<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9493" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9493?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T10:56:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19927">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/32f43c8f89360472caef9c439b19f21c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c76f62851d8b2f8c86b37557e6fbc6ae</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30451">
                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 15, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AIMirrHD rmiiiOltf· Eadl Of these ad'lerl!sed Items ~ reQ~red to be rt!8dlly a~lable for sale In
each Kroger Storl, except as speclflcaly noted In tills ad. If we do 1111 out of an advertised ll!m. we

wRI Offer IOU your dlolee Of a comparable Item, MlEI1 a'llllable, reflec~ng 1t1t same savings or a
ralncheck wl'lch Yldl entitle you to purthase the ad\1!ftlsed ll$11 at the advertised llllce '!Mihln 30
days. Only one vendor coupon wB1 be accepted per ll$11 pllthased.

Ohio ~ottery

COPYRICHT 1995 · THE kROCER CO. ITEMS ANO PRICES GOOD SIIHOAY. MMOI12,
TIIIOl.icH SATURDAY MARCH 18, 1995 IN GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY.

NIT cage
action
underway

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. fjONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

rick 3:
'962
Pick 4:

3747
Super Lotto:
1·12-20.26-32-43
Kicker:

~ageS

..

CAFFEINE FREE DI.ET COKE, SPRITE

Dl
coca

a
Ia Ciassic
•

12-Pack
12-oz. Cans

Limit Two
12-Packs,
Please.

Luw tonlgbt In tho 40s, clur.
Friday, sunny. Highs In 601.

678082

•

•

a1
Vol. 45, NO. 224
Copyright 1995

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents ·
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 16, 1995

~yoinovich supports t~x hike for highway projects
By JOHN CHALFANT
·
.
Associated Pre W
COLUMBuSS rltesr
G
G
.
. eems a 11 ov.
eorge
bears
· a bo uta ·
IVomovich
k f
£ these da_YS are co~pIamts
boc kino mone&gt;: or local htghway proJCCts .• Now he ts
iitoc thegcl:artaxetncrease for roads- but be s not lead·
8.,
g ·
.• ,
,
tb : Eve:;whe~ .I t~,~1 s You ve got to do~~;
v~/:!v~C:~~J ;.s !8 way or that htgbway.
.
ednesday.
..
. .
He_ satd be would suppon an m~ease m etther
::ehcense ~g fees or the slate g~line tax.to pump
. money mto htgllway construction.
He tol_d House an_d Senate leaders be would
endorse etther alternauve to help erase a backlog of
road and bndge building projects. He· left the choice

up to legislators
·
.
, ,
. ·
.
,
1
think'! m basth!cal~-~!! 10 Bbetbdoattheredstbeno ,money. .
some mg 1o:a10 to
ne an
Y ve got to
dec'de
• gomg
· to dott,
· " Vomovtc
·
· h 10ld ·
1 wh en th_eyre
reportelS at an unpromptu news confe~ce:
can _tell you they'll either do tl thts. y~ar o;&gt;r
~Y II do 11 next year becau.se the heatls ~~ldin~ m
tbtS state and people are getung very up~~ · be srud.
Oh~o Departtnent of Tmnsportallon has told
legtslators 11 ~ 1101 bave e~ougll m~ney to fmance
all the ~M?W higllway and bndge projects ready for

·:1

!he

cons~uon.

Dtrector ~erry Wray blam~ the federal govern- .
ment for falling to. return to Ohto·more of the money
from federal gasolme taxes.
But Wray said last month that the department

·
would not propose a gas tax mcrease.
Voinovich said Wednesday that legislators should
place any gasoline tax increase on a·balloL
But he said he would not object if legislators
wanted to increase vehicle registration fees on their
own.
. .
"I've already indicated to the leadership that I'd
have no. problem with tbat. We're supportive but •
that's up to them," Voinovicb said.
. "If we got the $IS along with the money that we
have in the pipeline ... we could put together a very
robust program,'' be said.
.
The Ohio Contractors Association has recommended _a $15 increase in auto tag fees witb the revenue gmng to fund operations of the State Highway
Patrol.

That would replace money lbe patrol now lakes
from its snare of the slate 22 cents per gallon gasolm'e ··~- spending gymnastics would free up about
Such
$150 million for new highway construction
Voinovich said be would recommend nothing
without a consensus among legislators.
"They know that 1 will be supponive of either
alternative. but they have to come back and put the
consensus together in regan! to that or I'll ·ust let it
go by the boards," he said.
j.
. . ''And people in southeastern and central (Ohio)
will continue to complain and scream and ell and
lben maybe they'll do sometliing about it nci:
Voinovicb 'd
.
Y
sat ·

Car,"

Barker
pleads
guilty

Governor says tourism
deserves another look
COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP)From the Statehouse to the White
House. government and business
seem to believe the tourism industry de·serves a closer look."Count
Gov. George Voinovicb among
those who agree that it d&lt;Jils.
He said tbe industry employs
204 million pe~le worldwide, and
337,000 in Ohio. ·

U.S.D.A. GRADE A 1Q-14 LB. AVG.

. Kroger
Fresh·Turkeys
.Pound

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" ASSORTED VARIETIES CHILLED

Minute Maid
orange Juice
64-0z.

Black seedless
Grapes ·
Pound ·

60¢

KROGER

·

1-Roll

Two - injured~

one
cited ·tn wreck

two Meigs Colin!)' men were
flown to Grant Medical Center in
Columbus f11llowing a ooe-vehicle. ·
CI11Sh on state Route 124 in Olive ·
Township early this morning. ·
Ricky I. Blake, 41, of state
Route 124, Reedsville, was eastbound wben his 1977 Chevrolet ·
pickup b'Uck went off the rigbi side
of the road, came back onto the
roadway, crossed the road and
struck an emlwm~e.nt before coming to rest on its top in a ditch,
reported the Gailia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
·
Passengers Gerald L. Barringer,
59, and Robert Richardson, 41,

Save

HI·Drl
Paper Towels .

"The days when our economic
development sights can be set
exclusively on manufacturing,
those days are gone," Voinovicb

Tender TWISt
WhiteBread
16-0Z.

said Wednesday· at the ftrst Governor's Summit on Travel and
Tourism.
. "Travel and tourism is a Clean
industry that benefits small, medium and large businesses. We can
spur Its growth through planning
and promotion." be said.
Voinovich said a state-funded
research project showed visitors
spent $9.4 billion in Ohio last year.
He said the industry had an
Ohio payroll of $4.3 billion in
1994, and generated $510 million
in state Wld local taXes. ·

'• •

both· of State Route 681,
Reedsville, were transported to
Grant via LifeFiigbtll helicopter.
A hospillll spokeswoman said this
morning tbe two are in fair and stable condition after being !Rated fill',
lacerations.
Blake refused treatment at the
scene, according to the report. Tuppers Plains, Reedsville and Racine
fue and medical~tnits of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service responded.
.
Blake was cited by the patrol on
charges of driv.ing under the inllu- ·
ence, failure to control and fictitious registration.

Cox promises to take IG
office to new, higher lev.e ls

Dorltos
Tortilla Chips
9-&lt;&gt;z.

f

.

(

.

cabbage ______

FRESH GREEN

Glazed
Donuts

.

Lb.

ICED &amp; OECORA'T~
S'T.PATRICK'S DAY

Boneless
stew Beef

$ 99

$

corned see~ . . . Lb.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE CRAIN FED BEEF CUBE STEAK OR .

Pound

·2/$
THORN APPLE VALLEY
BRISKE'T

· COLUMBUS (AP} - Tbe
inspector general's office will try
to prevent wrongdoing as well as
investigate it, Gov. George
Voinovich' s nominee for the posi·
lion told tbe Senate Judiciary Committee.
"I will lake the office to new
and higher levels.'' Donald Cox
sad Wednesday promised. He said
his plans include making recom mendations to government agencies on how they can prevent prob·
lems.
·
Tbe committee recommended
Cox for confirmation . after
Democrats-questioned the foiDier
Gallia County judge's qualifications. His nomination now goes to
the Rules Committee and then tbe
. full Senate,
Democrats have criticized Cox
' for his lack of experience as an
investigator. Cox responded be
would be wiUing to take on tough
cases.
The nomination bas also been
under a cloud , following
Voinovicb' s decision not to reap·
·point former Inspector General
David Snirtz. who had been investigating
charges
against
Voinovicb' s chief of staff, Paul
Mifsud.
·
Cox told the Senate committee
that bis office is continuing tbe
Mifsud investigation and will com·
plete tbe case in 60 days. Mifsud
bas been accused of offering a
Cincinnati contractor work in
exchange .for dropping a law suit
against the state. ·
Mifsud has denied any wrong·
doing. Voinovich has said be wants
a fresh ~tlvc in the office.
Cox also drew fire from some
lawmakers for firing all four memben of Sturtz's staff during his fmt
week oo tbe job. Cox slal1ed Feb.

.Duraca
Resin Chair
Each

·

cup cake .-:. .-:--·s-et.

51 ' PA'TRICK'S DAY
•
fliESH C:UT "SINGLE STEM .
GREEN BOUQUET

Kiddie
Resin Chair .... 99¢

c,rnatlon. . . . . . . ..Each

inierviewin~

the current staff. He
said they dtd not share his ideas
about expanding the scope of the
·
office.
Sen. Joseph Vukovich, DPoland, said that it "strains all
sense of credibility" tbat Cox ·
could have been chosen on the
basis of his six years as judge and
four years as im assistant prosecutor.
Cox said be bad no knowledge
of any political motivation in his
nontinalion.
.
"I am nota political person,"
{::o~ said. "If there .i s some political reason for my being chosen, it
is beyond me."
Tbe committee voted 6·3 in
favor of confirmation. Seti. Jan
Long, of Circleville, was the only
Democrat to vote with the majority.
Republican Sen. Scott Oelslager, of
Canton, was not present to vote.
Immediately after the vote.
Vul(ovicb lri\ld to mend fences.
''If you do the job as tbe slatute
·says. I wiD fight vigorously to keep
you in the job," Vukovich said.

6.

•

'·

+

He said he made the deCision to
hire new staff on .his own-. after ··

DONALD COX ..:...

..

'

A trial- set for a mwuccused or'
assaulting an Ohio wildlife officer
was canceled this morning after
officials reached a plea agreement
Michael R. Barker, 49; of
Charleston, W .Va., pleaded guilty
to a felony charge of failure to
comply with the order or signal of
..
a police officer.
Barker · lead Meigs County
Game Protector Keitb Wood and
other law enforcement officers on a
· 15-mile chase through western
Meigs County on Nov. 11, 1994,
·after Wood attempted to arrested
Barker for spotlighting, the night·
time shooting of deer. The chase
ended shortly after Barker's car
struck a deer and ran into a ditch.
Prosecutors dismissed a charge
of felonious. assault iii exchange for
Barker's plead of guilty to a misdemeanor assault charge. Tbe charge
stems from a struggle between
Barker and Wood following a foot
chase after Barker's car went into
the ditch.
As pan of the agreement. arlcer
wiD receive a suspended 18-month
sentence and be placed on probation for five years. In addition, he
will plead guilty to 15 misdemeanor charges receiving an 18montb sentence suspended to 90
days to be served starting midSeptember.
Proceedings were still. in
progress at pn;ss iime. Complete
details will appear in Friday's
Daily Sentinel.

a

CLASH IN. COURT • Defense a~torney F.
had with defense witness Max Cordoba In Los
Lee Bailey, right, and prosecuting attorney Mar·
Angeles In the double-murder case against 0. J,
•
cia Clark discuss an alleged conversation Bailey · Simpson. (AP),

Fuhrman denies using 'n-word';
0. J. Simpson case limps along
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Tbe
"You say under oath that you news conference.
jury that Includes eight blacks have not addressed any block per·
Nearly lost in the day was any
finally beard the "n-word" in the ·· son as a nigger or ·spoken about indication that it is Simpson who is
O.J. Simpson trial, but not from the black people as niggers in the past on trial, accused of the June 12
mouth of the detective"accused of 10 years, Detective Fuhrman?" murders of his ex-wife Nicole
uttering iL
Bailey insisted, his voice rising to a Brown Simpson and her friend
At least seven times Wednes- roar.
. Ronald Goldman.
day, defense attorney F. Lee Bailey
"Th.at's what I'm saying, sir,"
"What we have now. is two trigrilled Mark Fuhrman abo lit the Fuhrman answered.
a1s going on here," Loyola Univer·
word "nigger." Each time,
Defense attorneys have accused sity law Professor Laurie Levenson
Fuhrman denied using the racial FubiUian of framing Simpson by said. "One is about who killed
slur that Simpson's lawyers are try· planting evidence, possibly out of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
ing to pin on him.
racial hatred. Outside court, Bailey Goldman. The second trial is about
Asked point-blank if be usesolhe said the defe~se would produce a . whether Mark Fuhrman is a racist,
word to describe peQple; Fuhrman number of people . to contradict and did he plant evidence on OJ.
-who didn't even use the woni in Fuhnnan .
Simpson? Somehow, we're getting
"Let thousands of witnesses more on Fuhrman than anything
his testimony -responded with a
fiiDI yet simple, "No."
come forward," Bailey said at a else."

TRC discusses WVOW
clean-up project updates
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. . (TCE) in·the groundwater. ·
dards and the creek will be moniUpdates on clean-up projects were
Arguto said the EPA has begun
tored. ·
given during Tuesday night's meet- ' temporary action to eliminate the
Concem.s ·were also expressed
ing of the Technical Review Com- problem. They will. drill wells over wetlands in the Mill Creek
mittee (TRC) of the West Virginia around the affected area and then
area and creek flooding because of •
Ordnance Works.
pump and treat the groundwater.
tbe &lt;liscbarge and run-off. The
Wayne Budrus, Army Corps of
Arguto stated the city's water
corps, state . and EPA will work
Engineers, reported the eight moni-' · supply is in no danger.
.
together on working out the possi·
loring wells for the ~int Pleasant
A meeting will be held next
ble problems.
In a repon on Operable Unit II,
and Camp Conley water systems week between lbe EPA and slate
have been inslalled. He said the officials to discuss handling the
Sellite Plan~ and remedial investi·
fmt reports Are due in June.
problem at the l'a!itasote propcny.
gations, Bu.trus said tbe perimeters
Budnts said the corps is continA discussion over concerns
have been se~ but the study is not
uing field investigations ili the about pumping the treated dis· complete.
magazine area. The repons are due charge from lbe Red and Yellow
Budrus said the corps expanded
bock in December 1~5.
Reservoirs into Mill Creek was
the site investigation 4. Red Water
He also reported the repons for held. The decision to pump into the
sewer. He said a draft n:port is due
the !lCid dock area are due in creek has been approved by the
in June.
·
A spring fish sampling will .be
September, Red Water sewer line · slate.
reports are due in JUDe and the fuel
Michael Hoeft, WV-DNR Fish·
done in Pond 30, Budrus reported. ·
' cfewtreponisdueinNovember.
. erles Biologist, said be is conThe next TRC meetingwill be
Bill Arguto, U.S . Environmental cemed over the traces of Iron and· May 16, at 6 p.DI. at the city build·
Pro.te~t.i on Agency, reported ·On
manganese from tbe treated water inR.
tesqngs done at the foiDier Pana- building up in tbe creek over a long
A special meeting to discuss ·
sote Plant site. Arguto said there • period of years. Officials said the sewer discharge into Mill c~eek
were two areas that showed a high treated water will meet state stan·. will be organized, but no date was
concentration of Trichloroethene
....., set. · •
·
I .

Percent chan!JB, month to month,
seasonally adjusted.
·
0.8%
0.6

: u.Uit••lll
-&lt;J.2

MAMJJASONOJF
1894

'15

Labol' Slati5liCS

Consumer prices
up in February
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices climbed 0.3 percent in
January as higher. costs for food
offset the first drop in gasoline
prices ip four monlbs.
The Labor Department said
today that tbe February increase in
its Consumer Price Index matched
the January rise and left prices
climbing at an annual rate of 3.7
percent so far this year.
That is 1 percentage point high- · ·
er than tbe 2. 7 percent increase
recorded for all of 1994 and served
to -emphasize the widely held view
that irination, after falling to the
lowest levels in three decades, is.
healing itp again . .
. Higher costs for food, airline
fares, auto financing charges and
d&lt;1ctors' visits contributed to the

increase.
The rise in the CPI was tbe
same as a 0.3 percent rise in wbok:sale prices.
I

�•
•

Thursday, March 16, 1995

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OhJo

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeMral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Coo troller

LETTERS OF OPINION ue wck:omc. They· &amp;boukl be Jc01 ~ 300
words long. Alllellei'S ue subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
address and ~lcpbooc number. No unsigned Jcnen will be publilbed. Letters
·should be in good Uste, addressing iuue., not personalities.

Do employment policy .
failures producejobs
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
.
·
NEW YORK - At what was thought to be the tail end of the
. expansion, business has gone on abiring frenzy, swprising even President Clinton. who understandably seized credit.
lt was proof, he said, that his administration's strategy was working,
and hedeclared his belief that "we have to stay with this sb'ategy."
Richard Vedder winced. In a research paper issued siKinly before,
and now stirring debate, the Ohio University economist stated that the
job surge may really be a consequence of Clinton's sb'ategic failures.
•'In recent months,'' be says, ''there has been a growing realization
that Clinton will not be able to adopt the more _radical elements of bis
domestic agenda." Business relaxed and began hiring. .
Vedder' s view may be incorrect, but it is well researched. He stands
' by bis thesis that for years government job policies "have probably
· . dcsll'oyed more jobs than they have created."
•
He contends that government efforts to relieve· joblessness
•
·· inevitably . ~se the price of labor, lower productivity, invite inflatioo,
lead to recession and in stieb ways destroy jobs.
' 'We have created a myriad of regulations and legislation from min. imum wage laws to employment insurance to provide protection to
workers. We have intervened in labor markets with legislation-to
remove discrimination.''
:'
Vedder's list goes on and&amp;n,(and is fully contained in a 1993 book
:· he wrote with Lowell Gallaway, "Out of Work: .Unemployment in
-: · T~c~;cntieU&gt;-Century Am~rica. "
:· .. , His latest comments on thii'Subject are in a paper for the Center for
the Study of American Business, a think tank at Washington University, St Louis, where Vedder soon will be a visiting scholar.
To demonstrate his point, be compares the century's first three
decades with the latest three full decades. In the frrst three, government
involvement in labor markets was minimal, and government spending
took one· tenth of output.
It was before minimum wages, pro-union legislation, civil rights
law, federal unemployment insurance, Aid to Families with Dependent
Children, and food stamps, Government ran budget surpluses ill most
years.
By conll'as~ in the '60s, '70s and '80s, government absorbed more
., than three times the proportion of total output of the earlier era. All the
social and legislation. programs mentioned were in effect. Government
ran deficits.
;
·
" The concern about unemployment was literally dozens of times
greater than in the earlier period, as were the actions taken to meet
those concerns," be says. Yet, overage annual unemployment in the
first period was 4.7 percent but 6.1 percent in the period of governme.nt
intervention.

·

.

Vedder also cites the 1920· I 921 downturn, wbich at first may have
been more severe than in the' months following 1929. But in 1920-21,
government did little or nothing, and in 1929 it intervened heavily.
Such evidence wasn't available •.ben, however. Some New Deal
thinking became standard, and government efforts in the labor market
have· been constant since then.
·
Right or wrong, John Maynard Keynes' economics of intervention
took bold. Vedder says the resulting economic disruptions often have
been at the,expense of jobs.
.
.
"The New Deal, rather than restoring. the economy, prolonged the
misery,' ' be asserts, and The Great Depression, often depicted as an act
of market failure, "is the best example of government failure in this
cen tury."
This is why Vedder thinks the job market has improved:
First, be says, the defeat of health-care reform legislation reassured
employers and removed, at least temporariiy, the possibility of signifcanUy increase&lt;! labor costs (which big business bad been attempting
to lower through downsizing).
Secondly, he says, the 1994 elections results reduced chances that
Congress wouid approve legislation raising labor costs.

Today in history
By The As.&lt;ocialed Press

Today is Thursday, March 16, the 75th day of 1995. There are 290
days left in the year.
·
Today's Higblighrin History:
Fifty years ago, on March 16, 1945, during World War 11, Iwo Jima
was declared secured by the Allies.
On this date:
• · In 1521. Portuguese navi_gator Ferdinand Magellan reaebed the Philip·pines. where be was killed by natives the following month.

Berris World

...
WALKiNG

6N

EGGS

Susie M. Fischer

Corruption makes Mexico a bad investment
Salinas' term, whfch ended last
year.
The problem, be allowed, was
the old intelligence bugaboo called
mirror imaging - the tendency to
see things through American eyes.
Salinas speaks nearly flawless
English, wbicb is due in part to bis
American education. He is. a rustrate economist and the most proAmerican president Mexico bas
bad in three decades (at least in pri·
vate conversations).
Yet the CIA now fears ir may
have ignored the fact thai Salinas
sprang from the same corrupt systern that produced other presiden·
.
.u'alSo
pro11 •sates.
.
.
far, no evidence has

of Jose Francisco Ruiz Massieu ,
secretary general of Mexico's ruling Institutional Revoliihon.ary
Party (PRJ). Others close to Salinas
are also being implicated by the
government of President Ernesto
Zedillo.
.
Meanwhile, .the corruption that
permeates all levels of Me.xico's
government suggests ' thai Amcrican loan guarlllltees may be sunk
into a black bole of greed.
To recap the recent history we
have established:
- Luis Echeverria, president of
Mexico from 1930 to 1976, was
too leftist for American 'officials,
•wbo 1believed be
· condoned
· · cCuba's1
mvo vement 10 various entra
American revolutionary movements. According to highly sensilive CIA reports we saw, Ecbever·
ria alsO amassed a personal fonune
of anywhere from $300 million to
SI binion during his term. - - - - --1
-His successor, Jose Lopez
Portillo, is. believed to have accumulaled anywhere from $1 billion
to $3 billion, according 1o the U.S .
intelligence reports. As president
during the late 1970s and early
1980s, Portillo presided over Mexico's oil boom.
In both cases, their successors
dutifully rounded up a few highprofile scapegoats and tossed them
in prison for good show.
-Lopez Portillo's band-picked
successor was Miguel de Ia
Madrid: who ran on a campaign of
"moral renovation." Two years
into his term, however, yet another
"Top Secret" intelligence report
alleged that de Ia Madrid was
siphoning public money into personal and family bank accounts to
the tune of more than $100 million.
He denied this' in interviews with
us.
When Salinas took the helm in
1988, a new round of arrests was
conducted. Drug traffickers, labor
leaders and others were carted off
to demonstrate a commitment to
good ~ovemment.
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Bln.steln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc. ·

emerged, even in the most secret
American ·intelligence reports, to
implicate Salinas in appropriation
of government funds or involvemt:nt in any political scandals in
Mexico. His brolller Raul. however, was indicted last week on
charges that be planned and
fmanced the Sept. 28 assassination

"'

~£'1~ ITWASOilUIM9W"6Ha1tttfANOA
Cf~~~
~WART~D TilE MU.(.l lll~ Pe;).£1 BUT WUEH CUfiTCW~PA UAAtfU~ Cf
~TS ~IT, rr~ NOT FN~,IT~ tf:JT RIGUT,AAP trs GOT TO STOO"
.

Sh~~ld o~ners
A Californta man owned a ptece ·
of coastal property, part ~f which
was upland, the rest of which could
be considered we~d. He wanted
to develop the entire property, so
be applied for a permit to fill in the
wetland poru~.
. .
: The U.S. Ftsh and Wildlife Serytce surveyed tle property and
mformed the ow . er that the salt
marsh harvest mouse, a rodent P!O"
teclel! by ~e Endangered Spectes
Ac~ hved m the wetlands.
But not. only dtd the federal
ag~ncx_ designate .'!te wetland area
a cnucal babttat - rend~ng 11
off luntts to development.-11 also
declared the upland poruon of the
property undevel~able .. .
It explamed Its dectswn thus:
There ma.y be ~ global warm10g
~end, which wtll cause the polar
tce caps .to melt. If the .•ce caps
mel~ the propeny owners wetland
. will be Inundated. If that occurS;
the Salt Marsh Harvest Mouse will
be forced to the upland area pf the
property.
.
This regulatory horror story w~
cbromcled b,Y, Mark L. Polloi, 10 hiS_
1993 book Grand Th ~ d p
· e t·an cut

.Searc~ing·
Stanley Greenberg, President
Clinton's poll~ter, bas written an
interesting new book, "Middle
Class Dreams" (Times Books,
$25). It is interesting in -its own
right and particularly so if you
want to fmd out what's still wrongbeaded about the'I&gt;emocratic Party
in the era of Clinton. Greenberg's
book itself is a case in point:
Greenberg says that Americans
have been doubly beuayed by their
political parties. The Democrats
betrayed the people with the
"Great Society." And the Republicans betrayed the people with
"Reaganism." The Democrats
betrayed America because "bottom
up" economics hasn't worked .
And the Republicans betrayed
America because "top down" economics hasn't worked.
,
·And Bill Clinton (swprise!) can
fix it all through "accountable gov·
emment with.public investmeni." I
only disagree with all of these
propositions. CertainlY, the terminology is wrong. M!slabeling political history means misunderstanding it.
Was the' Great Society a bell'llyal? Is that why voters have turned
against Democrats,? It ·is a phrase
that will always be associated wiih
President Ly,n don Johnson, in •
whose administration I served as a
speech-writer about a hundred
r~

,1,_

And in a 1994 case Dolan vs
City ofTigard, the justiCes declared
that "we see no reason wby the
Takings Clause of the . Fifth
Amendment, as much a art of the
Bill or Rights as the Fu!'t Amendment or the Fourth Amendment,
should be relegated to the status o(
poor relation."
Both the Supreme Court and
Congress have found it necessary
to curb regulatory takings lx;cause,
in recent decades, government
bureaucrats have used such wellintentioned laws as .the Clean
Water Act and the Endangered
Species Act to abrogate individual
property rights. Even lawmakers
who actually voted for these laws
say that they are being interpreted
today in ways that Congress never
intended.
For instance, the Clean Water
Act originally applied to rivers and
didn't even mention, much less
define a "weUand .. S f d 1
regulators have arbiUanl~ d~c~~ ·
that a piece of property may be
considered a wetland if it is dry as
many as 350 days of the year and I'f
the wet area is as small as a puddle
S~milarly, the Endangered
Spectes Act was mtended 1o protect
bald eagles, moun tam hoos and
oth.er ~rom10ent creatures. No! in
~tr wildest dreams did lawmakers
tmagme that federal regulators
would restnct deve.l&lt;;&gt;pment on milhons of acres of pnvate propeny to
ensure ~e comfort of kangaroo rats ·
and snatl_ darters and salt marsh
harvest mtce.

Josenh P~r''l"ns

~
..- "'
regulation.
.
Passage of this "takings bill"
provoked predictable yelps from
the environmental lef~. which
somehow believes that the governh
b
h .
ment as a so 1ute aut onty to

~i:;~11 g~~~~fo~:t~p~~~r~

a smile and a handshake.
But that's not what the Constitution says . The Fifth Amendment
declares that private ~operty sball
not be "taken for public use, without just compensation." And, in
recent years, courts bave held that
the Takings Clause is .applicable
when government regulations leave
property in private hands, but

res~~~ i~ ~co~:;~~~e~:;t

1

has
been especially clear on the concept of "regulatory takings." In a
1987 case, Nollan vs. California
Coastal Commission, the justices
compared a state land use regulalion to "extortion."
In a landmark 1992 case, Lucas
vs. South Carolina Coastal Council,
the high court ruled that "when the
owner -of a real property bas been
called upon 1o sacrifice all economically beneficial uses in the name
of the common good, •• he must be
paid for ·ws loss.

lengths to which misguided governme nt regulators often go 10
deprive land owners of full use of
their propeny.
In an effort to restore some balance between the rights qf property
owners and those of bafvest mice,
House Republicans Uoined by onethird of Democrats) recently

Ruth P. Grinstead

. .
.
Wtth a takings law on the fe~r: ·
al boo~s •.the apparatcb~ at Fosli
and Wildlife, at the En.ytronmental
Protecllon Agency and m the Army
Corps of Eng.10eers will ~ave to
caref~lly constder the_ unphcauons
of Ulerr re~latory dectsmns.
.
~~y ~Ill sull.!'t abl~ to· regulate nutsa~ces -. hke au or·
water .Polluuon .- Without compensauon lo pnvate property owners. But absent such threats to pubhe bealth or safety, they wtll have
to wetgb the costs versus the bene~IS of regulat10g property owners
10 coastal areas, wedaod areas and
areas 10. whtcb some e~dangered
cntter Of another may restde.
That s the way 11 ~mght to be. If
the ·.c ommonweal .'s served by
restnctmg w~at a pnnte lan_downer may do With a parucular ptece of
property • then the government
ought !O purchase the land on the
people s behalf.·
~t is eminently more fair th3:"
_teUmg a property owner that he ts
forbidden to develop his land
because a rodent win have no place
to go when the polar rce caps melt.
And leaving tbe property owner to
:;:s~~blotbe cost of such an inane
g
ry deast~n.
Joseph Perkms is a columnist
for The San Diego Union- Trl·
bune.
(For Information_· on bow to
co!'W'unlca~ electronically with
tbts columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling!800-827-6364, ext. 83.7.)

Meigs announcements
0

,.

Rutland Y1111tb Lea1gue
Rutland Youth LealgDe
tinue sign ups ton11g11t
p.m. at the Rutland
. ment with fmal

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·960)
P-ublished every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, I I I Coun St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia

Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992- 2156.
Second class. postage paid ot Pomeroy, Ohio
Mtmbtr: The Associated Pregs. and the Ohi~
Newspaper Assoeiolion.

POSTMASTER; Send

;aJ ct it was an immoral war, tbat

Aroerica was guilty. And by the
way, America was also guilty of
racism, sexism, puritanism, environmental despoliation, bomophobia, consumer fraud, colonialism
Ben Wattenberg
and imperialism. Crime. of course.
was caused by Ibis oppressive sysfeatured the "War on Poverty,"
tern . Welfare, of course,- was a right
including "Head Start," and "Jobs
not a privilege. Quotas and preferCorps." It also included many nonenccs, of course, must be extended
poverty-related programs : Medito oppressed minorities. And what
care, clean air, clean water, new
was so wrong will! l!l'!!!lliscuicy and
colleges for millions of new col·
pornography?
lege students and health research
Hooky! Tune in, turn on, drop
concerning heart, cancer and
out. Make love not war. And much
stroke. The war in Vietnam, begun
of the adult 1iberal part of the
earlier, was escalated by Johnson,
Democratic Party, trembling, fearas the military situation in Vietnam
ing their ebildren, agreeing by not
changed.
disagreeing, remained silent.
Politically, these were compl~x
None of that guilty stuff came
decisions . It may be that Johnson's
from either LBJ"or the Great Socistand on ci vii rights burt the Demoety. All of it enraged most Americratic Party, as Greenberg indi,
cans, deservedly. Which is why
cates, but who among us would
voters believe they were betrayed
have it differentl;t? It may be that
-by Democratic liberalism. If you
the poveny programs and the nondon't understand wha! went wrong,
poverty programs engendered too
you can't fix it.
big a role for the federal governWere the voters betrayed by
ment, althougli one is reminded of ."Reagan ism ''? America won ·•e
C
w
the elderly woman who recently
old War on Ronald Reagan's
approached her congressman and
watch. Last time I looked the pubsaid, "Don't let them take away
lie opinion polls showed Reagan as
our Medicare and turn it over to the ~=Itspopular of the 10 modem
government." · Vietnam split the
Was ~rica betrayed by "botDemocratic Party like a cleaver ripping through an over-ripe melon. · · · tom .up" or ''top dqwn" ecoThe. then-young l!ew Lef~sts . nomt~!? If so, bow ·d'd America
I

.

become the most prosperous society in history? To believe that we have witnessed economic betrayal
means accepting the trendy notion
that Americans have lost income in
the last quarter of a century. I think
it's bonkers.
.
Heaven forfend that 1 would
criticize any author whose name
. ends with "en berg." Indeed, there
are whole paragraphs I agree with.
But Greenberg is searching the
wrong precincls for evidence of
political betrayal .
· ·
· Beb'ayal? Is there a mao or party
that has said one thing and done
another? Such as running for bigb
office as a New Democrat, promis·
mg to end welfare as we know it
looking. for a "third way" betwcc~
. hberaltsm and conservatism
putting Republicans in the Cabinei
and en~.ing the "something for
nothmg state? If Greenberg is so
m~ent on dtscovering betrayal . be
mtght start his search in the Oval
Office.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior telI
t tb A
ow a
e merican Enterprise
Institute, Is the host of the weekly
public television program,
"Think Tank."
.
·
(For Information on bow to
commun·Icate electronically with
. ~~: ~olumnlst and others, con·
' ~82~rlca Online by ca!Ung 1.
364,ext. 8317.) .

k

addre .~S

com:chons Ia

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Cuurt St. , Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carritr or Motor Route
Ollt Week
····· ······'·· ········ .......... S I.75
One Month
........ ...... ............. $7.60
OneYear
................. ............... .... $91 .00

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dllily .... ... ,.... ........ ............. ............... . 3S Cent§
Subscribers n0t.dc5lring to pay lhe c:tnier mny
remit in advnncC direct to The Dnily Sentinel
on a tlu:ee. silt or 12 month bnsi ~ . Credit will be
given carrier each week.
No

~ ub §c ription

by mail permitted i11

ureu ~

where home carrier s~rv icc is available. 1
MAIL SUBSCRIPTiONS
huidt Meigs Coun t~ '

13 Week! ....... .......
.$23.92
26 Weeks ......
.............. . ........... .. .S47 .06
52 Wetb ...
.................... 592.56
Halts Outsklr Melp Co~nt}'
13Wttb ......
.................
.$25.61
26 Week~ ....................
..~ ., ....... ... 549.66
52 Weeks ............................................... ..$%.20

Across the nation

Rain and fog covered much of
the Southeast today as storins
dropped marble-sized bail in
Louisiapa, reduced visibility to
near zero in parts of Mobile, Ala.,
and prompted a nood watch in

Pomeroy B&amp;e reported

Teresa L. Rodatz-Stooe, 36, of Middlepon, died Tuesday, March 14,
1995, at ber home.
Born Nov. 11, 1958, in Michigan, the daughter of William and Patricia
·Rodatz, she was a homemaker.
·
.
• S.b~ is survived by her hu~band, ~ince Stone of Middleport; mother,
PatriCia Radatz of San Bernadino, Calif.; daughter, Samara Slone of Middleport; son, Ryan Slone of Middleport; brother, Billy Radatz of Cincin·
nati; and mother-in-law, Mllljorie Slone of GalliJ.XlliS.
.
She was preceded in death by ber father, William Radatz.
Service&amp; wUI be at I p.m. Friday at the Ewillg Funeral Home, with the
Rev. Ralph Butcher officiating.
·' · ·
Burial will follow in the Howell Hill Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call between noon and the service Friday at the funeral
home.
·
·

Chamber open bouse set
The Meigs County Chamber of
Comlnerce will bold an open house
from 1·6 p.in, Friday at the-new
offtces. The offtce is located at the
former GTE. branch on We.st Main
Street in Pomeroy. ·

upper 40s northeast to the-plid 60s
far south,
The record-high temperawre for
this dale at the Columbus weathpr
station was 79 degrees in 1945
while the record low was 4 in 1900.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:39 p.m.
and sunrise Friday at 6:40a.m.

Mississippi. ·
Scattered showers and thu'nderstorms were expected from the
Gulf Coast and the southern East
Coast to the lower Mississi ppi
River Valley, with rainfall· up to
two inches.
Some severe thunderstorms
were pos sible from central and
southern Alabama to southern
Geo rgia, Florida and eastern
Louisiana.
There was a· chance of showers .
from New York to New England,
with snow showers possible in the
higher Appalachians and the rest of

A Pomeroy residence bad a Ford pickup truck, motorcycle and
several guns stolen from it overnight Tuesday after a door was broken in, according 1o Pomeroy Police Department reports.
Mike Haley, 800 Wes.t Main Stree~ reported the following items
stolen Wednesday mornmg: a 1978 red Ford one-IJ.)n consii'Uction
truck with bl~e and green doors; two acetylene botdcs; a Lincoln
welder; and etgbt guns. .
'
The motorcycle was a 1974 blue Harley SJlortsill.'ll ith a
chopped bard tail and eight-inch springs, records show.
The theft remain under investigation.

Pageville theft occu"ed
A Pageville convenience store was broken into overnight Monday, according 1o Meigs County Sheriffs Deparnnent reports.
The R!dgeview Carry Out. on State Route 681 near the Athens
County hoe, bad beer and cigarettes reportedly stolen, records
show. The Meigs County Sheriff's Department and the Bureau of
Criminal Investigations and Identification are investigating the
break-in.

Huntington car recovered
A car reportedly stolen from Huntington, W.Va., was recovered
Tuesday outside Pomeroy, according to Meigs County Sheriffs
Department reports.
·
The 1985 Chevrolet was found a1 the intersection of State Routes
7 and 143,, after allegedly silting there for a few days, records show
Troy Oliver, Route 3, Chesapeake, owned the car, reports stated.'

Deer/car wreck occurs
A Pomeroy woman;s car stnick a deer on U.S. Route 33 at 7 .
p.m. Wednesday, according to Meigs County Sberiffs Depamnent

repons.

'• e

Annette M. Bare, of Pomeroy Pike, was driving south on 33 ·
when her 19921s1JZU bit the deer, records show. The car had moderate damage to the left front end.

Judgment suits filed
(Editor's note: A lawsuit out·
lines the grlevan&lt;es or one party
against another. It does not
establish guilt or Innocence.)

4 p.m. Fee $10 per child. Bring
copy of birth certificate. For additional information call Dei(jra·
The following suits fOt:"judgCross at 742-2209.
'lllent were filed r~cently in the .
Meigs County Common Pleas
DAR charter _luncheon set
Court of Judge fred W. Crow UI:
The Return Jonathan Meigs . Joseph D. and Patricia A.
Chapter DAR wjll bold .a charter . McKay, Warren, flied suit Wednesday luncheon at noon Saturday at day for foreclosure against Kenneth
the Episcopal Parish House. .
and -Cathy Jacks, Middleport. The
McKays allege a breaeb of a land
. NASCAR show set
~stallme nt contract and seek
A NASCAR racing collectible · $18,051.23 plus interests and costs.
and memorabilia show will be beld
Ben Ewing, doing business as
from 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
the Oils Banquet Center on Market filed suits Monday seeking
Street in Parkersburg, W.Va. , $8,004.86 and $7,055 .43 from
Admission is $3 for adults, $1 for 6 Edith Jane Hysell, Deloris Wineto 12-year..olds and is free under·6.
brenner and Denver Busb, all of
Pomeroy. Ewing alleges breach of
Letart trustees set
'•funeral service contracts.
The Letart Township Trustees
will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at the
,office.

Fit Yogathar

AEROBICS
NEW 9 WEEK SESSION
TO BEGIN MARCH 27
Mon.-Wed. 10-11 a.m.
Royal Oak Resort
Tues.-Thurs. 7-8 p.m.
Royal Oak Reson
Mon. - Wed. 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Carleton School, Syracuse

Hospital news

RACINE ·
Units of the Meigs County
5:37 p.m. , Manuel Road, Eric Emergency Medical Service logged
Stover Jr.. ll'eated at the scene ,
10 calls for assistance Wednesday
SCIPIO TWP VFD
including four transfer calls. Onits
12:25 p.m ., Cotterill Road, · responding included:
brush fire on Cotterill property,
MIDDLEPORT
Rutland VFD assisted;
2:04a .m., Sycamore Street,
7:27 . p.m., King Ridge, brush Sharon Raimony, Veterans Memo· fire, Rutland VFD and squad assist· rial Hospital.
ed.
·
·-- ·- -POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAINS
3:15 p.m., volunteer ftre depart8:03 p.m., Tuppers Plains Fire ment and squad to Landaker Road,
Station, Angie Chapman, O'Ble- brush fire on Lyon Coleman propness Memorial Hospital.
erty.

Weat~er
SouJb-Central Ohio
Today ... Mostly sunny and
unseasonably warm. High in the
middle 70s. Mainly ·north winds 5
to lOmpb. . ,
Tonight. .. Mostly clear. Low 40
to 45. North winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Friday ... MosUy sunny and cooler. High in the middle 60s.
Extended .forecast
Saturday... Dry . Lows from the
middle 20s northeast to the upper .
30s southwest. Highs from the
lower 50s northeast to the lower
60s soutbwest.
Sunday... A chance of showers.
Lows 35 to 40 and highs in tbe
upper 50s to lower 60s.
Monday ... A chance of showers.
Lows 40 to 45 and bigbs in the
upper 50s to lower 60s. Barjen·
hruch ·
·

BASKETBALL FANS.~ ...
GET READY FOR OUR ·

PICK 7HE
FINAL 4
CONTES7! APPLICATIONS DUE BY MARCH 23, 1995.
LOOK FOR APPLICATIONS IN SUNDAY, MARCH 19TH'S SUNDAY-TIMES SENTINEL

'95 BONNEVILLE SSE
Test
Drive
Today!
•12-way Power Seat
•Head-up Instrument
Display
·Traction Control

OVER S01
BUICK$ &amp; PONTIAC$
IN ·sTOCK!
•Professional Quality Service
•Free loaner Cars for Overnight
Repairs
•NO High Pressure Silas Tactics

Cefe6ratit'·n
Friday,. March 17th-9:00A.M. t.o . 5:00 P.M.
.

·join CUs for Ca~, Pu~ft and Coffee·
221 West Second St.
Pomeroy
992-2136

.

Your Bankfot4i···
·Farmers

~
••

Bank
Member FDIC

1 '•...J /J r""'"".4...._

446-0923

FUllY EQUIPPED NEW

St. Patricks fJJag

1\1..,1 \ l llll{

. FRIDAY THRU THURS.
JIM .CARREY, JEFF DANIELS
"
IN
DUMB AND DUMBER
PG-13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

'GRAND AM G. T. SEDAN

New!·
•3.1 Uter V-6
·4 Speed Automotlc
•205/t5R16 Eagle Tlrtl

•Cuootte
•Air Conditioning
•Tilt Whttl

•Variable Effort Power Steering •Crulwe Control

•Rotlye Gogu &amp; t.P. Tack.
•Dual Air Baga
·

•Powor Wlndowa

$15,995

SAVE s2,100

Stop In and Join Us F.or A

\(. lllf II\ 1\1\Rll \I IIII\ II h1\-

COLONY THEATRE

Holzer Medkal Center
Discharges March 15
Mildred McAfee, Clint Wise,
Cathy Saunders, Hunter Helmic,
Hanne Lore Doota, and Thomas
Lanham.
Published with permission.

•Power Glass Sunroof
•Compac\ Disc Player
wllh steering wheel
controls

For more information or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen 992-6893

'

upstate Maine.
Meanwhile, a scattering of
showers and thunderstorms was
likely as a cold front was moving
out of Wyoming and Montana into
North Dakota and Minnesota.
Other shower s could spread
from Washington, Oregon, and
northern Californi a into Idaho,
western Utah and the Rockies of
western Montana and northwest
Wyoming.
The nation's bot spot Wednes·
day was Thermal , Ca lif. , at 93
degrees . . The cold spot was
Leadvillit,;Golo., at 13 degrees.

--Local briefs----- Meigs EMS logs 10 calls .·

Teresa Rodatz-Stone .

for political betrayal
years ago.
Johnson's civil rights laws
broke the back of legal racial segre~
galion. The Great Society programs

By The Assocllted Pr..S
Seasonably cooler temperatures
are in Ohi(}'s weather picture. But
forecasters said that won't be too
bad, since highs this time of year
are normally in the 50s.
.
Most! y clear skies and mild temperatures were expected tonigh t. '
the National Weather Service said .
Lows will range from the low to
mid-10s north and low 40s far
. south.
Skies will be mostly sunny on
Friday, making the cooler temperall)res a little less noticeable. Afternoon highs will range from the

Ruth P. Grinstead, 77, a resident of Hartford, W. Va., died Wednesday;
Mareb 15, 1995, at her borne.
Sbe was the county director of the West Virginia Department of Wei·
fare for 43 years.
Born August15, 1917, in Hanford, ~e was the daughter of the late
Jacob and Li)lie Dale Robe Phillips. She married Vernon D. Grinstead
who survives, along with one daughter and son-in-law, Irma M. and Ken·
-neth·&gt;\-,: Dodson;-Hurricaoe, W.Va.; the following s isters and brothers-in·
law: M. Myrl Purcell, Kensington, Md.; Edythe H. Graf, Santa Rosa, .
Calif.; L. Mildred and Louis N. Stone, Vienna. W. Va.; Leah A. and
William F. Litzinger, Westerville; N. Doris Kraft, Jacksonville, N.C.; two
sisters-in-law: Dortha W. Phillips, Nitro, W . Va., and Anna J. Phillips,
Belle, W.Va.; two granddaughters and four great grandsons.
Preceding her ~n ·death besides her parents were one grandson, Jody
Dale Dodson; three brothers, James R., Ralph Wayne, and E. Harold
PbiUips.
. .
She was a member of the Hanford Baptist Church, American Legion
Smith-Capehart Auxiliary Unit 140, Mason County Historical Society,
New Haven Sewing Club and a 1934 graduate ofWabama High School.
Services will be held 1:30 'p.m . Saturday at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with Rev. William Bud Hatfield officiating. Burial will be in Gra-'
bam Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 6-9 p.m.

house endangered mice?·

approved a bill that requires that
. the federal government compensate
landowners when their propeny is
devalued 20 percent or more by

~O::C:C(n 1~.:'!s ~~b~v~~~:;

Susie M. Fischer, 99, of Racine, died Wednesday, March 15 1995 at
Ve1enms Memorial Hospital.
'
'
Born Oct. 5, 189S, in Syracuse, the daughter of the late Seymour and
Ellen Jones Blake, she was a retired employee of the GTE Telephone Co.
She w~ a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church.
.She ts survived by her daughters, Hilda Frecker of Painesville, Gloria
Mtebael of Syracuse, and Mary Poner of Racine; sister, Elizabeth Hogue
of Nonh Olmsted; brother, Lawrence Blake of Parma; II grandebildren·
14great-grandcbildren; and 7 ilreat-great grandchildren.
'
She was preceded m death by her husband, John Fischer; sons, Frank
and Th~ Fischer; one grandson; three sisters; and four brothers.
Services wtll be at 1 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral Home, with the
Rev. Kris Robinson officiating.
.
Burial will follow in the Beeeb Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Saturday at the funeral borne.

-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

deaths-- Mild .temperatures will continue through weekend

--::~.-Area

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy--Middlepon, Ohio
Thursday, March 16, 1995

WASHINGTON - A fitting country afloat.
,
allegory f&lt;r today's Mexico can be
But the United States no looger
found in the daring dives of the bas the will- n&lt;r the endless supfamed clavidistas of Acapulco.
ply of greenbacks -to save MexiNight after night, these highdivers climb the steep cliffs of La By Jack Anderson
Quebrada (the Gorge) and ready
themselves, for a 150-f&lt;iOI dive into
and ,,
the sea. It is a potentially fatal act,
the success of wbicb depends on
Michael Binstein
split·second timing: Eacb young
athlete must bit the water at the co once again. Moreover, there is a
precise moment a new1wave fills buge underwater "sucking sound."
the gorge or be will break his neck. as Ross Perot !night term it, wbieb
To the dismay of her own peo- consumes American aid almost as
pie, Mexico has been engaged in a fast as it can be given: widespread
similar feat. ,Qnce again, despite COITUption tbat reaebes 1o the top of
. hopes that the-'govemment of for- Mexico's political leadership and
mer President Carlos Salinas de its business community.
Gortari bad ushered in a new economic era. Mexico's leaders real" We thought it was in check
.
.
tempt to scale the walls to intema. dur_ing the salinas admmistrauon,
. tiona! respectability. Inevitably, but it appears it was just ·bidden
they will be propelled into the better than usuai- even from us;"
abyss again. Yet the IKipe of. these one CIA source said...He was..clearpolitical clavidistas is always the ly despondent that his agency
same: that Ameri&lt;;a win promise a would have to re-write some of the
wave of new money to keep the rosier analyses it prod~ d~ng

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1995 BUICK
ROADMASTER SEDAN

Newf
·P~wer

Se•t

•Keyleoo Entry

5.7 Utro V-trEnglno
•Full Size Aluminum Spore

•Eioctrlc Ctlmllo Control

•Auto.Door Locka

•Power Antenn•
·DUal Air Begs ·

•He•t•d Electric Mlrrora

·Anti·Lock Brokea

•Friendly Locol Sorvlce
•Loaded

$24
500
.
I

_CHECK OUT THE SAVINGS.ON.
LOW MILEAGE •••• 1994 SUNBIRDS, SKY

KS,
GMC SAFARI.VANS, GUND AMS, GUND PRIXS,
' CENTURY$, BONNEVILLE$'AND PARK AVENUES
,WITH BUMPER TO BUMPER WARRANTIES/

State Route 7
Tuppers Plains
985-3385

Buick Pontiac

..

J L---...o..--.---------~--

SINCE 1954

191.1 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, OH.
'

•

�r

•

Sports

Thursday, March 16, 1995

The Daily Seritine-

._M ount St. Mary's among No. 16 seeds looking for upsets

e--4~

Karr &amp; Turley among D-IV all-Ohio picks
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Jodi Dobransky
of unbeaten Eas t Canton was selected as the
player of the year in Division IV of the 1995
Associated Press girls· all -Ohio high school
basketbhli team, released today.
Dobransky , a 6-foot senior .. aver,aged 21
points and 11.3 rebounds a game for unbeaten
East Canton , which will be playing in the
Division IV state tournament this week.
East Canton (26-0), ranked fourth in the final
regular-season AP poll, meets unrated Lafayette
Allen East (21 -3) at 2 p.m. Friday. Top-ranked
Danville (25-0) talces on No. 5 Jackson Center
(26-0) at4 p.m. The winners decide the championship at 5 p.m. Saturday at Ohio Slate's St.
John Arena. ·
·
The coaches of the year - East Canton's
Tom Davis and Jackson Center's Roger
McEldowney - not only led their teams to perfect records but also to the state tournament.
Dobransky, a third-team all-Ohioan last season, mppen-the- l,(lOO-mirk in ooth- rebounds
and points in her career.
Joining her on the fust team are : Dl\Dville's
Mandee McCombs, Erica Bevington of Berlin
Hiland, Karla Wenzlick of Ouoville and
Amanda Stewart of Sooth Charleston
Southeastern.

McCombs, a 5-11 junior, provided 16.1 ConlinJWn·Uncolll, 11-2. Sr., 17.1; Jodle Borxl, PorumoU!h Eut. sa. Sr., 17.1; l&gt;t=Anna C11l10n. Galea Mil.lJ Gilmour, 5-10, Sr,. 12.7;
points, 1 rebounds, 2 assists and. 1.2 blocked· M...Sy t.o""nlca. New Aliladelphio ;ru"'"'"'u cent c ..... s-9,
shots while averaging less than 18 minutes a sr.. u.o
f b sb
"•Jn~lheytar: JodiDobranslty,EastCanlOD.
game. Sbe b'It U\
I.N percent 0
er OlS frOffi the
Co.c:hu of the JUr : Tom Davis , East Caaton; Roaer
field and 65 percent of her free throws for MoEidowoty,JaobonCeo&lt;co:.
Danville.
Spe&lt;ioh..nlloa
Jenny Bw-ns.. Milford Or. Fairbanks; Carey Holden, Col. Tree
Bevington, already signed to play at West of Lire; Amber Hornyak. Bdlaire St. John ; Franci Wi&amp;lilll,
Liberty, is a 6--0 senior who av~raged 15 points Shadyside; lana MoDDin, ·Ruuia; Btclr:y Holdeai, Fayeuevitle;
Christ y Lipps, Hamilton New Milmi; Erin Sells, Willow Wood
and II rebounds.
Symmes Ytlley; RENEE TURL~Y . RACINE SOUTHERN;
Wenzlick. a 5-8 junior, averaged 19.8 points, Jeo.Difer Fronet:ek, Kirtland; Eileen PiU, Aahtabula St. John;
7.6 rebounds.,- 5.7 assists and 5.5 StealS. A~--- , Shao])()n Kleve, Newbury; Kim Krimer, Moaadore; Rachel Spaite,
.-.....
Columbiana.
ond-team all-Ohioan last year, she led Ottoville
u.no""" monuon
Carrie Canon, Danville; Michellt Mathiu, Col. Tree of Ufe;
t 0 a N0 . 8 ran kin 8 th'IS t..une arOUDd ·
Matilll Rogers, Marion Cath.; T11a Swaney, MariOft Pleasant: Jenny
The 6-0 Stewart scored 22.4 points a game we~.,.-bet,NeworkCI!h.; L)'lleneKeppei... Edgcnon.
as a senior to guide Southeastern to a 19-1 reguXwame Carl. Zan•YiUc Ra~I!Qan•; Laura Goins, Waletford;
Michelle Blelansld. Bellaire St. John; Becky Kloll, New MatamaraJ
lar -season record and a the No.3 spot in the Fron~ier; Mmdilh Tol!erd~e. Bridi'J'O"·
poll.

•

Rachel Faeth, New Riegel; Bobbi Jo Bieber, Fayet1e; Jenny

By The Associated Press
No matter that- it was the
National Invitation Tournament
instead of the NCAA, the crowd
went crazy for Iowa. ,
In a game pla&gt;:ed at_Moline;.IU.,
.!lie Hawli'eyes -dereated DePaul'%87 Wednesday night in the first
round of the NIT before 10,678
fans.
"In my nine years, I've never
seen such an unbelievable sbow of
support," Iowa coach Tom Davis
said.
'
Tl)e game was shifted across the
Mississippi River, about 65 miles

GENERAL TIRE SALES
1:0'11'1 TEH TIBE B\L\:\CI\1;

Katy Potter, GeorH,etoWn; Heather Meranda, Georaetown;
Stephanie Stewart, S. Charles~oo Southeas~ern; Erica Bowman.
Covington; Tara S~llabarger, PitJbutJ Frnkhn:_Monroe. _
· ~~ _
Ktm Britton. Mowrcystown Whiteoak; Stephanie Tennant,
Franklin Furnace Green; Amanda Wil!iiJI15, New Ba~ton Glenwood;
JESSICA KARR. REEDSVILLE EASTERN: Beth Koou. Glo\llter
Trimble.
·
Satah Ruzicka, Gates Mills Gilmour; XristeD Stih, Cuyahoaa
Hts.; Amber Sanchez, Elyria Open Door; .l..aW'I Blum. Thompson
Ledgemonl; Becky Whitehead, Lorain Clllh.
Jeuie Edwards, Briltol ville Briltol; Heidi Cleitcrt, Dalto~t T01ha
White, Elilt C10ton; Jennifer Pinti, Windham Catlly Zwbruu:,
SebringMdG.Diey.

614-992-7161

'

UCLA and florida IniCmational
(ll-18), the only team in the field
with losing record, play Friday in
the West
.
No. 16 seeds are 040 since the
tourney expanded to 64 teams in
1985.
"We're not here to shake bands,
say beUo and get back on a plane.
There are 240 schools who would
like to have my problems right
now, ' 1 North. Carolina A&amp;T coach
Roy Thomas said.
Mount St. Mary's has one of the
better stories of this year's tournament. The Mountaineers are
coached by Jim Phelan, who is

a

making his rust NCAA touranment
appearance in 42 years ·at the
school. The Mountaineers beo!me
a Division I school in 1988.
The No. 15 seeds can he only
sligblly more optimistic. Richmond's victory over No. 2 Syracuse in 1991 and Sanla Clara's win
over Arizona in 1993 give hope to
Murray State, St. Peter's, Tennessee-Chattanooga and Texas
Southern.
Colgate, with highly regarded
freshman center Adona! Foyle,
struggled early against teams outside the Pauiot League before the
Red Raiders (17-12) won the con-

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Even the fans are struggling
with replacement ball, apparently.
At the Dodgers-Mets game
Wednesday nigh~ a young girl held
up a sign for the television cameras, welcoming announcers ''Tim
Mcairvey" and "Ralph Kinner."
"Kind of typifies this spring,"
Tim McCarver told the WWORTV audience hack in New York.
"Spring training, anybody could
make a few mistakes,'' Ralph
Kiner said. ·
The g;une between Los A!!gelcs·
and the Mets in Port St. Lucie, ¥Ia.,
featured one of the suanger plays
or the spring. The Mets scored a
run on a botched squeeze play in
which both the bauer and 'catcher

Teams were accused of chang"relate to wages, hours and other
terms of employment of the unit ing the rules "without bargaining
and are mandatory subjects for the . with the union to a good faith
impasse or agreement"
purpose or collective bargaining.''

WE WILL NoT BE UNDERSOLD
ON ANY ITEM
AT ANY TIME
Our pmes be beat We
anv local an
soeciHI nrders
ca~· t

I

pr1ce cnmparablettems, excludmg

Will mat~ b

P"'ctO 'llal ~~ Hl'lfieij lea iiQ~t II~ ~!l!IIS

·By RICK GANO
CHICAGO (AP) - . For money?
He doesn'.t need any .. For fame?
. He's got m'lire than any athlete. For
ldve of game? Perhaps, but even

0

[rom the Iowa campus, because
Carver-Hawkeye Arena was
booked with the NCAA wrestling
championships.
In other NIT openers, Marquette
defeated Auburn 83-7!. Coppip
State topped St. Joseph's 75-68 in
ovenime, Canisius beat Seton Hall
83-71, Penn State downed Miami
62-56, New Mexico Slate beat Colorado 97-83 8114 Washington Slate
defeated Texas Tech 94-82.
Iowa (20-11) won in its first
postseason NIT appearance. Chris
Kingsbury scored 19 points.
The Hawkeyes may be back in

kicked a pitch that bounced.
In an all-too-typical development. there was no progress toward
·settling the strike. In fact, union
bead Donald Fehr and acting commissioner Bud Selig did not even
la1k during the day.
While players and· owners ·are
having uouble catching up to each
other, the Seattle Mariners are having U&lt;JI!ble catching. Manager Lou
Piniella saw his team make five
errors that led to six unearned runs
in a I 0-6 loss to Milwaukee in Peoria, Ariz..
-•'I neea-w-fmd nine players who
can catch the ball," Piniella said.
"That's the biggest problem I see
here. I feel sorry for the pitchers.
We teU them to keep the ball oil the
ground, which they are doing, but

more for aoother challenge.
Michael Jordan was scheduled
to ietum to practice today with the
Chicago Bulls with all the questions sdiiiD!answered.

1)99

Nlw......, Altlt Jean
"'"I lEAR WARRANTY

~~~

' Mlllll' Quality

· Brake Fluid

Allal'lllbli'l

.•

••

•

Price good with exchang&amp;
Everydly Low Price

,•
~

liFETIME WARRANTY

FROM

139.?
4097,

397

We are just enjoying the moment .
... This is part of Michael Jotdall,
,the media anen1ion . It's a little
refresher on what it was like. You
MYSTERY on
6)

11299
2 Ton &amp;yslem. jnslalli!O lo your upftow
furnace, drain and electrical.

;lfi,.,_
"I
.........

,,, I

l.t9

. "'0"
. .
Sale Ends March 31, 1995
David White Services,lnc.
Athens;Oh. ·
594-8381 or 800-24'7-6180

•
••
•

•
•••

1llle-Up lOti

••
••
••
•

llaniiiiiiCturad
Mlll8l' Cylllllllrl
. Pnce good with

10W40 II'

)~.!

5W30
MDtlr 1111

Orange

GoJo

II••

WEST VIRGINIA'S LARGEST CONVERSION VAN DEALER WITH OVER 300 TO CHOOSE FROM!
'

$21,488

••
••
•

ucha~

IIFniME WARRANTY

109

I

.· I

~

S(Off
Well

••
••
••
••
••
•
••
•

SNAP
fill Aflit
with hose

•'
••

,tS4SS

•'
•'
•

'•'
•
•

rwo [)(l. r,:e; De!l¥f)"oo·

. . BRA111 NEW '95 CHEVY ASTRO EXlENDED

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP.

CONVERSIJN VAN
• Extended Chassrs
• Drrver Srde Air Bag
• Anh~Lock Brakes
• An CondtllOn
• Automatrc OYerdnve
• Vrsta Bay Wmdows
• Power Sleermg

• Power Brakes
'Till Sleenng
• Crurse
• AWFM Cassette
• Power Windows

• Power locks

• lndrrect Ughtrng
• Premtum Wocxl Pkg.
·Full Conversron
• Alumrnum Runnrng Boards
• Loaded'
·

• Automatic
• Or1~er Side A1rt:lag
• Anti·Lock Brat&lt;es

l !ITI(t &amp;yer

~"'e

• Power Steenng

• Power Bra~es
··Power Door Locks
• Power Wrndows
• AMIFM Cassene
• Tllt Steermg

• Crwse Conuot
• Electronrc Shift Tran ster Case
• P 235175R IS" Trres
·Loaded'

11Ouar. ~oo

$13,888**

No Doc fft!S DeiNfr.r·

"?Doc rEM

~w ·

•

•••

NEW '95 PIJifTIAC GRAll AM
• Power DoOr Locks

••

• AJ.IIFM Slereo
• SI)Oe&lt;l Wheels

·51 00 m!r's rebate

• Air Cond!lron

FRDM

·AutomatiC

I'IIMI' fill

Di 11181'1

llyl'flllllll'

IIIIAIIII NEW '951111EK CENl1IIY SEW

lor &amp;l{ln 01 dome$1ic

• A11 CoOOruon
• A~lomatoc:

$0.99 sate pnce
S· 25 mlr's rebate~

. 0.... s.. ~rtlag
• 4 Wheel AntJ·~

' Lim&gt;116

~~~

·Your coer
aher

Aulallllllllllbli'

lltii'IIPIIIII

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store Hours: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday;
8:30a.m. to 7.p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday

209 Upper River Road

446-3807 '

•

•
..
•

''&lt;

·P~ . P~

· Power [bJ! Ltd~$
• Pawer W ~t1d:lws
•Powel Tn.1nk Release

• 4~4 '
• 4.3 L~et \1·6 flower
• 01fW8f Side 41fbag

Special Allo Ground Ellecls

II

197'

BRAND NEW '95 CIEVY S.SERIES
Pra&gt;
·414PICKUP

.BRAtll NEW '95 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE COUPE

• Steel Belled Trres

From
$2.97 sale pnce

-·=··

• 4x4

$17;488

•

GALLIPOLIS

·Custom Cloth lntenor .

' Sleel Belled T~res

I

lore.gn or oamestic

WliCCEPI ·
USED Ill

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4

··Sare P1'1 cC lf\CluUeo; GMAC f 1P.ol

T

11Y Purlllllll'

74

• Power Steer1ng
• Power Bra'ices

• 4 Cap!" Chairs

••'
I' '

c·

• Onver S•de A1rbag
• Rear ~n1t·Lock B,.akes

• Sola/Bed

•

Jlllllll'l

'-------.-

reporters continue to cover practices. It's annoying the players to
an extent, but also laughable.
"It's not irrilaling us. I like it,"
Armsuong said. "It' s fun for us .

Central
Air
FOR

,...•

FROM

Pawll' fill

-.

"We ·don't know what Michael
is doing to do. He probably dbcsn't
even know, what be's goi,g 10 do."
Bulls guard B.J. Armstrong says.
An inordinate number · or

Preseason Special

...••.;

&lt;:~fter

~-·

career saves leader, worked out this
spring with the Orioles. He pitched
brieOy for Atlanta last y_car, but
mostly was sidelined by his injury.
-. Toronto reliever Duane Ward
was told by management to stop
working out at the min9r-league
camp. Waril, on strike with the
major leaguers, missed. l994 following shoulder surgery. Blue Jays
general manager Gord Ash said the
cotnn\issioner' s office asked that
Ward pitch off the premises in
Dunedin, Fla.
- For the third straight year,
major league baseball will enforce
a ban on all tobacco products in the
minors. The policy affects more
than 6,000 players, managers,
·
coaches and umpires..

'

~181'111111

1'1'1110118

Everyday Low Pritt

77 ~:,;.~::,'
rebate

-.,-·

to start il) ·2 112 weeks, and players
say they are prepared to resume
negotiations at any time. Talks
were been scheduled for this week
outside of Orlando, but owners
canceled them to study a complaint
issued by the National Labor Relations Board.
"I think there is now an understanding of what the NLRB com- .
plaint involves, so we can proceed .
into negotiations when the time is
correct," management lawyer
Chuck O'Connor said.
In other areas:
- Relief pitcher Gregg Olson,
still uying to recover from a partially torn tendon in his elbow,
signed a minor league deal with
Cleveland. Olson, Baltimore's

•••

3497

S1.77 sale pnce
·Sl 00 mlr's rebate

Middleport

our fielders aren't catching it."
The Mariners have made 29
errors in II games, setting Ujl 33.
unearned runs .
"(Infield coa~h) Sam Perlozzo
bits them a lot of ground balls in
our morning practice, so they're
getting enough grounders," Piniella said. " That could be the problem. Maybe he's wearing them out
before the game."
·
Febr met with Roger Clemens,
Frank 'l'bomas and about 30 other
top players at Orlando, Fla., but
didn't speak with Selig.
"I called and left a message
before I got on the plane, and I
wouldn't expect to hear from bim
until tonight or tomorrow," Fehr
said later in the day.
The·regular season is supposed

•'

••

992-5627

(15-13) ahead 5146.
Canl!lus 83, Seton HaD 71
At Buffalo, Canisius ended a
14-g'ame losing streak against
teams from the Big East. Craig
Wise bad 28 points for the Golden
Griffms (19-12) and Adrian Griffin
had 24 for Seton Hall (16-14).
Washington State 94
Texas Tech 82
At Pullman, Wash ., Isaac
Fontaine scored 32 points for th e
Cougars (17-11). Lance Hughes
had 23 points for Texas Tech (2010).

~

FRII

Lund

21 &amp; N. Second Ave.

Iowa City next week when they · Aggies began the game with a 15-0
Marquette 83, Auburn 71
play the ·winner of tonight's game run and never trailed . Rodney
At Auburn, Ala .. freshman
between George Washington and Walker scored 28 points for New Aaron Hutchins, a reserve guard
Ohio University;
Mexico State (24-9) and Mack averaging only. 3.4 points, scored a
."We fought back and executed 'Tuck bad 28 for Colorado (15-13).
career-high 20 for Marquene (18inJbe second.balf in a hostile enviCoppin.State 75
II) . Auburn (16-ll) went nine
ronment. If this wasn't a home
· St. Joseph's 68
. minutes without a basket in the
coon advan1age, I don't know what
At Philadelphia, the game began suetch.
is," DePaul coach Joey Meyer more than an hour late because
PennState6l,Miami56
said.
·
Coppin State's Mario McGri'ff
At Slate College, Pa., Penn Slate
Tom Kleinschmidt had 19 shattered a backboard while dunk- rallied from a 20-point deficit with
points for the B,lue"fiemons (17- ing during warmups. In overtime, 14 minutes left, John 'Amaechi had
II).
·•
Keith Carmichael made two three- 21 ooinLdor the Nitlany Lions (18New Mexico State 97
pointers for the Eagles (21-9). St. 10). Constantin Popa, Miami's 7Colorado 83
J&lt;ie's (17-12) lost an eight-point foot -3 center, fouled out with four
At Las Cruces, N.M., the lead in .the last5:30 or regulation.
minutes lefl and the Hurricanes

•
'

159

Mens • Womens • Children

· against Gonzaga; Cincinnati
against Temple and Connecticut
against Tennessec.Chatlanooga.
The lirst round will be completed Friday: the East at Albany,
N.Y.; the Southeast at Tallahassee,
Fla.;· the Midwest at Austin, Texas,
and the West at Boise, Idaho.
Last year, the four 16th seeds
lost by an average of 22 -points in ·
the opening round and only four
double -figure seeds won games:
No. 10 George Washington over
Alabama-Birmingham. No . II
Penn over Nebraska, No. 12 Tulsa
over UCLA and No. 12 WisconsinGreen Bay over California.

•

Ill!•

Baseball Shoes Now In Stock

phis, Tenn ., and bas Brigham
Young vs. Tulane, Arizona State
vs . Ball State and Oklahoma
against Manllauan, lbe surprise of
the 35 at-large enUies.
In the Midwest at Dayton, Ohio.
is Western Kentucky against
Michigan, while Arizona, which
recently reinstated All -American
Damon Stoudarnirc, plays Miami,
Ohio, and Virginia faces Nicholls ,.
Slate.
The four West matchups in Salt
Lake City have Oregon against
Texas; Maryland, with coach Gary
Williams back on the bench after
being hospitalized with pneumonia,

Mystery over Jordan's return to Bulls keeps scribes at their doors

P&amp;tiiZOI
10W30,

MCS Diamond Fun1 %.

fen:uce title. Kansas (23-5) rarely
faltered in moving to the No . I
ranking during the seasori and winning the Big Eight ·regular-season
title.
"We played a toush non-conference schedule," said Colgate
guard Tucker Neale, the nation's
18th-leading scorer. "We've seen
the best teams in the counuy. We
know how they play."
·
In other games today , in the
East at Baltimore, it's Minnesota
vs. Saint Louis, Alabama vs. Penn
and Oklahoma Slate against Drex.
el.
The Southeast will he at Mem-

Piniella hopes Mariners ditch · fielding woes after loss to Brewers

NLRB complaint pushing
Selig
and
Fehr
to
talk
•

date before an adminisuative law
By RONALD BLUM
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Perhaps judge.
Two
sources
speaking
on the
Selig will find time to talk
condition
they
not
be
identified
with Donald Febr today.
On Wednesday, the acting com- said NLRB general counsel Fred
missioner didli't return the union Feinstein intends to ask the NLRB
board today or Friday for permishead's telep()one call.
Febr met with about 35 top sion to seek a preliminary injuncplayers, such as Roger Clemens tion to restore the old work rules.
Players say they would return to
and Frank Thomas at Orlando, Fla.,
on Wednesday as. the National work if an injunction is issued. But
Labor Relations Boards formally a judge probably wouldn't consider
issued its 'complaint against own- the request until the week of March ·
27, leaving little likelihood an
ers.
"I called and left a message injunction will be issued before
before I got on the plane, and I 'opening day on April2.
Tbe complain~ sighed by NLRB
wouldn't expect to hear from him
until tonight or tomorrow," Fehr New York regional director Daniel
said Wednesday evening from his Silverman, says owners "have
eliminated the system of salary
home in Rye Brook, N.Y.
"Certainly be and I will be lalk- arbitration ... the system of competing," Selig said later Wednesday itive bidding between respondent
night from his home in Milwaukee. clubs for the services of free agent
"And we'll both be talking to employees" and the anti-collusion
(mediator) Bill Usery."'
provisions of the expired collective
With just 2 112 weeks until the bargaining agreement. ·
•
scheduled start of the season, playThose areas, the complaint said,
. ers say they are prepared to resume .
negotiations at any lime. Talks had
been scheduled for Ibis week at Hunting safety clinic
Lake Buena Vista, Aa., but owners slated for March 25
canceled them to study the NLRB 's
complaint.
A free hunting safety clinic for
" I think there is now an under· .. turkey bunting will he held Saturslanding of what the NLRB com- day, March 25 from 1-5 p.m. at the
plaint involves, so we can proceed Pomeroy Gun Club in ·preparation
into negotiations when the time is for next month's wild turkey seacorrect," management lawyer son.
.
Chuck O'Connor 8'\id in WashingThe free .. clinic covers turkey
ton.
hunting safety in addition to calling
Eugene Orza, the union's No. 2 demonstrations and turkey hunting
official, said the timing of talks techniq'ues. People auending the
was up to'the. owners.
course will receive a turkey bunt" I think that's a lock only they ing IJook and an instructional casconuol," he said.
sene tape including the various
At a news conference in Orlan- types of turkey calls.
Class size Is Umlted to ~0 peado, Fcbr and Orza said they
couldn't imagine a settlement that pie, and pre-registration is required.
would include records from games To pre-register, contact Meigs
with replacements, another poten- Cnuiuy game pro'tector Keith
tial obslacle 10 an agreement.
. Wood at985-4400.
The NLRB. meanw.bile, roleased . The gun club is located on
its six-page complaint, announced Pomeroy Pike near S.R. 7, on the
Tuesday, and set a May 22 bearing left past Meigs High School.
'·

By The Associated Press
Based on history.lhen: was little
to encourage Colgate, Mount St.
Mary's, North Carolina A&amp;t and
Aorida International.
Those No . 16 seeds bad the·
unenviable task or trying to
become the fust team to lrnock orr
a No. I seed-in the forst round or
the NCAA tournament.
In. o'pening-round games today,
tbn:e of the No. I vs. No. 16 games .
were to be contesled: Wake Forest
vs. North Carolina A&amp;T ·in the
East; Kansas vs. Colgate il) the
Midwest; and Kentucky vs. Mount
St. Mary's in the Southeast.

Iowa and Penn State among ·winners in NIT's open_ing night

· th 1995 AP D' · · IV
Markwood, Tot. Chriltlan; Stephanie Striker, New WashinJ1.on
Here IS
e
IVISIOD
learn, based · Bu ckeye Central; Krhta Thorne!! , Convoy Crutview; Tracy
on the recommendations of a slate media panel: w...u,~ attorill•
Flnl team: Jodi Dobransky, East Cl!lton, 6 feet, Senior, 21
points pet Jamt; Man.dee McCombs, Danville, $-11 , Jr., 16.1 ; Erica
Bevington. Berlin Hiland, 6-0, Sr., I.S.O: Karla WeDtlick, Ottovillt_,
s:a. F., 19:8; Amilliti Stewart. S. Cha!laioilSoutheastern, 6-0, Sr..
22.4.
Second lcun: Juli1 Regula, Jackson Center, S- 10, Jr., 12.S;
Amy Bentley, Franklin Furnace Green, S-10, Jr., IS .2; April Cooper,
New Boston Glenwood, S-4, Sr., 21.2; Kellie Hannon, McDonald, s.
9, Jr .. 20 .1; Lisa Rotunno, Lowellville, S· ll, Sr .• 17.9; Cheri
Siebeneck;, Leipsic, S-6, Sr., lS.S; Anjie O.et. Lorain Cath., 6·0; Sr.,
13.6; Toni Sapp, Danville, S-1, Sr., 13.0; Amy Tallllan. Zane~ ville
Rosecrans, S-7, Jr., 14.0.
Third team: La}lrie Schalk, New Riegel , S-8, Sr., 12.2; ·
Shannon Smith, Dtlphol StJohn's, 6- 1, St., 2l.l; Steph CriuiO£er,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

In NCAA cagefest's opening round,

. Thursday, March 16, 1995:

Pa

· · P9meroy-Midcfleport, Ohio

• 4 Wheel Antr-Loclc Brakes

• CuSiom Sjlo~ Bucket Sea~
• Pass-Key 11 Theft Deterrent

• Dual AirtlaQ$

• Rear Deck l~ Sjlo1 ~r

• Power Steering
• Power Brakes
• Power Door locks

• Spec•at Aero Gro und Effects
ar&lt;l Wheel f.ores
•Sjlon Suspenooe
· Spl~ Dual E1haus1

• Power Wrndows

.. nsteenl)g

l l'(.lll(l~GtM C ·

· PIS. PIS

• Custqm Clorh lmenor
• Sleel Belted TJres

f ~s~ I ,me Buyr.&lt;
lnco;-n1 owr ll
O..lll&gt;llfld

• Cooisole

• V'6Power

• AWFM Cassette

"~IP.

S26,988

• · 15• Casl Alumrnum Wheels
• L.Qadedl

• CN~e Corllrol

•AM'FM Srereo

I

••
,

••

TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 .• 312·2844
J
~-5947 • 422-0758
• Ta•es,Tegs, 11:~ Fees e1tra. Reblile included it1 Bile~ ol new vehicle lis1ed wtMll'e Wltable. On 8111l!Q'!I!i~;!ftd~t No! L«.pon!lble

Monday • Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm .
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm .

�..

•

• Thursday, March 16, 1995
Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentine~age-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, March 16,1995

Jordan mystery..._&lt;_Con_un_·u e d _ f r o m _ P a g . . : . e . . . . : 5 ) - - - - - - - - - - - - " - - - - get back into a groove on bow to · collective bargaining agreement
ptovide your own penooal space.''
and a moratorimn exists on renegoPlayers denied Wednf.sday they tiating contracts.
were told at a ream meeting of Joe.
"We would be fined beavily if
dan's imminent return.
we even talk.ed about engaging in
. Jordan's comeback, talked about negotiations," Bulls general mannow for a week, is still just that ager Jerry Krause told the Chicago
talk. The Bulls bave played better Tribuu last week.
ball since speculation became so
Tbe Bulls bave a policy against
intense. They've woo tbrce of four, renegotiating contracts. Jordan's
including a 99-86 victory over contract, which is to expire at tbe
Atlanta on Wednesday.
end of next season, reponedly Is
Jordan may be waiting to get paying bim about $4 million a year.
into better basketball sbape. Maybe
Krause claims Jordan is not
· tbere's a bang up in negotiations, if being paid under tbat deal, not lhat
negotiations are origoing.
a man who makes an estimated $3().
Tbe NBA players and owners million a year in endorsements
are currently working without a

needs tbe money.
Jordan's salary is, however,
tieing applied against tbe salary
cap, said NBA spokesman Jan
Hubbard.
If Jordan returned Ibis season,
be might bave bis salary under bis
current deal prorated for the
remaining games.
"Tbat would be up to tbem.
There bave been cases wbere players bave gotten tbe whole sala!y,"
Hubbard said Wednesday, citing
Dallas' Jimmy Jackson as an example.
There also have been reports
that Jordan's new deal witb tbe
BuDs could be tied to Other players

on tbe team. most notably Scottie
Pippen, who bas been unhappy
most of !be·season.
Without Pippen, Jordan's
chance of winning another champi·
onsbip would be remote.
Armstrong, another key to the
Bulls' three-season championship
run, was asked Wednesday if be
thought bis future was conneaed to
a new deal sboWd Jordan return.
"I don ' t think so. I'm not tied
wltb him. It's Michael's, it's bis
deal,~ ' Armstrong said
Jordan's agent, David Falk, did
not return a telephone call to bis
Washington office Wednesday.

"199!1, LM Angelel
Time&amp; Syndtc.tt• and
Cu,•tOts s~te"

1994 FORD
TEMPO 4 DR.

Dl•lslon IV....,.lfiDols

Basketb all

AI DaJiu; Ruu ia (18-6)

lll .

Moatrca18 , PitaburghS
Philadelphia 4, N.Y. Ranam 3
Alt.thdm S, Calpry 0
Toroato 2, SID Jcse 1

Uaioo

Citf Milliu.iaawa Valley (18-6), Thun-

NBAstandings
· EASTERN CONFERENCE
. Al'-lk Ditto._

l!: L

Ita

a-Ortudo ............. ~ ••

fsl.

Gil

.150
.6.56
.413

16

New Ycw-11: .............. &lt;40 ll
New Jeney ............ 26 17

6.5.
21 .5

8011DD ......._............ .l4 38 ·.317

Miami ................... .23
flhJI.Idelpl\iiL ..... .....J7

39

.311

45
Wllhinatoo ... .._....... 17 "''

.214
.274

23
24
J0

30

Ce•traiDiriiiM
Chwlotle ................ 39 24 .619
ItwliiD.I ................... 31 24 .613

.5

CLEVELAND ....... ll 26 .574
Chlcqo .................. 33 31• . .516
Atluta ................... 31 32 .492
Milwautee ............. 24 ofO .37S

l
6.l
I
lS.S

.J6~

16

Dcuoit ................... 23

40

day.6o llp.m.
SpriDalleJd Catholic Central (19-4) v1 .
Fort Loramie (151-4), 'ntundly. I p.m.
Champiorllhip Slturday, 11 a.m.

va. CcoterbUtJ (22·2), Thur1day, 6:1S

p.m.

Crat.lloc (13 -11)

(•·•4~ Th......

Yl.

r. 1 p.m.

Dclphol Sl. JohD

Oaampio111hip S•wday, DOOD.
AI To&amp;ttlo: Fayme (20-3) w. Oltoville
(l0. 14),Thunday,fi:JOp.m. '
Holaare (li·.S) v1. Fiadlay Liberty
Benton (23.0),1bund.ay,I:1S p.m
Ownpi.oDINp S•ll'daY., ooon.

AI C•nloa: New Philadelphia Tua.

carawaa Ce ntral Catholic (J 9-S) va .
SouthlDfllOD Challr:er (19-4) , Thunday,
6:lS p.m.
.
OaltoD (20..3) VI. Columbiu a (21·2),
nu.nday,l p.m.
Otampiolllhip Sllllrday, OOOD .

busintss·.d tt envtlope•and a clttck

4 cyl., 1uto., elr cond.,

AM/FM Cl ..ettt, PS,
PW, POL, Ult, cruiH, pawverl

AM/FM Cl811tll, PS, PB,
PW, POL, tilt, cruiH, Pwr.

1120410

Stockt1te50

or money ordtr for $3 .75 (lhis
inc/udu poslage and handling) ro:
Lowdown. cloAnn LandLrs, P.O. Box
11562 , Chicago.l/1. 606/l.fJ562 . (In
Canada, send $~55 . )

nat

__....;....._...._Girl Scout assistance-----, p-o-&lt;.~~o-.c&gt;oo-,oo.o~~-.:&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;;&gt;..o-.o-G~;&gt;.Oo0-0&lt;::&gt;-0~

Transactions

u.,..

BuebaU
·

Tonlgbl's games

AI Collamhu: Porbmouth Eulj~) ­

1994 MERCURY
TOPAZ 4 DR.

4 cyl., lllto., 11r

""'·

Scoreboard

Whal'srhe 1ru1habou1 pol , cocaiM.
LSD, PCP. cra ck, speed and
downers' "The Lowdown on Dope"
has up·lo·rhe·minuce inforfiiiJlion on
drugs . Send a self·addrt$Std. long,

Amcrkan

·

BOSTON RED SOX• A.ulpod Walt
McKeel, catcha'; Pat Murphy ud NoiDII'
OII'Ciaparra, lllfitlden; aad Scutt 8atkwn
and Pete Youn1, pitchetl, to their mlDor
league camp. Refeued Jetr Hammond,
oulfield«.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Sianed
Oreaa OlJoa, pitch«, to a minor loaiU•

MoattNI at B01ton, 1:30 p.m
N.Y. blaadm. 81-Buffalo,-1.;30 p.m.Philldelphia at Ottawa, 7:30p.m.
PittsbutRh It Quebec, 7:30p.m.
Harttord at New Jauy, 7:30p.m.
. Wuhia(JtoD at Aorida, 7:30p.m.
Dall11 at DetrOit, 1:30 p.m.
v~uvcr at Chic:qo, 8:30p.m.
St. Louis all..ol AiiBelea, 10:30 p.m

COME ON OVER TO BOB

con~.

:· And Get A Jump On Your Garden!

FootboU

Friday's games .

Nallooalfootlloiii.o.NFL FILMS: An.Doun«d the retiremeat of Ed Slbcil, cbalrmlll..
·
CIDCAOO BEARS' Sipe4 Mlchaol
Timpaoa, wide receiver, lo a threo-ycw
coalrld. •

YancouYer at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
WiMipea at Cl.l&amp;ll')', 9:30p.m.
S11.11 Joae at Edmoatoa, 9:30p.m.
Toronto al Anaheim, 10:30 p.m

"Right N~~ Bob's Is Fully Stocked With Everything You'll Need
·
To Get Your Garden Off To A Great Start"
.
* Bulk Garden Seed
* Fertilizer
* Lime

Hockey
WllSTilRN CONFERENCE
Mid.... QlrilleD

t.r. Ill.

· l!: L

IsD

.146

Utoh ..........•............-47 16
San Aalon.io ........... 42 11
Houatou ................. 31 24
Deowr ................... 29 33
Dallu ..................... 24 36
MiDIIICiotl .............. 11 46

.700
.6)'3
.461

J.5
. 1.5

,40()

21.5
30

17.~

.210

PocllkD..W...
PhoeDix ..................47

16

.746

Set.ttle ....................42 19
LA. Wm ............31 24
·PortlwL ............ 34 v

.619

SIICI"'ml!Dl0 .......... .. 30

4
l.l
12

.613

.m

31

.492

· 16

GoldeD State .......... 20 42
L.A. Oippen ... ;..... 14
x-cliDdled playoff berth

.323

26.S
33.5

so·

.219

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
ll' L I I'lL !if 1iA

Philadelphia ...... 13 9 J 29 80
N . Y . R~~~&amp;cn .... lJ II 3 29 77
New Jersey ....... 10 11 4 24 651
WaahlnatoD ...... 9 10 6 24 61
Florida ............. ciO ll 3 23 61
N.Y. Ialanden ... 913 3 21 62
Bay ....... 5I IS 2 20 6S

Wednesdliy'1 scores

72
70

6&amp;

Double .

Single
Pole

Outlet '

11

1994 MERCURY
SABLE

v..a, 1uto., air cond., AM/FM

Receptical

49~

61

71
7S

Tan.-

3-Way

92
61

Buffalo .... ,......... tO I l ll ll
Hartlard ............ 10 13 3 23 66
MontrNI ........... 9 11 S 23 63

l2

10 ·SO

76

Ottawa.............. 3 16 4

26

A High Quality,

.

LA. Clippm 117, Oetrolll1

Priced Dog Food
21% Protein

OoldeD State 119, L.A. taken 101

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Toalchl's games

CentraiiNNion

Utah at CLEVELAND, 7:30 p.m

p.m
HoustoD. 8:30p.m. .
Philade!pbia.r: Su AoloDlo, 1:30 p.m.
Saaamcalo llDener, 9 p.m.
Bottoa II PortlaDd,IO p.m.
o
Mitmi Ill Semle, J Op.m.
PhoeaiJ.II Chatlocu:, I

Miune~ata at

Friday'• game8

UtaJutNcw Jcner, 7:30p.m.
New Yort II W.ahia&amp;toa, 7:30p.m.
Orlando aiDdiua. 7:30 p.m.
CLEVELAND l l M I - 8 p.m
MIIWI\Itee II Qkaao,I:JO PJII.
Alii adelphia " lloltu. 8' 30 p .m
Mllrni at L.A. Clfppen,10:30p.m
'Boatolll L.A. Labn. 10:30 p.m
Golden State at SacrameotO, 10 :30
p.m.

Cllllttl, tilt, crulae, PS,
PB,PW,PDL

lltll, till, Ctulae, 811 pawer,
only 14,000 mllea.

Stock 1202t0

ft53771

:r...
l!: L I &amp; !if
Detroit.. ............ 16 6 2 34 512

1iA

30 90
29 87

TOMato ............. 12 Jl 4

28

13

7~

DIUM...... ,......... ID 12 4
Wiallipea.......... !i' J2 4

24 79
22 72

69
81

Aqoloa...... •

26% Protein

52

ChJcaac ............ 1• 9 2
Sli.DulJ ........... 1• I I

PadlloJihot....
Calpry ............. 11 10 5 21
Yaaouuvcr ........ I I a 24
BdmolltDD .•.....•• IO 13 2 22
Suloae ............ 9 12 2 20 ·
t.o.
12 4 20
Amahoim •.•........ 1 ll 2 16

50_1bs.

62
6l

aa

10

79
70

80
81

51

72

l6

94
88

7~

$10.75
$11.95

$284.mo.
'
··"'-

1994 FORD
AEROSTAR XLT

1994 FORD E~3SO
CLUB WAGON

Exten.d ed length, 8 cyl.,
auto., dull A/C, Ult, crulle,
all power.

15 P11senger, 5.8 L. V-8,

auto., front and rear· air
cond., 1111, crulee, all pawer.

I203eO

120420

.

Bits

26% Prolein 5011

"Tbe Wild World Around Us"
was the theme of the March meet·
ing of Chester Garden Club held at
tbe hbme ofTwila Buckley.
In response to roll call members
told wbat tbey are doing to care for
tbe world around them. Litter, our
own and tbat of tbe communily,
and roadside cleanup, appreciation
for and wise us of natural'
resources, were among the topics
. . covered in tbe responses.
Patricia Holter gave devotions

·sneeze. This strategy also works to
· keep squirrels out of tulip beds, sbe
said.
Other suggestions she made
were planting pumpkins around tbe
corn patch to keep the raccoons,
planting; castor bean s in areas
infes ted, with moles, sprinkling
· blood meal along garden rows to
discourage predators.
~ Mrs . Banon said that gardeners
need to decide what creatures tbey
"want to attract to tbeir gardens, and
includin ~r·tlmie-poem~ring,"
tben to provide tbe right habitat. To
Kind Words" and "Love" lrom;W-;:a- "'at""uacri!lrdr,&gt;llnatd;--gartleners·' ·
book of poetry wrillen by Meigs need only provide feeding stations.
County residen~ Gay Perrin.
She said that tulip lrees and flower- ,.
Macil Barton conducted the ing dogwood will attract humming
business meeting during which birds and butterflies during bloomtime plans for tbe school tberapy . ing time and again when the berries
.appear. Squirrels are also attracted
program were discussed by by .dogwood berries, she added.
Those gardeners wbo want to
Katbryn Mora who also bandied
tb~ sunshine project for Marcb.
allract bu. uerflies and bum
. ming
It was noted tbat Pauline Ridenour provided altar arrangetnents bird moths need to encourage
for tbe Chester Metbodist Church plants tbat tbe larvae feed on, Barin January, and Jean Frederick pro- ton said. Gardeners must be willing
to abide milkweed and nettles COD·
vided them for February. Mrs. sidered weeks by most, but essenBuckley gave tidbits on bow 10 tial for feeding larvca. Butterlly
deter animal intruders in tbe gar- week and :Me xican sunflowers
den. She said lhat moth balls work
attract monarchs, evening primrose
well in and around gardens and autacts huiiuning birds motb, she
flowers since .they cause rabbits to
·d

"A Complete Line Of Hardware"

WedDesday's scores

NIT action
WedMIC!ay'1
nnt·rouad scores
Can!Aiw 13, Seton Hall 71
Mcquettc61, Aubll'n 61
Pe01 Stile 62, Miami, Aa. S6
Coppin State 7~ , St. Joseph '~ 68 (01')

Iowa 96, DcPaull7
New Melioo SL97, Colorado 83
WllhiDfllD Sl.lle 94, Texu Tech 32

1993 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

Tonight's nnt-round games

SIGNATURE SERIES. 4 Dr. eedan, V-8, auto., air cond., PS,
PB, PW, Pwr. 111t1, POL, crulee, .tilt, AM/FM sterap c1... ,
rear window

Oeorae WuhillatOD (11-13) at omo
(23·9). 7 p.m.
•
Sl. John ;, {14-13) it South Florida

B o na~nrure(l7-12),

7:30p.m.
Gcora:ia (18·9) at NebrasU (17· 13),
S:OS p.m.
Eutern Michiaan {20-9) al Bradley

(19-9). i •Ol p.m
lllinoit State (19-1 2) at Utah SIJ!te (217). 9•0l p.m.

Limited, V· B, IUto., 1
cond., AM/FM caea., tilt,
crulae, 111 pawer, leather.!
more.

NEW 1995 NISSAN SENTU XE
Automatic, air, cassette, dual air bags.

Friday'• games
Oemson (1~- 1 2) a1 VirJioia Tech {2010). 7:30p.m ·
'
Moni&amp;D.I (21 - B) at Teua-El Puo (199). 9•ll p.m.

1993 FORD
TAURUS
LX WAGON

1992 BUICK
ROADMASTER

( MSRP $13,939)

SALE

$12,999!

V-8, auto,, air conditioning,

AM/FM caasatte, tilt, crulee,
all power, leathtr.

"

Wednesday's regional action
l6

llt.W..J
Cle, HlCi&amp;ht. 64, Puma Valley Forge
EuClid 41, Lorain $r. 31
Tot. St. Franci1 74. Mansfield Sr. 54
Zllleaville 45, Mwillon J~o~:boo4 3

.

Dt.w.om

1992 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

1992 FORD
T·BIRD

v..a, automatic, air condl·

automatic, air condl·
tlonlng, AM/FM Clllltll,
PS, PB, PW, POL, lilt,
·crulae, etc.

Col. Hartley 74, M.-iertllnl Sl
Delt170, Medioa Hia,hi&amp;Dd 56

Gc:rmaotowD Valley View ~7. Cill. N.
Collcae Hill 49
Minford 70, Buckeye Trail69 (OT)
ODlario 62, Coldw•CI' 49
OrJ\Iille 79, Newton Fai!J 4S
Wheel enburl n, Bloom-Caroll 67
Youaa. Mooney 7~ . Aurora 67

Division I

Air, power windows &amp; locks, cassette, cruise.

i

nnals

AI 8owlla1 Gr\en : Toledo Sal at
(19 - ~) vs. Waterville Nanh (22 -

Fnuu:il

3), Satwday, 7:30 p.m.
AI C.lon: Zu.e.~ille (23-0) v&amp;. w11 •
rea lllrd.iaa (20-4), Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
.
AI Clnelud : Euclid 06-7) VI .
Cleni&amp;Dd Helr,hU (23-1), Saturday, 7:30

p.m.
AI

~mlftMb

lhftH: CiDchmlli

Oai Hill&amp; (21 .
2) vi. Spriaaf1eld North (21· 1) , Friday,
U~pm.

Xenia Beavercreek (20.3)

VI,

Ketter.

iDJ Flirmool (151· 4), Friday,l p.m:
OlampioDihip S•wday, I p.m.

DtvllloD II ftnoll
AI To. . .: Oltaw•OIIIldort (1~·10)
n . Oyde (20-l). Friday. 7•30 p.m.
AI A.tlllea•: CambridJe (IS·9} u .
Greenfield MeCiai• (11-6), Fridly, 7:30
·p.m
At Aknlll: Nanm FairJeM; (21-4} V&amp; .
ctevcl•d YUlll ADa.Sahlt. Ja~e~~h (19l) Friday. 7•30 e .m.
' AI DaJto•: tiUFIDDiti MeNicholu .
(14-9) Y1. KdtaiDI Alter (15·9), Salur·

day,$ p.m.

.

tlonlng, AM/FM ca..•tt•
tilt, crul11, 111 power.

NEW 1995 NISSAN ALTIMA GXE
( MSRP $ 7,388)

4
X
4

SALE

$14,,99!

Auto., air ~nd.,
eteer., power brakee,
wlndowa,
power
locka, Ult, crulee, etc.

NEW 1995 NISSAN .KINGCAB V6 414

$11,"49

Air conditioning, auto hubs, bed liner, jump seats

SALE

$15, 999!

TAYLOR MOTORS WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY BIGGER CITY DEALER'S PRICES
BECAUSE OF OUR LOWER OVERHEAD!
RUNI·ARCJU NO WHEN THE BEST DEAL IS

1-Reg. $2295
1-Reg. $639
1-Reg. $319
1-Reg. $389
1-Reg. $499
1-Reg. $1098
1-Reg. $639
1-Reg. $289
. 1-Reg. $209
1-Reg. $169
,1-Reg. $329

I.

V-8,

$12,449
1991 HONDA·
ACCORD LX WGN.

( SAVE $3655 )

CLOSEOUT
SPECIALS

$14,949

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

199lFORD .
· T-BIRD

46" Projection TV ............... S1599
Loveseat •••••••••••••••••••••..••••••••$399
Wing Chair............................$1 59
Chair •••••••••••~•••••••••••••••••••••••• $159
Loveseat...............................$249
Sectional••••••••••••••••.-.••••••••••••$699
Recliner •••••••••••••••."••;~ ............ $469 .
Cherry Table..........................$1S9
Blue Table ............................... $99
Cocktail Table .......................... $89
Wing Chair...................:........$159

:-r . .

~~

*

44&amp;-1711

·

4991*

l . . . . . . ,.. ......

Ultra·llin mini
hantllald callul•
Waltlhl just 7 oz.

You'll fnlaafa
&amp;aacura with a
hanjlheld cdj~r ·

Our fin est! Men u-dri'.'en
display and memory for up
to 98 names and phone
numbers. Press any key .

Lightweight handheld at a
great price . Memory·
stores up to 48 names
and phone numbers.

to answer calls. Includes
battery and charger.

••11 £9 o/llllllll'iO

••1:1149 99 •11 ·10&amp;2

999*
lrlllamobila phona
li Jilrtact for .
2·car.famltaa
No installation required-ju st
plug 1nto car lighter and str ap
to sCat Includes antenna and
Conven1ent carry bag .
l'J'i'J•I/ 10?1

Closeoull
May not be In all storao.

Sorrv. no rain checkl.

· . , . _ - - 1&gt;'1 .......,.

lranaportabla phone lr0111 TachnOJhona®

Pf&gt;C;II IIIQ..,.II,.., •"'"lhOn ;;all(! fl'lo&lt;1"'lum r.a......::e w mm ol"&gt;"'" " 'I~ Rad•a S~oc ~ ftUII'Ionl.d '
etll~la r e •"'" Prit tt *IIIOul itl••al oo~ • ' ' lot! ~ $4911 ~ "'7 &gt;CW S349 9\1 ' '' 1011 !oM 9\l

• ,1r 101§ I llS QS

'

OPEN
MDNDAYTIL8
rues.. SAT. Tils

5tncferson's

Ta ke 1t anywhere! Powerful 3· wau ope rat1on . IOO ·number
memory Multilingual menu . • 11 101 ~

Ot••• •Old m CA 0.1~•1• on~""".

THE REPAIR sHOP

onblltl (21·3). S...Uy. 4 p.m.

(20.•), SaiUnlay. 4 p.m.

Phone (614)

$8949

Dl•llloa m IIDall

P·~t T-lldta (22;2) n. o...to

2400 Eastern Avenua (acrossiiDin KMatt) , Gallipolis, OH

IO ~

.u A-• Mlolotd (23-1) n. Wbeel·

YouDfltOWD ~aey (16-1). S~y . ~

19919

• Cabbage
• Cauliflower

•All payment~ n U ITIOI'IIh RCL- ~Plan" paymtfU are bllecl on $2,CXXJ down att!me ot delivery.
lhll inCkfdlll tit~.&amp; MClKity deJIOIII rtsull:lng In 21.1emalnlng payments. Slate IDes not
-

•· Red Pontiac

Rt. 33 (1/4 mila north Pomeroy-Mason Bridge), Mason , WV
. Phone (304) 773· 5721
'

Stery .$ule

v.a, •utcli\ ltr cond., lilt,
crul11, AM/FM Clllltlt,
PS, PB, PW, POL,
mllee, etc.

.

AI DaJ~•: CJcntatoWI Valley View
(20.2) •• Columbus Hanley (2o.l), Sot·
-y.2p.m
·
AI C•••••: OrrYille (21· 3) VI.

• Irish Cobbler

Also Our Beautiful Frost Proof ·
Pa.nsies In A Variety Of Colors!

Toads are garden friend~. she·
said, because they devour insects
by the thousan~s and they arc
encouraged to stay in tbc garden by
providing water, food and shelter.

Sal •

(16· 11). 7•30p.m.
College of Chk'lestoa (23-~) at Provi·
dence(16-12), 7:30p.m
,
Southern Miu iuippi (17-12) at St .

• Brussels Sprout
• Broccoli

Garden club plunges.into the 'wild world'

$11!IS
WAGNER HARDWARE
•

• Head Lettuce
• Red Cabbage

COMMUNITY SER\iiCE- Girl Scouts occaslonaUy engage in projects to improve their community
or school. Here, members of Middleport CadeUe troop 1208 cut out soup labels for a pfVtlram to assist Mid·
dleport Elementary School Shown are, fro~~;~, left: Bridget Johnson, Stacey Brewer, Leeann Dill, Nikki
Roush and Ginger Dant.
'
·
.
·

72

77

• Red Chieftain ·

And Now Ready For Planting;

V-8, auto., A/C, AM/FM CIS·

sa

63

• Kennebec

1993 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

Narlbeul DlvWon

PiltlbiA'ah ......... 18 7 2 ll 113
Qu-·············· l7 l 3 37 9l

B01too .............. 12 10 2

New Jersey 108, Orlando 99
lndlua 111. Milwllllkee 101
Ollcoao99.AUIDia86

Quiet Switches

Allude Di,.llion

Ium

*

Onion Sets .
• Garden Dusts and Sprays
SEED PO]'ATOES

.'

..

w

ltadiO.ihaei
· Out of whapk? Oul ol warrantY? We hx
most maJOr brands _of out·Of·warranty
electroniCS. For a store near you, call

Radio Shack ValuePius' Credit Card aod Moslllajor Credit Cords are Welcome

-"-""'.:.' -------------------------1

f----·•_•_&lt;~•o_:S_h•_:_
''_v._"$_e_•••_. _
••_.,_lvln..:o_c._.._.• c_._.,_.,_,._""_'_··:...·~_"_'"'_':.._
' '..:.'':.._''_:"_'"..:.''..:"'_oo_·"-"-'
' '-"""
--"'

ltadle.l baell

. P•&lt;tl

•1111'• o1 PJ'I~. 'P•tor&gt;q !lot i&lt;} S ~ac,~

~1(,, $$ 11M

......;,.., ,.• ,.,~ "'" ~,,o!!l)loo II 0 l)oli' '!..PIItnv

\IOi e

.,..,__,., 11141

\.N ,.... 11,. ,_,~ &lt;&gt;&lt;Ill· •~ '""'~*~-'"'
•J~t'llo\..., P''tl • ~tl otJil OI"''IIIO&lt;t

"'"'~~"•t &gt;~e

.. ~ olf,. I

,..,.,. ., , '"" r•l&gt;:k.&lt;. t" 10111 our ·

"~""......,"' ~- 'tnlt(:~ ·~~~~~,_, ,..,&gt;&lt;l hftt.'h-t
....... f\01

bco

I)Mb(.l /)11...., "'.~,.., &lt;l' \IO(;Io Of

You've got questio ns. We'vl' got answers .••
DOWNTOWN POMEROY - 992·3672
1-SOO·THE·SHACK'"
·
.. ..:.,
rl!•o.tal'llll&amp;ll!
~--.-----~--..........~~.-~.....................
1-----------~~----~--~----~~------------====~------------~--------------~==~~~--------__j
--- =
.
"
\fi'K:' I I OHitl O... y ~t'll od•ltlo-

s.-~.,

.
'

~··•ntetcl'

'•'

•

�,
Page

8

Thursday, March 16,1995

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Ser(linel

•

Thursdiy, March 16, 1995

benefit

SOC/e

'Bye ·Bye Love' comes to terms with divorce
The I Y-song soundtrack opens
" the child support mobile."
The Mighty Ducks") does a fine
DAVID GOODMAN
with
Linda RQnstadt' s versiQn of
Then there's Dave (Matthew job with his multigenerational cast,
,
Associated Press Writer
the
Marlene
Deitrich classic
It's Friday evening in a South- Modine), a good-looking lady particularly the affable Reiser and
."Falting
in
Love
Again" and feaern California suburb and three kiUer with a twentysomething ~irl- the ever-versatile Quaid.
tures
bits
from
a host or stars
Weisman previously worked
recently divorced dads are meeting friend (Maria Pitillo) and an
including
The
Spin
Doctors, Phil
their wives at a fast food restaurant . unstoppable roving eye. His " I' m with script writers Gary David
Collins
and
Mary
Chapin
Carpento take. weekend .custody of the so sensitive.. lines wow the Goldberg and Brad HaU on the crit- ter.
·
ktds .
divorced moms be meets at Satur- ically acclaimed TV series
"Bye Bye Love" is produced
"Brooklyn Bridge." Individually,
Such exchanges on neutral terri- day afternoon Little League.
by
Goldman, Hall and Weisman,
In a nice touch, the action is the trio have racked up a bon of
tory are ·~the new American rituwith
Michael MacDonald as coal," according to "Bye Bye held together by an annoying and accolades for other TV shows
Producer.
·Love," a wry and wiuy comedy pcmpous psychologist (Rob Rein - including ''Lou Grant," "L.A.
The PG-13 movie has a running
er),
whose
48-bour
"Divorce
in
the
Law"
and
"Family
Ties."
from 20th Century Fox about comtime
of I 05 minules.
·
90s"
radio-a-thon
iroflltrales
further
While
the
movie
deals
bead-on
ing to terms with separation and
learning to date again.
aod further inlO the plo.t.
with the pain of loneliness and the
Motion Picture Association of
As the weekend unfolds, Donny pitfalls of promiscuity, it Is stiU a
With a clever script that borders
America
rating definitions:
on farce and bravura performances battles his loneliness and tries to sanitized version or separation - a
G
General audiences . All
from a host of gifted actors, th e patch up things with his 14-year kind of sitcom divorce-lite.
ages
admitled.
Everyone always looks great.
movie successfully balances a swry old daughter _(Eliza Dusbku), who
PG - Parental guidance suglaced with excellent one liners, is drifting away from him.'
Kids are adorable. Lawns are manigesled.
Some malerial may not be
Wbile Dave fight s off the cured. \
multiple plots and emotional
suitable
for children,
drama.
women, Vic has a btind date from
In this ideal, affluent suburb, the
PG-13 - Special parental guidIt's a world in which everybody hell with Lucille (Janeane Garofa- painful economics of single parent- ance strongly sug gested for chi!used to be part of a couple. Donny lo). They're polar opposites . The hood in America neve r reaUy rear dren under 13 . Some malerial may
·
(Paul Reiser) is a lonely real-estate nightmare restaurant trys t culmi- their ugly head.
,be inappropriate for young chilsa!Cs man who still carries a torch nates in a very funny scene in
And when Donny .has a fling dren.
for his ex-wife afler three years and which Garofolo keeps seizing the with Dave's ex-wife, Susan (Amy
)l~r r~ -marriage
_
second wheel !n...Quaid's dri ving__ Brenneman}, it doesn't com~;.s;I o.e . R - Re stricted . Under 17
In contrast, cranky Vic (Randy
instructor car. ·
.
t'o shaking th e tight, supportive re·quires accompanying parent ·or .
adult guardian.
Divorce and dating have long bonds between the trio of friends.
' Quaid), a driving instructor, loathes
hi s · fo rm er partner (lindsay
been staples or American comedy
This is about as good as divorce
No one und er 17
Crou se), referring to her car as
"nrl director Sam Weisman ("D2: can get.

•

j

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BULLETIN BOARD
'6 c~lunan Inch weekdays
'8" column Inch Sunday

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

.

CALL OUR OFFICE 11992·2155

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
' 992-70130R
992-55530R
TOLL FREE 1-800-848-oo?O
DARWIN, OHIO ·

Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary Club
Annual Pancake Breakfast Sat,
Mar. 25, 7 a.m.-noon
Sr. Citizens Center·in Pomeroy
$3 Adults , $2 Children
Tickets available at door.

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

'

One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri.· Sat.
1.6

• Craftsman Toolt
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Mlac.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992-2060

7131191 TFN

fillY'S

Howard L.:Writesel
ROOFING

Mobile Welding ·
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump svc
Tune-ups
985·3879

NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94g·2168
511619• TFN

10t'S/1mo

Sunday, March 19 at 2:30
p.m. in the
French 500 Room at
Holzer Medical Center.

·

D JAM0 NDS
ttj}1~(tl
"'I

COUNTRY

Reg.
1/4 ct. tw.

14K Diamond. Ring

$499

112 ct. tw. $899

1/2 Ct. T.W.

Sale

Golf Lessons
by appointment &amp;
cl ub repair as well
Call John Teaford at
C hester, Ohio

THE WATERING
HOLE
··

AND

BAD HABIT

Jl l4f1

TREE TRIMMING

H&amp;H SAWMILL

AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling;

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

Shrubs Shaped

32124 Happy

and Removed

Bill Slack

Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 457GO
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

992·2269

614-742·2193

Misc. Jobs.

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

mo.

Announcements
3 Announcemema .
All Notu,.l Food P,...uct Which
Holpo Vou ' - Wotght And
.... ..... en.ty, 114-&lt;Ma3358.
.

EJimlnote Fat. From DW Wlh
Afl-noturat -..,-~ill , L- ~ - e-~
Wotghl, -

'A!&gt;oo1118, Mil

.... Energy 114~z-.

Han Vou Ever WaniH To Oo
RIICing? a&amp;.• Few E"et yone.

Opanrng Sunday April 111h,
a.to AI 10 A.ll. AclivHioa, .
12:00, VI_, Rac-ay
Inc. Aclrnlalon.M, tM 311 1:100,

:VZI/1-.

114 3M 8817.

...
~

$299
$599

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•.Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
·Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

•Convertible Tops
·Carpet &amp;
. Seat Covers
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
·Bo·at Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-7587

CLUB

1/2/lln

Topic :
Conva Tech Update
Speaker:
Chris Chadwick,

diamond anniversary band.

t:T',llii' ,..,.......

YOUNG'S
CARPEIIJER SERVICE.

"Take the pain out of
painting • Let us
. do it for .you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
31632 Woilt Shade Road ~
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Free estimates
Beton'! 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

The Ohio Valley Ost9my

~~ce~r~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;iiii~~~ii'ii~~iij~~
·

Linda's
Painting &amp; Co.

Fed all natural feed .
$1 .65 lb . cut, wrappE:d and
frozen . - 304-882-2886

DAFFODD..
sponsor
of tbe annual Daffodil Days fund raising project of the American
Cancer Society, Meigs unit. Orders for the ftowers are still being
taken, and deliveries are beginning this week. Here Carson Crow,
left, Society board member, accepts a.check"""!' Paul Reed, president of Farmers Bank, for tbe cost of tbe dalfodils sold by the Can-

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

CHESTER

FOR SALE
FREEZER BEEF

17. Captivating 7 marquise

Racine Southern Future l'armers
of America members Philip Hamm,
Chri s llamm, Jessica Sayre and
Tracy Card recently attended the
1995 District 10 public speaking
co ntes t held at Wellston High
School.
The con test is designed to
encourage students to study,, organi ze thoughts and translate their
thought' .through pubtic speaking.
Chris llamm participaled in the
advanced prepared division with
his topic: Staph Aureus Mastitis:
li e placed seventh in the contest
and received a silver rating. Sayre
took part in the extemporaneous
speech division with the speech
"The Impcrtance of Teaching Pesticide Safety." She received sixth
place and a bronze rating . 'Philip
Hamm won sixth place and a silver
rating with a speech entitled

I

00

a~~~7-

' '

~

Get Your Message l4ro11
With ADally Sentinel

B)'

FFA elects
officers,
attends
competition

~).

r

KU'I APPLIAIICI
IIIVICI
•Foctory Authorized Parts
a. Service

JAMES ALARM
SERVICE

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
Olfice Hours: Mon.:Frl.
e:oo a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; AlUm. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl .
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates

•All Mokto ""2 Vearo

of'aat Reliable Service

.Washer• • Dryera ,• .Ranges

-Refrlger8tora •Freezers
-Diahwaahara

-H .W. Hutera

-Mic:rowaveo •Disposals
•Thonko Melge a

Surrounding Areal

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335
.
t 2J1•... n

1/ltl'ttn

.

'

UVE GIRLS, CALL NOW, 1·8QO.
old. 1451 P.ttlmln,
IIUOI bo 11 ,,.., ..,_. Co.,

~000

MODERN SANI'rATION -

102-tl54-11t:ZO.

,
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
DaHy, weakly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties

Special Tlais
Monllt
With every new
. alarm Installed receive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.
304·882-3336

4000 ald. 1032. Only P.ttlmln.

, ••. -··· 102-tiM-llaO.

.

MEET NEW PEOPLE nlE FUN
.WAV TOOAV, 1-100.771-3005 ut.
8002. U.tltJmln, lluol bo 11 yrw.
of •ge, Procall Co., IQ2..t54..

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FO R SALE
Licensed a Bonded - 20 years experience

"JI20.

...

THE PAMPERED CHEF
"Tho K"chon SlotW That eom.
To Your Door.'" Local CoMLIItant
AvallabiiiAt :
114-441...724

99 2- 3954

311411 mo.

..

LDYE CAN BE \'OURS TONtGKT,
}u« ...1 and find oul 1.eGO -

Emergenc y Ph one 985 34 18

l..oaftMonago.
Call For lnfonnotlon On Onlo&lt;lng tiMna, Part&amp;.. Or For au.a.
n...
Oppor'luniiiM.
F,..

11 Hnln

Brochure AYII~IM .

Vlno SI!MI BaH. Toclllo,'Open

llarch llh. Nlahterow..,., llln-

nowe, Open 7....

. .

YOU CAN FIND THAT SPECIAL
. SOIIEONE NOW; t-tQO.II2·
11800 eat. 1140, U.tltJmln. lluot
bo 11 ,,., Procoll Co., 111:2-85411120.

OPAYM
PUBLIC SPEAKING PARTICIPANTS -Chris Ha.iun, Jessica Sayre and Tracy Card, from left, members of tbe Racine South- ·
ern FF A Chapter, competed in the 1995 District 10 public speak·
ing contest in Wellston. Also competing,but not pictured was
Philip Hanun.
'

GIVE-AWAY
Come In and
·Sign Up For
Our Recliner ·
Give-Away

ONE OF AKIND CASH &amp; CARRY ITEMS
•LIVING ROOM COCKTAIL TABLES in oak or cherry.
Reg. $151.00 ............................ ................NOW$99.00
•LIVING ROOM END TABLES Round or reel. in oak or
cherry. Reg . $149.00 .............. .. ............ .. ": Now $79.00
•TWIN SIZE HEADBOARD Ivory with gold trim. Reg .
$.139.00 ...... ........... :.... ... ............. :.. 1/2 Off NOW $69.50

ie~~~s~~~;.:.~.~-6.~~~.~·~..~~:;~ $379.00·

•4 PC. GROUP LIVING ROOM TABLES
.
Includes square cocktail table, 2 end tables &amp; sofa .
table; wrought iron base with wood &amp; glass top .
Reg. $1417.00 ........................................ NOW $699.00

Galllpolla
&amp; ViCinity
2128 Chatham, Fttday A sotur-

HJ.

(No Sunday Calls) .

As high as
Minimum
Opening Deposit

$ 250,000

$ 100,000 . I
$ 10,0.00
$ 5,000
$ l,ooo·
.

R

~

!================~

BUNK BED

•

Kenny's Auto Rental
3115/Hn

18 Month
. APY

7.17
7.06
7.01
6.96
6,69

11 Month
APY

7.17
7.06
7:01
6.96
6.69

APY

6.90
6.80
6.74
6.69
6.43

Csll800-374r6123toopentht
·
account or r~quest mora Information. ·
'

j

•

ROBERT BISSELL
. CON~TRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
· FREE ESTIMATES

$43700

50% OFF CASH &amp; CARRY
ALL IN STOCK SOfAS &amp; SLEEPER SOfAS
REDUCED TO UNBELIEVABLY LOW PRICES!

REGULAR .
$689.00

*1.1ze Y'l.rea's ;Finest In Safes. anif'Especia,ffy Service. . ·

Minimum deposits to open an account is· $1,000.00. Rates indieate

Right of way, Wallace P. and Donna J. Hatfield to
TPCWD, 34 acres, 7.58 acres and 13.191 acres;
Right o( way, PhiUip R. and Pauletta Harrison to
TPCWD, Salisbury, 49.47 acres;
Right or way, PhiUip R. and P;mleua Harrison to
TPCWD, Salisbury, 125.17 acres, I acre and 27 ,
acres;
Right of way, RogerS . and Belinda J. Clark to
TPCWD, Salisbury, .74 acres;
·
·. Right of way, Ivan Carman to TPCWD, Salisbury,
9 acres:
Right of way, Ivan Carman to TPCWD, Salisbury,
5 acres:
· Right or way ; Virgil C. and Mary King to
TPCWD, 57 acres and 10 ac[1:s;
Right of way, Virgii .C. and&gt;Mary ,King to
TPCWD, 3'acres and 14.47 acres;
. ·

annUal percentage yield .and are a~ailable for accounts open March

t6 through March 22. 1995. A penalty '"' urly withdrawal may be
Imposed. Interest compounded monthly, paid 11 maturity of
certificate only. No cheer.. ·will be Issued during the tenn of the
certi~cate. Above rates available at all Peoples Bank locations.

•FREE PARKING
•FREE DELIVERY

. HOURS .DAILY
9TO 5

ALL ITEMS SUBJECT
TO PRIOR SALE

FRIDAY
9TO 8

VISA
MASTERCARD
DISCOVER
OR USE OUR EASY
•
CREDIT TERMS
I

THIRD &amp; OLIVE
•

\J \,• ... ·(

4~6·3045

"

Sales and
Service with
Low, Low
Prices

F-r. - y

p.m. saturday.

,.
h'

•

Th-. Frl And Sat, 31 B Frvm t :OO Till ?
.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

1_800_486 _1590
264 Upper River Rd . . , Bus; (614) 446-9971

&amp; VICinity

Adva,_.
Doodtl,.
~~~===O~H=.:45=6~3~1=~~~~~~~1 ~01tt~n ot.r
All Vo•d Bar..
lluot: 1:00pm
lo Pateltho
In
bofotW tho ld II lo
FOR.SA 1,£ OR TRADE
$,~"~ro!;~o,=-.i
Nn

Pt. Pleasam
&amp; VICinity

I..

~- l."' ,,_ •• 1or........, *"'111-lm,

W•T.f'. I 112n11 oil R117 on Oun· .

O.lwo1

1'1'11-A~WlY
MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
CllllljNifrlllt Slm &amp; Price~
NEW !:lAVEN, WV
304-882·2996 ~1 • 1 mo.

...

lildjuiMbl.
,

~

__

vllo Rd.

lhiiXJ•

·

aSt••nM

B

t.at. ol 111u11. IDKiil

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

Pea--,

AleAuction c-.pany
fuH time 1uet~r, ~·
I ,Udlon
e.vlce.
UuJ f
~- A

MANLEY'S
HOM E IMPROVEMENT
Roofi ng, Siding, Roorn
Addilions,Concrcte,etc.
P.O. Box 220
Bidwell, OH 45614

1

1

MO RRIS EQUIPMENT
·
"""

_

-

""

11

WOOl

Vlrvlnla, -

~~~!":J..S.:.:::V.,!i::
. fiM llarbl a.-.
Th4.n.ao~c.lt10W7U411, ·
lu-

- - ...ry Fotday-.....,

742•2455 ~Allo Auotlonflt.:!; 2..:0

RUTLAND

..

L..-~(6;,;,14;:,;;.3; ;8 ; ;·9; :8; ; 6;5;.....--! L..------...;..-~-·-··---...::",:".:.:1mo:::.~- ~de ~. pl..

I

'

"

-lon - 2:00

Floe ' Vonl Sat. llpMao
Fot AMI, 114 4tl Dll
.

Kenny's Auto Center

712210&lt;

·

Hoolir8d On

PhonlcoAnd l.olo..._t
ALLVanl--lePoldtn
" " - -· DEADLINE: 2:00 I'-'"·
•tho HJ boloxw tho lid t. lo Nn.

985·4473

Lay .9Lwdy .9l. Celar Cfiest 9\[ow j"or. %at 1995 (jraduate.

•

We Have Cars and Vans/

~

onw.r.,

ChMier

Sundooy ldltfon - Z:GO p.m.

.Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental •.

7 Month

In Reds, Greens &amp; Natural.
Reg. $875.00

n17111,1111t4 FamiiJt
c- · 'F-~
Taltla
4

2112/92/ltn

-.

.:::

•

�'

.

.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 16, 1995

Thursday, March 16, 1995

Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-11

ALLEYOOP
OF '&gt;OU ClnZENS TO

AI-!.EY

ACROSS

BRIDGE

Fll!JMEI N-lD I EXPEcT

IUNIX

35 Au1hor Wioaol
38 Melli futenera
38 Frock
39 BuH ogalnal
40 Compass pl.
41 Slobber
4-4 Broomstick

1~1

~

5 Omelet

IMPI..IC/Tl.Y /

lngr..tlenl
8 Wagonaand

PHILLIP
ALDER

Seep IH lHe TWIUGHT Zae:
houH, .... p~o~.

o.cor.t:MI •an.ware, wall ,...
...,..._, old lompo old tho&lt;.... old elodea, arolquo
· fvmlture. Alvwi,. Anllquea.
RUM lloort. OWMt. IM-1122&amp;28. We buy .......

kit~

on rtnr, t..t.rt. 304.at5-3053.

IJJiimRJL .. WSL G~ ...
1-!IUS ~ fM JlS 1\le

~NG

1t10

5
- d . AJC, Good Condition,
107,000 Mllee, $2,200, 114--3712510Pita. .

Smon 1Wo bod_, - · 1u11
. . . _.., .... alorago
t:J00 pluo utiiMI-. · 0:.

ere CAN ::ee. N-~D rrs~&gt;a

A.'lTROTURF! .

·-~

.......

Nuroa AJda Tralrtlo)g Program-,
We Buy Junk CaN, 114-311- PomtrDJ
Nunolng a AahabiiKa1012, 114 441 PART.
llon cantor will bo ollt~nt trainIng •Appllcattona
- In tho month
of
,,. now
Employment Services April.
btlng IICCOipltd at H7H Rock_- - - - - - - - - I oprl• . Rd., Ponitroy. Clott
olzo Ia llmlttd. ~..

..........

!!J

papora ...

_:_~=!:....,-------,--:::-:-:-·1 •"h application. lit parAVON I All Are.. I
IOf'l betw.., 10..nL l ·ap.m. fll.
•-- •~ •-&gt;121
F. Studentl Uwl eucceMfully
.,_,., ~·~
.
!plota tho TCE clota will bo
AVON lo buy 0&lt; - · MarilYn, Inble for amployrnanl. Abdaportdent rop. 304-a:t-:1$45 or
uloly no """"' caiiO. EOE.

Ltdgarl

Payroll a

General

Flnanclol

PER!IONAL CARE PROVIDER

Individual needed to provlcl.

Merchandise

Gall~ll

Dally Trtbune, 825

AVOH SPRING SALES
A~ II 415 /Hr. At Wort
-Homli
-Mall.
O.acount•l
a.n.fllef
No
Door !Door, lndep.

Rop. 1-t00-JII2-4T.I8.
BOOKKE EPER
llual ' Ha\1&lt;1 E&gt;poritnco In AlP,
P/R, AIR, And Ganaral Ltdgo!1
Alao llual Have Knowlodaa or
IBM CompMable Carnput•, 114441-4101 For lnW¥1ow.

• 7 4

Upright, Ran Evana ~nterpriMI,
Jtclcoon, Ohio, .1 .-a?-1121.

Ho&lt;IH And Lol ~ Down
Ptymont, Euy TtnM, 3 Bodrooms, 1 Ball, Located Near
Crown CHy Araa. Call1-«)0.4486101 Ask For

nv. pram d,_, ~~~~ 7, OM
wedding

~hew.

1 112 otory, I , _ and bath
ctown.talrw. aluminum aiding. 4'

-d).

Wtddln'

year old roof, two porchea (Onl
$21,000,114-1185-UII.

om.,_S110

WMtlnghOUII

.........

I, WhHt,

Rttrlfll'lfOf

Worlca G-. $7!1 Firm, 114-3791422.

or

polnlmenta.

tong

Worn 1 lme, $1DQ!, l'f4.3e'f..0251.

to aid In the
malntonance ol lndOpondant

homee

gown,

high neck, low lraclc, . - .
~~·· e_._248t or

55

1t10 Dodge Rlim V•n 8-250,

1171 Jeep CJ7, VI, hlrd-top,

Building
Supplies

vtcH. New Tlr.., N_. Am.

Racing Whtala, Btdllnar, 41,000
lllltt, . $10,500, 814-448,1332;
114-3116-i780.

IF' THAT
DO&amp; IS A

75,000ml, aood cond., Hlclng Jeep Wagoneer Ouad trutk. 4x4,
I'Mied pelnt, 78,000 original
- - :JCi4.175.1102.
mi._, $3500, 11~H2-2807.

vlc11, Inc., Suite 213 of the
PleaAnt val ..y Hotpll a1, Poi nt

PI-nt. EOEIM ,
Rttponolblt Babpftttr Part'lhM:SAexlble Houra, My Home,
Non mo•-- ~-·t Aller 1 P II
•114-254H.iii':' .' . .
AN Full-nm~~ POilttlan Anll•bl•1
ExcoUonl Solory Ptld Inaura nco, Apply At: P.O. Box
1185, Golllpollo, OH 451131. Ot
Phont: 114-44&amp;-3108.

IF I JUMP
A 6AD
DREAM , HE
KEEPS ME FROM
JI.IMPI~&amp; TOO
Hl&amp;i-1 ..
DURING

BOTHER,
WHl( DON'T
YOU SEND

HS

Requlrea

dlpk)ma/GEO Nllable tl'lnlpor·
tatlon and valid drlver'a IICIMI.
Apply In . .-rson at PrMtara
Center · f« Menttl HNith Sll'•

AU real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol196i:l which makes It Illegal
to advenlse ·~ny preference ,
limitation or discrimination
based
race, color, religion,
se:-: lamilial status or national
origin, or any Intention 10
make any such prererence,
llmilalitm or discrimination ."

HIM HOME'

On

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

.I'Vt

miiNaa, $1,100, 114-112-3411.
1111 Suzuki DR 100 Dlr1 Bllct, In
Excollonl Concllion, 114-2!11101, After I P.M.

,~f:N SN~ZING

A t,OT LAHLY·-

IT'S Bf:tN

~

ININPY

300 4 whtalor $:1500, 114;
l'l2·20111.
•

A,OUNt&gt;

T~t SPIC~ .
...---...t.U.AN.O.S ~ -

Jacbon

Ave.

Point

l»tllllnt. 304411-200~
~ Wolmoranar puppy, ragl•
I
• - . . _ 304-11'111-

BORN LOSER
•

TJIIO.

1 Hal a anack

32 Tho self
33 Vaotago
34 Dlmlnullve

2 Llma -

v

.

f&gt;.NOli\E.R t:f&gt;.-Y, f.JIIJT\Jf.7., t-IE.VE.R II bUL fo'lJME.NT :,(~ YOU
~-- f\01-J 1-JPO
. LEFT, C£AR
YOU~. M.Y
ftP .r•.._,.

MINituN Toy T•rler, """·
• ' Sl,
............
t100,114-112:1011 I.
Fourth
lllddltport,

5042.

~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Ceteonl~ Cipher cryp1ogram11~are crea!ed trom quntahons by famous people, pa111 and pre! enl
E1ch leller In !he crpher tiAnds lor anoltler Today 'l clw. F equals C

A K I 0 N G J B K ·1 G

J X0

••c.cqrtd.,

~:::p ,'::k, ~.::

112-.2134 aftar 7pm.
Dautz 4501 Tractoio $5,850; IIF

10 luth Hog &amp; Blodt
$3"911; Font Jublltt $2,115; 111
II• OloHI $1,450, ...-.2.18-6522.
POLE BUILDINO SPECIAL

CBK

VG

NVLXJ

A~IONGJBKfG

v s s

GDSS . ' ..-- F)KRAFVAG .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All art requires courage ."- Anno Tucker.

'·impressionism is the newspaper of the soul." - Henri Matisse .

'::~::;~' S@tt~lA-l&amp;~trs·
I AMI
ldltod
ClAY I . 'OUAN _...;__ _ _ _.._
WOlD

~r

-·~--~~:0 lltar.rongt-- iettvt ... oL ~ha

four Krombled words be·
low to form four words

L E NT E S
EP I XI

I· I

I
I
6

•

Is I I

N E S I Cl'

I I. I.
L A

wE

- ~:~'_

sE

m

Goingovermymonthlybills
wasalwaysahassle. lthinkmy
income is only something that
falls short . of what I need to
cover my ----- - - -.
.

IO

Complete the chuckle quoted
.
by hl l1n g in lhe miasinQ words
you develop lrom slep No. 3 below .

'A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBLE FOR

4whtol dr, $4000 080. 30301-4+bs'i-bs:

=;

p

C B K

P X B J

VKRONVZN ;

P X B J

,.

BIG NATE

$1,500, 114-4441-7140•.
.1187 okta U Royolo Brougham,

O.Yis Trencher 2Gx~111'D; Psr-

GAVONVZN

'J X· 0

L- l - J - - L - - l -·..l_J

. 1987 lroc Z-28 Camero, 82,000
Mil•, Black, Good SNpel

61 Fann Equipment

45~=~:d'-

1---.~8~,,_;,_1..=-....:;.1-=.,,--l

'

lltn:ury Couaor

Ptolec.llon _ _ .
NeglliVOI
Slalk

46 Grafted
(heraldry)
47 Aloe ·
49 Epoch

.

1IU

~·~trv

Slaylon
42Sh.,.,.,
43 Yeo- 44 Enclouln

Ib..-t-+-t--

lor Mia,

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

27
28
29
31

41 Aatroneut -

Baldwin AcnlsonW:: l)lano. $500.

3518.

-+-1---+--t

By Phillip Ald'er

C.H lratar. 3 pm 304-471-31110.

v•.

produC1
11 Polar Pan
pirate
19 Spoil
20 Eager
22 Sea eoglo
23 Golf mound•
24 Hindu
peaunl
25 Wild buffalo
26 Telephone

40 Number for

· Cl l9'J5 by NEA Inc.

loaded, 3.1

C:~orv

(2 wda.)
35 llullt
37 Fork porta
3B Aug. hours

minor.

Musical
Instruments
SpintO plano l boncfl
call ...-1111:1-11314.

3 Soft cheese
4 Quiet

10

7 Oblllned
8 Floor covering
9 On lh4 hlgh4ol

34 laraell airline

one, you a lso
. East
switches to the club queen.
Now consider playing dummy's
spade five . II East overtakes with the
king, you have a discard lor your dia·
m.ond jack. If East ducks. you can win
the second s pade lead with dummy's
ace, draw trumps and fin~sse the dia·
mond jack. You cannot lose more than
three tricks : one spade and either two
clubs or - as here - one trick in each

Blrdl, _ l~nae, Tarantula•,
mica. flail T•nk a Pol Sllop,

2413

5 Anealltellc
6 Prod .

Jane-

31 Beach malertal

More useful
instruction
· Terence Reese is arguably the best·
ever bridge player-writer. David Bird is
well· known lor his arlicles about the
monks of Sl. Til us . In tandem, they
have written , by my count. 10 books.
Their latest excellent offering is "Thai
Elusive Exira Tric k." Published by
Gollancz, it is available lor $15.50 from
The Bridge World. 39 Wesl 94th Street.
New York, NY t0025·7124.
The Foreword sums it up well : "In
this book we assum·e. for the most part,
thai the reader is familiar with the bapnnctlple! of play. We describe a vaof more advanced moves, the type
mark thg differe nce beiweeti'competent and expert play."
Thi s deal is typical of those in the
book.
North's three hearts is a limit raise,
s howing at least fo ur-card support and
Mme 11 support points.
West leads the spade j'ack agains t
four hearts. Which s pade -should you
play from the dummy?
Suppose .you rise with dum)'lly's ace,
draw trumps and take the diamond fi.
nesse . With this layout, you fail. West
plays a spade to his partner's king, and
a switch lo the club queen gives the de·
lenders four tricks ,
•

72,000 IIIIOa, $1,000, Can 84
At: Golllpolla O.llf
Trlbu"!1,125 Third A.. nuo, Galo
llpollo unlo.
•
1113 9-10 4&gt;4, Rtd
_ Wllh Groy ln1m Brad..,_. OTt kH car, r... larlor, Woll llalnlalntd And SarSHn

alrplano. 304-522-3351.

20 Rod fruit
James
21 Neither 's
54 Son of Selh
partnar
55 Likely
22 Adam'a male
58 Antlered
23 Pamphlet
animal
26 Inscribed
30 Bron1e h4rolne
DOWN

skalara?

2311.,,.,....

ullra~lghl

52 Cheer
53 Soul-singer

IOUnd

lead: •J

duty, lour apoocf, 350,1

than a,ooonil aince uMmbled.

so51 Pur,aylng
- - card
gooc1

Miele I

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
South
West North East
1.
Pass 3 'I
Pass
4.
- PasS Pass
Pass

I. otto!
bad wKh tool bo&gt;ta roar ....,..
por a hKch, 132
••colloni
71 Autos for 5ale
condKion, $1,!100, 114-1112-2471•u vw Golf Dlottl, oall 114-112· 1115 Chtvy 112 Ton Von, V-4,
~o, $1,800, ~. eM.256-6432l

$1,000 or lradt for

rider I

48 Mtrll
49 UnR of energy

WAKJ106 2
• A J
•K 9 3

K.

STQRAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

Rtport ng. AcCOOMIIIna Dogrtt living.
WIU
wKh
Or 1-3 Yra. Rtlottd Wortc Ex- houHc:IN... ng, laundry, dlthperlence Should Include Com- .wuhlng, encf Mopping, auper·
put1rtzed Al:countlng Prace- viH pe..-nal hygiene. and
durM. Reply To: CLA 352, c/0 tran1port
cliliit
to
IP-

Third Avenue, GalllpoUe, OH
45831. ·
·
·

A

11112 a-. Comt...t'"' Van'1
11114 Ford 4&gt;4. 304-4~112. ,
11181 Cllovy ono ton, 4&gt;4 hoovy

Transportation

54 Mlicellaneous

Tlma Poaltlon For llollvattd, ...,..- cora ualatonct to
s.ft..Starter. ~b'l For mentally Ill client• In tt. chn11'
Peyable,

• K

73 Van8&amp;4WD'I

Help Wanted

AcC04A'Ite

SIX-YEAR ll;RM

f.":ti 1104. '
Loaded,.

~

Fun..

•J
W8

27,000 llllta, 114-2-TI.
1113 QIIC 1500 S.LE., all op- .
tiona, t_r,_hllch.._whoolo, axcollonl condnton. .,z.soo. 114112-2471.
11114 C1lovy S l - Eat. Colt
Z71 Off
tl\000 IIIIH,

Lony Llvoly. 1&gt;1-31&amp;-1303.

Accountant, · lmmadlate

J:::l.;•
~.

'Tf-IE:Y oc.G-tr 1D ~
W£ ~~~IJ:::Y A

1112 Nluan, 5 SpMd, Nlvy
Bluo, E x - CondKion, PullOut ....... 11M« WaMnly,

W.nltd To . Buy: JOMik Autoa
WKh Or WKitcM.C llol- Call

1-aoo-112-tlM.

I.OC SEE-M 10 &amp; .
L!VtiJG IIJ A PERPE:TUf&gt;,L
PR£.SICWTtAL CAMPAI61J .. .

1112 cht..- s-10, u v-t,
•uto, t.d liner, bug WILd,
T•4S,IIOG mllot,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

11

EEK&amp;MEEK

a-. S-10 4 C,llndor,

•A Q 5
•Q 9 53
• Q 10 7 3
.s4
EAST
10 9 3
• K 86 2
• 7 4
9 4 2
• 8 6 5
8 7 2
•Q J 10 5
SOUTH

Flying prof.
In adclnlon
Small'p.rtlcle
Dog'a waggor
Chapeau
Part
dlaparaglng

3·16·95 "

1'" 011ovy s.10 4 eyu.-. 5
ap.cl, &amp;3,200, 1141 ... 1151.

$8500,

W.nltd To Buy:
-· Pt ....nont Or
114-24U1e0.

..

1117 DodoO 112 T'"' PU LOW
- . 114-146-mt.

Hdana

12
I3
14
I5
16
17
IB

ANSWER

XR7.

86,000ml, IXC. coni. $5600.

llrm. A~ 4:30, 304-Z73-4883.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

1988 T•uru1 Gl StaUon W.gon.
Paw• brake~, et•rfng, win·

dowe 1ncl drlver'l ...,, AIC,
rear defroel:lr, l'fldlo and more.

Carver- Acorn - Geese - Upside - PROCESS

M1 roan, .clual mU• 31,443,

=:ivi"ll Bob Hotlllch, 114I c:.:::..c=::...---,--,-,--..,

1981 Cl'f'sller 4 Cylinder, 5

sptaCt, 12.100. e~l58.
1181 Chryalor Now Yortcar; 1

STRI&lt;E A8WN N Tl-£ VtM ON
l-fGI-II'fllCES. ~HOP TI-lE CLASSflE~

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Owner, Excellent Condhlon,
$6,000, t14 ••• 3822

!THURSDAY

6\V£ ME

30'•41'•1'. Palnled Sl•l Sk111•1
Oalwalume StNt Root, 15'xl
Still Slldlr, 3' M1n Door.

Our new aerobics instructor hung this sign over the
door of lhe-gym: "Developing your body is important, but
don't neglect your mind in the PROCESS!"

MARCH16I

SOM£!6\V~ 1
MESOM~ .

!!1444. ERECTED. IRON HORSE
11UilDEfll! 1-800-352·1041.

63

Wsnt Ta Be YCM:tr Own Bou."P Try

Booth Rtntal AI Tho -

~n campenlon homlmlklr Whlepera H1lr Salon on Sllle
for llklttly lady. Good homo R1t 1il!l, In Golllt&gt;Otit1 Can 814plua Nlory. RtftJ8ftCtt. Bo&gt; Q. 448-13• Tuoa -Sat, I A.ll. -8
t cia PI PllaAnt Regilter, 200 P.ll. Alto,- A Fuii·Timo Hair

MOin II., PI P-nt WV 25550. Slyll.t.
Httd 5 Llldlta To Soil Awon, 114441-33N.
Real Estate
Nttd babyomor lor 7mo .. old , In
my homo. 3Q.4.m-6878.
No Exporlanc:o llocoaaryl $500 31 Homes for Sale
To $100 · Wttlcly /Poltntlal
Proc.ellng Mottgaa• Retundt. Houao And Lot Low Down
OWn Ho&lt;lra. c.n -715-2300 Poymonl, Euv ~.,., 3 8tdo
Ext 1351. (24 -

room•.

.. ~

1 Bath, L.oc.ted Neer

VInton /8-11 Ataa. Cali 1.Oak Hill Tnoc:klng .Comptny 441-UOII Atk For - -SHidnCI Over Tht Road on-.,
WKh aOod drlvlna roconf. CDL 2_.,ory ll"lagt, bttldt Roquliod. .IIW82-TT13, Or A~ Hllv•n Suparmartlel, bottom
floor .comJMtlly remad1l1d, 2
ltr 5:00 P.ll. C.lll14-.245-1304.
boyo: Cfront boy 40'&gt;21', ....
ON-CALL MENTAL HEALTH boy 12'123'), 100'&gt;40' lo4,
AIDE
304-112-2713.
.lndMduall nMded • an-call 3 Btdroom Subtomintan In
rollol otoft In lla_, Caunty
rwlldlnllal program for metaiiJ Country 16 112 ac,.., $47,000,
dftlbl11hmoUOnalty dllturbtd 814-379-2787.
tdufta. Fltlclblt hourw, dayo, 3
2 Batht, Httt

f21.ooo.

Btd-.

Pump,-· Gal Furna~, 1 Atr-.

nlglrto,
- ·por
·lo 11 hounl
WMiL .
Can Ufl
bo
-ud around ochool tchtdutcr
or Olho&lt; tmplo!-• followfng

lrtlllallnlnlna. Prafw lhota

wK~

hLttMn Hf'VICI rlakli twiw•,
~ nOI roqulrtd. Ccrtloct
Lou AM Rich ot 304-1175-2311 or

r

-'=·"-·--Can-

10 acraa on R-od Rldgt.
Ulllftltt on . . - y. Will Mil all
or part. sz;500 por ..... 3048'15-8401. ,
.
STO-A-WAY mini ........ 1&gt;10:
4 AcrN Comer ot Pouom Trot 1Gx10, 10.11, 1k20. Nolr Nnllnt
&amp;
Blazer Rood, , Addl110n In- Hovan. 304-182-2111.
Tawnahlp, $14,000. IM-3117-7111.

5.32 acroa, m ft wldt rlclgo lop
building tlta, $13,180. R&lt;iybum
Ref, rouonablo rwtrlctlona. No
oingio wldt tnqutroa, ,...... tnlormotlon maMtd on NqUMI.
304-475-4283.
eO T,_;.a Of l;,nd 5 -35 Ac- I
""'" Tracta .11100, SUO "Dc!oon,
t100 Month Land Cortlracl, Go~
llo Co. - o z. 10 1111• From
Rlnr, .,.:(e!~-34~2.
1110 - ~~~
Rlvar i;;j
2_~Ji
5810.
Tvoaon LIIQ. ont acN lo4,

=At

by

•Pool-

only
75-&amp;0011.
HouM
And
L.al Low ·

·
Down

Household
Goods

I .,-Ca-r-.,.pot""a"'vt.;.n=yl:,l=n~St=o...,ck-:$1::-:
.oo=Yd
a Up eo p,...,. ot Kllchan
C.rpot In Stock. Over 35 Pailorna Vlmrt In Stock. llollohon
Carl\flo, C&gt;l-441-~
.

dr~~were,

excellent conclllon,

dull

3'&gt;1'

wlchalr, filing dr..., ph• IS
$400, 814-JII2-2el4.
Like

new

ohort bod

aluminum topper lor
Chavy

"""" -=

S-10, 114-112-

8513.

M IMNiord ' Htllara,
.arne with cro.-lnd calfta,
call.,.-41111-38011.

sz

Chlclcona, a aut.-, t1oo
For All, e14-37M422.
1 c:awa &amp; calv• fDr aal1, 114lll2·20111.
Anau• Bull, 25

rnot1,

reglsteNd.

12-- '""· 1ong a tot~ t1ooo.
304-475-1131.
Bull.
Chaf&lt;llola/Sim-•1 tH3 Ford Taurua QL Carribean
v.e.._~w. PL,
Moving: All DlffoNnt Kl- Of CrotO. lmoa, .... lo. 304-4'15- a ..... Ton
41,000 llllta, Poy un, Call
Fumth••· S.. .AI : 112 Seccnd 3034.
a....... Galllpolla, 114-441- Rttltlorod Ang.., bulla, 14-20 Evenlnp, 114-251-1020.
3414.
Ulct ,_, bofa lllzt ·33 Huoky
1S-20, thlrtil
.
olu111-18.
11-l'IN.

advantages . Gel a jump on IHe by unde r· . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Continue lo

Int-.

ASTRO-GRAPH

old. YOry pntla, uoollent bloodllntt,IM=11t2·3033. ·

'

Ragltlorod Llmoolnt bulla I
htllorL
_ _Block
,..1'111"·I poltd. 304-1~

-N- ....

··~

41 Houses for Rent

...!'•a.

~~~~2M.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

•

CM)ur

I00-411-34t1.

•

'Birthday

1-73M,

Friday . March 17. t995

LAYNE"S FURNfTUAE

Complala homo lumlthlna&amp;
HouN: Ilion 811, rN, 1'14-da0322, I nollta aut Bulavlllo Pika
F- Dolvery.

.

yo ui

lin anc 1al

a1ta1rs

standing the influences tha t govern you in

kee p

the year ahead . Send for your AstraGraph predictions today by ma11ing $2 to

Prudent habits now may enable you to
enjoy life's 11ner th 1ngs a bit furtt1er down

Astro ~Graph . clo th iS newspaper . P.O .
Box 4465. New York . NY 10163. Be s ure

for

~~--1 ~, ~'f.~i- ~

balan ced .

the line .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Aller you make

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) If you are
re luc tan t to make a Cr 1tical dec ision
today . someone might step '"and call the

an .impOrtant decision today. have th e
courage of your conv1clions and stand by
your decisions . even 11 1t's pi cked apart by
others.

to state your zodiac sign .

sllo ts for you . Eilher way . Ihi s could

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) Th1s can be

becorne a no -win situat ion .
·
TAURUS (April 20~ May 20) Dedicate
your time and eHorts to truly meaningful
tasks ' today. With some hard work . you

a productive day for you, prov1ded you
work 1n an env1ronment free from
i
interference . Shut the door and unplug
the phone.

could catch up now and even put yourseiC

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) Rellect

ahead.

on the future today, and lhlflk of things

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take Irma out

you 'd li ke to see happen . Your tarsighled·

today to enJOY pleasurable pursuits . If
they are added to ,.-our agenda wisely,

ness could help you visualize the nght
game plan.
.

they s houldn 't inlerlere with a nythmg • CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)
1

A si tuation might devel op in the ye ar

vital.

ahead that enables you to ta ke advan·
tage ol two opportunities not apparent_to
others .· Do not broadcast your d1scover1eG
prematurely .
.
\

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do not . could be your best allnbute loday.· li can

ability to sense lhe mood of the moment

undertake assignments today if you don't
think you can follow them through to a

help you focus the necessary forces to
achieve a desired goal.

successCul concl usion . They co uld

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) tja'(e con·

Etch, o.-r :Ill"
~T.V. 171; Oak eon.. a
2 End Ta- 1100, 114-317-712:1

.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Someone become obstacles.
with whom you' re involved· m1ght try 10 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Sqme inCormalion
change something today ~o that it bene· Y?U possess could be enormously benef1·

tidence today in your con cepts. 11 you feel

Allar I P.ll.

fits him/ her more than . it does. you .

c;:;-'. r~oc~:''et!'.i
~CGaaao~~
- ~lor~JW110iiilnli0Pim.;:Pio~~·· .szoo
Dloh·~!Ill
. . . .E~i
~· Coldopat
0.1. W..her
•

Iii fi&gt;r llantol Hotlth a.mc-. Ptrn-t, hoy ~trma, 4 8tdo Nlca 3 bod-.t - . Sullo 211 Ollht ~VON:/. - . • Batoa.
Ntor ·air, 2 - 80,.., PtO _,.hty
P.. nt
. Rullond - , . Colt UOO 441 Dlua -uilly iltpoall, 114-1112C:.IIOI=•.:.:Aik=For..::..::....,:::::htw=.- -- I ::~=::••::•:.ce:cprn=·----

..._,td

51

olflca

CounlrY Furnllura-FumMu,.
Every
Room.304-11,.._,,
lml.__A)_:,l_ North,
Pl. P'-!'onl.
GE nofrlgaraior, aood lheo mobile home, cau:r, $100. Elilatrta .raw, ha ~
water: _ . , -~c ...
alarMnl.~ ~··-- •~
114-JU-2157. •
• .... •
304-4'111.
GOGO USED APPLIANCES
~.~ ........,.....,

CII.Ogo. Addloon Aru, $12,000,
or~~- •
IM-317.,.,.7.
_....., - .
.,.. . .
4br on Rodmond Rldgt, 5mln 4 Btdroon-. 1 112 - ·
hom town, 3oc land, born a $321J1ilc&gt;. Dopotlt, In EUNica,

gara~-

Merchandise

l&lt;lmboll

Livestock

=~

Drytr 17!1

c1al to someone you recently met. If you

Ironically, you could receive Its greates t don't pass 11 on , you may late ~ regret it.

r .

f

you have a good idea. don't let olhers
disp aurage you b~fore you 've had a
G h ~nce.to test it.
.
OI'JI:IS by NEA lne. .
·

'

j

�•

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Bobcats win
83-71 in
NIT action

\

Rutland Garden Club plans th:erapy program at GDCA therapy program at the Gal·
lipolis Development Center next
week was planned when the Rutland Garden Club met recently at
the bome of Marcia Denison.
• The session with residents there
will be held 1:30 p.m. March 23,
and the wOJtshop will be carried
out by Pauline Atkins, Clotine
Blaclcwood, Marcia Denison, Betty
Lowery. Ann Websler and Dorothy
Woodard. Others will contribule to

refreshments to be served follow- responded with something seen
ing the wortsbop.
meaning sping. The traveling prize
It was noted that valentine provided by Mrs. Atkins was won
plates had been prepared for resi- by Mrs. Lowery.
Mrs. Lowery showed photos of
dents at the Me1gs County Infirmary. They were made by Mrs. birds and blooms and· raJked about
Atkins, Margaret Belle Weber, and planting flowers in a rtat bed. One
Chelcia Bratton with other mem- such bed of flowers is featured in
bers providing goodies for the sun- the yard of Lula Toban of
shine plates. Several members also Pomeroy •.
reported providing flowers for their
She also read an article concernchurches over the past month.
ing 'two foliage houseplants and
· Devotions were give by Mrs. told Of their unusual habits. The
Denison who read "He Never prayer plant which folds its leaves
Sends the Winter Withou! the Joy at night into what appears to be a
of Spring" and had a prayer, "Grant pair of praying bands, was disUs Wisdom." For roll call members cussed as well as the varieties of

Ohio Lottery

Thursday, March 161 1995'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the plans. She noted that such a
plant can add characler to a collection. Anotbec plant she lalked about
was the rabbit's: foot fern with its
furry little feet which grow over the
surface of the soil. ·
Mrs. Blackwood reported on
flowering potted plants including
~oses and begonias gown in pots
mside. Sbe talked about miniature
roses, their fragrance ~ flowering
characteristics, and colors. Fibrous
begonias produce profusely, she
said, in talking about bow to control leggy stems, growth patterns,
and diseases.
Mrs. Weber explained fertilizing

=t

bouleplants.
(OIII)ula. liDd
the nutrients
Sbe said thai
nitrogen stimulates belter foliage
aDd thai as long as plants are growing, they need nutrients.
Birds were discussed by Mrs.
Atkins wbo noted that cllickadees
are the "fiiendly sort." She spoke
of a bini's love for sunflower seeds
and of one bird lover who carried
sunflower seeds in his pocket to
feed a little bird who regularly
landed on his sboulder and ale from .
his band.
Mrs. Bratton · reported on
pigeons and doves noting that the
domestic pigeon and the morning

dove are everywhere. Sbe spoke of
· tbc cliaracteristics of the birds, as
well as bow lhey rear their young.
Plant pests need not bring panic,
members noted, since there are two
basic ways to remove pests . One
was to mix a cup of vegetable oil
with a tablespoon of dish detergent
and spray on tbe plant, or to soak a
cigarette in a cup of warm water,
strain off th~ liquid after it sets
overnight. and then add to a quarter
teaspoon each of olive oil and
detergent and spray on the foliage:
"A Snowdrop. Poem" closed the
meeting. The March meeting will
be held at the Atkins bome.

Pick 3:

2-6-8
Pick 4:

2-2-8-4
Buckeye 5:

1-5-16-18-34

Page4

•

·ai
•

Vol. 45, NO. 225
Copvrlght 1995

•
••
•
·p\..05

or

KATIE ALEXANDER

Slashing

By JIM FREEMAN
Barker and his ~ttorney, Steve
The court is not bound to abide
with the telliiS of the agreement as
Sentinel News Staff
Story.
The Charleston, W.Va., man
Prosecutors dismissed a charge far as sentencing is concerned,
accused of assaulting an Ohio' of felonious assault in exchange for Crow added.
wildlife officer following a car and Barker'!i. plea to the misdemeanor
"This penalty is as harsh as any
I've ever ~n for a fourth-degree
foot chase pleaded guilty to one assault charge.
felony charge and multiple misdeUnder the agree.ment, Barker felony," said assistant Prosecutor
Chris Tenaglia.
meanor charges In Meigs County will:
·
Common Pleas Court Thursday.
• Receive an suspended ISMichael R. Barker, 49, pleaded month sentence and be placed on
· Barker is also making arrangeguilty to a felony charge of failure probation for five ' years on the ments to plead guilty to charges in
10 comply with the order or s1gnal
charge of failure to comply;
West Virginia, Tenaglia ildded.
of a police officer. in addition. be
• Plead guilty to 14 poaching- · "It is my understanding that he
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor relaled misdemeanor charges in the will plead guilty to eight misdec-harge of assaulting Meigs County Meigs County Court, receiving an meanors and be placed under 45Game Protector Keith 0. Wood 18-month prison senlence suspend- days bouse arrest with permission
and other misdemeanor poaching ed to 90 days to be served starting to go to work and church,"
charges.
mid-September; PLEADS GUILTY- Michael R. Barker, 49, Charleston,
Tenaglia said. "He faces a fine of
• Forfeit a 1992 Chevrolet not more than $3,000 Jflus costs
W.Va., at right, pleaded guilty In a felony charge of failure to com·
The charges stem from a Nov.
II, 1994 car chase through we_stem Lumina, a spotlight and high-pow- arid will forfeit 10 deer to West . ply with the 'o rder or signal of a police 11fficer and to a mlsde•
Meigs County and parts of Vmton · ered .22-caliber rifle;
meanor charge of' assaulting Meigs County Game Protector Keltb
Virginia authorities ."
0. Wood. Seated next to Barker is bis attorney, Steve Story.
County after Wood observed Bark• Forfeit four deer identified as
Meanwhile, more than a dolen
, er and others using a car to spot- having been taken in Ohio;
uniformed wildlife officers from
light deer. The. 22 112-mile pursuu
• Pay fmcs and costs of prosecu- Ohio and West Virginia, along with
and West Virginia game offidl!ls to W.Va., pleaded guilty to six ·coun\S
ended ironically when Barker's car tion;
,
,
. . Meigs County Sheriffs deputies combat the nigl)ttime poaching of of spotlighting, five counts of lakstruck a deer and ran into a ditch.
• Lose all Oh1Q huntmg prt v1- . filed into tile courtroom to show of deer. or spotlighting.
.ing a deer with a gun during closed
'Barker then fled on foot and · leges for IU:e·~
" . .
support for their colleague.
Story said the agreement was "a season and one count of improper
struggled with Wood before being
In add1tton, Barker 1s not
transportation of a firearm while
"That felt good. It's good 10 . fair and just result"
,&amp;ubdued by Wood''s parmer. Spe- allowed _to use or possess a flJearm know people are supporting you,"
Warren
M. Shirkey of South
Officials earlier agreed to drop
cilil Deputy Dana Aldridge.
unul be 1s relieved by the court.
said Wood. "I'm proud of all of felony charges against two other Charleston, W.Va. pleaded no con·
A trial in the matter was canJudge Fred W . Crow Ill set sen- lhem."
men with Barker that night in test with a finding of guilt to a
celed after Ohio game officials tencmg in the rna~r ~or May 1 folThe arrests were the result of a exchange for their testimony . ·
charge of spotlighting.
reached the plea agreement with low a pre-sentencmg mvesugat1on. collaborative effort between Ohio
Rickie D. Gobert of Hurricane. ·

Katharine "Katie" V. Alexander,
daughter of Bradley W. and
Stephanie Alexander of Vinton,
celebrated her eighth birthday Feb.
25, with a "Lisa Frank" theme
party at her home and a ballerina
·
cake.
Attending her party were her
parents and siblings Carol,
Nicholas and Jessica -Alexander,
Janet Alexander. Judy Alexander
and 'Stacie, Mr. Dale Bing and
Danielle, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Eason and Ainanda, Mr. and Mrs.
Huey Eason, Trhonda Casto,
Jonathan and Austin, Patti Wallen,
Geremy and Zacb, Mrs. Cindy Paxton. Chase. Chance and Hollie
(Watts), Oma and Brittany Cook,
Josh Murphy and Wendy Wolford.
· Unable to auend, but sending
cards and gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Houchins, Victor Casto
and Annabelle, Jimmy Alexander,
.:....--~~---~lll~. IJlJ~ E_cU'erkifls, Karen
Tripp,
Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Fogarty. Brainne and Ryan,
Kellie and Christopher Dawkins
and Tessa Russell.

. · By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff ,
Springtime - tbe season of
renewal, rebir1b ... and brush ftres.
"Any person starting a brush ftre
is liable for any damage,'' said
Meigs County Emergency Services
Direc10r Robert Byer.
Under Ohio law, people are not
allowed to start a fire outside
. unless any all leaves, grass and
wood and other flammable malerial
surrounding the .fire have been
removed·to a safe distance.
In addition, outdoor ftres are not
allowed outside corporation limits
between the hours of 6 a.m. to 6
p_m. during the months of March,
April, May, October and November.
"Arrest powers· fall upon
forestry division officers or the
sheriffs department when violating
this code," Byer said ..
Improper burning is the most
common cause of brush fires in

Community
calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
· spec inc number of days.

·•.

(Conllnued on Page 3)

•

,,

J

......
v

•.

,

.. : ' '

'

~

':•".:.

.

'
BRUSH FIRE- Meigs County fireftghters have been busy the
last few days fighting brush fires. EMS Director Robert Byer said
many brush· fires could be avoided by following simple precautions. Above, a Middleport firefighter works to contain a brush
blaze on Stale Route ll4 ~ar Rutland Thursday.
,..._..----~....,

~

RACINE - Weekend revival 7
p.m . each. evening, Pentecostal
Assembly, State Route 124,
Racine. Rev. James GiUene, evangelist. Bill Hoback, pastor invites
public.
LONG BOTTOM - Evangelisl
Dave Carpenter to speak at Faith
·Full Gospel Church Friday. 7 p.m.
Pastor Steve Reed invites public.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778, and Star Junior
Grange 878, potluck and fun night,
Saturday, 6:30 at Grange hall,
Country Road I north 'of Salem
Center. Anyone interested welcome
to attend.
SUNDAY
RACINE - James and Debra
Davis, in concert the Racine
Cburch of the Nazarene, Sunday.
Debra. bronze medalist or the .1976
Montreal Oly-mpic games, will
share her testimony at 9:30 a.m.
followed by James. singer-song·
writer, performing a blend of contemporary, count~y and gospel
songs at 10:30 a.m. Public invile.

.

NITURECO.

The I 00,000 decline in exemp·
tion l)ouseholds since 1983
occurred at a time when inflation
increased seniors' income- along
w.ith their expenses - but the
income cap to qualify remained
stable.
"The inflationary numbers
showing their income have
increased, but property taxes have
more than eaten up that differ·

' '

AEP scrambles to soften
drone from scrubber fans

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastetp Junior
High School athletic banque~ 6:30
p.m. Friday, followed by Athletic
Boosters meeting with officers to
. be elected. Eastern High School
athletic banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday.

COLtJMBOS· (A?) - Tenyears ago, almost 354,00Q bouseholds benefited from !he state's
homestead exemption tax relief
program for seniors and the dis• abled. Now the number is down to
254,000.
Democratic Cuyahoga County
Auditor J. Timothy McCormack
told legislators Thursday the time
has come to raise the program. s
income limit.
McCormack. testified before the
House Ways and Means Commit·
lee in suppott of an income adjustment Gov. George Voinovich
included in his proposed state bud·
. gel.

.....

'

TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Post 9053 and Auxiliary, joint din. ncr, Thursday, 6:30 (i.m.

Tax cut package
wins -approval
from committee
ByALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON House
Republicans say their outline for
$100 billion in budget cuts lets
. them whittle away more bureaucratic wasle, drive the defidt lower
and slash taxes deeper than President Clinton bas propo!ied.
But Democrats say the measure
is yet another GOP swipe at the .
poor and contains double-counted
·savings that Republicans already
had put into other legislation.
A fractious House Budget Committee approved the SIOO billion,
five- year reductions on Thursday
by a nearly party-line 24-11 vote.
The money is to be used to help
make up lost revenues from the
Republicans' $189 billion tax·cut '
bill, and party leaders exulted that
they were giving the public what it
. wants.
"You ain't seen nothing yet,"
said budget panel Chairman John
-Kasich,. R-Ohio,. referring to even
deeper cuts the GOP will map this
spring lo balance !he budget.
!Oarlicr in tbe day, .the House
voted 227-200 to cut $17 billion
from housing, public broadcasting
and other programs that already
have been funded for the current
fiscal year. The measure also con$5.4 billion in
'torn1a and other states suU reeling

.
I
SuppOrt seen to
QIVe ax . tain~d
aid_for~i.
break to-elderty,--dis-abf·ed~rr~~~~~~~ quick veto

agai.n st fires

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Belter Health Club will meet at the
home of Frances Goe_glein, I p.m.
Thursday.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, Thursday, 7 p.m., at Sacred
Hean Catholic Church . Al-anon
will meet also.
RACINE - American Legion
Post 602, Thursday. 6:30p.m. with
dinner. ·

1 Section, 10 Pogea 35 cenhl
A Multimedia Inc. Newopo...,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 17, 1995

West Virginian pleads
-·to wildli-fe violations ·

YOU

Eighth
birthday
celebrated ·

...

Low tonlahtln the 30o, clear•.
Soturdoy, suMy. Hlah•ln 50o.

New pollution control devices at the James M. Gavin Power Plant may .
be great at cutting acid rain in New England but they're 100 loud for VIllage residents ih Cheshire, according to a story in Thursday's Columbus
Dispatch.
.
,. ·
Ever since American Elcctrtc Power switched on the second
smokestack scrubber at the Gavin plant earlier this month, a steady drone
· - described variously as a buzz, a bum or a router noise - has rattled
the neighboring village •
. . .
.. .
.
"It's constant and il s rather tmlaUng to some people, satd Cbesbtre
Mayor Walter S~u Lu~s . He bas received num~rous complaints.
Some people have ·srud they .cannot leave thelf wmdows open. Others
told him they have trouble sleepmg.
Columbus-based AEP, which also bas received complaints, announced
Wednesday it is rushing to cut the noise.
.
The scrubbers cost $686 million and took four years to des1gn and con struct. They are high-tech air, ftlterin~ equipment _that _greatly cuts sulfur
dioxide emissions and theorettcally w1ll reduce ~id . rnm fallmg hu~dreds
of miles away.
. .
~
.
.
.
The specific problem IS w1th huge fans assoctaled w1th scrubbers, satd
Jim Howard, manager of AEP's major projects division. He agreed they
may be too loud.
,
"We recognize that there is a noise concern with !be fans, and we recognized that when we brought the second scrubber on line," Howard said.
"It wasn\t a problem when the ftrst one came on. We did not anticipale
the noise level with the,second one."
.
On Wednesday, construction crews started installing temporary so~nd
deflectors near the fans. Howard said there is no certainty bow effeCtive
they will be. bitt they could be in place aii quickly as possible.
·
The utility is calling a meeting with Cheshire residents Monday at 7
p.m. at the village hall.
·
.
·
·
There is no Ohio law against loud industrial fans. In fact, tbe.re are no
laws against noise in Ohio, except local ordinances, Said Marty King, a
program administrator in the Ohio Department of Health's environmental
health section.
.
King said complaints about industrial noise are common and are normally sent to his office, although be could not remember any specifically
about scrubber fans.
·
·
The huge Gilvin plant bas dual 1,300 megawat~ coal-ftred power generators operated by AEP's Ohio Power operating company. It serves.
662,000 customers In 53 counties.
.

·· ·
ence," Mccmmiick said.
• 'Today Social Security and
some peAsion money knocks them
out of eligibility and so people are
being dropped significantly," he
said.
Currently, homeowners must
have incomes of less than $16,500
annually to qualify for reductions
of varying amounts, depending on
income, on their real estate tax
biUs.
Voinovich's proposed State 'budget would raise the eligibility level
to $20,800, an increase that would
correspond with the innalion rate
since 1989.
Such a change would make ~n
estimated 85,000 additional homeowners eligible for a reduction on
their real estate bills.
For those in the new top income
bracket of $16,500 to $20,800, the
proposed tax reduction would
amount to about $80.
In Cuyahoga County, there were
52,000 homestead cxempiion
households in 1983. The number
dropped to just under 40,000 in
1993.

threat frolJI the .White Ho11se,
where Chief of Staff Leon Panetta
· called it "irresponsible and meanspirited." But Republicans said
they would press ahead anyway.
To save the $100 billion in the
Budget Committee bill, Republicans would drive spending down in
a broad category tbat includes
many domestic, defense. and foreign aid programs. But final decisions on which programs would be
cut won't be made until later this
year, after the House bas voted on
the tax cuts.
Nonetheless, the budget panel
voted to recommend cuts in more
than 140 programs to achieve Its
promised savings, including tbe
Peace Corps, energy research,
vocational education and anticrime efforts.
Pointing· out that Congress' budget scorekeepers would give his
committee's proposal credit for an
exira $91 billion in savings over
-five years, Kasich said the money
would be used for deftcit reduction.
He said that was $62 billion more
than CliniOn achieved in the budget
he proposed last month. ·

2suspects ·Eastern Board delays decision
in robbery to place bond issue on· ballot
identified
action is not taken, the oldest
Board member Greg Bailey said
By GEORGE ABATE
If

The two other suspects in the
Feb. 28 robbery of the Coolville
·Bank -One ·branch have been
named by Athens County Sheriff Johq Hicl&lt;s.
·
Thursday's Athens News said
Hicks identified the suspects as
Brian E. Lynch, 20, Little Hocking, and Jamie Clinton Ford, 22,
Belpre. Both have admitted to
assisting another suspect in the
robbery, Hicks said.
That other suspect, Patty
Lynn Ingram, 45, Reedsville, .
was arrested by Athens deputies
March 9 and charged with rob·
. bery. Ingram, an employee of
the bank , originally reported
that she was ambushed by two
men when she arrived for worlc
on the morning of the robbery.
The men robbed the bank and
fled after stealing car Ingram· s
car, according to reports.
Sheriff's officials, aided in
the Investigation by the FBI and
the state Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, indicaCed afterward the robbery was an inside
job involving Ingram.
Ingram bas since posted bond·
and was (,eleased from the
Athens County Jail.
Hicks said Lynch and Ford,
who have not yet been charged
pending grand jury action, are
cooperating with the investigation through their anomeys.

1

Sentinel News Staff
The Eastern Local Board of
Education will probably wait until
May 1996 to let voters decide If
they ' want to build a new school.
school officials said Thursday.

schools - Tuppers Plains and
Chester elemcntaries -may eventually be condeOUled-;·be,added. .
Combining some of the dis trict's schools would save heating.
food and maintenance costs, Smith
added.
The board discussed the con·
struction issue for more titan 30
minutes, responding lo 9ucstions·
from about 20 community members attending the board's regular
meeting.

he would like to sec a new school
built soon, adding if the board does
not put the issue on the ballot this
fall it should not wait for -May
1996.
.'
"We don't have a handle on it,"
Bailey told the audience. "As you
can see, there's no simple solution.
It's not easy."

The board will seek more· inptit
from the public, staff and architects
before deciding on possible con·
If the state invests $8 million in
struction, said Board President Ray
a
new
school, it will not likely turn ·
Karr.
around
and consolidate Eastern
"We can't get enough public
with another district, II ailey added.
input in time," Karr said.
Questions focused on the need
Jack Hunier, ·a supervisor with
The board must contact state
building officials before May I 5 to for new schools and outdated the state's energy/building assislaunch efforts to get a bond issue junior high and high school text- tance program, told the school
on the November ballot. The stale's books. Residents also questioned board about two weeks ago state
energy/building assistance program the need for consolidating the ele- monies should be available through
next year.
·bas paid about 80 percent of the mentary schools.
The board continues to offer at
costs of new school construction
But. if the district's voters
, leasuliree options to residents, defeat a bjtilding levy, Eastern may
during the last 10 year$.
Karr 'said. They include:
'
fall to the boilom of the lis~ Hunter
building
a
new
centralized
ele·
•
~aid.
"(The state) will put in $8 to $9
million. There's no way our voters mentary building .
• constructing
a
new
can pass a levy .for that much
Construction of a new school
junior/senior
high
school
and
then · and remodeling of another building
money," Karr said.
Continuing to repair the current consolidating some elementary ·could cost about $8 million, Hunter
school buildings will only become schools in the current high school.
said. The district would have to
• developing two smaller build- raise only about $1.6 million, paymore· expensive, Karr said. The
junior/senior high school repairs ings for kindergarten through fifth ing this money off on a 23-year
could total $200,000, while Chester grade and sixth through eighth . bond at 5 percent interest.
In otb,er action, the board termiElementary's could be at least grades.
naled the contract of EHS Principal
'
$50,000.
'
At some point, local taxpayers ;c Pians devised for a previous · Donald Sbuc, who has worked in
will have to replace some of' the levy could be used, but the plans ' the district for nine years. Sbue bad
70-year-old buildings, .said Board were. only in the preliminary stages, a t -year probationary contract that
Karr said.
was .not renewed
by the
board.
Vice President Jim Smith.
.
.

t

,I

-

••

'

+-

-·

,

...

...

•

\

.

'

'

•
'

)

\

)

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="372">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9744">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30453">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30452">
              <text>March 16, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="341">
      <name>blake</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3372">
      <name>fischer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="707">
      <name>grinstead</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6221">
      <name>rodatz</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="193">
      <name>stone</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
