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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Meigs
defeats
Alexander·

Pick 3:
709
Pick 4:
0327
Super Lotto:
.3-9-15-27-30-41
Kicker:
202916

Sports, Page 4

SUNNY
..-..""' Low tool&amp;bt IJilOL Clear•
Friday, sunny. HJab 1114011.

•
Vol. 45, NO. 204

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nawapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 16, 1995

Copyright 1995

State reaches agreement in prison lawsuit
C~~INNATI (AP) -An ~~nt reached in a .
lawsuit ev~tually will end solilary c~fine~nt for

abo!it 80 mmates under lockdown smce a deadly
Apnll993 prison fic?t, a lawyer said.
..
Lawyers for the •nmates and for the state s1gned
the agreement on Wednesday. A court hearing had
been set for today.
.
. The settlement rev1s~s rev.iew procedu~es for
•~mates. accused of breaking p~n rules dunng the
!lOt. S8ld Alphonse Gerhardstem, a lawyer for the
mmates.
.
. ''Our h&lt;;lPC is that this process will ~ult in most ·
m~~ bemg re~ !0 the general (prison) population, Gerhardstem S8ld.
" The inmates are totally upset they have spent
two years. (under ~oc~~own). and have .never been
charged w1th ~ythin~, he ~d.
Gerhardstem sa1d the mmates have not been

charged with riot-related crimes, but could be
charged with violating Jlrisel! rules.
The agreement, whiCh still must be approved by
U.S. Magistrate Robert Steinberg, settles part of a
lawsuit flied by.inmates on Jan. 23.
StiliiO be resolved is the inmates' c~ that the
state owes them damages because authonnes allegedly ign~ saf&amp;r ~lems, failed to protect prisoners
and v1ol.ated theu nghts.
.
. .
.
The mmates had been demed pnvileges smce the
riot at the maximum-security Southern Ohio Correctio~ ~ac~ity. in Lucasville, 83 mil_es elist_of Cincinnall. N1~ mmate! and one guard died durmg the 11~Y upnsmg.
· .
. .
Lawyers for the inmates had asked a U.S. District
judge to order the ~rs· immediate release from
lockdown. A heanf\g .on that request was set for
today, but no longer 1s necessary because of the

agreement.
·
Joe Aridrews, spokesman fo~ the O~io De~ent
of Rehabilitation and Coi'rection, sa1d the mmates
have been under lockdown while the State Highway
Patrol has been investigating the riot. Information
from the investigation has been slow in getting back
to the department, he said
"We are .~ow able to move forwar.d w~th d!sc~:
plinary beano's in a manner we thmk IS fa1r,
Andrews said. 'The information has started flowing.''
Usually, inmates accused of violating prison f!lles
go before a rules infraction board made up of pnson
guards.
.
Under the agreement, the inmates will remain
under tockdown whi~ a screening committee studies
evideRce against them to determine whether charges
are warranted. The committee will consist of three

wardens,.a criminal justice professor and a lawyer. ·
A rules .infraction~ board. staffed by de~ent
representaUves then e1ther will mete out punishment
or release the prisoners from lockdown.
The process assures •'the inmates they are not
g~ing in fr:ont of a lcangaroo court," Gerhardstein
wd.
.A typical pe~al~y for a !"Jles' violatio~, sue~ as
bemg m ~ off-limits area, 1s lo~ of ~t for nme
·served, wh1ch counts toward an mmate s fmt parole
hearing.
Andre~s said lockdo:ovn already ~as . been lif~
for some mmates. He wd about 60 lllfl!aleS remam
in lockdown at Lucasville and other pnsons where
some inmates were transferred after the riot.
Fifty inmates were indicted on felony charttes
from the riot; 28 have been convicted and other trials
are pending.

Meigs No. 31 employees hqnored for heroic efforts

.

RECEIVES GRANT • Racine Mayor Jerr Thornton, left,
recently accepted an $80,000 Appalachian Regional Commission
grant from Ohio Gov. George V. Voioovich. The grant wiD be Wied
to upgrade the Racine water system, according to Thornton.

Four employees from Southern
Ohio Coal Company's. (SOCCo)
~:.:Js No. 3l mine were recog. ·
Feb. 8 by Ohio Gov. George
V. Voinovich for their actions
when the mine flooded on July 11,
1993.
.
Voinovich commended. the
men's "selfless and heroic efforts"
and their "courageous actions... an
example to all Ohioans."
The four Governor's Commcmdation Awards were presented by
Paul Kidney, chief of the Ohio
Division of Mines, at the annual
meeting of the Ohio State Cot10cil
of the Holmes Safety Association,
held in worthington.
Each of the certificates recognized the individual contributions
of Dan Beam and Carl C~, both
of Gallipolis, Charles "Jod:Y' Neece
RECOGNIZED BY GOVERNOR - Four
1993. Receiving certlficates were Dan Beam,
of Rutland and Dick Workman of . Southern Ohlb Coal Company employees were
Gallipolis; Charles "Jody" Neece, Rutland; Dick
Albany after water entered the
recognized for assisting evacuation from tbe
Workman, Albany, and Carl Curry, Gallipolis.
mine from a flooded, adjacent
Meigs No• .31 mine when It nooded on July 11,
mine.
Beam and Workman are section
supervisors at the mine. Curry is a exhibited in this incident than in proud to be able to say that these Association presented "to the
courageous miners of the Meigs
safety supervisor. Neece, a continu- any other experience I've col)le people work in the state of Ohio."
Beam, Curry, Neece and Work-. Np. 3l .mine" a 16-by-24-inch
ous miner operatol' llelpct, was a across since I've worked In Ibis
man received individualized certifi- engraved wooden plaque, recognizfireboss when the incident oosition," he said.
"These guys had it together. cates signed by the governor, speci- ing: "their heroic efforts that indeed
occurred. The four are credited
with assisting their fellow employ- They kept their cool. They are pro- fying their contributions in helping saved the lives of their fellow minfessionals with many hours of to evacuate the mine during the ers... This is presented to all those
ees in the evacuation of the mine.
who assisted in these valiant
Calling the awards "way past ttaining, and it paid off. As a result, incident..
At the same meeting, the Ohio efforts."
ther. did the things that mattered.
due," Kidney praised the group.
'That, folks, is heroics. I am State Council of the Holmes Safety
"There was more teamwork

Rutland council OKs
band perfor.mance
Group says Ohio ranks 13th in pork-barrel spending
The old-time rUck 'n' roll band
- discussed water shu10ff proWASHINGTON (AP)- A $15 states on the group's list with $75 gram.
The former subcommittee. chairPhil Dirt and the Doze~ill per- cedures;
million foot bridge to Ellis Island million worth of what it termed
form April 22 at the Rutland Civic
- approved the mayor's report and $10.5 million to renovate a unnecesary spending. The most man did not return a call seeking
.
Center, Rutland Village Council · of $1,254.50;
soon-to-close naval shipyard were expensive Ohio project: the $18 comment on the group's assessmembers decided Tuesday night at
- paid bills and accepted the
among $10 billion in federal pro- million Aquisition Management ment.
At a news conference where two
their regular council meeting.
minutes of the January council
jects a citizens' group criticized as · Center at Wright-Patterson Air
Force
Base.
noisy
pigs chomped away at animal
Tickets are expected to go on meeting;
wasteful spending.
The
Ohio
tally
was
dominated
crackers
filling a trough lined with
sale soon for $8. Tickets will also
- discussed the possibility of
Citizens Against Government
by
23
pojects
that
moved
through
play
money,
.group president
be sold the rtight of the concen for purchase workers compensation
Waste, in its fifth annual "Pig
an
app(opriations
subcommittee
$10.
.·
Thomas
Schatz
conceded
that some
coverage for a lower price through
Book" of congressional "pork-barheaded
last
year
by
Rep.
Louis
projects
cited
may
be
worthwhile.
The band performed last year in the Ohio Association of Rural
rel spending" released Wednesday,
the civic center.
Water.
•
highlighted 88 projects costing Stokes, D-Ohio. Among them: $3 He directed his criticism instead at
Council also renewed the vil·Present were Mayor JoA'nn
more than $1 billion. The grouP. million for the Ohio Supercomput- behind-closed-door procedures.
Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J.,
lage's insurance with Brogan- Eads, Clerlt Sandy Sinith and coun:
said it also found but did not detad er Center, $2 million for elderly
Warner Agency of Pomeroy for cil members Steve Jenkins, Danny
an additional $9 billion in "bacon" services at the Jewish Community was given the "Bridge Too Far
$995 compared to $1,053 last year.
Davis, Gladys Barker, Judy Denny · tucked away in the fiscal 1995 bud- . Federation of Cleveland, $1 million Award" for sponsoring a $15 milfor the Urban League of Greater _ lion bridge connecting New Jersey
In other business, couneil:
and Dick Fetty; Dale Hart, village
get
Cleveland
job preparedness pro- and Ellis Island. Schatz questioned
- rejected a bid for the sale of maintenance supervisor, and MarOhio ranked 13th among the
the-need for such a bri(lge when
an old snow plow;
shal Tim Gillilan . Absent was
•
Councilman Duane Weber.

-Local briefs--Man jailed after confrontation

·

A 24-year-old Pomeroy man was jailed early this mQming following an' alleged conflict on E. Main Street in Pomeroy.
According to a Pomeroy Police _report, Michael Mulf~rd .was
thrown out of Jimmy's Bar on Ea Main Street shortly after m1dmght
DUring a dispute following his expulsion from the bar, he allegedly
broke out a front window of Brogan and Warner Insurance Ser-

~ce~;.lford was arrested by Pomeroy police.-with assistaiJ~ from a

Middlepon police officer, a state highway pa~lman and 81_1 off.
duty Pomeroy officer. He was placed in the Me1gs County Jail and ·
faces charges of destruction of property, disorderly conduct and
resisting arrest. police reported.
.

Meigs SWCD gets $12,000 ~ra~t .

The Meigs County Soil and Water Consen:auon D1stnct ~as
awarded a $12,034 grant to develop programmmg ~ut nonpomt
source water pollution, according to State Sen. Jan Michael Long
(D-Circleville).
The grant is awarded jointly by the Ohio De~ent of N~
Resources and the Ohio Soil and Water Conservauon COIIIIl)ISSlon
and is 'administered by the Division of Soil and Water Conservation •s Environmental Education Section.
·
.

Attempted theft repor:ted_

.

The Pomeroy Police Department IS probmg the ~ttempted theft
of coins from a washing machine at the P61neroy Cliff Apartments
'
«;omlnued on page 3
·

immigrants used to arrive at the
processing center by boat
But Lautenberg responded that
the bridge "would enable families
who cannot afford the price of a
ferry to visit a national historic
landmark."
Sen. Robert Byrd, a West Virginia Democrat who until December chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee, was "honored"
for approaching the $1 billion bar-.
rier in cumulative pork spending,
including $158 million for 1995.
8 yrd responded with a state- ment: "It is old popaganda. It is a
vawn and a boar." The spelling of
1
' boar" was intentional.

Housing starts down 9.8 percent
in
January
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Hous.ing starts plunged 9.8 pereent in
January, the second straight drop
and the largest in a year, reflecting
the growing impact of higher mortgage rates.
Ground-breaking activity was
down sharply in every re~ion,
including double-digit drops m the
Northeast and Midwest. $inglefamlly statts al!o experienced a
double~~t decline. ·
Today s Commerce Department
report also said consnuction of new
single-family homes ancf apartments totaled 1.38 million at a seasonally adjusted annual rate. That
was down from 1.53 million in
December, when starts dipped 0.6 •
percent. Starts had risen 5.irpacent
during favorable building weather
in November.
The January drop was the
· largest since a 21 percent plunge in
January 1994, when winter storms
.
'
prevented builders from laying
··
·
:
foondations. This Januacy, weather
conditions were very favorable
·
·'
·· · ·
· ··
over much of the nation.
Many analysts had expected
1 Althl)ugh mortgage rates have
been
falling slightly recently, 30housinR construction to slow to a
. year, fixed-rate mortgages still
1.49 million rare last month.

averaged 9.15 percent in January,
compared to .about 7 percent a year
earlier.
·
An increase from 7 percent to 9
percent would add $209 to the
monthly payment on a $150,000
mortgage and price many prospective buyers out of the market.
Sales of new homes were falling
as 1994 carne to a close - down
0.6 percent in December and 9.6
percent in November. Analysts said
the declines showed the housing
industry was losing momentum as
the year ended
And a National Association of
Home Builders survey of 358
members earlier this month found
only 22 percent describing their
sales as • good." Fifty-one pen:ent
said their sales were "fair" and 27
nercent characterized them as·
,-.poor."
,... Single-family starts fell 12.3
percent to a 1.07 million annual
rate, the smallest number since a
similar t.07 million in June 1993.
Single-family stiuts had dropped to
1939,000 in March 1993.
Construction of apartments and
condominiums edged up 0.3 percent to a 305,000 rate, but failed to

I

recoup from a 13.1 percent decline
a month earlier.
And applications for buildings
permits suggested further declines
m the months ahead They fell 8.6
percent to a 1.3 minion rare.
The No~t posted a 16.8 percent drop in starts to a I 14,000 rate,
w~ile the Midwest registered an
II .7 percent decline to 302,000.

Leglslatlqn talces aim
at utility coml .lies
COLl;lldBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
lawmaker has introduced a bill to
prevent utility companies from
charging on the basis of average or
expected energy usage without a
customer's written consent
State Rep. John Garcia, R-Toledo, said the restriction comes in
response to Columbia Gas of
Oh1o's weather-normalization program ..

The program which
Columbia since has modified ~
~llowed th~ company to slightly
mcrease b11ls when the weather
was warmer than normal and lower
them when it was colder. ~ ' . ·

I.
•

_,_
'

f

..
•

,&lt;

i

'

.

, •'

..

�•
&gt;

Thu...ay, February 16,1995

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

Page 2-The Deily Sentinel

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 16,1995

Meigs County Court cases are processed

Friday, Feb. 17
Accu-W~ forecast for

The following cases were.
resolved Monday in the Meigs
County Coun of Judp Patrick H.
O'Brien.
f'"aned were: Keith Hanini. Gallipolis, misuse of a credit card,
costs, one year probation; 60 days
jail suspended to tbree days,
lall'aioing order issued, ICSiituliOII
ordaed;
Marlyn J. Carte, Cape Canaveral, FhL, driving under the inOumce,
SSOO plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to three days, 180-day
operator's license suspension, one
year probation, jail and $2SO of
fine ~ upon complclion or
residential tteatment program; lefi
of center, costs only; scat belt, $25
plus costs;
.David L. Williams, Spencer,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Jared
G. Stewan, Middlepon, speed, $30

MICH.

Clinton remembered, and .f.oretold
~

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. · General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le11 than 300
won!J tong. Alllettcn are aubje&lt;:t .to editing and must be signed wilh name,
~&lt;~drat and telephooe number. No unsigned lette11 will be publisbt,d. Letters
sbould be in good ,....,, addressing iosues, oot personalities.

Sell ·thecompany,
.n ot the product ·
~y JOHN CUNNIFF

.

When Bill Ointon ran for _presi·
dent in 1992 the ideo~ line on
him was this: "an actiVISt moderale
who had been a liberal." Many
voters bought it. Pundits, too. But
since his electioo, that description,
central to his political viability, has
been open to question. Now it is
asked: "What is Clinton really; a
liberal or a moderate?"
.
A wonderful new biography of
Clinton, "First In His Class'' by
David Maraniss, is remarkably
well-researched, and reads like a
novel about an American original.
It covers ground from Clinton's
birth in 1946, to his 1991
announcement of candidacy. As I
sense it, the pages reveal an ·
oblique answer to the liberal/moderate question thusly: "Clinton is a
tactical moderate and sliD an ideological liberal." (His supporters
say labels don't mean anything
anymore, which is just what liberals say.)
The past is prologue. Follow
Clinton's story. Ask: "Upon what
meat doth this our Caesar feed." If
. Early Clinton were made into a

very-liberl!l Children's Defense
Fund, 9) as a lawyer for the Watergate investigation that drew up the
Nixon impeachment charges and
later, I0) serving on the board of
Legal Services Corporation,
Ben Wattenberg the
helping poor people use the Jaw,
occasionally for political pwposes,
liberal fumament.
. allegedly unlawfuUy.
Thus, Bill gets his ticket
The boy prodigy from Arkansas
punched: I) working for the lead- flowers in the fertile soil of New
mg opponent to the Vietnam war Politics liberalis".!..There is passion
(Se.n. William Fulbright), 2) at the everywhere. Joy~·rllpture, desponanu-war hothouse that was Oxford dency. Clinton is described as a
(Rhodes Scholarship), 3) as " ... a young man who hardly sleeps, who
full-blown anti-war organizer,". 4) consumes food books and women
as an artf~ draft a~oider, consider- in prodigious quantities, who will
mg selecuve con~1enllous ob.JCCtor tallc to and listen to most anyone
status, 5) at the hberal Yale Law anywhere anytime, who can symSchool, where s~dents are ~ncour- pathetically fit into any scene
ag~d to do t~eu own thmg, 6) (maybe the movie model is Woody
wh1ch for CJ!nlon was the 19~0 Allen's "Zelig"), already nurturSenate c~patgn !lf Joe Duffey m. ing an aequaintance card file 10 run
Co~nect1cu~, .wh1ch drew young for high office. He gets married.
anu-war acuv1sts from across the · His wife is smart, tough and ambicountry, 7). as an C3!IY supponer, tious. They shout at each other a
then organ1zer, m liberal George lot.
McGovern's 1972 presi~tial bid.
This young man is an impres. Meanwh1le, H11lary, m Wash- sive piece 'of work. He returns to
mgton, p!}'_~he_r .dues 8) at the Arkansas, runs for Coogress at age
movie it would be in Forrest Gwnp
style. Watch the screen: lbcre go
Bill and Hillary Gump, popping up
at most every watering spot in the

YiP Business Analyst
: · NEW YORK- Have you noticed how many companies are selling
)hemsel ves?
•
· -: No, not literally, but in an advertising sense. SeUing you oo the idea
lhat they are on the cusp of change, leading their industry in having·the
tiest business practices and therefore the best, most up-to-date products. .
: : lndustrial 'Arnerica once WI!S reluctant to talk about itself, preferring to
ANY
llublicize its products instead. It said a lot about horsepower and appearwee, for example, but little about how it ran its business.
: : But that was then. Today is a time of change. Change is viewed as bet~er. and so companies want you to know they are at the forefront of
cllange.
.
: : It's all very different, says Professor Eugene Jennings, who has studied
~he induslrial corporation for more than four decades, taught and written
about it extensively, and advised its top executive officers.
'
: : The merchandising of the company itself, not just the product, has
~Wolved in conjunction with the language merchants. Examine the words,
IW advises. They are creations, he says. Advertising words. Packaging. ·
FOLLOWING
Merchandising.
THE SIMPSON
•: Ihe· phrase "just in time" inventory control: "It used to be referred to
~ lowering material costs." Re-engineering: "It's simply rearranging
TRIAL!
~ork processes." Empowerment "It's merely delegation - delegatioo
ill authority to groups, giving them more discretion in decisioo-malcing."
:: Such words refer to the operation of the company rather than its prodIK:ts, but the inference is that if the company is so aware, so advanced, so
i~with it," so formidable, the products it sells will be state-of-the-art, the
~St.
..
; • The technique was used impressively by Japanese carmakerii, whose
tilitiai offerings on the American market were scorned. They regrouped,
IQlproved business practices and created an image of quality that exists to
~!!is day.
•: So successful did they become that tomes on Japanese work habits,
~siness practices and goals - described in code-like titles - became
fommonpiace on best-seller lists, and some Japanese products achieved
Almost mythic status.
W.hen I arrived at work one inhalation. ---: · ''You cannot indicate to people that you are managing charige with old
mornm~
~dy an elderly woman ·
For his bravery, Mycbael was
words," says Jennings, professor emeritus of business and management at
was
walling
for
me_
She
banded
me
chosen
as a recipient of a 1993
~ichigan Sla!C University. "You need new words or you are not chang~. neatly typed lett~r addressed. to Young American Medal for Bravtng."
.
•
Anne Vmgt, J~ce Department,
·
:·So, for example, the progressive company doesn't use "team work"
W~hmgton,p.c.
.
Sarah
Overstreet
when "group effon" is available, or suggest that it is retrenching when it
. They S81d you wrote the editocan refer tO "downsizing."
nal
about Mychael Ramsey an~ I · ery. He was scheduled to go to
: "Progress" is dated, while "change" is relevant "Leader" becomes
wan';ed
!O s~ow you.~ letter I m Washington and have lunch with
:"c hange agent," and "syntrgism" becomes "integration." "Disci~~ding
m hiS behalf, " she told me. President Clinton, but the Justice
:Piine" is dated (and loaded with negative connotations) but "power" is
1.
ve
neve~
beard of such an awful Department announced last month
:contemporary.
•
thmg!
I
think.
everyone ':"'ho feels that it is reconsidering giving
· "New words have more magic than old words. It's part of our cuithe
sam~.way
ought
to wnte a leuer Mychael his medal.ln the year
lure," says Jennin!;s. "They are socially and culturally approved." While
forMhlm.h
Ram
S since Mychael saved three people
~e concedes they ilnpress, he believes most are simply labels applied to
yc ae1
sey was on 1Y 1
from burning to death, he was
old procedures.
years
old.
m
I?ecem~
1993,
when
arrested on a misdemeanor charge
: "In a world where everything js changing it's obvious we have to use
he
and
hiS
fne.
n
ll;s
m
Kansas
C1ty,
of possessing marijuana.
11ew words," the professor says. "The psychology is that a company
Mo.,
were
dnvmg
to
a
srocery
Possessing marijuana is not a
:Offers a whole new way of business thinking instead of mere product-line
store and spotted a house on fli'C. heroic act, but risking a death. by
:extensions."
·
· The goal is to make the company sound formidable, adaptable, knowl- T~ boys stopped the car. Mychael fire to save three strangers cenainly
edgeable -able to bring the newest products to market in the least tned to get 10 the ~t door or lhe is. Those fire victims 'didn't care
)lmount of time; to crea!C the image of indus!ry leader, a~le 10 do things house but was dnven baclc by whether Mychael was p~dent of
smoke:
.
h1s church youth group or fresh
better than anyone else.
·
Gomg
around
tlie
h.ouse,
from
a Bloods and Crips rumble, as
: The image.sought is that of a company that leads the industry because
My~hael
heard
someone
rapp!ng
on
long
as he was willing to dash
;it is the best managed. The. implied message is that a company so smart
a
:W'"d.ow.
He
broke
the
wmdow
inside
the scorchatorium and lead
JIIUSl also produce the best products. Promote the company and sell the
w1th
h1s
hand
and
helped
an
83them
to
safety. l:le was. At IS years
. .product
year-old woman and her 67-year- old with a whole life ahead of him,
~~~~~~0 h:CO:~~el~ he risked it all to save people who
,
lall . paired da b most probably don't have that
woman s men Y un
ug • many more years to live.
ter He was taken to a hospilal and
I assume the 'olks at the Jusu·ce
••
.
treated several hours for smoke Depanmenl who are thinking of
·By The Associated Press
.
: Today is Thursday, Feb. 16, the 47th day of 1995. There are 318 days
:left in the year.
..
.
· Totlay's !iighligbUo History:
·
: ·Fifty years ago. on Feb, 16, 1945, American troops, arriving by Qir and
;sea, landed on the island of Corregidor iri the Philippines during World
The story got played on the apply just to Democrats wreck
·War II.
.
.
business pages, but the recent what comity exists in lhe'rultioo.
Ways and Means Committee
: On this date:
.
.
House Ways and Means Commit: In 1804, Lt Stepben Decatur led a successful raid into Tripoli Harbor
tee vote to repeal a huge·telecom- action on repeal of sec. 1071 of the
·tO bum the U.S. Navy frigate Philadelphia, wbicb bad fallen into the
n\unications tax break was the
bands of pirates.
opening shot in a coming .eongres- Morton Kondracke
· In 1862, during the Civil War, about 14,000 Confederate soldiers sursiooal war over racial preferences
:rendered at Fort Donelson, Tenn., (General Ulysses S. Grant's victory
that could tear 1lplrt the Dernocmt- Internal Revenue Code was a
microcosm of the battles to come.
;earned him the nickname, ' 'U11conditional Surrender Grant.' •)
ic Party and, maybe, the country.
During debate, black Rep.
Republicans are making it clear
· In 1868, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks was organized in
lhat they plan at least 10 challenge Charles Rangel, D-N,Y., accused
New York City.
. . ·.
- and possibly to dismantle - the committee chairman Bill' Archer
; In 1918, Lithuania proclaimed its in\kpendence. .
.
sys_tem ~f affirmative action by R-Texas, of "playing the rae~
• In 1923, the burial chamber of King Tutanltbamen's recently unearthed
wh1ch mmont1es lind women are card" by denymg tax breaks to
lomb was unsealed in Egypt.
given !!references in employment, companies that sell radio and TV
: In 1937, Dr. Wallace H. Carothers, a research chemist for DuPont who
educauon, and· government con- stations to minority fums.
invented nylon. received a patent for the synthetic fiber.
Archer said that he resented
tracts.
; In 1948, NBC-TV beg811 airing its firSt nightly newscas~ "Tbe Camel
being
called a racist and claimed
The impact on Democrats could
Newsreel Theatre," wbich consisted of Fox Movietone newsreels.
that
he
simply wanted the tax laws
; In 1959, Fidel Castro became premier of Cuba after the overthrow of be catastrophic, splitting moderates
to
be
"color-blind."
who favor reform of affirmative
fulgencio Batista.
.
In f~ct, Demoomts~flf'SI tried to
• ·In 1961 . the United States laWICbed the Explorer 9 sateUite.
. .action Jaws, .and black leaders and
reform
the law, under which Via: ·In ·1968, the nation's first 911 emergency telephone system was inau- liberals, .who are liable to fight any
com
Inc.
would receive a tax break·
. change.
)!urated in Haleyville, Ala.
·
lt'nKlt clear where the Clinton of up to $640 million for selling its
• In 1977, Janani Luwum, the Anglican archbishop of Uganda, and two·
administration will stand on the cable TV system for $2.3 billion to
bther men were killed in wbat Ugandan authorities said was 811 automoissue, and some Democrats fear a consortium led by a black
~ile accident.
. .
. .
.. .
that President Clinton will fail to investor, f'rank Washington, with
• In 1987, John DemJanJuk went on trial m Jerusalem, accused of being
offer leadership, will be torn only a $1 million stake, but were
!'Lvan the Terrible," a guard at the Trebiinka conccnttatioo camp. (DemJIJ(Ijulc w.as coovicted, hut the conviction was ovenurned by the Israeli ·between constituencies, and will voted down by Republicans.
surfer politically in the ~ss. .
Five moderate Democrats then
l;upreme Coun.)
·
·
.
voted
with Republicans against a
The
battle
will
be
JOined
most
: :Ten years ago: Israeli troops completed the farst step of a three-stage
move
by Rangel to preserve the
dramatically
next
rear
over
an
antil"(tbdrawal from South Lebano~. two days earlier than planned.
racial
preference.
Then, the compreference
ballot
mitiative
in
Cali• .Five years ago: Fonner President Reagan began two days of giving a
Cornia,
and
ultimately
could
racialmittee eliminated the tax break ..
lri&amp;:otaped deposition in Los Anseles for the lran-.Contra trial of former
ly divide the whole nation if altogether to pay for a 25 percent
national security adviser John Poindexter.
African-Americans perceive white health illsurance tax credit for the
: :One·year ago: At least 217 people were killed wben a powerful eartbopposition to affinnative actioo as · self-employed.
Qllllke shook Indonesia's SIIDI8tra island. Fig~ skaters Tonya Harding
.
and Nancy Kerrigan encountered each other at the Winter Olya.lpic a racist attempt to deny Opponuruty
Dunng the debate, one of the
to minorities.
O&amp;mes in Norway before posing together for the team photograph.
De~ocrats, Rep. Bob . Matsui,
Republicans, in other words, Calif., sought to steer clear of nicial
• ·today's Binbdays: Singer Patty Al\drews is 7S . Movie director John
Sclllesinger is 69. U.S. Rep. Sonny Bono~ R-Calif, is 60. Actor LeVar need to handle this issue carefully, issues, arguing that the Viacom tall
lest the "wedge" they intend to · break was ' ~indefensible" lwansc
Burton is 38.
. Tennis player John McEnroe IS 36.

YO(fVE 6oT To HELPAtE!
I C4ffT &gt;UPR&gt;RT N!V

HABIT

LONSER!

DRU6S?

NO! ...

2&amp; (loses), for attorney general ·at
age 30 (wins) and for governor at
age 32 (wins).
·
Over the years Clinton is seen as
a man who is tardy and indecisive;
sometimes dissembling, fudging .
and fibbing; .seen increasingly at
"racy nightclubs," as stories about
his extra-marital· sexual activity
abound_
·
puring his fust gubernatorial
terpt ( 1980~ Clinton ~omes .across
as a know-n-all, do-n-all laberal.
Arkansas voters sense what's going
on; he loses his re-election race.
Ex-Governor Clinton then transforms himself into a Not-Liberal,
launching what Clintonistas call
"The Permanent Campaign." This
includes a devotion to public opinion surveys and focus groups, talc-.
ing the results "to shape the substance and rhetoric of policy
depates," according to Maraniss.
Clinton's poUster (Richard Morris)
and the future president massage
the responses and speak them aloud ,
until " ... Clinton would shout,
'You know, I feel it! I feel it! I'm
out there and that's just what I feel!
That's absolutely right!'' ' He
regains the governorship in 1984.
He never loses again.
Back to the question, now historically: Was Clinton's conversion
to Not Liberal authentic? Reading
Maraniss, one senses mostly a passion for tactics, designed to win
elections, with Qinton 's libeialism
often latent but not retired
The fmttwo years of QiniOn's
presidency seemed closely to replicate his Early Liberal term in
Arkansas. Now it's said that he is
"moving to the center," once
again. Perhaps so. But what would
he be like if he's re-elected? With
no more elections to worry ·about?
That couldn't happen in a novel,
only in real life.
Ben Wattenber.g, a seDI(Ir fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the .host of the weekly
public television program,
"Tllink Tank."
(For information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and otben, con·
tact America Online by calling 1800-827..(i364, ext. 8317 ,)

INOc

•lcolumbus!42"

ffoday in history

a

Soutb-Central Ohio
TonighL .. Clearing. Low 25 to
· 30. Light winds.
Friday ... M:osdy sunny. High ill
themid40s.
Extended forecast
Saturday ...Fair_ Lows 25 to 30.

•

.!

•

•

Matthew M. Hart, Reynolds- · :
burg, seat belt, SIS plus costs; •
Larry C. Hendricks, Middleport, ;
scat belt, $2S plus costs; Thonw J. •
Eakins, Syracuse, seat belt, $25 :
plus costs.
•

Open house set tonight
An ~n bouse, vocational skills
competition. and parent/teacher
conferences will be held tonight
(Thursday) from 6 to 9 p.m. at
Meigs High School.
Teachers and j!Uidance counselors will be available during the
evening to answer questions and
concerns about classes offered at
Meigs High SchooL Student guides
will assist visitors in locating areas '
they want to visit and there will
also be guided toun of lhe build-

ing.

High School Band Boostezs •
wiD have a soup 811d chili supper in ;
the cafeteria from 4 to 6:30 p.m. :
The price of $3.50 includes bever- •
ages and desserts.
;
In addition the annual Meigs :
County spelling bee will be taking place at Meigs High in the music ;
room tonight. The contest to be •
county champion will begin at 7:30 ;
p.m.
The

Meigs announcements
Board of electioas to meet
The Meigs County Board Qt.
Elections will have its regulat·
meeting Tuesday, 4 p.m. At that .
time the validity or candidates'
petitions wiU be established.

Highs in the 40s.
Sunday...Fair. Lows 30 to 35.
Highs in the mid 40s to mid 50s far
south.
Monday ... A chance of rain ·
north ...FI!ir south. Lows in the 30s.
Highs from around SO north to
around 60 south.

--Area Death-Clifford E. Taylor
Clifford Eugene Taylor, 63, Long Bottom, died Wednesday, Feb. IS,
1995, 81 Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
A farmez, be was born April6, 1931, in Pomeroy, son of the late Isaac
A. and Viola Mae James Tll)'lor. He was an Air Fon:e veteran.
Survivors include a daughter, Brenda Ball of Racine; a grandchild; two
sisters, Zelma Grady of Reedsville and Evelyn C. Watson of Rutland; five
brothers, James E. Taylor, Virgil H. Taylor of Cincirmati, William A.
Taylor of Columbus, Joseph C. Taylor of Akron and Delben L_Taylor of
Portland, and several ni~ and nephews.
He was llrCCeded in .death by a brother, .Herschel Taylor, and a sister,
Betty Jane taylor.
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
PQmerpy with tbe Rev. Steve Reed officiating. Burial will foUow in Bald
Knob Cemetery with military graveside rites by the Racine Post of the
American Legion.
Friends may call Friday from 3-S and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral horne.

--Local
briefs
•.•
continued from page 1
on Union Avenue.
.
The incident was reported Wedncsday morning.

.

One-car Q.ccident investigated
No injuries were reported following a one-car accident on Happy
Hollow Road in Rutland Townilbip Tuesday.
According to a Meigs County Sheriff's report, John D. St~eon,
33, Pomeroy, was northbound when hiS 1974 Ford Torino slid on
cinders in a left curve_ The car went off the lert side of the road and
hit two mailboxes and a newspaper box_
Moderate damage was reponed to the ear. No citations were
issued.
•
-

Mtmber: The Associlned
Association.

P~ss .

and lhe Ohio
·

New~paper

•

POSTMASTER: Send addrru corrections to
The Daily Sentinel-, Ill Courl St .. Pomeroy,
phio 45769.

SIJBSCRIPTtON RATF.S
By Carrier or Motor Roule
OneWeek ....................................... ........... $1 .75
One Month ..................................... .......... $7.60
One Year ................................................. $91 .00

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
eight calls for assistance Wednesday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
6:24 a.m., W. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Shawn Wbittekind, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
9:45 a.m., Beech Slreet, Lowell
Beaver, VMH;
10:S6 a.m., Holzer Clinic·.
ShaWII Whittekind, Holzer Medical
Center.
POMEROY
9:30 p_m., Children's Home
Road, Opal Cremeans, VMH.

TONIGHT

HIGHLANDER 3

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Star Balik ...- ....·---....___ ,42 1/4

_.._._

Welldy IDt'l. "*'*-•--*--·16 J/4
Worlblllglon lnd......;...... --.1!1 J/4

plants 39.S0-41.2S.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 34:50-38.00.

S,tock reports are the 10:30 a.mquotes provided by Advest of
GatUpotls.
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remit in ail vance direct 10 The Daily Sentinel
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No su bscription by mllil permiued ill un:os
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Pharmacy ,_.,..,
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•

,:a:a•

Hanning, A. Ph.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnskte Melp County

.:I

COLONY THEATRE

Stacks

Onily ...... .............................................. 35' CeniS

13 Weeks ................ .: ...................... ,. ...... l23.92
26 Weeks .... ............................................ S-47.06
52 Weeks... .............................................. $92.56
Rites Outlkk Melp County
13 Weeb .............................................. $25.6)
26 Weeb............................ .....................$49.66
52 Wicls....... .................................. ........ S%.20

RACINJo:
9 a.m., Racine Fire Station, Clif- .
ford Taylor, VMH;
11 a.m., Barringer Ridge Road,
George Moore, Pleasant Valley
Hospilal;
.
3:33 p.m., Tryee Boulevard,
Yytice Sellers, HMC.
RUTLAND
.
8:41 a.m., Woodyard Road, Paul
E. Martin, O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.

Bob Eva•---------.20 518
Champloa IDd·-----.%1 314
Charming Shop----------' 112
City HoldiDg *--------17 112

Today's livestock report

Published eVer~ afltrnoOn, Mo!MIBY through·
Friday, Ill Coun St., fomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publi shirtg CompMyiMu ltimedia
Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 457 69. Ph. 992-2156.
Second class poscaae paid 01 Pomewy. OtUo.

STARTS
TOMORROW

AT&amp;T ·•--------.51518
Bmk One.-------.21318

An icy roadway was blamed in a one-vehicle accident on Happy
Hollow Road in Rutland Township Wednesday around 5:30p.m.
Donna Lynn Fink, 36, Rutland, was southbound when her 1991
Ford E:xplorer slid on ice before coming to rest in a ditch on the
right side of the road.
l)amage to the vehicle was listed as moderate.

(USPS ZU-960)

JUDICIAL BIRTHDAY - Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Jud11e Fred W. Crow- III observ.ed bls 50tb birthday
Wednesday wilb some bizarre assisJance from his wife, Cathy.
Mrs. Crow arran¥ed for a bearse to pick up the judge for work
while two men wBiled for blm at the courthouse with a wbeelcbair
and oxygen tank. Upon arrival, be was assisted into a .waiting
wheelchair, given oxygen and whisked Into lbe courtroom.

Akm·-------- - - -..57 J/1

Wreck blamed on icy road

The Daily Sentinel

TOMUHkUW

Alllllllld ou '---*-*--.313/4

A Ravenswood, W.Va., man escaped injury when his pickup
.truck roUed over after striking an icy pa!Ch Wedllesday morning on
state Route 7.
·· .
Randall Lee Kersey, 42, was northbound when his 1989 Jeep
Comanche hit a patch of ice and rolled three times before corning to
rest against an embankment, according to a repon from the Meigs
County.Siierifr s Department
,

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
direct hog prices at selected buying
points Thursday by the U.S.
Depanment of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: weak til 50
cents lower; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
· points 38.S040.00, a few 40.50;

S"'NH~·.

Am l!te POit'tr ·--*--*-,.;.33 SIB

Man escapes injury in wreck

Will race issues divide · Democrats?

.

plus· cosu; Michael L. Hunter, ·
Blufton, sliCed, $30 plua coats;
Stacy L. Tripp, Pomeroy, seat belt,
$2S plus costs; Rachel R. Rose,
Portland;- seat belt, $2S plus costs;
speed. $30 plus costs;

-----Weather-----

elated Press. "It's not. like I'm
going to go back home and cry or
something. I just be thankful for all
ihe other awards I got."
Bu~ when Myc)luel · is old ·.
enough to.realize how much those
in J!OWer .set away )IIIith and bow
eas1ly the award he earned was
stripped from him, it will be a
much more powerful message than
whatever it is the Justice Depanment il! trying to say.
_
Mychael will pay whatever
price the local justice system
assesses for possessing marijuana.
That has nothing to do with what
he did for three doomed people in
December 1993 . If you feel the
same way, write the Justice Department, .care of Anne Voigt, who is
acting as the department's
spokeswQman on M:yehae!'s case.
Her address is Justice Department,
I Oth Street and Constitution
Avenue, 'Washington, DC 20530.
Sarah Overstreet is Associate
Editorial Page Editor at the
Springr~eld (Mo.) News-Leader.
(For i,nformatioai on bow .to
commun1cate electronically Wllb
lb ·
1
1 1 d tb
IS co umn s an o ers, contact America Online by calling I·
800-827..(i364, ext. 8317.)

of its•Size and because Washing- avoid a bloodbath in 1996."
ton's co;mtract wi.th his partner,
It's not clear how sweeping
cable g1ant TCI; enables him to Democratic reforms might be, but
withdraw after only three years clearly one option is 10 ~ preferwith a $2 millioo profit
ences on income or economic
Opponents of afrumative action background rather than ethnicity, ·
in government contracts contend so that children of wealthy blacks
that blacks often Serve as "fronts" aren't favored over those of poor
for white interests, and the FCC whites.
reponed to Congress that of 192
Republicans, too, would do well
radio statioos transferred to minori- to aPI'roach the coming conflict in ,
ty ownership under Sec. 1071 since a spmt of reform, not demagoguery
1978, 430 were sold within a peri- -:- by, for instance, using conservaod averaging four years.
tive blacks and "opportunity
The Democratic reform propos- Republicans," · such as Bill Benal, written by Rep. James MeDer- neu, 10 make the case that aflirma. mott, Wash., and rejected by the tive action has been more of a burGOP. majority, would have cawed den fdr minorities than an advantax breaks at $50 million, and tage, particularly by raising doubts .
demanded that minority partici- about the competence of those who
pants demonstrate-real equity and get jobs or university slots through
management control in a partner- preference.
ship and hold onto the pnpcny for
Furthermore, the GOP would be
at least three years.
beuer off striving to amend preferThe fact that Democrats were ences rather than sweep them
willing to change affumativc action
law to eliminate excesses illustrates away. This is apparently what Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, Rthe pressure that the pany is under
given the tendency of "angry white Kan .., plans to do in calling for a
~view of federal laws and regulamales'' to vote Republican.
bOos.
One of the other Democrats who
Dole's presidential rival, Sen.
voted with McDermott, liberal Rep.
Phil
G!'l"'m, Texas, has said that,
Sander Levin; Mich. said that
~
president,
he will sign an execu~
"Democrats need to hdce a hard
bve
order
eliminating
all federal
look at programs we've fostered
.
preferences.
Angry
white
males
including affirmative action, noi
may
cheer
such
pm:ipitous
action,
embrace them blindly or run away
but b~ will VJCw it, angrily, as a
from them blindly."
foot
10 the face. This society is
Similarly, in California both
already
angry enough_ ·
Democratic Pany Chairma~ Bill
(Mortoa KoDdraclle Is exee•·
Press and Lt. Gov . Gray Davis
have called for affumative action live editor of RoU Cd, tbe aewi.
reform - in order, Press said, "to paper of Capitol HIU.)

I

plus costs; Tony Rood, Rccdsville,
criminal dama11ing, $100 plus
cosl!, 30 days jail suspended to five
days, two yean pubalion, mtrainillg order issued;
Roben M- Scarberry. Pomeroy,
DUI, SSOO ]!Ius costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, 1SO-day
OL suspension, one year probetioo,
jail and $250 of fine suspended
upon completion of residential
treatment program;
Bruee"M Friend, Lewt, W.Va.,
operating a motor-vehicle after
underage consumption, $2SO plus
costs, five days jail, one year probation, jail and $250 of fine suspended upon completion of residential tteaunent program; underage consumption, $SO plus costs;
John M. Adam IV, Rio Grande,
speed, costs only; Sulaiman Morray
Bangura, Columbus, speed, $30

In&lt;:.

When a young hero makes a mistake · ·
revoking Mychael's medal have
had no elderly or disabled family
members burned to death in fires.
Yet I have hope that su!;cly commoo sense will overtake some of
them. Perhaps on a slqw day at the
of~ce they'll flip on .C-SPAN. As
!herr gazes fall over our .president
and legislators, they can't help but
be . reminded that even people we
count among our highest heroes are
not withQutflaw.
Maybe they'D realize that if we
can forgive national ·leaders all
their warts and blemishes of character, so too we can give a young
boy another chance.
If they don't, they will send
message to American voulh such as
Mychael that it doesn't matter how
bmve you are when it COWits most;
~w up once and it negate$ everythmg that came before. Don't take
a risk fpr anyone else, because you
can never do anything wonderful
enough that one slip-up won't ruin ·
it.
Mychael says be doesn't care if
he ~ets the aw~d or not, allho~gh
he IS pretty exc1ted about meeung
the~ident and th hanCe tha h
. also
ec
t e
m1 t
meet Jesse Jackson. "If
I don't, 1 don't," he told The Asso- .

The Dally ~tlnel Page 3

Pomeroy.-lddleJort, Ohio

Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
.
Sundav 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

..

106 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

·

PREflCAIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'11119
··

FURNITURE li JEWELRY, INC.

(614).992·2635 •1·800·426·5581

•

~ Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. 9-5
Thurs. 9-12; Sat. 9-2

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...

~

~
................
,_

�•

•

• •

..

Sports

•

Thu...day, February 16,1995

The Daily Sentinel

J:a"l'S ~in... __&lt;~~-nu-·nu_ed_fro~m~P~~~e~4)~----~----------~~--------------------------------------------------

Thuraday, February 16,1895 '
Page 4

.'

.

In the third quarter, Eastern and but both times Nelson answered
Trimble traded the fust two buclc- with two big goals of her own.
eiS, but four points from Lenigar Lenigar hit another key bucket,
along the baseline and a Canter along with lcey goals by Lent and
field goal cut the score to 31-26 Tonya Trace. Each time Eastern
a~swered as Evans and KaiT probefore Eastern called time.
Evans hit a free throw IIi malce it . Ylded the fire worlcs.
It was at this siage that Wolfe
32-25. After Aeiker's rebound,
thought
his club showed its true
Karr scored along the baseline for a
character,
.
34-25 tally.
.
.Wolfe
said,
''Trimble
came out
Trimble made five of six field
red-hot
in
the
third
period,
but we
goals to start the third frame redcame
right
back
each
time
and
trad·hot. Lenigar hit two clutch goals,

Eastern girls beat Trimble 52-43 in D-IV sectional game
Playing one of 11\eir best ~es
of the year, Easlem's Lady Eagles
too1c an early lead 1&amp;1 never loolcrd
back en route to a S2-43 first round
Division IV sectional tournament
victory over Trimble at Alexander
. High School Wednesday nighL
Scott Wolfe's Eagles (9-12)
advance to the sectional champi•; · . onship game to fac:e Beaver East::: : em (5-16) Monday evening at 6:30
:&lt;· at Alexander. The Pike County
~ ·.crew defeated Symmes Valley 5944 in the secood gatne.

Eastern's win avenges 55·52
and 70-62 losses to Trimble earlier
in the season and leaves Trimble at
7-14.
Eastern had a great team effort,
led by a 22.-point effort from junior
point guard Jessica KaiT. KaiT hit
9-18 from the field for SO%, hit 4-4
at the line and tallied five assists .
Sophomore Patsy Aeilcer had
one of the best games of her varsity
career with 12 points and 25
rebounds. The 25-rebound marie is
believed to be a school record, pos-

sibly eclipsing the marie of 24 set
by Tiffany Gardner bac1c in 199192. Aeiker was 6-14 from the floa
in a great effort.
Nicole Nelson piclced up se~
key buckets (4-6) for Eastern and
ended the night with eight points,
while Junior Rebecca Evans had
ten points and seven n:bounds.
Tammy Lenigar led the Lady
'Cats with 14 points and five
assists.
Perhaps the key to the game was
Eas1em's defensive effort on Beth

Koons, who was held to just four
points. Evi.ns and Aeiker were
credited with doing a great job with
Koons underneath. Koons had 34
and 2S poiniS against Easlern in the
two regular seaSon meetings.
Although not hiUinJ! the scoring
column Amy Redov1an played a.
great defensive game for Eastern
and a stead)' offense. Redovian's
defensive wmg collapsed on Koons
from the right side and also complimented Eastern's defensive effort.
Melissa Guess and Jessica Radford·

q-·

had good efforts orr the bench.
Eastern took a 2-0 lead on a
baseline drive by KaiT, but Erica
Campbell tied the score at 2-2 .
Patsy Aeilcer then hit a couple follow-up jumpers off the glass and
Nelson drilled a lcey jumper for an
8-2 Eas1em lead. Eastern rolled on

to a I()..7 lead at the
s elld.
In the second frame, Eastern
held a I S-9 edge to lead at the half.
Koons spent the entire second period on the bench in foul trouble as
Eastern marched to a 25-16 halftime lead.
(See EAGLES on Pa1e $)

:
:
,
,
:

:
,

DiviSI&lt;_~n.
. Me~gs got off to~ dreadful start
w~th rune turnovers m thefustfoo/

mmutes of the game. Meigs didn.1
, even get a shot from the Door ~til
the 4:04 marie of the first penod.
BY that time the Marauders were
staring at a 5-0 deficit
After Marauder. head coach Jeff
. Skinner called a urne out to calm
.his troops down, they came alive.
Ben Ewmg took the first shot from
the floor for Meigs and canned it to
-'-- I't a 5-2 Ale--"m.....,
"""...... lead at the
4:04 marie o~ ~ penod.
Trav•s R1ce s bu~ket gave tl!e
S~ a 7-21ead ~th 3:451eft !n
the penod. But Me1gs scored SIX
straight points to lead 8-7 with 1:45
left in the period. Josh Mace's
•
.
bu~ket w1th 1:00 left m the first
penod gave the Spartans an 11-10
lead at the fii'St period's end
Gary Stanley's three-pointer
gave the Marauders a 13-lllead 24
seconds into the second period.
Mr.er that both team traded baslcets
: the rest of the fii'St half. In the ·sec: ond period alone the score was lied
: eight times. Travis Abbou's fol· low-up shot at the buzzer tied the
. game at 31 as the teams went into
: the locker room at the half.

Alexander took a four point lead ou~ the.s~ point w~. . . · "
Valley at· t~e U~iversity of Rio
on two different occasions in the
'Th1s IS a very b1g wm.for us, a Grande. Me1gs w1ll also travel to
third period the last time at the 5:16 happy Slcinner said after the g&amp;l!le. .Wahama on Thursday, February
marie of the third when Milce Sher- "We came out and played wuh 23rd 10 play the White Falcons in a
man hit a bucket. But Meigs took some energy right from the start. malce-up game.
advantage of a pair of Stanley free We executed real well on offense
Resuve notes: Meigs won 45throws, a Abbott buclcet and anoth- a!! four periods .. This was a great 40 behind Chris Lambert's 13
er bucket by Stanley to talce a 41- wm over a quality team, that has po'"'" and Bradley Whitlalch' 11
·
raJ b'Jg games th'18 Y.ear"
s
391ead.
won seve
·
points and five assists Jeremy
A three point play by Shennan
_Ab~u I~ all scorers w1th 21
Pierce added nine ints ~three
tied the game at 43 with 3:13 10 go ~mts, mclu~' 11 or 14 from the steals for Me' {:C Ga dish led
in the third period. But Nick Han- bne. He was JOined m double fig- Alellllllller wif~· h · · Y
ing gave Meigs the lead for good ures by !"win_g (14) and Stanley
_._2!~~ts.
when he drilled a trifecta from deep (II). ~e1gs ~~ 26 of 41 from the
ALEXANDER
on the right wing to give Meigs a floor, m_cluding two ~f four fro!R
(ll-20-ll-ll=415)
46-43 advantage with 1:341eft
three-pomt range. !'fei~ ~hed m
Pete Williams 1-2-0..8 Kenn
Thirty seconds later, Meigs on 63% from the bne hiumg 17 of w
141 ;.3 Owl
increased the lead to 48-43 when 27 . .The Marauders gra~b~ 25 0-:6=~Milce Sbeiman S-0-2=! 2
Pullins fed Adam Hendrix with a re~unds, led by Abbott s e1ght. Josh Mace )-0-tl=(j Joe Grubb 5:
pass for a ~ay-in. V.:ith forty sec:- ~ei~S had !7 turnovers, but only · 0-2=12, Travis R'ice 4-0-2=10.
onds IIi go m the penod· Haning hll .e1~1it of those came after the ~our Totals: 23_z_13 =65 .
a short jumper off a feed from mmute mark of the fust penod.
Ewing and Meigs went into the ~e Marauders had seven. steals,
MEIGS
final eight minutes with a 50-43 With Abbott and Pullins !letbng two
(10-21-19-21=71)
lead
each, and 12 assists with gettmg
Gary Stanley 3_1_2=!!, Cass
· .
. .
seven of them.
. ~lj!:S ~ thell' bljq~CSI lead of
Alexander placed four players in Oeland 4-0-(),.8, Paul Pullins 3-0the rught with 5:~3 left m the game double; figures led by Chad Jarvis' 0=6, Ben Ewing S-0-4=14, Adam
when Abbo.tt hit both shots of a 14 , 12_point efforts by Grubb and Helldrix 1.()..0..2, Nick Haning 3-1~~~ ~ Spart:ans 10 Sherman and Rice's 10-point 0=9 • Travis Abbott S-0-11=21.
giVe 1gs a .
·
. .
effort. The Spartans hit 25 of ·53 Totals: 24-Z-! 7=71
Bu~ the sconng of Pete Will~ · from the floor for 47% including
anthed Rice gotRithe~ighbaclc mthetO two for 12 from three-point range
1m
game,
ce
· The Spanans hiI I3 or 18 from the·
'od
and Williams
hi e
trif
A bucket b Josh =cut ~ line for 72%. ~exander pulled i.n
lead to four (6J_59) with 2.20 left 25 rebounds With R1ce and JarviS
in the riod
·
grabbing seven, the Spartans turned
pe · . . .
.
the ball over 13 timea.
Ewmg made.n a su:_pomt Meigs
Alexander will host Miller Frilead (65-59) on a lay-11! off a feed da
·
hi! th Maraude
from Stanley Then Ewmg went 10
y evemng w e e
rs
the line (I M. fi
.
. th
play Vinton County at home .
or elgs 1 ~ .umes ·m e Me' swill hit the tournament trail
next 27 seconds hlltmg four of 011
F b 21
. 51 R'
them malcing i~ a 69-59 game with
y, e ·
agam
IV&amp;
53 sec~ ~ftm ~game.
But. W1lhams hit baelc-to-baclc
~
threes m a span of 15 seconds the
last co~ing with 20 seconds left IIi
m~lce II a 69-65 game. After a
miSsed Marauders tree thro:W, PJ!ul ·
Pullins _cam~ u~ w!th a b1g steal
and lay-1n with SIX uclcs left on the
clock and the Marauders had pulled

Basketball

:By JIM ABRAMS . '
: WASHINGTON (AP) - With
·spring training opening, members
: of the Senate are playing hardball.
: They are dehverinl! the bl~;~nt
· message that Congress 1s not gomg
: to help the owners and players res: cue the 1995 season.
"I ain't doing nolhing now. It's
: all yours, period,'' Sen. Alan' Simp: son, ~-Wyo., told players Wednes. day at a Senate Judiciary panel
: hearing on ending baseball's
: antitrust exemption.
· The players say they will end
: their strilce if Congress passes a bill
: to repeal the 73-year-old exemption
· that shields baseball owners from
: suits over work rules and gives
: their union the right to sue . But
. with opening day only 45 days
· : away, senators made clear that
: slow-moving legislation is not the
. answer.

.
·
:
:
.

"It's unrealistic for anybody to
hope 1hat Congress is going to
intervene," said Sen. Arlen
Specter, R-Pa, wbo called for owners 10 join the players in agreeing
: to bipdiilg arbitration.
· 'file Senale is considering sever:· al bills that would partially lift the
: exemption, which was created by a
· . 1922 Supreme Court decision. One,
· proposed by Judiciary Committee
chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Uiab, and
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, DN.Y., would repeal the exemption
for labor relauons but not affect
baseball's ability to control franchise relocations or the current
minor league syslem.
But even those senators who

Seedless Navel
Oranges 10# bag

se:conds

..

$

w.........,.. . . . ...

35
I2 35

.631
.417
.:192
.313
.216
.255

.!ill
·7
17..!
19
19
24

F..astero

(10-15-15-12:::51)
Jessica Karr 9-0-4=22, Nicole
_ Nelson 4.0-0=8, Rebc:cca Evans 3Trimble
0-4=10, Patsy Aeilcer 6-0-0=12.
(7-9-14-13=43)
Misti Trace 1-0-0=2, Tammv Totals: 22-0·8/ll:Sl

-·-·-·-

II
=vE!AND ....... 29 19
todiooo ................... 28 :lll
C!icoao..................24 25
Adamo ...................23 26
Milwaukoe ............. l9 ' 30
DcuoiL ................... ll 30

.633
.604
..!13
.490
.469
.388
.37,5

llinm Col 6:!
lkidclboq 19, OhiD Nortbom 71

a

Atk&amp;niU

86", AlaMma 80

Aubunt 80, South Cuulino 78
F1orld1 70, Tcnncucc 41
GooiJio Tochl5, N. Corolino A.U II
luna M1dilon 92. Eaa Cuolina 17

11
12.5

ileum. ............... _30
Denver ...................20
Dtllu ..................... l9
Minnaaou .._........ - 12

I~

W4

15

.674

17
'I1 .
28
37

.6311
.426
.404
.245

Padllc Dhbloo
l'boa\ix ...... :.......... 39 10 .796
Scl1lle ...... .............. 34' \3 .723
LA. l.Uen ............ lO 16 .6S2
Sacnmmao ............26 20 .565
Portland .................25 Z1 512
Ooldon Stotc .......... 14 33 .291
L.A.Ciippca ....... ·' 41 .16!

REJECTION FROM BEHIND - Meigs forward Nick Haning
(41) is about to have his shot altered from behind by Alexaoder's
Mike Sberman (34) during Wednesday nilbt's TVC pme in Albany,
wbere the Marauders won 71-65. Haoio1 Ooisbed with nine points.
(Sentinel photo by Da~ Harris)

.!ill

VMI 14, Lynohboq 66 .
Vancitlbilll3, GcorUa n
Vi .. 64, DukeSI

2.l
4
14

Nortb Cout Alblttlc Cont.

wTefo.at 63, Maryland 5A

u

62

23

.

Midwest
BollS' 14. Cont. MichigUI '4

4
7..!

• Deni~Ut II, Wilbert"~ 6~

Butler 76, N~ Dame 60
Dn.ke 82, lllin- SL 78
E. Michigan 65, Bowlin Green 43
Iowa 74, Minnc10t.a 70 ·
Kent 73, Akml 64

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

a

1\.S

13
24
31

Wednesday's scores

Okl.homa Sl. 7l,lowa St. 69

CLEVELAND 100,0rlando99 (Of)
lndi.na 114, Deuoi.t 88
Otic.$o I 07, Washington 92
Phocna 120, Po!1.land II J (OT)

46

- Purdliii7\,PfnnSl.5l ·
W'~rin 70, NoohwaRCrn 56
XaWer (Ohio) 94, Wright St.. 34

Boston 116, Ooldcn Swe liS

1

Cin. w,...m to. -L,~h

On.l Robcna 81. SWTe11u St. 65

' games
Tonight's

a., Collinwood 79, a..

Rice 75, Tua1 A&amp;.M 69
Tens 91, Southern Me.Lh. 65

DenYcr at New Jc:n:ey, 7:30p.m.
NewYotkatMiami, 7 :30p.m.

Te:ua Tech 98,11ou.t.oo 72

HOUIIon at CM.riOUc. 8 p.m.
·
CLEVELAND at Mil waukee , 8::30
p.m.
San Antonio at ULah. 9 p.n1.
LA. La1u:nro al S&amp;a&amp;mmto, 10:30 p.m.

For West
Gonnga 74, Pon.land S9
Long Ruc.t. St. 75 , UC Smta 8arbln1
63 .
Oklahoma 82, Colora.do 7.5

· Friday's 1ames'

WICI1c:m Rcurve61 (Of)
La.mr~ccbwL lnd. 61, Hmilon 65

90

''""""S4,
71 Miami
· Golllpolio83,
Gmcilficld McClain

.

39

Medina Hiahland 13, Norton 61

Stanford B3,Cali.fcnia70

Miami at New Yotk, 7:":~0 p.m.

McDannoa ~onbwCI\ 98. S. Webltc:J

Mcip 71, Alu.andcr 6S
O&amp;k. Hill 93, Porllmaulh W. 74
Pikctan 52,. Zane T raoo 44

Hwllon 1 1 Wuhin&amp;ton, 7;30 p.m.
Philadelphi.a at Orlando. 7:30p.m.

Florida

:z. au. •• 0

t... Anaola 3, 0.U.. I
Occrolt3, Wimlpca 1
&amp;Jn )piC 1. Vancouver I

TOillght'sllllllts
llull'ont "Pil~. 7,30 p.m.
.
MontJU.ill ~.Y. Ran.IC'.!, 7:30p.m.
Qucbe&lt; "PhilodelpiUo, 7,30 p.m.
Cll&amp;UY at ChiCIJO. B:lO p.m .

TampaBay ....•.. 5 7

I

II

38

42

6 22

J4

Frlday'spmes

33

N.Y. blandtn at New Jeney, 7:lO
p.m.
Otu..-a at T~ Bay, 7:30p.m.
Bow.~.._ Flonda, ~:30 p.m.

3 7 l

56

22 46 22
15 36 29
ll 2.5 21
II 29 3 3
9 31 32

FAnwnLon •• Detroit. 7 :30p.m.
SL l..bullat W~ 1:30 p.m.
San JaM~ at.l.ol Anplal, 10:30 p.m..
Vanoouvcr II\ Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.

r~-~-~-~::~::;~=~~~:~,:;;~ ~~:·l:r~~~;~an•no&gt;n
Baseball - Football - Basketball - Racing
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¢
¢
~

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~·

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40
41
43

38
40
28
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""".ant ...........

Buky 13, Faidield Union 37
an.- B .... ai,N........t22
Eo~on 59, Ba&gt;junin ........ 49
FWi~nd 62. South P&lt;MtSI

lludoon71 , o-55
Kiaki (Pa .) Prop 71. Berlin Center

F"iuno St. l9, CS Nonhridtl,e S6

11 !9
I 2A
I 29

34
35
21
32

71, Maricu. 43

DI-D
Athcfta 56, New LuinSLm 49
lldhoi·Tde n, a..Purcoll Muian 60

Glmvillo 101. Cle. W• Tech 51

34

42
31

13
13
ll
II

Bu.fl"alo ........ -.... 6 6 I
M:mtn:al .. ... .... .. 4 S 3

63

K Liv"!l"'!'! 10. Woinal, W.Vo. 56
O.UipoliJ 75, ................ w.v•.57

14 r1
14 !I
13 41

I
I
2
I

Qud&gt;ec............. 11 I 0
lloo&amp;m .............. 7 4 I

33
. ........ 56, Unt:uler 49
w. ConoliiOn 57, MWnilburtl S&lt; (OT)

Copley 69. R~ 64

45

Edrnodon 4, Ton:.llo 1

Northt.Ut Dl\'likJn
Pittal"uJ.h. ......... 11 0 I 23

Kcu.erin.&amp; Fainnont 61, Dey. Belmoru

Cin. Summit Country Day 49, Cin .
Country Dly 41

Soutbwesl .

LA . l..&amp;kcnl02,' SR~.tlc96

Cin. Loveland 69, On. MariCI'I"tmt.57
Cln. Sown Hilla 52,. New MWni43

IS 43

11 4.2 ~2
13ol39

"RoDda··········-·· 6 1
PhihdolplUo ...... 6 7
NewJaRy ....... S S
N.Y.lalondcn... 5 6

Ww.ini'OO ...... 2 8 2

Cin. Sycamore 44, Cin. Walnut Hiu.
37 .
Cin. Ut~Wine71, Cin. Taft 35
Doy. Dunbor69.Middldown52
'

Zl
31

Wedneilday's scores

Atlaatk Dlvlllon

llhloloo I
Oilllic:odl~

16 50
I' 50

Hutront 4, Moo.... I
N.Y. R..,. . 2, Bulfolo I
New Jeney 4, Wuhiaifan 2

ham
.!! L I U: fA l&lt;l.
N.r.Ranpn.... 6 6 I 13 34 32

TOUrDillllODb

A1uon Elld 54, Am. Con'·Howa-51
A1uon Oufiold 70. A1uon Budtl&lt;l 64
lk!P"' 87, Trimble 37
.
CUt IJrecr,PaJk 45, Cin.. Taylor 40
Cin. Indian Hill 41. Cin. linne)'\'lwn

Miami (Ohi o) 61 , W. Michigan 47
Michigan SL 68, Illinois 58
OHIO 19, Toledo 62

Vancouver ........ 2 5 4

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Wictllffe 67, Hawkt.l'l !52
W0011eriO, New Philldelphia 44
Y01.11!11- Boudtncl S I, Warran lludin&amp;
32
•
Youn1- Libcny St, ·..r.·aml\ Ownpi.oo
43
'
Young. R.ayen 41, Sharon, Pa. 32

Butlel" 58, O.ytm 44

Anaheiql ........... 4 I 0

NHLstandings

47

Non-conference Kllon

Cola"l' .............

6 5 2
6 5 I

.1- ............... • 5 3

Hockey

W1tkin.t Marnorial49, ReynoldabWJ,

\vin.eabe:IJ72. Ohio W1111lcyln 61
W0011a1r 65, Kmym. 41 - -

William 1: Mary 16, American Univ.

Edmoo... .........

· Whitcolk 60, PMamouth Notre Dame

Obcrli.n47,1!J.yD.aW.42
.
Pidt~~ 12, Whitd&gt;.U 31
S - 1 - d 42.N.-or 31
l'"ol Scoa 31. Tol Waite 2.3
Vamillcm 64, Suubky 45

I

PodlkDI-

S&amp;tl Joae............ 6 4 2

36

N. Olmlted S4, Rocky Ri~cr 26

Bowlin&amp; Otoen 67o B. Mic:hiaan 53
Toledo 77, 01110 60
w.MiclUpn 76, MUmi 72 ~

·

Bc:din Hiland 66, Jewa1-Scio 20
Cln,. SuMmil Counny Day 2.7. Cin.
c..ont.y Dol22
FoydleYille 94, Cin. l.ondnwl&lt; au. 4
N. Adoml31, Foiofiold 3ol
RatdrvillhEailan 52. Trimblc43

:w

. Mld-Amerkan Conten!nce

Louilima 62

MiMCII'OU I 01 , Jl'hll.ldelphil91

..

college scores

N. CuofW St. i6, Florida St. 17
Tuaa-Pan Amcric1n 74, SW

MldwMl DlYIIIon
Amoni,o...........

w.......,..u,
Ohio women's

'i~~ ~'toft

I 4 0
St. Low. ........•.. 7 4 I
Tomno •............ 6 6 3
W"UU'Iipce: .••.•.•.•• • 7 l
o.u.. ................ 372

Dbllloa IV
Beava EaAetn S9, Symme~ Val44
4

Oe. l..ahcsran Wea40, Flyri.a C.th. 33
OW.40, Tli-Villqo 19
~...... &lt;16, Onwio 31
a.--;.., 36, E. Clioun t6
J... Adduno ~. Habb c.-.19
t.api&lt;: 59. Ubor&lt;y·B - sa
Madiaqt 61, Jcffeaon 61
Mo..,;&amp;.t6!1, Vol F&lt;qeS5
M&lt;C.mb 72. v... -

M.nob...., 71, Blull\oo 76
t!odhom 61

~l02LSU90

WESTERN CONFERENCE

2A

NOll-conference ICtloo

South

McNOCIIc St. &amp;I , Southern 71

l\"'
. . . .......... .Jf31
Son

MOWlt Union 61, Mui.a 66(01')

&lt;lllod&gt;om 16, ~ 12l0'1}

OUcoao ............

Smdy V&amp;l.. :SS, Ridgewood 38

a..-

loll! CamiU 60. lloldoio·W...... 57

CollcfC 75
Rhode bland 11; Wcd VUJlnia 73

DIYIIioom

A.Unabula s-4, P)'m•wnin&amp; Val. :41
Alhubula Harbor 14, Genova 46
AVU1 Late 71, t.~.I.!e
Bamemlle .50,
' St. John 39
NIXL 51, SIJokcr Hu. ·41
Cle. C.lholi&lt; 60, Brooklyn 51
Cle. Jloiahto 52, P.du• 38
a.. lndepondcnco 71, a~ w... Toch

~II,

.=. . . . .

41

CfllllraiDI...,._

· Oanway 61 , NcwcomeatbWn 37

Ma""'

5I

Oblo Athletic ConfertDCe

Novy7i,Anny69
PiU.buJJh 14, -

1..5
2.5
7

w....,..

W-..65,La,..,50

East

25

Roautar......,.. ~~&lt;tlol!t
Allin I!. S&lt;, A!tin.... 32
.Arnhln. 5S, FailvlBw S4
Andmn 34,
Clu. XI

4 2.5

t 9 2

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Wavt:dy 60, ~River Val. ~8

OlUo DanioUcu 12; lh'-1 6S

Nortb Caul Athletic Cont.
l2ue w.... liS, OI.tio 51

con

w........,

Vinum Co. "!S, Sboridan S4
CJl 47. llilUloom 45

Ohio H .S. girls' scores

Mld-Oblo Colltenace

Wi-69. OlUo

Ulla•• ··············

Sprina. Sh.lwnee 44, Orcmon 22
Sprinaboro 41, Fomklin 40
T~ Edacwood n , Nucn 36

coUege scores

Bo.loa Univ. 63.Horstn 37
Cotaa~ 76, BIK:l.Ml159
Holy em.. 7:1, FoMiwn 57
I.OhJah 97. Woye~~e 7S

Ceatr•l DIYIIIoll

1994 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD .

5

Idaho 10# bag
Baker$ · ·

300W. Main

17
28
31
29

o..n-................31

PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRU&lt;:KS

Wando Peas

415::43

$8999 SJ89.Down
$11,999
.s10;995
189 Mo.

l----------

Lettuce

Lenigar 6-0-2 •14, Tonya 'I'raal 30-0=6, Erica Campbell 1-0-0.2,
Sherry Davis 0-0-1•1, Misti Lent
1-1-0=5, Hollie Canter 4-0-1•9.
Beth Koons 2.()..():.4. Totals: 18-1-

T'~~6J])~r-11''61)A" 6Al.~!!

-~•

Solid Head

r~eld

: ERFURT, Germany (AP) : For the fifth time in less than three
· weelcs, Sun Caiyun of China set a
: world indoor record in the
; women's pole vault by clearing 13
· fee~ 7 1/4 inches. The record was
: 13-6 1/1.
.
Sailinl
.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Ameri: ca3's all-women crew heat Dennis
: Conner's Stars &amp; Stripes by 1
in the opening
: minilfe, 26
, race jlf the third round robin series
· of tho America's Cup trials to end a
: three-race losing strealc.
America3 lnlils co-leaders Stars
li. Stripes and Young America, 9
poinJs to 7 in the Citizen Cup
standjngs.

New YOd&lt; ..............30
B -.......... .........20
NcoJ-, ..........20
Mlomi .................... ll
I'1Uiodolp1Uo .......... l4

HURRY TO DON TATE MOTORS

~c:c:bok ,.,~ ·

suppon antitrust legislation seolded
the two sides for failing to reach a
solution on their own. ·
"I really fear that enormous
damage is being done to baseball
today," said Sen. Patrick Leahy,
0-Vt.
Hatch, on "CBS This Morning," was asked why he thou,ht
Congress had a role; sa1d,
"because we ggve an antitr-ust
exemption to .organized baseball
and this has given the owners,
some of the owners, the right to
pervert the process and to have an
advantage over the players."
·
. Hatch explained the proposed
legislation would, " grant a lim ired
exemption or a limited.repeal of the '
antitrust law."
He said the biD would "protect •
the owners and their right to maintain the minor leagues and keep
business as usual .
~'Then they have a choice, they
can go to the bargaining table,'to a
court or both and in the process
both the pwners and players have a
level playing field."

Sports briefs
Track &amp;

~do .................~ I~ ~

FIRST IN SALES!
,.....,
FIRST IN SERVICE!!! AND
m:t:l FIRST IN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

~ Congress

says it's staying
:out of baseball strike issue

turnovers, 16 assists (Kan five,
Radford &amp; Redovian three each)
and 10 fouls. ,
Trimble hit 13-31, hit 1-3 ~
and was 4-S at the line. Trimble
had 32 rebounds (Canter seven,
Lenigat six), had nine steals (Lenigar six), 12 turnovers, five IISSists
and 18 fouls.

Wolfe added, "We played good
as. a team tonight . We had 16
assists and moved the ball well.
Every girl did their part and did it
well We were able 10 sub a lot in
th~ early part of the game, and 1
thinlc that helped us going down the
stretch." ,
Eastern hit 22-58 for 37.9 percent, shot no threes and was 8-T2 at
the line. Eastern had SO rebounds
(Aeilcer 25, Karr eight, Evans
seven), nine steals (Karr 3), 30

Ohio men's

Major men's
college scores

AU..IkDI'Ilokoo

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Our Line Up:

D=oit atOUcaao. 1:30 p.m.
Atlanlt 1t Dallu, 1:30 p.m.
Sc.aa.le at Portland, I 0 p.m.
Bocton at LA. Clippcn, l0:30 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

iarvis (

tesda

Indiana at Minncww, l p.m.
Golden Sta1e at Pbocni1, I p.m.

NBA standings

u....

l:"

ed buckets. If we miss a shot or
twO here it becomes a different 1Mil
game. Our girls showed a lot of
poise both here and at the end of
the game. Overall, our ability 10 set
the early tempo and to set the stage
defensively was also a big factor."
Eastern rolled on to a 40-30 lead
after three frames . In the final
round, Trimble twice came back to
seven points, but could get no closer. Eastern rolled on to the S2-43
win.

..

.M.e igs hands Alexander 71-65 setback
•
By DAVE HARRIS
SeatiD~l Correspolldent
Me1gs overcame a rocky start
and t~olc advantage of red hot
shootmg from the floor to defeat
th~ Alexander Spartans 71-65 in
Tn: Valley Cc;~nference. basketball
ac110n Wednesday
everung
at Larry
.
.
R. Momson Gymn&amp;Siwn: .
The game was the third m cons.ecuuve days for the Marauders.
After a well-deserved rest ~y.
.the maroon and ~ld will host Vmton County o_n Fndar. .
. The wm IS the Sixth IR the last
e1ght games for .the ~rs (8~9
. o_verall &amp; S-1. m the Oh10 DIYIsmn). Ale~der fell to ,8-10 ov_era!! 800 7-7 10 the TVC s Hoclcing

The Dally SenUnel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�.I

SenUnel

Ohio

~eigs

County Council on Aging, Inc.

Multipurpose Senior Center, 1st Floor (614) 992-2161 FAX (614) 992·7886
Mulberry Heights, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS
AT THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER

THANKS TO .

1994

Alzheimer 's Disease/ Related Diso.rde rs
(famil y caregive r trai ning and
support groups)
C are Supp ort System (assess men t of
hospitalized seniors for fo llow-up care after
discharge)

1994 GROUP
DISTRIBUTORS
CHURCH DONATIONS
East Letart

BUY A 1995 MEMBERSHIP

li ni ted Methodist Women

Racine Fi rst Baptist Church

CONTRIBUTORS

Mt. Union Baptist C hurch
Mt. Moriah Church of God Ladies Auxiliary
Mt. Moriah Baptist Church
Racine United Method ist Women

C ase Manage ment (iden ti fying problems
and obtaining assistance)

Racine United Method ist Men
'
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ

C enter Dining (nutritious meal s)

'

Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society

D ay Ac.ti~iti es
Educati onal Programs
H ealth Assessment ·

Flalwoods United Methodist Church

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

Meath United Methodist Women's Club

IN THE HOME

Rocksprings United Methodist Church

Pomeroy First Baptist Church

Chore Service (cleaning-laundry)

H ealth Clinics

Pomeroy Trinity Church
.Protective/Legal Assistance

Tuppers Plains Church of Gqd Ladies
Auxiliary

Home Delivered M eal s

ORGANIZATIONS

R ecreational/Social Activities
Home Maintenance
repairs)

R etired and Senior Volunteer Program
Support Assistance (for example, filling out
insuran ce/medical . forms and answering
benefit questions)
· Tax Assistance
Tran sp.ort ation and Escort v e hi cles are
availabl e for personal/medical trips . .

(minor

Big Bend C. B. Club

home

Feeney Bennett Post # 128
I.C.P., Inc., Tiffin, Ohio

Oulreach

Kroger Retirees (Gallipolis)

.

-

The cosl for membership for 1995 is $3.00
per individuaL What is your $3.00 used for?
The dollars raised through the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Cenler Membership
campaign will be used to pay for the cost ol
printing and mailing the newsletter six times
per year and as local match dollars for in·
home services.

Pomeroy United Methodist Church

Home maker/liealth Services

Informati on and Referral

Your paid membership to .the Meigs County
Council on Ag ing , Inc. is a measure of
support for the Multipurpose Senior Center
and for the many services It provides. Each
paid memb.e rship received verifies to
regional, state and national funding agencies
that tha Senior Center is providing needed
programs to older adults.

You may stop in al the Senior Center or mail
your membership to : ·Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior Center, P.O. Box 722,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. II possible, please
include a stamped . sell-addressed envelope.
Thank you for your support.
AtAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAA

and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

50% off

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

Bill Slack
992·2269

l;tappyAds

.
'

;• Ain't It
Nift'

• Jess

KEII'IIPPI.IINCI
; IIUICI
•Facto'l Authorized Porta
ill Service
•All .,_ '42 Ynrl
of'ost Reliable Service
•Weshllre · Dryers · Repgo~
•H.W. Healers
-Microwavea •Disposals

TREE OF LIGHT DONATIONS

Teresa Byer

Ruby Frick
William &amp; Anna Fink
Ruth-Francis
Lijah Frecker
Hollte Green
Ralph &amp; Nell Graves
William Gibbs
Charlie Gibbs
Waller Gree n
Fred &amp; Avanet) George
Carl &amp; Pauline Gorbv
Denzel &amp; Mabei .G o~·gl c in
Goldie Gilmore
Herman &amp; Beulah Grate
Sara Gibbs
Ted Halfield
Ja&lt;J,ic Hi.ldebrand .
bavid &amp; Delores Holler
Virginia Hoyt
Ota Hy ~c ll
Lula Hampton ·
Helen Hood
Dorothy Hendricks
Hilda R. Harris
Clyde Hampton
Ollie Hill
Et hel Hughes
Dalton &amp; Rose Henry
Rudie &amp; Lena Ha1fleld
Nadine Hudson
Helene Howett
Eve lyn Hill
Dorothy G. Hall
Bernice Hawk
Emmeline Hendrix
Sarah Hull
.Naomi Hoschar
Mary Hamm
Mildred Hamm
Nellie Hatfield
Helen Hicks
Erma Hill •
Freda Hood
Mildred Ihie
James &amp; Elnora Ingels
Margaret Juhll~o n . . ,
Rulh Johnson
Rob!. &amp; Patric ia Smith
Charles Johnston
Berth a Johnson
Charl es Kise r
Lewis &amp; Alice Kennedy ·
Delmas Kerns
Mary V. Kautz
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robt. King
Margaret Kennedy
George Kauff
Chester &amp; Ann Knight
Farie Kennedy
Charles &amp; Bunn y Kuhl
Dorolhy Long •
Mary Lyon
Amber Lohn
· Olive Lawson

Hazel Bcnrhs
Lois Bell
Ed Burnem
WM. '&amp;Delores Bailey ·
Juanita Bachtel
Edison &amp; Bernice Baker
Goldie Basham .
Burdell &amp; Effie Black
. Genev ieve Burdelle ·

Helen Bodimer
· C E. &amp; Daisy Blakeslee
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roy Gu1bcrle1
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Arlhur Wieneke
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ewing Giffin .,
Mr. &amp; Mrs .. Edward Gam meier
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Raymond Oliver .
Don &amp; Belly Becker
Gertrude Bass

John &amp; flenriella Bailey
Glad ys Blessing
Flossie Badgley
Mary,Buck

Luci lle Bmley
Lou ise Bca rhs
Eilee n Bowers

Belly Butcher
Doroth ) Bryan
Carl &amp; Hazel Barnhill
Anna Brown

Evely n Casto
James Conrill
Man le y &amp; Malinda Christy
Kenneth &amp; Mary Cund;'ff
Erni:sl &amp; SadH! Ca rr
&amp; Teli tha Cas to

O li ~

Ed na Ca rme n
Doug Ci rcle
Carole Coleman
Liz Cutl er
Rubat Caldwell
Laura Cozart
Bonnie Co nde
Mtldred Caldwell
Mrs. James Hanning
M. Crouse r
Clara Criswell
Ruben &amp; Thelma Coli ins
Carsey
hil &amp; Pam Cleaver
Sherwood &amp; Beulah Coll·ier
Edna Clark
Elizabeth Carmen
Nancy Parker Camphell
Mary Durst
Eva Dessauer
Leo &amp; Mary Davidson
Roland &amp; BOnnie Durst
Clara Darsl
Willie Davis
Ernest Damewood
Gladys Dillon
Mr.·&amp; Mrs . Sam Dolfi ·
Rachel Dcwnie
Els i ~

•

Garnel Ervine
Richard &amp; Alice Freeman

Maxine Owens

Dayton Phillips
Doroth y Pence
Inez Pooler
Marilyn Powell
Ervin &amp; Lucille Pot ratz
Alice Plantz
Mary Rinehart
Frances Roush

Pauline Ridenour
Doro1h y Reibel
Doro1h y Roller
Josephine Ritchie
Harold &amp; Margie Roush
Wanetta G. Radekin
Wanda Rize r
. Arnold &amp; Flor~ nce Richards
Leona Roach
: Golda Radcliffe
Wilbur Rowley
Marshall &amp; Debbie Roush
Esla Roberts
Rose Reynolds
Nina Robinson
Haro ld Roush
Josephine Stil es
Rubl. &amp; .Donna Smilh
John Joe Shain
John &amp; Mary Southern
JA &amp; Dorothy Smith
George Sellers
Rosalie Story
Harriette Sinclair
Daisy Sayre

David &amp; porothy
Sayre
Tom &amp; June Soulsby
Beatrice Smith
Eileen Snyder
Faye Schullz f&gt;
Bernice Swartz

Mamie Swauger
Bertha Smith
Geraldine Spencer
Abbie Stratton
Trell &amp; Edna ..
Schoenleb
Sadie Trussell
William Thurston
Velma Taylor .
James &amp; Eleanor
Thomas
Eva Triplett
V. Jane Teaford
Hazel Van Cooney
Mae Weber
Beulah While
Robt. &amp; Norma
· Wilson
Belva Willard - '
Dora Wining .
Mabel Waddell
Betty Way
Mary Winget!
Elizabeth Well
Bob &amp; Alice Wamsley
Mike Wright
Victor &amp; AI ice Wolfe
Audra Wells
Buryl &amp; Evelyn White
James Webe r

Helen White
Pearl Wi II iams
Ann Williams
Dorothy Woodard
Bernice Wilson
Lillian Zerkle

Rose Sisson

Joe &amp; Myrtle Sisson ·
Evelyn Stowe
Agnes Stevens

SPECIAL THANKS
Meigs County Commissioners &amp; Local
State Elected Officials
Meigs County Health Department
The Daily Sentinel
Meigs County EMS
Meigs County 'rruslees/Cierks
The Class ics
,
WMPO Radio
Meigs TB Office

Avanell Bass
Anna R. Fitch
· Nonga Roberts
· Martha Chambers
Mar!Iyn Powell
Rose Reynolds
Clara Conroy
James &amp; Elnora
Ingels
Eileen Buck
Dwain &amp; Wilma
Casto
Martha Dudding
Nellie Parker
Mae Weber.
Lilah Frecker
Catherine Burton
Catherine Colwell
Garnet Ervine
Mary K. Yost
Ken Braun
June Cole
Goldie Pickens
Lillie Randolph I
Dorothy Hendricks
.Eva Dessauer
Nellie Harfield
Gladys Dillon
Nell Wilson
Helen Fisher
Emma Adams
. Don &amp; Betty Maurer
Josephine Smit!J
Virgil McElroy
Nina Dixson
Mary B'uck
Viola Rumfield
Carol Lunsford
Polly Eichinger
Leo &amp; Mary
Davidson
Lillie Randolph
Joan Corder
Isabelle Wolfe
Karen Phalin

Dayton &amp; Sarah
Spencer
Harry &amp; Mary
Stobart
Martha Anderson
Gudrun Schaekel
Jim &amp; Jenny
Whitlatch
.
.
Nellie Zerkle
Gwinnie White
Donna Grate
Dorothy Dqwnie
Edith Reiser
Elmer Brandt
Margaret Thompson
Ruben &amp; Thelma
Collins
Roy &amp; Eunice Jones
Helen White
Bonnie Conde
Diana Ash
Pauline Davis
Margaret Kennedy
Opal Tyree
'Peggy Drosky
Dave &amp; Dorothy
Sayre
Abbie Stratton
Bernice Carpenter
Ola Hyse.ll
Ruth Criner, Ann, &amp;
Charlie
Donna &amp; Fred
Williamson
Ida Diehl
Charles Kiser
Mary Rinehart
Margaret Sheets
Jane Teaford
Lula Circle
Nadine Hudson
John Joe Shain
Mae Crouser
Margaret Murray
Eva Robson

.. Don &amp; Lee Young
Elsie Smith
Agnes Dixon
Grace Warner
/ Grace Price
Rosalie Story
Pauline Ridenour
Alice Wolfe
Alice Wamsley
Levanchia L. Cain
Joe &amp; Myrtle Sisson
Jeanette L.awrence
Mary Bentz
Edna Fiber
Beth Theiss
Ferndora Story
Mildred Perry
. Evelyn Mundly
Elizabeth Milton
'
Hazel Sellers
Effie Pickens
Paul &amp; Eileen Be~gle
Manley &amp; Malinda
'
Christy
Elizabeth Carpenter
Margaret B. Weber
Jean Wright
Peg Douglas
Juanita Ratliff
. Marjorie Grimm
June Soulsby
Mary Grace Cowdery
Jackie Hildebrand · ·

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Come Tan With
MeAt

949~2168

(614) 985-3561 or

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair · NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
• ALL MAKES &amp; fv100EI.S .
992-7013 OR
(:192-~553 OR
"OLL FREE 14!00-848•0070
DARWIN, OHIO

..

•
' J

We Have Cars and Vans/
Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486-1590
264 Upper Rive r Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Gallipolis, OH . 4563 1

''"'"

s200 lnstelled

.5/16194 TFN

KINGS'
Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Mlddtepor1. Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
· •Roofing •Painting
-Garages •Porches
•Pole Barns
FTH

E•rlmeree

614-742·3090
. . 304-773-9545 2N1 ...

110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

Graded Benefit Whole Life is now abailable. The
plan offers coverage of up to ·$10,000 with no
physical exam and no health questions' askecl'on
the application. Ages 40·80
·

992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1·800·29h5600

ROCKY R. HUPP

One Stop Complete Auto Bdy Repair

American General LHe &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

614·843-5264
Life • .Medicare • Cancer • Fire

Health • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work We1lcotme

.........

· State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

CALIFORNIA TANS
34110 Sugar Run Rd.
Long Bottom, OH. 45763
00

15 Sessions SJS
All Lotions Y2 Off
949·2823

HAULING

Utnti'M'tf'n

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Limestone
&amp; Gravel

Garages • Replacement Windows

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

COMMERCIAL
and .RESIDENTIAL
.
FREE ESTIMATES

SAYRE TRUCKING

614-992-7643

Room Additions • Roofing

614•742·2138
t~_n

·1/3111 mo.

(No Sunday Calls)

211219211.10

MORRISON'S
&amp; COOLING
EPA and RSES Certified

Your authorized
American Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Available
. Call992•7434 for more information.
1125195

•

R.&amp;J.IU'I'O
PIIN'I'IRG
"You Cra.lt. II .. We Fix 'It "

32361 Dewitts Run Road
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
Portable Welding ·
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to '/, Inch.
·call Anytime ·, ·
John Krider
614-843-5192
Harold Person
614-843-5285

J&amp;L INSULATION

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
OHice Hour&amp;&lt;" Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
. Free Estimates

1120t'95

111Mfn

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues •• Wed. - Fri. • Sat.
1~

• Craftsman Toola
•Toys
•Guns ·
·Loads ol Misc.
Buy-sell-Trade
992-2060 10/&amp;ll mo
.

'S

DAN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
For All Malor
Brands
Used Appliances
for Sale
Call
614·992·5515

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

, 011 1/ltn

MODERN
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; porlable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Llconaed &amp; Bonded - 20 yoara experience
.
992·3954
Emergency Phone 985- :.1 1B

,,

h Hn

.

an is between rock and hard place in .helping ·step-~on
Ann
Landers
" 1995, Loa Angat as

.r mes SyndJcale and
CreaiOfl Syndicate"

, Dear Ann Landers: In a few ·.

rlionths, I will be marrying "Jill," who

$Is a 15-year-old son, "Mike." Mike

i1 very friendly with my son, who is
tDe same age.
: Mike and 1 get along reasonably
ell, but we haven't had. time to
velop the kind of close relationship
would like. Recendy, my son wid
~-in the stric~t of confidence. thai
has seen Mike buying and using
rgs. Jill has no idea this is going

~

't

on.
I am in a quandary. If I tell Jill, I
·will be violating my promise of
confidentiality to my son. His trusl
is something that is implirtaiit tD me,
IIJid I dQn't W!lfll tD betray him. Also,
Mike wiD certainly know that my son
was the one who ratted on him, and
it would hun their relationship. This
could cause real problems when all
of us are living togethet
On the other hand, if! withhold this
information from Jill, I am being
unfair 10 her and preventing her
from helping her son. Also, if Jill
should ever find out that I knew
about Mike's drug problem and said
nothing to her, it could &amp;mage our
relationship.

·! Society scrapbook

; DF;A.N'S UST
spans s~veral countie_s in southeast' Hetdt Ferguson, a student at em Ohw ~~ bordenng nvenowns
apilal University, was named to tn West VrrgmaaandKentucky.
e fall semester dean 's Ust having
VALENTINE QUEEN
hieved a 3.4 or above grade point
Barbara · Welsh was crowned
verage. Her home address is Valentine queen for 1995 during a
aum Addition, Pomeroy.
recent meeting ·0 r Xi Gamma Mu
: ART DIRECTOR
B s·
Ph' S
.
•• "So
. ~uth-·t ·OhiO
' " magazine has Chapter, eta Igma 1 oronty,
~
held at the home of Barbara Blal:k
4lpointed James Thomas Holter as in Cheshire.
:jl't directot for its spring issue.
Plans were discussed for the
• Holter, a graduate of Southern next meting tD be held at the home
Jl;gh School and son of Roger and of A.R. Kliight at which time his
llelen Holier, is a junior at Ohio birthday will be observed.
~niversity, majoring in fllagazine Founder's Day was discussed and
itumalism.
arrangements made for a fund rais• "Southeast Ohio" iJ published er at that time, and a report was
rly by students"of the E.W. given on ~bloodmobile canteen
ps School of Journalism at served by members at the Senior
.
University, Athens. II covers Citizens Cenler. ·
many wpics such 8S local histDry,
A feature of the meeting was a
aha communities and special hearts and hands gift exchange by
e;vents along with highlights of the members. A thank you card
r~gional restaurants, theaters, was received from Paula Haynes
museums, and historical spots. It
a:l so profiles local artisans and for remembrances during her recent
~sinesses _9 f the region which h?S!Jitalization.

I cannot violate my son's is acceptable, tell Jill you ,are
confidence without .destroying the concerned about Mike because he
lrusl we have labored tD build. But if seems "preoccupied" or somehow
I remain silent, MOO: won'! b!: getting "disconnected." In this way. you
the help he needs and Jill may never do your duty by alerting Jill, yet
forgive me: Pieasc,Ann, teU me wha! you leave' your son out of iL Good
tD do. -- LOST IN CHAPPAQUA, luck.
N.Y.
Dear Ann Landers: Please give
DEAR CHAP.: You truly are me your opinion on a situation that
between the proverbial rock and a is creating some hard feelings in the
hard place. Can you persuade your family.
son to confide in Jill? Explain thai il
Was I right 10 tell my 18-year-old
would be an act of genuine friendship son, who lives at home and pays rent,
and not snitching. Ir your son feels to put a midnight curfew on his
he cannot do this, ask for his girlfriend's visits? She is over here
permission to speak tD Mike direcd): two or three evenings a week.
Perhaps you can become an ally and
"Mary" slarts her job at 10 a.m. so
gain his confidence.
she gets plenty ·o f sleep. "Billy,"
If neither of these silggeslions

however, has to get up at 7 a.m. to go
. to school. I told him yesterday that
as long as he is under my roof, he
must obey cenai·n rules regardless of
his age. Either he limits his social
visits wa midnight curfe~or he must
move out
Billy says since he pays rent, I
should "keep my mouth shut." (He
has never spoken 10 me in such a
manner before.) I am tempted 10
· throw his belongings out on the
driveway. I have stopped talking tD
him. Was I outofline, Ann?-- MOM
IN MATIHEWS, N.C.
DEAR N.C.: I'm on your side,
Mom. An 18-year-old school boy
should not be allowed to entertain his
girlfriend at his home until the wee

hours ot the morning -- even if he:
does pay rent. .
.
· Tell Billy to watch his mo~t!l .a¢
shape up or ship ouL
V
:
. Gem of the Day: Overllcard in a:
res1aumn1: "Waiter, if this is coffee, .
will you please bring me tea? If this·
is tea, please bring me coffee."
~

Feeling p~ssured to have su?:
How well-informed tvr yoM? Write ·
for Ann LAnders' boolrlet "Sex and the·
Teen-ager." Send a se/f-addrrssed,
long , business-size envelope and a.
check or money order for $3.75 (rhis
includes post~ge and hafl4/ing) to:
Teens, clp Ann Landers , P.O . Bo:x .
11562, Chicago , Ill. 606/1.0562. (In .
Canada, send $455.)
·

-Spelling champs-....., s·pelling bee winners

to compete for title

i

SCHOOL WINNERS - Winners or .the ~hester Elementary
spelling bee were held recently in preparation for the county bee to
be held Thursday night at Meigs Higb ScbQOI. Tbe local scbool
winners were, lert to right, Joshua Clark, son of Roger Clark and
Penny Smith, who will represent his school in the county coatest,
Juli Bailey, daughter of Greg and Joscelyn Bailey, second, and
John Cooke, son or Gary and Debbie Cooke,tbird.

Winners in spelling bees in their
respective schools will compete foc
the championship in !he Meigs
County spelling bee tD be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at Meigs High
School.
According to the rules of the
event if a school winner is unable
to compete then the runner-up will
represent the school.
The winners and runnersup, listed respectively, are as follows:
EASTERN
Chester - Joshua Clark and
Juli Bailey.
Riverview - Brandon Browning and Amber Baker. .
Tuppers Plains - Jaime Whit.
lock and Tyler Simmons.
Eastern Junior High - Lacey
Bunting and Michael R. Soibiesl&lt;i.
MEIGS
Bradbury - Jan Story and Jes-.
sica Chapman._

Harrisonville - Amber Haning :
and Wesley Call.
:
Middleport - Brandy Shea and ·
Casey Dunfee.
:
Pomeror - Nicole Runyon and :
· Kayte Davts.
·
·
Ru~and - Beatrice Morgan and :
Eli1.abeth Smith.
.
Salem Center ~ Kendra Cle , ·
land and Lindsay Bolin.
Salisbury - Whimey B . Ash- :
Icy and Euva J, Stumbo.
Meigs Junior High - Wesley :
Thoene and Kim Peavley.
SOUTHERN
Portland - Laura Wallbrown
and Kevin Tapscott.
.Racine - Sheri Cummins and
Leasiann Deem.
.
Syracuse - Mindy Chancey .
and Nicole Benson.
.
Southern Junior High - Jen- :
nifcr Shain and ChristDpher Randolph.
·

l

~~n,· wome.n differ in how their brain handles language task, study says
d'- MALCOLM RITI'ER

Jeane tte Lawrence

. ·-··

CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Gara ~s
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

"'""'

·
Surrounding Areaa

7131191 TFN

Meadie Long
Cecilia Mitch
Mae McPeek
Esther Melcalf
Margaret Murray
Virginia McCieland
Virgil McElroy
· Eilee n Marlin
John &amp; Kathryn Metzger
Ronald McDade
Mildred Meadows
Bernice Nelson
Naomi Neville
Ethel Neuman
Geo rge Nichols
Mary Nease
Eula Mae Odegard
Ronald Osborne

949-2804

YOUNG'S

. 992·5335 ~,~'"""

PHONE N U M B E R - - - - - - -

Oregon Chain Saw Bara

1/2/tln

•Thankl Meigs &amp;

Drew Webster Post #39

DO-NATIONS
Roben R. Du1s1
. Alia Dill
Virginia Duckworth
Edward &amp; Edna Evans
J.im &amp; Alberta Eiselslein
Harvey Erlewine

·985-4473

S. J. Nuggud, Inc.
D.A. V. Chapter #53

Martha Anderson
Shirley Appleby
Emma Adams
Mary V. Easterd~y
Gatha Alvarado
f':loise Adams
Sieve Beha
Ken &amp; Jean Braun

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

i(Bill) W.
.lis Fift'!

•Dishwashers

ADDRESS-------------------

" In Stock"

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need .a car·rental.

•Cuttom Mlde
•Solid ~inyl
re.lacement
window•
•Free Ettimatet
•Starting At
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

Pomeroy Kroger Store

Respite Care (assistance for families
who are caring for an elderly family
member in their home)

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

•Refrigerators •Freezera

NAME--------------------

Kenny's Auto Rental

Paou &amp; Service on Molt
Makoe Raclna Mower
Clinic

Shrubs Shaped

SUPPORT YOUR
SENIOR CENTER

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

AP Science Writer
• NEW YORK' (AP) -- Does
•pete" rhyme with "keal"?
, This question about two imagir&amp;ry words makes the brain per{finn a task that is crucial for Jan.
!!~Page abililies - and scientists
r~ported today tllat men's and
women's brains do it differendy.
: The sludy provides new evictnce of sex differences in the
· ~n. and bolsters the idea that the
bi'ain concentrates language-related
jdJ,s on its left side much more in
han in women. Previ-ous
h on the lal!guage issue has
nconclusiw.
c To tllfS'Iter· tlll!'!h)'me qnestlon,

the brain must break each word ral research programs in learning variety of tasks, shows thai scien- which partS of the brain are being
into its individual sounds, a key diSabilities at the National Instiblte . tists can track where specific lan- activated while a person does a partaSk for reading and other language of Child Health and Human Devel- guage tasks !ll'e done in the brain, ticular task.
One task performed by the volabilities.
•
.
opmcnt. The institute supponed the Shaywitz said. That should gtve
was tD judge whether two
unteers
. The n~w study says that m men, work with S!&amp;nts.
. :
insight intD problems like reading
nonsense
words like "Jete" and
thts JOb ts concentrated on the lefl
Lyon sa1d the results suggest disabilities..
"keat"
rhyme.
The scientists measide of the brain, while in women it women have a brain reserve for
Shaywitz and her husband, Dr.
is shared almost equally between language ability that can help in Benneu Shaywitz, are co-directors sured the a.:tivation of a panicular
· both sid~s. . .
casL the left side o~ the brain is of the Yale Center for the Sbidy of '·area found on both sides of the
Despite thiS difference, men ~d damaged or malfuncbons.
Learning and Attention at the Yale brain near the temple.
"The sex differences are prelty .:
women did the~ eq~y well !n
That might help women recover University School o£. Medicine .
the study, showm~ that the bT31n bener from language problems The Shaywitzes and colleagues clear," said brain researcher Dr.
has great versatilityJ n processing caused by strokes, and e&amp;plaill why present the work .in today's issue of . Sandra Witelson, a profe~ sor .o f
psychiatry at McMaster UmversJty
language and in reading_.·:· said girls with a reading· disability e~d the journal Nature'
.
researcher Dr. S_aJir,Shaywitz
up, reading better than. boys with
They studied 19 men and 19 10 Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Some
scientists
were
cautious
. The slud_y IS. a~ extremely the same problem, he smd.
women with a new technique
Important miies!Dne m ~:mr ~~de~~
The study, in which volun~rs·
called functional magnetic reso - about the new report. Brain-scanstandmg of language ability, smd brains were scanned as theY did ll n~nce imaging , which can show ning studies involving language ·
{1:· Reid Lyon, director of exttamu·

have gotten inconsistent results in :
the past, said Steven Pinker, a pro- :
fessor of cognitive neuroscience at ·
the Massachusetts Institute of :
Technology.
.
''
Pinker, author of the book "The .
Language Instinct," said he sus- :
peeled that the brain areas activated :
In the new study may be doing .
things other than just sounding out ·:
words.
. . ·
He also. said ·that' while pas! : ·
research suggests that women's :
brams distribute language tasks ·
more equally between the left and :
ri_ght sides, it d!lCs not suggeu a :
virtual S0-50 spltt as the new study
found.

..

.

'

'

�· The Dally Sentinel-Page 8

Pomerily--Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 16,.1995

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

---------------------~----------------------------~·.' "'''

_Thui'Hay, Februa,Y 16,1115

36 Goddua ol
hooting
37 Kind ol curve
36 Glvo - - whirl
39 Place for
dancing
41 Sandwich type

ACROSS
1 Former N.Y.

PHILLIP

mayor
5 D.D.E. ·
a S&lt;;rewblll
12 Cloth ridge
13'- deplume
14 Biblical king
15-TamlroH
16 Greek tenor
17 Genuine
11 Similar
compound
20 Became

ALDER

Fuml8hed
Room I

41 Houses for Rent
2Jor
. .......
'"""" In •·
~
_ 2mo&amp; . . .. IOW7rr

3 Announc.menta ·
All NltUNI Dllt 1¥ n1 tft. 1E1t 'The

•

-n.o-·-'"'--

'

To -Door.""--Au 1: hi AI:

.. -"'"·

u-

Frw

IIIIo!'•• t

---Ior-In

-·
11,100.':¥~ 41,000 .... :'

-·-juoot
10 ..............
Alhono,
IM
l .

lluol ..., -

11113

lA KG 5
orK 2
oK J 8 5
eJ 1o 2

33 Map abbr.
34 Pecan , e.g.
35 Telephone

5I

~

Household
Goodl

72 Trucks tor sale
Ford

814-388-0011.

Froo P....,._, I Wooklo Old,
'ell CoiOro, IIIIo I
Fwnofo,IWaW180.
Hlmolayon ldtlono bom Doo t,
to - .
,__ only, IOUitl-

3111.

Pu~

)uol In dmo

tar Vlllon-

388-tlttl. .

Help wanted

11

O::::::-::=:;;.=,.:.:..:::.:.:_::.:.__

:.l...F..:"'f'""'
- 1 boollonl Poyl MAI HomO. Coil

..

~
313.

'

-aao.ti7-65M, Ext.

31 Homes for sale
3 b&amp;droom, total ellct~1 wood

~:"'.. lot, $28,..... -

tlno o Doj Glfto, :JOt.lt6.33ll

Mobl... homM In lhe countrywllw, 911riloge ond lncludod. Juat 10 '""'"'" tram

=7,
Athono,

COUNTRY.JIUANITUIIE
Cedar I r droom lubte, 1711.

1304.

Loot: Rod Hound Dog With t
WHt• E!e,lt ...., PliiM call
IWI 448 4848. RIWardl

Loot: Roddllh borwn 1 whKo
Beagle, WMt Coh""tMI aru.
304·773-1542.

OOpllng oppllcotlono tar CNA'o
. . ~~. ~... l~od
plono oorno In and pick up on
oOIIilcotlon or -'loci Shotll
Pletoono, DON II 114-W2-6472
"" RIOIOinfamootlon. E.O.E.
Pilrt 1M drtVWI nlld.d, call
114-112-2801 up to 8 pm. . .

-Ion

Public Sale

8

Po~~lmo
tar RN, LPN,
liED TECH 0&lt; LAB TECH tar
llo- Co. WIC too- In-·

&amp;Auction

2bdnn. oplo.,

o-tolook Contor lo , _ oc-

All real estate advertising in
m1s newspaper is subjeci to
tht1 Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes il illegal
to advertise "any preference;

Rick Poor.on Auction Compony,
po~
Uclponto.
Far turthor ot
lntormolull tlmo ouct-r, comploto Counly
auctton aerva.
Ucenaad tlon, OOnloct tho WIC Olfk:o, - - - or
IM,OIIIo I VIrginia, 304- wrfte
WIC OII'ICtor, llld-Ohlo
T73-S785.
.
.
Volloi! Hoofth Dopo-nt, 211
AuctFr1cloy.sotwday, lth
-buriJ, wv
7pm, lit. olllo Auction, At. 2-33 21101, or
304 4U 73,..,

limitalion or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
Sex familial status or nattonal
origin, or any lntenllon·to
make any such prelerence.
limilation or discrimination.·

'"CfVAraldl-, Ron Prtce, 1111

This newspaper Will .nol
knowlingly accept
advertisements for real eS1ate
which is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
inlormed that all dwellings

-ry

s-.••pi••

R_....... -

-...
a-'"!'"- pluo , loto IIUIIOftl to ttv.ln morwf &amp;dFruler..w.

ol

-011 1412.ond - olol-., I

Wanted to Buy

9

i:o1~

·etoon Lido Coro Or
Truclla, 11181 - . Or - .
9m•h Buick Poni!K, 1100

Rlwwlno

Rua lloorl, OWMF. 614--ta.

2521. Wo buy ootatn.
Don, Junll II Soli Uo Your NonWo1111ng llojof Appt'-,
ColOr T.V.'o,
Ilolrlciwatoro,
F,.._.
VCR'o, * - ·
Ory- ~lc.IM-:1116-1231.

'

.......... - A n d
'Qier eu..:~:
tie F,.. On
Ell
:111 v-. Ex·
Or -

1111-11114.

Old
old , _ -

•

]owolry,

- . . piDo

- - - W.., g"-o, - .
,.....,.. toole or ~·=
......
QOI,fllllltln, I
.Jit4t.

W.nttid To Buy:

Jllnk Aut•

-Lany l.lnlr.
Or - tM 3UMot-.
an1. Coli
,.... Pold: All Old u.s.
Colnl,- Rl~ 81- Colno,

Colno. II.U . Coin Shop,
Ill ~ Cloltlpotlo.

:1.=

wanted
To
t-,Coll

11o1111o

...... /:""'

Rolllgontor 11110 - · IWil1811.

..

Klndlowood - ...

Clorlloge, 11opoo1t

1

oton,

lliP ~ -~.;:

RoqurN&lt;f. Evoningo, St$-122·

YDu ~..: $300. '

•
=
=. :::

0294.

-

'

11 .........

I

n "".__
on -loll

· ott Cnob CIMII
$30t!o'noo, :tOt-..zm.

Rd.,

On Fobruory
. 2211. till At 1 P.ll.

Yldio. llld-

Cowo Hovo CConolllnod Far Thlo Solo. HYou Woufcl
Uko To Conolan Your eowo
Coil. Coila WIH lo o\o.

'114 1182 3t~.
llno . . a-Logo Far Flro NO:
Ono S... Conll-lon - r
~ ouno 31,000 BTU 11141: Ono
100,000 HI lfflch ooy 0.

JIEAUTIFUL APAIITIIENTS AT
BUDQET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA~ol 12 Woot od Drlvo
tram
to usn. to ehoo
I ...-. CoU 114-441-21d.
EOH.

ruro. -

:

'

buolna &amp; .tllng -

~·e

Uvlltock

-;;;;;j;j;;f.;;;;i:;;;;-;;-j;,;

RAil, 14.t
llodom, ColOr
- . . " - 01 - · $1,000 010, 114-t41-t471.
•

Bodroomo, WID --Up Col,
S34CIIIIo.
,,.,..._
Wator,

~cF-~c:!..'t"to.loiS.s:!~

t;.":f..t
A - . ll411

:=.::.:•~t..::e ·

Soloo,

Houllna

11140:11~~ 111:14322,1tt-llll3131.

a.rtc Furnooo- NC Con: &amp;4
-12110.

cor-~~~
~
30t~.'' . oftor 5: II

Hay a. Grain

11110 l b . - -

ol"m:-

3113 or =~r:~.,..r:::.-·

w-.. ;;

AI•••• Ani.,_,

And ...... ---Coli Down
114-245-01121.
.
'

·Rl= =·..:-nd""=''="'S

2 Doob And Undonllnnlng, On ;:::, opo~::N5cl AIMal Lat, $ti,OOO, 114- - - - o In IIIII- F""" old, Iiiio now, 1210.
Ooowol llolntono-, Polnl!ng, 441-0tTt.
.
f232.f3111 • Col 114-112.-t. 1110.
Yonl w.to W I - Wunoo
·
--------Outtoro Cloonod Light Houilng, 1183 Sunlhlno 141'1'8 3 lod- EOH.
Com~ Rooldontlol, Stovo:
Room,
0 I
114-445-...,.
1120
, bl2 BulldiiiiJ, On
:::nd-:-.=_
Rontod Lo1 111,100, 114-t454514.
Oeargee PCMt:.W. S.wmlll, don't 1785.
Twlnl=~_:r_c:u::e:J now ecc•· Mendon Mobile I Daub It aWe
hlul your toao to tho mill luot
- 1pt...fwroreldlrty
1br. HOD
llomuwneN
A c...
oall304-175-1115l
18115 DOUBLEWIDE REPO, •na
_ _ .,.,
.nd •
• Slodt w.Ofcarry
trurtt.rm
..,. IIWid In, no downpll)ii..,. hllt*r~prll. EOH 3M:e71- 12SEEA HIM ~And F~
to quo-""-·- dOiivtOy 1111.
And Homo fur.
loot up. 304-7S5-aau.
.,_ POllio Mh FIIIOI"*Ii
1H3 SkylkM 14171 S Bldroome,

=~,'J:t.';.:=-' '

==

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ttl lttl Or~
f.
Uo E......_

~ "~·

Fuml8hed
.... _ _ _ _ _ h.

Holol.

WIH l o - , lly Homo. lo\.11. -1 UII"ED DFI'ERI now 1tx111 2· -·~~t~t~~~-~~~---------­

P.ll. O.IM- Aroo. Toddler To
Prelehool, IM 441 0128.

-onl.

3br., $511 DOWN, No PaYft*llo
ottor lvn. Frw DoiiYory I

56

Coli~,: ::.cr:~t::;':".;,.;"'II':~

IY Reel Wlntl Chi
To .a'o Dog-li.H.

lltol C..., .M 411 1222.

C

The

:

__

35111 Bob s.u-.

~-a~lnG. !=.l'";,':o"':'\"":.:C::
· 30t'

Qnoom
Foot ....... ~· Jullit now no- I out, Webb. c.ll

MC--.~~!.:'!!Lcid,.,,u._,
__ ,.. . ,

D(INCE PARTNER~

Com- .... ;

·-...
a..v.
I
Ford
4ll4. IOt.f'IHtl2.

815:1834.

.·

....

Auto, Oood ConciMIOi\-li• t
P.ll. lltt11 - ·
.
111113 Ford F-1110, 114~-·
:.,._~Air CondK
114-

;

HtAI&gt;J...It-1/E'

:
,,
::

t&gt;F:Pi-~~

i;;;-';;;i;-=:-;;;;-;;-:-::=::- :;

..
:"~
3:;!0132.!P~ol~nt-·-P_._uo_,_o_•_o~,--- ;:
:

,•

•

~

Motorcycllt

"

..m-apm.

BORN LOSER

Block I Oroy 1113 GoldwJna In- :
1-oiO, ti,OOO - . AlltRI ..
ca, - - . Uaht ,
Biro. 12,1100, tn4-2SI.f104, t"I4-

01

111ft, ~ n
EWI!Int Shll
W
C1114 lhlve Wi~f.
o,poot...., Enljll-1 or.
"'" DltootOI' 01
NurolntJ.
,.....,..
c..Or"lp
-·
t1D
,.___. Dr.,
I' , Oh.

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

eo.-.

::::1116-::_;1.;:131~.;_------76 Auto Parts &amp;

AcC811110rles

::,m=-:o::,:::'W:::-:J.-:::am::-.~~~:::;..='"' ;,
Good
Pokll!fng
, _, ,
1
Evorythlng -,:.: :141~~ ,:

rro.--. . _

A LOT OF
WELL, I'VE SPENT THE

a.-to. .::

TO COME UP WITH A
111 DDLE .....11E FOR

~

I

NMIES OUT lriERE ,

WT GRADUALLY I'VE
EIE~N. AELE TC I'JA~WW

t1'i~ELF !

~-.:.-

...._ In TM a.
Till0.....
- .......
Cort1-

=.......

.
loiiiiA -To:-•11 ,
. . ... 1:£ ~~~ ~ OM.

.,., ..... ,OE.

•

G;?

A ERO - ·
I)'( r..IAMI C. ,

,O.ND'

L Y S

' J H

uv c

0 ,H Y M ,

YOU
T HINK ?

r.r_..._

: ::
. . •'
''

STRICE ABLOWN Tl-£ Will ON
HGi-1 PRICES. SHOI' M CI.ASSf/EDS.

.

F·. S L H .

~ I just play the notes as they are rotten ." - (Conductor) Ernest Ansermet:

'::~:~:~' S©\\.JU)A~ £tfs·
-~:..;_;_.:.:;_~
~y
l41to4

Rearrange leners of
0 four
Krambled words

lAM I

·'

the

be- r-...-,-

low to form fo1..1r words

.

won

CLAY I . ,Oli.AN

1·

RIKELL

'=1=1~1~1.

I

.'

L
.
-= = '

..--~-.-o_E,--w,...E...,G~~-~,
. 1I I f .

'

2

I
r I· .

~-L--L-_L--~_JN

I• I
.

M

EP 0

I.

_

T
.

Afterlhe.holidaystheconvers9tion always lums to weight
16se. I've concluded, alter many
years oflrying, lhatlhe only thing
'I lose 1s my . -- . -·

.

M lJ Q 0 R U

e

P~INT NUMBE~ED L ETTE~S
THESE SQUA~ES

Compleoe

..

th~

IN

Aviary- Truly - Mince - Feudal- ADVeNTURE
To me, beach combing is an activity that is a worthwhile
indulgence.ltsatisfiesanurgelofindsomethingofvalueand
gives us a sense of ADVENTURE too.

ROBOTMAN

FEBRUARY16l

-:m-

6

PI
~~·~~·~·~·~·~A~
t_~':-~· ·~
nt, ~Dt-~1~-2011.

Jock -

.,

IV
BVYMXRY .
N.
PRFMHIIF
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I am a pig." - Arturo Toscanini.

!THURSDAY .

;:

tll3 Chlvette.luH power, 1'11W 2211
tlrwe, llhawt. · luM-Vp. $800·

F SID

X R H

J N F

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

.•

TratML llal W. 114-3'19-"-7;.·

GHFGIH

C N H

KCYMORSB

YMH

H O ,H MD

J N H Y C

G IYS C

UN SCRAMBl E ABOVE .lETHR S
TO GET ANSWER

DON 'T

IT CC".It./ 1

~Cooklor DBO. 30t-m430t.
Bponlalo FOr Solo Adullo . I tll83 Toyoto T...l, -~
PUpploo, IIW1t-21:tl,
•
tlon, $1000,114-182'024.
...o, llllt Oklo Cutiuo, 11300. 304Floli Tlll'lll &amp; Tonnt
Pot llhop, • _ .....

.,
.,

..
...
. ..'·
c .

tWYior pupploo,

GIG -h, tn4-llt2-:IIIIIO.
Whlto1110,111 311 'Ia.
Old,

v...
·•

ASTRO-GRAPH

31 ~forSale

36

•

~'blr

W'~~rthday

/·

Friday . Feb. 17, 1995
ln th e year ahead. you m1ght find more

41 . HOUSAS for Rent
lolling
On l 2 Bodroom Uplllol,. Du!olex,
-II)'
· a--,
In Countly

=

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Tho s could be a
plea sant day tf you make it a point to look.
fo r the vrrtu es in y.our co mpan ion s
tnslead of thei r faults. ~o one likes being

mately be to your benetlt if you think in
terms of what IS best tor the greates t
number of people 1nstead of just focusing
on your own inleresls

lne the merchandi se. Make sure that the
price you pay doesn't exceed the value of
the item . ·

LIBRA (Sept. 23.0ct. 23) The Irends are

ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) Avoid JUmp·

in yoU r favor today, and you 're capable of

ing to concl~sions today. Your decisions
will be more eft ective if you take time to
analyze all of the pertinenl information.

pace yourself. Allow adequate time for

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) You can be

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov . 22) Wh en

surprisingly productive today it you don't
rush lhrough :your assignmenls. for best

negotiating a signif ican t matter today,
play· hard to get . Lei them come to you
for a change. ·

results . strive for consistency rather than

considerable acc omplishm e nt s if you
you.r endeavors.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) when ·
and inventive lalenls rhan you have in lhe • GEMINI (lol!ly. 21·June 20) Even if you , conversing wilh lrlends today , try to keep
past Do not impose tim1ts on your imagi 1 are in the com pa ~y of_someone who the conversat ion l ight and ph~ asant .
nation.
·
could help you out lonancoally today, resisl Avoid shop·lalk.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) It is very
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2Ct-Feb. 19) You might the urge ro make a pitch.
assiociate with someone who has a caus· CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Try 10 be probable that you will achieve an impor-

Rental s

··~

1ng th e mf l u ~nces which are governing
you in the year ahead . Send ·for your
Astro~G raph predictions today by mailing
$2 to Astra -Graph . c/o lh1s newspaper ,

PO Bo&gt; 4465. New York . NY 10163. Be under a microscope .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Belore mak·
tb slate your zodiac Sign .
PISCES (Fob . ·20·Milrch 20) II woll ullo· l ng any purchases loday , ·careluify exam·

RINII Estate
Wanted

,..
' ......, llunl Wllor, L.Ooollecl
Ylno ..- . FJrot A -'
lots II Pallial I - . , Goillpollo.
131Mio.
1
Rtfl41itc~~
RecpJhad
'
-lng, Ptfoed To llell
2411.
I
IM-IINMO.

•

when they leave smtling.

sure

.!

2 c.....,. ,
pll)l
_ , _ , . _ P d l ;Of

--ro ,.,,. W

by Lula Campos
CeiM!rity Clt)hef Cl'fPIO{Irams are ere ated trom quotauons by tamou• peopta , past and present
Each lener 1r1 the Clpl'1er s111nds 101 another .. Toaay·s clw . K ~~qUBis S

8

t&lt;.IND Of

=::• =-=:-....::·~
T r l lie nO. Allo, Cool! And

...

ch,ck In quooed
•
•
,
,
•
_
•
by folltng 1n the mt:uong words
L...-L--L-...1.--.L-...I.__j you develop h om srep No 3 below

BIG NATE
L.A':&gt;T l ~ HDU~ T~~ING

•

Actor Rob-.
Electrical unit
Actual being ·
Poem

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

u...J I - · II IJpoo, ;.
lngotllll;-114-3111-2131. ··
"
Flat Bod, 14'. IS opd.
oton. s.
Bucklot -.. t .'·
nrw
P21UIJA15.
~---Computir Far 31'i"''M.";:;::, ,.
~ Doko1o. Yotll Slioroo. •:
XR 100 R Mondo. 1flll' ·:
etoouy C30 Cob . 1m CIIIC •1100 Sorloo.. 171 . · .:
o,inolt . Z10 H.P. 10 lpd. ·:
,.,. ...,_lon. Bel lnlemll*'-1 . ·~
Cut otto Wlo\lr - .. onc1 Filii ;:

- o l d , IIIII, 11i.iea--.....

(81.)

47
48
49
52

~--TI.:..:.. .;1:....:~1-=-..;,:....:::..r--1

BuclaM Priced ,.,...,, l••lane~ ':

Pulllp.

43 Author
Emile44 Black
.
45 Social mloflt ·

.

Real Estate

.......... 7112

K

South had made a critica l comment
. about North's bidding when the dummy
appeared. "I hope you'll keep your mouth
shut next time." commented North.
We kn ew Philip Si lverma n as Phil
Silvers. J'm not sure he was a bridge •
player, but "The Bilkn Show" was one
of my favorites.

Phillip Alder's n ew book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon reque st , for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Rosiyn
Ht s., NY 11577·0169.

2

0p ln............ .....

- oc.

linn. ~.

11um1o Holot w

feature

41 Hen ..
42 Sqme Like

_No w came four

heart\tricks to claim an overtrick! .

··•

Ftnancial

llenoii.A.Utoa...,.,Doat.
~· 1oo1 ttftl7; ~ FL

II

~~~
NU Inc

11110 Hondo Foui Trox :1110, ·''
ltlclr1c ....... ,..... rlddlri"
vory IIIIo OXC. CiiM/., $2M ''

-

32 Energy unl1
35 Languish
39 - .Jonea .
average
40 Mountain

docl! 1-211-10111.

=.::::..':::' o;;:'l::
s

•

spade .

rounds of spades, the last two clubs be ·
ing di scarded from the dummy. East
retained three hearts and her old pal
the club ace. So South cas hed four

'·

to._

a

released a

-=;;-;::~::::_:;::::;-:;;::~=:=
'13Suz'*IKIIIonoiOO,rod,3200 ••
- · htOO, -112-31111 bot· ''

_

no, he wasn'llhe sister of yesterday's
Belle Silvennan 1Beverly Sills&gt;.
Sometimes bridge deals feature mysterious results. Have a look at loday's.
Do you see any way Ihal South, playing
in six no-trump. might end up with all
13tricks after West has led a club?
The deal occulTed las t summer. dur·
in g a mixed-pair eve nt in Deauvill e,
France . Opposite a 15· 17 no -trump,
North overbid with s ix no· lrump. A
quantitative fou r no-trump is surely all
her.hand is worth. StiJJ, if North had bid
four no-trump !eit her immediately or
after Stayman, if that was their agree·
ment &gt;. South would have pa ssed and
there would, have been no story to tell .
Unwisely, West led a deceptive club
nine . Suitably deceived. East withheld
her ace.
With his total up to 11 tr icks. South
cashed his diamond winners, noting
th at East wa s exh ibiting s igns of dis·
comfort. She could throw one heart on
the third diamond, but what shou ld she
di scard on the fourth?
·
Attached finnly to the club ac-e, East

W~ITlr-IG

S-10 1118t tit 2.1 V-1 ~. '

74

organa
·.
30 Roman tyrant·

Satup; :lbt-715-1111.
lloklo Z po,_... I ,.... In,
new MXlO 2-3br. Cell Run Mur-

A - 11 4ti1Hr Ptuo Font1
Business
t l a _ I ... Aiw.to
Op rt It
NEW IIANK REPOSI Only 4 Ioiii
. - _ . , O!ltlonoi. 1n- --~po;;;;;;:un~y-- r IIYod ln. 304-111&amp;-7m.
dop. Jllp. 1-llt2-4'131.
INQIICEI
1111)1... In 11r Home, Aft•· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
,_ 1~'1'872, Colli - - thot you do ·IIIIRU!II U . fo a P.ll.
.
-NOT to
wHh
~ rou k.-1 11!1!1 ' ltl10oo. owortooldng Ohloo-RIYor,
Mild inonoy tlwougn tliO 21111. Rt.2. ~.
~-:•it ~:~~~~= ::::·~~ hovoln-lgllod Lind For Solll: 2 :114 Aero
R-ntty 8urvoyecl 11,100, Ap· ,_
• '
Vondlng: Won~ Got Rk:h Quick. JIIOI. t liUoo S. On SR 211, 114Elm,.
-.y otufllng Wll Got A St~'":i"· t41-11tt.
WCUIIDPII .. home. Siart ,..., PrioldtoS.I. 1
.

...

1

i&gt;Ali.-Y Nev-.t.r

. EDE

A - ... SAI..Ell

IT WAS AN
ENCI-lANTED
~
EARL¥
AFTERNOON

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

a-~-~·
oond., $1100.
•
.,
1181 aoov ...... Von lllnl Colt- '
dMion, ttlliS K COr t,;;;;,;,;. AC, :,
1111

MJ;

..

WE D.6.NCED.
AND DANCED
AND DANCED..

....
..

Vans I 4 WD'a

Itt t1124tr.
dHion, Don, II._ Thll Onol " - 33at210xt5 . ,_, Ploono Ahor 5:00 P.ll. 11t-4tl- with 111" .........._ -

Pets for sale

0-- u....t-. ---3
-

-40

8tortlng Ill tt:JII/mo. -

:MI.fd1.

1:; - · - ·

Homo Wol ..
" ' - ThollloiMia
No ElootrlcJty.
wv 010212. u..o

Room•

_

.

. . . ., . . . . -cc=

=-·Rr=..:· OH

-73

.. 3Q4...m...J7U.
_;,;;,;,;.;;...__

.

•-•2201. ·

A- I AI Arooo I -.y

An you lnl-od In nunlng?
leal oolug lloudo 11, HRDE lric.
wlf IPOIMIOI I cl.. In Point
PI - rt to t,.ln pu to blcomli
0 c.tlflod Nurolflg
noo • - to - H rou , _
JTIIol Tltto II auioioN.- • o -od wolior or dloc:!
IMNIMU 'r. For mar. In
t1o11 -.ct HROE, Inc. 304-:IQ-

....

!fl~. ~or,:~· ~ 63

588 Counlryoldo ~ 2

.

tion. - - · .,.

MA'AM.WHERE W~AT DO 't'OU MEAN
T~Ei!.E'5 NO EMIL'I'?
15 EMIL¥ ?
...----'11 S~E WAS M'(

31 T-or 1112 aoov plcll-up . . , - . :
11,000-......,1.-.v- ,.

Good Condi••• 1108.

wv 2Uit , . . . _ Co. 30t Ill

115-4180.

614-88es71111.

UYo

PU

· 11,000. - · _ , _
~2.
. .'

Plonlo 1 "'1" tolling .,..
lor ow otonto. Don
Dlwhurll, At 1-Box: 200, lit Alto,

::._vwv.
•m. mo.No poto.
- ·304·
·110. dopoolt.
Sowogo I

T-

PU t'.lllf.!.rllt

-=-· ... '

61 Fann Equipment

..._ rwc;

1111
PU 112,211; PU IUD: 11111
¥-a Auto
41t
lloldo

1WI Ford"-'· lll'd C1b XLT, ; .
8ulo, •• AIA=II

=ng QO:Ican...!:,~ HP llltJino, 110 ill. round bokit, 11Wt320tS: I~"' or 114-ttt- 113110 or
EHiclancJo.
ro:r•ooo
I
~.
12llll0 troiiOK tar nlo, SIDO, 114- nopoto.
15-lltl2.
"'"""And ...... o..toonl o...
1112-llel.
Rolrlgorotoro, St..•. - . U:OO To $2.21 A Bola, Dolono
And llrpto, AI Rm ncltlorood Joc:-'o Fomo. 304-17&amp;-1llt3,
And O.lllllniMI SIOO And Up, 114-311-:mt.
.
Witt Dollwr. 114-1111-1441.
. Exr oorn lor - . ~
~on Aut-Io 12 Go. Ex· 114-112-2'1'83 or 114-112-2123.
1
c StiOc 114 21tltt3. ~,orgo - .. 1o11oo 01 Orohlni
.
.
.
.
,
oll.ll.--o
P.ll.
ll0~-;;I~M...4~1~1~tOII~S·,.-,=:::-:Antlques
tie.,. 1r oolot TV
luy or - .
-lollo • - wlduol Round -ao. ·1,1100 to
1'124 E. Main at...a. on Rt. 124 ca8Mtt-. AMIFIINclo.lumtlble 2.000 ... ....._ 1b4:175-4301.
P-..,. ; II.T.W. 10:00 · - _. ontlllloln_,. Sctuoro- 11.21 to l2.iiei.OOOpor
o.m. to I:CIO P.IIL, , _ , 1:00 ,otond.30t-1111-71111.
~. ~OoOI,
rd
to
1:00 p.on. 1~-28211.
1'::::7.::::-:~::=:7:-:::--=-::STOIIAGE
TANKS
3,000
Golton
a-.
·
tho Spring Rulhl Got your
trllftlllll"' I mowers Nr¥1ced
54 Miscellaneous
Upright,
Joe:•~- Ron
"""'Evono
1 - Ento=•·
••
now ot Sldoro Equipment Compony. 304-17&amp;-11121.
Merchandise
-·· --. ·
Wwkaohop T - Far Solo, tn4Contllod Doycoro Prov- With
2 ,._.do m, oJu ..., """' ......~..~-·-------I Yooro ExporloncoW:.:J.Jlro¥ldo 111110 Cloyton 1411111112 Aero Lol
Brtllony'o, -· bo ••
71 Autos tor Slle
QuaiMy Dorcorw
y Thru Z BR, 1 Bath, Col, cllllii.."hl
wom wlhOGp. Plr* wfWiott.·tooo, .,..
Bulldll:lg
Frldoy From 1 A.ll. To I P.ll. Colllng, 2 Docklo, F - Yord, t
SIOO. - h - · ..... 110.
SUppllel.
1171 Buldl '--In CUllom,
c.nt. .lly Locettld, 181wwn IIIIo Out Ill On Loft, t2ti,OOO,
104-87W4M.
10,000 Mil•, Good Condftlon,
O.tttpoiO And Rio Orondo, 2 .,. ... 1833.
~. Vory ~ 1....-.mu.
Aero sottlng, Looml1111 AottvN.
Onoclouo n.Ing. 1 onc1 2 bed- , _
loo!t!orv _...... --. --.
-·

lpoont,IOUIII-1421.

A - to buy ot .... lllllliyn, In, 5 • • rep. 304:112·2148 or
1.001131311.

ad $31 Plclwp Loecl, We

--Stovwl

,,,

.

I

3 "'9111 opl outotolrto Hondor-

Help Wanted

11

Flrici

.,..._.,a lllck, IM411 IGIO.

.:=eJ
·
aoov

r:.~k~~~

4 ML N. Of Holur'e
1115.

ue 112111

2 Shade traeo
3 Mu118 of

Today"s myste ry n a me is Phil'ip

n~-.g ~

-

River -

Silvennan. How did we know him? And

ms.wa ..... St.~,~:. :

Far m Supplt es
&amp; Live stock

tor Sale

roomob!,:"Uoo, l.oundry

Employment Services

-

pllancoo lumlohocl, laundry
noom lociiMiao to oohocil
In town. ~tone evalr.ble
ot: Ylltoae ~on,on Alllo. M8 or
colll1t-ft:l.m1. EOII.
~ Iloor, kltct.o lumlohocl,
~
. ~.... .
-

32 Mobile Homes

lquoo.

........... -71111.
bull- -umo

ai.00.114

ap-

11-. 300 . waa

~

Qulor Allltlllflor With 4 -12"
- - Co111not, l.ooklo Uklo
NiW, tiOO. 1'1Wl"Ne01.

Fire Wood: Dellwr1 t4C).OO • 3
~ lor 1100.00. You Pldt Up-

opportu ~i ty basis.

Ooooratod
·
- -" thor,
·phonoo, okt
. lampo~okt
mom ...,., oNt e1oc
anliqUII
lumKuro.

t--.

Whoolo I

.

meaaure
10 Algerian
118aport
timber tree
11 Sconloh eldrt
1 lmltitoo
1a Betore
21 Son of Sath
_"'II"""TI'!I""m-. 24 Unit of force
,..
25 Ad!ectlve
ending
rr+--+--+--1 26 Ina and 27 Greek loner
28 Angero
29 or hearing .

1 Bridge on tho

By Phillip Alder

~·i

Condlioll,

·

book
9 He.b raw

Stuck like glue

14,000, 080, 11~ , ,
•
::
1HI Chew, 41:4 PU $4,111; 1117 ~
¥-8 Allto 14,2115: , ... a- ..
Coolo -trio kloyboord, ..,., Ford
V.f
Auto
IS,III: - a - 4llt '
_ ..... 1110, 11t'tlla41H.
JIU t3,515_;__1115 Ford J1U V.f ':

eon,OH1~.·

are available 'On an equal

Eutem Av.nue, O.lllpalla.

·~·
1115 1-10 Good
i*lllcal
Instruments

8 lalam ucred

history
4 Shortanod(a
skirt)
5 Opp. of extra
6 Hawaiian

n,ooo, . ',

Looloa And Runo -

T-.

AU New 1 81droom Efftc:llncy

advertised In this newspaper

0 1M D¥ NEA. tne.

CaNer ID ba, 11rW ..-,
143.11,114-112-1111.
~
I
Plllllllo Soptk:
aoo TJvu 2,000 Golliono
Ron Evono Enlo- Ja.

SJ•-

Lost a. Found

1tNIZ DocJgo 110, I ~. ::

a..n, 111411 up. cuoto. t I I
1110111ng ot l:ltt- llro- a........... up. lml. 54 IWscellaneous
AI. 2 Nolth, 1"1. 304Merchandl18
oobto ovoltolllo, 114- 1'111-1120.

·-·7217.

.:

AutOINIIIc, ti,41S ~ ...... •.

~~~~
up. 3po;UYc:.;
- . Suite. . -

3Bodl-,2·-l.ocol -1 Storo Sooldr:og Po~ ........ Goo Furnoeo, 1 ...... Nioll 2 Bod,_ 141111 111t1J11o. .
Sloophord/Lob ..... gontlo, bul Time Help /With Poe'll~ Of
Electric a W.ter,... rna~
~.~tchdog: ll8o 1 wk. okt Full 11- -II E•oert- Gorogo. - - - · 112,000, •P.ll.
114 ttl :1111.
;or-d .... - : 114-1112- Hotplul. Bond Rooumo To: CLA l.oOrondo BIYd. Thrw Bod,_
3110, c/o Golllpotlo Dolly Trl~ 1
Apartri'lent
821 Third Avonuo, Golll~, UH Nice Nlighbod:aad. Prlcld To 44
Sell O.ilclty. 11t ttl 2324 After
41131.
okt mlud - tor Rtnt
ploo, tn4-1185-3315.
SP.M.
Clok HIU Trucking Componr
Sooldng 0.. Tho Rood Soml t..ogo ..... nloll 2 bedDrtwn, EICIIIent P•r, El· rllncfier on . . . lot, m.ooo.
304·713-2173 01' r.v. II
"DI•
portoncod Drl... Only, · - 7713, Or Aftor I P.ll. 114-245-

6

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

=· =::rT-,

2 Bodnoom Troller eto. To
Unlvorolty Of Rio Orondo, 114-

'

2218.

1-l'tl'f'-o.\

32 Sorrows.

.'

Opening lead : • 9

1 WONDER IF
SNUFFY WENT OFF
FLOAT FISHIN'
WITH TH'
FELLERS

I'

New Tlrle, I Tool Box:, I'M4'7I-

o9 7
.eA 3

'

· Vuln erable : East-West
Dealer: South
West North East
South
Pass 2 •
Pass
I NT
Pass 6 NT
All pass
28

;;;~::3~==--=--=:=1171 Ford F·100 Aut-tic, AC, ..,.1

. .,,

"He told me that he wa s sent here for
talking in movie theaters ... ..

•

orJ t0976

svce.

·.

Ton :t1112,
Automatic, M,OOO Aoluol - .
liZ

1

SOUTH

bo '

door, ......,.
1111

-utllul Colo, 11447!1-2552.

'

,:
·:

':3'·
.........:--.4

4 3

6 4

e J943

Coprl eto.Io ..

Co·~""""

Q

EAST

JIB, 4

$1,300, ltt-I1Nl2S.
Wonlod .. ....,... . . -

Q4 3

e8 72
or 85
oi 062
eK 98 .75

301, N, Good . . _ , . . _ , .

r.1erch andi sc

42 Mobile Homttl

tor Rent

Cho- - -

OOIJ-*7. ....... ...... and
_,., nckidM. Diwe •ir ..

2·1&amp;·95

10

WEST

(L.IHA\?

I..........,.Evonlngo.

Z113.

Giveaway

4

UICE

1ta s...-,~,ooo
Door, fout-le, M, CiMn LIM •
~..1.-~'~.1. 114 - ••• Dlyej

46 Space for Rent

- conatruotlon
undor oonol-lon
oomplolo
In lolu Of
ren1, loc ..lll on Halw Cntlllc.
Rd. olf Crob Crootl Rd. 10t-124-

lng ·-,,~- Or Far .....

~~

7ifa l'flMSE'

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Cotbogo "" ront In Pt. - ·
114-9t:Z-a151.

THE -PIRIDCIEF

'ftiAT

NIO tniiJor on "-'
- - - Col 1:110 p.m.,

:.:..:::1,•·•·
-· '*·
:teM-411-l~.

Clull.
No.~
No
"'""
- - The
a.c
' You
II Fot .... 1ntenna
tlon,IIM- I I

IT ,4\ll';f'VE' ~~&amp;N A "AT

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........ 1'001111 ..-..

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eQ
. or A
oA
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KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry.Wrlght

..•'

(ebb&lt;.)

42 Olympic org.
43 Hlgholl point
46 Number In •
dozen
50 Ruth 's aon
51 - and aah
53 Crlea of 'd ove•
54 Noblemon
aware of
22 Porlod of time 55 Sated herb
23 Aelreoe JUlian 56 Shoemaker's
tools
24 Electron tube
.57 Singer
27 Former
WiUiams
JapanaH
58 Soak, as flax
state1man
59 Singer Seeger
21 Electrified
portlcle
DOWN
31 I Want -

NORTH

A' 1' 1ounc ,. 111p 111 s

· :•

. &lt;

You•// Come ·up Aces With .
The Classifleds .
•
•

'l
'

profitable uses tor your creative . artistic

speed.

tic tongue toda y. This individual can be
won over by responding tactfully , not

especially patient _with your fa m~ly an~ i n~
laws t~ay , evt:tn 1f they are exas~ra1 1~ g.

.eHor.ts don 't succeed . Regroup and try

angrily. Gel a jump pn tile by unders!and·

You woll thank yourseH for keepong quoel

again .

·

tant objective Ieday. even il your initial

•
·'
'I

·--

-~

t -··

'
-· --

•'

�Page-10-The

Ohio

SenUnel

'0 Pioneers' reviewed at -literary club

'
Willa
Calher's 0 Pionur~ was
the book reviewed for the Middleport Literary Club during a recent
mceting at the home or Betsy Par-

sons.

.

Pauline Horton introduced her
presentation by touching on some
aspects of the aathor's life. Willa
Cather was born Dec. 7, 1875.
Although her family lived in Virginia, she seems to belong to the
West, as her father toot over a
ranch in Nebraska when ·she was
eight years old.
.
.
Since schools were few, Walla
was educated at home by her
grandmothers until the family
moved to Red Cloud, Neb., where
she attended high school. Miss
Cather then worked her way
through the University of Nebras·
ka, doing newspaper correspondence. an expenence whtch later
worked Jo her advantage. She

tau_ght for a while as she began to
Mrs. Horton described the setwme poetry and short stories.
ting of the novel in the late 1860s
A volume of poems, April Twi- in the little town of Hanover, Neb.,
lights. published in 1903, brought as "a cluster of low, drab buildings
her popularity and led to the posi- huddled on the gray pairie."
tion of managing editor of From the first pan labeled "The
McClure's Magazine in •New York Wild Land," the reviewer carefully
from 1906 to 1912. While the delineated the four major characauthor aaveled widely, she retained ters - .Alexandra Bergson, the
her interest in the ~ric country dominant character; Carl Linstrum,
and her books with western themes a quiet, sensitive young lad; Emil
are 'those for which she is best Bergson, Aleltalldra's little brother
who needs much comforting and
remembered. Other well-known
works include My Antonia. Death caring for; and Marie Tove~y. an
Comes to the Archbishop ant!
outgoing, coquettish child visiting
Shadows on the Rock. After a . from Omaha who found an inter·rather solitary life, Cather died in esting playmate in Emil.
Mrs. Horton then traced the
1947.
As the title 0 Pioneers suggests, development or these families.
the land and its development has as Aluandra who managed the ranch
great an infl~ce on the c~~ after the death of her parents, Carl
in the st?ry as the rel!lli~n.shtpS who moved away after selling his
which eltJSI among the indiVIduals land to Frank Shabata, a moody,
paranoid person who married the
· themselves.
..

lively, loving Marie, and Emil, who
was educated and somewhat pampered but never fOUDd a love or bis
own excep1 his sister, Alexandra.
Unfortunately, he and the
increasingly frustrated Marie
became amorously involved until
her husband Frank, in a jc~lous ­
rage , finally shoots them both.
Alexandra feels herself very much
alone after the death of her brother
and her dear friend, Marie. Carl,
however. her friend from childhood, returns, and as in romantic ·
novels of that time, the happy ending comes as Alexandra and Carl
walk the path together.
Mrs. Betty Fultz was welcomed
after her recent hospitalizations. ·
She shared with the members a
tape of beautiful music which was
prepared by the Bachtel family to
bring some comfort in her illness.

Southern's
girls post win
in tourney

1994 OLDS
ACHIEVA 2 DR.
:·· 4 c:yl., air c:ond., powar

6 c:yl., auto., air c:ondhlon-

lng, AMIFM c:aaMttl, tilt,
c:rulaa, power ltNrlng,
power brakea, power door
locka, more.

ltHrlng, power braoa,.
power door locka, tlh,
·.. . AM/FM lleNO, air bag,
ABS. .

$11 I 949
.

9

,

"

The Community Calendar Is will review ''Rachel ·Carsoo" and
published as a free service to Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will review
DOD-profit groups wlshiag to "King's Oak". ,Members are to
anDouDce meeting and special respond to roll' call by naming a
eveats. The caleDdar is aot biography they have enjoyed.
desigaed to promote sales or
fuad raisers of aay. type. Items
POMEROY - Ohio Valley .
11re priDted as spac:e permitl aad Soap Bolt Derby meeting, WednescaaDot be guaranteed to ruD a day, 5:30 p.m;· Pomeroy .flower .
specific Dumber nf days. .
Shop. All mterested participants
encouraged to attend.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Alzheimers and
SYRACUSE - Third WednesRelated Disorden Support Group, day Homemaken Club, Wednes1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Mci's day,lO a.m. Syracuse Municipal
Multi-purpose Senior Center. "Pam- -Building. Roll call, a homemade
and Alzheimers, Watchin~ for valentine. Project is tying a quilt,
Clues" will be the topic or discus- Members to take seisson. .
sicin. Public invited.
CHESTER - A special meet. . MIDDLEPORT- The Middle- ing of Shade River Lodge 453,
port Literary Club will meet F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 6 p.m. with
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Sacred work in the master maSon degree.
Heart RectorY. Mrs. Chester Erwin three candidates. Refreshments.

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport Child Conservation League
meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at Rocksprings United Methodist Chureh.
Guest speak~r Cliff Kennedy on
children with learning disabilities.
Brown bag sale to be held.

FRIDAY- Pentecostal Assembly, S.R. 124, near Racine, James
Gillette evangelist; special singing,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Cachet made
for New Year
one-day stamp .

~ERDALE

&lt;::::zi"L

HOMES

We will pay arrangements and
pay for your rapid income tax
refund to use towards your
down payment.

1-800-466-7671
•TAX TIME
NEW 1995 70X4

p.mKathy .McDaniel wa~ guest
speaka' at one of the rneeungs and
talked about how TOPS has helped
her lose over 90 pounds: She also
showed a video on wetg~t loss.
Missy Frazier, Dreama Pickens •.
and Sharon Stewart performed •
valenline skit :tnfocmalion on. the
weight Joss group may be oiJiained
by calling 949-2763.
.

•

1994 FORD
AEROSTAR EXT. .
XLT, V-6, auto., dual alr
cond., tllt, erulali, AM/FM

V-6, auto., ilr co~ .• AM!FM

can., PS, PB, P,W, POL,
Pwr. Hit, tllt, c:ruiH.

c:ua., PS, PB, PW, POL.
1120370

120280

'

'c:-=-~-

~any

Other Items 1/2 Price

BAHR CLOTHIE.RS
992-2351

145 North Second

•,

Middleport

Two area riverboat
captains indicted

E~PLAINING TRUCKS..._ Ray Werry of the Ohio Department of Transportatioo poiDted out

the ·differences between ODOT's ofd and new trucks to Salisbury .Etemeatary S,:hool students
Thursday. Some nf the children showo here will be selected to break ground on the rll'st phase of
tbe I·77 CoDneetor Project on .March 6.
·
toward the future," she said
First. second and third
graders will draw pictures while
fourth, fifth and siltth graders
will write essays about OOOT
to determine which students will
perform the ceremony.
The pictures 811d essays will
be based on a visit to the school

early Thursday afternoon by
ODOT employees and trucks
the department uses to Clear
snow from slllle highways.
The students got the opportunity to compare an older truck
with a newer, computerized
niodel and learned how snow
re'moval equipment works.

Studenis ·also learned how
many trucks ODOT has in
Meigs County'(l2) and why the
· salt used in the trucks is dyed
blue (so tl)e drivers can see it).
Yoacham said she will pick
up the essays an~ pi~tures
Thursday and the Silt wmners
(Continued OD Page 3)

CINCINNATI (AP) - A federal indictment alleges that a Cinci~ti
towboat company; one of its retired execu~ves and SIX towboat_caplllliiS
were involved in dumping oil and garbage mto the Ohio and MisstSSIPJll
rivers for more than 20 years.
The nine-count indictment returned Thursday accuses MIG Transport
Services Inc.. J. Harschel Thomassee, 66, of Paducah, Ky .. and the silt
captains of dumping from 1971 through 1993.
. .
.
If convicted, they could face prison terms and millions of doUars m
fines. Arraignment was scheduled for Feb. 27 before U.S. Magtstrate
Robert Steinberg.
·
· .
Grand jurors said M/() Transport employees violated the Clean Water
Act and Oil Pollution Act by dumping oily bilge slops, burned wasteS and
other kitchen and industrial garbage including plastic. metal, glass, ash
and paint chips overboard.
.
·
·
The company and Thomassee deliberately failed to report a July 1990
oil discharge into the Ohio River at Wheeling, W.Va., by ordenng
employeeS to lie to authorities if questioned about the dumpmg, the
indictment said.
The defendants wiD fight them. their lawyers said Thursday.
Not aU of the captains listed in the indictment worked for MIG Transport during all cif the 22 years covered· by the charges, company lawyer
Glenn Whitaker said.
" The company has had numerous towboat captains. l don't know
elt8Ctly why these folks were singled out," Whitaker said . "We've had a
comprehensive environmental program in place for two years now that
served as a model for other companies on the inland waterways.' '
The indicted captains ure Stephen West Pearson, Henderson, W.Va.;
. Jerry L. Ferguson, 44, of Jackson, Tenn.; Melvin G. Herdman, 58, Buffalo, W.Va.; Walter T. Reed, 58, Villa Hills, Ky..; Fred E. Morehead, of
Vienna, W.Va., and RobertS. Montgomery, 63, of Racine.
If.eonvicted, the company could face $4.2 miUion in fines. Thomassee
and the captains could· each face up to five years m pnsoo, plus fines of
up to $500,000 for each pollution count in which they are charged. . .
"'
M/G Transport is a subsidiary of Midland Co., also based m .Cmcmnati. Midland ts not involved in the criminal case.
Crews often live aboard towboats for weeks and generate garbage plus
engine room wastes, all of which is supposed to be di!¥._1~ of on shore.
Thomassee's successor as port engineer, Roger Wtlltamson of Paducah•.Ky., pleaded guilty in December to misdemeanor federal charges of
aiding and
·

Fil.ings Y!i.ll prompt
_pr1mary 1n Pomeroy
1994 LINCOLN TOWN CAR SIGNATURE SERIES
V-8, auto., Cllmata Control, tilt, cruise, pwr. seat,
AMIFM cass., all power equip.

1993 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS ·'

1994 FORD E-350
~ (LUBWAGON

V-8, auto., air, AM/FM caaa.,

15 Pua., 5.8L V-8, auto.,

front &amp; rear air iibnd., PS,
PB, PW, POL, tilt, .c:rulaa,

Pwr. ut, PS, PB, PW, POL,
till, crulae, only 13,000 mi.

C:ISI.

1953771

1993 FORD
TAURUS

1993 FORD
T-BIRD

V-8, auto., air cond., AMIFM ·

V-8, auto., air cond., AM/FM

120161

120330

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
When the 1-77 Connector ·
Project was first envisioned
prior to th.e opening of the
Ravenswood Bridge in 1981, no
one at the time could possibly
imagine who would perform the
groundbreaking... because they
had not yet been born.
.
Next month, silt students
from Salisbury Elementary
School, one from each grade,
will get the honor of breaking
ground on the connector road .
The groundbreaking ceremony
will be held at 1 p.m. at the
Rock Springs eod of the project
near Meigs High School.
"Weather permitting, Jbey'll
walk the school (students) over
and the six wiD do the groundbreaking," said Ohio Department of Transportation District
10 spokeswoman Nancy
Yoacham.
Salisbury Elementary School
was selected because it is near
the project. Yoacllam said it is
"very appropriate" that the children will conduct the ,ground.breaking.
.
"It gets them interested in
what's going on ... it looks

A Muhlmedla Inc. Nowopaper

~~--:::-;n--......,.---."1

call., Pwr. lilt, PS, PB, . caaa., tlh, crulae, Pwr. 11at,
PW, POL, tilt, erul11, mora.
PS, PB, PW, POL, mora.

•1 Lot Ladies Dresses
Values to 58500
ONLY 51995
•1 Lot Ladied Dresses 1/2 Price .
• Ladies Coats by London Fog
and Sherwood of Ohio 1/2 price

TOPS OH 18'15 . _
Debbie Lowery and Carol Crow
were top .losers at recC!lt meetings
of TOPS held a1 the Syracuse
Nazarene Church. ·
Runners-up for weight loss at
the two meetings were Betsy Jones,
Celia McCoy, Debbie Htll , and
Cindy Wolfe., Meetings are held
ThJKSCiays with. wei3hins !'rom 5 to
6 p.m.llld meetings fiool 6 to 6:45

1994 MERtURY
.,
SABLE·

120420

WINTER SAVINGS

TOPS news

1994 MERCURY·
TOPAZ 4 DR.

American Legion

TURN YOUR TAX REFUND
INTO A NEW HOME!

A unique situation occurred
with the release of the Postal Service's New Year stamp. It virtually
became a one-day stamp.
Jim Sundquist, postmaster at
Beverly and formerly employed at
the Pomeroy Post Office, explained
that the New Year stamp went on
sale nationwide Dec. 31, 1994 as a
29 cent stamp, while in a totally
Separate action, first class postage
changed to 32 cents effective the
ONE-DAY STAMP -This
next day, Jan. 1,1995.
. commemorative cacbet of the
· To commemorate the event, he New Year stamp issued Dec.
created a special cachet based on 31, 1994 was created Jly Jim
an enlarged image of the stamp Sundquist, Beverly postmaswhich was designed by Clarence ter.
Lee of Honolulu, Hawaii. It contains a canceled stamp, plus a full
pane of 20 uncanceled stamps and
retails for $10.
For information on obtaining the
cachet, residen~ may call 614-9844263 or order direct enclosing a
self-addressed label to U.S. Postal
Service, 204 Fifth St., Beverly,
Ohio45715 .

1994 FORD
RANGER 4X2

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 11778 and Star Junior
Grange 11878 regular fun night and
potluclc SUjJI!C{ Satun!a
~~-Y, 6:30 p.m.
at the grange hall AU members and
interested people urged to allelld.

~ TUPPERS PLAINS- VeteranS
of Foreign Wars Post 9053 dinner
for men and Ladies Auxiliary at
6:30p.m., Thursday.

2 Sectlono, 12 Pages .35 cont.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 17, 1995

Copyrlght1995

Students chosen
for connector's
groundbreaking

SATURDAY .
CHESTER - Special meeting,
Shade River Lodge, 4.53, F. and A.
M. Saturday, breakfast, 7 a.m.;
lodge opening, 8 a.ni. Work in the
entered apprentice degree for rwo
candidates.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday, 7 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
ChurcH. A1 Anon will meet at the
same time.

RACINE -

,I

Post 602, American Legion, dinner
at 6:30 p.m. meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday.

Past masters' night will be
observed.

Vol. 45, NO. 205

Turning
earth

on that. No matter how small or
12~~ii!i~~m~rJi2:::::::::::::::::::~
~imple, with all of the ,people in · • ······•'·~······
ioiW
theJr areas. working toward the
same goal they made themselves
successful, but the key was for
everyone to be in sync.
I would like to thank Reverend
4 cyl., auto., air cond.,
XLT, 4 cyl., 5 apd., AM/FM
Roland Wildm811 for allowing me
AM/FM call., PS, PB, PW,
caaa., PS, PB, sliding baek
to print his quality of life statePOL, Pwr. Hat.
glue, long bed.
ment We should all take a moment
118950
120291
to be grateful for &lt;U surroundings
and then make something more
.from them.
This month's quote: "I always
view problems as opportunilie$ in
wolic clothes. • - Henry Kaiser.

Community calendar:_ _ _ _ __

1...- tonlcbtllltht lower to
mid aos, Clear. Saturday, IUDIIY·
Hlchs llltbe mid 505.

1994 CHEVROLET
BERETTA .

ference -with Commissioner Fred
Hoffman we both realized how
incredibly fortunate Meigs County
is to have all of OlD' agencies working so smoothly toward the same
goal of service IJid advancement
At the Chamber ConfereDce,
Pauy Calaway, Horace Karr, 1eff
Thornton and I became aware of
our vast potential. The successful
areas to the north took a bald look
at what they do have and then built

picnicking, fishing and beautiful
·scenery. Several have campsites.
Because or its location along the
river, and sheltered by the cliffs,
Pomeroy, our county seat has the
finest climate in the entire Midwest
• fact, not brag.
Cost for an average boose for a
family of four would run from
$40,000 to $50,000, with very
competitive .utilities and taxes - an
inexpensive plaee to live. Excellent
medical care is available. Veterans
(Memorial) Hospital offers 69 beds
plus other hospitals at Pt. Pleasant,
Athens, Parkersburg (2) and a.
regional hospital of 269 beds at
Holzer (Medical Center) in ·oatlipolis. There is a helipad and Life
Flight services to both Veterans
and Holzer. Our local schools are
good with a very low drop out rate
d
h' hi
ed b th
an are . tg. Y support
Y e.
co~':"~e Meigs County has
much more than other areas. After
attending the Commissioner·~ Con-

Pick 3:
9-2-6
Pick 4:
4-6-3-3
Buckeye 5:
1-2-17-22-23

Sports, Page 4

High quality of life offered in · Meigs County
And it is a· coimty on the move.
With the new year·just _be~nd
Great
strides are being made in renus and the freshness of spnng JUSt
ovating
and improving the proper- ·
around the corner, I felt that the
ties
and
the central business disfollowing quality of life statement
tricL
Community
pride is growing.
by the Rev. Roland Wildman was
Over
900,000
persons
live within order. It is time to reflect on the
in
100
miles
of
our
county
seat.
many favorable aspects Me~gs
Within
350
miles
of
over
40
perCounty maintains and to take pride
in our neighbon and our efforts to cent of our nation's population,
achieve a better way of life for our- Pomeroy is only 2.5 miles from 1-77
selves. Before anyone from the out- and less than 100 miles from 1-64,
. side will take a chance on us, we 1-70, 1-71 and 1-79. Meigs County
is within 20 miles. of two business
must
"Meigs County is fil_le~ wi~h aiipOrts, at Gallipolis and Albany
friendly people, where 1t 1s sull and within 80 miles are three comsafe to walk the streets at ni~ht and mercia! airports located at Parlc:ers· where life centers about farruly and burg, Huntington and Charleston,
W.Va. aside from Columbus lnrercommunity.
· .
It is a county of churches, wtth national being withil) I00 miles.
Within 60 miles are five colmost major denominations ~pre­
sented and with a beautiful spmt of leges and universities and two technical schools, with all of the culturCIJ,Ilperation am'?ng them.. .
'Nestled agamst the chffs and al advantages they provide. There
along the beautiful Ohio River, is are I0 Ohio State Parks within so
one of the most picturesque areas miles, including Burr Oat and Old
anywhere. The hills, rocks, forests Man's Cave, which have a lodge
and streams combine to provide and cabins and Lake Hope which
. hilS cabins. All have hiking trails,
unequaled natUral beauty.
·

Ohio Lottery

I

$229 ~0,

1993 FORD
ESCORT WAGON

·1993 FORD
RANGER 4X2

4 cyl., auto., air c:ond.,

4 cyl., 5 apd., air cond.,
AM/FM cau., PS, PB, bed·.

AM/FM ateraQ, tilt, c:rulaa,

PS, PB. .
11147471

$204 ~o.

llnar, ftbarglaaa,
mora.

topper,

1945301

205 ~o.

5
PIY"*WW••

'.&gt;'·,"'

•All ~are a! month fl(:t- -n. PIM"
biMCI on 52,000do'Wn II time o1 delivery.
!til
11t payrnnl HCUrity depod, ,....., In 21 rtrnalnl'lf payment~ .

S....tu• nollndudld.

By CHAnENE.fiOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
Due to an abundance of can~dates, Pomeroy Village will bave a
R~ublican primary ~Jection ~ 2
whtle in contrast, Midflleport, wtth
only one candidate filing for any
office, will forego a primary.
At Thursday's 4 p.m dea&lt;Jline
for candidate filings at the Meigs
County Board of Elections o.fftce,
Pomeroy had three Republicans
seeking nomination to run for
mayor and four residents seekmg
nomination for two seats on council.
On the other hand, Middleport
· had one Republican candidate til-

Ri-ot trial
jury ·hears
talks tape

COLUMBUS (AP) - Jurors
listened intently to a tape recording
of negotiations during the 1993
Lucasville prison riot - · including
a desperate plea by a guardhostage.
Guard Darrold Clark pleaded
with a state negotiator to restore
electricity and water to the cellblock taken over by the prisoners.
"Please do this. Please," Clade
begged negotiator Dave Burchett.
"They want to get out of thi_s
peacefully. ,.. All you g~Jt ~ do, 1f
you want to cooperate, IS JUSI tum
the (expletive) on. This is my life,
buddy." .
In response to Clark's pleas ,
Bur()hett said authorities needed
two hostages released 1as a sign of
.
good faith.
"Here's a show of faith - by
nobody killing one .of these
guards, •·· snarled inmate negotiator
George Skatzes. Skatzes is awaiting trial on charges related to s_layings of guard Robert Vallandmgham and two inmates.
The tape was pta yed Thursday
in the trial for Jason Robb,)6. in
Franklin County Common· Pleas
· Court. He is charged with aggravated murder in the deaths of Vallandingham and inmate David Sommers. He also is charged' with kid-.
napping Clade. ··
The jurors are eltpected to hear a
total of 17 hours of tape from negotiations that took place during the
11-day uprising at the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility in April
1991

•

ing for mayor= incumbent DeweyHorton - and no other candidates
for· two seats on council and the
village cledc-treasurer's post.
Neither community had any
Democrats filing-for any office.
Republicans filing for the
mayor's post in Pomeroy were
incumbent Mayor John W. Blaettnar, Kenny Klein and Frank A.
Vaughan. ·
Filing for the two seats on
c'?uncil were incumbent S~tt Ml
DtUon, Bryan S. Shank, Gen Wal- .
ton and Bracy A. Korn. The tenns
of Dillon and William Haptonstall
.JOHN W. BLAE'ITNAR .
. expire this year. Kathy Hysell, petition for re-election.
incumbent clerk-treasurer, ft.led her
On Middlepo_!'l Council, the

.....------.---~-~----:"i

FRANK A. VAUGHAN
· KENNY KLEIN
DEWEY HORTON
Ye sterday's deadline applied
terms of James Clatworthy, who run in the November general eleconly
to Pomeroy and Middleport,
tion.
did not seek re-election, and Beth
which
have the population to qualiCandidates'
petitions
will
be
Stivers expire this year. Stivers, an
.
fy
.for
partisan nominations in th.e
certified
for
validtiy
in
a
meeting
of
undeclared partisan candidate, has
May
primary.
Independent candJthe
Board
9f
Elections
at
4
p.m
.
until the day before the primary.
Tuesday.
(Continueil on Page 3)
May I, to file as an independent to

P,r osecution hits·on Simpson's
reaction when told of murders

WATCIUNG, WAITlNG- Wuda· and Homer Vallaodlagham listened to statements at the trial of JB!lOD RoiJb lu Columbu.
Robb is challled in the kllliag of Corrections Oflker Robert Vallandingham during tbe 1993 Lucasville prison riot. (AP)
·'

.'

Uy MICHAEL FLEEMAN
"All of this is subject to the
Associated Press Writer
jury's estimation of whether the
LOS ANGELES -He has been detective is telling the uuth or mak told his ex-wife has been kiUed, but ing up a version of the conversation
he doesn't ask how. He doesn't ask that is not independently corrobowhy. He doesn't ask when, or · rated by anyone else," said Southwhere.
western University law professor
This, 8CC!lrdirlg to a detective, Robert Pugsley.
.
was O.J. Simpson's reaction upon · Simpson flew to Chicago the
being told of Nicole Brown Simp- night of the killings. Phillips said·
son's death.
that when he told Simpson his eltDetcetive Ronald Phillips, testi- wife had been killed, Simpson said,
fying for the prosecution Thursday, ''Oh, my God ,. Nicole is .killed?
said he called Simpson in hts Oh, my God, she's dead" and
Chicago hotel room the morning became very upset
after the murders of Ms. Simpson
"l finally said, Mr. Simpson,
and her friend Ronald Goldro!lll.
please try to get ahold of yourself. 1
He said Simpson got very upset have your children at the West Los
on the telephone, but did not ask Angeles Police Station . I need to
for any details. The prosecution talk to you about that," said
hopes Simpson's alleged absence Phillips, who made the call from
of curiosity will indicate to the jury Simpson·' s house.
that he already knew how his wife
Simpson said he would take the
had been killed because he was the next flight back to Los Angeles and
murderer.
then talked to his older daughter,
· · "It does at least, in the eyes of Arnelle, the deteCtive said.
the prosecution, give the impresPhillips emphasized he never
sion he doesn't have to ask those used the word " murder" when
questions, he already knows the talking to Simpson about his exanswers," said Loyola University wife.
law professor Stan Goldman. "It
"Did Mi-. Simpson ask you ho.w
su~ests O.J. Simpson was not sur- she was killed?' Deputy District
- •
Attorney Mareia Clark asked.
prised."
The defense is left to c~plain
"No," Phillips said.
just what happened,. possibly
"Did he ask you when she was
through the testimony of Simpson kiUed?" ,
himself. Defense attorney Johnnie .
"No...
"Did he aslc you if you had any
Cochran Jr. continues his crossexamination of Phillips today: .
.

. I

•

idea who had done it?"
"No."
"Did he ask you where it had
occurred?''
·
"No."

''Did he ask you anything about ·
the circumstances of how his ex wife had been killed?"
"No.".
Under cross-.e xamination by
Cochran, PhilliPs defended investigators' decision to delay notifying
the coroner's.office for 6 1/2 hours,
when police regulations call for
"immediate" notification.
He said he interpreted ''immediate" to mean "as soon as practicable." · .
Detectives waited until about
6:50 a.m. to make their nrst call
which was only to notify the cora:
ncr's office of the deaths, not to ask
that someone be sent immediately.
About 8:10a.m.. 'Phillips called
agam.
No o)le from the coroner's
office arrived until 9: 10 a.m about nine hours after police
reached the scene of the crime.
The defense contends that
because of the delay, the coroner's
office lost the opportUnity to more
closely fix .the time of death. Prose.
cutors say the killings occurred
about 10: IS p.m., which would
have given Stmpson time to get
back to his house and clean up ·
. before leaving for Chicago about
II p.m.

.,

,'

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