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                  <text>Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Thursdly, _March ot, 1883

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Conimunity calendar
Co••••lty Caludar Items
appear two days before • eveat
aad tile day ol tlllt eveaL Items
mlllt be received weU Ia advaace
tci IISSUre. publleatlon In tbe cal·
endar.
THURSDAY
RUTLAND • Meigs County
Holiness Association's annual
indoor camp meetiJI,8 will be held
at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene through Saturday at 7
p.m. nightly and on March 7 at 6
p.m. Rev. and Mrs. Murre! Duffie
are the music evangelists and evangelist for the camp. Fern Grim will
be having children's services for
K-6 grade. A nursery will be provided.
'
LONG BOTTOM · Revival will
be held throul1'! Sunday at F~Oill •
Gospel MisSion on County Road
30 in Long Bottom. Special singers
nighUy. Marvin Welch, Charleston,
W.Va., will be the speaker. Roger
Wilford is the pastor. Everyone
welcome.

RACINEi • Services at the Fel·
lowship Chun:h in Racine will be
h~ld Thwsday lhrough SalUrday at
7 p.m. ni&amp;hUr. There will be spe·
cia! singins rughtly. Don Bush will
be the evangelist. Pastor Charles
Bush invites the public.
'
.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the JTPA building in
Pomeroy. call 992-5763 for infamation.
POMEROY • "How to Best
Handle Common Diseases and
Pests Around the Home Yard" will
be given by Hal Knecn, extension
agent, on Thursday from 8-9:30
p.m. at the senior citizens center in
Pomeroy. Admission is lice.
RUTI.:AND • Rutland Township
Trustees will meet Thursday at
6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Stalion.
POMEROY • The Community
Lenten Service, sponsored by the
Meigs Ministerial Association, will
be at Sacred Heart Church. Rev.
Roland Wildman will be pieaching.

POMEROY • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ. Jill
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Johnson will be demonstrating .l:ocal Board of Education will hold
spring crafts. Bring af!i!;nd.
a special meeting Thursday at 4
·,
p.m. at the high school regarding
RACINE ~ The Racine Ameri • personnel.
can Legion Post 602 will meet .
LOTTRIDGE • The Lottridge .
Thursday at 8 p.m. Supper will
bCgin at 7:30p.m.
.
Community Center Association
wil,l meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs center, Everyone is welcome.
Junior High Academic Boos&amp;ers
wiU meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the . TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tupschool cafeteria. Kathy Shibley pers Plai.Jis VFW Post No. 9053 .
will be the speaker. She will dis- l,adies Auxiliary will meet Thars- ·
cuss parenting skills. Everyone day at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
inviled.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM • There will
be a round and square dance at the
tons Bouom Community Building
on Friday from 8-11 pJII. feat~
Buzz Sloter and "Out of the Blue.
Ronnie Wood will be the calle,.,
The cost is SS for couples or $3
single. Refreshmepts will be
served.
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel -Church in Long Bottom
will ~ave preaching ·and sjnging
Friday at 7 p.m. with local singing
talent. Pastor Sieve Reed invites
the public. Fellowship will follow.
POMEROY • There will be a
baby shower for Linda and Jef.f
Warner on Friday at 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Uniled Melhodist Chun:h.
POMEROY • There will be a
baby shower for Linda and Jeff
Warner on Friday at7 p.m. at the
PIJ!IIeroy United Methodist Chun:h.
'

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will have a round. and
square dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. Heritage Express·will provide
music.
·
ROCK SPRINGS • Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. The degree of
Pomona will be conferred. Star
Grange is host
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a soup bean dinner in the basement
of the Middlepon Masonic Temple
on Friday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. by
Evangeline Chapter No. 172,
O.E.S. Eat-in or carry-out Cost is
$3. Call992-5330 for information.

REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees will meet Friday at 7:30p.m. at the Shade River
State Forestry Buildins.
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
pon Youth~ will hold sign·
up for the 1993 ball season on Sat·
urday from 9 a.m. to noon; March
9, 6-8 p.m.; and March 13, 9 a.m.
to noon. Sign-up will be held at the
Middleport Council chambers.
Anyone who did not participate last
seallon will need a copy of their
birth certificate. Registration fee is .
$10 per child, not to exceed.$25
per family.

RUTLAND • The Rutland

and under. Everyone welcome.

Ohio Lottery

Hoosiers
clbich share
of crown

youth League will hold sign-up fOr
the
1993 ball seuon on Saturday
HARRISONVILLE • Harfrom
1-4 p.m. at !be Rutlaild Civic
risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
Center.
Anyone who did not partie·
will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
ipate
last
season will need a copy
Work in the F.C. Degree. Refiesh·
·
of
their
birth
certificate. Resistra·
menta se.rved. All master masons
lion
fee
ii
$10
· child, not to
invited.

Pick 3:
347
Pick 4:

5908

Pag~S

•

'.

e

~if

RUTLAND • There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8p.m. to midnight. Music by Pure
Country Band. Public invited.

· Vol. 43, No. 217

Copyrighted i !193

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 7:30p.m. at the
grange hall near Salem Center.
Potluek (efreshmer\ts will follow
the meeting JIRd all members arjl · .
AND QlJEEN • Niellle Hatlleld wet naaetl qaetn aDd
urged to attend.
Harvey
kiDI at the Valeat!M llnquet beld
receotly ·
ofUocl by tbe Sealor Salats.
. HOCKINGPORT • There will
be a round and square dance at the
Reynolds Building on Route 124 at
.
.
Hockingport on Saturday from ..8·
II :30 p.m . featuring "Out 9f the
The Senior S&amp;iniS of the Rudand Corcofln, Joan Keller and baby,
Blue," Buzz Sloter, Millie Church of God held a valentine Steve and Andria .Powell, Chrissy
Reynolds, Bill Sharp, Joe Clark, banquel recently at the church and Andrew Powell, Ronnie Pow· Junior Wiblin, Denzil Benneu. social hall. The room was decorat· ell; HarVey Erlewine, Nellie Hat·'
Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
field, Katherine Weaver, Mary
ed in hearts, (lowers and balloons.
Romines,
Betty Kleinert and Ash·
Nellie Hatfield was named
TuPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- queen and Harvey Erlewine was ley, Glenia Yarbrl)ugh, Mildred!
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 named king. Runners-up were Ingram, Mary Lambert, Birdie•
Ladies Auxiliary will have a Geraldine and Chester SexiOO.
Hysell, Alice Kitchen and Grace,:
Sl/aghetti supper Saturday beginRod
and Dianne Walker, David and
Attending were Chester and
ntng at 4 p.m. Cost is $3.50 for Geraldine Sexton, Jeff SeXton, Darlene Wilkes and Sarah, and
adults and $1.50 for children 12 Dave Richardson, Jphn and Julie Jackie Preece.
'

'

Brochure, survey
are SEORC topics
GUEST SPEAKER· Naocy 'Holllster, (center), director of tbe GoverJ!or's Office of
Appalachia, w.as the guesf speaker during
Tllarsday nlgbt's Soutbeast.ern Ohio Regional
•....CouncU's
winter
. .
,. . meeting. at tbe University of
.
.

Rio Grande; Also pictured are Ron McDade,
(left), president of tbe Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce, and Carl Dahlberg, SEORC executive director. (OVP pboto by Kris Cocbran)

.

Mardi
Gras
Madness

By Kathryn CroW
·
Mayor James Pape, Council
SentloelCorrespondent
members Jack Williams and
A public meeting to determine Kathryn Crow met recently with
whether London Pool in Syracuse the Meigs Coul)ty Commissioners
wiU ppen or remain closed this year and asked for financial assistance.
will be held l\:1onday_at7:30 p.m. at A representative from Middleport
the Municipal Buildirig. ·
was also there asking for assistance
'
The fate of London Pool could for the Middleport pool operation.
.. be determined by the amount of They were told by the commission.•. intcrest shown at that meeting, not · ets that the COqnty·had no money to
: only ~Y resideniS of Sryacuse but give to either the syrac\ise ~ Midof Metg5 County.
dlepon pools.
The p11blic meeting to ask was
Mayor Pape J!ointed out that
·. ·~t by_S)!lliCuse..Yillage.COUncil-at • tnllhY children wtll be.dellrived ol
ill~ meeli.og'Thwsday night
learning to swim as \ilefl-as stuCouncil agreed that the right deniS who. work there losing jobs.
piOCedln would be to .ask for input "It will hun the kids," tHe maror
hot liiiiY from Syracuse rcsjdents staled with Katie Crow poinung
but other ares residents who use or out that it is a step backwards in
!1fe in~. in whether the pool, progress made over the past 50
m operation SUlCe 1977, operates or years.
is clOsed.
·
The mayor also stated that lhe
By CH:4.RLENE HOEFLICH
· The pool operation described"as village is in the SBCll.e state as the
Sentinel News Starr
having "gone down hill". for the cOqnty with no funds to operate the
With
a diagnosis ()f Alzheimer's
past few years lost approximately pool. Commissioner Manning
Disease,
it isn't just a victim who
$12,090.1ast year.
.
Roush ·asked those attending the
suffers.
The
afflicted, as well as
After
deliberating
past
9
p.m.
·
~ 1s partly due to closmgs for . commissioners meeting if Council
family
members
and those who
ThurSday,
a
jury
of
nine
men
and
·repatrs, weather condtttons, and had considered placing a tax levy
become
caregivers,
move into a
three
women
returned
a
verdict
of
poor anendanee when lhe pool was on the ballot for pool operation.
spiral
of
frustration,
fear
and uncer.
guilty
against
a
Crown
City
man
open. Lack of attendance is
Council members indicated that
tainty.
'accused
ofra~.
but
were
unable
to
be;lieved to be caused by t!le many they are against a levy in the vii·
Knowing where to look for help
pnvately owned pools . wh1ch have lage since the pool serves not only reach a decision on a kidnapping
can
become as important as knowchar~e.
sprung up over the past few years.
Continued on page 3
ing
when
it is needed and how to
·
William
Henry
Wells,
20,
20741
•
\
State Route 7, Crown City, was give iL
The part about "knowing where
found guilty of the May 27 rape of
a woman in her mid-20s behind the to look" is what brings the Meigs
The Ohio River in Pomeroy was 10:30 a.m. the water stood at 34.7 ·catholic Youth Center, State Route County Council on J\ging intb the
standing at 38.6 and still rismg at feet.
588, Gallipolis, Prosecuting Allor· picture, says Lenora Leillleh, R.
11 a:m. Friday. Flood stage is 48
Meanwhile,
several
roads
in
the
'ney
Brent Saunders said this morn- N., the Alzheimers Disease/Related
feet.
.
Disorders program coordinator for
county were closed.
ing.
The 1ockmaster at the Racine
The Meigs County Highway
The kidnapping charge will not that agency.
Loeb and Dam reported that water Garage reported that County Road be pursued, he added.
A support group, homemaker
··.
was rising.at a rate of 7/10-of a foot 3 at ~ding Creek, County Road
services,
respite care, home delivWells allegedly abducted the
an hour.
ered
meals
are some of the·services
10 at langsville and the Bowman woman at lmifepomt from Hinkle
He said that the last crest pre- Run Road were all closed.
offered
through
the Co.uncil on
Avenue before he took her behind
dictions he received from the
Aging
to
qualified
clients, accordThe State Highway Garage the youth center and raped her.
National Weather Service have reported Route 124 between Rut·
ing
to
Leillteit.
Wells was remanded to the cusalready been passed and are cur- land and Langsville and Route 124 tody of the G;lllia County Sheriff's
rently being r~vised. At Racine at at Rock Run above Portland closed. Department and incarcerated in the
county jail to await sentencing following a pre-sentence investigation
ordered by Common Pleas Court
I udge JoSeph L. Cain.
Another man charged iq the
incident, Jason P. Ramey, 19, 37
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby transported Fred Oren-·
Smithers Street, Gallipolis, is
nen of Ravenswood, W. V~ .• to the Orient Receplion Center Thursday.
.
•
scheduled for trial May 2 to face
similar charges of rape and ltidnap· Drennen is 10 begin serving a life sentence after pleading guilty ·
Pillll'..
to three charges of aggravated murder Monday in lhe Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas.
·
A charge of aggravated rape is a
ftrst
degree felony ,in the state of
Drennen· must serve 20 years confinement before becoming eli-·
gible for parole.
Ohio
and capies a sentence of 5 to
'
.
· 10 or 25 years and a maximum fine
of $10,000. .

Man found
guilty of rape ·

River up to 38.6 feet here

•VISA

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•LAYAWAY

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992-5177

Gol4

SWIM
SUITS
ARE NOW
IN!'

jobs, lots ·of responsibility ·
The support group for caregivers meets at the Center on the
third Wednesday afternoon pf
every month. At the meetings, general discussions, speakers, and
videos are used to teach care tech·
ni~ues and share tips on ways to
reheve some of the stress experi·
enced by 24-hour.caregivers.
One emphasis of the program is
to encourage caregivers to take
take of themselves . Caregivers
have important jobs and lots of
responsibility, said Leifheit, and if
you do not take time for yourself,
you may not be able to continue to
help your loved one." •
.
In Meigs County two-thirds of
Alzheimers patients are cared for at.
home by family and friends. One
reason is the ,expense of extended '
care:
· Leifheit said that there are many
things. which can be done to help
caregivers.
Besides the support group meet·

ings, home care videos can be burrowed. These teach easier ways of
changing an occupied bed, tech' niques for moving patients from
the bed to a chair, and ways of
changing the envitt&gt;nment to make
it safer.
"Like knick-knacks, mirrors
anything that reflects - these ca~
be frightening to someone with
Alzheimers," the nurse· explained.
She also suggested using black and
white ins.tead of bold ~nd bright
colors wh1ch tend to exctte the victims.

.

The Center also can provide
respite workers to relieve caregivers occasionally. According to
Leifheit, this amounts to only a few
hours a week but at least it gives
the caregiver time to get away from
the constant supervision required
by many Alzheimers patients.
Alzheimers is being described
as the disease of the century. Esti·
Continued on page 3

Bre'aking and entering examined

-

Deputies Qf the Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment:are investigating the breaking and entering of the Little Coal Bucket, Hampton
Hcillow Rd., Langsville.
,
It was ~ the establishment, ownecj .by Cecil Fry, had been
ente~ sometime between 10 p.m. Wednesday and 8 a.m. Thursday
and beer and cigarettes were talcen.
.

3-Week Delivery

. t

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Ofrer Explre5 May 3 t , 1993.

BRING THIS AO·

More-Allat

Snrril! rt&lt;~lrlctlnn~

.

prlcea. ••

Pomeroy resideniS in the Lincoln Heights area will be without
water for 1)¥0 hours Monday fro!D about 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
·
According ~ the Pomeroy Water Deparunent, the water will be
shut off allowmg water deJIII!:ltllent crews.to conduct regular main·

' ··'(~~~·
. ThC
OfiPlli

tenance.

moy oprJy. St:. dN~r ror Clrtall~.

c

•

unbellevllbHI

Water outage sc.heduled

· IJJfRTrAR\~n .

.
.

Pearls and Much

Racine man In accident, twice

· .

Deputies of the MeJp County' Sherifl's Depanmentlnvestigaled

twO accldeota Thllllday, both involving the same man.

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS·

100 E. Mal• St.
Pomeroy
~L:'\it» tGJ•te) Ferrel:t;.;_;n~
lcfJJ'"IP" ~.
1t.J1Jfllfi)
~~ ..~

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··

.

SHOW
TICKETS
AVAILABlE
• Now Carry
HEliE. Pink Ice, Pewter,

i

fund8mental need to improve the
quality of life," said Bush. "T~e
brochure has come out at a crucial
tin\e."
.
Although several projects have
moved forward, Bush is concerned
with lhe length of time it has talcen
to get to where projects are at now.
"We're concerned about being
bogged.down in a bureaucracy ihat
threatens the changes of gelling
projects completed by the turn of
the century," he said. "It's lhe bot·
tom line problem this region has."
"It's important to keep pushing
the planning process and cut
through the red tape," he added. ·
Taking the -council's message to
Columbus, the brochure reflects lhe
views of southeastern region, said
Kenner, views that have apparendy
reached Gov. Geoi'ge Voinovich. ;
"Gov. Voit\ovich has expressed
Str9ng support in these projects mid
he is encouraged by the pro~reb
that has been made," said Hollister.
In meeting with the gQverno'r,
Hollister said one of his goals was
. to establish time lines on projects.
"We need to continue setting
goals and meeting them," she
added. "We have good local Ohio
Deparlll)ents of Tran~portation in
this region to move projects along."
· Conjinued on pagd

Drennen trat:tsported to Orient

Savings At
BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
Easter
Dresses &amp;
Suits Arriving
Dail)'ll
FASHION

opa:ator, all around machinist/automalic machine operator, mainte·
nance electrician, data processor,
semi-skilled production worker,
assembler, and clerk typist, according to Crawford.
''The survey, which. will be used
as a marketing tool, gives prospective employus a b,etter look at
regional numbers," said Crawford.
"lf low wages is an advantage,
the region has an 3dvantage, continued Crawford, adding that the
region's wages were some what
less than th~ rest of the State's.
A brochure outlining lhe Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
Highway Agenda was also presented to the public Qy G. Kenner
Bush, chairman of the SEOR'C
lfighway Users Committee, which
spotlights three major highway projects including Route 23 from
Columbus to Ponsmouth and Hunt·
ington, W.Va.; Route 35 from Dayton to Gallipolis and to Charleston,
W.Va.; and Route 33 from Colum·
bus to Ravenswood, W.Va., and
Charleston. . ·
Completing the council's high·
way agenda by the year 2000 is
whaL Bush called a "realistic
expectation".
"We consider highway access a
•

--Local briefs-__,;,.,

~:f:..,,fl'/.nJI,OtSCOVER

J

By KRIS COCHRAN
OVP News Starr
The first of its kind from a
regional approach in the United ·
States, the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council Manufacturing
Wage, Benefit, and Labor Survey
was presented Thursday night during a press conference prior to the
SEORC's winter meeting at the
University of Rio Grande.
Also attending the conference
·was Nancy Hollister, director of the
Governor's Office of Appalachia
and guest speaker for the dinner
sponsored bi the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce. .
According to Sam ~r~wfcird,
chairman of the SEORC Industrial
Development Committee, the survey was a way of develaping tools
for economic development in
southeastern Ohio.
,
Ninety-four manufacturing
firms. from the 'tt counties that
make up the SEORC, including
Meigs County, provided confidential information pertaining 10 wages
and ~fi!S for the publication.
Chambers of commerce from
each of the n counties hand delivered 'the survey, which outlines
eight job descr-iptions including
gen~al machine operator, process
,

·r:afegitiers ;hllve imprJrtant

$ave During Great Spring Sales ,S- ~onsored ~V Pom~roy Merchants As$oeia.tion .

-~

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 eenlt
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 5, 1993

Fate of London. Pool could
be determined-'M onday

~Sl~O~~c~c~ ·
~ March Is Blowing In

low30s.

•

a1

Seniors crown king, queen

.

Low tonlghtiD ap~r 20s
Snow. Saturd•y, nurrloa. Hlgb In

CHAPMAN SHOES
......

POMEROY, OHIO
~,:!JJI'" ' - ~·92~2·. ~ •!If' ..... . Ufl. ~·

\.;.- ejl~t~ ~~\J~~AJ f!!&gt;!IY-&lt;~ ·

K&amp;C Jewelers
212 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
' ·'
992·371i
....I

_!!!o~~cident, ICCICinJinlto Sheriff James M. Soulsby, hap-

.-- ••IUI-Y .lftmloon in the Eastern Hlsh School paddnsiOL

A perked 1990 ~ ~ owned by Scott Wolfe, Racine, was
~ on !be lefl-liont when it was backCd into by a 1979 Ford,
operated by James P. Hutr, Bailey Road, Pomeroy, report staled.
Lller, 80UDd 9:30 p.m., Wolfe was southbound on Bashan Road

a

Continued.on
I.

3

Ohio jobless rate drops
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The ·unemployme9t rate· in Ohio
dropped 0.3 percentage point to 6. 7
percent in February, the Labor
Department reponed today;
. Ohio's jobless rate was down
from 7,0 percent in January.
, The nation's unemployment rate
dJ'opped 0.1 pei'CI:Otage pointiO 7.0
percent in February and the recovering economy produced the
biggest one-month pin in -jobs in
four years, the government report·
ed today.
'
'
The Improvement in the national
rate, whiCh exceeded the expectation of prlvate·economlsts who
closely ,monitor the labor market,
110111med from employment gain~
in construction, retail trades and
servlcjjs, tile Labor Department
said.

.~~

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Local Sdtoola. Here, water coven State Rllllte
143 .ID Sallabury. Towuhlp 1b11rsday manilla,
.Severll·rvadiiD tile county are stU! co~ wJi1t •

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··commentary

....

_Frldly, March 5, 1993

Page 2~The DeilY Sentinel

Pomeroy Mlddlifport, Ohio

r---------------------------------,;--------~--------------------------------------~·~~F~rl:: Ma~h5,1993

..

Major e_xpansion project announced by PVIf

Wednl'Sday, March 3

•

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions

~

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
•

•

•

111 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio '

PA .

·' ' DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

••

IND.

''''

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControUer

The Dill Se

: i;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::::::::::~~:-:--:~-!!:~2:::~~~~~------~---------------------l~E!~Y~~n~U~RM~~~~i¥'!=!3
OHIO Weather

•

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,

Pomeroy----Middleport, ·a hlo

I

· •lcolumbusl47'

'''''

I

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

By Mlady Kearns
be built onto the existing P!llient
floor,
with a new pediatric unit on
With today's me4ical technology
the
second
floor.
ovec 60 percent of surgery is done
In
addition
to the new facilities,
on an outpatient basis, accos'ding to
moving
tbeae
unitB
to the new area
Michael G. Sellards, Executive
Director of Pleasant Valley will free space for renovalions. Tbe
Hospital, and thai wiD be the em· intensive care unit will be reassigphasis of tbe hospiral's $8.9 million ned, Sellards said, and obstettics
construction and renovation project will move to the east win~. This
move will make it easJer for
which wiU begin this summer.
The project will add a new sur- women having cesarean binhs to be
gery department so the i:ast wing of close to the surgery department.
The laboralosy will be expanded
the hospital facility, with emphasis
to
old operatin~ room area. and
on outpatient and ambulatory sur· thethe
existing
gery. In addition, new waiting and gency !:8J'C. lab will become emerconsulting areas will be builL
The lbtal area of new consuucBesides the addition so the east
wil)g, a new intensive care unit will tion will be 16,953 square feet,
while another 10..565 square feet

----Local briefs... --__,
W. VA.

:.:Key -to the universe
;:proves elusive

..

,

'Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
01993Accu·W6altler. Inc.

------Weather~
. ----Soutb-Central Obio
,
Tonight, cloudy with scattered
flurries. Low in the upper 20s.
· Chance of snow SO percent. Saturday, clearing with a slight chance
of flurries in the morning. High in
the low 40s. Chance of snow 30
percent.

Extended forecast:
Sunday through Tuesday:
Sunday, a chance of rain or
snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs in
the 40s. Monday, fair. Lows in the
20s. Highs in the upper 30s to mid40s. Tuesday, a chance of rain .
Lows in the 30s. Highs in the rnid40s to mid-50s.

--Area deaths--· George Adkins
· Oeorp W. "Gravy" Adkins, 77,
· of !'Dint "'mant, died Thursday,
· March 4, 1993, at Jactaon Geaenl
' Hospiral ia Ripley.
· He was a pipefitllr fot Union
· Local S21-Huntington, a veteran of
· tbe U.S. Army World War II and a
• member of the Main sireet Baptist
Church in Point Pleasant.
:,

Some customers without water
Several hundred Pomeroy Water Co. customers in the area from
Pomeroy village hall to the corporation limits were still without
water la!e Friday morning.
It was reported by the village that a leak or break occurred
around 2 p.m. this morning cutting off the water supply to that area.
As of II a.m, the trouble spot had not been located. Since the Salis·
bury school is serviced by that line, school was dismissed there
today.

Man cited for D.UJ.
Rickie L. Koenig, 3g, State Route 7, Tuppers Plains, was cited
· W~y by the qaJlia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Pab"ol
for drivmg under the mfllience.

Ruth Durst

EMS responds to.four calls

• Ru!h Love Dunt, 82, of Point
died Wednesday, Man:h
3, 1993, at the Holz« Medical Cen·

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to four calls for assistance overnight.
Responding were: 9:59 a.m. Racine to Main Street for ROberta
Thax~ who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital; II : 10
a.m. Middleport to Sycamore·Sb"eet for David Cole who was transported to VMH; 6:26 p.m. Racine to State Route 338 for Trudy
Reese who was transported to VMH; 6:38 p.m. Middleport to Grant
Street for Marvin Kelly who was treated and not transported.

Plcasan~

ter in Gallipolis.
Sbe was a member of the former
Eckard Chapel Church.
Born June 19, 1910 in Flatroek,
sho was a dauahter of the 1a1e Dr.
William P. and Cora Blanche

be~ a~:·~~1Iol::t ~ Fets~ J:;·b:~::B:':
Durst. Jr.; a brother, Hugh Love;

Ina Mae (Fry) Adkins.

Continued from page 1
in Sutton Township following a 1988 Ford operated by Timothy P.
~ Tanoers Run Road, Racine, when both drivers spotted several
standing in the roadway, a sherifrs report said.
.
Both drivers applied brakes and Wolfe's sruck ssruck the rear of
·
·
Hayes' vehicle.
Damage so Hayes' vehicle was listed as heavy while damage to
.Wolfe's right-front f~der and bumper was listed as moderate.
No injuries were reported.

for construc;tioo bonds for tax ~­
empt purposes on the project. A&amp;·
cooling to Sellards, the county Wjl1
have no liability, however.
•
Sellards added the expansi()a
will be a "design and build" concep~ with HBE of SL Louis prom·
ing both architectural and contraCt·
ing services. According so the
hospital administrator, HBE will
come into the area and deal wUh
lncal lrlldes for services on the
project
:
Once started, the expansion Wjl1
take about 15 montha to compleJC.

lime."

Thiny montha in planning, the
total cost of the project will be $8.9
million. Some of these · funds,
however, will be used to pay off existing Farmers Home AdminiSiration loans for an earlier tower and
the nursing care center.
Sellards said the moner will also
aUow the hospital to eqwp the new

areas.

A breakdown of costs will include $3.5 million for construction
and renovation, $1 million for
equipment, and $4.4 million for
loa1i payoff. The Mason. County
Commission ac~ as the vehicle

Caregivers...

Continued from page 1 .
mates of up to five million peoP.Ie
in varying stages of Alzheimors
have been given and the number:is
expected
to double by 2000.
Continued rrom page 1
Leifheit
described the disease as
In order to move ahead, the
"chronic,
progressive,
and degen&lt;;rissue of keeping individuals in the
ative
during
which
time
the patient
area will also be addressed by the may become frightened,
angry,
SEORC.
conparanoid,
hostile,
repetitive,
"Without quality education, we fused, agitated, and finally comwon't have the talent to fill the
dependent on the aid of othneeds of the 2lsi century," said pletely
ers".
,
Carl Pahlberg, SEORC executive
."As the patient's life is erodj.ng
director. "There will be highways from
him, he remains a
that just go straight through the humanunder
being
who is holding onto
region."
the
pieces
of
his
mind that have not
Heading the way on education yet been damaged
destroyed.
on southeastern Ohio will be Dean· · Each one of us must or
see the person
na Tribe, education committee for who he is, not what the disease
chairman, he added.
had made him," she said.
The SEORC consists of Meigs,
most Alzhcimers patients,
Perry, Hocking, Ross, Athens, Vin- the.With
time
comes when ri)(J uired care
ton, Pike, Jackson, Gallia, Scioto, can no longer
be given in the home
and Lawrence counties.
by a caregiver-usually the hus·
band or wife of the patient. How to
deal
with feelings of guilt at not
Veterans Memorial
being
able to keep a loved one at
Thursday admissions · Violet home is
an area often discussed at
Bush, Racine; Daisy Sisson,
the
support
meetings.
·Pomeroy; Gladys Walburn, MidLeifheit
encourages
residents
to
dleport, and Pamela McKinney, look to the Meigs Council Council
Middleport.
·
Aging for help when
Thursday discharges · Betty on
Alzheimers
is diagnosed. She may
Carsey, Pomeroy, and Samuel
be
reached
at
992-2161.
•
. Williams, Shade.

·sEORC...

Hospital news

~tl/e...__~~~on_t_in_u_ed_f_ro_m~p~ag~e_1__________________

He is survived by his wife, and a siitcr, Ruby Richtt:t.
Macie (Akers) A~s: one sister;
She is survived by her husband,
two •brothers; and several nieces Barto L. Durst, Sr.; a daughter,
nephewS.
·
Patticia Ann Lee of Point Pleasant;
Graveside .. •ice will be held at a - . Jackie L. Durst of Racine;
10 am. "Saturday, March 6, a1 tbree brothers, William J. Love of
: Kirtb!nd ~ Gardens, near Wmchester, IN, Neil W. Love and
· Point Pleasant. with Rev. Louis A. Woodrow
Love, both of MunHusacll officialing. Burial will fol· cie, IN; seven grandchildren; one
. low in the~- · .. . .
. stcp-pandchild; and , nine great·
There will be no visitalion. Ar· - glilldchildren.
·
ntiJICIIIIIIII 11'11 under the direction
Service will ..be beld at 2 p.m.
:!If ~ Crow·Russell F.III!CI'al Home Sawrday, March 6, a1 the Ciow. tn Point Pleasant.
BusseD Funeral Home in Point
: In lieu of flowers, conb"ibutions Pleasant with Rev. Elmer Farmer
may be made to the Main Sbeet and Rev. H.W. Durst officiating.
Baptist Church at 1100 Main Burial will foUow in the Suncrest
. Stree~ !'Dint Pleasan~ WV 25550.
Cemetel)' in Point Pleasant.
'
·
Friends may call at the funeral
lr'"'"""""'"""'"""'"""'!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!l!jl . home Friday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m.

:and

wiD be renovalCIL
"This is just the beginning; Sel·
lards stated. "Many other ~ of
the · hospital will be upgraded in

Syracuse but the entire county. '
Eblin said that his rates· have
Williams reminded council mem- been increased at the landfill from
bers that whatever is done, it~s tax· $18 a ton so $27 a ton dumped.
payer's money that is being spent.
Afser Council refused the requested
The. village does not have 'the increase, Eblin asked for 75 cents.
money to continue operating at a No action was taken at the meeting
lose, council members agreed.
on the increase. .
Follow_ing the pu~lic. mee~ng . Eblin then suggested that the
Mon~y rught..Counc1l wi_ll go mto vtllage include the trash fees on the
~ .spec;iaJ ','leetirlg to. cpnsider lVh!ll village water bills. Eblin will preIf any action needs to be taken m sent a proposal to' Council for conthe future.
siderauon. At the present time there
Ptlter Business
are 339 customers in Srrocuse. Of
Meeting witli Council were Gor· that number Ill are sentor citizens.
don Winebrepner, member of the
Also meeting with Council was
Board of Public Affairs, and Bob Malcolm Parks of the National Gas
Moore, superintendent of the water and Oil Corp. which serves the viidepartment; in regard to an evalua· lage. He is retiring in June. He prelion survey which was conducted sented Co11ncil with an outline of
by the Ohio EPA on Feb. 10.
what has been done to improve serSome of the things which the vice since the company took over
village wiU be required to do is to in 1988. Council expressed appreIrma Kittle
submit in writing to the EPA a · ciation to Parks for his work with
Irma Kittle, 91, Coolville, dled statement indicating the 100 Year the village.
Friday morning, March 5, 1993 at flood depth elevation in the area of
Arcadia Nursing Center 'in the water wells and the elevation of . Mayor's report for the month
the vents on each well. This is to showed receipts of $871. Balance
Coolville.
determine
and control poSsible con- reported by Treasurer Janice Law·
Arrangements
will
be
tamination
in surface or ground son included general fund,
announced later by the White
$4,393.24; street construction,
Funeral Home in Coolville.
wa':::i.e agency also said that to $23,766; highway, $4,765.88; fire
maintain an effective program, the $1,.509.29; water $4,955.56; guarvillage must adopt an ordinance anty meter, $2,527.94; cemetery
Memorial contributions for Ruth that prohibits cross connections and $82.44; total in all f11nds,.
Wanda Gardner Myers may be gives the wjlter superintendent $42,000.35.
made to the Meigs County Chapter
· to t 1'f 10
· h'18 · d
t,
Trash being dumpt;d over the.
thonty
ac •
JU. gmen
riverbank near the tennis courts
of the American Cancer Society au
potential contamination exists.
not the American Red Cross as
The village will work with the was reported by Crow. She also
inc(\rrectly listed in Thursday's
reponed the need for guard railing
t d th EPA
water departmen an
e
to on Route 124 near Hubbard's
newspaper.
comply with the regulations.
T~e- address for the Meigs
Garbage Collection Fees
Greenhouse, and for a stop sign at
County Chapter of the American
Also present at the meeting were the intersection of May and ColCancer Society is: P.O. Boll: 692, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eblin and their lege Roads. Crow will contact the
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
,
son of Eblin's Garbage Service in Ohio Department of Highways
. , The Daily Sentinel apologizes regard to an increase in the garbage regarding the guard railing.
for the error.
rates. They have asked for $1 a ·
Attending were Mayor Pape,
month from all customers.
Treasurer Lawson, Chief of Police
Jim Connolly, and Council members Williams, Crow, Kenny Buckley, Jim Hill, Dennis Wolfe, and
Bill Roush .
a.m.
at
Star
Mill
Park
.
Dance location cbanged
The Gallia Twirlers Western
COLONY THEATRE
Pancake brunch planned
Square Dance Club will hold a
I
Tbere will be a pancake brunch
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
the MacKenzie Agricultural Build- at Carleton School in Syracuse on
JOHN GOOOIIAN IN
Sunday
from
I
0
a.m.
to
2
p.m.
~~ark Clausing will be the
PG
Dinner planned
There will be a smorgasbord
SHOW TIMES: •
at the Lottridge Community
dimer
Meeting canceled
FRI..SAT.·II,IN. 7:30 • 1::10
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
The Meigs· County REACT Center on Sunday from noon to
Ono Ev...ng 1-7:30
1:30.p.m.
Everyone
welcome.
meeting, scheduled for tonight, has
Admtoalon 11.10 • 44e-OI23
been canceled. It will be held next
Friday, same time and same place.

w.

Stocks

.

'.'
~

!

•

•
~

,
l
•
;
;
:
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f

Giving up 'individualism' for Lent
Do you remember wh~n we
used to ask each other every year at
this time. "What have you given
up for Lent7"
If you are a member of the
younger generation, you probably
don't remember.
I
Giving up something for Lent
- the Christian period between
'
.
.
Ash Wednesday and Easter - ~
By Tbe Associated Press
gone out of fashion. The church
·:; Today is Friday, March 5, the 64th day qf 1993. There are 301 days made it seem almost obligatory (as
:left in the year.
·
.
indeed It was, in certain instances
·: Today's Highlight in History:
of fasting and penitence), and we
:Pn March 5, 1770 the Boston Massacre took place as British soldiers who got to the point where we didn't
·had been taunted by a crowd of colonists opened fire, killing several peowant anybody to teU us we had to
:pte. ·
do anything.
'. On this date:
The
.
..
.
in Am~~a:a':.d~:lg~~~
• In 1766. Spanish official Don Antonio de Ulloa arrived in New
·brleans to take possession of the Louisiana Territory from the French. ·
'.' D" word) didn't seem to go
:~ In 1867, an abortive Ft;nian uprising against English rule took place in · · together. With two cars in the
:Ireland.
garage, who would be foolish
·: In 1868, the Senate was organized into a Court of Impeachment to
enough to walk anyplace?
:~ecide charges against President Andrew Johnson.
·
This attitude of self-indulgence
• In 1933, 60 years ago, in German parlillffientary elections, the Nazi
has Jlrown now to the point where
1&gt;arty won 44 percent of the vote, enabling it to join with the Nationalists
it is a 111ajor deterrent to envii'llnJO.gain a slender majority in the Reichstag.
mental safety.
In Denvec, for eumple, plans to.
• In 1946. former Bntish Prime Minister Winston Churchill, in an
iddress at Westmmster College in Fulton, Mo., spoke of an "Iron Cur- cut down on aUIO 1111ffic in order to
iain" suetching from the Baltic to the Adriatic.
keep the air aafe for IRalhing are
• · In i953, 40 years ago, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin died at age 73 after running into barrien.
·J9 years in power.
. .
.
·
.
·
. "We're part of the great Wes~"
•· In 1970, a nuclear non-proliferation treaty went mto effect after 43 says Colorado's air quality coordl·
ilalions ratified it.
nator. "People lib tlleir'indlvldual
•. In ) 976, the British pound feU below tbe equivalent of $2 for the fU"S I rights. They want to tske their cars
time.
·
, .
. wherever they go."

~Today

in history

.!

1'n

•In fact, it woul\1 .make
ideal
book for Lenten reading.
Marcus Aurelius, the emperor of
Rome in the 2nd century1 was a
Stoic. For people who followed
that philosophy, "to endure and
abstain" were key virtues. Duty
can begin to see how ultimately tool: ~ over pleasure; but
destructive "rampant individual- duty brought happiness. :~
ism" can be.
This ascetic way of life·did not,
There are signs, however, that however, leave Man: us ~urelius
the temper of the 1980s - which crabbed and sour. Modern critic
put the rights of the individual first Clifton Fadiman remarks on "the
and foremost over tbe rights of the charm and sweetDeas" of Marcus'
majority -COuld ~ chan&amp;in4.
disposition.
.
President ~linton has remtro.·
He('e
II'C a few samplei'from the
dueed the worit sacrince into the •• MeditalionsII:
'
ltticon. Individual Americans are
the morning wbei) ~ riabeing asked to sacrifice some of est "In
unwillingly,
let this
be
their private good to the good of. present: I am riaina
to
the·
\riolk
of
a
the country.
·
human
being.
If
ram
go~do
While sacrif1ce hu never beeri a the thin&amp; for which I was
t
popular word. I wonder whether we into the world, why lben'iu'n I ·
weren't happier when we thought S81isfied7"
"
leas aboullielf-indulgence.
"When
tlio11
hast
dcirie
a &amp;ood
We forget that going without act and another hast received
It,
often pvea more pleuure dian siv· why dolt thou stiU kx* for a thitd
ing in to our desires. Have you ever thina besides thciC, u ·fools do,
met anyone prouder !ban tbe per· either to have the~ of hav'
son who hu been
with ina done 1 good let or tb obtain a
his or ber diet?
return?"
·
Clinton may have aoacn some
"Do not diat11rb thyself by
of his Ideas about sacrifice from
thinkinJ
of the whole or· thy life.
Marcus Aweliua' "Meditalio111
"
'
his favorlre book next to tbe Bible, Let not thy thoushts· It once
embrace
all. .the-.various troubles
he told a reporter recently.
'
This is true not only of people in
the "great West."
In other areas of our life, too• we

George.R. Plagenz

. which thou mayest expect to befall
thee. "But on every occasion ask
thyiiCif, What is tllctc in this which
is intolerable and past bearing'/ for
thou wilt be ashamed to confess.••
"Do evf:C'j act of your life as if
it were the last'' This is Marcus
Aurelius' best-known saying.
G.,.-p Plqeu Ia 1 IJDdlclt·
ed writer for Newspaper Eater·
prlle Alloelatloa.

Berry's World

•
•" r---~--------------·~·n,•
The Daily Sentiuel
•'

~~".'lu-=i:· J'oada-t

Ohio l&gt;J ' 1M Ototo YIDIJ fooib~
Compaa)'/Mtl)tt dl1 la'fi :~11DJ,

Ohio I'll. tiii-JI18. 1
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Am _Ele Power....................35 7/8
Ashland Oil........................28 1/8
AT&amp;T................ ................. S7 1/8
Bank One. .......................... S2 112
Bob Evans .........................18
Charming Shop.................. l6
Otmp Industries.................ll
City Holding... ...................21 3/4
Federal MQ&amp;UI................... ..16 3/4
GoodyearT&amp;R .................. 70 1/4
Key Centurion ................... 22 3/4
I...ands End .........:................24 3/4
Limited Inc....................... 24 7/8
Multimedia Inc. ,................34
Point Bancorp .................... l3 112
Rax RestauranL ..................I/4
Reliance Electric ................21 5i8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 19 1/2
Shoney's Inc......................22 5/8
Stir Banlc ........................... 37
Wen4y Int'l ............:.......... .l3
Worthington Ind...... ,......... 24 3/4
· Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Securities, Inc., o
Galllpolla.
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Co"ection

1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4 DR.
Tilt, cruise, air conditioning, rear defogger, antilock brakes and much more.

SALE

Stock 12936

$12,4 29 :

1993 BUICK CENTURY
3300 V6 motor, auto/overdrive trans., power
windows, power locks, air bag, cassette.

SALE

Stock#2929

$15,200 .

--Meigs announcements•

MATINEE

Rlclae Yoath League to meet
The Racine Youth League will
hold sip-up for the 1993 bau season on Wednesday from 6·8 p.m.,
on Ml1;h U from 9 a.m. so noon
and March IS from 6-8 p.m. Final
sign-up will be March 20 from 9
JJJL to noon. Sip-up will be beld
It tho Southern kindergarten build·
ina. Roaillmlion fee wiD be $10 for
,soltbaJf playeq, Sl.S for baseball
playen, aot to OICOOd $2.5 per fam.
lly. All~ who did not particlp;t~e
lti tho Racine Youth League prevt.
oualy wW need • copy of their birth
certificate.

1993 PONTIAC' TRANSPORT
Keyless entry, defogger, power seat, 3800 V6
engine, power door locks, power 'windows, 7
passenger seating.
Stock #2938

$19
20·
0
SALE
1

·1993 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR. CUSTOM
Power seat, trunk release, power windows, split
seats, power locks, wire wheel covers, llr beg,
anti-lock brakes.
Stock #2925

SALE

REBATESAPPUEDTO SALE PRICE, TAX AND
TITLE NOT INCWDED IN SALE

loslrd to meet '
Tho ·Racine Board of rubliQ
Affaln will meet Monday at I 0 ·

.'

$18
900
. 1.

'

'.

�'Sports

The Daily Sentinel
-

· ·

Ohio

By HOWARD SINER
. Today 's questions in the world
of sports:
' • Whal turned UCLA imo the
bcs1 NCAA Tournament team
eYer?
• To begin with, it was the
"Bruin Blitz" - marked by
relentless hustle and a fierce zone
jpress. Actually, UO.A wasn't very
1highly thought of going into the

1%3·64 college. basketball season.
But coach John Wooden led that
club to a 30-0 mark and the
school's first NCAA ti~e ever. It
began the record Bruin string of 10
national championships in 12
years.
Not until his 16th season at
UCLA did Wooden emerge as the
"Wizard of Westwood." He
became the head coach of the Bru-

ins in 1948. His teams were
bounced out of the West Regionals
of five NCAA Tournaments (in
1950, 1952, 1956, 1962 and 1963)
before he fmally reached the top.
Leading the fll'St UCLA club to
go all the way were two guards:
senior Walt Hazzard, the playmaker who was named the NCAA
Player of the Year, and junior Gail
Goodrich, the club's top scorer

(21.5 points per game). Up front
were two more seniors, center Fred
Slaughter and forward Jack Hirsch;
and another junior, forward Keith
Erickson.
To put their quickness to full
use, Wooden installed a zone press
that foiled opponents. It featured
Goodricll and Slaughter under the
basket, with Hazzard and Hirsch
backing them up and Erickson as

the safety.
In the NCAA title game, UCLA
used lhe "Bruin Blitz" to oulScore
Duke 16-0 lale in the first half on
lhe way to a 98-83 victory. A second NCAA thle'in 1965 gave
UCLA .b ack-to-back championships.
.r . .
But !hat was just the be)linning.
UCLA won seven NCAA ulles in a
row (1967-73) behind a series of

with 6: 12 to go in the firSt h8lr. • Tech 83-82; No. 16 UNL V beat throws in the final two minutes;
By The Associated Press
"Calbert Cheaney's honot is an Cal-Irvine 96-74; No. 19 Okla- then blocked Damon Stoudamire"s
Calbert Cheaney disposed of
absolutely
outstanding honor for a homa State beat Oral Roberts 114- 3-point attempt at the buzzer as
Glm Rice, Steve Alford and Mike
great
kid,"
said Knight, who 85; Virginia Commonwealth beat California ended the nation's
McGee, and is now the Big Ten's
wasn't
concerned
about his own No. 20 Tulane 77-65 in overtime; longest winning streak at 19 games.
leading career scorer.
mark.
J,lob Knight was also celebrating
No. 21 Brigham Young beat TexasMurray scored the final four
But it was tr\IIY a night for El PaSo 84-63; No. 22 Louisville points of the game for Cal (16-8, 8Thursday night as Indiana clinched
at least a share of the Big Ten title Knight
beat Virginia Tech 82-61, and No. 6 in the Pac-10).
And for Cheaney, who went '23 Massachusetts beat St Joseph's
by routing Northwestern 98-69. It
Trailing 73-71, Arizona (21-3.
was a record 19th conference title cold after making his first .three 61-43.
14-1} forced a turnover and had 8
for the Hoosiers, and Knight him- shots as Northwestern (7-17, 2-13)
California 74
chance to tie. But Khalid Reeves,
self tied the career record for titles aclually held a 25-2A lead over the
· No. 3 Arizona 71
who scored 2I points for the Wildin 11 career with Piggy ,Lamben1 Hoosiers (26-3, 1.5-t).
' Lamond Murray hit three free
(See HOOPS ou Paee 6)
"When r hit those first,three
who won 11 at Purdue between
shots, I was really, really nervous,··
1921 and 1940.
But lhe focus was on Cheaney. he said. "Nervous and excited and
who had 3.5 points to run his can:er everything."
In other games in.$'otving Top
total to 2,468. most ever in the Big
Ten.
25 teams Thursday night, No .. 3
. He scored lhc fll'Sl seven poinlS Arizona lost to California 74-71;
of the game and went past Rice's Mexico beat No. 9 Utah 69-59; No.
record of 2,442 on a three-pointer II Florida State held off Geotgia

three stars: center Lew Alcindor,
forward Sidney Wicks and center
Bill Walton. During that stretch,
the Bruins went 205-5, with
records of 30-0 thr~ times, 29-1
three times, and 28-2 once.
Wooden finally stepped down in
1975 after guiding UO.A -led by
forward Dave Meyers -toilS lOLit
(and latest) NCAA title. '
(See SPORTS PROBE on PageS)

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READY FOR TOURNEY -Marshall University's Tyrone
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tonight's Southern Conference tournament game against Davidson
College. The tournament began rarSt-round action Thursday night.
(AP)

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'

·:Indians, Belle OK three-year pact

NTORY ORDERED SOLD
.,; .

,5

Cheaney, Knight set new career records

.Peg.._..

used fierce zone press, hustle to rule NCAA tourney

·.

~~

In Indiana's win over Northwestern,

Friday, March 5, 1993

Sports Probe

~~· UCLA

Sentinel

111e

'

By CHUCK MELVIN
WINTERHAVEN, Fla. (AP):outfielder Albert Belle agreed to a
~three~year Contract with the Cleve·land Indians on Thursday, becom·:ing the 18th player on .the roster
'working under a multi-year deal.
Terms of Belle's contract, which
. includes a fourth year at the club's
. option, were not disclosed.
although it was believed to be
worth more than $8 .million over
:the. first three years. He made
;$175,0001astyear.
The 26-year-old Belle hit .260
with 34 home runs and 112 RBis
!J~st year, leading the Indians in ·
. •~omers and RBis for the second
;·straight season.
·
··
:. '"With lhe long-term signing of
'·Albert today, we now guarantee the
~tans of Cleveland tlilit this core, of "
::exciting y.ounll players will be

together iri Clevetand. for the coming years," general manager John
Han said, "Albert's numbers spealc
volumes. He has established himself as one of the most prolific
power hitters in lhe game today."
Belle, who would have qualified
for salary arbitration lifter this season, said the security of the multiyear deal was too compelling to
pass up.
"All I was asking was what I
felt was my fair market value,
based on statistics I feel! can put
up year in and year out," Belle
said.

Three
BOSTON (AP) months &amp;flo. he was the Celtics'
embarrassing secret NOw Sherman
Douglas is Boston's secret weapon.
Half a season after walking off
lhe team for unexplained reasons,
Douglas is showing Dashes of bril. liaDce at the point guard spot that
h!IS been one of Boston 's weaknesses this year.
DouglaS had his best g11111e as a
Celtic on Wednesdar. with 23
points and 12 assists in a·J32-91
rout of San Antonio, two days after
a 13-assist performance atl)etrolt.
"This is the best I've felt since
I've been·.here, '.' said Douglas,
traded to the Celtics in January
1992 after fwo seasons with Miami.
"It's been \IP and down, and hopefully I can stay up. I've worried
about a lot of things I couldn't control.
When praising his performance
against the Spurs, teammates and
coach Chris Ford were careful to
stress DouglBs' improved psychological state as weD as his physical
accomplishments.
"Even before he staned playing
l!(Cat bilskelball, his demeanor was
much better," Ford said. "He
seems to have come to peace with
himself. There's definitely been a
penooality change."
Added guard Dee Brown,
"Sherman is more relaxed now.
He's got more confidence."
That·was not the case in midtl

•

·.

December, when Douglas left the
team: He took off. his shoes on the
bench when removed from !he second half of tbe Celtics' doubleovertime win at Minnesota lin Dec.
· 15, then refused to travel with the
team to Indiana and also ·skipp¢ a
home game against New York.
Though DouglaS and club officials never spceifJcally said what
was bothering the fourth-year pro,
lhe Celtics implied it was 8 crisis of
confidenc:e and did little to.!lis(ourage s~ulation Douglas was·suffering a bout of depression.
Douglas began the season as
Boston's starting point guard, but
was moved to the bench and
received much of lhe bWne for the
Celtics' 2-8 stan. Poor foul shooting and untimely turnovers early iq
the season added to eriiicism of the

former Syracuse Stir.

·

'.

.

,.

·-..

&amp;n" IF ytl(j COULON' T READ,
HOW DID YoU PAS~ THE
W~UiiE)J PART Cf YOUR
DR.I %.R'S EXANi

.-

?

·

He slowly worked back ir)to the
lineup after his return. T~mates

~ously prote:eted Douglas from ·
the media and opposing players,
and Ford - known for ·pu,Uing
players from a game im.mediately ,
. after a mistake - showed patience
wilh him.
Other problems surrounding the
Celtics -.including marijuana
charges against Raben Parish and
Alaa Abdelnaby, and the declil)C of
Kevin McHale ·in what is expected
to be his final season - may have
helped i)ouglas by focJISing attention away liom him.

EASY ... I

JlJ~T

HAD

·-

S&lt;JIY)I:.ON€- READ {(If.
· ALl 11-JE QUESTIONS AND
I rl\ £IY'ORJ Z. ED TH €.1'1\ !

....

·-. .

:Sports Probe . ..
~ (Continued from Pag~ 4)
; • Who's the most underrated
' player in baseball?
; It's Shane Mack, according to
:stat expen Bill James. In "The Bill
~James Player Ratings Book 1993,"
tMac~ ·is singled out as the game's
•most overlOok¢ star. He plays for
ithe Minnesota Twins.
, Mack, 29, who has quietly
:'become a complete ballplayer, is
: ranked by James as the third best
•left fielder in baseball. He trails
:only top-rated Barry Bonds of San
. ,·Francisco and runner-up Juan Gon1 zates of Texas. ·
·
1 During his first two big-league
i scasons (1987-88), Mack had a
' total of just 357 at bats with the
. San Diego Padres. He went on to
•become a regular with the Twins.
;:Mack hit .326 in 1990; then .310 in
~1991; and ,~ 15 in 1992.
·
'! Last season, he also hit .16
•hol!lers, drove in 75 runs, stole 26
•bases and scored 101 times. His
:on-base percentage was .:3.95 and
;his slugging average was .467 iboth excellent. In fact, Mack's
•:career total for on-base plus ·slug. ging (the best simple indicator of
,batting abilily) is a solid .823.
:That's better than lhe numbers of a
; dozen or so Hall of Fame outficldfcrs.

.

WHAT'S SO

AIYlAZI~&lt;S?

11/'(1 NOT

STUPID,.,.

1993 CARAVAN SE SPORTWAGON PACKAGE

.

Auto., V-6, .Luggage
Rack, Power Windows; Power Locks, Tilt, Cruise, and Cassette
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WAS '20,119 .

NOW$1-8,288
.-

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·· · -- -

Illiteracy.
It's not
a laughing
matter.

.

James not&amp;s that Mack "plays
~ hard and likes to bust up a DP. His
throwing arm isn"t very good, but
•he's a good left fielder." ·
' . Actually, he had' a total of nine
;assists 1m year, which tied him
:with Kirby Puckett for the team
lead·among outfielders. Covering a
'lot of ground in left, Mack had only
:four errors in 335 chances during
. 1992.
' .
, · • Which team made the greatest
coinOblc1c in
history?
.It has to be lhe Toronto Maple
,Leafs. They,~rc the only NHL club
e~er' IO wlp the Stanley Cup after
~einc down"3-0 In the finals. It
llappcncd In 1942. After falling
,j)chlnd, Toronto - coached by
Hap Day - won four ·stra:il;ht ·
'lunos (4-3, ?-3, 3-0 and 3-1) to ·
pctge the Detroit Red Wings. ·

:.

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·~-lealp NHL. Dcluol&amp; -liflh.
COIIIOr Syl APPI ,.at tbo 111P lllr
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(lpaUe Tllrk Brode. riJht winlor
Oerdlt Prillon and dtfOIIMitlan

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�Frl"' ~rch. ~. 1993

.!:P~ag~a~6:::!Tl1e!!!_Dai2!Jy~S~an~U~nt!I~------------:--!;Po~m~er!!O!!JY!::!M!I~dd!lapo~!!rt~,O~h~lo~_ _..__.;.__ _ _ _ _ _....:,_ _ _Frlday, March 5, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Pas:=~ .

..

Redmen look to ent.er title race by beating Urbana Saturday
Is !here a cllaDce tbe University

of Rio Grande Redmen can find
themselves vying for the cham pionship of District 22's Division I?
Following Rio Grande's 108-99
defeat of Malone in the fJrst IOUIId
of playoff action Wednesday, there
may be cause to believe that the
third-seeded Redmen could go all
the way.
But a lot of things have to happen between now and Tuesday,
when the division tit!e and the
·chance to go to the nauonals goes
on the .tine. First, Rio Grande (257) must defeat second-seed ~rhana
(23-6) at Urbana Saturday m the
semifinals, an interesting proposilion in that the Redmen have been
victimsoftheBlueKnightsintheir
last four meetings between the !at. ter pan of tile 1991-92 season and
durmg the recent season. . ·
Secondly, either top-seed Findlay (24-5) or fourth place
Cedarville (23-8) will determine
the other half of the championship
round in Saturday's other semifinal
game. A win by Findlay over the
Yello,w Jackets means a trip to
Findlay for the victor in the Rio
Grande-Urbana matchup. butlfRIO

Grande and Cedarville are the winners, Cedlirville would be at Rio
Grande for the championship.
But looking at tbe Urbana game,
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
sounded a note of eonfulence when
asktld about Rio Grande's chances.
"We'd have to play an excellent
' ball. game, but we're capable of
doing it," he said. "Urbana has lost
to Cedarville, whom we've beaten
twice, and ·once to Findlay, whom
we' ve bea~en once. What we'll
have to do IS take advantage of our
. strengths."
.
•
.
Th~ !l!ue Kmghts Bob Rona1,
the Dms10n I Coach of the Year,
seemed less assured after scoutmg
the Rio Grande-Malooe tilt.
"We'rereallyscaredaboutplaying Rio Grande,";Ronai noted.
"Rio Grande is talented ft!!d I have
the utmost respect for liS s~per
players~ !don't know. wh~! 1t'll
take to beat them three umes. .
Ronai noted that during the past
season. Urbana won each of liS
games with the Redmen by 10
points (99-89 on Jan. 19 and 91-81
on Feb. 13), each' time in a final
burst Of scoring f~om brothers
Wade and w~anGomsandveteran
guardJenyLtgon. •

"II' s a hard th ing to predict rebounds) at the post.
rebounds), while Troy Donaldson
because, really, both games were
The Redmen will fire back with (6-8, senior, 20.3 points, 9.3
closer than the score indicated," Jack Morgan (5·9, freshman. 4.2 rebounds) enters his 33rd outing
Ronai said.
points. 4.8 assists) at the point and this season as the center.
"We lost by 10 the last time we Matt Powell (6-4, sophomore, 23
DRUMBEATS: While the Red·
!!let them and we played terrible," points, 4.6 rebounds) on the other men lost both of its Mid-Ohio ConLawhorn noted. "But I think we defensive spot. Taking the forward ference meetings to Urbanf this
have a shot."
positions are-Jeff Brown (6-5, past season, they have been encourUrbana, which dropped from senior, 15;5 points, 5.1 assists, 7.3 aged by their twin victories Qver
14th on the NAIA:s top 251ist two rebounds) and Brett Coreno (6·5, Cedarville (which handed Urbana
weeks ago to 24th this week, will sophomQre, 11 ,3 points, 3.8 two of. its MOC losses
this year)
,.
bring lin averase of 98.3 points per
game to Saturday's meeung, while In NBA action,
the Rect,men are now averaging
97.7. The Blue KnighiS are giving
up 15.5 markers per outing .and Rio •
Grande 1s surrendqing 14.I:Shooting-wise, the Redmen hold a slight
lead in fi~ld goal percentage at 52.4
(1151-2197, 344-822 from the
three fot 41.8 percent) to Urbana's · By The Associated Press . ~ guy yelled ' Remember Kenny
Who was that masked man?
Anderson,' so I wanted 10 get filled .
51.4 (1076-2076, 262-694 from the
·It was John Starks, who broke and get back on the court in the 1
outside for 37.8 percent).
Starlin~ for Urbana will be his nose in the first quarter, worst way," Siarts said. "I wasn't
Wade Gmns (6-0, senior, 12.3 grabbed a facemask and lifted the madorangry,ljusteameputmore
. ·
• .~
points, 12.1 assists per game 'for a New York l{nicks to tlleir highest· 'focused."
Starks' remartabie quarter
national ranking) and Ligon (5-9, scoring half of the season en route
junior, 19.4 points). At forward are · to a 125·1.11 victory over Utah inclu~ed t!U'ee three-pointerssnappmg his 0-tk-lO·slump entet·
Wyat.t Goins (6-0, senior, 21.2 ThursdaymghL .
"John showed again that he's a ing the game - and three other
pomts, 3 rebounds, 3.5 assists) and
An JaJI)es (6-6, junior, 14 poil'lts, tough kid," coach Pat Riley said. jumpers from 18-21 feet. His last
6.7 rebounds), With Marc Eversley "Some guys would have stayed in basket of the period, with Sl sec-·
(6·8, sophomore, 12 points, 4.9 the locker room. He came out arid onds left. gave the' Knick!! a 70-42
..
told me he was ready."
lead.
.
.
,
"The ~n was excruciating," · "The mask didn't bother me at
Starks sa1d. "I went to the fl~r all," he said:. "If illnything, it
and saw the blood, and.I knew 1t helped me focus oli the nm and
was broken."
,
block everything else out"
.
The collision with Jeff Malone
Campbell supported Starks with
less than two minutes into the game 14 points hi the seeond period,
sidelined Siarts for just ll minu!CS when the Knicks scored 37 points
before he returned to·score 15 on 16-for-22 shooting . They led
points on 6-for-6 shooting in the 70-46 at halftime.
second quarter.
''
The Knicks' 125 points matched
There were other stalwarts for a season-high and New York's 63.S
the Knicks - Tony Campbell percent shooting also was its best.
scored seasoh-bigh 28 points on
Karl Malone and Jeff Malone
' 12-for-13 shooting and Patrick scored 32 points each ror the Jazz,
Ewing had 28 poinis and IS who have lost six of seven games.
rebounds ·- but Siarts clearly was
Elsewhere in the NBA,.it was,
the hero.
.
New Jersey 116, Orlando 97; the
Starka, who was fined $5,000 Los AngeleS Clippers 117, Washfor a flagrant roul that sidelined ington 98; Indiana 136, Atlanta
· N~w Jersey's ~enny Anderson 111; Cleveland 103, Minnesota 95;
With a broken vmst Slinday, said a Denver 103, Portland 88; and Seatflin's r.aum made him determined to Ue 138, Charlotte 112.
rewrntolhegame.
SuperSonics 138i Hornetsl12 '
"When I was walking back, a
Seattle won its ninth consecu-

HEADED TO URBANA- The third-seed ..
University or Rio Gnnde Redmen will lake on
second-place Urbana Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at
Urbana tor the.senUfiuals or the District 2l Division I playol1's. Ia lroat, from left, are Coach ·
John Lawhorn, Larry Caudill, Jason .Curtis,
Kyle Schroer, Jack Morgan, Lyndell Snyder,

C0llege ho{Jns
•••
.1:'

St·orchoat·d
~ ....·--·· n 2310
.... &lt;\Dploo ..-. 29 ;19 1
w;,;pe, ......~ 29 'lO 6
EdmaOtoo--·-- 23 3:5 I

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUanUc Di*kM
Team
W L Prt.
Nll'w YcU ..............38 18 .619
Ncw Jency ······-····32 25 .561
u-...................30 26 .536
~ ..........19
Woi~Uqulo .......... .. l6

l5

~

6.5

Thursday's scores

11
C12VELAND .......38 ;20
a..rlolf&lt; ................29 26
lndilnl .•.•- ............ .2.8 29

.102
.6SS
.52'7
.491

AllaY .................. .26 31
DdroiL ..................-24 31
MiJ,w1ukee ............. 22 34

.4S6
.436
.39]

Tonight's games
~

DtYlllon n
Cin. Lon!.nd 62. Cin. Roaar Baeon

Otitaao at New Ieney. 7:40p.m.

59

Toranco at De:ttoil.. 7:40p.m.
Phnadolphio" w.........,a,IO pm.

12
14
IS
11.5

&lt;16

Sotunloy'allames

SL l.ouia a Bo.aon, l ,eo p.m.
Vacou'IICI' atlb..dfonl, 7~ p.m.
Calal.f'J• Tampa Bay, 7:40p.m. '
N.'f'. Ranp ~t Quebec;, 7:40p.m.
Mantntalat t6metou,l:l0 p.m.
WumipecatTorm~ao &amp;:10 p.m.

Sunday's pmn
Oaawa at OUctao. 2;1 0 p.m.

~atNcw~,S : IOp.m.
N.Y. lal1nd1tJ11t Wubinaton, S:30

N. AdlmJ 71, Vlllo&lt;o 59

Stt.ubeftvillc Catll. 7Z, Welll:vi&amp; SO
Triad 59, Vonaillao 52. 20T

pm.

20
2S
21

7.5

33

.431

I!

38

.321

24

llanat n Minncleu, 1:10 p.m.
~onl(la ll s.. Jo.e. 10:40 p.m.

3

12
13

Dlvlllon tv
Bellin lliiU&gt;dll, Son.t.q 75

"'-..........,.n,Mof.... 41

National college
basketball scores

Ohio high school

Thursday's scores

· TourniJQ;ent •ctlon

Eaol

~ 67, Doy~o~~ Sl

12

Maa.chUICII&amp; 61, SLJauph'1 .3
Rhode Wand 15, Goora&lt; wuru.....,

so

T....... I9,Ru-7S

Wcat Virpni112. St. B..-..•uua ~

LoWMIJel'l. v; . · Tocll61
Souohcm Mia
60
VL Comrnc...Jah 'n, Thlane ~. 0T

;r.:... """'"'

~.nnp...

22

E - 6 6 , D&lt;u.itM=y6S
Lo,ol~ IU. 66, Bw" 65, OT

DIYIIIon D

Southwat
.
Bri&amp;ham YIM1JI4, Tesu-£1 Puo63
Cltbhornl St. 114, 0ra1 Robat&amp; as

Utah It Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
flr Wttt

Sin Antonio at~. I p.m.

Arizm1 St. 7!, SWI(Otd 71

Phoenia 11. Dallu. 8:30p.m.
Sacrunento at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Pbiladclphi• It ScauJe.IOpm.

Sunday's games
a.EVEU.ND at Bwm, I p.m.
LA. Clippm It Orlando, 2 p.m.
Detroit at Milw1ukee, 2:30p.m.
Porthnd at GGldc:n Stat.e, 3:30p.m.
Indiana. II Miami ,_4 p.m.
O.adoueatl..A. Lai.t.n, 10:30p.m.

In the NUL ...

70

Cdi!omi174, Arizorla 71
Colondo St. 12. AU """" SS
LataBacb St. 103, s.n 1... St.l1
New Maico69, Ulah 59
New Maic6 St. 71, Cal SL· FWJe:Mn

Southomc.ISf. w...._55
UC s&amp;nt. But.n.13, Pacific U. 6.5
ua.t.11. w~ St.7D

IJNLV !16, OC- 14
W,.....&amp;71,ftooooSL 55

Toum1111mll

WALES CONFERENCE
P1trlck Dlrillon

Tu..

W L TPll. CFGA
Pitubw&amp;h ......... 39 20 • .. :164 211
Wuhinaton ...... J2 24 1 11 2S9 2l6

~~as...u.c..r­

Quarttrfluk
Coutal Cerolin1 79, ~South-­

om66
Md.-B•himore. County 15. Campbell
67
•

NcwJeney ....... 32 26 S . M 231 223
N.Y. Jlatl&amp;tft .... 21 2.5 II . 67 ~1 l16
N.Y. Illlnden ... 30 21 6 Mi 2162 231

Radf..-d 73, u ....., (/j
Winl.htop_l3, ToWSGI SL 79

Aillado~JM ..

Mld-Eaatnt AU.ItUc &lt;:.rtftllce
flnlr-.1

.... 23

30 II

~7

:146 255

Adame Dlwllloft
~·Montttal ........ 41 20 6 II %76 217
•-Quoboc ......... J6 20 10 f2 276 239
Boman ----·-----·-- l4 n 1 1~ 2S4 m
Buffalo.............. ll 2S I 10 276 2l4
Jl&lt;nfmd ............ 17 42 4 31 210 290
Ouawa '""""'"" 9 :SS 4 2l 16!5 323

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NorriiDf•lilloft
Teatn
W LT ....
QD'"ao ............ J6 21 9 II
T....to ........ ..... 33 1!2 9 -,
Dotn&gt;it ....... ...... 33 :IS 9 75
- . ......... 30 26 9 "
SL l..oP ·-·-- ----· 30 l9 I 61
Boy ...... 20 40 5 45

T-

GrGA
22'7 113
2lO Ill

21l232
22:1 222
2Zii 2l9
193 :142

Snti'IN Ill .....
Venc;au•e:r ........ l6 20 9 II 2'76. 206

Howltd U. l6.ac.buRo C: :&amp;.um12 ,

Rocky River Maa.nifu:aL 66, Wlllllake
Wodo-4'l.M.ouillao32
WtJIJill.« 6C, C.&amp;.on McKinley 30

lndian.l91, Notthwutem 69

Saturday's games

14, Th«nu Worthin&amp;*J

41

MldWed

Dem-c al New Jency, 7:30pm .

Bodf..-d 41, C.V""nd Hta. 39

Oufdd i-ha. Trinity 17, Sol.on !57
Lakewood 46, N. Olmsted 4]
Medirul Q. Pann1 V1lley Fotp 60

Florida SL 13, Gocq;a Toclll2

Ocuoi.t 1t Bolton, 7:30p.m.
LA. Clippert at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Sen Antoniou Oticago. 8 p.m.
HOUJLOn a~Dallu,l : 30 p.m.
Orl~ndo 11 Mih¥aukcc., 9 p.m.
Sacramen10 at PhoenU, 9:30p.m.
Philadelphia 11 L.A. Liken , 10:30
p.m.
O.adotteatPotthnd, l&amp;.lOp.m.

DlwlJion]
Akftll'l Cent. ~Hower 46, Akrm EUet 3S
Auninlown -Fitch 61, W•nen Hudina

CJOW"at..f 48, Akron Spring. 41
Col. W•ac:ncn 73, Col. Nol'\hltnd 49

Soodo

Tonlj:bt's games

·

girls' basketball scores

Regular...ason action

New Yodl: 125, Ul&amp;h. 111
New Jasey 116. Orlando 97
L.A. Cijppm 117, WIShiniJUift 98
lndian.ell6, AUan1a 111
a.EVELAND 103, Minnelota 9S
Denve:r 103, Pomand 88
Seaule 138, 0\adotte 112

Whi.Wtall 59, Oit:t~llnJY 51

Bloom-Carroll 58, UWna H11. 53
Cardinpon 50, Spana lliahland 40
CoL Hartley 68, Col. Ac.dC111J55
Liberty-Union 56, 1Jlica 48
Mtdi&amp;onPlains 66, W. Jcflez~on 54
Marion Ellift 68, Mount Oi1cad 42

Wumipcf: 11 Bllfralo, 7:10p.m.

.759
.696
.623
.537
.511

Col. OeSalot 60, Marion ltlver Vall.

· DIYlllonm
Afanum 6S, KCOLOn Rid&amp;• 46
Bellaitc S9, Union Local 51
Belpre 66. Luc:uvillc Vall. 43

~atl.a1Anplm,l0:40p..m.

Padflc Dl\'iltc.
17

Panna v.uey Forae.19, DJUNwick 51

Pilt&amp;bwJb atN.Y. Raapn, 7:40p.m.

10

Mtdwat DIYilion
Tea~~~
W L Pd.
GB
Sm An1CJnio ...........35 20 .636
.................35 21 .112S
.5
Ul&amp;h .......................34 1A .!86
1S
Denver ...................24 32 .•29 • 11.5
Minftel,(l.l ..............13 .0 .24S
21
Dallu ..... ..................4 so .1174 30.S
13

........ M...,.7'l.~
M i d - 61, Cln. PrinoetDn 39

Hartfonlll Bllffalo; f:40 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

PhoeniA ..................41
Suale ....................39
.......... ................. 33
L.A. Laktft ............ 29
LA. Clppm ........ .29
Golden S1-1te .......... 2.S
$acnmc::oto ............ l8

Dl•lllon I
Alliance S4, Uaiontown Lako 52
C1e. w,. Toeh 59, MWpm &lt;16
Day. CU.IIlinade·Ju.U.enne 61, Day . •
Culialo&lt;!6
lhntillcn 55, c;, s
:M

w"""""

Ctntnl Dl•ldoll
Chieqo................ ..&lt;IO

Tournament action

BoRon 4, Vanc:auw:r 3

21

,

boys' basketball scores

Qlcbec 3. Cbic.ao 3, tio
SL 1Aoio 'l, Calpq I
5, Ednx.loo 3
LG1Anpi, O..wa6

15
11

.216

Ohio high school

119 2SO

GB

!

.l52

257 22S
2'0 2'76
246 2S6

Sut J.-e·-······-· 9 55 2 20175325
J.-dinchcd playoff bath .

9.5

Odonclo .................21 26 ·""
Mi.omi ..................22 32 ..ftrl

76
6S
64
54

Apostolic

J

Atltenl Sf. llkDemtot1 NW. 33
Canfiold 39, Poland 29 ••
Codllnd-Lolt!Mew 63, Salan S1
Dovw47, Tri-Valley4S,or
Hilltboro 51, \ylvedy 50
Millen-• "6. W. Bftflch 30
Omill• 43,-Mul.iapln 41
W. llolnt4o 51, BO&lt;bye Looal 31

111-W

Atroa St.V..st.MS2, W1ynedale 38
. , . , _. . 12, Cow.tuy )'
W. Mu&amp;kinpm 66, BuckcycTrtill6

Dh-IllOn IV
ilollm 41, Kidna Cu. IS
. E.c-64, Moploton35
o- Milll Olltnow 42, Newbury 31
MeDonaW44, S...........·21i

cats, was calle·d for an offensive
foul with seven seconds to play.
Murray was fouled on the inbounds
pass and made I of 2 free throws.
Chris Mills led all scorers w!th
22 points for -Arizona, while Murray topped Cal with 15.
New Mexico 69, No. 9 Utab 59
Ike Williams scored 26 points
for New Mexico (20-6, 12-5 Westem Athletic Conference).
Utah (22-4, 15-2) had its sevengame conference winning streak
snapped. Jo~h Graqt ,led the Utes
with 18 points.
·
·
Louisville 86
Vir~inia Tech 61
The Cllfll1nals (17-8) fJnally got
back to their accustomed spot atop
the Metro Conference, winning
their lOth title in 17 years, but their
first since 1990.
.
Greg Minor had 17 points and
10 rebounds for Louisville, whose
11-1 conference record is its best
since a 12-0 mark in 1983. The
Hokies (9'-16, 1-10) lost their fJfth
ina row.
No. 11 Florida SL 83
GeOJ'llia Tech 82
Florida S.tate blew a 15-point
lead, then rallied in the final 10
minutes as Bob Sura led the way
with· 22 points. The win snapped a
two-game losing streak for FSU,
which finished ·the regular season
22-8 and clinched second place in
the Atlantic Copst Conference at
12-4. Tech fell to 15·10 and 7-8.
James Forrest led the Yellow
Jackets with 23 points.
No.16 UNLV 96, UC-Irvioe 74
The Runnin' Rebels (20-5, 134) beat Cal-Irvine for the ninth consecutive time as J.R. Rider scored
25 of his 34 points in the second
half and Dexter Boney had 24. But
unranked New Mexico State mathematically clinched the Big West
title with a 78-70 triumph at Cal
State Fullerton, marking the first
time the Runnin • Rebels will not
finish first in the Big West since
entering the conference for the
1982-83 season.
Freshman Todd Whitehead led
Irvine (6-19, 4-13) with 19 points.
No. 19 Oklahoma St. 114 .
Oral Roberts 85
Bryant Reeves, Brooks Thomp·
son and Fred Burley all had career
nights ror the Cowboys.

Church of Chnst

"1:

Ooordt t1 , _ Clirlll
o'atk
·
VmZindr llld Ward d.

..........., Clloorcb atClorlll
212 W. Main St.
Pas10r: Andrew Mi1el
St01day S&lt;:bool- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.,7 p.m.
w-..y Serviceo ·1 p.m.

-J-Millet
Slmtlay Sdlool -10:30 a.m.
B....ma ' 7:30p.m.
W - Y - 7:30

..

Assembly of God

-

tive game, ma!ching
secondlong_est streak m team histo~, as
E4d~e Jo~nson s~ored ,23 Jl?IRIS, _
leadnw ~me So.mcs !'~t~ mne or
more pomts agamst vJSIUng Charlotte..
•.
..
Michael Cages $even pomts led

Mldfleport Cll- Ill Cltrllt
Sib llld Main
&lt;PaiiQr:: Al_HartiCII'l
Sunday Sdoool - 9:30am.
Worwp- 8:15, !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servim · 1 p.m.

• .m• •

Stmday

Wonbip - 1t Lm. ood 7 p.m.
WetllteOday Servi&lt;c -7 p.m.

Fno
Will B~~~":'~
AlhSaeel.
.
PoiiOr. Mall: Monow
Sllwday ServicO - 7:30p.m.
Sundoy Sd&gt;ool· tO a.m.
Wonltip ·llo.m.,
w~ Servioe-7:30 p.m.

'

a9-21'!'ntosranthefounhquarter~

extendinga96-891eadto 105-91.
Nuggets 103, Trail Blaze(s 88 ·
· Denver won for the l~tlt time in
14 games at home as Chris Jackson
scored 12 of his 28 poinis in a lopsided fii'St quarter against Portland.
.The Trail Blazers lost for the
ninth time in 14 games ~r the
Nuggets.shot 60 percent while talc- ·
in~ a 34-19 lead after one period.
D1kembe ·Mutombo had. 17
rebounds and .lO points for his
eighth straight double-double.
•
Cavaliers 103,.Timberwolves 95
Terrell Brandon, playing for the
injured Mark Price, scored 17 of
his career-high 21 points in the second half as Cleveland rallied from
a IS-point deficit at Minnesota. ·
Brad Daugherty had 20 points
and 13 rebounds ani! Larry N:anee ; ·
scored 16 points.
' ·
Pa~rs ~36, Hawka 111 ..
Regpe Miller scored 34 pomts
and Indiana hit its rust IS shots of
the second. Q,uarter against visiting
Atlanta, giVIng the Pacers 1,000
regular-season vi~tories.
Dominique Wilkins scor.ed 23
points for the ·Hawks, who were
outscored 45-28 in the second peri- •
(Continued from Page 5)
od as Indiana took a 77-54 halftime
lead.
·
Nets 116, Magic 97
.
Burley scored 35, Thompson
Derrick Coleman had 1 seasonhad 33 and Reeves 31.
h'1 h 34 ·
· d 15 bo d
g
Va. Commonwealth 77
poiDts an
re un s, '
and New Jersey took advantage of
No. 20 Tulane 65
ShaquiUe O'Neal's foul trouble to ·~.
Sherron Mills had 19 points and win at home against Orlando.
19 rebounds in leading Virginia
The Clippers, who were Jed by
Commonwealth to a 77-65 over- · Danny Manning with 30 points, •
time vic[9ry over No. 20 Tuiline.
made 17 of 2~ shots (74 percent) to ;
No;21 BtU 84, ,UTEP 63
turn a 4-point deficit into a 63-47
Gary Trost and Niclc Sanderson halftime lead.
,,.
led the Cougars (23-3, 15-2), wh.o
moved into a first place-tie with
.
Utah in theWAC.
BYU took control early in the
game, going ·ahe.ad on ·a IS-foot
jumJ?Cf by Randy Reed with 14:41
left m the first half and never relinOPEN
quishing control.
No. 23 Massachusetts 61
St•.Joseph's 43
'•
Massachusetts (20-5, 11-3
Atlantic-10) scored 21 straight
points in the second half. St.
Joseph's fi~ishcd 17-9. 8-6.

·d

Kfllo Cllurch at Chrlll
Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 Lm.
B..,.,..llow Rldp Church Ill Christ
.\
Putor: Jack Colearovc
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonbjp , 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednelday ServiCco · 6:30p.m.
Zlm Cburch ~Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisoo
. ville Rd. (RLI43)

Ru!lond FlnllloJIII• Cllurcb
Sundoy Sd&gt;ool-.9:30 a.m.
Wonltip • 10:45 a.m.
I'GmtrOJ Flill BopUst

Paaor: Inlerim .~tor

, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 o.m.•7:30p.m.
w ....eoday Servim - 7 p.m.

Baa Main&amp;.

PuiOr: Dr. Lee Monh
Sundoy School- 9:30 a.m. ·
Wonltlp • 10:30 o.m.

BradiHirJ Cburch of Cbrl•
Pastor : Tom R~roa

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.

.... Bopllsl

Jl1nl -

41872l'amerof Pike
Putor: E. ~O'Brymt
Sundoy Sdtool· 9:30 o.m.
Wonltlp - 10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wedttelday Services - 7:00p.m.

Worship- lO:jO Lm. '

l5lh ond Pointer St.
......,., Rev. J1m01 A. Seddor!
•
SwldaySd&gt;ooi·9:1So.m.
· Wonbip · 10:15 Lm., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
Lonl'a s.-r Ill Sooday of ...ry m&lt;lftlll.
W.aiiosday Servil:c- 7:00p.m.

Dexter Cllurch of Cbrlll
Pastor: OuU Stewart t
Sunday Sdoool- 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Wemesday Services -7 p.m.
lulllnd Cburcb of cimal
Putor. Euo""' E. Underwood
Sundoy School - 9:30 o.m. '
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

n'llloplllt
YOUih P1110rRict Homa
Swlday Sdltiol· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip-10:40Lm., 7:00p.m.
W~yServic:eo -7:00p.m.

M.... Churdl of Christ
Miller SL. Muoit, W.Va.
SUndar School - 10 o.m.
Wonltip • II o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneadtty Servii(O•· 7 pm.

SIIYer Roo BopliJI

Puaor:.Bill Linle
tOa.m.

Suaday Sdtool·

Wonbip - llun., 7:30p.m.
Wodneaday'Servi&lt;:es· 7:30p.m.

•

Brodlorci Church at Chrlll .
SL Ri. 124 k fu Rd. S
Putor. De~ Slump
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhij&gt; • 10:30 o.m., 7:00 p,.m.
Wedneadtty_Scrvit:a - 7:30p.m.

· MI. Unloo BopliJI
Pu10r , .IGe N. 51)110
SU!tday Sdlool-9:45 a.m.
B....ma·6:30p.m.
w~ Scrvi&lt;ca . 6:30p.m.

I

Suuas Road Cllurdl or Chrlll
Pas10r: Joseph _B. Hoskins
·, Sunday School - 9 am.
· · Worship . tO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneadtty Servi&lt;:ca • 7 p.m.

llelhlthemllopllll
PaS10r ' Rev; Eorl Slluler
Sunday Sdloo!- lb:30 Lm.

&gt;

Worship • 9:30 o.m. ·
Th"'ICCay Servioea· 7:30p.m .

..

Uberty Cllrlllloa Cburcb

Dealer
, Pas10r. Woody CIII ,
Sunday E...U.a • 6:30p.m.
' Thursday .- · 6:30p.m.

OloA -Fret Will Bopllat Clourch
21601 St. IlL 7. Middleport
• •1
Sladoy Scbl!ol· 10 a.m. ·
. ...._ . 7:30~' I
nQndoy'!lerviooi - 7:30

i..up.ult Cltrl•lllt Cburdl
Suaday Sdoooi· 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneadoy Sesvice 7:30p.m.

Blllllde Jlopliot~ .
SL Ri. 143 jtllc olf Rr. 7
-Rev. J-R. Acn!I,Sr.
Sundof Sdtool· 10 a.m.
'Z:.!".&amp; · 11Lm.,6p.m.
W
y Services .7 p.m.

H•lod&lt; Gro.. CIIII'C~
Putor. C1wlea Domi&amp;an
Suncla~ ac:hool. 10:30 a.m ..
Wosahip • 9:30 a.rn., 7 p.m.

Vktorys:= ,

GaTHE
GRAVELY
·8Y8TEM

S:ZS N. 2std St. ~lepoo'.
PuJOr: J. .esll. Keesee
Wonbip • IOo.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

·-

.

·-

' . ) \ssllqoiiJ lopllol

Wonllip • IW o.m.
Thunday sem... -7:30p.m.

--...
.......
~

Chuck Wingett BuUderi
1 Carol Ln. Athens
. (614) 592-4119

Dnl.llt1la1Wer

·~

••

....

Holiness

Ploe Gro•• Bible Boll- Clturch
I /2 mile olf Rs. 325
Pastor: R... O'DeU Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship • IO::IC o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn&lt;Sclay Service - 7:30p.m.
WOIIeJin Bible Boll- Church
7S Pwl St., fM!dlepoll.
Putor: Rev. Roy Mctusy ,
Sunday adtool - 9:30 Lm.
Worship · 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service· 7:30p.m.
HJaell Ruo Holln. . Qturdl
Putor: Rooen Monier
Sundoy SchOOl - 9:30a.m.
Wdnhip -10:45 a.m. , 7 p.m.
ThOnday Service -7:30p.m.
H-•Uio Holl- Clsopllr

Paator: Rev. John Neville ·
Stmday School 10 .....
Wonhip - II "'!"·• 7:30p.m.
Wedoeldoy Servi&lt;e--7:30 p.m.

Latter-Day SLlints
,.. . looillllllod Cllll'&lt;ll Gf JduaCIIrllt
In Lilla' DaJ Sollll
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Putor: Jeny Collin•
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.
Weduooday Serviooa. 7:30p.m.

Our s..tour Lulh~ Chorcb
Wolntu and Henry Sis., Ra..,..wood, W.Va.
Co-ouson: Revo. Ridlord ~
'Patricia Bonda-Krus
Sunday s&lt;hool- 9:30 o.m.
vl'anltip . tli.m.
St. l'llul Lu........, Cburdl
Comer Sycamore It Second St., Pcmeroy

Putor: o.oiae Weirick
.$unday Sdlool • 9:t5 ..m. '
WOI!hiP·II...,..
•
'
'

Un1ted Methodist
Gnlutm Unllecl Metlsod.,.
Wonblp- 9:30 Lm. (Ill~ 2nd S...),
7:'l0 p.m. (3rd ~ 4lh Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
ML Olive Unlled Ml!lhodlll
Off 124 behind WilkesWie
Pastor. Otarles Jones
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday ServifC1 • 7 p.m.

Map coO,erau.. Parllh
NortheaatCiuller
Altrecl
PaalOr: Sharm. Hauunan
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worlhip • I I a.m., 6:30p.m.
ChPallOr: Sharon Hausman
worship. 9a.m.
Swtdoy School· 10 o.m.
.Thunday Scrvi&lt;ca • 7 p.m.
Jtlfpa
. Pa110r: B=&lt;ll Weber
Wonltip · 9:30 o.m..
~f.'.!'l.Scltoot- 10:30 .....
w
y Services -7:30p.m.

L&lt;nl JloiiOill .
""-' Rov. Sel- Johnson

.Rnda'llllo
Paotor: Rev. Sel- Joltn"'"
Wonbip · 9:30 o.m.
Ill tl3nl Sunday· 7:30p.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m. .
Weduooday Services • 7:30p.m.
Tuppfl'l Ptolu Sl. Paul
Putor: Slwcn Hltlllllon
Sunday Sdiool • 9 Lm.
Wonhip ·10 o.m.
Tuesday Servioea - 7:30p.m.
C..troiCt..ur
Albury (SJri&lt;UM)
Putcr. 0emt Newman .
Sunday School- 9:4~ o.m.
. Worship ·II o.m.
Wedneadtty Service~ · 7:30p.m.

......•.

n~

C\\\,rt S~·'" Q3.,.,r.5

13 Mil Street
Mldcleporl. Ohio 411710

11141112·1117 ·- IIII·OOKit
CHURCH IUPPLIEI • BIIL£1

B•b.U
AtooriCI&gt;oWI"'
CLI!YI!LAND INDIANS - Apod
widr. Albll\ S.U.. -.dieldet, on 1

-A..-

'" · -.MEIGS TIRE
. ; \ CENTER, INC.

to

- Domllf:gd~. ...
•.1ttlo
lint .....
Lttlo loJo. loll
a...
a-. Bob Mi-O=r'' IDII Paul Maahut..
pitdlllll. c. ..., _ . . . . ,

,

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An.\NI'A BIAYIII'-._..........

ot lW.aa ......_, out!Wder,
.... p • Colnoi,IAII DII100 PADUI- ....... to
-wldiDooW-IttdT•J.-.

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1t1t1. - ; Pldl l'Judao, DJ. DooiO.
.,.., z v~ _.. ·.en; •
Ootto -

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DoUa ltOOIII,

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. .£"'

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•

. GRAVElY TRACTOR SAlES
204 (ondor St.

J,lll D.. fUb

Pomeroy,

liE •11r
P1L 1114101
Pom.oy

OH.

992-2975

P.SCIIPIIOIIHOP

UWUNGS..C:OAn

FISHER
FUNERAL HO.

.· H2·5141
264 Seith 2•
}

J

Pan.or: Pmtlt Smilh

RuliUd C-urcb oflhe Nuarme
P1110r. Samuel Buye
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30o.m.,6:30p.m.
Weclneaday Services - 7 p.m.

Ml1...We
Plaor: Deron Newmut
Suoday Scltoot • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Porllaad J11n1 Cllurdl or tho NUI1CIIe
Putor. Willi~m JuatU
. Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:40 Lm., 7 p.m.
w eduooday Services • 7.p.m.

'

'

M~'«••rt

While'• Cbopel WOIIeJao
CooiYillellaotl

Putor: Rev. Phillipllidenout
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service _. 7 p.m .

PuiOr: ~v. Hetbat O..te

Folrvlew Bible ChLetart,..W.Va. Rt. I
PU!tOr: I ama l.&amp;wil
Swtday School-11 o.m.
WOflbip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship - II o.m., 6 p.m.
W~y Services - 7 p.m.

J'eor!Chlpol
Putor: Ftosatce Smilb
Suoday School • 9 o.m.
Wonltip - tO o.m.

Cal•II'J' Blblo·Chorcb
Pomerov Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Swtday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonltip 16-.30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Fttltb Fellowmlp Cruliide lor Cbrlll
PallOr. Rev. Fronlclin Diclr:CIII
Servi&lt;:c: Friday, 7 p.m.

N l l l ' - Church flllhe N-. ene
.
Paaor: Glendon Suoud
Sunday School· 9:30 a-!ft.
Wonltip -10:30 Lm., 1 p.m.
Wodnoaday Service~· 7 p.m.

Pastor: ~(dne.) Kee
S...day Scltool • 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
w ....eod'ay Services-7:30p.m.
Rock Sprlnp . ··
1
Paa!or.Keilb Rader
Smclay School • 9: IS i.m.
vl'onltit&gt; • tO o.m.
Wednesday Services • 6 p.m.
RudMd
PallOr: Arlhur Csalluoe
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 Lm.

Col•or'J Pll&amp;rt• C1laptl
HonisosMlle Rood
PallOr. Re•. Via« Roush
· Susu!oy Sdooo19:30 o.rn.
Wonltip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;:c . 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
lllddase

u-"' ,.,..

Sll•ermlle WordatFollb
· Pa&amp;tor: Dovid Doiley
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evenina·7p.m.

(II BtuliJtahom dlun:h olfR.oute 33)

PlsJOr.Rollen Vance
Stllday wonltip - 10 a.m. ·
Wedn..doy.aervice ·6:30p.m.

Thursday Service ~ 7:30p.'".

'

Tr!IIHJ c ...voalllmll Cllurdl
Paator: ReV. Rolmd Wildman
Chun:h · 9:15a.m.
·
Wonltip - I0:30 a.m.
The Solnllon AnoJ
tiS Buaemut Ave., Pomeroy.
Suaclay School· 10:30 o.m.
W""!tiP ·10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Thunday Serviocs - 7 p.m.

SllnCatter
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9: IS un.
Worship- 10:1~ Lm. .

Mtdclleporl c--·~tz,~urch
575 Pearl St., Mid
.
PallOr. Sam Aftclenoo

s........

Putor: F1osmce Smilh
Sunday School- to o.m.
Wonbip- 9 a.rn.

Stllday School 10...... .
. Hvenina·7:30p.m.
Wedneadtty Servi&lt;:c- 7:30 p.DL

Belhan:r

Faith Tobtnlodt Clnsrcll
Bailey Ibm Rood
PuLer. RIIY. Bmmeu Raw100
Sundoy School · 10:00 a.m.
Evenina 7 p.sit.
Thuraday Service • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kennellt Balcer
Sunday School· tO o.m.
J'
. Wonhip • 9 o.m.
Wednesday Services • 10 a.m!

'

Putor: Kennellt Balcer
Sunday School · 9:30 LJD.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. ('2nd~ 4dt Sun)
' M«nloaSJar
Putor: Kennellt Balcer
Sunday Sdtool· 9:45 a.m.
Wllflhip • 10:30 Lm.
Thundoy Servioes ·7:30p.m.

Syracuoe M t 141 I Brida&lt;mon St., Syroouse
Pootor: Roy (Mite) Thompooa
· Swtcloy School ·10 o.m.
l!vt:tting • 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Sesvice • 7 p.m.

Rejoldoa Life Churdo
SOON. 2nd Ave., Middlepost
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Swtdoy School · 10 o.m.
Wed~¢ay Servicea . 7 p.m.

1/4

Cllurdo til J ..... Chrlll,
Apostolic Follh
mile po•t Fon Meigs on New limo Rd.
Pastor. William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-_7.:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Pentecostal
J'oo-A-bly
SL Rr. 124, Ratine
Pusor: Williom Hoblclt ·
Sunday School-10 LliL
Evening- 7 p.m.

Wedneoday Serviceo - 7 p.m .

Mldd~~"!Putor. Rev. Cla.t Bal:er
School • 10 o.m.

Huol C""'muollJ Clturcb

SultOn
Putor. Kenri.eth Baker
Sunday S&lt;:bool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip · 10:45 o.m. (1st~ 3rd Stm)
• EuiLellrt

Pas10r: Roser Groce
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Wollhip • 9o.m. ,
RodH
Pastor: Roser Once
Sunday School • I0 o.m.
Wonbip. It o.m.
Lourel ClllrFne Melllodi,.Citurcb
. Putor: l'oler Trombloy
Sunday S&lt;:bool - 9:30 l.m.
Worship- 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Services · 1 p.m.

OffRr. 124
Putor. l!dsel Hart
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip ·• 10:30 un.,7 :30 p.m.

Bo""-vlllo Preoi&gt;Jieliu CIIWonhip - 9 o.m.
Sunday School- 9:45 o.m.

O,enlllo C01tm111H7 Cllurdo
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

MlddleporiPnmJIII'IIB
Sunday Sdlool· 9 Lm.
Worship • tO a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd~ 4dt Sun.).

Chrladu Fellowlblp COilla'
Sa1esn Si., Rullond
PallOr: Robed E. Musser
Sunday School· 101.111.
Worlhip ·11:15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wemuday Sorvice • 7 p.m.
M.,. Clostptl Clourcb
Supt.: Mike MillOn

Suncfay school· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • llo.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

.

RollaadBibloMethodlst
Pa1tor: Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
E...U.a·7p.m.
Wednesday Services •i .p.m.

Fllllt ~­
• 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Sunda~

Cool•llo Vnllecl Melltodlal Porlllt .
Pu10r. HdCII Kline
CootYillt Cllurch
Main~ Plft1t Ss.
'
s...day School· 10 a.m. '
Wonhi~ • 9 un.
1\teoday Semces • 7 p.m.

MI. ou.. COIW-stliJ Church
PuiOr: LoWfttlCOlltuh
Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
B¥0tlina·7p.m.
Wedneday Service· 7 p.m.

llelhel Cllurcll
Townaltip Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 Lm.

Uollod Falllo Cltll'&lt;ll
Rr. 7'"' Porneruy By·Pua
PUJOr: ROY. Robed B. Smilh. Sr.
Stllday School· 9:30 il.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednaclay Service - 7 p.m.

Wedneaday Service•- 10 a.m.
Hockl..,..n Cllurcb
Gnnd Street

Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • II o.m.
w•uday Service• - 8 p.m.
Tordl Churdl

SJI'I'C1110 n-at Unllad -ftorlu
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worahip- I I o.m., 4 p.m. (lat ~ 3rd Sun.)

Seventh-Day AdventiSt
S..--Da, Ad•oallal
Mulbeny Hu. Rd., l'ame107
Posror: Roy Lowinslty
Satwday Services:
Sabbolh Sdtool • 2 p.m.
Worship- 3.p.m.

Un1ted Brethren
ML H-GSI Uollecl_...,
Ia Cltrlll Clousds
Texas Community &lt;if CR 82
Paator. Robed Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7:30p.m .

Edea Uolled llnlh...,lo Chrlot
2 1/2 miles nollh of RecdsWie
oaSUieR.... 124
Passor: Rev. Robert Morldey
SundoyScltooi·-IOa.m.
Wonhip -7:30p.m.
Wednesday S'ervices ·7:30p.m.

Full Goopel L t p l -

Co. Rd.63

33045 llitond RDod. Panesoy
PuJOr: Roy HW1lllr
Sunday School· 10 a.m.•
. Hvenina7:30p.m.
Tueaday ~ Thunday -7:30p.m.

R..ll! l'lnl Clsurcb of I.. N -

~1 Wonltip ·2:30p.m.;
1btmday oervices ·7:30p.m.

N-Selllemaol Church

o-. n

PuJOr: Thomu L.
Sunday S&lt;:bool - 9:30a.m.
W&lt;!nltip- t0:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

S.Uih Belltel New T - f l l l

snwr Ritlp
Putor: Duooo Sydalltlfd&lt;er
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 o.m., 7 p.m.
w .......Loy Service • 7 p.m.

Middleport Cllurdt oflhe Nlllnlle
Poator: R...,, Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday tiool - 9:30 .....
Wonltip • 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.

._,. _.,

Car1e1oo biM •• ,.11111..11 CII-

W~ySoMoa-7p.m.

Kinpbusyllaotl

w.

•

Pastor: Clyde
lleltdenat
Sunday Seltooi · 9:30 o.m •
B...... · 7p.m.
Wedn&amp;otioy Service - 7 p.m.

a...rdlelllleN•-.,
PI-, Joltn Doupu .
Sunday S&lt;:bool· 9:30 ...

w.

Wonltlp • 10:45 o.m., 7 jun.
W-ySoMoa·7p.m.
.,

•

Transactions
to....,
-~BfullAYS

Hallt (Middlopost)

Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 .....
Worship- 10:30 o.m.
Wednesdoy Services • 7:30p.m.

8 7 - Clsorcb of God
• ' AJllllellld Second Sis,
PuiOr: Rev. David Russell
St1n4aJ School and Wonltip- 9:30 o.m.
. E....... Sesvicea·7p.m.
Wedaesday ~- - 7 p.m.

.... c....

~ Chttrcb of theN...,._

Cormel

ltlllud Cllurdl of God
r-: John P. Cosoorln .
~ S&lt;hool· 10 La!.
Wonltip • I I o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ • 7 p.m.

..

F«eaiRuo
Putor: Deron Newmon
Sundoy Sdlool • 10 o.m.
Wollhip • 9 o.m.
Thunday Servicea - 6:30p.m.

Sundtty School· 9:30 o,m.
Wonllip - 10:30 LtD.
WedoeldoyServioos - 6p.m .

I • fliSitai'OII Holl- Cllttrds
New Limo Rood, Rul1olld
PuJOr: Rev. Dewey. Kina
St111day adtool· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wcnhip "7 p.m.
Wedneadtty prayer meetina· 7 p.m.

ML Marlllt Clourcb or God
Rocino
Puur. Rev. lllllJI S•"'rfirld
Sunday S&lt;:bool- 9:4S . ....
'
Evenisq - 7 p.m.
Wednofd~Y Serviceo.• 7 p.m.

C 11hol1c
8Mnd lleut Ceft II O.ldl
16t Mttlbony A..,, ..... ...,., 992-5198
Pa.or: Ril¥. WalllrB. Hoisul
Sal. C.... 4:45-S:I~;Mw-S:JOp.m.
~
:4S.9:tS a.m., .
g... Mus • 9:30 a.sn.
Dailey Mus -'8:30 Lm_.

Re&lt;toi: Fr. Bill Lyle .
Holy i!udtariat .,d Sunday Sdtool I lo.m.
. Colfee'-followina

Cllllrch of God

Ru!lood Fret WHI Boplllt
SolaDSL
Poaar. Rev. Paul Toylor
Suaolay S&lt;:bool · 10 a.m.
E¥0tlina·7p.m.
Wt!dneaday Serviceo · 7 p.m.

•

"'

Gract ~a,.l O.rdl
3261!.
. SL, Pomosvy

Bll'll'ord Clourch atCbrlllln
CllrlodooUoloa
Hanfonl, W.VL
PallOr. Reli. Dlllid MeMonls
Sunday Sdoool· II LID.
Wonblp • 9:30 o.m.;7:30p.m.
w......aoy-. - 7:30p.m.

Kaistotlt9::10
Smidl
Sunilay
S&lt;:bool·
a.m.

..
.,

f:piSCOpal

H-Cit-GfCio)jallli
Cltrtollu Uoloa
PuiOr: T1teroo Darblm
,Sunday Sdoool · 9:30 Lm.
Eto0Rina·7p.m.
Wedaesday scm... . 1 p.m.

'

Pallit 0/ Cburdl ot llle NaDrllll
PuiOr: Rev. Thomas M~
Sanday School· 9:30 om.
Wonhip. 10:30 Lm. llld 6 p.m.
Weclneaday Services- 7 p.m.

~

Sunday School· tO o.m.
Wonltip . It a.m., 6 p.m.
Thundoy Servi&lt;:es • 1 p.m.

Putor. Gary Hines
Sunday School - 9:30 LID.
Wontil,::p.rn.
Wednc:aday
·ceo • 7 pm.

Chnst1an Un10n

ML MoriiiiBoplllt
Fowth ~Main St., Midd1oport
PUJOri Rev. Oilben Croia. Jr.
Sunday S&lt;:bool· 9:30 un.
WoniUp • 10:45 Lm.

Sunday

Wonltlp - 9 o,m., 6p.m.
Tueaday Services • 7 p.m.

Putor. Keilh Rader

~I

Fsinllluallaptlll
PallOr : Ariu• Hun
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • II Lm.

Putor: Kei1b Rader

0Ulllef' '

Sunday Schoof: 9:30a.m.
Worship Servic:e: t0:30 Lm.
Bible Sludy, Wedneadtty, 6:30p.m.

Railroad St.. Muon
Sundar School - 10 a.m.
~"':!"1 " II Lm., 6 p.m.
W
y Services - 7 .. m.

Paaor: Rev. Gleoll McMillall
S&lt;:bool - 9:30 o..m.
Wonbip - 10:30 Lib., 6p.m.
~odnoaday Services. 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

.,

Goopel
Bold Knob,
'"' Co.MIRol. 31
Putor: Rev. Reier Willford
Sunday Sdoool· 9:30 Lm.
Wonitip- t0:4~ IJD., 7 p.m.
Wemesday Service . 7 p.m.

s1,...a.orcbti'IHN"

. Ea'.'irlorbe

N.., Life Cburch of God

11eet1n111e Cllurcb ofCiuiat
Puror: PhiliP Ssumt

hldl Bopllsl Clturcb

·,

God.,

Tuppel1 Ptlln Church or Chrl•
Pasror: Bill,Wines
Swulay School - 9 a.m.
Wonltip • 9:4S a.in., 6:30p.m.

Flnl Boplllll Cllurcb

..

Clsurdo Ill
Proploeq
0.1. WhileRd.cifSLRL 160
Paator: Pal H..-&gt;
Sunday S&lt;:bool · I0 a.m.
Wonltit&gt; • II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

l'olowGJ W - t Cllurdo Ill Cbrlll
33226 Olildn:n'o Home Rd.
Sunday School.· II a.m.
Worship • IOa.m., 6 p.m.
W - y Servim • 7 p.m.

,

Despite broken nose, Starks
leads Knic.k s to win over Jazzth~

a

In theNBA ...

and singie win over Findlay. ·Dur~
ing the season, Rio Grande, Urbana
and Cedarville each il~peared on
the top 25 list .. . R10 Grande·
received five votes in the polling
for this week's nalional listing, led
by Oklahoma Baptist at 27-3. Findlay, unrated last week, is now 19th •
on the strength of its 11-game win'ning streak sini:e its 94-90 loss to
Rio Grande on Jan. 14. ·

..

·-

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

N:~:~~~~£;:~ ~
Co.

SWISHER&amp;LOHSE
ptfMMACY
we F Ut Doctors•
JX
frescripUons

"nus

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

·.

..

POMEROY, OHI0-992-.6677

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelite Saws

SILL QUICKEL

·Sl

CrDw's Family RutawCIIt

, , .
Pomoroy •.

992-5432

"F~tltll/11

Mtlitf!g FIIN C61dt~"
221 W. Main St. P~roy

.

EWING FUNERAl HOME
..niJ(nir _,. nnd St•rl'it'P

.-..lu•ny~"

Establlsh!!d 1913

992-2121
106 ......, bt.

'

. 214 E. _Main
,
992·S130·Pomoroy

fMi\

-=Veterans
"5M ..._.I

•muna Holpital
,_,

115 I • ..,_lotDr:
n2-2104

�•

March 5, 1993

•

By The Bend

The Dajly Sentinel
Friday, March 5, 1993

•

Page

•

~ MA

Florida

Law .
th·e
sales

fraud. In the southern district
48 people have been charged.
omcials described lhe raid as
ever against telephone .
(APphoto)
·

makes long-range,plans

; · A long-range look at whaussis' tance older Meigs Countians will
need in order to remain in their
own homes and communities as
long as possible was taken by a
• group which met Tuesday evening
: .with Cindy L. Farson, Marietta, ·
• ·Director of tbe Area Agency on
' Aging.
Purpose of the meeting was to
· hear suggestions from local individuals who know and understand
. tbe problems of senior ci~ens in
ibeir communities, but may not be
• directly in.volved in social seryice
.
.
.
: progJallls.
The group included the Rev.
·
: Roger Grace, pastor of the United
Methodist Church at Racine, Ch8rlene Hoeflich of The Daily Sentinel, and Beth Theiss and Susan'
Oliver, Meigs County Council ori
: Aging staff at the Scnio~ Citizens
: Center.
- · Farson reported. that the Ageli
• Agency _on Aging provides $3 mil·
. lion in state and federal funds to
local agencies that serve those-over
. : 60 years of aae in the eight county
area of the Area Agency on Aging.
The a~ency is a part of the Buck·
eye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development DiSirict program.
· She said that half of that money
! goes 'toward specific programs
which are given out to Councils on

Aging on a grant-type basis, while
the ot!ler half goes into Passport or
the Options program where the
emphasis is on seNing those confined to their homes.
It was reponed by Oliver, director of the Meigs County Council on
Aging, that Meigs County has,
according to information obtained
from the Ohio Department on
Aging, a total of 894 residents over
60 in households when: the income
is under the poverty guideline. That
represents 20 percent of all senior
citizens, according to the repon .
The poverty guideline is $6,280
for a one household size family,
$8,420 for a two person household,
and $10,560 for a three person
household.
· .
However, il was pointed out that
tbe poverty guideline is determined
by inco~ and does not take into
consideration real estate, stocks,
bonds, money in bank accounts and
other assets. As the discussion
brought out, some Meigs senior citizens faU into that cate~ory.
More funding for m-home services and providing assisted living
.facilities for those who need some
care but not of the intensity provided in nursing homes was suggested
as a need or Meigs County residents.

•

:..~New arrival
., '

Mr. and Mrs. Matt (Joy Neigler)
: Matthews, Columbus, announce
• the birth of a daughter, Sarah Eliza: beth, on Feb. 17 at Riverside Hos' pital in Columbus.
•
She weighed seven pounds and
: five ounces and was 20 inches
: long.
•
Malemal grandparents arc Sarah
: Nei$1er and the late Anhur Neiglcr,
• Racme. Maternal great-grandparent
' is Mrs. Evelyn Stowe, Syracuse.
•
Paternal grandparents are
·. Blanche Matthews and the laiC Dr.
Leroy Matthews, Robinsdale,
· Minn.
;
There is another child at home,
; Timothy Shawn, who is four and
~ one-half years old.

. It was noted that in Meigs
County there are only two living
facilities for seniors which are subsidized • The Maples on Mulberry
Heights in' Pomeroy and
Stonewood Aparuncnts in Middle·
port. Neither are assisted living
quarters, although both are especiallytequipped for the elderly and
handicapped.
.
Overbrook bas planned an adja·
cent facilitr wl\ich will .be or an
ass.isted livmg nature for ci~ens
who are no longer able to live
alone but are not incapacitated
enough to enter a nursing home.
Farson said thl¢ in rural areas,
like MeiJFS County, 7S percent of
senior cittzens remain in their own
homes. Programs to help those
senior citizens and bow that assistance can be paid for and delivered
were discussed, along with possible
incidents of self' neglcct and elder
abuse.
.
Strategic planning discussions
are being held in aU eight counties
of this district, as well as in aU U
other Area Agencies in Ohio. Input
from the discussions wiU be included in a report ,which the Ohio
Department ·or Aging will use in
presenting program and funding
requests to Gov . George
Voinovich.

Eric Chambers will be conducting Tai Chi classes for the Middlepan Arts Council on March 22, 29
and AprilS. Classes will begin at 7
p.m. and the cost is $IS for all
three classes.
A three-session porcelain mbbit
class will be cOming up with Judy
Dixon, instructor. A date and time
win be announced.
·
New officers for 1993 are Mary
Wise, president: Jeanette Thomas,
'
.
Vogalsong , Dian Bias, Tammy vice-president; Gail Hovatter, corBakt;.r. Gloria I;lecker, Lisa responding secretary; RaeAnn
Puun'iln, Bonnie Richards, Mattie Gwiazdowsky, secretary; Msrilyn
Teaford, Judy Elkihs, Wendy · Meier, treasurer; and Nancy Cale,
Wilfong, Linda Putman and public relations.
Marlene Putman.
Hostesses were Sue Suttle and
Kristy Bos10n.

Nazarene women gather
.

Tbe Nazarene Women's Society
met recently ~~ the Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene.
Cathy Masters presided at the
meeting and opening prayer was by
Robin Putman. Devotions were by
Judy · Elkins, "What Are
Valentines," and by Janelle
Sargen~ "God Love of a Christian"
with the group participating.
There were 90 shut-in calls
reported and the group is making
plans to go to the Meigs County
Inf1111lary for an Easter program.
Attending were Kaye Jett, Kate
Ladd, Sue Douglas, Janelle
Sargent, Amanda Scyoc, Robin
Putman, Evelyn Barr, ·rami
Putman, Cathy Masters, Sue Suttle,
Barb Masters, Kristy Boston,
Annette
Smeeks,
Cry s tal

'

SOLO to meet
The Meigs County SOLO Singles will be cooking Korean Sunday from 4 to 6 p.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church. ·
The pastor, Rev. Eun Hae Kce, will
be working with the group on
preparing Korean fo~s . .Anyone
mterested in attending is asked to
call Sharon Hausman, 985-4312.

Narcotics Anonymous observes anniversary ·
A. local Narcotics Anonymous
g·roup recently celebrated nine
years of helping area addicts live
• clean, free of their addiction.
; ... Narcotics Anonymous, also
· iiJlown as N.A., is a 12-srep fellow• ·ship or men and women for whom
, - drugs bas become a major problem.
: . -They are recovering addtcts who
ineet regularly to help each other
get and stay clean.
It docs not matter what or how
, mUch a person used, anyone with a
• drug problem may attend a meet·
l ing. There are no dues or fees and a
person' s anonymity is fully protected:
•
N.A. is not connected with any
• political. religious or law enforcemerit groups , and is under no
• surveillance at any time. Anyone
. • may become a member reprdless
. of qe, race, sexual identity, creed,
· r eligion or lack of religion. The
: &lt;1nly requirement for membership
: 11 a desire to stop using.
N.A. is a worldwide fellowship
: · of recovering llddicts. It was found;: ed July' 1953 and held its first
: meeting in southern California.
·: Gradually, new meCtings started in
:· other areas of the world. Today,
· there .-e more than 22,000 weekly
: meetings in SS cowftrics.
:: . The Tri-County N.A. group in
•: foin&amp; Pleasant was .slartcd wilh a
··:Weekly Thursday meetinf on Jan.
' 1.6, 1984 by some loca addicts

•

&lt;:lasses slated

seeking recovery from their addictions. That meeting grew and tbe
group started another weekly meeting on Saturday nights. Today, in
Point Pleasant and .Gallipolis, there
are four N.A. groups with a tolal of
six meetings a week.
If you think you may have a
drug problem and would like to
attend a meeting, N.A. meets:
7:30 p.m. every Sunday and
Thursday in the basement of 61
Viand Street, Point Pleasant (use
the side entrance);
8:30 p.m. every Toosday at tbe

Christ Episcopal Church, 804 Main
Street, Point Pleasant, W.Va;
7 p.m. every Monday at GI11Ce
Uniled Methodist Church, Gallipo·
lis (use Cedar Street entrance);
7:30 p.m. every Wednesday and
noon every Saturday at Woodland
Center, State Route 160 across
from Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Also, to·assist suffering addicts
seeking help in our area, N.A.
operates a toll free 24-hour
helpline, 1-800-766-#12, based in
Charleston,

OF HOUSE

TRAILER
OWNERTRANSFER-

OPERATOR OF
A HOUSE

TRAILER
COURT-

Upon the transfer of ownership of a house
trailer the cartHioate • • • as to such trailer
shall expire, and the original owner ahall
immediately remove such certHicate from the
trailer.
·

I••

All

contreCtora

and

.CHARUE'S
SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
and UMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

producte, materiale, eerv·

len, and labor In the
iniplementellon of their
project. AdctlllonoHy, cotitroctor qof!lpllenqe wllh ·the
Equol Employment Oppor·
tunlty requiromonll of Ohio
Aclmlnlotrotl" Code Chip·
Exocutlve Order of 1972,

992·7553

and Governor'• Executive ·

POMEIOY, OH.

Order

84·9 ohall . be
required. .
Bid del • muat comply wilh

2-3-f:l-

r1te on
public Improvement• In
Melp County, Ohto, ·••
dellrmlned by Tho Ohio
Dep1rtmenl of lnduotrlll
Wlfll

CALIFORNIA
..INS
l1

R":,-:'dd.,

PUBLIC NOTICE
"ooived'pr_..t
The following.bywere
re·
tho Ohio
Environmental ProtecUon
Agencv (OEPA) lelt week.
Effective datil of final

PUBUC NOTICE
In com~lllnce with
o--Jion
51f ,01'ol the Ohio
~
Revloed Code, tht Melgt
County Board of Revioion
will hold en otpnlzetlonll

.ot
propooecl
eclicne end
of
.ecti- lsouanco
delee
'droit octlono 111 oletod.
~tnal' action• mey be
;•ppulld, In writing, within
. 30 dtlyf of the dell of thit
•notice, !co, The Environment- .

at
9:00 o'clock
A.M.
the
meeting
on M11ch
17,In1993,
Aucltor'o Olflce of tho
Melfll County Courthouoe.
N":r. p=tyc.Au=
Ill
(315, 1tc

,OH., 43215. Notice of 1ny
;1ppeel ohlll be flied with tho
director within 3 daye.
;!'ropo01d 1ctlono will
,bocoml llnel ..,I•• 1 writ·
•ton ediddlcetlon hearing
.._t lo eubmltted within
:110 d1y1 of the loeuenoe
;date; 0{ lht director revlo-

Public Notice

. ~~~ Board ot Revllw, Am. 3oo,
~236 E. Town St., Columbua,

~lh*ew• ~.P~~~.

-ecllon. Anp peroon 1111v
r.ubmlt oommMta end/or 1
....ung r~t~~rcllne ' 111 y.drafl
'llctlon wtlhlri 30...,. of the

utl11'11•t

da.. lftdlcated. .. Action..

11

i)llld 1bovo dooe ~ol

••cllio•
p.rt.

,Jnotude '•-'PI of e vartlled

.'comploinl lhlilniftcent pub·Uo lnlar•t exfata, • public'
Jn•llng may be held. AI to
.,, eclicn, indudlng recolpt
j.J verified oompl1lnlt, eny
,,..,.on may obloin nOll..- ol

. , . . . .k.......................... , ..,

It IIIIJIW..'! i! i1 ••• ..cern ..... of ••t

, ••, ........" ... IIIICIM i •••••,.
2) Your
wiU\e .....,.,... to ....... eln.
3) Your • .., will ....... to yM.
THE CHOICE IS YOUISI ·
To collect ynr IC..Itln•lp
call

••J

J urth• 'ectlona, and

c..,.,.
.
FlEE ESTIIIAYES

Stolt&amp;

915-4473
667•6179

NOWOPD
MYSTIQUE
TANNING
SCA Wolfe Bad
15 Session $25
Depot St., Rutland
742-3190
· Call for
Appointnient

Plu1 FlEE kttle of
ohlll be properly
lotion
oigned br en 1uthorlzed
r.pr-IIIUvo ol tho bidder.
Good lhro•1h Jobrv•ry
All bldo ehell be ouled
949 2823
end pleinly marked "S.Ied ·1';;;:;:::;:::;;;;":::;;;;:;~
Bid for Storm Sewer II
Project, llddloport, Ohio."
The owner reeorveo the
right to ~I any or Ill bide
eubmIII , Md waive any
trr_leri_.
Rates
Fred Holfm110, Mayor
Full Insured
VIllage of Mlddllport
742·2~60

I~FE~B~.2~6;~·M~AR~~5,~1~2~~~·~~~~~~~~
.

OFFICE 99~·2886

ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.
992-5858
696-1290

FIREWOOD
'
FOR SALE
ALL HARDWOOD

Seasoned .
$40.00 a Load .

. Delivered.
(614) H2·5449

367·7444 • 446 6644

1-100·926-2032 (OWo O•IJ)
Monday-Friday, 8:00-5:00

~ld Estiot. too. Quilty Wortc, lns. Wort!

Welcornt. FbtrGiuo Wortc. ~ Repairitg &amp;
Relinisllitg, flame Straighlenilg, Cuslorn
Sal-&gt;g. Mallin SenourM~ing System

Approa. 4 rnHtte North of a.Hipohl
and 4 mUM South of ~ IO
AddiSon . Twn oft SL AI. 7 OI'ID
Addl8on Pille. Body shop appro•. 2
fftiiH on righl.

Porta ..... 8erdoe lor ••
makee •ncl madale af
tnctoNendmm

.from ~.,

.

)

- ·

· 6:45p.m.
. Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thia ltd good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and !
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Ufe • Medicare • cancer •Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

. HAULING

North SecOnd Ave.
Mlddllport, OH
'
"
•
• il
POMEROY- Ebenezer Street- Foals ika homo wilh 3·
bedrooms, one bath, beautiful kitchon cabinots, nowor
roof and Forced Air natural gaslumaco.
$19,500
HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD- Looking lor a placo 1o build
lhat dr.am homo or a pllc:o to pall&lt; lhat mobile homo.
Well hare's approx. 2 acres already.set up and waiting for
you. Land Only.
ONLY $12,000

•

~di·

loll 119

•••,Ort,

Olllo 45760
(614) 143•5264 lQOI9Wn

JOI I. SAYllE
SAYRE TRUCIIIG
614·742·2131
3-4-93-1

SUMMER
IMAGES
2 •llts on lpell

Run RoetiOff
lt. 124 &lt;
12 S.11iH1 $20
16 S.llio•• $25

. PubiC Notice

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent .

992·2487

GUN

CLUI

WE DO

AND OERHHING UNDEINUTH

BUILDERS

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

20 Years Exp.

47269 St. lt. 241• 1Y.llile Off Rt. 7'

n... Clloillr ••II. 241

lOW OFFDIH-.
OIL IIID LIIE •mcE
DIE lENlR AID IOTADIG

s.·111:

2/IS/H/IMpll

More Legals
On Page 12

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages. Replacement wrndows
Room AdcRtlons e Roofing
·

:

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

PfO(

614-949·2101 • Mt-2160

ertiS-3139

c• S nt., c.llal

·.
992·2259

'

'·

REDL!CEDI Eaale Ridge Rd. • 3-4 bedroome, balh, 1/2
~~n~ elaclrlc I fuol oil heat, TPC water, 2 cor
garlgOQI'lApprox. 1+ acre olground. ASKING $18,000
/

IIDOLEPORT· One ftoor frame home in need oi rapoir.
Hu 2 bedrooms, bath, gas heat, outbuilding. ASKING
...000 (mlllle.an otr.r).

111

$
.
1
"
6
IIOW _· 1

Tilt llmlly of EID
Birch wllht• to ttilnk
. lit 1111' lrlendl, Ylnl 8t

3

· nllgbborl, Rtv. Roger
. GriCI, the IIIII It
Extllldecl Clrl, lncl •

IPIDIIIIhrillll HolM
Hllltll Nur11 Ltncl1
Au..n tor lhlllngln
cu ICII'GW. VIlli' ltllfd.

Every operator of a houaetraller court or park
or avery owner of property uaed for auch
purpoae when there Is no operator shall keep
a register of all hOuH traUera which m8M UH
of the court, paill, or property.

""' lncl llloUg!ltlul·

· n••• Ia eln·cerlly
W'IDIIdtd

HOWARD E. FUll,
MillS CO.UITY .TRIASUIII
,.

•

SA Do 2 story homo with 3 badrtoms, completely
romodlled, nice modernized kilchan, includes moet
IPfiiiiiiCIIi, CIA, decking 1111d one car garage. ASKING .
1*7,000 '

'

)'::

•

.•
'

•

•'

·

PH. 614·915·3949

SMALL
.· WANT ADS

Auto., 3.3. V·6, Air, Cassette, Power Ortver's Seat, POWer Wloldows, Power Door locks' Tilt '
Crulae, &amp; Many Mont pPtkHia
.

742·2328

IELUR'S CUSTOM
BENDING

3-4-113-1

· A8IJ PlfOtl

·1993 DYNASTY -LE

ROOFING:

GUN SIOOTS

..
"

.Widte Chrysler•Piymouth•Dodge

ani))

UCIII,OHIO
614·949·2202
61

IN POMEROY

: !17&lt;111 a,... Route 124
• .. ddloport, Ohio
•Elf-• 01111: 02121193
: HP~lcetlooi No(e)

Jlllew Dodge

•PP'·

Chun:h, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

· Hili Top a.-ry

Drive Into

work·
ploc. !b1

"He/pinf You To Beconr Your lnwstme11t''

, EAGLES
CLUB

10r requiren~ent..

.•

your
homror·

Snodgrass Upholstery

EVERY THURSDAY

, roaletrlllon.

Rl

el&amp;l-k'!'
Collusl
Wrwill
c:orne 10

. ~·

· : Oi53IJIIIM G001

WAS
118,619.

M46 AMbo• J111w •G.oi.I,..U., OR. 4S6JJ

I

,t Rnellleuence ol notice ol

: (3)

'

lARRY'S BODY SHOP

J

TAIIUII IIDIIIG llOWIII
YAIDIIAII PUSH llOWIII
2Cwdo•UCJI!
1010 TiiUDIS &amp; SAWS
SALES AND SERVICE

Columbue, OH., 43286-0148
.Ph. (&amp;U) 844.2115. Conoull
ORC Chap. 3745 end OAC
;.e••· 3-7&lt;15-47 1nd 3746-5
t

On~'!

Nadon

..........
•••••

·

N011CE OF AP~SIT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Follrua" 12, 1111, In
the lllolge Coun(J Plobete
Court, Caae "•· ann,
~lmll W-"'!L~14 Poga
Strlll,, llk!d~rt, Ohio
41710, • •• appointed
Ex-tor or· the Milito of
Kille WoblrJ. d• nd, 1111
of 114 1'110 ltreet,
Middleport, Ohio 41180:
.
Aolten E.lluoll.
ProbMe ~udge
lMw K. Monti J od, a.tt
(2) 11, •; (3) I, ltp

NOW

112211 mo.

LIMISTOIE,
GUVIL &amp; COAL

:J;Ierll, OEPA, P. 0. Box loCI,

10.7 er S.t. 11-4

THE

15 Stulcins '15

llonel lnfonn1tlon. Unleoo
ptherwl11 . pr'ovldtd In
Notlcea of particular
ectione, II conimuniCitlono
ahell be oenl to: Hoerlng

-•J
614·915·3556

eC·~··
lailiotleli•t

CARE FOR

V•..,.tfne &amp;peeflll

within
the

PubliC Notice

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

IISSILL &amp; IUU.I
COIISIIUCnON

REASONABLE RAHS

ter 123, the GOvernor'•·

the prwiiUng

Public Notice

b~dgeto

(3) 5, Ill:

aubcontractor• involved
wtth the project will, to tho
extent pr-=lic•bl• UM Ohio

l;!eginnersl All Ages! S.lowerPace!
Fu~! Easy! Great Exercise!
(Monday) Pl. Pleasant Youth
.
-s:ao-1:00 p.m. (Sint••~low Pace
team the .altai i1n dl i ACri)l
Breaky~!ltectric Slide, Boot Scoolin'
Boogie , Texas WaiiZ, Flying 8, Ten
Slap Polk!!, Cotton-Eyed Joe. Tush
Push. Elvire, Ski Bumpis, Mcntena,
Slap Laalhor, Louie, Tumble-d an~
morel

w,va.

All owner11 of h.ouse trailers having a shua in
the State of Ohio and subject to the tax as
provided above MUST register such trailer
With the County AudHor on or prior to the data
the tax Is due and payable. . ·

ehlll r•utt I~ the -••d of
procurement contr1cta to
CerUIIed Miporlty lluelnEnterpr- In an eggr-te
dotllr vlllue of no
th111
two percent (2%) of the
prime contr1ct. Tho bid
e~lllcetlono provic!o fur·
thor detello on the11
requlromenta.
·

COUNTRY and WESTERN .

,.-a

THEGREA

Tax Levy On House Trailers .
RESPONSIBIUTY

rnalerlala •ndlor aerviee•,

Pool Tournament starts at
12:00 noon on
· Sunday, March 7th
Open Bowling 12 Noon

Joo!t

0~• ~.frL

Minority llueinEnlerp- In ., 114111'-le
dot11r vllue of,no I•• lhM
flve percent (5%) of tho
prime contract. Bidder
procurem111t ec!lvlll•, to
tho extent that It procurM

61 4-992' 3432

$1700 •IIMUM IN SCHOLIISIIIP
MONIY ..&amp; UP
COIIPUTE'"'' '. ' '
· · FatE EDUCAnON
Tller1'1 • ltil'l' .-1 of IC••I•nltlp
•••Y• 29·•11110• .Jelltln wert., IHt 1m ••• to ·
.. N ..i....rl of ..... -HJ is y•n. 1'111
I)

lor ochool
dlotrlclo located In Melgo
Counly. The Commloolon
will meet at I 0:00 o'clock
A.M. In lhe Auditor'• Office
of tho Moigo County
Courthouu on the
following detoo:
March 16, 1883 Meige
Local School Dietrlct
•
March 17, 1983 Southern
Local School Dlotrlct
Morch 18, 1993 E11tern
Local Schoal Dloblct
Nancy Parker CempbeH
Moigo County Auditor
1884

award auboontraata to

POMEROY BOWLING LANES

-..m.

.----"'
!
"'
cpET

will mHI to review the 1ft3..

.auboontr·e cte work, ehall

169 N, 2nd." Middleport
992:2725

'

. to self-mutilators was right on
target. I have never practii:ed
'711t' AM J,a~~ders GlliMfor Bride('
aelf-mudJelion, bull hM'e knowa the
tberapeUiic effect that good friends
/tQu/J IM.fJIIIWI'l. Sellll a •V-fld·
can produce when you're feeling ·
drUsel,li»tg.~-....
. aNI a r:lteck or rnDMY order for
low.
$).65 (t/Us i~~r:fMdes postare atri
In August of 1991, I was told I
· ltaNilillrJ to: Brides. do AM Lattbid brain cancer and my chances of
living IIIOIIIer five years were at best '-------..0::0~--11 des, P.O. Box 1156Z, Clrltaro. 111.
SO-SQ. When word of this leaked to
60611-0562. (111 CaiiOda, stllil
my ftlends. 'two of them begm . a "llllbc:oolcious" finl in!pl' h-u of $4.45.)
lcucr- and card-writing campaign. tllin women vs. fat women.
All the pilots employ«! by our Evidmdy be bas been 'IIIIIXIIISCious'
airline sot involved.
.
for quite sometime.
1
The JeSpOnSe ·was overwhelming.
Someone should info?_n this
I received SI8Cb of cards and lettm · mOron that bec•nse of auitutles like
every day. The doctors 111111 nurses bis, there are reeord number&amp; of
also let me ltnow they were women in this country who suffer,
l1y H&amp;R Bleck
interested in my leCO'""" and ""YC and in some cases die1 from
me a lot of T.L.C. TI;' all-fe~ anorexia, bolimia tlld othct ealing
AGE 65 BRINGS TAX ' ·
team in the radiation department disorderS. It is so bed thallillle girls
BENEFITS
when: I took my lreatmcnt deserves age. 9 and 10 are going ~ diets
special mention. for its perpetual bec••ae they fear they Will :Btl I'll
· For tax'~rposes, you are con7
smiles and supportive attitude. My and boys. won't lite diem. Wby
'd d
pilot buddies collected enough must women be made to feel
Sl ere age
on the day belor~
money to send me and my family to there is something wrong with them your 65th birthday. Therefore, ~ yoH
Disney World for a beautiful if they don't confonilto a cenain .were65orolderoi1January1, 1993;
vacation.
image? ·
you are q~l~ied to claim not ooly a
Surrounded by all that love, I
rve been a long-distance truck
basic standard deduction amount,
couldn't help but get better. 1 810 driver for 16 years and have
but an add~ional amount as well OQ
now classified as a cancer survivor, Slnlgg!ed with my weight~ 1was
you£ 1992 tax return. The total of the
and the suppon of my friends a teen-.ger: It's tabo me unliloow basic and addHional amount is
ccntinucs to tbis day: 1am convinced (age 4S) to Jealizc lbll diell don't $4,500 lor single filers, $6,150 for
that "friend therapy' can be 1 big wort. In r.:t, it's been JIIP:aDy heads of househotd,.$6,700 for joint
fi!Ctor in recovery.
poven tbat dic«ina Clll nutc you filers if one spouse '(luatllles and
Toallt!Josein~blepeoplewho faaer, tho ~e~wtency IOWIIdobesity $7,400 if both spouses qualify,
. helped me in my time of need, 1say runs In ftmilies llld yo-)'0 dil!'ing is $6,700 lor qualifying widows .and
thank you llld may God bless yoli. lwder 011 your lalJh thin
widowers, and $3,700 for married ·
.. ROBERT' BERRY, SHRE- ing II OIIC CODIIIart we;pt, even if individuals filing a separate return.
VEPORT LA.
·
·
it's a lot 1110relhlll it ouaht 111 be.
·
In addHioo. you may also be
DEAR 'ROBERT BERRY: Your
Being overweight ca..nllt 111e111 eligible to take advantage of a tax
'mince" IIIli}' Is 1101 the f1111 rve you are lazy, indiffamt or' ln.,wt • credit for the elderly. The maximum
heard. While ~ 1111 .not "1111 Wing All WOIIICII Wlllt to be 1owd IIIII credit is $750 lor single individuals,
. that positive thinking can cure accepted for ·wbo they are, not $1,125 lor married individuals-filing
cancer, there is a .great deal of becanae they can get into·uiie S.- a joint return, and $562.50 lor
evidence that the immune system L.T.D. IN USBON, OHIO
married indiViduals filing a separate
docs - - - ' to what ..,.._.on in the
DEAR USBoN: UDfOIIIIDalely•
t
Marr'1ed .1nd.lVI'duaIs musI 1'11 e
~
r
the f""'ion inc!n•rv with its 5 foot re urn.
brain '':ri::::~.
. .,.,.....,. ,or a ,..., upper. m
-,
·
a joint return to claim the credit
sure you've spread a lot of joy 10• 11 0-~. models Ml!fls the . unless they lived apart lor the entire
today. · .
message
u IS glamorous to
Dear An Landers: 1 am so · ccnsumpttve. Whit a peal ,day tt year.
angry I could scrcain. I just read the will be wbcn women feel :aecun: 618 E. MAIN . POMEROY
letter from 'Frank in Frederick enough to say, "This is me. Like i1
. '
~
S.D.," who wrote about his
1111111_....;;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...__•

'!W

PUBUC NOTICE
In compll1nco with
Section 5705.27 olthe Ohio
Rovlood Code, the llotelgo
Counly Budget Cornmloolon

""r.

AMY WOLFE
IS NOW AT
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON

TaXNews·

,
OPERATION DISCONNECT ·FBI agents
·• . remove evidence from a business in Oakland
Park, Fla., Thursday during a nationwide FBI
investigation called Operation Disconnect in
wbich arrests were made on individuals involved

ol the Ohto
Revleed Code, end Rule
114-1·32 of the Ohio
Admlnletrelive Code. In
pert, thle onune that
blddtr, to the ext•t that t
e.ru~~ec~

or lump iL •
:
Wllt-11 p/lwlillr a noiddi'lf, wlto
pays for wltal? Wllo siiJIIds wilt'~

Ann

Public Notice

Section 114.07

8ULLEniiOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
"Ill CATION

a

Loye and support from friends
plays a big part in recovery .
Dear .uia l.aPclers: Your lidvice

Bll.l.l-:1'1\ BO.\RI&gt;

Public Notice

Thll!ie 8lnlh , .

.,

DEXTER· 1 112 elory homo wilh 4 bedrooms, cellar,
fiMion - . !ergo front poroh, newly painted. A qulot

homlln thil country. Ste.OOO

2

In Memory

In Loving Mtmo,Y
of My DMr Frltnda ·
BUENA GRUUER
Mlrch~1"'

SYLVIA BLACK·
Mafoh 10,,1111
Lovedlndllllld
. Nllncy Morrl•

Guarantaed Scholarship Money

949·2391or
1.JON.37·1460

•regardless of income
.regardless of grades
'.
•J*Is $20k guaranteed loan '
•regan~~ess ol credl
To COiltN:t your 8Chol8nhtp money
cal 614 985 3558
Open MCJQ•..frl. 1•1 or SaL 1o-4

for all college bound'students. :

L8wn IIOU!Itng,

Fortlllllng, Welling, end
Is ...
Tree :rrtntmlng
I ReMoval

Shrub -

AMid niiiiA Ccc•alll:w:n....
lol
FrM Elllmii:M

FIREWOOD FOR

I~

11-11-pol.

'

VACANT' GROUND- SA 814 Harrison• • .289 """''

llanO paved ICed. AIIKING

KEVIN'S LAWN
.IUINTENINCE

tti,OOO

IIDDI.IPORT• 2 llory. frame home with 3 -.omo,
bath, 1111 .-n, IIIIo 14 X14 gnge. L.ocllltd juet OUIIlde
Ill I poo1. AIIICING 117,000
.

IP YOU lEE IOIIETHING YOU UKE...OIVE US A
,CALL, WE'LL TAKE YOU TO GET A CLOIER LOOKt

s:::z.

SRIDI.MIOIE
FOISAII ·.
c.u 61 ..992·
6637
St. II. 7

c•••WJe,
·,

�1993

Ohio
SNAFU® by 81'11Ce Beattie

32 Mobile HomH
tor Sill

Apartment
tor Rent

44

114-2111-121'0.

D~pM~t

lloQulrod, 814-441-ms,
814-441-24'/1,

The World AJmaaac 411 Cros.Word

. 4 Cwln, tt,JoO,

--. ....
turbo. Air, AI -

tiiMio. All Ulllttlle lncludad1 ,

fl
-........,
room taclltll•r-~ to ICIIoOI
In tGWn,
111:
VII'-Aaollcellono
·a.- A..._Mtor
colllt4.ft3.m1. EOII.
Aportmont For Ronl: 1 .....
room, Flrlt Floor, tn Otlllpollo,
CIII8-14Z9. ·

PHILLIP

ALDER

NOilTII ·

+M2

+no ·
EAST
+JII5
.FOIH4

ldtten,

-n

uu

SliiiiA ...,-,, Dog To OhNWOY,
Oood Whh Kldo. 1114. 381 113111.

+KQFO S
.KQJ
+AQ4

"The bartender wouldn't give me more peanuts
so I. set the jukebox to play 'Feelings' 50 timesl"

Found: Block Lab He., Addloon,
81o1.441-NI3.

DIRECTOR

Jtcklon

. Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer. South

H:::.~.~-.~~-:-,-::w=nto~t~•~m~lo~old~~:-:P.:i;'

OF
THERAPY

-,!ttl,

a-ol

S...
2 NT

-=- -n:.o:c·.....,. - •.
far _..,. In t k
home. lervloM: piottldld ..,..

;!'.,";r,·

o:v.

v-

I

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

ARE YOU READY WAIT TILL
' FER TH' CARD
I GIT
GAME, SNUFFY? · MY OL'

DECIC

NQ.PE II YOU BEEN.
WINNIN' TOO MUCH WITH
Y"llE "L' DECIC f!

Mrloo. fiO'Irolta of,llft 1,_ D I
D Pholog""""' - - ·

......-,.

M&lt;( 6RAMPA SA'f5 THAT
AFTER ALL THESE YEARS, HE
STILL DOESN'T UNDERSTAND

Ffldly. - r. odltlon • Z:OO

Reniais

8 · Public Sale

Merchandise

41 Houses ror Rent
51
2 BodoOCWN, Unfurnlshod, eon.
tenary, Call 11t 416 a. After
8:00 P.ll.
3
bMroom duplex1 11c
nolghborflood, rofria-Jor . •
llovt, full
wn0101drv
hook... po. 304-878-f7l'l or I'll-

-mont

AllES STORE FIXTURE IJ.
QUIDATION. lllkl olfonl now;
ganMnt I'ICkl, lhow 081H,
roller ~ &amp; ~ conveyor,

~111.

•ongo .oholvlng,
.......,11,
uiB, ll*'d racka, aftlce equi~
· ment. Store houri: 10 to 8. 100
s11Ptou, At. 7, 011tlpotlo. 1
8-415ol0.

Houeahokl

Goods

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

1112 corptt 880, 1112 vlnyll50.
Sell on •II carpllln •ock. Mollohtn COI'JIIII.I14-441-JII44.
All CII'OII &amp; VInyl·On Solo. lloJ.
lohtn C.rptto, R87 N. 8 11144.

•::t:

- - ......
...........

Bobr bod, ohtot " otti. bobr
ltelne, 304-I7J.4I48.
.,_

304-lll-tCIU.

Coflor
boliM14e:"'""'·
.
-, ID
141.
4188. -W.Voo.

"""·

:O~i'~bt;
_, a- ti,OIO.
Bruoh Hoa e 112 I pull tYJII

monlft - d t r ft,OOG. ~

ft,eoo.

JOhn - . 12 I

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I
1178 FGid · -· XLT, 414,,

ouloc,..

PI!,.

,._._.,
"""' -

-

PB, • olr;
11n - ·

""'"' ..,. -

FRANK AND ERNEST ·

far

4114 pliollup, - 2 -

tronoport dllc llUO,. lronoport
dllc 10 ft SIOO. groin btd.MIIO. 11M ChivY Von WIH Ttkt Tradt, '
No. 7 -..plcllot MOO. 01tvor 4 111!V Truo~ 111M Chivy ··
raw aom planter
John Truak.I'M441 . . .
:
2 - _ , P!tnt•1210. .,~ .......-.-....
•

aoo.

304~4111.

-

,

_

._nd m

hoJ - . John

AU

r• --"'~7"..,.
..
";1ttltiii'oo:i..d:nii:lr::ioaiit:ii....,;;·~~~;,-;...;:;,ooa;oo ~

a.-..-.-.....-.11. }

110
. . ........... llltoe,
tlorW
-~diM.

Blooli;

Aldo. -

'

·'1112 KM:
I CIR-210, 111ft (
dMn - . 2,4oo 11011111 '
83
UYeat 0Ck
111M 11U nowll !
1
2 _.... Anauo llullo. 814-37!1.
11.
'
r

..... coad.

•

I

"::!:':-.

All raol Hllllld¥111111ng In

P.J. Hock; 8ii441-9Ht LoroltL

For

I

tl- · oov
oontolgnod •
lloblllty lnturo- • John

WANTED ........,
cah -

-

0. Wilton, .... 3!1· Sorell, Ohio
.431141. 8-11011.
Wtntod •ondlng tlmbtr, lop
"""" .,.Jd, ..... 01111111111,
llconHCI -lng compony, 304.. 111113011 ---31138.

Wtntod llondlttg limbo=
..,h contnct Ill

Umitation or diiCrimlnadon.•

Port·TI- Styllot AI Holr
Hopponlng, CoR - H o u r
. i
01 w 1114~48-3353.
'
RN'o&amp; LPN'o

Sconlc Hllll Nurw1:3 Conltr lo
43948, 1-·1601.
=.c::pt~;,.~: s':.~
Thtir
Fino Stott PAN &amp; Flolllltl
Wanled To Buy: Junk Aulae
Schod.:~ ......bto. Cempel~
Whh Or Whhaut llot,.., Coli 11¥1
.. For !foro ...........
Loll)' Unly. ll4-381-11303.
tlon Or To Arrongo An lntortlow
Wtntod To 8\IY: PoD-Up Com- Coli 814-448-71aa-or Slop In At:
31 I Buck Ridge Rood, Bidwell.
~~ ~~hlon, - - S.I•F wn .,..-ct, ....t
Top PrieM Ptld: All Old U.S. r.IUIM to P.O. Box 172,
Colno, Oold Ringo, Sllvt&lt; Colno. Pomtroy, Olllo 41788.
Gold Colnt:. M.T.S. CcMn Shop.
THE PAMPERED CHEF
111 Second Avenue, O.lllpoll1.

which loin violation of lho
low. 0.. readers are horoby
lnlonnod lhat all dw&lt;&gt;lllngo
ad,.,111110d In lhls ~--...
""' avoloblo on an equal
opportunlly bull.

o.termlne Your OWn H,.,
GIMMICKS.

31 Home• for Sale

18

No

Rtqulrod.

Smtll Mobllo

?looM

...,... en ll)epoelt

P••·

8-

Wanted to Do

s-Ing, Minding,
814-341-1213.

a.in Nmov-.: nMd an Old ·blm

b""'9hl down I out of tho woy?
Will remov1 tar •lvtg~. 114--

~-Doar end Iobeii work. by tho

compony. 1.aoo-JII2.8318.
I Lldlol Who Would Uu To
Soli A""" CIA 114-4-41~318.

m..

h01r, ICIWelll
or 114-843-828t.

IM-t43-et23
·•

hourt ,..,. Wtok, t4.50 pllll
trlvel · M.t•r 'ruct.ra, mu81
~ your own 1111n.,ort•
fiOio. ·coli 814-141·2512 or llop In
1nd Dick up •n appbllon .t
J .D. brllllng Company, R•clrw,
Ohlo41771.
AYOfl I All Arooo I Shl~ty

, . .... 304-4'15-1421.

-r

E1ptrltncod flrnw I
looking toi on dolrr, liNt,
hoy firm or loaglng, con Ed 304175-7611:
~ Portobho Sowml111_don't
houl rour ._ to tho mil! lutt

Intormo..-who--.
..._........
call 304oe71·1157.

_
- -.-.-·Ho... -lng
Core
Home In Will Cotumllfo, W.V.,

CI.ERK OF PUBLIC AFFAIR$: N.A. ooro. ltoto lnd HooNII
COniP"'II' And Bookktoolng
~~:oed DMired. CornWneiJ Niwencee 1nd 1lall Of TLC, IM....... Of Will« /Tu Ctort!. 24- 'JitZ.2711 ..... liB llln 1pm. No
84lndly ..... plolloe.
10 Hour POIIIIon,
-

·~

A r ··
- - WIM le T•ken
AI The -roomlnonloeNogollllllo.
llunloiJIII lulldlna, 401 loot
Coleae. FNim 1-S WI hd11e. wt I I heir, IMctfMI ot olher-

. '"' Tllo Yltllgo 01 Rio Orondo, -.CNAon-lloHU-.
Ohio. DudHno&gt;Morell 11, 1113. Nlllfenoea and 20 ,_,. •·
peMI'tCI,
0111
1144:11-•a
lnyllmo.

our::

far

u:c. ·"'

,_
iii-iii

For Ront,

RequiNd.

81H41-3'110.

...,r '· , ...,

~:---·· •.

.

• u

Spring VioAiy Aroo. Otlt Drive,
Brick 3 lodroona 1 112 litho.
Corporl, AC, Ott Htlll, Fun

-

'

..... .., far oldorty ......

~lon ~':,
tor ftlnlng : : • NIIF til
wcw\lud of 24 houre per.,, • ·'~lot
" ---''---·~-·
.,_. re•Rond to: Wfllll111 ·J: 1 ·
!!lot&lt; -lotnotorL_ P011.....; Wll Do ....,.lttl:a In II¥ Reb!rMutlon c.;. Off 110, On . .rlllt: PAle, &amp;.
...
, ,
Ott Rocl 1 ~- IW., c:"'4i:~ a R I w Ul 114...... .,. . 41711. ~-

__

32 Mobile Homes

iorSall
$112.17 por - h lncil- ...
monlhe frM lot ,...~ new ~170,

clolhlrod ~ oldrtlng
ond . . . . 1
I.

eon.

lllobflo - . Oood
dHion, Air Condnl-... WHh

A - . llttpo M.OOO 010, 304•

1 1 1 1 3 - - Homo,
1rtx'71, 2 ...,...,., 1 ltlh,
!leo. Holt, u""'""""'ng. After

BORN LOSER

Why poy rllnl wfoon you con

own • 115a 14170 Redmon with
5 r•r w•rnnty, .tepC. eklrtlng,
doll.....,
for $1Umo.
Coli tor In
on, 81+388-

•-:.=

' WHEN HE
RS'Ioi.L.Y Elt;Te

Tum your clutter into cfJ8h,
SeU it the easy way... by ghone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
1.5 word&amp; qr less, 3 days,
3gfWers, $5.40 paid in advance.

m&amp; Up, Ill•

3·------,..-----

4. ________________
5. _ _ _ _ _ ___:."""'"'"_ __

,11t ttl

('

vCfVICe:,

au

Wtddlng double oroh, -

-~on;
- ·o
-laaoo.
-..........
dllloll,
f-

1813 l'orol O.luy 100 2 door
hlnll~.
new ~Wpit •nd
hllciiMI, tiOOO 080. 114-Ma

81'

Home
Improvements

110. I MW prom dr11111 elle 21131.
tFo'1t5 • 13/M, $100. 080. - · " " lluolong, • crl .........
8-8.

=z.
-

55

1--~----~--------2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1188 lllllonF lpr?h!or 22'
. . _ 'Whh EmM, E.C. , C111
114 141 ..... No . . . . ., ......
l.Mnlln 1

Building

a-.

-

t-4.000. f83tl ctotvy

I tnmo Sl50. *'471-

-suppllle
brfoll, - - . , .

................ CloUdt'-

lon,
... - · ott COli 81424111Z1.
-ondgol¥.
""" ..., aldln&amp;
~
-

orm.tMa.

,

=
-

·ORAPit

CIIIWtto A-lo, LR
Woolt Cor,. 114-

;Q,-

BERNICE
BEDE.OSOL•.

6~-----------------7.____________~----8.
____
9. _
_---:------------_ _ _ _ _ __

10~--------~------11
•._________;___;____........,_ _

12---------------13 . _ ___;__________
14 _______;____________

I P.11.1114o44W044.
1114 ......_... -

with 11111
7........ 1151. 1 - . 12114 Fn-On 112 ION.
loufl ...
ng. lloolrtoott.r
- ·I
1114'216-1147
p.m. .

43 ()pp. ol NNE

46F••rel.
48 Slltcll
47 1111. ollleer
48 Drift lfCY·
48 Lnl .,....,.

20=

21 Clnllayaltm

:.c~

of word

52 lln'l (II.)
54 Part Ol

church
51Belk
57 TJM oiiiOal
5I ~Nehl ·
51 Go (Scot.)

DOWfll
;

2 GrHkletter
3 Cllarge,wiUo

8 Out - Alr?ca

....

10 Eleclltlled •

4 ~hlolt.
511Mten
I Y " - no
7 Box11 lllke

?Faltlclll

Pbilip James Bailey said that we
sbould "COIIIIt time by heartthrobs." In
bridge, though, Ibis method of count·
ing is impractical. How sbould we
COIIIIt? Our fingen and lhe toes on one
foot are usually I!!IOU(Ih. But when we
have a band full of cards, it is bard to
use all of our fingers. We could use
both feet, but I suppose it is best to
stick to the good ole brain.
For a declarer who counts, today's
contract is easy to make.
Against Six no-trump, West leads
lhe club king. How should South make
all of bis cards count?
Soulb bad 11 top tricks: three
spades, three hearts. four diamoads
and one club. The 12th trick II(Ould
have to come ·from the spades, but u
there were different ways to play.the
Sllit, South knew to leave lt until last.
Emiblting good lecbnlque, Soulb
ducked bis elub ace at trick one. He
woo West's club-queen cootln~Uon
with the ace, noting from East's heart
discard that West bad begun with five
clubs.
. Nen, South cashed bis seven red'!Uit winoen. He learned that West bad
started with three diamoods aod at
least three bearts. This meant that be
bad at most two spades. It was easy to
cash the spade king, lead a spade to
dummy's ace and. when the jack
hadn't appeared, to finesse the spade
10 oo the way back. Tbe spade queen
was South's 12th-trick.
U West beld jack·fourth of spad~•
would the contract faU? No. After the
red'lllit winoen, West would be
squeaed down to four cards. He would
bave to retain the elub jack to stop
dummy's ei&amp;llt from being promoted.
So be could keep oaly three spades and
the suit would nm.
e.--. .........1a; ......

15~------------Gallipolla Dally Tribune

446-2342
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel

992-2156
Pt. Pleuaul Ref!later
675~1333

....011....... ~ ....

ii1'==.R"orl:
Gi\5~....=
~.......r::.;=:
(•

\

I A:lLJR

M~

SY1&lt;1..1P

IN 1HEr a,I.LL- R ·~
OF Hl6 60' F BIG'.

A. What jPOu probably mean is ICE
FLOE, whreh ends with an E and not
a W. 'rhis tenn, whicb fint appeared
in the early 19th century, is applied
generally to· any luge Boating sheet
of ice. FLOE, spelled wilb an E, is Jll'O:
nounced like FLOW, but the two
words are otherwise unconnected; the
infrequently used FLOE probably
comes from lbe NorweliaJt wonl FLO,
meaning •nat layer." Any use of the
millaten 'jce Dow" is bound to leave
your readers cold.

-

11 hturuttyi'

16IIKIW
18 -

1 UMI chair

mot?o

21 c.llu .
22 AccL
23 Allen?lon-

=
28.._- .

+K

Q. Where is the problem ~in ''i'ce
Dow"? I've been corrected twice about
using that tenn.

DrY• at rr

871-41ll.

•

'

TWo bedroom m- homo In
Rlclno .,.1,114-1192·5818.

W I - I Dryoro,
Door Wwnonty, CliP -

Lorge Conlompory Home On
17.8 Ac- 11/L WHlo Blmt And
Swlmmlna Pool. Adloctnt 83
Ac,_ . MAo Al10 AvarL.tM. For
11oro lnf01111111on Coli • 8111
Connett At Donn• s-.ro
AMity. 814-314-11177, 814-3848289.

:::&amp;':nt

Eul
All pass

By Jelftey Mdluln .
SPLAY spreads out or extends.
Never play around with the pronunci·
ation of Ibis vertt; rhyme SPLAY with
PLAY.

Transportation

EAR TREE SERVICE. ,;~g, IIMmont, Roconlly R...-lod
T h -. Prlct: 184,800, 814Trimming, Tree Aemovtll,
44H4l1.
Trimming. Fr• &amp;tlmatnl I

387-7157 Aft« 4p.m. ·

Appllclnll Wllnlod· 18 10 20

oond., 121100, ~-

..., ....,

Al'l l&gt; NOv/ l "'ttl&gt; A
"'t"" FflONT;~,.,l&gt;
ALIGI'lMt"'T·
,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploto homo l\lmlololngo.
Hou,.: llc:rt-S.t, N . 114-441-0322. 3 m11o1 ou1 auto"lo Rd.
FrooDolhltrr.

NU

All•r~tlan•,

.....I;'

3840.

four '

FROST

ME MAP...

114-271-0033(COLLECT)

•AVON• ALL AREAS! Sh1n: your
time wllh 1.11. You'll love the

aiel, · - · 1110

;

POsTRYOP
ROBSRT ·

IMIZ1 otk for Brlndt.

Coli RITA Aft or 4:00

Thoro.e!. -

~~

To Cook? An Ex·
clllng Concept In Home
Plrtr Pion SoMing Ambltlouo
lndMduoll In Your ArN To
o.mon.t,.te Ouellly KllcMn
No Doll.. rloo, Na ~'!t

T-.

Help Wanted

!'hJtlool

. _ _..,.
11200 080, I~ wh1111r, tow ~~~~

Do You LDYE

Employment Services
11

advertlaenwrtl for,. . •tate

_,_,ba.,
... 3.-

ml, t

THS

.1 roo~ Tttf ,oAt&gt;
Lfl$ T,AV~Ltl&gt;,. ·-

-2-roomtl18oc?.......
4871.

k.-lnglyea:ept

40F-•d
41 Dry; n wine
42A-....

cen (abbr.J

28 Comedlen
C..aar

OUR ·LANGUAGE
R-oo...

Thlt - · - w i l l 1101

.....~
,., . Nondt lQO . . 2.100
:W Clll, IIIII Aftauo Bull, lltlok, 13,oqo. 0.8.0. ~.

-

TONI&amp;fiT:

EARN OREAT I II

Wtntod IO buy! - d mobile
'

For- ?..ool-.
-" w/plold drj ololnod, . . .
2421.

Mobile

hiYII llabiiKy lrw~
n G.
wmon, Box SIS, Slrdll, Ohio

- · 814-448-4171

--·fool

thil ileAlp.flef iaiUbjllct 1D

lhl F-.. Folr Houtlng Act
oi11M18 wNdl makn h ll!taal
to iidWirtlto "Onr l&gt;'&amp;forenoo.
llrnllallon or diocrlrnlnOIIon
bued on 11101; color, religion,
MX famil-. 111n.11 or national
origin, Of iny lntandon to
mlkl any tucll pteltronco,

BUT HE GOT THE
ANYWA'f..

304112¥".

......... ,.... - Pto-.
wv.

Old Toy Trwlno. Any PloC•
P.rt• Or ka ..larllia, Cuh Or
Trodo For Quno -1-1122

!=OR INSTANCE,LAST WEEK
l-IE 80061-l,T A NEW CAR- ..

11"' color TV a\anOII 1100.

l uon
- Mlo
Sotdt
ond -Ptuo, -21111
now
11 Point

Wanted to Buy

9

,

PEANUTS·

Fmanc1ai

773-5785.

3t Secret ~~gent

24 Wllow

Uncelol

21 1[111 -, CA '

. 28 Alljlllllble
....-1---f 30 ~Oil

31 E,.lnfec:lkin

......
.,
34

33 '0.1111111 for .

By~lpAider

•

Rick Plonon Auction Compony,
full time auctioneer, comp611e
ludlon
.........
Uconoocl
IM,Ohlo &amp; w..t VlrglnJa, 3()4..

38F711?

The beat
is still the same

In""'

&amp;Auction

COIIIIn

.llpln
13 . , _ ,
14 FIJtng uu-

""m"t 25 -

Wtddlngo, ~-- Annlvw,

ALL Yord Sollt IIUII 81 Pold In
Advo.-. JlEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the dar be..,. the ad ta to Nn.
llui!Cioy ~lon • 2:00 p.m.

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Opening lead:

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· Yard Sale

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not?olng to do with what I really am." - M..- Dietrich. ,

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L-..1-.--J.L-....1..-'-"--' you develop from sfep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS AN$WERS
, .,
Charge - Musty • Irish • Jovial • EIGHT
Ona over sized matron to anothar, "Do you think it's
possible to lose weight while~ sleep?" Second mat·
ro11, "H It is, wake me when I m a size EIGHT!"

...

,

...

�•

_
omeroy
dleport, Ohio
Friday, MarC:h 5, 19931
!!~!1~1~2~-:The~~O.~I!Y!Se~n~U~~~--::--~--------------------.!!~~!:!M~~~~~~~~------------------------------_J~~~~~~·~~
••

Community calendar

Riyer Valley Herbalists
make appointments

season will need a copy of their vegetable soup, soup beans and
birth ~cate. Registtation fee is corn bread. Eat·in or carry-out is
$10 per child, not to exceed $25 available. Bring containers for
Jan Gerhold presented a pro. carry-ouL
POMEROY - There will be a PC!' filmily.
grain on herbal cosmetics and Nave
baby shower for Linda and Jeff ..
Couch reported on rosemary, the
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse herb of the month, at the February
Warner on Friday at 7 ~.m. at the
RUTLAND - There will be a
eadar.
Pomeroy United MethodistChun:h. dance at the Rutland American Youth League will meet Saturday ' meeting of the River Valley
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 from 10 a.m. to noon and Wednes· Herbalists. The meeting was held at
FRIDAY ·
p.m. 10 midnight. Music by Pure day and.March 17 from 5-7 p.m. at the home of Connie Hill.
TUP~RS PLAINS • Tuppers
· RUTLAND • Meigs Cou~ty
Syracuse Elementary School. Reg·
Holiness Association 's annual Plains vr:w Post No. 9053 Ladies Country Band. Public 'invited.
Guests present were Janet
istration fee is $12 per child, n01 to Hawk, Juhe Given and Emma
indoor camp meeting will be held Auxiliary will have a round and
at the Rutland Church of the square dance Friday from 8· ll :30
SALEM CENTER - Star exc~e~ $25 per fam~r. First lime Gerhold.
.
Nazarene through Saturday' at 7 p.m. Heritage Express will prrivide Grange and Star Junior Grange will parllC11'8!1ts must provt&lt;le a copy of
. The theme for the year will
·p.m: nightly and on March 7 at 6 music.
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the their birth ~cate. Further mfor- focus on culinary herbs. Those on
p.m. Rev. and Mrs. Mwrel Duffie
grange hall near Salem Center. malion may be obtained by con- the ·refreshment committee are
are the music evangelisrs and eviln·
ROCK SPRINGS • Meigs Potluck refreshments will follow tacting Jim Lawrence at992-3282. encouraged 10 incorporau: the herb
gelist for the camp. Fern Grim will County }&gt;omona Grange will meet the meeting and all members are
of the month into the refreshments.
REEDSVILLE ~ Easlem Alumbe having children' s services for Friday at 7:30 p.m . at the Rock urged to atlend.
In was announced that Linda
ni Basketball Game at Eastern McCoy, vice-president, will be
K-6 graile. A nursery will be pro- Springs Grange Hall. The degree of
vided.
Pomona will be conferred. Star
HoCKINGPORT· There will High School. Women's contest conducting meetings in the absence
GIBIIge is host
be a round and square dance at lhe starts ar6:30 p.m. with two men's of Nava Couch, ~resident, who has
.
LONG BOTTOM • Revival will
Reynolds Building on Route 124 at games following.
accepted a position with Buckeye
be held through Sunday at Freedom
MIDDLEPORT • There will be Hockingport on Saturday from 8Community Ser\'ices as a group
SUNDAY ·
Gospel Mission on County Road a soup bean dimer in the basement 11:30 p .m. featuring "Out of the
home supervisor.
.
.
30 in Long Bottom. Special singers of the Middleport Masonic Temple Blue, Buzz Slater, Millie
SYRACUSE - There will be a
The year's calendar includes
nightly. Marvin Welch, Charleston, on Friday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. by Reynolds, Bill Sharp, Joe Clark, pancake brunch Iii Carleton School several workshops, demonslralions
W.Va., will be the speaker. Roger Evangeline Chapter No. 172, Junior Wiblin, Denzil Dennen. m Syracuse on Sunday from 10 and tours.
a.m. 10 2 p.m.
Wilford is the pastor. Everyone O.E.S . Eat-in or carry.out Cost is Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
Chairmen and co-chainnen were
welcome.
$3. CaU 992-5330 for infonnatioil.
MONDAY
appointed for the upkeep of herb
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup·
BURLINGHAM - The Bedford
pers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Township Trustees will meet Mon. LONG BOTTOM • There will
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
be a round and square dance at the Township Trustees will meet Fri- Ladies Auxiliary, will have a day at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
Long Bottom Community Building day at 7:30p.m. at the Shade River spagheui supper Saturday begin·
POMEROY • The DA V will
ning at 4 p.m. Cost is $3.50 for
on Friday from 8-11 p.m. featurin§ State Forestry Building.
•
.
meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the h~I,
adults and $1.50 for children 12
Buzz Sloter and "Out of the Blue.
Shirley Coleman, Rutland, has
124
Buuemul
Avehue,
Pomeroy.
and under. Everyone welcome.
Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
SAnJRDAY
been re-appointed as local
The cost is $5 for couples or $3
MlDDLEPORT • The Middlecoordinator
by the American
HARRISONVILLE • Harsingle. Refreshments will be port Youth League will hold signInstitute for Foreign Study
served.
up for the 1993 bill season on Sat- risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
Foundation. The not-for-profit
urday from 9 a.m. to noon; March will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
organization's Academic Year in
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full 9, 6-8 p.m.; and March 13, 9 a.m. Worlc. in the F.C. Degree. RefreshAmerica program arrange~ 10
Gospel Church in Long Bo110p1 10 nodn. Sign-up will be held at the ments·served. All master· masons
month homestay/high school
will have preaching and singing Middleport Council chambers. invited.
experiences for teenagers from
Friday at 7 p.m. with local singing · Anyone who did not parlicipaie last
Europe, Asia and Latin America.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
As local coordinator for the
Youth League will hold sign-up for
program,
Mrs. Coleman will be ·
the 1993 ball season on Saturday
mterViewing
·families in the area
from 1-4 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
who
are
interested
in hosting a boy
Center. Anyone who did no1 partie·
or
a
girl
for
the
1993-94
·school
ipate last season will need a copy
year.
of their birth certificate. RegistraStudents arrive in August. All
tion fee is $10 per child. not to
have
studied English, have their
exceed $25 per family.
own spending money and full
medical insurance provided by
PQINT PLEASANT, W.VA.AIFS
. A family is inviiOO 10 select
Liberty Mountaineers wiU perform
JOANNA JEFFERS
Saturday &amp;~the senior citizens centerinPointPieasant,W.Va. .
The WiltOn Civic Association
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Jennifer King, Pomeroy,
Twirlers Western Square Dance announces the birth of her second ~ill be.havin~ a soup and sandwich
Club will hold a dance Saturday daughter, JoAnna Nicole Jeffers, dinner on Fnday from 5-8 p.m. at
from 8-11 p.m. at the MacKenzie on Jan. 13 at Holzer Medical Cen- lhe WiiiOn School cafeleria.
Chili, soup beans, cornbread,
Agricultural Building. Mark Claus- ter.
hOI
dogs and homemade pies will
ing wiU be the caller.
She weighed five pounds and
be
served.
Proceeds win go IOWard
seven ounces and was 18 and onerebuilding
of
the Wilton CommuniSOUL WINNING AWARDS· Dan Hood aqd Mrs. Jamie
SYRACUSE .. The Syracuse half inches long. ,
ty Building.
'
Humphrey, members of Hillside Baptist Church, were remgnlzed
Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary
There is another daughter, Jamie
of
the
association
Members
recently. For ''leading the most souls to the Lord" for 1992. Hood
wiU have a soup dinner Saturday Renee, age 22 months.
h~ve purchased the b~rned-oui
brought Ia 24 people wbile Mrs. Humphrey brought in six.
beginning at 11 _a.m. with chili,
Malernal grandmother is Joan .
restaurant and plans are underway
King,
Pomeroy,
tind
the
laiC
Jack,
King Sr. Maternal great·grandpar· to rebuild and' renova1e the building
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
PubDc Notice
ents are Lenora McNull Hudnall, for used by 4•H clubs, senior citiORDIIANCE 615
Albany, and the late Ernest Hod- zens, SCOIIIS, etc., and can be rented
. ,
1
AN ORDINANCE
the Conical BualnMa
-lion of Chlirmen end nail, and the laiC Ed and Frances for private parties.
The public is invited.
AMENDING SECllON
Dlelrict ConiotiMion Mid
..Control Buoinuo Oiotrlct s-otory. They moy lldopt ElliS' King.
521 Ol(o) OF THE
O.CIIring An EmorCommioolon
ruloo of procedure of tho
CODIAED ORDINANCES
WliEAEAS, the
of -Orgoniution
Commlooion •nd provldo
OF THE VILLAGE OF
Pomwoy hu crootod tho -Oulloo
for rogulor ond epoclol
POMEROY.
C.ntrol ·Buolnooo Dlotrlcl -"Centro! Buainuo Dlotricf' moolinaL
BE IT ORDAINED BY Conimleolon, and
Created
-OUllES
·
THE VILLAGE COUNCIL
WHEREAS, tho Central -PURPOSE
Tho dutloo of the
OF POMEROY, OHIO, AS Buolnooo Dlolrlct Com·
Tho r,urpooo of thlo Commloelon ohall bo 11
FOLLOWS:
mlooion lo roopon~ble lor chapter 1 to lmpoM certoin lollon:
,
SECTION 1: Section
furthering tho purpooo of roqulromonto ond p1o·
(a) To oolve tho problemo
521.01(1) of the Codified rootorllig and prooorvlng coclurH • to on- of tho ond dotarmlnolhe noedo of
Ordlnoncea of the Village of tho orea of the city known Village to be kn-n ao tho tho Vilogo In furthering tho
Pomeroy, Ohio, io heroby ••· the Conbal Buoineoo "C.ntrol Buoinooo DlotrlcL" purpoot of reo lOring ond
aiiMIIIdod to ,..d •• lollowo: Dlolrlct; Mid
The intent of Council lo to pr..-vlng tho aroa of tho
(o) No owner or occupont
WHEREAS, It io a impooo roquiromenl• ond 1 Village known at lht
of Iondo tbutling 1 aida- roquiromtnt lor portlcl- pro-cedurH In oddltlon to, Central Bualn•• DtotricL
Tohoo, WI, air,
wolk, curb; or gutter oholl paling within tho CDBG rather than in lieu of, tho
(b) To dotermino whet
e-.c&gt;,r•r
fall to keep oaid oldawolk, downtown rovllallzallon roquiromonta and pro- loglalollon, II any, Ia ·
bumper
curb or gutter in repair and progr.., thai P••tlclpotlng cedureo thol ore otherwloe ntcoooary to pre11rve,
tree from •now, ice or any communltlee adopt euch esblbllllhed by lew.
reetore and davelor, tht
Control Butlnou D ttrlct
nuiunco. AI to aidewalko, deolgn oLenda1da oompor- ..CENTRAL BUSINESS
repair 11 uoed herein ohall able to tho SocroLery ol DISTRICT COMMISSION
and · to rooommond
moan the aboonoa ol tho lnterlor't !ITANOAADS FOR
Tho Central Buolnooo loglolallon to tho Council.
lollowing doleolo:
REHABILITATION
AND Diotrlct Commlulon, con·
(c) To ptrlorm ony other
1. A oidowalk block GUIDEUNES FOR REHA- olotlng of llvo (5) mombwo, dutiH HLebllahed by lhlt
5 Speed
having a crack or cracka in BIUTATING
HISTORIC. lo horeby oollbllolled. Ono chopllr.
11 mo1othan W' wide.
BUILDINGS.
member ahall be a member
(d) To provlda lor r-lor
Auto~ 'lllr, Y-6,
2. Adjoining oldawalk
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT of City Council and do- and opooiol .m,allngo to
power
wlndowe ·
blocka or porliono thareol ORDAINED
BY
THE olgnalod by tht Council ocoompliah tho purpo. . of
&amp; locka, etereo. '
whooa adgeo diller rf~~~~ ~FMERTHO~. VIH L- Preaidont Thrto mombera poragrapha (a) and (b)
vertically by more than II".
•· 0 10 aholl bo bu.inHo repro- horoln.
3. Sidewalk blockl thot THAT:
oentetiveo, which term ohall -"CENTRAL BUSINESS
have holeo in them t" or
SECTION ONE: Council mean • poroon who Ia DISTRICT" CREATED
~12,969
moro in diameter or hove heloby adopto tho lol- directly involved with •
Thorola hwoby ctllled in
tooao or mioolng pleceo.
lowing: 1) The SocroiJ!ry of buoinooo within tho Central lht Village of Pom.,oy, a
4. -elk blocka hwlng· Interior'• Stondordo lor Buolnou Dlohlct: tho cllolricllo be known M thtdoproaoiono or reverse RohabiiiLetion and Guier. buolnoaa ahall bo oilhor a "Conlrlll Buoln•o Dlotrlcl"
oroo•alope, oloping ow., linea lor Rthabilltatihg going concern or a bl&gt;undtd ond riHcrlbed a
Y-6, auto., air,
from tho otroet, oo ao to HiotOrlc Buiklngo.
buolnHI to bo oollbllohed; lollon:
atereo, power
Impound mud or water, or
2) The oliiK:hod polloioo the buainoao rtpr ..tn(a) Tht • • oltht Vllogo
any other oubotanco.
Mid prococlurH lldoplocl by Lelivil'o involvomont ohall 'lhot Ia bounded on tho uot
window• &amp;
5. Sidewalk blocka having tho Control Buoineu bo by ownorahlp, man· by Sy...,oro tltroe~ on tho
lock•.
Commaaity Caleadar ittllls
appear two days Wore u event
aacl tbe day ol tbat eveaL Items
mlllt be received weD In advance
to ....re publlcatloa Ia tbe cal·

talent. Pastor Sieve Reed invileS
the public. Fellowship will foUow. ·

'

.t
:~

wr.;·

1992 CHEVY LUMINA EURO

Vol. 25, No. 3
Copyrighted 1183

Recycle Day... -----.

••

"

..•'

a croea•lope in ex cHI of Dietrict Commlaaion.
3/4" vertical per one loot

horizontal.
6. Sidewalk blockl that
cauao an abrupt change In
tho longitudinal grade of tho
oidowalk.
7. Natural atone olaba,
brick or undo tone
oidewtlkt which hove

SECTION TWO: Thlo
Ordin.,co Ia on emergency
necoaoory lor tho
P•••oiVallon ol tho public
poaco, hoolth, oaloly ond
wellaro, and lor tht lurthw
,. .on that tho doolgnatlon
ioroquired to be moclaprlor
to Fobruory, 1993 oo that

dellecdone or racka grealer the gr1nt appllciltlon fundi

than ao oet forth In llemo 1
•nd 2 contained heroin.
SECTION 2: The pruant
oectlon 52l.06(a) of tht
Coclliod Ordlnonceo oflhe
· Village of Pomeroy, Ohlo,lo
lioreby rap•led.
Puoed thlo lot day of
Fobrulf)' 1993.
Larry Wahrunl!

moy be -eel.
Paaaod lhia lot day ol
February, 1993.
P-ldelanrrytoWICouehruncngll
·•· 'Pomeroy, Ohio
ATIEST: Kathy Hy..u
Clerk of Council
Approved thia ht day of
February, 1993. ·

Pre•ldent of Council

Bruce Reed, M8yor
Pomeroy, Ohio (3) 5, 12, 19, 3tc

agerial atatua, or ern-

ploymanl. Ont mtmbor
ahall be on archiloct. Tho
••ohitoct and tho buolnHo
rop1ooontallvoo shall b'o
appointed by tho Mayor
with tho approval of ~
majority of Council; Council
-rovol moy be oflected by
motion, rooolutlon, or

on tho no1th by Sooond
Stroot; and on tho oouth by
Malli Street.
(bl Tho-.. boundarla
oholl Include all proporlloo
within or abutting thooo
· boundarlto. Rtg~rdlou of
tho lntwnt of tho ownor, no
property abutting lho

ordinance, •• Councif 10 lfor•••ld

chooooa. Tho toorm of oach
ol tho throe bualnou
1eprooonteUvH ohall bo an
initial term of throa yoara,
commencing with tho
tlloclivo dolt of thio
orclnonct; lltht end of tho
Initial
tarmo, ono
of oald buolnHo reprooontalive larmt ohall be for

lhr--

a term of one y.., one •m

ohall be two para, onc1 ono
ATIEST: Kathy Hysell
torm oholl be lhrH yoara.
Clerk of Council
Public Notice
Tho term of the Council
Approvedthlo 111. day of
·member and tho archllocl
Februlf)', 1993.
appointed by tho Mayor
Bruce Reoct, M-ror
ORDINANCE 117
ohall be at tht ptoaouro of
(3) 5,12, 11, 3tc
AN OADI'IANCE
tho Council Prooldant and
ENACTING CHAPTEA.... OF Moyor, rotpoctivoly. All
Public Notice
THE CODIAED
momboro ahall "'"'' with·
ORDINANCES OF THE
out componoallon. VocanORDINANCE 114
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
cleo aauood by daath,
·An OrrlinancO Adopting
' OHIO, ANO
roalgnotlon or othorwloo,
thou. a. Socrttary of
SECTIONS....:..THEREOF. a hall be tilled lor tho
lnWior'a S-rdo For
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE uno•plrocl term in tho 111111
•d
VlllCOAGEUNCl0 LF OFPOIIETHEAOu, monnor ao original op·
Guldoll- lor
•·
polnllnonto oro modo.
Rahobllllallon Historic
OHIO, AS FOllOWS:
Builclngo • Bulking
SECITIONth ONE: Chap- -ORGANIZATION.
Aehlllllilallon Bland do
lw... o
o Corlllted Ord.Aa - n 11 oonvonlont,
within tho .City ol-oy·o ~~-end llecll-..... .oro -tho 14PO~IIjtortt by 'tho
Central au.lnoeo District
,_eby
lo....,.:
M•yor tnd tho Council
and Adopting tho PolciH CH4PTER....,.
Prealdent. tho Comml..lon
and Procoduroa Adopted by Control Buoln•• District
thell meet and organize by_

Roll_,..

.,.,lad •
\

we.t by Butternut Avenu.j

••

bound•rl••,

whothtr doecrlbed ao 1
Village lot. part th.,ool, or
olhoowi•, thall be oplit Into
oeperalt parcolo, or
. othorwlee clvldocl to M to
wold tho procedurot ond
requlromtnto of thlo
chapllr. In lho event thol
ony ouch epllt or othor
dlvloion Ia hrolnollor

9
1992 CHEVY CORSICA
Auto., air.
'eter.a, 111r ball,
V-8, 4 door.

8,999

5

low.

P••lll thle lot cloy of
February 111t3.
Lorry Wollrung
Praolclantol Council
Pomwoy, Ohio
ATIEST: Kathy Hya..
Clork of CouncU
Approved lhlo lot d., of
February, 111t3.
Bruce Rood, Mayor

,,

.~

1992 OLDSMOBILE CIERA
Auto.,lllr, V-6,

1989

1989

OLDSMOBILE
·DELTA 88

MERCURY

Loaded. Nice.

Auto., alr,·lollded.
'

,..

•

..,.

.

,.

The balance of the ·~~'"""II•
approximately $57,000 will come ·
from local sources,· Mayor Martin

said.

POMEROY - Saying people
using mental retardation and develPP£!1cntally disabled (MRDD) ser- .
·vices throughout Ohio are not
being treated equally, a court of
appeals upheld a MeiJS County
decision ordering the Ohio Board
: of Mental Retardation and Developmontal Disability (ODMRDD) to
provide funding insuring ·Meigs
County MRDD clients access 10

SIBLE .

1990

BUICK
LESAIRE
Auto., air, atereo.

•t,9·
. 95

''Those is more affluent counties
are assured of the slate matideted
minimum services, while thole in
poorer counti~ are denied the
ume ae,rvices," Fourth District
Appeals Court Judge Lawrence
Ore.t ~ in tile court'1 opinion•
"BqU8l proteclion of law IIUIII
that piiopiO will be trealtd equally
rcpidlca of the county In which
lbcy choole to live." - ,

TO&amp; TDLIFEU
NOT INCLUDED.
ILL PIYMEITS
. SUBJECT TO
IANI
APPROVAL

'

· Oa

.

I

.•

~~,9,~MolaCoun­

Z:~clilniiiDd the 'tlllolm
.. ~trlea l!ducation

Auocladon filed u UUUJI!;Iioo in
tho Mlill County eo.n ot Coal·
moll Pte11 orderiiiJ tlae MRDD
baird tram renninalinJ state.man-

.

Water' Rate Concerns
"There has been some concern
about water rates," said itie mayor,
who assured that rates will not be

~.

He explained that the village
can easily pay back the $57,000
which Will be borrowed at low
interest beCause lhere will be considerable savings once the water
leaks have been eliminated. Main·
tenance cos~ will also be drastically reduced, he said.
The villa!fC purchases water
from the Leading Creeic Water Dis·
· trict and then seUs the water 10 the

.

~

-

~- .:

, ,BE J,IEPI..A.CED • Sb:-lnch water tjqes like
oae wMCII .. '
n'!'l' !lne ODI)' !bO~t a three-lricll opening because COl roslon
wtB l!e replacid. all over Rutland 'this year. Tbe viJiage lias recely~
a $515,000 grant.tbrougb Iss1e 2 for the project. Here Councilman
Jerr)' Black, Iel't, and Maylir Edward Martin. look over an old
piece or pipe which had to be replaced earlier this year due to
leaks.
•
residenrs of Rutland.
Line Replacements
According 10 Clerk Smilh, who
was instrumental in gelling the
water replacement grant as weU as
the griln!S for the new sewer system
completed last sommer, plans call
for replacing 12,000 linear feet of
waler lines, aU of .the taps, and the
gate valves, and putting in aU. new
ftre hydntnts.

Over the past two years, several
streets· have had water lines
replaced with small Issue 2 granis.
A year ago lines were replaced on
Salem Street from Beech Grove
Road 10 the corporation line, two ·
years ago on Brick Street to the
corporatioo, and just this year from
the comer of Route 124 out New
Lima Road to the corporation line.
Continued oil A-7

Boq,rd of Regents want to
create college review board
An enrollment padding case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hocking Technical Col·
involving
The Ohio Board 'Of Re$CIIts wants
lege
in
Ne15onville
led the regents
10 create a board to reviCw courses
to
withhold
$600,000
in state aid.
and enrollment practices at stateat
Hocking
The
regents
found
funded ·coneges and universities.
numerous
abuses
of
stale
tal&lt; dolVice Chancellor Mallhew V.
lars,
including
credit
being
given
Filipic proposed the board Friday
for
one-day
employee
workshops
~a meelinl with college offi.
on home-apliance repair and defen·
cials. ·
. •
The plan comes after three sive driving.
The proposed board also would
known cues ·or enrollment padding
in the. last five years. The state monitor irregularly scheduled
funds colleges and universities courses such as workshops. The
regents plan to do more· spot
based on cnrollmeat •

1991 Meigs.MRDD decision
upheld .by appeals court

•6,995'

lt&amp;NO;

$11,269

.. ):

.1989 CHEVY
ASTRO
CONVERSION
VAN

stale IRIAdated pogiWIII.

SCJ,999

I"
·:.&lt;

,Count)' J-Itter 'Preveiltloa 'and
Recycllna PtoJrlim, Rec)'cle
Pay was held tit tbe Gallla
County Junior Fairgrounds
Saturday afJernoon. Nearly 100
tirea ..,.ldents participated In
the .eveat, dropplna off Items
sud 11 plastics and newspa·
pers. Accordln&amp; to Terr)' ,
Hemby, .(above rilht), program
,
coordinator, tbe aluminum will · , ,..
be donated io the Gatna Coun- c
ty Fair. Board for the use of
their facility and equJpment.
Also making contributions to
tile event were memben ol tbe
advisory board, volunteers lUid
the Stowllway Bakery. Recycle
Days will also be beld Ia May,
July, and October. Fair board
member Tim M11181e, (bottom
rlgbt), sorts tbrol'gb tbe alu·
mlnum cans bdore they are
pr.o cessed. (Times-Sentinel
pboto by Kris Cochran)

Loaded.

(3) 5, 12, 11, 3lc

'

.•

Spo•~req l .b)'· tbe G,llla

1992 MERCURY
GUND
MARQUIS

$2,995 $11,429

12 SectiOn 112 Pog•
•
A Muhlmedla Inc. new.-per

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
RUTLAND - Design work on
Rutland's $573,000 water line
replacement project should be Completed in the next few weeks and ·
construction started by early
August.
Rutland Mayor Ed Martin and
S~ndra Smith, village clerk and
grants coordinator, said Friday that
En!!ineering Associates have.
adv1sed that the final design will be
completed by the end of May.
The village will then advertise
·for bids on the project in J1111e and
award conlracls for the construe·
lion in July, Smith said.
The project is being funded with
about $516,000 in Ohio Issue 2
mOnies awarded in Round 6 on ree. ommendation from the district
~or~:~~~~~~~~
c'o mminee
Rqri
llil .Do 100loprn""1

The 1920 Olympic Games were held:
· in Antwerp, Belgium; four years after:
that, Paris, France, hosted the oom-~
pelilors.
-

. 1992 OLDSMOBILE ACHIEVA

m1de, \he prop•tr ahell

continue to be part of tho
Central Bual- Dlotrloloo
II thoro heel " - no ouch
oplllorolhtrdlvlolon.
SECllON TWO: Thlo
ordlnono• tholl go Into
oHocl from •tl alter tht
Mrll•t dole pennlttocl by

.. f··

~

Like New. ·

Suon7. Hlp lodl7- 50.

Work expected·to
begin in August oD
Rutland project ·

'

..,

$6,999 $13,969

1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

Weather............................A-2

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpolle-Polnt Pleasant, Marth 7, 1993

·~

1987
DODGE
COLT

·----·-------..A·
···--···-A6
Sports ............:.... _ .........Cl-7
Ed.itoral ........- ••

•
l

France produced ils first epic poem,.;
·"Chanson de Roland," in the late uth_;
century,
...

414

...

Alon&amp; tbe river .............81-8
Buslness/Farm ............Dl-8
Claslifled ............. _ .._ ....J&gt;4..7 '
Deaths.
7

'Waterloo Wonders won state title
60 years ago· James Sands. A-8

•
.
.
the boY or girl whose intereSts best ::
match 'theirs. · Through the "'
foundation this year, sports-minded .;:
families have chosen Spanish ~
soccer players arid Gennan skiers :.
and a musically inclined couple :l!
cho.se a Japanese student violinist. •:
An early 1\ecision to host gives ·a ,...
family time to cortcspond ,'with '::
lheir ruture "son" or udauShter~:
and to begin building a friendship :
that will last a lifetime.
,
. · ~·
The rewards of participating GljC ..,.,
great. In addition 10 being exposed ;!:
to another language, a family can "'
share different cus10ms and heliday ;:
traditions with their n~w family member. Families also ofterl::;:
rediscover their own communities. \
and see ~merica with. ~ different;;:
perspec.t1ve. In addition, hou .families are aivarded up to $800 in ;.
scholarship funds Cot family !;
members 10 use on AIFS stUdy and ••
uavel experiences abroad.
·:
Anyone interested in knowing · c
more. about the program or in .±
applymg 10 serve as a 1993-94 host ·
family should call Shirley Coleman : ~
at 742-2125 or Regional DircciOr -:;:
Lynne David at tl\e Academic Year :. '
in America National Office in ::::
Connecticut at (800) 322-4678.
'

.1989 CHEVY
S·10 BLAZER

Inside

Jim McCumber murder case
is recalled ·Fred W. Crow ·A·6

un

1993 CHEVY S-1 0 PICKUP

59188

•

-B-1

"'

t'l' ll 1"

River ·Valley five eliminated 65-30- C-1

Day care .
·for senior
citizens

gardens : Connie Hill and Sue
Hayman, Blennerhassen Island ;:;.:
Verla Shaffer and Jan Gerhold ; •.
Ravenswood Riverfront Padt; Janet :io
Theiss and Karen Werry, Meigs ;
Museum ; and Shelia Curtis and ~
Denise Arnold, Dave Diles Pad; in-·:
Middleport. Debbie Gilmore . ...
chairman, Linda McCoy and Verla 4
Shaffer, were appointed to the 1;
committee 10 audit the treasury.
;:
Members were reminded to pay ;:
Beuy Jones for herbfes~ proceeds, ...
cookbooks, etc. Mem~rship due ;;;
collections begin in March.
·:
Anyone with ideas regarding ~
advertising for the 1993 Herb Fest ';.
should contact Jan Gerhofd. or .~
Karen werry.
....
Refreshments of lemon "'
rosemary crumbcakes, herbed ~
oyster crackers and a ham and ;::
cheese appetizer were served by ;
Jan Gerhold, Sue Hayman and _.
Nava CQuch . Members then :•'
combined ingredients to make .:
friendship orange spice potpourri. •i: ·

Birth is announced . Dinner planne(;l

-Pu•-

7-:'I

.•

Coleman re-appointed

==:;;;~~:;;,:;===r==;;;:;:;;:;;;;:;===]p=;;:=:::=;;:=.:;:::;::===r-==:=:i====::::;=l

Sunda\•

date services due to the lack of
funds. They also requested thai the
judge order the ODMRDD to
the Meigs County MRDD'shortfal .
Before filing the suit, the plaintiffs were 10ld by the ~eigs County ·
Board of MRDD that. due to alack
of funds slate mandated programs
would be cut back with a corresponding layoff of union personnel.
The suit named MRDD, the
MeiJS County Board of County
Commissioners, ODMRDD and
ODMRDD Director Jerome C.
J'.1anueL The county commissioners
were dismisaed from· the suit
lw;etp tbey providod aU the funds
reau1rcd IIIICier statute.
)udJC Fnld. .w. Crow Ill granted .
the illjlrllctioo requiring MRDD to
eoutllue proVidiiiJ die mandated
•vlcel (jibytleallnd :rpe ch liter·
IJIY .for W11 and the community
~Jfllll) 11nd aLia required
D 10 pey Meip Counr.y's
¥ROD llhortfaiL
,.

par

Deelllon appealed
Oa Ot:L 2, 1991, the ODMRDD
IDDtlled the decillion aayinl addltiiitll fwtdlaa II diM:Ictionary with

dlo ODMRDD director.

.

In ~lion, the ODMRDD said
Crow erred in deler~ining that
affected MRDD chents were
denied due process, substanli~e due
process and the equal proteeuon of
the law.
ODMRDD also said Crow was
wrong in requiring the department
10 provide certain funding to the
MRDD board when to do so was
impossible and finding the union to
have any standing or to have
brought any cogniiable clailns in
the action.
'

:
Appeal overruled •
The allJJCals court overruled the
ODMRii!l's assignment of errors,
sar;: thai the ODMRDD Wll
indl
obllaated 10 provide additional fundingiO the MeigS County
MRDD and that Manuel, who hail
additional funds avaltable and
knew of the MRDD's financial
problems, did nothing.
Furlherrti(Je, Grey said beneliiS
promiled under slate law confer a
pro~y intereat in the recipients
whiCh u ·jiotectcd by lh6 due pro-

mOH WATEK • B8CIInP water from tlt
Ohio RIYer a~ IWOllea Cblekamau1• Creek
covered Spraee Street Exteulon In GalllpiiiiJ
Satarda)'. The Oblo River .w u cllmblD&amp; one·
tentb of a_foot an baur a t - yesterday. om.

cess claiiiC.
Grey lli4 •~e law describes the
Conllrlaecl on A·7

•Y
I

·checks, but a statewide commitlee
made up mostly of college representatives would be heuer suited to
examine questionable courses, Filipic said.
He said the plan would 1101 eliminale all problems becaui!C irregularly scheduled courses are only a
small porlioo of classes offered. ··
"But my sense is there is a
greater potential for abuse in irregularly scheduled courses," he said.
"We've seen cases of wor~
, Continued on A-7
·
'

J,

Ludll ud Daa l8ld 111e
river- apetted to Cftlt ....... 2 p.a . . ...

dall It lbe Galllr+

JeaoadteJOwwpqe-4U•110GaSaatsr- '

day, wen below flOod ltqe. Nonaal JIOOI .... at
the datpla 12 feet.

l

....

,•.

.

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