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Page D8 Sunday llmee

.19,1895

*************·***

Ohio Lottery·
llmellicGM·
II/II

Pick 3:
987
Pick 4:
2194

PIIJJs

ON PRESIDENTS ' DAY

Super Lotto:
12-14-17-23-29-41

11/11

Kicker:
003320

Low tooJabt In mid 30s.
Cloudy. Tuesday, cloudy. H!pl

In the up,pu 30s.

•
MYSTEkY FAJlM- '11111 week's mystery
farm, featured by tile Gallla Soli aa!l Water
Conservation Dlltrkt, Is loalted -wllere Ia
GaUia County. llldlvlduals .....Iaing .to partlcl·
pete Ia tbe weekly c:onteat may do so by guudag
the farm'• owner. Jut maD, or drop oft your
pea .to tile Gallpolls DaUy Tribune, IllS Third
Ave~ GaWpolls, Obio, 45631, or Tile Daily Sen- .
11ne1, m Court s~ Pomeroy, Olllo, 45769, and

you mlly wla • $5 prize from lbe Olllo Valley
Publllhlnt! Co. Lave your DJUM. 8ddrea llllCI
'lelepbone DUIIIber wltll yotQ' c..-.1 or letter. No
.telepboae .calli will be accepted. All conlelt
entries sbould be turned In .to tlae newspaper
ollke by 4 p.m. eacb Wed.-day.IIIC8M ola tie,
the whmer will be cla-D by l!oUery. Ne:rt week,
a Melp County farm wiD be featlll'ed by tbe
Melp SoU llllCI Water c-rvadon Diolrkt.

Free trees availab.le for
reclaimed mined land

'

of Forestty iod reccndy 1f1Proved for the trees are required to sulimit
by the Ohio General Assembly, the a management plan to the Division
new ~rogram will complement ' of Forestry.
O)lio s TreeSource reforestation
The seedlings are available in a ·
initiative, aimed at planting and variety of hardwood and conifer ·
nurturing more trees across the species and will be deli vcred in
state,
early spring. They must be planted
"We can·now help landowners by April 30. 1995. Landowners are
tum abandoned mine lands onto required to pay for planting costs,
productive forests and make a sub- however, several cost-share prostantial contributi.on to our refor- . grams are available which can
estation effon," said Ronald Abra- reduce the cost as much as 7S perham, chief of the ODNR Division cent.
of Forestry "Thousands of Ohio .
Landowners interested in the
acres have been stripped and TreeSource mine land tree planting
reclaimed to grass since a 1972 program should contact their local
change reduced tree planting as an ODNR service forester.
alternative reclamation teclmiquc."
Interested allplicants with land
Both private and industrial located in Gallia, Jackson ,
landowners are elijfible to receive Lawrence or Vinton Counties may
the free tree seedling which must contact tbeir Service Forester at
By BRUCE WIL~S
We are seeking more conserva- he planted on a minimum of lh1ee Division of Forestry, 86
tive investments and ate consider- and a maximum of 40 acres, Portsmouth Street, Jackson, Ohio
ing government-backed Treasury · Landowners interested in applying 45640; telephone (614) 286-5900.
notes. Am I correct in thinking that
this is a safe investment. and the
only ·way one can lose principal is
when one withdraws before dte
time period is up? Is it best to
invest through a brotcr and pay a
commission, or is it just as safe to
invest through a Federal Reserve
Bank? Should we invest in individual securities or a fund? We
thoiJiht this was pretty simple, but
now we are wondering. - C.R.L.,
Lafayeac. La. .
DEAR C.R.L.: Treasury-backed
instruments are the safest that this
country offers - as safe as our
govemmenL I'm still one or those
old-fashioned people wbo feels that
the ~ovemment is on pretty solid- footmg.
.
One does not withdraw from a
. Treasury instrument. however:. It is
sold on the secondary market. If
the interest rate is highly competitive. you could actually make
money on this U8lisiiction; On the
other hand, if interest rates have
risen beyond the rate that you are
currently being paid, then your
principal in a sale would be
AOCEirrS DON4.TION- Bertie SaDDden,
reduced.
-'staat
maaaaer, aceepll •
sylllem
You can go directly to the Fedfrom Ralldy Mamllout or Prescription
of Point Pleasant.
eral Reserve and purchase tbese
ne nebulizer, wbidt dispenses medlcatioa or resplra.tory alnray
instruments, or through a booker or
diseases such u Mtllma and brODdlltis, wu donated to 1111! Holzer
CUale Pediatric department. ·
banker; personally. I prefer the latter. For the few dollars involved,
it's just plain easier.
WANTING TO BUY A HOME?
As for the liulds, there are many
mutual funds that invest primarily
OR HOW ABOUT
or solely in government securities.
REFINANCING THAT HIGH INTEREST LOAN?
Here you have professional manFmha, FHA, VA and CONVENTIONAL LOANS
agement and very possilily a higher
return over the long pull. However,
AVAILABLE
· one must understand that you are
not direcdy investing in the Trea- ·
• Low or No Downpayment
sury, but rather in a fund that buys
• Special Financing Programs Available
Tre.ury insuuments, which can be
a bit more volatile.
• Programs for Your Individual Needs
Bruee WiUiams is a syndicated
• Low Fixed·&amp; Adjustable Rates
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
• Evening Appointments Available
Association.
(Send your questions t•:
• Local Representative for 10 Years
Smart Money, P.O. Boll 503,
• Free Prequalification
Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of
~eneral Interest wiD be IIISWered
· 1D future columns. Owing In tbe
-FIVESfAR _CALL VICKiE HAULDREN
volume or mall, pei'IOIIal replies
caDDOl be provided.)
MORIIiA&amp;E
(614) 446·4042
Copyrigbtl995 NEWSPAPER
. CDRPoRAnOII
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, ·coli-tact America OnUne by calliq 11100-817-6364, ext. 8317.)
COLUMBUS - LatldoWtiers can
receive fn:e tree seedlings to plant
on reclaimed mined lands this
spring through a new program
established by, the Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources
(ODNR).
.
ODNR will provide approximately 400,000 treeS to be planted
on any 'Ohio mined land property
whi'ch has been stripped and
rei:laimed after 1972 Applications
for the free trees will be accepted
until March 15. 1995.
Initialed by the ODNR Division

WE'RE CELEBUTING PRESIDENTS' DAY WITH
PATRIOTIC DIALS ON THESE QUALITY '

,

PRE·OWNED TRUC S!
.
1985 Chev. S-Biazer
Just traded. bought new here. Low ·
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See it now!
.

' ,
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-

., ,

.'

4 wheel drive, auto. trans., ·air,
locally owned. Save Here!

Crop Insurance For
Tobacco Producers

PATRIOT - Shannon Fallon,

Pltriot. is a new juni~ member of
the American Angus Association.
Jnnior members are eligible to
resister cattle in the American
Angus Association and lake pan in
wociation sponsored shows and
other national and regional e.vents.- . .

The "new" crop insurance program is-almos t
free if you enroll for it 1 The government
pays the premium. Your cost (or
administrative purposes can be as little as
$50 per crop. For details contact me today.

·Named aide
GALLIPOLIS ·- Public He8Jth
has hired Gallipolis resident Donna
Foster as a home care aide. Ms.
Foster will make aide visits to
homebound patients in Gallia
County.
Pioneer Health Resources, Bre•
men, p(ovides home care services
such as slciUed nursing visits, home
care aides, home ·infusion therapy
and home physiological laboratory
services.

..

..

..
1991 Chev. S-10

1992 Chevrolet S-1 0
Extended cab, V-6, 5'speed, locally
owned, low miles.
New Chevrolet trade.

1993 Chevrolet
Astro LT.
Fully equipped, dual air, power seat,
power door locks, power windows
and custom cloth seats.

1994 Chevroh:~t
S-10
Only 6;000 miles, 4.3 V6, air, auto.,
two-tone teal and silver. ·
Locally owned.

1989 Ford
Ranger
Just Traded! Camper topper, 5
speed, extra clean inside and out.
Priced to Go!

1994 Chevrolet
S-10

e

MPCI " ... a.~c to oil producm ~prdlcss of ra&lt;c.

Clinton
salu.tes
lwo Jima
survivors

. "Half of Ohio's poor families
work. They are largely invisible
,because they just manage to get by,
often wi~ut health insurance and
often without adequate food or
housing," thereponsaid. · · -By JOHN CHALFANT
It concluded that some progress
Associated Press Wriier
has been made in rea:nt years. But
COLUMBUS _ Knox and perfonnance varied sharply among
Warren ranked best among the counties not only in specific cate•
· ~ the' .....,;
gories such as. child suppon collecstate 5 88 counues or tr .,....or- u·
b t·
rail rankin
mance in 10 health, education and
ons, u m ove
gs.
welfare areas used to measure help .
Mark Real, director of the nonfor low-income families, .a private profit advocacy group, said qucsresearch group said.
. lions of accountability were raised '
Pike and Cuyahoga counties · when one county could collect
ranked worst on a rating syswm child support in 75 percent of
that included such subjects as child cases, while another collected 13
support collections, unmarried percent.
fathers establishing paternity, Head
"The lack of a statewide strateStan preschool enrollment and pro- gy lies at the heart of what has
ficiency test scores.
become a patchwork quilt of local
.
The Children's Defense Fund- efforts to help families achieve and
Ohio included tbe rankings in a maintain economic indepetidence,
216-P.age boot called He.fp!ng to help them obtain a quality eduFam 1tus Work. l'he pubhcaUQn cation for their children, and to
was to be released today.
help them provide for their own
Meigs County was ranked 72nd health and safety," Real said in a
in the defense fund's report and news release. .
Gallia County was 47th. Other area
Among the ~·s .rondusions:
counties included in the report - ' The state s chtl!l. support
were washington , 15th; Jackson, . enforcement system rem~~;~ns funda21st; Athens, 28th; Vinton, 34th; men.tally weak, despite some
improvement. Child suppon cases ·
and Lawrence, 55th ·
r

Progress made,
but.performance
varies In state

Fully equipped, power windows,
po~er door locks, tiit, cruise,
AM/FM stereo 'wtcassette, only
11,000 miles. We sold it new!

1993 Dodge
1 To·n
I

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only 45,000 miles, one local owner,
new truck trade.
Save a bundle here!

JIST PRICES IN TJfl TRI.STATI RIGION • BIUIVIIT!
1616 EASTERN AVE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446·3672
•

By GEORGE ABATE
. Two of the four district buildings 'are 70 years old. The .others includSeatinel News Staff
mg the current junior/senior high school, are 40 years old he added
The Eastern Local Board of Education is considerinf! building a new
All four district buildings need major roof repairs, J&lt;ari. said. '
school, Board President Ray Karr said today.
"We don't know whether it will be a new high school or a new elemenAt last week's monthly board meeting, the board discussed the differtary," Karrsaid.
ent schools and the steps needed to get:;tate money, Karr said.
·
. Superintendent Ron Miruirtl will travel Tuesday to .Colwnbus to meet
"There's been no decision made. We are studying the· options," Karr
w1th the state director of this building program, he added. By the next
said. "It's ilur duty to investigate it as much as possible.n
boa:'! meetmg, the ~ should have more specifics and may make a
The board is weighing the cost of the project and whether residents
deciSIOn to place the ISsue on the ballot this November.
will support a building levy, Karr added.
The board hopes to keep the building levy about 5 mills Karr said ·
A new school wiD cost the least if the state Building Assistance Loan
The district is seeking input from community membe~ ~~ parent- ~chFund covers at least 75 pen:ent of the cost. he added.·
er meetings, Minard said Monday.
But. the district will plummet from the top to the bottom of the list if ·
The tltrell options include:
the district does not pass a building levy before June 1996, he added.
·
. • building a new centralized elementary liuilding, which would consblIf that occurs, the state wiD likel~ give any money and the grant
tdate the three current elementaries. ·
process must stan again, Karr said.
district rust applied for the pro• constru
_ cling a new junior/se.ruo
_· r high sc. hoo
_ 1 and then consolida
, ting
gram in 1984.
·
.

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

cc&gt;or. natiOI!ai ons~n. "'-"'or disabiii~.

•

OR

' l·800·5 21·0084 -

have more than doubled in the last
decade, with 92 percent of the
growth from worlcin~ families who
are ll!ll on public assiStance.
• Thirty-three percent of babies
lfornin Ohio In 1993· were to
unmarried parents, an all-time high.
• In 1993, Ohio established 59
paternities for every 100 births to
unmarried parents. That was more
than in previous years, but lagged
behm
' d Mich1'gan and Wt' sconsl·n.
• Twenty-nine percent of chitdren in very lOW' income woitiiig
families rea:ived child care help in
1993. Slighdy more that) 5 pen;ent
of c:hildren less than age 12 living
in Aid to Dependent Children ramilies received child care that year.
· • In 1993, IS percent of Ohio
school children hve~ in extreme
poveny and relied on ADC, compared with 10.5 pen;ent ip 1980. .
The fund said more accountabiiity was needed in human service
and health programs to measure
results and determine whether the
public was getting iJs money's
worth.
,
~ne reason: the repon said the
qhto Department C?f Huma.n Serv1ces cou)d not readily explat!l how
many ch11dren were served tn the
sta,te's $ISO million child c.are
assistance program.-

-

•.

•

·

'

.

'

. abortion into the GOP fold. But he
said the issue needed to be debated
and declared, "I am pro-life. My
.
party is pro-life. The Republican
ticket is going to be pro-life. ••
Dole, Gramm and Alexander,
considered at this point the three
leading candidates, all call themselves abortion · opponents ,
although Alexander says the Cederal government should have no rol~
in the subject.
And over the course of the
weekend, all three said they would
not use the issue as a litmus test for
appointments and suggested
Republicans would be better served
discussing other issues.
· Dole, for his pan. used his cam•
PHIL GRAMM ·
paign debut wooltenl\ to cement l!is
status as the front-runner, scamperder would prefe,r to avoid.
ing to nine. town halls over three
"I am an economic fiscal con- days and craclting occasional joli:es
servative and a sociallibenarian," about several polls showing him
GOP Sen. Arlen Specter of Penn- well ahead of the pack. "Move it
sylvania said in introducing himself up to tomorrow and it would be all
to New Hampshire and calling for right for me," Dole said of the disthe GOP to drop the anti-abortion tam primary.
· language in its party platfonn.
· And he tried to quiet any con"I believe that if the abortion cems about his age - he is 71 _
issue stays in the forefront we will saying his experience left him
be giving President Clinton his best uniquely suited to put the countty
. and· Jll:rhaps his only chance to be back on the right course before the
re-elected," Specter said.
close of the century.
That position, however, was
"Maybe there is one more c8JJ
challenged by three longshot con- 'to serve for my generation," Dole
servatives in the field: commenta- said. "Maybe there is one more
. tor Patrick Buchanan , California mission for my generation."
Rep . Robert Dornan and Alan
In his remarks, Gramm made no '
Keyes, a mid-level Reagan admin- direct reference to Dole. But the
istration State Department official Texan said he was the true conserwho now has a syndicated radio vativc in the Reagan tradition,
· show.
.
eager to cut taxes but also balance
"It is a baby , not a choice,"
the budget through spending cuts.
Doman said.
"I believe families can do a bet. Buchanan, who got 37 pereent ter job than the government does
against President Bush in the 1992 spending your money." Gramm
New Hamoshire orimarv. said he said. ·
'·
welcomed peoPole of all views on ..

Lawyer poll

•,

HOMELESS DOG - Friendly, healtlly, black Labrador male
seeks home. Tom Mozlaao, manager or the Country Mobile Home
P.ark outside Burlingham, pets the laid •back ·doa bt bas twice
returned to the pq110d. Ng dogs are allowed in the trailer park and
Its size could eallly scare older people, Mozingo said Saturday
afternoon. The area dog wanle,a will not destroy this dog, and be is
trying to nad a Rood home for It, be a«,Jded. (Sentinel pbolo by
George Abate)
·

predicts Q.J.
may go free
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
number of lawyers who believe
O.J . Simpson will go free has
increased since last fall . Fully 70
percent now believe his trial will
end in a hung jury or an acquittal, a
?~a~_ona! leg~ ne~SJI!Ipc;r rcpo~ -·
........y.
.
A National Law Journal survey
found 39 percent of lawyei'S polled
predicted a hung jury and 31 per:
cent an acquittal. The other 30 per·
cent either felt he'd be convicted or
didn 't offer an opinion .
The poll of 301 attorneys was
conducted Feb. '8- 10 and had a S.6
percent margin of error.
The results were more favorable ·
for Simpson than a similar poll
conducted by the newspaper in
September, when 61 percent said
Simpson wouldn't be convicted of
murdering Nicole Brown Simpson
and Ronald Goldmarr.
Some attorneys attributed the
change til reports that the jury was
divided by racial tension. The panel
now includes nine blacks, one
white and two people of mixed
race. A white juror was dismissed
on Feb. 6 and replaced by a blaclo
'juror. 1
"When there were eight blacks 1
thought it would be very difficult
for a lot of blacks to send OJ. to
jail," New York lawyer William
Kunsiler told the newspaper.

'

I

I

some elementaries in the current high sc hool. This proposal was Completed in 1985.
.
"
• developing two smaller buildil!gs near each other for K-5 and middle
school for grades 6-8. 1). shared gymnasium could bC attached between the
two schools.
·
"We're still open to other suggestions, but we don't have a whole lot
of time," Minard said.
. .
·
The district does not have a crisis with its ctirrent facilities, Minard
said.
.
.
Building needs have changed during the last I0 years with new stale
mandates, Minard said. The district's special education students are being
sent to other schools now ,.
Whether voters build a new sc\Jool or t ontinue to. repair old schools,
costs will continue to rise, Minard said. . ·· · ·
.
But, continuin~ to repair and maintain the district's old buildings
would "plow away ' at its funds, he added.
·

GOP White ~ouse hopefuls
test ·waters -in primary state

New report·ranks Meigs 72nd
in aiding poor working families .

W. R. "Dick" Brown, CLU
· Nationwide Insurance,
386 State Route 160, Oallipoli_s, Ohio
.
614·446-19,60
Crop Insurance Serviced By
:
Rain and Hail Insurance Service, Inc.

Eastern Schools ponder new building

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
MANCHESTER, N.H. - On a
night of polite competition and a
few pointed disagreements, Sen.
Phil Gramm took a moment to cap. By RON FOURNIER
tore the unifying spirit of the room:
Associated Press Writer
''The next president is not going to
ARLINGTON, Va. - Joined by
be Bill Clinton."
·
aging heroes of lwo Jima, President
But if not. then who?
Clinton honored soldiers bloodied
More than 1,000 New Hampand-lcilled 50 years ago in the savshire Republicans crowded a balla~e World War II liattle. " The
room Sunday night to mull that
dimensions of their struggle still
question and hear from nine GOP
stagger us," he said Sund;iy. ·
White House hopefuls, including
The president, in keynote
the three early favorites and a few
remarks commemorating the 50th
longer-than-long
shots.
anniversary of the pivotal batde,
The
event
capped
a weekend
l.!,id II\bute to four Iwo Jima surlhat
served
as
tho
ceremonial
openY!vars by name and urged Ameri- ·
ing
o~
the
1996
campai~n.
at
least
cw' to honor the memories of all
here
10
New
Hampshtre,
which
soldiers who fought for the tiny
holds the nation's ftrst presidential
Pacif'te island.
primary
a year from today.
''To be worthy of that sacriftee,
Common
among the Republican
we must detennine in this time to
candidates
were
pledges to cut or at
remain the strongest nation in, the
least
hold
the
line
on lalles, to shift
world so that our freedom is never
OBSERVING PRESIDENT'S DAY- The third Monday Ia
power
from
Washington
to the
again threawned," Clinton told a
February, traditio1111lly George Wasblngton's Blrtllday, Is when
states and to overhaul welfare and
. crowd of about 3,000.
Americans remember all U.S. presideits.l\bove, the'Rev. William
pllt a 11remium on work and disWith the monuments of WashMlddleswarth and Jerr Warner placed flags ill front of Pomeroy
couragmg
teen pregnancy. And, in
ington visible through a misty haze
businesses to commemorate tbe bollday. (Sentinel phoiQ by Jim
a clear indication that affUlllative
over the Potomac River, the presi- · Freeman)
.action will be a leading 1996 issue,
dent said; ••And we must worlc to
the leading GOP contenders said
create a nation worthy of the generthat February mornin~. The sky.
they were committed to ending
ation that saved it for our free- mainland Japan.
dom "
In 36 d;iys, U.S. casualties num- The island. And somettmes I think racial preferences in federal hiring
and conll'liCting.
. He spoke beneath a 78-foot . bered 26,000, including 6,821 I can still hear the noise of battle.''
Clinton, who avoided wanime · · For Texan Gramm, Senate
bronze statue depicting the famyus dead. For the Japanese, the toll was
wartime pbotograph of u.s: sol- even more gruesome: Of the servipe in his youth; told another Majority Leader Bob Dole and' forme.r Tennessee G'ov. Lamar
diers hosting a flag atop Mount island's 20,000 defenders, only generation's war stories.
Alexander,the
goal of the weekend
Suribachi. "Hard men wept when 1,083 survived. Thousands of the
He said Robert Dunlap, for 48
was
to
focus
on
!heir perceived
they saw the flag fly," Clinton dead are still missing, their bones hours straight, directed attacks
'd
hidden
in·
the
volcanic
island's
strengths
and
add
new activists to
against enemy positions at lwo
sat .
.
. .
f
their
growing
organizations
in the
The Associated Press photo by mtncate web o tunnels.
Jima. The president marveled at
state.
·
Joe Rosenthal symbolized the
.Introducing the president, Medal Douglas Jacobson, who grabbed a
But
the
three
also
got
a
vivid
nation's resolve, Clinton said. of Honor winner Col. William E. bazooka · built for two and
"Our countty saw the true defini- Barber shared his memories of destroyed 16 enemy positions by demonstration of the powntial for
lion of courage."
· "that S-mile chunk of.rock and himself. Joseph McCarthr charged
the GOP debate to be sidetracked
into a divisive feud over abortion. a
The Batde of Jwo Jima, one of volcanic ash." In a halting voice, through an open field wtth a carthe nation's bloodiest, gave the he told dozens offellow veterans in bine and grenades, Clinton said,
subject Dole, Gramm and AlexanUnited States an air base for long- . the crowd: "1 am older now, as are and Jack Lucas threw hiplself on
range bombing missions against you, but I can still see the .colors of two grelilldes to save his buddies.

4 cylinder, extra clean. Black
·exterior.
Priced to Sell, Now!

CODIJT

~NEW~

Fallon new member
of Angus Association

1 Section, 10 Pogea 35 centa
A Mullimodio Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 20, 1995

'

T-bills still
the safest bet

••ne

Vol. 45, NO. 206

Copyrlgh11995

I

I ..

~

•

�Monday, February"20, 1995

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

General M•~~~~ger

LI!TIERS OF OPINION .,. welc:ome. 'lbey should be leu lbaD 300
wonk long. All lelten are subject to editins and mwt be oigood with n1me,
lddraa IDd telephone number. No unligned lotten will be publilbed. Lotoen
obould be in good Iaaie, llklreuing iuiiCI, not penonaliliel.

_

The economy
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Speclal Corresp011de•t
.
: WASHINGTON - The laser-beam intensity President Ointon said
he'd aim at economic policy was blurred from tbe start, and while the
White House is trying to regain the focus, there are still mixed signals.
It shows in the most recent annual presidential message 10 Congress,
the economic report Clinton called a milestone measurement of "our success in fulfillinj! the mission I brought to the presidency" -an imJXOViog and expanding economy.
·
- He's also decide1;1 to convene aoother econo'@ic summit like !be one he
held before taking office, to review progress and "to 10Qk at some of the
thorny problems that remain. "That.'s to be held in late March.
" ... The economy will continue to move' filrwai'd in 1996," ClintOn
said. He'D need that; his re-election problems are evident and a slump
would make them worse. Recession and lagging recovery were pivotal
issues when he beat Geo~ Bush in 1992.
But better times didn 1 help Democrats, and Clinton now must deal
with a Republican Congress, where it's been said that recovery is a legacy
of Bush policies.
.
: Nothmg irks the Clinton economic team more. Laura Tyson, who
h?ds tbe Council of Economic Advisers, said the GOP claims were Alice
in Wonderland stuff.
·
·
: " ... I concluded that dteir frustration at tbe administration's budget was
really frustration because we had not given them a way out of tbe trap of
inconsistent promises which they had made during the fall Cilmpaigo seaS(HI ," she said in a speech at a Democratic policy organization.
_. She and her two coUeagues on the council said a lot more in the economic report, more, in faci, than Clinton speUed out in his budget or his
fl!llf'!llhon, 81-minuti: State of the Union address.
.
· Those higher-visibility messages usually detail a president's agenda;
llle economic report includes proposals that showed in neither.
: There is, for example, a I 0-page assessment that recommends elimi·
nating nearly all agricultural subsidies in the new farm bill Congress has
tQ produ"" litis year. The economic repon says price suworts are rooted
in New Dear programs and ·that "many of the original motivations for
farm programs no longer apply."
·: The Republicans aren't about to elliSe the farm programs, nor would
the Democ111ts if they still held Congress. The programs are likely be
uimmed, but not as drastically as the economic report suggesiS.
·
: There's also discussion of what Clinton calls his "unfmisbed agenda"
of health care and welfare reform. "The Congress can and should rake the
Hist steps toward achieving tbese goals," he said His economic advisers
SIIY more about where those steps sbould lead:
· ''The administration believes that any successful reform must uitirnately. be comprehensive in scope, even if it proceeds step by step." That
111eans the universal coverage Clinton tried to gel in the first place.
: There had been conciliatory hints-that Clinton might consider some cut
ft1 capital gains taxes, long a Republican_aim, in tandem with his own pro.
posal for modest muldle class tax reductions.
·
'
: The economic report argues vehemently against cutting capital gains
taXes. It would be unfair, expensive, and iU-advised. the economic advis- crs said.
: In his preface to the repon, Clinton said his administration has "fixed
!h~ fun!!amc;ntals" .in the economy, and now wants 10 move on to rest of
the domestic agenda he pushed in 1992.
· ·
·: A Republican Congress isn't going 10 do that to the specifications of a
Elemocratic president peparing to seek a second term. Even as tbe minority, tbey blocked his measures during tbe 1994 campaign season.
: But the White House still is the best platform in politics, used to full
advantage. Clinton hasn't been able to dn that.. "Our economic strategy
lias been straightforward," he said. " ... Two years later, that strategy has
begun to pay off."
_
· But there have been diversions and detours. And whatever the ecortomics, he needs a stm_tegy .that will pay orr politically as he-campaigns
for a second term.
.
. EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R, Mears, vice president and' columnist ror Tbe Associated Press, bas rep!)rted on Washington and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

Today in history
By Tile Associated Press
Today is Monday, Feb. 20, the 51st day of 1995. There are 314 days
left in the year. This is Presidents' Day.
· Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago,-oo Feb. 20, 1895, Frederick Douglass an
~Pc:cl si;ave wh~ became one of America's most prominent abolitionIsts, ~ m ~ashmglon, D.C. (He was probably 78, although his exact
date of birth IS unknown.)
·
.
_
'

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 20,1985

WASHINGTON -The Clinton
administration is proving once
again that -on arms proliferation
issues profit often rules out over
prudence.
At a time wben American officials an: threatening the People's
Republic of China over its unfair
trade practices. human rights abuses and weapons exports, the Qinton administration is poised to
allow a controversial technology
sale that many 'believe could belp
the Communist country upgrade its
missile program.
•'Th1s (sale) would give China
the technological know -how to
make engines for lonJ·range cruise
missiles capable of h1aing any city
in Japan, Korea- all the way
through India," one frustrated
American official explained. "111e
administration knows this, but so
far no one has had the r,oJitical will
to stand up and say no. '·
The proposed deal involves
AlliedSignal Inc., the Californiabased aerospace giant The company recently informed the government that it intends to sell China
tbe manufacturing technology used
to bu iid its Garrell gas turbine
engines. This follows on the heels

of a controversial decision by the . obtained by our associates Dean
administration last year to allow Boyd and Dale Van Atia suppott
Timmerman's view. "G arrett
the C:arreu engines to be sold.
AlliedSignal officials told us the engines and/or production technology would provide an arrsy of
high... performance capabilities 10
By Jack Anderson ·. satisfy
(China's) military require·
men
IS
well
into the next century,"
and
one document alleges. Anotfter
Michael Binstein study indicates that China could
mate en~ines capable of launching
technology -poses little risk since it a biolog1cal warhead some 1,000
is only suited to build aircraft milea if it obtained these malerials.
engines. "We·are not in a position
Despite the red fla~s. the Clinto judge China's missile engine ton adminislnltion last year lifted
manufacturing capabilitr,.'' a com- the export controls that normally
pany spokesman said. 'However, cover~ Garrett technology. This
the technology involved is specific means that AlliedSignal is free to
to civil-cenified (Garrett) engines sell its manufacturing technology
which are designed for aircraft without government approval ___:
operations.,.
unless the administration reverses
Arms proliferation experts itself. So far, there's been little
believe China wants the Garrett indication that this will happen.
technology 10 establish a domestic
lan Baird, the Commerce
production line for upgraded cruise Department's deputy assistant secmissile engines. "Qearly, the Chi- retary for export administration,
nese could use this to make engines maintains that there is no legal
which are perfectly suited for that basis to oppose the sale. He says
requirement," says Kenneth Tim- the Garrett technology is over 20
merman, a security expert and years old and " completely impracdirector of the Middle East Data tical" for use in cruise missiles.
Project
· Baird adde~ that AlliedSignal
Confidential government studies should !Je applauded for taking

ltiSf~il'l·~
~Mm.

NI!WS·,.....a

" the unusaal siCp of advising" the
government of the sale when it
wasn't rtquired to.
In the oril!inal engine sale,
which came ·m the wake of the
administralion's 1994 decision, the
engines wen: 10 be used in a miliwy jet that auna was deYdoping
with Pakistan. Many Amencan
officials opposed the deal at the
time, after intelligence studies
found that the Chinese recipient
was invblved in missile building
and that the engines could form the
basis for a new Chinese cruise missile.
.
Nevertheless, the Clinton ·
administration approved the sale,
allowing the engines to be exported ·
as civilian goods .despite their
declared miliwy end-use. Despite
specifiC warnings from Congress,
officials at the Pentagon and the :
Commerce Department also ·:
removed export controls from ·the
Garrett manufacturing technology.
AlliedSignal says it has only ·
sold 33 Garrett engines to China,
and the technology sale hasn't been
finalized yet. A company
~pokesman added that "at this
point, we don't need government approval."

Critics of the deal an: outraged.
"This is exactly what we said
would happen a year ago," says an
American offictal. "We warned
that the Chinese would come after
the technology after they got the
engines, but (the admimstration)
decontrolled it anyway. In my
mind, it constitutes criminal negligence4''·
·
The anger generated by the proposed sale is not surprising considering a simulated war game played
out by the Pentagon last year. In
the fiCtitious-battle scenario, which
projected what China's military
capability and manpower. would be
in the year 2010, China routed the
U.S. Navy's 7th Fleet, due in part
to a line of new precision-guided
cruise missiles. ·
The G~ saga is illready having an impact. Russian officials
recently informed the administration that it wouldn 'I halt a rocket
engine sale to China because
America had allowed similar technology to reach China during the
Garrett engine transaction.
Jack Aaderson and Michael
Biastein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

.
·

.

•
·
.

Why .not air killings on TV?...._
. ---~
It has again been proposed in
Congress that the content of televi·
sion be regulated so that it can be
purged or _excessive violence. f.
few .stations are already eensoring
the news too - so that viewers
need not be offended by real
corpses.
Despite this cooeern about vio·
lence on television, lutrdly anyono
has suggested that since c : l
punishment is supposedly a
rent to future murders, we should
be able to actually see the execulions that are, after aU, beinJ coo·
dueled in the name or the cnizens
of those states that enjoy the death
penalty._And, indeel!, Congress has
now added 60 fede111l crimes for
which death is tbe ultimate punishment Accordingly, ihe nation as a
whole has a stake in capital ,punishment
'
Yet, as Russell Baker has nOted
in The New York Times, "Nobody
of consequence insists on television' s First Amendment right to
brighten the American parlor with
clectronic sunshine from the death
house."
·
Recently, on "l)lightline," Ted
Koppel devoted two programs to
the carrying Out of a death sentence
in Texas on Mario Marquez, who
had an I.Q. of about 65. Koppel
went into the death chamber and
witnessed the administering of a
lethal injection to the condemned

man. But he wasn't allowed to
show the execution on television.
On the air; Koppel said: "Nothing is more dist11rbing than the

Nat Hentoff

_
thought that we are executing peapie in this country in the spirit of
, apathy because we can't think of
'anything better to do about violent
crime. If what society wants is the
death penalty, then let us at least
have the decency ~ be fully conscious of what we are doing and
why."
But how can we be fully con·
scious of what we ate doing and
why if we are not allowed to experience - if only through a television set- an actual execution.
Several television stations have
tried to educate the public about
what is being done in their name,
but always, a judge has prevented
the showing of the.ultimate Penalty
being implemented.
Some of the objectors to-televising executions claim that it will
coarsen the public. But in a coostitutional democracy, the public
ought not to be kept ignorant of so
fundamental a life-and-deaih issue
because some critics feel the populace will he cheapened by exposure
to tbe truth.
Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to a
friend, said, "I am not among those

who fear tbe people. They an: our
dependence for continued freedom."
·
Nonetheless, even so devott.d a
constitutionalist liS Anthony Lewis,
a columnist for The New York
Times, takes the astonishing position:
·
. '~ The First Amendmenl in !!IY
Judgment does not require access to
scenes whose broadcast would further coarsen our soci11ty and
increase its already -dangerous level
of insensitivity."
What a strange notion from
someone who is one of the preeminent FirSt Amendment advocates in
the country. James Madison, the
architect of the Ftrst Amendment,
did not believe that the people must
be protected from lcnowledge that
would give them the information
on which to base their political
judgments - including whom they
choose 10 elect to office.
·
As for television "coarsening"
the public, I watch a lot of television, including Westerns and cop
sbows, and the onlr time I have felt
coarsened as a ciuzen was watching the House of Representatives
·- led by the shinin$ new ,Republican maJority - k1ll the Fourth
Amendment in the Bill of Rights
on Feb. 8 or this year. They actual!y core out a vital pan of the Constitution by exultantly voting to

James R. 'Jimmy' Ball
James R. "Jimmy" BaD, New Haven, W.Va.,, died SIJ!Iday, Feb. 19,
1995 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va.
..

Edward A. Cromley Ill

Edward A. Cromley m, 62, Point Pleasant, W.VL, died Satuiday, Feb.
!8,1995 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
Born Dec. 25, 1932 in Mason County, son of the late Edward A. and
Macy Vivian Cooper Cromley Jr., he was a retired profile operato~ at
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp., a member of the Good Sheoherd Umted
Methodist Church at Flatrock, a U.S . .Air Force veteran ol the.Korean.
Conflict, and a lay speaker for the United Methodist Conference.
A graduate of Point Pleasant High School, he was a member of Local
5668 Steelworkers, a member of~ Steelworkers Or~on of Active
Retirees, and a member of tbe Mason-Jackson Labor Council.
.
Surviving are his wife, Doris Ella Thompson Cromley; two SOI_IS ~
daughter-in-law, Edward "Ed" an.d Diana Cromley IV, and Charlie ~Ill
Cromley, all of Point Pleasant; a brother, Robert E. Cromley of Pomt
Pleasant; two sisters, Betty Louise Lear of Gallipolis Fc:rry, W.ya, and
Bonnie Lucille Klein of Huntington, W.Va; two grandchildren; hiS ":'other-in-law, Eleanor E. Lee of Point Pleasant; al)d father-m-law, Wilson
Thompson of -Boynton Beach, Fla.
'
.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wedne~day in the Crow-Hussell Fune111l
Home, Point Pleasant, with the Rev. R.C. Browning and Rev. Paul Suder
offiCiating. Burial will be in the Forest Hills Cemetery, Flatroek, W.Va.
Friends may caD at the funeral home on Tuesday from 1-4 and 6-9 p.m.

allow federal law enforcement
agents - including the FBI - to
breat into homes and businesses
without a warrant from a judge.
As-for televising executions, the
only reserv~lliOJI I would have
·would be a requirement that the
doomed prisoner must give his
: consent. Several prisoners have
already asked that their last
. moments be televised in the hope
that enough people would see how
barbarous we are as a nation. No
other Western natioo permits capital punishment. But if the condemned does not want his death to .
be televised, that, of course, is his
right His last right
I don't know - nobody knows
- whether enoush people watching will be so repelled that the
d~ath penal!)' will be taken off the
books. But the main reason for
televising !=~!Pita! punishment is to
make us an informed part of it - -rather than continue the apathy
with which we continue to allow
the state to kiD in our name.
Nat Hentorr is a natlo .. lly
renowned alitborlty on the First
Ameodmeat and tbe rest of tbe
BiD of Ri3hts.
(For Information oa bow to
communicate electronlcaU:r wltb ·
tbls columalst and others, contact America OnHae by calUa1 I·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

- 'Gene Austin Lake, 64, Mason, W.Va., died SBIUrday, Feb. 18, 1995 at
his residence, following a lengthy illness.
' · Born July 5, 19j() in New Haven, W.VL, son ofd\e late Lewis Morgan
and Hattie Kelsey Clark Lake, he was retired from the Mason Furniture
Co..
He was also preceded in death by his wife, J oon Scarberry Lake; and a
son, Darrel Lee Lake.
,
S,urviving are a son, Richard Gene Lake of Mason; two sisters, Ruth
Lyons of Bater, Fla., and Erma Yoho of Pomeroy; a brother. Virgil Lake
of Lo!aln; and a g(andchild.
·
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, I p.m. in~ &lt;;asto Fu~. Ho~.
Evans, W.Va. with the Rev. Gerald B. Sayre officlatmg. Burial will be m ·
the Blaine Memorial Cemetery, Cottageville, W.Va Friends may caD at
thefuneral home .today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Lorenzo D. Lowery Sr.
• Lo!enzo D. Lowery Sr., 90, Glouster, died Saturday, Feb. 18. 1995 in
the Mark Rest Center, McConnelsville.
. .
.
Born Nov. 22, 1904 in Hanleyville, son of the lall: Alonzo ~d Lavtna
Kasler Lowery; he was retired from the New York Central Railroad, was
a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and attended the Oakdale Church

It seems like ooly yesterday that · have focused on the contenders.
before his withdrawal.
'drastically alter perception~. and
political observers and avernge citiThat kind of compressed cam:
One problem was that Jack therefore ultimate outcomes.
zens alike were bemoaninljthe paign calender has obvious conse- Kemp's brand of right-wing Jimmy Carter .,-- "Jimmy Who?"
arrival of the "endless" preslden· quences. The experts say a candi- Republicanism, which combines - went from nowhere before the .
tial race and wishing for campaign
fiscal conservatism with madera- Iowa Caucus in 1976 10 the nomiterm limits. Now it appears likely
Ho"ding Ca.,..er
1'1'1 tion on social issues, was no longer nation in a marathon campaign
1 1'
"'
in the GOP mainstream. He honest- whose outcome was in doubt for
that the Republican nomination
·
will be won or lost next year in a date must have a minimum of $20 ly didn't believe in litmus tests and months. Even after most leading
Sil';·\ileek campaign, and many of million on hand by next January to constitutional panaceas such as the Democrats chickened out in the
us are longin' for the.old days. Big make a credible showing and · balanced bud~et .a mendment. . face .o f a popular Refubliean
money and smgle-issue voters will around $10millionjust to sbow up. - Speaking his mmd, it turned out; · incumbentm 1992, Bil Clinton }
have more say about the outcome Past visiblllty will be a major asset, was . no way to keep the mone. y didn't cinch it untii well inco ihe
in 19961han ever before.
since there won't be much .time commg and tbe faithful standing at primaries.
Bear with the following.' While during the primary season for out- attention.
·
But Carter and Clinton had the - :
it looks like a tedious list of dates, Siders to introduce themselves. And
For others, that $10 million hur- ,relative luxury of time to build :
the 110minating chronology is cer--- vinually everyone agrees that can- die was simply too h' h p
1 credibility and voter suppon and. , _.
tain to have dramatic conse- didates whose appeal is targeted like former Defense SC::~~: as a consequence of both, fUUUICial ;
quences. The Iowa caucus kicks it and deep will be in much better Cheney and former Education Sec- backing. It is a luxury the Rcpubli- - '
off ~n Feb. 12. A series of pri- shape than those whose appeal is ~etary William Bennett, though of can contenders will be dented in ~
mar~es and caucuses are spread broad and general.
·
unpeccable right-wing credentials their party's primary next year.
over the next three weeks, includIn the face of such daunting Ia~ ked the stomach for nonstop Most or the money m.ust be in hand
ing such large states as Georgia and conside111tioos, a large number of fund raising, It is less ensy to say before the six-week war begins,
New York. On March 3, "Super presumably viable candidates have exactly why former Vice President because there will be so little time
Tuesday," 10 states will vote, already dropped out. Most notable o,an Quayle withdrew. but some of to raise it in Sufficient quantities ill
including such 800-pound gorillas among them was Jac~ -Kemp, the hiS close associates blamed the February and March.
as Florida and Texas. !ly the time fanner congressman and secretary money game.
- Hoddlng Carter 111, former
California votes on March 26, the or ltousing and urban development.
Most of the recently dep•·ted St t n
tm nt 8 okesman ' ·
... it and
a awanl·winaing
e epar e reporter,
p
•
seven. 1'!!'gcst states and ~ost o.fth e Less_ than ~O· years ago, -~u"' con- WO!Jld probably have never made
edl. South w1ll have made thetr chotces. ventional wtsdom was that he was past New Hampshire in any case
lor aad publisher, 1s president (I(
In other words, the .game. wiD be ~ b~t the certai~ Republican nom- ·~ However, one of the truths drive~ Ma~Street, a Wasblagtoa, D.C.·
over almost before II begtns, and mee m 1996. This year he was pro- home by recent presidential nomi- based televisloa production com·
almost certainly before most voters claimed so much dead meat well nating CliDlpaigns themselves can pany.

•

·-

r

·-

-"Mother tells me you 've been sticking pins in
an Alan Greenspan doll. "
·-

•

..

- -·

•
•;

I

..

·

ore~

. Surviving are his wife, Ethel Zarley Lowery;·sons and daughters~io­
law Lorenzo and Betty Lowery Jr. of Glouster, Glenn Lowery of
Glo~ster, Bill and Cathy Lowery of Circleville, aod Roger Lowery of
Glouster: daugbters~d sons-in-(!w, ~hi_rley ~OCJdard ofPom,el()y, C'!fO'
and~ Hall of Garden City, Ga. Alice and Rodney McKee of Tnrnble, Barb and Joseph McKee of Nelsonville, and Larry and ~y Giffm of
New Marshfield; and 22 grandchildren and four great-grandeh1klren.
He was preceded in death jly a sister, Zenith Embrey; and a brother,
Frank LOwery.
.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in tbe Cardaras Funeral Home,
Glouster with. Jobn Wright offiCiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove
CemeterY, Perry County, with miliwy graveside rites by combined veterans organizations.
·
The family -will receive friends at the home of Joseph and Barb
McKee, 4940 Happy-Hollow Road, Nel!IOnville, from 5:9 p.m. on Tuesday a,nd at the funeral home Wednesday from 11 a.m. unbll p.m.

---Hospital new$-VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions - Herman
Lawson, Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - - none.
Sunday admissions - Lee
Layne, Racine.
Sunday discharges - · Flossie
Badgley, Racine.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
· Discharges Feb. 17 - Mrs. Jim
Willis and daughter, Mrs. Robert
Lewis and son.

The Daily Sentinel

'

Publi 5hed every nftcmoon. MondO)' through
Friday. I l l Court .St., Pomeroy, O hio, by the
Ohio Valley PubiJ5hitfB Compimy!Mullitnedia
Inc ., Pomeroy, Oh io 45769 , Ph . 992 · 2156.
Second class pus 1ag~ po1id at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Mcmbtr: The Associmed Press, and the Ohio
t:~ewspaper Aisoc iution.

POSTMASTER: S~nd address correcti on! lo
The Daily Sen tiricl, Ill ,Co ur1 St .. PomerOy,.
Ohio 4.5769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

. By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week...... ...
.
....... $1.1~
One Month .. ,............................................. $7.60
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Subscribers not desi ring to pay the cnrricr m•y
remit in ate~ancc direct 10 The· Daily Se ntinel
on n three. six or 12 month basis. Credit will be
given canierenc h week.

Births - Mr. and Mrs. William
Elam, son, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Christopher Hutton, son, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Russell, son,
Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs . . David
Rustemeyer, daughter, Gallipolis. "
Dlscharses Feb. 18 - Haille
0 'Neal, Mrs. Charles Russell and
son, Mrs. Christopher. Hutton and
son, Mrs. William Elam and son. .
Discharges Feb. 1!1 - Gladys
Rankin, Raymond Opphile, Mrs.
David Rustemeyer and daughter. ·
(Published witb permission)

Units of the Meigs County
I;lmergency Medical Service
recorded eight calls for assistance
Saturday and Sunday . Units
responding included:
-MIDDLEPORT
.
2:23 a.m. Sunday, Second ·
Avenue and Race Street, Walter
Haggy, Veterans Memorial Hospi- ·
tal;
.
.
6:01 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
Dorothy Hlinenbach, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
.
POMEROY
1:46 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy

: : :· :.: : :: : : . :

Inside Melp County

I 3 Weeks ........................ ----------.. ---.-- ----- .. $23.9'1

l~ ~=~

:::::·::~

lbtn Outskle Melp County
I J Weeks .... ---.. ---·· ............................. ·--· .. $2l.61

26 Weeb .... ............................................. $49.66
~2 Wceb......l .......................................... $96.20

I

No injuries were reponed in two ~r/Vehicle collisions feporled
over the weekend by deputies of the Meig~ County Sheriff's
_
Depanment
Jodi L. Young, 21, Pomeroy, was westbound on State Route 143
in Salisbury Township Saturday around 11:45 p.m. when she struck
a deer that ran into the path or her 1989 Buick Regal. causing light
damage. ·
Patrick J. Mullen, 16, _Middle~. was westbound on State Route
124 in Sutton Township Sunday around 9:20 p.m. when a deer
struck the side of his 1992 Chevrolet Lumina, causing light damage.

.

•

One-vehicle accident probed
An Athens man's pickup truck sustained light damage in a onevehicle accident on Rocksprings Road in Salisbury Tow~ship Saturday around 7:10 p,m, .
. _
John W. Lemon Jr., 48, was southbound near the Ohio Pallet Co.
when he lost control of his 1984 Cl\e~olet pickup truck, according
to a repon from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depal1.!Tlcnt The truck
went off tbe left side of the road and struck a ditch;
No inji!Qes or citations were reponed.

Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Herman Lawson, VMH;
9:52 p.m. ' Saturday , Condor
Street, Clark Taylor, VMH;
6:32p.m. Sunday,South Second
Avenue, Rachel Wilson, Holzer
Medical Center:
·
8:09 p.m. Sunday, Fisher Street,
William Stivers, VMH.
RACINE
11 :28 am. Sunday. Letart FaDs,
Bill Hively, VMH.
RUTLAND
7:08 p.m. Sunday, State Route
124, Violet Jarrell, HMC.

Just when you started to -think
winter was over comes the harsh
reality that it isn't.
Forecasters said the springlike
weather of the weekend will turn to
rain, sleet and snow tonight. And
·tbe snow will continue over many
areas of the state. on !'uesdax_..
·Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Rain likely nonh and
east. .. Rain changing to snow
around midnight. Cloudy with a
chance of rain west and
s6uth ....Rain may 'change over to
snow before ending afli:r midnight.
Lows 25 to 35.
Tuesday ...Cloudy with a chance
of snow east half in the
moming ...Then partial clearing in
· the afternoon. Cloudy west in the
morning ... Becominll panly cloudy
in the afternoon. Highs in the mid
and upper 30s.
•

... , Tax-Free Investments

IRA's
Annuities •Insurance
Retirement Planning
Larry Brogan, CIC

or 428-2222

417 Grand Park Dr., Suite 105
PMC Building (beside the Olive Garden) Parkersburg, WV 26101

·- ·- · -

_..,. .

-- . -- --· ·

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Deer/car collisions reported

Jean Henty Taylor, 77, Mason, W.Va., died Sunday, Feb. 19,1995 at
Veterans Memorial Nursing Center.
.
_Born Jan. 30, 1918 in Clifton, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late
Darius and Evelyn Ward Henry.
. She was also preceded in death by her husband, John W. Taylor Sr.; a
son, Kenneth A. Taylor; and a brother, Earl Henry.
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, John and Carol Taylor of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Michael A. and Frances Taylor of New J?ven,
W.Va.; a half-brother, Delbert Henry of Point Pleasant; IWO half-SISters,
Frances Jeffers or Pomeroy, aznd Christine Luikan of Mason; and e1ght
grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
.
Graveside services wilT be held at the Jeffers Fam1ly Cemetery,
Clifton at a later date. There wiD be no visitation. Services are under the
directi~ of the Crow-Htissen Funeral Home, Point Pleasant.

No su bscripti on by mWI permilted in areas

where home cnrrier service Is a~ailn.ble.

;

Monte Riffle,. 37, and his brothet, Roben L. Riffle, 40, both of
1739 Chester Road, Pomeroy, may be charged Tuesday in the
breaking and entering of a vacant Enterprise house owned by
George Ncssclroad, Meigs Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed
today.
The house was broken into late Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, according to sherifrs depanment reJXXIS.
Nesselroad repOOed someone h-oke into his home and also feU
through the steps, records show. Items, including a microwave
oven, were found on the porch and over an embankment on U.S. 33
near the suuc111re.
Because it appeared a subject had fallen through a step, Soulsby
said deputies checked area hospill!ls and found Monte Riffle had
been treated for a leg injury at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
•
Soulsby said the pair later admiaed to their alleged involvement
in the incident They will be charged Tuesday instead of today 'due
"to tbe President's Day holiday, he added.

JoAnn Gibson Smolenski, 61, Sandusky, died SBIUrday, Feb. 18, 1995
in the Providence Hospital, Sandusky.
Born Dec. IS, 1933 In Sutton. W.Va. the daughter of Harold P. Gibson of Raleigh, N.C., and the lale Eva Worrel Gibson, _she was emplo~
by VetetanS Memorial Hospital f1r 20 years, and by Sandusky Anesthesiologists for the past seven years. She was a member of the Anesthesiologists Association. .
· Survivors include her husband, Cement Smolenski; two daughters,
Mrs. Cheryl S. Warner of Cleveland, and Mrs. Deb111 S. Kromer of
Castalia; two sisters, Mary Melissa Hartley of Raleigh, and Jane Shuck of
Union Town. Pa.: and a granddaughter.
.
G111veside services will be held at II a.m. Thursday tn the Sutton
Cemetery Sutton, with the Rev. Joseph Jarrett officialing. Friends may
call Th~y from 9·10:30 am. at the Greene-Robertson Funeral Home,
Sutton.
·

SINGLE COPV PRICR
Oaily ..... ........... ....................................·J~ Ctnu

burglary.

JoAnn Smolenski

Jean Henry Taylor

.

A broken step may have assisted the Me1gs.County Sherifrs
Department in arresting two men now suspected m a Pomeroy 1m1

Sarah Caroline Mann, 78, Gainesville, Texas, died Friday, Feb. 17,
1995 in the Wilaoo N. Jones Hospital. Sherman, Texas.
A homemaker, sbe was born April 22, 1916, in Terre Haute, Ind.,
daughter of the late Benjamin Lee and Nora 0 . Bryant Huffman. Sbe was
affifiated widt the Collinsville Bible Baptist Church.
Sbe is survived by her husband. Keidt Ponald Mann, to whom she was
married on May 8. 1937, in Terre Haute; a son, David Michael Mann of
Pomeroy; a dllt•ahter, Jane Lee "Jackie" Gaspard of Gainesville; a sister,
Btztha Mse Gralton of New Goshen, Ind.; and four giandchiklren and two
great-grandchildren.
.
Besides her ~ts, she was preceded in death by 'a grandchild.
SeMces will be 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in the Huff Funeral Chapel,
Whitesboro, Texas. The Rev. Randy Webb will officiate and burial wiD
be in the Collinsville (Texas) Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2·9 p,m. today.

Area announcements

(USPS 213-960)

Leg injury prompts. arres~ :

EMS units log eight calls

Gene Austin Lake
.

Local·News in Brief:

sarah Caroline Mann ·

Gladys 0 . Anis, 74, 'Mason, W.VL, died Sunday, Feb. 19, 1995 in
Pleasant Valley Hollpital.
Born Oct 13, 1920 in Aecovillc, W.Va., daughter of the late Bryan
and Ruby Gilben, she was a retired nurses aid, a member of the MaSon
United Metbodi~Jt Church and a member of tbe United Methodist Women.
She was also (ftCed«&lt; in death by her husband. Denver B. Artis, on
- Dec. l7,1980; andabrolher,DonaldGilbcn.
~urviving are a daughter, Mary F. Artis of Canton; four sons, Daniel E.
Artis of Midland, Midi., Denver James Artis of Mason, Ralph B. Artis of
Winston-Salem, N.C., and Roben L. Artis of Jackson. NJ.; 10 grandcbildren and six great-grandchildren; two sisters, Betty Waters and Fninces
Bond, both of Portsmouth, Va.; and a brother, Frank Gilbert of Mess,
Ariz.
.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Mason United Methodist
Chun:h; with the Rev. Bennie Stevens and the Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial wiD be in the Kirldand Memorial Gardens. Friends may call
at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.
The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to the service.

The Dally Sentlne~ege 3

.

Deaths-.. . . . . - - - -

Gladys 0. Artis .

Short campaigns undermine democracy 1

Berry's World

•

-~----Area

Page 2-The Dlllly sentinel

Technology_sale to China raises fears

111 Court 8beet
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..
~

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Thurs.9-12;Sat:9·2

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4 The Dilly Sentinel

Monday, February 20, 1995

:sports

BIBB
EAS7EB EAGLES
. 1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

•

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Saturday, February 25 7:00p.m. Division
IV Sectional at Alexander High School
Beaver·Eastern VRS Eastern.
GIRLS
Monday, February 20 6:30 pm Division
IV Sectio..al Champions~ips at Alexander
High School. Beaver Eastern VRS Eastern.

SOU7H

FEB. 7 ................................ AT EASTERN*

FEB: 10 ....................................... MILLER*
FEB. 17 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
._Indicates Tri-Valley games
.C oach - Hewle Caldwell

FEB. 9.................... FEDERAL HOCKING*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
·
Coach - Jennl Roush

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 16........................... AT WELLSTON*
DEC. 20 ................................. AT MILLER*
DEC. 22 ................. AT POINT PLEASANT
JAN. 3 .............................. RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 10,...................... ~ ........ SOUTHERN*
JAN. 13 ...................................... BELPRE*
JAN. 17 ............................... AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 20 ................. AT VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 24 .................. :........... ALEXANDER*
JAN. 27 .............................. AT EASTERN*
JAN. 28 ................................ AT WAHAMA
JAN. 31 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*

~OYS

·
•
· February 21 at 6:30 pm Sectional
Tournament at the University of Rio
Grande ·Meigs VRS River Valley.
'\
GIRLS
Completed Season With 11·1 0 Record.

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LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
ATHLETICS

The Daily S~ntinel
l

RaiderS.
lhe year between the neighboring
This Divisioo II sectiooal tour- schools, with each team picking 1!1'
nament game will begin at 6:30 a win on the road. Me1gs (9-10)
p.m.
. will go into lhe contest on a roll,
It will be lhe lhird meeting of having won seven of its wt nine
games. River Valley will head into
the contest wilh a 8-12 record that
has seen only three of those wins
come in the season's second half.
The Marauders will start their
usual three-guard offense. Senior
. point guard Ben Ewing, whose
three-point shot defeated the host
Raiders 74-71 in the Mlu]luders'
lions Tuesday, but nothin¥ definite season opener in December after
was set. Initially, each s1des may the guests squandered a 13-point
bring reduced bargaining groups to lead, is &amp;\Waging around 7. 7 points
the table. .
·
a contest.
"I talked to Don once or twice
The Qlher guards will be juniors
last week about when we could get
together, where the meeting should Gary Stanley and Paul Pullins.
be held, what the size of the poop Stanley. a 6-foot-1 junior, is scorshould be - that sort of thmg," ing at a 8.3 point a game clip. The
said Colorado Rockies chairman 5-foot-10 Pullins is scoring 9.6
·
Jerry McMorris, a member of man- points a game.
At
the
post
position
will
be Cass
agement's negotiating committee.
Cleland
and
Travis
Abbott.
Both
"The fact that he wanted to discuss
are
6-foot-2
juniors.
Cleland
is
what we can do ·to get this thing
scoring
12.4
points
a
contest,
while
goin~ again should be viewed as
Abbott is leading the Marauders in
positive. •'
scoring
with a 13.6 point a game
BiD Usery, who spent the weekaverage.
end in Florida at talks involving
"We are ver~ familiar with
Deere &amp; Co. and the United Auto
River · Valley, second-year
Workers, will remain the mediator.
"Bill Usery has not given up, Marauder coach Jeff Skinner said.
and he. still seems to be lhe best "We respect lhem a great deal, we
tool io get everybody back at lhe know what we have IQ 00 it is just
table," McMorris said. "Mr. Usery a matter of execution."
· Keeping in mind what the
had a lot or rue in his voice when I
Marauders
did to them the. first
spoke to him, and he continues to
time,
the
Raiders,
in, their January
feel there could be a solutioo."
meeting
at
Meigs
High
School, got
Meanwhile, union leaders in
eastern Missouri are urging the
250,000 workers, lhey represent to
boycott games with replacements.
"Baseball owners want to break
a union, so it would be hypocritical
for us to go to !James played by
scabs," Joe C. Middleton Sr., president or Local 1102 of the Iriternational Union of Electrical Workers,
told the St. LoUis Post-Dispatch.

ahead and stayed there en route to a
72-53 win.
Junior forward/ceo ter Bruce
Ward's 18-point effort, senior
swingman Doug Lloyd's 17-point
effort and junior guard Greg
James' 14-point effort gave River

Vailey what was needed for the
win.
Pullins led the Marauders with
14 points in thai encounter,
River Valley is led by James,
who is averaging 15.2 points a
game. H\1 is joined in double fig·

ures by Jamie Graham (11.7
pts./game) and Lloyd (11.6
ptsJgame). Ward wUI sign in with
a 10.6 poiii!S·pet- ~ame average
The winner will advance to the
ti tie game Saturday against third·
seeded Warren Local (14-6).

~: those playing exhibitions

:: will be considered scabs
:: By RONALD BLUM
: · NEW YORK (AP) -- Striking
• : basdlaU players say they will con;. sider anyone who appears in exhi-

: : bition games - including minor
. · lea~rs - to be a strikebreaker.
;:
'They ought not to be fooled,"
• : union head Donald Fehr said SWIday after returning home from
~· regional meetings with players.
Negotiations may resume Tues.:· day. In lhe meantime, some major
~ league teams have been telling
i. minor leaguers they will not be
:: considered replacements until April
:· 2, when lhe regular season stans.
·: But the union says anyone partici:: paling in exhibition games. which
:· stan March I, wiD be at odds with
·. the 1,100 striki!JJ major leaguers.
. "Our view as thai any spring
training game that is played at
either the major league site or for
which admission is charged is a
replacement game," Fehr said. "A
replacement game is any Jame that
. , otherwise would have m&amp;]Olleague
: players."
·
·
Los Angeles Dodgers general
manager Fred Claire said he wants
minor leaguers to play this spring.
'
"We feel we should have the
! right to play minor leaguers in
' exhibition games," Claire said .
"Players are not salaried until the
• start of the season. We haven't
: signed anyone to a replacement! player contract. Spring training
: games have always been games
: where. a large number o( minor lea.: guers have played. That's w.hy
l we're here, to get our players in
i shape for the season. The players
: association obviously speaks for
; itself."
•
The most prominent minor lea;: gue~ is Michael Jordan. Chicago
•: Whate Sox general manager Ron
'· Schueler wants him to play in exhi:: bition ~ames. ~ut Jon.lan says he
·: WOO 't VIOlate un100 policy.
:.
Fehr said the sides had been
,: talking about re ~ uming ncgotia-

&gt;

..

"Tomorrow they could be cappin. the pay of $9-an-hour workers, ' said WiUiam Stodghill, president of Local 50 of the Service
Employees International Union,
which represents I 00 emplo~ at
Busch Stadium.
Cardinals president Mark Lam!!"
ing said the players association as
different from most unions.
"The ballplayers it represents
have little in common w11h ordinary worldng people," be told lhe
Post-Dispatch.
"l

'

;: S/usarski just wants to pitch
: By C!iUCK MELVIN
lie split lut Season among three
:;
WINTERHAVEN,Aa. (AP)- different minor-league teams
'· Joe Slusarsti wants to make one before signing with Cic:veland as a
&lt;: lhing_ clear: This is no act of des· six-year minor-league free agent.
· . perabon.
: · Hardly a household' name,
:; Slusarski nonetheless is .far and
p away lhe most well-known of lhe Clinton Invites
' ! more than 50 pitChers and catchers
; ; in lhe c ·leveland Indians' spring
f 1 camp. He's one of only two pileh· to White House
; ; ers in camp who have ever
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP):i appeared in a-major-league game; President Clinton has invited lhe
Youngstown Swe University foot; ' Darrin ~in is the other.
~; Slusarslci, though, llinche5 a bit bail ~. lhe defendinjl natilll!al
·: i at the notion of being considered a champion in NCAA DiviSion I-AA
~: replacement ~~yer, astrikebreaker. for the second consecutive year, to
; ; That•s a dec:t51on, he says, to be the White House, lhe coach said.
•; made later in the spring.
· "ll's a great feeling when your
!i "Initially, no, I'm not ready for athletics programs are recognized
· ': that," Siusarski said. "Not at this by others for their successes bolh
; : jpncture. That could change. For on and off the field," coach Jim
~ · now,just leave me alone and let me . Tressel said Sunday. "Budor the
~: throw. ..
president of the United States to .
\ • · "This is not a last-ditch effort recognize our team, our instilutioo
~ (or Joe Siusarski. I'm not looking and our community, it makes it all
~. lit it like thai at all."
the more special."
·
::; &gt; The right-handed Slusarski, 28, ·
Tressel, who is also executive
~ Spent pallS of the 1991, '92 and '93 director of athletics at the school,
i seasons with the Oakland Athletics, said the team has been invited to
:· going 10-12 with a 5.34 ERA in 37 meet with Clinton on March 6.
• games, 34 of them starts. But his
The Penguins defeated Boise
• time in the majors was interrupted State University 28-14 on Dec. 17
; because of a freak ace ident that to capture their second consecutive
~ occurred while he was golfing in I· AA championship in the National
t, Arizona on an off day during the Collegiate Athletic Association. It
:· spring of '92.
··
was their third championship in the.
' . "I slipped and fell on a caclus, "
past four seasons:
·
: he said, 'showing how his pitching
The Youngstown State football ·
1· hand got puncnui:d by lhe needles. team is only the second team in lhe
t I'They gave me a cortisone shot, 1'7-year history of the I-AA divii': and I went 4-1 in April, but I got sian to compete for the division
' sent back down in July. 1 couldn't championship for four consecutive
:• gnp the bali. The hand injury hung years. Eastern Kentucky Univenity
; · around ali year, and it turned into a . was the olher team. competing in
; : shoulder problem."
the finals from 1979-1982.
;: : Bothered by tendinitis thai ~ven·
The Penguins were 14·0-1 last
; . IUa[iy required surgery. he firushed season. Tressel won lhe Sports Net!: 5·5 with a·5.45 ERA thai year, then work's Eddie Robinson Award as
, . spent most of 1993 with Class I-AA Goaebofthe Yrar for 1994.
':~
.. • • Tacoma..
· ·

Y·State players

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY .21, 2:30-4:30 P.M.

-.

.

TOURNAMENT TIME - Jeff Skinner's
Meigs Marauders wiD bit the touurmanef trail ·
Tuesday a1ainst River Valley oa the University of
Rio Grande campus. Ia front are (L-R) Mark

Same Day Service
All Parts Extra
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hgl 5

~ : Baseball's strikers say

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1

STH STREET
New Haven, W. Va.
304-882·2136

BRUCE FISHER- Ow•er/Operator
MIDDLEPORT
·
992·5141

Establish 1913

·

DEC. 15....................................... MILLER*
DEC. 21 ......................... ~ ..... ALEXANDER
DEC. 22 ............................ AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 29 .......................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 5 ................................:.AT BELPRE*
JAN. 9 ...... :................................ TRIMBLE*
JAN. 11 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAI•t 12 ....................... VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 14....................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 19.................... ~ .... AT ALEXANDER*
JAN. 23 ................................... EASTERN*
JAN. 26 ................ NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 30 ............., .......... ... AT WELLSTON*
FEB': &amp;...................... .,................ BELPRE*
FEB. 9 ........ :.......... P.rVINTON COUNTY*

and Service Alwa~s"

Ewing Funeral Home

Mon· Fri. 7·5 Sat~ 7·3

1994·1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

LIENOI!"

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555 PARK ST.
Middleport, OH

FEB. 7........................ POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 10 ................................ AT BELPRE*
FEB. 14.. ........................ :.......:.. WAHAMA
FEB. 17 ....................... VINTON COUNTY*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley game;s
Coach - Jeff Skinner

BOTTLE

CHESTER

106 N. 2ND

.

FEB. ·3 .................................. WELLSTON*

AND

BAUM L~MBER

FEB. &amp;.................................... AT MILLER*

·MEIGS

MEIGS MARAUDERS

Where America Goes 1b Relax··

1994·1995 GIRLS'
SCHEDULE
'
.

DEC. 15.......... AT NEl-SONVILLE-YORK*
DEC. 19 ............................. AT EASTERN*
DEC. 22 .......................................... MEIGS
DEC. 23 ............................ FiiVER VALLEY
JAN. ~ .................... AT SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 5 ......................................... MILLER*
JAN. 9 .................................. AT BELPRE*
JAN. 12 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 19 ....................... SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 21 ...................... AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 23 ............................ AT WELLSTON*
JAN, 26 ............................... ATTRIMBLE*
JAN. 30 ......................: ....... ALEXANDER*
FEB. 2 ..... ,.................. :............ EASTEIJN*

JAN: 10 .................................... AT MEIGS* .
JAN. 13.................................. AT MiLLER*
JAN. 17 ...... ................................ BELPRE*
JAN. 20 .................. FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 21 ........................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 27 ................................ WELLSTON"
JAN; 31 .....................................TRIMBLE*
FEB. 3 ........................... AT ALEXANDER*

GIRLS
Monday, February 20, .8:15 pm Division
IV Sectional Championships at Alexander
High School.

1 HolSIJring·
~
{.:$!11 lbfrable Spiis

TORNADOES

JAN ..6 .. ................................... EASTERN*

I

Relax With One of These

*-Indicates Tri·Vl!lley games
Coach - Scott Wolfe

DEC. 16.............................. ALEXANDER*
DEC. 20 ............... NELSONVILLE-YORK*
DEC. 23 ............. ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 27 ............................. COAL GROVE
DEC. 30............................. CHESAPEAKE

BOYS
Monday, February 20 7:00 pm Division
Ill Sectional Tournament at Athens High
School
.Nelsonville·York VRS Southern.
•

DEC. 19 ................................ SOUTHERN*
DEC. 22 ................................ WELLSTON*
JAN. 5.................... FEDERAL HOCKIN'G"
JAN. 9 ................... AT VINTON COUNTY*
·JAN. 11 ........................................... MEIGS
JAN. 12 ............................... AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 18 ............................... WATERFORD
JAN. 19................ NELSONVILLE·YORK*
JAN. 23 ............- ..................... AT MEIGS*
JAN. 25 ................................ AT WARREN
JAN. 26 .............................. ALEXANDER*
JAN. 30 ....................................... MILLER*
FEB. 2 ............ :................ AT SOUTHERN"
FEB. &amp;.............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING"
FEB. 9.. .....................................TRIMBLE*

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

The Meigs Marauders will bit
. the tournament uail Tuesday
• evening when they travel to lhe
·, University of Rio Grande's Lyne
; Center to banle lhe River Valley

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16.......................................MILLER*
DEC. 23 .........:....................... FORT FRYE
DEC. 29 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
DEC. 30 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
JAN. &amp;............................. AT SQUTHERN"
JAN. 10 ........................... AT WELLSTON"
JAN: 14 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING"
JAN H ........................ VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 20 ..................................... TRIMBLE*
JAN. 24 ......... ;AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 27 ................................. ~ ....... MEIGS*
JAN. 31 ......................... AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 3 ................................... AT MILLER*
FEB. 4 ....................................... 0AK HILL
FEB. 7 ................................ SOUTHNERN*
FEB. 10 .................. FEDERAL HOCKING*
FEB. 17 ......................... ;•.••. AT TRIMBLE'*
._Indicates Tri-Vallay games
Coach- Tony Deem

The Daily Sentinel

~ Meigs to take on River Valley in Divi,ion II section.al Tues~ay

•

•

•

..
I'

•.

Corp ...

a••

Tllldntl Wl'llt WltCII
' Tell s" you lhe lime at D j5USn of a bulton or·
hourly. With ,alarm . r•g 17 99 *63· 50420V

· !I' OFF

llll

�hge 6 The Dlilty Sentll"lll

Monday, February 20,1185

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'Monday; February 20, 1995

Pomeroy~lddleport,

Ohio

Marlin bypa~ses Earnhardt to win Daytona 500 again
~yPAULNEWBERRY
· DAYTONA BEACH. Fla: (AP)
-7 Dale Eamhanlt lricd his best to
convince everyone he wasn't burt: ing. The lntimidatllr even ~cd
:a. smile and some self-depr'ecating
· humor after his latest Daytona

Sunday,ltlookecllibBinllllrdl
was fmally going to mUe it 10 Vicrory Lane. His car was fast, his
tire.! were fresh and he had Str:rting
Marlin in his sights after a dnlmlt·
ic, ye't typical, late-race charge.
With two laps still to $0• he was on
the verge of cxorcismg all those
demons.
.
"But this is the D&amp;ytona SOO,"
Earnhardt said bitterly. "I'm not
supposed to win the damn thing, I
don't reckon." ·
. Marlin, wh~se only previous
Wmston Cup VICtory was the 1994
Daytona 500, was simply too
strong. His Chevrolet Monte Carlo
had not been passed on the track all
week, and he wasn~t about to let

: downfall.

: "Hi there," he said, shaking
, hands with a stranger. ''I'm Dale
' Earnhardt and I've never won the
Daytona 500."
How can that be? .How can the
: w?rld' s grea~st stoc~ car ~v~r
' fail tune and lliiiC agam to wm htS
:sport's greatest event? How can a
:racer who's won nearly everything
· be saddled with such .a gaping void
; in his career?
.

anyone - notevenEamhlrdl do it nciw.
"Any time you bell Dale Earnhardt in one of those late-race
deals, it's real special," said Marlin, who held for a two-car-length
victory Sunday in the rirst
NASCAR Winston Cup race of the
year. "It meant a lot to me 10 beat
him cominf down to the end."
Marlins victory must have
stung Earnhardt even more. The
son of former Winston Cup star
Clifton "CooC~" Marlin has w~n
exactly two Wmston Cup races m
his career- ·both in the spon's
Super Bowl. In the process, he
became the first repeat winner.
since ·CaJe Yarborough in 1983-84.

" He'sw011aiotofraces,buthe
hasn't won tbls one," Marlin said
of Earnhardt. "He's won seven
(Winston Cup) charnpioiiShips, and
I know he wants to win the Dayrona SOO.
"Maybe," Marlin added with a
grin, "I'll let him win one when 1
quiL"
Marlin, 37, started third and was
among the leaders throughout the
200 laps, dominating the second
half of the rain-interrupted race.
Earnhardt coul~'t ~ Marlin on
the track, ~Jut gaine4 the lead after
beating him out of the pits on lap
161 by about two feeL
Marlin, who led three times for

IOSlaps,rePhiedtheleadfor!M
fin&amp;: time on lap 181, muscling
. past Earnhardt 011 the low side of
the 2 I/2-mile oval at about 190
mph as the awo dove toward the
third tum.
.
Earnhard1 got one more chance
10 pull it out when Bobby Labonte
hit the wall on lap 186, bringing
out the lOth and final caution periodoftherace.
While all the other leaders
remained on the track, Earnhardt
drove ?"to pit road to.put oil four
fresh tires. He was 14th when the
green flag waved with II laps to
go, but no ,one is more adept at
navigating through traffic than the

_Intimidator.
1 1' f&lt; h'15
_ It took only three
or
. b!ack N!!. 3 Monte. Car~ 10 ~
nmc cars mf::mrea::e.: ~duro•

"J

· was up andiO -·"""'~
by 195 . a -

MaJim for

~fwtMth: ~ 1~ ~10 ~~~-

HAULING

•

Umestone·
&amp; Gravel

haps I -:U~ ~ ~
keep up wt draft aided':.'::!have made a
•
...- ..e 011
the leader. .
.
. But ~~n h•~om
ures •. Ieavmg
, 10
011
Marlin al~.
~ ~ ~ to ~
task, crossm~
m~
e 0•• .

Candace Pope, Holzer
Medical Center
Community Liason
Director, will be at the
Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center on
Thursday, February 23 at
11 a.m.-She will be
discussing the hospital's
MaxWell 50 program,
which is free to persons
50 years of age or older.
For more information call

':e

sccondsdbe~~fo ~ wt!;!t~~e
the crow o
ly.

•

c

w •

Scoreboard
EASTERN CONFERENCE .

~ ...............Jf .~ ~

. lil
.660
S..S

wuru.,.u.. ............ u n
Ce~~tral

.400
.396
.360

11.5
19
20.5

.294
.l4S

2A
26

Owloue ............:... 32

19 .6rl
CIJ!VELAND ....... 31 19 .620
lndiloo ................... 30 20 .600
Otiuao.................. 2S 26 .490

63

.S
l..l
7
1 .
12
13.5

Atlant~~ ................... 24 n
.471
· Milwwkee .... .........20 31 .392
lleuoiL ................... l! Jl .l60

16 .667

Wi,

Houltm ············-···32
Denver .•................ .21

.640
.420

- . . . ..............13 ll

.396
.255

II
29
Dallu ..................... l9 29

Pttdlk:Dlolllaa

Phooda ..................40
Soaa.le .............. - ....35

L.A. I..alun ............ll

·

s......................:tl
...........................26
Goldan SLIW ........-lS
u . Oiwen ........... 9

11

A!L-Ualo Roct77,SWI.Guitllou fa

Dofionoe w. 11Mmu Monll
w~ otDo 70, m-fil

::IC
Now Odcenl7!i I..amts64

3
4
IS

16

235

14 .11•
17 .646
20 .sn
23 .531
34 .306
42 .t76

4
75

to.s .
13

61

2A
11

San . . .o 7 1 . - 6 7 ·
San . . . . SL s8;&amp;,;pm Y...,. s2
San Fnnoilco 72. Lo,-.1• ~-

New Yodt 1 2 2 . - 117
lndilno 106, Miani 17

Ulalt 6!, Hawoii S1
Ulalt St. 75, N..,--., St. 63
W......... 65.o..mSL63

Mim-100. Odondo 95
O.Wer-94, Wuhinpan 92
l'homii 11 o. IJialt 107

Dalla• at Wuhinston, 7 :30p.m.
O\U:aaoatAdanta,7:30p.m..
San Antmio at Hauttcm, I p.m.
LA.Clippon a Dawer, 9p.m.
Bolton ll Pha.U, 9 p.m.
Minnmoca at Portlmd. 10 p.m.

loll

cntll 53

F:r:ft.ld Union Sl.lllin- S6

.B.us.......................a 6

.m

Manhattan 67, Sim~ .54
Manm..,lh, NJ. 81, Fttirloia]t JliWn.

aon 63

Mount SL Muy'a, Md. 64, Rider !iS
New llampah.irl: 71, Hutford 75
...... 16, llon&lt;an! 73
Penn St. 74, Wt.coolin 67
Pi..bwJh 67. Miuni 61
Print:c:too l7, Dutm- 48·
Rutps 19, RMde lal.tnd 63
Sewn Hall 82, Symwe 74
St. Francia:, NY 19, Robert Mcnilll
St. Fn.ncil, Pa._ 91, Lana: J&amp;land Univ
Bl
•
(
St. John't 73, Bolton Colleae M
Villanova 96, Corui~cu113
w•..,.. 76, Moria 74
Xavier, Ohio 88, GoorJc WuhinJIOn

1!. MidU&amp;"' 75, Ball St. 72

t. I D: lA fl:l.
6 2 14 37 43
1 2 14 31 39
9 1 13 ]9 47
8 1 ' ll 37 44
8 1 13 42 45

N. Y. lallnolcn... 6
N.Y.Ronpn.... 6
flooUII .............. 6
l'bilodelollil ...... 6
Tompttllor ....... 6
Newl,...y ....... S 6 3 13 ll
Wuhinp ...... 3 8 2· I 26

Pilllburah ......... 12 I 2 26 66
Qoebec .............. 13 2 0 26 56
Booton .............. 8
Mmbal .......... . s

s

1

•

•

s

4
Buft'alo.............. 6 6 2
I

'

17 42
14 36

.14

21

7l, Poruinouth 71

42

29
36

a.,

ldidd.ldown 7.. , Fairfield 67
Milia
50,Ara..ille41
. ........ so, Anno 46

-Comni 66, Frontior63

Mauntow.d7!,Moriaol'leulllt73
Obo&gt;-lin 61' tt.,..... 110
Olnuted Fallo 61,lbr 51

~
L.l FE TIME

•

¥ ·zs'·
Specta

............... :;.[OI_A._,?_;...,tT"""(-.)...,0,....~--

Rl'ii~:iou .v,

mu.li('(J/, and \f'l'tia! iulere.l t l'lllcrtaiuml'llt.

••

s..(01')

'

Mld_C......,..Caof1

Columbua, Ohio 43215. A
copy ol the appeal mutt be
served on tho director
within 3 doyo after llllng the
oppeol wllh the EBR.
Application
tor
Cortlflcatlon
Vllloge ol Pomeroy,
Pomoroy, OH, Receiving
Watora: Ohio Rlvor, Per1alno
to 401 Certification Public
Notice (H) ~Finat .Approval of Plene
end Spoclflootlons
Leodlng
.Creek
Coneervancy Dletrlct,
Rutland, OH, 111ue Date 0203-95, Thlo final action not
preceded by prapooed
octlon and Ia oppooloble to
EeR. lnalallatlon ol
Precautionary
ta11_k

POMEROY· Old House nexl to New Auto Zone Location .
Plxer-Upper or remove home for Trailer Site.
ASKING $9,500.00

Home Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow-Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Addlllons .•Sidlng
•Rpoflng •Painting
-Garages •Porches
.Pole Barns
Free Eathnlllea
614-742-3090
304-n3-9545 2N1mo.

NEW LISTING- Just Out Of Chesler- ,Sumner Rd . - Appro•.
Mobile Home with added addition, 2 bedrooms,
bath. Out Buildings, well with TPC w·a ter available.
Appliances, Air. NICE VIE WI .
ASKING $29,900.00

34 Acres with

ATTENTION HOME OWNERSII WE HAVE BUYERS
WAITING FOR THE "RIGHT PROPERTY" SHOULD YOU
NOT BE LISTED WITH US?? THE CLELAND CLAN WILL
LIST YOUR PROPERTY ANO SELL IT FOR YOU
WITHOUT THE HASSELII GIVE US ACALLI

YOUNG'S
CARPENJER SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

HENRY E..CLELAND JR ...................................... 992-2259
T-RACY L. BRINAGER......................................... 94&amp;-2439
SHERRI L. HART..................................................742·2357 ·
HENRY E. CLELAND 111 ...........;........................... 992--1\191 .
KATHY M. CLELAND........................................... 992-6191
OFFICE.....................................................,,.......... 992-2259

11211fn

-

No Money Down!

$ ·.· 95
Bravo

62. 1'bomll Worthina.
SL Hauy 6 7 , - Local ss

1 -800-56,0 -347 4

Tol. Scootl4, 1!. CieYollnd Show S7
TUican••• Ca&amp;h. 12. M«uti.old St.
-·64

W-utoN. I2. Dolowuo42

W...mlloS. S6,~54

·

Call Now For Our Free .Installation Spec tal!

Ask about the Full-View System. The-one that dishes-up everything!

Weotloloe53,A•oo[..akel(l
~

O.A.C.

Call NO'w For Your Free Site Survey!

SwliWon 61, O..,o $1
· ·
nft"lft Calvert 73,"tal. Ouild&amp;a 41 ·
Ttli'UI Columloion 70, Faotario 46
1inon 53, CmliNi'Ul 52

Wollb lottlil17&gt;c.,...... Vol Otr.
Aad.ill
.
Wopak-oiO,Dolpooo St. lalta'o 110
W...,._C.IL67,111ico46
w...... 92, Lanin c.th. Sl
Wa,._r..&amp;d 11, TriM 19
, Wellnillo9l.E. , _ 7 5

Monthly

Available as annual

Sprina. Nonlt

53

39.

.... 52.0.Wpolil42

('a112.J I lours ,\

Da~·

7

Da~s

.\ Wl'l'k!

'

WINNER -Jim Johnson, Racine, was the winner of a sltotgun
used by the Fraternal Order of the Eagles 2171 Auxiliary as.
fund-raising project for charity purposes. Louise Autherson of the
; auxiliary presented the gun t~Jobnson.

t- Names 1n the news-

KA YLA CHANEY

Kay
Ia Chaney
.
celebrates
first birthday

even try to label the newest generation of actors. ·
"People like me and Brad Pitt
and others arc making completely
difre ren! ·kinds of movies," says
24-year-old Uma Thurman, who .
earned an Oscar nomination for her
role. as a mod junkie Mob wife in·
"Pulp Fiction."
· "When the Brat Puck happepcd,
!here was a certain kind of movie
- Sixteen Candles, Weird Science.
The same people !!lways worked
together, and it was practically a
cottage industry," Thurman says in
the Feb. 27 issue of Time magazine.
Instead of the self-conscious
teen roles that made Brat Packers
such as I udd Nelson, Molly Ringwald and Rob Lowe famouS, nlany
so-called Generation Xcrs have cut
their teeth on films of extreme
range and ten~.
Winona Ryder, 23, earned her
Oscar nomination for her portrayal
of 1o -in the old-fllshioned "Little
Women," on the heels of the hip
"Reality Bites." Ke11nu Reeves,
•
~ NEW YORK (AI"~ - In the 30, went from bone-head sur~er
'980s it !oYas the Bmt Puck. Don't boy in "Bill and Ted's Excellent

'

.

L

Kayla Chaney, daughter of
Roger and Parn~la Chancy,
Reedsville, celebr~;~ted her first
birthday Jan. J2 with ~ party at her
home.
A teddy bear theme was featured on her cake which was served
with other refreshments. Attending
were her grandparents, Ada Congrove, Reed sville , John and
Dorothy Chaney, Racine, and her
sister: Angela Chaney. Sending
1:ifts and cards were Forrest Kibble,
Reedsville, and Don and Lois BeU,
Racine.

· FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

way." ·

. But that doesn't mean they're
no! still kids at hcarL
Says Thurman: '.'! am completely a goofball nerd.''

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

15Sessions s1 5°0
All Lotions ~ Oft
949·28231131/1 mo.
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW~ USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKE$ &amp; MODELS
· 992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800-848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO .

264 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

1 •8 oo-486-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
tclllln

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL nml RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
•

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

2/121921tln

' r-~G.;.ra-d:"e~d-:B:-e-ne:-f:-it~W~h-o-le_Li_fe_i_s-no'"w-a-ba_i_la_b_le-.T-h-e--.
plan offers coverage of up .lo $10,000 with no
physical exam and n.o health questions asked on
lhe applicalion. Ages 40-80

ROCKY R. HUPP

7/31191 TFN

American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIODLEP(!RT, OHIO 45760

KEJI'I

IEIIICE

ofaclory Aulhorlzed Porto
&amp; Service
•AH Mokeo t42 Yearo

614-843-5264

•Faat Reliable.Service
•Waehera - Oryera • Rangea

Li fc • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accidcm • Annuity • IRA • Mongagc

•Refrigerators •Freezers

&gt;Oiehwlllhera
•H.W. Heaters
-Microwavea •Diapoaale ·
•Thanks Meigs 6

Surrounding Area•

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 1'11 t.....
· -n

MORRISdN'S
BEATING 8 COOLING
EPA and RSES Certified
Your authorized
American Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Available
Call992·7434 for more information.
1125195

Mobile .Welding

Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-387g .

=~=======

Kristen

••

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We Have Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center

~ · .:

Adveqture" to quoting Shakespeare for " Much Ado About
Nothing" before ·breaking. the
bank,s with the action -tbriller
"S~d" last summer.
· 'People my age have an
earnestness, a desire to do good
work," says Mary-Louise Parker,
who co-starred in Woody Allen's
period piece "Bullets over Broad-

*200 ln•t•ll•d

Kenny's Auto Rental

2
February
23, 1995. Bids may ~=:l::n::Mem==o=ry==:::;
be mailed or brought to the r
Meigs County Library, 216
In Memory
W. Main Street, Pomeroy,
Oh . 45769. The TruaiBea
ELEANORA.
reservea the right to rejecl
WERRY
any and all bide. Ref. Deed
Volume t08, Page 488, Lot
August29, 1916 1148.
February 20, 1992
(I) 30, (2) 6, 13, 20·
It has been three long
years since you told
1 Card of Thanks
your friend you would
call her back , But thai
We want to extend our
thanks &amp; appreciation
call was"hever made.
to the nursing staff &amp;
You answered anoth er
employees at the
call that day, the call
Pomeroy nursing &amp;
of God. the one
Rehabilatation Center,
Dr. Villanueva, Ewing
important call we all
Funeral Home,· Rev.
will have to answer. It
Blackwood,
Alan
was a time of
friends &amp; family in our
gladness for you,
time of need .
Family of Marie
Mom, no more pain,
Michael
but the loved ones and
friends that were left
5
Happy Ads
behind had to try and'
understand why. We
should not question
God, but we do. I
know you were
prepared for that call.
but family and friends
were not. Still today. I
wonder and asked
,why, but I know that
Lordy, Lo y
it was th e wish of
you're in a fi
that you've 1
God . We now wait
4 .
and prepare ourself
H py Birthday
for lhat grand family
Dad
reunion.
Jackie, Cylinda,
Sadly missed,
Jeff, Jodi&amp;
. Ralph

•

'•

.

win4owt
•Free Estimates ·
•Starting At

992-4119. AI Tromm, Owner 1·800-291·5600

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Public Notltie
BID FOR SALE OF
CARNEGIE LIBRARY
BUILDING
The Meigs County Public
Library Board of Tlusteea
are accepting bids lor the
aale of lhe Carnegie Library
Building, located at 200 E.
Second St. Pomeroy, Oh
45769.Bida
wni ..beThursday,
accepted
until I :00 p.m

.'

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

GRAY'S

.,'

NEW YORK (AP) - Lauren
put up with idiots like
on-screen, but not off.
)icreen- unless of course, it's Jim
Carrey.
.
: "I'm at a weird spot in my
J:arcer," said Holly, lhe fiery redhead who co-starred in the hit
inovie " Dumb and Dumber." · ·
: "Movies ~at I probably, would
~ave done a year ago, now l m saying, 'No, I'll pass on that.' And all
lif a sudden I'm having trouble.
finding enough time to meet with
IJlllhe people I'm supposed to meet
with," she said.
: Even real-life beau Carrcy, who
hcver got the girl in his "Dumb
pnd D~mber" rol~ as _her morefhail-shghtly moromc swtor?
~ "We're not even close to think·
1ng about mardag_e," she sai~ .
r wc·re just attempbng 10 keep this
jelationship going, and we're gomg
jhrough the normal thin*s any relalionship goes through. I m JUSt not
bscd to having millions of people
go through them 'Yith me.''

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

MeAt

KINGS'

•Cultom Mde
•Solid vinyl
retlacement

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
OHice Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum ..Sidlng,
Rooting, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
. Windows, Garages.

READY FOR OCCUPANCY! Located on SA 7, Nice 2 story
frame horne with approx. one acre. 3 bedrooms: bath , newer
carpeting, paint. &amp; furnace. B.G. heat. TPC water, nice
storage building, large front porch. ASKING $28.000.00
MAKE AN OFFERII
VACANT GROUND- SR 338· 23.88+ Acres. approx. 6 miles
from the Ravenswood Bridge . Great building site. Once had
~ome dozer wort&lt; &amp; driveway prepared. ASKING $17,500.00
(OWNER WIL~ CONSIDER REASONABLE OFFER II)

Howard L. Wrlteael

Come Tan With

1111/tin

.

~oily may
~im Carrey

32361 Dewitte Run Road
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to '/, Inch.
Call Anytime
John KrtdfJr
614-843·5192
Harold Poroon
614-843-5285

J&amp;L INSULATION

Fr• Eatlmates

....

l!
''!

" You Crtula It - lf'e FU It ..

5116/94 TFN

RACINE- 1 1/2 Story Frame Home with newer siding , 4
bedrooms, hardwood flooring , large living room &amp; family room
with fireplace, one car garage , nice level lot. Front and side
porch. $40,000.00. MAKE A/'1 OFFERII

I

tGaSI

·

OID076,-60
W. Midoipt 101. Koal 9:1 (01')

Town Street, Room 300,

REDUCED TO $350/Acre.

public mettlngo, end main rtplocomont.
adjudication hearing (2) 20; lTC

:

--(fl

. ~Smoiultr99,MahowtSI
v'...... 7l,AdoB .
W. a.-.Lakcu 67, Cin. s,......

Bro~!%ng

~

ill, McDonald 47 .
Sprina. Catholic 16, Sprina. North·

Ni• lilll'....mlldloll

•

permit, llcenle, or variance

which Ia not preceded by a
propoaod ocllon, may be
appealed to the EBR . by
filing an appeal within 30
day• ollaouance of the final
action. EBR appeelo muel
be fllod with: Environmental
Boord of Review, 236 Eool

wooded ground. Utilities· are available· Great Hunting Areal!
Give us a call for more information!!

J::Ommenta, requeale for -meaiurea~ riPaTra, &amp; water

'

Much-Music

Music TV

SleUbenvillo 51, Edilon 4S

Mllml. ~ 62, Ciiiliillli&lt;iliipl 54

revoking, or renewing a

LEBANON TWP. • Ross Rd. - Appro•imately 12.0+ acres of

ll'l'in .

~L~~~~~uT~'=~'~O~I~;~J~~~---------JN~e~
.twQrk

S.Ut~Unpn

x..n., Ohio II, Oocqe WeeNnp

r.... Sadllonlu.-ao ·

I

omo
usa
.........

~~i]

Rocky River 61, Fairview 60
Sonduoty61, Vermili111 54
s-.r.....,. n, New """"villo"'

CetloMlle 79, Findlor 69
""""' 12. Malone 11
Slut- Sl. 6l Ohio Do . • " 61
T.mn 90, RIO CntANoo 19

... 67, a-a;. Sl. 64

Written commento and.
requeoto lor a public
meeting . regardlrig a
propoaod action moy be
eubmltled within 30 chlya ol
j!otlce of tho propooad
ectlon. An adjudication
Jiitarlng may be held on 1
propooed octlon II a.hearing
requoet or objection Ia
,..,elvW by the OEPA within
3o dayo of'loouance,of tho
propooed action. Written

.

_.,

c..,,.....

T-.- Muda1.5,1!.~79

oubmltted within 30 daya ol
notice ·of the draH octlon.
·"Propoaod Actlono" are
written ototemonte of tho
Dlrtctor'o Intent with
roapo.c l to tho laouenco,
denial, · modification,

THE
WEATHER
CHANNEL

Pollndll.-1.-164
- - Natio o- 73, S. Wfb. ·

Mld.o. .
Blul!\m 17, Lob Erie 79

college scores
S""'*J'•M... A-w.a.C 'a

meeting requeata muat be

OFFICE 992.. 2259

'

Potridt Hawy 49, llloC""b 42

"-"llca~M-Calop

S. t.rnlino SL 94, Moo!"' 51.17
SoudMtm Mia 71, S.Uill Flaoido 7S

N.Y. Ranpn; atFlmU,1:lOp.m.

~!&amp;

s. """"'ss '

Dofionoe 16. w~ Ohio,

Alcom SL 19

written

permit, llcenH, or variance.

Otto wo-Olond&lt;Of 67. Pluldin~ ]I _
Paineavillc Harvey 41, Punenille
Ri....U.4S
........., 69,

Lewi173, Aalllood 71

Rldfanl63,eo.tal Cotolino 61

Qucbecoti')DiburaJt, 7'30pm.

30

•r•

llllemento ollhe dlm:tor ol
•nvlronmentol protecllon'o
•(Director'il) Intent with
~oopoct .to tho 111uance,
denial, etc. of a permit,
etc.
)lcenao; order,
lnterootod pe~aono may
eubmlt written commentt or
requeot a public meeting
regarding draft ectlono.
· Comments · or public

Currelltl' l'l'llll', ana/y.l'i.l', educational prtiJ:I'IIIIIIIIillJ:2-I lroun a day'

Miani T- 11 .lltmtinpm 47
Middldiold c...tiDal 57,......,. 29

· Ghotl..okooV.U.yCoot-

"Ohio
· women's

·Actlona"

Agoncy, P.O. · Box 113MI,
Columbua, Ohio 43216-3811
{Ttlaphonr. 614·644·21211).
"Finol Actlona: ero actlono
ot the director which ere
effective upon laauance or 1
oleled ellactlve dote.
Purauanl to Ohio ravloed
cod aactlon 3745.04, o final
action may be appealed to
the envlronmonlol board of
revlow (EBR) by a poroon
who was 1 party to o
proceeding boforo the
director by filing on oppoal
within 30 dayo ot notlco ot
the final octlon, Purouont to
Ohio rovlood code ooctlon
3745.07,. a final action
lsoulng, tlenylng, modifying,

'

M&lt;Ooin77,PomtVol4S
w.o..;..., N - 74. ...lh
Cloy 61
~ 6Q.Jcwdt.-Scio51
Moolino Fint lbpL 61, Tempo au. 56

Ohio Wmle)'&amp;ll 69, Qber1in 56

NW Louiliana 74, Slephen P.Aun.in

and the opprovol or
dlaopprovol of plano ond
.pec lllcotlono. "Draft

Ohio

•

u...•a.n.

c ... w-. n.AD-r IO(Of)
llatioon 44, w- 40
Katyon 117, Eadhom 17

NE Louililllfl 101, Sam Houston St.

;variance•. or c•rtlflcatee;

'

ss,

Nortio€-AlltltlkC...r,_

N.C.-Atthorille !7, Winthn&gt;p ~7
Old Drminion

Tonlpt's 11111108
NowJemeyuWIIh:iap:m, t:30p.m.
N.Y.........&gt;ITIIDJ'IIbr, 7'30p.m.
N.Y. blonden II"""""-~. 7,30 p.UL

Tuollday's games

37

.....,..,...76, Tol. - - 6 1

N.C.-WIImin- 73,
71
'

modlllclllon or revocation
olllcenoeo, pormlto, 111111,

Mind Extension
University

Limo Coth. 63, Fmt RocoYay Sl
~ ~"11- n, Oroc:nvillc 64
Unoolnriew ll,Umo T - dot. 40
London 9:!, U&lt;tin1 Val. 7f
Lonin
Lonin A... Kinl49
ilk 74, Manmcld Clu. 41
Maion.C.th. II, ColT- ml..ileiO

(OT)

71 N.C. Owlaa&amp; 14, VL Canmat-.t.

Buflalo l, PilloburJh 3 (tie)

Dalmia 11 Tmanw. 7:30p.m.
San l-11 CW..,O.IOO p.m.
E4monlaa. It St.l..auii, I ::JO p.m. .
0.U... It Calpzy, }0:30p.m,
1M An,U. 1t Vancwva', 10:30 p.m.

33
36

denlel,

Clerk,

Environmental Protection

c:oln-W-.S2

ss,-........ 79 (01')
lloidelbcq66,_U..._64
Muieao75, Hinm Col.64
' Ohio Nonhem 15,ldto Convn 61
Onerboin 101, BaldwU!.-WaUaco 91

13, SE SS ·
N. c.lollno St. 14. Duio 79

s..•

.lt:

iaeuance,

Flooidll

Lakewood 63, w. JclflldM 45
La.k!Owood St. Edward 70, O.e. Lin·

c.~

Molrrly

Qoebec~.

KiJdond 63, Brillal S9

Olalo A..a.dc cc.r....

"""""94. Sandon! 90
Middle Tenn. 77, TCIIUNIIIOe St. 76
w;.;.;~ St. 60. r..._s2

cmc.ao 4, Edmcmtor~ 1

C/a1.1ic we\tl'm \l'tie.\, fal'llrite comedy .1ir1111'.l am/ ri•·etiiiJ: actiou

!tent llootOY&lt;h 56, Akmn""""' 53
Katlon Ridp 76, W. Uberty SUm 61
Kldnm !7, c..... Hailop&gt; "
KJou 6!, llomUtm 11.- fa

M6d-CoallneM Coahnnce
Buft'alo75, Y - S L 72

Mo.queae71 Cl 01')

. v.-.. 91.
Cuollno n
v;,pn;.o Tecll 70. Tutu. 66

u..,.. 65

Jacbcn 61. Nclamvill•Y O!k 41

lowo&amp;S. OlUo St. 66

. o-uloGro 70
Md.·E. Shore 19, Flooido A.tM 16

I!T.O.t....... 7~ Oooop

~

w. MidUpn at omo

Saturday'slldloa
lilT•

Sunday's scores

·

Hudson Wan.em R01ern Acad. 51.
Uai-trSdloaiSO

Abon •• folodo
c.._ Midl:iaan at K,alt

Ohio men's

AnllDm 6, san I.- 3

Hearing

- 6 7, Nonhridp&gt; 66

B-lin· 0ntat 01 Ball SL
1!. Mi~ .. Milmi

Man.halllO?, VMI62
Md .·BillltHOU COifiU)' 71, N.C .·

-

Onnd Ri•er 76, Elyrio Fim

t..n ...... 6t.a~EutS2

collegt scores

47

c...... 3,1lttllu 2 (Of)

Atlaatk IMwlllon

KTLA .

o..n.w. 63, ....... Coth. 49
Gntcnmow ill, W•Yt*"iile Sl
n..lin N- 53, Ri..m.t. lS

Wednesday's aames

-

v..-.

Fm ~62. Caldwctor SO

l'rodr:rit:klow 67,RidpdaloS9

1
1
9

•-!inc

Abhunal6, Auburn 73
. Abbuna St. lOO, Mia. Valley St. 13
A"'tin Feor64. T....,...Teclt63
Bdhme-Coc*IIIID 72, Dd.aware St. 71
CentmafJ "· SE l...ooilima 90
Owielton Sauthmt 1l.libclty 70 ' ·
•
Col). of O.ula1011 67, ·eem. Florida
. 66
~ SL80,N. ConilinoA~T IIO
Dnubon 70, CitldC'l St
•
E. Tenn•ICIC Sl 13, Appalachian St·.
. 74
.
Eul Carolina IS, William a: Mary Sl
.Fl.t. International 14. Compbell 72
F1oridl SL 62,. Clenwm 57
Fwmonll, W. CuGiino 72
Gr.uJe Mum 91, J&amp;mr.~~ Mldi.am '94
Oeo&lt;ail91, I.SU 19
&lt;JnniblinaSL 97, JIIhon SL 83
lockt&lt;wMile 65. Louililnl Teclt 5I
Kcnud:y 17, Pmda 71

p,.jrie

FiAdlor 75, Cotllut so
FmlcnUn SO. Paad...-Oilboo 49

5

Sall!rday'sse..-es
w. MidUpn 74, Ka.t56
Milml79. c.... Miclq.., 54
OIUO'IS,AbanSI
Ontat 17. Toledo 10

Ab.-llimtinahllll 71, lloqu&lt;one 49

' 73

eml(l

Tolodo ................ :....7 7 .500 13 9
. W. Midti&amp;m ............ 6 I •.429 11 11
Km. .........................3 11 .214 6 16
....... ...................... 3 11 214 7 15
c. Midlipa .............o 14. .oro 3 t9

Maine 61 , Venncmt'59

1

Fedenlllocltins B. l~Mdnille But·

Owenll

13

"J7

VanccuYer 6,l..ol A..n&amp;elel2

*
el, e a
falll ~e ~

l!lyrio 71, Loroln SoWmow S9
l!lyria Midview 63, N. R.idaerillo 43
El ' W. 65, Wollinotan 114

OIDO ..... ,............... IO 4 .714 19
Bowtq Gntcn ........9 S .643 15

requeata muat be aent to:

11

PUBUC NOTICE
Tho
following
;appllcoUono end/or vorlllod
,:omplalnto wore rocolvod
,and tho following draH,
propoood, or final actlono
were 111ued, by tho Ohio
:Environmental Protection
~geilcy (OEPA) 1111 Wllk.
. Actlono" Include tho
'odoptlon, Modlllcotlon, or
revocotlon of ordoro (other
.ihan emergency ordoro); the

2-1-lwur 1-port.\ cm·era~:e. includillJ: action from.fal'orite prt!{eHionalteam\.

ur.

Elida 74, Vm Wlllll71 (OJ')

3 .716 17

41

T - . 3, St. Louill

EASTERN CONFERENCE

"In Stock"

41

Monuoal5.1'J.Y. Rona.,..2

Hockey

50% off·

)1

THE NASHVlLLE HlTWOU•

S7

Gocqc&amp;own 77, Providence 74
Haly Crou &amp;3, Ldliah II

E.

.

E. Uv.tpoal a... 63, s.... Roa1

~ ~ ~

Collin ...... S2.lllcRtm41

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

Service on Most
Makes Racine Mower
Clinic

Public Notice

QUALITY WINDOW SYSIEMS:

1120r'l5

Parts &amp;

Public Notice

53

Saturday's scores
l!.u!!an14, l'llllbtltP l
wuru.,.u.. 4, ~2
N.Y.Ial&amp;ndon 3, Newl....,. 2

Col. W11l0"11ln61, Dublin 4!1

985·4473

Real Estate Ga.naral

so

e

Do0alf11Mnidel7.-67
Dolpboo wr...,. Sl. w.,.,. T""' S6

lf!:.
:. . . . . . . ..Jf ~
Micbip1 ........... 11

35
40

*
.
·
'
i::tr-ii
Sports ()TNN

13. ZutOI'Iille R -

OeltoS~. B-45

c ..r.

Loo .............. .. 4 7 3
Vancouver ........ 3 5 S

614·742·2138

B. 8 J. AU II
PAIITIII

-

16 46
16 32
14 41

II 32

FREE ESTIMATES

For All Malor
Iraads
Used Appliances ·
for Sale
· Call
614·992·5515

949·2804

revocation, or ren•Wel of 1

Cnottiaell,Nootltm«70
llolka II, Louinillo A&lt;tuiaoo 62
-5S.Tol.SIIft45

MAC men's standings .

Calpq ............. 7 s 2
s.. . ............ 7 s 2
- - ......... 6 7 2
Anoboim ........... 5 I I

SAYRE TRUCKING

IPPLJAICB
SBRVICB

Oregon Cha.ln Saw Bora

Now Available In Your Area

, Cobmbl»Onwe.59,011mille43

American Univ. 90, Richrnon479
Brown 64. Colwnbio l6
Buoknell71,
49
Bulralo 75. y...,p.....,' SL 72
Colpto 92, Almy 80
.Comell76, Yole 65
Fanlhom 62. N..,. Dome ll

62

Col.- St. Otuleo

r .. w..

w.,...

13

B -.... ss

UQ.A 72. Arizon170

.

14, '-bwJ·F.;...

llerilor. 65, MOnt.w&lt;&gt;u. 5I (Of)
Col, Ia opendence 56, Col.

-

Podlc~

CONSTRUCTION
•NewHomea
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; 'Compare

446-5392.

44
17 , 46 46
11 45 56
I 36 42

Wireless Cable

Col

Muylond 74, Cin&lt;:Umlli 72
lbcc 74, Teau Cbriltian 13
T.... 70, Tanplo S4

NCAA Division I
men's scores.
•

MoCIIlo 62, Butem IIJown 21

N. Cfton .59, New phjlecSelphi• 46
Onlllio41.Ri....talo43

67,

Clolnlew Sl. A..., S4
Cot ACidcmr 67. Sputolfiablond 47

-·

29

4' I 3

f?c!30

c.. HaaiN !IS, Slwu• lito. 79

Dol'lu166, SL I.Guitl 64
6l,lodiono50 •
71, Ckvdmd SL 110

wn,J'$:.

Muwllald St....,...., 59. Tiftia CoiYert

.

C.. VA-5174, Tol. St. Fnncio67

bill
Virpnio•73, Nanh Conotinl71

CLEV'ELA.ND at New Yadl:, 7:30p.m.

Salurday's octlon

47

Droul'IS.-57
...,, 14, Coniliua Sl
Lorol1o Md. 71, Nilam 61
- - 91, Louil.villo 76
SL Bonavenluro 71, Well V'qinia 69

Tuesday's games ·

~ 71,

c..Unal Sllildt 60, Ubertr C.... 1(1

Bo.on U. 76, Dol.twuo 72 (01')

p.m.

.

.

Cid. Widuow71, Oft. Winrai Woo&amp;~

1

Sai:DI1Kilto at Dccroit. 7:30p.m.
Orllrldo a Milwaukee. 8 : ~ p.m.
L.A. I...akcn at Soatllc.IOp.m.
Philadelphia at Golden St~~tc. 10:30 .

52

Cio. Olctl Eu 70. Clo. Tilt S7
Cin. McNidoalu 71. Cin ru.,u 64
Cin. Moe11Gr70. Cin. xm.. tl4

sundac ~~~:11on

WlMi..............

O.U................. 31%

B..w.illo 75, Km.a-...tt SO
Bnooh 76,lohn.......,. 2l
Oe.lohn Mutlotll 69, Oo. Eui'Tech
39
.
Col. B-•"' 62. Morioo Hanling

'

eur.a MdW!Jjj115.1!Udl453
CuttoaS.60,Clo-S5

W-SL 72.BoiooSL61

Toallbt's games
Miami at CLEVElAND, 6 p.m.
auc.ao ~t· o.moao. 7:30p.m.

Cteomow44
I nint"' 55, Aoblond 37
Limo th 72. Limo Sr. 46

B - 7 0 . FU.Iondt S6
B~'" 71. Limo Both 69
CIMty Ott. 54, Wadd - 1 ( 1

WuhmpnSL7~0npaB

LA. Lakm 93, Poo1lond 83

w......

~61,

B.U.U.IO,S..........ulo C.dL 54

W.Va.

T .............:...... 7 6 3

JHY!tlool
AktmE.47,Abuao.,fidd4l

Iua .

Gllm- ACid. SO, H......
-Acod.31
0.....6l,Notlon49

.

Cendo-JC.cnon,
-.oE.6l .
Cin. Cownq D•r
field 74

Deuait .............. 9 4 1 19 S4
SLLouio ........... I ·s 1 17 55

Tournaments

m,n. ep.; Do« •a. AI..o mm. 4!1
pw.;.., 62, Clo.ladependoaoe 44

c...Unpl3,1!1p 70

San Jc. SL 16, Cal SL·I'ullaloo 77

~,_ .......... .IJ ~ f

&lt;&gt;nn"

NUL standings

· Fad ...,_II, l'luati•'47

Abanl!llot 6 3 , - Ou&amp;tld 62
Akmn SL V..St.M 62, Y'""'l· U.......

p&gt;d'66(01')

s.m. a... 77. St. Muy'• Cal. 62

Sunday's !!EOI"es

C-01-w'3t

39
42.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Vidoq Otr. 41 , E. Uvorpool au. 29
Wadawortb .50, Revcro 40
wmo-Hill 31,
au. 30
W'tndlwn 65, Southin~ l2
W-94.C.....,Timken3l

Avlint..b64, P...... 36
BIDlft&lt;tn 75, Millot- City 69
B.....tdield 76, Ne"""' Fallo 41
Buc,... 52. Calanol Cnwfonl49
Val. 65, lowtll..Scio S6

llonlotlq 77. Oihocoobulo 36

B-S2,Lod-41
Bealer 54, Bia Walma4S
Bilhcop (W.Vo.) DonohUe ill, Bridp

a..-11o.o...mss .
MilwaW:oc 111, Caicaao Ill
sUlaltlOI.-91
.. - · Ill, Albnll97
S.aamatiO 109, L.A. Oippcn 92

I........ FoiJq&gt;m1'1S, Belmont S7

eo.-

Bod!'anl a....t n. myn. c.tlL 11

Pot11ond , ... Omup 71
S. Utah93,S~Sl .64

70

u.s. boys' scores

B"'-6l,NewtoFalll50

uc-'73"'

•

11 37
6 %1

T~mp~Boy!,llootonl

Amhont 70, N. Olnulotl41

Montana 66, MOOI&amp;nl SL 64
N. Ammo 16, ldoho SL 11 (Of)

St. Caill'tiUo 56. CO'hcc:orm 43
Tallmadae M, lfudloa 60
Tiffin Columbian 69, Mlllr.swt 26
Tol. Noao Dome 36, Tol. SL lltlula 'r1
VonniliCII 71, M;dvicw 23

' . Saturday's
Regular ansoa adlon
Aotl~ 51, Lintoolo.WW Sl

s.o-ao.SanAu~tri'IDim62

Ploilodt!lphi• 95, DaMrl9

'

5]

o.,.-

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

S.turday•s
reaular manoa .clloa

Arizona St. 14, Sl:uheln Cal 70
CS NMhridp 104, Cal Polr·SW 66
c..~...o~o St. 11. T.....mPuo 74
flemo SL 6$, AJz Faroo 63
Leona Boocb SL 75, UC- Bubuo

N...do73,UNLVS7
N... MW&lt;&gt;o62;W
. 61
Pacific 14.

Se.lttle 129, (]alden Sbte 117

afM-C....

o.,....

, ... w..

_.,...

replar·•-n acUon

49

- . . ............. • • 3

Oaawa ._.......... 2 9 l

........... fa.Nmthmont32
Bedfanl49, Oo.lohn F. K&lt;mody 41

O.r. COlcnet While 70. Leloonoo 67
65, Vondolil Buda

GhoiMI-C...r...,..
Slint Louil 57,
49

Ohio

John Monh.U

y...,....,...11, Co.

Sunday's

lndiloo72. OlUo s.... 10

' TID1U·Ar~ 1001 McN'cao SL 15
Tau-Pan American 14, M.uuu Sl.
46
Tau-San A~ 86. SW Tau St.
82
Tuln 79, Ia.lilaa St. 66
Wldlllo SL 12. Oral R....... 62

lil

Killlaume 59, Otenton&amp;Y

Tri-Vdlap 59. Newton 52
Ttria v.n., s. 72,Doy. ,..,...,. 11

Sunday•sactloa
Ill Tea

.

T..,.Tedo 15, Sou"""" Molh. 71

Saturday's scores
CLEVJl!AND 12. New Ieney 7S .

7l

-llao

N'u:holll St. 14, loionh T.... 75
&lt;llWllooN 94.-89
&lt;llWllooN SL 9 : ! , - 53

Mldw.tiM•Woft

Son Antonio .......... 32

Wu...a..en a~, 76, ~,.._ DJ. 56

W........... Ott. 71, Cal. Wlleutooe

w..,.._

so. ColwnOO. Gn..c

Pmd&lt;a.oilbo.
44

S.turclay's tournaments
. ili-JV
eo.;..,.. 71, !'naldin-Mantvo 59
Miooioiuwo Vol 1:1. BM!anl44

Fiodloy 71, CodoM1Ie 54
Malone 11, Urloono 69
RIO GRANDI! 1.5, T.mn 61
Slut- SL 117. Ohio Drm!nimt 46

S.. 7S

n

z....m.71.~49

Mw.o ... caor-

Albnlui5, Wni · ' 10
Houltoo
Teua:
10

WE!rrERN CONFERENCE

~................... Jf .~

-

41

Eulhom 51, Ka.yon 54
Ohio w....,...tm.Obootin 34
w_..1S, Doailoa 54

Gowolt..•vo~erc-=
Alhlond II, Lewil66

~

~2

N-C-AiltltllcCaof.,_

01.-0iicap&gt;IS, Wii.,Milw*"bo 77
lllinoil St. 104, S. lllinoil98 (2 OT)
low• IS, Ohio Sc: 66.
._, SL 101, Cel&lt;ndo61
IWou 71. Kanaa SL 67
MHo-.. 66, MichiDn SL S1
Mo.·IWiu
71,'!&lt;1! 1Ui00i177
N.llliooiol9,8..... 70
,.._94, - - ! 7
Valponilo 10, C"'L CGOIIOCiioul SL
W lllJnm. 9S Otica

59

Cooill167. "' ]' - 45
Boldwin-W.U... l{'o...t.,;, 76
1ctllo ConoU ss,Ohio- 40
74,llimn Cot S6
Mouo1 Uoioa 63, Haddbcq41

a.,

Dlvlllon

~--~New Ri&lt;p1
W-IIO,AiblondS7

OltloA_C_.a

E. DlincU 101, Tro7 St. 11
E.....W. 69. ~ !9

~llonlkDhtolaa

Miuni .................... 18 32
Philodoljohii ...........IS 36

Doomd 13, c...tiittl SL 10

AJa-.

Bndley94, N.lowt 69
o...m 1:1. ... s..n. 67
llnb76,SW ...._,;St. 75

NBA standings

New Yodt .............. 33 17
Bmtm:.............. ~--- 20 30
New Jency ...•...•.... 21 3Z

-

w.

k.n""*r 9:!.71
W Ike """"' 1\ o.o.p Tedo 62

Basketball

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

DD'S

ROBERT BISSELL

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites ' Camp Sites ' Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERA L HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Licensed &amp; Bonded 20 oo

..

992-3954
Emergen cy Phone 985·3 41 8

101211'1MMn

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

Bill Slack
992·2269

.

Little lhings
are Worth II lot

DAVE'S
S~AP SHOP
One mile out
&gt; 1431rom Rl. 7

Tues. • Wed .• Fri. - Sat.
1-6
• Craftsman Tools
• Toys
• Guns
Loads of Mlle.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992·2060

..

•J

In '

the Classified Section! ;

'.
I

;.

1\nnounccment s

.

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

3 Annou.nceme.nte

;
All No!urol Dlol Splom. Eat Tho i

FO&lt;Mlo

Vou

No

Oulll.

Enjoy Wnhaut Tho I
C.tfltlno

Chemlcale. For ..,.

llon,114~.

L-----------~,~~~Y~lm~oJ

.

11 11 11n

No '

k.tonn. !
•

THE 1'1\IIPERED CHEF
l
"'11o Klohon liON Thot
.To Vct~~r Door." looal Conouhanl '
Avljlablo At:
I
814-441~4
• I

eom. '

lng

t...•ll-eo.

'

Ill

C.ll For lntolmMkK'I On Order- :
For 1uo1- ,
n-.M-e;,.~~
until&amp;
Free 4
.Brochure n~..w..
,

•
•
4
Giveaway
2 · - • pup,ilito, to ""' •·
good
homO.
304~-1147 •

•untngo.

·

;

Medium !!vtlo; t llolo, 1
F...,.lo; 2 Putio: I llolo, 1
:..:
Fom
=llt
:::,~•14
:.:...:
-3~:.:.::::.:::·_____ •1
2

•

..

�•

•

The Dally Sentinel

Page B

Monday; February 20, 1995

=i~fc~F:!.:::..::::_

Monci&amp;Y. February 20, 1- .~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~LLEY OOP

_____________~-~~~~r-~~~ogh~l~o====~-=========~The~~D~al~l~y~Se~en~U~ne~l;P~aJ~g~e~e- ·..

''

_

BRIDGE

..'

' •,

ACROSS

Beattie
NORTH
•A Q

•K

2·20-95

Q 6 52

OA' Q

•K Q 8 5
EAST
•9 B 6 5 2
•K J 10 7

M'fBbltiil&lt; PM~ A
(APrti'll.GI\INS W

Love AMt, chal~dl 1 b1d,
or . . at

((It~

-0)'.

99 3

•J 10 6 4
SOUTH
• 4 3
9AJ . l074

QM-3013.

P - : 4 mcnho old Poll Col,...' Loving """ play·
fu1.814-ll~

::::t~

''I

•

covering
51 Actreoo· Andr52 Endunod
!IS Foe
54 Covered wllh
· llehono

'

.'

..

DOWN
1 Eyeo

Workera' aoan.

amorously

2 Becomes ollm

3 P1r1y throwers
Buah'l V.P.
Unlta of -rgy 4 Princely Italian
family
Supporled
5 Mop abbr.
Rip
6 Algerian
Fuaa
seaport
Crozy (sl.)
7 Lone Ranger'o
Chlld'o tor
Danish Island
friend

8
9
10
12

13 Secluded
valley
18 Meadow
20 Trade for

Bushy clump
Adam's wile
Primary color
Having allta

money

4A 9 7 2

..

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

ald.
BARNEY

4850.

HALT!!

Lost &amp; Found

IT'S STRAW !I

WHAT'S IN
THAT THAR
SACK?

PAW DOES THAT
JEST TO
AGGERVATE
TH' SHERIFF

South
1•
5 9'
6•

West North
Pass •4 NT
Pass 5 NT
Pass 6 "

East
Pass
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: • J

The odds were long

insect

Pl...
R••rdl

e~~n :

.,~

18

ue 't1fl.

Wanted to Do

IBII COmD. CornaoAor, IIIIX 21
IlHZ., 20d + HD W....,,1111
RAil, 14.4 llodom, · ~

loo1: ·Rodd~ balwn &amp; whho
Beagle, WMt Coh.rniM 1ra1.

- - · LoCo 01--ra, SIOO
080,.,...._,..

·304-713-9542.

-

Yard Sale

1

tho Spllng Ruehl Go4 your

trim,...,. l mowiit elf'Ylced
now 01 Sktoow Equlpmont c ...

Fumlsheld

pony. 30U75-'ltl21.
Child oora In my homo In lllldd-, llonclly thru Friday,
7:00o~:OOpm., 814.f12.1524.
For Low Cool Tox• P-Ion,
Colt Sondra Wilburn 814-4441-

1111 . Ford F~110 LMII, l
114 111 MOO.

Moving- 3 pc. bedroom · ouno,
JIOO· Rllnl&gt;ow -•par, llko
- : $800; 10.- BTU 01c1 llko
nMIII, S250i wMhlng n.cnlne,
S5CJ·
- n614"-992·5234
g · - · ....
liDO; ole.,
or-718;
11
124 llulbony, - o y .

If You - . . . You lily OUoiiiY,
Pt- Coli 114-3111-7342 Or eM'
112-eea ro Hlv• ..

p,.S,

lion lllllod To You.
pllcotlono #110 AJoo Avoltobto
Tho JTPA ~o AI 851 Third
Avonuo, Qolllooflo And 33101 HrYac., ..,.., ......~. ,..,.,,.,
Hlghlond Rd., -noy.
·
F,.. ..tlm.t•, 24hr. nrvlc•.
301-372-4381.
O.lllo-llolgo CommunHy
8
Public Sale
Aolloil Agonay
Pfolooolonll Trwo Sorvlco,
JTPA Porjpame
ConiDIMe Tru S.Mol, Bucket
&amp; Auction
11010 North"St Rl7
Truck Sorvlco -10 R. Rooch,
P08oK272
Stump Rlmoval, FrM EeRlclo Pooroon Auction Company,
tlrMt•t lnMJI'IInH, . 24 Hr.
tun time .uctlonMr, compa.t•
Emorg«&gt;CJ Sor¥tco .c.JI And
1uctkm
III'YICI.
UcenMd
814-3111-7342
Savorl14-311 1843,,114:317·7010.
1166,0hlo &amp; W..t VIrginia, 304114-112-441211
713-11785.
SUn Volley NUI'O!'Y ~ School.
Equol()pporlunlty
Employer
Chlldcoroii-F 8o~:3Gpnl ~
Auction Ewory Soturday" 7:00
P.ll. Upper Rl- Rood ,.oldo
~ri.~'?:r'r:o.~~~~
Burlllo 011. G- Buyo.
.
lmmodloto Opening tcr poll time IIIRim 814-441-3117.
.
RN'o. Doy ond Ewonlng Shift
9 wanted to Buy
Rollol CcimpoUUvo
01~
Will Bl-,lly Homo. 8 A.ll. -e
twentlal wtth ••~. ~u.t
Toddtor To
,114 41~·
0121.
Ctoon lllo C.rw Or Opporlunlty Em-. Contlc:l ~~lo
Truckl, 11187 Modell Or Newer, tho Olroctor - ol Nurwlng,
SmHh Buick Pofl!'"':t 11100 PI~WC~Wef -care Cent•, 110
&amp;•.m Annw, OallrpgHa.
Ptnoc- Or., Golltpollo, Oh.
c.ocnt.t eton-·wra, WIU t ... W31. 114-44e-7112

C:.~ -

w._

.=:::::::-..old
ald'":~.a:"'!...'.:::
tumll,.o. R-lno Antlquu.

llltUN ........ to C.,. lor Khool
ogo child..., "" ton ...,. In
April, oKcotlont poy:!e~.:'"' hovo
Ru. · Moore, owner. 114-112· 1Wfllr..cle,I'M-llt2•
.
2IZL WI buy 111t11t11.

Don,

lllturw Poroon To Wen Port·
Junk hi SoH Uo Your Non- Timo, 814-4441-75JS "Pfll' At: Jo
Working IIIJor APflllancoo, Ann Fabrlco, SIIYor Brldgo
~
T.V.'ok Rofltoorotoro, Shopping Ptou.

Fmanc.al
Oppon
N
. un Y

- v..

INOilCEI
lllddto ago lady to live In &amp;
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
m~ke home, muet hive ,.,..,_.
_
..... lhot ,.... do buolJ &amp; D'o Auto Pallo ond Salv., c., 304·m..531'7.
buying wrockoJunk a.- &amp;
with people you k.-r and
Ook Hill Trucking Com!lony NOT to oond __, throuvn tho
........
.r.~ao. pone "" ..... '17'3-5343 or 773-5033. .
ln-ogllod
Sooklng Ovor Tho Rood Sonil moll uroll you · .
EKcot'""' Poy, Ell· tho olfwlng.
Timbor W.rood, Solocl And Orl-.,
. Ctoor Cutting Awaltoblo. On porlo.- Orl. . . OnlY,·-Silo EollrnoiM. 20 y...,. Ell.· Tin, Or Aloi I P.ll. 814-2451304.
~~: 114-3411-7011, Or .,..
OvMbraoll center Ia now acCOf'llng. oPflllcotlono lor CNA'o
Old bunone, eo.tume JMnll'l', ond
LPN'o. Anw- li11orootod
oli:l IIQhtal'll' 11'01'11 lkiiiMI, DIC·
turw, Star Ware, glaa, chln1, plano como 1ft ond t&gt;lcll up an
fwnKwa, toola or comP'ete ... oDOIIcollon or -.!oct Sholll
laiN, Olby Martin, 614-~-111141.

Worood To Buy: Junk Autoo
With Or WHhOUI ·Matoro. Coli
Larry Lively. 814 3118 9303.
Top P,lcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
Cal.._ Gold Rlngoil SM- Calno,
Gold Calno. II.T. • Coin Shop,
111 Socond ,....,.,., O.ttlpollo.
Worood To Buy Uood
Homo. Colt 114..441-0175.

-lo

Wo~o6- 1«11 ~ .:!,'!h

Sctwol y...-b DDk, I

ol

Palt tlmo d~vww . - . coli

114-1112-2108 up to I pm.
Ptuunt Voila¥ Nwdlng .and
Rohobll. .lon c:- lo MMlng
o 01..- of Nurwlng. Tho P*eon rnuM 1111 • i*01III! 'n
loodor 1ft hooHhooow -lalblng
In gerontoloGY ond rahobiiM•
11on. APflllcorir muot hove a BBN
ondt- yoora ~
r.llt«&lt;

••Ptrilnce, ........

verbll wrtnen and

~unlca­

il.111o. lluol bo a - w.rood: Standing Timber, 814- tlon
-'v• lhiMer. eom.ct Chri._INI
3~.
Stov~ •A_drnlnlolrotar, 30Ul'lw.rooci : Uood lorgo Dog ~ !5231. """'OE.
Or Kenn.t Reuon~ble Price,
POSTAL JOBS
114-M1-1415 Any!lmo.
Stoll l11.411h-.lo lor oum and
oDOIIcolfon In . call 21S..7K-

Employment Services

~ ext
Sun-F~.

WV548,

llm-lptn,

All real estate advertising in

this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair HOusing Act
ol 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertis~ "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race. color, religion,
sex lamilial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such pi"eference,
limitation or discrimination:
This newspaper win not
knowHngly accept
advenisements tor real estate
hlch Is In violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings

i

advertised In this newspaper

are available on an equal

SALES EXECUTIVE
R AHD l TRANSFER,- of tho
.. rgoal prlvotloy ownod lTL cor·
AVON I All A!Na I Shlltoy rlorw, lo oooldng · o hlahty
matlvolod poroon lo nwnkofM'o
s;-... :104-471-14211.
ouporlor Mrvtco In WHI VlrAVON to buy or
In- glnlo. S u e - condldoto
muot howo 2yoa. -or holghl
~:
or 01p. Wo eiiOr oornpotMhrw ollory

11

opponuni~

basis.

Help Wanted

::·:f'z'l:j

AVONWSALES
A-ogo $8 -$15/Hr Pluo Font...
tic DIKoUnlol SOl AI - k
_.__ Tomtory ~""""· tndop. Rop. 1-1112
.
AYQ!l Won10 lndlvlduolo lnlolod In Eomlng $8 -tiC lllr. No
o- -To Doif, 1 - - . . o
lnd. /Rop.
C.Uulor Ono
.. .-king Ill , •.,.... .nd I•
61wldu•" lnt....ad In be&amp;na
ogonto ra; phonM ona
In tlw PomotOJ orwa.
F« morw ln,.,...lon 018 1-.
472-3581.

73 vans &amp; 4 wo•s

..n,

NEW
Hover

35 Lots &amp;Acreage ·

wHh ........-

bonalll

PkB

to Incl.,. tu • ..,..., compony motchod r o l l - plan.

Conlact Cindy

Durr, 1 -543

WI on llondoy Fob., 20 bot-.12pm or lox to 113:183-05!1. EOE

w-

m.._
Plived Orlvw.y.•,

111 0130,

1100+11/F llonoh • 3BR, 2 Botho,

FR, Roal, Lorgo Yonl •
Pt.&amp;OO. -7111.
S _ _rk,, bottom
olotY
-·
-.
oompoototy
2
'"""' bOy 40'1121', rwor
:12'11231. 100'•40' lot,
301-ae:l·:mt:l.

Houaahold
Goods

•r•.
36.

Real Estate
Wanted

~-

Roolng ao-Url, 11.5 HP ong1no,
$821,1~ .. ~2041.
And
-~ All
llolrlgooMww,
-

RtcancldOIIM
... - - ·
And(Qourarooodt
Up,
Will Dollvtr. 814-41

r."1.:00

I

114

'

Good mllod ..... -.
l1.2141.50,114-1J1i2..31n.
hoy, _ , WOI,
11.21, Woyno IbM, Riel.,..
IIMhln Rd.,IM-Mt-2217.

a.-

TW.-

j_

To Cool! 11
Crap Will Pay J10t /Lb.
114- lttl.

=~ Dopollt Roqulrwd,

Transportal ion

~l« . rwntlnPt.-.

Supplies

114-lt2-1851.

Vl'RA FURNituRE
~~14-4M-31M

Ouolhy HN t hold Fumn~n
And Apjltlor-. Groot Doolo On
Ciiiih And cany1 RENT-2-owN
And _Low-oy Atoo Avoloblo.

Frao~Whhln2111111oo.

1117U Trwltor For Rant, 2 Bid&gt;
· 2 Botho,CA,AII Eloctrla,
814-441-1141.

WI-~
M-,....n.....
•-·

~~- tu
~

CB
Rodio, •lcrirw..., Rohlgorottir,
014-2811-12311.

·•··

52 Sponlng Goocls
Anno - Ga.
Turko¥
Spoc:lol10

.......
Uko.....

With lllng a SMIIII: flemington
3001, 11...... 1032.

53

Blook. brick, - · wtndow'-lnl...... ClooU. WinI... nlo Orondo, OH Col 114-

I:MU121.;:;:::;.-~~---tor sale

Autos tor Sele
=-:-:::=~::--...=-.,.,,.,..
71

11114

~

Cutlooo, l1100. :J04.

..,....,
Je!:t'
at

.-

eM-MtiD41

a Mdroom
rancher on llrl:lll lo1, $72,000.
304-,.2173 or reo. n
a•.,.., ntee

Sand Hill Roed. ~ bldi'OOfft, 2
botho, ottachod 28150 go-, e

acr-. sonwvt.. AaltijiiJ,
871-3030 or e71443i. ~ 1·

1
11211311

Yoy--·-

II

5-10 1884 .... 2.1 v.e ~
Point, Sl,$80, 080, 114-

,,

1430=

'13 SuzultiiCOioNIOO, rod, 31110
- · $3400, 114-tll2 3011 1101·

-.e.m •.-.

--

76

-

ttiNGfS 7
•

BORN LOSER

,_.,

~

1'10, YOU CAA NOT FUT A SCOOP
Of(AC£ ci£NI. IN YQJR SOOI'
fO COOL IT Off I

'

,

r

IF IT3 TOO J.lllT,
BWWON tTl

40 Etectrlc unlta

On New Year's Day, my wife and I
watched the football malches with a
group of friends. We called in Chinese
food. When it came to fortune cookie
time, I picked two, neither of which
CQntained a fortune. What are the odds
against that? Must b e enormous.
. Luckily I 'm not superstitious ; other wise, I would consider it a very bad
omen for the year.
Declarer complained about the long
Odds against his fumbling - going
down - on today's deal. But as is so often th e case, better handlin g would
have seen him score a louchdown .
In Black\l'ood, il you follow four no trump with five no-trump. you guaran tee that your side has all the aces. So.
West, knowing lhere was no chance of
a club miT, led the diamond jack.
Snuth won with dummy's queen .
drew two rounds of trumps ending in
hand and took the spade finesse. East
happily won with the king and returned
a spade. South turn ed his attention to
clubs. but t he 4·1 split meant a second
loser
Soulh started lo say something about
how unlucky he had been, but North in tercepted. He had noticed South's useful club spots.
"Not so unlu cky," he sa id . " Afler
catching the diamond lead and drawing
trumps, cash one of dummy's top clubs
and your second diamond trick. Now in stead of finessing the spade queen, exit
with the ace and queen of spades. If
clubs are 3~2, you are always home. But
here. alter East win s with the spade
king, he must return a club, which al ·
lows you to pick up his holding without

loss."

..,,

Syccessful Victmian Age

.~

mine~

in

Auslralia had valentines trimmed·
with gold )11ade to give 10 their

Q

'

wives at'jd sweethearts .

------:;::"-.- ... ..,

-

---

, 'I

'

Autof:lans&amp;

iviiNGf:S
IN Tt-4t

.,

74 Moto
lea
:::::~~-~rcy:.:::;c,::.:.~.,.,

'
·~

,.

Accessories

1171 Do ~1-'!io'l P-:

Good
..1101 - t y
Ev.-yt""!
114 141 •tt.
Budalt. Pitced Trll..ntllllane,
Uoocl' I - · oil . , _ - .
lng . . . . j ....., IM4'JI..2III..

I
"' ..

41
42
44
45
46
47
48

"
· . ...
Not outwardly · · :~
Mexican coin · ·
Can . prov.
· '
Fancy v:ase
,,..
Peer Gynra
·"
mother
50 Sweel polato

..'

..

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r

&gt;lEE D TO GET MOR. E
INTERE5TED IN
THE GAME .
'!,. A
WEALTI-i OF
TALENT
KID~

I

·r

Eact\ kll'ler

'H G

IG U

JNGULYM

XG D Y
W S I Y

JGIJYSRY

XP BY

U L PI

U L P ·U

WS I Y

W S I Y

)( y I •

PIZ

WYPULYDM

CSDHM :

x

P

.••

a v

FY 'G DFV

,,

~~m. ulltHI• a dopooft.

':~~::~~· S©\\~lA-.ltt.~s·

...

::::

. ..

ldllod by CLAY •. 'DLLAN - --- - - - -

1

0 four
Rearrange letters .of
scrambled words

the

be·

'•

low to. form four '*ords

I

..

..

SOF T RY

I I' I I .I
I1-. .,. .;(. .; 0ul~.,;. .1~. :.:,. .KI- ,.~1~
t

l........l..__j_.l__L__j_ N

J YT ET - ~

.,.

... ,.

I ignored
of the.advice 1
wasgettingconcemingmaniage. My Mom told methatmostpeople
, - - - - - - - - g e t advice but few are smart
MI S L Y P j
enough to · • • ••• by it.

.1. I. r·_ I.

l

C)

'

( omplere the chuckle quote d

by ftUrng rn rhe moSStrlQ Words
you deve lo p fr om srep No. 3 below

PRINl NUMBERED l ET1ER5 IN
lHESE SQ UARES

. .
'

I,JNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
10 GET AN SWER

OR MY
HO S.Y'~

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

:~

- ~~
..

-. .

•i

STRIKE ABLOWN Tl-£ Will ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP TI-E. CI.ASSFifDS,

•i

...
Truck - · Chov.l!;' Dodao.
""" 1-10, a
•~
11211.

I

)1

.• I
·1..1

Unmask· _Vouch • lndeK • Outwit - IN ~our MOUTH
Ourdaught;rwas in tears after a heated discussion with
my husband. You put your toot down," 1obse!Ved "and
wound up w~h 1t IN your MOUTH." .
·

IMONDAY

·'

. _,

...••
....

.. •'"'

FEBRUARY 20 I

- ~

...
..
...
.

'

..••"
~

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born on Hoc. 304-871-148.

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lor morw l - I o n . E.O.E.

DANCE WITH
REAL EiiRLS :

I D TELL YOU.
BUT YOU'VE USED
UP YOUR FIVE
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Business

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SUPPOSED TO

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39 Pllaoter

By Phillip Alder

Looc: Rod Hound Dog With 1
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10
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resort
24 Clayey aarlh
25 Unplayed
.
goll hole '
27 Whllrl
28 Heir otyle
29 Nautical call
30 Argument
31 Preposition
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burden
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36 Buulng

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Pupplao: Poll Ro41wollor a Colllo- 4 Block, 2 s-. 11WII1043.
Smoll yol- kllton 7 mo
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bath 10 ~ """-- 304-171-

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43 Ealory
45 Sllln opening

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11 Speclero
13 Rut
14 Harrow bond
15 Alighted
16 Grofted
(heroldry)
17 Fragrant
19 Droll agcy.
20 Brltlth
machine gun
21 Egg-ohapad
25 Second of a
26
27
30
33
34
35
36
37
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124 MulborTy,

NEA Crossword Puzzle

----------------------

PHILLIP
ALDER
REA TTIE BLVD.® by Bruce

: ;~

11)\ 1'._1,

In the year ahead,lhere's.a good chance
that ~you can accumulate the material
goods you've been wanling, provided . of
course. that you are not wastetul or com·
placent
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Persons
usually reCeptive to your sugge'Stions
could be turned off today if you act like a
know-it-all. Leave ample room lor their
egos and thOughts. Know where to look
for romance and you'll find it. The· Astro-

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Make i1 a
po1nt Ia take your work seriously today . It
you don't, your boss might have some

. "·

•.•

you . Mail $2 .50 10 Malchmaker. clo this
newspaper. P.O. Box 4465 , New York , choice comments regarding your value to
the organ1zation.
NY 101 63.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Strive to be LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) Do no! treat·
financially, realistic today. Y~u mustn't pin your bu~get like an interesting array Ot
numbers that ca n be conveniently
your hopeS on situations that will proba·
ignored today. You could laler regrellhe
bly never happen .
resources yoU waSte .
1
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) When nego·
t1attng a critica l agreement today, don't SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Although
you're usually astute at determining the
hesitate ·to back off if the term s mal&lt;e you
uncomfortable . II is better to lace this ret!l value ot merchandise, today there's
a chance !his facully mighl no1 be operanow instead of later.
tive.
Use caution when purchasing.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Your
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
progress could come to a screeching halt
Unfortunately,
this
is not a day when you
loday if you depen~ loa heavily on olh·
ers . Do no! ask anyone· else to do lhings can take promises at face value, especially from an individUal who has let you
you can take care of yourself.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Business down in tho past.
and ,pleasure won'l mi• well 1Qday. 11 C.(PRICORH (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Try 10
would prove wise to temporarily forego · stay optimistic about ,your commercial
trying to promote a commerci~l matter in dealings today , but don'1 e&gt;pect big
· returns from uhprofitable arrangements.
a social seHing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·feb. t9) Remain
LEO '(July 23·Aug. 22) All hough you
may think you're wot1&lt;ing for !he general modest and honest today when describgood .today 1 others might see it different- ing your achievements. even ·when yOu
ly . Clarify your inlenllons lo avoid being converse wfth people whom You know tor
a la~t grossly eKaggerate their own .
perceived as selfish.

.

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�Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Divor~ed

Monday; February 20, 1995

spouse: -Social Security still CC:tres

By Ed Pete..-, mauger
·
Society Security Oflke, Athells

even higher if your ex-spi&gt;use is
deceased. If your ex-spouse's earn·
ings were h1gher than yours, you
The marriage may be over, but
sbouJd ·cbcck with the Social Secu·
Social Security at least m:ognizes rity office to sec if you can get a
that the.-e are still ties that bind. higher benefit
.,That is why a divorced spou!IC may
When you apply for benefits,
be eligible to ~ve Social Securi· you will need your ex-spouse's
ty benefits on the rcconl of IIC%/his Social Security number. If you
ex if the marriage lasted 10 years or don !t have the Social Security
more.
number, you will need to ~vide
Benefits available include' min:- · bislher dale and place of birth and .
ment benefitS for spouses at age 62, his parents names.
_and survivors benefits at age 60, or
You can get more information
a~e S0-59 if the spouse becomes
24 hours a day by calling Social
disabled. If you are a spouse with a Security's toll-free nulnbei, 1-800child of the worker in your care 772-1213. You can speak to a serreceiving benefits, you may be vice rerresentative between the
Dl)LCIMER WORKSHOP - De1111 Eades, a dulcimer crafls.
entitled 10 a benefit at any age.
hours o 7 aJ!I. and 7 p.m. on busiman from Seneca, S. ·c.. wiD be one of the ·instructions at a dulIf your ex -spouse has remarried, ness days. Our lines are busiest
.cimer workshop to be held Tuesday and Wednesday mornings at
. the amount of benefits you receive early in the week and early in the
the First Southern Baplist Church on Pomeroy Pike -near
will not affect the amount of bene· month, so if your business can
Pomeroy.
fits the current spouse can receive. wait, it's best to call at other times.
· Also, if there are young children Whenever you call, have your
receiving benefits, benefits paid to Social Security number handy.
· you will not affect the amount
being paid to your children.
R'ESTRICTIONS
BENEFIT
Even if you arc working, you NOTICE TO BE SENT TO
may be entitled to a higher benefit ADDICTS AND ALCOHOUCS
based on your. ex-spouse's work
The Social Security Administta·
- A South Carolina couple is in they sand and then glue together in record than you will get on your lion (SSA) will mail notices in
P.omeroy this week to conduct a · the first session. At the second sea- own record. Your benefit may be · February to 158,670 individuals
dulcimer workshop at the First sion the· strings are put on and
Southern Baptist Church on lessons~ given on the basics of
P,omeroy Pike.
playing tlJe mountain instrument.
· It begins Tuesday morning at 10 The participants are also given tips
a.m., continues two hours, then . on applying ·a finish to the dulPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. the American Health Information
Two Pleasant Valley Hospital Management Association and the
~joums until 10 a.m. Wednesday
cimer.
morning when it goes another two
Easy to play, Eades said that the employees, including one from Ohio Health Information Managehours.
there is an old mountain saying that Pomeroy,
earned certifiel!tion ment Association. She lives in
· Dean and Brenda Eades have states "the gifted play instantly and by the American l:lealth Informa- Pomeroy with her husband, Tony,
been working with dulcimers for the slow take a few minutes .to tion Management Association,
and son, Taylor.
niore than 20 years, having traveled learn".
. Wendy Deem, medical records
Reynolds, who lives in Fraziers
coast to coast doing workshops and
Cost for the workshop is $10 - technician, and Tracy Reynolds, Bottom, has worked at PVH for
demonstrations. Dean says he has which includes all tools, materials, medical records clerk, P&amp;ssed the over a year. She is a member of the
b.Uilt over 2,000 dulcimers.
and instructions for the completion accredited ·records technician West- Virginia Health Information
· In the workshop there is nothing of a dulcimer. Each participant examination in Columbus, accord- Mana,gement Association and the
to build since each participant is chooses from different styles of ing to Tony Hatton, PVH director · Amencan Health Information Manprovided with an already complet· dulcimers starting from $49.95.
of health information services. '
agement Association. She is the
ed sound-box and fretboard, which .
Deem has worted at PVH for a daughter of Don and Joyce
year and a half. She is a member of Reynolds.

:Dulcimer workshop
to begin Tues~day

who are receiving Social Security
and SuiJI)(emental Security Income
(SSI) di'Sability benefits based on
drug addiction and/or alcoholism .
The notice wiD inform beneficia·
ries of changes in the law that
affect the way payments are made
10 them. If the individual is CWTCnt·
Iy receiving benefits through a representative payee, SSA will also
send a copy of the notice to the
payee.
The following changes will take
effect in March 1995:
-All individuals who are
receiving disability benefits based
on druR addiction or alcoholism
must receive payment through a
representative payee. The payee
may be an organization or.other
person whose c!uty it will be to
manage the individual's payments
and sec that his/her needs are met.
-Drug addicts and/or alco-

holies must go for treatment for
their addiction when it is available,
and must make propiss in cteat·
meot or their payments will be

i~g.

TUESDAY
DARWIN - The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Committee will meet at 7

EAST MEIGS - Tickets for
Eastern boys sectional game on
Saturday at Alexander. go on sale
Tuesday in main office of the high
school. AU advanced tickets are $3.
Eastern plays Beaver Eastern.

ty with a concentration in secretarial studies are eligible to apply,.
· Also eligible are students currently
anendin~ Hocking College or Ohio
University in the Secretarial Science Pro~.
For application forms, interested
students should contact their business del'imment teachers, Student
Financ1al Aid Office, or Belle
Baker, Chair, PSI Scholarship
Committee, Ohio University, 306
Cutler Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Application deadline is March 17,
1995.

036

I

ty results from drug addiction
and/or alcohol~ may receive benefits for no more than 36 months.
For Social Security disability il)surance beneficiaries, months in which
treatment is not available are not
counted in determining the 36month period.
The disability benefiCiaries may
contact their local Social Security
office at the telephone number ~
vided in the no\ice, or they may
call SSA's toO-free telephone number 1-800-772-1213. Social Security representatives will explain the
provisions of the law in greater
detail and answer any questions
they may have.

PageS

Pick 4:
.1322
Buckeye 5:
5-6-8-12-14

Vol. 45, NO. 207

Copyright 1995

.

TRACY REYNOLDS
and WENDY DEEM
.

Christian Academy honor roll
ters, Jonathon !IIewell, Derek Put·
man, Jimmie Putman, Slirah Putman, Corey Sargent and Josh· Wilfong.
·
Supervisor's Honor Roll Seva Cline, Amanda Maynard,
Richard Misner, Christopher
Scyoc, Francis Wood and David
Butche[.

Honor roDs for the Fellowship
Christian Academy in Reedsville
have been announced. Those stud~nts listed on the honor rolls are
as follows:
Pastor's Honor Roll - Josh
Adams, Stephanie Baker, Sarah
Boston, Ashley Gibbs; Kayla
Gibbs, Joseph Howard, Holli Mas-

By JIM FREEMAN
· Bend Stemwheel Festival CommitPatron problems
Sentinel News Staff
tee, approached council seeking
Council also met with Jimmy
Pomeroy took another, step for- permission to hold the annual festi- Ingels, owner of Jimmy's Bar in .
ward in its Downtown Revitalize- val in the parlring lot on Oct. 6, 7 Pomeroy, and nearby merchants
tion Project with the help of a and 8 and to obtain a permit to Sarah Fisher and Mark Proffitt con$70,000 grant from the Appilachi- serve beer in tile_parking lot
ceming problems with 'the bar's
an Regional Commission, Mayor
Council approved both requests, patrons, Including broken window~
' ~John W. Blaettnar announced at the commendmg the stemwheel com- and people urinating in nearby
"lf''
village's regular council meeting mittee forits handling of the evenL
doorways. .
_ _
Monday. .
In add1Uon, DaviS and Bll!ei!JW
Ingels wd he IS willing to work ·
The grant will be used to con- discussed the placing of buoys with merchants and police 10 help
struct a grand pmmenade along the along the lower edge of the resolve the problem. Blaettnar said
inside of both upper and lower Pomeroy launch ramp to help pre- he and police officers would meet
parking lot walls - part of the vent accidents' like that which with Ingels in an attempt to remedy
grand scheme in the village's revi- caused the sterowheeler J~011 Mary the problem.
talization project, which includes to sink last autumn. The stemResidents of the Pleasant
building and facade renovation and wheeler struck a portion of the Ridge/Rock Street area met with
.a proposed riverfront amphitheater. launch ramp and sank alon~ the council concerning a chronic water
The promenade will also include · shore on the other side of the nver.
problem in the area.
permanent electrical hookups for
Davis said renovations to the
Blaettnar said workers would,
festivals held in the parking lot, Jean Mary, which was raised fol- within three weeks, install a 2-inch
Blaettnar said
lowing the incident, are about 90- line from the end of Pleasant Ridge
Councilrnan John Musser, w~o 95 percent complete. Plans are for ·to Rock Stn:Ct, which may renledy
is administering grants for the pro- the boat to return to Pomeroy for low water pressure in the l!fCB.
ject, said the grant funds should be t~is year's festival.
Pomeroy resident Nancy
available by July 1, with the project
"We're trying to build it up (the Thoene criticized the lack of activi,
being bid OUtiO contraetors·in early festival)," said Davis, who specu- ty in fixing the problem, saying
June.
Ia ted this year's festival should workers she has seen were e1ther
Musser said the U.S. Army drawalargecrowdofboatersfrori'l standingaroundorsittingintrucks.
Corps of Engineers received no Pittsburgh on their way to attend
During &lt;.',PCD discussion, council .
adverse comments or letters con- the Tall Stacks Festival in Cincin· members dlsc·ussed several probceming the proposed amphitheater, nati.
!ems, including the lack of ditching
meaning the corps should issue the
Jim Goodrich of the U.S. Coast on Wyllis Hill Road, speeders on
permit The project will' now go to Guard Auxiliary invited council Lincoln Heights and removal of a
the U.S. Environmental Protection members to anend a safe boating parlcing meter near the junction of
Agency for approval, be said.
class set to start March 20, from Second and Lynn streets.
. The village is currently seeking 7:30-9:30 p.m., at the Carpenters'
Other action
a grant for the amphitheater and Hall in Pomeroy.
·
In other business, council:
should receive notification later
Boaters from Meigs, Gallia and
• Approved the minutes of the
.this month from the Ohio Depan- MaSon counties are attempting to Feb. 6 meeting and paid the bills;
A .bellcopter wu used Mond. ay ,to alrlin tbe rigging to be
m,ent of Natural-ftesources if ;tbe start a local volunteer USCG A:
· • ·Merwilh a OUt,Hollow resiused 10 the old stack at tbe Gavm POwer Plant. Graver Tank &amp;
grant is approved.
flotilla and almost have enough dent who wants hooked up to a viiManufacturing Jne., Houston, Texas, will begin the nrst pbase
. The original $357,000 down- - members to get a unit started, !age water line that runs under his
of dlsmlllldln&amp; the 1,250-root stack by removio11 the lining withtown revitalization project will GC&gt;Qdrich said. The group's next pmpeny;
io tbe stack, explained Mike S)llhh, Graver's on-site safety
develop into a $750,000 project meeting will be Monday at 7 p.m.
• Discussed caulking around
supervisor. The Interior work is expected to be rmlsbed by June,
when the other grants come in, said ai the Carpenters'. Hall and all windows on the municipal build·
Smltb added. The portion of State Route 7 near the plant was
.Blaeunar.
interested people ate welcome to ing;
·
closed by the State Highway Patrol while the riainl was Iiftid
.Festival request
anend, he said.
(Coodoued on·Paae 3)
to tbe stack.
Jim Davis, representing the Big
,.,...~====-==-==~,--:_~=====:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::;"'

'

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• Taxes. Tags. Trtlf! Fees e'rtra Rebate nct.ded ir\ sale price

ri fl8W vehicle ~steel whefe appllcatlle. On a~,ed aedil. ~responsible lor typOgfiDhieaJ etrOI'S.

. I

•

., '

·

Monday • Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm
·

Eastern
Board
names
member-

ByGEORGEABATE
.
Sentinel News Slllr
The Eastern Local Board of
Education appointed Roger Gaul~ ­
the new board· member at its:
monthly meeting last week.
.
· Gaul will fill the unexpired term
of Ron Eastman, who resigned at
last month's board meeting after he
moved out of the district About 10
years ago, Gaul served at least
term on the board.
A lifelong resident of Chester,
Gaul has two children .and one
grandchild. He has worked at
DuPont in Pmkersborg, W.Va., for
about 25 years.
·
Tlie Eastern board may buy·
video cameras for the bus fleet.
. said Ray Karr, bbard president.
Meigs Local and Federal Hocking
schools already use similar devices.:
A video camera would ·not be '
_placed on each bus, but would !la!t
among the different busses.
:
"I don't think we have that
many big problems" on the b!UCI;
Karr said of the need for this pur-.
chase.
.
In other business, personnel
matters included:
• gave two da.)!S of assault leave
to high school. hbrariall Jim Huff.
Karr would not comment on the
board's decision, noting that all
discussions occurred i• executiws
session.
• listened to two staff
grievances:
• named Howard Lawrence as a
substitute bus driver for the rest ol
this school year, wben needed .
· • awarded contracts for the rest
of the year to Dave Barr as high
sctiool boys and girls ln!Ck coacn;
Margie Bartee as elementary choir
•
director and for the operetta; Arch
Rose as student council advisor;
and volunteer assistant softball
coaches Tony Deem and Paul
Brannon.
••
• listed Kelly Henry, Keith
Eubanks
and Linda Faullc as substiBy KEVIN KELLY
lute
teachers
for the rest· of this
OVP News Editor
year.
PAlRIOT - Buckeye Rural Elecuic Cooperative members came to
• accepted James Cowdery's
BREC's board of directors with questions and demands- including the
resignation as substitote custodian.
firing of its general manager- bUt weren't satisfied with ~me of the
• granted lin unpaid leave for
resr.?.'!ses.
·
Darlene Buckley and a paid leave
'We're concerned about the billing procedure," member Charlie Freofor DeborQh .weber, effective
man of Scottown said. 'They won't tell us what the procedure is, they
March 2.
.
wouldn't provide us with the information and limi!Cd our time to ask
The board also discussed, but
questions.
did not act, on infrastructUre needs.
"Basically, we learned nothing," he added.
The Columbus firm Landis &amp;t
BREC spokesman Wayne King assured members that their inquiries ·
Gyr made suggestions about diJ- ·
abQut the cooperative would be answered, and noted that some of the
uict heating needs and how to get
information they sought has appeared in the coopetative's member magastate
energy conservation money,
zine and other literature.
Superintendent
Ron·Minard said.
About40 customers came to the board's regular meeting Monday indi. eating they wanted a calm exchange of information and ·viewpoints, in
Last year, the district overhauled
contrast to a pair of raucous public meetings the board and BREC manthe furnaces in all four buildings to
agement had with members two weeks ago in Lawrence County.
·
save long-term energy costs.
.
But members grew restive when the board declined to meet openly
, To comply with House BiU 264
with t!Jem, optin~ to confer privately with member representatives for 10FIREFIGHTERS- No Injuries were report·
10:18 a.m. Aboye, Middleport flreflabter Henry
project grant requirements, tlie
to IS-minute penods.
'
·
·
eel following this blaze that destroyed a Middle·
Johnson, armed witH a water belle, and Pomeroy
board had to specify these n~.
Board President Gene Nance of Chesapeake said the action was taken
port mobile home Monday. Middleport and
ftreftghter Stacy Shank te11111ed up oalhe blaze.
Minard added. The district will
. to avoid what he called the "circus" atmosphere that highlighted the ~Rvi·
Pomeroy nreftghten responded to the Belinda
Cause of the fire is undetermlud. (Sentinel
qualify for additional energy savings funds.
·
· ous meetings.
•
.
·
·
.
Gray residence on South Secoad Avenue at
pboto)
Member frustration spiUed .over at the meetings in resporise to a new
·
.
Also, the board must resolve
10
septic tank problems at the high
charges
school and Chester Elementary.
BREC has smce changed the procedure, allowing members to read .
- Additionally, the di'strict may
build another school, Karr said.
The distriCt needs to pass a bond
Several small groups met with ihe board, wbich King said is standard
levy before June 1996 to capitalize
their next witness, but severai Cramer
told
police that Kaelin
told on state b u1' ld"mg f uo ds. Th esc
procedure at regular meetings~ in which members are allo~ time to By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
.
tha
s·
ed
..
..___
broadcast reports said it was Brian h1m t 1mpson appear
"'"'' funds 'would pay about 75 percent
address the board or ask quesuons. The board preferred the pnvate ses- Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES- After a "Kato" Kaelin, who heard bumps zled and out o~ breath" before of building costs.
sions to avoid repetition of questio"" and concerns, King added.
In othcr11etion, the board:
A group of Lawrence County members COI!fcrred wit!l ~ board for weekend of inspection by O.J. oo the wall of his guest house on _ h:avJ~g [or Chicago th.~t mght,
_more than 40 minutes with a list pf gu_estions !!nd de..l!lll!ll1s. !lll.c._gllling Simpson's scientific cxper1s in. the Simpson estale on June 12, the. allcgJng that Kaelm , ~.greatl-Y~--- • retained Means Bichimer
muted" his account when he testiBurkholder &amp; Baker as its Ia,;
for the dismissal of BREC Exeeuuve VJCe President and General Manag- New York, evidence in the murder night of the mufders.
On the other side of that wall, fied; .
firm.
er Walter V. Truiu Jr., repon.edly over comments Truiu made during the trial is returning to tbe courtroom. ·
Cramer also claim~ ~ Kaelin
• accepted a new district poliCy
Prosecutors dramatically con- another glove was found by Detec- .
previous meetings.
.
. "We received no direct answer:S from the board on ·Mr. Truiu," groop cluded last week's court session by tive Marlc Fuhrman. Tbe prosecu- quoted S_unpso~ !IS teUmg hun after on blood-borne pathollens.
• agreed to let semon go ·on the · spokesman Ray Owens'said
·
carefully unwrapping a black tion says DNA tesis show that the morders, Thank God you
The group said what it calls Truiu's "lack of respect" for members has leather glove found near the bodies glove holds a mixture of blood were here and can ~Y that I was~! annual class uip to Williamsbura,
Va., and ·Virginia Beach May (g.
"proven him unworthy to serve in an offiCial capacity within this compa- of Nicole Brown Simpson and from Simpson, his ex-wife an'd hom~ whe~ tins thmg happe~.
Kaelm tesufled he was with Sunp-_ 24
Ronald Goldman and showing i! to Goldman.
~"
.
·The members' other concerns would be considered by the board, the jury..
Fulirman has been accused by SQn for pan of the evening of June . ·, revised appropriations and·
.
the
defense of being a racist who !'l,but did not.see hi!D for more paid bills.
·
.
:
·
Detective
Tom
Lange,
one
of
Owens said the group was told. '
.:.
,
.
Membeis in attendance were u(ll!ated on the board s responses foUow- the top investigators on the case, may have planted the glove. His than_ anhourd~g _wh•chthepros· '
• approved minutes from the
ing the meetings. But some members' discontent with the system · identified the glove and a knit cap lon,g-awaited testimony could ecuuon says the killings occumd.
Jan. 9 organizational, repllar and
begm
this
week.
After
the
cnme
scene
glove
was
records commission meeangs
remained strong.
.
. .
ded
and as some of the evidence found at
Today,
a
published
report
said
shown
to
the
jury
Friday.
it
was
. Board members atte~ding
Freeman, detailing his frustration W!th pnc1pg, ~xu:n
'!"'Bges
the ·murder scene early the morning
that
Grant
Cramer,
a
friend
of
sent
to
Albany,
N.Y.,
for
evaluaincluded
Karr ' Vice President Jim
other problems, _called for members to ~d together m fmding another of June 13. Lange was to return to
Kaelin
and
Ms.
Simpson,
told
tion
by
Simpson's
forensic
specialSmith
Greg
Bailey Mike Martin
the witness stand today for more
utility to serve them.
·.
...
. .
.
·
police
that
Kaelin
gave
him
ndifists.
They
B;~so
inspected
the
glove.
andR~gerGaul.
:
. ·
Boundaries set by ~PubliC ~~ues CommiSSion ~ curre~y direct examination by pr~utors
The next meeting of the board
probibit·BREC members from swtfl?lling, but Freeman said be IS plaru)mg and what will probably be a feeing account of the niglit Of J\llle Fuhrman S31d he found.
-ryte scientists. said they weren't · will be at'6:30 p.m. on Wednesday,
·lengthy cross-examination by the 12 than the one Kaelin testified to
a petition drive to have the boundaries changed.
"I say let's circulate the petition, get hold of our legislative representa· defense.
at the preliminary hearing.
lookinl( to get Simpson off - JUSt March IS in the high school
The New York Daily NewJ said for the facts.
lil:nry.
Prosecutors refused to disclose
tives, and get the laws changed." he said.

Board response irks
Buckeye Rural users

$8 688**

Low toaJabt Ia lOe..Ctoudy•
Wednttelay, cloudy. HJaba Ia 11M
upper 405.

1 Section, 12 Pages 35 cenll
A Mulllmodlo Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi_o, Tuesday, February 21, 1995

Pomer.oy promenade r--Up and away...
wins federal funding

Scholarships offered
The Athens Chapter of Professional Secretaries International will
be awarding two scholarships in
April for the 1995'96 academic
year.
A $500 PSI Scholarship wiD be
awarded for the lith year and the
$200 Joyce D.. Malone Memorial
Scholarship wil) be awarded for the
third year.
Graduating students from high
schools in Athens,- Hockin~!, Morgan, Meigs, or Gallia counbes who
desire 10 continue their education at
Hocking College or Ohio Universi-

Pick 3:

-An individual wbose disabili- ·

haw

p.m. Tuesday at the town hall.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPOR'I' ~ Middleport
POMEROY - The Meigs
boat dock meeting to discuss
County
Board of Elections will
financing set for Monday has been .
have
its
regular
meeting Tuesday, 4
postpOned. No reschedule date set
p.m. At that time tbe validity of
· LETART FALLS - Letart candidates' petitions will be estabT'Ownship Board cif Trustees meet- lished and regular business will be
.iilg Monday, 6 p.m. at office bwld· discussed.

Marsh aD
in first after
74-61 win

stopped.

PVH employees get certification

Gommunity calendar

Ohio Lottery

?~=~d:l~~~a.:.;~~~ins;::r;=~·;:~~hly
Top Simpson case investigator
~=~o;n~~~~~~~;.~~:!. inadditiontosevCilllotheradjust- '. back on stand as trial·resumes

.

or

M•

.
y

I

one:

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