<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10089" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/10089?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T21:41:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20529">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/9a9a45f0c7247c532a35c96dbf04b523.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6e3876421786936bf9d4b679b6393e15</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32246">
                  <text>Severe baldness linked tO' ·
heart disease, says report ·

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
..

.

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

'

.

· Question: ~ six-yw-Old son exudate" and the lymph n!ides in
has had steep lhroat several times · the neck are swollen - not a sim·
this-winter. His pedialrician thinks pie scratchy, red throat. In mt
we should have his tonsils childhood, "repeated infection
removed, but I'm reluctant to do didn't have a clear defmition.
Today, it does. It means having
that because I've heard tonsillec·
six
episodes of tonsillitis ill one
tomies aren't necessary . What
year,
or.five episodes of tonsillitis a.
should we do?
year
for two consecutive years.
ADSWer: The tonsils are part of
Your
son probably has met one of
the body's defense system . They .
these
criteria, and that's why his
can be seen by looking into the
ped.ialrician
~ommended a IOOsil·
mouth of any child. They are the
lectomy.
·
rounded mounds of lymph tissue
Question: What should I expect
· lqcated on the side walls of the
throat just behind the last molar. In if my child has a tonsillectomy?
Answer:. Your son's pediatri·
cliildlen the tonsils are quite promi·
nent, but in adults they usually ciao will ask you to take your son
shrink down to lillie patChes of tis· to a doctor who specializes in ear,
nose and throat (ENT) surgery.
sue.
The surgery to remove the toll· After this doctor confirms your
pediatrician's diagnosis, he or she
sils - called a "tonsillectomy" is performed frequently, but not as will actually do the tonsiliectoiny,
·
frequently as it was 20 ¥ears ago. It if you give the OK.
Tonsil surgery often requires an
was previously beheve!i that
enlarged tonsils caused frequent overnight stay in the bospi'tal,
sore throats, aild surgery to remove although sometimes it is done on
the tonsils prevented 'sore throats. an out-patient basis, which would
Wben I was a child, one of my sis· allow you to take your son home
tas and I had our tonsils out at the that s·ame day: Ask the surgeon
same time;' It was considered a about the arrangements for your
"normal" surgery that all children · child. You should ·expect that your
shoUld have to keep them healthy. child will have fewer sore throats
Today, we.know beuer. The tonsils and Rencrally be healthier after his
enlarge as a response to infection: tonsillectomy.
They rarely become so infected •
It's ·important to stress that you' ·
tliat they are the sowce of)Uness, ' will make the fmal decision about
However, there are still some whether or not this sur~ery is pergood reasons for an adult or child formed. To make an mtelligent
to have his or her tonsils removed. choice you need to be as informed
In children, this operation is most tis possible. Ask two basic quescommonly performed beCause the tions: Why should this operation be
tonsils have beCome so large that performed? Why should it not be
they cause difficulty with swaUow- performed? Then weigh ihe pluses
ing and breathing. If your son has and minuses. Don't agree to the
surgery until all of your concerns
' difficulty in swallowing, snores have bei:n' addressed, aild evlryone
while sleeping and breathes
throuJh his mouth most of the agrees that a tonsillectomy is best ·
. ·
·
time, tt's likely his tonsils are to for·your son.
"Family
Medicine"
is
a·
weekly
blame.
Another common reason for column. To submit questions, write
tonsillectomy is repealed infection. to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
versity College of Osteopathic
I'm talking about tonsillitis where the tonsils are enl~ed and Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
covered with blotches of ' whitish Ohio 45701 .

Mardi Gras rev~lry gives way to Lent
By MARY FOSTER
Aslociated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS - Two mil·
lion people- from wide-eyed otit·
of-towners to transvestites in lingerie- ate, drank and danced their
viay through Mardi Gras in one last
fling before· police cleared the
streets to usher in Lent today.
"If you want, it you can fmd it
on ·Bourbon S~ at Mardi Gras,"
·said John Summers, dressed as a
i:ancan dancer in ruffled skirt and
net stockings. "If you don't want
it, you .can at least look .at it. We
have beautiful men and beautiful
women ready to let go of all their
inhibitions.''
Revelers included clowns,
dozens of ersatz nuns and priests
- ~~vena foppish quartet of heav-

Busy Bee class
,meets at church

'I

The Busy Bee Class of the Mid·
dlepon First llaptist Church met
'recently at the home of Freda
Edwards with Rpsemary Lyons
presiding. .
.
The openmg prayer was giVen
by Pooch Brewer. Members
responde~ to roll call with each
givmg a btble verse.
· Devotions were by Freda
EdwardS, "Seasons of the Soul. •
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Edwards to Pooch Brewer,
Rosemary Lyons, Ruth .Ebersbach,
Fltda Edwards, Lillian Demoskey,
Elizabeth Slaven, Elizabeth Searles, Betty Gilkey. Betty Denny and
Dorothy Evans.

MJHS SPELLING BEE WINNERS • Nancy whaley, rltbt, ·sev·
enth arade, daugbter !If M.-y and· Delmar Wbaley, Mlddlept~rt,
was the winner Of the spellblc bee at Meigs Juaior Hllh School.
Allam Tltomai, 10n of Debbie Jean Thoma~, Pomeroy, and Tim
. Thomas, waa ruDDer-up. Other pardcipl!llts were Scott Dodson,
Bobble Klulson, Amy See, Mike FryJitye~, Tory Swartz, ~!e
Blalte, DliYid Gritul, Da\'ld Park, Scott 8eDen, Stacey Cotterill,
Cbad HaDIOII, Myca Haynes, Steve PatterloD, Steve McCulloulb,
SbaDDOII Petrie, Ubby KiD&amp;IIIId Justin SeY..oar.

By BRENDA C. COLEMAN ·
Aslociated Press Writer
CHICAGO - Balding heads
may mean vulnerable hearts.
A repon published today says
21· toSS-year-old men who were
severely bald on top were thrc;e
times more likely to suffer heart
attaCks than those with full heads
of hair. Men with moderate bald·
ness had a 1 1/2 times greater risk.
. Men with receding hairlines even severely receding ones- but
no baldness 'on top faced no
increased risk.
The report on 665 heart-attack
victims and 772 IDCII who had suf·
fered no heart attacks appears tn
The Journal of the American Medi·
cal Association. The study was
paid for by the Upjohn Co., maker
of the hair-growth drug Rogaine.
The hypothesis that baldness
1\l'ay predtct heart disease goes
back more than 25 years, said .the
researchers, led by author Dr,
Samuel M. Lesko of Boston Uni·
versity School of Medicine's
School of Public Health. .

Such men should be espec~y_
sure to get themselves screened fOt
high cholesterol, hi~ blood P!'CS·
sure and other tratiS that might
increase their risk of heart disell!c:·
he said.
·
.
· ·~
. Authors of the study contrOI!.Od
statistically fot' the possible effeciS
of smoking and high blood prea•
sure, as well u age, family hisqy,
drinking habits, exercise habiiS and
other factors that affect heart lisle. .;
Lesko said it is unknown
whether 'the results are applica!&gt;k;
to men over 55 or to racial minot.!· .
ties, who made up only abOut _5
percent of the subjects.
,,
Presumably Upjohn is mo~t
interested in men most likely 10' u~.
the drug- those under SS, Leske!
said.
.
:: ·
All the doc'tors said more
research will be needed to mllk~
sure the link exists and if so, why: •
··
•

By BOB THOMAS
Aslociated.Press Wrlt!r
In' "Falling l:iown," Michael
()ouglas is having a bad day in
L.A.
.
It all starts when he's tntpped in
freeway gridlock, surrounded by
noisy borps, bawling children and
ci'IIM}' motoristS. He abandons his
car and starts walking al:ross the
city, growing angrier with each
encounter.
,
First, he beats up a store owner
and trashes the merch1111dise over
an 85-cent charge for a soft drink.·
A couple or ~g members accost
him and get attac.ked. The gang
retallates with a drive-b)' $hooting
aild end up deld and dying in a car
crash. Douglas cotnliiiiJideers their
arsenal and walks on.
His next victims inolude the
patrons of a fast-food restaurant, an
army surplits store owner, a pair of
wealthy golfers and more. ·
Robert Duvall happens to have
been in the same freeway jam. He's
a ~ detective on hia last day
before retirement, and he is the
onlr member of the Los Angeles
Pobce Department to pick up the
scent of the wacko terrorist. Anoth·
er cop,,Rachel Ticotin, agrees to
help him. ·
,
Despite a top-notch cast,
''Falling Down" is just another
urban shocker based on violence
and illopc. Could Douglas' ~Y
trail remain unsuspected by the
entire J)O(ice force?.Could anybody
walk lrom Boyle Heights in East
h.A. to Vcnicc al the ocean in one
day? Maybe an Olympic athlete. ·
By now, moviegoers are inured
. to the bias~ of !Wtornali~: weaponry
and the nddhng of tnnocents.

Dinner scheduled

Council to convene

meet

Super Lotto:
4·5-111-23-28-43

Page 9

Kicker:
119585

speculated that a cenain male hor·
The caregivers suppon gro)l{l
. .,
mone necessary for baldness to "Let's Talk" for family and ~
develop may have a role in sup- who care for shut-ins or pe11~
pressing "good" cholesterol,· partially disabled, meets 4ver'
which. proteciS
the
Mon
· day from S;,.,..,:
on "' 30 p.m. at IIIC
"'~
. heart. d" h
Etg h1 prevtous
stu tes ave American Hospital for RehabiliO.:.
e~plored whether the association tion on Coun~ Club Drive ,Iii
truly exists: Researchers who H ·
w F iii'
"", ed II , h
I d d .
mlltngtol!, • a. ac tators "'"'
revtew a etg t cone u e m · Deborah Suii-Lewis, Social SA'.!1990 th8t "a small risk of coronary
·
d
· · A T be p"f:
disease due to baldness may exist, vtces, an Patriclll · au ' ~but this risk is smaller than that of toral care Department.
1
'
w~li-known risk factors such as
Director Joel Schlli'IUither goes one smoking and hypertension."' said
step farth.er. He seeks l!umor in an editorial in JAMA.
..l.·
·
The editorial's authors, Drs. 4.\utOUflCeS meetingS .
these violent outbursts. I;&gt;ougias
tosses1lfT one-liners while threaten· Peter WJI. Wilson and William 8, ·
ing families and employees in the Kannel of the Framingham Heart
A stoke suppOrt group· for ~il
fast-food place.
Study, said some bald men may sttoke survivors and their family·
Douglas b expen at exploding want to.taice extra precautions, such
as rigcsously watchinlg th
their choles- members, meets the second Tues'
rage, but his role as D·FENS of each month at the Arnericail
taken from his1icense plate -pro- terol altd blood pressure and quit· day
Hospital for Rehabilitation in Hunt'
vides no shading. Sure, he's been
smokinR"ch
. ardg. J Carroll cardi I ington, W.Va. from 4:30-5:30 p.~.
fired from his defense job and tingDr.
1
0 • At the Marc~ 9 meeting, Sgsan
;a
·
yearns for his ex-wife and young ogist at Lo~la University MediCal B' R h b'I't t" c
185 • e a 1 1 1!- ton ounse 1or,
_en who are losing
daughter.• Bul does that motivate Center, sa1d m
will speaic on "Services Available
him to launch a idlling spree?
their hair on top should view it from Division or Vocational R~;
The saving grace of ".Falling "more as a marlcer for a potential · bilitation." Further information
Down" is Duvall, who .can do . problem rather than aS a potential. may be obtained by contacting
more with -a s.idelong glance than problem itself."
Roberta EQierSOII at 304.733-1060,:
most actors can manage with a
page of dialogue. Rachel Ticotin is M~
warmly sympathetic as the only .
friend he has on the force.
"
, . ·:
Barbara Hershey is convincingly
Final plans for the Lenten visions for their needs as God does
terrorized as D-FENS' ex-wife and Breakfast at Trinity Church on the same thin' for each. God is
presumed victim. Tuesday Weld Wednesday at 7:45a.m. were made constantly admmistering needs' and
has the thankless iole as the neurot~ when Friendly Circle of Trinity guidance. God is with everyone
ic wife who is pushing Duvall to Church met recently with Gay Per· always and is always there when
retiremenL ·
·
rin
·ding.
·
needed. The Shephard takes each
The ·City of the Angels never
ft':'as announced that.the Marl· sheep into the fold one by one 81\d
looked more bellish.' Andrzej etta College Chorus will pre~~ent a gives each one individual attentiiln,
Bartkowijlc's camera captures the concen.at Trinity Church on Sun- justilsGoddoesforallpeopte. • ...
worst of the city and its inhabitants. day at 1 p.m. Eric Russell, a grandThe offering was taken, by Mary
~ven the wall murals look threaten· son of Friendly Circle member, V. Kautz with offertory prayer by
mg.
Mary Kautz, will be performing Maye Mora.
.
fbe Warner Bros. rele~e was with ihe chorus. The public iS invit·
A valentine theme was used 'at
wntten by Ebbe Roe Smtih and ed.
. tbe refreshment table. A desser.t
The program 'was presented by · salad and cupcakes were served to
produced by_ Arnold Koi!elson, '
HefS!;hel Wemgrod and Timothy Maye Mora. She based her fro- 13 members attending. A-valentine
Harris: Rate4 R, for language and gram on "The Interpretation o the
was presented to everyone.
'~.
violericc. Running time: liS min· ' 23rd Psalm" by Charles Allen.
Hostesses were Pauline· Maye'r ·
utes.
Some· excerpts were • The. sheep and Marie Hauck.
:
knows the Shephard will make pro·
Motion Picture Association of
Amtriea rating definition:
R - Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or
adult~.
The Evangeline Missionary sion study on the Laws, which tht
Group of the Pomeroy Church of group is supporting,
.
Chrisl met recently at the home of
Debbie. Miles had devotipns
Eileen Bowers.
from
Psalms. Mrs. Bowers read a
everywhere could push for more
The opening prayer was given poem "Spirit LUter" and "What is
minority enrollment, improve ~il· by Pat Thoma with Debbie Miles Love"
,
ities specifically for blacks and presi:J.· A quiz on ·bible women ' The women's fellowship gro11p
fight racism senenllly.
was
•
will meet at the church Thursday. ,'
Lee said this in response to a
Officers reports were given and
The mother-daughter baqqliet
question about a student takeov~ collections taken.,
. will be held May 6 at 6:30p.m. '
of a
buildin in Aprill988
A sympathy card was sent to
Mrs. Thoma read "Effecti~e
at ~te in w~ich protesters Linda Laudermill. and cards were Solvent"
,
·.'
demanded the administration step sent.to Dorothy Ritchie and Lane
Mrs.
Venoy
gave
the
prayeffor
up efforts to anract black students. . Goods. The sunshine box will be refreshments served by the ~
State police were called in and presented to Helen Millel'.
to those named and Debbie AJQe
arrested-89 demonstrators.
Charldine Alkire had the mis- and Pauline Kennedy.
·
' .,
.'

Vol. 43, ' No. 214

Copyright.~~

Ddnce planned ,
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 LadieJ Auxiliary will
have a dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. at ihe JIOil home. Happy Hoi·
low Boys will provide ihe musiC.
Public invited. .
.

A multiple sclerosis support
group for ,1111·persons with MS and
their family members, meets the
second' Tuesday of CI!Ch month. at
.6:30 p.n!. at ihe American Hospital
for Rehabiliwion on Counay Club
Drive in Huntington, :W.Va. ,Fur·
ther information may be obtained
by contacting Lany Kwant at 304272-6431.
.

4-Hers meet

Members of the Meigs i4·H
Pleasure Riders returned r.ccently
from the 4-H Horse HiptK&gt;IOJY
Clinic a1 the Ohio S~~~te Umventty ·
Hone Barn in Columbui.
Members panicipated in a hllnc
ju1f!;/ event as well 11 being
qu
on all types cA hone relat·
ed itemL Allending the clinic wae
Sara Craig, Holly Milhoan, Matt
Milhoan, Sus1111 Graeser, S~~tah
Oi-ueeer, Llnzie Noulnabanl,
advison, Rldtael Downie and Pam
Milholn. Abo auending were F110
Craig.
. During the group's February
mectina, project boob were dis·
tributed.
· The next meedng will be Mllch
I 5 II the Milhoan '1 home on Rock
Springs Road. The elub will review
the fair horae lhow with Terri

'an"

~eri':~IZndlnl the m~ti~g

were Tracy Shaffer and Jessica
Wheeler.
•

'

.,

FUture of area pools in ·doubt
&lt;'

, EYE EXAMS • Eye el181Dlnatlons for children are one or the many
;services offered by the Melas County Health Department with fund, Ina from local tax dollars. Here, Jert MeAdoo M.D., 1111 opbtbamolo&amp;ist from Athens, demonstrates an eye examination on u:year-old · Brandy Stevens, Middleport, as part or the children's eye clinic held
..,Wednesday. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)
.
.

· ·,·

Voino
. vich won't retreat
Y
Cut
ment
I
I
f rom
0C3
govern
.
·
·

COLUMBUS, Oblo .(AP) -Gov. Georae Volnovlch won't
I . t frOID
w•l to CUt the IUDount or 11ate tax n:ve11!Je
. • allared with
pvfl'!l-nt, but he wiD support reHer -from
· uiittmcled ltllte mudltes.
·
_Vblnovlch dete~~ded the revised fuading plan for counties,
, mnnldCHtln, townships atid libraries IncludecHn the state
bu~~~ dtr.tb~ :'e:t~~~uld
with tile dollars tliat we
__, ..__
C
C
bave," Volaovlcb ·...d aucr a speech .to the ounty ommls·
sloners AIIOdation ol Ohio oa Wednesday.
"IDdlredly, II I Ctlecf to &amp;et IICI'OIS, we're helping them witlt
.a lot of the lodal well.,e proarliml that are being funded quite
halllbomely," he said.
r

1

l:::Jrup

:
·
Ia
·
•
., ess c zm.s u1:'
n
J0 bl

L----""'"-~---------------..:...1

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
nuniber.of Americans filing first·
time claims· for jobless, benefits
edged up by 4,000 in mid-Febru· ary, the fitS! increuoin a month,
thegOVCI!IIIIentreported today.
. But the advance was only half
of what many llllllysts had C:X~I·
ed._And 4~ ~tates-.and temto~es
reported declmes, while only e1ght
postedTheincrcaseaLabor
De•
. ,
, . parunent said the
ne111 a.PPhcattons f'!r unemployment msurance durmg the week
ended Feb. 13 totaled 325,000, up
froiD 321,000 a week earlier.
Claims_have remained below
400,000 stnce September. Many
analysiS consider that num'!er to be
!he threshold between an nnprov·
1ng and deteriorating labor mada:L
The Labor Department reported
eariier that payrolls gre_w by
106,000 ·m January, the btggest
inC:r&lt;'&amp;Se in six mon'ths, while' th~
unemployment rale dipped to 7.I
pereent after remaining stalled at
7.3 perce~t the previous two
months.

The (our-week moving average
'of new claims continued to fall dm·
ing the latest reporting perjod. It
dropped to 334,500, the lowest
since the average reached 327,250
during the week ended S&lt;;Rt. 30,
1989.
Many analysts prefer to track
the four-week average because it
smooths out the volatility of the
weekly numbers and more aCCU·
rately reflects the labor situation,
In addition to the regUlar weeldy
benefit claims, 22,405 other appii·
cations were filed by newly laid off
workers for benefits under a federal
emergency program. That was
down from 30.118 during the week
ended _Feb. 6. ' ·
. The emergency prograrn ·is due
to expire on March 6. But the
House voted 254-161 on Wednesday to extend unemployment insurance for up tQ 26 weeks for laid off
workers whose state benefits have
expired. The Senate Finance Con:t·
mlltee approved a similar measure
earlier in the day.

,.....--Local briefs-~~
Due to overstOck, this Singer sewing machine .dealer Is
offering for sale to the public a limited number of ne,v
special 1993 heavy duty zigzag and open arm sewlnq
machines that are made to last, and sew on all fabrics:
denim, canvas, upholstery, nylon, . stretch, vinyl,
EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachments nMtjed.
for buttonholes (any size). It monpgrams, hems, sews
on buttons, satin stitches, overcasts, dams, appliques
and more. Just set dials and see magic happen wltho~
old·fashloned cams or programmers. These Singer
Heavy Duty Machines are suitable for home,
professional or schoolroom sewing. Twenty·live year
warranty.

YOUI PIICE Willi AD $169, WITHOUT AD $299

willcoiM. V18A, u.tere.nt, AIMrlcan Exp- .
-iptld. INnd- FACTORY lUI ED CARTONI '

Cllecll, CMh

•Hf' flHfll

;~f)OD

maY AT f!f!S I OC/\TiOli

t, I'JAVS ONLY!

11•1 IEWIII CEiftU ·

THE FABRIC SHOP '
POMIIOY, OliO • 992·2214
Open 8 to 5

ttiru Saturday

I

A llulllmedla Inc. Newopopir

'

ay,e M. ora presents ·program :

.
Meetings posted

2 Becttone, 14 Pogea 25 -Ia

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 25, 1993

11183

Stroke support group:

Mother-daughter banquet set

Heavy enowwamlng
tonlaht. TG!ol a_,utelkln C&gt;l ...
e 1na.... Low In the low ZOe.
Fltdly, enow. High :1045.

•

'Let's Talk' open to:··.
is ~ ~0:~!':, ~e~.n~~: family and friend~ :;j

T

'·

274
Pick 4:
3263

•

-Names in the news.:-

·Key women

Pick 3:

Just when you. think
you_~· ve had a bad day,
try ~Falling Down'

ily rouged toy soldiers who extend·
ed a limp wrist in a nod to President Clinton's bid to lift the mili·
tary's ban on homosexuals.
With brilliant sunshine and tern·
peratures in tlie 60s, many revelers
donned the skimpiest of costumes.
Others on French Quaner balconies
shed their clothes in response to
chants from the crowd and were
rewarded with trinkets.
"These are great!" Tom Con ..
roy or New York · said of the
strands of beads he wore. J"See
these big green ones? Women will .
do anything for them. Well, at least
they'll show me just about every·
thing for them."
Police cleared Bourbon Street of
drunks at midnight as Fat Tuesday
gave way to Ash Wednesday, the
stan of the austere Lenten period
before Easter.
Police reported no serious prob·
!ems. Most arrests ~re 'for pick·
pocketing, drunkenness and dis·
turbing the peace, Sgt. Bob Young
said. Am:st figures weren't imme·
diately available. .
BALTIMORE (AP) - Joe
A rider ren orr a float after he -Jaclcs~n suggested his s!'pers_tar
passed out and slipped out of his · son, Michael, exaagerated m telling
safety harness, police said..Doctors a national television audience his
said he suffered head and neck father abused him as a boy.
injuries. In the same parade, a 16- .
"When you chastised a youngyear-old boy was hit by a float but ster back m the early ages, we
wasn't seriously hurt.
called it a whipP,ing •.Now it's
One man wore the cardboard called child abuse, '· ihe elder Jackfrom a case of beer, held up with son said Monday. He was refening
suspenders, and nothing else but to his SOl)' a in~ew Feb. 10 with
jogging shons.
' Oprah Winfrey in which ·the per·
Charles Sawyer wore only . former said his father beat him and
strategically placed chains. Next to mocked his complexioit.
him stood a statuesque blond in a
"Michael's interview with
black leather bikini. "Today I'm Oprah was good fat Michael," Joe
Gloria. The rest of the year I'm Jackson added. "It sort of put me
George Walker," the blond said.
down a liule biL" '
·
~andy Patterson of New
Jackson made the remarks .while
Orleans was resplendent in a pink plugging his new cola, Jo~ola,
gown with hoop skirt, ruffles and which comes' in cans bearing his
lace, and a hat with long ,white signature and a description of him
feathers, Doug Taylor wore a black as "father of the Jackson entertainbustier and high black boots and ment familr and renowned
carried a riding crop.
entrepreneur.'
·
"I went for romance," Patter·
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) son said. "Doug is more basic. His
Filmmalctt
Spike Lee picked up a
costume is called 'Domitrix."' ~
political football' and ran with It
when he suggested black college
athletes could threaten ~ to play
unless minority students .get more
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post clout on campuses.
No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
"You have to hit them in the
have a spagheui supper March 6 pocketbooli," Lee laid Monday
beginning at 4 p.m . at the post nighlto a IIIOitly white IIIICIIencc of
home. Cost is $3 .50 for adults'and 2,500 people at ~ml SIIIC.
$1.SO for children 1ttnd under.
"You talk about lheiC llig foot.
Public invited.
ball and basltotbali 'TV conttacts
and you have no black athlelea ... it
could wort," ·wd the maker of
"Mako1m X'·' and "Do The Right
Bosworth Council No. 46 lblng."
R.S.M. S.E.M. degree, Friday, 7:30
He suggested thai by llling their
p.m., Middleport Masonic Temple. swus u mone)'lll8km for colleges
and universities, black athletes

EMPLOYEE OF THE
MONTH • Angie Russell was
recently selected employee or tbe
month by her feDow employees at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.• She· bas been
employed In the laundry departtq
ment 11 a laundry aide for the
past 1 112. Russell volunteers her
Ali key women from area
OWD litite to participate in facility
c~urc
hes are to meet at Sacred
spoa10red fuad raising projects
Heart
Catholic
Church on Friday at
. to help raise moaey for the
I
p.m.
to
plan
for Church Women
Alzlaeimers Research Founda· United.
·
tiOII.
.

0 hio Lottery

Tennessee
upsets No.2
Kentucky

:1Baby born in squad vehi~le
.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Meilical Service responded to three.calls for assistance overniaht including 'a call in which a
baby boy was born in the squad vehicfe in route to the hospital.
Al2:14 a.m. this mornina. the Racine squad responded to Third
Street for Ruth Swan who gave birth in Minersville while the squad
was in mule to Pieasalit Valley Hospilal in Point PleasanL
·
In addition, at 10:43 a.n:t. Wednesday, Pomeroy Squad 1
responded to the Pomeloy Nursing Rehabilitation Center for Cora
DeLong who was ttansported to Veterans Medical 'Center.
At 10:40 p.m. Wedneaday, Pomeroy Squad I responded to U.S.
33 for John Slllll)bo who wu transponed to VMH.
.

Schools take part in voter program

According to MiddleJ!«!!I Mayo'r
By JIM FREEMAN '
Fred Hoffman, the vtllage lost
Sentinel News Stair '
Meigs County youths could be between $12,000 and $15,000 on
required to find other places to• the pool last year.
"We don't know if we can open
swim this summer if financial
(the
pool) or not," Fred Hoffman,
problems force the ciosin~ of the
Middleport
mayor, said this morn·
county's two public ~w1mming
ing.
.
pools,
Syracuse
Mayor
James Pape
. Wednesday morning, repreSen··
said
this
morning
it
will
be up to
lalives from the villages of Middlethe
Syracuse.
Village
Council
to
pan and Syracuse unsuccessfully
decide
if
the
pool
will
be
opened
attempted to get money from the
Meigs County Board of Com- this summer.
"There's a good likelihood (the
missioners to help furid the two
pool) will never open," Pape said.
pools.
In addition to using $5,000 in
As a result, it is unlikely the
pools will be able to open this sum· general funds, Pape said the villllge
borrowed $10;000 the past year to
mer, the villages' mayors said.
Maintenance problems and a operate th.e pool.
The pool has lost money
cooler-than-usual summer contributed to·both pools losing money beCause maintenance that should
· have been taken care of hasn' t been
for their villages last summer.
taken·care of, Papeexplained.
In addition, the pool was closed
part of the summer, Pape said.
Commission criticiud
.
Pape criticized the commission

Bloodmobile
receives 66
p-ints of ~lood
.

.

.

~·

.

for looking at the siwation on what
he called "a shon-sighted basis."
"The pools offer too many posi·
tive things for the county for !he
commission to take sucb a negauve
attitude," Pape said.
Both pools serve the public,
Pape said, addi~g that perhaps
thousands of youngsters were safe·
ly taught to swim at the community
pools.
·
If the pools close, there'll be no
more tramed swimming lessons.
Pape said.
It will be up to the parents to
teach their kids to swim, Pape
added.

Continued on ptJge 3

·:

Sixty-six units of blood were
received Wednesday during a visit
of the American Red Cross BIOO!I·
mobile at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.
Among the blood donors was
Sarah J. Fowler, Middlepon, who
gave her 100th unit, a total of 12
112 gallons. Another donor, ·lljlrry
D. Holter, became a two gallon
· donor yesterday.
First-time donors were Debra
Folmer, Alben l'llrker, and thomas
Parker, all of Pomeror Kandi
' Hysell;:!1!ddleport, an Charles
James, RaCme.
·
The canteen was served by the ,
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middle·
port. Tracey O'Dell and Libby
· Fisher were the donor attendants
for ·the-visit and Retired Senior
Volunteers of the Senior Citizens
Center assisting were Dorothy
Long, Wanda Fetty, Mary Nease,
Emma K. Clatworthy, Peggy Har·
ris, Jean Nease, Helen Bodimer&lt;
Florence Richards, Beulah W. ·
Ward, Evelyn Gilmore, Gerald
nurse Terri Tern, Parkersburg, w.va~ attends
GIVING BLOOD • David Harris, advertising
Wildermuth, Goldie Fr,ederick,
to HarriS. Sixty-six units or blood were colleCted
representative ror. The Dally Sentinel, donated
Biondena Rainer, Grella Suttle,
during the Bloodmobile visit. (Sentinel photo by '
blood Wednesday when the American Red
Lula Hampton, Mary Buck, Lloyd
Jim Freeman)
·
Cross Bloodnioblle visited the Senior Citizens'
and Ardella Johnson, and Donald
Center' in Pomeroy. Here, licensed prai:tical
and Betty Maurer. Brian Reed is
Logan.
,
·
McCloud, Billie S. Fitchpatrick,
Meigs County's blood chairman.
Rutland: Tammy Miller and
Adaline
J.·
Baker,
David
L.
Har·
Herbie
Bush,
Angela
Sellers,
Donna
M. Davidson.
·
Donors by COmmunity Were:
Pomeroy: Harold Norton, Janet ris, Marvin E. Taylor, ·Paul F. Barr, Do!ln&amp; M. Hawley, Kandy Hysell, · Long Bottom: Donald R
N. Ambrose, Jerry E. Reitmire, Nancy Thoene. Dale Thoene, Ger· Norma G. Wilson, Gloria J. Peav· Spencer, Laura L. Hawley, iBruce
Nancy J. Reitrnirc, Janet K. Peav· aid E. Rough, Dan E. Foillrod, Glo- ley, Mary A. Sorden, and George Hawley, Oris L. Smith, Merrilee
ley, PhyiUs J. Witherell, Walter R. ria K. Kloes, Donald R. Smith, L. Harris, Jr.
Bryant, Sharon E. Bryant.
Mason, W. Va.: Brian E. JObn·
Couch, Robert W, Smith, Wilma Sonia J. Allen, Roger C. Gaul,
, Minersville: Kenneth E. WigA. Mansfield, Brenda S. Cunnins· Roger A. Abbott, Barbara A. son.
gms.
'Racine: Marie A. Bush, Freddie
ham, Raymond L. Landers, Debra Riggs, David G. Graham, Madhu
Syracuse, Darla N. Thomas and
J. Simons, Harry D. Holter, Grace Kathy J. Cumings.
Folmer, Daniel R. Folmer, William ,Malhotra, John W, Moore.
Middleport: Micahel R. Mow· E. Holter, Dawna Arnold, and
W. Radford, Alben Parker, Tom
LangsviUe: Ellis E. Myers.
Parker, David M. King, Howard P, ery, Sarah J. Fowler, Dorothy C. Charles James.

s.

Derby

officers
announced
An organizational meeting was
held w~ab at the office or the
Blue.Streak
Company, Inc., to
elect offiCers for the annual Meigs
County ~oap Box Derby to be held
in Middleport on June 27. ,
The followin&amp; officers were
elected: WiUiam Snouffer, director;
Charles Neutzling, assistant director; James E. Pape , treasurer;
Cheryl Fisher and Debbie Peck·
ham, secretaries.
·
There wUI be two divisions run
. this ~ear .. the stock and kit car
diviaons.
·
The event is open to boys and
J.!rl• qea nine tluouah 16. To qualIfy, conlellants muat Ito nine years
ol age on or be(ore Aug. I, 1993.

Students of ·:~~ aso altendins Meiss and Southern high
achooli may be e
to vote in the May 4 primary election after ,
Proof or age ia n:qaired.
~=::the Ohio First Vote 1993 (li"OI!1III sponsored by
Reglsuidon day for contelllnts
Ohio :
d State Bob Taft.
.
will
be announced at a fulllnl dare. ·
Teachen 11 achoola (lllticipatina in the propam devote one class ·
·
Anyone
inte~ted in taking a
~.to ditcussing voting aild regillering eligible and in~
part in this event can contact
William or Oary Snouffer at. the
'
The -tary of 11110'1 ofT'tee auppllea each (lllticipatlq acbi&gt;ol
Blue
Streak Cab Com(ilny at 992PROGRAM IN PLACE· Kitty lfuler,
with a videptlpe about
vildng, teaching guidea and
dlrednr ol tile Melp Local Talented lllld Gifted
7075 or !1112-6471 Monday'through
reglatradon miiDriaiL 11to IJitllc!plliag achoola ~nt 64 per·
Propam, II plelared ltete with Jeanller Lee
Friday
from
8
a.m.
to
7
p.m.
and
cent of an publlc IIIII priYIIO high acboola in Ohio.
'
Saturday
from
8
l
.m;
to
S
p.m.
Stepp,
a tltlrd pade II deat, IIICI Kara Balllq·
PaniclpidnJ IIUdanll will bl reaiJtered before the April 5 deed·
ton,
a
lint
lll'llde lllldnt, at l'omero)' Elelllen·
The
soap
box
derby
is
a
youth
Caatilllllll 011 pqt 3
· _ __
Coatinued 011 paae 3
· 1111 oa We(llllday monill&amp;, 1'1le new proaram,

cltlzen-'t=

·

Pape speculated that more area
youngsters will take to unsuper·
vised -swimming in ihe Ohio River.
"You know what that means,"
Pape said, referring to the possible
increased likelihood of droWning&amp;.
No iDODey, lorry
Commissioqers Manning Roush
and Janet Howard explained the
county did not have the money to

heiR the villages with the pools.
'There's no money to help,"
Roush said. "I'm sorry."
Roush explained that the county
is currently facing the cost of two
murder irials.
Syracuse had requested $15,000
w$ hi1 e Middleport requeste!I
11,000•
;
· The . county currently has
$30,727 earmarked for parks and
recreation. Of that amount,
$22,141.63 is fol' employee-related
expenses.
.
.
· Discuss r011d petition
,
The commission invited County
Engirieer BOb EasoCnharan~ RR~~add
1te 1oe to
Township Trustee
. discuss a petition presented to tlie
commission last week by Noble
Summit ROad resident Ray Fowlei.
Tho.se signing the petitio)!
requested that t,be county abso~b
the road in the county road systell!•
Eason and Rife said .the roa;d
needed work and agreed to jlat¢h

,I

�'

..
•

I?IISII 2-The Dlilly Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

'

•

:What
did Clinton know ••• and ·when?
.
.

.

, WASHINGTON (NEA} - Lis·
• ten closely when a politician
: chooses his JYOnls with great tnei: sion: It usually means be bas some• thing to bide. So it is with President·
; Clinton as be lrics to explain wby
: be i~ now proposing a !'\lddle-class
• tax tncrease after promtsmg not to.
: . Constantly during the prcsiden• lial campaiJn. Clinton made the
: same promue. "I will not raise
: taxes on tbe lniddle class;' • be said.
1 "If I can't get the money I need
: eiS!'wbcre for my profllll"s, I will
; postpone or cut tbem.'
• But his newly unveiled econoin: ic program features a large tax
• increase tbat will affect all taxpay; ers down· to the $30,000-a-year
: level. No matter ho:-v you define
• ' ·middle class" this tax increase
tclearly dips deep into the ~up.
: In the nalionally televised Oval
•Office speech that preceded the
;address, Clinton said: "I've
•worked harder than I've ever
: worked in mr,.~e 10 meet that goal
:(no middle-c
tax increases). But
•I can't .,..;. ~u5e the deficit bas
;increased so much beyond my ear•tier estimates and beyond even tbe
:worst official government esti;mates from last year."
· The critical phrase is "official
;government estimates." Clinton
;now says he has been foiced to
·abandon his middle-class tax
;pledge because the deficit is much
•

worse than the orficial numbers
from the Bush administration.
The Clinton White House says
that the Office of Management and

Robert}. Wagman
Budget, tllldC'Z Bush administration
chief Richard Darman. cooked the
books. This much seems .to be an
objective and true statemenL Over
an I 8-month period, starting in Jan11.\UY 1992. OMB produced a series
of out-year deficit projections that
were greeted with blOwing grins
all over town.
However, as with any debate
over the federal budget, this is a
complex matter. First some background:
When the government makes
budget and deficit estimates for the
future, say five fiscal years ahead
-called "out years" ..,.. much
Sllessworli: takes place. How much
tax money the government takes in
will depend on the general condi·
tion of the economy. The more
robust the economy; the more tax
revenue. The more tax revenues,
the more government will have to
spend or use for deflcit reduction.
Likewise, rates of inflation must be
forecast, because increases in
mandatory spendin~ in many federal programs are tted to inOation
rates.
&lt;

Thus. when the JOvernment No one believed them, least of all
comes out with defictt projections the economists who advised the
for the jive years ahead, it actually Clinton campaip.
"'
.releases .three forecasts: one based
_During the camJ!P!gn, ~!!le
on the most optimistic assump- Chnton usually referred to the
lions, one based on the most pes- . defteit projection then coming out
simistic and one somewhere in of the CBO, ~ause those esti, .
between.
mates were always much higher
The flscal year eveeyone is con- than OMB' s. The GBO projections
centrating on IS 1997, which actual- · for fiscal '97 eventually rose to
ly begins in October.1996. In Jan- $319 billion- much higher than
uary 1992, OMB predicted a flscal the OMB figures Clinton now says
'97 deficit of $lliJ.8 'billion. By he wasdejlendingon.
' ·
July '92, they had u~ that estiMany mdependent economists
mate til $236.7 billion. In January, say that sometime around last
just after the election, the flnal Dar- August - well before the fall camman t~on for fiscal '97 was a paign· even lcicked off- it was
$305 · · shortfall.
ceystal clear that even the CB0'1
· Now the Clin10n administration, more pessimistic projeetions were
using what it calls "conservative" probably way too low. It ·is
- read, most pessimistic - fig- believed that pfivate estimates
ores from the Congressional Bud- Clinton received from his pellOIII!
get Offioe (Clinton says he is using advisers pill the real deficit projecCBO figures until his new team can tion in the $350 billion range, or
get a fmn hold on the OMB fore- even higher.
.
Clinton insists this is nonrue.
casting operation) is forecasting a
'97 deficit of $346 billion if no His top economic advisers say it
.changes ar.e made. So, says the w~ not until after the fust of the
president, if the '97 deflcit will year tbat they began to get "solid
actll8lly be $100 billion worse than · mdicators" thatdhe out-year
OMB was forecasting during the deficits were slcyrocketing.
election, his promises based tin the
How this debate plays out may
old numbers JUSt won't wodc.
speU the success or failure for ClioThe problem with this, say crit- ton's economic pacli:age- and for
ics, is that while Darman's deficit his presidency.
·
numbers were phony - or. to be. ·
Robert Wagman is a syadlcat·
charitable, wildly optimistic ed writer For Newspaper Entereveryone in town knew they were. prise Association.

1991 CHEVY S.10
SPORT

OM.Y27,Si!IIIIIES • 0000 IIUYI
2 ctocn, • ~.• 5 ~peed sllnd.,

PB. AINFM - · · ......

..,.. Alp bumper. 111n raol.

NOW

NOW

54,444

S6'-333
.

~Middle . class

; ·The middle-class tax cut was
:a!Rtost bum on the campaign trail,
•in 'a large diesel bus, to a man wbu .
:kept shouting its name - yet never
;said, "read my lips." That'.s. what
•mide that other guy so untrustwor;thy, the man on the bus explained:
'He'd said "read my lips" when be
about anodtel idea that was
:almost bum, "No new taxes...."
1 The miMie-class tax cut died in
:a speech on Feb.. 17 when rthe man,
:now out of the tius and standing in .
•front of the U.S. Congress, was
:catting for "shared personal sacri' fioe." Suddenly, in'the midst of all
;the wonderful things the governiment could be doing with that
' IDOIICY instead of giving anyone a
.!Ill! cut, the idea of a middle-class
cut began to sound pretty

:talked

»

~y.

.

:- ;-when that money would be
;j~ng to put displaced yc)ung poor
·l)lpple to work, to give a pertna~~ investment tax credit to small
•6Uinesses, 10 fiX the infrasuucture,
:m')JI'OlCCl the environ~nt. 10 pro:vide healtlt care for eveeyonc and
·to reduce the federal deficit enough
~ our children and P.ndthildren
· :wouldn't be stuck w1th our bills,
-how could a person be so petty as
:to want the tax cut the man had
:yelled about when be was on the
-bus? The man's wife, who'd
:Clapped so hard jn the bus whenev:er the man had yelled about it,
'SCOlded that anyone upset over·the
dead tax cut was playing the
~ 'blame game" that had kept

Sarah Overstreet
idea of a middle-class tax cut back
when the man was yelling for it,
blinked and tried to figure out
when they had become .the bad
guys: ''Let's .see. In October, the
man said .it was something we
deserved because during the '80s,
while our salaries were going down
and we were lOsing our beneflts,
Congress increased our taxes,
decreased those on the rich and
used our tax 11\oncy 10 offset what
they lost by letting corporations run
amok. And all the good he says
we're gonna do with that money '""'
wasn't that supposed 10 go alon2
WITH the tax cUt, not instead of it'
What .-ewe missing here?' •
Ju~ging_by the ma.n-on-the.street mtervtews loeaJ. news crews
conducted after President Clinton's
speech, • ·lot of middle-class Americans are doing what they always
do;.gutting it out and not complaining. Some are praising the president as a brave sacred-cow lciller,
and some are saying they'll do
whatever it takes 10 get thC country
J!ack on traclc, that they don't mind
doing their pan as long as evei)'One
else (spelled t-h-e r-i-c-h) does the
same. Few mention the lost tax cut,
intuiting tbat it is no longer politi-

:T.I Oday . •·fl hi•StOry
1

·

·
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Feb. 25, the 56th day of 1993. There are 309 days
:left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
Two hundred.years ago. on Feb. 25, 1793, the department heads of the
:u.s. govei:runent met with President Washington at his home for the firsl
~inet meeting on record.
·
· On this date:
: In 1570, Pope Pius V excommunicated England's Queen Elizabeth I.
·. In 1870, Hiram R. Revels, R-Miss., became the ftrSt black member of
:Jhe U.S. Senate as he was sworn in to serve out the unexpired term of Jef.ferson Davis.
. ·
,
; In 1873, opera singet Enrico Caruso was born in Naples, Italy.
; In 1901, United States Steel Corp. was incorporated by J.P. Morgan.
: In 1913, the 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, giving
(:ongress the power to levy and collect income taxes, was declared in
:effecL
·
,
: In 1943, 50 years ago. during World War II, U.S. troops reoccupied the
Kasserine Pass.
.
: In 1948, Communists seized power in Czechoslovalcia.
.
: In 1956, Soviet leader Nilcita Khrushchev harshly criticized the late
tosef Stalin in a speech before a Communist Pany congress in Moscow.
· In 1964, Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) became world heavy:Weight boxing champion by defeating Sonny Liston in Miami Beach, Fla.
. - - - - - - - - - - - , "'
In 1973, 20 years ago, the
'l'be Daily Sfintinel
Stephen Sondheim musical, "A I:.ittie Night Music " opened at Broadway's Shubert Theater.
lilbed eYery aftemooa, Monday
In 1986 President Ferdinand E.
PriilaJ, 1n eo..t 11t. P .....,.
Marcos
fled the Philippines after
by lbo Obio Volloy NHabinJ
20 yeats of rule in the wake of a
Clllllpaay!Maltime4ia Inc., POJMfGJ,
Oldo ~1611, Pb. 1191-2166. Second cW.
tainted election; Corazon Aquino
~~at Pwwiuuy, Ohio.
aasumed the presidency.
Ten years ago: Pulitzer Prize)I....,., Tho Aooodaloll - · .... tho
winning
playwright Tennessee
01Uo
N...,apoper
·
Netioul
_ _ . . . . .........latin, a...........
Williams
was found dead in his
Bolu, 783 Thlnl . N-1"!
t'ojr lin. Now
'11ft IOOIJ.
New York hotel suite; he was 71.
Five years ago: Paruima's civill&gt;cisnu.lrrER:
~ ......... ...._"'
ian president, Eric Arturo Delvalle,
t'IM DaiiJ __ Sentinel, · 111 Caart St.,
PumatcJ, OHM o&amp;a1ea•.
announced the dismissal of Gen.
'• ', IUIIliCIUPI'IOif L\TD
Man el Anton·o
1 N ·
• , a,c-.w--1&amp;
man~er
of
the
cou~~~: ~fe~~~
O..Woet. ........................................... l .80
Forces. (The next day, Panama's
Po!o u..................................................
Plio Yoor. ..................................- .. .$13.20
National Assembly vote.d to oust
,
IIIIIOLII COPl'
Delvalle.) Roh Tae-woo was inau,
Pille&amp;
Daily......................................... ...:..:15 C..IO
gurated
as president of South
I
Korea.
·
nolciMri...
..m.
One year ago: The U.S.
mil
in
d
"'
l
tiaol Oil o thtoo, lilt or,....
12 · Supreme Court ruled prison guards
_ ....... Cndll will ho'""" corrler
who use unnecessary fon:e against
inmates may be violating the Con•
Jo1o - · - by moll ponalllod io
~L~Mn homt carrier umc. t. . stitution •s ban on cruel and unuaual
punishment even if they innict no
serious injuries. Prestdent Bush
,
won the South Dakota Republican
Woob. ....................:...................~l.N
primary,
Bob Ketrey the Demo·
uua
................................................. 71
cratic primary. Natalie Cole won
•
o...... - . CouoiJ'
.
seven
awards at the 34th annual
II W-............,.............................
~11'............................................... . .80
Grammys, including best album for
p w.............,................................. . .40
"Unforgettable."
·

"',.,.tho

--·
,_...
' ....
........
. _.....,eo....,
"

t: w-................. ............ . ....... .

=.411

•

- -.-.--Area .d eaths-----

The DaUy Sentlnel.:.._,.ge-3.

Derby...

Cootinued from page 1
David G. Kay
Homer A. Cole
Ernest Baker
rac ing pi:O.gram whfch has run
David G. Kay, 87, Letart
Homer A. Cole, 74, Tuppers
Ernest F. Baker\ _?1. Salser ·nationally since 1934 with the
W.Va. , died Tuesday, Feb. 23: Plains, dled Wednesday, Feb. 24, Road, Racine, died wednesday, exception of during World War II.
· 1993, at Pleasant Valley Hospllll.
1993, at Camden-Clark Hosftal in Feb. 24, 1993,atMt. Cannel Medi- Youngsters from throughout the
cal Center, Columbus.
.
United Slates and foreign countries
He was born April 21, 1905 in l"arkersburr. W·Va.
J.
. New Haven, W.Va., son of the late
Born May 3, ·1911!, in
Bomon OcL 12, 1921 in Athens have come to Aleron with the racers
Joseph A. Kay, Sr.• an4 Maggie L. Reedsvil~. be was the son of the County, he was the son'of the late they ·have built and driven to victo. (Fry) Kay.
late Pearl and Ethel Roush Cole.
Wesley and Katie Bak~r. He was IY in their home communities.
, , . He was a laborer, and a mem'-He was a retired farmer who an engineer. He was a member of
Local race programs are span: of Union United Methodist Ch~. raised beef cattle, hogs and horseS. the Morning Star Methodist sored,by a variety of civic clubs,
· and Construction and General An ivid horseman, lie was a past Church, the Athens Elks Lodge se~vice orga~izations. business
• Laborers Union Local tS43, Hunt- president of the Bar-30 horseman's 973, Yellowstone Campers Club of · fll11ls and indlviduals.
associatioo.
·
Anyone wishin~ to sponsor a
. mgton,
.W.va.
.
. Athens, and for several years was a
Survivors include his wife, VirHe owned .and operated a hard- special deputy with the Athens car can contact W111iam or Gary
Snouffer. ·
. ginia M. (Rou~h) Kay of Letan; ware store in Tuppus Pl4ins during County Sheriff's DepartmenL
and 0 brother I ph A Ka 1
the 1940s and was a school board
He
is
survived
by
two
sons
and
.
~ .
' ose
· Y r., mem ber of the Oran ge ·and OJ'tve
of LetarL
daUghters-in-law, Jerry and Betty
Baker, Lancaster, and Ronnie and
Be~.i~I\S his. parentS, Mr. Kay Township School Board.
Continued/rom ptJgt 1
· was preceded in death by two
He later owned the Ql!io.Valley Shellie Baker of Columbus; a son,
' brothers "'--·)and !.VIII Ka and Manufach•nno Ccr.poratioo which Sh11wn Baker of North Carolina; the road for now and work on it
·
'"""""'
y;
was at o-;;-time considered the two daughters and sons-in!iaw, later when weather allowed.
: =~~~nee Cullens and . largest emplOyer in Meiga County. .Linda and Albert Wahlbaker of Elk
DisciiSS ~veyanee fee
.
Paula Thacker, Meigs County
Servtees· will be held -:Jm. Fri- A well-latown aawmill operator, Grove, Calif., and Judy and Rick
.. in 1980 he m·--"
day at FOglesong Fune Home, after .,.,;,;n
·~-..
- - - Josten, of Rapid City, S.D.; three Chamber of Commerce director
grandchildren, Stephanie Baker of and economic !levelopment direcwith .the Rev. Bobby Woods offtei- the MeiSS Reclamation Company.
Columbus,
Matt Baker of Lancast- tor, and atiorney Steven L. Story
: ating. Burial will be in Union
He is survived by his wife of S4
er, and .Kimberly Smith of Florida; tal!&gt;ed to the commission about
. Cemetery.
·
years, Oneita TuUie Cole.
Friends may caJJ at the funeral
Also surviving· are: sons and a brother, Bernard Baker, Colum- funding for economic development.
bus; a brother-in-law. ~cil Vantha.ck~r and Storf asked the
home'~ ThUrsday from 2-4 and 7- ~~~=h~~~a!:~~J'k:':~~ Cleve,
Columbus, and a great- commtsston. to cons1der a con·. 9. ..: '·' ·• ·
· Nanpy cole o f Tuppets Pta1ns; grandson, Christopher Smith, Flori- veyanc~ foe mcrease to ~lp fund
. econom1c development activity.
Moore
. . three dauJbters and IWO sons-in- c1a
Besides his parents be was preA conveyance fee is a tax paid
Gei:ti · ·w Moore.~ Hartford. · law, Vicld and Jack Rocxrof.tup: 5gei ·
""'
.
pera Plains, Nancv and George ceded in death by a bWiher. Blain by those selling property. Currently
, W .Va., ·~ .ed Tues~ay, Feb. 23 Collins of Reedav1llc, and Nita Baker, and a sister, Madeline Van- proper~y sellers pay $1 Qf every
,199~ •.'1\t VA Med1cal Center. Jean Ritchie of T:f!P rs Plains; Cleve
S1,000 m property sold. '
Hunlillgrpo, W.Va.
· -"""'hildren
ven
t
FuDerat
services
will
be
held
at
Roush and Howard said they
· . He' w'a.s born Jan. 17, 1927 ~t ~';en.
se grea • 1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing have
no objections toward raising ·
Letart, W.Va., the son of Goldle
Other surv
· 1·von
Jude· motb
Funeral
Home,
Pomeroy.
The
Rev.
the
conveyance
fee sinoe it would
:Mae Rietmire of MinOnville.
. .
.
· He as retired constru lion er-in-l1w. Bm1cc Tuttle C?f Kenny Baker will officiate and presumably affect only a small pro..
. w a
·
c
Pomeroy; two half-brothers, Otis b~ will be in Gilmore Cemetery. portion of Meigs &lt;;ounty. taxpaye':S.
; worker; _World W~ n u.s. Anny Cole of Cincinnati ~ Floyd Cole Fnends may call at the funer11l However, they .smd an mcreasem
, and Marl~ vetemn and a IDe!"~ of Gallipolis; three half-sisters, home Friday from (ito 9 p.m.
the conveyance .fee should be
,of West S1de Church of Chnst 10 MarJorie Mercer of POrterfield,
plact:d before the voters instead of
being passed by resolution.
,Po;er&lt;;~c1; his Olher Mr Moore Ang1e Miller of R:ic hmond, Va.,
Other busineSs
• · CSI. eds. b mt
so' ·J h S and Enid Cole of Reedsville, 'arid
IS SUCVIV
y WO ns, 0 n . two aunts.
In other business, the commis' Moore of Letart, and Lloyd G.
He was preceded in deadt by an· Bee postpoaed
sion:
·Smith ot Colvert, Mass:; four infant daughttz and four balf-broth- Met in executive sessions with
The
Meigs
County
Spellinf
Bee
daugh~ ~ Bill (Gecqia Kay) m
·
scheduled
to
be
held this evenmg at Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
•: Heinola 110d Mrs. Shannon ~ar- , Semces will be held 1 p.m. Sat- Southern High School has been Auditor Nancy Campbell;
, bllra) ~. both of !~ville, urday at the White Funeral Home postponed until 7 p.m. on Monday.
- Changed next week's meeting
, Fla., Beatrice E. Wllbamsoa of . in Coolville. Burial will follow in The postponement was made from Wednesday to Friday, at
Pomeroy. and Mra. Kevin (Cryslll •L- T
Plains ,_._.., .... _ Ceme
because a heavy snowfall bas been which time they will open bi.ds
Gayle) RoUsh of Letart; five broth, u"' .liJJPUS
'-'u~•
•
scheduled to be opened Wednespredicted for today. ·
·e~. C!Jarles Rietmire and William
may call Friday from 2day.
.
.R!ellll!fC. both of Pomeroy, HC!'fY 4 and 7-9p m at the funeral horne
Present
were
commissioners
Meeting
canceled
· R1etmtre of Letart, Raymond Riel· ·
·
·
. A meeting of the Ohio Associa- Roush and Howard and Clerk of
mire ~f ~ine, and P~ Rietmire Fred Ferrell
tion of Public School Employees Commission and Grants Coordinaof !'1inersvtlle; three Slaters, . Mary
Fred H. Ferrell, 46, of Leona (OAPSE} scheduled for totught has tor Mary Hobstetter.
Adkins of SL Albans, W.Va., Car- Vall
Calif. ell d S da F b
Commission President Robert
. ric Deem of Racine, and Annie
ey, . ·• e .u.n y, ~ · been canceled due to a"heavy
Hartenbach.
·Stanley of ·Huntington; and seven 21, 1993. unexpected tn a liosp1tal snowfall prediction for this area.
. -""~hildre
there •
:- ~ .
.
~in-on~a~
. . He was preceded in ~ by his lie was the son of Kessell and
;wtfe, Beuy.Jo Moore, on A~g. 7, ·Leota Swan Ferrell, former resi. 1987.
&lt;
•
dents ofU-'""Coun"'
' '
• Graveside servioes will be held
.....cr:
. •r· . "• .
·
Ceme ·
He had resided m Califooua for
: 2 p.m. ~unday at Broad Run .
• 16 years where he was a housing
• tery, With L;andon Hope_ officiating. contractor. Besides his parents, be
will be no callmg hours.
·
· ed b h·
:-• There
Arrangements
are under the IS
survlv
Y IS WI·~e. Mary •.•a ·
•d'
·
fF I
p
I daughter, Yuvet~D Femll, of Flcri• 1rcct1on o og esong . un~ra da· twin daughter and son' 1iliza~
! Home.
bedt .net Olrlstopher, at home; a

F Uture•• •

r----Area briefs--~···
Coatlaued l'rom pare 1
line and will be eligible 10 v?te in th.e May 4 primary election.
March has ~n proclmmed Htgh School Voter Registration _.
Month by the OhiO General Assembly.
·

Sto.len car recovered

A car stolen from a Pomeroy man was recoverea Wed~y '
evening in Circleville a Pomeroy Polioe Department spOkeswoman ,
.
,.
, reported this morning.
John Nelson's 1983 Dodge ArieS was reportedly stolen Monday :
from the Kroger's IJillting lot.
·
::
The polioe department is in~estigating the incident, po~ said. · .
No damage to the car was reported.
:...

Man cited after accident

A Po~y man was cited l!fter a two-car accident on Mulberry ~ ~
Avenue m Pomeroy Wednesday around 1' 22 p.m.
. .
H.C. Bricldes, 77, turned onto Mulberry Avenue and attempted ,,
.to ntali:e a U-tum after flnding the road blocked, a spokeswoman ·
from the Pomeroy Police Department said. Bricli:Jes' car then struck. -,
a car driven by Cathy Berlcheimer, Syracuse.
.'
Damage to Brickles' 1979 Buick and Berkheimer·s 198t ,
Chrysler was listed as lighl
·
".
Brickles was cited for improper backing. No injuries were ~·

.., ,,

~M

re..-~

Police are investigating a reported bit-skip accident near the ·_
junction of W. Main Street and Lynn Street Wednesday around 7 .:
p.m.
'·
A car driven by Dennis I . Hoschar, 19, Pomeroy, was parked on ;''
W. Main Street when it was struck by a northbound vehicle which ·
then continued on.
Damage 10 Hoschar's car, owned by Darlene See, Pomeroy, was ·:
listed as lighL
,
·: ·:

m
·
e

is hot and bothered

Washington .in gridlock and prevented all these wonderful thmgs
from happening.
The follcs who had so liked the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Goorae w.

•

•

Thursday, Februa,:Y 25, 1993
'

cally com:Ct .to speak of, titarldng Mitchell have any idea what $200
one as just another greedy pig at · will buy a family lili:e that?
In his new boo!c, "Boiling
the govenunent trough.
'Fhey sincerely wish the presi- Point," economist Kevin Phillips
. dent well, as do I. Bui it was partic- chronicles the decline of middleularly galling tO hear Senate Major- class prosperity and how it defeatity Leader George Mitchell toss off ed the )l'eSident who i~ it and
the proposed energy tax increase swept in Bill Chnton, who
~ $17 a month for a family makpromised, "I am a prodliCl of the
ing $40,000 - as if it were noth- middle class. And when I am your
ing. "It's less than $200 a year," president you will be forgotten no
he said. Actually, it's $204. For a more•.,
couple trying 10 raise a ldd or two
But just as playing on middleon $40,000, the last few years have class frustration got Clinton electbrought a growing seliSe of desper- ed, if he does not keep his promises
ation; perhaps with one of the par- · 10 the middle class, "or if budget·
ents even taking a second job, or pressures make it impossible for
putting things lili:e medical care and him to do so," Phillips wams, "his
car repairs on a high-interest credit failure could unleash demons.''
card. A tax cut seemed like a rest
Read Phillips • lips. The middle
stop, a small plaoe to, catch one's class is reaUy hot.
•
breath before plunging back onto
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndl·
. the interstate and trying to keep one cated wtiter ror Newspaper
car-length ahead of creditors. Does Enterprise AsSoclatloa:

Announcements

1990UNCOLN
TO.WN CAR SIG.
NmTOHfr#ltiiWI4dooii,IIIWI,
Y-1, .W, uo.. PS,.PB,

-wlrtdGn.

-· -'""bumper. gouges.

S9

1992FORD
THUNDERBIRD
2TO CHOOSE FIIOIII2doori,Hdln, 6

crf.,lir, ouu, PS, P8, -window~.

AM.fMilaniOIIpe,radiU,bud!at-.
- - - ·...... cnill.

_.win. dftlg.

When is~ spending
cut a tax increase?
'

ByWALTERR.MEARS ·
AP Spec:lal Correspoadeat
WASHINGTON -Common sense, President Clinton lamented, isn't
too ~ommon in Washington. Nor is plain language, let alone simple arithmeuc.
And a week into the debate over Clinton's economic proposals, none
are making much headway. Clinton, Congress and the plan's critics are a1
odds over the numbers involved and the words used 10 describe them.
The arithmetic depends on which side is doing the calculating, and
who defmes tax increases or spending cuts. In ordinary talk, some of the
items the Clinton plan lists as spending curbs sound much more like taxes.
Even Clinton's decision to use the economic projections put together
by t!Je Con~ional Budget Offioe .ins~ of his own staff ~pled sacdome Republican laughter when be descnbed the figUreS as independent
Some GOP critics consider the CBO too attuned to the Democrats wlio
have run Congress f&lt;r all but six of the 19 years since it was set up.
"Let's at least argue about the same set of numbers," Clinton said.
It hasn't sounded like ,the same set since the president presented his
program to a joint session of Congress a week ago. Anything but, with
conflicting numbers calculations and definitions on the television talk
show circuit and in congressional debate, while Clinton bas been campaigning for the program with·his own statistics, challenging his critics to
do better.
.
In the Oval Offtoe address that prefaced his proposals, Clinton said it
was just common-sense government to invest in people and jobs, impose
~es fairly and wodc toward balanced budgets honestly, without gimmtclcs.
.
.
"I've already learned that here in Washington, common sense isn'ttoo
common," be said
.
One step Clinton advertised in the name of avoiding gintmicks is his
use of CBO projections of economic growth, future rates of unemployment, inflation and other factors that bear on budgets and deficits.
. Those projectioos are vital in gauging how much the government will
nuse and spend. The Democrats argue that Republican administnttions
spent years ll$ing overly oplimistic forecasts produced by their own economic advisers to pretend thai deficits would come down.
·
"The use of rosy scenarios bas eroded trust in,government broadly,
and in econom.ic polic~alcing in particular," the Clinton economic plan
says. The pres1dent satd he is opting for conservative ,projections, beginning at 3 percent growth this year and next, then declining to 2 percent
later in the decade, so thai the deficit curbs in his programJifC more likely
to be underslated than exaggerated.
By using pesaimi~tic projections, Cfinton further minimizes the risk
that flucblations in the economy will underinine his plan, and it the same .
time improves his chances of doing better than expected when it will
count most politiCally, as the 1996 election approaches.
There's abo a numbers dispute over the ratio of tax increases to spending curbs in the $3~ billion, four-year deficit reductioo plan. InitiaUy, the
aim was $2 in cuts for every $1 in higher taxes. That slipped to even
money, and Republicans now say it's actually weighted the other way,
more taxes than cuts.
Clinton insists that spending cuts and revenue increases are about
equal over the next folD' years, and tbat longer term, cuts far exceed tax
boosts. That's counling it the administration way- $246 billion in revenue increases, $247 billion in spending cuts over the next four budget
years. But that is offSet by $109 billion in spending proposals, plus $60
billion in.invesunent tax incentives.
·
·
•
· That makes it $186 billion worth or tax increases, with spending to be
tril'nmed by $138 biiUon.
·
Some RepubJ!cans ~y that's no more than 7~ cents .in spending curbs
. for evc:ry doUar m tax mcn:ases; other GOP cnacs say tt may wind !Ill as
50 cents to t!'e !JCW tax dol!lf.
. .
..
The adminiitration rephos. that the mtx will change, w1th more spending cuts ~ ilf the program than at the OUIJet, when Clipton is pushing
steps to stunulate ~ economy and create jobs;
.
That doesn't satisfy the Republicans, and some Democrats 10 Congreas
say there should be more emphasis on prompt spending cuts. Clinton't
commll!'-se~ retort: ":rell us exactly where you want to cut and I'll
gladly listen,
.

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vke president and eollllll·
nis! For The Assoclat~d Pnss, has reported ob Washlaatoa and
.nattonMI politics For more thaa 30 years.

NOW

WAS.

NOW

$12,888

-·n.

---lltda.llllhlol,CIIiu,
Mlofll -

··

defog.. IIIUIIII·

:'lli,IIV!I

.....

NOW

s16 777
1

. .

"1;riends

:William C. Burns

Rutlan(l woman 'hurt in wreck

.•.

A Rutland woman was injured Wednesday morning when sit&amp;" '
lost control on a curve and overturned, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the ·State Highway Patrol repo~.
·.
.
,
According 10 the
ijaomi C. Findlay, 37, 33164 New Lima
Road, Rutland, was nonhbound on County Road 3 in Rutland ·,
Township when she lost control on a
ran off the right side of. ·
the road, struclc an embankment and overturned.
. ·~
Findlay WI$ cited for failure to control. The vehicle suslaine&lt;f .
heavy, disabling damage and was towed from the scene. She was.·.
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital where she was treated and ::
released.
.'.
A HoclcingpOn woman was cited for in•Jiopet passing following., :
a two-vehicle accident Wednesday afternoon Q11 State Route 7 withT ·:.
in the interseclion of County Road 36 in Chester Township.
"
A~cordlng to the report, Nancy E. Schultz, State Route 124;. ;
Hockingport, was northbound when she attempted to pass a vehicle ."
driven by Vernon C. S~artz. 64, RL 3 Pomeroy..
.:,_;
. Swartz was atlemJII!DJ ~ tum left &lt;!II County Road 36 and was",
struclc by Schultz. No mJunes were reported. Swartz's vehicle sus, -.
tained light damage and Shultz's vehicle sustained moderate dam•.-, .
age. Both vehicles were driven from the scene.
, •~

report,

curve,

~,Keith~~t,of~,a
SiSter, Betty LeO Kouse of Florida;

· rW'"'- C. D.~ ,.~ p

: · ..._,. · ~·.., "-'• ·0 · •!lox four nieces and nephews, and a
: ~·~·
~died~~=· . Dumber of uncles, aunta· ll!d
7

·tal: . 1'1,',~ :... IMf • . . Y. • ' cousins. Local rel~tiv~s .iqclude
""''be ''-'" 1 ·
ro"r aunts, Mar1o Houet Gf
· ......._...........
.,.......,,"!_
,..,... ' p.m. Pri: · Pomeroy
EDadene WaiJOn of'MinMae

: da)',aJ,WIIIjS puneral lklllle, ~tli

ersville,
McPeek Ud Ada Bissellofl..ongBGUom.
.
Funcnl IICivices and burial was
held Wedneaday.in California.

:!he kli¥. B~ ~Y olf'ICII&amp;. mg.· J:turill,.w1ll be. 10 Centenary
, CemeW)'.. Tliere wtll be a gra~, sit!e l1ag presentation by VFW Post

;114'164.

·

..

_,,.• .

·

·

Doris Hensler

: Friends may call at the funCI&amp;I
..Funetal services for Doris L.
, home on Thur$day from 6-9.
·
Hill
Hensler, 68 .of Racine, who
• Pallbearers will be William
died
Tuesday
at the Pinecrest Nurs· Burns, Jr., Mike Burns, Ronny
' Bums, Larry Ratcliff, Ralph Pac- ing Center, Gallipolis, will be held
at 1 p.m. Friday at the Racine Unit• tor, and Shawn Gallick.
ed Methodist Church. The Rev.
:Odessa Cart
Ro$er Grace will officiate and
Odessa lola Roush Cart, 72, bunal will be in the Letart Falls
Bailey-ltull Road, Pomeroy, died Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Thurs~=· 25, 1993, at the Ewing FUDCilll Home today from 2
to4 and 7 to9 p.m.
, Holzer
' Ccnla', Glllipolis.
A homemaker, Mrs. Cart was
: the daughttz of the late Charles L. Kathryn Oliver
and Anna •Rusaell Buck. She was
Fitneral services for ~ L.
born on Sept, 1~. 1921 in Meigs Oliver, 76, of Pomeroy, w1ll be
held Friday at 3 p.in. at the Letart
Count}'.
She was a member of the Hysell Falls Cemeteey Chapel. Elder Bill
·. Run Holiness Church.
Roush will offiCiate and buti8I will
. She is survived by a daugbttz, be. in the Letart Falls Ce111etery.
• Patricia Imboden, Pomeroy; two Fnends may call at the Ewing
sons and dauxhtcn-in-law, Marvin Funeral Home tonight (Thur$day) 6
• •
, L. and Mary Roush and Rogc:r Lee to9 p.m.
• and Kathy kousb, all of Pomeroy;
• three sisters. Pauline Hale of Lan. caster, Freda Mae Roberts of
Sooth·Centnl Oblo
: CrooQ~ and Blaise RaiJc:rty of
Heavy snow warning tonight.
: Fairborn; two brothen, Frederick
Total
storm accumulation of 4-6
· Mick Buck of Zanesville, and
incheS.
Low in the low 20s. Chance
• William Buck of Sun City; Ariz.;
: two stepsons, Oli:ey Cart, Jr., of of snow is near 100 percent~ Fri• Virginia, and Harold ·Cart of St. day, snow is likely with a hiJh 30: Louis, Mo .. and nine grandchil- ~S. Oumce of snow is 60 )lCII'
., CCnL ·
; dren.
.
•
Besides h~r parents, she was
: preceded in. death by her firat hua' band, CIW1os Marvin Rllldh, her
The foll=·n
~lei recently
• second.huiballd, the Rev. Okey 1Qllllied fer
licenses in the
: Cart; two listen, Pram:is Brown, Clillia County
Court
.: and Leah~ Buck, and a brother,
Randy E. Wise and Sally A.
• Russell Buck.
Mill«, both of Gallipolis; Maurice
~ 'Funeral services will be held W. ~and l..aln A. Gray, both
.• Saturl\ay It 3 ~ril. II tho Bwlng of Gallipolis; Keith N. Eblill, Jr., of
Funetal Home, Pon•oy. 1be Rev. Gallipolis and Sandra K. Pearson
: Bob Manley and tbe Rev. Paul of. CrOwn City; Bruce A. f&gt;\&gt;yo and
• Taylor will off'lclare and burial will Doreen Kbumalo, both of Glllipobe in Riverview Cemetery, MJddle- lis and Larry W; Bowcou and
• JJ0!1. Frienlll may call at tbe funelal
S. Wheeler, both of Glllipo•·home Friday 11om 6to 9 p.lll.
•

·.

Others at this price can't com~e! Ours
featureS speed-dialing convenience
PLUS a Compander circuit for sound
so dear it rivals corded phones!
~-

11.15143-51'1

'.

SaWJ 48% 1111
I;

:-,;.,t

Weather

.·

.,

;

I'

.

Marrillge licenses

BArE

:;:.en

,.

-lllftl:l-

IIIWI
I Pf

.

'

Squad 86 Tuppers Plains Is looking
for persons Interested In taking an
class to run with the squad..
.. E.M.T.
Ther:e will be a meeting at ,the
Tuppers Pl•lns squad bay,
1 .~ Tuesday, Marc,h.2, 1993 at 7 P.M.

• IOOUf11y. roH
-tough to

.,.., CIM'AIIESI
With.,_ 81100 locations
nllionwlde, Radio Shack
Is in olec1rnnics

*•

111111-

&gt;t l
\

....

...... ,.,.._.
.....

I

....•

CUT .
411%

bl

---...
---

,., a*

elly. ........ 114.1112

�•

:; ,
"1
•

.
.

.

lip Division II sectional opener.;

Thursday,

25, 1993 !

,

PII(IB

•

'

l!

4

lt•s just a little thing. but

•

·

edges Vinton County 63-60 to advance to finals

'

buckets by Trevor Harrison gave
By DAVE HARRIS
the Marauders a 13-11 lead with
: Sentinel Correspondent
r The thin! time was a charm for 2:24 left in the period . But the
Phil Harrison's Meigs Marauders Vikings scored seven points in a
row and when Allen Keifer hit a
Wednesday evening.
I Tile Marauders lost two heart- bucket with five seconds left in the .
bteakers to the Vinton County period the Vikings held a 17-13
~ngs during the ~ season, advantage.
but the Marauders gamed revenge 1 Meigs came back and took a 18-.lith a 63 -'60 victory in the first 17 lead when John Bentley drilled
l"Qund of the Division II sectional a three-pointer 50 seconds in the
basketball tournament at the Uni- second period, Bentley hit another
:.Sity of Rio Gnmde's Lyne Cen- three-pointer at the 2:30 mark to
open up a 30-26 lead for the
! Vinton County had defeated the Marauders. The Vikings cut the
Marauders last Friday evening ·74- lead to two on a bucket by Nolan
71! when Jason Williams canned Yates with 1:52 left. But Bentley's
t"'o free throws with no time left jumper and four straight free
throws by _,ric Wagner increased
op the clock.
.
1 Meigs (9-12) wiU now advance the Meigs lead to 36-28 at the ~f.
On two different occasions, the
tq the upper-bracket finals Saturday
~t 6:30p.m. at Lyne C~ against MarauderS opened up a nine point
Jim Osborne's Gallia ·kademy lead in the third period. The last •
coming on a Jay Crenleans bucket
~lue Devils (14-6). Advance tick·
ets for that. game are available at with 1:21 left to give Meigs a 50..
41 lead. But the Vikings scored
t.,leigs High School for $3 each.
• Both teams traded baskets to five straight points to cut the lead
s(art the contest. Two straight to 50-46 with 27 seconds left.
rison canned two
.
.o

'

nine seconds left and Meigs headed
into the final period with a 52-46
lead.
The Vikings outscored Meigs
nine to four at the slalt of the period and took a 57-56 lead when
Jason Snider scored in the paint
with 2:53 left. Bentley 'hit a 10
footer to $ive the Marauders a 58·
57 lead With 2:32 to go in the con-.
test.
.
Meigs received a big break
when S~ic!,er missed a wide open
lay-up With 1:50 left on a fast break
and Eric Wagner grabbing the
rebound. Harrison hit two free
throws with 1:35 left to increase
the lead to 60-57. TreVor then came
uP with· a big defeilsive play when
he intercepted a PillS at mid-court ·
and was fouled. The 6-2 senior hit
one of two free throws to make it a
61-57 Meigs lead.
Wagner and Bentley bqtb made
one or two from the line to increase
the Meigs lead to 63·57 with 16
seconds left. But An!ly Booth gav~
the Vikings one last chance wben
he banked in an off balance three· ·
pointer from 25 feet out with eight
seconds left to cut the Meigs lead
to 63-6!). But that was as close as
the Vilcings would get .
Harrison, whb led all scorers as
he poured in 20 points, was joined
in double figures by Bentley and
Wagner with 13 points each.
Meigs hit 22 of 41 from the
floor including three of nine from
long range for 54%. The Marauders
also drilled 16 of 23 from the line
for 70%. Jay Cremeans pulled in
nine of the Marauders 29 rebounds
to go along with six blocked shots
for the 6-5 senior. Harrison added
seven rebounds and Bentley six.
Harrison had three of the Maraud·
ers' six ·ucals and three of his
teams eight assists. Meigs turned
the ball over 14 times and was
c;all~ for 16 ~rsonal fouls.

Jason Snider led the Vikings:
who closed out the season with a
. 12·9 record, with 19 points. Jason
Williams added 12, and Booth had
11. The Viking~ hit 24 of 57 from
the floor, including three of 14
from three-point range for 47%."
Vinton only hit nine of21 from the
line for 43%. The Vikings pulled in
24 rebounds witb...Nolag .Yates

grabbing eight. Vinton was called TOTALS -19-3-1~ ·
for 18 fouls. ·
VINTON COUNTY
-(17-U-11-1440)
MEIGS
Andy
Booth 3·1-2=11, Jason
(l3-1J.l6-'1.143)
.
John Bentley 3-2-1=13, Trevor Williams 2·2·2=12, Olid llaldcrHarrison 7-0..6-20, Jay Cremeans son 1-Q-0,2, Jason Snider 9-04.().()=8, Todd Dil12-0-1=-S. Brad 1..19, 1\llea Kiefer 1-0-2=4, Scou
Anderson 1.()..():2. Eric Wagner 2· Braden 2-0-0=4. NIUl Yall:s 3-01-6=13, ~Drummer ~2=2. 2-8, TOTALS-21-J;;t 151

The Dally Sentinel PeiJI I

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sent~el
l
FebruarY

Sports
~eigs

Thl.ndlly, Februery 25, 1m

• •

r,

;

1

1'

!
•
••

·,

'

I.

.

I

'
''

,

•

...•'

'

,

.

'

.
·Replacement Parts In Every Department!

•

at Rio Graade. TJie Manllders,... 634 to
advuce to Satunby aipt'&amp;IIJI(Ift'-IIQCbtlitle
pme apinst GaDia A• r'my. (l'llolo
Odly ·
Edwards) .

PASSES . TEAMMATE- Melp forward
Trevor Harrlsou (35) pas~e~ 'olr to a teammate
out or the ~mera's eye Ia front or two V1ntoa
County players near the baseline during
Wednesday night's Division D sectiolial opener

.

•

1 Large .S eledion Of

.•

.

The Quality Diffentnce ••• GUARANTEED!

'

..• ••
..
...•
·-•

.•

.

•J

•
•
•
•

'

.•
.•

I

,.

•

•
•·:
,•

!

...

.

;

.

'

9' X t:z'

: PUTS UP LAYUP- Meigs ~ruard Eric Waguer (11) puts up this
layup against an unidentified Vinton County' player durin&amp;
Wednesday night's Divlsioa n Rio Grande sectional opener at the
University or Rio Graade's Lyae Center, where the Marauders won
103-60 to eam tbe right to race Gallia Academy Saturday night for
tre upper-bracket title. (Photo by Cathy Edwards) .
·.

~wens leav~s

troubled past to
t1ecome top Coventry wr~stler
: AKRON, Ohio (AP)- It has
ta;lcen time for Chad Owens to
cl\me around . It al'pears that he
h;(s, at least for the ume being.
· "I ran with the wrong crowd, a
g:ing in Akron," said Owens, one
o~ the top high school wrestlers in
O~io. "I was into it pretty deep. I
got into a lot or fights and we did
seine other things, too. I punched
oljt people just because I was asked
to;do it.
1"l'd $0 right up to somebody
arid hit him and I don't know why
e~cept if I didn't want to, they'd
sa)" I was a wimp or call me chicken. That was something I couldn't
~e."

.

tHe said gang members would
call on him to start fights.
1"1 look back on it now and I
think it was all so stupid. It's the
d~mbest thing I ever did,'' he said.
; Not only was Owens in trouble
on the· stteets, but he caused problcins at school.
:He attended Walsh Jesuit High
Sohool in Stow for two years, but
wb scholastically ineligible as a
fr~shman. He wrestled last season
as;a sophomore and finished third
in ;the Division 1 state tournament
at'135 pounds;.compiling a 41 -4
reCord with 23 pins.
.
:But when,he again had academicfroblems, "I was told it was bet-'
te if I took a year o(f," Owens
said.
•A resident of Coventry, Owens
want out for the wrestling team
thtre at the start of this season.
•But the AAU Nationals champioB at 121 pounds soon drew the ire
of:coach Randy Glover, who suspeflded him for a month and a half
for drinking during the preseason.
H~ already was in hot water with
th~ administration for throwing two
cans of paint out a school window.
:Glover, himself a state .wrestling
champion at Coventry, wondered
w~at made Owens tick.
;Again O)llens was suspended.
this time, he was told it was permanent.
dido 't take the suspension
long to grate on Owens. He called
Glover at home constantly.
•Glover finally agreed to meet
with Owens and his parents, then
asked the Coventry team wbether it
wanted Owens bacJc. Team mcm bers voted no. But Glover over·
rul,:d them anyway. He put Owens
on 24-hour probation. His school
work, atlitude and life at home had
to improve for him to stay on !be
team.

:It

•'

•'

"You mess up in the wrestling
room or the classroom and you're
going to be booted off the team,"
Glover said.
· ·
"So far, it's been working," he
said. "I've seen the change in his
study habits, in the wrestling room
and in his association with his
mom, dad and sister.
·
1 Now Owens is back and is paying attention. He is doing the job in
the classroom ·and won his first 11
matches, 10 by pins, in the 145pound class.

el.9 Each ' Lellrllle

201181

I .!h
3

Dlopooabte Ptuti&lt; Poiat

Troy u .., .

119

Flexible or Still Putty

Kalveo
with hardwood hondles.

,....,o..,.
,.._..
..........
......

•

Clodo
' •plwl waaer

'

T81MI

•

reinforced rim. 5 quart capacity.

•

•

- 279

751471

9" Roller Frame Dr Cover for
applying all types of paint.

A,ll Purpooe Maoking Tape.
3/4" x 60 yds.

3" Roller for areas too small
for larger rollers. Ideal for
touch ups.

'

·,

-·
'. '

•

9"~-,.;..

C..... LightwleilbL
11711

•

••

lI

Trusted Name Brands!

i'

A Pet Stont Within A Stont!

'.

•

•

1
I

I

!•

•
•

I '

•
•''

..

I
I
I

•

10

99

•

I

I

GaL

2 29 ·"-------

~49

Golloa """t11UnDer cooforms to
Ill nvironiDinLII tl dca air re·

Pcm • Roller Set With 9" roller
&amp; 10'! x 15" tray.

quiremmu. 7tmY7010ifl(l-6)

,•

,.

'

••

1543291

Palllt lrulh for UM with all ,
tn&gt;OI! of paints, - ·

.. ..

,~·r

Gal.

'"*

'
I

••
I

,

I

'
••
•

I

I

Pt:

.

.

.

Plutl&lt; Paint Pail with steel

Cage standipgs
(All lames)
Team
W L
P OP
Chesapeake .......20 0 1401 1172
Southern ............17 4 1490 1221
Marietta ............ .15 5 1537 1196
Point Pleasant.. .. IS 5 1277 1210
Gallipolis.......... .l4 6 128.3 1056
Greenfield ........ .12 8 1115 998
Athens .. ............ .12 8 1150 1165
River VaUey ...... l2 8 1385 1344
x-Vinton County II 10 )354 1268
Wheelersburg .... IO 11 1366 1317
Jackson ................9 11 1318 1340
Meigs ..................9 12 1421 1370
x-Fairland ............7 14 1366 1317
Logan .................. 5 15 1076 1350
Portsmouth .......... 5 16 1351 1488
WarrenLocal ..... .3 17 1128 1410
x-Complete'd season
Tuesday's results:
Pleasant 78 Spencer 77 (ot)
(Regular season)
01 Sectional at Ironton
Wheelersburg 67 Coal Grove 36
South Webster 55 Fairland 40
W~dnesday's results:
Division 0 Sectionals
Meigs 63 Vinton County 60.
Portsmouth 68 Ironton 61
IV Sectional
Southern 73 Trimble 53
Frida,ts games:
n Sectionals
Washington CH vs, Greenfield, 7
p.m. at Chillicothe
m Sectlonala
Portsmouth East vs. Wheelers·
burg, 6:30, at Ironton
South Webster vs. Chesapeake,
8:15p.m. at Ironton
Saturday's games: ·
Division II Sectionals
Gallipolis vs . Meigs at Rio
Grande, 6:30p.m. ·
· River Valley vs. Jackson at Rio
Gnmde, 8:15 p.m.
Athens vs. Warren Local, 8:15
p.m. at Logan
.
Portsmouth vs. Portsmouth
West, 8:15 at South Webster

.

..

•

•

..

I
l

472111

527424

,_

~·litrE WhilE RAT
lAlfX CE1UNG 'AINT. One-

coat..,...,.,

Galan. ~ l1tt11 f4

••

'

Service+ W.rranties + Low ·Prlces • Total Value!

Highest Qullllty OUterwe•rl
~very Size Imaginable!

•'NMR

y co.
., ..5U
" 'PllD
"'"
ST. 1
IIIIDDliPDIT. OH.

'

'
•
'

B~rt~

--------·Tolliittii

'
t-IOD-733·
'I

..'

..,'
(

.

'

.. 0 -- ' •' ..-. 000 .... _... -· ~ ··-· ··-·M -0 ...... - · - - --.. . - -· · ·"!.-- ---·~ . .·.. ---·'

..... _......

~~ .......

""'·-

•

�.·
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

· ·. PICII 8 1'he Dally Sentinel

'

·'

. ..
.......

'

~

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-:.7

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.•

•

'.

••

..

'
...
.
..
...
.. ...
...

I

•

'

• • •

"••
.•

.

· . Thursday, February 25, 1993

Thursday, Febru.,Y 25, 1993

•

,.

~

..,

'

•

'••'
..
•
•I
I

1

r.

'.

here.

•
•
•

--•
•

.

••

or here.

• •

here.

• •

..

••
•

.or here.

• •

r

I .

•'.
•'

• •

;'
•~
•
•
I

••

•
•

••

••
•
•.~

.•
..•
~

I

-".

'

'

••
••
•

..
•

'

''

'

•'

-

.

•

•
•

.•••
•

l,

•

-.
•
••

-

Qullitl;i S-.:7.-

•

, ..

~.-

••

,.•

•

.•

•

Superb 100 10W·30,
10W-40 or 5W·30
Motor Oil

~

••
•
•

1 quart. Reg. 1.24 :
Special
.99
Mail in rebate
·.25
Pnce after rebate .74

••

.•

•
'
•

UMIT 16 PER

·

CUSTOMER

c:;!l~te
·
6
9~
4

!

••

••

each

.••

12 per customer! ·

New spout design with
brass filter to screen
out dirt. (013482)
Reg. 8.49

AC Spark Plug
Reg. 1.09

Interior/Exterior
$pray Enamel ·

5 Gallon
Poly Gas Can

Choose from flat or gloss
white or black, r~d, ·
.walnut and rust primer.
11-oz. can. Reg.1 .99

112 Price! .

.

pure! , 50 l.b. ·bag.
(343632)
4. 79

Properly mixed blend of
cement, sand and gravel.
.All you need to do is add
water! 60-lb. bag. Reg. 2.69

each

Sold in 4, 6 and 8 packs!

:

~

or·here...

•

9~.8%

Coarse Concrete Mix

z
e·
6 169
99
or here • • •

.4
' :Z5

· .

Water Softener .
Salt Pellets

Hi-Tensile 1$·112
Gauge Barbed Wire

3·112" X 8'
Pine Fence Post

· · 7/16" Linch Pins

4 point. 80-rod rolls .

or llere..
.

.

-

•

.·.

..~ : .

.•

't.
•

••

•

'

~
I

r

·-~
~=·

~&lt;

M

Bulk Nails

4.5 amps, 2500 rpm, variable · ·choose from common
nails, sinkeF nails or
speed reversing, ball bearing
fence staples.
construction. IIDW101. ·
(005413) Reg. 89~/Lb.
(1.49286) Reg. 69.99

99
·59
i

"Premium"
Wild Birdseed

z

§99

••
.•

Pocket T-Shirt

100% cotton. Assorted
tolors. Size: M·XL.
Reg. 4.49

#STK-145 or #STK-14M.
Reg. 21 .99
·

Mens or Wornens
550 Levi Relaxed
Fit Jeans

''•
·'

Join us for three
days of fun!

,I

Reg. 31.99

299
•

1.

While quantities last
No rainchecksl

· ·

10.00

3.5 hp Briggs &amp; stratton
Flower Seeds
en9ine wfprimer button, ,
Reg . 1.19
20 steel deck, 3 position
'
•, man~:~al height adjurters.
..
. 11040. (947291) Reg. 109.99

B ·0 ·
uy ne
Get One ·.

99
94 FREE

While quantities last.
No raincheckst

Optional mulch kit and
, • · grass catcher available!

.,

G 1

4•

in Jackson

'

12 Pk Chore
Gloves

Helps stimulate .hoof
growth, can be used
on any animal. 32 oz .

GRAND
oPENING!

'

'

The Hoc)fmaker®

50 lbs. Contains 10%
sunflower'seeds. Reg. 7.49

Frid&lt;ly. saturday.
&amp; sunday

· 20" Mower

14-Piece 3/8"
Drive SAE Or
Metric Socket Set

99
67~. 12
{

Country Basted
-.eef Dog Biscuits

•

· ~w:
3/8 Heavy Duty Drill

"

.. "

~

•

-

The wait is over! At last, Quality Farm
&amp; Fleet has opened its doors right here
in Jackson! Come see what makes us
different. We've got just about
everything you need' for around the
house, around the garage, around the
yard or down on the farm! In 30 years
we've learned a lot · about what
customers expect. That's why Quality
Farm &amp; -Fleet is committed to your
100% satisfaction. That means we'll
do whatever .it takes to make it right!
But don't take our word for it. After
just one · visit, you'll discover the
difference in Quality!

...•.

'

--

,{

,

'
''

inllllllllll, ~llll lllilll~llllnl PI

•

,.

-

I

4 lb. bag. (153585)
Reg . 2.99

(825315) Reg. 23.99

'"1ZJ96( J99 1899

~

~-

'

' -

)i

--,.,

..

'

.

~t~tt---

f·~·
.~ '"i ~','.

•

\

I

12·1·2·'12 Fertilizer
50 lbs.Feeds up to 6,000
sq. ft. 50 lb. bag.
(7:71113)

I

'

780 E. Ma.in Street

29
4

286-4669 ·

Prices Effective: 2/24/93 thru 2/28/93
'

'

.,

'

Jackson, OH FE04

\

•

�Pag• B The Dally Sentinel
1993

Jn Division IV sectional cagefest,

In Division IV sectional opener,

·Southern
hands
.
:.Trimble 73-53 loss
.

Miller posts 38-34
win over Eastern

'

.

By SCO'IT WOLFE
Seutlnel Corrapolldut
_ Behind a 31-point founh quarter, Howie Caldwell's Southern
Tamadoes posled !heir eishth win
in a row, claimina a hard-fought
73-53 lriwnph ova Greg Holbert's
Trimble TomcatS Wednesday nilht
iii the Division IV sectional rournadlent at Alexander High School
ne.r Albany.
Tickets for Tuesday's championship pme ·qainst Miller - the
Filcons beat Eastern 38-34
WedDCSday niJhl in the p!W'ding
Cl!l'e (see ;!'age 9) - will be on
sale at Southern High School
tJimulh Tuesday.
: · Afthough the score indicated
another Tornado runaway,
\llednesday 's finale .was much
~ than the final tally; Just fa.
~~ ~. Soulhcnl had drilled
Tnmble 83-39 on the Cats' own

COurt.

'

Last ni&amp;ht's billie 1llOk on • dif.
ferent comple.xian. This game mir·
rored the tePI)lO of the firSt pme as
Trimble IOQ selected a delibcrltc
'*::;.the fnt quarter. Trimble COil·
trolled the ·ttmpO, while Southern
suffered through a friaid frame
from both the floor anil the foul
!inC. Trimble gun Tom Hardy put
his club on top 2-0 at the 5:01 mart
after driving the lane:· Robert
Reiber lied the acore· for S011lhcnl,
but Adam Irwin !lit a pair of free
throws to pvc Trimble a 4-2 lead
II the 3:09 lllllk. Reiber hit the sei;.
ond of a two shot foul as 'a Sli'llgalin4 Southetn limped to a 4-3
defiCIL

Hardy pvc Trimble a 6-3 lead,

but Reiber retaliated, then after
going for the last shot, Marcus
Allen drilled a three-point bank -in
at the buzzer to give SHS an 8-6
advantage.
Russell Singleton, Allen (threepointer) and Ryan Williams all hit
goals 10 give SHS a 15-61ead 81 the
6:07 mut, prompting a l'omcat

·.

tirneouL

Southern gained sonie steam in
the frame, but cOuld not shatli the
determined Tomcats. All five
starters did a nice job in the frame,
which ended just lite the fust go..
tound, on a three pointer at the
buzzcl' by Allen. Soulhcnl led 29·
17. .
,· _.

TorNidc!el straaJe
Southern sputtered out of
rythym in the third !'OQlld, while '· ·
Kiute and Irwin allowed 'OfS 10
keep pace. With ·4:30 left; Kittle
began a Trimble seven-point'run
that cut the sccxe to 34-29. SinglePLAYS KEEP·AWAY ...-SOuthern
Ryu Wim~s (11)
ton also picked up his third foul
JUMPER - An unldeotllled Souther!!
(left) takM jump
plays teep-away from Trlmble
Kittle while ,s t811•
shot
llid was sJCielined for the n:st of the
In
front
of
Trimble's
Reuben
Kittle
and
two
of his teammatea
ning 'he floor for an Open teammate
Wednesday nl1hl's
frame.
durioR
Wednesday
nJibt's
P,lvlslon
IV
sectloaal
toarnlllileal
game
Division IV lliCilon!ll lo!!~ent game at
Hl&amp;b School,
Jeremy Dill came in to pick up a
at
Albany,
which
the
Tornadoes
won
73-53
to
move
on
to
next
where the Tornadoes WOii 73-53 to move oa to next week's champ!·
week's
title
game
against
the
MIUcr
Falcoas.
chuge, then Reiber hit tbree
onsblp-game agaiDst MIUcr.
straiaht buckets from the painL Kit·
'
'
tic and Irwin continued~ chm'ge
instructions. Caldwell drilled home
Trimble
scored
its
first
goal
of
,
Allen
'and
Singleton,
capped
by
points,
:.vhile
Irwin had 12.
as Kiule gained confidence, hillina
his ~oint well as SOuthern, as if the frame· at the 4:23 marie. The good bench play from Mason Fis!tSouthern
hit
18-33 for 55 per- ,
both inside l!ld OUL Michael Evans gaining aecond wind, whirled off a next two minutes saw Reuben Kit·
er, Andy Grucser and Trenton Cle- cent, hit4-12 threes and was 25-35 .
stole a pus and drove in the lay-up
string of 11 unanswered points. tie go on a mission. Tho senior land accounted for the scoring. ·
at the line. Trimble hitl4-3S and S- ·
' to ~ve SHS a 42-33 lead, but an , Evans had six in the stretch, and gilard' reeled off 10 points to lead
The
scoring
i•
19lu the tine.
IrWin free throw and Kittle steal Singleton had four.
·
Trimble
to
a
62-50
score.
Seconds
Evans
led
Southern
with
20'
Southern had 33 rebounds, led .
and dri\le in, Cllt the lii:Oie to 42-36
During the streak, Southern's after his last shot, Kittle fOIJied liut pointS as four Tornadoes hit double by Singleton's 10 and Rieber's six;
at the bazui.
defense was the main spark. The and Southern outseored Trimble · figures. Reiber had 17, Allen had whi)e .c laiminf five steals ·
Trimble was
primed 81
five forced several Trim- 11·-3 going down the streiCh.
14 and Singleton had 10.
(Williams three), 4 lllmOVcrs, five
this point as the
tornadoes Tornado
ble turnovers and just as many
Good
foul
shooting
by
Evans,
.
Kittle
led
all
scorers
with
25
assists
and nine fouls.
limped to the bench fer last quartet fOJted shots.
Trimble had 26 rebounds led by
Kiute and Irwin with seven and six
Commentary
each. The losers had six stcsls, 10
turnovers and 24 fouls.
Southern advances to Tuesday's
'
finals
with Miller at Alexander
• TCII'CDG a\ San Jo.. 10:40 p.m.
DoPau1,79, T.... Ouiotian 68
E. Midtiaan S9, htiuni, Ohio Sl
High School.

caefl-

a

:".:£'

.~

'

In ·tbeNBA ...

A--

FrldaJ'II*IIIes

T-

W' L

NewYadt ..............36 I~
New,_, ·--·-..30 2!
Ollaaolo ..
2!

-·----..25
B - . ..... - - -·.27

r.t.

.566

6.5

Z1

.519

t
· 9

.m

In the MAC
. ••.
c.or.
TWLPcL

16.5

1.5
1.5

10
12
13
16

Kt~~.t 76,

N.Y.

11.5
20J

C.Oinl' Qioaao. .................36 17 .679
CUNILAND .......35 It .1141
0 , . ._ ,,, __..27 23 .S40
.... .....- .....26 71 .491
- --·- - -......14 29 .453
-.... ..................22 29 .431
Mil-.............20 33 .m

Iowa St.I9,Fbicla Atl•ntk46

V~DC~a~,... as.~ l:«t p.m.
~a1Colpl1,9:40p.m ,

.OWl

.................. IP :12
'I'd' 1 ';la ~-··-·· 11 33 . .353
w +' , , __.. 16 r1 .302

:

Mcmtnlllll Bulraio.

Gl

.!121 .

low. 5&amp;,l&gt;'ean SL Jl

-,:40 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.
.

17 6
14 9
1211
10 II

116 .304
716 .304

MIJWI......_
,
W L r.t.
16 •.610

----·.
.34
··-----11

TSoo
lilolo

:10
............... - . ....11 . 21
... ,............. ..11 31
12
= ···- ·----12 37

-

""

--

• Dolloo .............. - •• .4 46

- ................. ..39 10
• ................. ~ .......~:~ 11

•-

................31

' L.A. .................27
LA. c ; - l......27
O.W..IIiuo ....- ..l4

'0---·:.11

Saca

.

••

---a-.

lta!I76,Abm~

Obio G6. c-. , l!pn s t
W. M;dUpo 69.

.Ga

2.5

Southwest

Ohio high school
boys' basketball scores
•
Tounameat o&lt;tlon

.&gt;1414, 14
.245 21.5
.'796

.m

II .631
2! .54G
Zl .519
30 .444
'36 .321

/Won II Cent. ' '
Ball SL a1Kan1
Miaoi.a.loa!Tolodo

30

s.s

I
12.5
13.5
17.5

34

"'
~'

_,_

W. Mlchipo 69,1lcwlinl 0..... 61

Clonland Sl. 7~ lluftilo 119
u , __ 99. M.IJoae 91

.

•

S4 lklllin St. Jdla'a 65, l£nao J~on

a.. c""'..,. Do&amp;90. Cin.lllllmol69

franklin Pumac:e Oreal 61. srmm•
Vall45
Mill&lt;o 31, RoednilJc l!ulem
34
Lyn....,_- Clay 72. ._._,_ Faidiold

ll

-..,....

Middle\owa Fenwick 65, Yellow
41

oa.boin II,_......, 71

Dame$2.

Uuh · - ·al9:30'1"'·
a..EVELAND
1.. . Lak.... 10:30
p.m.
LA. Cllw- •• Ooldan Slala, 10:30
pm.
s.ulea&amp;
10:30 p.m.

S.U•••IO.

:;

...._Ill_
........... 31 19 6 12 216 2jM
.. ~O" M" '"'"'' 34 11 9 ~ 253 211
· - ....... ....... 32 22 6 70 :100 212
86lo...- ........ ·II 22 1 69 264 211
llatl!ool ............ 16 o40 4 16 19! 271
O..wa ............. , 1 .52 4 11 147 3«Z

.

s

-DI-

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
. .
T-

I

· aa..,. ...........
. Dooroh ..............
T-to .............

w

L .T Pia. OPQA
34 :10 1 76 216 111
:13 22 ' 7! 276 Zll
30 22 9 69 211 112
30 21 I 61 213 206
:16 29 I 60 210 2:15
l9 39 4 01162:13'

..,..._

-

.........

SL Louil .. ........

TampaBoy .......
VanoGP• ........

~ 1~

I 76 2$1193
71 345 20P
.. Loo Aaplaa ...... 71 27 7 61 :M4 :NO
Ca~FJ

............ : 32 21 '

WlaalpaJ .......... 71 21 6 60 2311233
!Wn
......... 22 33 I !2 112 :141
S•J-........... I 52 2 II 167 309

Weda ...ay'•acort~

P.0 .....,1ph'a S,Hadford2

.._4

-~0,-7

v - s . N.Y.

~61 , BcmeUnioo56

M..... llidrclalo4S, New ~t 16
Now lbt.Cii 73, Inn.on SL I
6S

Rt~~~lar«lllln o&lt;llon

Akron Jloban IS. c.,enuy II
Bowlina_Orocn 61, Mawnoo 47
CUIIG1!1C.dl.l2, Waterloo 34

basketball scores

Findla; 72. Col.l!ul7o. err

Toalldlt's c-•

Minncraota at~ 7:~ p.m.
PUtt~ I t 0ttaw1, 7:«)p.m.
N.Y. blandon
7:-40,J;"'·

••Qooboc.
Hew-..,.11Jih d ':"•,7:

p.m.
(»apotT-Ity, 7&gt;10p.m.
Loo Aaplaa "'SI.IAoil, 1&gt;40 P"'·

CJ-.11.--62
KCI\l R001Mt 66, Cuyabot;a Fa11161
Kaurina Ab.er Sl , Conta"\'ille 49

Bow~0.....91 , W . MJclUun64
c-. · · an S5 , Ohio ~

64
OIUo Sl 73, Penn SL 71

u.

Tournomeat.Mtlon
NAJA DlllrldwtSiY, I
Cha-lp
Cc:nlnl St. 67, Shawnee.Sl 44
North Caul Cottrtnnc:e:
Qual1erllnlk

All.,.,.,y6ll.\V..,..,SO

LoipolelfO. Ollovillc 56
... 66, Alblabula IS
MeolnalliJIIIIInd 66; M&lt;dma Buctq.
44
•
•
Mnor41, Shak•Hll.-47,0!
Mentar Lakt Cat.h. 6S. Oufield Hu.

Trinit 60

~ Cllonn, w.v•.•7. 1!dioon s. 42

Eat

Bucknell II~ t.o,ola,Md. IS
~ SL 76,Bal!alo119

C~69.a.c.CaUele64

Teonpla6!.~SI.SI

wood 40
,
WomnMJic 74,Clc. Hoy 7Z
w.w..- 79, Ohio o..r

.a

'

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores
Toumom•nt a&amp;:tlon

Ill .talon I
AJuwa C.t.-Hower 34, Akron P'lfO.

..... 22

W• Y!tpU U, YUJitUa Teeb10

South

Auburn n, M
ippi 7]
CJon.m76, Wob-74
Couul ~ 79, Wlnlllroo64
Coppin 11.13, II. Carollaa .U.T 11
I

l)oU 91,l'lcli&lt;la SL 75
E. T-SI.II7, 0nl-91
l!aa Camlina 74, William It Muy l 3
.. Saudi Catolloa 11
-Alii
lll,l!dword w..... 107
Onmblinl SL 12. T ....... '19
1-MacU.n90,.......,_,U, 67
MarylaM 11.11. ~.... 71
llld!ai4N 61, Ooqa Muon II
Soulh ........... I 01, Lutw 10
Soulhom U. 171. C..L fladda 100
Tenneaet 71, JC.dacky 77
Vandodtlh 17, Ooonia 13, err
W. Cwlina 12. N.~·Aihovillc 69

11

Mldwoat

BaliSI.71, Tclado~ ..

McXinlol!',;

Sebrina
Mool..ood II
Shenandoah ~ ,
·er 4'5
""""" Howllncl60, AahubulJ Edac-

Fcodhan69.Rico67
1.... 96, Siena 90

l..diiJhi!,W...,.70
N..... n, c..!liiU 62

.

......m. Han.y ..........boll Jlu.

bod I

Dcnilon 78 , Cue Watcm 63

National college
basketball scores

Portlmou\h Clay 6!5, Bea'Yer utcrn

w....,.t..ohomiO.-OUihN-

Ohio women's college

Kart 109.

·

Jllc:inc Soinbem 73, Trimble 53
WIYJ*Yillo 71, X.U. Willmt 42

lobo Camtll75, C.pUal 71
Ohio Northan $7, laldwin· WaDa;e

Wednesday's action

,
'
..

w...,._ . ..

s .

o-..o conrtnftce

54

-·

Mud; .... .59, WhiuiOU. 50

S!

Now Yook ot DoaoO, I p.m.
-ra, I p.m.

• "'· CiA. Looldand

S6 Cia. Landnwlt

Ji'd'hq~~

P-Dhlaloio
W L TPII. GPGA
p ...,,_, 31 11 S II 252 199
32 22 6 70 210 214
'New hiler ....... 29 2!
63 211 201
N. Y.~ .... 27 2! 9 61:100230
N.Y. ... 27 27 6 60 ::Ill 217
Pdh' ':t'···- · 21 29 It !3 2332M

••
.•

au. Dcmlai&lt;an 71, llyb 61
Ntrtli Co.t c..rer•n

OwloMat~. 7:10p.m•

T• 1'111 7

•

61

Mount V.m:~a N. . . . as. Lab Erie

DlvWonJV
Anlmia 19, New10r1 51

-·--7:30p.m.

WALES CONFERENCE

• •

Vcaollloa 66, Mlhat·llaioa 31

A~~opyt-::!:'::'!....n

In theNHL...

•

11-.m. 61 , Sorina. C.lhollc 60
a.. CAP!! 69, On. no.. Pm l7
Eu&amp;cm Brown 59, Cln. Indian. Hill46

Frlday'l&amp;aiaea
-·~!~ 7:30,.111.
Mil•·--·~ 7:30p.m.
Odaodoot w.......... 7:30p.m.

O.U. • J 7

..•

~

S . - o t MYml, 7:30 P"'·

••

-

NAJA Dill. J:a Dl.,. D

T011lldlt'1-

•

•

Tounamont O&lt;tloa

CU... ot oilando. f :IO p.m.

......

Sheridan •2. New ~on 36

StcubatviJle_ 63, W'Ulledville 61

au. 66, c.... Michl... !I

n

'

lndiarl Vall 66, SL Cllimille46
MciJI 63, Vmton Co. 60
Ponim.outh 68, Ironton 61
S, Poinc 15, M:Derm01t NW 76

lta!l76, ..._ 7!

·77

S...A.moat0•"1l7:30p.m.
-•Haaotao,l: pm.

4l

Dl•lllon D

Mid·~ C•Ftrenet
llaiiSL 71,Tclado64
B.llidUpl SP. MiatU. Obia l5 .

NewYook91,Mil-90
o-.111. DoDoo
O.W.. - I :Z0. llllliiOI
LA. . . - liM, I
99

•-·
..

·

llppoi AoUn.... 57,l'nni&lt;Un H~.
. Xcnil 60, TIOJ !li:J

23

•

~~t.&lt;a:r.!Peny

Cla.l!ui53, ............ Ri...,;do34
Garfield

....... 29

H~.

Trinity 93, Cle. John

kin~ll)' Jtiver Map.~CII 11, Lorala

Sol.. " · - lila. !2
.
W..tab7S,Lonln - . . 4 6
w..... 6!, c - Tlatboo 12 .

DhldooD

Ott.·--

BWoy!I,IW&gt;nlnLab.... 41
B....... Vall 7 2 . - 5 3

6!,a-·T•,. SO
Cla.YASJ911 ~17
.00
Ko-51,1
46,ctr

-.....s6,sc

NMva 61, Triny 54
Moo.- !loW 46, Akn&gt;n Duchtel44
II.
70,0nnp16
Polllld ~ y.,... Mooney !7

R.,.....

-61,Y-..-41

Tallmadp 54, W......W. lito, 31

'··:'""-----------~-------'

· The mayor had caned reporters
10 City IWlto watch him ~lup off a
load of sports equipment 1Q Dallas
to pay off a wager he'd lost.when
the Cowboys beat the Eagles in the
NFC playoffs. The sum of Rendell's lobbying effon was a brief
conversation and a 'thank-you note
dropped in die mail. ·
One week ago, Eagles owner
Norman Braman reacted this way
in an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer:
"I know Ed Rendell is a big
Eagles fan and 'I appreciate his
interest," he said. "But I would
like to challenge .him to produce
five years of the quality of life in
Philadelphia as we have done for
the quality of football in Philadelphia.
.
"Let Ed Rendell match my
record, get business back in
Philadelphia and act a tax base. 1
read where rapes are up. I read hoW ·
dangerous the streets ue. I know
that Veterans Stadium is safer on
the· day of an EaJies game' than.
most of Philadelplua. I remember,"
Braman said, "when Philadelphia
was a great city." ·
· .
Braman's concern for the city
was admirable, but it must have
struck many residents ~ curious.
Especially since he spends most of
his time away from the occasional
game at Vet Stadium at homes in
Miami and the south of France. So
let's assume that-lbmething more
was behind that intemperate, wOeful response. A!ld it just might be
this:
Because Renie White is a
plaintiff in the lawsuit that hastened the beginning of real free
agency in pro footbaU, he is one of
a handful of players who can actu·
ally move with0111 restriction to any
team that mates him an offer. And
White has already made clear that
his past differences with Braman
mate it unlitely that he will stay in
Philadelphia.
.
Given the way the situation is
likely to play itself out, Braman,
undersl8ndably, does not want to
be portrayed as a cheapllkate. But
even less desirable,' in Braman's
view anyway, would be for him 10
be portrayed as a fool. A!ld that he
is not.
Lilce everyone else engaged in
the business end of sports today,
Braman knows that llipealing to an

--'--

SOUTHERN
(8-21-13-31:73)
athlete's sense qf loyalty - · with·
Mark Allen 0-3-5 .. 14, Ryan
out an armored car full of money
parked at the curb - is a lot like Willaims 2-0-~. Michael Evans '
spilling into the wind. You just 4-1 ~9=20, A!ldy Gruescr 1-().0..2, ·
Trenton Cleland t-0-0.2, Roben
don't do it.
Experience tells us that almost Reiber 1.()..0=2, RDSsell SingletOn
every contract negotiation that 4-P-2=10, Mason Fisher 1-0-0.2. ·
.
begins these days with the ballplay- TOTALS -184·25=73 .
er saying how much he'd like to
TRIMBLE
stay in that town ends with the
(6-11-19·11=53)
local hero saying how much !le
Chad Hoot 0-1-0.,3, Reuben .
likes this new town. Sometimes
they cry when somebody asks Kill1e 7-3-2=25, Justin Day 1-0· ,
about the last stop, sometimes they 2=4, Tom , Hardy 2-1-0..7, Chris •
don't. The only constant seems to Craig 1-0·0=2, Adam Irwin 4-0- ,
be the armored car.
4:il2. TOTALS - 15·5-8=53

S,.AR,.ING MARCH lat
MILLIE'S WILL II OPEl
FOR DillER!

Dhlalonm .

Mllaolf02,_,.

•

s-.Nanh76.Pioua61

Wednllday'•a&lt;tlon

W-105, ...... 101

•

Newut71, Col. Wea54' •

Ohio men's college
basketball scores

........ 132,NI-1177
s-~~n."

ilik

W. !.lil:lllplail!. Widtiaan

WICIDMdaJ'aiCOI'II

'

OMalonl
Qn. Modlcr6S Cin. llulll•46
Cia. WCil\cm
56, C"in. Ande:sm.

a.lo•llowliaaa-.

-101, Newf- II

•

so

65,

Satunla~mos'

4

.1110

'

ByJIMUTKE
AP Sports Writer
Some 30 yeus ago, the story
goes, lawmakers in 'Brazil became
so frantic at the thought of foreign
clubs stealing soccer great Pete that
. they rushed a bill through the legislature declaring him a national trea·
sure.
.
II seeme!l slightly loony back
then, a hopelessly impetuous way
10 guarantee an athlete's loyalty in
that time before lawyers and agents
ran the world. II says something
about the times we live in that such
gestures don't strilte liS as quite so
funny or so desperate any more.
Two weeks ago, with free agen·
cy at last visible on the NFL hori·
wn, Philadelphia Mayor Ed Rendell took a few moments after a
news conference 10 mate a personal plea to Pro Bowl defens1ve end
Reggie White to re-sign with the
Eagles.

Oklaham1 St. 71, Miuouri 73, OT

llaiiSI. 71, Tclado 64

B . - " · -.au.ss

,..,.

w:

Wedlltlday'l KOHl

WESTERN CONFERENCE

·

79,Nonhwe.tem60

N. Iowa S4,.SW MiNowi St. 53
NE Dlin.U 90, Olicaao SL 70
Nobruk.o 76, Colotado 67
Ohio 66, CtnL Michipn II ,
SEMiUouri69,T"""·Mulin68
MJclUaan 69, BowUn 0..... 6S
Wla.-Milw•ukcc 66, S. ~tab 56
WYcon&amp;in &amp;5, Micltiaan St. 62

.139
.609

.l22
.41S
11 IS .423
9 14 .391
9 14 ,391

Akron 75

Minnef~

OwnH
W L Pd.
21 6 .m

Ball Sl. ......... ... 12 I .100
Miomi ........... .,.l2 3 .100
w. Midt. ....., ...11 4 ,733
a.;. ..............,..., 6 .600
Tolodo .......... ., ...l 7 .!Ill
B.-.. ............6 9 BOSU.-., ......,...6 9 MlO
~tea~ SL ...... ., .....6 P MlO
c. Midt. ............112 .200
Alual ...............211 .Ill

Money seems to be only
constant with athletes

NEW HOURS:
MON.DAY'THRU FRIDAY 6:00 A.M.-7:00P.M.
SATURDAY and SUNDAY 6:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.

MILLIE'S·
39239 BRADBURY ROAD
992-7713

By SCOTT WOLFE
. crawl or in some cases slower, as·
Sentinel Correspondent
EHS point guard Pnt Newland
The Miller Falcons (1 2-9) would simply hold the'ball until a
a~vanced 10 Jhe boys' Division N
Miller defender would succumb
sectional championship game, due to lack of patience.
scheduled for Tuesday, March 2, . Eastern's initial possession feaby beating Eastern (3· 17) Wednes· tured 'the three-man weave. Eastern
day nig&amp;t at Alex ander High p~t the first points on the board
School near Albany.
when Roben Reed scored a shon
Ea&amp;les play slow down game
jumper from the lane at the 5:23
Looting to be in the game when marie. Eddie Paige .of Miller tied it
the final round began, Greg Ull- : shortly thereafter. One minute later,
man's El!stern Eagles slowed down Eastern took a 3-2 lead when Jerethe pace, but came out on the short my Cline hit the second of a twoClld of of a 38-34 final in the open- shot foul.
ing game last nighL
·
Willie Peyton gave Miller a 4-3
Ullman said, "We tatted with lead, then Chad Savoy regained the
the kids about our strategy .all week lead for EHS 81 5-4. Bruce Laming ·
long and decided if we .were to quickly retaliated to give Miller a
have a chance to win, we had to be 6-5 upper hand, then Eastern
in the game at the start of the fourth · scored the last six points Qf the
quarter. Miller beat us by 20 or frame on buckeiS by Reed, Bissell
more both times in the regular sea- and Newtapd. Eastern led 11-6 at
son." -·
the b~J¥.Cr.
"Our main goal was to have a
At the 2:18 mark in the second .
chance til win it when we went into frame, Eastern led I 6·10. Doing
the fourth quarter.:.and we did. the job it had intended to do, EastThey started a 6-7,6-4 and 6-3, em's slowdown game had fruslrat·
while we staned a 6-2, S-11 and 5- ed the Falcons and put the Eagles
9. They beat liS inside the last two in control. Eastern's strategy had
times and we were down by 20 ,worl!:ed to this point, and Miller
points before the last quarter began was {'laying right into the Eagles'
the last time we played. Heighth handS.
was their advantage, and our
Turnovers cost Eastern
advantage was our quickness. We
During the last two minuteiiJPf
thought we'd use our quicl!:ness, the frame, Eastern became inpapull them out on defense and get tient and forced three straight bad
.the easy shots. For no longer than passes. two of which Miller turned
we'd practiced this, our kids did a 1010 scores. Newland hit two free
good.)Ob."
throws to give Eastern an 18-14
"We were down only two and lead at the 1:16 mark. ·
had the ball with ten seconds left. , Again Eastern became impatient
' Jeremy (Cline) had the ball and Miller turned last minute
stripped away or we've got a turnovers into an 18-18 tie al the
chance to win it at the end. We did hslf. During the frame, Miller con·
what we had to, to put ourselves in verted four of five Eastern miscues
position to win." ·
, into scores.
A "snail's pace" would not have
Turnovers again plagued East·
accurately deScribed the delibemte em in the third quarter as Miller
tempo that Eastern set throughout took advantage by scoring the first
the game. Without the "lack of four points of the half. the score
action" rules utilzed a couple of now 22-18. Overall, Miller
years ago, the pace slowed to a outscored Eastern 10-2 in the frame

- By The Associated Press
For all the foul shots Allan
flouston has made for Tennessee,
he missed the biggest one he' s
· taken this season.
On purpose.
Houston's deliberate miss
turned into ti three-point play by
Corey Allen with 1.5 seconds left,
Jifli!i&amp;'Teunessee over No. 2 Kentucty 78-77 Wednesday nighl
A day after top-ranked Indiana
JosttoOhioStatcmovertime, Ken. lucky (20-3, 10-3 Southeastern
Conference) missed a chance to
move up. The visiting Wildcats led
70-64 with 3:01 left, and still were ·
ahead 77-74 when Houston went to
the foul line with 4.9 seconds lel't
''The hardest thing is to walt up
there I!Jre Allan did and say, 'OK,
I'm gomg to mate the fust one and
miss the second one,"' Volunteers
coach Wade HoUston said.
That's how Allan Houston, an
88 percent foul shooter, did it.
After hilling the tint 10 niate it 7775, he missed.

'

SPRING VAlLEY CINEMA -,
446 4524

' ' :

Ohio Northern, Otterbein winners
in OAC tourney; OU victorious
•

In Black and White

•
•

•

..

Duke e~d~ the Seminoles'· eight- including 5 of 9 from three-point Wake ForesL
off-center,' h~ S&amp;ld. .
game wm~mg streak.. .
range. Cleveland Jackson led the
No. 181owa 58, Penn St. 38
. Tennessee s Jermame Brown
AntoniO L~n~. p1ckmg .up !he host Bulldogs with 18 poiniS.
The pace was slower but the
upped the ball off the backboard slack for an IRJ'!red Graf!l Hill,
Clemson 76
result was the same as Iowa beat
and Allen ~bounded. Allen scored scored a car~·hlgh 17 pomts f~r
No. l2 Wake Foresl74
the Nittany Lions for the second
on a ~art Jumper and .was fouled, the Blue Devils (21-5, 9-5 Atlanbc
Chris Whitney starred at both time in 48 hours.
·
and hts free throw won II. .
Coast Conference~. Bob Sura had ends of the court, scoring 20 points
Val Barnes, who scored a
• Houston scored 27 pomts and 29 pmnts for Flonda State (21-7, and stealing the ball from R.odney career-high 33 points in a 74-58 .
Allen had 24 for Tennessee (12·13, 11-3).
.
.
Rogers in the final seconds as . victory at Penn State on Monday,
4-9). Ja~al Mas~burn led . Ke~No•.s Vanderbllt87, Georgw 83
Clemson won at ho.ne.
had 11 for the Haw keyes. Iowa
tucky wuh 26 pmnts andTrav1s
B1ll&gt;: , McCaf,frey SC&lt;!re~ a
Rogers, the ACC's leading scor- (18-6, 7-~ Big Ten) won its fifth in,
Ford had 22.
care_er-h1gh 35 pom!S, and hiS Clghl er, had 27 points. He was setting up a row and sent the Nittany Lions
In other game~. No.9 Duke stnughl foul shots m the l::tst 1:46 frn; a three-pointer wben Whim,ey . (6·17, t-13) to their lith straight
trounced No.6 ~onda State 98·7~ •. of ov~rume led Vanderbilt over snipped the ball with 3.8 seconds toss.
.
.
No. 8 _Vander~dt got past Ge:org1a Georgia.
left.
The victory made Tom Davis
87-83m overume, Clemson tnpPed
The Commodores (22-4, 11-2
Clemson (13-10, 3-10 Atlantic the second-winningest coach in
No. 12 Wake Forest 76-74 and No. Soulheast.ern Conference) have Coast Conference) beat a ranked Iowa history. He's ·in his seventh
18 Iowa beat Penn State 58-38.
won f1.ve m a row and 11 of 12. team for the first time in 10 nies year at Iowa City and has 147 wins,
~o. 9 Duke 98
Georg1a ~11~ 12, 5·8) forced the this season. Wate Forest (17-6, 8- 21 behind Lute Olsen. Penn State
No. 6 Florida St. 75
extra penod on Dathon Brown's 5) lost iiS second in a row.
was held to its lowest point total
Bobby Hurley, ~losing in on the ~-point ~et with six seconds
Sharone Wright had 17 points since a 76-36 loss to Temple on
NCAA career assist record, set a left m regulauon.
· and 15 rebounds' Trelonnie Owens Jan. 23, 1986.
school mark with 16 assists and
McCaffrey made 11 of .J6 shots, had 15 points and 15 rebounds for ·
Dulce downed Florida State.
·
Hurley has ~.OJ? assists, 20
shon of the all·time fecord held by
Chris Corchiani ot North Carolina
State. Hurley also had 16 points as

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT·

point shot and hit all three free
throws 10 tighten .the score at 3429.
.
Wes Arbaugh drove the Jane for
an Eastern score to cut the lead 10
three (34-31). EHS fouled and
Merctle hit the second of a two
shot foul with 53 seconds left.
Eastern made a costly miscue on its
next possession and again had to
foul. Duffy hit the second of a two
shot foul,the score now 36-31.
. Clir)e hit a three pointer with 18
seconds left to give EHS new hope,
the score now 36-34. Miller turned
the ball over and EHS had another
chance, but Miller rough-housed
the ball frum the Eagles and EHS

-.

"t nied !'»silo&lt;?' hard and a tilde

The Air fotdan~

992-5627

to lead 28-20.
Tbe final round.
Miller scOre the fust four poiniS
of the fmal round 10 piiSh the score
to 32-20, the biggest lead .o f the
night. Bissell pulled Eastern closer
at 32-22 as Eastern continued its
deliberate pace. Both teams
·became ice cold in the stretch, then
around the four minute mark,
Miller went into its own slow down
game.
· At 2:05, Savoy grabbed a steal
and drove it in for the score (3226). Eastern now had 10 apply full
couil pressure. Peyton scored a
bucket at 1:41 to push the score to
34-26. Cline was fouled on ·a three

. -Eastern auard Pat Newlatl (left) au "Js·~
AVOIDS FALCONS
.
Miller's Brady Daugherty (21) aid Many Merckle willie t r· 1-...,
eootrol or the ball daring during Wednesday aicllt's Dh' • IV,:~
sectional tournameot game at Alexander High 'Scllool, wlla e die ~. ,
Faleons won 38-34 to move on to next week's ehampicmdip came' ,
against Southern.
.
" :;
again had 10 foul. Peyton sealed the had l1l steal s (Lanni ng 4 ), l'bl
·· "
game by hitting both ends of the rumovers and 18 fouls.
,
bonus with 'seven seeonds remain·
EASTERN
.t.o.:
ing.
(11·7-2-14=34)
"'C
The $Coring ,, ·
Jereray Cline ll-1-6=9, Chad~·
·
Eastern was led "by Charlie Bis- Savoy 1-0.0=2, Pat Newland I~
sell with 10, Peyton led all scorers 3=5, Wes Arbapgh J..()..2=&gt;;11. ,Robale :.
•
with 14.
Reed 2.0.()..4, Charlie Bissell ~ .t
Miller hit 16·31 from the floor 2=10. TOTALS -9-f- 13--34
and 6- I I at the line, while Eastern
hit 10·22 overall and 13-18 at the
~·
MILLER
line.
. . (6-l:Z..10-l0=31)
Eastern had 15 rebounds,)~ by
Bruce.Lanning 2..().(1:4,
·
. Bissell's six, while Miller had 17. · Paige 1-0-2=4, Willie Peyton
Peyton had six and Daugheny five. 2=14, Jeremy Duffy 2.()..l=5, Bud
Eastern had eight steals, 1!1 Daugherty 4-0-0=8, Mann Merttil:
turnovers, two blocks (Bissell), 0-0-1=1, Jeremiah Keller I~
eight assists and 14 fouls. Miller TOTALS- 16-0-6=38

-Houston,helps Te~nessee notch 78-77 win over UK

/

219 N. SECOND

SHOOTING IN TRAme - Eastern gulll'd Jeremy Cliue (left)
finds himself shootln&amp; In tramc created by Miller redwood •WIUle
Peyton (31) and teammate Brady Dauaherty in the paint durin&amp;
Wednesday night's Division IV sectional tournament contest at
Albany, which saw the Falcoas post a 38-34 victory.

IDLTON SLAMS • TriCJ S.elt011 of tile Wilt Vlr.lnla
Motu-' I n ..... - 11-. cmr · - Good (10 ~the VIr·
pala Tida Holdll Ill flnt llalf ~ 'I t tile C!allleull1 Moraan·
town, W. Va., Wechm~ay. Welt Vtrpala woa, 74-71. (AP)

.,•

jl
\

By TIM PUET
a layup 10 put the Student Princes
Associated Press Writer . ahead 67-66 and they held on in the
Top seed Ohio Northern strug· final seconds. Steve Fleming had
gled to win, and the second- and 20 for Hiram.
third-seeded teams both were
John Bufford had 22 points for
defeated in the first round of the John Carroll, which scored 10 of
Ohio Conference tournament
the 11ame's final 12 points after
The Polar Bears came back after traihpg Capital 69-65 with 2:30
trailing for most of the game to left. Keith Hocevar added '20 for
defeat Baldwin-Wallace 57-54, but the Blue Streaks. Todd Fox SI;Oled
No. 2 seed Hiram was beaten 72-68 26 for the Crusaders.
·and third-seeded Capital fell 75-71
Milce Couzins put in 20 points
to John Carroll in Wedne~day's for Ouerbein as the' Cardinals
tournament quarterfinals. Otter- defeated Muskingum for the 44th
bein, the fourth seed, was more for- victory in t.heir last 45 home
tunate, defeating Mustingum 83 - games. Bryian Burson was the
11.
Muskies' scoring leader with )9.
The semiftnals will be Fridsy at
Allegheny defeated Case Westthe Canton Civic Centet, with John em 76-72 in a North Coast ConferCarroll (12-13) going against Hei- ence quarterfinal game postponed
delberg (11-15) in the opener and one dav bv weather. The Gators
Ohio Northern (23-1) playing two- (19-6) face Wooster on Friday in
time defending champion Otterbein · the NCAC semifinals at Ohio Wes(16-9) in the second pme.
Jeyan.
A free throw by Mark Gooden
Derrick Owens scored 24 for
with 2:23 left gave Ohio Northern Allegheny. Leighton McCoy had
the lead for' good.
16 for the Spartans, who got within
Baldwin-Wallace led 31-23 at n-70 with 31 seconds to play
halftime, but the Ye!low Jackets before Allegheny assured itself of
were outscoled 34-23 m the aecond the victory with four free throws in
half.
.
. the last26 seconds.
Aaron Madry hit a three·poinler
Mianii of Ohio lost 59-SS 10
!0 gi ye O'!io Northcm. a 50-49lcad, Eastern Michigan, allowing Ball
us f1rst s1nce euly m the game, Sl8te to tie the Redstins for the
widl 3:53 remaining. Baldwin•Wal- Mid·AJ1!erican Co,nference lead
lace went back ahead 52-50, but a with 12-31eague lecCrds.
basket by Nick Bertto with 2:57
remaining tied the score at S2-S2
Elsewhere in the MAC, Ball
and Gooden's free throw8ut the State defeated Toledo 78-64, West·
Polar Bean ahead again. · oodcn ern Mlcblgan got by Bowling
and Bertke each made two free Green 69-65, Ohio University
throws down the stretch to clinch downed Central Michigan 66-51
the victory.
·
·
· ,
and Kent edged Akron 76-75.
D' AnlJ Jones finished wiih 16
Clevelanil Slate (20-4) won its
points for Ohio Northern. Doug 14th sira~Pt pme, defeating Buf·
Dictcnon scored 15 for Baldwin- falo 76~69 behind 2S points by
Wallace.
A!illlooy Reed, including six in a 90hio Northern's victor)i was its · 2 run Chat put the game away in the
14th in a row at home, tying a fmal minutes. ,
school record.
Ohio Dominican was a 78·67
Mall Adanls ~ored 21 of his 25 . victor over Dyke and Mount Verpoints on three-point goal$ 10 spade non Nazarene cruised paat Late
Heldetber,a'a triumph over Hlrani. Erie 85-68 in the first round of the
·The Temera led (Ott most of the NAJA District 22 Division n lOUr·
IIU!\C and were up 66-65 witli ·19 .; nament: Mount Vernon Ia at Walab
seconds lei\, but Mite Hurst made. and Ohio Dominican at Tiffm
in
I

••

Saturday's semifinals.
Mercyhurst outscored Malone
99-91 in the only other game on the
Ohio college schedule.

Babies should not get r..lly sick from teething, say dentia&amp; 111 the
Unlvereity of r - H&amp;alth Science Center In S.n Antonio. ,I tbeJ do,
the problem may be mouth Infections, perhaps relllled to loa rw
simplex vlrua I; Medic!ltion and fluids ahauld help.

... .

.

It can be dangerous to a~n&gt;ke whlla -ring a nicotine patch. A'-pltalln Attleboro, Mllaaaehuaetta, reports live p!ltlenta in whom ahal
triggered heart lllt8cka.

...

..

Related newa: abaorptlon ol nicotine In chewing gum ean be
blocked by cotfM, cola and many jule... Advice from Unlveraity Gil
Kentucky College of, Dentistry - don't drink anything but befo,. chewing. '

...
.

It'a never too l!lle to fight asteoporosJ., a Mayo Clinic !ltudy found.
Even If a women hu been postmennpeu811 for HVeral y - .ad
hu heel some frac:turee, tllklngeatrogen wQllncreeM bone vOiuma.

...
...

Weight !litera can double their gelna In strength by taking more 1111!11nealum, aaysthe Journal of American' College of Nutrition.
When your doctor recammendll supple~ vitamins
ala, you'll find
want •~·.

I!ICI~-·
MM. tfn
......_
l'tiiiCIIIOTI1. ..

CII.... MWt.ll .......
~,
I :OIIIa,m 1• 100 111.m
tO:OO • ·"' to c.oo, •
M Ill nM
_
............_.OM.

o... -

. ;.

- ..

11-'!'·

....

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

•

and.......,_

�.• .

·-....

ByTheBerid

.-

r

The Daily Sentinel
.Thursday, Febr11ary .25, 1993

Ann

.

sooner
.
•

.

.

Hm l!e IOIIlC samples of what
11-. dominated my mail:
.
From BloomingiOn, Ind.: My

l

prior to tbe openhla of tbe first Texas A&amp;M
Film Festival. Tbe festival features maay or
Lee's films, iadudlag bls latest, uMalcolm X".
(AP pboto)
·
•

SPIKE AT TEXAS A&amp;M - Controversial
ftlmmaker Spike Lee makes his way through a
mass or media representatives at Texas A&amp;M's
Rudder Tower Wednesday in College Station,
Texas, following a news. conference be gave

::

L.,_ Man crushed by_boulder on sofa
. - ELKHORN CITY. Ky. (AP) -· . behind the .house and cra.~hed
..., • A: 30-ton boulder fell about 500 through the roof onto the sofa
.: feet 0010 8 mobile homo, crushing where he was sitting, Pike County
a DIBD to death and throwing his Coroner Charles Morris said.
graridfather from the couch beside
Morris said the grandparents,
•
hiln. The victilll's grandmother had Virgil and Lucille Ramey, were
'! just gotten up from lhe couch.luc~7. to be alive. . .
;
Jackie D. Johnson, 19, · of
They were slllln~ on the
~
Adams Branch near Elkhoni City, couch," Morris said. ' The lady
t died late .Tuesday when the 10- . got up 10 go to the door 10 let her
. foot-sqwue boulder fell from a cliff little dog in."

"When I saw the rock, the only
thing 1 could see was the rock," be
said.
Zelva ·corman, the dead man's
mother, said ber father ''w!ls
lhrown through the air."
· Ramey, 61, and his 58-year-old
wife were taken to Pikeville
Methodist Hospital. Corman said
her father sufl'ered a broken shoul·
der but that her mother was uninjured.

•·•;-"'-'
. a~-HtN'•

hlllblnd was I bowea ll1d I lkirtchuer, but·I stayed with hiln for !he
sate of the kids. When I fmslly
tlew hilil oat, die kids thanbd me.
Two years later, I married a tmif'IC
~· ~ I think that I almost
nussed thiS pan of my life, which is
'the best, I could die!
.
Owtoaesville, VL: I divoo:ed my
husband five ytarS ago 8lld regret iL
My kids mils him, and sci ilo I. He's
a lot better than any of the jerks I've

date4 since.

·

Nonh Bay, Ontario: Being a
staunch Catholil:, I tbouaht hard ind
ID!'g before I decided 10 divorce my
w1fe. (She came after me on two
occasions with 'a ldJchen knife 'llld
once with a gun.) Our ehiklml~~~:

M'mneapolis: rm ory I eli~

The worst pain of my life W!IS

seeing a family picture of my childn:n with their dad's other f1111ily. I
suddenly ,....liwt that my kids had
a whole other life, and I wasn't a
pan of·iL Talk about being heartsick.
·
Bloomfield Hills, Mich.: Why 10
many diwn:es? I believe it is the
UJIPie mentality at work -- the
concept thai there is aomething
newer and !Jelter.just around tbe
comer. We !tide in people like cars
these days. Most marriages llllhy fall
·apart because the wife has tO
compete with the .women in the
wOrkplace. My husband always left
the house in the .morning looking
better and smelling beUer than he
ever did at. bOrne. or Course . the
inevitable hapjJened. Am I glad I'm

ByMALCOLMRITfER
AP Sdeace Writer
NEW YORK - Scientists have
found a gene that IIJIPCIIl'S 10 cause
the rare dise~se depicted ·in the ·
movie "l..oienzo's Oil," a discovery that may help in finding a treatmenL
The gene would cauSe the disease when defective. Its chemical
makeup suggests that it normally
tells cells how 10 make a chemical ·
shuttle thlit r.ransports a key
enzyme, resemthers said.
. lbat is a surjlrise bec•nse aeienlists had Sllspected that the disease
was caused by a defect in the
enzyme itself.
The disease is called X-linked
adrenoleulcodystrophy, or ALD. In
its most severe form, it sbikes in
•

Community calendar

~~============~~==============
~

Community Calendar. ile!JIS Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior
appear two days before an event High School.
and tile day of tbat event. Items.
•
be received weD In advance
STIVERSVll..LE • Kerry Orenl must
to
assure•
publication
In
t11e
calnan,
Palestine, W.Va., will speak at
•
the Stiversville Word of Faith
• endar.
'
Church on Thmsday at 7:30 p.m.
•
Pastor David Dailey invites the
THURSDAY
'I
POMEROY - Auditions for the public. .
Midnight Cloggers will be Thurs· •
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
day at 7 p.m. in the Pomeroy ViiYouth
League will hold its first
•
.._.,._ , lage Hall audiiOriurn.
meeting Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in
POMEROY - "Planning You1 the Middlepon Council room. Any•- Flower Bed, Vegetable Garden, one interesled in coaching or other
-:;:. Home Landscape or New Lawn" activities with the youth league are
~ will be presented by Hal Kneen on asked to auend. ·
Thursday from 8-9:30 p.m. at the
FRIDAY
~ senU. citizens center in Pom.eroy.
PORTLANDThe Lebanon
..,...,.Admission is free.
Township Trustees will meet Fri• POP4ROY • J&gt;omeroy Serenity day at 7 p.m. at the IOwnship build• ' GroUp of AA will meet Thursday at ing in Portland.
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
: ·- Ch~h. Call 992-5763 for infor'{* Jj mauon.
•
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
"
~ L:;
TIJPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers Friday at 7 p.m. with local singing
" ' Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will talent. Pastor Steve Reed invites
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All the public. Fellowship will follow.
7' · members attend.
RIPLEY, W.VA. - Liberty
••
CHESTER - There will be a Mounlaineers. will perform Friday
special meeting of Shade River at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. wilh work in the
TUPPERS PLAINS · Tuppers
•• B.A. degree. Refreshments will be Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
••
Auxiliary
will hold a. dance Friday
served.
•l
from 8-11 :30 p.m. wilh music by
•
REEDSVILLE • The Riverview 1he Happy Hollow Boys. Public
Gatden Club will meet Thursday at invited.
~
7:30 p.m. at the home Janice
:
Young with co·hostesses, Kila
POMEROY • Key women from
• k •' Frank and Phyllis Larkins. Bring area churches willl)leet Fliday at 1
:_ •. · fruit for lhe fruit lrllys and. articles p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
·- for the auction.
Church in Pomeroy to plan for
""
Church Women Uniled.
~
.
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs Local
OAPSE Chapter 17 will meet
MIDDLEPORT - Bosworth

Council No. 46, R.S.M., S.E.M.
degree, Friday, 7:30 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Masonic Temple.

SATURDAY
LONG BOTIOM • There will
be a turkey hunting safety clinic on
Saturday from noon to 5 p.m. at
Forked Run Sportsman Club, Cur·
tis Hollow Road, Long Bottom.
Call Keith Wood, 985-4400; to register:

~

•

.-

-

.t

-.

•

KANAUGA- Liberty Mountai~rs will perform at the D.A. V.
Center in Kanauaa on Saturday.
· MILLFIELD - A belaled valentine dance will be held Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. 81 the Russell
Building in Millfield. Music will be
provided by Out Qf the Blue. ·John
Russell wlll be the caller.
·

P~ga~?lVAd(srigN?

What's lf"OIIg? "The AM l.atrlkrs
Gllilk for Brides" will nliM yow

J

.•

,,

- nocx1ratime.

•

..

'

To place an ad
Call992-2156

busintss-sire tnlltlopt and d check
or mDIIey order for $3.65 (tllis includes postage and lttutdU11g) ro: ·
Brides, clo AM Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago,Ill.ti0611.()562. (In
Canada. send $4.45.)
.

child~qod

and progressively ·
destroys nerve and muscle runetion, leading 10 impaired vision ind
hearing, loss of mental faculties
and paralysis.
This form or ALD gene~:h
leads 10 a coma-like state and
within a few years. A milder form
can appear at ages 15 10 30.
No standard tre81lllent is known.
The tide "Lorenzo's Oil" refers to
an experimental treaullent that so
fill'- has shown liule ,:vidence of
stoPJ!ing progression of the di ...ase,
according to the March of Dimes
Birth Defects Foundation.
~LD strikes males almost
exclusively and is estimated to
affect one or two people per
100,000 in tl!e United States, the
foundation says.

Withrow announces Women's
History Mont~ essay contest

POMEROY - The Royal Oal&lt;
. Dance Club will sponsor a dance • .Oh1o Treasurer Mary Ell~n ·
Saturday rtom 8-11 p.m. at Royal · W1throw has announced she w1.11
Oak Reson. George Hall will pro- sponsor an essay contest for Ohm
vide the music
public high school students in
·
honor of the March. celebratiCf of
STIVERS VILLE • The Clark Women's History Month. ThC conFamily and Dailey Family singers test-allows,Sllldents 10 recognize a
will perform at the Stiversville woman who may have made an
Word of Faith.Cllurch on Saturday ·impact on their lives.
·
.
at 7:30 p.m. David Dailey invites . ~11/ublic hi4h schools a.re
the pubhc. •
1nvue to submit two student
essays discussing a woinan who
has made a contribution 10 one of
SUNDAY
si.X:
areas: ,arts. agricul~ commuCHESTER
Chester
mty
serv1ce, educallon, governBowhunters Club will have a 30inent,
and health care. The essays
target McKenzie shoot on Sunday.
at the tange on Pomeroy Pike. Reg- must be submitted 10 the Treasur·
!stration is from 9 a.m. to I p.m.

CLOSED S1JNDAY
• Ado ..............,.,............... poop alii
• Lool,. dlooo-1 fer """ paid Ia ad.._.
• '-Ado: G-war ....t Fouocl
IS wont. wllll&gt;o
... I .ta,.ot ........
• Prieo., ad r......pilot tou.n lo ....... price of ad-•
• 7 pa1ot U..lJpi. ooly ...t
• S..IIMI II-...,._.... fer orron after lint clor (dtoek
for ...,.llnl.t&amp;J ad,_la popw). Coli t..lon J:OO p.m.
da,. .,_. p-h!!.·tlee ID ..... CCift'eedoa
• Ado ..., _ ... poldlaocl•- ....
Cor&lt;l.t.'l'luuW
BappJ Ado
la.._rioa
YordSoloo
• A aloooiiW ...r l an• pt.N,t i!o ... GolllpoBolloilr
Trllouo (....,. Cluolllool DloplaJ, B . - Cord or Lop!
N..,_)wlllaloup,_.la...,Poilotl'louul8; I rod
dwo DoUr S.IIMI, ,..lolac •-11,000 too-

'.

ado-

.I(

b.

'•\
,,
•t

.

..·

(

181-VIaloll
245-llloG......
256-Golru Dlot.
~Dill.

119--'1'.-.

67$-1'1.

992-llloWioporll

Po.....,
985 n ••

lEI'S

.......

.....

~82-!'~.w

...

D~ys

.
\

Words

1
3
6

15
15
15

10

15

Monthly

15

Rate

Over IS Words

$4.00
$6.00

$ .20 .
$.30

$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

$ .42

"·r.-

a.-

895 ......

74.1 'Lttl...

UCINE GUN

917-llodralo ·

667...c:Got.tl. .

. CLUB

GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

$ .60 .
$.05/day

Ratiel ani lor collleCulive I'UJ15, broken up daf8 will be
chargecl for-" day u aeparate adl .

.•

WICK'S
SERVIa
36970WR•ROIIII
. Pomeroy, Clio

171--~- .... Sall
T~ferllalo

v.. a 411'D'o

••= • "

Guaranteed Scholarship M~ney .
for all colleg• bound students.

THE

•regardless of income! &lt;·
•regardless of grades

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.

'plus $20k QUaranteed lo~n
• regardless of credit

992-5858
696-1290

To coll8ct your scholarship mo114!y·
call614-985-3556
Open Mon.·Frl. 10.1 or

11,-114-- ......_ Trolalai

., _Loot ....t Foud

.... l•i

......,. .....1
1

14 -Par
·- 14
Llmil2
cu.aon.r

A.,dooo

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533

RWOfWLE RA1I5

992·7553

HOURS:

Sunday · Monday ..:... Closed
Tuesday·. Wednesday · Friday-9:30a.m . - 5:3·0; P.m .
Thursday · S.turday- lq : OO a.m . . 3 :0b p .m .

· POMROY,,Clll.

104 Mulberry Avenue

Pomerov . OH 457fl!l

Vld

II . . . . . . . .

u s.s•••• ••s

.....

.... na ........

I
C
Tht prlco 1&gt;11- Nducod .. f88,1100 and
nnenc~ng o1 up 10 ~ ot pu&lt;e11ue
......,, mor bo poollble 1or quo~~~y~no por·
ton ., buy .,.IY nloo homo on 3~ aaM In
RIICino. 4 BR, 3 - · 2 - ronJtd t
~R apl. PIOPifll' lncilldol 4,100 oq. ft. llrm
bldg.

THE DISnNGUISHED
GENT1EMAN 1

.

C.tll!4-8112·7!041or

L

Qwality

·s.... c•.

SENIOR PHOTOS
PUBLISHED IN THE

0111 m:1•n SHOW 7:H

STARTING FRIDAY

1990, 1991 or 1992
graduation editions
may be plpked up
during office hours at
The Daily Sentinel.
Also available are
photos from Desert
Storm, In Memory,
Birthday and
Cards of Thanks.
All photos not picked
up by March 31, 1993
will be discarded.

OIIIUE 511111 Ill

LOADED WEAPON I "IS
SHOW nMES:
FRI..sAT.- 7:1Clii:IC1

MONDAY THRU THUIIIDAY
One ......... . _ 7:30
Mnlui:On 11.10 • ttl aua

~- ~_.:;===:r=~~

~·

~·

SUD ...SlONE
rot SAlE

c.u 614-992·

.....

~

YAIDIIAII·

YARDIWI PUSH IIOWER

10 LB. BAG

$139 '

1 -

Want Ada

.

-

.......... ,. bl

..

~ . """

'Mil

-• '1'

~

~,,

..

'

•• -.. t..;
l

t.-

. -.-ca:

•

.
i

,)..

'·

't
u.J
'

~ 992-2156
.

.·
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages. Replacement wrndows .
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•••a1111
......

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or 915·3139
(111~••-rC.II)

2112182/tfn

M"OYIL
HAULJNGII ...-

who

24, 11110
Ann, Chlklrln,
llld Qfllltlchlldrwt

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •

. DI;POT STREET
RUTLAND
742-3190
can for
. Appointment

:Hullliand, Flllher, and

... ~ IIW.Y 3 yelirl
ago today February

RACINE, OHIO ·
614-949-2202
61

TANNING

SALES AND SERVICE

iOiiis

"Helping You To Recorer Yo11r lnrestmenf'
Church, Home, Truck, BOat, Auto
•
and Office Seating

,

MYSIIQUE

2Ctdo .. 4Cylo
1010 TNMOU. SAWS
Parta and Soritoe for al
makea and moclela at
traalora and farm

SL II. 7

NOW OPEN

llOWIII

In Loving Memory of
Clair' C. Boao,
Grandfatll~r

Snodgrass Upholstery·

6637

--,..------2
In Memory

I
·POTATOES

1/271113 .

CIUFOUIA
TAliS

LYME DISEASE INFORMATION
MEETING MARCH 2-7:00 P.M.
Ple~nt Valley Hospital
Downstairs Conference Room
Dr. Jamo~a. Speaker ·
For information call
1·800·866·0256

EDDIE MUIPIIT Ill

ASK FOR CHRIS

WORK,
· DRIVEWAY WORI
a.d UMESTONE
DEUVERY SEIVKE

Bl'LLETI~ BO.\RD
IULLEnN IOARD DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

TONIGHT

.

101• IIIIIL FEL 20

. SMALL DOZER

I{&gt;- J.+, TV A C8 Ropa\r
11-M' Jle ......
111-'l'.....tToDo

9--- 1Vulod II! hr

II•

I I

CHARUE'S

11;- s.tooolo "' ..... """"'

8-. PaWie Solo a

· •!,

JeH Wlcbrsal

,

sat. 10-4
•\
:1-1 t ·mod.pcl.

FOIEYER
BROID
1111111

IJ-s-....wua..t

5- Bam Ado
' 6- Loot ....t Foud

..

OWNER:

11-Balp'I'Uaocl

+-- Gl..;...., . .
I'•

"--ri"''

992·3470

"'•ph• .Eqp,t''"t-

s-- Ia ••• ,.,.
S--A

SIZED liMESTONE

a Mo10n ,_.Solo

Auto Pull "
Aatolapoir

f

PERSONAL
CARE FOR

.

•
•"

I,

frt.

217LI

773-11-

MT......_F. .

......
lliuc1

.... .._........

mI •• •

s1~c

2/15/tJ/ I -Jill

WKE
tt2·5USw
915-Uil

458 ' - •

-·-

~

lOW OFFER--..
OIL. UD .LUIE SEmCE
niE IEP~R AID ROTITIIt

~

RATES

Othat living longer is just one reason

.

446-Goll. . .

PH. 414·915·3949

•vca
....
Ill.,••

G.Wa Comlly Mel&amp;a Coanly M_. Co., 1VV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
. U'TJ'\ y,.

47269 St. II. 241 • 1Ya lllle Off II. 7
Tlln C...ter •• lt. 241

MIOWIIEOIII

ClaUified JH168• ccm~r .dul
following fflleplume eu~e....

Boall

COOLVll..LE • Coolville VFW
Pos1 No. 3478 is having a gun
shoot Sunday at .noon at Ralph's
Gun Club, Route 50, west of
Coolville.

to work out. Those who keep in
-Men who take up moderately
shape also tend 'to live better: They vigorous sports between ages 45
have fewer chronic diseases, such and 54 live .10 months longer than
as hcan uouble and diabetes.
those who remain sedentary. For
The study also demonstrates the ages SS to 64, exercise adds nine
difficulty of extending the human months, for 65 to 74 it adds six
life span. Olher works have shown months and for ages 75 and 84 two
lhat eliminating all cancer, for months.
ins1ance, would only add about two
-Middle-age men who give up
years to the average human life.
cigarettes add 1 1/2 'years 10 thelf
However, commented Dr. Gra· lives, while those who both quit
ham Colditz of Harvard Medical . smoking and start exereising.gain
School: "When looking at life almost three years.
expeclallcy as it is in the Western
-Exercise seemed to extend
world ~Y, adding another year is lives most by warding off heart
a fairly major shift at the popula- lllacks, although those who
tion leveL"
worked out were less likely than
MoSt experiS believe that exer- other men 10 die of all causes.
cise is good for women, 100, but
The researchers conqdered
it's uncertain whether they would moderately vigorous sports to
gain !he same amount of exlrll life · include such things as brisk walkas did the men in lhe study.
ing, tennis and other court games,
The latest study was based on biking, · · and digging in the
questionnaires filled out by 10,269 garden. ~ern~:~tirnes,
male Harvard graduates. Among such as pitching
;bowlthe findings, published in Thurs· ing and golfing with a cart, were· .
day's New England Journal of notdeemedstrenuousf!!OUgh.

Wedneocboy Paper
lltunday Paper
Friday Paper

... 11....---------------.....l..

COLONY THEATRE

I .

Midda.atorf, Oltio 45760
(6 I 4) 143-5264 1121119:1Mn

1:00p.m ~y
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. n.day
1:00 p.m. Wodneoday
100 p.m. lltunay
1:00p.m. Friday

S\11\day Paper

POUCIES

loll 119

. DAYBEPORllPUIILICATION

Moclday Paper
Tu.d8y Paper

llolontJ11loo

In the new work, scientists
report iracking down the apparent
Al:O gene and finding thill its
chemical makeup resembles that of
11enes involved in transporting Sllbstances. The gene was partially
deleted in six of 85 ALD palients,
and deletions were inherited along
with the disease in some cases,
researchers sai!f.
·
,,
The work is reporllld by. Dr.
Patrick Aubourg of the SL ' YIIICCIIt
lie Paul ~ital in i'Jirb with 1101leagues there aild 'iii"S'uasbourg,
France, in Heidelberg, Gennahy,
and at the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore.
Their results are "quite convincing," although further work
must be done, Dr.. David Valle of
the Jqhns Hopkins Medical School
in Baltimore said in a telephone
inlerView.
.
"It will cenainly give us a better understanding of the disease,"
. which should guide_research into
lreatments; he said
·

1
, .,
.
er s offiCe Qlld postmarlced no later •
than ~h IT:
W11hrow w1ll announce the winners on Mitch 22. Students with
winning essays will be awarded a
$100 United States Savings Bood
to' be presented at a reception i~
Columbus on Marcb 30.
"There are so many impre§ive
women in Ainerican society today,
women assuming roles of leadership and authority," Wilhrow said.
"This essay contest provides an
opportunity for .young people to
taitt a moment and reflect on the
influence women have in their cuiture and lives."
·

COPY DEADLINE

MoN. tbn FRI. 8A.II.·Sl'.M. - SAT.8-12

twiery. Send a self-addressed, lOng,

l,. -thint~0g~oTQrlm:f1d(d:le-ag' ~me.rn~tso~thm,.nk~ :~~~~~' ~~ :~th

• ~ · about while joj!ging: Taking up
vigorous exerc1se adds about 10
.mooths 10 lheir lives.
·
- · Those who slarl while young
gain a bit more, pc:rhaps a year or
twO. while men who wait untillheir
50s or. 60s add a few months at
:.:: besL
•
"::'"; These results, the latest from a
•· ~ long-running study of Harvard
_ 'graduates, .show that despite its
• m111y apparent benefiiS, exercise is
"';.~ no fountain of youth.
"Some may be discouraged
over the fact that you don 'I gain a
~ lot of years. I hope people won' t
;. be." said Dr. Ralph S. Paffenbarger of Stanford University, who
- directed the study.
In fact. he said, the work sug. .
gests it's never .100 late to benefit
:... from exercise. Even lhose who take
·· it up past age 75 live a little longer.
The figures are averages. Some
who exercise probably extend their
~ lives for several years'. Others gain

Rocky R. H•pp, D.C.U. • Agent

a

ruvon:cd?
Ufe with chealer
is heU.
Vienna, Va.: I am not divon:ed
but I c:ould have been five yean ago.
My husband was a faithful, reliable,
dec'ent man. 1 wlllled IOIIWICC aDd
paasion. A sensible marriage
COUIIIIelor made me sec my.life as it
JC8lly il. Thlnlt heavens,
Chiealo: My divorce was good
not only for me (I have remarried),
but for my cx-llusbllid. He joined
Alcoholics Anonymoua .•lllll now
holds areaparisible job. We are both
beUer off.
''
Richmond, VL: I'm a piaclicing '
Sunni Muslim. We have what is
called "Idalit" -- 1 three-month
waiting period before the divon:e is
fmal. Both paniCs have 'breathing
room 10 learn if eli~ is really
Wbit they WIIIL After tbat they they
can split or 11111y ·lllgelbcr. .Most of
!he time, they stay together.
.
· DEA:R RICHMOND: You don't
have 10 be a Muslim to get this
braking me&lt;:b!IDism. Most s'-tes
have a wallinl period. In the state
of .Virgi~ia, all couples with
~hildren must wait 8 y~ for a
divorce.

r--Researchers: E'x ercise adds months
e.

Accldenf '!Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Gene fou~d for disease .that was /
featured in movie 'Lorenzo's Oil' ·
'

1

I

Yes.

Ute • Medicare • Cancet' • Fire • Health •

.

.

.

DEAR iO!ADBRS: Rcc:eady, 1
asked tbia qiiCIIion: "l.oQtin&amp; blct, ·.
do you ream, bavina moved so
ntpidly 10 be !livon:ed. and do you
now Uol dill had you waited. !he
marriqe might have been
Slllvapd?"
lllllkecl'rar 1 "'Jfll" or "no" IIIIWIIl
on a JIOitcard, but lhotuanda of
fel!dal l'eltcampelled 10 write long now
8lld I
letlln.I'm alad iheY did. I '!ned a I was wrong 10 have stayed in that
lot.
marriap "far their sake.•
To my surprile, out or nearly
~ Kan.: I don't .epa my
30,00jl JUP.OIIIOI, 'almost 23,000 divon:e. It's tbe m~e tbal I
came from women. Nearly tluee . regret. My pcllelllllj)lit when I was
times as IIIIIIY leaders said tbey weiC 27. I only wish they had done it
. glad !hey dlvm:ed, IIICfiiiOIII or diem liOOIIer. Children iruor victims or
said they wished ~y had done it divon:e; they 1111: viclims of unhlppy

••

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

IIUIICIII RIEUL UFE •IHI ·

Divorced readers.tell their stories
.

4

v

ACCIDEIIT IIISUUNCE COIIPIIY

•••
•••
'•'

,.

Page-10

•

~

I

.·

AI111D utlCe men t s

afiREWOOD
No Ellptlrl4lnce NICIIIIry
DellveriM Stert Lite FtbNBry
90 pedple heeded to deliver the new Ohio
Valley Telephone books In town and rural area in
all Gallla and Meigs counties including Allany
and Coolville:
To become an Independent contractor you
ITI.IIt be' at least 18 yeara old, have the use of an
inlured car, van or truck,and be available a mlniITI.Im of 5 dayllghlholn dally. ·

Announcements

IIJ.SIACI
992·2269

DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS

;GU'/11 WI WMT 10 HEAR

YN.-0..-:,r.,..-

FIIOIII YOUtH WI'RI uvt AND
WIITINCII , . . M liM Ell.
..... Por ........... ,.

USED IUIIIQAD 1IS

uw: CltATUII8 1 ... .,.. Ill
..........- ......·1,Ell. 1141. .,,. Por ..... -

LAWN

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

.......AIICE
Mt-D91er
'1 ... ~·1460

HARDWOOD
Seasoaed
s•o.oo • Load
_Dellver•d•

a.-11 ...

Oo.IIGIIIII!-

!ll!!ll!e....

I

-

...

:.::::0
:;•.,.' -'L!.-bt.1 '.: •
IUD 1!:!:!.' ._ IIIII

--011- .

.4

caav.w.y

.................................-.
I • Wt ttllltlollld

II

aA

(6 14) 992·5449

,,.,.,.

'

,.

e,..

''"'

,_.,._,1111WIIIl

...,..
mun 1an1or 0o11o... -

�'

Pjaa 12- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Belittle

__
-- -u;y·- . . . . . .,:
C:..

KIT 'N' &lt;;'ARLYLE® by Larry Wright ·

Autos for Sale
_.,.....

~

u ..._ ...,. a

·t IIJ

•
1rrt Or
. . . . . ......

!llg

~rg&lt;

a

112
aoo

I

C

1M

••nzz

ii&amp;ll*

llitolly

Or· ..... , _..

~=-:;

-~Qn,­

....... ~, - -h

.

,.., Unl-.

-..........................
.........
=

Ollil.•-. - · ..._

1o -

Y81'd Sale

'
TliM, ' •

ii'.i

--:::

....

1117
11,1110.
.....llblo, good 304-171-2(40.

&amp; VICinity

11

H!!lp Wanted

--Iii.-.. .,_

A L L - - - l o - I n AVON I A I - I - _ ,

Adtw-DUDUIII:I:GI ...... llpoon,~1GI.
1.o111 Pllnr For bo ' - - I • A hoi ....... a....
-~ . . . . . _..., • 2:00 -"i'j'
aoilp- N101
ry. -

1M l!or ....... 1M IIIIo II MI.
!lundoi' • 2:00 .......

P.fl'o--

-·- _

...........
....
-*'
'· ......... . . . . . u=r .,.•.a. . . . .
..................

--

•vicinity

. . ., •

Goo M'Awd . . . '"'~-,... 17,

8

....... 10

&amp;po'lmonto 1n llldllddlo!todlopc"'il. Fn;m

--·
-

==.. -

u

tid

NUII8E

""'*

~~·
...ritiaw
.....:
... frzl : .VCWI.
.
lllciCMIWM.

.._.

AIDI

~P'O&lt;OOIOIOW!OCII'CII'

iinllollonorillalmlbolocl on roc», color, Nllglon,
•• farnYW a-.-or~
origin, or ony l - I D
maM WIJ IUdl pnla::ww,

PROGR..UI .

r.-eeln:ru•-

...._.,.~
l-4piil. .....
......

...

-.

lo ;;pply .... .........

EARN GREAT$$$

. _..................

"'--ngly . . . .

111m IIIIIL Aile b Pa1J.
1Wo 1: Ill oatil INiirf tor nM In
~-~'
end2133,
;oloto;marm
....,.,..,.........
,,. 141

........
can

-,.,..--..,.--1

'

44

.

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

·-

11011
-sraTiRROUT£
1, h~
n ,;, -IM-

::t

l'w;llllilll Apl: 1 IR, RZII
DIQ. Ullltllli ..... 114 441 ...

..........
_,p "''·~

:z.ro

a

Sp: lie ~

·=- . . . .1-. .
do_..
-1
,.. :
.........
Job
prtplftltkin

- Col-.
..-. CRIIIn....
H r , ••
c.::',: :r:,- .~·:

=.:.lio
-

...lo-

I ...,.lghl

(ONOW~
. ___________
=.;;;;;.:;;...

18 Wanted to Do
Caot1t1oc1 -

olcll will -

•-"1·
onytlrno :.own;mo.

- ! !::t.1Q411Joil
!!:."!-.I.n
· - - Wll2A ......
d,,. ·
Will
I
All

Pll~;::n:: ~

11111
Ao••low•

-OIY -

Colp.IOl.
.. I oiM

32 Mobile Homea

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
h.-=
.............. __ . __
=·..:...-:.-:::.~
b...- In

=

$112.17 P.lr I'I'MII'Ilh lncludl•_,. •ll
month~ ,_ toe rent, nrw ,.m,
.... _
...... up, oldnl"'
...... _1~1.

•

___-.-·.. _
. . I.....
-·
«

.......................
......... ,.............
:=..~ ~'::
... ..,.,.,, ""'••or -~~~ a

~

:1

31173.

Canbol
............
Wlh
lllyl;;o
-Ex·
•... - e.;;;;,; IIUII -

eu 111 oetitf. . . .). ·
1 - ~ Holr 1Udfi114x?D,

_..... .

........ ....., -·
1-Qwi-.. .
- ........ ,_. -.. . . . . . - Do--· . .
___
=
-CIInlo--110'1
............
__
o.nert11

Holpilal,
pooltor 'Dnllrir of

- . bW
' l - ...
ii:t'l
7

~~~~..

....... IIIIa. EIIINinl

~ For A

F1nanc1al

21.

...a

MUll • •
,,=-·~
I I tflimloltlol1

ldn A

Ho1ne. Urg.

~-- Dollniy.

-NN710.
... .

Bual....
Opponunny

- -_...oftlco...........
,......,...

De.?' COl

Pn Oailid Mobile

. dldlte
II I I of
, . _ In Thoropr,
W.Y I . _ ...... _ t o
111011CEI
P.O. loo JliO, ......,, WV 21271 "OHIO YALLIY PUILIII•ill CO.
-,.ta a• • • • thll ~ do .......
liD47II "" m lOE.
NOT I I - - ·
lhci
Pl._ For c.u.... ,
lt.-.....
---,_
,_
Only.lhl4.... home • • • rb11r
IIUL , .. • po'l~ltwo. 11w1
...... fo In .... JIIIM!fta ........ _ , . .hlniO ......
- I n ........ Qollo
DPG, til - ··

~~-=

~-lonl

.,.--., wv-.

-

rMn

aili,...-.. ·ean

-IIIII -Ina.
41111very, ......._
*"2414

......

1114-

-Homo Canter Will lllow You

~

....... Or
hi
~=:.:xr:::-Dno~
.. ........

::::::Yt
~
.. _......., Ooon
'-m.
utllll
~
-

· 35

Guldr to holM -.IU,PatJQM., •

........ lttl 14x?D wll'l I r-r WiWIIy1 iln-

..:;.;:;;;_......,....__________

LDta • Acreage

2 'VI AaN. MIL Daerd , .

........,... ....... II'OIItlw......... .... . .
'~
.............. ~ ""'.d;"'.., . . . t."l:."=.~"

~;
~Ill..., . . . . . . . . .:

tuli •

fiiU-nlto•Mpaill......, · Uai111A1 - -

lr8ln ....... 11Mia1d ...

- · -.......,. •• ..a..

- ua•wMII~'?d
.. sa
11111
__
.....LAioldnl
,__ ....
..

MlllllllliiL '•••n,..lr•
t,_.p_o(lllhu.

=·" ti~~~~·
~~~iiiii;;
.. AIM ,.,....
Oft 'd"

lot;;te: CIC
PO
a. II\
lrn Co;
.. 'un~~

4im.

-Ina I

-

::ro

1

Plu ...- 1 Clowlll ......
For loolcTnol.-"17

....... . . _, ..........
...... "='J:"Iilo;
.
__ =--~~.=: ;;war
1 I 1:1

,, .,~

=. --.

...... .,.tDIIea;

Ullo

..

.-y 124,400.
holnL
1.,.,_ -be.-rlnnl

?*".TriNI

-;d

~

- ~ ~~~~~
1We=IIW
M III te
,..,_
, .II• i..,....
at1
of Duloii?Now.,t
IIOUTI:
0o1 ... W.-A

....

.......

I 0No, M

'::lo,-

-.·
AO
l i aW
I .1- '-f·L
""""""'
..- . . Dlllo - . "'. ~,Wncl.

.'

I DON'T UNDIERST,~NDI

ARE VOU OUT OF
VOUR MINO? .

SICK PEOPLE ..

~ '2::)

...... lumlohl....

,.
.FRANK AND ERNEST

L .·

IN YOIJfl Owf'! Mlfll&gt;, 1'10~ PO YOU

/

-

1111 ~ , _ , Plold,
Con;lllon, ........ 54 Mlacellaneous

SWAIN
AUC'TlON a FURNITURE. S2
OIM 8L, ...... •Uood
I
f14.44e..llal.

,

~

· CNl!&gt; IW'£L Y GET~ /Wl.Y Mil~

Merchandl•

$200,114 · · - ·

Dill' opt, t215.

BORN LOSER

'11141.

_

......

TO THE (,lJ,t.()t,t ~ THEIR €.P.".

,

~

IF I DOI&gt;Ii ~ lH£ ENC.IN£ a:F
WHit£ r'~ fltuW:. TilE TH\Yo-, r

AATI~~' YOUI®W

30 Drmra' orv.-

33102,11:Je Autloor Jollft._.

- c.r. . . . ;.

37eon-....a···
oil

cAAT lt'Ea' UP WITH IT!

SAY, iHE FIFTl-1 ~D
SIXTH weEI&lt;!S IN

WE ONLY ~10 60ACOUPI..e

A. This type of advertisement repeats an error that's already far too
widespread. Aa I've explained before,
the adverb FURTHER should not be
used to lleiCrlbe pb,ys\cal distance; the
correct term is FARTHER. Car8 may
go FARTHER, and explanations may
go FURTHER; Icy to distance yourself from any attempt to mix up these
words.

F~I&lt;Y.

.

I

l'ltm.

'

..
T~ your clutter into ,ca.h,
s.dl it the ea11y IDOy... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Ploce your clouified ad today!
15 word&amp; or less, 3 days,
3 pAAers, 15.40 paid in advance.

63

.....tloll ·-· .
c.n. '"''· ,._,,
43 AdltCIYI "" ·'
41

lndlitg

(2 wdt.l

:::.:

451111--·- '
... Pllolt pert
~

fn-+-+--1

47 Now DM1 :::::;;
I!IICr·
--···

41F......... -;~:-:;

41 BouthoNk•"
.liD Gr1Y11 ~~c~ge::~

i--11--1--1

-·-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

OTHG

R

SRVV

Ui

IILIFFRPO

N T Z . '
P F G V V T

Y G G M

VIM U

R

...

:rom quotat!OI'It ~ IMIOUI ~ pa11 Mel ~ -

MOHOE

TDGERLT .

AM IS

•- ,-

.... Aetlrdll!t ---~

...., .......... _,_..,_,.._r.,..,.., ....,z - r.

'R .

1

(bfeiil)

40Whlle-

Celebrity Cipher cryptogram~.,.. ere~~ec:

FI•

.

•

~

'·:1

... ...,

....

F I

.....

R

-~

I M G
TLFEGBP)

U I M 0 F .

.

'

' +" "J

. '
···•·I
• ...,.1

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Anger Is an emollon thai If carried around owr -- ·
a long period o1 lime, doesn't allow you to liVll." - John .Singleton.
;·r

'::~:~;~' S~\\~lA-~r.trs·
::::
Hlto4 h CLAY R. POLlAN __;;.________
Rearrange
of the
0 four
xramblecl words be.
~n

low to form four simple wordt.

I
I

OUR LANGUAGE

Q. A company advertises itself as
"the gas that makes you go further."
Would you please comment?

ea1COl- v.oi.JL.O eE ~IF

.

3e Brow"'

By Jelfrey MI!QUIID
MODAL &lt;"MOij-dul"&gt; is the adjective form of either MOOD or
MODE, as in labeling a verb a "modal
auxiliaoy." Try o~l MODAL whenever
you're in the mood.

F&lt;:1m Suppl1rs
&amp; L1vrstock

.... .-:.

32Stn

Three declarers played the contract. The first won trick one with the
heart king and immediately finessed
the club queen. However; East won
with the king and returned his last
·
heart: two down.
The second declarer saw that if the
club finesse was working, he didn 't
need it. After winning the first trick,
he led the club queen (to tempt a cover) but put up dummy's ace when West
·played low. The king didn't drop, so he
led a second club. Nonetheless, the result was the same: two down.
The thin! declarer used the Rule of
11. Subtracting the number of the card
led (seven) from 11, he knew there
were four cards higher than the sc:ven
in the other three hands. And when
East played the 10, declarer could see
all -of them. Therefore, ·West had sev·
era! beart tricks ready to ·run if East
got on play. To try to stop this from
happening, South played his heart four
at ,trick one. Wilh the hearts 6-2, he
could no longer go down .
Tbe moral ill: Paws (sic!) at trick
one.

""''•:\ 1ciiiiil
........
:oa II:':;!.M.T.W.
I - · 1:00

=~=.:
--Oottr.

Eul
All pau

missed-a game.

OF WEEK5 A YEAR .• .

u-.

ldlcllonldlnlnll
- - ar -..
nr.hed. 304'h5 3113

....

OF PHYSICAL
THERAPY

tood

I I-lAVE A COLD...

51-\ALL I 6RING SOME
0~ YOUR SCJ.IOOL WORK
lolOME SO YOU CAN
DO IT TONIGHT? ·

-rutlon:
.. Ohio,
te.ooo. For
· - ·I
304-1~
' After
P.ll.

!!!01..- bldals-~:Opa•~...

' ...... Rd., PoiMro,_ OH.

Lea:•• c:.unDIIL

I'M NOT 601N6 TO
SCI-lOOL TODAY. MARCIE..

=. ~'=.'"..~"":·

~j!iJ
Ani!Z
:

.. .... 2 lltdroome, ~
.......... oom. ccuulild pard~, kltohln llllnd,

Ceftl•, .,...

Thoropr.

PEANUTS

12x15~,With
Air Coo ...... _

1HI 141711 Pllilol , . _, Z IR
lull
bllh,
coanbiMCI

Mloo Poulo'o DIY C... Canlw I
01 HIICOn .liic"lnl lata ~•da In a 1' • a -Wow
PIIIo 111-1' I A.ll. -I:M P.ll. H
m
•••pll&amp;lfJOU . . Quollly And E•p I lot- lo TM
.. Ccincom FOr v... a.lld'l
Ctn. CaR Uo l'w A Vlo • . 1nton1
IM t• 1227. p,_.
,.,.. I n - - - · To Jrciddlelw
oh a 111 ra llcttool Ate 114-4411224.

••

Aent~OWn;

toblcco

a

,,

CA~H?H

ror Sale

~ Aftoto
IEloc.
P.M. tt4·1111044.

iiiliii!!J - - ~To

7

......

~::

I AiiPIIud
2 Poleon
3 Coneumed

As I am founding father of tbe Ai·
lurophile Society-, tbe cliche I dislike
the most is "There's more than one
way to skin a cat." But the concept and the .concept alone - may be applied to many bridge deals.
..
Take today's, for example. How
would you plan the play in three no- '
tl'lllllp, West leading the bear! seven
and East putting in the 10?
Soutli's opening bid of two no-trump
showed a good 20 tJ&gt; 22 points, in the
modern style. OPening with a one-bid
when you hold a balan~ 21 points .
dangerous. Partner might pass -with ._..,~._,_..._
.
four or five points, and you may have

Antiques

53

purple

5 E11111
8 Concrete
Ingredient
7 Phlbeto 8 Llnld with
bolldl
gSIIIh

By Plolli1p Alder

I

304'171-

14x711, Z P i l l - , 1 Polh,

I

r :bon

No .,..,... On

IT'S A DEAL

a-. 1ir1co11, _ . ,~- w1n-

"

3 NT

rvr:t.

~$ Weolll
37 Eiplonego

_ F_ _ _ _

Rei ' 'X' 'lon Cent~ ~
..... te:aaarcfta;•' ourllf.
A 'aM I . . the oom-

DIAICTOII

Pllio.

I lhntugh PW

1711.

34

- DOWN

Take time
..
at trick one

-~~~~~--.brlho

=~,:::..~

I

......

32 Hint
33 Uncouth

4 Brownllh-

-·
chewed IODCI·~

-· t14-i4U121
or tit 111-1211.....
•

'aM

I

Baal

Norlll

55 Slrllghl- arrow
!Ill Plllllll duck
57 S.ull ..:.
M1ri1

28 Cow'e

GIVE ME TWO
FREE TRIPS T6 CUKEY'S
HENHOUSE AN'

FER HOW
LONS?

Want to:
PIN ctown EXTRA

,, .......

..._ - T o Help

CLA

•

1 ,
-1HI Ford
good-~4
. - . ""'...
··olM W....., 1104'
11 Cl!hir 1
:.':00
::;:_:,PII;::...,.-::--- ::-::-:::-:-:::-::- !
-Ford Ronaor Z WO 4 CVIIn- •
~ I loolll JIJIO; 1m IQIO ":
~ 1m NiD
4x4 a,JOO 1
1304

52 Sponrng GOOda

-·--··- ---.
Wort;- . . -om

ll:'"v.n~~..: ~~-·

- . Hoollonl; - .
Tot.
OOfMi . Apploowibwtur

....
....,

• _, WV.104-773-G41.

1 "' llulloo
- · - Carponlly
a-.~.,.
ylftl
lalaphou• looM, No llllfm••· ...., ...,.,.. To:

Gl e ad,
......._
Point
PI
II.
Or"'Lon1na.
...... .., ,,,..,. a...u.l;

Or

N;
~~-141 i!dllo
Ptuo
Or 4 -1111• llul
Ori ~

,..._ ...,.

ueteu ·

=~..-.. 30MINit:l «

to

"

WILL YOU WATCH
TH' JAILHOUSE
WHILE I'M GONE,
SNUFFY?

to 1:00 11-111· IM - .1111
R. ll. PumiU19. Now,-· on- F-on iopolr a l'lllnlolad,

f- -

..,.

-....... -tJ::::'

Nadii.. EwrP:

-711-111.

I

tl'..._

01011101 CnOII RCIId, Oolllpollo, .
Ohio~ ue 4311.

End-

AI I I I 1 antlrlar, car.;

5•1.a•••

p lr11UDI

1
..... ...; Dey · WomcniJ, .ean ,.,..
i 0.1. llonoo
K.......,. ,..... Jll; }II lnoli Dryw 1 " - ' 114 141ZM4.
Rongo hi; ~DOIIII · Wlllcii!IO d - with
•..,....
.... till:
-lniit ~... • ... 1:1-14, $75,
c.T.V. , _ Ill; .,.._ .....,

B.

Well
Pus

52 Nullree
53 SoViet Union
(lbbr.)
54 Scollloh CIP

(lllbl.)

Opening lead: • 7

'o.-.

Household
Gooda

o..- Rot
S2hiMo&amp;n:

Solidi
2 NT

51 Pigpen

El21 ~II. time
3Q Etglo'l neat
31 1111. omcor

+Ks

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

rd, t121.304,I'Mr441:
·
:.1
Mit.
.:,l'ilo4I;.:..;;;II;;.:;;Ailor;::.;,:I,;;P·;;II;,.·,.....----I ........... U,,:
0o11 F - - Toll!oo, ""
···
loD., loldlll, 311,001J!nl.,_ e-, .
Cholnt, Clif..
au; ...,
Building
Wlft-lldorpolllol-tlol-,1
R- ,...,. 011; FumllSUpplle
c11r Chevy lnick ond ,... - ~

-~.....~hi
Cholio ~~;

I PR · - In Point
PI
iL Qulw, ........ good
11'ghbocl ud $ISO ... -month.
114 ue Olelw-·•-.

c=:.!nt.s::
._... ~
HiWi,

•aYO/IC' ALLAIIIMt ...... ,....

a

.,..._1ZII.

w,-.a Drron. flll Up, jO

Q.&amp;.

~ ~,.. 1...uu ...

11.12 Week; Baal11helv• 1tart:

for Rent

,. . . """

I'-

11

Dlllnf

Cand.lon $110;
~
~-- .........'t.:;

Dodge
.
Rom 1\'uclc, .With "
El- ....... liP /AM T - , E-lionl Coriolllon,
C8-. _ _
114-317-lWI.
·,

T.V. c:a.-1o 111i; ........
:Mit.
~'"·'II VIne 11'!!', Gil- Whb 11u w...- .

.lng S2UI; Roell'*" ~»._I!Of"

Apal bii611l

.

10ft

47 SenM of
SiMII

27 Stllnloh MIO

tQ1076

t AK~
+QJ2

. . "'

.. lllcuow!~•

"-Mar,

41 Nollhl
42 Row
44 Abr11U1m'e

22 Wild lbMP
23 Aclr111 Sue

SOUTH
+AQU
.KQ4

1;•

VC!I, Color. T,V.,' WM._, D;ror, Pll.

Color

i.1erchandlse

tMI;ni.
~- .. - . Enli'lol..,.lll Conlor'o -

1ar

11211111CfDr8NndL

CHUIIIAE PRICE RED'ICID I
1 ~~~'lito

Employment Srrv1ces

t

s;c·

l'ao!OIIIooJ.-~~ ...

.

+HI ?I
~

76

1171 ~ 4K4 ~·&gt;~ ~, ~ ~
good, aooil -i!IMion, 'tGt,DOO*'.
mllo!i.~.
,. ,
11114Fordllo
" _, ...,. , •.
- · ~!';:l;l:l'
oond, ~71-7114
••• ,lovu ~ , ~'

.., _ . , 114-lt:U~., IM-· 1
1112-2111.
.
·., ,,.
'I
~t,mwt=
locl
PICK- RJRNITURE '
.•-... l.loNnl~-~.· OH ~II Wleff Chovrolll, Fonl, Doc1go, pickup ;
"
-~ aM-e7H31.
- . Shoot or lor)g. Hci
::,..:.:!..,!!::.....,-,---~~~..,---,
VI'RA FURNITURE AND AJL Hoi , _Nowo\lood
lumii!IIPO. 112 1111. 24HIZ1.
. •. lUll-;
Ad. PL P l - . WV,
own • • • 'MKJI na-... wlh
PUHK:ES
coiiiOM'JI.1410.
~,_ _,nnly,- -lng,
~· 441 1421 0111"14-44W!II

:J:Ji-4~='::::!
-

W.rud:

1,

-11111-Pif,

-

L

t.nt Conllllon,·l14-~a,.

'
S.rnlon•wllle'rhltleflrldl••
1111 OllllY pollom comi!I'IOO
lbct' .. ~)by lcondywtle

N...,......

~.' tr:a...

tw1 P.M.

S2ll Or .,._.,

4 - , Iiiii "I

IWp'
'''*''id
~-~~,.-. CaR

1·

,~.,.._ -

,.

.
.
=
.
.
--.-.
. -.Nl·- c....
!'::1::'..:-"'tioos:o.=
i:t'~·=~,= .--;;;;;;;.;;---:- -;eo..w-.

Cal RITAAIIw4:00
114-Z1H113:11COWiCT)

CIIIN_._Iarholrl
_,olol..,.ln-PI wr'w
411
....

z:eo ........ - ,
-.-wv.

Aci. - - C a R 5I
411-1011. · bdp bill an

-,hlnll0111\311dmi.,ln--. lilly ........... 2 .....
2210.

ca

Rocmo lor- --or _,h,
-~ oll120/mo. Oiillo Hoell•.
114 t MIO.
CaR ....

aul*

!!!31!!!Ho!!!!!!..,..!!! for sal8

orracu.

MI"'!"'Iile,IM -.1112.

·flooms

Drtt«*t.l1t - • •
-ZIA--.2-

1111- To 11ur: ~Unll Auloo
,....., NoD leU.. Mct au..a. ... 1'1., .11 ......... 211
. -Lonyi.IWIJ.
Or - tMI.II
llol...,.. 2 OCNJPp' 'a brrlhr, .-...
I. CaR .. O.. "Hn, NO
~­

........ No-.

141711
a • PIIM.
N.G.H.I.
,...,., Polol,
...'Ill l'timiiillll, A I • 1 ,

_...nlly~.

·~-~ln­
...,., Plln ' "I 4 An lllkM•
lncllllf ·II In Yoiir a.. To
Dacw:•• Gurlllv ICIIahln

,..,...._, 'JI
.,n;
Q,

1!122._1
- . ........................ Ad.
FNelliiiNry

Furnished

~,.. with ·~·
flrl••• AI' lfll'L IM-'JU. ....
Allo
...... AIIhag~

Ttil ,.... r r" ·w11 no~

Do You lOIII To Co*P An Ill·

. , , , .......

-

whk:hloln-oflhe
...., 0... ......... ilnlll' .
lnlormodlhaloll-lnp
-nlllldln .... _ , _
.,. . . . - on 111 oquol

THE MIIPEAED CHEF

-~--...-...·

___ ..,,....,_

.... 2

.

_
.... ....,. ...... 'I;;~
F• .-..... ttlll •
••"C£¥i1 die TI:E ... Iii;

.......,._~

.,.,,
*· 12111 - . -,m•••=t

~~or ciiCIImi'\WIOO~

11711 Aa:ttlpch. . Rd.,
...........
Oil-- Cliio ....
· - A p p l r l n _ .....
~

......-,a
.. - ..- lnCaunl;yllaliloPoill.-

45

-

~··=·~~~~~·~~·~~~~,~-.~--..,~·~
-:::

40 Gr... iltltr

21 For eumple

••o

J8S

~: lolld OU Kina llu
•'
W.lwlilll, - · , . , . . _, 1171 et.vr 1 112 Ton~ 12' '•'
--~-.l~WM'- &amp;lo 1'1., Groin Pill, 4 ....... ,;

APPLIAHCEI

Howi;: - · ...

10-...,............

TRAINING

Nui'*N I lUI alLIIn.•
l i o n - ..... _ . . -

·-....-""""
.-.........,.
................
" ...... ..... . .....
......
Cll---- -

:!"i.:l..!.~·=!

- .=...

:,;.:;...

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
t::otftpiWo homo IUiiiil-iliclniiO

ol111111wltili_- •liege!

:M-

Old Q;onti ...,., ,.._ •$1GO. fQO. 1. . podge Von 311 ..... I:
• - Dodge lllidl!Or po'IL :104- __., t4SO. ' •
1 biidr m mz
,
114-4• 1141.
~~
• 1
-=.;;;D;;.~Il.,.... ~·'"'a.:-::P:-Iiot- ..- , I - C!W.Y 4 wo - PodiiiO, !:·
114 ttl 2tiOAfter4P.M.
Aulo, ~ Aauah. Rune Oood,,~

IOOt•ltn.

AllrtOIM-IIIIvonitlngln

11'\un-\ IS ... ~

104
AJ.9H 2

"""*•

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

~

Ext.Jtl.

....... 1 ~- .. '

Ylrglnlo, -

UIIEO

1

w.ldV Nat•lllll Puc ' 'i
FHA liar!- W noll. Ori

9 · Wanted to Buy
Doll.'
AI lol ~ y\1!1' Nit

CICXIO

,I

llelelum

12 Flee (ol.)
13 Plrt of the
· 1s 11tH tower
18 Ttpe of 111
"20 Sword

+AI09B H
EAST .

WEST

N?.RIV£. AI..OJE. I~
1l-11S Lift. MI&gt; Wt.
CtffiRI AI.Dk£,..

.

Merchandl• -1
12 Trucka for Sale ·
......., -~ ..., And Cubor 1111 OIIC • arlglnolL_,_..
LIIIIN.w -:t--.7111.
011..
. ~~
moo. 1171 1'
Oldrntolllte 310. ruM good, ; •

=..:::.."2;,a:...0:...

=:.-"

No bp lw-1 tiOO To SIIIO

lHb

' I

=·~leo~
.~
:~~
---------l~d~~.
......
MIICellaneoua
$ZSOOIO,CaRI-.

54

·Goods

......_. . .,........,,

c.~e-.-..211.

w r'loneer, oomp1111

Hou11hold

,.,.. .. :c1r r.qulrwd. no ..... pt.

Ta ....
II
1

•Auction
...........

ano

5I

Compll!e . . _ iooUH,. unll,
- . I l l . Plmi.. e-. 114-1112-1811.
M I ::::-;.,.~~ One Mdnaom •pl., Spring Ava.. nniJ,.
IOU'JI..'MIO.
""'IIOICII',
ll'llliliO.,
$1GO
'
clopooil, ~-- ohrllpm. · COUNTRY FURNITURE Nlll
s....11 u~ Aplrtment,
CRAFTI
In Oiilllpoi'"R.'l:.!::· ::. :;:
~
6
•
IM-441:1422.

l'wll ..

~

'
"
=::r._-.No.-.ean -;--H;;;;i;iid---- ------.....
One I · - · ..."'..... Fur-

._.I''"'

Real Estate

.,. EEK~ND MEEK

1188 a... ....... AUIO.;.Nr, PI, •:
PI,_
TW. CC, AltiFII ....- . . I
11.- . 114441 UM.
1•
1HI -loc 01011cf Pftr.iljl

........

31 Alvtrln

(mut.)

1$ Vtlf (Sp.)

1-U-11

•as
t ll l2

1117 Ca'lo, 1.11, - , T·!
T-J.CtulooiiiAir, TUI, It Interlor, ..,oaa
.. - · . . .. '
15,100 Firm. ii.W*~.
;:

...., z ......
ot VllloGo

-LIIIIuNl.
_
WolaiiL No Win
- _ __

Public s.le

tu1 -

I
AI Will
oqlirlod.
iSIIWID.I1Wii47JI.

. "'
- ·: tt,all A

dlunnlr - - to

IIIII rooll;

tt!.t'1 ~c.!

~=:.;.,:::::

Opponunlty

•-'-a. _,__

ftrl1:i..O:il4.lma. ~

Pi.P...Unt

t.,ZZ:~:'

Bull....

21

+Kz

-•.
..

1117 ... ... OXC
- . te.IOO. 080.
Z7ZI or e7HI'n.

\iA

811omowhot

14 Tiki - -

..._,_,
.....
---·~~~····

~

"Sorry, you have to find the

I TVnelwo..

.,..

NORTH

......, te ,rtWIIII .......

org.
38 Bolingvictory
'
lbbr.

4 Skin m11'k

PHILLIP
ALDER

72,000 ILIIPee: •

Coii114-112-INI. EOII;
{ ~
l':i :::"..0:, $118.
ComploiiJ Fumlohlll .:.:.~
::::.:l\ona:-=.~o:a a:: ·J·
-:~'.·~·-c~UDOU;-----~;=~=;=;s;e=lf·
=
h=e;lp=s=e=c=tioTn==by::y:ou:r:se:l:f
.
:
"
::::=:~~~:b;;:~~~
--~--""'!'.Glilllpolla
~o4~kJraLriver. No Pill, 11+ I -~"'=-:;::.,:"~'-'~·':'"·::::::::;::::::::::::::::::...j
•
. ,

•

ACIIOII

•

:104-t71-·.:

living. 1
-~~~~~ gonigo, ..... Oroolouo
100111 iifiii'l-

-

The World Almauc" Cros•word Puzzle,"

- . •• ,.,.........
- - CGndlllon, :.
14,100

of C.UR&gt;E .
Sill IT5 /loY
C!W Off.

+aa• tloiM. butrn..m:,

b

:a~~==

.......-. tM 241 1114, ..........

7

In R&amp;o

-~

., ltdroaa: ,. ...._, L.ower River

~ '''· ftl.44i.mo.
Lold: Cal, 6011 ...
....... ~ en.~; - . .

-

.___ I J ;:

--.-TINIII.

2

.,. . . . _ Old, ......

BRIDGE

~~~aM~-~
~~~~
In
~-~---- ·
'
- - M . T·T-'-- •

I, ..........

llty,tM • • •

,__

oonMUon.

41 Houlll for Rent
01-, -

~

III,
' I .....,

13...

ALLEYOOP

:

4221.114 ... iJitl.

Ren',IIS

1

Cld,

The

..... I~"'GN.i - ' •

City

.......... .......i;Orl.oiOf
-To-Mioio.t...

nn · a Anti•

,.

11

J

Thul'lclay, February 25, 1993

Thul'lday, February 25, 1993.

Apanment
tor Rem ·

3IS

. -·

B A GME L

I II I I I
HULBS

I

I

I
I

....u
u n ;'l

•••

R U QY E
Someone asked the town
l--,l.--.r-1..;:,1~3-rl--1 \:. !lpinster if it were true she was
getting married. "Oh no," the
rL.::::·:::~: : : · : : : : ·: : . ·: · · , spinster
laughed, "but 1am re·
N

I

.....•.

•

"':~

UNN0 E R
ally thankful for the - ·-!"
1--r~::...;1;-:.:,l.;:~c..;,';-5.:..:...1.- G Complete ihe chuckle quoted
·--'-·.....L-.1.--.1.--.L.--1.

'

•

by fi lling in the miSJing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PtiNT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

..,.,.,..,

,,,,.,

""'t"'1

THESE SQUAJES

6 IJNSCtAMBlE
ABOVE lETTERS .
· TO GET ANSWER
111111
SCJIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
' -• '
Thrush • Gruff· Rocky • Wotker • FOR HOURS
While attending a lecture. a lellow worker yawned
and said, "He's supposed to be a man of few words,
and he's been telling us that FOR HOURS!"

..:

~·:/

...~

....,.

-·

'"""!

.. .. '

"'•'""
~;'

Llveatoek ·

1 P.ant Orldlng Harre For S.M.

1141411Dn

zlltl-

Old ...... Tool; Call
nn 1:30 :1:111 P.M. Or
~ . . . . . 1113.
'
Kldo ......, Onor Arolillln ....._

___
_
.--.--___ _

~._.

T•1111111

Wilker

..... - , ; •• :I04-IlWOOI ...
,., 1:00 •

,_

.........

NO;--.W..

1----------------------

2 •. ..________________________

3 . ____________________

4··--------~--------5 . ________________
~---

6 ...

For Solo:

_______,__

____

9. _ ___;..,._~------10~---------__;_--~

11.~~..__.._____,_,___,_
12.__._...________________

13~--~-----------

14·~----~-----------­

~5~..__--~..__..___,.__...___

G.WpoU. Daily Trlb101e
446-2342
Pomeroy DBily Sentinel
992-2156
Pt. Pleasant Bqieter
675-1333

Klittr

~

8 I pU -

. . . . . . Round ....

For-· .,...

UM.

COnlact lonefbtll To lnlrr
Bid, tM-44WIII.
Genelle Nut11Uon Pia d ' *
IIoiUilng Amino Aold ilodv

1'111 ...

7---~--------------.,__..__..____,_______,_,_

B. _

a.~t 1141tal'lll. ..
14MIW4-Iplo.

=-.
·=-=~=-=

1pm

AITRO·GRAPH

Tr ,111 •;portal 10n

.... 111 11 Autoa lOr Sill

wo1a111 -

burniM' ,.._,._, Au ' b' ...
Clulfvr:fr II Mil Ml ..WICUSJi.
TM
II olloo.
~~ 'r ¢own

•to-

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1172 0 ' I b" Orb . . "*'Y
- ..... ~11!1!1. tiL I I truoli .,_, MVi 114:14NDDI

-...en.

;;bolllf!~;;lpi;;m:;•=t;;:;;;:;;;u;;-;:

::r
...
ll£&amp;!.1~= 11!; ~~t;=:.'.·~ a.:!
M» . Nl- .. -~~~~~ -A.r···,.,..
-

........, • I

Full -

-

f!illl'lt ' " 'a - • 11.0110 .,.._ -.$110, 114'111

1171 Pantloo l'lndllnl, 1100;

=·tiel, ...

~,--:::. ~~~ m7 Ford TOIIIpo, JZIIOO; loth
i;i..:-.:, lw llil .JIIor. In good . . . IIIII ""' gootl,
I - . . 11~~~!-!!:!7~2:.__ _ __
~ -

••••,

9

........

-a..,=·:.:r.··- · 82

tunlfOOd.

--11W*-

,_ . . . ,._ ·~ ,._ ,_ CccaN 110 C.W.e ~
... - PocioWIIollo
..,..010
,=t:.":;
tl4 ••• 1'/:;- --....... ~ _

llllr4PJI.
.
..... -OIIUtrCI,~-.

c:.-m.::;........... ·1HI9o!ile
~~-·
....
....

--iii
-=

~

:-?":.:~':: .-r:: .......
~·~·~F::U"r
am.
Clooniii,.L

..

-1

.=====.;.iloii;:.;:.-=At"'
.
-,;---L
-1-I-, -\
~ t:*l:.li'iil,' will~ l;l~····~

Ia r'
r, fl d ctd
441•1110.

Prloe. ,I'M- ll~~~~~~~C.~
~iCII
=Ion
~·~·-=·100=·~114~
I~(

Plumblnq•
Helling

, ...... 1lh the yMt.lhead. unuiUil hlppenlnge
could ..,... to -~~ your hoplllnd
, epectiiiOnl. JUII when you think
lhlnge ltlll't going 10 out, you
could be In lor till 111rpriN of your llle'.
I'IICIS (hb.. 'tent •1 PllltMt
could get you ltarlld an tM right
- todllr- Onol you ... In • hiPPr
~r-. tlllnQI
o1 mind,
·· • ohanoe men
IIIICid
than .... might d~
ICw you. del • jump on I~ by wndor·

· ·~

standing the lnftuencea which are gov- VIAQO (Alii. 23-hpt. ·221 Fresh In·
ornlng you In the year ahead. Send for. sights cen be gained today through
PIICIII' Astro-Greph predlcllona today converuuon, u well u braln81ormlng
by mailing $1 .25 plus a long, sell-ad· with knowledgeable aaoclates, Seek
driiHd, ol111nped en.,..ope to ' Astro- out lndlvlcluala who fltlhla description.
Greph, c/o this newapaper, P.O. Box UIRA (Sept. liJ.Oct. 231 You shouldn't
91428, a-and, OH 44101·3428. Be ha .. loo mUCh trouble today In gratify·
ture to sllte yOCK zodiac sign. .
. lng your ombllloua object ..... You are
AAIIS (Meroh 21· Apr1111) Thecharlla· In a good achle...,enl .cycle, so try lo
bla way wllh whiCh you deal with others m1k1 the moat of it.
today will yield a larger return at a later ICDIIPid (Oat. M Noiw. 22) Generally
dale. Your - • of klndnfll are eown opeaklng, you lhould be obit to gel
on fertile soli.
.
·
along quite well with olheno today, but
TAUIIUI (April :zo.Mor 211) In your In· you ore Uklly to be molt elfoctlvawllen
volvamenta with otheno today, you will dnllng with - • • ori a one-to-on•.ba·
be the person sough! .to eatablloh the sil. .,
· •
COUIW of ICtiOn. Fortun1tely, lhll II
(...... 8 Die. 211 Upon
whit you'li be bell oqulppod to do.
IWid 10 In fllo IIKI
OIMIMI ( . . , 11 .........., Someone
"""' you . . you• mind 10
whom you hove alwayo beenlll&gt;le to rely
totllr. 11'1 -lllorlgone
on will once ogaln bl wtlfklng on your
you can complete 11 to your _
blltalltodoy, ond you won't _ , ho....
to Ilk lor lhle pereon'e IMIIP·
·
CAIICIR (olunll1......., II) Group In- you might
- t • lhould prove vwy &amp;pplli· "your tllOutlhtaiiKI ~~~~~
ln(l to you today. You will riiPOnd W
Cllllltlng With pillt
1•In ohulllonl .....,, you are able to ~ 111111. ~nlntll!llnlllcont lo likely to
1
together with otherl for a oharecl Inter· .-IL .
111.

·

~ ••Hr~eb.b.11),..,.,. ••

LIO '""" 11-Aua. 221 CooperatiOn
~you .,. movtrom ~.,... 1o 1111"*' to your IUC· 1!111 10••• ilrll1l' ground ,.._ your
Cllllodor. Fortunetlly, you lhouldn'l lilallrlal tllllin f t coo...,.c~. ·filii.
hM any troull4e gent.,. the rlpht peo- ,
JDII've l!ell' ~ could
pll to go to bet lor you.
· 1 be&lt;modiflecl.
·
'·

.n.

\

'
'

�•

Dinners

Tho Rutland PTO will be span:
loring a spaghetti dinner on Marcli
6 from S-7
at the Rutland Ele·
mentary Sc I.
·
Advance tickets are being sold
- This anlcle Is the second of SUpPOrt group headed by Teresa u Buttons and. Bows, Middleport
Department Store, Rutland Depart:
three reponing on the srnclrome DUnfee at 992-n43
· .
ment Stole and Rutland Elementary,
.
known as Allendoa Delicti HyperTh 1s
gro~p serv1ces . Mason, for $4 adult, arid $2 cbildren 12
activity Diaucdtt (ADHD); a ccndi· J.ackson, Me1gs and Gallia Coun- and under
· '
tion char.cter!Dd by problems in. ues. The first meeting is scheduled
D·
·
·
r
h ··
aiiCIIIion IIWI, impulae c:ontrol and on March 12, at 1 pm., 81 the Galmner cons1sts o spag ~tu:
h~~ This article will deal lipolis Holzer Medical Center. If salad, hotl!emade rolls and ¥.nt:
primarily with classroom interven- you desire more information on Desserts will be sold at an addibon•
tions.
Ibis or other school related topics al c.harge. Ca~ry-out ~rders arct
The first consideration when please contact Robert Hudak 0 ; ava.1lable..D~Iivery :Will also ~
dealing Wltb ADHD children in the Cheryl Crossan at the Meigs Coun- &amp;VIIllable Wllhin the Village of Rut;
classroom should be the environ· ty School Board; P.O. Box 684 land.
.·
.
'
For further •nformauon or tQ'
ment, .Seat the student near the Pomeroy Ohio 45769
'
'
·
reserve a ticket, call '742-2103.
;
teacher's desk, but inciucle as pan
of regular class
Surround
the swderu with "g
role models", and encourage peer tutoring
· and cooperative learning. Avoid
distractions such as placinll the
ADHD swdent near air conditioners, high traffx: areas, doors or windows. Providea quiet study area,
and let all students have access to
Ibis area so lhe ADHD student will
not feel differeill from other stu·

f.:·

1993
Bridal
edition

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

274
Pick 4:
3263

Inside today

Mootly tloudy tonlpt. Low
near 20. S1turday, cloudy. HJah
In low 305.
'

sea:J.

de!IIS,

-Vol. 43, No. 215
Copyrighted 18113

j
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 26,1993

:Coal firm says UMW
refusing to bargain

-

The next consideration is ·
instructional delivery. Make sure
the AD HD swdent ts looking at ·
you duting verbal instruction. Sim- ·
plify complex directions and avoid
multiple comminds. Mate sure tbe
student comprehenda before beginning the tast. II: may be necessry
to repeat directioiiS in a calm, JlOSI·
ti ve manner. Help the. student to
feel comfortable with seeking
assistance (most ADHD children
won't ask). These children need
more help for a longer period of, :
.time !han lhe average child.
·
· To aid the sllldent in performipg.
Cruise, V6 motor, one owner car.
assignments, require a daily assign'
'
. ment notebook. Make sure !he student correctly writes down all
00
SUPER SHARP
.assignments each day. Parents· and
teachers should sign daily to sip~i,
fy completion of homewolk IISSlgnments. This may be used as a
method of daily communication
between home and school. Only
give out one rask.at a time, monitor
frequently, arid be supportive of
any work performed. Modify
assignments as needed.
·
For example, if the child is
never ~ble to complete 20 math .
problems in lhe allolted. time, give
him/her less so lhey C&amp;!l have some
success. Make sure you are testing
knowledge and not auention span.
Give extra time for certain tasks.
Tho ADHS student may work more
slowly, so do not penalize for needed extra time. ADHD children are · Tlrvo·tone paint, air, tilt, cruise, power door locka,
easily frustrated. Stress, pressure, . AMIFM stereo, cassette. This Is a clean carl
and fatigue break down seJfo(;Ontrol
0
and lead to poor behavior. Finally,
ONLY
allow lhe AI!HD child to use.a ~
~
'
.
recorder dUnng lectures. Thill will
decrease the nuniber of times you
will need to repeat instruCtions, and
also allpw lhe slow working child
Tilt, cruise, power windows and locks, power
to go back .over directions and
complete everylhing necessary.
seats.
· Our third column will offer
00
interventions relating to supervi·
.ONLY
sion, discipline, and providing
'
encouragement to the ADHD child.
We would like to take this opportu·
nity 10 infixm you pf B· locaf parent

By TED ANTHONY
Associated Press Writer
The nation 's largest coal producer took to the advertising
columns today wilh full-page ads
in Appalachian and Midwestern
newspapers accusing striking Unit·
ed Mine Workers of refusing to
bargain;
Onion leaders dismissed the
advertisements as another escalalion ofrhetoric.
An ad placed by Eastern Associated Coal Co. on !he back page of
today's editions of The Charleston
(W.Va) Gazette asks in bold, inchhigh letters, •'Why' does the
UMW A refuse to bargain?"
. An eight-paragraph statement
appears below, as does !he signalure of Eastern Associated President Peter B. Lilly.
.
'·At Ibis point, we still cannot
figure out why the union is delay-

.
$6995

FULL • Rock Jepad Erk:
Claptoa holds his six IIWIIrdl bacbtllge WedDesday l!lght'atlbe 351b·unual Grammy Awards
In Los Angeles. Clapton's honors included

Record and Son1 of the
.Heaven" and Album
"Unplugged." (AP photo)

pric Clapton triumphs
with six Grammy awards
By JOHN ANJ'CZAK
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Grammy voters affirmed with ballots
what rock fans said with spraypa!nt cans in the 1960s: "Ciapton
IS God."
.The graffiti !hat once appeared
on London walls became the theme
of Wednesday's Grammy cere- :
. monies as Eric Clapton collected
six trophies, including album of lhe
year for "Unplugged" and record
and song of the year.
·
Tho 47-year-old British guitarist
picked up his first award of lhe
night for "Tears in Heave11," a
melancholy tune written after lhe
dealh of his 4-year-old son in a fall
out a 53rd-floor apartment window
in 1991.
"I feel so guilty about ~~!king so
many of lhesc. I'm very mo~ed and
very shaky and very emouonal,"
Clapton said aft~r accepting his
final honor of the night. "And I
want to thank a lot of people, but
the one person I want to thank is
my son, for the love he gave me
and the song he gave me."
Clopton also shared best rock
song honors with writer Jim Gordon for Clapton' s acoustic version
of his 1970 classic "LayIa."
The other big winner of the
night was lhe music from the Disney movie "Beauty and the
Beast," which claimed four Grammys.
Celine Dion and Peabo Bryson
won best pop vocal performance by
a duo or group for !he "Beauty ani!
tile .Beast' ' single. The music, by
Alan Menken and lhe late Howard
Ashman, also won best album for
c~ildren, best insttumental composition for a movie or TV, and best

song wrinen for a movie or TV.
The academy presented awards
in 80 categories at the Shrine Auditorium, but only 13 of them during
lhe three-hour CBS broadcast
.
Previously, Clapton's only
Grammys were for his contribution
to the 1972 album "The Concen at
B1mgladesh" and for best rock
vocal in 1990 for "B.ad Love." He
had nine nominations Ibis year.
"I'll go out on a limb and 's;~y if
you're up against Eric Clapton in
any other categories, I'd go home
now," comedian .Garry Shandling,
host of th~ Grammy ceremonies,
joked about halfway lhrough the
show.
Arrested Development won lhe
coveted best new artist award and
best rap performailce by a duo or
group for lhe single "Tennessee."
Billy Ray Cyrus, who was nominated for f~ve awards on the
s~nglh of his wildly successful hit
"Achy Breaky Heart," was shut
out.
Instead, Vince Gill won best
male country vocal performance
for the album " I Still Believe in
You" and, with co-writer John
Barlow Jarvis, n:ceived lhe award
for best country song for the
album's title track.
In other country categories ,
Mary -Chapin Carpenter won
female vocal performance honors
for "I Feel Lucky," and Emmylou
Harris &amp; The Nash Ramblers won
a Grammy for performance by a
duo or group wilh vocal.
"Wow, isn't that beautiful!
Gosh almighty," .said Tony Bennett after his "Perfectly. Frank"
album, a tribute to Frank Sinatta,
won best traditional pop vocal performance.

k.d. lang's " Constant Craving"
won the female pop vocal performance Gramrny.
.
Boyz II Men's smash hit "End
of !he Road" was best R&amp;B group
performance.•. ~d it also won lhe
R&amp;B songwnbng award. Also in
R&amp;B, Chaka Khan won female
vocal performance for "The
Woman I Am" album and AI Jar.reau took male vocal honors for his
"Heaven and Eanh" album . .
The rap solo performance trophy went to Sir Mix-a-Lot for
"Baby Got Back," and the Red
Hot Chili Peppers were the hard
rock performance winners for
"Give It Away."
U2 won a group vocal rock performance Grammy for the album
" Achtung Baby," which also
earned a non-classiCal producer of
the ~ear award for the team of
Dan1el Lanais mid Brian Eno.
Olher winners inc.luded !he late
Stevie Ray Vaughan for rock inslrUmental performance for "Little Wing." Vaughan, who died in a
plane crash in 1990, also won lhe
contemporary blues album trophy
for ''The Sky is Crying.''
Multiple winners included The
Chieftains with two in the folk
album categories and Linda Ronstadt with a Grammy in both lhe
Latin and Mexican-American
album categories.
The Miles Davis album ·"Doo·
Bop" won the instrumental performance Gralnmy.
·
Classical album of the year was
"Mahler: Symphony No. 9" wilh
Leonard Bernstein conducting !he
Be.rlin Philharmonic Orchestra.
Mic)lael Fine was classical producer of the year.

CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DR.

$54t5°

WINTER UNIFORM - Even lbonp some
. . area ll!Otorlsts &amp;rumbled about Thursday '
· · nigli't's snowfall, the Civil War Memorial statue·
· at the Mel~ County Courtbouse did!l't seem to

.

1989 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4 DR.
.

This car has a lot of power equipme!lt. Tlrvo-tone
paint. A real savings!

There will be a round and
square dance at the. Long Bottom
Community Building on March 5 '
from 8-11 p.m. MuSic will be provided by Buzz Slater and Out of
the Blue. 'Ronnie Wood will be the
caller. The cost is $5 per couple
and $3, single. Refreshments will
be served.

This·
Weekend!

Friday, Sat.
&amp; Sun.

Home heating program extended
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
V. Voinovich has announced the
extension of the Home Energy
Assistance Program (HEAP) application deadline to March 26. The
program which helps low-income
Ohioans meet the cost of home
heating, was originally scheduled
to end Feb. 26.
"Because of the relatively rnild
winter, we were able to extend the
program deadline for HEAP services," Voinovich said. "But the
recent extreme wealher conditions
remind us that winter isn't over
and I encourage those who think
for Ibis service to
-lhey may qualify
.
-./:

,._ .,... _.... '

__,.. .,...- - ......--

-·~

;

ing lhe sran of tallcs on a new conuact and why they have cbosen our
company for Ibis Senseless strike"
Lilly wrote.
'
Charleston-based Eastern Associate~, a subsidiary of Peabody
Hol~mg Co. of St. Louis, placed
ads m 1.2 West Virginia newspa- ·
pers, most of them in the coal
fields, spokesman Terry Whitt said
today.
He said Peabody Coal Co. of
Henderson, Ky., also a Peabody
Holding subsidiary, took out similar ads in an assonment of Midwest
newspapen.
"We want people to get what
we see as the facts of what's going
on in the strike," Whiu said. "We
get to put it the way we see it witlloutTil being dislllrted."
he . UMW • in a statement
issued before lhe ads went to 11ress
Thursday, d~nounced ~e tacbc as

their corporate disinformation campai~.' •
·
·
'It wouldn't surprise us if
Peabody even decided to eventually purchase a few newspapers in
order to spread its misleadin¥. accusations," the UMW said. • Sadly,
Peabody seems committed 10 continuing lhe strike."
Union spokesman Jim Grossfeld
said he was surprised company
officials had not announced the ad
in advance.
:'It's been a war of words up
unttl now. I guess lhey're bringing
outlhe nuclear weapons," Grossfeld said.
Lilly accuses !he UMW of having "a different •genda, such as
legislative objectives in Washington, D.C."
·
"If Ibis is !rUe, it's unfair 10 !he
men and women of Eastern Associatedwho are sacrificing their liveli-

Athens county makLWes
offer .on '6 9llandfill
'

By KRIS COCHRAN
"I.Ihink (district) ~ l!J ~w
Under Ho~se Bill 723, which
·. . OVP News Sta"
first if.Athens c;~ty IS even go~n,t~ .._ outlines a new district withdraw
Alhens County Commissioners, to be "!. th~ d1~tr1ct before vottlig procedure; Athens cornmissii!nem
faced wilh the high cost of closing ~ 6?1, 58!d Vmton County Com- would have to adopt a withdrawal
their 69llandfill and continuing miSSIOner Jun Beckner.
resolution, deliver it to !he board of
lheir efforts to withdraw from !he
Although. memb~rs have directors and wilhin 60 days of its
six-county solid waste district, expressed lheu ~'!Ons of rak- receipt, !he district's board of counsought ~lion on bolh issues from !ng on !he respons1~d1bes of clos- ty commissioners inust either
members of the Athens-Gallia- mg Athens County s 691 landfill, approve or disapprove the pttlposed
Hocking-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton as well as other pos~ible district withdrawal.
.
Solid Waste Management district !&amp;ndfdl~. ~y have ~ lhey assist
In order for Athens County to
board of directors.
1n mon•tonng the closmg of land- wilhdraw, it must receive a unaBiClosing of the county-owned
landfill will cost the county fill~i think the disuict would be mo'us ,vote, not a majority. vote,
ff
h . .
according llHoleal.
. .
approximately $2 million, Alhens b11m~
o . more 1 an 11 could
Trying to get an indication on
County Commissioner Roxanne c~ell:', said Jackson County Com- what direction commissioners
Groff told the board of directors m~1oner ~e Neal.
..
would go, whether they were for or
Thursday afternoon in Wellston.
. Tho, mouon was 8-5 agamst the against the withdr.iwal, Joe Kasler
The operator of the 37-acre landfiU, d_islrlct s l!wthase of the 691. ~d- Alhens City-County Heallh Com:
which has been closed since 1984- f11l. ~alba County CommiSSIOn missioner, asked for a vote by a
85, walked out of ille closing pro· Pres1den~ Harold Montgomery show of hands.
ject
. voted ag&amp;lns~ ,t~e purchase while
Neal advised members not to
During the board's January fellow comm1ss1oner Ken Farmer take any kind of vote since the
meeting, when the 691 landfill YO~ fo.r the purchase.
were not meeting in an official
issue was first brought to light,
I think we should set a prece- commission session a violation of
there was a question on whelher or dent and show leadership in assum- the Sunshine Law. ' '
not the district's tipping fees could ing the landfill," said Farmer.
Allhough board members symbe used toward the closing of a
Concetned with the cost, Mont- pathized wilh lhe Alhens County
publicly-owned landfill, an option gomery asked members to remem- commissioners' landfill situation
Athens County thought could be ber !hat funds were not the budget some did not agree with thei;
used.
to do such and project resulting in effons to withdraw from the dis-:
According to a Feb. 23 letter to tax assessments.
trict
Lance Wilson, district director,
"It would go -back to our con"If Alhcns County had spent as
from Pavid White of the Ohio stiwents,.IIJe residents," said Mont- mucb time wilh lhe six~ounty disEnvironmental Protection Agency, gomery.
trict plan as they did with !heir
to EPA's knowledge no solid waste
Whet!'er Athens County stays in own-single county plan, lhe district·
management district has allocated !he distnct or not has no bearing on would have a plan," said Beckner. ·
funds for such purposes in draft or Meigs County's decision.
Groff told Beckner she felt !he:
approved solid waste management
"In or out, no one is willing to district didn't not look at Athens·
plans.
·
fix your 691 landfill," said Man- County's existing programs such'
Due to Alhens County 's finan- ning Roush, board president and as recycling,.as models for the discial dilemma in closin~ lhe landfill, Meigs County corniDlssioner.
trict, one of many reasons Athens
Alhens County Comm1ssioner Broc
Whether Alhens County is "in County feels it would benefit most
Irwin, made a motion !hat the solid or out" of the district would be by becoming a singleo(;ounty diswaste district purchase the 691 determined by the board of county trict and assisting lhe remaining'
landfill for $1.
commissioners in the.district
counties in the solid waste district

By
and wire reports
p.m. and early this morning. City as many as 30 cars involved in
A 'storm that dumped 3 to 6 and county road maintainence minor accidents or unable to climb
inches of snow on much of south- crews were out from 6 p. m. Thurs- !he steep grade.
ern Ohio prompted many business- day until the wee hours of the
Blowing and drifting· snow was
es and schools to close or restrict morning pouring salt and scraping . reported throughout southwest
operating hours today, frustrating main roads for area motorists.
. O~io. The Eaton post of !he State
motorists and public lransponation.
The Meigs-Gallia Post, State H1ghway Patrol reponed visibility
. Snow .flurries continued falling Highway Patrol, said all main roads at .one-eighth ·of a mile or less
thiS mommg, butlhe storm's heavi- were open this morning, but were Thursday night.
est punch was gone, the National snow-covered and slick. Only three
Many schools in soulhern Ohio
Weather Service said. Winter storm wrecks were reponed by .!he patrol and norlhern Kentucky dismissed
warnings issued Thursday for during the past 24 hours. City classes early Thursday to try and
southwe·s t through east-central police reported none.
1
beat the snow. Many also canceled
Ohio had expired by this morning.
Classes were postponed in all class for today.
About four inches of snow blan- schools in !he tri-county area today
Retailers, businesses and govketed the Bend area overnight because of the storm. Thursday ernment offices closed up to four
Thursday causing slick roads and night's GAHS-Jackson and Meigs- ~ours early to give employees a
school dismissals.
. Rock Hill girls sectional tourna- JUmp on the wealher. Some CincinAll of Meigs County's schools ment basketball games were called nati workers stayed at hotels downwere closed today, the second day off at Oak Hill. They have been town rather lhan fight !he snow.
\his week, because of snow and ice rescheduled Saturday. Meigs faces
The cold also was a problem.
on the roads. Schools- had been Rock Hill ai 12 noon and GAHS Early-morning temperatures in !he .
closed Tuesday because of Mon- will play Jackson at1:30 p.m:
teens contributed to two water
day's OY!lrnight snow.
· Forecasters at Cincinnati Norlh- main breaks in lhe Dayton suburb
Many of the county roads ern Kentucl\y International Airpon of Keuering on Thursday.
remained slick and dangerous Ibis in Hebron, Ky., reponed snowfall
Last week, a storm dropped 7
morning, according to a Meigs of 7.2 inches. Snowfall of 3 to .5 inches of snow on Cincinnati. the
County Highway Department inches was reported in lhe Dayton Cleveland area had 13 inches Monspokesman. He reponed lhat the area. Heavier snow fell to the . day ·and Tuesday, but northeast
work force bad been out about all south, in Kenwcky.
Ohio was spared the brunt of
At !he Cincinnati and Dayton Thursday's snow.
night plowing and spreading cinders. All 250 miles of road had airports, some flights were delayed
beeo gone over completely once, as runways were de-iced during lhe
he said, and today crews are beck • storm 's peak . Two-hour delays
out !here goina over them again.
were reponed from all major con·
As for the state roads, Supt. Jim necting systems at the Dayton
Proffitt at !he local garage, said that Greyhound bus station.
highways are in ''real good condi- ·
No major highway accidents
lion." He said !hat lhe ttucks hit the were reponed, but commutes home
roads shortly after the snow SWted became exercises in frustration.
Thursday and worked throughout
Jacqueline Weber of Cincinnati
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
the nighL
said her usual 20-minute drive -.A panel helping to plan a
There were no snow-related home from work took almost two reg~onal aupon for lhe Charleston
. accidents reported by the Meigs hours.
Huntington and Parkersburg area
County Sheriff's Department, or
"I could be walking and making hopes to whittle a list of 41 possiofficials of Middleport and be~ time," she said.
ble sites to five or fewer by midPomeroy.
·
Police closed Interstate 74 at lhe March, an offlqial said.
Galha County received any- Montana Avenue hill in Cincinnati
~ lh~ short list is produced,
wher~ from lhree and one-half to for a time Thursday evening after public meettngs will be held to disfqur mches of sn~w between 5:30 !he roadway became clogged wilh cuss the sites, beginning with a
meeting March 16 in Chw:leston,
said Arch Gleason, a member of
the Regional Airport Advisory
Committee.
. Gleason, the state's lottery
.
Firefigh!CIS of the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depanmenl responddiCCCtor and former transponation
, ed to two fires dlis morning.
secretary. said business and civic
·
An unoccupied building m Colbwn R!lld in Bedford Township
leaders m !he lhree major commu.· was destro)'ed in a llrUCture rue shonty after midnight, Fire Chief
nities to be served by !he 4irpon
. Danny Zirkle said. Tho depanment is still investi~ the blaze.
m.Wt avoid a turf battle.
A clothes dryer fire amind 4:30 in a Uncoln }{eights home in
''Our overall/oat is consenPomeroy caused liibt clamqe, Zirlde said. No injuries were repon•
sus,"
Gleason IIi Thursday at !he
· ed.
advisory cornmillee's first meeting,
~Slid tbe staro has "a unique
opportunity" to obtain federal
funding for the lirDon because Sen.
Citizena National, Point Pleuant, W.Va., a division of The First
. INSTALLING GUARDRAD... Workers tor
Robert Byrd, p..w.va., is chairman
·
C011tinued on page 3
PDK Con1truetlon, Pomeroy, were busy
of.lhe Senate Appropriations Committee.
· instaDIDI I n.-. ledlOII of IIUII'drall along Ohio

Panel paring
down list of

apply now." ·
For households with more !han
HEAP, a federally funded pro- six members, add $3,570 per memgram administered by the Ohio ber. ' '
.
Depanment of Development, helps
Applications for the Regular
eligible low-income Ohioans wjth program are available at !he HEAP
home heating costs by paying ,a o.ffice, community action agencies,
part of the December, Jantlary and human services offices. DepartFebruary heating bills.
ment of Aging centers, banks,
Households applying for HEAP libraries and utility company
must be at or below 150 percent of offices.
the 1992-93 federal poveny guideHEAP also offers an emergency
lines, which are: (size of household program providing assistance to
• total household income 12 households whose beati111 service
monlhs)
is disconnected, is threatened wilh
1 • $10,215; 2 • $13,785; 3 • disconnection or have less !han a
$17 ,355; 4 • $20,925; s •$24,495; ten-day SIJiliJ)y of bulk fuel. Emer6. $28,065.
gency HEAl' allows eligible households a one-time payment of up Ill
$175 per winter season to leSI01e or
retain home heating IICfVice. The
Hawley, Dottie Musser, Mary V. pro~ralil may also ~. el., pay f~r
Kautz, Gay Perrin, Pat Holter, heatmg system repatrs 10 cenam
Irene Bailey and Amy Perrin.
cases.
Mrs. Wildman's meditation was
Applications for Emergency
on "The Nail" with scripture from HEAP will be accepted at local
Romans 12:1-13.
HEAP delegate agencies .(Commu. Following Mrs. Wildman's pre- nity Action Agencies) tbrou1b
sentation, all in attendance sang April 2, 1993. Information about .
"Benealh lhe &lt;::ross of Jesus."
the HEAP JIOIP&amp;m is availiNe by
Unison benediction closed ihe calling the toll-flee HEAP Hoiiine,
program.
1-800-282-0880, Monday tbroulh
Contributions given at the Friday between 8 a.m. lild 5 p.m.
bfeakfast will be donated to the Those who have a TelecommunicaMeigs C®nty ~lirmary.
tions Device for the Peaf (TDD)
cali calll-80().,686..1557, toll-flee.

airport sites

Ash Wednesday breakfast held
.The women of Trinity Church
hosted the annual Ash Wednesday
breakfast ai the church on Wednesday wilh 125 people attending and
22 churches represented.
JoAnn Wildman gave the welcome before the breakfast was
~rved. This was followed by a call
to worship.
· The Trinity Women' s Chorus
pn!SCIIted special miiSic (with bass
provided by Rev. Roland Wild·
rilan). Members of.lhe chorus are
Lois Bun, Carol)'ll Thomas, Alice
Globokar, Mary .Skinner, Diane

bls w1nter uniform. (Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman). ·
·
10

sta"

1989 FORD TEMPO GLS

Dance planned .

,!Din d. H~rl! the""' soldier standa guard, coo"tit

/Jate winter snow prompts widespread
school .,closings, causes traffic delays

$6495

3 Sect~• • 3e ""~~" 25 .......
A Muldm~ Inc. Newop1...,

....--·-Local briefs--

'

: PVFD ,reports two fires

Bank seeks judgm,nt

.

_...

~

.

.

.

,

'

.
'
••

.

'

.
. I

124 be!Weeu Pomeroy and' Mlftrmllt n•rsday. Here, workers rivet l••rdrall Mdlou
totetller. (Se•IIDel photo by Jla ...._.)

•

..

.'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="333">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9627">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32248">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32247">
              <text>February 25, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="214">
      <name>baker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1739">
      <name>burns</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3702">
      <name>cart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="106">
      <name>cole</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1732">
      <name>ferrell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2195">
      <name>hensler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2106">
      <name>kay</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="471">
      <name>moore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="463">
      <name>oliver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
