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I

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•

'rhe Daily Sentinel
.

.

I

·

Ohio Lottery
,!.. '

.

NBA cagers ·
inducted into
hall of fame

Monday, May 1o, 1993

.

PIIQI 1j)

Graduation isn't the end for
.

ByLYNNELBER
" They're older than normal
AP Tele'lsli. Writer
high scbool kids," be IIOICS. "But
LOS ANGELES - Ob. c'DIClll. we did start them as sophom~n~,
A wa11:h? You didn't really lhink and we ~laycd one soph~m~~e
lhe kids of "Beverly Hills, 90210" year, one JUIIlor year, one seruor.
and "The Fresh·Prince of Bel-Air"
The soft-voiced megaproducer
would settle for a mundane gradua- · also politr.ly, but firmly, _poinrs out
lion gift like niAT.
an obvious pattern of discriminaThe " 90210" brat pa~;k after · lion.
all, .wore designer duds by
"No one com~ wbcll a 32Karan and. Issey_ Mi)'alt~ to their year~ld- we don t have I!DYbodY
prom - likely msugaung rear- that old - wben !'-. 32-r=r·old
some nationwide battles between male star plays a htgh sc
stu·
~g teens and their skioDin1 dent in movies," Spelling sayL "It
·
COISI8Rtl1 amazes me."
parents.
Y
d
But for twin~ Brandon an
No, what lhcse lap-of-luxury
high school graduates warit, and Brenda (Jason Priestly and Shanwhat !hey 're getting (gift wrap ncn Doherty), Dylan (bearuhr!&gt;~
unavailable), arc TV contract Lute Perry) and Donna (Ton
renewals. Their shows are coming Spclling,.you-know-who's daughback in the fall.
tel), there's no more high school
AND they get to continue grow- haven.
"I'!D sure the network would
ing up. NBC's "Fresh Prince"
graduateS irs Slllr, Will Smilh, at 8 have liked us to stay in high ~I
p.m. Eastern 1onight, while Fox for another four years," Spelling
TV's "90210" special two-hour said. "But we didn't do thal. and I
season finale airs at 8 p.m. lhink the cast really appteciated the
Wednesday, May 19.
fact we've shown the growth."
Even NBC's Saturday IIIOllling
So, just like tbe great poet
high school sitcOm, "Saved By . Robert Frost, our stalwart gradu·
The Bell," gets a prime-lime c:ae- ates soon will find themselves conmony at 8 p.m. Satwday, MaY. 22.
fronled by alluring multiple-dloice
No snide J'l!IIU!I'b, please, about nBis.
lhe, ummm, more llliiiUre·looting
Well, maybe -not the SAME
members of "90210," although roads. not roads in some musty old ·
Aaron Spelling ~ that wood. But hey, we aU try for the
lhe youngest san of the scnes pro- path less traveled, even. if it turns
duced by his COOipany are 19.
out to be Rodeo Drive after rush

Do.ma ·

PAGEANT WINNER- Holly Williams, left, participated
recently Ia the Miss Teen Ohio Pageant Ia Wortbiagton. She
received second place .I n the talent division aad third nnner-up to
Miss Teeaager Ohio. She is pictured here with Miss Ohio 11191
Amy 'Osborne.
-

Holly Williams .
comes in third
in state·pageant
Holly Williams, dau,llter of
Allen and Marilyn Wtlllams,
Pomeroy, participated in the Miss
Teenage Ohio Pageant in April at
die Holiday Inn Wonhington. She
is a senior at Meigs High SchooL
Miss Williams wu awarded the
title of third runner-up to Miss
Teenager Ohio. She also fmished in
second place in the talent division.
She received an $800 schobuship
from John Power Modeling.
She is now eligible to participate in lhe Show Choir Camp of
Amercia. She will be traveling to
Disney World in Florida "in August
for !hat presentation. .

CASPER, Wyo. (AP) - "Children of a Lesser God" playWright
Mark Medoff says school budgets

.
William H. Cleland, 1anc w.
ymon of"D""'ft·
Cleland. R/W• to '"""6e ._u..,

Cc.pledby:
EDliii'J&amp;eDe Jla•!Jtoa
Recurder, Meigs Couty, Ohio

HOLI;Y WILLIAMS

Mitchell is a 1989 graduate of
Meigs High School. He is a construction worker presently working
in Columbus.
The open church wedding will
be an event of May 15 at 2 p.m. at
lhe First Baptist Church in Middlepan wilh Rev. James Seddon officiating.
.
A reception wiU follow in the
church fellowship hall.

-........ Names in the news·
PENSACOLA, Fla . (AP) Astronauts who set foot on the
moon say it's important to return
and travel beyond.
•'Going to the moon, allhough a
lot of people look at it as having
been a luxury, wasn't at all,"
Eugene Cernan said Friday at a
news conference during lhe annual
Naval Aviation Symposium. "We
are going 10 go. It'll man's intuitive
spirit..to go back and go on to
Mars..
Ceman, lhe last man to walk on
the moon, was joined by Neil Armstrong, the first man on. the moon;
Alan Shepard, !he fJtSt American in
space; and James Lovell, part of
the fJrSt moon mission.
Former Air Force astronaut
Buzz Aldrin of Laguna Beach,
Calif., lhe second man to walk on
die moon, introduced the panel.
Armstrong, who walked on lhe
moon in 1969, advocated furlher
development of manned and
unmanned spacecraft.
"For some jobs you are going to
have 10 require intelligence on lhe
spot," he said.
Cernan, speaking of his December 1972 Apollo flight, said:
" Many of us are disappointed !hat
that beginning never continued."

for lhe ans always seem to be lhe
fii'St ones cut in diffiCult economic
times.
.
"As a society we will not pay
for education t I do not under·
stand," he saRI. "In failing to
answer lhc needs of education, we
are signing a dealh warrant of our
society as we know il.''
During his stay in Casper Ibis
week, Medoff wall:hed rehearsals
of his play "Stefanic Hero," based
on a Hans Christian Andersen fairy .
tale. The play is about a princess .
who's turned into a swan by an evil
sorcerer and !hen goes on a quest 10
break the spell
The themes of love, courage and
the clash of one person's desires
with the wishes of olhers are lhe
same tikmes Medoff applied to his
famous play. "Children ora Lesser
God." That play was made into a
hit movie starring William Hurt
and Marlee Matlin.
·
KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine
(AP) - Former President Bush
told friends and neighbors this
reson 10wn will be gelling bact to
normal after four years of Secret
Service agents, press entourages
and visiting dignitaries.
Bush noted !hat lobster fishermen who.were barred from the bay
surrounding his seaside home during his presidency are now wei· ·
come to return.

Sw:dison C. Brace, Mabel L.
Racine
Louise Thompson, Lot 13, to
:
:
~·
to
Village
of
•
Dorolha Nentzlins. Pum.ViL
.,_
......
!
Discri
Roben Barton, Patricia J. Bar·
Local ......w
Soulbcm
ct.
ton, Parcels. to Thomas McChmg, R/W,ID
Village
of
Racine,
Sidton.
M•deline McClung, Pum.
William L. Cleland, Sharon L.
Dewayne G. Stutler, Mldla C. Cleland. RJW. to Village of Racine,
Swtler, 45 A., T-4, S.33, R-12, to RaCine VilL
Charles Donald Burke; RoseBeneficial Mtg. Co. of Ohio,
Orange.
.
mary Burte, ~· S.6, T-9, R-.IS,
Anhur W. Nease, Ada L. Nease, 10 a..tcs Bnan Burke, Columbl8.
parcels, S. 2~. T-3N, R-13W, to
Patrick V.1ohnson. Jill L. Jolm!JQD,
Sutton.
Roben 0 . Willis, Shawnna L.
Willis, Lots 10 clll, to Home
National Bank, Syracuse V. •
Dar AM hMe!s: I am writina
Dewey Ray Birchfield, Mary .in respoase to your totally
Birchfield, pucels. to Lmy Car· o«.-..a nply 10 "J• a Boob."
penter, Pom. Vill
You waWAI "Boob" that a JIC!IO!l
Roben E. Facemyet, Melissa F. need only lake a look at his
Facemyer, 2.3~A. to Joseph D. sw 1 t' ra mother 1o ree whatshe
Cremeans, Racbacl Cremeans, will be liU in 25 years. Wrong! ··

Community Caludar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD In adVIIDCe
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

Wednesday tO a.m. 10 2 p.m. Public invited.

MONDAY
BURLINGHAM • Bedford
·Township Trustees, Monday, 7
p.in., town hall.
·

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA~ •
Singing by the Lake, Krodel. Park.
Point Pleasant.• W.Va.; 7 p.m .
nightly, through Sunday. Ed Craw:
ford, Conrad Cook and Calvary
Echoes. Paul Olapnan will emcee.
Call 304-67S•138l ror informalion.•

!J:irit

'..

bour.
Sr.;Uing plays it CCI'f about what
the '90210" graduates wi~l do:
where they'll live, who's gom11 10
what college, wbo may head m10

Jason Carroll (the name is
changed to protect his privacy), a
diabetic since the age of 13, had
unsuccessful eye surgery in 1978
and developed an infection !hat
resni!M in amputatiOn of bolh legs
above the knee.
He applied for and received
Social ·SI!Curity disability benefits.
He also received vocational reba·
bilitation services from a State
agency. With this support, he
returned to college and in 1983
~ted wilh a bachelors degrees
m social work and business .mnin·
istration. Today he is a state vocationa! rehabilitation counselor and
is teaching Olbers what he learned
throu.. bolh his studios and his life
expeneoces.
•
This is a true story, and one !hat
Over lhe next several years, ~
illustrates a fact !hat far too many · experienced additional heallh prob'
~pic may not know about-lhat
Jems, includjng a kidney transp~f
1s, rehabilitation help is available if Each time he fought back. for 3&lt;$·
!hey become disabled. Every State ' monlhs after his trial work period,
has a vocational rehabilitation Jason was allowed to receive
a11ency dcsi11ned to assist people Social Security disability benefits
for any month he was unable to
work enough 10 earn at least $SOO:
selins; training, job placement, Medicare coverage concinued dur·
transportation to and from work, ing lhis ~. providing help wilh
and on the job assistance.
doctor bills. _
Every ~licant for Social SecuIf you are disa\)led and want
rity disability benefits is considered help in getting back to work, you
for refcml to lhe State Rcbabilita· ',should call your State Vocational
tion Agency for help, even if they Rehabilitation Agency, listed in the
do not qualify for disability beue- telephone book under."Siate Gov·
fits. If they do get disability bene· · ernment". Y011 should also contact
ft'ts, Social Security pays for the the Alhcns Social Security offJCC at .
cost of the rehabilitation $CI'Vices if 592-4448 or call Social Security'i
the services result iD lhe individual toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213,
being able to work. People are business days between 7 a.m. and 7
accepted for vocational rehabilita- p.m. 10 find out how work incen•
tion services based on an evalua- lives can help you while ypu are on
.
tion of their rehabilitation potential. lhe road back to work.

a

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•z.

-Mted. · ·

Colllpleti Medical/surgical Care
for Ear, Nose; a~ Throat Including
Asth•, Allergy &amp; HHrfng Aids

RACINE - Southern Junior
High Boosters, Monday, 7:30p.m.
All sixth grade.parents attend.

. POMEROY· DAY, and Ladies
Auxiliary, MOnday, 1 p.m., 124
Buuemut Avenue, Pomeroy.
. MIDDLEPORT -Meigs Junior
Hisb Al:adcmic Booslen, Monday.
7 P·~· · school cafctqia. Everyone

invited.

WEDNESDAY
RFFNVJLLB • BllftiD School
RACINE • Racine lloard of Board, special
Wednes·
Public Mfairs, Monday, 10 a.m., day. 4 p.m., high
cafelaiL
Star Mill Park.
· MIDDLEPORT • Middlepon
RACINE - tuberaWn 11kin lelt· Literary Club, WedDelida/a!:
lng clinic, Monday, S· 7 p.m., p.m~ home ofMn. BJd!ed
•
RaCine F'U"C Station..
Group review or Jane Byre by
Clladolre 8lonle.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - BarPOMEROY • Pomeroy Merrisnnville Senior Citizella Club, clluta AMocillion, Wednesday,
l'rcc blood p1 IlL£ clinic Tueaday, 8:30 a.m., Bank One conference
10:30 a.m. 1o noon, toW!Iboale. IOOIIL
Potluc:t cliMe( a&amp;r the clillic. AD
memlicQ wdconie.
·
. , POMEROY • Am a Ganim·
..
en Clab, WM"""t), 7 p.m., home .
POMEROY • Tuben:ulin 1kiD of Mrs. Harold Lohao, Wolfo
It Ohio Valley Qris. Drive, PI I Of. Alic:e TbolapiDII
bly Taeaclay from S- 7 will pi r•t JIRIIIMI 011 orieDial .
p.m. Ptee eernce.
•••• PM ... '

m;.:t,•

lelli,=

John A. Wade, M.D. ·
Suite 112 Valley Drive
· Pt. Plesant WV
Call 304-675-1244
for appt. or illformation.
.

-In regards to the per~ons letter,
please come forward and attend
our meetings and your Information .• .
. that ·you ·are seeking will be
explained to you. . ,
Trustee ot Oranae 'l1fP

..
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·

Robert Mmmld
l
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70s.

•
,
. Pcln1810y-lllddlaport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 11, 1993

Vol, 44, NO. I

Moiltlm1latnc.

1 S.C!Ion. 10 PagN 25 oenllt.
A Mullmeclatoc. ,._llfi8PW

In LeMasters murder trial

Jurors visit sites where bodies were ·found
By JIM FREEMAN
SentiDel NeWB Stair
Jurors in lhe aggravated murder
trial of William D. LeMasters II
visited two sites in riU'al Meigs
County Monday where the bodies
of LeMasters • alleged victims were
found.
l.,eMasters, 26, of Racine is
accused of four charges of aggraVllted murder in lhe Feb. 8, 1991, '
shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and 12-year-old !ctfrey S.
Halley, bolh of Gallipolis.
A co-defendant, Fred Drennan
of Ravenswood, pleaded guilty .
March I 10 lhree charges of aggra"
vated murder in the ineidellt. Dren·
nan is expected to testify aaainst
LeMasters during lho trial as pan
of plea bargain agreement.
The tour of lhe two sites was

held soon after counsel ror LeMasters and the state finished
tin&amp; •
jury of five men and- along wilh two altemalc jurors.
The jurors, in two VIliS, visited.
site off Old Port18nd RoadPortland iri Lebanoo Township
where the body of the clcb Hallcy
was found in Septemller 1991.
Mterwards, jurors ttaupaocd
to a location on Eatoo Rol!d, allo in
Lebanon Township, where the
remains of Jeffmy S. Halley MK
found in Aprill992.
Jurors, following inttnlctiou
from Court Bailiff Teresa M.
Tyson-Drummer, viewed die dialy
sites while LeMasters sat ia the
~ear of a Meigs County Sbclifl's
DeparUnent cruiser.
According to Judge Fmd W.
Crow. III, jurors viewed the two

silr:s 1D br:lp them 1leaer W!!lcnland
the ewi• • c ... will be JIICSC!Ited
..... die 1rial..
Followill&amp; die jllrors' JCtum to
the coardaoasc around I p.m.,
Crow 10 cnnl porecdinp nntil
8:45
T
by when opening

a..:

••••• ,., -

... ltelal

.

Before bciDJ n:cessid, Crow
Oll!l!: apia 1Did ;.ro.s to IK)I dis. t:IISS the c:awe IIIII 10 a-void media

:·;:..ofto'ot':c:~ !:

e.. '.

-u JQD' "• • • •

ev*'

solely ta1 the
Oow aid

D
Wfh
Also Moeday. Crow denied a
5

=ia"l..~.t::::::.1::~

c:rilai I -=t al•=a flJ commilted
ealitrbyld'
iMevi+nrc in
tallill..
•

During the hearing, Prosecutor
John R. Lentcs said the information
needed to be presented to demonstrate that LeMasters was not "an
innocent bystander" in the double

m..

..

Lentes said LeMasters was
involved ip the robbery of lhe
Howard Lawrence store in Long
Bollom and the subsequent beating
of Lawrence in January, 1991.
lninically; Lawrence was murdered
during anolher. rob~ in which
another man, Donald Lindeman of
Racine, was latel convicted.
Lentes called attention to a
graph showing similarities in lhe
two incidents.
•
Bolh acts were planned in lhe
presence of Michelle Drennan and
occurred in Lebanon Township
wilhin lhree miles of esch olhet,
Lc:nles said. In addition, lhe same
vehicle and shotgun were used, he
said.
Attorney William N. Eachus,
representing LeMasters, called the
motion an attempt by the prosecution "to buuress a case lhat isn't so

&amp;ood -'YJIIOie." .

. ,

. ) .

"To allow (lhe mcormauon m
. would be substantially pejudical to
our dient, Eachus said.
Crow denied the motion saying
that the informatiou would be high·
ly prejudicalto ..LeMasters and
would pemaps warrant a reversal
upon appeal.

Ann

.C'::.:r=:n~~

Low tonlgb!ln 60s. Pll'llyf " •
cloudy. Wednesday, rain, high In

6350

ft

Dear Aaa LaDders: Your
. llltemeat 10 tbe )'011111 follow, "]f
you want 1D ree ~ )'IIIII' wife will
look lb in 25 ,._., loc* It her
mother,• wasiOially W11J11i.
.·
My mother was a atldd,.. for
neatness. I~m a slob. She was a
devout &lt;Jtholic. 1'111 • atbel• $be
B~~ of Middleport, Ohio, 12' Wrong! WI'OIIII
X 114 • strip, to Ruben Collins,
I - die oldeat cl five kids and ~!!'!!'!!!!'!!!!!-....~~;;;:;;;;,.,;;_~J wu never lllo for anylblaa in b!l'
life. I'm new:r ta1 limo. Mam wll
Thelma Collins, Midd. Viii.
CIIIIC from a family just like the one
alWI)'II
a aw:r. 1'111 a I(IQ!dOi. ~
delaibed
In
tblt
lcall'.
My
mother
Your
tatimony
is
impressive.
You
John N. Ginlher, Jr., Judy K. bad 110 n 1 nal MariS wbalsostayed
with a busbancl who wu
have
a
right
to
bq
proud
of
)'OUI'Idf,
Ginther, l.SOO A., to James M.
meal
abusive
and pntalthful. I duew out
"'~ever. Silo- coc*ed
a
, Read ou ror more:
Sprouse, Jr.,.........
did ,__._
Jack lett, Betty Jett, Ease, to cl wt die IDa or
.awf.
Dear Au l.aaden: I lin darned two lousy hg. . . . . . wbo- very
Monongahela Power Co., Olive.
1be bad a loa&amp; fri;tcclnJ lucltyyoudi&amp;l'tprint "J•aBoob's" much lite. my ladler. ·.
1bore ol4 ciJcbee daa'talways fit;
Stanley L. Boyce, Frances M. biliary of llt:IDa too -.y pillnnd lcaer when my bnsband IIIII I met
Boyce, Ease. and Ronald E. Jamll, was a MhlmiiJilr. Silo anbtiliud 30 , . . qo; "Boob" blalilcs bis Ann, 10 qait uing them. -· A
Jr., Chester.
die l'anily by aam.l'"'*l" at 1 .'
aJ!VELANDCRITIC
·
lllllrilge 011 dlo fact tlw
Cecil Maynard. R/W, to Vilhlgc . ~.... w- b bonncina cbecks ""'""'
DEAR a.BVIILAND: 11vllb for
be was dumb enough 1D many a lid
of Racine, Racine Vill.
and f'nrsing pcscaiptiona.
from I dirty, dysfunctional borne. If h8ullna mnp lholt lnu(Mihat.,~ ·•
My dad Wll!l't much beau. He · my huabind had.judged me by my
11 alco~ nthtbtg yow life tJf' '"" •
parenllllld the Jllllsbeclde house I lift of a lowd 011t? "AlcoltoiUm:
~;!~~
. lived in, which was baiod in junk, How Ill Rtoophe II, Huw Ill Deal
wilb my 11c:1t rri&amp;ld. By the way, be )WUid !IC\U have lllllried me.
Wllh It, How Ill Coiii/IIN It" t1.11111ri
Dad was a minisW.
· Luckily. he had faith and tlli11.11 aroiU!d. Stlld a 11(/-1111,
Owning tsUmlbatbDg!ound, rm COU'I&amp;6· We are both ~UCCC~Iful drtutd,lo,.,.~,_~
sure you cu undentand the profeaionals. 8lill in love and have twl 11 clltcJ: or lftOIIIY twtllr /o~
aelf 1 m ptHemc I bad. But I two lovely children and 1 beautiful $3.65 (llril il!clllllt• poltagt , . ,
am p10ud to tell you, I pulled home. .
lralldlillg) Ill: /Jcolrol, clo AM Ltua·
IDylelf out of tblt- and am now
Slwile 011 "Boob" for a mQ!r tkrs, P.O.BoJc 11562_, Cllll:ago,IIL
livlnl a WOIId&amp;ful1y leWIIding life cop-out, and lbame ou you for 60611-0562. (Ill Ca/Uida, ~elld
in a clean home with a clcwtcd loaing bim act IWIY wilh it. Amoog $4.45.)
h"'wMI..a dno t a•!li'ul children. your readen, Ibm are COIIIIIIeu
The WOIIt iDmlt I could naive boya and gida from dirty, DtWicct·
lo Not~~ Open For
would be for • _,., ID tell me I ful, alcoholic and llobn bomea who
I"
n.. s.........
1111 jultlikc my"""""'· I have spent long for and ca11 succeed in
J Pltats (flaw... &amp;
30 years ayina 1D be • different building a beUer life ror themaelves.
¥
........
),
lllaMt Well, Plllltl
fnm b!l'.a p•INc. "JOlt a Boob's" I hope they doa't let tlw lazy Boob
Pliatt, c..,llli ll. ol • lluy ·
leall' will be eatremely cliscouraa· dealnJy their faith In lhemrelveslllll
.... lJM&amp; ....1f11f IW
. . 1D people who liYC in dyllimc- in each other. - ,A CINDBRELLA
. SPECIAL OF THE MON'lJI
c,.••., ••,..u
..... taailiell!ld billiiM tl!ey are FROMPHRLY
OPEN HOUSE SLATED· doomed 'k IE, Ala, tell diem thtll
c.lllew•'l.l5
Carroll Teaford will c:dd'nte llil
DEAR PIDLLY: You've hit a
HUIIARD'S GIIEIIIOUSE
life II wllat JCU !Dike it. - PLANO.
70tla blrtbda, with- . . . - - TI!XAS
home IUD while I WU fumbq
IYUCUII
bOIIted bJ his daqllten oa, Sat·
OPEN DALY
t2-l
DEAR PLANO: ~ you for &amp;Oilil)fobere-theblr :"en.Keop
urday rr- Z-4 pa. 81 SCar Mil the 11¥kl x IIIII poop1e Cllllllld do r-ting for I!!OIIIa' dobbcl.
Park In R1dae. II lias •eea
riae !!blwc a bligh""' beaiDDing.
requested that lifts be

.I

Pick 4:

PageS

'

Counselors look at Stich liK;IOrs ·
as age, education, work experiencew
and most importantly, they say-'
motivation. "If the person is moti!
vated and really wants to work,,
generally we can help him," 1\
counselor stated.
In addition, Social Security has
a number of special. rules designed
to assist people wilh disabilities-by
providin$ extended cash benefits .
and Medicare or Medicaid coverage while ·!hey attempt to work. In
1ason' s case. for example, a montlf
ilfter he graduated from college Ire
became a case service manager
wilh lhe County Senior Services
Agency. Durin~ this time, he
received full Social Security bmei
fits for nine monlh "trial work
period" and then. for a three monlh
"grace period" before his Social
Security checlcs stopped. .
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240

the wort world.
And, he. adds: "What is Luko
Peny going to do in the summerand witb whom? 0)1, I wish 1
hadn't said that. ..

Social Security ne'Ys
By ED pETERSON
Social Security
Manaaer in Athena

Pick3:

.Parents' behavior won't doom you

Colnmurtity Calendar .

ANTIQUITY • Tent revi~al;
Monday, 7 p.m., Failh. Fellowship
Crusade for Christ, Antiquity,
Brother Hurest Prater. Everyone
welcome.
,.
LONO BOITOM • Failh Full .
Gospel Church, three day ICI!Iinlr
on Holy
by Rev. MirY Dia- ·
mond, A 1011, Monday and Tuel·
day 10 a.m. to 00011 and 7·9 p.m.,

TV's top. teens _:

r---------------------.,
I Property· tran·s£ers I~!.,~s~t!s~c: ::~

Brewer engagement announced
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Brewer
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Marybeth Hazel, to
Vaughan Kelly Mitchell, son of
· Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Mitchell, Rutland.
Miss Brewer is a 1988 gmduate
of Meigs High School. She is
employed as a veterinarian assistant for Dan Notier, DVM, Gallipolis.

•

JURY AFIELD • Joron In tbe aggravated aurder trial of
William D. LeMa&amp;tera D, lli, of Racine tourecl two sites MOI!day
where LeMasten' two alleled vlctlnis were fouad. Here, Aaktl"t
Prosecutor Charles H. Kafgbt and Bill Mcl.aae of New' Pblladel·
pbia, representing LeMasters, eaamlae the site where the re~~alu
or 3fi-year-old Je"rey L. Halley were round. (Sentinel photo by
•
Jilli Freeman)
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Nelsonville firm awarded bid to
·remove trees, stumps in Middleport
ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

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NO, THIS ISN'T TOUCAN SAM • Stadeall
at Pomeroy Elemmlai'J eajoJed a visit from the
Columbus Zoo on Monday afternnoa. They

were ripon • to • •• . . , •.:. Ilo' iaclwl'' I

I I I«
theblrdllwt .................
this IOWID wllidl _,. •

t.' . a .
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Charoes
are _re'iled
in coc-u::g.
· hting' case
b
'.1 "
"'J "•

McARTHUR, Ohio (AI') Fifty-seven peopl~ pleaded innocent 10 misdemeanor cockfighting
charges refiled in a 1991 case.
More than 100 people cnunmed
into lhe ViniO!I County counroom
forthe&amp;n1dgnrnenthlonday.
.
Vinton County Prosecutor
David Kessler said he reflled the
charges becmtse he was c:oncerned
die original charges from the May
11, 1991, raid would be voide!l. ·
. The_4th District Court of
Appeals of Ohio il) Athe~~ is
reVIewing an appeal of the original
ruing by 20 people charged in the

. case.

Died cadi of 284 new amplailus,
. . . by c:erlifilld !lllil..
Kessler Slid die Jeaet advised
d!a die co.~ is wil1in&amp; ID KCept
Ia ~-· of ille oriP'a1 case

'

donations have been made to lhe
pool fund. He said a comJ?Iete
report on the donations wtll be
made at lhe next meeting.
The mayor reported !hat
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, had made a $1,000
donation 10 lhe village and !hat lhe

money went 10ward ·completion of
lhe stage in Dave Diles PaJt.
Mayor Hoffman said that he
will be meeting wilh a representative from lhe FmHA Friday regarding financing of the Hobson water
and sewer project
Continued on paae J

Hubbard reported in.stable
~::c:ri:::f::J:!~~:~t:! condition after gunshot wound
award the bid but for a scaled down

project to bring the cost 10 $S,SOO.

Charges of attempted aggravated murder are expected 10 be f!led
able for the work through a grant against a Pomeroy woman as lhe
and local monies.
·
result of a shooting at Jeff's Carry
Council gave a second reading Out early Monday evenin~.
ud
the defeadallt isn't to .. ordinance 10 hire a pool manMeigs County Shenff James
tiliil)l!in:d 10 ....,_ for die new ~ ager at SS.SO .. hour in lieu of a Souls by said this morning that
n:creation director. The third read· Brenda Sue Fry, 43, of 606 East
Ia ll, S3 rl ' "'"' ~ 10 ing and adoption of the ordinance Main St Pomeroy is being held in
~~ ao COI!test ud paad $54 will tate place at the next meeting lhe Gall~ County Jail pending mne n:maiaing 231 clefcn- prior ·10 Memorial Day when the ing of charges.
dal5l eadllii(. d die ~IIIII band pool is slated 10 open; .
The victim, Michael R. Hubbard
pc1111td a illeir am:st, Slid COllllly · . On the recommendabon of lhe · of Syracuse, was reported in stable
coutt Oat R g w Brilbr.
MiddlcP.M Recreatiori Committee, . condition at Grant Hospital where
Slleeu Slid lie believes Vinlon Council approved hiring Kenny he was taken by Life Plight at 7:30
Coullly's
pi;. • the defen. . Reynolds as pool
Mayor p.m.
Fred Hoftinan
SCV6Ial
That is the amount of money avail-

ccMil19

· According to Sheriff Souisby,
Fry walked into the Carry Out
about 6 p.m. carrying a shotgun.
She reportedly had some words
with Hubbard and lhen fired tl!e
gun. The bullet struck Hubblnl m
the left shoulder area. Several -of
the people the!"' took the ~ from
· Fry, former wife of the VJCbm, the
sheriff said
Hubbard :was tran5!lO!"ed by ,the
Pomeroy Ulllt of lhe Metgs County 1
Emerg~ncy Se~vtcc to Veterans
Memonal Hosp1~ where he w~
treated before bemg .taken by .~t:li.copter to Grant Hospital.

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EPA conducts
landfill bearing
'

The Ohio Environmental Pro-

tection. Agenc
. y conducted a brief
hearing Monday night conccning
the American Electric Power's
applicati011 for a landfill to dispose
of coal COOibustion wastes.
About 10 members or the public
aucnded the one-hour mectina,
held at Kyger Creek Elementary
· School. The OEPA pvc 1 ~­
iation on landflll requlremenll lnd
then conduc&amp;ed 1 question and
answer session. ·
· Pollowina a short break, the
agency then opened the meedna for
public ,comment, but no oae c11oe
to 1peak on the record, aid 1eff
Rennie, AU Public Attain Man·

IF·

The poposed 225-acJC landfill
would be conltniCied 1 1/4 miles
northwut of tho Gavill Plant in
b.e,hhe and would hive lllaUl 14
years .....,;'ty. It would be 1111111 10
diapoiO of coal combuadon by·
lJ'nducll IUCh u uh and IC!Ubber

duda.

James SheeJS,' a lawyer ~senting the 20 defcadiiU. aid 1!is
appeal contends the ori&amp;inal aaplaints were void because theJ
were not notarized, as teqailed by
law.
Kessler said he was OOdl:emed
that the county might have to
refund lhousands of dollars to 1he
defendants if illolcs the appeal
"The county dOCID't l!i!ve it,"
Kessler saidofthemoney. .
Keasler said he bad 1D refile lbe
charges by today bec••w: of • twoyearstablteoflimilatious.
Letters explai · that there a defect in dlo o k l : IDC• . .•

Smtiael News Staff
The bid of Altier Complete Tree
Service of Nelsonville for removal
of several tr®s and stumps was
accepted at a meeting of Middleport Village Council Monday
night
•
The bid, $9.980 for the removal
or 19"1nles and seven sblmps, was
the only one received. Since the bid

1'he OBPA now bu 75 daya
from the April S pennlt IJIIIIi:ldou
nt1!1f dale 10 1Mw ,_..,: I
and meet with AEP ror
.

•

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--Local briefs----...
Man cited after accident
A charge of unsafe vehicle was fded against Allen Manley, 19, ;
of Bidwell Monday afternoon follawing.an ia:idcnt at the inlersec:.
lion of Mulbmy and Second Streets.
.
..
Pomeroy Police reported tlw Mantey's vehicle parked on Mul;
berry rolled backwards across Second Sueet and struck Illes ,
1993 Jeep owned by Gary Wolfe, 46, Racine. There was no
•
10 the Manley car, and light damage to the driver's side door of ·'
Wolfe vehicle.
:

Three injured in accident

:::

. A two vehicle accident Monday aftemoou in Olive Township· •
sent three people 10 lhe hospital, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stile :

Hitr:.
~~ytsell, 31, and his pusmga-.. ICaihleen M. .
Jcnnelle, 32, both of 52003 Joppa Road, Reedsville, lind Cbri8ti L. : ·

Hoffman, 22, I passenger of l'l!mela K. Hoftinan, 42, bolb of 37380 ;
Texas ROlli, Pomeroy, WCIC all lrlnSilOdDd by Mllip County Bmet- scn9 Medical Service ro
Memorial Holpltal.
·,
.They weftl all treated and releaaed, a holpilaliiJ'l• ~ .-14: :

vesenns

this --w..t".

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~ to the BGcii!ent report, l'ioif- W. northbound 00: : .: : ' : .

State ROUII'J 124 when abc turned left inlo the path of W1lylloll'« .:

IIOUthbound vehicle.

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· Hoffman was cited for failure to rield. Wbyuoll'a veblde q. •
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tained heavy, dllabling clan!qe and - towed from tho ~ :. . ,
Hoffman's vehicle sustained moderate
climap
and wu drivea.. :-. .,
.
'
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away.

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One-vehicle accident relH!_rted

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A Cincinnati ~·a wblcle ....a.J ........._..... S.. .
day afternoon in I 01111-.vebit:le l"fi+l'l in Columbia TOWillldp, lila •
·

Coati

n~• -JIIIt3

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The oei1v sentinel Page

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Com•nentary

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MtotaD_,.._.,,•

OJ. Oillo

asarTD MP'CI v•sott ARitA.

•
'-

w

L WIIHGETr
• 755

IMI

&lt;R&amp;M ij!!EBOEIJ.ICII

c

lEI I&amp;S OF a
-M ...,. -

a

«'ii
..,._ ....... 7
.,.....,...,.._ rn
-

MARGAllET I EHEW
Coalroller

.... a

1'boy llbould be leu t11ao 300
" D ediliilf, lllllilllllll be liped wilh aame,
1!10• .• l leaenwillbepublisbed.Letla'l

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--..-ponoaoliliu.

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Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
.,. 'DR •

F" Jl' d - [

5

. • d

Accu-Weatber•

5.,_
. I tS from Obio IICWS(II•

CHARLESTON, S.C. (NEA)Suppose your community was
about to be hit by a 1111111a1 di•""ef
and some supreme being showed
up to hold a public bearing on
whether you will be spared. What
would it be like? Probably much
like the hearing the Defense Base
Closure IIlii Realignment Commission recently held here.
.
Tbe downsized Navy of the
future will mainly berth at two
"supcrports'' -.. one on the East
Coast (Norfolk, VL) and one on
the West Coast (San Diego)- and
in a number of much smaller sateJ.
lite ports like Kings Bay. GL, and
Ingelside, Texas. Thts has left
Charleston, the country's third
largest naval base, as the odd one

Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. put ic
"We're a Navy town, we have
been one since the Revolution. We
thought that no community 'in

Robert}. Wagman

America has done more for the
Navy, nor has hail a beu.er relationship. Many of our people simply
don't understand why this is happening."
The recetll hearing was
Charleston· s one public chance to
try to prove the Navy's decision
wrong. Privately, the community,
its elected officials and some highIy paid consultants have been lobOUL
.
bymg the commission and its slaff
· The Navy is proposing to shut for months, and this is likely to
dowilthe ChariCSIDn Naval Station. continue .until the commission's
the Charleston Shipyard. tile Naval fmal vote on JuJy 1.
.
·
Electronic Systems Engineering · , By law, the Navy had 10 follow
Center
(NAVELEX),
the eight specifiC criteria in making its
Charleston Naval Hospital, the decisions on which basea to close.
Naval Supply Center and the To remove a base from the Navy's .
Defense Dislri.bution Depot.
closure list. the commission must
The Navy's propos.al has find "substanlial deviation" from
stunned tbe town and state. As those criteria: Thus CbarleSIDn's

plea was at once highly technical
- showing how the "Navy failed to
follow the criteria - yet. at the
same time, very emolional.
"If this happens.'' Riley told
the commission, "it will rip the
CCOIIOIIliC heart out of this community. It will cause a depression lhal
will take generations to recover ·

•

IToledo! TZ' 1

White's panel was followed.by
otbcn arguing the Navy made sirn·
iiar critical errors in the decision· ·:
malting process in deciding to close · ' ·
each of the other ~ facili· ;
lies. ~h of the panels, in tum, "
gave the commisston a suggested "
list of alternative bases. ancHacililies to cloae that would make more
sense mililarily. and would save the • ·
taxpayers money.
When all - said and done. the . ••
commissionen promised nothing
{IUblicly, only that they woul!l
study' all of Charleston's data ,.,
closely. Mayor Riley Jli'OIIOUnced ·
himself satisfied with tbc two days
of. hearings, saying, "I think the ,..
whole matter has been reopened ,
and is back on the table."
, ..
Privllldy, even before the hearinjl was over, members·ofthe com- •:
mwion's SU!If were already deep_ .·•
in an analysis of the data ....
Charleston had gathered. As ooe •
noted: "They have made a very ·'.
compelling case. We're. so!ng to . ;
have to go back to tbo Navy and ... ,
ask IKliiiC very tough qucalionr ..
•;
Robert W~~p~~an Is aiJIIdlcat- . 3
eel writer ror NewJpaper Enter- '·'
prile "-iatloll.
' ,.
. .' ..

100 days vs. 43 gridlock gremlins
The poetic parallel was 10o ~
to resist - a comparison of · ton's f1.!1ll00 days, battling Senate
Republicans from without and
Leon Panella from within to "The
Charge of the Ught Brigade.''
"Into the jaws of filibuster
lniO the mouth of defeat
Rode the president ...
GOP to the right of him
Panella to the' left of him
Tbe media in front of him
Vulley'd and th~ . . , ..
SIUbbomly defending a m1ilor
bill
Fi~hling as if 'twas Bunker Hill
Clinton had blundered."
Franklin D. Roosevelt was just
as stubborn. But his "first 100
days" succeedell in establishing a
legislalive benclunalt by which all
future presidencies - Democratic
and Republican - would be measured.
The parallels between the
dencies of Roosevelt and C inion
arc many.
Like Roosevelt, Clinton was
swept into office with a powerful
mandate -a Democratic ~~
with a Democratic House and a
Democratic Senate.
Like Roosevelt. Clinton faced a

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northe8IL

0
so::~t!~~~~~r
~~ ~;~~:~~
Wednesday will belp to hold tern·

•lcolumbusl·w I

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~ down

s0 ihat high readmgs will be mostly in ihe 70s.
Some cooler 'temperatures are
expected later in the week.
The nalld-higb temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 92 degrees in 1896
· while the record low was 33
degrees in 1966.
'
Sunset tonight will be at 8:35
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday at 6: 19
am. and llllllSCl will be at8:36 p.m.

W.VA. .

economic cri- tative high by appointing the m~t lost ground under Reagan a11d . • ,
•
interncial, and miXed-gender Cabt· Bush.
But the cruel paradox is defmed' l~
But unlilce Clinton, Roosevelt net in American hisrory.
did not !)ave to ride intQ the valley
The 13th Democratic president ~ what Senate Majority Leader ·
did keep faith with his polilical her- . eorge MileheU called the "spec- ' '
ilage by gelling the_ Family Le.t:ve . raculat Irony" of tbc 43 GOP~- ,
Ac.t passed and lifung the restnc- lock gremlins voting apinsl · • '
of Iegislalive defeat ~ on one lion against any federally funded ton's $19 billion economic siimu ~Ius legislation, but
ago, ' ·•
side by a group of . P gridlock clinic mentioning abortion.
for a similar
introgremlins and sandba~ged on the
The youthful Rbodes scholar did
other side by a high- vel agency slamp his economic imprimalur on due by Ronald Reagan. Those
his swiftly passed budget and his arc S)JCI("tamlar phonies.
head.
Bob Dole •s partisan rhetoric
If Clinton's grin-in-your-face- $500 billion deficit-reduction prOmay
contain a smidgen of truth: .... ,
but-stab-you-in-your-back budget gram.
director, Leon Panetta, is a loyal
Clinton did attempt to establish The American people didn't vote
member of the team, then Bob a new national morality of compas- for tax increases. But neither did
· Dole should be invited to deliver sion by pushing the military to lift they vote for a Repu,blican-led
a!lministralion, a Republican-led
. the keynote address at the 1996 its ban on gays.
House of Representatives, a
Democratic National Convention.
Clinton did negotiate the begin- Republican-led
Senate nor a
Panetta unapolofelically sabo- ning of a new foreign policy with
RepubliCan-led
aborting
of the peo- ~
tages the president s agenda, and his support of Boris Yeltsin and
pie's
willmasq~
under ·
it's "candor." Attorney General ' offer of $1.6 billion in aid. ·
that
legislative
hoax
call
a
fiJi~
Janet Reno stands courageously
And be did dare to pmpose for buster.
•
against a murderous religious the fust time in presidential hisrory
Decades from now, histDry will .
fanatic in an attempt to resolve a that a ·c omt:he!Jsive national
be far more kind 10 Bill Clinton's -crisis not of her making, and critics health~src p be coacted.
creative
I00 clays than it will
begin muttering sotto voce about
Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., be to thefust
obscen~, obstructionist
her "resignation."
has eotbusiaslinlly hailed tbis
But that's only a small part of "new polilical diRcuon for Ameri- tactics of the 43 GOP gridlock
'
the cruel paradox of Bill Clinton's ca." For the first time in 12 yeatJ, gremlins.
I&gt;~
Cbuck
Stone
Is
a
sradicated
first 100 days. First of all, this this new direction welcomes writer lor Newspaper nterprlse
youthful, idealistic president did women, blacks, Hispanics and ordi~ AsiiOdadoa..
"
raise democracy to a new represen- . 11.JY:t,Jllid!lle-class families, who

Chuck Stone

;!l;'

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the 60s and 705 in upper New En...-~ •
land. across the Great Laku, in the :

-=

Rocky Mountains, the southern . ·
Plains, the Missiai · valley and ·
along the Pacific
a- 100 iii :
the extteme Southwest; and in the • ,
80s l!nd 9ns tluwgbolll the rest of
the Lower 4S a.es.
·
The nation's high Monday "II! ~
lOS degrees at Gila Bend. Ariz. • •

Divers search for missing victim
CLEVELAND (AP) - Pivers
. have been unable so far in their
search to find the owner of a pleasure boat that exploded on the
Cuyaho$a River, ldlling three peopie and mjuring several olhen.
Divers from the Ohio Division
of Watercraft and the Cleveland
Fire Department searched near the
dock where a 33-foot Chris-Craft
cabin cruiser exploded, c:lllll!ibLltlfe.._
and sank Simday.

The search was expected to mother and grandparents were .•
resume !Delay.
killed .
The burnt-out hull of the boat
The child's father also was
was raised Monday. The boat, a aboard but was missing, police
1985 model with twin inboard said. ,
gasoline engines, was docted next
The dead were identified by the
1(1 Shooters restaurant in the Flats,
Cuyahoga County coroner's office
an entertainment district near the . as Marla Hoffman, 29, of Qeveconvergence of the river and Late land, and her parents, Penzil and
Erie.
Nancy Moss, ages 62 and 5 , of ·
A 9-montli-old child and his .Grafton in Lorain County. . '
Ie were rescued. But the child's
Cuyahoga County
liz: '
. abeth K. Balraj said Monday
)

Ohio Valley Supermarkets, Inc. ::~~~=·· ~~: r/&lt;
to open new store in Oak l;lill · ~~~r:::~n;~~;; .i:
The baby, Charles Hoffman It..

Weather
rain is 70 pen:ent
Extelaclecl foreealt:

Soutb·Cenlrll Oblo
Tonight, variable cloudines.s
with a chance of showers IIlii thundersrorms. Low around 60. Ollnce
of rain iS SO pertent Wednesday,
showers and thunderstorms likely.
High in the mid-70s. Chance of

nunday tltroup Saturday:
A chance of showers and thundersiOOIIS tluou&amp;h the period Lows
in tJ1e 40s. Highs mosdy in the 60s.

'

Ohio Valley Supermaikels,lnc., ·
of Gallipolis has confumed it will
open an 18,000 sq~ foot Foodland Supennarket in Oak Hill. A
ground· breaking ceremony was
held Wednesday, May 5, and construclion will proceed immediately.
The new stDre wiii include a full

--Area death~--·- - ·::~:!e~ ~=.:~=

new, local super!J\arltet which will
offer ahem the.variety they w-"t at
a yery comJM;Iilive retail. The store
wtll be supplied by Weuerau, West
Vitginia Division;·&amp;'Super-Value
Company, which is the large~t
Independent Retail Grocery Suppb·
er in the United S~. This will be

sllld ·

.:

Tom Slavin, another Million Air ·
and froun, and fresh meats.
will employ local people which ly 400 people upon opening the ~fman and his wife were
Preceding her in death was one
Bo~ Eastman, president of the
helps us become a part of the com· Oalii Hill SIDIC, including the family
May~l Clevenger
fam~-owned independent chain of munity we serve. We strive to be involvement of Bob and Sheila ried liboard the Plane Crazy IV in ·
brother.
Also surviving arc her husblncl, Supermarkets stated that he is community-minded and involved Eastman; along with sons, Brent. July 1991.
Maysel Clevenger, 61, of New Elton G. Clevenger; one claughr.er proud--to offer area consumers a in many benefit.activities . Out who is vice president and director
Hospital and child welfare om,:. '
Haven, W.Va, clled Monday, May (Charlotte A. Roush of !'lew
of sales and promotions, and cials said the baby's maternal ,
10, '1993 at Holzer Medical
Haven), one son (Larry F. Cle0C
S••0
Kevin, vice president and director uncle, Richard Moss of LaGran&amp;ll: •
She- born on Oct 13, 1931 venger of Southgate, Mich.), five.
•
of pricing. The company is based had asked abour obtaining custody, · ·
in Onna, W.Va. to Delpl_lia (Cot· . gta!ldcbilden, two step-p-andchilContiliued from page 1 ·
in Gallipolis and has Foodland of the boy, and other relatives also
trell) Panon of Orma aild the Iaie dren, two ilisten (Naoma Port« of
Gtillia-Meigs Post of the State Highway PatroiiCJ)Iirted.
stores· in Gallipolis (2), Pomeroy, ~e exp-essed interest In acloptiJJ · :
Simon G; Panon.
According 10 the report. Drenia M. Banta, 45, Pickway Drive,
Trimble, Wellston, and Point Pleas· htm. ·
·
Onna ·and Juanila Byard or AmsShe was a retired employee of terdam, Ohio) and several nieces · was eastliound on State Rou te 32 when her .veh'ace
I went off the
"It's SO sad that the baby WOI('t • .
ant, W.VL (2).
the Lakin Hospital Nursing Ser· and nephewl.
'
right side of the wet road and struck a guard rail. The patrol listed
Eastman emphasiwl Foodlands ever know his birth parmts, but it's
vice. She attended BICbtel United
unsafe
speed
as
the
contributing
factor.
are
owned and operated lndepen- wonderful to know that be has~ ~ ·
The funeral wiD be Thunday at
Methodist Church, was a member 1:30 p.m. at Foglesong Funeral
No injurieS were reponed and no citations were issued. The vehident of one another, The eslimaled pie who care for him," said hOspi: ·:
of Orma United Metbodist Oturth, Home in Mason, W.VL The Revs.
cle was driven from the scene. ,
opening of the new store which tal spokesman Jim Gosky.
..
the New Haven Women's Club1 Joann Home and Eldon Shingleton
will be named Acorn Plaza FoodA crane mounted on a barge~ · · :
Clifton Masonic l,.odge, Order or will oftlcale. Burial will be It SWI·
land ill be late 1993 NUII!;ng con brought in to remove what -- .:
the ·Eastern Star Chl)lter No,' 1S7, rise Memorial Gardens.
structi'on problems. &amp;Piance
·remained of the boat from the· ·.
chief of the New Haven RCICDC
Friends may call tbe (uneral
jobappllcationsandinterviewswill water. The charred and mud-coV- .
Squad for several _).'eatS, a New home Wednesday from 6to 9 p.m.
be announced later.
ered hull was the largest singhi " ·
Haven Town Council .-.bet and
Reclpes-pt
The tournament is limited to eight ·
piece recovered.
.
In lieu of flowcn, contribulMms .
a Jefferson Award recipient in may be made to the New Haven
Ken Elvey, district aupervisQf ''
The Rut land Volunteer ,fire teams . .Individual trophies will be
1992 for volunteer service;
Department Aux!Jiary iHolleeli;ng given for fusl place and second and
for the Division of Wateraaft, laid :
Emergency Squad.
recipes to publish a community· third place teams will receive team
the wreck will be analy~ fot ' : ·
cookbook. Those wanting to sub-_ trophies. The cost is $45 and two •es~nond
clues to lbccause ofthee~tolosion~· · ·.· ·
mit a favorite reC:ipe sboWd do s6 balls. Call Roger Willford at· 667- ' ' y
·
Investigaton believe the blast
_,_...;..
:."!""
,
repo~t·----....._ by
May 25 to Kimberly Willford, 3653, Danny Spencer at 667-3342
•
was accidental. The presence
Box 11, Rutland. Ohio 45775..()()11 . or Willie Holben at98?-2931. .
CQ S
gasoline in the bilge, or bottom, of '
82.85; &amp;Ciect 72.()().78.00.
. cafyc
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) thein
to
Marga'et Edwards.
the boat could have caused ll'n·· · ·
Sllughw helfm: choice 7S.()().
Direct tivestDck prices a n d s
742-2103 for further informaOES to meet
Units of the Meigs County explosion when the boat was startat selected bu~~nts
. 80.00; seiec:t .62.00-78.00.
lion.
The
Harrisonvi
11e
OES
wthill
.
Emergency
Medical Service "ed.
· : :,
by the Ohio
ent of
Cows: 1.00 to 4.00 higher; all
30 p.m. at e responded to nine .calls for assismeet
Tuesday
at
7:
COWl 60.00 and dowil.
cullliiC:
slated
masonic hall. Ritualistic work will lance on Monday and early TuesBanows and gilts: fully steady;
Bulb: hiafler; all bulla 64.75 and · The.Tournament
Tuppen
Plains
Baseball
be exemplified.
clay morning.
,
- •
., .
demand moderate.
.
• dowil.
and
Softball
Association
is
sponOn
Monday
at
10:14
a.m.
the
CLEVELAND
(AP)Hen:~
'· ·
u.s. 1-3. 230-260 lba., couniJy . Feeder caaJe.lJteady.
soring
a
baseball
tournament
for
Grange
to
meet
Pomeroy
unit
went
to
Nye
Avenue
Monday
night's
Ohio
Louery
·.~ ·
points, 44.SQ'4S.SO; plants 4S.25Yearling iteers 65.00-90.00;
,
Star
Grange
and
Star
Junior
for
Keith
R.
Day
who
was
transselections:
'
·
."
·
boys
ages
9-10
0!'
Ma~
22
and
23.
·
46.2S, afew 47.00.
. yearling heifers 63.00:82.00.
Orange will hold fun night and a potted 10 Veterans Memorial HosPick 3 Numbers: 2-4-0
Steer
oalves
65.00-130.00;
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
otluck
supper
Saturday
at
6:30
'tal
Pick 4 Numbers: 6-3-5-0
P
pl .
..
heifer calvea63.()().99.00
COIDIIry points. 45.50-45.75.
p.m.
AU
members
attend.
At
1:40
p.m.
the
Middleport
tinit
The
Ohio
Lottery
will
pay
Olit
· ·
·Sheep
and
lambs:
treRII
.
not
Receapts Monday 3,800. Estiwent
to
South
Third
for
Ben
Batey.
$458,235.50
to
winners
in
Monavailable; choice wools SO.OO·
mated ~ipts Tuesday 6,500.
Conlilued From page 1
. Lamb weigb-ia set
He was taken to Veterans.
clay's Pick 3 Numbers daily
Pricea (rom The Produccn Live- 67.50; cbolce cliJ)S. 110 .qm; feedThe mayor's report showed
The market lamb weigh-in for
At 3:16p.m. the Olive TownSales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled ;.
er ,lambs 67~00 and do.wn; old receipts of $5,386.90 for April.
stDCt Association:
.
1993
·
4
-H
and
FFA
market
lamb
ship
Fire
Department,
Orange
$1.230,119.50.
.
, sheep 29.50 and down.
Cattle: Slllldy 10 2.00 higher.
According to the' report of exhibitors will be May 22 from 9- Townshi(: Rescue, Tuppers Plains.
In the other daily game, Pick ·4
SlauRhr.er steen: choice 76.00Clerk-Treasurer Tcri Hockman, II a.m. at the Meigs County Fair· Syracuse and Racine squads, Numbers players wagered' •;
there was a balani:e of $34,074.10 grounds. Any 4-H Or FFA member responded to a two-car motor vehi- $260,930.50 .and will share :
in the general fund at the end of planning to show market lambs at cle accident on Route 124 at $58,400;
. ,.
. April. ReceJp!s for the month the 1993 Meigs County Fair must Reedsville. Thelfuppers Plains unit
The jackpot for Wednesday's
' totaled $120,248.09 with disburse- register and pay picture money in uansponed Kathleen Jennelle to S~~r Louo drawing is 'worth $4_·. ·•
menrs of $96.406.56.
.
the amount of $10 per animal at Veterans. The Syracuse unitarans• million.
·: . ~ ·
Balances in lbc various funds . that time. Members may only seD pbrted Roben WhytseD to Veter' ..,
were $2,774.S2, fire equipment; one project through the sale. Each ans. The Racine unit IDOk Kristy
•
$23,744.51, fire truck; $26,967.24, member may take one wether Hoffman to Veterans.
..,~A,;..,.,~.,
public uansportation; S359.5S, and/or one ewe. Further informa·The Middleport unit, at 5:04
/He- ··~
.. '
water. system improvement; lion may be obtained by contacting p.m.. went to Overbrook Center for
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) lllliOIIQCed the strike lllinst select- $4,S83.3(), Water fund; $2,370.91,
Haggeny at the Meigs County Flora Edmond. She was taken to
,., ____ L
- United Mine Workers Pnsidet1t ed operations of No. 3U.S. produc- sanu.y sewer; $570.11, recreation; . Chip
Extension
Office,
99Ui696.
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital.
I~
Ricbanl Trumka called 3,100 WJ- ~ AMAX Coal Co.. l.e.lgler Coal $2,04!1. 78, cemetery; $25,971.62,
The Pomeroy umt. at 6:20p.m.,
nois an4 Indiana minen out on : Co;;:'!:·=~ with the waCer meter trusts; $1,244.9'7,
Dance planned
was called to Lasley and Mulberry
&gt;
By
strike, then iaued I warning.
• ODNR W1terways; $2,853.41,
' ,.
Tbcrc
wiU
be
a
dance
at
the
Rut,
for
Michael
R.
Hubbard.
He
was
"Odien will follow in ihe clays · Bituminot11 Coal Operaton Alloci- )S$JO 2 fund; $16,4S4,2S, revolv'
Americin LegiOn Hall on Sat- aaken to Veterans. At 7:25 p.m.
Dave
and weeks to come if the ... contpl· Ilion; a b8rgaining P,JP, thlr rep-- ing loan; $15,754.25, refuse; and land
urday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. with Hubbard was II'8IISpOlled by Ufe·
'r'J
nics don't come to their Nnses," rcsenta 12 of the nation 1 Jaraest $2,566.88, Betsy Ross Fund.
Graft
music by Pure Country Band. Pub- nighi to Grant Medical Center in
"•..' J1
Funds showing deficits at the lie invited.
Trumka said .· Monday as he · , coal&amp;=irs bepn Nov. 6 and
Columbus.
of
~' 'tl'
end
of
the
month
were
streei
!flaiR·
At7:21 p.m. the Middleport unit
,broke off just before a )IICt &amp;ten- tenance,.$6,753.13; lllini-aolf,
'
Rltl.d
•. .I'
Aa5oclalion
to
meet
went
to
Nonh
Second
for
Brian
'
sion expired May 3. No new nego- $764.62; economic de.velopment,
,. '
The
Ohio
Valley
Draft
Horse
Hayes
who
was
taken
lo
Veterans.
,.
Furalttre
.tiations had been JCheduled.
The Daily Sentinel
Arts Councd, $339.54; and Mule Association ,will meet
,. '
The Rutland unit went to Salem
1
The contract covers 60,000 min- $3,976.32;
CUSPS 111·110)
and litter conuol, $443.84.
,.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Street at 9:37 p.m. for Lena Car,
ers in
Ru111or
lo
one
lhlng
lhllt
gala
·
:
;
Chester
Volunteer-Fire
Fire
Chief
Jeff
Darst's.
reporr
Depart.
~liahect every ' aftemoon, Monday
penter. She was transported to Vet. · The union says itS chief concern showed that Mkk!Iepon department
thicker
u
Ill•
aprud.
,
U.._to Friday. 111 c-t 81...._ ~­
ment
New
members
welcome.
erans.
is providing job aecurity for ita
* * *·
II
Ohio by tho Ohio V.lloJ .....- ..
This morning (Tuesday) at
Company/Multimedia lac., Poll•"'
'
members,
who
work
at mines that answered I total of 59 calls. That
The cli-oty thing .,._ "'•
OhiO 48.,., I'll. 1193-21116. 8oc&gt;Ond ....
incl•tded
eight
fire
and
•ue
calla
12:47
a.m.
the
Syracuse
unit
went
the union says h1ve an averaJe
hiVIng~ 111 1ttorney who kno••
poltlfe Plfd at PomlraJ, Ohio.
and 51 eiroeopf medical calls.
to Third Street for Albert Roushel.
· remaining life span of IICIVeD yan.
the ... •• hoiVIng wllo
Nine accidents were investigatMember: Tilt
.tile
He was !&amp;ken to Holzer Medical
knowe tha(udOe.
.
Trumka
aeeks
an
end
to
the
' ,.
Ohio ~-lion, .No~anal
• ••
Am Ele .Power....... ............. 36
Center.
~ !mown • ''double-.._· ed by Midd~ Police during the
Mvort!oinc .,._.to~... Bnnbam
NewiJIOpor l!o._, 733 Thmt A...,aa,
Ashland Oii...................;;...2S 7/8
At 6:54 a.m. the Salem TOWIL· , Adventure lo the -ult of poar · •
mg," in which unionized compa- month wid\ 3 amsts being made.
New York, N.wYort 10017.
plll'lnlnQ
' i.
Men:hanl
police
coi1ections
IOialed
·
AT&amp;:T
................................
56
1/8
nies establish non-union aister
sbip Fire Department responded ""' ·
$76,
parking
meter
collections
.,
Bank
One.
...
:
......................
52
314
a
vehicle
fii'C
on
Briar
Ridge
Road.
operations, transferring reserves
POS'J'IdASTJ!JI, Send. cha- to
F11n111a11 to employee: "It fln.ttr
The Deily Sonijoel. 111 Court St.,
came
to
$641.50,
and
369
parki!lg
Bob
Evans
........................
.!
T
S/8
The
vehicle
was
owned
by
Keitll
and sales contracu to tbe nondawned on me why you hne •
''
Pumii'OJ, OHio 4&amp;769.
tickets were wriuen dunng the
Chatming Shop.................. I5
Oiler.
·
union
operatlona.
pertec:t llllely record. You dc;&gt;n'l
,.
8UIICJUPI10N IIAT£8
Chnip Industries................. I3 1/2
The operators have said they month.
do lllylhlng."
87 Carrlw or Motor Ro•te
•
Attending the meeting were
City Holding...................... 24 .
•••
One Weet. ..........................................$1.80
want to llncla way to make operaMayor
Hoffman,
Clerk-Treasurer
Federal
MOI!ul
....................
20
518
One M'"'lll·"····--------------·----·-··--·---·.t6.115
tiona more efficient and beller able
One Ye.v..........................,........- --tU-20
Goodyear 1'lR ................ :.38 1/8
to compete with low-coat non- Hockman, Council members.
81NGU: COPll'
Lands
Bnd..........................32
Dewey
Horton,
James
Clatwordly,
Pille&amp;
.
union arid foreip )II........
n.n,...., ...................................- 28 Ceolo .
Umiled
Inc...........,........... 22 718
Paul
Oonrd,
IIICI1ack
Slluerfield,
Until Monday, both lidea !lad
Multimedia
Inc..................33 314
Bruce
Fidler
of
the
Middleport
FREE
.
s.bocri.....,,... '-lJ!nclo..., tho ..m.
declined to comment on apeciflca
Point
Bancolp
..................... l4
• tni.J ....., te
lo Tha
Bolrd of PubliC Alflln, and Toni
of
tbo
neaocladonl•
'
Di.. ll'
t CWt
n.n,. S.tt.l • a thNI. lla or 12
ReltiUlariL ..................7(32
,..,.., bMtO.' Cndll wm bo . . - - .
Tram&amp; ar:cund the G)lllll•a of Daaley of the Mldd1eprn Commu- Rlx
Wlllt ... hi lillt . . .
Reliance Eleclric...............:20 718
•
IIChweeJL
·blrllitiinl ill bacl faidl, I8Yinla.abe nll)' AIIOclalion.
Robbins&amp;:Myen
................
17
1/4
Sllle,LYIIJIII•DIAit.
•
No lpd,. by ...0 pennlllod .1•
compatlfol "bl¥0 failed" to
Shoney'slnc. .....................20 718
...... whml . _ .. me. to
ldalowledp tbo Jeaililucy of our
n•~~~ny
Star Bant·....... ...................36 1/2
••oiloblo. ...............~~a..
·roriiHI!'~_:.IIOedl. • a1oae provido
Mil stlecl.. Mlwt.., IS.:
Wendy lnt'I............ ,........... I3 318
•
WorlhingiDI! Ind................26 314
--·Co.i·~ aa.84 ,
u .....
13 w.............................................
1bo111u
P. Hol'flnan, I)IDiramail . VeteriDI M-orlal
7
~OOMS
II
WMIIIOUSU
Stock
reports
are
tbe
10:30
211 ......................................... ~3.1 6 ' . for the openton'IIOIOii•lni comMONDAY ADMISSIONS •
52 W...._o;";;jd;)i jp'~---SM. 'M
il.m. quotes provided b)'
.
miuee,
ilald
the
compUIOI
proJ1ea
Baley, Middleport; Lena Clr·
0
Kemper Securltlea, lac., o
lt. 124 ........ ...
~ = ::::;:::::::::::;::::::.- :==
.::,~
DlSCHA~GBS • GaUIPQIII.
a
BCOA llld 11011-BCOA """'h... · None.
·
742-UII

•'

c.er.

mar:·:

L / b·ne
• /l

of

Meigs announcem.ents

EMs units

to

nJne

ll

o( -

Lottery numbers :&lt;.'

Nelsonville....

game: :

UMW says more
-strike·s in store ·

:;!
.

1

ol h

Why America confronted the Serbs
· A careful mix of diplomacies- quiet diplomacy with his decision ment for action ca~e from none watch the eth~ic clean.sin,. We ,
quiet and loud-has carried Presi- to use mill~ air power, if neces· other lhan Ronald Reagan's secre-- know how qulckly we d nse to
'
dent Clinton to the defining sary, Karadzic, signed an interna· tary of state, George Shultz. On acSeur·onbs wifethosere
nambeie'dng lilunlered
baum bory
0lofllbaWII
0
momentofhisroleas world!·-'-. u·onal
f
ABC's "Good Morning America"
paper
9
peace.
Fet'n'"·rg
or
Weinstein;
And we
He got himself to the right
last monlh, he veritably shouted
""
place: a resounding "No!" 10 Serwith rage as he declared: "Ethnic know how quickly the British fot- "' .
bian ethnic cleansin$., backed up by
cleansing is just genocide, and they
-;n=~~tty~:.~ifg
a vow to use fon:e, if needed. ·
(the Serbs) have done it They have
.,
· And he got there just at lbc right
The world, of 'course, ii:nows mwdered, raped -1 don't know clclmsed were named McMillan or
,
lime. Afterw~ ~post-inaugural betler than to value those words what iatakes to get us worried Thaldleror~orHunl.
;
to-in~ and fro.ing, America's new from a leader who lives by lies . . about something .... Stop, stop this
Now as we wait to see if our
,
presadenl worked boldly to give (On NBC's "Today Show," killing and murder and genocide new world leader, Prcsidtnt Clin- . ~
peace a real chance. Fir81, he Kan~dzic, the neopeacenik, insist- and rape. Stopl"
. ton, has pushed the Balkans into a
worked quietly to get Russia's ed: "We don't attack Muslims.
On May Day, Clinton took his lasting peace. we ought to be guid- . ,
embattled president. Boris Yeltsin, Muslims attack us.")
loud stand. The United States ed oot by the words of the British " :
to take a Stand against the munlerAnd speaking. of the world, stands ready to meet Sedlian inhu- foreign secraary but b)' those of a · ·
ous policies of Ruasil"s one-time those Europeans who consider manity with American air power, German Protestant mtnister. The
client. Sedlia, and its never-to--be- themselves to be among its leaden, and appuently stands willing to Rev. Martin Niemocller, wr!hng in ~· .
ll11Sied president. Slobodan MiJose.. morally and monetarily, have now ann the vinllally defenaeleas Mus· another time, sounded a clarion call - ·' :
vic.
been yanked abruptly into reality lima ~ they can fight their own · for today;
' ·'
. Then Milosevic, seeing that by America's youn$ president. The '-nleson the tp'IIUIId.
"In Clermany the Nazis came
:
even his one friend in the world wile heads of Britain, Ftance, GerThe ever-tremulous Europeans first for the communists, and I . ' i
was no longer in his corner and many had been relatively ~ntent worry that arminalhe Muslims didn't l)leak up becaiiiC I Wlllll't a .•.• :
fearing the effecu of a choking fcir a year to counter Serbia's may Iesd to a wider war that will communist Then they Clllle for abe •· '
economic embargo, sent 1 ICIIier to unspeakable ethnic cleansing of apdld throu8b the IIalklnl.
JeW., and I clidn't apelk UJI heCMtse ' l
his own client. Bosnian s,ro leader Muslims, which was happening , Juat before the peace JIIPer was ·I wam'ta1ow. Theta the)' C1111C1 for . , :
Radovfn Karadzic. Milosevic'a right in Europe's backyard, with · aigned, Britilh Foreip Secretary the trade unlonlsta, and I didn't "" ;
mesnp was, i1J effect. that the war shouted protests of"Tik. tst."
Dnolll• Hnnli'OICI in Parliament I(! .peg up becaiiiC I w1111't alrlde 1
he'd 011CC fueled had run its CO!I'IC.
Even as the Clinton jldminiatta- dec:IIN lis mYQIIIc view lhll ratio- . Cunlltohnollaltc.a11tbeu~ r:~d~~:n:.!! ~pe
l,
And, after Clinton followed tllat lion debated, the stronsest argu- nalizes Cklil'lf"'ili&gt;llilil&amp; wliile Mus•
· ..•
lima are ' aliuahtered. Hurd beciUIICI I wu • l'rotearanL Theil , ·;
declare4:. "111c wont or a11 worlcla · they came ror ~. and by that .time ', :
would be half mesiurea in 11o1111a there wu .110 one loR to speak for
,
:
'Thouaht for T~: "Goveinment. in the last lllllysla. iJ orpnlzed wiUcb lllved the conaciences with- -· me."
,
Mlrtll.&amp;c•r• Ia uJIIdlcraled '' :
opinion."Wheee there 11 Hale or 110 publiC oplaioll. there iJ likely 10 be bid out saving livea." .
:No the ·worst of all worlds wrllilr IDi' NIWiplptr Ellterprfle , '
government, which sooner or later bocomolllllOCralk: govemmenL "· ·
would" to do IIDihing but lit and AIIOdiM
•
William Lyon M&amp;bnzie Kina. Canadiln 11 s 'lnll (I874-1950).

Martin Schram

•

'l

-,..,,.omii$e
.,..
4'J;.

• ... .And ciJ

:............

~

,_I""":: JJI:IU... ---

•

~

........~

.,·compere on a .level

'

.

.

•
'

'

-.

-

.

.v

::se

I

,

·
·
th ·
enzil ·~'Bud" Mou, 24ndr.
mam purpose IS to setVe e con ~~~~· was in critical condition' H
sumer their needs, in a pleasant,
.
c!e&amp;n all!losphere at the,~&lt;!west poll·
live Oenise Reeves
stble pnce. We emphastze a low divers. were searching for CharleS
everyday price program and an ~flipresiden~.46i:CMi!"'i!:~~~ ~
ex'!emelh aJ.gressive weekly ad. land, an aircraft servicing compmiy
Bemg a amily-owned, local com- at Burke Lalcefront Airport. He alSo . •
pany, Foodl8nd will be VCI] sensi- is a partner in the com)lllny, saicl •.

the:S=Y~~~;'Our SIDrc tiv~~~~~:ioy near·

Livestock

~epublican-caused
SIS.

votinJ

scalta-ed wet weather possible ·More rain fell in the MississipPi today. The region has been espeIDnight.mainly in 1011thern Ohio.
Valley and the southern Plams
cially sbmy since Friday.
A second cold front will move early today, prompting flood
The Rocky Mountain region,
aouth aaoas Obio Wednesday. Wet watches across the 1/Cilher-weary
whtch had snow and cold rain
weather possible ~¥Ver much of the region. Temperatures were mostly
through last week, was warming up
stale btl apia much more likely in . warm elsewhere.
!Delay, with highs eX)iCcted 10 be as
10111hem Ohio.
Severe thunderstorms overnigh!
much as 30 degrees above normal.
. Sunshine will very from a mix caused damaging winds and large
Summery temperatures also
of clouds and sun in the south and hail from Wisconsin to l.ouisianL
were forecast alona the East Coast
aouthwelt to mostly sunny in the The rain this morning was expected · and in the Pacific tb:thwest.

1

about the impact the closures
would have on the swe. "Benefits
to the unemployed and their dependents could rop S1 billion ... while
state revenue lost would be $185
million in a total state budget of
ooly $1.7 billion. This will cause a
deprqsion berc, not I recession."
While the emotional issues were
clear. Charleston will ultimately
win or lose on the merits of its
complex technical irgunlents. •
Some of the evidence it presented , ,

from.'·
.
He went on to &amp;plain that if the
Navy leaves, 18,380 direct jobs and
anotlla- 20.000 indirect~ will be
~ l
lost. The lOial cumulative job loss was Slartling.
The community's case to save 1
would addjlp to 27 percent of the •
jobs in the three-county area the' Naval Station was )lllliiCIIICd by •
around Charleston. Because the 1 panel of n:lired Naval offteerS led
average Navy salary is $~,600, as by Capt Robin White, a former :
compared to the commuruty aver- . base commander.
:
age sallll)' ofabout $18,000, the
"We believe the Navy's data. i$ • ..;
closings would eliminate approxi- fatally nawed,'' White told the
mardy one out ~every three dol- commissioners, aild then he and
laB now in the local economy.
several other fonner high-ranking
"This will wrea1c havoc on our officers spent more than a hour
community." said Riley. "This detailing an ~g list of_ ll_lllllr• • •
community will suffer an economic ent errors, omtsstons or mtsmterimplosion if this goes tluough. Its pretalions that led to the Navy's
devastalion will be greater than any {lecision 10 cloae Charleston rather
na111111 disasw I could imagine.'·
than other bases.

At the same time Gov. Carroll
Campbell told the commission

...
••
•• ••
Rain forecast for Southern Ohio tonight .....•-• .
Jl• Tbe Auodlted Prell
Around tbe nauon ·
to turn into more storms later
Highs IDday were expected in
.

IICH.

Charleston fights Navy base closings

111 C-Itt ltteet

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesdlly, May 11, 1993

.

The Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, May 11 1 1993

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~ports
.

The Daily.Sentinel

Erving, Walton, Meyers among
new Basketball HOF inductees

Tuesday, May 11, 1993
• Page-4

'

By.TRUDY TYNAN
and liale guys Could do."
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) · While Erving, 42, can still dunk
Julius Erving, still able to dunt . in lunchtime games, Walton, 40,
during lunchtime pictu:f games, · walks wilb pain. Forced to wear
and Bill Walton, force to wear sneakers wuh his suit Monday
S!leakers wilb his snit because of because his surgc~an'cd feet
swollen feet, wc:re inducted iniOibe sweU too much for
.
·
"My carecC was one of fMtraBasketball Hall of Fame on Mon·
day.
tiQn and disappointment, which
Also enshrined were Walt Bel- mate~ being here today more ~­
Iamy, Dan Issei, Dick ~(Julre, cia!," he said. "To .IICC my hfc
Calvin MUI'Dlty, Ann Me:,:ers, and come back together in this ~lace
Ulyana Senlfc&gt;nova. a 7-foot sw where basketball began is like a
on two Soviet Olympic women •s dream come true."
teams.
'
Walton led UCLA to two
Erving, the gravitY-defying Dr. NCAA champiooships hitting 21 of
J. who'took the game above the riJil 22 shots agamst Memphis Slate in
with his dazzling dUnks, ,.....ai!M he lbe 1973 championship game. ln
wasn't even good enough to make 1977, he led the Portland Trail
his high scliool team on Long Blazers to the NBA champiOnship.
lslanduntilhewasaJunior. ,
In 1986, he received lite NBA s
"My humble begmnings he~ Sixlb Man Award far l;oming off
me keep albletics in proper
the bench tOI •help the Boston
spcctive," said Erving, calling !tiS Celtics w:in-lthc title. hi between
induction not lbe last tribute tO a came 30 operations on.his feet and
phenomenal Career, but "lbe begin- le,$, thcluding his first major
·
ning of a Ion¥ road of added ·inJury since he was a boy.
~sibilities.'
"For someone who had the
'My tum really came when 1 severe kind of speech impediment
was a pro,'' said Erving who joined lbat 1 did, to be able to make my
the ABA in 1971. He became one living in television is far beyond
of lbrec pro players to score more dreams," said Walton.
lban 30,000 points.
"My only dream was to play
"A lot of what I did paved' 1be basltetball. Period," said Murphy, .
way for .guys who were middle who at S-foot-9 scored 17,949'
siZed and who could do what big

Q.edmen
fell
to
Otterbein;
but
earn
second
seed
in
playoffs
--·
:.,.:disappointing end 10 lbe regu-

lbe Strellgth of a four foi four (sophomore, Pomeroy) WhO also
hitting job by Eric Mcleln (jllllil:w, had a double on a two fat four perColumbus), but lbe single error fonnance. ·
ball l eam, seeded second in lbc lbey commitied late in lbe game .
Greg Edgar (junior, Newport)
Disfrlct 22 Playoffs ~ Ibis allowed Oaerbein to post two addi- · pitched lbe fust lbree innings for •
_., dr:oooed a pair of non-district tional runs, wilb Curt.McUoa com- '· Rio Grande and was relieved by
~to Otterbein 8-7111d 4-3 on plcmenting Sturgeon's perfor- Rob Sharfenaker (sophomore,
the Cardinals' field at Westerville.
mancc with a similar two for lbree Columbus), who took the loss for a
:Qobby Sturgeon's three-run showing.
I,2 regular season finish. Overall,
hoOter in lbe bottom of the sixlb
Backing McLean's work were Rio Grande had 14 hits to Otterinn,iJ_J in lbe opener propeUed the Eric Parrish (sophomore, Grove- bein's eight, and lbe Cardinals also
caidlnais to victory after the hosts port) who was lbree for four wilb commilted one enu.
had:piayed catch-up lbroughout lbe an RBI. Jason Wright (senior, CarThe Redmen established a 3-2
gliiJ8!,'
roU) who went two for lbree wilb a lead near the end of the second
'I;be Redmen posted a 7-3 lead double, and Jason Lee Wright game, but the Cardinals again
OR

lar:SG&amp;sOO developed Sunday when
tho University of Rio Grande base-

exploded for two runs in the ·bottom or the sevenlb to take the game
away from lbe visitors.
·
Parrish and Wright were each
two for three to hi4!hlight Rio
Grande's hitting, wh1le Sturgeon
and Dustin Calhoune were each
two for lbree for Otterbein. Rio
Grande recmled eight hits and had
no errors, and the Cardinals
matched lbern wilb eight hits and
commilted a single error.
Allen Elliott (junior, Gallipolis)
opened on the mound for Rio
Grande in lbe flfSt 3-1!3 innings,

bus.

and was relieved by Eric Wall•
(freshman, Scottown) for 2-2/3
innings. Phil Kuhn (so_Phomore •.
Oak Hill) relieved WaU m th\1 sevcnlb, but Wall took lbe loss and
.sent his recmlto 1-2.
The losses sent Rio Grande's
overall record to 17-14.
Playoffs open
At IS-S in the district and with a
Mid:Ohio Conference record of 95, 111e Redmen
trailing top-seed
Ohio Dominican in the playoffs,
which
Wednesday in Colum-

f

Rio Grande will play at I p.1m.
Wedne~y at Capital University
against lbe winner"of the MaloneTiffm game set for to a.m., also to
~yed at Capital. Malone is
·
third and Tiffin sixth in the

postseason.

OD, which wiU draw a bye from
the openin~ round that morning,
plays lbe wmner of a 10 a.m. game .
between fourth-place-Walsh and
fiflb-ranked Shawnee State at I
p.m.atOD.

are

oeen

Ci~ci~nati edges San Diego 6-5; Philadelphia beats Pittsburgh ·. ·•

.:
B JOE KAY · ·
He;s still giving up a lot of hits · tbal to tHe me out of my game !if'POSilim in their~ start ever.
Los Ange!es batters ~ ~for
.. eiNCfJ'N ATl (AP) - Tom - 25 during the 19 innings of his plan."
.
.
. Danen Da~ hi~ a grand slam a three·hllter over e1ght mnmgs,
BroWning has learned to measure winnings~. But he's allowed
It was hke thal .all mg~t. The 1~ the sc~enth mn!n,&amp; Monday
suceissinsmallincrements.
just seven runs, a sign that he's Padres ended up wtth 1,0 ht~ ~ fl!&amp;bt, .leading 1be ,Phillics to.a 5-I
QS
Om S
H~ still doesn't lbrow the ball as eilber really lucky or still got sometwo walks off Brownmg m Six VIC~ over the ~ Pira~
hard1111d his earned run average is thinlllcft.
. .
innings, but ~y ~runs. They On Sunday, Manano. Duncan s
By SCO'IT WOLFE
stiU·way too big (6.92), but at leaSt
'l'He didn't have the vei!)City wound up~ IS hits '!vcrall, !'at ~ ~ bcatSL Louis6-S.
. Sentinel COiiespoacltnt
he's a winning pitcher again. that he had before," said Tony stranded ntne runners m sconng . Its ruce ~have IOIIIe!'odY ~
Eastern broke open a 2-2 tie in
11 every game, Daulton 881d; smil- lbe fifth inning, scoring four runs
That's not bad for someone: coming Gwynn who went I for 4 against position.
''Fifteen hits ~d five runs is . ing ~roll!'!y at the lbougbl. ''It's in the fifth frame en route to a 12-2
· o'rf career-threatening knee surgery• . Brow.ilitg on Monday. ''It wasn't
Tri-Vallcy Conference softball vicBrowning survived another hard to J.llll the ball in play. But he about as frustrating as ypu can amazmg.
lbrill-an-inning performance Moo· lbrew it m good spots.'
get," Gwynn said.
Daulton, who now has four tory over Soulbern. ·
.
day night to win his third strai•ht
At~ he~ when he had to.
The Reds took advantage of career gnu_td_,~. has.the formula
Eastern took a 2-0 lead in lbe
stitrt The Cil\cinnati Reds' 6-S VIC· That's a small unprov.emcnt over a . Kerry Taylor's worst performance for lbe Phillies 23-7 st.t. the best 1 firSt inning when sluup-eyed Jaime
torY 'over the San Diego Padres left month ago, when his mistakes in three major-league starts. Taylbr after 30 games in.club history.
·. Wilson drew anothet walk to lead
him encouraged lbattitings are added up quickly.
·
·
(0-2) &amp;,ave up s!x ~its and f~ur . "l,'he pill:hi!'i ~keeps us in of( the game. Jess.ica Karr then
sfamng to come togelber after a
Take lbe fusl inning Monday. walks m 3 1/3 mnmgs, letting ll until ~lbing nuraculous hap- · delivered an RBI double and ·
rQcb spring and an 0-2 start.
Riclry Gutierrez and Gwynn open Cincinnati J!ull oul 1~ a 5-3 lead. pens,'_' he said: ,
Rae bel Hawley followed in suit
· :'1 felt good," said Browning wilb sinBI;es. Gary Sheffield~ B!'"'Y LB!'km !'rove l~ two runs Phtladelphaa s Danny J!lckson . wilb anolbcr double, pushing the
(3·2) "I feel like I'm throwing on four pitches, and Fred McGriff ,WIIb a p8l1' of tnficld smglea, and (3-1) gave up a ~-mnmg run scoreto2-0.
moreronsistent each time ouL"
hits the next pitch for an RBI sin- Kevin Mitchell -had an RBI single and blanked lbe Pirates the rest of
Jessica Radford singled, but a
. JWs still giving up hits CORSi$- glc. Bases loaded, none out, and a sacrifice fly.
the way. He allowed four hits, good throw fromt he outfield held
ten~ly, but hasn't been over- already 1-0.
"Kerry j'!sl .~idn't hav_e it," S!ftl~ II\'' six and walked twll in the runners in place and Southern
whelmed bv1 them tbe last lbree
This time, he got out of iL AIIel Riggicmln S81d. He was wild. He e1ght tRJUngs.
got lbe next two out, leaving the
Melli, Mar!Jnl 0
runners stranded on base.
siarts. That s a big change from going 3-0 to Derek Bell, he gets ~'!'C ~a few too many opportujust"a month ago.
·
him oo a called lh!rd strik~. ~n mbes.
.
. Bret Saberhagen ptlched a three·
Soulbern ~ a single run in
atowning wears a bulky brace Tim Teufel, who 1s .429 IifetJme.
The Padres had the1r ch1111ces ht~~;etto ~pa personal three-game the third inning when Amber
on his lefl tilee, which had to be against Browning witb four againstlb~ R~s· bullpen. ·They !osinJ! ~ '!' N~w York W9ft for Oblinger reached on an errqr an~
rebuild after a home-plate collision homers, hits into 1 double play.
scored tw1ce 1n th~ ~cvcnth l off just die lllird tune m 14 games.
Rabcrta CaldweU lined an RBI sin·
wilb'Jiouston's Scou Servais last
"In 1be ftrst inning, we should Steve Foster to C'!l ll to 6-3, ihcn
The Mels. in gaining a spUl with gle to tighten lbe P!Re at 2·1.
..
Jdly: 1. He was ineffective in spring have broken.it open," Padres .llllin· g'!l runners &lt;!R fust !ind second the Marlins in their four-~ame
Soulbcrn added a single run in
t~Jining and gave up 13 runs while ager Jim Riggleman said. "He w11b one out m the nmlb off Je~f series, were held to lbree h1ts by the fourth to tie lbe score at 2-2
lasting just seven innings in his made two really good pitches to Reardon. But he struck o~t Phil Ryan Bowen (2~) and scored ~e when Jessika Codner walked and
rmrtwo regular-season starts. ·
Bell.''
.
Clark and Bob Geren to end 1L ,
only run on Eddie Murray's one- Marcy Mathew~ singled. Mathews
··Et-eryonc was wondering
"In the first, they hil some
"It's never easy; ~ it?" Reds out sacrifice fly in lbc fust inning. was caught stealing, then Tabith~
whether this was ·the end for where lbe fielders weren't and I manager Tony~ 881!1.
•
The victory moved lbe last-place Willford delivered an RBI single~
Browning. Bul he's shown modest made a couple of bad pitches,"
Elsew~erc IR t.he Natt~nal Mcts wilbin two games of sixth- tie lbe game. Jodi CaldweU walked,
inijlrbvemenl lbe lastlbree times Browning said. "But I didn't allow L_ea~ue, 1l was Phtladelph&amp;JI. S, place Florida in the East.
but bolb were lefl stranded.
I
OilL • •
Pittsburgh I; New York I, florida
Saberhagen (3-3), whose olber
After lbe last two batters of1!!tc
· ·
0; Chicago 6, Los Angeles 2; twO victories have been against the founh inninf stnu:k out and Ute
. Houston 5, ~ta 2, and Colorado expansion Colorado Rockies, rust baiter o lbc fiflb frame also 7, San FranciSCO 4.
struck out eight md walked one in fanned, Eastern's hopes seemed 10
Pblllies 5, Pirates 1
pitching his flfSl shutout since beat- dim. But magically, Eastern ~
~he Philadelphia Phill!es are;., mg Houston 1-0 00 April29, 1992. . a ont-9ut rally w~ Karr .v.Jiked,
·· ·. - • Baseball • havmg
a grand time slammmg the ·
Cubs 6, Doell"' :z
· Penny ~er doubled and Rachel
&gt;,
1
Greg Hibliard retired lbe fust IS Hawleyt'walked tO, load the P""''•·
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Claaa Out Your Clasat,.Basament,
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Betketball

NaU... " det'MI.U. t lllla.
ATLANTA, RAWlS : Pio'ed Bob
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!NOI'E: 15 WORD UMrr AND YOUR SEWNC PRICE Musr BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
&lt;SORRY, THIS DOES NOr APPLY TO YARD ~LESl

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ByJIMCOUR
SEATTLE (AP)- Hakecm
Olajuwon can only do so much .
He's begging for some help from
his Houston Rockets' teammates.

Rockies needed
17 home dates

to get .1 million
paying fans

Help, as in outside shooting help.
Whelber 1be Rockets arc capable of giving Olajuwon what he
wants will be a key to Houston's

!!!~rib
~n=c;u::z=~
•....,

"We have to cut down on our
turnovers and capitalize on our
lbrec-point O(lpOrtiJIIities," a Crustrated Olajuwm said after the Son· ics took the O)iener of the best-ofseven series 99-90 Monday nighL
"U we can h'it from the perimc· ter, we'll make lbem think twice
about doubling Hateem so quickly," Houston coach Rudy Tom-·
janovich agreed.
Wilb lbe tight defense on Olajuwon and Houston's dearth of out·
side shooting, lbc Sonics held lbe
Rockets scoreless over the final
3:40 of the gamC:
·
Olajuwon fouled out Michael
Cage and almost fouled out Shawn
Kemp. But it wasn't enough.
The Sonics . used a trio of
defenders- Sam Perkins, Cage
and Ke~ - and bet from DerOlaj
rick
to slow
own sbootuwon Me
to 26 cy
points
on 8-for-22
ing. The Rockers sw also had 16
rebounds and five blocked shots.
Olajuwon said he didn't agree
wilb the premise thai Seattle's front
line is lbe key to lbe series. In his
view, lbe lcey to Houston's success
is starting guards Kenny Smith and
Vernon Maxwell.
·
"If we can fmd a way to deal
wilb lbeir big backcourt, we'll ·be
· OK,'' he said.
·
One of Seatde's starting guatds,

By JOHN MOSSMAN
DENVJ;R (AP). - Without
building anllhing, they will come.
All the Colorado Rockies have
to do theae days is unlock lbe gates
to Mile High Stadium, and fans by
lbe thousands stream in, toppling
map-league attendance records in
lbeuwake.
· The phenomenal fan response to
Ibis expansion team in the baseballstarvc:d Rocky Mountain region
produced two more atten(lance
marks Sunday. And Ibis isn'l even
an Iowa cornfield.
theexpansionRockieal'lliChcd
lbe I million mark fasiU lban any
other team - in their 17111 home
game. Sunday's crowd of 70,786
- their lbird-largcst - gave lbe
Rockies a total of 1,017,678.
The Toronto Blue Jays reached
lbe million mark in 21 dates last
year, lbe J.llCviOUS record. ·
At lbetr current pace - li pergame average of 59,863 - the
Rockies would easily eclipse lbe
all-time season attendance record
of 4,028,3 !'8 set by Toron1o in
1992.
Colorado also set a record attendance flgllfC for a four-game series.
The four games against Atlanta,
which concluded Sunday, drew
251,44 7, bettering the previous
Connie Fazio, the seventh ali- of the way she carries herself,w her
· mark of 218,948 set in 1963 by lbe
leader in lbe history of coach, Cindy Driggs. said. "A real
Los Angeles Dodgers against San time
Unioto Hi School basketball, has leader, she was a clutch player for
Francisco.
"I've never seen fan turnout chosen t c University of Rio us as a senior because she's excellilce tltis place,'' Btaves manager Grande and its women •s baskrJball lent at the basket, and a driver who
Bobby Cox said after his team's · pro~ for her coUege Career. _ will get better in that area." ·
' Rio Grande is close to home,
Smalley, who became coach of
. 12·7 win Sunday, which comJJieled
has
a
reputable
education
program,
the
Redwomen program in 1992
a sweep. Even lbe Rockies' losing
and
1
liked
the
atmosphere
and
the
and
guided lbe team to a 26-S sea:
ways - lbey'rc 10-20 and have
program,"
she
said
following
a
son
and
its rust outright champidropped lbeir last six home games
sigrting
ceremony
attended
by
her
onship
of
thC Mid-Ohio Conference
-&amp;isn't delelred lbe faithful.
foster
parents,
Gary
and
Susan
at
13-1,
feels
Fazio will add a great
"We never expected it (I milHager
of
Chillicolbc,
and
Coach
deal
of
depth
to
the team.
lion in attendance) to come this
Dave
Smalley
of
lbe
Redwomen
·
"She
excels
best at the open
soon," Jerry McMorris, the Rockprogram.
court
style
of
baskelball,
and we
ies chairman, presid~nt and chief
As
1
senior,
Fazio
averaged
12.9
feel
lbat
with
her
penetration
and
· executive officer, said Sunday.
points
per
pme
and
was
named
to
·
ability
to
drive,
stop,
pop
or
dish,
"We knew lbe response to a
franchise in Ibis recion would be lbe All-Sc1oto .Villey Conference she is a valuable asset to us offen·
.
good, but never in my wildest rust team. In addition, she was lbe sivcly," he said.
"We look for Connie to come
dreams did I think jt would be as team's most valuable player, was a
member
of
the
Alt-District
team
in,
n\alce her adjllSll1lCDt as a freshsb'Oilg as it's been. Obviously, the
andf.layed
in
the
Ohio-Kentucky
man,
and expect some~ things
fans are having fun, and everybody
·
·
she
from
her as freshman IR terms of
As
All
w
game.
AJ
IJURIOI',
was
is behind lbe Rockies.''
on
the
SVC's
second
team
and
was
contributions."
he added. "We
· Earlier this year, the Rockies set
an opening-day attendance record ' chosen lbc team's best defensive expect her to come in and play a
major role in lbe program in the
with 80,227 for their home opener pia~ in her sophomore year.
future."
,
'Connie's
a
great
individual,
April9 qainst Montreal. They also
she
•
s
fun
to
be
around.
she
has
a
Fazio
said
she
tentatively
established a ~-league 81andard level head, ceres about olber people to major in special education. plans
for a IM:e-game series by drawing
212,465 for the April 9-11 series and is a real asset to a team because
with the Expos.
General manager Bob Gebhard
&lt;Cont!;nuedfromPagc 4&gt;
noted lbal, since 1980, 17 teams
have failed to drsw I million in
· · · · · .. " ·entire seaaons-.ali~ lbe..Roc;~, .. 'drove m·t1m1 runs for Chicago at gave up a d.oublc. to .Mdi.e ... ",
ics reached in about. one-fiflb or Wrigley Field:
.
!f':sS:p:fb~a~~~vJ;~
' their inaugural year.
Eric KanoS broke up the no-hit
"To have 1 million people in bid wilb a double in lbe sixlb. He 2).
Rocklel7I GlaDIS '4
the ·17th game l'Just unbeliev- · also had an ei&amp;hlh·inning single
Dante Bichctte hit a three-run
able," Gebhard
"I think all of and ended Hibbard's (3-2) shutout
basebaD II jilt amazod at how well bid whell he scored on Cory Soy- homer, and Armando Reynoso
pill:hcd well and homered u Colwe've chwn hiR."
cler's pinch RBI double.
McMarrii,..S.
.
Smltb'l Iead!l'f double, lbe first orado ended a five-game losina
•
"The npanaion commiuee bit off Pedro Astacio (2-3), trig- stteak.
Jbc Rockies, snapping 1 sixthousbt Our Oriafnallllllllberl were gored a four-run fourth. Smith
pmc !Olin&amp; skid at hOme, JOt to
ovcresdmated and lbat we were lddcd a two-nil homer in ~ ftflh.
Trevor willoll (0-3) for three lint~
pluni"' an drlwlna DGODie from
AJirGI ~ Bnwsl
.
too rlr away," McMorila aald.
Ken Caminiti • two-run double . lnninl.RlJII.
"We proved them wroq on both . keyed a four-run eJahtb inn;Jii 13. . ReynotO (2-1) allowed 13 hiiStCOUIIII. .
.
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HouiiOii ~in~~j~mgame SiniCk out .wn and Wllbd twO.
NL leader ~ Willllms hit his
All or Ibis from a ream whose ,....... ...... u"' nill0Ci0110.
on-field effo!U so far ahould be
Orca MaM•x held lbe Altlolto utli homer for the Glints.
expiceed 10 repel\ not IIIIICt, fans. . twO hits over sevcnlb innlnJa, but

a

with was lbree goals in less lban
two minutes- and Lemieux's line
was on lbe ice for all lhrec. ·
Lemieux · finished with two
goalS and an assist- and he also
may have finished off the Islanders.
"When it's 3-0 here thai early,
that's the whoi~~Uri~t ~·
Kevin Stevens
o owtng
•
burgh's 6-3 victory Monday. "If
it's 0-0 after 1be flfSl period, lbey
get new life and lbey feel lbey can
heat us. When it's 3·0 lbat quick,
that's tough to come back from."
Oh, lbe Islanders ttied, but wllbout their leading scorer Pierre Turgcon, Ibis was almost impossible,
especially with a power play lbat
converted only one of nine opportunities. The Penguins lu!d too !Kg
a lead, too big an emotional hft,
and Lemieux had too much jump in
his legs. And no pain in his back.
Lemieux tried everything to
ease the sharp back pains lbat
benched him for all but a few minutes of the flfSl four games: thera·
py, no .therapy. rest, .exercise .
Everythmg except uacuon, ~ procedur~ that.helped. dramatically
after his back ~rauon nearly lwo
years
ago.lbc Penguins faced. wi.th an
With

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Seattle hands Houston 99-90 loss
PengJiins defeat Islanders 6-3
in NBA second-round series opener
By ALAN ROBINSON .
PITTSBURGH (AP) _ Five
games into the Pauick Division
Ricky Pierce, scored 19 of.his 23 ftnals, and it is clear lbere are the
points in the second half, while Pittsburgh Penguins, and lbere are
another old pro, Eddie Johnson, lbe Pittsburgh Penguins wilb Mario
came off the benclr to get 11 of his Lemieux. They are not lbe same
20 in lbefounh quarter.
team.
Pierce, 33, and Johnson, 34, are
The New York Islanders played
Seatde's oldest and most cxperi- the mostly Lernieux-less Penguins
enced players. Thal experience for four games, and they played
showed in lbe fourth quarter when lbem dead even. The Penguins, tied
lbe pair combined for.t7 points on 2-2 in a series many lbought would
8-for-13 shooting.
,
. be ov·e in •our 'elt a sense of post
Pierce was Seattle's regular-Sea- . season r~ratl~n for the first ti~
son scoring leader (111.2), but since they trailed the New York
wasn't a factor in the Sonics' flfSl- Rangers 2-1 in. lbe 1992 division
. round series ~ainst Utah when he fmal
scored 13.8 pomts a game and shot
T~ight, SL Louis is at Toronto
· 38 percent from the fJCid. He's glad · and Los Angeles is at Vancouver.
not to see Utah's John Stockton , Bolb series are tied 2-2.
Ibis week.
.
·'The fifth game is a pivotal
"John Stockton is one of the game in any series," Penguins
best 'help' defenders in the coach Scotty Bowman said. "You
league," Johnson said. "We tnow
Ia that
hom ·
•
Houston isn't going to double-team p Y
game 011
e Ice, you vc
Ricky Iilce Utah did. ••
.
gotri'id't:Y~::tage of iL''
Perkins took hard charging
. As soon as Lemieux hit lbe ice
foul from Maxwelllbat knocked jusi before gametime and skated him to lbe floor wilb 42.3 seconds full tilt to lbe Penguins' end, the
left in the third quarter. He suffered Islanders hardly knew what hit
strai ned
It•. but returned after 111em. What the Pengums
· h'•t them
aCage 'fouled
neeout
and Kemp drew
his fifth foul with 6:01Ieft.
Perkins had an ice pack on his
neck after the game and talked
about what a pain in the neck trying to stop Olajuwon was.
"We did OK, but. we didn't do
enough," Perkins said. "We need
to pve him less spliCe bec•nse he
spill us a few times and he beat us
to the baseline some olbers. If you
give him any space, he'll hurt
you."

•

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In th~ NHL playoffs~

...

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almost must-win game, Lemieux •
decided desperate times called Jot
desperate measuresJ so a therapist
put him in traction for nearly 2()
minutes Sunday afternoon.
' · ·
"I started feeling better (Sun- ·
day) night and I felt great til is
}"'fi~'
he said. '~Every ~~·l ·
ee g , any lime can p y to
my full potential, I can be very sbc:

cessful.''

··

The Islanders dido 't exactly fOld
-lbcv outshot Pittsburah37-18.'
·- but lrying to beat lbe Pen8Whs ~.
wilb Lanieux resting his
lliiet:
· is one thing. Trying to beat Pi~
burgh with Lanieux on a mission
to return to his Montreal hornetoWJi
for lbe Wales Conference fmals
~·
•• ,,,
' We knew they'd come out ·
wilb a lot of fire and a lot of eiiiCi..':
lion," Islanders goaltender Glcdri ~
Healy said. "You can't take cveri
one minUie off againsllhcac 811}'1. ••
Now that Lemieux's heal~!
again and the Islanders are on 1J1i • ·
criti&lt;;al.list, lbe Pensuins want~ ;
en~ Il m Game 6 .Wednesday 10 :
Uniondale, N.Y. History says they :
· have an exc~Uent c~ ~ do it; .
lbeygames
are 9-1themlast
potential
senCHIIding
three---·
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ATJ'ENTION!
AREA HIGH .SCHOOL
GBADUATES OF 1993

NL games ...

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NAME:
__~----~~----------------~---I'

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scorine

.

,· .,.trl
Slate Auto's 8lready
lowpremiums'canbe
redUced even more by
insuring both your car
·and home .with the S4!te
Auto Companies.

r

Basketball HaU of Fame in Sprla&amp;flelcl, Mail.: _Tbe;r are amona IH members at the latat claiL. · .
(AP)
.
.
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Unioto star plans to join ,.
Rio women·'s program

Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo
Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad Ancl Mall It To Us Or Drop Off At Our Office.
Your Ad WW Run For One WeekIt~m Per Ad
THIS OFFER GOOD NOW niRt,J JUNE 2~, 1993

I

1{
6
6.5

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.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Ploco4

6..5

.433

17 .414

w-. - · .. Norfolk ,

.....u.... Lupo. ......... Erie flill.

J;

Seoulo ................... l6 16
MUonoo&lt;M .............. I3 17

• KanNo Gly ........... 12"

~ning totala

nldd•, pi~. oa 1M U -d17 diubled

Gl

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oblocl,tia. op.ia&gt;eol Cllot Clobr, pl-. 10
r....,
.., ................ Loo.,..
. I N-.......
NEw YOIUt MEl'S: l'loood Sid Pt.·

•

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Doaoil.. ........:.. ... ll

lben

Let us Help .
Your _spring Cleaning!

'

A-~
DETROIT
TIGERS: A.U..IOd Bill
&lt;llllli'*-. ..a-. r..m 11oo 15-4ar db·

.•

~u&amp;onollhllloi&amp;

PletJJillll Register and lbe SIUidayTinus-St/1/lnd value lbe contributions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers, and
these·conttibutims wiU contiolue to
be published.
However, certain dead!ines for .
submissions wiU be observed. The
deadline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winter .
sports is the Ialit day of the NBA
1
Finals.
•
·
Likewise, lbe deadline for submissions of local baseb[.,J. and
softball-related photos and related
articles, from T-ball to lbe majors,
as well as olber spring and summer
sports, is lbe day of lbe last game
of the World Series. The deadline ·
for photos and iel~ted articles for
football and olber fall sports is lbe
Saturday before lbe Super Bowl.
These deaillines have been instiLuled to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos back from the
photography studio # i c e and
to give the staffs lbe
. nunity to
publish these sports photos and
· articles during lbe appoopriate season for that sport.

ButboU

• (ll&lt;ny :1-2), 9:05p.m.

·y -

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1M Arlpi.M: ·~ Vaac«m~~", I p.m., il

: &lt;~'7. ~:!:~C Cl-0). Coloado
1

J'ltdor
•l'llllllouF, 7:30pm.,

St. Laail at T....,. 7:30p.m., it DelCo

AtlarUI (Avery 1-2) ll Houlton

( 3 - 4-3). ~"::£

Jessica Radford delivered a two- :
run single,
as Nicole Nelson
reached on an error anolber run
came home.
,
A mishandled ball at second
lben allowed anolber run to score
-Eastern led 6-2 at Ibis pointas Carrie Morrissey also reached
safeiHl.lirsl,
.· , , · .
·
Nelson, Aeiker and Karr, had .
RBI's in a lbtee-run sixth inning;'
whiie Hawley's two-run double'
was lbe big blow in the lbree-run
seventh.
Eastern held defensively in lbe
last lbree frames as lbe Only Soulbern runners to reach Were Mathews,
on an error and Angie Swiger on .a
walk in lbe sixlb.
.
Jessica Karr and Rachel Hawley
each had three RBI's each. Karr
had lbree singles, Hawley a double,
single and Walk; Wilson a triple,
Penny Acikcr a ·Single and double,
Jessica Radford three singles, Neison a lingle and ShcUy. Hendricks a
single.
_ .
·
Hendricks, the Eastern hurler,
gave up just four hits; two singles
to laberta Caldwell, a single to
Tabllba Willford and a single to
Marcy Malbews.
Jodi Caldwell suffered the loss
with five llll'ikeouts and five walks,
while Hendricks picked up the win
with three strikeouts and two
waiks.
'

The Gallipolis Daily TribiUle,

9.S

12 .613
.594
16 .3~
13

b SOUth ern J2 •2

'l h• Daily Sentinel, the Point

11.3

w..... DhiiiDI

~

and Dwiaht Sm!lh homered and; .
(See Nl- on PaRt 5)

'

Sports deadlines posted

Per·

points during a 13-year cazcer with
lbe Houston Rockets.
Issei, .now coach of lbe.Denver
Nuggets, said, "You don't even
dream of something like Ibis happening.''
"I don't know how to put it into
wordS. but I'm very, very happy to
have been able to malce a living at a
~ I would have _Played for nolbmg," said McGuuc, who was a
ftrst·round draft choice of lbe New
York Knicks in 1949. The 389
assists he had in his rookie season
stood as a club record for nearly
four "«adcs.
.
"My brolber, AI, has done all
the talldn~ for bolb of us since we
were kids, ' he said.
.
, "He was the player, I w&amp;S the
.talker," agreed AI McGuire, lbe
ebullient former Marqueue coach,
who was inducted into lbe HaU of
Farile last year. ,
. They are lbc rust two brolbers
to be installed in lbe Hall of Fame.
. "Nobqdy ever starts out wishing they were in the Hall of Fame,
but I hope 1 had a little bit to do
with ~aining recognition for
NEWEST HALL OF FAMERS::.. Former
women s basketball," said Meyers,
NBA
superstars Julius Ervin&amp; (left) and Dan
the UCLA All-American and
stand
In appreciation of their ldoriDg fans
Issei
Olympic: star who in 1979 became
during
Monday's
induction ceremonies at tile
the fusl woman to receive a free
agent contract in the NBA.
•

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On Frid.ay, May 21, The Daily Sentinel will
have a special edition with photographs of
high school seniors graduating this year.
Now through Wednesday, May 12, .Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily Se.n tinel or At
Your High School Office To Be Included In
This Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Print Your Name and High School
· ·· on back of Photo)
. .... .. ..
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ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL
. OR CIVIC ' ORGANIZATIONS WHO WOULD .
LIKE TO HAVE AN ADVERTISEMENT' IN THIS
SPECIAL. EDITION PLEASE
CALL 992-2156.
Ask for· Dave or P.J~ .
.

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The Dally Sentinel

IailL aetion,
~gers
.

11'11 &amp;&amp;CJ .d'&lt;dllpGI .. Ohio

TUnday, May 11, 1993

.

top Yanks -2-l .to split long series

; -11 Tilt AIIOCIIted Prtu

Bob.MacDo~ald $)·0) P.!.,ICbed
the final two innmgs oor the •ISUS.
allowing one hit
Elsewhere in the American
League, it was Baltin)ore 2, BQSIOil
1; Chicago 13, Seattle 2; Teus 7,
Oakland 4; IDd Minnesota 13, Califomia 3.
Orioles 2, Red Sox 1
.
Rookie: Mark Lconanl'i ciahlht.IO:;iirlliahL
inning sacrifice fly brote 1 lie and
. :rJ!e· auryrising Tigers, wbose lifted surging Baltimore over
lc:lid:Md slipped to one-half game Boston at Camden Yards. Leo
in l1li AL Eist, have been in fli'SI Gomez bothered for the Orioles,
p~.aince April 23. The teams
wbo have won lhree llll'light games
salit ~- f'!ur-game .se~ies, with and eight of 12 after starting the
daee gomg 11110 aaa mrungs.
season 5-13.
: The last time the: Tigers bad
Todd Frohwirlh (2-2) enltled in
llfte 4Xtri-inning game&amp; in a series the eighth ,ll!ld got .one out in lh_e
Wl!lin"ugust 1972atMinne8ota.
ninth before.Brad Pennington fm·"You get a lam four limes, you isbed for his first career save.
get a ~retty good feel for their
White Sox 13, Mariners 1
skills, • Yankees mauagcr Buck
Chicago scored six runs in the
SbowJ}~er said. •' They probably
ftrst two innings against 20-yesraot a feel for us. too. But the IIClll · old rookie Mike Hampton (1-2)
tiiiiC w meet (in June), aomcbocly and went on to rout Seattle at the
ebie illiy be boL''
"

.
' nc Detroit Tigers and New
Yort Yankees have already seen
~ o1 melt odiC:r dlis IIWal. ·
-ne naers won their fli'SI-place
biiUe wilh the Ylinkeea when Gary
~ singled willl lhe baseskwle4 single in the bQitom oC the
lOtlllnniDg to give Deaoit a 2-1
vic'"""' over visiting New York

.

I

KiDJdomc Cor ill filii • ·g We- Badl wae .,.,_.. r1KJ1s off loser
lilly.

'

Robill ~-

a. A.- 1h

aud DID Puqll1i adllillWJ iw
homas for De Wllill= SaL .. fli:
·ninlll illllinJ, Mkb-1 llldf, Bo
Jack"'!! ud hiqu ..
cd oft'
reiie¥u D ·,I\: a I
Ales Fa atz • 2 used llil
reccrd&amp;o4-2.S..
llilliltA
to 1..88 widl eiJia-. · · •
help tile Wlile Sox wia few die
11111 limcix 13...-.
R• C s 7, ACZ ' •
Juan Ooanh h · ul ia llil
third $traiJII~ a-e u YisildJ
TAcrh~bea ~ • •\ • . :
-- 1
••
Tbc A's drowed a 1 r r ra-tup
eighlpmen..Uet..D(I0-11)_.
trail AL Wat-1 r t o . •• ~
eight pmcs
('qnJr llilllillOIIt . . _ . .
.of tliil-10 p 111e R
,a
S~ lc:ld ill die lllinl.- .- ·
after Dean PalSXCI' liilllia . . .

10

.

THE -BOOK
BARN

a. Dldilc (0-2).
w-- Clllrlie Leibrlndt (4-1).
bi

' dttoqb every iJming but
fCNIU, wkll the A's ~eored ·

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

FOIUr
.......rl. 1Ch...2s00

Twlwl3, Aqdl3
DPe Winfield brob out of a

4 ' W:./~b~.t;kto111':::
1'1las a r' d Cllifomia at Anas.a... s-.e Matt aiJo bad four
... w y · 1 a 11¥0-nPI home run
ia die -lllb inning; IDd Mite
a rbree-run homer
ia File c:ie'tlla a die TWins rougbcd

CLOSED UUISDAY

992·3577
5-s-tl-1-

,..._..,lllled

HAULING
. Quall?a

let Joh

Farrell (2-4) and
daealllap•dJCts.
lk4l-yar-old Winfield had
;.
iD 1iis peviou142 ata.. _, - t.1iJ11 .204 enrering
De 1 e One orllis hits was a
..._ · &amp;It .
Willie B•ts (3-2) went 5 2{3
; • p. aDowisig two niDI on six
lils ..S liRe wales for the victory.

Stone o.

me .,_

u•stOIE,
GUYEL &amp; COIL
Re.........
Illes
'

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR WE

Call 614:992· .
6637
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OUL I didn't-~Olin • 1· 1
thep!Ue••l· a Bclltae-a
lot ollhillls ....... ,...... . .
He stays ill IOEidl witla l'laui
Olin, Sieve's widow. 11te lerll'

&amp;iina

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res.

.Z!r

JOE I. SAYRE
SAYRE lRUCIIII
614·742·2138
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On AprU 23,

llelge County Probate
- eourr, c ... No. 27127,

Clore D•••t. 234 Hamilton·
. Strut, Middleport, Ohio
45710, ••• eppolnted

-2

In llemory

. In Memory Of
ROBERT. G.
PAINTER
Who passed away
one year ago
May 11,1992
Sadly missed by
. your famll

ol 234 Ha10111ton StrHt,
lldcl,..ort. Ohio 45.710.

RobertE.IIuclr,
Probate Judge
Lone K. Ntt•ol• 1111, Clerk

(4) 27; (5) 4, 11, :lie

2.

In Memory

· In Memory 01
ORA M. SINCLAIR
On Her Birthday,

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
........ lCe.71
FIIWLt,OI.
742·2455

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CUSTOM SADDLES, .
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Med technicians goof on special
wrist brace for injured Wallace '

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MARITECH
INDUSTRIES

...._ ..

Will Bulls' week-long layoff help Cavaliers?

.
B

Backhoe and
sm~ll Dozer
Work

e~~CC~ur~ged

him to be
- · "we.
.
"To ae," tile most important
.... iiiD bcp WCllking hard and
wi1l:a Jal Ill Clla lMre, go OUt like
;ro."altd:'s •inst the Wall and
su~:ri:
Wd•·-~- . . JCMI"re aoiaa to fight your way
allli&amp;ltl.
- ..- .·· k aid. "Wilen you do tbaL
· FIRST TOM- John O'Brien, lli, fl!«Dtly kiUed bls lint turkey, l
He aa loel" Y
·
dlilp lllaidiO walk OUL''
a
11-pound tom with 11 10 lll·lnclt beard wblcb was called In by bls
the grief, His clri1y • ::
Bipblck
father,
Mike O'Brien of Galllpolf. The bird was killed in Meigs ,
are dqa • 1
I .. ...,. Ilia« BiJi Robats was
Conaty.
"ll Ullld.., Ire tiad af - ;·;~ ltsck ill die J;pegp Monday night
b a 6-S oicoy over Sau Diego.
=-~~~~.;::~~
Be weal 1 for 3 with a pair of
llllile Mdie llilp I
• 6e ...... IWO IUIIes bases IDd two
fun lila5. IIIJC?Iil's• z-tafllie rsas ICiiNII.
R l nap. a c:onllnnc shot Fria ,,
- ia Iii+ . I hiPt wrist. He
•
}'W
• f 'JI i:jji4J lwt it .,. slidin&amp; iaiO first
•
'The
car
needed
som~
WOJ;k.
so
;
·
By
STEVE
HERMAN
._..., ill die
.. He aggrawe
11pc
''! •
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
they sent it back from California 10
John S.uJcr !Ilea ....,.,. 1llil . . . il bJ ~ over lint base
Funny
thing
about
tliat
special
Charlotte.
They did all the work,
·
tlirowiD&amp; ill llle WJpew .......,. _T Kaday ill Miariti and landing brace for Rusty Wallac:c:'s broken and it's on the
way back out to t:aJ.
Tbc:Rcds~reiiJill•lia-­
left
wrist.
It
was
designed
for
his
ifomia.
So
it'
s
a really dedicated
Rabi:als lites to dive hcaclf'trst
wbal's Mml wi6 Slailey, Wo il
effort.
·
·•
right
wrist.
.
0-5 in ICVCS llSriS witla a 7.08 iniO lisa lilac OZI cloae plays. The
Oops!
.
''That'
s
the
reason
we've
been
·
wrist ilzjxiJ has shown. him why
ERA.
His
"We got here and something . so good this year ... and I'm doing :
l possibly can myself 10
''1'1lis aperiencc bas knockOI! happeDecl ... the brace didn't fit the everylhing
Smiley pit ~ r..- ei&amp;lll i1i1s
ivay it was supposed to," said the get back in the car for SUnday."
andse-rsasix6111C ' · afa "idilz&amp; iaao rust base out of lily NASCAR
points leader, who had
Wallace's stock car is o~ by l
," lie Aiel. "They always
12-1Jc.ill"
laMS
I;. iJ
surgery
here
last
week
after
a
spec·
Roger
Penske, also the owner of •
So . . ., •• · - • witll tu.! told-., 'YCMI'IIget burt,' but I lll:ular crash the previous weekend the Indy cars driven by Emerson •
clid l1lllil rliis yw:.••
Rotblc:llild ll1id. il's 1111 ia s.Dcy"s ar Talladega, Ala.
Fittipaldi and Paul Tracy.
· ~
Dr. Teriy Trammell, who per·
"Indy cars are an absolute worlc •
formed the operation, asked Wal- of,art, the worlcmanship in them. I •
lace 10 return for a checkup -on his enjoy warching them," said Wal- :
way out to California before this lace.
.
~
:: : : . By JOEMOOSHIJ,..
ond niund NBA series in Chicago a yearqo.
10wiatlzc1Crics. ,
Week's race at Sears Point
"People always ask me, 'Would '
· ·CHICAGO (AP) - The two· Sladium.
The Bulls arede1 c.ly dine
1k Ciwaliers hope to do the
"So Trammell looked at itiDd you like to drive one?' And my l
tinic: champion Chicago Bulls face
The: Bulls eliminated Atlanta in games to ciiaziaale Mimi• ..a dli:iJ 1ll1t won't Clfdl Olicll- said, 'Oil,. buddy, &gt;tjlis wasn't the answer is that, sure, it would be fun 1
the c:'halll\nge of the Cleveland three games and had to waita week they rested nile die New. Yodt JO llilppisa- CGsc:b Phil Jackson . right thing.' But anyway, lhe fel· to drive one, but trying to switCh '
Q1o1iers with a gnawing·feeling of while lhe Cavaliers had to go all Knteb played a ..,. li
reaiEidecllbe Bulls at practice · low worked hard and got it all careers would really be rough," :
IIOJ~~.l.,bow they will react to out 10 defeat New Jersey in a five. llCria .....,....._
·-Ma.day or wllat ..ppened last changed around,'' said Wallace, Wallace said " What you have 10 !
tbeii'-ex
layoff.
game series .lhst ended with a 99The
dies- • a,;.. ,ar.
who also visited the lndianapblis learn to drive one of these cars and ·
:They'll find out toni•ht when 89 victory Sunday.
""IIIII- File iWII ia !lie-.
'"'llca'sa clifl'awce," Jackson M
_otor Speedway to watch Mon• what you have to learn to drive,
diet open lheir best-of-seven secThe: silllllrion is similar 10 lhat c:J ~ a.k;'"'w 1010- ....-- said.. ''We llad be , n 1.11e Knk:b day's Incfy soo practice.
·
stock cars. are two different. ani- '
. • .
•
'Ilia&amp; lite 14 straight when
He planned to leave for San mats.
\·
~
"I would lilce to try one out 'On a ";!
IIley- ia, but Clevc:laud bas Franelsco today.
road course on a given day, where I ~
could go and just~~ and be uruno- · •
:· :By PEGGY ANDERSEN
did not immediately return a call.
said or the deh'
wkn die Bulls llave eliminated . any way of lmQwing how good I'm Jested and bring myself up to speed :
''SEATTLE (AP)- A J~wsuit
. Earlier this yesr, a federal jury
Thc:new••XIil•a• -filt:db dieCitlllieo'idne limes in lhe last going to be able to be. Then, if I and get comfortable," he said. "I ;
-ha been filed a~ajn~~ the Cincin· decided the woman- identified in the c:hildral by Dale Batlia', 111te fit!:,_._ Bal OMland bolcls a can't do it.:. 1 sent Scott Sharp out don't lmow how far you can .take •
IUid. -Bengals on IICII8If of lhe cbil· court records as Victoria C. - is fathc:rc:JV'ICioliaC.'slizal 1 1 3-2cdp CMrrbeBuDsllm season. there last week for two days rest· lhem.
~
•or
a woman who ·cJaims she: bound by a $30.000 release • .,__ and ::r=!!Jtlieroltwoafkl'ciil·WiDdlelajoftburt?
ing, and he ran some really good
"Stock cars I do; these I don 'L" ~
w""
..."'We"D ~ 10 wait and see," laps," Wallace said.
wai gaug·raped by icam members ment she signed in 1991. 'That.....doc·
~ren. She: lias tJcea ..ned,._ _ ,.. _ .. ____ .. Any comment 1
1........,
hi 1990, but apparently surrendered ument released all parties from fur- tunes.
her right to sue.
ther liability. and the U.S. District
The: lawsait
V'octnria c. .. aamcmllill._ '1 bokl -tmtil
••••
'l]te lawsuit conrends lhe four Court jury's AJ]ril 9 verdict barred been u!Jibleao~bmmV u
~~t::..,~.ICIIDCODICIOUl for
••'
cbUciren ranging in ~ from 6 10 her from purswng her own lawsuit due ro -·• el .S ;ch•'l· el ....... _ _
•
1't:.-lla;e been depnved of the against the defendants.
problemlllze . . ;ih'.i:dlitltlz Ilk
E-M ' IJOidan isa't sure.
'•
sh'
·
"The
release
doesn't
affect
all•-'--"
".Ac1aally,haven't
plliwo.tF
TOLEDO,
OhiO'
(AP)
Kevt
'
n
·
·
player
listed
out
of
15
(quar1er"Jove, care, comparuon tp, soct·
...,._
h 1 ---.. ....... -"' "'e'- 1 lltd":"c:
ety and guidiDcc or their mother" this," said vreeland, who with
It says die - I'IIJCIII. . .._ ""-. "' ·~
Meger didn't bother 10 wait for lhe backs), but I was also the fastest," ;
since: the alleged assault ar a Sear- Eymann represented Victoria C. in ized and 11 llilll4 bJ k ...,_ill ~ ~a;:,::.,therore~ ...~~ willo!lr NFL draft before signing wilh the Meger added. "So that should ~
tle•area hotel.
char ~ng.
a two-hour pcrioclu lk IMMel, bllil£ ...........
Ottawa Rough Riders of the Cana- erase any doubts about my Jmee.'' ,•
He was clocked at 4.53 seconds
: 'TJte King County Superior
' It's the same case but it's a where r.hey stayed ciarUaalrip ~_.
..
_~.!:'~have
ro,p out dian Football League. ·
in
the 40-yard dash during the
Court lawsuit filed Monday seeks different measure of damages. ... here ro play tlsc S Uc: S • iEb. - "The Dolphins and Vikings
unspecified damages from lhe ream It's important that the people lt says lise - •o; 11 11D eaist
Sc:uuic Pippea, w ose aching showed the most interest in me and annual workouts for NFL scouts in
and 17 current IDd former players.
injured here are made: whole. The: and racist iblaa .S p ;cl.._. e1 ..tie is bella&lt;, doesn '1 think the lhe Patriots called me right before Indianapotis before the draft
"There's no question he can
Y ll's difficult to measure the children have suffered significant· abuse, llldbeld • · llierwil[
~::!."!!::i, will be back," the draft and said they were rhinkvaliie'of your parenL That's some- ly," she said.
. The:.
.S "!'=.1' )£!1ST lie aid. "Wulway~ enjoy playing ing of raking me in a later round," handle the mental part of i~" said
lhiqg we will have to ... have the
"They've got 10 deal wilh lhis V~toria C . - a11iillmK £AAIIU- a , I 1 ..
lhe former University of Toledo his foJTDer coach at Sheridan High .
jUry decide," said Victoria Vree- one way or another," Vreeland pant in sexuahaitiiJ wiillazual
quarterback said. "But I had School ·i n Perry County, Paul Cui· .~
latlcl; Who is representing the chi!.·
player! on the aipt of OI:L 3,
Tile Caiiilliea ibiDJc: they might alreadl verbally committed to ver. "The only thing they nii~Jhl .
question would be his durability ·
dl&amp;(.along wilh Spokane auorney
B d" t tak
1990,1nd rllll-af6eJI ;= ~Us~~~
Ottawa' for a two-yearconllliCL
Richa'dEymann.
0 IDe 0
e OVer
lllliledhaclnoc• 4Kiwilllm.
'
- P-s-· 1 ~ yon ~:1 '!?
"I probably could have signed and ann strength.''
Meger has worked hard on _.
·T~am spokesman AI Heim K 1
· • k''
ti
She: insists sliellal · - l t d : IIIII play ittJmeclia_Jy,
as a free agent wilh an NFL team,
decliRed comment, saying he had
u WIC . I s opera on after ha'rin&amp; co I I - widl said Gerald Wilkins, who will but my chances of making a ream improving his .arm and will get ~
not:st.eD lhc: lawsuit Bengals attor·
one pla)'a'.
aunl Jonlan. ""Sitting back and would have been very slim, •• he plenty of chances to show his pass- :
ney:~obert Srachlcr of Cincinnati
CHARLOTIE. N.C. (AP) Laic fast..,.. Va I 1..t 1ililii1J_ciMm't help, It rends to said. "I lhink I can nlay in the ing ability in the CFL, where the ~
Geoff Bodine is expected to Eym.m libel US. Dinllil:lJaf!le aablliiap slow. I think lhat week NFL, but unless you rre 6-4 and fi~ld is longer and wider and the ;
~ ·~- ~ Sports briefs
tiecome owner of the racing opera- Walter JokGG;as 10 oua•• •
cuddbi:• Plvnnlale ro us.''
. 220. they- won't hardly look at ofrense has only three downs to •
• • ··
Basketball
tion of the late Alan Kult~icki April !I vtidic:t.SICII)' ... case..
a a 'r ~aJICIILennyWilkens you."
make a fii'Sl down.
·
:
;ATLANTA (AP) _. The under an agreement being Tbcyallo • • 1 ltil+ .. . .., apa.aR'Jil in die c;ase of Jor·
The: 6-foot-1, 195•pound Meger
"My &amp;~le - of play and athletic :
Att11nta Hawks fired coach Bob announced· today, -The Charlotre . c:onsider«bi:Rlr H "'
I~ cia
.
l
accounted for more than 7,000 ability pi'Oliably fit it (lhe CFI,.) bel· :
·
~
WeiSS after lhree seasons, includ- Observer reportQd.
irately froa die ape
''ll-·l affC~:t Michael but I yards of total -offense during his ter," he said.
•
inJ; two lhat ended in first-round h "Thisbeis ha dcaldledthat is go~ IDd ba¥e izAi lllieJ
411 1el Pili* it •i&amp;bl affccqome of the Toledo career.
losses in the plsyoffs. The.lfawks
ave to
an
very del
· to the: 9th US. CiKail
at otl1llt piiiJaa." Willlins uid: "If
But one Of his ,best days as a ~H;:;U~B:':B:'!"ARD~'S~G::'RE;::E::-:N~H~O~IJS~E~ :
were 43-39 Ibis season and 124- ·ly," ssid a source close 10 the ream Au h
nx)llliaa I'll n&amp;ber not be orr a collegian in a victory over Purdue
l• Now Open For
:
122 overall ~Weiss.
of Kulwicki, the 1992 NASCAR
A heariaa or a ndia&amp; 011 die wak."
·
· last season might have hurt his
77ae Se.uon.
• '
; ;
Footbd
Winston Cup series champion who motion llkillll MeG
1D
..Jed
·- ·a ·clissdnn••··e itl . chances wilh lhc NFL.
..... PI- (Fieworlat 1. · :
SEATILE (AP)- A lawsuit died in an April! plane crash.
sider is eeJw\W~ VR~ oae per
He set three school recorda in
VogthiWe}, H\lltlng hsk"ers, Pond l,
filed·lll!ainst the Cincinnati Bengals
Bodine, 44, a 14-year veterau said.
''¥• llsft 10 tali2e the inlen• the game and was chosen as Sports . Plitnrs, C.!lplolo LIH el St. llury
I
seekS damages for the children of a with 13 Winston Cup victories,
The new law ·r
17 Cll'- sily kwl Cleu1l iJ reached Sun- lllustrated's national offensive
Pin Anion &amp; AhoNtlont0111.
•
woman who contends she was drives for the Bud Moore Engi- rent or fDIEIB B
baiFIIclist *J,"' lie said.. "We have to build player of the week. But he also
SPECIAL OF THE MONT/I
•
Calabago, lroc.ti &amp;
.
••
- ".'by ICall1 members in 1990.
neering ream and is meier con1111Ct is not «be- 11 . _ ••h liD _. .
';kwl.''
hanged up his knee and was forced
11.15 •z.
':Tie suit claims the: four chil· to continue that .ride through the VicFDria C'aG&amp;iPtelu-, 1 ·
SoWo• tlleedle?
miss
a
game.
Culllewor
10
•
dr_pll, ages 6 to 17, have been rest of the 1993 season, which has
Named ill llodt V'KICFisa C's Cll'·
"I a ' t tlliat auyone has the . "I really think if I wasn't hurt, I
HUBBARD'S GREEIIHOUSE
' SYUCUSE
dclpived of lhe "love, care, com- 21 races left
1ic:r laWIIIil .S l t c - Klliaa~re ect., riak - · altboulb people might have been in the top five
Jlllllbnship, society and guidance
Kulwicki, one of fol¥ people: Lewis Billips, Ecldie illvwa, Carl an: ~lliaa tbev have the quarterbacks heading into . the
OPEN DAFLV t-5, SUNDAY 12·5
of their mother' ' since lhe alleged killed in the crash, left his estare to Caner, aa-.u::llat..,_.__ ectee. • Plid Jonlu. t•yon don't draft," he said,
992-5776 .
a""'"'"* hold. The woman lolta . his falher, Gerry.
cis. David Pslclu, R ... C 1 • t.w. wea't...,,lilt 11llti1 we
"I was lhe shortest and lighrest
lawsuit againsr the players last m~~:g;::.,an: Crai' OgleiRe, Miachill Price, phJ _ , - . . . warb IDd what .--~------------AA!I--•-mobtll. Tile suit, filed in King
..R~R-teat.o-.'I'IIJiar,Eiic ..... 1illlik ... llow-playas
County Su=riorCourt, seeks noon news conference at the Kul• T&amp;omia aad' EJ11en ''k:by" •JinJix&amp;"
·
•
~ifiecl
from lhe ream
wicki ream's sbop in Harrisburg. Woods. D • •
ia6e-Jraw8oir )ordaa playa
an~~l7current rormC'iplay~.
Thc:newsconferencewucalledby auit.butEIOidle..--.- w...,.,...,...tlsc ·
SO~GWRITIR,
.
- .
Football . . .
Charlotte businessman Felix JIIIIICilkacD, o.id Orw ·s.- laM,ar,at?ldlrelbf..
.
"Ei. SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) _ Sabates, executor of Kulwicki's fordJ-in&amp;I.SK.ewisWalorr.
''lll'un ; I'ICII, w've had
,11
:
•
• ft
1
Jlll)et Lofton, who has a record estale, IDd Bodine was expec.ted Ill
Founeea olFIIc
- - . - f!!Dd
bollr ....,..,.. Jor• 13,821 yard• on 15o rec~ptions auend,thenewspaperssid.
triburocZ roae$30.000
dlsllirl
.
.
d~ hil IS-yw career, Signed a
It was notlc:riown when lhe actu- ~ u.e iMi r ., . . ....,. · .., ..... wly die)'lrnlapt me
. •. • deal wilh the Los Angeles al purchase would be made, and .tn the: I'ODS1 at ·~eaa," Vrr I"" ~ 10 ' ' t doe bat player in
The church Is located four miles from Rach1e on
for Sl.B million. l.ofiQII, · The Observer said rhere wu specu- said.
rrlrzl _..,.. Wililfl?id. "I ibil*
Stme .Route 124,. Pastor Bill Hobuck Invites the .
~ pill the put four years wilh
lalion that the formal. purcha$e
N - oC' ;oeuaal pZsJUS wire il's
a IRM miiCbap,
~~~
llurr110 after playing for the . would probabl~ be deJa~ until ~ 111ey- • •• - - i£1 a.:trse~. I '!'f:'C' blm, lie
1Ui6erlin 1987Jindl988.
the~~dsmNovem .
waediOflllediO • 1 sr1 FIIc~
a 1 •-.lel'sclolt.'
·
lad. He

Pluonblng

117LWSt.

Rfds notes

.
B7 JOE KAY
when the baseball seuon swtecl;
: CINCINNATI (AP) -· Kevin . and he wound up traded to the
· Wickandc:r turned his Cincinnati Reds last Friday for a pia~ io be
Reds cap over and glanced at lhe named later.
am&gt;JV he: &lt;Rw under the bill - a
He doesn' t fault the Indians for
lribule to Steve Olin.
g~ rid of him.
: Next to his feet were shower . "It s pubably for lhe best lhat I
!dippq1 wilh "OLY" on lhe lOpS. did get traded," Wickander said.
Tliey 'belongedro Cleveland Indi- "I had too many memories over
Ills piiChc:r Jdlled in a boaling acci- there. Sieve and I were very close.
o:ae.t.llst March.
•'Those are good people over
JlfR he: is, 2SO miJc:s away from there. They lreaFed me very fair. It
tllci clubhouse lhat reminded him of was lime for me to move: on. They
aUeclv, and he: still cau't put it out thought it was best for lhe ream and
of his 'mineS. Every day, Wickander best for me. I feel the same way."
tl!inq of Olin, who was the best
His numbers lhis season suggest
man II his wedding and his best he: was having !rOuble getting JliSI
friend.
the pain. Wic:kander was ().() with a
."It was seven weeks ~ roday 4.15 earned run average in 11
tbll he: passed away," WJCic•ncli:r appearances. Witb Olin gone, the
said Monday, "When you've been Indians were counting on die rest
with somebody for seven years, of the bullpen to pull through.
you 'rc: not going to get over it in Wickandcr just wasn't the same as
sil[ w~s. It'll always be on my -last year, when he: was 2~ wilh a
milld;
,
3.01 ERA and one save:in 44 relief
•1.'k's geuing becrer.l don't rhink
appearances.
abOUt it at all when I come to the
Wickander shrugs when asked
field IIIYJI!OO'."
whc:lher the tragedy was a~.
·It's. been a painful and puzzling
"Some people say it was, some
sprinl for Wickander, 28, a left- r.eople say it wasn't," he said.
. ~ reliever. The boating acci- 'When I walked on lhc mound. my
den( shook him up; he: was 1 flop main objective was to get the hiller

CAIPIIIIEI

Ill • Sill •lUll

0e
11ae- em home IUDS ,_ .Mark
1f1:GwiR: 11111 Paw~~-

liP

YOUNG'S

lb•ltllll IITD._f!Ytlrl,
t.D.C. ReMr Cailllr .
P~CKUP llicfDEUVERY
Houra . . . . . M lal.
CloHd Iunder

t4,·lll04

UIIIJ Nlfl fW&amp; ·JOOI •
IIRIWD NICIS
· h7·$275.00
16x7-$4SO.OO

ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM
$1.00 PER FT.

OPI.IIIIRALUD
y, IP..Uto.to
Wltlt21
hltn.

..
Won't Jl'lnd A Bzazr

"

'

•

' I

•• 1&lt;

�'

'
J

May

Ohio

44

Apartment

11

S4 r,tscelllneous

for flint

Merchancllu

•

1993

Ohio

Autos for Slit

NEA Cro••word Puzzle '
ACROSS

·
PS1 air,
oruiM,
tilt .......
wMI~A~ce
PW.

lllrnUJ ... 13200, .• ,. -

'

;gv5. .

36

peeunt

cologne
8 Gonulno
12 CMterol
14- Stanloy
Gordntr·

.3••u
+6

15 Applloo

..U·II

ntiiiiW

17 SouthWHtr

omlndlanl
1S Dony
20 Cho8rlul
22 II (Sp.)
23 Twlat lbout
24 Potull

EAST

••
.J

7$
K962
K.Q 10 &amp;
Jl

10 74

+J0742

27 Not to Ill
31 Llrge bird
32 FIIIIIIJ In

tK 10 II

SOUTH

required •
for volt

46 Sinate tt...

18-Voan

tAQ76UZ

411 Head of c.tholle church
SO Cenlnoo
51 Flrterm
OWIIIR' org,
52 ......... fl!'lr., lol!dor

53 aolng
54 Dolly
55U...-

(dotbrtM)

. 33 Plrtod '
34 Computer

I 1 DtVIIIIta

BARNEY

45 · Fumllhld
Rooms
---·-or-h.
-114 ........
. . - . - - ~-l'.'!*..!!..Uioo
·~I1MI.

TH' BARLOWS
ARE OUT IN
OUR FRONT
YARD!!

c.,.,dlllon,

1 CAN'T VISIT
RIGHT NOW!!

- _=~
J¢Ae••-•~::.-..:
,....,_
""' •·
. ~.•

Po I Of.

IWOPMt) In

_lo
..... ..

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.. .. _
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For Solo:

-

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To Tho Hlg11anoir AI: hiu' ' ' To EnMr

...

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9

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-

1 a-tot- 1 2 ....., ••
Solo, M Z411DIZ

ZYr old -lin lui. f1M43.
:DOOor-4polt!WtMI11
I R1gl I od , _ lloooluod

----PII.
.
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.
.
·
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=-swo--

Dnlor, ............... t40
Each, AI TfuM For'IIOO,- lon!lollaft ovollolllo,
. . . Alpelr, ....... ma.
Wolahllooo. Pal. Umbioolo lot
,_

55

UR-In-. ~,.

Building
S141plles

-

............. CioilciO-

.,-.--len-,_
-.
--- .-. .

..............
$7100. PI

-.Couldlloool&lt;l•-lal

,., ..... lloclolng Chair ... ;

---'11$121.00 .

For . ..._ Fumluro I mloc.
. .. ... 201 .. Fourth St., ......
dloporl, Ohio.
-

--wn-

diJ ......... 130, 114-11112- .
2421.
_Siudonmoclll
wlumloollool..
•r
For .....
r
,
m
-trill, lllle ...,., . . $11, now
Or 4 ...... Qui 141. 140,1101d $150:oloo - . l o -nlnt; call 114-112-2111, f.
Opon I A.ll. To I P.ll.- -Bal.
lpm
""" lpm.
Couch I choir 171. Elec For Silo: lllciWovo Pan._.lc
VOJIConlrol
Wllh
CWII•IID.
121.
- ·:IOM7WIN.
.... - · - Tum T•IM, Phon.: 114-44f.o
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.......;Cirlod'o,

lod'o, - . , Fill
LIM
01
IIWIIng AI«&lt;I.GO; lnil-lllony
lhope'i I llorllng AI
11.00. a .,_Iorio .a-Ide 'JooAo
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............... 2111
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41 Ho"-forRen?

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64

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'dod, 2

Hay &amp; Grain
loll,

,.,.,., 111113 AllolloiiiN•
, . , Dlllu":., ........ IIIDf'.
...... Form, ...... _,.2011.
Will ""' . . P" Ill ... CGu!IIJ T - Clualo. .... Fonot,RLII,-1.

.tell on:l udt

For Solo: lllcrowavo, Coler TV,
CompoA• Doo1r, I.Mdano, llook.
TV
ltaNI.
114 441 2111,
E_,lngo.

-

Nulrllon .. PtodUdo

::W"::3
.='wao:l
-. A v - ...
_ . . , • Alii Aid Phomacy.
Tho- . ., 10 dlol.

....

T1311sportol1on

-.17NJU.

..,... 8kylort, 2dr.,
~-- N, oUio.,

1ml

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Po1 -

::a-·-·.:::::-·

tiiOO,

111
011

Pass

-

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SAYS YOIJ'Pe
:...'"·'~:AI&gt;Y ~1Ct4.

..... Dpm.

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I TCIII Dunop

ThN

though, isn't ·it?

frlo!l!lololp 14 Fl[

1812 -

'!E·.. -~
Condtllon, n.ooo. tM~,I.I I U7. ,

- · -·

S.lt-Conlained..!-

1111

Halldo

"lmpwtal"

I VCN0ER IF THE 'oJGIRLD
WIL.L.SLIDDEN!;T'GO UP IN

SMOKE, SO\AEOo\Y••.

OR IF tli..L GO ON

R:lf&lt;EVER,

&lt;..IUE&gt;T 11:11: WAY
IT IS RIGHT tCM/.

NOT MUO-IOF
A CHOICE,
IS IT?

&gt;

...-l

Aombl•, 31 II, - ·
ohaDo.canllo_n_o'

''

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.

-

--

...... ............
.
.... ..... .,..
;

llldo In TNok

c.n.or. 11:

A. Yes, 'it is, BROUGHT is the past
. tense of BRING apd must follow the
same rules that apply to the present
tense. BRING suggests a movement
toward, and TAKE suggests a move·
ment away; you either "bring here" or

utake there." As long as we're not at
the school, those parents must have
"taken" their children to school, not
~~brought"

,..,r .a,tora.OIMIM,

them.

Serv1ccs
81

Home

1. . Ponlleo Flf'llllnl aulo., ac,

.,., ..... P,IIS.
I1M4I-4M1
abr • p.m. or
a

7

ndL

-a...-.
.
.
1. .

-llo lollrwvl!&amp;,

oxc

oond. 3DM7I-CIZ2., ltH571.

Musical

lnatruments

--~­
KM
Ciirllo• --~­
Anrl .._
-

Ownw, Aault Drtnn,

.fe~a1'

L~=~~~~~Jl~~~~;i~~~.
•

ASTRO·GRAPH

......Oii
..liiililil , _ ""''..............
Mullo, ,_klon, OH ~

-e;

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Frultl &amp;
Vegetablas
-llool ...A,..

114-M

~ .

.... llod -

11-li1H771 or

-

-

AI, """' grool.

ncllllnl -~~ tiOOO owgotr.w..
11t ... a..

1.
Oldo PW,
CUIIIo&amp;
· ll
V
....Aulo,
Rod ·
With
Groy
In-

.....

.

- · - Cort 11,100. · -

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........

....... 11/C, fll, ' cyl, 11 .....
"""""' fii,IOO. ~ ..

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41=::.

42Cinipul43 Fiollc ·, ' -

44AnoW45Nole ...,...........

48 Bpullf ~

.

.' A I U

N .P C

NKU

W N PC

OTAVSU
N 'M '

..

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D V W K

ZIAOC

A I

I
1 1

one coed~~urois so
"Yea,' her friend

w0 R D N

I
If:6,.-,..:l

· ~ 1 Is
=·=·=~=.:. -i two
he'syears
so dumb
that beklrll he
.of tutoring
p 0 T uT u
could qualify as a - -."
L . . .: : : ·: : : ·

IQ

_::j;-:.,lr.'~I_:'TI-1

Complete the .&lt;hudle quOied

L.-1.._::.L.-.J.-.J.-.1..__1.

by flllrng '" the m1ssing words

=

you de&gt;eiop from lltp No. 3 below.

-..

Aslro·Graplo, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O. Box
4465, New York. NY 10 .1 63 . Be sure to·
state"your zodiac sign.
GEIIINI (lloy 21-June 20) You mighl sur·
prise even yourBelf today wilh your clever,

prefer to .work on your own,
from
patlnerBhlp enlanglemenls, but today your
grealest oucceSS&lt;!s are likely to come from
endeavors that require a loam effort .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Qec. 21) Be alert
lor a malerial opportunity today lhat could.

innovative ideas for circumventing or elimi· provide you with add~ional income. It mtght

naling difficult obstacles. Give lree reign lo be a !/"•us derived from something inge·
your imaginalion.
nlous thai you conceive.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You mlghl find CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. II) II mighl be
yourself in a position today -.r you have necessary today for you to slep in and man·
lo take a chance on a perBon you do nol age something that is not being handled 100
• know too well, and he or sha might l)ave to well by people wilh whom you're involVed.
1 · take a gamble on y&lt;&gt;u . Bolh parties are like· They will welc;11me th' tact thai you're tak·
ly lobe pleased.
'
ing the initiative.
LEO (July 23:Aug. 22) Don't leave any· AQUARIUS (Jan. 2CI-Folt. 11) A situation
thing pending lhal could be edvanlageous you have been viewing with lrepldalion
for y&lt;&gt;u-careorwlse. Your chancea tor sue· IoDico as ~ il'a going 10 wort&lt; OUIIO your ben·
cess m~ht be !letter loday lhjln lhey will be ellt. owlnU lo changes from oulaide lnflu·
!ley 12, 111113
tomorrow.
ances.
~or fUIUriatlc andollvors in which .VIRGO (Aug. 23-tapl. 22) F- your per· , PISCO (Feb. 20-llarch 20) AI If today,
you be&lt;:ome involved In lhe year ahead apeclive you mlghl be able lo conceive clrcumslancea mig!~~ bring you and 110m8·
couflllum ouiiO be aubalanlial successes. some conslrucliva Ideas today lhat may one .you rocenlly mtllnto cloatr proKiinity
0on be afraid to lry ll()l1l8lhing new.
benefil another. Submil your silggealiona, wilh ora onollar. Good things, could come
1
TAUIIIIB (Apiti2D-118r 201 You're likely to ~u88 you could pe~lclpale In tho game. from lhlo owlalloollhlp.
,
be betlar docliion maker under prasauno UBRA (ltpl. 23-0cl. 23) Conditions look ARID 1 - 21·Aprll11) Try 10 be bolt\
toda8 than you think. Have the courailo o1 ' quHe tncouraglnli today for (ulfllllng y011r lldvenluroua and anlarprlalng in &amp;HUI!UOn•
Y victionl and lruit y&lt;&gt;ur )udO"lent. · ambHiOui!JbiiCIIvet. Y011 ~~have to uae lhal can genera to increaaed t~rnlnga .
~~coni
·yourstlllo a birthday gill.' tachnlquoi or methodt .you .ntver have Today 'i condillona. ara conducive .to
11
S:~u~~r ~aurus' Aalro·Graph predlcliona ; ~nempltd previouoty, bu1 don't be ftalful. iltrenglhaning your matorlit t:!ocunalancea. ·
tor the year ahaad by.making $1:25 plus a .s~ORPIO (Ocl. 24~•· 22) FreqUitlllly

.

\

.

•

•

•

'§
i

.. .
,

.

" •"

.

.-...
'

'

-t2,100._0IMIII,_-.alll.
Doda= 100 ~J low mlloo,l

ST

-

38 Qnellletler
31 UnciOtlled
40~··

Q. l read that parents "brought their
children to school." That's wrong

camliars&amp;'
MotOr Homes

PuD..Cd Allor I P.11.11Wtf.
lilt

:

............ :

36-n, -36Na ........

By Jeffrey McQuain
SEISMIC ·means "caused by ~n
earthquake qr ~mor," as in 11 Beismic
distu~~nces.'' Size up the proper pro§
nunc~atton of the adjective SEISMIC:
"SIZE-mik."

:::o=....

a

MUI'TI- ·

32 '--lie' .

.

-·

=~~=..:::=:r..=
Ex-d -1!111-. Thooo
~0::, -=-~

,~

211etorj· ••
ao•••a~ I

I zu

"";'50o-=-

Jolon
-rto I ao!o
motor,
; 11ft. 0'
4•
boll wtmHP, 1!orcurY Olalor fll
......~~~ 010: 11411112 -

1ml • - LolobN For Solo,
Good Condlllon.l14 441 tOOl
~,lltallltll

.........

21Caspw-.

OUR LANGUAGE

lfll ·ct.v-,
•o I
.....-.:,_llo;.olJ 11oo1 lloflo, Truok, 14,000, U

M1 dl~
27 llttlllt .. .-

'~:~~:~' S©~~lA-l&amp;t.~s·
0

P,efiPfi'IT CLINTON

wllh all Y -· ) ·

lrolllna Olalar, ""' , - eo1141,

-·

I•---.1111011

.....+-+.,.....-1--1

...

FRANK AND ERNEST
-=~~~~-----------------.
:I'D PI-ANNel&gt; TO GIVe YOU
&lt;:h._ /
A ~AISf, F~B&amp;.e. IIJT

no

.
IN) . _ Twrt Pupo. llldnaN Ill~ w11 ...., NIII......,."'V,v

.....,... H~

W ,N P C ,
W N PC
NPNXKOM
lish dummy's club suit. So, after win: · U N L ;
ning the first trick with the dial)lortd i
ULXKP
A I
MTC
SXPTM .
ace, Klausner led a club to dunnmlr's M T C
.ace and ruffed a club. But he "'.'""'" !
ULSNK
MTAGNO.
'
ruff with a low trump; he ruffed with
1 PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The law lo a causeway upon which 00 long .. ; ;,
the queen .
he keeps IO II, lhe" clll.., may walk safely." - Robert Boti.
, ~ ,;..
He continued with the spade ace
a low spade. He had two things in
WOlD •' ' •'
mind: to keep the spade king for
lAIII
oecoud club ruff and to guarantee
EditH
~y ClAY R. I'OUAN
trump entry in the dummy.
West won with the spade jack
Rearrange letters of
four scrambled words
led the diamond queen to tap the
low to form four simple
my. But Klausner calmly took
force, ruffed a club with the
king and led his remaining
R QA T
six, to dummy's 10. This drew
last trump and allowed Klausner
cash the four established club tricks,
.-.
on which he threw his four red-sllit
. ..
lpsers.
•·
Klausner had found the only way
'
.
· through the minefield.
·

7

.U \'i"s ... -

Pass

oee how he made six spades?
Declarer realized he bad to estab-

111113 11 A. 4.3 VI
LX llcol!&gt;r . . - , rn.100
Flml.
114-317-7312.
.
'
304471-1811.

Pus

cards.deal bril·
·pllS;~:~~~'~tJr;~~i~~
tOdav''s
all 52 cards; can you

1111 Clorlo Crol, 1111, 144 hp ....
boud .. oulboud - . .......
10111 .!!!l!.!'o.- 117,2110.

-

6t

24IMIIIMller

· 21 Coni I diM -

Pus
Pus

«&gt;-.IIIWIPAPDINILUJU.MIM.

-

¥.~ g.?ol
~ c:w.

.

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

15 A. Flboog- Flololng Wllh New 7 l/2 HP llalor, New
S,lt8. e1t, 311 'M'
'

-

Eul

I -llul~-·,..

r. -.-...

•(Q=
577
ForCW
I
--

Is

.. AND, I !-lATE TO ADMIT IT. 8UT iF YOU'RE
L05T. ii-IE BEST WAY TO FIND YOUR WAY
!-lOME 15 TO FOLLOW A CAT.. CAT5 ALWAV5
·KNOW
Wi-IERE Ti-IE'&lt;'RE 601N6 •.
.

14 A. - I Trollor, Good Ccoft.
dhlon, Como Wllh . TIOIIIng
Mot:or$321,1111te 032t.

Wllelb.c.ll'ltUIDJIL .

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

............... a I

U,OG8, Wll

4 - " · 114-

1-lA: t.~E'LL BE
LUCK'f' IF J.lE
EVER ~IND5 1-115
WA'&lt; I-lOME:

- V I Zll Ewlnrude, ,..kplo!o
Exoel,.nl C. dMian. Cal 114211-3311.
~

71 Autoa for Sale

=-!lli;;.._..;.P..;.81,;;;S;,;fo;:;..rS&amp;;;:::,le;;....,.., 1"'"';
""
~AI~~
-

WHERE'S VOUR
TAKING
STUPID D06? 1·115 T~OOP5

For Sale: 1ft!) Ch 7 • • IN

gullori!og, 11" ...... ..
114 -

llml Yomoho 110 · - l&gt;lko,
blodl, oond, S480. ·111m.
304415'3a1.
'
11113 Handi, .._ Ill._, Ex·

304.., _ olori:OO Pll.

~In 1om $1.21

-c1aw1.r trwutltld
- ....,rOof,
two 1112 ,...:
•amlr 11 ·

--loiNI,Full For ..... ~ ...... COOl, 1\11
ao-ntMIIol:4 longllo, VIIY wlpllld ocorf, h•

Rentals

.,

. ... IWO .

OUT'IIJE
FURNISI.JEll:
-Pwi&amp;Uf',
"' Ohio
P.O. 8ol
211,
41711.·
',
J•
W1 ,.. lroft 1'lble W/4 Chillra;

7'

~~,:,~. =
iiin,_ JlaUon, 01o1o

~

.. _ ......... - - Coli
114 . . 1012 ... ....,. ._.

Hafpff

~-"!!
11x11~ . . .

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

..

PEANUTS ·

IC)4.I75.

~old,H00-

1-. Rio - . OH C.H ,114:MUI21.
For-lly-·11-::.r-011
---In
Puccoaq. E.., .._. from
UniOn
Awnue.
Adltclnt
.._...,nice •~ =did, nell dill

-:::74=-:::-Mo~to-rcy~c_l,..as...,..,,_

:IOW7WI23

::::r.:-:.::=
.,..._.,

-·"
.-.-.---

~lercllandise

bUll.

..-1111--.

14, 180: ........,... ... - . t10;

, llcllrlllll• loMtlan li'l Gl.lllpollli
Forry . . Rl. 2, 104.e71-:IZII.

'

_ Coo_,
-.1, .............._ . . ...,._
_,For Nloo
Motors
..... ,_......"- 75 Boatstor&amp;sale

w.-.

n...-t 33 Fanns for sale

.: ! ..::

11

For

Nor"

. . u..-.ot

Mary Buckley said: "Husbands
awkward ' things to deal with;
keeping them in hot water will
make them tender.•
Well, it is ollen said tbit the qui&lt;:k:l
est way to destroy a marriage
the spouses to play bridge together.
But some couples have done very well
in international competition. Jane and
. Tony Priday from England spring to
my mind. Also, Malvine and Siegfried
Klausner, who came from Vienna but
moved to Beverly Hills before World
War II. She' was a national champion
in both .of her countries. He invented

~.Con.£_..,

1........
_
-.--=Gur
. =---1...-:-::--:=J=.-zz.... _...,.. -lid,AV'F ay

....

w-, "" Inch - ,

1235.

2t
4t

c•uttrof

21 .....,_" :"
23 ..... 110118

By Pbllllp Alder ·

1180 p~ llul ~:·

Ooolo,- w l h - ·
- llld llulldlng,
- Counlr.
....
~
In . . .

•• n ron

";fi:" •

f\200. 010.

$1,1150.---For .... or ,,.._

Well

11111 lilt : :

Ruff high
to get home

11177 Fan1 210 ~ :Ill 11. Alllo,

Alum.

Pus
Pus

,........: .

11 For,_ IIIII

Opening lead: t K

THEY'RE GOIN'
AT IT HAMMER
AN' TONG!!

73 . Vans &amp; 4 WD's

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

•·••

Shanty- Gland • WitCh • Empire • CHAMPAGNE
My hu&amp;ban!l yelled 70 our landlord, ·~ baselnent is
fl!led with waleri"The landlord calmly replied, "And what
did you expept .. , CHAMPAGNE?"

. ..
• •

�/

..

-~

By The Bend

'Ihe Diiily_Se.ntfuel

\

Bulls
defeat
Cavs -

Tuesday, May 11, 1993

,,•

Page-11)

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Landi'ords should not let ·someone into
apartment ~ithout tenant's permission ·
.

'•aden:

. LOTIERY WINNER • T••1 c..cnrr, a
!line year e•ployee of Sua Full. Pell&amp;OIIIIl
Racine, 101d a wlilitiJII "Spriq FIIDI" tkket to
her brotber·lll-law, Jell CUdilf of Toledo. CUDdllf
. was turkey bUDtilllin the area wlltll be pur·

.

'

ctwed two of the $:1 tlcketL Tile flnt tldet be
rub~ orr resulted In a $10,000 will. Mrs. Cuadlff stated her brotber-IQ·Iaw would receive
• $6,850 after taxes.
.

OVC announces honor roll for fifth six weeks

-,

· The following students have
made the A Honor Roll for lhe fifth
six weeks at Ohio VaDey Olriitian
SchoOl:
First grade: •Megan Adkins,
*Rachel Blackwood, Hannah
Burleson, Brittany. .Cox. *Jessica
Curnutte, *TCIIII HaJerly, Dianna
JBI:~is, Joshua Jarvis, •Matthew
Maloyed, ··•Colby Richards,
·• Angela Turkovich, .•Lindsey
Wheeler, Britt Wiseman, • Alyssa
Ziri)le, Nathan Bowman, John
Moran, Ashley Pyles, Clinron Shelton. Crystal Taylor, Nathan BeaYa,
Timmy Hall.
Second Grade: *Deanna Bryan,
•wmiam Burleson, *Jeremy
Evans, •Scottie Frans, *Chelsea
Gooch; ·*Stephen Henry, •Kelsey
Silisbury, *Christina Taylor,
•Rachael Walker, *Seth Matheny,
·•John Polcyn, *Maria Wasna.
Third srade: *Am it AJrawal,
•Stephen s-den, Hannah BeaYa,
•Dawn Chamberlain, Chad Dailey,
A.:di!ID Holconib, *Michael Jenks,
Ginny Miller, •Sam Sullivan.
•Rai:hel Tucker.
Fourth srade: Brad Bowman,
Eri.ca Massie. Nicholas MuiOOiand,
Mtssy Rossiter, Andrea Sims,
Arilanda Wilcox, Nalhan WiUiams.

Firth Grade: Meredith Clark,
*Travis Frasher. Courtney Gooch,
*Jonathan Taylor, Erin Walker,
Christen Zirille.
Sixth grade: Rebecca BirchfiCid,
GabrieUe Blackwood, *Dani Jenks,
Natalie Pyles, Stephen Roberts,
• Ji1~6am~sicsa. . · Walker, · Andrew
W
Seventh grade: •vandana
Agrawll, Jeffrey Burnette, Jessica
Cames. Suzanne Clark, Bo PoUard,
Tony SIIIley, Lisa Vollbom.
EiJhth srade: Joy Chaksupa,
Benjamin Taylor, Melissa Brown,
BiUy Miller.
.
Ninth grade: *Michelle Burcham, *Aaron Holley, Jill Mock,
• Amy Pollard, Anesa VanMatre,
Nan WiUiamson.
Tenth grade: Emily Asbeck,
Jenny Hlqjer, *Robin Rice, Melissa
Smith.
.
Eleventh grade: Jodie Hage~.
*Elizabeth Wooren.
·
Twelfth grade: *Sandra Adams.
The folfowing students have
"!*the B Honor RoU for the fifth
SIX wetks:
First grade: Beth Hill.
Second grade: Ryan Carter,
Joshua Evans, Kevin Queen,

CompDedby:
Emmogelle Hamilton
Becorder, Meigs County, Oblo

.

'Chester H. GorreU, 1.12A. S.36,
R-11 T-3 to Randall W. Hickmllll,
(Jilll~ne E. Hickman, OliYC. .
• Jack B. Freeman, Dolores R.
Freeman, Lot #375, to Steven H.
Dunfee, Teresa R. Dunfee, Midd
Vii.Dwight P. Medley et al, Sh~·
ifr s deed. to Secretary of Veteran s
Affairs. Chester.
.
. ·Eugene Triplett, Karen Tnplett,
Corrective Deed, to Charles E.
Orim. Marilyn W. Grim, Sutton.
' Katherine T. Weaver, I 1{2 A.,
S.- 16, T~7. R- 14, .to D!-&gt;~na M .
CbeAdle, Jim T. Fams, Scipio.

'·John !,.. Hagerty, Dorothea A .
Hagerty. 10.015 A.•. S.3, T-9N, R15 W, to. George E. Scarbeqy.
Angels L. Rowland, Columbia.
Kimmy Pierce, Baraber Pierce,
R/W, to GTE North Inc., Salem.
Lee T. Swain. Me'an L. Swain,
to parcel, Lyle J. Swam, Oranae.
Linda 1. Lambert, 7 A., to James
P. Lambert, Salisbury.
Kirk D. Chevalier, Karla Chevalier, aka Karla K., tracts, 10 Kirk D.
Chevalier, Chester.
Charles J. Knapp, Michelle R.
Knapp, Naomi G. Smith, 7{20 A., ·
10 S.35, R-13,10 Kathy Jeffers, Salisbury. . ·
Scou Nelson, Karleen Nelson,
parcel, to F.20; S.21, T-9, R-15, 10

.

Rick Karns, Trustee, Columbia,
· Olita F. Heighron, Hlirotd Emerson Heighton 111, Seren L. Livingston, Troy Livingston, Lot, to
Bart P. Tidrow, Rebekah L Tidow,
Midd, Viii.
Roy Dowell , Mary Dowell,
Ease., to Ohio Power Co., Rutland.
Kenneth H. Rizer, aka Kenneth
H. Rizer Sr., Deborah Ann Rizer,
22 A., to Deborah Ann Rizer,
Lebannon.
Kenneth H. Rizer, aka Keneth
H. Rizer, Sr., Deborah Ann .Rizer,
parcels, _10 Kenneth H. Rizer, Sr,,
Lebannon.
Louise R. Conde, parcels, to
Willis H. Durst, Sharon S. Durst,
Porn Vii.

5500

BuckeyeS:
11·28·33-24-36

child's immuniz&amp;:tion recOrd.
POMEROY - Precel'tor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta' Sigma Phi
Sorority, Thursday, 7:30p.m. ,
home of Charlotte Elberfeld. l!ISiaiJation of officers.
POMEROY - Pomeroy AA
Group, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
He8rt Catholic Church. Call 9925763 for Information. .
POMEROY - Public dinner,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, S-6 p.m. Cost is S4
per person. The Classics will perform. Free_will offering. Public
Invi~.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
the post home. Officers will be
installed.

RADNOR, PL (AP) - Kirstie
Alley says tapinJ the final eoisode
of the NBC sitcom "Ch~f' was
like a funeral . .
"It's like when someone dies,"
Alley, who plsys Rebecca, said in
this week's TV Guide. "You just
know that when ewrybody goes
their se~ ways, you're going to
lose it.'
.
·
Producers decided 10 end the
series after 11 years white the show
remains a hiL The 90-minu~ series
finale, episode No. 275, airs May
20.
.
Cast member GeorJe Wendt
also worried about life arter
''Cheers.''

e

BURBANK, Calif. (AP) Actor Dennis Quaid will portray
Doc Holliday in the Watner Bros.
movie "Wyatt Earp, " starring
Kevin Costner as the legendary
lawman.
"Wyau EArp," which beains
principal photography in July, will
be direc~ by Lawrence Kasdan.
Kasdan also will co-produce the
film with Costner and the actor'•
Tig Productions panner Jim Wil·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 12, 1993

~HARRISONVILLE • Har·
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • S_pecial meet·
BRANSON, Mo. (AP) -Fire
· risonYiUe OES I11WS Tuesday 7:30 ·
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP - ing for aU Eastern seruors and their gutted the lobby ·of the Mickey
p.m. JIWOIIic haU. Ritualistic work Free community immunization parents Thursday 7:30p.m. hi_gh GlUey Tbealre on Monday, but lhe
clinic, Columbia To~nship ·Fire school cafeteria regarding semor ente~ has decided 10 rebuild. ·
wiD.be exemplified.
.
Depanment, Thursday, 9-lf Lm., class llip.
·
WEDNESDAY
ages two months through kinder. REEDSVll.U: · Eastern School Jlrten aJe. Brimr child's immuCHESTER - Shade River Lodje
Board, speci~ meetin~, W~es - nization record.
No. 453 F&amp;:AM. Thursday, 8 p.m.,
dlly, 4 p.m., hiJh schoo ·cafeteria. .
Chetter Masonic Hall. RefreshHARRJSONVD.l.B - Free com- menll served:
S~ve Trussell. Lons B011om,
· ·MIDDLEPORT - Middleport munlty immufti1.ation.c6nil:, Scipio
.
•
gra!luated in March from Ohio
Literary Club,'Wedneiday, 1:3.0 Townshitl
DejabiiCnt,-Thun-~ -'"' ROCKe- SPRJNOS' -· -Rock.. S~ Univenity,wilh a dcpee In
. p.m.. homt of Mrs. Eldred Panons. day, l -3 p,m. age two. months Springs Grange mee1a Thursday, 8 _applied ICience with ~In turf
Group review of Jane Byte by throu1b kindergarten age. Bring p.m. Racine Grange will visiL
. ··gi'llff and golf course manapment. ·

.

12

Trussell graduates

716 North $econd
Middleport
992·6491 '

P'U'C
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60s.

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2 Sections. 12 Pao- 25 OMia
A Multimedia Inc. New apap ar

ln.case involving drugs, sex and money

Opening remarks macJe ill Lemasters trial
By JIM FREEMAN
accused of four charges of aggraSentinel New~ Stan'
valed murder iii the Feb. 8, 1991,
In what was portrayed by both shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halsides as a case Involving drugs, sex ley, 36, and 12-year-old Jeffrey S.
and money, representatives in the Halley, both of Gallipo6s.
. aggravated murder case of WiUiam
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
D. Lemasters D painted two differ- Lentes described Lemasters as a
elit portlaits of the defendant, one cool and -aloof kiUer as he warned
that of a cool, calm killer and the jurors of what'lhey will face during
other a victim of a former co- 'the trial ahead.
. . .
defendan!'s ha~. during opening
'~ You will hear terrible facts.
statements in lhe Meigs County You will see terrible pictures,"
Court of Common Pleas Tuesday.
Lentes said as he described bow
Lemasters, 26, of Racine is Lemasters allegedly engineered the

CAR ASSEMBLED """' Lemast~rs' rormer
co-clefuclaul aad alate'• wltuess Fred Drameu
watches as the rear ball Gla 19111 Poallac Gr111d
Am, similar to bls car wlildl wulnvolved llllbe
19111 sltoolinp of Jeffrey L. HaUey, 36, and Jef-

murders of Jeffrey L. Hatley, 36,
and 12-year-old Jeffrey S. Halley,
both of Gallipo6s.
"Ladies and gentlemen, during
llie next few days the evidence l'resented 10 you from this courtroom
wiD show a iale of robbery,kidna}lping and cold-blooded murder,"
Lentes said.
"Lemasters considered himself a
hard, tough man and he clllistantly
.denigra~ and shamed Fred Dri:nnen (his former co-defendant)
because' of his supposed lack of

· frey S. Halley, U, bolla of Gallipolis, Is assembled 011 the ftoor or tbe Melp County Court or
Commoa Pleas. (Sentinel pboto by Jim Free·
man)

nerve and manlinesS," be added.
said. In exchange for her wtimoDrennen got involved to prove ny, she was granted immunity and
10 his wife, Michelle Drennen, and charged with nothing, he added.
Lemasters that he had enough
Co-clefeadlllt's teslimollJ
nerve and was manly enough to do
The ~ called Lemasters' forsomething criminal, he said.
mer co.defendant Fred Drennen,
Drugs, sex and love
currenlly a prisoner at the Ohio
Following Lentes' statement, Correctional Facility in Lebanon
Lemasters' attorney William N. and fonnerly of Ravenswood, as its
Eachus of Columbus said Fred fustwimesslnlbecase.
Drennen killed the Halleys as he.
Drennen, who on March 1
depicled Lemas~ as ail unwitting pleaded gui~ty 10 three counts of
victim of Drennen's hate, drug · aggrava~ murder in the cue and
habit and need for mouey.
receiv.ed lhree concummt sentences
"The case is not a simple a case of 20 years to life in exchanse for
as the proseculor h•s painted," ~timony against Lemasters, fuiEachus said. "II involves drugs, filled his part oflbe bargain. ·
sex, love and maybe even money."
Drennen testified that be and his
During his opening statement, wife, along with Lemasters, fabri.
Eachus related how Lemasters was ~ a plan one night at the Drenhaving an affair with Michelle nen residence 10 rob the elder HalDrennen while be was 6ving in the ley.
Drennens' home in Ravenswood,
Drennen's testimony was.
W.Va., and emphasized that the unusual in ihat the rear half of a
relationship between two wiD play 1991 Pontiac Grand Am, similar 10
an imporumt role in the case.
the car reportedly used in the
Michelle Drennen's affair Volith crime, was placCd in the courtroom
Lemasters startel:l shortly after the as a visual aid .b jurors.
Drennens' marriage and they all
The plan caUed for Lemasters 10
three lived under one roof; Eachus drop me off in an isolated area
said. Fred Drennen came to hate while be went and brought Halley
. Lemas_~rs .
bac.k 10 the scene, Drennen said.
"You (the jury) will hear how Upon Lemasters' return with HaJ.
Drennen spent $180 a week on ley, I was to rob the pair and take
drugs," Eachus said. When he the car which would be deserted
couldn't afford it, he decided 10 some distance away.
i'aise the money in other ways.
Drennen said Lemasters
Atlacl:in¥ the prennens' credi- dropped him off the afternoon of
bility as witnes~•· Eachus said Feb. 8, 1991, at a remo~ location
.Fred Drennet2nJ)~~~ky \O ..o{( .~Poni'P'J.a.l--i!a J nhnon
.three colllll$ U:~ munler ToivDSI!iP' w~K'li!, ai-essed in coverin the case II lliii he liimillell no ·ails and armed with an semi-autowrongdoing and repeatedly gave malic sl!otgun and shotgun Shells,
false StatementsiO law enfoo:ement he waited foe Lemasters' return • .
officers.
Approxima~ly two hours ls~r
Drennen killed the Halleys, my wife pulled up in a pickup truck
Eachus said, he then saw a chance and said Lemasters had called and
10 save his own hide and be lOOk it. said be would be late, Drennen let!·
In addition, Micbelle Drennen tified.
gave false statements to officials
Eventually Lemasters pulled up
and denied ·any knowledge of the and backed Into a small area used
incident, Eachus ~
for turning around, Drennen said.
She has been in and out of men- He opened the door and the dome
tal hGspitals and has been both 6ght came on revealing some blond
homicidal and suicidal, Eachus hair I assumed belonged to a girl or

a child iri the back of the car and a
man in front wearipg a baseball
cap, be added.
.
. Lemasters got out and asked me
if I could go tlirough with it, Drennen said.
"No, I don't want 10 do this,"
Drennen said.
l..eQJasters then indicated that
Halley had a gl!n and would ltill the
both of us if I didn't go through
with the plan, Drennen . said ,
Lemasters got back in the car and
he and Halley both got out and
went to the front of the cat, he said.
'- At that point in the testimony,
LenteS had Drennen hold the sJiot.
gun and positioned himself and
Assistsnt Prosecutor Charles
Knight at the front of the car on tbe
courtroom floor, simulating the
~~fed positions of Lemasters and
. y on the night of the shooting.
I appratcbed the twO and heard
Lemasters say "easy, easy," which
was a code word we had plamed in
case Halley was armed, Drennen · .
said indicating he fued a warning
shot at that time and then fired
another shot hilling Halley high in
the left chest. ·
Lemasters said "you should
have shot him in the head" and
attempted to take the gun from me.
Drennen said. Duriug the struggle,
Halley was shot once again, he
added.
At that point I froze and Lemasters took~-~ from me, relOaded.
lllld..sbolHaJJpy -in the head, ltilling
him, Drennen ~stifled. Lemasters
then said "the child has go to go,"
be -added. Lemasters then wentro
~car, opened the door and pulled
the child out, Drennen said
· I heard the child sa,r "Billy, is
my daddy all right? to which
Lemasters said, "Yes, Bobby.
Hurry, we J.wve to get out of here,"
Drennen Slid
~
·
Lemasters took two steps
toward the rear of the car with the
boy and s.hot him in the head,
Continued on page 7

..

Teachers, aides ask board
to reconsider decision

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Seutblel News Staff
A request 10 reconsider a decision 10 lay off library aides in the
district's elementary schools was
made by sevall teaChers and aides
to the Meigs Local Board of Edueation at Tuesday night's meeting
In the board offiCe.
The Board vo~ last month 10
abolish four aide jobs. Funding for
thOse positions has come from
DDPP (disadvantaged pupil funds)
through the Ohio Department of
Education . Those funds are no
longer available to pay library
aides. it was reported, and there i,s
no money in lbe disllict's general
fuDd tu ftnance the positions. The
disuict is already in the state loan

program.
Pomeroy teacher Cafol
Oblinger read a SIII.CIIIC!Il from that
scbool' s teaching staff; and Car·
olyn Nicholson, libdry aide there,
'presented a "Save Our School
Libraries" letter.
Ohlin11er detailed the importance of library aides in their assis·
tanee to teachers u well u chil·
. dren. She said that aides in the

expense. "Money ~ for aides is
just no lOnger available, • said
Rupe.
Ohlinget susses~ that perhaps
the time has come to ''put pressure
on the vo~rs" 10 pass a levy and
P!"lposed that a.committee be organized 10 wqrl( on thaL
,
In other personnel matters, the
resignation of Ed Bartels as head
teacher at Salisbury Elementary
was accepted. The retirement of
Mary King as a bus driver as of
June 15 was noted llid her resisnation ~with regreL
The board voted 10 enter into a
purchased services agreement with
Judy Ganqway 10 turor a handicapped student not to exceed five
hours per week at $11.72 per hour.
By mutual agreement, tbe board
adopted&amp; new lime schedule for
secretaries In seYerlll schools. For
• SPECIAL RECOGNITION - ROIIIIe Stery who will retire at
this school year lbe days worked is
tbe ead ot lbls ICbool year after 37 Jell'S- pmt special reecll!li- ·
being cut from 203 10 197. Next
tloo aad 1 Jetter or commendatloa from tile Melp Locll Bo..-d' ot
year, according to the board ac'tion,
Educatioa at its m~tiDJ Taesday llllllt. Here Board member
secretaries at Bradbury, Har·
Roger Abbott presents the letter IDd coqratulates Story.
risonville, Middleport, Rutland
Salem Center will work 192 days
while the secretaries at Pomeroy, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sllisbury, and Meigs Junicr High

::!::~r~dethe~~w}~: ~~:Sa::!atn~~~=ys~ere

son.
Quaid's movie credits include
"Breaking Away," "The Right
SwtT," "Oreal Balls of Pire" and
"Pollcards From the Edp:."

'

Vol. 44, NO. 10

MultiiMCIIatno.

Non-smoken will be assisned to move more and more away from
rooms with other nonsmokers, smoking in common areas," he
which has been done as much as said.
·
possible in the past, said Bob
About 6,950 students liYC in 40
Hynes, direcror of residence and residence halls, according to
campus auxiliary services. Studenll Hynes. The J?Oiicy doetl not COYer
wiD be asked to cheek their smok- two Universuy-owntd apartment
ing prefer~nces on their housing complexes.
acceptaiiCC &amp;peement.
·
North said the new smoking
Students living in residence · policy was a compromise' that
halls preYiously decided on their would "allow smoking in places
own smoking policies building by where people live in a way that
building, Hynes said.
limits exposure to secondhand
"But as the momentum grew smoke."
·with research of smoking and its
Hynes said the University may
debilitsting effecis, we began to be one year away from a total
smoking ban in residence halls.
"I anticipate that by the fall of
1994, we'll be comple~ly smoke
free," J:Iynes $Aid. ''That year will
give us time ror transition and lbe
opportunity 10 malce adjustments in
The 'marquee above the the~r anticipation of being smoke-free."
collapsed inro the lobby, and h~
Ohio University's Board of
and water damaged the theaier's Trustees approved a policy April
936-seat auditorium.
·
17 10 ban smoklns in aD classroom,
1bc fll'C is belieYCd to haYC been lidministJ:ative and sen-icc build·
il!D!~ by an electriCal spark, offi- ings, and University-owned vehiCials said. The blaze burned for cles on the -Athens and reJional
about an hour before it was con- . campuses. That policy lake$ effect
trolled.
Jull I, althoagh offices will have
No one was injured.
until Sepl I 10 fully implement the
Gilley opened th'e theater in ~·nNra:u:U~: GoY. GeorJe v.
1990, the same year his Gilley's Voinovich issued an executive
nightclub In Pasadena, Texas, was order malcing smoklnJ iUegal -In an
ravaged by an arson fli'C and ~ · s~ate,owned buildings and vehicles.
razed.
' J
·d
University residence haDs and
Manager Rodney ones sai
prisons were exempt from the
Gilley was told about Monday's executi~e order, which was
fll'C an~ plans to rebUild the thea~ announced a week after the U.S.
in Branson, an Ozarks tourist town.
· df
f
h · EnYironmental Prol.ection Asency
G1' ll y game
arne rom t • released a IIIUd~ 11~. secondhand
1980
movie
"Urban
Cowboy,
"
· which featured seYCral of his songs
smoke kills ,000 mericans a

"It's tough to think lhpt this is
probably the best work any of us
wiD ever have done," Wendl: said.
"I could cry right now."
_Y_ear_._,_,_ _ _ _ _ __
Woody Harrelson felt differe~- and his Pasadena nightclub.
ly.
.
NEW YORK (AP) - No joke. publicity siunL Is this a man with
"I think the show .has run its Comedian
Jackie
Mason ·no place 10 go, nothing 10 do, lookcourse," he said. "They're runninB announced Monday he's runninJ lng for a
10 make a speech?" '
out of stories."
·
for the city's Office of Public Mason
But even Haii-elson was sobbing AdYOCIIe.
.
The 59-•,ear-old
when it came time for cast mem"A lot of people will start saybers to take their final bows, execu- ing to themselves, 'Is Ibis a
a
tive produc:a Dan O'Siiannon said.

Low loDigbt In 50.. RaiD.
TbUI'II!dl y, parUy cloudy, blgb Ia

•

Ann

People in the news ...
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Pick 4:

students rooms·at OU

Comlnunity Calendar
Charlotte Bronte.
TUESDAY
ANTIQUITY - Tent revival, 7
POMEROY - Pomeroy Merp.m., Faith Fellowship Crusade for
christ, Antiquity, Brother Hurest chants Association, Wednesday,
8:30 a.m., Bank One conference
Prater. Everyone welcome.
room.
·: j..ONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
POMEROY - Am~ur G&amp;rllen·
GOSJ!el Church, three day seminar
en
Oub, Wednesday, 7 p.in .. home
on Holy Spirit by Rev. Mary Diaof
Mrs. Harold Lolise,. Wolfe
mond; AddiSOII, Tuesday_tO Lm. to
Drive,
Pomeroy. Alice Thompson
nQPI) and 7-9 p.m., Wednesday 10
will
present
program o~ oriental
a.m. to 2 p.m. Public inYi~.
arrangements. .
POINT PLEASANT. W.VA.·
Sin}ing by the Lake, Krodel Part,
POMEROY - Uni~ Fund for
Point Pleasant, '!'·Va., 7 p.m. Meigs County, Wednesday, 3 p.m.,
nightly, through Sunday. Ed Craw· Meigs County Chamber of Comford, Conrad Cool! and Calvary mace Office, Pomeroy.
~hoes. Paul Chapm1111 will emcee.
q n 304-675-1383 for lnformaaion.
SYRACUSE - Revival a Syra·
cuse Mission Church begins
· POMEROY - Tuberculin skin Wednesday-. Saul .McGuire, CYanttaling clinic at Ohio VaDey Chris· ge\isL Services 7 p.m. nightly, 6
ti311 Assembly Tuesday from 5-7 P·~ · Sunday. Rev. Mike Thompson
mVJletl everyone.
p.m. Free service.

749

Smoking to be limited to

fJ_eigs .County property transfers
.,

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Page4

SPANISH IN DAYTON
De. Au
I live lloae , .- - - - In my own ~ In the 111M
DEAR DAYTON: Thanks for
1
rown u my pan:nll. I have no
unloadinJ in my space.· You've
8111wain3 •hinc. ao when I want
written a fairly Incendiary letter. rm
10 tate a bllb cr do aomelhlng lhaa
JOinf 10 Ilk the readers to tell me
~ privacy, I like the phone
how II grabbed than, and I will print
off lbe boot.
tbe beat letten.
.
. One clay wbilc liking • balb (I
Dear ADD Laaclen: You often
llways keep my door locked), I
IIMie. women to ast dlanael-.
belnl 1011- waltiq 1111111111 ill
• Ale you bea.cr off wilb or witbout
my 6vinJ 100111 a~m,. my 11&amp;1110. It ccmpllllioa employ people 10 do him7"' Well, men sbould ut
wu my C... He bid 11!J11e to lbe bUiinea? If !hoy don't do ~ lhemseiYCSthe ume qw rtioo.
buildina IIIIII8F llld goaen him 10 tbae woa't be a company.
My wife and I agued too mudL
unloclt the door.
My gnMhlber wiD tell ~ that She bad 110111C faulll dill ceve me
Aside from Ibis flagrant invuion wben he worked, there were no null. One night, l c:ontelnpla~
of my pri'VIIC)' and ICiring me hllf -.a man•aement progr11111 for leaYinJ. I got out a paw:ij and liDd
10 dcalh, I woncleiM why alJuildins employees. Nowadays, compani~ aU the lhinp about her tbat I didll't
lllllll8llf woWd abule a ieaant's right offer a full nnae cif benefits llld lillc. Thai in another column,llililed
IO'pri'VIIC)'tbis way. And whatiflbe "wenneu• prosraml, employee aD her sood points. To my surprile
man who pined entrance 10 my assistance, child care, family and emluaamall, tbe liit rl sood
home had lied about beins my leave,eu:. Inlbe-.ime,l\-e~ poin11was four times •loa&amp; u tbe
fllb«llld wu actually 110111e nut cr ao much soofing off, It mates me bill points. I mali""' thea thlt rd be
I rapiat'1
sick.
• fool to let her JCllwaJAnn, Ibis is not lbe life world
Ale aanpiD)IIIJIDveeeas wiDing 10 Jill fonh
1 now blOW how kdj I am 10
people UBed to Cl'ljoy seVeral yean !heir belt effcrt 10 poduce. ullitY ~ have her. Thank you. -- D.C.,
ago. Pleaae, pleue adviae all product'1 Or n IIIey siliing ~ . ATWOOD, IlL.
building JIIIIIIIOII, landlcrdl . and wilh one eye onlbe .lob llid the lllhcr
DEAR D.C~ You're welcome. I
superin~ndenta against lettins eye 6n lbe cloclc? I work for a
suggestlhaa others wbo lie cridl:al
someone iniO a tenant's apartment · Fortune 100 CQmpany 'In• buman of their matca ta1te a page out of
without prior pcrmissiori fmn lbe resources. My company pays yourbook.
..
~L .. E.W., USBON, OHIO
c.xtremcly well and provides
Is life passi11g ~ by? Wllllt 10 .
DEAR ·E.W.: . You told tbent -- excellent benefill, includins the impro.ve your sotiollldl/S? Write /Of'
11111! very nicely. After that inclckru, abovc-mendoned programs. Tile
AM I a•ders' MW bookll!t1 "HfiW to
did you have a talk with your ·other day in lhe lunch room. I heard Malee. Frie11ds 011d Stop Bei11g
. buildlnJIIIIIIIIP'llf not, you abou1d an employee say, ·nc 1eaat Ibis LoMiy.• Stllll a self-odtbuscd,lo"'.
haw.
' COIIIJ*IY could do II povlde decent biiSITies.s-size tiiW!lopc ONl a clttck
Dear ADa lucien: You let me silvorwn.•
OT IIIDMY order /01' $4J5 (llris ilt•
down. You seemed 10 support "Any • .~Ilk diOie clowns wblit IIIey clllks postDge a1Ul ltalldli11g) to:
State, . USA," who thinks her wtU do whCI'IIbeir eot11p1111y '-Is Frielllls, c/o AM l..aluleT•. P.O. B011
husblod'a compeny OWIWOib ill fer the bolder bectn!IC it can't affll'll 11562, Clricago, /U. 6061 UJ562. (111
employeea. When wiD we 1e1m lhst 10 keep them happy. .., LEARNING · CO/IIIdo, selld $5.05.)

Amanda Taylor.
Third grade: Lauren Browninf
Elizabeth Rice, Jonathan Bee '
Jeremy Frazie.
'
Fourth srade: DQn Ashworth
Tom Curnutte. Jason Holdren'
Adar_n Newbeny.
,
'
Fifth grade: Ap~H Agustin,
Amanda Brown, M.Ike Francis,
~ PoUard, Jessica TurlroYich.
Sixth grade: Lisa Bowman
Daniel Sizemcire.
'
Seventh grade: Chris Bryan
Stephanie Jenltins, Deanna Martin'
S~ven Rice.
'
ATHENS - Smoking wiD only
EiJhth grade: Rachel Hamriclc,
be
permitted In IIIUdent rooms with
Jared Leach, Nathan Smith, Leisa
the doors closed as part of a new
Walters.
Ninth grade: Rachel Cochran, smoking po6cy for Ohio University
Jami Gianechini, Nathan Lusher, residence haUs, campus officills
Shawn Rice, Joshua Sel!er!. Joh11 have announced.
. Smoking will not be aUowed In ·
Theiss.
. .·
any
other areas of Athenscampus
Tenth grade: Ashlee Saunders
·
rOsidence
halls, including hallways,
Sarah Marr, Karen Sanden, sarati
bathrooms
or lounges. The policy
Newbeny.
'
goes
into
effect
when students
Eleventh srac~e· Jason Beaver
rerum
fall
q~.
. Melanie Blizzard: Byron Burke:
The new policy was deVeloped
Andy Brumfield, Amy Carnes,
by
Residence and Campus AuxilAnna Hamrick Sarah Mill
iary
Services and~ by ViCe
Twelfth g~ade: Jerr~·Back,
President
for Admmistradon Gary
Christy Mock Meredith PoUard. .
North.
' ·lndic•w' straight A's.•
·

Ohio Lottery

planning period, in addition to gran~ to Kathaine Deskins. The
exposing !be children to boob. She · board also J!lll~ u .a clock day,
a1ao spoke of tbe positiw infiiJC!ICC June 1,100tbA~y· Wtlod.
of haYC another adult In lbe school
w• . . . . .
to interact wiih the children.
, The boald agreed to pay WhaNicholson talked about the l,ey's Auto $700 to haul in two new
trained staff members who are cars from Pontiac, Mich. which
included in lbe Jay-off and said that havo been dondd to the school to
·by not haYinJiibrary aldol in lbe be~ 'II sed in the auto mechanics
achoola, the quality of education class. The can are for classroom
will be decreated. She aaid that instruction only, and .cannot be
many ol the students do not haw licensed, tided. or driiiC!I.
boob in their hom.es which makes
The list of aenion to p-adua~
tbe achool library even more 011 May 23 at 4:30p.m. in l..,arJy R.
•
liDL
Moniaon Oymnaalum was
the requesiiiO JeCOIIIIder lbe approved. It WM ~poln~ 0111 that
lay-offs of the aides, Bolrd Prell- . paWl n be1na ilotlflod or delldellt Larry llupe ubd Oblinger ciencica wbiCb cCu1d Jli'OYCIIIIOIIIC
and Nk:bolaon If,.._ bid.•Y .,,,_ IIUdatta tJom m:el.....,. c11p1omu. .

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PRil'SENTED COMMENDATION LETTER- Lois WyBIIt, a
Meigs Local bus driver, was recogaized at Tue&amp;dey nipt's meetme or lbe Meigs LocaiiiGerd Gl Education. She was cited ror ber
c:oacem ror. cbildreu, ller apprec:latloa ror and care of tbe eqnlpment, 111d lbe plllillve Image IIIe projects toW!lrds Meigs Local.
Bob Bartoa, board member, presented tile letter of c0111meudatlon
to Wyent.

L ocal brtef:s·-----------------.
•
.
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w::rce~r!l~or:~an~~~::%:C~

Woman injured, citedforD.UJ.

A Coolville woman IUitained miDor injuries In • one-YCbicle
~ccident Tuesdaabi!~ and 1¥111 cired for driving under the
~uencc, the G
Meigs P~ orr- SWo lfilbway Plltol ~.
Mep L. Cantley • 28• 5925 Prost Raid. wuiiiiiS)XIrted by Meigs

County EmCI'JIIICY Medicll Senice 10 VCIICIIIII Memorial Hospital
wh~':y"~..~~'r::!s~ca::,., Route 143 wben she 1111 off the
right side
_ of the
whllc~a- ,_,. ~·- The ... LI'cle
- · - ·~
•.,.,
then came back onto the
• slid o tbe lel't lide, struck an
embanlcment and overtumed 01110 ill side.
·
·
Cantley was alao ci~ for uaale apeed and' DC) liCit beiL·TbC
vehicle ~ liJht dlmlp 11111 WPB ~ fmm lhe ICCI'IC.
r_o a d

Ace:' ".lent·
.. p"·•obed
1
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Two Tuesday acdde ll have been reported by tbe Meial County
Sheriff's De)iatmerL
.
. The fust accident octurred early ~Y momlna on Brier .
Ridte Road. AecordiDJ 10 the report Xevhi Oiler ' ORWSYille

..

flames, according to lbe report. The truck was heavily, damaged.
. The second"ccldeM occurred at ·the parlring 1o( • Meigs High
· School somelkiiiC on Tuesday. Acconling to the report, a_ 1991 Polltiac Sunbird. owned by Jenrcy ~. was !llfbd in the front lot
. when it waa llriJCk bY a vdlicle owned by liriaa CJelend, Middleport. The~ lllllllltbere wu 110 driYer in lhe Cleland vdlicle. lt
apparently Jlllllpecl OUl of &amp;e*' and clri6ed Into the side of Baker's
Yehicle. No damage wu n.c1 10 Cleland's 1981 CheYCtte.
·
~-ma·~ed

·

Y.F.ehicle
rI •
uu

a

~ichard Fetty, Rulillld, rctpCirted Saturday night ui the Meip
County Sbaift's Depanmenl dill his vehicle wu damapl whUe
parted at Melp HiJb School during lhe prom. A sbarp Instrument
w
tbe j)eint on lhe hood,.trunt~~-~!des of hit
19as
88

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Gas stolen

· The Gu Phis S1ation in ~ Plajna reponed iUeaday 10 !he
Meip County Slierifrs Deputment 1!111 aroqnd 6:40p.m. t~ lillb- ·

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