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J

•

Pomeroy--lllddleport--GaiUpolla, OH Point Pleaaant, wv

Pqe P8 Sunday Tlmea Sentinel

March 28, 1993

Community pledge will key Bane One merger deal
By M.R. KROPKO
Atsodated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - Bane One
Corp. has eliminated lhe only
obstacle to a $10 billion mer~er
deal by agreeing to improve tts
financial involvement in lhe city's
neighbOOJoods.
Mayor Mich~el R. White said
Thur~~ay the city will drop its
~111011 lo lhe merger of Valley
. abonal. Corp., based in Phoenix,

GARY MILLER

~iller,

PAUL CARDONE

Cardone promoted

• ' CHESHIRE • Two employees
·o l Ohio Power Co.'s Gavin Plant,
W. Miller and Paul D. Car·
jloao, were Pf011101Cd to key posi·
liOOs in ~ MainleiUIIICe Dept.
~ Miller; of 166 ·Roush Drive,
.f'lew Haven, W.Va., was named
·maiatenance superhnendent. He
succeeds ihe late Donald
'Honlmln, who died 111\. 23.
Bcainning his career at Kyger
Creek Plant as a laborer in 1955,
Miller advanced to maintenance
~per 1atu that year llld jr. mainltnince man in 1957. He was promoced to main~ man at Kentucky Powu (;o.' s Big Sandy Plant
in 1962, master maintenance man
in 1966 an4 maintenance foreman
Jo 1970 before transferring to
Gavin Plant in 1973. Miller had
Served as production superinten·
Clent·maintenance since 1980.
(Bolh KeniiK:lcy Power and Ohio
Power arc part of lhc American
Elcelric Power Srstem.)

·oary

Cardone, of Jolin's Road,
Racine, succeeds Miller as production superintendent-maintenance ..
Cardone was hired as a. uliliir manB at the company' s Muskt11gum ·
River Plant iii 1'965 8lld was promoted to utility man-A and then
coal handler in 1966, to mainte·
nance helper in 1967, jr. mainle·
nance man in 1968, maintenance
man in 1969 and master mainte·
nance man in 1971. He transferred
to Gavin Plant in 1973 and
advanced to maintenance supervi·
sor in 1978.
.
Miller is a member of the
Moose Lodge. He ancl his wife,
Sue, have a daughter, .Jennifer
Ranegar of Gallipolis, and a son,
Scott, Qf New Haven.
Cardone and his wife, Janice,
have two sons, Paul 1r. of Cincinnati and Trevor of Abenleen, Md.,
and a daughter, Annett of The
Plains.

Humphreys elected to AEf fower
~ervice Corp. board of directors
.: NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Nor11111\ R. " Raildy" Hum~ys, Jr.,
manaacr of Philip Sporn Plant,
. J:{ew Haven, W. Va., has been
elected 1o a one yeai term on the
board of directors of lhe American
Electric Power Service Corpora·
lion, Colilmbwl.
. IS
·
.. The AEP Service Corporai100
t!Je management and technology
arm of the American Electric
System. ~r.,.spom Plant
is. operai.ed by A
hian Power
.Company, one of seven operating
cpnpanies in lhe AEP System.
Humphreys holds a bachelor of
science degree from the College of
En,inee~ing .and Technology at
OhiO Uatvcmty: He bas attended
the American Elecaic Power Sys·
tern Management Program at the
Upivcrsity of Miqhigan Graditate
Sehool of Business Administration.
NORMAN HUMPHREYS
Humphreys began his utility
career in 1971 in lhe Performance
Department at Sporn and uans- positions of performance en&amp;ineer,
to Indiana Michigan Power performance supervising engineer
C~mpany ' s Donald C. Cook
plant performance superintendent'
Nuclear Plant. Bridgman, Michi· and maintenance superintendent
gan, lhe foUowing year as a stan· ·before becoming assistant plant
up engineer. He returned 10 Sporn man~er in 1984. He was promoted
in 1973 and advanced lhrough lhe to plant manager in 1989.

r.ower

terred

Trawick ·named to AEP board
I·

\

into Bane One. Cleveland had
Thomas E. Hoaglin, chief execasked the Federal Rcaerve Boanlto utive· officer of Bane One Ohio
reconsider lhe merger's approval.
Corp., which oversees Bane One
While lhe Fedelal Reserve gen• operations in Ohio, said at a news
erally approved of Bane One's conference with White that the city
activtties in low- and moderate· and corporation have reached an
income-neighborhoods in the cities informal agreement to a set of
it~!CfVCS, illl merger report March I . aoaJs.
·
satd tho Bane. One affiliate in •
"This is not what I would char·
Cl~:veland needs to improve its per·
acterize
as a formal ~rcement,"
formance.
Ho~lin said. "It is a joint state· oil March 2, White called lhe ment of initiatives. It's a very
Federal Reserve's approval of lhe strong commitmentlo !Jte city.'' .
. . ~anc One-Valley National merger
Hoaglin rderred to the agreean OUII'IICOUS $lap in the face of ment as "a road map so that we
every citizen of Cleveland."
c~ more effectively penetrate the'
B1,11 on Thursday, White said lhe Clevelanll market ... ''
city is ready "to put past differ·
The city has estimated that
enccs aside.''
neighborhoods may benefit by as
Bane One operates in Ohio,
Indiana, Mich' , Wisconsin, lUi' much as $67 mill ion over four
nois, Texas, ~!~orado and Ken- years.
Bane One ~ to m8lce severtucky. Its Cleveland subsidiary, at changes
in Cleveland. Among
Bank One Cleveland, consists of them, Bank One Cleveland wiD:
five branch banta.
• Establish a new mortgage pro-

'• CHESHIRE • Andrew J. Traw
lck Jr., Gavin Plant manager for
Ohio Power Co., was recently
~to serve a one-year rerm on
the American Electric Power Ser·
vice corp. board of directors.
· Ohio Power is orie of seven
AEP operating companies. The
S'ervice Corp. provides manage·
ilient and technical services to the
ilj~C!alin• companies.
'"
.,· Trawtck previously served on
die board in 1989. He has been
cjpployed in lhe AEP System since
1956, ·when he was hired as a test
eilgineer at Appalachian Power
Co.'s Glen Lyn Plant. Following
ioveral promotions, he moved to
the John Amos Plant near
Charleston. W.Va., as operations
~uperintendcnt in 1970. Trawick
was promoted to assistant plant
manager at Mountaineer Plant in
1978 and jo,ined Ohio Power as
Joining Trawick on the AEP
Gavin Plant manager in 198S. board and representing Ohio Power
(Appalachian Power is a sister is Canton . Division Manager
company of Ohio Power in the William F. Sheffield.
AEP System.)
.

Bank One will offer small
.Jlusiness seminars April15, 16
ATHENS • Bank One. Athens.
with participation from the
.Women's Bustness Resource Pro·
pam of the Ohio Small Business
pevelopment PJ'ogram, is sponsor·
inl financial lllllllllllentenl seminars
on Aprill5 and 16at the Ohio Uni·
vcnity Iiiii in Alhens from 8 a. m.
toS p.m.
: The seminar, Managing and
Pinanciq Independent "Business:
Pntctical Tools for Control, Sur·
vi val, ll1d Success." will cover topics rangina from understanding
rmancial statements and monitor·
in1 cash lfow, 10 negotiating with
banb and learning lhe rules o( the
.banking game.
• The seminar will be led by

Steven J. Abercrombie, Executive
Vice President of Business
Resource Services, which is nationally known for illl financial seminars for business owners and managers.
.
The seminar is especially bene·
ficial for .busine11 owners, key
managers, entrepreneurs and busi·
ness advisors. Sixteen hours of
continuing professional education
credit are available 10 CPA's.
The seminar· is $295 per partici~L Class size is limited 1o 60 par·
belpants.
Reservations may be made by
calling Jane Heintzelman at (614)
593-6681 or 1:8()(J.{;77-4994 .

___

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

G. A. Burnett
promoted by
Columbia Gas
COLUMBUS ·G. AJail Burneu
of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, asset
accounting supervisor f9r the
Columbia Gas- distribution companies, headquartered in .Columbus,
has been promoted to manager of
asset accounting.
Bumeu joined lhe gas company
in 1956 as a plant accounting clerk
at Columbus. In 1958, he was
named unitization clerk !here, and
in 1975 he was promoted to coolin- ·
uing property records. supervisor.
Bur.neu was promoted to asset
aceouitting s~ in 1989.
A Reynoldstlurg, Ohio, native,
Burnell is a 1950 graduate of
Reynoldsburg High School. He
holds an associate degree in business administration from Franklin
University, Columbus.
Burneu acMd in lhe u.s. Army
in Kola, from 1952 lhrough 1954.
He and bi.s wife, Janice, a native
of Gallipolis, Ohio, have
two sons and two grandchildren.
The Columbia Gas distribution
companies, including Columbia
Ga.s of Ohio, provide gas aervice 1o
more lhan 1.8 million residential,
commercial and industrial cus·
tomcrs in Ohio, Kentucky, Mary· ·
land, Pennsylvania and Virginia.
Nearly 1.2 million 'of !hose cus·
tomers we in Ohio.
Yott never know.

But, you can always
be sure.
'
~1G1N6ct

.!:::.3

tfiii\'Ll

;,;:=~=·~yq~

\16~·
For the finest natural quaUty, on:

MEIGS COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH,IIIgr.
PHONE. 882·2511
VINTON, OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
MAIN·11T.
JAY and JOE MOORE
PHONE 311-11113

regional
finals

gram designed to cncoUiagc home
ownership for low-income 10 mod·
crate-income bonowers.
• Fund counseling programs for
a home buyers and people facing
foreclosure.
• Invest $2.5 million in lowincome housing tax credit projects
annually an.d make equity invest·
ments tn new housing develop·
. ments.
• Invest $100,000 in a city-run
loan program for small businesses.
• Seek to open three new
branches.
• Attcmptlo improve its minority hiong.
Getlin(! big banks to make loans
or invest m businesses In inner-cit~
neighborhoods has been a major
goal of White's adininistralion. The
city has agreements for neighbor·
hood investment wilh Clevelandbased bank~ Society Corp. ancl
National City Corp.

Super Lotto:

2-18-27-36-41-46
Kicker:
512405
Pick 3:
115
Pick 4:
0725

Page4

a1
Vol. 43, No. 232

Copyrl~hled 1993

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL until last Friday.
father.
Associated Press Writer
Gore revealed at the outset lhat
A consumer panel was the ftrSI
WASHINGTON - Vice Presi· lhe task force will make available to testify, and speakers urged the
dent AI Gore promised that the starting today in a resding room at White House to include long term
Clinton admimsuation will give the Department of Health and care in a basic benefits package.
Americans "freedom from fear" Human Services the wotking docu·
Daniel Schulder, lhe legislative
about their medical bills, as he ments prepared by lhe task force director of the National Council of
launched a: marathon hearing today study teams.
Senior Citizens, said a heallh syson health reform.
''Fixing ·lhe system will not be tern without long-term eare "would
Gore, sitting in for Hillary Rod· easy. But the American people be like a transportation system
ham Clinton, presided at lhe 'first have demanded lhat we fundamen· without roads."
public meeting of the White House tally reform a sysiem that costs 100
Phyllis Torda, director of health
task force on heallh reform, which much and wastes too much and and social policr for Families
summoned ~4 , special interest :;erves 100 few," said lhe vice pres· · USA, said Amencans want the
jP'OUP5 10 testify at a 13·h0111: hear· · 1denL
peace of mind lhal will come from
mg on )low to revamp lhe ailing,
"Health care reform means ftrSI , knowing they will get the same
L\ ·~· system that is costing $940 and foremost giving the American
help caring for a relative with
btllion annually.
· people freedom from fear," said Alzheimer's Disease as for one
The task force has been under Gore.
· with hean disease. She said a suit·
fire from Con~ and lhe courts
Mrs. Clinton the task force . able benefit would cost $15 billion
for conducting most of illl work in chair w.as in Little Rock Ark.
to $20 billioo a year.
Clinton's heallh reform team is
secrecy and refusing to name its wilh President Clinton at the
511-member staff and advisers side of her ailing 81-year-o1d just five weeks away from its self·

cruise P. driver seat, cloth split bench
seitt, ·rear ' defroster, cast aluminum
wheels, low miles, extra clean, P. win.
&amp; lock$:

~~~995 lOW 812,881
.1181 FORD ,.IURUI GL 4 DR.

bed:

cassette, P. windows &amp; lock$, till &amp;
cruise; . P. driver seat, clottl split
bench seat, rear defroster. local one
owner, low miles.
WAS

•• sa,

1111 MERCURY TOPAZ IS 4 DR.
4 cyl. eng., P. steering &amp; brakes,
auto. tra~s., AM/FM stereo
. cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P. windows
&amp; locks, P. driver seat, rear
defroster,
mileage.

extra

Was
$9,995

lOW

clean,

.

low

8,891

8

·1112 FGRD ftMPO 1L 4 DR.
4 cyl. eng., power steer., power
brakes, auto. trans., AM/FM stereo
cassette, power windows &amp; door

COMMUNITY SERVICE ·Pomeroy aecoun·
tant Kenny Utt, center, was presented with the
Meigs County Cbam ber of Commerce's commu·

locks, power driver seat, rear
defroster, low. miles 14,942, extra
clean/.

.,.c...•8,888

r

1187 FORD liP
4 cylinder engine, 5 speed
transmiSsion, AM/FM stereo
radio,
good
conditioning.

tires,

air

'2,11111!
..U

.Brlngln your bed
. deal on a New Car or Truck and we
Spacial

'

will t17 to meet or Beat the Deal.
FOB A GOOD D.Ur...
SEE BOB ROSS. BRYAN HALL or .JA&lt;:K ROUSH
Our Service Department Is Open PJion•.frl. 8·5; Sat. 8·12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. 11-5; Sat. 8-12

~~==

~~~!

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

imposed May 3 deadline to submit
a comprehensive reform bill to
Congf!!ss. The advisers have been
struggling in private to narrow !heir.
options.
Gore is not on the dozen-member task force, but-like the president - he has attended hours of
internal debates on how to provide
health insurance for everybody
while wrestling costs under control, ·
two bedrock promises of Clinton's
campaign.
· . .
,
·House Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt, D-Mo., said Sunday that
health reform will be lhe toughesi
issue Congress has faced in more
lhan half a century, but he vowed:
''If we can get it done lhis year, we
wilL"
•
"As the Clinton administration
is working ilay and night 1o get it
done, ioe'U work day and night in

help families s~gercd by nursing
hOme bills and lhe costs of provid·
ing care at home for ailing Or disabled relatives.
Clinton himself said Tuesday
lhat lhe extent to which long-term
care benefits will be provided is up.
in the air "because of the cost
question."

the Congress to get it done,"
Gephardt said on NBC.
In reality, virtually all of !hose
testifying have already flooded lhe
White House with position papers
and attended private briermgs wilh
Ira Magaiiner and other Clinton
health advisers.
As Phyllis Tonia, a leadoff wit·
ness for lhe advocacy group Farni·
lies USA, put it: "The most impor·
tant tbing to watch will be the
interchange between lhe task force
members and those testifying.
· "It's not that anybody will say
anything surprising," said Torda,
direclor of health and social policy
for Families USA. But the task
·force "may give some si$nals"
about !he direction it is heading.
Torda's group wants Clinlon to
include long-term care benefits
costing $10 biUionlo $20 billion to

Robert F. Allnutt, executive vice
president of the Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association, was
urging that the basic benefits pack·
age pay for prescription drugs.
The c!.tug industry and o.ther
groups representing doctors, hospi.
tals and insurers also were training
!heir guns on the possibility lhat
Clinton may try to impose a short·
term ~ze on prices, fees and premiums 115 be seeks to reshape the
health care system.

Yeltsinfoes vow to carry on battle :.

V6 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AMIFM stereo

..

1 s.ctlon, 10 P•• 25 e«olo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 29, 1993

Health care reform public meeting underway

3.8 V6 engine, PS &amp;: PB, auto, trans.,
AMIFM stereo casselle, air cood., lilt &amp;

$7,895

Partly cloudy tonll:hL Low Ill

the mld-411&amp;.

••

I.IIIIRCURY lAlLI II 4 DR.

matcbed craftsmanahip and
guaranteed value, Rock of Ages
memoriala sland alone.
Rock of Ages family memoriala
stand lor what people care to
remember.

LOGAN
MONUMENT
COMPANY INC."

Ohio Lottery

NCAA

nily service award Saturday night. Also pictured
are, lert, Chamber President Denny Facemyer
and Executive Dlredor Paula Thacker, right.

Freshman cong~essman
commends Meigs chamber
By BRIAN REED
Sentinel Correspondent
Congressman Ted Suickland
(D-Lucasville) commepded mem·
bel'l! of the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce for !heir community
pride on Sarurday night, when lhe
organization. met for its annual din·
ncr/dance at the Family Resort near
Pom-eroy.
Suickland, who was lhe guest
speaker at the fourlh annual event,
was inboduced by Chamber Presi·
dent Denny Facemyer as ''a man
who sincerely enjoys listening to
his conslillients."
. During his- campaign for
Congress, Strickland said, he
bec;lme active in working to save
jobs at the Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division, having
attended public hearings both al
Meigs High School and at Canlon.
"I haven't known Meigs County
for very long, but I have found
something about Meigs County lhat
is very special. I have sensed in
Meigs County a tremendous pride
·in your community, in spite of scri·
ous economic problems," Strick·
land said.
"I don't ·lcnow what I can do to
help you, but whatever it is, I am
GIPT PRESENTED • CODJII'eiiiDan Ted Strlelcland, standing
commiued to do iL No individual
.
rl1bt,
was pr-ated with a handcrafted walkln1 sdck, made by
ean work miracles, but when peo·
Bernrd
LaValley or Racine, as alflt from tbe Melp County
pie join hands and minds and sou(j
Chamber
of Commerce 011 Saturday Dllht. Making lbe praeDia·
together, great things can happen,"
tlon
IJ
Chamber
President.Denny Facemyer.
:·
·
· ·
.
Strickland said.
Strickland, a former United
.Methodist
Church pastor, com·
1
When lhe lhornbush was aslced themselves in service to olhers,"
pared lhe members of lhe Mei4s
County Chamber to lhe fill trees m to be king, he accepted. However, Strickland said. '1'hole individuals
he said he would only be kina after are like lhe fig trees and ~
an Old TestamentiiQr)'.
Duri"8 lhe days of judges' Nlc, he sent. forlh firel to consume all in that story. But !here are thorn
bushes out there who would
lhe story goes, lhe trees decided lhe cedan in Lebanon.
''I believe that in a way, our desttoy 0111: communities."
they wanted 10 he ruled by a kina,
Following the Slricklllld's mesrather lh•n lhe judges. The trees society Is diainte~J,·" Strick·
asked a fig aee and a lflpevine to land iaid, "wllh dte dil ntqration sage, Facemyer presented him a
be !heir kinJ, but bolh declined of our communitioa and families, handcrafted walklna sdck made by
Bernard LaValley of Raclno.
.
saylna they produced wonderrul and violence to innocont people."
"There are lhoiC communities
Before Stricklan(l wa1 intro·
fruit and were 100 Important to be
wh~ people voluntarily live of
lhe king over alllhe olher trees.
(Condnued oa Paae 3)
.

.

By BRYAN BRUMLEY
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW · (AP) The
Congress stripped Boris Yeltsin of
more power today and authorized a
referendum for next month to ask
Russian voters to. approve early
elections for president and parliament and judge his economic
reforms.
Presidential
aides
had
denounced the proposed question
on lhe economy as being designed
to elicit a "no" vote on lhe effon
19 build a market economy that
began early last year. ,
·.
The actions by the Soviet-era
Congress of People's Dep11ties
deepened the power struggle
between Yeltsin and lhe legislative
branch - a constitutional crisis
lhat has paralyzed political life for
nearly. a year.
Frustrated by !heir failed week·
end effort 1o oust Yeltsin, his leg·
islative opponents began work
today by passinJ a resolution
rescinding presidential decrees in
1991 that placed regional adminis·
tratoi's in power across Russia.
'YeiJSin relies on lhese personal
representa.lives to prqmote· his
reforms. They govern in 66
regions, including Moscow and .St. .
Petersburg.
The Congress made no provi·
sions for replacing lhe administrators, but the regions stiU have local
councils elected before the collapse
of lhe Soviet Union.
There was no indication
Yeltsin 's representatives would
obey lawmakers' orders to step
dowri.
The resolution also urged
Yeltsin to form a cualition "gov·
emment of national accord'' lhat
presumably would include hard·
liners who want to slow down or
reverse his economic reforms .
The deputies approved the resolution 535-213, with 31 absten·
lions.
Yehsin spokesman Vyacheslav
Kostikov denounced the Congress'
action as "a continuation of the

National Gas and
Oil benefiting from
deregulation . '
National Gas and Oil Corporalion's customers are paying lower'
gas bills due to deregulation of lhe
natural gas industry, lhe company
reponed recently.
According to a press release,
National has talcen advantage of
deregulation and reduced the cost
of natural gas.
Atlhis lime last year, National's
gas cost recoveiy (GCR) was $4.34
per thousand cubic feet, the compa·
ny reported. As of March I, the
GCR is $3.34 per thousand cubic
feet '
.
"No longer Is National one of
lhe higher priced nalllral gas com·
panics in the state," the press
release said.
''The current reduction of $1 J;IU
thousand cubic feet makes the pnce
to National's current and P,lteRtial
customers very compelltlve. In
fact, lhe total gu bill for National's
customers is now among lhe lowest
in its service area,• the press
release llid.
National 0as and Oil serves CUI•
tomers in Racine, Rutland .and
Syracuse.

·destruction of the president,'' and "open calls for revolt" during ·a
he said lhal "adequate measures" pto-Yeltsin demonstration Sunday, .
would be taken, He did not elabo· when about 50,000 people rallic;d
rate.
next to lhe Kremlin gates,
•
·Tbe president was not lit the ses· · '· "The editorial commission will
sion today, Kostikov said, because please prepare a brief resolution on
it was the ninth day after the death this questions, saying absolutely
of his molher - a day of remem· clearly that if our esteemed presibrance under Russian Orthodox dent, Boris Nikolayevich, caDs for
Chtm:h traditions.
revolt, we will immediately return
Yeltsin' s chief rival, parliament to considering lhis q uesuon" of
speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, impeachment, Khasbulalov said. .
threatened to renew efforts to
AI the rally, Yellsin said he
remove 'Yells in if the president would obey "only lhe v.rill of Uti:
conlirlued 1o encourage Russians to people," and he accused the
defy -the ·CoDJmunist··dominated &lt;;lli!F 'Of 'stirring up'all ofRusCongress. ·
sta.
Khasbulatov said there were
(Continued on Page 3) .

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FASIDON SHOW PLANS FINALIZED· Plans for tbe eighth
annual spring fashion show of the Pomeroy-Merchants Association
on Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary are nearly final·
ized. Here, show committee chairman,' Susan Clark, right, and
Vicki Ferrell, show committee member, discuss the program booklet to be used at the show. Tickets for the show are available for $4,
either in advance or at the door the night or the show.

--Local briefs-Food stamp insurance purchased
The Meigs County Board of Commissi,oners accepted a bid from
Downing-Child-Mullen-Musser Insurance for $600,000 in food
stamp insurance during its regular meeting Friday.
C~ of the insurance is $15,904 annually. The bid was the only
one received.
In addition, lhe commission approved advertising bids for the
refurbishing of lhe Tuppers Plains ambulance.
In olher action, lhe commission:
- Signed a resolution supporting Serenity House •. the domestic
violence shelter for Metgs, Gallia and Jaclcson counbes. The three
counties currendy
provide receipts of marriage license sales 1o the shelter as required
by state law.
-Agreed 1o pay an animal claim of $10 1o Wayne Roseberry,
Pomeroy, far five chickens killed at $2 each. .
Attending were: Robert Hartenbach, prestdent; Janet Howard,
vice-presiden~ and Manning Roush, and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

�•
Monday, March 29, 1993

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Monday, March 29, 1993

Pomeroy-Middlepprt, Ohio
'

OHIO Weather

111 Court Sueet
I'OmeiOJ, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 'I1Dt INTBIUI8T8 OP 'I1Dt IIEJGS-IL\SON AR&amp;\

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
PubUsher·
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ConU,Uer

'
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
&lt;:eneral~anager

LETI'ERS OP OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words. All letttn are subject to editing and must be signed with name,

----....J
Let's not lose the
American family
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
110 1
L...:'::bu:;;u::;ld:.;be:.;.:in~g::;ood::::.;tas:::tt::.·ad::,:dre::;ss~in:,g;,;;i";,;ues;;,;,;.·;;;
;.;,:;.peno;.;,;,;,;;.nal;;;i~tie;.;•_
,

A visit to the local ~ling card store startles. Ensconced between the
usual birthday and holiday cards is an entire section devoted to divorce.
"Getting divorced caiJ be very healthy!" exclaims one card. "Watch how
it improves your circulation! Best of luck! "
It seems a rather sad commentary on lhe times in which we live when
greeting cards celebrate family brellkdown. One only imagines what is to
follow. Maybe cards congraiUiating lhe unwed teen-age mom. Or perhaps
cards cheering the newly, not wed, but cohabiting COUple.

joseph Perkins
The traditional American family you remember, legaliy married Mom
and Dad and biologically related kids has '!it rock bouom. !he ~line
began three deca~es ago wben both the d1vorce rate and illegtUmate
birthrate began to nse.
. .
Half of all marriages toda&gt;: end in eli~. One of every four bab1es 1s
born to a single mother. If this trend conun~. and ~ 1s no fel!SOn !0
expect otherwise, r~wer than half of ~mCfiCan Chl)dren born 10 thiS
decade will grow up m the same home wtth both of lheD' parents.
·
. To lament the decline of the traditional two-J.lllll:Dt family is not to disparage one-parent families. There are many smgle moms and dads out
there who are doing their damdest to raise their children and who would
love to·have a supportive spouse to help them.
·
But, then we must also m:osnize !hat there are a number of JlC!lple for
whom singl~parenl!lood truly is a "life5tyle choice;" They don't want to
bother with getting married, with having a spouse around. Indeed, the
. Census Bureait reports that in 1990, 30 pei'CCIIt of•childten lived with a
never-married parent.
. What we have witnessed over the last three decades is a dramatic
(bange in the zeitgeist Time. was when parents Would su~nate their
own interests, their own happmess ev~. for the sake o~ theu chi'!Jren. No
more. If parentS don't wint to get mamed or stay married, the children be
damned. The happiness of parents now takes precedence.
: This breakdown in the family ethos, and resultant explosion in singleparenthood, has had a devastating effect on America's children. A growong body of both social and scientific evidence shows !hat by. virtually
every measure of well-being, children of single-parent families fare conJiderably w~ ~an those in twa:parenl f~ilies.
.
. Children tn smgle-parent fam11ies are SIX umes as likely to be pOor.
They are two or three times as likely to have emotional and behavioral
prOblems aocording to a 1988 survey by lhe National Center for Health
Statistics: And !hey are inore likely to drop out of high sc&amp;ool, to get
pregnant as teen-agers, to use drugs and to run !~foul !Jf lhe law. .
.
· If we want to make life betler for the next generauon of American children we must deal squarely with the breakdown of family structure. We
- t continue to pretend that a child's life chances are unaffec!t4 by the
kind or family in which he or she is reared. Oearly, it is in the nauonal
interest Ill encourage two-parent families.
.
· "Fiimily values," to use an extremely loiltled term, are important Our
Society has become so morally relativtst, so value-neuttal, so wary of
offending sensibilities, that we no longer stigmatize out-of-wedlock birth
or cohabitation by unmarried couples or divm:e. lnsteild, we send greet·
ingcards.
.
· This needs to change. Our schools, our churches, our commumty org~­
nizations need to start tallcing about the importanCe o( two-parent families. The institution Of marriage needS to be restored to the hallowed pDSI·
lion it once held in our culture. Maybe even Hollywood will get w1th the
(amity ~ - The government could play a leading role. It could, for
instance, discourage.easy divorce (except in cases of domestic violence or
child abuse). It could recast the welfare system so that it no longer
rewards single-parenthood. It could offer tax incentives to two-parent
families.
.• .
· The idea of lhe government encouraging two-parent fam1 11es IS not
simply a leftover from the previous Republican ~inisttation. Family
pohcy is the one area where liberals and conservauves, Democrats and
Republicans, tend to agree.
·
.
.
.
: In fact, in a paper he co-authored for the Progresstve Pohcy lnsu~ule,
(!efore his appointment as Presidenl Clinton's domestic policy adv1ser,
William Galston stated plainly: "It is no eltBggeration that a srable, twoJiarent family is an American child's best prorection against poveny."
· Dan Quayle himself couldn't have said it better.
: It has taken 30 years for America to finally acknowledge that the
decline of the ttaditional family has taken a toll on its children. Let us
!lope that it does not take another 30 years before this nation fmally does
something about it
Joseph Perkins is a columnist for The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Berry•s World

Army funds some costly biological research
WASHINGTON - In lhe rense
days leading up to the Gulf V/ar,
Pentagon representatives came
fonh with a startling admission:
The United States military was
woefully unprepared to protect its
own soldiers, let alone all allied
soldiers, from lhe threat of biological warfare from the Iraqi army.
This was the case even though the
Pentagon knew Iraq probably ~lad
stockpiles of an,thrax • and
botulism-inducing weapons - the
two most C()mmon kinds of biolog. ical weapons.
The Pentagon was caught off
guard on the biological weapons
front despite pouring more than
$500 million into its Biological
Defense Research Program since
. 1984. Although biological weapons
were banned by internalional ~ty
in 1972, Congress has continued to
fund the BDRP to keep abreast of
developments that might affect
U.S. troops and to develop vaccines that protect U.S . troops
against possible contamination. ·
A draft copy of a study conduct·
ed by the Center for Public Integrity suggests the Gulf War scenario
was merely illusttative of a much
larger problem. The CPI study
argues that this obscure agency has
fallen far shon of its goals, all at
the expense of U.S. taxpayers. It
has become a haven for second-tier
scientists whose research bears little recognition in the scientific

community. But since the program
is run by the U.S. Army, these scientists have been allowed to operate with thriving budgets and with-

By Jack Anderson
·and
Michael Binstein .
out scrutiny, insulated and unaccountable.
Where else but in the U.S. Army
could you find a program where
taxpayers have paid more !han $12
million to have scientists tty to find
· a cure for Rift Valley Fever?
Though !his is a deadly disease, it
occurs mainly in Mrica, and !las
never been known to be developed
by any country in biological
weaponry. And where else ~ut t!Je
U.S. Army could a top sc1en1tst
working for the BDRP allegedly be
operating a liquor store on the side,
while another allegedly moonlights
by selling computer equipment,
according to the CPI repon?
Apparently, a good portion of
the BDRP's in-house scientists
have been asleep at the wheel for
some time. Although inlernational
treaties and U.S. law require the
program to remain open and
unclassified, much of the research
· is easily hidden in other~ c~ifted

programs. The studies !hat did see
lhe light of day were less than aweinspiring:
In FY 1989, in-house
researchers had S49.6 million earmarked for 59 research projects.
That monev was disoersed between
16 lll)i resean:hers who were .allotted more than $1 million each. But
while the funding was enough to
equip the labs of several Nobelprize winners, the results were of
somewhat lesser quality.
U.S. taxpayers were supponing
such projects as " Studies of Microbial Toxins and Venoms of Military Importance: Basic Mechanisms of Toxicity" and "Freshwater Cyanobacteria Blue-Green
Algae Toxins: Isolation and Characterization." In the case of the
Rift Valley Fever research, Dr. KJ
Linthicum, WhO led the research
effort, found his results published
in such esoteric medical journals as
the Journal of the American
Mosquito Control Association.
That article recounts il study where
Dr. Linthicum ttaveled to Kenya,
where mosquito habitats were
sequentially flooded in an effort
"to determine the numbers of
mosquito eggs hatching during
each flooding." A related article,
co-authored by Linthicum, was
published several months earlier in
the American Journal of Tropical .
Medicine and Hygiene.
Nor do these research results
come cheap. In ,1991, the 12 BDRP

conditions and high

AcrouOhlo
The western third of the state.
has a chance of seeing some sunshine today, but the rest of Ohio
wiD be mostly cloudy.
Winds will be from the north at
less than 10 mph.
Temperatures will remain in the
mid to upper 40s ~y along the
northeast lalceshore. The rest of the
srate will be 'more springlike with

MICH.

researchers with the highest fund·
ing contributed to the publication
of just 19 articles in the open literature. At $33.2 minion in total fundin~. this amounts to about SI. 75
million per paper. By contrast,
most private-sector researchers
normally produce between three
and 10 onginal works in a given
year. Moreover, the study found
that, in 1991, some 42 percent of
published articles by these 12
researchers appeared in journals
not even among the top 1,000
ranlced in order of how frequently
they are cited by other biomedical
researchers.
Aside from the quality of the
research, a larger issue that has
analysts concerned is the purpose
of the research. International and
domestic law clearly prohibits
development or production of
offensive biological weaponry. Yet
the report lists at least one-fourth of
the research commissioned by the
BDRP a8 not being solely defensive in nature. For example, one
researcher has created a ''highly
virulent and antibiotic-resistant
strain of anthrax." Another has
"modified the botulism neurotoxin
to yield a deadly form of botulism
that would be unaffected by conventional vaccines."
Copyright, 1993, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
(Jack Andersli~t aud Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

t

'

Rain in Northeast, warming trend in Southeast

Tuesday, March 30
Accu-Weather• forecast for

The D8ily Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnel-Pag&amp;-3

IND.

Meigs announcements

)·

• leolumbusls4•

Special slagiag
The community Unity Singers
will be giving part of !heir spring
concert, "Heaven's Eyes," at_the
Eden United Brethren Church on
Thurs'day evening.
~eed•c planned
The Bedford Township VotunP
leer Fire Departtnent will be having
an organizational meeting Tuesday
at 7' p.m. at lhe Burlingham ~od­
ern Woodmen Hall , Everyone
inll:reSted in being a member of the
fire departmen~ lir auxiliary is
requested to a!Wid.

I

·
W. VA.

4

highs in the mid 50s and 60s.
To11ight will be partly cloudy
with lows in the m1d 30s to mid
40s. Tuesday will be panty sunny
with highs 55 to 60 nonheast and
in the 60s across the rest of the
state.
The record high for this date
was 83 in 1910 and lhe record low
was 14 in 1887.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:53
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
6:19a.m.
Across tbe uatiou
Rain fell over most of th.e

Northeast today, while snow
intruded on ea( ly spring in the
Plains.
Foggy and rainy conditions
stretched from Maine west to Ohio
and SOULIJ to Washington, D.C., this
morning. Rain also fell in parts of
lhe Midwest and the Southwest
Snow fell in Wyoming and was
expected today in Montana and
Nonh Dakota.
Skies were clear in the far West
and in the Southeasi, where a
warming trend was expected.
High temp~rawes in the 70s

and l!Os were to extend as far.
northwest as southern Kansas·
today. The Soulhwest was to be a:
little cooler. with highs in the 60s_,
and 70s. The Northeast and the :
mid-Atlantic states were to be ·
mostly in the 40s and 50s, as was :
most of the Midwest.
Highs in the Plains and Roct:y
Mountain Stales were expected in ·
the 30s and 40s, and the Pacific:·
Northwest was to be in the 50s and ·
60s.
'
fiigh lemperature for the nation ·
Sunday was 89 degrees at:
McAllen, Texas.
··

The ~~~:C: ~~=~~ip Fire
Pepartment
will have aon
bake
sale at
i;
Krogers in Pomeroy
Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Anyone
wanting to donate baked items
should call696-1017.
lmmuuilatlou clinic .
Extended forecast
A series of free community
40s. Friday, a chance of rain or
Wednesday through Friday:
snow. Lows around 30. Highs in immunization clinics will be proWednesday, Fair. Lows in t(Je the upper 30s to low 40s.
yided throughout Meigs County. In
40s. Highs in the mid-50s to mid·
South Central
all Cases, children ages two through
60s. Thursday, a chance of'rain or
Tonight, partly ,cloudy. Low in kinder11arten must present an
snow. Lows 30-35. Highs in the the mid-40$. Tuesday • partly immumzation record. Times lind
sun~r. J:ligh millr 70.
places are as foUows:
. Thursday. 9:11 a.m., 01\.io ValSERVICE RECOGNiZED - Three outgoing
dinner/dance. Pictured are, left to right: Lenuy
memb~rs of the Meigs County Chamber or
Eliason, Executive Director Pap Ia Thacker,
ley Christian Assembly (old Bethel
·
·
·
,,
School in Bedford Township);
Commerce Board or Dlrec:tors were rec:CJiDlzed
Duane Weber aud Chuck Kitchen.
·
Syracuse Fire Dejlartment, ThursSaturday at the orgaulzatlon •s rourtlt anuual
Dorothy Faires
Dr. Roger Grueser
day, t-3 p.m.: Bashan Fire Depart(Continued rrom Page 1)
Dorothy C. "Dot" Faires, 87, of
Dr. Roger Jacob Gruescr, 59, of ment, Friday, 9-11 a.m.; Reedsville
Point Pleasant, died Saturday, 802 West Hunter Street, Logan, Fire Department, 12:30-3 p.m.; &lt;!uced, Facemyer and the cham- nized and presented with SOCCO and were present0c1 with plaques.
Man:h 27, 1993, at Pleasant Valley died Sunday, March 28, 1993, in April 8, Tuppers Plains Fire ber's executive director, Paula hats by Jim Tompkins and David
Ernie Sisson; manager or Ohio:
Hospital.
Hocking Valley Community Hos- DepartmenCt,l9 a.bmt · to2J&gt;.m.
Thacker,
presented
various
awards
Baker
from
the
mining
operation.
Power
in Pomeroy, was presented,
She was a former employee of ' ·tal Log
u o m.....
to those who worked on the chamDuane
Weber
of
Quality
Print
with
a special award in recognition .
the Valley Bell- Dairy in Point PI B~m .:;:· ~. 26, 1933 in the
. The Middleport Literary Club ber's behalf during the past year.
Shop, Chuck Kitchen of Dairy of his work toward attracting a
Pleasant, a graduate of Glouster Rock Springs CommlilitY, he was will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
Those
who attended public hear- Queen"and Lenny Eliason qf slale prison to Meigs County.
.
High School in 1923 and attended the son of Clara Betil&amp;h Hamm at the home of Beulah McComas, ings i~t an attempt to save the WMPO Radio were m:ognized as
Kenneth
R.
Utt
was
presented;
· .Ule late Frank
341 Main
Street,
Ws. Meigs ~e operauon were recogOhio University and taught scliocil. Giueser of Racine 1\mf
Regan
willMiddleport.
be the hostess.
buJgoing cham~r board members with the chamber's cdlnmunity ser,·
She moved to Point Pleasant in ClarencePeterG~.~:)Iil
The book review, ''A Year in
•'
vice award.
1933 and was 1 member or the
He was a graduale of 1958 from
·
·
ill be
Members of the chamber's din-.
Christ Episcopal Chtirth, where she Ohio Stale Univer$ity, College of Saigon" by Katie KeUy w·
prener/dance
committee were also·
.was active in lhe Service Guild, the Veterinary Medicine aild practiced sented by Mrs. Evereu Hayes. Roll
thanked:
Debbie
Clay, Mary.
Altar Guild, lhe Episcopal Church in Logan for lhe past 3S Y•· He call wiD be Ill lell a far east destina- VETERANS ~EMORIAL HOS- Mrs. Henry Farley anil daughter, Gilmore, Roger Gilmore,
David,
PITAL
Elora Miller, Mrs. Aaron Kerr and
1
Women ~d was Chairman of the was a board member of !he Ohio ti\)n.
Easter Cu!&amp;ta
Harris,
Chuck
Kitchen,
JOI\D
May,
Saturday admissions - Donald daughter, Tracy Miller, Adam
United Thank Offering for .many Veterinary ~edical Association .
The Easter Cantata "We Have Cowill, Syracuse.
Jeff
Thornton,
Kenny
Uu,
Duane,
Stewart, Andrea Norris and Dalton
yean. She was also a member of and a member of several area veeth Lo d" 'II be'
ted
Weber, !O Ann Willford and,
Saturday discharges - James Mabley.
the 1\J-Bndie-Wei Garden Oub and erinarian associations. He served Seen e r Wt
pr~n
Sheree
Wmler.
Pomeroy; Herman
the Thursday Night Bridge Oub.
on the Logan-Hocking County by the Syracuse Charge Chou on Eakins
·'
. Born July 4, 1905 in Bishopville, Health Board for the ('l!st 30 yean, Slll!daY at 7:30p.m. at lhe Asbury Micha~l. Pomeroy; Marjorie
Ohio, she was a~auhter of t&amp;c late and was a past prestdent of that Untted Methodist Church. Every- Burnem, Middleport.
Sunday admissions - ~artha
--" Ora
) Carr She board.
one welcome.
De
(Contiuued from Page 1)
Wolfe, Middleport; Harry Perry,
xter ....
ever
.
He was a member of the LQCa1 .
Le_giOIItb m~t
.
· .·
.
was also preoeded 'in death by her Civil Service Commission. During
"The Rac1.ne Amencan Leg1on Pomeroy. ·
Sunday discharges • G~ CaD,
C. Faires, who died his years of practice in Logan the
at
A Pomeroy ;woman was. i~jured ~ut re~used ~ent •Sunll!ly
Pomeroy.
Surviving are one sister, Helen veterinarian continued ~ immu·
· ·
·
·
evening
followmg a two-vehicle accident m SaUsbury ;r'ownshlp,
HOLZER MBDICAL CENTER
'nizatioo...........,. for dogs and cats
Smor~bord platmed
C Doci G•-..··- Oh'
·
the
Gallia-~eigs
Post of~ State Highwa~ Patrol reported.
·
e, ........,r,
IO; two in cottabi,';-"iiicit'' with lhe Hocking
. There w11l ~ a s~orgasbC?rd
March 26 discharges · - ·
According
to
the acc1dent report, Edith J. Hysell, 45, 32343
~:;eyvil
· ~:Y Dl~ ~!; Couiuy Cornmissiol\etS. ·· dtnuer at the Wilkes~tlle Pythum Rebecca Frisbie, Ardith Hathorne,
Hysell
Run
Road,
Pomeroy, was eastbound on State Route 124
He was an active member and Hall on Saturday at 4 p.m. The c&lt;!St Joseph Charchak, John Johnson,
when she slowed down to make a right tum into a private drive.
= e ~~~~niok
.past president of the Logan Kiwa- is $5 for adul!S ~r. $2,.SO for chit- Chloe FeDure, ~elvin KeUer, GraTamela
~- Fry, 32, Depot Street, Rutland, was foUowing Hyse.ll
cie
Neal,
Gil
Neal,
Marvin
Curtis,
Chad Walton, Pinckneyville, n.. and nis Club, and a member of St. dren. The public IS mv1ted.
and
was
unable to stop in time, striking lhe right side of HyseU's
Mrs.
Kevin
.Pullins
and
son,
.Strokuupport group ..
T. Jay Schultz of "Ious•-, Ohio ~atthew Lutheran Church in
vehicle.
,
.
u
""'
·L.ogaiJ
"Good News and Pos11tve Charles Radcliff, Mrs. James WilHyseU's ·vehicle sustained moderate damage and Fry s sustamed
and one great~nlece, Tammy
. lle;ides his mother, he is sur- Thinking" is the topic to be pre- son and son, Jason ~er. :Kimberlight damage. Both vehicles were driven from the scene. ·
. Schults, Glouster, Ohio.
.
b h·
·f
0
sented at lhe sttoke support group ly Roberts, Frances Harkins, Elsie
services will be held at II a.m., Vlved Y IS WI e, 1anet rr meeting at the American Hospital Howell, Walter Perry, Brandi
. The accident report was incomplete at press lime.
1\Jesda , Milich 30 at lhe Christ Grueser, four daughlerS,_Mrs. Perry
6 00 W
Howard,
Langston
Harvey,
Uzette
est
Episcopaly Church with ' the Rev • (Gma) Meyers of Columbus; Mrs. for Rehabilitation, 9
Ronald L Baird officiating Bunai Nicholas (Lisa)tMcCoy of London- Country Club Drive in Huntington, Carter, Cyndra Hudson and Mary
·
•
d•...... ·Mrs James(Susan)Fosterof W.Va., on April13 at 4:30p.m. Fuller.
~arch 26 births - ~r. and
wiU foll~w in the ~lewood ' G-;'0'Jv~ City'· and Jennifer Grueser Further information may be
Units of the Meigs. County ~mergertcy Medical Service respoQdCemetery ID Glouster Ohio
•
.
•
.
db
. R b t Mrs. Michael Campbell, daughter,
ed
to
12 calls for assistance dunng the weekend.
. nds may call'at .~~ n...:.t Columbus; and three grandchtl· obtame
ot. contacting o era ·
Fne
Wellston. ~r. and Mrs. Aaron
u., .._,,.,. dren
Emerson at (304) 733-1060.
Units respoqding were:
Kerr, daughter, Wellston. Mr. and
Saturday - 5:51 p.m. Syracuse to Third Stteet for Don Cowill
Episcopal C:hurcb tollight from. '110
F~neral services will be held at
MS support group
who was transported to Veterans ~emorial Hospital; 6:38 p.m.
9 p.m. Servtees are under the direc- 11 a.m. Wednesday it the St.
A support group for all persons ~ . Henry Farley, daughter, Creo.
Racine to ~ Stteet for Lewis Smith who was taken to VMH;
tion of the Crow-Hussell Funeral ~atthew Lutheran. Church in with multiple sclerosis and their la
March
27
discharges
Edna
7:31 p.m. Pomeroy to ~echanic Street for Lisa Loar who was transHome.
.
..
Logan. The Rev. James F. Zingale family Jllenlbers will be held April
Poe,
Barbara
Woods,
Lisa
Graham,
ported
to VMH. ,
•
In keepmg w_ith lhe Lenten wiD officiate. Burial will be in the 13 at 6:30p.m. at the American
Brandon
Gilliland,
Hannah
HughSunday5:31
a.m.
Rutland
to
Salem
Street
for
Burl While who
season, lhe fa,mllf requests no Gilmore Cemetery in Sutton Town- Hospital for Rehabilitation, 6900
es,
Lidora
Brady,
Juan
Cruze,
Marwas
taken
to
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital;
9:07
a.m.
Middleport
to Ash
ftowers. Contrilillti~ ~Y be ship, Meigs County. Friends may West Countty Club Drive in Huntvin
Bates,
Fred
Riegel,
Hobart
Street
for
~Wolfe
who
was
taken
to
VMH;
9:40
a.m.
Middlemade to lhe Christ Episcopal call at the Roberti Funeral Home in ington, W.Va. ~ information
pan to Railroad Street for Hazel ~cHaffie who was talren to VMH;
ChtJ:Ch ~emorial Fund at 804 Logan Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. may be obtained by contacting Call, Eva Pinkerman, Dixie Miller,
Barbara
Lowry,
Elizabeth
Hunt,
.
10:02 a.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV and 7 to 9 p.m. and·at lhe church · Larry Kwant at (304) 272-6431.
Jeri
Balcom
a:nd
Mrs.
~ichael
for
Harry Perry who was ttansported to VMH; 2:45 p.m. Tuppers
25550.
. Wednesday morning from 10 a.m.
Trustees to meet
Campbell
and
daughter.
Plains to Arbaugh AdditiDD for Clifford ~cCartney who was taken
, until time of service. Graveside serThe Rutland To~ip Trustees
~arch 28 discharges .....
to St Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.; 1:45 p.m. Rutland
vices will bC held at the Gilmore will meet Thursday at 6:30 P·ll!· at Stephen
Pittman, Avery Adkins,
to Hidden Hills Raceway for Matthew Leach who was taken 10
Cemetery at 2:45p.m. Wednesday.
the Rutland Fire Station. Public
Freda
Akers.
Hilliary
Osborne,
Pick 3 Numbers
O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital; 4:21 p.m. Pomeroy to PNRC for
In lieu of flowers, friends· may invited.
1-1 :5
Willa
Gum
who was taken to VMH; 9:26p.m. Pomeroy to Mulbercontribute to SL Matthew Lutheran
Bake sale plaDDed
" (one, one, five)
ry
Avenue
for
Herman Redman who was transported to Pleasant
· Church R.a dio Fund, 2.58 Bast · The ~eigs County Pomona
(C6ntinued
from
Page
1)
Pick 4 Numbers
Valley
Hospital;
11:05 p.m. Pomeroy squad and ftre department to
Hunter Street: t:opO.
Grange will have a bake sale and
0-7-2-5
Long
Hollow
Road
for odor of gas at Betty Weyersmiller residence,,
•
craft sale 11 Big Wheel on Saturday
(zero, seven, two, five)
V creat or dleS
no injuries reported.
·
Cable
T
.at 10 a.m. Members are reminded · One deputy appeared at
Congress today with a bloodSuper Lotto
to bring items to Big Wheel stained bandage on his head and
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) 2-18-27,36-41-46
between
9 and 10 a.m.
said demonsttators atracked him as r--- '---~---,
John Walson Sr., widely regarded
Gnages
to meet
he left the Kremlin.
as the founder of cable television,
'Ute Daily Seutind
Star
Grange
and
Star
Junior
"An unknown elderly man
is dead of liver cancer. He was 78.
~[17 nnro~n
HaVe Plenty
(USPS 213·960)
Grange
will
meet
Satu~ay at 8
struck
me on the head with a meral
Wal!on
died
Satuiday
in
Sacred
P.ubli11hed evety aRemoon, Monday
p.m. at the grange hall on County object," said law.malcer Alexander
~ \.:.I'OLD
~.
P.d;( I
Heart HospitaL .
through FridAy. lll Court St., Pomct:'O.f,
Road
I
near
SaleD1,.oCenter.
InspecGolishnikov. ·,
·
Ohio by the Ohio Valley ~IWhifll
tion will be held ltnd final plans
CompAny/MultimediA Inc., Pamemy,
There
has
been violence on both
Ohio olll769. Ph. 992-2 1M. Sooond cl...
will be made for lhe chicken barbe- sides of the political battle. On
p~gc paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
cue and dedication ceremony on Man:h 22, pro-Communist demonAprill8. POIIuck refreshments will sttators atlaCked a Yeltsin legislaMember. 'l'tle AllodAted Praa, and the
\
.. •. '
Ohio Now . .psr AaDciaWn. N•t.ion.t
be
served following the meeting. • tive ally outside Russia's parliaAm Ele Powelr.... ~I .. Ot•·-·~.36 S/8
Ad¥erli11ina ~ntati.o, Branham
All
members urged 10 attMd.
Newtpaper
133 ThfTtt Annue,
ment building.
.
·
Ashland Oil.... ,...... ;,.•.;._.• .27 718
Just mail in lhis rebote lonn with four proofs of purthue (UPC codes) from 12·
Now York , NowYortc 100t7. .
Committee
to
meet
AT&amp;T............... t.:....-.v..J•••• ~7 .
'
packs of any Pepsi product. \lie'D send you a coupon good for a free 12-pack of
The
~eigs County Dry Fire
Bank One.......::,;,::..;;q,..;.;&lt;.S71/4
POSTMASTER' Send add- cha,... to
Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, Calleine Free Pepsi, Calleine Free Diet Pepsi, Mountain Dew,
Hydrant
Committee
will
meet
The D•i1Y Sllntinel, lll Court SL.,
Bob Evans ......_
............ ~ .....;ts 1/4 Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at lhe Soil
Porntro,, OHio 45769.
~~ountain Dew, Cryst.al Pepsi or Diet Crystal Pepsi. With Register Sltp.
&lt;llanning Shop..................! S Ill
StJBSCKIPTIOif RATES
Conservation Scrvt~e Office. All
Otmp Industries::....... :....... l4 3/8
Br Carrl•r or Motor R.o•te
committee members are urged to
City Holding......................22
One Wook... ............... .......................... JI.60
atlend.
&lt;&gt;ne Month.....................................-....16.95
Federal MQgU(. ................... l8 S/8
ADDRESS
()ne Veftr....... ::~
~.-··· $83 .20
· Barllecue plauned
Goodyear T.tR ..................75 1/8
SINGLE COPY
Star Gmnge will hold a chicken
CITY/STIZIP
.
PKICIC
Key Centurion .... ,..............24 Ill
Dally. ................... , .................... N•M•2li Centa
barbecue
and
dedication
ceremony
PHONE( _ _
l..aJwls End ..........................28 5111
011
April
18
with
terving
from
11
Umited
lnc
......
:
................
24
3/8
SUb&amp;aiban not dftllrinJ to .-y the cani·
Req-11 ....... - b y .. ,,.... l'lpll.cota II loot ...,....b. "' ..... loot..
a:m. ro 1 p.m. The dedicalion ~
ill' mAY romit tn advance dtracl to The
mlldlrectat ...0. ..... r-.lddl~ ......
Multimedia II!C..................34 3/4
Q-i1y Sentinel on a Lhr"DD, lix or 12
mony will be at 1:30 p.m. Franc11
Point Bancotp.................... 13 1/2
month wia. Cmm will beg~ ... comer
·=~:.r.".ti~::-~.;r; ~r:.1::=.~~="1:;:,•
While,
Ohio Stale 0nnae Uc:turer
IWt
Reataurlllt
..................
7/16
MCh WCIC'Jk, ·•
will
be
tbe
spkv.
En.-inment
• Lilllteloeec...-fll...," ........u.iltl•...-t.-.......
';;.._ , . .
Reliance Blocttlc................21 ill
Na 1.....,;ptioN by mail pormil,led in
• ....-.....m.llllilrdiM...... or•s · ......... -.....id:110Cit....~Dfretlf1111'1 .
wiD be proy;decl by Kenneth and
AI'Mi wham hOf'I'MI •rricr •rvkle ia
Robbinl.tMyen ................ 19
.,,_..ttnahiJ'f!V~Se.. ~_...uto :
available.
MarthaWIRl
.
flfel.ctllhte U-htll, P.O. IIIII 2tt,,_.Fiflltf:, Oluat.
Sholloy'alllc......................u 718
PI PSI , NPSI.COU, DIIT PIPSI , W,I/Nl Pill I'll'S I. a.,.too: PUI DliT PlPSl, ClmAL I'IPSI , DIET
Tickctl for the all-you-can-eat
M•fii•IMeriptJoN
Star Bank ...........................37
C~L 1'11'51. MOU!m.IW DIW, DIIT loiOtnmiM DIW ...!TOCX UP! GO'I'TA JIIWI Pl.INTY TO fUT:'f are II'MHurtl
lnoldo . . . . c-nl;y
chicken barbecue are S4.SO witb
Waxly lnt'L ..............~ ........ I3 ~
13 Weolca ..... ... ...................... ...... .. ... l21.N
:16 Weok,.......................................... $43.16
Worthington Ind. ...............27 1/4 drinks and dcaerts extra and are
52 w..b ......................................... .l84.?6
Stock reports are the 10:30 availablr: fro111 any Star Grange
O.tatdo M•lp County
a.m. quotes provided by member, at the Rutland Depart13 Weoko ........ ...............,. ...... ,... ,....... l23.40
786 NORlH SEC. AVE.
.36 week .. .............................. ,..
t46.10
ktmper S•curltlel, IDe., 0,1 ment Store, or by phoning Patty ·
MIDDLEPORT, Ott. 417110~
52 \rleok•·· " ''"' """""''"'"'"' '"'''"'"' ....40
Dyer at 446-3.57.5 or Maxine Dyer
GaUJPolla.
at 742-280.5.
.
·

-:==~=::::;:ci:~!::.,..:,:.,...,!~~~===~

·
.

_ ___,;. ,. _ _ Weather·----

----- Ar·ea deaths'-----

Freshman...

fFIO£ .

----Hospital news----

-----Local briefs•..

...

~i~

Woman injured in.JVreck

p7~30stp~2 a~~ postmee\J::~rsday

.

Oh:i

Are press conferences worthwhile?
When BiD Clinton held his first
press conference as president the
other day,'one of the least important controversies of the new
administration was 1emporarily laid
to rest. By giving White House
reporters an opportunity to question
him in a direci, open and sustained
way, the president in effect agreed
with them that the formal press
conference is an institution wonh
preserving.
He ~d they are P.robably right,
but just barely. L1ke the White
House beat itself, the presidential
news conference says more about
modem journalism's considerable
ego and show business instincts
than it does about real reporting. In
the end, it benefits the president
more than it does the press or public.
Even so, President Clinton's
performance produced one unqualified benefit by eliminating any further excuse for the non-stop Dow of
self pity emanating from the White
House press corps. Two months of
their whines about the new administration's lack of respect for their

needs and prerogatives has done
more damage to public faith in the
press than NBC's faked test of a
G~ truck. They sounded like

so on the isSue ol" gays in the military, his Chernobyl of political
radioactivity. As for the rest, the
president declared himself in favcr
of democracy in Cuba, health care
. C
for all Americans, a qualified
H 0ddll~g
appointee for the Supreme Court
and campaisn finance reform. The
spoiled .children,' demanding that press conference essentially made
Daddy do what they wanted, when news by not making news.
they wanted it It was a demeaning
That is what should be rememexercise from beginning Ill end.
bered about presidential news conAs for what lhe rress conference ferences generally. Little more of
revealed, it can be safely said the substance is learned from t~m
world was still in orbit when it was than from a White House Juuldout
over. In his long opening state- or a presidential speech.
ment, the president surprised no
When a president goes before
one by backing Boris Yeltsin in lhe assembled reporters, he has two
Russia and the administration's missions. One is to sell policy. The
economic packagl( on Capitol HiD. other is to avoid mistakes. What he
He proceOOed to repeat bolh stands is not there to do is to bare his soul
' in the face of repeated questions or admit error. If he does - if he
that seemed based on the assump- says that "mistakes were made" or
tion that lie would change his mind that he is "not a crook" - il is
in the course.of a press conference. because he and his suiff have
·Oth'erwise. Clinton demonstrat· decided th'at damage control is
ed anew !hat he is an easy, graceful required, not because reporters
public performer who can bob and wormed something·out of him.
weave with the best of them when Except in ·terminal moments, as in
circumstances require it. They did Richard Nixon's last days, the
advantage is always with the presi·
dent
Not that most ref.orters are
much inclined by set -interest or
home offiCe )rissure to take on the
By Tbe AlsoclaRd Pre.
.
president in verbal hand-to-hand
Today is ~onday, March 29, the 88lh day of 1993. There are 'r/7 days combat. Occasionally there are
left in lhe year.
hard-edged queries, but most
Today's Highlight in HiJtory:
conference questions are etther
Twenty yean ago, on Marth 29, 1973, the last United SraiCS uoops left obvious softballs or whaclrily irrelSouth Viemam, ending America's direct military involvement in lhe Viet- evant The presi~t is not exactly
nam War: That same day, Pre8ident Richard M. Nixon liiUIOIInCed that dealing with a pack of raven.ing
"all or our American POW's are on !heir way home."
. wolves when he steps behind the
On Ibis dale:
.
podi_lllll
In 1638, Swedish calonilu aeuled in p-caent-day Delaware.
·
explanation can be found in
In 1790, the tenlh president of the United States,Jolm Tyler, was born' tlteJllCnature
of White House
in Charlea City County, Va.
·
repon.age, which from the governIn 1m, Sweden's King Gustav ill died,11C81'ly two weeb after he was ment's point or view is close to
mortally wounded during a masquerade pany.
.
ideally conttolled. The most visible
In 1867, the Britith Padiament paaed the North America Act 111 create beat in American journalism is also
lhe Dominion of Canada.
the most constricted. Sources or
In 1882, the Knighta of Columbus wu charteml iD Connecticut
real information in the White
In 1943, so yean ago, World W• n meat, buller and claK rationing HOUle are limit-' to non-exiltenL
began.
·
Notworlt reporting largely OOI1Iiau
In 1951, Julius and Bthel RoiiCIIberg were convi~~ of espionage of passing along to the public in a
charges. (They were exeeuted in June 19~~·
.
one-minute capsule what the prep
In 1962, Jack Pw hosted NBC's "T
" show for the futal tjme, secretary has just doled out iri a
paving the way for Johnny Canon's arrival
folio~&amp; October,
briefing. The prestigious daily

arteT JJJ

Today in history

ress

newspapers run moie information i
from !heir While House correspon- ·
dents, but most is also little more :
thari camouflaged hand-outs, ·
amplified with a few quoles from
outside sources.
From beginning to end, journal- •
ists assi!!ned to the White House · ·
are capuves of a situation tailor- ·
made to protect the newsmakef. :
"Good" reponers are rewarded
with choice leaks, "~ad" reporters.·
are cut off. It is a claustrophobic
existence, far removed from normal reporting and light years from
investigative reporting.
That's why all the emphasis on
the rules and conventions imposed ·
by each new administtation is misplaced. Nixon's last days notwith·
standing, every president in the'
television era has handled press
conferences with relative ease. A !
graceful essayist can cover the i
White House with a certain satis- :
faction. You cann~t be a digg!ng :
reporter and expenence a,nythmg ,
but frustration there.
I
That's why the best way to '
cover the presidency is to invest :
less in the White House watch, a :
sterile pursuit, and more in oover- :
ing its actions out in lhe world. In .
other words, concenttate on what it :
does rather than what it says. Presi- :
dential press conferences, like .
White House news releases, are an :
atlempi '!0 put an official gloss on :
reality. The gloss •s occasiiinally '
si~nificant and frequently enter- :
taming, but it is always propagan- : .
da, pure and simple.
•·
The best reporting about White .
House policy and presidential performance is done by people who '
rarely enter the While House gates. .
It will be a point worth remembering as Bill Clinton repeatedly '
demonstrates his mastery of the ~ ;
media in the months and yean '
ahead.
•

·'

EMS responds to 12 calls

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'-Sports

The Daily
.

Monday, March 29, 1993

Sentin~l
~

p

By NORMAN MacLEAN
303 ABs) routing in CF and LF.
The best division in the major · "Neon Deion" hit .533 in the
,
leagues is the National League World Series.
WesL And the best team in baseThe catching is handled by
ballthelastisthe ~orldtaSB~ves, despite · Damon Benyhillllld Greg Olson, ·
two "'
enes.
·
who must bounce back from an
Here's how IIley will finish in serious leg injury. .
,
the Nl: West Ibis aeasoa:
Cladnutl Reds .
Rookie manager Tony Perez
Atlallla Braves
· The well-armed Braves, led by was a Big Red Machine hero. If
manager Bobby COx, are favored to slugger Kevin Miu:hell can play,
win a third lbllight NL pcnnanL
Cincin!'lli might challenge in '93.
In a great swting rotation, Cy ·But he went dOwn again in spring
· Young winner Greg Maddux (20- training. The 1989 NL MVP hit
11, 2.18 ERA for the Cubs) joins only nine HRs in .99 games with
· former Cy Y.ouns. winner Tom Seaule lastscasoo. •
. Glavinc (20-8, 2. 76), John Smoltz
Pi!Ching is the. real ·asset Start·
. (1'5-12. 2.85, 215 Ks) and Steve ing are Jose Rijo (15-lO, 2.56),
Av~11-11, 3.20). Youn~ rcliev- John Smiley (16-9, 3.21 for Min·
ers
ike Stanton an Mark nesota), Tim B~:lcher and Tom
Wholcn are ready for prime !iJne.
Browning, who was out for most of
Terry Pendleton (311, 21 HRs, '92. The Reds signed Jeff Reardon
lOS RB{s), the .1991 NL MVP; (MLB record 3S7 career saves),
plays third base. At lB, Sid Bream who will set up Rob Dibble (3.07,
and BrialrHunter combined for 24 25 saves last seiiOn).Joe Oliver
HRs.
cau:hes.
' ·
David Justice (21 HRs, 72
Hal Morris· is at first; Bip
RB!s) is in RF, with Ron Gant (17 Roberts (.323,44 SBs. 92 runs). the
· HRs, 80RBis, 32 SBs}, Otis Nlxon best leadoff man in the NL. is at
(.294. ~runs, 41 SBs) and Deion second; Barry Lar!tin (,3b4, 12
Sandedl (.304, 26 SBs, S4 runs in HRs. 78 RB!s) is at short; 11nd
.

:.In NCAA Division I men's cagefest,

: North Carolina, Kentucky,

~

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
The geneml consensus all sea·son long was that four or five
teams made up the college basket·
'ball elite, while 50 or so others
were one notch below.
· : Two weeks into the NCAA
. tournament. things still look the
· same.
· · Kentucky, Michigan, North Car. olina and Kansas make up this
· -1feat' s Final Four.
· It's taken 60 NCAA tournament
·games to get to this point and 60
teams are finished for the year.
.. Cincinnati; Florida State, Indiana
. and Temple joined the also-rans
· over the weekend, three of them in
:·close games.
. The onlr blo.W'oui featured the
learn that s shaping up as the ·
favorite - Kentucky. The Wild·
cats continued their streak of
trouncings by ousting Florida State
106-81 Saturday in the Southeast
Regional fmal at Charlotte, N.C.
The closest game.,was Sunday at
East Rutherford, NJ., where North
'Carolina outlasted Cincinnati 75-68 ·

in ovenime. Michigan continued its
odd habit of winning despite look·
ing bad. rallying to beat Temple
77.72 Sunday at Seattle. Kansas
made Indiana the only No. I seed
to lose, pulling out an 83-77 deci·
sion Saturday at St. Louis. .
Kentucky (30·3) has won its
four tournament games by an average of31 points.
North Carolina (32-4) made it
through the weakest regional, the
East. beating the pressure defenses
of Cincinnati and Arkansas.
Kansas (29-6) may be the least
respected member of the Final '
Four, but the Jayhawks made them·
selves notjccd by beating a talented
team - Indiana, an emotionally
pealdng team - California and a
taller team- Brigham Young University.
Michigan (30-4) has survived on
sheer talent. The Wolverines fell
far behind in almost all their tour·
nament games but mana~ed to
scrau:h their way back each wne.
Before moving on to New
Orleans, here's a look back at the
weekend's games:

·

•

-·

Mic~igan,

Sunday'slldlon
EutRqioall
North CIJ'oUu.75
•·
Clndnnatl 611 (OT)
When's the last time anyone
saw a player blow a game-winning
dunk at the buzzer? That•s exacdy
what Nardi Carolina•s Brinn Reese
did at the end of regulation, send·
ing tile garite into overtime.
The Tar Heels outsc«cd Cincinnati 9-2 in the extra period, with
Donald Williams' ~onsccutive
three-oointers proving to be the
biggest baskets of the day.
·The Tar Hccls came back from a
29-14 ftrSt·half deficit by contain·
ing BCIICats' point guard Nick Van
E.xel, who hit six tlirec-pointers in
the first half and bad 21 points
when the game was only 15 min·
ures old. The second half and over. time Wert I different Story as. Van
Exel was only I far 10 from the
field. He finished with 23 points.
George Lynch had 21 points and
14 rebounds, Williams had 20
points and Eric
15 for
Norlb Carolina. Erik
had 16
points for Cincinnati l-'t··~J.

UNDER PRESSURE- Wbile looking for an
open teammate to deliver a pass, Cincinnati
guard Nick Van Exel (left) finds himself under
preuure from North Carolina'a Derrick Pbelp~

Scoreboard
·---!.... . .

,,
'

Adam~.,.,WM

In theNBA ...

.. ~ ..........

EASTERN CONFERENCE
TNR

Allantk Dlwtllon

W

L

Pet.

x-Ncw Ycdt ...........47 20
Bc.~ ..,.,, ..............40 21

.70l
.SIS

New Jency ............40 29
Orlando .................. 32 34
Mdm\ ....................30' 37

.S80
.485
.448

Pltilodolpbia ...........21

46

.313

Wu!Unatoo. .......... .l9 48

.214

Central DIYI1Ion
;t-ChiCIJO ............. .48 20 .706
CLEVELAND .......43 ;1j .632
Atlan1a ................... 36 32 .529
· Charlouc ................ 35 34 .507
lndianl ..................:33 3S ..US
Deuoit ...................31 36 .463
Mih,.·•ukce ..............26 4~ .381

a-Bo.ton ...........

CB

Owwa .......... ....

8
14.S
17
26
1J

• '

25
29

40

5
12
!3.5
15
16.5

ZZ

Pd.
.638
.6Z1

08

.412

u.s

.sao

1
4

o.uu .......................7 6.1 .103

'If
36.S

Paclrk Dhillon
s.-Jl'boc:nU ............ ...52 15 ,776
a·Se~We ..................n 22 .611
Portland .................41 2S .621
L.A . LU:cn ............ 34 33 .507
WI CliPP'l" ......... 33 36 .478
Golden S~aie ..........21 40 .412
Sacramento ............ 21 46 .313
·~linchcd pllyoff bath

6
10.5
l8
20
24.5
31

51

.239

Odando 98, New Jeruy 14
Atlanu 118, Milmi 106
Denver 123. Jndiln~106
Seattli!i 112. LA. Clippen 108
Milwdee 12.5, Sacn.mtso 1OS

NarrlaDIYW.

Tum

ct.£VEUND 78

Minnaota lOI,HouAon 100
San Antonio 114, Dal1u 107
New Yml: 94, Golden Sl.ltc 84
Lt Liken 92.lndW\a 90

J.•IJrr:uoiL .. ,. ... ,.
r.-Toronto..........
St. LOW ...........
Minneaola .........

Tonl&amp;hl's pmes

1.-C.\g•ry .......... 37 l8 10
r.-lol Anaeta .• 35 32 8
K.·WinhipcJ ....... 34 3~ 7
EdmontorL ....... 25 44 &amp;
SanJoie ............ 10 64 2
x-clinc:hM playoff berth

~ 11 Gold.-. Sta~

New Jmey S, Wa.WnJ'Oft 2
Piwbu.rah 5,BDiton 3

&lt;lo"""' l' Pttilodclphi• 3

N.Y. Wanden 7. San J01e 3
Deuoi1 I, T1rnp1 Bay 3
Hu1ford 2. MinnCMKI 1
ToronlO 6, Ednx1n10n 2
McntrcaJ 4 (OT).twa 3 (OJ')
S~nday•s

Buff•lo 3, OU.IWI 1
&lt;lo"""' 3, N.Y. a..1on·2

Salwdaj'1 dtle piM

At Chartoue Colllnm, Ch•rtotu, N.C.
Konludoyl06, FloOdoo s~~ II

Midwest Rt~:lonal

4

10:30 p.m.

S•t•r4aJ'I tUM11mt
At SL Loull Artllll

x...... 83, Indian• 77

WALES CONFERENCE
P•trkkDI...._.

TW L TPU. GrGA
, .Piioobuop ...... 49 21 6 10&lt; !172'2
31 30 1 13 300 26.!

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

-

score•

Pl"'bouali 4, w~ 1
l.ol AnJda 3, WiM1pq 3, tie

Southeast Regional

In theNHL ...

_ , . ....... 37 32 6 10 275 264

N.Y.Rq... .... 33 llll T72Jol214
N.V. !Wndas... 35 33 6 76 300 265
~ ...... 21 35 II 67 2S. 299 .

By RUSTY MII,LER
throws as the Panthers enlarged the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - . lead to 5241.
Cincinnati Bider won its second of
The victory marked die second
back·to·back state titles in 1974. time this season tlu!t,Elder (24-4)
·Mite Schwallie wasn't born until a ·had beaten SL.John's,. the ~;'anthers
year later.
.
winning 70-63 at h11me in Decem.!
But Schwallie still felt the ber.
·
, ,
power and pressure' of Elder's tra· ·
Jay Larranaga·had 17 po~ts and
dition. That was one reason why he eight ·rebounds for.St; John s (23·
scored 20 points and had a hand jn 5), which-,Jtad won its last 14
all the big plays in the Panthers • g~..
·
.
62-53 victory over Toledo St.
Ph•hp Huyler was .the story 1n
John's in the first all-parochial big- the DiVISion 1'1 game as be scored
school final on Saturday.
. ' 34 points and h!t five free thro:ovs in
"I couldn'i even dream of this the last 48 seconds as Guard
happening,"1Schwallie said. "We brought home Trumbull County's
have a chant that goes. '73-'74-'93. fust state boys basketball champiBut I still never realized that -we onship. ,, .·· ,, ' ·
·
could win the state."
·
. Trutp\\IP .County teams had
, In Qther title games Saturday, . fail~' IO ~!II?,ii;i(dwnpionship in 11
Girard beat Whitehall· Yearling 64· prev•DI!fl,!_11;11S .fCJ· the state tourna·
57 for the Division II champi· menl81\11(four p,~evious title games.
onship, Campbell Memorial pulled
Huylel', a native of the Bahamas
away from Belpre for a 47-39 vic· whose father saw him Jliav for the
tory in the Division Ill tide game ftrSt time in the semifmals, added
and Fon Loramie took the Division four rebounds and two assists.
IV crown with a 70-S4 victory over
He had to sue the Ohio High
New Riegel.
.
School Athletic Association to
The victories by Campbell and · even play this season. after the
Girard - both from the Mahoning state's ruling body of prep sports
Valley Conference - marked the ruled that he was a recruited trans·
first time in the tournament's 71 fer.
years that two teams from the same
The victory overshadowed a
conference had. won state titles in glittering perfprmance by White·
the same~- · .
· ball's 6-foot-9 junior center, Sama·
Coach Joe Schoenfeld was on ki Walker. He scored 24 points and
Elder's freshman team in 1974 and had 14 rebounds -two more than
sat high up in til!: balcony when the the Girard team.
Panthers won.lbe tide game.
Girard. whose only pevious trip
''I'll never forget being in die to die state tourney came in 1953,
building wl)en it haptiened, !low fmishcd 22-6. Whitehall-Yearling,
proud I was," he said
ranked fourlb in the final regular·
Elder's tradition added ·another season poll. closed at 25·2.
page as Schwallie led an 8-0 run in
A late 9·0 run was the differ·
the foilrlh quarter that turned the enee.
tide.
"People have been writing
Schwallie, who had seven about Cinderella and there's been
assists, staned the tally with an talk about dreams coming true,"
assist to Pat Kelsey for a three· Girard coach Bob Krizancic said
pointer. Then Schwallie had il throuF.h postgame tears. "We
three-point play and hit two free weren 1 even scede4 in the section·

Ch'"'ploo..lp
MGftdaJ1 Aprll5
9:22p.m.

Sports Probe

West Reelooal
'

SundaJ'• dile pntt
A111tt 10.,._; SaUlt

MkhipnTI,T....... 1l

Tbe Final Foor
AI 'ftelap J

Cin. Elda.62. T&lt;ll. SL John"• 53

Division n
Girard 64, Whlleh&amp;U-Yut~ 57

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the world
of spons:
·f
• How talented is the new
"Dream Team" in high-school
basketball? .
It remains io be seen. But the
199 3 McDonald's AU American
High School Basketball Team is
bound to feature several future col·
lege and pro greats. Those teen·
agers - following in the footsteps
of Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson
and others - will make their
national TV debut on Sunday • .
April4. ·
·
The 16th annual McDonald's
All American High School Game is

Division ID

Carnpbcll Manorial47, Belpre 39

Division IV
Fort. Loramie 70, New Rie&amp;d S4

, Nft" Orlu.M

s.c.rUr'•.....,...•

Transactions
Baseball
Amerlc:•n Le•aue
CHICAGO Wlll'rn SOX -Optioned
Jason Bcre, pi\cher, Sh•wn GilMn, in·
fielder, and W•nen Newson, outfidder,lo
Nuhville of the Am.criun Auociuion.
Sent B•rry Jonu , pitcher; J011 Hall and

Norbcno M1nin, inficldm, w their minor
le.su.e c:•mp Cor IC.IIIianment.
MINNESOTA TWINS - O..i..,.tod

~avid McCany, fltll bueri\11\•outfielder,
and Bemardo Brito, outfielder, to their
minor le~sue camp for IIIUJianmer;t. Op-

tioned Pit Mural, i.afielder, and P1L
Howell, oulfieldc:r, lD Pol\land of lhe Pa·
cific Cout Wauo.
lCIJUC corutiCL

TEXAS RANGERS - Son' Willie
Smith 1nd Mui Lee, pitchers; P.hrio

Diu, infiel der; Bonny Di1teftno, fint "'
basem•n: Doua O.vU, catcher; •nd Rob
Ducey, outfielder, 1.0 their mlftor 1eaa~.ae

camp for tc~~~ipunc:nl.
N1tlonal Ltaaue
CHlCAOO COBS - Placed Ryne
SINI~Mra, lfiOMd. M.eman: Shtwon Dun·

"""·
""""""''
d Mik• "'""'ll·
pildlot,
on the
IS·d•J 0/l
diutuo•
li1t. Optioned

"" Jcqie Hollint •nd Turk wneU. pii.Chcn,
lnd Fernando Rlm~ey, outlicldcr,lo lowa
tllhe American AIIOC:ilti&lt;~n". Outria}ned
OeorJa Pedre, Cllchi:r, ta low1. W1ivcd
s~ LyCIII, infielder, for the putpOie tL
Jivinl hUn hil 11nconditimal releu&amp;.
CINCINNATI REDS - Sent Bill
Landrum, pitcher, and One Cochrane,
fu1t b•aem•n•outfieldcr, lo lheir minot"
)CIJUO etmp (Of lalaipwnont

COLORADO ROCKIES - Placod

Eric Wedao. c.ateher, t111 the U·day dil·
•blod llR.

FLOIUDA MARLINS - AcquHo4
Chri• H•mmoncl, phoher, frOM the

Cincinnati RM1 for oa,. Jcoca. tWnl
bateman, and a pla)W lD be niiMd .....

• tha ,...... al Ltdo Aqoloo,
pluhcr, from tho Kanou Chr aorala.

1--.1- -·Pat

S..John
Jhpp and David w• ...._, pllelhen, ta
Edirion10n or U!o Padfk Couc IMIJ-Io.
MONTREAL EX POl - Oplioned
Jon1than Hunt. pllehlr, to Oa•w• ~ 1M
ln~etn~tionlllM~_

NEW YOIIl Min'S - ..... TINO Pll.-, M11m1 a--, an4 Midul)' W~.
pi""'NJ; DIM Bilardello, calelsor; Eric
and W1,_ H0111ie, 0\ltnoldln,

,.thalt,.........,.. ...pr......,.
.....
B~o~Uoc:t

By NORMAN MacLEAN
The ·National League "Least" is
just that - .a bunch of so-so clubs ·
10 wbich almost anyone (except
expansion Florida} can win it all.
Here's how they will finish in
the NL East Ibis season:
Montreal Expos
Under second-year manager
Felipe Alou, the Expos have the
bcslyoung team in the majors.
The lOp of the hatting order2B Deli no DeShields and OFs
• Marquis Grissom. Moises Alou and
Larry Walker - is the heart of the
attack. DeShields (82 runs, 46 SBs)
and Gtissom (99 runS, 78 SBs) are
· · super fasL A1ou (282) looks ready
to blossom. Walker (.301, 23 HRs.
93 RB!s) is slugger wilb a great

Beny at3B.
The rotation is headed by Den·
nis Maninez (16-11, 2.47 ERA)
and Ken Hill (16·9, 2,68). Chris
Nabholz (3 .32) is solid. So are
selup lilan Mel Rojas (7·1, 1.43,10
saves) and closer John We!teland
(2.92, 37 saves). 1
Neill' York M'ts
Manager Jeff Torliorg claims,
"It has to be easier Ibis year than
last when we used the DL 18
times.'~ Maylie, and maybe not.
·
The Mets starters could be solid:
Dwight Gooden, &amp;ret Sabcrhagen
(due for a good "odd" year) and
southpaws Sid F~mandez (14-11,
2. 73}, Pete Schourek, ,and Frank
Tanana. Jeff Innis. Anll,lony Young
and Mike Mad411ll
the 'long
arm.
men. Closer John· Franco (6·2,
Wil Cordero takes over at SS, · -1.64, IS saves in .33 IP) is coming
Greg Colbrunn at .J B and Sean off surgery. ''' · ·

The pressure WliS on Campbell
Memorial in the Division mgame.
Wilb Girard having already w!lll a
tiUe, there were bragging rights at
stake.
. "We didn't want to go back 10
Youngstown with diem winning
and us losing," said Kevin Dill,
who scored 23 points for the Red
Devils (21-6).
'
.
Campbell never had won a dis·
trict title, let alone a state champi·
onship.
· Against fourth-ranked Belpre
· (25·2). they cemented the victory
while trying to kill time off the
clock when Ryan Merrell J)OJlJJCd
in a ~-point shol with 2:t41eft
that inacased the lead to 42-36.
Erin Hall had 12 points for Bel·
pre.
In the Division IV title game,
Fon Loramie won its third state
championship by geuing past New
Riegel's pressure and grabbing
every loose Jebound.
· Jeff Brandewie and Ed Maurer
each scortd 19 points ,as Fort
Loiamie (24-4) added to its titles in
1977 and 1987.
,
Brandcwie l1ad scored 'just four
points in a 43-42 defeat .of top·
ranked Lima Central Catholic •n
the si:mifinals. li"e didn't have.any
choice but to improve his !Hoduc·
tion after a pre,ame tafk .with
coach Dan Hegem1er.
"He told me if I didn't score,
I'd be walking 'home,'' Brandcwie
said.
•
Eric Flcckenslein did everything
for the Redskins, with 13 points,
eiglit rebounds, seven assists and
four steals.
.
New Rie~el (23~) was led.by
Ryan Clouse 1 14 pomts.
Lcadin~ 43-.42 late, the Red·
·skins put •the game out of reach
with an 8-0 ruJ!.
'•

a

Sports .deadlines posted
The Gallipolis Daily Trib1111e.
The [)ally ' Selltilltl, the Poi111
PleiiStUil Register and the S,IUidoyTimes-SellliMI value the contribu·
tiona their readers make to the
• sports secti0111 of theac papers, and
" lbcse contributions will continue to
be bLiJhed.
, frowever, certain deadliiiCI for
submissions will be pbservcd. 'J'he
deadline for pbotoa and related ani·
cles.for MsJred)all and other wiRier
sporta is the last day of the NBA
Finals.
Liltewise, the deadline for subminions of local baseball· and
softball-related piiOIDI and related
articles, from T·ball to the' IIJIIion,
as well as other spring and summer
S]l0111, II the day ol tho !Ia IIDI'e
ol the World Setlel. ' 'I1Ie 4etiiJiine
f:Lnbotollllll relalcil aniciea for
~
and ocbCir fall aporll is the
Saturday before the Slqa Bowl.
1'blle clew'IIMJ bave beallnsli·
tulcd to pve ...-. plenty o( time
to get their pho!IM back lrom the
photoaraphy lllldlo ·ol cbolce and
to give the idllhe oppCituDity to
putiliJb thoae 1poru pbocos and
8niclel dtatDI·die II(IJiiqxlllc ton for that aport.
'
'l

·•

to be telecast iive by CBS at I
p.m .• EST, from the Mid-South
Coliseum in Memphis, Tenn.
This
· contes!
·
h'is hbilledh as Ithe most
prest1g1ous •a -sc oo sports
event of the year. It offers basketball fans throughout the country a
chan~c to ~ee !he mos! highly
recruued sen1ora m the nauon.
Named to the East squad for '93
were such ¥OURg stars as 6-foot·ll
Rasheed Wallace of Philadelphia
c
•
S
f
· '
u-7 Jerry tackhouse.c_&gt; _Oak Hill,
Va., and 6-4 Randy LIVIngston of
~ew Orl~an~ .. The West team
mcludes tw~ h~·school hetoes

H:r:::.

~~~nd~~
Ford
For the·athletcs of courac this
can be an unwnani step.
'

are

I

'

5

Chris Sabo is at ihird.
Cincinnati's outfield has
Miu:hell in left, ex- Yantce Roberto
Kelly (81 runs) in ~ter and Reg·
gie Sanders in righL
Holllloll Astros
A .change in ownership qeated
deep pockets to pay for two new
Astro stlirters: Doug Drabek (IS·
II, 2.77 for Pittsburgh) and Greg
Swindell (12·8, 2.70 for Cincin·
nati). Relivcr Doug Jones ( 11-8,
1.85, 36 saves) made the NL come·
back of the vcar.
Manager Art Howe's infield
features lij Jeff Ba2well (18 HRs.
96 RBJs. 87 runs), 211 Craig Biggio
(96runs, 38SBs).3BKenCarniniti
(,294) and roung 3B Andujar
Cedeno, who IS mistlkc prone~
Houston's key outfielders ' are
Steve Finley (.292, 44 SBs, 84
runs), Luis Gonzalez ind Eric
Anthony (19 HRs, 80 RB!s in 440
ABs).
·
San Francisco Giant&amp;
Rookie m!IJiager Dusty Baker
·can handle 1992 NL MVP Barry
Bonds (.311. 34 HRs, 103 RBI, 109
runs, 39 SBs). The ex,Pirare has a
seven-year $43.5 million contract.
Firs\ baseman Will Clark (.300, 16

HRs, 73 RBis) is the other 10p S.F.
hiUer.
'
.
For saarten, the Giants have the
NL ERA champion, Bill Swift (104, 2.08, 164 IP), a1png wilb Trevor
Wilsoa, John Burketi (13-9), Bud
Black and Jeff BranUey. Kirt Man·
waring is the caldler.
.
A13B, Malt Williams (20 HRs)
should boun.c c back after an off
year. ·
San Diego Pa.dres
Short of becoming· a Contender,
the Padres faCed ccooomic reality.
They lost hiJ!·/r.ccd SS Tony Fer·
nandcz and
er AU-Star CBenito Santiago. So manager Jil!i Riggleman'selublacksmorale.
Third baseman Gary Sheffield
(.330, 33 HRs, 100 RBis, 87 runs)
challenged for the NL Triple
Crown. First baseman Fred
McGriff (.286. 35 HRs, 104 RBls)
led the NL i'n dingers. OF Tony
Gwynn (.317. 77 runs) will bat
lendoff.
·
· S.D.'s key starters are Andy
Benes (13-14, 3.35) and Bruce
Hurst (14-9, 3.85). Frank Seminara
(9-4, 3.68) hPPCS to prove his junk
ball is for real. Mike Sc~ia, the
,.

finally gets his shot.
ex-Dodger, is the new cau:hcr.
"Whoever wrote the boot IIW
CF Darrin Jackson (17 HRs, 70
an expansion team had to lose 100
RBis) is a top-flight fly chaser.
games never met me, and I Lol Anpln Dadpn
L.A. has too many ifs, including read lbat book,., says Baylllr.
Top Rockies: IB Andres Gu·
an iron-handed inf~eld Even manager Tommy Lasorda says. "The raga and 3B Charlie Hayes (18
· Dodgers need to improve in three HRs. 66 RBis for the YanUm).
The outfield has Jerald Clark
areas: the bullpen. power and field·
(12 HRs, 58 RB!s'wilb San Oir«e)
ing." ·~~
Los Angeles picked up two new in LF, and either Danyl Boslon or
starting players: 3B Tim Wallach Alex Cole in CF, with Dante
and 2B Jody Reed. Ther also Bicbene in RF.
Ex-Cub Joe Girardi (210 in 270
added stopper Todd Worrel (2.11 ,
ABs)
will cau:h for l young staff.
641P for Si. Louis).
·
Rookie
David Nied (3.(), 1.17 in
Dariyl Strawberry, recovering
from back surgery. wants 30 fiRs 231;P for the Bmves; and he was oo
and 100 RBis. So does Eric Davis, thetr World Series roster) was
another former AU-Star outfielder picked to start the opener. After
who was also ailing. CF Brett But- that, who knows? Vet Jeff Pauelt
ler (.309. 86 runs, 41 SBs) can't do (9·1, 3.02 with Oakland) is the SCI
up man. Darren Holmes (4-4, 2.5S,
it alone. .
·
6
saves for Milwaukee) is the closEric Karros, (20 HRs, 88 RBis),
er.
the NL Rookie of the Year, is at
Final l99l llaDdiop: Atil!nta.
ftrSL
98-64
•.605; Cincinnati, 90-72,
The rotation has Ore! Hcrshiser
.556
.(8
GB); San Diego, 82-80.
(10-15, 3.67). Ramon Martinez.
.506
(16GB);
Houston, 81·81, .SOO
Tom Candiotti (11-15, 3.00) and
(17GB);
San
Francis!;O, 72·90,
Kevin Gross.
.444
(26GB);
~ Angeles. 63·99.
Colorado Rockies
Rookie manager Don Baylor .389 (35GB).
. -

;,

•'

During the winter, the Mets
stole SS Tony Feinandez (84 runs,
20 SBs) from San Diego. Eddie
Murray (93 RBls) is at l,B. Second·
year 2B Jeff Kent has some power.
Back at 3B, slugger Howard John·
son looks for a big comeback.
Mega-bucks RF Bobby Bonilla
(19 HRs, 70 RBis, 62 runs) must
do more.lnjury•prone Vince Coleman (229 ABs) is in LF. Rookie
Ryan Thompson is the CF. hope.
St. Lou .. Cardinals
With vet 55 Ozzie Smith (.295,
73 runs, 43 SBs) re-signed. manager Joe Torre thinks SL Louis has a
shol The rest of the infield feiuures
Gregg Jefferies (.285 for Kansas
City) at ftrSt, Geronimo Pena (.305
in 203 ABs) at second and come·
back candidate Todd Zcile at third.
A deep outfield roster is led by
Ray Lankford (.293, 20 HRs. 86
RB!s, 87 runs. 42 SBs), Bernard ·

Gilkey (.302), rookie Ozzie
· Randy Tomlin (14·9, 3.41) and RBis, 104 runs); newly arrived lJ's
Canseco' and Brian Jordan, knucldeballer Tim WakeflCkl (8·1. Milt Thompson (.293) and Pete
Nonetheless, St. Louis lacks real 2.15, 13 starts) head the rotation. Incaviglia; oft-injured CF _Lenny
run-Scoring lbreats.
The closer is Stan Belinda (who Dykstra (.301, 53 runs tn 345
Gold Glove catCher Tom Pag- couldn't get Atlanta's Francisco ABs), the team's MVP; and RF
. Wes Chamberlain.
nozzi will.handle a young piu:hing Cabrera out in the NLCS).
The rotation has lefties Terry
Cblcaao Cubs
staff. Key SPs are Bob T!lWksbury
Mrer losing OF Andre Dawson Mulholland lind Danny Jackson
(16·5, 2.16), Donovin Osborne
(11·9, 3.77), Rhea! Cormier and and Cy Young winner Greg Mad· and righties Curt SChilling' (14-11,
Omar Olivares. The closer is Lee dux to free agency, Chicago ll).a n- 2.3~). Tom Gmcnc llld Ben Rnera.
ager Jim Lefebvre has to be realis· MilCh "Wild Thing" Williams (29
Smith (3.12, 43 saves).
saves) is the c)oscr.
tic.
.
Pittsburgh l'lrates
Florida Marlins
Already
the
Cubbies
have
sufIf Jim Leyland can win a fourlb
M•nager
Rene , Laeh~mann
fered
a
setback,
with
2B
Ryne
stmight NL East title - wilbout I.F
wants
his
young
expansion ,team to
Barry Bonds, 2B Jose Lind and SP Sandberg (.304. 26 HRS, 87 RBis)
"play
the
game
hard." They haYC
Doug Dra~k - be is the manager · breaking his hand. H,e will miss
nothing
to
lose.
moSt of April. Shawon Dunston is
of the century. No way!
The Marlins aren't quire all DOCF Andy VanSlyke (.324, 14 recovering slowly from back
HRS. 89 RB!s. 103 runs) hlis a surgery, so Rey Sanchez will PPCR names. Former AU-Star C Benito
quick·bat and a Gold Glove. Jay at SS. Gold Glover Mark Grace San,tiago signed on. lack Arm·
Bell (87 runs) is aJ SS. Aging ex- (.307) is at ftrSt. Sreve Buechele is str()ng heads the roliltion. Bryan
·
Harvey is in die bullpen.
Brave Lonnie Smith takes Bonds' at third.
Candy
Maldonado
(20
HRs
for
The infield has. ex-Scibu Lions
spot. Rookie Carlos ~cia hopes
Toronto)
replaces
Dawson.
(Japan)
slugger Orestes Deslradc
to replace Lind.
Mike Morgan (16-8, 2.55) is the (41 HRs, 87 RB!s) at lB; B~ Bar·
new ace. Jose Guzman (16-11, 3.66 berie at 2B; retread Walt Weiss at
with· Texas) fills in for Maddux . SS; and Dave Magadan. (.283 wiJh
Closer Randy Myers had 38 saves the Mcts) at 3B.
.
'
'
The top outfielders arc Junior
for San Diego.
.indicated lbat many of the girls had
Pbiladelphia PbiUies
Felix (72 RBis for California),
played summer ball, but wilbout a
Manager Jim Fregosi of ailing Chuck Carr and Jeff Conine. Top
complete reserve schedule last Philadelehia is health conscious. drnft pick Nigel Wilson isn't ready
year, they lacked a lot of experi· "Since I ve been here, I have never yet.
ence and.playing time. ·
seen the team we expected td
Final 199l standinas: PittsDouthitt concluded, "Like I said have.''
burgh, 96-66, .59,3; Montreal, 87·
before, they're. young ... if you
Their best includes: C Darren 75, .537 (9 GB); St L.ouis, 83-19,
watch theni their first game and Daulton (27 HRs. 109 RBI$); IB .512 (13GB); Chicago, 78-84, .481
come back the last game,l'll guar• John Kruk (.323, 86 runs); 2B · (18 GB); New York, 72-90, .444
antee you're going to see an im· Mickey Morandini; SS Juan Bell; (24 GB); Philadelphia, 70-92, .432
provement They are hard workers 3B Dave Hollins (27 HRs, 93 (26GB).
alld we'll be able to stick with the
better teams. The league will be
tough. The coaching staff has the
confidence, if we can j~stle\ a litUe
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The 86 games during his eight-year
bit of it rub off on the girls."
with the Vikings. The 6Trying out for pitcher are Shelly allure of becoming the highest paid career
foot-3,
280-poundcr
has started '10
Hendrix, Jessica Kart. Came Mor- offensive lineman in the NFL led of Minnesota's last
73 gam~s.
rissey and Rebecca Evans. Catch· center Kirk Lowdermilk to say including 45 straighL
· .·
ers are Jessica Radford and Heather goodbye to the Minnesota Vikings
He
had
topped
Indianapolis'
and hello to the In~lis Colts.
Howard.
That, and reported maction on free agent list since the Colts
Vyin$ for infield spots are
waived 13-year veteran center Ray
Jaime Wilson, Penny Aeiker, Kart, the pans of the Phoenix~ Cardinals Donaldson on Feb. 18.
.Nicole Nelson, Morrissey and Hen- and the Cleveland Browns.
Despite posting a 9-7 recotd. die
Lowdermilk, a native of Salem,
dricks.
. .
Colts
ranked 24th in total offCIIIe
Rachel Hawley. Amy Redov~an Ohio, on Sunday signed with the (273.0 yards per game), 28th in
and Michelle Donovan, pushed by Colts for. a three-year deal worlb rushing (a franchise"record lqw
a hoSt of freshmen. are trying out more than $6 million, The lndi· 68.9) and 26th in scoring (216
anapolis Star and the Minneapolis
for outfield slots.
points). During a five-game wiil·
Star Tribune reported tod!ly.
The Colts consummau:d the deal ninl! streak that capped the year,
by flying Lowdermilk to Indi- Indianapolis genera~ed just six
anapolis on Sunday morning touchdowns. The Colts have yieldaboard owner Robert lrsay's per· ed 152 sacks over the last three
, sonal jet and hammering out details seasons, including 44 in 1992
The Colts also have expressed
in Palm Desert, Calif. "How far we of the conuact with Neil Comrich,
can ~o beyond that is to be seen..
Lowdermilk's agent, the lndi· interest in Phoenix guard Danny
• It isn't that we're out of the !U13polis newspaper reported, quOI· Villa lind Green Bay tackle Tootle
:
markeL We're in die markeL' Iiut ed unidentified sources in Min- Robbins.
righ 1 now. the market is just too nesola,
Lowdermilk had been targeted
high for the most part for us to do
Indianapolis Colts general man· by the Colts, Cleveland and
much good/' he said.
·
ager Jim lrsay was not available for Phoenix. However, sources told
The Bengals were 5·11 in 1992, comment on the reponed signing. · The Indianapolis Star that Lowder- '
their ftrSt season under coach Dave The official announcement of the milk grew impatient when only die
Shula, after going 3-13 the year deal was expected to come at a . Colts put a solid financial package
before under former coach Sam news conference this afternoon.
on the negotiating table.
'
Wyche. ·
"Phoenix
didn't
put'
any
numThe Colts· ability to land LowBrown ~d lbc progress of quar· dermilk, 29, marked the second bers on the table and Cleveland
· terback David Klingler is a key to time in three weeks that a free didn't put any numbers on the
how competitive the Bcngals will agent left the Vikings to become table," the Star quoted one ~
be this fall. Klingler, a rookie last the highest-paid offensive lineman as saying. "People were apparend)'
year, took the starting job from vet· in history. One week into the free. . waiting to see what the Colts ~
eran Boomer Esiason with five. agent signing period. right guard going to offer. You have to llllde!'
games remaining in the season. Brian Habib s1gned a three-year stand that Kirk elida 't want 10 drai
Esiason has been traded to the New deal with the Denver Broncos this process out. He wanted it ·
York Jets, leaving Klingler as the worlb more ihan $42 million.
resqlved."
undisputed starter.
The Habib contniCt was exceed·
Lowdermilk became available
ed by a three-year, $4.6 million when die NFL's liberalized free
Perennial AU·Pro offcnsiw: line- pact signed by guard Harry Gal· agency system kicked in Maldl l
man Anthony Munoz Is also gone, breath of Green B.ily.
and Minnesota chose to protec2
having retJrea after last season.
Lowdermilk, a third-round pick ' guard Randall McDaniel auf
Running back Harold Green and of Minnesota in 1985, has started defensive tackle Henry 'Jbcnu •
outside linebackers Alfred
Williams and James Francis join
Klingler· as key players, Brown
'
said.

Eastern ·softball·team set to start play . to~ay
'

•

'

'

Division I

OAKLAND ATHlJlll{[CS - Sip&gt;od
Mike Aldrete, oullicldcr, 10 1 minor-

als. That's what makes Ibis SO spe·

cial ...

;

Pari•

NL East flag available to any team but expansion ·M arlins

McDonald's all-star
basketball
game tabbed a~l ~~radle of pros'

state basketball finals

22 197 379

11 New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.

pJn.

••

75 281290
58 220 JOS

- scores
Saturday's

Detroit It Orlando, .7 :30p.m.
Miami 1t Chlrlotl.e, 7:30p.m.

fhoonia •t auuao. s p.tn.
S..ule ll Sltl AIMnio.,l :30p.m.
LA. Wen 1t L.A. Clippers, 10:30

•'

7i 303 301

Kentucky 106, Florida St. 81
Kentucky made sure there
would be nolbing similar to Christian Laettner's buzzer-beating
heroics from last year.
The Wildcats, who averaged 97
points in roaring through the
Southeast Regional, took an eight· ·
point halftime lead, then broke it
open with an 11-0 ·run in the sec·
ond half.
Jared Prickett scored 22 points
and grabbed 11 rebounds and
Ttavis Ford had 19 points, helping
offset a sub-par 12-point performance by AU-American Jamal
Mashbu01. Bob Sura led Florida
State(25-IO)with 17points.

Campbell Memorial ·gets past
Belpre; Fort Loramie also wins

SemJIWI-.
·

&amp;4 281 254

East Regional

Sac;mn.G\\0 1t Ne-t,. York, 7:30p.m.
Phila!ieJ~a

251 266
49 222 294

Sund1y'1 lllt.aame
At 1'llf MQdowtlndl
E•t Ruthtrford, NJ.
North Cuolitui7S, GnciMati 61 (01)

Tuesday's gamH

''

338 260
271 211
255 2SO

Smythe Dhialon
1-Vancauvcr ..... 39 ZJ 9 87 304 142

Wathinpxt ll Mllw•lliee.l:lO p.m.

Denver l l Ul&amp;h, 9 p.m.

j

~

Tamfl Bay ....... 22 49

Pul\llnd at Atlanla, 7:30p.m.

'I

42 24 10 94 2S4 209

42 T1 9 93
41 2S 10 92
:35 32 9 79
33 33 10 76

NCAA men's
tournament scores

Sammento 1t Bolton, 7:30p.m.

!Conwcky (3CI-3) ... Mlchipn (30-4),
30 minu~e~ aAw,.._&amp;a sam•
·

WLTPII.GFGA

8011.0n It H1nfrwd, ' :40 p.m.
Buffllo 1t Wuhin&amp;Wn. 7:40 p.m.
Phihdelphi• al N.Y. la:landc;;(. 7:40
pm.
0uaWIII PiwbJIJ,h, 7:40p.m.
Vancouw:r at St Louil,l:40p.m.
Winnipq ., c.Jvry. 9:40p.m.

BoMn u ... Wuhinpn 113

Noith ~- (3:1.4) w. """" (296),5:42p.oJL
.

Saturday's action .
Midwest Regloaal
Kansas 83, Indian 77
Like Cincinnati, Indiana was
foiled in its bid to return to the
Final Four for a second straight
year.
·
1
Kansas advanced ~y shooting 60
percent and going on a 10-0 run
midway through the second half to
go·up 58-50. Indiana (31-4) closed
to 76-73, but Adonis Jordan acorcd
on an end-to-end drive and Kansas
made 5 of 6 free throws in the final
51 seconds to clinch the victory.
The Jayba,wks placed five plliy·
ers in double·;figwes for die fourth
straight game..
·
Soutbeasl Reaional
•,

In Ohio boys' state basketball title gam~s,

Ohio H.S. boys'

Tuesday's games

_ . . 110, PIWadelpbb 100

'

297 257
314 263
206 326
1&amp;1 352

Tonlghl's games

Por\1lnd 121, ChulOl.. 114

I

:no m

San ]Qit at New Jency, 7:40p.m. .
lol AnseJa .1tDeuoit, 7:40p.m.

Sunday's scores

I

312 254

Tc::wc:wo 4, Calpry 0
Otielao 3, Uanford 0

Saturday's 5C'Ores

l)o:aOO 91'

s

91
94
93
1-4
49
22

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
a.-0Uca~ .........

Mldw•t Dhillon
San Anltlnia .."""'"-42
thah .......................40
DllnYCr ............... .,,.2!
MJnnci:CU ............ .. 16

25 6
:z..t 10
26 1
2110
47
62 4

7.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Teant
W L
x·HouMft ..............44 2j

x-Buffllo ..........
Hortf.... ............

46
42
43
37
22
9

Kansas remain '

· West Regional
Micbican 77, Temple 7l
Michigan was aided by a techrii·
cal call against Temple coach John
Chaney with I :491eft and the score
67-62. The Wolverines made five
free throws - one on the technical,
two on a foul call and two more on
another play as Michigan regained
possession - for a 72-621cad with
1:361efL
.
'
. Temple (20·13) controlled the
game in the ftrSt half l!lld had a 32·
27 halftime !Cad.
Jalen Rose led Michigan with
17 points, 13 in the second half,
and Jimmy King had 14 points.
Chris Webber.added 13 points and
12 rebounds.

The Dally Sentinel

Atlanta picked to win NL West for third consecutive season

Monday, March 29, 1993

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

graduaiioJI - ali·SVAC, Bn·Dis· piu:hers."
trict 13 anli all~state pitcher Lee
Doulbitt, assisted again by long
Gillilan; all-District 13 outfielder time sidekick Don Jackson and
Amy Well; all-District 13 honor- Paul Brannon, cites the great poten·
able-mention shortstop Tabby tial, talent and desire of her club as
Phillips; and talented plar.ers ~ key factors in the success of the
Golden (outfield) and Julie Riffle · · season: She feels the team will be
(oudleld/third base).
·
' competitive once they get a few
Eastern is looking for pi !Ching, · games under their belts.
but .seems to. have more than ade·
Eastern will play in the Trj·Val·
quate replacements·ln the other po- ley Conference for the first time
sitions. Douthitt said, "Lee th1s season. Eastern and Soulbern
· Eastern softball roster
(Gillilan) did all of our pilcllinalast were added to the I~ schedule
'Piiyer
Yr. year and we will also miss her baL this year and will be eligible for the
Carrie Morrissey .......................Sr.• Amy (Well) was one of the league crown, but the league will
MicheUe Donovan ....................Sr.• league's best outfielders and Tabby not be divided into divisions as it
Jaime Wilson ...........................Jr. • (Phillips) will be missed wilb her will be next season.
Douthitt. said, "Our freshlJien
·Penny Acikcr ............................Jr.• bat and talent at shortstop."
The Eagles look to play wilb the ' have renlly ·pushCd our upperclass·
·Rachel Hawley .........................Jr.*
Al!ly Rcdovian .........................So.• same enlbusiasm lhat won them men to work harder the first two
Shelly Hendricks ......................Jr.• sectional and district champi· weeks of practice. They have the
Jessica Radford ........................So.• onships last aeasoa. The team has desire and in order for these girls to
Jessica Karr ............................. ~ ...Fr. overall great speed. quickness on get off to a winning starL We need
Nicc)lc Nelson ............................. Fr. offense, has a lot of natural talent some leaders to step forward. I
·Brandi Rceves ..............................Fr. and they are decent hitters, accord- haven 'I seen lbc leadership yeL ..
Doulbitt indicated that she was
Heather HOward.......................... Fr. ing to the COil;h.
East~·s weaknesse~ are t!J•t
disappointed in having to go over
· Crystal Morris ............................. Fr.
Rebc:cca Evans ............................ Fr. the tean1 •s very YOWIII· tnchiding so many of the fundamentals. She
Lauren Young .............................Fr. the influx of eight frcslimen, which
Jennifer Mora.............................~Fr. Douthitt hopes IO'Iceep together for
Kriati'Wamer ..... ~ ....................... Fr. a big payoff tbrU·years from now.
Traci Lancc .................................Fr. Of the eight returnees, five are re~
Susan Hawk .............. :....:............ Fr. turning starters.
DQuthitt said, ~We open Mon·
Valerie McGinnis ....................... Jr. day (lonight) lii!d we have yet to
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
get outdoors or on ollr field wiJh all Cincinnati Bengals intend to
• -leucrwinner
the rain. We need to get in some
Pam field time and we need. to get more rebuild on a core of young players,
Coaching starr Doulbitt, head coach; Don Jackson confident, especially with our and won't go overboard trying to
si!!n free agents, gene-ral manager
and Paul Brannon. assistants .
Mite Brown says.
·
Brown said the free agent mar·
kct is too expensive to help his
small-market team much. He said
he is using the Dallas Cowboys as
a model for rebuilding.
·
The
Cowboys
used
trades
and
AKRON. Ohio (AP) - A mQther arrived after his first 300
waiver-wire
acquisitions
to
go
from
bowler of 31 years had the game of game and asked him lo throw
1·15 to a Super Bowl champi·
' '
his life lbis'scason- two, actually. another strike.
onship
in four years. ·
''She told me she missed it and
·He bowled two 300 games in arow
"If
~e
have a goal, it's to retain
· and now he's trying to llgure out asked if I could throw another one
our
own
players.
our key players."
how to live up to die expectations just for her."
·
·
Brown
said
in
an
interview last
that followed.
He did. And the strikes began
week
at
the
NFL
owners'
meeting
· "It was a great thrill, something again. Stewart ,iays by the fast
I will Re\!er forget," Dave S~art frame the silena at the lanes was
'mid. "But it has been tough to put . unnerving.
·· ·
·
Probe.~.
bchindme.lt'ssurehardtoJOpit:"
"It was so ',*ilmost too
Stewart, 38, of Alaonr l.ald the quieL It's a bow ·- . . lbcre's
(Continued from Page 4)
· tWo 'perfect pea gave him satis· supposed IIi bo
,'1 he' aid. '!! of the sport. suggests Jack Nick·
. faction. but llso left him dissatis· wasn't thinlrlna o li1olbei' 300. I laus.
· fied. ;
•
was just ~~ cfiiiOIIIer strike.
In the March issue of Golf mag: ''It lifted my spirits and rai~ed I looked army ,..,pc•j!hll f~n·. azipe. ·he polnta out that being calm
· my conlldence. It made me ·reallZC rOp'cd It to lhe ~ Afterward, )!n4:lleldy is nearly always tile key
thai I could run with the l!es't of everybody jlliiiPOd illcllrid tengrat· to winlilag oo the POA l'our.
them," Srewart said. "But it made ulated me."
•
·
The. Oo.lden Bea~ aa~s his
me think about why I couldn't get ·
Stewart received two watches "deliberate unel{CiteabDity '' kept
three in a row."
from the . American Bowling him 11om wi!Uiing more lana dur·
, Stewart was competing in the Congress and $300 from Fllir ing h1a early yean. He adds:
Starcher'• Billiards Monday Mom- Lanes.
"B~ntualiy, with increuing
ina Men's Trio Lcquc Dec. 18 at
Wilb his r110 feat behind him, 11181WilJ; I manaaellto find a way
Flilr Lanes. He atartcd hi1 four· Stewart has turooc1. to Other_
to loot IIUfficiendy haiiPY about
gJme block w.llh a 192 81111 a 2.58. ' He want1 an 800 1t1r1o1: his hlgll is 8ood Illata tllld lid lbotit W 011011
Then the lllrikea beiM coming. 792 twice. He 'NIDII a major -area Wilbaut lllowlna uy ~ iatemll
Twelve ltbocl llja', SIDWI!t hid the championship.
pub II' vllleya, wJtlch illlot cuw
sixlh 300JIIIIeofhls-., . ·· But moat of all he wants his . oflbc 1'111 ••'•"• Wilhout~It was even more spec•al father to pt tho proper crediL .
Ina rny emiJIIon•lll!lbWty.''
~ausc his father and tutor, Bo
"I idolized Jl!)' clld when I was
But nw1y POA winners Jemain
·Stewart, was in atlelldanee. The youna. He'• ~me what I am in cool, distant .00 Unemodonal.
elder Stewart was one o( Allrob'1 bowlillll M!l, wjby mom, what I
"lt'a 1 shame top tournament
beat bowler• in the 1950's and am In IICe.i He lllltlioen 10 lnstru· ~::U thll ldnd of level·
19601 and often pa!Jcd with bls rnealllln my lf!IDD," llld SteWIIt.
oliO miny fine play·
blothcr, the lite Olen Stewart. to "Tha only 1111n1 beacr lhan my 300 era," aaya Nicklaua, "beca11se
tllld _.. .-u.the Jl1l!!llll ftuld bo 10 1111 my clad do there's no quesdon It dalla the
· Stewart. a
iL"
·
·
pmc ftJt spectllors lllld televisloo
U.S.l'l:lltll ServlcO. llYI "'"Jill.....
Yiewul."
Pam Douthitt's Easaem softball
team is anxiously awaiting the·start
o( the 1993 campaign, which is to
begin today at Vinton County
weather permitting.
' ·. Eastern, who went to the region·
' al 18f year, returns eight lettermen
to the lineup, but !oat several tal·
ented players from last year to

Lowdermilk signs with Colts

Bengals looking to Cowb.oys
as model in rebuilding team

andS.LaPhonsoElliS(Denver).
Morgan Woouen, ·head basket· ·
ball coach at DeMalba High SChool
·lD Hyatts v111c, Md., IS
· chainn an of
the selection committee for the
McDonald's squad. John Wooden
, the legendary UCLA coach ~
an advisory panel.
'
''It has somethin~or every·
..
W ltell
t the
one, says . 00
a .
pro, gram that f1rst ~ecogruzea more .
than 1,000 top hlgh·SChool basket·
ball stars. "For the Jn.-lrv 22 .team
ben .. he
, .-:=-being{ -•~
~":a~=iruc... ~­
, Who stood out in last year's

.·s tewart thrilled, dissatisfied
:a fter bowling two 300 games

game?

One of those who helped the
West b~t the East 100-85 ~as
"Playing in die McDonald's All JI!SOR Kfdd. who ac~ 12_polDIS.
American High School Basketball Now he s a~ for Califorrua.
Game gave me an opportunity to
• Why can t pro golrs best play·
compete against the greatest play· ers be more colorful? •
ers in the United Stares,'' says JorIt has a~ to do Wllb the nature
dan. "I ~;Allst beginning to pur· (See .SPORTS PROBE on Page 5)'
sue bask
ps a ~ and was
questio~
'
';ltiliJ. That game ,....
beii!Od .
•
."
LEIIAUDJJI:E

Sports

~i " 1l :~o:i~jst~an ThePu:.ic:UtiliilesCommluionoiC'~olo
sc He wen(QII . Jiory ~.lb Nd · huselforpllllllchttrtngCaseNo.93-

Carolina and the NBA Chicago 02-EL·EFC, to. rt'liuw tho iuel
Bulls.
·
proc:urement prKticeUnd policies of
In fact, Jordan and Johnson ColumbusSoulhemFnwtrCompany,
were among five McDonald's the operatiOn of Its Electric Full ·
alumni who played-for the l992 Componen~iVo&lt;lrelalldlllllllws. This
U.S. Dream Team that won the hi•""·' 11 .......
Olympic gold medal. The others:
-·, ......ulld lo begin II lhl
Patrick Ewing, Chris Mullin and Cor,,mluJon olllcts at 10:00 a.m. on
Christian Laeuner.
t,qtch 30, t893.
·- ·
There have been 393 McDonald's All American hi&amp;h·school Alllntlllllld jllllltl will be gJYen 'In
stars since 1977. Nearly all played oppottunlty ID bl '-"·~
col~e basketball for major
lntorrnation may ~ o~J;n•Ur
ach
. A total of 81 are now play· conllt:lil)lllheConr-lltlru 1111 j 1111 1111
. ina in the NBA.
BIOid Street; Columbus, Ohio 43266. The top fivp playcra talcin in the 0573.
'
1992 NBA drift were McDonald's
All Americana at the hllh·IIChool
PUBLIC
UTILITIES
level: I. ShaqiJillc O'NOII (Orlan· THE
do); 2. Alonzo Moumln• (Char- COMMISSION OF OHIO ey:Gary.E.
lotte); 3. Christian Lacttncr (Min • . ~S..illlt,.
nesota}; 4. Jim Jackson (Dallas); '---------~.J

•oals.

•dolnl.._..'mlilbandJ¥..'!.....

,

'

I

" .We're going to be aloung
foolball team. And a. lot o &gt;~~tbal
we're going to 'do is build with
young playera. And when some of
thole come to the fcnliont. we're
golna to ary to tetain tholtl.u best
weCIIL''
Brown llid he doeln'l think the
Bengal• are falling bolllnd other
NFL te1m1 for not trYiJII viJorolll·
ly to ~Jill free qcnis. Ho aaid he
thinks NFL teaml do not und!:r·
stand the - fnle aaency sy11e111.
•• As they 1llllkntind It~· as
we widai •ld 11....-. ~ R likely 10 aee a Utde ~1111101'11 reatralnt."
he said.
•

Do you have rental propertyl~

•

618 E. Main Sl, Pomeroy, OH.
992.e874
Hount: I:CJO.I:OO • • Fr~c~~¥, s.tu.., Mil Mil

•

I

�•

•

By The Bend

~iiiMairci'hi29~·~199~3iiiii·iiii~~l-=~~~~=:r.=::;::;;P~om~er~o~y~Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, March 29, 1993
Page-6

. '

Pomeroy, Ohio on Milrch 31 ~
1
witt be
eold, ot not lloe u..n
:
•
•
'I
twenty lhOUIInd dolllll
1$20,000.00), lo lht hlghHI
~--:-~...;;.;;.:,:~:.:.:,::.:;~----1 bidder. The Ex110u"" of .,e
eelllte retain• lhe right to
reJect MY llild d IN•. Thte
raal ••tate ••• formerly
BEGINNING APRIL 1
epprllialld ot $30,000.011.
C..h on h•d on dey of
MONDAY NITE IS
ulo.
ORIENTAL BUFFET
The 1111 muel be
opprovlld by lhe Probalo
NIGHT
Court of Melgo County,
1
Ohio.
.
Rollle SI8Wart
59 Court St. • Gallipolis
Executor ollhe Eo- of
Ruby Stewlrt, do could
i/ Featuring your lavor~e
1
.141
,,..,
,2S, 30, 31c
Oriental Cuisine.

)

Donating organs can save lives
.,_. Aaa

•men: rd like to

fNj •Ill II) "Sddl OrieYiq ill Plio
Roble~, Clllf." die mccber oldie

l().JIII'-olcl boy who - decllred
lniD deld Iller 1111dcaiUiD.&amp; ..... y
for a blain IUIDOr. Tho family lbea

LEARNING TECHNIQUE • Pomeroy mtll
&amp;nde lllldeull ot Julie Hubbard visited the
Mt11• Couaty Emer1eacy Medical Service
olllcll 'B!mday to pt lllftle llrat·bud experl;'.:d,'oa re~eue wor'k. They practiced on the "
l•
cblld ucl iDIIDt "Aimles", leaned how to
tile Heimlich maneuver ou "ChocklDa Char· ·

lie", and practiced baDdall•l· Here Geae

Lyons, tralalnalaatructor, de•outntn tbe
Heimlich lor tile llllda.._ Hubbard eacll year
takelller lllldeall to tile EMS ollke • a part ot
her clamoom be•D uM. Wllo IIIey fiDiall tile
ualt, certlflcalll ol bule CPR uowledle are
a~ed

to tile IlludeD...

chole to dooM' bit orpna.
ld!oaab'mylife-overr30.1
had 111 inc~ li¥er dfnase IIIII
could DOl poaibly uviw: wilhoul
a new liver. While ll dealh'l doCII',
lbiDidn&amp; l would not liw: to nile
my b e1 11iful cbikhl, my doctor
!Old me a J0U111 penon had been
ldlled ill an 11110 accident and his
puents liad aped to doule his
· · 01p11 10 anyone who miaht need
. diem.
I Jeeelwcl-dle nuplant lmJiledi,
lldy, and die Ojliillitai' wu a IDCI1
IICC Ill My newli¥er will be 3 yan
old lioatllllllllh. My balbmillked
our suraeoia -If we mtaht know the
ideality oldie JIIRIIII who lllldechil
gift or life p011ible. We were told,
"Sorry' it is --die ndes ol this
........ II) .-Idle idenlity oldie
donor." '
So, dear Am, will you print my
leaer on behalf ollll of Ul who 1n
aliW: today IJrw:wlr 101111 Sllllltp
pw: Ul a aecond chance 11 life.
Thank you 1 thousand limes over. PITI'SBUROH READER
DEAR READER: Thank you fOI'
a uuly heartwannifls letter. You
might want to know that Ibm is a
way to COIIIIICI tbe donor family:
Write 1leaer 10 die rtmlly, IIIII like
it to lhe liolpilll llllllljllanl COOidi··

t

ICCOI)d of two extrandy py:cessflll

Ann

wllllllena;nd
your Ieaer II) lhe arpn JIOCiieDIIIIl
orpniulion IIlii handled yoor
lnlnlpllnl, IIIII it .will be fon•adccl.
111011ytii0UIIy, to lbe doaor famUy.
MIIae ue die lnl'tplall CQORJiDa.
tor tnow1 the elate and tYJie or
tnnlplanl involw:d. If tbe doilor
family expresllu an interest in
ron!l'1ina you. dieCIIJII'iA~ will
arrange it. (You can contact
~pien~ or lianspill\11 tbe same
way.) '
.
Here's another Ieaer from Beverly

Hilll:
Dear AD•: 0... 1011 received a
kidney tran~P,Iant in September
1990. We will be everlulinaly
smtefulto the donOi' flmily. We 1110
feel an enonROUI debt 10 all diOIC
olhen who in the lllkbt ol great pain,
before havina a chince 10 mourn,
ha~ made this immec&amp;ate 811111005
decision.
We need moie donor ~-~~ m
Every lime an·anide appean in tbe ,
JIIPII' it helps. - R.R.A.
DEAR R.R'.l\.: I agree. Read on: .
Dar AD:1'nli&amp; leaer from "Still
Grieving" reaDy 101 to me. My
husband has just experienced tbe

cotnea1 ll'llllplanla. He . hu gone ·
from bein&amp; leplly blind to having
almost perfect eyeaiA
I will never fOQiellbe look on his
face wben, a few daJ1 after lbe tint
pqeay, be loobd .-.llbe lOOiD
ill ... llllta)lllllll. Tbe fd !bing
he IIW when he. looked 0111 the
window - I pa SIMion. He tead
lhe 1111111 oldie Sl8lion aloud aild
exclaimed, "This is a lal tmlll I
lalew a ... llalion could be
so beauliful." - K.M.M.
DEAR K.M.M.: 1banb 10 you
IIIII lhe huadrcds who wrote 10 llhare
their stories of aratitude and
appreciation. Readen who now
~Mea•lll whala clmatecl 01p11 Cill
do for lhe life of a stranger, pleaae
aet a pen 01' jleneil. Here's wbci'e 10
write fOI' a donOi' l1!gislrallon c:an1. I
Clll ~ or IIOihina you Will do in
the .-t2400iln tbal willllllb you
feel 10 1004 about yoUnelf. Write
to: The Livin&amp; Blnk, P.O.IIol672S,
Houstm, Tws7726S. (A clollir 01'
two to help derray &lt;XISIS would be

Atwopanprogramfrom"The
Magic Garden" by Anthony S.
. lofercanante was presented by
zMayc MOI'I at the March meeting
i of.Chesttz Garden Club held at the
~ hoine of Clarice Krautter.
~ "The two parts included "The
Eachanted Forest" and "The 'Boun1 ~.of Nature Plants". MOI'I said that
•-the ancient heathe!'s had many rites,
to mate sure the sun would shine
,the trees would grow, and the crop~
I would thrive, as well as rites or
i~tions for perfection against
:e:vu spells and from lightening.
, · Many trees, she said. were
;.sacred including the ash, oak,
•mynh and mistletoe. In Scandi·
!navia, even after the advent of
~Christianity, a birch branch was
;used to protect the house against
'lhc evil eye, as well as lightening.
:Healing properties were attrib~
;to many plants including the birch,
'Oalt, senwherry, carrot, gensing,
"onion and WOI'm·wood (herb). The
'liean, which was one man's m~st

or

ancientfoods, wasalsoconsidued
!0 have magic ~penies. Traces of
tt were found m the Bronze age
cave sites of Switzerllind, according to Mora.
Maida Mora talked on "The
Language of Flow en" noting that
the pint carnation has been the
symb()l of Mother'~ Day sine~
1907 when Ann Jarv1s selected 11
after foundinll the observance.
Christian ttadiuon has it as one ol
the flowers associated with the Virgin Mary, she said.
The iris is believed to be the
originalfleur-di-Iis the flower symbot of French kings. Myrtle was
fashioned by the Romans into
crowns for victorious athletes, and
· Mora rePOrted that Greek colonists·
carried Mynte boughs to their new
country as a symbol of the end of
one life and the beginning of anoth·
er. In the language of flowers,
- cedar means strength; red clover,
industry; holly, foresight; daisy,
innocence; golden rod, encilurage·

...~

men~:anclbluesalvis,"lthinkof
you".
., .
.

and figh,t

caviti_e,:~,,,'llv.~.'~., :J'ff·~. a_ys

or any one of 30 other countries
around the globe. AYA students
have their own spending money for
personal expenses and full medical
insurance. Their host families are
asked to treat them just like their
own son or daughter.
Students arrive next August to
begin the school year with their
American classmates. They attend
the local public high school, carry a
full course load and join clubs,
sports and other activities. The
cross cultural learning is returned
two ways. A student comes to
understand how Americans really
live, work and think. The host family discovers how holidays are eel·

.......... VaeaiiOil
'111111

It's Cheesy, Beefy and Great
Sauces!

By DANIEL Q. H~NEY
AP Sdence Wrller .
• SAN DIEGO - An expenmen·
~ lal new test that counts tiny blood
:vessels may ~ive~tors their fii'SI
•tool to pred1ct whether proslate
] cancer is likely to spread and needs
(

1
I

...

to be treated.
The new test, which has not yet
been approved for rou1ine use, is
intended to help doctors make difflcult decisions when lhey come
across the disease- the most common and the second deadliest

CHANGES In BALANCES
For 'Fiacll Y- Enclng

Dn•mb• 11, 1912

~.)

DISTRICT FUMl
RECEIPTS:
Gille, Cenlrlbullona
lllld Berto ................... 11147
SllleoiProduct./ ·

Do yoKI!avt quest/oilS aboJiliU,

/nu 110 OM 10 1111J: 107 AM l..ai~Mrs'
booklet, •su qlld 1M Tee11-A,er."
is frtild; .IJIIIl 10 rM poW, Selfll II
~lf-lllldressed, to11g1 "JISI/Iu.r-iize

~ ........................ 792

Aanlllll ........................:.. ssn

AiOih• '
~···-··············.. 4894
TOTAL

tltwtlope IJIIIla chzd: or lftOI!eJ or-

tier for $3.65 (litis iltcllllia pollllge
aNJ htwlli1tg) to: T~IIS. c/o AM
l..aNius,l'.O. Box 11562. Cltic~Jko,
IU. 60611-0562. (/It CaNida, ulld

AECEIPTS.-............ 13,210
DISBURSEMENTS:
s::r,lllo .......,.................... 75

~'£:=-::~Ilion

$4.45.) .

'(Bchollrlhlpe) ............. 1112
rm.llllld'
. l:xjlli 1. . .., ............ ;••• 2411
Pr.............
ForAeu........................608
au.. .,........................... 14111
TOTAL DIBBURSE·
lENTS.-.............,.. 14,240
Tolll R101lpll Owrl lUnde!
Dleb. ..............;............... (1030)
Tolll ol Ale. and Other
So.- Ovwi(Un&lt;*)
Dlfb.MdOII•

-1. .

. u.-: ......:.................... (1030)
FUI)d Cool! lllllnce

JM. 1, 111112............... 10,8112

FUI)d Cool! 1111111""

0.0. 31, 111112 •.,.......... 11,862

SPECIAL FUND
RECEIPTS:

·

ar.nt.:

IIIII..
Govern-1.......,....• 26,222

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
=
TOTAL

AECEIPT8 ................. 21,222
....,..._................. 33,$'3

MFR FUND
RECEIPTS:
.
AI 011• Alv.,ue ...........400
Tolll Roctlpto ..................400
DISBURSEMENTS:
·
~ecle: Rlpllra ...... 5,200
ToW Dltob ..., ................ 5,200 ·
Tolll Alcelpll Dvtll
(Unw) Dtlb....., ...... (4,100) ·
Tolll of Ale. and Other
S o - Ovwi(Undor)
Diab• .,d Olh• ·
111...................... ;..... (4,.00)
Fund Clllh BIIMice
J... 1, 1M................. 6,800 ·
Fund Caah llolonce ·
.,... 31, 111112 .............. 2,000
ToTALS '
RECEIPTS:
GRANTS:
SleleGovornmenl ...............:......... 26,222
Gllla, Cenlrlblltiono, ·
'
lnd Boqueall .............. 11147
Ball of Producttl
U.larillo ....................... 7!12
Rente............:................ ssn

11111. 2...

CompenNtlon ............... ll15
ProcluclaiMe,.,lllo

RIIIDA'S
Clli)'IOIII &amp; AIJIUI'IOII

Ciot..............ln,
Alton I f St., s. .. ley ltrvke
CaU llro14o at ftJ-5770
20+ Yri. Exp. StwiM

HAUUNG: llmeatone,
Dirt, Gri!Yel and Coel

c1o... s.....,

LICENSEO oncf 110N0ED

36358 SR 7

9f2·U77

PH. 614-992·5591

•·••·f ••

....

Want Ads

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
end TRACKHOE WORK
. AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE:TRUCKING
FREE ES11MATES
6/81'11211 mo.

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

.~~~~~..1

(FREE

V.C. YOUNG
992-6215
~roy,

Ohio
9·1

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7

Cllesllire,

r----::::;;;::;::::;:;---,
CATTLE OWNERS
certiflad~meyman

LI.STOI!,
GUYU &amp; COAL
Rea10aallle
Raits
JOE ~SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCIIIG
614·742·2UI

• BISSELL &amp; lURlE
· COISTRUCnOI

.MAitiTEtiUCE

eGara..s

eComplete
Remotleli11
Step &amp; Com~tare

985-4473
667·6179

·-~~~
~II*'CIII

Rllldantlal &amp;

Ff'MEit,rMin

36970 BaR R•n Road
Pomeroy, Ollio

SIZED LIMESTONE

992. .3470
JeH~::~;bam

Glngerbr~d
PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
514 Norlh s-.IAMicldlopoo\ Ohio 45110

Opealag of tllel( ..4
l•falt/Toddler Protratn · · '.1

AiiiiOUICtl tilt

We will NOW serve children
.... ,
' ' ·J
6 months to.12 years of age.
·· -~
Call us for more Information
~~
· (614) 992-7328
311M mo.
'"

"

!Awn-Ing,
Fertilizing, W-ng, 111d
Seldlng.
Shrub and T- :rrimmlng

RR!'WOOD FOR SALE

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

UCIM!, OHIO
614-949·2202
61

949·2398 or
1·100·837·1460
Auto-RaUIIs
.

WoAiooltow
7112

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

SprintTime ..,.,.
,S peeial

RODGERS £.1

2-7·92-llo

'1 419 Stille Rt. 7

614 ·446·0736

EVERY THURSDAY

.

EAGLES

CLUB

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
5100 Payoff
Tltia ad good lor 1

Life • Medicare • C1ncer • Fire • Health ·
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA ; Mortgage ·.

FREE card.
lie. No. 0051-32 ·

3·11-93

BISSELL BUILDERSI INC •

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

Rocky R. Nupp, D.C.U. • Agent ,
lox 189
') "
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614} 843•5264

614·992·7643.

Public Notice

(No S1ndtir ,Calls!

2/12192/tfn

POOR BOY TIRES
SIRUT &amp; SHOCI
2 Fro1t Struts e L.ltor
• 4 •••• AIIJII!eftl
Prices Stert•nt et

'129.95 + Tu

FREE ESTIMATES

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698

'

NEW USliNG SR 325 n•r Danvll... 92+ acre farm with
mobile home wilh built on addition, fireplace, c8\1ar, bam,
garage, paved road. Nice laying land consisting 91 hayland..
pastura &amp; woods . $72,500

312511 mo.

.
NEW LISTING- Pomeroy· Approx. 31ots of vacanl grouf)d

SHIUI &amp; TREE

uoad as mobile home aile. All hook-ups available immedj.
all ponet~lonl $2,500
.
•
•

GOOD SERVICE
OUR GOAL .•

'

USED RAILROAD

lbollll bllotn•• bulking In POMEROY? 2 alory
unh mlin ' atraet entrance. large front ahowroom, large
upabjlro poaaible lplrtmOnl tpaoo, loll of ttorege,
ASKING $15,000 ·

room

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING
47269 St. Rt. 241• IY. aile Off II. 7
Tltru c•ester •• Rt. 241

PH. 614·915·3949

NOW OFFERING......
OIL AID LUll SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AID ROYAniiG
J/24/tl/ 1 •• ,.

3-8-113 1 mo. pd.

GUN
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

.BILLSLACI
992-2269

'

D·. A. BOSTON
EICAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

ei.IGHT HAULIN~
, •FIREWOOD .

TUPPERS PLAINS- Great localion lor a commuler Ill
ParkerSburg etc. well maintained hi,torical home wilh 3
bedrooma. 2 fireplacea, 1+ acre, fenced back yard? Oflaf1
some very unique laelul8sl ASKING $49,9011

•TRUCKING

CLUB
GUN SHOOTS

. ' IEMOVAL
.'
'

'

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

· . DIM and .
.

RuTLAND- Brick SI.·Nice affordable home with 2 bed-' .
roGfl)l, bllh, -gas hoat, 1 car aarage, golden space, fruit •
....W: pevad atraet, lol of 66 x 100, appliance&amp;. Alking
$1G,ji00
.
·

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

WEDO

SUPERIOR FI,JELS AND _
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
't
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Diesel Supreme...Try It, there Is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetsne
•low ash and 1ulfur
•Will not gel in winter time.
1993 ~RING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST
Special farm terme with peyrnenl4tlll*o a
and NO INTEREST or RNAHCE CHARGE.

ROOFING

Larry E. Miller
1-800-598 5654
81

AND EVERnHING UHDERIUTH

TROMM BUILDERS
'

,20 Years Exp.

742·2328
•

3131113tln

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound students.

UNION AVE.· Alol of house for a Hale tnoneyl 1 112 otory
homo 3-&lt;i lleclrOom!. c:arpot/WOOd ftooring, ftiaploce, large
Iron! pordl. ASKINu $11,1100

"regardlels of income
•regardless of gl'llld8s ·
"plus $20k guerenleed loan
'regardlesa dcredil

.P YOUfllUIED OF PAYING RENT coME IN AND
lEE OUR HOMI UII1ING BOARD •WI HAVI! ALL

'

"llelpirrg You To Reconr YoiiT l~tHstnfmt"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seetlng
·

3+93-1 mo•

3-16-93-tln

•HIIrlng Aide

Snodgrass Upholstery

HAULING

Is '
looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Dani:eon
May 29, 1993.
Mail addreiSIIs to
Meigs Alumni
Association, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohio 45760

949-2168

INC.

~

(614} 992·5449

,._.~• :=======~
·

· 614•919•2405

Real Eatlte Generel

'

.~
. .

URDWOOD
SHsoned

FlEE ESTUIATES

Quality
Stone Co•.

.

S.12-1Jol-

' •llewHOBies

992-3138

Chester, Oh.

985:3406

lr ··

HOWARD

ATTENTION

992-2259

LEATHEJt REPAIR
an~ BALL GLOVE REPAIR

lloll.•frl. IO:CIO-StOO
Sahlnley 10:00.6100

992•2417

311N mo.

3l'lJilll3l I

Exterior

work. .'

CUSTOM SADDLES,

si.

Middleport, Olllo

BASEMENTS I.
HOME SITES

Painting

YOUR
IIIIlS

: •Ear, Noll a TllrOII

LAND CLEARING
WATEB:E~EWER

Rt. 124
12 s.ssio•• $20 . . $40.00 a Load
16 Se11io11 $25
. Delivered.

Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY

NEW- REPAIR

s.c•

WIDE, ~ &amp;D.,

POMEIOY,OI.

CARPENTER SERVICE

Repllra ..........
Service ..................... 5,200
Service F - ...:............; 1,5511
lnlormotion Education
(Scholarahlpe) ............ U48,
Trovll111d
'
Expen-.................... 6,7116
Advertiotng .,d
Printing ............................ 58
Public Employ, Rellremant ................. 4,324

Shade River Saddle

IUY • SILL • TIADI

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

2

ROOFING

MULUI MUSSER .

JOIN

~-

LEGAL NOTICE
o,..llng Tr111o~
Notice
Ia hereby given 1 - - - - - - - - ,
-ln...........- ................ 21,750 that I elngll
otory hoUII I 'I
Tolll OU.. RNncing
logelhlr with opproxlmollly
Howard L Wrltesel
- - (lleu)........ 21,750 two acr• ol r11( .11lele
. Totll·ot Ale. and Oil•
located at 103 Union
.__Ovwi(Un&lt;*)
Terrace, Pomeroy, Ohio,
' Dltob. ..... other
owned by Ruby Stewart, flrll
tM.
···
-······
..
·······
..
··
4,044 Ruby Mo••m•n. end
Gutters
FundCaolllllliance
d11crlbecl In Volume 210,
olln.1, 1M.................
Page 7111, wll be lold oth
Downspouts
Func! Clllh llllonce
office of Crow •nd ·Crow.·
Gutter
Cleaning
0.0.11, 111112.............11,053 2nd ond Mulborry Ave." 1

IIISUUIICE

The deteCtion ot pro11a10 cancer
is inctcaSing 1?1' about 3 paeent I
year, IIIII in 1990 itiUIJI•ecl lung
cancer as the No. 1 mllipancy·ID
U.S. men. While the aainl of the
population at least partially
explains this, the emerJeDCC.ol better detection methods also is
thought to be.a mllior rcuon.
The cancer society estimates
that this kind of cancer will be
found in 16~.000 men this year,
tiDing 35;900.
.

BARN

SUMMER _

992·

YOUNG'S

OTHER FINANCING
BOUACEI (UMM):

a

wri.

PONDS

IULLDOZING

FOn VOll wallet .
with awant Rd

Year-end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES

..

---Names in ..the news--;._

THE 1001

12·5-tln

For Aeo.......................608
Othet """""'""'"""'" 5,327
!1111 Toll
I Dlobura.,.,te.. 70,368
..........., ............ ., ... 501 Totol Recalplo Over/
Colllr~: Rlpaln .......... 1011 (Un&lt;*) Dlab...., ....... (30,536)
S.vlce F -................. 1,5511 Operating Tr111oloro ,
lnlormallon Educlllon
· Kilft _Undarachullz, A.F.A.
......
--ln ......, ...................... 28,750
(SohoiMahlpe) ............... ae Tolllt Olh.- Fin-Ing
olfenng his hoof trimming NIVIceslo cattle owners.
Travwllllld &amp;pen...... 4j67
1s yea.. experience ... prol••oionatramor.
SoUrcao(Ua•)......... 28,750
All trimming is done with hand tools (not grinders)
Tolol ol Reo. .,d Olh•
~.
using a portable rollovorchu18.
SourC81
Dv•IIIJnder)
=~.,tO'Y"i"'''''"''"'58 Dlab.andOiher
Kirk will travol up to HI hours from Uttlo Hocking,
Aallt•i..nt ••••.~ •••..•..... 4,324
u
.............................
(1,7aa) 1 and roquiros a minimum o11s h&amp;ad ol calli• ~·r visit to
WorUn'ConlpenSpacial armngamants posslblo for4·H groups and clubs.
C..h Balance
.-n ............................. l15 Fund
·Coli fer •• appelat•lll
Jan. 1,111112 ..............24,701 '
Othlr----·--·~······· 3,836 Fund C..h Balance
TOTAL DIIIIIUI8E·
Dec. 31, 111112 ......,..... 22,1115
p~ea 11 t 10~ . ., . .1, &amp; plo011 ........
MENTS .,.. _ ............. 50,1128 (3) 211, 11c
Tolll Alcllple CN•I
(Undar) Dltob.........:.(24,706)

8---

RIC IICAVAnl&amp;

&amp; TAX SERVICE l'-..,.__..;3~-4-11.;.;3-~1 ~1l::::===~~ ·~
Quarterly and ·

Public Notice

MEIGS COUNTY BOIL AND
WATER CQNIERVATION
. DISTRICT STATEMENT OF
RECEIPTS,
.
DISBURSEMENTS AND

r_.esearch,e_rs ..

--

en 3;~ 1n.,.

Melge County Probote
Court, c... No. znce,
Linde L. Sohug, 1041
go._h* w.,, W•lilrlllll,
Ohio 43(111, wM llpflOinlld
Executrix ol the •lilt. ol
Nor• M8l C.rroll, dJCIIttd,
lot. of 321011 Hlgl., Rolld,
llddloport, Ohio 45780.
AobertE.Buok,
Probele Judge
L.tna K. Neullroad, Ct.k
(3) H; (4) 5, 12, 311:

b11 Road OH

\New
test reved1s whether
:
iprostate cancer likely to spread
~

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT ~~,;w,.;.,.;:;w;;;;;;;;;;;o:~:;

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING

. · P~tbllc Notice

-·---~----- ---------

-

.

PubliC Notice

ALL DINNER BUFFETS
6:00,8:30 P.M.

rAYA coordinator seeks host families
;:;:shirley Coleman, Local Coordi·
~r for the Academic Year in
l'i.liaeric!l program of ~he A_IFS
i:!eJmdaUon, has begun mtemew~ area families inlei'Cited in host;w 111 international student on the
~A program during 'the 1993·94
(alhoot. year.
,;..";.COleman has the applications of
,_9!aal boys and girls who would
\Jilie to live in this pan of Ohio next
JAr. AYA students are between
:liM ages of 15 I!Dd 18, have solid
t.aQdcmic records, at least three
~~of EnjtliSh and the maturity
and flexibU1ty required for a year
abroad A family can select a stul ~l from Germany, Spain, Brazil,

Want Ads

TUESDAY NITE IS
FRENCH BUFFET NITE

By·DEB RIECHMA.NN
to fOI'm lhiJ.IIilniiM tbal makes up Association Health Foundation, lhe
Associated Press Writer
teeth and tole. !ll!e.chemical com- National Institutes of HeaiO.and
GAITHERSBURG, Md.
pound triggers chC natulal reminer· the National Instiblte of Standards
Four researchers at one of the alization proceas already taking and Technology, according to
nat!on's top dental ~h labora· place~ !he ~y. 1KI said.
Frederick C. Eichmiller, associate
The g11denu's creed was rcc:it· tories 1n busy chomptng on wads
Cavmes In tanoid when .bacte- director .or the denial research ccned in unison to open tbe meeting. of grape-flavored bubble guin, blit ria in. tbe mouth digest' sugar and tcr at NIST.
Devotions, given by Pat Holter, they're not abit worried about cav. produce acid, which diSIOlves tooth
included ''The Difference- Winnm ities.
enamel. Under nonnal conditions,
Fox said h.e hoped the gum
an~ Losers", "T.he Miracle of .
Not only is the experimental there is eilough calcium phosphate would be on store shelves next
Praise" and "If I Live to be a Hun- gum sugar-free, it corilllins a new in saliva to repair lhe damaae. The year, .but Tung said .he didn't think
dred". For roll ,call faV!Irite garde_n . patented compound to remincralize trouble is that many pCc)ple con- consumers would be able to buy it
boots were s'!!~tayed and their their teeth_. The pm helpl repair sume more sugar and generate until 1996.
·
merits discu
. Those included enamel before cavities can cause more acid than the saliva can fight,
David Pashley, professor of onl
were "A to Z Gardening", Perenni· IDOih decay; it also lllllr.cS teeth less Tun~ said.
· .
·
biology at the Univcnity of GcOtat Culture", Field Guide- Wild sensiliw: to liot p cold. · ·
-" • ·So we say 'Let's 'live saliva a · gia, said if Tung's process ·could·
American Flowas" IIIII tbe map"This is the fd major scicnlif- hand.' We'll help, the saliva to temporarily repair teeth. it also
zine "Flowers and Gardens" all ic and technological breakthrough repair the tooth, ' be said. But could help pauents through oral
offered a wcaltll of infcxmalion. · in tbe toothpaste induSII}' since the Tung aildcd, "ll'stoo optimislic. to surgery that leaves teeth painfully
introduction of fluonde in the th'1nt that it can repair big cavi· sensilive to hoi and cold.
The next meeting will be April7 19&lt;i0s," said dentist Steven R. Fox, ties."
"We'll have to do clinical trials
at the.home or Maurita Miller.
who heads Enamelon Inc., a New
Resealdlers have lried for more to see how it really works in
Mrs. Krauucr· served a dessert Yorlt company with the exclusive than 30·ycaD to put calcium phos- patients,'' Pashley said. ''·The
coune. The door,.;,,. was award- license to manufacture the gum_ phate in gum. and toothpaste, but human labontory IS mu~h m,ore
ed to MacU
with the patented mineralization they had a tough lime gelling it to
Iicaled. It toog promising."
process.
.
dissolve. Tung, who has been ~inical trials are being devel·
The process was invented by working on the~ fOI' about oped at the Univcnity of WuhingMina S. Tung, a chemist wl!o seven yean. found acalc:ium.phcn- ton at Seattle and·University of
worts in the Paffenbalga- Rescan:h phate material tllat can dissolve Maryland.
Cen!er
at lhe National Institute of quicltly and be dispened'into the
EnameiOii will submit data from
ebrated in the student's homeland, Stilndards
and
Technology
in
teeth.
these or other clinical trials to the
learn a few phrases of his language GaithelsbQrg.
Ten yellS or ~h on the lat· l) .S. Food and Drug AdministnTung's process includes a chcm· est development was backed by tion in an effort to get the comand experiences a new way of ical compound called amorphous $1.5 million in grants and support pound approved for gum and other
looking at things they have lc;mg calcium phosphate that ccyslallizes funds from the American Dental prodllets.
taken for granted. Families that
.
.
decide to host now are· invited to
~boose the student they would like
to welcome. Letters can be
exchan$ed immediately and the
friendship begins. ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Four Oscar nomination ibis xear, but she ftssionals, journalists, pubiiclsts,
days in the ho!Pilal ~ 't stop leg- was a doUble "winner ' at tbe 13th Wil1011's friends and "other people
Inte~ested families should call
endary ac;tor 1unmy Stewm:t from BMuaJ Razzie .\\ftl'dl, the 0Scan who have heard about tbe foundaShirley Coleman in Rudand at 614- making it to the 11th Annual spoof that salineuhe worat in tion, .. he said.
'
742-2125 or Regional Director, Jimmy Stewart Relay Marathon at movie-makina .ifitb Bronx cheer.
Lynne David at the AYA national Griffith Park.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) s~. Tom Selleck
office in Connecticut at 1-800.322- • "I haven't missed a marathon andSf:s"r:F
Ie Getty also were rcc:og- Ridge Bond, the Broadway ~~ttor
4678.
yet and I'll continue to stsrt the nized during the Golden Raspberry wJ!o helped mate "Oidahoma" lhe
race as long as I can," Stewart told Foundation ]iresentations Sunday at state song, is wning up his vocal
about 25,000 spectators and 500 the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, chon!$ to help celebrate the song's
, .
runnen Sunday. Stewart, 84, was the site of the first Academy 50th amiivenary.
'
hospilalized less than two weeks Awards show 6S yean ago.
Bond has suii• the title ~,008
The Golden Raspberry Award from "Oidahomalf, between
ago wilb an imgullr hcartbcaL He
was given medication to COIIIIOI the winners were determined by mOI'I and 3,000 times. He was the
condition and now: is doing fine, than 350 movie afiCionados f~ longest-running Curly in the
his spokesman, John SttaiiSS.
play, performing from
malignancy among American men. saidFor
26::So::M'~~
Wont Broadway
35
yean,
SteWart
pmuayed
19%to.1954.
'
'
Prostate cancer grows slowly, slow·speaking, honest heroes in actresS for hCi roles in two li!O)Iics, .
sing
'it
at
least
one more
He'll
and many men who have it wUI die films including "Mr. Smith Goes "Shining T-hrough" and. '.'A
time
Tuesday
at
a
luncheon
cele·
of something else before the cancer to Washington," "It's a Wonderful S!J:anger Am'oag Us." "Shining.
bratinl
tbe
relear
of
a
commemocvcrbecomesaproblem.
Life" and "The Man Who Knew Through" director David Seltzer rative stamp on the play's 50th
got the wont director nod.
Too Much."
annivenary, which is Wednesday.
When doctors find it, they can·
Stallone was .voted worst actor
1be marathon raises money for
not always be censin who should the Child Study Center at St. for his role in "Stqpl Or My Mom
be treated IJgressively with John's Hospilal.
Will Shooll" allil his co-star,
DORIN&amp; CHILDS
surgery and rad1ation, and who can
"GOlden Qiils" 1111' Miu' GCUy;
be left alone.
·
LOS ANGELES (AP) ;:;te41,~;!~1r1t s~pportina
Melanie Griffith' didn't iot an
Dr. Michael K. Drawer, who
'
SeQect11~ ''Christopher
developed the new test with colColum-~~~M:overy" 1101
111
St~ , ••..,,
leagues at the Seattle Vetcnns
~im se~ i!IW09' IUpporUng
Administration Medical Center,
IIDEPEIDEIT
outlined its use at a meeting Sun~~~.,~~each
day of the American Cancer Soci· year by 1ohn Wilson, 1 Loe ~
SERVING
ety.
les-IRI
fOt !IIOvic advertiS·
MIIISCOUm
ing tnilen IIIII TV commelclals.
VOIOR include rum industry pro"It dramatically increases our
'liCE 1161
ability;to predict whether 1 blmOI' is
aggressive or not," Bnwer said.

The clubs hint for March tS to
check bird houses' for damage and
clean diem well before spring tenants arrive. ·

~: ~: Pe!'b.~e

· BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4 30 P. M DAV B'E
· FORE
PUBLICATION ,

AT OSCAR S

1 aye Mora presents the March
!Chester Garden Club program_ Mineral gum could help repair teeth

.I

Public Notice

B l LLETI:\ BO. \ RD

Page 7 ·

The Dally SenUnel

IHAPEB, SIZES I PRICES•..IIOIIETHINO IS BOUND .
TO IUITI! YOUR NEEDII
WE NEEO USTIIIOSI

To collect your echolenhlp money
caiiii14-985-3S68
Open Mon.-Fri. 10.7 or S.l10-4

Medleare 4 V!IWA Atllpme'llla Aeeepled

Suite 112 leU., lrln, Pt. Pl•••••t, ·

VIII • Mitior Cord

"

.

Itt-

.... •

•

.. '
"•

.......

�•

•
PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

'Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

51

Monday, March 29, 1993

Monc;tay, March 21, 1913

HOuseho!d
Goods

The Daily

Ohio

-ALLEYOOP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wr!pt

llsA'etd
hllkt ""'. . .• · ' 112
olio- lid. Pl. PI '"1,

1TrM

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

PHILLIP
ALDER

Hoe

=

AUCmOII

wn-o.
'

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'

'.EEKANDMEEK

.

lhe Federal Fair HOuolng Act

",HI11 :·•:p pli i"·

11R TNIIw._.!'.! !)ounlr):
. , -

lWlter.
l o .111
- ....
.........
~·"*

&amp; Ll'.r''tock

ol1988 whldl makeollltgal
to adver'll$8.1ln'/ preference,

&amp;1

lmlallon 0&lt; &lt;lscrlmlnallon

410 """" D!ronr "4 ~

nal~l

orlgin, or any l...nllon lo

• ,..... ,...._.,, bna

make any ..m pret•rance,

lmliiiOn or dloer1mlnallon."

I'll-

a

~~

2 lrJ oomo, Prortldr
On Coni MUI 1101[11,
Ott Rt. :11211; No .......llalorenie.
DotoooR lloljii!Nd, IM44H1122..

Real E;,tate

31 Homes tor Sale
1111 lq. Fl., "' .... lol, 21CI
walla, 2 complela bllho, dining

Lost&amp; Found

6

LOST llrgo bllcl&lt; long halnd
ca~ __..,. rod oollor I
tog. ~ ...........
Fol ..tow Ad, Camp Conloy,
REWARD, 304-QS.6350.
LOST vlolnMy ol aath B~ I
Jacbon Ave. Bllclt Scol11111
malo

Tlfllor, 1100. REWARD,

. 51110.

:lOW~

Yard Sale

7

room, living room, 3bdrm., walk·
In - · lully aorpotocl, 2 por·
em., electric hNt, At;, etove,
..trtaerator, llereo uuirwd, Jo4Qrrie
Niil'fllonk, Alcina, OH. 1-92210.

poy ....... -

......w·

TRE~

Prtvocy ..._., Tall _ , 1·

-..a.mt.

..e.z..,I........

44

for Rent
Sl,

__
,._.-.
......... .- - .
-----.,wv.-

wo.--.~-~.
Mlolngii,ICIO,
.,.,....._,

vans 1o 4WD'I
&amp;.~~"'""·'

I

A..,_n
.-.

....... a •••nc
·--Cor--Von.-

-------··
114 4414101, ~

Ona 711 ool - " " " ' oil .._

-

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•

ConiJIIGril

5xo

7 II po111, U.IO uch,
304.f7UM
.

11oft. 1Wo Ill ~
both .,.C:,IIIJIW ·a

11oft.
drpr. ~""""'"' ....

I F....., orlllll( IICollonl oond~
lion; 4 """ - . . . dlllwanl
. . . . good oorulblon; 114-lU:1010.
3 Boclroomo Slllh Lavol, Son·
d - Drlv!1 Flnfohod FA, 2 112
a.th•, ·n•
Heal
Pump,

'1111. HP.
Ev-MIIor. -..nD:

1NI -

Mllolb=,• l14o
II
~-----·
-wr. lloolrlo
uto.-

Malnlonance Froal $81,100 In·
eluding AppllanCH, Otolo44f.215t.

-

5 Roam Homo, liilh, UtiiiiY

21111111 All., I I'.IL

Clr Unan.ched O.rage, WIW

76

Plont, River Valloy High School,
$M,SOO. 014-307•1114,

Auto Parts &amp;

Acceaorll•

In
ttw

All Vord 8aloo Uuot Bo Paid
Advance.: O.dllne: 1:00pm

dar befoni the ad I• to run,
Sunday edHioft.. 1:OOpm Friday,
Mondory
ICIHian
10:00....,.
Saturday.
Hugo go-ord Nl"" Ap~l 1,
2, J; Rf. ..:r. '110 milo from At. 7;
tiller, 1lr compreseor, toot., f\,lrnlture, colllcllbiH, much more.

a.
crooo..eow.
- - "U At-•
Chlluii
.IOO, 114-

.....
llonotJ. -·
BTU '!I!M,
. -11,000
........
lor ::'It "" -··

Rd., olrolflhl ICIOH trom LNd-

lng CrMI&lt; Rd. on Rt. 7 bypooo.

Largo vorloty ot -hold ond
mlec. h•m•, 1180 nice chlldrtn

and odul clolhlng. .

I

-•

....,~
Crill ....
Ill: .....
....,
111;

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

.....

.

lie
IUIIIIMc:•

10 ComparaiiYe

. Eut

Pus

Pass

Pass

Pass

All pass

Pass

..,

....

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SlllE!ITO

5€£1T!

,,

OUR LANGUAGE

AAE~VSTWO

~vI

---

~---..,.-.
_ _ _ 1711.,....
7, ..... Color:

Joft'rey McQuain
Use the adjective IMPENDENT
( "im-PEN-dent") to describe some·
thing that's about to happen: "We're
awaiting the impendent decision."
Depend on this spelling cloie: 1MPENDENT ~nds like DEPENDENT.
By

£Vat:{

~TOO!

camplrig .

I

Equlpnieflt

Ill _,. 1111011 J~:
llr, bllllouim, oallo,~~ "'! - . .

Carnpw, ,

C""""'

.

WHITE'IIIET&amp;L DI1IC1'0II8

79

-~-Awnut.
~··· CNo, ......

.• MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

camperaa
Motor Homes

'

Q. .In your misspelling poll, has
anyone voted lor "truely"? I keep
seeing it in print

'

A. I'll add your vote. Readers from
around the country. appalled by
today's spelling standards, have been
sending examples of spelling problems. A reader in Texas, .for example,
dislikes seeing "loose" for LOSE, and
a California speller dislikes "gutteral"
for GUTTURAL. There's still time to
vote for the misspelling of the year,
and in this poll every vote counts truly.

'I.'H4T Wll6 HE:
DOiNG-UPON
THE LADDER~

....

~~ 1 II II . . . . . twin

~.--.

0

CELEBRITY CIPHER
, . • bJ...,... PIOfll!li, ,... Md .,.......,

"""'In

Cltebtltr apn. c:rypl...,. ... or.lld troa quo'
IM:h

lhlclpMr...,. for lnOihlr. T..,"l c:M:

'YDOOGNODI

XJFN

BD

TF

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I

CODWJMPVMHX
DI W

PMHUF

•AVON" ALL AREioSIIharo your

Autoa tor S.Je

compony. 1-.12~-

5 Ladloo Who Would Uka To
Sol Avon CoM 114 441 1351.

0 L

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aVF

GaY D 0 D X G

I
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SUBTOE

0 RM0 B

___:

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. ~...;..,3-T-1;.:...;':__;'',_..j

I
I

• j, •

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I DE L
1--..1A;,;...;;1-..;;.,1""5
__...,6_, ~-

Coed to her' not so smart
roommate: "Have you put any. _ _ _ . _., thing aside lor a rainy day'!"
. - - - - -- --..;";_., The not so smart roommate
L E NAG
replies: "Oh sure, an ...----1"

IQ

i:

~...;.,,7;-;:.1..::.1.-'::....;,r-:;,'l'a-1

Complete rhe chuckle quoted
-1...
--'-'-..J-L-.J
__
J.
_
__J
by filling in the missing· words
l
you develop from step No. 3 below.

A

V

PRI Nr NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SOU~RES

-

. . .

7

-~~~,.

.

______________

·ABTRO -ORAPH
.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~ ~'lbur
.j'

.

~ 'Birthda.v

.• '

lltrdt30,11t3

one.
CANCER (June 21.July 221 Setting lofty
IJillocll'm for yoursalfiOday Ia an - incllniillon, t&gt;Ot don1 faN lnlo
!tap olfllr*·

!he

,_PI'"'-

;Rich

1can make you. Famoua7 No problem .
Quality day care 7 Lot me·get back to you ... •

scliAM-LETS ANSWERS

• ·••

Zephyr - Limbo - Humus • Basket • SOLES
·
The old gent goes to the shoe repair man . "I should
be a song writer," he tells the fellow.
shoes squeak
so badly that I have music in my SOL S."

"Ml

~...;..;.;,;....;....;.....___;;...._

ies, L.P.

Ft WOI1h . n :

__

'

•

t '

..

could fizzle out
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're sliM in a
ralller loclcy cycle, and you should gel yoor
fair share of breaks again Ieday. However, •
you gel involved wilh negalive Individuals,
nolhing much is IIIli 1c oome of ,_ opportunllies.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2&lt;t-Nov. 22) Be caoetul at
IIlia lime lllal you dOn'
)'OOfHff 10 ·
something where yoo're blinking more on
hope !han on r8illlly. ff )'00 . . ,, dislinguilh
bet 8811 the two,
be ~ ... Dilled.
SAGiTTAIIIUS (Nov. U.O.O. 211 Thin's a
chanca Ieday lhel yoo mi!tJI younMJII
to a clique In which. you mlghl not leo!
• er IM'l. Toying Ill win """" rMir aMI be a

eomrn"

)'OU"'"""

loll ......

CA NCDM fDic. 22.Jin. 11) I you Ire
rMidng any ll1ljor -Ifill in )'QUI hOrne or
. - . . II Ilia limo, be - - OlfiUl
!hey lrit 1111 llliooe you .., llv. will 0111r h
long Nul.
AQUAIIIUII.Ian. »Fell. 111 You mighl
IICic tideql• filth In your own ldlll ll1d
Mlualionlloday lnd rely on advlcl fnlm
[)ICIIIII wilD ~ nol be II wila II you n .
FIICD (M.. MIIGIIJIII
cnful

_llld.....,....
11101-· ...
your....,.._.

,.

ol

'

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MARCH 2

Be....,

- -·"!he

..

ANSWER

ing lhey ••• achieved juol becauae lhoy
hilYI
blan defined. ·
'
lho ~"~"' ahead could ma"' a lime or ~
LEO CJu1r ZW.ug. 22) You mighl hilYI an
bagin tio iQI. You m9rt-"""' olilring .
)'QUI loci&lt;
ind
lnd etq)lore 8iluiiiiOOI yoo 8lijiiMilo . . todily lhal will ol
knowlldQt
lboul
"""""'*'~~
you
111111911
would iWYII have deriCIIO probe proYIOUII)I.
yoo
undoN81oocl:
lfa
wiae
lo
lab
AIIID (lllrch 21·Aprll It) When Olhl"
imm•dialely in· order to become better
10 yoo lodly. ""' inlanl mighl
ktfonnod,
be lincilre, bu1 lhart II I pollit!lll1y """""
your awn
llq cqu!CI dl....top !hal oould miM Klrnpol· ~(Aug. 21 ••,. 221 " )'00 - . . , . today In tho management of
you . . _..
jOint
vtnturoloelly,
be
auro
your
counttr·
lllbll )or litem to deliver on what lhey'vo
....- I l l
'1'~ 1(.-wheriiOIQOkiOrrcmanot pM'I contrlliutlciM equal wtiM you hM to .
!NIIirnl.
arra11gamanl Ia 0111 ol._.., ft . ~not be
and you'l,l lind it. The Aslro -"Groph

-reus

"

~ UNSCRAMBlE FOR

J

Matchmaker instantly reveals wh ich signs
are romanlically pe!lecl for yoo. Mail S2 plus
along, 911ff-addreooed, stamped envelope lc •
Matchmaker, clo lllls """"P'"pe'· P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH .... 101 -3&lt;128.
TAURUS (April 20-MIY 20) An imponan1
endeavor in 'lttlich you're prasarrtty involved
might no1 Wofk oullo yoor satisfaction Ieday,
especially if you leave parts of it up to
chance. Monitor and control every step of
!he project.
GEMINI (May 21.J..,. 20) Daft bocane so
involved wi1h neW ao:quainlances Ieday lhal
you lai 10 keep in touch wiltl Old lriendl. Be
!he kind of pal who is conoiderate 1c 8Y8oy·

'

''

llrl OtM . . .
''T' n Poe 17

lloolroa. tclo..:O.

·''

XJFFAP . '

m
..":::clrr:::c:
='I
~-,..

..

CLUID .JG

Servtces

11.,. with ua. You"l love lha

avF

WOlD
lAM I

1Rl 1993 TV Data Tee

T1dllopotld i iOII

.......

M.

0

EDPa

____ ___

,;....-

11 , Help wanted

f..,.,...

0

A~60Wif~, ~ Tll~

; ; ;..... .-eon, Ohio- 78

8

7 tlpbarte~
811Rn

3 8-11111 4 Entllulilltlc
5 Sound Df

37 Obtain

Computers have been used 10 score
bridge events for some years. But oth·
er good software packages bave been
,o
arriving with the regularity of 70-de,
,.
Jl!J'--!."::-:.:~!.:-~·:,_J,::...__J [::::2:_L~~~~C:::.::::j
gree days in Nome. However, over tbe
L-.I:.....J~.:.....!I..--...J_ next three'days let's look at what is ar·
guably the best available.
Have you sometimes wished you
, PEt\.Nt)TS
had an assistant when it came to ana·
lyzing double-dummy problems (those
ALL TI-lE PRESSURE
1-!ERE, 'f0U1D B!=TTER
JUST DON'T
in which you know the positions of all
IS ON ME. BVT I
the cards)?
USE A BAT..
GET NERVOUS ..
CAN DO IT! I
If you have a penonal comruter,
help is now at hand in the form o Base
KNOW I CAN
Ill. Written by Fred Gitelman with
DO IT ...
some
belp from Sheri Winestock, it
'·l
costs
$199
plus postage and handling;
·'
call 800-387-5216.
Tbe program is very quick when
there are, orily a few cards left. For a
full 52-&lt;:anl deal, it may take many
hoilrs.
Base Ill also contains a dea.l genera·
tor and will analyze sliit combinations.
These calculations take into account
FR~.NK AND ERNEST
information known about the full deal.
There are some example deals, of
1F THf TAl' oN fN~GY fVI'~ Gors Tit~liGH,
which today's is one. North used
Gerber t"'ice and then took a shot at
THfY'/..t. HAVE TO
severi no-rtump rather than settle for
the safer sevm spades. The extr11 10
. SEND FilAN/C A
points can rna~ a buge difference in a
pair
event
'·
~fftiN{).
South bas two lines of play: cash the
spade ace, hoping the_qu\"'n is a singleton, or finesse immediately through
West As Base Ill will tell you, the
1-'1.9
'I'.., A,volf.,.5'
odds on the former are 26 percent and
~ 1111 " MIA. • .
on the latter 50 percent. So you should
take a first-round finesse in spades.
You know the old rhyme "Eight
ever, nine never.• Gitelman bas add·
:, BORN LOSER
eel. "10 once.•
.,_...,._ ANDTAAT, If« F~
Of~, lliEII£

twiP.M.

March 211, 30, 31, Bono Hollow

Employment

-k- =Ill

hHitalloll

II Encor-'

1 Flnt8h
2111wllan

"

73

.... - -" ...ror.ol tor llo.....
Iii I&gt;""" Dnoo, Corol, FuM Bh. Plllnl ..... 210'1 ,, I J 7

Carpeting CIA. ~ "FumBtl,
Garden Spac•. C~H To Gavin

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

DOWIII

l..J.:__:l__j:C:Ji..J

Room, 1 Car AHIChad Qarago, 2

Pomeroy,

'

II-:ITo11,1tW-. .

~luyl-lool

Apartment

1 boclroom ljll, 2DI ..._

o.r-r

A symphony
for four hands

"

,.

,.... -

"""' li'1 - 14a7l wlh
I
- wr•~r. ...... -lng,

ciiiiVeNd and
tor tii!PT
Clll tor .... lib
11121ooklor.

.......

..

72 TruckS for Sale

..........,......... Dllka: Oilier
Flild
equiP.IIIInL
........
,_
iiOGh1naty.
. .._., Ohio.
I'M _
_ ..

ONLY NI.B Hoovtr

-Wolllro=AIId -- . 8
0 - For WI
b 1llfoot.
And

--..;

·'

"'~:t'.i 1NO- MIOL"'t 1 Ton, 4 ,

... H - W I I h l
twa;
_
- ;_
2 Ailll _
4 Con - _

WlrJ

wordl
It AIYer"'

Opening lead: + Q

FannEqu~

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

based on race, c;olor, Nllglon,
MX familial status or

lit Vlltttge .

IDAt- - for

11oM
35 .. _oprlo
Ill to

Pass
Pass

47~ 48~1rlc

52.=1Dld1Y

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Well

45 lluntllltllld

115 ... -,CA 1141 Ctlt (a 10Mt)
118 NagiUYM ·

33=::-:, . .

+Jiot

42 Mobile tlomH
for Rent '

NI....,..

lor IIMir•t-

32 Staivt. .

.... K1 3
tA·K S
+A Kl

AM. . lePieuP .......

40 Flood
42 Short IWOI'd
44 Prolecllon

30 U.0. lllecH

SOUTH

All real es~ate a~~ h
this newspaper la subted lo

Of

:IV=

.QIOIS
• 87 5 2
+QI0 7 6 5

Allor I.

-Poet

:r."·

-..

~-140,1144nHIZ7

12 llorrl
13~
· II•

171118wa
11 Part In piiJ
21 T1rrlllar tree
22
hill,
25C..parta

EAST

':Ili.JW -:aro.....

81Kk . .,.2.

IOIIL ...., brian Go.,. Qolt.r

llaMa

prWceu

•• .2 .

l~f-M.GOS.

52 Sporting Goods

-

15~

NORTH
ut-11
+A.K15UZ

udbaardm.~,..nu.

··-··4 Conductor

14

~

............ CIUHI!!!M..l...-..

Cor?,,... ...

,.....

3t Dap1hld Of

PICi... PURIITUAI

h

..•-.•

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

•

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Page 16-lhe

0

B) s

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.

,.

..

Monday, March 29, 1993

OhiO

The secret may be gone for
good if ''actor'' wins Osc~u;s .

•

I,._ .........

RaHU, rigbt, a piano solo, "Soireggietto".
IJHI' 1 WeD, right, emceed the sbow and pre-

TALENT SHOW WU.INIDS- ..... ,..
Da\'ii, IK
._.~ ilt lk
Teea Talml._ 7 a _,. ae nz a c
r1
Library l'.... C
I§ 7 .............
llbrar!' ~..ury a
5k -a ""Kftft
Cl&gt;-ill&amp; Me"'. So
NI ' 7 . - a• aA I a
~
tars, Wloile doe aiR~ Ji1M!r •
- D ••
7

I

Nalbaa, Baloy playing "Van Halens Eruption"

.,. pitlW; Gretchen Blaine singing '.'Wbea l-ove
iS IUacF', AprD Cash SinJin~ "Daddy's Hand"
Amanda Musser s•ng10g ""Unchained
Mdody". J11C1glng the show were Laura G1Jihrie,
Tonli Payne, ud Bob Hoeflich.

••II

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0

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Community calendar
Die

appear twa dap • I e • ellllll
.andtbe ·~r lfl.,.e
7 t-.s
must be
-.dl ill..
e
to assare
C illille ai-

•ud•
Jlo....,..

-,

·c, illelllill bea[th rea-

Patty Calaway.

-.. 'lkJ loalc: llJPOinted David
~ ...... s.iill.t Brian

Kin
• - • - t e f ) ' trustees.1
-==-~afiiEW., r wiUbe held
T a ; a'l-.30 F-JB'· llll the Carkllla C
•

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Beulah McComas, 341
· Main Street, Middleport. Mrs .
Frank Regan will be the hostess.
WJliiNilSI)AY
Tbe book review, "A Year in
T'f'iltJI""r•FELS PE.AJNS - The • Saigon" by Katie KeUy will be preOil .
ToM tip lirustees will ~ted
Mrs. tve~ett Hay~. !.oil
il a iAJi =sihn· Wednesday . w
to te a ar east es a• 7 .._a allli:me of the clerk, uon.

'MONDAY
ROCK 'SPlUNGS - ltewiwl at
Rock 'Springs (gmtc4 't11eohn.tiia
Church willlbe 1111 iT hJ a
7 p.m. Rev. W'"H'Jdl y..,..lQigo
will be lthe goiiCit J 'a 'Dale
will be :special .P.,nt&amp; ..iprllj.
Rev. Keith Rlider iaoiile:i 6e Qll6lic.

Jfbe

z

eople in the news

0

r

REEDSVIU.E - E6:la u.id
Bretbren Cbwtib -..illlllue eri...
with Betsy 'a ad ~Narf a
and family Suadl!f- S; i4 - c
nightly at '7p.m.

I

Harlem for the first time.
· "Yeah, we uptown tonight!"
Prince yelled to the crowd, which
included R&lt;.p. Charles Rangel, a
Democrat who represents Harlem

7

POMEROY -De JJ&amp;ii.p C..
ty VeteranS :Sc:ni!iLceCnmn!o • •
will mecl ~:lt 7-.3Dpa..ia
the Veterans Suwice OIIIKic i1a
Pomeroy.
,
Rtm.AND-lt:cwiVJil a ? '
Freewill B~ 0 dk .... illllt
Stewart will be M 7 1 _. T-day, MaMn M u = •111' 7 _
day and Th:uu:day7 _. tid:
Weaver on~ 1_.2. P
Paul Taylodnrites i11e &amp; i f
I

k

,

•

,e

;&lt;,4'"'~~, ,

RlJ'ILAND - De R
GardenOubWilliiJD14ilsvj
ing Monday :at l':3D IP..IIL • Ilk
home of Mrs. Vir@ A!tips Jll!lcooo
Lima Road, IR•!D' t
1

.

+ii,
. .,
.

I

7

"'~'

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·

&amp;M.UDUNXIN

I'()MEROY -"De~Mb­
ic Boosters M'ill - . M+&lt;••IIIJ a
7:30 p;m..at ..........
""' .... ..m..ml
_ __

Celebrates birlhday
llatoiill P '•,GI(T1JllllCIS.Piains

:ruESDAY

IICIUtldlllj « I '
~ )lis; Eldll birth:
liiiJ' w.iil'a ;a p1111r ao dlc liome of his.

Mil-.

PORTLAND - '1k I ' m
TownShip Trusrecs
T-day at 7 p.m.atiOJciiDMJlllillhiilling.

i

'" liiJl'ID md Connie· Rankin,

......tao si'!IJiitiL
"'"
we

1l'r

andl other

li IM 11 • - sened.
AI
s
&amp;Ieffi and Maey
Jlhumliiwl1 Tlnis LyonS', Je&lt;emy
0 Baa;;;g l151i1Dtl:auze~ Mr.. and
116s. 'IOi.y laMs&gt;. Mr. andl Mrs. Lee
litO)' i'IJ'al', Mr. andJ Mils. Bria~&gt;
Filpr
••dftao MJ;_ and Mrs.
llbarlly ft)ar audl TJfen". Ke!Si and
I"

RACINE - '~'~~lee -.rill kalalo-

lit soup~ allbc Rwiine lliliilled Melbodistl'bmd!ali
1•
3 p.m. Soup, :sud~ Awn
and drinks win be aw.e J•a, Plllit
invited. AU .pcnM• IWiill~~~t*=
Joe Hill family..
7

_.Sa

1!'~8rlllpl.

POMEROY - The Cuklalm
Cemetery T:rusteei. RaJip'll Cxl.
Clarence :Story i8Dil W:~JK Bell..

P lioa:llllllultliolillamd bis birthliiiJ'af! • ewiii\Jtamilymemllli:lls.

Pub!lc Notice
.._.
·

Mn

s

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Jerry Wray
DirM&gt;tor qf Tran,..-tlon
Robert L ldll-,
State of Ohio
Attomey.-W..W
PLAINTIFF
No?ary Public
-VBLEGAL NOTICE FOR
Unknown OWner
PUBUCA'nON
DEFENDANTS UNKNOWN OWNER, ,
Caoo No.II3-CY.77
whoeo oclclreu Ia unlaiown
AFADAVIT
to tho Plaintiff will taka
STATE OF OHIO
notice lhotlt ha boeft ouod
COUNTY OF MEIGS 10 by tho Director of
Rebecca A. H~ward, · TronoiiOrlallon'of the State
being flrot duly oworn of Ohio, who hMinoUiut.d
depoaeo oncl uyo ui!Ot oh~ o proceeding In tho
Ia a duly appointed, Common Plo10 Court of
qualified and acting Molga County, Ohio, to
Aaalotant Attorney
opproprlota certain property
ollho State of Ohlo·lllallh doocrlbod horooltor lor
Plaintiff, Jerry Wroy, highway purpo-, nom.ty
Director of Tr.,.poi'IIIEion, tho mlklng, conolruc71on or
Stale of Ohio, oooko, by hlo lmprov..,~ta of:
.
Petition, 1o opproprlota lho Slota Roulo 7, Section
property dMcrlbect lhoroin 0.31, Meip County, Ohio
and 1o fix lhe voluo lhioroo~ · and 'to 1111 tho voluo of oold

G_..

l\':r~~~~~~;t:,.~~=
:.=oboT::...;::.:tl~
Ia unlcnown and -not wilh more opoclfloolly
ri7Md
reaoonoblo dlligonao bo
aacertalried: UNKNOWN
OWNER
The following actlona
were ..ken on ..,.,.., of lho
Plaintiff to aoaortaln tho
placl(o) of reoicloftae of lho
unknown Delonclont(o): A
thorough ooarch "of
courthou•• rocordo, tax
mapo from tho County
Recordor'o Office, County
Engin-·o mopo ond
diacuooione with ocljolning
property own.,. olllncllcato
that the ownor or thlo
oubJect parcollo unlln-n.
lila nocuoary thoroloro
toglvenoticooltheflllnaol
lhe Petition heroin by
Publication, occordonco
with Soctio.n 2703.14;
!~~A~~~..:1:!.
Rule
And further olfiontoollh
not

•Ad

-

· -· ..,_..,.,.,....

earningf to $0Q.. - -.. -..
._...;I IHadl yea;:.
"&gt;"The
eaniings tiniitdiiii'IJIRIIIil
1993 BJe:
1!19.1
Under ·l ie 65 - .$ 7.... • 6S69 - $10,200.
.

U93

Under JIIF.65 - :$74i8Q; •6S69 • S10,560
Afu:r you1elile.,... a.y 111ue
received pay.meats far-':,_
did t~ofore yo• _ _ . . nicg
Soc ial Seem"' ill:_ &amp;• lilw4yl

paymcai: will -:diu,_.
Social Security • £, iii' "K . . , . .

thole

mwiims iilllllm!•nsiiR"''t,.famugri4 P 'W • paple:IU3~ iocome

¢''0 '

lil!llllll a!IJ- mps; (crops bar·
m ..U iii one. )!e&amp;r but
!III!UiilauiJh.,•llliJliiDi:s paidto
3

"

l!lm'65 )a~SIIIll

•
Sar:iilll SCcurityl bendliiciiatJ all_,_-;:!Je.dy earn,__;a

iilp.. •• P 4 s - payments,
"' Hille•• - a liiJJi"I;,JW must
ICJlll*l , _ . calli&amp;&amp;:s: to Social
s.,.,iiJ.JI4.."'+ Jlllfdo. con111tt • _. d • JIIUI diiJI&amp; your
•
M' 7 a soerill payment
Dr._.-, - wili lid alUIIt the
••• • ~ • . . , - • pan of
JG~Rilllli
" i d le,_-.
..
-.a1Scdll5e •Wy• 6cc ll
1-IIIIHD-1211 '"uirss days
1 aa. _. 7 ~ liJ conSucial Seclllity
. .&amp;r Y•-.r-.... for the
' •
[w I a
$ :00. W'lld Af{eCII
er. Some 1necial ..,, •1• 111 Y - Suiai ScariiJ' Bcacfit•
emp'-ees
"lp b
•, ..... ... IFa --s,...
IIIIL'CII-IOII!I!J)j,
IIJd If
NZ
r
r
.,o -.a.~;~a.
mllllied ve •• • ar litt: PI!J• .,._ · - ....,. ---... I • J..u "' -~
I 'f! . . .. . , , . , -Na..IS-'Sdm).
'
' eQDCepl)',
r •
'JkU
alliceiJJb lfll
1
payme41• ·
~ mont111, u1e1 iC a . ,
•
221 i/1 llf. Cci "'a: Rd. Tile
cle(emdu r
... ....,. a , ..... 9 ...... to4
a w-1 fan?
lle,.._s.m-4MI.

they are compensllliotl liiJr 'IMIJII;
done before ;yo11 aciiltd ~coa;,·
many times we ·doll·t-.. allis
unless y011 teU us.. n.isC)D!Ideacribel IOIIIC d d i e - a.mon type~ of "tpl'l"illl p&amp;J
help~ yoo 10 tlec:iik if ,.. .....awe
one, ud tells -you Mill 51lf!P5 ID
Lake if you do.
If yo11 wor~c'd fill' ...,.:s.
income' received atim .....
4
counll u a ';pociat i*J
if •
last thing you dill t o - • IP*!t'!ftMt wu compl:uf %:'- , _
·lllllppCd WOiliiJ&amp; far , _ ........,_

,_,....ik_iilforma7

"7
-*Ad
1

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1

Car-.,.;,__ .-.

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GovornrMnt......... 26, 144.50
·Public Bar.ty ........... 8,218.54;
Public Worka ........84,S70.0t

Hulth .......................3,SII7.11

- - --

--

A.JD)

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For '100.00 Or Less
~
And Advertise It FREE.
'Simply Clip This Coupo,n {Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
·
You Ad WW Run For One Week.
RYAN TRIPP

First birthday

2 Sectlono, 22 Pogeo 25 oenta
AMuiJimedlo Inc. Newapoper

Pomeroy 1\41ddleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 30, 1993
7

Board closes two Mason County schools
By Mirldy Keams
OVPreporter
.
, West Columbia and Hartford
elementary schools will permanently close at the end of the
school year, it was decided in a
special meetiqg of the Mason
County Board of Education Monday nigbL
.
_
Member Olston Wright made a
piiCh duriri~ lhe session to keep one
of the facilities open, adding he felt
to closc both schools would put a

lot of burden on another si:hool
somewhere.
West Columbia Elementary was
closed on a 4-1 vote, wilh WrighT
being the only dissenting vote. The
motion was made by Brian Billings, and Maxine Niben seconded.
Also voting for the closure were
l{arry Siders and Paul Doeflinger.
Members seemed a little more
reluctant to close the second
school, Hartford, however. Wright
said he felt ·the board should lceep

one schooi, wllichever was deemed
practical, open. He added he felt
closing botb schools would put a
lot of burden on IUIOiher school.
NiberT made the motion to close
Hartford, witb Billings seconding
the motion. Siders also voted yea,
while Doeflinger and Wright.voted
nay.
Parents at both West Columbia
and Hartford said, during the
hearings, !hat tbeir children would
be sent to Mason Elementary.

'J'hen: was some concern that the
Mason li!cility could not handle the
number of students from the two
closing schools.
Paul Doeflinger em()hasized that
·it looked as if closing the schools
would present ovefCI9wding at
Mason. When asked if there would
be room at Mason, Curriculum
Director Ken Evans answered '_'I
lhlnk so."
"I see the lack of planning,"
Wright said, and Superintendent

Michael Whalen told tlie board, "If
there's not enough room, we'll
make room." He did not tell board
members how that would be accomplished though.
.If ill! students from West Col urnbia and Hartford auend Mason
Elementary next year, each class
would have the following number
of students: First, 28; second, 29;
third, 34; fourth, 36; fifth, 43; and
sixth, 30. By state law, each
classroom is allowed to have 28

stuc)ents per teacher. Mason now
has 10 classrooms and 10 teachers
for regular students. With lhe above
numbers, fi!Jwever, II t.eachers'and
classrooms ~ou!d be needed. .
. Althoug~ ll did ,not have any s•gmfi'?IJICe m cloSJ~g -~ _schoo~,
Billings once ag;un cnuc1zed b1s
co-members who voted to l.ower
the le_vy rates recent!~. He ~d by
lowenng !he rate ll tS savmg lhe
lBl&lt;payers an average of $7, $5, or
Continued on page 3

Ohio to produce 500,000 jobs

bllilcllng ,..ult lor conatruct1oa at the lite hal
been Issued by Pomeroy VUiaae to Wheeler Clevenaer Oil Cr. of Loulaa, Ky. Tile •d on which
the new construction will take place Is dlrec:tly
acr011,1 the street from SuperAmerica.

SITE PjlEPARATION Trees are beinJ cut
dowa, soille rock1 from the clllf are bein1
removed,, and a aeetion or lalld on West Main
Street in Pomeroy is beln1 readied for construction fA a serviCe station aDd coovenlence store. A
7

Six-county solid waste district
could bedown to five, maybe four
Athens County will .withdraw
from tbe six-county solid waste
district along with the posSibility of
talting Hockin~ County with it,
according an artiCle in the Jackson

louriiiii-Herald.

Athens County commissioners
made the withdrawal official by
passing a formal resolu~ March
23 to withdraw from the AthensGallia-Hocking-Jackson-MeigsVinton Solid Waste Management
District under the authority of
House Bill 723, said the article.
Athens County has attempted 10
pull out the district since the start
of 1992, blil the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (OEPA) has
blocked the ,move and the issue
remains unresolved after a swing
lhrough the appeals and court system.

.

But House BiD 723, approved
late-last 'jear, allows counties to
withdraw from existing districts
·. during a three-month window of
time beginning April 16. Also, the
withdrawing county must secure
· the approval Of each of the boards
of commissioners in the original
-district.
'
Up until recently, Athens Coun·
ty's stated intent had been to form

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's economy might not prod~e
the same percentage increase in
jobs during the 1990s as lhe national rate, but its outlook is still good,
officials say.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services released a report
Monday that showed the State's
economy is expected to ere_ate
.more than 500,000 jobs before the
year2000.
Total employment in 1991 was
5.36 million and is expected to be
nearly 5.89 million in the year
2000, said Administrator Debra
Bowland.
The state is projectin~ a 1.2 percent .annual increase in JObs, while
national figures are about 1.3 percent, $Bid Larry Less, projections
coordinator for OBES.
He said Ohio is behind because
population and income are growing
. slower than the national rates.
· The report predicted: ·
·
-The Columbus' area will lead
the .state in job growth. Current
employment is 718,400. It is
expected to rise to 813,000 in the
year 2000, up 13.2 ~L
-The smallest mcrease will be
in the Cleveland area, with an 8.4
percent change from 922,60(Hn
1991 to I million in 2000.
-The Cincinnati area will have
the most new jobs, going from
737,600 in 1991 to 833,800 in the
year 2000, up 96,200, or 13 percent.
-Most of the new jobs will be
in the service sec10r, led by health
and business services, such as com-

puter and data processing.
Other rapidly growing industries
include legal services, managemenl, public relations, accoUnting,
res1aurants, personnel supply services, auto repair, construction and
transportation.
-About 28,400 jobs are expected to be created in the goods-producing sector. The construction
industry is expected to conlribute
all of the gain, while manufacturing
employment holds steady and min-

ing employment continues to
decline.
-The number of jobs that
require education and training
beyond high school will grow
faster than average.
Managerial, professional, pamprofessional and technical occupalions represented just over 2S percent of total employment in 1991
r but are expected to account for
two-fifths of the increase during
the decade.

DOE designates
five Ohio sites
HAMll.lON, Ohio (AP) -The

U.S. Department of Energy has
placed live private propert•es in
Ohio on a f~erally funded cleanup.
Jist after confiCinihg they are contaminated with uranium or other
materials used in defense-related
programs, a newspaper ieported.
. Contamination at sites in
Oxford, Columbus, Toledo,
Painesville and Luckey dates to the
1940s and '50s, when the g&lt;ivernment employed small- and medium-sized businesses to process uranium and other materials, the
Hamilton Journal News reported
Monday.
Three of the sites used to mold
or machine uranium metal. They
are the former Alba Craft Laboratory, Oxford; the former Baker

Brothers site, Toledo; and the. former B&amp;T Metals Inc., Columbus,
said Dave Adler, a DOE clealtup
manager )Vho .has surveyed the
sites for the agency's Oak Ridge;
Tenn., regional office.
The Diamond Magnesium site at
Painesville received contaminated
scrap metal that had been containers used to ship uranium ore. The
site at Luckey manufactured beryllium, a non-radioactive metal used
in defense programs, Adler said.
All operated in the 1950s e&gt;&lt;cept
B&amp;T Metals, which was a subcontractor on lhe United States' aiOmic
bomb project in the 1940s, Adler
said.
·
He said none of the sites is u
immediate health risk.

a single-county district, but at a landfill in that county.

district meeting in February, its
However, Athens County does
representatives mentioned that have a landfill in. its domain and
HOCking County had been invited Ibis will result in a loss of revenue
to join with them in a new two- 10 the district. But, th.e district
county district At that time, Hock- would also be smaller in both area
. ing County commissionezs' said no and population, which should cut
decision had been rna~ on the overall costs.
option, according to the arucle.
Athens County made the deci- 1
No definite decision has been sion to withdraw from lhe district' .
made on whether Hocldng County through fiB 723 after district leadwill join Athens County or·whether ers declined to assume responsibilia jomt Athens-Hoelting meeting ty for its closed 691 landf'JII. The
has been set up.
landfill hasn't been used for about
Jackson County Commissioner 10 years, but the OEPA is pressurDale Neal said he would like to see ing the county to clean It up to
Hocking County stay in the district, make it environmentally safe.
whidl now includes Athens, Gallia,
Neal also feels the depart~ of
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton coun- Athens or Athens and Hocking will
ties, said the article.
deiay the district's prolonged
He also pointed out that a union efforts to draft ud implement a
with Athens would make Hoelting solid waste management plan.
Coumy share the ~nsibility of OEPA is currently working on one
cleaning up a Iandf1U in Athens thai pertains to a six-county· disCounty, a clean up that is expected tricL
to co~t Athens County nearly $2
''The best estimate that I have is
million.
that it will take a minimum of three
years," Neat 10id the Journol HerNeal added that the withdrawal ald.
of Hoelting County would not hurt
OEPA's six-county plan was to
SURVEY DAMAGE Flreftghten survey
the district financially since the dis- have been finalized and put into
the damqe of a train denllinent near GnaviUe,
lrict's revenue is derived from effect this year.
Ohio Monday. A driver cl a semltraile~ rig ran
landfill tipping fees and there is no
7

n

Into the side' Of tbe train !hat
travellq eatbound and carrying liquid aspbalt and grain.
The accident caused 10 can to deran. (AP)

,,_-Local briefs---. Investigation continues in train derailment
(NOrE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLINC PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, TiiiS DOES NOT APPLY TOYARD SALES)

NAME= --------------~--------~------PHONE NUMBER: - - - - - - - - , - - - ' - - --,.---

MAIL TO:

T·he Oat y

Union, engineer reach agreement

Fedlnlioll or s-. County anc1 Municiplt Employee;
(AFSCMB) Ohio CouncilS, Local 1080, employees and the Meip
County Bnglneer's office oppt\loed a two-year apemeat Thursday.
The contnct covers 31 moinbera of tho bargainiag unit and
inclucloa a 6 1/2 perceat pay raise over tbe two yeara, Public
Amer~c:an

Bmp~ Rcdnlment System tax defcnal, iJnpJomncnts in uniform lllowance, licit lea-ve, COihCillion at n:tlmnent, bereavement
leave and lonpvlty pay.
'
The DOW CCIIIIIICllabl eft'ect Aprill.
The chief 1poltuman for tho eagineer'• office wu Dave
Spencer, olllce m•Mp', IIIII !ip'teii"M for AFSCMB ComKlil 8

wu Barry Bolin.

.

'

.

Man rehired by Meigs Local Board

111 Court Street, Pomeroy,""'".,

A Mlddlep'«t mu, earllllr CCJIIvictod of 1wll'11 aiOiine lioMt
The Melli LoCal Sdlool Dillrk:t while e?EIIIloYed • aliul meclllllic,
wu NCirlly ~ebbed by ....... LOMl fdrOol Bon ofBdl• 111m
after a COIIIt
:air CMIIIIIIIId bia -YiclioL
·
Tmy Powell WU ...... M I n . . . .• II R.utllnd Blemontary
Coatlped an JM11 3

(OFFER EXPIRES 6/21/93)

....-.;.. ...
·--~-

Vol. 43, No. 233
Copyrlghlocl19t3

-·-

C11A®~lliPJIIBID&gt;

Ryan Todd Gordon Tripp
recently celebrated his first birt'!day with a party at the home of h1s ·
grandmother Keitha Hunt. The
party was hosted by his parents,
Todd and Kelly Tripp, Pomeroy,
who ·used Jhe theme, "Mickey
Mouse and Gang".
Attending were Kathy, Qonnie
and Jessica Barringer, Barbara and
Alvi!l Tripp, Mike, Cory, Shannon,
and Chad Whitlatch, Rodney,
Stacy, Amber and Megan Trip.p,
Nikki, Zachary and Scott Whltlau:h, Stacy, Tom and Audrianna
Pullins, Fred and Bertha Smilh,
Jackie Whitlalch, Tammy Capehart. Gordon Lyneue, Keith Aeilcer, Deloris Aei\&lt;er, Bob Hunt, Mary
and Brian Bowers, Tam, Joey and
Josh Marcinko. Sending gifts were
Harlan Whitlatch, Eva Duncan,
Fred Tripp, Pat, Cindy, Penny,
Patsy, and Patrick Aeilcer, Debbie,
Adln'l, and Abby Chevalier, Lori,
Rennie, TitTany and Brittany Hensley, and lind&amp; and Larry Hudson.

•

.ff.:V-!A.!!

- ""

Low Ill lbe mld-401. Plrlly
tloudy. Wednesday, blplu nld60s.

Inside today's edition

r ~r.lguh~t:to·:'_.::w:~.~~ ~

IPlli.IElE

-·&amp;

alI .

All Olhor
Rovonuo......:..;..... 46,823.1ll
TOTAL
RECEIPT8 ......... 149,154.21
EXPEICliTURE
DISBURSEMENTS:

Clean.Out Your Closet,
·Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH . With A

dcrapf&amp;ll,ed. net
:A afiu retirement
-;a 5 jjaQ _ , _ _ il you
'11ie....£s:ID! ca1D die
aFJ_. ...._.
,__
f
liE ..... IIIUIJUI, o
••Sal:iiiScnlii)''beoefill.. "!arias"' ;an:. aDlf 1eguJar
_.._ - -~. .
~.- . . .'I' UUC71Yit~
p4Db:JG~Rh•iness·.
.
Si1Jm= : jyll JiB!Dients liJJ self:• ;cd....,... ~r.roe income
•• - ,., _ _ o€abusiness
dD lillll:s- paflllllll signWcanr

Pick 3:
533
Pick 4:
537L

ln..,..t •...•:•••••••.•••••.. 1,406.13

Copltol Oudoy ...., .. 45,417.82
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENT8 .............. 147,527.88
Totll Reoolpta Over/
(IJnder) Dlob. ........ 2,326.33
Fund Cooh Bolonco
ohio.
·
Ownora rotoln rlghta of Jan. I, 11112.......... 38,730.38
lng-a or~d 011'- to and Fund Cooh BaJ.co
Doc. 31; 11112 ....... 41,058.71
from any -lcluol-.
Sold poreona not.dabpw a.pooilory Boi......S0,585.12.
ohal lurlhlr lllkll notlco lhot Total Troooury
unlou thoy, or lholr .................... 50,585.12
Atlomoy, fllo an Anowor no . LHo Oulllllnclng
lot• lhon 21 dllyo on.r lho ChM&gt;ka ................... l,520.21
comlllodon of the lerVIce of TOTAL
BALANCE ........... 41,058.71
11
SUMMARY OF
:...:.."..
••
INDEBTEDNESS
lho Potldon wll bo takon oo Out.lonclng
truo and ·tuclgnoont will bo J•.1, 1112........;...........-4ronctorocl oo0«4ngly; Civil l'l.ow lao-1112 .••44,500.110
d'ullltonclng
Rulo12(AK1).
Doc. 31, 11112 ...... 44,500.00
Dlr- of
I aortlfy lhla report to bo
,....correct and-, to the boot
13) IV; (4) 5, 12, 11, 21;
q1 my knowloclgo.
~) 3, 6tc
Ka'-'H.vman
Clork of Oliva T-hlp
Public Notice
Maroh 24, 11183
503116 Uokoldllal Rood
FINANCIAL REPORT
Roodovllo, Ohio 45772
OF TOWNSHIPS
.
1174511
For Flocol Yoor Ending
(3) IV, ftc
Deoornber 3t 1112
oUVE TOwNSHIP
county or llolgo
ThlaloAIIUnoucltod

.....-

'

• ,... ;w ·
wei
5

APPROPRIATED
Slluot.d In lho Townohlp
of Sollobury, · Cou.nty· of
Molgo and Stoto of Ohio,
ond known oo being port of
100 aero Lot No. 383, 1 port
of Town 1 Norlh;' IIMII" 13
Wool, ao ohOW!'I lly tho
recqrcled Molga County Tu
Plat, Mop No. 27, ....,11 No.
018, ond mo~o fully
boUnded and doocrlbocl ao
lollowa:
PARCEL NO.a.wo

PubliC Notice

,.

..._.

- - - - · - -

RIGHT THEIEIH

- -- '

7

• -· .,_,__... ......;:_
tied to their fJill Sucial Sol wil' .
benefit. They m11Sl iqlllll JIDI:il'

, . _ • • . . , ... -

. _ _ . _ __

DESCRIPTION OF 1liE
PARCEL OF LAND AND
ESTATE, INTEREST OR

=

~·bese

- - yc:v.

7

alol....,.:

Public Notice
rood on lho oouth llna of
tOO IICre Lot No. W;
t - !l'•t lbout 200 fwl
to the alii!;
thence In o northerly
direction to the oor- of
lho 811\rio ROger ""d N•oy
Snydw oOUih proporty ....;
"'-• - t obout 200 lo the aonllr of the .....
lhWice ooulh 7 - WMt about 11 f•t lo lho
Plan of Beginning,
con..lnlng 0.551 of•--,
more or I••·..., llolng of
unknown ownorohlp In lho
Court of Molp, lilote of

in ~~:;ert Saturda
. y night was
by invitation only and most of the
tickets went to community groups.
The two-hour show was about
30 minutes shorter than his performances ·at Radio City Music Hall
·
h'
earlier in the week, but Jt was •s
third concert in less than 30 hours.
Following Friday night's Radio
City show, he played an unan- l o t Report
nounced gig at 2 a.m. Saturday at
(HighwoY)
'SUMMARY oF CASH
Club USA. a dance hall off Times
ALL RIGHT, liTLE
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
S·
,
AND INTEREST IN ·
AND EXPENDIT\IFEB
q~le saw the equipment get·
tf:rr~'1fo~x~:, ~~V::~PT~
un· gsetupandasked, 'Who's playIN 1HE Rli.LOWING
.~
.........,....... 1701•.'
ing?' We'd say Prince, and they'd
DESCRPFD PROPERTY
lntorgowrnmonllll
say, 'Yeah, right,"' said Club USA L:~~R~o~boc~co~E~.Ho~w~o~rd,:l~Bol~ng~ln~llo~~-~~ol~the~J.:~R~oc~o~~~·~··;
...:...~
...;~.~·7~4,:!61~0.~M!l~~~~~~~~
executive direc1or Monica
Michaels.
Prioce and the New Power Generation reversed sets from earlier in
the week, starting with dance tunes
and COfiCiuding with songs from his
new album, a story about his
seduction of an Arab princess . The
album's wordless title 'is an interlocking male and female symbol.
Prince is on his fi{SI United
I
'
States tour since 1988, a topr that
began March 8 at Fort Lauderdale,
"
J
Fla., and is scheduled to conclude
I
April17 at Phoenix.
\
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - For"'
/
JJJtZ Atlanta mayor And!ew Young .
....
says that if Los Angeles jurors
acquiL four policeme~ accused of
violating tne rights of black
motorist Rodney King "that's no
reasontogiveuponthesystem.' :

..,. _ _ ,.(Ill die W-2
. . . ._, a ·~ed

:

GeiiiDIIy•.Socill
So • . , - - .
ficiariu under N MID - ' : . _
. ·- -

: : : • ;a

Public Notice
Aaolo..nt Attorney Genet..
SWorn to boforo - and
oubocrlbect In my preunoo
lhla 3rd doy of March, fillS.

~~~':'~':'

Your Social Security
BYr.....:...o
l1lD PEJiWSQN
.,_.iii.
-..-.:-- Jl

COiilpany's semor vtee pres1dent of
marketing. He wants to keep it that
way.
'
"We really believe the public
should see the·· movie the way its
intended to be seen- at its best."
Davidson is nominated for playing Dil a hairdresser who at first
appeari to be a woman, but turns
out to be a man. The film reoeived
sii nominations, including best picture, best director for Neil Jordan
and best actor for Stephen Rea.
When Davidson received the
oscar nomination last month,
Miramax ur~ed reporterS not to use
the nominauon to reveal the secret.

By JOHN HORN
the air after Siskel gave away the
AP E'Mtertainment Writer
sllllJrlse.
.
Othera 'have· speculated about
LOS ANGELES - Is there
anyone l~ft who doesn't know the how Davidson, who Oscar organizbig secret about "The' Crying ers say wi~ attend, wi!l dress for
Game"? If so, they will surely find • the intemano~y televtsed awards
out tonight if Jaye Davidson· wins show: as a man or a woman.
an Academy Award for best supBut Miramax Films, the distribporting actor - and probably if utor of "The Cryin~ Gllf!l~·" said
not, too.
last.week a new publiC ~pm10n IX?II
In recent weeks, a variety of . sug~ests many A1_11~ncans ~till
publications - including Rolling don tknow the,mov~ s P.lot twiSt.
Stone, Time and Peopl~ - have
"There's still a SJ~ficant perrevealed "The Crying Game" plot centage of the aud1~nce th~t
twist. Tlie ·television critics Gene d·oesn 't know the twiSt,'' sa1d
Siskel and Roger Ebert feuded on Gerry Rich; !he independent film

0 hio Lottery

Spring
fashion ·
show
•
preview

.-

seated the trophies. Other participants were

7

...

endar • .

.

ot•n

__

. 'I

'

GRANVILLE, Ohio (AP) InvestiJ,alors say the driver of a •
semitrailer ri' tbat crashed into a
train ind derailed 18 cara apparent- ·
ly waited too long before trying to·

~he accident killed Monday
afternoon the truck driver and
spilled at least 44,000 gallons of
liQuid a.pbalt into a nearby creelt.
Tile train's two-man crew was not
injured.
~Beverly Schell of lhe
patJOI 1 Oranville J)Oit llid 1amee
A. BoU:II. 28, or Columbus, lried
10 IIDp The II'IICk u It
bed •
CSX CroaJDa OD Qbio 7 '*-o
u.s. E'OIItel 1~ l7ld 40.
'
Tile ~J.,.bu barrier p?Cil

:'f,'*

andQuhlzla
.
The tnck, carryinc a load of
wood chlpa, awerv!ld Off tbe left

side of the road. hit an electric conducTOr box ud struck the trains
fifth car. ·
The ln'!h "derailed evt:rytlting
froin the fifth CIW back 10 lhe 22nd
car," llid Pred ~tor of
lbe transpOIIItion
t of tbe
Public Utilities Commiasion of
Ohio.
.
"Tb
Iacer had seen the

and noticed IIOCbina

wu aurpriled wbeo !i
iJaJIItcfld die train," AaJer said.
lnVIIIIIpM will TCill dte II'IICk's

air bnbs, said~~ Felhn, who beadl the 111\'lllllialbon.
"We went to make IDre the
·\ntea 'fiUk OD die .trailer bccNII•
thero wcmt 't any bnlte marks on
the (llvement," Fellure aaid.
The Columbua
- ·· and Ohio River
..

Railroad train left Columbus bound field.
for Coshocton with 23 cara loaded
Cleanup of the creek started
with asphalt and 51 empty. The immediately but could lake aeYelll
train planned to stop in Heath to days, Jones said.
deliver asphalt to Koch Materials,
Asphalt remaining in the
said William Nuttle, agent dis - derailed tankers will be pumped
patcher for lhe railroad.
intD tanker trucks, and the denlled
The accident occurred at 2:30 IIIDkm will be loeded 11110 t1aara,
p.m. in a rural area about four miles .Jooes said.
.
IOIIIh of this central Ohio viiii8C.
Rob Beraer. spoltesma for die
· The truclt cab disintegrated · Ohio Environmental Protecdoa
when il hitlbe train, and the truck's Agew;y, aid Ill epncy tq11 I . .
motor exploded, igniting the live ..,. aentiD the lite. He aailltbe
truek's diesel tank and motor oil, apill wu not COOiidered llulnloa
Slid firefiabtet:!:-ar~Y. Jones Slid.
The road will be clolecl~euezll
Two cit die derailed IIJJicers fell daya while the can are clealld l7ld
inkl Ramp Creek an the 1011dt lide the spill is cleaned up.
of lhe lniCb and lpilled the liquid
Paramedics toOt Bozich to the
asphalt into the creek, laid Licking County mor1ue, Ma.
Granville Fire Chief Riclt Beck. Schell said. She Slid the accident Ia
Asphalt leaked from at least two .still under inveodpri'lD.
otber demiled tanken into a hay

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