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Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

(JUo (Jiai.lUSity

WedneSday, Aprll .14, ;993

ADVERfiSED ITEM POUCV-Each of lhe•.• adv.rtised ilems is requirad Ia be reedily ava&gt;labiJ! for sale
10 each Kroger Store, excepl as speCifically nolod In this ad. If we do run oul of an advertised Item

.

o:

we will offer you your c hoice of a comparable item, when available. rellectlng the same •liVings
a raincheck which will entille you Ia purchase the adverlisod item at tho a(lvertlsed price within 30
days . Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per ilem purchased .

Oo!Jro- of OsbJpalhic Med'icine
..

Fam~Jy

Medicine

COPYRIGHT 18e3. THE KROGER CO. ITEMS MID PRICES'
GOOD SUNDAY, APRIL 11 TH ROUGH SATIJRDAY, APRIL 17, ,
1993 1N POMEROY

--..t,.. - .,..,_

Ohio Lottery

Phillies
sweep
Reds

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WE Fii:SERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.'NONE SOLD
TO OEALERS.
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This·,weelf only!

Jo11D C.~ D.O.
.Ascoi;aePtnl ;gw
uF.IIIIily M l i -

By Jolm C. Wolf, D.O. ~
ciate Professor or Fa•ily
Medicine Obio ·UaiveBil3' c.ollege or OsteoJIIItllic 'N eiljriw

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Pick 3:

904
Pick 4:
2999
Super Lotto:
4 13 17 23-4445
· Kicker:
853898

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Page4

r , __ of

Dec+
lkliB6at••

Low tonight In 50s. Rain.

Friday, showers, blgh In low 50s.

3

1

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d ing·~

•lrilllk

3

is Kl:omJIIi*d by .doc .... or pnwaful
a • • "' 1 llclwaa die ribs.
·{1ll!::!lt
• s at! c•-.•aNe: to
*-GI'Iwl'* 'ds.) BmilliiiB 817 af'llii:a p lid IIWEfrs.
c::aa I*' h+ • lk 1J11e Ill paiD :~!OU
l!ue,. w•ih d 'De riO ascles
--ill&amp; -a ., llllld lk dlcst stead')"

'

Question: Two wceb qo,
when I was playin,g basked•!!, I
·sustained what appeareiUo be :a
mild rib injury. Then last'1bursila.J'
.-:...before it had to\Blly lhc:alc4 - I
played again. Not a ·sman - . I
had all sorts of muscle SJIII-S
around the tender area oo diC D.&amp;k
side or my rib cage and on iinto IIIIJ - - . - - •
right shoulder. I 1had •pe:riods or
nc Iiiiis t
m -s lfll:· JTib
intense pain, followed by JIICIIiodl ~tJ g • p? ' c ID iilj~
of relative calm. Oven be11adi:IJI Jllll•*=
h ......... lk libs
day&gt;:.~2...s:=anded to begcaiing
~E-ll•
i7J 2. t:Uisipife ........ y
today, howe-.• w:: a.i!i-Ymlllalta-.l"mm sure
had increased pain - but 11101 as ,.. *' &amp;
i£1r: Sl!d'dell,
bad as last Friday. At niiht it Us iliilill pail . . ia '
you
been hard to find .a comfonablc lllak a dL U D.r il rapile&amp; a
position in which lll .sleep. 'Wialdo ........,, T · •wilt.....,
you recommend 'I do? Am u: piiJa'., .-,..,... · line 0111 11
Ribs are an impor.tant pan of die liiiDIIal&amp;.
body that are genlnlly OYftlooh:d
Fw•• ·dy, rib liKtw;es
until they have been injured 1iul.. nai,;: ... ~ IIIIIJ'iiE spom are
·of course, isn't very unusual. W C : J 1 . .. . . . . . life dleat:
treat most body pans &gt;
that way. I cai"&amp; :OU."t 1 t Pi•ete the
think my answer to your qucsfue p.;;., 1. . . . .; u c:a&gt;k scvcre
--:iU be clearer if I give a bit ofp
• • £ D lie iuz iMiNe E-r
eral information about nbs fir5t.
0.: lillie ...p lllalai cars of
Wehumanshavel2 :setS CJ(d!s
- - &amp; run'
that attach in the back to lbe 12 allnaiaciJ ·
sipal is sent
irregularly shaped bonescelled_.- ......,.
s.ysreJD 101
tebra that make up what dQrton - • ~ ., - tiD u. h is:
call the thoracic ponioa of die alliS...._.
..._ • ..._
___. Jl! r - t.~.-,
uuu•
spinal column. That is, lhe palioM Ill • · 1 a..._,, 1 r-.ils amof the spinal columo belmw die
ii woilll lklilt ca 111:. jusli as
neck. In the from of diC body,-.: 1 · ·.o.alitlt;•:;:;;...~
fust ·seven pairs of ribs " ~·"i!C
Wllii£l: dt • • • JM h n pain1
from the top down - alladl 110 tic far xs 4 wmls ia c::aa; wilae a
breast bone (sternUJ11) by -..ay ar a rib Ills ........,. . . . llnltn. llie
nexible section of can.il~e. Tile ..... lila.
£e
111 • •
'th
Oth
..
~
eighth, nm , and 1 pairsoha •
pe''J.SilceJQIDi
:
end in the front wilh ·a rcadibp pllioiiiB 5 · · 2 1 ...,.
extension that attaches 110 die rib _. • - - •
, • ...,. 10
above it instead of.~g di=l- - * ,_ 10 die CJKqcncyr
ly to the sternum . f he bst two dqaa-a(,a.lllalhnpi'l, D
· pairs of ribs. like the flm tiO, ae .-.: iii is a &amp;y .._ ,._ flave
attached in the haCk Ito ihe ,..,...,.,..,.._ • 'Z:f hw 2 a lilt. il 5liill. il is;
but they don't attach 10 liD)' &lt;lilllB Ill~ ,., We dial JOII ban· '
bones in the fronL
lallilli:d ,._
-s 11e -1es.
·This complex method &lt;of rill bela
llllaL 'De prnc,r: of 11
attachment is importanL It :allcta'S r- 'lla:lt"s rille w"d • • . , .
the ribs to fonn a Sli'OIIg iCQe- U.jouy
eM Die calC
the chest -to proteetthe ~..a paiia. nc-ar • ~
lungs and lo sercve.as a !5'tudy plliol•llis•i•-..a.:r,;IDO..Uie
attachment for the niuscles lbit iloea"', ~·· ~ 10 1111:e y011r
move the anns and tnmk. "Die Giller _ &amp;.i7y 4 ••
important f~ture or ·lhis a• 1
. . . . . ,. s
- iii a Wftllr
mentlsthatltallowstheribs, 'llliilc uS w Te 1 jt . . ' "aa&amp;
still being Slrong, 10 mGv.e widl write ....... C . WeB:
breathin~. This movem~t ~ ~ I' =:aa, C p 1 J o ; ;
sary to e p pump 8ln nto
IIJijl
s
Qua
Balli,
of the lungs much as mavillg die ·••
._.,.._
handles of a fireplace lbcUuaos
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.,.......,..di:eplln:ath-

Vol. 43, No. 245

Copyl1ghted 1883

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Pomeroy-Middi..,Ort,
Ohio, Thursday, Aprll15, 1993
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2 Sactfons, 14 Poges 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. News p aper

3

N~tional

Guard troops
·se.n t to·Lucasville

":to.

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w.a.

This week .your manufacturer's products ·cents off" coupons are
worth. double at Kroger. Limited ·to manufactured products
coupons worth up to and including 50¢ . are redeemed at face
value only. Llmlt·one coupon for each product purchased. Limit
one coffee coupon. No beer, wine or tobacco product coupons
will be doubled. Not valid on free coupons, ' Kroger coupons or.
retail food store coupons. The amount refunded cannot exceed
the price of the item. You must purchase product in sizes
specif,ied on the coupon. This offer applies only to manufactured
products ·cents off" coupons for items we carry. To · assure
~~ product availability for all .our customers, only one coupon per
shopping family, will be doubled on -any brand item during each
store visit.
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Latest negotiations said 'hopeful'
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INSTALLING 'DRY' .HYDRANT- A 'dl')''
fire hydrant was iastalled at the Curtis BaltJaas
er farm near Danville Wednesday afternooo. A
dry fire hydrant allows firefighters to easily
pump water rrom a pond or stream where It is
·. installed. Here, Mike Diahl, Meigs SWCD dis·

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of:,_

. U.S. COV'T INSPECTED •

Genuine

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=-~---nd

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· By JIM FREEMAN
rial Inc. of Marietla for bituminous
~: •
Sell,llnel N~ws Stan
. material for the month of April._
Acting· on the recommendation
Afterwards; lhe cbmmission
or Engineer Bob Eason, the Meigs opened bids from the Horton comCounty Board of Commissioners pany of Columbus and EVCO of
Wednesday accepted bids on ·Geneva for renovation or replaceaggregate material (limestone, mcnt of the Tuppers Plains Squad
gravel and matef!II!Hl9!D.fQIU'.di(, .. of. the Meigs County Emergency
ferent·su!IJ)liers·.
Med1cal Serv1ce.
Eason explained his office will
Commissioner Manning. Roush
base each individual purchase on moved the bids be tabled until
several factors including price ·and Wednesday pending further invesdislance from supplier.
ligation by EMS Director Bob
It is a common practice for Bycr. ·
·aggregate bids 10 be accepted in
Mike Duhl, Meigs SWCD disthis manner, Clerk Mary Hobstetter trict conservationist, met with the
Said.
.
commiss.ion to discuss block grant
Bidding were Jaymar Quality money for dry fire hydraniS.
Stone of Cheshire, Richards and
A dry fire hydrant consi sts of
Sons Inc. of Racine, Dravo Basic PVC tubing which leads from a
Materials of Apple Grove aqd Dia· roa~side coupling to apond or
mood Stone of Jackson.
· stream, Duhl said. Fire trucks can
.: In addition; the commission hook up to the hydrant and pump
,accepted a bid from Asphalt Mate- wafer into their wafer tanks.

Chuck

'

Youth fund raiser scheduled
A youth fund raiser ldinoec Mil
be held at Trinity Ohllci'Cb S:llilday
with serving to begin at noon.
' Baked steak and bakedb UD 'Ilill·
ners will be available. Aldv.aDCe

ill£ piitblhp a lk d
~ ?ilellllMS

II Salurlt.lf ..

mllaa.llllll2

pa

Fialpl.s•*=--willl lle

a

IDllllc a rile )'IIIII: pa:p
• ro
tickets for the dinner are :avliJINe be kill •
pa. 'II ...., • the
at the church and cail be SflCUftld by ........._

s

calling the c;hurch 992-3lllllla&amp;Mt ;• • or die ~ JVtl~
day from 4:30 to 6:30 .p.m. 1bole J&amp;iiOilp&gt; an: h:ld - die fim IIICS
with advanced tickets will •be s-- idiild n ....., Ill . . . . . . . 5
an teed a dinner. The dilliiCi'S may · JILIIII::- AI! ,..... ar rile _ _.,
be eaten at the church M cmil:d :aeaoilludiiD • 1
ou L TicketS can also be pw:cllallld

f?eCULA!? HOT OOC Of?

Kroger
sandwich suns

Ohio could be in TV
tourist battle by July

*-),lids

.Miks,-

ll l ¥

cyc~~velopment

Direcwr O.onal4
. Jakeway told a Senate Finance subcorniniuee on Tuesday thaube
agency reached an agreement wiib
Paramount's Kings Island for we
·of the state 's 1 - 800-.~UCKEYE
telephone line in lhe theme )lid"~
out-of-state advertising.
" We're try ing to geta11 11he
other people that do that kind. of
. mass media advcrtisin¥ to
with us in partnership,.' J~~way .

w&lt;d:

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~~~,isr::.•.:f"~l:.
• h 's 1 2 ,._ lk umer.

·
·a

·a..-_

Silfal('l+e ·

fOltT SW., Lawt.. Otfa&gt;. Anly PwL hlri4 B. Capcliarr
IIOtall)r Mihal b 1i111J
Fori
Siil,......., miL .
·
· f'lr: I l;,aJii&amp;llwlaa:lutirl:k
• I • I is - -~~~ B r •Ill L
ilni'Aiia: II.~. 5 1·111'21 Rid
S..OiuioZ . ·..

a

70 SHI:tTS PER ROLL 2 PLY

.Viva' Paper

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Fresh

IN OIL OR WATER, CHUNK LICHT '

star-Kist ·

Broccoli
Bunch

sge

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rowels
g~t~~iiii
Single Rolls

Tuna
6.125-0Z.

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1993.

Attending were commissioners
'Robert Hartenbach, Janet Howard
and Roush, and Clerk Hobstettcr.

,JfSfltl el

LIMIT 3 ROLLS WITH COUPON
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&amp; $10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASI
LIMIT ONe COUPON Pel? CUSTOMef?
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11•SA T. APitfL I 7,!ftJ i

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Br JULiE E. DlLLON
Tentative plan s include the with ihe finish line at the levee area
Sentinel News Staff
sele ction of the 1993 Heritag e on the parking lot in Pomeroy: The
· Activities sponsored by the Queen, a morning parade, crafters rubber ducks may be adopted for
Pomeroy Merchants Association· and concessions, a car show 011 the $5 each and several sizeable prizes
for Heritage Weekend in June·were upper parking lot by the Oldie&amp; But will be awarded. Only I ;000 ducks
discussed at Wednesday's regular Goodies Car Club, outhouse races . will be available, Further inl onna~eeting of the association.
i and the newly added attraction of a tion on any Heritage Weekend
Employees or Bank One in fllbber ducky race. Other activities activity may be obtained by conPomeroy arc or~anizing a variety are also planned.
tacting Bank One in Pomeroy at
or new and cxc1ting activities for
Accon!ing to Dianna Lawson , 992-2133.
· the eYCllt which will take place on ,Bank One employee, the rubber
Fashion show wrap· up ·
Saturday, June 12.
. ducky race will begin at Krogers
l:ontlnued on page 3

7

Filing deadline today .

pon 't panic, IRS says, but don ~t neglect to file
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· WASIDNGTON (AP)- With ,below last ye •s pace and ·the . down from 51.6 million arid $975 a
- The IRS is pushing its insl&lt;lllyear ago.
· mcnt payment Jllan ·ror those who
. the IRS offered some final guidProfessional tax p arers and
The.re is no penalty for missing file but can't aUord to pay all that
ance today to as many as 25 mil - the IRS have reached the
e ~on- the deadline ror the three-quarters is owed. The taxpayer can suggest
llon couples and individuals who elusion: People delayed filing of taxpayers who get refunds.
a payment plan by IIUIChing Fonn
. ljon't believe in filing their tax because their refunds will be small¥any IRS offices and postal 9465 or a handwriuen note to the
returns early.
·
cr than expected or - the worst stat1ons around the country planned return; the tax agency will say
: The fint rule: Don't panic. Sec- · . surprise - they have to pay when late hours tonighl to accommodate within 30 days whether the offer is
t)nd, don't think an innovative they file.
' procrastinators and those who sim- .acceptable.
.
. excuse wiU get you off the hook ror
"People who got refunds in the ply don't want to hand oyer their
-People who' have·failed to me
(ailing to file . The Internal Rev- past are getting less and so they are money a minute too soon.
returns ig the past - costing the
c.nue Service has heard them all.
filing late,'' said Harry Buckley,
_The IRS, which is on. a C811\· treasuty at leaSt $7 billion a year There was the cenified public director or tax operations for H&amp;R pwgn to treat taxpayers like paying were offered 81most no-questions,liccountant"in Dallas who didn't Block~ Inc . The reason: President customers, offered~ major new asked treatment· if they col)f~ssed
file for two years, claiming he Bush reduced wi.thholding from wrinlcles lllis iax xason:
and arranged to pay before the IRS
coulcjn' t find any forms. Another.. most workers' paychecks last year. · - A person who is unable to ·contacted them.
. ·
·
Texan skipped filing ror several , in an effoit to stimulate spending, COIIIJ)le!C a re&amp;um by tho .deadline
With' tho filina IC8SOII ending;
years and, when pressed by the· lind that shrunk refunds.
may ptn a -rour montli extension, tho General Aeco~ntlng Office
IRS, demanded: "Didn't you get
Millions of taxpayen who filed to Auf. 16, by filinl form 4868, . repcXII!d wbatmiiiJoriaortiXpaye,s
· riiy death certificate? I mailed it to early figured it out, Buclcley said. The b1g deal this year Ia. that no . know: lt'l hard. to pt throup on
you." .
.
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"We are preparing a lot ofW-4" faill!re-to·file penll&amp;r oarill be the IRS toll-tree Jaelp liae. Only_
' Th~ IRS cxpecu 1,17 million . , fonns so workers can return to pre- . aaelled even if 48M lt110t acc:om7 · one in four caUen connects, OAQ
c~uples and individuals .to fjle 1992 withholding levels. "They panied by a check for the balance said, down from Jwo In lO ·two
sometime this year. No one lulows don't want to see this happen owed: Note Form 4868, printed · yearaago.
for sure how many have done 5o again/'
·
monthi ago, still says you must
Those who act tbrougb lei lbe
already, but-the latest count availlillrough Friday, the IRS had send a check: thatiulutdated.' '
correct answer 89 percent of tho
·able - throuRh Friday - showed approved 48.1 million refunds
But there still could be a penalty t ime - ~p from 63 percent in
only 70.1 million retums had been averaging '$971. Those figures are · 'and interest of 13 percent on the 1989.
~ived. That was nearly 5 million
bala!lce.
..
li midnight deadline approaching, · slowest in five ye

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· While most tanker trucks can
Pllffill d).rec,tly from pQf!.(\s or
streams; Duhl said the dry fire
hydrants lessen the possibilitt of
drawing debris· and muck into the
tanks.
·
Duhl said nine sites have been
selected for dry fire hydrants.
·
The commission informed Duhl
that while the grant has been
approved the money has not yet
been received. ,
.
In other action, the commission
sent Jeucrs to Racine and Middlepon village councils expressing
support for the viUages' community development block gran! for
comprehensive housing/neighbor:
hood revitalization projects for

Heritage Weekend activities
planned a( merchants meeting

B·Ct. Pkgs.

COLU MBUS , Ohio (AP~ 5llid. ""We"m "'' ac IIIII. we'll tak
Commerc ials touting O hio as a lliUt $12 ........... raRy lmlll il
tourist attraction could begin shew- a-nt,, ........ ~
. in~ up on television scr:eens i111 llimrdle-CJ(Oiio....
Mi chigan. Indiana and Ken!IUd;y
Zia~ sa~~~ · ..c meme
gmt wD i+ .... Otio"s nod iMlt
this summer.
The .Ohio Department ,o f Oe&gt;~el­ llDi: ial :a"
itill auo ~051! 10
opment promoted in-state mvol f~~~r
eSIIIIe.
years wilh its "Ohio lhe Hean ofil
Ill - .
ap tlie
All" campaign,
.
0011 Ill-&amp; : ..w alh g
aredl by
Now il lwants to begin o ut-ef- il!:lC ild. :&amp; P""' 1 f111r aWri:ng a&gt;
siate advertising by seelcing 'legisla- pawr:e 11w iKIIIIdi:i!i a Kmg,s;
tive approval 10 spend an e11tra 'S U biiBod ~-. ...0 IIGiln state'
million for the Division of Tra"el Wli'LPM 111W•• . ill
all(~ Tourism, ·
t
" The House approved it. :and iJ. News of our senicemen .
looks preuy good in the Senate,"
~ z••• 1 a Fu«-. lsi
said George Zimmermann, state . llGII:giii)S..illliilll:idiBIIfemdl:l:·- .
travel director. T he spending ~ ...... die Joillt Sc:niec
. request is contained in the lllelldi!\g ~ He is ma;...d af
state budget bilL
.
R&gt;nGturaeG.u a,r d. MIL
.. · " We're making- plans to lbe on • ~ ·r'a•;;.. a'WUdl:d 10 lll
the air in July. We' re loelcin:g 111 iiDdRidaal far• •••• xnice,
markets like Detroit, Indianapolis, aas ar
~
·Louisville, Lexington. We'- .....
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Ill'
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L
ua
nc•u•'f
ing adjacent states primarilr if w.e
illi• ,:m SJSUiils
get this increase," ZimmermanD eup_., is r k - of u-. E.
· said.
Edwants&amp;Hwze•or~E.
The budget biil would bGllst- Ed. . . . or IS71 ~St. .
spe nding for travel an d tourism · Bdpoe..
•
from the current $4.9 million a year
His Eallla, Q:a1 )l.)fiks, is 11 •
to $6 million annually, or $12 mil- oailkat or 1416 Bnay Poinl
lion over the lwo-ye.ar budgel · Rmi!,C z +

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.Commission accepts bids
ifor engineer's ~ate rials .·

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trict conservationist, watches while backhoe
operator Richard Helton P.repares the site ror
inslallation: A demonstration is slated lor 5:30
p.m., April27, by Duhl111d the Salem Township
Volunteer Fire Department._ (Sentinel photo by
Jim Freeman)
·

7

LUCASVILLE (AP) - National ·Guard troops joined state and
local ·authorities trying to end a
four-day standoff by about 450
inmates who look eight guards
hostage at the state' s maximumsecurity prison.
At least seven inmates have died
at· the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility since the standoff began
with a riot Sunday.
But a consultant to negotiators
today characterized the last negotiation session on Wednesday night
as '"hopeful. " Another round of
talks began at 9 a.m.
''We are- 11etting a ,POSitive feedback. There as a feehng of mutual
respect, " said Dayton Police
Detective David Michael. He said
inmates appear to be united in their
der~~ands, but no clear leader had
emerged. He declined to comment
on published reports that 'tile leaders were followers Qf the Black
Muslim faith and membets of the
Nation oflslam .
Inmates have made no offer to
surrender, he·said.
As a gesture of good faith, officials on Wednesday gave inmates
fresh fOO&lt;I and water and two of the ·
hostages were allowed to receive
proscripUon medicine: • ·- •·
He also said that thick smoke
that wafted out of. a window of the
barricaded cellblock early today
was created by candles inmates are
burning. Elctricity has been ·shut
off to the area.
On Wednesday, Gov. George
LUCASVILLE BOUND Jason TaCkett of the Ohio Army
Voinovich activated 500 National
National
Guard 's 216th Eogineering Battalion, Co:npany A,
Guardsmen ' 'to secure the perime- .
climbs
into
a truck Wednesday anernonn in Chillicothe. Tackett's.
ter of the prison," the Rehabilila·
is
one
of
14 headed to Lucasville to help control the hostage
unit
tion and Correction Department
situation
at
the
Southern Obio ·Correctional Facility that began
said. It is the first time since 1968
Sunday
anernoon.
(AP)
that the Guard has been mobilized
to help end a prison siege.
Five Guardsmen acting as advise~ joined state troopers inside the
had spoken with several inmates decision."
pnson, sa1d Tessa Unwin, a and weren't sure who the leaders
· About 10 p.m., a guard became
spokeswoman for the Ohio Depart· were. .
ill and was talc:en from ttie.prison
ment of Rehabilitalio.
Sbarron Kornegay, a department on a StreiCher, Morris said.
.Capt. Jim Boling, Natiofl al spokeswoman, said Wednesday
The guard was identified as
Guard spokesman, said early today night that prison officials had spo- Bruce Holcomb, whose age and
that most of the troops were in the ken by telephone with two people hometown were unavailable. He
area and the rest were expected by believed to be hostages who said was taken to a hospital with an
late morning.
they had been given the medicine. unknown ailment, Morris said.
The troops were anncd but Bol- She said acquaintances of the
Holcoml!'s illne.ss had nothing
ing would not discuss the lyJK'S of hostages confirmed the voices were to do with the prisoners' barricade,
weapons.
· theirs.
Morris said.
Negotiators for both sides took a
She did not identffy the
Ms. ,Kornegay said officials did
break early today aftcr talking for hostages, the nature of their health not know whether any hostages had
about l 1/2 hours. Morris said there problems·or the type of medicine. been harmed.
was liulc communication with the The two were cut off before they
" Our negotiating team says iC~
inma~s overnight. He said earlier could report on the conditions of
impossible to confinn the condition
he was encouraged by Wednes- the other hos11ges, she said.
·
oflhe hostages," she said.
1 1
··
day's talks. · -·
Inmates reaeived peanut butler,
The corrections department ·
" Wc are negotiating as there is tuna, fruit, cheese, sandwich meat, would not say how the soldiers
dialogue between negotiators and bread and water, Ms. Kornegay would be used. Members of mili- 1
inmates, " Morris said. "This is said.
tary police, engineering, communi"An inmate was heard to say, cations and medical units from
one or the longesl- I'm not saying the longest - of conversations. 'Thank you ror the food,'" she · around the stale reported to th.e
said, "We thought it was the right Scioto County fairgrounds.
Negotiators are very hopeful."
Morri$ said prison n,egotiators thing to do. It was a management
Continued on page 3

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·c ommentary

Thursday, Aprll15, 1993

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Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprill6

Thursday, Aprll15, 1993

Special interests balk at bitter pills
WAS ~INGTON

111 COurt &amp;beet
Pom_e iOf, Ohio

.

· DI:VOTitD TO 11Dt IN'l'ltRJt8T8 OJ' 11Dt IIEIGS-IIASOI'f AREA

ROBERt L. WINGETT
Pub Usher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant PubUsber/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters ue subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be published. Letttss
should be in good taste, odcmssing issues, not personalities.

Economy rules .
the political battle.
By JOHN CUNNI~F
AP Business Analyst
·
NEW YORK - If the coosumer economy continues in lhe direction it
~ headed, it could mean a stea~ly growing number of problems for lhe
€lint011 administration's economtc program.
·
·
; • The consumer economy is weak~ing, and e~ide.n~ of its deleriOf!itiOn
i)i revealed by the sharp· decline dunng March m retail sales, followmg a ·
smaller loss in February and a flat ~pon for January.
.
. ;· It is revealed also by ·price cutting, as wholesalers and retall~rs lrY to
use consumers. Most notably, tobacco and drug compan1es ~ave
dropped prices, and securities ·analysts speculace that food and \iCvemges
lnight be next
.
• After rising late last year, consumer confidence has weakened agam, .a
.:Cnection of heightened stress on household budgets. Inco~e growth IS
weak, savings have fallen. tax refWlds are smaller, debts remam high ..
•' Surveys show uncertainty is pervasive, enhanced by fear of hsgher
iaxcs and additional health-care costs, and worries that large-scale layoffs ,
from once-strong employers might persist.
.
.
• Tbe consumer perspective is in sharp con~t to lhe more 1mpe~
incasures of business and government econom~sts, ~hose confidence JS
$upportcd by rising productivity, moderate mflallon , and 1mproved
llomestic production.
·
:. Even the political critics or lhe administratio~. however, canno~ blame
fresident Clinton. They concede !hat tile same Situation preva1led m Pres·
tdcnt Bush's administration •.and they acknowledge there are no easy . answers. &lt; .
'
•
• But as lhe situation continues without appreciable improvement, ques· .
lions may arise about what economic policies arc 'be~t suited to the times,
a,nd intensify already widespread concern about added taxes on con-

to

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(NEA) - As
Hillary Rodham Clinton's Heallh
Reform Task Foree nears release of
its much-awaited plan, all sides in
the debate have suddenly caught
reform fever. Doctors. insurance
companies, hospitals and dru g
companies are all' swearing their
commiqnent to'refashioning the
natipn !s health-care system. On
closer exa!T\ination, !hey genuinely
do want reform - for the other
guy.
.
Clearly major, possibly even
fundamental, health-care reform is
coming. Admittedly, it is not com:
ing any time soon. Whatever the
first lady's task force recommends,
the plan will have to go through
Congress, and the battle there
· between vvell-heeled, entrenched
interest groups will be long and bi!·
tcr.
Most Capitol Hill insiders dismiss the idea that anything will be
completed in 1993. Many arc skeptical that ,work of\comprchensi ve
. health-care reform can be completed before the 103rd Congress
adjourns in October 1994. Ironical·
ly. if you listen to the various spe-

ADULTS SAY
'm~Y CAN'T AFfORD
TO HELP US
NOW. .

Robert}. Wagman

PAY. WHEN

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' · Supporters of the administr~t!on approach believe that whtle tax
increases arc disagreeable, there 1s no alcemallve 1f budget deficits are to
be lowered. Opponents contend thai increases can only worsen a bad situation.
.
:
: Oddly, and in a narrow sense, it pits otherwise fis~l liberals ~~
otherwise fiscal conservatives, a reversal of roles. TJIC•hbemls are seeking ,
lo clqsc the budget gap ~nd lhe co~se~atives .are ~ling to risk greater..
ilcficits.
:
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Some conservatives, for example, believe that any stimulus (~_g)
. package must be_ir multip_les of the $1_6 bi!lion p~~Sed by the adrmmstration, even whtlc recogmzmg thatlh1s m1ght nuse mterest rates and the
deficit. ·
· ,
· .-· ·
. To impose tax increases on already Stressed households, they say, IS to
worsen an already bad situation and put a squeeze on household budgets
like none experienced since lhe Great Depression of the 1930s.
: The argument is explained this way by economist John Willia~J:ls of
American -Business Econometrics, a Ridgewood, N.J. adv1ser to busmess
and individuals: ·
· ·
Personal consumption is two-thirds of gross domestic product; retail
:-; ales arc half of personal consumption; so, retail s~lcs arc one-third of
:,gross domestic product, the broadest measure of acuv11y. .
.
: . Result: If taxes lower retail spending, a rec_esst~n as hkcly that ml$hl
.might force Clinton supporters and advcrsancs mto more c.ooperauve
:positions.
·
•. The economic il)dicators to watch are those that affect or refii)Ct the
'levels of household liquidity, or ability and willingness to spend,_ includ·
::;ng the direction of incomes, debt levels, jobs, confidence and. retail S;aJes.
• In the end, the decision about whether to tax or not tax and tp ratSe or
~ower spending may be made by econom~c conditions over ~c next few
.months rather than by political forces seekmg to mflucnce pohcy.

ous kinds of doc tors , and the segment of the private sector that is·
infighting was becoming nasty. most ready to fill the role- major
The ()oc wrs finall y reali zed that, insurance ~ompanics that already
unless they were willing to ~om ­ run large managed-care programs,
promise, they were going to get -either through !heir comprehensive
:
price coiltrol s and ceilings and medical plans or HMO chains.
The Health Insurance Associ&amp;··
have liitle input into the final prolion of America has long represent·,
gram . ·
.
.
The current bpzzword is "man- .
So they have now come out m ed the nation's health insurance
aged competition. " Since this is .support of " projections " . .rather . companies. HIAA was stymied
likely to be the centerpiece. of the than ceilings, and " cost contain- when it became clear that most of:
Clinton plan, suddenly everyone iS !"ent: • ~ath er than innexiblc spend- its members did not want reform,
fo r it. However, as one Senate .mg hmtts. But their wdhngness to while its dozen or so largest mem-'
staffer said, " The operative defini- , compromise comes with a demand bers wanted reform now. Many of
tion around here of 'managed com- for a quid pro guo - a guarantee the biggest insurance companies
petition ' is: You go manage thp thai malpractice award limits and have now left HIAA. HIAA
other guys and leave me alooe.''
malpractice insurance reform (i.e., responded by reversing its slilnd,
Here arc the positions currently . premium· cuts) will be a pan of the coming out in favo r of certain
reforms. The smaller insurance
being taken by the major players:
·package.
·
.
companies'
response was to form ,
Doctors - For years the AmeriInsurance industry - No seg!heir
own
assocl8tion:
'lhe Council·
can Medical Association fought ment of the health-care industry is
for
Affordable
Health
Insurance.
·
against any .reform that might set as fragmented over reform as insur·
The
industry
is
~till
fighting
1imits on physicia,ns ' fees . .Last ers. Simply put, in a nationalllUIIJ·
year·the American College of Sur- aged-care system, latge insurance some reforms, however, such as
gcoils broke ranks by suggesting companies will get rich; small requiring insurers to cover every·
one, no matter lhe risk, at the same·
that an' overall national ceiling on insurers will go broke.
·
health -care spending might be
It is assumed that Congress will nites; or allowing employers to
acceptable. The AMA dismissed refuse to invent a new goverrunent band together to form large, pqwerthat notion, and all bur forced the bureaucracy to run a national man- ful insuraix:e-buyin$ cooperatives';
ACS out of organized medicine:
aged-care sr,~tem. That mearJS gov- or, above all, limiung insuranceihc split widened between vari- emment Will have to tum 10 !hat company profits.
Hospitals - . They are all for
. '
major reform·::Thcy believe the ,., "
only kind that will work is a healthcare sySielll built ~und "commu·
nity care networks. These would
be owned by local heallh·care _
providers - i.e., hospitals. The
hospititls are willing .to accept
almost any funding mechanism so ·
long as care is provided by hospitals and the allocation of resoun:es
is not controlled by the govern- ·
ment.
~EY'LL
Drug COJ11panies - The dru$
industry has come a long way,
from absolutely denying that drugs'
should even be a part o(heallh-care
~UP.
reform to the biggest cheerleaders
for reform - so long as any new·
national benefits package includes
prescription drugs and maintains
current laws on patent ri~hts. In'
exchange for accepting pnce ceil•.
ings, drug cornpallies want a much
cheaper way of getting approvals
on _new drugs they are trying to·
bring to marteL
Robert Wagman Is a syndical·
'
ed writer for Newspaper Euler·.
prise Association.
cia! interests gearing up to do bat-.
tic, each vows a deep comm-itment
to moving reform 'along at abreak_neck pace.

Chelsea .:C iinton :ls ..a beautiful girl
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· c~ctsea c ·lin.ion is a 'beautiful undlirstand that not everyone has is that the host. has a 2-ycar-otd or her child became matenal for
child. Caught .by either video or the ability to recognize the beauty daughter himself of _whom he ch~p jokes, the issue is taken out
still camei:a at this stage of little- in unfinished _structures. I drew . speaks_ often:. Forg1ve htm, Father, of the realm of censorship. It is
girl-al.most-y;oiJlan·, she has taken JXJrtraits for many years and even for he IS obvtously a saphcad.
sim~/rei:Ccu~ion will be OK. She
· my ~reath away - h~r innocent
·
W~al have we co~c to when a
freckled face suddenly puckering to
child s look s arc fau game for has many people who love her,
smooch her fllOther's nose at the
comedy? In my 41 years, 1 don't who will champion her strengths
Inauguration; her curly red hair
rcmcm~er this happening' be for~. and help her fmd her beauty when
spun by the wind and sun as she taught art to middle:school~rs, so Comedienn e a_nd autho~ F~nmc some olhers cannot. The rest of us
sits on bleachers wilh new friends maybe I'm mo~ attuned to art-in- Flagg, when domg her 1mnauon of who went through some of what
on her first day of school. ·
progress.
Lady Bird in the 1960s, used to she's going through, both men and
To those of us who have loved
1 am not surprised that not refer to Mrs. Johnson's "two semi· women, could have used some
little girls, she .is perfect. .
everyone recognizes how altraCtive beautiful daughters. " But those champions when we were sacri·
Hcrs ·fs "Dot the classic beauty of Chelsea Clinton is. But I am gen' young women were almost grown. ficed ·to lhe social pecking order all
a "Wonder Years"· Winnie or a uincly stunned that some adult I can recall a few cracks about the those years ago.
Brooke Shields, the cutest iirl in comedians and writers have had the Nixon girls, but not harsh ones.
If this were a. just world,
·
· R:ather, oafish cruelty to mention that !hey
Of· co11rse, come dY ase
· If has Congress
would
presclass cv11r smce
concepuon.
ident to put
intoempower
stockadesthe
anyone
Chelsea is the beauty under con- don't sec what I can sec. That is changed much since the Johnson
str.pction, glimpses,of lhe autactive somcthi'pg 'usu.ally left to one's and Nixon girls lived in the White who makes fun of children, and
woman to come flashing across lhe· churlish, pimple-headed, immatu~:e -House and in the public eye. Nolh- supply the rest of us with rotten
giggly adolescent face. She is what schoolmates who arc trying to bol- ing is sacred to lhe writers of pro- 'tomatoes. What would be more true
most women were at her age, and stcr shaky self-escecm by establish- grams such as "Saturday Night to life is a "Saturday Night Live':
she is the face featured in ads from ing a pecking order of attractive.- Live" and "In Living Color," not .skit where Phil Hartman makes a:
·
crack
about up
Chelsea's
and
the trendiest kids' fas h"ton des1gnness.
even children ·
she grows
to be 8 braces
knockout'
crs- Gap Kids,' Benettoo, Espirit.
I thought my cars would fall off
What message do we send when
Fresh, sweet. No little chiseled recently when 1. was listening to a we a~eptlhis hunful using of chil- about the same time all his hair
noses and doc eyes. No Winnies, or popular comedy p{ogra,m and the drell' as JOke fodder? That we are as falls out ami he develops a beer
Brookes.
host succumbed to the temptation loutish as· those who use them? gut.
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By Tile' Associated Press .
I
guess
I'd
have
10
say
that
few
of
an
easy
laugh
at
Chelsea's
When
you
consider
how
any
of
Sarah
Overstreet
is
a
syndl·
·
• Today is ThW"Sday, April 15, the 1051h day of 1993. There are 260
things surprise me any more. I expense. What absolucely awed me !hose comedians would feel if his cated writer for Newspaper
:days left in the year.
Enterprise Assoc:iatio~.
' Today's Highlight in History:
In the early morning of April 15, 1912, the British lux~ liner Titanic
'sank in lhe. N~ Atlantic off Newfoundland, leils than three hourS afcer
)lrilring an icebeig. About 1,500 people died in lhe disascer.
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• On this date:
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• In 1817, the fll"St American school for lhe deaf opened, in Hanford,
Barbara Meller Jensen was alive bar 'code. Side and rear windows said'AV'is neects lhe sticker codes to December.
J:onn.
.
· and well in Berlin, planning a fun- carried similar logos. Around town, identify cars it allows to be drjven
Now, stories throughout Europe
• In 18SO,Ihe city of San Francisco was inc01potaled.
and-sun Florida vacation wilh her I saw that Hertz and other rental out of stale: "If we rip them all off warn tourists 10 avoid Miami. Now .
: In 1861, President Lincoln declared a SIBle of insurrection and called two small children, when I cars had s imilar ·stickers. Self· for the two people who might get government and car rental offJCwS ·
)Jut Union troops.
.
· approached lhc Avis desk at Miami warned ~ I stayed hea,lthy by staying attacked, what are we going to do are meeting and promising. Sud•. In 1865, at 7:22 a.m·., President Cincoln died, several hours after he International Airpon on March 18
about the, hundreds ~thousands dcnly, the car rental execs are anx~as shot and wounded at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Willces with a request that was treated as
"."
who want a car !hey can drive ious to scrap lill decals and
:Sooth. Andrew Johnson became tlie nation's 17th presidenl
strange, indeed.
lY.l1
back tQ, say. Atlanta?"
insigrtias. Their logos have proven
• In 1892, General .,Electric Co., formed by the merger of the Edison
I wanDed ! rental car wit a
I asked: Why couldn't lhe red cost incfficienL
·
l;:Iectric Light Co. and olher f1rms, was incorporated in New York state.
license plate that dido ' t begin with vigilant.
~
" AVIS" logo be snipped off, so
Martin Schram is a """dltated
; In 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was buried at the Roosevel~ " Y" or "Z" ...,.... the designation .
Later, Avis vice president for only the tiny bar code remains? writer for NewsP,.per E'.i'terprlse
f.an_lily home in Hyde Park, N.Y. . . .
.·
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Florida had used for all rental cars · ·public rclatians, Demetria Mudar Why ·couldn't it be done at the Association.
·
,. In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castro artived in Washington to begin a umii.'Gov." Lawton C~iles' Pebru- . defended the " AVIS" ·stickers, same limp they empty ash IIiJys and \.
~oodwill tour of the United Slates. ·
. ' .
ary declaration of a,"state of emer· telling my rcscardi associate Laura vacuum each car1
·'
•. In 1985, South Africa said it would repeal laws prohibiling sex and gcncy" suspended the practice. Atwell : "We are within regulaNo one thought of it, said VP
i,Jarriage between whites and ·non-whites.
Tliug s were using the 'Y" and tion ." Mudar elaborated ~o nie: Mudar; " 'lthink you're raising a
:· In 1986, the United States launched an air raid against Libya in " Z" platAS to target tourists, who " We've had no big identifiers '
really good point. We y;ill be lookp:spoose·10 the bombing or a discotheque in Berlin on AprilS; Libya says often carry lots of cash, Five no bumper sti~kers or frontliccnse ing into it"
·
. - - - - - ---'-----,
;j7 people, mostly civilians; died in the raid.
tourists had bccri slain·this ·year, plates.... That' meets the current
But Avis veep James added it Berryts World
;. In 1989, students in Beijing launched a series of pro-democracy many others beaten and robbed. standards."
was all the fault of criminals, not
Protests upon the death of former Communist Party leader Hu Yaobang.
The rate of ctime,a'gainsttourists in
The pathetic thing is that she's · car rental companies. Also: "If you
•• In 1990, actreSS Orela Garbo died in New York at age 84.
south Florida more than doubled right. In 1991, semi-caring minds happ~n to be like thO\. German
:: Tllll yeilfs ago: Roy L. Williams agreed to resign as president of the since 1989, a ·Miami, Herald analy- in Florida spotted !his life-or-dcalh wol'lan was, driving in a new car in
'teamsters union as pan of a bargain with federal prosecutors. (Williams sis concluded.
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•
problem - so they wrote a law and the wrong pan of town, you Sland
was succwled by Jackie Presser.)
My business require4 driving a loophole.' Dade County enacted out - sticker or no sticker.?
&gt; Five' years ago: Former White House spokes111an L!llry Speakes into ' unsavory ~e1ghborhoods . an ordinance declaring: "A pattern · ' About "that German woman:':
~igned from Menill Lynch and Co. less than a week after discloein~ that
Since I ,)1111~ raised in 1\iiamt ·and · exis~ of criminals IIJTS~tll)g ·tourists On April2,•.Barbara Meller Jensen
he had, on two occasioos, fabricated quotations attributed to Prmdent fir~t worked aU~c ·[ate lameJited drivinfi rental' cars ,,. ~leading) to ,left Miami airport in a renied car
Reagan.
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Miami News, I had Ibis advaniage certain tragedies includmg theTOb- · bearing a "Z" plate on the rear and
. One year aso: RUssia's deeply divided ConBJ:CSS of People's Deputies over Barbara Meller Jensen: I kriew bcrics, shootings, and deaths of a fro!lt plate lettered: "~0."
formaUy endorsed Presiden~ B&lt;!fU Yellsin's econom~ reforms. Countries I couldn't allow my car to mark me inn~nt people who are vacation· She exued an expressway IDto a
baned Libyan JC1$ from the1r ~ and ordered diplomats to ao home · as some thug's pOtcntial~yday/
ing in Dade County/ ' It outlawed . proble,n area. Robben 5PI?lled ller .
because o( .Libya's refusal to 111m over suspects in the bombing of Pan
The Avis representative first "lillY bumper stickers, insignias, or Alamo car and .rear-enclecl jL When
Am Flight 103. Hotel magnate Leoni Helmsley began serving a fO\)I'·year . told me the)' had no cars with non- advenislng that identifies the vehi· , she aot out to mspca, they robbed
prisori sen!enCe for tax evasion.
· " '(" or "Z" license plates. :Sut clc as arental car."
her; lbey beat llcr; they ran over her
· Today's Binhdays: Actor Michael An.sara is 71. Country si~ger R~ two clerks ana ooc hour later, I got
'''
with.!heir car as her small children
. Clark is 60. Actress Elizabeth Monagomery is 60. Actress Claudia Cardi· one. Off I drove. But Avis was still
Bizarrely, it exempted "any and her molller wall:hed in horrl)r,
'
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· nale is S4. Rock singer-guitarist Dave EdmWlds is 49. Actress Emma_ targcting ,llle ,for robbers. On 111y · emblem less ·lhan 2 inclles by 4
Barbara_MeUcrJensen.ateal!tlet
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is 34.
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windshield was@ bright red sticker, inche.s that iJ p~ on the rental in Berlia, became a galvanizing
I
~~ for Today: '!lfillory wciuld be an excellent thins if only it . 2 inches by 4 inches, a bold white car for. inventory Jllll_¥JIU only." statistic in Miami: sixth tourist
'
wen~lnle. '' - Lto Tolstoy, Russian 1111hor (1828,191()). ·. ·
" AVIS " · al)o.ve a tiny inventofy Avis' vice presiilent RuuellJames (third German) murdered since ..._..__ _ ~-"'c--...,.,..,-.:..,--..J
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Food drive set
for Sunday

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Stocks

------Weather-----

'. Heritage .•• Con~nued~m
..;...--MeigS annOUnC{!ments·-~ · · (;l~rk,

week~

Former Pb'illies' outfi'eldet
meets with area Rotarians

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Thirteen were fi ned anH nine public intoxication ; Brian Diehl,
others· forfeited bonds in the court 'Racine, $11 3 and costs, possession
of Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed of a controlled substance; Carl CalMICH.
Monday night.
.
?iber, Long Bouom, $375 a nd costs,
Fined
were
James
Chapman
,.
D'UI , 90 day license suspension,
. A repon on plans for the .annual
Bus driver eenificates for Pauy · Middleport, $113 and ·costs, public throe days in school or in jail; Boyd
Toledo 49"
Meigs County academic exceUence Johnson of. Meigs Local and
banquet was given by John Riebel, Michael Hursc of Eastern Local intox ication ; Tammy Slump , Bailey, Racine, $88 and costs, open
,
PA.
Sr., superintendent at Tuesday were approved as was a computer Pomeroy, $25 and costs, scat belt Oask.
viol
ation,
driver's
side,
and
$63
Forfeiting
bond
s were ·s unday
night's meeting of the Meigs Coun- software service agreement with and costs, no operator's license; Davis, Mason, W. Va.
S64, speedty Board of Education. ·
the .Southeast Ohio Voluntary Edu- Max Geary, Middleport, $63 and ing; Nev White, Raci ne, S60. failMansfield !sO"
The banquet will be held on cation Cooperative.
costs, traffic light violation;.Christy urc to yield the ri ght of way ; Eli1.a- ·
- IND.
May 4 at Meigs High School.
Auending lhe meeting were Bill Johnson, New Haven, $375 and belh Bunge, Columbus, $66, spcc6The superintendent also reponed Qui ~kel, J!!:esident; Jeff Harris ,
on the Franldin B. Walter academic Rob~rt Burdeue, Harold Lohse, costs, DUI, with a 90 (lay license ing; Carol Roberts, Portland, $67,
suspension; Barney Hiles, Middle- speeding; Earl Phelps, Portland , ·
excellence winners .from lhe lhree Dohrman Reed, and Riel)el.
port, S63.and costs, failure 10 com· S~ . speeding; Rebecca Lavender,' ·
·
46°
high .schools in Meigs &lt;;:ounty and
•
lcolum~us!s1•
-ply with a· court order; Mark Rcit- S.ytacusc, S72, speedin g; Roland
,. '
on activities and anticipated per·
mire , Pomeroy , $200 and costs, Goodwin, Middleport, S63, speedsonnel changes in the Adult Basic
driving
under s'uspensio11 .
ing; Sarah Carman, Pomeroy, S67, ·
\
Education Program;
Judith
Laudermil
t',
Rutland
,
speeding:
Shirl ey Jones, Tuppers
r·
· Riebel said that eight l)ave
47"
S375
and
costs
•.
three
days
in
jail,
Plains,
$67, speeding.
applied for the· position of seCsix months' license suspension, and l\T
•
ondary supervisor wilh tile County
'''''
Sl50
and
costs,
operating
under
Board of Education. Bill Buckley
!
Contillued from page,l
W. VA.
Subway Restaurants .or. Gallipo- o.river's license suspension;. Chanresigned from that job w~en he
dra
Van
Meter,
Rutland,
$150
and
.
·
acceptetl the position of Meigs lis, Pomeroy and Point Pleasant, in costs, driving under suspension,
Boling
said
several
guard
mc;m- •
Local · superit~tendent. Riebel cooperation with M:tgic 101 additional si,.; months' suspension. ·bers were inside secured sections
reviewed the applications for the WMGG Radio, will be collecting
Monty Riffle, Pomeroy, $113 oflheprisonWednesdaynight.But
board. Interviews with lh~ a~pli - cans bi food from 3 to 4:41 p.m. and costs, public intoxication; Dale few soldiers were seen outside ~:
- ...A .. · cants -will begin next wee by Sunday for the "Food for Food R
·rn p
SJI3
grounds:
·
1
.
•
c, omcroy,
· an d ·cos.ts, priSon
Until
Wednesday,
the law•:diBII Riebel and John Costanza and !heir '93'~ c;IDlpaign.
recommenda:tions' will be ,brought
Area residents can \lrop off·theit '
enforcement force at the complex
Pl.
to' the board at the next meeting.
cans at the nearest Subway Restau.was made up mainly of State Higll- .
Inc.
Buckley's resignation is effective rant during the '101·minute drive.
way · Patrol troopers and prison •
Ma 31.
.
Magic 101 will be broadcasting Am Ele'Power...:................37 3/4 guards.
•
~pecial education specifications live during the event.
Ms. Kornegay refused to
Ashlallll
Oi1
........................
27
1/8
were amended by the board 10 meet
Radio stations across the colin- AT&amp;T................................581/8
address questions about demands
Extended fotecast:
South-Central Ohio
'
requirements
of
the
medicaid
protry
will be participating. The length Bank One........................... 60.
Saturday through Monday:
Tonight, windy with occasional
Saturday, a cbance of rain. Lows gram . The changes in specifica- of the event depends on the freshowers an&lt;! thunderstorms. Heavy
Bob Evans ................... ,.....18 518
. , ·' ·rain 'possible. Low around· 50. 35-40. Highs 50-55. Sunday and tions were made in an effort to quency (dial setting) of the station, Cllarming Shop..................l5 1/8
qualify the county for Medicaid a press release from Magic 10 I . Chmp Industries................. l2 1/2
SPRING VAllfY CINEMA -,
Chance of iain 80 percent Friday, Monday, fair. Lows in the 30s. dollars.
sa•d . .
446 4514
·. .
cooter wilh rain likely. High in the Highs in lhe 50s.
City Holding......................22
' '
low 50s. Chance of rain 70 percent
Fedetal Mogul.-...................18 318
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................79 1/4
page l
.
. .· • . Key Centurion ................... 26·1/8
Lands End..... ,. ...................29 1/4
s 4san
fash.ion show available by 'Memorial, Day
Limited Inc ....................... 22 518
' Ohio River Festival
for $5 each. Space is limited. 'there chairman, reporting on the eighth end. This new ornament will fea. This year's Ohio River Festival, will also be baked items, hot dogs annual style revue, stated it was ture lhe Pomeroy-Mason !!ridge Multimedia Inc . ..,.:............34 3/4
Bancorp ....................l3 1/2
located in Ravepswood, W.Va., is and drinks. The church is located one of the most successful and·pos- and will be aqua IIJid·silver in color. Point
Rax
RestauranL
................. J/8
scheduled for June 10-13 from 11 across from Forked Run State Park. itive shows for the association. She The bulbS will sell for $7 each.
Reliance
Elecnic
............... 11 1/8
a.m. to. 9:30 p.m. Anyone interest- Call 378-6133 or 378-6422 for expressed her appreciJIIion to all
A clean-up day for the minl· Robbins&amp;Myers .. ......... :.... 17 1/4
ed in having an arts and crafts information.
'
who aSsisted in any way ·with lhe park and the parking lot median Shoney's lnc .........:............20
1
hooih is requested to send a resume
•
evcnL
areas was set for Thursday, April Star Bank ...........................38 3/4
with photographs to: Ohio River
·· homemakers to meet
Revitalization news
22, at 5 p.m. F)owers will again be Wendy lnt'l........................l3 3/4
Festival , P.O. Box , 125,
The Third Wedn~sday Home- • 'i Reporting on revitalization, planted in those areas. and Jeff
Ind. ............... 27 1/4
l{avenswood, W.Va.,.26164. Limit- mak.ers Club of Syracuse will meet · Mrs. Clark stated thai although · Thorton of'Radne has agreed to WQrll)ington
Stock
reports
are the 10:30
ed spaces arc available for !his out- Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Pomeroy did not receive funding dona\e those flowers. '
a.m. q uoles provided by
door fe.Stival at the cost of $25 per municipal building. Bring needles- this year, plans ate currently under· nie next promotion of the asso- Kemper· Securities, lac., o
~ and ta~les and coverings will
to tie quilts. There will be a flower way to proceed with lhe process for elation will feature a "Mother's Gallipolis.
. . ~·
riot be provided. Night security will seed exchange and eggs will be fin· next year.
·· ·
Day" them~ wilh a group advertise. hi' provided. Jnterested artists and ished. Bring anything you choose • John Musser, revitalization ment 10 run in The Daily Sentinel
crafcers arc urged to apply as soon lo work on.
. . spokesl)'lail for the association, is in on Monday, May 3. Businesses in
a~ possible. Call (3Q4) 273-8065
the process of setting up a meeting town are encouraged to hang balOfficers elected
with Lisa McDaniel Qf the Ohio loons outside lheir.stores 011Friday,
Antique dub to meet
'Officers' of the Harrisonville Department of Development to May 7.
'
,
. The Big :Send Farm Antique Scipio Alumni met recently at the determine what steps can be taken
Jim Andersqn, vice-president,
Club will meet Monday at South- home of Harold Grahain, vice-pres- in next year's apelication to further who conducted Wednesday's meetem High School at 7:30p.m.
ident, to make plans for the ban- . enhance the possibility of receiving ing, urged those in lhe busmess disquet on May 29. The dinner will be the grant
trict to begin thinking about !heir
·
Bazaar planned
catered. MuSic will be provided by
Mrs, Clark staled lhat according exterior-Christmas lights for next
The Ladies Society of the Fel- Alvin Chutes Band. The scholar- to Farmers Bank~ ~ilillQan pro- ··· year. lfe alSo c'alled for a more-unilowship Church of the Naz.ar~ne, ship is open to a graduale, child cir gram wilt be set~up far busineSSjls ,.form IOOJc ro'llle lights arid 'felt that
• R:eedsville, will have a spring yard grandchild of a graduate. Ap[!ly to who were going to participate in by ~~g now that look co'\ld be
sale and bazaar on May ' 8 from 9 Joy Clark, .992:-3690; Harold Gta- . t~e revitalization program but who ach1eved.
DJfll. to·5 p.m. Tables are available . ham, 742-3033; Fr~nces 'Alkire, cannot wait another year for grant
next meeling of lhe associa.
.
'
/
" treasurer, 742-2.775; Gladys Cum- , funding. The bank has '\greed to tio11The
will be May 12 at 8:30a.m. in
ings, 9_92-7131. .
malcc those jmprovemcnt loans at the conference room -of Bank One
one percent below prime.
in Pomeroy. New members weiGolf to begi'L
' .
Other,molters . · ·
corned to lhe association are ChapThe Tuesday Morning,L.adies
Edward Malttox
In other mauers, it· 'was man Shoes, Davis-QuickellnsurLeague
of the Meigs County .Golf announced that the next Christmas ance and the Meigs C.ounty Golf
~ Edward Lawrence Mattox, 80,
Albany, died Wednesday, April 14, Club will meet for its first play ornament in the series started by Course, au full members, and Ken199.3 at Ohio State.University Hos- Tuesday at 9 a.m ~ All ladies arc" Bank On~ three years ago, will be neth R. Uu, C.P.A., association
invited.
member:
ll)ial in Columbus.
tte· was boJll in Middleport on
..
,
' April 7, l 913': a son of the late
Free screenmg
. .
Elmer and !della Hawlcins Mattox. ·
A free comprehenstv~ v1s1on
He was a former foundry worker. screemng w11l be .provide~ by.
·He was a graduate of the class of Manet~:&amp; Opthalmology ~ssoc1ates
1933 of Middleport High School.• . on Apnl2:i :Crom IO,a.m._to 2 p.m.
.
'
, He was a veteran of the U.S. Army, at Fruth _Pharmacy_m M1'!dlcpon. ·- Mel ClariC, a .former major tady, N.Y. l:li:i manager asked him
S:ccond Air pivisio~. 3891\1 Bomb Rescrvat1ons are not nccCSS!U)':
league outfieldel"'with lhe 'Philadel- if he wap!Cd'to.play in the majcirs.
Group.
·.
•
phia Phillies, was the featured
After saying "Yes," Clark's
Dance planned•
; He is survived· by two brothers,
speaker
when
the
Middleportmanager
told him to repon lhe next
There will be a western dimce at Pomeroy Rotary Club met at the
~oben Mattox, Alamo, Texas, and
day
to
the
Phillies, who were playDale Mattox, Philadelphia, Pa.; ~wo Middleport Elementary on Satur- Heath Uniled Methodist Church on ing in Pil!.sburgh, Penn.
aunts. one uncle, several nieces, day, April24, from 8-11 p.m. spon- Mond~y evening.
After an overnight nip, he was
n,ephcws and cousins.
.. sored by the Middleport Arts
Clark told of many Incidents told by his _'!1)W manager that he
Besides his parents, he was pre- Council. ,Dances to be featured relating to =his brc'aking in~o the would be )1fiiying right field that
ceded in death by five brothers and include Boot Scoolin' Boogie, line "big leagues." ' ,
,
nig~t and lialting fifth in the rotadancing, Texas two·slep, :Achy·one sister.
·
· One of the intidents mentioned tion. That night he was two for four
· · Services .will be Saturday at I Brealcy. COS( is $3 sing~ or $5 per by Clark was that when he was in at baL The ne,.;t night he hit a home
' p'. m. at Fisher Funeral Home in couple. Food, sweets and soft the third grade, his teacher asked run and bat~ three for live.
'Middleport with ' Rev. Edward drinks will be sold.
all of the students to write down
Clark. was· introduced by Dick
J~nes officiati!ig. Bufilll .~ill be a(
.what lhey· lil~ to be wlie,n;they Vaug·hn. President Gene RijlgS
, L01111 Oak Cemccety in Pbsnt Pleas- ·
Lodge to meet
grew up. He"'wtote ,"Big l..etlgue" announced !he Rbtary' fund rBiser
·• There will be a special3meeting baseball player. Years later his for
am, W.Va.
!his spring· will be ~e Rotary
GET A LOW
. Friends· may call at the funeral · of Chester Lodge No. 45 JOnight . teac~er showed him what he had Pancake Breakfast 10 be held Saturhome after I 0 a.m. on Saturday· (Thursday) at 7:30 p.m. There will written. .
PRICI; TAG ON
day, April24, from 7-11 am. at the
until lhe time of the service.
be work in the fellowcraft degree. i
Clark pointed out that hard worlc Senior Citizens Cencer on Mulberry
A MAVTAG!
· Memorial 'connibulions niay be Refreshmelll9 will be served.
and· dedication are required of any Heights.
111adc to the.cJ!arity of your chmce.
naturally talented player to malce it.
Tickets may be bought from any
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG
Bhhop to mit ' ·
He said he wonders if ioday's play• · Rotarian and proceeds will go
WASHERS ·
West Ohio United Methodist , crs, with their huge salaries, !)ave towards Rotary service projects in
· Tite ..Doily\'
S
entinel
BishOp
Judith
Craig
will
be
atlhe
•
Lasts
ktnoer, ne.Ws fewer
!hat dedicatioo.
~
Meigs County.
, ·r
'
r~pai rs and costs ress to
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
When he broke lnld lhe major
The ladies of Heath UMC
- serv1ce
PubUahr.d , every aflt!moon , Monday · on Saturday at 2 p.m. The public is
league, c,Jark said lte was taldng a served dinner.
1• No. 1 preferred brand.·
through f riday, ,111 Court -St., Pom(IT9)',
. '
inyiled to meet B1shop Cnug.
playing
in
Schenecshower
after
Ohio - by the Ohio Va11oy J.'.Wliahing
'

Today i'n history

'

The Dally Sentinel-Page-!

Area death

Sarah :Overstreet

Are. -!ogos Qn ren.tal cars to~ costly? ·

-

•

Supt. Riebel reports· -Pomeroy Court newson banquet plans

Accu,Wealher• forecast for daytime conditions

'.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Compony/Multimodia

Inc., . Pomen&gt;y.

"

Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. SCcond cla.u
poAlagr, Mid at Pomeroy, Ohio. ~ \
Member: The Associ atad .Preis, and theOhio N(1wHpnper Auocia&amp;1on, National

AdvortiMinA

RcprOicnlAlive, 8.-.nham

Nowopopor Sal.,., 733 Third Avenue,

New York. N~w York 10017.

• No 1 prefttrtd brWICf"

• Oepilnctal)lity P'Mn.,.

'

.

C~ll launclnn

·• ~ ~n·entmt~

.

RUIWID

�..

'.

•

Spor~s
&gt;

_

.

ing champion Atlanta Braves.
Atlanta is ofr to a decent 6-4
sUIIt, but the Braves have been shut

o~t.two times in 10 games and are
htltlng .197 as a team.
The best team through the flfSt

10 ,jays of the season is the
Philadelphia Pbillies, who
improved to 8-1 Wednesday night
with a 9·2 victory over Cincinnati
at Vctenms Stadium for their fifth
straight win.
Philadelpru.'s Wes Chamber·
lain did it all in Wedneslay's win,
collecling lhree hits, driving in two
runs and throwiag out a runner at
the plate. .
.
· Ben Rivera (1·1) pitched six
Shutout ~ allowing four hils,
strilcing out seven and walking four
for the victory. Los« Tom BIOWII·
ing {0..2) p_ve up five hits and five
runs in 4 213 innings.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Chicago 3, Atlanla 0; Houston 9,
Montreal S; Aorida 6, San Francisco 4; New York 6, Colorado 3:
Piusbmgb 11, San Diego 7; and St.
Louis 2, Los Angeles 1 in 15
innings.
Cubs 6, Br11ves 0
Mile~ Harkey came off the diS·
abled bst to pttch 7 1/3 shutout
i'!nings _a! Atlanta, giving up f~
h1ts, Slriking out .five and walking
two.
The ri!lhthan&lt;ler, placed on the
disabled li• on March 27 to conlin·
ue rehabilitation "'f his left knee,
was removed from the game after

.-

Pistons look to~~.~hake road-trip _blues after win over Hawks
By The AssOciated Press
The Detroit Pistons' recent hot
streak will go for naught if they
can ' t tum around their season-long
road woes.
Only one game separates Charlotte, Detroit, Indiana and Orlando
in the Eastern Conference stand- ·
ings, and only two of those teams
c·anmake the NBA playoffs unless
sixth-place Atlanta falters.
The Pistons have made the play·
offs every year since 1983, but this
season they are 0·6 in Charlotte,

.

walking Otis Nixon with.one out in
the eighth inning. Bob Scanlan
relie.ved and got out of the inning
before Randy Myers finished.
Jose Vizcaino drove in three
· runs for the C11bs.
Harkey is now 1-0 on the year
.and loser Pere Smith is 1-1.
· Astros ~.Expos S ,.
The Montreal bullpen blew a
·lead against Houston for the second
straight game at Olympic Stadium
and the Astros capitalize!!, winning
their· fifth straight road game after
losing their first three games at

a tie and capped a three-run sixth
inning at Candlestick J&gt;ark. The
~lins snapped San Francisco·~
four-game Wtnning streak.
· ,
One day before the Braves were
to arrive for a four-game series,
manager Dusty Baker held both
Barry Bonds and Will Clark out of
the startin-g lineup because of
minor injuries.
Ryan Bowen (1-0) allowed four
runs, two unearned, walked five
and Sttuck out three in five innings
for his fint victOry sin~e October
1991. Bryan Harvey pilched the
home.
ninth for his third~ve.
Houston scored two runs on
Bill Swift fell til 0-1..
wild pitches, in.cluding the goMets 6, Rockies 3
ahead run in a three-run seventh 10
Sid Fernandez held Colorado to
take the lead as the .Expos again one hit in five shutout innings at
missed closer John Wetteland, out Mile High Stadium before leav.in.g
with a brolcen toe. The Astros ral· with stiffness in his left shoulder,
lied for seyen runs ill the seventh and' New York held on to beat the
inning in a 9-6 victory on Tuesday Rockies.
.
against Montreal.
·•
The Mets are now 4-3, with all
Marie Portugal {2-0) pitched six · of their victories coming against
innings, giving up five runs and Colorado.
•
·
four hits. Reliev~r Mike Gardiner
. Fe~ez (1-0) did not allow a
(0·1) gave up t11rce runs and didn't h1t unul A!idres GaJan:aga led off •
record an out in th~; seventh.
the fifth With l! sharp smgle to left
Marli~-6 Giants 4
field. Mike Draper took over in the
The Aorida: Marlins won their sixth and held the Rockies score· first road game in three tries as less through two more innings until
Rich Rentaia's pinch single broke
(See NL.on PageS)

New York. Cleveland anll Chicago,
the site of their next four games.
"We've haven't won in any of
those cities this year, but we better
win in one or two of them on this
·trip," Detroit coach Ron Rothstein
said after Wednesdny night's 87-84
victory at home over Atlanta . .·
The Pistons are tied with lndiana for tile conference's eighth
spot, with Charlotte a half-game
ahead and Orlando a half-game
behind.
Whe'n Detroit comes home from

its road trip, all that will remain of
the season will be home games
with Indiana and New lersey.
"We have 10 beat Charloue and
then hope we c.an compete with
New York," said forward Dennis
Rodman, who had 22 rebounds
against Atlanta. "We can beat
Cleveland, but Chicago will be difficult"
.
Terry Mills scored 24 points for
the Pi,s tons,' while Dorriinique
Wilkins had 29 for Atlanta.
.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was

.

Sol)thern.diamondmel) ·beat M~igs . 7. . 3

MILLIGAN'S OUT -The Cincinnati Reds'
. · Randy Milligan (left) is out at the plate despite a
hard slide into. Philadelf.llla backstop Darren
Daulton ia the seeoad nalng or Wedaesdn

S,o uthem collected seven bits
and took advantage of three muhirun inningua route to posting a 73 Tri-Valley Confereoc:e win over
county rival Meigs Wednesday
evening in Rai::ine.
The game became a baule of the
Jones boys as brothers Eric and
Billy Jones of Soulhem (4-3) wept
head-to-head with brother Keith•of
Meigs. Every brother did good
job for their respective teams, but
but in the end Eric tmd Billy posted ·
temporary bragging rights to the
lop branch in the family tree. Keith
was .a premier pitcher for Soulhein'
last season, but transferred to
Meigs.
Andy Grueser pitched a fine
game to post the win for Mick
Winebrenner's Tornadoes. Grueser
fanned 10, walked just.three and hit
two hatters. Billy Jones was behind
the plate.
Brett Newsome got the stan for ·
Meigs, but was relieved by Keith
Jones i~ the fourth inning. They

a

night's game in Philade)phla, where the PhDiies
won 9·2. Milligan was thrown out by right-field·
er Wes Chamberlain. (A1')

..
'•

- * Baseball *£uttm IM•Iaion ·
W

L

Ptt.

l
2
2
3
Chicago ...•..,. ............4 5
Monuul ..................3 5
Florida .....................3. 6

.119
.750
.750
·.571

PIIU•delphia ., ...........a
Pinsbuf&amp;h ................6
St. LouiJ ..................6
New Yi1rk, ...............4

•-diacbld diwiliaa. Ql.le
, . . - pii)Olr-

•
EASTERN CONFERENCE

NATION~L LEAGUE
TQIII

Son !&lt;I.e............ ll '10 Z 24 21511111

-*NBA •..,...

WednO!Iday's"""""

Atli•Uc:Diw~

To•
W L
y-Now YOik ........ _ss Zl

15
3

•

.444

4.S

s

.333

Wa:lern Olvlslon
j
.625
Athn\.1 ..... , .._......... .".6 4 .600
San Francisco .......... S 4 · .SS6
. Lot Angel., .. .......... .l 6 .333
Colol'l!do ........... :.. - ..2 S -.216
San Dic.go ................2 6 .250
C~CINNATI... .......l
7 .222

Phil•dolpllia ........... 23 S3

.303

Walhinpln....... - .... 21

.276

.5S

Banan 4, Ol:aaw• 2
lhnf••U. N.Y. llloadon 4((7[)
W.......... 2,N.Y........ O
Pl.-p 6, N.. !oftoy6, do

CJI

801&amp;m,_ .................43 33 . .S66
New Jency .....••......42 3S .SU
o.t..do ...-·--·•-..::131 • 31 . ~._A[P3 .
Mlomi ....................3S 41 .~l

!.S

.375

Pet.
.71.4

ll

''J -..

-~-

x·Qt~ifJ_.............. S4

. .s

l.S
l.S
3
3.S

s.s

v -.. "J..Go Anae~M.l0:40p.m.
Frklar'•

MI-DI•IIioo
W L PeL
x-HCW~Ga ...: ..- ......Sl 25
.671
x· San Anfoaio .......~ ~ .611
• ·Uuh ................. - 43 33 .566
Dcn- ...................33 44 .429
Min....,.. .............. l&amp; ss· .237
o..u.........................s . 68 .tos

Pttilldclphia 9, GNCINNATI2

Turn

New York 6, Colorado 3
Pituburgh II , San Diego 7
SL Louis 2, Los Angeles 1, lS inninp

Todoy's games "
Houston (Drabek 1- 1) 11 Montreal

(Dennis Martinez 0.2).
New York (Gooden 1-1} It Colorado
(Niod 101).
.
.
Pitt.sburgh (Cooke 0- 1) 11 San J;&gt;ic&amp;o
·(Eiland 0.1 ).
St. Lwis (Arocha 1-0) 11 Lot Aqgelet

ll·Seaulc .. -, ............51 15
ll•Pot\l&amp;nd ... ;......... :47 28
L.A. Cllppen ........ l8 39
L.A. I...aken .......;.... 36 40
Golden s..............32 44
Sacramenta .......... _22 S4
X·Clinchcd phyofJ berth
y-clinchcd division title
z-cUnched conrerenco thle

Atlanta (G. Maddull. 1· 0) 11 Sa~ Fran·

cisco (D ranllcy 0-0).

·

Friday's games
P h ila~cl phia

(Mulholland 2-0) at
Chicago (Morgan 0-2), 3:20p.m. ·
Colo rado ( Henry 0 - 1) 1t Montred_
(Bottenfield ()...J), 7:35 p.m.
New York (Schoun:i. 0.1) •• CINCIN·
NATJ (R.ijo 1·0), 7:35p.m .
•
Flo rida (Houah ~ 2 · 0 ) u llounon

.7SO

.625

Toronto ... \' .............. .4

_3
J

.571

i)euoiL.. ...................3

4

.429

CLEVEL\ND ......... 3
·Milwaukee ........... ,...2
Baltimore .................2

S .J7S
S .2&amp;6
6 , .250

L.A.

Mlnncsou ................4

.4

.500

2

7

.125

S

"

Ttarft

LOS. ANGELES RAIDERS - Apood
MIAMI DOLPHINS c.. S;gnccl Troy
Taylor, quaiterback, tnd Martin Hocheru:,

'

,.

Seaule (Cummi ng• 0.1) at Toronto .

y~ ..........

47 27 10
y-Monaool ........ 41 30 6
y·JM!alo .......... 31 3S 10
Hudool ...... ...... 26 Sl 6
OU.wa ............ " 10 70 Ill

·
(Ciemcna2·0). . .
. Kansaa City (Appier 0..2) 11 New York
(Key~) .

Hubbard. Creenho~US
I• Now Open For
Spring SeiUon

...........

104 3Sl 300

lG:! 3:16 210
16 Jll :!PO
Sl 210 364
')4 202 395
' i.

(Darw1o 0-1 ~ 6,111 p.m: .
OU.laad (Wele""h 2...0) Jt Milwallkte
(Wepnoo o-2~ 7:05 pm.
. S..alo ( 1 - 1·0) 11 0....0 (Wolla .
1

-4f~~0.2)ata.BYI!LAND

.
.

(l(qy o-2), 7:05p.m.
Tau (I.Arf•rt• 1·1) at N.ew. York

'

.

1.0) ot Bal"""'"'

· . ..

·

,.T-.......... 44 2111 , •

m.,

SL .._ .. - ...,.. 36 36 ll 13 ~
,. •
""""'- -.. ~,. . 36 :r11o , u
zn
Tanpo RaJ ....... D ,; 7 5J 240 :1:16

·. v-..
·

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. ,_.... Aqo141 .. 39 3410
39. 37 7
- ......... 26 49 ' . ,

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Cllllfli. . $1.2Stln. '

·

•

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(OPFER liXPIRiiS 6/21 /93)

0

.·

. .

HUIIAIDS GIEIIIOUSE

NL games

., Easler satd, . I knew 90ce he got
(Continued from Page 4)
• the knowledge ... fear and ·appre• • • ...;..:.=:::.::.::.::.::::::.:..::~;:_-----~.hension goes away.'' ·
; , Vaughn, who has one homer, Colorado scored in the eighth on his outs ori strikeouts, while ,allow·
...has helped propel Boston, which Eric Youl~J'S three-run triple. Mike ing one run ll!ld two hits, 19 earn
finished in the AL East cellar last Maddux pttched 1 1/3 innings for the victory in relief of Randy Tom·
season, in10 first place with a 6-2. his fim save as a Met, allowing lin. ·
record, its best start in 38 years.
one hit
.
Cardlaals l, ~ 1. ·
.,, "He's a lot more patie!l! around
Plratesll, Padres 7
· "Gre&amp;&amp; Jefferies' infield .sinaie in
.... the plate," Cleveland manager .
Andy ·'Van Slykc d,rove in a the ISth inning scored Brian Jixdan ·
;t Mike Hargrove said. "He was a career-high five runs, and Pitts· from third base to lift viseing S l
. t. good hiner last year, but now it burglt beat Sad Diego for the fiflll Louis past ~ ~ea. whic~ h8d
· ~ -Ce!IIS he. h.u ·improved on his time in U many mtelingS&lt;this Sea· only four hits.
•
,
Jefferies' hit off rookie Rick
'! mechanics.''
. son.
.
Scott Cooper went 4 fer 4 with
· Vaa Slyte contributed a two-run Trlicek (0.1) glanced off the aJove
· ~ three RBis illld had one of Boston's ·st3lewith two outs in the fourth of flfSl baseman Eric Xarros. .
~ nine doubles.
·
i
10 pve the Pirates 1 6-2leid
Les Lancaster, who pi idled the
:- •'It jus&amp; ICC!IIed lilce everv time and c 1116- starter Frank Seminam
14th inning for St. Louis, got hil
;:they'd seote..~, we'd 1e0re two or · (~1), dlea lllded 1 two-run homer second victor)' in u many PJI!CS
~~."llid UIOI*'· who is hitting in the ~eventh. .Ridie Albert.Mar· and Lee Smith oxtened hts ~
~four 1i:l:!.nd scored !eaaUe Jeccid willl bls 3S9th career
111
saw:

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The Daily Seli~inel

. . AI....

CHECKOUT
OUR

Southern baseball reserves
sweep twinbill over Fort Frye

r;

MAIL TO:

Complete ... el Sla.Uuy

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CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

ChJuao (McDowell l-0) ~t Botton

.

The visiting Nets dropped I 1/2
games behind fourth-place Boswn
in the Eastern Conference.
Derrick Coleman led the Nets
wilh 23 points.
Lakers 112, Mavericks 99
Anthony Peeler scored seven
points in a tiebreaking 13-6 surge
in the fourth quarter, and James
Worthy had 10 of his 20 in the
period, leading Los Angeles to vic·
tory at Dallas.
The Mavericks failed in a bi.d
for their ninth victory of the season, leaving them trailing the 197273 ·Philadelphia 76ers, .whose final
9-73 mark is the worst in NBA history. The Mavericks (8-68) have
six games remaining - four at
home - in which to avoid the
record.
·Scdale Threatt scored 22 points
and Vlade Divac 21 for the Lak:ers,
who lost .lost 12 of their previous
14 games.
Dallas was led by Jim Jackson
and Randy White with 20 p'oints
each.

was

rr,

s;anod

(NOI'E: 15 WORD UMIT A'ND YOUR SEWNC PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE

Ada•Diolalao

By HOWARD ULMAN
Cleveland scored one run in Texas 6-S, Seattle !OJ!ped Toronto
BOSTON {AP) -Red Sox fans evC!Y inning but the fifth and ninth 10-9 in 10 innings, California beat
eagerly awaited, the arrival of Mo and iot solo hornets from Carlos Milwaukee 12-2 and New York
Vaughn, hyped as Boston's next Baerga, Reggie 1Jefferson a:nd beat Kansas City 6-5. The Mingreat slugger. He signed in 1989 ' Albci't Belle. But BOSU&gt;il sebred six ' nesbta at Cliiiago game
rained
• and enhanced that reputation by runs, .all with two outs, in the out. .
:. hitting balls deep over minor· fourth and too1c a 10-41ead,c ·
Orioles 6, Rangers S
. Vaughn and Cooper each had
::11eague fences.
Chances are Nolan Ryan
k He started last season with the two-run doubles in the inning Qff remembers .where be was on April
~ 'Red Sox, but by May was demoted Dennis Cook, ·who relieved starter
14, 1968. Most likely, he'd prefer
• ' 10 the minors after a terrible stan. Mike Bieleclci (1·1). Joe Hesketh
to [orget where he was 25 years
~Vaughn Wl'S back a month later and {1-0) pitched the fifth in relief of later.
.
John Dopson.
·
: , finished w!tlr'a .234 average.
Pitching on the guaner-century
"I don't know how it could he .anniversary of his fusl win in the
•&gt; He's really arrived now. He has
~ new knowledge and confidence and any more frustrating than it· is," major leagues, Ryan lasted only
~ is concentrating on hitting bolls all Hargrove said after his team lost four innings in a steady rain·
despite 12 hits.
, '·
·
- ·over the park, not just out of it.
Wednesd~y night and lost for the
"It's
good
to
know·
thiit
we're''
• Vaughn went 4 for 4 before
fmt time this selson in Baltimore's
striking out in ~is last at-bat and going to score some runs, becauijC .~ 6' Jvictilry over Texas. ,
rilised his average to a team-high you know ~that our starters will
,:Ryan ·(1·1) gave up six runs on
.429 Wednesday as the Red Sox come along,'' Bielecki said .
eight hits, three walks and a wild
In other games, Baltimore beat pitch. ·
heat the Cleveland Indians 12-7.
~.-He matched his career high of four
.RBls.
· ·
,,
In spring training, he hit ,403
L.with six homers and 23 RBis in 22
I ·games. Vaughn has worked hard
with hilling coach Mike I;lasler to
drive the ball where it's pitched.
·
"The difference for me isc:onBill Hensler's Southern reserve
night. Fields had four singlea, Luke
d
·, " v h
baseball team opened its 1993 ~am- . Holman, Scott Hubbard and Cass
·
AlStency an repeuuon,
aug n paign with aregular-seuon double• ' Cleland ·each. singled, and Richie
~- said. "In past years,.l'd try to make header victory over Fort Frye, post· Wamsley doubled.
"
.: the ball do something it didn't want .
~ 4 d 15 3 ·
h
h'
·
t-··todo"
·
· mg '(' an
• wms overt e
Fort Frye pitc mg gave up etght
N~w he tries La go' with the Cadets. ' ' ·
walks,. six errors, five strikeouts
' pitch. On WCdnesday, he doubled
. Southern won .the hard-fought and had five passed balls;
to !e.ft, singled 10 center and singled ' f1rs.t game '6·4 ~~ come-from ; ,
Southern's reserves made it 3-0 ·
and doubled to right.
.
, ~lund fashton ~ J1mm~ Rando!J!lj 'as !hey defeated River Valley on
Easler said Vaughn has had )lJIChed 5 l(l: and Kevm ,DeeRJ~r
the '\lercynJle in five innings in the
~ pressure on him "probably since came O!l to pttc~ the last one'8Rd . home opener.
.
L he's been signed, because he's big two-thtrd~ to p1ck up the. save.
Jimmy ~andolph was the wint and strong and he's had ~uch sue- They combmed for seven s,tq~uts njng ,pitcher, picking up his second
~"cess in the minor leagues.... ae'll and four walks. '
win in a row, while going the dis~:. go through some tough timesf but
Southern hm~rs were Ryan
tance. He gave up just five singles;
f, he'll be all right"
Marlll) ~1th two stogies, Calis ClF·
fani!C\I.five and walked two.
~·. Vaughn's first major le&amp;gJ!e lll!d a smgle, Scott H,ubbard, ,£rlc
Soltthern's d9fense played very
'- homer on June 30, 1991, fell about Jones and Jeremy Smtth each sm·
wen, only makirig one error.
five rows short of lleing the second ,gles. Southern collected eleven hits
• ball hit out of Baltimore's MemoriIn t.h e second game, S~?uthern led by Jay Day with two singles,
a! Stadium. That didn't help him ~o~ on the · me~cy rule m f1ve
Ryan Martin a double, Cass Cle~
~. learn the finer poinu of hitting.
m!lm~s, 1~·3. Enc Jones. was. the
land two singles and a triple,
"You think you're going to hit wmmng puch.Q.r and Eddie Fnend 'Shawn Dailey a triple and Ran·
11
h
f
came on to p1tch the final round. dolph ljlld Friend each singles.
1 l'k h
p bal 8 ,} e t ~~ e rel\1 0 yiour They combined for seven' ~trikeHoward Browning suffered the ·
. ,.. career, . he satd. ' You SUI!t sw ng- outs five walks and gave up three Joss on the mpund fbr River Vlllt ing harder and harder and ,the ball hits.' ·
·
ley . . Hitters were Browning,
• '. lfll~~ls less and.'~· . · \·
Southern had eight hits, led by M Cl k
H I
Bl .
d
I reallr dldn tk_now what I Andy Fields with a ,perfect 4·4 K ell as ehy, .thur .owl, ame an :
was domg.' . "
I
c ey C8G Wl smg es.

career.

!,

Wayne Ma~, dda.iv~l'end.

SEATTU! SEAHAWKS Kcvi.n Mlilphy, linebu:ktr.

'•

the decisive fourth 'quarter, overcoming a six-point deficit at the
start of the period . The Hornets
were 8 of24 in the period.
Ewing scored 10 points as New
York too1c the le8d for good with a
12-4 spurt. His basket from the
lane wtth 5:21 remaining made it
96-95.
Alonzo Mourning had 27 points
and Larry Johnson 22 for the Hornets.
Bulls 119, Heat 92
· Chicago kept pace when
Michael Jordan scored 15 of his 34
poin!S in the third quarter against
visiting Miami.
.
The Bulls, who have won four
straight and 12 of 14 games,
knocked the Heat three games
behind Indiana and Detroit in the
Eastern Conference.
Harold Miner scored 19 points
for the Heat
·
Pacers 109, Nets 90
Indiana handed New Jersey its
sixth conseculive loss behind Reggie Miller's 20 points, including
the 700th three-pointer of his .

:l

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS ·Matched Wnhinaton RtdWn~' offer lO

,.-... ........... Sl 26 7 109 332 261

(Stoulcmyre 1-0).
Oakland (B, Win ()...0) at Detroit (Doheny 1-0).
Cali(omia (Farrell 0-1) 11 Milwaukee
(!!.... 0-1).
.
CJ..EVELANI) (Men. 0·0) at Bost.on

AJD) ·

.

Ligh~end .

-'record 12'-7 win over Indians

New '( ork 111, Charlotte 107;
Indiana 109~ New Jersey 90; Chica·
go 119, Miami 22: the Los Angeles
Lakers 112. Dallas 99; Houston
107, Denver 96; Phoenix 98. Min·
nesota 84; and San Amonio 96,
Golden State 93.
.
Suns 98, Timberwolves 84
Phoenix won its 60th game,
be~ting visiting Minnesota behind
Dan Majerle's 25 points and 23
points and 12 re~x?unds by Cedric
Ceballos.
· The. Sims compensated ·for ihe ·
a))sence of injured forward Charles
Barldey with Ceballos and Richard
Dumas playing as starting forwards. Dumas had 22 points.
Doug West paced the Timber·
wolves with 27 points~ and Chris·
tian LaeUner had 20.
It was the seventh strai~ht loss
for Minnesota, now ()..16 m fran chise history against the Suns•
• Spurs 96, Warriors 93
Dav1d Robinson had 33 points
a nil 17 rebounds, including a
rebound dunk with 7:7 seconds
remaining for San Antonio at Gold·
en State.
'file Spurs, now 1·3 against the
Warriors this season, avoided being
swept by a Western Conference
team in a season series.for the ftrst
time in the four years of the Robin·
son era.
Latrell Sprewcllled the Warriors with 20 poiDIS, but was just 5for-16 from the field.
. Rockets 107, Nugets 96
Vernon Maxwell matched a sea·
'soh-high with 30 points, and
Hakeeti) Olajuwon had 29 points
and 13 rebounds at Denver, lifting
Houston. to its seventh conseculive
victory.
The game had 12 lead changes
and 20 ties, the last one at 57-57
with 9:05 left in the third quarter.
Kenny Smith's two three-pointers
started a 14·2 run, and Olajuwon
had five points in the spurt that
gave the Rockets a 71-591Cad.
Chris Jackson scored 24 points
and Dikembe Mutombo had 17
points and 17 rebounds for the
Nqggets.
' Knicks 111, Hornets 107
New York stayed a game ahead
of Chicago in the race for first
place in the Eastern Conference as
Patrick Ewing scored 17 of his J9
points in the fourth quarter at Charloue.
The Knicks made 13 of 18 shots
and outscored the Hornets 32·22 in

f.

,.

---

to lenni with SieVe Smith, fullblct, on a
, UIJOO-)'Oir con.ltlel. .

·&lt;

_·Vaugh~'~~ hitting h~.Ips Red Sox ·

t·

INDIANAPOJlS COLTS - s;l"ocl

W L T Pia. GP CA
S6 21. 7 '19 367 261
y•Wuhinpn ... 42 '14 7 91 321114
y-New 1-..... «l 36 7 17 304 291
,_N.Y. ltlandln 39 37 7 IS 327 293
Philoclolpllia ..... '14 37 ll 79 3V/ !!.!
N.Y. ............ ;: '14 3111 19 302 ~

Today'sgames

.

Smith. Players on the team were (L·R) Nathan
Thacker, Matt Stewart, James Conley, B.J.
Kennedy, Matt Cotterill, Adam Bullington and
Justin Gihi!Ore. Standing in rear are coaches
Bill Kennedy and .Mike Gilmore.

I"

This Is Xour lnvitatio•t To Sell Any hem For •too.oo Or Less
,.
And Advertise It FREE.
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Simply Oip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad .Ud Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
· Yu~ Ad Will Run For Pne Week.
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CJLA~®IlJFlllBJD)

Football
tld:le.

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IP~1B1B ·

N1Uoul Football.Lua.ue
BUFFALO BILLS .:Z Matched San
FranciKo 49en' offer toJdrWri&amp;ht, OOIC

WALESCONFERENCE

Boslon 12. CLEVELAND 1
CaUfomia 12. Milwaukt.e 2
Seattle 10, Toronl09, 10 inninp
MimJCMJt.a It ChiCI(O, ppd., raut
Baltimom 6, Texu S

(S,..iil!ol·l~7;35 P'"' · . ·
Koatat Cloy Ill'"'- O.l)" ,. (T~ 0.2), U!l p.m.

BasketbaU
Nallonal 1 •*d'"l AJ'Cddloe
NBA ,..._ Su•pended Duwll W•lk•,
auc.ao Bulla """" r.. --.,... with'"" ......d him $10,000 .... linocl
BiU Llimbocr, Detroh PdtOGJ center,
$12,000; S""' Wllliama, CII;.aao Bulb
........ $6,000, .... 0.....Pippeo~. Bin Caawri&amp;ll. W'all FwWo, Eel
' Ncoly, Rodney Mo:Gay, BJ. Aml .....l
•ocl Carey Willilmt, Chicoao p11,_., aocl
Terry MiliJ, DenniJ Rodman, _Mark
Aa•U... Mom Randall, AMn ltabcNoo
aocl Donn~ y..,.l' Iloboil playas. S500
e~~~ (or their rola in 1 b«tch-c:loarina
fi&amp;h&lt; in,a&amp;""" M A.,Ull
OOi..DEN STATE WARRIORS PlocOcl hlr Gn'"'"'"'ud·bwanl . .......
injur" lilt. Siped Joe Counney, for;
ward, far Lhe remainder ~the 1caon.

-*NHL*-

New Yolk 6, Klf\IU City S

.

the MilwaYk• Bmran.

~cnll2, Dalla• 99

./

. Clean Out Your Closet,
Basement, Or Garage •..
And Tum Your Unused Or
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Op&lt;ioaed

Nallonall.ea...
MONTREAL EXPOS ·- Claimed
Tun MclaiOih. ci\Cher, oa wli.wen fran

3&amp;

Friday's aames

Wednesday's scores

Collf- a -

l!

Dettoit at Chadoue..7:30p.m.
PrJ.andaat Cl.EVEI.AND, 7:30p.m. .
Podland at Minneecu, II p.m.
New Yotk.atlndiana, 1:30 p.m.
Milw-aukwat Oaicaao. 1:30 p.m.
Dcnv•at Dallu.I:JOp.m.
Satrama'il.o at. San. Antonio,1 :30 p.m.
Scaulea Atomill, 10:'30 p.m.
• Ooldm Sutc &amp;l L..A. CUppcn, 10:30,'
p.m.
,
HOUII.m at L.A. Liken, 10:"30 p.m.

.S
1,5
1,5
2

Kansu City ... :......... !

("'"" 0-0), 7:30 ,...

l4

CLEVELAND at Mil w111kee, 1 :30
p.m.

4

Cltdlcr.

SI!ATfU!

· Tonight's games

3.S

Mcl
n.,
MAJ!.INI!I!S -

' .... .- _...

an.
u.- lofioldor. "' c.~&amp;•ry or""
l'lc:Wc-Loopo.

Pbllalix 91. Mm.... 14
S-en AntorUo 96, Golden Stale 93
'
'

I
I.S
2.S
J

Friday's gam•

m

'Hoa~tm · tcn, Dm..-11'96

GO

WHirrn Dlvbtion
.......................6 2 .750
. Califomi• ................. S 2 .714
Oakl and ...................4
3 .S71
Scaulc ......................4
3 .,71
dlicaan., ..................4 4 .500

· ··

9

Bot\on at New Jeniy, 7:30 p.ip.
Orlmclo "Pbiliclolphia; 7:30 P,-ln.
·Miami at Wuhin.l.ton. 7:30p.m.
P&lt;lnlaftd 1t Utah, l p.m.

Tc ~ u

Wai..-ed 'tun

lndiiN 109.NowJascy90

Eulcm Pl~lslon
2

.671
.627
.494
.474
.421
.289

\

· A - o .......

MILW·AUXEB BRI!\VERS - Acti·
vJled O.WI NUaoft,. ca.~, Jnd Bill Don~. infielder, from 1bc tS..ay 4iNbled
Iii&lt;. S«1&lt; Witlilm s..... lnfioldor,IO Now
Orlc.n• af lhc Amcrie~n AJJociat.ioa..

41

CLAIMS MEIGS COUNTY TITLE...._ The ·
Rutland fourth graders claimed nrst place iD the
Meigs County Youth League basketball tourna· .
ment. In front are cheerleaders Lisa Eblin, Ali·
son Hayes, Beatrice Morgan, Jenny Allen aad
Bethany McMillan (L-R). Absent was Elizabeth

l

\
I
I

B-baa

.

a.;.. 119. MianO 92

AMERICAN LEAGUE
801ton .................. .... 6
New Yorlc .. ~............ .S

"'·33s•

New YOlk Ill, Cllul....,I07

Atllnll (Smaltz. !· 1) at ,San Francilco

PeL

4

0....0 17, A"""' 14

(!1urkctt 2·0), 10:35 p.m.

L

~

-

Wednelday's S&lt;:Ores

(Swindclll-1). 8:05p.m.
St. Louis (MagnRe 0-0) 11 San Dicao
(Bcnc&amp;l· l), 10:05 p.m.
Pitt4burgh (Wakefield 1-1) It Lot: An·
gCiea (I [crshiscr 1·1 ), 10:35 p.m.

W

- • Transactions • -

CB

PadRe DlviJion
•· Phocnix ...............60 '16 .789

(Ast~cioo-1) .

·,

--- '

Now Jersey at N.Y. hlanden, 7:.0

p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

H01nton 9, MMtrcal S

Tea m

p.m.
.'
.·
.
Pbiladc!phiao&lt; !Wifont, 7:40p.m.

• ·

double in the si)!:th inning to knock
home Grueser and Jones to put
Southern up 7-2.
Meigs scored a single run in the
seventh when J_ones walked,
advanced on a passed ball and an
error, then Reiber singled. Gruescr
then retired the side to post the win.
Mick Winebrenner expressed a
lot of enthusiasm in posting the win
over Meigs, praising his club for
"starting to put things together."
Southern hitters were BiHy
Jones with two doubles and a single, DIU a double, Ryan Williams a
single, Grueser a single; ,and Eric
Jones a double and two-RBI.
Meigs' hitters were Vance and
Glaze with a dquble and single,
Reiber three singles, Gary Adams
two singles, and Keith Jones a singlc.
Southern goes to Belpre Friday.
Inning totals
'·
Meigs· 010-010-1 = 3-10-4
South~m: 030-202-x = 7-7·5
. ,,

- -. -

regular·SOIIIOIIIIaalu

N.Y. Ran,.n at WalhlnJion, 7 :40

Wednesday's scores
Aorida 6, San fnnclsco 4
O ictga 6, AtlanLJ. 0 ·

'

· TonJaltt'a pm• .

Pbilldolphilll Bull'olo, 7&gt;10~ • t:lolnOI, 7&gt;10 p.m.
Ta.mto at OU.C.p. 1:40 p.m.
T.npt. Bay 1t St.l..cJuil,. f,W p.m.
E.imoou&gt;a II W...,.., 1:«) p.m.
San l01e ~tc.J.prJ, 9:-tOpo~~~.

Centr•l Dhillon
,
22 .711
•-CLil'IIILAND. ...41 Z1 .640
At.lant.a_ ...!... :... -....40 37 .519 lH
Chlrl~ ...........-... 39 38
.S06 '. IB
Deuoil. ................... ll 38 .500
16
lndianl ................... l8 38 .!00
16
Milwdoc ............. 28 48 .368
26

JIOUilm ...... -:· ··-· .. ····5

-

-

lJ.S

combined for eight strikeouts and
six walks. Milce Welsh wiiS behind
the plate.
Meigs went up 1.() in the second
when Vince Reiber singled, Billy
Glaze singled, and an error at third
allowed a run lO come home.
Southern fought back to .take a
3-1 lead in the bottom half of the
frame, when Kyle Wickline
walked. After Newsome fanned
two batters, Grueser walked, and
Eric Jones hit a fly ball ~hich was
misplayed by the center fielder.
Both base runners scored, then
moments later brother Billy
knocked home Eric with an RB!
,
double.
Southern w·ent up 5·1 in the
founh when Gnieser. singled, Eric
Jones doubled, and Billy Jones
slamm~ a two-run double.
Metgs scored one m tl!e fifth to
make the· score 5-2. Keuh Jones single!!, SHS made an error, and
Mike Yance had an RBI single.
Jeremy Dill slammed a two RBI .

The Dally stntlnei-Page-5
t

I

ln NBA action,

.

Phillies, Braves make up tale of reversed fortunes early on

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4

The Daily ~u~!!!~,i'J.~~
.
Page-4

Considering their 1992 finishes in NL,
By The Associated Press
· The best team in the National
League right now isn't the defend-

Thursday, April 15, 1993

t'·.ta,:

Ni'tllt(2.0) IOllll' Iii of
.· Jlla ~

''-,

.

•· i

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dlep(,rt; Ohio ,

Pomero

The Dally Sentinel

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Olderman's induction into scribes' HOF ·drawing c ser
Atlat)ta JournaL •• He filled in a lot wagon. I was an early advocate of
of gaps for a lot of us who didn' t pro football as a SJJ?rl to cover, as a.
sport that was gomg to take root
get to do the things he did."'
Bisher, who became a NSSA and gain popularity. And it has.' '
Hall of Farner in .1989, will take
In 1955, Olderman fouJ;~ded
part in the ceremony honoring Old- NEA's Jim Thorpe Trophy, which
erman, who is also an award-win- was the original most valuable
ning sports cartoonist. "He's a player award in the National FOOt·
double:barrclcd prospect for the ball League.
Olderman cites the landmark
Hall of Fame;· says Bisher.
Olderman became sports editor 19 58 NFL championship game of NEA in 1964. He was the execu- the Baltimore Colts edged the New
tive editor of the syndicate from York Giants 23-17 in overtime1968 to 197 L Then he was a con- as one of his top memories. The
tributing editor for 15 years .. He contest is credited with boosting
still does special reports for NEA the popularity of pro football ~
· Since then, OldermaQ has
on pro football.
"I think the thing I'm proudest become one of the few journal isiS
of," says Olderman. "is in 1952. to have covered nearly every Su~r
when I came to New York with BowL He's missed only SB IX m
NEA. I looked around and I recog- 1975. '
nized
that pro football was going to
For a distinguished career, Oldtrulh.
become
the
most
dynamic
sport
.
erman
was honored in 1979 by the .
· A former ABC- TV sportscaster,
"So
I
hopped
right
on
the
bandPro Football. Writers ·Association
Cosell is also a 1993 inductee into
the NSSA Hall of Fame, which is ·
located in Salisbury, N.C. (about ·
35 miles northeast of Charlotte).
· Cannon, who was a noted ·
sportswriter, was inducted in 1986.
The other participant in lh\: 34th
annual NSSA Hall of Fame ceremonies will be sponscaster Marty
Glickman. Grantland Rice, known
as the "'Father of American
Sportswriting," was the first
inductee in 1962.
'"I never patterned myself after
anybody," says Olderman. about
his own work as a syndicated
columnist. "I'm sure I was influ-""
enced subtly by different guys. Bu't
I was guided by the principles of
good journalism."
NEA distributes copy to more
\
than 600 U.S. daily newspapers. \
· "Murray probably had the~
widest circulation of any
sportswriter in America," says
Furman Bisher, a columnist for the
By HOWARD 1SINER
NEW YORK (NEA) - Murray
Olderman says that during )Jis Hall
of Fame career as a journalist he
watched sports in America turn
into a big business. '
But he still enjoys seeing great
athletes do what they do best.
· Oldeririim, 71, will be inducted
into the National SportsCasters and
Sportswriters Association Hall of
Fame on Monday, April 26. He
covered sports for Newspaper
Enterprise Association from 1952
until1987.
·.
"Jimmy Cannon used to. call it
the toy department of journalism,''
Qldcrman says. •'Then Howard
Oosell came along .years later and
said spans is a microcosm of society. I think Cosell is closer to the
1

'

Workers strike·to protest Hani slayi~g

Beat of the .Bend.._.

Olderman:has ~a~~ght journalism
courses at San Francisco State, the
Univ~
· ity of Redlands (Calif.) and
the Uru ersity of Oregon.
.
· He p ·ses the current generation of ~rers.
ing."
"'They're less reverent, which is
Olderman holds bachelor's not bad, " lie says. "The}"re .
degrees from the University of smarter. You, have fewer hacks.
Missouri Uo)llnalism, 1943) and The suburban newspapers .are so
Stanford Umversity (humanities, strong nowadl!ys that the wr)ting
1944). He earned a tnru;ter's degree . on them is just as good as it ts on
in journalism from Northwestern in metropolitan newspapers."
He points to 1im. Brown atid
1947.
. Before\ joining NEA, Oldetman WiUie Ml!ys as perhaps the greateat
worked· as a sports cartoonist and athletea of his era. :Aut Oldermlll
feature writel'-for the McClatchl says that, like other sportswriterS,
Newspapers in Sacramento, Cali . · he outgrew any trace of hc:ro wor(1947-51): and forth\: Minneapolis ship after seeing big-timnports
!'rpm the inside.
:
·
Sial' and Tribune (1951-52).
·
"It didn't dul my interest," he
He has written .I I books and his
NEA features have ~n included says. "It gave me a different perin several editions of the annual spective. But I still admire the conseries '"Best Spcins Stories."
tests and the ~~:ameS."
•
'

was a brilliant person. He's one of.
the few Phi Beta Kappas in the
sportswriting business. Even
though it was sometimes hard
·working for him - it was demanding - · in the end, it was reward·

by Bob Hoeflich

and about !50 people were wounded in the looting.
. Looting also broke out .in Durban and Pietermaritzbur$ in Natal
province, and in Port Ehzabeth to
the south.
Hani, head of the South African
Communist Party and one of the
ANC's most popular leaders, was
assassinated outside his home Saturday. A white right-winger has
been charged in the murder.
A.cross much of the country
Wednesday, ·mourners expressed
their sadness peacefully by attend:
ing memorial services and .marches, heeding the ANC's call for a
one-day strike.
''It was one of the best-attended
stayaways ever," said economist
Mickie Dames. Business groups
said as many as 75 percent of the
nation's 6 million black workers
were on 'Strike, meaning a possible
$160 million loss to the economy.
Black and white leaders are
stru!!gling to prevent an$er over ·
Ham's killing from derailing talks
on ending apartheid and giving_the
black majority the vote. The government and the ANC have said
they will press ahead with talks.

By TINA SUSMAN
10HANNESBURG, South
Africa (Al') - In an outpoUfillg of
black
rage, millions of workers
Mere we are " mid-April 45743 in case you'd like to get in
went
on
strike Wednesday to
already. Doesn't seem 'possible touch. And, best of luck with the
protest
the
slaying of black leader
does it? The spring flowers Ire surgery, Kathy.
Chris
Hani.
Four people were
showing off in aD their slory- the
killed
and
hundreds
wounded as
forsythia never looked better.
Senior citizen, Bonnie Conde,
blacks
bauled
police.
·
Those flowers, tluink heavens, are · says that we've lost a meaningful ·
The
wont
clash
was
in
the
black
doing their thing, chilly or not.
· holiday in the discontinuance of the
township of Soweto, w!lere police
observance llf May Day. At least fired
on marchers outside the main
Since time is mavins right children have.
police
station.
Hospital
along, I can't delay another minute
llonnie remembers when on the
spokeswoman
Adri
Potgieter
said
in Jelling y~ know tiW !he'dead· fii'St day of May~ children used to
three
people
died,
five
were
critiline application for the Rutland slip out of their homes at dusk and
1-liBh School Alumni Association deliver little paper May baskets cally wounded and 259 suffered
scholarship is May 1.
.
filled with flowers to their friends , minor wounds.
Police claimed they fired
i\pplicants have to be a 1993 and neiahbors and she's $Ofl'}' that
graduate and must be a child or toda)"s children don't have the fun because protesters were hurling
grapdchild of a Rutland Ahlmni. . of winding colorful streamers rocks, but witnesses. said most of
Applications must include a around a tall May pole and the the crowd was calm and had stancd
high school course transcript, a crowning of a May·queen. May to leave the area.
Among the dead was African
resume of activities and career Day, Bonnie reports, was so special .
Nation'
al Congress official Sam
objec:tives, ~ c,ment philto for pub- back in the 20's and 30's and she'd
Ntobane,
the black group said.
.
licity purposes, the name and grad- like 10 ~ tl)e observance revived ..
and
soldiers
fired
shot·
Police
uation year of the alumni
or
grandparent, and the naine of die \ Louise Bearhs has returned from guns. rubber bullets and tear gas at
intended .highey cducatiOnill institu- a three week visit in Endicott, N. looters who rampaged through
shops in Cape Town and torched
tion.
Y., with her daughter and ~~in­ velucles. A hand grenade exploded
, All appli~ts will be evaluated Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Barrie (Carol)
and injured 10 soldiers, and medion grade potnt avera~e. course of Phillipt.
.
cal officials said a man was killed
study, and compliance with
During ~ visit, Louise attendrequtrements with consideration ed the ~ of her granddaughtrial,
also to be given to exua curricular ter, Michelle l&gt;hillips and Ronald
and co-curricular activities as well Spur. Ronald is the IOU Of Baric
as career objectives.
. and I'Jtricil Spur, also of Endi- .
Applicllions are to be mailed 10 CQIL The wedding took place at the
t!Je Rutland High School J\lumni United Methodist Church in Vestal,
By ALAN COOPERMAN
.·· Scholarship Committee, Box. 125, N. Y., on Feb. 27.
.
.
MOSCOW (AP)- The men
Rutland, Ohio 45775. ·
Michelle is a graduate ot the accused of masterminding the
SIIIIC University of New York and August 1991 coup failed to halt
is a researeb technici!ln at the their trial on its first day Wedries·
SUNY Health Science Center at day arguing unsuccessfully that
S~. N. Y. Htt husbend.I!Did·
they could not be tried for treasOn
ll8lCd from the Rochester Insiltute against a country that no longer
ofT~atRochesler,N. Y., exisls.
and is a quality techniciaD ror the
The day was martr...t by .a--a
- ,one of
"'"'"
Carrier Ccirp., also located II Syrtl;' and confrontation as
the
cuse. Conveniently, Michelle 8nd defendmlts ruShed from the court.h h
.
d
Ron are residing in Syracuse.
Incidentally, Michelle is also the cU:.:m~~k ~~~~~~:c~~
'th It . . .ourilal. 15
granddaughter of Dayton Phillips,
wt Th uss: J k ~s d.. d
.
,J.Ocust S!., POmeroy.
.
h:f;t.b':ied ~n ~h~ ~~i~~
&lt;: •
h · 1 · th
ellnulch
overofRuSSII'.s
1 e ~ta JO e mJ!uary
Supeme Coun
· The families of three oun'
Moscow men who
kill~ in~
,.... 'th s· •
. · _..
h' 1 ·
. c...... .wt ovlet anno•.,.. ve ICes
during the coup huddled together
011 one side of the courtroom
"We are sitting here in the
invisible resence of our children,"
Raisa Kri~hevSka a told re ni:rs
The 12 die-h~rd Com~unisis .
used 0f lakin Miltha'l
1 G
are ace
g
or?

pare"'

'"We could have ended u~ with
a much worse situation,' said
ANC Secretary-General Cyril
Ramaphosa. He warned that if
negouations did not speed up,
"worse could happen."
·
Two whites were shot and killed
and another injured Tuesday night
in the Transkei black homeland,
police said. Two black men ~er;e
killed Wednesday m shootmg tnctdents'·mJohannesburg.
' There was no immediate indica. tion. the killings were linlced to the
Hani protests.
.
At one of the. biggest memorial
services, about 20,000 people
squeezed into Soweto'S small Jabulani Stadium, where ANC President Nelson Mandela pleaded for
calm from the militant crowd.
"I appreciate that our young
people are very angry because their
hero has been killed,'' he said.
"(But) those who feel ... we should·
revert to armed struggle do not
know what trouble they're causing.
To return to violence only means
more innocent r,eot&gt;IC are going Ia
continue dying. '
People waved banners condemning the governing National

Pany and President F. W. de K,lelk,
who spent the day in a security
meeting monitoring the siruation. ·
In Cape Town, hundreds of
youths broke away from the main
protest rally and began looting
shops.
· ''No peace! War! War!" they •
chanted while running down glassstrewn streets as vehicles and trash
bins were set on fire.
Several bystanders were hurt in
the melee as soldiers and police
ftred volleys of buck shot and rubber bullets.
Anglican Archbishop Desmond '
Tutu was led away by aides as Red ,
Cross doctors at the scene.picked
pellets from the backs of the
.wounded and bandaged bloody
limbs. Later, he said while most
marchers were wen-behaved, ANC
leaders "have io lake the blame" ·.
for the damage.
Police CapL Craig Cotze of the ·
Law and Order Ministry accused.
the ANC of not controlling the
crowd. "We impose law and order.
We can 'I afford another week of
this kind of activity," he said.

In Moscow

PIRE .FURNITURE
.
,.

In South Africa,

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(the McCann Trophy); and in 1991
by the (college) Football Wnters
Association of America (the
McGrane Award).
'"Sports isn't any different than
news or business in the general
approach to covering it," says Olderman, "It's more dramatic. It's
more exciting. It changes more
from day to day. Jlut the same principles, in general, should apply to
sportswriting."
Spans columnist Ira Berkow of
The New York Times says he
learned many of those basics while
working at NEA will) Olderman in
the late 1960s.
'
Berkow recalls: "A guy once
said to me that working for Murray
Olderman is like going to Yale. It's
true. It was an ·education on many
levels - how to get a story, how 10
write a'S tory, what is a story.
"I always thought that Murray

Ohio

Thlnday, A .r1115, 1993

'

Treason argume·n t fails to hold water

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NBC, Schenkel
biggest winners
at 14th Sports

EmmyAwards

bachev prisoner and seizing power
from Aug. 18-21 , 1991, in the'
failed putsch that accelerated the
Soviet Union 's collapse.

If they are found guilty, they
could get the death penalty. ..
Some of defendants left the
h ·1 arded
rth
d .
cavt y-gu
cou ouse unng
a break and addressed
about
200
·
.
1
supporters outstde. Po tee barricades held back the demonstrators,
who waved signs calling the defcndants "'patriots" and denouncing
the judges as "traitors and werewolves."
120'fwitnesses
hMore
.ed 1 dth·an
h .are1
10
81
~c
u. e
test• Y t e tr!a •
tncl~dtng Go~bache:v; Russtan
Pres•dent lions Yehstn has not
been summoned
··

were

. NEW YORK (AP) -NBC and
Chris Schenkel were the big winners at the . 14th annual Sports
Emmy Awards.
NBC led all networks Tuesday
night with nine Spons Emmys, pre'
sented annually by the National
Academy of Television Arts and
Sciences, while Schenkel, the longtime ABC broadcaster, won the
Lifetime Achievement Emmy cita·
tion.
Schenkel's award read: "For a
half century ·of excellence in
sportscasting. His vastly varied
assignments have been performed
with accuracy, excitement and
charm, and have greatly enriched
the vieweing public."
Schenkel has been ABC's bowling commentator for 31 years.
· Previous Lifetime Achievement
award winners include Jim McKay,
Lindsey Nelson and Curt Gowdy.
Outstanding sports personalityHost went to Bob Costas of NBC, ·
while Outstanding Spons Personalily-Analyst went to John Madden
of CBS. The "NFL Today" on
CBS was judged the oustanding
studio show, while ESPN"s "Outside the Lines: Portraits in Black
and White" won in the sports journalism category.
· Awards were presented in 24
categories by sports personalities
and show business celebrities that
included comedian Alari Ki'l_g ,
CBS newsman Charles Kuralt, former Cincinnati Bengals lineman
Anthony Munoz, and New York
Giants quarterback Phil Simms.
The Em my winners arc selected
by a blue-ribbon panel of peers and
.the results arc tabulated by the New
York ac co u~tin g rirm of Lutz and

The trial .bcgan with the formal

r~ading of treason charges and a

roll call of the defendants. Each
stood in tum to give his name and
·former position.
They called each other "'com.radc'' and immediately sought to
,. derail the !rial.
,
.:
"Nie men were tliC leaders of

the Soviet Union but ... the union .
no longet exi~ts," said Genri~h
Pavda, auomey for former Sovtet
parliamen~. leader . An~toly
Lukyanov. It ~ms to me ~~we
have today to dcetde who can Judge
an alleged crime against a Slate thai
mayThnode~gerdanexisLal"
ded
.
e aen ts so conten
that the three judges should be
· il'WI
· JUfY
· ...___
rep laced bYa etv
....... use
their com~an&amp;:r is expected to be
a prosecuuon Witness
A military court is hearing the
trial because several defendants are
former generals,
·
·.
A:ll the defemlimts were released
· from 'I over the past year Ill pre· 1 Most have used
pare or the Uta.
their f~?m to re-enter ~lilies:
~archmg m.pro-Co~~umst raJhes denolilfcmg Yeltsm s econom. ,
. '
tc ~forms and caJ!tng ·~ the resurrccuon of the Sovtet Umon.
. Before any witn~ are called,
the coun must dc;al,wt!h procedural
issues and prehmtnary legal
motions. The defendants lost the
first round Wednesday when the
judges ruled that the court has
jurisdiction over crimes committed
. on..&amp;ussift!l .territQ,Cy.Jiefore th~ ~
Soviei'collapse.
ro;
·

.

.

The defendants then c~lled foL
the ~placement of the enure ~
of moe prosc;cutors. The_y sa!d
Prosecutor Ge.neral Valentm.
Stepan~ov had biased the team by
pubhshmg a boo~ a~;K~Ut lJ!e CC?up
before the offictal mvesugauon
endcd.Defense lawyers also com,
plain~ that both. Stepankov and
Yeltsm have publicly
guil declared the
defendan!SSoiO ~ Dety. Min' ·Former VIet :fense
IS....
Dm~uy yazoy alleged that he waa
dented a lawyer for 10 days afle(,
his arrest on Aug. 24, 1991.
."I believe that the_grosse~tviOi~
lations were made dunng the mvest'•.otion
with respect to all thi•
•..defendants, including myself,':
added former KGB Gen. Vyacheslav Generalov.
Th. 'ud
ted to rul
e J ges ~ expec
e
on those complamts Thl_ll'sday. .
We~nesday'.s opemng sesston
ended m con.fusiOil when defend~nt..
Alexan~ Ttzyakov ~nt over wtth
chest Jllllns aN! hurn_ed O!!t of the·
courtroom wtth hu wtfe and
lawy~r.. Tjzyakov, 67, h~ded an
assoc~anon of slllle factonel_be;fore
the coup and had been hospitalized
until last week.

.

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CBS trailed NBC with eight
Emmys, followed by ABC. ESPN.
HBO and NFL Films with three
apiece. MTV and TNT got one
apiece.

~Sports deadlines posted
.. '

.
,

.

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sentinel, the Paint
Pleasant Register and the SundayTimes·Senlinel value the contributions their readers make 10 the
sports sections of_ these papers, .and
these contributions will continue to
be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for photos .and related articles for basketball and other winter
sports is the last day of the NBA
Finals.
Likewise, the deadline for submissions of local baseball - and
softball·rchitcd photos and related
articles, from T-ball to the majors,
as well as other spring and surinnei
sports, is the day of the last gaiJIC
of the World Series. The deadlinee
for' photos and related articles for
· football and other fall sports is the
Saturday before the Super Bowl. ·
· Tl\ese· deadlines have been insti•
tuted to give r~ders plenty of time
tq gc( their photos back from the
photography stud10 of cho•c~ and
to givc the sl;lffs the opportumty to
publish th:sc spom Jlho.tos _and
articles dunng the appropnate season for that SJ;IOrt ·

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By
The
Bend
.

Thur1day, April 15, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Dally Sentinel

After 21 years,

Former rad~cal surrenders to face murder, hijacking charges ·
·

By CONNIE CASS
ARLINGTON, Va. \A.P) -.
Afte.r two deca~es of h1dmg 10
Cuba and the UI_uted States, a former teen-age radical turned mtddleaged computer technician gave
h!_mself up to face murder and
htJBC~lR$ charges:
. , V.:tllt~m ~htte Graham, the
mlSSmg link m_ a 19(~ cnme s_pree
. that lc{l a pollee offtcer and two
others tJeai!, surrendered qu1etly
Wednesday.

"He just decjded it was time,"
Arlington police Detective Stephen
Caner said.
Graham contacted the FBI
through an attorney earlier this
week to negotiate ttis surrender.
lnvestiptors believe he returned to
t!Je Umted States in the mid-'to late
1970$.
He was arrested liS he stepped
off a plane from !lliami at Washington National Airport. Now 38,
he 'wore a tie· and salt-an!t-pepper

lx:ard and was accompanied by his
wtfe. .
.
Dunng _lbc past five years, Gra·
ham hv~ m the San Francisco Bay
area, ilsmg the alias John Morgan
iichardson and working with comp~ters •. FB_
I agent Howard Luker
satd: His w1_fe, w~ose ~am~ was.not
re!eased, hved m M1am1, Luker
satd.
Graham may have bee!! fl~shed
out by ~ressure put on h_1s -~ends
and famtly, who were bemg mves-

tigati)d for possibly aiding a fugitive. Rec\)nt publicity on the TV
show "Amenca's Most Wanted"
also produced tips on his location,
investigators said.
Aircraft hijackings today seem
about as out of style a~ communism. But in the early ·~os, the era
of Charles Man~on and Patty
Hearst, the robbery .was another
terrifying ~rime of the tim¢s: A
band of would-be revolutionaries
shoots up a bank and diverts an air-

linerlo Cuba.
An off-duty police officer and
the manager of the Crystal City
branch of the Arlington Trust Co.
were gunned down during the. bunglcd holdup in October 1972.
.
Four days 'later, a ticket a$ent
was shot to death as the fugittves
hijacked an Eastern Airlines jet
froiJ! Houston Intercontinental Airport
•
Prosecutors said the' bank robbery was planned by former Com-

merce Department employee
Charles A. Tuller to raise money to
start a band of revolutionaries .
Tuller was·aided by his two sons,
Jonathan, then 18, and Bryce then
19.
'
· .
:..
"They wanted to form a new
world," Carter said. "They needed
money. ~ ·
. · .
. "The donos commg closed and
life ca~ go on," said Joanie Cabdee, wtdow of Harry Joseph Candee. "It's been a long 21 years."

·Republicans not wasting time getting ready for 1996 election
By JOHN KING
.
MANCHESTER. N.H. (AP) · Mark your qllendar: Today is Day
86 of Bill Clinton's presidency. Or,
to put it another way, there are only
about a thousand days until the ftrSt

votes are cast in the 1996 White
House C31!1paign.
At least that's the way Republicans are looking at it
·
Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas was
spending the day here, a familiar if

Police, National Guard
_presence making crime
in.L.A. take vacation
tain calm when the verdicts are
By JEFF WILSON
announced.
It protested the law
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
enforcement
buildup.
police show of force, the mustering
"A militaristic presence
of troops and pleas for peace durbristling
with potential confronta·
. ing deliberations in the Rodney
King beating case apparently have tion ....could all too easily spark the
made ·the streeiS safer: Authorities reactions everyone is trying to
on Wednesday reponed a dip in the avoid," said the letter to Mayor
Tom Bradley, Police Chief Willie
murder rate. '
... I don't lmow ' if we can say Wllliams and Sheriff Sherman
•. death took a holiday, but it looks Block.
Joe Hic)cs of the Southern Chris- that way," said Scott Carrier, a
tian
Leadership Conference agreed
· spokesman for the county coroner's
that
law enforcement had gone too
office, which handles an average of
far.
five murders daily.
"They should be prepared for a
Stung by criticism it was slow to
crisis,
but at some point this
react to unrest after innocent ver. diets in the state trial a year ago, becomes counterproductive," he
: law enfon:ement officials have put said
Rioting that began last April 29
• hundreds of additional officers on
. the street. National Guard troops after the state trial left 54 people
were training at armories as the dead and caused $1 billion in dani•
. jury deliberated charges that four ages.
officers 'violated King's federal
civil rights when they beat him
· March 3, 199L
· . A pol'ice presence ~as been noli·
t · d t b • · ·d
cable on the StrceiS since delibera· · · S
0
tions began Saturday afternoon.
There were some murders
reported over the weekend, howevBy HOWARD GOLDBERG
er the Sherifr s Department, which
NEW YORK (AP) - Most
handles unicorporated parts of Los Americans want President Clinton
· Angeles county, said no new mur- to ignore a pptential nominee's
: ders were reported since early position on abortion when he fills
: Monday.
the impending vacancy on the
, "The high police presence can Supreme Court, accordmg to an
. contribute to this," Deputy George Associated Press polL
· Ducoulombier said.
On a more $eneral questipn, 54
The Los Angeles police said it percent said Chnton should considdidn't yet have statistics, but the er a person's legal qualifications
coroner's office, which handle.~ the and background only, as opposed
entire country, repor!Cd no homi- to 41 percent who said the presicides in the 24-hour period ending dent alSo should consider how the
· Wednesday morning.
. nominee might vote on major
. Capt. Patrick Frochle of South issues.
·
: Central's crime-ridden 77th Street
A majority, 57 percent, said
· Division,"just a mile from the flash· Clinton should not ask his
: point of last year's riOIS at Florence appointee's views on abortion.
' and Nonnandie avenues, said offiClinton has said he will not
cers were pleased with the drop in directly ask any ·potential nominee
~ slayings.
.
·
his or her position on abortion. But
"It may have something to do he has also said he wants a justice
: with more police Qn the streets. who will respect the right to priva: Then again, it may have to do with cy, an argument underpinning the
• other things,'' Frochle said.
right to abortion.
• Cunis Owens, executive direcIn the poll, 72 percent said Clintor of the African American Com- ton should not consider a potential
. munity Unity Center, said commu- nominee's position on abortion.
nity peace efforiS also were help- Fifteen percent said he should con" ing.
sider only someone who generally
~ · "The real credit goes to the peofavors abortion rights, while II
ple of the community working to percent said he should' res~ict his
~ develop a presence of peace,"
search to opponents of abortion.
Owens said. "Gang members and The remaining 2 percent were not
ex-gang members are cooperating sure. ·
· ... to help keep crime down right
The P.Oll 'ilf 1.003 adults was
now.''
·
taken by phone April 7-10 by ICR
While Carrier, of the coroner's Survey Research Group of Media, .
office , said the pol icc' show of Pa., part of AUS Consultants. :
·.force was "absolutely" responsi- Results have a margin of sampling '
: ble for the dip in crime. others criti- error of 3 percentage poiniS, plus or
cized it as excessive.
minus. ·
A leiter released by the National
Clinton is selecting a replaceAssociation for the Advancement ment for Byron White, who says he
of Colored People urgi)d police to will retire at the end of the coun's
- work with the community to rhain-., current term in June or July.

not favorite place, meetmg with Wednesday with past supporters Kemp is rumored for a May 5 New
supporters and influential Republi· before a busy day today: a news ·Hampshire visit and already has a
cans, promising a critique of. Clin- conference to bash Clinton's ceo- hearty core of supponers in Iowa.
nomic prog(;lm, a visit with Repub- And New Hampshtre is on 'former
ton at virtually every stop .
Phil Gramm of Texas, another lican Slate lawmakers and a meal Defense Secretary Dick Citeney's
Senate Republican who would like with the Manchester Chamber of calendar for May 28, for a
women's Republican club meeting
to live in the White House, will be Commerce.
He
docso
't
want
to
talk
seriousand
.another Chamber ·of Commerce •
along Saturday, fresh from a visit
ly
about
whether
he'll
be
running
dinner.
_,
to Iowa. bringmg a chorus of Clin·
in 1996, except to say, "I certainly
''I'm sure it's just the slart of
ton criticism of his own.
True, the laSt presidential elec- haven't discounted it, no."
.
the parade," Duprey said of the
Gramm, in Iowa to criticize Dole and Gramm visits. "It doesn't
tion was just five months ago, and
Clinton. has barely ~ttled into the &lt;;linton's economic package, is surprise me, given Clinton's perWhite House. But some Republi• heading to New Hampshire this formance so far."
cans are stirring early in Iowa and weekend, his second visit since
Democratic National Chaiiman
New Hampshire, the twin pillars of Clinton's election.
David Wilhelm, not surprisingly,
retail and presidential politics.
He acknowledges he's interested took a different view. ''I don't
"If you haven't been here a few in 1996.
blame them for trying to forget the
Limes before the season begins in
"I am not here today to declare last election," he said. "But
earnest, then you are considered a my candidacy for president," he instead of looking for new jobs for
late comer," New Hampshire GOP sat d. "But let nte say this: Every themselves, it would be nice if they
Chairman Stephen Duprey said. day· I watch Bill Clinton, I and . helped to create new jobs' for the
"In New Hampshire, if you wait many other· Republicans look for• rest of America."
until 1995 to make a visit, they'll ward to the day we have real candi· · :But not all the Republicans are .
say, 'What Look you so long?'" ' dates running for president, and eager to test the 1996 waters so
On this trip, Dole has the place we 'II have an opponunity to put a soon.
to himself among 1996 GOP Republican back in the White
"I think· it's a little crazy at this
prospects, holding a private ~inner l:iouse."
point," said Bill Bennett, the forFormer Housing Secretary Jack mer education secretary and drug

policy chief and another potential
Republican.candidate in '96.
For all their tongue-in-cheek
humor about the faraway 1996
campaign, some Republicans see
good reason for an unusually early
stan to some gentle jockeying. The
race for party leadership is wide
open - and the finger-pointing
after the 1992 defeat is far from
over. .
"The pany is more split than it
used to be," said GOP pollster Bill
Mcinturff, listing the major factions as the religious right, the
moderate "George Bush-Jerry
Ford wing" and the blue-collar
conservatives who were Ronald
Reagan's core constituency.
"To win the Republican nomination in 1996, someone is going to
have to build a coalition from these
groups," Mcinturff said. "Aild
coalition poliiics .is not something
we have lots of experience at like
the DemocraiS do. So it's not surprising that there are a lot of people
who want to keep their fingers in
the water."
·

•

DRESS ,F-LATS

·. .

•

•

First grade- Nathan Beaver,
Erica Massie, Missy Rossiter,
Andrea Sim s, · Joseph Taylor,, Timmy Hall , Beth HilL
while they SliU have good health and
Nathan Williams, overall. · ·
Sec ond grade - Ryan Carter.
.Dear ADa 1-aaden: This is about
e~.
.
Fifth grade • Meredith Clark, Joshua Evans, Amanda Taylor.
those greedy daugbcrs who
If parents have done a decent job,
Christen Zirillc , all A's; Travis
Thicd grade ·. Lauren Browning, critical of their t'alh« for spending
Frasher, Courtney Gooch, Jonathan Ashley Brumfield, Elizabeth Rice.
"their inheritance." That column
their childml should tp'OW up 10 be
Taylor, Erin Walker, overalL
· Fourth grade - Don Ashworth, reminded me of 10 experi~ one
responsible adults who can take Cll'e
ANN LANDERS
Sixth grade · D~ni _ Jenks, Seth Easton, Jason Holdren, Joey ofourseniorlawpartnenbadsome
of thems.elves, unless, heaven
.,1993, L01 Ancelu
Stephen RolicriS, Jess1ca Walker, Johnson, Adam Newberry, Lesley years back.
forbid. they should bccane aeriously
Tim., Syndicate
all A' s: Rebecca Birchfield, Smith.
. Two farm youths cam.e to his
iU or disabled.
Cftaton Syndicate"
Gabrielle Blackwood, Natalie
Fifth g rade · April Austin, Mike offiCCtodiscusstheirfather'sestate.
Leaving children an inherillnce
Pyles, Andrew Williams, overnll.
Franc is. Laura Po II ard, Je ss ica When the lawyer asbd the older son •.....,..,....,,....._ _.,....;;;;;;....;.._ __, can be a mistake. Some kids count
Seventh · grade · Van dana Vickers.
when his .....
'-•'-·bad
died, he...,!:.."
...,. - . he spent S1,600 on home on it ·ind never make an effon to
""'
Agraw al • Tany Staley, aII A's; Jef·
Sixth grade • Lisa Bowman, "Oh, Dad's 1101 dead yet. He's in the improvements, thereby reducing the achieve anything. They may be
frey Burnette, Suzanne Clark, Bo Daniel Sizemore. ·
fte.ld plowin.g. But we wanted to •et
·
viewed as "privileged,• but actllllly
Pollard, Steven Ri'ce, overalL
Seventh grade . Jessica Carnes, thi
lined .
. o
Sll.C o their 100,000 inheritance.
·
they are deprived because they will
· hth grade • BenJamm
· · Taylor, Mike Gianechini, Kerri Howard, ourngs
· upwhen
so we
Etg
inheritance
he can
dies."handle · My father is dying of cancer. I never know the satisfaction that
all A's; Joy Chaksupa, Nathan Stl:phanie Jenkins, Deanna Martin, .
would give every penny of my
. Smith, overalL
_ Jaddy Newbold, Lisa Vollborn.
The lawyer replied, "This is the inheritance, which is considerable, C:omes from achieving~ on
Ninth grade- Michelle BurEighth grade. Rachel Hamrick, fllSd t_~e l'vthe el'el" been ask~. to ·if I could _buy less pain and more their own. The true tut of love 11 to
cham, Aaron Holley, Amy Pollard, Micah Lanier Melissa Brown
a mmtster e estate of a bvmg tune for thiS wonderful, gentle man . allow children to be independclu and ·
all A's; Jill Mock, Anesa VanMa- William Miller.'
·
' person.Pieasegetoutofmyoffice." · NoamOun!ofmooeycan make up . make their own miSlikes
·tre, overalL
...... · · · · ·N··· iif' ........d......-n. n · c
··JACK IN MATI'OON ll..L
~ ,..., h···"'··" f th
df th
Thanks for printlna Ieam tbat
Tenth grade - Jenny Hagar, all J ami~ia~~~hrni. N~t:~ ·fu~~~~:··-.- DEAR JACK: Yootlisriusa:foo a····!dfti~':c ~~~lran a er teach people something. •• M.MJI.,
A's; Emily Asbeck, Robin Rice, Shawn Rice, Joshua Sebert, Nan fann s~ld ~ow better than ,to
My "iiffioe· to the man with the APEX, N.C.
DEAR APEX AND ALL
Melissa Smith, overall. .
Williamson. ·
c.ount thetr chiCkens llllfore they re money-grubbing daughters is to fmd
WHO
WROTE ·
Eleventh grade • Andy BrumTenth grade • ~hlc:e Saunders, halched. F~ cheers for the _lawyer a wmthwhile charity that would be OTHERS
field, Jodie Hagar, Anna Hamrick, Nathan Blackwood, Kristin Torres. who booled em. Keep reading for pateful ror his bequest. He could THOUGHTFUL LEITERS ON
Elizabeth Wooten, overall. Eleventh grade - Jason Beaver, letters thal should make those two make a m1J diff~ in a great THIS SUBJCET: Children who
~w_clfth grade· San_dra Adams, , Jennifer Fleming, Dusty Hill, lunkheadsevenmoreashamed.
many li'VCS and, at the lltlme time, grow up with the disadvan~~ge of
Chnsty. Mock, Mered1th Pollard, , . Amber Montgomery, Noah Smith,
Dear ADD LaDders: I am teach his daughters a ICSIOII they too many advantages . are the
Bnan R1cc, overafl.
Dan Sullivan; Matt Swain.
compeUed 'to 'respond to the man need to learn. _ TilE 1WINKLE saddest of all. Not only is die
Students m.aking the B Honor
Twelfth grade - Jerry Back.
whose daughters wtnupset because IN HER FATHER'S EYE, burden of gralitude too heavy 10
Roll list arc:
bear, they never know how Clplble
CASSVD..LE, WIS.
DEAR TWINKLE: Thanks for a they really are because they were
lovely lcttu. Bless you for having ntver permiucd to be tested.
One of the funniest canoona I ever
your priorities straight. Keep
saw
was of a family gathered ill a
reading for another one.
.
Dell" ADD Lallden: Regarding lawyer's offiCe 10 read their falber's
baking contest and auction wiU be
·: Community.Calendar items
HOCKINGPORT · T~ere will gclist. Pastor Charles Bush invites •A New Me in California" with the will. Jaws dropped and eycbllls
.. appear two days before' an event held. The meeting will follow the ' be a ·music benefit Saturday at 3 the public.
greedy daughters, I just wanted to popped as the lawyer read, "Beina
and the day or that event. Items ' potluck dinner. ·
p.IJI.
for
the
Hockingport
United
.
add something to your advice. of 80Uild mind. dear children, I spent
.: must be received well In advance
Methodist' Church fellowship hall
it all myself."
MIDDLEPORT • Revival will Parents don't "owe" their children
POMEROY • The Young bUilding fund. The event will take
:;. _to assure pablicati!ln lp the calWllal's tile truth abolll pol, ~o­
Democrats Oub'will meeut 7 p.m. place at· the Reynolds Building·on be Sunday through Friday at the an inheritance, nor do they owe their caine, LSD, PCP, crack, $f*d tWI
- "" . .
·
endar.
. at the Carpenters Hall just prior to Route 124 in Hockingport. Food Bradford Church of Christ. Tim grandchildren anything, either. downers? 'Tile Lowdbwtt 011 Dope"
•';:; · . THURSDAY .
the regular meeting ·of the Meigs and door prizes. All bands and the Wallace, Wheelersburg, will be the Sptaking for myself, I would much
speaker. Services are 7 p.m. nigh~y rather see my parents enjoy their lw up-to-tlle-lrlilwU illfonrtalitJft 011
~..
MIDDLJ:,PORT • Revival ser- County Democratic Oub. ·
public welcome.
and at 9:30a.m., 10:30 a.m. and money and spend it on the~l~s drugs. Send a #/fotJdtlrt:ued, lollg,
..,_vices are being held at lhe WesbusiMss-size tt111tlope and a clwclc
FRIDAY
7:30 p.m. on Sunday. Special
~eyan Bible .Holiness Church, MidSUNDAY
or m(IMJ order for $3.65 (this illPOMEROY • Pomeroy Lodge
::&lt;llcpon, through Sunday night. The
. POMEROY • Bruce Stone will music nightly. Nursery provided.
Plan
for
eludes
postage arul Mndli11g) to:
F&amp;.AM
will
hold
annual
#164
:Rev. Elbert Barrows from ·North
be in concen Sunday at10:45 a.m .
The
Eastern
High
School
alumni
Lowdow11,
clo AM La!tdet~, P.O.
insp·~ction
at
the·
Middleport
c;:arolina will be conoucting the
at First SouJhern Baptist Church,
coordinating
committee
is
currently
Bo:c
11562,
Chicago, Ill. 6()6JI.
7:30
p.m.
Masonic
Building
at
~ervices with special mustc by
. SALEM CENTER . • Star making plans for the 1993 alumni
Pomeroy Pike. Pastor I,.amar
0562 . (/11 C(Jfi(Jda, #rul $4.45.)
:Brian and Connie·Conley. Services Refreshments will be served after O'Bryam invites the public. Nurs- Grange will hold a chicken barbebanquet to be held June 12 at the
!.start at 7:30p.m. The Rev. John · meeting. All master masons invited ery will be provided.
·
cue Sunday from 11 a.m. to I p.m. high schooL
to attend.:.'
•
I
::Neville, pastor, ·invites the·public.
at the grange hall in Salem Center.
Any alumni not contacted with·
••
RACINE · Revival at Iiellow- The new. grange hall will be dedi· in the past five years should contact
In 1991. "I Am a Fugitive From •a
;. MIDDLEPORT. There will be
MIDDLEPORT - The 28th ship Church in Racine will be Sun- cated at 1:30 p.m. Francis White,
Brian
Collins
at
985-3593,
Julie
Chain
Gang" ! 19321 was placed on the.
~a revival at the Middleport annual dinner of Meigs County
day through Tuesday at. 7 p.m . lecturer, Ohio Slllte Grange, will be Elberfeld Dillon at 992-2006 or National Film Registry as a cultural. Nazarene Church today through Salon 710, Eight·and Fony; will be ' nightly with David Crowell, evan- ' the dedication speaker.
Leonard Koenig at 992-9918.
ly significant film.
,.
:.Sunday with E,ev. Robert F. Styers, hel!! Friday at6 p.m. at the Middle·
• ~vanj!elist. His emphasis is chil· pon ChurCh of Christ
=ctrcn and he used ventriloquist pup·
. Pets a~~ gospel -magic illustiations. · · MIDDLEPO~T · A dance will
' S~rviccs ar.e 7 p,.m. nightly ~nd . b~ lield from 7 to I~ ~·,fi!.Jriday .
!'6:30 p.m. Sunday . Past01' Greg n1ghl at the Amencan 1..egion .
Anne)( in Middleport. Music will
,·Cundiff invites the public.
1: '
· ,
be by George Hall.
,: MIDDLEPORT - The Middle;;port Chil.d Conservation League .' POMEROY - The Meigs Coun-,
" .
ill meet Thursday at the Rock ty Grange Banquet will be 7:15
::' Springs United Methodist Church, p.m. Friday at the Meigs County
,. 7 p.m. Nancy Morris will H:~ve the Senior Ciuzens Center. Advance ,.
;"program.
•
• tickets are required. Bernard Shoe·
•
"
maker, master, Ohio State Grange,
,
.
_ POMEROY - The .Mcigs Coun- will be the speaker.
.
ty Democratic qub ·Executive
· TUPPERS P~S • 'I)Ie \Tup:. ,
"Cotfi'miuce )Viii meet Thursday at
,.7:30 at the Carpenters Hall in p.ers Plains VFW Post- No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary will hold a. dance
; Pomeroy.
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. with
::. RACINE • The Racine Ameri· music by CJ and the Country Gen;:'can Legion Post'li02 will meet tlemen. Red Carr and Melvin Cross
:;Jhur¥~ay at the hall. Supper will be will be the callers. Public invited.
'
• erved at 7:30 and the meeting will
SATURDAY .
.:OCgin
.
. at 8 p.m.
CLIFTON · Benefit hymn sing
: · POMEIWY · · The Pomeroy 7 p.m. at the Clifton Tabernacle
·~Group of AA will meet Thursday at featuring Frank and Lynn Dickens,
} p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Aqita Brown and Roger. All wel·
~Church. Call 992-5763 for infot- come.
'••malton.
.
:
. RUTLAND· A dance will be
•· POMEROY ~ The Meigs United held at the Rutland American
·"Methodist Cooperative Parish will . Lcgi'?n ~all Saturday from 8 p.m.
::be taking garden seed appliCations to m1dn1ght. Pure Country Band
•:I'.hursday and Friday from 10 a.m. will provide the music for the
:JO noon at the office, 311 Condor dance which is open to the public.
~street, Pomeroy.
·
RACINE • tli!~ will tJe a •--=-'-"-"
: POMEROY - There will be a cia! meeting of Racine Lodge
, dinner at the Senior Citizens Cen- 461 F&amp;AM on Saturday at 10
·, tcr, Mulberry Heights, Thursday Work in the fellowcraft degree.
~ with serving from 5 to 6 p.m. Cost Rc{reshments. ·
·
:'is $4. Following that music will be
· ,Played by The Classics with a free
POMEROY • Belles and,Bcaus
;~ill offering to be taken for the . Western Style Square· Dance Club
'"musicians. The public is inyited.
will sponsor an open dance at the
.•
senior citizens center in Pomeroy
'" RUTLAND. A meeting of the on Saturday. from 8·11 p.m. Jim
cading Creek Conservancy 'Dis- Underwood will be the caBer.
lrict will be held at 5 p.m. ThursSALEM CENTER • StQr
day at the water office.
Grange
will hold fun night· and
"
work
session
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. ·
• POMEROY • The n.ock Springs
Grange will meet 'lbursday at (ic30 at the grange, haD near SalCID .Ceo·
p.m. for a potluck dinner. A. citizc~ .ter·. Potluck dinner at 6:30p.m.
of the year wi II be na111cd a~d a

were

.•
"•

Ann
Landers

r

s

.,Community Calendar .·
.

2~? •Iller•

-

.

.

.

$1.04 &amp;ale pr&lt;e

"mlfs
!!baclo
QICY~&lt; coli .

7,....
.$0 3Q

.

lfl•reDate

per qt.

......

Lirnrt 12

ll'J....i2'11t

.

$2.97 sale puce .
·ll 25 mfr's reoa~ """'

l

72
.

0
'""'""'".

..........

'

llllltllllllrl'llllll

Umt2

""';;:··=~ . . ---

IIIWCI'IIIt

.filii I

•

IN CONCERT
AT THE

$, .04 sate price

,

RUTLAND

.

3HM~r
·s "batec~;=,

&amp;
·ID

.•ALL
•ALL
•ALL•ALL
•ALL

.

.FIWI

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•

Four cheers for this lawyer

The honor rolls for the fourth
"six week grading period ar Ohio
. Valley Christian School have been
.. announced. Students maldng the·A
Honor Roll are:
_
• . First grade - Megan Adkin s,
.:Rachel Blackwood, Btittany' Cox,
_ Jessica Curnutte, Tessa liaggeny.
Dianna Jarvi s, Joshua Jarvis,
Matthe-w
Maloyed, Colby
Richards, Liildsey· Wheeler, Alyssa
Zirille, all A' s; Hannah Burleson,
Angela Turkovich, Briit Wiseman,
:. Nathan Bowman, John Moran,
Ashley Pyles, Clinton Shelton,
Crystal Taylor, overalL
·
. Second grade • Deanna Bryan,
, William Burleson, Jeremy Evans,
. Scotti e Frans, Chelsea Gooch,
• Stephan Henry, Christina Taylor,
..Rachael Walker, Seth Matheny,
)ohn Polcyn,· Maria Wagner, all
A ' s ; Kc1sey Salisbury, Kevin
Queen, overall.
, Third grade · Amit A,grawal,
;:Stephen Bearden, Chad Dailey,.
Michael Jenks, Sam Suflivan,
• Rachael Tucker, all A's; Hannah
. Beaver, Jonathan Beck, Dawn
' Chamberlain, Jeremy Frazie, Adam
;,;Holcomb, Ginny Miller, overalL
Fourth grade - Tom Cufliutte,
Nicholas Mulholand, Amanda
...Wilcox, all A's; Brad Bowman,

ICIIIII:I

COLORS:
·•NAVY
-METALLIC

Page-t

'Ohio Valley honor rolls announced

~

Ftw

2!?
..'

Thursday, Aprll15, 1913

banquet

Most.want abortion
an
e Ignore ,
AP poll illustrates

CONNIE.

•

The Daily Sentinel

CMC CENTER
SAT., APRIL '7

,...... .
~

'

·'

. szoo·P.M. . ' ·'·

U!'flll 16

111 cun
ftlll Wll!ll'k , _

.......... ca • .,....)~
&gt;

SOFAS
LOVESEATS
RECLINERS ·
SE(TIONALS
GLIDER ROCKERS
I

,.

WI!VI JUST RECEIVED SEVERAL LAIGE SHIPMENTS OF SOFAS,-LOVISIATS,
SECTIONILS
.liD
.CHAIRS.
GRIAT NEW
-fABRICS
AND
STYLESI
·.
.
.
· ...
.
I
..
YOU'LL
OUR HIIH QUALITY AND LOW PRICESI

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

At ftll Dl 11 . . . . . . . . . lie

'7Jif

.

'

.SHOE PLACE
.,

IPEN lEVEN DIYI A WEEK
. llootHoon:I:JOo.m.lolp.oiL~a....r-v,
. I:JO """·to 7 ,..,., IIIIo ,.,, Md ..... 10 I pJil. lllncliy

, N~ s-=coND.
MIDDLEPORT .

.. . IALLIPIUI ,. 201

"U AOid

· Tickets av811abla at · ~alga cCKmay C'-mber Office,
Quality Print Shop In Mldclllport and Fnitt fharmacy lrt
Middleport, Qallpolll and ~. Pllaunt.
'

992-5627
'

.

t'

' ·e

'

,,.'.

lpon~o,.ct

by AUIIIInd Vllage and ·.
..M81 • CQunty Cbamber of ComiiMII'Oe.
' • •-·

'I"

I

~.' -

l

•·

,,

'

~ ·

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•

PIID• 10-The Dally Sentinel

Two MHS junior high students
to take part in State Science Day
Two Meigs Junior High School
Special awards provided by 81
students will be among 800 junior professional societies, corporations
and senior high school students and governmental units will be pre:taking !heir award-winning science sented. Included in the special
projects to Ohio ·Wesleyan Univer- awards are cash, savings bond,
sity on Saturday to complete for trips, and sc6olarships worlh more
top honors in lhe Ohio Academy of . !han $260,000 inclu\ling '\he opporScience's 45th annual 'State Sci- tunity to participate in the International Science and Engineering Fair
ence Day.
.
·
Libby King's project is entitled in May.
:"Keep Warm, and Bill Crane's pro·
All students with entries in State
;ject is "How Does an Amplifier Science Day will receive superior,
Work?" Both are science students eX~:ellent, or good certilicates from
of Rusty Boolcman. .
the Ohio Academy of Science, and
The students qualified for state medallions from Frey ·scientific of
level competition by earning supe- Manslield.
.
rior ratings at the 16 district science
The competition will be in the
days throughout Ohio. Their 'Pro· Branch Rickey Center on Ohio
jects will be JUdged by more than Wesleyan's campus where students
600 professionals in medicine, edu- will begin arriving at 7 a.m. Judgcation, industry, and science. .
ing will ·run from 9:30a.m. to
·
At Ohio Wesleyan State Science 12:30 p.m.
. Day is sponsored annually by lhe
Ex hi bits are open for public
Ohio Academy of Science, a not· viewing from 12:30 to 1;30 p.m.
for-profit membership organization An awards ceremony will begin at
founded in 1891 10 rulvance science 1:30 p.m . .
in Ohio.

Eastern honor rolls announced

•,

Thursday, Aprll15, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1993-- -

New study charts ·m en's sex habits
. WASHINGTON (AP) - The are likely lower than 10 percent.
average American man loses !lis · ,"What we're finding if you look
virginity at 17, makes love once a at white males living in large urban
week and has had seven sexual centers, you get a ligure ... around
partners before his 4.0111 birlhday, a 9 percent," said Catania, a senior
research associate at t)le Center for
government-funded study 5ays.
Only 2.3 percent of the men AIDS Prevention Studies at the
reported any homosexual activity · University of California, Sari' Fran·
in the past decade, and just 1.1 per- cisco. ·"But if you look at the Unit·
cent said they had hl!d exclusively ed States as a whole, and include
homosexual relations, according to all racial groups, then it drops off
the survey published Wednesday in considerably, to 2 to 4 percent."
Family Planning Perspectives nia'g·
The survey also found that 27
azine.
·
percent of the sexually active men
A federal health agency paid had used a condom in the previous
researchers $1.8 million to conduct fourweas.
the extensive survey of the sexual
But attitudes about condoms
behavior of 3,321 men in hopes of were mixed: 75 percent said confinding ways to encourage condom doms reduced sexual pleasure,
use 10 stop the spread of AIDS and while the same number agreed that
other sexually transmitted disea~s. using a condom showed they were .
The survey found 23 perceni of ''a concerned and caring person.'·
men ages 20 to 39 have had 2.0 or
The survey was carried out dur·
more female sexual partners during · ing the Bush administration, and
their lifetime; the median number 2,000 of the men were questioned
was 7.3. .
again recently.
But 96 percent of married men
Among lhe findings:
said they haCI just one partner in the
-Ninety-five percent of men in
18 months before the survey was their 20s and 30s are sexually expeconducted in 1991. · ·
.
rien.ced. The average age of first
And while 94 percent of the sexual contact was 17 among white
married men had sex in the pr~vi· men and 15 among black meri.
ous four. weeks, only 41 percent of
-Twenty percent of men have
the single men and 32 percent" of had anal sex, usually with a
divorced men had sex that recently woman.
with a woman.
The survey also found threequarters of men engage ·in oral sex
with women. On average, they
have intercourse with' a woman
about once a week. .
, While the famous Kinsey
Report of 1948 has led to popularization of the idea that 10 percent
of the population is homosexual,
this survey and .other recent studies
found lower numbers.
"None. is close to the 10 percent
[jgure that persists from Kinsey's
study," said the report by the staff
of the Battelle Human Affairs
Research Centers in Seattle. .
. Joseph Catania, another social
scientist who studies human'·sexual
behavior, said in an interview that
the Battelle figures are likely an
underestimate because some men
"aren't willing to acknowledge .
their homosexuality in an inter-

The honor rolls for the third · Justin Robe~tson, Gary Vierling,
nine week grading period for East· overall; Dan1elle Spencer, academern Local Schools have been- .1c.
announced.
Third grade • Bradley Brannon,
Chester Elell)entary
Jake Householder, Kimberly .
Sixth grade . Beau Bailey, Marcinko, all A's; Michael BertRadley Faulk, Jacque Hall, Dustm nett, Tin~ DeLaCruz, Ashley
Huffman, Valerie Karr; Wesley Hager, Tiffany K1dder, Chris
Karr, Jessica Marcum, Jason .Mora, Lyons, Tiffany Spencer, Billie Jo
Brynn Moss, Aaron Will. Angi Welsh, overall. ·
Wolfe.
.
Eastern High School
Fifth grade . Joshua Broderick,
Tw~lfth grade - Jeremy BuckChris Krawsczyn, Jessica Pore, ley, L1sa Hoffman, Kim Michael
Alison Rose, Joshua Will, Matt Michael, Mike Roush, Vicki
Stephanie Young.
Warner, all A's; Chuck CunningFourth! grade . Juli Bailey, all ham, Michelle Donovan, Nancy
' A's; Kr~sten Chevalier, John Gaddis, Chad Griffith, Letitia
Cooke, Wes Crow, Tiffany Hollon, Holsinger, Karen Morris, Tracy
overall; Joshua Clark, Adam Murphy, Stephanie Otto, Eric PowSteglich, academic.
ell, overall.
Third grade- Tammy Bissell, all
Eleventh grade - Penny Aeikcr,
A's; Anthony Bearhs, Holly Brod· Atn~da Barringer, Kathy Nemard,
erick, Amber Ellis, ~en Holter, Jess1ca Covert, Charlene Dailey,
· Garrett Karr, WhiJneyJC;w, John Debra Frost, Scott Golden, Melissa
Krawsczyn, Sarah Mansfield, Jon Harris, Christy Hawkins, Stephanie
Will, Charlie Young, overall; Erin Hoffman, Randy Kaylor; Pat NewMoore, academic.
land, Cynthia White, Jaime Wilson,
Riverview Elementary
Andy Wolf, overall. ·
Sixth grade - Mike Sobieski,
Tenth grade - Heidi Nelson, all view.''
But Catania also said the figures
overall.
A's;Chatles Bissell, Ryan Buck·
Fifth grade· Cassie Rose, over· ley, Jessica Chevalier, Dina
:au .
Combs, Becky Mcintyre, Mary
•. Fourlh grade · Brandon Brown- Nally, Jamie Ord, Jessica Radford,
mg, Amber Church, Nathan Jeff Stelhem, Chip Suttle, Stacy
.Marcinko. overall; Renee Bar- Woolard,overall.
;ringer, academic.
·
Ninth grade - Rebecca Evans,
Third grade · Kayla Gibbs, aca- Brandi Reeves, Lauren Young, all
demic.
A's; Melissa Dempsey, Jessica
Karr, Jennifer Mora, Roben MurTuppers Piains Elementary
Sixth grade - Jessica Brannon, phy, Nicole Nelson, Connie Pooler,
.Stephanie Evans, all A's; Lacey Heatller Well, overall.
··
Bunting, Jeremy Coleman, Sarah
Eighlh grade - Meredilh Crow,
' Householder, S;u:i Putman, Mary aU A's; Candace Bunting, Christirie
Styer, Ann W1ggms, overall; l.T. Grossnickle Traci Heines Martie
White, academic.
.
Holter Am~da Milhoan 'overall·
Fifth grade . Molly Heines, au ·. Eric Dillard Maria Frecker Lisa
A's; Meghan Avis, Matthew Bis- Frigiola, Eri~ Sexton, academic.
sell •. Matthew Caldwel!. Jeremy
Seventh grade. Kelli Bailey,
G1lhlan, Andrew Rolhns, Leah . Billene Buchanan, Christopher
San!lers, Steven Weeks, Amanda Buchanan, Brandon Buckley,
· Wheeler, overall; Matthew Boyles, Michelle Caldwell Billie Pooler,
·Amanda Upton, academic.
Michael Weeks Nlcole White all
Fourlh grade- JoshUa Kehl, all A's; Stephani'e Bearhs, Ja~ie
A's; Dean Alexander, Joey Brown, Drake Jeremiah Kehl Lamar
Matthew Grubb, Kevin Keaton, Lyons 'overall.
'
· '
Michelle O'Nail, Wesley Shafer,

~ne-fourth of men worry fre.;

-While men were less likely to
use condoms (2~ percent) than . quently about AIDS, but 60 percent
black men (38 percent) or H1spanic think there is ito chance they are
positive for HIV.
men (39.percent).
- Single men were more than
Public Notice
twice as likely as married men (45
percent to 18 percent) to use a conPUBUC NOTICE
dom.

-Twenty-seven percent of men
are embarrassed to buy condoms. ·
-Ninety-six percent of the men
knew that AIDS destroys the
.immune system and has no cure.
-Forty-one percent have had
blood tests that tell if they are
·infected with HIV.

Attention voters!
Meigs County residents who
have voted in 50 or more consecu·
ti ve general elei:ti\)nS are asked to
contact the Meigs County Board of
Elections, . Mulberry Ave .,
Pomeroy.
.
Rita Smith, director, advises that
Secretary of State Bob Taft is plan•
ning to honor those long-time voters.

To speak
Bill Villars will speak Sunday at
7:30 p.m; at the S tiversville Word
of Faith Church. David Dailey,
pastor, invites the public to attend.

a.lllllllld . . . . CounU.
rocolved 1 grMt from tho
Ohio • Doportmont of
TrMoportollon, Dlvlalon of ·
Avlollon ond tho Foclorlll .
• AVIolloll Adrnlnlotrallon to , •
oludy tho ovlotlon needo of
tho two County liN. Tho
otudy woo unclertoken to
determine tho beet '118 for
on Improved Golllo·Molgo
Reglonlll Airport ~*Poblo of
mooting tho . lono·torm
ovlollon nHde for Golllo
ond MeJoo Countl• • .
Tho Silo EvoluoUon Study
hoo oomrleled ond •
droll T.Ghnlco Report hN
bHn pqpored documontlno
tho onllro oludy proc••·
Thlo document will be on
public cloploy ollho County
Courlhouoo lor .both G8lllo
ond Molaa CounU•, ot tho
••In ilbrory In both
Pomeroy ond Golllpolla and
ot tho Golllo-Malp Roglonol
AirpOrt.
.
A rovlow of tho ontlro
Study wilt be prooontod to
tho public oto·formot Public
HNrlng to bo hold ot tho ..
(Continued on Pop 11)

PubliC Notice

(Continued from P-10)
Molp County Courthouoo
on Thuredo¥', '
13, 11111
ot 1:30 P.IIL 'rho
wAI
bo hold In tho county
Room, locotod on tho Srcl
floor of tho CourthouOL Tho
Courthouao Ia loclltod on
Coun Stroot at loooncl and
Mulberry Avenue, In
P-oy.
.
A 30 rnlnulo Study rovlwlll oommonco prompUy ot
1:30 Pll, followed by o 20
mlnulo .,.alan Md - ao.. lon. Following tho
Study ,.,,_ 1111d quooUon

Airport Authority ond tho
lito Evoluatlon Study
Technical Advloory CoMmltloo
pubic
to otlond IIIIo lnlormoUvo
-llno ond provide their
atat. .ronto obout tho
development of an hn·
prov.cl o•• " Ia Region.

of MoiQ., end Stata of OhiO,

-dod·-.. .

••••lon,

wit bo
' token from lntorootod
partloo. TheM oUitomonl8
• • be publicly road lnio tho
rocorclocl tronacrlpt or o
algnod, written oUitomont
con bo oubmlllod to the
Gilllla-Molgo roglonol
Airport Authority either on
or before tho Hoorlng rloUI.
Wrltlon ol.atomont.a, oubmlllod prior to tho Public
Hoorlng, ohould bo oent to
tho Airport Auth!'rity In o
..aled envelope ot tho
following acldr••:
· G8111o Mol111 Roolonol
Airport Authority
312 Airport Rood
Qolllpollo, OH. 4HS1 '
'
. '

.

_.,..111.,

oiAlrporL

(4) 15, 22, H; (5) .. 4tc

PubliC Notice
$HERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TAXATION, ·
Plolntlfl

vs

CLETUS DALTON, ol ol
Delondonlo
CASE; NO.I2 CV 2to
In purouanco of an Order
.o f Solo dotocl Fobruory 11,
1893, In tho above ontltloil
octlon, I wHI offer lor oalo ot
pubUc oucllon, at tho front
door of tho Court Houoo, In
Pomeroy, Ohio, In tho _ , .
named County, on Frlrloy,
tho 14th doy of Moy, 1!183 ot
10:00 o'cfock A.M., the
following doocr.l bod rul
Nl8ta. ltuotaln tho County

Bl'LLETI:\ B( ).\RD
BUWDN BOA~D DEADLINE
4:30 P•.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICADON

DANGE .
APRIL 16, 7 TO 11
Middleport Legion Annex
Music by Geqrge Hall
.

I

The price hu tN.n reducod ID 181,900 Md
ownor finonc:ina o1 up ID 80% of purchae
omcun1 may be pooalble tor qualifying pe&lt;·
1011 1D buy W!Y nice

hcmt on 3)1 IICIOI In

Rooclno. • BR, 3 bolho, 2 - · ,.,..... 1
BR apt Properly lndudn •.eoo oq. ft. farm
bldQ.

• 1--·
cau &amp;1 4-902-7104 tar....,.
..

YOUNG'S

.

CARPENTER

Addlllono
Work
Plumbing

"

992-6215

,...................
.
u-r-

CIEITIHI &amp; llliUJIOII

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

CoR Ire.... ol t9J:S77t
20+YI'Irllp. ......

PONDS

WATER &amp; SEWER

s..os.-hYSonlco
J·tt-r

ROUSH'S PRINTING

2 Front Struts • Labor

•4Prices
••••IStart••t
an,.....
,
at

2251 Sixt• St. • (t14) 992·5315

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

1

T-Shlrts • Hats • Uniforms
Vorlety of T·Shirt Colora and Lettering StyiM.
(.til

(IJ(f.l\ l111

lt.llll (

129.95 +Tax

lllhUII.llllHI

lhl.li '1'12-:'.11:'

Howard L Wrltesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
3-16-93-tfn

11--------...J

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
. and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVI;WAYS INSTALLED
LIME$TONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

47269 St. Rt. 248 • 1~ Mile OH Rt. 7

c•••••r
o• Rt. 241
PH. 614·985·3949
T•ru

NOW OFFERING-••••
OIL AND LUBE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND ROTATING

992·3838

3/24/93/ I •o ptl

6181'1211

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES

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

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
We Paint Mobile
· Homes and
Aluminum.Siding ·
•Power Washing

lEVIN'S .LAWN
MAINTENANCE

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAININ,G
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

949·2398 or
1·800·137·1460
t,_, Mowing, .
Fertilizing, Woeding, and
loocling.
Shrub and Tr" Trimming
&amp; Removal

RHklenllal &amp; eo"""'*rclal
FreeEellmatH

FIREWOOD FOR .SALE
6-26-'92&lt;1n

312511 mo.

12·5-tln

Rocky.R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
· Box 189
·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

""., SUPERIOR FUELS AND
THAT WORK
..
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Di-1 Supreme... Try it, there·is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel in winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST
Special I aim terms with payment 4 limes a year
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
Larry E. Miller
1-SOQ-598-5654 .
614-446-1157

I.

I
I
1

·~lrltl new IICiiVIbon 1nd minimum lllnfQ

·~

~

915·3561

1

commilmlnt wtUI Rl4io Sl\clc Hllulll cam.r.

'

P-1ic. maw ~..,- ~ng on ~ pllfl
IIIICIIcl lll'a witi'IOv!ICIIYMion: S27t ts1 Ott.!-.old In CA. O......ln • •,

........ -..

,.,.. - - · flrst .llerntl. AI _,.. . . . . .
Ill plor . .. ~ .. IIMM!In lilt 1torw. No

.... _

Fl,.t e~. fir11t ~- AA lt•m. ...... to,ltf\Of ..... Not 11R tten.
in all •torH. No rllri checb. HurTJ, bonul dllcouftltl •ncl41tllt3.
..

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

Acroto
..... Office
217 ·LSocoatllt1
POMIIOY, OHIO
316f90/tl

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

J

J
I
II

36970 Bal Ra1 Road
Pomera,, o•ID .

lnsiH IM Olit
FreeEatlmatea,
Low Coot..

FIREWOOD

FOR ·SALE

·-·-··---.1

992·34.70
3·11·93

tJ1ii JAYMAR

•LIGHT HAULING

ll1ry Kay h111 proVIIIolfeedve llldn Clro program
deligrlocl for your oldn type.
MARY KAY
IndopendentBnuty
Conoulllnla

Coralyn McCoy
(614) 882-&amp;012
Slndrl HtnderiO!I
(614) IIIN847
Produetlln Stock

-1-

Sto•eCo.

·SIZED UMESTONE
. FOR SALE

Call 614·992· ·
6637
St. II. 7

- - - · ·

•. ..
---. -......... --····
- ,.
BUSINESS CLASS

n .,,..
",...., ... ,

FOR THE FAMILY

Power computing at an onordablo prlcol

..

..

NO INHRfSf . Ill !JGHIBW, l!W:i

........-.

--

My'r11• Beach Area: Motel On
Boach, t &amp; 2 Rm, EH. $401 $55

Nlghlly.

$1751$225

Inc. Mom. ljlk.

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE' REPAIR

985·4473
667·6179

2+92·tfa

36358 SR 7

CHAILIE'S

EVERY THURSDAY

SMALl DOZER
DRIVEWAY WORK
attd UMlSTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

.

EAGLES
CLUB

Giveaway

&amp;:45 p.m.

Special Early Bin:j
$100 Payoff.
Th lio od good far 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

'25 HOUR

992·7553
POMEROY, 01.
312518:1/1

WE ·DO

ROOFING

AND EVERnHING UNDERNEATH

BUILDERS

USED RAilROAD TIES

742·2321

"•

· ! NG-92·rfa

. 313193 dn

Save Big on Voyagers
Po-.cl by Mercury Outboard•

J. S. MARINE .
10 mllea aouth of Glllllpolla
on BlaMnRood
PH. 614-25&amp;6160

llepo/r

Hoorra: lull. I lion. Cloood

pure

bred (no

papers). 304-675-

'7946 before 9:00PM.
5 Klltens, 6 Weeks Old, 614·24S.
9135 After 4:30P.M.
.
Appror . 3 112 Plck·Up Loads Of
Firewood, You Pick Up. 614-446·

3907.

Beautiful black .Colllt dog, '•P'
pro11lnlately 1 112 years old

friendly, houubroken, no
h•bils, 814~992·2282.

·

T- Wod.,Frl.
1:3D-.1:3Dpm
Thon.. lottO n4 pm

Porch Glider, To Giveaw1y, 1514·446·1264 Afl!r 6 P.M.
Registered
black
lab, 15
months old, 10 a good home

6t4-992cl'l65.

'

Two old washers, floor model
color TV, 304-675-3921.
White Samoyed t.m•~. 1pay~
friendly, good w/kl•, 304·13~

2895.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found: coon dog, bl•ck, Sue.
efta/ Joppa Rd. 1 r-.1 1 614-6673126 or.614·667-6647,

Henderson

• a-by """""Y' -

ICIIII

• Sot dloplay ..... far- .'
l n f l - .............. . .

•
'

.

MI)'21,1H3.
Mall add,..... to
MolgsAiumnl
Aaoolatlon, P. 0.

Box 21, M::rrt,
Ohio

.· ·

. THE 1001

Bill
IUY • Wl•IUII
3171L
lt•

w

. .....,.I,OWo
.....frl. 10100-ltOO
......, 1111006100
· Cloucls....,
· tti•U77 ..

·-

are1

Or1nge &amp; Whit• m•l• Brlttniy
Spanfel, ·3041-675-5443.
.

,.._
CiAIWS

IJJQIJ

---·

I

16 YNro

~-

LOST: black &amp; while mille 8os.
ton Terrier, REWARD, 1304-675--

7979. .

0

Losl: Gerin•n Sh0J1rd dog
black wllh brown flee, McK.,;.
Zil Rldgl vicinity, If Men Cll
614·949-l426.
L011: Lar~ Orange c1t 1rom
Cenle:n•ry Rd.· Rtwlrdl 614-441·
t6t8
.

lost: Mt of Mye on Court
StrMt,

many

key1

on

~.

Pt- retum to Tho O.lly Son.

111101.

.

Yard Sale .

7

........,011.4ml

Molgs Alumni
ASIICICiatlon Ia
looking for CU.f'I'!!IJ
acldrasue of Molgs
gl'8dultos for April .
milling for Alumni
Dancoon · ·

bad

Free to 1 good hom ... m11e, Plrl
Chow, red, be1ut1tul, 1 112 yrs.

FOUND; ·

I

~~

3 yr old male Brittany Spapl11,

'88-9973.

"A Quality Auured Contracto.r"

MEADOWS SHOE &amp;
LEATHER REPAIR

yr old, 304-675-2687.

Good Cats To Giveaway, 1514--

20 , ••,. Etp.

BILL SLACK
992-2269

2 male Red Retrlvers approx 1

old, 6t4-949-2157.

.'JN POMEROY

REASONABLE RATES

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

Wool&lt;ly. Rato

Call803-238-58t2.

GallipoliS

'l' , JMIF Jlllllf!
Slicker grljllllcl 101 I'IU r - ttwough ·
Wlndowl'-lllln1101f1414811SX
PCal MS Worl&lt;llollrlldy lnotlllod.

FIEIISIIIUTIS

101 IIU.IIT) .,.,

c••••lre, OH.

VALUE PERFORMER

sto,&amp;c.., ....

· •FIREWOOD

Quality

~ o- -

4-t-1 '

(614) 9·2·5449

FACIAL

JeH Wkkers~am

614·949·2335 or
614·593-5010

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

COMPLIMIITIRY

· OWNER:

Work Gu. .nteed

HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

SIZED UMESTONE

4121113, ~ hM,. .......... .

-----------------~-~

,,.. FOUIIdatioll to
Roof

KEN'S IWfiANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

ts•:

'93 Catalog Price 999.00
New Low Price · · 799.00
Bonus DIICOUnt -100.00

J &amp; THOME
IMPROVEMENTS

.... All-IS
lrl1111 It Ill Or Wo
l'lckU

.

Cat. Price
199.95 1.
Sale Price
79.95 I
Bonus
_
_Dlac.
_ _-50.00
_..;..1I

1125-3531

Shade River Saddle Shop

••-tl•li•t

MICROWAVE OYEI
oatl VCR REPAIR

Announcements

GOOD SERVICE IS
OUR GOAL ·

4 .

-c••••••

I

Gallipolis

NW

MaaterC•rd

614-992·7698

I

cations pre-Installed . Just EPh lbs. light.

~

IIUH'I

R&amp;C EICAVATIIG
BWDOZING

614·446·0736

1419 State Rt. 7

at.....

Tandy 1110HD with 20MB hard drive. 3'1:1" flOppY.
MS-005 and DeskMate with 9 ready-to-run appli·

qUIIIIIy.... _

RODGERI £.1 RIDE

&amp; lURlE
COISIRUCnON
•letlfHo•s

output. 111·'107!1

At&gt;Ool• IV tljllllcl Willi 512KRAM. Uport ll11DIIMHz, laO. USA

7111

P-gorv-

illlliiLL

Tandy CT-104 mobile
cellular phone. Handsfree operation, 3-watt

L

approlaocl
or;~::~~:~ii~~~~~
otSaid
TwoprornlThouoond
Four to You
onowor
Hundred Dollaro ($2,400) within
(28)
ond cMnot be oold lor 1 laat
thon .two·lhlrdo of · th~l
of thlo notice
omounL
will bo publlohed
TERMS '?Fj SALE: T1111 one• a wook for alx (6)
per coni (lint.) cooh In bond ou-alve wHka. Tho laot
on day of oata with bolonco publication will bo made on
to be paid upon delivery of the 22nd rloy of April, 11183,
clood.
.
ond tho tw•nty..lght (28)
THIS SHERIFF'S' SALE dayo for onoworing will
OPERATES UNDER THE commence on lhot dale. In
DOCTJUNE OF CAVEAT coao of your folluro to
EMPTOR. THE MEIGS anower or otharwloe
COUNTY IIHERIFF MAKES roaponcl oo required' by the
NO G.UARANTEE AS TO Ohio Ruin of Civil
STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR Procedure, Juclgmont by
TO SALE.
default will be rendered
Jo- Ill Soulaby, SIMirlfl ogolnot you for tho rollof
MeJoo County, Ohio dam•clod In tho ComplalnL
Lowronco A. HoM
Dated thlo 1Oth rloy of
Speclol Counaol.
March, 1893.
OTHS •d Holaw '
Undo Bentz, Clerk
Attorney lor Plointilf
(3) 11, 25;
·
(4) •• 15, 22, 3tc
~4) 1,1; 15, 22, &amp;tc

SprineTime
Speefal

WoAlooHa,.

1.------·---.

,ll~i4.992-'m1

Pomerey, Ohio

I : I

~

. Aato-Renrals

1 1 11

LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOMESITE$
HAULING: Llmeotone,
Dirt, Graval and Coal

'

1

'

PARCEL NO.
1: lha . - - - - - - - following rnl eo toto
Public Notice
aituoted In tho Stato of
Otilo, County of Molga and
IN THE
Townohlp of Scipio ond
COUNTY COURT OF
known • Two lo18 Number
MEIGS COUNTY, Ohio
Th- (3) ond Four (4) In lha
ROGER HAYMAN, ·
Vlllap of P-ville In aold
Plolntifl
Townohlp, County end Stolo
-w_
ofor•old end clooc:ribod •
WILUAM DUNAWAY
followa: Bolng part of
Defendant
C•• No. 83 CVF 11
loollon No. Six- In Town·
No. Seven (7) In Ronp No,
NOTICE BY
Fourtoon (14) in Ohio
PIJBUCATION
Company'o lot · No. Throo
To: WlLUAM DUNAWAY,
~3), tho alor•ald roal ootolo whoeo lui known oddr••
bolno tho aamo roal eo tale woo 54304 New Portland
convayod by Mary A. Road, Portlond, Ohio
Br.ooka and Ezra. S. Broolur 45770.\
to Somuol H. Queen by
You oro hereby notified
deed doted September 15, thot you hov~ named
1aar ond rocorclocl In .tho Delondontln o legal action
rocorrlo of dMdo of Molp 1·p'j!l t ~~~ ~Roger Haymon,
.
I
vo. William
County, Ollie. .
PARCEL NO. 2: Sltuo18 In
Thia
tho Townohlp of Scipio,
uolgned ·
County of Moiga .,d St.alo
11 and lo
of Ohio, onclln 11M Vlllop of .pending in tho County Court
Pogovlllo, .,d bolng known of Malo• County, Ohio,
oo 42Yo f•t off of tho aoulh Meip County Courlhouae,
aida of L.ol No. ThrH (3) and :Court Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohio
In SocUon 11, Town No. 7 457&amp;8.
ond Ronge No. 14 of tho · Tha object of tho
Ohio Company'o Purchaoo, Complaint lo · ooeklrfo
bolno tho oamo promlooo . damopa fO!' lllilure to pay o
convoyed .by Robocca J, loon In tho omount of
a ..... to Adolbort...,.oll by $1,000.00, ond ..eking
deed dated December II, dam oooo .for · otorage
1!125, u rocordorlln Volume choro• In 1111 amount in
128, Pogo 365 of tho llolp excooo of SI,IOO.OO, and all
County Deed Recorda, othor relief which may be
reference to which to parmlttod by law or In
hol'8by modo. :
equity•

•

I
I
'I
I

•

to-wit

985·4181

I

e

MAKE IT ARtlE...
IJSI WANT ADS, /7)

FREE ESTIIURS

Nan"eS l·n the news

I

PubUc Notice

and anewer

I

'

PubliC Notice

•

Teenagers attend
conference in Columbus
Thirty-nine teenagers and their which was the requircd.number for
sponsors from the Middleport the twelve choirs competing. They
' Chwch 'of Christ recently attended also sang, "Be The 01)e", by AI
the Ohio Teens For Christ conven- Denson. The teens perfonned in the
tion, held at the Columbus Conven· combined choir at the convention's
tion Center. The theme of this main sessilm,also. Sharon Stewari
·year's convention was. "Refuge".
is their director.
.
The keynote speaker was Chuck
Besides those mentioned. oth·
Booher from West Covina, Califor- ers attending were Kathy Wilfong,
nia. Booher's youth ministry has Christi Lynch, Lorie Grimm, Marlo
• become a refuge for over 300 White, Erin Warner, Shirley Bum+---..li~~~in..!lj.§S1l1Jl~ unity. He gardner, Jared Stewart, Aaron
vanuu&gt; problems teens
Hockman, Jeremy Hartson, Mike
'today and
your youth Wilfong, Shane Hatfield, Mike
group can become a refuge, or safe Wilfong,Jr., Ryan Rowe, Matt Benplace for answers and understand- , son, Carrie Hartson, Donna Hart·
•
mg.
son, Carrie Glaze, Stephanie See,
Another highlight of the coh· Debbie Toundas, Dawn ' Hockman,
· vention was a concert featuring Heather Hudson, Arnie Elliott,
popular contemporary Christian Beckie Elliott, Brandle Elliott,
artists Billy Crockett and Rich Amanda Hays, Gail Davenport,
Mullins.
. . ·
David Duncan, ·Brad Davenport,
Many of the teenagers partici- Mike Stcwan, Jared Warner, James
pated in competitions which arc White, David Toundas, and Bill
held at the convention each year. Frazier, youth m,inister of the MidBill Toundas and Dodger Vaughan dleport Church of Chfist.
.
entered in the Preacher Boy com·
~· petition.
Out offinished
28 first lhird
year partie1pants, Dodger
. Both
•
boys received a plaque and a Bible
· Concordance. Dodger also received
LOS ANGELES (AP) _Walter
a plaque for his. third place finish.
Koenig took a voyage to lhe final
Bridget Davis participated in lhe frontier _ space _ as Mt.
v, lhe Russian navigator in
vocal solo and public speaking
competition in which she received th~ " ar Trek" TV series arid
high marks. Her vocal selecti n movie ow the ;tetor will explore
was, "Keep Choosing Me".
unc
d territory of the mind.
· Melissa Wilfong also received
Koenig is writing a series of
high· marks in the vocal solo com- , comic' books for Malibu Comics. It
petition . She sang, "People Need will debut this month.
,'
The Lqrd". A total of (ony-six parKoenig's .tltree-book series,.
ti~ipants competed in the vocal "Raver.'' .illustrated bb "Spider. solo competition.
· " · · Dan d
'd 0a
· Alison Gerlach received third 1111111 111l1U
an
avt
y,
chronicles lhe adventures of a char·
place in the public speaking com·
......
·
h
·
' petition. The title of her. speech acter 011 8 quest to.c•.,..le 10 ab•t·
· · was, . "My Yotttll Oro•"• _,..Y .8"!C ~ fOI' an overpopulated
"
un1vene. ..
.
.
· Refuge". She was presented .with a ·
"1 was trying to find so~ethmg
troph&gt;;.
,
. . where I could combine superpowT,he church .' Te~n ~h~lr · ers with psychology," Koenig said.
recet.ved a Supe'.'lor ratmg 10 the · "!have.an orientatiOn that .always
Cho1r co!."pettuon:~ They per,- returns to psychological motiva- ·
formed, Jesus M1ghly Gqd • lions."
·

•

BISS.Ell

HAULING

.........
.....
u.a~o•,

8UILDE~S,

INC.

&amp;

New Homes · ·VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Addltlorte • Roofing

IUVIt I COIL

COMf"ER~IAL

and RESIDENTlAL
F~E .~STDfi\T~S -: ·
...:.

101 ••
SIYII
614o742•2.131

614·992~7643
,., S.lllllay Calls)

' 3+13: 1

••

•
1

�•

12- The Dally Sentinel

Page

Pomeroy-Middle

GanlpqJI•

41

5I

HOUIIS for Rent

&amp; Vk:lnhy
7

Room
House,
Rodney
$"350/Mo Deposit &amp; Reterenc•,
614·643·2916 Afl•r 4 P.M.

'Alloy

KNck·Kriackt,

cu......,

A_., Etc. Open Tuosdoy

Thru Saturday.
Ya•d

Sale:

T...,..,...., Flrol

T1 Co,..E~

mo ..0 5
FamHioo. Friday !1-4 &amp; Salunloy

t-5.

Thursday,

KIT 'N''CARL YLE® by larry Wright

Hou181101d
Goode

'

Pt. PIJUII'Il
&amp; VIcinity' ·

Eur•kl. on Sl. Rl.7. NID pel8,
raterencu. 114~~ . ,

U.ddhwlln

52

atrle

Pomeroy,

l.:===::::::=::==r::::::::::::::~::::::::::::=12
badroom mobllo ho~1 $250,
I·
month wotar • 1111 paoa, 304-

ili&lt;ldleport

11

&amp; Vk:lnhy

31

Help Wanted

All
- o.dllnl:
.. PolclIM
In
t\dt•MIL
1:00pm

......

-.
·&amp;~,................,.

""' .,_. "'" ... .. lo .....

. . . . . , ....... 1:00pm Fridoy,

. .. . ,

lllllllon

-

•J....Ihooil.:
I I • - • Enlow Tho Vlowl 1m3
1
- • licio
lalho,2

·~

. . 17lh- Saluldoy Onlylllony

=" ........._,_--

·
-· ·lollll I - 1 , fumllun,
•oro.~
Lotort FoMo, Ohio,..

- I ", i a.
....... llore

14

Business

a-.,
.................... - c
..
Frlcln -

Retrain

8

B..!.-. Coliogo, s~ Volt:r,
431i7.!
Rag.fi0.05.1~B. .

Auction

"'"' ion

Company,
!lick Pooroon
tuH limo auct~r. comploto
. ouctlon
oorvlco.
Uconood
III,OIIIo I Wnt VIrginia, 304773-5785.

Wanted to Buy

J &amp; D'• Auto Parts and.S.Iv•r.:
•lao·buying Junk car.. &amp; true a.
304-773-5343.
Old

lumituro,

m•rblee,

'

'

'

glasa,

china.

tool8.

ar~n.ads,

otone ,.., llao tuma...
reftnlohlng, Osby llllltln, 1141192·11141,
WantMI To Buy: Junk Auta.
Wllh 0&lt; WllhoiO IIOIOfl. Call

Loiry Uvoly. l14-388-9303.
lot~

PrlcH Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Ring!. Silver Colna.
Gold Coins. ll.b. Coin Shop,
151 , _ , _ Avonua, Golllpollo.
Wanted to buy: uud mobile

homn. 114-441-01711

Employment Serv1ces
11

•AVON' ALL AREAS! Share JOUr
Umt whh uo.. You'll lo" tho
eompMJ. HIOO.II92.e358.
~ 4 Ladlft Who would Uko To

loUvoq C.R61~ ·

AVON I All Aroao I Shlrtoy
Speoro, 3~75-1429.
Eosy World Excollont Psyl oornblo Produclo AI Han!~. Call
Toll .Fno, 1.S00o467o5511, Ext.
313.
F~II-Timo
Raglstorsd X-Ray
. ru. Frldoy
Tochnlclon,llonday. Th
For A Buay Phyot~lono Olllco.
No Shift Wook,ll!nto-sd C....
1aet: 614-446-9620, 8:30 lo 5
. P.M. 0&lt; ~Sand Roaumo To: P.O.
Boo 788, Gallipolis, OH 45131.

Gallla - Uotgo Haad Sta~ Hu An

Immediate Opening In GIIU.
County For A Famlly S.rvk:"

Aldo. Apptlconto lluot PooooA
An Aosoc:lalo DIQ[.OI In Social
Worll /Rolatsd FloTcJ And Hold A
Valid Orlvtro Uconso. lho
Boglnnlnl Alto Of Pay II $5.50

!Hr. For dc:lhlonal fnlormltion,
Call &amp;M-446.66111, 8 :00 • 4:00,

Monday • Friday. GaRia • llo!Qo

Of

Slart, A Division

Woodland Centers,
AA!EEO Employor.

Ill

An

H•lp needed to c1re tor efdefty
lady at her Middlapor1 horne,
Cll 614·992-6193 belw. .n i-5,
Monday through Friday.

IIIMEOIATE OPENING FOR
BUYER:
Primary . -111
producer headQuarterld In Plt-

ttburgh It ••klng experienced

lndlvldualt tor Its pwch..lt:lt
dlpt. loeatsd In Wnt VIrginia.
Ideal candtdata shauld poauu

yeut purthiiSinQ ••·
ptrillnce •• a buyer. .,-Uit be

3-5

able io work In a fall PltQd
oHiee

prot....

atmosphere

slonally &amp; etfic•anlly. Coinputar
experience &amp; ••e•llent nrbal
communlcaUon akllls a mutt.
Interested candldatn ahoukl
sand rasuma &amp; salary hlatory to

PQ:Int PIIIUnt Reglstlt, % 801
C.13, 200 Main St, Pt. Ptt, WV
25550. An aquol opportunhy

employer.

.

.

babyslftor · I
Six children.
111 required, 304-115-1377 anytlmo.

Llvo • in
housekeeper.

A...,•

-~ng And Yord wort&lt;-·
Call - o l P.ll. 614 ...- 3 1.
Mwiclana: OrumrMr wan~~~ to
Join .,. torm group _ ·country roc1&lt;, coil John 6-gd;

2416, 11~.C12.

- d: ·!10 Pooplo To ·Looo
WeiGht . No Will Pow•r NMded.
1~ Natur~l i

Colt

100% Guaranteed.

303-415~213 .

No

E_,loncol $500 To $1100
- l y IPotontlal' Proc-ng
FHA .Mort- Rolundl. Owii
- · 1·!101&lt;146-0503 E11.213.

24Houro.

Plrt.ntn. WN-tndt, For.....,.
Ina Aiel For Stroko Vlctllrt,
Ret. • ens, 114-446-77'l2.
Aollglouo F1111lly llan, 82 Yooro
Old, W - Ukl Fomoll u-!n
Companion, 70 v•ars Or Over,
Somo
Cooking
I
Llahl
-OoplnQ. For motion

eon: rw318-ltrn.

liliOr·

Salol: Rllall .lowllry £1,
portonco · Jlaqulrad, For II....
CCI. ltoro, Apply
.
A
Alt. ,AcctJowotry Ut ~ locond ~~­
~. Man ..... 10.12.
' TJIIICI( . DRIVERS
Ut!tllld
Op tlrip Wlh
County
Tructdnil .. Compony. No
nlgltl llrtVOI. An Excollonl 0,.
~unltj nl For
l.ongo!orm

Joe-.,

~CJ."aerBlnlf,:

-·

o.w-

14AW{ Uf.SET
If . I USe' A NAf!::tN,
0

P.O. lo1 101, Jacuon, un.

44

~partment
f

•

-

Or

1 badroom apto, good location,
101 SIX1h &amp; llaln Sl. Nowly
remodeled wfnew appllancn,
utilities Included, dtpoah ,..
~~!{~· 304-67~1131 or 675-

strongly

.... .. ..

Dnllo, ~­
1,200 llllliOI

.. SIJ,IGO. I,..:M6-IH7.

NORTH
.J65
tQ 76
.K 6 53

Dodp
Collom OniJ. ,114-256-152a.

--·-"·---

EEKAND

IM-tl2·2001,

;-:,...?·-:-:-=:-:--i

ooch. 304~75-1132.
ohollo. Throo ot tfiom """'·
53
Antiques

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

Blnoculll'l MS. 114-245-M41.

S81e

1· •&gt;

-

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.., '"' " ' - "'

=

7

,.....

Soutl!

II4NI.

2 NT

1

Baldwin Planoo '
Roland
Koybolrdo
Mortln
&amp;
Olboon
Gulloro And lluch M- Avolloblo Prlc•· Hummingbird
Mu1lc, Jack.on, OH 11~2885689 .

.,....,..,_
, . . For!l

F-110

XL

!! 'TH'

::'fibod,
4.1 - ·.
- fr.:"-.:=
oatual
•
. . -c ......., halt
1
..._.,.·

BARLOWS JEST GOT

TWINS!!

2141.

-.
--=1'5
A..-,

THEY WAS

ONE OF
EACH II

TICKLED
PINK AN'

PINK!!

, ........ truclr, olr, 4
wheel drive, ta..-r. SCM.I'JI..

•

·=~~~~L;=

PEANUTS
TJ.IE OLD WORDS

~

STIL~WORK

T11E 13E5T .. .

7

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1

Jo..,_ -

:-:,:;:r-

12:M. .

...,...

TtfAT BOwL IS
GOING TO C05T

mJ.

..

YOU tY.nA··Ttft ,EAN ~z
5LJPPtl&gt; Off ~
Ttft STirJNG.

!

/

Leonerd

54 1111111
55 Drinking

·3 Co, ottlctr

VIlli I

4ln...,.l

manner?

DOWN

5 Notice
6 Architect -

1 Encounlara

Gagar)n

2 ll 'a delfcloual

vandlrRo.,.
7 Tltelllllng'l

All pass

Henry Kissinger slid lha t power is
the ultimate aphrodisiac. But some·
times power isn't enough at bridge. It
helps to have winners as well. In yesterday's deal, a player with a balanced
28-point hand doubled a four·spade
contract and .found that. she couldn't
defeat it. In today's, South is in three
~~~trump. It looks ironclad, but de·
clllrer fell to defeat. Do you see where
he went wrong'
West led the club two: three, 10,
queen. Declarer cashed the spade ace
and led a low spade to dummy's jack.
However, East won with the queen
and returned the spade nine. South
won and finessed tfie heart jack. But
East produced a.!!eCC!nd queen, cashed
his spade eight (West discarding a
heart) and exiied with the heart 10.
South woo with the ace and, with a
sinking feeling, led a diamond to dum·
my's queen. Easl won with the king, as
declarer half expected him to, and re·
turned a heart. With nowhere left to
turn, South claimed . the eight top
tricks with which he had started.
"We had 31 points between us, yet I
went down in three nMrump. How
can that happen?" asked a bewildered
South.
,
"I've never seen it ·before," answered North, "There are different
ways to get home, but :f think you
missed , an unusual opP'!ftunity. If
West's lead is his fourth·hlghest, East
must have a singleton club, Why not
play low from both hands at trick

~ The dime dropped. "You're right!"
criell South. "Whichever suit East re·
turns gives.me a ninth trick. Wow why didn't I think of that? I'm going to
hate 'myself lor weeks because now I
. won:t be written up in the newspaper."

when it's reversed. How would you de·
scribe that?

M:ORTY MEEKT.K AND WINTHROP

A. You may describe the telephone
number as P.ALINDROMIC, which
means "of or like a palindrome." A
palindrome is any word or phrase
spelled lhe same backward and· lor·
ward (such a6 LEVEL or MADAM, I'M
ADAM). Numbers in the same order
forward and backward are also con·
sidered PALINDROMIC, an adjective
pronounced "pal·in·DROH-mik." The
mosl recent year that fit this catego·
ry was 1991, and we won't have our
next palindromic year unlil 2002.

rVe GOT DETENTK&gt;I

AND I SAID

FI&lt;OM NON UNTIL
1997.

"SCHOOL-

T~~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

Cetebrity Cipher Ctyp10grMtl . . c:r.ll«&lt; from quollflons by farnoul people, ~ and pt...,t,
·
£tiCh lett• In thl dpher a1and1 ror IMtMr. To.Uy"• CIW: V ~B.

F S H

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UHCJHHS
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CYZ

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C'YZRXHMTRKC

CYZRXHMTRKC
NRXH.'

CNH

IHYOHK

TFMCRTHM

CNH
LYGiRB .

b'f NEA, Inc.

~ leta

15

TIIAT DAILY

WOlD
llMI

PIZZLII

O Reorrango

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four O&lt;romblad

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My husband is very poor at
remembering special dates

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my birthday, but granny rem1nded me that It's better to
remamber special ........
Complete t~e chuckle quDiod

by filling in the missing words

~ou develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS

.:11' IN THESE SQUARES

6 g~~c:~:~~

lETTERSTO

I I I II I I I I
~-~~

SClAM-UTS ANSWERS

Meadow - Knock AlOUd Pagoda - LOOK GOOD
My husband, wl'io is a hYPOChondriac, ratumed ~om
visiting the doctor. "That "doctor is a real sad1st, he
mumbled. "He keeps telling ma I LOOK GOOD."
o

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- - . Send lor Aries' Altro-GI'IIIft predic- pertain 10 personal acq~isil,~s,,you
lions IDdlty !If rntili1)g S1 .25 pluo a long; be fonunalo today.
is one otlhose
sol "'
I, -..,od ortve1ape to.Aitnl- · • times - n breaks might como your way ,
Gnt!lft. cio litis ne II'8Pif', P.O. l!ol44e5, wilhoul baYing to engineer litem you&lt;NI.
New VOlt, NY 101fl3. Be
your SCORPIO (Oct. 24-llov. 22) Gaining aup!lldiac 191.
pori lor a cause in which you believo
BERNICE
T-..a (April ...._, 20) Even !hough Sllooldn'l be too dltticufltodoy. Olhera will
your own idiU regardi1)g recogniZe lhe !Mit and worth of ' - that_
BEOEOSOL yau m1g1tt yau want done lochiy, lialen lo lito you ""' promutgaling.
.
..... o1 yaur · He .. she might have a SAOITT ARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 21) Your
........ you ciO.
potential lor auccec• il favorable today '
, . l(llttr11....,.2D)Tryyourhandot ~lly penalnlng 10 jolnl ventures. It
filling.IIW1gl vaur-lftodey belen cdlng on you operate on _., you may nol be
. , ._...,. ei!ptrt for a . .llnet. You as lucky or eflec:ltvo.
m1g1tt 1m ou1 1D be ""'"' cornpelltlllhen &lt;;APRICOIIN (Dec. 22.JIIn. It) II ~ be
yau - ·
,
to your advan,lllgt loday 10 lpeltd loma with
CNICEII (,_
22) Tltltt II a flOOd tdtndl whose thoughta and ldtoa are on
·dttJ IDIIy to
11 ldlltoo.w 1111 are ~ ltlnllonY wilh ~· Good lltll9 can hap• lmpotllftl ID JOUr pertonll killiMII. You pej1 When you are wtllt pH whO think , II
...,. btu ..... 10 COiai.. Gl .,. t6 Yll!' do.
•
IDifiiiPOrl you.
AQUAIIIUI (,_ 20f'lll. 1t) GM veniiO
PltGplo wttom y o u - fl1lilllii -'~*~' LEO(..... D •rtg 22) H you.,. on !lie yaur MlbiiiOU8 iteii.UOO• todly irtotead ol
to t:.IDO lucky tof you OIINI. : \in .. .
poofl181t16 todly, 11y to -.ty Idling tbOUtlltem. Mike your lima
, _ ..... Cal ....... hUG M. peapll .... .,..., . . . - •
lui* lll!wrtli- ~ ... lilnililllng wayalhll .... ,ruly
lrtycuwotl 'ay . . . . . . . btu . . . .
lng
lawlr. Tlte brael11 mlgltt not Pfllilldwl.
. ..

"""'lo-

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~ ':::!·~~·iii:

lhe year UBRA (Sept. 23o0ct. ·

ASTaO-GRAPB

~

..

gooemtng you

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bod

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.

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• ....,.....

c-. • 2 I 12) ~ou ccUd btu a
0011*! ba . . . . . . ,.,.. . . . . . . . W"i WIIO
r.t ...... IDdiW. 1D 11y to mailtlilt a buty

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... ;au ..,. - ...-,.... ... Gill
julltbl,.. on lie "'
Uttdlrltl!dl'i •
.

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vt 1, . tile !111U .... Ill clo, lie
btulllr Jliu'll iNI W . . ... Cllillly

~ WOU'IblllillmL

in

PIUII (M. 311 IIINII 311) .Sociaumg • ·

a illqUirllltllll'* ccUd ~ bullvl~lllllto
!DillY,, H o - . don'lllm.. ICI t - ~

t111fe . . . , . In JOUr 0011118rt&amp;IIOn. 0.

-llitliiiM you II'Und pl¥lil dy W
1. .. . , .. . . . . .

.

'•

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'

he forgot

IO

I
A

and days. one yBar

';&amp;

on

YSX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I tind you can gel away wllh all sorts ot unusual
Ideas it you present them wllh a · smile on your taco." - Mall . Groen~.

one?"

Q. My phone number is the same

e

,...,enc..;

....,
-

52 Se1t-1ervlca

Eaut

By Jefll:ey Mc4uain
Precision or. exactness is· known
as DEFINITUDE ( "the delinilude of
the architect's drawing"&gt;. For lhis
noun's definitive spelling, start
DEFINITUDE exactly like the start of
DEFINITE.

Pr-

=::::'-:::--"::"-:;--...,.......,....=

-

~Ne. 5A.Y~.
•:iPEMo~!·

~

~ ===·R=o=o-:m=s~~:::­

quently

think of it?

BLUE I!

z

?Qt~IPment

50 Thriller w~ler

garmant
24 Uncle
25 Something lo

Would you

1. . Ford "-'-· 4

SuppliPS
&amp; Livestock

Farm

Rotrtgorator, Saaro 8 HP Riding
Mower, Shop Mete Saw, Wood
Loth, Aftor 4 P.M.I14-446·2115.
Sam Somerville'• Battlell•ld t ....

-· -·-.---7.

Drln

OH!! I BET THEY
.WAS TICKLED

era-.•
:r=:;r.ooo 111141, sa;-."":

wlwhlto laco, $100. 304~711-3911.

22Long

BARNEY .

IV

Aut-Io, 11:1,100, -.ont•

,31111.

Prom drHt eiH 20, l.vandlr

Nortb
3 NT

4gcon...

47 Lamp

Opening lead: + 2

- 0 ~-:::;-r".,,_ ._.
~ chrome Pearl Export Mf'lll •C):tl-~~
. "• .._, ..-,

drumnt' wJGibrahar Cllge· &amp;
cymbal hardware, Zlldllll!n hi·
hall w/lland. Stop by Crtmlnal
Recorda lo oso. &amp;14o441-3302.

Wtll
Pass

1ymbol

18 Naulleal rope
20 lnalrumanla
21 Acct.

32 Co1monaul

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

1
~·
Aut-Io, $1,500,114 4 ,
Ita Ford p.. •~•· F100, I

Musical
I st
nt
n . rume S

45Fied

30 Type of
colton

.AQ 7 1

--b,-,.•~-·
";:; ;'

~up:

ceught on

46 Plutonium

28 Coach B11r

tA8

,....,
~h
t•""' PS,kPI,.,.350 co
"""'""'•.....,.

43

26 llolhar

• .\04

·;;?:~=-;;;::=-'::i:i.-::
1m
112 ,., Chivy p1o1o uP

maaaure
15 MOYII
unsteadily
17PoPII -

eat

.A K 43

tNt Dodtll Plcik.Up 112 Ton

57

.,0
SOUTH

Ford ""'k
112 1
1177
.- -up
,..~ ·
~ good
DO
IM-21!1
822'"1condllon

Buy .., olll. Rlvorl,. Antlq-. 54 Miscellaneous
1124 E. lloln Stroot, on At. 124,
Mllrchandlu
Pont~roy. Houra : II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00·
ta 1:00 p.m. «114·~2-2528.
G•te Lea Table $50i Roll AwaY
Bed $26; On~po
' 1 12Dx54, Uke
p
54 Miscellaneous
Now, $25, hono: 614 ... 4&amp;-3897.
Merl=handlse
'Portablo
Changooblo
latter algn $299. Froo lotfor.a •
1000 Gallon Doloval Bulk Tank dallvory,
1o800·533-3453
And , 4 Uhh Mllkorl,
614-178-.
an,tlmo.
,
3422
Prom drno novy lapootry, whllo
tt4CI"• Duncan Phy.. Table satin acc•esoriu, ••rrlngs,
'(Dining) fiD(I; Molal Khcfton ntcklocl, hair piece, long
Cobl!fjl (Lorgo) 115; 5aoro glovoo, 75. 304-675·1670.

Sortna YalloY ....... Ooklalllrtv.!, 1 Bodroom Untumlshsd Apart· 24 Ft. Round A - Ground
·Bitck-, I d caw 1 112
, .., . ment.
Range,
Refrlg•rator, ~ Bond Fll
l Co
814~ 11:;, Goo - · FuU Oilspoool, Garago Provldlocl.
,.,
vor,
141
2
I\~ Rem adtlld Water, Sewage, Garblge Paid.
A... I P.M.

TruCkS for

982
.QlOP7
t K J9 3

.J9 8%

:;
...
;:;

72

EAST

•s

tlreo,

42 Klncb of curve

IIoko

.Q

WEST
•to 7
32
ttOo4 2

- - Clnntl - . -

Sl\odll , 010,

4·15-11

.KJ8

•

...,. ~~Coo-. LDrw
lll-!~'! aood ;;.;diilon, -

.,. .......

38 AnlrNI'a loot
- 40SmeH

ALDER

, . . ........, lablo OS.-..
A-1 eond, 114,000 mloo, ......

-n

In good work·
lng order

35 Depar~H
37 Long Journey

PHILLIP

eruloo, N;, LomllrO , _ . - .
114,400. 114-3J!I.2303.

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

NEA Crossword Puzzle
33

1112-11.32.
tiU Ford · Tampo OTS~ _.!·

-eo-.
collonl cona~en,

Llg~ted

Aent

--.--....

BRIDGE

........ """""""'· 114300, 114-

UCCII. ~·

~~
..,."
_...,
I&gt;Wl

The

Ohio

•• tit.

DopoxK &amp; Rotoroncoo Roqulrad, IU.. l.k1ll, 11.10 ..tt. lltt 1-10 e~t· 414, ~
dod Coli,
• l-, .14,
136 First Avenue, RNr, Gil~ 11.10 I lUll 18..10, beth 11u 11,
-..sao.
~
;
lipolis. 614-44S:.2561.
304-411-3420
1o1Jo lor oummor, SandNI a· 32 Mobile Homes
~;.;.:_::;..:;;;;:.;;;;
· ;-;:::;::=:-;::=:~1 tsd camollaug' (tr"borll dooign
~~~-- ..... ~
2 bedroom •pt, GallipOlis Ferry, 40 Fool Of C8 Anttnnl Tow.,, army patter:n). Turkey ae•sofl 61 FaOTl
5131.
'
•
for Sale
WV 30oH75-2548.
$100, 114-446-'11110;
April 21 • May 22. Surplus ronlal
2
Row
&amp;m
Plantar,
1514--2451:30 P.M. l'lol-2. .1021.
, •,
Cutluo sooting • ....""""' $152.17 , . month lnc!Udlna Ill 2bdrm. apts., total •lectric, ap- 5bao-Wiba•&amp;auoc.... clothing. By Sand,vllle Poll
Offlco.
l'ri
•
Sot,
Noon
till
6:0~0 5508, Evtnlnga.
Cltovrolll,
Ford,
Oodpplcktlp
pliance•
fumlshH,
laundry
·
woyo, paitdng - - ................ ..... ....70,
PM. 304·2'1;1-5655.
' · 601 Ford Workmist•r detlel, 4· bedL Short or long. NO Rill.
HtimiiH. 304-6154701. ·
d.. .,.. ~~ ..Urtlng roolft tacllhlu, clou 10 echool
In town. Applications available I FIINII orll41, oi!COIIonl condi- Satellite Dlth Racelvar, D- cyl,
~754281.
. '•
- $3,200. 304·576-2667.
Duor and _,., by 1111 - . . . . . .
5.
at: Village GrMn AIJII, 148 or tion; 4 hog - . . . dl"-nl SCrambl•r, Pole, Cable, S600, Alllt Chllmer 3 row no tlll ·corn
&lt;,
11241, goocf -.clition; 114-'1112·
call 61411112·3111. EOH.
· rllo, -3-1121
or61U43o52H.
•
114·245-5918.
planter wtmonltor, good cond, 73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s
2010.
•
,. 1 1\ 111100. 114 143 ~.
Apartmonto For Rent: Utllhloo
Sears Kenmore WindOW AC, 21 304 ·273-4215.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE.
1b1l A J *"two' teom, Paid, 614o446-1482 Doyo; 114- I HarM Rlclor, 30 lncii ,Cut, .... BTU'o 220 VoHo, Uud 2Months, :,C,-or-n"'=PI,-on=-:t,...ora-.2'",-:4:-,-:,:-6:-;R;:ow:::::; 19711 CJS Joop, 6 cyl, 3 oposd,
Trtmmln9, Tr•
$1,500. :J04.175-2011t.
446~353 Evonlngo.
~ Extnt llsdoo; 11117
Trimming. F - EodmoFord Flol HKch Dlolt, Whool
Yaoitaho TT221 llotoroycio, 114- Llko Naw $450. 614-446-8199.
367-1t57 Allor 4p.m.
1882 Ford Bronco 4x4 AC,
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 31lo7241, I!Wilollt73.
S.l Of Bunk Beds, E:u :elltnt Dlakl, I,~ ~~ &amp; 12 Ft. \ 2. A Ster10, Loaded, Re•l Nice,
BUOOET
PRICES
AT
JACKSON
Condlllon! $125; 20 Gallon A· 3 Bonom
; 16 Ft. Hor- $2,500, 614-319-2561.
- 1 llalnlanonc:o, Pal,..lna.
ESTATES, 531 Jacko'"' Pl"quarium Complale With All k · A~ptor; Mtnurt Sg:c~MWi
Yonl Wortc Wlndowo, Waollod
from
$206/mo.
Walk
to
shop &amp;
ceasorisa, 114-441·t025,
~na Equlpment j
bin. 1810 Astro Von lmportal~loodsd ;
oua- ctaonod Light 11au10og,
mavin. Call 614-446·2568. EOH.
lion Rab And Tsddor; ~ 304~9~3335 aftor 4:00 I'll.
Commoricol, Rnidoinllal, Stno:
:
Solo Flu, Almost Naw; IBM PSI Whh Flot Bodo; Farmall H T 614o446-1658.
Efficleney apaitment, Mulberry
Now, Csll Blloro ·1:30 P.M. 614· tw; Other Flald Roody Equlp- 92 Chevy Aslro Conwrwlon Van
·With Avenue, Pomeroy, 614-IMJ2·7698.
Gac,. Port.._ Sawmill. dan,
256·1026.
rMnt. Howe'• Farm Machlnwy, EXT,· V.S, 4 c•ptaln chairs,
14...
'12,000 milest. excellent condihoul yow logo to tho miN J!101 -E = 1 .- , 2 loci- Fumlshsd 3 Rooms • Bath,
Tool Boll .For Com~ct Truck, ..laelcaon, OhiO: IM-ZI&amp;-SM4.
call304-675-1957.
Air, $10,000,' 114- Vory Clnn, Wator Paid, In Por·
llon1 614·992·•136 daya, 614-1112·
Ford
Rangor
Or
.Chevy
S·10
~ lnlomlllonal bruoh hogo, right
302111 IVIningl ,
IU I"!
t er Area. 61~388-8000;
Black Plaaflc, New $75, 614-446- priDe, St. At. 124 near Pori~,
llloo Poula'o Doy Core C... 1
3934,
Ohio, 111-1143-5218,
Block Will OIIWC On
F - - . llobllo Homo, Fumlshsd Effective, All Utllllln
74 Motorcycles ,.·
Ptko 11-F 1 A.M. ·5:30 P.ll. H 1llil7l, I 81 ~-... 1 lath, Paid, Sharo Balh $140/llo. 911
Troodlo
Slngor
oawlng
...
chino,
J .D. 730 • D J.D. 7000 4 • Row
Qualh, And-E•pOrto,_ II Tho EJoc. Holt, Undorponnlng. Afttr Socond,.Av•nuo, Gallipolis, 614qui11 old, $75, can bt sMn by Cam Planter, 114~51-1011.
11 ec-.m For Yow Cltlld'tr ~~~P.~-~111~~44~1~304~4~
, :=:-::::;:;;: ·446·3945. . '
..
Boharna Cruloo, ·adayo/4 nlghla. appointment only, 614·992~!7S5.
Call Us For A VII._ lnDoore 400 grindor mllor.
aNI Two fluar..cent lights 24x48 John
/Toddloro lit tlll227.' 2bdednn.onmoblla~lo ' Fumlshsd Efflcloncy, 7 112 NoU Undertnakedl · Mu.t
tntematlonali10ft.transport dlac.
$271/cotlpla.
Umhad
tlclulta.
hoollrl /School &amp;ftA . . . . . . . .
i---:, .auat
Ave.,
Gallipolis.
$160/Mo.
w/bulbl, will reca11 or hang lnt.natlo,_ Farmall 644 dleHI.
lot,
Rullond, 114- • Utllkln Paid, 614-446-4411 Ahor 40lo711'8100 HI. 15111• ......_, $20. oach, 304-175-1!104.
1985 Hondi 700 c::c:, 2,600
All good cond, 304·273-4211.
I:OOAII •1:00PM.
'
Dlaft8rlpnL
7 P.M.
'
$2,000. 304-t7~31160.
UHd S.rvel gas refrigerator1 Sna- rid. mow01 with graoo
SMal Englno Ropalr- T...., ..__ ......_ Dw- 14170, Fumlohsd
EHioclln~
107
Up, lWo And Four C,Cio, 114- • - - ._, ,....,..
;:;!. 1 1o,
good condition, S300; two gooa catcher, 12hp, 33" HI·Vac, 114- 1985 Honda XR 350, Exool,_,..
441-4210.
.. ..... 2 t tao.-. AIC, Second Avenue, ...;.u pol
300 gal. tusl tanks, $7Soa:, 614- 14148111.
Condlllon, $1,150; 114·388-f1114. •
cou•ed pOrch, Uet.n IIWNI, Share Bath $185; UtllltiN Paid,
.985-3531.
Slop By SleL~ Can, c-. -.go bldg. tOtdoojJMonlng, 614-446-4416Abor7 P.ll.
198i Honda 4 Whleter, New
Livestock
Motor, 114-44'1-1003.
~
Wedding D,.ss, Ivory, Lac:a 63
ptoto Lawn
Wo Do • All, IIIIa now, 304-675.2464.
2 llodroorn O.rogt AP.,IImont
Ovorioy, Poo~ And Sequin Trim,
114 441 me.
Localsd: 106 Locuat StrOII, Ga~
4 Raglotorsd Umouoln !tulia lor 1992 Suzuki GSXR·750N, 1398
New, Siz•: &amp;, $100, 614-446-6833. ,......
1990, M1llt, 3bdrm., 2 bath, llpolls.
w..er,
S1ov•,
,..892..S180. , •
miiH, minor damege, l14l4..
diwhwwtw, gn furnace, porch, Re~ralor
Fumllhed.
2644 aner &amp;pm.
:
urarptnnlng.
Will
110
14 •••
Bulldlrig
wh"""hhoul 6.8 acroo, 304·773- $22 o. $1!10 Dopoah, 6 ~
82 Yamaha Mnlm 550, $800; ~
5141, 3CJ4.882·3331.
3870.
Supplies
Hondo 0Lt200 Aoponcad~t
Wonllng to blbyoh In myhomo, C.ll 1..aoo-1'88--5474 For Colored Gracious livrng. 1 and 2 bed$3200, 814·9no565t.
Bloek, brlck, ••w:er blpes, '¥in· ·Anauo And Chi-Anguo ~ Blactc
Chootor, anr ago, &amp;M-·»IIIo:S-4212....,
.. Brochu,. On New Cape Cad roam •plrtmenll al VIllage
dowe, llntalt, etc. C.. uda Wln· Bun.. Roo_,ably Pr,_, Slota
ottor 7prn,
Manor
and
Rlvw•a•·
tors, Rio Gronda, OH Call 114· Run Farmo, .Jackaon, Olllo 114: 75 Boat• &amp; Motors
Homes!
Apanments In Mlddllpon. From
245-5121.
WIH palnl and opruco up -.a398,
call 1-Soo-788-5474 Far More Ina $196. C•U 614-992·585g, EOH .
fOr Sale
mollbo• lor oprlng1 !Ianing II formition On New 16 Wide
Gold Sail SIMI' Building I BEST UTTLE CLUB LAIIE
$15, pick-up and GHvery, ......_ Homes We Take Trade-Ins.
4 o,. bedroom apartments,
StMiwood Doalorohlp, Buy Dll- SALE, April 17 I 18. PriYOIO 1986 20 112' Rlnkor v~. 301..ve,
llt2·z'TS4.
nice. reasonable rent. 30C.CS75countaci Wholualo~ Dlroet From Treoty Solo Thlo Yoor. 1:30 A.ll. Alpha One Meraruleer CuddYt
Mobl~ home far sale, price r,• 2053 or 675-4100.
ath
Factory. Makt · ~oflt Whll• To 1:00 P.ll. Both Doyo. Salo full canvas. T•ill wood plalf!Hft\
Wll 1,11 ~"
gotl•ble, must be · moved, ~:;:---;~-...,..~::--;;=
Loarnlng. PaO·Timo To Olhor Hold AI Schllchtor Fonn, 10117 Eagle tandem tr•ller, Good
...... :104
•
sedous Inquiries only, &amp;14-992· One bedroom
apt,
Point
Buslnna. Some Selact' Markt1s Pro!~• Rood, 10 lllloo North 01 clean, dependable boat. Prl~
527l
Pleasant. Fuml1hed, v•ry clean,
Avollablo, 303-756-4135, Ell. W.oltlngton C.H. Lo- WIH lo $13,000. 304-17~1571 or .304(
no pels, 304-675--1386,.
675-50,93 IVO.
'
•
Fmanc1al
llobile home on 3/4 acre, thrM
Numbortd Tholr Priced Wit
1000.
'
badroom, gorage, worlshop, ,45
Furnished
81 On A Salo Shoot.
To 18113 Sklltcran1e Ft. llohogany
Gold Slat SIMI Building I
fruit trees, cloH to town, 614-SuK Any luyorl Scltllchlor • Csdor Flohlng Boat, Doap &amp;
st
..
Doalorlh'&amp;i.!::'
1111FomiiY.
For
lnlonnollon
Call
o.n
21
~ Wldo, 6~·24~9109..
·
counl•d Wholeult,
FJDm
Business
992-5!173,
42'11..-ns 0&lt; Doyo 01 lolo
Foetory. Sail For P10lho On AI
Musr Meritiee, 1993 14x70 Rid· · Rooms tor rent. w..k or mon1,h.
.a.Bs · bOer, 55 Yamlh• ·(like
1om Phono: 114-42W8113.
Opportunity
man wilh 5 y.. r warranty, Ina Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hottl. Corpoj Ono 111.., BIH· 1Dx12; Material &amp; Con .. ruoUon Whlll
new), Equipped a rNdy to ft•H.
eludes •livery, setup, steps 614-440·9580.
Hay &amp; Grain
Well kopt. :IOW75·1111.
.,
Ono llurgundv Slu: 12.4112.5, Loarnlng. No lnvontory R.. 64
!NOTICEI
and slllnlng, S165mo. Call 614·
qulrwmonto. Sotoet Morlooto 1 ~~~~-=~-:::::::-:=
S3l
Each, 111.3117-7300.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 385·2434
aSk tor Mike.
Sleeping room• wilh cooking.
Avallablo. Coli For INFORII.t. 1:
Yamahl Jll Ski 650 Supor Jot, 2
recornmondo tltot JOU do - .
• 1 •• E11 Hlr for lale rvund balM 114• Years Old, ·Excellenf Condhlon,
Also traDer space. All hook·ups. Chlld'o owing HI Wlddl $20, TON
1 • 303-7••
~
-•
· -•
oquam baloo 11.50. , 304,11116- Call 614·441.0738.
nonwhh-'" you k - ltltd
Coli aftor 2:00 p.m., · 304·773- F l - Prlco cor _ , $20,
f
Sal
3811.
NOT to oond monay ttwougit tho .
5651, Ma.son '(IV.*
56 • Pets or
!:::::---:::::-:-::--~::-:=~
304..a.36.,.
mall untM you ha"lnveollgllsd
48 A, 8 Room, full BaSement, 2
Will pay zac per lb lor . . _ 76
Auto Parts .&amp;
tho ollorlng.
Comfl'trtrCial •xheull tan, l40i 1 yoir old eo,iper N- Boogie Countr TobaCco Ou011. MorIMhs, 2 Barns, Work Shop, 46 Spape for Rent
lorgo
Loollo
amplltlor,
l'!l.i
•••·
• dog houoo $35.00. e.u 114- gano Form, 111. 36, 304·1137-2011.
18' Cof'l(ll 'gp .,...,, ......, W/Garage, Crib. 614-446· 2360.
AccBssorles
ciM/IK_. moc:hlno, $w; 114- 446-7730 '
Trailer
lol
Witt,
Bam
Pond,
1
1112-211211.
68 acre country estate with
460 Ford snglno, nowty rabullt,
Groom ond Sur&gt;ply Shop-Pot
pond, Vinton. Colonial farm Ulloo From Galllpollt, Wotar
have all documentltd work on
Transportation
Couch,
IIMd
l
...
acaps,
wllher,
Paid.
$110/llo.
614·256-1:!88.
Qroomlng. AM &amp;isodo, at,loo,
howe newly remodeled. 2 Large
engine, runs very strong, ••k1Jl9
4
,.,.,.,
...........
.
lovo
....
'
bams, summer house •. garage,
Pol FGOd Dootor. Julio 1_ . - " " : ' - - ' : - - : " : ' - - $16"50, 61tol48-2068,
eMir, tn•. •frller8tor, 304-1~ lamo
Webb. Coli 814o44H231.
I~
sludio, hUnting cabin. By owner. 47 wanted to Rent
4286.
71 Autos for Sale
Budgot Tro~omloorono, UOOd •
Rsducsd! 614·388-8210.
3 badroom homo naodod by
75 Gallori complet• ~wrlum 1 1=:::-:=:::~~:--;~~::::;;::: 1'8bullt. •II typ. ., slertlng at 191;
Dup••
HMvy
~Rod,
RHI
June 15, 3'0 mlnutu from Gavin
two IIHoro, oubm::21blo tilt Cltovy Yon, Good Utility owner 114·245-5177, ll14·37t35 Lots &amp; Acreage
- . OT-3211 GraphKo Rod
Plant, coli cottoct 614~33-1421.
Real Estate
l;:;226~3-:.::::--;:::;::"-:::':'":---:::''"!'
heeter, hood, llgh,t and t i 10 Vthk:la, MOO,IM-245-5123.
100.200 ft . lot on At. 2 tMiow
c:emplete aqu•rtum with
New 1•• tanke, on~ ton truck
=·~~· $51.M-251·1UI a•llon
Dsh, 814•111t·21i2.
.• 1MI Mutt•ng. I cyl euto, • • whnls, radiators, floor mt11,
Gallipolis Ferry, beautiful view,
lntorlor
$4,000,
1831
Chovy
MerchandiSe
Elvlo
Praolov
R..orU, AKC Cockar Sponlol puppln, I body &amp; tramo $850. ~76- llc. D &amp; R Auto, Rlploy,.WV, 304·
excellent soH, restricted to
homos only. 304-576-2894.
llogod-. llo&lt;ILo 1178 Gum tNU old, a holt a wormed, $100. silO.
372·3933 or 1-B00·2J3.:1329..· 1
Cordi, fioo1oro, elc. Coli IM11118 Acre on lincoln Heights·
304-576-2223.
I tm· Plymouth Fwy, vory good bRollbar,
flllio tOO w1 t~ llghto,
182-7814.
•
d
$1500 down, baSane• at 8% with 51 ~ Household
AKC
Erigllah
SP.rtng·
e
r
apanflt
oOndhlon,
new
tlr.-, $100: 1'14rusn ..
tor For . truck,
Fl..-cl:
All
l'tanlwoodo
:split
614·992:·2529 and
. Goods
$100: 30 75-6734, .
··
pupploo, lilack anH Wllllo, ohciw 4411-7041.
Dollv- f40 Plck·Up Loltd.
... VI fMRIIQI or SM Guido,
Ford LTD, 2 o-, Strlilght 6 Chaa,Ennlno, bcol·
quaiKy llock, grool lomlly poto, 1_
132 Buuernur, Pomeroy.
tx12 Carpot teo,. All Vlnyt In 114-ZM-1311.
304-675..253.
.
•••
lont ~llunnlng ' ndl lonl c~.
Stock 14.41 Yd. Molohon Cclr·
Automatle
Tranemiaslon, .3S'I
um
Business or rnldenllel 2 acres poto, 111. 1 Nonh, 614-446-'N44.
AKC Gormon Shophonl pupo, I -or, Vory Olpondabtol 1421, r,loto Fon To Fly Whool, lnciU,.· .
AJIreal ~ate ~rti*'g r.
with 254 ft At 2 frontage btt·
wko old, 304-675-5724 .,. 676- 114-:J19.2251.
i"rb~roloo, 1200. 614-4&lt;1,6!his newspaper is !l.t)Jed 10
ween Ashton &amp; Apple Grove, Vl'RA FURNITURE AND AP•
1846.
1:==~:=;;::--;:;:::;;:::--;;::::; 1
"n ngo.
the Federal Fair Housing Ac1
public water. 1 acr• lots wtth
PUANCES
tm Pontiac ,Cot ail no Qoocl
•pprcwed seplie system Mer•
AKC P_,anlrin puppln, 3 -hlnlcol ~Ilion. CaU 114114-446-4428 OR 814o441-3151
o1 1968 whldl makes Illegal
c•s
Bottom Sub-Di'll:lslon,
moln, $150. I 1250. o~ar 8:00 441·1327.
lo acNerUse ~any preference.
Services
Clyde
Bowen,
Jr.
304-51'6-2336.
Entlf'telrvntnl
Center'•
$141
Or
P11
304~711-5419.
I :::=-==-;;:::-=::-:=:::
Nmilallon o.tm Dodgo Van, runo good;
building 1o1 on Peacock $5.52 WMk;' Bookshllv10 Start·
baSed
race, color, religion,
· Block r. Whho Bonlor CoUio 1m Thundarblra, runo jjood; B1
lng 129.95; Roell nero $12tL!'I"'
Avenue,
Pomeroy.
$90008%
sex familial stalus or national
· Home
~leo, a Wootra Old, 114:367- I ·I0:1::::t-:-•-:•3_81:::8-:1.=:-=-;;:=;-;=
financing with down payment Arid Cholro 1295 Or 01U.II3
ortgln. or atrf lnren:IOn lo
and rer.,ences, 114;912-2529, Wootc; Coffao And End Whh For ..,. IIIU mo«&lt;u• ladloo
tNt Audl 4000 I Spood, Uko
Improvements
make arPf sum preference,
leave message or see Guide).:. Doors $199 ~i 5' Tablo Whh I winter 0001, clonlm wl lollhor Flth Tonk, 2413 .lfckoon Avo. ""!*1- lowldo 1 Out, No · Ruot,
1AII
wood);
Woahoro,
Chalro
Point
P
.....
m.
304-875-2013,
$1,'
!
1UU
1*371-2240.
,
.
limitation or tiscrlminaUon.•
132 Bunernul:, Pom11oy.
BASEMENT
Dry.,., Jlanges, Refrigerator'• trim, like new, Wll $95, now full llno Troplcll lllhv blhlo,
WATERPROOFING
Lot In Big Foot Park , Gallla S261; Houre: lAanday- Saturd8r $40, paid $150; 1110 misc. ladln omoll o,nlmalo ond tuppl-.
11112 Oklo Culton, 304..76- UncQndhlonal
Uf•llme gusran·
H; Below Silver Bridge Plaza clothlngi c•ll 614·H2·2155, •
CountY. 304·27J..5470.
Tnis newspaper will not,
1375.
t8e;. Local refe,.ncet twnllhed.
For Pawo Only Prof-lonol dog
Or 4 Miles Out 1~1 .On Lincoln 5pm or1114·149·2204 ohor 6pm.
knoWingly ao&lt;:aJll. ·
Coli HI00·287.oti76 Or 114·237ThrH lots, · building, lour PI"-.
·grooming by cortltlsd groomor. 11115 Cho
. V Colobrlty, 2.8 Iller y. 0488 Rogoro Wottrproollng. E• .
adverllsemenls for real estal8
•partm.nts ~ sotne remodefed', ln
Gennls · Nulrltlon
Products Call tor •ppo'lntment 304482· I, motor nHI!o ropolred "' tabllohsd 1175.
which Is In violation of the
AK~f!t.J urious lnquirlet only, No O.paalt On Aent-2..Qwni tla1urtng Amino Acid Bod, 342t
replaood, 11471. 304-176-2117. . · c;;;u;~~;;;;'fn;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;:'j~
614·W•·5!173.
·
low.
ire horoby
Nolhlng Ever Preowned.
Building, wotght loo.o arid 111
Hond ttd
Cocktoilo, $40.
burn.
rormuf11.
Av•llabte
IJ·
11115
Dodao
Turbo z. .'
J:'r,:;:,nV:l,c:
lnlormed thai al dwellngs
G000 USED APPLIANCES cluolvoty II Rlto Aid Phormacy. NCh, 304-1824421.
Loodld, l'ull
t, AIIIFII porionco On Oldor
36 Real Estate
ad'iertlsed In this newspaper
Woohoroc. dryoro, ratrigarii«.!J Tho Hlo woy to dlot.
Pooclrn: pupplll,lOP. CName. Ccloootlo, I Spol!l, Now Tl-, Homoo. Addhlona, F-lono
are avallabte on an equal
, . . _, ""1991 Apptlancn 111
~ Wanted
1110 arrid
m1111 Rune • IAoko Greall $3,300. ROoting, Kllchono /8atho In
YlnO St-. Call 614o446-73N, 1· King Slzo Eloctrlc Blonkol, Duo!. main;
oppoOunly basis.
turect. "Free Estlnwtn. tM-a
Schnauzer, l.n weeks old, 114- 114 ttl 1222, 114-441-21llt.
,Control
Btlgo,
Worranty
Good
100o4
...
34H.
3 Bldraorn Home, Double
H?-3404.
1
Ponllac
lunblnl
Loodld
0516.
Till
Jan.
14,
$20;
Coil
1
.........
Garage, Urge Lot, Small
Acruge. Whhin 441 Call Ar• - - d lor q..on .... 2851.
Aoglotorsd Chlnno Shar.PII 12,300; 1178 lmpota 4 Dortr, il =o-av-=-lo-,S~ow=ln-g'"""ll:-o-,chlc:-no'-A:-:1
· POOHoolon lloy 111. &amp;14.a86- . . .erbed, nc cond, very attr.c·
pupa.
one female two m1ht.. ~tnder, AUlometk:, ,...... Vacuum CINner Repair, Fr
ttvo, $!10. boloro 8:00 Pll 304- Lenox PuiM Furnace 125,000
Trlillll l11lon, , ~. 114471- Pick·Up And DIIIYWJ, O.org
7804 U.ve M....ge.
BTU Uoscl 2 112 Ysaro 1100; loti ot wrlnklll, 614ol4t.2791.
176-7141.
2711.
.
Crooto Rood, 114o441.0ZM.
,
Fow Air Cclndhlonoro, VI rtouo
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
81..., 114o446-2544,
Olclo Doha 11, 4dr., Ron'• TV S-lco -1a1~' '
Raglotarad pot· ballad pigs, Renlals
StOO oach, 114-1112·2050.
,_
air, outo., runo
.. • • ~ ..ong
Cola ;1111 hom• tuml...._.
In
Zonlth olio -.Icing moll
Lovoty
chlld'o
tormol
draoo
(otoo
Hour.: Ilion-Sot,. 1-llo I~
WHAT'IIO DIFFERENT ABOUT
u ; ·
~
frl- llloe ,_, Olhor brondl, Houu callo, oloo
.1!322. J mllao out Bu viii Ad. 10) 125. Oorgoouo Ioria full HAPPY JACK 3-X FLEA COL·
; ,... •t8, l 4 , - , llltlflanco ' - · WV
blacil prom drool $30, ~
F - Daltvory.
41 Houses for Rent
LAA? IT WORKSII Coft!ol,. NO
~ ~':'~
304-1111-2:198 Ohio ltlo441-2414.
:wsa.
. , _ a. 1 '1i k ~
,
,
o,nlholla PVrllhroldo. 1'or " - olumrftum w.....,o, 6
.
PICKENS FURNITQRE
3 badroom, 1 bat~ • bmlfllnt,
llelll ·Iron twin
with ·• catol RIG I'IED- IUPPLY, -l'4lltli::."' •
--pta on ~umplna-=~:
~
'"'
Co. RON EVANS EHTI"IUI
· .
Avo. 1400.
2505 lit. oprtngo, ~20; 1ll puge olnalo 114-fii2.21M.
.
~l!fOnlh
dlpoak, . :J04.175- ......hold lurnli:hfng. 111 mi. barr.r aholgun, ·$35; 114-fll.. - - - - - - - - -· POntllo
loMovtllo,
ao
·
.locQon,OH
1--1137....
'
21119.
.
•
.lorrlclto Rd. Pt. PI•-· WV, 21113.
... :IOW76-1450.
57 .
MuiiCII
- . N.300. 010. ...... WIN bvlld lfllto - . . , ~
lllLlOPIEC~
3 Bod,_, Galllpotlo Llmlta,
polnl"""
'
....
tn•rurnent•
mz•PWI'n.
·
Modem Khchln, No Pees,· flo~""'"'"'· 2 Door, Wltlte,
ollonolon, boHio grlpo, Whllli,
:
.
~.
-·~
Clololtlb.
Loodld,
246-11152. ~
• .,. ' '
=:oqulred,
$310/Mo.
114on m ""'
boo, auto ,.....,, - - . NO. FOR IALI: IPINlT oC0N10L1 17,GOI
~
' '
~c.p;
... a'fl nlkrMM.1A~·
'
304
.....
311G.
.
, . . , _ Slou; Rotrlgorator, Hlr4 roarntl &amp; blth, clroM to
84 Electrical &amp; .
· Froet F-, Lit.,._, Ooiagon Plenlo Tofl'"!;_,!lmoM:
•4
Olt .4 Ami IChoolt, ..-.... Drs Offk:es, ret .- . . ,-Whirlpool
Wultor~
$150· ~.ar~~o: ~
... LoeoHJ. cau: ;.
• dop requlrsd,.304-67~1010. '
11.1. • ........ SilO;
Dotolll: 1~14JI.
AIIOITho~-SIIIoo
0.,..
171;
G.l.
Dryor
01 Rio Onndl - Cont..:~ •
5 ROOIM, First Avenue, Gfll, HI;
Uood
Corinol AI: Danno lu
1 tlpollo, Ottlo. Ott St- P~rllng, lnCii lloctllo A
Allor IPJt. Dolly, 114-44~
,~
Ill- '111 1 ~ - T.V....; . . _
- . 71.
1275111o.
DOpoolt
I
Rotoror~eo.
'AI:
Y1rte
•
.
1&amp;1
I, 114-441.
.
121L ~tlittrn
Aivaru
Gullo!
With
eooo,
Uko
6M-2S6-1m. ·
n.,Or

=:r: --2-.

Sand ~ Ra..... To: DIIIVE'!!i

mp,
Ellra o 4
Eureka,
11"111
Slllo
llouto
7,01
SSS,IIOO.
114-11117tt:l.
a - - At.-. 3 Bedroom
~ , _ Room lotand 1
ieid:.,114-24n213 •
n

57&amp;-2434 or 576-2479..
Why · ,., '""' when you .,.n
own nm 14x70 Rodman with
5 yoar warranty, stapo, lklrtlng,
·doli•orad and H'up ti&gt;r $16!1m0.
Call for Information, e14·315-1621 aak tor Brenda.

Dodao Doyt- _ ,

.......

1\fi' Gl*

Sporting Goods

18 Wanted to Do
::-:::-:=:=:::-::::·
: ;:·::::;;"i'::::; ~· Prlco: $114,100, 81415 yr old wonto , a n i - • odd

c-

Help Wanted

HNd

Now!!!SouthNatem

l'lua. Colt Todoy, 11

Public Sale

&amp;

9

Training

Salunloy,

llood.

Homes for 5ale

3 1 • , brlc:t ,....... GaJ.
llpollo Fony. lrontl- Lonnoi
-- H' ou, II·
.~oro , IGO, .,...

-

1993

111

Gun Cablnot For Salo, Asking
175; G - Front, Lock, Phoni
Evonln-·. &amp;14-245·9511 Alii For
Fumlohsd, 2 or 3bdrm., lor rent
~.
.
.
ln. Couritry llobllo Pork. Woohorl llork.
dryer, air, $2351 mon., 1'14-62· ~.~
2
•
, ~·"Y guno, 1 galfGO.t.....~•

2167, 614-385--8227.

71

AutoS for Sale

cru1oo, toor . - . air, -

2 bodroorn turnlohod moblla
home, 304-175-.1080..
.~
"I know it's only two thirds of your allowance:
I'm preparing you for a lifetime o! paying taxes. ·

A rll15 1993

~ A11R1

dr....r
wfdouble mlrrow, cheat 6 nJaht
•
otond, no f&gt;1!11 $100. 304ot?IBeautihll 3bdrm. nouae 1n 7141 before t :wPM,
Syracose, full llllchen, carport,
$300/mo., dlposll roqulrsd, 614· Now Ook China Coblnota,
992_.298 days, 614-667-3715 Tobloo, Chll'!r Hutchn, Cott11
1
To- .&amp;tel tabloo, Etc. Rlvor
ovon ngo.
ValloY Ook Fumhure, Goorgao
Newly Romodelsd Houoo In Creole Ad, 814-4*4318.
Centerville. Walk Olst•nee 'To
Poll
Offlco
And
Sloro.
SWAIN·
Rotoranco, Damago Dopoah And AUCTION I FURNITURE.. 12
Crodlt Chock. 614· 522-8355.
· Olivo Sl., Galllpotlo. !low I Uood
tumMwo, hntorw, Woolorn •
Two
bedroom
hou•
In Wortc booto. 6~4t-3151.
Syrecuu, &amp;14-992·7681 attar Two d,..MI'B: 5 drawer ~
5pm.
eond $35. 4 d r - fair • ..,.,
$20. 304~~140.
'
42 Mobil!! Homes
Whlllpool chlol typo lrooar, 211
for Rent ··
cu, tiood cond, nNds tnton,
14K60 2 Br, 1 milo South of $50. OBO. 304-895·3813.

lllulon Thrll
Store, N Main Street. Vini:Oft,
on1o.
Clothing
s-.,
Houeahokll •ems. ~raf\1, Fumlo·1..., Appl..,_, Toys, - . ,

" Willow

rt, Ohio

' '

'I

�Local _honor rolls released-~~---~

~-"""'!"-----Meigs
.

f

The honor roll.s for lhe third Bias, Scott Colwell, Tawny Jones, strong, Jessica Carr, Meli"a Clarlc,
nine week grading period for Stephanie Kopec, Laura Payne, Meagan Givens, Jessica Gray,
Meigs Local Schools have been Jeremiah Smith.
Courmey Hicks, Robbie Johnson,
announced.
Sixth grade ~ Candy Barnett, . Kathy Jones, Amber Pierce, CharSalisbury Elementary
Beth Call, Lori Kinnison, Jessica . lie Richards, Ryan Terzopplous!
First grade - Jeremy Banks, Priddy , · Kimberly Rillerbeck, overall.
Johnathon Bobb; Nikki Butcher, Rebekah Smilh.
,
Second grade - Jassiline Carter,
Ben Collins, Jesse Gillette, Peter
Rutland Elementary
$trauder Little, Jennifer .Stepp,
,IOing, Pamela Martin, Jenny ProfFirst grade - Tyler Barnes, Joan- Kayte Davis, Michelle Drenner,
!itt, Jessica Roster. Jordon Stotts.
na Bowersock, Jennifer Cade, Marie Drenner, Robyn Freeman,
-$econd grade · - Marc Barr, Joshua Hawk, Randy Hudson. Don Brandyn Ramsbul-g, Jeremy Rous~.
Da~a Brumfield, Jonathan Did- Hysell, Nicole McDaniel, Christina Michele Runyon, l!.en See, C~ns
die. ichie Dill, Ashley Eblin, Miller, John Nelson, Melissa Rich- Smitb, . Cody Sm1th, Jenn1f.er
· Juley blin, Melody FeliS, Ashley mend, Matthew Salser, Jennifer Zielinski,JoshPriee,overall.
. Fields,l-!Jstin Gilkey, Jon Halar, Searles Miranda Stewart Jamitha
Third grade- Beth Shaffer, all
Chr's H~~ning, Bubby Haye, Willford.
'
A's; Carrie Abbo~t, Stephal!ie Bell,
Me!lJlan Ha~nes, T1mmy Hubbard,
Second grade __Kerr.y Allen, Kimberly Mc~&gt;amel, Magg1e RoseKristi Lamtiert, Shawna Manley, Ashley Bartrum, Brandon Black, berry, Jess1ca Roush •. Clara
Heather Riffle,,Jason Roster.
Brook Bolin. Hollie Ferrell. Joshua Sanders, ~allhew Wilham son,
· Third gra_de\~ Bobbi_e Burson,
.
.
Jonathan Wtlson, Danny -BuffmgZach Davis, "".J. Estep, Levi Fowler, J.R_. Hawk, Jesstea Justice, ton, Ashley Hamilton, Kris JenkMallory Kmg, Steven McDamel, ins Nichole Runyon Lester AeikG illette, ach ~laze, Ashley Rachael
Morris, Samantha Tilley,
•
.
• . .
·
Hoschar, Justin H schar, Christa- Allison Williamson, Nicki Wines.
er, Jenny I!nckles, Jess1ca Davts,
phcr Neece, Mindy O'Dell, Amber
Third grade _ Bradley Baylor, Jod1 Reeves, overall. , _ . .
Proffitt, Beth Russell, Cindy Six, Aaron Bowersock, Erin Bush,
•Fou~h grade, Chns Pickens, a! 1
Marc Smith, Allison Story, John Gabriel Jenkins, Ryan Kauff; Dar.- A s; N1cholas Dettw1l~er, Curt!s
Witherell, Joey Martin, Chris rick Knapp John Lentes Melissa Hansune, Sh_annon Pnce, Chns
Rupe.
· .
. . Richmond, Amber Snowd~n.
Ward, Dusnn B'utcher, Andy
_Fourth grade- Shand1 Bobb,
Fourth grade_ Adam Barnell, Davis, Matthew NeiRler, Adam
Michacl ~rum field, Sarah Clifford, . Derrick Bolin, Zacliary Bolin, Sl\ip Shank, Brenna Sisson, overall.
Sand1 G1lkey, Brandy G~aham, Dodson, Alison Hays, B.J. . Fifth grade- Ryan Prau, Wes
Abby Hu_bb~rd, Grace Kitchen, Kennedy,BethanyMcMillin,Beatr Thoene, all A's;GrantAbbott,JenCars~n M1dk1ff.
.
. rice Morgan, Tiff!lfly Priddy, Eliza,- nifer Shrimplin, Adam Thomas,
F~fth grade - Beverly Burdette, beth Smith, Trish Walker, Nancy W~itney thofttas, t-mber-BlackMar1one Halar, Tiffany Harder, Wingo.
·
.ston Melissa Dav1s, P.J. Erwm,
Manssa Whaley, K•m Peavley,
Fifth grade_ Amanda Miller
Amber Perkins, Julie Spaun, Mike
Anna Story; ---. .
• Williamson; overall.
s·!xth grade · La., cy Bank, s, Tncla
· ' Joshua
Sorden, Brooke Williams,
• s·1x·th grade • Kristina Kennedy,
Shawn Workman.
·· Dav1s; -Ryan Dill, Meredith FeliS,
Sixth g(ade _Jamie barreu, Kasey Williams, all A's; Sto~ey
Tamra O._Dell, C9rtney Scarberry, . Kristin Brown, Tracy Coffey, Day, Missy Darnell, Amy Johnson,
. Joel Tremclay.
Robby Diddle, Bert Fowler, Justin Stefani Pickens, BJ. Smith,
~alem Center.Elementary .
Jeffers, Matthew Justice, Tanya Jonathan Wyatt, overall.
F1_rst grade - Donald Barnett,- Miller, Alyson Patterson, Melissa
Middleport Elementary
Dav1~ Butcher, Adam Jones, Priddy, Clayton Tromm.
First grade. David Boyd, Page
Aubnc Koj)CC. Corey L~ngstre_th, · LD _Primary_ Timmy Cole- Bradbury, Kenny Carsey, Katie
Amanda Pr1ddy, Josh Ray, Jesstca
Childs; Jeremy Dingey, Jennifer
Smith, Philip Smith.
L.D • Intermediate· _ Wayne Dunn, Ryan Frazier, Tyler French,
Second _grade -. Rachel Capehart.
Ashley .Halley, Jessica Howell ,
Argabnght, Lmdscy Bolm, Ashley
DH _Suzanne Runnion.
Kim Johnson, Belh Landers, AshColwell, Ausun Cross, Kevm
Pomeroy Elementary
ley Payne, Ei'ica Poole, Donnie
First grade- Ashley O'Brien, - Staggs, Ruby Stewart, Amber
Grant, Kelly Johnston, Knstal
Jo~nson, Bobby ~uhn, Jenmfer Kindra Snouffer, Angela· Wilson, Alderson, Jamie Chapman, Malissa
Pridd~. Amanda Smith.
all A's; Curtis Jewell, Bobby Mar- Hoffman, Jonathan Larkins, Angie
Thml grade - Josh Bass, J~sh cum, Brittany Powers, Matthew Smith, Michael'Stewan.
•
Napper, Krystal Pennmgton, Kri_sty S1rong, Paul Will, Kara Buffmgton,
Second grade _ Brook Bryan,
Puckett, _M1sty Puckett, Jess1ca Brandyn Bumgardner, -Thurien Casey Dunfee, Zac Gilkey, CQie
Schuler.
Carter, 'Joel Clelland, Jaynee Davis, Haggerty, Lucy Howerton, Ton¥
Fourth grade- Kendra Cleland, Michael Davis, Kelly Freeman, Martinez, Nikkie Phillips, Abram
Robcrt_Johnson, Enc Montgomery, Nicole Harper, Brandi Thomas, Sayre, Stephanie Schwab, Carla
. Carl_R1ckard, Amtx:r Roush.
·.· . Jordan Williams Amber Arm- Smith, Jimmy Smi!-fl, Angel Strine,
Fiflh grade- Onon Barrett, L1sa
·
·
'
Emily Story, Sammy Stout, Zach
z.

man

Butcher, Came DarSt, Peter Ditty,
Bradbury Elementary
Andy HyseU, Brooks Johnson, Will
Fifth grade- Sclh Baker, Stacey
Kauff, Amber Lee, Alislv{Mohler, Brewer, Bridget Johnson, Davy
Misty Painter, Heather Phalin, Reynolds, R~nce Stewart, Candace
Joshua Simpson, Keith ·Taylor, Wcrry, Bethany Boyles, Sarah
Beth Wilfong, Hannah Woolard, Nauer, Ashley Burton, Brant
Jeremr Selby. .
,
Dixon, , Scott Johnson, Nick
Thtrd grade - Charles Eakins, Michael, Jennifer Nease, Brandy
Heather Feuy, ,Healher Fry, Erin Tobin.
hartson, Joshua Lynch, Ntckolas
Sixth grade - lenni Howerton,
McLaughlin, Monica Moon, Sarah Jessica Johnson, TJ. King, Jessica
Reynolds, Michael Smith, Tyler Cale, John Davidson, Melissa HoiStewatt, Brandon Werry, Tara · man, Beclcy Johnson.
Wyatt, Andrew Baker, Erica
LD- Jason· Boggess, Steven
Bryan, Trevor Buck, Delana Hoover, Lester Lowery, Chrystal
Eichinger, Corrie hoover, Staesha ·Wells.
.
Kennedy, Richard Michael, Erin
DH ·Tammy Pletcher, Brian
Ralston, Jacob Smith, Rebecca Klein, Kim Bush, Erik· Johnson,
Smith, Michelle French.
Laura Sharrer, Kevin Bush, Gary
FoUrth grade- Whitney Ashley, Reitmire, Georginia Spears, Jen::my
Abby Harris, Michael Hawkins; Thomas.
Derek Johnson; Carrie Lifhtfoot,
Meigs Junior High School
Leah Marrow, Debby Sears, ChaSeventh grade - David Andersitr Stewart, Rlichel Taylor, Jessica son, Latiren Anderson, Rachel AshChapman, Chasity Fowler, Joshua ley, Mick Barr. Michelle Bissell,
Hayman, Jason Knight, Zachery Carly Chasteen, Scott Dodson,
Krautter, Tiff11ny Qualls, Justin Robin Donohue, Crystal Eblin,
Robson, ·Brooke Smith, Donnie Emily Fowler, Jason Frecket:.
Smith, Jan Story, Kathy Taylor, Danielle Grueser, Jennifer HaySiephanie Wigal.
man. Myca Haynes, Heidi Legar,
Harrisonville Elementary
Michael Leifheit, Steve McCul. First grade· Tasha Boring, Iough, George Miller, Melissa
Brent Butcher, Kevin Butcher, Reeves, . Collin Roush, Wcndi
Scott Chapen, Megan Dodson, Erin Shrimplin, Amy Smith, Sabrina
Doughty, Randy Hall~ James Hem- Smith, Adam Thomas, Charles
sley, Courtney Kennedy, Sarah Trader, Jessica Wheeler, Nancy
Lee, Marlc Maue, Bobbi Sue Nap- Whatc'y, Sandra Youn~.
per, William Reeves, Sarah StoEighth grade • L1berty King,
bart, Matthew Williams, Joshua Erin Krawsczyn, all A's: Scott
Yost, Ashley Young. ·
Authcrson. Jon Barnhart, Casey
Second grade- Jes,~ica Allen, Booth, Desiree Clemons, Amy
Ben Bookman, Wesley Call, Der- Clonch, Taryn Doidge, Jam_es
rick Fackler, David Hall, J ami Ditty, Whitney Haptonstall, Betsy
Hayes, Crystal Jacks, Christopher Houdashelt, John Kelly, Aimee
McDaniel, Jessica Preast, Jessica Klees~ Shawn Leach, Josh MarKing.
.
.
shall, Rick Marshall, Jessica McEIThird grade - Joeline Allen, roy, Michelle Miller, Scou Mitch,
Ashley Bu~bridge, Tash~ Green, . Jason Mullen, Stacey Price, Ashley
Ben Haley, Amber Hanmg, len- Roach, Cynthia Sandy, Beverly
nifer Reeves, Stacia Sims, Rees Stewart, Melissa Whaley, Adam
Wyant:
·
White, Jamie Williamson, Amber
. Fourth grade - Joey Blazer, Slaven, Stephanie Stewart,
Cluistopher Dodson, Amanda ParMeigs High School
sons, Dustin . Smyers, Albert
Ninth graqe - Amber Bennett,
Stearns.
Anne Brown, Phyllis Clark; Ryan
Fihh grade: Kyle Smiddie, Crisp, Angela Fisher, Michael
Adam Walker
Franckowiak, Jake Gannaway •. Ali· ··
Sixth -rade • Christopher son gerlach, Angela Hale, April
D'Augusuno, Megan Drummer, Halley, Michael Hawley, Michael
Randy Haning, Jason Preast, Fran- Jarvis, Dorolhy Leifheit, Lori Rusco Romu~o.
sell, Tracy Shaffer, Kim Smith,

.Ohio Lottery

Indians
•lose to
Red Sox

Marion Snider, Cynthia Stewart,;
James D. White, Donald Yost,
·
Tenth grade - Sarah E. Ander: .
son , Juanita Arthur, Keith Friend,'
Kelley Grueser, Heidi Huffman.Kimberly Janey, Mandy Jones,
Lisa Montgomery, Shilo Moore.
Adalll Sh.cets, Brent Smilh, Brian- ·
Smith, Jason Taylor, Crystal
Vaugtian. Walter Williams, Lisa
Yeauger.
Eleventh grade - Rachel Bales,
Matt~ew Clark, Tericia Cogar, _
Traci Crow, Paul Davis, Crystal
Donohue, Arnie Elliott; Dawn' .
Erwin, Tracy Fife, Danielle Gray, ·
Phillip Green, Jason Hart, David
Herdman, Heather Hudson, Melissa Jeffers. Anthony King, Andrea'
McDonald, Jason Miller, David
Mitchell, Joy O'Brien, Charles.
Parker, Stephanie See, Cora See,
Shannon Spaun, Tonya Thornton,
Jeff Tracy, Marlo White, K~vin
Whobrey, Jason Wilherell.
Twelfth grade - Debbie Alkire,
Kandi Bachtel, Tim Bal&gt;er, Jennifer
Barnhari, Lon.i Burnelli, Linda
Chapman, Jennifer Chasteen,
Wendy Clark, L~ann Cundiff,
Kelly Doidge, Elizabeth Downie,
Kimberly Fetty, Allison Gann- .
away. Rhonda Gibbs, Billy Glaze•.
Autumn Griffith, Tracey Grueser ,:
Tonya HudnaU, Randall Johnston,,
Gary Kerr, Kevin -Lambert, Courtney Midkiff, Scou Moore. Lorena:
Oiler, Billye Pherigo, Stephanie
Price, Jennifer Profritt, Regina
Rider, Shawn Rollins, Virginia.
Shuler, Me lisa Sisson, , Ritn·
Spencer. Sheryl Thoma, RuJIY·
Triplett, Katrina Turner, MiiCC:
Welsh, Thomas Wilson.
,

Pick 3:
347

·Pick 4:

•
llulllmedlatnc.

Pomeroy·Mic:ldleport, Ohio, Friday,
. Aprll16, 1993

Vol. 43, No. 248

Gilmore remains ;
in care unit
Bob Gilmore, owner/operator of
Middleport Trophies and former
Middleport Village councilman.
remained in the cardiac care unit at
Mt. Carmel Medical Center,
Columbus. He was taken ~ by
helicopter from Pleasant Valley
Hospital late last week after suffering a heart attack.
Cards may be sent to Gilmore at
Mt. Carmel Medical Center, Fifth
Floor, CCI.}, 793 West State Street,
Columbus, Ohio 43222.

CHECKING BLOOD SUGAR - Jennifer
Chasteen, leO, a member of the nursinJ assistant
program at Meigs High Scbool, is ptctured as.

she checks the blood sugar level of Becky Snow. den. The nursing assistant class held its annual
health fair at.the school on Thursday.

·Nursing class hosts health fair
'

related instruction during.thUIIOming and four periods of simulated
· laboratory experience in lhe "afternoon. Begihning second semester,
~tu.dents will,_participate in on-theJOb eooperauve ·employment at a
local health care or hospital facility
durin&amp; tile afternoon or evening
hours: Sfiii:fenu willi~ed in
€PR and First 1Aid and iUso complete a 75-hour nurse aid training
program required by law to work in
a long-term care facility.

G JAMBOREE

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v6, auto., air, cruiae, atereO, mare.

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Northstar sy_stem, leather
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appreciated. ·

ROYALE

NfW 1993 CADIUAC

SEDAN DEVILLE

531

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lledllnar, aldO., llaNO, al'l- bu.,._,
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Plldded roof, leather _.,.,Ugh! bilge.

llllf 1993 OLDS 98

llfW 1993 GEO

IIIW CADILLAC

$15 995

'1 995

• IIIOIIIhe - 1.1 APR

ing assistants class. Debbie Babbitt, R.N., from
the health department, is pictured as she..perrorms a hemoglobin check on Amy Reynolds.

HEMOGLOBIN CHECK - The Melas
· County Health Departmeut provided
.hemoglobin cheeks during the annual health fair
at Meigs HJth School on Thursday by the ours-

3,1 VI, load I d

'16311o. . 1163 .. , ....

$6,000

SEDAN

llffll993 CHEVY
LUMINAEURO

•&amp;,366 or

Hating.

CADILLAC
SEVILLE SIS

CUTWS
SUPREME SPECIAL EDitiON .

IIIW 1993 OLD$ 88

llfW 1,93 GEO METRO
Auto., air, alaNO, hllchbeck.

llfW 1993

llfW OLDS

'It, auto~ 1111, erulaa, 16", whMia,
power windows I ·1ocu, mote..

leat~ar

were without power tamers in Gallia and Meigs CounThursday and some were ties had service disrupted
sijll w1thout service at noon today overnight. Two hundreq customers
as a result 'of the rain; high winds were still without powef'lhis morn- ,
and lightening which struck the ing, he reported. All service was
area .
expected to be restored by early
Ernie Sisson; local manager of af~emoon.
'Ohio Power, reported that 250 cusBuckeye Rural Electric crews
tomers in the Union Avenue area were out all night as the ~ij!h winds
were still without power this morn- cut off power to a substauon serving large areas of Jackson and Vining.
Included in !hat outage were the ton Counties and then caused scatMeigs Emergency Medical Service tered outages from southern
office and Veterans Memorial Hos- . Lawrence County up Lhrough westpital although both have backup em Gallia and Mei$s Counties, as
generator systems. School was can- well as Jackson, Vmton and Pike
·
celed at Pomeroy Elementary Counties.
School today due to the outage.
The major outage affected over
"The outage caused very little 1,200 consumers from the
disruption at Veterans Memorial McArlhur area in Vinton County to
Hospital," Administrator Scott south of Oak Hill in Jackson CounLucas reported. The hospital h~ its ty when a Columbus Southern
own ·alternative system which was transmission line that feeds the '
moved into use and consequently substation southeast of Jackson was
medical treatment and general damaged by wind about 4:30 p.mc
operation at the hospital continued and interrupted.power for approxiwithout disruption, Lucas said. mately three hours, a spokesman
·
However, c.omputer systems were for the company said.
down but will go back into operaAt the same ti!"e another
tion once the outages are corrected, Colwnbus 'Southern..ljne f~ing a
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperahe said. · .
.
Sisson said that a large uee on a tive metering point north of Wellsteep bank on Union Avenue fell ston was damaged affecting an
into seven spans of wire resulting · additional426 consumers.
Widespread high winds continnot only in puUing down the wires
ued to cause additional scattered
but several poles.
OIIWL outages for short pericxti ou)llgc;s from ..broken_)!ales and
of dr!te ;Mt1 in the WUiis HIH area trees down into lines throughout
of Pomeroy and iii Rutland. Sisson the rest of the ~vetting, keet~ing line
said. ·All power with the exception crews busy all night and mto this
of the one involving Pomeroy was morning, the spokesman said.
restored by 4 a.m. this morning.
In addition to the electric outJon Buck of Columbus Southern ages, .some areas· in Pomeroy were
Power reported ,that 13,000 cus- reportedly still wilhout telephon~
service this morning.

LUCASVILLE {AP) - Pub- lion today, said a nursing supervi- referred to the death.
lished reports today indicated that a sor who would not identify herself.
"We hope there is no·more vio- :
guard found dead at a b'arricaded He was being checlced for dehydra- Jence. We hope there are no more:
prison where inmates were holding tion and other possible health prob- unnecessary murders. We as the:
six hostages may have·been hanged lems.
. convict body send our condolences·
and may have died days ago.
About 12:20 p.m. Thursday, the to Bobby's family," the inmate:
The Columbus Dispatch, quot- body of Vallandingham, who had said. "But that is something that
ing a source it did not identify, said been a guard at Lucasville since had to happen. A lot of us didn't:
Robert Vallandingham, 40, who 1991, was found iri a prison yard: · want it, but that's,l'm sorry. That's:
was found dead Thursday outside a
Ms. Kornegay has refused to all I can say."
bOrricaded cellblock at lhe South· answer questions about VallandAs the inmate prepared to speaic:
· . e10 Ohio Correctional Facility, was ingham's death. But the inmate over the radio, a WPAY announcer
hanged
who broadcast, the radio message described the event for listeners as
Mike Lee, a spokesman for the
it was happening.
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction, said he had no
information about the guard's
death. The Scioto County Coro'
ner's Office did not immediately
return a message seeking commenL
. The reports came in the sixth
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fredrick W. Crow III
day of the standoff that has left
denied motions today to move the trial of a Meigs County man
eight people - seven inmates and
accused of aggravated murder to another county_
one guard- dead. On Thursday,
William Le~ter, 26. of Racine, is accused in the Feb. 1991
inmates released a guard held
murders of Jeff Halley Sr., 36, and Jeff Halley Jr., 12, both of Galhostage since Sunday after they
lipolis.
.
were allowed to air tl!eir demands
In addition, Crow overruled a defense motion to postpone
on a local radio station.
LeMaster's scheduled May 4 trial.
·
Meanwhile, inmates scheduled a
Attorney William Eachus said articles printed in area newspapers
television broadcast this morning,
concerning the confession of LeMaster'$ co-defendant, Fred Drenafler which they said they would
nen of Ravenswood, W.Va., may make it diffJ!:ult io seat an impartial jill'}' for LeMaSter's trial. ·
·
release l!llother hQstage.
.
Early today, military trucks and
Drennen pleaded guilty on Marc~ 1"to three charges of aggravat·
anned aulhorities moved closer to
ed murder in exchange for a sentence of life in prison_ A conditions
the cellblock. Several military
of the plea agreement is !hat Drennen testify against LeMaster.
trucks were seen moving toward
Acting upon an agreement between council, Crow granted a
lhe area of the barricaded cellblock.
motion for LeMaster to appear at his trial without restraints J!rovidOhio National Guard soldiers were
ed certain security needs are met.
·
·
posted early today along the
perimeter of the prison complex.
On Thursday, workers at the ·
south-central Ohio prison cheered
A Springfield man remains hospitalized at Cabell-Huntington
the release of hostage Darrold
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., following a motorcycle accident
Clark.
Sunday on State Route 143.
.
· Kennelh R. Welsh was norlhbound on State Route 143 qnd lost
The release came after an
conlrol of his 1969 Triumph motorcycle in a curve, the motoJCycle
inmate identifted only as George
went off the roadway and SlrUCk a guardnli~ according to the Meigs
talked aboUt prisoners" demands on
County Sheriff's Department.
radio alation WPAY in Portsmouth.
Welsh was transpOrted _to the hospital via LifeFlight. He said this
The inmate spoke into a micromorning that he expects to nemain !JosP.!talized for another week.
phone ll a table with the hostage at
According to Meigs CooRty Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Welsh
his side.
.
was cited for no operatm license. The motorcycle was !mpounded .
''We eithor negotialll this to our
'liking or~ wlll kill us. We are
~ 10 die," the inmate laid.
AfW the bll&gt;ildcast, Clark was
. Deputies of the Meigs Cowlty Sheriff's Department are examin· released. He .wallr,ed out of the
ing
two~~~ with the olfa Thursday.
.. ·· .. · ·
prisiln Without aaaistance. . ,
Gary'S
•
Ball
Run
Road,
Pomeroy,
reported
the
theft
of a
"He CIIIIO down the corridor to
Sears push mowcr,111 alwninwn 1ldder lllld two gas CIIIS sometime
thlllldeloua IJIP)Mtpj," Comclions'
between
Tuesday and Thtnday,lho ~trs offiee npork&gt;d.
doplrtmenl tpOtelwOman Sham!n
Franklin
Jarvis, Edmundson Road, Salem Ceq~er, reported· be
..Clark'
KOmepy.lllil
_ of workcn
g
wu aavoling on s- Roulc 12411 Sttlcm een.llllllll4 4:15p.m.
a~e-.
when rocQ we~e throwg at bis truck by two aub,IOCII .
Thursday
Clarlr. was tilton to Southern
walking
home
tiom ICbool, 8CCOidinS 10 a sheriff's repcit.
. .
. Ohio Medical Center · in
. Portsmoulb. He wu in fair condi-

Change of venue denied __

THE HEART

SEVILU
White diamond,

dents

ovemi~lit

Local briefs

.

NfW 1992

Auto., alr, pulea wiper•, cruiee, more.

llfW 1993 OLDS

PICKUPA.,.~-

VEHiCLES
1986 CHEVY CAMARO Z·28

From OVP staff reports
High winds and heavy rains
swept through lhe state Thursday
night and early this morning,
dOwning trees and power lines and
damaging some buildings, but no
injuries were reported, authorities
sa1d.
Locally, Buckeye Rural Electric
crews were out all night as high
winds left 1,200 CUSto!liCCS in pllfl$
· of Jackson and Vinton counties
without power. Scauered outages
from southern Lawrence County up
· through western .Gallia and Meigs
counties in addition to p~rts of
Jackson, Vinton and Pike counties
were also reported.
The maJOr outage .occurretl
around 4:30p.m. Thursday when a
Columbus Southern transmission
line that feeds the BREC substation
southeast of Jackson was damaged
by winds.
Residences from the McArlhur
area in Vinton County to oouth of
Oak Hill in Jackson County were
without pow~r for about three
hours, a repon from BREC said.
At about the same time, anolher
Columbus Southern line feeding a.
BREC metenng point north of
Wellston was damaged, affecting
an additional. 426 BREC customers.
Widespread hi$h winds continued to cause .add.nional Sl:~t!ll.r~ed .
outagef'Uirougbout the evening,
breaking poles and knocking trees
and limbs down onto lines. B~C
line crews were making repairs all
night and into this morning, the
report said.
.
· Hundreds of Meigs County resi-

.

5

.

.

One hostage released, another dead :.

5

IIIW 1993
CHEVY 5·10
BLAZER

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wtndows &amp;
locks, stereo,
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5

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L}w-~ V6, auto., air, P.

~8688or

Auto., air,
stereo, 4 door.

IIIW
1992 GEO
STORM

1992 OLDS .
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1992 CHEVY
CORSICA .·

.

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1992 CHEVY
CAVALIER
R/S

2 Sec!DpmL 12 Pogea 25 cinta
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Heavy win~s, ·rain leave
hundreds without power

DON TATE CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

SPRING

Low tonlgbt In mld-30s. Rabl.

Saturday, cloudy, blgh In 50s.

8670

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· · lffl1993 CHEVY
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