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nmaa Santlnal

Indiana
_thumps
osu 96-69

·Farm Flashes

Applicator cards may
be renewed Jan. 27
ByEDWARDM. VOLLBORN
ference.
GALLIPOLIS - Attention priPork: producers in the area
vate pesticide applica!ors who need will want 10 aucnd lhe Polk Protheir cards renewed Ibis year! Gal- ducer Update on Tuesday, January
lia County applicators should 26. The event will be held at lhe
attend eilher a I p.m. or 7 p.m. new Lewis Family Restaurant in
class on Wednesday, Jan,uary 27 at Jackson. In~luded in ihe evening
lhe C.H. McKenzie Agricultural • will be a. co-sponsored "Polk aurCentet.
·
·
fet" for lhe cost of $3.50 per per·
Reccnification ~Uires a mini- son. The major focus of the meetmum of 3 hours ttainmg (one hour ing will be "Pork Quality Assurcore, plus one-half hour per catego- ance" level 3. Documentation of
ry certified). Class sessions will completion of the "Quality Assuralso be held in Meigs County on ance" levels is very important,
' Thursday, January 28 at eilher I should future questions arise. Mr.
p.m. or 7 p.m. at lhc Senior Citi- Dave Samples, Extension Agent in
zens Center in Pomeroy. Jackson . Jackson County mai~~Jsram
County will host recertification iilvitalions directly 10
. If
classes atlhc Soulh District Exteil- you did not get a copy; please
sion Center on February 17 at A meal reservation count is needed
eilher9 a.m. or7 p.m.
by 9 &amp;;m. Tuesday (call44&amp;-7007).
In Gallia County people wanting
Several -local farm and small
to become certified for the first busif!eSS record keepers attended a
. time, should auend .a training class class last ~ear to learn how to use
at 7 p.m. on FebruarY 3 and lhe fol- "Quicklm' , a computerized record
low-up testing between 3 p.m. and . keeping system; The class was well
6 p.m. on February )7. Both will be received and most of lhe l'artici- held in lhe m_eeting room of the pants are usin~ "~cken" to their
C.H. McKenz1e Agncultural Cen- business. A s1mllar class will be
ter.
_
held from 9:30 a. m. - 3:30 p.m.,
Severa! activities of a regional lhe first lhrec Thesdays of February
nature w11l be held on Monday, at the South District Extension
January 25 . The .Central Ohio Office in Jackson. Bryson R. (Bud)
B~eeders C&lt;J?pe~uve (C:O.B.A.) Carter, Extension Farm Managey.till hold lhe1r Dairy S~mar dur- ment Specialist, will be the primary
mg lhe ~Y at lhe Hobday In~. A instruciOr. A registration fee of $10
n~n unul 2.:30 p.m. Hay Chmc is requested by January 29 or until
will be held m the Ag. Mec~an1cs the class is filled. Call for a regisshop at Buckeye Hills Career Cen· tration form. YQu do not have to be
ter at Rio Gran4e: T~e industry a computer expert,_however, prior
SJ?&lt;!nsored event will mclude ser. computer or typing experience will
YICi!lg and trouble ~hooting of hay be very helpful.
eqwp~nt along 111_11h a safety preThe tobacco marlteting season is
scn1aaon. Reserv~uons are not nee- rapidly drawing to an end. At the
essary. The Oh1o Valley Sheep end of sales on January 14 an estiAssociation will hold its monthly mated 93 percent of lhe crop had
mee.ting at the C.H. McKenzie been sold. The season average
Agncultural Center at 7:30p .m. price at that point was $181.79 per
The business meeting will include hundred.
the election of officers. The proEdward M. Vollbom is Gallia
gram will feature portions of the County's exteasioa agent, agrl·
recent West Virginia Satellite Con- cutlure.

can.

anua

earance ae

ALL CARS AND TRUCKS AVAILABLE FOR
MONTH ENDING
SALE - .
.
BUSINESS IS BRISK - BUT WE MUST MOVE
THESE UNITS' THIS.
TH. NO ONE 'WILL
SELL YOU ONE FOR .LESS!

300-400
400-500

S00-600

BUll CALVES:
Good &amp;. choice

400-500

S00-600
HElfER CALVES:
Godd &amp;. choice
300-400
400-500
Cows &amp; Calves (by head)
Cows (by head)
BABY CALVES '(by head):

:

Page4

••

a1
Vol. 43, No. 182
Copyrighted 1"'

.

2 Sectlono, 12 Pogeo 25 cen11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Monday, Janua,.Y 25, 1993

'

A MuHimedlo Inc. NeWopaper

..

.

I

Firemen torch.
old wo.oden
mill buildings

a first step to clean up the lot for COIIImerdal development. The
buildings were torched by the r~remen at 9:30a.m. and in less than
·
two bours were reduced to nbble.

:Iraq turns
:·over list of
·suppliers
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraq
has turned over a list of suppliers
_for its nuclear weapons program,
-complying with a key Security
' Council demand after balking for
monlhs, a top U.N. weapons expert
said today.

and olher prunes and plums.·Production dropped for bananas, cranberries, dates, figs, pineapples and
California prunes, as well as for
peaches. Avocados, berries and
guavas were not included in lhe
estimates.
.
Nut production fell 2 percent to
863,900 tons, the Agriculture .
Department said in the same repat. ·
Larger crops were reportecf for
almonds, hazelnuts and pistachios.
Production was 'lower for
macidamias, pecans and walnuts.
The department estimated the
overall value of fruit production,
· excluding berries, at $S.41 billion,
nearly lhe same as the previous
year. Increased values were reponed for apricots, sweet cherries,
dates, olives, pears, and other
prunes and plums, as well as for
grapes. Values decreased for
bananas. nectarines, papayas,
peaches, pineapples 'and California ·
plums, as well as for apples.
The value of the nut crops was
$1.36 ~illion, up 4 percent. Yll;lues
we_re higher· for almonds and PIS.ta•
ch1os and lower for maca~m1as
and pecans.

Clear lolllgbt. Low aroulld
15.
Tuesday,
IIUIDy. H""~ Ia midlOs.
...
.

Kicker:
522735

UP IN FLAMES • Two old frame structures on the MGM
Farm City property pan:based last week by David Bumgardner
were burned Sunday morning by the Pomeroy Fire Department as

-" " "'
. - - . . .,._. .Maurizio Ziffeiero, deputy chief

~·--""

The old wooden structures of
the former MOM Farm City on
East Main Street, Pomeroy, which
at one time housed a thriving feed
and mill business were burned Sunday morning.
Under file direetion Of Danny
Zirkle, Pomeroy Fire Department
chief, lhc: buildinp .were torched at
9:30 a.m. and ·m less than two
hours were reduced to a pile _o f
smolcing rubble.
Pomeroy fliemen were assisted
by lhe Syracuse and Chester Fire
Departments in keeping lhe frre
under control. As the winds
whipped lhe blaze frremen kept ,a
steady stream of water on 'the old
four-story building on the rear of
the lot as well as the nearby Ohio
Valley Bulli: FOQd store.
Despite the rain, dozens of resi·
dents, many with cameras to record
the spectacular blaze and billowing
smoke clouds, lined the riverbank:
to watch the buildings bum.
During the height of lhe fire,
one firemen got overheated and
was taken by Pomeroy EMS to
Veterans MelT\orial Hospital where
he was treated and released.
At one time lhere was a water
shortage, Zirkle said, but it did not

.

-l"'t-~-

create a problem in controlling the
fire. He said that lhere were six fire
trucks and an emergency vehicle
on the scene and lhat 3,000 feet of
hose was used to pump water. .
The Middleport and 'several
other area departments were on
standby in the event of a fire iii the
area usually served by the Pomeroy
department since most of the active
fuemen, about 25, were assisting in
burning the MOM buildings.
Firemen were on lhe scene until
I: 30 p.m. with periodic checks
being made lhmughout the rest of
~the day and evening to assure lhat
small fires in lhe rubble did not
spread.
Zirlde said lhat oni:e the blll1l¢
area cools off then removal of lhe
underground and above ground
tanks will begin . He said tllat lhe
new owner David Buin$111lner has
received permits from lhe State
Fire Marshall's office to remove
the above ground tanks and from
its Underground Tank Division to
remove those under ground. Jeffers
Excavating will be handling lhe
underground tank removal, Zirkle
said.
.
Bumgardner has set Maft:h I as
his target date to have the area
cleared.
·

Thurgood Marshall, civil
rights champiqn, ~dies

of lho Internati!lDII Atomlc Energy
A~ency, said Iraa submitted what 11
said was a list o£90 percent of the
foreign suppliers and agreed to
answer quesUOD.I about the list.
"As usual, we ·Will press lhern"
for the remainder, said Ziffen:ro.

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Thur- tributions he made as 'an advocate
good Marsliall, a "true American and as a justice.' •
hero" who served 24 years as the . Retired Justice WiUiam J. BrenU.N. experts were in Baghdad
Supreme Court's first black justice nan, Marshall's closest friend on
today for what could be a crucial
and a lifetime as a civil rights the Supreme Court, said his "comtest of Iraq's compliance with Perchampion, is dead at 84.
mitment to making the Constitution
sian Gulf War cease-fire resoluwho
retired
from
lhe
Marshall,
a
vehicle to protect the equal rights
A
SEAT • Lester Frank of Jeffers Departmeat buraed bulldin&amp;s on the
lor
. lions at a time when Baghdad is
high
court
18
months
ago
because
of
all ha~ no match in American
Excavatinr Was oo the "hot seat" Sunday morn- Dave Bum1ardner who bas pun:based the propSeeking better relations with Washof
his
age
and
poor
health,
died
history."
·
ing as be bulldozed areas of ruble from the erty. (Sentinel pboto by Julie E. Dillon)
.ington and a halt to U.S. air auacts.
Sunday
of
heart
failure
at
Bethesda
MGM Farm ,City fire; The Pomeroy Fire
Naval Hospital in the Washington
Marshall was to have sworn in
'
suburbs.
AI Gore as vice president last
The great-grandson of a slave, Wednesday, but his health preventMarshall was privately gre~arious ed it. The duly went to Justice ·
Pneumonia vaccine will be Older persons, and those who s~f­ and genial, more reserved m pub- Byron R. White.
available Ibis week at lhe Meigs fer from long term illnesses may lic. But he cracked up lhe news
Marshall was hospilalized the
County Heallh Department
take longer to develop proteCtion or conference where he announced his next day.
Norma Torres,-R. N., nursing in some instances may not develop retirement, telling -~ reporter:
director, announced today lha_t the it at all. Children under two years "What's wrong wilh me? I'm old.
~all's 1967 appointment by
department has just received 300 of age will not be given the vaccine I'm getting old and coming apart."
President Lyndon R Johnson culdoses of the pneumonia vaccine because it will not "take" on them,
As a justice, he opposed the minated a successful career as a
which will be offered to lhe public Tories said.
death penalty, and was a forceful civil rights auorney, appeals court
Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m.
She stressed lhat frequent dis- advocate of abortion rights, affrr- judge and U.S. solicitor general
or as long as lhe vaccine lasts. The eases .o~ the_upper respl!atory· sys- mative action and legal protections the government's top courtroo~
vaccine will be given on a :'first tem, mcluding ear or stous mfec- for criminal defendants.
lawyer. ·
come, first serve basis~ . silid Tor- tions, in children who are otherwise
As a member of the court's
res.
heallhy are not reason enough to shrinking Ijberal wing, Marshail
A dose of the vaccine 10 Meigs give them the vaccine.
often had vowed to outlive RepubCounty residents is $3, according
As for side effects, Torres said lican presidents so his replaaement
to Torres who explained lhat f\lnds that about half of lhose who get the could be chosen by a Democrat. It
generated lhrough the levy passed vaccine are expected to have very was a promise he could not keep.
last year is subsidizing the cost
After Marshall retired, Republimild side effects, such as redness
She explained that pneumonia is and pain at lhe injection site. As can George Bush named conservaa serious condition caused by bac- wilh any drug or. vaccine, on rare tive Clarence Thomas to the court,
ACCIDENT SCENE • Anita Casto was transported, to Pitasteria which results in many deaths occasion a severe allergic or more prompting a stormy confrrmation
ant Valley Hospital after Ibis one car wreck on Route 124 on Sunin
the United States each year. serious reaction, even death, may fight featuring sordid allegations qf
day night around !1:30 p.a. Casto was eastboud and lost control
Especially
vulnerable are lhe elder- occur.
sexual harassment
of her l991 Chevrolet Beretta on the Icy roadway. Tbe car went orr
ly,
the
very
young, and those who
"We've lost a true American
The vaccine is not safe for
tbe left side of the roadway md struck an embankment: .
have special types of health prob- healthy pregnant women, Torres ·hem," Supreme Court Justice San.
•
lems. including diabetes, heart or said.
dra Day O'Connor said. "He left
lung diseases, kidney failure, and
behind a legacy of hope for racial
certain types of cancer. ·
•
'
h"'.,~
I
d
equality."
'
.
This newer vaccine contains Meetmg re~ .:Ucu e , ill . President Clinton issued a staleMiddle_port V11Iage OUIICI 1 Y"
ment saying he was "deeply sadmaterial to help proteCt against 23
not
meet
m
regular
SCSSlon
tomg_ht
dened"
by Marshall'sdeath.
types
of
pneumococcal
bacteria
An organizational meeting fur lhe Meigs Local Community Edu1
quorum
~
11
"He
was
a giant in the quest for ·
(Monday)
because
a
that causes 88 pen:ent of the w6rst
cation Grant Advi~ Council will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday at
n~t
be
able
to
attend.
The
m_eeong
human
rights
and equal opportunity
types
of
pneumonia.
Most
heallhy
the Pomeroy Public Librlry.
.
.
w1ll
be
rescheduled
later
10
the
.
in
the
whole
history of our coonadults
who
receive
the
vaccine
At the meetina calted by Janet Bolio, Community Education
week,
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
reporttry,"
Clinton
said. "Every Ameridevelop pneumonia proteCtion two
director, the council will elect offu:en and dlscuu the role oflhe
to lhree weeks after vaccination. ed.
THURGOOD MARSHALL
group in mmlng aecds and developing programs geared not only
'
can should be grateful for the conto adult education but programs 10 which the community and
school• can wodc together.
The local~ Ia i pan of the Americ1111 2000 Education Program and Ia
lhrougll a special rural demonstration pa11t provided by tho State Departrnent of Education anc! the University Qf
MCLEAN, Va. (AP)- A man minutes after lhe shooting. One lhe gate. standing in between cars
jacket.
.
RioOrande.
·
opened fire this morning at lhe other person was shot at the gate, and randomly shooting at cars. CIA field
Pr.
Barty Burica, another wit- ··
entrance or the Central Intell!Jence while two olhers were wounded in employees tum at the li&amp;ht into the
ness.• told CNN tha.t the shootips .
Agency, killing t\\·o people and lhe agency's Visitors Center, be agency grounds.
occurred
at a stoplight. A young ·
wounding at least three, Fairfax said.
A Pomeroy W!)man recel~ minor injuries in a ono-cai WieCk
"He seemed to be undomly man who a~ to be in his 20s :
on Ohio 124 Sunday arota1d !1:30 p.m. ·
County authorities said.
• · The Visitors Center is inside lhe pointiilg, to the right, to the left, to was shoottng into windshields,:·
Anita L. Casto, )8, wu eutbound llld lost control of her 1991
Pohce said they were searching main gate.
the ri~ht, to lhe Jell, just shootin~ at Burb said.
~:,
Chevrolet Benal on lbe Icy roldway, the Oallia-Meiga Post of the
for the gunman, delcribed by a witPolice sl'okeswoman Jackie cars, ' Robinson said, describmg
Stale Hlgbway Plllo1 rtp~~led. The car wmt orr the left lido of the
ness as a m111 in hiJ 20s carrying a Collmer sa1d 1he didn't have a the gun as an automatic weapons,
Burka and his wife, who wae in ·
roadway udllniCl: Ill emblatment
hunting rifle. Anochcr witness said description of the su~t
"ma be an AK-47."
.
their car, sped away ffOIII the.
Casto
111111p01 llld by tho Meigs County Emcraency Medical
it lll')le8re!llhc man was firing an · "I heard lhe pop, pop, pops,"
kept my eyes rocused on the acenc.
Service to Pleulnt Vllley Holpital in Point P~ W.Va., for
automatic weapon.
Gilbert Robinson, who wiDICSied gun because I didn'tlmow if it was
1re111111111 or
lqjuriei, lbe Pllftlltepoo1ied.
·
CIA officials, many of whom :
The" two dead were shot and the shootina. told NBC's ~oinA to be pointed in my direc.were
D1JnaF to tho car -lllild •light.
kllled near tl!e CIA's main gate '.'Today.'' "·I t was llllmll."
en route to work whoa lhe ,
uon, he said, addi114 that the man
about
B
a.IT\.,
fire
department
·
Robin8011
said
the
man
was
near
shooting
occurred, wei$ not immc- ·
•
Coatlalltd OD J11P 3 .
"looked quito aguated" and
spokesman Lt. Mike l[teilly aajd a stoplight .about 100 yards from appeared to be wearing an Army diately available for~
: :
.

Pneumonia vaccine available

JACkSON CO~ LWE~K'M'~· , .
Ripley, WV
January 14,1993
SLAUGHTER STEERS:
Good &amp; Choice
.63.00-66.00
58.00-62.50
Standard
SLAUGHTER a:EIFERS:
Good &amp; Choice
60.00-65.00
Standard
57.00-61.00
SLAUGHTER COWS:
46.00-48.75
Commercial
43 .00-46.00
Utility
Canner &amp; Cutter
36.00-42.50
Bulls over 1.000 lb.
54.00-68.00
VEAL:
75.00-86.00
Choice &amp; Prime
226-265 lb. •
75.00-84.00
HOGS: .

Pigs (by head)
40-60 lb
SLAUGHTER LAMBS:
80-90 lb.
Old Sheep
YEARLING STEERS:
Good &amp; choice
600-700
700&amp; up
Feeder Bulls
YEARLING HEIFERS:
Choice &amp;. good
600-750
STEER CALVES:
Good &amp; choice

l·ll-24-33-34-lZ

NO MONEY DOWN!

'·· ~ I'

190-240
240-260
Boars

Pick 3:
$53
Pick 4: .
3020
Super Lotto:

•

Production of noncitrus
fruit rises in 1992
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Growers sold, used or stored 5.3 million
tons of apples in 1992, compared
wilh 4.9 miJ!ion the previous year,
lhe Agriculture Department estimates.
But lower prices dropped the
· value of production to $1.6 biHion,
compared wilh $1.75 billion lhe
previous year. '
Utilized production of grapes
was 6 million tons, valued at $1.9
billion, compared with 5.6 million
tons valued at $1.7 biHion the year
before.
For peaches. utilized production
was slightly lower at 1.2 million
tons. But lhe fruit were valued at
$373 minion, compared wilh $394
million the year before.
·
Overall growers so!d, used or
stored 16.2 million . tons of
noncitrus fruit in 1992, up 8 percent from 1991 USDA wd in lhe
preliminary rePort, issued Thurs· day.
In addition to apples and grapes
larger crops were also prod'lted fo;
al'ricots, sweet and tart cherries,
kiWifruit, nectarines. olives,
papayas, pears, California plums

Ohio Lottery

30.00-37.75
35.00-40.00
26.00-24.00
12.00-17,00
15.00-22.00

.

.

--Local briefs .....· --..,
.

55.00-56.00
22.00-26.50
80.00-86.00
75.00-81.00
65.00-72.50
55.00-70.00

Group to organize Thursday

BUY NOW WITH APPROVED CREDIT!

' 65.00-77.00
61.00-72.50
90.00-100.00
85.00-98.00
82.00-91.00
75.00-90.00
80.00-90.00
77.00-85.00
68.00-76.00
80.00-85.00
72.00-80.00
70.00-81.00
500.00-685.00
~00.00-565.00

90.00-145.00
65.00-140.00

CALL NOW% 446-3672
TAX &amp; TITLE NOT INCWDED.
•

OLDSMOBILE

.1616 EASTUN

AVENUE
GAWPOUS, OH.
446·3672

l-100o521-GOI4

At least two dead in shooting outside CIA

Patrol investigates wrecks

w•

"l

nu.or

.

.
•

,I·

�i

Monday, January 25, 1993

·c ommentary

••

PolneJoy .. ddleport, Ohio

.

•

•

Page 2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, OhiO
Monday, January 25, 1993

OHIO Weather

Cool, dry weather forecast for Ohio

Tuesday, Jan. 26
Accu- Weather• forecast for

B71'11e A_..ted Prtu
Tuesday sboold be CXJOI, IJut dry
around Obio. Higlls wiD puab into
the 30's ·a rter brisk lows in the
teens tonight. Aside from • rJtanre
of some rain or llltiW for a wbilc on
Wednesday, fair weather will rule
this Mek..
The record higb 011 this elite in
Columbus was 74 in, 1950. The
recontlow was 15 below in 1884.
Sunset today II 5:42 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday at 7:45a.m.

MICH.

The Qaily Sentinel

Clinton·needs to address workplace safety.

· Although OSHA has fewer lhan
WASHINGTON - Joseph Kin- tional safety and Health Administralion is high on Congress' piori- 1,200 inspectors policing more
ney
is
not
what
Bill
Clinton
would
Pomeroy, Ohio
'call one of the "faces of bopc" ty list, and he could see tbe thin 6 million sites, some critics
. DBVOTED TO THE ~REST8 01' TilE IIEJCS-IIASON AREA
who are looking forward to his upheaval as an extension of his bat· believe the agency's problems arc
mon: a matter of lllisplaced prioriadministration. A3 founder of the
ties than lack of mitnpower.
National Workplace Safety Insti"Right now OSHA has the
tute, Kinney fears that Clinlon may 1
same
requirements far in$peetion
not have the lliswer to America's
;vo.iplaoe safety woes.
·
on a contractor whether it has a
R9 BERT L. WINGETT
clean record or four fatalities,"
The
NWSI
ranked
Arkansas
Publisher
Rep. Robert An~ws, D.N.J.,
dead last among all 50 states in
told our associate Ed Henry.
wortef
saf~,:;;
1991.
·
·
'
.. PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH · " We I
at a couple dozen tie against the health-eire crisis. " OSHA will tell you they don't
different criteria and Arkansas After all, some 10,000 workers die have enough inspectors. But just
General Manager
·· Assislanl Publisher/Controller
wasn't last because of oae or two each' year from accidents in the hiring more inspectors will not
LETI'ERS OF OP!f'IION are welcome. They should be less than 300
things, it was substantially last," workplace and tens of thou~ds make workp)OC"S safer."
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
Kinney said. "In the general elec- more die from occupational dis- .
Andrews recently chai~ed a
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published Leners · lion, there was no mentioa by Clin- eases. A recent Rand Instiwte for · hearing for the House C11111m!uee
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
· ton about anything to do with Civil Justice study C$limates the on Education and Labor, wbich
"----.....;._ _ _ _ _.;;,._ _....;..._ _~~~.~
- -. -:
.,"!
.~~
· .- ..1 worker safety, so it's not clear what
cost of workplace mjuries·alone to delliled .ihe case of an employee of
kind of priority he will give the be $83 billion a year.
the George Campbell Paiating Co.,
issue."
Kinney's brother, electrical who was killed in August 1991 ·
Arkansas' AFL-CIO President, . engineer, was lcilled in 1986 while whill: washing .the. understructure
.
.
J. Bill Becker, has also blasted working for a Colorado company of the Walt Whitman Bridge
Clinton in the past for coddling ~~ safety problems. OSHA (which connects New J~y and
corporations and developers at the
by slapping the compa- Pennsylvania). Tbe· worker was
.•
expense ofr:J~!Iilace Safety and ny with eigbt safety violations and electrocUted after his high pressure
other worltissues.
issuing •1800 rDIC - or less than wafer unit came into conlact with a ·
But Clinton has taken offiCe at a some penalties for fishing without power line that should have been
First, there is no question abOut time when refonn of the Occupa_- a pelliliL
You may have read the anicle in
the
right of Head Start to relocate
tile Sunday, Dec. 27 Times-Senprogram to another facility .
their
. tine! concerning the Outreach CenSecondly,
there is no question
ter. It pointed out that lhe Outreach
Center has moved from Third Ave. about the right of the City School
to 275 State St. Many thanks to District to seek a tenant for Clay
Kris Cochran, staff ~porter for the School. However, .there are ethical
Tribune, for this fine coverage. questions deserving an answer.
Is it fair for the Head Start
Questioqs persist concerning some
details, so perhaps funher clarifica- Director and the Superinrendent of
City Schools to 'arrange' their own
tion is in order.
·· The building at 275 State St. lease without our knowledge and at
wiu formerly a skating rink that our expense? Who was responsible
was purchased by the Cat!totic Dio- and wben did those negotiations
cese of Steubenville thrOU$h my between Head Start and City
predecessor, Fr. Golubiewsk:i, with Schools really begin? Was Clay
the hope of e5tabtishing a Catholic Elementary closed in order to
elementary school. Though the accommodale the Head Start Pro·
classroom section in the rear of the gram? What is the expense to the
building was added, the school was taxpayer for the Head Start Pronot begun for a variety of reasons gram to be relocated at Clay
and has been .used by St. Louis School? What are the ramifications
P.arish for at 1east the past 30 years to the students and families for this
program to be eight miles further
for religious education classes.
In 1978 Fr. Golubiewski and froriJ the city? What are the finanMr. Chris Zimmer, Director of cial advantages for the City School
Head .Start Program, agreed on a Sysrem? Who signed the lease with
the City Schools and on whose
)e;~se contract for the Head Start
authority?
Why have the details of
Pi'ogram to be located in that buildthe
lease
between
Head Start and
ing, as the Head Stan Program was
City
Schools
not
been
released to
lUIVW&amp;rr
A
&amp;li1UI bft
lOoking for a larger space. Another
1m
t
r~p
{1,/ff
the
media?
Would
the
members
of
i~ ase contract was updated and
·
It
Signed in 1983 between Chris Zim- the School Board have vOied in this
mer and myself. The 1983 lease manner if his or her own church
~d elapsed for some time and it owned the building?
Did the Superintendent of City
was again agreed early in 1992 that
a new one should be drawn up. Schools only.begin to investigate
'thus began the demise of our rela· the possibility of a lease with Head
A Supreme Court case that Supreme C&lt;u:t cb=ision. I have, for · Appalachia and Washington, h,e·
ti'onship with Head Start and for Start' in August of 1992, as indicat- seems to particularly stay in the inslance, seen enormously overbUr- ·became director of the Southern
some very inreresting reasons. You ed in the Tribune, or was that jusi minds of many schoolchildren is dened public defenders meeting Center for Human Rights in
may not care to kno\ll, but as a tax- the beginning of the eqd of lin :Gideon v. Wainwri:'Jiht. Those I their clients for the first time only Atlanta, where emyone, including
already long process? Why is the · have talked to are impressed thai
payer, you have a right to know.
support personnel, receives the
;· From ~h of 1992 to Seprem- same attorney representing both this convict - without any money,
same saJary. Bright is familiar with
Pb.r of 1992 a commitree from St. Head Start and City Schools and without a lawyer - · wrote a hand•
death rows throughout the South
Louis Church and the Director of not regarded as a conflict of inter- written petition, in pencil, to the
and he has sometimes had death
Head Start, Chris Zimmer, and the est? Regardless of the manner or Supreme Court, and 11 was actually 15 minutes before a hearin(!:. As thC sentences reversed.
Oirector of Woodland Centers, Dr. motives of the Superintendent and read by those distant, mysterious January/Febru!lry 1993 tssue of
Since movies are hardly made
Bernard Niehm, and staff members the School Board, I am Certain that figures. More than that, they said The American Lawyer details in a anymore on the order of "Mr.
negotialed a new lease. Woodland our parish will continue to hold he was 'right, and bis name Cr.om series of appalling case histories, Smi til Goes to WashinJ!ton" or
Cenlers is the grantor or parent them in the same high regard as then on became part of Amerielin tbere is much worse evidence, "High Noon," a televiSion docu.
· throughout the country, that a great mentary on Steve Bright's journeys
organization for the operation of before. And no doubt they will constitutional law.
Head Start locally. Head Stan is a hold us in the same regard as
Charged with thievery, Gideon deal needs to be done "to rmish the and campaigns eoulcl be powerfully
federal program which is oot per- before, only now we know the had asked a Florida state court lob that ... a ne'er-do-well drifter revealing. Especially his collection
. judge to appoint a lawyer for him. from the backwaters of Florida set of stories of the rampant incompel!)itted to purchase buildings. quality of that regard.
directly. In most cases throughout
· On Oct. 1, 1992, Head Start The judge said he couldn't under . in motion ... more than 30 years ter~ce of many court-appointed
tlie country, local organizations moved out of our bldg. They did so previous Supreme Court rulings. In ago."
.
· lawyers in states that do not consid. such as churches simply 'donare' as a result of action taken on Sept 1963, Justice Hugo Black, speaking
The need is particularly pressing er public defenders' work importhj: space for the program and are 30, 1992 at a meeting of the Board for a unanimous Supreme Court, since, as The American Lawyer tant enough to pay these lawyers
reimbursed for utilities. That was of Woodland Centers. John Len res, said that Gideon and other indigent points out, ''nationwide, approxi- decently or to insist that the courts
our relationship for the oast 14 chairman of that board, and a defendants are indeed entitled to a mately 80 percent of all felony exan~ine theit quaJifJCatioos.
lawyer .in felony cues. (This right defendaniS are represented by pub~ P.f-!IJ.llJJllle(S J!re&amp;ent .v.oteg
In a talk at tlle Uaiversity of
&gt;Wi~y conviction is that for those to disregard our already s1gned has since been expanded to include licly paid .defenders compared to Missouri-Columbia,
Bright told pf
14 years, Chris Zimmer Vias happy valid lease. mere are some ethical misdemeanor cases that involve 48 percent in 1:982." ·
a Georgia case in which the courtNot only are more funds needed appointeddefenselawyer"didnot
l!rid satisfied with our facility for questions here also. Why is Mr; imprisonment.)
tlleir program. Only since March of Lentes, Chairman of the Board of
In his opinion, Hugo Black to share the caseload, but also more put on evidence to seek to avoid
'92 have we been aware that he did Woodland Centers and also a mem- nored that "any person hailed into lawyers who - as Srephen Bright the death penalty. The jury that
not want to remain in our building. ber of the Head Start Policy Board, court, who is too poor to hire a keeps saying when he's asked to sentenced the yonth to die was not
on State St. Dr. Niehm, the chief with again no regard of a connict lawyer, cannot be assured a fair speak at law schools - "will not · even told that he suffered from
Administrative officer of' Woodland of interest? Why has Mr. Lentes trial unless counsel is prpvided for commit just a few years to learn at schizophrenia."
Centers with the authority to sign a not responded in any way to the him. This seems to us to be an the expense of the poor, but who
In a Mississippi case, "a person
lease, did agree with the details of investigation of the issue by the obvious truth."
· will Commit a lifetime to le&amp;al ser- was repmlled at a capital trial by
our lease and in fact did sign it fol- Federal Department of Human SerThirty years larer, it is also obvi- vices, public defellller and other a public dcfenclel and a third-year
lowing deliberations with John vices in Chicago? Why was I not ous that Gideon isn't working for programs"
·
·
law student, who told the judge at
Lentes, chairman of the board of given the opportonity to meet with more and more defendants with no
Bright has done just that. After one point tbat she needed more
Woodland Centers , on Sept. 2. the entire Woodland Centers Board other resources than an old working as a last-chance lawyer in time because she had never been in
1992. This lease was 'for a period of prior to their decision? These are a
court before, 11iere have beeri other
five years with monthly payments few of the questions I believe
amounting to the appraised value deserve an an swer. The reason
of the building, plus utilities. The being that the nei difference for the
building was appraised in August cost of Head Stan at Clay School
of 1991. At the conclusion of this comes out of the taxpayer's pocket
Clinton's honeymoon did The new president elected to take ernmenL The result was the embartime, St. Louis would deed the The people of St. Louis Chun:h pay notBill
last
even as loag as the 78-day personal responsibility not me~ely rassing spectacle of Bush
building to Woodland Centers for taxes like the rest of the communitransition from election to inaugu- for all of l!is Cabinet appoinbnents, appointees being begged to stay on
the permanent use of the Head Start : ty.
ration,
a matter of some COilCem to which was .unexceptional, but for so the govCnu!tent could function
On Oct. 13, 1992, I was contactProgram.
the
new
president's adviserS: They
after 12:01 p.m. on Jan. 20.
On July 13 the parties met to ed by the Director of Outreach,
should
spare
themselves
the
worry.
While Mr. Clinton's embarrassconfirm that there were no prob- Susan Johnson, for the purpose of
What
matters
are
not
preliminary
ment
was of lillie lliOIIICDt, the loss
ltrms with the draft le·ase, no negotiating an agreement for the press clippings and commentary by·
of
IIIOIIICIItWn
was not Radler lhan
changes recommended and that it relocation of the Outreacb Center. my tri~ of columnists and comthe
spbcabinet
appointments
as.
"hit
the
ground
running," the Clincontained 1!11 items originally dis- The Outreach Board· and the Dio- mentators - "the ll&amp;ltering nabobs
well,
wbich
was
JUSt
this
side
of
ton
government
did not eveq get
cese of Steubenville agreed upon a
ctissed.
of
negativism"
as
former
Vice
being
utterly
crazy.
of
the
blocb
on Jan. 20. In a
out
On Aug. 4, 1992 .the lease was Land Contract over a period of five President Spiro Andrew once
His
was
an
understandable
world
and
aJUlllly
beset by multiagain discussed and Clay School years at the apP.raised value of the called us- but presidential perforimpulse
whictl,
like
most
impulaes,
ple
problems,
sqme
of them deadly
was introduced as a!rernative eon- bldg., plus utilities and interest mance from now on.
should
have
been
resisted.
He
sc:rioua
and
all
of
them
wonisome,
•tderation by Chris Zimmer. There free. Head Start would have.JbeneManqing the media really isn't wanled a government staffed with that illllll a failure to be lightly disfired
the
same.
I~
·
aie two important points to be
the problem, since for the most pan Clint.onites, people in ·whom he had mined.
Msgi. William R. Myers. we
D)ade.
have the auention·span of fleas persortal trust and who in tnm put
It cannot be repeated ~nougb :
. Pastor, St. Louis Church.
••
and
the
COUI'lllle
of
the
Cowar.:.:z
his
objectiVI!s
ahead
of
their
own.
Presidential·
micro-liUUI8genlent is
..
••
Gallipolis
Lion. The press goes into the
That way, he hoped to avoid the a delldly lin. And lbereare warning
with tegular lbandoa. If Pleaident problems of tbe Jimmy C1rter signs evaywllele that the~
Clinton delivcn on half of Candi- adminiltnttion, in wbic:h 100 many lo&amp;jam it Indicative rather than
date Clinton's promises, we will appointees ftom the Cabinet on exceptional. This Is a president
,•
fall over and play dead.
· clown bad more Interest in their who liwea the muck and mire or
::
. By The A!loc:laled Press
.
· But if President Clinton falls , own Clreeiil IbiD in the p:uidelia's ao-1111lel!l .._ ofpolltica.
:: Today is Monday, Jan. 2S,the 25th day 'of 1993.,Tbete are 340 days into patterns hinted by Prclaident·
He liblto "pt biJ banda dirty...
16ft in the year.
·
in-waitinf Clinton's pniCticea, the
.. in demanding thll his lllm- .. the DyiDa JOIII, and for the llllllt
.
pack wil be in full bay witltin a sidoo 1e1111'1 alrlal'dlrllrily wide part thllll a Micnnte cblue. But
: • Today's Highlight in Histcry:
· On Jan. 25, 153'3. England's King Henry VID secretly married his sec- month. That's why the president and deep llll dump ill penonnel
all of the - admfniJira.
~wife! Anne Boleyn (who later gave birth to Elizabeth 1).
·
and ltiJ men have te"'Ollto worry Clleh 011 biJ fnlnt door ewry day, almOil
tioa 'a OfiiDlZatioul decisions,
• On this dale:
about some of the lr81111tion's mil- . he pwu~teed a lxlaleneck. Tbere be&amp;lnaiq witll the Wbl&amp;e Honae
: Ia 1579, the ~reaty of Ulrecbt was siSJICd, marking the beginning of . steps. If repeated, they could iJ and -1111 way far. p!ildent llllf, seem to inc!lctte a desire to
tile DUICh ReDublic.
·
'
destroy his paidenc:y before it bas to micro-at~ deci· concentrate rather liiiD delegate
• In 1787, Shilys's Rebellion suffered a setback when debt·ridden farin· a chance to~.
Ill the
rant iOCieiiWy of audtorlty. lf that """'ila true, biJ
m led by Capt. Daniel Shays failed to capture an arsenal at Springfield, Eumple ime was leas a Qliaslep, ....
stale level and COIIIIIIcle biJ ICiec:- wiD be. failed p~~•;:tency. .
Mass.
actually, than a deliberate decision. tlona in time to Dlf .. new 1!0"·
The ICCOIId CllliC for leptmato

111 Court Street

By Jack Anderson
--.__gnd .·
MichaelBinstein

Letters to the editor ·

E:

an

.

More details concerning Outreach
· Center story

""I.

CLU"V,. mu

M-e.£,

OSHA's investigation resulted
in citMions for three serious violations, includinf one for having
1
inadequate fal protection. The
company paid a total line of $7,225
for the fatality, but their contnl(:t to
paint the bridge was worth $8 mil'
lion.
Nevertheless, OSHA didn't
bother to conduct .a follow-up visit
in the next 13 montlis to see if the
comparty had rectified its safety
problems. In September 1992
OSHA was forced to return to the
same bridge after another Campbell
worker plunged to his death. T~
owner of the paint company was
unavailable for comment.

IND.

• IColumbus 133" I

"We can't be everywhere all the
time," said Andrews. "(But) my
concern i$ this is the second fatalily
on the same job, the same contract.
by the same contractor ... 394 days
passed from the first fatality to the
second one and there were no
{OSHA) inspectioos on any one or
those 394 da s...
ELVIS WHO? .- President Bill
Clinton may be an Elvis Presley
groupie, but his tasre in stamps is
definitely from the old school.
Over the years Clinton wrote at
least four letters to the Citizens
Stalnp Advisory Committee, the
panel that select$ America's stamp
designs eacb year, but none were
, oa behalf of "the King." . ,
· According to Clinton's correspondeilce wllb.the 1;0111111itree, the
former Arkansas governor once
.lobbied for a stamp commemorating Winterset, Iowa, the birthplace
of John Wa~. And Clinton also
'pleaded for coosiderltlon of a Bing
Crosby stamp, to honor a man he
called a ''patriot, a humanitarian
and a fine entenainer." Clinton
also wrote letters asking for llallips
to honor American Prisoners of
Wilr and one to bonor Ann Pamela
Cunningham, founder of the Mount
Vempn Ladies Association.
Clinton's petitions for' Crosby
and Wayne were· rejected by the
post office, wbich receives more
than 15,000 st,~ch requests each
year and accepts only about 30.
J•ck Aadersoa DDd Mlcblel
BIDBtela are writers for United
Feature Syadkate, IDe.

I

NatHentoff

cases in which the lawyer's rtr$\
trial after law school WaS a·capilal
trial,
In another Georgia case, the
convicted defendant, John Youn$.
waiting to be executed, "met h1s
defense lawyer in the yard at the
jail. The (imprisoned) lawyer said
he was under considerable disl!ess
during John Young's trial. He was
oa drugs. He was breaking up with
his wife. He was breaking With his
gay lover. He really was not
focused oa the trial. But this was
close enough for government wort.
John Young wa~ executed in
1985."
.
Steve Bright will be the J. Skelly Wright Fellow and Visiting Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School
for this year's spring term. The
course is: "Cap1tal Punishment,
Race, Poverty and Other Issues."
Ydll lnl.:lA lllftllff!n'MI'
who wrulQm him, w
lbily
become lawym, in asking: "Wh)'
~would any conscientious judge,
why would any bar association,
why would any systenJ that is sup-posed to dispense justice ever
allow those kinds of things to hap, pen?"
.
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Rights.
Nat Hentolf Is a sylidlcatecl
writer for Newspaper Enterprlle
Alociation.
··
It

.. • I

I

'

ffoday in history

.'

r

.

[

- -#Area deaths
Flora Lowe

S
Norman nodgrass
S .Capt Normanf !--· "Buck"
0

~odgrass, ?2, .Pomt Pleasant,
died M~y. Jan. 25• 1993• at
bcrc u.....,l!; ill~de Holzer ¥edical ~ter.
.

-

F~ may call at the Crow- .
Bussell Funeral Horne today
(Monday), 2 to 4 and 7 to 9p.m.
The bddy win be taken to the
.
.
churc:h one hour pnor to scfV!ce.

Fire extinguished
A fire at the trailer home of
Danny Zirkle, Anne Street, Sunday
night was already out when the
.Pomeroy Fire Department arrived
" on the scene at 8 p.m. Zirkle said
· the furnace malfunctioned causing
the fire which he was able to put
. ·out with a fire extinguisher. There
was some smoke damage, he said.

The Daily Sentinel

concern was the transition govern- ·

ment's seeming inability to admit:
forthrightly that 111istakes had been
made, promises altered and pro-:
trams chariged. The first instinct:
was invariably to deny the obvious. ·
Attorney General-designate Zoe·
Baird's deliberale flouting of immi-·
gration laws was initially treated as·
an inconsequential issue. The:
incoming president did not come:
clean about the worsening budget •
deficit figures for three months:
after his
. IQIDOd that his
econOfllicC:C. were built on .
rapidly •hlfting sand. Campaign :
pledges, oa such divene lll8ltorl as ,
Haitian refugees and Pfl in the ·
military were altered, dlluted or :
re~
.
· But the curtain is up now and i
the· fint act Is Ullllerway. In ways :
DOl en~ last November, how :
the play turns out wiU depend in •
significant measure on bow well ;
the new president and hh team 1
lelmed the leasoaa of their tranai- •
lion tryoul in Utde Rock.
,
Hoddla1 Carter W, former
State Departmeat apoll:eamaa
•d award·wlalu nparter, edl·
11or aad P-'llaltlr,la psn'dellt or
MaltaStnet, a W......... Q.C••

Flora Lynett Ayres Lowe, 78, of
Point Pleasant, died Sunday,
Janlllll}' 24, 1993 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born January 31, 1914 at Walton, WV, she was the daughter of
the late Alva Ayres and Mary
Hoover Ayres.
She was also preceded in death
by her husband, John M. Lowe.
· Lo.we was a 57-year member of
the Salina Olapter 1181 'Order of the
Eastern Srar in Malden and a retiree
of the nursing staff of. the Colin
Anderson Swe Hospital in St.
Mary's.
Surviving are one daughter,
Betty Hudson Lynch, Point
Pleasant; one slejHiaughter, Sharon
Callow, Zanesville, Ohio; one
brothel', Hazen L. Ayres, BeUe,
WV; one grand-diughter, Rebecca
C. Browning, Point Pleasant; one
grandson, Min A. Lynch, Point
f&gt;leasant; .t1uee ~grandchildren,
Zanesville, Ohio ."and four greatgrandchildren, all of Point Pleasant;
Services will be held at the W'JlCOllen Funezal Home on Wednesday, January 27 at 11 a.m. with the
Rev. Don Jolmson officiating.
Burial will follow at the King Knob
Cern
inRiiCbieCounty.
Frie~ may call on l'uesl1ay,
January 26, from 7 to 9 p.m. At
1:30 p.m. the Order of the Eastern
Star, Point Pleasant Chapter '1175
will conduct a service.

''&amp;
rvJb :'bef~JtW~'MJiiiili'lt""i'
""'' ol\;J!II!rMrelfll1'm ~ 'American
Lodge ·
·
i Electric Po'\VCl' COm~ was a

!!!t,t·

(UIPIIll-110)

Ploblioh.. ....,. allomoon, Mo....,.
llmlaihby~.
111 Coorl
~-·
Ohio
tho Oblo
ValleySLL
l'llbltabl,.
CompanyJMaJUmedia

·,

lac.Sec:d'*'GY· •

Ohio 4117811, Ph, 1811-211!8.
poollp paid •&amp; l"ommmy. Ohio.

....

Send- cha-

POSTMASTER:
1o
Tha Dolly Sealiaol, Ul Coan 81.,

or--t.

=j•ea:8 ~~
t Hig~
· • !'!Cmber 0
.
. 0
Heights United Methodist Churc:h,
and .mem!'« of the Moose Lodge
347m PomtPleasanL
Born Ian. 13, 1921, in Benderson, he was a son of the late Millard Iames and Nannie Lee (Lyoas) .
Snodgrass. He was also preceded in
death by a bro~. James, and two
sisters, Mary Dirst and Mildred
Snodgrass,
He is &amp;Ufvived by his wife, Betty
L. (Ambrose) Snodgrass; sister,
Mrs. Bill {Nancy Lee) Gorsuch of
McArthur, Ohio; · two brothers,
Maurice M. "Messie" Snodgrass
and George Michael "Mike"
SnOdgrass, both of Point Pleasant;
and several nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be Wednesday,
11 a.m.~ at the Crow·HusseU
Funeral Home with Rev. Mike
Evans officiating. Burial will be in
the Suncrest Cemetery, Point
Pleasant
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.m.

940

Sessions contends Barr
planned personal
attack

Ponwcox Otuo 41'769. ·
luucaD"'1011 L\TU

WASHINGTON (AP) - FBI
Director William Sessions said
OnoW..t. .......................................... a1.60
today he w~ts to talk to Ptesident
One IIDDU..........................................III.Iill
()ae ................................... ,..,_...,,.M3.20
Clinton about charges th!tl he ueed
' IINQLii COPY
government money f9r personal
PRICB
~fiL
.
lloll)&lt; ............................................ tll Cent.
"I'
aril
hopeful IIIII believe that
Subl«lbon ...t doalrina lo 1'01' tho ...m.
• _, ninl&amp; la ....._ lo 'l'ho · President Cfinton wUJ meet with
me at !llllllO point, ••. sessions said
0.0, llealiMI ., • u.,.., oli ,. ll
.-111 l&gt;ooio. Cndl&amp; will be ....D on NBC'~''Totlay Show."
A Jllllice Depart.-! repM has
No ~ by ...n pormllloll ...
accused Scasi0111 of enpglng In a
pattern of mi~eonduct includiq
a..n.l&gt;lo.
misuse of PBl travel 'funds,
Jlallh' ' .....
r..wo
.....
Improperly ch1rglng the lOVern·
II W.............................................
28W............................................ .18 ment for a fence Ill bls home and
113 w...........................................
.,. imptoper uae of ~I vehicles and
Bp c.ntw

--..... ----EiJ.
eo.._.

.

o.--.eo.aq.

II W........................................ ~AO

· - . .......................................

Uw..lra. ...;.......l.........l:.~. ....... ...... ..

baled .......... protlaetlon eoJII• .

pany aad a writer lor NEA.

I

Donald L. Horsboan, S9, of Rt.
2, Point Pleasant, died Saturday,
Jan. 23, 1993, at his home.
He was a maintalanoe superintendent for American Electric
Power Company, Gavin Plant; a
graduaiC , of Moundsville HiJ!h
School; member of the 1\iruty
United Meth~ Church, where he
, was in the choir and served oa the
··administrative board and as a
· delegare to annual conferenc~.
~ A . former MOundsville City
Council member, he Was 11 U.S.
Army veteran of the Korean Con-,
ftict, member of the Antique
Automobile Club of America, the
Ole Car Club, Studebaker's Drivers
;Club, Inc., Minturn Lodge 19 A.F.
and A.M., Scottish Rite, Beni
Kedem Shrine Thmple Knights of
Pythias, and the Camera Club.
Born Sept. 28, 1933, in New
Martinsville, W.Va., he was a son
·, of the late :Edwin Horstman and
E!Jtll)8 (Williard) H&lt;nbnan. .
.. ·Surviving arc his wife, Shirley
(Mason) · Horslman; son, Donald
Edwirl of Kissimmee, Fla.;
.~ daughter and son-in-law, Melissa
Beth and Matthew B. Roush of
' Owensboro, Ky.; sister; Betty
,, Horstman of Moundsville; two
• brothers, Rev. Robert H&lt;ntman of
Buckhannon, and Edwin W.
Horstman Qf Canton, Ohio; two
grandchildren, Jonathan B. and K.
Brooke Rolish; and several nieces
: and nephews.
The funeral will be Tuesday, 2
p m at the Trinity United
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Steven E. Dorsey Oflic:••:"g. Bun'al
.. will be in Kirkland M;.;;;;..w Gar-

' "-•

Missteps bode ill for new president
Hodding Carter III

Wednesday, a chance of rain or
snow. Lows 20-2S. Highs in the
30s. Thursday and Friday, fair.
Lows in the mid-20s to low 30s.
Highs 35-45. Friday, fair. Lows in
the mid-20s to the low 30s. Highs
in the upper 30s and 40s.

Donald Horstman

.

'

t

I.

JJO

.40

agency~L

s

.

~ lie ~pecll Aclina

Attorney General Stuart Gerson
will re!1ew the allegations.
·

m American history, arguably the
finest courtroom lawyer of this

Enrollment procedures may
have.confused investigators

·Hospital news

.

a

-Meigs announcements_...-.·. ·

·· f:s·------1
r----- L·oca. J brJe

a

and-·

Squads respond to 8 calls

Court news

Stocks

~nit

OOOOMO OM o n - o a a 6 8

Key Ceaturion ...................21 314
Llnds Bad..........................26 1(1.

Inc. ......................

Umhed
2.9l41
Mullimedia Inc. ................. 33 1(1.
Ra ......., ..- .... -...-.3/16
......_... ____.22 ~•
ReIiince. ""......:...
Robbi.....M,_ ......- ....... 171!l
~··Inc.------- ..24 IJ8
srar Bd- ..- .........- .......35 314
Wendy lnt'L-...-....- ......13
Wordlingmlild. .....- .......24lt'
Stock reportl are oe 11:30
..... qaolel p;Otlded . , . IIIII ud Loewl fl Gellp+
~

~"

...

Administrator Scott Lucas announces the addition
of Dr. George A. Kusnir, M.D., to the medical staff at
Veterans Memorial- Your Hometown Hospital.
Dr. Kusnir is board certified in Internal Medicine
and board entitled in Nephrology, diseases related t~
the kidneys.
Dr. Kusnir's offices are located in the Meigs
Medical Building adjacent!' to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
For information or an appointment, residents may
call992-7463 or992-7.579.

•
,.

least several hours.. :~
Temperatures in the reens and·
20s were likely today in the upper
Midwest and northern New England, rising 10 the 30s across much :
of the nation's middle tier. Much of·
the South was expected to have'
temperatures in the 40s and SO,
with the Southwest and Floridl
basking in highs in the 60s and 70s.
The high temperature for the
lq,wer 48 states Sunday was 82
degrees at Naples, Fla.

lawyers whose arguments dis- decried " the ethical banlauplcy of
tressed him. But he drew the line: those who peach a right to life that
century. .
" Emotion has its place, but I means, under present social )ll&gt;li"·
A champion of the poor and stopped pounding the rable when I cies, a bare CIIStence in utter mis-:
cry for so many poor women and;
powerless long before his historic left practice," he said.
In his 23 years as chief counsel their children."
·
appointment, Marshall's name had
for
the National Association for the
While
his
last
years
on
an·
for
years
been
synonymous
with
An AP news analysis
the fight for civil rights and racial Advancement of Colored P-eople, increasingly conservative high
Marshall more than anyone was court were often bitter for him,
justice.
school," he once recalled, " I blew
Throughout the segregated credited with smashinj! centuries- Marshall never held persQnB'I
the whole thing by heart."
·
Sooth in the 1940s, people acc.usc old legal barriers to racial equality. grudges against his conservative
Marshall represented many colleagues. To them, he was the
He spent most of his adult life tomed to having the legal system
teaching it to others, many of them exclude or humiliate them often . death row iruil8les in the 1940s and master raconteur, who blended
unwilling Sludenls, and CllleJlding it took heart when hearing the words: 1950s, and oa the court parted with humor and insight.
to those who bad'been deprived d
" Here in tlie building there's
"Mr. Mnhal1 is coming to IOWll ... even some liberal colleagues .as he
its majestic pi•
and pmmiol:s
consislently
vOied
against
the
death
never
been a problem. We've g\)t
His "commitment to making the
"I enjoyed my wort." be would Coosrin!liOII a vehicle to prorect the penalty under all circumstances.
an awfully close-knit group," he
say years later. "And when you equal rights of all has 1111 match in
Throughout his court tenure, said in a recent interview.
won, it was a helluva feelina."
Marshall
remained a passionate libStill, when it came time to
American history," said a deei!IY
He won a lot- 2.9 of 12 cases swJdenrd William J. Btennan, lhe eral ..,.. initially as a mem~r of a retire, he made little a~pt to hide
argued before the nation's bigbest retired justice who was Marshall's majority of like-minded brethren his frustration.
. ;
court, including the one that out- closest friend on the higb court.
and later as a frustrated dissenrer.
Asked in a farewell news conlawed racial segregation in public
He roared, in stinging dissents, ference who should reolace him, ~·
M~rsball was not without a
schools in 19S4.
his disapproval when he believed replied gruffiy: "Me.' 1 But he must
sense of humor.
"Segregation," Marsball said
Retired Justice Lewis F. Powell the court ignored the .disadvan- have known no one quite like hiril
many years afterw~rds . "is the recalled M1rshall leaning over taged, the forgotten and the do'wn- was available.
·
worst thing that ever hapPened." toWild him durin$ an arcane tax lf1)dden, no l1Uitler their'race.
M,jlny of the cases be won helped . case and whispenng, "You can·
When the court in 1977 ruled
EDITORS' NOTE: Richard·
chip away official segregalion.
have my vote oa this for a future that states wcte under no legal duty CarelU bas covered the Supreaie'
.
Even if be had never sa on the draft pick.'.
to pay f(\r abortions wanted by Court for Tbe Assoc;iated Pr~
Supreme Court, where be served
On the bench in his larer years, women on welfare, Marshall since 1976.
for 24 years as its fint black justice Marshall could be cranky with
before retiring 18 IDOIIths IIJO• be
.
would be rauembered as a gant d
American law.
For it was Mlrshall, who died
Sunday at 84, who had tbe legal
mind, the skill and lhe persisleol:e
that helped c:banae America aod its
trealmcnl of black people.
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) When named to the coun in
bow muCh money Hocking im~
dents.
1967 by President Ly.ndon B, John- The president pf Hocking TechniCiedit was offered for a one-day erly received, he said.
son, Marshall already ranlr;ed as cal College says confusion about workshop on hooking a videocas·
The official enrollment on
one of the iiiOSl influentiallawym the school's enrollmenl procedures sette recorder and fixing small which stare funding is based is sup:.
may, have led investigators to con- appliances; training in defensive posed to be taken on the college's
clude that the college padded dr1ving; and volunreering to run a 14'th d11y of classes. Light sa~d
Hocking has trouble providing
enrollment figures to boost state haunted village at Halloween.
"I think ·there's clear evidence reliable count by that nme becauSe
subsidies.
VeteraDS Me-al
Matthew F'ilipic. Ohio Beard of that the management of the institu- . of its continuing enrollment da~
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - Regents' vice chancellor for lion came to the conclusion that its and many one-day and short·term
'Glen Baker, Reedsville, and administration, told The Columbus enrollments were below its targets, courses. He estimated that 80 peiGeorge Molden,l'unaoy.
Dispatch in a Slorf Sunday, that it that that meant it would receive
cent of the student body is enrolled
SATURDAY DISCHARGES· was the most ser1ous enrollment less subsidy than it had planned, in some type of non-traditional
None.
padding since at least the mid- and that it decided to generare addi- course.
Sl,JNOAY ADMISSIONS • 1960s.
tional enrollments to generate addiAfter the investigation in
None.
~ Light, )IIUident of the twO:
tional subsidies," Filipic said.
. November, the regents cut Hoek"
SUNDAY DISCHARGES • yell' college in Nelsonville I 0
. The probe did not determine ing ' s s~bsidy this year "
Grace Call
miles northwest of Athens, admit'·
ted that some mistalces have been
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
made in figuring enrollment
But he said most of the board's
Dlscbarga, JaL 22 - Kristin
concerns
iesult from confusion surThe Riverview Garden ,Club
Dance planned
Marks, Mrs. Anlhony lacbm and
rounding
innovative
enrollment
The
Gallia
Twirlers
Western
will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
daughter, Jerry Massie, Zelma
Square
Dance
Club
will
hold
a
the
home
.of Gladys Thomas. Co•
Adamson, G1ry Chapman, procedures.
Documents
obtamed
.by
the
hostesses
will
be Grace Weber arid
dance
Feb.
6
from
8-11
p.m.
at
the
Wilmont May, Cathryn Felter,
nel'VS(llliJCI
fiUn
the
board
showed
Henderson
Community
Center
in
Frances
Reed.
Marilyn Hannum
Miranda Canter, Tamara Jordan,
that Hocking officials counted facHenderson,
W.va.
Roger
Steele
lllKi;
Ruth
Anne
Balderson
will pre;
JKristinaBI!IC:STerry, Th.omas Sexton. and ulty members as incoming freshwill
be
the
caller.
senttheprogram.
.
Paden
men, back-dated course registraDiseharces, Jan. 13 - Agnus
Dinner platmed
Gardea dub to meet
Sprouse, Katie Vallery, Kathy Can- tions and claimed students from
other
countries
were
Ohio
resiCub
Scout Pack 376 will spoil·
terbury, Mabel Mercer, Mrs.
SQr spaghetti dinner Feb. 1 at the
Myron Bryan and dlllgbter, Mrs. ·
Lottridge Community Center at
Cha les Boso and da ghter
6:30
-p.m. Tossed salad, garli'c
Jacq. Anderson, Ricu':d Sea~
bread, pies, cakes, coffee and
graves, Virginia Games, Mrs.
Ccintinued From page 1
~
-iema.
le"will be available fa $4.
James Williams aod daupter, Mrs.
No injuries were reported following a one-vehicle accident on
for adults and $2 for children.
Charles VanMeter and dlughter,
Ohio 7 in Orange Township Sunday around 9 p.m.
.
There will also be crafts available. ·
Mrs. Shannon Barretle
Ina
According to the patrol, Kevin R. Place, 39, Cutler, was northJones, Ronald Montgomery,
bound and lost control of his 1988 Toyota pickup on the icy roadLegion Auxiliary to meet
Charles Campbell, Ashley Patios,
way. The truck slid sideways off the right side of the road and
The
Racine American Auxiliaiy
Ashley Refffu, Alice Puclceu and
struelr:: a traffic sign.
·
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at die
Cath Elliot.
Damage to the truck was reported as light Place was cited for
Y
post home in Racine.
·
Dlscbarces, J••· 24 failure
to
wear
a
seat
belt
Matthew RifDe and son, Mrs. Gary
~hool boardlO llltet
Scou and son, Anlbony Lanzon and
Southern
Local School Board
·son, Lowell Crabtree, Whitney
will
meet
Wednesday
at. 7 p.m. at
Knight, Evelyn Thoma. Roubell
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
the
high
school.
Musick, Nancy Pennington and
responded to eight calls for assistance over the weekend.
.
Christina Syrus.
On Satunlay at 10:02 a.m. the Syracuse unit went to Route 7 in
Garde,n club to meet
··
Birth, Jill. ll - Mr. and Mrs.
Tuppers Plains for Lita Mon~ry who was transpo!'(ed to CamTile
Wildwood
Garden
Club
Anthony Lanzon, son, Wellston;
den Clark Memorial Hospital m Padtersburg, W.Va.
will meet Wednesday at 1 p.m. a~
·Mr. and Mrs. Malthew Riffle, son,
At 4:29 p.m. the Middleport unit responded to· North Second
the
home of Doris Grueser.
Cheshire, and Mr. and Mrs. Guj
Avenue forOsby Martin who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Scott, son, McArthur.
The Pomaoy unit, at 11 :56 p.m., responded to Riclwd Srewart
Births, Jaa. 23- Mr.llld Mrs.
who was iransported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Michael Aeibr, daughter, !lenderOn Sunday at 1:01 a.m. the Syracuse unit was called to College
son, W.Va; Mr. and Mp. Joe Gray;
Avenue for Bernice Winebrenner who was taken to Holzer Medical
Divorce granted
son, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. John
Catter.
A divorce has been granted in
Harrison, son, Middleport; and Mr.
At 1:57 am. the ~ Plains unit responded to Silver Rid&amp;e
the
Meigs C:ounty Court of Com- :
aild Mrs. Dennis Pope, son, Gal- .
Road for Josephine White. She was taken to Veterans.
mon
Pleas to Christine Lillian lipolis.
The Middleport unit, at 10:17 a.m., went to East Main Street for
and Raymond Andrew ·
Stewart
Births, Jaa. :U - Mr. lllld Mrs.
Melviri'VIIIMeter. He was transported to Veterans.
·
Stewart
II,
both of Gallipolis.
·
Roa Collins, daughter, Jacbm.
At 7:56 p.m. the Pomeroy Fire De~ent went to Ann Street
for a trailer fire at the Danny Zirkle resulence. The had already been
· Judgment awarded
.
Clllinguished wben the deJ*ImCIIt arrived on the scene.
A
judgment
in
the
amount
of
The Racine F'ue Department respoaded to a motor vehicle acci$6,600.82 has been granted to Ohio
dent on Route 124 at 9:31p.m. Anita Casto'was taken to Pleasant
Power Company from D8le E. Tay- ·
Valley.
Am Ele Power...........- ......33 3/8
lor in the Meigs County C~ of'
Ashland Oil.......................26 314
Common Pleas.
AT&amp;:T.................................54 1/8
BW ()r)c. ......................- ..SO SIB
Bob EVImll ........................ .191(1.
HEALTHCARE PACKAGE
Chlrmina Sb0p.................. l6 Sill
~~in1 .....................22
EXPANDS .
}tlc)aui.•••••••, ............ I9 1/4
WASHlNGTON (AP) - Every
time he misbehaved in grade
school, Thurgood MIJ'Shall was
forced IQ i1lCilQize a ponioa d lhe
Constitution. " Before I left that

------Weather-----South-Central Oblo
Tonight, clear and cold. Low
around 15. Tuesday, sunny. High in ·
the mid-30s.
.
Extended forecast:
'Wednesday throu1h Fri.day:

Anlud tknatloa
across West VirJ inia, weste rn
Cold winds gusting to 40 mph Maryland, western Pennsylvania,
buffeted lhe Northeast Clfly today. eastern Ohio and western New
Snow and higb winds closed high- York. Thunderstorm s rumbled
ways and cauftl power outages in across eastern North Carolina and
the Pacific Northwest
- parts of Florida.
A stroag cold front swept from
In Washington state, where
the Atlantic Ocean into the North- ·nearly 25,000 customers remained
east, lowering lenlperatures by as without electrical power after last
mnch as IS degrees. Snow flurries week's windstorm, gusty winds
wcte expeciCd to be scattered from
brought scattered power ourages in
Michigan to Maine.
Sno~omish County and heavy
Snow also .fell late Sunday snow ci06Cd .major h1gbways'for at

Marshall will be remembered as giant of American law
· W.VA.

The fading legacy of Clarence Gideon

IJI1f....

· •··The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

,,

�Sports

·T he Daily Sentinel
.

Duke loses

..

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SeatiBel Correspoe+-t
Outstored 20·6 in the second
frame, the South~rn Tornadoes
&lt;hopped a 62-47 1!01l·leuuc boys'
basJa:tball encountQ to die OJcsa.
peake Pimthers Sllurday night in
Chesapeake. Chesapeake is CUI\
renU,Y ranked 7th in Division III
and 1s now 12-0, while Southern
drops to 8-4.
Brian Runyon PIICCII tilt winners
with 25 points, while Matt Hl:nslcy
and .James Dempsey each added
nine. Dempsey controlled the
boards with ten caroms, while
Mike Tomlin &amp;dded six rebounds
and three points.
Malt Stollings and.Carl Carpenter each added four, Kirk Smith
three, Dayhan Holley and Vince
Masterson two each, and Shane
Nidaone.
Junior .Robert Reiber paced
S?uthern with thirteen )!O!nts and
mne rebounds, wh1le Ryan
Williams added eleven, Malt Alleo
and Michael Evans each eight,
Russcn SingletOn five, and Jeremy
Dill two~

TOP SCOUR • IDcllaDa's Clllbert Claeaaey be8ds uPcoart as
be celebrates a second-ltalf bucket durinl the second-ranked
H005ier's 96.(i9 win over Obio State in BloomiJIIton, Ind., Sunday.
Cbcaney led all scorers with 27 points. (AP)
66, No. 22 Utah beat San Diego
State 78-53, and Virginia Commonwealth beat No. 25 Long
Beach State 95~1.
SUNDAY
No. 2 Indiana 9,, No. 24 Ohio
State69
.
At Bloomington, Ind., Calbert
Cheaney scored 27 points and sank
three shots in a row to igni~ a 19-2
second-half nm that helped Indiana
(17-2, 6-0 Big Ten) stretch an
eight-point halftime lead to as
much as 32. Obio Swe (9-5, 2-3)
made only one basket during a
seven-minute stretch of the second
half.

No. 3 Nortb Carolina 70, No. 10
Setoo Hd " ·
At East Rutherford, N.J.,
George Lynch scored a season-high
25 points as the Tar Heels (16-1)
won their eighth straight in a defensive battle. llorth Carolina foil:ed
1l Seton Hall (15-3) i!lto a seasonhigh 23 turnovers and beld Terry
Debere to 10 points - almost 13
below his average. ,
.
Ca!Wornia 104, No. 23 UCLA 82
AI Los Angeles, Alfred Grigsby
and Brian Headrick scored 23
points each and California (9-4, 3-2
Pac-10) used a 17-0 nm late in the
first half to beat UCLA (12·5, 3·3).
Tbe I 04 points was the most Cal
· ever had in a Pac-10 game.

good on a _pair from the · charity
stripe, but Parry Casto answered

test. The event was sponsored by
~lesBank.
.
Score by Quarten;
1234Tot
Eastern
13 13 15 17 58
PPHS
19 14· 13 28 74

with a free throw and Boyles hit a
The Point Pleasant Big Blacks field goal to put the icing on the
pl!Jced three players in double cate.
•
figures and again, used a big fourth
"Most games Jlre' won in spurts
~= spurt to defeat the pesky and we were fortunate to have that
Eagles 74-58 in a game . big one in the fourth quarter," said
FG 3pt Ff PI
played qn the local Ooor ~turday PPHS Head Cooch Lennie Bar- POINT
Austin
Moore
2 3 1-1 14
night.
nettc. "I am J]I'OUd of our guys for BllldBameue
0 0 3-4 3
. Elliott Dorsey scored 21 points, hanging in there. I am especially Kevin Boyles
8
0 2-5 18
Kevin Boyles 18, and Austin proud of the job our bench did
DeJanKablar
2
0 0-0 4
Moore 14 to lead the Big Blacks to Guys like Paiiy Casto, Bobby Elliott Dorsey
8
0 5-S 21
~ir 9th victory against only three Austin, Wally Smith, and Ryan
() 0 2-2 2
Matt
Rieger
losses thus far in the camp;Ugn. Roush. This is the second straight Parry Casto
0 0 1-3 1
Dorsey also collee~ a game-high game that Ryan bas. come iii and Ryan Roush
0 1 3-4 6
10 rebounds and dished out 8 as- played well for us. We need him to Bubby Austin
2
0 1-1 5
s.ists to com~_ ll_,good nig_!JI of be able to do !haL I also want to WaUySmith
0
0
0-0 0
ti!!NW&amp;I.#~liiCEilil"'liff:-:s'"'"'jive EaStern some crediL They did Ryan Beckner
0
0
0-0
0
caroms and Moen also dished out a nice job. We just couldn't break Totals
n
4
18-25
74
5 assists as all three players Cll· away from them until that run in
jo,yed success in many aspects of . the fourth quarter," concluded Bar- EASTERN
FG Jet Ff PI
the game.
nette.
C.
Savoy
0
0-0 0
;the Eagles, wimers only twice
The Little Blacks lost a
P.
Newland
1
0
2-2 4
i ~ll attempts this season, kept the heartbreaker in the opener, losing
J.
Buckley
4
0 2-2 10
game close throughouL They feU to the Eastern Junior Varsity 54-47
W.Aibaugh
3 0 2·3 8
ll5hind by II early in the second
Point did not score over the fuuit C. Bissell
4
0 7-10 IS
qll8ller, only to fight their way back three and a half minutes of the J. Cline
1
0 8-8 10
iO: contention with some timely game and that, according to Coach M.Goode
0
0
0-0 0
s]J:xlting and hustle that w~ Dave Bodkin, was the difference in R.Kaylor
0
1
0-0 3
h!ve made Pete Rose proud. PoJDt the game.
R.Reed
I
0
2-5 4
hid several opponunities to put the
"We shot 0\nelves in the fOCK,• M. Martin
2
0
0-0
4
E4gles away, but each time, the said Bodldn. "You just can't finish Totals
16
I
23-30
58
Meigs Countians clawed their way a game like we did tonight and ex~k.
'
pect to be successful. If we would
Fouls: PPHS 22, EHS 20
;Eastern scored first in the contest ever play four quarters of basket- Team
Fouled
Out: Bissell
ud they played even with the Big ball, we would be good • added
Tech.
Fouls:
Eastern Bench
Blacks the Clltire first quarter. The Bodkin.
.'
OtT.: Bill Neal, Gary Clark, Rod
Efg~ held several leads in ~
Cory Hill and Jeremy Rizer led Hudson
opemng frame, and enJOyed thea' the Little Blacks with 12 points
last one at the 2:17 mark. But, the each and Thmmy Dorsey added 11
JUNIOR VARSITY
lli~ B~ ~the final 7 poin!J
Both teams arc idle until Frida)- Score by Qaarten:
of the ~· climaxed by Moore s night when they travel up the pike Point
10 16 12 9 47
uey w1th J:ess t1w1 a minute left, to to take on county rival Wabama.
Eastern
10 13 12 19 54
g~ u~ by mat ~buzzer.
The Jayvee game wiD Start up there
-PoJDtlooted like they :would put at 6:00, with the varsity tilt to fol·
EASTERN • Buckley 4 (1)1-2
tltC Eagles . away in the second low somewhere around 7:30 or
quarter, P11!11Dg together a 7-0 run 8:00.
12; Hill2 2-2
6 3·3
15; Stetham
2 Oho
0 4;
Sheets
6; Bowen
3 1-97;
that gave them an 11 point lead.
Tbe Blacks maintained that lead unAt halftime of the game, 1onncr 4 2·3 10; Loughcly 0 0 0; Pullins 0
til, the Eagles held- the Blacks. to PPHS bastttMllen wbo graduated 0 0; Barnette 0 0 0; Rood p 0 0.
·
oAly a three pointer from Moen in the '70s gathered at the foul line TOrALS 21 (I) 9-19 54.
oc the final two aild a half ' for their tum It the ongoing free
mb!Uies of the half to CUI the lead throw shooting COIIIUl Ric:k Team Fouls: EHS 14, PPHS 15
10"/lt intenniJiion.
Handley, wbo barely quali&amp;ed in , Fouled Out: Stcthan, c. mn
~ kept the pressure on in this group, hit3 or 5 to win the con- OfBcials: B. Hicbnan, J. 'l'homas
thJ third qiWtel', never falling more .
'
thP six points behind an any junt·

•••••

tute.

;And. by the end of the quarter,
th!Y had closed the gap to only ,5
po111ts. Thc:n, after Pomt's Bubby
Atltin scored to open the final
~ the Eagles got a three point
p!jy from Robat Reed Ill pull
Wihin 4 poinll M 48-44. At this
Jdlt, the Blacb went to work.
.'J'KCy scored the next S points, and
JtRIIJ)' Cline made 2 foul
...... they ICOied 10 ~
~ 111 ealald their lead to 17
~ Ollrlle Biaell then qlllde

c

.. .

Facing one of its bigacst chal·
lenges of the yar, Southern 1:1111e
oat fighting. but fell to a 15-10 first
period deflciL Experience and dx!
confide11ce that goes with being
among the top in the state lifted
Chesapeake to ' 1 20·6 offensive
explosion in the liecood ~- The
six points in a frame was South·
em's lowest oulpll of the year and
one of the 1owe11t madts ever by a
Howie C&amp;ldweD coached team.
Southern ttailed 35-16 ll the
half.
.
.
. Soulhcm dido 't give up. however, and made 1 respectallle finish
by outscoring t!lebosts 17-10 in the
third round. the 11DC ·DOW 45-33. A
strQDg finis!l pve the hosts a 62-47

nin~ steals, 12 'turnovers, two
...ists. and 15 fOtils.
had 28 rebotmds (Dempaey 1 and
Tomlin 6), six steals, four
turnovers, one assist, lnd IS fouls.
Southern lost the ~e PD~e
38-55. Billy Jones led Southern
with ten and Jeremy Hill hiMI nine.
RusseU IJICCd the winncn with 13,
Wilson liad 12, Gue eight and Grif-

By DICK BRINSTER
AP Spotts Writer
When you expunJ~ ll_Je likes or
Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson
from the record book, you've had a
pretty good game. ..
That's precisely what Drazen
Petrovic did Sunday night when he
made 17 o( 23 shots and scored a
career-high 44 points as the New
Jersey Nets ended Houston's eight·
game winning streai' with a 100-83
victory.
"I knew I was on as soon as my
first two shots went down.'' Pelrovic said after sening Meadowlands
Arena records by scoring 32 points
in the second half and 25 m the
final petiod. "Mo (Cheeks) and
Kenny (Anderson) were giving me
the ball in the right place all night.
All I had to do was catch it and
shooL"
In the final period, he made 8 of
10 shots and scored 25 points, one
less than the Rockets.
" In the fourth quarter, we saw
he was capable of the record, so we
just kept giving it to him, telling
him to shoot it," teammate Derrick
Coleman said.
That he did, in the process sur·
passing the record of 28 secondhalf points by Jordan, Johnson and
Alex English. No one ever came
close to scoring 25 in a period.
" He was upset when the clock
was running out," Coleman said of
Petrovic. "He feltlilce he could get
70."
Petrovic's game total was the
most by a Nets player since Ray
· Williams matched a team record
with a 52-point effort against
Detroit in 1982. The previous high

I.

fin seven.
Southcm goes Ill Eastern Friday.

BY QUARTERS:
SOUTHERN 10 6 17 14-47
CHESAP£AICE 15 20 10 17~2
SOUTHERN (47) .

Mart Allen 1-2-0-8, Ryan
Willi•ms 3_·1-2·11, Jeremy Dill I·
0·2, Michael Evans 3·2-8, Roberl
win.
'
Reiber 4-0-5-13, Russell Singleton
Southern hit a frigid 14 of 49 for 2-0-l·S. Totals 14-3-(10.17).47. .
29 pen:ent from the floor, hit 3-11 . CHESAPEAICE (62)
three pointers for 27 pen:eot, and
Matt Stollings 2-0-4, Matt
was 10-17 at the line. Chesapeake Hensley 3-1-9, Dayban 1-0-2,
hit 20-54 for 37 percent, was 3-16 Brian Runyon 10-1-2-25, Mike
for 19 percent from the three point Tomlin 1·1·3, Kirk Smith 0-1-0-3,
line, and was 9-15 at the line.
James Oempset\,~3-9, Vince MasSouthern grabbed 37 rebounds, terson 1-0-t &lt; Clii]ICIItQ1·2-4,
led by Singleton's eleven and SbaneNil;a0-1-1. Tolals 22-3-(9·
Reiber's nine. Tbe Tornadoes had 15)-(il.
.

Players arrive ~ in Pasadena to
begin workouts for Super_B.owl27

})ig
Blacks
4own
Eastern
74-58
..
By Rick Slmpldns
Sports CDmSpoDdent

New Jersey ends Houston's·
eight-game winning streak

Monday, Jenuary 25, 1m

Chesapeake tops ·Southern
.62-47, rem~ins undefeated
Cbesr

again; OSU
bombed
. By Tbe Associated Prm
• Monday through Saturday,
Duke is ~rfect. Sundays arc an
entirely different SUJry.
The Blue Devils suffered their
third straight Sunday defeat as
Byron &lt;Wells sank a 3-poinler with
3.6 seconds left in ovmirne to give
"Florida State an 89-88 victory at
. Tallahassee,fla· .
.. Duke has now lost on successive Sundays to Georgia Tech, Virginia and the Seminoles.
This Sunday's swoon didn't
seem to faze coach Mike
l{rzyzewski, who said he was
happy that his team played .as well
as it did.
: "I don't judge things based on
wins and losses. We judge things
based on effort," be said. "I
lliougbt-our effort was outstanding.
I'm 001 going to fault my ldds."
· Aorida State had set up its fmal
play for Sam Cassell, but he
couldn't shake loose and Wells
,Yound up shooting from deep in
the left corner with 6-foot-11
Cherokee Parks' hand in his face.,
The ball rimmed around once and
kissed off the backboard before
talling through.
Duke (13-3, 3-3 ACC) now bas
men losses this season than it had
ail of last year when it was 34-2
and .won tbe national championship.
.
Florida State (13-5, 5-1) is a
good bet to be back in the Top 25
· when the Associated Press releases
its poll at6:30 p.m. EST tonighL
In other games Sunday, No. 2
Indiana beat No. 24 Obio Swe 966!!, No. 3 North Carolina beat No.
I0 Seton Hall 70-66 and California
defeated No. 23 UCLA 104-82
On Saturday, No. I Kansas beat
.. Colorado 82-51, No. 4 Kentucky
beat South Carolina 108-82, No. 5
Michigan beat Illinois 76-68, No.
lti Georgia Tech beat No. 7 Vir·
· ginia 75-71, Auburn beat No. 8
~ 100-89, No. 9 Cincinnati
beat Alabama-Birminlham 40-38,
No. II Arizona beat Flew Orleans
7'2:69, Iowa State beat No. 12
Oklahoma 81-74 in overtime, No.
IS UNLV beat No. 18 Georgetown
9!&gt;-80, No. 17 Connecticut beat
Providence 68-61, No. 20 Pitts·
burgh Ileal Miami 86-84; Wisconsin beat No. 21 Michigan State 67-

.

LEGAL NOTICE
ThePulllic:u-Comm·r.! 'C1d011io
lias Mlloail poM: -·~~~~in tho t9112
long-term lor8cal report -for Col-

umbus Southern Power Company
(92-573-El-FOR) lnd Ohio Power Com!*Y (112·574-El-FOR). The Columbul
Sou1horn Power
'-ring will be
held on TUOidly, Fobfuary 2, t913, •
6:00p.m., •the olflces olthe c:omm;..
Ilion, teo ea.llnJedStreet. Columbus,
Ohio 432118 01173. The 1oc111 '-lng for
the Ohio Power case will be held on
Wedneldey, February :1. 1993,
at 6:00 p.m .• at City H..C. Council

roe..

a..-.. 2t8

C-nd Avenue,
s.w., c.ntan, Ollio 447112.The purpooo

of tho '-"1101 will be to provide
.......-.of tho public the opponun11y
lo be "''!!lrdlng the _,,,, of the
lonrf-Wm
for- rwpoll ftllnge. Coplee ol ...

in-

co_.·

repalllare......,..

oounty

years - until it hit in the b~ game
By BARRY WILNER
and the Bills couldli't deal wtth iL
AP Sports Writer
Levy desaibed those leuers as
PASADENA. Calif. - It's not
even close to a war of words. saying, 'You're the ones we're
looking at as the underdog, the
Maybe not even a skirmish.
Still, when the players aren't -ones who fought their war b$:k.
available yet and the Super Bowl " You're the blue~ guys. "
"I told our players, 'You kDow
hoopla is just beginning, it sure is
refreshing to hear something who will be wearing red; white and
unusual, different, even slightly blue out there wheo we play that
game? You are - the Buffalo
conttoversi11J..
Bills.'"
,
Not that Marv Levy meant to
Levy
has
a
poinL
In overcoming
cause any headlineS when, almost
injuries
to
SlaiS
such
as Jim Kelly,
as an aside at the end of his news
Bruce
Smith
and
Cornelius
Benconference to open the week's fesnett,
the
Bills
have
shown
a
load
of
tivities, he lai~ claim to a tille that
clearly bas belonged elsewhm for perseverance. After blowing the
AFC East title by losing lheii seadecades.
That tide, "America's Team,'' son finale to Houstoo while under·
in.fact bas been the property of the . manned and on the road, they
Dallas Cowboys. And it is the staged that memorable rally the
Cowboys, of course, who will race next week to eliminate the Oilers.
Levy's Buffalo Bills for the NFL · Then they won two playoff
games on the road, a place they
championship on Sunday.
"America's Team sometimes is hadn't won in the p-ooo since
what someone names themselves, .. 1981.'1bey did it with dominating
Levy said "We've had an OUipOIIl· defense. 'Ibey got the fii'St two of
ing of letters froin all over the their three January victories with
countty since our Houston game, Frank Reich, not Kelly, at the ·
.
with people telling us we were helm.
So if they want to call themAmerica's Team.''
The Bills staged the biggest selves "America's Team," let
comeback in NFL history in that them.
wild-Qrd game, coming back from · "That's great for Marv Levy,"
35-3 to win 41-38 in overtime. Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson
That victory might be men mean- said when told of the fan mail - ·
ingful than any in club history and Levy's claim. "I don't care.
because it displayed so·obviously All I want to do is beat the team we
-to the players as well as the pub- play Sunday, and that's the Buffalo
lic - that this team can handle Bills. I don't get carried away with
adversity. And adversity mrely was the· America's Team.'''.
an obslacle for Buffalo the last two
After so much national tel~vi-

sion time in this decade-the Bills
are the only AFC champioo in the
1990s IUid are making a recordtying third straisbt trip to the Super
Bowl- they might be America's
Most Familiar Team.
"I see a lot of star J,Jiayers,"
Johnson said or the Btlls, who
would be the first team to lose
three consecutive Super Bowls if
they .can't stop the AFC's slide in ·
the big game, DOW at eight "Bruce
Smith is as fine a player as we've
faced all be~aybe the fmest.
Cornelius
... Dmyl Talley,
who is one of the most undarated
pla~. ·

'Oo their offense, the number
or talented, experienced players in
their entire lineup allows them to'
do some things other teams are n01:
able to do.
'
.
"They have so much diversity
on offense. They can do things
P.robably across the board better
ihan most teams. ' ' ,,
"We're not that complicated."
They are as full of stars when ,
they l!ave the ball, though. Troy
Aikman, Emmiu Smith, Michael:
Irvin and Jay Novacek surely
deserve the acclaim Kelly, Thurman Thomas, Andre Re,ed and
James I.oftoo receive.
Dallas also has the top-rati:d '
defense in the league.
· ·
'

A Garrison Ftnish in horscrac-

ing, a late run to a nanow victory,
is named for ol~·time jockey :
"Snapper" Garrison.

Miller girls top Eastern 5.9-54
added Dine, Stephanie Merclde ·six,
Karen. Arkley five, Haley Berry
four, and two each by Julie Lanning a Laurie Willi.
.
Eastem'bosts Belpre Wednesday
and goes to River Valley on Thursday.
SCORE BY QUARTERS:
MILLER 13 12 22 12-59
EAS"mRN 8 IS 12 19,54

A 22-12 third period lifted

bot shooting SParked Miller to a
22-12 liamc and Eastan aai1ed 47basketball victory over Eastem Sat· 35. Eastern peaed the fmal round
urday afternoon at Eastern High and had a chance to win at the foul
School.
line, ~14 hit just 5-13 free throws
Miller is now 6-8 and Eastern is going down the suetcb. Eastern
5-8.
. outscored Miller 19-12 in the
Sandy Hem paced Miller with frame, but fell short 59-54 at the
20 points, Jenny Plant added 14, · buzzer.
.
Eastern hit 21 of 68 from the
Jamie Hanning 13, Michelle Nel- '
son five, Marty Cook four, and floor and a frigid 12-27 It tbe line,
Erica Toki three.
while grabbing 31 rebounds (Otto
Eastern was led by senior 16), having 19 tumoVC!I, 9 steals,
Stephanie Otto who netted 18 and 18 fouls. Miller hit 25·55 for
points and had 16 rebounds, fol- 49 percent, was 8-16 at the line,
lowed by Jessica Karr with 16, and had 35 rebounds, led by Plant
Jaime Wilson with eight, Amy with 8 and Nelson's seven. Miller
Redovian eight, and Pemy Aeikcr had 25 wmoven,llld 23 fouls.
four. Seeing action but not scoring
Miner won the reserve game 39were Tara Congo, Jessica Radford, 27.
'
Melissa Guess, Nicole Nelson, and
Michelle Schultz led Eas~m
Rebecca Evans.
with a great 12-_point effort, fol·
Miller went upc10-2, then rolled lowed by N1colc Nelson's
to a 13-8 fiiSt period seore. Eastern live,three each by Jessica Radford
cut the lead to 25·23 at the half.
and ~ Morris, and two each
Miller sank 8-10 field goals to by Mc.lissa a-. tiKI Belh Bay.
start the third frame, including 5 or
Tracy Swlln led Miller with
5 in the opening minutes. The red- eleven points, while Angela Taylor

Miller to a 59-54 non-league girls'

.

K8lll Maroh ().().(), Sandy Hem i
1().().20, Jeannie Wycinski ().().(), ,
Jamie Hanning 5-1-0-13, Julie Lanning ().().(), Tracy Doughty 0-0-0, •
Michelle Nels011 0-S:.S, Marty
Cook 2·0-4, Jenny Plant 6·2·14,
Erica Toki 1·1·3. Tolall 24-1-(8·
16)-59.
I
EASTERN (54)
.
Stephanie Otto 8-2-18, Jaime •
Wilson 2-4-8, Tara Congo 0-0-0,
Amy Redovian 4.().8, Jessica Rad· '
ford 0-0-0, Penny Aeiter 2·0-4,
Melissa Guess 0-0-0, Nicole Nelson 0-0·0, Jessica Karr 5·6-16
Rebecca Evans()..().(). Tatals 21-0: '
(12-27)..54.
i

,...-~------------------------·

·MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE.. OWNERS

THE TU
BOOKS
ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1992
.
.
COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES, ALSO
'
FOR DELINQUENT TilES.
CLOSING D~TE 1s·FEBRUARY 12, 1993
TUlLER Til DEIDLIIIE IS,JIIIUARY 31 I 1993.
NO EXTENSION WILL IE GIAITED .ON TUlLER IllES.

public lilll'llrtel within lhe an.ctec~•·

vtoe lli•lblw. Furthor lnfonnlllan may'
~by ·conr.ctlng the Public
U1lllill Commillhtn a1 Ohio, teo Eut
Broad

Strwt.

~-

HOWARD E. FUll
MEIGS COUNTY TRWUIH

Cotumbue, Ohio

,.

I

0

'

'

irs!*

• One limit he's disregarded
throughout his career is the one set
by his vision. Legally blind in one
eye, Dunson has learned to adjusL ·
Dunson also rushed live times
for 33 yards as the East's running

game stole the spotlight from i~
two touted-quarterbacks. Virginia's
Terry Kirby ran for two touchdowns and Boston College's
Chuckle Dukes led all rushers with
62 yards on 13 c8rries.
Neither Heisman Trophy winner
Gino Torreua nor Mirer were spectacular in college· football's final ·.
show.case for seniors. .
Coming on the heels of his
three-interception Sugar Bowl flop,
Tomita completing 9 of 16 passes
for 69 yards with one interception.
Mirer hit 7 of 16 for lOS yards with
two inlelteptions.
Trailing 21-17 at balftime, the
West was shut out in the second
half. '
"We left the Defense on the
field 100 long," said Oregon's Rich
Brooks, the West coach.
Washington's Mark Brunell was
1 of 15 for 89 yards and one touch·
down with one interception, and
Weber Slate's Jamie Martin threw
for 67 yards and one touchdown
with ail interception.
Damn Alcom of Akron lticked a
31-yard field gOal to put the East

. -How top 25 fared ...

MILLER(59)

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writ6r
Paul Holmp-en is still having a
tough time wmning as a coach in
Philadelphia ' ·
Holmgren returned to the Spectruin Sunday night for the fiiSt time
since the Ayers fired him Dec. 4,
1991, and dido' t have any better
luck with his Hartford Whalers,
losing a 5-4 overtime decision to
the Flyers.
.
"I got a chance to sec a lot of
people I haven't seen since last
year around this time,'' said Holmgren, a longtime player and coach
in Philadelphia "Other tlwl that, it
was just another game."
Holmgren was fired by the Flyers after getting ·off to an 8-14-2
record in Philadelphia in the 1991·
92 season, his fourth as head coach.
He had better fortune as a player,
helping the Flyers reach the Stanley Cup finals against the New
York Islanders in 1979-80.
In other NHL games, it was
Tampa Bay 2, Min.nesollf2, and
Chicago 6, Vancouver 2.
Flyers 5, Wbalers 4, OT
Ric Natttess' goal with 2:23
remaining in ovenime lifted the
·Ayers over the Whalers.
Nattress' wristshot from the
right boards ticked off Hartford
defenscman Zarley Zalapsti 's stick

East rolls over West 31-17
·in annual Shrine contest
STANFORD, Calif. (AP)Middle Tennessee State's Walter
Dunson, a late addition to the ~­
. Wea Shrine roster, made his mark
with the most memorable play of
. the game, just like he planned iL
Dunson, a tailback with 4.28sccond speed in the 40, sprinted
downfield to m'ake a perfect ,catch
on a 60-yard pass from Notre
Dame's Rick Mirer. The third··
quarter reception Sunday led to the
. fmal touchdown in the East's 31-17
victoly. .
·
"I knew I would have to do
something extra in this ~." . said
Dunson, who led Piv1sion I-AA.
Middle Tennessee Swe in rushing
with 1,031 yards in only eight
·games. "There were guys here who
came from big-name universities. I
didn't need 10 do anything super·
natural, just play within my lim·

up 24-17 with ·7:23 lefi in the third
quarter. On the East's next possession, Dunson's catch set up a 1·
yard run by Clemson's Rudy Harris
that made it 3'1·17 with 14:23
remaining.
Texas Tech's Tracy Saul inter·
cepted a Torretta pass on the
game's oj!ening drive, resulting in
a 40-yard TO pass from Brunell 10
Eric Guliford of'Arizona Sta~ on
the next play. It was the first of live
East turnovers.
But the West gave the ball back
on the next series when California's Russell White fumbled and
Rut!lers linebacker Shawn
Williams returned it 30 yards for a
touchdown.
Jason £lam's 48-yard field goal
gave the West a 10-7 advantage
with 7:23 left in the frrst quarter
after Texas A&amp;M's Dmick Frazier
picked off Mirer' spass.
Kirby's 7-yard touchdown run
put the East back on top 14-10.

Edberg withdraws from .doubles
after suffering back spasms

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) ton 6-3, 6-4, 6-5 and next wiD meet
~Just call her the Comeback Kid.
the winner of the night match
By Tbe Associated Press
13. Purdue (11-3) lost to No. 2 Jennifer Capriati did it again today • ~~~t~te~~:riN~~~
How the top 25 teams in The Indiana 74-65. Next: at Northwest- losing lhe fust set before advancing Australia's Richard Fromberg.
....... Preas college L .......L . u em Thursday
to a quarterfinal match a~inst
. C .
f h
Assoc""""
~
'
·
s
fli1Graf at the Ausu........
-"··
No. I J1m ouner, one o t e
•--•
tltts'
week:
14.
Iowa
(12·3)
vs.
Northwest·
te
·
poll "'"'"
But Capr1'at1' wasn't the only few plavers
to finish a match .on
I. Kansas (16-1) beat KansaS em, ppd.; at Penn State, ppd. Next:
f
Sunday 1s rain-plagued schedule,
h0 h d t0 d'1 · d
1
State 71-65; beat Colorado 82-51. at No. 21 Michigan Sta~. Thurs, P ayer w
a
g eep or will tlay No. 7 Petr Korda of the
"'ext:
vs.
No.
25
Long
·
Beach
State,
ds
somethin~
extra.
· who fim1'shed off
·~·
y.
N 2 • Edbe
tw~"~e Czec Repubhc,
Monday.
· 15. UNLV (11·1) beat Texas
o. te•an
rt a ~-..
unsceded American Chris Gamer
2. Indiana (17-2) beat No. 13 A&amp;M 98·96, OT; beat No. 18 winner here, had bac spasms so in the .completion or a suspended
Purdue 74~5; beat No. 24 Ohio · Georgetown 96-80. Next: at Neva- ~~~b~;s ~!:Yw:dr:; !~ match.
State 96-69. Next: vs. Minnesota, da. Thursday.
for his match a~ainst France's
No. 11 Guy Forget of France
Wednesday. ·
16. Georgia Tech (10-4) lost ,to .
d B
'I h
ended American qualifier Kelly
No.7 Vrr· Arnau
oetsc unu e was
3. North Caroil·na (16-1) beat wate Forest 81·58·, IlealN'
rth C
cleared after a morning workout.
Jones' run with a straight-set victoNo. 7 Virginia 80-58; Ileal No. 10 . ginia 75-71. Next: vs. o
arThe stoic Swede, wearing a ry and will tate.on No. 14 Michael
Seton Hall 70-66. Next: vs. Aorida olina State, Wednesday.
f sed dr
Stich of Germany in the other quarSiate, Wednesday.
17. Connecticut{9-4) lost to No. wrap for support, re u
to op terfinal Wednesday.
4. Kentucky (13-1) beat Alaba· 18 Georgetown 86-69; beat Provi· . out of the tournament that has been
No. 1 Monica Seles won the last.
ma 73·59·, beat South Carolina dence
. 68~1. Next at Miami, Tues- something of a jinx for him since it
·
was moved from the grass of near- e•g hI ~es to rout N.o. l6 Natha1ie
108-82. Next: vs. LSU, Tuesday.
dsy. ·
· b K
I · · s ha e forced TauZlat of France and reach tile
5. Michigan (15-2) beat Min18. Geor~etown (11-3) beat No.
't ooyong. OJUne v
·
women's quarterfinals Wednesdav,
nesota 80-73; Ileal Illinois 76-68. 17 Connecucut 86~9; loSJ to No. him to pull out twice.
when she will play unsceded Julie
2
Next vs. No. 24 Ohio State, Tues- IS UNLV 96-80. Next: vs. No. 10 ·2 ~~~t~::CJ.~ ~~ti~ Halard o( France, who conquered
day.
Seton Hall, Wednesday.
S ed C . . B
No. 6 Conchita Martinez in straight
6 Duke (13·3) beat North Car·
19. VBlldcrbilt (14-3) Ileal No.8 with w e nsuan ergstt(j1ll,
· ·
102 89 N
T
who knocked off his second seeded sets.
lina State 92-56; lost to Florida Arkansas
• . ext: at en- player, No. 10 Wayne Ferrein of
No. 5 Mary Joe Pcmandez oust·
ed
No 9 Manuela Maleeva Frag
tate 89-88, OT. Next: vs. San nessce, Wednesday.
Francisco, Tuesday.
20. Pittsburgh (13-2) beat South. Africa, 6•4 • 1:~· 2·.6 • 64 · niere. She's matched apinst.No.
· . 7. Virginia (11·2) lost to No. 3 Boston College 81·70; beat Miami Ferreua was a semtfmahst last Arantxa Sanchez Vicano, who won
North Carolina 80-'58; lost to No. 86-84. Next: vs. Syracuse at the year.
Sunday, as did No. 3 Gabriela
16 Georgia Tech 75·71. Next: at . Pittsburgh Civic Arena, Wednes• ·
No. 3 ~te Samrv:.ousted_fel- SabatiniandNo.lOMaryPien:e.
William&amp;Mmy.~y.
day. .
•lo•w. .
A•m•en•c•a•n•~
. . tV•m
. . w.a.sh•m•g··
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,
1· 8. Arkansas (12-3) lo1t to No.
21. Mic:hiaau Stale (10-4) lost to
19 Vanderbilt 102·89; lost to Wisconsin 6'7-66. Next: vs. No. 14
Auburn 100-89. Next: at Mis•i•ip- Iowa, Thursday.
.
PI State, Wednesday.
r 22. Utah (14-2) beat Hawaii 82,
1
: 9. Clnc:innall (13-1) beat Chica- 67; beat San Diego State 78-53. ·
go State 103-43; beat Alablina- Next: at W)'OIIIina, Tbunday.
/'1
Birmin~ 40·38. Next: vs.
23. UCLA (12-S) beat Stanford
xavier,
\\'odn1day.
84-76;'·)ost to California 104-82.
10. Seton ~15·3) .beat Vii- Next: 11 Southern California,
Ianova 66·61, :.:j}Dil 'to No. 3 Thundly.
·
North CaroliDa /\Mill. Next a No.
24. Ohio State (9-S) lost to Wis18 Clecq1~ Weclt...... y.
COI'IIin 76-67; lost to No. 2 Indiana
11. ~ (11·2) bell Arbona 96-69. Next: 11 No. 5 Michiaan.
State 91-37; bell New Orlllnl 72· Tuelday.
.
Put Americ~'s r~r Tum tti wotl for you!
69. Next: a Oreaon. Thurlday.
25. Long Beach State (13·3) lost
12. Oklaboma (12·5) lo1t to to UC Santa Barbara 61·60: beat
MlrYllnd 89-71: 1Mt Ill Iowa Stile Cal State-Pullenon 72-58; lost to
ST.
818
~1-14, OT.Noxt ya. P1orida A4M, Vitainla Commonwealth 95·61.
Wednelday.
.
Next: at No. 1 Kansas, Monday.

~

4

Healid abou· t

1:·

' .

R AP1D REfUND.?

'

.

••

.by Petrovic was 39 points, last sea- consecutive time in San Antonio.
son against Boston.
Michael Jordan led Chicago
''When Petro has it going like with 42 points.
that, yQU just tty to get the ball into Heat 122, Mavericks 106 ·
his hands," Anderson said. "He ·
The beating goes on for Dallas,
was on fll'C, so we just rode him."
which tied the game in the third
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was period before Miami matched a
the Los Angeles !.akers 112, Wash- franchise record for most points in
,ington 110 in overtime; San Anto- a quarter with 37 . .
nio 103, Chicago 99; Portland 124,
Glen Rice scored 31 points.
Ulah 113; Miami 122. Dallas 106; Rony Seikaly added 22 points on 8Indiana 112, Charlotte lOS, and the of-9 shooting, and had 12 rebounds
Los Angeles Clippers 116, Seattle for Miami.
95.
.
.
Derek ~ scored 24 points,
Houston's Vernon Maxwen had . including a third-quatter layup that
a long night trying to guard Petro- tied the game for the Mavericks.
vic.
But the Heat scored the next 10.
"Petro shot the lights out," said points.
Maxwell, who had 19 points.
Trail Blazen 124, Jazz 113
Coleman added 23 points and
Utah's 13-game home winning
14 rebounds as the Nets brolce their streak ended when Portland rallied
own two-game losing soeak.
by outscoring the Jazz 78.()0 in the
Hakeem Olajuwon had 22 second half. Rod Strictland led tOO
points and 11 rebounds for the way in the decisive firull period
Rockets.
·.·
·
with 12 or his 17 points.
·
.
Clippen 116, SuperSonics 95
Clyde Drexler scored 28 points.
Ron Harper fell hard, but Seattle for Portland
harder. Overcoming a scary spill,
Karl Malone had 42 points for
Harper scored 24 points as Los , Utah.
Angeles handed Seattle its worst . Laken 112, Bullets 110
..
loss this season.
Los Angeles overcame a 13·
Just 17 seconds into the game, point deficit in the final 5:49 of
~~r hit_the floor hard froll,' a
regulation, then got the go-ahead.
colliSlOO With Shawn ~p behind basket from Sedale Threatt with 54·
the baseline after a missed layup. seconds left in ovenime.
Harper appeared to be seriously
James Worthy scored 25 points.
injured. but returned a few minutes for the visiting Lakers.
later fora slam dunk.
Pacers 112, Hornets 105
.
Danny Manning added 23
Rik Smits h'lld 11 of his 21
points, Ken Norman 20 and Gary points in the fourth quarter as lndi·
Grant 10 of his 16 in the founh ana was overcoming a 14-point.
quarter for Los Angeles.
defiCit.
Spun 103, Bulls 99
Charlotte led 98-84 with 8:06.
David Robinson had 24 points remaining. But the Pacers scored ·
and Dale Ellis 20 as the Spurs 28 of the last 35 points.
.
defeated the Bulls for the fourth

Flyers edge Whalers _S-4 in overtime .

Ar~!na. Dallas forward DoaJI Smith (34) and for·
ward Terry Davis (43) look on, The beat won,
122-106. (AP)
.

MISSED SHOT • Miami Heat pard Bimbo
Coles '(ll) tries to rec:onr after losin&amp; the ball
during a layup attempt Suday duriag tbe
Heat's mateh-up agaiast Dallas ·In the Miami

•

'

and got by Hartford goalie Frank the lightning's tirst point in five.
Pietrangelo for his fifth goal of the meetings with the North Stars. .:
Zamuner skated over the bll!!!
season.
Philadelphia, which snapped a line and let go a soft wristshot that
three-game losing streak, had tied got between Jon Casey~s pads.
the game on a power-play goal by Blackhawks 6, Canutb 2
Goaltender Ed Belfour gained,
Greg Hawgood atl7:50 of_the third
period.
.
....
. his 25th victory and .the Blackchawks JIOI a $feat performance·
Lightning 2, North Stan 2
Rootie Rob Zamuner' s goal at . froll) '!herr special teams to beat tlie
.
2:34 of the third period gave Canucks.
Tile Blackhawks scored two
Tampa Bay a.tie_with Minnesota,
shorthanded gnals and one on tlie
power play during a four-goal sec.:
ond period.
, :
Belfour (25·11·6), tied with
Pittsburgh's Tom Barrasso form~
Sunday's
College
Basketball
wins, made 29 saves.- His team·
Stores .
mates, meanwhile, killed off th~
By The Associated Press
Canucks' Jx&gt;wer play seven times
EAST
until Doug Lidster broke through
Brandeis 100, Emory 73
with a rebound shot at 7:05 of the
Drexel 75, Boston U..63
final period. The Blackhawks
Massachusetts 79, DePaul 69
killed off eight of nine Vancouvef
North Carolina. 70, Seton Hall power plays overall.
66
Chicago's Steve Larmer record· Northeastern 76, Delaware 73
ed his 30th goal for the ninth timt
Rutgers 80, Temple 72
in his career when he scored l'nim ;
SOUTH
the top of the left circle to touch off.
Davidson 82, Marshall69
the four-goal barrage at 13:14.
.
Florida 80, Tennessee 68
Florida St. 89, Duke 88, OT
Furman 73, VMI 60
Louisville 85, Arizona SL 59
SPEEDSKATING
. Wake Forest 74, Clemson 56
HEERENVEEN, Netherlands
MIDVVEST
,
(AP) - Palko Zandstra of the
Chicago 59, Carnegie-Mellon Netherlands won his second Euro- ;
53
pean championship Simdl!y, setting :
Indiana 96, Ohio St. 69
world record of 156.882 poin~
a
Missouri 79, Oklahoma St. 63
with victories in three of ap-cbo- ·
FAR WEST
0 1·25-93 0552est
.
California 104, UCLA 82

Sunday's results

-Sports briefs-::-

•·

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PLACE: Big Bend Health and Fitness
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�. PIQI 6 The pa11y Sentinel

Monday, January 25,1993

ByTheBend

RIGR

Reader defends his own kind
'

.

Dar Au I ' I: Your 11011to "'!aoa&amp;b Alady,' wbo
uJie4 _ . •••ha IIJIO, "WWIIl'a
WRIIII w1111
i 111e llllk
by a alile. 1'lle wriler concJqclecl IIIIi
llllllllea 11e tzshaDy vicious, llld
IIIII is wby we will lllways 11m
wm. I Rlllb&amp; yoa've piared a areat
111111)' opinicw cia lbe llllbject lliDc:c
the oriPIII lcacr iijJj4iCid, but I
boptyoa ba• rooni for one more.
~ wriler &amp;Ibid wby IOCiolcJIIsls
doa'tdo-ailai...ldicltolellll
why mea 11e lblt way. Molt of the
men I blow wort bird at their

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. 5-UNIOTO- 1:00 p.m.
DEC. 1G-AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE
DEC.17-TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
, JAN. 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 9-AT MEIGS- 3:00 p.m.
JAN. 11-sDUTHERN
JAN. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING-.1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
JAN. 23-MILLER- 1:00 p.m.
JAN. 27-BELPRE
JAN. 2~AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. 8-MEIGS -1:00 p.m.
FEB.1S-AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. S-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. 8-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-SOUlliERN
FEB. 5-AT MIL[ER
FEB. 12-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 13-HANNAN, WV. ·
FEB. 16--FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

BOYS
JAN. 26-Ravenswood -Away.
JAN•..29-Southern - Home

-r •

1992·93 GiRU' SCHEDULE

1992·93 IOYS' SCHEDULE

E.ASTERN EAGLES

.

•

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN •
DEC. 12-MILLER
.
-DEC. 18-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC.1~NIOTO

DEC. 26-COAL GROVE-At OUC
.
DEC. 28-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. 3G-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY •
JAN. 1&amp;-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 3o-SOUTH POINT I
FEB. 6-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB.13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 30-AT TRIMBLE

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS
JAN. 29-Eastern - Away
JAN. 3G-South Point - Home
GIRLS .
JAN. 27-Trimble - Hom•
JAN. 28-Symmes Valley - Home
FEB. 2-River Valley - Home

ANN LANDERS

"1992, Leo Aac•let
Tima Srodleate
;: ..
Cru10n Syadicate'' : .

DALLAS (AP) Thefalewars
may have crippled-the nation's air·
lines, but they helped tum 1 long·
IN SEATIU!
. distance romance into wedded bliss
DEAR ANONYMOUS: What a for one couple.
.
self.defelling, 8CII8Ciess appie»o:h.l
Dean Brumbaugh and Jean Ray·
hope )'0111: taueea this. . .
mood suuck up a romance afler
P(a1111inr ,a weddirtg? Wlla(s meeting in Cancun, Mexico. last
riglrl? WllaJ's wro11g? "TM AM March. Trouble was, he lived in
Ltwlers Guiu for Britks" will Dallas and she near Los Angeles.
reline 'JOIII' I»&gt;J/kty. ·Selld a selfThey made several uips back
addreued, loll g. busi11ess·si1e and fonh but were starting r.o .sttug·
envelope IJIId a clled: or MOIItJI gle when NOilhwesl and American
order for $3.65 (llils ittclMdes airlines Uiggered the indusUy's
poSIIJge alld ltalldlint) 10: Brides, half·price sale ill May.
.
•-,
--~-,,,
P,O;
Box
,
"The
tim.ing
was
unbeliev11562
C/0 """ ...........,
able," Raymond said. "We eacb
ChictJgo. Ill. 60611 ·0562 . (Ill must have booked six roun~·uip
CIJIIIJda, Wid $4.45 .)
tickets apiece. We jUS! fell mm: in

T.,r,;;,

1992 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

Ann·
Landers

NOV. 30-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
.DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY .
DEC. 21-AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
• . DEC. 2~AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT .EASTERN
• JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 2G-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 ·

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MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
JAN. 26-Nelsonville•York- Home
..
JAN. 29-Belpre - Away
'

GIRLS
JAN. 25-Nelsonville~York- Home
. JAN. 28-Miller - Home

Where America Goes 1b Rtl:!x..

~nto~r For Just Pennies A Day..

BAUM LUMBER

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND RADIO SHACK
Mlddlepor.t, OH.

106 N. 2nd
992·2635

0

.
Com.tng
:

.,_.Au

February12

....•
&lt;I

~··

··' .•Iii•

.

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0

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:lt.is Valentine's Day send someone special a
personalized Love Note. Your sweetheart, friend
or relative will be happy to know that you care!

20'

perwonl

Love notes must be received by ll nooa, fek.IO, 1993

Add a special ~uch to your message with o~ of lbrse el

·

en15 $3 00 eadl

Bank

Middleport, Oh.

WILL .,AlE CARE OF ALL
YOUR IISUUNCE NDDS

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 SECOND AYE

POMEROY

992·3381
GUARDRAIL

PHONE
(614) 992·6451

&amp;

SIGN ERKTION

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST Ill/~
992·5432
MAIN ST.
POMEROY KFC.
•

-JI;t;ll.'if.i/

F.SHER FUNEUL· HOME
P. 0. Box 683

Pomero , Ohio 45769

IIICI FISHD- Owellr/4i»,_do,

JUST DO IT.

•
Prescription

•

Shop

. SlUS • SERVICE • Pl~S

' For All Your Prescription and s,mdry Needs

MIDDLEPORT

N. 2nd AVE.

992·5627

253 II. StCOIIII

See Us

·

A. Lovebirds

B. Cupid

E. R'ose

F.Cou n

D.Lips

'

MR. an~ MRS. JEFFREY (ROBYN) HAWK

•

Pitzer-Hawk
Robyn Gail Pitzer and Jeffrey
Allen Hawk were united in mar·
riage on· October 17, 1992 at the
Racine Uniled Methodist Church
with Rev. Roger Grace officiating.
Tbe bride is the daughler of
Clinton R. and Esler L. Pitzer of
Long Bottom. She is a 1984 gradu·
~ of Easrem High School and a
1989 gradna"' of Rio Grande Col·
lege with a bachelor's degree in
Business EdiJCation.·
The groom is the son of Rollin
K. Hawk. Guysville. and Cheryl A.
Laudennill, Racine. He is a 1985
graduate of Eastem High School
and will be graduating from the

Uni~ersity

of Rio Grande in June
with a degree in electronics.
Maid of honor was Melissa
Scarbrough~ Bridesmaids were
Tammy Timmons and Cynthia
Chadwell, sisters or the bride.
Flower girl was Megail Venoy.
Besl man was Greg La1hey,
friend of the groom. Groomsmen
were Rocky Pitzer, brother of the
bride, and Jonathan Dunn. Ring·
bearer was Matthew Timmons,
nephew or the bride.
A reception followed the cere·
mony in the church social room.
The couple resideS in Pomeroy.

·Zsa Zsa returns to courtroom

.

liTIHL •. _ •

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

.

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992·3345

..._,CiliiiH!I--:STIH~
Dealer

'

Peoples

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

Y• Local.

••

MIDLAND, Teul (AP) - Zsa
ZSa Gabor nlba'IIIIO the COUI1I'OOIII
this week, this lime to deCeocl IICI'
no-sbow It a "movie lilt camp"
where fans ~ $7.$00 lpicc:e to ·
111JP11f in I Video with JICI'.
San Antonio businessman
Leonard Safar claim• his Holly·
wood Fant111 C~. went under
after Gabor cancefecl two weeks
befole lhe.l"l ev.tllld be lwd to
pay,.....,. to 20 cllenu.

Saflr won a $3 million 'ud

,.
1

aglinst Gabor for breac~-of:'::.
aract In November, but a federal
judge threw it out IM!cause Gabor ·
halfn 'I been notified of 1hc !rial
dale and didn't •nend
Gabor has said her contract
allowed her 10 back out if she aot a
movie contract. The clause was
1rig..\:4ed by her cameo .rule in
"N1 . Oun 2 Ill," she IBid. ·

'

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r--------~------------------,
I
· ~ noler:

U

I Payment mu&gt;11Wlmpany your order
of words
II Num~r
a12ileparwon:l
S
tlemenl (f cleaired) S
I MPicture
$5.00
S
TGbiS
I

1
1

I·
I
:

1
I
I

0
0

Check

0
0

M.O.

----.

.

Name

....,

Address

1

ZJP _ _ __

SC.

City

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I

MESSAGE (Please print):

I
I.

O 'Di scove r

VISA
Maste.Card
if paying with credit card:.
Cord no.
E•p. date
.

Sia nature

•.

Special Art Element (if olc&gt;ircdl
AO
BO
c .O
oO

1flajl

EO

FO

GO

HO

''

I
I

I·

to. LOVE NOTHS .

The Daily Sentinel

:

.,

lll Court St, Pomeroy. Obio 25769
. 1
Or Phone 992-2156. Call in your MastetCar:d. \"lSI or Discbver cud mDDber and cbarJ.e lL .I

~-----------~--------------•

•

0 0
••

,"~"

· NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL ·HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 1-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1G-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-AT MILLER
DEC. 17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9-EASTERN
JAN. 11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2G-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
J~N. 25-NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB. 1-AT BELPRE
FEB. 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 8-TRIMBLE
FEB. 11-AT EASTERN

When The Time Comes .•• See Us
For Your 1993 Graduation
Announcements.
255 Mill St.

m

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®~2!f

•we
aa.-., ""'"""'

0

1992·93 IIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 4-AT ALWNDER
DEC. 8-TRIMBLE
••
DEC. 11!-MILLER
DEC. 12-AT ATHENS
DEC.15-AT NELSQNVILLE·YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC,·22-WELLSTON
JAN: 5-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-SOUTHERN
FEB.16-VINTON COUNTY

ailline bumped them to flrsl class

.a.. ••
."r.or their "
-ymoon.
'J'bey •icd S..cat
"""'
J&gt;omtw c.aL ne, irlwilal "-t'·
The newlyweds will set lie in•
icaa chid eu •
RoiJcrt 0.. Sllennan, Texas, 70 miles nortll of;
dall since lbeir
Dallas.
•
oo bisaidiac.
' .
American's parent company las~
Crandall
bis IqJCU, bat lbe week reported a record annual loss
.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _........_!
it!
N~·me
=:!!,d~paJ~rtl!y!:on!,!the~fare::,:wars=:·_· ,

/

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1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

love wilheldlvisil."

•

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7

Fare wars: Bad for bottom line maybe,
but good for long-distance love

damlllay borne when they were ill.
. It plainly 11111e1 IIIIi if you miD more
IbiD llix ci&amp;Jia year, you will be
..:..;..~;,..t
••'""
. ·. and
. - --~
- put on ~•
~---..
Cllllolc )'1111' job.- ANONYMOUS

citiun and didn't ask for a 8ccurily
deposit ""cause I believed she would
iate aooc1 care of the pllcc. While
her 10111 moved her fumilll!'e in,IICI'
dauahltn-in-law hammered nails
joiJIIIIII~~e Cllefu1 driven. lovina 0.0 my walls, and they must have
bUiblods, prouielive fatben and hung a picture of every member of
cooc:eraec1 citizells. But thele are the .entire· family. I'm s'ure they
lbe IIICIII you do 1101 read lboul · · would never have done lblt to the
bee w•se they 11e lilt "IICWIWCIIIby. ~ plasler in their own homes. By .the
'I'bc ~IJIIPCO II'C loaded with time they finisbed, the woodwi:R
stories about ldlc1lious. """"'-h"' was chipped and the cmpeiS were
criminals w~~oee behavior
dirty and Sllined.
which makes for fascinaling
Ann, please warn JanCIJonls lbaf
reading.
they must always insist on a secu·
The question is not which group rity deposit so that if the Jllopeity
can we blame for our society's is deslroycd or damaged. they will
evili, but what is there about have suff'JCienl money for repain. ••
our society lblt eauscs people not ONE WHO WAS USED IN ST.
10 cue about one another, and LOUIS
"
how can we avoid lhese pilfalls
DEAR ONE: Thanks for a good
and pan on 10 our childr.en a letter: I mighladd thai a tenant whO
legacy of Iakins responsibility doesn'l have the money 10 gi~ a
and cuing. Auumptions which securily deposil is DOl likely 10 fmd
disenfranchise and divide people the funds to pay for any property
do not help. -· EVERYMAN, c:lamage when he Or she moves oul
PORlLAND, ORE.
A wool to the wise is suflicienl
DEAR PORn.AND: It is~ dial
0... AM I •,.,_..: This is in
mos1 men ue peaaful and decenl. response 10 your column about
but the fact remains that in the last ll8ying home from the office when
s.ooo ,..., there bas - , been. you 11'1! aict.
-~-' . .
lime wltbo1t a 11 progreu
Unlil September, I ...,...., m a
ICIIIIeWbere on tho pia~ Mean- bent vault where the employees
wbilo, liawi- ba¥e doc-" were ¥inually locbd up IOV'Iw
tile l'lct lblliiiOil of!Ma - - mos1 of the day. Palple would come
foqbt Ia the name of religion. in sick IS clop. They touched the
'I'IIa'1 am c gc -.Will we cvu code buiiOns to get in and out. Tbcy
pt it?
·
touched all door knobs. They
I an l'el a: I am a widow c:oughed aU over the place. As you
who Wll ~ liken ldvanlqe of. can inlgine, each illneu wu the
Pleuo print this as a w.niD&amp; to S81lle IS an epidemic.
otben.
·
The aupe~•ilor's evalllltion sbeet
I nillled.an II(&amp;DIIeotiO a IICIIior I am enclosin&amp; explains why 110 ooc

'

GIRLS
JAN. 27~Belpre - Home
·JAN. 28~River Valley - Away

Monday, January 25,1993·
. . .B

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1912-1198

THIS .WE.E '5:
'GAMES

The Daily Sentinel

�Page

Monday, January 25, 1993 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

B The Dally Sentinel

•The Area's Nt•mher }.
Marketplace

':Scerit of a Wom~q,' AI Pacino, Emma
Tho~pson t~e top drama film honors
By BOB THOMAS
. Associated Press Writer
· BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.•'Th~ Player" and " Scent of a
Woman" were big winners at the
Golden Globe awards, while Clint
Eastwood was honored as best
director for " Unforgiven." · ·
" The Player," a satiric view of
Hollywood, triumphed in the best
· musical or comedy film ca1egory.
Tim Robbins, who played an
unscrupulous film producer, was
liailed as best actor m a musical or ·
ci)medy.
· " Scent of a Woman " won a
silrprise Golden Globe for best dramatic motion picture of 1992 as
wen as honors for best acting by AI
Pacino and best screenplay.
. The 50th presentation of the
Hollywood fioreign Press Association's awards on SatQrday spread
the movie and television trophies
liberally, and no winner dominaled
the event.
· The Golden Globes are viewed
closely for indications of what's to
come at the Aeadem y Awai:ds in
March.
. " Scent of a Woman," the story
of a blind, retired Army officer,
overcame "A Few Good Men,"
'.' Unforgiven," "The Crying
Game" and "Howards End."

ABC ' s blue-collar sitcom
" Roseanne" and the HBO special
"Stalin" tied for top television
honors with three apiece. .
"Roseanne" won for best comedy or musical series, and co-stars
Roseanne Arnold and John Goodman took best actress and actor.
"Stalin" brought the mini-series or
TV movie actor award to Robert
Duvall and support acting awards
to :Maximilian Schell and Joan
PlowrighL ·
Standing in for Mrs. Amo!d was
her husband, Tom, who sa•d she
was home sick.
"Most of all, she'd like to thank
her fans- and it's about'time," he
said. Mrs. Arnold has been nominated for an Emmy just once
despile the popularity of hCJ show .
Emma
Thompson
was
acclaimed best dramatic actress for
her role as the independent wife in
"Howards End," a movie about
class consciousness in Edwardian
England.
·
' 'If I have a wish left in the
world it's for the creation of more
great female rOles.'' she said.
Miranda Richardson, the care'
free vacationer in Italy in
"Enchante!l April," won best
musical or comedy film actress.
Miss Plowright, the feisty --:idow in

the film, won best motion ,picture
supporting actreSS.
Gene Hackman's role in
"Unforgiven" earned the motion
picture supporting actor award.
" Aladdin " won trophies for
Alan Menken for original motion
picture score, and for Menken and
Tim Rice for the ~ song " A
Whole New World.'
"lndochine," a French production tracing the beginnings of
revolt against the French colonial
regime in Vielnam, was named best
. foreign language film.
In the television categories,
"Northern Exposure" captured the ·
drama series Golden Globe and
Regina Taylor and Sam Walerston
were TV's best dramatic actress
and actor for ... I'II Fly Away."
"Sinatra;" the saga of the
sin'ger's life produced by his
dau~hter Tina, was named best
mint-series or movie made for lelevision.
Laura Dern's role in "After·
bum" brought her a Globe for best
actress in a mini-series or TV
movie.
·
Special awards were presenled
to Robin Williams for his voicing
of the genie in "Aladdin" and to
Lauren Bacall for lifetime .achievement.

'

Parker-Goh

·:: Mary Magdalene Parker and
Steven K. Goh were uniled in marriage on August 22, 1992 at 7:30
p.m. at the First Uniled Methodist
Cllurch in Athens. The ceremony
was performed by Rev. Sharon
~usman and Rev. Daniel Keigar.
· The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Alben Parker of Chester.
;The groom is the son of Mrs. MuiGek Goh ·of Knoxville, Tenn. and
(he late Mr. Siew-Buay Goh.
! The bride, escorted by her
father. wore a white sat.in g.own
t~anl!liWCiiillR flilmd col)ar, long leg-0-muttOn ~eeves, and
p long cathedral tr;Un. The bodice
of the gown featured a sweetheart
neckline with net illusion and a
high wedding band collar. The
!JQdice and sleeves were adorned
with pearl beads and iridescence
sequins. The basque waist of the
gown fell into a full bouffant skirt
which flowed into a cathedral train.
The veil featured a blush ad01.1ed
with pearl beads, sequins, and roses
ieaching to the cathedral train. She
Carried a cascading bouquet of live
Y/hite roses and stefanotis.
:. The maid of honor was Carla
TerriO. The bridesmaids were Lisa
Saunders, Renee Richard, Teresa
~cKelvey , sisters of the bride, and
Elizabeth Bryant They wore black
and white satin gowns featuring a
tatu waist, operaque sleeves, and
V-neck in back accented with a
bow which flowed into a train .
They carried silk arm bouquets of
white roses and stefanotis.
· The flower girl was Elizabeth
Saunders, niece of the bride. She
wOre a white satin gown similar 10
the bride. The flower attendants
were Racheal Seth. Leslie Richard,
Stacie Watson and Amanda Saundo1s, nieces of the bride. They
gfeeled the guests and passed out

.. Call992-2156
MoN. thni hi, BA.M.-SP.M. - SAT.B-12
CLOSED S1JNDAY

POi.ICIES
• .W. .-Wo tloo eo..ty,..... ,.j...,. . _ . . . pnpold

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

....... ...._ ....... poiol Ia .........
• rr.Mor et-war .... F....lodo ...._.IIi

IISUI_&amp;_ICE

111

llooloolt..-

F...U..AV........
r.. SoJo .. Troolo

$.30
$ .42

I \I:\ I 'I 1'1 '1 II '

$.60

,\ I I \ I ' I I

$.05/day

31-llollllo a-for Solo
3S- r ..... lor Solo
RateS are £or consecutive runs, broken up days will be
M- B.i
8-IWbp
charged £or each day 11 !8l'U"'• ads.
35- Loio a A.-.
.
;-------- 16-B..J Eotuo w..o.~

1:00 p.IIL Soturdoy
1:00 p.IIL 1\otoDdoy
I :00 p.lll. 1'l8dly
1:00 p.m. Wodnaday
I 00 p.111. 'lltunclly
1:00p.m. Priday

Ill·-,.,... for Solo
41- a - for171-- T•..U. for Solo
41-lloWio a - for Roat
A 4 WD'o
41- Foroulor RMoto.. y•loo .
· -~trwRoat
RootoAIIo..,nlooS.to
U-Futido.!R-.
PoNAA-.MN~ '
-S-forloat
llopo1r
47-Wuood .. •
C..plotc~
Equi-tlor I••

Melp c-ty M - Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3M
2-

446-Golll. . .

992 IbiD prtJ

1614 ''•

Po_,

915

388--

Q

675-PL •

t58

t.o.

c,....

51'6 ,.,..

a

84S-Po.......

256-C.ru-.

247-l.ooortF. .

77J M ~.·
182--N-R,....

-~
'JU-P•de-d

89$-Lolut
9S7-1Wfola

MS Az It Dill.
. S79-1V.._t

M

n7

3-- A-r'~Rcn·onu

r •

24$-llo Gn.lo

II ;,

667...C tlulle

ll-llolp W-...1

4-Ci-way

u- Si-llo-·W...a.d

&amp;-!lapP!' Ado
6-Loot ... F......t
7-Loot·.-F......t
8- Plllolie Solo "'
Aaclio.
.9-w-...I ... Jiar

13-lu-14-,- 8 i

Troioi,.

ts- SoJaoo~. a IUb

!'"

16-~,TV . ACBIIopolr

11-MI

"·=m•

II- 'l'u!OII To Do

U-S........ c-t.
5S-Aa.....
54-llloe.Moro.......

ss- !l.ild!. . , . , , . . .

.Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE

IULUIIH BOARD DEADUIE

'4:30 P. M.

DAY IEFO.R E .

PUBLICIJIOH

t------------;._--~.l

d~~.J.:,b~~oh~t:!1:;

~~-f~-~~-~~~~o~~t!

the goa ca.t recovery raiN
ol
Goa of of
Ohio,
LUM.IEI, or
lne.,Columbia
the operation
Ita
PurchHed Gee AdJuatment
FLATBED WOU
Clauoo; and c... No. 12In State or Qut
993-GA·FOR, ito tong-torm
tor-t r-rt, rellltecl
Of State.
mattera. Thia hearing Ia
ocheduled to begin at10:00
o.m. on T-.y, February
23; 1893, ot the oftlcH of
tho Commloolon, 110 Eoot
Broad Stroot, Columbuo,
Ohio. All lntorllled partlao ..,._ _ _ _.I;

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A Huntington woman identified
by Marshall University's student
newspaper after she accused a man
of lliJ,Iin8 her said a decision to stop
printing accusers' narnea resolvea
linle.
"The policy can still· chan~ on
a semes~er-to-semester basis, ' the
wilman said. "If a woman is ~
and she's about to call the police, .
will she have to take time to stop
and think, 'Who is The Parthenon
editor this semester?"'
She reported her rape to Huntington city police in September,
and The Parthenon, under a then·
new policy, printed ber name in
editions distributed throughout
Marshall's campus.
Hers was the only niune printed
in the publication, which also circulates informally throughout
Huntington. .
·
Most news organizations,
including· The Associated Press,
withhold accusera' nan\ea in rape
cases out of privliCy concerns.
Last week, Parthenon Editor
Greg Collard overruled his editorial
board and ended the policy for the
spring semester.'
"This (controversy) would have
been a headline every day," Collard said. "I don't think that would
be in the newspaper's best inter-

to be hoard. Further
Information · may be obtained by conllctlng tho
Comml11ion.

The Public Utllltleo
Commluion of Ohio
By: Gary E. VIgorito,
Secrollry
25, 1tc

•"•31,1•
LEBANON TOWNIHIP

St.=

J

•

s:.!

~

1"1

•jliTI

' Eao..rn LOCI!

SEPTIC SYSTEIIS,

HOMEsrTESTRAILER SITES,
L.ANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAUED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING

PI I;

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

!'&lt;tl lh"

I

toe conolclered

llollrd

and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.

"•\II \.11•1 A11h• H•·p.111
'12·~J

111/'IW/1

I n1o. pd.

DAVIDSON'S

BINGO

PLUMBING

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

~

CLUB

iAI

Morch 10,111113

tntwgcwornmontol

i

l'!\

lntcrsL1te fiatterie)

on:

Ucana•, P.-mltl
and'- ....................... 600

BULI..DOZER, BACKHOE

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
. Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff

31904I.HIIIng

CNokiOINI
IIW•port,Ohlo
614-992·7144 .

Thio ad good tor 1
FREE card.
Llc. No. 0051·32

1'011192 tfn

Rocolplll ..............,... 73,713
All Other
~....................... 41,r:A7

&amp; TREE
IRIM and

SHRUB

. TOTAL
131,114

REMOVAL ·

•LIGHT HAULING

Fund C..h Balance

Dec. 31,TOTALS
11182 .......
l 2, 500.00
FUND BALANCE
RECEITS:
Tuoo .................... 38, IU.I7
ln!Mgovom.,..,tal
Rocelplll ............ 11,343.11
ln-1.................... 1,701.11
All Dthw
Rov.nue ............... 1,2412.42

Fund C..h Batonce
Dol. 31, 1112 ........... 22,735

RECEIPT8 .......... 110,4M.21
G•onol

..... .............. 141,340

~FIREWOOD

-----~~~....:.~-------1
Roll EIIIIO General

IIU SLACK
992·2269

.Jon. 1, 11112............. 25,811 TO"U

Dopoollory

8lilance .................... 21,522

TotaiT,..ury
Balonce ..................... 26,522
LH10u-ng .

Cheob ....................... 3, 717

Govwnmont ......... 211,..,.114

Public 8afety ........... 2,5to.OO
Public Wortca ......... to.S42.M
Hllllh ...................... 3,1186.33

Copltal

OuUoy ................. 14,511.51

TOTAL DISBURSE,
TOTAt:
BALANCE ...~ ............ 22,735 MENT8 ............... 111,500.M
Tollll Rooolpta Ovw/{UI*r)
SUMMARY OF
Dlob ..................... (1,011.43)
lllilEBI EDNESS
Outotancllng
.
Olhw Bourcoo/
.Jan. 1, 11112....................... 0 Alaelpta ................. 3,050.00
New ........................000 TOTAL OTHER FINANCRetirect........................S,244
ING SOURCES
(U8EB) ...................3,050.00
Outollollcl!•
Dec. 31, 1112 ........... 34,751 Fund Caeh BatI aordfy the preoedhtg
Jan. I, 1112... - .... 21,404.43
report 10 toe oo....,tonct lrilo Fund.Cult Balanoo
to the · boot of my
Doc. 31,11182 ....... 31,431.00
tcnawllldgl.
Fund c.lh
. Dorolhy A. Aoeeb.-ry
Bal-.............. 31,431.00

30141.,..., llollf41771
Cllrk- Jon. 10, fiN

•

Rlalno, Ohio
(114) 143oM74

(1)25110

Dopooitofy

992·2259

-y.

REDUCED - II(IIH luyw home locllod near
4
bedroorilo, 2 bathe, g11rago. oppllancoo. boaomeni/WOik·
lhcp. INH trMs, ohed on 8.35 ..,..,, NOW ASKING
9 900

~ '

'

NEW UBTif!IG- B y r - - 1eea modular with 4 bod·
100mo, 2 batho, FANG hOI~ docking, tlonlgo building.

contralllr. ~7.500.

NEW UBnNG - PomlfDy - 1 ftoor frame homo with 3
bodroomo, 1 both, luH finiohed ba•monl on lot ol

.

Batonoo ............... 32,•.22
,..,.._"' _, ........ 2,500.00
Cooh on Hlnd ......... 1,ZIU1

-EIIclrloot -

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health • :
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Plumbing

-lntorlor i Extwlor

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
•
Middleport, Oldo 45760
. (614) 843·5264 1flOJ9:Wn

PalnU~t~~_

(FREE EmiiATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
P-oy,Ohlo

9·1D-92-Hn

AEEDSYILLE -

TotiiT,.._ury
Batonoo ............. 31,277.73

belh, ...,.

t floor

Ae....... _ ............... 1G,I24.20

Ou•tandlq
Doe.
1112.-.1t,atl'.31
I
IIIII report to toe

-to tho beet

nl.., A Commercii!

lllR•_.I.,.da...

fiMEetlmat.•

' :•

MEIGS

coum

WANTED: S to 6 ACRES OF RUATIVRY FIAT

.

WID:·

(1) Nn.. !1. 6h. Nl&amp;w .. llu••
(2) Willi Snnr (3)

·

w w...

PHOIE: Plllty ar by PlckMI
H. .e: 915-4231 or Plllty's
IROLLEY SIAOOI CUFIS

FIREWOOD FOR BALE

992·2549

8-2&amp;-'I:Hfn

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER

,

WORI. ·
DRIVEWAY WOII
an• LIMESTOIE

WV. Across fr. . tho Post Office
We Specialize Ia
Tirtl •
Exllau111 .,

Allg••••• ·

DELIYEIJf IEIIYICE
Sslll Do- Worll
$25.00Pwi-

Check our Price or We Both Lose

Jrlf LOCATION TO SEm YOU lmiR

IWOIIAill UJU

992·7553

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

614·742·2138
1-11-'113

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOLIDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.
614-992-7523

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

~
Snodgrass Up.olstery
"Hr/pi}rg You To Rrco•rr Your lrrnstnumf'
Church, Homo, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Offlc• Sating
UCIHErOHIO

614·949·2202

61

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC•
New Homes • VInyl Siding

ALL HARDWOOD

Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
. Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

block home with 2 bedrooma, 1

1!'- Slllllhty C•llsl

21121821lfn

12/3119211fn

I&amp;C EICAVIDH
IUUDOZING

PONDS
SEPJIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOlE SITES
HAUUNG: Llmoelone.
Dirt, Gl'IIVel and Cotll

..... ,•.

SIZD&amp;ETOIE
fOI SALE

C.ll614oM2·
6617
11.11. 7

c........

(1),15, tto

I'

MICROWAVE OVII

••IIIVCI UNII
AlL MilD
Or We

·.....:.Ill

KEN'S DRiAIICE
SIIYICI
992·035•
915•1561

LICENSED -IIOIIJED

PH. 614-992·5591

667•6'179

G•llty

WOLfl&amp;
IIIOCIA1IS
ICCOIIIIING

........,
r.ownp

ofncome Till Ptlf••Uon

laaldniPint

"'Za INDIVIDUAlS

J•tli ... Serwico

.ca...-·.. ....,
-

8UIIHEIIE8

lUI~ W.

AU. ST.

,,....~~···76t

•TRACK
LOADER

•TRUCKING

D. I. 1011011
EICIYIIIIIG
(614)

992-61 J

.

·

614-949·2101. 949·2860
or 985·3139

l1•1 ••••••
..., &amp;C....N
f I UIIIIITII
915-4473

cor :a.C.c':':.

'

• Rlmovot

·o~te

WI! IEED UITIHGI OF ALL IHAPIO l IIZII 1'11011
E¥IRY llli!.A OF tiiEtCII COUNTY! IF YOU WANT 10
ti!LL CliVI Ul A CALL.. WE'LL GET YOU MIULTII

'·

L.own--.g,

Fertlhlng, w...ng, and
Seeding.
ShNb and Tree Trimming

::•r•l

cor ~. P""*- buldlng, ...,. .....nee~

.bedrocma,

Jan. I, 1112 .......... 211,021.51

l

••w lo•s

SALEM 10WNIHIP - lleaulilul bdck ranch home with 3
2:4 b&amp;lho. abched2
lnllhod
beMmenl. aile 1(18C11 fi..,.-,
barrio.
pond, llnclna. exaa niter hook-up on 22+ ..... Hutlap
ioed. c:.ntnil. locoloo• IPP"'X. 30 min. 1n&gt;m Golpolo,
Pameroy, Jeokoon. Athent. • 130,500 (may -1).
.

........... __:~·····~NoM

949·2398or
1·800-137·1460

USED RAILROAD TIES

Very PNllr hamel MUOO ..

Outalollcllo•

FUTUif FOI MEIGS COUNTY

HELP US IN 0111 ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOil

IISSILL
IUBI
COISTIUCnOI

TUPI'ERI PLAINS - 2 stcry home 3-1 bed100111s, 1
ball, .... had .. modlllng COII1'111111. ~ firopllcoo.
· hendcnlfted chendlllers, 1+ ..,,. with r.noed,yanl. ·

Checb .................. 4,1H.73

HELP THE EFFORT TO IUILD A PIOSPEIOUS :

MAIHIEHANCE

r--------.
&amp;

~!,t&gt;rch, on .1061 ..,,., Allorclably priCid II $18,000.

TOTAL
BALANCE ..- ....... 31,'121.00
IIJIIII.AY. OF
INDEIIl!DNI!IS

KEVIl'S LAWN

I lA.--..&amp;.:.

100X150. ASKING f10,000.

--~~----1 LMIOutallndlng

. I'UbiJc,Notlce

-.

-G-Work

111241'92111n

tn-t ......................... 1,315

.

I
v

LHlf·J f·-l· 1:

NOTICE TO BllOERB

Said BCN!rd ol EduaoUon
rH•rv• the right "' accept
or reject My end Ill peril ol
.any Md all bklo.

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG

614 985·4412

oil aoalod bide ohell be
received in the trNaurer'a
olflco by 12 o'clock noon

T- ................... S21,4UI

Total Recolpta 0../
·
(Under) Dieb........... (3,17&amp;)

~!~ERVI~

11)...111-92

Oh.

Public Notice

hi order to

Fill..... Retlort"
BUMIIIARY OF CASH
, BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURE&amp;
'GOVERtMNTAL FUNDS ·
RECEIPTS:

Che~ler,

Oil &amp; lube, Urulo:s,
Tun()·llp'&gt;, TiH· Repoir,

The llollrd of Eduoellon ol
E•tom Loaol School Dla·

.

or

Mnif' St.•

Property lna&amp;irwtee

COUNTY OF MEIGS
"Thiele .. Ull. . .ted

.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Only

CHESTER AUTO
REPAIR

trlct cholrea to receive
oulod · bide on the
following:
Building ond Peroonot

·o

H. D. VEST
FINANCIAL SERVICES

COim

Public.Notice

F.INANCIAL REPORT
• OFTOWNIIIPS
For Floolll , _ Ending

accused ani! accuser, and to help
tear down the stigma associated
with rape.
-Many in Marshall's campus ·
community saw it differently therl, ·
and still do.
Donnalee Cockrille, director or
Marshilll's Women's Cen~er, aaid
she expects the issue to resurface
each semealer as new editora take
offtee.
·

SUNDAYS
12:00 NOON

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

wltl·bo gh(on on apportunlty

I

Editor'$ decision doesn't end
issue of naming rape victims

CLUB

992•5

TOPIC: Recipe Modification for
a Cardiac Diet
SPEAKER; Marie Gravely, R.D.
For Information Call
304-875-4340, Ext. 405

PUblic Notice

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

TROCKI NG

ROOM

CLOGGING CLASSES • Jodi G!ui and Kay Hemsley, mem·
hers or the Shady River Shumen, will be olferina a six-week clog·
glng workshop•starlin&amp; Feb. 2. Classes are on Tne&amp;day n!pts at :
Pomeroy Vil&amp;ae HaD; 1be bealnner clus is rrom 6·7 p.m.; adult
beginne_r is 7-8 p.m. and adviDced beainner is 8·9 p.m.

YOUNG'S

HAULING
LOG HAULIH, .
$ &amp;L

HEART TO HEART
CARDIAC SUPPORT
GROUP
WilL MEET
THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 1993
AT 7:00P.M.
AT PLEASANT VA~LEY
HOSPITAL COMMUNITY

New computer program
tracks down school dollars

(IUS

·s .20

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

..

Six-.week clogging workshop begins Feb. 2

NEW YORK (AP) - Jean HarNEW YORK (AP)- It appears
the commute finally got to Bob ris, free after 12 years in prison,
plans to work on behalf of children
Costas.
The Emmy award-wil)ning and may write another bool:, her
sportscaster says he's stepping lawyer said.
"She's going to work with the
down after nine years as host of
NBC's '!NFL Today" because he foundation she set up io raise
wants to spend more time at home money for the children of women
in SL Louis with wife Randy and in the New Yorlc prison system, so
they can get some education and
their two children.
He's been shuttling between St. breal:. out of the cycle those fami·
lies are in," said attorney Leon
Louis and New Yorlc for six years.
·
"I warit my career to fit into my ·Friedman.
Gov. Mario Cuomo, citing the
life, not the other way around,"
C9stas said in the Feb. I issue of health or Mrs. Harris, 69, granled
her executive clemency on Dec. 29.
People.
His swan song for "NFL Live" hours before she underwent heart
will be Jan. 31 at Super Bowl bypass surgery. She was released
Friday night from the Wcstchesler
xxvn.
Also expiring this year is his County Medical Cenler.
Mrs. Harris, convicted in the
contract for "Later with Bob
Costas.'' the non-sports talk show 198 I' love-triangle murder of
that follows "Late Night with "Scarsdale Diet" Dr. Herman
Tarnower, is staying with friends in
David Letterman" on NBC.
Costas, 40, says he's weighing Westchesier County.
Mrs. Harris, a former headhis options, but insists he's not
"about to disappear."
mistress of the ~ira School in
McLean, Va., already has written
LOS ANGELES (AP) two books. One, "Saanger in Two
.Singing the national anthem at the World.' ~ details her 14-year relaSuper &amp;owl can· give even the tionship with Tarnower.
biggest star a bad case or the jitters.
Just ask Garth Brooks, only the
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Singer
second country singer .ever tapped . Gloria Estefan and her husband,
for the honor.
Emilio, were honored by the
"I'll never make it through the .National Music Foundation for
song," Brooks said. "I've been their worl: in bringing relief to vicpracticing night and day. The tims of Hurricane Andrew.
national anthem is one of the hard·
The couple accepled the 1993
est songs to sing.''
Humanitarian Award during a dinBrooks says he'll perform a cap- ner hosted Sunday by the foundapella Jan. 31 at Super Bowl XXVIT tion's chairman, Dick Clark.
m Pasadena, where the Buffalo
The Miami residents organized
Bills baule the Dallas Cowboys.
a ~nefit concert in September that
"I have to be exactly on the raised nearly $2 million for hurriright beat or I'm screwed," Broolcs cane relief.
said in a telephone interview from
The foundation also·officially
Nashville, Tenn. "It's stupid of me "WlliOunced that Lenox, Mass., will
to do it to myself, but here goes.''
be the site for the National Music
Charley Pride sang the natiortal Center. Massachusetts officials
anthem at Super Bowl VIII in were informed of the decision ear1974.
lier this niOnth.

PoooforS.to

Gallle CoaaiJ

a.,p,

·
•
Members
attend pot[uc k dznner

(

...-..w. ..

fin&amp;.,

PREPARES FOR MUSIC AWARDS Michael Jackson, right, and American Music
Awards executive producer Dick Clark eo over
the script durlnJI reheanals ror this year's show
late Saturday n111ht at the Shrine Auditorium in

Over ~5 Words

Rate

Cfou4/U!d ptJ6el COHr alae
folloMinK felephou uc;...el...

• S.......... , ; 1 ftllforen"On.,._flntda,(el.ek
for onwo
,.j..., Ia p&amp;por). CoD Won 2:00 p.a.
cia' dier ,.wa don .. ..q. eaawtio•
• Ado tlool- .. poiolla ..t..- on:
Cud., T1luob
Ado
!all .! •
Y.... Soloo
· • A"'" 11\od f""M'I .
t ploOoolia tloo Cotlipo. Doilr
T...._ (....,. Clo " lllloploy, B.-- Cu.lorl.opl
No-) ..W aloo oppoorla tloo Poiat Plouut R tif toe oad
... Doilr S..dool, ........ ·-11,000 .._ ,

Los Angeles. Jackson is nominated for rive
awards and will open the show with a live per·
formance. The awards, cllaseo by the AmeriCan
record-buying public, will be presented on the
show which airs Monday Diehl on ABC. (ABC)

Monthly

·, DAYIIBPORI!PIJBI.ICATION

COP\' DEAOLINB
Monday Paper .
Tuoocloy Poper
Wecblolday Paper
Tliunday Poper
Priclay Poper
Sunday Paper

• Plioo., oo1 ' • o1 cap~~o~~o~oon 1a douto pr1oo., ..t ....
• 7 polloi II. .,. o.Jr.....
.

long stem white roses filled with
birdseed.
The groom wore a black waistcoat tuxedo with black paisley vest
and tie. The best man was Richard
Goh , brother of the groom, from
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia . The
groomsmen were George Parl:er,
brother of the bride, Ron Moore,
Ernie Husk, Phil Jones and Bob
Martin, from Knoxville, Tenn. The
JOHN A.
ringbearer was Joseph Richard,
nephew of the bride. Each wore
WADE, M.D. INC.
black tuxedos with black ties and
.EAR· NOSE· THROAT·,~~
vests.
ALLERGY
Pam Builer of Athens was the
organist.
BOARD CERTIFIED
The reception followed in the
Fellowship Hall, featuring a stairSPECIALIZING IN
way or love cake prepared by
•ADULT
&amp; PEDIATRIC
Juanita Potts. The three- tier cake
ALLERGY
with a white staircase decorated
-HEARING AiDS
with ivy and miniature figurines of
-RECURRENT EAR
the wedding party departed into
INFECTIONS IN CHILDREN
two side cakes. The cake was
•ASTHAM
accented with pearls and lace. The
pillars were surrounded by swan
•HEADACHES
figures. The fountain below was
•RUNNY NOSE
decorated with white roses. The
•SNORING
cake top was heart shaped with
•MANAGEMENT OF SKIN &amp;
crystal swans embedded with lace
FACIAL LESIONS
and pearls.
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT
The bride is a 1990 graduate or
ACCEPTED
Eas1ern High School aild a 1992
..
graduate of Hocking College of
675-1244
est"
Nursing. She is enrolled as a full
Suite 112, Valey Dr.,
Previous Edihir Kevin Melrose
time student of the University of
had said the identification policy
Pt. Pleasa1t, WV.
Tennessee in the program of ourswas
desig~eil
to
be
fair
to
both
ing.
The groom is a graduate of the
University of Tennessee with a
B.S. degree in chemical engineerCOLUMBUS (AP) - A com-. showed that Reynoldsburg put93.6
in g. He is employed by Focus puter program that shows exactly · peteent of the $18.7 minion it spent
Environmental, Inc. as .a project where school taJt doUars are bei!'g Ia~ I ~choo! year into its ~even
engineer.
spent could lead to a new financial buildings With 6.4 percent gomg to
FoUowing a wedding trip to the
reporting system in the state, an central office costs. The district
Hawaiian Islands, Singapore and education official said.
spent$4,363 per pupil.
Malaysia, the couple is now residThe program was develolled·by
ing in Knoxville, Tenn.
'
Reynoldsburg school officials Fordham University prolessor
were the fust to leSt the program in Bruce Cooper, and was fii'Sl used in
,.
the state. They reviewed their fmd· a 1989-90 analysis or the fliUIIICial·
ings last weekfor officials from ly troubled New York CitY schools.
. .
..
•
Dayton, Ironton, Shaker H~ights Since.then, it has been tested In 300
·A potluck dinner was held one inlereSted in Panilers in Educa- and Findlay, who will also teat the schools in eight other dislricta.
recently by the Friendly Circle of tion shoul~ contact the Meigs sys~em :
"'r""~~~!!"!~~~----.
Trinity Church.
County Cl(amber of Commerce
The project coulll change the
.....
Gay Perrin presided and thanked who initiated the program . Bank financial reporting system for
everyone who helped with the One and Clark's Jewelry are Part- Ohio's 612 school districts, said
-··
Alberican Red Cross Bloodmobjle ners in Education with Pomeroy Matthew Cohen, director of
canteen in December. She also Elementary.
research 111d analysis for the Ohio
_ ...
= I I - ltiiNH!II•tlvtl:
thanked everyone who helped
Individual thoughts were given Departr!ICIItoff:lducation.
·
.
IIKII 111, CPA .
deliver gifts to the eldeloly and shut· by 16 members attending. .
S1111.
in's. Many notes of thanks were
Maye Mora gave the closing
The program will show taxpa~~- . . . . .
MIY IIILII, lA
.
.
~ived.
(lr&amp;yer.
ers and lawmakers how much ss
were made for the Lenten
spent on children in the clar8room
111111 .......
1614) 992-7270 (614) 667·60U
'
hast
. .. to be held Feb. 24 at the
and how much goea to admlniltra- I
. .
Slalrilllllll-.cl
tllrai9l
H.
D.
Vllllll'4s-tilt,
Inc.
,
•
,
'llte chlef justice ol the U.S. Sulion; food service, busing and ocher
433 EM! LuCollnu Blvd., Third Floor•IMng, T-75031•(2141 1551-1861
I Mrs. Perrin also spoke about the preme Court receives an annual Alacosts.IIICI 1161
'IJIOIJMI Bank One is having. ¥Y· ry of $116,200.
An analysis IJSing the program

.a·

10

To place an ad

Names in the news

..
....

15
15
15
15
15

1
3
6

as weD as routines (lhose that have ·
completed the beginner class).
The Appalachian style of clogging with ihe steps and tenninology that i.s used nationwide will be
taught
. Classes are on Tuesday nights at
Pomeroy Village Hall. The beginner class is from 6-7 p.m.; adult
grade.
.
beginner is 7-8 p.m. and advanced
The adult beginner class will be beginner is 8-9 p.m. A donation of
taught the.basic steps of clogging $3 per class will be taken. Further
and some beginner routines.
information may be obtained by
The advanced beginner class calling 992-7788 or 992-6248.
will be taught more advanced sleps

MR. and MRS. STEVEN (MARY) GOH

Words

Days

Jodi Glass and Kay Hemsley,
members of the Shady River Shufflers, will be offering a six-week
· clogging workshop starting Feb. 2.
Students in the beginner class
will be taught the basic SleJ?S of
clog~ing along with some begmner
rouunes. The beginner class will
consist of children up to seventh

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 25, 1993

,

'.

�-

..
OhiO
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

a

32 Mobile ttomll

tor sale

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PHILLIP
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.

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ACROSS

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....

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G. IN 1002, " _ W n, qtlo

And !lory Alit. ..

The Dally Sentinel-Page 11

ALLEYOOP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

wanted to Rent

Ohio

PI I nlanll Couro1t Wonl To
,Ziolho,WII
1112.1J·flll'--...... ... - . a l J
""~
- ~-. No
c:rM.n.--

Al)nouncem~n~•

01001

Q

Monday, J.,uary 25,1993

NORI'H

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Til, YlciniiJ: Thlnl
A\oonuo, Nome: lila. 114-446-

-

·. BARNEY

7

Yard Sale
UCJI

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Gallipolis

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(LJrTAj OpparluniiJ In A

"'"""::.-.:c:;

ALL Y o n l - - Be Pold In
Advance. DEADI.JNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho claJ lloi:N lho od IIi lo "'"·
SUnclaJ odltlon • Z:OO ~.rn.
Fridly. llondly lldiUon • :OO

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311-7951"AI.-4p.m.

Rentals

opel..._-·

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1171- IIIII 4 WD. monuol (

41 HOIIIII for Rant

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LAYNE'S RIRIITURE

Con p'JCa tto. fumiiil-.
.....ao
Moura: lion ,... N. 114-tieI!RZ. I out Bulnllo Rd.

-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

II Mat.n Cwp.ta 1,......_11144.
tx12 c:on.t S1G. tx1Z Ylnyl
MI.OO Solo on colpol In otaok

S5.DIIIupl

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PICKENS RIRIITURE
......

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21

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lionca...
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John A

'

-

nCina., ~~.,:rJP'"~ .:.:53;-;;-;A;int~li;;CII~.JeS;&amp;;o;;;:;;:
100 4M117L
Buy or aa1. Rlw•~• Anliq-,

P•••..,.
Fali;.Wwd, 2 or tbdrm., tor rwnt
In c.wtrr lloblo Pan._....,
·114
lliftJDIII
2187,
R5-1227..- , IN-liZ·

Buslnen

......, on AI. 124,
Hwn: II.T.W. IO:OD
a,~ to 1:00 ~'!!;,_ , r.:oo
to I:OD p.m. 114 - 2121
Furniture:
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1ft church
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1124 E. -

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Read the

Want to:
PIN aonn EXTRA

Seller

CA&amp;H~H

1171

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7&amp;

31 Homes for Sale

Auto Pane "

-.·
....--.----.11;-..

CLRSSIAED F\DS

'

4-FI'IJI'Ie.

Willi z

1112

For ..... -

u~""'"'"
mlllg pool,
•
--------~----------lbllho,

IHIFARSIDI

By GARY LARSON

-r

1/Z ..... Lat. · - - -

3 b1droonw,

ron

- - .....

-&amp;rim, lllnr.llnlng,
- . danlm• wl ,.., ....
lilna NO. paid ftiO; ......
..._ rtclttkiil· cal 114412-

Bioi IADalollo ,_.., . _
ldl on , _ 1o1. .,._... I up.

.,._,,...

2111, Npm or
Wl£1111.

i-loZ£04 • ._

Jla. two b 1II own apt, Wn:J

Thm
clutter into cruh,
~ it the em UHJy... by phone,
· no need to leave your home.
Pla.ce xourcf,yi6ed ad today! '
15 word. or Lw, 3 dqy1,
3 pqpeg, 15.4{} poid in Gdt10ru~e.j

3 . ___________________

4 . ____________________

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48 Speee for Rent

55

114 •• 313'1 • •• a•z.

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..

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JSCLERDKU •

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •"If people criticize noe lor not

being

right. 1 don'l have. the anger to do mean comedy.'' -

mean. they're

Jay Leno.

. '=~~:~' s&lt;e:~c(}lA-lt£~s·
I~IFo~

WOlD
lAIII

"' ClAY I. POUAN _.;;,..._ _ __

letters of
0 fRearrange
- ICIOinbltd -d1

low to form four ,words. ·

I

HOGURT

I1--r';;,;...'

I
~,

A. You may want to try HY·
PAETHRAL, sometimes spelled HY·
PETHRAL.
Pro nounced
"hy-PEE-thrul, " thi s adj ective was
first used to des cribe areas in clas s i ~
cal buildings that were roofless. The
term now has a general meaning of
"open to the sky" or "outside." Use)l
in English for almost two certturies,
HYPAETHRAL ·comes from Greek .
"under the clear sky."

HE SA're I r;:o.J'T HAVE 1'0
'M:JRRY ABCUr THAT UNTIL
I &lt;SO 10 COL.t..E&lt;SE.

I1---.,.
:!·

JABON

.

,

I

.:....:r.,l"~..::.,l,:-:;.l_,.r
•

.,

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Whenltoldmyoldunctel
was going to college all he said
was, "In Ieday's time. a college
education is one of the few

T y p E R T ~~~~"g~~~~-~ .~rewitlingtopay
1--rl::.....;lr--:,1-is:..:r,i-,.,-j 0 Complele the chucklo quoled
. .....I.L.....J.L.....J.-.S.....J
L-1..

by fi lling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Chosen · Vocal • After • Idiocy • DIVORCE:

•

Overheard in lobby of government building, "The
words Political Economy are lwo words that are incom· ·
patible and should be granted a DIVORCE."

HQIIII

RIFF

=.,...

lnt;•==•:

Curtll HolM
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82

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446-2342
9)2-2156

5I.L-~--~~~~~--~~~
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Plumbing •

Hilling
Pli F I'II ...... AiiiQ~ ••

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.............
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84

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Refrigeration

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·

llldanour Elaol1oo£,

I0441aol'fll.

•

' ''

'

signa are romantically perfeCt for you .
Mill $2 plus a long. sell-addreued,

stamped envelope so Matchmaker. c/o
lhla
P.O. BoK 91428, C"-ve·
land. OH 44101-3428.
·
BERNICE
PIICII (l'ell. 21£.118roh 2111 You inighl
BEDE OSOL be In for a plealansaurpriM todaysomeone you lhoughl WIOII"I too aware
of you gcies out ol his or her way lo show
you how .,.rong you 've been.
AlliES (-.:h 21·Aprll 111 Somaone
who likes you 11 reluctant so expr- hla
or her !oellngs becauae lhll peraon 11
unsure or your lncllnaslona. II you feel
she..,. wey, be more obvious.
TAUIIUI (Aprii21J.Mer 21) Friends Clll
be awayecl to your way of lhlnklng lo...... 1111
day. nor through hard aro-se or aaMrllven-. bul an appeal to llilllr ftner
Tho year ahtia&lt;£ saokl encouraging lor inl1inctl. Soften your pr_,llllon. .
you especially 11 you do thlngoln ACCOr· QIIIIINI (iller 11.,._ 10) There It a
.cs..C. with yGAJi higholl ldMII. In order poaalblllly you mighl achieve something
to be IuCCi s lui, proper otondarda loday thlt will give you a..,... of per· ,
aonlil pride end grallllcallon. yor ob-,
""'"' 1111 mefn1elnld.
' ACIUMIUI
Peb: 11t ..._.. -.won't 1111 .,... of 111 smpacr.
gilntiF'II -~~·~ tadey, bul ~~ CANCIII I"- 11""""' 211 You could.
IIIOUt 001114 1111 rllhlr ,..,_ hive on opport..,I!Y today so C!ilrJiy o
I)OIItlon you•wslken wlllcl\ uoocllleo
' IIICI mtii... DIW.
U lOng U
...,-rellonlll unci you're tile bllntluc- do nor fully und-.nd. Put all of your .
sor. 1&lt;.- wtoere to 111011 krf
.....sa on lhti table and be u frank u

-aper.

6 ____________~-----

forSisle

WHATAeauT
' FRATeRNI"TY''i

'"'*oUUt
- " Ani
a.nar
llapolr,
Dlt~
a •.,..
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pllo,I0447HII2.
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Mobilelfomll

All pass

allultlon

middle

4 In Ifill• or tha

your

c. o.r.p And Bl••z• aw on

eon...
1548.

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Improvement~

whiid,-

Ranch-

'

, _ , . . - llaolno illow •'

81

Nll'fllanil, - . OH. • ..._

3 Bedroom

'

~ 1100.

East

4•

Q. Do you know of an elegant word
to describe an area that's outdoors or
in the open air' I've been looking for
one.

=·
.
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fDrCiau;..._...,...,... :

lol, Zd
tltq

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2210.

•

8udalt 1'1w11Md I a, Ulld I

Z£11, ""''•"":

Nortb

Pass

7 Songbird

8 Puzzling

3 Sinko In

.:.:.,r.r

4 4 .-- .
211711115
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I•

8 7, Roman

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2 BriUIIIIIChOOI

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fact Shot
5. Ziti

1 Billet dane·

32 Monk't kin

EMPYREAL means "of the heav ~
ens" : "The astronomers admired the
empyreal display." Use "em-py-REE·
ul " if you want your pro~unciation of
the adjeclive EMPYREAL to be heav~
enly.
·

AcCIIIOI'IM

........

,.-..,., llww

.

DOWN

WORME

~

.

'

odclell

Hebrew IIIIer
27 'Prelemng
31 J1Ckll'l2nd

Off !

-:-------------·

1 1111room ,...._ In VUIIge (X
c-. a.,,- To l..o4gii, 114441-1111.

Read the

(,()E!)

*.DlRnA~~~o. .
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24

Jo9eph Wood Krutch wrote, "Cats
seem to go on the principle that it nev·
er does any harm to ask for what you
want.• It is a ROlicy that I have exer·
cised from time to time. But at the
bridge table, as in life, it pays to ask
for only as much ·as you need, not
more.
North's raise to four hearts was
frisky. But he had lctts of trumps; little
defense and favorable vulnerability.
The bid would have worked beautiful·
ly if only South bad been a litlle less
prodigal in the play.
- West led the diamond queen. East,
who should have ducked. erred by win·
ning with the ace and switching to the
club five. After finessing the club
queen successfully, declarer drew
trumps. He then played a spade to
dummy's king, but East won with the
ace and the defenders took two more
spade tricks: one down.
South started to mutter about bad
luck, but North was unremittingly un·
sympathetic. He had seen that the con·
tract was guaranteed once the club fi.
nesse worked .
Declarer should draw trumps, cash
the club ace and diamond king, and
ruff the diamond five in the dummy.
Now South leads dummy's club jack;
and when East covers with the 'king,
South discards one of his spade losers.
East wins the trick but doesn't enjoy
the experience. Wl!ether he cashes the
spade ace or leadS a club, which con·
cedes a rufl-and-discard, declarer
loses only one more trick and makes
his contract,
, Always bear in mind the loser'OII·
loser play, especially when you have
an unsupported honor blowing in the
wind. Maybe an endplay wUI allol"
you to sidestep a finesse.

~~e·

Coli . _ , C I ' * ' I I - PT
9 ' ptA..,., tt.ncy llulllne. For
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55 Snick and -

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Opening lead: t Q

CAN I GIT YOU
ANYTHING ELSE,
AUNT LDWEEZY?

11130.

ending
50 DlrecUon
51 Numberi
(abbr.)
52 Rodanll

23 roplcll trull

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Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

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whom you'll have similar but unrelated
involvements may treat you in an equal- '

ly advanlageous manner loday. Neither
will be governed by the other's reaction.
VIRGO ·(Aue. 21-Sept. 22) Today you
mlght.be required to make a decision
that could have fer-reaching effects !or
others u well as younoelf. Fortunately,
your judgment might be betler than

.

.•

...
•,

., '

usual.

LIIRA (lept. 21-0ct. 23) Asslgnments
or lall&lt;a that chlllenge your creativlly1
end imagination are apt to be the onea1

you'll lind she moat appealing today.•
They will alao be the onea you'll perform I
lhe beat.
ICORI'£0 (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You could
be much more ohlrtsmellc: loday than
you realize. Whas you do or say will
make a arrong lmpatl on people wllh
whom you'll be Involved, -Iaiiy
mtmbera of the oppoeltU gender.
IAGmARIUI (Nov. 21 Dec. 11) eon..
you 111'111 pertlinlng to a m.rrer
IIIII ~ your mallrlll -lly may
1111 broughslnto proper tocua laday. You
wlll18111ze tNre'a a 11(1111. at She end or
lhelunnel.
'
CAI'IIICOIIII (Dec. 22 'n 111 You can t
gorsrnportant J)OiniiiCF'Oelloday 11 you •
aprlnlde your s--tatlci'n with loucheoi
ond you'H find h. Tho A81Jo.Grapll pOUlble.
MIICIIm.SCer ln1tently ..-ell ;&lt;dllch LIO (JUS, 21-A~~t. 22) Two people llillh. or humor. 1e bolh lhtillrlc.lllld witty. I

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. ~D~al~ly~Se~n~tl:neJ::__ __:.______~......,......,""'!"!!!!!!!!!!!~Po~meroy:;:-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 25, 1993

Disney's·newest 'land'
is ,a pie-in-the-face place
·
By LARRY GF:RBER
Associated Preil Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. - The folks
at Disneyland won't be upset if
their biggest new at~tio.n !J1 20
years turns out to be a b1g pte tn the
face.
After all, it's Toontown. Nearly
two years in the making, the 3-acre
cartoon community opens Tuesday
with all the subtlety of a whoopee
cushion.
"Everything is a ga~," said
Dave Burkhart, the park s senior
show producer. ·
Inspired by Robert Zemeckis'
1988 movie "Who Framed Roger
Rabbit?" Toontown offers a handson tour without the movie's sinister

movies lilce "Steamboat Willie.''
The mouse's makeup for thai 1928
classic, you'll note mthe dressma
room, is black and white, of course.
Restrooms? They're in Goofy's
Gas Station, wheie rllh are iwim·
ming in those old-time gas pump!.
Visitors can also expect .autographs and pictures with Mickey
and the others.
·
"It's one giant phoio op," said
Joe Lanzisero, the. senior concept
designer. "Eye candy," Jlurkhart
called the collection of curvy
· "Toon Victorian" buildings.
There are rides, including a
cockamamie trolley with a big
windup key. A litUe roller coaster
opens Tuesday with the rest of
Toontown, but Roger Rabbit's Car
surrealism.
"You are the cartoon charac- Toon.Spin won't open until late
.. ' .
ter," Burkhart said. "You get to summer.
participate in all those cliches.''

A d

H

•

Mostly, it's a place to s!IOII and
look for surprises.
Executives wouldn't say how
much the new attraction cost;
althougb some published reports
put the price tag at $100 million.
It's the biggtst addition at the 37·'
year-old theme nark since ·"Bear
Counll)'" (now 'fCritter Country")
opened more than 20 years aao. ~
But they're quick to add thai the.
park didn't increase its ticket prices,
{$28.75 a day for adults.)
Toontown's scale fits the 10- .
year-old and under set, but
Burkhart expects to coair. som~ ,
adult smiles as well. He dived into
a pile of plastic Cliip 'n' Dale
acorns and wheedled a guest in!!~.
joining him.
,
".I've got to keep myself qualified, .. he slid

b

b

.d

u r.ey ep urn urze ;
We!~~~c~~·t~~~::.~ ·. in view of French Alps .~
G:rrs-~~=~::~:

What happens when you push that
.SCHOOL GROCERY - Third IJ'ade students
at WashinJIOn Park Demonstration School in
Cincinnati, shop recently in a mock grocery
store set up at their schooL But the store means
more than goodies for the children. They're

learning skills by stocking shelves, monitoring
aisles for shoplifters and ringing up purchases.
Materials for the projects by the J{roger Co. (AP
photo)

Children shop for groceries with
money earn~,d in the classroom
By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI ·- Doing well in
.class pays off at the checkout line
for pupils at an inner-city elementary school, where they can CMh in
credits for groceries at their own ·
supcnnarkeL
But the store means more than
goodies for the children. They're
learning skills by stocking shelves,
monitoring aisles for shoplifters
and ringing up purchases.
"They put a lot of work into
·· thintore," said Bonnie Dilbeck, a
Washington Park Demonstration
School employee who supervises
the store, "They really learn a lot
more than math and budget. They
learn how io wock together."
The store, provided by the
supermarket cham Kroger Co., has
been operating in an fanner classroom for 2 l/2 years. Edie Melieski, a spokeswoman for the Washington-based trade group Food
Marketing Institute, says it's
unique.
Kroger, a Cincinnati-based food
retailer operating in 38 states,
adopted Washington Parle School
in 1979 as a "partner in educa-

tion." The partnership helps the
school and allows Kroger II! polish
its image with ruture shOpperS and
their parents.
The store was modeled after a
similar Kroger store that has operated for six years in Stone Street
Elementary, an inner-city school in
Louisville, Ky. But the Louisville
store is opetated by adults, not children.
Judy Ball, Kroger's manager of
consumer affairs, would not say
what it costs Kroger to support the
school stores,
Pupils receive credits daily for
attendance, turning in homework,
being on time, completing class
work and good conduct. Bonus
credits also are available. Each
credit is counted as a penny tOward
a purchase, lll)d a pupil can earn a
maximum of 180 points a day. For
$1.80, a child could buy a bag of
potato chips and a can of pea'S.
The school store charges the
same prices as regular Kroger
supcnnarkets and stocks such items
as baby food, paper towels and
laundry detergent.
"It's supposed to be something
where they feel a sense of acco~

plishment where they feel that they
can help at home," said Principal
,· Helena Paul.
"We really hope they get a
good work ethic: How do I eart1
something, How long do I have to
work, and so on," she said.
A Kroger truck delivers stoclt to
the school on Mondays. Child volunteers take the goods up two
flights of stairs to the store. They
marie the prices during class time
on Tuesdays, and the store is open
on Wednesdays and Thursda)'s.
· Shopping generally is limited to
third throu$h sixth grades at the
school, wh1ch has 520 students.
First- and second-gnlders occaSionally work in the store as a reward
for good behavior or good work in
class.
,
Third-grader William Wri~ht. 9,
had his basket full as waited m line
to pay at the .egister.
Asked what he learns from the
store, he said: "Spending money
- and how to shop."
Parrish Ricks, also 9, has
learned what he must do to be
allowed to shop in the store.
"Be good in school, bring all
your homework, do your work on
11,...he said.
.

for the falling safe! Whew, ~at
was close.
·
. "You've got to understand the
• mythology," Burkhart explained
during a n:c:ent tour.
Mickey Mouse, it turns out, has
been living for years in this northern corner of Disneyland, just
behind Fantasyland. Fleeing the
Hollywood hubbub, he set up
mov1e studios in his barn · and
talked his friends into moving here.
So Minnie Mouse lives right
next door, You can lounge in her
living room and eaves~ on her
answerin~ machine. There s cheese
in the fndge: gouda and not-sogouda.
Minnie left the radio on, tuned
toWCKY . .
These folks didn't even hide the
diny laundry. A plumber's plunger
washing machine pounds a load of
Mickey's three-fingered gloves on
his back porch.
Guests get a tour of Mickey's
studios, look in on Mickey, Goofy
and Donald Duck in a projection
booth and see clips .of ~ickey

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items Social hour and trading session at 7
appear twO days before an event p.m. precede the 8 p.m. meeting.
and the day of that event. Items Refreshments. New members welmust be received weD in advance come.
to assure publication in the taleudar.
TUESDAY
TUPI&gt;ERS PLAINS • The
MONDAY
Orange Township Trustees will
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern hold an emergency meeting TuesLocal Ohio Association o( Public day at 8 J).m. at the home of the
Employees will meet in the Eastern cledc, Patty Calaway.
High School cafeteria at 7:30 p.m.
Monday.
RACINE - 'Ite former "Racine
Ruritans" will .have a meeting
. POMEROY - Graduation for the Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Belles and Beaus Square Dance Park. All members urged to attend.
CI\Jb wiU be Monday at the Senior New members welcome. RefreshCitizens Center in Pomeroy. A ments will be served.
poduck dinner wiU be held at 6:30
p.m. with dance at 7:30 p.m. The
SALEM CENTER - The Salem
dance is open to all western style Township Trustees will meet Tuesdancers. Wear square dance attire.
day at 6 p.m. at the Salem Fire
House.
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
POMEROY - Rabbit sub-comBurkett Barber Shop in Middlepon.

••

BY ALEXANDER (J.I:IIGGINS
Associated Press Writer
TOLOCHENAZ, Switzerland
- Audrey Hepburn was buried
Sunday after a church service that
paid tribute to the love she inspired
in her fallS ~d her devotion to the
world's children. . ,
.
"Audrey Hepbum .was a star m
the real sense of the word," said
Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan, former U.N. high commissioner for
refugees, who· gave the eulogy.
"Everrone in the audience fell m
love w1th her."
About 120 friends and family
members attended the Protestant
service in the Lake Geneva village
that Hepburn adopted as her home
in 1966. Another 500 people, mostly admirers from the area, gathered
outside the church and listened to
the service on loudspeakers.
·
Sadruddin noted that Hepburn
had chosen to "dedicate herself to
humanity" by becoming a gOodwill ambassador for the United
Nations Children's Fund, visiting

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP)Former British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher will receive an
honorary degree next month at
Louisiana State University.
LSU alumnus and benefactor
Lodriclc Coole, chief executive officer of Adantic Richfield Co., invited Mrs. Thatcher o'n behalf of the
university, officials ~d.
The Feb. 8 visit will include an
address by Mrs. TI~atcher at a ceremony that will be open to the public. School officials approved the
honor on Friday.
Coole. a friend of Thatcher, also
was instrumental in getting former
President Reagan to visit LSU in
1990. In recent months, LSU has
been visited by former President
Bush and his wife, Barbara; former
President Ford, and then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton.

SALE

·Cherry Fillish,
bcelle.. Quality.
POSTER lED
TRIPLE DRESSER,
PEDIMENT

POMEROY - The final public
hearinj! on Pomeroy's downtown
revitalization will be Tuesday at 7
p.m. in the auditorium at Pomeroy
Village Hall·

MIIIO~S

DUWEI HEST,
IIIHT STAIID

WEDNESDAY
LETART - There will be a
meeting of Letart Elementary PTO
on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Letart
Elementary for all Portland and
Letart parents regarding the consolidation.

·•ONLY
••• $1,999
I TO

"'"'

$999

RACINE
southern Local
School Board wiU meet Wednesday at 7p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at I p.m . at the home of Doris
Grueser.

WASHER

41• REMOTE
PIOJECTIOI COLOR TV .
.Sale $1,749 ·

Gerard Schwarz of the Seattle
Symphony will replace him at concerts Thursday, Friday, Saturday
and Feb. 2.
Muti, the orchestra's laureaie
CINCINNATI (AP) - New
York Gov. Mario Cuomo told a conductor and former musi.c direc· .
Jewish group that ethnic fighting in tor, was expected to return Feb. S.
Europe reinforces the need for conThe program.for the four perfortinued strong U.S . support for mances features the world premiere
Israel.
of "Canti deii'Eclissi" by composCuomo was the keynote speaker er-in-residence Bernard Rands ~d
Saturday at a dinner observing this with bass soloist Thomas Paul.
Schwarz is music director at
year's fund-raising campai!!" for·
the Jewish Federation of Culcin- Seattle and at the New Yark Chamnati'.
ber Symphony and the Lincoln
In a time when "ethnic cleans- Center's Mosdy Mozart Festival.

C~n~tru

HESSE~

11

MIUO:;,c ST,
HIDI AID,
IITESTAIID
AU. FOA
ONLY

$444
5

Reg. 639

SAVE '195

DRYER

SPRING AIR
BEST REST

8809..·

5

la. PL

$108 Fll EL Pt.
$299GHeiS.t

Garllia stable,
Meigs rate up

SOFA
SALE
H!ll• •lectioa
of co•try•••
coate~nry

atyloi. Tlio .
latelt faltrica
••• colon
HIGH ·
QUIUTY••••
LOW ,IICESI "

sibility of creating an economic
development office in the county.
According to Ondy Oliveri, Meigs
County Extension Agent, such a.
venture could be cost-shared with
the Ohio Stato University Extension Service. Oliveri stated such
situations exist within other counties. Under such a situation the economic development director would
work under the direction of the
extension office. Thacker and Oliveri will investigate that possibility.
Other officers elected for the
commission are: John Lentes, president; Jon Jacobs, rmt vice p.esident; Don Poole, second vice-president; Joyce Bowen, secretary; and ·
Howard Frank, treasurer.
Assisted Uvlll!l fac~ty
Ray and Patty Pickens, of the
Chester area, llttended the meeting
to gain input and support from the
commission in developing a state
.egulated assisted living facility for
Meigs County.
The Pickens' have been talking
with The Jerry McClain Company,
Inc., to gain information about
bringing such a facility to the county. The McClain Company con:
struc:ted a similar facility, The Inn
at Sharon Brooke, approximately
six yearngo frOin the &lt;k'.1ign Sllge ·.
through construction. .
.
The facility, according to Pickens, would l?rovide care for the
older generation in an apartmental
living situation with restaurant
facility - "a community within a
comll)unity." Mrs. Pickens stated
the facility could employ as many
as 40 full-time employees.
Mr. ancl ~rs. Pickens slated
they now are looking for sites in
the count)'. A.levellot with at least
five to SIX acres is neede4.· They
Continued on page 3

By THOMAS J; SHEERAN •· •
Associated ·Press Writer
CLEVELAND - Declines in
high-paying manufacturing jobs
and average hourly wages over the
past decade have pushed Ohio' s
poverty rate to a record l S.4 pcrCCI!t. an anti-poverty agency reported.
Most jobs created since 1983
have been lower-paying service
posltions, the Council for EconomIC OpportUnities in Greater Cleveland said in its annual statewide
poverty report Monday.

secretary. Not pictured Is 'Don Poole, second
vice·presldent. These omcers were elected at
Monday's regular meeting of the planning commission.
·
•

Mrs. Clinton gets an assignment
options and make tough choices
and that's hard to do at a highpolitical level,'' said, especially
since any health ·
plan is
lilcel&gt;:. to hurt
peopl~ - cut-

Ling benefits and. mcreaslng costs
for some, raising deductibles, limiting Medicare payments, reducing
doctors' incomes.

The council's county-by-county
list showed the percentage of
pOverty in Gallia County was the
same in 1992 as it was in the previous year at23.7. In Meigs County,
the rate increased four-tenths of a
percent from 27.6 in 1991 to 28 in

1992

.MiddleportSears catalog
store among those to close
The Middlepon Sears catalog and two part-time delivery persons
store will be closed along with over in the Middleport store.
.
2,000 others in the country, accord·
A Sears catalog store has been
ing to word which Bill Haptonstall, operated in Meigs County for more
operator, receiVed from Sears, Roe- than 30 years. Lou Osborn had a
buck and Co. Mcnday.
·
catalog store in Pomeroy for 17
Haptonstall said he received a years and Jack and Judy Williams
telegram from the company advis- operated one for two years, When
ing him of the
It said that Greg Gibbs took over in 1981 he
he will be advised w1thin 4S days built the building in Middlepon.
of the actual closing date but that it H~J)tonstall bought the business
from.him in 198S.
wiU occur before the end of 19S J .
Meanwhile, he said, business
As for service on products
bought from Sears, that will not be
wiU continuo as usual. .
Haptonstall said that the local affected by the closing, Haptonstall
store has had a good continuing said, because servicemen come
business over the yean and the best from the Huntington and Parkers·
Christmas in years. He said thai he burg retail store,s. .
Hap~onstall said that while he
knew changes and revisions were
coming but that he had no idea that waits for word on the closing date,
catalog stores which were prof- he will work toward getting the
,building leased or putting so~e ·
itable would be closed.
The clo•ing will eliminate the new business in it
jobs of four full-time employees

Prices start
AtOnl~

$299

closin,.

20 Styles
of Carpet

ot old

SERTA
SERTAPEDIC

51190ri.

lo.Pc.

$169 f•l Ea. Pt.
$399"'-S.t

AND
SPRING AIR
ULTRA PLUSH
JUMBO
'239Twll S.t
5

369 F. Ei. Pc.
439 Galli Set

5

METAL

STOUGE
CABINETS
c•iaaC..iHII
. Wanlrollea • Utlity

c.w......... c.w••••

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•

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.

· Average hourly wages declined
11 pen:ent between 1979 and 1992, ·
the council said.
While the number of those living in poverty increased during the
period, the middle-class also was
affected, the council said. Ohio's
median income - meaning hair
made more, half less - dropped
5.3 percent during the 1980s.
.

Prlcee Include

MATTRESS SALE

PHR.ADELPHIA (AP) - Conductor Riccardo Muti canceled
appearances with the Philsdelphia
Orchestra this week because of the
flu.

. -slur4IJ.

Blakeslee. Blakeslee has stated he
will remAin on the commission as a
volun•like other members of the
commission.
Lentes stressed the election of
·Thacker will in no way combine
the chamber and the planning commission. It only allows Thacker
access to ~e . commission's budget
for cconom1c development purposes.
.
Ernie Sisson discussed the pos·

WHIRLPOOL
FLOOR
LAUNDRY SPECIAL COVERING
SUPER
SUPER
SALE
CIPICifv
CAPACITY

•

tng" is used as a justification for
civil war in Bosnia and elsewhere,
U.S. support for Israel cannoi
waver, Cuomo said.
"In such a .world we must cling
to one another, the United States
and Israel," he said.
The Clinton administration wiU
strengthen ties between the United
States and Israel, he said.
"A close relationship between
Israel and America should be
regarded as a moral imperative for
both nations," Cuomo said.

Ferrer and her other son, 22-:year-old Luca Dotti, then led the •
pallbearers in carrying her oak coffin ,to the nearby cemetery, juSt a.
few hundred yards from her home.:
A plain wooden cross served as a
temporary grave marker in the.
cemetery, which looks across the
village and lake to snow-capped·.
Mont Blanc in the French AlpS.
;

Tbaclw takes over the position

mittee meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
the Meigs County Extension
Office, Pomeroy.

1 Section, 10 P-• 25 cento
A Jlulllmecllo Inc. Nfttpopof

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, January 26, 1993

Number of poor in Ohiohits record 15.4%

from long-time director Charles

---People in the news-.- CAR,MEL, calif. (AP) - Syndicaled humor columnist Erma
Dombeck treated herself to a $1.5
million vacation home to be closer
to the water, but she got more than
she bargained for during her first
~Y there.
··
" It rained the entire time I was
here," Dombeck said. "Northern
California owes me a big one
because wherever I go, I end the
drought."
Bombeclc, 65, is known for her
newspaper columns and books. She
also 1s a survivor of breast cancer
and has spoken frequently about
lier experience with the disease.
She and her husband, William,
live most of the year in Arizona.
They fell in love with the Monterey
County coast while visiting in the.
esrly 1980s. Their vacation home is
about 10 milei south of Cannel on
the road to Big Sur.
• "I lovt the smell, the feel, the
excitement of the ocean,"
Dombeck said. "I've been landbound all my life, first in Ohio,
then the desen,.ahout as far away
from water you can get."
'Dombeck sai4 she used 10 motivate herself to work by thinking of
coolcies as a reward. Now, she said,
"going to Carnie! will be the
incentive.''

Vol. 43, No. 183

. Copyrlg!lted 1883

By JU~ E. DILLON
Sentinel Nem Staff
Paula Thacker, Meigs County's
economic development director;
has been elected executive director
of the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. That action
was taken at the regu18r meeting of
the commission on Monday afternoon.
John Lentes, president of the
commission, stated the election of
Thacker to the position of executive director would allow her
access to the budget of the commission for purpo~es of economic
development. Lentes stated economic development has been the
main focus of the planning commission and he feels this move
would help alleviate a financial
·problem that now exists within the
economic development departmeni
of the Meigs County Chamber of
ComlJlelce·
·
·
Tlie motion was supported by
all p{e!Cnt with the exception of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
· who opposed the move. Meigs
County Commissioner Janet
Howard state4 the regional plannil)&amp; commission could berlefit by

Sean Ferrer, Hepburn's 32-yearold son, said: "She ·believed love
could heal, fix, mend and mak~
everthin!l fine and good in the endt
And it did. She left us with peace,,
serenity, and her passage was·
almost devoid of any pain."
~

Pertly dDIIdJioDJabt. l.mr In
mld-2Go. Wednetday, ciOII!Iy.
Hflb Ia low 401.

•

Thacker
to
head
•
planning commission

pOOr, sick and starving children to.
call attention to their plight
·
"When she went out to the
refugee camps. to the squalor of the
tents, the mud hovels, think of what
she brought to these children," he
said. "She reached out to them'
witb her smile, with her hands,.•
wilh her heart"

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