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                  <text>p. age-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1

Tuesday, April 28, 1992

Boston defeats Indiana 102-98 to enter second tier of playoffs
By HANK LOWENKRON
. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Larry
:.Bud is injured. Dee Brown is in.
Kevin McHale and Robert Parish
are fighting age.
Which means it's time for Reggie Lewis m emerge as lhe new slar
of lhe Bosmn Celtics.
" Reggie Lewis has been our
orrensive go-to guy all season
)ong,'' Boston coach Chris Ford
said. "He's stepped up his game 10
·lha! next level and, beginning wit.h
his selection to lhe AU-Star Game,
he's just carried it on."'
Lewis scored 28 of his 32 points
in the first half Monday night as
the Celtics defeated Indiana 102-98
to sweep lheir best-of-five series
and become the first team to

advance 10 the second round of lhe
NBA playoffs. Boston is riding an
11 -game winning slreak and 18 of
19.
The sweep gives lhe Celtics,
who have Bird sidelined by bacl:
spasms and Brown recovering from
a viral illness, a chance for some
welcome rest before their next
series. Both ~;~layers missed the
entue senes w1t.h Indiana and t.helf
sUitus for lhe next round remams
uncertain.
Tonight, Cleveland is at New
Jersey, New York at Detroi~ Golden State at Seaule and Utah at lhe
Los Angeles Clippers.
On Wednesday, it will be Chicago at Miami, Phoenix at San Antonio and Ponland at the Los Angeles

118th Kentucky
Derby scheduled
Saturday

Lakers.
the NBA's Sixth Man award for the rebounds for Indiana - his 12th the victory, while John Bagley had
Cleveland, Utah, Chicago, second consecutive yepr earlier consecutive double-double.
14 points and II assists.
Phoenix and Portland have 2-0 Monday, had 23 points and 12
McHale conaibuted 15 points to
leads in their series, while the
~~~------------~-•'
Detroit-New York and Golden
State-Seattle series are tied 1-1.
The Celtics are lhe second seed
in t.he Eastern Conference and will
meet the winner of t.he ClevelandNew Jersey series, which t.he Cavaliers lead 2-0.
Boston led by as many as 18
points in the third quarter, then survived a late Indiana charge that saw
the Pacen grab a 95-94 lead.
Kevin Gamble, one of five
Celtics in double figures with 17
I
pomts, then hit a jumper to put
I
Boston ahead to stay 96-95 with ·
I
1:48 remaining. The Celtics'
defense then held Indiana sc&lt;nless
Hunters take about 1,000 turkeys in Ohio
until Detlef Schrempf made a
Surveys indicate only one-third of three-pointer with 12.4 seconds
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hunters bagged 1,010 turkeys those requesting free permits go left, cutting Boston's lead to 10098, before Ed Pickney made two
Monday on opening day of Ohio's hunting.
free lhrows lO seal the vic!lry with
The
division
estimates
42,000
spring turkey season, the Ohio
11 .9 seconds remaining.
hunters
will
panicipate
in
the
lhreeDivision of Wildlife said.
Lewis said lha! in the fust half,
Last year, 810 turkeys were week season . Hunting continues
"evcrylhing
I was lhrowing up was
Ulken lhe fli'St day and 791 lllrkeys t.hrough May 16, except Sundays.
going
in
for
me. Down the stretch,
Only bearded gobblers may be
in 1990.
Vinton County again reponed Ulken and hunters must obtain and we were able to execute our
the most gobblers checked with 88. · attach a temporary tag lO the turkey offense and get t.he job done.·'
"We just could not get over the
Hocking County was second with before moving iL Turkeys must be
63, followed by Athens, 54; Ulken to an official checking station hump,"' said Reggie Miller, who
CONTEST WINNERS- These students
by Racine Department Store and C&amp;A Auto of
Adams, 50; and Columbiana, 48.
by 2 p.m. t.he day the turkey is shot led Indiana wilh 32 points. "We
were the top three money earners in a recent
Pomeroy, third place; and Jason Shuler, second
A total of 28,974 permits were
AII hunters need a valid Ohio played hard and everybody gave
"shoot-a-thon" held at Southern Junior High
place, winner of tennis shoes from Chapman
sold for turkey hunting season. hunting license and permit. Turkey 100 percen~ butlhey just held on
School. Pictured are (L-R) Ryan Hill, who was
Shoes in Pomeroy. Proceeds from the contest
Free permits. available to senior hunting is permitted in 38 Ohio and didn't give in."
awarded a fret registration at the University of
will benefit the school's science program, &lt;chool
citizens and some disabled veterans counties.
Octlef Schremp£, who was given
Rio Grande's basketball camp for first place;
supplies and gymnasium improvements.
were requested by 36,881 people.
Sammi Sisson, winner of a basketball donated

Cards:

~
r

Vol. 42, No. 256

AT THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER
Alzheimer's Disease/Related

Meigs
boardOKs
contracts

Multipurpose Senior Center, 1st Floor
(614) 992-2161
Mulberry Heights, P. 0. Box 722. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Disorders (family cartgivu rraining
and suppon groups)

Care Support System

(asuwn~nr of

lwspiraliud uniors for follow-up cart
ajllr diJchatgt)

Case

Management (idtnrijying probltm.r and obtaining a.rsiSIIlJICt)

Center Dining (nulritwus mLals)
Day Activities
Educatiooal Programs

Health Assessment

Hugh DaVIS
Hilda H. Davrs
Glact;s Drllon
Baker

Alta Dill
Peggy Dosky

Eleanor Lawson

Pearlene Lae
Jolln &amp; Kath'Yn Lambert
James &amp; Ruby Lewis

Eura Largent
Bernard Ladlie
Gene &amp; Daylon McElroy
Vrrgil McElroy
Mae McPeek
Kerm1t McElroy
Caroline Miller

Ada Bissell

Gamet Ervine

ElSie Bamhan
Elmer C. Brandt
Martha LO&lt;J Beegle
Margaret Bowles
Eileen Bucl&lt;
Juanita Bad!tel
Rita Buckley

Freda Ea.rards
Sybil Ebersbadl
Ethol Euler
Virginia Eastep
Marguerite Eskew
M1 &amp; ~s Allen E~hrnger
Ma'Y V Easierday

Temsa 8y8f

Anna Frank

Flossie Badgley

Helen Fisher

Neva Moore
Beulah Maxey

Virginia Buchanan

Mara bel Frecker

E11elyn Mains

Lois Bell

Ruby Fnck

Lavina Brannon
John Bryan
Chuck &amp; Omsy Blakeloo
Cart &amp; Hazel Barnhill

Wanda Fetty
Arvilla Frecker
Earl &amp; Lrlah Frocker
Mr &amp; Mrs Eugene Ftnk
Manas _Fosler

AddeR Buck

Ma'Y CundiH

Mr . &amp; Mrs . Robert Burdette
Thomas &amp; Ma'Y Bowen
John &amp; Sylvia Blake
Ardilh &amp; Edith Banon
Reva Beach
Avanell Bass
Gladys Blessing

Frances Goeglein

Betty Butcher

Alpha Bailey
Lorena lleeg~

Golde Graham
Byn Griffin
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Carl Gorby
Frances Gereaterex
Thelma Garren
Frances Goeglein

Eloise Mankin

Lewrs &amp; Ruby Miller
Donald &amp; Betty Mauer
Maye C. Mora
V&lt;&gt;let Mrllhone
Cecilia Mitch
Carl &amp; Lena Marlin

Jessie Martin
Jestio Molden

Wayne Mrllhone
Pear1 Morris

Margaret E. Me teal!
Nan Moore
Ruth Morris
Virgil &amp; Jose Mascerro

Mrldred Meadows

Mabel Gofl
Nancy Grueser

Nellie Myers

lnfOOillllion and Referral

Elmer Bailey
Robert &amp; Bemice Bailey
Malinda Christy

George Genheimer
Vona Gillenwater
Martha Greenaway

Paul Nease
Alice Nease

ProtectiveJLegal As~istance

Manley Chrisly
Bertha Conde

Jackre Hrldcb&lt;and
Etho/ Hughes

RecrealiooaVSocial Activities

Clara Conroy
Emest &amp; Sadie Carr

Virg 1nia Hoyt
Lula Hampton

GeQrge NIChols
Margaret Nichols

Sarah Caldwell

Rachel Cundiff
Rubal Caldwell
Mildred Cal&lt;lrNell

Kelhel Halfieki
Hen'Y &amp; Kay Hrll
Marie Houdashe/1
George &amp; Lois Harris

Max1ne Owons

Otis &amp; Talitha Casto
Doug Cirde
Carole Coleman

Virgil &amp; Mary Hamm
H1lda Ham s
Dalton Henry

Jenevoe Chesher
Joo &amp; Eliose Connoly

01a Hysell

Reuben &amp; Thelma Coll1n s
Evetyn Casto
Lula Circle
Cart Casto
James Conre/1

Mildred Harns
Donna Hill
CIIHord Hill
Dennie H1ll
Nadine Hudson

Mae Cleland
Mae Crowser

Helen Hood

Health Oinks

Retired Senior Volunteer Program
Supponive Assistance (for namplt,
filling out iruuranalmedical forms and

an.rwtr;_,

bt~ttfil questions)

Tax Assistance
Transportation and Escort

vehicles, iru:ludmg varu wrth a whttl chnir
lift, art availablt for pmonallmLdical
(5

E:dwin &amp; Laura Cozar1
Earl A . Cross
FIOfence Circle

Lawrence Carpenter
Liz CuUer
R.L &amp; Faria M. Cole
Edna Carmen

'f-ond" D - ol 11M MCCoA,
ncc•dJ relllrHd lo doe Aan&lt;J....,. u ...._ ol 14
moatlu. Mn. Ollnr wu -plo)'ell ~7 lllle Oltlo
~~otMuWa.llllm•~~·~

1a1 11o1111 ......11... , .... w1111 11M luct•r• llllh
Arw A&amp;•II&lt;J oa Aitq'• OptioM for lldon/P-port
Projod.
~
al
hodi.Wuab, orplliu- ud •~udr• ~

ou... em•• .. ,......

·-to ...•......
•••r

uolotod 1111 MCCoA wlllll -tlarf . _ _ aod
..tu_. I ta- durlq tloc
SM ll8kd

t
o
.......
s.mc- m

,_a,....

lllat Stall oltloc MCCoAr ....Wd wol._. 11M oppor·

tpnrcr- lo .... puWic .. 11M Sclll&lt;rr

Molp Caa1J ... "" Gcroalolov-....

Milton &amp; Freda Hood

W1llard &amp; Elsie H1ne s
Ronald &amp; Hilda Hart
Helen Hicks
Rhonda Hall

H1lda A. Harris
Cart &amp; Dorolhy Hendricks

Looise Heines
Don Houdasheh

Bonnie Conde
Lucille Clay
Ron &amp; Mary Cowcle'Y
Ida Choad~
Lyle &amp; Erna Campbell
Ora Carsey

Nellie Hatlield
Wm. &amp; Elizabeth Hobstetter
Rhoda Hall
Mildred lhle
Eileen Juslis
Bertha Johnson

Leona V. Cleland

Curtis Jenkin son

Edna Clarl&lt;

Margaret Johnson

Geraldine Cross
Mary l. Crossan

Ruth Johnson
Carroll &amp; Mii&lt;Yed Johnson

Mattha Clond!
Lola Clari&lt;
Harald &amp; Ouida Chase

boallJ

Vernon &amp; Lucy Donahue
Mr &amp; t«s. Ernest Oav1s

Dorothy Long
Mary Loudner
Donald &amp; Evelyn Lanning

Sam Cummins
Mary G. Durst

Edith Jrvrden
Marv1n Kelly
Chester Kmght

Earl and Kathryn Knight

Lao Davidson

Glact;s Knolls
Elizabeth Keller

Maly Davidson

Marcia KaiT

Dorothy Neutzling
Addie Noms
Bernice Nelson

Rex O'Brien
Nellie Parker

Peart Proffitt
Clara Phillips
Daytoo Phrlhps
Irene Phillips
Howard Pinnell
Helen Pickens
Inez Pooler

Erwin Potratz
Lucille Potratz
Lulu Mae Ouivey
Dorothy Reibel
Arnold Richards
Florence Richards
Frances Roush
Pauline Ridenour
Helen Reynok1!&gt;

Leona Roach
Wilham Ratliff
Juanita Ratliff
James Randolph
Tammy Randolph
Allred Randolph
Brenda Randolph
Ted Riley Jr.
Clara Riley
Harold RO&lt;Jsh
Margory Roo sh
Nonga Roberts
Gertrude Rizer
Brit Russell
Mary Russell
Horman Reese

Thelma Roese
Nina Robinson

Wilbur Rowley
Matilda Rowley
Franklin Rizer

Wanda Rizer
Eva Dessauer
Betty Kern
Mary KRoush
Roland DIMst
Mr. &amp; MIS. Nick Kramer
Erma Roush
P89 Douglas
LewiS Kenr"ct;
Wanetta G. Radekin
Robe~ &amp; Virginia Ducl&lt;worth Laura Krebs
Golda Radc~tle
John &amp; Mattha Du&lt;tling
Mary Kautz
Manning Roush
Will10 Da"s
Charlie Kiser
Ramona Roush
Dorothy Downie
George Kauff
Rose Reynolds
Elizabeth Davis
Ambel Lohn
Dorothy Aoler
Lilian Dem&lt;&gt;skey
Calvin ! Mabel Lane
Ralph
Shain
Ernest Damewood
Lawrence &amp; Ma~arie Leonard
MaxW&gt;eShain
Vincent Daoo .
Harold &amp; Elizabeth Lohse
John Shain
Will•• &amp; Patti DaVIs
Mary Lyon
Belly Sayre

Alben Smith
Clara B. Sm1th
Art Strauss
Beulah Strauss

Ftorei\C&lt;l Smilh
JA Smith
Dorothy Smith

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

l

Daisy Sayre

Emily Sprague
Eileen D. Smrth
Paul Searles
John Southam
Mary Southern
Joe Sisson
Myrtle Sisson
Mary A. Samuels
Ethol Shasteen
Mamie Swauger

IN THE HOME
Chore Servtce (cleantng laundry)
Homemaker/H~Ith Servtces
'

Home Delivered Meals

Josephine Stiles
Harriette Sinclair
Lucil~

Smith
Home Maintenance lmtnor home

Rose Sisson

MaiW&gt;da Smilh

repairs)

FemOOra Story
Da~d Sayre
Dorolhy Sayre
Geol\je Starcher
Kathleen Scote
Betty Spencer
Ralph Shain

Outreach
Resplle Care (assLslance for
famU!es who are cartng for an
elderly farnil!J member tn lhctr

Lawrnnce Stewart

Eva Schreibel
Bill Thurston
Harry R. Thomas
BesSJe Turley
Blythe Thoiss
Edna Triplett

'

Retired Senior Volunteer Program

Edgar Thomas
Gretta Thomas

Harnett Thompson
Sacie Trussell
Eleanor Thomas

Hazel VanCooney
Chester VanMeter
Sarah Voss
Mel.,;n &amp; Charlotte 1/anMeler
Rowena VBllghn

Nellie Wethemott
Roben W~son
Norma Wilson

Monad Wilson
Waddell
Freda Welling
Joseph Walle
Geol\je While
Mabel

Jessie White

Beulah Ward
Margaret B. Weber

S A MONTH CLUB
CHECK ONE
f1 .00 Club 1
f6.DO Club I
81000Ciubl
820 00 Club I

I w11h to loin the

1
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)
1

I will pay monthly 1
Staning .. . .. .. .. . ....... . ... ........ I date)

I will pay yearly (
Staning •.. •..... .. •...... .. .•. . .. . . . . I data)

NAME :

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ADDRESS : . ....... .. .... .... ... .............

Dora Wining

Gladys Walker
Clara Wise

James Weber
Katie Weber
Alle~ra Will
Norman Will
Mina Walker
Isabelle Wolla
Au&lt;bWeM
Anna Wolfe
Kathleen Wells
Alice Wamsley
Helen L. White
Jean Wright
Mae Weber
Belva Willard
John Wilfiams
Ann Williams
Floyd Weber
Faye Will
Maggie WW19brenner

JanaWalton
Alfred YeiiUQOr
Hilda Yeauger
Enna Voho
Nellie Zerlde
Lillian Zerlde
Cash Zimmennan
Hallie Zerlde
Mar$hall Roush

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1991 GROUP CONTRIBUTIONS
CHURCHES
E . letan United Methodist Women
Mt . Un i on Baptist ChurCh
Mt. Moriah Baptist Church
Mt. Moriah Church of God Lad les Awe
Pomeroy Sevon Day Ad..,.&amp;ntlat Church
Pomeroy United Mathodlat Church
Pomeroy Church or Christ
Racine United Methodist Men
Racine Unlled Method ist Women
Rocksprings United Methodist Womena C lub
Silver Run Baptist ChurCh
Syracuse Asbury Methodist Church
Eagles Sunday School Class
Tuppers Plains Church of Chrlat
Joppa Sunday School Clue
Racine First Baptist Church Ruth Missionary Circle
Enterprise United Methodist Willing Workers Class
Del(ter Church of Chrisl
Heath United MothOdlst Church Afternoon Circle
Catholic Women's Club
Racine Baptist Sunday School Clas.s M4

ORGANIZATIONS &amp; BUSINESSES
Drew Webster Post M39
D isabled American Veterans, Chaptur 63
F.O. E. Au.~dllary 2171
D isabled AmericAn Veterans, Pomoroy

Friendly Neighbors Club
American Legion- Feeney Bannen Unit N128
Auxiliary
long Bottom Senior Citizen Club
TCKS, Inc. M1362
Southern Ohio Coal Company
Rutland Furniture Star&amp;

•

•

Contracts were awarded to
teachers and other certified staff
members as wen as non-certified
personnel, at Tuesday night's meeting of the Meigs Local Board of
Education.
Given continuing contracts were
Stephanie Ash, Mick Childs, and
Donna Clark. Employed on five
year contracts were Rusty Bookman, Teresa Carr, Carol Crow, Jim
Crow, Jennie Dorsey, Ron Drexler,
Dale Harrison, Janet Hoffman,
Eleanor McKelvey, Elizabeth
Story, and Julia Vaughan.
Three year contracts were
awarded lO Cindy Allen, Marjorie
Blake, Christine Dowler, Tim
Dunn, Darla Kennedy, Lynn
McCarley, and Mike Staggs. Hired
on one year contracts were Bob
Ashley, Karla Brown, Tammy
Chapman, Rick Edwards, Daryl
Owens, Linda Smith, Shirley Van
Meter, John Van Reeth, and Sandra
Walker.
Contracts to non-certified personnel went to Jeff Wilson,
mechanic; Jack King, custodian;
Marilyn Meier, secretary; Judy
Eblin, aide, and Carolyn Nicholson, part-time&gt; aide. Continuing
contracts wentiO Carrie Morris and
Ste\-e Morri.&gt;, buflli'ivtts; Myrville
Brown, cook; Carroll Johnson, custodian; and Sandra Butcher, aide.
Of the numerous supplemental
contracts awarded by t.he board, a
five year contract went to Toney
Dingess, band director, with a one
year contract going to John Van
Reeth, assistant band director.
Mike SUlggs was given a two year
cootntct as head football coach ror
the Marauders. He also rccei ved a
one year contract as alhlctic facilities care person.
Other one-year supplemental
contntcts for alhletic coaching positions went to Daryl Owens, assistant varsity football; John Amott.
~venth and eighth grade football;
Bryan Zirkle, seventh and eighth
g.rade football; Rick Ash, boys;
assistant varsity basketball; Rick
Edwards, boys' reserve basketball.
Given two year contracts were
Jim Oliphant, cross country; Fred
Baloy, boys; head track; Jim
Sheets , head wrestling; John
Krawszyn golr; Rick Ash, girls'
volleyball; Dale Harrison, girls'
assisUint volleyball: Ron Logan,
girls's varsity basketball; Cliff
Kennedy, girls' head track; John
Amou, girls' softball.
Other one year supplemental
contntcts were awarded 10 Eleanor
McKelvey, yearbook ; Jamie Blaettnar, junior high school cheerleaders; Celia McCoy. dmma; Jeannie
Taylor, junior class sponsor; Rita
Slavin, quiz team; John Arnott ,
Cliff Kennedy, Mike Witrong ,
guidance; Eleanor BlaeUnar, librarian; Rebecca Triplen. Pomeroy
Safety Patrol.
A one-year contract was also
awarded to Earl Young as pan-time
assistant high school principal.
Given two year contracts as head
teachers were Vicki Haley, Harrisonville; Marsha Radabaugh,
Middleport; Julie Hubbard .
Pomeroy; Marjorie Fetty, Ru~and;
Mary O'Brien, Salem Center; Ed
Bartels, Salisbury; and John Amotl
Meigs Junior High. Gary Walker
was contracted for a year as EMJS
Coordinator, and Eleanor Blaeunar
as library supervisor.
The board vot.ed to abolish the
supplemental positions of junior
high athletic duector and director
of extra printin~ for schools. and
accepted the I'CSignation of Gordon
Fisher as athletic director.
Tea~:hers who did ~~ get contraCt tenewals betause they were
working in "fill-in positions" for
teachers on leave included Judy
Crooks, Todd I obnson, and Bryan
Zirkle.
SupplemenUII contracts to ail
non-teaching personnel were not
renewed at lhis time in accordance
with the law, Supt. James Carpenter explained. That group included
DeMis Boothe and Bill Ross, assistant varsity football CQIICheS; CarContinued on page 3 •

A llulllmedlo Inc. Newsoaoer

Bush, Clinton
•
coast to WillS
PHILAD ELPHIA (AP ) - Btl!
Clinton is seeking endorsement s
today from Democratic congressional leaders as he begins to wrap
up the presidential primary season
with a convincing victory in Pennsylvania and clear signs that his
character problems are diminrsh-

By CHARLRNE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr

M eigs County Council on A ging1 1nc.

Kaly Anthony
Emma Adams

Euvena Bechtle

tonight in upper 40s.

2 Section, 16 Paget 25 cenlt

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 29, 1992

Copyrighted 1992

'

Trudy Anctews
Doris Adams
Louise Bearhs
Edison &amp; Bernice

Low

Chance of rain 60 percent.
Thursda y, high in mid 60:-..

Page6

\ 1/~~------.
SERVICES&amp;: PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

Pick 3: 184
Pick 4: 7554

, r I

THANKS THE
1991 CONTRIBUTORS
/-

~

7H •· 10-C·• 8-D ·•
Q-S

Meigs County C ouncll
on Aging, Inc.

.-:::::~

Ohio Lotterv

mg.

VIDEOS PRESENTED • Copies or the new
Meigs County promotional video, "The Heart of
the Valley," were presented to area schools and
county organizations on Tuesday by Mary Powell, director or the Meigs County Parks District
Accepting the videos, 1-r, are Dick Smith, superintendent ot Eastern Local; Bobby Ord, superintendent or Southern Local; James Carpenter,

superintendent of Meigs Local; John Riebel,
Meigs County Superintendent of Schools, with
Mary Powell; Rulh Powers of the Meigs County
Public Library and Rev. William Middleswarth
of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical
Society and Museum. Addilonal copies will soon
be available for the public.

Court action sought to help
reduce debt in Meigs district
By CHARLENE HORFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
Action to tran sfer $344 ,4';4.46
from the bond retirement fund in to
the gen eral fund for the specific
purpose of reducing debt of the
Meigs Local School District was
approved by the board of education
Tue&gt;day night.
The board adopted a resolution
authorizing Supt. James Carpenter
to proceed wilh action required lO
facilitate the transfer. Carpenter
explained that a petition requesting
permission to make the tran sfer
will have lO be filed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun, with
a copy to go lO the state tax com miSSIOner.

According to Carpenter, the surplus goes back to the high sc hool
bond collections. He said that rn
effect about a year's wonh of taxes

were collected which were not
needed lO retire the bonds, and that
the amount represents an ovcrpay meot into the bond retirement fund
The resolution passed b) 1he
board specifically states that the
money will be used to reduce debt
in the district. The district is in the
state loan progntm.
The board voted 10 hire Landis
and Gyr Powers, Inc. of Columbus
to do an energy analysis of the dtstrict's schools. Representatives of
the firm auended Lhe meeung and
e&lt;plained savings in energy costs
whi ch can be realized through total
school evaluation. It was noted that
the firm has already looked at the
Pomeroy Elementary School where
there have been high repalf costs
on heating equipment.
The emphasis of the analysis,
said Carpenter. wlil be to get
improvements in energy efficiency

and costs wrthout strruning the budget.
Bob Smitty, parent of Har risonville Elementarv students ,
~gJID appCaif.irt)dorelJieoooril lO
discuss lhe matter of teacher cvaluauon He asked what can be done
about teachers who arc not doing
an "adequate job" in t.he classroom.
The superintendent questioned
Smitty about what he means by "an
adequate job" to which Smitty
replied "If a whole classroom of
children arc not understanding ,
then there has to be something
wrong with the teaching ."
Carpenter acknowledged that
some teachers do a better job ~~an
others but went on to say that he
doesn't think "we have anyon e
dorng ~ob so poorly that they
need immediate dismissal." He
went on to explain that the state
Conrinutd on page 3

Clinton now mu s t un rfy hr s
party while honing his theme.s for
the fall - for campaigns agamst
expected independent candidate
Ross Perot, as well as Bush.
Exit polls showed Clinton's
rmage rebound1ng, at least with
Pennsylvania voters, in the three
weeks since t.he mucous New York
primary . Srxty-one percent said he
had the honesty and integmy to be
prcsrdent, a sharply higher percentage than in earlier state s. Three
week s ago in New York , 49 per·
ce nt of voters leaving polling
places sa1d they did not believe the

"it was my kind of campaign,
rooted in the desires of the Pennsylvania prople and their yearning
for a change," Clinton said Tuesday night after trouncing rival Jerry
Brown 56 percent to 26 percent.
President Bush caplllred 77 percent of the pnmary vote to Patrick Arkansas governor was honest
Buchanan's 23 percent. The While enough to serve.
llouse called the rnce over. malheAs much as Clm:on and Bush
rnatically , but it counted delegates had reason to cheer, lhey also got
who won't be awarded until thi s fresh ev1dcnce of potential trouble:
25 percent of voters in both parties
weekend .
said
they would vote for Perot in
and
Buchanan
gamely
Brown
the
fall.
pledged to fight on, but the PennWhile the presidential results
sylvania vote underscored Lhe obvious: The challengers arc little more were about as pred1ctcd, Pennsyl than diversion as the primary sea- vania hved up to its recently earned
son head s toward Its end, June 2, rcputauon for surprises.
Lynn Yeakel. a political novice,
with voting in California, New Jerdefeated Lt. Gov. Mark Singci for
sey. Ohio and elsewhere.
" Bill Clinton has now moved to the Democratic nomination to
a general election campaign oppose GOP Sen . Arlen Specter
focused on George Bush and it' s She attacked Specter's treatment of
only April." said Democratic Anua Hill dunng hearings to conNational Committee Chairman firm Clarence Thomas to th e
Ronald Brown. "It 1s truly historic Supreme Court SpecJCr easily won
for the Democmtic Party to be ral - hi s pnmary.
lying around a virtual nomihee this
Five - term D emocratiC Rep .
early in the process."
Continued on pa~e 3

Justice department objects
to JFK documents release

WASHINGTON (AP) - The sources.
"We strongly obJCCt to the resoJustrcc Department, despite earlrer
administrauon hints to the contrary. lution in its current form ," Rawls
is opposing legislation to rel ease sa id. If passed. he said, the Justice
doc uments related to Prcsrdent Department "would give serious
consideration to recommending
Kennedy's assassmauon m 1963.
Re sponding to the popular preSidential disapproval."
The letter drew a chilly rcacuon
movr c. "JFK," televr sion docu rn cnetrres and opimon polls. House Tuesday rrom Republicans and
and Senate leaders of bot.h parties Democrats at a hearing of the
wcr nl swrfl pa ssa ge of the bill House Government Opemtions legcr uiil onnn g an openin g of th e rslation and national sec urity su bcommittee.
arch1 vcs.
"I had hoped for the admrn rstra!'hey say the point IS not to cater
tion's
full support and coopera 10 crny particular conspiracy theo ry
tion
."
said
Chairman John Con ycr bou t th e murder of Kennedy, but
ers
,
D-Mich
. "But I mu st repon
to res tore pub lic tru st in go ve rn that it appears tlmt the administm men t.
Un trl Tues day. 1hc Bush adm rn· tr on is dragging Its collective feet. ' ·
The ranking Republican on the
Lc. trall on was gomg al o ng with
pcr
ncl.
Rep. Frank Horton of New
opc11mg lhc files.
York
.
and
Rep. Chnstopher Shays,
Then thi s week, on the eve uf
RConn
..
said
there was no good
th e fir st congressional hearing on
reaso
n
to
block
th e release of 30the lcg•slation, the Justic e Department submitted a nme -page letter year-old secrets
Under th e proposed resolution,
c
lctailrng major objections to the
under a rug."
the federal appc;1ls court in Washproposal.
Ass
istant
Attorney
Gen
Oflicials have said the ruling
rngton would apporn1 a five-mem likely would not be released if the eral W. Lee Rawls wrote tlmt the be r citi ze n board to review and
company and union success fu lly hli l " would severely encroach dwdc on Ih e release of assassirulupon the president' s constitutional
negotiated a new contmct.
authont y to protect confidential uon doc uments. In cases mvolving
exccut rve age ncies such as the FBI
i nfonnati on."
Meanwhile, Marc Rich, the hrl·
Rawls al so raised nauonal sccu - or CIA. the president could refuse
lionairc financier who is one of riiy concerns. saying that language to rclc~L'iC material but only on narAmerica's most wanted fugitives . clearing lhe way for the release of row priv acy or national security
said in a television intervi ew CIA and FBI document s could ground s.
Tuesday night he is awa.re of the endanger intellige nce methods and
problems at Ravenswood.
The segmcn t on "Datcl ine
NBC" focused on the troubles of
union workers at Ravenswood
Aluminum, which was purchased
Meigs Count y Common Pleas Cou rt Judge I-red W. Crow ill has
by a financial group with tics to
ann
ounced that the tnal set for Tirursday ha&gt; bee n canceled. Jurors
Rich.
need not report.
In add1ti on . those jurors arc released from funhcr service due to
the end of the January tenn of court , accordi ng to Judge Crow. He
expressed hi s thanks and appreciati on to all those who served as
planning to apply for a Women' s
Jllrors in the January term .
Health Grunt of $500. The money
will be used ror seminars. one
relating m Slfess of caregivers, and
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Wednesday
the second to the physical condi1hat
sometime over the weekend, someone had lmockcd the lock off
tion of caregivers, to be offered
1he gasoline tank at Riverview Elcm cntm'y School. No gasoline was
during Women's Health Week in
believed to have been taken .
September.
On Sunday, Shirley Diddle of Happy Hollow Road reponed to
The caregivers support group
the
department that the back door on her residence had been damwas resumed last week w1th 12 in
aged.
auendance, it was reponed.
Tom Kimes of Racine reptirted that sevcml items had been taken
Senior Citizens Day wa s
from a building on State Route 338. A scanner. a CB base radio and
announced for May 19. It was also
a
power saw were Ulkcn.
reP.orted that the senior citizens
will be back at Lhe Meigs County
Fair this year and that the Center
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed that deputies
will also be participating in Herwere caned 10 Lhc Debra Henry Residence on Old Ponland Road on
itage Day and the Sternw_heel
Monday evening to investigate a domestic violence complaint
Regaua.
According to Soulsby, Henry and her husband were involved in
Malcolm Orebaugh presided at
Continued on page 3
the meeting.

Newspaper wants judge
to release RAC decision

Union woes featured on national TV
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
- A newspaper has filed a
Freedom of Information request
seeking lO force a judge to release
his decision about charges of unfair
labor practices against a Jackson
Cowuy aluminum plant.
Administrative Law Judge Bernard Ries in Washingmn, D.C., had
been scheduled 10 rule by Monday
on the National Labor Relations
Board's finding that Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp. locked out 1,700
union workers 18 months ago.
That decision, if upheld, could
force the company 10 rehire t.he
union worlcers and fire more than
1,000 replacement workers.
However, Rfes agreed to

Ravenswood's request that he delay
his ruling until June I to give new
negotiations a chance to work ,
Representatives from lhc company
and t.he United Steelworkers uni on
were to resume contract talks today
in Pittsburgh for t.he first time since
last July.
The Parkersburg News said in its
Freedom of Information request
that Ri es should release hi s dcx is10n.

"We believe the public ha.s a
large sta:&lt;c in lhis decision," satd
Editor Charles Jarvis. "It would be
a shame, considering the amount of
taJ&lt; dollars that have been spent
through the NLRB lO get a dec ision, lO just have this ruling swept

r----Local briefs-----.
Criminal trial canceled

Funding problems among board topics
f'unding problems to be faced in
the next several months along with
proJects planned for summe1 and
fall were discussed at Tuesday
afternoon's meeting of the Meigs
County Council on Agio~ Advisory
Board at the Senior Ciuzens CenlCr .

Mem hers were encouraged to
write letters to their legislators urging support for additional funding
for the Older Americans Act. It
was noted that an effort is being
made to plug the appropriations
gap. It was reported that funding
levels will have to be raised by
$424 million to meet the new
demand of persons age 60 and
over. The percentage of that age
population continues to increase.
Linda Friend also encouraged

~wt

members write letters of support for the Title 3 program which
includes health services, transponation escort service, supportive servi ce, and home maintenance.
It was reponed that the Software
Computer Project funding has now
been rejected because of the difficulty in implementing the program
with available staff. The Ohio Children Fund Grant which would have
provided seniors as mentors for
teenage parents at Meigs High
School was not funded, Susan
Oliver, director, announced.
Beth Theiss reported on the
options/passport program noting
that referrals are welcome. Assessments on new clients need to be
completed now so that the names
can be placed on a waiting list.
Friend advised that the Center is

Theft, vandalism reported

Sheriff's deputies probe incident

•

t

�Wednesday, April 29 , 1992

Commentary
I l l Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 11iE MEIGS-MASON AREA

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITFJIEAD
Asslst.ont Publisher/Controller

FORT WORTH, Texas - Late ing on lhe pan of people who come
one evening in 1987, !hen-Speaker late and want to redo works of " sit beside me 10 use the opponunity to talk wilh me about som eof the House Jim Wright was sit· an, .. read hIS JO
. urnal .
th ing in which lhey are interested.
ling at his desk in the East Wing of
Our associate Dale Van Atta It makes it imP?ssible for me to
the Capi10l. He was writing in his recenU y was granted wide access 10 hear lhe debate. '
journal about a day that was all 10o
Wright complained that lhis had
typ,cal.
made
his own debate preparation
"To tell the uuth, I am a little
problematic.
These conditions, he
weary ," he noted. "I have had
relates, forced him to spend more
calle~ all afternoon. The difficulty
and more "creative time" far from
is to mret alllhe people who have a
the House floor.
legitimate need to talk with you, to
"They will come and sit await·
g1ve them each enough time and
ing my completion of a conversanot wind up always on somebody
tion with one member, or worse,
e lse' s sch edule .... I spend, it
will
inuude inLO lhat conversation
seems, such a disproportionate more lhan a decade of Wright's pri- assuming that I'm just passing lhe
share of my time listening 10 olhcr vate journals and olher transcrip- time of day with lhe olher member
~pie who want 10 tell me lhings. uons. In previous columns we pu!}.
llshed excerpts lhat paint a picture and have nothing imponant lhat he
This panicular day, May 12, had of Wright as a fiercely partisan and is discussing wilh me ... . If you're
i1s h•gh moments - an "interest· pndeful politician, someone who on lhe floor, you ought to be sitting
ing" conversation with Woody felt awed by the heritage of the lhere listening 10 lhe debate.··
Wright's journals read like a
Allen and Ginger Rogers_ " She House but fretred about its future.
Wright's
weariness
often
was
time
capsule for his relationship
certainly looks young for her age.
She and Woody Allen were here brout;ht on by colleaJUCS who gave with former President Reagan ,
with some screen write~ of renown h1m little peace or pnvacy. On May which seemed 10 evolve from revto talk about legislation which 15, Wright explained his pel peeve erential to revulsion.
OnApri14,198l,inlhewakeof
would protect their works from m one journal entry: Everytime he
set
foot
on
the
floor
of
the
House
to
the
attempted assassination against
artificial coloring and other tamperwatch debate. mem~ swarmed 10 former President Reagan, Wright

Accu-Weather• fo re&lt;:ast for

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man.gtr

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome . They abould lie 1.., than 300
word1. Allletten are 1ubject to ediliD&amp; and musl be tigD«t with name,
llll&lt;nu &amp;Dd Jelepbone number. No unsigned le11m will be publilbed. Lenen
sbould lie in good lUI&lt;, addn:nins
ool penonalitiea .

is'""'·

Clinton needs to convince
Democrats they want him

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
. WASHINGTON -Now thatJhcy'vc gor him , Bill Cl!nliln needs to
convince the Democrats that !hey really want him .
That' s his test in lhe Pcnnsylvmm pres idential primary today, and '"
big-state primaries over the next f1 ve weeks. .
. .
Clinton's nomination to challenge PreSident Bush no longe r IS '"
doubt; only a miracle or a dls3!iter could stop him now. The cloud that
persists is over his standing w1lhin his own panr , tl1c v1tal core support a
challenger has 10 have to build the broader consutuency 11 takes to wm the
While House.
There are 15 primaries to go, and c3c h w1ll add an mstallment of delegates toward lhc virtually guaranteed maJOrity for the Arl&lt;ans3!i govcmor
when the roll of stales is called at the Democ rati C Nauonal Convcnuoo on
July 15.
Clio10n has 1,388 of the 2, 145 he needs for the oominauon. f omll''California Gov. Jerry Brown, !he only other active ca mpaigner. is shonol
300 delegates. The numbers add up to no contest.
That should free Clinton to make the last phase of lhe pnmancs 1nto
1he opening round of his campaign against Bush, but he's also got to cope
with a Democratic enthusiasm gap, and with the character questiOns that
have dogged h1m all year.
.
Clinton says he's got time 10 dispellhose doubts, and w1ll succeed as
the voters learn more about him and what he proposes to do as pres1dent.
A landslide showing in Pennsylvania would help make his case. A narrower margin would be read as a sign of lhe weakness Gov. Robcn Casey
says would make a Clinton ticket a likely loser_
Casey has been complaining lately that _there's no emhusiasm and
widespread Democrdtic uneasmess about a Clmto~ nommauon. .
Clinton countm lhat Arkansas voters wouldn t have elected h1m governor five times "if I couldn't be uusted to handle lhe affairs of state
wilh honor and mtegnty and dignity."
"I ' ve learned lhe hard way, through ups and downs of the campaign,
that when people don't know you very well , it's easy to get sidetracked ,"
Clmton told a conference of black mayors on Saturday . "It's become
almost comical, alllhe licks I've taken in this election," he added Sunday
in Washington .
Later. Clinton said Bush ought to be the issue, and lhat the election
should be a referendum on his policies, particularly on the economy,
The whole 9th Crrcun Coun of knew !hey had in their lup pocket a
health care and education.
Appeal s is gettin~ a bum rap supply of seven-day stays that
"You don't need four more years of certain, slov: e&lt;:onornic dedinc because its minonty of liberal would last as long as a single 9th
when you are bcmg !Old things are getting beuer and they're not," he said JUdges proved ready 10 go to almost wcuit judge could be found who
at a rally in P1usburgh on Monday .
any length to block lhe scheduled was willing to request an "en
Clinton has challenged Bush polic1es in set speeches on topics like execution of Roben Alton Harris at
U.S. aid 10 the states of the old Soviet Union, the environment and , nc". San Quentin at 12:01 a.m. on April
education . in an early , indirect debate on major issues.
21. Harris, you will recall, killed
But his defensive signals get in the way of his effort to take lhe offen- two 16-year-old boys in cold blood
save.
in 1978, to keep !hem from identi Low voter wmouts in lhe Dcmocm1ic pnmar1es, h1gh negauve ratin gs fying him and his brother as the bane" rehearing of any order of the
Harris panel.
1n polls lhat record dissatisfaction w!lh ca"'lldatcs in both pan1cs and the ones who stole lheir car for use in a
To provide fresh ordc~. "new
surge of interest in Ross Perot as a likely third entry all underlin e th e bank robbery.
evidence" was alleged that Harris'
problems lhat persist for Clinton.
Normally a panel of three of the brother "may" nave committed
Brown plays on those doubts. sa y•ng a Clmton uckct would lose 47 circuit's 28 JUdges will hear and one of lhc murders. With just days
states and telling Democrats that a vote for lhe Arkansas governor is like dec ide on an appeal. The panel to go before the execution date, the
assigned to the Harris case had tnal Judge dismissed lhis argument.
buying a ticket on the Titanic .
.
Casey said Monday that 1hc Dcmoc raLs should keep thCJr cand1date done so, and had affmned the trial Simultaneously, the American
options open until the convenuon. He said in an NllC intcrv1cw that the coun's judgment of execution. But Civil Liberties Union raised before
lock or enthusiasm for Climon shows 111 every survey . "Whail 'm trying under a rule of the m cuit called another district judge - Marilyn
10 head off is a mindless stampede by the in side -Jh c- Be ltway crowd "lhe seven-day rule," any one cir- Hall Patel - the highly belated
hehind a process which isn't workm g, " Casey said.
cuit judge can order a seven -day cr&lt;llention that execution by lelhal
Actually, lhe process is work10g. The problem fur Brown, Casey and stay of such a judgment, to allow gas has become a "cruel and
other disenchanted DemocraLs is who' s winning.
the full 28-member bench to vote unusual punishment," and hence
Clinton won 17 stales on lhe way to his commanding lead, forcing on whether to rehear the appeal unconstitutional, by our "evolving
himself on a Washington Democratic establi shment that would have pre· "en bane" (i.e., collectively). It standards" in these mauers. Judge
[erred somebody else but couldn 't agree on who. rive of the 10 biggest takes a majority of 15 10 order such Patel promptly ordered lhe cxecu·
electoral vote states have held primaries so far; Clmton has won them all. a rehearing.
tion postponed wh1le she stud1ed
There are five to go, windmg up with California on June 2.
Harris' lawyer s accordingly this contention. (No wonder EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
nisi ror The Associated l'rrss, has n•pnrted on Washington and
national politics for more than 25 years.

DIRTY LAONDRY

00 0

•
IToledo I 58° I

William A. Rusher

Berry's World

SELF-DESTRUCT TIME

•

and running in lime for the general
election !his November.
Although numerous mock clec·
tions" arc held across the U.S . each
Election Day, Kids Voting is the

Sen.Jan M. Long
only program in which students
study a voting centered curriculum,
register to participate, and vole at
the same sites lhey would ~o to as
adult voters. The Kids Young curriculum - including homework
assignments which encourage stu·
dents to debate the relative merits
of candidates and issues with lheir
families - is designed 10 stimulate
conversation about voting and the
election between children and
adults.
As an added incentive for adults
to become involved in the election,
Kids Voting asks lhat at least one
parent be registered to vote in order
for a child to participate in lhe election, and that an adult accompany
youn~er children 10 lhe polls.
IGds Voting originated in 1988
in Arizona's experience. Their
results are impressive - and enviable. The 1990 Kids Voting project
involved more than 675,000 stu·
dents and 18,000 teachers from
nearly every community in that
stale. On November 6, 1990, more
than 131,000 students, the majority
accompanied by their parents,
voted on a special ballot in lheir
nelghborbood poUing place.
In addition to sparldng interest
among would-be voters, the pro·
gram is helping 10 draw registered

adult voters to the polls. Seventysev en percent of surveyed adults
indicated lha! IGds Voting sparked
political discussion at home and
3% of all voters said that their
child's participation in Kids Voting
is the only reason lhat lhey voted!
Of all the alarming signs regarding civic participation, perhaps
none is more worrisome than
young adults' failure 10 vote. The

By April 16, 1983, Wright
wrote !hat he had lost all "regard
for Reagan 's acumen as a sLatesman. I think he is for the birds . ... I
really think he is one of lhe poorest
people that we've ever had in the
While House for knowing what 10
do."
Wright found Reagan could be a
stubborn negotili!Or who indulged
in eanhy language. "He (Reagan)
was capable of colorful figures of
speech .. .," Wright states. One of
the biggest .rustrations for the
Democratic leadership came when
Reagan pulled statistics out of lhe
blue, such as asserung to Wright
and former Speaker Tip 0 'Neill
that "50 percent of all the welfare
programs did not ever reach wel fare recipients .... "
When challenged by O'Neill .
about his facts, Wright quotes Rea gan as replying: "'Well, Tip, don't
forget I was gathering it (information) all those y~ I was on lhat
green-pea circuit"'
At times it seemed Wright was
fighting a two-front war in the ·
1980s - one against a Republican .
administration and the other against :
restive members of Congress. His :
chores ranged from lhe cosmic, as :
in crafting Central American poli- •
cy,10 lhe mundane, as in striving 10 ,
get mem~ home in time for &lt;lin- ;
ncr. One entry reads:
·
" ... lhe rank -and -file membe~ ,
would like it very much if they :
could predictably say to their ·
wives, I'm going to be home at
6:00 tonight because we'll quit at
5:00. The difficulty is that without
some rule that establishes how long
the debate may go on a given ,
amendment, you just simply can't ··
say when you' II adjown."
Copyright, 1992, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

a

By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, April 29, lhe !20th day of 1992. There are 246
days left in lhe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 29, 1945, American soldiers liberated the Nazi concentration
camp in Dachau, Germany, where tens of thousands of people had perished.
On lhis dale:
In 1429, Joan of Arc entered lhe besieged city of Orleans to lead a victory over the English.
In 1861, Maryland's House of Delegates voted against seceding from
lhe Union.
In 1862,-New Orleans fell to Union forces during lhe Civil War.
In 1863, newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst was born in
San Francisco.
In 1894, several hundred unemployed men known as "Coxey's
Army" swarmed iniO Washing!On to ask Congress for help.
In 1913, Swedish-born engineer Gideon Sundback of Hoboken, NJ.,
patented lhe zipper.
In 1916, the Easter Rising in Dublin collapsed as Irish nationalists who
had seized control of the General Post Office surrendered to British
authorities.
In 1946, 28 former Japanese leaders were indicted in Tokyo as war
criminals.
In 1974, President Nixon announced he was releasing edited transcripts of some of lhe secretly made White House tape recordings related
to the Watergate scandal.
In 1977, Pope Paul VI and lhc Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Doltald
Coggan, parlictpated in a Christian unity service in lhe Vatican's Sistine
Chapel.

•[ Columbus [ 65°

.
.
,
.
,
.
·
~

'

00

I

W. ~A .

Showers T·storms Ram

Flum·es

Snow

Vis ASSDciBied Pre~ GraphcsNet

Ice

S.mny

Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
0 1992 Accu-Waalher, Inc.

------Weather-----Friday through Sunday:
South-Central Ohio
Fair
on Friday and a chance of
Tonight, showm likely. Low in
the upper 40s. Chance of rain 60 showers Saturday and Sunday .
percent. Thursday, mostly cloudy Morning lows in lhe 40s Friday and
with a slight chance of showers . mid-40s to mid-50s on the week High 65-70. Chance of rain 30 per- end. Highs in mid-50s to mid-60s
Friday, the 70s Saturday and 60s
cent .
Sunday.
Extended forecast:

,---Local briefs... - - - .
Continued rrom page I
an argument and she was struck in lhe mouth.
Papers were filed and submiued to lhe Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office for a warrant

Emergency units answer calls
Four calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday by units of
Meigs Emergency Services.
At 11:51 a.m ., Middlepon unit responded lO Logan Street for
George Siders, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At6 :28 p.m., Middleport unit went to Nonh Founh Street. Ken neth Mohler was taken to Veterans. At 9:31 p.m., Middlepon unit
took John Galks 10 Veterans from lhe station. At 11:43 p.m., Rut·
land unit was senl!O Side Hill Road. Debbie Faw was taken to Veterans.

Tests show Woodall innocent,
newspaper, TV station reports
Hl!I\'TINGTON, WVa . (AP) man who spe01 four years in
~rison on charges he raped two
women in 1987 says results of a
prosecuuon-sought
test
makt
CabeU County authonties look
foolish .
Glen Dale Woodall. :\4. is
sc heduled to go on tnal Aug . 3 on
; harges he abducted two women
from lhe parking lot of the Hun tingLOn Mall and raped them.
He was sentenced in 1987 10 two
life terms plus 3:\4 years in prison
for lhe rapes, b~t his convictions
were lhrown out last summer by a
circuit judge because of geneuc
tests that reponedly proved his innocence.
Prosecu!O~ sought an additional
test that concluded lhe same lhing,
The Herald-Dispatch of Huntington
and WSAZ-TV reported.
"I think they've made lllemselves look awful foolish," Woodall
said from his HuntingLOn home
IOday.
Assisunt Prosecu10r Charlie
Hatcher said he wants 10 have the
test results inspected by a! least one
more DNA expert before makmg
any decisions in the case , including
filing for a dismissal.
"There are several lhings we
have to do," Hatcher told The
Herald-Dispatch
Ill
today's
editions. "Fust off. these decisions
aren't mine alone. We will, of
course, consult with the most important people on our side, the vic tims, about these result!.. "
WoodaU 1s confined 10 Ius home
while awaiung the second Dial. He
A

Kids Voting law can help us tum .
that trend around.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan ·
Michael Long, if you have any -:
questions &lt;X comments about lhese
or any other issues, my number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio,
43215 .

Today in history

PA.

~
~

IND.

Ohio tackles voter apathy among young adults
On Jun e 2, Ohio voters will
have the opportumty to exercise
one of our nation 's most funda men tal right s: the right to vote.
Voters will nominate their part y's
standard bearer for President and
many state and local offices. Vanous local issues and levies will al so
be decided.
Sadly, many voters will not go
the polls !hat day. choosmg instead
to 1gnore their right 10 vote - a
r~ght for which our nation's
founders pledged lheir lives, libeny
and fortune to secure, a right lhat
many people in many pans of the
world are still suugghng to obtain.
During lhe past 30 years, voter
participation has declined significantly. Only about one-half of all
e ligibl e citizens cast a ballot in
1990, compared to a 63% voter
turnout in !960. Even more signifi cant is the fact lhat the failure to
vote is age-related. A full 85% of
eligible young adults between ages
18 and 24 did not bother 10 vote in
the last presidential election . If
action is not taken, Ibis disturbing
trend could continue and eventually
be self-perpetuating. Ohio is laking
action. We have recently joined a
growing number of states lhat have
enacted an innovative program
aimed at increasing voter participation.
The Kids Voting Act of Ohio
(House Bill 471) was signed inLO
law on April21, 1992. It authorizes
programs lhat will permit children
to actually enter polling places and
cast a special, non-official ballot in
simulated elections. Election officials hope 10 have the program up

•

o

sors.

appeal. Wearily, the Supreme
Court lifted that too. In San
Quenun, shonly after 3 a.m., Harris
was strapped into a scat in the gas
chamber.
So it was left to yet another
doughty 9lh circuit liberal 10 add
the final macabre touch to the
drama. Outside the gas chamber, ~
phone rang. Judge Harry Pregerson
had just ordered yet another sevenday stay . A puzzled Harris was
unstrapped and led back to his
holding cell. In Washington, the
Supreme Coon grimly vacated the
Pregerson stay too - and then
added, in an action as unusual as it
was understandable, lhat no more
stays were lO he issued by lhe federal courts without its express permission. At 6:21 a.m., Robert
AI !On Harris was pronounced dead.
For arTOplt abuse of lhe judi·
cia! power,lt would be hard 10 beat
the performance of the liberal
minority of 9lh circuit judges who
issued those stays.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

~
~

IMansfield I 64 I•

Caution: liberal judges at work
she' s a former member of the
ACLU board herself!)
On appeals of these rulings, lhe
9th circuit's lhree-judge panel on
the Harris case affirmed the trial
coun's dismissal of the "new evidence " argument, vacated Judge
Patel's order for hearings on the
lelhal-gas issue, and directed lhal
the execution proceed as scheduled. But by now it was 6 p.m . on
execution eve, and lhe 9lh circuit's
own liberals swung in10 action.
One circuit judge ordered a
seven-day stay, ostensibly to per·
mit a vote on rehearing lhe "new
evidence" appeal. Two hours later,
I 0 of lhe 28 judges joined in ordering a similar sLay in connection
with the lethal -gas appeal. In
Washington, where it was nearly
midnight, the state of California
appealed to the U.S. Supreme
Court. By votes of 7-2 , the
Supreme Coun lifted both sLays_
Now anolher unidentified circuit
Judge stubbornly - almost contu·
maciously - ordered yet another
seven -day stay in the lethal-gas

conditions and high lemperatures

MIC H

hailed Reagan as a "good perform er" for lhe humor and grace
he showed in reassuring an aru.ious
nation . "It was the act of a good
man and a decent man and a man
or good will . ... I frankly do not
think (however) he knows about
economics."
By Nov. I, !982, Reagan was
an "alibi artist" who tried to pin
too much blame on his predeces-

The Daily Sentinel
(UHP8111-IIO)

Publiahfld every al\emoon, Monday
throuah Friday, 111 Court St., Pol_neTGY.
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Publlahint
Company/Mu.Uimedia Inc. , Pome1'Gy,
Ohio 48769, Ph. m .2J56 . Seeond elul
JIOilop pold ot Pomeroy. Ohio.
Member-: The APodatt.d Pr-eu , and the
Ohio Newapaper Aaodat.ion, National
Adnrtial.nl Repreaenlati.-e, Branham
NewapapeT Sales, 733 Third AYenu.e,
N.w Yort, New Yurt 10017.
POSTMABTElt Bend oddrou doa._ lo
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomero,, OHio 46769.
IUIIHCIUFI'IOH llATD
By Curler.,.- llewto

E~··· ••:::::. ::.: •:::: ·:.: .E~
IWIGU: COPY
PRICB
Doily.... ... .....oo--oo···· ·· ·· . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .- ••:15 Cenl.o

Sultocriben nOi deoiri .. lo poy tlte carrler may nmit in ech'ace dtnct Ia The
Daily Sentinel on a . th1'111 , ab Ql'" _12
month t.n.. Credit .01 be lli•en earner

eacb....t.
No nblaiptioM by mail permitted In
anu whan home u.rrier .. nice ie
a•ail&amp;ble.

-·--

laoldoMolpCo. .Q-

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112 w-..-...

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oo . ... . .. ..... ... .. ... . oo .. . . . . . oo ••

O...W. Met11 Cowni;J

Page-3

_____::._____:____::__

Thursday, April 30

Wright discloses insights on fellow lawmakers

The Daily Sentinel

Court acti.On ..._Continutdfrompage 1 __ Local store named in

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, April 29, 1992

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~t -14

k3.t6

$84.76

: ::=:::••:••:· · :::: :::: : ·: .: : ::::::5: ~

said prosecuwrs have no choiCe but
to drop the charges.
"I don't know what they 're
gomg 10 do," he said. "The way
the IUSDCC system works in Uus
cowiry, I'm afraid 10 guess. I bope
thev do drop the charges like lhev
should have a long time ago."
Two genetics expens u:stifted Ill
March 1991 that DNA. the geneuc
building block of the human cell,
from Woodall's blood did not
mau:h sperm samples taken from
the rape vicwns.
Citing unidentified soums. the
Huntington television station reported that a genetic analysis sought
by the prosecution showed thai
blood and other fluid stains from
the victims' clothing did not come
from Woodall .
"I lhink it demonslralCS lha!
regardless of which side is asking
for lhe DNA test, lhe result IS the
same: Glen is not the assailant ,"
Woodall's allOmey, Lonnie Sim mons said Monday. "That's what
all lhese tests have shown."
Simmons had asked last week
that the charges be dismissed be·
cause of lack of evidence.
"1 would lhinl: that lhe state
would have to dismiss w1th
prejudice at this point," Sunmons
said. "1 thought a dismissal was lhe
only appropriate action prior to
these test results."

Test kits available
Alcohol teSt kits are now available at Meigs, Eastern, and Southern High Schools and at lhe Meigs
County Juvenile CourL
The kits are being made available to parents at a cost of $1.65
per alcohol test packet. Complete
insuuctions are available wilh each
kiL The Alcopro test has no expira·
tion date.
The purpose of the test is to discourage students from drinking
alcoholic beverages. Knowing their
parents have a kit and can test them
for drinking when lhey retllfD from
an outing may serve as a deterrent,
said Juvenile Judge Bob Buck.

sets many of the standards on what
is to be taught. Board Member
Larry Rupe said lhat the board has
talked to principals about evaluations and that lhey are now evaluating teachers.
At the request of Board President Bob BariOn, Carol Ohlinger,
Mei~s Local Teachers Association
pres1dent, spoke briefly asking for
"fairness to leaehe~ who have put
in a lot of time and money." Sh e
said that children are not easy to
teach, that it is hard to keep their
attention, that many have a short
attemion span and that it is a "very
difficult" job.
The ML TA president also said
that some of lhe problems go back
to lhe parents and a lack of communication because it lakes tim e to
go talk to a teacher. Smitty
responded lhat he is tired of hear.
ing the blame put on parents and
the swdents and frels lhat some of
the responsibility falls on lhe teachers.
Carpenter concluded the lengthy
discussion by stating that "success-

ful schools come about when parems, leache~ and communities are
all involved and when everybody is
pulling in lhe same direction."
Dock days of April 15 through
May 27 were gJlllliCd 10 Kalherine
Desbns.
The board vOied 10 enler iniO a
service agreement with Execu10n
for phones at tbc Cenllal OffiCe at
S468. Rupe vOled against lhc servi ce contract on the basis of the

sexual harassment case
A Racine woman has filed sexual harassment charges agamst Fisher' s Big Wheel and the form er
manager of th e Pomeroy B1g
Wheel store.
Maci Kathleen Sal se r is
demanding compensatory damages
in lhe amount of $350,000 and $1.5
million in punitive damages in a
suit filed in U .S. District Court.
The case, filed through Athens
At!Omey C. David Warren, alleges
that Thomas G. Moore of Athens
made suggestive remarks and gestures toward the plaintilf while she
was employed at lhe Pomeroy discount S!Ore.
Warren has not been available 10
comment on the case or explain
details.
·
In her complaint, Salser alleges
that Moore "would comment on
how the plaintiff was dressed, indicating that "'she really looked
good'."
Moore also allegedly ~ed lhe
plaintiff out for drinks with him
after work and requested that he be

COSl

Approval was given for lhc field
trip by FHA members 10 lhe stale
FHA convention held in Columbus
last week.
II was voted 10 enter inlO a lease
agreement with Columbia Gas Co.
for an area near Meigs Junior High
School used for that company's
regulator at $175 per year for 20
years.
Following an executive session
held 10 discuss personnel and negotiations, lhe board named Meigs
County Supt John Riebel as acting
supenntendent of lhc district in the
absence of lhe regular superintendenL
Attending were SupL Carpenler,
Treasurer Jane Fry, and board
members, Barton, Rupe, John
Continued rrom page I
Hood, Roger Abbotl, and Randy
son Crow and Tim Faulk, seventh Humphreys.
and eighth grade football; Phil Harrison, boys' varsity basketball;
Gene Wise, boys ninlh grade basA judgment action has been
ketball; Chris S10ut, boys' eighth filed in Meigs County Common
grade baskeiball; and Pat O'Brien, Pleas Court in the amount of
boys' seventh grade basketball.
$4 ,117.66 by Citizens National
Mike Kennedy, assistant high Bank, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
school track; Bob Ashley, Jr., agamst Raben M. Pooler, Mhldlejunior high track: Bryan Swan, pon, and others.
assistant junior high track; Zane
Beegle, head baseball: Keilh Det· Dissolution granted
twiller, assistant baseball; Beth
Actions for dissolution of marSchneider, girls' reserve basketball;
riage
have been filed in Meigs
Jodi Glass, girls' reserve sofiball:
County
Common Pleas Court to
Beuy Wolfe, girls' junior high volMichael
Patrick O'Neil and
leyball; Mike Kennedy and Betty
Wolfe, girls' junior high basketball, Melanie Kay O'Neil and 10 Marian
and Kathy Doidge, high school Anita Van Cooney and Paul F. Van
Cooney.
chrerleaders,
The calendar for the 1992-93
school year was adopted by the
board. Teache~ will meet on FriThe juniors of Modem Woodday. Aug. 28, wilh the first day of men of Burlingham will have a
school for lhc students being Mon- bake sale, yard sale and chicken
day, Aug. 31. The last day of the and noodle dinner on Saturday
year for students will be on May from 10 a.m. 10 6 p.m. at the wood27, 1993 with the last day for men hall. Proceeds to benefit the
teache~ to be May 28 .
road 10 Burlingham Cemetery.

Meigs ...

--Meigs announcementsBook fair planned
There will be a book fair at Rutland Elementary Thursday lhrough
Tuesday. Books will be available
for children of all ages.
Sign-up planned
Sign-up for American Legion
Baseball will be Sunday at I p.m_
at Meigs High School. Participants
must be ages 16-18. There is a $10
registration fee and a binh certificate must be provided.
Dinner scheduled
There will be a smorgasbord
dinner 81 lhe Louridge Community
Center Sunday from noon to I:30
p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50
for children under 12. Public invit·

Judgment suit filed

ed_

Sale slated

Hospital news

--Area deaths-Lucy 0. Lambert
Lucy 0. Lambert, 77, of Route
I, Ewington, died Tuesday, April
28, 1992, at her residence.
Services will be held I p.m.
Thursday at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, wilh lhe Rev. Marvin Sallee
officiating. Burial will be in
Wilkesville Cemetery.
Friends may c~ at lhe funeral
home !Oday from 2=4 and 7-9.
Pallbearers will be Floyd Newsome, Chris Newsome, Andy
Duffy, Marty Mollohan, Tim
Kruskarnp and Ralph Christian .

•

Her husband, Homer DePue,
one son, Hal William DePue, and
one brother and three sisters preceded her in death.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at II a.m. atlhe SLOneMatheney Funeral Home, Chesterhill. The Rev. Harold J. Demus will
officiate and burial will be in ML
Hermon Cemetery. Friends may
call one hour prior to services at
lhe funeral home.

allowed 10 copy a key of lhe plaintiff s residence.
"On several occasions," the
complaint slales, Moore "followed
the plamtiff 10 her car, asking what
she dreamed of at night"
Salser's complaint states that :
she reponed Moore 10 authcrities at ·
Fi sher Big Wheel and received a:
letter of apology from Moore.
"Due to the hostile work envi·
ronment at (lhe Pomeroy SIOre),lhc
plaintiff had to transfer her ·
employmem 10 the Big Wheel store :
in Jackson, which caused the plain· :
tiff 10 incur transportation expenses :
and expend time traveling to and ·
from employment", the complaint ·
says.
Salser also alleges that Big
Wheel had received other com- ·
plaints of sexual harassment :
involv ing Moore, but that Moore ·
was permitted to continue his position of supervising female employ- .
ces.
·
According to a spokesman for .
lhe local store, Moore is no longer ·
employed wilh the retail chain.

Reunion planned
There will be a meeting at
Pleaser's Restaunmt May 6 at 7:30
p.m. for all 1952 alumni to plan the
40th reunion. All glllduates WJed
to auend.
Meeting place change
:
There wiD be a Girl Scout lead- ·
ers meeting Thursday 81 7 p.m. II
Trinity Church, not St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy, as
staled in lOday's Community Cal·
endar. Reservations for the motherdaughler bunquct sbould be turned
in at the meeting.
·

OES to meet
The Racine Chapter No. 134,
OES, will meet Monday at 7:30
p _m. There will be a mock initiation and all officers are asked to
wear saeet clothes.

Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS ·
LCCD 10 meet
Zeva Kitchen, Albany; Teresa
The
Leading Creek ConservanAlderson, Middleport; and Gary
cy
District
will meet Friday at 7
Richards, Letart, W.Va.
p.m.
at
the
office.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES ·
Frances Sheets, Marie Dudding,
and Goldie Shaffer.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Continued from page 1
Discharges, April 28 . Charles Joseph Kolter was defeated and
Albrigh~ Charloue Cole, Erin Con- eight-term Democratic Rep. Austin
ley, Jeremy Davis, Fay Gardner, Murphy was in a tight primary race
Mrs. Jimmy Home and daughter, as voters had a fresh opportunity to
Leigh Huddleston, Lelha Leddy, vent frustration wilh Washington.
Irene Newlon, Mrs. Marvin Ross
ClinLOn ignored Brown throughand son, Alben Sheets, and Mar- out the Pennsylvania campaign,
jorie Wheeler.
practicing for lhe fall and working
Births, April 28 · Mr. and ~­ on lhe unity effort before the next
Greg Nelson , a son, Vinton. Mr. three big contests, May 5 primaries
and Mrs . Timothy Ward, a son, in Nonh Carolina, Indiana and lhe
Gallipolis.
District of Columbia.

Bush ...

!i
DID YOU KNOW? ~
;:::::q
There are only
~
IMIOAUI ~TIII:U Slll.:IIY I RIDtl .
IIAISAII IIQIT lll(Wl .

Ernestine DePue

&amp;llltiTIR

Ernestine Powell DePue, S4, of
Amesville, died Tuesday, April 28,
1992, at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. Athens.
Born Aug. 9. 1907 in New
Haven, W. Va .. she was lhe daugh ter of the late William and Olivia
lane Bumgarner Powell.
She was a homemaker.
Sh e is survived by a son,
Michael DePue, Amesville, and a
daughter, Mary Jane Small. Eston,
Md.; five grandchildren, and two
great·grandchildren.

I :OO,U:IO Mltr. SATI$UW MT . i :OO,J :OO ("

to

~DIN &amp;OIIMIN
Til( Ill(
I 00,~ : 10 111'1\..l . SAT/ SUII ""T . I :OO,J : JO ~

ffiPNEN

lilLY PRITIN

left to register to vote for the June 2 Primary.
Contact your county Board of Elections.

I lO,i Z!1 Ml l1

l:JO ) : JO -_

STIRIUT llll

SAT / SUII IIAT . I :Z O,l :lO n,

IEETIIIEN
1. 00 ,9 10 ~Ill

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WNlfi MIN UN'T JIMP
1· H,9 JO [llli !LT !.Al / SUIIIIII T. I

h~

rmvldtd

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1.

I 10.9 JO Dll llT . \A T / ~ JII,IT . l : IO ) : )0 ( ~ l

OHIO SBCRETARY OF STATE HOB TAFI

• Jn

U~ l lflt.A T U

AfA ILAIU AT IOlOffiCI

It's a
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REVIVAL
AT THE

CHESTER NAZARENE CHURCH

C

reations. Pleasant Valley Hospital's single-room, famUy-c~ntered maternity care unit. Is c~lebrattng our second anniversary. And we're tnvtttng
you to celebrate wtth us at a Baby Fair featurtng exhtblts from local
businesses of the latest In maternity. Infant and toddler's fashions. baby
products and furniture; gift Items for mother and chUd;'alld Information booths
on a variety of topics of Interest to new and expectant parents and grandparents.
There wtll be a maternity wear style show at 2 p.m .. an Infant &amp;toddler's fashion
show at 4 p.m .. and spectal Btg Kids &amp; Babies classes for siblings ages 2 through
12 at 2 and 4 p.m. The Point Pleasant Pollet Department will be offertng
KldTracks flngerprtnttng. and the Mason County Shertlfs D~partmcnt wtll
present tnfonnaUon from Its DARE drug awareness program. Refreshments w1ll
be served and door prtzes awarded.

Saturday, May 2, 1 - 6 p.m.
PVH Community Room

APRIL 28 • MAY 3

7:00 p.m_. Njghtly
6:00 p.m. Sunday Evening
EVANGELIST: Rev. Bdl Hill
Chllbcothe, Ohio
· PASTOR: Herbert Grate

ln

llllt INSTINCT

Stocks
Am Elc Power ·····-······ ...... .32
Ashland nil ......
3l 1/8
AT&amp;T... ......
43 3/8
Bank One...... .. . ..... .. ....... .44 l/8
BobEvans .. ........ ......... ...... l77!8
Charming Shop...
25 7/8
City Holding .... ............ _..... l9 7/8
Federal Mogul.. ............... 19
GoodyearT&amp;R .. ........ .. .....71 7/8
Key Centurion .....
18 1/2
Lands End .... ............... ..... .34 1/2
Limited Inc ..... .....
23 718
Multimedia Inc .......... ..... ...27
Rax Restaurant.. .. ..
1 7/16
Robbins&amp;Myers .. ...
15
Shoney's Inc. ............. ... ..... 21 3/4
Star Bank.. ... . . .. .. .. .-..... .36
Wendy lnt'l .... ...... .
ll 7/8
Wonhington Ind ......
23 l/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided
Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi or GaU1polis.

ltNi'S SUEP.Ili(IS

l : lO.~ · JO ll'.lLT . !i.AT{SIJIIIMT

'

llfl

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals
2520 Valley Dflve, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 875-4340, 8lll. 253

�Wednesday, April 29, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wednesday, Aprll29, 1992
Page-4

Cincinnati edges Pittsburgh 3-2 to share first in NL West
By JOE KAY
. CINC IN NATI (AP)- Tom
B".rowning got the thumb for his
3;!nd birthday.
- Not your usual binhday gift. But
1t was appropriale for the occasion.
Brownmg gainc~ a year and lost
his cool Tuesday night, drawing a
sixth-inning ejection. He was stlll
fuming in the clubhouse when tile
Cincinnati Reds rallied to beat tile
Pittsburgh Pirates 3-2 and make
Browning the winning pitcher.
; " I usually don't allow situations
tq bother me," he said in a monotone. ''It's a heat-of-the-battle
tning. I was a little more intense
titan usual. "
· A little?
:" I don't know what got 1nto
hi)n," said home plate umpire To~
Hellion, who went nose -to -nose

witll Browning after ejecting him.
Browning (3-l) can't explain,
either.
"I don 't know. I don't want to
talk about that," he said.
He had plenty w say in the pivotal sixth inning.
The game was tied at I when
cenler fielder Reggie Sanders misplayed Gary Redus' line drive into
a triple, charging the ball as It
sailed over his head. It was only tile
third hit allowed by Browning.
Jay Bell followed with a sacrifice fly for a 2-l lead, and Brown'"&amp; walked two batters before getung out of the inning and unloading on Hallion as he headed for the
dugout.
In baseball term s, Browning
thought Hallion was squeezing the
strike zone on some pitches.

Browning had a more eanhy way
to describe it, though.
"I don't think he used the word
squeezed," Reds manager Lou
Piniella said. "If he'd used the
word sqneew!, he might have gotlen a hug for his birthday."
He nearly got a bear hug from
catcher Joe Oliver and Piniella,
who stepped between Browning
and Hallion as they screamed at
each other.
"Obviously. he thought his
pitches were better than they
were," Hallion said. " He continued to say thin's about balls and
strikes, and that s why he got nm.
It was a healed argument I don 't
think he bumped me . We were
nose-to-nose and there was casual
contact. We both had things to
say."

Crew chief Paul Runge was surprised at Browning's oulburst.
"I think some of the other
things that ltappellcd in that iMing
might have upset him ," Runge
said, apparently referring to the
misplayed triple.
Browning lOSScd some conlainers on10 the fteld before leaving in
a huff. His leammaleS enjoyed the
show.
"He probably sparked us,"
Oliver said.
The Reds went out and tied it on

Paul O'Neill's lwtHlUl homo- off
Doug Drabek (3- 2). tllcn toOt tbe
lead on ~Uii-e singles by Bill
D!no, Reggie SlllldO"s and Oli...-.
Now it was Dnbet 's tum 10 get
fruslrated. He did it more quiedy .
'' Anylimc you giYC up the lea:!,
it's frustrating," Drabek said. "I
gave up tbe home run and said,
'OK. just get out of this inning,
leave tbe score tied and give us a
chance to go back ahead.' I
couldn't gtt tbe final out until it
was too lale. ••
It was that kind of day for
Dnlbr.k. He gave up Ius fll11 bomer
of t.he season - after 30 2!3
innings - wbe.o Reggie Sanders
pulled a ooc-Slrite pildi with 1'110
out in lbe founb.
Oliva-'s dllcisive single came 011
a cune tbll -'Y fooled him.
"I don't lbiot be hil lbe ball as
good .. be aJUid, but il - J!DOd
enough to &amp;a it ova the iofiCid."
Drabet Slid. "It SOQNird liU be
hit it oiJ the cud of the biL,
The Reds' bdlpm bcld the lead.
NMD Cbarlton, lbe foowth ldieva.
piiCbed I pcrfCICl oinJh for his !ICY·
enth save m niDe oppiii1IDtics.
It rnaRrld tbe fuslliml: this season that lbe Piralcs ba-e la5l ronsecuti-e gJmCS. It abo martcd lbe
Reds' retunllll fusl piKe iD the NL
West for the fliSl time since last

Symmes Valley posts 7-2 win
over Southern baseball team

GETS SEVENTH SAVE- Cincinnati hurler Norm Charlton
(left) gets a high five from catcher Joe Oliver sbor~ly alter the_Reds
beat the visiting Pittsburgh ~irat~ 3-2 Tuesda~ Dig~l. Tbe wm put
the Reds into a first-place he w1th San FranciSCo m tbe National
League West (AP)

Scoreboard
California

~cw

11

Ycd ..

9

550

10 10

SL louLJ

9 12

Ptubdel~1.1

M,..,..l

. 8 1)
7 12

Clue&amp; aa .

• Atl.an~£

GB
Jj

&lt;l

429

6

Jil l
368

l

.. 10 II

476

9 12

42'9

•l..oiAnJdal .

Oakla nd (Slunnki 2·0) at Dec.roi1

soo

Westun l)lvldon
Clndnn•U ----1 1 9 .SSO
· S.an Frane&amp;K()
Il 9
550
. HOUitoo
10 9
526
: S.an Di.c&amp;O .
... II 10
. ~24

1-2) ll C leveland

(Annruona O-J). 1:35 pJI'i.

NATIONAL LEAGVE
Euttfll IJh l.slon
W I.
Pet.
Twn
14 ~
HJ
. ritt&amp;burJh ...

(Ot~hiC

l

(f anant ()..2), 7:35pm.
Tuu (Jiy.n 1)..0} at Ooca1o {Mt.Do• dl 4-0). a-m pm.

Toronto (hun Guu111 n l -0)
Wiuko: (Bc.W 1-1).

s-mp.m.

It

Mll -

NBA playoffs
Tuesday's scores
New Jeney Iff, C lenl111d IU,

5
-~
l 5
25

Tuesday's scores
Clndnn•tl J, Plllsburah 1
Atlant• 1, Ouc.aao o
Nc:.w York 4. 1l0U11.0n 0
Sao [hc:.gn 7, Ptu.ltdclptua 6
St. l.oo11 2. Loll Anacla I , I 0 mrunp
San hanct1c o 2, Mon1u:.11 \ I. 10 .n . rung1

Cl...-eland lacll .... l-l
New York 90, De.udt 17, OT. Se•
Yor'&amp; letdl aerie. l- 1
Sc..ulc 129, ~Sea~ 121, So.tlle
lCidl ICii-=- 2-1
LA Otppcn 98, Utah 11, Utah W-adi
lc:ru:. 2-1

Tonf&amp;ht's &amp;ames
Ou.c:Afl ll Miami. I p.m
Phoenu 11 $an Anto"t~ . I 30 p.m
Potl.land It LA. r....un. 10:30 p m..

Thundoy's ramrs
Ck~eland

Today's games

•I New .)ttwJ, I p..lll.
lO&lt;lO p.m.
GoMen S~o~te a Sc.ule, to-.30 p.m.
lJuh 01 LA.

. Oungo (DIM)' lH bon 0--J) II At
.. mt.l (Smdu 1· 2). 12 40 p m
•
SL l..DuLJ (Oli vr:ru 2-1) 11 S1n Franot · cn (Wtllmll ).-105pm

Oi-.

Stanley Cup

Plllabura h t l.ant Smith J -1 ) at
{ lndnn.11tl (Dddnr 1-1), 7:35p.m.

division semifinals

ll ou1l0n ( K tie 2 - 1) II New York
'S1bcduB01 0 2). 7 40 p.m
' Monll'l:a l ( ~dohoU \ -1) 11 Sin !Aego
(lluru O-I l. I 0 OS p.m.
.
l'hl11dc 1phu (Co• 1 · I) II L&lt;• A n~tdo

Tursd.111y'!i !iCOres

(llmh~r 21).10 · ]5pnl

liuc111o

SL Louu (lkLcm t -1) tt Sm Func LJ·
co (lhnieU 1 l ). l : l~ p.m
Montrc• 1 ( Hill 1 · 2 ) 11 S.n DttJ O

2. SL I..DULI 1. Chu::ago

42
Dc:t.rolt 1, Mulncsw 0, OT, tcnca uod

) .)

)J
Edmomm ), Lo. Anada 0, F...dmoo ton 'III'UII ICilCI ... 2

Tonight's rom rs
s y Ruipat New haey, 7 35 r_m

Philidtlphu (Abt:-dt 0-4 ) 11 L011 Angclet (Ca.ndmUJ J -0). 10 ]~ p.m

Ro.too. et Bafhlo. 7:15p.m

Wuhl.n&amp;LUn tt ~. 1 . 3~ p m
M.c.-ureal t l i11rtford. 1-15 p m

Thursday's games
Minnaluu II lleuo!.L, 7J5 p.m

A~ERtCAN

E....tltm Dlvi.alofl
W L
Pd.

Tt.un

T on:.-~~.o .

Wtm.lptltl Vanoouvcr. JQ-3 5

LEAGVI'

15
11
12

GR

6

714

8

7
8
9

!\SO
600

2l

1l

9

471

l
l

• I)etroiL.. ............... .. 7 1)

350
.JJ.J

NcwYork .
_, .
• ~tUinlR
....

: 801\G'I ..

.

. MiJwtuhc ...

. c•ndand.----·7 u

471

[)hll~on
1]
.,
t\50

Wutern

~ Ot,kW'wt . .

'OUcaao..

10 1
12 10

' TeJ.U

Ca.lifomLJ
Selnk
- Minnclou

2

.!126

Ll

10

II

476
450
. 1~8

4

9 11
) 16

Ne~

ll

9

Tuesday's K"ores
Tuul.

'

.. 10
..

KanJu CIIY

~ 88
S45

Jl

Jl

"

Yolk 0

Detrott 4, Sunk I
Ulifumtt 9, Toronto~

O•k1ud J, ()e't'ebnd 1
BMtoo 6. Chic.so J
Kuun Cuy J, MJwtukcc 2, 11 In·

•
n,a.IIJmO~ 10. Mmnsru ~
•

Today's &amp;ames

lltJtirnore {~bbc:ti 1·2) II Minnaota
.(SmiJeyG-2), 1: 1Sp.m.
.

,

Kanw Ciry

•

Teu~(JOKGulm&amp;n 1·2) •1NewYock

(Gordon 0.2)

•u. ~ ().j)). 2,Jl pm.

z-o•

ll

Mil will ·

'(C..W.
7,JO pm.
, Ol.ic:•Jo {Fun1adu 1-1) 11 Bo.tDII
o{Vda 1-2), 7:15p.m.
Ctlifomi• (Abbolt 1· 2) •• Toronto
(Sotalom'"' 2-1) ns pm.
Oald•IWI (D•,tlnt 1-1) II ae~elud
' (Olio 1·1&gt;7:35 .....
.
· Soalllt (Fl1111in1 2-1) II Dcln»l (AJ·
~ Q-2), 7:3S p.m.

pm

Transactions

Il

Bas&lt;ball
Arntrku lapt
l'EXAS RANGERS - Phcod Bntn
Hri11nm, p!k:hc::r, Ul the 15·daJ dt.~.~Mcd

l.ut. Recalled Rota- P.vlik, J-ld\a, fnn
OIIWum1 Gtp J Lbe Alnaiun AuGcl.l-

Natloftal l.ape
C IN CINNAT I IF.O S - Plued
GMn Bnp, uucReldef-, CMI the 1$-d..ly

dlaable-d lbt, relro.cll~• lo April 11.

Dul1n•led Rl&lt;k Wro•a, UI(IMr, for
1lllpment. lha11ed Jtft lar•ftiiiiMtt lfl.
ntkkr, frOift N•hwllle of Uw A....-kan
AuoclaliM. hnhued 1M mnlnd ol
Troy Aren1r, uttMr, ,.._ Nlllh.tiiL
J'lo'EW YORK M1rrS - Placed Kevin
B1ez, infielder, on !he I S-d•y diubled

...

SAN FRANOSCO OIANTS -

Rc·

called John Pltl.enon, mficlder, from
Pho&lt;nU
!'Kif~ c... u...,.. OpUCW!ed Gll !-kn.dil, ~.~a P'hncni1..

of""'

Kyger Creek's baseball team
collecled its third win of the season
m 12 tnes by beating visiting Waterford 8-4 Tuesday at CheshireKyger Elementary.
After the Bobcats, 3-8-I ovetall,
slashed the Wildcals' early 4-0 lead
to a one-run advantage with a
three-run rally in the bottom of the
third. senior hurler Phil Bradbury
held the west Washington nin e
scoreless in the lOp of the founh to
give his crew a shot at takmg the
lead.
KC's fourth stancd when Bradbury and Jeff Birchfield reached on
walks. After Adam Denney's sacrifice moved the runners ahead 90
feet, Matt Rhodes' smgle scored
Bradbury and Birchfield to put the
Gallians ahead 5-4. Then Grady
Snyder walkoo, but Ctuis Crace hit
into a force play that nailed Snyder
at second base. The inning ended
when Scott Newell popped out to

srrond

Bradbury struck out row and
walked IWO iD a "QDDpltT-pmc d fort Larry Brooker. Waterford's
starter. combined with rclieven
Coffman and McCmc!w• to SIIWe
out six and wallr. frve.
KC' s offense CliDlC from Rhodes
(3 -4. double, three RBis), Adam
Denney (1-1, RBI). Marc Villanueva (1-1, double). Bircbfteld (1 -2,
RBI) aad Paul Covey (1~. two
RB!s). Waterford ' s hillers were
Kevin Broolr.eo-, Ryan Hinton, Jeff
Huclr. and McCutcheon (all 1-3),
and Larry 8roota' ( 1-4 ).
K yga- Cn:d: will head west today lD play OIJr. Hill. the ICIID that
the Bobcats tied earlier iii the season in a rain-sflonmed game.
lnninz totals
Watcrlord __ .112 lXXl 0 - 4-5-3
Kyger Cn:d: _.003 230 x - 8-7 -I
WP- Pbil Brdiury
LP- Larry Bl'llOko-

Wlnt

tent:~

2 1I. 4 0~ p.I'I'L
llouJion (Portulli 2-1) II New Yn rlo:
(hmandcz I 2), 7:.40 p m

(BQla

tricl.

NeiSODVille-York edges Meigs 3-2

VancOllvcr &amp;. Wiftrupea 3. smet ued

fhursdoy's enmes

league.
Southern billers were led by
Scou Lisle with two singles and
smgles each by Kcidl Joocs. Andy
Grucstt, Jen:my Northup and Jeremy Dill
For Symmes Wall singled twice.
Andy Lesler had a single. double,
and triple; Chris Gms doubled.
and Jaye Criswdi singled
Southern will host Wabama
today and play Meigs Thursday II
Rod. Springs.
Southern will play the winner of
Monday nigbr's Miller-Kyger
Creel&lt; game in the SlCClion.al toomament on Friday. May 8. The: winner
advances to the district
Eastern plays Trimble in the
uppa bracket game 011 Fnday, t.uy
8. That winner will go to the dis-

KCHS gents beat Waterford 8-4

Tbundlly's e•mes

In tbe majors ...

Visiting Symmes Valley, who
had been struggling somewhat in
league play til is season, brought out
the big guns against Soutllem to
c!aim a 7-2 SV AC baseball victory
in Racme Tuesday night
Keith Jones gave up only seven
hits, but suffered the loss, as Southem made three costly errors.
Robinson , Patterson and Eric
Wall combined for the win.
Symmes took a 1-0 lead in the
f1rst, but SHS quickly came back to
tie in tile bottom of the mnmg.
After a scoreless second,
Symmes pialed two for a 3-1 lead
and despile a single run fCJ' Southem in the bottom of the frame to
make it 3-2.
Southern is now 6-3 in league
play, while going 8-S overall .
Symmes is reporledly 4-3 in the

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Ne lso nville -York scored an
uneamed run m the eight inning as
the Buckeyes cooled off the Meigs
Marauders 3-2 in Tri-Valley Con ference baseball action Monda y
evening at Meigs High School .
The win gives the Buckeyes an
R-4 mark on the season and a 6-4
mark in the TVC. Me1gs drops to
5-9 overall and 4-7 in th e TVC.
Meigs went into the contest wm ners of f1ve of tlleir last seven contests.
Monday evemng's contest was
an old -fashioned pitching duel
between tile Buckeyes' Dan Dailey
and Marauder senior flamethrower
Jeremy Phalin. Dailey struCk out a
school-reco rd 17 batters while
walking three and scattering three
hits. Phalin also struck out a JlOSSI·
ble sc hool -record 17 batters .

walked five and ga-e up frve hils.

The Buckeyes jumped out to a
I-0 lead in the first inlliq wbeo
Randy Oioe walked.
..aJild
and .:ored on a J.ll I&gt;isboDc single. Nelsonville mode il. I U) pDIO
10 the fifth inning whea Oioe apia
singled . stole second and came
around to score on anotber
Marauder erm-.
Meigs ~rored a single run in the
sevcath inning wbeo Billy Glaze
singled and later scored . Tbe
Marauders forced the game into
mra innings when Glaze &amp;o.e in
the tying OUI wilh a dooible
The Buckeyes woo lbe poe in
the seventh inning wbea Justin Gail
walked. stole !leCODd and SlODRld Oil
anot.her Manwdcr miscue. oae of
thme Meigs made ill the game.. NY made tWO goofs.
Meigs will travel w Wellston

**

today.

HOLZER CLINIC
PulmOIII'J/Respi'atory Re~aUillliol

Federai/OIIio Dept. of .._..

f••••

MayS.
Not such a bad birthday for
Browning. alltr all.
"It's Dice. I'll like a win for a
biJ1bday ............ be !aid
W&amp;.,,Jacbolt
IDrt llliUilll
Mall W'allialm and I&gt;arrin ladSOD IJ81led 011 the power and wrned
oiJ the shmps
Williams, bitting .159. sent
relie¥cr Bill Sampen's fliSl pitch of
the IOtll inning 1D10 the Slallds in
rigbt 6dd. an opposite-fiCid home
ll1D tbat pve the San Francisco
Gialls a 2-1 vic1IJr)l ova the Monaca! Expos.
"I'm just up tbae looking for
Sll!DCihing I an &amp;a in the air, put
me on second base," Williams
sLd..
to caldl ~- ••
Je b"l, bauill&amp; .171 entering
Tursday llipl's bome pme with
tbe fhjhrlelphia Plmlies, led off the
oindi .... his ..aJild bomer of the
game - be - 3 for S with four
RBis - llld took the San Diego
Palres., I 7-6 decision
·"I aa wd: up tbae and try to
bunt." said J.-frsoo, who led off
aga;ms Curt Schilling "But if you
have a liulc: bit of power, I think

··r•.,,. "..

Owuimiing 10 improve tlvough- Amber Ohlinger walked, Aime
Mills walked. Michelle McCoy
well's Southern Tomadoeues reached on a force out and fielder's
SlODRld their biggest win of the )'Cif choice, then Amber Cumings
with a 5-4 SVAC softball victory walked 10 load the bases.
over league leading Symmes ValChristi Maidens showed a lot of
ley Tuesday e&gt;ening in Racine.
patience at the plate and forced
Southern. now 8-6. tool&lt; an home a run with another walk 10
early lead. but bad to depend on push the score to 4-1. Marcy Hill
good pitching and big defensive then slammed an RBI single that
plays in the finale 10 secure the evenrually won tile game and now
win.
pushed the score to 5-1.
So•hem lOOt a 1-0 lead in the
In the top of the seventh S V
=oad wbea Megan Wolfe sin- scored on an error. walk, and two
gled. smle wmd IIlii tbild before run double by Mays, as Symmes
COOling borne 011 I suicide squeeze pulled closer at 5-3 with no outs.
baot by Rabcna Clldwcll. Cald- Caldwell then forced two straight
well picUd up the RBI on the per- ground outs belore Schroeder
fectly cvn!!ctl play that p-e SHS forced home another run with Bll
an o.ua boosa r1 ronfidcncc
RBI single to cut Soutllem's lead to
Wbi1e Jcxi Caldwell mimi lbe S-4.
side against Symmes Valley.
With the tying run on base,
blallking them for three straight Symmes had a ground out back to
innings. Soutbem's offense again Caldwell on the mound to secure
the win for Southern.
McCoy led off the
Southern hitters were led by
mning witb a sioaJe, but - nailed Hill's double. single and three
m a '-3-bmg stal llllempt II sec- RBI' s, while McCoy Blld Maidens
ond. Amber Cnmings tbeD reswted each singled.
the offense by walking. Christi
Trina Schneider, Mays and
Maidens walked, and Man:y Hill Schroeder collected single hit
slammed a lWIHUD double to give llights for Symmes and Owens had
SHS a 3-0 lead.
a double and single.
Symmes Valley SlODRld a single
Caldwell was the winnin~ pitchrun ill tbe founlt to tnn Southern· s er with six walks and no strikeouts,
lead 10 J-1.
while Blankenship suffered the loss
In die sWh c:aolD Snit!• "' plat- witll II walks and five strikeouts.
ed 1'110 nm. wbich lalcr proved to
Southern hosts Wahama 10night.
be valnable insurance policies.
oot tbe ,..,..,.. • Coach Howie Cald-

~i~.:;,'f!'

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446·5244

if you try to hit the ball over the
fence on a couple of swings.''
In other games, it was St. Louis
2, Los Angeles I in I 0 innings;
Atlanta I, Chicago 0; Blld tile New
York Mets4, Houston 0.
Giants 2, Expos 1
10 innings
At San Francisco, the Expos fell
to 0-11 at night when Roger Craig
showed patience with his slumping
third baseman.
"Some of the wri1ers asked me
before tile ~arne if I was thinking
about resttng Matt Williams,"
Craig said. "I told them I'm going
to let him fight his way out of it.' '
Williams did just that, lifting the
Giants into a tie with Cincinnati
atop tile NL West.
Giants slancr Kelly Downs gave
up four hits Blld allowed no earned
runs in nine innin~s. Downs, 0-2
with three no-decisiOns tllis season,
ha.~ allowed just one earned run in
his last 15 innings.
Padres 7, Pbillies 6
AI San Diego, Jackson, who had
21 homers WI year.j!ot his third of
tllis season in the fifth inning. In
(See NL on Page S)

Southern ladies record 5-2 win
over visiting Symmes Valley

BLACK LUNG CLINIC
qualifying history of coakelated .
employment
Based at the Sycamore Shet

llle lC8Ill would appreciaiC it more

100 L e 'a.

AUTO

Po•roy, o•1o

992·2094
Thank You, Crutomers, For The
P111t 26 Years!

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

With Lansford's clutch RBI single,

Oakland hands Cleveland 3-lloss
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- Carney
Lansford is right there artlODi the
American League leadm in ~
agam, gettmg the same c.lutd! bits
that have driven opponents crazy
smce the !ale 1970s.
You'd never know his CMeer
nearly ended last year.
"Knowing Carney, this doem 't
surprise me at all," Oakland pild&gt;er Mike Moore said Tuesday nigbl
after Lansford's bases-lolded single in the ninth inninJ gave the
Atllleties a 3-1 win over the Oe.-eland Indians.
Witll the score tied 11 I, !..aDSford drove in IWO runs with a twoout single up the middle qainst
Cleveland relievo- Ted POwer. The
single, Lansford's second of the
game, improved bi' average to

allowing one. run and five hits rolled inw tlie ClevelBild bullpen
before manager Mike Har¥rove for a ground-rule double.
mmcd 10 Steve Olin (0-1) In the
Howard, who would have
ainlh. Nagy had thrown 134 pitch- scored easily, bad to stay at tllird. _
es.
"Obviously the rurmer scores If
Olin. however, walked Terry the ball doesn't ron into tile pen, ..
Stcinhocb. and Willie Wilson sin- Hargrove said. "That's a littl e
gled pinch rwmer Riclr.ey Render- tough to swallow. We didn 't
SOliD Sl'l"llDd A sacrifiCe advanced deserve to lose. But they pi tc hed
the
and an intentional walk well, also."
loaded lbe bases.
Oakland missed a chance to
After Randy Ready hit into a score in tile seventh inning when
fmacd • the plate for the second Hargrove outguessed Oakland
out. Lamfonl singled borne the go- manager Tony LaRussa. With Wil abca.d i'lllS.
son at third base, Hargrove ordered
'"Carney Lansford is a clutch two Slraight pitchouts, and the sec major Iague biner and has been ond one caught Wilson trying to
ror a loll&amp; time," Hargrove said. score on a squeeze play . Lance
""That's why they stayed with him Blankenship couldn't bunt. and
Wilson was ragged out easily.
..-ben be wm:b:d his lr.nee.''
"We hadn't doubled up on a
The Indiaus narrowly missed
tat.ing the lead against Moore in piu:hout all night." Hargrove said,
.362.
the eipth. With Thomas Howard "or all year. for that matter. We
It also extended Moore's per- at linl, c.tos Bacrp drove a ball figured if they were going to put a
sonal winning streak to nine down the ridlt-freld line, but it squeeze on. it would be there. "
straight decisions since last Aug.
26.
"I was sitting on the bench
thinking there's not anybody I'd
rather have up there in tlw siblation with two outs especially the
way he's hilling,'" Moore !laid.
: Lansford missed all but five
'games last year aflef tearing up his
left knee in 8 snowmobile 8l't'ic!ePI
at his home on New Year's Eve.,
'1990. His aboncd auempt to come
back at midseason led to speculation that his career was all but
\lone.
· But he 's come baclr. litenlly
·stronger tllan ever.
; "With all the lifting I did all
winler long, I've really noticod the
ball jumping ofT my bat a 101 betICr,'' he said. "I'm 100 perctnL I
have been since tile season uu:d.
If I lost a step. it's becau!IC I'm 35
and because I put on 15-20 pomds
with my weightJifting. My knee is
just fme ."
Moore (4 -0) gave up one run
and seven hits in eight innings.
Dennis Eckersley struclr. out all
three batters he faced in the nintll
for his seventh save in seVCII tries..
Charles Nagy pitched eight
strong innings for Cleveland,

The A's scored their flnl run in
the fIfth on Blankenship's sacrifice
fly . Cleveland tied it in the bottom
half on Howard's RBI single.
In other games, Baltimore beat
Minnesota 10-S, Detroit downed
Seaule 4-1. Boston beat Chicago 63, Texas topped New York 1-0,
California defeated Toronto 9-5
and Kansas City defealed Milwaukee 3-2 in II innings.
Oriles 10, Twins S
Relax, all you rotisserie players
who were wondering and worrying
when Cal Ripken would hit a home
run. He's on the board for your
team, and for the Baltimore Orioles.
Ripken fmally connecled in his
20th game and 72nd at· bat of year,
ending his longest drought at tile
start of a season and helping the
Orioles beat the Minnesota Twins
10-5 Tuesday ni.!!hL
(See AL on Page 6)

•-s..

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&amp; Pearl Street • 992-3471

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NL games ...
(Continued from Page 4)
the ninth, Jackson found just the
fastball he wanled from Schilling
and increased his home run total
this yCM to four.
Benito Santiago had three
infi911l ,singles and stole two base&lt;
for the liadres. Mickey Morandini
knocked in four runs for Philadelphia.
Cardinals 2, Dod~rs I
At Los Angeles. Tom Pagnoui
&amp;ingled in the winning run , while
Bernard Gilkey doubled in a run
and threw out 8 runner at home as
the SL Louis cardinals t.ept Ramoo
Martinez winless in five starts.
Todd Zeile gRlCIOd reliever hm
Gou with a leadoff single in the
lOth and took S&lt;lCOOd 011 a SIICrifoce
by Tim Jones. Gerald Perry diew
an inu:ntional walk one out later,
and Pagnozzi lined a 1-2 pitch 10
cen1er f .eld.
Reliever Todd Worrell got his
f1rst win since 1989.
Braves I, Cubs 0
At Atlanta , Otis Nixon scored
tile on! y run on a wild pitch and
Charlie Leibrandt retired 20
straight hillers, allowing only on&lt;
hit in seven innings.
Nixon ran for Sid Bream, who
singled to open the seventh . and
was safe at seoood when third basiCman Luis Salazar threw high lo
second on a grounder by Greg
Olson for an error. Mart Ltmlr.e
ll8Crificed and pinch-hiuer Damon
Berryhill was wallr.ed inlefltionally
to load tile bases.
Paul Assenmacho- then t1uew a
wild pitch. ~raring Nixon.
Leibrandt issued a leatloiT sin&amp;le
In the flnl iMing 10 Sbawon Dunston, who was thrown out stt'l!li"'
He tllen retired the next 20 CuM.
facing the minimum 21 batten in
seven innings. Leilnndl s:auct. WI
four and threw only 75 pitdles.
Mets 4, Aslros 0
At New Yext, David Cone bad
a no-hitter for 7 1(3 innings. 'Theil
pinch-hitter Benny Distefano
reached on an infield single and
Cone wound up with a tw&lt;Hlitlt:t.
Cone struck out I I, includin&amp;
the 1 OOOth of his career.
Edwe Murray provided Cone all
the runs he needed with a ["w(Hgl
double in the first inning and a
bases-loaded two-run single ill the
fifth off loser Butch Hmry.

Grass C:utttq
Snson Is Ban!
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6 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, April 29, 1992

Wednesday, April 29, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Derby fave Arazi gets first
workout since quarantine

•

By JOHN NELSON
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Arazi or no Anlzi. Neil Drysdale is
sl!aocing far No. I in the Ken!ucky
Derby with A.P. Indy.
"To win the race. you have to
bcal Arazi." Drysdale said. "But
!' d want to win Ibis race whether
Ar1lzi was in i 1or nOl "
A.P, Indy, the Santa Anita
Derby winner who has won five of
six lifetime SllirlS, likely will go off
the second choice to Arazi on Saturday in the I 1/4-mile Derby .
"Arazi is a good horse, but I'm
very pleased with the way A.P.
Indy is oorning up to this race. He
couldn't be any better," Drysdale
said.
Arazi became the horse to beat
last Nov_2 when he ran away wi lh
the Breeders' Cup Juvenile at
Churchill Downs in his only U.S.
swt. Although Kentucky -bred,
each of his other races has been in
France.
Arazi arrived in the United
StaleS on Sunday, spent Monday in
quarantine and came over to his

stable on the Downs backstretch
Tuesday morning. He cantered one
mile.
"He's grown now, he's beuer,
and he's matured," said Fabien
Gerard, an assistant to trainer Francois Boutin.
Asked if Arazi ttul y had wings,
Gerard smiled and replied through
an interpreter: "He doesn't need
any. He has a good engine."
As Arllzi's chief American competition, A.P, Indy will be joined
by Aorida Derby winntr Technology and Arkansas Derby winner
Pine Bluff. Another threat, however, looms from the other side of the
Atlantic,
Dr Devious, an Irish·bred purchased as a birlhday present for her
husband last March by weight-loss
queen Jenny Craig for $2.5 million,
is trained by Hall of Farner Ron
McAnally and should receive some
attention from beuors, He's won
four of seven stans, all in England.
"I think he deserves to be the
third choice," McAnally said. Out·
side of Arazi and A.P. Indy,

McAnally said he wasn '1 particularly impressed witb the tbe field.
A.P. Indy, wbo will be ridden
by Eddie Delahoussaye, hasn't lost
since his maiden outing last Aug.

24. His five-race winning streak
includes victories in tim:e graded
slakes, his last on April 4 81 Santa
Anita.
Neither A.P. Indy 1101' Technology was among the field that Arazi
beat in the Breeden' Clip.
Drysdale calls A.P. Indy a
"very intelligent horse" with
smooth acceleration. The knock on
his running style is that he carries
his head low.
"I've seen quite a few horses
run with low heads," Drysdale
said. "I think borses extend better
when they have low head car·

See Store For Details

The Big Bear Hug

riage."

Drysdale also said he didn 't
think A.P. Indy's hanging bead
would impair his vision in what is
expected to be a large field of 19,
who will be enll:led on Thursday .
"It really has no bearing on his
visioo,'' Drysdale said.

FIRST WORKOUT - Kentucky Derby
ravorite Arazi is beld in place by exercise rider
Ramond Lamonorca (left) as he gets a grooming

following his e~ercise workout Tuesday mornin,g
at CburcblU Downs in Louisville, Ky. It was hiS
first workout since being released rrom quarantine. (AP)

Detroit, Cleveland among fallen in first round of NBA playoffs
they won two World Champi By The ~iated Press
Three other series continue ley· s in bounds pass and called time before rallying.
This time, rt was the New York onships by executing flawlessly tonight OUcago is 81 Miami, Port· with 13 seconds remaining and
Petrovic scored nine of his 20
Knicks who looked like playoff down the stretch in Game 2, did lit- land visits die Los Angeles Lakers New York ahead 88-87.
points and Coleman had eight of
veterans and the Deuoit Pistons tle right when it mattered this time. and Phoenix is at San Antonio,
When play resumed, Dumars' his 22 during a pme-closing 27-12
They blew a tbree-poin! lead in the with all three visitm looting for a pass for Thomas was picked off by run. Chris Moms, who hit 12 of 14
who made the mistakes.
The Knicks, who lost the home- final minute, then couldn't get off a sweep.
Mark Jackson, who was fouled and shots, finished with 28 points but
court advantage when they dropped shot, let the Knicks get in front in
Koicb 90, Plslons 17
made both free throws. Bill Laim- did not take a shot in the fourth
an 89-88 deCISIOn to Deuoit on overtime and wasted several
The Pistons were their own beer's desperation three·pointer quarter.
Sunday, got it back on Tuesday by chances to tie or win in the final worst enemies al cruncb time.
missed as time ran out.
Larry Nance had 28 points and
oudasnng the Pistons 90-87 at The seconds.
Joe Dumars missed two free
John Salley scored 20 points for 14 rebounds, Mark Price scored 19
The Knicks can wrap up the throws heflft Ewing hit bis tying Detroil and Rodman got 14 points and John Williams 18 for the
Palace.
Paaid: Ewing, whose misfires best-of-five opening-round series jumper. The Pistons held for the rebounds for Detroit.
Cavaliers.
on Sunday burt the Knicks badly, Friday night.
last shot, but lsiab Thomas was
Nets I09, Cavaliers 104
CUppers 98, Jazz 88
scored 12 of his 32 points in the
In another Eastern Conference forced into a desperalion hook shot
The Nets won a postseason
Doc Rivers scored all 15 of his
fourth quarter and added.four more series, New Jersey stayed alive that missed
game for the flfst time in 11 tries points in the second half as Los
in overtime. His jumper 10 the lane with a 109-1()4 victory over Clevelohn Starks tlm:e-pointer to since 1984 as Drazen Petrovic and Angeles, making its first playoff
with 13.4 secoods left in regulation land, which still leads 2-I. In the begin the ovmime gave tbe Knicks Derrick Coleman led a fourth-quar- appeamnce in 16 years, shut down
West, the Los Angeles Clippers a lead they never lost - n01 that ter rally that overcame a 10-point Utah's big guns to stay alive.
forcedOT.
.
"I got off to a slow srart," said also earned another chance with a Detroit dido 't have oppommities.
def~eit at the Meadowlands.
The Clippers held Karl Malone,
Ewmg. who scored just eight points 98-88 victory over Utah, which still
Thomas, bcld to only sii points,
The Nets, whose 7·for·ll shoot- who had 32 points in each of the
in the flfSt half. "But I was domg leads 2-1, and Seattle took a 2-1 missed a jumper in the lane and ing from three-point range over- frrst two games, to 22 points and 10
other things. I was rebounding, lead over Golden Srate with a 129- Dennis Rodman was called for a came a 27 ·6 deficit at the free- rebounds to force Game 4. Jeff
blocking shots."
128 victory. All three series resume foul with 14.3 seconds left. But throw line, fell behind 92-82 mid- Malone, who had 53 points in the
The Pistons, who showed why Thursday night.
Dumars picked off Charles Oak- way through the fourth quarter first two games, scored only II,
and John Stockton, who had 40
assists in the ftrst two games, had
13 to go with 20 points,
Danny Maming led the Clippers
cess on the field. I'm really im By SCOTT WOLFE
Gaul indicated that they bad a and three former SV AC teams with 17 points.
Southern varsity footbaU coach pressed with our young kids. They schedule that could put them in the Oak Hill , Eastern and Symmes
Sports briefs
David Gaul and athletic director show a lot of enthusiasm and good playoffs should the Tornadoes en- Valley.
Howie Caldwell recently an - work ethics. I'm proud of our older joy some success.
Tennis
For the first time in 15 years,
nounced this year's Tornado foot- kids toO, but I'm looking for a little
ROSWELL,
Ga. (AP)- TopGaul also indicated the team has Southern will not play Eastern in
ball schedule, which will have more leadership from some of our had several fund-raising events, in- the season-ending game, but rather seeded Pete Sampras defeated MarSouthern competing as an indepen- older players."
cello Filippini 7-6 (7-3), 7-5 and
cluding a spagheui dinner in which on the seventh week.
"For the most pan, we have a several players participated and
dent prior to its enD)' into the Tnsecond-seeded Andre Agassi beat
VaUcy Conference in the 1993·94 good solid corps here every nighl acted as servers.
Mikael Pernfors 7-5, 6-2 to
Southern's 1992
We've got a good group returning
!Chool year.
advance to !he lhird round of the
Gaul, a class act himself, indiThe schedule includes three next year and the progr1111 is on the cated that be appreciated the help football schedule
AT&amp; T Challenge. In other secondTVC foes and three farmer South- upswing. I just hope our kids don't the players, parent.s, boosters and Date
Opponent round matches, seventh-seeded
em Valley Athletic Conference take anything for granted. We can the public have provided
Sept. 4 ........................ ..... Alexander Jimmy Connors defeated Eduardo
have
a
good
team
next
year.
I'm
reteams.
He said. "The support here at Sepl II ....................... at Waterford Masso 7-6 (7-2), 6-4 and Todd
aU
y
looking
forward
to
il"
Gaul indicated that team memSouthern has been great. The entire SepLI8 .... ........ ................ Fon Frye Witsken beat fourth·seeded Brad
"Next year, we have a very community has been supportive. Sept 25 ....... .... ...... ... at South Point Gilhert 6-4, (]..{j, 6-4.
ben have been working hard in the
off season to prepa~e for this year's competitive schedule. The middle We 'rc getting a lot of volunteer Oct. 2... ... ... ....... ............Chespeake
MADRID, Spain (AP) -John
.chedule. Gaul and assisrant Jeff three games are tough, quality op- help in ~g the fJCid and rais- Oct. 9 .... .............. ......at Oak Hill McEnroe beat Marcos Perez
Baker have organized weight train- ponents, but with much of our ing money f&lt;r equipmenl Howev- Oct. 16 ··· ··-· ··-····--······· ·--···at Eastern Hubert 6-7 (2-7),6-4, 6-3 and Marc
ing sessions at the school's football starting team coming back we can er, we still have some other goals Oct. 23 ..... .............. Symmes Valley Rosset upset fourtb·seeded Emilio
play with anyone if we get the to meeL"
0cL30 .............................3! Trimble Sanchez 6.0, 3-6, 6-3 in the Madrid
building.
needed
off-season
preparation.
If
Gaul said, "We've had nearly
Southern will open with Alexan- Nov. 6 ...................Federal Hocking Grand Prix tournament. Boris
Becker withdrew before his firsttwenty people Iifting at various you're a player and not in the der at horne on SeJX- 4 befon. fac(All games are slated ror a 7:30 round match wilh Martin Jaite with
times every night. In today's weight room. you need to be there ing a pau of new opponents a back injury.
pme. you have to work hard at the to prepare ."
p.m. start.)
Soulh Point and Chesapeake weights to enjoy any kind of sue-

badlr-

Southern announces 1992 football schedule

AL games · · · · - - - - - - - - - -Yankee Sladl urn.
Brown (4 -1) gave up two sin gles in eight innings. He struck out
three and walked three.
Kenny Rogers relieved to start
the nintll and Mel Hall led off with
a double. Two outs laler, Jeff Russell toot over and finisbed for his
sixtll save.
Tim Leary (2-1) pitched his rlfSI
complete game since April 19.
1991. He allowed seven hits.
Royals 3, B• twtrs 2
Wally Joyner led off the II th
inning with his flfSI home run since
Sept. I, and Kansas City won at
Milwaukee.
His horne run off Jesse Orosco
(0-1) gave the Royals their second
straight victory following a 1- 16
stan.
Neal Heaton (2-1) pitched 2 '1/J
perfect innings and Jeff Montgomery went the lith for his second save.

11 PC.

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Evans may get
MU cage job
Marshall University was
expected to name a successor
today to women's basketball
coach Judy Southard, wbo
resigned lo become athletic director at Texas Women's University
in Denton, Tuas.
Sarah Evans, daughter or Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Evans or Rio
Grande and a rormer player al
Gallia Academy High School and
Stanrord University, is expected
to be the choice, accordmg to
unofficial sources.

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~~~

Special of the Week!

•

WAID CROSS'
SONS

(Contmued from Page 5)

Angels 9, Blue Jays 5
"It feels good to get one. You
Lance Parrish and Gary Gaetti
never want to get to the point
when: you're thinking about hitting hit home runs for California, and
one, because then yoo never do," Bobby Rose was hit in the head by
Dave Stieb as the Angels won at
he said.
Last year, Ripken got off to a the Sky Dome.
Rose was beaned in the fourth
torrid start on his way to becoming
the AL's MU&lt;t Valuable Player. He inning after Parrish homered. Rose
bit .338 with five horne runs and 20 did n01 lose consciousness, but was
RB!s in 68 at-bat.s in April, and taken to a hospital for overnigh1
observation.
went on to flllish with 34 homers.
Dave Winfield hit two solo
Leo Gomez, who began the
aight in a J-for·l9 slump, also home runs. Devon White also hit a
broi.e oot. hitting a pair of RBI solo shot for the Blue Jays. Junior
Felix and John Morris each drove
tblblcs far the Orioles.
Mite Mussina (3-0) led 10·2 m three runs for the Angels.
Chuck Finley (I -I) shut down
lfiU pving up five hits in 7 1/3
Toronto
on three hits for six
innings. The Twins chased him one
aullata as Kirby Puckett h11 a two- innin~sSueb (0·2) lasted only four
run hcmer.
innings
in his second stan, giving
Greg Gagne also hit a two-run
up
four
runs
on six hit.s.
booler for the Twms. Sull, rl was
Rangers
I, Yankees 0
Dill enough for Scott Erickson (0Kevin
Brown,
a career 39-33
3).
.
pitcher,
improved
to 8-1 life1ime
Erickson gave up frve run s on
against New YoO; wilh a victory at
!ICYCD hits in 5 1/3 innings.
Tigers 4, Mariners I . .
llelroit won for the first ume rn
11iJ1e games at Tiger Stadium this
.-m as Bill Gullickson stopped
5allk on five hits,
Gullickson (3-2) sttuck out three
JDd walked two.
Rll'lll Swan (2-3) also pitched a
canplete game, allowing six hits.
He !IIIICk aut two and walked two.
Red Sox 6, Wbitr Sox 3
Jloger Clemens lowered his
EJlA 11 1.38 in five starts this sea- . SlOpping Chicago on one run
far pen innings at Fen way Park.
Clana!s (3-2) struck out nine.
Clemens allowed five hits.
walked twa and left with a 6- I
ll:8tL ~ Boston relievers gave up
JWV doubles, four singles, one walk
llld bit a bauer, and Jeff Reardon
Jllllbs thin! save,
111c Red Sox scored twice in the
fin&amp; iriiUII qainst Kirk McCaskill
(1-3) 011 three singles. Mike Greenwell's sacrifice fly and catcher
Milt Maullo's throwing emr.

SuperSonics 129, Warriors 128
Shawn Kemp's two free throws
with 6.1 seconds left gave Seaule a
victory at home over Golden State.
After Billy Owens' spinning
layup with 7,5 seconds left gave
tile Warriors a 128-127 lead, Kemp
drove to the basket, was fouled by
Tim Hardaway and made both free
throws to put Seattle ahead. Golden
State couldn't get orr a last shot.
Derrick McKey led Seattle with
27 points and Sarunas Marciulionis
topped the Warriors with 27, one
more than Hardaway. Kemp had 22
points.

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APRIL • MAY 1992
Wed. Thurs. Fri.

Sat.

29 • 30 • 1 • 2

GET THE BEAR
MINIMUM PRICE

�Wednesday, April 29, 1992

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, April 29, 1992
Pag~

Women are obsessed with being
thin; stats possible wake-up call

•

DEAR READERS: Some inleresting statistics w""' compiled by
Jenefer Shure while resean:hing her
book, "Life-Size,· about an aJKRXic
woman. What follows may be a
wake-up call for those who are
borderline nuuy on the subject of
weight loss. Read on:
A Glamour magazine survey of
33,000 women revealed that
American females value being thin
more than success or love. The
average woman would like to lose
10 to 15 pounds.
As many as one-fifth of all
female oollege students have a
severe eating disorder. Every year,
150,000 American women die
from complications associated with
anoreua and bulimia According to
the National Asoocialion or Anorew
Nervosa and Associated Disorders,
7 million American womco suffer
from anorexia and bulimia.
A gcoeration ago. fashton models
wctghed 8 percent less than the
average woman. Today, fashion
models wetgh 23 perccotless.
The average model, dancer or
actress ts thinner than 95 percent of
the female population.
A recent swdy of high school guls
showed that by age 13, 53 percent
sa1d they were unhappy with their
bodies.
Women's distorted body image
tr.mslatcS into b1g bucks. The diet
mdustry has grown to S33 btllton a
year, and women spend S300
mII han a year on cosmetic SIIIJlCry.
iocluding breast implants.
There's always a diet book oo the

Ann
Landers
"IHI, Lot ..U,f'lft.
'l1ma SyiMicMe and
Creatora SyDII&lt;We.''

yet
are
still fa~ and SlalisticaUy speaking,
they are geaing fauer.
In cenain African and South Sea
island cultures, f81 is beautiful.
Women are fauened up before
marriage by being placed in special
enclosures where they are encouraged to eat all day long.
What se« was to women in the
19th century, food has become to
females in the 20th century -- a
source of guilt and shame.
So, dear readers, all I can say
is this is a sad commcotary on the
values of millions of American
women.

Dear An1 Landers: This is
for the Nortll Dak01a wife wh&lt;&gt;;e
husband never said, "Bless you,"
whco she sneezed. Maybe my letw
will make her feel better.
I have been married 30 years.
Never once hav e I heard my
husband call me by my ftm name.
He has never wished me a happy
birthday, anniversary, merry
Christmas or a happy New Year. He
has never said, "Please," lhank
you," "Good dinner," or anything
else. My clothes always "look like
hell. " If I ask him if he likes my
hair, he says, "It's good enough for

the garbage man."
"Bill" went to California for a
week, came home, palltld the dog's
head and aslced, "Whaa's for dinner?"
He never mcotioned one word about
his trip. The man comes and goes as
he pleases and has absolutely
IIOihing ID say when he gets home.
I am 1101 ugly. I could pass for Liz
Taylor's older sister. I wear makettp
every day and keep myself neal
My ooly satisfaction in life is thai!
am oosting BiU a fortune in doct.or,
psychiauist and hospital bills.
Tell Mrs. Nonh Dakota that I
suspect there is more ID her story
than "bless you." And there's more
to mine than I have wriuen. Is there
any hope for us, Ann? -- CANTON,
S.D.
DEAR CANTON: Your marriage
sounds like a nighbnare for both
Bill and you. You mention a
psychiatrist. Is he or she helping
you' A woman whose only
satisfaction in life is socking it
ID her husband with big medical
bills needs the guidance and
suppon of a competent men t.al
health professional. Good luck to
you.
Do you ltavt quutwns aboUJ sa.
bUJ no OM to talk to' Ann Latukrs'
bookltt, "Sa and thL Tun-Agtr.""
is fr/JIIJc Cllld to thL point. Stnd a

stlf-addrtsstd. long, busi11tss-siu
tnvtlope and a chtck or mo~~y
ordtr for $3.65 (this includes
postagt Cllld hilndiing) to: Tttns.
c/o Ann LaNius. f.O. Box /1562,
Chicago, Ill . 6061/-0562 . (In
CaMda, strul $4 45 .)

Community calendar
Community Calendar ilems
appear two days before an event
and the day ot that event. Items
must be received weU in advanct
to assure publication in the calendar.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER · Revival at Mt. Hermon Unned Brethren Church will
he held through Sunday at 7:30
p.m. nightly with Rev. Donald
Bender, Fayetteville, Pa.

f

STORY'S RUN ·Crusade for
Christ will be held at the Old
Bethel Church on Route 7 and
Story's Run Road through Saturday
at 7 p.m. nightly. Speakers and
singers nigh~y.
POMEROY · Meigs County
Head St.an Center wtll hold open
house through Friday from 9 a.m .
to 3 p.m. daily.
CHESTE R · Revival will be
hel d at th e Chester Nazarene
Church through Sunday at 7 p.m .
ni ghtly and 6 p.m. Sunday with
Rev . Bill H1ll. Chillicothe. evangelist. Pastor Herbert Grate invttes
the pub l1c
PORTLAND· The Lebanon
Town ship Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the town ,h,p building.
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun·
t) Better Livestock Dairy 4-H Club
will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at
the Me1 gs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Anyone age 9-18 or in
the th11d grade by Jan . I, 1992 is
cl• g,bl c Anyone interested in
show in ~ ;~ registered dairy animal

at the 1992 Meigs County Fair is
inv1tcd .

POMEROY ·The Wildwood
Gar&lt;lcn Club will meet Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Belly
Milhoan.
MIDDLEPORT- The Mei~ s
County Scollish Rite Club wtll
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple . All
32nd degree master masons arc
invited. Bi-laws will be voted on at
the meeting .
THURSDAY
LONG BOTIUM · Bruce Stone
will perform at Faith Full Gospel
Church in Long Bottom on Thursday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public and fellowship
will follow .
. MIDDLEPORT - The Eleanor
Circle of Heath United Methodist
Church will sponsor a rummage
sale at the church Thursday and
Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
: ATHENS - The PrecepiDr Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will host the 61st
Founder's Day Thursday at the
S"portsman in Athens at 6:30 p". m.
Other chapters to attend are Xi
Qamma Mu, Xi Gamma Epsilon
and Ohio Eta Phi.
POMEROY · There will be a
meeting and rehearsal for all mem bers interested in participating in
the Middleport Alumni Band. The

rehearsal will take place at the ban·
droom at Meigs High School on
Thursday 81 7 p.m. All former band
members are IIIJlCd to attend.
POMEROY - A free clothing
day will be held Thursday from I0
a.m. to noon at the Pomeroy Salva·
lion Army office. All area residents
in need of clothing are invited to
auend.
POMEROY · The Btg Bend
Stemwheel Regatta Commiuce will
sponsor a four-man scramble golf
tournament Thursday beginning at
I p.m. at the Me1gs County Golf
Course. The cost to regisler is $45
per player and you may pick your

own team .
POMEROY - There will be a
Girl Scout leaders meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy . Reservations
for the mother-daughter banquet
should be turned in at the meeting.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND . There will be a
dance at the Ru1land American

Legion Hall Fnd.oy from 8 p.m. Ia
midnight with music by White's
Hill Band. Public invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS · There will
be a dance at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Hall Friday from S- 11 :30
p.m. with music by CJ and Country
Gen~erncn. Public 1nvited.
MIDDLEPORT · The Heath
United Methodist Church in Middleport will have a rummage sale
Friday and Saturday.
TORCH . A rummage and craft
sale, sponsored by the Fruth Chapel
Women's Circle. will be held at
Torch United Methodist Church
Annex Friday and Satu rday from
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m. Caii667 -65Gl
or 989-2667 for information.
LONG BOHOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Churc h in Long Bot' om will have preaching and
s inging Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public. Fcl ·
lowship will follow.
SATURDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS· There will
be a bake sale sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains VFW Auxiliary No.
9053 Sawrday beginning at 9 a.m.
across from Farmers Bank in Tuppers Plains.
LONG BOTIOM · Ther~ will
be a hymn sing at the Mt. Oli ve
Community Church in Long Bottom Saturday at 7 p.m. with local
t.alent Joy and the Dailey Famil y.
Pastor Lawrence Bush invites the
public.

Junior Fair Grounds.
TUPPERS PLAINS · Little
League Giants Baseball Team of
Tuppers Plains will have an II
family yard sale and bake sale at
John Rankin's on Saturday. Proceeds will be used to buy new unifonns.
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange and Star Junior G' ·'"'· will
mee t Saturday at 8 p.m. "' the
grange hall on County Road I ncar
Salem Center. Potluck refresh ·
mcnts follow. All members attend.
HENDERSON - The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8- 11 p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center in Henderson,
W.Va. Herb Shelton will be the
caller.
POMEROY · The Southern
High School Golf Team will sponsor a four -person golf scramble
Saturday at the Meigs County Golf
Course. Entry fee is $35 for members and $40 for non -membe rs .
Sign-up at the course or call 9926312.

D of A prepares for district rally
District 13, Daughte:s of America, met recently at the Chester
Lodge HaU. Mary Moose, District
Councilor from Perry Council No.
283, New Lexington, presided at
the meeting.
Pledges Ia the Christian and
American nags were given in uni-

son.
Received officially were Esther
Smith, AJ.P.S.C: Dorothy Ritchie,
P.S.C.; Margaret Collerill and
Mary Moose, national representatives; Opal Hollon, state cncdcotial
committee; and Bette Biggs, Dis·
trictl3 deputy.
Mary Moose thanked the mem bers for the cards and leiters she
received while in the hospital and
while she was recuperating at
home.
A practice was held for the dis trict rally May 30 at New Lcxing·
ton. Bette Biggs, district deputy,
conducted some of the meeting,
pertaining to the program for the
rally. She spoke briefly on several
matrers.
There will be a district practice
at the senior citizens building in
New Lexington on May 16 at I
p.m. All members are urged to
aucnd this practice.
At the Chester Council No. 323
meeting on May 19 at 7:30p.m. it
will be the lodge anniversary.
There wiU be initiation for one candidate. All members on the district
team are invited. It wiU be a practice for the rally, the irtitiation parl

Janet Bolin, Southeastern Ohio
representali ve of Ameri flora,
recently visited Salisbury Elementary where she explained the Ameritlora '92 program being held in
Columbus.
She described the areas of interest including A Monte Carlo
palace, a British High Tea, a
Japanese Tea Ceremony, the won ders of Malaysia, Korea and Russia
and the variety of Africa, Australia,
Canada, HoUand, Ireland and lt.aly.
Enrertainment includes five formal
stages in addition to the street
entertainment available.
Studcnts can also visit nine di f.
fcrent climates in the techno-magical conservatory, see the multi media magic at the U.S. Pavilion,
and hear a musical tribute to America.

Refreshments were served by
Guiding Star Council No. 124.
Helen Wolf, district pianist, played
for the meeting.
Attending were Mildred Lowery, Logan Council No. 120; Belly
Wolfe and Mary Moose, Perry
Council No. 283; Eileen Clark,
Nathan Biggs, Betre Biggs, Betty
Spencer, Bob and Esther Harden,

Margaret Cotrerill, Janice Lawson,
Guiding Star Council No. 124;
Dorothy Ritchie, Faye Kirkhart ,
Marcia Keller, Thelma White,
Erma Cleland, Mary K. Holler,
Lora Damewood, Esther Smith,
Opal Hollon, Doris Grueser, Belly
Young, Everett Grant, Helen Wolf,
Ethel Orr, Elizabeth Hayes, Chester
Council No. 323.

Wilson speaks to M-P Rotarians
The speaker was introduced by
Bruce Wilson, Meigs Junior
High School {lrincipal, was speaker Richard Vaughan. Mark Murphey
at Monday mght's meeting of the announced the annual pancake
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club breakfast to be held on May 9 from
held at Heath United Methodist 8 a.m. to II a.m. at Royal Oak
Church.
Park.
Wilson discussed the effective
Dinner preceding the meeting
schools program of the Ohio was served by the women of Heath
Department of Education which Church.
provided about $250,000. Of that
about $140,000 came into the
Meigs Local School Districts with
Revival services will be held
each school receiving a $5,000
through
Sunday at 7 p.m. at Eden
grant to be used for needs assessUnited
Brethren
Church, two miles
ment and development of a mission
north
of
ReedsviUe
on St.are Roure
statement.
The money over that allocated 124. Rev. Robert Markley wtll be
to the individual schools went to the evangelis~ and special singing
provide additional training for 35 is planned each night.
teachers in the Meigs Local Districl
Wilson talked about the role of
the Academic Boosters at the
school and the upcoming banquet
DOVER. England (AP) - New
to honor scholars. Rotary is active York -born Gertrude C. Ederle was
in that recognition program.
the first woman to swim the
English Channel.
She made the crossing in 14
hours, 31 minutes on Aug. 6, 1926,
from Cap Gris Nez, France, to
Kin~sdown Beach , near Dover,
''' beaung the existing men's record.
Her record stood until 1950, when
Florence Chadwick crossed the
channel in 13 hour.;, 20 minutes.

Revival slated

Channel swimmer

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSUUNCE
Ill Second St., P11111eroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Waiting For The Holiday
Season To Excite Your
Customers?

POMEROY · The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Daoce Club
will sponsor an open dance at the
Sen1or Citizens Center of Pomeroy
on Saturday from 8-11 p.m . with
Keith Rippeto, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Refreshments available.
BURLINGHAM · The JUni ors
of Mod ern Woodmen of Burl ing ham -w d l have a bake sa le, yard
sale anu chicken noodle dinner Sat·
urday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at ~1c
woodmen ball. Proceeds wtll benefit the road to Butlmgham Cemc·
tcry.

Market hog
registration set
Market hog registrallon for 1992
4-H and FFA mark et ho g
exhibitors has been set for Saturda y
from 9-11 a.m. at the Meigs Coun ·
ty Extension OITice.
Any 4-H or FFA member plan ·
n1ng 10 show market hogs at th e
Mctg&gt; County Fa11 this year must
turn in registration cards and picture money in the amount of $10
per animal by Sawrday.
Further information may be
obtJmed by contaCting Chip Hag ·
gcny at the Meigs County Extcn ·
Ston Office, 992-6696.

Moving energy packets

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) A
University
of Michigan chemist
POMEROY - The Royal Oak
says
he
has
found
a way 10 transDance Club wtll hold a dance Sa tpon
packets
of
pure
energy along
urday from 8-11 P..m. at Royal Oak
so-called
"molecular
wires.
'
Reson. Music will be provided by
Professor
Rooul
Kopelman,
who
the Doug Hcs.s Combo.
describes the wires as 10 times
GALLIPOLIS · Clay Elemen- thinner than the thinnest metal wire
tary PTO and Green Elementary and 1,000 times thinner than curPTO of Gallipolis City Schools, rent optical fibers, says they have
will hold "Country Treasurers" ans many potential applications.
Kopelman says these include
and crafts show Saturday from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from ultraminiaturization and optical
noon to 5 p.m. at the Gallia County computer memories.

Why wait? The average amount spent on gifts for moms on Mother's
Day and dads on Father's Day is higher than the amount spent on their
Christmas gifts. Mother's Day, May 10, and Father's Day,-June 21, represent
combined retail sales of $16 to $17 billion nationwide. That's a median of $70
being spent fur every mum; $60 spent for every dad.
Newspapers reach adults with buying power. Eight of every ten U.S.
adults, with household incomes of $50,000+, read an average day's
newspaper. Advertise fur Mother's Day and Father's Day, where your ads
create excitement, and generate sales: The Dally Sentinel. Call your
advertising account executive today for details, 992-2156.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

by Bah Hoefl ich
Let's hope-this is the last hurrah will be m the form of a yard sale at
as far as the cold weather is con- Star Mill Parle and will be held all
cerned . Spring was somewhat day, both days, rain or shine. lncirumed by the returning cold- think dent.ally, the club is still welcommg
we've had enough of the cold stuff, contributions-if you want to give
don't you?
some items to help out, just call
Incidentally , I suppo sed you Frank Cleland, Ruritan President.
noticed that they are using
parachutes to hold AmeriFiora
Jeff Connolly who wa s very
together. I suspect you al so seriously injured several month s
noticed the expense in attending. ago is no longer at Grant Hospital
According to one televiSIOn show, in Columbus. Jeff is slowly maka couple and one child attended and ing progress and is now at Dodd
did the ordinary- the cost wa s Hall where he is undergoing reha somewhat over $80- ju s t a bit btlit.ation.
steep, it would leem to me, but
You can send mail to him al
then, what do I know?
Dodd Hall, University Hospital,
Room 4112,490 W. 9th Ave.,
There's just a little bit of confu- Columbus, Ohio 43210.1228 . I'm
sion about the Middleport High sure Jeff could use a lillie encourSchool Alumni Banquet. Some· agement about now.
how, picnic type foods were mentioned and therein lies the problem.
The Womco's Auxiliary at VetSome felt that they were ~oing to erans Memorial Hospital enteran "on the ground" picntc when tained employees and the public
they attend the alumni this year. Tuesday in the hospit.allobby .
This just isn't the way it's going to
Punch and cookies were served
be.
by the Auxiliary in observance of
The banquet will be prepared Volunteer Week which is currently
and served by members of the Mtd· underway. On Thursday, members
dlepon Pentecostal Church and it of the group will attend a social in
will be served outdoors-at t.ablcs, lhc dining room/sun room of the
mind you- in front of the old high Skilled Nursing Factlity where they
school, now the Meigs Junior Htgh wil l be guests of honor in conjuncSchool. The only food item which tion with Volunteer Week. The
won't be served at the tables will social is being staged by the facility
be the homemade icc cream . There staff and the hospital. Awards will
will be several flavors offered and be presented during the event.
after you've finished your dinner
The Aux ili ary will wrap up its
you are to go to the dessert area week of activities Friday with a
and make your selection
Jewelry sale to be staged fr om 7
This program at the banquet will a.m . to 4 p.m. in the hospit.al confeature not only an alumni band, ference room . Mr. and Mrs. Ron
dinected by Roger Williams. but an Salser will be in charge of the sale
alumni clogging group. The ban- which is open lo the public.
quet is 6:30p.m. oo May 23.
Just fhink, 500 years ago
Don't forget the Ruruan Club- Christopher Columbus started all
the new civic organization in this' If the drugs, crime, abuse and
Racine dedicated to community politics don't gel squared away
service-will be holding its first maybe we should give it back to
fund-raiser since organizing on Fri- the Indians. Do keep smiling.
day and Saturday. The fund -raiser

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Carol
Burnett received UCLA's 15th
annual Jack Benny Award for her

Emmy received the Am e rican
Express Tribute for achievement in
the performmg arts.

contributions and achievemenLS in

Previous recipients were Miss

comedy.
The award was presented Mon·
day during a ceremony that included a surprise appearance by Vicki
Lawrence, who appeared with Mi ss
Burnett on "The Carol Burnell
Show." Miss Lawrence presented
the award.
The ceremony also featured
excerpts from "The Carol Burnett
Show" and Miss Burnett's feature
films, including the drama
"Friendly Fire," and the comedy
·'The Four Seasons.·'
Previous recip1ent s Include
Johnny Carson, the late John
Be lushi, Whoopi Goldberg and
Billy Cryst.al.
-HOUSTON (AP ) - Heavy weight boxing champion Evandcr
Holyfield paid $8,000 at a charity
auction for a Jersey signed by
Magic Johnson, organizers said.
The jersey fetched the highest
price for a single item at Sunday
night's fund -raising dinner and
auction for the Warren Moon
Celebrity Golf Tournament. The
event. which brought in about
$4 7,000, benefits the Houston Oiler
quarterback's Crescent Moon
Founda~on, a charity ~131 provides
college scholarships and services to
underprivileged Houston young sters.
Holyfield outbid Moon and fel ·
low quarterbacks Randall Cunning·
ham of the Philadelphia Eagles ,
and Boomer Esiason, of the Cincinnati Bengals, said Judy Riley, the
foundation's executive director.
"Evander walked up to the
microphone and said, 'I bid $8,000
and ain't nobody going to bid more
than that,"' Ms. Riley satd. No one
argued , she said.
Johnson bought a jersey beanng
Moon's autograph for $4,000.
Johnson retired from the Na~on ­
al Basketball Association's Los
Angeles Lakers last year because
he's infected with the AIDS virus.

Hayes, James Earl Jones. Angela
Lansbury, Anne Jackson, Ell Wallach and the late Mary Martin.
NEW YORK (AP) - Former
Mayor Edward Koch confirmed
Tue sday he considered suicide
when a political scandal broke
early in his fmal tenn in office.
"I was so overwhelmed by the
betrayal of a handful" of people ...
that I was very distraught," he srud
speaking from his law office.
Koch, mayor from 1978 to
1989, would not conftrm the accuracy of quot.ations in press reports
about his upcomjng memoir - "I
don't want to scoop my hook" but said the story was true

He reportedly wrote in " Citizen
Ko c h" : " There were moments
when I thought seriously of killin g
my se lf. ... I think it's entirely possible that if I had a gun nearby. in the
spring or summer of 1986, I would
not be here today.··
Koch, 67 , said thiS "low est
moment of my life " occurred after
Donald Manes, the DemocratiC
leader and Queens borough presi dent, stabbed himself to death as
his role in corruption in the Parkmg
ViolatiOns Bureau came to light.
BOSTON (AP) - Bonnie Raiu
will receive an honorary doctonuc
in music from the Bcrklcc College
of Music at its graduation exerci se
May2.
The 42 -year -old singcr-songwnter has been pcrlormtng her
own blend of folk and country
blue s since the 1960s. But sh e
didn't score big in t11c charts unti!

1989, when her lOth album. "Nick
of Time," went triple-platinum and
earned her four Grammies in 1990.
Raitt's follow -up album, "Luck
of the Draw," has sold more than 2
million copies and won three
Grammies last year.
The school's charier allows it to
confer bachelor's degrees but only
honorary doctorates, said John
WASHINGTON (AP) - Helen Collins, development director at
Hayes is 91 and says she still the school.
hasn't missed a performance since
she stepped onto a st.age in 1906.
But illness forced her ID bow out of
this year's Helen Hayes Awards
The names of Fallon Rou sh,
ceremony where Jason Robards
third
grade, and Brawn Herman.
took 1Dp honors.
fourth
grade, were unintentionally
The annual accolades named for
omitted
from a list of students at
the WashingiDn-hom actress were
Letart
Falls
Elementary named to
presented Monday at the National
the honor roll.
Theatre.
In a starement read by her son,
actor James MacArthur, Mi ss
Hayes said her doctor advised her
to st.ay home ID nurse a bruised verThere will be no more childrens'
tebrae. "For betrer or worse, I am movies presented at the Meigs
one of those people who never County Public Library in Pomeroy
missed a performance," she said.
and the Middleport Library until
"Tonight, for the first time, I funher notice .
must miss the experience of my
beloved Helen Hayes awards." She
concluded by quoting her late
friend the actress Ruth Gordon:
' "To be somebody,' she said, 'you
The Chester PTO will meet
must last.' "
Monday
at 7 p.m. in the sc hool
Robards, 69, whose 45-years on
cafeteria.
All parents and teachers
stage, screen and tube were rewardare
invited.
ed with two Oscars, a Tony and 'Ill

Names omitted

Movies stopped

PTO meeting set

Sowcc: 1992 Plan book, Newspaper Advenising Bureau, Inc

MIT finds abundance of talent at EPHS

Beat of the Bend...

People in the news

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-9

By SUZANNE GAMBOA
Associated Press Writer
EL PASO, Texas - Wh en he
began high school, David Villareal
had never heard of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Now he's part of its history.
Villareal and four other Yslet.a
High School students represent the
largest group of Hispanics ev er
admiued to the prestigious university from one general publi c high
sc hool.
Villareal, 18, who plan s to
major in electrical engineering this
fall , was always a good student.
But he never believed he would
auend a major university .
"I just felt in this part of the
country, people with a Hispanic
background, didn't get the kind of
education as people at those other
private schools," he said Tuesday.
Villareal, Yslet.a's salu tatorian,
is heading ID MIT with valedictorian Alicia Ayala, 18; Albert Martinez, 16: Enrique Anaga, 17; and
Liliana Ramirez, 17.
''When you are already labeled

a Hispanic, you have

La

"These kids have a lot of faith
an d co nfidenc e in th emselves ."
Hamm ond said.
" It's helped being Hispanic ,"
Villareal said. "You develop a set
of work ethics that other kids might
not have. It's a different back-

ground. You're not really poor, but
you're not really handed everything ."
Arzaga, who plans to major in
computer science and electrical
engineering, thanks Cain for roping
him iniD academic conrests and the

computer team.
" That was my turning point. I
started hanging out with my aca demtc peers and it caused me to
motivate myself," he said. "He
gave-me the challenge, the goal to
achieve.''

prove

yourself. They don't expect you to
do well," said Ramirez , who
became an American citizen in her
sophomore year. She allended
night school last year to improve
her English.
All five share the credit w1th
their school and their parents, some
of whom are recent immigrants
from Mexico.
" I had done well since elementary school and since th ey didn't
have an education, they always
encouraged me to do my best,"
said Ayala, whose father is a janitor ala copper smelter. She plans to
study marerial science.
The 60-year-old, rundown high
school is south of the railroad
tracks in a poorer El Paso neighborhood. Students who took the
Scholastic Aptitude Test reported
mean family incomesof$17,000.
"We do more with less bellcr
than anyone else I know ," said
Paul Cain, a computer mathematics
teacher and academic competitions
coach who has taught all five.
" Every year our top 10 to IS stu·
dents, it's, 'Name where you want
to go,' because we push them that
hard."
"I can tell you how old and
rally thiS 60-year-old building is,"
he said. But the school is not the
building - "the school is the
bright young men and women you
sec working here."
MIT, in Cambridge, Mass., has
about 4,300 undergraduates. Six
percent to 8 percent arc Hispanic,
and 6 percent of that group arc
Mexican-Americans.
The university recently hired a
fo rmer Texan 10 help find t.alentcd
min ority students. In all, 20 El Paso
students were admitred to MIT this
year.

"MIT is in tlJC midst of pushing
for a greater number of minority
students," said admissions director
Jack Hammond . "We don't just
look at SAT scores and that' s true
of all students ...
But the five were not acc epted
Simply because they are HISI""'c,
he sa td . Their SAT scores ranged
from 1,100 to above 1,300 1,600 is perfect - and each had to
write es says and endure a thre ehour interview.

Branda wants
name removed
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Marion Branda says he wants his name

removed from an upcom1ng
Chri stoph er Columbu s movie
because it doesn't show the explorer's rc.'iponsibilily in the "genoCI dal obliteration" or American lndi ·
ans.
The actor satd in Monday's
week ly Variety that he agreed to
perform in "Christopher Colum bus: The Discovery" because he
was assured Columbus would be
depicted accurately.
But he said "Native Americans
were presented wilh cruel inaccura cies, " a violation of his contracL
Branda, who plays Grand
Inquisitor Torquemada, reportedly
earned $5 million for scvcr.il days '
work on the fihn, which stars Tom
Selleck as Spain's King Ferdinand.
Warner Bros . will distribute the
film later this year.
Producer Alexander Salkind
sa_id that he was surprised by Brando's comments and that the actor
behaved erratically during fdming.
Branda refused to accept his
1973 best actor Oscar for "The
Godfather." sending an American
Indian to the stage to denounce
Hollywood's treaunent of Indians .

HEADING FOR FREEDOM- Workers from
the Miami Seaquarium push a juvenile shortfinned pilot whale from a US. Atr Force Blackhawk helicopter some 150 miles east of Miami

Tuesday. The whale was one of 15 found stranded near Key West March 1991. The wha le was
rehabilitated at the attraclion and given its freedom. (AP)

'Lodz Ghetto' A doumentary
of witness and remembrance
By SCOTT WILLIAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK - It is not poss ible merely to watch "Lodz Ghet to."

" Listen and believe this. even
though it happened here. Even
though it sounds so old, so dis~ml
and so foreign," is the film's epigraph, written by a man "shot
while attempting to escape" the
concenlnltion camp of Dachau.
Listen and believe. To watch is

to witness, to sec and remember.
To remember is to honor the
200.000 Jewish men, women and
children who on March 16, 1940,
were herded into the Litzmannst.adt
slum district of the Polish Clly of
Lodz. II became the largest concentratiOn of Jews in Europe.
Their siDry of slave labor, starvation and ultimate "deportation"
is told in this deeply moving film
documentary. It airs on PBS Thurs-

List of week's
television ratings
NEW YORK (AP) - Here arc
Lhc primc·Limc r.ilings as compi led
by the A. C. Nie lsen Co. for April
20-26. Top 10 listings include the
week's rankmg, with full season to-date rdllking in parentheses, rat ing for the week and total homes.
An "X" in parentheses denotes

one-time -only present.a~on. A rating measures the percentage of the
nation's 92.1 million TV home s.
Each ratings point represent s
921,000 households.
I. (2) "Roseanne," ABC, 20 0.
18.4 million homes.
2. (I) "60 Minute s," CB S,
18.2, 16.8 million homes.
2. (4) "Home Imp rovement ,"
ABC, 18.2, 16.8 million homes.
4. (6) " Coach, " All C , lb .H.
15.5 million homes.
5. (II) "Murder, She Wrote,"
CBS. 16.6, 15.3 million homes.
6. (13) "Honor Thy Mother' ' "CBS Sunday Movie," 15.5, 14 .3
million homes.
7. (5) "Cheers," NBC, 15.4 ,
14 .2 million homes.
8. (3) "Murphy Brown ,'' CBS.
15.0, 13.8 million homes.
9. (18) "America's Funni est
Home Videos," ABC, 14 .R, 13.6
million homes.
I 0. (8) "Full House." ABC.
14 .7, 13.5 million homes.
10. (51) "PrimeTimc Live,"
ABC, 14.7, 13.5 m1ll10n homes.
10. (7) "Dcstgning Women,"
CBS, 14.7, 13.5 million homes.

day, Holocaust Remembrance Day,
in the 50th anniversary year of the
start of the Holocaust.
"Lodz Ghetto," direct ed by
Alan Adelson and Kathryn Taver-

na, is a testimony of courage.
humor, anger, anguish amd despair.
II is the best of humanity in the
face of its worst. It is searing,
unforgcuable and overwhchning.
Even its musical score. by
Wendy Blackstone, is haunting and
beautiful.
The pictures are movie foot.age
and color stills by Nazi photographers, works by ghetto artists, and
still s by gheuo photographers
Mendel Grosman and Hcnryk
Ross.
(There's a great picture of Grosman near the end of the film . It
shows him, still making pictures,
while he waits to board a tram 10
the death camps . He died on a
forced march. Ross survived. He
made it to Tel Aviv . He has the
ncgauvcs. )
Th e film's narrative consi sts

only of Nazt communiques and the
diarie s of ghcuo pri soners whose
voi ces were stilled in places lik e
Dachau and Auschwit z. " Lodz
Ghetto" gives them back thw
VOIC CS.

"Another student from our dass
died today from hunger exhaustion.
He was the third," said a boy who
wrote his diary in four languages m
the margins of a French novel
found at Auschwitz. ("We gave
him a voice," Adelson notes in a

commentary following the film,
"but we don't know his name.")
The film also shows the pictures

Area students
to be honored
WSAZ television 3 and its "The
More You Know" partner's; C &amp; I'
Telephone. 'Cabell Huntmgton Hos·
pi ta!, and Key Centurion Bane ·
share s, Inc., will ~lute the area's
top academic achievers in the nimh
annual "Best of the Class. 1992".
Val edi ctorians or top scholars
representing over 150 publi c and
privat e sc ho ols thro ugh oul th e
WSAZ tele vision 3 viewing area
have been invited to a lun cheon
and vidcoLJping in their honor on
Monday , May 4, at the Huntington
Museum of Art . WSAZ will air
announccmcms during the May.
June grnduation period paying tnbute to the academic achievements
of these youn g people, both indiVIdually and as a group.

and speeches of the ghcllo's Nazi leader.
Chaim
appomlcd
Rumkowski , an elitist dict.ator who
exhorted his people 10 work hard
for the Germans to save them .
selves.
"Work protect..\\ us from annih1 ·
lation. Everyone 14 years old and
older mu st work for a living,''
Rumkowski ordered. "As far as
older people are concerned, people
who arc unable to worl&lt;, I trust God
w iII not for sake them ."
He also supervised a Jewish
police force and sp1cs who helped
s uppress di ssent in a starving,
exhausted population too weak to
rebel.
Of the 200,000 who entered the
Lodz ghello in 1940, 800 remained
five years later when l.hc city was
l1berated by Soviet troops.
What meaning IS there in c:uinc.
t• o n"' What knowledge do we
dcnvc from the bitter tcs!llnony of
"Lodz Gh cuo""!
It is '" that image of the phOlographcr Grosman , shootmg pi ctures
even as he is borne away to hi s
death. It ts the noblest alfumation
of humanity.

Legal services
available in MeiRS
The Ohio Stare Legal Services
and Southeastern Ohio Legal Services provide fiT".e representation in
civil matters to those who cannot
afford an auomcy in 22 Southeaste rn Ohio Counties, including
Me tg s. The OKSLSA/SEOLS is
governed by a Board of Directors
whid~ meets four to six Limes per
year '" Columbu s. The meetings
are open to the public and the next
one wi ll take place Saturday at 10
a.m. at861 North High St., Columbus. Those with questions concem mg the meeung may contJct Patn CJa Brown, 1-800-589-58&amp;8

IOWOP£1 FOR
BRING SEASON
Capletellnt ol hddlng and
Vtteta•le Plants, Blooming
and Foliage Hanging
ladtttl, large Sele1tlon of

Rifle class offered
A NRA bU' ic pistol class for
women only wo tt begin Monday .
Participants must preregister by
calling 992-6311 .

Trustees to meet
The Orange Township Trustees
will meet Monday al 7:30 p.m. at
the home of the clerk, Patricia Cal awa y.

"Toasted Wheat Goodt :ow"

sh..b..ry

and TrHs.
0,. Dtlly 9 a.&amp; to S~.m.

iiUiilfR'iis
GREENHOUSE
Syrac11e 992-5716

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--10-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, April 29, 1992

The Dall
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

SPECIAL GARDEN CENTER HOURS: OPEN SATURDAY AT 8 AM; OPEN SUNDAY AT 10 AM

Familr
Medicine

Visit our GARDEN CENTER for colorful
FLOWED and quality LAWN CARE.

John C. Wolf, 0.0
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

lqu.. l'rtl:P:S )!by \larv lo Sumr
Du- To lnc.al Cnmpermon

~(VO

"Y"UI.ibk In .'IJI

\lore~o

99(Ea

AIIOITID ANNUAU

Selection of colorful vane ~
ties 10 enhance your land ~
scape. Ca refully grown in
h a ndy 4" containers..

I'OPUUII HIIIIIIIAU
Beauuful nowering varieties grown

•ent 4" containers Perfect for

1n

conven-

deco r&lt;~t.ng

porches , patios, flowcrhcds anti more

-

99(Ea

II'BIID IIID GIIIAIIIIUMI
Grown in 4" con tainers .

Healthy plants 10 give garden ~
ers a good start on their
srring garden and flowcrbed .

denominationally diverse backgrounds, diffmnt hentage grou~s
and brought a vanety of expenences. to feed and shape thear perspecuves on compassiOn, wounds
and healing.
,
, _
May Fellowship Day 92 IS one
of the three ecumerucal days of eelebrauon sponsored by CWU. The
Olbers bemg World pay of Prayer
and World Cornmunuy Da~.
,
The events m Racme wtllbegm
at noon wttlr a sack lunch 10 the
chun:h basement Dessert and bevenges wiD be furttisMI by the host
chun:h.
.
_
,
A shon buSines~ meeting wtll
follow and a worship semce wtl
also be held

m.tct ................ to

CO. ITEMS A.ND PRICES GOOD

t. fMIItt ........ b . . ., Mdl
lhQDII' . . .. ~ •
71wli

SUNDAY , APRil 28, TMfK)IJGH
SATVADAV, WAV 2, 1.:2, tH

..rvDd In ...... " ... dD""'- of

W f RESERVI Tlt£ RIGHT TO
UWIT OUANT1T1ES . NONE SOlD
TO DEALERS .

~.._,,,..,.ohyou

yowcno6cldiiAIA'II*. . . ~
~ .......... ~ thrt..,..
01' • ~
wl

"'*"

..w..

... __

1ntttl• you to purch••• tht
~

k..-. M the If

pftu wtlt*l ~ •
~coupon

.....

.

dwd

0Nv

CN
~ I*

California
Strawberries
Quart

c
Including The Best Variety Anywhere!
~;;1

CWU to sponsor May
Fellowship Day Friday
May Feliowship Day will be
held Friday at the Racine Baptist
Church.
The worship event is sponsored
by Church Women United and
brings women of faith from differing religious traditions together to
experience a sense of bonding and
community within an ecumenical
environment.
The 1992 theme , "Call for a
Compassionate Community," recognizes the essence of suffering
within each member of the human
fam1Jy.
The materials for this worship
experience grew from a retreat
gathering of.&amp;ight women of faith
in Indiana. They came from

JUU&amp;IMI ffa PIIU:t...&amp;dl of

COf"Y"IGHT 19112 · THE KROGER

'

Question: Do you kno~w~o;rf-;a;-~y:OouriifCIOCiiOr"iilc:hei:rimiiDaiiiria.
sol ution to my problem of heavy
Chronic infection in the sinuses,
night sweats? They are so severe urinary tract, lungs or teeth can
that at times 1 have w change my · cause night sweats, so have your
pajamas as many as three umcs a doctor and dentist check for these ·
IllghL I've had this trouble for the as well. The medications Noroxin,
past three years, and 01her than the Sumycin and ampicillin you have
night sweats 1 have been fine~
taken are antibiotics that are effec.
My doctor has given me Norox· tive at clearing some- but not all
in , Sumyc1n and ampicillin, and 1 - infections. If your doctor still
have also taken aspinn and Sll,pects an infection, I would recTyl enoL None of these have ommend that you have tests to
helped. I'm sure I'm not the first identify the specific type of organperson to be troubled by night ism that may be causing the condiswcats that disturb my rest. What tion and its location before you
should 1do?
take more antibiotics.
Answer : Nighttime sweating is
More serious causes of night
a general symptom that can be pro- sweats include some life·threatenduced by many different condi- ing diseases. Severe heart disease
tions _From other information in or severe kidney disease can cause
your Jetter , 1 know you are not a night sweats in addition to other
woman in her 40s or 50s. This is symptoms produced by these fail important because the fluctuation ing organs. I don't think you have
of hormone levels near the time of these problems because you
mcrmpause may cause night sweats wouldn't otherwise feel fine.
for some women, but that certainly
Another serious disease that can
produce the symptoms you
15 nOt the cause of your sweats.
One common cause of night describe is cancer. For instance,
sweats that at one time or another stomach, bowel and lung cancer
affects mo st adults ts emot 1onal can all produce night sweats before
stress~ This can occur in women other symptoms are apparent
and men of any age. The individual
While I think that cancer may be
is usually aware that they are wor- a relatively likely cause of your
night sweats, you shouldn't panic.
rying over a matter of importance Even though you have had three
to them when they awaken sweat·•
in~ in the middle of the nighL
years of night sweats, II s en tare1y
possible that any cancer you may
As the period of stress subs1dcs, have is still curable.
normal sleep pauerns return. It is
11 is important for you to see
unusual for stress levels 10 remain your doctor again very soon for a
suffa cicntly high to disturb sleep thorough physical examination_
for three years, so I am concerned Your doctor will help you identify
that you may have another prob- th e specific cause of the night
lem ~
sweats you experience, and then
There arc a number of infectious recommend the proper treatment
illnesses that cause night sweats. for your coodition.
Malaria is a "class1c" cause of this
"Famay
~ I Medict-ne" ,~s a wee"ly
L
complaint, but individuals with column_ To submit questions, write
malaria usually feel "sick" during to John c. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Unit he rest of the day, too . Even versity College of Osteopathic
though you said you feel fine Medicine, Grosvenor HaJJ, Athens,
exce pt for the night sweats, it 4570 1.
would still be a good idea to ask

e 19!1~ linin'* Corpvrauoo
~No

I

·-------------,
1

KROGER

I

34.5-oz. Can

I

: Select Blend ~
1
Coffee
:

88

I

U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE

Split
Chicken Breast
Pound
FROZEN PEPPERONI OR
COMBINATION

Totino's.
10.2Party PIZZB .... 10.7-oz

99c

U.S . GOV'T GAAOED CHOICE

GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak .. _.

tb

$299
~

Charge Choir performs
The Sy racuse Charge Choir can"The Gospel Song of Easter"
was presented Palm Sunday at the
Syrncuse Asbury United Methodist
Church under the direction of Mary
Lisle.
Judy Pape was pianist and Kath~
lllta,

·'

~·

I
/ '

..... _, ... . ..............
. . ........
.
'

-~- -~ ' " ' '

.

Jl

allY'S TIPS'

v1

1l(

:triH n )(

I)('J( h pehhlc_., m mcn•nu1
ill 1 fi !l\/('ll iCnt ) -1 ll

lf

, ·r

'an lens once a

Cj&lt;"n"Y f 1\;1\&lt;rr t&lt;JI'.II

~~(!.::-J

GAIIDIN AND LAHDICAPI INHANCIU
frorn red

!

Wash your nov. C g ' n&lt;&gt; W1th a miX ~
. the evt m "
week, ~~~e In of liquid :-.oar and "h-oz
turc of "."o~.. uthwash per ~al\on
of Lislcnn~ mo
holh insects an d
Th is wrll chscourJRC\1 y tips and tricb
LOOk for a rn
diseasesI Lml'c serie~ \x)ok5,
. h 8 Gar&lt; en
.
.nt e
r l 7 ~c;Khat Kmart
available fo .

4,kgs.$1 0

( .IH ,( l:O.C

I

k aystal marhlc .

p('h hle~ A~·3 ilahlc

Garde ner"

p :ll k.lgC" ~ I DCk up!

All Nu~ry SUM'k Shown On ThU
Pa~ Arc ~talurr SJW"cim~tns

58.97

UGII IIAYII I IUCTIIC ILOWII/YACUUM
Feat ure~ powerful 6.0-amp ' \20 -v&lt; 1\1 mrH&lt;)r.

Includes 2-piece high-impact blower and vacuum
tubes, built-in shredder. washable ca nv;" baK'
' I . • hu • 11("1 Up;l! IIY

7.97

I

Post meeting set
The regular meeung ol Amencan Legion Drew Webster~ No.
39 will be held Tuesday. llus will
be awards night and a special dinner will be held at 7 p.m. with
meeting at 8 p.m.
Awards to be presented include:
40 year award, G.E. Reuter, Floyd
Moore, Robert Crow, Paul Kloes,
Chester Knigh~ Elmer White, John
P. Williams; 45 year awards, Roy
Christy, W.A. Gibbs, George
Schneider, Harry Osborne, Paul
Casci, Geage Bwten, Bob Duckworth , James Ebersbach, Thomas
Marcinko. Roger Morgan and
George Kauff.
All members are urged to
attend.

Students to graduate

rkg.
IIAI1' GAIIDINII LAJIDICAPING PAIIIC

Two Meigs Countians were
included in the 551 students from
the Athens campus wbo were candidates for degrees at the end of
winter quarter.
They were Diana Marie BisseU,
Bashan Road, Long Bouom, bachelor of science in hearing and ~h
sciences; and Suzy Green, West
Main St., Pomeroy, doctor of philosophy, College of Fine Ans.
Roger Allan Kroplr.a of New
Haven, W. Va. was a candidate for
a bachelor of science in education_

Feal1lft&gt;S easy ~ to~ u se 3x50' roll . Lets essential
wa ter in and keeps dest ru ct ive weeds out. Conserves soil mo1sture wirhour suurin~ ur rnilllewing.

On Sale Wednesday, April 29 Through Saturday, May 2
I

lccn Fryar was narrator.
Judy Pape played and sang "The
Lord's Prayer" 10 open the service.
Those singing were Kenny Wiggins, Dennis Moore, Rick Hauber.
Roy Jenkins, Dick Ash, John Lisle,
Mary Cundiff, Ann Sauvage, Kristen Pape, Rose Ann Jenltins, Kimberly Jenkins, Debbie Hauber, Ann
Wiles, Hilda Weaver , Beulah
Ward, Rebecca Wiles, Mara belle
Warner, Rochelle Jenkins and
Hope Moore.
Kenny Wiggins gave the closing

•

•

•

(r.lyer.
Greeters were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Winebrenner and palm branches
were given 10 the congregation by
Martha Moore and Trina Davis.
The chwch was decorated with
spring flowers and white lilies SUI·
rounding tine white crosses.
The charge choir is made up of
members from the Asbury, Forest
Run and Minersville United
Medlodist Chwches.

Meeting held

The Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Chwch held its
meetingatthechun:h recently.
Mary Cundiff had devotions and
tbeofficersreportsweregiven.
Reports oo delivery of the Easter baskets were given and thank
you notes read.
A bake sale was tentatively set
for June l
A report on rugs was made and
cleaning of the kitchen discussed.
Irene Parker closed the meeting
with prayer.
Present were Bob Smith, Irene
Parter, Martha Moore, Mary Cun,
diff, Helen Teaford and Hope
Moore .

Scottish Rite
formed in Meigs
The Meigs County Scottish Rite
Oub was fonned earlier this year
following an organizational meeting of that group.
The group was formed to provide members with further fmtemal
activities and masonic fellowship.
Membenhip fee is $5.
James Clatworthy is the county
director for the group with David
Fox, assistant.
Oflicen .-e Jeff Beaver, president and Jim Huff, secretary and
treasurer.
Activities of the group and an
amual dinner were discussed at the
fli'St meeti!tg.
The aext meeting will be
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Middlepan Masonic Temple. All 32nd
degree master masons an: invited.
By-laws will be voted on at this
time. \

ASS~TEO

VAR tmES, GREEN BEANS

OR CORN

Del Monte Vegetables
11-IJ-e~.

LIGHT MEAoA-TT ~JrNEIIS

Oscar
Meat Wieners

I With Prlcoo Llh Thlo.. _Why Shop Anywflo!! Elool
ANTI-PERSPIRANT

Mannen

Speed Stick.. , 214-oz

$ &amp;7

1

Sealtest 2%
$199
Lowfat MilL .. a.~.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
DIET COKE,

Coca Cola Classic
or Sprite
2-liter

"IN THE

DEL~PASTIIY

........

SHOPI'E"

Oven Baked Apple Pie

70 SHEETS PfR ROlL 2 PLY

.... ....

Viva Paper Towels

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprl129, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3

.'!BIJY-B&amp;r·

GROUND

CHUCK

TROLLEY RATION

CUFTS
10 Dlo-· Sl, IIWolt.porl

NEW - REPAIR
GUnERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTIER CLEANIN G
PAINTING
Free Estimates

10 LB. PACKAGE

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

s

90
Public Notice

,,

SPAGHEnl-0'

PRICES EFFECTIVE APR. 26 THIU MAY 2, 1992

BULLETIN JOARD
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

14.5 oz.

CHICKEN

·

Leg Quarters................La.

Blade Steak. . . . . . . . . .La.
Pork Ribs. . . . . . . ... . . LB.

Bottom Round Steak..LB.

CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
OLD BETHEL CHURCH
Rt. 7 and Story's Run Road
APRIL 27-MAY 2- 7:00 p.m.

ORANGE
DRINK

••••••••••••••• 12 oz.

$239

S40Z.
Public Notice

Public Notice

inte

Spooa., ond Aaolgno of

' COMMON PlEAS COURT
........_..__Po......
:oF IIEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
lt.nnloh
BERTHA J. PROFITT, ot ol.
Blahop, Mary Dtlith Grl!nm,
.
Plalnti"- EIID Ann For-on, Luoy
-n.Gti-, F , _ Lartdna,

Jtnt-.-

MAXWEU HOUSE

INSTANT
COFFEE

s

99

I!UGENE GUY LONG, tl ol.
Ooltndtnta
No. n-cV-113
NOTICE BY PUBUCATION
TO: Froncheo

ea..

Boa, Powtll,

:

!'7C'•
nit

U...._

Powell, ....... .

..,known;ond ...

Heh. Neac1 or Kin, • 1 , , ,
Dtovlo - · Admlnlt,_,
El:ecutof"l. Sua
on,

In Memory

2:

: In Loving Memory
\·
of My Dllddy, ..

. MATT WEAVER,
"Who Passed Away 4
: Years Ago Today.

.

LB.

TENDER LEAF

TEA BAGS

SNUGGLE

FABRIC
SOFTENER

Tomatoes..........................La.

2o/o Milk. . . . . . . . . . . 1
2$
1
Margarine. . .
$ 99
2
Ice Cream. . . . . . . .

i wee not born when
: you were tagn . .IIY

:My life wlthout you
' will not be the Nmt
In my eyw the clouda
are your playground
I think 1 big ladder
; could
bring
you

' down
So we could pa.y end
have eomefun
I'd ehow you off to
everyone.
In thou clouda I aee
: yourf..:e
And long to give you
. my werm embriCe
I know th81 you're In
Heaven with Jeoua.
I juot with you could
be here with u.
I love you o.ddy Matt
Michelle

Bertha Sfloun, Ralph
Powell, Ch- Powtll,
Wade Powtll, Sytvta Pool,
Ltroy Bishop, Fr.,k
Biohop. Anno lllohop
Conoly, Tho111tt Mk.t
Grimm, Dtvld WUIIam
Grtmni; Eu- Stanley
Grimm, Thorn• Fi'anklfn
Grimm, Harry FranGrimm, Twlla o.n•ky,
Henry Grimm,
Edw•d A. Fonman, Jooolo
Gti-, Ela LMtdno, Elva
Hliyman, Frank Madl1on
Powell, Nonlt Smilh,
Dtlbtrt E. Powtll, Roy
Powtll, HtD1 SluiW, Ruth
Opphllo, Allred !Wold

w....,

NOTICE OF
APPOirm.IENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On April 22, 11192, In tho
Melgo County Probate
Court, Caoe No. 27436,
Aoborl Dl•on of 3717
Darbyohlrr Drlvo, Hillard,
Ohio 43026 end Linda L.
WhiUtlch of 18 Lookoul
Lane, P•taak•l•, Ohio
43062, wore •rpolntntont
co.executora o the •llll•
of Loulae V. Dixon,
decooood, late ol 201
Mulb•rry StrMI, Pom1roy,
Ohio.
Robtrt E. Buck,
Probata Judge
Judllh R Weny, Clerk
(4) 28, 20, 30, 31&lt;1

and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCL.EARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE- TAUCKJNG

KRAFT PARKAY

.lb. qtrs.

Dog Food. . . . . . . . . . 2o LB.

KEMP'S

'

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2097
539 Bryan Place
Middleporl, Ohio

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
ALl MAliS
Bring It 11 Or Wo
Pick~­

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-53:l5 or
985·3561
...... , ... PHI Offlco
217 E. SocoM St.
POMEIOY, 01110
3/23192/tfn

Mother's Day
Candy Carda and
Gift Boxes.
Long Stem Candy
Rose Suckers
P• rf•cr l'or Morh•r ..
l}oyond
MolherWa"iPotor

If It's Chocolate

4-24-'

'-1mo.

Mddleport-992-6302

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861 -1929.
Especially National
Bank Currency from
any state. Paying
$300.00 and up for .
specific pieces from

Ravenswood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evenings

1-614-764-2101

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

134 Ml St.••'!plll1,1l.
NOW OPEN
Hrs. 91a 5

DAIWIN OHIO
1

DK's FARM TOYS

ft

DALLAS K. WEBER - Ow n~r

All SClLIS - VINTAGl111d
COUICTAILI
"Alders AvailaLio'

PH, 614-992·5591

204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleporl, Ohio
992·3184
1 mo. pd. 4116m

l•··

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

4·4-92-lla

c

GROUND
BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

90

Real Estate General

At Fruth Phlrmac:y.

4

Giveaway

2 Old Jonn DMrt Tn1ctor Tlrea
And Old G11 Stove, Worb! s..,.!

367·7760 EYtnlnga.
'- ---c---

Bik &amp; t1n tamale dog, Bordlp.
Collie I Blua Tick Heeter, 304- ·

ahar
•

Rhubarb plants to give . .,y,

304-675-11~ .

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found : DoG In Uernrville Area
Belle"• White Spitz, 614-256:1380.

-

LOST - blk &amp; tan R11 Tenier, l•ll:

bobbed , stand up ea.-., Jlrn HiiiRd - Crtb c r..k eru., 304-675-

6U8.

Clonch.

l.os1 : Slam... eat, dark brown
ltg1, tall, and t.ca, non-SfltneM.,
volee, Bor. HoUow·Mkldlepon.
1ru, 614· 992·3346
•
Lost : amtlt long-halr.d Daeh-.
s hund, reddlsh·bfown, F•lrtaneOrtv., MkSd11por1 , 514-H2-3341 rew.rd.
'

Yard Sale

7

ALL Y1rd S.111 Must S. P1klln '
Advance. DEADLINE: :Z:OO p.m."
Itt. dly b.tore the 1d 6a to run.
Sundly ldltlon · :Z:OO p.m.
Frtdlly. Mond1y edition • 2:00

p.m. Saturday.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnlly

Mellli&lt;Jws

"* o.t 01 , . , .
- 1M u, Dt '' Ftr r"·

'Tale "'

"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS "
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

Ahw 6 p.a. 614-915-4110

614-992-2242
412/92/lfn

4117112/'1-. pd.

From

Gill/polls:

1It

White

HouN On TIM Righi, Past Cenl~ry lownhouH, In Cent~
ery, IRtM114130, 51~ 5121i2.
31&lt;4 mites out 218 May 1·2 l :am .
Glassware Jewlr11y, Bedding 1 CI'IIIdrtn, Adun Ctothlng.

•

5 FamUy Yard Stle: 1-112 Mia.·
Oul 141, John Un1 Anldllnc• ·
May 411'1 &amp; 5th.
'
Bac k Porcl'l Sale : 1 MUe And
4110 On RCMJI:e 218, Friday And

S.turdly, Kkls Clolhft. Few
Ptac... AnUque Fymlturw.
Blo Yard Sail : Satwday May 2.
UO - 1 Rodney Vll!a90 II, Mony·
Ro.d .

Plants, Herh, Pert~~nlals,
herlas.-g

OPEN
WED, -SUN, 1D-5 pJtL
4·21-92·1... pL

TROY-BI£T
r•• 't\#trfflil~~·
It SOWl!l, lilt"' Olio •113~11 5

YOUNG'S

992-2259
608 £AST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW USTING- Grant S!.- Mlddlepo~ - 2 stooy ~a rne
home with approx_ 1_
acre. 3 bec*"ooms, fireplace, new gas
tu rn ance , new pam t 1n and out N1ce location! $39 ,000
VERY BEAUTIFUL- woll mainta in ed hom e in Racine with
4 bedroom s, I 11 2 bath. 2 ca r garag e, large lronl porch A
very n1ce home that should be seen to appreciate ! $45,900

:POMEROY-Main SlrHI·View olthe River·A 2 stooy home
with 3 beaooms, 1 1/2 baths. one car garage, and a. tull
basement. The house sits on 2 lots and has central a1r.
$25,000

PLEASANT RIDGE- A very nice home lor couple startng
out or anyone tooll•ng tor an allordable home ' 1 112 &amp;tory
wdh 3 bedroom s. on two lo ts ol 50 x 100 each Includes
patio ASKING $ I 6,900

REEDSVILLE- OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELLI One slory
ranch style home 1n Rigg s Cres t SubdiVIsion. 3 bedrooms.
2 baths , att. garage, elac. FA hea l ASKING $39,900

MIDDLEPORT-Cole Str..,t· A veoy well kept 1 1/2 story
.home with vinyl aiding, 2 bedrooms, FA NG 1\J rnace, full
·basement with shower . and 2 1\JII bath s.
$29,900

FLATWOODS RD.· Bricll ranch sty le home wilh 3 bedrooms, 2 bath s, la rge glassed in fam•ly room with fireplace
Home in good oondition in a greatlocabon l $49 ,900

:sALEM STREET-Rulland-A 2 story home wilh 4-5 bed.rooms, nice front sitting porch, carport , cuto little playhouse
•sitting inside a tencec:f back yard. Home has a br~nd new
•root and gutters, central air, and some new carpet1ng , and
:• storage building .
NOW $29 ,900

FLATWOODS RD .· 2 story contemporary home wi th 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, eqwpl kilchen, fireplace, bay window&gt;, pine walls, basement 3 112 acres. Beautilu l settingI
$104,900 owner Will accepl reasonable offer.

E

co.

...... ' , ... '-• .....p

O ur .S priz!« Shlpmfl:ll Of

make an offer!

TTIE TUANEI!Jiroktr .................................. 992-5692
• ENDA JEFFEnll............................................!liZ-3056
: RUNE BTEWART........................................... 092-e385
8ANDY BUTCHER........................................... ... 992·5371
")IHEAYL WALTER8,Chethlrt............................ 387:0421

REDUCE; Bum OH Fat Whlli
You St..~ Taka OPAL &amp;vallatM&amp;

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
lUI ESTIMlTES

985·4473
667·6179

JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
(oll614-992-6637
Sl. R1. 1
Cheshire, OH,
1/2/lln

•

Crown Ctty Commootly Yard·
Saa.: M1y 1at, 2nd, 1:00 Until ?"
Something
For
Everyon.!
Everton• WelCome!

Friday Mty 1a1 T1kt Rt. 7N. to
C hnhlrt: turn l•tt al lighl -Go 2 .
Bloc ks . Atk 1boUI Antiques 614- ·
367-~01

c----=---::--::--=--=-c-·-

s•:·

Hug• Thr• Family Glrag.
Moy 111, 2nd I 3od. 114 Milo.

From
554,
Roush
Lana, ·
Cheahlra, 1-? Antiquu, ClothIng , HOUMWIIf'l, TocM1 , Fum~

lute, Wist .

Jty Drtn Community Yard Sai1,
15-20 Homoo, AP&lt;II 30, lily 1 &amp;
2, 11...5. Out To Work Sehedut..,
Different Homea Open DIHerent ~
Days. A.ll Open s.twdlyt Rt.lS·
1 Mill Wnl Of Holzera.

&gt;$92,000 or business and 1 1/2 acres lor
$65,000
'
:RACINE Aru-51 RI124-Aimost 4 acres ol nice laying lawn
and garden area and a 4 bedroom home that wtttun the last
' 8 years has had a new roof, sidi ng , c.abmets. furnace ,
:windows, satellite, steel garage , fi~tures , and new plumb:ing In bath
$42, 500

• :MIDDLEPORT· 2 LOTS, and a one story home with seven
•room s. Has 3--4 be«ooms, huge livin_g room, big d1n1ng
·room . front porch , newer garage, and 1s partly fenced
:
WAS $36,000
NOW $25 ,500

~PAINnNG

Cualom Paintings

V20/9113mo.

ing to re bm . Can purdl ase bus1ness and 3 acres for

'l(fl.tfiryn

Welcome Slates
$20.00

CONNIE'S OHIO
1Nr.R&amp;TULATIONS, RIVER HERBS and
EVERlASnNG5
52100 u. Ul, ..... ow.
TERESA!
247-4035
NOW
OPEN
FOR SPRING
I'M PROUD

OF YOUI
LOTS OF LOVE,
JOANIE

Yap dlm lc. Available at Frulh
D"'ll.

Motorcycln ·Eic.

Fill ISTIIUIIS
HAVE IIFIIIIICIS

BUY-S[U,TRADE

REDUCE: burn oH fit whl.. you
sleep, t1ka OPAL tabltt1 and E-

omtt·Pat a-WIIdllf•

MLINDA'S
&amp;

Reduce S.le And flat With-

4'ltt'll, 1 IM. "'"

4-7·92· 1 mo.

Happy Ads

Real Estate General

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS, SOME OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE, WITH DOWN PAYMENTThis res!au rant seats 38 , is well es tablished, fully equipped. new
e&amp;nb'al air, attractive dining room , good gross sale ligures.
, nice slor"9e building . am ple truck parking Owner prepar-

Colfer~•!

992·2487 or
992-7184

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
end Seeding.
Shrub and Troe
Trimming &amp; Removal
RHidontlal •
Comm•elal
frHEttlmtiH

HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

Tr oy -BU11Uien Now In &amp;oek.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

2 Mileo on Hyool Run Rd
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Viaita ...... $25 .00
16 Violta...... $30.00
1 Viait...... $3.00

&lt;l-.21 -92- I ma . pd .

5

614-949-2627

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

-GuU..Work
~- and Plumbing
-Rooftng .
-lnlorlor &amp; Exlwtor
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

HEINZ
KETCHUP

SUMMER
IMAGES

Matltal , Costa M•a, C.llfomll;

l.osl : Foxhound , whit• and
black e poll", EaQie Ridge 1 ,..1 ,
no coU1r, 614-§92·7197, Bob

lEVIN'S LAWI
MAIITEIINCE

NEW OPENING

.

1-1100-173-10011, $2 .15 Min. 18 •

675-5815 early mornings or
9 :00PM .

USED RAILROAD TIES

4·2·92·

I&lt;OIIIi .-s

C.n Today, liNt Tonlte

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

74H021Hft• S:OO 1111

992-339H:30 •-4:G0 ,_

GIRLS , GIWL.!I, GIRLS

Goa... Caplets And E- Valf
Dturttk: At FnAh Phllrmacy.
"

MIDDUPDIT, DH.

DtsPUvtD AI

3 Announcements

LIVEI UVE ! LIVEI
.
1-IIOG-454-11800, 118 •I SS TE 1:0n. Fl $3.115/Min.
-

BILL SLACK
992·2269

!HI QUAUIY PRINT SHOP

Announcements

12-5-tfn

MaL ..1'1 Sat.

-Room Aclrlltlono

s

FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
9 9 2, 70 13 or
99 2-5 553
OR TOLL FfiU
1·800-848-0070

~------~---~11-i1-4M•"~I it~----....~~'.!'1'~'·-"''~1

CARPENTER SERVKE

s aT. PAIL

In Custom
Frame
NEW &amp; USED

•Vinyl Siding
-Repl acement
Window
•Roofinp
-Insulation

992·3838

OFAC E 992-28811

32 oz.

S AUTO
PARTS

INSULATION

FREE ESTIMATES

GAL

$2

411 S/ll2/1 mo.

J&amp;L

Bon.quel•
NOW TAKING ORDERS

Middleport and

u-.

You aro hertby notihd
that you have .,_, ..-ned
Oo-ta In a t.go1 action
ontilled Btrtho J. Prolfttt
and Joo Foromon, Pltlnti"-,
va. Eugono Guy Long, ot II.,
Oolwodonta. Thlo ..don h•
boon Mtl"'td C... No. 82·
CV-113 and lo pending In
tho Common Ptou Court ol
Mtlgo County, Ohio, Court
Strut, Pom•roy, Ohio
45751.
Tho objoct ol the
Complaint lo to dttormlne
lho lnt••ta ol tl Pltlntiftt
ond Dolondanta In 42Y&lt;
- · mort or 1oea, ol rwol
•tala lo,.ltd In Ltbanon
Townohlp, llolgo Counly,
Ohio, In Soc:tlon No. :10,
Townohlp No. 2 Md Aongo
No. 11 of the Ohio
Compony'o Purchuo ond,
that the rut eotato bo
partitioned or Ordtrtd oold

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER BACKHOE

Racine, Pomeroy,

Powoi,WtldEPowoll, Cllllord Aug,.lut
Powol,ondffBa gguo, !Iotty -til, oncl
Nonlt -·who l•t

tdclrMa• ...

HOWARD

64 oz.

$ 79

BROUGHTON'S

SUNSHI

614-992-2549

PONDS
SE PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limesto ne,
Dirt, Gra ve l and Coal
li censed and Bonded

Public Notice

aoz.

B:l~gna. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99&lt;
Ch~;;~~-~~~. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .s189

Tonight (TuOidayyl hoor
Rav. Jamoo Bum and Muslc by
Clarka Family

ORANGE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
•nd IUCh ath•u rail•' . ...
PATRICIA CALAWA Y,
may ·bt nocuury ond
CLERK
proper.
46686 GUTHRIE ROAD
You art hereby roqulrtd
COOLVILLE, OHIO 45723
to onow• IM Complaint
PUBLIC NOTICE
within twonty ·olghl (281
The Orang e Townshlp
doyo alter tho leot Truoteeo will ba accepllng
publlc.Uon ol thlo notlco ... led bids lor the 1992
which will be publlohod C4llmetery mowing aeBton
onco • wook lor olx (61 unlll May 2, 1992. A IotaI of 5
•-ootlve wooka. Tho lui cemeteries lo be mowed 2
publlcttion wiU be made on Umea 1 month or a s deemed
tho 27th day or lloy, un, necessary by the tru stee•.
and lht twonty-eight (2Bj Bldo will be opened Moy 4,
doya lor onowerlng wll 1992 7;30 p.m. a1 the homo of
commence on th•t date. In lho clerk Pat~cla Calaway.
coot ol your lolluro to The trustees reserve the right
an•w•r or otherwl11 to accept or reject any or all
rupond u roqulrod by tho bldo . Low bid may nollnfluOhio Rulot ol Civil ence the trustees decision.
Proctdure, judgment by Send bids to;
doloult will bo rondored
Palrlcla Calaway, Clerk
ogolnot you lor tho rollof
Gu thrle Road Coolville
45723
•
- - In the tom:r,lalnl
Dtttd thlo 16th oy of
23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30
April, 11112.
1, 4, 5, 6 IOTC
Lorry Sponc•,
Clerk ol Courta
(4) 22, 20;
15\5. 13.20. 27.6to

plu1 •ttorn•y fHI , costa

Business Services

$ 119

KENTUCKY BORDER

$199 Wieners........

Bidwell Elementary, S.R. 160
Bidwell, Ohio
SATURDAY, MAY 2
Sponsonod by BidweH Baseball A!IOOC.
For rasaNations &amp; morv info call
614-446-1110.

WAGNER

$119

COUNTRY STYLE

SPORTSCARD SHOW

39 (

PORK SHOULDER

. Public Notice

II It cannot be pariiUonod,

s

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

MUST PRE·REGtS TEA FOA
Al l ClASSES
HRS: Mon.·Sit. 10 mn-5 pm
Sund1y 1·5 pm
For Mor. Into C.ll

4111112 1 mo.

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

Round Steak. . . . . . LB.

28. 6: 00 pm Basket Claso

14NIII

298 SECOND ST.

, DA CHOICE BEEF

APRIL 13-18
E1lended Easter hours.
111td1:30 pm

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

WANTED AT ONCE: HOMES &amp; PROPERTIES, LARGE
&amp; SMALL. FARM &amp; CITY I WE ARE GETTING REQUESTS EVERYDAY! FOR All TYPES OF HOMES &amp;
PROPERTY. IF YOUR THINKING OF SELLING ... THINK
OF USI BmER VET.. PICK UP THE PHONE AND GIVE
US A CALLI
HENRY E. CLELAND .........................................992-e191
TRACY BRINAG ER............................................!I49-2439
JEAN TAUSSELL ..............................................!I49-2660
OFFICE................................... .. ...................992-2259

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
3-13-92-lfn

HAULING

ANGIE'S FLOWERS

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
RACINE, OHIO
... r.a.c._r

"B~r

y• .., I·

to a~ "

614·949·2202
t/U~211-

Perennials &amp;
Annuals,
Strawftowers and
mora Everlastings.
Hybrid Tomatoes,

Baskets, Etc.
lat4•,_..'sHI
lrallwlf ltotw- 0.,.1 Sl.
lelofl.l.,jlt, SS4

W.tch Signs In Eu,..ka: Lett
Baby Cldhee I Acc.aoriet ·

!lise. Somo&lt;hlnv For EYII'/OMI
Uty 1, 2, 3, 41h.

Yard S•l• 5 2110 uu.. on 141.

1&amp;2 0.30 to 1 TV Chino, CoblllOI
4 F1miliH
'
Ytrd Sala M1y 1st ·2nd 1 miJI:
OU1 Nelgl'lbomood Ad. I till 4

Yard S.le: Ma y 1 and :Z at 753:
Nelgl'l borhood Rd . Galllpolls
Ohio llme : 1 :00 tm to 5:00p,; .
Clothing, Dishes, To.,..

MON.·SAT. 9 to 5

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

614-742-2772

... , 111 lnd 2nd bookie BN!o"
Sc hoot, crafts, wood Cf11fta, kids·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
· Roo• Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESmENTIAI~
FREE FSTIMA'RS

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No

Sunday Calls)

clo4 ~109. cemp.r, miK.

Thuro lnd F~, I lllloo H. Rt 2,
Flatrock. Antlque cane, bottles,
Celt Iron b.d, "Iota men.
Yard Site, lola ot boys c k»hlng
..z.. 5,1 and 7. Anllqu. Singer
aewlng ma&lt;:hlne, nlce bOys toys, lawn tum"ur1, Hnens ·•
small 1pplitnca, piMty of mi.C:
11eme lncludlng tn. albums, .
booka, elotl'l" lod other. Thur, •
Frl, tnd Sat, i :OO till 'P, 21!113 M1.Vernon An, 304~75-21W.

U.y 2. 9:00.?, Itno, chairs,
lampe, dieM~, Clf'lmk

la~Wai,

2112192

MESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

n.ttv~~~~Ms, 1ntlquee, misc.
2i15
broot Drive.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity

REASONABLE RATES

a.....

742-2138

OIL, WV, &amp; ILU.D.
AppmttlllMiuilllfll
Hot. . Prodlcts.

3-15-'92-1 mo.

FOR SALE
Agriculture
lime

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2
Mdlwood, W.Va.

304-273-SSSS
4-9-Hn

•

Qllllty Hi EffideiK'f ~
Colllltlolers, Heat
f11'11CK8S &amp; Now

Water Healers.
Beunelb Mobile
1391 Safford School RIL
Cal(614)

u

2 lomllloo, 2ml. N. of
SUIU, llor 1U, I::IOom 1111?

girts eiOihel liz• 2,41:1, .. dlei .
121l4 , antiques: oak menU• .
011k mlfror, ~
'
2-lomlly Nil, lloyU,J, lm ••
Lauret Cliff on Ntytort Run

lhlnt houoe on 11;111
3

lomlly

-

'

Mlo

Moy

101&amp;2nd, Hot R'"ilncl 'S!.....
........ boby · - ...,

clal'-,mloc.

4 Foml!y -

Nlo, Moy :

1,2u&amp;,l , 10ln or olilfto, ._, nat ·
IO
Plllnt Chot!• WI!Or"
.otllco, good Cldhlng, . _ on- .
tlquoo, fum~..-. boob, ole.
..
I Fomlly Oontt 1111, llor 1&amp;2, :

'"Pill'"

1-4, - - - - · dllh- .
· Clalhlng,
Homo Interior,
I ldun
•bovo ~
Eall. . '

High ot Algpci111

·

�Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy llddlepot'.. Ohio

SNAFU® by

Pomeroy,

Bruce Beattie

_.,,.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

f 7
-., ._

t

7

71

.

SocoM, llddlopoft,
~+.."'
rant clolhand
ganp
, 11-,
1110. illiilll, pana, ap!Mdo,
..,_, curtaiM, Jewelry, .orne-

110 -

paymont !5885.

5 ,...,.. - , .

5 5

l illr, . . .

Friday only, 390 North Thlnt
Aven-, Mldc.. port, t-4, curtalna, bedlprud8, c~thlng,

GJ

at¥1-

Very nlea Mx'PD mobl&amp;a home 011
privtlt ac,._ 3
altra
room wtwoodbumer, IM,jar •
pllancea, $15,500. or Will ..w
paymsnts wiaomlthblg llawn.

Friday, May \11-4, II&lt;:Cullough'a,
231 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy
•tmall
-·
llalnteoa llaat alnk,
..,...,..., lhMII, cur-

304.S7&amp;.z7113.

t•Nb1niC MCa, clolhlng, bika,
llcardi,Mc.

33 Fanns lor Sale

0..

ON THE OTHER
HAND. THERE 'S A
LOT TO BE
SAID FOR
SNOW .

THE GRASS 15 JUST AS

600D. MAYBE EVEN BETTER .

11181 Chavy 11-10 plckop, 4ap.,
long bad, 814-11112-7!1114

l toom

11187 Chavy PU, Good Condl·
tlon. New 350 Enalns &amp;

Tnuwmlalofl, 114-44tr7185.
11110 llalcla 8·:1800 King Cob
pickup, 5ap., N:, JVC otoroo,

~- 1 1

U.~flo/

(.U~M\
Cl 1ae 2by NEA. nc

21

BARTENDEASx:ASINO
WORKERSIDEct&lt;
HANDSI'HoltHitl,

llay 112, lradbury Road, Dolly
w~ rtl'lrhnoe, \12ml up hill
"-' WIIPO, llamlly, 10-4.
llay162, Star MIH Part, Racine,
tponeorM by Atclne Rurit•n
Club tor benet• of communhy
projaclo,

Mayloa, a:~ :30, $4821 Crow
- . bohlnd Mal~nly
F•l,..nct•, a.ath.r }llcklt,
dpWn-IIHecl c,_t, houlaholdR-, antlqw kllehen eupboard, 2-llr condHk&gt;ntrt, entry- ..-a1nt1 and t~orm door
May 1a1Und, 341 Au11and
SlrMI:, lllcldlliport. Oh, Sonny
Hudlon Mkltnce, .... , tom.lillng lot • ...,..,., eheap.

May 2, t-4, two houMI on Wthl
1\rnell, ott of Union lv•m.. ,
;,.n.roy, n1ln c.ncfil W1111 May
~

liar 2. t-4, two """'" on Wlhl
TMICI, ott of Union Av.nua,
Pomeroy, rain cent*t until May
4

Yovtng s... , Frl.-5at., May 1·2,
..m-Spm, ltationary blka, amall
opplloncaa, clothing,
oeene IMIW, tter.o, mite.

£:"

TuppeR Plaint, Ohio.
liutU-tlmlty, 111 tlmt yard 1111,
rain
or
llhl111,
Friday·

l!ay1at/Sotorday..oy2nd,

.., I. Seoond, MtddlepOrf.

8-5.

One-lrMII Ml4 of Royal O.k Park
on VInegar SlrMt AoH, 4th
~-

_on left, watch for signs,
A'pril30, May112, IH.

WUI Hill Road, lint houoo pall
Malga Ootl Cour11 on loh,
"'""""' May 2nd, ~5.
Yard Nil, May 1·2, 1-5,
chrtdNn'a,
lduft'a
clothes,
~-. cultalns, mite., cor01r
a-ry·nd 124.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Rk:k Panon Aue11on Company,
fuit time audionellr, com~et•
a\ICUon
sttYk:e.
UcenMd
IM,Ohlo a Wnt VIrginia, 304·
11W785.

Wanted to Buy

9

Oon, Junk hi Sell Ut Your Non·

Working Mtlor AppUanc..,
Cofor TV's1 VCR's, Microwaves,
Air CondhiOMtt, Elc . 614-256·

1231.

Etc.

INOTICEI
Potitlont Aboaird Crul" Stlips.
VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
$3001$900 Wkly. FrM Tr•vtl. OHIO
recornnwndl lhl1 you do bull·
C.rtbbean, tiaw•ll, Bahamas.
n... with people you know, 1nd
No Exp. Nec...,.ey. 1·2015-736- NOT to Mnd monty through ltM
1000 bt. 18911 N2.
mali until you t'11v1 lnvettfgalltd
lha offering.
Ea1y Work! ExceUenl Pay1 At·
Hmb._ PI'Oduett At Horne. C.ll Anenllonl Styling S.lon For
Ton FrM, 1-800.... 87-5566, Ext. Sale! Prtme L.ocllfktfl. Call 61~
313.
448-N03, 114-4411-8355.

GUARANTEED
AVAILBLE .

WORK Home Woriltrt Needed By 150
Flrmo, Top Ply, t%11 Wooil Or
Exc:tlltnl
P•y
For EASY lloro. R..t. $1.00 Soli-Add,_
Homebaaed Wor1c.. FuiVPar1 Nd Stompad Envolopa 110 D&amp;A
Tlmt. Call t-8(1()..8.M·n73 Ext. Supplln, Bo• 1443, Fairborn,
33-10, M·F, ~5 CST.
OHU324.
Twa experienced HuboJ Pilots, Tlvtrn bullnea tor ,.It or
40 to 60 hours per .,..k, must leiM, Mlddltpott, OtMo. :JD4.
live wllhln commuting dlttanea 882-3362.
of Marlt11a, Ohio. Send ratume
to P. 0. Box 5175, V1erma, WV
26105.

J•nilor1al Services fOf ~r1·11me

help, 51:1-544·5331.

Point PtMunt arM, &amp;304-t34587 during morning hot.ra.

NURSE AIDES
P1Munl Hill Manor, A 201·8ed
Nurolng Facllhy, lo Now .leeopl·
lng AppllcatioM For Nuralng
Aaalstants Curr~~nlly On TM
State Aeglatry. Pravlou• A~

pllconll Wlll Nood To Ro-Appl~y.
EKc•lltnl Application Or Ap
In

At Pl.. tanl
II
M•nor, 7'143 U.S. Route 23,
South, Piketon, OH 45661. EOE.
Parton

Office cleril

n•dad. knowledge

of bookkaoplng, typing and
tlllngl coli 114-1192·21111 io. an
•ppo nlmenl
Otlle. Girl Needed For Local ln-

C5631.

Pold' All Old U.S.

~ateond Rings,
Prien

1M

, Qotd
Sllvtr Coins,
Cotns. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
Avenue, Gallipolis.

flllployment Services

..

Help Wanted

11

53!10roAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
CAL.L YOU.

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
.
1--800-25~242.

•suudellnJBarber on I• lor

..me.

basts to WOfk at lakin
Hoapllal, L.akln, WV. 1·2 daya
per ...k. -consulting Olatltlan
HrYtell for Ukin Hospital,
Laktn, WV. Must bt r.giale~f
Ncena~ clleUtlan. S.rvlces 1o
be DMiotm.cf 2 dayt per mom tl .

a25 Third Avenue~, Gallipolis,~
Pfofattlooal Drummer, W•nts
To F«m Country And Rock

Group. Strlout lnqulrtea Only
814 ... 46-1848.

W•nted: Two par1 -III1'MI poatUons
nallable al a community group
home
tor
pertont
with
davelopment•l dlubllltln In
Gallla
County
(GIIIIpoUS/BictweiiJ. 22 tl,..,...,k :
&amp;am-6pm or 10:3c:Um .. :30pm
S.t; 8a~pm or 1-t1 pm Sun; 3.5
hl'llwtl: 11pm-a :30.m, ltv'Frl ;
8:30pm S•t - 1:30am Sunl· Botti ;
2-hour ""kty staH mall ng; Of
u othtrw!M scMch.Jied . Hlgn
echool dtgi'M, nlld drlver't
lleerwa and good driving
reeord, good communle•tlon
•nd
orgeniZIUon
aklllt,
pul't(tual, and abl1 to work u
p•rt ol a t.. m r.qulred: ex pefltnca wot1dng with pttiOnt
with mental rer•rdallon and
dtvtlopmen1al
dlublllliu
pratarrad. S•lery: $4.50/hr, lo
.. art. Send ttrauma to C.CIII•
Baker, P.O. Box 604, Jsckson,
Ohio 45-840. O..dllna IOf appllcantt: 516192. Pl.... IJ*:ltY
which position applying fo r. ( .
qual Opportunhy employer.

"Contuhlng laboratory Arvk:H

lot' Lakin HoapH•I, Uldn, WY.
l..lb ' to bill MRI,IiQIMedicare
•ndJOf 1ny lhlrd party com·
panlea. Servlcea to include
pick-up
detlvery."Contulllng
pharmacy Nr¥1ell for L1kln
Ho.pllal, Lakin, WV. PM•rmaey
mYI!t be computerized &amp; lnttr·
faoe whh IBt.f AS400 computer
.,Piern &amp; aims sohwar11 pack·
age. lntttHitd pertofW conlac1
)04A78-3230 erl. 20 or 24, MooFn., " 8un-4pm tor bid form.
OMdNrw tot applying Is May 15,

a

1tf2.
··~·All

AREAS! SM•re your
time wtlh us. You 'll love lha

_pan,.

1-800-992-6358.

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
E. . . .nl

P•y,
Bentfltt,
Trlli8porllllon,
407-292...C747,

_,.d.

£It

571.

h .m.·!Op.m.

Toll

AVOH I All A.ran I Stllr1ey
....... ~1429.
_..,

ahtr

nHdldl

Moneltp..~ocl
Lac~~

Young,

wlltl Children.

n lo come Into our

...,.,., Lt Grande Blvd. 1514-44&amp;11171ftll' S:pm

Coneu"lng PlycMologk'al Hr·

• • Inc II.NIIng evalustlon•,
,..,. rnNtlng1, ll•H consuttltk&gt;N, ,... man~gament lntonullon. lie. to.- I'Hlden1s of
Llldn Hoephal'e K:F Unit 1o
....,.aln ICf CO&lt;IIfleotlon. Mual
hive cutftfl1 WV t~nM. Inter·
Ollod porona eontact 304-&amp;JS.
:aaa·llll 20 .. Mon-frl a:oo
AM • 4:00 PM .., bid lorm.
DMdlina lor opplylng May 15,
fH2, Av.,.p of 12 hou,. par

a•,

.......

~lniJ

Poychologleol ..,.

14

Business
Training

Retnin
Nowi!1Southtutarn
Bu ..nua College, Spring Vatley

Plw . Coil Today, BM--446--436711
RegllltraUon 100-05-12748.

18 Wanted to Do

Care tor tlderly ~raon In their
home full or part tlm1, nursing
expt~rlance, ref1r.nc ..1 Wrila:
resident, Rt . 1· Bo• 23-A, Leon,
wv 25123.

Gardane lllllld - r11dy lo plant,

large or email, uw 1100 Fotd
lraetor, 614-992-6903

Georgn Porta~t Sawmill , don 't
haul your ~~ lo ttl• mill Just
~11304.a75·1l57.

Houle elelnlng, weekly or
tpring c ... Nng Applt Grov1,
Pt. Pl1111nt, llaillpollt arsa.
H•v• rtfartnCH, 304·571-40!52 .

If yoc.t hevt an odd Job or 1ny
~hat nelda dont, 304-67S.
Ml11 Ptul•'• Day Cart Centtr.

Sat., aHordabte, c:hlldc•r•. M-F
1 a.m. • 11:30 p.m. Aga• 2\olr10.
Btfon, sfter K~ . Drop--In•
wllcomt. 8~4 . New In-

font Toddlor Coro, 114-446-6227.
Ptlntlng outelM I lnalds, roof,
odd Jobl, yard wort~; , Ira• ntlm.tll, don't dal•y, 304--458·

1042.
lrMI and lhruba Mulet., top-

ooll, -:l:::ntlngl p&lt;unlng,

,..,..~on, ate., lot Noldonta of

W.ugh e
"'
Will Do B•byalttlng In My Horne.
Ct!1lllacl NIHM Aid, Qood loci·
lion And Ratarencet. 814-44&amp;-

Ulldft Hos,pli•l'e ICF unit to
rnalnltln ICf CO&lt;IIfleotlon. Mull
,._. 1 curNnt WV lkentt, In,...... Jllf*Onl concact 304tn-3210 1111. 211 or 24, Mon-Frl.,

llt'll 11m tor bid form, dudllne
.., lllitiiJina 1o May 15, 111n
A-ogool f2hno . .,., ......

Business
Buildings

34

COl

100.100. Foctory .-ka,
Now I San. lobi~

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
25 ..... In W l l - - .
boau111of alght ..... homo • par·
tlellr wooded ..... &amp;14 •
Of SM-JIIZ-2531

ieaz

BEAUTIFUL Homo Silo F&lt;w Solo
22 Aoroa Or WIK otw. ~
prollmllofy 2 lllloa Roo
Ora,_ NHr OUter a.a~~t~tU
Homoa.
814-245-6040
!loy
Pllono; 814-245-1575 - . . .
Lote tor .... traltart ~
lablo. 304-67S-2722.

Lola In Golllpolla Forty • 1oo..
ownsr fln~~ndng II Sii.M ..,

Mowl~.

21162.

L nt Haull ng. Don

Ill.- ...,.. ::!:•• Anllq- 510 Main St,
-~~o~a~. 54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
ceoWng.

. .

...... . . .

-----$236;
..,.,

~-- ...... Rt.
JW.,. ..... -

-

tt•lt.

•

~

Ei ..-

Olfioo
Sullt 7

Olllco
And

... 5 7
ii
s..:.:-1..__,
G..,.,.,
7

414

: : . :

rll

-

.. ••

Mor·

lit 114-

C7 Wanll!d to Rent

_.,__
., .....

c:._-Liu

L.ote In New Haven - 100'l.

Golltp!liL

,...

5JS.2722.

~.....

l.alo
joining Poln1 · 1"""'nnanel~ at $101.46 par ...o

~·~;d~For~~~~!~i~S~I;;;iiF;

2722.

;;?:::-1'"::0.~-

VIew For Mil•- Nice levlll
0ri~teway,
Rural
w.tw,
EIKtriclly, And Phanl Sarvi01

....._ 011 hi . . . . . 114•-.zm~:m,o.•
liB.

Prlvac~

M

•

3 Min. From lown, I Acr~~a,
Houae I Garaga, V4 Mllee From
Rt 'M1, On NtfgMborhood Road,

Housa~Dd

51

Goods

o.n~

Historic•! Aru Corner Lot · t16 3 bldroom untumistM houaa..
Main 81. Pl. PMaunt, W. V•. 507 StoOnd Sl, New Haven. ~
Compllttty Renovated: 2 Full 6JS.348t.
Bathe, 3 Urge Bedrooms, New
HVAC, New Carpet. Av•llable Fumlshtd 3Br HOUM, 1 ~.
June 15 614-441-~5 .
l35t +IJIIIHioa, U"': Avenue, Gahipolla,
aa
,
Country Horns, Sand Hlll Roed, Socurtty Dopoolt. 114 441 4411i
8 rooma, 2 balht, 5 aert land, After 7p.m .
:J04-8V5-3871 •tttr 3:00PM.
Nlco oHicloncy oottago, oniqYo

GslllpoUs: 3 Bedroom Brick
Hom. Comer Lot, Owner l.Nv·
I~ ANI . Adjac:enl Lots And
Rental• Also Avsi'-ble. Call 6147f7..4:M5 (After 8:00 P.M.) For Information And Appotntmene .
HolfM And 2.2 Acree Land: 3

Bedrooma,

2 B•1hl,

Living

Room, Dining Room, Kitchen

And Don. ~6,000 . &amp;14-lB&amp;.UOl.
In Gallipolla, Walk To Everyth-

Ing, 1·112 Btthe, Baternent,
Garagt, Fir11placa, Oualhr Construction, May Finane•. &amp;M-2568855.
In town/u two story, lh,.• badroom•, II
1·V2 beth,
111Khed 1·112 c.ar garage.
Ctntr1i hul and air. Evenings
Ctll 61...... 6-8107.

ba""""'·

and boau11tllf, 3GH7W042

u-......,

SmaH - ,
1"Aotoronco and~ Aoqulred. l~

2 bdrm. mobfle home tor ..nt
R.c:lnt area, SM-112-51151
2 bodroom lumi-_ - ' Grove,,.., relwwm requfrW.d,

304.S71-24M.

Two Of thr• bedruom t,.IW tor
rent In cownlry, HUD 'I r owad,
114·941-2833

44

Bodroom, Oa'"ll' Apanmwt,
Larvo Back Batoony. ""'"'

1

t9741_14x64, 2bdrm., applianett, ...ail, ,,...,. pllld, rou ,.,
tumnur., •II electric, 151C· i92- oloctrlclgaa, J 1 -..
2217
!1800.

In SyncuM, unluf.
t171 Hotly Porll 14 X 70, 3 BR 1 bdrrn. •pl.
....._
J115/mo.,
1V2 Bath Good Condhlon. 114- nlahad,
w.ter, •wqe I truh, tllpolll
245-6649 Mornlnp

Nqulrsd, I'M-111-?211

1180 Buddy 14170 lot•l alectrlc
Concrwta pon::h, 2tull Batht,

1bdrm.,
clapaM,.
bath1ub, ldHMioa,......,
groung poot qolrad, no polO. i14-lla.a.a

garden

2

Ba I -~~•

o-notatro.

a-..

&amp;

a.~\

No ......

118fli Wlndtor 2br, Futly Fur. Qvlatl - - ..., ~
niahed, Dlshw11har Dlapoetl, Roqorod.--.
T.V., Sloroo Syatom Throogh~ 1 2 lA ........a In " 1 =
W111her l Dryer 2 Btdroome ur
Fumftwt And l..M,;-Room Fut· no pola, 112211 par - .
nlturt.L. Mlcrowl~. - -,.•trirrotor
dapMII ......... 114 - . .

..,.. ,.,,

1982Double wide R... potNevtr
in!IN•w Home WarranlriiSO. down to qu•llflld

b&lt;Jyaro. 304-7151-U85.
Wlll Do Ho-ping: Qalllo
County And lmmldlalt Sur- " - Mnad down tor mobllo
rounding Aroa. 114-379-:1734 Aak home k&gt;ln? Call Ltl we ean ~p.
304·7&amp;1-7111 011117.
For DabtM.

1'Juatworthy Hlrdw•ra.
- . 110, Blcfwon, Ot!to.

-

FARM TRACTOR SUPPLY: Ot!lo
V.ttor 8orYioo Contor. a..,, 9CIII,
Tradl. 114-258 8040
Ford Dloc, Ill., 3 point, good
ooncl., aoll or lracla lor 12 or 14ft.
•l!aol dloc, 1114-4118-27111

KUBOTA
Solos, Porto, Sorvlco
HURST TRACTOR SALES
28 HP 4 WO $1115: 20 HP 4 WD
$5,65, Roula 7 North, Marietta.
614-3J!1.4151
-

Holland~hobind.

Holland 1ft
lind SuPif' Tf1

' -

Hoi-

harwater.
Gehl II ..ndar mlxar. 304-273-

dowlro,-__ _,...... .....
...

~

,..

. .tdlinv

IZill.-....._

-. . . -ll--~UIIEII

....... . . . .
Oooll-1-•:1•a -ma.
~S

.,...~

L-811 1 I

- -· !10W71-7181.

roor one~

-

aiding, balcoci

and galv. Trollar ondor·
.....ma, 1982 Subaru front
cJrtv., ...... NnO good
-

&amp;......

Rd.

11110 AQHA Big Groy Filly: 11179
AQHA Big sewr.lllrood Maft, 4
Hof'M OooMneck lnller. 114286-ttl22.

2 YMr11n; Suftalk ~""- 1
rtal.terwd Shropehlr~~ A•m. 304W·1H2.

-

lalclnv

71 lbo, - . dolallod,

tOOihld, al lhola, Hemp, York,

Duroc:,
ovontnga.

ero..

A~ And

Cht-AngYI Block
lo
R_,.bly Prlcod. Slllo
Ron .,... Jaclcaon, Ot!lo, 614-

-

. . 0&lt;

288-6315.

llrnoualn bulle_~, raol11arad, 18
moa. old, SIIOO • $11oo, &amp;1WIIfl.

2715

*Yoro, -

.....,.

'

$100 and op. Wo

malaa. Tha WHI!or &amp;

.,.,.. Sllcppa. 114-446-2144.

3220.

...,.

kina saoo. 114-192-5770, -

""

tiiMTt'S METAL D£TECTORS

-

.. Yt¥.

Rei. Pl. "
--.-.

Roo! Allloon, 1210 Socond
Awnue, Galllpoll•. Ohto, 114-

-.tl:ll.

.~ .. 55
$ . . . . . .......
_,_,
~

MJCTDI
O..Sl,c -

Building
Supplies

BEAUTIFUL IPARTIIEHfS AT
BUDClET PRICES AT 'I~
ESTATE~. Ul , _ hom $1..,_. Wolle .. &amp;
~- Cllll1t Ut DIP. Ellt

,...._ . . -

PaT 2

-

i

a.. -

a-. briclc. ...., olpao, window;. Untete, ate. Claude WI,._
1-. Rio Gronda, OH Coil 114Aa. 12:3D :MII-aln

"

-

-

...
- • - so..-. .......
-~

56

Pets lor Sale

-;;;;;;;-;;;-:;;;;;;;;""'i;;;;;;
Go-. .... S.pply ShapPot

_..,.. .......... "l'"'·
lamo Pol Food Daalor. ullo
Wobb. Call 114-441-0231.

BARC''IS GAl OAFJ

Ill•·=·

c....

-9 --am ~-End

2 U.C llaalll- Yorb111N TarrlonJ !Yao~Jloo) I Molo, 1
All llhota And Poporo, s.too
Eadl, Flrcn, 11H7f.2tl01.

Qlllit:

•

.,._

~

I.

IW05 IES: Woot1 ... Slooll

u.c -

Dalmlllon
pial, ~
.. 114-11121714

tJUI (lr) - - 4 - F1ah Tanl1, 2413 Jac:lcoon Avo.

Autos lor Sale

Laaclod. $2,100. Two bad aldeo

lor Chn

,._,bad 175. 814-387-

0122 after 5:00PM.

1171 Dodge Mog"""'1 VI, ou1o.,
good eonclllon, IIICing $5aO I
euh talka, 114-14f.:lfl3

=~~f"·
1983 ChoYoitea, 'Ill.

1m

Mu.tang,

New ,.,.,
Rebuut Mo4«.lledona To Look
Llu 1111. ii::H1y, 302 A.-o,

11181 Pontiac T·1000, 4ap. now
clulch mombly, 6! modol 4cyl.

motor, nme 6 looU good, 1150,
'*m-~21

.... ' am 61 Farm Equipment

.,.

ALLEYOOP

ro(2,00)MOVIE: Conaplrecy to Kill
lilii

(J) U Wonder Yoora
Norma and Jack agree to

Michael and Karen's
IJ!I'Pi&amp;·slylo wed~ ing. Stereo.

m(})

Nlflonol &lt;l~rephlc
Special Stereo. C
OlD IIJle MOV'IE;
'Botman' CBS Mov..J!pe&lt;;lol
(PG131(2:45) Stereo. Q
llll .. MOVIE: Top Oun JPG)
(200)
II) MurdJ!. She Wrote
Stereo. G;J
Crook ond CllaM
Pt1meNew1 I;J
IIJI Big Brother Jok1 Stereo.
6:G51ll MOVIE; The Bod Newa
lll!ora (PG)(2 :15)
8:301IJG (l)fl Doogle How-.
M.o. Dooglo and Wanda
declare war on members of
the medg.l establishment.
Stereo. 1,1
Man11c Mon1lon Stereo.

a
a

EEKANDMEEK
J. Htf\1&lt;0 J£RKV i'm~JIJ
~ MACUJIJA 10 OC
HI'S fli&lt;')f lAW. ..

8

Barnen Horne lmprov.mente.

9:00 lllD IIJl 27111 Annuol
Acoclemr of Counlly Musk
Award• A live telecast from
the Universal Amphitheatre In
Calilornia. honoring country
music's &amp;lito. Hosts; Clln1
Black . Lorrie Morgan and
Travis Tritt. (2:00) Stereo . t:;l
lllG (I) D Room lor Two
Jill and Man win a contest:
Edie forces a secret into the
open Stereo.
11J (}) Amerlcon Ptoyhouae
A Chinetle woman lights Ia
escape a tile of prostitution .

Garagn, Painting,

Experltnce&lt;l,

BaNm.nt W•ttrproo--

Cunla

v..,.

11184 ........ Slatton
-·
$1.200, 8~

11U C.m.ro, loHed. $3200.
1NT Dadaa AINI, PS, Auto.
12100. 11117 Hotlzon, AC. 11400.
304.e71-2440.

~y

CON'T 'rU.J

JOIN THE.

FP.IEND.5HIP CI.U6 AND
M.I&gt;J&lt;&amp;. loJE;W FRIENDS~

-·-721!1.
-

11111

=

~ ~-

MEM~5HIP

DUEe.

MOVIE: Final NoHco
(2:00) Stareo . C
!» Noahvll.. Now Stereo.
a L.ony Kl"'l Uvel
tD Fallt!!,.Dowll"'l Myatet1oa
s-tereo. "'
1:30 ill II (I) II Slba Howle
works at a local bar to make

Newer Homea. Room Addltlont,
Foundation
Wort.
Rooling,
Kltchena And Baths. Frea Et-11matul Atltrtneta, No Job
loa Big Or 9malll614-387.0516.
Hick's Roofing, Decka Porche•

And Painting. Fr11 Eatlmatnl
Cheap Prtc_0!1 _ !~ YNr b·
porionco, 6,..,......1&gt;4,

J.W. Conalruc:tlon. Room AddHiono, Aoola, !)ocb, Skllna
And All 'JYpoo Of E111orlor And
lntlriof Painting. Will Give Low
Llconot Bid. &amp;14-24!1-8071.
JET
Aarallon MCICH'I, repaired. New
&amp; ,.._bul" mOCCH'IIn lloek, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-IIOt).
537·111128.

some money to buy Nora a

gi" . Stereo t:;1
10:00 (!) Nowa
:
~ 11 (J)
20/20 Stereo

BARNEY
YOUNG -UNS THAT THROW
PAPER AIRPLANES IN
SCHOOL WON'T NEVER
AMOUNT TO A HILL
OF BEANS!!

Plumbing &amp;

dressed , stamped envelope Ia Match maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Carttr'e Plumbing

Fourth tnd Plna

Gdlpotl,o1Ohio
1114-41...888

84

Electrical &amp;
Relrlgera11on

Aeal. . . lal

01'

COtnfUiiGIII

;;:;:Mc=w=,.::,.::-,-7U:::pl1ol:::::ll~ari:,:_ng!....aarv__,lo-_
lng
Tha
b-.tlriCOCOltyIn lu h
m urw •
aring.
Coli :JOW7!5.41tl4 "" .... ...
llmal•.

·:=-·

.

'Your

'Birthday

Apr1130, 11112
'doss or plana you personally conceive
will have good chancee for success In

tho year ohead. However, II you allow
them 10 be amended and revleed by ·
Ou1slders they won't be very eHocllve
TAURUS '(April »Moly all) Try to tal&lt;~ ·
care ol crlllcal manera u early In the
day 01 polllibte' lhal'l when you'll be
more ellecttve. Prolongl!1g leaueo lessen1 your p&lt;olicleilcy. Trying 10 patch up
a brol&lt;en romtlnCII? The Aetro-Graph .
Matchmaker can llelp you understand ·
what to do 10 make the relationship ·
work . Mall $2 plus 8 long, sell-ad·

91428. Cleveland. OH 44t01-3428 .
QEMINI (lby 21.June 2G) You may
have to guard against impulses enticing
you to buy something lor which you
have no real need . A bargain Isn 't a bar gain when it serves no useful purpose
CANCER (Juno 21.Julr 22) Your llrsl
lhO&lt;Jghls are likely to be your best ones
today. When you 1ake too much time to
dellberale , you could become doubtful
and confused, and not apt to act.

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Make every el·
tort today to be as forthright with coworkers as possible . It you deliberately ·
hold back inlormallon. II could work
against you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-811pl. 22) Be extremely
careful in your commercial dealings IO·
day; there are Indications you might do
something Irrational thai could turn a
profit Into a loss .
LIIRA (BIIpl. 23-0cl. 23) You might be
templed today to wiggle out ol a prom·
lt1e you made to another rather lmpul·
sively. But It you do, It might croat~
some unique complications you dldn I
anticipate.
,
.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) You re an
Industrious worker today, but you might
not ~ as dolall·consclous as you

•

should be . There's a chance you'll make

some mistakes that could have been
avoided .

SAGITTARIUS (NoY. 23-0ec. 21) In OC ·
der to expedite an endeavor you're involved ln. you mlghl be templed lo take
soma risks today that. II they misfire,
could bf!l quite cosUy . Unfortunately •
1hay may .

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22...W.. 18) Even
though you might feel a strong need lo
be closely Involved with others today,
you may handle your one-to- one rata.
tionshlps poorly. Do not take friends for

granted .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-fob. 18) Unproduellve Interests might command the
greater portion ol your lime and anen.
lion today . Excuaes will be lound for
shirking your regular dulles.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Marcll20) Where domestic

merchandise

Is

concet'ned,

you'll be a prudent shopper today, only
· to pamper your axtraveganl wlllms In
other areas. Be conalslent, not
·compulsive.
'ARIEl (Much 21·April 11) You'll be
aware ol your virtues and abilities today, but you may also be plagued wtll1
feelings ot inadequacy and aelf-doubl.

Politician to fellow who oHered him a car, "I can't
accept a car. That would be like bribery." The fellow
replied,
selltt to you for $20'" "In that case," smiled
the pollttctan , 'rll TAKE TWQt "

·ru

....,
:

BRIDGE

NORTH
+JB 7

PHILLIP

EAST
+ 65 3

WEST

.A a

+Ql

ALDER

.KQJ!08
• KJ 2
• J 94

.9763

+8 7 6 3
SOIITH

catcher

+AK1094

I

:~ ~;~:~~scue

• 763

u s

+AQ a
Vulnerable· Bolh
Deale" West

Some of l he eaSiest hands lo play oc· •
Soutb
cur when one opponent has bid and the '
other has not. You starl with a lot of ·
useful information about lhe hi gh·
l+

Wesl

••

Unfortunately, these negative Influences might gain the upper hand .

Nortb

F.ut

Pass

Pass

•• 2.
••

Pass
Pass

11:351llD 0 Tonight Show
Slantng Johnnr Caraon
Stereo.
(I)
Cheera C
1D Araenlo lfoll Stereo

e

a

All pass
card distribution
Cover the East -We st cards in the di - f
Opentng lead • K
agram. Against your four -spade con- ~
lrac t, West leads the heart kmg . East · L ---------- ------4
overtakes with the ace and returns the
-r
•
heart five. West cashing two more turns up with the heart aoe, Wesl i(
tri cks in the suit while East discards marked with the spade queen and dia:the club three. West sw1tches to the di- mond kmg . You should wtn Irick fout'
amond two_ How do you continue" Do with dummy's d1amond queen arid:
you have any views about West' s cash the A·K of spades, hoping tl)e,
defense?
queen drops. When she does, you
North 's two-heart cue-b1d showed a s1der it no more than your due.
. ._
good hand. probably w1th spade sup·
West defended poorly. Wtlh his h~
port. South mad e a game-try With or cards uncovered, he should have teq.
three clubs. whtch North was happy to another heart at tnck four, hoping his
accept. Both overb1d slightly, but ag- partner had 10 -x-x in spades. If Eas.\_
gression ofte n pays when you know does have this holding and you ruff ~be&gt;
that the opposition's st rength is con - fourth heart w1th dummy's spade jacli:;
centrated in one hand _In this situation East scores his spade 10 . However, 1f
you can often make a ga me with fewer you discard from the dummy, East uP,:
high-card points than are customarily percuts with the spade 10, promotirr~:
requ1red
West's queen.
•
@ , _ NlWIP'AP'II'I OiiLd 1 - Ulll.
Once E ast . who couldn't respand,

..

ol1'L

I

con,_

4

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle -·..

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

ACROSS

-··

38 Cord·ond·
stone
weapon

Starr

9 Query
12 Spool
13 Back
14 - Wallach

15 Yellow of an
egg

16

Antwar to Prewloua Pull ..

suffix

1 Unclothed
5 Grldder -

Nervous

11 Whoallrack
18 Compaao pl.

19 Contumed
food
20 Beactl area

22 Hlalua
24 Anna and ttle

King ol26 Inebriated
(ol.)
29 Narrow band
on a bolldlng
33And- bed
34 Small atroam
36 Light- leather
37 Chemical

39 Political
association

40 Fringed
ornament

42 Having
clumps
44 Store event
46- Paulo
4 7 Poslllona
50 From- - Z
52 Jar co'ler
55 Residua
56 Film dlroctor
Jacques -

58 Sonny59 Accounting
agcy.

60 Secular
61 Conceits
62 Before
63 Pull
64 Force unit

DOWN
-

Mawr

2 Vaal parlod

B Typ' ol

oftlrne

3 Handa onr
4 Antlered
animal
5 Author Ha:1t
6 Yellow fner
mooqutto
1 Torn clottl

. .•

IP\Ip I ClnVII

g Of aircraft
10 Dlapategtng remlrk

...~

t 1 Aortal toy •• •
10 Gorilla, e.g. '
2 1 BriUih Novy; ;~

-•Yialloft .·

23 Flurry
2 5 - - ..... . .
26 Futuro
·. ..;

ll.Ba.' exlm··-:
27 - O'Neill
28 C&lt;M111c

31
32
35
38
3V
41

rtpaiiUon
.
Anclant oort .·
ChlfJI- • "
- Trovolo('t ,.
Unploaaanl · ·
Artlal'a dog.;:. ·
5•111 olrcrafl. ,
(lbbr.)

43 Enlert•ln·

ment org.
45 Hl¥1 dlnne(
at home

47
48
4V
51

53
54

r•rl .

57 Molorleta'
org.
58 Sleoplng

.;

. ·,

CIPHER

Ceittlttty Ctpr,. O)Jltogr~m~ n awtld from QU01111onf by fwnoul P10t&gt;11. t&gt;M1 tnd ~~
Eacn tstt• 1n the ctpMr tt~ tor ~ rooay·, clw: f f1QVM .w.

R Z X B

G Z F

8 B H H 8 H

HBXL

VG

KfVTZ ,
MBKPB ,

w

..

l 0

.·..'

N D L

'· ~I

I Z V P 8

.....

F VA A

·.'

..

• Niall- -

RDAVZ

18 NawaNtghl

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Bill Graham b rought a consclousnesa to the
wh ole roc k lleld . He made us all better." - Jo hn Fogerty.

Stereo.
@ Hlwlllan ac..n Evenla
Wlil&lt;lld KI"'IS Roce (R)

12:05 &lt;lJ MOVIE: The Streng~&lt;
Within (1 :30)
(I) fl Nlghdlne t:;1

"

place

H818HN8HKL8

.. ..

.,_ )

(2 •dl.)
8ook
Grno rldgu ;
Sneaker, o.g;· :
Clock sound ~.·
- - tha
ground llodr , · ·
Macllclna
:'
portion
, ,,

IIJ).Lo.. ~

tiJ The Eqililiii

...,

30-.... ···:

W Z 0 H

e o.nnta Mllltr

..,

..·

PIUS

e

a

...

·~Q104

+K 10 2

A
«J MacGyver C
a Crook end i!"haae

@ SjlollaCenter
1211 8poiUI Tonight
ID Bordertown Stareo Q
11:30(!) Kolak C
(Il QreOI ii'ecltionl
(I)
Nig11111ne C
IIJle 'Dallfii'OUT Curvtl'
Cnmo Time After Prima
Time Stereo. t:;1
Moneyllne
1D MOVIE: Tomoltawlc (2:00)

4-tt-t!

• 942

Stereo .
1211 World tMwa
tD 700 Club With Pot
Robertaon
10:20 (J) MOVIE: The 811d Nowa
811ara In Breaking Trolnl"'l
IPGI (1'45)
10:30 a:1 Boaeball Tonight
10:45 0 GD IIJle Roacue: 911
C.mpus police ol the
University of Kansas lind a
pipe bomb. Stereo. t:;1
11:001llD illfl llllt OlD
IIJle @ Newa
(!) Ntght Court t:;l
I1J Ne,..wotch
(8 Areanlo H1ll Stereo

12:00 (I)

'

'&gt; · t'i

a American M'ualc Shop

.ASTRO-GRAPH

ek:llno « traUtr Ulrtlng. 114·

82

IIIIIIII

0$ 18 Hunter C

61VE ME
THAT THAR
THIN6 I!

Will build patio covwa, deckl,

245-41152.

TO

a

ecrNnld rooms, put up vlnyt

11111 Doctto -by Charger
Turbo, 5 ........ radlallvo~_good
~~ lkalna ...sso.
11111 . ..., Cirone! Marqolo,

BETWEEN NE.W FRIENDe
AND OLD FRIE.ND6 ~

Q

25 CENTI:. IN

R

Heating

T111 WMII, PS, PB, Powar SMta,
' - - M d~
Cua1om

WHA~ THe DIFFERENCE

lmprovemeMs :
Experience On Older I

441~214.

Qood Concltlon,
1822, EYtnlnga.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Home

Aon'a TV SlfVIce, speclallz.lng
11183 Ford f.150XL 111111 Cor· In Z.nhtl •Ito tentlclng ~
'Mila, lllh Annlvenlry. Two 101 . other branda. Hou• e~~ns, slto
~ llntoto. 304-4171- oomo appliance ropalra. WV
304-S.,.-2:11111 Ot!lo 614-C4S-245ol .
11184 Dodgo Ariao. 4 dooc', black. 9Ciptlc Tonk Pomping SIO~Qallla
AMIFM, e....a:e. 4 cyt, •uto, Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHI!IES,
114-11112·1231. ovontngco
Joelcaon, OH 1.aDO-II37-IIIW.
1N4 U laron, csnet¥ maehlnMI, Oevta
s.w.vec
s.mce,
1 pop mac.!!!_na,_ 31 ft. lith Gaotgn Crook Ad. Pa~a, ICJI&gt;o
.-,304-nwe!l
plltl, pickup, and delivery. 814-

ES, ~
38
11M E. .~... . . . . . . P'l " ""
·
Elic.
Wlndowo,
t::::
1 . . ol ..... -~ Daorbom, 1111ao, Qood Condlllon, l4,rw;
1117
o.eo
PU, 12.100.
tm.
ona
5lt
Kina
C\Jttor
: : . _ , · - .. 1:111 ..... bn!ol.hag, 1225, 114.ft2·1051
I ~ ~..·

.., ..... •

8:00 Ill D IIJl Un1olvod
Myatarlea The search tor
Noah's Ark; a search tor a
~napped woman . Stereo.

gentttlor, 18,700. ~58-10815.

Rogere

•.;•

rl'rrrl'l

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IIJl Wheel ol Fortune

7:35 &lt;lJ Sanford &amp; Son

Rambler! Excel·

otclo ~J. 5 _.t. olr,
or repalra.
om/ 1m llaroo, '"' whaol, 114- wiring, now ~Maalar u . . - -rlclan.
llti2-4AII
oattaftor
lpm
Clftlt: 7 0.,.A-.,tA.II. - I
R - r Eloctrlcat, WV00030e
P . M . - R - · IP.II.
304-t71-1711.
'
1111
Dodao
Chorgor,
Good
... a.amplon blood
. . . . . llllao u. .. J .. co... ~. 1 SDaad. Air, 63,000
..... Tick Coon Hound Mllao. 12,400; ·111U Ford LTD,
85 General Hauling
~»11153470.
Rune Good1 U,OOO Mllee,
11.1110. 1142111 1211.
1111
OI&lt;ICIOl&lt;lbllo
Cu11au
Farm Suppltes
101.lupromo C l - a.'::'Jham,
&amp; Ltves lock
307 v.._ axcatlant
Klon,
rad!ICod, 814-1142·217\l "'
53
l14-III:UH 4.
fTT
Upholstery
- . . . :J04.175-208:1,
IIJfl llno Tropical lloh blnlo,
.,........,,,.,,.pdae.

THAT" fVIVCH /

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

tlng.

.

Cobalt · Knack· Twang · Mentor · TAKE TWO

~~ro11flre

5TANl&gt;ARD.f

-1238

Transportation

'

Q

a

LO'Nf~ My

Oc.4 : 111 Plymou1h: Good

B.throoma, Ktlchene, Roofing,
Eloctrlcal Siding, llaaonry,
Omnll, Fr~mlng Room Ad ·
dHlono, Plomblng, E1portencod ;
F,.. Eltlmat•l 304-11'5-2«0.

.....,

Ot

bbn.iinoi... SMJ5; . . . . . . . _

(f

'7'0

310 englnt a Trant. Intact. Aleo:
hl'ltl 18 Olds lSO 1nglne Good
Tr•n•. Engine nHda wor\. 614-

.,_•!,&lt;&gt;,

n

-......._ I t?fFUS'f

wheel drive llartlng at tMI.OO

F,.. ntlmat•. Can collect 1·
114-:n7-&lt;M81, doy "' night .

1800, 114-1112·2840.

axtrae, ...

.

614-245-lltm, &amp;14-tw.l.ean

64 Hay &amp; Grain
-..,.-:---;.--,.,.,-::::-::~
i a.. a-......,. l!M-175-508

1181 CulltM Cn.ll. . wagon, tlr,
PS, PB, au1omatlc, tlh •flaal,

Tandy CGkr c - o r :S. prlntor,
r
... end other

......__

you{?.ffLF.

&gt; ...

Unconditional llflllma guar~~n ­
tM. Local retarane11 fUrTdthed .

~~~~--~-­
'88
Coiobflty.
2.8L.fiJOD.

"-ndlt&amp;onad

~

MVJT' LEA/!N T"O l-1/&lt;£-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANQ

~

!I:J7olllal.

THf!Af1fT

you

::;~;a,bl•. 614-446-8568, 614·

71

E._ Jac:Uon, Ot!lo. 1.-

-

Budotl Tt~nsmlalon~ UHd &amp;
rwb&lt;JTh, lla~lng 11 SHL.~ont

Home
Improvements

6 ~F:~~~~ LEIIEIS

a

YobUe, We come to you. 614:z51.5ffl.

Addltlon1,
Roofing.

1ft. 304-615-2218.

~

11.1 llll

i

ctrUfied.

81

0

Stereo. C
II) MacGY.,er t:;1
@ SpotiiC.nter
Moneyllno
tD Tho Wenona
7:05 (J) Addamo Family
7:30 lllD IIJl Jooperdyl C
ill Now 11 C.n 811 'rora
lilii E~!!!rtolnmenl Tonight
stereo. Q
(I) D Moma'a Family
0 liD Wheel ol Fortune t:;1
IIJllll Fomlly Feud
811 a Sllr Stereo.
a:1 MoiOr League 811aeban

''

BOATERS

Services

.

GonoreUon

Gutme Mercury Marine Service.
Yarcury, Mariner, MareruiMr

•

.

" :

( omp leta the cl'luck le quoted
by f,Ji ing in the m•ssmg word s

IIJllll Enteltll nmonl Tonight

S.Mea. 614-~tio.

-273-22~

\31 D

.

PRINI NUMBERED LEITERS It
IN IH!Sf SQUARES
•

•

l!llC8 Star T~k: Tho Noll

BOATERS
J.S. Utrint S.rvk:t, Serving Ali
'tour Boating NMds, P•r1s, AcriM, lWo Cycle 011 And

lffl Holliday

.

G)

.. ·l

you de11e lop fr om step No. 3 below

~Gil Jeopardy! C

1175-7554.

79

.

I

IJlU

10ft aluminum bolt, exe cond,
S200. c•ll •fttr 5 :00 PM, 304-

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.

I

to

I II

17

6

NowaHour Q
Morrltd... With Children

lor Sale

76

V0 NE W

I I

6:30 lllD IIJl NBC Nowa ~
IJ) S8vod by the 81111
lilii (J) • ABC New
I1J Wild America Stereo. Q
Square One TV Stereo.

00 The Je«e,.on• a_

Motorcycles

4-11 I ff'A laaclor plgo lot uta,

4J lo

6:05 &lt;lJ 811vorty Hlllblllleo

lilii lnaldt Edition t;J
11J (}) MocNoii{Lihrer

tion, $8,400. Call 614-446-7371,
After SP.M.

lltrcury

I

tD Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
Stereo. Q

Zom&gt; Stareo.

,,

I was going
jail for robbing a publishing
~-c,:-~,-T,-,,.,~--.,~ : company of valuable antiques.
.
.
.
.
.
.,
He told his lawyer he would
, -- - - -- - - - , return the items il the publisher
T 0 RRA y
would read the book he had

a World Today

7:00

Tilt, CruiH, Vtry Good Condi -

8DICIIIIM.

l I' I I

6:35 (J) Andy (lt1fflth

ltD Ford Aaroat., Conver~lon
Van, Au1omatlc Overdrive, Air,

Coachman 24fl Mini motor
homa, 460 Ford engine, roof air,

379-213:1.

Olf1 And G1aaa Top Tablo WHh
I Cl1atro, CoM Uor II P.M. 114-

----~

.... _._

4" llftL.Aium Whoalo. Coli 304-

IIJS.71n, Or 614-448--4015.

lent Condttlon, New Pa nt, New ..
Tlrn, Mlcrow•ve $6,400. 814- : •
448·01&amp;:1.

onion for picnic

Ralo Tiller, Ntw 3 HP Engine,
Prlcocl Rlghtl Pflono: 814......

- ...~ ._ . e· •

e-,

74

GRINOI
..

f!!!!J•• t:;1

tD New

r - - - : -- --.
UE 5AIQ 'I ~Rf.T ! HAVt.
M Of.)t. lift. fO GIVt.
fO MY COUilfRY"

1184 ChiiYy 4 Whatl Drtva,
Wheal
305, 4 Spaod,

Sho~

3 YHr Old Bty Fllty, Nlnc:hts,
Gantla 8,.._ To Ride, 1500.1114-

-~

-oi
l
=-=i
l
o
__ ... _...,.
-s.. ,.,.,

Livestock

L.ng prom d - .........
5111 Jll. pooch 15111, $7!1.

And-· s-.

~- C
()&lt;_,ltJIII!
....,._

63

Complalo Kllchon
&amp;14-448-111U.

Plaatlc
C..'-1 linch
l1!ru 10 1nc11 1n
Ron

-

ARLO AND JANIS

4230•

Pa~lng

~nt Sal.

,_

Apartment
lor Rent

bath, untumlahtd, l4300 enh,
I BR Qulo4 !lollna. 10 - ·
614-1112·:1033
trom OaniPQIIIe dloh 1n0.
1m 14xl5 trailer, 2bdrm., large UCIIhloo Pilei. DopoaM 2 - ·
living room , kitchen, den , At, Roqulrod -1104
8111 porcl'l, moo, 814-37&amp;.-639.. .
1bdrm. apt. In Mlclcl_., - -.

ltnd

a.-n.

..
__
.....
____...... .
--t. IJWG--.
T_Sll_ .,.. . _
..... ... .. -..., ... :.:::z
_-. ....

1M7 Melody 12r65 3bdrm ., 2 Poreh,l144tl . . ..

And olova. 114-441-364 , 1113-43511.

E-lvol Boy ENFORCER At;

·~

1\4.446-JJIII,

1~AfllrtP.M .

88 3Brs Mobil•, On 112 Acre
S.C:Iud.cf lot, CA, CioN To
Town, Graen Sel'\ool, $29,500

CA 1&amp;x30 abo 'II
3ml out ot Porttr. C•ll 614·388m2 . 5:oo

Utllfty Bklo. Spaetat 30'140'xll',
1-111'18' Stldlna Door, t-3' Wotk
Door~Palntacf Sloat Skiing a
Roo
. 118110. Iran HOroo
Blclro. .-3fl2.1ll45

$100. 1514 44..-zl

2780

OW,

-.-a a..........

2 l.drvorn~ I Bath, St~a
Rou1o 21a. GoHipolla. 114-2561001.

tipo411.

WID

IOWFLEASt
luy lNFOIICE~ Floa Kttlora For
Yord.

-sm.••·-

Ust wfltl ua1 We're 11111ng1

1500 Oft Pure: hate Price Of Any
New Home At EIHI Home Ctnltr , Gr11t Selection, Fret S.t· Up
And o.tlvery! Call 614-m-1220.

Bodl

L.ng.~.

,,.._, ..,. OMI

u111hloa pl.. dopooolt, liDU....
2S35.

H.ayae Ae•l Estsle, Mtigs-G•III•-

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Pac

• ... In boylng "' lolling
SS..V Pnxtuets. ctll Vlrglnli

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Mobile Home Unturnl.twd, CJA.
14155, l22 Third A¥..... GaJ.

Athane,IU4·992-2403 or 114-992·

Gym

loat...tng Amino Acid Body
lllfklng, .alght ond Ill
...,_ fanrd• Awallab6a ••·
ch ahll) It Rile A~ Pflllrmecy.
Thllule way to diet.

GOOD

1 bedroom

1500 Very
Et-..o EICOtOioo And
I~ Machine~ .Now Cond·
tlanl c.ial: $575 -1 Fo&lt;: $250.
114-441--1122 Ennlngs.

DP

1800 541 1123

Hunllng, Flohlng (Tullloy, Door,
BNr) Modem Cabin FOf' l-10; 3 llodroom 2 llatho,
BNutttul Mountain Senlng, Living R~. Dining - _
111,100. 814-379-2)18.
KHchon, WHh Appll- - .
nan Tr~e~ Dlttrk::l. ,....._.,. ..
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE

Moyw. 30H75-C142.

Color l.Y.'e Pontbla And ConlOll, teo Each. lllcrownt Chtn
SIO: Eioctrlc Ctothoa Oryor, 1&amp;!1:

- _..., -·

Ren1a ls

1980 JMp ChtrokH, .. wheel
drive , $850. 304-67S-4853 or 675-

I

Ill Full
Smurfa_Q

111 IIJllm CBS Newa
18 Anclr &lt;lt1fflth
II) Scooby Doo
a:1 Up Cloao
•

klr-.

lBO eao llriH 125. tarvo ""'lght
$111'. ltJ4.475-4241.
DAKOTA
DREAM
HOMES
$31,111!1 &amp; Up. Bulh On Your l.al.
Sao au. - . ....-.7311.

II)

~-

1173 Oodga Domp Cno Comblna With a Groin
TnM:Ic. All '!no· 325 Amp. Haada, S1,100j 2 Row Tobacco 1m Hor1ay FLH Groat CondiGoo Wadlor; Pricad To Soli I 514- Slaw, Sl7o· John O..re tion. 1114-245-11428.
3SJ.7031.
-Ina Moehlna, 1450. Coli A~
Yama.h• 400 dirt ~kt wftldru,
tor 5 P.ll. 614-245-51112.
Appla N E Compu1or, prlnlor,
good ohapo, 304&lt;175.S088.
monhD&lt;, boob '"" Allla Chalmar 4 row corn P'anter
eluded, $1200, 814-247..J313 after SIIDO. PTD com ahott. $100. 75 Boats &amp; Motors
304--4!5&amp;-11112.
4pn
~

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
~,:;,sa:z.1111Mo. •F.. 12 Montha.
XC PoCII lncludM Flftlf,
. . - _ Hugo Docie Etc .
=•d On S.Hina Prlco Ot
$14.41 APR, TGial Dalonod
P!tco' 1754.112) Don, Bollova M?
CoftiiM

A-l=ram1 Cabin t6'J37'j, Mar1in- 41 Houses lor Rent
ton, WV William• ur•briar
River Hetrby; Monongahall• Ne- 3 b.clroom 2 story tton...
tlooal Fornt; Nut To Hllndley Nterenee &amp; deposH requlrwS,
Publlc Hunting A,.t; Great 30&lt;4-675-3271.

For aatl bY, owner, In Henderson
•bove ral roM tr~ekt- 7 room
hOUit, 4 Bedt"ooma &amp; b.th, L.at
..z• 100x100. lmmedl•t• po•
llllion. $17,000. llrm. Call Helin

Track

42111.

81~1-05'16.

Ft.twood ArN, Pomeroy, La rga
Cou~ry H&lt;MM, New Kitchen,
Bath &amp; c.,patlng. Low 130'a,
auadnect Buyer. 6f~46-2351iJ.

H[)..4

Farmtll Cub wlbelly mower,
$1500, 114-11112·2217

Size County. 614-441.0801, ,,....._
0501.

3 a.droome And Full
Buement, 114 Ufl BIH.

CMimen

Aile

'Seooad floor lp I taaat For
L . - LA. Ooo aJl. Both.

• llolrig.
......
Fw- - ' - ' . . ..._
eo.-.
&amp; - . Glotlpollo.
All- PW' -....; o.p.r. ~

Roed,

5112 ft Br~h Hoa pull type $300.
lwo _pull trpa lraetor mowers
ona • - • ona 1100. Saod l
loctlllzo opraador J125. 30WIIS.
3813 aftlt 1:00 PM.

·~1238.

18 Acrws..
M001ty Woodod, With 0 ko•f&gt;
rut Bullding Slit Th.t Has A

O.J. Wtllta

2020 JD $5,1150. 814-288-

t

Te
6 . . .- . " - 1 - . ~ Nlco 3
~
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46

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Rtptlr, $e,500; 800 Ford Tractor

:L- .. 1£:
COI-HI
-. Silii.-W
s

month, any one of IDuf kilt
av•l'-ble, 304oi1S-Z7ZZ.

owner financing at 51D't41i par
month buys all Une NU, a!OI-

Pt. . .m, WV.

111!11 John Ooaro Modll 9, Allla
Chslmer~, H.D. I
Hyater
EloetrlcForlcUft.81
-23511.

lette rs of

four JCrombled wo rds
low to form l our sim ple

Reading Rainbow Staroo.

i

bed Oner, femlie *lvar, mUll

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-lor---11.
:::r•
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... ... -

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-~ 5Gr100,

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t..n Mlltlngt, ltltf CGniUI·
tllltonl CMt m.an~gttnent ln·

44tl-1243.

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2021 Marquella Ave, 5 yrs old,
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S. all brick maintenance IT• Avollablo. 3 Mlloa From ""'MARSHALL'S Now Hiring. No home, 4 ~rooma. email living Hoaphal, UI,OOO. 1~.
Elporlonca ..,.,. For Ap- room, dlnlngroom/t;lmily room
piiCitlon lnfonnetlon Call 21g.. comiMnaUon, khchen, utllhy 36
Real Estate
75H66!t Ext. OH15a lla.m. To room, aH one leva!, coveNt~
Bp.m. 7 uayo.
Wanted
pa,tlo In b.ck, privacy Nnce,
MaiUrt blby litter w.nlnoa garage, shown by a~ntmanl 2 Aclllho Wanting ea...,.,
only 304-875-1238.

wented To Buy: Junk Aulos
WIUt Or WllMout Molors. Call
L."") llnly. 614-388-9303.

P.M.·

Won't Lilt 1-800..284·

Real Eslate

swranet Offlet, Mutt Bt Able To

Ddt- Makers Form _Good Con-

Good, St.. dy, Affordtblt, Busl-

Vendln; RDUia: loc•l. We Have
Immediate Opening For Fuii- The NMftll MachiMS, Making A
Tlmt AN Shift SupeNisor.l. l2 to Nlco Study CUh lncoma. 1·
40 Hou,. Per Weak. aen.IH IIIJO.Z34.2851.
Package Intact With CompeiiUve Wagu and DlfftrerCial wtth
Elperitnct, Equal Opportunhy
Employer. PIMM eonl:aet The
Olr.ctor of Nursing, P4nec,_
C•r• Ctnltt. t'nr Pinec,... 31 Homes lor Sale
Drive, Galllpolla, Ohk&gt; 4!5631
614-446-1112
2 a.drooma. HouA, With 1 Acre
Lind, 28 Chillicothe A01od, G•tJanltori•l ciHnlng, conlacl L.&amp;P llpollo, $7,000. lle-446-1815, 614-

Typa. Stnd Rseurna To: CU
114, rJo Glilllpolla Dally Tribune,

ditM. c.ll 614 ... 46-4015 Ahtr 5

VENDINO ROI.Ilt: Got Rich
Quick? No Way! But Wa Have A

Hiring 1 part·tlml Pollet OHlctr n..._
for the Village of Rutland, 9-4, 8383.
Mond•y·Frlday, 614-Jil2·2121.

UHd Mobllt Homes, Call 614·
446.0175.

w•-ed To Buy: Large Size

Business
Opportunity

·0 Rearrange

IJ..

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11180 Chovy Luv plck·•P lruek,
good eond,$1,500. 304-1'7J.5413.

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PUULII

WED •• APRIL 29 •

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1985 Ford Broneo II, Nlw Motor,
Ntw Tran1, AC, PS, Tlh Wheel,
A.W:M
na, tt14-24!S-9428.

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1m QMC 4x4 1m Chovrolol
414, llolh Run, 'r!Oih For: 53,500.
814-ZIIS.e2311 After II P.M.

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.

Television
Viewin2

~THIS ~IT DO£~

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18115. 814-245-5152.

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thlnglara...,ono.

BORN LOSER

1987 Vugo, 42,000 Aclu•l Miiu,

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
--

AIM"• ca...ae. cruiM, 1111 ,
13,2Qii. 1Wl Cl1avY S.10 pick-up ,
txc, 11 ..,.M, U, $8,ces. 304·
8JS..4480.

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11111 Bolek SkYLark. IIH, PW, c
~~-~II. 11181 Pontlae 11000,

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,....,.,, lam~llo -roy

Wednesday, April 29, 1992

Wednesday, Aprll29, 1992

... .

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SHKOPBXPZGV

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__________ __ .,.
, 19117 by NEA . Inc

29

"'

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, April 29, 1992

PEPSI
24 PAC
Low Priced,
Community Minded

For
Seholan
Partlclpaat8&amp;

l.utDaJTo
Orderb

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
L

Ohio Lotterv•

Evans
named MU
cage coach

Pick 3: 608
Pick 4: 2386
Cards:

8-H; 3-C; 9-D;
A-S

Page 4

Super Lotto:

2-9-14-18-28-47
Kicker: 515290

I,_ --··-·----·-------- -___J,-----==========-l..._-=:.:.:.:.:..:...=.:.::____J__ _ _ __j

MT. DEW •PEPSI·FIEE • DIET·PEPSI •IEGUW I

I
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I
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CASE WITH COUPON AND .10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
I
GOOD mRU MAY 2, 1992
_.J

24
PACKS
LIMIT l

PEPSI·COLA

$ 99

------------

II.

Vol 42, No . 257
Copyrighted 1992

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The future of lite Meigs County
public defender's office was the
subject of the Meigs Counly Com ·
missioners during their reg ular
meeting Wednesday.
Bill Kidd, representing the Oh10
Public Defender Comm1ssion and
Charles H. Knight, Meigs Counly's
public defender, presented the
commissioners with a proposed
contracl for the 1992·1993 fiscal
year.
Meigs Coun1y is part of an
eight-county public defender dis·
trict and lhat affiliation, according

to Kidd, has historically saved lhe
cou nty money. State budgel cuts
have reduced lhe state reimburse·
ment rate from 50 percent to 43
percent, and lhat rate could dip to
below 40 percent by nex1 year.
As that rate of reimbursement
decrease s, counties involved in lhe
multi -co unly dislrict will see an
increase in savings, since the
regional districl will continue 10
receive the 45 percent reimburse·
ment rale lltat it has received in the
pa.&lt;t year.
Meigs County's financial share
of lite conlrllCt will again increase,
although lite $7,400 increase in lite

contract is believed to be cons1der·
ably less than what the county
would pay wilh ils old assigned
counsel system, in which local
auorneys were assigned to cases
and paid an hourly rale.
The increase is viewed as rcla·
tively modest, and lite commission·
ers did nol indicate yesterday that
lhey would not renew lite contract.
which expires on June 30.
"Even with lite increase, u's still
a good deal for Meigs County:
Commissioner David Koblentz
said.
CHIS reviewed
Funher information was pre ·

By staff aDd win 1 q&gt;01 Is
COLUMB US - American
Electric Powo- Co_ has asked lite
Public Utilities Commission of
OhiO to approve a plan 10 fmance
clean -c oal tecboology to redu ce
pollution 31 its Gavin power pbnt

c

m southern Ohio_

lOW.

oa•ou

LB.

FOODLAND

FIRE PROTECTION • A Los Angeles
police officer stands by to provide armed protec·
tion as firefighters battle a blaze in the Soulh
Central.section of Los Angeles l~te Wednesday

COTTAGE CHEESE

c
CTN.

SPRINGDALE

DELICIOUS
ATH or SKIPPY

COOKIES

140L PIG.

MT. DEW • PEPSI·fRIE
DIET or RIGUW

PEPSI·COLA
2URR

FRITO LAY

CHEETOS

$269

CHOCOLATE
PLASTIC
DRINK ..................................GALLON

701.

BIG

$119

IOTTU

99c

RED RIPE
CALIFORNIA

STUWBERRIES

QUART

night. Arson related fires were started city-wide
in the wake of lbe acquittal of four LAPD orfi.
cers charged with assaulting Rodney King. (AP).

Five killed,
138 injured
in LA riots

24 oz.

lUND

sen ted 10 the board by Sid
Edwards, director of the
Gallia/Meigs Community Acllon
Agency , relaLing to tbe County
Housing Improvement Strategy
(CHIS), a docwoeAt !hal will be
required for most Community
DevelC4M1lCfll Bloc.t Gf3lll housing
grnnts beginning in 1993.
Edwards anlicipaiCS tbat grant
monies will be rtteived by the
county to aid in complwng the
CHIS. After Lbosc funds are
rccetved. an ~ suo-ey will be
required. AI yesaaday's meeting,
Edwards stresSltld dr impor1an&lt;:e of
pro"'!pi and tborougll data collec ·

tion.

"We've got lo get motivated 1f
we want to do any thing with the
ClnS." Edwards said . "If we want
a true picture of what's out there.
we're gomg to have to get people
involved."
The surveys will require door·
to-door c~rculatlon in each town ·
ship and village in lhe county, and
Edwards suggested that township
trustee s be con tact ed to do the
work outside of the villages, stnce
those officials are probably most
aware of where low -to-moderate
mcomc households arc located in
their townships .

Further, Edwards stated that let·
tcrs of commitment wen: not being
rec eived by county governments
and organizations as quickly as
lhey should be toward lite projectro
cost of the CHIS prcparauon.
A maximum of $20.000 will be
available for each county m grant
funds, but total cost is projected at
$40,000. Cash or in-kind pledges
have been received from several
organizauons, incfudmg CAA and
the counly commissioners . but
more are needed.
Edwards Slressed thai if 1he
CHIS is not completed and
Conlinued on page 3

PUCO asked to approve
scrubber financing plan

PORK ROAST

LEG QUARTERS

A Multlmedlo Inc. Newooooer

Commission reviews public defender contract

BOSTON STYLE

CHICKEN

2 Secllon, . Pagea 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 30, 1992

II.

FRESH

Low tonight In 50s. Frida) ,
high near 80.

c

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Blacks
and whiles altacked police headquarters and ftrCS, looting and gun
ballles broke out overnight after
four white policemen were acquit·
ted in lhe videotaped beating of a
block moiOrist. At least five people
were killed and 138 hurt.
Gov. Pele Wil son declared a
state of emergency and 2,000
National Guardsmen were sent to
armories and olher galhering poiniS
lo await orders. "This is a mauer 10
be reconciled by the courts and nol
on lhe streets," he said.
Blacks dragged molorisiS from
their cars and beat lhem late
Wedn esday . Looters - mosl of
them block - emptied a supennar.
ket. Police wilh sh01guns guarded
firefighters as lhey hauled at least
40 blazes . Pillars of smoke rose
across a wide area of the ci ty as
officers in not gear patrolled in
armored vehicles.
Mosl of lhe violence broke out
in yredominanily black Soulh Ccn·
ua Los Angeles within hours of
the verdict in lhe Rodney King
beating case. Violence also broke

AEP said tbc plan aouopates
that ooal scrubber ttchoolngy - m
addition to =uoin SlOpS 10 be taken
al other plants - ..·iU allow 11 to
comply at the leas! possible cost
with !be federal Clan Ail Act of
1990
Richard Disbrow, AEP cbaumaif, said Wednesday that AE.P
wants to COOiinue to II!IC coal from
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
mines. thus saving mining jobs and
related business 10 arc1 suppliers.
He said Gavin will cmliaue to
be supplied with coal from the
Meigs mines as well as about 2
million tons annuall y from non ·
affiliated Ohio coal produ&lt;ns.
"This arrango-oeol would tnaX!·
mizc Lbe use of Ohio coal while
keeping costs low lor ow cus·
tamers," be said_ "Tbe Meigs
Mines would optta aa a reduced

level of approxtmately 4.5 million
tons of cool per year,'' he said.
The company did not indicate if
the reduced level would result in
layoff of miners. The mines now
have 1.041 employees .
AEP. in asking the PUCO to
approve lhe plan, stressed lhal sev·
eral crucial regulatory rulings are
necessary before a final decision is
made.
""Before proceedwg with construction, we need to obtain all nee ·
cssary e nvnonm ental permits,
assura nce of Phase l extension
emi,;sion allowances for scrubbing
and a ruling from the PUCO that
our proposed compliance plan is
reasonable and pruden~" Drsbrow
said.
'" The need for coope ration from
all interested parties. a clear out·
look for emisSion allowances. and
timely rulings from the U.S. Army
Corps of Engmccrs and lhe PUCO
Jre cri tical . Otherwrse, the cost
advantage of scrubbing could d1s·
appear." D1sbrow S31d.
Regulatory delays could make
lhe company lose much oflhe 1992
conslruction seaso n. That would

hike construction cosiS and eat up
Gav1n's cmtssion allowances
reducing the potential savings ~
Under the worst conditions
leng_lhy delays could destroy th~
v1ab1IUy of scrubbers. Disbrow out·
lined how regulatory rulings could
affect the utility company's sys .
tcmwide compliance plan:
L A permil from lhe Corps of
Eng mcers IS required to inslall a
lime unloading facility and fill in
aboul 13 acres of low-qualily wet·
lands for a landfill to handle scrub·
bcr waslc. The company proposes
lo replace the wetlands by creating
15 acres of new wetlands and
enhancmg anolhcr five acres.
The Corps ha.&lt; scheduled a pubhe hcan ng for May 4 at 7 p.m. at
the Chcs hire-Kyger Elementary
School The Sierra Club and Ohio
Industrial Energy Consumers have
challenged the pcnnit applications.
If the Corps of Engineers
rcqutres an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS), the Gavin project
could be. delayed for al least 18
months, Jeopardizing lite viabiluy
of the scrubber option;
Conrinutd on pagt J

Groups meet in RAC dispute

RIOT IN LA · A PROTESTER HOLDS A "We Will Not
Rest" sign as a Los Angeles Police Department kiosk bums outside
Parker Center Wednesday nighl. Protesters took to the streets
after a jury in Simi Valley. Cali I., acquilted all four LAPD dden·
danl~ in the Rodney King assault case. (AP)
out downtown, a mostly non-resi·
dential section, and white neigh·
borhoods.
"Guilly! Guilty! Guilty!

r----Local briefs--coMPAc endorses Evans

The Ohio Coal Miner Political Action Commiuec (COMPAC)
has endorsed Gary Evans, Republican, for Mctgs County Commissioner. Evans, who works al the Me igs Mines and is a member of
Local 1857, is one of six candidates seeking tl1c nominution for lhe
Jan. 3 tenn in lhe June 2 primary.
AI Childs ofLocal1857, Meigs Mines, is one of 10 members on
the state COMPAC board which makes candidate rccommenda·
tions. The board met Wednesday in Alltens.
Also endorsed wen: commissioner candidates, Bill Oiler of Gallia County, and Tom Adkins, Sr., Athens Counly incumbenl

Neighborhood watch to meet
A neighborhood watch meeting will be held at lhe Reedsville
Church of Christ at 3 p.m. on Sunday.

Village named in suit
The Village of Middleport and fanner employees of the village
have been named as defendaniS in a lawsuit. flied in Meigs County
Common Pleas Coun on Wednesday .
Rainelle Duff of Albany, and her mother, Eunice, allege lhal
Rainelle Duff suslained permanent leg injuries at the Middleport
Continued on page 3

Guilly!" young men and women
chanted outside police he3dqual1e1S
downtown, which came under
under atlacks from hundreds of
blacks and whites soon after the
verdict "No justice, no peace'"
Mayor Tom Bradley ordered a
dusk-to-dawn curfew tn the hard ·
est-hit area; banned the sale or
transfer of ammunition within the
city; and prohibited the sale of
gasoline or other flammable liquids
for usc in anything except motor
vehicles. More than 100 sc hools
were ordered closed today.
The last lime the National
Guard was called in to restore order
in Los Angeles was in 1965, during
the Walls rials sparked by the
arresl of a black man. Thiny-four
people were killed and large areas
burned in lite uprising.
Presidenl Bush appealed for
calm and said the verdict "'has left
us all wilh a deep sense of personal
frus1ra1ion and anguish." "It is
importanl lhal we respecl the law
and lhe legal processes that have
been brought to bear in lhis case,"
he said.
Five people were killed, four of
them shot to death, police said.
Two of those slain died in a
Continued on page 3

PITTSBURGH
(AP)
Rc:pres&lt;fllalives ol a JOIICbln
0)1Blty, W.Va., alnmDqn plan! and
lite Unilcxl Sll:dwutus tlllion
weren't talking a1it:r mumiog to
11tt: ~ning llblc r.. lhc firSI
lime since July.
"The union irtii:Dds to bql dr
negotiations privale, wbile ad:.
nowledging lhallbae cbly 8 intereSt in dr pt~" tlllion
spokrsman G.y H""'-1 said
Wednesday. "The bet dill tbcy mel
for moo: tban tbott hours
dc:monslrateS a «Dod a.t."
NegOiiaiOO lor bodl sides mel
for aboot 310 boon 11 die tlllion 's
PiiiSburgh ~ Wednesday, a woct afw Ra¥cmwood
Aluminum Corp.'s DtW ~ of
directors fired chairmlll and cb..d

oecutivc officer R. Emmcu Boyle.
The talks were to resume today.
The uniOn contends the dispute,
pnmarily over wages. has dragged
on for 18 months because Boyle
was not interestro in negotiating a
new contract and wantro to sec the
Steelworkers
gone
from
Ravenswood.
"He drove the company to the
bnnlt of ruin and somebody wilh
some sanity final! y stepped in lasl
woct," Steelworkers Vice President
Geage Becker said. "All we've
wanted is a new cootract and the
boord of directors apparenUy was
coovinced that Emmeu Boyle was
llOI d1e person to do lhis."
More than I ,700 Steel workers
have been off lhe JOb at
Ravenswood Aluminum since Nov.

I. 1990, when their contract expired. The union says its members
wen: locked ou~ while the com.
pany contends the unioo is on
strilce.
Before lhe start of Wednesday 's
talks, Becker saKI he was
"cautiously optim1stic" that lite
dispute could be resolved fairly
qu1ckly once negotiations resumed.
Becker is chainnan of the unioo 's
ctght·man negotiating commiuee.
The company's negotiating 1eam
IS headed by PciCr Nash, a formtt
general counsel to the National
Lahar Relauons Board .
"The company 's goal is to
negotiate a contract that w11l ensure
the long-term v1ability of lite
plan~" said Pat Gallagher. a
spokesman for Ravenswood .

Gov. Voinovich expects
to sign school board bill
COLUMBUS . Ohw (AP ) Gov. George Voinovicb IS expect ed to s1gn into law a lmg-dcb:ued
bill reducmg tbe members of tbe
&lt;tate Board of Edncalion from 2 I
to II and re.ahgning tbear election
d1suiru.
State senators completed pas·
sage 18 -15 Wednesday, bul ooly
after more than an hour or littLer
debate that included opposition
from memben or bolb political
parties.
Voinovi ch asked lor a smaller
board that would be appomtrd by
lhe governor, giving bim mooe S3Y
m edUCAtion policy. Bua wlten the
House balked. he agrttd to settle
for what the chief sponsor . Sen _
Eugene Wans. R-Columbus. ailed
··a s:1ep in Lbal dimaioD."
The governor applauded the
Senate 'YOie. He said die biD i! " IIOl
a panacea to Lhe education problems of Ohio" but is an in'oportlnl
step in securing more effec1ive

mlnlgcment of the ed ucauon system .
Wednesday's vote wa.s on con ·

c urrence m House amendments.
Opponents general ly cla1med
the measure Will dilute reprcscnta·
t1on of big city mtnomies and resi·
dents of rural areas who could wmd
up sharing single distrKts of 25 or
more

COUDllCS .

Presenl board members were
elected from each of the stale's 21
congressiOnal diStriciS. Under lhc
new law, each will be elected from
an area comprising three of lhe 33
slale Senale diSLricts.
Each new member will repre·
se nt about 990,000 constituents,
compared wilh 570.000 under the
prescnl alignment
The bill does not spell out the
ll districts. Inslead, it provides that
the Legislawre may designate them
1n a separale bill prior to a July 5
deadline. If the Legislature fails,
the governor will draw the districiS.
The new law will be in place for

lhts year' s elec tion s.

School board cand •dates do not
run on partisan ballots and need not
be nontinaiCd in lhe June 2 prima·
ry. In stead, each cand 1date will
hav e unul Aug . 20 to file as an
1nt!cpendcnt with the board of eiC&lt;:·
tton in the largest county tn h1s or
her district
Senate Minority Leader Raben
lloggs. D-Jeffcrson, and Sena~e
Ed ucation Chairman H. Cooper
Sn~der, R-Hillsboro , argued
agamst passage. They said it will
diSenfranchise large segments ol
Ohioans on education policy mal·
tcrs.
"Eleven dislriciS won't reflect
Ohio's diversity. Some are going to
be left out of the proress altogeth·
er," Boggs said.
Snyder said rural areas, espe·
cially in southeastern Ohio, could
be linked with cities such as
Columbus "and would have no
voice at all.''

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