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Page 16-lhe

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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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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

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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

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+ii,
. .,
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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

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· -· ..,_..,.,.,....

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).
'
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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
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Car-.,.;,__ .-.

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

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

- - --

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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.

.

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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

�Tuesday, March

· DliYOIED TO 11IE J;ll'l1tlUI8T8 Of'111E KEIG&amp;-IIAIIOI'f AR&amp;A

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Manager

Amstant Publlsher/Conltoller

v

_Wednaday,Marcb31

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 30, ·1993

~~Aceu~~-W.~ea~lher~:·!fo~rec~ast~~~or~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ll!Tl'ERS .OF OPINION are welcome. They lbould be le&amp;o than 300
words. All !etten ue subject 10 editing and must be signed witb name,
address and telopllone Dumber. No UIIJiped lettm will be published. Lettm

sbould be in good WIO, oddJe11ing iJaues, aot penoDIIitios.

Walking the fine line
between funny and offensive

ST. PETERSBURG,Fia.-- In
my 39111 year as a Baltimore Ori·
oles fan, I finally got to sec tbem
play in a sprin$ training game. It
. was a fine begmning 10 a season
which will end in October, I pre·
diet, with the Birds taking the
Braves in six.
While at the ballpark, I also
thought up a way for Baltimore
Mayor Kurt Schmoke 10 become
the governor of Marr.land, a way
for Maryland Gov. W1Uiam Donald
Schaefer to ensure his canonization
and a way to save baseball from the
heinous fate it has charted for
itself.
Not a bad day's work, especially
on vacation.
. You say you weren't aware the
ruination of the Nalional Pastime is
at tiand? Ah, my friends, consider:
A visit to the ballpark now costs a
family of four nearly $100; atten·
dance is falling; television revenues

will soon be ·halved; the average
player salary is now more lhan $1
million; the team owners are going
to try to save the game by making a

Joseph Spear
tawdry tourney of it; and the Big
Buffoon is bac1c in the Big Apple.
Just as the Yankees were about
to regain respectability, George
Steinbrenner returns. Bqseball's got
troubles, folks.
Let me restate that. The game
itself is as pedect as the day God
invented il, But tile professional
version of it is going down the
tubes, mainly because the rapa·
cious collection of car dealers,
cowboys, pizza makers, magnates
and developers who own teams
have escalated the salary structure
into the stratosphere and now want

wild and crazy idea. Three years
ago, Mario Cuomo proposed lhat
lhe state and city of. New York buy
lhe Yankees. "I suspect that it is
eminently fina)lceable," be said.
"You could even sell bonds."
Regular readers will rccogn,izc
this as a notion I bave been pushing
for years. I truly believe basel&gt;all
teams are civic instirutions that are
as important to the cities they represent as monuments and libraries.
So why shouldn't the public own
them? Float bonds and buy them.
You financed and built most of the
stadiums the teams play in. s~ buy
lhe teams, too.
.
The New York investment
banter who owns the· Baltimore
Orio' .lS is in financial trouble and
has to sell the team. You bave hint·
ed yoU, want to be the ~t governor of Maryland, Mayor Schmote.
Organize a municipal pun:hasc of
the Orioles -what fan wouldn't
buy ~ird Bonds - an&lt;! the so•e
house would be yours. ·
·
And you, Gov. Schaefer. If t 'e
mayor is reluctant, why not tl. '
state? You built Camden Yards.
Buy lhe Birds, and go down in history as the man who made damn
sure no lousy tycoon would move
lhe Orioles out of iown in the mid·
die of the night, as that scoundrel
Robert Irsay di&lt;l with your beloved
Baltimore Colts.
It wouldn't be easy, because lhe
idea unnerves the owners. Three
years ago,Joan Kroc wanted to
give the San Diego Padres to lhe
city and the owners vetoed it on
grounds lhat public ownership
would be ineflicient. Pittsburgh in
1985 and Montreal and Quebec in
· '. 1991 kicked in millions to keep
their teams, but the owners refused
to grant lhe cities an equity interest:
So you might have to take the
owners to court, but that's OK.
Anybody who messes with baseball
·should ailswer to the law.
(C)l993
NEWSPAPER
6'flllt
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

I

ByWALTERR.MEARS
I
AP Special Correspoudent
WASHINGTON -There's a rme line in political humor, with laugh·
tcr and lll!lllause on one side, mcming-after apologies on lhe other. The
best in political wisecracks are poinled enough to be near the line without
crossingil
· No politician is better at that than Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, the
Republican leader, who glanced down a bead table at Vice President AI
Gore the other night, DOlin~ he had been assigned to the environment at
'me White House, and told hun "AI, I think the lawn looks greaL"
· The art is to make it biting wilhout making it bitter. That's not ea$y; it
look Dole years to make lhe transition.
·
. When the pedormen are less skilled, lhe joking can tum mean, as it
:did when Oliver Norlh lisped a gay joke to a Republican banquet in
Mclean, Va.,later expressing regret and saying he was better as a Marine
'lhan he was as a comedian.
·
: In an era in which politicians often are wired for sou ld, Democrats as
~ell as Republicans have run afoul of locker room humor by blurting
·jokes lhat forced public regrets.
Dole is adept enough to joke about bad jokes; at the Gridiron Club din·
ner SaiUrday night, he said he'd be happier "if Ollie Norlh's speech writ· ,
ers hadn't stolen my best stufl'."
.
But the best one-liners, and certainly the safest, usually are those pow·
erful political figures tell about themselv~. as when President Chnton
·noted: •'The opinions I will express tonight are those of my wife.''
: Jimmy Carter, not usually a joking president, told one in Tokyo to an
audience that heard it in uanslauon and laughed uproariously. Surprised at
ihe reaction, an American asked the translator how he had ren&lt;iered the
· joke into Japanese. He hadn't, he confessed. He'd advised the audience
that Carter had just told a joice.
The best lines are durable, like the on~ about lhe campaign controversy
over lhe Republie&amp;D search of Clinton's passport fdes.
Clinton told broadcast correspondents at a formal din.\CI' earlier this
month that when he met John Major, the British prime mi.ister told him
"Youlmow, you don't look anylhing like yOI!f passport phon."
Television's all-new Ross Perot
Variations on presidential themes usually work, as " '1en Clinton
recalled his budget list of 150 spending cutbs, and told an 'lfier-dinner. Shpw, a prime time (!seudo-voling
audience:
·
experience, had touched us in all
·. "IU kept going I'd give you 150 jokes, 150 specific jokes -:uaranteed lhe old familiar populist places.
We had num bcred our papers
to reduce the humor deficit, which is cnppling this country." ·
·. Jokes aimed up the government ladder do well, as wh, .n United from 1 to 17 and answered his
·Nalions Ambassador Madeleine Albright said at the Gridiron baquet lhat questions lhat were carefuUr word·
.ed to make us respond ' Yes!"
the stolid Secm.ary of Slate Warren Christopher - thiec seats Lway every time. Now our master of cer·was statesmanlike, sage-like, abnost lifelike.
:· At the coming summit conference, Dole said, Clinton and R 1ssian emonies had one last master marPresident Boris Yeltsin will be discussi;f1cthe importance of mainlail. ;ng a keting piiCh:
''Let's do one more thing to
free market system. "I hope Boris can
him into it;'' said Dole.
demonstrate
that we want reform in
: "Bob is one of those rare Republicans who is intentionally funn_r,"
Washington.
Millions of you,
Albright counlered later in an evening so long that Clinton said he was
hungry again by the end of il "I know it's easy to stand up here and pol:c tomorrow morning, as you drive to
fun at the Republican Party, but I think it's important to acknowledge lhl:t
work, tum on your headli~ts. Let
whate'ler you think of the last two adminiSirabons, we are forever in their
Washington see the hght on

'".

c,,.._.,_.,....'!!L«6_. ~UIIIIf

Let's send a message to Ross Perot

~

debt.''

Dole also is one of the rare political humorists who would risk joking
-about the suicide doctor at a 90th birthdty party, and bring it off. As mas·
ter of ceremonies at a dinner for the v,·nerable Sen. Strom Thurmond,
Dole quipped that there was a telephone c: Ufor a Dr. Jack Kervorkian; .
He was at it again Saturday night, ren11 'king on George Bush's losing
struggle for a second term:
"It was Dr. Kervorkian's rust effort as a' 'llllpaign manager."
EDITOR •s NOTE- Walter R. Mears, Ice president and colum'nist for Tbe Associated Press, bas report 'CI ou Washington and
national politics for more tbaa 30 years.

Berry's World

reform.''

And, lo, there was light in the
morn, just one more scattershot
sign that this third party promotion
will be around for some time to ·
give America's first and secondparties fits. Yet, for those who
tuned in seeking problem-solving
solutions, Perot's show-your head·
light's commercial was disappoint·
ingly head-lite.
Perot's $500,000 half-hour piiCh
to NBC's Sunday night viewers
was calibrated with care to leave us
wilh,jusl the right P!!Pulist f~or.

Indeed, he reportedly tllped two
shows, tested them with a Texas
screening focus group, and aired
lhe one lhat had the highest au«J!·

Martin Schram ·
ence reaction.
That's why, as a populist per·
suader, Perot's chosen ad had per·
feet pitch. He hit all the old lhemes
lhat made him. a video folk-sw in
the campaign of '92: our out-of·
control deficit lhat is stealing the
future from our children; the hypocrites of Congress who raise lheir
salaries and our taxes; the perks of
the powerful; and of course the lobbyists who buy wholesale at the
bazaar of Con!!fCSS.
.
He kept h1s options open. He
praised President Clintpn ' s pro·
posed reforms one minute,
expressed skepticism the next.
Clmton's plan, he said, would still
add $1 trillion to our exisling $4.1
trillion debt, and asked: "Do you
see a paltem here?''
On all substantive problems,
from the deficit to entitlement programs to health care, Perot offered
flip-charts and flip-slogans - but

Let U.N. be our brother's ·keeper

.·

· A peacekeeping force is like cleansing.
The Sudanese government's
brotherhood. Everybody believes in
· it, but nobody wants the wrong orgy in death is not unique. Mutual
"brother" living next door. Every· destruction in Bosnia-l;lerzegovina,
body wants a U.N. peacekeeping
force to put out global brush fues,
but few are willing to pay for iL
Peacekeeping has suddenly
mushroomed into a global industry.
A few days ago, I heard a rad1o reciprocal Hindu-Muslim slaugh·
repon on thousands of Sudanese ters in India and the Israel-Pales·
who are dying at a higher rate lhan linian civil war are only lhree of ·
the people of Somnlia.
the more desiructive enterprises
The reasons for these mass against
humanity.
deaths are differenL Somalians are
In
11 other areas around the ·
dying of starvation, their survival world, U.N. peacekeeping forces
held hostage by genocidal war· are trring to keep the peace, in
lords. Southern Sudanese, most of some
inStances doing the work lhat
whom are Christian or animists, are previously
was a primary obliga·
being slaughtered by the Muslim lion of American armed forces.
government's version ·o f ethnic
That raileS the question of alob-

..

Chuck Stone

"So, what prompted you to seek 'alternative
therapy'?"
1

no specifiC solutions. .
But culling oui deficit and reform·
He did it all with the video- ing our government and health care
honed pitch of a man who wants to requires a whole series of real,
sell us Ginzu knives and simultanc· tough choices. Not just bromides of
oustr C(lnven us to a new1 higher reform and de•ices like constitucalhng. He gave no clue about tional amendments to require that
whelher he intends to conven his someone else balance our budgets
1993 crusade into a 1996 cimpaign and heal our woes.
for president
·
.Perot ended his latest appeal by
But make no mistake about enlisting his new wave of disciples:
Ross Perol's Uni'ted We Stand '• And to every morning radio talk
America. It is for real. It will be show host who's with us tonight;
around for some time lo come. we ask lhat you remind your listen•
Indeed, it may be here to stay, as a ers to turn on their headlights as
populist party base that coold even they drive 10 work - if they favor
grow beyond the third-party desig- government reform, now."
For lhose who lhink a flash or
nation to become the eqlial of the
headlights is a show of su~ let
olhertwo.
He has already made a powerful me propose my own can t miss
impact on the new freshmen class appeal:
To those millions of Amaicans
in Congress. These are pols who
ran in the year of Perot, and won who are rcading·these words coast·
by parroting Perot. Now they are to-coast, let's do one more thing.
showing more backbone and Send Ross Perot a messa~c that
resolve lhan their predecessors, as you want more than populist bro·
they are willing to cast some tough mides. Let Ross Perot sec )'OI•r sign
votes and reluctant to blindly fol· that you are demaliding tough solu·
dons, not just tough talk. As you
low lheir old guard leaders.
Perot has tapped into our anger, &lt;!rive horne late tonight -- tum on
and lhat may carry him a long way your headlights.
(C)l993 ·
NEWSPAPER
- if, indeed, we are willing to be
led by an ever-promising man who ENTERPRISE ASSN.
promises everylhing but answers.

"

[foday in history---------~-By The Alloc:ilted Pre.
Today is Tucaday, Man:h 30,the 89th day of 1993. There are 276 days
:'left in lbe ye..
: Today'a Hiahlight in Hialllry:
:. On M.-dl 30, 1981, Pn:liclm Ronald P•9" Wll aeriously wounded
·:in 111111e1npt oa biJ life ouuide a Wtllhingk!D hocel by John W. Hinl:kley.
;Jr., wbo llao sbol and wounded Wblte Houle preu secretary James
llndy, 1 Semi Service 11e11t and a District of Coi1DDbla pollee officer.
. On dill dale:
.
: ID 1822, Florida becaile I Uniled Slllellelrilllry.
·: ID 1842. Dr. Clawford W. Looa of Jcffcnon. Ga., tint used ether as an

1

:••,.,.; clurinlamiaor openlion.

,

. ; 1D 1867, U.S. Socawy IX Sllte William H. Seward reached ~g~eCmcnt
:wttll RUIIia 10 pllldluo lbo lelrillll'y IX Alllka for $7.2 million, a deal
tOIIIIIy ridirvkd illlbe U.S. u "Sewlnl's Polly."
: ID 1810, die 15dl ECIIdmerlt 10 the Conailulion, giving black men the
npt 10 voee. was clecland in effect.
In 1870, Teua was reD!Rd.IO the UnioiL

In !90!),.the Quecnsboro Bridge,. linking the New York boroughs of

Manhaaanand~.~
In 1~!5. the Soviet Umon invaded Austria during World Warn.

In 1964, John Glenn withdrew from lhe Ohio nee for U.S. Senate
beeausc ot
in a fill.
In 1973,
BwWr laigned u U.S. am'bfwedor to Soulh Viet·
118111, and wu succeeded by Grahain A. Martin.
In 1984, Preeldcnt Reef~! formally ended the U.S. role in the multina·
tionall!eacetcepiue fon:e m Lebanon.
In 986,at:UJr JIIIIICI Cqney died io Sllllfoi'dville,N.Y., auge 86.
Tea. yem ago: A jury lit S•ta Monica. c.tif., decided lhat Groucho
Ma'x'l Wiiiji6itlon, &amp;iD
delrauded die late comodian, and
awanled ncmy half a million
10 lhe executor of Marx's cs~ate.
(1be IIIIOUIIt was laler reduced 10 $221,000.)
.
Pi~ )elil ago: AD llbney for the Rev. Jimmy Swqprt llid the lelcvqelilt would return 10 the palplt, defylna nalionll Aiilemblles of God
churdt officials who had suspended biM lor It least a year for "moral
failure."
· ·
·

1f.:.'rered

Flemln&amp;.l::

al responsibility. Aie we our lilotJi.
ers • keepers everywhere? What
decides where we should keep the
peace? What is lhe cutoff point for
humanitariin aid in dollars? If we
encourage the U.N. peacekeeping
forces to replace Amaican troops,
should Amerie&amp;D troops be a part
of iuch forces, and if they should,
do we surrender a part of our
national sovereignty to an intema·
tiona! agency?
Some of the members of
Congress who arc urging ~hat
American military fuefighters be
dispaiChed to put out other nations'
rues are also screaming the loudest
about lhe escalating costS and the
unda'lying danger of U.S. militazy
soverei~ty being compromised.
Tijlleal of such hypocrites, they
want1t both ways.
But ullimately, there can be an
alternative to lhe United Nations as
the world's major peacekeeping
force. This nation cannot cut
spending by almost $300 billion
and simultaneously "'aintain ihe
same level of fomgn lid - mlli·
tary or humanitarian - that has
been pan of ill intemalional COlli•
mitmeolaince World W• n.
Onldually and subtly, the United
Nations has grown in internldonll
prestige •• It has increased its
~~~~ ~IIN!Idcw. M a
OlllfOIIional uanorly anlele
recently painted out, the U.N.
Security Couacll'a wo•al of 14
pacekeeplllg rniuloallinc:e 1988
11 one more lhln It waved In lbe
previous 40 year1. Prom 1992
tluough lhe end of 1993, lhe Unlted
Nallona Is ellpected 10 spend more
~

than $3.6 billion on peacekeeping
missions, again, as CQ reponed,
about 10 times its expenditures
from the same periOd six years ear·
lier.
Compared to the entire U.S.
budcet, that $3.6 billion doesn't
seem like an ellorbitant sum. But
when you mau:h it against the 1990
total of U.S. foreign aid of $11.9
billion - $9.3 billion of which
went 10 only .two countries, Egypt
and Israel - then it takes on an
economic life force of its own ..
Right now, ~dinll to the Slate:
Dc~ent, this natton owes theUn!led Nations $240 million for
dues and $40 million for peacekeeping aclivities.
.
.
President Clinton has pledged:
lid in a I~ effort to save Boris ·
Yelllin. But 11 will be jlolitically ·
impoasible for him to maintain the
same level of foreign aid while
reducing spcndin• for domestic
programs and the military.
· One of the Senale'a most influ·
endal mcmben, J011eph R. Riden,
D-Dcl., IDidentands 1M new bud·
gctary reality. Bldcn favors a
strOnger United Nations to share
the burden of peacekecpin.,
despite the risk it enralls for AJneril
ca's young aaldiers.
Both our humanitarian hcri
and our position u llle wor~
moat poWerful lllllon Nquile that
we uaill the Uniled Nations to be
more of tbe &amp;lobal "brother' a
teepor, •• u America concentraiU
011 iltlq !:are of Ita ..... faml· :
ly"M'-.
•
NBWSPAPER '
. (C)l!l93
'I!NtSRPRISB ASSN.

...

. By Tbe Associated Press
The clouds will come back to
. alon 'th
.
Ohto
g w1 a chance 1111n by
Wednesday as another weather systern heads to the state from the

soufh'!V~ .

.

l~ly Wednesday m the
southw~ wtth a chance elsewhere.
Highs will be 50 toSS norlh to the
60s south.
Tonight will be partly cloudy

Rain

to pay for it by tempting televisiOn
wilh glitt.
They are ~ing 10 "~~"
a game that IS steeped m tradioon.
By 199S, they announced, they
inlend to commence interleague
·play and to S,Piit the two leagues
mto three diviSions each. After- the
regular season, the division leaders
and a wild-card team in each
league will duke it out lh!O!t~h two
rounds of playoffs to detemune the
pennant wmner.
It's not quite as silly as the
Nalional Basketball Leagues's 16team playoffs, but it's close.
It's also indecent. Nay, it· is sacrilege.
·
So how can the game be saved
from these reprobates? That's
where Schmoke and Schaefer and
other mayors and gr vemors across
· lhe land come in. They should buy
their teams. Not them personally their states and cilies. This is not a

IMansfield lsgo I•
u

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-3

co Rain will return to Ohio Wednesday
or

•
l Toledol.s1• I

Give big leagues back to the people

111 Coart Street
Pomaoy, Ohio

Pomeroy.L.Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wcatfler

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

30,1983

tS

with lows 40 to 4S.
Earlier today widespread derise
·
•
fog co~ the~ quarta' of
the state w11h VISibility .reduced to
near zero. The rest of Ohio had
!IOIIlC clouds _and JlllChy fpg.
.
· ~ccord high tem~ture 82 m
1986, ~low 16m 191~. . '
sunnsc.Wcdnesday at 6,17 a.m.,
sunset a16.S5 p.m.
Arau~ the-aation
Showers. hnge_red over ~be
~ lhts mormng, ~ng
fl~dmg frc:Jm ~ennsrlvama to
Maine as J'8Jn m1xed w1th melled
snow.Th~IOmiS continued to
pound the Plains.
A strong low pressqre system
ove.- the Texas panhandle produced

sevc:nl tornadoes and softball-sized
h -1 · th
. M
.
at 10 c reg1on onday. The
moist air ma,ss was rnoving slowly
northeast today bringing moreshowers and thwidcrstorms as far
nor1b as Iowa.
The same system brought a
J!lreat of heavy snow today to parlions of Colorado ind New MW·
co.
The wet ·weather _in the N~east was aggravatu~g floodmg
problems over p_oruons of t~e
northern and M1ddle Atlan.uc
states.
I
~evcral hu~ peop!e 'volun·
tanly left thcu ~omes 10 flood·
~ '!'fayne, ~J., w_here .the ~
8a1C Ri,ver IP)d 1ts majOr tributanes

County~ court
Fifty-two cases were processed
March 24 in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Fined were: B.ryan L. Stewart,
~oolville, seat belt violation, $15
plipous~.~ts;
Herman•
$23 pf~
-?~:

=..'

Pt.
01993 Accu-\Yeo!hef, Inc.

~_.......,

othy J. allagher, Bethel Park, Pa.,
speed, $20 plus costs; Gary A.
Lambert, Crown City, seat belt violadon, $15 plus costs; Joseph A.
Malcolin,
Rio Grande, speed, $27
mainly soulh. Lows in the niid-30s
Plus costs.· David C. Carroll,
in the 40s
· Chesapeake, seat belt violation,
$25. plus costs; Ryan B. Fox, Oak
. Friday, fair. Lows around 30.
Hill, seat belt violation, $15 plus
. H1ghs in the upper 30s to lower .
40s.
costs; Florence M Sidders, Shade,
Dale Kautz of Pomeroy has won ~~ bell violation, $25 plus costs;
Saturday, fair but cool. Lows 25
second prize in the 1992 Equip- Heather L. F_ox, Oak Hill, seat belt
to 30. Highs in the 40s. .
ment and Seed "What a Dcall" violation, 5~1us cost!·,
Frank B. · ronowski. ParkersSweepstakes sponsored by "Pro·
burg,
driving under the influence,
gre$sive Farmer Corns/Soybeans · $450 plus
costs, 30 days in jail susMidwest" magazine.
pended
to
10 days, one year opera·
Kautt was awarded $1,000. He
tor's license suspension; failure to
is featured in the magazine's March appear on ~nal recognizance,
15, 1993, issue.
Donald Gengler of Remsen, 30 days in J&amp;il suspended to 10, one
Pomeroy for that purpcisc bul can . Iowa, won lhe grand prize of year probation on both charges;
go 10 a loeadon in, their own com· $5,000 and 150 other winners William White, Lancaster, disormunity. There is a statewide received Buck hunting knives derly conduct, $50 line suspended
1 to $25 plus costs; seat belt violaemphasis on $Cllin~ more of worth $100 each.
Ohio's children 1mmunized to preEnlry cards for the "What a lion, SIS plus costs; Robin lmbo·
vent an outbreak of diseases. Cur· Deall" Sweepstakes appeared in den, Pomeroy, seat belt violation, .
· Mi hael Eblin R
rently less than half of all infants four copsecutivc issues of $15 I
US costs; . c
• ut·
and pr~-schQol children have "Corn/S'oybeana Midwest". Win- land,Pseat
bell violation, $25 plus
.
received all of the required inunu· nen were selected by an indepen· costs;
Ron
Capehart,
Racine, DUI,
nizadOns for their age level.
dent
judging
organization.
$600
plus
costs,
six
months jail,
All but three of the 10 clinics
"Progressive
·
Farmer"
and
OL
suspended
for
one
year, two
will be held at fire stations, .Riebel "Com/Soybeans Midwest" are pubyears probation, alcohol assess·
said. In Bedfo'rd Township, the
clinic will be at the Ohio Vlllcy lished by Soulhem Progress Corp., ment; driVing under suspension, six
Christian Assembly; at Middleport, which also publishes "Southern months jail concurrent with DUI,
.
in lhe Department of Human-ser- Living", Southern Accents" and cos ts, two years probation; driVlng
"Cooking
Ugltt"
magazines
as
well
vices conference room; in Easl
under suspension (second charge),
Letart, the United Methodist as Ollmoor House books. The $100
plus costs, six months jail
Birmingham, Ala. blised company
Chun:h.
""~
CQ~current
with DUI, two years
Riebel said that the regular is the largest regional publisher of probation; Oscar
Shumate, Mt.
schedule rex immunizations is 2 to magazines and boob tn the COUn· Healthy, sjieed, W.
$26
plus costs;
try.
4, monlhs, DTP (diphtheria, tetilnus,
Christopher T. Wolfe, Racine, fail·
and whoopiag cough), oral polio
ure to control, $20 plus costs; Terry
vaccine and the HIB inunuiJizadon
Clark, speed. ~ ~3 plus costs;
whicll.protec:ts against meningitis.
·- VETERANS MEMORIAL
Gary L. h/, utin, Columbus,
Boosters on most of the vaccines
Morlday dilcharges • None.
speed, $27 plus ~osts; Dennis E.
follow It six and IS monlhs. Chll·.
Monday admissions • Stella Palmer, Columbus, "'JCCd, $27 plus
dren bcm after Oct. I, 1992 will be Mae Durst, Racine.
costs; Sbirley M. 1. '&gt;ler, Athens,
given the Hepatitis B vaccine
$24 plus cost~ ; Gregg ~{.
speed,
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
.
sometime during the first month
Wald,
Oakwood,
speed, .;,;,., plus
Discharges,
March
29
•
Robert
and then boosters at four months
costs&lt;
Ted
A.
Kitchens,
Caleb, Ga.,
Johnson,
Sharon
Straten,
Geneva
and again between six and 18
$50
plus
costs;
safety
violation,
S
y
I
via
Hall,
Helen
Adkins,
monlhs of age. .
Timothy
W.
Zurcher,
Letart,
Gilliam,
Linda
Fletcher,
·Edward
. Most of the community-b8scd
clinics will be beld on Thursdays. Mattox, Henry Barnett, Betty W.Va.. failure 10 _yield, SIO P!us
The regular scheduled clinics at the Crump, Abigail Rees, Marlin costsf; Paui1_B. Perkins, Sou$1h0Pomt,
Health Department will continue Mapes, Bessie Edwards, Minnie no ront tcense plate, I plus
on the second and fourlh Tuesdays Harris, Kelsey Halfhill, Geraldine costs; Gary G. Lee, Shade, s~.
Long, Kayla Ross, Stephanie How.- · $21 plus costs; RusseU E. Batenian
of each monlh.
ell,
Dale Ellis, and Ronald Wilson. Jr., address unreported, failure to
The clinic schedule is as fol·
Binhs,
March 29 • Mr. and Mrs. display proper registration, SIO
lows:
Barry
Henry,
son, Gallipolis Ferry, plus costs;
April I • Ohio Valley Christian
W.Va.
Richard L. Martin, Cheaspeake.
Assembly (Bedford Township) 9 to
II a.m.; Syracuse Fire Dcpanmcnt,
I to 3 p.m.
· April 2 • Bashan Fire Depart·
ment, 9 a.m. to II a.m.; Reedsville
Coatinued rrom page 1
Fire ~nl, 12:30 10 3 p.m.
School.
April 8 • Tuppers-Plains ·Fire
The appeals coun ruled that the trial court erroneously admitte4
Department (kindergarten registra·
evidence on rebuttal concerning Powell's alle~ed past acts in taking
lion) 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
gasoUne from the iiChool district without permiSSion.
April 12 • Department of
Human Services, Middleport, 10
a.m. to noon.
• ·
April 1S • .Eut Letart Methodist
A 63-year-old Albany man was reported missing Sunday.
Chun:h, 9 l.m to 11 Lm.
Mount J. Tippie was lalt seen Thursday evening at Gribble
April 23 • Chesta: F'tre Depart·
Chevrolet in Athens, according to a missing person repon flied at
mc;nt (kindergarten registralion) 9 ·
the Meigs County Sheriffs Department by Tippie's daughter,
.a.m. to 3 p.m. •
Sharon Hudnall of Albany.
Ajiril 29 • Rulland F'tre Depart·
Tippie is described in the report as a white male with a medium
ment (9 a.m., to 11 a.m.), and
build and complexion. He is approximately S foot 7 inches tall and
Salem Township Fire Department,
weighs around 215 pounds. He has gray hair and drives a 1984
Buick Regal.
.
1 p.m.to3p.m.
.
Tippie ilso has heart problerils and diabetes, the report stated.
DALEKAUI'Z

___ Weather--....---

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the mid-40&amp;. Wjads cast less than
10 mph. : Wednesdal, mostly
cloudy with a chance o rain. High
65 to 70. Chance of-'rain 50 per·
cent.
ExteDded forecast:
Thursday, a chance of rain

~~~th.Highs

Kautz wins
k
~- sweepsta es
h 0 n0 rs

$
.
2

Announce April dates
for immunization clinics
The April schedule for community immunization c!iilics has been
~nouitced

by Glenna Riebel, R.
N., the Mei)IS County Health
Department's tmmunization nurse;
· The program of taking immunization clinics into the communi·
ties is funded ' through a special
'llrant from the Ohio Department of
· Health. There :ire no charges for
lhe immunizations, Riebel StreSsed.
Purpose of the community·
based clinics is to make it easier for
parents to get their children immu·
nized. No longer will they have to
travel to the Health Departtnent in

Area death
~ugh .~.: . qani~Is .

.

. .'Hugh R. Daniela, 79, Pomeroy,
forlnerly of Miami, Fla., died Mon·
day, Maroh 29, 1993, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
A former local funeral director
and a lnember Of the Pomeroy First
Baptist ,churcb, he was born· in
. Pomeroy Feb. 2, 1914, son of lhc
late George and Arabella Skinner
Daniels. .
. Survivors include: his wife,
Esther T~omas I;&gt;aniels of
Pomeroy; a son, Richard Daniels of
· Cassadaga, N.Y.; five grandchil·
drcn, Richard Daniels, Shannon
Wilson and Kirk Bennett, all of
Miami, and Robert and Joey
Daniel, both of Cassadaga; two
1 . great-grandchildren, Sara Dianna
Bennett and Kelsey Brooke
Daniels, both of Miami; a step·
grapdchild, Michelle Estridge of
't-fiami, and a sister, Mary Eliza·
lletb Roush of Racine.
.He was preceded in death by a
daughter, Dianna Rulh Estridge;
two bfothers. Doctor's Manning and
Roger Daniels, and a sister, Ruth
Daniela.
Graveside services will be held
2:30 p.m. Sunday at Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pomeroy v,:ilh Dr. Lee
Morris officiating. No visi~tion
will be held.
' Memorial contributions may be
Qlade to ihe Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport is in charge of arrange' inents.

Tite Daily Sentinel
• :

(t18P8 113-880)

,Publilhed

-------.Local briefs...

111

Cmrrt -Sl, Pornoroy,

Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publlohi111
ComJN~ny/Multirnedia
Inc:., Pomeroy,
Ohio ..S769, 1'!1. 99:11211i8. Soccmd clpoUp pmd at Pomeroy, Ohio.

'MI:mber:

The Alloda&amp;ed Pnu., and t.hc
Ohio Ncw.,.per Auoc:i•tion, Natlona)

Hepreaent.etivo,

Bn~nham

,MI.wapaw Salet, 733 Third Aven\le,
New York, New York 10017.

.POSTMASTER: Send ......... cho- 1D
Tbo Dally Sentinel, ttl Court St.,

Divorce sought
. An action for divorce was filed
in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Colina( Judge Fred W. Crow
,/UI Monday by Rqth Owens Med·
ley and Gregory D. Medley, both
ofRacine.
.

BtJBRCRIPTION ~TEl

Reynolds critical

Jason Reynolds, 1g, son of
Kathy o.dner of near Middleport.
BINGLJICOPY
" is in criticll condition 11 the San
PRICI
o.n, ............................................:lll c.n~o
Joaqun Hospital In Bakersfield,
Calif.
as the ieiUit of injuries 1111·
&amp;.al.cribftn no&amp; de~fti111 to pay the can1talned in an automoblle accident
• JMJ nnnH. fn advance direct to 'n.
there Saturday nlabL
on •willlhroo,
lir &amp;amer
or II
Crodtl
be 8ivan
Aeeordlna to reporta here,
Reynolds
suffered head ·iajuriu
No oabaeripUono by ~~ pormillod tn
and has been In a coma since the
111111 whm home . •Jli« Mnfce 11
available.
ICddenL He reportedly Ia allo )Ill'·
·
MllllhbacripUano
llyzel
'
.
',
tnotdo.._.c...Reynolds
attended·
Meias
HI...
18 -........................... ~ ......... 121.84
Scbool befole lllOVina to Cillforma
. - .......................................... f43.t6
112 WeeiiL ....................... ,................. $84.76
when! he flnlslled hlP .Cholll and
"
O.tnle M•lp 'Ca••*Y
Ia
CUI'RIIId)' enrolled In eollege.
l8 - . .......................................... 123.40
He II the arudsoa of W-'ter
ttw-.......................................... t41.111
.,.,_,,........................................ SIIAO
and Betty WIIIOD, Peach Port
1111• Mon\h .........................................$6.915
Orrte YeAr......................................... S83.20
N ••

!1Stnel

.

Two cited for D.U.l.

.

The Gam.·Mei&amp;s f'ollt of the State Highway Patrol recently cited
two men for drivin4 under the influence.
·
Charles W. Wh1uington, 35, 34437 Crew Road, Pomeroy, and
Michael A. Tillis, 34, 34659 Slate Route 7, Pomeroy, were both
cited Cor driving under the Influence, left of center and no seat belL
Whiuington was cited early Monday morning and Tillis was ,
cited early tbis morning:
,

Rold. Pclmelot.
•

app•• .. ollldll

itpOIII,

=most

;q,

seat hell violation, $15 plus costs;

probalion, 90-day OL suspension;
upon com:J:IetementofRTP school,:
$150 of efine and J'w'l will be
suspended; failure to control, $20
plus cOSIS; mishandling a ru-carm in
a motor vehicle, $100 plus costs,
30 days jail suspetlded to live, consecud~ with DUI ~e. one year
probation; criminal m1schief, $40
for .restitution, 30 days jail sus= t o live concurrent with mis·
dling fireanns charge·
'
Scott A Wholrey Pomeroy·
·
'
seat belt violation, SIS plus costs~·,
Charles A. Weimann, Cheshire,
speed, S20·plus costs; Larry Bis·
sell Rutland DUI $350 I
•
•
•
P us costs.•
10 days jail suspended to thrcp
days, 90-daY OL suspensiOn,
· one
proba
•
· o·f
year
bon, upon comp1ebon
the RTP school, $150 of the fine
110d jail will be suspended; Floyd
Pullins, Long Bottom, leaving
scene of an accident, 30 days jllil
suspended to 10 'days, $75 plus
costs; restirulion; no OL, $75 piU$
costs; failure to control, $2S plus
costs; James Blair, Marietta, Dill,
belt violation, $25 plus Cl!Sts; Ran· 30 days jail suspended to 10 days,
dall Kesterson, Pomeroy, DUI, $450 plus costs, one-year OL sus5350 plus costs, 10 days jail sus- pension, one year .P~baticin, alcO:.
pended to 1hree, 90-day OL suspen- hoi assessment; 'drivmg under sussion; left cel_lter. $20 plus costs; pension, 30 days jail suspended 10
seat belt .VIolauon, $2,5 plus costs; 10 days concurrent w1'th DUI, one'
El
p k
R
d
mer . 1c ens, acme, assure
year probation; left of center, COS!$
clear distance, $30 plus costs; . only; seat belt violation $25 plus
B_uddy Kuhn, Lucasville, seat belt costs.
'
· :
V!Oiab~, $lS plus costs;
. .
Forfeiting· bonds were: Ronal~
Sherrial! M..Hadder, Lucasv!Ue, Hill, Batavia, speed, $65, and Timseat belt violabon, $2S plus costs; othy Zurcher Letart, W Va seat
~ A. Hawk, Reedsville, speed- belt violation.'$43. ·
· ·•
mg, $28 plus costs; Susan G. Jones,
Reedsville, SC8l belt violation, $15
plus costs; Crystal Barber,
0Qfu. ••
Reedsville, operaling a vehicle
Coutiuued from pa'e 1
with permit Qnly, $100 fine suspended $50 plus costs if OL pre·
sented in 60 days; seat belt viola· $3, but by keeping tile former levy
rate, it would ·have provided aption, $2S plus costs; Floyd D. proximately
$300,000 to be used
Pullins, Long Bollom, DUI, 30
for
capital
improvements.
Niben
d
· ·1
d-A
10· d
ays Jal suspen "" to
ays, also voted not to lower the rate. :
one-year OL suspension, one year
. Wright jumped !n• adding any
probalion, alcohol assessment; no
tune
a levy serves tts purpose and
OL, 30 days jail suspended to 10
concurrent with DUI, $100 plus there is a surplus, common decenc~
costs, one year probiuion; ficlilious ·says to reduce iL "It seems we ha~
money when it is convenient, and
plates, costs only;
no money when it is inconvenient.~
Dewayne Barley, Middleport, Wright
added.
·
no OL, $15 plus costs, three days
It
was
noted
by
closing
the
jail suspended if valid OL present·
schools, the system would save aped in 90 days; speeding, $25 plus proximately
$150,000 per year per
costs; Jon S. Turner, Alhens, seat school, or $300,000
total.
belt violation, $30 plus costs; Vicki
Closed
hearings
were held for
L. Miller, Pomeroy, DUI, $4SO
four
bus
drivers
who
possibly
plus costs, 30 days jail suspended face layoff due to RIFcoukl
(reduction
in
to 10 days, one-year OL suspenforce).
FoUowing
an
executive
session, one year probation, alcohol sion for personnel,the meeting was
assessment; Thorne M. Cottrill, adjourned.
Pomeroy, petty theft, $50 plus
Board members will meet in
special session once again tonight,
Barnhart, Guysville,
6:30p.m., to vote on the RIF'ing of
DUI, $350 plus costs, 10 days jail
2S professional and 14 service per.
suspended to lhree days, one year
sonnel employees.
Lawrence E. Zier Jr., New
.Brunswick, NJ., speed, $21 plus
cpst~ ; Lonnie Sawyer, Lepoir,
N.C., speed, $20 plus eosts; James·
Ferrell, Racine, DUI, 10 days jail
suspended to three days, $350 plus
costs, 90-day OL suspension, one
year probation, upon completemcnt
nf the RTP·school, $150 of the line
and jail will be suspended; left of
center, $20 plus costs·, Flo~d H.
Ward, Marietta, DUI, $35 and
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
thre;e days, 90-day OL suspension,
one year probation, upon complete·
t f th RTP h00I $150 0 f
men
e
sc
•
the line and jail will be suspended;
failure to drive in· marked lanes,
costs only; seat belt
violation, $25
plus costs;
Bf¥an K. Swann, Pomeroy, seat
belt VIolation, $25 plus costs; Larry
E. Powell, Middleport, no OL,
three days jail s~nded if valid
~~':' ~ if ~l"~=,
Greg P. Garretson, Rutland, seat

°

me

5

ot

B

,,,

co~ichael

-Meigs announcements_
Lodge to meet
Harrisonville Lodge No. 411
F&amp;AM will meet Satwday at 7:30
p.m. Refreshments will be served.
All master masons invited.

Pomeroy.
Cleanup be&amp;lns Moaday
Cleanup i!f the Letart Cemetery
will begin Monday. Those who
wish to preserve the flowers on
Missioaaries to speak
graves are asked to remove them
South Africa, land of turmoil • before the cleanup be~-~- •
and tranquility, is in the news and
on the minds of the world. 'Dr. .,
James and Dorothy Ditty, missionaries Who reside in Johannesburg,
South Africa. will share the excite·
ment and adventure they have
experienced on Wednesday at 7
p.m. at Hope Baptist Chun:h oa
Grant Street in Middleport.
Bricklayer&amp; meetlag post-

poued .
The Bricklayers Local 32 meet·

ing scheduled for Thursday has
been changed to AprilS at 8 p.m. at
the Meias County Library in

Sta1e Auto's already
klw prarniurils can be

reduoedaven more by
insuring bolh your car
. and home with the
Auto Companies.

s....

ll!l us ta(l you just
how much your savings
can be.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to nine calls for Biatance ovcmighL
Responding were: 7:40 un. Middleport to Beech Street for Mar.
garet N'unn who wu lntts(10111!110 Pleasant Valley Hospital; 7:56
a.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy PitO for Heather Divis who was trans·
ported 10 Velaanl Memorial Holpilll; 11:54 1.111. Rutland to New
Lima ROid for Angle Wblse wbo was lllllaponcd to VMH; 12:05
p.m. Tuppers Plalna to Old Seven Road £cr BloiJe Connley wbo
,was ~'lllid 10 Camdoii-Cft Hospital; 3:15p.m. Midd~ to
South
Streel Cot Fnncls Roulb who wu .._...ted 10 lzer
Medical Center; 8:56 p.m. MlMepon 10 MiddleoOn Fire Dcpert·
ment for Birney Hllea who w• trlnlpOited 10 VMH; 9:43 p.m.
Mitldleport 10 die Mldd~ Fire Dlii*•nllnl for Mart TIIIil who
wu tr101poned 10 vM( 11:39 p.m. Wlddleport to BI'Oidway
Streel for Barney Hllea -,..Ito was lrlllsported to VMH; 6:40 l.m.
Middleport to lite MldcJieDort Fire l)epartmcat _for Barney Hiles
who was tra11sponct1 to Holzer Mcdlcal Center.
•
Editor'• aGte: All ._., .,. ud addra are pub~J~W as

ther

J::'

ends 52 cases

EMS responds to nine calls

Pomcnq, 0Hio45769.

I)" Carrier or Motor Ro..te
Obe Woek........................................... 81.60

.

Missing person report filed

every af'temoon, Moncbly

lh""''h Friday,

1 ~111'11

l

Hospital news

d
·
crestc early today. No maJOr
flooding was reported.
Rising water atread has closed ~
1 ·I · roads 10
· y
:
~':
towas around:
Flood ~ were up '-y for ·
parts of New Jeraey Maine New .
Hampibire, Masslth~ ~ :
Island and Connecticut. ·
Tempera!
tod
·
ted 10 ; ; : : the ~...;~ :·
of the northern tier; the '.
60s in llle Northwest the Texas :
IJ!IIIhandle region and the Ohio '
Valley· and lht 70ii.and 80s in lbe :
SoutbcUandSouthwesL .
:
The high temperature Monday :
for the continental t)nited States ·
was 91 degrees in two Texas :
towns, Sanderson and LajiiiS.
·

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
. H2-6687

,.~

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........... c •• d
. '
.. .

'

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�-sports

_ Th¢ Daily, ~!~~

·

Tuesday, March 30,1993

.

Toronto looks to take AL East despite challenge by Baltimore
By NORMAN MacLEAN
The Vastly changed world champion Toronto Blue Jays will have
their hands fuU winning the American League East in 1993. Expect
challenges from both the Baltimore
Orioles and the dark horse New
York Yankees.
. Hel'C's how they will finish in
• tlie AL East this season:
Toronto Blue Jays
Pave Winfield, ·the hero DH
· whose hit against Atlanta clinched
the World Series. jumped to Min·
nesota. He WiU be replace!:~ by exMilwaukee Brewer Paul MolitOr
(:320. 12 HRs. 89 RBis). who can
· also play some third base. Other
Jay departures: 38 Kelly Gruber,
, SP David Cone, SS Manuel Lee,
"RP Tom Henke, 'OF·DH Candy
Maldonado and SP Jimmy Key.
Manager Cito Gaston's starters
· are Jack Manis (21-{i, 4.04 ERA),
Juan G_uzman (16-S, 2.64) and
Todd Stoulemyre (12-ll, 4.S0).and
ex-Qakland ace Dave Stewart (12·
10, 3.66). Duane Ward (7-4 , 12
saves) takes over for Henke.
· Toronto's infield features John
Olerud at lB and Gold Glove
Roberto Alomar at 2B. Tbe outfield: . ~oe Carter (34 HRS, 119
RBls), m RF; DevoQ White in CF;
and prospect Derek Bell in LF.

.

Georgetown, Minnesota advance to finals
lly CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP)- In oollege
basketball. there are second
chances. Just ask Ocor&amp;etown and
Minneso&amp;a, this year's finalists in
the refuge for the unchoacn - the
NIT.
.
Tbe Hoyas and Gophers proved
Monday night that college basket·
ball in March doesn't need an overload of hype and a host of cooference champions, iJ only needs
teamS 6gbling for one more game,

said.
more ball games and that was our
"When r pleyed litre in 1965, goal," Thompson said.
everyone wanted to win the NIT,
The final shapes up as a baule of
not the NCAA, so that's what r tell Minnesota's wide-cpen. NBA-Iike
my players. lt's a very big deal to game vs. Georgetown's tentative,
us."
height-oriented style.
Pretty Siron' words from a
The Gophers reached this point
coach who was IJ'IIte 2 l/2 weeks with _an eight-point victory over
~o when the NCAA PIIS8ed o~ 1 Florida. a 14-point win over OldahiS~ onselcclion day. ~ homa, an 18-point win over South·
and h1s. Gopb~rs are maki~~ the em Cal an4 Monday's win at MadiNIT their JI'OVII!&amp; ground, ;lr)'ing to son Square Garden. Minnesota was
show the selecuon' comnuuee was the only NIT entrant to play irs first
wrong. '
three tournament games at horne.
"We're showing that We n:ally
Georgetown beat Arizona State
do belong br, being our best in this by 10, Te.xas-EI Paso by 27 and
tournament,. ' said .Yosbon Lenard. Miami of Ohio by 13 before Mon·
a sophomore gqilrd who scored 10 day's game.
straight poinrs as Minnesota came
Geo11etown 45, UAB 41
back from an 11-point.second-half
In a game devoid of highlight
deficit against Providence.
"I
· 1 G
h ld
Georgetown coach Jotm · ' m mat1ma, eorgetown e .
Thompson sees things a little dif- UAB scoreless for the last nine
fere. ntly, but that's because hi's . minutes. Even coach Gene Banow
H
was shocked.
oyas were out of the hunt for an
•'Do you mean to tell me we
NCAA benh midway trough the had 41 points wilb nine minutes
Big East regular season.
1 • and · •
1"
His team. with a •--'·g lineup
e.t
didn 1 score Banow said
f
fresh
........,
whe'l confronted with a stat sheet
0 two
men, a sophomore and
The Blazers (20-14) had only
two juniors, is using .!he NIT as a two field goal attemprs in the last
learning experience.
. nine minutes thanks to five
"This NIT experience has been tuniovers, a jump ball and several
great for us, lt's allowed us to play fouls. UAB led 31-14 early in the

one more chance.

G~orgetown and Minnesota
have had that extra chance four
times in the NIT 50 far, and came
up winners each time. So even
though they'll be playing for a sort
of booby prize Wednelday night,
they'll still have aclilnce to play in
'onShip
a 'Th~~~ r:u b· . ~in a low·
·
·
· b k
sconng mate np; comh.r:f ac
from a 17-point leCOIIddeficit
to defeat Alama·Binningham 4S41. Minnesota advanced in a much
·
d
· ·
more athletic an entertammg
game, outlasting Providence 76-70.
So. is anyone ~egretting the second-class circumstances?
"To me, it's a championship,"
Minnesota coach Clem Haskins

In NCAA. women'sfina,lfour,

second half, but' GeorgetoWn came
back with a 2().5 run and tied the
score 41-41. .
Eric Micoud's two foul shots
pul Georgetown ahe$1 43-41 with
three minutes left, and Othella Harrington ac!ded lWO mort foul shots ·
with 22 seconds left.
Harrington led Georgetown (2012) with ll points, and Robert
Churchwell, Duane Spencer and
John Jacques had eight apiece.
Stanley J!ICkscn led UAB with 11
poirits.
Minnesola 76, Provlden.c:e 70
. This one was tighly contested
throughout !he ftrSt half, and·Provi·
dence pulled ahead 53-42 early in
the second half. That's when
Lenard took over.
He scored 10 points in a 16-6
run that made 'it 59-58 with 8:52
remaining.
.
After Providence's Michael
Brown hit two ~ throws to tie it
67·67 with 3:40 remaining, .Min·
ne1101a (21-10) scored nine straight
points - all on f~ throws. . ,
Lenard made moe of 12 shots,
including 4-for-7 from three-point
range, and fmished, with 25 poi~,
Jayson Walton added 16 points and
seven rebounds. Tony Turner led
the Friars (20-12) with lS points.

,. REJECTED - Providence's Dickey Simpkins finds his shot
. : attempt rejected by Minnesota troutman Chad Kolander durlilg
.:., Monday night's NIT semifinal game In New York's Madison
Square Garden, whe.r e the Golden Gophers won 76-70 to advance to
.
,
,.. ..Wednesday night's championship game. against Georaetown. (AP)
r .•

Score boar((
" ; In the NBA •.•

By NORMAN MacLEAN .
In the American .League's wild
:West, tbe Oakland A's and the
'MinJ:I!lSOta Twins have been taking
turns as No. I. Now it's time for a
change - to the Texas Rangers.
' But Minnesota and the "Chicago
:. White Sox will be close.
. Here's how they will finish in
" lhe AL West this season:
·
·
Texas Rangers
Manag« Kevin Kennedy, 38, is
making his debut. He likes the fact
· that key Texas newcomers played
' for diVISion winners in 1992. This
includes: OF Jose Canseco (whQ
arrived late last year from Oak·
lan!l). RP Tom Henke, SP Charlie
Leibrandt and SS Manuel Lee.
'l1le sw outfielders are Canseco
. (26 HRs, 87 RBis) and AL homer
king Juan Gonzalez (43 HRs, 109
RBI~). lf those two come through.
so will ~exas.
.
.
_,
Lead111g the rotat1on IS Keym
Brown (21-11, 3.3~ ERA). Nolan
Ryan (lS7 Ks in 157 IP), who is
461 is in his farewe!l season:
Le!bl)llldt (15-7, 3.36 wtth Atlanta)

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUantk DlriiMJn
WLPd.GB

T,_

s.-New Yoli. ...........47 20
BOIIOn ...................Al
New Jersey ............40
Orlando ..........~L ...32
Miami ....................30
II

r ••

.701
..59-4

21
29
34
37

..5110
.48S
.448

Jlhiladolphia ,.,,,"""21 46
Wullinpn ...........20 41

,313

7
, 8.
14.5
17
26

.~

27~

Central Dl.,llioll
20 .706
ClJ!VI!I..'N1) .. .....43 2S . 63~ .
Adanl.a ······-···""'"'37 32 .!136
Charlotao ... - ........... 3:5 34 .507
lndiana ...................33 3.S .48S
DctraiL ...................31 36 .463
MUwauka .............l6 43 .m

,,

.'

Buffo!o" WuiUn....,, 7o40pm.
Philldflphbi at .N .Y. blandcn, 1:40
pm.
Ottiwa al PiUibutp. 7:40p.m.
Vaacouvcr at St. Louil,l:40 p.m.
Wimipca at c.Jauy~ 9:40 p.m.

New Jc:aey at Bw:falo, 7:40p.m.
Qucboc at MontreaL 7:40 p.m.
Lol An&amp;d• at Toronto, 7:40p.m.

l
11..5

13..5
IS
16.S

22.S

Mimeeog IL EclmCIIIGil. 9:40p.m.

In the NIT ...
Monday's semilloals

" ..

Utah .......................40 30
O..vw ...................29 o40

.S71
...20

. .......... ..... - ...... .16 ll

.239

. Dallu .......................7 61

.103

•
• .

, ..

6
11
11
20

.m

a;_. .........

' "
.

IS
'II
36.5

P.Jrk: DI.Vion
.............. S2 IS .T16
x..Seat1le .................47 22 .681
l'orllond ............... ..41 26 .612
LA. LWn ............ 34 33
LA.
33 36 .478
Golden State ..........21 40 .412
Sacnmcrno ............21 47 .309
I -clinched playoff berth

&lt;

&amp;.\on 110, Sacn.meruo 89
Atlanta 127. Portland J 11 (OT)
Wuhinf.OO 114, Milwaukcal07
Denver 114, Utah 101

Tonight's pmes

S~toatNowYo«. 7!30

p.m.
Philadelphia ll New Jede)', 7!30 p.m.
Octtoit 11 C&gt;rbado. 7:30p.m.
Miami atChuloue. 7:30p.m.
PhomU at OLicaao. I p.m.

Seattle at Sift Amalio..1:30 p.m.
L.A. Ltkcn: at L.A. Clippen, 10:30
pm.
Mimc.oY at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

wgr.

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

. 11 B~,

?:30 p.m.

atl::ldtoil, 7:30p.m.
Wllhin!PM It Indiana, 7:]0 p.m.
Seaulc ll Dallu,l :30p.m.
Allanta 1t OanYCr, 9 p.m.
SUI Antonio II Uu.b, 9 p.m.
MinneiOia It L.A. Lakc:a, 10:30 p.m.

....

'

In the NHL •.•
WALES CONFERENCE
PatrkkDI ...klll
W L T Pta
x•I'Htoburlft ...... 49 ~I 6 104
Wullinpn .. _.. 31 30 7 13
N•w Jcney ....... 31 32 6 82
N.Y. Rqm .... 33 lt 11 77
N.Y. Wanclon... lS 33 6 76
PltiladclphiA ...... 21 JS II 67
Team

'

.••

•
'

•
••

GP GA
317 242
300 265
280 264
2M :114
300 W
2U 299

Ad..aDI•iiiMI

•

y-MoaU'CII ........ 46 25 6 91 311 254

~

y-Bilffa.lo .......... 37 ZIIO 14 314 263

'
: y.(luobo&lt; .......... 42 24 10 94 320 212
; .. y-Bocon ........... .C:l 26 7 93 291 2.17
"
~

Hanford ............ ll 41 :s 49 246 326
•' Ot&amp;aw• .............. 9 62 4 2l Ill 3S2

.,

, . CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrk DI•W.
• " ' T...
W' L T Pll GFGA
:
,~ ......... &lt;l 24 10 94 :25&lt; 209
1 .,. y·Ddluil ........... 42 21 9 93 341 2111
1
41 2l10 9l v1 211

•

i

,.r................

I

SL Louil; ........... 35 32 9 79 25.5 250
w ............. 33 3310 76 251 2M
T-Boy ....... 2249l49Zl2294

:•

..,....~
y-V~ ..... 39 71 9 17

'1.

1 ...

•

304242

•

y-Co!pty .......... '¥1 :1110 14 211 2l4
Aaploo .. l6 32
10 312 JIO

'
I

,,
.......... r25 .w • sa 220 30!1
1•1---..-· 10 65 2 22 197 314

•

r-Lao

a

• ·: y-Wiaolpot ...... 34 35 1 15 211290

!

•
'

.

Wednesday's lloals
Third place
Alabama·Birmingham (20·14) n.
Pnwidmco (2().12), 6:45 p.m.
Chomplonlhlp
Georgetown (20·12) Vf, Minne~o\a
(21· 10), 9 p.m.

Transactions
BasebaU
American Leape
BOSTON RED SOX - Placed Dory!
Irvine, pitcher, on wlivm for the pwpo~e
of a ivina rum hia tm«&gt;ndidonal rclcue..
Sent Jim 8)'fd, 1hort11.0p;

CJnw Bloucr,

outfielder; Otoo Garcil, ia.fi&amp;lder; and
John Flaherty; catcher, to their minor
Ie~aue for rauipman.
·
CHICAGO WHITE SOX - Placed
Shawn Abner, outfield~. on waivers for
lhc purpoac of sivina him hia uftconlti.tional rclcuc.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Pl•ccd.
DauUa Rumuum, pitcher, on the IS-day
diubled liot.
OAXUND A11llEI'JCS - C1aimod
Scm Hemond, ealtber, oft waiven from
the Chicaao White So1. Optioned )oe
Sluunki and VUK» Honrnan. pildwa, u.
Tacoma of the hcifu: Cout IMpc. Rou&amp;i&amp;n.ed Kevin Campbell, pitcher, to
Tacoma. Rdaucd Ridi Godm&amp;n, catcher,
1nd Bob Miladd, piLcha. OO'aod Ouy
PetU., outJielder, and Dale Svewn, in·
fielder, conrncu with T•coma.

NllloMIUaaue
ClNCINNATJ REDS - A&amp;rce.d to
terma with Jeff Reardon., piteher, 1nd

Randy MiW1an, fU11 bucman, on oneyeu tontracu. Optioned Ouy Scoit, in·

~

~

MiMeaota16., Providenoo 70

31.5

Monday's scores

J

41

24.5

..

•I'

NtwVork

Ocora..._ 4l, Alabmuo-BiJmifta)lom

4~

~o·Phoc:nix

.. •
'

At MadiiOft Square Guden

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Mklw.a Dt•ldoa
~ ~ TWLPtL 0 GB
1·HW~Wn ..............44 2:S
.63S
.• San An.tonio ...........42 2S .6"J:l
1

•

Tolllgbt's g1111es

Boaon II Hanfad, 7;40 p.m.

Wednesday's games

•.au..,. ...~..... .. ...

-tide

-

'I t ,,..,. ....

'

fielder,

tD

lndianapolia of the American

~

CO LORADO ROCKIES - Sent
· Lance Painter and Armando Reynoao,
pitcher., and ChriJ Jonca, O\llficlder, to
!heir minor leap cunp for rcauipunc11L

HOUSTON ASTROS _.. Placed ROb
Mallieo~tand Tom Edc:tts, pitchen, on lbe
15-day diu.bled 1ill. Mallicolt n:ttoactivc.
10Mud!.26.
LOS ANOELI!S DOIXlEIIS - Tnd·
ed David Fitzpatrick, pilcber, to the

Chlcaao White Sox for Orea Pcrtehkc.,

phchrz.
MONTREAL EXPOS - Re1e .. ed
Franklin s~ubbl. fita baiCITian, from tw
rninor·lape conltleL Sent Cliff Aoyd,
outfielder, and Joe Slddal. e~tchc:l, to their
minor lt.lcue camp lor iu.Ni&amp;nmenL Sent
Pete Youna, pitcher, tD Onawa al the

Amc:rictn Alloc:iaUon. .
Pl!ll.ADELPIIIA l'lliU.IES - Sent
Ke"in Slacker, dlonnap, and Mi.lr.e
u..wa. oaldtw, 10 their minar leape

eamp lor N-~Nipman.

to...._

~onN

Kyle

Abbou. ]rildl«,
Wilk•&amp;m
&lt;IIIIo r.u...li&lt;onal Lupo.
SAN DIEOO PADUS - llelea•ed
Jc.Mn Wud, ~.and Vlcanw Pala·

v..,.

said. "Our players probably feel its trip to Atlanta by defeating Vir· more. It's a chance to redeem ourcornfonable m playing one another. ginia 75-73 for tile East Regional selves from when they beat us at ·
They're aware of each other's ten- championship last Saturday. That their ~lace,.'.'
..
1
dencies and styles of play.
game was played right before No. 4
· [t s also a chance for the Big
"It probably would be a truer Iowa beat Tennessee 72·56 in the Ten to show off to a national audifeeling of being in the national Mideast·Regional fmals.
ence. Although conference teams ·
semifinals to be playing a new ·
DBfSCh and Iowa coach Vivian such as Iowa, Ohi9 State and Puropponent But we're.happy to be in Stringer congratulated each other ~ue ttaditionally 1J4ve been strong ·
iL We don't care who we play."
·
by P.hone on Monday.
m women's basli:et)lall, they've
Vanderbilt plays Texas T~h in
'I'm very, very happy for coach never made much of a mark in
Sawrday' s other national semifinal Stringer and her team members, •• NCAA play until now.
at the Om.ni in Atlanta, with the Darsch said. "She told me her
Purdue had ait off year, but the
winners to meet Sunday for the players were cheering for us and I addition of Penn.State gave the Big
championship. Those two also are told her Qur players were cheering Ten another Top 25 team. The
in the Final Four for the ftrSt time.
for them."
Lady Lions were eighth in the fmal
Thinl' ranked Ohio State earned
Oh.io State and Iowa. both 27-3 rankings, then were upset by
o~erall, went 16-,2-- in the Big Ten
Georgetown in the second round of
and
split their ret~illar-season ·the NCAA toW11ament •
.
games, Iowa winnmg 79-62 in
·"We had three teamS that were
rowa City and Ohio State prevail- ranked in the top five at one time,"
ing 12-60 in Columbus.
lowa coach Vivian Stringer said.
Iowa center ·Andrea Harmon "[ have heard that other coaches
said knowing Ohio State had woo have questioned that But I think
motivated·her against Tennessee.
we
have beCI) able to get a
'I already wanted, to
{to the grtat
of respecL Any time you
tluoughout ihe secoild half.
The :ICings were led by Walt Final Four)," Hannon satd. "Ohio can put two teams in the Final ·
State made we want to go even ·Four, that's special.'"
(See NBA cin Page 5) .

Wilkins, Willis push
Hawks ,t() .overtime. win

Moaday'a~
Newi•oyS,Sml0100
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WASHINGTON REDSKINS - flo.
oipod Dulay Coptlond, uloty.

By The Associated Press
The Atlanta Hawks are soaring
behind the hOttest forward duo in
the NBA, Dominique Wilkins and
Kevin Willis.
Wilkins scored a season-high 48
points.and Willis. listed ~doubtful
before the game because of a
strained thigh, had 32. ~IS and a
season-high 25 rebounds Monday
l)ight in• Atlantit's 127·118 overtime Victory over Portland.
"I'm proud of our performance." Willis said. '·'We were
able ·to hoi!! off a good team and
maintain our composure."
"Kevin had an amazing performance. especially nOt knowing if
he was going to play or not,"
Adanta coach Bob Weiss said.
· It was the fifth consecutive win
ovetall and ninth straight at home
for the Hawks. who. have climbed
into sixth place in the Eastern Conference with II victodes in 12
games.
"Right now we feel, really confident about ourselves and we are
playin~ together," said Wilkins.
averagmg 36.6 points in .those 11
wins.
. ·
Cliff Robinson scored a career·
high 39 poinrs on 18-for-25 shooting for the Trail Blazers.
The Hawks led by five with 53
seconds left in regulation, but Port·
land came back to take a 108-106
lead wi1h 12 seconds remaining.
Stacey Augmon 's two free throws
with 6.0 seconds to go tied the
score, and Terry Porter missed a
jumper, forcing overtime.
Willis made the key play in
overtime ·when he grabbed a
missed free throw by Jon Koncak
and converted a three-point play
that gave Atlanta a seven-point
lead. The Hawks, who blew a 19point third-quarter lead, outscored
the Blazers 12-2 in the final 1:19 of
overtime,
Elsewhere in the NBA. it was
Boston 110, S~ento 89; Washington 114, Milwaukee 107; andDenver 114. Utah 101.
Nuggets 114, Jazz 101
Denver outscored Utah 31-16 in
the third quarter and handed the
Jazz their 12th home loss, triple the
number they had last season.
Chris Jackson scored 23 Jloints,
Dikembe Mutombo had 19 points
and 15 rebounds and Reggi~
Williams added 20 points for the
Nuggets.
. Karl Milone had 26 poinll IIIII
14 rebounds, Jeff Milone scored 22
poinll and John Sroclaon 21 poinll
and 10 assists ftl' the Jazz.
· CeltlclllO, KlDu 1!1
.
Bolton won Its elglith atralght
game as Kevin Gamble scored 28
poinll and Joe Kleine had a c:sreer·
high 20 rebound~ in a rout of visit·
log Sacnlinento.
·
The Celticis ooened a 32·12 lead
· tare in the tim quarter, survived a
Klnga nlly in tho second period
add led by at least 12 points

rn::r

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By DAVE HARRIS
,
Sentinel Corrapoadeat
;· , First year coach Scott Gheen
· · welcomes 16 players including
: • eight letter winners as the Meigs
:: Marauders get set to open the 1993
, . baseball season weather petmitting
; at SOUthern tonight
• .
; . Gheen who wss the coa~h for
·, two years at Kyger Creek, will·put
:. j lineup on the field that is made up
: of lZ seniors, three juniors and one.
~ lopbornOre. Gheen is no slolilger to

-- -.I
I
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Clean Out Your (~loset,
•
Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or
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IFIRIEIE
C JL A ®~ ll ,IF II IB JD)

will help. Craig Lefferts can spot
stilet or relieve. Henke had 34 saves
for Totonto in '92. The Gold Glove
catcher is young Ivan Rodriguez.
'Rafael Palmeiro (21 HRs, 85
RBis. 84 runs) ·is at lB. Billy Ripken shares 28 with Julio Franco,
who will also DH. Dean Palmer
(26 HRs. 7'1. RBls) plays third.
. Minni!IIOta Twins
Somehow manager Tom Kelly
keeps the Twins in contention. But
he needs pitchipg in '93. Starters
. Kevin Tapani (16-ll, 3.97) and
ScottErickson(l3·12,3.40)return.
Bert Blyleven is a possibility.
Willie Banks could blossom. Closer Rick Aguilera has 83 saves in
the past two seasons ..The catcher is
Brian Harper (.307, 73 ~Bls).
Loyal star Kirby Puckett (.329,
19 HRs, 110 RBis) signed on again
CF. .Underrated ~bane Mack (.315,
16 HRs, 75 RBJs, 101 runs) is in
LF; Pedro Munoz is in RF. Dave
Winfield the World Series hero for
Toronto 'is the new DH.
·
Keni Hrbek, returni~g from
shoulder surgery at lB, ts a key
,

man - a lefty hitter in a right·
handed lipeup. T~ird-year star
Chuck Knoblauch 1s at 28. Scott
Leins moves fi'Qm 38 toSS. Terry
Jorgenson talresoveratthird.
Chicago White Sox
Manager Gene Lamont enters
his second sC8son in Chicago with
renewed hope. two reasons: newcomers Ellis Burks 1111d Dave Stieb.
·But they've been injury-plagued
lately.
·
Jack McDowell (20·10, 3.18),
Kirk McCaskill, Alex Fernandez ·
and Stieb (only 4-6 in Toronto)
form the rotation. The bullpen fea•
tt.Jres Bobby Thigpen (22 saves).
Ron Karlrovice is the catcher.
In the talented infield are Frank
n
( 323 24 HRs liS RBis
toS'::s)' a1 is; Steve' sax at2Bi ·
Ozzie Guillen, returning from knee
surgery. at SS; and Robiri Ventura
(.282, 16 HRs, 93 RBis) at 38.
· DJi .George Bell (25 HRs, 112
RBis) drives in runs year after
year. OF Tim Raines (.294, 102
tuns) is back. OF Burks (23S ABs
in Boston) is questionallle.

I

. \

By JOE KAY
- . WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP): Jeff Branson rounds a base, and
.· knows he's being w.atched.
;
1 He glides through infwkl prac: lice, and feels the scrutiny from the.
• Cincinnati Reds dugout.
; · He knows people
watching
: for any si~n of hesitation every
, time he's mvolved in a double

are

~

pl!IY.

'

·

· "rhe 26-year-old infielder' is one

~ of the most closely watched players
~ in the Re.ds' training camp.- He
·~ knew he would be from the day he

'

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This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For •too.oo Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Oip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Acceptecl),
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You Ad Will Run For One Week.

the ·marocln and gold. Tbe 1985
Meigs graduste was ap all-state
catcher for' coach Tim Saunders
and was a member of th\l . l984
·TVc championship team. After his
graduation. Ghe~n continued his
career at West Virginia State before transferring to Rio Grande
where he finished his career. He
will be assisted this year by former
MaraUder teammate Dan Thomas,
·an all-conference pitcher for the
Marauders and former pitcher at
.

Malone CoUi:Jc.
. The Marauder liutfield will be
led by center fielder Mike "Abby"
Welsh and leftfielder Bill Glaze.
Welsh, a senior, was one of the lOp
hitters for last year's team. Jac:k .
Stanley. a junior: will also sec time
in center. ln left field will be Glaze.
another of the Marauders" leading ·
hitters from last season. Chris
Knigllt is also loolcilig for playing
time in left. Battling for playing
time in rigl!t will be seniors Nathan

while turning a double play Sept
30. Los.An$eles' Eric Young hit
the k;nee at JUSt the right angle to
end Branson's sensational rookie
season with a career-threatening
injury.
.
Doctors had to repair tears in
two ligaments and reconstruct his
anterior cruciate ligament. There
wassomequestionwbetherhe'dbe
able to move well enough to play
infield once it healed.
No one counted on him coming
back before mid·IICIISOD. ·
Less than six months later.
Branson is in the running for a spot
· on the opening day roster. He's hlt·
ling just .167, but is playing well
enough defensively to make the
"'-~- CODSI'der keeping him. .
"'""'
M1111ager Tony Perez put Bran·
son at shortsiOp Sunday to test his
mobiUry. He went l for 4, turned a
doubt~ play and. made one difficult
play m a 6·3 vtelory over Cleveland.
He knew Perez was watc~ing '

He'd love to keep his job as
backup infielder and No. l pinch
hitter. The fact that be's still in
camp competing for it less than six
months after surgery is a major

a.!?'*

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NAME:----------------------------~--~--PHONENUMBER:---.-------------~------~--~-­
MAILTO:

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.The Daily Sentinel
Court Street, Pomero~ OH 45769
1

in the race. Somehow.
The rotation was hit by the
departures of Dave Stewart and
Mike Moore. But Ron Darling and
Bob Welch return. along with
, Bobby Witt and Stonn Davis. Dennis Eclcersley (51 saves) is the AL
MVP closer. C Terry Steinbach resignlld,IOO.
The infield has 1B . Mark
McGuire (42 HRs, 104 RBis).
Unhappy Rickey Henderson and
new ziU1onaire Reuben Sierra (17
HRs. 87 RBls) are key Olllfielders.
Kansas City Royals
Manager Hal McRae welcom~;S
four major anivals: P David O;lne.
2B Jose Lind. SS Greg Gagne and
OF Felix Jose.
.
Cone (17 wins, 261 Ks) and
Kevin Appier (15-8, 2.46) are onetwo in the rotation . Jeff Montgomery (2.18, 39 saves) is the closer.
..
Wally Joyner is at lB. Battling
at 3B: Keith Miller and Craig Wit-

son.

The outfield has Jose (.295, 75
RBls). Kevin McReynolds and

Brown arid·Matt Craddocic and juniOI' AarOn Drummer.
-'
The infield for Meigs will reature seniors Vince Reiber, Carlton
Drummer al\d Mike Vance, all of
whom will play at first base: At
second base. either senior Kyle
Simpson or Carlton Drummer will
get the noel: Returning starters Jim
Pullins at sb&lt;XI and Gary Adams at
third, both seniors, will 'round out
the inf~eld.
Juniors Jmmy Grimm or Airon
Drummer will get the job behind

the plate. 'Gheen feels that both are
good additions to the team.
Pitching might be one of the
suong points for the Maraud,ers.
Anchoring the staff will be senior.
southpaw Milce Vance and South·
ern transfer Keith Jones. Both have
outstanding arms and are good athletes, Vance was an honorable
mention all-conference pick last
seasorl. The rest of the pitching
staff also have outstanding arms including sophomore Brett New-

foi

(OFFBR BXPIRES 6/21 /93)

.L

or

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accomplishmeat
"I feel extremely $oocl about
myself right now,to be m the shape
r am, to be able to move like I
.

can,'' he said. "When the injury
happened, everybody said it would
be nine to 12 months. [ feel very
good about being where I am

now."

Indians to commence final season
in Municipal St(ldium against·Yanks

By M.R. KROPKO
CLEVELAND (AP) - A coupte of unusoal factors could make
:-reponed with a bulky brace on his
for a huge crowd Monday at Cleve~; s~ically reconstructed left knee.
land Stadium. when the Oeveland
' · 'That's nonnal for everybody
[ndians and New York Yankees
L atter they've had knee surgery or
begin their American League sea·
sons.
• any kind of injury,'' Branson said
The~ will be played, weath• Sunday. ·~They've got to make a
: decision on whether r,hey think I'm
er permuting, two weeks after lWO
p eady or not. 1 feel I am. I feel I'm
Indians pi~hen were killed in a
• movmg as w.ell now as'I ever did.' ' ,
boating accidenL
~: Branson Is way ahead of scbedthe Indiana hljve been ~ot&gt; ule in his comeback from surgery
ing this liCIISOD as the ream s last at
J. tast October. malcin11 him ·one of.
·Cltveland Stadium before entering .
~ the biggest surprises of training' eve~ step. •
·
..
their new Gateway ball~ male:;camp. .
· . ' I felt ~~re we~ go!ng..to be lng Monday"s game the' last home
, - The diagnosis was a 9- to 12• eyes on me, Branson said, They opener ·in 1111!' 60-year-old latefront
: !DOnth rehabilitation after Branson were going to ~
lnd see s~cture with a seating capacity of
• tore three ligaments in the left knee
bow well I'm movmg.
· · 14.483.
·
:
So? •·
·
To what extent bas the tragedy
A
•
"He looked all right,'' Pctez ~ affected tickeuales?
f,
L-1. QCtiOn • • •
said, noncommittally.
, "I n:ally can't gauge that one,"
•·
Perez
thinlll it'll be a while yet said Jeff Overton, Indians vice
;
(ContinuedfromPage 4 )
before Ihanaon ia back to ,full presidont lot marteting and com1Williams wiih 22 points.
· strenjth. He lllCI tbit .~ can ' maaii!ad0111. '4The reality is that
l
BuDets114, B11Cks 107
nm welt llllilhl.-ebead·, bat illdll our opeDIIr and preseason ticket
, Washington won for just the i litdo limbed wllh lateral modon. . salea were runn1011 far ahead of
, seventh time in 35 road games, That would 116 a P.f'Oblem if he'a IIOIIIIIIj.prior to this, and it 1111 con• outsooring Milwaukee '40..30 ill the ~ 10 play lllat1stop or iccoDd tinned. We have felt a lot of.emothird quarter.
tNue:
.. .
. lion from thla - . but ticket aa1es
1 Michael Adams and Rex Chap"Thild bue 11 the best ~lion ate climbina aalbout tho Rile
;' man scored 24 points each and for him becNI"' all he hu IIi do Ia they have"-.''
! Harvey Onnt had 23 for the ~utlllliaht." Pe1ez said. "He's not
N
Mooclay, the advanl:le llle
~ lctB, who exiCIIded a 50-43 halftime ·
to move back; and Conli.•'
for the bome opener wu aUahdy
Perez woald Jove to have a · over 51,000, he lllid.
.
• lead 10 17 pointl in the third periOd
: behind 11 poln11 from Adams and healthy Branson on the bench. .1 Team officlall are clelllnllinina
nfne by Ol1nt.
Nobody waa tietter last year at now to beat honor plu:ban •teve
: · Larry Stewart'• shon jumpar deHvailla big pinch bill
Olin and Tim Crew a, wbo died
· : with 2:10 remaining put Waablill· ·
Bt1111011 wu 13
34 (.382) after Crewa' 18-foot baaa boat
• ton ahead 82·63 aild Milwaukee wllh 10 RBII Ha went 8 for 12 as slammed· under a dock ~n Lltde
l (IOlno cloler than seven tho nst of · a Dinch bittet.from July nlo Aug. Late Nei!IC- ~.25 milll nardt
:.IJ!ewa,.
· 16. and woo two pmes in three oftheMw Florida...matnlin• '1111 Bucb,led by Bnld 1 oba•• da;a In Septembt!r by driving .In ing beao In Wile lfaWta. A ~
1ifiWI21 palnia, have loll nine
12 . ru111 in the 6om1J1 the ninth
pitcher, Bob Ojeda. wil iftltlajd in
p1111111.
·, ·
•
"
•
U. Mardi 22 accldelll bUt·IiU been

r

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-~111

. Seattle Mariners
Lou Piniella is happy he's with
the Mariners as their new manager.
"[ can't believe this team lost 98
gameslasty•,'; he says.
To recover, Seattle signed SP
Chris Bosio (16-{i, 3.62 with Milwaukee) and acquired closer Neirm
Charlton (2.99, 26 .saves in Cincinnati). AL strikeout king Randy
Joltnson (241 Ks) and'Erilc Hanson
are also in the rotation.
·Tino Martinez (16 HRs) is at
first base; Rookie Bret Boone, a
third-generation major leaguer, is
at second. Omar Vizquel is at short
AL batting champ Edgar Martinez
(.343, 18 HRs, ·73 RBis, 100 runs)
plays third.
Baseball's best young talen~ CF
Ken Griffey Jr. (.308, 27 HRs, 103
RBis), is only 23' years old. Jay
Bohner (2S HRs) and ·speedy Mike
Feldr.r also play the outfield Dave
Valle is the catcher.
Oaldaad A's .
On paper the A's ~m to have
been dismantled. but manager
Tony LaRussa might keep Oakland

[·.:Branson's
knee surgery recpvery well .ahead. of schedule
.

•

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.
(SORRY, TillS DOES NOT APPLY TOYARD SALES)

knees wiU be helped by Fenway' s
grass. Can he repeat his 22 HRs
and 90 RBis? Calderon is coming
off an injury-filled "92.
·
Tbe Red Sox are led by baseball's best pilcller, Roger'Clemens
(18-11. 2.41). Frank Viola (13-12.
3.44) and Danny Darwin (9·9,
1 3.96) are key starters. There·~ no
established Closer, however.
LF Mike Greenwell ( 180 ABs)
is looking for a comeback. Tony
Pena is 1he catcher. Young Mo
Vaugho could be bumped at IB by
Carlos Quintana, who's back fl6m
the DL. Tim Naehring is at 2B.
John Valentin at SS and Scott
Cooper it 3B.
·
Dttroit Tigers
Manager Sparky Anderson still
has a problem, despite the mega
bucks of new owner Mike Uitch.
Without better pitching, Detroit
can't win no matter how many runs
it scores.
lliU:h re-signed I B Cecil Fielder
(35 HRs, 124 RBls). Ditto vet 2B
Lou Whitaker (19 HRs, 7l RBis).
who teams with· coming, supersw
SS Travis Fryman (20 HRs. 96
RBis). Vet Alan Trammell wants to
stay healthy . C Mickey Tettleton'
(32 HRs, 83 RBls) and OF Rob
Deer (32 ~s) add power.

)

Solid Mike Henneman (24
saves) is the closer; Bill Gullicklen
(14-13. 4.34) is the ace. Mile
Moore (17·12, 4.12) and young
John Doheny offer hope.
Milwaukee Brewert
Owner Bud Selig. baseball's
acting commissioner, !oat fri:e
agents Paul Molitor and Chtis
Bosio. Manager l1hiJ Gamer thinks
he can still win. Top stancn: BiU
Wegman (3 .20), Jaime Navarro
(17-11, 3.33) and n;lOide Dash C11I
Eldred (11·2, 1.79). Doug HC111Y
(29 saves) is the closer. Coming"elf
lf1ll trouble: ex-ace Teddy Higueia.
Dave Nilsson replaces B: J.
Surhoff behind the pl~te. At 2B,
Bill Spiers returns from back
surgery. Robin Yount (3,000 hils)
is still in CF. First baseman Urry
Sheets si~ on from Japan; ~PI
Doran is mf~eld help.
·
·..
Greg Vaughn (23 HRs. · ~g
RBls) and Dsrryl Hamilton are OF
~gWars.
'
Final 1991 standings: TIJ'OIIIIl,
96·66, .593; Milwaukee, 92-70,
.568 (4 GB); Baltimore, 89·:73,
.549 (7. GB); Cleveland, 76-8(i.
.469 (20 GB); N\lw York, 76-a&lt;i,
.469 (20 GB); Deuoit, 75-87, .463
(21 GB):. Boslon. 73-89• .451 (23
GB).
•

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Brian McRae. lbe catcher is Mlie
Macfarlane (17 HRs).
California Angela
:·
A(ter li disasb'OIIS season, m~·
ager BuCk Rodgers has his fingers
crossed. Last year the Angels commilled a horrendous 134 errors. ·:
Now the infield has rCiokie tT.
Snow it lB; another first-year man,
Damion Easley at 28; soph Gill')'
DiSarcina at SS; and Rene GOiimlez at 3B (instead of injured KeDy
Gruber).
• ,
·The outfield features club MW
Luis Polonia (83 runs, 51 S~);
Chad C!lflis: and minor-league •
Tim Salmon . The DH is Chilli ·
Davis.
.
:.
The rotation was stricken with
injuries a year ago. Now vet lefties
Chuck Finley and Mark Lan~ton
are set Joe Grabe (21 sa'!es) IS the
closer.
.
Finall99l standings: Oalcland,
96-66, .593; Mjnnesota, 90·12.
.556 (6GB); Chicago. 86-76. ,I~ I
(10GB); Texas. 77-85 •.47S -tl9
GB); California, 72-90, .444 :(24
GB); Kansas City, 72-90, .444 (~
GB); Seattle. 64-98•.395 (32GB).

:With 11ew coach, Meigs to begin baseball season against Southern :
~· •

--t. '

Winning makes a team better, new Yankees: 38 Wade Boggs, SS rise this season, especially with the
which is why the Blue Jays will Spike Qwen, ·sp Jimmy Key, SP . excitement created by the last seabold off the Orioles. who are still Jim Abbott and LF Paul O'Neill
son at ~ old ballparlt. before the
trying to prove something.
Reliever Steve Howe, back from boating accident that killed Steve
Baltimore Orioles
his seventh drug rap, helps closer Olin and Tim Crews and injured
Manager Johnny Oates will be Steve Fare 130 savt.•). The hest Bob Ojeda. Ooin into this sprin •
expected to either win or seriously N.Y, starters: Abbut (2.77), Key it's hard to tell iow the tragely
contend. In '92, thC Birds had and Melido Perez (13·16, ~.87). will affect the team.
improved pitching. And career sea· Prospects Bob Wickman (6-,t) and
Olin (29 saves) symbolized the
sons from OFs Brady Anderson Sam Militello also hope to start
emergence of the young Indians.
(.271, 21 HRs. 80 RBis. 53 SBs)
First baseman Don Mattingly Carlos Baerga became the ftrSI AL
and Mike Deveraux (.276·, 24 HRs, · (.288, 14 HRs, 86 RBis) is the learn second baseman to bit .300 with
107 RBI$}, the O's MVP.
leader.
. .
200 hits, 20 home runs and l 00
Tbe rotation is anchored by vet
The outfield has fragile hopper RBJs and Kenny Lofton set a
Rick Sutcliffe (16-15, 4.47) and Danny T8nabull (~S HRs, 85 RBls; league record for rookies with 66
youthful Mike Mussina (18-5, in 421 ABs) in RF. or at DH. stolen bases. Albert l!elle (34 HR.
2.54). Ben McDonald (13-13, 4.24) Bernie Williams is in CF, and 112 RBis) is getting even better
and swingman Alan Mills (10-4, O'Neill in LF.
and catcher Sandy Aiomar Jr. will
2.61). Gregg Olson (36 saves) is
If the rotatiO!I holds ·up. the improve. if he stays healthy.
the closer.
Yanb could move up. Big time.
. Charles Nagy (17·10, 2.96
Baltimore has added Gold
Cleveland lndlans
ERA) gOt batteis to ground intO a
Glove 28 Harold Reynolds and
Manger Mike Hargrove and the league-high 34 double plays. with
DH-OF Harold Baines. The O's Indians open 4heir fmal season at his forkball. Ojeda was scheduled
hope lB Glenn Davis and iron man Cleveland Stadium before moving to .be the No. 2 starter, with proSS Cal Ripken Jr. rebound 10 All- to a new ballpark.
jects Scott Scudder and Jose Mesa.
Star form . Chris Hoiles is a top
Loaded will! young talent, the along with Mike Bieleclci, rounding
young catcher. [f the Baby Birds Indians must learn to win. All·SW out the· rotation. Ted Power and .
)lelieve, they might fly past the C Sandy Alomar and 28 Carlos Kevin Wickander will try. to fill the
Baerga (.312. 20 HRs. 105 RBls, closer's role:
Blue Jays.
New York Yaakees
92 runs) are the leaders.
Bastllll Red Sox
Owner George Steinbrenner is
The outfield has speedy CF
The Red Sox couldn 'I hit last
back. Thatsays.enougll.
Kenny Lofton (66 steals), Albert year - it was as simple as that for
. Manager Buck Sliowalter kept Belle (34 HRs), and Glenallen HiU · manager Butch Hobson . They
Boss. George off his back by win- · (18 HRs).
added RF Andre Dawson and DH
ning early in spring ttaining. Top
The Indians seemed ready to Ivan Calderon·, Dawson's bad

Texas looking to become new face on top of AL West heap .

Iowa, Ohio State get ready for rubber match
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- A
couple of da)'S ago, the women's
basketball players a~ lowa and
Ohio State were cheering for each
other. That won't be the case this
weekend.
The Big Ten co-champion. s,
who split their two regular-season
games, will play their rubber match
at the Final Four on Saturday.
They'U also ntake history for their
league, which befo{e this year
neve' had even one team in the
women's Final Four.
"[t creates a very nice story,"
Ohio State coach Nancy Darsch

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

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In NIT semifinals,

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

""

released from a hospital.
"We obviously are extending
jnvitations to the family members
of our two former players," Over·
ton said Monday. "It's really a sit- ·
uation of the families telling us
bowmuchtheycando." •
Bob DiBw"1'o,.radians vw.
- president for public relations, is orgapizing the ()pcnin11 Day eventl,.
"We're fn the midst finalizing
all that," he ssid. "We Just want to
make sure everything 11 buttoned
up before making any announce·
ments."
the -last time the Indiana had a
home c;J)Icner during a weekday,
when young fans .generall)' are tD
school. the 1ea111 drew 46,606 on a
Tuesday. It was April 16, 1991.

and the Indians played the Texas
Rangers.
The home opener was on a Sat·
urday a year ago. The tiD'IIOUt was
65.813 for the [ndians and the
Boston Red Sox.
"We anticipate SU1]18SSing that
this year.·· Overton said.
The Indians, who posted a 76-86
record last season. hold the Ameri·
can League record a~ for 1
home opener. They drew 74,42Q. to
a game with Deb'Oit. on Saturday,
April7,1973.
Ovenon said the team's atten·
dance base. season tickets sales, is
significantly up. Last yesc the ICIDl
sold 3,300 seUon tickets. This year
the total is already over 10,000.

--~----Sports

briefs------

BuebaD
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Resul'- of the Florida Game and
Fresh Water Fish ·Commission's
lnve1tigation iato a niJbt-time
boating Crash that ldlled Clllveland
pilcban Sieve Olin and Tim Crews
were
made publle lllday. ·
[aveatiptorl looted Into any
possible wron&amp;doing, lnclnding
drinki.P&amp; and apeedinJ, in tbe
Marcil 22 accidellt'oo Uttle Late
Nellie in -.by Clean1011L
Punen1
held llal
weeJrend for Olin, 27, 111111 Czewa,
31. Survivor Bobsc~cda, 35, ia

slammed into the end of a private
pier on the small lake. All tbree
ocxupants SUBtained head injmes. ·

lleinJ

•"'* -

flqm a
laratlon
lllat required IIQIJory •. Ho wu
l'Cleased Prldaf froiD South Lab
Memorial HolpltaJ in
The 18-fOOI blu boat OWIIiid
~

a.....

!'1

Clewa- wbldl inveldplan artier said was near fnll·ihrottle -

some, Knight and Stanley.
· '·
Even though Gheen will be
ing his ftnl TVC competition Jn
several years, he feels tllat perennial powers Belpre, Wellston arid
Alexander will be the teams to
beaL

see-

Meigs baseball slate

•

Date
·
Oppo•e~t
Marth 30 .......................at Southein
April1 ...........................at WeUstdn
April 2 ..................... Vinton Coun\)'
April S.......;.................at AleXllldCr
April 7 ...............................at Belp(e
ApriiiO .................... Jackson (DH)
A)Jfil12 ...............................Eastein.
AprillS........................... AiexancJtr
Aprill6 ............. ;............. ;....Athens
Aprill9 .......... .at Nelsonville· Ymlr:
April22 ...;........................81 Atherls
April23 ..............................Trimble
April24 .............River Valley (DH)
Apil26 .............~ ............... Wellston

Apil30.................................Belpie
May 3 ...............:at Federal Hoclcirfg
May 6 .....................~ ....1.PL P~t
May 7 ..............~ .................at Miner

7~-LUJ&amp;

7tJeed
"By
Dave ·
Grate

. of
Rlllc.l
. '

Ftnltwe

INDIANA~fs

(AP) - A
federal judge pled two requests
to the womu who was raped by
Mike Tyson and who is filin11 a
ci vii lawsuit aaalnst die former
heaV)"WCiAhl champion. .

~S~J=-~-s=I· '
ed froiD takiq pretria.IIIOid=
hal wit
1 lllilli1 .Tylan'a
•
1m'I 1eq IR lbat NliiiMIII he

nil caM Ia molve4. Alao In hia
Man:ll 23 order, the JudF plied

a ponion of the ~:~car-old
WOillllil's reqUCiliO
t public
accC. to specific t0111t documents.
•

•

�-.

\

By The Bend

The. Daily

Sentine~

....,......,...
SprlniTf•c
SiNei•d

---RODGERS B-1
WoAiooltlvo

Jatl

4:30 P. a DAY IEFORE

"IUCAnOI .

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

Till,.....,.._,_uc.. f.",--,

for all college bound students.

lll8,800ond

.
•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

...... cl up ID 8IJ!I. ol Jlllld*e
polllblelor quolllyiiQ ""'"
-IDburWif-hamo'"'3ll ...... ln
AllcWte. 4 BR. S blh. 2 o- lUll, ten1tc1 1
BR opt
4.11011 oq. It lorm

--...,be

-

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rqoflng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

"-!» -

llldg.

Collt4-llll2-71041or

FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
Public Notice .

Public Notice

•regardless of income
•regardless of grades
"plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of cred~ .
To collect" your scholarship money
call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10&gt;7 or Sat 1G-4
·
Vlu &amp; Malar C•d

DANCE TEAM TO PERFORM • The Meigs
Hl&amp;b Scbool B1111d Daace Twn, uader tile dine·
tioD of Melissa Stewart, will perform dviDg Fri·
day's eiglltb anaual spriag fasbioa show of tbe
Pomeroy Merchants Association. The 1993
show, "R!Yer Essmce," will be presented at 7:30

•.
•
•

•'
•"

p.m. at Pomeroy ·Elementary. Members of tbe
dance team are, l·r, front, Michelle Young,
SheUy Joluuoa, AlllsoD G1111aaway, Kyla Sellen,
Alison Gerlach. Back, Katie S1111ders, Crystal
Donohue, Megan Evau, Amie Elliott and Joy
O'Brien.

IETii.EIIENt OF

ACCOUNI1I
PROBATE COURT
iiiBGS COUNTY, OliO

·I

'

'

Gingerbread Home

Community calendar

•

.•
•

• • • · Community Calendar items
appear two da)'S Wore aa eveot
~" ·aDd tile day of tbat event. Items
: must be received weU ill adwace
; to assure puhlkatlon ill tbe cal·

t

eodar.
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRffiGS • Revival at
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church will be throu&amp;b Tuesday ar
1 p.m. Rev. Wendefl Vermillion
will be the guest speaker. Tllere
will be special singing nightly.
. Rev. Keith Rader invites the pub-

t
'

!•
:
:
:
'

-·. ...~: lie .

REEDSVILLE • Eden United
·-:·:s~tluen Church will have ~vival
.,:. ':with Betsy and Peter Martindale
~- -and family through Sunday. Spe~ cial music nighUy at 7 p.m.

t::"

RUTLAND- Revival at RuUand
Baptist_Church with Bob
~· Ssewan will run through Friday.
. ~-. ~Paul Taylor invites the pubF~

t'

~:.

: PORTLAND • The Lebanon
,·.,.. .. Tawnship TlliSteCS will meet Tues. · day 817 p.m. at the township build: • ing.

.
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1.
•

l

l
\

'
:
'
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':
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· RACINE • There will be a benent soup SUJlPC! at the Racine United Methodist Church on Tuesday at
3 p.m. Soup, sandwiches, dessert
and drinks will be available. Public
invited. All proceeds will go the
Joe Hill family.
POMEROY • The Carleton
Cemetery Trustees, Ralph Carl,
Clarence Story and Wayne Beat,
have resigned, due to health rea' sons. They have appointed David
King, Paul Smith and Brian King
to serve as cemetery trustees. A
meeting of me ~rees will be held

.

Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Carletoo Church.
BURLINGI'IAM • The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
meot will be ha::!:J. an organizalional me ring T
y 11.7 p.m. at
the Burlingham Modem Woodmen
Hall. Ew.ryooe intereSted in being
a member of the fire department or
auxiliary is requested to alleod.

- nm

RU"I1.t\ND • The Past Matrons
of Harrisonville OES will meet
Wednesday at (:30 p.m. at the
horne of Pauline Atkins.

1

'

•
~

:
-

gram presented by Mrs. Helen
~olf and Mrs. Ethel Orr at the
"March meeting of the Chester United Methodist Women.
· · Sharon Hausman played the gui- tar and the group sang "Many
Gifts, One Spirit.ft The scripture

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The"community Unity Singm will be f.viog pan
of their spring concert, Heaven's
Eyes," al the Eden Unill:d Brethri:n
Church on Thursday evening. ·

&amp;eculorofh~of

Doctor fearedly!i~ would_kill Woody.

POMEROY - A free community
By SAMUEL MAULL
Yi. I want to marry her.' I said, where the abuse allegedly
immunization clinics will be proAssociated Preu Writer
'Take her, and go; the~'s nothing occurred, cleared Allen of tha
vided at Ohio Valley Christian
NEW YORK - Mia Farrow more,'" the acws said.
charge two weeks ago, "I believe
·Assembly on Thursday from 9-11
went
from
ragin$
anlnst
Woody
She
said
lhe
filmmaker
changed
Dylan."
- I·
a.m. and at the Syracuse Fire
Allen
as
"sataotc'.
f
and
"evil"
his
tune
immediately
and
told
her
Charging
Farrow
is
an
unfit
Departlilent from 1-3 p.m. Chilmn
ages two through kindeJgarten after learning of his affair wilh her the affair was "good for Soon-Yi; mother, AUen has sued for CUSIOdy
MIDDLEroRT • The Middle- must present lin immunization .adopted daughter to musing about it gave her confidence. Let's use of Dylan; an adopll:d son, Moses1
.
pon Literary Club will meet record.
whether she should marry him, a this as a springboard to a deeper IS, and their biological son,
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
psychologist testified.
.
relationship."
·
,Satchel, S.
.
home of Beulah McComas, 341
RACINE • The Racine AmeriDr. Susan Coates, a psycholoLast August, Farrow accused
Farr_ow has sued to have the
Main Street, Middleport. Mrs. can Legion Post 602 will meet gist for one of the warring couple's Allen of sexually molesting their adoptions voided. She S&amp;ys 'Allen
Frank Regan will be the hostess. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post children, took the stand Monday adopted daugbrer Dylan, 7. She tes· defrauded her and the court 111 SSQ\ ·
The book review, "A Year in home.
after Farrow, who. is battling her tifi~ that even tl!ough a ~ of disclosing he~ sleeping wiib die
Saigonft by Katie Kelly will be pte·
former on- and off-scree" ~ medtcal expen.s m c_onnecu_cut_._ chilmn's sister.
·
··
·.
.•
seated by Mrs. Evcrcu Hayes. RoU ·
RUTLAND - "The Rutland · for custiidy of their three children. · ·
· ·
·
•·
Coates said she feared for
call will be 10 Jell a far east destina· Township Trustees will" meet
rilm.
Allen's safety at times last year
Th~y at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutbecause of the level of rage and
land Fire Swion. Public invlred.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middlehate Farrow displayed
port Literary Club will meet
Farrow ""felt variously that Mr.
POMEROY - The Community
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Lenten Service, sponsored by the Allen should be killed, she would
home of Beulah McComas, 341 Meigs Ministerial Association, will lllte to kill him, or that she would
Main Street, Middleport. Mrs. be held at the Pomeroy Baptist Ilite to stab his eyes out,'' Coates
Frank Recan will be the hostess. Church at 7:,30 p.m. Rev. Bill testified.
Tbe book review, "A Year in Hoback will be preaching. ·
She 9uoted Farrow as calling
Saigonft by Katie Kelly will be pte·
Allen • a moral tumbleweed,"
sealed by Mrs. Everett Hayes. Roll
POMEROY· · .The Pomeroy "satanic" alld 14evll.'' and saying.
call will be to tell a far east destioa· Group of AA will meet Thursday at "Somebody has to find a way to
rion.
7 p.m. at the J1'PA building. Call stop him." .
Later, Farrow said, "Maybe I
m-S763 for iof01111arion.
POMEROY - The Meigs Counshould marry·him," the psychoio·.
ty Dry Fire Hydrant Committee
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun. - gist said. She said she asked Farwill meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m, sy PERI group will meet Thursday row if she was ierious. ;·she heanl
at the Soil Conservation Service · at 1 p.m. arlhe senior citizens ceo- my reaction and realiV'A1 there was
Office. A11 commiuee members are tet at 1 p.m. All members .are urged something absurd about it,'' Coates
urged 10 atlend.
10 attend.
said.
Allen, S1, and Farrow, 48, had a
12-year personal and professional
·relationship that began in April
1980 and ended after she found
nude photos of her adopted daugh·
.
. ter, Soon-Yi Previn, in Allen's
read was I Pcier 4:10&gt;11.
Christ's day, technology was not an apanmenL
Technology changes with amaz. issue simply llecause it·did not
FB!fOW, testifying for her third
ing speed. One could easily ask, exist. But technology did exist in and final day Monday, said Allen
"Does technolO$): really have any- simple, appreciate forms to pride · told her his sexual affair with
thing to do w11h our Christian means for such things as efficient ~vin, now 22, was good for the
STUDENTS· OF THE MONTH • ne toDowlq studentl were
faith?" Television connects people tluashing, weaving and baking.
selected for behavioral or acade~~~lc nNORs to be tbe student of tbe
younf woman.
over great distances of time and
week at Meigs Jualor Hf&amp;b School tor tbe moatll of March. holD
" asked, 'What have lou
The group san~"Opc:n My Eyes
space, become
instaoUy That I May See wuh Kathryn done?' and the fllSI thing out o his
l·r, are: Mick Barr, rtadflll aDd apelliDr; Joba Barnlsart, adeace;
of world evaus. k
that in Baum as pianist. The meeting mouth.was, 'I'm in love with SoonBeverly St~rt, reading and speUioe; John Kelly, blstory; aDd
Sara Let, sc1ence.
closed with prayer.
Mrs. Betty Dean presided at the
meeting with eight members pre.
sent and 17 sick and shut-in calls

~ .

' ~

Wher~

A card was read from Bernice
Bailey.
A thank-you nOte was ~from
West Ohio Conference for World
Thank Offering.
A workshop to make lap robes
will be ~t up at the IICllt meeting.

would· Hansel and Gretel
be w·ithout a forest?

•
I•
I

•

•••
•

The COlt o( the March workahop

LEASE do~l eve~ foss ciqarelles inl.o Ihe bPush.

P

waa diae.-d and alimall:d to be

w._ II

~tore

auager, lois CampbeD.

'

S 10&gt;$12 in order to make a bMJret
Mrs. Jackie Frost had the Vllen·
line Surpriae Auction. Six members
were present and roll call was
answered by each member naming
a plant they would like 10 grow and
exchanSiniiCied catalogues.
·The meeting was held at tbe
home of Mrs. Denise Mora and
refJealsmenls were aerved.

. '

.

"Helping You To Recover Your Investment"
EVERY THURSDAY

, EAGLES
CLUB

•

Onl~

You Can PPevenl

•
(

•

'.••••
~

\

I

,

We
wlah
to
·eJIIINUaur•.._
, thtlnlta 1nd deep
appncllitton to 111
Who helped In any
way during the 111nna and p. .1lng

-·

1way of our loved
A apecl1l th1nlts

to Overbrook Center
and atstf for the
wonderful CM'II that
waa glvan tci•oJn•.

to

Ora.

Levert,

ShrMII II'ICI t..nt ...,

their care II'ICI concern. To Foglno."1!1
Funer11 H~111e for
thalr efficient ..,.
vtee. To Rev. Blmle
Stevens for hll conaollng II'ICI
Ing 111esaage. To
111-EIIS,IIwho
vlllled, .... now-a,
food, canis II'ICI ....
lpecllsl pnsy-. llllsy
God Btau..c:h-.
n..•llyol
Vlrglnle Grlnltll 1

-•ort-

lowllono. ...

Spect.l Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thloi ad good lor 1
FREE card.

Propoaall
llelgo

Countr

992-3470
OWNER:
JeH Wlt• ...••••m

Lie. No. 0061·32 ·

I~:::::;:======~
It

....

. BISSELL &amp;.BURKE
· . COinRUCDON

chlnga O¥W of -(1) 1MI :

EllS

Association is
looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addresses to
Meigs Alumni
Association, P. 0.
Box 26, Middleport,
·Ohio 46760

.....,,..v,

:::.=::.-=-..:.:-.:=.:
and 1111181 11e aoaamponlod
by ., orlglnalllkl lionel or

-ulild cMclc ....,.. out "'

the
Malga
Countr
Commleelonera In the
- s of ............. (5%)
of tl!llo181 111c1. Bide n 1o
be .placed In • ...tad
FOR
~.~..W or Dlnio
un Ita buill to EMS
apeclll..tlona - or atock
unite •••ling our
apoclllcaU.. will IIIIo lie
conalderod. Onlr
with OVM .,rowel In tho
ambulaMe -nufllcturlng
buelnna
will
be
conaldwad. Suoc•alul

.,...._....._."BBl

bl-•

blddw ................
work perfonnod and ltavo
IIY....,.. lor ..,Drwballon
. .Ina~ 1 cllon .,y 111ock

1

w• wa 1111 . . to

...,•ra• who

cant or Th8nlts

MAINTENAN E

GRAVIL &amp; COAL

Re•so••Lie
•

R.tes
· JOE N. SAYRE .
SAYRE TRUCKING

614•742·2138

1

949·2391 or
1·100·•37·1460
,_ 1

~..
"~~•
Fertilizing, W-g. and
D~-ub -SalllllrHIIIil.;,,lmml- :
-·
.,
... '
1 -·• ·
.
-1-lola Com-1

FRE~oo~·~RSALE

3-4-113-1 mo.

RACINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
6••·1•

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
36358 SR 7

IIIIDA'I
Clunolll &amp; Alllunotll
Coot••......,.,l.,.ln,

. _·-...... ...
can........
~~:"

5770
20oYn.lxp.S.W... ,
. J·1t~l ••

CNARLIE'S

SMALL DOZER WORK,

DRIVEWAY WORK
aiHI LIMESTONE
DRIVERY SERVICE

BUANALENE KELLY
Would lllat to !Mnk
• .,.,... who Mlpocl

In our time oleonow.
A epect.l t....,b to the
PleMant 'IIIIey

Nusalng Homo Stall,
PI
ntV.U.,
Hoeplt81, fleher •
Funenl Home,
Reo-KIAIHMion,
Middleport Clluch ol
Chrilt, ...... ort
Aas•lc8n Legion
Auxtu..y, and to .u

frlende, nalgllbore,

hllpild talhra sgh

fUlly for eMil, food,
llcwwa and~

. . __. clllcull

-·..,
................
,......._.

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

992·7553

lrllll _It .. Or ••

POMIIOY, .OII.

Jthklll!

3I'I!Sit3/1 mo

614-992-7698

All lUllS

-THE BOOK
BARN
IUY • SILL • JUDI

317 II. 2sscllt.
Mlllllleport,Ohlo
lloll.·frl. 1lhOCI-5100
S.llnlar 111100-ftOO
CIOMtl S.ssclar
992·3577
J.I2~J.I-

HOWARD

EICAYAnNG

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
. Delivered.
,.14) 992·5449
12fJ111121lfn

5

....

~

• TIRES
SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(3041 773·5533

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health&lt;•
Accidenf •Annuity,
IRA • Mortgage '·I
•

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent·

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
.
(614) 843·5264 112019311fn

POMIROY,OHIO

WE DO

ROOFING

TRO

. NEW - REPAIR

FREE ESTIMAT£5

949-2168
3-18-93-lln

TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
-LIGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

CARPENTER SERVICE

USED RAILROAD nES

SUPERIOR FUELS AND ,
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
ttA::i

O.lty
Ito•• Co.

Happy Blrthd8yl
"My Little Mqlel"
39 nl Holding!
Love,
11ltt Whole Qq

SIZED UMISIONE
. FOISALE
Call 614-992- ·
6637
lt.lt. 7

(Ill.....,

Y.Qulfterl=d
.r-end
,...

REASONA LE
RATES
Je1nle Howell, EA
NOTARY
31111 mo.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
•TRUCKING

D. A. IOSTOI

EICAVAftiG
(614)

\ 667·6621
J.l.lli 1 ft!O,

•

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

·ROOFING

Gutters
Downspouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

ASK FOR CHRIS

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

GDDD IDIICIII
DDRIUL

ll'a UhlllsiWolt

...--

129.95 +Tax

Hippy Ads

...

Abllln. •Ills "''"Jirllo••••

1

...........
,..Oifk.
217L S.CHCISt.

.... Jcl hd w,.
-*llilao . . to

Funsrllll

".

• 4 WIIMIAiiJIIIIII•t
Prices Start1n1 tlf

Howard L Writesel

YOUNG'S

lOWELL'S
IOOIIIIPIII
&amp; Ill SERVICE

'

2 Fro•t Strwt1 • L•~or

992·5335or
915·3561

miJullbslnoU..

Eaeo ..,,., 1
MdFaol PIZJ

.

l/24/fl/1 - :pd

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERYICI

312511 mo.

1-:ll:.o~{tii=U~-:.~..,••"r"'•rll.,l'sll ==:Q:ad====all=·~.
no•-. 1ooc1, MOl_,

TIRE REPAIR AND ROTATING

'25 HOUR

PH. 614·992·5591

3-4-83-1 mo

.

47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Y. Mile OH Rt. 7
Thru Chester o• Rt. 241
NOW OFFERING••••••
OIL AND LUBE SIRYlCE

MICROWAVE OVEN
•••YCR REPAIR

REASONABLE RATES

992·2487

LICENIEO llid BONDEO

'·

3/8/lln

s.......

LAND CLEARING

:!

985-3406

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
. HOMESitES
HAUUNG: LIIIIHione,
Dirt, Gravel •nd Coli

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

Chester, Oh. 45720

2 •iles 011 Hysell
...... Off
••• 124
12 S.ssio•• $20
16
$25

R&amp;C UCAYATING
BUllDOZING

3/twt

PH. 614·985·3949

LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TA~E CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

SUMMER
IMAGES

Call ua rOr more Information
(614) 992·7328

20 Years b:p.

FO~A

thslrltll:&amp;:lll

,

forest fire•.

--.cllta.
ahall b1 lor

11:00 A.M. at the - •

SIZED LIMESTONE

6:45p.m.

HA-ULING

••
•

•
"l'
•

untii10:CII A.ll.., Aprll14,
18113.Bidawlllleoponwlllt

36970 Bal Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

IN POMEROY

LEGAL NOncE

We will NOW serve children
6 mosiths .to 12 years of age•

•

Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

11--"::

Se•l•d prapa•• •• be
nntved in the oftlce of the
llolga Countr CoMmlaaionwo, Third Flo« ol tho
~,_,Ohio

Aliliou•ces ••• Opeaiag of their
l•faat/Toddler Prolram

Saodgrass Upholstery

1o

.... ....... ...,.. pil.or lo
tllecllilnllt,..hoarlng.
Roborl E. Buoll, Judga
eo-.. ..._ Court,

o-

IP I 111"11•* You"

•

'

,.....nlng
tile
of tile :rues nos

EITIJE NO. 17411 • AlnWmce wtth trad1 In of
Flnai and DlatrllliutiYa oldcMnla.
o.ull1d lntonnllllon, t~
aooount of Aalaert Dlx011
•truclona,
PfDpaa.. tonne,
and~ L ....._.,,CoExoaulora of lie e.- of -~plale.,...llcllona
..., lie obt.lnod , _ tile
Loulee V. Dliaon, D c
J.
of hllelaa County'
' EITIJE NO. 27- ..:
Flnll ~DDIUIIIolll. ........ Emor1111cr llldlcal Ser·
vlcea, P. 0. Box 741,
IIJ•n••· boaulllx of 8oe ..,...,
Htlglite,
E - of au.llt.lld aw,
Ohio
45711.
(614) 112...17.
D
ed.
Bidder•
ahall
u11 tho
·Un!Me · ucepllone ••
lllld INc Ia. Nld MOOUnlll !Prlnlod ~on~~. prootJ•d. , - . . . . ; . - - - - - , r~K~E~VI~N~'~S~.LAW~~N~
no ahop orden or othlr
for•• will 11o IICcoplod.
(
Eachp•opoealmuat-u•srONE,

•
"•••
••
•

I

Because when a fopesl burns, we all feellosf.

t

1) ..... 0

!Mnlt

I

'

w

••
••
I
•

!

.

•=

A CARD OF
THANKS FROM THE
FA-Y OF
WILUAII (811)

•

"Red Roses for My Valentine"
was the program presen\Cd by Pat
Holrer at the recent meeting or The
Shade Valley Council of Floral
Arts.
.
The members made roses out of
b~ dough. They wm insaucted
to roll the dough IDto the size of a
pea or small marble, then flatten ·
the dough 11111 place adrop of glue
on the petal. Place at least four to
five petals on the rosebud and let

... ~ die

od
ESTATE No. 27514 - Flnt
Mel AMI -.ac aUld of Cllhy
Crow, GU ' 1 of KMMII
C:00U llao, ., """'" J I il
... w ..
. ESTATE NO. 27413 Final and Dfatrllliullwa
arant of Pallblc'r S. ...._
· &amp;ICIItrbl ol tile Eetalo of
Donald w. Milia AKA
1, D

l
•I
I
'••
I
I

Council meets

dry.

mnl

Aogor IU

WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Oran(te Township Trustees will
meet m special session Wednesday
at 7 p.m. a1 the home of the clelk,
Patty Calaway.

wp!ND ·leU, liarrli of Reedsrille ~tile winner otu
;., I s - Jots Ide car ltllt It Blc Wl:ttl. PrestDtial the car seat to

-r .. Mllloiii ~

••. . . .-

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
514 Nollh Second A..,uo
Middleport, 0111o uno

-~

· - ...,. 1o ...,. lllltllllnllly
* r aood ol.
Anr poreon In:~':!::.

I--------

~ported.

~::;

oiAIIrl, 1. . . 11t w111o11 111M
..111 olcoounta will bo
oonaldwod •d -tlnuod

ESTATE NO. 26114 P8rW 'a aaunt of lllcUrd
ProbataDiwlaion
G. 8h J I ••· &amp;10ulor of
· ...... c-tr, Ohio
tile e - ol a.-. Sn., (3) 30, 1tc:
' Dnntd
ESTATE NO. 2SOIO •
Public .._.Ice
FJ ..I and Dlatrllliutlwal----""'---.......,,of - I I . Full,

: Wolf, Orr present club program .
i' .'·i.nother"
, "Technology:
Employ It for One
wa&amp; the title of the pro-

will lie for -ring lleloro
u1c1 Cowl on tile 21111 !My

•na•ta Mel vouc-. to elkl •ocoun'* or to

ol tile followl•g - o d
lldnolariM " - " - ..,.
In .... 1'1 ..... Court, ......
CoadJ, Ohio, lor oppronl

31t:Pi93

(flo Su'llliar Calls)

21121921tfn
It 1HE
COl" ION. PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DMIION
IIEIG8 COUNTY, otiO
It 1HE MATTEA OF

614·446-0 7 36

14111 State Rt 7

HARD FOR YOU.
oSP Diesel Supreme...Try It, there Ia a
dltrarenoe.
oMinlmum 110 c.tane
•Low ..h •nd sulfur
•Will not ..lin wlntw time.

111113 SPRING LUBE SALE

MARCH 11TH thru MAY 31ST
Spec.,! farm bl.n na with , . , - t 4 tlmn • r-r
•nd NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.

Llirry E. MOler
1-800-518 5854

BUILDERS
742·2328

�· Ohio

41 Hoi

111 for Rent

52

3 ................. .,....

1\

a,..--

-.117-..
,

..

n

;-

t.!,'

II

AI

D•p rM,

ACIOII

PHILLIP

clah•

=~r:::.~t
=t:.a:..;...,.

ALDER

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

.N

54 IIICIIIaneous
Merchlncll•

1IR TrWI•L!!! c.ur.y, DIG .
Mo. nuo ,_ ~~opoo~~, -

' GivMway

....r. - - . . 14110 z 1&lt;, 1 •·~,
- - oon
II. RU No
,.....
t . 111 :111

·-

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

111.

~M....,--

4.

••«=•·=:
=::!hn

o1

31 Vlllotyor

1 Alrlcln

1(11111

Mllon
....... lloel

NORTH

.

- . aao. to441W41I.

17 Scltool

+KQJ
.876
+Kf5
+KU2

.

SOUTH

..,

Pass ,.
Pass
·pass

....... llodi'IIOIII, lilmlohod, . """"

-

41!•. . .
SFDIIOw

DOWIII
1 SllltJIJ

• lltlllc wL

2

8 Pro-

..

bolntll

:1~:::-:-::-~&amp;~V~Ic~lnl~ty~=
Bo
ALL Yard- -

Pold In

M-•· QEAOUNE: 2:00 ....
tho ..., - - tho 1111 lo .. -

SundiJ
- , oclllon
• 2:00• P.lll.
F -.· _
2:00
P,lll. ....... , .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

44. . Apanment

~--·nt
21.,
'I I "-t
22 Cll!l1lr Ill • .

Eut

Pus
Pus

liNd

27"1111cllk•
3DIIIDDpU ·
UlloN Ill I

........
3413

Nul,... -:'
:l~
..... .

38

40 . . . .

.u Coo nil
41111~1ft

.=

lmmodlolo Eniploymont, Full·
Shift

PDIII

•

Available

In

A

TormWoCore
Com
hro
•.
F nao
BonofHo.
Hoollh, Dontot, VToton, 'And Lifo
lnouro-. Far Con-lot In·

·'

17Notolll
:3=:'~(11*.)

PEANUTS

tii'YI• Cont8cl : Pam Jeflt,..,
AN, DON, 114-446-7150, EOE • •

8eonUry. Full-Time Poahlon In

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.,_, aoo..~..,an
-"'"' '"'_"'•..;,;;.•lhl.,......,
..,_ • a' :: •..,. .._.. peap~~, ,_...,
clphw . . . . , . . . . .. TOIIIII;r'• ._.a...., D. ,...._
'D

,.,.,.w

X,.M

Soturdoy.

WorMn: Make mer. money!
F- olg,. wool! (ob proporollon
~ a-ao/Yard ..... April '· ~~ about nontradltloul
2. fi Rr. 141. '110 mile from fa. 7i i3Ui£amen~ (&lt;XoiOW), t-100• 111101'
, llr
turo
nltwe.
coned1', much rnot"'.

UDGB

compr:-· -·

AND ERNEST

own llonthtr tncornolll
koollh ·11111111' - . Willi.&amp; Thur. Your
w... AI Homo, Mako SUIOO'o A
1 -.L HYNU A,.,, w-·o Month Rush 11.00 + BASE To:
and .......,... alalhea. El•r
DIA 8uppllol, Box 81, Hllloboro,
OHUI33.
~1.
prtcoo, 114·
- .,. - clloop
· pottod-.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Buslne$S
Training

14

Public Sale

·--.. .-e--.
a AuctiOn

auction
..vic&amp;
Llc•llllld
tuM limo -· -·
111,ao1o a 'llrgtnlo, -

18

Wanted to Do

w.nted to Buy

11m removal: nMd an old bam

........,. down I iHil of tho wor?
Wll _ , . tar oolvogo. 114-

258 1014.

114 ' " 4411 Aft•7 P.lt.

1980 14X10 whh opproxlmotoly
·•era Df ground, IXCIIIIInl
condhton, gorogo, outbuilding,
central air. Approxlmlftly 2
oc- In ·town ond aortlon, •
wood~~- clly
wlller,

Gnoal- lvlng. 1 ond I -

,.....blr pnGed, 114-417-3111.
1880 moblll horne, 2 IMdroomt,
ftaSOO.. good eond, 304-175.
1981 14x70 WHh 7X24 Expendo,

E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. l-Ing.

Trimming, Troo Ronoovat, Hodlll
Trimming. Frw Eltlmateal ef4317~1'157'"After

1 loth

home, 12,500. 304.a75-2722.

10

77WIItL

9

I:Votv~~CloiCIOI~rr:,~Wo~ta~r~P~old,~~·n~~·
Fun:lol:od

Excellent

rm.

4p.m. , ,

Condition, 814-446-

~-

:0:.

Coin Calno,
Sloop,
'Wia.oond~Od'J HI
Cain&amp;

Emp loyment

11

Will do pMnll hOu.ciMnlng,

Pomtroy7 Chillier

114-11115-35t~

Serv1ces

Help Wanted

"Avotl" ALL AREAS! Share your

y,..·.

..... wlh ...
ton tho
-nr.t-.n.eMI.

lrN ,

U hr.,

= ,_

.:mr.o
~,u

Dooc-.~

~

M/;'JII

21

1 1.....

~h, GIOJ W/JI!Ikl •"!!'J ~
2421. dlj ctn-., $30, . _ . .

Far Sot. llu modlum tocloo

"mah-ES-tro."

nounced "MY·slroh'" or sometimes

a. new, ... 111.

r.lerch andlse

1!Ml3 14K70
man
!i yar warr1nty, In·
eludes delivery, 11tup lttpt

INO!lCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. ond oktntng, f\65ma.
NCCM'r'UMndl that yoU do bu8J.. 381-.2434 tall tor Mlkt.

with poopto vou k -1 ond
NOT to ooild .-oy through tho
moll uniU ,... hovo ln-lgalod
tho oiiWing.
$1,000 A Pccontlol loco I1
Pay Ploono Routo. Low Coot,

Colli--.

C.tt

814-

Lind /Homo Dovelocmont, El·

. . Home Center Wllf Show You
HoWl Your Ntw Sing~ Or
Doublo Woll, Sopite, Foundo·
tlon I 0rivowor, Allin Ono Loon

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1.8

Q. What's the problem with "I can't

mloc.......

help but worrying"? I was told to correct it.

Ori!r Ill,

NEM:R TRIED 'ro
"ITE A 61-IDINEt

Col -

fii.Ae5 c:ooR.

Four INclt tlroo, 140; tlroo
... .. $ 2 1 1 1 · - 314 hone, 131i tM..a
'

-

Goode
Att Cor:&gt;M a 111.,, On 111o. lohon Corpoto, 1117 N. • 11144.

vt'RA FURNITURI AND ASJ.
PUANCU
814 Ul U21 0A 114-441-3'151

NWIIIon

-UCla

tootu!lns Amino Acid llodv
Butkltna, wotahl onc1 hi
bumw -fDrinur-. Anlllble u·
ctilolvoty ot Alto Aid Pho-oy.
Tho'oofo- .. dlot.
J.C. Po:nnr -Ina_., o1zo
314,11011. :104-77.Hf3Z.

A. You'll often hear "can't help but "
which bas been around for almost 'a
century, but that expression is best
av.oided in formal English. &lt;Even
when it is used, however, it should be
followed by WORRY, not WORRY·
lNG.&gt; Note how tbe meaning stays the :
same without BUT: "I can't help worrying." There may be things that you
can't help, but we can all help avoiding the use of "can't help but."

Entonot,_., COIIIII"o 1141 Or

... a

Week· I~ a11ahehl• ...,...
lrrg Ul.llj ~utlr-.a NILSofa
Or ..o.tl
Homn. H14-m· Ariel Chon
Wool!; Colloo And End WMh
Doonltlllol*l

Packag•,_~· Rat•,.Dpi,n Lilt

With ~lfblld
1220.

now

For lito: Tw Anllqlll Lompo
$2111; Crutchoo UU- $5; COli
114 441 ,.., Or Itt ......

Household

Business
OpponunHy

an

Dry-. ~; .•

Cl:oln:

Acroo, Co. Ad. 28, Applo 12ti;_Hoon:

•

-

..

.....,

GrovW Dotca1, Racine, Ohio.

M; ..... Ptolio
OUt 141 On ~

2 Lat• Dl'x177' Etch On Oeenle

No

Sopite link, chr wotor, $1000, Or 4 Pilla.
114-117·3083.
Drl•o, DH Aouto 35, City School

Dlotrict, $5,100 For Both Loto,
en ue 0111.
41 woOdod
kt

o.n.. eou-:,-:-ss!.':.....

~ On Ront-2-0wn·
Nalhlng E- "'
......
•
O.E. Wul:or SIS; Whlrfl!ool
Wo- ... Ooo
or ltZI; ii.L llociJio 11:pr
; 30 Eloolrlo llonito.
; 2Dinoh Ooo Rongo, •..i..'l!i

=
i\i._::;'l::'~ ::

or rnldllll._. 2 eotM
with 214 l AI. 2 " ............ _ , Alhlon I Apple - ·
public ..... 1 - - loll -~
_
... ooptlo - - ......
. . . -.... lliob-lllvtolor:. Clycto - · J r. -.aJS.233t.
8utl:

Real Estate

_w__ _
-

llooigo

-·

ASTRO·ORAPH

1171· T.'t

c..- ...; .......

QOQO

a.D

.

U.:O- olol- NRIIO,

. . •• 171.

liD

AZioliot 1:00.

aond,

*-""'

~1111 1 ILL~tt
- c:-rroon.tot Tonnlna loti.
Yw .._ , F- T""'*l, 21 IlOilo. lf4.441!

31 Homes for Sale

4033.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.

•rr'•r=••.ll
="'
·-7111,
.....
___..........
~~=;;:.,,.

Ylnl•ftlll. Gil1-100 ....

~~

APPUIJICIS

~

LAYIII'I PIIIINITUIII
c.n,·
,. ..._ tutm.--.llll'*
t1ouN: lion Ill N. ........,..

0112. I ...... .U. lulu• fld.
FrwDIIuo....,.
--I'UIIIITUIII

3 llodroom llflctl. I mlnUIH
...... Pl. I'll (!II. Rt. 2 North).

Mordl31, 111123

....,...
..........
.....
,.....,_MOO

Two

- -·-In ....--...........
-....
...-··-·

Rentals

SH,IOO. - n by oppolntmont,

104..7U301

~.......,.. 21-Aprll11) Dctn1 bl over1y
oaoOCimld lbDUt your 1m1go w1111 ou4lldlll
today. It'I more important to
It: 1
'manner 111a1 g~vo 1 111e blll tmprHIIon to
..._ whet n 1no1y ~ 1D you. Ar111. 'your~~~~ to a 111111tdoy gill. Send for Mil'
' Altt&amp;Graptt prldlclloltl for 1111 yoia:lhlld

ltUO,

.,_,.It

ttt ttt 1111

AUI:liON

....-HUll,
.I

a PUIINITUIII. a

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

•

~ you already prize could be

;oto'loglheload _.mono inti1B year ~~ad. I~ :
ellct you might eventually have difficulty "'
doo:itio which ptr10r1 II your belt lritnd.

'111111 ........ 111 .....
~~
ot,WV,
Hee

....... •• .,._ -

G...ek1." _ Allatalr Cooke.

2

1

I

I

j RID is I
I
;,;,;..1
I
,, IG

'!a·:

MAESTRO refers to a great muconductor or master of an art.
Master the noun MAESTRO, pro-

~.~·

Financial

the

MU T A N 0

1 I 1

AAE. $12, .-ll~lER

-Ina; ... 111 112:1111, "
. lpm or•11141 1201 ottor 1pm.
For ..,., Croltmon Ellctrlo
1 ' - V:ocuum Whh Clut1w KM

·

II

PEPf'Eit.Ot41 PtW.~

=
"'
-"11"
'*·--·
-·lull

ad: AU ...,da ull 1p11
PloWp Loocl.

For Solo Or Troclo Droloo Sololo
lite Syotom Whh 10 Fl. Dill: I

rengo, rof.._&lt;!lohwoofior, $20,150.

304-t7H;m,

OXRDM

• ~ to form four olmplo words.

,......
•
~
till. C o l i . EOH. .
4 • 1...,.menta.
n 11 a1 11111 NnL SQ4.I1I..
Ot 171-4100..
an. t~•• 11 ~~ h21i
two bedrDOift, ......lit... w.;.
cludtd, no.-.. 814 182 2211.
One tlldloom, Spring Avenue.
PonNIOj,
tm~mo:,
ttOd

$40, lllfdltiO; -

-

XYIMBIDIIM

' ADEEMO
GFJXM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Hal)'- g - . to b1 11:e ~ f1our1a1t1

wlnt•r DDIII, dMIIn w1 IUit.r

COitiO,--·II.,...

XJ

~

trim,

: AI Old U.S.

EX W

'::~~:~' S@\\.~lA-&lt;t~~s·
Hltotl
ClAY L POllAN _;;.,_ _ __
0 l.arrange
!.tters of
lour scrombltd. words

Far- Lodlll-r

-

W KX B M

D ' II M

lactoty of popular mythology 111nco

dopoolt,no.,.., - - -

Tap -

,

XJ

'NW. '

'

1181 Sun.hlllll, 14x80, b.autlful
mobile horne, total.-:, 3 btd·
roomt, 2 blth1, aardln tub,

BFA

f ' .'

AVIAN GRAMMAR
"
.'

apart....._ 8l ~
1:r;R l • - -

room

AKX

OXRDMB .

$112.
17 por
Including
••• t•Arll. I'Mx311 1000
.....
monlht
fretmonth
lot Nnt,
new 14x7G,
delivered and Ml up, sklnlng Fumllhell
Etftul•nay
and .tep~~, 1-800-837-1625.
8toond
-·
•~- loth~,
'ut-flol
MPGIIo,
1975. 3 bedroom, 14x70 mobllt ~
•- 101 "PMd

~

8

~ Raomo

....

,,

.

_._,.,...
~·=·­

-

advertisements for real estate
wtllch'ls ln vlala11on ol the !
law. Our readers are hereby
lmarmed tnat all ctweHings
advertised In this newspaper
are avalable on an equal
opportunity basis.

AN'S

Tlnoetloo Pon·Timo Dor

- I Illill
' ·-... Loo. .....
5440

lllf 1

37Fooll

1 b lllroona apt, 201 Seventh 81,
Toklng Alopllcotlont AI:
Domlnoo Pizzo, Oolllpatlo.

"

21 hit of Alii

Pass
Pass

.looobon Olflco. Socntorlol
All Yard Ioiii lluot Bo Paid In Qur
And Computor Skltlo Aoqulrod.
By April I, 1113
·
- tho ..
day ..
1111: t:C!Gomlho
lo io run, Soncl"Roo41mo
- 1770 .Joelcocon Plko,
Sundor ocllllono 1:CJGom Frldoy, To:
llondoy
odMion
IO:OOo.m. llllw•ll, OH 4561ot, MIFIH, EOE;·

r

1tllulcll

for Rent

This newst:~aper wtll nat
Wnowlng!y accept

'I~·

11W•IOII

toy that is magic
maddening

IIA1ook..,l-.

slatus Ql' oatkmai

origin, or any Intention to
make any suctJ pmterence,
limkatlon or dlscrlmlnallan;"

Gallipolis

,
.

(for

lltolllllo

clau" ..

:::=:

based on race, color, religion,

~··~--~----------

-r-

(lllbr.)

:;:rn-a

:

10]'.;ec.
11111kelwltif
1Uiulllll .

7 Allloce

33,ROIUII

'I! l

I~

• t.O.g

Opening lead: • 4

:JI:'~"':;
CoU tor
on, I -

limttallon or dlscrtmlnallon

Yard Sale

:c..i

r.1111[•][ .)[ J

I cl[•ll :l

Why poy ..... ·,... own a 1ta 14x70 Aeclman wtdl

to advertise •any preference,

7

Pus

- - RMr:,.,.
nci
=·GIG wotor, 301 ilii

All real estate advluusng In
this newspaper is SUbject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whk:h makes k Illegal

~x ·famiUal

. '1m~.

.... """" -

UU~GJ
tJ[o]~.:JU
~!.JlJljU w~u

U::Jl!J!.JlJUU
Ul!JlJ

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
W..t

~Uut.J

~Uij

1.2 Actor l!d -

28Teulonlc

IZWdl.l

---

llurllo

COUftCI

31 - llftd Son
33 PNIIy lllllda
. UIII--

+A QS2

GJL!JW~Ll

L:llJ!.J UL!JUUU ::JUU
.:Jl'J.:JU Ulll'JWL:J!.JUU
L:l UU[o] ~ ~ ll U L:l LoH.J l:J

.,~

21 Welnl

~lJU

U.:JlJ~lj mHJ
u !.J ll !.J u u .:J .:J u l.J [J
lJ l-.l ~ u !.J L.m

~l'J

Ac"--

5I Loopaol

241:"'?

•

•

LllJ!.JlJ[o]WlJ G.Jl'J.:JL.IlJ

5511YM1f

211!1101!W...

+AU
.AKQJIOI

ftMI

5I llollult

23=t

~l!JUUll

.:JUU

50 llecQ
51 .....
53 Poellc fool

201!111wlnd

EAST

.!]

411

derflll Ufo

ftltrcgln

+AJ IOU

42-'lllllhlll

41Acl-

,.~::....,

•n
+Jt '

' EEK

11q41 . .__ llol::
..
..,..,_,. . . . . . olhor ..,_;

a.st,fl

+10817

L:I~.:J

43 E._.,
.......... ,1. ...:::::..

15--WOfto

lllna. tfu: L Prloe: poto, WeiiUk
Aloyltr:oo':- ~ Alor I,

31-Hen!M

Dor

11 AMiii'W:.
12 lrllll

14 , .-....
(lllbr.)

-;:-.i;i;N;;-a;;;n;;;;Mi
~ .t wftiN And DIIIIIDnd

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

351oct1M

·-

,.

..

by mailing $1.25 plus a toog, self-addressed, .
slamped envelope Ia Aslro-Graph, c/o lhis
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, CleYeland, OH I
44 tOt ·:)428. Be sure to stale your zodiac
s~n .

to something ttoal mlghl be complelely lalse .
LIBRA (Sopl. 23·0cl. 23) Sot meaningful ,
olljttctives loday, btlt doro1 demand lhings o1
yoursetllhat elO:Oitd your capabilities and tal·

ants. Toy lo operate witloin your !imitations.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Do things In
IIIXlOidlnce witlo your atandards today, even
K!hose wi11o whcm you'f8 lrMtllled tend to de)
ott.owise. Make lhom come up to your-:
doro1 stoop down to lltelro.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Doc. 21) Your
mallriallortur:eo today miQiot be I1IOf8 benefi·
clll for ott.rolhan for youl'IOII. Don't despa~.
btfcauoe 8COOUIIII will be betanoocl later.
ing.
CAPIIICORN (Ole. 22-JM. It) In partner,
CANCER (June 21-Julf 221 You miQiot be ·ahlp arrangementt or dlveJ.opmento that
even more popular lhan uaual today wilh require INm lflort. keep your ego out ol ti1B
momberl ollloe oppcale gor:dlr. · piclurl I~ coltortl af8 capable ol doing
' hied thla Wllming f10110 ~hurt' llilfiGibelllrt11Bnyou can.
ti1B llllingo ola wnolllvelldmlf8r.
. IIQUNIUI (;Mil. 11) SotOOIII cxtt*l
LIO (July :g.•111 22) You lrl Clltallll ol bl cllr:llciiD you lttday Myou do llilfiGI in an
QOillliiOU 11 :c 1luly lttday, 1tt1t 111!1-dtUII intpulllvl or~- r d - · • you could cramp your otyt. ond impadl raur ID ..._ 'l cltw, Ill ..... . -,
P'tJUI- FOCUI on ptllitNe '-*". nal neg- · I 1; II (l'tll. • Mil lit . , You ftiW'ol boa •
1
IMOIIII.
•• •
!,tW' wtii.. IDdly',ltul you ntW'ol
WIIO (Alia. a ltpl Ill 'II** IWIOI, IDdly nal CI• • ji 4 It\ on ::IIIII;• you (llln.
.belaNitjillllloou -.oy lla11ll?litllo or goa- Dar:, be t1t1 ona wliD prlel viCIIDry 1n1m your
lip. You cxUtlo~...,OIIotllly giW orldltoot JPIIP .
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) People wilh
whom you'll he•e important dealings today
might not be as frank end open with you as
you are with them. Weigh everything that
!hey toll you vory Cllreful!y.
GEMINI (lloy 21.JU11120) Don't rely too
heavily upon verbal commitments in your
commerQal anairs today. For your own prolection, llave'lll t11e Iemos commiltlld to writ·

"!

MY HE R

I heel atlelided an exercise
class and heard one woman
L-..1..-L
• ....J.--.L
. ....J ~ tell another. "The only way I'm
..-------------.,.:.... going to lose excess weight is

I-"'TI'I6"""'1'~1

-l

N U B R 0 t1

II

.,,Q divorce •• ··-·-!"

Compl~te the chuckle quotod
II I I 19 Q
by f1llu'lg '" the miSiif!Q words
you develop from slep No. 3 below.

•·-.1.-.1.-.l.-.l.-.&amp;---1

SCUM LETS ANSWERS
3'''
Obtuse • Broom • Ideal • Glance • UMBRELLA
Coed to h8r not so smart roommate: "Have you pi.tl
anything aside lor a rainy day?" The not so smart I'OOifla
mate replies: "Oh sure, an UMBRELLA!"

'
1111 :

�Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

Clint Eastwood and AI Pacino
finally winners at Academy awards
By JOHN HORN
AP Elltertalmaeut Writer
LOS ANG~ - On a night
that was supposed IQ honor woinen
in movies, the names to remember
were Clint and AI.
• · Clint );astwood and AI Pacino,
overlooked by Oscar voters deS{lite
more than 50 years of acung
b.etween them, finally broke
thro1J8h Monday ni~t. Eastwood's
moody Western, ' Unforgiven,"
brought hil)l awards for best piclllre
and best director. Pacino, the bitter,
blind Army veteran of " Scent of a
.Woman," was named best actor.
. Neither became famous by smil·
in~ a lot, but they each had somethmg furmy to say as they picked
.up their long-awaited Oscars and
received weD-earned standing ovalions.
·
"This is pretty good," multel'ed
Eastwood, drawing laughs as he
picked up his first Oscar of the
night, for best director. "This is all
right."
" I' ve been around for nearly 39
years; I've enjoyed it and I've been
1ucky," said Eastwood, who had
never been nominated until
"Unfoi'given." "Everyone feels
they are luclcy when lhey can malce
a living in a profession they
enjoy.''
Pacino, nominated six times
before this year, obviously arrived
with high hopes. He actually wrote
an acceptance speech. The actor
quipped "You broke my streak,"
and ihen rambled on, offering plenty of thanlcs and memories.
Midway, he paused and apologize4: "Indulge me for a minute,
because I'm not used to this.''
While films such as "Dances
With Wolves" and "The Silence
of the Lambs" have dominated

-'recent Oscar ceremonies, this
year's awards were more evenly
divided.
"Unforgiven" led with four,
also takinJ honors for best supportin~ actor {Gene Hackman) and film
editing. FoDowing with three were
"Howards End," which tied with
· "Unfor~iven" by receiving nine
nominauons, and "Bram Stoker's
Dracula."
·
The best aclreSS award went to
Emma Thompson, a heavy favorite
as the free-thinking intellectual
who marries· into money in the
stately " Howards End."
" It's overwhelming to see so
many faces who have entertained
and thrilled 111e for all my life,"
said Miss Thompson, a British
actress, in her acceptance speech.
Marisa Tomei, Joe Pesci's feisty
girlfriend in "M~ Cousin Vinnr,"
offei'Cji the night s biggest surpnse.
She won for best supporting
actress, her role in a film that
reeeived mixed reviews beating out
such highbrow contenders lis Judy
Davis Vanessa Redgrave and' Joan
Plowrlght.
'
The theme Monday night was
"Oscar Salutes Women and the
Movies," but the women receiving
the most applause weren't being
honored for their acting.
Two of the screen's most beautiful stars, Elizabeth Taylor and the
late Audrey Hepburn, were given
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian
Awards for their off-screen work.
Another favorite .was Eastwood's
mother, Ruth, who beamed from
her seat in the audience as her son
called her "the greatest woman on
the planet."
A man even attracted the most
attention for fashion. There had
been special interest whether Jaye
Davidson, the cross-dressing barrdresser of "The Crying Game,"
would wear a tux or gown for the
occasion. DaVidson, a loser for best
supporting acta, chose an androg·
ynous outfit of a long blaclc frock
coat over tight pants and boots, his
hair in a b1111.
It was a disappointing night
overall for "'The Crying· Game,"
the underground hit written and
directed by Neil 'Jordan. With a
plot twist that seems to get less
secret every day, the sexually

c TIFFAN\'LEE

New arrival

Mr. and Mrs·. Tracy Lee
announce the birth of their daughter, Tiffany Elizabeth, born Feb. 18
at Holzer Medical Center.
She weighed six pounds and 15
ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are San-.
dra Rife, Middleport and Mitchell
Stanley, Cabin Creek, W.V. Maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Stanley, Cabin Creek,
W.V., Mrs. Leona Stanley and the
late Everett Stanley.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Lee, Pomeroy.
Paternal great- ~randparents are
Mrs. Rachel Wtlson,Middleport,
and the late Howard A. Wilson,
and Mrs. Phoebe Lee, Middleport,
and the late Charles Lee.

NBA
action
turns nasty

provocative ·story about love and
terrorism Ieeeived six nominations,
but only won for original screenplay.
"Unforgiven," meanwhile,
became just the third Western to
win the Oscar for best picture in
the award's 65-year hislory. Othen
cited were the 1931 film "Cimarron" and 1990's " Dances With
Wolves."
"Howards Epd," 1! stately family saga, aJao won for art direction
and Rulh Prawer.Jhabvala's sam~­
play adaptation of E.M. Forster's
classic novel. "Bram Stoker's
Dracula," directed by Francis Ford
Coppola, picked up awards for costume desi,n, makeup and sound
effects edibllg.
"Aladdin" Disney' s latest
smash animated film, again
brought the Oscar for best original
score to Alan Menken, whife he
and Tim Rice won ·the best song
award for "A Whole New World"
Menken and ltis late · partner,
Howard Ashmin, had won Oscars
two out of the ~vious three years
for Disney's 'The Little Mermaid" and "Beauty and the
Beast.''
"A River Runs Through It"
piclced up the Oscar for cinematography, while the award for best
sound went to "The Last of the
Mohicans." The prize for visual
effects went to tbe black comedy
"Death Becomes Her."

•Vol. 43, No. 234
Copyrighted 1993

ATTEND CONFERENCE· Teachers from
Hillside Baptist Church attended the Teachers
Conference held at the First Baptist Church ill
GaUipolis recently. Pletnred, l·r, are Dau Hood,
Gary Jones, Mrs. Linda Jones, Heather Cudlf,

tion Army presented him with with
LOS ANGELES (AP) Roberta Flack will malce a guest · Tradition of Caring award
Laine, who !UI11S 80 today, startappearance Friday on the ABC
ed the "Old Shoes For the Homesoapoptza ''Loving.''
In the episode, Miss Flack sings less" program three years ago after
"Amazing Grace" at the funeral of seeing a homeless man with ragged
character Trisha Alden McKenzie shoes on a television news show.
"I said, 'He needs a pair of
(Noelle Beck}, believed to have
shoes, and I've got shoes in my
died in a ftery car crash.
The four-time Grammy winning closet just sitting there,"' Laine
singer's hits include "Killing Me said. ' I told some radio stations
Softly With His Soog."
abollt my idea to coUect shoes, and
they just nipped over the idea.
They
got involved and we lOok in
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A pair of
6,000 shoes the first year."
shoes - or the rieed for one turned singer Frankie Lane into a
Laine still pedorrns regularly
benefactor of the poor and home- and his autobiography is due out in
May.
less.
In the 1940s and '50s, he pa:Mayor Susan Golding pro·
claimed Monday "Frankie Lane forrned such hits as "Mule Tram,"
Day" in San Diego, and the Salva- "Jealous," "Moonlight Gambler,"

59 Court St.

Gallipolis, OH.
446·9545

"For% of A Century"

is making some 'hanges with some
additional management and
employees.
'

'

Begi-nning April 1 We Will Feature A

L Utl CHE0 tt BUFFE,T
SUCH AS THE FOLLOWING:
2 Homellltltle Soups

4 Salads
Warm Home- Bread
3 Stardles, Sid! as:
Potatoes, Rio, Maanlli

$ 25

4 Yeggles or Casseroles
3Meats
2 Desserts

·.Effor(t(J collect delinquent
land taxes paying off- Lentes

•

DINNER UFFET

7 Days A We-ek

. 6·8:30

• Will ,,,,,
,,,., "''"''

•

A campaign to collect delin- the property owner from forecloquent land taxes in Meigs County sure, as long as the payment plan is
Is begillning to .pay off, according followed.
to Proseeuting Attorney John R.
"This is an option· that is not
Lentes.
·
available to taxpafers who par,
Ilkcari.v,Fe.brutlrY. Lentes .issued ·,-Uieiu~ when they are due; '
an o~n fetter to those taxpayers LentesJiald, "IIC"I-urg~ those delin'
who have been certified as delin- quent taxpayers to talce advanrage
QI!CDI. In his leiter, Lentes pledged of it. It allows taxpayers to budget
to talce whalever actiOn is necessary the funds necessary to take care of
to collect. the delinquencies, includ- their delinquency, and most imporing foreclosUres.
tant for them, it prtXectS them from
Records at the Meigs County foreclosure."
Auditor's Office show that as of
Lentes also said that the county
Dec. 22, 1992, there were treasurer's office accepts monthly
$984,609.68 in delinquent taxes payments on delinquencies,
due the county . That figure although no plan is ·avadable for
includes interest and penalties.
such an option.
..
"While I realize the heartbreak
"As long as a taxpayer shows a
that w~uld result from foreclosing , COI_ISCious effort to pay on his
on family homes and farms; I will delinquent taxea, my office remains
~esort to doing just that if delinwilling to CllOperaiC! ~d worlc witb
quem taxpayers do not offer to that taxpjlyer to avoid foreclosure.
~ooperate with our efforts to colHowever, the worst thing those
lect," Lentes said.
delinquent taxpayers can do is
: A,ccording to the prosecuting ignore th~ appeals of my offiCe. We
attori\ey, those with delinquencies are now preparing the fii'St parcels
~an enter into a five payment plan for foreclosure. If such actions are
to settle their delinquent status. flied, then the taxpayers "!ill have
Under such a plan, the taxpayer is to pay coun costs and costs of prosa_sked to pay 20 percent of the . eclition as well as their taxes and
delinquency and then pay the bal- penalties just to save the propenr,
ance in five semi-annual install- they worked so bard to purchase, •
ments when the tax books are open Lentes -said.
for the collection of current·taxes.
Collection letters which oualine
Those taxpayers are also required the options available have been
to pay their current taxes as they mailed to delinquent taxpayers in
Ci)me due. Such a plan also protects

,.._________ Local
Highway projects announced
··
Two highway projects involving Meigs County were recently
,. .awarded by the Ohio Department of Transtdtation.
The SheDy Co. of Thornville is schedtOOI to resurface 9.13 miles
of. roadway on State Route 124 from the Vi\100 County line to 1.2
miles east of State Route 325 and from the Srate Route 160 junction
to the Meigs County line.
The $550,527.08 project is scheduled forcomvletion by July 31.
: In ad~ition, PEBCO Inc. of /'lorwalk received a contract to
mstall raised J)l!vetncnt marlcings on variOus routeS and sections in
,. Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, MOnroe, Morgan, Noble, Vinton
and Washington counties after submitting a bid of $94 I ,650.
Scheduled completion date for the project is Nov. 15.

Daylight Savings Time returns to Ohio and most of the nation at
·· 2 a.m. Sunday•
Dinector Michael A. Alcrouche of the Ohio Deparunent of Liquor
·· · Control reminds all liquor permit holders that ·•when the clock '
striJ:es 2. a.m. it will•. in fact, he 3,a.m.. 30 minutes put the legal
closing wne for pen01t holders entitled to be !lJ!CD until2:30 am .
Therefore, all aales and consumption of liquor must cease at 2
:a'I:i.when clocks should be advaJ!Ced one hour, Director lllaoucbe

Kuhl named instructor for class

•

You'll Find Caviar, Frog L..• and Es Cargo at Oscar's
'

was culminated with a vlalt by a uewspaper
reporter. Here, Seatinel reporter Jim Freemau
shows students at Rejolclna Lire Christian
School some nl the tools associate!! with uewspa·
ll'r reporting. (Seutinel photo by Charleue Hoe- .
flich)

·· DST returns Sunday

11:15 A.M.· 1:45 P.M.

Music students participate in concert

'

DISCUSSING NEWSPAPER • Studeuts in
selected t:laa&amp;es at Syracose aad Salem Center
elementary ·~thools and R~oldug Life C-lstlan
School in Middleport participated lalt week in
the Great Readiualll Ohio Week (GROW) program dnrina which they learned things about
the various parts or a newspaper. The program

"High Noon," and "That's My
Desire.''
LAFAYETTE, La. (AP) Cosmonaut Georgi Grechko told a
group of si:hoolchildren the reason
the Russians are building a space
shuttle.
"Keeping up with theJoneses,"
Grecl\kO said Monday, referring to
the American space program.
The students attended a lecture
and slide show, then peppered
Grechko with questions like, "Do
cosmonauts suffer ill effects from
space flights?"
The answer? After weeks of
weightlessness, the weight of food
in tbe stomach can be unsettling,
Grechko said

Or Order From
OurMenul

•

Bunny Kuhl of Pomeroy will be the instriiCIOI' for a quilting class
tlu'ot!ah t!'e Ohio Univcnlty'• cootintllng eductllion pqram, Com"muruvenaty, besinnins on April 1J&gt;.
The five-ee•aon JII'Oil'llll .will be bcld·on Tueadaya April 20May ~8, 7 to p.m. in 104 Tupper Hall. The lint and lui clua periods will be held from 7 to 10 p.m.
·
.
Everyone enrolled in the Qulltina for BeJinners clus will
receive 21 pata~m~, enotJib for a quoea size quilL
. Detnonltnllions 1111fbandl-on work on • 12~ lllllpler quilt
~teach partlc:ipanta the ~lire Cl1liltlna ja¥o:e• from choollna fabnc to trimmina and bindin&amp; the fiililhecf prodncL

procedural error.

MitcheD .said since some
_programs scheduled for deletion
involved teachers who were on the
transfer list, and had not had their
due process of a hearing yet, the aclion would be "putting the cart
before the horse".
Mitchell said the action would be
a "dOne deal" and would say to the
tt,achers that their hearings had no
meaning, if the program had already been deleted before they had &lt;•
a chance to teD the board why they
felt the program is needed.

several townships to date, Lentes
said, and the results have been
encouraging. The letters, which are
go!ng in ~email every day, are
b~mg ma1led to those taxpayers
W!th large delin~qencies whose
".topc"losrtiurees.are ·~in~ preJil!CCd for
ft.."Many of those prope:ny owners
who have been contacted have
shown good judgment and either
paid their taxes in full or have
made arrangements with the treasurer to make timely payments •
Lentes said. ''Those who haven'•t
yet contacted the rreasurer's office
or my offiCe are risking foreclosure
each day they wait•
Lentes stressed that no delin9uent property o.wners !las been
'singled out" for coUection of their
delinquent raxes1 Properties are
being eval~ for delmque~~t stabiS _~dcoDecuon by IQwnship.Itis
anticipated that the coDection letter
process will be completed by the
end of March. At that time the
office .will begin foreclosure 'proceedings against several propeny
owners.
"These are days when local governments, especially school dislf!Cts, are scrambling to operate in
d1ff1cillt t1mes. Taxpayers have a
greater responsibility than ever to
pay lheir fair share of the burden •
Lentes concluded.
'

WVEA representative Kathy PPJHS; Kathy Clay, P.E. teacher at
Smitb agreed with MitcheD when Ashton; T110othy Click, first grade
asked by the board, but implied she teacher at Roosevelt Patricia
was going to wait until the board Graziano, kindergarten teacher at
approved the deletions, then file Mason; Drema Greenlee, social
gnevances for the teachers .invol- sttidies teacher at Wahama; Kelly
Harper, fifth and sixth grade
ved.
Board lliembers exited from the teacher at Hartford; Kathy
public meeting twice last night Cot Hemetek-Johnson, reading teacher
executive sessions dealing with . at Hannan; ·Jean Henderson, teen
personnel. The first was 18 minutes parent prognim at ~Thch; Craig
long, the second lasting 28 minutes. Hesson, speeial education teacher
While board members were in at PPJHS; Bema Hilbert, business
executive session, Mitchell staled education at Vo-Tech; Christine
she felt this is what's wrong with Kratzer, special education teacher
the school system (spealcing of the at PPHS; Anna Lewis, kindergarten
possible ·deletion of programs at New Haven; Brenton Martin,
before the teaching hearings). malh teacher at PPJHS; Cheryl
"They (the school board) do some- Metz, English at Hannan; Tracy
thing and then they go back and try Pickens, social swdies at Hannan;
IQ fix it," she said.
Angela Potts, reading at PPJHS; .
"I felt this was the fair and Blythe PoweD, fifth and sixth grade
reasonable thing to do insteall of at New Haven; Walter Raynes, sowaiting, letting them go ahead, and cial studies at Waluunil; Jozie
then file grievances. Grievances Roberts, special education at Beale;
can talce QP to a year before a c!Pci· Lois Robinson, home economics at
sion is made on the fourlh level," Wahama; Barbara Scarberry, speMitchell stated. "And, it costs a lot cial education at PPJHS; Brenda
of money, county funds, and then Scott, P.E. at Leon; and Shawn Serthere is no guarantee the board is -gent, third grade at Roosevelt
going to win." ·
• Service personnel being RIF'ed
·
"I felt it was iplportant to bring it were:
Sheryl
Sims,
cook at Hannan·
to the board's attention 1mmediately," she concluded.
Catherine Cook, cook at North
Thachm affected by the RIF, Point; Wilma Martin, cook at
who will lose: their jobs at the end PPJHS; . Edna Holcomb, cook at
PPJHS; Barbara Scarberry, ~ at
of the school year, include:
Linda Bragg, kindergarten Hannan; Richard CampbeD, cus~er at Leon; Patricia BrtiJllfield, todian at Hannan; Naomi Lanier;
rea&lt;Iing teacher at Roosevelt; Mar- · secretary at Hartford; 'Illmmy Hall
Continued on page 3
'
garet c.sto. English teacher at

Cong. Strickland to address
Meigs Democrats Saturday

U. S. Congressman Ted Strick·
land (D-Lucasville) will address
the Meigs County Democratic
Party at the party's annuaiJefferson/Jackson dinner to be held Saturday.
Strickland, a psychologist and
former United Methodist minister,
was elected to that office last
November. He represents the 14
counties of Ohio's Sixth District.
His is the largest of Ohio's Con·
gressional districts, spanning from .
Washington County to the King's
Island amusement park near
Cincinnati.
Strickland defeated his Republican opponent, Incumbent Bob
McEwen with 52 percent of the
vote in Meigs County.
"I was thrilled with the way
briefs---..;;;M;;.;::;eigs;..;;.Co;;;;;un;;:..;tys;;:;:uppo;;;;.;rted;.;.Co.;;;;n~gress;;;;;.,·

man .Strickland in November, Party
Chauwoman Sue Maison ~aid.
''Ted is a true ·man of the people'
and I'm always excited when I see
· how he relates to his constituents
Ted ~ridges the gaps of partisart
pohlics and economics. He puts
people at ease, and I thinlc anyone
who speaks to him is im~ressed
with his genuine interest m their
problems. For a change, we have a
U. S. Congressman who actually
listens to the concerns of the people
who elected him. •
"Ted is also a dynamic spealcer," Maison said... He has .a way of
motivating all of us to look around
and see the job that needs to be
done. I think anyone who attends
Saturday's dinner will be inspired

•

by what he has to say."
Maison alSo rioted that Satur~~·s visit ~11 be Striclcland's third
VJSII to. Me1gs County since he took
o~ce m !anuary. In February, he
vtsll~d w1th health care and econo~nc development leaders in
Metgs County. Last week, he spolce
to the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce during its annual dinner/dance at Royal Oak Resort.
. The Jefferson/Jaclcson dinner
wtll be held at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center. A social
hour at 5 p.m. wiD precede the dinner, which begins at 6 p.m. Tickets
are available from any member of
the Democratic Executive Committee, or at' the door, at a cost of $10
per ~- Children under 12 are
admlaed free.

Enrollmeniis limited and the re~tration/cancellation deadline is
' April 16. For more information or to register, residents may contact
the Office of Continuing Education at 593-01770 or toll-free at J.
800-336-5699.

Man arrested on warrant
Walter Barrett, Briar Ridge Rd., Langsville, was arresled Tuesday evening on Mler of the Meigs County Court for failure to pay
· fines and COlts.
'
He is also beins held on a ~ check warrant from the Wellston
Police Depanment, Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported.
Barreu is to appear in the MFigs County Court.

Man cited on charges
Donald R. ~pcncer, 20, New Hope Road, Long Bouom, was
cited to the Meigs County Court on chargeS of leaving the scene and
improper bactins foUowing a Friday night incident at Five Points.
Accordina t.O 1 repon from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Spencer II charged with liacking into a I985 Chevrolet
driven by C~ Aeilcer, ~.causing modmle damage. Damage to Spencer s 1989 Ponliac' was listed as lighL
The ldlerift's depanmcnt ii itivestigating a hit·sldp accident that
occurred ~y fli&amp;ht at that ~y Tav~g lot.
Accorciin&amp; to I ftPO!t;ll977 ~ow by Ronda L. MOOII,
Union Avenue, Ponleroy, was· slniCk in the leftlidc by a vehicle
~ OUI of a pD:Ingspace.

·

An mvel'lipnon II cootinuin&amp;, Soulshy said Charges of leaving
the scene of 111 acekleolt are pendinJ.

Deer-pickup wreck reported

A Mlddlepon IUD'S pickup llllCk sustained light ~e In a
deer-vehicle ac:c:ldent on State Route 124 in Syracuse Tuesday
uound 2 I.ID.
Accordltla to l!lhertff'l danment niJXII1, Cbrillqlber A. Davis
wu fl81ll!oidod when bo all'lrk a deer dill jumped iniD the Jlllh of
hil 1987 Font ltanpr.
Coutinned on pqe 3

-

•

,

By Mindy Kearns
Mason County Board of Educalion members unanimously apeec~
to
off 39 employees dunng a
specilll session Tuesday evening.
Twenty-five professional personnel and 14 service personnel lost
their jobs due to reduction in force
{RIP). Board member Maxine
Ni~ tilade the motion to lUF the
professional persolinel, ·with Paul
Doeflinger secon~. ·. On service
personnel, Brian Billinss made the ·
!'K'tion, with Olston Wnght secondmg.
~ on the l!j!CIIda Tuesday, Supenntendent Michael Whalen had
.recommended the board approve
deletions of several professional
positions and many service perslinnel positions. Both items were
deleted from the agenda; however,
after Ann Mirchell, a representative
from the American Federation of
Teachers, O!arleston, .told the
board the program deletions were a

'-Y

OSCAR'S"'
RESTAURANT

Spea k

· ..Faith and the Burden of Reputation" was the tide of the program
presented by Mis. KatiJ?n Windon
at the February meetmg of the
Chester United Methodist Women.
"Polite" society e~es one
to associate with the "right people
- that is, people of similar race, culture, educational level, economic
class, political orientation, and
often times, gender. To this the
Gospels record Jesus as saying
.. Bah-hum-bug!" Jesus crossed
MJHS/MHS CHORUS
these lines many times wilh women
of questionable reputation in the
New Testament - women on whom
.. polite",Jewish society looked
doW!!. Examples are The Woman at
On March 11, 1993, the Meigs 1992 program. As the number of lhe
WeD, the woman who washed
·Junior-High and Hi,gh School cho- participants grows, so does the Jesus'
feet, and the woman who
ruses participated m the World' s 1mpact on the public's awareness bled continuously.
Largest Concert . There were . of school music programs.
John 4:7-26 was read. Three
approximately 65 students particiThe program reflected MENC's groups
four were formed and
paiing in the program.
1993 Music In Our Schools Month answeredofquestions
strangers
The program was broadcast ' theme "Make Time for Music." and The Woman at about
the
Well,
then
from 1-1:30 p.m. on PBS stations which was chosen to create aware- answers were discussed.
at which time millions of ness of the need for music in our
group sang the hymns "Fill
achoolchildren. teachers, and citi- schools, homes, and communities. MyThe
Cup
LOrd" and "Springs of
zens ftom around the country per- The program was chosen by an L.ivi~g Water"
with Betty Dean as
formed the same concert program MENC committee of elementary PUIIISL
simultaneously in the World's music specialists,
A poem was read and a Litany
l,.argesl Concert from the John F.
The pro~ consisted of "Har- of Prayer
in cl01ing.
Kennedy Centerfor the Performing mony", "Siyahamba", "Garden of
Mrs. Betty Dean p:esided at the
ArrJ in Washington, D.C.
the Earth", "If 1 Had a Hammer",
business
tneeling with 12 members
· Last year an estimaied 8.2 mit- "AmiQos", and "Sing a Song of
prescflt
and
56 sick and shut-in
lion students participated in the. Peace".
.
.
·
calls were repmted.
I

Mason School Board
terminates·39 employees

-----Names in the news---

SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - Two ing to tell her about his death.
weeks after a 93-year-old wpman . In the meantime, Mrs. Downs
walked a mile through several fell and also was talcen to Cleveinches of snow to get help for her land Memorial. She was dec.lared
husband, they have died within dead at 7:25a.m.
"What she did was just the ultiaboutl2 hours of each other.
Clara Downs made the trek mate love story," said Marsha
down a remote dirt road to reach a Jackson, activiues coordinator at
neighbor's pbone after her 88-year- the retirement home. "And for
old husband, Everett, broke his hip. them to die the way that they did, it
He had made the same journey, just really takes your breath
without the snow, after she brolce . away."
·
·
her hip a few Ye&amp;fll ago.
'
When Mrs. Downs moved in to
Downs stayed in Cleveland the retirement borne she had not
Memorial Hospital for more than a read a newspaper story about her
week aftet his fall, according to walk, Jackson said. One of the
The Shc;lby Star.
employees gave her a copy of the
He was admitted to Cleveland article.
.·
Pines nursing home Thursday, but
··she said, 'I didn't do nothing . .
Sunday night he was talcen back to They're making a mountnin out of
the hospital, where he was pro- a molehill,"' Jackson said.
nounced dead on arrival shortly
before 7 p.m.
Mrs. Downs had moved to a
retirement home after her bustO
band's accident. Her family had
· planned to visit her Monday mornHoyt Allen, executive director
of the KYOWVA Regional Evan·
gelizing Association will speak
Sunday at the Rutland Church of
Christ. He will tell the history of
KYOWVA at the 9:30 am. service
and speak on the need for local
evangelism at the 10:30 a.m. service. Hoyt is a former minister at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
'There will be a fellowship dinner at
noon. Eugene E. Underwood, minister, invites the public.

2 s.ctlono, 11 Pageo 25 cent•
A llulllmedlo Inc. Ne,..paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 31, 1993

Tanimi Jonu, Mrs. Jamie Humphrey, Mrs • .
Teresa Reyuolds, Mrs. Beliuda DeiD, Mrs.
'Jandl Jones, and Mrs. Betty Acree. Also attend·
log but not pictured were Mrs. Cheryl Chicle.

"Seeds of Faith -·Death and Chris Hill and Clara Mae Sargent Camp Abury are Margie West,
Resurrection" was the program The penny fund collection was Martha Dudding, Etta Mae Hill,
topic presented by Lois Bell when talcen and siclc caDs reported. Cor- &amp;uth Smith, Chris Hill, Eileen
the Racine United Methodist respondence was read.
Buclc and Lee Lee.
Sue Grace, on giving the misWomen met for their March meetThe date for the Alpha Delta
ing. .
sion report, spoke about Nome, Kappa dinner to be served has been
The focus image was a basket of Alaska, and said it is one of the changed to April22.
various seeds, seed pods, seed most isolated place in the United
A money donation was voted on
packets and dried weeds and also States. The ministry of United to ~uy a new sound system. for the
plant bulbs just' beginning to Methodists is there and 60 percent social room.
·
sprout.
of Nome's residents are Eskimos.
PlanS were fmalized for the benMrs. Bell said "we see death Despite the isolation, some 10,000- efit dinner to be given for Joe Hill.
because the visible plant ,with its 12,000 tourists 'visit Nome each
Refreshments were served by
fruit and families form are gone but year.
Clara Mae Sargent and Karen
we see resurrection because we
Mrs. Grace also explained about Walker.
know that the ~tial for a new the new prayer calendar. She said
Get weD cards were signed durplant is within. She commented on on each member's birthday, a card ing the socializing.
'
some ..Seeds of Faith" tO correlate would be sent to a missionary
Attending were Alice Wolfe,
them with the coming Easter sea- whose birthday corresponds with Lois Bell, Mariam Bell, Margie
son.
·
·
the ·member sending iL
West, Robyn Reiber, Clara Mae
the hymn "Standing on the
Ruth Stearns, program resoun:'e Sargent, Ruth . Stearns, ·Karen
Promises" .was sung by members. secretary, reported on the UMW Walker, Chris. Hill, Gladys Shields,
Scripture was read from John and reading program and presented Margery Roush, Etta Mae Hill,
the program closed with a prayer eight books which were passed Out Frances Roberts, Vicki Hill, Carla
by Mrs. BeD.
to members. Points are given for Wallace, Sharon Hubbard, Lee Lee
Lee Lee presided at the business the most books read by the UMW and Sue Grace.
meeting which opened with the groups in the Athens District and a
The next meeting (note the date
group repeating the UMW purpose. prize is awarded.
change) will be April 12 at7:30
Members attending the district p.m.
Officers reports were given by
UMW retreat on April 16-1 7 at

·Chester UMW meet

I

••
•

UMW to attend district retreat

George Clinton, the fourth vice
presideilt of the United Stales, died
in Washington in 1812. He was 73.
Clinton was the first vice p:esident
to die while in office.

Low In tile mld-4811. Rail
Tbunday, blgb near SO.

•

e

Nathan Hale was hanged in New
York on Sept. 22, 1776, by· the
British for being a ~. Under Gen.
George Washington s direct orders,
Hale had disguised himself as a
Dutch schoolmaster and made his
way into New York, only to be
captured by the British. His last
words before dying have become
immortal . They were: "I only
regret I have but. one life to lose for
my country."

Alie n

Pick 3:
623
Pick 4:
4375
Buckeye 5:
17-27-30-31-36

Page4

News notes

Elderly woman who walked through
snow dies in attempt to rescue husband

Ohio Lottery

.

I
l
·-·Ill. . -

WITH 'I'll£ GREATEST OP EASE- Ia ... llltllerlaadalk ot
llle TlltldaJ after-, Ulheull) Rio an.1e lllldellll &amp;ea,
SeD ud ADpia Rltad• 111011
I• aud . . .
peratuNID 6e a. to fly a .... • 6e P'tel ._., ADIYenary
HaD. Rlbl II Ia 6e fnriCIIt fDr today aadlllantlaJ,IIId w1a11e the
sun II expe..1ed to retnna Friday, te•perataiW wli llover in 6e

40-to-50-!lelree nuae.

. :

I

'

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