of 2br Advanca. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Calltl14-440-4758.
McCormick Rood For Aon1, 814tM .day Hlare tt111 ad Ia to run. Dukl Cioanoro, Pl. - n l hoo - -· Lolo of flln ond 4411111.
..
Sunday IICIHion .. 2:00 p.m. pooltlon opon, no oxp, ..... loomlngl Call Tommy Hyoofl,
114-tll:f-6388.
Friday. MondiV edhlon • 2:00
3 Badroo. . I 112 litho, $200
oary, apply In Wod-Frt.,
p.m. Seturdly.
Will bobyoft In my horne In 1ho DopooH~ f211G/Uo. 1144U-41075
l-3f&gt;m only.
RuUond "'!!'~ ~Iliad, floxlblo Allor 4 ~.II.
·
Public Sale
8
Mobile In tho ·counlryhouro, ,,..,.....,.,_
llay10~-=-hor
' llryor
uop
&amp; Auction
-•.
In- C..-c
, Ex rlant
Conc:IUoft,
cluded. 111!"'-00
J,.. 10 ond
mlmM•
from
Silo;
hi
-Ina
llachlno,
Ftnancial
Alhono, -·~lng II U40o . Crock ~. 114-fll'JIIOI A~
Rick Poorson Aucllon Compony,
3001mo~ coblo avalloblo, 114full time auctloneer, com~•
Iori P.M.
IIV24117.
-o.
l.lceMod
PICKENS FURNITURE
. .,Ohio .a w..t Vlrglna., . . .
21
Business
Nice 2 Bedroom 14x70 t35QIIIo.
T7H7II.
.
ExPNI•nce Outalde S•l• PerNowiUood
Wit.,,
htween
5
..a
•
El.ctrlc
l
.on Full /Part llma, Benama.
Opponunlty
No appUanoee. Hot uhold turP.M
.
114-448.;!515;
nlohlng. 112 mi. Jonteho Ad. Pl.
- - CCII. Olear E. Cllcll, 114~383.
IN&lt;mCEI
Pfe11Hnt1 WV, 0111 104-175-1410,
Exporloncod ootupooplo.Oiroct OHIO VALLEY PUBUIHINO CO. 44
IOtfllttto.
Apanment
114 411 ......
aaln poeltlon of 1
rwcomnwndl lhat ~ do buelfor Rant
~om. U.do provldod, No croclll .,.. whh poopto you k,_ ond
SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 1Z
rojoclo Uborol cornrnloolono, Hal' 10 oond ,_,., ifiiOUiil, iho
1 and 2 bedroom apartmente, Olivo SC., Olillpollo. Local linn, No 1rovol~ ll•n.ogo- mall urtll you havo 1..-ftalod tumlahld
l ,_
and unfumllhed, fuml1ure. ....... w•.m A
mom opl)or1unllloo. """"" ln- 1ho offorlng.
teeurlty
dlpo~~ft rtqulred, no
1-llng? F• tho _, of 1ho
Work boolo. 814-448-3151.
Olory, caiiiM-8112-7303..
For oalo or
Florldo, 8 polo, 614·11V2·Zl18.
mU• frDm C'Y81.11 River, lot, 1 Bedroom, Kitchen, Appll•nc•
lmmodlato Opening For Full 1rollor whh Mx28 Flolldo raom, Fumlehed
NN.r
Holzar
Tlmo Doy And E_,lng 811111, AN all lumlohlngo Included, lncl""' Hoophol, baw.
Pluo Dopoo~.
S u -. Cornf10111¥o Wo- lng waohar ond dry_., lolo of No Petl, 8M~C&amp;-2157.

Yard Sale

7

.••

Alto trlller apace on river. All

·

30 Lal - -

04

• 4 3
• A 6
+A K 7 3 2
• A 7 5 4

45131.

4

23 Sound•

SOUTH

88711.

-ng

•26 Sowing
lmp-ent

• J 75 3

• 10 9 8
• 10 9 8
•1 0 9

Tril n s po ·I. it 10 '1

nOw -=ceDt·

EAST
• QJ 9 6 2

w_.,

4g Bridge of San
Lulo 52 X-&lt;oy
d iiCOverer
55 Peel
{prwl.)
56 CurH
16 Wide ohoe olze 57 Froohwotor
17 Employo .
porpoiH
18 Tennla unh . · 58 Craltlor
20 Povlng alone • 58 Llot onder

2-8·95

Apanment
for Rent

31 Dod1IH

41 Crloil
43 Gl"o oddrH o
44
47 S uporl8tlvo

'

ElectriCal &amp;

BERNICE
BED~ OSOL

Vendor · Notch · Extol ·Insist · SHOVEL IT
t really don't like the winter months. t prefer to sit in the
summer sun and risk a sun bum, at least you don'i have to
SHOVEL IT

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Wt~dnesday, Feb~ary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
AD'/EII'ISIITEM JIOli:Y. Each Of these advertised Items Is reqlired to be readily al'ilable for sU In
each Kroger Store, except as spedflcally noted In this ad. If we do 1'\11 0111 Of an advertised Item, we
wmoffer )'OU your choice of a comparable Item, When available, refleCting the same savings or a
nlncheQ wtich wll entitle you to pUrchase th.ad'leftlsed Item at the advertised price within 50
days, Only one vendor coupon will be acct11t«1 per Item pli'Chased.

8,1895

COPYRIGHT 11M • 'THE KIIOGEII CO. ITEIIS AHO PRICU 0000 lUNDAY,
n . u M ' I I , - MTIIIIOAY, I'I!IIRUAIIYn, , . . II POIIIEIIOr.
WIIIEIEIME THE RIGHT TO LIIIIT OUANTmU. -SOLD TO DEAl IRS.

Ohio Lottery

OU
. rebounds
with victory
over Kent

..

•'
•

Pick 3:
383

Pick 4:
9661
Super LOtto:
1·6-9-36-37-45

Low tonlpt around 20.

Saow.llrhlay raiD or snow. Hlab
near 40.

Kicker:

PageS

481374

•
•

•

Always Good.
Always Fresh.
Always Kroger.

1

Vol. 45, NO. 199
Copyrlght1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 9,

stances - maril~~ cocaine, amphe!alllines, opiates or pbencyc · · e (PCP). Alcohol and drug tests
are required on covered employees under the following live circumstances: pre-employment, post-accident, reasonable suspicion, randomly and return-toduty/follow-up.
.
Buckley said the random tests will be unan·
nounced and spread throughout the cale~dar year.
The district may cooperate with nelgbbonng South·
em _and Eas~m districts to belp reduce lbe cost of
tesung, he said.
,
In personnel !llatters, the board accepted tbe resignation of Phillip Shaw as an aide for a vjsually bandicaoDed student due to other employment. The board

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel neWIIstaff
Tbe Meigs Local Board of Education Wednesday
night adopted a federally mandaled policy concerning drug and alcobol testing for employees who are
r uired to obtain a commercial drivers' license
(c::bL).
.
Tbe poUcy brings the distric_t in compli~ With:a
new federal regulation requiring such tesung, sa1d
Superintendent Bill Buckley.
.
·
According to federal ·regulauons, school boards
with Jess than 50 covered employees as of Marcb 17,
1994 must comply with the poUcy by Jan, 1, 1996.
Drlvers will be tested for five controlled sub·

see store For details:
.-

..

·

·

resh

FLAME

oRADeA

u.s.

TU .

11

Red

seedless Grapes
Pound

pound

APPLE OR

$
Boneless
Round Steak ••• Pound

49

$
Krager
Tortilla Chips ••• 24-0z.

79

Remember\

aentme'g

. SUPERSIZE

ASSORTED VARIETIES

•roger Chilled
Orange
Juice
1
12;t:allon

5BOflgtKDrInks....2•Pack
12-Gz.cans
ALLVARimB

Kroger
...............

t/2oCallon

Paperctn.

a•

Kroger Is Your Valentine's Day Headquarters!

99
19

Kroger ·
,IS.I!Ioez.
.. 3
vegetables ••••• cans
Heiner's .
area~ •••••••••••••• 2001.

Ii gilt agalnstlenorlsm...

FRESH CUT,

'

Red Velvet
Valentines
Cake
Each

gg

r

-

___..-Local briefs----.

umn.

VIsa Rase .
Bouquet

Tax deadline extended
Tbe deadline for paying. taxes for i first balf of 1994 bas been

extended from Feb. 10 to Feb. 15, Meigs. Coun1y Treasurer Howard
Frank announced today.
.
.
·
Tax payments pos~ on or before Feb. 15 will be accepted
. witbout·a penalty, Frank wd.

s·

·valentine
Message
·C ookie
Each
.

NEW YORK (AP) - After two
Authorities say Yousef bought
years on tbe run, the man accused aDd mixed the chemicals f9r the
of masterminding tbe World Trade bombs tbljt exploded Feb. 26, 1993,
Center bombing and slipping away in a van parked under the 110-story
before the smoke cleared bas been twin towers, the world's secondcaptured in Pakistan and returned tallest buildings.
.
·
to New York.
Tbe blast killed six people ,
.Ramzi Abmed Yousef was injured more lban 1,000, caused
soared Tuesday at a Holiday Inn in S500 million in damage and introIslamabad. Pakistan1 officials said. duced lbe fear of international ter·
The U.S. Justice Department said rorism Into mainstream America.
be was to be amligned this morning
Yousef. 27, escaped the night of
in federal court.
the bombing, using an alias to t1y
The most serious cbarges to Iraq via Pakistan. His finger·
against him are punishable by life prints were found on two bomb·
in prison without parole.
making manuals seized by aulbori·
President Clinton called the ties and on containers of bomb,
arrest "a major step foiWard in the making cbemic:J!s, authorities ~'I-

I.G SIZE

DECORATED 12-INCH COLOSSAL

JX)UBLE LAYER

RUTLAND LEGION BANQUET - Tbe Ell Dennison Rut·
land American Legion Post recently honored Mayor JoAnn Eads
and her husband, Bob, at a banquet this week. Standing Is Mark
: TIDis ol the posL In addllion to honoring the 11111yor ,a nd Joe Bolin;
the po~t also recognized long·standlng post members. Tbe post
gave another $500 to the Rutland Clvk Center, which raised funds
to $1,700 during the last year. (Sentinel phpto by George Abate)

Trade Center suspect caught

CORN, GREEIIEANS, OR PEAS

Open door session set

gg

. ..

·--

No mjiuies were reported following a deer/veliicli: collision on
Kingsbury Road Wednesday around 8 p.m.
.
Angela Brickles, Bearwallow Ridge, was e~tbound on Kingsbury Road wben sbe .struck a deer that jumped mto the path of bcr
1990 Ford, acco(ding to a Meigs County Shenff s Department

I'

rePTI!; vehicle sustained moderate damage to the left-front fender,
. door and running board, the report stated.

Valentine
Cupcakes
6-Ct.
.

Deputies probe one-car wreck .

~··

MILIC CHOCOLATI OR ALMCIIID

-·~'.J

$
21

5.

Henhey's .·
Hugs &amp; Kisses ... ,.,MI. .

Available Only in Stores With Delt,Pastry Shoppes. .

.

.

An icy roadway contributed to a one-car acc1dent on Leadmg
Creek Road just south of Rutland Wednesday around 9: I 0 p.m.
April Halley, 16, Route 33, was northbou~ in a 1994 Honda and
lost control of tbe car on the icy road, aq:ordmg to a Me1~s County
Sberiff s Department report. The car went off the left s1de of the
road, struck an embankment and !ben spun around and went off the
roadway backwards.
.
.
Moder.lte damage was listed to .the front~- Side of the ~e!Dcle.
·· No Injuries were reported.

I
•

1

I

I

1

•

well as in nonhero Georgia, wbere
By The Associated Preis ·
Qbioans will enjoy milder it already bas snowed twice ths
weather tonight and Friday, but an week.
Scattered areas of Ugbt rain and
Arctic cold front will usber in
another blast of frigid air for the bigber elevation snow was expect·
ed across the southern Rockies,
weekend, forecasters said.
. Following another m(XIIing with soulbern Plains and lower Missislows in the single digits, tempera· sippi River Valley. Some ligbt
tures early Friday should remain in snow also was expected from the
the 20s, the National Weather Ser- Tennessee River Valley to the
vice said. And readings,in the after- upper Ohio River Valley.
Snow showers were forecast
noon could break tbe freezing marie
across the Great Lakes and into the
for the firSt time In several days.
Ligbt snow and flurries are Northeast. Another blast of cold
expected across all ·of Ohio tonight air, gusty winds and snow showers
and friday. A mixture of rain and was expeeted in the northern Plains
snow is possible over the southern and Rockies:
Dry weather was expected from
third of the state on Friday.
The icy blast will move into California to 'the central Plains, and
Ohio Fri!lay night Highs both Sat· .across the Pacific Northwest. . ·
urday and Sunday will be mostly in
On Wednesday, as much as twothirds
of an incb of rain fell in
the teens.
· , , ,,
.
Tbe record·blgll ·lei!lpenuure for western Nevada. It aiso rained in
this dale at the Columbus weather central California, wilb scattered
staiion was 64 degrees in 1894 storms across the Rockies and
wbile the record low was -17 in · upper MidWest
1899. Sunset tonight will be at 6
A band of new snow produced
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:31 up to 6 inches in Oswego County,
a.m.
N.Y.
Across the nation
While it was freezing in the
It snowed in western New York East, record warm temperatures
this morning as some strong winds were being set in tbe West. It
swirled through areas of the Mid- reached 64 degrees in Portland and .
west.
62 degrees in Salem, bolh Ore., S4
More snow was expected in the degrees at Drigbam City, Utab, and
upstate New York region today as 53 degrees at Spokane, Wash .

Firefighters respond to 3 calls.
Local volunteer frrelighters responded to lbe scene of three f1tes
Wednesday and Thursday.
·
No injuries were reponed
Tbe firSt frre involved a bay inside a barn belonging to William'
Kennedy Horner Hill Road, in Scipio Township.
.
. The Sclpio Township Volunteer Fire Deparunent with assistance
from tbe Pomeroy and Rutland VFDs were summoned to lbe scene
at 11:52 a.m; Wednesday and remained on site for about 2 112
hours.
.
Tbe pole barn was not damaged although some bay in the barn
was consumed.
.
.
A one-story block bouse on Ball Run Road was destroyed in a
fire early Wednesday afternoon, according to Pomeroy Fire Chief
Danny Zirkle.
Firefighters were called at 6:48p.m. to the Br~d lobn~on resi dence and arrived on the scene at 7:08 p.m., Zirkle srud. They
returDed to station around. 10 p.m., he added.
·
"The roof was collapsing when we arrived ... it was totally
destroyed," be said.
, .
Seventeen firelighters from the ·Pomeroy VFD along with II
from Middlepon and Scipio VFDs responded to the scene. •
Tbe cause of the blaze wa.' undetermined, be said.
Pomeroy frrelighters also responded to a bay bale f1te on Bearwallow Ridge on Sbaron SwindeU property around 3:30 th1s mom·
in g. Zirkle said.
"Someone set a big round bale on f1te," be said.
Damage was limited to bay bales, be noted.

. . .

State Rejl. John Carey will bold an open_door.sessl&lt;ln m Me1gs ·
County Monday from 3 to 4 p.m. at Rac~ne VIllage ba!L Con;
stituents of the 94th District who would like t? meet With Rep.
Carey about concerns of state government arc mVJied to auend.

No one hur{in accident

approved biting Marcie Shaefer to replace Shaw on a
purchased services conuact for lbe remainder of the
school year.
.
Tbe board also hired Kelly Kinser as a substitute
teacher for remainder of the scbool year ·on an asneeded basis and approved the creation of a one·balf
time .cook al Harrisonville Elementary due to the
increased ~umber of students served.
A medical leave of absence was granted to Faye
Manley.
.. .
Members also agreed to renew the afflhat1on
agreement with Woodland Centers Inc. to
referrals for counseling and ren"•erwvedi.cea&lt;.
ment with Heallb Recovery '"

are paid through grants at no cost to lbe district
The board also hired In Touch Therapy Services
to provide occupational therapy services to a visually
handicapped student retroactive 1o Feb. 2 at a cost
not to exceed $500 .
The board changed the date of its next regular
meeting to Feb. 22 at Salisbury Elementary Scbool at
7 p.m.. .
.
~sent were Buckley, Treasurer J311e Fry, board
Pres1.dent Larry Rupe, V1ce -pres1dent Randy
Humphreys and board members Roger Abbott, John
Hood and Scou Wallon.

••

•

,,

•

COLD WEATIIER CONTINUES· Tim Gray shields his race :
while operating a soow·blower In Columbus Wednesday. The' cold
weather across Obio Is expected to continue through tbe· weekend
according to state rorecasten. (AP)

Racine Village Council
repairs equipment
Racine Village Council ordered
repairS to equipment and buildings
in the village during its regular
meeting Monday.
A building is leaning into an
alley, restricting the garbage
trucks' passage, said Glenn Rizer,
street commissioner. Council will
send a letter to tbe property pwner
requesting the problem be solved ,
witbin two weeks.
In Qlber village .e quipment
repair demands: ,
- I van Powell will cbeck out
w·iring in tbe squad buililing to
ensure adequate .voltage;
-estimates w'ill be received for
repair to the roof on the Star Mill
· Park building; and
- five fire department pagers
will be checked out and fixed.
The Racine Volunteer Fire ·
Department will also apply for a
Department of Natural Resources
grant to acquire a radio and a generator;

In other action. council will con·
tinue to work on village street numbering. The committee should fin.
ish tbe project once maps are gathered.
Luke Pickens will get billed for
lbe recently-sold police cruiser.
Acting Marshal Malt Richards
must locate tbe owners of dogs that
have 'been runnin' loose. Citizens
have been complaining about lhfo.se
dogs.
.
Council held a moment of
silence for Mae Cle.land - a for·
mer clerk - and Rutb Bradford,
wife of former councilman
Clarence Bradford.
Those atlending included: Bob
Beegle, Henry Bentz, Dale Hart,
Scott Hill, Henry Lyons, Larry
Wolfe, Glenn Rizer,·John Holman,'
Karen Lyons, Craton Wolfe and
Junior Johnson.
.
The next Racine Village Coun:
cil meeting will be held March 6.

Incentives offered to get jobs for welfare recipients
He said later that incentives now
are available for counties based on
lbe number of recipients enrolledJn .
cenain education or job ·training
pro~.
.
"We're going to change that,"
Tompkins said.
He said some counties have
used previous incentives to bclp
cover ;ldministrative costs.
"Some of them use it to provide
olber services. It's whatever they
choose to do with it," Tompkins
said.
.
He ponrayed the agency's Jimposed budget as an invesllllent in
self-sufficiency for recipients.
Tompkins said tbe agency wants
to increase from tbe current 37,000
to 63.000 a year tbe number of
AOC and Genetal Assistance recip·
ients who get jobs. .
·
ai-:f 60 percent
· Another
increase in · e n1lmber of ADC

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Counties lhat are able to place wei·
fare recipients in jobs could earn a
share of $15 million in state fmancial incentives under terms of Gov.
George Voinovich' s proposed bud·
get.
The Ohio Department of Human
Services told the House Finance
Committee about that proposal and
array of others Wednesday as bear·
ings opened on the agency's pro·
posed $18.2 billion, two-:year bud·
get.
.
Director Arnold Tompkins proposed fmancial incentives to counties for placing Aid to Dependent
Children recipients into jobs.
"We dnn't want to just focus on
measuring caseloads or participa·
lion rates. We want to measure job
placements, and rew
coun
governments acx: · y," Tcim
kins said.

'

'

and alcohol counseling. Buckley said lbe programs

Arctic blast to hit
Ohio over weekend .

·

j,

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF, WHOLE

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap8r
'
.

Meigs Locai .Board approves testing .policy

vour Total Value FoOd Store.

.

2 Sections, 12 Pagea 35 c•m•

19~5

''

recipients wbo work for their assislance, bringing lhe total' to 12,000
per,month. _
• "We are going to reach lbesc
goals b¥ taking some dramatic
steps to move people from *lfare
dependency to lasting self-suffi.
ciency," Tompkins sai\1.
One of tbe most visible cbanges:
the proposed abolishment July I of
General Assistance benefits for
able-bodied adults, and an end to
cash aid for able-bodied adults on
the Disability Assistance program
because of a medication dependen·
cy.
.
· ,
Those reforms woulll SIWe .._
state $200 million. About half the
inooey would go into other buman
services Jllllgrams, and the rest for
education.
·
· A special legislative commiltee
is working on Voinovicb's otber
major reform plan to tum adminis;

traifon of Medicaid, the federal State health care program for lbe
poour•.mr C!l.private agents. ·~
nder the proposal called Obio·
·care, Medicaid recipients would
enroll in priv.ate health mainteilance organizations.
Savings from such a managed
care sy_stem would help pay for
extendmg coverage to about
500,000 Ohioans with incomes
below lbe poveny level.
" ObioCare will enable us tO·
extend health care coverage to:
these individuals arid families wi~
out requiting new state dollars anO
· wtlt IPI ....... IIIi~ oC exist•
lnttftlefibl," 'fompkins said.
.
The program will use some of
• tbe money from the elimination of
General Assistance, federal match; ·
ing money, and revenue from ao .
existing tax on hospilals.
..
·

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