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                  <text>Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ITEM POl.a- Each of these advertised Items~ reqlired to be readly available for sale in
nch Kroger store, excej)t as s~lly noted in til~ ad. f we do 1111 out of an advertised Item, we
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_

Wednesday, March 1, 1995

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Vol. 45, NO. 214
Copyright 1995

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Your Final
Cost:

.

to galher numbers of what someone else couid dO the
work for, and the amount of time and cost to the taxpayers, the results will be po~itive," Pcrz said.
The highway budget was essentially the same as
~ voinovich introduced, although the committee shuf·
fled some money to make an extra $20 rniiUon a year
available for major new construction.
Approval of the bill came after the committee
defeated amendments from minority Democrats thai
would have increased funding for !he State Highway
Patrol and blocked a GOP plan to use for road ton·
sguc~on some mp.ney intended for building highway
sound barriers.

shot to do the work by private enterprise,'' Street
said.
"The ODOT maintenance budget for the past several years has run about $90 million, so in contract
doUars it's not that much," he said "We're talking
about crack sealing, guard rail replacement, grass
cutting, which they do now on the interstates. .It
could be snow removal." .
Perz said such a study would "not necessarily lead
to turning functions over to private enterprise. But
she said the department could use tbe results of a
study to improve its own Operations.
"We can l8llc about.efficiency, but when ·we have

ODOT officials ready
to break ground on
connector project
State highway officials had a
. Kokoslng hosted this Marietta
successful meeting with contractors two-day meeting to belp coordinate
earlier this week, according to an the different groups, including
Ohio Department of Transportation Meigs County Engineer Bob Eason
spokesperspn
. and Don Poole, director of the TupODOT met with. Kokosing Con· pers Plains-Chester Water Depart·
struction Co. and other subcontrac· ment.
--·tors-to build a parmersh~ between - -"A partnering project starts wi~
the various parties, sa•d Nancy meetings such as the ones held thiS
Yoacham, of OOOT.
week in Marietta. These meetines
Koltosing Consuuction - based bring together everyone involved m
: in based in Fredericktown - wiD a project," said John Dowler, direc: begin work on the first phase of the tor of ODOT .disuict 10. "You put '
· U.S~oute 33/lnterstate 77 con~· names with "faces, ~u
. becorn.e
tor MoQday. The groimdiRakins is familiar will! individ respons•set for I p.m. Monday ncar Meigs bilities."
Wgh School.
··
· Problem !\Oivin~ tram
d
This $12.3 million project will team building sess10~s were also
connect 2.25 llliles of road Rock provided", he added. .
~--· -~prings and Five Points, cornplet·
"In the long- run, ,this kill of
mg the State Route 7 bypass of interaction makes a tar1 . \I"CI
Poq~eroy. The project should be
run smoother and more ef 1cient·
finished by next spring.
ly ," Dowler added. ''The taxpayer
The 18.6-mile Meigs Count} • benefits greatly from pannering."
portion of the connector is divided
Area motorists will also know
into four sections from Rock what to expect since Y"acham
Springs to the Ravenswood, W.Va.. mustlceep the public infonned on
-Yoacham added.___
the project's sta!IL'I, Dowler said.

Area senior citizens
upset over possible
loss of taxi servic~ -

Ohio Power
to up rates
once again

PREPARE FOR GROUNDBREAKING Oblo Department of Transportation officials
and toDtracton IIJ'e preparing for the construe·
tiQD ol tbe first pbll&amp;e of tbe U.S. Route 33/Inter·
state-77 connector. Pictured from left are Brian
Will and Nick lble ofODOT District 10; Joe
Kershaw ol Kershaw Construction ·in Wellinw-

ton; Dave Woltz or Kokosing Construction; Don
Poole or Tuppers Plains Chester Water; Charlie
Brown or ODOT District 10; and (in rorearound) Kevin Kingery of McKenny Drilling of
Bedford. (Sentinel photo courtesy or Nancy
Yoacham)
.
,

Racine water upgrade ,
·set to start in s ring

meters.
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel oewa staff
"We were pumping 4 million
gallons of water. each month Work is. expected to start this
that's too mueh. By putting the sys·
spring on Racme water upgrades
including a new well and additional
tern in, we will decrease that
water lines.
. amount by half;; hHredicted.
An $80,000 Appalachian
Curren~y. there is no incentive
Regional Commission grant and a
for people to repair water leaks on
$156,100 Community Develop·
theu property, Thornton said.
ment Block Grant will be used to
Metering will prompt property
finance the .upgrades, said Racine
owners to fllt chronic leaks.
Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Thornton said he fully expects
Oqe change all Racine Water
the meters to be a subject of some
customers will notice is the instal·
contention among the_comm\IDity's
lation of new water meters. Thornresidents.
ton said the village is installing a .
"After a person gets used to
state-of-the-art Census system to
paying $12 a month for all the
determine how much water each
water they_can use, they are not
customer uses.
·going to wanlto change," .he said.
JEFF THORNTON
The ~illage was contacted sever·
"It's going to have ·to change."
· (Racine Mayor)
Thornton said !he water board is
al years ago by the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency which backflow problem, Thornton said currendy considering charging $12
said the village had a potential in explaining the need for the ·
Cont!nuec! !!"page 3

COLUMBUS -Ohio Power
Co. customers would pay an aver·
age of $2.80 more a ibonth for
electricity under a deal worked out
between the utility and the staff of
~he Public Utilities Commission of
OhiO.
.
The two sides join~y filed a set·
tlcmcnt agreement on Wednesday
that would gi,ve Ohio Power a .S66
million rate increase.
The agreement, which still must
be approved by the PUCO, would
raise rateS for 662,000 customers in
53 central, south-central and nOrth·
west Ohio counti~s. The average
residential bill would go from
$47.90a month to $50.70, the company estimated.
. Ohio Power had asked for a
$152.4 million increase. li filed the
request in July to recover costs
associated with the federal Clean
Air Act amendments of 1990 primarily the c•pense of installing
air-cleaning scrubbers at the Gen.
James M. Gavin plant.inCheshire.
'"The base rate increase is clearly below the e•IJCI;tations we had
going into the rate case," said Carl
· Erikson. president and chief operat·
ing officer.
''But, on balance, the agreement
represents a reasonable accommod'ation of the various parties' inter·
CSIS .••

The settlement would also
resolve a pending PUCO review of
the company's environmental compliance plan ; with no changes
required from the plan approved in ·
1992.
'

By GEORGE ABATE
. "!.would just~ lo~t w•thput _the
Sentinel News Sta"
cab, Hampton swd. They re JUS!
Area senior ci~cns arc boiling· as nic.e as they can be. They're so
over about !he possibility of losing c~us."
.,
a much-needed taxi service.
Drivers refuse to let her walk up
'(he Blue Streak Cab Co. which, her steep, gravel driveway to .her
transports area citizens ·with the Kerr Street home and they even get
help of local, state and federal her mail and newspaper, she added.
funding will likely drop the subsi- '
Della Mohler of Middleport said
dized OOkens at the end of March, she ~ the cabs at least four times
said Bill Snouffer, cab company . a month.
W ASHINOTON (AP)- Amer·
owner. Blue Streak is the county's
"I depend on them." Mohler
icans' personal income rose 0.9
only ca~com y.
said. "It's going to be bad with the By JIM FREEMAN
People meeting the grant guide· three conuactors to do the .job.
~~in Jllnuary, the biggest gain
Rece Sill action will pr0ba- really older ones."
Sentinel ne,rs staff
lines can receive up to $18,500 for
"Tiiey have a lot of opuons," he lD three months and more than
bly for e Bl Streak entirely out
Mohler said she ~ay have to
In addition to receiving new needed repairs which may include said.
twice as rapidly as spending.
of busi
, Snouffer said Wedncs· walk ~ore than a ~de to get her water lines this spring, Racine roof replacement, new windows,
There is still time to submit
11ic Commerce Department also
day morning. The Middleport busi· · grocenes and prescnpllons filled.
Mayor Jeff thornton expects ·work furnaces, painting, he explai~.
applications for the. second J,lhase said today that incomes climbed
ness has operated for more than 10
Harry Clark, who bas driven·for on a $500,000 housing grant for the
"Almost any type of repwr your of !he project, he said. People tnter- 0.? percent in December, revised
years.
·
the last four years with Blue village to start as soon as the house needs." he commented. ·ested m the program can contact from an earlier estimate or up 0.8
Pomeroy's Lulu Hampton 85 Streak, said the beginning of the weather wanns up.
..
"There are all different types of grant coordinator Jean Trussell at percent.
said she doesn't kriow how she'li month remains the busiest time.
Last year, the village "Was work being done. •
..
992-2733 or Thornton at 949·2296.
Spending increased 0.4 percent
get her groceries or handle routine Now, the company averages about awarded the housing grant for
Thornton then pointed out how . Also included in the grant fs in January after edging up 0.1 pier·
. chores.
200 runs each day.
repairing low-to-moderate income the process wo~:
$25,000 for new sidewalks to com- cent in Decem bet.
.
"I never have owned a car," said
"The hardest time is in lhe win· houSes and rental units. This year
People applymg for _the grant plement sidewalks installed list
The January figures are in line
Hampton, who has no nearby fami· tcrs," Clark added. "They'll call for the village will benefit from nearly ~rst have to meet low' to-moderatc year. The sidewalk project will with analysts' p!Wictions 1nd the
ly. ''They're trying to make us stay a cab even though some have a car $750,000 in grant money for hous· mcome status•. Next, a grant con· probably be bid ow in April pend· spending advance could SUg(JCSI at
in our homes."
of !heir own."
ing and water improvements.
tractor deter:mmes what the house . ing receipt of an environmental least a tem~rary slowing m the
But this recent action could
Many senior citizens are very
"We' ve been through the first needs, he S8ld. If th~ needs exceed review, Thornton said. In addition, . economy. Analysts said in advance
force her into a nursjng home wo~ied, he added. But, disablc:d phase ori the housins IJrojeet,• silid $20,000, ~~ home ·~ deem~ nt?l the village will do some sidewalk of the repon that the solid income
because the taxi service helped her restdents and even local bars w11l Thornton. "We're starting with worth repamng and IS made melt· work on its own·....., including the gains could point to increased buy.
about a dozen households plus a gible for grant funds. .
downtown area.
ing later this year.
keep her independence.
Continued on page 3
rental uniL"
Homeownen can p1ck between
·

Housing work poised to begin

~-Local

briefs--

Jurors need not appear

Post

•

audit a feasibility stuoy ot pnvatizing maintenance
operations.
The Ohio Contractors Association welcomed the
proposal.
·
.
"It's time that ODOT looked into it," said C.
Clark Street. executive vice president.
'·A lot of cities in the state and a lot of other states
have gpne that way and are taking a look at it. It's a
logit:m step," said Street, a fonner ODOT assistant
director.
·
_
About 4,350 of the.deparuncnt's, 7,700 employees ·
work in main~ce.
"It wouldn't take that many
a long

A SO-year-old Pickerington man received only minor injuries
after he was apparendy shot by a hunting buddy Saturday ~n.
Jack Hipscher was one of five Columbus-area hunters gomg after
late season grouse in Olive Township near Long Bottom, said
·Meigs County Game Pr&lt;iteciOJ' Keith 0. Wood.
.
· ·Wood said Hipscher was apparendy shot by .anolher ~ the~
who was attempting to s!'oot ~e of the P."'ebirds. 'f!lc J~UI.f of
the alleged shooter is being .wuhheld pending further mvCSUgalion,
he said.
..
•
•
He then returned to Pickerington before seeking treatment. He
was struck in the left arm, left leg and neck with five shotgWI pellets.
He apparen~y decided not to repon the incident, but later con·
!Acted officials when word about the shooting began to spread,
Wood said.

I

I Also avallabie for
FAX IT HERE! : yourconvenlence
.
· send &amp; rece1~
e Postatl"' St"•m'7~ Ja#ut W4lf
· messages
at
"J
(ll 4ed ~·
' at a low prtce.
. Office Prices

WESTERN !iMONEY
UNION ! 1TRANSFER

COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinovich's $3 .2
billion highway budget bas cleared a House commit·
tee, with a requirement that the state take a look at
turning some maintenance over to private business.
·_The two-year spending plan for .the Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation left the House Finance Com·
miuee on Wednesday with a 25-4 recommendation
.for passage by the full House.
Chairman Thomas Johnson, R-Ne.w Concord,
expects a House vote next week.
Rep. Sally Perz, R-Toledo, won approval of an
amendment that would require the departme!\.1 to
include as part of a man~gement and op_erauonal

Officials probe hunting accident

2(}{)z.

2 Sections, t2 Pageo 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursd_ay, March 2, 1995

Voinovich's highway budget clears House panel

U.S. NO. _1-

llell, Ripe

Low tonight l.n 201. Chance of
snow. Fridoy, cloudy. High In
mid 30s. C hanee ohnow.

·

.

Cidzcns summoned-to appear for jury duty Friday in the Meigs
County Coun need not appear, a coun spokeswanan said Wednes·
day. A matter scheduled for hearing Friday bas been canceled.

. I
.•.

Persona/Income
up In January

Showdown expected·today on balanc~d budg~t vote

WAS 1-IINGTON (AP) - Frus•
trated Republicans predict that
President Clinton and Democrats
will be punished by the votm if the
Senate defeats the iminensely popular balanced bJM_Iget amendment
Su~rs Slld Wednesday they
were still a soblary _senator shy of
th~ 67 votes they n~ All but barg~ out, Republicans set a_IIJ1lg, :
awmted showdown rol~ tall on .the
measure for ~Y. Stx ~av~nng
pcmoc;rats seeki~g consu.tuuonal
msulauon for Social Sccunty from ·
deficit-reduction efforts said the
GOP
had, notAoffered
enough... Sc·
· "W
- · all
~ ~ ""'"'
we can,
n·
· ate Mlljority Leider Bob .Dole, RKan .. eont:cded late Wednesday, a
month and a ·day after debate
bes.:ier fnlitleas beiund-the-scencs
. the dec'ISIV~
. VO te ,
• ·rts to gam
ef 10

Dole and his fellow GOP leadeti program's huge surpluses to help · nlng close to $200 billion an~ually, ·
"weren'tquite conceding defeat. But eliminate builget gajls.
by 2002. Lawmakers could suspend
"They are wanting really to loot the requirement by majority vote
they were already apportioning
blame for the failure of the heart of this Social Security trust fund," during wartime, and by a three GOP plans to slam the blllkes on charged Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.
fifths-margin at any other time.
To maximize the political rrice
federal spending.
The amendment, however, left
"If this constitutional amend· for Democrats, Dole said i the for later the hard work of cutting
ment fails, it's at his doorstep," amendment lost, he would exercise spending or raising taxes to balance
.Senate Budget Committee Chair- his right t&amp; force another vote dur' thebudgeL
ing the 1996 -campaign season.
m!lll Pete Domenici, R·N.M.. said
After the GOP election sweep
of Clinton, who waged a low-key Polls show more than 70 percent of last November, conventional wis·
Americans suppon the measure, dom was that the amendment
cam~gn against the measure.
although
the margin drops dramati• It wiU be they who decide
would ease through Congress after
cally
when
people are asked about five failed attempts-since 1982 and
whether the American people get
what they want," warned Sen . cUll that would be required in spcbe sent to the states for ratification.
Larry Cr8lg,
· R•Ielah o, re~emng
' to . cific spending programs.
Voters have expressed growing
"Let's see what happens when
Senate Democrats.
impatience ·Nith the government's
Over heated Republican &lt;denials, we get near the electton and the
sea of red ink, which exceeds $4.8 ·
Democrats responded that the GOP American people are a litde agitattriUion. Amendment supporterS say
failure to build Social Security pro- ed at Congress, as they should be,"
the measure would be the dose of
. Dole said.
,
pressure needed to force lawmaken
tections into the amendment
The amendment woultl require ' to fmally address the defiCit.
showed thm
they wanted
to use the elimination of the deficit. now run·
· ·
'

·'

r

�•

·

Commentar

Page 2-TheDallySentlnel

.

'POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. ~rsday,

March 2,

199~.

: r------------------T~~--------~-------~~--~
- ~----~~
0 ~--~~~-

Wedging and hedging

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stnet

'

Pomeroy, Ohio
,

•
•
•

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
· Pllblilber

..

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mauger

MARGARET I.EBEW
Conlroller

'R
LI!Til!RS 0~ o)INION ue wekome; They should lie l~a tbNl 300

..

word.! long. All ~~ 11'0 JUbjed 10 editing lllld mwt be aigoed with o1111e,
addreao and tel
umber. No unaigoed !etten will be publiahed. Lctt.en
abould be in good \ te, addressing iaauea, oot penooalitieo.
.
.

..

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

:The hot issues
.r-

.

: ByTOMRAUM
- Associated PreM Writer
WASHINGTON - From affmnalive action 10 abortion riglus 10 flag
. burning, the nalional JX?Iilical dialogue sudde!lly is. bristling_ wi"' dif~cult,
emouonally charged issues. And the pres1denual elecuon 1s sull 21
. months away.
'
·
Many of these items, including what President Clinton heatedly calls
: "wedge issues," were stirred up by the Republicans who seized Congress
:. from Democrats and by their campaign manifesto, the "Contract With
_.__, · America.' •
··
- - ·•
·
• And they've been kept in play as Clinton and Democrats shift't!teir
own footing in hopes of neutralizing the GOP offensive and regaining
· their political balance.
: Ye~ some of the thorniest issues, like abonion and a fierce Republican
· assault on affumative action prilgnuns, were not part of the HOIIS:I' GOP's .
• "contrac~" but are rumbling across the country in the gathering storm
that will be the 1996 presidenlial election.
It already is adding up 10 campaign seasoo of heavy issues, far more so
than usual.
·
. "People's antennae are up. I think that's what's reflected in all this
debate," said Andrew Kohut, director of the Times-Mirror Center for the
People and the Press. "It's going to be an eleclion about two things: What
kind of job has Bill Clinton don'e and what kind oC change do we want?"
Both of those echoed in .the Senate on Tuesday ~~ggled with an
amendment to the Constitulion that would require a
federal budget by 2002. .
'
..
.
Such an amendment long has been championed by conservatives, but
hadn't stood much chance untilthe poliucal climate in Washington
changed almost overnight
·
·
.
Senate Mlljority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas touched off another poliucal powder keg - affllDl8tive action - by suggesting earlier this year
that a quarter century of government measures designed 10 counter discrimination against minorities be reconsidered.
Republicans in the House began taking I whaclcs 81 such rrograms and
by the end of last week, Clinton himself had joined the cal for a IOp·IObouom review of racial preference programs. · .
. ·
. It was a difficult maneuver far Clin10n, who throughout his presidency
has tried - with little success - 10 silore up his base among traditional
Democratic liberals while coaxing back the moderateS who. helped elect

been defending things that can't be
defended?
Like choosing his administra·
tion by quota - by race, gender

It's time far the W-wonl, again,
but with a Clintancsque twi.u.
In Canada last week President
Clinton (according to The New
York Times) "acknowledged... that
he had ordered a review of (his)
administration's support for afftr,mative action programs." Indeed,
s,aid the president, "we shouldn't
be defending things we can't
defend. So it's pmc to review it,
discuss it, and 1!e straightforward
about it." But, said President
Straightforward, he was determined
to prevent the debate over aflirma·
live action "from becoming anoth·
er cheap, political, emotional
wedge issue."
, Goodn~. A wedge issue, cheap
and emotional. It's a statement in
search ·o f deconstruclion.
We? Just who is the "we;' that
Clinton refers to when he says,
"We shouldn't be defending thin~s
we can't defend"? It's not me, I II
, tc_ll you that In the realm of afftrmhtive action, are we then to
understand that Clinton himself has

Ben Wattenberg
and ethnicity - so that it would
"look like America"? Like supporting congressional redistricting
based on race?
· Like appointing and hiring an
all-star team of quotocrats to fill
the civil rights slots in this administration, hailing from the NAACP
Legal Defense Ftmd. the ACLU,
the National Center for Lesbian
Rights, the National Women's Law
Center, the Puerto Rican Legal
Defense ·and Education Fund and
the Mexican American Le~al ,
Defense and Education Fund'/ Like
appointing Mary Frances Berry as
chairperson. of the U.S . Commission on Civil Rights, she ,who has
written that "civil rights laws were
not passed to give civil rights to all
Americans .. .'' (but only) "10 disfa-

JANOT~~~

.

' \,

.u....

~
'%1~

' RUN FOR

PISiDhNT

IN'q6

bit strange to some. Atone point;
his Who's Who biography erro·
neOusly claimed he had a college
degree and had served as a deputy
assistant secretary of state. And he
did once introduce a bill requiring
. record companies to put labels on
rock 'n' roll albums warning listeners about messages that may be
heara when the records were
played backwards. And he did con·
tend that Bill Clinton was duped by
the KGB when he visited Moscow
as a student in 1970. He had no
evidence, he said, but he felt in his
"gut" it was true.
·
And yes, Bob is inclined to hysterical thetoric. He once excoriated
California Sen. Barbara Boxer's
contributors as "col&lt;e-snorting,
wife-swapping, baby-bnrn-out-of.
wedlock, radical Hollywood left."
Yes, one House colleague did say
he suffered from "rhe!Orical diar·
rhea." Yes, another lawmaker said
Dornan is a reverse E.F. Hutton
because when he speaksnobody
listens.
The fact is, Bob Dornan has
superb credenlials for the office of
president. Besides his military
record, he is a very religious fellow. When he got ~;aught houncing
a check in the House banking scan-

Utility fund ~returns are up

·::Today in history
By T)le Associated Press
·
. .
.
TQday is Thursday, March 2, the 61st day of 1995. Tllete are 304 days
left in the year.
TQC!ay's Highlight in History:
.
On MiliCh 2, 18'77, R-epublican Ruthmlird B. Hayes w111 declared win·
ner of the 1876 presid'ential election over Democrat Samuel J. Tilden,
even though Tilden had won the popular vote and was just O!Je eleaoral
vote Illy of vic!Ory. (A special commission awarded 20 disputed electoral
votes'IO Hayes, making him the winner.).
On this date:
In I 793, the fU'St president of the Republic of Texas, Sam Houston,
-~~om near Lexington, Va.
·
In 1836, Texas declared its indepeildence from Mexico. ·
·
In 1899, Congress established Mount Rainier Nalionall'lut.
In 1917, Puerto Ricans were granted U.S. citizenship. ·
In 1923, Time magazine made its debut
In 1930, author D. H. Lawrence'llied in Vence, France.
· In 1933, the motion picture "King Kong," starring Fay Wray, had its
worl~ premiere in New YOJt.
•
- · In 1939, Roman Catholic Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli was elected pope; ·
he IOC!k the name Pius XU.
.
.
- In 1939, the Massachusetts Lcgislatu.re voted to ratify the Bill of
RightS, 1.47 years after the fU'St 10 amendments to the U.S. Conslitution
had giXIC iniO effect
'
.
.
In 1943, the World War U Battle of the Bismarck Sea began.
·
In 1949, an American B-50 Supcrfonress, the "Lucky Lady II," land- . ed at Fon Worth, Texas, afrer completing the fmt nons!Op, round-theworld flight
·
In I9SS, the William Inge play "Bus Stop" opened at the Music Box
'fhl:alre in New YOlk.
· ·
In 1977, the U.S. House of Representatives adopted a strict code of
. ~~

-

Ten years ago: The government approved a ~ng teSt for AIDS ·

•

l
'

Does this mean,that the quotocrat
assault oo merit over the past quarter of a century is not important?
That opposing it is wx:lcan? That it
hasn't helped spawn some of the
most bizarre and corrosive forms of
politically correct multi-culturaiISIII?
.
.
And, anyway, how come the
president chose to ook:r a review of
affirmative action right now?
Hasn't he been in office for two
years? Could it be that the Republicans beat him 10 the punch and are
already brandishing a 32-page
report by the Congressional
Research Service, listing 160 federal laws and guidelines which grant
preferences to "protected" groups,
mcluding Tongans, Sri Lankans,
and in one case, Hasidic Jewish
Americans?
And why is affirmative
action/quotas/set-asides awedge ·
issue? Is it wron~ to try to explain
to the other party s voters that your
pprty can reJlresent them with
greater fidelitY?
Isn't that what's supposed to
happen in a C(HDpetitive democracy? Isn't that what C1inlon and the .
Democrats have done regardfng
abortion, trying to peel off prochoice Republicans?
And what is the political morality of the Clinton Special, the anti·
wedke wedge issue? It's an old and
neat trick: the accusation that your
nasty opponent is using a wedge
issue - becomes your own wedge
issue! But this time it involves a
nifty three-carom shot: accusing
your opponent of using a wedge,
using that charge as a reverse
wedge. all the while moving
toward your opponent's position!
Thus, the Clinton "review," I bet,
will lead to alleast a cosmetic rollback of affirmative action, and
hopefully more than that
This administration has plenty
to rpll back. And it will do so
. becljl\se of that great ·tool of real
demdcracy, the wedge.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
· low at lbe American Enler.prise'
Institute, Is tbe bost of tbe weekly
r,ublic television program,
'Think Tank."
(For information on bow to
communicate electrnnically witb
Ibis columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1800-827-63M, ext. 8317.)

dal, he said he had overdrawn his
account 10 pay for a shrine to the
Virgin Mary he erected in his back
yard.

And besides all that, he recently
told a Reuters reporter, be has been
. blessed with a gift for gab. "You
watch when I speak," ·he said,
watCh "how God has given me this
gift to communicate- to reach out
to people."
Like I said, this is America,
where every man's got a right to
run. So what if Bob only got.two
votes in a presidential preference
poll at. the Louisiana state Republi·
can convenlion. So what if he came
in fifth in a straw poll 81 the Conservative Political Action Conference, behind even Dan Quayle,
who had already announced he is
not going to run.
'
Just think of Bob Dornan as a
· niche candidate.
Now the lunatic fringe has
somebody 10 support.
.
. Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer fiH' Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
·
(For information on bow to ·
communicate electronically witb
tbls columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-63M, ext. 8317.)

•

world and in our own economy. want 10 ~Y it all out."'
There is nothing that can just be
Despite the changes within the
put in a safety deposit bnx and for- utility industry, Christensen still
gotten about"
considers utility stocks ·conservaEvans said competition ha~ tive investments.
'
come to the utility industry. Conse'.'Ulilities provide essenlial ser· .
quently, he sees some uncertainty vices
lilce electricity, gas for heat·
surrounding all aspects ~lectric, ing or telephone service," he said.
five years, ending Dec. 31, 1994, telephone and natural gas - of the "What are the altematives7 If you
·
.the annualized total return for this industry.
to invest in the stock marke~
Jon Teal, a spokesman at Lipper _want
·category was 6.52 percent; over 10
what oilier industries have less
years, it was 10.49 percent; for 15 agrees. "It used to be that you got rislcs?"
years, it was 11.01 percent. But- into a-utility fund because you were
these days, utility stocks, once looking for an inflation·protected
Here are this year's five top-perreferred to as "widow and orphan" dividend . The utilities would sit forming utility funds. Total return
stocks because they were .consid• down with their state regulators numbers are from Dec. 31, 1994,
ere&lt;l very conservative and safe, are and argue over, not .whether there through Feb. 16, 1995:
/ more complicated and have '90s would b!l a (dividend) increase, but ·
Colonial Utilities fund "A"
how much. Now, with the advent shares , 6.96 percent; Arnerica's
kinds oC:rislcs to them.
"There are no widows'_and of competition, the inflation-pro· Utility fund, 6.92 percent; Dreyfus
children's stocks anymore," said tee led dividend is sttucturally ques- Edison Electric Index fund, 6.91
Frazier Evans, senior economist at tioned."
percent; Colonial Utilities fund
Robert Christens~n. portfolio "B" shares, 6.86 pen:ent; Benham
Colonial Mutual Funds. "We're in
time of accelerated change in the • manager of "the Liberty Financial Uiilities Income ftind, 6.19 percent.
Utililies fund, said that last year the
Dian Vujovich is the aulbor or
FPL Group made histoty because it "Straight Talk About Mutual
that detected antibodies 10 the virus, allowing possibly contaminared was the fust utility to cut its diviFunds," wbicb Is published by ,
blood 10 be excluded from the 11Jood supply.
dend without having tO.
McGraw Hill, and a syndicated
Five years ago: M&lt;re than 6,000 drivers went on strike against Grey"They had the money. but just writer for Newspaper Enterprise
hound Lines InC. (the company, Ia,ter declaring an impasse in negotiatioos, chose 10 reduce (the dividend),"
fired the sttilcers). A grenede anaclc on a discotheque in Panama claimed said Christensen. "So we can't Association.
(For .information on llow to
the life of a U.S. soldier and injured 28 other people.
have the same degree of assilrance communicate electronically with
· One year ago: 1be government of Mexico and Indian rebels reaq_ac,d a that dividends are going to be
· !entatiye acqJrd .oo ~~ insurgent demands for the ending the rebellion, ' maintained because management tbis columnist and otbersl cnntact Am,rica Online by calling 1mcluding sweetliRII political reforms.
1
·
,
just might decide, 'Well, I don't 800-827-(i~,ext 8317.)
After a lousy year, utility .funds
are making a comeback.
Utility funds ended last year on
a sour note. Total return bX the end
of 1994 on the average utility fund ,
was down almost 9 percent,
according to Lipper Analytical Ser·
vices. In fact, of the 86 funds .in
that Lipper universe, noi one had a
positive return last year. That, how·
ever, seems to be changing.
Through Feb. 16, the year-IO-date
total return for that group was up
more than 4 percent
"If you look at what utilities
have done just since' the fiiSt of the
year, electric utili lies are on~ ?f ll!e
better perform in&amp;· groups, · sa1d
,Thomas M. Keresey, chairman of
Palm Beach Investment Advisers.
· Keresey said the sbOng numbers
show that utility invcsiOrS are buying yield and safety, and that
money is coming back into these

_Southern Ohio may get light snow tonight, Friday

OHI O Weather
Friday, March 3
Aecu-Weathe~ forecast for

By The Alloclated Press '
1be recli'lnltglnemperature on
Partly to mosdy cloudy skies are this dare at the Columbus weather
expected across northern Ohio station was 73, set in 1992. 1bc
tonight and again on Friday. In the · record low of zero was set in 1980.
southern half of the state, cloudy
Sunset today will be at 6:24
skies and a chance of light snow p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
will continue through Friday after- 7:02Lm.
.

noon.

Across the nation

Lows tonight generally will be
in the uw.encens and lower 20s.
Highs Fnday will be in the lower
and middle 30s•

• lcolumoosl37'

•

0

It snowed this morning over
parts of Oklahoma, Kansas and
Attansas and freezing drizzle lllld

I

. .

•••

snow fell over sections of Tcus.
The total snowfall in southern
Kansas this morning was estimated
at 6 to 8 inches. In Oklahoma, one
pcrsoo died Wednesday in a weath·
er-related traffic accident. A record
3.5 inches of snow fell in Oltla·
homa on Wednesday, breaking last
year's record of 2 inches se1 March
I.
More snow and temperatures in
the 20s were expected across the
both states today.
.
Snow also was forecast from
Wyoming 10 southeast C.olorado,
New Mexico and the southern
Appalachians. Up to 4 inches was
possible.
A combination of rain and higher elevation snow was expected
from California and Oregon to
southern Idaho and Utah, and the
western sections of Colorado and
New Mexico . The mountains of
southwest Colorado could receive
up to 6 inches today.
Wind chills as low as 30 below
zero were possible today from the
Dakotas to northern Maine.
Lingering light snow showers

rAXI

•

i

,intereSt-sensitive companies.
Historically, utility funds have
provided solid long-term results.
Lipper reported that for the past

Difln Vujovich

a

.

..

.

I

STA
TOMO

Hospital news

Area senior...

Meigs announcements

SPIRITUALLY THIRSTY

&amp;HUNGRY? .

---

Livestock
report

.

.....,.---

------.-·

..--,..--. -

Meigs ~MS logs 13 calls .

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE

-4~160

6141992 ·~

Marriage licenses

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE ·

arms and
deep.seat
cushioning . ·

Published every afternoon, Monday through
Fridl:ly, Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio, by !he
Ohio Vnlle)l l'ublishir\ Compnny/Mullimedia

Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·2156.
Second class pollt.age paid nt Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associattd Preu, and !he Ohio
Newspaper Auociarion.

PREMIERE
Thi s chaise delivers

POSTMASfBR: Send addreu corrr:ctio ns to 1

to-toe comfort wilh a thick
headrest, channel stitching
and
arms sure to
soothe you
completely .

The Daily Sentinel. Ill C'"ourt St:, PomCfoy,
Ohio 45769.

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.....

,

~

RUTLAND, OHIO

•

.i l

MAIN STREET

FINANCING AVAILABLE '

-

"
I

'I

a decreasing chance of rain show·
ers along the southern East COIISL .
Icy rain and snow flurries were
~:xpected over the Tennessee ValIcy.

CONCERN OVER CABS - Area senior dllzens are worried
STARTS
. abnut bow they will gel arOWid when the token cab service ends ·
s ....ny Pt Clolldy Cloud(
l&lt;t&gt;
March 31, said Harry Clark. Clark bas driven for Blue Stre11k Cab
TOMORROW
for the last four years. The elde-rly bave no other means or traas01995 Accu-Wealhat, lrw:.
Via Assodared Press GraphicsN61
portation, especlaUy if tbey bave no family in tbe a~rk !~!lid.
Here,
helps Pomeroy's Lula Hampton into the,cab.'tieatinel
~----Weather------ photo Clark
VETERANS MEMORIAL
by George Abate) '
. Wednesday admissions
Extended
forecast
South-Central Ohio
Robert Roush, Letart, W.Va:.; Edna
Salurday... A chance of rain or
Tonight...Cloudy. A chance of
Roush, New Haven, W.Va.; Dennis
snow.
Lows
in
20s.
Highs
35
10
4S
.
Continued from page 1
light snow after midnight. Low
~ Middleport
Sunday
...
A
chance
of
rain.
Lows
near 20. Chance of ~ow is 30 perWednesday discharges 35
to
40.
Highs
45
to
50
.
.
employs
seven.
people,
with
five
be affected by the loss of the taxi
cent. Light northeast winds.
Melvin
Morris, Pomeroy
Monday
...
A
chance
of
rain
service.
·
cabs.
Friday ...Light snow likely. High
ODOT gave Blue Streak three
"I really enjoy it," Clarlt said of
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
in the mid 30s. Chance of snow is early...Otherwise cloudy. Lows 35
to
40.
Highs
from
the
upper
40s
10
his
job.
"I
love
to
walk
in
at
1be
options:
.
· 60 percent.
March 1 discharges • Betty
lower 50s.
·
- privatize the operation, Denny, Jennifer Evans, Judith
Maples and put my arm around
which would cut off state funding;
them."
Saunders and Roberta Maidens.
- back out of the taxi service
1be Ohio DeparUnent of TransFeb. Z:Z birth - Mr. and Mrs.
portation has told Blue Streak it and make room for a new ,compa- Kevin Gibson, a son, of Ewin~n
lllUSI comply with the Americans ny. or,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pctne, a ,
nacle in Clitton, W. Va. The ser- with Disabilities Act and add
Smorgasbord announced
=-- continue the subsidy under and
daughter,
of Bidwell.
I
A Sunday smorgasbord will be vice will begin at 7 p.m. and a free another van with a hydraulic lift, the village's supervision for six
Printed
witb
permission.
·
held at the Lottridge Community will offering will be taken for the institute a drug testing program and months.
Center Sunday. 'the public is invit· Gideons.
This cab service and any taxi
· limit tokens accepted to 4,000 a
ed. Mults, $5.50, children under
company
could not surVive without
month, Snouffer added.
Dance to be held
11, $2.50.
the
govemmelll
subsidies - which
itself, this 4,00) lOken limit
C. J. and the Country Gentle- . willByeliminate
total
about
$160,000
each year, he
ihe company's profmen will play at a round and square
Athletic boosters banquet set
added.
.
The Meigs High School Athlelic dance 10 be held at the old' Ameii- its, be added.
·come and Be Fed With
Nearly all the people who ride
COLONY
THEATRE
Boosten winter sports banquet will can Legion hall, Middleport. There
in the cabs are on ftxed income, he
be held Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. in the is no .admission charge. The public added.
TONIGHT
_ Rev. Michael Pangio
Snouffer.' s company
Meigs cafeteria. Meat, rolls, drinks is invited to aUend .
FAR FROM HOME, THE
will be furnished. Parents are to
ADVENTURES OF YEI.lEIW
take two covered dishes, a veg· Soup and baked goods
DOG PG 7 p.m. Sunday, March- 5 at
etable lllld a dessert
'
· · Eagles Class of Asbu.ry United
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Methodist Church will have a soup
STARTING FRIDAY
Pomeroy Senior Ci~izen Building
Trio to perform
and bake sale Saturday from 8 to
The Billy Ward Trio will per· I :30 a.m. at the church in Syracuse.
fonn Saturday at the Clifton TaberCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 7 p.m. Sunday, March 12 &amp; 26
Ohio direct hog prices al selected
buying points Thursday by the U.S.
Old American Legion Hall
Department of Agriculture Marlcct
Units ·of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service logged News: '
on Fourth Street, Middleport
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
13 calls for assistance .Wednesday
'~-~
.
Barrows and gilts: mostly SO
446.0023 .
induding three transfer Galls. Units cents higher; demand light 10 mud·
responding included: .
erate.
."
· Contlnuea trom page •
MIDDLEPORT
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
for every 4,000 gallons ol w. ter
1:34 a.m., An Lewis SD'eei, Jim
36.50-37.50, a· few 38.00;
used. Also being considered is..a _ Casto, Veterans Memorial Hospi· points
plants 37.25·38.75. , · ·
discount for senior citizens,. he tal;
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
said.
3:23 a.m., S. Third Avenue, points 32.50-36.50.
.
The meters consist of a small 3- · Doris Haynes, .Pleasant Valley
Prices from The Producers Liveinch by 3-inch object sel ·in ground Hospital;
stock Associatioo:
: which can be read with an electron3:41 p.m., Middleport VFD, S.
Callie: 1.00 to 2.00 lower.
ic device called an interrogaiOr. ·
Second Avenue, report of a strucSlaughter steen: choice 65.00Thorn!On said the meten should ture fire, Pomeroy VFD assisted;
72.50; ~~elect60.00-65 .00.
be installed by September with
5:20 p.m., S. Fourth Street,
Slaughter heifers: choice 64.00.
work starting in July.
Dorothy Sedewick, Holzer Medical 70.00; select S9.0Q.64.00.
"People will get water at the Center;
Cows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower; all
existing rate until January," Thorn·
7: 14p.m., Elm Street, Dino cows 44.50 and down.
KENSINGTON
ton said. "This gives us an idea of Hart, VMH.
BuDs: higher; all bulls 53.00 and
Calmialf'Comfort.
how much water people are using
RACINE
down.
Ease back in this
9:46 a.m., Stiversville Road,
in their homes and gives them a
Veal calves: steady; choice
recliner and enjoy all
Goldie Lawson; VMH.
chan~e to find and repair water
It has to offer, a posh
135.00 and down.
. RUTLAND
leaks.''
tufted back. soft rolled
Sheep and lambs: steady; choice
7:53 p.m., Page Street, Goldie wools 73 .00-78.50; cho1ce clips
arms. and·a lhickly
We plan 10 offer leak insurance
padded seat. Also
Bryant, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
10 residents too, he added.
80.00-85.25; feeder lambs 80.00
has heat massage.
SYRACUSE
In addition 10 installing meters,
and down; aged sheep 44.00 and
Available in vinyL
8:09 a.m., Padc Road, Annabelle down. ·
workers will place a 6-inch, l ,SOQ.
foot-long water line along Yellow Davis, VMH;
11:34 a.m.. Karr Street, Henry
Bush Road.
.... a. Beal' Company
Hill,
VMH; .
This will replace an existing 2·
' TOPPER
The OhiO Rwer M:64141pcrt.
""" .."""'
"""~
4:40 p.m .. Third Street, Edna
inch line, ThomiOn said. Residents
0H
Comtort surrounds you from
in that area have been plagued by Roush, VMH. '
the tufted back to the thick
low water pressure, he explained.
Chock out our lnlerelltin4&amp; &amp;: unJquc
seat cushion and the
•hOp. •We've p Clfta ror kJda of AU.
soft P•llow arms.
"This is. an area of town which
acc-r Pr1cea atart. at 99 c:~enta.l
=~
has plenty of growth potential," he
said.
The following couples were
Also included in the plans is a
new.well for the water ~ystem.
granted marriage licenses recently
"We're going to drill the ftrst in the Meigs County Probate Court
well in 45 years," he said.
of Judge Robert Buck.
Bids on the well and water line
Receiving licenses were:
project will be advertised in about Michael Allen Tillis, 36, and April
PEGASUS
three weeks with wort expected' IO Jo Harris, 25, both of Rutland; MilRestlul repose .
start by May I, he said.
REMEMBER
ford C. Wyant Jr., 52, and Betty
Head-to-toe comfort is
it's never too late to have a happy
Pauline Wyan~ 52, both of Albany;
at your fingertips in
childhood!
·
this plush chaise
Steven William Clay, 44, and Kar·
Mon-Fri 9-4
Sai 10-S
r--o~- recliner. Fealurlng a
The Daily Sentinel rie Marie Hommen, 30, both of
Layaway available. ~
channel·stitch
Albany.
(USPS 2,13·'160)
•
back. wrapped

&gt;

I

were expected east and south of
lakes Erie and Ontario, along with

Racine..• -

B-1 Bob guns for the prE!sidency
a

..

l!l:61tN ~J.D

I AM NOT
OOiNG TO

bi":::alifomia voten are likely to vote next 'year on an initiative to ban .
' racial preferences in employment and education, drawing further auention
: to the affmnative nction issue.
·
·
It's crying shame, the way fighter pilot. OK, so the accidents
·•
The divisive-issues pot was stirred-even_more as Sei!S. Phil Gramm of
people
have been scoffmg at Bob he was mvolved in occurred during
Texas and fonner Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander 'kicked off their cam- Doman's
plans tq nm for president domestic training flights. It wasn't
paigns for the Republican presidential nominalion.
·
This
is
America. Anybody can his fault that the damn Korean War
Gramm promised that one of his fiiSt acts, it elected, would .be an run, even the
red-bearded Republiexecutive order abolishing affirmative action programs. Alexander, who
can
congressman
from California
Josenh Spear
announced his candidacy Tuesday, declMed war on the "arrogant who has a reputation
for
invective
1"
empife" of federal government and vowed 10 abolish the Education
and
a
tendency
to
shriek
and
the
ended
before
he could get there.
De)l3fUI!ent he once headed.
disconcerting
habit
of
eating
desks
And
he
talks
(;lften
abnut how he
Ab&lt;iri.ion wasn't a bi~ issue in last November's eleclions, nor was it
and
spitting
out
the
screws
while
he
was
almost
captured
by the Commentioned in the GOP ' contract." But it's since been reignited, in part
..
mies as a journalist in Vietnam.
by Clinton's selection and defense of Dr. Henry Foster as surgeon gener- tallcs.
OK, so I'm exaggerating a little. And by damn, those who have not
al.
.
Anti·abortion groups rushed fcnoard to try 10 turn the Senate vote on I think he only eats desks that are served have no right 10· hold high
the Tennessee gynecologist into a vote for or against abortiOii rights.
· glued because the screws chip his office.
·
·
Fonner Rep. Tom Downey, DT(Je fire was fueled by Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition, who teeth.
At
bottom,
Bob
Doman
is
a
ttue
N,Y.,
is a perfect example. He was
wanied Republicans that "pro-life and pro-family voten" would balk if
patriot.
Just
the
other
day,
he
erupt·
exempted
from the m1litary draft
the 1996 GOP ticket contained an abortion-rights candidate.
ed
on
the
House
floor
with
a
tirade
for
medical
reasons, but that did
On the Capitol steps Tuesday, 1,500 people gathered 10 show support
against
Bill
Clinton.
Bob
was
irrinot
impress
Doman. In 1985, he
for a constitutional amendment to ban Oag burning. Talk abnut an amend·
tated
because
Bill
had
honored
a
grabbed
Downey
by· the tie and
ment to pennit school prayer is once again in vogue.
war
hero
during
the
State
of
the
called
him
a
"draft-dodging
. Democrats accuse Republicans of victimizing children by trying 10
Union address. "Does Clinton wimp.'' Bob later complained to
elimi~ate the national school lunch program. And. a debate rages on the
think putting a Medal of Honor · reporters that "there is a covey of
future of public broadcasting. .
· With so much nastiness out there, it was· no wonder that Clinron's winner up there isn't going to members who assiduously avoided
voice was heavy with san:asm as he grumbled about the GOP efforts 10 recall ... that he avo¥Jed the draft miliwy service - mostly through
pass lhe balanced-budget amendmenl.
. three times?" he thllljdered. "Clln- student defennents."
Yes, I know a military service
"I've been here 770 days, and I want the members of the other party 10 ton gave aid and comfort to the
requi~ement for el.ected officials
propose and vote for something that will reduce the deficit That has not enemy."
The
Defense
Department
sel·
would force the retirement of Newt
happened yet," CliniOn said. "And I ')'ant them 10 wOJt with me. I will
dom
suggests
a
project
Dornan
Gingrich
and Phil Gramm and
work with them in good faith to do more. That's ... what·the people hired
doesn't
regard
as
worthy.
Where
do
three-fourths
of the new House of
iJs 10 do. They want us 10 !Jialre the decisions.'~
you think he got the nickname "B- Representatives, but hey, Bob's
l Bob' '1 And he never slOps telling entitled 10 his standards.
. EPITOR'S NOTE- Tom ·Raum covers the White.Hoilse for Tbe
us
about his brushes with death as a
I am aware that Bob may seem a
AssQI!iated Press.

•,•

•

vored groups (such as) blacks Hillpanics and women"?
Like
the
SO percent
women/minority quota promulgal·
ed by his appointees on the Federal
Communications Commission, for
1,000 new lice11ses, at 60 ,J?Crcent
below-market value? ' L1ke his
health care plan which pushed for·
ward minonty docton to train for
medical specialties while other
doctors would be disproportionate•
Iy tracked into general practice?
Like his administration's SUJlllOrl of
retroactive enforccmeru of the 1991
Ci vii Rights Act (rejected by the
Supreme CotD't, 8-1)7 Like his Justice Department's demand that
banks approve loans f.x minorities
at below-market rates, with grants
to cover down Pllyments (which
has the effect of raising interest
rates on non-minorities)?
Moreover, why is lliking up the
issue· of affirmative action/setasides/preference/proportional.ism/quotas - "another cheap,
political, emolional wedge issue"?

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 2, 1995

.. I.

11
W~rehouses

~-

�•

The Daily Sentinel
Sports
.
c
U LA beats USC -to get NCAA tourney bid; UK also wins

Thursday, March 2, 1995

On the baseball labor scene,

Thurscl8y, March 2, 1995
Paga

In

25 college hoops,

· The top-ranked UCLA Bruins
became the first or 29 teams to
receive an auwmatic berth in the
NCAA tournament with yet another convincing victory, an 85-66
decision over Southern Ca I on
W~nesday night.
Since the Pac-10 doesn't have a
post-season tournament, its regular-

Freshman Toby Bailey was the
Soutllem Called 39-38 at half- ern Cal.
In other games involving l'liJiked
hero in the Bruins' lOth straight time on 50 pen:ent shooting. Bailey
vicwry that gave tllem their first had a steal and two baskets in a 12- · teams Wednesday night, it was No.
sweep of Southern Cal since I 988- 2 run to start the second half, and S Kenruclcy 97, Georgia 74: No.6
89. He had a career-high 24 points he had eight of UCLA's 19 points • Maryland 94, Duke 92; Auburn 76,
and grabbed nine. rebounds as in a run that gave the llnii'ns a 69- No. 14 Mississippi State 69; No. 16
Oklahoma 7 I, No. 24 Iowa State
UCLA pulled away in the second 51 lead witll 7:39 to play.
. , Ed O'Bannon, who;&gt; was rested 68; No. 17 Purdue 92, Iowa 85:
half.
.. The loss was tlle 12th straight for the final4:04, and J.R. Hender- Colorado 81, No. 19 Missouri 76;
for tlle Trojans (7-19, 2-14), four son each ad.ded 14 points for No. 21 Alabama 69, Mississippi
shy of tlle school mark set in 1976- UCLA. Lorenw Orr and Jaha Wil- 50; SL John's 82, No. 22 Syracuse
77.
.
son each had 16 points for Soutll- 78; and No. 23 Georgetown 96,

Scoreboard
NBA standings

1•Milmi... ... 1S
01110 ......... .13
E. M;ch ....... 12
BGSU ......... .IO
fhU St. ........ 10
Tole.do ........... 9
W, Mich ........ &amp;

. Ala.ntk Dh1•iwl

. .!!: .1. t&lt;L

Otlando .................. 43

13 .761
19 .648

New York ........ ...... 35
Ho.too ................• ,22"
New Jeney ............ 22
Miami .................... 21
Phil.odtlpl&gt;io .......... .16
W11hif1alorl ... ;........ l4

33
35
34

.400
.386
.312
.216
.2!15

4()

41

!lJ!
7

21.5
2U

14

. Medina Hil_...d .51, fl)'ril Ca&amp;h.

.(.J(i

5

436
.3%

lb
1M

Minnc.aau .............. 15

.268

25 .5

.fi98

2

.754
.698
.630
.566
.519
.296
.193

. 1.5
II ·
\3.5

25.5
J2

W11hington 1 2S,Ba~t~ 124 (20'1)
Dctn1it 92. Indiana 79
Chicallo Ill. Ml.,i 8S ;
,,
I'hocnu: 101, L.A. lahn. 93
MiMeaot.l91, Sn'Tarnento 87

Friday's games
PhUadelphia at N.Y. Jhnaerl, 7:30

Tonl&amp;ht'~ games
Chicasoat New Ymk, 7:30p.m.
At.lanu at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.

CLEVElAND 11 Ddlu. 8:30p.m.
9:30p.m.

SeltUc vii. L.A. Clippm It Anaheim.

t

• CaW'., I0:30p.m.

~ollipolio.50,

Mcdain 70, Wa11er!y 38

59

Dl•lllon n

a.or........ 96, S.U..IWl92

Cin. Plmcii-Muian 68,1hmil100 Rou

Chy 74. CenL Connccti·

49

cutS..61
Nul SL ?j:, Ohio SL 61
Sa. John '182, Syracuae 78

Cath. Sll
Uc. Calholic 66, Aahtabula Harber 45

A)ab.ma 69, MialiNipPi SO
Aubum 76, MWLuipp1 SL fiJ
Clamtoo 62, N. Carolina Sl. 4.5
Kenwoky 97, Oeo.P 74 .
Mll)'l.rw194, Duke 92

Philodelp/Uo ...... I I 2
Tampa Bay .. .;... 8 10 2
NewJcncy ....... 7 7 4

II S4
II 54

l ~ orida ........... ... 7 II

2

16

44 . 40
41 511

W•ohini'OO ...... 310 5

II

37

II

14 4 2

30 10

Mon.,..!... ........ 7 I 4
Boft'olo ............. . 7 7 3
Hallford ............ 110 3

2 12 3

O.~wo..

tl 40
17 l6
17 .51
7 36

51

Pwduo92,1owtiS

IL LouiJI 17, DcPau161

Southwnt
Tcua AAM 67, Soulhlm MM. 64
Tc.u•l'a:h l-4, Oral Robcna 71

FarW..t
Colorado Ill. MiJinUri 76 '

N. Ari7.M.I 68, S. Ut.ah 67
UC I Mne 19, CS Northridg£ 73
lJCLA IS, S..,.hem Cal M

Tourn·amenl1
Mldof.utcrn Allllt&amp;lc Conftrt:ftCI

flrll roun-d

llcUw.,. Sf 100, Fl~.do AolM 73 .

Nort~l canrrnnee

Q.unurnnall
Fairld&amp;h Dickinsrin .73 , Monmouth,

N.J. 71
Mariat91. Wagner7.5

Mount St 1 Mary't, Md. 61, Long II·
land Uni11 . 67
Rider 63, Sl. Francia, Pa. 62

1·. Who is Ihe only·major leaguer to

be named Rookie . of the year and
M.V.P. in the same season?
A. Barry Bonds
B. Fred lynn
C. Johnny Bench
2. Who is I he NBA's all ·lime

Pain-Bust-R/1 is Yhe best'

,

leading scorer?
A. Michael Jordan

-·-- -

s~ . '"""'

~_:,:rthrillis

..

B. Will Chamberlain
C. Kareem {\bdui-Jabbar
3. Who holds lhe N.Y. Yankees
Miskey Mantle
B. Babe Rulh
time leading rusher, who is 2nd'!

B. O.J. Simpsons
C. Jim Brown

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CARMEL, IN (Wire Bulletin) Read what our users
If you suffer from lhe pain of
have to say:
arthritis, rheumatism or bu~ltis,
there's a small company in
"I use PAIN BUST because I
Carmel, Indiana that manusuitor from tension in my back
factures a product that you
and shoulders. I can~ praise your
should'try.
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ointments, but they donY seem
The product is called Pain-BustAll, and It Ia a soothing medlcaled to work as last nor lest as long.
· Thank you. Thank you . ..
cream that you simply maosage
Thank ~I"
C.K.F.
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I rubbed some PAIN BUST on my
begins - bringing inatant reliet.
sore aching knee. 15 minutes later
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.I fell sound asleep and woke 8
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Though the product is not widely
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BUST lOng ago/'
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arthritis in both hands and leer.
·to It In tact, according to com·
On damp, cold days I usrJd to go
pany president Bryan Auer , . ,
our of my mind with pain. Not
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anymore,
I now enJoy peace
producl than any of the other 33
ol.mind
and
pain free joints.
products in our line! And people
Rospectlu(ly,"
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write us everyday 1&amp;11/Rg us that

JU.ce 10. Beylor 61

Wisconsin $
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so
42

Special New cream
for arthritis .

Oklahoma 11, r""'. s' 61

SIXTH STREET

BULLETIN BOARD·

S2
60

Indiana Firm Discovers:

Mldwl!lt

. .

in the final 25 sec.onds. Dwighl
Brown had 25 points to lead the
Pirates ( 16-11, 7-10).

Allanllc Dlwlllon

SL 8,3, Sam Hwatm Sl. (,6

E lllinoil17, y.,.......... S' II
Konou SL 7S, Ndnob7l
Midlll'ft II , Norlh.......,l\4

/0

point range in his final home game,

eac~ had 19 points for Georgetown,
wh1ch made five of six free throws

Bi.lhoo IWril NMinl bteU 001ch.

K....U.s Aluo:60, Ftanklin 37 ·

Nicholls SL 107, S~ F. Au•lln 71
Sou&lt;h Carotin• 69, LSU 62
TcnnOIIOC 62. Vandetbilt 58
W. lllinoiiiO. Tro)' SL 74

No. 23 Georgetown 96
Seton Hal192
•.
Jerome Williams scored 2 7
points as the Hoyas (18-7, 11-6 Big
East) won !heir fourth str"ight .
Freshman Allen Iverson and senior
John Jacques, 5-for-5 from thrcc-

"A Comp,Lete Line Of Hardware"

ClllCAOO BEARS : Sisncd Chril
Zorich, dcfmliVCI tactic._ 10 I threc·)'CIIf
cmutc&lt;.

Dooton .............. IO 6 2 22 .SO

Fairlea 76, Nonnn fiJ
Fircland•67.Bf'Clbvillc 59

Orioles owners Peter Angelos said. ers from replacement by oUter for"We know what we are doing is eign workers."
.
right and proper."
Toronto is barred rrom using
Montreal, meanwhile, received replacements by Ontario provincial
permission from lhe Canadian gov- law, and the Blue Jays have not
ernment to use replacements at asked for special consideration.
Olympic Stadium.
Toronto has asked the American
In Ottawa, the Canadian lmmi- League for permission to play reggralion Department reversed course ular-season home games in
and said it wouldn't enforce a regu- Dunedin, Fla., where it has a 6,218Jation barring replacement workers. seat stadium for spring training
from obtain visas to enter Canada.
games.
"Tbe original intent of this reg"We'll have a decision by the
ulation was to protect Canadian end of the week," AL pres•dent
workers involved in a labor dispute Gene Budi~ said.
against replacement by foreign
· In Flonda, 20 players left the
k
•
1
·
·
Expos
camp at Lantana and 16
wor ers,
mm1grat10n
spokeswoman Pam Cullum said. were booted out of the Cincinnati
"We were fondin$ in this situation Reds complex at Plant City.
that it was prot.ee'ung foreign work-

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~ ..............

Kaulon 69, Manwa Cte~twood 51
Edgewood 72, KinJ• 51
Elyri1 W. 53, Mcd1n1 Buckeye 47

South

FootbaU
Na,_l Foolball .......

. Nord!ea&amp;l Dlvblon
Piu.bwJh ......... 14 3 2 30 II

Clc. Dtnediclinc 71, Mentor Lake

.

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.Cin . McNicholu 58, Cin. Roser D•·
coo 52

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lame.~

BOS·TON CELTICS : Siancd
Blackwell.~, to a

0

Union officials met witll minor
leaguers for the third straight day,
tllis time in Phoenix. The union's
executive board also decided to pay ·
the way home for any minor lea·
~uers kicked out of camp for refusmg to play exhibition games.
.
"They're in a hot spot, and it's
not of their own action or their own
doing,".Fehr said.
The strike wiped out its first
games of 1995, witll the American
8.11d'Nationalleagues fonnally canceling 26 exhibition games. Twelve
involved Baltimore. which refuses
to use replacements or play against
strikebreakers.
·.·we have made it perfectly
clear that we are willing to play
games witll only minor leaguers,'_'

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Soaker Spray Wand or Rainwand

ATLANTA HAWKS: Sianed Enni•

NHL standings

. Shaker lit.~ . 69, Oc. Hay 42
Spring. North 82, Sidney 61
S1smpviUe 74, EJ)'ril 72

BuD'alo 99. Valpar~.!Jo IS

.

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Wuhlnaton 33
"Reynoldob"'' 114, Oohonno 49

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cmlf&amp;\
,;
)
- Nitloiiil Lii ue
~
- SAN PRANC!SCO-SIANT.S : R lealled Pat Pclllty, pitcher.

.

National B11ketball Auodatlon

lle.th 48, Utica44
Mincnl Ridac 48, Lwiavillc Aquin11
44
.
Saline~~ville Soulhem S9, Columbiana
Cratvicw

Oc. Eut 74, Cle. Collinwood 61
Col. l~• rmoor 57, Col. l!a~t 43
Cuy•hoga l1allit 63,Akroo N. 49
' EL~C:Ud Ill, MadiJm 60
· lAkewood 49, Lorain Adm. King 211
.,Mu1illon hckaon 54, Mauillon

men's scores

INDIANS : Sianed

Basketball·

Dl•lalon W
fmleriok10wn 6!, Arnando&lt;J....-

64

NCAA Division I

CLEVELA~D

Dlwlllon D
Avoo Lake 39, Olmated FaU. 3~
Oarfidd JILl. Trinilv 90, Lorain ·Adm. ·
Kin 29
· . '
· .:.._
Vinton£0..40- -- - - - -

.
lll¥blqn I
Akron Cent.·Howcr79, Cloverleaf 41
Jleo,....... 56, Sprin~ Solnh S3
Clc. Glenville 68, Cle. Lincoln-Wan

Milwaukoc at 8011100, 7:30p.m.
Philtddphi• at New Jmcy, 7:30p.m.
lndUru 11 Waahington, 7:30pm.
Damit at Allanta, J 30 p.m
lloullOrlll Minnctou, ip m.
S.-uJe II Phocnii, 1. p.m.
Otlando at San Ant.ooio, !:30 p.m.
Milmi at Denver,? p.m.
Sacnmcnto at L.A. Lalter11, 10:30 p.m.
Olarloue n Oolden St.ate, 10:30 p.m .

Baseball
Amtrleln Lague

~

Tournaments

Friday's games

Transactions

49
W....mlle N. 49, w......,;u, s. 44
W0011er6l, Wadawor\h 31

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Otatlou.c at Ponland, 10 p.m.

· p.m.
Anaheim •• Dallaa, &amp;:30 p.m.
Chicaso at Edmgmon. 9 :30 p~.

nad~Julicnne

DlwldOfl W
,, .
t'lr.l round
C.piw 74, Wuh. &amp; Jcir. 5o
Dc!iancc 80. Wiucnbcr&amp; 5&amp;
Mount Unim 70, Ohio Wt.~~leyan 63

-ktt....

American
WINNlPEO
: Miped RLIII Komaniu.k. lc:C\ wins. 1o Sprinafield of lhc

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Vancouver at Calply. ?:30 p.m.

£IJ, Cin. St Bernard 60

W. ChCIItcr Lakall .SJ, Day. Chami•

NCA~

'

Greenhouse and Garden Sale

SanJ0110atToromo, 7:30p.m.

Plcl&lt;erins&lt;on 61, up.., A&lt;ling~a~ 11
Sidney 56, Cin. McAuley 48

· · -- -Toornl!m-enlli

Peake, left wina, from Porlland of lhc

Leo~i.ADELI'IIL\ fl. YERS': RmoUod

wu.upo," o.a.il, 7:30p.m.

&lt;on

lll.t.IMI
Canton McKinley S4. N. Canton 38

Nun-conference action
NOUtl O.mc86, Xavier {Ohio) 73

Ul.lh..9i,~Gulden.St.a.t.cJIS ..:.- ~

66

Nalloullloc:keJI...uaut

OTTAWA SENATORS: Rcullcd
S1cvc l..uvl.x:hc, cm\a', hom Prince Ed'Watd bland of the American Hockey

Flo.Wui0w.ddphio. 7o30p.m.

Tournaments

Mldwalern Colleaj1tt Conrertntt
USa11c 81. Oevtland St. 73
Wrisht St. 67, Detroit 54

. Wednesday's scores

57

WASHINaTON CAPITALS : R.e·
c.Uod Jim ean,.. ao&amp;h:ender, and Pa&amp;

,

Wuhinaton· at N.Y . lallnden; 1:JO

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Mid-Continent Canf6tnt::e
't'uunpLOwn S,t. i3, E. Jllinoi• 58

Sl

Hockey

&lt;he....,..Oonalllo&lt;keyl.oa..,.

p.m.

Portamouth Notre Dame 69, New

0 1110 65, ll. Michip_n 45
Toledo IS, CenL Mkhigltl 66
W. Michigan 86, Akron 68

42

tN

fllANCISCO 49ERS : Ro-oi"""'

loYillo."""'"" bo....

New Jcncy n BortDn, 7:30p.m.
Pinob&lt;lroh "Bull'olo, 7:30p.m.
T.~~nJ'I R,y ••-~wa, 7:~ p.m.

BaU Sl91, Kent 89

4

45
Sl
69
61
70

S~

Derok

be the best OPtJOrtunity to make a
deal," Toronto s Paul Molitor said.
Meanwhile, the exhibition season - and replacement ball opened with the California Angels
beating Arizona State 13-5 in
Tempe, Only 350 fans were in the
stands ·at gametime, and about
I .300 showed up in all.
"This is my first replacement
game," said Mark Werner, 30, of
AhwaiUicee, Ariz. "I've been associated with some bad teams but
I've never worn a bag before.'.'
Owners .vowed to stage the
replacement games despite tlle difficul!ics.
. "I_ suppose they'll go ahead
w1th tt no matter how silly it is,"
union head Donald Fehr said

:rest of the way and trailed 81-51 . Cyclones {19-9, 5~8), who lost for the second half.
goal over tlle final 5:42 to close a
:with 6:24 1eft. Carlos Strong of the the seventh time in nine games-·
. St. John's 82
76-67 deficit. Scott's two free
~ulldogs scored all 21 of his points all!O ranked teams. Iowa State had
No. 22 Syracuse 78
tllrows with 40 seconds left were
on the second half.
. a final shot to tie, but Fred
James Scott scored eight of his the game-winning points. Michael
, ~o. 6 Maryland 94, Duke 92
· Heiberg, who had 16 points, failed 26 points in the final 90 seconds as Lloyd had 20 paints for the visiting
: ~ Smitll was good enough to to beat the buzzer on a three-point the Red Storm {13-12, 6-11 Big Orangemen (18-8, 11-6) •
'Offset the absence of Gary attempt mat missed badly.
East) held Syracuse without a field
~illiams_ as.the M;ary.land coa7h
No.17 Purdue 92, Iowa 85
.was hospttal1zed wttll pneumoma.
The Boilermakers (21-6, 12-3
· :Sm•tll scored 40 points, the last two Big Ten) won their fifth straight
pn a follow shot at tlle buzzer as and moved into a first-place tie
'VIsttmg Maryland (23 -5, 12-3 with Michigan Stale as Cuonzo
ACC) set a school record for Martin had six three-pointers
Atlantic Coast Conference victories among his season-high 29 points.
and moved within one win of its Purdue used ·a 17-0 run to take a
forst regular-season title since 1980. 91-78lead with 38 seconds 10 play.
Smtth was 15-for-25 from the field Jim Bartels and Chris. Kingsbury
and grabbed 18 rebounds. Chero- led the visiting Huwkeyes (17-10,
kee Parks, w~o had 20 points ~or 7-8) witl121 points each.
tlle Blue Devtls (12-16, 2-13), Ued Colorado 81, No.19 Missouri 76
the game 92-92 with two free
Donnie Boyce scored 27 points
tllrows w1th 29 seconds left.
.and grabbed 10 rebounds as the
Bring your jewelry in for a free
Auburn 76
Buffaloes (14-1 I 4-9 Big Eight)
estimate. It often takes· very little
No: 14 Mississippi St. 69
won their third straight and sent
to make worn or damaged jewelry
The Ttgers (15-!0, 7-8 SEC) Missouri {18-7, 7-6) to its fourth
swept the season series and are tlle consecutive loss. The visiting
look just like new.
only
. to beat tlle Bulldogs (19- Tigers, who had won the last six
6, I I
on tl1e last 5 1/2 weeks, a · meetings in the series, trailed 79-76 '
~pan
!0 games..Pat Burke had a when Paul O'Linney mis sed a
car~c -h1gh 21 poonts. for Auburn,
three-pointer and Mlick Tuck made
!'h•le _ ochte No~tsa.dded 10, twa free throws witll 18 seconds
onclud~ng Sl lri!l8 ..
. throw~ m left. O'Linney finlshl)d with 25
~he ftnal t ·6 mt tcs. Eroc.k
points.
pampier I
e visiting Bulldogs
No. 21 Alabama 69
_. ___w
_._l:'th
:::::.l:.;9 points_and !8_rebounds.
~-Mississippi SO ___.:...._·
~
No.l6 Oklahoma7J
Jason Caffey had 17 points and .
..,_-- . - - No. 241owa St..li8
12 rebounds in-his fmal home- ·-:::-:.:..~•-~: Ryan Minor scored 21 points as for the Crimson Tide (20-7
lh.e visiting S~ers .(22-~. 9-4 Big SEC), who won 20 games for tlle
E1ght) won the1r stxth m a row, ninth time in 11 seasons. John
four over ranked teams. Hts two Jackson had 15 points for Ole Miss
· (ree throws with 33 seconds left (8-17 3-12) which shot only 35
gaye Ok!ahoma a 70-~ lead. Julius perce~t from 'the field for the game,
Mtchallk had 19 pomts for the while Alabama shot 61 percent in

ri&amp;bl WJrll; liDd Jaa llanm, cld'-eman.
ln&gt;m Comwoll of tho Amaice Hoctey
Loa
.
JOSE SIIARX.S: IteoallodT,_
Robina, p)taMier, fn:.n Kanaa City of

cm~yeu can.lrldl.

Tonight's games .

Green 40

Miami 82, Bo wlin$ Grem 76

63

.

NEW OIU.EANS SAINI'So a...;"""'
Kidl Balkin, lioo)n end, TJ1'!"' Johnooo,
wide reoeiwr; lftd Alan Kline, ~ L0

discussions, tl1e sides have avoided
n.umbers thus far this weelc. Ne~ouarors spend their time talkong
about the relationship between a
luxury cax, free agency, salary arhitration and revenue sharing.
"We got to the heart of lhe matte~ on a number of subjects," Selig
SBJd.
Despite the lack of apparent
progress, the sides said they will
remain at tlle bargaining,table. Color ado Rockies chairman Jerry
McMorris and management lawyer
Rob Manfred met Wednesday night
with union lawyers Lauren Rich
and
Wemer, but no breakthro-Michael
h
· ug soeeurred.
"The next two, three days, ·
maybe tl1rou8h lhe weekend ... may

\ Top 25 action ... ...:.&lt;c_on_lin_ued_frorn_P,;.::age.:...4~)_ _ _ _ _..:.__ _-:----:--::--------:-:-...,..,..,::---~------'----

Loa-

QUEBEC NORDIQUE"S: Recalled
~ ~ow. Ptcndcr; l&gt;wlyne Norria,

AMhoim 3, Chi&lt;oll" I

a.r.

Willilm~bJ.rj

51

of tho...........

- Wednesday's seores

Beaver Eutcm 7S,lkm.loc:k Miller 65

. Dc.tm Gtmw~ 61

--

Mike ar-lly, = 1 , fnlm Henhey

multi·

N.Y. Ranaas 5,JlutCard 2
~I. T""P' Boy 2
o.n.. 5, &amp;honloa 3

8rill.oll9. AahLibul.ll SL Juhn 71
Lowell rille 53. Batin Cera..- Wmem
RCICNC 52
&gt;,
Columbiana 60, Scbrina McKinley SI
Mdlonold 60, .......,..30
Cin. SLmmitS3, On. Hillcrat 35
Fai.rfield 66. badwn W•w:m 46
Kid ....
63, Lake Ridp """· 41
Por1amouth E. 57, Franklin Furnace

Re~ular.season action
Mld-Amtrlcan Confertnct

Pacinc Dlvblon

60
53
61

Divllloft.IV

· ;

n

S4
Anaheim ........... 611 1 13 41

Anno 68, M.....,_.. 49
Avon 60, Oe..lnod.epmdcncc.59

Ohio women's
college scores ·

!lJ!

21 59
15 52
IS 5S

redlkDI•ilkNI
10 6 3 2l
Sonl... ........... I 9 2 II
Jldmon..., ____ , .. 7 II 2 16
v................. s 7 6 16
'-"" An&amp;eia...... l 9 4 14

You. Mooney 67. Unit.ed Local4.S

Ai:mn it CBiL MichfS•n

UL1h .......... ., ......... ..41 16
San Antoni o ........... J7 16
lf nWI IUn .................J.S '20
Denver ...................24 31
l)aUu .....................21 32

44

c.tauY ............

Norwayne 64, T\Ulaw 41
Rocky Kiva Unhertlll W . 69, Black
Rivan
TWic.lfiWII VaL 6\, M.lvem .53

Tolodo at E. Michisan

Mldwell Uh·l•lon

SS

Mineral Ridge 48,. Louihille Aqulnu

.

Deauit .............. 12 s 1 25 61
SLLouio ........... ll S l 25 69
QUail" ............ 12 6 I 25 7l
Torm10 .... ,........ 9 ~ 3
3
WiNDpes ...... _.. 6 10 3

44

7 ·U .250
3 12 .120

Ell. lil lib.

o.nu ............_.. • 10

Martini~ Fary 61. Hlnnibll River 41

.

OIUO II Ball St.
Kern 11 Miami
Bowlin&amp; Green at W. Michigan

,.

McNee~•

9 .640

.»: J. I

Iaa

LD 1

By RONALD BLUM
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) Three days of bargaining between
players and owners is feading to
pleasantries rather tllan progress.
The sides aren't calling each
other names anymore. But with the
_9~ibition season getting into
~wmg today, they aren't approachmg a deal.
"I don't know if there's been
a_ny si~nificant change in positions,' acting commissioner Bud
Selig said after 6 1/2 ·hours or talks.
"But I think a greater degree of
understanding could lead 10 that. I
think there is increased underStand:;ng each day.' '
r
Since specific rates of a payroll
:tax previously have inflamed the
•

Seton Hall 92.
No. S Kentucky 97, Georala 74
Tony DeUr; had 16 points as the
Wildcats (21•4, 13-2 SEC)
clinched their 37th Southeastern
Conference title. Seven of his
points came in a 9-0 run that took
98 seconds and gave visiting Kenlucky a 33-18lead with 4:23left in
tlle first half. Georgia (17-8, 8-7)
never _got closer than I I points the
(See TOP 15 on PageS)

NI!W ENOLANtfPA'DIOT.Io Sipol

Bobby Abtamt, linobKter,

Coelnl lll.tolan

DI'¥WOB W

MianU 63, Bowlin$ Grem 36
0100 75. E. MicluJOO 60

WE~TEKN CONFERENCE

Mo.·kant•

IS 10 ,6(.(1
1.5 10 .600

Saturday's ·games

.315

0rt111d0 lliiOUROO,

7 .S88
8 .S28

Tolcdd 74, CenL Mictuaan SK
W. Micltipn 61, Akron 54

35

Phomu ........ :.........4J 14
Sc.~uJe ....................37 16
l..A. I..aken ............l4 20
Ponland ................ 30 23
SacnmcnL0 ............28 26
Ooldr:n S1atc .......... l6 38
L.A . Clippen: ......... ll 46

16

I$
7.S
7.5

M.ilw•llkee ............. 21

41

7 · ..588

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Aluon M.onch...,. 81, Woyncclolc 51
Campbell ~ fiJ, New MiddlcIOWn Spdna. 60

S .800
7 ,759

5 .706 II ·7 .720

Xa11 92, B.U s, 7S
.S

\J.S

.719

2 .882 ,2(1
4 .765 22

Wednesday's scores

.:JB2

I. llJ.

I. t&lt;L .!!: J. llJ.

l ·clinchcd rcguhr-scua:t tit.lc

28.5

34

.»:

Overall

Akrm ............ 3 14 .176
C. Mich .........0 I 7 .000

v

DctmtL ................... 21

Illlll

Conf.

9 .47 1 13 12 .520
Kcnt.............. J 12 .214 8 17 .320

20 .~

Centn iiHvWon
Charlone ................ ~5 21 .6ll
lndiana ................... J.4 21 · .61 I
ClEVELAND ....... 33 22 .600
ALlan !.a ..... .............. 21 21 .491
Chiu.o.................. 2i 29 .491

•

.»:

Ium

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Illlll

s.

IAuiMII&amp; 50, c..... 47
Orana,c 7S, Pepper Pike Uniw:nity 63
You. uberty SCI, Reid 51

MAC men's standings

Basketball

-Opponents progressing more toward kindness than to a deal

•

·

season champion gets the bid, and
that\s UCLA (22-2; 14-2 Pac-10),
which swept second-place Ariwna
to win allt1es.
.
This was UCLA's first game as
No. I this season.
"Our first goal was to win the
Pac -10, and we've accomplished
that," Bruins coach Jim Harrick
said. "Everybody's working, 'hoping to help (the seniors) reach their
goal in the 10umament' ·

By The Associated Preils
• · It was appropriate No. I was
rmL

The Dally Sentlnei---Paga 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

..

' ..

--!

-

.'

•

!I

-·

�•
Page · 6 The Dally Sentinel

Eastern to face' Whiteoak in Division IV district title game
Friday mght at 7 p.m. the Eastem Eagles girls' varsity basketball
team (11-12) will face Whiteoak
( 13-1 0) in the Division IV district
dournament fmal At Ross-Southeastern High School in Richmondale.
The school is about 10 miles
south of Chillicothe on U.S. 35.
The last time an Eastern girls
team went to the district was in
1992 when Eastern was defeated ·
by Lynchburg Clay in the first
roqnd at Jackson High SchooL
Eastern went to the di~trict and lost
to Peebles in 1985 at Wqverly High
School, bu
ck to the
198
ason shows that t!1:&gt;.,g~
m has advanced as far as the dis,
trict fmals.
Eastern has enjoyed an up-andown season, upsetting several top
clubs early in the season with a 5-2
start before going into a tailspin at
mid-season.
Eastern came alive at the end of ·
the season and is 3-0 in the tournament, claiming a 52-43 sectional
win over Trimble, then slamming
the Eastern-Pike Ea~les 74-39 for
the sectional. champiOnship. Eastem then defeated Miller last Thursday4Ml.
Whiteoak defeated Portsmouth
Notre Dame 60-36 and North
Adams 53-39 in sectional action
before defeati ng Western Latham
46-31 last Thursday in the dislricl.
Eastern's starting five consists
of two, three-year leuer winners,
senior Amy Redovian, juniors Jes-

sica Karr, Rebecca Evans and rebounding with an 8.2 average and
Nicole Nelson and sophomore 163 total. She is good inside, but
Patsy Aeiker. All five have had can also shoot the three-pointet.
very good tournament games.
Nelson has improved steadily
Redovian has been a three- year throughout the season, starting the
staner at the right wing for Scott year with a big game at NelWolfe's Eagles. She has become a sonville· York and sparking last
stable figure in Eastern's three- week's comeback drive against
guard offense and has shown much Miller. She is a triple threat player,
versatility by also playing in the capable of hitting the big shot,
post and doing a good job. For a making the big pass and also a
guard, Redovian is an excellent good driver. She is second in
rebounder, clearing nearly four assists on the team and third in
rebounds a game and also averag- steals. For her size, she is a great
ing four points per game.
rebounder and one of Eastern's
Redovian is· also a steady defenc best at.going after a loose ball Nelsive player, posting 29 steals (see· son is a primary component in the
ond on the team) and has posted three-guard offense and has had a
several double digit scoring efforts great tournament
this season.
Aeilcer is a veteran at the post
Karr has been the team's leading Aeilcer owns a 7.1 scoring average
scorer the past two seasons, hitting and an 11.4 rebounding average.
99-131 (31.6%) from the floor and She too has had a great tournament,
120-169 (71 %) from the line for a collecting what is believed to be a
total of 322- JlOints. Karr, the East· school record 25 rebounds in the
ern point guard and playmalcer, sectional toun\ament. In regular
leads the team in steals (77) and season, she collected 193 in 17
assists with a 3.55 average per games. She is second in shooting
game. Karr's driving .ability gets percentage and has the least
the EHS offense in motion and turnovers (26) of any starter. Aeilcadditionally Karr is a good er is good at the post both offenrebounder and heads the fast break. sively and defensively.
Evans owns a double-digit 8cor·
Radford has been a spot starter
ing average and Eastern's best and great asset coming off the
shootinJt percental!e at 90-230 bench. She is perhaps Eastern's
(39.1%). She was the team's lead· most aggressive defensive player
ing scorer in many games early in and. quite a competitor. She was
the season, but opposing teams also the winner of the Sportsman- .
have doubled up on her in the latter · ship Award in the Alexander secstages of the year. Slle is second in tional. Despite being one of the

·srowns &amp; Simms show mutual interest
CLEVELAND (AP) - Phil
Simms might be heading out of the
broadcast booth and back behind
center.
Simms. who retired after the
New York Giants cut him last year,
has met with the Cleveland Browns
·~i~sible return to the NFL as a

know. I'm trying to be honest, but
it's tough for me to say yes or no."
Asked to characterize Simms'
reactions, Lombardi· said, "I think
he's in a thinking mode. He's got
his thinking cap on."
Testaverde's backup last season
was veteran Mark Rypien, who is a
free agent and isn't likely to return
~leading passer in Giants to Cleveland.
history worked as an ·analyst for
Belichick was the defensive
ES'PN during the season. ESPN coordinator for the Giants when
reported Wednesday night a source Simms helped them win the 1990
close to the Browns said Simms NFL title.
wo~ld join .the team as a backup to
Simms, 39, spent 15 seasons
quarterback Vinny Testaverde.
with the Giants, passing for 33,462
Art Modell, Browns owner and yards and 199 toucttdowns. He was
president, said Wednesday night !he most valuable player of the
the teain is interested in Simnl''r but 1987 Super Bowl, hitting 22 of 25
has not decided on signing' him. passes for 268 yards and three
Modell confirmed Simms would · touchdowns.
meet with Browns officials today.
"He'll come in and look us over
New York Newsday said in
and we'JI take it from there," Modtoday 's editions that Simms, ell said. "Nothing is defmite yet
Browns coach Bill Belichick and We're going to meet with hiffi and
direetor of player personnel Milce see where we stand. He'll see what
Lombardi had preliminary discus- we have to offer, and we'll see
sions earlier in the week.
where he stands.' " .
"I know I might' come across as
Simms blamed the salary cap
really wishy-washy, but you never after being cut by Giants coach
know," Simms said. ·"I don't Dan Reeves last June. When he ·

G}. .

Turkey-ca..•"rig contest.
set for u ay at N-YHS
Turkey callers from Ohio an
is located pn S.R. 78 in Buchtel,
several different states will get a .approximately two miles north of
chance to strut their stuff on Sun- the U.S. 33-S.R. 78 junction in
day.• March 5 at II a.m. at the Ohio Nelsonville.
·
State Turkey Calling Champi·
on ship at Nelsonville-York Htgh
School in Buchtel.
· Part of the National Wild
Turkey Federation Ohio State Convention which runs Saturday and
Sunday, the championship will feature junior ( 17 and under), amateur,
state and open competitions. Competitors will be asked by judges to
perform four specific turkey calls
and will be judged solely on so~nd
quality,
Bob Davis, vice president of the
NW1F Ohio State Chapter, said he
expects as many as 60 callers to
participate.
·
Turkey calling is serious business, so to end the ·festivities on a
lighter note, Davis has scheduled
an owl hooting contest and gobbling contest immediately following the championship. Gobblers are
judged on presentation as well as
sound quality and arc even provided a hen decoy for inspiration, he
noted.
,
"Some of these guys strut
around and really actlike turkeys,"
said Davis. "It's very entertainin'll-"_....,.
Rob Keck, a chall1pionsti1p
turkey caller and NWTF executive
vice president, is the convention's
featured speaker.
· Past winner of the U.S. Open
and World Turkey Calling C~pi­
onships, Kcck 1s a former h1gh
school educator from Pennsylvania
who has had '"a love affair with
\
.
wild tur~eys, since his grandfather
'
showed lim h\s ~rst wild gobbler
in the mtd-fiftic('
A board me"\ticr of the Outdoor
· riters Association of America,
eck writes a regular column in·
~ '1/fkey Call, the NWTF magazine,
· __.- arl!l has conrributed text and illustra)·ions to several authoritative
books on wild turkey hunting and
biology.
He has appeared on several television 'shows including ESPN's
Hunting Strategies and TNN's
American Outdoorsman. He was
elected to the Pennsylvania Turkey •
Hunters Hall of Fame in J978.
The convention is open to the
public and admission for NWTF
111embers is $3 per day and $5 per
day for non-NWTF merribers. Chil290 Norlh Second .
dren younger than 12 years old get
in free.
.
Nelsonville: York High School

smallel' players in stature; she averages 2.6 rebounds off the bench (52
total) and is fiftll in sreals with 25.
Melissa Guess: another senior,
was an early spot starter and can
come in to add some offense and
rebounding, She hatS two big plays
to spark the Eagles against Eastern·
Pilce, hitting a big bucket to break a
15-15 tie early in the game.
Sophomore Tracy White and
junior Beth Bay have seen a good
bit of tournament time and played
very well. White is known for her
quickness and defensive .play, but
is an offensive threat as well, while
Bay is a good defensive player and
good rebounder. Crystal Morris is a
good rebounder, while sophomores
Martie Holter and Crystal
Holsinger and freshmen Michelle
Caldwell and Joanna Gumpf has
also played critical roles off the
bench.
Because the numbers were low
this year, many of Eastern's
younger players shared time
between the reserve and varsity.
Wolfe said, "It's hard · ~ .give both
teams the' time they need, because I
coach them both.
, "My assistant, Paul Brannon,
volunteered a tremendous amount
of time to heloing with both teamS.
I attribute a lot of our success- to
him and Pennr Aeilcer, who spent a
good deal of ume working with our
younger players," he said.
"A\Iditionally, Coach llrannon
has built a strong junior high pro-

•

(Results as or Feb. 22) .
League- Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team standings - Meigs Golf
Course (46-18), Captain D's (3628), Court Street Grill (36-28),
Tony's Carryout (32-32), Chainsaws &amp; Roses .(30-34), Thunder
Alley Cats (26-38), J&amp;L Insulation
(24-40) and Banks Construction
(20-44). ,
. .
Team high series ....., Thunder
Alley CatS (2017)
107 Milt Sueet, Middlepon, Ohio 45760
, Team high gam~ - ~hunder
Alley Cats (735) .
. ,__'_. __;6::,:1;;.:.4·~99~2::;;:~3::,:1~48~--1

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's.District Championship Against _

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Game ,.ime 7:00 p.m~

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• In store repair in
Galli~lis store
• Finagcing 1\':'ailable

'

Ohio

992-2556

Shoe· Ptace
Locker 219 ~
· Middleport, Ohio . 993-5627

-'

-

__..._-

7

-

•

:Valley
Supply

&amp;

~o10pany
Middleport,·Ohio 992-6611
.

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy
Pomeroy, Ohio

Sugar Run
Flour Mills
·Pomeroy, Ohio

Jewelers·
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ridenour
.Supply
985-3308

•
)

Crows
Family Restaurant
Pomeroy, Ohio

·Fisher
Funeral Home
...... _Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·5141

.Mi.d dleport
Trophies &amp; Tees
992-6128

992~2121

Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2104

Ingels ·Furniture
and Jewelry

992-5432

Middleport, Ohio

992-2955

Ewing
Funeral Home

992-2115

Chester, Ohio

992-6491

K&amp;~

992-2955

......,.- Ohlo

992-2635

armersBank
nd Savings ~o.
Pomeroy
992·2136

Tuppers Plans
985-3385

-·

' '.

1,

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Fruth
Pharmacy

-.-~--

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108 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-3985 Middleport, Ohio

.

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FINANCING*

·Mens &amp; Ladies Justin Athletic
Shoes (Sport Lacers)

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•

1994-95 SECTIONAL CHAMPIONS · The Eastern Eagles will play Whiteoak
'Friday Night for the District Championship at Ross Southeastern High School. In
front are (L-R) Martie Holter and Jessica Radford. Seated behind them are
Michelle Caldwell, Crystal Holsinger, Joanna Gumpf, Billena Buchanan, Mindy
Sampson and Tracy White. In the back row are Amy Redovian, Beth Bay, Crystal
Morris, Patsy Aeiker, Rebecca Evans, Jessica Karr, Melissa Guess, Nicole Nelson
and head coach Scott Wolfe; Absent from · picture · are assistant coaches Paul
Brannon and Penny Aeiker, scorekeepers Susan Brewer and Jill Holter and
manager Matt. Boyles.

r-f--------------------------------------------------~----------,

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14K Earrings
1OK Rope Chains &amp; Bracelet
10K Soft Bangle Bracelets
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Shop Acquisitions for the Best
.Quality Best prices aropnd!

(;hester

20% off

PIO
LES

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New Shipment

•

Tee.Shi.r-ts- .
Tanks
Sweatshirts
Swimwear
Suntan Products
Reduced 20% everyday

March 3rd 8 4th

l
.
i

B
y

Acquisitions ~ine '}eNel'll(

Mason Bowling

DAN'S .
Weekend Spacial~

...

II

gram.'' .
As far as the game goes, Wolfe

League results

The

. '

Michael. a 5-4 senior rounds our
just hope ii snowballs from here."
Several area coaches who the lineup.
Whiteoak utilize.s primarily
shared opinions 'about the
Whiteoak club indicated on their three players in its offCJ_~se. alf!!OSI
scouting summations: "Stop the big exclusively to the nght stdc . .
Whiteoak goes about .9-10 play.ers
girl and you'll be okay."
The big girl is sophomore post deep off its bench WithOUt IOSlDj!
player Jenny Monteith, who aver- much ·of its offense. When Montiages just over 12 points per game. eth hits the sideline, however, the
A $-9 post, she stacks up .evenly Wildcats become a different team.
with Aeilcer and Evans underneath. They beco[lle more patient in the
Monteith is an aggressive post half oourt ·offense and will run the
player that shoots well within 15 ball more in the transition.
feeL She is a good rehounder and
Jennifer ~raycraft and Rebecca
good passer.
·
\
Cox are usually the flrst players off
Kim Bratton is the Whit.oak the bench.
.
point guard. The 5-8 senior that
"Many of their games were low
also plays some off wing. She can scoring. That is why we must take
hit the three and is a good outside away their second and third shots."
shoo~r and is a fine passer. Her
.
saidWolfe.
primary target is Monteith in the
"Our motto this week has been
paint. Bratton is also a good foul 'Just one more step:• Any tournashooter.
ment game takes a good honest
Carrie Christman is a 5-6 senior effort, but I think the girls want it.
guard that sometimes will run the If they want it bad enough and play
point, especially when the Wildcats together lilce we have been, we can
go to a 1-4 low baseline offense. be a well-oiled machine and do
She can hit the three, but mainly something no other Eastern girls
shoots 12-15 feet and in. Sarah . basketball team has done. Every
Rowe a 5-7 junior is the off guard level just gets a liule more ellcltor small forward, while Nicki ing.

said, "In the tournament, anything
could happen, but we have a legiti.
retired, Simms was coming off one mate chance.
"We must play our game and
of his best seasons in 1993, leading
the Giants to an 11·5 record and a not get in a running game with
them ," he said. "If we're patient,
playoff berth.
"Right from the get-go, I never work the ball and execute well,
liked the salary cap. I knew that we'll be there at the end. Everyone
was another bomb on the players' has really been excited. I think the
heads. I knew it spelled trouble for . girls and much of the school and
me, unless you played well to war- communitY has the fever now. I
rant your salary,'' said Simms.

.Individual bill!
Men $erieli - Russ
Carson (549) and Chet Wigal Jr.
(545)
Individual high game - Carson (221) and Bill·Slack (206)
·
Women
Individual bigb series - Opal
Wigal (500) and Pat Carson (492)
Individual bigh game - Wigal
(198) and Carson (190)

Ohio

Thursday, March 2, 1995

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

'

•

�Pomeroy-M~dleport, Ohio

Thursday,
March 2, 1995
- 5
1 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio __ _

~

Get Your ...sage Across
With AD•lly Se1tl1el

Sons of American Revolution discuss 'Goals 2000' project ·_ _

Markers will be placed on the
gra~es of mem~ of the Roush
family by the Ewmgs ~Sons
of the American Revolution in
April, with dedication =llies
to be held later, it was decided at a
recent ':lleeling of the group held at
the Me1gs Museum.
The dedication will take place in
late summer following the Roush
Family Association reunion, it was
decided, which will allow descendants to be informed of the dates
for the ceremonies.
During the meeting allended by
24 members and guests, tlle chapter ,
also discussed plans for the its 1
annual presentation of _medals to i
the ROTC units at the University of
Rio Grande and Ohio University.
John Kauff, chapter president,
noted that he plans to attend the
National S.A.R. trustees' meeting
in Louisville, Ky., for the pwpose
of planning the Battle Days Celebration at Point Pleasant an October.
It was noted that the ~hapter has
distributed literature to area high
schools on the annual Douglass G.
High Historical Oration Contest.
The chapter awards a $100 cash
prize to the local winner, who will
then compete in Cleveland. This
contesl is open to all sophomore,
junior and senior students. Further
details can be obtained by contact·
ing Keith Ashley, chapter secre-

•

Valentine
dinner
hosted
Men of the Golden Rue Sunday
School Class of Middlepon First
Baptist Church hosted the February
class meeting with a valentine dinner for the women of the class.
The menu was planned and the.
members served the dinner at the
Holly Hill IM. .
·. Marjorie WiJibum gave devotions on "Love", had the-Rev. Mark
Morrow give John 3:16, and !hen
she talked on the love of a mother/bllby, love employer/employee,
love of husband/wife, and the love
of the minister and his flock.
June Kloes, presided at the
meeting with officers' reports
being given. It was announced that
a church visitation program will
begin in-March. Class members
were encouraged to particifate in
the program. The class wil invite
the entire church !6 the next meeting to be held on 1\farch 12 at the
Olde.Dutch Restaurant in Logan.
Attending the dinner were the
Rev. Mark Morrow and Vickie,Phyllis Young, Ethel Shank, Jack
and Colee Ambrose, Lawrence and
Barbara Eblin, Marilyn and John
Fultz, Manning and June Kloes,
John and Glenna Riebel, Norman
and Sis Van Matre, and Dale and
Marjorie Walburn.

Envoy's
birthday
celebrated
The 92nd birthday _of A. R.
Knight, envoy of Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
was observed when the chapter met
recently at his home on Lincoln

taiy , a1992-7874.
Nominations for the ~n.nual
chapter awards for good ctliZCnship, law enforcement. and display
of the U.S. flag were made. No
nomination was yet made for heroism.
'
·
Keith Ashley, registrar, reported
the death of a member, John
Frances Grimes of
WilkesN.C. He
on his

ancestor, David Sayre, who is
burled in Letart Falls Cemeu:tv. He
funher noted the submission of
applicalions of three more memben for naliaw approval.
Ashley also reported on "Goals
2000," a Ccderally-wrium curriculum for the teaching of history
the U.S.&amp; dellcribed Jt
wrinen and stress"

' This gives bisiDiy a very disuJrttd
appea!IIICC, according to Ashley,
who nOicd that The Ohio Society
S.A.R. bas tabn a stand ag•insl the
program.
A discussion was held on the
possibility of a ceremony to honor
World War n veterans on lhc 50th
annivCl$81')' of the end of the war
later this
It does not appear
local veterans'

'

Portalilt

·audsawMIII

34110 Sugar Run Rd.
Long llolt!lfll, OH. 45763
Sessions 5 00

WAYNE'S PLACE

1S

Middlepor1 , Ohio
presents "BlitzKrieg•
Friday, March 3 ·
9:30 p.m.-1 :30 a.m.

32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Danny l Peggy

15

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992-6215

DARWIN, OHIO

Pomeroy, Ohio

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SATURDAY,
MARCH 4th

SEPTEMBER 1995
'To qualified appli cant s

DOWNTOWN POMEROY- 992-3671
_{

•
I I-.,

9:30-8:00 MON. 9:3CJ.5:00 TUES.~SAT.

__ . ·
·ed
An ecology theme were cam.
out at a recent mC~ng ~f ~e ~~dleport Literary u e a e
Sacred Heart recto~, d d bi •
Th~ progra~ trc 1uthe :.Chol
e
graphical sk-etc 0 ~u or
C~rson,S~dndd a, revle~ ~!K~ng~~
n
Rtvcrs I on s nove ;·
Oalc". . Erw' : crod ed Rachel
Clance .. 1010 uc
1
Carson as a woman c~geous,Y

flg~~,!l&amp; ~orna El~~ ~~~f:::u:

. wor_ an ~e · .. 15 f modem
e_nvlll/nmen acuvts 0
umes.
in
.J7he no~ that 5~::'s~ur';"and
17 v fin a = n~t th blast fur, saw. trst- .
w a e d She
41
nabHs h~ \:' ~[ :~'!,;·when
pheu s . theer , urths grade
s wasm
10
•

ISIMce

•AUMalooao42Y. . . .
ofut Reliable~
.Waahera - D&lt;yera • Rangoa
. oRifri9arlt01'1 " " oOiohw-

as an educallr, nurse, social worlcer-

or administrator, Lee said.
She also discussed child labor.
Child advocates estimate the number of working kids between the
ages of 12 and 17 at 5.5 million,
according to Lee, who said that the
figure does not include illegal
employment of children under 12
in sweatshops.
Offering envelopes were distributed and should be turned in at
!lie Maicli meetilig.
Lee presided at the business
meeting, which opened with the
- Lord's Prayer, the UMW pwpose,
and the official song. Officers'
reports were given by Chris .Hill
and Clara Mae Sargent. Correspon·
dence was read, the penny fund
collection was taken and sick caDs
were reported..
It was noted that 20 fruit baskets
.were delivered recently to shut-ins
at Overbrook, Ex~nded Care Uni~
Veterans Hospital and Racine.
.The "don't toss it out" items
will be boxed and shipped to the
vmiJlM lgcJ!liQ!ls, a monetary dona•
lion will be sent to Good Works in
Athens.
A book, Loving Promises, by
Helen Steiner Rice. was presented
to Marilyn Bol!ard. who recently
'

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Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220
Bidwell, OH 45614
614) 388-9865

HAULING
Limestone
&amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

·-

614·742-2138

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3 Announcemlllts

Clenn m o tor
:, Clran &amp; r.~H'tl1 1iltr r ~;v:,!f·m
Gre;1se rull er ln_o;trln~s I) C!w c k belt~;
C IPa n &amp; check &lt;lq ilillor 7 C~H'ck. f'lrctriC.ll ·;y~;tcm
Clea n allmovmq p.Hts 8 Hcpl~cc f1ll rr b.1~1

'Ho.. -en.gy

Phone: .,. 141-2410.

One Stop Complete A1to Body Rep1ir

PREC'ISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

Onemlleout
143 from Rt. 7
Tuea. -Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
Hi

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade

eir.!-2060

lime.
AJtendiog besides those named
were Etta Mac Hill, Margery
Roush, Margie West, Gladys
Shields, Frances Robens and Jcnnifer Walker. The next meeting
will be March 27, 7:30 p.m. at the
church.

1Millmo

J&amp;LINSULATION

American General Lila &amp; Accident Ina. Co:
P.O. Box 189
Ml.DDL.EPORT, OHIO 45760 .

539 BIIV,lN PLACE

·

MIDDLEPORT . 992-2n2

614-843•5264

otftce Houra: Mon.·Frl.

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8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
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Rooting, VInyl
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Insulation, Storm
Dqora, Storm
Wlndbwa, Garages.
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"1'111 KHellin 81.,. That c To Your Door." Loa.ol ConauiiMI

Avallobla AI:
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for~::......~On

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nportunMIN.
Free .
Brochure ~llllbkt.

--------------., 4

Giveaway

~:~C:..~V.::·,~11~

, __

...utlluf, ....... lona-hatrwd,
a..r • white .... eM-141-34:11 ·
pledges to the American flag and
afl~lpm.
the Christian flag, ~cripture readF....... 1.oppac1 Ell Robbll, eMti1Wtfn
ings from John l4,_ and the Lor~'s
318
COMMERCIAL
and
RESIDENTIAL
_.mAaorr:MP.II.
prayer. _Opal E1chmger. was remFIM To Good Homo: lllud Col2
lnM1mory
stated mto membership._ It was
FREE ESTIMATES
~""";~*1~
reported that ~ta Ballard IS home
from the hosp1tal, the Penny Elain
In -Loving Memory
Booalt
had a baby boy, that Opal Hollon
11+1U-7180.
had ey~ surgcr~. and that Betty
of Lucille Gibbs
1
.;;..._ _ _..(_N_o_s_u_nd_a_v_c_a_ns_)_ _.;;.'":;;........,.,=...... 1'"""""'' Ad blat 111a1o
Oj!nny 1s hosp1talized.
11Dlt.r llllok ,.... .,...,..
L
2-3-27- 8-7-93
. Refreshments were served by
We cannot send a ..----~---~~~......~~~~~~--, 211111 ::10 P.ll. -fP.II.
CHESTER COUNCIL
Vugm~al.ee, Ethel Orr, and Doris
present,
Mary Jo Barringer was present- Gruescr. .
!':.~~: ~"=""Cell
Your hands we cannot
ed a past councilor's pin at.th_e
Attendmg were Ethel O~r.
POMEROY, OHIO
TloD Comdllo - . ..recent meeting of Chester Counc1l Ev~rett Grant, Op_al Hollon, VII·
touch,
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets ranted.
- . 1114·'1112-2t311.
323, Daughters of America, held at gm~a Lee, Opal E1chmger, Esther _
Today there will be
Dally, waaldy &amp; monthly rental rates.
Y - Lob 2 Yooro Old, 114-3AthehaU.
Sm1th, Mary Holter, Lora ·Dame1711
1ears and memories
. ~ob sllH' Camp SIIH' Family Reunlon1 &amp; Pull11
·
Mary Holter was also recog - · wood, Joann Baum, Jean Welsh,
Yount Pogo, 2 1111-, 1 ''-lo,
For the one we loved
~
O.Oord Oogo, 1,. l.o'leablo
nized and given a past councilor's Elizabeth Hayes.- Charlotte Grant,
NOW O FFE RI N G GE N ERAL HAULING
so much,
They A•• AI Fhioa, lllovlna And
card. -Pians were finalized for the Erma C!eland, Doris !Jrueser1
Thoy C.,, Oo, ~41-014'4, A~
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
For in a graveyard
Feb. 25 district meeting held at the Laura Ntce, Thelma White, Mary
ter4:30.
·
softly sleeping,
WE HAVE /1-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Chester hall.
Barringer. Goldie Frederick, Faye
Where . the flowers
. 6 . Lost &amp; Found
Jean Welsh, councilor, presided Kirkhart, and 'Ella Osborne.
U
ed&amp;B ' ded 20
'
gently
wave,
~ = • llonlh Old IIIIo Alrdllo
at the meetin&amp;.. which opened with
992-3954
Black • Ton, A-onl, 1 - .
Lies the one we loved
L llH •qf'ncy PllOnP C)t! ', l ~ 1H
,, i!n 111l
so dearly,
But whom we could ..- . . . . ; - - - - - - - -.........................~~; ~: Pool CUI lltlck In Vlnyi
CMO not save,
..
omcoAndcMy.,.... ,m.
She attended Pennsylvania CoJc author became a well-known ploGod only ~nows how
7 .·
Yard Slle
lege for Women where she majored neer in the ecology movement, the
much we miss you,
in biolo~y went on to Johns' Hop- reviewer noted. She died at the age
As he counls the tears
kins UI!Jv~rsity and-encoliraged by of 56, ironically a victim of _the
we
shed
the policies of Franklin. Delano chem1cals she had fought to ban1sh.
Gallipolis
He
whispers, she is
Roosevelt in conservauon, she
Mrs. Bermce Carpenter
&amp; VIcinity .
onlf'sleeping,
forged ahead both with her 'writing reviewed Siddon's "King's Oalc",
Youi love one is not
· and scientific studies, Erwin said.
the psychological struggle of
·I
Fomty:·
Coo. .I"J
dead,
Her books included "The Sea . Andrea "Andy" Andropolous and
· ToaiahOIM, Prt l Ill. M.
,· ctaldl•" AdUII8. ••· C.Ccw
...u•IPO~it-M
She is jusl away,
Around Us" which won the Nation- · her da~ghter Hi_lary _to find their
. ., - . . . . . , fumiiUN.
waiting for that special
al Book Award for non-fiction in mche m a multi-faceted SOCiety.
ALL.Yonl--le-ln
1951 stayed on the New York Andy, according to the reviewer,
day,
AdWIUM. DIADIIII: 2:00 .....
the ... , ba-the ... .. .. ..... .
Time's best-seller li_st for 20 had been taught that "life is only
· Mom you are so
r ...... - 2:00 .......
months, was translated mto 32 Jan- beautiful when we malce 11 beauuprecious why C(luldn't
*200
Instill
..
fttdn: _ , 111111011 - 2:410
guages and was later made into a ful".
you stay.
movie. At the height of her career,
The story talces place at Pem"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
Sadly missed a loved
AlnVN ..... ....... 1111, '
7th.
o.n.a A.M.I11t•
,.,., ~·
Carson became a subject of much bertowCollege with its typically
Kathy &amp; Troy
110 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
'
contro~er~~ over ~er book ·~silent academic atnwsphere in_ a t~wn
Randall
&amp;
Shirley
&amp;
"Look
tor
the
Red
and
White
Awning"
Spring' . e questioned the use of where people 1gnore the B1g Stiver
Rus;M; DIG ....: ~. lilllreh
Children
lnl,
4:00 Oraol certain .Pe.sticides and the_ danger_s River Plant which rnalces compoc
992-4119 TrHtM, Owner l·IG0-291-5600 u 1 1:40
n 1 au.~t, · llllollolh
Gina, !tic~ &amp; Andrew
of rad1at1on and pollutiOn, the nents for nuclear weapons.
QnoJa.
Pomeroy group, met recently.
.
Nancy Manley presided at the
meeting which included_ songs and"
poems, along w1th a ~hlle ele~t
sale for a fund _ratser. S huley
Hoder won the frmt basket. and Bev
Napper won the gadget g1ft. Margaret Henderson .had an article
about aspartame (Nutra Sweet).

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'

..

Limestone, .
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Spoci;ll offer includes

't

.

(Specialize In ·
driveway •praadlngl

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special
1
2
:l
4

Rottsl

WICKS
HAULING

Kenny's Auto Center
1-800-486-1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446c9971
Galli olis, OH. 45631
·-

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

·DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

(lllllut... Low

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
.We H•ve C•rs •nd V•nsl

AND REMOVAL

992·2269

985-3879

Kenny's Auto Rental

TREE TRIMING

1111 Slack

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
InJector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

. (614) 992-5535
(614) 992·2753 ~OM

Oregon Chain Sew Bart

One yea r warr,1nty o n wo rk pcrlorrned.
VL!I1d on all rwtwnally ;rdvrrii SNJ br;lfld•;
We scrvrce rnos t milkf's &amp; models.

Light Hauling,
Shrubs. Shaped
· and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

'}J'}JJ/95

1af1Wn

SMITH'S
.CONSTRUCTION

"In Stock"

It !I
I .II

MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding,' Room

had surgery. ·
It was vOicd on by the group_to
reserve a table a1 the Racine Flower
Festival.
The UMW spring retreat to be
held at Camp Asbury, Rio Grande,
on April 21 and 22 was discussed.
Any member may attend. Plans
will be fmaliz.ed at the March meet·
ing. The 1995 prayer chain and
JX&amp;Yq partner information list was
given to members.
Plans for the annual mother· daughter banquet to be held May
13 were discussed. It was decided
thlit no chairman will be appointed
since aU women will work together
on the event. Theme will be
"Everything's Coming Up R,pses".
It was noted that work at the
· church is contintting every Monday
morning. Participants are to take a
sac'k lunch.
Refreshments using St. Patrick's
Day theme were served by Karen
Walker and Kay Spencer. Get well
cards were signed during the social

-5335

50% off

(l~lh hill 1hb\

Backbore, 680 Front

. (St4..~-3581 or

Plrta I Service on Moll
r..ket Rlclne·Mower
Clinic

lliiPI Iii \il\11

11 111

Surrounding A,_

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

l

ltlltllllil._,

•11MI!M Molga •

Chris
Schlrlll
614-992-4236

I'~

\,llll

Sunday 1:00 p.m .
12 Gauge qnly
Limited: 740

ofi.W.HM*a

h, l1l:

,111 lilt\

I •. 1111 ;k,·

Ecology theme '~f Literary Club presentations .

00
Wood Accent

985-4473

Society scrapbook

TOPS CLUB
Judy Laudcrmilt was the TOPS
best loser .with Douie Sizemore as
runner-up wher. the TOPS OH 570.

CHOICE

HI·LEG RECLINER

949-2168

.I

' RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

ofoctory Authorized P -

\' \ '. 1. II II . Ill' I

.111&lt;11,' 1hl, I [,

.

CLASSMATES MEETING
. The Classmates met at Maggies
Crackpot ~estaurant in Cllfi~n
;recently for a buffet dinner. Sylvta
Sayre had prayer preceding .the din·
ner. Peggy Edwards conducled the
meeting and a "thinking of you''
card which was signed and sent to
Carol Roush.
,
·
Attending were Charlene Frye,
Sylvia Sayre, Marjorie Walburn.
Connie Smith, Bernie Smith,
Shirley Tucker, Patty Sue
. Allensworth, Peggy Edwards,
Carol Workman, Geraldine Roush,
Mary Jewell, Hazel Smith. Anna
Sidwell, Rev. JoAnn Hem, and
Evelyn Johnson.
-

YOUR

ROCKER/RECLINER

, ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

' 1I, I' I '.'.

I I·, ,

1511&amp;'94 TFN

:. "Prayer and Self Denial" was
:the program topic for lhc February
·meeting of the Racine United
:Methodist Women held at the
:chlD'Ch.
·: "Love Expressed~ was the
:theme used by Lee Lee, who ban'died the program 'in the absence of
:Alice Wolfe, chairman.
: Scriptures were tak:en from !saiah and Romans and were read by
Margie West. '!Jie call to prayer
)lid self-dei!llil is a speciiil obser. vance for United Methodist
:Women who come together to cele-_
)Irate the women who, in selfless
Jove, dedicated a year of lhcir Jives
in Christian service as .missionaries
and deaconesses. The emphasis of
the call to prayer observance is to
-express love and show support.
- The opening prayer and prayer
of intercession were read in unison
by the group with members being
pven prayer cards to be used durmg the year.
·
. Lee detailed highlights of the
lives of several missionaries and
ileaconesses. She described a
Methodist deaconess is a lay
woman who consecrates her life to
the service of the Lord, and who
.Cter receiving training is commissioned by the General Board of
Global Ministries. She may serve

·

CHOICI

$46·9°

Howard L. Wrltesel

'I&lt; 1 1 ( I!!/. 11" .1 · '1

1:

-:Prayer, .self denial dis~ussed ·
.at Racine UMW meet1ng . ·

CHAISE STYLE
RECLINER
J!erldine' s recliniog
chair features contemIJOIIIY st)fiflo with cruai!Y.

'\.

card of Thanks

The family of
Charles Grueser
· would like to thank
all the friends &amp;
: family for thoughts
and prayers during
his illness and
death. Your
kindness was
greatly appreciated.
Ruby Grueser
- &amp; Children
.

com1ortable, sensible tran. si1ional style. Compatible with
any decor, lhe but1on Wf!ed bad&lt;
meo1S hefty padded ~ .over an ample
T~ seat. Soft sllirriflg CO'Ief1; lhe

0

Ber1dino 's recliner pro-

614-742-3090
304-773-9545

.... _

YOUII'S
CAIPEIJIR SERY.ICI

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

THE SOUTH FORK
INN SHOWBAR
Girls.- Girls • Girls
Open 6 p.m. Tues thru Sat
1-304-675-5955

lleRirJee reclines you ~

Fl'flfl li.atlmafWia

\,

~

JOVRCROICI

St Heppy Hollow R-H
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•NewHomet
•Additions .Siding
•Rooting .Painting
oQarages .Pon:haa
.PoleBsma

\\\:\'lTD

1-304-675-7115

1

j iD'IIPNIIICI
;
IUIICI

HOllie Improvements

614-742-2193

Old Amies Buihjing

.[

'

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Gallipolis Ferry, WV
OPEN FRIDAY, MARCH 3rd
Newest Country N~e Club
in the Area

A decorated cake and ice Cream
were served in observance of the
occasion and gifts were presented
to the honoree.
During the meeting conducted
by Sheila Harris, it was nOicd tha~
aclrnowledgement of the $25 donation to International for the endowment fund had been received. An
information packet on Founder'~
Day was presented by Harris, who
reponed on progress for the Jc· al
observance. Program covers will be
purchased.
Plans were made for the March
7 meting with members to meet a1
lhe Bradbury Church of Christ at
5:30 and go from~ to the Red
Rooster Restaurant for dinner· followed by a movie, The St.
Patrick';s Day dance was post·
poned.
·
Members were reminded to tak:e
items for Serenity House to the
. March 7 meeting.
•
It was noted that Hatfls and
Maurisha Nelson had met with the
· Meigs County Fair Board- concerning work at the fair this year.
.

In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
evenL
.
All club meetings and ..other
news articles in the society section
must be submitte(J within 30 days
· of Occurrence.. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence.
.
,
All material submitted for publicatiOn is subject _to editting. ..

laid over for further discusSJOD.
Roy Holter, chairman of Ewings
Chapter for the 17Sth anniversary
of Meigs County, repm:ted that one
of the chapter's commemorative
ribbons is being~ in lhc time
capsule to be buried in June.
Speaker at the
was Tim
Scarberrv, vice
River

BULLETI BOARD

Valley High Sch.ool. He.talkcd
ailoul the iniimidation of Skidmore,
Mo., by Ken Rex Mc~nroy. the
town bully, and the fatlwe of the
current legal system to deal with
the intimidation.
.
The next meeung was
announced for March 23 at the
Meigs
Muse~;~m w~en _the
annual
G. High Historical
be held.

jl{ncferson )s

Hill.

News policy

groups have made any such plans
!mown at this time. ~ UlJ!ic was

(

·'

�Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
~--~----------------------------------37 UodloVII poom
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEA Til E BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Pomeroy,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

41 HoUMII for Rent

-··- .......

Mldclllport .
&amp;

A... o1H5f!. s't 4M YoV MAV SE 5f'&amp;NbtNc,.
"foo ,6\U &lt;:. H 1'1 M5 l&gt;'-"1'4" WITH 'foiJP- ~T.

nqulr.d.
- t o: Tho Qolly Son-

1-2·95

M ... iJil Cll

tlnol, P.O. 1.,. mol, Polo-.

• K 4
• K Q 10 3
t A Q

"
EEK&amp;MEEK

Ohlo48711.

a

..,...,

EAST

A t.C:I&gt;f ~ iU-'01£ fUHI;AT , ~ ·FAT
WJJ ~l 6RIOAO, A.GI.ASS

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

J 8 .3 2

OF CAI'f'l ~-£·FRee- OIE'T SODA ...

____..

f75.8411.

"

42 Mobile Homes

Wanted to Buy

'

. Conop Coftloy,

' 2•

dopoetl. :I04-I7UOil

s.

BETTER

31 Homes for Sale

211r., oil _ . . , - Upfond
Rd., tflllmo. pluo oolllltloo. 3041.,.._,

56

Don, Ju'* Ml Solf U. Y•r Haft.
Wootlng Major Applllnceo,

21 . Business
w-.
OpportunHy
·

Relrlgonlora,

3111., lilt ollctllc, dopoetl a ,...,.._

no"'
~...14-~1231.

J a D'l Aula """" """ Selvage,
buying
outoo •
INOIICEI
lrvclol. Alia
lor •lo. 304- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
773-1343 or
rwcommondo thll you do bull·
Old button1, co.tume Jewelry, 0111 with_.. you kO»W ond
money ttvough the
old llg!ll.,. Iron okllloio, pk&gt; NOT to
turw. Sl:1r W1n, gl..., china. mall until you ho• lnvntlgatlld
tumllwe toot. or -Comilletll _. the ott•rlng.
tiiM, QibY l. .rtln, 114-to2:~'N41. Vending: Won, Got Rich Quick.
Wanlod To Buy: Junk Auloo Will Ool A Stoody c.;oh Income.
WMh Or WMhGul ltlotoro. Coli Prlcod ta Soil. 1.acJ0.120.41712.
Lorry Uvoly. 114-31111-11303.
Rea l Estate
Top Pold: All Old U.S.
Col.., Gold Rlngoil Sl~ Col..,
Gold Colno. II.T.I • Coin Shop.
181 s-ndA...,.., ClolllpoiiL
CARE GIVERS, BElHESOA
HOllE CARE- ~ng op.
· W.nlod: Chic boil, Gul11111, Dllcollonl
IDr Home llloolth
Duck8, Rabbhi,GkNdl, u..d 10
ln. Toblo Sow, AlooL Howl Chick· Ahlle. SUcu•rul applicant•
1111 I A I - For ""loiiM-25&amp;- lltUit hive own' tran~~portltlon,
•uto lne., ftnlbiUty _ .wtlh
NIO, I A.ll. To 10 P.ll.
echedulee, borlcW* llftd ,_ve
Wllnlod: Home I Con Roooll At obiiMJ lo work 1""-odlo~ly.
Yard Sole Pr~ 114 Hll368, W. alflr oonilllllti¥1 wogo ond
•111od -don tlono. Plelll
114 ue 3341.
coil · now lor on olllltlollkl.!!...I ·

••nd

Employmenl Services

800-385-2tl2

or ,,, 385 ua~B.

no .-.. 304-t754133.

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subj ec~ to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
to advertise ..any preference,
limitation or discri mination
based on race, colo r, religion,
se)( familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.•

not
knowllngly accept

Thi&amp; newspaper will

advertisements for real estate
which is in violation ot .the law.
Our readers are hereby
infonned lhat all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on ~:equ al
opportunity basis. .

7!Wit-33tl ut 1101.

" - .. 411/Hr- Font... Donco,.. S7 hGirtr pluo

tlpo

lie Dliooou...l Sol AI Work and oomonloolon, 114'112·2807
-clop. Rop.
· Tonttory
Ootlonol. ·In- or 114-1'7W1155 oftori:OO ....
1.-,1Uo4'r.lll.
Eom up to ftOOO wllkly otulllng
Bobyallor In mrhomo. envoi- II homL Slort ,_,
:104-m.t178.
.
. Ha 11poo..,_, F- oupplln.
F- In-Ion. No Obllgotlon.
!lobPllor Noodod, City Bchoot Sand S.A.S.E to Slortlng, Dopt.
Dlot~ct, v... Homo Or ...... 3
K, P.O. ll_ox 'MIJ167. Ortalndo, FL
Chlldron, Ape: • • a~..\ Aohlillr 32814.
c.~~~~ Ilion -HI, 114-441Eooy
Workl
Elloollenl Poyl Al11037.
oombto Producta At Homo. Coli
13th In Toll F-. 1.aoo-417olllll, Ext.
313.
Floral OlllgMr needed, ••P·
hllplul but nat
Sind
rnurne to Box R·25, c/o Pl.
PI-nt AIIGiolor, 200 lloln St.,

IIICI....,.

Pl. P.._..nt,"'WY 25550.

TIOMO, lluot Be Ablo oo Uft, 85

!Hour, 114-44&amp;-77.12.

wtth
motora,
10
troubt•hoot hHIInglalr condlltannQ oqulponenl, bo on
otoo:trlc&lt;il
P9fll!lclor
or
· molnlonooncl llootri&lt;lon. lliort In ·
Eloctrlcft.r. on !Iorch 13tlo. Coil
,_m 11oo Adult Eoluootlon
Coni•, 1.aoo.a37.e501.
WOf'll

.

W.nlod: Ellpooloncod
Aulomotlvo Bcxly Rot&gt;Oinnon.
Bend Roounoo To: CLA Boll 351,
t:/0 Golllpotlo Dolly Trtbune. 825
Holp

Third A.venuej O.Uipolla, OH
451~.

32 Mobile Homee
for Sale

1085 Uberty, 2 bedroom•, 1
=~ now otovo I relrtgorotar,

75-4625.
1185 14170 Slcyllno llobfte 2
BodroOmo, · NeW Corpot, 2
Docko, t With Awnl!19o lolond
RonQo1 Rotrlgorot•, set Up On

Aanfea Lot:, $13,500, IM-3e'J..

7103.

•

1885 T,.vol Troller, 32 Ft. Fully
l.oaded,

Exceltent Condftlori,

11,1100,114-245-1015.
1188 14&gt;170 Commodoo'e 2 rvom1, G.E. Appllanc• In
Kllchon And Conlnot Air Unh .
Coil Aftor 4:30 114-U1.ot44.
1188 Uberty molotle home,
14x54, MW
a tile, CA,
ftO,=!IJO OBO.
75-1143.
1890 Cloyton 14xfl0 112 Acre Loll
2 BR, 1 Both, CA, Cot-a
catllng, 2 Oeeka, Fenced .V•rcl, 1

=

Lml£ CASEARS Hiring
All Lovoll, Full Or Port Tl"!l,
Dotlvory Drl..... Alolotont
lllno111r Arool llonoll!r Trolnoo.
Ellollllonl Growth, Good Poy
And 8onltMo, Apply At: 811 Mile Out 588 On Lift, $28,000,
814 448 6933.
Truck Drlvw ./Counlor Soloo Socond Avonuo, OOlllj&gt;oUo.
Pwldon Open In An Electrical
Buppl._. Flokl. Eloctrlcll Ell· LPN Poohlon Avolloblo, Sond 1993 Sunohlno 141711 3 BodI'll*- Or Elootrtcof .Voco• R-mo Ta: P.O. Bo1 188, Gal· room•.o. 2 litho, Loundry Room,
6Jo20 UICk, 8x12 Building, On
llonll Doa,.. Prllorrod. Wo Will llpollo, Oh 45831.
A1nt.d Lol $11,100, l'f4..441Bo hotomOwtng At WOOl Vlrglnlo llolul1 RIIIIIGIIOiblo Woman B785.
Elootolco tll85 Entorn Avonuo, Noodod To Cllln Houu, 614Ciolllpol•, OH On W-ldly,
1885 DOUBLEWIDE REPO,
3/11115 i P.ll. -4 P.ll. EOE. . _ 44!1.0:104.
newer lived In, no down,.yment
Wll==nl=od
:.::::::L:::,.:.:.;
ody 50= ,;T:=
o151
::,..,Y
,;.N_ro
;;.•l llllkor W.nlod lor lac:ol dolry to quollflod buyor; lrll dlllwry
&amp; 11t up. 304-7S5.aats.
Old To Uve In For Room llollrd, torm. 30H75-3012.
Small Wllgooo, IM-44&amp;-3418.
X·RIY loch, llodlcll AI- 11 Sctoun mobile homo, 14170,
W.nlod: Poromodlcl olotont, LPN, Rocoptlonlot. Full lolal et.drlc, 3 bedroom, 1 112
•
TJ
o
nt
tlono omJIIoyrnont lor buoy " - both. toctory II,. ploco,
.FuII Or PIn me. PI nge tor't
oftke.-Mnd ruume to Box Wllhlrldryer,
atov•,
Avolloblo, RIDter WY, Prlvolo c.1 'II. Pt PH AIIGII~!o 200 lloln retrlgerlltor, block &amp; 1nchor
372
Am-nco lloivlco, 304- • 91, Point P-ont, wv 2111510.
plna, $10,500, 814-1112-3040.
1855.

18 Wanted to Do
Ace T,.. Service. Complel• Ira
...., :zo,.. oxp. I lnourod, lr11

llllmot•. l14-44t·t111t or 1.aoo1111U817.
tho Sllflna Rulhl Got your
trtm....,. l rnowen MrWlced
now .. Side,. Equipment Com3DU75-'11121.

--a1on-••na ...,..

for tho

Do!lblowldo " - · -

liVId

ol Donlll Alllotont. ln. Coil R-lloordock l.a00o211t·
Ellpootonce ~t- but not 50111. Flnonc:lng Avolloblo.
,.qulred. PIMH Mnd r..ume
to: Dontol Aulotont, P.O. Bo1 Malt. .2 p.yrnenta • mov.. In,
new 14x70 2.3br. Clll Au.. Mur310. Muan, WY
dock 1-IIOIJ.25t-5070.

aao.

POOIII P.,.itt1111 141170 lncl- 'otolrt·
12.2eihr. • bonollto. Coorleno, clootoo, ..,.,.... """ molnt. )obo. lng, ..... blaCioo, 1 yoor
For 111m lniDrlmtlon a oppllco- homeo~~~MrW lnaura~ arid 1
llon ... 7011-2114-1100 Ill. 3170, monlho FREE lot ..nt. Only
St20 .._n and StM poo mo.
l i t o - OYonlngl.
Coll1.aoo-&amp;3'7-3231.

35 Lots &amp;

Hay&amp;Graln

z:r+-+- +--+- t---1

SA'( THAT..
HE DIDN 'T
HAVE A 0151-1
IN HIS
MOUTH ..

Apartment
for Rent
1 ond 2 bod,_ oportmoroto,
turnlaMd Mill untumw.d,
_,...., ....,.. rwqulrod, no
pola,lf4.912·22tl.·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebrity Cipher crypt og~ma are crealed lrom quolations by famo!il peoptt palt 1ne1 preunt
Elld1 1ener In tt'4 Cipher allnctt lor 1/'IOihat. Toc::Wy'.J dul: W~~ p

= ' !u ;or
LA E K B

(o

Rl.....a.

Soloo -aton- muot bo oblo to
Uft. SOnd _...,. lo: P.O.' Bo1 WOI'IIod: 20 • 50 ,..,_ Pooton
172,P-oy,Ohlo41m.
Lono W M h - - . CioN
To Clolllpotlo, 114-5811-1003.
Train for
emplcymorot
·
ovollobto
with oonolruc,
'tunMioo
tlon oomponloo ond tloraugh
Rentals
-~
ooinolruatlon Inor.cupen!y•
01........Wino~ , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;._
lno ...... tno~a;,: 13th. ,.
COII-1111
.
Troln In 1 flokf of with •mlng
-111111 of ft5 por hour ptuo
bonlfho. Oofn lklllo noodod to

31 Homes for Sale

2

By Rod Wlna C h l -

-40 To -10 Dog-,li.H. • O..,....IICI Prtcoo, Tho
Shoo Colo, tM o4 II 4222.

"'.L'::

Box Sllflna 111ooa....
HUICh LIM- m5; _
Ill: Cot od T.V. tzs, 114-44&amp;3224.

1

Rlt; NATR
Farm Supplies
&amp; Live stock

..

Ooluy 'l lllum CB, 811Yw Elate

IIIIo, PDC 100 W0tt
llo1ollro, Phonlom NDS Pre
Amp, .... Ani, 12 AMP P-r
Suoilltr. e...... Sporlcol flcM.

STRJ(f A8W# N M Will ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOI' Tl-£ CLASSfEDS,

"""' llock Blq\oln Formol
Royal IIIII ·lllldod ......
mol ·Bath ~. 81zo14-11.
lit Ul 2412, 114&gt;4..,.2413 Allor
IP.II.
-

100,000 BTU II Elllclonoy

Fumoca Hoot Pumpo,
'lory -"""'""" ·Polcod, Ono
UeOd 21KW Eloctrlc Foornoco,
Cont ... Air CGndH;~ F- . .

Goo

t-•·
........1~0
.

.Or

'*

63
LJvestoc;k
ii;;ii'i:i;j~~;;;;;;i;;;;
_ U .oiiiiiM I m IDr loo•
w-on; ltoollod . , -IIIII
Rd.

oft

Cnob

Cl'lllt
.

no a-· :IOW2+2773.

Rd.,

.

• ASTRO·GRAPH

-lno.

Aoclng -t2.~ HP
1121, IA-lMI
or 1 - t 2041.

in1.1uences wh ich go)l'ern yo u tn the year

--·-·--

R='=oro, 91ov•, Wwlooro
AM
,._ All Au ancltlonld
And -~~~- ftOO And Up,

torno Ylnyt In Slack. - n

on

ments nitghl signal otherwrs e. The end

II
r

1ect that seems to be movtng in the right
direction . ·

established today for a parttcular purpose

promoting yo u and your sel f-interests. Let could be Unusua lly lucky m arrangements
thiS indiVidual say Wh8l yOU Can't,
' l tiat add 10 you r lnCOffi8 and enha nce

30f.a75.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) A situation your material security.
requiring tea mw ork can work ou l we ll SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) A buso·
Friday . Ma rch 3. 1~95 ·

Enl•p' 11 T.w.. ,
OM , _ , ,

LIWIIr~\.~

llblod Hoy $1.10 , - , ~
Jill Or IM 111.2531.
~~qooorw 1o11oo 01 Hoy

a

Ear

.Com, L"otlon On tc.. lloltcl,
111 ... - 8

1110 t . - - 2 Ton DuntP
Truok. Aul....akl, PI, t Ft.
-Wit 111
-._...,,
· Bol-. . .

--01

o. 11':;

For Rol ....
v..u..
11WIMI12.

::.......=:=_:.~ ·:r=
an...
. .:=-.=:
I

have a good Chan ce of producing mutua l

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Fiemam 1n benefols. Unoons double you r strength .
the background today of someone else is SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) Today you

Refrigeration

.~~l4~10;,
~~~'~n'ii~WY.~,~oo~H~30f.a75.a

dttions wtii work to your ultrmate advan·
!age today. even though early de\le lop -

res ults are lhe ones lhal maller.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) Alloa nces

Electrical &amp;

No ....,.._ .... hold ....
:Z..Cory goroge, boooldo -.....
112 mi. Jorrtoho Rd. Pt.
Hoft~ Supormorkot, bottom
Wll dl:t lnterfwiUterlor l"'lln dJI floor compWely rwmad1l1d. 2
fit ... -111
• 1ng. - · . , . - . ontry . A lleyo: llront boy 40')121', ,..r
~ge
for
,
.
.
In
Pt.
,..
••
nt,
111111 ....
.-.. - . - bar :12'123,, 100'140' lot,
llll4237 oftwlpm.
.
f2!,ooo. :IOW82·2783.
. 114-112-1111.
...,
conol. 304 112 21tl.

tmum 114-446-3667.

c/o this newspaper. P .O. 011 4465 . New
Yo rk, NY 10 163 . Be s ure to stat e your

ARIES (March 21 · ApriJ 19) Do not hesi·
tale lo take greate r nsks Ieday on a pro·

"81 Chovr hill ton Dicfo up, .tor 1:00PM
Zlll.

PICKENS FURNITURE

ltve mode.

zodt ac 51 gn .

72 Truck8 for Sa'le

Mtloo,

~
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Shifting con·

ahead. Send lor yolJ r Astra-Graph predictions. today by mailing $2 to As lro-Graph,

e

Corpota, · - -·
.
Country Furnlt-. Dlocooont
- h pun:- lnol. Ill. 2
North, Pt. - -· 304-e'lll11120.

--

Hu,_.., Bchoot. FR.
1f00+ SIF Alnch • 3BR, 2 Bitho
Nn Roof, Lllr0- Yerd !
~""'? :'~"£!"11~ I~$SI::;.eoo,;::::-:11:4::::
44;::
fl.781t
~.=·-::-.... Vo1t1r

e
e

•

•

•

•

.

Complooo .ohio ch uckle •quoood .

by fill ing •n the minmg words
you develop from step No. 3 below

PRl Nf NUMBERED LETlERS
IN THE SE SQUARES
·
UNSCRAMBLE LmER S TO
GET AN SWER ·

I

III

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

11580.

Cort&gt;ot a Ylnyt In Sloott M.OO Yd
I Op 10 P - 01 Kllo:!!fn
Cotpiot In Stook. . Onr 31 Pit·

•

-

Lawrwa

cttNdnmJI.F lamol:30pm ~

.

.R-ID&lt; ront - - o r monlh.
~:1:2' ol $t201ono. Oottlo Holll.

HousehOld

lwaryofthosewhoare· ,·· -- ·"

·.I,._L_·l_G_l_'_l_..LI__J 0

Rooms

46 Space for Rent

afraid of those who ar9ue, but be

E B I· V 0 N

Furnished .

304·7T.HNI, llooon WY.

s 1 1
Acollegeproressorgavemethe
I
I
._=:;~~~::_..,best advice. He said "Don't be

r

30f.a75.

GOoers
wanted

-

~ ~y

I I· I' 1 I I

13§1;

w-

-~·__!:oU ofW 2:00 p.m.,

M B.. '

ROVENG

Twin
Rt... T -- , -··
..c.~ WMh ao~
Ina IOIIDIIcollono
1br. H(ID Kino
ouDokllzod opt. IDr eldorty and' Vli1Tzod Plpo S250, Kon-. I
hindi• FF d.. EOH
Cu. "'· Chooot Ft'NDr, ' v....
Old, atiO, 11t ttl MOl.
llt71.

~=:r::..:::..ortt.:: ~i

v _o

ROBBOF

low to form fOYr words.

1411 Alor 7 P.ll.
Hoovy Dutr o.E. Drror Stl, ,,..
Ootlverylt-nlll.

llobfle - - l o r ront In
...,ntoy.
~~"""""' and
wlter [nciUc~M. ceble Ulillallle,
Sl5/mo., lull 10 mlnool11 1n&gt;m
AthoroO, 114-ti:M117.

Real Estate

A I - Rolrlaerotor WMh loo
lloloor ftoo; 3!,000 BTU Spice Hooter flO; 3.1 v.a Chivy
EntiiM. 1225, f14-31Hlt1,
Bl"!!o Coblnoto, 13 F\ ........

Gaollne PoWII'ed Hobart W...
dor 1'4'x11" T - . Alia Tnottor
Loll Of Eatt..... $2,100 114-251-

I

M

SOF

2

I~

. . . . . ....,.,.1141.

45

zso

L T A

w u o e .lol c o l __ u

Z SEN

'::~:t:~' S@\l(llA-~t.trs·
::::
...
CLAY I . POlLAN _;.·:...__ _.;_,:_
0 four
I.Orrange letters of the
ICrombled words be·

Nloo UpoiU. ,.._.mont, 201
A - Golllpotlo, Ha
-. ~a-Required, 114 ' .. 1017.
One b•droom ap~rtmentln Mkf..

M

~A woman withoul a man is like a fish without a bicycle." - Gloria Steinem .

-

dllport, 1ft utllltloo paid,
S250/ono., flOG depoolt, 1 _..
22ti

P

IMFU ,

L

C 1895 by NEA, Inc .

3 - . Aport-

ond

ZOF· MEK J .

HKOTBMT
BLFLTBMTE.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Familiarity bre~ds anempt."- Jane Ace .

mont, Cleon, Utllltlll Paid, No
Pot., Rol•• •••• Dopoolt ....

Allerl- In Middleport F"""
stl2-$351 . Cl.ll 11c.tl2 111!10.
Equol Houolng Oppcort..-.
Fumloloed Aportmorot, 1 Bod- . sm.oo Avo.
Ulllflloo Pold. OoHipotll, 114.-Aiw7P.II.
Nloo 2 br IJib, 1n - . . , a
lllddllporl, 114-1112.a&amp;Y.

IOBBMTf -

R F L' C E , '

F ME

BUDGET PRICES A T d Drlwo
liii t~ 1211. - to • ' afrom
rnovt•; Col 1Mo4. .:tllll. E·
qllllllouetng Oppirtunly.

Ill-

M'J

/

BEAUTIFUL APAIITIIEHTB AT

Fumloloed Eflloloncy $111111o.
Ulll.loo Pold SU.. Both, 107
~ Clollpallo, Ill Ul 4111
Altor7 ,11.
Fwnloloed
Elflo;llncy,
All
Ullllloo Pold....~ Both,
~......
AOollpcott., ltt4-44NMI.
0 - ' - Uvlng. 1 ond ~ '*!,_, aport- II VII-

by Luis Campos

.

- · opto., tatol _ . . , opplll,... fum-. loundoy
,_, llocll•loo, C!"M to ocloool
In lcoom. Aollt-lono .........
II; V I - ·o.- AIIIO. 141 or
ooiiiM-1112-3711. EOil
All N- I hoi,_, Eftlcf..,.,,

quiNd, e-..1Stt.
Fumloloed At&gt;ortoowot, 1 Bod"""!'&gt;. 1117 a-..1, o.tiiDotlo,
$28IIIMO. UtftltiH Paid, I~
4411 Aller 7 P.ll.

bronze

C 1995 by NEA, Inc

J.IE COULD

a

Moum greatly
Icy coating•
Watch
Elicit

42
· ·lolond
43 25th
Danloh
44 Puto on
• 48 Bikini porto
-+~f---1 i 47 Brim
· 48 River In
Belgium
50 - - rule
tuouolly)
52 human

1112-T.

51

WI,....Hut..,_li
Elootrlo ,.,.._

'Fftr' Ee- ''

d"'IIMo If v... Don, Col u. Wo "
lloih Loeel 111 . . . . . . . 1-I00-

21M301, WYGOH4I.
•
Equal
~~ ~f"~or;:~...;;;;.;;;,.iiOiolol•''·~

.......
i;ii.....
. , Uaau£ It
~--~ ...
R..,_
Eflctrtool,
304..711-1'111.
.

.wv-.
=··
'

.._I

I

today with a little instruction. Each party
shquid be fully appraised of its potential

ness m eeting will go more smoo thly
t o d ay if it IS co nduc ted i n a Conviv ial

In th e ye ar ahead , you can make impor- 4 benefits.
atmosphere . G ef away from t~e ri ng ing
tant changes to dis lodge imped iments CANCER ~J u ne 21-July 22) Try to ontro· phones and noisy buzz of the olllce .
lhat have s lowed your prog1ess 1n the d uce pr oced ures loda y tha i cou ld CAPRICORN (Dec .. 22:Jan . 19.) Before
past. Your potential for success inc reas- upg rad e y our pe rform a n ce at w o rk . est~ bhs h1ng ne w ObJectives today , locus
es with each obstacle you remove .
Quality i s a c atal ys t fo r reward s and all yo ur .e ffo rts an.~ energ1es. o n an old
PISCES (Feb. :ZO.March 20) •You mustn't recognition .
·
. one that IS near truoloon .
.
underestimate the value of your services LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) Thongs should AOUJ!RfUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) Allhough
today. However, resist the u ~.Qe to over- work out well for you 'today in. situati ons yo u ow:on 't pleas.e ev~ryone today , you
estimat e yO~n w orth to your e mployer . involving )'our affections . Som eone who ~n Still score pomts Wi th the people most
Gel a jump' on life by understanding the loves you could be in an equally recap· omportant to your present needs.
1
0.1995 ~ NEA Inc

_,. .

•

..
..

end• well

34
39
40
41

Mobile In tho oourotry•
wotor, ll"rllogo and ln.
ctudod. JUII 10 mi.- 1n&gt;m
AthoM, otortlng at S:z40.
3CIO/mo" ooblo onllobto, 114-

Fumt.to.d 2

rne•IUIWI

9 Hipbones

By Phillip Ald er

harM,

I

'

lead: • 9

Watch those
communications

....,t...t,

Merch andi se

'·

7•

Pass
· Pass
All pass

ESTIITES U -

AVON to buy or ...1. lllrtiYn. In- . noodod. Work
~=~..=: :JOW82.2t4S or Comp&lt;Aw
own hGI,., SZO.SOk!yr, 24tn. I - . ; . . ; . - - - - - - - -

eo.. For lnnlld llotoL lll'lgulor

East
Pass

·~mol.

EOE

Help Wanted

AVOHmSALES

64

P ass
P ass
Pass

North
2•
4 NT
5 NT

10 Llnglh

-Turn•

of t968 wn ~h makes II Illegal

1112BIIho,
I Dryer

11

Pels for Sale

Pass

Openin g

OllT BILL
COLLECTIN'I!

; OL' OOG !!

Finane tal

6t

DOC PRICHART'S

. West

8 - - World

12 Chllnge
· 13 Futuro bkl.
II Potion
20 Anlmot
-lfare org.
121 Sod
· 22 MIJ'!t.l
,...+-+-l~+--+-1 1 23 Tvpe ollark
24 Floot
...-+~f--l--U 26 Plalno lncllon
27 Cald Adriatic
wind
. 28 Perolo, now
30 Waotorn
maroh plont
32 - well !hot

Dealer: South

PAW!! YOU

\

HIDE YC!RE

-ank

.

South
1 NT

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

"You called a.bout the ant problem?"

T.v.:~....

• 10 7
•J J09874

Vulne ra ble: Both

' ,.

• for Rent
14lllll :1111'. -

Color

• 2
SOUTH
• A 7 6
• AJ 5 4
t K653
• A3

C*: AIIID, Flu Martr.t: Salle•
For llont, Tllu,. .sat, Cod 304-

F

• Q 10 9 5

9 8 7 6
tJ 9 8 4 2

-lon Ewry Sotunloy, 7:00,

9

'
I

• K Q 6 52

AI-\,1Hl5 IS '11-J£" UF&amp; ..

38 lncllno
3V TOkee awoy
7 Homo.... child 42 Dry rlv.r btd
11 Unouopec:tlftll 45 Wile ol Gotolnt
12 lalam. bollo- 48 Tunlolon rulor
; 14 Tolked loudly 49 Novol petty
t 15 F,_ltom
alllcer
rutrolnt
51 s.ntrlea
18 Profit on bank 53 Actor Borgnlne,
ICCt.
54 Gloc:lal epoch
17 Anclont
(2 wdo.)
Europeon
55 Greek peok
19 Tams and
56 Minor
bitreto
20 Furrow
·DOWN
22 - In Cincinnati
I Puobto Indian
25 .Htoot unit
2 - - tho
(lbbr.)
ground floor
. 26 J openelloaoh
3 Tount
129 Pou(olow)
4 owna
· 31 01ygenator
5 lultd
33 Failure
6 Actr111
35 Plonto,
Winona collec:tlvoly
7 Waa vlctorlouo
36 Depaoli

1 Lop hllrp

.,

h.
1-

Wallow· Grave · Ultra · Convoy· ALONG the WAY
"You will discover,"a wise colleague told me. "that success can be measured by how you react to the obstacles
ALONG the WAY."

�Make·a meal with .Ann Landers meatloaf
Dear Readen: I swore I woold
never do this again, but the
preaaure has been lOO much. I'm
caving ill.
In l9S9, l printed a recipe Cor
mcBloaC. Since lhatlime, l have
received lhousanda of reqiiCIIS trom
readcn who have heard aboul ~
recipe and others who have lost
theirs. Actually, I shouldn't be so
apologetic. A whole new genemion
has been born since lhe recipe first
appc:am!.11ere1t is. Enjoy! ·
· ·
Ann Landers' Mestloaf
2 pounds ground round steak
2eggs
1-1/2 cups bread crumbs
3/4 cup keJchup
I tsp. Accent
Ill cup warm w11er
1 pkg. Upton's onion soup mix
Beat lhoroughly.
Put into loaf pan. Cover with llYO
of slrips bacon, if you like that flavot
Pour one 8-ounce can of tomato sauce
over all. Bake one hour at 350

·
· If I'm late, she says something like,
degrees. Serves SIX.
· • 1 called the theater: and the movie
Dear Au Landen: I am a 31- •
half IIi hour ' o. Where have
year-old college-educated pro- ~been?"
Ill
1
rw~nal. l have a g~ career.
I am 8 responsible adult who has
beautiful apartment, 8 paid-for CAJ; a · good sense and high morals. I've
high,IQandabank~nt.People never seen a drug, never held a
say I m IJR:Ily. I love lcids, and I know ::igareuc and have maybe three drinks
how to cook.
a ear
So what is the problem 7 ~:i
~ lo~e my mother. I'm grateful for
mother She sees me as an extenSion
,
N .. time
of ~If lhat she needs to control. all she has done aor me. ow 1t IS
friend "Ha!!k • i ~ for her_'!' let ao and trust me. Any .
~y - · - .;.,1j'ingo.Jrlivei suggestiOns? •• TAKIN&lt;f THE
if w~~~ to me': Everyone who PIFTH COMMANDMENT TOO
has left my life has said the same PAR (LAKELAND, FLA.)
. •• •Why does your mothe r call
DEAR FIFTH:other's
You have
been a
thmg
s~ocating
you so much r ·
party ~ your m
ha been
1call Mom every morning, when I behavtor because ~ou ve
get home and when I go to bed (three willing to tolerate It for so mapy
calls). She calls me several limes on years. Mother
will phone once
weekends to see what I'm doing. If
Tell
~ need for her to1
I'm not at hom~, she phones my dacally and ~::.C:isanemagency.
friends and asks if they know where
Y~ IJII
•
h
lam If she hearn siren she calls to Make II clear that she IS not toP one
see ~I'm all right. I ah~ays tell her your friends to tc:arn of y~ur
where I'm going and how long I'll be. whereaboutS and that if you ~ant er
to know where you are gomg, you

Oregon State
winner in Top
25 action

Ann
Landers

l~J\viduals

~;;til

~f

tl ... 19~Jl'sliJI.ih
2

as the disability lasts. It all adds up . Socml Secunly JaJ&lt;es prud. e in the
'!&gt; important protection .... protec- S ~cf~~~~r~t;ol:w~h:~'faxes are
bOn ~ou can count on dunng your d~ aon wages for household
working years
· IOta1 $ 1,_000
Another Chance
employees unless they
Here's a reminder from Social or more for the year. (The prev11ll!s
Security If you didn't sign up for . threshold was $50). The .change IS
medical insurance
effective with 1994
you first became elig!ble, you II Se~i~a:J:&gt;f~nw!~:Sdo~%~$
hav.e !!!lQther oppgrtqmty to do s9 than $1 000 duiing f994 would be
durmg lhe general enrollment pen·
•
ld be
od ending March 31. Your Medi· due a refund. No. refund wou
care coverage begins July 1 of Ibis due for taxes pa1d on wa~es that
year. You should ~lso lc~ow that Were $1,000 or more dunng the
your mon.thly premmm wiU be 10 yea_::he em lo ee doesn't lose the
pe_rcent h1gher than the basiC ~re- S ial S P.,! ag credits for the
m1um for each 12-month penod
oc
ecun., w e .
lhat you could have been enrolled eamingsr' ede~ though ~':J,or~~~
hut weren't.
gelS~ re un · owever, , e
A rerund perhaps
eammgs on the wor!&gt;~CS.Jl:C!lrd
If you hired someone to work in
$620 or more, but less
your home during 1994 and paid SI,O~~only one wage credltts
them $50 or more, but less than JlC~ .·
I also
.d lh I

Medic~

wh~n

~ual

~~h~! i:!~~~~n~/.~(0; ~t~ . !~~~· io~tl!:'~oy:~~f~Zf~m~

,__...__AI zhe imer benefit
·

eam1~gs. 1'1!1~

·

~'!"

wiU tell her. 1 wge you to be rum
aboutlhis.
The ideal110lution woold be to get
tniWerred ool or town.
·
Gem of the Day: If you want to
make your dreams come 1n1e. the lint
thing you have to do is wake up.
Is lift pauing you by? MIMI to

1994 FORD.
"
TEMP04 DR
4 Cyl, auto, air cond, PS,

tilt, crulu,

impro_, )lOUT social skills? !Mitt for
A1111 Uuultrs' new bookkt,

"Hm~~ 10

Mtlkt Friends and Stop Being

Lonely.· Send a se/f-tJddteued, long,
busine~·sizt tnvelopt and a CMCk

mo.•

or money order for $4.2S (tills
includes postage tJNi handlinr) to:
Friends, c/o AM Uuultrs, P.O. Box

$239 mo.•

have questions about paying taxes
on household employment, call
IRS at 1-800-829-1040.
Ea
· limit
, mm'
.
up.
. If you re rece1v'fg
Secunty benefits, here s an 11Dportanl
update. The
~:~ec~t~nefit am~unt has
been increased for 1995. If you're
th gh
up to
65 rou . 69 you
in
$11,280 Without any
cuons
yo~~~U.=r 65 you can
earn up 10 $8,160 in 1995. If you
earn more than these amounts,
ded .
.
benefit

am~r!c~v~W:. ~

willc~~~~d~~or
peo:C~s
th educ. F $ .

1

~or;

=~s

throul!b 62, e r
n.on 1&amp;- •1 m .
benefns
every $3 .m
ft~:r$~e;::;:~ Ifu:P~ry $ of
· s er the limit. If fOU're2 70

1993 MERCURY
COUGAR XR~7

1993 FORD
T·BIRD

V-6, Auto, A/C, AM/FM CD,
PS, PB, PW, PDL. Pwr Seat,
Tilt &amp; Crulee. Moonroof

V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM

mo.*

0

am~unt you can e~trn an s 1 .
recewe your full benefit amount:

ca11, Tilt, Crulae, Pwr. seat,
PS, PB, PW, POL

----

·-:--

,.-

MO.*

, 1994 FORD
. TAURUS

mo.*

HARRISONVILLE - Har·
risonville Lodge 411, F~AM Sat·
urday, 7:30 J.&gt;.m. Masomc Temple.
S1a1ed meeung. Refreshments to
follow.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Lenten worship
CARPENTER - Columbia
service of Meigs Ministerial Asso- Township Tru,stces regular meeting
ciation, 7:30p.m. at Trinity Con- Monday, 7 p.m. at the ftre stallon.
. gregational church with lhe Rev.
· Dawn SpalcUng speaking.

Convaralon, V-6, Auto, air
. cond, PS, PB, PW, PDL, lilt.
crulea, AM/FM caaa, MUCh
More. 1201181
•

Baseball Shoes Now In Sto.ck
Mens • Womens • .Children

rue

RACINE - , American Legion
Post602, Thursday, 6:30p.m. with
dirmer.
·

.

992-5627

Middleport

Auto, Air Cond, PS, PB, Till,
Crulee, AM/FM Stereo,

V-6, AUto, A/C, lilt, cruise,

58,949

Sho~tJltt~ Ou'l New

S p'litt' /!,ines 06

•

• flt~ted ~unne~

•

• }{out 0~ ea.tl~o~nla

ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
· Township Board of Trustees meet·
ing Friday, 6 p.m. at the township
hall in Rock Springs.

sa,949
1989 PLYMOUTH
GRAND VOYAGER

Much Mo,..l954011

1989 LINCOLN·
. · CONTINENTAL
Signature aerlaa, V-6, auto,
pj, PB, PW, PO!.. PWR
eeet tilt, crulae, JBL atereo
CD. ft531172

~.

during July '93
SOCCO flood .

ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer
. · WASHINGTON- Denatcd
House Republicans say Senate
. defeat of their treasured balanced
hudgel amendment may make it
·tougher, but they still will produce
plans for eliminating the federal
deliciJ.
.
"We're going to do our bcs~"
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M., sai~
after the Senate rejected the
amendment by the narrowest margin Thursday. "We always thought
we couldn't get it done without a
balanced budget amendment and its
full pressure. But we're going to
try.••
"ll makes · il harder," said his
House counterpart, Rep. John
Kasich, R-Ohio. "You have to
spend sgme energy making sure
you don't have people relax . Bul
it's a crusade. The crusade goes

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Steff
Two area miners have earned .
national recognition for saviDg
lhe lives or nine other men
trapped nearly 400 feet under·
ground while Meigs Mine 31
flooded on July 11, 1993.
·
Charles "Jody" Neece of
Rutland and Daniel J. Beam of
Gallipolis were nonored for
their actions Thursday.
The Pittsburgh-based council
honored 17 individuals trom the
United SLates for saving their
own lives
other indi-

CARNEGIE MEDAL WINNERS -The
Medal
has been beslowed oo two Meigs Couoty minen. Seen above are
Gallipolis' Dan Beam and Rutland's Cllarles "Jody" Neece,
each awarded the national booor Thursday. The two mloers
played key roles io saving the lives or niDe other mioen on July
11, 1993.
have lefl those men," Neece said
in a previous interview wilh The
Daily Seminel. "Who ci&gt;uld turn
their back yn friends or coworkers in their lime of need?"
Neece Jrudged through the

rushing waters as logs and other
debris swept past h1m, ~tinging
to the ceilmg and moving forward SICJ! by step.
Once .ho reached the Olher
(Continued on Page 3)

P.S ; PB, PW, PPL. AM/FM
. Caaa. 1954281

.sa,949

lly KATHRYN CROW
Sentloel Correspoadeol
Discussion on renu·ng villageowned buildinl!s highlighted
Thursday's meeung or Syracuse
Village Council.
The village bas available as a
rental sforage unit the former
Duckworth gas station building
across from the mun!cipal building,
and four block resJrooms, two at
. the former state park and two at the
village park.

The restrooms were abandoned maintain the park. Scott Walton,
because of extensive vandalism . . who requested space for storing
Council is also attempting to rent diving equipment, will be offered
the village-oWned house,
space at London Pobl.
It was noted lhatcouncil has had .··
The restroonis at the municipal
numerous requests to rent the park have been. offered, as requestbuildings.
. ·
ed, to the Syracuse Baseball AssoCouncil agreed to rent the Duck- ciation and the Midget Football
worth building to Harry Leffle, League. The person in charge of
who operates Can-Do Maintenance the two p.:o~s will be con~ted
Co . The village will use I he to detenmne 1f they are stallmter·
restrooms at the former slate par:k ested in using the facilities.
for storage of equipment needed to
Councilman Larry Lavender

BREC members.launch petition
drive to oust manager, trustees

1989 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA !X
auto, air cond, 1111,
eru1u. AM/FM ·can, PS,
PW, PDL. Much Mora.

$6,949

• 9a.nt;:en

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge Friday, 6:30 p.m.
annual inspection. Work in MJis!er
Mason degree.
SAT.lJRDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Jun._ior;..;;G;:ran~giie;rlt--~
t--~..'llrwill- hold-regnlaE-mectitrg Saautday, 7:30 p.m. at lhe $f811ge hall
on County Road I. J umor grange
members need to bring baking ~n­
.. test enlries. Potluck fQIIowmg
meeting. All members urged to
anend.

• cf-la.tanln,ton

o-1 Bostota

e·!Ja.nde~6llt
'

.

• /.!,e11i Bendo11e~s

illR CJ:01'HIERS·

145 North Second

992-2351

Budget ·a mendment defeat
won't stop GOP downsizing

on.''

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

PRJ&lt;SIDENT CLINTON

·

That's just fine with President
Clinton and his fellow Democrats,
who know that the massive,
unprecedenled. spending cuts necessary to balance !he budget would
enrage millions of voters. They
quickly inviled the GOP to proceed
with its budget-cutting work, as
Jiguse Republicans promised in
iheir "Contract With America"
campaign manifesto.
"They have still not presented
their budget," Clinton told
reporters at Jhe White House. He

·
f
dd d I
h ·
a e .ater t at 11 w~~ lime or
Repub.hcan.s to sho"': ho~ they
are. gomg to keep the prom1ses of
lheiC conlra~t on balancmg the b~dget.~nd parmg r~r thett tax cuts.
. Now IS the lime for the Repubbeans ... to roll up thett s.l~.ves and
actual~y reduce the. deflcu, House
Mmonty ~dcr R1ehard Gephardl,
D-Mo., S&amp;ld. . .
.
The ame~dment, wh1ch was to
be lhe fla~sh1p of the GOP effort .to
cut spendmg, zoomed through the
House m January m JUSt two days.

But it was shot down by lhe Senile
afJ,cr nearly five weeks of debate.
. The vote was 65-35 in favor, just
shy of lhc two-lhirds majority constitutional amendments need.
That margin was deceptiv.e -·
because . Senate Majority Leader
Bob Dole, R-Kan., an amendment
supponer, voted "no" in a parliamen~aty maneuver that will enable
him to force a second vote on the
measure, probably during lhe 1996
campaign season.
Bul even without lhe amendment, Domenici and Kasich say
they will produce deflcit·roduction
measures Ibis spring. Dole, who is
planning a run for the White
House, said Republicans would cut
spending, raise .no Laxes .and t~st
Democratic dedication to deficit
.reduction with tough V!lles. _
"They'll be hiding under the
couches," he said.
The amendment called for a bal·
anced budget by ihe year 2002,
unless waived by .t hree-fifths
. majorities of Congress. But it left
unspoken what spending cuts or IIIli
increases should be imposed precisely the problem that has
mired lawmakers as the national
debt has surged to $4.8 trillion.
Nonet!Jeless, opinion polls indicate the measure is backed by thrc!:
of every four voters, though that
margin plummets when people are
asked aboul specific cuts lhat
· would be required 10 eliminate the
red ink.

Syracuse Council finds renter for storage building

1990 PLYMOUTH
VOYAGER SE·

/!,adles We fhe

TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
· Post 9053 Auxiliary, regular meeting, 7:30p.m.
.
·
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Church
Women United of Meigs County,
armual observance of~rn:ld Day or
Prayer at I p.m. Friday, Mount
Mdriah Baptist Church, Middle-

port

219 N. Second Ave:

A Mullimedla Inc. Newspaper

$190,000, stands to lose $426,000 a year in bask s-1aie aid under big budget loser - said dislrict residents were sending more state income
Voinovich's proposal.
·
laX money to Columbus and gcning less back.
"Some people may look at the OlenJarigy School DislrictlaX base and
DePalma said that in 1981, residents paid $8 million in state income
say we are a wealthy dislrict and don't need assislance. I disagree,"
lax and saw $3.7 million, or 46 percent, returned in basic state aid 10
Richards said.
.
school s.
''All of the progress .that has taken place in the passage of school
" By ,1992, disJrict residents sent $46.6 million to Columbus, but the
issues and lhe quality of outcome has been done with a belo"' state averbasic aid payment of $4.3 million represcnled only a 9 percent return," he
age expenditure,'' he said.
·
said.
Richards said pee pupil spending statewide was $5,241 in budget year
Centerville would lose $1 miltion annuaUy in the budget, a 23 percent
1994. Olen tangy spent $4,965 per pupil.
loss of state basic aid and a 2.4 percent reduction of tolal dislrict revenues.
. The proposed $426,000 cut represents 2.6 percenl of the dislrict's operThe Buckeye Association of School AdminisJrators said opposition to
ating budget
.. ·
• ·
.
· stale laX increases had produced more and larger requests from disllicts
"To eliminate basic aid all together is unacceptable. The state of Ohio for local laX levies.
· .
is charged to provide a thorough and efficient form of education in the
· "In 1984, 356 school issues appeared on Ohio's ballots; in 1994, 553
Constitution. Where is the slate's effort?" Richards said.
'
school referenda appeared," said Barney Dunilan, thc. association's lobSuperintendent Frank DePalma of Centerville City Schools -another. byist ·

Miners
get
hero's
honor
Actions praised

.
Jrying to save a bOy
from drowning.
Neece and Beam, Soulhem
Ohio Coal Co. employees in
Meigs Mine 31, will each
receive a $2,500 granL
The pair played key roles in
helping the mmers escape as
millions of gallogs of water
rushed in from an abandoned
nearby mine.
Neece, a 19-year mining vet·
eran, waded more lhan a half
mile throu~h water that rose as
high as hcs neck. Neece had
already worked a 12-hour shift
when .the miners heard that
water was· rushin·g into the
mines cutting off nine miners.
"I had to go back. I couldn't

1990 DODGE
·. B2SO
MCS Diamond Furu %.

1 Section, io P•g•• 35 cenco

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 3, 1995

·r---------~~~------------------~--~

--

BALLOON BOUQUET FUND-RAISER - Mooey ror the
Alzbeimen Fouadatloo wt111 rallied recendy tbrou&amp;b a balloon bou·
quet sale. Here Mllrcla HmHie•ltelt deliven some of the bouqu~lli­
Pomeroy NursiDg and Rehabilitation Center. 1D assoclatloa With
WMPO I390 AM and FM, Veterana Memorial Hospital ud the
VMH Auxiliary, John Construction Company, Kee and Dee
11C:era,mic:s, and AGA Gas sponsored the ruod raiser.

.

Vol. 45, NO. 215

Copyright 1995

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
.
COLUMBUS- So far as Gov. George Voinovich's p-oposed budget
is concerned, the OlenJangy school dislrict of southern Delaware County
is wealthy -and a target for a cut in state aid. The dislrict disagrees.
Supenntendent Keilh Richards joined other administrators and education groups Thursday in opposing parts of Voinovich's school spending .
plan before a House Finance subcommittee.
Voinovich proposed to cut basic state aid to 60 of the Sf:Bte's 611
weallhiest disllicts. About $33 million in savings would go mstead to
low-wealth schools.
Richards said Olentangy was the fastest-growing district in the staiC,
with a student P9PUWi9!! lhl!l !!Qubl~!!. in eight years. Voter~ have
approved lhree money issues ·in recent years; the graduation rate IS 100
peicent; 90 percent of students go on to advanced.ttaining.
.
The district, which has a property valuauon per pup1l of about

S~ial

can:

~

16-22-26-27·28

Low tonl&amp;ht In lht 20s,
cloudy. Saturday, dou~y. HIJibs
near 50.

'Wealthy' school districts tar.get aid cuts

mo*

TH.URSDAY
RUTLAND - .Rutland Town·
ship trustees, regular session,
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the
sla·
lion.

8-0-l-3
Buckeye 5:

AUTO, A/C, AM/FM
CASS, PS, PB, PW,
Pwr aeat, tilt. crulae.

4 cyl, · auto, air cond, lilt,
PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr. IHt; · crulae, PS, PB, AM/FM
Tilt &amp; Crulaa, MOREl
stereo

--Community calendar--

2-7-6
Pick 4:

V-6,

V-6, Auto, A/C, AM/FM Can,

-··-·--· -

Pick 3:

1994 MERC~RY
SABLE

Jl562, Chicago,lll. 60611-0562. (In
'ttllltlda, send $5.15.)

n~f' liii~g anS~~~i~g ~~~ ~~:lr, there is no limn don ~~~~

instead
taxes each quarter, an employer can
me and pay'just once p Y"Jlt.

•

Sports, Page 4

Survivors of tax -paying workers receive b~?,,l!,~~~,!?.?,.
By Ed Peterson,
Social Sec~rity
Mt~nager m Athens
le think that Social
A lot of
Se urit is
for old age. Well
c shXutd Jkhow lhat millions Qf
who aren't retired get
Soci.al Security, too. They're the
surv1vors of men 811~ WOfll~_ who ,
lilive walked and prud taxes under
Social Security. Each year, more
than 2 million children and young
adults get Social Security siD'vivors
• benefits ... money that ~elps ~ (Jl!-Y
the b1lls whale they re still en
school And parents who take care
of a s~ving ch~d are eligible ~or
benefits too. Children can rece1ve
'al Securit survivors beneflis
they're
high
school . Their parent can receiv.e.
benefits until the .child is 16. And if

Ohio Lottery

Middleport, OH

. ....

'

'

'

suggesled that the house owned by
the village, if not rented, be convencd into il concession stand
which, according -to council, is
needed because of the condition of
lhe present facility. Council agreed
to study the proposal and costs
involved.
In other business, Ernie Sisson,
named to council to fill the unexpi red term of Don Sllafer, was
relieved of his duty because of his
failure to allend meetings. The

Ohio Revised Code states that
. council members may be expelled Stale Route 124 lo begin ncx't
·
if they fail to attend two meetings week.
A new culver! and a headwall
in succession.
Named to fill the post was will be placed between the Knapp
Donna Peterson. Peterson had ear- and Taylor propenies across the ·
• tier requested to be considered for a highway from Hubbard's Greencouncil position. Mayor James house. Ditching will occur along
Pape conlacted her, she accepted 124"beginning above the Joan
lhe appoinupent, ~will be sworn Mescher property to Seventh
Sueet.
.in at the next counc1l meeung.
Councilman Bill Roush reported
Council also discussed adopting
on culvert and diJching work along an ordinance to control unsiRhtly
(Continued on Page 3)

Witness' memory fails:
except on .O.J. alibi

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