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                  <text>•

Paae 10-Thl Dally Sentinel

Poinerciy-Middleport, Ohio

1a,1m

•

•

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
007
Pick 4:
3753

Kansas- . ·
tops
Kansas St.

People in M·P Rotary meeting focuses ·
the news on threat of tuberculosis _- . ~

Beat .of the·Bend... .
by Bob Hoeflich

Monday, January
.
.

'

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
First brother-elect Roger
Clinton was chastised for bis casual
wardrobe by a fashion-conscious
audience member at a local appear(AP) -

In case you've wondered, the
Royal Oak Dance Oub is alive and
well.
· . If you enjoy "cuUing a rug" this
would be a good time for you to get
involved since membership for
1993 is now llpCII.
·
The club Will ~e four dances
. thjs year the dates mcluding Feb.
27, May 8, Nov. 20 and Dec. 11
and of course. the dances are held
in the pleasant surroundings of
Royal Oak Resort-each, dance
gQeS from 8 to 11 p.m.
Membership for the season is
$45 and by paying your membership for die year you oot only save
money-price 11 the dQor is $15 a ·
couple-but you help enable the
planning committee to secure the
.1/ands in advance. You can mail
your yem:ly membership to Roben
Hysell, P.O. Box 143, Syracuse,
Ohio43779.
Milking up the 1993 planning
committee •are Opal . and Roy
Grueser, Robert and Julia Hysell,
Joanne and Mickey Williams, Joan
lnd Bruce May, Peggy and Ken
Harris, Toni and John Redovian,
Chuck and Lynn Kitchen, and
Phyllis and Larry May. Officers
this year are Opal Grueser, presi~ent; Robert Hysell, treaSurer, and
!ulia Hrseit and Phyllis May, co-

surgery but will have to stay nearby
for a couple more weeks for oulplltiennreatment at the !Jospiral on a
regular basis• .During the hospitalization period, Vicky and Ted will
be joined by Vicky's daughter,
Katie Da~is, who lives in Aorida
these days. ·
We know lhat you join in wishing Viclcy a successful operation
and a speedy recovery.
May Kelly of Middleport-the
wife of Marvin Kelly, former Middleport Village Councilman-is a
patient at lhe Charleston Medical
Center and would certainly be
cheered with some cards. The
address . is Room 3()7 South,
Charleston Medical Center, Washington and Morris Avenues,
Charleston, W. Va.

Bet you at times have wondered
whatever happened to Dorothy
Oliver and her family, Dorothy
was an outstanding English and literature teacher at Meigs High ·
School before she decided to look
at the rest of the worlrJ.
.
Well-the Olivers' were all
together during Qle Christmas season. They're scattered hither and
yon, but still share Dad Bob's
address, Box 445, Mason, W.Va.
sccreranes.
Bob, who still teaches at Meigs
The club has el(pressed regret at High School, is okay afte~ having
'the loss of Edna and Robert Wood undergone a battery of medical
and AlUla and Lloyd ·Blackwood tests following a illness which
who have !lroppcd li:om the com- sauck him 11 school in September.
. hlitree. They have been long-time Dorothy is still working at Chemimembers and officers and have cal Abstracrs Service in ColumbUs.
been quite insJrumental in keeping · She was injured in November'the dances going over the years. says she walked into a door in a
The two couples deserved their big darkened .theater in Columbus-.
vore or thailks from the club.
Come on, Dorothy, that's what
they all say.
There •s bad news and good
The Olivers• son, Lance lives in
news on Vicky Morarity, Wetzgall . Puerto Rico where be is copy editor
St., Pomeroy resident.
of the world news section of the
The bad news is that Vicky has San Juan Star. He lives in historiserious health problems resulting cal Old San Juan with lots of sand,
from a bout with a deadly sttain of sun and warmth. Make you envipneumonia a year ago and has to ous? The Olivers' ~ghter, Lynne
undergo surgery.
and her husband, Chris, are living ,
The operation involving the in Czechoslovakia. Lynne is
lungs is difficull Vicky has been employed wilh an American law
. referred to one surgeon who is firm-she's an attorney, you
reportedly the only one to perform know-and her husband is a parther needed operation using laser in owner in a couple of business venthis country. The good news is that tures.
Vicky is optimistic as she makes
Undoubtedly, with everyone
plans to proceed.
going in different directions and
Joined by her son, Ted, of Lan- involved in varied life styles, the
caster, Vicky will fly out of Olivers didn't want for conversa·
Columbus on Fdl. 10 for C~ tion during the_if holiday getGeneral Hospital near Los Angeles, together.
Calif. She musl be there five days
before lhe operation takes place for
No, I didn'tget invited to the
various tesrs that have to be com- inauguration either. But, hey, we'll
pleted. If she progresses satisfacto- live with the hurt and will just keep
rily she will be discharged from the smilin'.
hospital two weeks after the

PageS

ance.

"I'd like to know why you
dido 't dress properly," Betty
Yaeger, 50 of Palm Beach said during a question-and-answer session.
ill response, Clinton, in town
Friday to open the Palm Beach
Round Table speakers series.
stepped from behind the lectern to
offer 1he crowd of about 300 a
chance to critique his ouifit.
He wore a baggy navy blue
jacket, white shirt, !lrown dress
Hush Puppies shoes, a festive
Uncle Sam tie and blucjcans.
"I'm sorry. ma'am," Clinton
said. "If I'd liad time I'd have
sewed litde rainbows on my pockets like you've got on yours, but I
thought judging l?eople by !heir
,clothes went pul m the 1950s or
'60s."
Ms. Yaeger defended her commenrs la!er.
"Everything was wrinkled and
his hair was unkempt. He was
.d irty," she said. "He shouldn't
'embarrass his brother lhat way:"

••
Vol. 43, No. 111
l'.opyrlghted 1ea3

America's first combat troops head home

•

INGEU .E,LECTRONICS
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RACINE - A meeting on agricultural law will be held on Tuesday at Southern High School in
Racine. The session will be held
from 7 to 9:30p.m. in the vocational agriculture classroom. Fencing
laws, dog laws, water righrs, underground storage tanks and many
ot¥r laws affecting farmers will be
discussed. The session is sponsoredby the Adult Basic Education Cen• ter of Tri-County Vocational
School, as a patt of its continuing
education progrnm. The meeting i£
open to tl1e p.ublic at no charge.

MONDAY
POMEROY - A financial aid
workshop will be held Monday at 7
p.m. at the Meigs High School
library for all Meigs County
seniors and parents. Guest ~ers
will be John Hill of the University
of Rio Grande on the Financial Aid
Form (FAF), and Melony QJeenwood of Bank One on student
granrs and loans.
~ RACINE - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet Monday at
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
. Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the home
of the clerk, Patty Calaway, for
1993 appropriations.

\

TUESDAY
CHESTER- The Meigs Co11111Y
Livestock Sale and Show sub-corbmitleeS have scheduled meetings to
review 1992 livestock rules and
regulations and to make recornmendations to the 1993 senior fair
board. The meetings are open to
any 4-H or FFA member, parent or
advisor. The swine sub-committee
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.rri. at
Chester Elementary.

.

POMEROY - American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, Tuesday. Dinner at 7
p.m., meeting .118 p.m.
LETART FALLS -There will
. be a special PTO meeting at Letart

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT T h e
Middleport Arts Council will offer
a series of dance classes on western
lWle dancing beginning Wednesday
at 6:30 p.m. Dances to be taught
include the Electric Slide, Texas
Freeze, Achy Breaky, Tush Push,
Boot Scootin' Boogie and others.
Cost of the classes, per session, are
$3.50 per person and $7 a collple.
.Call992-2675 or·992-7733,

NEW YORK (AP) -The average American homeowner will
spend S1,100 Ibis year in energy
COSIS, a:cording to the U.S. Department of :Energy, which adds that
this can· be a bomeoWDel''s highest
household expense after mortgage
payment.t.
.
Since bolh major presidential
candidates sup(JOrted conservation,
tenewable eiiii'IY IOIUtCS and more .
efficient ~. "homeowners could be the leal winners after .
1 .•

y,

With the departure of !he 3rd
Battalion, 9th Regiment, fewer than
9,000 Marines remain among more
than 25,000 U.S. '!OOPS· There are
also another 11,000 troops from an
international force of 20 nations
operating in Somalia.
.
. "!feel tha.t we did a ~ood 1.00...
said Lance f"nl, Shane eaux, 20,
of Dralh, La
_ ~
. r.'I'm nor sure lhat the
mission is complete. I hope the
people come out of starvalion. I see
the way lhat we live and the way
that they live. Big difference.''
·
Somalia bas lost 350,000 of its
people 10 famine, fighting and disease in the last year. An additionsl

."I feel it's time for us to
leave," said Pfc. lames Brumfield,
19, of Baldwin, Mich., one of the
850 Marines from lhe 3rd Battalion, 9th Regiment, returning -to
Camp Pendleton, Calif., today and
Wednesday on chartered flights.
"The more we stayed here, I ~illion people are considered at
think the Marines would have let
Some Marines said the rocktheir guard down," said Brumfield.
:'The more .we stay here, we feel throwing they often had to endure
st's not a threat anymore and lhcn bothered. them at first, but they
leave w.ith a feeling ofgoodwill.
SOJileone could lltlaCk us."
· Some Marines said their mission
"It bothered me at first, but then
was complete. Others weren't so I r~ they were just kids and
sure.
·
they were playi11g a kids' game,"
Even as lhe ba!falion was lcav· said Lance C~. Antonio Valening. other Marines providing secu- zuela, 20,1!fC 'cago.
rity for relief workers came under
"You can't put most of the
sniper fue in scattered parts of the blame on the people," said Lance
country. U.S. military spokesmen Cpl. Nathaniel Willey, 20, of

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POMEROY - The Middleport
Literary Club wit! meet Wednesday
at the. library in P!&gt;meroy. Mrs.
Ronald ReynoldS will be the hostess. The book review will be presented by Mrs. Eileen Buck on
"Except for Me and Thee" by Jessamyn West. Roll call will be to
tell of a Ouaker custom

&amp;O·Ch. Scanner With Prlorltr

this election," says Frank Glover,
vice presiden1 of Owens-Coming.
An analysis of their energy pillforms by the building material
manufacturer found bolh President
Bush and Gov. Clinton willl'ush
for decreases in utility regulations.
The candidates' aim is to help
make energy conservation more
feasible and profilable for Qtilities
and homeOwners, according to the
study.
.
·

29
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GOING HOME • A Marine waves bls boardbig pass as.201 memben of 3rd Battalion, 9th
Regunmt board their chartered .iet for home at

.

Mo1adlsbu airport Tuesday. Ma.rlnn
returning to Camp Pendleton, '-•'"'·•
March. (AP _,boto)

By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
"We continue to watch Iraq's
AP MDitary Writer
behavior. We certainly would not
WASHINGTON- U.S. Air hesitate to respond if necessary,"
Force jers auacked Iraqi air defense · said Fitzwater.
sites in lhe northern "no-fly zone"
Meanwhile, tbe Vatican said
Tuesday while the Bush .adminis- today that it has accepted an Iraqi
!ration moved·a second aircraft car- request to ask the United Nations to
rier into the region with a warning press for dialogue and halt military
that more auacks could take plaCe.
action in Iraq.
Today's skirmishes in the northIn the first military incident, at
· em no-fly zone came after an Iraqi about 2:40 a.m. EST Tuc;sday. an
missile and radar installation F-4G Wild Weasel fued a mt~sile
"lOcked on" to one U.S.. jet ~a at an Iraqi surfa~e-to·air missile
second fighter drew lraqt anti-au- and radar mstallallon after the radar
craft artillery fue, a Pentagon offi- ''locked on'' to the American
cial confmned.
plalie. an act that U.S. pilots conThe rene":ed ~stilities- a day sider. a p~vocatio~, lhe Pen~~on
after a coordinated alhed attack on official satd, speaking on condition
Iraq's southern defense network- of anonymity.
.
came as the United States was
In a separate episode about three
moving the USS John F. Kennedy hours later, two F-16 Fighting Fa!into the Eastern Mediterranean, cons dropped several cluster bombs
within striking distance of Iraq.
on an Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery
The Bush administration warned site after being fired on by the
that more attacks could take place artillery, the official said. He said
unless Saddam Hussein abides by !he pilots reported "secondary
U.N. demands.
.
explosions," indicating that the
~ lhe White House, spokesman Iraqi gun emplacements had been
Marlin Fitzwater said, "This damaged'ordcstroyed.
sounds like a defensive auack." He
Also Tuesday, at about 4 a.m.
refused to rule out more strikes in EST, an Iraqi Mi0-23 fighter was
the final 24 hours of the Bush spotted flying in the northern noadminiSIJ11tion.
fly zone, the official said. When

confronted by an F-16, the Jraqi
plane fled soulh, he said. Also, an
F-16atabout3:45a.m.ESTreponed Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery fii'C,
but the U.S. plane did not retaliate.
The incidents were similar to
lhree Monday in which American
and British planes reported being
ftred on by anti-aircraft artiUery or
targeted by air defense radars in the
northern zone patrolled by U.S. and
allied aircraft
. ~~ about the time of Tuesday's
tnCJdents, 3 second U.S. aircraft
carrier was moving to wilhin striking range of Iraq to bolster the
Bush !ldministiation's warning that
more attacks could take place
unless Saddam Hussein abides by
U.N. demands. .
. Meanwhile, a second U.S. aircraft carrier was moving to within
strildng range of Iraq today to bolster the Bush administration's
efforts to force Saddam Hussein to
abide by U.N. deman!ls.
Called away a day early li:om its
port visit at Naples, Italy. the aircraft carrierUSS John F. Kennedy
with roughly 85 airplanes aboard'
was heading into the easter~
Mediterranean, a ·senior defense
(Continue on Page 3)
•

Wehrung re-elected as council· president

The two-story c~ment block chief. the lire Sllrted around a oatuB~JULIE E. DILLON
of the MGM Landmarlc property on . !age Hall. At that time, ·Mike
home of Rufus Cline located on raJ gas stove in the baseMent. Fire·
East Main Street. That person has Stroth, Pomeroy's revitalization
Route 7 near Tuppers Plains w'as men were on the iseene for nearly
Larry ~tl:::e~Staf!
gutted and all its . conten. ts four hours, and then were recalled
e
,g WI agam serve requested that the Pomeroy Fire
destroyed in 8 ftre Monday after- 'at 7:17p.m. when the rue rekin- as president of Pomeroy Village Department burn some of the
died and were thefe fo~ 81\0tber Council. '!\'~ was .~ous­ . buildings on that property.
Maypr Reed, as well as council,
nD&lt;JF~ppers Plains firemen were hour. There was no estimate of 1&gt;: voted m to tha~ post.llon at last
called at 2:18 .P.m. but lhe house dalnagc.
ntght:s ·regular mceung of the slated concern al)out burning the
buildings on the propefty before
was fully engulfed in flames when
The Pomeroy unit of the Meigs , council.
.,
they arrived on lhe scene. ·They County Emergency Medical SerA! the: council s last regular existing fuel tanks there can be
were J'oined to n~- ht lhe blaze by vice was called ill 2:23p.m. to beat meeung 1D ~ember, two me~- removed. Zirkle stated he is checkMrs. Beulah Cline who 1tu a heart bcrs were nomtnated for lhe prest- ing into lhat mauer and will ilert
Chester, Coofvil e and Pomeroy condition. The Tu~rs Plains dency -. Wehrung and John ~~t- council as progress is made.
fuemen with cech deparunenl tak- .
tnar
th each candidate recc
Obfo Power support
ing ICveral piccca 9f equipment.
squad again treated
. Cline at
- wt
.
tvm.g ·
Council
passed a resolution in
Accordmg td a report from 5:09 p.m. She was not uansported three vllfCS eacb.llJ .that case It ~s
T
PI
cithei' time.
up .to lhe mayor to break the lie which it went on record stating lhe
¥ark Boyd, uppers ains fire
vote.
desire to keep Ohio Power in
Before Mayor Bruce Reed could Pomeroy. Mayor Reed stated lhere
cast his vote last night, Blaettnar ·have been discussions with Ohio
stared he was withdrawing from the Power and Columbus and Southern
nomination and 1'CCOIIIII1CIId lhat to ~rge. According to Rel!d, Ernie
Wehrunrl be accepted 11111111i1no\1Sy Siss6n, office manager of Ohio
as president of the counciL
Power il) Pomeroy, italed nobody
WASHIN010N (AP)- AmerThey are not paying big!ler
Mayor Reed expreued bis knows exactly what is going to
lean worker~ are about to feel the taxel. They aim~ly had l~as tax appreciation to Blaettnar for his
downside ofP!elideiU Bush'• Cllll- widtheld from tbeir .paycllecb dur- move stating MWe had two 10011 happen. Revltaliratloa
j,aign-ye~r elTon to atlmulate the ing the last 10 months of 1992 candidatea. He (B'"ttn•) bu been
Second readi~- given to
·~ economy: a smaller tax reA1ad.
bceouoe Btllh wu ttyina to boost very aood In bil first year. He resolutions per1ai .· 10 Pomeroy's
About 12 percent ol c:ouplel and ~ ..,endina.
· kecpt e~waklna lllpdler. • downtown revlt szation. An
indlvitils acclliiOIIIed to recelvSpendin&amp;aclllally rose during
Pin ·
•t nporta
IIIIClldment to one resolution was
lng a tax refund e~eb 'Wintor will the flnt quarter of 1992, only to
Danny lrkle, Pomeroy Fire· to exlend the botmdarles ol the desact none this year. Low-and mid· drop In tbe .one~ quarter. Now, Chief, wu authorlzeclto purchue . ignated business dlslrict to include
ille-income Wlllken Will find dlelr some analysts worry that Jhe three new portable radios and one lhe putlng lot atona the river and
COUNCIL PRESIDENT ·l..arr7 Wemna, left, will again sene , •
as
president ot tM P:a Ill OJ Vlllqe CounciL ije- .......botlll1 •
refunda
reduced
by
••
much
as
rechm
lwnp-llliD
refunds
OVJ
the
mobile
unit
provl~
the
cost
lhe west side of Buuemut Avenue. .
1
·
elected
at 1ut nfabt'a replar aeellq ot tbe council. Pictured wt" :
$300 llld.IOIIIO who bid expected \ next aevenl weoka will cause WOI!1d riot eltceed 53
.
.
The fmal public hearlna on revi.·
Wehrun1, otrerlnJ biJ CODIJ'IItnladons, Is Pomeroy Mayor Bruce ~ •
to eeild a check with their retu~;ns . W01bn to curtallll*tdlnl just as
· Zlrtle reported to councll "that lalization will be held fuesday,
.
'
·..:
wiU have to make It a Ualo lltpr. · .
(Condnl!f Dli , ... 3)
he ha&lt;tl!een contacted by the buyer . Jan. ,26 ~t 7 P·!D· It Pomeroy VII- . Reed.

·Presid-ent Bush's economic
stimulus cuts tax refunds

INGELS . ELECTRONICS ·
1 4 1
"' "'

ftpten lbmv water on tile IIUies lnll~. (Sen·
tine! photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

Fire guts TP home

.--. ~

'

· U~S. conti-nues attack·on Iraq .

........

'

Auto Sound Ampllllecl

SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club of
Syracuse will meet Wednesday. ·
Bring items to make ttay favors for
February: red and white construe·
lion paper, red ilik pen or marker
glue or paste, scissors and a ruler. '

High cost' of enf!rgy

:vy

Chicago. •'Ninety-five percent of
the people were wanting us here.
They were in the streers sin~in~.
clapping, saying, •Amenca~'s
good."'
With the departure of lhe fii'St
Marines, the United States is moving toward transfering military con·
' trol of Somalia to a United Nations
Command, perhaps within two
eeks 8 U S iii
w
'
• · m tary spokesman
said Sunday.
But such a timelable appeared
unrealistlc an
. d designed simply ~or
public consumption to pressure lhe
U.N. to move faster so lhat the built
of American forces could return
. home sooner.
Critics say the U.N. is dragging
irs feet in adopting resolutions on a
d
comman structure and rules of
engagement- percquisites necessary for the transfer.
The u.s. military spokesman,
Marine Col. Fred Peck, said the
change in the American presidency
wilh the inauguration of Bill Clin· .
ton Wednesday could contribute to
dela
~n~er the current plan, many of
lhe 25,000 American troops will
h
t
d 11
·
P
ase ou gra ua y as secunty
unproves. But a substantial contingent of U.S. logistics troops and
staff personnel and a Marine
amphibious assault force afloat off
the coast are to remain after the
U.N. takes over.
·

~- lllll·plly
-~.
Cll**oJtiCIOfd.
tnOdl. AIAO·

~li.I'H!...

.... t&gt;t.H

said. No casualties were reported.
Since .the Marines landed in
Somalia Dec, 9, one Marine has
been killed and one Marine and one
COrpsDl8ll have been wound-

.........
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ar.w ........... . ......

GIGAN·T I

IIU$

160-Watt car Stereo
" Power Amplifier

7f'S

SALE ENDS

Now

Falls Elementary on Tuesday at 7
p.m.

B1 GEORGE ESPER.
AP lipfelal Cnrrespondmt
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- The first American combat
troops to head home from 'Somalia
ended a bittersweet tour today,
leaving a lawless, famine-sttiken
land where their humanitarian mission was often greeted by ·sniper
fue.
.
~ 202 Marines abottni the fmt
chartered jet to leave cheered loudly as :aileridants locked thll door and
pulled away the stairs.
· .
Minutes. later, they were in the
air.

...

1 s.ctlon, 10 P~gea 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 19, 1993

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Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before u event
and the day of that event. Items
must be roceived well in advance
1.!1 assure publication in the calendar.
.

Variable doudl-tolllabL

A siJibt tbante r# nurrles. Low
near :ZO.

Limked to In Stock Metthandise

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Tuesday, January 19, 1993

·;Commel)tary
&gt;

OHIO Weather
VVednesday,Jan.20

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUeada~Janua,ry19,1993

•.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Rain shrouds southern tier of United ·s tates

. Accu-W~lhef• forecast for daytime conditioru

Across' Ohio
.
this d,ate at the Columbus weather
Starry skies .and bone-chilling staliOn was .67 degrees in 1907
cold temperatures· were forecast for wf1IIe the record low was 15 below
. Ohio again tonight. The National zero in .1940. Sunsel rdnight wiU bC
Weather Service said lows .would .at 5:36p.m. and sunrise Wednesbe 10-20.
d,ay at 7:49 am .
· Sunny conditions are likely for
Across the nation
much of the state on Wednesday
Rai n shrouded much of lhe
before the clouds, warmer tempera- soulhem half of !he United States
tures and rain retllfT!. By Jbursday, today from !he Rockies east to the
the mercury will be back in the 40s, Carolinas.
forecasters said
Freezing rail! made for slippery
The record-high lemperature for

. '

The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OJalo
.
· DEVOTED TO THE ~RESTS OP THE QIGS-liiASON AREA.

ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

GOP wiii ·hold Clinton to "his
pledges·
.
. WASHINGTON (NEA) - On
cam,palll1
· irail a candidaJe
will.
..
promise anything. George Bush
learned that. reneging on the big
ones can CQSt you your job. Republicans believe that if Democrats
could' hold Bush's feet to "the t"u-e
over his prOmises, they can .do the
same for Bill Clinton. So Republi-"'
can researchers have been ~rinil
over every word Clinton. said during the campaign, compiling a list
of several hundred promises, big

However,"Clintoil prollliscd the
American people much more. Here
is a selection of the most important
promises the GOP will be wailing

. the

Robert J. Wagman
io see Ointon break:
(LT)B(GT)Deficit(LT)P(GT) · Cut the defiCit by SO pelteD! within
four years and make sure it· is proportionately reduced each year
thereafter.
(LT)B(GT)The economy and
development(LT)P(GT) - Establish a $20 billion !lind to rebuild
the U:S. infrastructure. Esta11lish an
Economic Security Coun¢il to
coordinate U.S. foreign econoJi)ic
policy. Create up .to 125 urban and
rural enterprise zones. Establish a
nalionitl lietwQrk of community
development baOks witb $500.million in federal funding. .
. (Ll)B(GT)Taxes(LT)P(GT)Give Significant tax breaks to people making IQIIg-term investments
m new businesses, and for )JClOple
and businesses investing in new
plants and equiJ)rnent Increase the
eatned tax credit for lower-wage
earners. Give middle-class taxpay.
ers a tax break paid for by higher
.taxes on those earning more than
$200,000. End tax deductiQns by

and SIIUI!l.

. Actualll, Clinton }las already
LETIE~S OF OPINION are welOQme. They should be less than 30()
kept one 0 his campaign promises
. words. All leiters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
- to bring diversity to his Cabinet.
address and relepbone number. No unsigned !ellen will be published. Letters
· There are more women, blacks and
should be in good tasre, addressing issues. not personalities.
· Hispanics in the Clinton Cabinet
~-:----------.;.._...__...;..
-.-~'!--~ then any in history. Tbe Clinton
· ·• transition team has promised this
diversity will be duplicated in subsequent sub-Cabinet appointments.
The new administration is giviil~ assll{lliJCes thst its inilial efforts
w1ll be
to.~eeping C!inton•s
two maJor campugn prom1ses: to
get the economy moving again and
By JAMES HANNAH
to bring health care costs under
Associated Press Writer
control
while expanding liealth care
DAYTON - A shooting rampage that claimed six lives may boost
coverage
to all Americans. Clio~ppon for gun conb'OI in lhe city but it won't dampen debate over lhe
ton's
team
is sar.ing- probably
· assue.
c~tly
that tf he can keep just
• ' Four people - 1wo young adults and two juveniles - are accused of
those
two
~mises,
Clinton•s pres!he shootings and ~bberies that began Dec. 24 and ended two days later
idency
w1ll
be
considered
a suc~ when lhey were arrested ·in the carof.one of the viclims. Six people died
cess.
·
. and. two others were wounded.
: . !'&gt;fayot Richard Clay Di,xon said be wan~ tO inslitute a program in
:~~~ch the ~1ty would .buy back guns from willing residel!ts. The mayor
,i81d collecung ~s m1jlht prevent impulse killings such as those llllsciciated with domesuc violence.
·
·
·
I'VE NbVI;R
'7ity Commissioner To~y Capizzi said he is thinking of JlllliXising an
o~ that would reqwre gun buyers to wait seven or-14 days prior to
purchasing a gun.
·
Thai way, spur-of-the-moment shootings may be averted, he said.
Background checks also could be conducted to ensure that guns aren't
sold to criminals or those with queslionablc menial condilions he said
C~pizzi said the waiting. period proposal wasn't prompted !ly the
shootings.
.
'
.
· ''But I tliink I may get more suppon because of it •• he said
.
Capizzi's plans are sure .to stir II)) the whQie gun~ntroldebate.' When
he proposed a ban on semmutomatic weapons in the city in 1989, hunilreds of ~~~ts showed up at City Hall.
,
. In a ~~~ to the. Dayton Daily News, Nicole O'Quinn of Tipp City
.C11!~ a 'Y~ung period a-"misguided" campaign thst would punish law. abiding ClllZenS.
•
•
; "Most crintinals obtain their f1re111111s by either stealing them or buy!!lg ~em from someone else.who stole them," said Ms. O'Quinn.
. B1H M~lntyre1 ~CSI!UID for the Nali0n8J Rifle Association in WashIngton, wd a wuung-period law would be "useless." ,
"No ':"'here ~ a ~ait!ng period lived up to the campaign promise to
reduce violent cnrne. said Mcintyre. "To focus on the tool these crimill!'ls use completely misses the point"
"
· !'fe said !h~ anawer is 101,1gher enfon:ement of laws and tougher prose~buon of cnminals.
•
Mcintyre said the NRA has no position on gun buy-back programs.
'IBut there are better ways to spend money to impact crinle " he said
:'There's no evidence these programs impact the use.of guns in 'crime." .

____

~ Sbpoting is likely to

:rekindle ·gqn-control debate

'eared

SEEN THIS TABLOID

. so 816!

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Committee assignll!ents announced·..,

B~rryls

World

OOUiROS 600\ROS- 6HAL\
Pa.J1f&lt;OS P(Jl)TI(t7S- 6HAl.l

Sotrr~os sou-r~s- &lt;,;KA.\. \

~C)\)'R()S ~~~&lt;YS

highways. and many ol\ler stale the committee will be faced with an
Wilh great demand and anti-complicity and suicide bill to
limited resources, I am sure that address the issue raised by Michi'
this will be a very challenging ses- gao's Dr..Kevorldan.
.
Agriculture is one of the premier
industries in .Southerri Ohio. As a
member of the Ohio Farm Bureau
and Obio •Fanners' Union, I am
excited about serving on the Senate
Agriculture Committee. In the past,
ilion as it relates to the Finance the Slate of Ohio bas been active in
Commiu.ee.
attempting to open expon llWkeiS
Wbelher it be police officer for Ohio's farmers. 11 is my hQI!C
training or stricter criminal laws, that we' can e.xpand these efforts
the Senate Judiciary Committee !'Dd continue to assist the farming
plays a pivotal role in considering .10dusll'y.
legislation of this nature. The JudiFinally, I am pleasetl to repon
ciary Committee reviews nearly · lhat I have been reappointed to the ·
75% of all Senate legislation before Senate Education, Retirement and ·
il becomes law; This year already, Aging Committee. As I have stated

I am pleased to repon tliis week

pro~s.

thst I have been reassigned to four

~ou·n~.os ~ou·n~~os-GHA\..'

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companies for "excesmve" execu· port training and skills developlive compensalion.
·
ment
(LT)B(GT)Health
(LT)B(GT)Welfa re
care(LT)P(GT) - Guarantee that reform(LT)P(GT) - Providt; all
every American has adequale · welfare recipients with meaninl!ful
healt}l care coverage, including the · job training. Require all welfare
elimination of the "pre-existing recipients without pie-school chilcOndition" exclusion from private dren to wort or do community serhealth insurance po)icies . .Set and vice. Allow recipients to save more
enforce a national healtb care cost money and prOvide llllllclting funds
cap to limit what con~umers pay for savings geared. to education,
for health care. Establish. a nation- .retitetllent or a ho
. me p~base.
wide program to provide ltealth
(LT)B(Gl')Crime(LT)P(GT) care for all children and pregnant Fund an additional I 00.•000 slate
women. Establish standardi:~!ed ·and .local police officers. Vastly
health care claim forms. Penalize ·' increase drug treatment programs.
drug companies that raise prices on Eliminate plea bargaining in r.be
preScriJ)uon drugs a1 a JJte faster prosecution of white col~ federal
then the riSe iR inflation.
.
crintes and demand that all· those
· ( t T ) B ( G T ) F o r e i g n convicted serve SOllie !ail time.
affairs(LT)P(GT) - Achieve 'a
(LT)B(OT)Energy(J..T)P(GT)comprehensive nuclear teSI!lan Oppose for . now, '.but study
treaty and negotiate a chemical and incre8$ed gasoline taxes. Oppose
biological ,weapons ban treaty with increased use of nuclear power.
all natioqs, Support a massive Increase. fuel economr standards
PeiiCe COiliS-trPe effort !tirected at · for cars on tlte American road. .
the countrtes of the former Soviet
Union. Contribute to U.N. popula- (LT)B(OT)Envirorunent(LT)P(OT)
tion reduclion programs. EStablish - Pass a greatly expanded and
a Radio Free Asia broadcast ser- toughened Clean Water Act. Provice. Support loan guaran~CCs to hibil new oil ~killing in the.Ala&lt;bn
Israel, oppose the creation on an Arclic Wildlife Refl,lge. Roll back
independent Palestinian stale,. and clllbon dioxide emission level$ ld
suppon the naming of Jerusalem as · 1990 levels by the end of the
the nation's capital. RedireCt U.S. decade. Begin a national solid
.
foreign aid 10 encourage and suP" waste disposal program.
· (LT)B{GT)AIDS(LT)P(GT)Consolidate ~d exp~d the government's anli-AIDS fig}lt by
increasing funding and ·appointing
THt. 103nl
a .single indi vidulil to control and
CON&amp;RES
direct the effort, Speed up the
CONVEN~P.
approval process for all anti-AIDS'
drugs. Allow foreign nationals with
AIDS to enter the country. Prom~
a massive AIDS lllid sex ·education
effon in schools.
.
(LT)B(GT)Abortion
rights(LT)P(GT) - Sign into law
the Freedom of Choice Act. Allow
for. federally funded abortions.
Repeal the '• g!lg order'' forbidding
federally funded centers from jliving ou1 abortion information.
Ap)Xlint jus1ices 10 the Supreme
Court who suppon abortion nghts.
- (LT)B(GT)Glin
controi(LT)P(GT) - Sign the
Brady ~ill to establish a waiting
period in order to buy a handgun.
Seek a bali on assault rifles.
Robert Wagman Is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Associafion.

influential Senate Committees: the
Finance Committee, the Judiciary
Committee, the Agricultural Committee, an~ the Education, Retirement and Aging Commiltee. One
of lhe most imponant aspects of
serving as a State Senator is the
work that is completed within the
Sennte Commiuee structure. In the
' Ohi~ Sen.ate all of the legislative
bus10ess IS acted upon within the
14 various Senate Committees.
The Finance Committee is one
of lhe most influenlial bodies within lhe Ohio Se011e. This committee
is printarily ~nsible for preparing the State B~ennial Budget Tliis
docume01 funds our schools, our

Sen.}an M. Long

..} J

l

I

in the past~ one of the keys to
assuring economic ·growth and
devel~t within our communities is having a solid educational
foundalion. As we continue to fight
for fair .and equitable funding for
our schools, it is.my hope thst we
will finally begin to see results
from our effons to improve our
educational funding sysiem in
Ohio. ·
· As always, please feel free to
call or write me, Slate Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
queslions or comments about. these .
or any other issues. My numbCr is
(614) 466-8156, and nly lllllms is,
Statehouse, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

Is Mideast peace finally at hand?
Ike's inheritance from the
Democra1s was a war in Korea.
Nixon's was a war in Viemam. But
never has a new president inhetited
anything to match the worldful of
wildlrres that will be Bill Clinton's
endowment on Wednesday at noon.
Clinton inherits a horizon
ablaze: a firestorm in Somalia,
whe~e he'U be an instant commander-in-chief; a tirestorm in Bosnia, •
where he soon may order war•
planes inro a multinational effort to
curb Serbs; and of course, his predecessor' s never-extinguished
Desen (Fire)Sionn in Iraq, wl\ere
his troops will face old dangers
anew. Also: a ID,IIS~ive powderkeg

with a lit fuse of ip·ca1culable grand advice in 1991 (they could
length - economically weak, mili- have read it in this comer, bUt no
tarily strong Russia.
·
aoubt they lot it within their inner
But with all his inherited woes, circle), BI!S and Baker channeled
' the spirit of the Persian Gulf coatitiQn · toward a co~gprehensi ve
Mideast peace. Result the hisloric
Meeting in Madrid - Arabs and
.,
Israelis who'd been in conflict forPieSident Clinton would be wise to ever wete instead in the same
swiftly build upon a great accom- room, talking irutead of killing.
. &amp;v-,_
plishment of the Bush ~idency:
Now Clintoo itnd his secretary
~by NEA, Inc.
tbe thrust toward peace m the Mid- of stale, Wllflen ChristoPhe,r, must
"YOUVEGOTTOHELPME. DOC .
dle EasL
·
move with speed and ~I 10 revive
The UN chief's name keeps going through
Never has the time been more the spiri1 of. Madrid, lest it be los1
rijlht for peace between Arabs and for the ages. They can stsr1 by recmy head and it"s DRIVING ME NUTS'"
Israelis. Credit Bush lind his secre- ognizins that - .Holy Henry! Lary of state, James Baker. Heeding peaceis at hand. Just behind the
public pronouncements and posturT_.
ing of all parties is this pnvately
.1. I
acknpwledged fact: . There is commoo ~ment on the broad scope
of the solutions. ·
.
By Tbe Associated Press
.
parole after serving 19 months at ai federal prison in AJabaina.
·
·n.e basic framework is ready to
Today is 'ruesday, Jan. 19; the 191h day of 1993. There are 346 days
In 1981, the United States and Iran signed an agreement paving the be negotiated:
·'
lefl in the year. ·
way for the release of 52 Americans held hostage for mo~e than '!4
.The Golan Heijlhts- Israel and
Today's Highlighl in History:
months:
·
·
Syria .undersland the land must bC
On Jan. 19, 1807, Robert E. Lee, lhe commander-in-chief of the Confed·
Ten years'
J8J'!IDese Prime Minisler Yasuhiro Nakasone concluded returned to Syria and Israel must
erate armies, was born in Stratford, Va.
two days of 1 w1th President Ronald Reagan in Washington on ttade have an ironclad security guaran: On this dale:
,.
and defense issues.
·
·
tee. Let the Heights be ~ by
: In . 1736, James Watt, inventOr of !he .steam engine, was born in ScotFive yean ago: State Farm Insurance Company in California Syria, but demilitanzed under
: ~and .
.
announced.it had agreed to PtY $1.3 million to scttle a lavisuit brought by intemational supervision. .
In 1809, author Edgar Allan Poe was hom in Boston.
lhree 'women who claimed to have been 'victims of sexoal discrimination
Lebanon - Syria, whose.fOICCS
In 1853, Verdi's opera "D Trovatore" premiered 'in Rome.
while en)ployed by State Farm.
· ·
· really tule Lebanon, can agree to
·• In 1861, GeOrgia seceded from .the Union.
·
One year ago: ArkansaS Gov. Bill Clinton drew fire 'from fellow keep the land free of .terrorilll;
·~ In 1937, milli~e Howard Hughes set a transeontinenllll air record
Democratic presidCnlial candidates during a debate in Manchester, N.H. Israel can withdraw from its buffer
by Dying his monoplane from Los Angeles 10 Newark, N.J., in seven . Gel1llllll government and Jewish officials dedicated a Holocaust memorial zane. This must be part of a comJ,9urs, 28 minutt'.! and 25 seconds. ·
·
· at the villa where the notorious Wannsee Confereilce had liken place.
prehensive ~·
: In 1955, a presidential news conference was fdmed for lelevision for
Today's Birthdays: RhOde Island Gov. Bruce 0 . Sundfun is 73. Actress .
·The West Bank - Palestinians
tbe fllSt time, with the permissioo.ofPresident Dwijht D. Eisennower. · Jean ·Stapleton is 70. Actor Fritz Weaver is 67. PBS newsman Robert deserve a homeland where they can
In 1966, Indira Gandhi was elected prime minister of India.
MacNeil is 62. Movie director Richard Lester is ~1. ~inger Phil Everly is govern themaelves autonomously.
· In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon nominated G. IJarrold Carswell 54. Actress Shelley Fabares ·is 49. Singer Dolly Parton is 47. ABC news- It can ~n here, buildirtg 'upon
to the. U.S. Supreme ·Courl; however, the nomination was defealed · woman·Ann Compton is 46. Singer Robert Palmer is 44. Actor Desi the Camp David accords. Israel
()ecause of conrroversy over Carswell's jliiSt ,acial views.
·
Amaz JuniOr is 40.
. .
I
'
'
agreel, In principle. but the two
• In 1977, in one of his last acts of office. President.Qerald R. Ford parThough I for Today: .: •Adyerusing has done .more to cause the social ,Idea disagree over die·extent of the
aoned Iya Toguri D' Aquino, an American who bad made wartime ~unres1 of the 20th century ·than any othel' single factor." - Clare Boothe · pom e~eh will exercise; yet each
Casts for Japan as "To~o Rose."
.
Luce, American aut!Jor, politician and diplonlat (1903-1987). .
. recognizel the other's inlperalives.
In 1979, former Attorney General John N. Mirchell was released on ·
A demilitarized, irms-free
•.

Martin Schram

oday·. I. n· hi. story-----------'!"""------------__,---__,--.
:t

•

autonomous Palestinian homeland
. on the West Bank lnUSI be IJIWIIII:
teed by the United Nations (and tb4:
Uniled States). .
Existing Israeli setdements on
the West Bank - ll's too much to
e.xpect them 10 be dismantled.
· These J~wish settlers, too, have a
right to live in pe8ce. One solution:
Grant.them a son ofilliJIIune diplomalic status not un1i1ce that of U.S.
military bases in foreisn lands.
Such c~xistencc can occur even
within a hoslile land: Call it the:
Guantanamo Solution, a Mideast
peace founded upon muiual semper
fidelity.
·
·
Jerusalem ~ There is.no quick;
easy solution. So let this be the No;
Solulion Soluliori. Let the comprehensive peace accord state that lhci
fmal determination of Jerosa!Cm 'S
status will be decided In future
negotiations. Jerusalem can remairi
· Israel's capital; cventuaUy, per•
ha~. the old E8st Jerusalem, site of
Arab holy shrines, can be an inter.;
nalionally governed city.
.
As Preiident, Clinton lleeka to
extinguish his inherited intcmalion~
al f~~e~~torms, let him not overlooiC
the imparlance or Rkindling !he
spirit of Camp David and Madrid
- prompdy and prominently, td
iilltjH urgency, unity lll!d impor:
tance.
Here's a:n idea. Let ClintOJI
name Co-1\mbassadora-at-Large
for PC11:e in the Middle Eui: for-:
' mer presidents Jimmy Caner and
&lt;le\Drltl Bulb. Let the llllhltecll of
Camp David and Madrid unite to
· fQrge the 119ace that can be the
JIMielt trilirilph or thel.r. OUI1, and
1 Ill lime. ·
Martla Sdaram llaiiJIICIIpited
writer tor N...,aper Enterprile
• ~· ·
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IND.

W. VA.

- -..........-Weather----Thursday thrpugh Saturday:
ThU(Sday, rain likely. HighS in
the 40s. Friday and Saturday. a
chance of rain. or snow. Lows
around .30. Highs in the inid-30s to
low40s. ·

--Area deaths-Charles W. Boyles

Roger E. Ackley
· Ro~er Earl Ackley, 45,
Guysville, died Tuesday, Jan. 19,
1993 a1 O'Bieness Memorial Hospillll in Athens.
· Born in Guysville, he was a son
of Dorolhy Young- Ackley and the
late Charles Ackley. He was ·a
·fanner.
.
.
. Besides his mother, Mr. Acl4ey
is survived by }lis ex-wife, Diane
Ackley, Guysville; two sons,
Christopher and Brian Ackley,_
Guysville; one· daughter, Tina
·Musick, Bluefield, Va.; one stepson, BiUy Turner, Guysville; and
one jlranddaughtet, Courtney
. Musick.
·
He was preceded in death by his
father, Charles Ackley, in 1988.
Services will be Thursday at l1
a.m. a1 White Funeral Home in
.Coolville with Rev. Charles Buck
officiating. Burial will be in Beech
Orove.Cemetery in Pomeroy,
Friends may call ·at the funeral
home lin Wednesday from 6-8:30
p.m. ,
;;;t."'.
.I

·"

Industry reports
weekly ·
:production

· Charles William Boyles, 54,
Middleport, !lied Monday, Jan. 18,
1993 at Vetel)lnS Memorial Hospi1111.
Born March 16, 1938, he was
the son of Julia Lewis Boyles, Middleport, and the la1e Clarence
Boyles. He was a laborer with the
.Laborers Local 83 ·of Portsmouth.
He was a veteran of the United
States Marine Corps.
Besides his mother, Mr, .Boyles
is survived by his wife, Unda Cremeans Boyles. Middleport; a
daughter,'Patricia Boyles, Middleport, a daughter and son-in-law,
V~ctoria and Chris McKinney,
Middlepon; three grandchildren,
Bethany Ann, Heather Renee lind
J~red William McKinney, all of
Middle~n; two sisters, Mrs. Joe
"Belty ' Lieving, Pomeroy, and
Janice Miller, CoiUinbus; a brother,
Marvin Boyles, Columbus; and
~veral nieces and nepbews.
Besides his father he was preceded in jle!llh· by a brolhet,
Clarence Boyles Jr.
Setvices will be Friday at I p.m.
at Fisher Funeral Home 10 Middleport with Rev. James Keesee offiCiating. Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery.
·
'
Friends may call at the "funeral
home on Thursday from 2-4 and 79p.m.

.•

FIRE SCENE - The Rufus Cline ho111e was
already engulfed In fia111es when firefighters
arrived on the scene Monday afternoon. Here

By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer
· CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. Endeavour and ils five astronauts
returned to Earth Tuesday after a
six-day shuttle mission !hat helped
lay the groundwork for the space
station and f'rred youngsters' imagi~
nations.
The spaceship sailed through a
·hazy sky ·and landed at Kennedy
Space Cepter at 8:37 a.m. A red,
while and b)ue dtag chute slowed
its ron down the conere1e runway.
"Welcome home. CongraiUiations on a super flighl and a grea1
stan to ·the shuttle '93 manifest,"
Mission Control's Kevin Chilton
told lhe crew:
Fog at Kennedy prevented
Endeavour from landing at sunrise
as planned and almost forced a
detour to the backup sile a1

Wehrung•..

Recycling

totals.posted

Winner named ·

....._...._to

U.S. con mues...

Hospital news

..... "...

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several fro111 the Tuppers Plains Department·
prepare to water down the first noor of the ·
structure. (Sentiliel photo by Charlene Hoenicb) :

Space Shuttle Endeavour ·returns

and

.

. I

Emergency . Medi cal Se(vice
responded 10 17 calls for assislanCC
on Monday and early Tuesday
morning.
. On Monday at 7:24 a.m. the
~utland unit went to Joe Boring
~oad for Bill Thornton who was
taken 19 Holzer Medicai'Ce!lter.
At 10:45 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Spring Avenue for Audry
Arnold who was 1ranspor1ed to
Pleasan1 Valley Hospital.
The Tuppers Plains unit, a1
10:49 a.m., went to Route 681 for
Arthur Heiney who was ta)(en to
O'Bieness Hospital. At 1:53 p.m.
the unit went to Reedsville for Ari- ·
zona Wigal who was transponed to
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital.
The ;I'uppers Plains Fire ·Depanmen t and Pomeroy; Squad were
called at 2:23 p.m. li&gt; a strttciUre
fire on 'Ro11te 7 at the Rufus Cline.
residence. ~ulah Cline was treated
but not transported. At 2:28 p.m.
the Chester Fire Deparllneht was
ci1!1ed to assist and at 2:59 J).ni. the
Pomeroy unit was called for further
assistance. At 3:48 p.m. the
Coolville Fire Deparlmenl was
called for additional manpower.
.The Pomeroy unil, at 4:31 p.m.,
went to Lakewood Rood for Anthony Perry who was treated· but not
traiJsponed.
·
At 5:09 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
unit returned to Roule 7 for Beulah
Cline who was again treated but
not transponoo.
At 5:10p.m. another Pomeroy
unit was called to assist on Lakewood Road to treat but not transpan Anthony Perry.
.
The Middlepott unil wen1 to
Min Street at 5:18p.m. for Charles
· Boyles who was takeri 10 Ve1erans
Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy unil reSponded to
. the Meigs EMS OffiCe at 5:19p.m.
for Gary Curtis who was taken to
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Al5:42 p.m. the Middlepon unil
went· to Mill Street for Linda
Boyles wlici was taken 10 Veterans.
The Tuppers Plains Fire Depanme~t was called at 7:17 p.m. for a
rekindle.. of the sll'uciUre fire at the
Cline residence on Rou1e 7. The
Chesler Fire Departmem was called
10 assis1 at 7:36p.m. There were no
injuries.
This moming (Tuesday) at 1:45
a.m. the Middleport unit wenl to
Laurel Street for Mark Oiler. He
was taken 10 Veterans,

(Continued rrom Page 1)
answer any questions about lhe
process. Council members and
business and propeny owners, as
well as !he public, are encouraged
to allend this jinal hearing. Application deadline for the village to
A lOlBI of 6.04 tons of recy- apply for grant money from the
clables were collected in 1992 Ohio DepliJllllent of Developmenl
through Middlepon Village's recy- for downlown revitalization .is
cling program, Jean Trussell, chair- February 5.
Guardrail installation
man, reports.
Council
authorized the purchase
Of the total collected '608
of
guardrail
which wiU be installed
pounds were· in aluminum from
in
three
areas
the village: along a
which the village had an income of section of theofriver
bank; part of
$127,37. ~ecyclables donated to
Run;
and
a
section
of UnNaylor's
Manley's Recycling Center totaled
coln
Hill
where
new
sidewalks
11,476 pounds.
·
Participating in the. program were installed sometime ago.
Committees appoi~ted
which gol into fpll swing in April
Committees
appointed by the
were 120 households, 10 percent of
mayor
were
as
follows : finance
those in the villaJ!e.
committee
•
Larry
Wehrung, chairTptal grant.funds received for
the program were $9,528. Of that man; Betty· Baronick ·and John
amount the village expended Blaettnar; grievance cQmmiltee $4,853.35. Total village match in Baronick, cl!airmari , Bill Young
cash and in kind services was and Thomas Werry; ordinance
$3,071.86 since the grant program committee - Young, chairman,
Scou Dillon and Werry; safety
required a 50 percenl match.
committee - Werry, Wehrung ,
chairman, and Dillon; zoning comCloggiRg_desses
mittee - Wchrun~. chairman, BlaetThe Daily Sentinel
r
Clogging classes wiH be offered
mar
and DiUon; msurance commilat !he Point Pleasant Senior Center . Susie rvtcKay of 34695 Bashan lee - B1aeu.nar, chairman, Young
(VII'IIIIMIOl
beginning Monday from 6:3041:30 . Road, Long Bouom, was the win- and Dillon; and park committee p.m. A $2 dolllltion will be taken. ner of the Jan. 10 mystery farm Blaetinar, Werry and Yopng, chairGary Willia!Ds is the instructor. contesL She correctly identified the man.
Everyone welcome.
. farm pictured in thsl issue of The
Pat O'Brien, Ppmeroy attorney.
Sunday Times Sentinel as that of
Soapbox derby meeting
was
again'appointed as legal coun·
The fll'$1 meeting for thtr 1993 Grover Salser, Jr. on Stale Route sel for the council.
Soapbox Derby' will bC Thursday at 124, Racine.
Other matters
She was one of two make the
7 p.m. at the B.Jue Streak Cab
Council
was aler1ed about a
Office in Middleporl. Anyone coirect identification and her name public meeting· in Mason on Tueswas chosen by Iotlery. She will day, Jan. 26 at 1:30 p.m. regarding
interested may attend.
POSTMASTER: S...d
receive
a check for $5 from the
·~~upection set
The . llolly Sollllnel, Ill Coatt sa••
Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co. who 1he toll-free service for lelephone
Pwa•IUfl OHio 45781.
Boswonh Council No. 46,
exchanges between Mason and
R.S .M. will have annual in~tion, co-sponsors the contest with the Middleport and Pomeroy.
81Jl18CIIIPTION IIATU
··
. Byeu.t•or- Bo•to
Royal Master degree, Fr•day at Meigs Soil Conservation Service. . It was reported that plans for the
()ne Week. ...............................:.....~~~-··••·80
7:30p.m. at the Middlepon Mason•
purchase of the fpnner Pomeroy
&lt;&gt;ne Moatla .............,•.•,......... _ ........... te.96
. ic Temple.
·
t
One Yoor......................................... tl3.20
junior
high building by the village
IINGUI COP!'
(Condnued
rrom
l'age
1)
will
be
finalized on Jan. 26 with the
PRICB
.
DaO~ ........... ,................................Ia c ..r.
official disclosed.
Meigs Local BOIII'd of ~lion.
Froni the eastern Mediterranean,
A police department matter was
.
Sablcribei.llllldeolriq "' .., lho ..intthe
carrier's
A-6
Intruder,
FA·l8
discussed
in executi"!' session.
.. "'"l' nmll in ......., Ia Tho
Veterau Memorial
DaOy Sonllnol Oft a ~ liz 0&lt; 12
Hornet
and
Qther
altack
aircraft
Council
members whoae terms
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
-~~~- cr.ul wtllbl ..... would
be
in
position
to
launch
were
up
were
reminded 10 pick up
Bet!}' Staltord, t.fiddlelJort.
attacks
o~
conduct
suryeU~ance
a
petiuon
from
the Meigs Councy
MONDAY DISCHA,~GES No nbicalptla by ' tUil pendtt.cl in
anywhere
m
Iraq,
bUI
mainly
10
the
Board
of
Elec1ions
by Feb. 18.
Dennis Hart and Mary H4ggerty. .
av•ilUJ&amp;
•
~orthem "no-fly zone," the offi, . Council members whose terms are ·,
llallcia! said.ffi
. ial. speakin,
. · up include Betty BarQnick, Bill
The
o
IC
•
g
on
condi• Young Thoinas Werry and Larry
1s w..u..............................,..........
tifJII of anonymity, said mo.v!n&amp; the W~g.
Pick 3 Numben
·aw-...............................,.1...- .., .11
· 62W..U.....................,.................... .78
Ken11edy was a precauuonary
Adam Jenkins a member of
0-0-7
.
o.
.....
•••
en.~
(zero, zero, seven)
move, not ~~sarily ~of a ~lao Pomeroy Boy Seoul Troop 249,
w..u.......................:................
'"Weeki..........................................
.ao
Pick 4 Nu111ber1
for further !Dilitary. ac~t~n agunst auended the meeting as a_ require.M w.ta,,,,,,,,,.,...............................
!t-1· The carrier USS .Kitty Hawk ment for his second class badke in
3-7-S-3
IS on station in the PcrsiBD Gulf.
community service. .
·
(tbrecl, lleYen, five, ~)

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Meigs announcements
- Domestic coal production
'rotaled 18.4 million tons dl.lring the
Meeting chauge ·
week ending ran. 9, up 27 percent
A· meeting of the Letart PTO
'from · the 14.5 million tons pro- sched11led for tonight (Tuesday)
duced the previous week, the U.S. has been changed to Thursday
·Departlllenfof Energy reported.
· night at7 p.m. at the'school.
· The pievious week included the '
LCCDtomeet
The ·Leading Creek Conservan'New Year's holiday..
cy Disaict will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the office.
· .The U.S. coal indusll'y produced
AA group to meet
19.8 million Ions in !he same week
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
lasl year, the department's Energy meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Saered
Infonnation Administration said
Heart Calhohc Church. Call 992Wyoming ranked first among 5763 for informalion.
the 26 .coal-producipg states with
Lodge to meet
3.6 million tons p{oduced. West
The . Racine Lodge No. 461
Virsilria was second at 3.3 million F&amp;AM will hold a special meeting
ions,
Kentucky was third at 3.1 1onight (Tuesday),at 7:30p.m. All
million toru, the agency said Mon- members are urged to attend. There
ilay.
will be worlc in the enlered appren'
tice degree. Refreshmems will' be
; Domestic coal production so far served.
thiS year .is 32.8 million tons, about
Group to meet
'7 percenl behind last year's proThe AJibeimers Suppon Group
'duction at this time.
will meet Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
The week's production accounts the Meigs Multi-purpose Building
'for bitumi.nous and lignite cgal.
·in Pomeroy. Beth Theiss will be
the guest speaker.

-.......
.......... c-..,.

roads in Arkansas. Oklahoma and aged tbousands of homes in CaJi,
t[le Texas Panhandle, and a nii~ture fomia and AriZona.
•
of rain and snow hit 1he Pacific
Temperalures in !he teens and
Northwest
·
·
20s were likely in much of the
Fresh snow carpeted the Rock- Plains and the Northcasl and in the
ies from Montana down to Arizona 30s in much of the res! of the
anll swep1 eas1.to Kansas.
nation except for the southern rim.
The skies cleared today over The mercury was expected 10 rise
Southern California, where heavy to the 70s in southernmost Aorid4
rain for two weeks has brought a . and Texas;
•
six-year drought clo5er to an end.
The high temperalure fo~ .the
Mudslides and flooding have dam- nation Monday was 84 al McAllen;
Texas.
•

EMS responds
toUnits17of calls
the Meigs County

• ICOiumbusl42" I

South Central
, Tonighi, variable cloudiness. A
slight chance of flurries&gt;Low near
20. Chan~:e of snow 30 percent.
Tuesday, panly cloudy. High in the
mid-30s.
·

The Dally Senttnei-Page-3

·I

·, '

&lt;o

''''-•

•• · -

·,"'

Edwards Air Foree Base in Califor- pareii different ways of moving -·
nia. Mission Control monitored the slide wires vs. handrails.
·.
wealher until the last possible
The as1ronauts also said they
moment before advising shuttle were pleased with Endeavour's
commailder John Casper to aim for new $23 million toilet, which was
Kennedy. ·
·
·
making !t~ rirsl tesl flight. Tlje
Endeavour sped over .central. much·CrtllClzed tOilet has more
Texas and Louisiana before head- automatic features and greater.
ing over !he Gulf of Mexico and oil capacity for longer tlighls, and
into Florida.. More than .600 space crew members said they found i.l
center employees and guests gath- quieter and more convenient.
·
ered a( the landing saip to welcome
· On Earth, scientists exulted over
the astronauts home.
data from an X-ray spectromel«:f
NASA's first shuttle flight of abo.ard .the shuttle. Wilton Sanders,
1993 included a 4 1!2-hour space- an astrophysicist, said 1he equipwalk to gain practice for the build- . ment may have picked up readil)gs
ing of the space station in 1996, the froln a fairly recent supernova, or
release of a sa1ellite to link space- exploding star.
,
craft and Earth; and a demonstration for sehoolchildren of how toys
.Days earlier, scieDiiSIS feared
behave in weightlessness.
the
experiment was ruined by a:
The flight, which began bombai'dment
of charged particles;·
Wednesday. was the fllSt of eighl bUI ground CODb'Ollers
fixed One
shultle missions planned for 1993 delector and got lhe oiher working
and the 53rd overall. It added 2 1/]. a1 reduced capacity.
,
million miles to the odomeler of
NASA 's newest spaceship, which
has made just three orbital nips.
·
The asb'Onauts accomplished the
main goal of their ,mission (Coolinued from Page 1)
.
releasing a $200 million tracking consumer confiden·ce is building
sa1ellite - a few hours after liftoff. again.
A network of such satellites allows
"Potentially, this could have
spacecraft such ·as the shuttle bigger negative impact now," sail(
remain in almost constanl contact Jill Thompson, an analyst willl
with Earth.
DRI-McGraw-Hill in Lexinglon;
On Sunday, Runco and Gregory Mass. "I don't .know. that we Will
Harbaugh took lhe frrsl spacewalk ever know whether lhere was BD)'
by Americans in nearly a year. positive effect last rear, bul mY.
Runco aild Harbaugh carried each feeling is that it d1dn'1 impacr
'other to give themselves practice in spending at all.'
·
hauling bulky objec1s in· space.
Sandra Shaber, an economist
They also tried out 1ools and com- wi1h the WEFA Group in BaJa
Cynwyd, Pa., believes the extra
cash - up to about $3.30 ·a week
for most single workers and S6:60
for married people - boosted
spending lasl year. She agrees there
is a risk lhat consumers, having
Christophe( Hall, 19, of Middle- counted on sizable refunds in the; ·
port was charged with failure to pasl , might curtail spending
maintain assured clear distance fol- because of a smaller check this
lowing an accidenl on East Main year.
Street Saturday momillg.
·
"Bul !here probably is no1
Pomeroy police reported that going to be 1!5 much of a depress;
Hall struck the rear of a vehicle ing effect on spending as feared,"
driven by Christopher Gobel, 23, Ms. Shaber said
Pomeroy, 'which was stopped in
. In a typical year, more 1han
traffic. Ther~ was moderate dam- three-quarters .of file rs receive
age 10 the back end of the 1987 . refunds. Last year, refunds averChevrolet driven by Gobel and aged $1 ,026.
owned by Toliy Gilkey,.and moderBush announced during his
ate damage to the fronl end of tlte Slate of the Union message last
1983 Dodson owned by Willil!m January that he was directing that
Hall.
wiihholding from most pliychecb
be reduced no later !han March· I,
freeing an additional $2 billion a
month for consumer spendin'k.
Since in mos1 cases the changes
were in effecl for 10 monlhs, an
Am Ele Power....................33 1/8
Ashland Oil.. ......................16 7/8 expected refund could be ·reduced
by as much as $298 for a married
AT&amp;T.... .......................... ,...54
person
or $149 for a single.
Bank One...........;...............52
Bob Evans-:........................ 19 7/8
'
Charming Shop..................l6 7!8
Cicy Holding......................21
Feden!J MoJWI............. ....... 18 3(4
Gcxxlyear nR ..................67 ]/4
Key Centurion ...................22 1/8
Lands End...........................27 1/4
Umited Inc....................... 28 3/4
Multlniedia Inc...,.....,....... .33 1/4
Rax RestauranL ..................3/16
Reliance Blecbic................2 I 7/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ......,......... 171/l
Shoney's Inc. ..................... 23 1/8
Star Bank ...........................37
Wendy Int'L ....................... I3 1(4
Worthington Ind. ............... 24 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provldell by Bluat,
Elllll an!l Loewl Dr GaDipolla.

President...

a

Pomeroy Potree cite ·
Middleport

,....... '-·""'--

mru.· .

Stocks

..

�•
'

'

Page 4 The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

1993

RIIR

(

1812-1993.

..Sports

The .Daily Tu~d~.¥an!}rv~~!
Page-S

Redmen continue home slate against Urbana, Wilberforce·
Wilh tbree big viciOries at home Ohio Valley Bank Night. Game
last week, lhe University of Rio times are 7:30 p.m.
.
Grande Redmen (16-3, 3·1 in the
In spite of injuries tbat have
Mid.Ohio Conference) are looking sidelined .some key backup pefS911·
to extend the streak tonight at 7:30 ·nel, the Redmen starters·an: playwhen !hey bost Urbana University ing at a peak that enabled them 10
• for l:lolzer Clinic NighL .
post narrow wiris over Ohio
But Bob Ronai's Blue Knigbts Dominican and Findlay last weelc,
(16-2, 3·1) are riding lhe crest of as well as Saturday's significant
what promises 10 be as exciting a victcry over Tiffin.
season as their 1991-92 campaign,
The results led 10 Troy Donaldwhich ended wilh the Disb1ct 22 son, Rio Grande's senior starting
Division I championship and a lrip . center, being named Ibis week's
10 lhe national touniamenL ·
Division I and MOC player of tbe
The contest will open another week. Willi a 20-points·pet·game
hectic week for the Redmen; wbo average and 9.4 tebounds per out·
. host Wilberforce Wednesday and ing 10 his credit, Donaldson is shar·
Cedarville, the top ream in Division ina high·scilring games wilh fellow
I and.dJe conference. Saturday for starters Jeff Brown (14.6 points, ~
•

THIS WEE '5
G ES

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

NOV. 3o-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. 5-UNIOTO- 1:00 p.m.
.
DEC. 1G-AT WATERFORD
DEC. 1~-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC.14-AT BELPRE ,_.,
DEC. 17-TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
JAN. 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN • ._AT MEIGS-3:00p.m.
JAN. 11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING-1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
.
JAN. 23-MILLER- 1:00 p.m.
JAN. 27-BELPRE
JAN. 28-AT RIVER VALLEY
. FEB • . 1-AT TRIMBLE .
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. &amp;-MEIGS- 1:00 p.m.
FEB. 1s,.;AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC: 22•AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. s..RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN.15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT
JAN. 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 26-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHERN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12~AT WATERFORD
FEB.13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
JAN. 19-South Point - Home
JAN. 23-Pt. Pleasant - Away
JAN. 26-Ravenswood~- Away
JAN. 21-Waterford- Home
JAN.
-Home

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN
DEC.12-MILLER
DEC. 18-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC. 19-UNIOTO
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE-At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. 3G-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. &amp;-EASTERN ·
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE·
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 3o-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB. 13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 3o-AT TRIMBLE

SOUTIIERN TORNADOES
BOYS
JAN. 22-Trimble - Home
JAN. 23-(hesapeake - Away

After playing tbeir last six conJests on lhe road, lhe University of
Rio Grande Redwomen return
home to Lyne Cenrer this week 10
open a three-game home stand
against two Mid-Ohio Conference
opponents and one non-league visi·

'

'

GIRLS
JAN. 2G-Meigs - Home
JAN. 21-Nelsonville·York- Away

NOV. 3o-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEV
DEC. 21-AT FoRT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT EASTERN
JAN. 14-At WATERFORD
JAN. 2o-MEIGS
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

MEIGS MARAUDERS

•

EASTERN CONFERENCE

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

C•tralllhllloo

CJW10.......~........26

11
CIJ!VI!LANI) .......22 ll
C&gt;ulooo ................ t7 16
DcuolL ..............,.... t7 II
lndiono ................... t7 19
Atlanta ........- ....... ::16 Jl
Mil..................... t4 21

.
' .

BOYS
JAN. 19-Trimble - Away
JAN. 22-Miller - Away
JAN. 26-Nelsonville·York - Home

4
7

.l9l
.ltl
.416
.472
.471
.400

8
8.5
l..l
11

GIRLS
JAN. 2G-Southern - Away
JAN. 21-Vinton County - Away
JAN. 25-Nelsonville·York- Home

08
~

13-'

llJI
lOJI

Soolllo ....................2l

10 . .714

.........................23 11

w-. ...........
o.w.. su.....:.... n

,({/6

3

LA.
19 16
LA. Ci............ l9 11

.S43
.lt4

7.l
8.5
9.5
12

•

10. S..llaD............... Io\.2 1,026
7
11. Arizaao ....................?-2 9:14 12
l 12. "t'•hc-ne .... ~ .........l2-3
181
10
13. Pwduo .................... 11·2 737
17
tu-....................... .t:l-3 694 · n
t5. VNLV ......................9-1 647 . 11
t6.o..pTodo............9-3 562
8
17. C
"mt ....... ., .... l-3
513
ll
11.-.... ........... 10.2 49l 20
. 19. Voadiobilt .............. t:J.3 394
20. Pil
''""'~'"'" .11~2 316
•
21. "f:Hpn.Sa...."'"""1Q.3 J27
23
nu..a..-................... 12-2 m 2l
23.11C1A .................... 11-I 252 ll
:14. OIUO ST.................?-3 141 • 21
25.lAoaBoocbSI. ...... IH 111

t9

.416

...........14 20

.412

Odoor ....... . - , Fbido Sl V/,
TMlano 90, Synwao 70, ..u-ota 62,
Now Odeaa1 S2, Houaton 41, LSU 28,
- - V, a911a1 Collop 2l, Florido
18. 91. X..wck, 14,
8,
CalifOI'IIia 5, x..Dw St. 5, t.laouri S, St.

a,;p.m y....,,

PocltkDI...!Ga
Phoa&gt;lx ..................2l 7 .711

,,

11

..

WESTERN CONFERENCE

-

·,

. a_-

Jouph '1 5 Ok1ahcna St. 4tllliDaU 3. No-

s.

brub 3, lobo'• 3, r .. pt. 3. Wok•
Panel 3, XAYIEI., OJDO 3, Coil. of
~ 2. o._. St. 2. C....on 1,
Mn•ecbl•""' 1, RJioda ldand 1.

Major colleg~

2-0na'rillo t7l 1~..,...................... m

:t-anQdldd C!l ?-1 ..........................2lll
YoU. tct-4 ...........1!11
5-llodfonlllllnol (2) 10-1 ...............113
f&gt;CAPI! (I) 10.1 _ .....................-.176
7-CHESAPI!AICI (4) 1CJ.4...............163
I.Qolel MiiJl Oilmour (I) 1-t ............ 131
9-Aibllbulo Harbor (I) 10.1 .............122 ;
IO.Ihloo 10.2... - ............................... 54

OIMn I'ICII .... u

0eaopooom 16, c...-., 69

The latest incident happetted
Monday night following No .' I
Kansas' 71 65 victory when Rex
Walters was•hit over the left eye by
a coin as be left the floor. The coin
opened a small cut, but Walters
was DOl seriously injured.
Last year, David Jobanning suffeed a wound 011 tbe back of bis
head when an object was hurled
from the Slllnds after the pme.
"I'm walking down lhe court
wilh my bands in tbe air and 1 got
hit in the eye. 1 tbink it was a quarter because it was so big. 1 didn't
pick it up, wbicb was too bad
bec:a•se 1 could use a quarter,"
said Walters, tbe game's leading
scorer witb 23 points.
Kansas coacb Roy Williams,
wholrc team was named No. I earli·
er in lhe day for lbe fust time in
three years. was so angry his voice
tmnbled.
"Thal"s bappened two times
now. Two teams played their butts
·.. indi' 'dual
off and some sic..
YJ
does
""'
tbat. We don't need tbat. Wbatever
more, 3 points).
,
individual did tbat is sick."
~one staJted Ibis week at 13:-f
1n the only Dlher Top 25 games,
for 1ts ~to-date season reconlm No. 18 Georgetown defeated No.
some Ume and was 10 play L31:e · · 17 Connecticutll6-69 and Califor·
Erie IOnight be~ore ~g ~e tnp nia-Santa Barbara surprised No. 25
downstate for liS meebng walh lhe Long Beacb Statc 61-60.
·
Redwomen.
Kansas staned slowly against
Smalle(s club _c~ look I? a the Wildcats, sboolioa just 35 per.probable lineup Wllh 1mpress1v~ cent in tbe tmt balf. flie Jayhawks

Djl'lsloiiiV

r....
t-u... C..• Colbolla (:14) u.o ...c... m

2-POIITSioKIUIH CUY (l) 11.0.... 302
J.Jicdiolljlood (3) 1'2..................... .261
4-Sebrina Mdtioloy (4) 10.1 ........... .251
. 5.an. CGmory Doy (I) ?-2 ............... 11l
~-10.2............................ 154
7-Coaol W-12-2 ................. 1:14
I·Bdloiao SL John's 1-2...................... 60
9 · - SL JOIIph tct-4 ..................44
10.Molvoaftt0.1.;............................... .4t

s-.

Doy (1), F . _ Lllletond 26.

ina. Middletown Fenwick 13.

Muq-66.-oW

•

South
~St. 97, Aloom St.l7

'

.

~'2!
'
St. 79. Md·l!. Shono 69

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

""*' 7~,T - SL 73
Eulc...un. ... Go.pMuao64

t

E.

llonniU.6'7,SL_.o62

J-SL9t,:s.u.MDU.I6
]111101- 102. ow Domlnion 19
Ubenf 70, CompbolllO
Mtmphil: St. tOt, Ttn~fiiii!DTcch 11

TOIIJabl'op,.;,

Min. Velley St. 107, PAid. View 80
Mocehcad St. 79, Ailltit!PuySI

Alllala '' Cblrlou. 7:30 p~.
Wuhin&amp;IOD 1tiDciWu, 7:30p.m.
r.t1and 11 MUWI\Ikce, t :lO p.m.

Moraen St. 82, Debware St. 65
,.
N. Carolina A&amp;:.T 68, Bethune-Cook·

Del:mU. Dra1111,1:30 p.m.

monl2
N.C.·Aohovillo 72. Radlon169

o.w." Sin Allcmdo. 1:30p.m.

IUw&amp;an 11 S.icriiMft\o, 10:30 p.m.

N.C.·Wilminaton: 93, American U. 7S

S. Corotino St 84, Florido A.tM 74
SE Louili.ono 98, Lo,.to. NO 82
SomfGI&lt;l 81, N.C..a-..bon&gt; 66
Soulb Alabuna 85, Louisiana Tech 68
s......, 91, CcaL FloDdoll
·

Ttm.·Mutin 71, Middle Tenn. 67
Tcmouee 10, N.C. O.uiotte 70

Peoples
·Bank

When The Time Comes •.. See Us

For Your 1993 Graduation

®~2!f

Announcements. ·

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

Where America Goes 10 Relax··

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Middleport, Oh.
. 992·3345

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MUSSER INSUUNCE

Middleport, OH.
992·2635

111 SECOND AVE

POMEROY
992·2342

GUARDRAIL
&amp;
SIGN EREOION

Winthrop 106, Cen1. Connecticut St.

In the NHL.;.
PllrkiiDI......
WLTPU.GFOA
64 202157
W................. :14 II ~· l2 1141112
- - . . , . ........ 2311 3 49 1S41&lt;16
N.Y............. 2119 6 4 116182
N.Y.kloaclon .... 2022 4 4411417Z
~ ....... . 1720 7 41173177

1'1......... .......... 30 12 •

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POMEROY KFC.

Ad ... DI•Won

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HriGI&lt;l ............. 12 30 4
OU.wa ............... 4 41 3

•'
'

61 200158

,_

- . . . .........
T-ID ..............

s ...................
Tompoa., ........

•

v

60

T I'll. GFGA
6 60 165130
3 l.l20216'7
' lO 156152
7 1(/ 151154
6 ... 161164
2 321!1113

S•JIINDI......
v................ 2112 5 61 201133

c.ap., ............. 25 16 l

.... Anpt.. ....... 22 II
w.................. 22:10
.......... t62l
Son!..... .......... 6 39

l
4
7
2

l5178tl0
49 ti311S
"' 161171
39121113
14 131221

M-.y•,_..

(614) 992-6451

-

Toolabt'a&amp;alll..

1to110a MN.i'.llt.Dden.. 7:..0 p.m.

TIC.!LY•
1:40 p.m.
N.Y.......
,.7Mp.m.

FISHER FUNEUL ·HOME
BRUCE FISHER- Ow•er/O~rator

o&amp;

T-IISI.IAU,I:40p.m.
C1oioop It 'l\'loololl. UO p.m.
Lol ~ atlldm"Cncln, t:&lt;top.m.

.
••

:

..,.:
"~··~p.m.
7 ' J. ~. 10:-40p.m.
Wedr

t.,•••••

Ohio high school
boys' basketball poll

JUST DO IT.

ST/HC. .
6TIHL .

" .

Dealer

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N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

AP Top 15 college
basketball poll

·Prescription.
Shop

~ad

_ ....,.u IM The Auooio...al'loil, by

Ohio

Hip School A~c Aaoc::ia&amp;ian
with won·lolt NOOfd tJuwah

division~,

reauler-MVOn .. m.. of Jen . 17; fUJt•

ploce•-·l n--'

,....,
l·S«&gt;w

.

....

Dlylslolll

(17) 11·0 :.............................. 342

3-0.,tm M=1 wd.elll (6) 11-0 ......... 271
4-:l'ot.
(lJ ICI-4 .....................:147
s . c - - . . 9·2 .................... 163
Son-y(!) 10.1 .......................... 163
7-Cln. Co1onin J.L..................~..... Ill
S.AJU... (I)?-1 ............................. 109
?-W0011irt0.1 ................................ 105
10-Mouillon WuhlnJl"' 10.2 ............ ~0

' ....
0 ...... ,...

en

u ....... pollltlt

n-c...,.
36. 12·t.GniD Amooslltlna
29. 13 (llt)·l!oot Uyorpool. Slow Wollli
J-ut ll. lS.Qn.. WU.C. Woodll6. 16- 1
Homil..., 15. 17 (de}Umo Stnl&lt;o, T.a..
doScaoi4. 1?-C..W...t.... l!.

lltvlalcill n

Too•
....
l·WbiMhlll·Y - (:14) 11.0..........343
z.~ (4) 1:14 ......,.,................299

!-W;DW (6) 11.0 .... -:-......- .......291
..Qaaoja~ Voll. (1) ICJ.4 ........2l4

6-'k'de

efne

t()..J .,.,,,,,,.,. ..,.,,,,.,,..,,J .. 3

7-lloyllll Dooblt 9·2 ........................127
~~~ fl=iee t~1 ......... ~M mo-l~90
?-Ctnllol4 (1) 1· 2 ....... - ...................13
to-w......... c-H..,..11-t .......~4

a.a.v.

..

w.,_ Ul tct-4 .....&lt; .................,......54

·--·(I) "·

O&amp;Mtl ........ i2 ..... ,...

1:1-ao¥. VIlis Aoplo-11- -

.... 131..'T... Cll,
Tippeouoe 21. 15 J..de)~'f•: C"O..oot4
....
~ w....
16.

'•

\'

wilh Tmy F*li:, pilchlll', m • mi·

ftCI' 1cuuo oanviGL

TOI ONTO BLUE JAYS - Invited

Tn.;. Bo..... T"'y CuOIIo, Donn, Co~

Ken Dayley, Paul S~c W WDDdy
WJlliuns, pitch. .; Dominao Ced•no,
. Alo&amp; Cleno&amp;la. ....,... Olillin ..... Did&lt;
Sdoolilld. -lOpl; Sill- a.- ond
Todd. SteYenoo, oUtfielden, and AnaeJ.
Martine&amp;. catcher, UJ lprina traialila u

play.e.

Alnra., Mike Capel, Adaa Pownon,
DMI Reouie, Jtlf Show, aJ. Won-,
Bna Wlllon end Oabe Whilo. ~;
JoeSUMD.-Diddt·-.w;.w.
or, ond Cl1ff Uefd uol Rondo~~ Wbito,

cufteJ....

CD

IJIDDI tnirUzaa te

Dllll-n.

~, RE1\REMEN'T

'

1«~~ CARDINALS- A.....

. PLANtU~G

wUh Jae M..-. piccber, ead
Cnia Willoa, thUd ...._ t:-. .....,_,.

-·
10 .....

5-DoytojlCbom.·M (I)J-1 ..............163

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Your Local

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u. Wlllll wkh Bndr Andlnon:. wdiclde:r.

on • .....,,_, ccDACt.
.
BOSTON RED SOX - A1ree. ta

NolloniiLoaaYt
MOm'REAL EXPOS _;_ ln.Wed Ta'o'o

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How e
etate panel

B-boU

A•ertcooLoapo
BAL11MORB ORIOIJ!S - Apood

nm-~

w-

... Son-3

l&amp;n.ou at

.

Z.CloYetood """"' (II) 10.1. ..........301

~....,..l,llalf..t7

•

ForWest

s- Bu1&gt;on 61, Loa&amp; B01do St

UC

·Transactions ·

\CmUI

M.·Ulllo Rock 66,Jocb ...villo l9
Tu.u Dlriadan 66, Hofetn ~
'Mul9,1ndiona St. .. (2 01)

S2 110162
"' 1971112
21 147215
11 104227

--

Chico...............

Doln&gt;IL ..... .........

W L
16
26 1~
:!2 17
20 19
19 21
15 30

Southwest ·

"194167

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

•

PHONE

Pomero , Ohio 45769

Butler 70, Notre Dame~
Clevelaftd St. 11., Wia.-Green Bay 66.
Crci&amp;h\al72, SW Milec:m]. St. 5I
E.llllnoi&lt; 71, W.·Chiooao S7
KlnA,J 71 , Karuat St. 65
Miuowi 94, Couto! c.u.w.. 69
N.lllinaU II, YOUJ!IIlOwn. St. &amp;2
N. lowo 74, Widli11 St. '12 (01')
s.1Wnoil77. BAc!lcy 64
SE Miuowi 91. S. tluh 74
Volponilo 12, W. lllinoio 6l

T-

a.- It oa.wo. 7&gt;!0 I"!'·

P. 0. Box683

Midwest

WALES CONFERENCE .

•

~!b&amp;e.-.,

(15·1, 3·0 Big Eighi) trailed by
eight at halftime, but turned&lt;it
around in lhe second half by sboot·
',:
1'ng 70 percent.
The Wildcats (10-3, 2·1) took
their biggest lead at36-26 on a tip·rn by Anlhony B~ before Will·
letS and Eric Pauley led Kansas Qn
a g·--turrun·g 15-4 run, includiilg
-·~
10 suaight
points in one stretch. ·:
The Jaybawks took the lead for
good at47-45 wben Walters, wJw
had been ,figbting a career-worllt
scoring slump, hit a pair of f~
tluows wilh 10:32 n:mainiug. :·
No. 18 Georgetown86 -.
No. 17 Connecticut 69 : ·
At Hartford, Conn., Georgetown
.(11·2; 4-2 Big East) used a 9~0
spun midway through the SCCOfld
half to break a 56· 56 tie and
outscored lhe Huskies (8-4, 3·~)
30-.13 over lbe finai10:2S.
:
Robert Churchwell, a junior,
scored a career-high 25 points ai\d
• hm an O·"-lla
.res
u"' HarringiOn ad~'·
"':"
22.
·.
UC-Santa Barbara 61
No. 25 Loag Beach St. 60
At Santa Barbara, Calif., Long
Beach had a cbance 10 win in tjle
final seconds, but a close-range
·
Hams
·
shot an d a tap by L uc1ous
bolh missed.
. •
UCSB (9-4, 2-3 Big West) canle
bade from an early H· l deficit and
took the lead for good at 56-53 on a
3-point shot by ldris Jones with
4:47 remaining.
;.
Long Beach fell to 12-2, 5-2,
leaving it in third place in lhe COil·
ference.
•
•

90

Quoboc..............

WILL TAKE .CARE OF ALL ·
YOUR INIUUNCE NEEDS

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND RADIO SHACK
106 N. 2nd

week's slate wilh Cedarville Satilr·
dayR~~~&amp;::EN NOTES: L~ri
.
HamiiiOn, who was eighth natiOnally in Division I for her field goal
performance, notched ahead lO
founh Ibis week at 64 pen;ent. .. In
team ranking.s, the Redwo~n
.
•
rated thitd in lhe country 10 sconng
offense (88.2 points per game) l!Dd
sevenlh in scoring margin, holding
a 21.1-points per outing advantase
over .their opponents.
•

Tciw110n St. 81, O.arkrltan Soulhem 76

Put One Under Your Tree This
Christmas

CHESTER

By DOUG TUCKER
MANHATIAN, Kan. (AP) - ·
For the second strai~bt year, a
Kansas player got bun y an obiect
'
Stluotate.wn from lhe 'stands at Kansas

hungry Blue Knights, coached by
veteran Urbana coaching staff
member John Woods. Urbana
. nior
Counts among their ranks se
Debbie Fredrick, a guard wbo
played for Rio Grande in 1989-91,
during which tbe Redwomen
shared the MOC crown wilh Tiffin.
Hamilton continues as Rio
·G rande's leading scorer at 18
.points per gaine, and is joined on
the offense by junior Stepbanie
Gudorf and sopbomore Tricia
Collins. Filling tbe poini guard slot
is junior Gena Norris, witb tbe
· olher defender's position going 10
either junior Michelle crouse or
freshman Stacey Ritter, the team's
founh~best scorer.
· Pro le(S-6,
starters
Urbana an:
Fredrick
. !0.3forpoints)
and
Debbie Koeller (5-5, fresbman,
12.3 points) as the guards, wilh
Renee Stoops (5-10, senior, 13.3
points) and Sheri Rogan (5·6,
freshman, ~~ints) as lhe forle starting
center
·wards.
Kelll'The
e u-Kinney
(5·11. sopho·
15

14 ~1e · AniOOII (1), )L H""'Y 22. 16
(do)~ .d•rvillo, MiU.r Ci.1y IS. II·
Bocklno14. 19(lie~F-IIuborHIId­

11t,Dell•79
C.U. ol Chorloolm 97, Md.-aollimo!o

Ptrilz ' \ Ia 124. Orl.IDdo Ill (01')
Cllloap 103, a - 9l
-110. LA. t.obn 90
I
M'O 111, GoWen St.w 107
Now-..,IOO,IIIcliluVI
LA. a;_. 94, Mlnnoocu 9l
Sooalei1J6, Uloh 96

M·-+m , BELPRE 17. 16 (de)--

C - Noonoriol, Lonm Colholio (I)
16. ll·p.!um~No llldloy ll.

COWl~

East

"CenMnuy

MoDC11~'~r :ores
NowY. . 106.
. 103

,,. - - .......

11-Cobwbiana Cre•tvie.w (1) 26. 12·
OAK IIIU. 2l. IJ.Wellmlle 21. 14 (do~
Akron

onto the floor this aftemaon at 5:15 statistical credintials, as iivernges
against MOe rival UrbaiJa (4-14). for the beginning of this week
All of Rio Grande's losses- Fmd- show for guards Tanya Erb (5-5,
lay, Central State, Mount St. junior, 10,6 points, 7 ~ists) and
Joseph and Shawnee State_ bave Kalhy O'Dell (5-8, sophomore,
been 00 the road.
11.1 points, 5.4 rebounds). Forards will be T
w lker (5•11 •
The Redwomen will also bost w
racy e
Malone ThurSday at 7 p.m. ·.
freshman, 5.9 points, 4.4 rebounds)
Anotber encouraging factDr for and Deb Moyer (5·8, senior, 18.6
lhe Redwomen ·is lhe selection of points, 6.1 rebounds), with Pam
startiilg cenrer·J..oO llamihon as the Oswald (6·0, sopbomore, 15.5
confermce player of the week for points, 9.9 tebounds) at the posL
bee ellons in Rio Grande's two vicTbe Redwomen ·will close Ibis
~~~Hami~~
.
56 points in Barnes against the
MOC's Ohio Dominican and TifMurphy of IUPU-Indianapolis,
who netled.72 in three games.
But baYing tbat honor going 10 a
single player and a 3-1 standing in
the conference sbould make lhe
Redwomen a target for the win-

O!Mn .......... u .. - - .......
11· ..... Lonmio 30. 12 (lio)oCln.

basketball scores

1-'

Pia.

1-Do)'UII o.twcod (II) 9-0 ............. 3:10

Tuu Sodbem 71, Omnblini SL 69

BAUM LUMBER

goal percentage of 68.9 after lhe
Tiffin game, Donaldson moved u;&gt;
10 1hird natio!JllilrankYined~lh
c1117gorylhe
... 111e team IS
SIX 10
3, sopliomore) or Chris DaCosia counuy in scoring, ei~lh· in scot(6-6, junia) as lhe forwards. wilh
ing margin and IOih 1n field goal .
the possibility of both being spelled , percentage ($3.3) ... Larry Brown,
by Brian Copeland (6-3, sopho- father of Jeff Brown, can count ~io
more) if necessary. At center will Grande l!asketball for baving a
ptl&gt;bably be Melvin Bostic (6·6, hand in his successful campaign for
Junior).
Licking County clerk of couns last
Admission for tbe Urbana game year. Lyne Center facilities dircctpr
is free, SIICliiSORd by Holzer Clinic. Gene Moore arranged for Redmen
For lhe W'alberforce contest. admis· scoring legend Clarence "Bevo"
sion is $3 fa adults and $1 for non· Francis 10 be the special guest at a
Rio Gnmde students. Rio Grande · well-received fund"raiset for the
students, faculty and staff are Brown camp, where fonn~ alhleik:
admitled free wilb ID.
· director Tom Perdue served as lhe
DRUMBEATS: With a field mainspeakec.
·

Kansas, Georgetown a, mong:.•:
~~n'7t::p=:!l~~b~Ji..R; ·Top. 25 college cage winners ··

Dl.tJIOD ID

Ttam'

1

.m

Mldw•tDtW L Pd.
tlWI .....................:14 11 .616
Son An-.. --....21 13 .611
............... .... 19 16 .S43
Den-.................. 10 24, .294
MUu&gt;,o... ................7 2l .219
Dollu .................... .2 30 .063

NOV. 3o-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7- VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1G-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14"-AT MILLER
DEC, 17-BELP!=IE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 1-SOUTHERN
JAN. &amp;-EASTERN
JAN. 11~EDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2G-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 2&amp;-NELSONVILLE-VORK
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB. 1-1\T BELPRE
FEEl., 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. &amp;-TRIMBLE
FEB. 11-AT EASTERN

3
14
9

9. CINCINNATI .........11·1 1,014

Allaatk llhlolml
T'
WLI'd.OB
New Yca ............. .22 14 .611
New IeneJ ........... .22 IS . .595 . .S
a......................... .20 19 .lt3 3.5
Odondo .................. 16 16 .lOO
"4
Phlladolphlo .......... t4 20 . .412
7
11 ~ .314 111.5
Miomi .................... to :14 .294
n

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. 8-TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-,-AT ATHI:NS
DEC. 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. s-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9-ATHENS
JAN. 12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN.15-ALEXANDER
JAN. 16-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN. 19-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
JAN. 26-NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2- AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB.12-50UTHERN
FEB. 16-VINTON COUNTY

lOr.
(13·1) Ibis week. Dave Smalley' s
Playing on their home court . young but competitive teiun posted
should improve lhe Redwomen's · an encouraging start in the early
growing status wilhin Division I, season, but have played all of !hear
where !heir 14-4 record has placed games on lhc road since Dec. 19,
them second bebind Central State resulting in a 4-2 finish as they go

6. Duko .: ............... .....12.2 1)39
1. VUJinlo (3) . ............11-o 1.232
8 . -.................12.-1 1,164

lntheNBA ...

MEIGS
1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

.

will

Scor·choard

.

Teom

.

.

\

1992 GIRLS' SCHEDUU

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

amc

g Joining them
be IOpbomore
Walter Stephens (9 points) as lbe
small forward and senior Lyndell
Snyda (2 points) at the poinL
Urbana will answer lhe cbal·
lenge wilh Jerry Ligon (5-9, junior,
20.3 points, 2.2 rebounds) and
Chad Miller (6-0, freshman, 3.3
points) as ibe guanls. LigD!Ir: whose
penetration belped the Blue
Knights knock tbe Redmen out of
last year's division playoffs, will be
assisted In bigh scoring by for·
wards Wyau Goins (6-0, senior,
21.3 points, 2.8 rebounds) and

matcbup witb the Redmen will

include Eric McDuffie (6-1 , senior)'
and Robclt Cummings (6-l, junior)
as die gagrds, wilb Cliff Bro.wn (6-

Lyne Center slate should prove· beneficial to 14-4 Redwomen .

TORNUOES ·

GIRLS

Wade Goins (6-0, senior, 13 points,
13 assists per game). witb Art
James (6-6, junior, 13.4 points, 6.9
rebounds) at lhe post
Rio Grande 1s averaging 98.6
points per game Ibis week for a
17.9-point average margin of vietory over their opponents. Urbana is
credited wilb 104.3 over 18 games
and holds a marginof22.2.
·
Wilberforce, under lhe dira:tion
of Ben Waterman, is 4-8 prior to
tonight's meeting ' with Indiana
State·RiCbmond. While details on
the team's sJatiS!ical performances
have been sketcby, lhe Bulldogs
have counted Tiffin among tbeir
victims Ibis season. .
Probable' starters in their

rebomds) at forward and shooting
~ MaU Powell, who leads lhe
Individual scoring with. 22.2 a

•SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS . A..... 1D ..... wllh Joff RaM. .........
Oft •

.'

minor -~ COIIIaCt.

'

GU\OE

I

Bukelbal

NaU.allt*'"'B"M:odlt.loll
CHICAGO BUW- Adiv•ted Scott
WiWIIU, f(WW&amp;nl. Pl.-* Jt04hw.y McCnJ, forwul, .. thelo;..d llot.

INDIANA PAC,Bl\S .- ~clinled .
Onlllna. - · , .... lhl loj-

I

Ontt
lill.

Foolb.IU

ADVERnSINI DEADUNE
IS JMUM'f 21, 1991

NallauiP...... ' - .
NFL - It
oer1 dill Jalu.y Bai~
1•7· k.iQ ...... ud llobelt ......,.
~~·
*t*
Cud1ftdo oriU
,..,
In ....

"'liN ;..llowL

RoclltJ

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NBW"='r~

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c..; .......
pob
.... ,
i llllaUy a...
d

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Cal Y11r AMtllllftl ••,.•••IllS.
For Raft lnlorMiflon
I.

NBW YOU: RANOl!lS - NomW
AI KW tllisU.nl ooe.ch. a.caUecl Per
DJaal. M
fila 1'-:L 11M fll
Aiudoa a..t., LRpe. lea\ Mik• ·
ilaAII. Jsl
It, 1G ~far

'4NM

'

TOilONTO MAI'Lii LEAl'S -

·The Daily

.
a.

Nn.l Nil ..... F!'=d , fan IL

! ...... .,..
-l.tofu!.
VANCOUVBI CANUCkl - Jlo.
••014 a.eplt•n• Maria, oeatll1', from
H••ll._ of · dr.e Americea Hocllr.•J

.........

Phone (6t4)

.....

II

992~2tSS
\

S~tmel

- .Ask for P. J. or Otvt

�•

.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

TUesday, January 19, 1993Page-&amp;

•

Parthenon editor says no
more naming of accusers
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP}
-The e&lt;lilllr of Marshall Universi·
ty's student newspaper said his
Staff did not balk When he OVeh
)'Uied their
to publish tbe name
of another woman who told police
she had been n!ped.
Greg Collard said he told
staffers at The Parthenon about his
dccisiononMondayaftemOon.
· "They were really understand·
ing," Collard said afterward. "A
):ouplc people said they didn't
agree, but they understood my .

"'*

41ccision."

The Parthenon's editorial board
had voted 5-2 on Friday in favor ol
naming another alleged victim in a
rape reponed earlier this momh.
That. brought an angry response
from school President J. Wade
Gilley.
: "I think it is unfortonate, sadis·
tic, immature and lacks complete
common sense," Gilley s~d Friday.
.
In September, The Parthenon,
then under Editor Kevin Melrose,
11811led an accuser in a case reported to Huntington city police.
Melrose had said the policy was
· instituted 10 be fair to both accused
:and accuser, and to ma1ce the Slatement that rape is neither shameful
nor tbe woman •s fault
Gilley said he felt otherwise. At
: the time, be criticized tbe school's
. journalism department and

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH • Students or the mouth ror
were recognized r~mdy at an IISSembly at Tuppers Plains
Elementary. Students are, front row, Nick Weeks, Danlelle Thomas,
Adam DIUard aad Brlttaay Barnett; aad back, Tl(faJI)l Kidder, Kevin
Keatoa, Leah Sanders lind Sari Putman.
·
~mber

paper."
Collard said the furor over the

issue put his shlllents in the spot· .
light but cansed them 10 lose their
focus.
"We didn't cover things on
campus as well as we should
DAYTON, Ohio (AP}- The
have,"' he said. "It lcept us from U.S. Air Force is leuing a dummy
doing that. It would have kept us skydive over southwest Ohio.
from accomplishing many or our
ADAM the high-tech crash
other goals this seJIIC.Sia'."
dlimmy isn't much on controlling
Gilley said Monday night he did his chute or hitting landing spots,
not want to comment on Collard's but he's pretty good at measuring
move.
the forces that pilots encounter
when !hey have ~ bail out

This skydiver's a real dummy
·The ,m anikin has made nine
parachutejumps with a skydiving
company in neighboring Greene
County. Resean:hers at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base arc using it
to study the effects of high-speed
ejections from airplanes.
"There's never been a real good
investigation of it," said Steve
Mchaffie, a researcher at WrightPauerson.
ADAM is the right manikin for
the job.
ADAM, short for Advanced
Ant~:fomorl'hic
Dynamic
Manilcin, has been . at Wnght·
Pauersoo in various crash tests. It's
stuffed with instruments to measure
acceleration and impact.
"We throw ADAM out .at
10,000 feet," Mchaffie said. "He
free-falls down to about 4,000 feet.
The parachute opens automatically."
The .hard part is getting ADAM
to the right landing spot. The
manikin may be goOd at measuring,
but it's useless at guiding. ·
"Now I've got this dummy at
3,500 feet above the ground under
a gliding chute which there's no
control over," Mchaffie said. "So
what happens is a ·skydiver, a very
~ood prQfessional skydiver, comes
m and hoolcs up with him,"
The professional skydiver intercepts the manikin's parachute,
hooks up and steers to a landing
spot.
Once the manikin lands,
researchers use the data to find·out
how much force its head and neck
had to withstand.
"It's sort of been a rule of
thumb that a man can take a 25g
opening shock," Mehaffie said. .
That would he a force equivalent to 25 times the force of gravity.

:cold-sore virus found to play in
[heart disease, say researchers
By PAUL RAEBURN
•,
AP Scimce EdiiOr
'
MONtEREY, Calif. -The
helpcs virus that gives people cold
; sores promotes cholesterol deposits
: in tbe ll'le(ies and leads to blood
• clots. 1
rc'aers say.
,
RCSCIIIthers have known for IS
• ,rears that herpes infections can
: mcrease tbe risk of atherosclerosis,
; or hardening or the arteries. Now.
they have determined precisely
, boW tbe virus docs iL
•
"The virus changes the struc: ture of blood-cloning proteins so
: they stick to our anerics," !aid
• David P. Hajjar of Cornell Univer; ·sity Mcdi&lt;:81 College in New York.
' "We now know what that chang~;
f •is."
'
Hajjar said his research dealt
with atherosclerosis in the coronary
: arteries that nurture the heart.
: Blockage of those arteries by
· cholesterol and clots can cause a
•
•

~ Tai

ence writers.
Dr. EdwardS. Cooper, the heart
association's president, said, "I
think it's interestin~ new information, but the sigmficance is not
known at this point. This is why
research is so important··
Hajjar's work began in the late
1970s, when he showed that chickens exposed to a chicken herpes
virus had an increased risk of
atherosclerosis.
Others determined that herpes
simplex virus type I, which causes
cold sores, increased the risk of
bean disease in people, but no \)ne
knew how.
Research· has since suggested
that some other herpes viruses may
also aggravate atherooclerosis, Hajjar said. Seven kinds of human herpes viruses are known, including
the viruses that cause genital herpes, chicken pox and certain infections seen almost exclusively in
AIDS patients.
·

heart attack.
The rmdings do not mean that
everyone who gets cold SORs is at
high risk ol re-t di ........
But Hajjar said the findings suggest that people who get cold sores
might WBDtiO be especially careful
about controlling their hl3t disease
risk factors, wbicb include smoking, high bl!J(Id JlleSSme and obesity.
And be said tbe discovery could
lead to DCW drugs to prevent bean
disease.
.
Hajjar said he would i. ut the
hefl~CS virus "in the cate ory of
envuonmeatal agents whic could
·malce tbe di.,sc worse. The virus
is probably not a causative factor.
It's probably involved later oa,"
after cholesterol deposits bave
begun 10 form.
He reponed the findings Monday at tbe American Heart Associa·
tion's annual conference for sci-

Chi Ch'uan classes offered ·

. Following three successful Tai
·.Chi Ch'uan classes offered during
1992, the Middlepon Arts Council
· ~will again present an introduction
; 10 the classical exercises and move; ments of lhe Chinese martial an of
'• Yang Style Tai Chi Ch'uan.
On Monday ¢venings, Feb. 15,
. 122 and March 1, from 7-8 p.m.,
: nationally known instructor and
: lecturer on Tai Chi Ch'uan and
·Taoist philosophy, Eric Chambers,
; will present an introduction to the
~ wisdom of lhe Orient and spccifi: cany direc!ed 10ward the mys1eries
: of the slow, dance-like mania! an

l

l

of Tai Chi Ch'uan. The three classes will be conducted at the ·arts
council center located on North
Second Avenue in Middleport. A
fee of $1 S will provide admission
for all three sessions. No experience in the martial arts is necessary. Neither is one required to be
athletically inclined nor have an
understanding of oriental philosophy or Chinese culture.
Cham hers has studied various
martial arts and oriental philosophies for over 20 years including
full-i:lllltact Bando-ryu lcit;kboxing
under Dr. Maung Gyi, Tomiki

Aikido with Sensei Marritt
Stevens, Wu Style Tai Chi Ch'uan
with Sifu Patty Rudiger and Yang
Style Tai Chi Ch'uan under Dr.
James Tong. In addition to his
studies in America, he has traveled
10 Beijing, China to study Wushu
Sword techniques under professor
Feng, Bao·&lt;hu. ·

CLASSES OFF'ERED • Fallowlag three SDCcesslul Tai Cbi Cb'uan

: cWiell offered duriDJ 1!192, lbe Middleport Arts Cwacil will again

present aa introdacbon to the classical ue11 ·s !I ud movements or
the Chinese martial art or Yaag Slfle Tai Clli Ch'uan. Eric Cham': bert will be the lastnactor.
~
~

'

Ice-

women ages 25 to 40.
The lesbians and bisexuals had
99 sisters, of whom 12 were lesbians or bisexuals, for a rate of
12.1 pacent, Bailey said. The het,
erosexual worn~ had 83 sislers, of
whom two were lesbian or bisexual, for a rate of2.4 percent.
. ''Female sexual orlealalion does
seem 10 have a familial component
10 it, .. Bailey said Moliday,
The study. to be publisbed in lhc
February issue of the American

•'
I.

•

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) Gov. Terry Branstad will miss out
on Washington's prcsidcnlial inauguration hoopla this week after a
bone-crushing spill suffered while
sledding with his 8-year-old son.
The governor was alone on a
sled 11.t a golf course when he
CHARbBSTON, W.Va. (AP} slammed into a riderless sled,
- Country songwriter Gary Morris breaking at least one hone in his
got sidetracked en route to Prcsi- face.

" SAN FRANCISCO (AP} 'Four of celebrity attorney Melvin
. Belli's partners are sumg him .
.'

6--w Lo.t and Found
7~ Lo.t u.d Found
8- Puhlie Solo 4
Auctioll

9- Waotecl w Buy

BISSELl &amp; BURKE
· CONSTRUCTION
•NewHOIMI

eCo

985-4473

667~179
2-7-92-tfa

.

homeless will continue in 1993".
She ~ that among the number of
homeless, tbe veterans are estimat'ed at between one-third to one-half
of that population. On nation!~~
security, she said that program co'!l'
sists of the awareness of the n~
of commlinities, such as ftre pre:
vention. and protection, crime pre'
vention, savings bonds, U.S .O.~
blood donor program and emergen•
cy preparedness.
I
Luella Patterson wlll be hostes!
for the .next meeting.
•
Closing ceremonies were carri~
out.
~

an ad
'
Call 992·2156
To place
J

CwsEo SllNDAY

POUCIES

ca--r...tF.... rulo.-..tS ....... wlll ..
nolclapotM ......
• Prlrro ol ad for .0 oopbal-.lo do,.lo prioo ol ad • 7 po1u 11M rypoooly aood
·
• S..tlaol io- roopo•lltlo for tii'On ollor flnt day (clroek
for...- lint clay od , _ Ia popor). Col Won 2:00 P·•·
daydWpoW'nlloato ......
lioo
• Ado ...,__. .. poirlla "'-on•
. Coni ol 'l'1wW
a.,, Ado
. I• Me.orioa
Yard SaJ.
• A ci-illorl od..-d
t piaeod Ia ""' Colllpolo Dally
Trikoa(...... Ch I' lllloploy,B-ConlorLepl
N - ) will oho .,... ta' ti.o Polat Ploo.ot R (
ood
... Dally S..llaol, ........

0_

•

:

t· ~---------------------------i
I

!
'

I,
,

PRICE REDUCED!

I

I'

how much your savings
can be.

,

ThoprlclhU--IOS88,1100ond ,
......, IIIWUG ol "'lto eo% crt pun:!-.
--bo~lor'l'' llylng1011 IOIMI)' ..ry ntca on 3~ .,.... In :

I

let us tel you just

-.4BR,3-.2--1 '
. ~-""1. p~ ll"**d014,800 ~ft. ,..,.

~-

Cd814-11112-71041or

•
'

.

:~~P:ub:l:tc:N:m:l:ce::::~::~P:u~bl;lc:N;~~k8::~

,
r

POMEROY ·

l

. 992-6687

'

~ D.K.'s Farm Toys

wish

to

exprou our appro-

COST

Sadly mlssad on
your 44th

fiftieth wedding
snniVOf'lllty.
Glenn and Sara

January 19.
Debbie, Adam,
Abbie, Frlanda

· Smith,
Nol'llllll, Hllnola

1

.

Po

lr

77~-

843 Poii'*M
247.......... F. .

882-N..,Bn•

6tS...boWo llloL
119-W..J..i ."t

949 . . . . .
742 •etle...!!

9317--olo

~

667~

Public Notice

USED RAILROAD TIES

Quali2

Stone o.

SIZED UMfSTONE
FOR SALE .
Call 6-14·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cllesllire, OH.

Public Notice

Contract tlocumente.
Each blddar Ia ._;,act Ill
lurnlah with 1111 propoael, •
Bid Guaranty Md Cont1110t
Bond In KcordMce with
Section 153.54 of the Ohio
Revlaod Code. Bid Security
lurnlahod In Bond form,
ahloU be laauod by • Surety
Company or Corpor•tlon
U-ed In the S- of Ohio

. to provide .... &amp;lftty.
&amp;ell Propoaal muat
conlllln the lull name of thlo

•-i•-

I I I: II 'I I' 1'1 II '
,\ I I I I ' I I II k
33-- Farm~ for Sale
~a

Ae....,.
36- R..I E.~are 'l'aotecl

55- Buitdi"8 Supplia

E'.(ERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB

.
.
· ;a~
~ --

.

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.

..-

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff..
This ad good for 1
FREE ~ard
Lie. No. 0051-32

38904 Leading
CrHk Roall
Middleport, Ohio
614-992·7144
10/1/92

WHAl'EY'S AUTO
PARTS

HAULING

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE
1·101-141·0070

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

Speclablng In Custom
Frame Rptr' .
NEW &amp; USED P RTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

DAIWII, OHIO

614-742-

7131f91/lfn

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00NOON

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
All MAlES
Bri'1JH Ill Or We

· ckUt.
KEN'S IPP IlNCE
SERVICE

992-5335 or
985·3561

Factory Choke
12 ~auge Only

fiJ

HAULING

LOG !iAULIIG,
LUMBER, or
FUllED WORK
In State or Out
Of State.

Rt. 124, R•cl••
614-949-2072

S &amp;L
TRUCKING
992·5380

R&amp;C EICIVAniiG
BULLDOZING

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

reault In the award of
procurement contracts tp

-•te

of the prime contr.. t. Tha
bid ap..illceliona provide
further details on these
requir-111.
~II contractort •nd.
aubcontractora Involved
with the project will, Ill the
extent p r a c - - Ohio
Product&amp;, mat.rl ..a, aerv-

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·662

lcea, and t•bor In the
lmptamentalion of their
project. Acklltionol, conIIIIOtor comptlolnce with the
equ•t emptoymont opportunity requlramanlll of
Ohio AclminlatraUve Code
123, llw Govarnor'a
Executive Ordar of tt72,

c...,.

Public Improvement
Metga County and
VIII.- of Pomar.,, Ohio •
determined by the Ohfo
Dep•rtment of Industrial

MCI to n(eot *'Y oi al III*.
John A. Andlnon
Admlnlalrator
VI. . . ~Pom·aroyiJ
(1) 5, f2, 11, Ito

FIA 1111 IIIVICI
Topping, Trimming,
AMtwval

,_

ArrtanllllaAIIIe
FuiiYinewod
742-23410

UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gnovel and Coal

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES •nd
TRAILER SITES,
LAHDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
l!MESTOII:.TRUCKING

PH. 614·992·5591

992·3838

i!~~.fk~~~~~

FREE ESTIMATES

LICENSED and BONDED

12·5-tfn

"'

~
Snodgrass Upholstery

and Gov:ernor•a Executive

orct. 114-llahaft be required.
BiJIIne mat oompty wilt
the prevlliling wago r•IN on

The Owner r•ervod llr•
right to walvo uy
infomulfltiM or lrrtgulolrf1lea

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

'

cARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Addllona

'

-Aoollng

r

-Gull8rWork
-Eieclri.,.. and Plumbing
-lnt.rlor &amp; Exterior
PalnU'1!L
(FREE nMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill ',,

992-6215

P-oy,Ohlo
9-10·92·tfn

FIREWOO.D:
FOR SALE·
ALL HARDWOO ..
Seasoned ••
$40~00 a Load
Delivered. ,
(614)

992·544~
12131/92/lfn

WOlFE&amp;
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING
elnc_
ome Tax Preparation '

&gt;Bookkeeping

•Payroll

SERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINESSES
113'1. W. SE(OND
POMEIOY, OH. 45769 .
f»owoleff W.rHr
t.._...,

sr:

IMPROVE
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR ..
CONSOLIDATE,'
NEW LOANS
ALSO.
614·992·7523

MAINTENANCE
949·2398 or

1·800~837·1460
LAwn Mo~Wtg,

Fertilizing, Weeding, lllld
Seeding.

Shrub •nd TrM Trimming
&amp; Removal
RelldlntLII &amp; COmnMreill

Fr"E•Imat•

FIREWOOD FOR

6181'0211 ..0.

Check our Price or We Bolh Lose

Horne, Truck, Boat, Auto

'

and Office Seating

3r. LOCAIIOI. 10 SERVE YOU IIREI

UCIIIE, OHIO

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

614·949~2202

Hl-1

' ......

(304) 77J·SS33

New Hornt8 • VInyl Siding

ASK FOR CHRII

FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY

·

New Garagu • Replacement Wfndowa

MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED: 5 to 6 ACRES OF REWIYnY

;

•

I

~

FIAT LANDi·

(IJJie - · ... 6ft. fRl II 11111¥111111
· 121 Wltlt 5tww (3JW Wit•

, ......., Call)

"

HB.P us IN ouR AnEMPT ro Gn INDUSTRY FOR

Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2860
· or915·3139

1

mo.

HELP THE EffOaT TO IUILD A PIOSPEIOUS

BISSEll BUILDERS, IIIC.
·

UpW.t...,.

MASON, WV. Across fr• ... Post
. We Specl•lb•l•
Tirts • llitllllllb • Exllausts .

"Helpinr You To Reco•tr Your ln&gt;estTMnf'
Church,

Euualiaf

Electrical A Refripn•lio~
Gsoral Ha..tiac
MohUe HoiiUI Repair

992·6193

10-19-92

•Ventlna Heater•

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

A.utD Repair

C.•piaJ Equi_.t

YOUNG'S

•Gas Grill Tonka

Buaineaa Enterpriaea in
dollllr value ol no
1 - than two parc... t (2%)

Boatl &amp; Moton for Sale
Auto Porll 4 Aoc-ri-J

po
.
82- Pluablar a Heotie«

•100 lb. Cylinders

alate certified Minority

Motorcycle. '

44-- Apartment for Rml
45- Fui'Dioh~
46--_Sp•ce fot Rent -47- Wooteclto Beat

48-- Ljluip•••ot {or a•••

•R.V.'a

iala and/or eervlcn, ahall

43-- Fanru for Rent

a..,...

n~~)!llng
..

Hay&amp;: Craia

Soed .t Feriliaer

41- Hou. for Rent
42- Mohile Ho•• for Rent ""- , .__

52- SporU.S Good.
53- Aoliquet
54- Mite. Mercbandiee

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

'11''1'"!
Wanted. to Buy
LiYeltoelc

HI \T \I:--

New Dealer
J an• I Gas S.rvice

contr.. tor purch- m•tar·

..;_ Build""'

:is... r..... 4

f'emollgas

procurement acdvitlea, to
the extent th•t the

flel-liono.

Happy 18th
Birehday
MieheUe!

r...u.. a:v.....,...

For!laloorT..-

18- Waotecl To Do '

CHARLIE'S

m-

Forma cont.ined in the

Muoicallu"'-""

Is- Schooll &amp;: IDIItnlelion
I&amp;- Radio, TV &amp; CR Kepow
17- Miocelta... w

" 12·311-92-1111

516.00 lee witt be roquirod thia mNna thai .,, bidder,
lor eKh. ael of Dr•wlnp to the extant that It
•nd Contr•ct documerito .aubcontr•cta work, ahaU
taken from the above •••d aubcontracl8 to atate
offlcea. Check• eh•ll be cot!'Uiiod Minority Buaineu
payallle to lh• Yilt- Enterprla• In ., II!Igl'"'lllle
of Pomeroy,
Ohio. dollar value of no Ina than
Propoaala
mual
be live percent (5%) of the
..,bmlttod on the Propoaol prime contract. Bidder

Birthday,

and Family.

675-Pa. p . ..
451 Leoa
576-Applo G.....

2t5 ... G.....
llloo.

2~

RODNEY
CHEVAUER

elation and thank•
to our rolit~v•• and
friends for flowers,
cards and written

m11sagss for our

·QDALift PRift SlOP

3674 ''•

~--------------)· ~
LEGAL NOTICE
; S.ted propoe•la witt be
1 r..llivad at the office of the
l Meyor, Po.,eroy City Hllll,
• 320 Ellt Mllln .IL, Pomeroy,
· ; ohlo,until 11:30 Lm. loo•t
• time on · ~ 1, 19113, lor
! furnlahlng all labor,
, materl•t• Md equlpme~~t
, _ . . , Ill cotnpl• the
l proleat known aa th
'.VJLI..AQE OF POMEROY,~~~:~
lMMI STREET WATER I&lt;
"l:lNE REPLACEMENT PRO- Halt,
••
~~.---------------- 2
In Memory
~ Cllrd of Th'nkl
Wo

SALE! ALL Y., SCALE FARM

--·

992 M!Mhporll

party or ,..,u.. aubmlDing
the propoaal- llil,..,.ono
lntereatacl thot!'llin. Each
bidder muat ·aubmlt
evidence of lla
on projecte of almlt•r alze
and complulty. The ownar
lntande ..,d roqulrea th•t
JECT, llrld at aald time MCI lhlo prlljecl be compltrtacl no
pt..., publicly opanod ~- than ..., 15, 19113.
read oloud.
Blcklara •• required to
The propaaed work comply with lha Minority
lncfudea fnetalfallon of 3820 Bualneaa Entarpriae (MBE)
t..l of I" PVC w- mllin. roqulrementa aet forth in
The engln-·a •Um•te lor Section 1.... 07 ollha Ohio
conalrucllon of the Project Revlaad Code, and Rule
114-1·32 of tho Ohio
Adnllnlatr•llv• Code. In pert,

\

214 EAST MAIN

M6-C....

18,000 . . . .

BULLEnll IOARD DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
, PUBLICATION

992·2269

G.JIIa C.....ty MeJs- c-aty MMO!I Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Co4e 304

•

T

ATLANTA (AP) ·The day honoring the civil rights leader.
In Arizona, where voters
younger ~~~ter of Manin Luther
King
Jr.
c
nged
President-elect
approved the holiday in November
Further information about the
clasSes may be obtained by calling Clinton and public officials atound afier a bitter, years-long fillhl.
the country to take up her father's . thousands marched to the state
992-2675.
.
work and honor him by keeping .C iiOl in Phoenix.
their word.
''A true follower of tbe prophet
must ~"lint out when peo(lle say
one thmg during the campatgn and
Journal of PSychiatt)': does not son do another, whether it's bud11et
out what influences female ~o­ cuts, tax cuts or Haitian Immigrasexualily.
tion," the Rev. Bernice King IOld ·
Bailey, who led an earlier stlidy · 1,100 people ·who ftlled Ebenezer
based on male twins that found Baptist Church, where her father
genes influence male homosexuali- and ~dfatber were pastorS.
·
OVEI
ty, is researching the role of genes
' All we say, President-elect
in lesbianism.
Clinton, is say what·you mean and
AT
Sheri Bcrenbaum, a psycholo- mean what you liy. Let your yea
gist at Chicago Medical School in be a yea and your nay be a nay." .
North Chicago, said Bailey's shldy
A quarter-century after King's
is the largest and best in a field ·. assassmation In Memphis, TeM.,
992·3314
sparse with data.
all SO~ observed lhe state holi-

TOYS 10%

_r

..,

Claaified po.sea cOHr tluJ
follltwinB aelepholll! uclaanBe• ...

•Froo.U.r

Bl'LI.ETI\ BO.\RD

State Auto's already
low ~lumscan be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
' and home with the SJ~Ie
Auto Companies.

.FiidlyPaper
Sunday Paper

• a-.. dlaao- for ada poW Iliad-.

cooperative parish where they will
be hol«!ing a meeting,
·
. Betty Wills gave a report o~
sending cards to the sick.
1
Sharon Folmer had the prayer
for the shut-ins i!nd tbe sick of it(e
community.
•
The closing prayer and blessing
were given by Susie Mash.
;
. A fellowship time and refrcsl)meniS were enjoyed·by the group. :

a program. Ann Lambcn gave a
reading, "New Year' s Resolutions.• A quiz on animals was presented by Jessie White and Bob
Reed was the winner. A candle
lighting ceremony was held by all
members. Ann Lambert sang a
solo.
All ofrtcers were present and I 8
members attended.
A ·soup supper was .held before
the opening of the meeting.
Happy Birthday was sung to
Syl'via Midldff.
The next meeting will be honor, ing Presidents' Day.

. Wedr "oyl'lper
Thunday l'lper

• Ada .......... - " ' ,....ad ....... lro ,..,.w

r

DAYBEtaU!PUIIL!CATION
1:111 p.m. s.tmday
1:111 p.m. Mcaday
!:Ill p.m. '1\eday
1:00 p.m. Wodneoday
100p.m. Thuroday
1:00 p.m. l'rld.ly

n.day Piper

.

MoN. tbru Fa1. 8.ur.-5P.II. - SAT.8-12

Rock Springs UMW holds meeting l
Plans were made 10 serve a lun·
Officers were installed at the
cheon to the staff ministers or me

recent meeting of the Rock Springs
- Uni!ed Methodist Womea.
Devotions ·were by Roberta Dill.
Linda Foster led the program.
Readin~s were given by· Vir§inia
Wears, 'Lesson of Life" and ' How
Much Are You Worth?" by Norma
Baker:

OOPY DEAillJNE
MCB!ay Piper

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

Polo for Solo

14--1:'-iau• TniniDt

•

Remoll•li•a
Stol.&amp;co:re
'F EE ESII ES

Lewis-Manley post discusses i
homeless vete~an legislation · .~

7

•The Area's Number rl
Marketplace

...=

"

The American Legion LewisManley Auxiliary Unit No. 263
met recently ai the home of
Tomiko Lewis. Dinner at Dale's in
Gallipolis preceded the meeting.
·. Bulk mailing was distributed by
Lom::ne Goggins, presidenL
Poypies and the American
Legion Dispatch were ordered.
A report of the Cluistmas dinner
and party was given by Edith Ross,
treasurer.
With January being both legislative and national se:urity month,
Lula Ha~pton, ~hau.man, spoke
concermng legulallon for the

The

dent-elect Clinton's inaugural and
{illed in for a sick musician at a
concert for Gov. Gasll)n Caperton.
Morris initially received a lulcewarm response from Sundily's
crowd of 6,000 at tbe Civic Center,
which was expecting to see country
singer Michael Martin Murphey
perform.
. But halfway through the.·twoDays Words Rate Over 15 Words
hour performance, Morris had
$ .20
1
$4.00
15
earned a staJid\ng o"!'tion· He sang .
and played gwtar with the Wheel$.30
3
15
$6.00
ing Symphony Orchestra, conduct$ .42
6
15
$9.00
ed by Caperton's wife, Rachael
$ .60
10
15
$13.00
Wmby.
Monthly
15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Worby told the audience Murphey was side~ by laryngitis. A
~llone call earlrer S~day g~ MarRates are for consecutive runs, broken up da~s will be
ns rerouted from hts Nashville-tocharged for each day as separate.ads.
V'(~shington flight to West Vir11-~~~~~=:-::======--~~--i
gmra.
Among the songs Morris performed w~ "These Days," which
was. nom mated as the ~ountry
mus1c Song of the Year m 1990,
and "Win!! Beneath My Wings,"
which he wrote. It won the 1990
Qrammy A',l(ard as Song_of the
Year, performed by Bette Midler.
2-IoM.....,.
Caperron took tbe oath ol office
3-- Aanounceaenll
It-Help Wootecl
Monday for his second lerm. Mor4-- Civeaway
12- Situatio• WAnted
ris was 10 perform at Clinton inau5-Hoppy.Ad.
l~luW'&amp;Dee
gura1 festivities in Washington.

•'

All 50 states mark King holiday

i

People in the news---

claiming he bro1ce their partnership
agreement by continuing 10 work
with a lawyer they had rejeclt:d as a
partner.
Ib papers filed Friday, they
sought unspecified damages and
as1ced tbe court to appoint a receiver to divide.the finll's assets. The
partners obtained a court order 10
bar anyone from discussing the dispute.
·
Superior Court Judge Carlos
Bea also issued a temporary order
forbidding anyone from moving
legal files, changing firm records,
accepting client fees or taking
money from the firm. Further hearings were set for Thursday,
· The plaintiffs arc Richard E.
.. LONDON (AP} - Queen Eliz- Brown Pail M. Manzione Steven
abeth II and Pririce Charles were A. Fabbro and Sharnoon Zakaria,
taken ill Monday and canceled all partners of the 85-year-old
their appointments, Buckingham BeiU.
Palace said
According to the lawsuit, Kevin
The queen called off a re&lt;;eption R. McLean was rejected as a
for elderly people and estate work- prospective partner at a Dec. 14
ers at Sandrin~ham, where she meeting. Since then, the lawsuit
spends the Chnstmas-New Year said, Belli and his son and partner,
~olidays.
Caesar, have practiced law with
Charles had viral gastroenteritis , McLean and two other lawyers "in ·
and a high temperature, the palace breach of'the partnership agreesaid.
menL"
The same virus had affec!ed five
. · The Bellis also moved the
other people at Sandringham, firm's Los Angeles office 10 Beverwhere Charles was staying, but the ly Hills and allowed the other ~
palace did not-say whether the lawyers to use the f11111 's name and
queen was arnon~ those infec!ed.
offices, it said.
·' Palace offic1als said Charles
Belli said the lawsuit an~ered
· cllliceled his. engagements on doc- him, but "you take it in stnde,"
tors' advice, calling it a precaution- adding that he planned to~ "get
'ary measure and saying tbe illness some new partoers who can help
·•was not seriouS.
me."

••
I

Ohio

NEW YORK (AP)- Call it tbe
•• transition for "Saturday Night
. Live."
:
. P~ormer Phil Hartman is tradmg m his .Barbara Bush wig and
dress to impersonate a new White
House occupant: President-elect
Clintoo.
. ."Irs m.y opponunity," Hartman
.~d m th1s week's People maga·
zme.
Hartman's fast·food crazy Clinton character has drawn some
,lau~hs from the president-elect
:·. . 'I hope' he's not offended,"
.said Hartman, wbo voted for Clinton. "But you can't be in this game
' .and not srep on a few roes."

briclc.
The same de~gates will be sent
to swe conference as to the continental congress. .
,
The orru:ers met at the home of
Phyllis Skinner to prepare chapter
reports.
.
,
Plans to celebrate the 85th
anniversary of the chapter in March
were discuSsed. Surrounding chapters are to be-invited. The location
will be selected by Mrs. Rae
Reynolds.
Hostesses were Mrs. Dwight
Milhoan, MrS· Cecil BlackwOQfl,
Mrs. Michael Elberfeld, Mrs. Guy
Moore Jr .. Mrs. John Rose arut
Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
;

The Meigs Junior High Aca- week after gr!lde cards come out
dem1c Boosters monthly meeting
A commlltee was formed to
was held recently in the school check out possibilities for an educafeteria.
.
cational field day for all junior high
The results of the fundraiser students.
held in December were noted and . The rotary will be contacted to
concessions at the junior high bas· see if they are going to panicipare
ketball games were discussed.
with the recognition dinner to be
The nme-weeks pany for honor held in the spring.
roll students who lii'bugbt their letThe next meeting 'will be held
ti:r grade up by two grades and per- Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. in the school cafefeet attendl\nce will be held the . teria. Everyone is welcome.

fStudy: Lesbianism tends to run in families
CHICAGO (AP) - Lesbians
: and biJcxual women arc 2 1/2 to
: five a- more likely than heteio' IC!tual WOIIIeR to have lesbian or
; bilellilal sisters, a study says. But
; it'l uaclear whether it's heredity or
• environment at wort.
• J. Michael Bailey, an associate
• profeuor of psychology at Nonh: wCIICm University, and colleague
S. Bcnilbay lhwJitcf tbe famlilicl of 84 le1blan or bisexual
: w_omen and 79 heterosexual

Kay Cecil spoke on antiques
and appraised various items dis·
played at the recent meeting of the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution.
.
Eleanor Smith, vice,regent, condueled the meeting. The Pledge of
Allegiance and the American's
Creed were followed by the chaplain's prayer. ~
Miss Smith read the president
general's message and Roberta
0 'Brien gave the national defense
report. ~ K. Yost presented flag
facts. Phyllis Skinner gave tbe treasurer'~ report and state~ $50 had
been sent to Waldschmidt for a

Boosters air fwidraiser results

Additionally, her regularly pre·
sents Tai Chi Ch'uan programs for
the Ohio University Communiveristy, Marietta Metaphysical
Society, the Billings Montana
YMCA and the Billings Clinic
Physical Rehabilitation Center, as
weD as a guest lecturer on '~Applied
Taoism" for Dr. Gene Blocker of
the Ohio University Philosophy
Department

-

-~

The charter was draJ?ed for
Katie Weber, a member m good
standing, when the Hemlock
Grange !Ret recently.
Rosalie Story presided and
repons on special committees were
given by Muriel Bradford and
Helen Quivey.
The grange is to visit Star
Grange and Harrisonville will be
visiting Hemlock.
Members reported ill were
Roland Eastman, Octa Ward, Art
Shumway.
Jessie White, lecturer, presen!ed

and Empire apple for $21.
Ground cover plants available
this year incllide the pachysandra,
50 plants for $15; Baltic ivy, 50
planes for $15; and crown vetch, 72
plants for $21 .
,
Any of these ·packets may be
ordered at the Meigs SWCD Office
at 33101 Hiland Road in Pomeroy
or by mail with check or mol)cy
order to the listed address. All
orders must be ~d for when submiited. There is a limited slipply of
packets.
Paclcets will be in and ready for
pickup around March I9. An exact
date for pick up will be announced.

~

1993

. .·

DAR discusses antiques
during recent meeting

Hemlock Grange meets

He has also served as a police
&amp;fensive ·tactics instructor for the
Ohio Peace Officer Training Council; Monadnoclc Lifetime Products,
Jnc., as well as guest instructor for
the Ohio Peace Officer Training
Academy, Northern Virginia CriminalJusnce Academy, Eastern Kentucky University Department of
Corrections; staff instructor for the
J.ustice Sys.tems Training Associabon, Hockmg College Police Science: Department, and is currently
servmg as a licensed international
instructor/trainer for lhe police selfdefense instructors - International
of Chicago,IU.
•

•

.•

SWCD offering tr_ee packets
The Me~s Soil and Water Conservation D1strict Ladies Auxiliary
is once again offeiing for sale tree
packets and grOund cover plants.
Single varieties packets available this year include white pine,
25 seedlings.for $8; scotch pine, 25
seedlings for $8; Colorado blue
spruce, 25 seedlings for $8; Norwar spruce, 25 seedlings, $8; Magnolia, five seedlings, $5'. ·
Variety packets include the
backyard packet which contains
two each of sweet shrub, red flowering quince, Redosier dogwood
. and pinlc flowering almond for $7;
and the fruit tree packets which
conlains two each of Melrose :!)li&gt;le

reworked the student publications
board. which cm:nces tbe newspaper, the yearbook and tbe student
radio Sfalion.
Protests and objections over tbe
policy, aimed at bocb tbe newspaper and Melrose. wrenched the
Cabell County campus for nearly
two months.
Until Monday, Collard, who
renl.,....t Melrose in December, had
saldb;"would back tbe decisioos ol
his editorial board. Collatd also
said he would 001 be intimida•M by
Gilley.
In reversing his Slance, Collard
acknowledged he was opening
himself up to criticism.
''I suppose some people might
say I'm a hypocri1e," Collard said.
"But I can't worry about that now.
This is a personal decision. I'm
doing what I think is best for tbe

. January 1

"

PHOI-= ..., or .., Piela••
....: t8H231 • Petty's

TROLLR STAnOII CWTS
.t92·2549. .

•

�•

Sentinel

Ohio

1993

19,1993

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Theo.lly

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrilbt
Q

Rentals

.

r.terchandiSC

ACROSS

'

c

51

41 Houses fOr Rent

Household

PHILLIP
ALDER

Goods
1 Bedroon;, R.,_aa. 1150
Dopoolt, $150/llo. • UtllltiH,
All
C.Orpot
•
VInYl In .ock On
Plno Grove Church, VInton,
Solo.
lllollohon
CilrpoU, 11117 N.
Ohio. 304 1124307.

~--·

PUlNCES

l·lt-11

+9864 52

•u
tKQ

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

EAST

, . . ' l o l l - · ""' ...,_

-

+s

Jll ,- k ... ~
- . - . .1100 Col .,.._

1---------"T"--------.
...
-:---------I
Wanted to Do

W:- ·~v. SIOO; GE ·wuhor _11__H_e...:lp_Wa_n_t_ed_ _ 18
tao; Oollold b d 1225· mlac.
hm II holll llema. tl4 U8 1155,

Tno lopping

=nee, rr..

•-.
Will

-~

ALlY.,.- MUll lo l!lkl In
Ad••• .oEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

u.., .....

a trimming

U·

lltlmatM, 304-

blbyollln my,...,., ohd POniOnd orou, .1 11301.

U.IdiiiiO .....

~;..::.=
r.

WIIICIN lor oldlrty In my - .
1...1182-5858.

p.m.

4 B•droome On Ahl-:r 2 Mil•
South Of O.IUoollllill """• CHJ
~--. 14101Mo.l14 513 ••.
$350

I+

4+

Nicol 3 8; 1 - , 2 liory HonOo
With FJ,JII a...menl, Chll:hlre
$3ZIIIIo.

Rtferenct,

Rio O~ando Form HOmo With
Dock And llomLNlco For Fomlly,
Coli Arnf 114o4oHI40tl.
. COUNTRY

BUT1 PAWtl

--Lie=.

Corponlry WO&lt;k

FURNITURE AND

A,_..,

9·.

Business
Opponunlty

21

Wlitttd to Buy

11!!!1'.1.""""'*

•I

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

loll Uo Your Non~ IIIP' •rr' '~~"·
CoiM
lY"II, '. , . ... Dfll,

..............
""", ...
,....kdo
....
with pooplo
- ,- ond
NOT to Mild ......,. lhrouth lho
moM urall rou hlvo ln-lgolocl
tho otlwlng.

Fr '#!!j.. 'ICR'a, Mlciwl-,
Nit ......,1 ..... Ampe,

-= '"'*

k :llt-1231.

ond - - · The Plum- And PIDe Flnora
em &amp; lruc~o. ~Union Humber B'n Will Be
31M'
I.
. Olvfng OUt •ppl""lone For
WaniOd 'ro Buy: Slondlnt '11m- ~ App,..«ICiolllp ,.....,.
bor,l14 •
_,,
. '""" Jenuery II, TtiiU FelliUerv
5, 11183 AI The Union Hd,

J 6 D'o AUto -

- - . - · Cell' 114441-01711.
Winlld To luy: .Junk Autoe
Wllh Or Wll- lolalaro. Coli
t.orrr Llvoly.t14 n1 1101.

!ap
Pilei: All Old U.S.
CoiM. Gold Rlnaa. Slhlw CalM,
llhcip,

Gold Co1no. II.T.ll. Cain

1111 - - . Clolllpollo.

Employment Serv1ces
Help Wanted

11

~.,.

Ul.

:;;Tho~S~to:::to:-:ra=nn=.,...-.-.---:-'
. :::-11:-be

toklngoppllcotiCN for ground &amp;
rnoln!Ononco - · llull hove
IXJ*ience In malnl.nance wed
u well u general g""'ndo. No
tr111111 benllls II Ihill limo.

.

---.~- ·

114-441-11142, Or 114olV7o4345.
14xta 2 Br, 1 milo South of
Euroko, on SL Rt.7. No pill,
roloroncM.I14..ZIIe-I089.

••hold

•

monthly
room, Hvlng raam, 3bdrm., wan.:.. 7217.
In c - i . lully corpotocl, 2 ,...

pluo

JNtCIIIIge.
Conlect
Amber
Flndlly, RN, DON, Lokln '

~

124,

Pomwor. M.T.w. 10:00 61 Farm Equlpniant
1.m. to 1:00 p.m., Su,_., 1:10
In CouNry Mobllt Pllrit. -horl
tm AA - 1 - ·
$'vir, olr1 JZ311 mon., 114-11112- to I:GO p.m.IM-1112·2!21.
With I ;::;,_._ Hra, e?,IIIO;·
2187, 114-HZZI
FYmlture:
rennlshl,.
and 1• 11:;
a flauilll -...;.
~apol,. wo opoclolllo In cllurch - - ~-~-A-~ 114IIIIo wm buy; Clli&amp;M-182· l-!ile~·~~~~~il'~·.,....-·=~....,.--,....·..,....
Furnlohld, 2 or :lbdnn., lor ron!

C"·

oau-.

Dlamoncta, Topaz, Pelttl, 114--11:~·

Choolllro: 3 IR 1-112 bath,
or4414532.

-=---1

614467--

olghl-)ob _ , . _

~:n"':.:'m
~~ I::
410; Plnonci . . A - I M :
BZZ.

ra......
T""Wareha - · ~r. Ohio. Wll
be IIU~ tlllllCCO 4 ,...,.

1111 F.on1 T...,.., With H,OOO
11111
....... 121 Ali"lllng:~·
ii,ibo......

- · -a.wnar

·

~

1- -

-.

2 dt.,

hol~fm,---

a 1100. linn, IIQol,fJI.tMI llllt'
1111 o.11_,111)4.171.,...
.. " Old• abllo. oo11
Edloon

aown EXTRA .

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. l~,

Trimming, Tno Removal,

Trnmlng. Free Eetlmallel 1

::76:-"::Aut~~o!!;P~a~n.~&amp;!;,.-=Ace 111 ortea·

I~,..

--7Zil:
-

Wlgoo.

IIRm_ I p _
1¥ .F.n'ng
man1111r
of
_ ,for
.,
.._

tur811C.

... I ..
riqUINd,
_..,,.....
••••101
to lox
C.14- at ...... PI
iW

n1

~~-SI,Pt. Pit,

--lim.

Trww' ·~ne. u..ct I

2an.P~IIIINI'J" . ...... •00

"""

rre iHE FIRer TIME r've

... tMit

IMIIe, -

. WY.~~-c~--

E=IIEiR BEeJ 'THRO lSI I A
ISPI~L.. DEl ECTOR.

R

campers &amp;

POrtable SawmUI don,.
hour rour - 10 tho mill juot

79

Honclvmon, Odd .lobe, /OutdOor
E"
Nndo. M.OOPor Hour.
114-24&amp;1443.
Mloo Poulll'o Dor C... Conlor 1
Bloctl WOOl 01 HIIC On Jecklon
Plko 11-f, I A.M. -1:30 P.ll. W
Quollly And E1porto- lo The
" COncern FOr v- Chlld'o

1111 .
Wllllwood
tiM
. . . ., . --~
...
7113. -

Motor Homes

roots.

Scrv1ces

81

Colo. Coli Uo For l VIol. lnlant
tradd•ra 11t ue 122l p,..
cha cia a /School Age 114-441--

Home

1224.

Thrn your clutter into cash,
Sdl. it the equ lllay... by llhone,
no need to leave your home•
Pla.ce your' clqujtied qd todgyl
15 'WOrds or le,., 3 da,u,
3 vqpea, 15,40 paid in advance.

Read the.•Best
Seller·
.

too.

Coli

ABTRO·ORAPH

BERNICE
~EDEOSOL

lien.. TY ..,.... TJ 1 ' WW
ln . . . . . . . . , . . . . . .

_.....,,.....WY

IIIWinndL IIINM iloilo,-

........ a... ........ :

Read the

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Co.IIOIIIYMI~

...
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ri.
iil- ........

--

'u' I '-'ON 1 - liTIS

CLRSSIFIED RDS

....
WAIT ADS

.

11!1!1 ..

........

82 . Plumbing &amp;

,.

llnportlllt cltengelerelridlclll«t for tho
,.... tllteed, 10, ratftet tflalt .lighting
- · ~ wttlt litem. In tile ftnaiMtllo
ylle " - altlfla could praw to JOUr

WITH'IIAIIWIS

beMIII.

PilL ,., No one
wiH tlllnk- ol ,all today If you'N hon'
- abaut JOUr . - . Alld NmltaiiOnl.
CanWi lllf, hawl,.,lf you preSel M:t you
1*1 do IICNMIIilngltid 1111, you ntlglillie
)ildgeCI V«'f ~. Aquariul, '-1
· youra111 to 1 birthday gift. Send for
AQUAIIIUI ( , _ •

'

I

Q. ·My brother is taking a malh
course and wants to know about
SQUARE ROOTS. Why are they called
that?
A. In mathematics, the verb
SQUARE means "to multiply· a
number by itseJr'; the SQUARE ROQT
tells you what number must be multiplied by ilself in order to gel another number. For example, 5 is a
SQUARE ROOT of 25. You should
never confuse tlfis term with SQUARE
0 NE, an expression that means "the
very beginning," or you'll be back to
square one in the study of square

Will Dollvw. 114-

·:r
:....":.'1=~

0111304-4'111-1118'1.

•

A meeting .or assembly is a CONVENTICLE ( "kon·VEN-tih·lrui"). Use
this noun religiously; after all, CONVENTICLE starts with CONVENT.

P.IL
4rww101711111,4-

I~ert

317-'IIBTAftor 4p.m.

0

IW'I'I~~..

1119 C.clllllo El Dorldo For

2111711111al

i

..

53 FMI

I,

"ss-..aaru

22F-*101dltrl (lbbr.)
24 Saulllllarlt
26 A wlllltlno
21 Onto! lit

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u
s

12Acl'
MC

P'

15-Z I

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om•
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31 Unlock

411nwoll
5Cal

7~dalll

+Q

OUR LANGUAGE

Part.. c.1111•••• After I

=r-..

.....

Eu1
Pass
Pass

one.

CAN'Till1(4

I:OOPIL

CA&amp;&gt;H~fl

18 · Wanted to Do

WIIOEYER ~
SAIO, '/IOI£.Y

oond,
,,. _
_cor,
1111 Yllgo
0'1,
-

Want to:

PIN

_.... nontraclltlonll
~· (ONOW), 1o800o

•

APPill llao Coni- With 2·3.5 ~..:II!..u..;:.:.~=
0101&lt; DrfVoo, Color MonMO&lt;~ 11!1 OrviHo Whol., or alii lldloon
rdm Cord, Sfl-.a Audio \,;MU Mo- ~~t••• ·
Cooling Fan, Ancllmogo Wrltor il
•- ~·- With &amp;IK Bullor lncl Sconnor
lilochmont. Sottworo Included
lloo Rurw Apple llo Sottwo'!!
11,1100 Or Boot Ollw. Emoot v

Hoo,-ol, 304-4175-3230, Ill 42,

.

Bur cr loll. Rlvorlno ArltlqUH,

1124 E. Moln • - . on

Merchandise

llan-Fri,I:OOAII-4:110P111.
F~a~

1143.

FRANK AND ERNEST

tlllll

'

.-

&amp; Livestock

Antlqun

I Nonnon - I I ,_ololn
Cola:lor
law Front
Curio ~. Jo,.,.,, 0o1c1

- ·· To WO&lt;k wRh rooldlraoln hlrdwood lio0&lt;11J.utl bonmont,
ICF tacllhy. Flullllo houri. corpart, lldlng, ""• noturol goo
SolelY com-o wRh ox. , heat, cablll, S47;000.114-317.7i71
bonoflt

~:':a• l.al. Stoll Route 11!14,

.PEANUTS

1-anr. Suppl'"'

on ..,. ocro, 304-4171-

53

~.

Plrm.lt4 441 ....

·l'ti!iu"
·.- .•
NO; Fonl
1111 ~

W.Nid: Cl- I Drlvor COL, ·
GoOd Rooonl, 3 Yoors Ex·
· Send
FlllbedR-.-:
Loaol, Lona
Dlolonoo,
P.lf.
Boo 400, Oolllpollo, Ohio 45&amp;31.

E........

Y""'"'"' DX7

SWAIN

A FURNITURE. 12

T1Jnsportat1on

-------.
"'*'....
54 Miscellaneous. . ....,~ !:4

3Q4.I75.I71II

porlo,_,

~

1· 19

--

1.\islcal
Instrument•

50011111
5111111elace

pupil

•rm!MII

Francis Bacon wrote; "Antiquities
are history defaced, or some remnants
of history 'which have casually escaped the shipwreck of time."
Many declarers don 't escape the
shipwreck of time. Contracts are
a race. The defenders are trying-toes·
tablisb enough tricks to defeat the contract before the declarer can cash
enough tricks to get borne. Usually,
though, if the declarer finds the right
path, he will win the race. The art is in
spotting the shortcut.
How would you plan the play in four
spades' West leads the club queen.
North's response of two no-1trurno I
was the Jacoby Forcing Raise. Sou1th's
rebid of four spades showed a mini·
mum opening bid with no side-suit sin·
gleton or void.
·
The thoughtless declarer wins the
first . trick ani! immediately plays a
trump. But West wins and perseveres
with another club. Now the contract
dies, the defenders collecting a trick in
each suit.
The careful ~eclarer sees tbe third·
r'ound club loser and' sets put to eliminate it. He notices that he can di!ICard
a club from tbe dummy on the third
heart. He also spots the shortage of
band entries. Carefully he wins trick
one with dummy's club ace - no sec·
ond·hand low for him. Then he leads
the heart king, the honor from the
short side first
When East wins and plays a second
club, South wins in hand and discards
dummy's club loser on the third heart.
Only then is it safe to lead a trump.
In essence, it's a simple hand, but
the analysis must be done before you
play a card from the dummy at trick

I'VE BEEN
WORRIED ABOUT
YOU ..1-lOW ARE
YOV STANDING
TI-lE COLD
WEATHER?

Roloranco
Roaulr..t Faotor'a Mobllo Homo coll304-e71·1450.
Porll.114-441-1102
R. I 8. Fumltura NN, IIMII, an- S1
Ho·
tumlahlnp.
Zbclnn., lurnlohod, . - cond., UqUH.
......... wv.
304-TIW341.

Nat•raank. Racine, OH. 614-Mi2210 •

WAIITED; Full-limo or Porl~lmo
RNo to WO&lt;k PM I midnight

Llko - 1 1 1 - I :pt.

l&lt;anougL Dopoolt &amp;

For Rent Or Sal•: 3 Bediooml,

to 11.00 pot hour
. ForiNOI'IIowcoll:

Woll Equlppod, Col ...... .
•
' . .
•••• .., To lilt S.10 Shart 11111

441-771111, 114o448-ai22.
PICKENS FURIITURE
Now!UIId
2 IR porlloiiJ lurn'ld, cablo
fumlolllng. 112 inL
ovolloblll. loollllful nvor vlow IIi J«rtcho
Rd. Pt. Pleuant, WV,

•*'ric heat, AC, ltOVI,
Nfrlaerator, lt....a.wlrea, Home

~

:Jr" ·- """"· .114-141-

~'mete

The clock
on the rock

4

-

chM,

ntmont Hl1lng only no

T~Uor

M.OOiupr
~~'l'iolc
Included, 114- - Couch And Choir, Co!lnlrJ
311
Aftor I P.M.
Print, Incl.- C - Tobli
2 BMroom Troller For Ron~ 114- $125,114o311W121lh' I P.M.

.. - For IWit or ule doubl. wide, Olivo St., Oolllpollo. fumMUN, ~."'JJJ. ~!!'- &amp;
Oelllpotlll Forry, WV. $3.10. WO&lt;k-1_,..,

• Flulblo DAY hours ond lraln-

-rol -

-....._Ill

. THAT'S WHAT
DAY IT IS!!

4 WD.opd.- ftiOQ..........,..,
oqul_.r for Dog - :
2 OOtiCioll mf-, ole. :IJOM'Itl.7211: t171 Chivy 114 ,., ....
MUoo Out Rt. 141\,~llpollo. 114- Uold 11' olock troller, 1101 112
oMHaa warne~··=·
:aas.
.
"""' ....: 1111
Food IIWtll.
.porto. O..gouwyud Coltorr: Cl'l Per• • I ...
I Kill-. 1141111 C11ewJ 1-10 Ptck-Ui&gt; T - ,
Livestock .
63
,413144 An• 7:00p.M.

torJon.a

oood

3 Bodroom Ronch With 2
Cor 0.- And .,_..,oy On
Comor 1 112 Aero l.al. 114-381111641.

. . . .J.

~.

0

72 Truck&amp; for Sell

ltltl 14170, Mobile HOmo Fot

1.511 Sq.' R., ~~ ..,. laC, 2111
....., 2 complllta betha, clnln.g

----

-.

~.-QFTI18ge

F,.. Delivery.
;:;lolal::;:loi:::L=
...
="·-::Cirpoto'::-:::-:l::-:14-:4::-:41-::111:-:4-:-t.
biZ Coraot MO. biZ Vlnvt
~.00 Solo on carpll In otoCII

30th . •

linn on.n:• Four ond olght hour

-~1-,1

' - • H.
'""'~~~~f:·
IBR
Tnillor, llopooR &amp; eo..p1o10
Houro: ~al,
I
R o - Roqulrwd. No Plio. 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulevlllll Rd.

31 Homes for Sale

MlwlrOiWIMit.

lVON 1 AI - · .1 lhlnor

Real Estate

171.ooch.-~

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Tokfng oppUc:lllonl until Jon.

You'l love tho • ,_,_, . . . - - k

1.eoo 1124351.

- u 111.00. Cell todo~EE
NEW Color Colo""' 1
62·
liiVI'.
. . .....

Vlnt Strwt, CII1114-441~M . '1 ·
800'4-ft.

locallon, altave New
~""· Rt.33, 1250, 304-882·
2481.

11roc1 or
Tho High Pr-uro
llrnOophiN?
Paint Pill-Ill .,.. occountlng

'lVOWlUAAElllllhorortlmo -

~ AI: 21~
-.
PortolnOIIIh,
Ohio. Oellle
130 Applloelion FM. Equol OpporlunRy
· Empiopr.

tiu-

Vending Route: AICIUion
-~
wRh I ottldy
- h -.o. 1-IONU.Vond.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
New Commerclll- Home Untie,
'"""
1111.00.
__ Ll".'pe.,.,....to
l.allono,
..,
_
_ IIOniiiiJ

42 Mobile Homes
.for Rent

,

BIRFDAY
......... nat · '"llilltorwd,

-

Nori~

2 NT
. Pass

Opening lead:

IT'S WDDD
. CHDPPIN' DAY U

IT') MY

WeSI
Pass
Pass

II

Fr--

.K74
.Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Soulb

17 Fufllrt Dr.

34 Sodium

tu

~~ Fou~h

Dopcioll,l14-t46o01~7,

42-1 Fe'
44 , . . . . .

33to~

SOVTH
+KQJ 107
.QJ4

PIUI

CRAFTS
.
Now
BuJkllna, Rorilodlllng, Framing, Rio 0 -, 3 IR, 1·~ bath, Wo Hove Crallo lnd Croll Sup.
l)ry Will, Floollng\ Polntlnjj, 1410/mo, Dopoolt roqulrwd. 114- pllol Alllo Will CUllom ~gn
8-- Public Sale
Your' Shlrto. Wo Buy And Sill
Coli Holotr Cllnlc'o Aalllont PT Roofing, Etc. Anyt: n: Hive 441-4222 doJO, Ul.a1llovo'o.
Ro........,IM-Jllo2240.
fumlllhocl, Oho . Good Uold Fumlluro. Como s..
,;=·. . &amp; Auction · Honey MuiUno, Fot
Dolallo:·
1~1111244.
Bod,_. In Oelllpotlo, c- Uolt 2231 Sloto Rollll 141, B14o
olotlr Fumlohld, No Plio, 441-1422.
AUction eo.np.n,, t'ndul: 50 ~ To La.
Financ1al
"""""•• • · Dopoolt, 114-441- :;;:GOO=o::--:-us=eo::--:,.:;;:,P:::UANCE==s
lull· . -lonoor, complolo
Wolahl.
No WI" - Ouo~antlld.
-·
1~ Nllu~aJ,214_3.
Wo•hora..~ dryoro, rolrlgorllI Woet Vlrglrilo, c.a - 115 1111
rongu. ""IRDO lppll- 7e

.Will Do

.A9653
tAJI07
+96 5

l-uo... Oolllpollo, 114 441 till
AllOr 7 ,..M.
·
2 llocl,_ Total
~1~==-~11 To
VIllage,

.401:W"o' I

= ==.....

21 Jep...H

••\S2

Fum- Ulllhloo. 3 BA,

lilldI CliooM

-.1

NORTH

(;alllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

4&amp;:·:.-..

~

3tl'-llli-

13 Spr
llhufllt
14
M
111eal'lllllngof

- - 2 1 OR 114-!4W111

"We don 't have any rooms where you can hear
the ocean . Sleep with these next to your ears.·

1 Herwtol

12 Shldt-

.

VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP-

.Yard sa1e

35,.........
37----

Aquarius· A~tro-Gr~ph prediCtions lor
the year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus a
long, sell-addreioed, stamped en...
lope to Altro-Graph, c/o lhlo "-*'
per, P.O. Box 81428, ·Cleveland, OH
44101·342S. Be sure to stale your zodl·
ac llgn.
PIICII (l'eb. 2HIMdi 20) Do not lm·
PQM YOUI'MII upon Hille groups or
cliques today where you do not 1881 wei·
come. Todata deviiloprnenla within the
group oould make you leal 8.., more
uncomtort- tban ueual.
·
.ARIEl lllalcll 21-Aprtl 11) Try nol to
make being oa tho top ollht heap your
P""'II'Y oDt-ctlve today. 11 this Ia your
II)OIIY&amp;tlcin, you might be tempted to
UM IICIICI that will prOVI Counterproductive.
.
TAUIIUI (April 20 ..., •1 Juat beceuN en

acquaintance waaluolcy dqlng

thing. a -wn W"f, It do.r!'l urtty fOllOW th81 hlo or her prooec1ura
wll1 work tile -.clli I for you loday.
. . . . ,..., 21..... .. , If you ""'
-lng ~or ftnanolallldVIoe to-

to_.

hOW you deal with Others On 8 one-IO·
bne balls. Take no one for granted.

LEO (oluiJ 23-Aug. :Ia) You could be severely dlooppointed today If v&lt;!l)r pur·
pOiil lor helping othilni Is morely •10
leather your own nest Eventa will penalize your ealflshneu or lnlinc:erfty.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-htM. 211 Do not become InvOlved in lnt"- with fl'landa
.today, bee.., . .IIIey couid mlaflre. ltrou
are ld.,lllled ao a precipitator. you may
have to beer the brunt of lholr wrath .
LlaiiA lllept. 23-0ot. 23) u - . you
... certain that rou Cln fOllow through
effecllvely, dlllt'llllalct prom-la:oth,
era lodiJ. A 1alluro to honor Ccimmll·
menll will lltnllh ,our lmag~~.
ICOIII'IO (0111. M
21) You might
not be at yow today In managing
programs lhtt lnvoiVI otherl .. Well •
yourallf. Don't tlke on -thing
you'N not equipped to ltartdlt.
IACIITTAIIIUI (Now. 21-Geo. 11) lnattlld ol njutfug propnall ...-by
yow ~ today lhat you lltl'- lo be
llltl'avaaant. you might .... ~ea~v con.-lltid Iaior be blamtd for tilt nn.,..

No•.

·
day, be"" to~
whe reallr c1a1 debaCle.
know What llilly ,. lliclng about. Poor CA•RIDOIIN (0.0. D,.1an. 11) In 1
....., llffort IGCiay, lake paine lo t.. COo
counaalcoultl be V«'f - " '·
C!AIICIII (,.,. 21....., 211 An Old -attw. If You 1111 to ltOid up
atandby whe Ill ..-~y II.IPPCII'ItW of you wllllftl\* 1ht Alllmoolly o1 th- I
yow politlona might tum out to be 111 with Whom you're lnvotVIII.
ad-v tOday. lie extremely Cllilul

your-· ·

. , ,. . .

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He ;
'oelj
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low 10 fonn """ - -

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T1110 old lines- talki::g
about the past "I b BI B0'8 the
WOISt lhng about h-11 wy; one
old li:na" said, 'Is ...

=it
I I I' I' I •

..--P-R_O_H_E_P-..,1
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itself the -

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in lhe """""" wordS
liiing

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deoalop " - ...,. No. 3 balow.

II
,_,.
SC...M IllS ANSWTruism • Mouth • Rln:h · Enough - HIGHER
"Well, I'm middle aged; sighed the feltow_ "You know,
that age when your met1101y is sholtef. e~q~e~iBirc:e is
longer, stamir;ta is .liMa'. lnl your bel ead is
HIGHER."

..

.. ;.l

...
.......
........
...,
~ ·

�TUeaday,January19,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GI raised U.S. flag over POW camp
O...U.I

I

LFCJ.yelll

110. ,._ p · e 1 aevcul -"'1
llltcn rn. A
W GJIW tild
beaa J&amp;ilauS d - ia Moool•qo

frn.-

aa .,.....,woddw.u.ne

TOYS FOR CHILDREN • Pictured are
Eloise Adams and Dora Wining or the Meigs
County Salvation Army and ''Mac'' McMillion
of Overbrook Center. McMillion was one or the

llltcn delai
ft liap d die
Gil I I GaL Gccqc l"'ltaa) 11aR
ArtrJ Slab llllde dleir Wll'f Ill lhe.
. . . . . . d ....... c:Bp.
Ollie of die llaell .... AmaiciD ..my ...... wlloat lbe
"wla ......y.
Gl dilnbcd 1111 die fltcpole, 1M:
dowD die aglyGa
.......
. .. , . it wilb tile I
N Slln
IIIII SlripeL• Well. MI. tblt tilay
01-me.
I - die pilot of. B-26 t- ""ci
shot down .,_ Nortb Aliii:a ill
JaniiiiY of 1943. Before 1 - IP.IIl
10 Moost ..ti. I W.. ia ..... FOW
camp, Stlllg LUft. m. Ia 1944, a
lalgc Amtrica 0., - . .,..ns
into die c:.np ..S houatato me for
hidin&amp;-(1-a""""'itycMiua.)We
wae ....eo put die Ore on
tile ptlillld ill CIIC lbe pWa tblt

elves that Santa kept busy aU year making toys
for chDdren. Items presented were wooden J'(J!:king horses, cars and a band crocheted baby
blanket.

we pmyal MUid oae day CGIIIe eo
libc:nllc us bid ~ idelitifymg
tile c:amp. I so-' die fill beho m

When Gel!. Paaon li\lerlral US,
my mommw IIIII 1 weal up to the
Gama fill IDWCI', 1lx* down their
fiii..S proucJly repllced it with the
b fiful .Amencan 1118 I bid kept
hjdc!Hi• ror 10 111111y mom.a
Sorry it lid me 10 kJoa 10 wri!C,
billl'lle been thinkiDa lbout this for
foar yan end decided it was time I
let you
DR. _MARTIN
All.AJN, SI:IREVEPORT, LA.
DEAR DR. ALLAIN: Can you
believe thit was 48 years ago?
1'lllllb for the memories, wl!ii:h
..,.,u me - BcJI) Hope will be 90

mow: ..

· ..
u
·
,_. old m
-,.
Dar Au LaDdfn: I just read
!he JeUer from "J.R.." who bit her
doctor's arin when he ~~:eideady
pine""" ber during a~

emergency room, tile doctor decided
I dim't need a pain ldDer liDce lhe
knee was numb. He tried to push
my kneecap bac411Ut it wu so
swollen it wouldn't go into position.
Meanwhile, the pain was
exapcialing.
Suddenly 1 sat bolt upri&amp;h~•
grabbed lhc doclllr's arm end bit it.
He Jet out a ICiellll lhat could be
'-\1 block away. Two emei'JIIIIC)'
room WOdm rushed in to IICIC.whit
was going 011. The doctor yeiW,
'Hold thM girl's 111!11 down!" They
· ~·and he pushed my kneeclp batlt
11110 ~lice.
•
.
This happeDcd 11 yean ago, blit I
remembcl' it like it was yesterday. I
don't drink wine lllymclle, but I still
love the Beades. •• CAROLYN
FROM CALIF.
DEAR CAROLYN: What a
III;IXYI Isn't it intereslina how aome
nigbunarcs fiom the put bllll out to
be fuMy when we look back at
them?
Gem of the Day: Old doctors
never die, tbey just lose their
palients.
·

Ohio Lottery

Meigs
defeats
Trimble

Pick 3:
209
Pick 4:

Page 4 .

a

Vol. 43, No. 189
Copyrighted 1993

in computing. Worked as electron- of Buffalo, N.Y., in 1987.
ics technician for major company.
He also gained credits toward
Speaks French, travels widely, his bachelor's degn:eat die Univerplays chess.
• sity or Mnssachusetts but quit when
One word made it all moot: he ran out ofmoney.
Homeless.
He was once nw:ried and, build.. _-.·
..
Unable to fmd a job for lack of a ing on technical skills learned in
home, DuBois has added a new the Army, worked on a high-tech
. item to his curriculum vitae: printer as a technician for Digital
Corp. in Westfteld for five years in
entrepreneur.
He has buih a small business as the 1970s. He earned about
a commercial window washer foL. $16,000 a year before returning to
about 20 clients in Northampton. school in search of beuer things.
He is now working for himself,
He inherited $12,000 when his
angling for more accounts, and father died but SPCnt it on his coleven slatting a new life in a rented lege education and medical bills.
room this wedt
.
He underwent successful operaBy his elllmple, Dubois is chal- tion in 1980 to remove a cancerous
lenging some widely held notions tumor rrom his chesL He had insur· ..
about il,le homeless.
ance; .but it-didn't pay for every·
"I liJce to work • and I can't get th'mg.
·
that permanent job,'' he said. . He was unable to find a job out
' 'You really wouldn't find any- of college. He said employers in
thing in a corporation, which Buffalo and Seau!e, where he also
expects you 1:0 have..a phone and looked; told him his knowledge
permanent ~s1dence..
was already outdated in the rapidly
Durmg an mterv1ew at Grove chanaing computer field.
.
Stree~ Inn,~ homeless shelt~r.
. Desperate for money, DuBois
DuBOis, weanng a tom s~eatslurt, picked apples in Washingron state
JENNA FERGUSON
sipped coffee as he reflected on - . the fiiSt in a string of tempoouy
how he W?und up there.
. jobs. He returned to Nonhampton
Techmcal terms about comput· in November - homeless for the
ets and insects, which he also stud- first time - after working con·
ied in ~ollege, crept into his C!ln· struction in Alaska
.
·versa lion. ~~ spoke of tounng
On extended visits in the past,
.
he had sometimes washed windows
Glenn A. and A.my D. Ferguson, Europe ll;"d Asl&amp;.
Th1s
•s
die
same
sbm,
bearded
for
-pocket money. This time, he
New Haven, W.Va., announce the
man
some
.people
shun
on
the
began
knocking on doors at stores
birth of a daughter, leona Danielle,
street,
even
m
this
college
.town
~f
and
offices
in earnest, offering to
on Oct. 15 at Cabeii·Huntibgton
f!Jnky
restaurants
and
lefttst
pohwash
windows
for about $5 a storeHospital in Huntington, W.Va.
ucs_.,
And.
he
never
panhandles.
front.
. She weighed seven pounds and
. I lbmk there arc people. wh~
DuBois now.makes only about
six ounces and was 20 inches long.
$30 a week, but it was enough to
Maternal grandparents are Frank think.we are gomg 10 eat the ncb,
.
enable him to rent a $90-a-month
E. and Carol S. Sisson, Pomeroy. he satd. .
Maternal great-grandfa'iher is . DuBOIS, whose fathe~ was an room on Thursday. Though his new
tnsurance agent.. grew up m n~y home is publicly subsicJized, he has
Ralph M Sisson, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are John Easthampton w1th. four ?ther. chtl· not applied for welfare or rood
and Joanne FerguSon, New Haven, dren m a French Canadian family. slamps
"I c'an survive without that;'' he
W.Va. Paternal great-grandmother He went to· French-speaki.ng
parochial school and earned a two. said. •'The Jess government depen·
is. Mae Grashear, Viper, Ky.
There is another child at home, year degree 1n compu~r sc1ence deney, the better."
from Bryant and Sua110n College
Luke Asa, age five.
The Order of Holy Baptistism
' was given to die infant by Father
Albert H. MacKenzie of St. Peter's
NEW YORK (AP)- Neil Jor- worse and worse, the business
Episcopal Church in Gallipolis on
seemed more difficult to get anyNov. 22. Godparents present were dan, whose "The Crying Game" thing through," the direcillr said in
Angela Sisson, Plano, Texas; has been mentioned as a possible today's The New York Times.
Amanda Sisson, Columbus; and Oscar contender, nearly quit the "You looked at what was coming
business less than two years ago.
Jack Hayes, Louisville, Ky.
• 'The movies were getting out: such paucity of invention . l

By JEFF DONN.
Associated Press Writer
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. (AP)
- His resume was Jllenty impressive: Maurice DuBOis, 43. Degree

Moo""'wg.It-ro.p.billr.. 11ft
the B-deldt

lhepain.
.
·
When we finaDy .mived at lhc
1

m.-dl--.

By JULIA PRODIS
A......,.., PressWrilr
DETROIT (AP) - Retilemcnt
disappointed 67-ycar-old Mary
Himay.

So four years after sbe retired !IS
a clerk with the Michigan state
uncmpioymelit office, sbe hired on
with iecl1y Services IDt_and has
been worldng as pllt-time tt.mpo- ·
rary help fm lbe past,_-.
"After a while I got tired of
going visitiDJ. going shopping,
going here, gomg there. I clriW I
gotta gCt outa tberc." said Himay,
processiug telephone onlen at
~Foods Inc. in Troy.
' 'Ii Jally boc.a my mcnle up.
I'm such a busy penon, ~yone
who wants
. to ICC
... me has. to make

a

ir"""tmmt

.

an :znay isn't alone. A study

Fergus on birth
announced

released late last ,_. shows ihiR
pk:uty -of .,,,,.,a~ 10
hire reairees for everythin1 froiD
clerical to managooeat positioos;
however. lbe "''vi"" doo't biR:
many of lhem.
. The stady was conducted by
two Mic:bipn professon for die
A.merican Association of Relired
Pe&amp;ns. It found tblt 46 pticenl of
the 1,000 private compll!lics surveyed hire people over 50 wbo
have retired from otber jotJs. II!MIY
in pennanent, full-time positioos.
But 63 percent of die compaaies
lbat employed n:tirccs had fewer
than 1(1 0111he payroll
.
Researchers Cllpected to find
only about 20 pen:cnt of private
companies hiring retifces - and

arc

----Names in the news---kept thiaklng, ' Why not take up
somelbing mm: rcwmling?' "
The turnaround for the Irish
novelist ud director oa:wn:d 1Rcr
he came across in his desk a shan
SIDty he had 'Wfdco years . . He
turned it into a screeaplay m just
two months.
....... _ ......... w
d•
a or; -1--&amp; ~ 4 9&gt;'0 ID
New York and Los Angeles in
NoVCillbe{ and will go natioilwide
~'~-"

Community calendar

TUESDAY
CHESTER • The Meigs County
Livestock Sale and Show sub-com·
mittees have scheduled meetings 10
review 1992 livestock rules and
regulations and to make reconl·
mendations to the 1993 senior fair
board. The meetings are open to
any 4-H or FFA member, parent or
advisor. The swine sub-committee
will meet Tuesday at? p.m. at
Chester Elementary.
POMEROY · Alnerican Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, Tuesday. Dinner at 7
p.m.. meeting at 8 p,m.
LETART FALLS · There will
be a.special P'1'0 meeting at Letart
Falls Elementary on Tuesday at 7
p.m .
RACINE • A meeting on agri·
cultural law will be held on Tues·
day at Southern High School in
Racine. The session will be held
from 7 10 9:30 p.m. in lhe vocational aaricultuJe ciaJsroom. Fencing
Jaws, dog laws, Wiler rights, under·
ground storase 'tanks and many
other Jaws aft'ecting fanners wiD be
llilcalsed. The IIOIIion is ~sored
by the Adull B8lic Educatm Cen·
ter of Tri-County Vocational

School, as a pan of its continuing
education program. The meeting is
open to die public at no charge.
BURLINGHAM • The Bedford
Township Trustees will hold their
organizational meeting Tuesday at
7 p.m. at town hall.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT ·
"T h e
Middlepon Arts Council will offer
a series of dance classes on western
line dancing beginning Wednesday
at 6:30·p.m. Dances to be taught
include the Electric Slide; Texas
Freeze, Achy Breaky, Titsll Push,
Boot Scootin' Boogie and others.
Cost of the classes, per session, are
$3.50 per person and $7 a couple.
Call 992-2675 or 992-7733.
SYRACUSE • The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club of
Syracuse will meet Wednesday.
Bring items !0 make tray favors for
Febniary: red iind w.llite construction paper, red ink pen or marker,
glue.or paste, scissors and a ruler. ·
POMEROY • The Mii!dleport
Literary Club will meet Wednesday

=-stars Fore.

i!)~

Whitak·
er as a Brilish soldier swicJned in
Nonbcm ln:illld who picks up a
beautiful TIOIJIIJl playa! by Miranda Richudsoa ..S discoms he has
been lured into a tnp by die Irish
Republican Army.

meeting for parents and students cif
the junior cla~s at Eastern High
School on Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in
the cafeteria.
·
ROCK SPRINGS • The Middlepen Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Rock Sl'rings United Methodist
Church. Gerald Rouaht, Pomeroy
Chief of Police, will speak on
"Morals of Children and
Teenagers."

even then only on a temporary, human resource skills 'ibcy need.
(Jirt-time basis.
. •.
They look at retirees as a very nice
"C011vc:ntiooal thinlting is that source of skilled labor," Hirshom
when you're 60, 62, 6S you redre, said.
KeDy Services Inc., lhc nation's
then you play and you die. It's not
happening Illy longer," said Joan largest temporary staffing compe,Kelly, manager of AARP's busi- ny, recruits older workers for its
ness pannersbips prOgram.
Encore program. Of the 550,000
Aicll AUwine, president or Pre- people who work for Kelly Sercise Metal Products in Phoenill, has vices, about 10 percent are ove~: 55.
four retirees, ages 61, to 72, in his Mally have fOUIId tetircment boring
)Wit force of l!Oe,Two are skilled or expensive and want the social
labaeas working in manufacturing, interchange 111d ·exua cash a job
the tbinl a supervisor 111d the fourth can bring, KeDy officials say.
' ' 'Com(JII!Iies are going to have
an engineer.
·
"The reason wt; hire them is to look 10 the more mature ,..orter.
because you don' t .~ve to train If they don't, they're not g:'£ to
them. They already liave lhc sldlls
IIIII lhc kilowledgc and the
C!ICC." Allwine said
dent of Kelly Services Encore Pro.
.
· The !IlDdy for AARP was ,con- gram.
ducted by Barbara Hirshom of
Critics contend that although
Wayrte Stale UniVersity's Institute more companies may be .hirjng
d Gerootology and Denise Hoyer olcb workers, they are giving ~
·
of Easlern Michipn University's menlll jobs.
"The problem is not enough
College of Business. It used mail
end ICJcphone surveys in late 1991 jobs are available for ~le who
to coruact privale companies across want them. There is an inJlate SCIIIC
the country with 20 or more that lhe older should move alo!tg
employees.
.
. and let in die younger, who have
"Companies have pared down families to suppon and need thelj'
so fast 111d completely, they have chance," said Boston . Globe
divested lbemselvcs Wsome of the . columnist Juliet BIUdney, author of
"Forced Out," aboutlhe problems
' .
of retirees finding work.
"People who come back setde
·"l
for very little in terms of whtr~
'Thinker~ goe~ to China
they were when they gat ouL Most
PARIS '(AP) - Auguste of the jobs I know of ... are routine,
Rodin's famed sculpture "The clerical jobs, or food service, or
lbinkc:r" left. Franccl for the fttst bagg!~ in a' supermarket," Brud·
time Monday, bound for a dispiay ney
.
in Beijing along with 112 other
Hirshorn and Hoyer aclt;n 0wl·
wads by the French aculptor.
ed$e that many companies employ
A giant crane hoisted lhe 6-foot- relirees in clerical and lower-end'
higlt, 1,500-powtd·bronze aculpcure jobs. Days Inn motel chl!-in and
at lhc Rodin Museum IIIII lowered McDonald's restallrallts are known
it into a wooden c:nte..
for hiring senior citizens to work
Organized by lhe French .Asso- the front !lesk or serve hamburgers.
ciation For :Anistic Action, the However, the mearchers also note
show nms in Beijing fiom Feb. 15 hbw many companies hire older
to March 14 111d. Shanghai from workers in management, profesMarth 27 to April 18 before head- sional and technical jobs.
•
ing to Hong Kona and Taiwan.
or die companies surveyed that
''Tile Thinker''. will then return 10 hire retirees, 36 percent had retirees
Paris from Taipei.
in m111agement positions, 40 per· •
· Tile sbow is lhc fiiSt Rodin ret· cent had some redrees in prores:
rospeetivc: ever in China. •
sional positions and 28 percent
Tile ~· showing a seated employed some older workers in
nude with his head in hand, deep in technical positions. The lsrger the
coua:mplatiou, is one or the best- companies, the more likely they
known WOib by the 19th-century were to hire redrees into upperse~.
•
level jobs, Hirshom said.
·

ewen- ~~c':rt:~h~a:~~~

.

'

Patrick H. O'Brien, affid, and Hazel P. Bearks, SullOn.
CarlL. Wolf, Meigs.
Hazel P. Bearks, 4 A.· Lot lt4,
John I. Kerr, Angela M. Kerr, Sec: 16, t 2, R 12, to Philip Bear•
·
1.10 A, to Gregory K. Lee, Tina L. ks, Sutton.
Don L ..lleizing. dec' d, by Exec: Lee, Rutland.
Williatn Earl Cray, Bonnie Loil
, 10 Thomas A. Stone. Salisbury.
Wanetta &lt;;l. Radekin, parcels, to · Jewell Cray, parcela, S. 12, T-8, R·
Robert V. H~::;ty, dec'd, Arlin .Radeldn, Patricia Radeldn, · 15, 10 Walter Jewell, Jr, Jeuie Jew·
,.
ell, Salem.
,
affid, to Lucille
erty, Midd Columbia.
Paul E. Beegle, Helen Eileen
Edward D. Neece Rhonda F.
Viii.
Guy T. Hayman, Sue Hayman, Beegle, 0.5078 A., T-IN, R-12 W., Neece, S.17 A, t-l,R-13, Charles
1.98A (conection deec,l). 10 Clellie to Dwight D. Hill, Lorna J. Hill, T. Neece, Gerturde Neece, Sa!isl.ellrt.
.
bury.
Maddox, Olive. •
Benz Land Co. by partners,
Charles T. Neece, Gertrude
Helen L. Conrad et al, Sberill's
deed, to Lowell D.~. Bon· pan:els Sec. 3, to 1o1m L. Hageny, Neece, 5.000 A. T·lN, R·l3W, to
Dorthea A Hagerty, Columbia.
Edward D. Neece, R~onda F.·
nie Sue Olevalier, Rasville.
Larry J. Roush, .Once Roush, Neece, Sali~ury.
, Stella S. Snyder, Michael A.
Da1lu A. Cadle, Betty Jo c.dle,
NeutzlinJ, Brenda Kac Neutz.lin&amp;. 4.20 A., to E!lward A. Young,
·
Malea
YOUilg,
Cheattt.
parcels,
to Willwil Leach, Melody
parcels, to Michael A Neatzlinl.
Gerald R. Thompson, Alice K. Leach, Midd. V.
.
Brenda Kae Neatzlin1. Poe. V.,
Tbompaon, parcels (corrective
Charles B.· Humphry, Vivian E.
Salisbury.
Marpret 1. Burdlc:r, plll:el. eo deed) , eo Associated l"abricators, Hump~=:•
·~ Jayrnu
"·'J,J r.,
,
,...,
,
Lilli111
cne Hall, Jon Thomp·
Michael
Millie On
r, Inc., Pam Vill
. Midd. v.
.
William E. Lewis et al, Sheriff son, Tamn L. Thompson, Dwi&amp;Jit
Ruleaa RoiJem,
23, deed, to Dou&amp;las M. Dempsey, Iva Thompson, Donna P. Thompson,
T-2, R 13, to GreiCirJ 0. King, L. Dempaey, S)'IICUSC V.
Emmett Roy Thompson, Pamela
'
Nancy T. ~ Sali~.
.
· James Thomas Ours, Dorothy Jean ThompsOn, Olive.
Alben Quivc:y. Jo Aim Qaivc:y, Ours, ~ S. 26, T-3, R-11. to
Leeira Stroiiiiiei•mdec'd, affid, to
aka , _ Quney. 3.97 Aim Pr. Andrew Miliiman. LebaiiOlt.
Richard H. Sh
u, Salisbury.
116, to 1o1m T. Jaat«, s..- M.
Guy T. Hayman,~. Sue Hayman, · Rufus Wesley Young, Lela M.
ButAif, Bedford.
•
1.98 A, to Mose II . Hagerman, Young, tnc:lca, tQ Rufn Wesi,y
Roller N. BuctleJ, dec'd, a1fid, Olm. '
· Young, Lela Mae Young, ICudand
ill DadeneJ. Buddey. Olester.
Pauli. Bearks, dec'd, affut, 10 .. Vill
.
.
Compiled bTEmmogene Holstem C01110
Recorder, Meip County, Ohio

POMEROY • The Democratic
Executive Committee ·will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters HaD.in Pomeroy.
· STIVERSVILLE·- Evangelist
Brother David Carpenter,
Belleville, W.Va., IVill be preachin~ at the Stiversville Word of
F111th Church OJi Thunday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor David Dailey iuvites
die public.

.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Special
at the library in PomerQy. Mrs.
meetin&amp;,
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
Ronald Reynolds will be the host·
No.
91»3,
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. to
ess. The bcxlk tcview will be pre.
elect.ll
quartermaster.
AU membcl's
sented ·by Mrs. Eileen Buck on ·
urged
10
at!Cnd.
"Ellcept for Me and Thee" by Jessatnyn West. Roll call will be to .
POMEROY • Poultty S~­
tell of a Quaker custom.
mittee, Th!lfsday, 1 p.m .. Mei's
County
Extension Office an
THURSDAY
POIDflOY. .
REED.SVILLE • There wi.ll be. ~

..

)

)

•.

--County land transfers posted-~

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home in
Racine. ·

.

Clllltlda, send $4.45.)

Companies·hiring more retirees·

~·

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that eveut. hems
must be received weD in advance
to assure publicatio!l in the cal·
endar.

Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (IN

o-.

....-See.

•

2 Secitono, 14 Pogeo 25 cenlo

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
Wednesday, January
20, 1993
. ,.
..
.

A Multlmealo Inc.

'

~flllper

·President Clinton calls for.
new generation of leaders

twO

College-educated homeless
man ·starts small.business

.

Rain tonight. Low _,. 40.
Tbunday's hJ&amp;b tn mid 4011.

•

What's the truth about pot,

old Gamlllll'rJrm IIIII llcp · ellamination. That was not as cocmne. LSD. PCP, crack. speed
~it for lbe acn ,_-.
unusual11youthink.
and downers? "The,· Lowdown
1n cmy 1945. we wae onleilld
I had a lridt bee pop out 011 me · on Dope" luu up-to-tlle·millute
10 start waJkin&amp; -.. Before we wllile "' "'"'in&amp; in lbe mounlains ilformalion 011 drMgs. Sellll a self·
left camp, I paiiiJe1 my pCLious yean igo. As 1·111Dted in qony, addressed, lon), baslnets-sl%1
blankets and a 1111111 traasmiua my hlllbMd loeded me IIIID the car en~lope Gild a. clleck or 1ff0MY
wbicli had 11110 been s!ijipt'l iDeo · ..S c1n1w four houn to lbe IIC8RSt order for $3.65 (this IIICIKtUI
qqJ. Twenly do-MId us...W ...... ·· • I cbl!k half a boUle d wine postage llllll handling) to: UJwdowr(.
for nearly six days ill lbe eo ud .., old Beetles songs to ldD c/o Ann Landers, P.O. BoJI 11562;

.

9251
Buckeye 5:
4-12·13-17-25 .

' WASHINGTON (AP)- Presi·
dent Clinron IOday summoned the
nation to help a new generation of
· leadership "face hard uuths and
, take suong steps," vowing in his
•
inaugural address: "We will not
shrink from lhe chaUenges nor fail
to seize the opponunities.
In his address, the natjon's 42nd
president marveled at bolb the his"
toric legacy he inherits and the
daunting cballenges America faces
- at home and abroad - on the
verge of the 21~ century.
" Let us begin with energy and
hope, with faith and di!cipline, and
l~t.-ui- work until our work is
done," Clinron, a Democrat, said
in the prepared text of his address.
It was a flowery, flourishing speech
that repeated his successful cam-.
paign themes but, as is ttaditional,
contained no new initiatives.
The 46-year-old son of Hope,
Ark., paid tribute 10 his predecessor, George Bush, for a half-century of public service, then looked
forward. In a line reminiscent of
John F. Kennedy's 1961 inaugural,
ClintOn said it was time for a new
generation to accept the mande of
A.m~can and global leadership.
·
"Today, a generation raised in
the shadows of the Cold War
assumes new responsibilities in a
world warmed by the sunshine of
freedom but tilreatened still by
Interfaith prayer aervlce. CHnton was sworn iD
· ·· ARRIVES AT CHUR(ll(- Prelidmt·elect
ancieat halreds and new .plagues."
iiS1tlle ..U.ct-praldel!l' at !lOOD loday on Capitol
. Cllutw, •
117 witt 111£als, arrives ..
Clinron said These remarks under~ ' 7:·~· at 'tbii'Mittcl telllm Afrlea MethodiSt EplleO- :i. ~ . HilL (AP)
c
.
.
scored
that he was a presidency
··
pal Cliureti):Waslalngton Weduesday for an

.,..w

borne amid a handful of global
crises, as weD as the sluggish econ- .
omy at horne 'that candidate Clinron
pledged would be his lllp priority.
The riew president- untested
in foreign affairs - pledged to
uphold America's global commit·
ments, vowing:
"When our vital interests are
challenged, or the will and conscience of the international community defied, we will act- with
peaceful diplomacy when possible,
with force when necessary. The
brave A.mericans serving our nation
in the Persian Gulf, in Somalia, and
wherever else they siBJid are testa·
ment to our resolve. •'
The first Democratic president ·
elected in t2 years, Clinllln called
on Congress JO join with him ·in
answering voters' demands for ..a
government that works, and listens.
"Today, we pledge that the era
of deadlock and drift is over - a
new season of American renewal
has begun," Clinton said .in his
text. "It will not be easy; it will
require sacrifice. But it can be
done, and done fairly, not choosing
sacrifice for its own salce, but for
our own sake. We must provide for
our·nation the way a family provides for its children."
.
Acknowledgill!l the obstacles in
his way - soaring b~t deficits
and health care costs, a fragile
economy, global.competition and
even voter cynicism about theii
government, Clinron sought imme- ·

diately to put an activist but.realis·
tic slamp on his Qew administra·
lion. ,
'
" We know we have ill face hard
truths and take strong steps," Clinton declared. "But we have .not
done so. (nslead, we have drifted,
and that drifting has eroded our ·
resources, fractured our economy,
and shaken our confidence. Though
our chaUenges are fearsome, so are
our suenglhs.. A.mericans'have ever
~n a restless, questing; hopeful
people. We must. bring to our task
IOday the vision and will of those
who came before us.'' .
.
· ''While America rebuilds at
home, we will not shrink from the
challenges, nor fail to seize the
opportunities, of this new world;' '
Clio ron vowed. "T6gether with our
friends and allies, we will work ill
shape change, lest it engulf us.'' .
Clinllln urged the young people
who returned to the Democratic
party in the election to s~,a~~d by
him in governing, and as John
Kennedy did in 1960, be call~d
them ill public service as weU. ·,
"The scripture says, "And let
us not be ~ in weD-doing, for
in due seasQn, we shaU reap, if we
faint not," ' Clinton said. "From
fllis joyful mountain top of celellmlion, we hear a call to setvice in lhc
valley. We have heard the uumpelS. We have changed the guard.
And now- each in our own way,
and with God's help - we must
answer the call.''

Reporf o·n 1991 solid ·waste
data, relea~ed by Ohio EPA
COLUMBUS • Landfill disposal .capacity has increased and outof-state waste disposed in die state
has decreased, accordina to an ·
· Ohio EPA report on 1991 so.lid
waste data recently released.
"Every county in Ohio has con' tributed to this good news. Respon·.sible planning is necessary IOday,
. to protect the; environment and
: meet the disposal needs for tomorrow. A 10lid witste disposal crisis is
. being avoided by die localized
; solid waste planning proc;ess set in
· motion by House Bill 592," 'Ohio
' EPA Director Donald R. Schregar·
dus said.
Ohio's landfills have a remaining disposal capa:ity of an average
of 7.4 to 9.4 years, up from 5.1 •
. 6:5 years in 1990. Each county in

the slate is ~uired 10 demonsirate
10 y~ or disposal capacity as a
part of the solid waste plan.ning
process. Due to tile IIIIOWlt of time
needed to properly site and con·
struct a landfill, Ohio·EPA has
defmed five years or less o/ dispos·
a! capacity as serious.
.
The amount of out-pf-state
waste disposed .of in, Ohio
decreased by about 200,000 tons
from 1990 figures to I.7 million
IOns, weD.below the all time high
of 1989 (3.7 million IOns).
The total amount of solid waste
disposed of in Ohio in 1991
·(including industrial waste) was
15,892,482 tons, or approximately
1.5 tons per peniln.
The following statistics were
also included in the report, summa-

rizing the Athens-Gallia-HockingJackson-Meigs-Vinton Joint Solid
Waste Management Dislrict repon
for 1991. (In tons/year).
In-district

Asbestos waste, 25.15; gene!al
solid waste non-baled, 48,993.20;
industrial solid waste, 3.14; exempt
waste, 27,833.40. Total, 76,854.89.
Out-of-district
Asbestos waste, 2,463.48; general solid waste non-baled, 53,
62 1.06; industrial solid waste,
8,!60.66; other waste 3,065.34.
Total, 67,30().54'.
.
Out-of-state
Asbestos waste, 1,993.28; gen·
era! solid waste · non-baled.
42,7.10.82; industrial solid waste,
1,530,08; other waste, 425.78 .
Total, 46;659 .96.

Rice sworn in as Meigs S&amp;WCD supervisor
Rice joins Tom Theiss, Joe Bolin, government, soU and water conserMarCo Jeffers 111d Chuck Yost in vation districts have legal authority
administering the Meigs Soil and to assist landowners with. a wide
Water Conservation District's natu· range of soil, water, woodland, and
ral resoun:c collservation programs. wildlife c011servation objectives.
. According to Theiss, chairman
The Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Conservation Districts was of the Meigs SWCD Board of
organized in 1943 to further the Su\)Crvisors, non-point source polnatural resource conservation mis· ·lulton education will be a major ·
sian of the state's 88 county based objective of the district in t993.
SWCDs. As subdivisions of state Non-point source water pollution
results when rain and snQw-melt
runoff carries polluLBIUS to rivers,
.streams, and IQes. Runoff from
farm ftelds and livestock feedlots.
construCtion siteS, streets and park·.
ing lots, mined land and virtually
all other land surfaces 111nualll.
delivers millions of tons of soi ,,
fertilizers, 111imal waste, salt and
other pollutints to surface water
SUI!P,!ies.
·
f.
• Non-point source pollution
affects the majority of Ohio's river
miles and lakes," said Theiss.
"With lhe cooperation of landowners in the district and with the
· U8istance of the Ohio Department .
of Natural Reaoun:es, Ohio EPA.
Soil Conservation Service and
other county, state 111d federal
~es and orpnizatlons we can
fmd solutions to a problem that
aiTecla all Oltiolnl." .
.
TIIO&amp; lllllnding 1be' Ohio Federation of Soil and w.- eonservadOII Districts SOth annual mcetina
in Columbus were Rice, Theiss,
Jcle 111d Janet Bolin, Marco 111d
Jackie Jeffers, Chuck and Nita
NEW S1JPERVIIOR ·Job ltlct, left, of ·=~=~!II a new
Me... Soil aad 'WIIIr CCIIIIII'V8U. Dlltrlct •
He Yost, Blair Wiudon, Opal Dyer,
Court Jastle~
sworn lato omee last wtek b7 Olllo
Mike.Duhl, and Relllllll catherine
TliomMJ, MoJer.
ShenefiCIId.

John C. Rice. of Reedsville,
recently elected supervisor of the
Meigs Soil and Wa!Cr Conservation
District, was sworn into office by
Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice
Thomas J. Moyer at the 50th annual meeting of die Ohio Federation
of Soil and Water Conservation
Disuicts held in Columbus last
W«k
Elected to a three year term,

)

NEW OWNER • David Bumgardner of
. Middleport has purchased this MGM Farm
City, Inc. property 011 East Mal11 Street in
Pomeroy. Plans caD for tile nearly four acres to

be partially clel!red iu preparation for some
commercial devell)pment. The Pomeroy Fire
Department i'l tentatively scbedllled to burn several of the buDdings on Sunday. .

Middleport man purchases
MGM Farm City property ·
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Nen Starr
The MOM Farm City, Inc. propeny on East Main St., Pomeroy,
vacant for more than three yeats,
has been purchased by David Bumgatdner, Middleport.
.
George Hofter, president of
MOM Farm City, Inc., Tuesday
confmned lhc sale of the real estate
which includes nearly four acres
with several detc:rioratulg buildings
.and tile riverfront area across East
Main.
'
According to 111 option on file
in the Meigs County Recorder's
office, the purchase price was
$40,000 with the specification that
it be trlllsferred subjec;t to easements and rights of way of record,
and any claims rellting to Jl(lllatkln
or_, other EnVirollnentai l'rolec·
tiol! ~ maam.
it furthei' specified that tile IIO'fl
owner uaume responsibility for
any problems widllhe fuel st01age
liJlks 111d EPA reaulatlons which
miaht ar1ae u a result of the tams
on or under die popiilty.
That stipulation was also set
forth In the deed filed in the
recorder's office this morning. It
reads '"l'he ....-e ICCePII this real
eatate in u ia eonclltlon and
a110mes and qrees to Indemnify
lhc gJ'Iilllln ap1nst aU JY.blli!Y for

any hazardOus waste or other Environmental Protection A~ency prob!ems which may ex1st on the
premises."
As a pe,n of the sale agreement,
. Bank One, Athens , agreed to
release its mortgage from record.
· Bumgardner when asked about
plans for use of the propeny, said
he has no speCific plans and his
objective now· will be to get it
cleaned up. ·
He said the fmt phase of the
project will be ill remove the wood
structures and that "hopefully that
will begm IICllt week." He said that
he has applied for permits to
· remove the above ground and
underground tanks and expects
those to como through withm 30
"-ys.
'
· ··
.
"Hopefully by March I the
cleanup will be finished," said
Bumgardner.
Bunla&amp; iichedi!led
Melnwltilo, Pomeroy Flie Chief
Danny ZiJtle said this iiiDr1lin&amp; that
the PoniorOy P~ Department has
been COIIIICIDd about bumiJW IORIC
of tile buildinp and thai bas leOta·
lively been ICl for Sunday. .
· He said that a Jejieaental!ve of
tile State Fire Manhali 's of!k:e has
already been in here to chect the
situation 111d will be bact either
Saturday or early S'!'III&amp;Y IIIOnliil&amp;

*-· •

10 do some more testing.
Reportedly there are four tanks
under one of the buildings and it
will be up to the Stale Fire Marshall's office to determi!Je if there
is any explosive danger. If there is,
· Zirkle swd, the tanks will be filled ·
with carbon dioxide to eliminate
that danger.
Zirkle said that all wood build·
ings along East Main Street will be
bl!flled. That will leave only the old
service station which is concrete
Main, a four story bUilding on con~
dor Street along with anothc:i
smaller building which MOM used
for fertilizer storage.
· .•
Zirkle said that ltC 111ticipates ·11
will take about six hours te com ~
plete lhe job. He said SUuday wall '
selected becanse the file·•ceds ·td ·
be lione in the "-yligbt. More 0~
lhe volllnteer fuanen are awi(abkl
on weekends and tralllc is m• e4.I
Asked about traffic control, Zirk1C
·says that because of the pllllned
systematic burning of the bulle)~
ings, he aatic.ipete&amp; that East MaJil
Slleet will remain open.
. '
As for oilier buildings in the
area. particularly· a boule 11111 lhC
Ohio Valley Bllllt Food Sun OQ
. die west aide of the MOM bu1J4.
· lnjp, Zlitlo asslll8d dill die~
ment will pve iidcquale [IIOIICtloa. ·

on

'

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