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                  <text>Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Wednesday, March 24, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NIT

'

R. C.

'

quarter
finals

PRODU

t-5-3

Page4

. 2 LITER BOnlE

STORE HOURS .
Monday-thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

Supa- Lolto:
13-14-31442-46
Kid.er:
1-2-3-1-5-6
Pidr.3:
Pidr.4:
4-0-2-3

Cloudy lolllgbt w1tb • lo" 4045. Lo&lt;aUy o1enso rog possible

•

'

. 298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH~
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., M«R. 21 THRU MAR. 27, 1993

/

COCA·COLA
.PRODUCTS

. ·'
Vat 43, No. 228

'Edwin A .Lewis'

$289
. $239

Cubed Steak.......................LB.
SLICED 1f4

$ 169

.•

pork Loln............

u •••••••••••••••••

LB.-

OLE SOUTHERN
..
. . r $239
PATT1Es•••••••• 3ta. Box · ··

Sausage

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Round Steak._~·-·-···--...18.

$ 49

2
$169
Chuck Roast. . . . . . . .La.
·
$ . 09
Sliced Bac0n............ oz. 1
$

(Editor's note: The following
story, 'ltbk:h was pubUsbed In
tbe March 1993 edition or AEP
Fuel Supply Department's
Coal Courier, bas been reprin·
ted with permission.) '

· ARGO
GREEN ·BEANS
16

oz.

4 $1
KRAFT GRAPE
JELLY or JAM
32 oz.
•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
BAL!ARD'S

.. .

·

STOKELY

12

ECKRICH

Betl

TOMATO

139

LB.

.· JUICE

.

460Z.

AMERICAN BEAUTY

. WHOLE
CERTIFIED KENNEBEC . . $,"JS9 · TOMATOES
16 oz.
Seed Potatoes. . so Las• .l . .
2~y BELL • ·. . . . . $ 89
%. Mdk... ._. . .-·-······GAL .
'

1C
C1trus Punch. . ,.-.. ot CJ9 ·
.
'
,,
69(
89c TV D•nners. . . . . oz.
SU~NY DELIGHl .

·

'

, MORTON
.

Mac. &amp; Cheese. . 7~ oz.

Do Food..~.....................
2o La.
rr::-- -

$299

1--------.1

BATHROOM TISSUE III'
$259 PKG.
l2ROLL II
II
'

Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu

on.r Qaod lllr. 21thru Mer. 27, 11113
LJml1 Per C:UeiOII'!III

.·

64

.,

'

·

'

·

~

'

9-1o

SUNSHINE
II

·

.

MOR!ON FRIED

Ch1cken. . . . . . . . . . . . .

PURINA

NOODLES
6 oz.

UNS

At Powtll'a Super Vatu
21 lhru rur. 27, 1813

aoz.

3 SJ

..·

GRANULATm 'SUGAR 1
.5) 29 , uas..
~ Powell'• Super Valu.
014fQoodU..I1 tiiNIIIM'.27,111113
Qaod Only

Llmll1 ,.,

'

GROUND

· BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

SJ59

GREAT

CAT · FOOD

5/Sl

. . .' '
~ 24 oz.

o.-.,

l
1
1

GROUND
CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

By Steve Hiles
.

Ooaked in a veil of winlry
fog, John Coleman, George
Cooper, and Carl Little move
melhodically among the coalfilled barges lhat line lhe river's
edge, wiring lhem IOgelher for
the day's journey.
It's one o'clock in the morning and the mercury haS dropped
to 15 degrees. The misty out·
lines of the John E. Amos
Plant's cooling .towers looms
overhead as the three men
prepare 10 barges for the ttip
from AEP's Pumam Coal Ter·
minal on the Kanawha River 10
iiS Mountaineer and Sporn
planiS on the Ohio.
Slanding at the helm of the
Edwin A. Lewis, AEP River
Transportation Division pilot
Bob Shaw maneuvers the 5,60().
horsepower vessel, worting
wilh the deck crew to arrange
the barges iniO a tow that is five
~ long an? two barges
Assembling a tow is a I8Sk
that's repeal&lt;:d day afler day in
~ AEP River Division; The
u..i.J .andq,4 od!U river-going,
vessels ·in the division move
rrion: than 20 miUioo tons of
coal aruiually 10 AEP genenuing
Slalions, nearly half of the Systi:m 's IOtal bum.
"You get 'some of lhese dark
nights, or some of these fouY
nighiS, and you really appu:coate
your radar - I wouldn't want 10
IUD wilhout it," says Shaw, guid·
ing lhe ~Awis out into the chan·
nel of the Kanawha River. "But
it's jusl an aid 10 navigation. It's
no substitute for knowing lhe
river."
·
"With· a five-length 10w,
you've got 900 feet of coal out
in front of you so you"ve got 10
be lhitllring ahead all the lime.
You've got to know what places
in lhe river are wide .enough for
two bo&amp;IS to pass and what
places aren'L You've got to an·

$1690

'

--~AI!Pinw1\w;

--.c.wc-..

BEING A PILOT IS CHALLENGING ·Jerry Boas, a master
piloi (captain) for ~ AEP River Transportation I)iv!Sfon, 111!1S Ice
lind hlah water coodotions are two or the biggest challenges for a·
pilot.
ticipare what's going· 10 hlippen
· the number of lockages handled
each year, the Winfield Locks
all lhe time. Yoti can't jerk the
are lhe busiest in the nation's intoW around or· you could s~.a~t
breaking lhe wires that hold it
land warerways sysrem.
, The Lewis is still waiting iiS
10gether."
One thing that Shaw has ac·
twn at Winfield as lhe forward
curarely anticipated on Ibis par·
waiCh comes on duty at 6 a.m.
ticular q10111ing is a delay 81 the
AEP River Division crews work
Winfield Locks and Dam, where
schedules of 21 days on, fol·
sevC1111 tows are wailing !heir
lowed by 21 days off. Crew
tum 10 lock lhroush. Based on
Continued on page 3

Clinton thinks jobs bill approval
will follow passage of budget
lion spending bill, he said "in the
end we will pass"it" because uthe
public would juSt be outraged at doe
thOught that we have a chance here
10 create a half a million new jobs
.•• and that it would be slowed up."
OiniDII made his comments on
the CBS News program "48
Hours" as tho,SCnate worked late
. Democrall.
''We've plainly ~ot the votes to in10 the night in' iti effort 10 fmish
pass. it as is, or wtth very minor Clintm's budget by midday today.
modifications," Clinton said The jobs bill, {l8rt of what Ointon
Wednesday night in a television contends is an msepuable package,
was uptiexL
interview.
The new president's bud~et
Aldtough Republicans could use
Senate rules to block the $16.3 bil- would steer federal fi~ pohcy
By STEVEN KOMAROW
Allloclated Prtll Writer
WAS}{INGTON - ·With his
budget heading toward final
approval, President Clinton pre·
diets similar success for bis JObs
bill ~ile opposition from Senale
Republicans and some conservative

Area attorney bound over
to today's grand jury term
A Pomeroy attorney charged
with giving druJI to two Meigs
County youlbs wu bound over 10
today's 1em1 of lhe Meip County
Orand l!Jff Wedne.day br, Meip
County 11111ae Patrick H. 0 Brien.
D. ldic:llaol Mullen, 1663 Lincoin Heilhta. Pomeroy, ileccuaod
or auppfying Dluepam. (Trade
name: Valium) to two Pomeroy
glda, gel II and 12, 011 Mlrc:h 12
and 13.
treated jUII
after
MIR:h 14 It Vet«·

=Ia

were

waived a preliminary hearing. .
Corrupting another with drugs is
a second degree felony punilbable
by up to IS ye.:s coofinement and
a maximum 6ne of $7,500. Alia, a
three-year torm is mandatory on
CICb C:llarp and lllcut duec Of the
lalllll lllllll 1lo ICfVed COIIIOCildvely, IICCOI'dinJ 10 the Meigr County

proecc:ator'a offtce.

O'Brien .set bond at SSO,OOO
in aU CMCS with RICOII·
nizanee permitted and ordered
Mullen 10 nhin fnlm contact with
tho alieaed viedma dmin&amp; the JICD·

COIICUIIelll

~~~~Mondly • proceedfna, dency lillho IICiioo.
Mullen lofcamecl the court that
Mullen ackllowledald aervKo or
aummoaa aacl complalnta, bat he bu ..riled Hennu Clnoo of
walmti'CIIdlna doc c:hlrpland the Atbeaa County Bar Amclalioo
poulble penaltiea. Mullen also u hillltorlley.
1111

In

or

:

•

cento

A Muldmodio Inc. NewspaP!'r

A journey aboard the

12 P-AK 12 OZ.

PORK

2 SeclloM,.12 Pogoo 25

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 25, 1993

Copyrlghtocl1883

away from the supply-side influ·
ence__._,_,_,,ftft
of a dozen years of Re~li·
..
can IIIUIIWIYI.I__,.Io
~
It would raise taxes, cut Pen·
tagon spending and make select
increases in domestic programs
beginning in fiscal 1994, which
begins OcL 1. In both doe Senate
venion and the one passed by lhc
House lasr week, federal dcficiiS
would be reduced over the next
five years by a IOtal of about $500
billilm.
·

ByBRYANBRilMLEY
Allloclated Press Wrillr

•-al

MOSCOW Parliameat
speaker Ruslan Khasblllatow
backed away from confi:oawicMt
with Boris YeiiSin IOday,sayiaslle
opposed efforts by aome hanl-liaers to remove the presideul &amp;um
offoce.
"I'm not a supponer o f sort of impeachment. •• said Klllsbulatov, Yettsin's cbicr rival iDa
of two-lhirds.
pow17 snuggle that has g1ipped die - . .
.A
poa;..._•ial
aide
c•ll"'
the
.
The fierce arguments in
RUSS1811 govemmenL
c:Giio
•
''.oy
1
Ot&amp;L''
Moscow
reverberattd across RusThe comments by the speokr
1"11te...,WIJ~isatunp«&gt;sia.
Cossacks
pledged aUegiance to
indic~ that Yeltsin's ·"14"
M•
IK I* · • • llld Yeltsin and oftered 10 form a presi.
in the Congress of People's mise • 1tet
Deputies lacked the nccessuy the ~" said Miaistcr of dt.ruial guard. Siberian coal miners
voleS to remove lhc pr ·.,, • ils lafomali011 MiUail Fedotov. lbreatened a strilre in support of lhe
emergency session scheduled 10 "Nat jlllt doe arP'"t ud the presidenL
4 ' 0 IIIII tile I* -' Mand the
The power struggle between
open Friday.
"I think it is not the oaly 111111- ..... •"
(Coo'liaued on Page 3)

The budget emerged unscathed
Wednesday from its 10Ughest cbal·
. lenge, a RepubliciJI amendment
which Would have lllippcd away a
proposal to raise taxea on higher·
1ncome Social Security ra:ipleniS. ··
The Senate on Wednesday
defeated S2-4 7 the amendment
offered by Sen. Treat Loll, R·
Miss., 10 ~e~~~~~ve lhc Social SOc:urity incle8SC after Democratic lead·
~lie~ on sen,ators to rally
Oinlllll.
'
Vice President Al Gore Jlll!lldecl
over lhc Senaae for lhc cl011e Vo&amp;c,
to add JRIIUI" and Clll doc decid·
in&amp; ballot in the event of a tie.
"Thil is an effort 10 slow down
the -~~~~~~ dl8l'l 8llhtlrilll for
the prclidDIIt in tho COIIIIIy," ..W
Senate Majority Leader Ocorac
MIICbell, D-Malne.
Cumody, rctilwl IDUJt count
half of lholr Social Security bene·
fits as taUble income If they earn
more than $25,000 1 year, or
$32,000 I year for coupleL
Clinton hill P'IJI ~~Millikin&amp; 8S
percent 1ubject to tuatiO!I

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

lioL I dtilti;- Slilllttne a pussiBut no sign of a comprise
ltili7, of (futdiq)
solu- · appeared today. Lawmakers also
liml, ' die 'I I o aid Ill Jq:cttlleiS refused to d1scuss a message
• • .... MJ 1 8 - Qlilfoca:e Yeltsin sent to the legislature
diUiq a a •ii.• of doc Sapreme Wednesday night, warning dtat the
'Soria t 5 ,_. ' wor:.
confrontation could destabilize lhc
n. I
w said lie pad'erml counuy.
doe idea ol ead7.. siaaJI8iiCOus
Some hard-line lawmakers even
C
b;
I ..ctlloe: p- said tbey would try 10 invoke an
!i,·m He said mdla l*upo511. article of the constitution that
Utl•easim" e ol.,...llby would allow them to oust Yeltsin
die~._ did .q •!&amp;- 011 a simple majority vou: insJead

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71

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�•

·=·Commentary .
The Daily Sentin el

.-

Thin~s have changed so rapidly
were more than 2,000, and the 'epi- nations are llOf. automatically superin
RUSSIA
that
we
reflexively
think
demic will grow. Russian mothers powers, but these days not-popu.
or what it was, not what it is. do not trust Russian vaccines or lous nations have greaa diffaculty
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
Because we have big decisions 10 syringes; many children go without even maldng the fll'SI cut, economamake, some perspec:live is in order.
cally, militarily or culturally. Third
Demography can shape destiny.
World not-populous nations are
In 1991. the olcl Soviet Union had a
never superpowers.
population of 284 million , someor course, it goes much beyo~d
what larger than America's. Last inoculations.
demographics.
Five years ago the
ROBERT
L.
Wf!'iGETT
•
year,
after
the
Soviet
Union
split
PUT
BULLET
HERE
While
life
Soviet
Union
was
a so-ailed SecPubUsber
•
apart, the population of the new ellpectaucy is climbing most every- ond World nation, armed to the
Russia was 149 million.
where, for males in Russia ~ ralc teeth against us, controlling satelPAT WIDTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
And
so,
even
though
Russia
hasfallenfrom6Syearsl062.
, lite states with 100 million people,
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General~a nager
takes up I I times woes worth or
. J&gt;t!f BUll.ET ~ ~ Rus- preaching global domination. They
real eState, it is 1101 a very big coun- SI8R infant mortality ra~ IS about were a fmHlass threat.
. .. .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less .lhan 300
try. Russia is less populous than 30 d.eaths per 1,000 buths. and.
With tlie parJ.ial exception of the
words. All letl&lt;rs are subject to editing and must 1&gt;e signed with name,
China (1.2 billion),~ (883 RJ!l- c~mbing . (In. Amer!ca . i~' s below weaponry, none of that is now b'Ue.
address and i&lt;lepbone nwnber.!&lt;lo unsigned letters will be publ ished. Letters
lion) and the Amenca (2S6 mil- ·· moe.) The chief peduMnc18D of SL
l&gt;e in..;;_
good_
tasl&lt;,_
addressing
issues, not personalities.
" L,_should
__
.....;;....__.:......
_
_ __
---l lion): It is in the second tier, with Petersburg estimates that only 3 The Russian gross national product
has fallen by about 25 percent.
Indonesia (185), Brazil (151) , pereentto4percentofchildrenare Even the old Sovie t arsenal is
Japan (124), Pakistan (122) aild healthy.
somewhat dispersed and deterioratBangladesh (Il l.)
PUT BUll.ET HERE The Rus- ing.
.
Moreover; says demographer sian .deat~ rate now ellceeds the
Accordingly , as. we plan a
Murray Feshbach of Ge&lt;irgetown RusSUIII birth raae, a most unusual course, we have some freedom of
University, in ~ me ways Russia circurnSiallc:e. It is an elduly ooun- action. If what we do doesn't worlc,
•·
has become a Thud World country. try, with poor health care, in eco- it's merely teirii.:e. not a disaster.
.
ByWALJ'ERR. MEARS
Feshbac:h reportS:
nomic and psychological shock,
I believe President Yeltsin' s
AP Spetial Correspondent
PUT BULLET HERE Last year where lwO thirds of pregnancies are declaration of temporary rule by
WASHINGTON - Chronic campaigners make officeholders jittery, in America there were four cases of aborted.
decree is right President Clinton's
which is just the way Ross Perot wants them.
.
diphtheria; in Moscow alone there
Therefore what? Populous early response seems admirable.
And that's between elections. Perot and his organization, said to num.. .ber a million members before his televised recruiting push, are an unpre. ' dictable force that could really put major party politicians on edge in 1994
, , ~r 1996.
- ·• · Perot insists that he is working on issues, not candidacy. He spent
more than $700,000 of, his own fortune on a televised call for people to
• Jilin him and send Washington a message about the kind of government
• they want
·
:·
While the agendas have nothing in cmnmon, the send-them-a-message
; theme is reminiscent of the non-slOp campaigning of George C. Wallace a
• :. ~eneration ago. So is the unease a relentless outsider can stir.
:: · · · There hasn' t been one quite like Perot. He can bankroll his own shows,
: ' he won 19 percent of the presidential vote in 1992. and he's set about
• making his United We Stand America into a pennanent, mass member; •:ship force for change.
•· -: His SWJday night 'fV appearance, b~led as a national referendum on
::', reform, ended with a bid to recruit $15 members in the Perot organization.
;:
That's the kind of political muscle ih8l led the major party organiza" tions iniO an awkward auditions for Perot's endorsement after he'd quit
:· and before he re-entered the 1992 campaign.
·:: · · Now !hey're keeping a wary eye on bim. With an organization and a
., -treasury like the one be's putting 10gether, Perot could be a powerful fac: · ··ror in fielding, promoting or opposing candidates in special elections and
::. ' in 1994.
·
.. ' . He says, again and again, that he's not planning another campaign for
:: · the White House in 1996. "I'd rather have major surgery without anaes:.: rl!etics than be a politician," Perot insists.
•
He also says his effort to force chan~~ will have failed "if we even
;, have 10 have a serious discussion on that. 'because reform can't wait four
... ,··years.
:: ':. · None of that is binding. And next time, there would be an organization
"Now I know why the president's name is Bill."
:: in waiting, ready to mobilize from the start
.. : ·:. In his current speeches, Perot bears down hardest on Congress, but
:&gt;: doesn't spare President Clinton in del1)anding more stringent govcmmenl
: • ·and sharper deficit cuts.
·
He points out, for example, that even if the Clinron economic plan is ·
: · -l'uUy enacled and works as forecast, priming defiCits by $473 biUion over
When J was a hi&amp;h-school fresh- · marea. No' crowds, no popcorn, no with the schoot:s two musical prothe next four years, it still will add $1.1S triUion to the national debt.
man
in 1966, I was on the girls' cheers.
,
.
ductions, which .Nancy always par• ~ - ·. "The average citizen has JIOI figured that out because we just haven' t .
track
team
.
We
practiced
every
Nancy
and
Tanya
coUected
over
'ucipated
in. so th8l the gym could
:: ·ifllbbed him by the shoulders ...," Perot said as he set about trying.
night
for
three
months.
If
there
2,200
names,
some
of
them
adults,
be
used
for
girls' sports.
:· ;. He said "we the people" aren't interested in big spending increases
were
Florence
Griffith-Joyners
. A couple days after the school
·: ;now with vague promises of savings later, matching a Republican line in
back
then,
we
didn't
know
about
board
meeting, a group of eight
':; .die deblle on the Clinton plan. He also is critical of the Clinton economic
them.
You
didn't
see
young
women
one or the high schools
girls
at
: :stimulus plan.
.
athletes
in
Teen
or
Seventeen
magtried
to
go out for the school's
• , But there are no complaints from the White House.
azine.
If
there
Wllre
any,
they
were
arid
wentiO.
a
school
board
meeting
track
team.
The track coach met
: : •: "Anything in support or real political refonn and real change in Washthe
best-kept
secret
since
reliable
with
their
petitions.
·
this
chaUenll:e
by refusing to come
: · :irtgton is something we welcome," President Clinton's spokesman. sex education.
Nancy
will
be
the
fiJ'SI
10
admit
the
locker
room. I'm not
out
of
·: "(leorge Stephanopoulos, said of the Perot's Sunday TV message. "But
The
overwhelming
feeling
I
had
th8l
the
only
way
she
could
make
it
maldng
this
up.
I
couldn't
make up
:: '~t~e American people want action, and that's what we're working on."
when
one
sojourn
into
the
·
onto
a
basketball
team
is
by
offerstuff
this
good.
: • . Disputing Perot now would be pointless at best. At worst, a challenge
world o sports ended was that ing 10 stand on a ladder and hold
Ironically, Title IX, the law
-: , from the While House can give a critic: a platform.
nothing
1
had
been
through
for
the
the
net.
But
she
was
asiOnished
·
mandating
equality in women's and
: · · · That happened when President Lyndon B. Johnson coined the phrase last three months was very impor- when one or the board members,
men's
athletics
in any institution
: : :"chronic campaigner" for Richard M. Nixon in 1966. intending an insult tant. We went to one llliCk mllCt. it knowing she wasn't an athlete herthat receives federal funds, had just
~; · but providing a boost
'
was rained out; we rode the bus self and was always in school the- been enacted. Few in Springfield
:'· : The label helped to identify Nixon with sweeping Republican victories
home, and the meet was never atrical productions, needled her: noticed, except the children.
:: :ih8l year, an important step on his path 10 the 1968 nomination.
rescheduled.
"And just what ~rt will you be
The school board did vote for a
.; · Nixon then had his own problems with Wallace, who seldom interrupt- track again. I didn't go out for participating
in, Miss Appelquist?" girls' "athletic program and it began
: · :ed the campaign he really began in 1964 until he was shot and partially
Seven years later, in 1973, my
A local newspaper SIOry about in the fall of 1974. This year, a
:: ' paralyzed as he hunted votes in Maryland'in 1972.
friend
Nancy
Appelquist
Allen
was
th8l school board meeting is a Cas- young S~ringfield woman, Rhonda
~:
As a third-party candidate in 1968, he got 13.5 percent of the vote,
out the same thing in near- cinaling piece 11f history. The coor- Blades, 1s a staner for one or the
· : &lt; holding Nixon to 43 percent and a narrow vjctory, then worrying the fibynding
Springfield, Mo., a town of dinator of secondary athletics best women's basketball team in
·~ White House with the prospect that he'd do it again in the next campaign.
100.000 then. She and and argued that the school system the nation, Vanderbilt. If you like
:;
Now Perot is the outsider with staying power that could complicate the about
her
friend
Tanya Carson, a good didn't have the facilities 10 accom- sports and haven ' t watched any
: - next campaign. Neither party wants to offend his supporters. Besides.
swimmer,
circulated
petitions ask- modale girls' sports- and besides, ' women's coUe¥iate basketball late·: when Perot gets mad, he tends to get even.
ing
for
a
program
or
inter-scholas- girls would abandon a Saturday iy, try it. Some of the NCAA rourAfter a Democratic senator criticized him to his face at a congressional
tic
sports
for
girls.
The only sports sports event to get ready for a nament games will be televised and
; • .hearing, Perot told another audience the same man had begged endorseavailable to Springfield girls 81 that dance, if given the opportunity. you'll find them surprisingly fast-: ment for re-election in 1992.
lime were intramural games. They The school superinlendent suggest- paced, physical and thrilling.
•• •
played
agai nst their own School- ed that they might just do away
Not long ago, I was doing some
:
EDITOR'S NOTE·- Waller R. Mears, vice president and colum. ; nist f11r Tbe Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
:· national politics for more than 30 years.
1

Ben Wattenberg

..
...

~·· ~ ~oliticians get jitters from

·:··Perot's
perpetual campaign
.
-~

rNEA

Women earn their sporting
Sarah Overstreet

ml

&lt;

,.. I •

•

-~.Letters to the editor
•

Paper carrier receives praise

'

• Dear Editor:

••

•
•
·:

I am writing to let people know
of a very dedicated Daily Sentinel
paper carrier here in Middleport.
His name is Jeremy GatriU.
· With the recent blizzard with all

••
:
:
•
:
:.
•

really looking to get a Sunday
paper Sunday morning. At least not
' till later in the day . But sure
enou~h we opened the door SIUiday
mommg belween 12:30 am. and I
a.m. and there was our paper all
rolled up inside our sronn door.

!

..; ~at snow and wind, We weren' t

•

~ Today

•
•

If that isn' t dedicated to your
customers, what is. I guess not rain;
snow, sleet, or hail, or blizzards
will keep our paper carried away.
Not only through blizzards ~e
always makes sure our paper IS
always out of the weather. His tips
every week are well earn ed,
wouldn' t you say?
Keep up the good work Jeremy.
Thank you.
·Mrs. Cindy Smith
Middleport

in history

:
By The Associated Press
:
Today is Thursday, March 25. the 84th day of 1993: There are 28 1
• days left in the year.
:
Today's Highlight in History:
:
On March 25, 1911 , 146 immigrant wo.rk.ers were killed when fire
- broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. in New York; the disaster stirred
: public outrage and spurred workplace safety rcfonns.
~
On this date:
•
In 1634, Maryland .was founded by English colonists sent by the sec: ond Lord Baltimore.
.
:· In 1865, during the Civil War, Confederate forces captured Fort Sted·: man in Virginia.
·
:· In 1913, the home of vaudeviUe, the Palace TheaD'c, opened in New
: YorkCity.
•
In 1918, 75 years ago, French composer Claude Debussy died in Paris.
;... . in 1947, a coal mine e~pios ion in Centralia,
claimed Ill Jives.
. Ill.,
......

••

ch~nce

members work 12-hour days, although the day is broken up in10
six-hour sbil'ls known as watches.
The forward wuch, which works
from 6 a.m. until noon IIIII hom 6
p.m. until' mlilnlght, iilcludcs: lhe

watchman, Olen Whia; and a deck- bridge it is. it's tou&amp;h ir ~ don't
. band, Ed Rickard. The aftu watch ~ how 10 IPIJI'C*b It, he says.
begins its work 81 midnight and ~~W:: ~:~~

OO:~er

a four-and-a-ball' hour ~~· one riaht after MOther, and
wait, the Wmlield Iockmasrer gives they re no piece of cake."
Boggs the go-ahead · 10 proceed
High wind.combined with empty
through the riverward chamber. balses can make another dirficult
And just as the Uwis begins 10 situalions, he stys. ''The barges ride
slowly ahead, the fog begins ~S:.t:C::d:~~ like a

:Otift.

Much of the reason for the
Small towns on the banks or the
delays 81 Wmfield Siems rrom ·the Kaliawha pass br - Eleanor and
·
f ·•- 1 k cham'-- hich BUffalo, FJUier s · 80110111 and
' SIZe 0 UIO 0C
""""• W
. Pliny, Arbuckle and Leon. As they
can only accomlllOdale four Slalldantbwges (or one jumbo barge) 81 do, chief engineer Bob Carter is
a time. The I.,ewis' !().barge 19w busy in the engine room of the
must be split iniO three segmeniS in ~. malting his rouli!le inspecorder 10 lock through.
· . bllns"U.suall • I
The lock chamber measures 56 '
y,
make the rounds
feet in width, and lhe width oftwil b;:l.hour. checking for any lealcs,
· Slalldard blqes is S2 feeL That
• and
making
sure
doesn't give a pilot a great deal' cif everything's the way it's .supposed
latilude as he makes flis approach 10 be. I keep a c.lose check 911 .oil,
_ ,_,_
waler, fuel filters, and
10·...
UIO WW.o
,
,,__,
the mate sure
With his 26 years of experience ;;'~ .waler m
ianks or in
in Jijlothouaes, however, ~
A 20-year veteran 8l the River
knoWs vinually every bend m
every river and j~t . how 10 ap- · Division, Carter says he can "teU
proach each and every lock. '.'When when sOnlelhinll's out or place just
you're headed upbound here at by walking dirough the engine
Winfield;" he says, "you have 10 J'll9lll - )'llllr first indication is
figure that the waaer from the dam usually a sound that you have heard
·
·
push
ard before. The display board will
· IS gomg IO
your lOW lOW
usually leU you Wha.t the .ttoubie is
the land." Headed downbound, the ..
challenge is to keep the~ lied .· -you don't have 10 go searching for
securely along the loc . I l!lltil iL "But we've
alarms for
the vessel can. ·lock through and
rejoin them.
·
everyihi~. and i the problem is
· WJtiu, the watchman, is at the really miiJC)r, it'U shut the engine
bow of the lOW, commwtic:ating down," lie explains.
widi Boggs over a speaker. "Eight
On a hot summer dly, the engine
hundred feet to the lock wall, room lelllperiiQI'C can reach a sizJerry,~ he calls ouL "Six bundled ding 130 degrees, Carter says, but
feeL~ FinaUy comes the report that. in die winter, "when it's zero out"You're coming up 10 the end of side: it~ great~ here.~
the wall now, abOut six or seven • Its preay warm. m the .Jiitche~,
feeL Looking good, Jerry. ·
100, ~here Mirilyn Reapp 1s
"If you can be a deckhand on the ~g !unc:h for the crew.•Reapp
Kanawha River,.rou can be a deck- 1s. a re~~~ ne~C! .w!th the
hand anywhere says Whitt, · after R1ver DiVISIOn, ·havmg JOined AEP
the lOW has pissed through Win- ~ year.and.a halfago,after 10 yearS
. fielcl and been put back ~ther IR the mtenor~g OOS11JesS.
..... in "It's ..... likethe OhiO' ·ver
Her day begins around 3 a.m .
_..
'"" have long stretches' when she -'"~ ,._ HJJ&lt;l '
where you can
'"""' 10 u."'cab·-- oor
without having 10 break and make' the c:rew. ~ ~ast. she SU!N
lOw. On the Kanawha, there's mall:in~ for lunch. Like
~ 10 do on almost every most
-~· Reapp manages a
watch - euher a lock or a landing.~ shor\ "!" m the af!enioon before
How long does it take before a ~.begins supper. ,
deckhand gets comforlllble Walking
I ~ve ~=~: ~ . dra~ 10
the &amp;wo-root.widj: gunwale along Vfaler, . she
. 'WhCII I ~as a
the length of the barxe. when he !il,de g~r!. I used 10 leU my f~nds.
knows ihat there's c:oaf on one side I m going to
911 one of tho~
and the river on the other? .
bolls someday. I never dreamed 11 '
1 "I don't think yoli eve~ get com· would ~tually come true~"
. .
rlirtable with that,~ he laughs. ..A
A !YJiic:allunc:h .or supper willmpersori would be crazy ir he did, It's elude meat a:nd potaiOes, four
worse when you're working with vege!Bbles, ~. and IWO desse~.
empty baJies, because they rise so Reapp's spc:cialues, she says, mmuch higher out of the warer than elude piJ~e~Wie upside-down c:a11:e
loadedbaQies.
.
and a chili she ~n'bes as "spicy
..These 1Mqes can be like a skat- butnotfiVb-alarm.
ing rink in the winler and a sltiUet
"1. usually liD out a large grocery
in the summer, but personally I'U order when I first get on the boat,
lake the winter.~ Whitt reBeccs; · and then a c:ouple more small or"You can always put on more ders bef~ the 21 .days are up, she
cloches ~
says. Traditional nver rare calls for
Bo.P, who calls
Putnam-to- fish Of! Friday, S1caks on Saturday
Mountaineer run "the Wmfielcl and chiCken on Sunday.
shuffle.~ joined O.F. Shearer and
"If there's ~cone on board
Sons, the forerunner of the AEP who, has .a ~ial need,, someone
River Division, in 1970. He admits who s dJabeiiC or who s got a
that he "never dreamed back in the choleswol JXObll:m, I try 10 ac1960s that one day we'd have bolls corn~ that." she~
like this ~
·
"Working on a boat 1s like drop''Thc 'first boll I ever worked on ping off~ .r~ of the ~ ror 21
was a stemwl!eeler with a 350- ~~s. and 11 s kind of mc:e, Reapp
l!orsepower engine," he remem- 1ns1Sts. "The boats do have phon~s
bers. "I ihougl!t it was a big boat at and fax mach~ ~ow! ~~ basithe time. 'These new. bolls are so caliy the Dhone 1sn.t flllgmg an4
much bigger, they've taken a lot or there's no 'rV reception ~~ much or
the work out or being a pilot.
the area ~e pass lhrou~. . .
"My people have all worked on
~eal wnes ~ social h1ghhghts
the river," he adds. "My dad was an of.~ day, ~1th crew mem!Jers
old steamboll captain, and my SV!'PPIDg ~ about prev1ous
grandpa was a fireman on the old tnps on the nver. B.oggs teU~ of the
steamboats. Even my two brothers c!ose. call when ~ waler skiel fell
are pilots." _ ·
, .
· nghtm ~~of hiS lOW some y~
lee and hi$fi waaer conditions are ago, w~ile Shaw recalls the mght
&amp;wo or the biggest challenges for a w~ his 10~ struCk a bear that was
pilOt.. Boggs says. . ''To me, it SWimming m the Kanawha near
doesn't matter if the water's break- Mon11omery.
ing over the treetopS or if it's juSt a
By mid-afternoon, the Lewis is
tlnwnd-8-half miles fnJm Point
Pleasant, where thl\ Kanawha Hows
Tbe Daily Sentinel
iliO the Ohio, and Shaw points out
(USPS 21~.JIIIO)
that this 1*1 or the river can he
llrubliRht.d r.very af't.t.rnoon. MondAy
notoriously shallow in late summer

.Fj

me

up.

Sarah Overstreet Is a syndi·
cated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

JOSeph Spear

I

'

B7 Tile Asllociated Presa
Rain that ck'cnched the East and
West, forcing power outages and
flooding, was still around IOday,
while another day or unusually
warm weather was shaping up for
the nation's midsection.
Moderale 10 heavy rains, possi·
bly thundersronns, were forecast
fiX: central and southern California.
and heavy snow was predicled for
the southern Sierra, the San .
Bernadino and the San Gabriel
Mountains.
A snow advisory was posted for .
this afternoon tbrou~h Friday
morning Jor the mountam areas or
southern California above 5000
feeL
On Wednesday, heavy tain
caused mudslides and flooding in
Oregon and Northern California.
The storm dumped 10 inches of

;~::~chi: :vi~!I~c!engwJ!

throuRh fo'tidAy, Ill Court St., l'omoroy,
Ohio by 'he Ohio V111lley Publitlhing
Comp.q.nyiMulUmndia Inc., Pomeroy.

Olllo 457Hg, Ph. 99Hiti6, Scci&gt;nd elBA
p:M~lagr.

pAid 1ft Po~roy. Ohio.

• Mcmbt.r: Tha AllsociALNI Prcaa. and tha

Ohio• NcwMpllp&lt;lt' AaMJdat.ion, National
AdvcrtiHinR KcprcecnLit.ive, Dnnham
Ncw,l)mptlT SliCK, 733 Third Avenue,

and

ran.

''You have to go slow because, in
low waaer, your baJies want 10
suck down undl!r the waaer. You run
the risk of sinkina a barge if )'!IU

POSTMA..'ITER: Sond addrcu chana;e• t.o
Tho Daily Sentinel, Ill Couri Sl ..
Pomc.roy. OHio 45769.

SUJIICRimON RATII

By Qarrtar or Motor Rinlta

SINGLE COPY

. PKICE
l&gt;aily............................................... 25 CenW
fklbterilJM"H noc. dNirina Lo JlftY ,..., c..rrl·
"' m~~~y mmil in adva~ dirod. to Tha
O.tly Sr.nl.inr.l on • t.hroo . ldx or 12
mmlh lN~MIM. Cmdit will bn ~~'ivan CM'ricr

MChwl\Ok.
No ••llllmpliGnll by moll ' ponnllkld in
•ro~~• whelm homo C.ntcr .orvioe ts
•vllf1Ab1r..

~~~M~~~~~~~

WORKJNG OUT ON THE TOW· A 31·year river veteran, mate
John Coleman works out on the low durlua a winter afternoon
·
aboard the Edwin A. Lewis.

SLBE discusses
maintenance,
sports policies

Three teachers were added to
the substitute list at this week's
meeting of the Southern Local
Board or ~UCalion.
Added 10 the list were Cynthia
Pacemyer, E. Jean Smithem, and
Jody Taylor. Wallace Morris was
hired as a substitute custodian. ·
Sports policies were discussed
and on recommendation of the
• _coaches some changes were
approved by the board. ·
The need 10 repair the Racine
Elementary School roof was .discussed and arrangements made 10
purchase the materials and use
available labor. .
Attending were Sue Grueser,
Joe Thoren, Scott Wolfe. Tom
ltoseberry and Denny Evans, bolld
members, Treasurer Dennie Hill,
aild Supt. Bob Ord.

Hard-line ...

Stocks
Am Ele Power....................36 318

Ashland Oil. .......................28 1/4
AT&amp;:T...............................~7 3/8
Bank. &lt;&gt;ne........................... S7
Bob Evans .........................18118
Charming Shbp.................. l3 314
Ounp lndustries................. l3 718
~ Hoiding......................22
ral Mottul................... .l8 Goodyear 'J'a:R ..................76
Key Centurion ...................24 1(1.
1..aJids End..........................28 114
Limiled Inc:....................... 22 314
Multimedia Inc: ..................34 1(1.
Point Bancorp.................... l3 1(2
Rax R~tauranL ..................SIS •
Reliance Electric................22 l/4

Robbii\S&amp;Myers ..............••20

Shoney's Inc: ......................24
Star Bank ........................... 37114
Wendy lnt'l........................ l3 1(1.
WorthingtOn Ind.... :...........26
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes •provided by
Kemper Securltln, lnc., ·o
GaWpolla.

.

to three calls
Three calls for assisi8Rce were
answered by units or the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service on Wednesday a~d early
Thursday morning .
On Wednesday at 7:48 p.m. the
- Phaco court..y at AEP 11.-n 1 1ie'1 CMI C~'
Olive Township Fire Department .
VESSEL EMERGES • The AEP motor vessel Edwin A. Uw1s was called 10 No. 9 Road 10 assist
emerges trom the fOR as It prepares to enter the Wlnlleld Locks and in a search and rescue. The subjects
were found: No names were availDam on the Kanawha River.
able.
On Thursday at 2:25 a.m. the
too fast 'in low water conditions there with 'check' ~nes because the Rutland unit went 10 Meigs Mine
- next thing you know, you' D see bolls didn't ' have enough horse- No. 31 for William J8RICI. He was
water starting 10 go over the rop of power 10 slOp the rows by themsel- taken 10 Holzer Medical Center.
-ves..
. At 4:39 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
the lead barge."
Today, however, the Kanawha
Dartcness
fallen theandLewis
it's. R1chard Stewart
to Laurel
Street
for ·
by has
the time
who was
treated
River is five feet higher than its evening
normal pool and Shaw senses the reaches Mountaineer Plant. The but not transpo~.
need to change the configuration of deck crew begins the task or
COLONY THEATRE
theiOW.
.
separating the six barges ih8l go 10
TONIGHT
"There's a pretty good current Mountaineer from the four that will
MELIJIBSON II
out in ~ Ohio today," he says, go on 10 Sporn. Boggs has instrucFOREVER YOUNG R
refening 10 reports he's heard from tions that the boat is supposed 10
STARTING FMIAY
the
Army Corps or Engineers pick_up c:fty ~ 10 return 10
Bl:ST OF TltE BEST II R
Tennmal, ·
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
via radio. "I don't thinlc I want to Putnam
AOIIISSION SUO
"I've done this type of worlc for
shove out. there with a tow that's
ALSO SHOWING AT 0:30
live lengths long and have ali that so long, I wouldn't know any other
FRI., SAT., SUN,
currem hitting agaii!SI those barges way," Boggs concludes as he
LEPRECHAUN R
like thaL~
watches Hays maneuver around the
ONE EVENING SHOW 0:30
Mountaineer
Plant's harbor.
AOIItSSION $1.50
• Almost
instantaneously,
"It
hasn't
been
an
8-to-S
job.
Coleman, the mate, Little, the
Slriker, and Rickard, a deckhand, But, on the other hand, I tried B' jOb
are reshaping the tilw into one th81 like th8l once, .and I knew then and
is four barges wide lind only two or there that it wasn't for me."
•
three in length.
Coleman, an AEP employee
COIOII'OITIAir?
since 197-7, has worked on the river HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
since 1961 and is sometimes called
Dlscbraes Marcil 24 "Papaw" by his co-workers.
1
Emma Spillman, Ethel Thompson,
"becking has changed a lot since William Russell, James Scharthen," he agrees. "We stiU had the tieger, Mildred Williams, Paula
small loCks on the Ohio River when Bonecutter, Charles Woodi'urr,
1 started in the 1960s and ~y've EtMIB Lewis, Janet Patus. Beverly
almost ali been replaced. Back in Bowman, Sue Yates, Andrew
lhose days, we· needed men out Calven.
Children, Adults,
2-8x10's

run

r~sponded

~~~~~~~~~~~

u.s.

-

Hospital news

,AVIIIG D"IICULrr IIIIDIIIG Till liST
OUALIFr Ill A

THERE IS A DIIFEIIIICEI

Color Portraits

ENROLL NOW!
Classes begin April 5th
'

Mall hboariplloM
IMido Melp Oo•at;r ~
13 - . ................... .......................121 .114
:Ill - k. .......................................... S43.18
liJ Wooko..................... ,................ .... $84 .78
O.lolde Molp Co••'¥
1 3 -..... ......................................123.40
:Ill - .........................................141.10
u-..............................................«1
•

6-5x7's
24-Wallets
(2 Poses)

Families, Groups
$3.00 Setting Fee
$1 .00 Each Additional Subject

Balance $14.95 Plus Tax At Delflfflry
Addnional Portrans Available
No Spl~ Orders - limit One Package Per Subject

You've tried others, now com~re.
We use the best (American Made} paper,
film, and lab processing.
Our Personalized service IS Unequaled.

~~~
um •

Bls&amp;enct~
Tri-C-r

V.C.-

!ldlool

. ti6761Utl

Ntl-illt, Ot&gt;lo OI'M

•

'

.

·E MS responds

1

•'

Unusually warm temperatures
and sunny skies were expected ·
IOday from border 10 border over
most of the nation's midsection.
The · highs were expected to
again be in the 60sl8nd 70s &amp;c:nlss"
the Great Plains to the Rock!es.

Hospital news

Call the Adult Education Center.
Tri-County
Vocational. Schooll-B&lt;XM37-650B ·
.
• Computer Technician
• Data Processing •
• Food Management
&amp;Catering
•• Secretarial

fJn&lt;e Ytl ftr,.,.,,.,,,,.,,,,,,,,,.,,.,.,,,,..,,w,_',.,,$83 .2()

.

A~rua.

Weather

TRAIN.FOR
EMPLOYMENT

One Wcck.,..................................... ....$1 .60
On• Monlh .........................................M.96

wet snow in Bend, ~.
More rain was forecast for the
East today, though less than on
Wednesday when flooding c:auled,
by rain and melting snow cl~·
roads and schools in parts ·of

(Continued from PaRel) •
Yeltsin and the Communist-dominated Congress had been brewjng
for months. It erupted iniO all-out
war after the president det:wed
emergency rule on Saturday and
called an April 2S referendum 10
ask Russians who they truSt 10 govern, him or the parliamcnL
The next day, the standing
.
Eldencled rorec:asl
Supreme Sovtet legislature
Saturday (!~roup Monday:
Pair and warm Saturday and launched the process of trying to .
. Sunday. A chance of rain east Sat- remove Yeltsin by aslcing the Conurdly . .tows in the 40s. Highs m . stiwtional Coun 10 rule whether he
the 60s. Monday, a chance of acted legally.
showers north, fair south. Lows in
the 40s. Highs in the 60s south and
upper40s 10 upper S&lt;M north.
VeteraDII Memorial
Soutla C~tral .
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Tonight, v~riable cloudiness . - None.
.
LocaUy dense fog possible. Low
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES ·
40-45. Friday, becoming partly - Sarah Smith, John Brogan.
, sunny. High in the mid-60s.

New York. Now York10017.

.I

•

Rain continues

few feet high, yoU've got 10 lake
lhe same precautions,~ he insists.
''The bllnepower in these new
bolls . is nice, but it won't always
Bet the job done.•
•
Boas knows all the bric!Jes that

!Je

research on the status of women's
basketbaU and thinking how much
things had changed for women aihletes since Nancy and I were in
school Well, as they say, the more
things change, the more 'they stay
the same. As the first-roWJd NCAA
pairings were being announced, I
. heard a s10ry on National Public
Radio on the deblle in Iowa about
whether to abolish women's halfcourt, six-player basketball in favor
or the fuU-c:owt, five-player brand
played in college and most high
schools. Some coaches say that the
half-court game doesn't prepare
their young women for college
sports.
"I don't care who you are, girls
just don't have the stamina 10 run
up and down a run court," an Iowa
school official claimed. "And
women can't jump as high as
men."
Didn't they make a movie with
that title: "White Women Can't
Jump"?
As I said, I'm not making 'this

you lrnow? Like what's the answer
PC Person: Ooops. We gol cut have been trying to eschew the
10 that freshman thin~?
off, Jim. Sorry about thal
word "pig." The connotations or
PC Person: Poliuc:ally correct
Curly: So, like what's the scoop filth demean the animhl·and conatipeople are unrelentingly opposed 10 on the Mexican smog thing? How tute. spc:ciesism. How·about male
do I respond when somebody com- chauvmist animal of girth?
plains about it?
Moe: Like, OK, PC dudes, so
.
PC Person : You inform them · like elucidate the brisket-tomato
that smog in poor developing sauce thing for me, please?
the oppressive patriarchal system nations is not the same as smog in
PC Person: Listing the meat
that has dominated herstory and the wealthy industrialized world. entree before the vegC18ble entree
continues 10 enslave contemporary Complaining about Mexican poUu- is a clear case of anti-vegetariansociety. We therefore avoid sexist lion is tantamount to environmental ism, bias ~nst those who do not
words, which are·mainly words that imperialism.
eaa flesh. Like Marxists and homocontain male pronouns. ''FreshDoreen: My male chauvinist pig sexuals, vegelarians are a threat 10
man" is one Cl181Dflle. At Nebraska boyfriend insiSts on caUing people the dominant carnivorous social
Wesleyan Uni~1ty, for in~. or my gender "women," and 1 structure-thatisiCisay,meaa-eatthe word ~!tis not used, and a keep telling him he has to talce the ing males - and must be supfmt-yesr
is referred 10 as a " men" out or the word. He can pressed. So the politically correct
"first-year student:" So what call us " wimmin" or "wimmyn" thing 10 do is stand up and explain
shoulcl you say when you hear the or "wr,myn" or even "phe- to everyone that the bourgeois
word used? How about: "I prefer mayles. • But he better quit calling establishment.they are patronizing
'f:reshperson,' tllilnk you."
us "women '' or he:s going to be encourages the consumption of
Jim: I think this PC thing is deprived or some vital parts. How beef and is therefore guilty of gengoing too far. Have you beard can I get through 10 this dolt?
der discrimination and they should
about the governor of Washington
PC Person: Perhaps the better all ieavjl.
who banned the u~ of the word Q,uestillll is whether he is worth getMoe: Oh.
. "chief" becau1e be think• it tmg through to. Incidentally,
Josepll Spear li a syndleated.
offendllndiana'l He doean't have a Doreen, we in the PC Movement writer ror NtMpaJier Enterprl8e
"chief of lllaff,'' fa example, jll.lt
AIIIOdalioa.
, ·
a "Iliff dlreciOr."
PC Penon: Not lndlan1, Jim.
!Utlve Amerlclnl. It is 1 gratuirous
Today's Birthdays: Sportscaster Howard Cosell is 73. Modelin' agen·
racial reference th8l olfeads Native. cy head Eileen Ford is 71. Former astronaut Jim Lovell is 65. 'Ms."
Americana.
magazine founding editor Gloria Steinem is 59. Singer-acror Hoyt Axton
Jim: But it's not /even an Indian is 55. Singer Anita Bryant is 53. Singer Aretha Franklin is 51. Acror Paul
word.' It comes from Middle Michael Glaser is 51. Actress Bonnie Bedelia is 47. Singer Elron Jqhn is
Englilh, 1 think. The governor's a 46. Actor Haywood Nelson is 33. Actress Sarah Jessica Parker is 28. Fignincompoop.
ure sk:ater Debi Thol)las is 26.

j

j

The now-evolving Climon plan can
and should be bold. We no lonser
need wnlk on eggshells in dealmg
with Russia, worrying about threecarom Cold War stratagems.
We have some ke y interests:
Military, h·umanitarian and political.
,
We should bolster efforts· to
kee p the nuclear arsenal unde r
responsible control and di~inish­
ing. Those·weapons are unlikely 10
l)e turned against us, but if lllllllthy
cbmes to Russia, the weapons and
the weapons-makers may migrate
10 unfriendly. volatile suues. Working with our allies, we should help
the Soviet military adjust to their
new sitpation. One thing needed is
military housing.
We should boost our humanitarian aid. Children are dying. We
mi~ht start With' vacc ines and
synnges.
We should .help develop democracy .and markets. A free Russia is
the best guaran10r of regional stability . The already authorized,
already appropriated, but not yet
implemented DemOCI1!CY Corps is ·
our best bet. It can encourage the
growth or a civil society, and
encourage privatization. We might,
with other nations. temporarily bolster the social safety net, helping
with pensions and unemployment
insurance.
Yeltsin's challengers threaten 10
crush the still-infant free media.
Clinton oughliO reverse his foolish
decision to phase out Americansponsored Radio Liberty, which
has been the major agent or free
journalism in Russia. (What has
poisoned his mind? He even
refused to seRd a congratulatory
message for RL' s 40th anniver'
sary.)
We can deal boldly because we·.
are not dealing with a superpower,
and, less understood, we are not
even dealing with a potential superpower.
·
·
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel- ·
low at tbe American Enterprise
Institute, Is author ol "Tbe First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press and a SJIIdlcated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

The PC hotline is open for business

Your daughter's escort teUs you
he is a freshman 81 the stale university. What should you say?
You hear an American complain
about smog in Mexico City. How
should you respond?
You are having dinner in an
expensive restaurant, and the menu
lists Brisket Carbonnade in a hier·
archical position over Rigatoni
with Roasted TomaiO Sauce. What
should you do?
.
You can get the answers 10 these
and related questions with a simple
call to the National Clearinlhoute
for Politically Correct Stulf. We
have a list of two dozen "isms" 10
be avoided. We have a computer
bank or a half-million words irt500
different languages and 3,000
dialects that could hurt somebody's
feelings.
We can also tell you whether
rou are eating correct food, wearmg correct clothes, reading comet
· books, attending correct 11e111inars,
supporting correct c:auaes.
This lllessa'e is sponsored by
the people 81 NJCkpicb. Have 1 PC
day.
. Larry: Like, uh, is this the
whaddayacallit, the National Clearinghouse for Defective Stuffl
PC Person: The National Clearinghouse for Politically Correct.
Stuff. Nickpicks for short. How can
we help?
Larry: Well, uh, like in your ad..

The Dally Sentlnel- PaQe---3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A journey.. ..___coo_tin_·_ued_ rro_m.;_paa.;;..e_l _ _ __

Lesser threat, greater boldness

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

• ••

Thursday, March 25, 1993

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 25, 1993

•

700 w. tMin, Pornlloy, Ohio
March 28. 12-7

•

�•

..

~Sports

•

Thursday, March 25, 1993
p e-4

By JOE KAY
-. WINTER HAVEN, Fla'. (AP) The laughs are forced, the tears
free-flowing and the explanations
sliD foggy as the Cleveland Indians
,B.et ready to play ball again after
. the &lt;!ealhs of two pitclicn:
Players and families wept
;wednesday night at a memorial f&lt;X"
•Sieve Olin and Tim Crews, who
were killed in a boating accidCnt
'.Monday. More than 400 people
packed a small auditorium next to.
;the team's spring trainio$ fteld to
'embrace and share memones.
• " We'll m;lke you both proud,"
manager MiiCe Hargrove promised

·~ Providence, Minnesota record
~:victories in quarterfinal games
.· .
By HOWARD ULMAN
: BOSTQN (AP) - PiiiSburgh is
: long gone from the N~AA touma· ment. So are Seton Hall and St.
· John's. Providence, left out of the
: big postseason event, is two wins
: away from the_cORS?iation prize :. an NIT championship.
·: In an off-year in the Bis East,
· the Friars and Georgetowo, the
' only conference le8IIIS still playing,
.:. are stiU alive in the NIT.
: . Providence stayed that way by
• outrebounding and outshooting
: 1loston Colleae. Wednesday
: )li~t's 73-58 win proved !hal three
· .j lrikes and you're out, even in bas·
•ketball.
·: Boston College was 0-3 this
·:season ag~nst the Friars (20-11)
:·and ended its season at18-13 .
; :3'rovidence is 3-0 in the NIT and
• faces MiooCSOI4 in the semifinals
: Monday night iD New Y ext.
· : The Oopbers beat Soothem Cal
.76-58 Wedneday night. Also, it
:was ,Alabama-Birmingham 61 , '
· 'Southwest Missouri State 52.
: 'Tonight, Miami, Ohio is at Georse: town.
•
"The feeling is to 'o there and
• to fmish up the jQb w~ ve started," .
said Dickey Sll!lpkins, who led
Providence with 23 poiniS, nlateh.• ing his can:er high.
They wcxted han!~~ boards
:
• and capitalized on their SIZe adYIJI· .
: tage f&lt;X" a 45-23 rebounding advan: tage. Their 21 offensive rebounds

were Just two more th an the
Eagles total.
That' s to be expected if you
have four startm 6-foot-7 or taller,
like Providence does, and your
opponent has three swters 6-4 or
shorter, like Boston CoDe$e.
"Their strength, combmed with
our weakness, makes for a lopsided
game," Eagles coach Jim O'Brien
said.
Michael Smith's 18 rebounds
led Providence, and the 6-8 Simp!tins added nine. Bill Curley ,
Boston College's 6-9 center, had
just five rebounds and 12 points,
four below his twn leading aver-

after hining 15 of 27 against Rice .
Abram and Huckaby led Boston
College with 14 points each. Tony
Turner added 14 for Providence,
which had ·nve scorers in double
figures.

Middleport man is 1111*'enily a big
JUt with many professional baseball
'players.
·
, Roger Stewart said he iovented
the Power Swing Trainer 10 help
obis soo become a beuer hiuer.
It is an idea Stewan said (le has
'been fooling IJ'OUII!i with f&lt;X" about
10 years. ul figured if the Lord
gavt me an idea and I did somcthiog wilh it, He'd give me another
idea," he said.
.
' Stewan said he finished the fii'Sl
Power Swing Trainer about two
·years aao and eventually gave it to
•the Meigs High School baseball
team.

--

EASTERN CONRRENCE

r-

WL

....

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- - . ..... - ..40 rl

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-'97

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C.lnllllic:qo................47 20 .701
CUM!I.AND .......42 :M .636
~ .............. ..3.'1 32 .522
AoJ.a ..............34 32 .SI!
lodl.oo ................31 33 .-492
l&gt;lrail. ...............29 36 .446
M l l -............25 41 .:119

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x-V -..... 3!1 26 9 87 303 239
x-Calpq .......... 36 TIIO 12 218 7A9
Loo Aaploo..... 34 32 7 75 296:103

ploroll' belli

REVERSE LAYUP - Minn.esota's Jayson
Wallon (32) goes up for .the reverse layup
against Southern Cal'il Lorenzo Orr (21) 10d an
ear thboulld Mark Boyd (33) durin!! the first ball.

-

.
N1Uonal League
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
Placed Ken Howell, piLchcr; on wai'Ven
for the pwpo10 of aiving him hU uncondi·
timal rdcale.

:1, llulr.lo 6

MaolnOII6.Honr...tS(OT)

s.. Laoii •• CaJauy 2

--

v~ 6. La. A~tpe~~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
•

TWL
................43 23

....
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S.n AtdaDD ...........41 :M
lltoh .......................31 19
o..-.....- ........26 40

.SGI
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Minneoda .-... - .. 15 50 .231
O.Uu ......... _...._ ____ ,'7 $9 . 106

Tonlgbt'saames

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17

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J.-S..U.._...:. ___ ,A6 21 .61'7
.... _ ........ 31 25 .603
I...A. t.t-.......... 33 32 .501
I...A. CipPia ......... 33 34 .493
Golda! s.......... ..27 31 .415
SacawiiWA0 .-....-..21 ""' .323
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11
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19

aa.a.lt5,MiM11109

· ~~ow-.m.a..~oaen•
Oolcap 113, PIUio1phLo I00
Do11M 101, w......, 91
S..-105.-92
LA.~ 116. Milwa-105
- ·flO, LA. LM&lt;n 105

Tmnoat~,l: lOp.m..
a.JralD at CJUcaao,I :40 p.m.

OaWcm StM. .. Den¥., 9 p.m.
Now y . . "'lllah. 9 p.m.
WW.1t SeiUk. tO p.m.

Frlda}''l 1ames

of Wednesday nlgbt's NIT quarteirmal game io
Bloomloatou, Mlun., where the host Goldeo
Gopbers WilD 76-511. (AP)

Sports ~eadlines posted
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The l)aily Sentinel, the !'oint
::PteiJSIJIII Register and the Sllllday: Times.Selllinel value the conlribu"· tions their readers make to the
.. sports sections of these papers, and
:.. these ·contributions will- coniinue to
~ be published. · ,
,
However, certain deadlines for
~ submissions , will be observed. The
- deadline for phoiOS and related arti;::'cles for basketball and other winter
::. sports is the last day ·of the NBA
~ · Finals.
.
•
Likewise, the deacninc for sub•"missions of loca\ baseball- and ·
~ softball-f!llated photos and related
; articles, from T-ball to the majon, ,
w as well as other spring and summer
=: sports, is the day qf the last game
:..or the World Seri~'The deadline
: for photos and related articles for
:,footbaU .and other fall sports is the
• Saturday before the Super Bowl.
::; These deadlines have been insti:1tuted to give ~ plenty of time
: 1o get their photos back from the
:;photography studio of choice and
..to give ihe siaiis the opportUnity to·
::;publish these sports photos .and
::.UUcles during the appropriate sea:.SOn for that sport.

Andenon, Herb William 1, Hubc.n Davis
and Do Kimbl e, Knickt ph yen , and
Cedric Ceball u, T om Ch ambers, Frank
Johnlon, Tim Kcmpwn, Ncgclc Knight ,

In the NIT ...
Wectneaday•a.......,.

Plwidc. . 75, a- Colleae 5!

-76.-Ca!J&amp;

.

Alablma·Binni.nJbun 61 , SW Mi•"""'SL52
Milmi, Ohio (22·1) n . OcorJelown
(U-12)nfaid&amp;l, Va.,l .pm.

Mitmi. ~ wiMcr vt.

Hcut.on • WwlliaijpW,. 7:30p.m.

Now-,."......_ 7:30p.m.
Ow!Mac Dlln*, I p.m.

Jlrn McMahon, quarterback,

·----

HO&lt;k~y

PH':~ ......

71

)4

.
.

NEW YORK RANGERS ....... Recalled

31M 2l5

:zn 234

DOMINO'S PIZZA

:167 2511
211 2M
llll 257

111 W. MAIN STREET.POMEROY

J I 65 714 2.19

992·2124

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZA

2110 10 30! lSI

5

47 ,.. J22

sl o· 99

Oaowo ......- - ' ,. • :t:l 17S :142

CAMPIILL CONFIRINCE
J

- -

' --

/

Clean Out-Your Clo~et,
Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your-Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

IFIR{IEIE
·cJLA~~lliFIIIElD)

..

AID)

With I Itt• Only
J

•

tempcs. Porter scored 27.S poincs a
game but also led his team in as- ,
sists and steals and was second in
rebounding.
Wolf, a Univenity of Cincinnaii
signee, averaged 20.8 points and
scored m9fe than 1,100 points in
his career. Dempsey bit 51 percent
from the field, 72 percent at the
line and avenged 24 poiniS, 7.2 as·
sists and S.3 rebounds ((X' the state
poU champion.
The second team is comprised
of: Utica's Ben RusaeD, Granville's
Aaron Toothman, Rob Wininger of
Medina Highland, Jim Rosneck of
;lnl liiiWI Rob Welch, H.viland Wayne
Mutillcn TUIIIw: M.a Newtr~~.A Abon ,St, VinWicltliffe, BellaR's Scott Coyne,
...,_SL Muy. 8 .1. Otuey,l'otonbwJ S~afield ;
~1--1, s..tar, 2A.O poiou per- 0...
Erin Hall of Belpre, Jeremy Ptm· 1'1-.
rick 1-.... CAPB, ~3. s,., 11 .6; B.., - . ,,
Ml,.;cll DcN:on, Orrville; 1aby LCw11, Jfroot·
berton of Arcanum 10d Bucyrus a.nc.lt U.UC.. Local, 6-J , Sr., 'Z1.l; Bsic W&lt;IU, - ; Kyln Mild1ell, LooUviltcAqW.u;
YCMiaJito.-a Liberty, 6·7, Sr., 20.1; J••••· _. Tooy Plots. Carey; Aaron BNU:aa.. Otl.awa Wynford's Tobey Schreck.
Glandorf; hiatt Nell', Alchbold: SIIIWI Sauber.~
D..p~~1 ,am,...... ...,sr :u.e:
Hall will lead Belpre into the
ltceiMilMm: B• R~, Udca, 6-l , Sr.,
tian&lt;o T""'"'; Andy Kzn&lt;ia, t.o.dmville;
Mike Cavey, Dayton Oakwood; Briu
Slate townamenL For lhe fmt time 2:0.1: Auoa t~. OramrWe. 6-7, Sr., 19.'7;
Rob.w w..-.-... Hlpland, 6-4, s... 31.7; Lobaroff, SpriA&amp;field Kcn,ton Ridac; Rick ¥c·
ever, two ICIIIIS wilh losing records Jim
Ra~n.U, Wickliffe, 6-5 , Sr .• 15.4; Scou · Gnw, 1..-. CrMII &amp;a Cliruan; Orca Mcftdjih,
are in the fteld and both are in Di- c-llollain!, 5-10,1•.• 711.1: lrtot .............. Bcllbmok: Jum Unac:r, Cautown Mi.•mi Eua:
6-1, II&lt; l U 1 l . a n y - Anon-. 6-1 , Tony Wn,h&amp;. Cin. Nor\h Collqc Hill;
vision ill.
Jama~ 1..unuctep, Beclford Chmc.l.; Bill Miller,
s,., 31.0; T...., Sduook. a..,... w,.-. 6-7,
'
Gate~ 'Milia OiJmoW-; JaM Pewuki. Wicldiff'e; IaCampbell Memorial (19 -6) Sr., 21.0.
mon Willi1m1, Cleve. Cent. Calh .; AliLhony
meecs Cmcinnati McNicholas (11........ - - ....... Cclum!ouo !WIIoy, eo-.
0ateo Milllllawken; Tony Polen, Mid·
..
16.11s.o..n.
·
-.....
s
••
.....
h
14) "' 6 p.m.' Friday, with Belpre 16.3; - dlelidd Cardinal; JOOn -Ai.c:.i, Lorain Cda.; Earl
11i6-l, s.., 23.6; .hm.d
&amp;)tina. Oave.. C-. C•lh.: Rep White. Buc:h(24-1) 18Clcling Coldwater (10-16) Huri., A....IIW.a Hubal-, 6-0, Sr., 20.4; Oeoff .....t;
M~. LaniD Calh., 6-3, Sr., 16.t; Klll'l Ma,.,
at 9 p.m. The championship game DoChuck Cane)', Belpre; Brl.. RunJon,
6-5, s... 22.11- Cloeolllaon,
Che.-.puke; Pal Beard, Chllllcot•e z.. e
is at 9 p.m. Sa&amp;urday.
Wlllllea. '"'• Jr. UA; Dne V• ~.Ibm·
Tract~ Briin Tqola. Scamm Nonh Adurw. Matt
6-'7,Sr., 22.0.
.Chosen to the third team were: l8r Pat:Dct:Hiwy,
McCraw, f'orllmoulh 1&amp;:1; c•ulle W~rd,
PlaJ• -' lhe JUri R.oh W.. ch, Havib.nd
c•lllk:Cithl UnW.; .,.... AraJI , ......; Shawa
Jlbon ·Moore of Columbus Hanley, WIJM Trace.
Whlta, CrooluYUte;
- ., ... yar. Tun S.Wvan, Sprina·
Justin Stowers of Brookfield, fWdC
Tod Soc:not. Caldwoll; 1....,, COnkle, W.
Caah. ; Tun Ta)'klr, a.ootrMW; 0.,. Wince.,
Rittman's Scott Amstutz, Jemal o....w..
Llf'•)'Cile Ridpwood; Jim w... New M.~
Frot~liei'; C•m Wut, N•w Ma.. moraa Fronuer;
Harris of Ashtabula Harbor, Geoff
Special meution
John Hinol, SatahMlle Shenandoah; JUllfl. BW'Idy,
Mogus of Lorain Catholic, Ken
Belmont Union lAcal. .
Choolt Jlooialo,
McAut.y,
-llolfao&lt;. Dnville;
Xorin
May of Dayton Oat wood, Scott Bloao.c-.tl;
Diii.Campboll - . , , N...
Aknln

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For 1100.00 Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted), ·
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It l'o U!! Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
You Ad Will Run For One Week,

Dot--

--Donw-.

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Wo111en and Children

MAIL TO:

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CHA

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PHONE 992·2351

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.

(ContinuedfromPage4)
SL Vlnclllftl·
o , .SI..Mar,;
____
Taac·t.er Pappu, Akron
Chiatham of WeUston and Hamler _
Patrick Henry's Dave Van J(arsen. Foa1.1r Dida, Plyaoulb; J.m i• . lell, Cia.
Sullivan has guided Springfield Wyomina; Shay-·· loliddlalowa IWfilon;
o..m.nu... v.n., v-. Brian
Catholic from 5-15 to 9-11 to 16-4 Donto.
Huiaaki, Bodford Clt.u.ol; David Pfwu:laulin,
this year. Taylor coached Brook· 0... Millo-Sba ........ a.... c...
c.th.; 0... Todd, 1Aaia a..m.w; BriM Bury,'
field to an 18-2 record, the ~hoot's t...u.
Om"Wr. Qllia X..........__....,
first winning season since 1985. VaUIIJ; ScoU ICtUir, C•tnkollle H••llnlkNIJ
Talle, Iooman Naolb- Milo CrMJy,
Wince put up a 19-1 record at Aruly
'--IU. Vallan Booilo Lloolo, Ooll H111J &gt;Qo
Grar.ville and a No.2 ranking in the · Aida., BPwl7 Fort 'Prye; Robart am.wu,
state poll with a defense that al- Sanb1viUe Sbeaaadoah; Jeff Tbompton,
WellmDe; Joe PoW.aw, Se• t... ville Cath.; Ken ·
lowed 44.3 poiniS a game.
llofhenbruhlor, Hannlbal Ri,...,
Here's the 1992-93 Associated
Honorable mention
Press Division Ill all-Ohio boys
M1U Bowen, Onnvilk; Alldy Goodenow,
basketball team. selected on the Columbu1 Ready; Aahiko Hudaon, CaJumb111
HartlDy; Brian Meade. Swnmil Sa.tioo Li..tin1
recommendations of a state panel IIY.;
Cody Whil&amp;km, Lond&lt;XI Madioon Plains;
of sPorts writers and broadcasters:
Rym EakridJc. ROOIIlOwn; ·Malt McMenell.

two-year

w LT.., crcA

»

.

\'

w_

Division III all-staters ...

JANTZEN•, SWEET TREE•, VASSER

Joby Mcu ier, dciCOIIcmln, from Binghamton oltheAmcrican HoQ:cy League.
ST. LOUIS BLUES - RecUJcd Bm
H.diRn, dcfcn&amp;Cman. fr(WI Peoria of lhe

WALES CONFERENCE

••-

1.0 1

Na tlon• l fl ockeJ Ltaaue

In the NHL...

II 1 .. ......... ol6 21 6 t1
W
...... :J7 21 7 II
_ , . ....... :10 Jl ' 11
N.Y. . _ ...
19 II 'T7
N.Y............ :14 :12 6 74

&lt; ,, ',

said Smltb aod t•e
OZZIE AT THE BAT- Perennial All·Star (center) look on.
shortstop Ozzle Smith of the St. Louis Cardinals . Cardinal'• manaaement were so imprused with
tries out R~ Stewart's Power Swing Trainer the mac:hllle that they bought one to belp traio
whRe a ltittlna iostroctor, right, and Stewart their maio ilne players.

LOS AN Ga.ES RAIDERS :- Signed
Jeff l-l01t11.ler, quartaback, to a lhn:.c-ycu
contriCI.

c:anuaa.

Od81doa Clioap.l~p.a
lltoh """' Aolaoio, 1,31J_p.m.
M i l - - • - a . 9,30p.m.
NowYcacLA. Latas, I0:30p.m.
LA. Clippin c Podland, lO::JOp.m.

r-

NOW

MINNESOTA VI KINGS - Signed

1a.ap.m.

sa,49S

ONLY 24,000 LOW loii..ESI
X·TRA CLEAN CARl SHARP II
StacOI 303151, 5.0 liter, 5 speed :

N•llonal Football Lugue

At.b.m.-Binninahina {X)-13), 7 p.m.
Plwidu..,. (2).11) " · MinncOou (2010),' p.m.

NOW

adding other devices to the
machine or pulling different colored tir.e8 on future models. One
possibility - makinl the machine
available in twn colors.

ONE OWNER · GARAGE KEPT .

Football

NowY_..

CLEVELAND at Pldladelphil, 7:30

1

MINNESOTA TI MBERWOLVES -

MttMIIJ,Mwdilt
AIM . . . . . . . . . Girckn

CLEAN VAN -NEWTIIES
Stockll3:l3131, 6cyl.. air. I UIO.. PS. PB.
ti~ cruise, AMA'Iol s11110 llpt. - II·
dial~ bucket saa~ . Rial wh-1. detog.

1989 FORD
MUSTANG

Si&amp;ncd Sidney Lowe, COtch, t.o 1 threefeU """""-

Semtnaall

Frlday'••·-

Mark Wc11 and R1chard Dumas, Su na
playcn, $SOO apiece for leavinJ ihe bench
IMI ,duringlhc im;idcnt.. Fined lhe Knicka
S.SO.OOO •nd the Siins S2S,OOO for failing
to cmiJ'OI. their players during the brawl.
CIDCAGO BUU..S - Actiuled Bill
C.rtwri&amp;h ~ cam:r, from the injuood litL
Pl.lccd Corey William~, guard, on the injurod 1iot.

I

I

p-y and fm cd him $ 15,000

for their part lfl 1 bnw l in a ga me o n
Marth 23. Fmed Jenod Mus1..1f, Suns for·
ward, SIO,SOO; DlMy Ainge, Suns guard;
John Sw::i.s, Knick• guud; and Anthony
Muon, Knicb forwanl, $7,500 for Lhcit ·
part in th e brawl, Fined Charle1 Smilh,
Rolando Blackman, O.arle. Otklcy, Eric

Calpryat v......., )0:40pm .

Dall.uat-7 :!0pm.

a..w.. s... • rm

pm111 wilhout

a.;..IOilN.Y. RM..,., 7:&lt;0pm.
S..Lcioia at W'onnlpos. 1:40 p.m:
Lao ...... nl!dm0noan, 9,&gt;10p.m.

)0:30p.m.

p.m.

~

Doc Rivm, New York guard, two games
wi~ t pay and fancd him $10,000; 1nd
K.CMrt Johnton, Phoc:ni.J&amp; Sunt SUild, l wu

Toolpt'•1•me

HCIUI&amp;OIIcA&amp;l.M,7:30p.m.

110,

National Bukttbiii.U.od atlon
NBA - S\l&amp;pc•uhd Orea Anth Dny,
New Yart Knicb auud. withouc. p11.y for
at lc:ut riw pmea and fined him $20,500;

NeW Joacy at PlualauJb, 7:40p.m.
Wuhin•on It N.Y.ltlanden, 7:40
p.m.
"" . . . Plillldolphil, 7:&lt;0 p.m.

ToaJ&amp;Iot'a piiMI
s.w

BukelbaU

-··-.1:40pm.
T..,_ I•J • Oat•, 1;-CO p.m.

5

WICIIIIICIIy'aiiCora

Portltftd •t

2

built around 80 of the machines.
Baseball offiCials were impreSsed
wilh the machine's sturdy construelion, Stewart said.
Stewan said he is considering

1989 FORD
AEROSTAR

.

Machines were purchased by the
~Pitcsburgh Pirates, the St. Louis
::cardinals and the Philadelphia
: Phillies, Stewart said. The Cinc:in·
• IIIIi Reds bought one in October.
::: In addition, the Toronto Blue
vJays and the Houston Astros are
considering purchases, Stewart
added. Several colleges and high
schools are also considering purchases.
.
The machines are sold to profes·

----

--- , ·:

WtdHid•y'asawes
PM•Mlp!-il S, N.Y. Rqcn 4

-

.

lher"'·
ru. unconditiona rc·

OUCAOO WHITE SOX - Eum...t
lhtir opdcn an Bo l1cbon., ~elder, f01
die 1993 INIOII.
NEW YORK YANKEES - Optioned
O.ve Silveltri. 1horu&amp;op. 1.0 Columbus of .
.,. bum"""'-dl.oof"~ Pbcod laok La·
ZOiko, pitda, 011 w11ven for the pwpote
of Jivina him hil unconditional rde.ue.

W................ 33 35 6 72 TIS 215
F1
o. ........ 25 •2 I ~~ 217 29S
Son!............... 10 62 2 :12 192 367

·-

BuebaU

aivir),a him

sional teams for $995 and io .Col·
leges and high schools for $795,
Stewart said:
Stewart comlnended Dell8 ManufaciUring in Middleport which has

:teams.

AIMf1cu Leaaue
•
BOSTON RED SOX - Plu:ed John
Marunao, c.leher, on waivers fm

1991 CHEVY .
G20VAN

metal

Transactions
'

" I lhink it was a lillie forted in
the beginning." reliever Ted.Power
said. "Afil:r a while things did t
closer 10 nonnaL But it's going~
take a lOng time."
They don't have much more
time, The Indians resumed their
spring exhibition schedule today

vodka were found in the boat,
along with an empty beer can.
There •s been no confirmation of
media reporcs that one of the pitch·
ers had a high blood-alcohol level.
Medical ewniners are analyzing blood specimens ftom Olin and
Crews. A stale offx:ial said resu)IS
won ' t be made public until the
investigation is camplete.
Olin, 27, the Indians' closer,
was killed instandy. Crews, ~ I , the
boat owner, died about 10 hours
later of massive head injuries.
Ojeda, 35, had ·slirgery for severe
scalp cuts and is expected to be
(See MEMORIAL oa Page ti)

·-

The Wright State signee first Granville's Greg Wince.
came to statewide prominence
Joining Welch on the fli'Sl team
when he was selected the most arc 6-3 :~Cnior Derrick Johnson of
valuable player at the stale towna- Cincinnati Academy of Physical
ment two years ago as Wayne · Education, 6-1 senior Ben Porter of
Trace won the championship.
Belmont Union Local, 6-7 senior
His selection as player of the Brian Wolf of Youngstown Libeny
year was based on the recommen- and 6-0 senior James Dempsey of
dations of a state panel of sports Chesapeake.
,
·
writm and broldcastm.
Johnson was good for 2 1.6
The coaches of the year arc Tim points and II rebounds and made,
Sullivan of Springfield Catholic, 58 percent of his· field goal atBrookfield'• Tim Taylor and (See ALL·STATERS on Page 5)

TW L T h CFCA
Doaoil ............ 41 Tl ' 91· 330 1l7
. OWp .. ........ &lt;0 :13 10 90 :144 20l
r -........... 3!1 :IS 9 11 251 212
SL t...io ......... 35 31 ; 79 253 246
- . ......... 33 32 9 7S 7A7 261
T-B.oy ....... 21 41 S 41 216214

su:ain showed.

.

with a game against Baltimore at
Winler Haven, where the flag flies
at half-staff and visitors talk in
hushed tones. .
.
While the Indians started thinking about baseball again Wednesday, investigators got closer 10 an
explanation f&lt;X" ihe accident.
Investigators said they will
know by the end of the week
whether 10y of the players was
drunk when their 18-foot Skeeter
bass boat rammed a private dock in
Little Lake Nellie shortly after
nightfall.
A cooler with unopened beer
cans and a nearly full bottle of

The device features two wheels
on a
post. The idea, Stewan
said. is to swing the bat throu§h a
.space between die two wbcels. It's
:So simple," S tcwart S!lid. The
. device can move to any angle and
:is adjustable f&lt;X" any resistance.
~ "It forces the hitter to get in
·. proper hitting position and main:Wn illhroughout the swing," Stew·
•an said. 1f the batter has an improp·er swing. tbe bat will not go
: between the tires.
Stewan said he went to Florida
to demonstr11te his patented
machine and received a good
response from seYCl'al professional

St·ot·ehoard
In theNBA ...

the two dead pla)'Cl1. " Some day,
we'Dmake you proud."
Earlier in the day, the .players
held their fuat workout sioce the
accident thalldlled ihe two relievers and injured pitcher Bob Ojeda.
The playcn tried to be upbeat during the illree-hour workout, but the

A lrlining device invenled by a

'

Southeastern Ohio teams get 13
· players on boys' all-state list

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;---5

:stewart's 'training device catching on in big leagues

Minnesota 75~ USC 58
A 'stingy defense and a surly
home crowd ·got Minnesota past
Southern Cal (18-12). The Gophers
held Southern Cal to 32 percent
shooting from the floor, including
25 .9 percent in the second half,
before a raucous crowd of 15,393.
The Gophers (20-10) have
played all lhree of their NIT .games
age.
before large, boisterous home
The Friars scored the fli'St eight crowds.
poiniS, four each by Simpkins and
The game was tight until the last
FranldinWestem,andthelasteighl
minute
of the first half, when
of the first half to take a 31-22
Voshon Lenard, who fmished with
lead.
They led by at least nine the rest 25 points, ignited a decisive 18-7
of !be way. Gerrod Abram's lhree- run .
pomter closed the gap to 56-45
With 6:31 remaini111. But Simpkins
Al;lbama-Birmingham-61
and Smith sank two free throws
· SW Missouri State 52
each f&lt;X" a IS-point lead.
Robert Shannon led the Blazers
Boston College never threatened (20-13) with 18 points despite the
again.
lingering effects of the Ou. SouthThe Eagles sank just 39.6 per- west Missouri State (20-11) started
cent of their shots after making off quickly in the second half,
59.7 percent in a 101-68 second- going up 35-30 with an 8-2 r)ln.
round win Monday night over Rice. The Blazers responded with four
Boston's three-guard offense of straJght baskeiS and went ahead for .
Abram, Malcolm Huckaby and good on Clarence Thras h' s layup
Howard Eisley made II of 35 shots with 8:12 Rlmaining.

Wayne Trace's Welch heads Division. III court

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Rob Welch of Haviland Wayne
. ·Trace, who cappccJ off a brill11nt
: career with a big senior season,
~ headlines the 1993 Associated
: Press Division Ill all-Ohio boys
• basketball team announced
Weclnesday.
· Welch, a 6-foot-1 guanl, averaged 24 poinu, 8 rebounds and S
• assisiS and was chosen the player
: of the yell in die dirilion.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~Indians remembered at memorial service ~ /

The Daily Sentinel

: :In NIT action,

•

....

Thursday, March 25, 1993

WAS
'14,495,

win.1.1iv

SJ ..1•.'1''I
.

1988 OLDS DELTA
88BROUGHAM
CLEAN· ONE OWNER
4 doors, sedan. front- drive, 6 cyl.,

··
air, auto.. PS, PS, pow11
power • :
soot, power lod&lt;s. till cruise. AMA'Iol · '

windows,

slllt'eo•,"''bw

995
1992 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR
EXECifflVESERES·BEAliTFUI.
S!Ock I 1151 0, V-8, lit, IUIO., PS. PB, · •

_ __,._..,_,._lodot,

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white~, rearvM.

JfWw

�Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 25, 1993

By The Bend

HGughn, Cluxton share Division IV top honors

Evans among nine SE Ohio all-state selections
B;r RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Two 10p scorers - Canal Winchesrer's Shawn Haughn and Lynchburg Clay's Paul ClUJ! ten- and 6foot-11 center Evan Eschmeyer
lead lhe 1993 Associaaed Press Division IV all-Ohio boys ~etball
u:am IIJIIIOWIC4l(! Thursday.
Haughn, ClllXIOII and Eschmcyer, wbo combined for 91 points a
. game share lhe honors as lhe players of lhe year in lhe division. They
were named based on lhe recommendations of a Slate media panel.
Haughn, a 6-2 senior, averaged
30.7 points, 7.2 rebounds and 3 as-.
sists a game while shooting 56.3
peiCtlll from the field, 49.3 pen:ent
on three-pointers and 82.4 percent
at lhe line.
Cluxton, a 6-4 senior, had at ~
most identical numbers. He averaged 31.3 points, 5.5 assisls and 5.5
rebounds while shoo_ting 57.8 perccut from lhe faeld, 50.3 percent on
three-pointers .00 86 percent at lhe
line. .
.
.
He will lead Clay in_to lhe state
toumamem !his week. Clay (24-2)
plays New Riegel (22-3) in a Division IV semifinal at 2 p.m. Friday,
wilh Fort Loramie (22-4) meeting
_top-ranked Lima Central Calholic
(25-0) in lhe 11 a.m. semif11181. The
championship is at 5 p.m. Saturday.
Haughn is headed for the Uni-

vc:rsity of Dayton and Clux1011 has
committed to Northern Kentucky
but might pursue a professional
baseball career. Eschmeyer is headed for Northwestern.
Eschmeyer hit 73 percent of his
shots from lhe field while averaging 29.3 points and 14.1 rebounds a
game. He hit 70 percent of his free
lhrows and also averaged 4 blocked
shots and 4 assists a game.
A senior wilh a 3.7 grade-point
average, hehad two games with
mote than 40 points and two others
with more than 20 rebounds.
The coaches of _the year were
Bob Seggerson of Lima Central
Catholic, Fort Loramie's Dan
Hegemeir and Ray Corbett or
Grandview Heights.
Rounding out the first team
were 6-1 senior Tim Arnold of
Freeport Lakeland, 6-S senior
J8ll)el King of Cincinnati Country
Day and 6-2 senior Matt Urchek of
Corland MaplewOQd.
Arnold managed 18.1 points,
6.9 assists, 5.1 rebounds and 2.7 ·
steals a game, while King was an
84-percent free-throw shooter who
scored. 20.1 points a game. Urchek
·averaged 27.4 points a game and
bad games of 44 and 40 this year.
The second team included two
members from poll&lt;bampion Lima
Central Catholic, Aaron HuiChins
and Dwight McNeal, along with

Bellaire SL John's Joe Reasbeck, Un:liok, ConlMd 1\bplewood, 6.2, Sr., Z7.4,
Second team; Joe Rc11hock, Bellaire St.
Jason Williams of Upper Scioto John't,
6-~, Sr.. 25.3; A~n~~~ Husddnl, Uma C«t.
Valley, William Wright of Dayton Cath., 5·9, Jr., li.S; J - W'~. Uw- SciDIO
v.u.,, ~.Jr., 22.9; ~ NcNal, Lima c...
Jefferson, Middletown Fenwick's C.&lt;lt,
6.2, Sr., 17.3: Willilm W&lt;ialll. Do- kfChris Gallagher and Frank lonon, 6-2, Sr. 21.0: Cllri&amp; Oalliah&lt;r, Midcllotown Fanric:l, 6-J, Sr.• ,16.1; J'rut lklrc:hd.&amp;e,
Burchette of Portsmouth Clay.
ca.,., ~Sr., 17.3.
Named to the third team were Por11MOUU.
~hlrd tt ..s: JC!Q Rich, Fairport Harbor
Jerry Rich of Fairport Harbor lhfdin&amp;, 6.!, Sr., lll.!: !Kobl.orNp!, Lal&lt;o Rida•
6-4 1/2, St., 77.0: Bmdy o,;Jiill&gt;, ConHarding, Jacob Latham of Lake A&lt;Odany,
tcrbuq, 6-1, Sr., 17.5; Maa Suller, Grandview
Ridge Academy, Centerburg's Htt: .•. 6-l, Sr., IS.2; Jat.. ~wbnag, Sobrina
MclGnley, 6-1, Sr., 14.9; JC.elria TJQYCI', Berlin HiBrody Griffith, Matt Sulser of IW,
6.0, Sr., 16.9; Dmn Ropp, tloGnlf RivuGrandview Heights, Sebring oido, ~.Sr., 2!,9.
·
Playen of lhe .) 'tan ·Shawn Haua,bn, Caul
McKinley's Jaltl: Zurbrugg, Kevin Win~
Paul Ow.&amp;on, Lrnc:bbwJ Clar: Evan
Troyer of Berlin Hiland and Devin &amp;dvncycr, New
K.nol.villc.
·
Ropp of DeGraff Riverside.
Coachtll fllht Jtar: Bob Seggenon, Lima
Cath.; Dan Heacmeir, Fort lbramie; R•y
Seg11erson guided LCC to its Ccnl
Corbett. Grandview Ht.l.
third tnp to the state tournament in
Special mention
his 15 years at the school. Nine of ·
Slcve Hnwkina, Marion Cathclic; Aaron
the T-Birds'. wins came against Di- Lynch, Marion Pleuaru; Georae Shack.d!ord,
Chalker; Dan~e Cuaanova, Mc:Donvision I or IT teams. Hegemeir lost Sou&amp;hlngttll
ald; Ealhon Edward•, CVCA; Rick Palumbo,
all five starters from last year's 20- Lowcl.lvillc; Knin Zeppemedt; Sebrin&amp; McKinRy~ Schultz, Tiltin Calvert; Breu Kaple.,
0 team, but still went .16-4 and ley;
Now Wuhingtm Buckeye Cenuali J11on .Home. •
made another bip to the Slate tour- FindJay l.i.beny-BeDton; Brmdon Otani. OeotJ&amp;
\own; Duua Tobe. Aolonia; AnscLo Shlw, RichnamenL Corbett guided Grandview mond
Hts.; Sooa Many, KirtlAnd; Dale IC.caml, InHeights, which had two starters dependenu; DJ. Mih.lli.k, lndependon~; Todd
Sciano, OayaJwaa HLI.; Chril Silva, Ashtlbula St.
back from a 9-11 tC:am, to a 16-4 John;
Martr· Cochenour, Bonr Euttm; Ryan
record - lhe school's best since Morrow,·
New· Bo1ton; MICHAEL EVANS,
JlACINE SOUTHERN1 AuOD M.,ahlll.
1951.
Malvern; Chad Shn,..cr, Zanesville Roaccn.ns; ·
Here's the 1992-93 Associated Juon
Krltich, Grayatille Skyvue; John Brcuell,
Press Division IV all-Ohio boys Mingo Jet.
Honorable mention
basketball team, selected on the
J~ Bub, Ncwad C.tholic; Cliff Harria, New
recommendations 9f a state panel Al bany;
Duay Miller, Lancutcr Fiahcr Cath.;
of spons wri~ and broadcasters:
Juatin Perry, Millersport; Phlllip PW.Hna, Milford
li'lrtl te~mz Shawn HauaM. C....l Winch·
C..1et Folrl&gt;onU.
·
...... &amp;.r--2, s.m.., 30.7 po;.u. I"" I""" 1'1&lt;0)
Briu Hecker, Lectonia;· Dcrrick WcatcnCluJ.ton, Lynch.bt.lrJ Clay, 6-4, Sr., 31.3; l'im
Arnold,~ LU.~nd,

•t, Sr., ll.l; Evan

&amp;chmeyer, ~e.w Knouillc., 6-11, Sr., 29.3; Jamcl
Kina, Cin. Country O•y, 6"-~i". Sr., 20.1; Matt

-

Scientists see link between
prenatal smoking and SibS

Bihn, FM Roe&lt;wery; O.,U,y SWk. Edger~oo~; T"'Y
ScioGt, Ubcny Ccnacr, Jamie Sieminski, Oreaon

J&amp;ff Bnndowi&amp;, Fort Loramie; Cunis Enil • .
UniM Oly MiaiiMinlwa Valley; Chris Orarnmel,
On. Swnm.it Counll')' Day; Shane Meade, Bradford; &lt;nca Walker, Ceduville:., Jaaon Wendel~
ll&lt;&gt;dcim . .
Jerome Fuller, Willow Wood Symma VJIIty; Chuck Jontl 1 Ironton St. Jonph ; Brian
Olovcr, LyllchblltiJ Cl.a y; Mill~ Kelly,

Wat.odord; Jamie WillillllS, Oray•vi.Ue Slt)'YUe;
J).,.id Huria, NcwGDmcmawn; Shannon Honll botaao, Berlin ljjlond: Scoct Pi!Cocl&lt;, Zanaville

...........

ald; Tom 'Kina. Berlin Cc:ruc:r Wca~em Rcacrvc;
Travla Mulanu, CaMon Hcriugc Chriatian;
Nuhm HanAlman, Vic:tor)' OWtian; Na\CI Nca-

Kentuc,ky boasts three teams in NCAA ·tourney
By DAVID KUGMAN
LOUISVIU.E, Ky. (AP)- The
,stale of Kentucky has a comer on
NCAA tournament market with
'three teams among the final 16.
And fans of Kentucky, Louisville
and Western Kentucky are loving
it
"We're very pr're talking aboUl
three prosrams wilh great tradition
:and pride. It's great for the fans."
. With basketball part of .many
'Kentuckians daily routine, !here's
'been lots to talk about in lhe past
week. Even last week's high school
state tillc game in Lexington drew
m&lt;n than 22,000 fans.
ll's the first time since 1978
lhree Kenlucky teams bave made it
'this far. That year, Western Ken1ucky and Louisville lost in the
regional semifinals and Kentucky
woo lhe championship.
"I think Kentucky is unique
because of the tremendous fan
,interest," said Western Kentucky

coach Ralph Willard, li former Regio!lal at Cbarloite, N.C.
Kentucky assistanl his third year
Willard, an assistant at Kenwilh the Hill10ppers.
tucky, Providence and the New
"When I was with Syracuse, York Knicks under Pitino, said
!hen: was great interest, but mainly Pitino called him after Western
in !hat area. In Kentucky, there's upset Seton Hall on Saturday. Piliinterest lhroughout lhe whole state. no offered congratulations but
That's a great climate to coach in." dido 't talk about a possible coachWith a u:am such as Kentucky, ing matchup between Pitino and his
popular across lhe state, the pres- former assistanL.·
sure to win can often be over"He just called up and said,
whelming, former Wildcats' coach 'Great game,"' Willard said. "He
Joe B. Hall said.
was happy for me just like I was
"When you consistently win, happy for him when they beat ·
pe!&gt;ple grow to expect it to the Utah. There aren't two_people who
pomt that you don't excite them root any harder for each olher."
wilh wiiming as much as you disIn 1990-91, Willard's firSt seaappoint them with a loss," said son at Western, the Hilltoppers
Hall, who coached the Wildcats were 14-14. Last year Western finfrom 1973-85.
ished 21-11. Now Western is two
It's that kind of pressure Willard victories from lhe Final Four.
will face if Western (26-5) defeats
"Ralph has done one of the
Florida State (24-9) on Thursday. greatest resurrection jobs I've ever
Western's ~nent could be Ken- -seen in a short period of time,"
tucky (28-3), which meets Wake Pitino said. "He's taken a program
Forest (21-8) in lhe olher Southeast

with low self-esteem and brought it
to the point that it's wearing the
glass slipper."
Western, a No. 7 seed, defeated
Memphis State in a first-round
game _last week_. Kentucky, lhe top
seed m the Southeast, beat Rider
and Utah in lhc first two rounds.
Fourth-seeded Louisville (22-8),
which beat Delaware and Oklah~ State in the fma two rounds,
w1ll face top-seeded Indiana (30-3)
on Thursday in a Midwest Regional semifinal in St. Louis.
Louisville coach Denny Crum
said he isn't astounded lhree Kentucky teams have survived this late
in the tournament. The Cardinals
lost to the Wildcats 88-68 in ·
December, and Western beat
Louisville 78-77 last month.
"It doesn't swprisc me" Crum
said. "Kentucky's a hotbed of basketball."

In NFL's off-season meetings,

.Raiders get Hostetler; Vikings snag McMahon
By DAVE GOLDBERG
PALM DESERT, Cali[ (AP)The quarterbacks are starting to fall
~n place in the free agent sweepstakes -Jim McMahon to Minnesota and Jeff Hostetler to !he

Raiders.
. The ~un! for ~e big prize, Reg. g1e White, IS geliiDg more complicated.
McMahon moved from the
backup spot in Philadelphia to a

ten tali ve slarling job in Minnesota HoiL
on Thursda_y - depending, of
"We're prepared to offer the
course. on h1s often undependable maximum for him,'' 49ers presihealth. Soon afterward, Hostetler dent Carmen Policy said after
signed with lhe Raiders after being meeting with White's agent, Jimmy
bid farewell by the New York Sexton.
Giants, who elected to end their
Tbat maximum is $14.4 million
(Continued from Page 5)
quarterback duel by staying with over four years -about $1.6 mil- ..
Phil Simms.
·
lion less !han what the New York
dozen f1oril arrangements.
But
as
lhe
NFL
meetings
ended,
Jets, Green Bay Packers and CleveOnly the buzz of the speaker
system and an occasional sniffle a new entry surfaced in lhe chase land Browns are prepared 10 offer.
That's because under the rules
could be heard as several people, for White: lhe San Francisco 49ers,
inc! uding Hargrove and Los Ange- who were freed from the restric- set down in the complicated new
les Dodgers manager Tommy tions placed on them as one of last system, lhe Niners can pay White
Lasorda, !Old stories about lhe two ·· year's ·final four when they · o~ly_ Holt's ~I.rSt·year salary of $2.7
relievers. Crews pitched for the declin.ed to match an offer by million, adding on $600,000 raises
Atlanta for defensive end Pierce in each or lhe next lhree SC880DS.
Dodgers for six years.

Indians' memorial...
released from the hospital this
week.
One question was answered
Wednesday. The medical examiner
said Crews' head hit the dock
strai,ht on, an indi~ation he never
saw 1L Tbat '!'ould explain why the
pill:hcrs weren't able 10 duck at lhe
last second.
Families were looking for a dif. ferent sort of explanation at lhc private service attended by managers,
players and front-office personnel
from several major-league teams.
Andre Thom100, a former Indians scar who overcame the dealh of
his wife and daughter in a 1977 car
accident, flew from Cleveland to
-preside at the team's request.
"I'homlDil, a church elder in Clcvellnd, said the city was stunned.
·, "I Cllll!e from a city that's riveted to the television," Thornton
said. "I came from a city that's
arrested by the suddenness and
"brevity of life. I came from a city
·that's been knocked to the de,P,ths
of its IOUi Jryin&amp; to understand. • •
ne crowd filled the 350-seat
auditorium and spilled out lhe back
door. Llrse black-and-white photopaphl of the 1wo players were
propped 011 talllea 11 eilher end of a
lmlfl sll~te. surrounded by_two

..

Dur AIIB l,ewc!era: A friend of
enough to say wbat I want Get off
mine who was a heavy smoker
my back."
recently lost her baby to SIDS
1 am not. a prude, Ann. I don't
(Sudden Infant Dealh Syndrome). I
mind an occasional swear word, but
amenclosinganarticlethatreccudy
when !here's a G.D. and S.O.B. in
~ in USA Today about lhe
ANN LANDERS
every sentence, it grates on my
link bel:n een women wb(J smoke and
Los Angel..
nerves. No one else I know taiJci
this cruelesl of all baby tiilers.
this way.
People need to be aware or lhe
,.
Please, Ann, how can I mate him
connection.
Wlderstand? -- RED-FACED WIFE
I see poople smoking as IIIey drive,
According to the study in Pediat- IN CALJR&gt;RNIA
with lhe windows rolled up. There rics,babiesexposedtosmokingonly
DEAR RED-FACED WIFE:
are often children in lhe back seat. in utero wen: twice as likely to die When people lack c:oafidence in the
To me, this~ child~- r~e seen of SIDS as the infants of non- validity 0!' Strength of their mi ge,
women holding babiCS m theu arms smoking women. Babies expoted they often lean on profanity for
with cigarettes dangling from their both in lhe womb .00 after binh emphasis.
!BOOths ~h,ile ashes and smoke get were lhree times as likely to become Language . patterns beCQ1pe
10 tile childs face.
SIDS victims.
habilllal. Once esrablished, they are
I'm a single man, and I woo't date
WeU, dear readers, !his is a Slrollg difficult to break. Unless yciur
a woman who smci:es. Maybe if you message for all pregnant women and huSband sbould decide on his ow
print this article, it will wake up new molhers. I hope they get iL · · to cut out lhe cussing and is willing
some or lhese foolish people. -Dear Ann Landers: My husband to wor1t at it, nothing will change;.
BRUNSWICK, GA.
is a well-educated Ivy ·League
Gem of lhe Day: A great deal or
DEAR BRUNSWICK: Thanks for professional man who comes from a lhe stress in our lives is a matter of
your comments and lhe clipping. fme family. I'm turning to you with choice. People who like themselves
Here are lhe highlights:
a problem I've lived wilh for several refuse to suffer for lhe foolishness
A new study· has revealed tbat years. It's his foul mouth.
of olhers.
rllll', ~ra WIIUams aad Jeuica Cole; third row,
YELLOW JACKETS • Pletured lire me111•
bab_ies whose mothers smoked
The man can't utter one sentence
Is life passing you by? Wa/11 to
lien ol the lllxtll IJ'ade Bradbury Yellow Jackets
Sara Larkiu and Mellsha Swisher; and top,
dunng
pregnancy
or
soon
after
wilhout
some
form
of
profanity.
rve
impro~
your social sltills? Wriu: for
ClleerJe!!dlag Squad when reeently participated
Chandra Mooa. Advisor is Sherry Swisher and
giving
birth
are
much
more
likely
to
IOid
him
repeatedly
!hat
his
language
Al1l1
~rs'
new booklet, "How 10
In eheerln11 tompetitoll. Members at~ first row, assistant advisor is Jane Moon.
die
of
SIDS
than
infants
whose
is
offensive
10
me
and
to
please
cut
Make
Friends
an,J Stop Being
MleheUe WIDiams and Becky Johnson; second
moms never smoked cigarettes.
it out, but I might as welllalk to lhe l..oM/y.• Selld a ~/f-addresml,long,
Scientists bave established a link lamppost.
bllsiness-siu en~lope lll1d a check
between-pre118lill smoking and SIDS · I know my husband's constant or Wlliiii!J order for $4.15 (ellis inin the past few years, but this is lhe cussing must offend olhers, although eludes postage aNl luurdling) lo:
firSt study 10 show that an infant's no one has ever come out and said Friends, c/o AMI..anders, P.O. Box
CompUed .by:
M. Moore, Sutton.
Weeks, Salisbury.
exposure
to smoke afttr birth c.t so. Whenever I mention it to him, 11562, Cllicogo,IU. 60611-0562. (In
Emmopne Hamilton
Gary Wolf, Patricia L. Wolf,
William E. Oiler. Thomas L.
be
linked
to
death from SJDS.
he blows his top and yells, "I'm old · CaNJda. muJ $5.05.)
Recorder, Melp County, Ohio
Ease, to Monongahela Power Co., Oiler, Debra K. Patton; Stanley W.
Oiler, Kim Oiler, Lot 11252, S. 5, RLuella Moore, dec' d, affid, to Olive.
William
'I'Itonias
Ratliff,
dec'
d,
12, T-1, to John C. Stacey, Letan.
Bob R. Moore, Coral Moore Davis,
to
Juanita
E.
Ratliff,
Porn.
Viii.
Joseph W, Jones, Ruby J. Jones,
Bobbie L. Moore Randolph, Terry
Charles
R.
Snider,
et
al,
Jennifer
Joel
Keith Jones, parcels, to Joseph
D. Moore, Rllndall L. Moore, SutSnider,
Sheriffs
Deed,
to
Home
W.
Jones,
Ruby J. Jones, Chester.
ton.
Natio!Ujl
Bank,
Racine
V.
·
PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)- Brooks, Vince Gill, Reba McEntire
Owen Smith, aka Owens J. ,
The annual festival June 7-13 at
Coral Davis, Bobbie L. RanGarnet
Johnston,
Carl
Dean
Britain's
Prince Philip says artists, and DoUy Parton.
Loretta Smilh, 15.106. A., to Con·the Tennessee State Fairgrounds
dolph, Jolin W. Randopb, Terry D.
performers and preachers all can
The money will go to the Opry has already sold its allotted 24,000
· Moore, Linda M. Moore, Randall Johnston, Cindy Ja Johnston. par- way Lumber Co, Inc:, Bedford. ·
Nancy A. Houdashelt, parcels, help "convey a sense of anxiety" Trust Fund, which helps people in tickets.
. R. Moore, parcels, to Bob R. cel, to Carl Dean Johnston, Cindy
Jo Johns!On, Lebanon.
about the threatened planet
to James D. Houdashelt, Syracuse.
lhe country music industry in times
The Country Music Association,
Moore, Sutton.
"Every
art
form
painting,
James
D.
Houdashelt,
Lots,
to
of
need.
Sealed
bids
on
the
guirar
a
sponsor
of the event, said
Bob R. Mbare, Ruth Moore, .
John R. Weeks, Barbara Weeks,
sculpture,
poetry,
drama,
dance,
Nancy
A.
Houdashelt,
Syracuse.
will
be
accepted
until
May
31.
Wednesday
!hat
Mauea will return
1.02 A. ' ·to Terry D. Moore, LiJic!a parcels, to John R. Weeks, Barbara
music - and every form of reli•
to the Fan Fair stage this Ye&amp;!'- Last
gious e~pression - worship,
LONOON (AP)- The scandals year, the singer had io cancel
prayer, ntual, preaching, monastic of lhe past year aside. the Duchess because of vocal cord surgery.
.
life or mysticism- can illustrate of York says her best friend.still is
some aspect of-!he damage human- her estranged husband, Prince
ityisdoingtonablre,"lhehusband 'Andrew.
I C..
..
.
of Queen Elilllbeth IT told lhe SociThe former Sarah Ferguson
The choir of Southern High
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
cium intialce," siUd Dr. Gary C. ety of the Four Arts during a visit drew criticism before and after her
AP
Science
Writer
Curhan of.Harvard School of l!ub- to Florida on Wednesday.
sep!lfation from Andrew a year
Schoo!. will ~t lhe dinner lhe- BOSTON Doc •
The-Eastern High School alumni
· I' H atlh "P 1
''Thil World iti 110w mpidly"van- ' ··aao. butiiOIIC 10 heated u when COIIIIIiJJIIInB
atre, Made 10 the U.S.A.," on
Clllll111illec is c:urreotly
.
. tors tradition- . IC e
.
eop e mar actually ishlng, and I am certain thai artists tabloids published piclures of her
April 10 at 6 p.m. at the high al adVI&lt;:t
making
pbim
for the 1993 alumni
for kidney stono sufferers be at in_creased risk o forming could use !heir talents to convey a topless; smooching with her
sehool.
.
banquet
to
be
held June 12 at the
to avo1d calcium may do more stones" 1fthey do that.
sense of anxiety."
"financial adviser" while her two
Tickets are available now and
high
school.
harm than_ Rood- A study suggests
About one in 10. Americans get
. The prince, who also showed small daughters played nearby.
.lhe cost is $4 for adults or $2 for calcium-ncb
Any alumni not contacted wilhfoods
actually
ward
stones
al
some
time
during
their
shdes
of artwork that went
The 33-year-i&gt;ld duchess said in
studenl$1childrCn.
off stones rather than cause them.
lives. The condition is two to three
in
the
five years should contact
For
h · ·
·
·
unS&lt;;alhed !n a fue at Windsor Cas
_ - ·an interview in today's The Sun Brian past
Collins
at 985-3593, Julie
. at 6 p.m. ·
years,to pSlea'
ys1c1ans
have tunes more common 1n men than in ''"
""'"de
f the w01'.1d wIde that her hUS band IS
. ..great. He•S
The dinner will begiD
urged victims
clear of milk women.
""• IS r
- - n1 0
Elberfeld Dillon at 992-2006 or
and the menu includes spaghetti, and other dairy foo(ls to. keep
While the study was conducted Fund for Nature.
my best friend. We are the parents Leonard Koenig at 992-9918.
col~~~-::::~~re- stones from returning. The recom- entirely on men, Curhan believes NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) _ · ~~~ ::::~~~~ c!=:
sentation, scheduled to begin •t 7 menda_lion made sense, because the findings should apply equally One of country music's most ful friend to me."
p.m., will feature selections from ~ost kidney siOnes are largely cal- 10 women. In fact, women have ~.amous. fans, Geor~B- ush, is_lendThe Sun, one of lhe tabloids !hat
·•- B'
c1um.
even more reason to consume lots
h
Tile rear or revolt
u"' 1g Band era, songs or the SilHowever, a lar&amp;e new study of calcium, because it also reduced mg IS name to a c ty aucllon.
ptinted the topless pictures, prevee Screen, as well as pop, country round that just the opposite. Men their risk of bone fractures.
A guitar autographed by the for- dieted lhe royal couple wiD divorce
The Sedition Act, which was the
fourth and last of the AUen and Sediand jazz tunes.
~ho get lots of calcium in their
Corban's work was based on the mer president in 1991, when he and in a year or so.
tion Acts, was passed on July 14 1798
The~ublic is encouraged to diets bave a one-third lower risk of Health Professionals Follow-up his wife attended the Country
-,
·
d
h tones than do 111
Music Association awards show, is
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) It allowed for the arrest and i~pris:
attend e event an support t e ~ium
.
ose who consume Study, a review of the health ~its being auctioned by Fender Music Billy Ray Cyrus, Al-an Jackson, onment or any person who tried to
musical JIOgram at Southern Local
"Thespannlgly. .
.
of 4 5,~ 1 9 male denusts, Instruments and Opryland .USA. Vince Gill, Lorrie Morgan, Kalhy impede the lawful processes of gov
whicb is under the direction of
mportant message IS that optometrists, os~, pharma- Twenty country music stars also Mauea and Alabama are among the ernment or foment insurrection. 1
Melissa StewarL
~:~e~~~ ~~tv!s~~ ~~~ic~ CISts, podiatrists veterinarians. signed the guitar, including Garth performers who will entertain at also forbade citizens from writing
publishing, or uttering any false o
malicious statement about the presi
dent, Congress or government of thl
United States.
The Board of Trustees of the income tax would always grow, a there will be no equalization funds · vices assistant She is responsible
Ohio Valley Area Librarfes formula was agreed on that for 1993. These funds should return for maintaining the computer net(OVAL) held their regular meeting pumped mOlt "of the increases into in 1994, and restore the progress works in six of the member
at System Headquarters in Weii- a fund to be used to equalize the OVAL MCIJ!bers had been making libraries. The training, to be profundin&amp; of poorer libraries. The to reach panty with lhe rest of the vided in Calumbus will increase
SIOII 011 March 18.
.
'
Direcior Eric , S. Anderson eq_uarization formula was working state.
her ability 10 manage the networlcs
reported that there had been mtracles through 1990. OVAL
The truth of the matter, even in the member libraries.
A Contract with Lilho IntemaMarcb 27, 1993
tremendous suJ!::.c:.'' to restore memben rose from receiving 50 though funding will be slightly
OVAL funding
area legisla- percent of the dollars provided to increased, is !hat OVAL members tiona!, or Columbus was approved
tors. Service users have been libraries across lhe state to 76 per- will drop to 71 pen:ent under lhe . for the printing of the Spring Books
swampiDI! Columbus with letters: cent in c:omparison.
5.7 pezcent plan. This is 1 pezcent By Mail catalog. Distribution of the
In 1990 lhe governor froze the below funding levels under the catalog is scheduled to begin in
Although lhe governor is desori~
ing the OVAL budaet as a 2 per- fund, providing no more dollars. freeze and 5 percent less than 1990. May.
cent
!hat rlgiiRl is based This ol counc wiped out equaliza- If lhe 6.3 percent level is not maiDOVAL is the only state funded
on the IS pon:elllCUL In teality this tion and in .two short yean, OVAL tained, lhe poorer libraries will lose regional library system in Ohio. It
means mainllining the cuts members had dropped to 72 per- any bope of obtairilng equali~y with serves lhe citizens and libraries of
impoacd laSt July. .
ccut of lhe funding provided to the lhc funding levels provided to the Athens, . Hocking, Jackson,
The board also diScussed the rest of the state. All the advanus, restoflhe state.
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
impact of thc ~vanor·s Jll'llll08ed aU the improvements, and all of the
The board also discussed the Sciold, and Vinton counties with
reducti011 of public Ubrary fnxn 6.3 parity eqnaliqtion was bringing to petition campaign, sponsored by programs of services developed by
percent to · s. 7 percent of the lhe citizens or 11011them Ohio came the Ohio Library Council. Numer- those libraries,
,
tneome tax. The govanordoes pro- to a screeching halL · .
ous si~ures wen: collected in the
Wanda Eblin serves on the
vjde for a lli&amp;ht dollar increaae for
The •ovcmor's 5.7 percent pro- counues 10 s\~Ppon the request to OV1\L Board as a representative of
each library, but wipes out the posal wtll provide an average of rc-inltate funding 10 lhe 63 percent the Meigs County Public Library.
eqnaJI:rJUilliJ component of libnuy $17,000 more to each library ln formula
,...
.
I
1993. If the 6.3 pen:enl figure is
In other business, Anderson outLEGAL MIITIC!
publle libraries tnded · mai•tained, it will
OVAL lined plans for lhe celebration of
Thei'IJ:kUtiliNsCommissionolr:olo
Intangible• funding, a tu on member fundin&amp; by an average of OVAL's 20th binhday. The event,
Photo and Frame with any HaUmark purrhast
has set tor public hearing Case No. 93wealth, for an equal share of the $60,000. Becanae ol the freeze, if planned for April 8, will recognize
• • •••• •••• ••••• • ••
02-EL-EFC, to re¥iuw tho lual
Income tax:.Becw1e -from the 6.3 percent formula Is retilned lhe twenty years of service OVAL
Came
see what's happening for Easter at Hallmark!
procucamant practices and policies of
has provided to the citizens of
Columbus Southam Power Company,
Soulhem Ohio. Member lrustees,
Piclures taken 12 noon til5:00 p.m. only.
pest .00 Jnl'elll, bave been invited
the operation of Its Electric Fuel
to ~ evenL Area legislators bave
Component. aroel related matters. This
also qrecd to lllll:ad.
hearing Is scheduled to beglll at the
RoXIe
Underwood,
represendn_g
Commission offices at 10:00 a.m. on
Alllllllrililllllf-belp CQIIII will
tie offered 11 tile Mol~ County
liy lhe Anbrilil Foun- 11WJacboll CitJ Ubrary and chair
Marcll30, 1993.
H'1dl .,.,.,._eat iii Pomeroy d•t!on,
001111e ~ a .-iety of the Peraonnel Committee,
z I 1 • ApdJ 7.
or toplca. PuiiiJ members arc repc1111d 011 tbelr me lLJ&amp; .tier in
Mlnterastlcf parties will be given an
Olllneld CHpOII· ant:OIIriiDd Ill llilld. . . Ibllie .. thc ...... DircciOr AndeiDI had opportunlly to be heard. Furthat
~u:
D1: ....,Ill, no ..... COill1e w111 .. hold aa broUJht a wide ranae of luues, lnlorm1Hon may be o~lalned by ·
nrc 11 .- Oblo fl~~t
1:30 111 3:30 from CJw 1 ID lhe PaiUtltldl PoU- contldingthtiCommlaslanii·IPOeut
Ullv It) l'o!'•• CJI 0 II ~;., pJD. IIIII 1Uidly fftllll 1:30 C'/ 111 lllaiel and bonolill, 10 the
27 Ohio River Plaza
•"-don at tile canmlaee. No rec- BrQid Strael. caurnbus. Ohlo4S
............. tile Arlkida
- Ill 3:30p.m.
Gelllp~lla. Ohio~~
0573.
dei!M 'l1le loalla CJI ... tel
II
~ b l h e - II otlllllallllllk wiD be f*CN!ded by
(81 4) 448-7330
oa ..lf-muq.... t for people eeceuary It eidler llli Health tile collmiueo until their May
,
willa ardldli1. lafonalliOD ud
1J9Ua, • 1111 0111o m a'l~
THE
PUBLIC
UTILITIES
'l1lo ._.. IJIPftlued lddldoaal COMMISSION OF OHIO By: Gary E.
ltlllt IIICOMIIrJ I• ..... wldl
lilY Olleope.Wc Wedlcal
NOVBLL 011111pattt niiiiBI'for
atlldlll wll a. oo•• • • _.,_ 0 1 , m.-2511.
Vlgorfm, Seallafy.
ltml Bowlilll, Netwcaldq Ser·
1111111 . . dlelt ....... lid

Ann
Landers

Porbmouth Clay; Bruce Lannlna. llcmlotk
MIIW; Chad R.uaell, Latham Wcstcrm.
J.J. Hunt, StraaburJ·Fnnklin; Clint
l'lukaridl, Fo.opmt Lal&lt;dlft&lt;l; Eric MtCul&lt;hoon,

felder, Soulhiilatm O.llker. Todd Fkze, McDon-

onds.
He said his biggest regret this
season was that he wouldn't be
making a return trip to St. John
Arena.
"You're always out 10 win your
last game. But !here won't be any
'state championship for me and now
the reality of that is setting in," he ••
said. ·
Ford ·is ~ a good student He
has had a 4.0 grade-point avemge
every grading period his senior
year and holds a 3.0 cumulative
GPA.
The elder Ford admitted he was
biased in favorite of the best player
he ever coached;
"I'm not saying he's in the
same category, but I look at
(Duke's) Bobby Hurley and him.
He's a lot like Hurley. You know,
Hurley's not pretty but he just gets
the job done,'' he said.
Ford will receive a plaque from
the AP and the Ohio AP Sports
Writers Association. ·

Thursday, March 25, 1993

Brian Gu.u.k, North Bahimare; Tim Oepinea.

Cambridge's Ford Ohio's, Mr. Basketball
on that stuff about who is No. I."
Ford, an Ohio University signee,
was selected for the honor in balloting by a state media panel. He
beat out Cincinnati Woodward's
Damon Flint, Hamilton's Chris
Kingsbury, Kevin Kovach of SlOw
and Rob Wdch of Haviland Wayne
Trace. Flint is headed to Ohio
State, Kingsbury to Iowa, Kovach
is undecided about his college
choice and Welch is going to
Wright State.
Cambridge lost in the ~gional
tournament last week, co~ng Ford
another shot ill the state tournament. Last year, Ford carried the
Bobcats to the Division II semifinals. He scored 22 points - hitting
4 of 9 lhree-pointers and both free
throws · - and added three
rebounds and four assists in a full
32 minuu:s. But Cambridge last to
eventual state champion Cleveland
Villa Angela-SL Joseph 58-57 0n a
blocked shot in the closing sec-

The Daily Sentinel

New lliead; B"' IWl. F""""" SL I&lt;Seph: lloua

Rlrcltc. Columbiana.

His father, Gene, was also his
By RUSTY MILLER
coach.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) "Our announcer said it best:
Cambridge's Geno. Ford, who
proved that someone of below- 'How would you like to be an
average hciKht can still dominate a opposing coach anci watch Camhigh scboof baskclball game, was bridge come out to warm up and
chosen today as lhe sixth winner or try to pick out lhe guy who scored
The Associated Press' Mr. Basket- all those points? He won't find
ball award, emblematic of lhe best him,"' Gene Ford said.
Ford finished his career with
player in Ohio.
2,680
points, second highest allFord, listed at 5-foot-9.• ended
time
among
Ohio schoolboys. Only
his career u the second-leading
Jay
Burson
of New Concord John
boys acorer ever in the state. He
•veraged 35.9 points a game this Glenn, with 2,958 points, had
seasoo and added 4.5 rebounds and more.
Ford was asked if he would fit
4.5 assisls per game.
He was a basketball player who the description of a Mr. Basketball,
if he could follow in lhe footsteps
didn't look like one.
"The good thing about it, it's of two-time winners Jim Jackson
not all athleticism," Ford said with and Greg Simpson, and Bob Patton
a laugh. "The main thing is I gave Jr.
"I'm not sure I'd ever be coneffort. I think I did a good job
sidered
the single best player in
bein&amp; a· leader. I feel as if I'm an
Ohio.
But
my teams bave always
overachiever. I think I .do more
been
successful,"
he said. "It's a
than most ·5-7 guys who can't
team
game,
and
I
don't
get hung up
jump."

.

Meigs property transfers posted

Names in the news---

'·'

.
.
AMONG TOP THREE - The Syracuse firth-grade boys' basketbaU leam worked three top-three fmisbes lnto.its 14-4 record this
season. ne Raiders won the Southern tournament, took second In
the Syracuse and Rutland tournaments and placed fourth ID the
Eastern tournament. In front are (L-R) Luke Grueser, Douuie Prorfitt and Adam Cumings. Standing teammates are Derek Warden,
Russell Reiber, Ryan Nease aDd Joshua Davis. BehiDd them are
coaches Ray Proff'dt and Rex CumiDgs.
.

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Plans underway

.

111-1-

Sale Prices Good

Study Concludes Calcl·u·m
Pvnvents k·z·dney stones

OVAL trustees discuss library funding

Jr. High Rings also available.

POMEROY

Choir to present
dinner theatre

ONLY

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!fu{[ !JfJJllmartsfwp

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Health department offers
an arthritis self-help course
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----

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�• Page

--• ••·•.....·•.
•• •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

B The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, March 25, 1993 .

Community calef!.dar

- ·~=========
• '·
Community Calendar items at 7 p.m. in the high school cafete• appear two days before au ev~ot

GOOD SERVICE IS
OURIUL

•

and the day or that event. ltems
must be received weU in ad vance
: · to assure publication in the cal·
•. . . .•. ..endar.

•

ria.

-·.

THURSI)AY
• POMEROY • The Pomero y
-youth Baseball League will hold
sign-ups on Monday and Thursday
: from 5:30·8 p.m. at Pomeroy Elcme~tary. Prices are $12 per child,
. not to exceed S25 per family. First
· ·· lime players will need ~o bring a
: · :'1iirth certificate.
: :.. · POMEROY • The ComiiUinity
~
Lenten. Service for the Meigs Min'isterial 1\ssociation will be at St.
. " ··Paul Lutfleran Church in Pomel'!lY
: on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Rev .
. Walter Heinz of Sacred Heart
: - Catholic Church will be preaching.
•

CHESTER - Chester Baseball
(\ssociation will hold sign-ups for
the 1993 baseball and softball seasons on Thursday from 6-8 p.m.
and satwday from I 0 a.m. to noon
• at Chester Elementary. Registration
is $15 per player. Anyone who did
• not participate last year will need a
copy of their birth cenificate.

MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a dance Friday from 7-11 p.m. at
the American Legion Annex in
Middleport with music by George
Hall.
.
POMEROY • Revival at Cal·
vary Pilgrim Chapel on Route 143
will be Friday through April 4 at
7:30p.m. nightly with Rev. Amos
Tillis and Rev. Bill and Naomi
Tillis, evangelist and singers. Rev.
Victor Roush, pastor, invites the
public.
RUTLAND - Rutl and Youth ·
League will hold an organizational
meeting Friday at 6 p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center for anyone inter•
ested in helping with the 1993 season.
SATURDAY
POMEROY • Darren Smith ,
with guest. Crystal Powell, will
present a gospel concen on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church near
Pomeroy. Call Pastor Pete Tremblay at 992~ 5326 for information.

RUTLAND - Rutland Youth
POMEROY - Free clothing day League will hold its third sign-up
• will be held at Tbe Salvation Anny for the 1993 baseball season on
: _ :pn Thursday from lO a.m. to noon. Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the
•• ~I area residents in need of cloth- Rutland Civic center. Anyone who
,":
did not participate last year will
.., •1ng
... are welcome.
.
neet to provide a copy of their birth
;~;:· RACINE • Racine American certificate. Registration is $10 per
.·: Legion Auxiliary will meet Thurs- child, not 10 exceed $25 per family.
::::liaY at 7 p.m. atthe .legion ha!l.
'
ROCK SPRINGS - The Shade
=~: REEDSVILLE o The Riverview Valley 4-H Club is sponsoring a
•::.·:Oarden Club will meet Thursday at beef hoof trimming Saturday at 9
:-~·:7:30p.m. at the Reedsville Church a.m. at the Meigs County Fair: ;:pf Christ. Easter favors will be grounds. For more information and
: •: made for residents of the Arcadia an appoinunem, call667-6535.
.•:•Nursing Center. Marilyn Hannum
. :: ' ~ Nola Young are hostesses.
· RUTLAND - There will be a
••
dance · at the Rutland American
:·:~ ; .TIJPPERS PLAINS· The Tup- Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
:::: pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 p.m. to midnight. Music will be
.:;_ : will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. provided by Pure Country Hand.
• "Members are urged to auend.
Pnblic invited.

...
. ...

· ..:.

1·

~

...

. . POMEROY - The Pomeroy
· Group of AA will m'eet Thursday at
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church . Call 992-5763 for information.
. POMEROY • The regular meeting of the Meigs County Library
Board will be Thursday at I p.m. at
the library in Pomeroy.
,'
RU'ILAND - The Meigs County
; , Women's Fellowship will hold its
' ' monthly meeting Thursday at 7:30
• • p.m. at the Rutland Church of
~ ChrisL Bring a bOok for the book
~xchange. Marge Purtell .will be
;: guest speaker. Everyone invited.

'·•.

MIDDLEPORT • Judy Dixon
'· will instruct a ceramic yard rabbit
• class in three session beginning
~ Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Middleport Arts Council Building on
North Second Street. The cost is
·• $18. Cal1992-5948 or992-7733 .

'·'·
'·

.
FRIDAY
: . ~ .. LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
and local singers. Public invited.
Fellowship will follow.

.. ..

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxi liary will sponsor a
round and square dance on Friday
from 8· 11 :30 p.m. with music by
CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
Red Carr and Melvin Cross will be
• . callers. Everyone welcome.

.... •'

'

• - RACINE · A group of 40 junior
•-aAd senior high students from the
:- ;:J"olcdo area will present a program
·: on drugs at Southern High School
:: on Friday from 1:15-2: 15 p.m. The
·: program is open 10 the public.
•
RIPLEY, W.VA. - The Liberty
: Mountaineers will perform Friday
: at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
·: · ~ REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
: ~ 6 thlctic Boosters will meet Friday
• •
0 ••

·classmates
meet in Mason
: The Ageless Classmates of
,. W.H.S. met on March 2 at the
Mason Family Restaurant in

'• Mason.

POMEROY • There will be a
teen talent show at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday at 7 p.m.

EASTERN CHEERLEADERS HONORED- Traq Murpby,
right, claimed tbe Moo Oulli'ta..tmg Clleerladiag Award and the
Most Creative Award, wllile Missy .H arris eal'lltd Most Spirited.
Michelle Murphy, who was ill, earned M05t Improved bouors.

Study: Woolly mammoths survived
~,000 years longer than thought
By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK - A population
of woolly mammoths survived
some 6,000 years afler the beasts
were thought to be extinct, roaming
an island northwest of Alaska even
as the Sphinx was being built in
Egypt, a new study says.
The discovery is "one of the
most extraordinary fossil finds of
recent times," one expert said.
The beasts, oddly enough, may
have been mini"rnamrnoths.
Twenty-nine teeth and tooth
fragments from mammolhs oo Russia's Wrangel Island in the Arctic
Ocean were found to be as young
as about 4,000 years, Russian
researchers say in Thursday's issue
of the journal Nature. Tusk and
bone samples were only about
3,700 years old, the researchers
said.
. Mammoths were gener;~lly
thought to have beeome extinct
around 10,000 years ago, although
some reports estimated 7,000 years
ago.

ligbt on the debate over whether
tbc mainland mammoths were
extenllinatecl by humans or environmental change, said study coauthor Andrei Sher of the Severrsov lnstituJe of Evolutionary
Animal MaqJhology .and Ecology.
part of tbe Russian Academy of
Sciences in Moscow•
1be 1D3J!11Dals apparently sur·
viw:d becN•se the island Jli'OVided a
suitable plant diet that had disappealed elsewhere, resean:bers said.
1be u:etb show that they were
smaller than the weB-known prehistoric wooUy mammoth, which
ranged widely through the North·
em Hemisphere tnl stood about I0

feet tall at the shoulder.
"That the remains in question
should Jtpcs::ad lhllt ultimate paleontological paradox - a population of dwarfed mammoths- further conspires to make the disco~­
eries ... one of the most extraonlifossil finds of recent times."
~in a Nature ediiOrial.

SUP!:RIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Diesel Supreme ... Try It, there Is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel In winter tlnie.

To place an ad .

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuooday Paper

Call992-2156 ·
MoN. thru FRI.

8.t.M.~5P.M ••

SAT.S-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

1:00 pJII. So!Wday
l:OOp.m. Monday
l:OOp.m. Tuooday
.
1:00 p.m. Weq,e.day
lOOp.m. Thuroday
t:OO p.m. Friday

Thuroday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

3674'

!192-lllddleport/

ro....,

'n

I

985

381-VIIItoa

n

576-APfleG!'OYe

1143-Portload

. 77...11.-oa

:,ZS6-Gayaa Dlot.

247-l.otaJt , ...

882-NewBaYen

643-.b.W. Dlot.

949-Lciae

3 79-'II'olllllt

742-Kotlaold

895-l.otart
937-Llfolo

667-Coohtlo

'Days

Words

BOARD

1
3
6
10

15
15'
15
15
15

Monthly

4:30 P. M. DAY BEfORE
PUBLICATION

L

· ln Memory

2

BRET ALLEN ROOD
Mlly 16, 1971 •
March 25, 1990
Three y. . .. IIQO tocl8f,
Gad gwe
the

u•

PubliC Notice

•INitgUt 10 ,_nand
couroge to lei you go .
But wltlll It me.-ol 10

VAllES

toea you oome tllll

n""er tcnow.

They say lime hula all
•ornno and hMpa ua
to forget,
But 11- 10 far h• only
proved how much -

mt.. youyel
To oo- you 1lliiY be
forgotten, to olhen'
lu•t potrt of the put.
To ua who loved you

,_,...,./
0

2

IU Jill!

1111:J&amp;cs its' 7 '!

TAN~./
?16'\•

TANDY

0-*IN/
I' 11 IMI . , ,
lfiA"f/llftll .

13MIIz!WIIX!.
107MB IIMrl tlrlwl/
t110 w'JtatJtMsJ

'

' '
,...

f

as sweet at
16 as you were .
at 2 day•.
Happy Jlirthday!
,
Lorle,
DadandMom

and tool you, your
memory will alwaya
•••t .
It broke our h - 10
to•• you, bul you did
not go alone,
A part of - went with
you 1M dlly Gad
cMied you home.
SadlymlaMCiby

Paronle, GrandpiiJWlll,
Aunta,uncl.. and
Coualne.

BUSINESS CLASS

VALUE PERFORMER

FOR THE FAMILY

94t·2398or
1·100..137-1460

l_.,,._.

11«/1111 .r&gt;I'C mt/IIIIIIIB,
7,..,,._
lJ
I

Power computing at an affordable price! Acceteraled
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Get started with the included library of multimedia

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,, ....:rrlntl"inll

Fwtillzlng, W I ling, •d '

than some 486SX PCs! Grab the mouse and gat busy~
MS Works is already instalfed . Take advantage or this
fast 386SX F'C priced to go as fast as its CPU! 125·1&amp;23

Shrub lind Trw
.. Aenlo)lal

Rtlldlnltll &amp;" COIIIIMftllal·
FI'ME..IrNIM

RAEWOOO FOR SALE

.....

. •••1011. . . .

.__ Mowing,

881/ffzf,., .fll/111 , .
IR M lllfiii'IM!I ,_,PC

JOE I. UYIE
SAYII
614·742·21

. , ,. iilidili ;;

.,.

''2"IIIU

IArf , _ on 1 VGft moni!Of wnen purchaSed wtm ltle
a bo~e

system, Ref . ..parat1 bma iltl.liO f25 -1623/W5

·-10101111-1 Rill

P

sprtn,rt....

·.,..,.e,.l

orVIM

·1419 State RL 7

fl

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

~

Reg . _,.,_ • ...,.. 12tt.IO f25·1823(4047

MIDDLEPORT - Rev . John
Haley will preach at the Middleport
Community Church Sunday at 7:30
p.m. There will also be spec ial
singing . Public invited.

,_

7&amp;11

614 -446-0 736

•••

IJIAI Add an SVGA monilot' for super-clew graphics,

S•odgrass Upholst•ry
"Htlplng Yoa To Recorn- Yoar lnNIIRwnf'
. Church, Home, Truck, flo.t, Auto
1nd OffiCe Selltlng

UCIII,OHIO
614·949·2202
- 61

All HARDWOOD
'
SeaMntd
$40.00 a Load
,DtiiYtrttl.
(614) "2-5449·
1&amp;01112Mn

U4llollllltoatlll~

llf'IJII\01111 . .

,·,
'

With over 6600 !J&gt;cations
nationwide, Radio Shack Is
* 1 In electronics

,... ____..........
......... ...

IIJn's •lldl SJIID ,_

•

..,.-IIIIJI---

,.,.,_t:llld' 'fOIJI phD/11- • Prices

at fllrlicipatlng stores and dealers

·· ·

I

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) J43·5264 1120111311in

AVAILABLE.

SEPnC SYSTEMS,
· HOllE SITES ond
TRAILER' SITES,

LANDCLEARING,
FREE ESnMATES

992·7553

992-3838

:11251131 1

Ho..-d L Writesel

ROOFING .

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREEESnMATES

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING ·
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698
.312511 mo.

•UGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD

Bill SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

•regardless of income
·regardless of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of creel"
To collect your scholarship money
call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-7 or Sat. 1G-4

HOWELL'S
BOOIIEEPIIIG
&amp; JAI IIIVICI

Vloa ..

Quarterly and

Year-end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES

31111 mo.

D. A. BOSTON

EXCAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628
3-8-13 1

:in•

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Jeanie.Howell, EA
NOTARY

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

--c...

ShaCie River Saddle Shop

PHONE 992·7036

949•2168 .
3,16-ts-tfn

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all c liege bound students.

' 6111'112/t

fOIIEIOY, 01. •

36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
.
3l8llfn

. BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ~
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIQENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

mo. pd.

UCINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SNOOTS SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

614·992·7643
(No

SvtMiar Calls)
21121921tfn

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

·2 Fro•t Struts • L••or
• 4 Whool AliJI•Ment
Prices Stort•nt ..
1

RIC IICIVIniG
IULLDOZING

129.95 +Tax

PONDS

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVICE

1001

BARN

tt24S77

UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
.
HOMESITE&amp;
HAUUNG:

36910IDIR•R...
Po..-.y, OltiD

IUY • .Ll • TUII
117 I. WSt.
-~...... a.JD
.............5100
....,._, IN0-6100
CIDseiii•••IJ

SIZED UMESTOtl

NOW OFFEIII&amp;......
OIL AND LPIE SERVICE
nRE IEPAII AID IOTATIH

OWNER:

-

JeH Wkk••••111

3-11-t3

1/24.191/1 .. jltl

•

lll*••motlllltl•

•

......... tor April

i

~=mnl
..., ... 1. . . .
llolllit:l llllto

llalpAiwlllll
Ana DIJI!oo, P. 0.
lox II, Mlllllapoll;

C•ll u..ror more lnfotlllltlon

OllloW.,

-~11U

'

"

KELLER'S CUSTOM
.BENDING
47269 St. Rt. 241 • I Y. Mile OH It, 7
n ... c...,., •• 11. 241
PH. 614·915·3949

992·3470

We will NOW..,. c~
6 morithl to 12 YIJII'I of • ·

.

· Box 189

Gllljipolla

AI114IMIIICIII.. 0,.1111 ef ...lr
llt.lt/IM•r ,.,. ..

.,..,,,,
'
·~~····· .....
_,

only)

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK

lUllS

lalildllg for IIUIIiort

NOBODY CGMPAIIESI

plu~' (by

•PP'·

3-4-83-1 '

priJ!7MIS. 125-11150
_...,Add WI SVOA mcritor lor_, bet1er graPhic$
and.......,.., .............. """ 23tl.t5 t25-1tso.f~ 7

Aufo.Batab

7111 ..

work•

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

POIIIII'oy, Olilo

LIMESTONE·TRUCKING

'

WoAitolltw

ywr
homeGI"' '

Approx . 4 mllea Noi1h of -G alfipofl•
and 4 mil• South of Cheahtre lo
Addison. Turn off St. Rl . 7 onto
Addison Pike. BOdy shop approx. 2

992-6215

'25110UR

REMOVAl

HAULING

. LIMISIOIE,
GRAVEL &amp; COIL

&lt;Om&lt;lo

· Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

111M and

LAWN
MAIIIIEIIANCE

w~will

I

TURN HERE

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accidenr •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

REASONABLE RATES

&amp;DEE

.

/Call"'!

.........

Aeft.Uud

..... ,_hot etfloo
217Lieca••"·
MMI'MY,OHIO

SMAU DOZER
DRIVEWAY WORK
IIIIIWIESTONE
. DRIVERY SERVICE

I*·

PubliC Notice

N...t"'

992-5335 Or
915·3561

CHARLIE'S

~

Cal814-11112·7104 for

Welcome, Ft&gt;er Gla• Woric, ~lote Rtpoiring &amp;
Refinishing, Foama Straightening, Custom
Sancllla!lling, Martin Stnour Mixing Sys1em

li~J ..
lEN'S IPPUAICE
SERVICE

Rates are Cor consecutive runs, broken up days will be
chaiged for each day as separate ads.

oan D buJ VOIY nlco holM on 311 aaoo In
- · · 4 8R, I bollia, 2 ga-Ogoo, oonlod 1
BR opt P - - 4,800 oq.,lt 111m
bldg.

Monday-FrldaJ::oo.s:oo
. WOik, Ins. WOik

Co~erized E!llillllltS,

Ill liliES
lrillaltiROrWe

Rate Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00 .
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
$1.30/day - $.05/day

I ' 0
I
ltU-.II MUOO llld
-omountft......,
of up ..
of purcltUe
- ... poulblo tor ..,rltylng

Tht price

367-7444 • 446·6644
1·100·926-2032 tO•io O•IJ)

MICROWAVE OVEN
•II VCI lENlR

·.

POMEROY · Proclaim, a drama
and singing group from Cincinnati
Bible College, will present a program at the Pomeroy Church of·
Christ on Sunday at 7 p.m. The
concert is free to the public .

BASHAN . The Bashan Ladies
Auxiliary will have a smorgasbord
dinner Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. at the Bashan Firehouse. The
menu con sists of two kind s of
meat, mashed potatoes and gravy .
homemade noodles, green beans,
slaw, dressing, desserts and drinks.
Costs arc $4.50 fofadults and $2
for children under 12.

458-l..oa

•r

CARPENTER SERVICE

SIZED UMESTONE ·
FOR SAlE
Call614-992· ·
6637
St. lt. 7
c....ire,

In Memory of

LOTTRIDGE · The Bashan .
Ladies Auxiliary will have a smorgasbord dinner Sunday from II
a.m. 10 2 p.m. at the Bashan Firehouse. The menu consists of two
kinds of meat, mashed potatoes and
gravy, homemade noodles, green
beans, slaw, dressing, desserts and
drinks . Costs are $4.50 for adults
and $2 for children under 12.

POMEROY - Country -western
line dancing classes will be offered
at Pomeroy Village Hall Auditori·
urn on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. Donation is $2.50. Ca ll 992-7853 or
949-2455 for information.

Quality
Stone Co.

67S-I\. Pt-t

24$-llloC.......

I '

MILLFIELD - Benefit music
show, Saturday, 7-11 p.m., Russell
Building in Millfield.

SUNDAY
REEDSVILLE · Gre gory
Lynnhart will present a seminar on
"New Age" on Sunday at 7 p.m. at
the Fe llo wship Church of the
Nazarene. Rev. John Douglas
invites the public.

YOUNG'S

G.Wa Colllllf Melp Counly M....,. Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
~olllpolt.

'

IAJUlY'S BODY SHOP
~~· AMU.11 Pllr• •O.U. . . Ia, OS. 41.,1

milnon

follouinB telephone e%claonge1•••

OASSD'It:PS
GET
• J'Ail'f

BOStON (AP) - A breath of fa~g~e. troubl_e concentrating and
fresh air appears to be no cure for llrtlatlon of skin and mucous .mern" sick building syndrome."
. branes. 11\ese woes occur at work
Experts have long recommend· but clear UIJ w_hen peopje are away
ed that building engineers add from the b~ildings.
.
more outside air to heating and air
. A_ccordmg to .o~e esumate, 10
conditioning systems to combat mtlhon to 25 mtl_h~n workers tn
this CQJDmon problem. But a new 800,000 t~? 1.-2 milhon U.S . comstudy concludes there is no reas6n mereta! buildings bave symptoms.
to think this helps.
To test whether more outside air
Sick building syndrome is a resolves ~e p~ble~, ~archers
common complaint among people from M~Gill Unt~fSlly m_Mo~~­
who work in modem office build- · a1 expenmented wtth.the 1111' mtx m
ings. Victims suffer headaches, four buildings whery workers com·
plained of the symptoms.

.

Cloi.ified prJ6e• c011er .ehe

••cl

-..n..

1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thN MAY 31ST
Special farm term. with payment 4.tlmea e year
end NO INTEREST or RNANCE CHARGE
Larry E. Miller
1-800-598-5654
614 446 1157

DAY BEIQRE PUBLICATION

Wednadayl'aper '

ru:. ••t

• Ada o•taid• the couty you..r ad
M pr:epaid
• Rq .. cli.coulfor .U paiclla ad...allle ..
• Fno Ado: Gi--y
Fo•ocl ado 15 ""rclo wilt be
no3darootoochup.
.
· • PrMe of ad for aU capitalletlen .. double price of ad eo~t
• 7 polntliae type oaly ......
• S.tiael ilaat n~pouihla for ~n after f1nt day (check
for, orrora lint day ad l'llltl ill popu). Call before 2:00p.m.
day •fler ptaltlic•tioa to aab eorr.lio•
·
• Ad. tha~ ••t he pUd madftllee an:
C.nl of Tlooab
Happy Ada
lo
Yon! SU.. ,
• A duoitood od•. . - , ploced ill iloo c.tlpolo Doily
Tril&gt;oae (aeept Cluolfled Dioploy, B....._ Card or Lepl
Noticoo) willoloo app0u ito lito Poillt Plouoat ftaiiotor aocl
... Doll): S...tillel, ........ Oftr 18,000 tto...

Outdoor air fails to cure
sick building syndrome

MILLFIELD - Round and
square dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
Russell Building, Millfield.· Music
will be by Out of the Blue.

•

nA~

KANAUGA - The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Satur'
day at the D.A.V. Center in Kanauga.

'
A de¥otional period was conducCOOLVILLE - There will be a
. ted by Sylvia Sayre and Charlene
hunters
safety course for turkey
Fry read two poems entitled "Two
hunting
on
Sunday from noon to 5
Days Not 10 Worry" and "Forgivep.m.
at
the
Coolville Fire House.
. ·.ness." Peggy Edwards held a brief
For
information,
or to register, call
·. ' liusiness meeting.
Bob
Pullins,
667-3831;
Ed Rood,
Those attending were Pat Al667·6348;
or
Ed
Wigal,
667-6657.
·lensworlh, Betty Russell, Shirley
Tucker, Bernice Clarice, Shirley
REEDSVILLE - The Con·
Sullivan, Charlene Fry, Sylvia
querors
will perform at the
Sayre, Bernice Smith, Emma Lee
Reedsville
United Methodist
Kearns. Pat Noel, · June Maxey,
Church
on
Sunday
at 7:30 p.m. A
eoMie Smith, Nancy Anderson,
potluck
dinner
will
precede the .
Cecile Van Matre and Peggy Ed·
program
at6
p.m.
Pnblic
invited.
wards.
· :The next meeting will be on
"An
~pril 6 at Shoney's Restaurant, • NELSONVILLE
of
Ohio
Forestry"
will
be
•Overview
Point Pleasan~ at 6 p.m.
presented
at
13
5
College
Hall
at
• All former classmates of
Hocking
College
on
Sunday
at
2
\Vahama High School are invited to p.m .
. .
anend.

,.

1be island beasts may help shed

This is the third of lhree articles · offered. it is either 1101 JeW81ding to
dealing witlt the Syndrome known them, or you bave made it too diffias Auention· Deficit Hyperactivity cult for them to earn. Teach the
Disorder. This is a syndrome char- child to reward, him/herself.
IICterized by limited anention span, Encourage positive self· UIIk suoh
poor impulse control a~d very as ;;,you did very Well remaining in
active behavior. This article will your seal during reatlirig. How do
include interventions for su~rvi· you feel about that?" This encoursion, discipline and provtding · ages the child to think positively
encouragement for the ADHD about hirn,lbenelf.
Finally, other ways you can
child.
In order to provide supervision . interv~ne positively in the ADHD
and -discipline, remain calm, state child's life is by encouraging activ·
infraction or rule, and don't argue iti.es that can be successful. These
with the studenL Have pre-estab- include mildly competitive sports
lished co'nsequences fot misbehav- such as bowling , swimming,
ior. Administer consequences karate or social activities such as
immediately and praise proper scouts or chun:h groups. Allow the
behavior frequent! y. Enforce class- child 10 play with yomtger ebildnm
room rules consiSielltly. Discipline if that is where they fit in. The
should he appropriate to "fit the child can still develop valuable
crime' without harshness. Avoid social skins from interactions with
'
ridicule and criticism. If the ADHD younger children.
If you need help in implement·
child could sit still and pay attention all .tlte time, they would. And ing any of the intei'Yentions, con·
most importantly, avoid ''publicly" tact your School PsychologisL For
reminding the child to take their more information on ADHD chi!·
dren please contact: CH.A.D.D.,
medication.
to provide encouragement, 1859 N. Pine Island Road, Suite
reward more than you punish in 18S,P~on.F1L,33322.Ifyou
order to build self-esteem. Praise desire more information on this or
immediately any and all good other school related topics, please
behavior and performance. Change contact Robert Hudak or Cheryl
rewards if not effective in motivat- Crossan at the Meigs County
ing behavior change. If a child School Board, P.O. Box 684,
never earns a reward you have Pomeroy, 45769.

NOWOI'Df!

2 . . . . .,..
... ... Off '
lt. 124

12s..aa.sUO
16hls1111$21

9f2,2417

.

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EYERniiiG UNDEIIUII

TRO
I

BUILDERS

20 Yurs ~xp•..

742·2121 '
•
:111111111

Ula1

•

�.
The Dally Sentinel Page 11
···iThi:iura~dafy~,~Ma~r~c~h!25:,~1_!993:!_
______...._______...J~~~~~~~g~l~======-r========~~~~~:;;;:~~

-- ALLEY OOP

.-

.
NEA Croisword Paa:zle

ACROSS

-

36

PHILLIP

Real Estate
Wanted

ALDER

NORTH

'"

+KQH
.A!OU
• 764

EEKANDMEEK

+8 2'
EAST
+AH

Rentals

•Q7 u ·2

NeW

. . Dodge ••d•• 4 Door,

I UMd -tumllura far Mle.

Microwave a ncrcll ablnM,
41 Houses for Rent
plo ..fo .. 2 of · · - . .
khchon ooblnol,
2 Bod!'OOIII Homo $100 Oopcsll , -•-g oo -~~-~--~ conlor 2
$200/Mo. Moln Slreel, Crown~~
~-~·~·~~-~·
.. -~~"~!::._'
Chy, Cillo 814·25G-199\ A~or 5 1.
cabl.-, :IOW7&amp;-l'IZ7.
P.M.
PICKENS RJRNITURE

lileon the
• getting through the
, ed, ge IS
express lane with more than 10 items .

1
:~:r,:::t::==:=:=:::=::::=:==~;;==;;;;::::;=::=;::==
18 Wlni8CI Do

3 Blldroom Hout• With Garag•,
Newly Dec:orat•d, Gallipolis City

HouHholdNow/Utood
tumtahlng. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Fld. Pt. Pl ....nt, WV,

llopooil, 114-446-'7821.
School
Dlllrlcl, USD Plus coll304-475-145G.
SWAIN .
to
Houoo tor R..,t. 2 or 3 bod room , AUCTION &amp; RJRNITURE. u
Wll do-·~· 304-882· Aoclno oroo, 6J4.1K12-5858.
Olivo St., Golllpclle.222701.
4081.
N- Houoo, 2 Bodroomo, Largo lumhuro, hoal.,., Woolom •

F1nanc1al

Business

21

Opportunity
!NOnCE!
CITID VAUEY PUBLISHING CO.
....... thlll: ,.... do buill..... wlll people you know •nd
HOI' lo Mi1t1 thro-e~ ,,..
II1

- - y o u , ... ln-ogotod

lho-..g.

.

, _ Vandlna !laorto: ~000 A
-.Del. 111111 nil. 1·
100111

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

·

_,... ,_,..,
~ • ..-._,~ Oot~
10,000 11llloe, ~~.-. 114-31..
:::'Wo:::;:--=:,..---cc-o--:---

) · '&gt;
lA....._'-1
w~' ~"'
Cl

1et:1 by

-

NEA.~ne.

004

Miscellaneous

P•MaonJc

Large

- ==
r.sr...

I'Hrchandlse

ao':

MlctOWIVII

'

61 Fann E qu1pment

All real aslalo advertising In
INs newspaper Is sWjecflo

the Fedefal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 Which makes I Illegal
to ac:!Venlse •any preference,

llrriallon or discrimination
based on race, cotor, religion,
.sex familial srarus or nalional
origin, or any lntenlion to

mae any sud'l prelereo:e,
Imitation or dlscrlm!nalton.•

This newspaper wllt·not
ltnowlngly aa:ept ,
adveri1Hmet1S tor real estate
wNch ls In violation of lhe
law. OUr readers are hereby

8ft. pool ta~, 3/f" ....
. e, good

-= -

•tt

111 •

-

Sh

r

nhh ...rk, Y wood ..._

·~~~~--~~
dollvorod and oolur. lor $165rno. :.~~,.':"~111 ': 1 r;:'·,:.":J ~=~~,.O.:..o:f.; ~=

C.U lor lnlor- on, IJ4.3M.
1121 Ill&lt; lor Brondo.

150, 814-411-7'153.

8- · -2

--· '
AHondo Modlum Dl"-blo 1,.. Th- WIHiol Blko Whh Bookol
-tlnonl Brlelo II In Box, $75, 1114-441-8851, rT Gorllold
44
Apartment
COol: fB5 Soli F&lt;&gt;f $80. 814-255- Avonuo, GolllpoiiL
for Rent ·
6855.
Twin lizo bookcose bed, like
Bo
..
boll
COnTo
11
$1.00;
...,L rnoftrooo lncludod1 .1140,
1 bedroOm apt, 201 s.v.nth st,
-ty
1304-875- ~~;;.midlflllot RuN! Nood Ropolr, 114-l't2·:ZUT or 81H42.:z:J...

-loci..

144Gul&lt;lorLao. .
1 hdroOm tumleMd .tflclency
1!111 uiiHIM paid, clop I rof,
po..lng. 304-1175-T713.

~~~~~~Cho~~lno~SoJ~
j 8J4.114t-2101.
Ulod 200 gallon
~

..._.__ Qd -

~-

- -··63

'

h _

...,.._

_.ock

~--::-~:"'=",...,.,,...,-

1 ..
~ ..........
_ _• .., ..
.....,
.lnolllloo Clnlr. Col .,.

1 lA

. 7 P.II.II'J4:44a • •
1.,...---'

_.,_~-;::::;-';';::~:::'"

-21111. -

11111 Ford 1'4111• PUif 1 Ton, 4
WD T1ne. Exc Jen1 lody,

Wl.. $1,100, ~---.
Ford F-100, XL 1 - ,

C)yll-.

Auto. I
N;. Pl. PS,
112,4Cf77 1111-, CIGod Condlllon,

a.---..-

-

Jon,

Five 15" tlru $10 aach; ahott

wavo radio lube typo, $50; 614-

__
.......
-- --L

982-6706.

Hoi...,d
7llli.

c-. t3'iil.

~

,.

-

-

78

.., w!n-

Unlolo, lie. CloUdo Win-

Rio

Z-21.

56

Clrondo, OH Col 114:
OWIW

•r-

puppy, 10. - · old..... ' .,.~
por, non-ohodcllng. hotl-o I
~=,....,--,,.--~-~- 1 wormod,$150. 304-QWNJ,
modlum lodloo AKC RoglllorH BMgie ,..,.,,

45

Furnished

Roome
Room tor .........~ poto, P.O. Boz
17. POIMI'Df, untO.

......... GIIIICOitJI ' I I
~ I A.a PJI. •

;;C...C.Uor.A-.:• -:-: ~~ ==;.::

n
I

5

5

....

a

For S.le: New Blue C.r Mltl $4;
London Fog eo... Slzo 12 $5.00,

Coill14-44i-1183i.

..._.

la_ap_

Want to:
PIN ctouunEXTRA

CA~H?H

For Stle~ . Tappon Mudowbrooll
Ge• Coaklng SIOVI Naturel 0r
Prop111W Slit-Up. WOfb Good,
$30, IJ4:44i-1141.

-hu•

1114
rnobllo homo 14x70
wtth h24 ap.ndo, 3 bedroom•
ol Olec., CA, lully oqulppo~
IIJtcMn., unct.rplnnlng, 2 dttch,
utrae. nc concl, mutt be

........... 304-175-2S88.
1117 Shutlz 14:~70, CIA,
J badroomt,
bet hi. .garden tub, extras,
'7n-S171.

Merchandise
Household

1 • Skyllno Holly Rldgt 14x70, 11&amp;26. 080,1J04.67JJ.2Mt.
II Me, ·2 bedrooms, AIC, m . couch, brown, aooct eoniJ.
covered porch. khchtn 111and,
llcnge · ~. undtrptnnlng,

lion. 175, 114-111---uta after

5pm.

- - 304-I7JJ.2414.
1112 oorpol sao, biZ vinyl NO.
SUnohlno1 !4xiO, booulllul
--.-loloe,3bod- Silt on aU • .,.. In ltoel Mol-

roome.

2 ._...._

gard.r~

t~b.

1o1ton - ·· IJ4:446.lll44.
~~--r. $20,850. Ali C.rpoJ I V!nyt Dn SOle. lloJ.

111:1 Narr!o 14180, 3 boc!roomo,

ol Olec, ...~ wlpotehot &amp;

ouJiildgo. UO,OOO. 304-475-2457.

~lng F&lt;&gt;f ADMI? Conoldor A
.owned Mobile ttom., l.arg•
ion, Law !lontY Down,
-Frwo SoJ.Up Ancl Dollvory. J.liGO-

-.eno.

llllu~ng
Bulldlng1

.....
.,..

an..,.,...
liN•••

114 ...........

M.SOO. 304-

--

iiiO

zx,

Pooo -

dWftlcopt&gt;

iM

•

ea•

l'or Jlon.

V011 llllorr IJ!C*"

hCh•-· *'.000 7Jite - ·

..10. $121.00. IJocll M41Uinod
"'-•
MIZ. T 1/2.
. $25.00. 1101 -

PYom Drooooo Plnil Fu!l Lonalh

l75i

While And Sltvtr Fun

Lanr.h 111 litO Coli 8J4.24i-

!25 .

.

,.

,

RIFF

..

WM'/Nm---

57

opedoi:'J

304~ Oltlo ~...-

.

P::fM:"IJGolllo
Jooboft,OH~8E8,
~,\"a..,~

UIIJ!ty !Jilt lol: . IJO'x40'11'
Pointed 81ool lkloo, Golvolultll
lllioi - · 11'11' 81ooi llldo&lt; ~·
Min Door, $5,444 Eroctod. .;.,..
~ldgo. 1.-m·1041.

Wl5l build

polio - ·

dock~

......ood , _ , JiUI .. vin'Jl!
oldlng or Troller oiilrl""' 1
241...2.
- ...
.

, t, I' I

' I -'

,I

'
I

'

11 Film &amp;qulj:a1111111 ·

"'

ASTRO·GRAPH

:

=~.~~·,..

Ron'o TV lervloo,
!n Z.n51h oJoo ..,.Icing
can•,
-ottwr brMda.
_ .._Hou..
..,.,,
... atao
wv

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

22

10 High
11 M•gazlne

......

Lillllf

22MJ

...

24-G's

18ActrRedgr..•
18 Chief

25 . . . . . 9111
27 .....

21-lw ..

6

Pass

Pass

Pass

+

...

.,
-·...,

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

what to do to make lhe relationship worlt. LIBRA (Sept 23·0cl. 23) Occasionally ,
Ma 11 $2 plus a long , sel! ·addressed, we aU feel we don 't get lhe appropriate
~ tamped envel~;&gt;pe to Matchmaker, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 4410t ·3428.

attention from those we love. Today this

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Members of
the oppos ile gender may !ind you more

hear1: on your sleeve.

auraclive than usual today. Rellstt this

alfenlion, but don't wander off lhe s~aigllt
and narrow .•An lnnocenl flirtation could get
oui ot hend.
·
GEM!NI (May 2hlune 20) 11 you alf8fllp1
10 biJy affection !oday instead of earning it,
your gesturos are li&lt;ely 10 fall flat. Saying "I
love you· ~nd sh9wlng it will have more
irnpacJ llian a material gi~.
CANCER (June 21·Ju!y 22) Be wary
today ot making unreasonable demands en
Morell 25, 11113
171e one you love. Possess•ve requests will
~ Try to better oomproheud the !oollngs and · push 171ia person away hom you inllead of
e..,.,.,.._ of you ioYtl In the year dra..;ng him or her-r to you.
ahead. 11 mlghl be neca!sary for you 10 LEO (July 2S.Aug. 22) The~e'o a posslbll~
-;,adjust your lhln5ting so yoo will bring happi- ;y lodly ...t you mlghl 111 ...._. down
w7lo WU,aiways there t o - you WherJ.
"to (lluch
bolh yourMif
and - YOf!
· hove ya1
··ARIES
21sAprt111)
you
,.,lp. Th0ugh11eunau on ·
.lo fuK!II •n obligation proml58c! to eomeone your bollaN could lmJ)IIr the
you CIIF8 aboul. and Hmig~! be brough1 to VIRGO (Aug. 2S.Sepl. 22) II you have a
your ananiiOn Joday. Produce inalead o! di~FHmtnl wi171 your -111eart today,
- making excusea. Tl'flng to po1CI1 up a bro- the worst thing you can do is let your
'''ken romance? The 1\l!ro·Gr•ph 7 - know aboul K. Reoo!ve your dll1er·
...Matchmaker can 71elp you Jo undfl1tand 111C811n priVate.

•

'

""'*'

,.

31Gr...e ......
37 . . . . -

40---.......
30 Tor•
42 C1

I doubt that any Bostonian would
agree with Fred Allen, who wrote to
Groucho Marx: "I have just returned
from Boston. It is the only thing to do
if you find yourself up there."
One colorful bridge player in tbe
Boston area is Dr. William Cole, a lee·
turer in medieval llterature at J{ar·
vard. He has written a book called
"Fishbeads" (Devyn, $10.95, 800·2742221), which describes the .early days
of bridge - in the 17th and 18th centu·
ries. The difficult deals are dramatic;
the text pithy and humorous.
For example, Elias Pigwhistle Fish·
head is asked why he Invented a oneno-trump opening showing 5-8 points .
He replies that he loves to give reviews of the auctions that begin "You
and your partner have doubled
throughout. •
In today's deal. how did Elias guar·
antee his six-club contract alter West
led the beart jack?
East-West were a Catalonian pair,
Antoni Turbot and Per.ico Bouilla·
baisse. (I hake to carp at these piscine
puns.)
North, Morold Fishhead, bid
spades to show 9.11 points and at
four spades.
As Tur_bot's opening bid marked
with the spade ace, Elias could est:ab· l
lish two winners in the suit. But
could he cash them?
Seeiilg the answer, Elias called lor
dummy's heart ace and unblocked bis

A. You may want to checkout David
Feldman's new book of "imponderable" questions, "When Did Wild Poo·
dies Roam the Earth?" The author
explains, "Their name is a derivation
of the German word PUDEL or
PUDELIN , meaning 'drenched' or
'dripping wet."' This fine animal, once
known by lhe Gennan for "water dog,"
perhaps takes its name from being
trained as a water retriever for

"""tionlhip:

mighl happen to' you, bul don'l wear your
SCORP!O (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) Continue Jo
establish a good relationship wi171 co-work·
ers today, but don'llet this lead to some·
thing romantic. II you dO, it could cause

unnecesoary oomplqlions.
SA!)!TTAR!US (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You ,
more 171an most signs in Jlle Zodiac, value
your independence. You mighl step out of
character Ieday and put limilations on the
freedom ot one you love.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22.Jon. 11) A loved
one might not react to a given situation
today exactly as you envision . Make

aiiOWincet for his or ""r righfl to lteedom
ole~presaion.

AOUAR!US (.llln. 20-Feb. 18) lnsltlld of
being 111pportive of your male today, you

mighl !ocus on criticism instead . Your
8hortliglitod!1eSS will not on5y hun the one
you lovtl, Hcould ignlla a helled 8fliUIM'll.
JIISCI!I (Pib. 211 lluolt 20) Tliio 1o one of
thOII days where you ml~hl be unduly

gonoroua to the u-Ning. While
rathlf stingy towai'CJ aomeone whom

shoulc5 be looking out !or.

•

.......:....
43 ....... -

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r::~;t;~' S©~~~-l&amp;t.trs·
l~ltftl

letters of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled - words

liy CU.T L JICIUAJI

........

the
~••~' ·

low to Iorin tour simple words.

-~ ·-"'

T£EKLT

I,IjA,~i
s

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HHAL
t--,1,.;:...;.;1__;_:,.;15;:.. -T-1~

My sisler-in·law says that
when company is coming and
. .
~ she hasn't had time to
~~~~~~~-~-:..,. straighlen the house • she
rcovers lhe cof'98 lable with A R Y L Y E , .... cards.

I1--r~g,;--~~...:...,;1:_;.17,..=..,;1---l e

Complete the

~huckle

quoted

by filling in lhe miuing words
1-....L-.L.-....L-.L.-....L--1 you develop trom step No. 3 be~.
•

•

7

7

,

DLMZIISYZF

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I h8d money, oo lhe money I've made
lasI lwo ~ars Is more than enough." - G8rlh Brooks.

7

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

' .,.

Warmth • Oasis • Jetty • Coddle • 7WO RITES
A lamous comic was host to a couples fiftieth wedding anniversary. He told the couple.
bigamy was
the only crime where a wrong is· made up of lWO

RITES!'

'"'

-a...
010 414. $"00.a...
210 4ll4' llfUor, t4aO.

114-245-11811.

Prom ......., t11 lenflh, tuMhll
I bllclc, Iiiith •-oriM, olu

•• .....,........

.•..

Davia low7ng lloehlno And
V.CUutn a...., R•palr, FrM

Quarter 1121 Mercury lMrne $1

='

HAD NONE . "

.,

1..-..ometw
.....,
and 11r.lon con:

"

TRASEDtEB· L-IKE TI-\A.T
ANYNOI2E:.
0

~

12,000.

O:For.::.::=s,:...g..
- -,-,..
- dm
_l_ll_w!t_h

40:11.

lHE: CL.FeQt&gt;.RD WA"O ~RE,
AND 90 HER FOOl&lt; DOe

THEY &lt;.JUST c;ot..~'rWRl'TE

Home
Improvements

'I75t••13.bl'ut, s.so. ..,tnlngs 304-

New
fooo Commwclll
To,.,.,., 21 ·lT1nnl~
ulb. I

"eur WHEN SHF:60T THERE,

~·

Serv1ces

hu new, S100; 114..Qg2.s581.
Long etr11D1n~ prom dr ..., sJz•

Jrol, $99.85, good cond.. 614lohon CorpoJo, Rn N. 81&lt;H4i- IKI2-304t
·
Jll44.
Mon'o H"fly blko1 ~·. hondltibor
Yl'AA FURNITURE AND AJ&gt;. brokH, 554, 614-w-•·5708.
. PUANCES
- · ••~•- OR 8 ,. · - -sa
M•,. NOfdlca akl boal:a NRUO,
·--~~~
1lza 1, 175. txc cond, J04..7'73:
1132hftor 1:00.
MS83 tll43 Wlilllng ·Libert~
AU55+ 1824 Sllfldlng •

'OLD #OTHER HU66ARD
WENT 10TH~ CLJPeQARD,
10G~ HER R?OR DOG
A BONe .. .

•

Hosphal ehrorne bad ralla, •
lu.ta to tit twin to quMn llze,

IJ4.24UIIOJ.
Now block loco prom gown,
long lonaoh, llzo 7, m. pnono
IJ4.1K1241141.
.

Tum your clutter imo com,
S,dl it the eCJU IIIGy...fn p#aope,
lW need to leaH your lwrne.
Place rour cl!u86ft tul todgx!
15 wonll or ku, 3 du•,
· 3 p6pe'1, 15.4() pa~ in ad!1anee.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

, . . ... _
...,., 22'
LMdM Wlh E - , E.C. Ctti1

-

1•
Pass

Q. We have two poodles and would
like to know about their name. Where
is POODLE from?

...

Point P..... nt. 3CM:f71..201S,
luU llno Troplcol lloh. lilnlo,

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Rodney Plko Rood, llclwel.
Floh Tonll, 2413 oloc"- Avo.

111111 onlltlllo and • ..,.lw.
Orlglnol mole A fomale P&lt;1!11oUy
For S..lt: TWo Antlqut Lampe ~~ old, $100. ooch,
SZO; Crulchoo Llko N,
Coil
514 41141171, a. 614-44
8.
Rlglotorod Bort!or Collie Pup.
G•nttll Nutrition Products ploO, Slrod ty lop 8coltloh 5ms

•..

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a..n Ab 1014

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Amino Acid Body pert, $200 Esdi. 814-256-10111.
wolahl looo ond Ill Roglotorod Chi.... Bhor.Pol
2 ~ Of Oro'"""' $30 EiiCii, bumar rormuru. AvallaW. U• pui»J. thrM black. one cr•m,
clu•lvel)' al Rite Aid Phanntcy. 0110 rown, ,.,. otWI1niliM, 814114 141 -·Alter 5 P.M.
.
Th• aaft Wlf tD diM.
114W7111.
I pc MCIIonal, cream a betsJ•,
Goods

pet"N••

can

Pass

The flawless pronunciation of the ad·
jective PECCABLE is "PEK-uh·bul."

1.

from
.. .~~

Elch,

2+

flaw or sin," as in :·peccable beings."

.C8mpe1S &amp;

lAin
M a Molor 1124104. .

Pass

PECCABLE means "capable of

~-.~

Transport ill 1011

••cell.m 9.., ~·
$40, ptld S150; 111o mlac. \.can .... 011., Hrloul lnqul,... on ,
clothing; call 614·1K12·215S, 11- ,_.,__,
•
5prn o&lt; 614-1148-2204 onor 6pm. AKC roglllirod Baoton Torrler,
For Sale· SuJ* slngl• w•t•r mea._ · ~_JMr old, hoUM
bod, llko I'IIW, wHh poddod rallo, ~~ w!th !ddo, $100.
fJOO, 814-1112·28111.
For Solo: Croftmon .Eioelrlc AKC
"IJiolllod
Labrodor
Bloww VKuum With Gutter Kll Aetrll~, bOO. MCh
Llko How, Dnty $28, Coli 114- ;304::::1;::;~:::·~;:-:-=-.-:::-::
4464838.
Esotor lunnlw For lolel $5.00

Obi.

By Jeffi-ey McQuain

Motor Homes

AKC lllnlllu,. SchnaUzer mea.

FAst

OUR LANGUAGE

=tOJo.DiR~~~
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79

Nortla

· Next came the spade klq, co~
and ruffed. Declarer drew trvmps
played the beart nine. overtaking ·
dummy's 10. East couldn't
clarer getUng into dummy to dl~ca_rd I
his diamond losen on the spade Q.J.

• - JtW•nlwlono, Uood a
......,., oil ty-lllrllna II ftl;

Pets for ·Sale

West

Jdog.

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce110rles

m-atillw1

_ . . lloo CON C0n1or 1

••

Building
Supplies

JonU, ono Jon lnlck

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2211

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trim, Ilk• new, was $011 now

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_._ 1100 loa. 17110. D
iiiO/liit old he5lor Ana-

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CONFIDENT I'VE EVER FELT...

....

oil Ionic, $80,

Bloclt, brlclc, -

11 TJ1MtlldtoDo

D.•D.n I

GOT GRAPE JELL'r'
YOUR SHIRT..

..

:$10,:-'::lt::l4'=M::::
·
11 alii ltul~ u - . .

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TODAY! I REALLY THINK
WE CAN WIN~

1 FEEl GOOD MENTALLY,
I.I=EEL GOOD PJ.IV51CALLY
Tl-115 15 TI-lE MOST

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55

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$'11.00 304-57JJ.

Real Estate

·.·'
.~-. · . ...

MYSELF!!

• nloe ohap. -

-ion.

5 Roden!
6 ArllltG...:o
7Totem po!a
8 WaH pointing
II Beginning

Beahtown
is no has-been

TH'BAG

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bed-12
" CIGodWhbo Teh
421
_-or.
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tnol-whhl

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JEST TH'
BIITTONSH
1 MADE

Truc:ka for Sate

1• Ford S lonlnlc!l w!lh dump

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DOWN

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

!!!fon - .

lrlloi'Tnecllhat all ctwellngs
advertised In this neW!paper
are ~alable on an equal
q;JpOrtunlly basis.

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56- 8ndl111
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IN Ford Troalcr, IIU.JIC~ IIIIDDI, ...........
11111 H Troalcr S
Com Col
12,000
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T,.. For lllnl Von; • - Ckond
=o!ft!owe;-, OU.. AM 4
Aulomollc Wfth
Flold
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u,aoo. 114l'onn _ _ .,,. • - . Dltlo. --~

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remark a
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8 Speck
.
12 Port otlhe
eye
1 3 - - mode
14
"'''
15 Ruulan
Riot
17 E1cltoment
18 B!Mk
20 Goll ·acore
21 C.refor
23 Alr!c1n 58nd
24 TV network
26 Appointed
28 !n no woy
31 - M1n1 auto
FICa '
32 771umln8ted
33 GrHk laHar
34 Loal mo.
36 Morl anc!ent
38 LaHar or

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condhl"!',.4 now lllckl, JoiOO, lng oyolorn, toto of OKlrlo, oJ.
114-IKI2·=7.
maot - . 304-571-2!133 oftor
1:00PM.
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114-1!12·
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nd
pool
27ft
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loodod, 11,000 mlloo, worr iOiid
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W.IW Furn~Med,· IU t41 1031.
F...-, 2 ot 5bdnn., lor ront
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1• lnlc Comaro
fool Contlllon, 114-

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Nollonll· Encyclo~ll
AI Pvrtw, tJ7Mio. With Air HumldHier$75,1J4.25U4o5
~~~~~y:-~~~~·~•k:•·~$2:::0,
Condltlon•ng,
1M-311-1371 1 FMTon cr•t•, •xc.n.nt aondiAnrl11t11.
tlon; 4 11ov foodoro, d l - Slvtrol polro of hoovy co11on
T1rM.
Conlonort: 2 7lodnoomo, Po•Jr olzos, good condHion; 114-lQ. work glovoo lor oole, - . """ 1Udi . ., -11atk.304F...,_ No Polo, $2.40/llci. 2050.
- · $.00 pair, 114-tl2·3703.
2_

Aulo. AC.

~-~~

LoJ. Rllrl1]0!1tlor &amp; Rongo Fur· Worll boola. 814-448-:tllill.
nlohod, Galiloolll City 'School S3
Pronl For lole, Bluo,
DIII~C\ 2 Mlln Solow Rio
Antiques
Pl'*o - . E-.ld Or-,
Grondo Unlvorahy, 514·24511-: ITo 11, II'IW-1.
5200
Anllqlll Library T~:';a Esaollenl
•
Condhlonl $100, I
l'JIIOI.
Pr
11ix
Thrwo bedroom, ovallablo In
~ 1 .....::-:: ~.:1;
Ap~~ 1360/mo., pooolblo HUD, ~~~ '; ~~~~ ~:':'"iiron~':"' 21111. Polnl PT111, 2101 ...,.._,
114-INIS.:I$1~
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TW IO
Avo, Palnl P-onl, WV. 304moroy. ..,,., · · • '
1'11-4014.
42 Mobile Homes
Lm. lo e:OO p.m., sunday 1:00
lo 1:00 p.m. 114-H2·2521.
Pump Air Co!!IPf'MIOI' 3 HP
for Re11t
Miscellaneous
MoJor._12
54
UtUo .,oo, Go.
114-2r:;~UOod
. vory
JBR Tnllo'L In Country, $200
, Merchandise
$1
Mo. Pluo .,oo· DopesH. Fro a
~!'!', ~J II!"~ o;..Moplo Drop
Wa1or. 114-2511.f1909.
ooblo - : wolnul Drop
3 Air Cond!tl..,_ Plllloblo Loo!Toblo••o 814-448-•2
bodroom
turnlshod, Dish Wuhor, At: 77 Plno Slrool,
·
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Golllpolll.
S.JD Top 1177 And Longbod PO:
N•- utllll~ •104 i - . ~h
Chovy Bum~ Compor Tollgolo
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43 Roglon of
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�PIQJ 12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Archaeologists find what may be
the continent's oldest settlement
By ROSANNE PAGANO
carbon dating, the spear points and facts were distinct from the sophis~ted Press Writer
wood charcoal from cooking ticated spear points found in New
. ANCHORAGE. Alaska
heanhs were reevlllualed and dated Mexico and other Southwesrcrn
Archaeologists have discovered . to 9,700 to 11,700 years llj!O.
states.
"lpCif poinrs and cbarcoal that they
Paleo-Indian sites in the Ameri·
The BLM oversees the unpopu..y offer the best evidence yet that can Southwest date to around lated region in the Brooks Range,
Prcb~ humans carne to Nonh
10,000 to 11,000 years ago.
about 225 miles south of Barrow.
~a by way of a land bridge
"It' s nice in Alaska to have
The Mesa Site, within the
aaoss the Bering Strait.
something a little bit older," said National Petroleum Reserve, was
: The artifacts, found on a nonh- Paul Martin, a University of Ari- discovered in 1978 during routine
·em Alaska hilltop, are believed to zona emeritus professor of geo- archaeology work in connection
))e as much as 11,700 y~ old science. Martin said the discovery with oil and gas exploration. li
which would make the site the old- fits with theo~ies that early commands a 360-degree view of
est known settlement on the conti- Alaskans moved into the' American the plains 200 feet below the mesa
nent, the U.S . Bureau of Land Southwest in as little as 500 years.
- ideal for scouting out herdds of
Managcmtnt said Wednesday.
The BLM, however, said more bison and mammoth, archaeolo_ Researchers have long believed sites in Alaska are needed to bol- gists said.
.!hat pn:bistoric humans entered the ster conclusions about human
The BLM said it has recomNew World over a land bridge left migration. And Wilson said more . mended the camp for inclusion on
bare diKing the last ice aae. which excavation on both sides of the the National Register of Historic
ended about 10,000 years ago, and Bering Strait is needed since no Places, and Interior Secretary
traveled south. Under that theory, artifacts like those from the Mesa · Bruce Babbiu has be¥un the proarchaeologists believed the conti- Site have yet turried up in the Rus- cess to withdraw the Site and 2,500
nent's oldesl settlement might one sian Far East.
acres surrounding it from developday tum up in Alaska.
. Wilson said some spear points ment.
: "We now have one good, well- hke those used by pllleo-Indians
llocumen!Cd site," BLM archaeolo- had been found in Alaska before.
gist Curtis Wilson said. ''There But those were isolated spear
have to be more out there."
points that were lying on the surThe find is known as the Mesa face and had been removed from
Site. Initial radiocarbon dating of other identifying artifacts.
the Mesa Site artifacts in the late
Wilson said of 100 points col1970s showed the spear points lected frOm the Mesa Site, 13 were
.were mly about 7,6W years old.
paleo-Indian spears. They ·were
: But the BLM said that with the found a1 depths of less than a foot.
!levelopment of moo: precise radioUntil !he Mesa Site, Alaska arti-

China.
.
"I think in some ways I have
beca an outsider in America
beeN'"' of thai," Hersey said in a
1985 interview.
The family returned to the United States when he was I 0 and he
graduated (rom Yale in 1936.
"A Bell for Adano," which told
of the im)liiCt of American soldiers
occupying an Italian village, won
the 19'45 Pulitzer and was made
into a movie. "Hiroshima," published in 1946, was Hersey's most

Woman turns
to death for
lottery winners
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Birthdays and anniversaries
didn't work, so Rhonda Starling
switched to the death dates of relatives in picking lottery numbers.
She won $25,000.
"All I can say is, they must
have been watching over me,"
Starling said after matching all six
numbers in Friday's drawing for
West Virginia's Cash2S game: 4, 6,
10, IS, 16 and 19.
.
"I've tiied using binhdays and
anniversaries and everything else.
So this time I used the dates of
deaths from brothers, sisters-inlaw, aunts and my mother," said
Starling, 36 of Bluef~eld, Va.

145

Pick 4:
9287

Insert

r:

PviiJ cloud' to.lpt ....
lcby ..._,.,. pciMibte. Low
tbemld40o.

•
..
Vol. 43, No. 231
Copyrlghled 18113

SWINGING THE DAY AWAY - R• Cirford Jaolds lllutds with Jais hriaJ, Setll, Wl, _.
Sarah, both S, while swingia1 iB Cllllty r . t
Wednesday llfternoon in Hutch!. . .., Ku. gr.

~
..

~

~

famous non-fiction work. li ~hi·
cally detailed the destrucuon of
that Japanese city by a U.S. atomic
bomb on Aug. 6, 1945, as the war
neared its end. The New Yorker
devoted an entire issue to it
Hersey publicly defended the
bombing as a way to shorten the
war. Former U.S. poet laureate
Richard ~ilbur, a. Key West neigh·
bor and friend, saJd Hersey felt differently.
"He came out bitterly persuaded lhat the dropping of the bomb
on Hiroshima had been a bad thing
to do,'' Wilbur said.
Hersey published ,24 works of
fiction and non-fiction, including
15 novels. His last bonk, "Antonieua," published by Alfred A.
Knopf in 1991, tells the story of a
Stradivarius violin. Hersey inserted
himself as a character.
His first book, "Men on
Bataan," was published in 1942
and .gave his observations of the
war. Hersey's "The Wall," about
the destructiop of the Warsaw ghetto by the Nazis, carne out in 1950.
In addition to "A Bell for
Ada no," Hersey's "The War
Lover'' was made into a movie and
"The Wall" became a television
movie and a play.
Hersey's bonks lllso include "A
Single Pebble" (1956), "The Child
Buyer" (1960), "The Algiers
Motel Incident" (1968) and
"Aspects · of the Presidency"
(1980).
His longtime Knopf editor,
Jut!i!h Jones, said Hersey continued
wntmg even after his debilitating
illnesses began severlll years llj!O.
"I have a collection of stories
called 'Key West Tales' that I got a
month or so ago," she said. They
will be published in the winter
Jones said.
'
Hersey's fust bonks were written ~bile he was a correspondent
for Tune magazine in the Far East.
He eventually split with Time-Life
founder Henry Luce, said Henry
G~wald, fonner editor in chief.
He was a wonderful foreign
.correspondent who had his occasional differences with the boss ...
about issues that we now all undersland better," Grunwald said.
Hersey opposed the internment
of Japanese-Americans during the
war and fought for the rights of
authors.

Impeachment effort sputtering _

DERSON'S

Sofas, loveseats,
Sleepers,
Sectio•als and
Swhel/&amp;liders.
llll..uced

·Berkline R·ediners
Our entire stock of qualty
Berkline Rechners is at
Spring Sale Prices. Huge se1ediol
of styles,and fabliics.
Reg. 5259.00.......SALE '19.4 .00
.Reg. 5369.00.......SALE '276.00
· Reg. 5409.00.......SALE ~306.00
Reg. 5499.00.......SALE '374.01

Best Rest
Quilted top, 1 year
warranty. ·

1

sasoo Twin
. Ea. Pc.
sl osoo Full. Ea. Pc.
5299°0 Quee• Set

SPEAKS TO Cmi!:F ·• President Boris Yeltsln gestures as he
speak• to llis chief rival, parliament speaker Russian Khasbulalov,
In private llhordy before the start ot the emergency &amp;e~Sloa or the
Coqreu ot People's Deputies. Friday in the Kremlin. The efforts
to Impeach Yeltsln railed due to the lack or 11 needed two-thirds
majority In tile Congres&amp;. (AP photo)

HiJA

SertiiJII6

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SJJ9"'fllilr..Pc.
IE

5

Perfed Sleeper
linl.,28p...

L

16fDDwr..Pc.
539,.., !511

lacked the two-thirds majority.
"Despite the fact that Yeltsin
deserves to be ousted, the most reasonab~ decision now would. be ~
hold sunultaneous early elecuons,
said Viktor Aksyuchits, a leader of
the hard·line Russian Unity faction.
Yeltsin's main rival for power,
legislative speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, had urged the Congress to
meet jn emergency session after the
pres1dentonSaturdaythreatenedto
impose "special" rule to brealc the
politiclll deadlock blocking reform.
Yeltsin later backed away from the
threat and did not declare any kind
of emergency rule in a decree published Wednesday.
In a report today on Yeltsin's
actions to the Congress, Constitu·
tiona! Coun Chief Judge Valery
Zorkin failed to give hard-liners
any ammunition to impeach the
president, and instead offered a
cOmpromise. ·
Zorkin proposed simultaneous
legislative and presidential electio!IS in the autumn and also suggested scrapping the Congress in
favor of a bicamerllllegislature.
Yeltsin, who has opposed holding simultaneous elections, said he
could back some of Zorkin's pro-

By BRYAN BRUMLEY
AssoCiated Press Writer
MOSCOW Efforts to
impeach President Boris Yeltsin
$puttered today after Congress
deadlocke:d in early votes and the
nation's highest judge offered a
compromise to hold early elections
anQ create a new legisla1ure.
The opening of the emergency
session of the Congress of ~le 's
Deputies, Russia's highest parliamentary body, capped a week of
heightened tension over the power
struggle between Yeltsin and the
legislative branch.
Preliminary votes showed that
the hard-liners in the 1,033-mcmbcr,
Communist-dominated
Congress lacked the two-thirds
majority needed to. impeach
Yelisin, whom they accused ofviolating the constitution. ·
The voting touched tangentially
on impeachment as a way for hardliners to lest their support, but they
never. actually called for a voce on
impeachment after reali'zing they

L&amp;IHfy.

534900·full set

.

, . . ..

.

•.By ROBERT E. MILLER
Atlodated Press Wri~
~J..UMBUS -, 9o.... Gcor$,e
.Voailo'rfi:lr'nwo-")'ear ·badget 'bill
has been recom"!ended for ~e
by the ~ouse Fm~ncc. Comm1tte:e
over clauns by mtnonty Repubh~;ms that Democ~ts made it into
a house of cards.
Still, fiye of 13 Republicans on
the com.m!ttec hupported the record
$30.6 billion budget late Thursday
night. The panel acted on numerous
amendments and approved it 23·8
for a floor vote Tuesday. All 18
~IS Stip(Xlrted 1L
· The commmce labored over
ame~cnts for nearly four hours,
adopting many of them. However, .
mQst made comparatively minor
cbanges in ~ s~bstitute bill
announced earhcr 1n the week by

.

Chairman Patrick Swee[ley, 15- islation.
Cleye~d.
·
The biggest change made by the
.h. smgle_ w:n~ndment, prepared ~m~ts W1!5 a ~ownw.!fd reviby ihe Leg1slauve Budget Office, ston ,n Votnovtcb's welfare
was more than I SO pages of mos~y ·caseload estimateS for the nc;xt two
techrucal chan~es.. .
years. The )ower esllmate,
However, It d1d mclude a $2 announced Tuesday, freed up about
millie~ additi6n for the O~io Arts $225 million.
·
.
Council budget and a requuement
Democrats spent about $25 milfor c~llege pro~ess~rs to begin lion with Thursday ~ght's.amendspend1ng more ume m the class- ments but they sll~ sa1d they
room. .
reduced the governor s budget to
The _b1ggcst of about two dozen $30.6 billion, a total provid¢ by
Republ_1can amendm~nts called f?" Dennis Morgan, director of the
sweepmg refor!"s. m the state s Legislative Budget Office.
welfare and Medicw~ ~s. .
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
However, Rep. Williaril 1'1!omp- Concord, the ranking GOP comson, R-Delphos! and others did not mittee member, said the revision
press for theu adoplton af!er was based on over-optimistic weiSweeney repeated an e~rher fare projections and will eventually
promise tha~ they will be consid- lead to deficits and spending cuts.
ered later th1s year as separate leg-

By LI!:E SIEGEL
AP Science Writer
, LOS ANGELES _Ore on's
sttorig eaithquakc was a tel!intier
that the Pacific Northwest someday
may be rocked by disastrous
quakes including major jolts right
under Portland or Seattle.
·'Oregonians have received a
wake-up call today,'' u.s. Sen.
Mlirk Hatfield•.R-Ore., said from
Washington. "We've known the
possibility exists for a major eanhquake and ret we are woefully
unprepared.'
Scientists ·and engineers echoed
that message after a sharp jolt estimated at 5.3 to 5.7 on the Richter
scale rocked the Pacific Nonhwest
early Thursday Centered southeast
of Portland,~. the quake caused
'
,

National Employ the Older Worker Month·

...... c, .,

II

m~y as

13 :·suPII!IIuakes" m~c
sunnf magn1\Ude 8 or ll rupmrea
the ,000-mile-long Cascadia.
"subduction wne," wllcre bu,e
plates of EartlJ's CtU$1 collide ·oa
the coasts of British Columbia,
Washington, Oregon and northemmost €alifornia.
Weaver said scientists fear such
a quake, measuring at least 8.S in
mllj!Ditude, will happen ~ain. but
they can't say when. Similar sub·
duction zone quakes killed thou'
sands in Chile in.l960 and Mexico
City in 1985. ·

More health care sought
for.poor women and infant~
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Advocates of a
program that provides helllth care
to pregnant women and children
who calinot qualify for Medicaid
welcome a modest expansion proposed by the House, but they say
moo: needs to be done.
The Children's Defense FundOhio, the Ohio Hospital Associa·
lion and other groups urged legislators Thursday to spend more
money on Healthy Start, a program
that makes some of the state's
uninsured working poor eligible for
Medicaid.
Medicaid is the federal-state
program that provides belllth care
for the poor. Healthy Start covers
women who are low-income but
earn 100 much to qualify for Medicaid benefits.
Helllthy Start currtntly is avail·
able for pregnant women and children up to llj!e 6 in families who
earn 33 percent above the poverty
level. For a woman with two children, that would amount to about

$12,500 under federal poverty
guidelines that iake effect nexl
month.
An expansion of the program
that was to take effect in Jantl&amp;lj
would have extended benefits to
families eamiQg 85 percent moro
than the poverty level. But the
expansion would cost an estimated
$34 million annually, and wall
delayed by the state last year td
help solve budget problems.
'1
Gov. George 'Voinovich's proposed stale budget recommended
spending for Healthy Start to cover
families at 133 percent of poverty
the minimum required by federai·
law.
An llltemate budget bill written.
by Democrats who control the
House would expand the program
to 150 percent of poverty over the
next two years, still short of the
oriiinai18S perccnt golll.
'We support what the House
did. It's an important step for-·
wan!,'' said Mark Rclll, director of
the Children's Defense Fund
1

Thursday's grand jury did not

Scftultz profile...
: '"As long u I can, I'll work,"
: said Faye Schultz, 69, of Cherry
Ridge ll'ho for the put nine yean
• has been a &lt;men Tfiumb worker It
' the Meigs County lkalth Depart·

ROPER BUILT·IN DISHWASHER
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minor lnjuries and scattered damage to bridges and buildings,
.!llCluding cracks in the state Capitoi101U11lla.
•'It is time for Oregon and the
rest of the region to prepare for a
much larger caithquakc,' said seismologist Craig Yleaver, regional
director of the u.s. Geologiclll Sur·
vcy's Pacific Northwest Earthquake Program in Seattle.
~PacifiC Northwest faces two
major seismic hazards:
- Numerous studies·show that
during the past 7,000 years, as

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Vetenm Memorial Hospitlll .
A number of considetali0115 preROBERT ELBERFELD
charged with giving drugs to two vented the proiCCUtor from taking·
1\ofeigsCountyyouths.
the case before the grand jury.
l
D. Michael Mullen, 1663 Un· Thursday, a spokesman for Prosc•••
eoln Heiabta, I'Oma'oy, is accused cutor John Lcntes said this mom·
•
said. ••1 ;,;,y 1.t here. I see 8 lot of of suppfyi_ng Diazepam (Trade ing.
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Robert Elberfeld, 82; of Five
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SPECIAL S

should rule Russia
.
His call for a referendum was
met with weak applause.
·
Yeltsin was present in the cham:
ber as the Congress convened 4n
the Grand Kremlin Palace. Ask6d
by reporters beforehand about who
would win at the session he
replied: "There will be no win~.
It will be a tie."
On Thursday night, Khasbulatov
said he was against Yeltsin's
impeacbmenL That was a reverSal
from his previous insis.tence that
there were grounds for impeachment and from his prq!arations for
such a vole.
Khasbulatov opposes the April
25 referendum and instead wanis
early presidential and legislative
elections.
Legislative elections currendy
arc set for March 1995 and presidential voling for June 1996.
Yeltsin in the past has suggested ·
advancing each date by one year'
But he has insisted that simul.
ousballolingcouldcreatead.angerou~ power vacuum and demand$
legislative elections fust, tiJlll8rellt.ly hoping to outlast-the Congreu ·.
which was elected before the Sovi!
et collapse.
. .

Case against Pomeroy attorney
may wait till next grandjury

IOPEI EUCIIIC lnEI
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posals, and there also were signs of
support from both hard-line and
reformist deputies. Kbashulatov
h.as previously ~reposed early,
Simultaneous elections.
Hardliners had expected Zorkin
to present the high court's earlier
finding that Yeltsin violated the
constitution by trying to override
the Congress and calling a nationwide referendum rex: April 25 on
whoshouldruleRussl&amp;.
Instead, Zork:in offered the compromise and tried to defend himself
from criticism that he had spoken
out against Ycltsin's decree before
it was published.
·
The Congress, which is dominated by ex-communist apparatcbiks and factory . directors
opposed to Yeltsin's economic and
political reforms, bas been stripping the president of his executive
powers for months. The lawmakers
say that Russia's Soviet-era constitution givps them supreme authority.
·
.
.
In a speech 'to deputies, Yeltsin
urged them not to be rushed into
"doublful actions from the ~lilical
and morBI point of view,' and he
again pressed for a referendum
next month to ask voters who

·t
.B. ouse paneI 0 K '·s b.u dge
bill, floor vote Tuesday
·Quake provides .'wake-up call'
'

SPRING AIR

1 Section, 10 Pogeo 25 cont.
A llultlmodll Inc. Newopopor

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Friday, March 26, 1993

Spring Specials

Pulitzer prize-winning
r:zuthor John Hersey dies
By RICHARD COLI!:
Aaociated Press Writer
MIAMI- John Hersey, the
combat journalist and Pulitzer
Prizo.winning author whose books
"Hiroshima," "A Bell for
Adano" and "The Wall" chronicled World War II and its consequences, died Wednesday at age
78.
Hersey: was among the nation's
fust writers to move away from
instinctive wartime patriotism to a
. more critical view of war and
hunwlity.
.
Heney suffered a stroke a year
ago and bad cancer of the colon
and liver, said Barbara Hersey, his
wife of 35 years. His family was at
his side when he died in their Key
West home.
Hersey ·was born to American
missionaries in 1914 in Tientsin,

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Improving
your
home

DICIIIL

.

Hclllth Depanmcnt and that she's
much happier when she working
andaroundolherpeople
. bildre
n
Durini·the' Y·-· as her c
were growing ·up, Schultz worked
in a_varicty ofj'obs including a

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Schultz wcrb W lioun a week
doiD&amp; basic ollice work and llliat·
•jnc lit the vlrioul health progr11111 the part,1lme job at. the Health
·aniliNe tliele. She Is paid tJuou&amp;h Department, she worked in an
the federUly funded Oreen Thumb assistant to the Green Thumb

0

=

t;'of.~

..

up under the Older

· Rodring II not on her agenda for
the lllllllll\'elll yean. She llld that
down lhrouab the yean she has bad
. contact wiib people who "when
~they 'uit (wuk), ibey quit evwy-

~at'a

aot for me." aald
Scholtz, who aaid llhelovos it;• the
)1

supervisor in five Southeastern
Ohio c 0181tica.
Whell the time carne for her to
alow dClwn-al)d she knew she
wasn't ready to drop out-she
looked to Green Thumb opponuni·
Ilea for pan-time emplo)'IIICitt IDd
went to wort 11 the Meigs County
lkalth Departmeni.
~(·

•

\

El.berjjeltJ proifile .

=

VllilinB groupe and 'I'DdiFor
64
yeers, Elberfeld worked
1
at department stores .,-hicb carried
the family name in Partenburg, .
Marietta and Pomeroy. Thronah
the yean he wu involved in every
phase of the busines-!&gt;uylng,
advertising, lltCIChandiaing and display.
·
For Elberfeld, his aac gM8 ~
an lldvanrase over )""\IIIII"' people.
'"I remember lots of hi$toly. I was
theze,• Elberfeld said.
'"It's ~ood to be lim," Elberfeld . 1

:~i......,..
. . .,.eld~RW!aincd.T,C!f~urneu.o-f;~tors.
E::~
RAC to mareaka e. recogruzanccmodi:ficatt"on"~l
lllber

CXJl
Blbeneld, ~5 through the · Offtcials
•
Ravenswood
museum replel, . people from Aluminum Corporation (RAC) analliiOWitllbe world, from Sweden noullced that they have undenatcn
to Cllltornia, vilit the museum.
a project to make ~ modifica· Althousb Elberfeld enjoys his lion to the plant's S·Stand Cold
work at the museum, he said he Rolling Mill.
would like to get back into the
The modillcaliorul will increue
re~ ~- , .
, .
· the widths available for the produc·
'The sellmg bust ness 11 m my lion of can body stock to mau:h the
blood,• Elberfeld said. .
changing requircmcnll of the
marketing. The project is expected

'

to be completed ~ the next i:t
~. IIIII
COIIIDUtmeltl by
1D remain viable and commlaed to !he lllllkcti
which It serves.
ia pllt of an own!! Wide

Willi • •

"'t

JIID8IIDI which iDdedn eaJIIn•
caaenllln our CIUIIIItY m I • I I
proc n, 11 welf 11 iqulpnu• .-1

L:;:. RA'(_P'~~ Ollr)'

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