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                  <text>Page-08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

O~olnt

Pleasant,

wv

Arkansas
still alive in ..
NCAA meet

March 19, 19~

National Ag Week to be observed March 19-25
By PATrY DYER
GALLIPOLIS • Agriculture
Week and ;Agdcu!turc Day_~re
- umes-set asule to gtve recogruuonto the people, organizations and
businesses responsible for prQducing the most abundant , highest
quality and most reasonably priced
food and fiber supply in the world.
National Ag Week runs March
19 through 25; National Agriculture Day is March 20; Ohio AgriSTUDENT WINS NEW CAR • Kelly MUls, above, Carrollton,
culture Day is March 21 . This
was named winner or the "Class or '95 new car giveaway" span·
year' s theme is "Growing Better
sored by Elite Photography of GaUipolb in cooperation with other
select senior portrait studios.
Every Day in Partnership with

Nmurt."
Naliooal figures show American .
First observed in 1973, Ag Day agriculture employs 21 million
is an annual celebration officially people (or 18.5 ~_of tbe !abo!_
reco-gnlml-lly"metr.S . Congress, - fon:e)-and ~tea to genBile
president and most governors. 1be 25 percent of the Gross Domestic
secrelatji of agriculiUre bas served Product in tbe U.S. by tbe year
as bonorary chairman since 1981 . ·
2000. America's farmers are the
"AgriculiUre is Gallia County"s world' s most productive. Today
number one industry," according to each U.S. farmer produces food
Paul Shoemaker, PresidC!It of the and_fiber for 129 people· 95 in the
Gallia County Farm Bureau. This is Umted States and 34 abroad .
the third year that the Gallla Coun- Americans spend only 9.3 percent
ty Farm Bureau will be recognizing
of their income on food, while
an Ag Baby.
other developed countries spend as
much as 53.1 percent.

The United States exported
$43 .5 billion in agricul!Ural produ~ts in 1994 and im110rted $26:4
btlllon 10 farm products. Tllu
resulted in a trade surplus of $17.1
billion for fiscal year 1994.
The next time you set down to
enjoy· your favorite meal or grab
your favorite snack food , tbinlc
about the farmer who made it IJO$·
sible.
Patty Dyer Is IQformatlon
coordinator for the Galli!l Coun·
ty Fann Bureau. .

tional headers)llat-cqt the stems . .
"It's ~for pi~ldng up grain
fr&lt;m lodged or fallen stems," said
Dale E. Wilkins, an· agricultural
engineer at the Columbia Plateau
Conservation Research Center in
Pendleton, Ore.
.
The findings of their research
were reponed in the February issue
of the publication Agricultural
Research.
The researchers used the stripper
header on experimental wheat
fJCids in Pendleton and Moro, Ore.,
and Sidney, Mont. Their main
interest was not the efficien'cy o_f

- on the field afterWard.
"We're interested in any con·
cept that will help soil and water,"
Wilkins said.
The new header leaves stubble
about three feet tall, compared with
about one foot left by conventional
headers, the researchers said. This
is important, they said, since the
longer stubble lraps more water.
In the 1993-94 winter, fields
where the stripper header was used
trapped 2.7 inches of "snow-water
equivalen~" which is the depth of
water created when snow is melted.
In fields where a conventional

..

HONQRED • Rocky Hupp
was named 'most valuable
player' In the American Gener·
al Bowl for being leading agent
in the Northern region of the
American General Life and
Accident Insurance Company
during the fourth quarter of
1994. The award Is for out·
standmg sales and services. He
was also presented a lapel pin
for his 15 years service with the
crunpany.

JOINS FIRM • Efta Spence
recently joined the Willis Leadingham Real Estate firm in
Gallipolis after completing eduC!Itional courses In real estate
and passing the State pf Ohio
Examination for her real estate
· sales license. She is a member
of the Vinton Chapter No. 375
of the Order of Eastern Star.

was held.
• .·
. ··
·"In the Northern Great PlaiD$,
snowfall accounts for about 30 per:.
cent .of the ~nnual precipitation,
.and standing stubble is important to
trap drifting snow;" said Joseph L.
Pikuli a-scientist at the Northern
Plains Soil and Water Research
Center in Sidney.
Clyde L. Douglas, at the Pendleton center, said the researchers
used the British-made header
because it was the only one like it
they knew of and "we thought It
would be a good conservation

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

Tax cut
Packwood says
Senate requiresmore specifics ·

By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Associated Press Writer
· WASHINGTON - An all-star
lineup of Democrats served sandwiches and cookies to some 3,500
· children Sunday at a rally on the
Capitol steps aimed at saving
school lunches from Republican
budget-cuu.ers.
·
Organizers calledJllle "lunchin" bipartisan, but nol'"a GOP lliJ!I·
maker was in sight PQlitical name·
calling pervaded the otherwise
sunny afternoon carnival that featured clowns and balloon animals.
"Pick On Someone Your Own
Size,· ' read buttons aimed at House
Republi.:;ans whose welfare refonn
proposal, .slated to reach the floor
this week, includes the dismantling
of the decades-old federal school
lunch program in favor of capped
block grants to the states.
"Immoral" was bow the Rev.
Jesse Jackson described the plan,
which be said would lead to malnutrition among youngsters.
Marian Wrigbt Edelman, presi·
dent of the Children's Defense .
Fund. called it. "a shameful and
cruel budget assault on America's
children."
The House Republican Confer. 'ence issued a statement Sunday
calling the rally "a sad display of
exploitation and propaganda.''
DemocratS contend that leaving
the program to the states and capping the growib of its federal funding to 4.5 perce!lt per year amounts .
to letting schoolchildren go hungry.

Wis~

I

Testimony
set on ·D.J.'s
finger wound

(oi.IJs ecoqP,mic
benefit of pulp plant

..,.,..;&lt;C:o:n:ti:n:ued::.:on::_:P:ag:e~J~)--~==E:n:v:ito=nm=en:tal:;:g;:::ro;u;:ps;::sa~y;:;;tbe;;:propos::;:;:::ed::;:ru:J:es:are=:st:ill:l:oo=le:n:ie:nt:,~

Eastern Board hails
cutsinlunchlosses
By GEORGE ABATE
board:
Sentinel News starr
• will increase the amount of
Parents may not realize the diffi- hours a treasurer's accounts clerk
culties surrounding student lunch- wiU be worked from four to eight.
es •.an Eastern Local School District
• bought a n ~w gas range for
official said.
Chester Elementary .
Eastern bas improved ·the lunch
• will keep next year's calendar
prognuit, despite increasing federal the same as this year.
nutritional requirements, school
• approved the 1995 high school
administrators said.
.
graduating seniors list.
The Eastern Board of Education · • gave a purchase order contract
learned that the district's lunch pro- for Linda Faulk to work with spegram has cut the losses seen during cial needs students.
· the last five years. Today, the pro• named Donald P. Smith as a.
gram is in the black, said Carolyn substitute bus driver for the rest or .
Ritchie, the district's lunch super- the school year, along with substi.·
visor.
tute ICachcrs Diane Rice and CarisSoard President Ray Karr com- sa Bailey.
mended the department, which bad
• gave Dixie Sayre a day of
lost $24,000 a year annually five unpaid leave.
years ago, on its efforts. Costs have
• allowed a sight-impaired stu·
been contained while benefits have dent to take classes in thl! GalHpoincreased $10,000.
lis City School District. .
The district must continue to
.• leamed about the high school
Republican budget-cutter•. Organizers called
LUNCH-IN - Grade school students from
meet U.S. Dep:lrtment of Agricul - account and the need to raise
LaPlata, Md., ale lunch In front of the Capitol . the "lunch-In" biparttsan, but not a GOP law·
ture requitcments to receive· fund - mon ey for awards for honor roll
Sunday at • rally to save school lunches from maker 'was In sight. (AP) .
ing, Ritchi!' said.
students. EllS Principal Clayton
This June, the program will Butler said by the end of the year
And the Democrats' heaviest bill, less money will go to the states and when you turn money over to
become more complicated because the fund wiU be in the black. Any
bitters were out in -force with that than under the present program," the sta:tes, it gets used for other
of new USDA requirements, she removal of funds for ay.rards this
message Sunday, giving away said Gephardt, a Missouri Demo- things," the senator said.
added . The school must switch year would JUS! bwt next year, But- ·
But House;, Budget Committee
lunches to thousands of children crat. "There wiU be no compensafrom counting food groups to cal- ler said. A $1,000 balance shquld
bused in from Maryland, Virginia, tion for inflation so some ki4J will Chairman John Kasicb, R· Ohio , culating nutritional value in each be carried in this fund, be added.
said on NBC's Meet the Press Sun- · food .
have to be cut."
/
West Virginia and Pennsylvania
·
• asked Superintendent Ron
•
Rockefeller,
who
brouglll
with
day that the {iQP plan to cut the
House Minority Leader Richard
This will force the district to Mi ard to have lists of suggested
him three busloads of children federaf bureaucracy out of school
Gepbard~ wbo called the GOP plan
buy a computer to track the ~...."'j--»"'tbooks ready by the nex t board
mean-spirited, handed out choco- from West Virginia, won: a broken lunches would save $200 million in
served each day, Ritchie said. .
meeting, so new, book s can be
late chip cookies, wbile West Vir· plastic fork in the front pocket of administrative costs.
If 'the district were to buil a bought. The .board also agreed to
his plaid sport shin to symbolize
"We're sending (the savings) to newer con5olidated school, costs throw out some library books.
gini~ S~nator Jay Rockefeller
·
the stateS. We' re going .to target it would be further reduced, she
manned the table of peanut butter- the Republican plan, be said.
• set the next board meeting for
"I was there when Reagan did to the needy," IW@ $Aid.
·
.
and-jelly' sandw.iches.
added.
6:30 p.m. April 11 at the high
"If you pass the Republican . new federalism, i.e., block grants,
In other action, the Eastern · school.
I

.

,]
•

+
.

•

Highs In

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cenlll
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 20, 1995

Remarks to member draw
ipo1ogyfrom ·BREC chtef

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4
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By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
unnamed benefactor.
WASHINGTON House
Sentinel News Statr
Otlier grants going into the proRepublican
plans
for
the
bigsest
An overview of plans for the ject include $357,200 from tbe
tax cut in more than a decade face
restoration and revitalization of Ohio Department of Development
dim
prospects in the Senate without
Pomeroy's downtown area .with · and $70,000 fmm the Appalachian
a
concrete
plan to cut spending,
nearly $1 million in grants and Regional CoWlcil- the latter to go
Senate
Finance
Committee Chairlocal match monies was given by for construction of the pranenade.
man
Bob
PackwoOd
says.
Pomeroy Councilman John Musser
The ODofD grant required a
.
Packwood,
R·
Ore.,
said Sunday
at Saturday's meeting of Return ~ local match of $357,200, most of
there
can
be
"absolutely
no ·tax
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters which is coming from local buildcuts
unless
they're
paid
for.
And
of
of the Anlerican Revolution.
ing owners doing interior improve·
as
you
Joolt:
at
the
House
course,
Described by Musser, the pro- inents and facade restoration.
REVITALIZING PoMEROY- Plans for
Pomeroy Councilman John Musser for members
spending cuts, the bulk of them are
ject chairman, as a "strong and
As for the timetable when n:siof Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
restoration of Pomeroy, Including facade treat.
just
sort of a generic lid without ·
workable development plan," be dents will begin seeing action,
of the American Revolution. Listening to Musser
rnent, period street lighting, a promenade, and
specifying what they are."
said that he views the project as Musser said that things should be
were, rrom len, Rae Reynolds and Anna Cle·
amphitheater with grants and matching monies
He said his committee, which is
"the single most important project "going full blast within the next
land.
totaling nearly $1 million, were outlined by
responsible
for tax legislation ip
to take place in Meigs County in couple of weeks."
the Senate, first waniS to see defi·
While be said the village bas
The next phase is building that group before the mauer came
years."
Recognized also were the coun- nite plans to cut federal spending .
He referred to the planned revi-· until July 1996 to complete the pro· facade or exterior design work to to Pomeroy Village Council, which ty winners in the history writing
"Sbon of that, I don't tbi,nk we'd
talization and restoration project as ject, Musser expects "most every- return buildings to their period of bad to me the grant applications.
contest - Holly Broderick, daugh- consider them (tax cuts) at all," be
a program which will regenerate thing to be done by July or August construction, the late 1800s, instalStudent• recognized
ter of Nancy and Martin Broderick, said on ABC' s This Wetk with
business and create a better ·except 'for removing the power lation of period street lighting
·T he Charter Day luncheon a fifth grader at Chester, and David Bfinkley.
·
lifestyle for residents.
·
lines downtown."
along Main, Co uri, Lynn and meeting held at Grace Episcopal Kristin Brown, daughter of Debbie
The House -Ways and Means
Musser announced that soon a
That phase has not yet been Sycamore, and building of a pran- Church also featured recognition of and Glenn Brown, a Meigs Junior
Committee
last week approved a
commi uee will be appointed to funded , Musser said, although be · enade or walkway along the park- Jacob Matthew Morrow, a senior at High School student: The theme
GOP
plan
to
cut taxes by $189 bil·
oversee the $207,000 amphitheater · suggested that money could . ing lot wall, be added.
. Southern High School, recipient of was "Living· in America before
lion
over
five
years in a package
to be build just off the levee, and become available as early as next
Musser noted that building the DAR Good Citizenship Award 1776." Cenificates and books were
that
includes
a
$500-a-cbild IIIli
month.
owners are doing the work 011 their annually presented by the Return presented to aU three .
develop programming for its use.
. credit, reductions in capital gains
He suggested commWlity activi·
Currently several projects, such structures with a dollar-for-dollar Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Included in correspondence read taxes and expanded Individual
ties, along with a summer theater as roof replacement, beating and match from the grant monies.
Eleanor Smith, regent, made the by Marg'aret Belle Weber was a Retirement Account savings plans.
program, as uses for the ampbithe- cooling equipment installation, and
Musser emphasized that down - presentation to Morrow, son of thank you note from DAR Schools
Democrats opposed I~ claiming
ater, to be buili with a grant of lhings like eleclrical. and plumbing town revitalization was the "birth Mark and Vicki Morrow, Syracuse, for Campbell soup labels which .the ·
111lrinly
benefits the. rich wh1le
it
$103,750 from the Department of work io bring the old buildings up child" of the Pomeroy Merchants · who W!!~$J!!_C,I~d .on thQ basis of scbools redeem for suppli~UW~ GOP budget
cutters are going after
Natural Resources and the remain· to ~ty codes, are underway. said · Association and that all of the pre- citizenship and an essay by ·a COin· equipment
programs that affect the poor. And
der from donations and a local Musser.
li111inary work was completed by mittee of educators.
some fiscal! y conservative Repub·
(Continued on Pa_ge 3)
licails have voiced concern abOut
pushing a major tax cut when
Republicans need to trim more than
$1 lfill.loo oa federal spending 'to
balance the budget by 2002. .
Both the tax cut and balancing
the bud~et arc part of the House
The-general manager of Buck·
The statement said Truitt per· ·
GOP's • Contract With America,"
eye Rural Electric Cooperative for- son ally apologized to Mrs.
A senior Democrat on Pack· .. mally apologized to a cooperative Schroder by telephone two days
CHARLESTON, W.Va (AP)- A proposed pulp mil.l should be
member for remarks made during a after the meeting.
built in Mason County if it meets go_vemment environmental stanLOS ANGELES (AP)- The wood's committee, Sen . Bill
recent public meeting in Lawrence
The procedure, whicb temporar·
dards, said Rep. Bob Wise.
Ialit thing jurors in the O.J. Simp· Bradley of New Jersey, said be
County.
ily boosted members' monthly
Wise, D-W.Va., said the $1.1 billion mill would boost the
son trial saw when they left the found it "very difficult to believe
BREC and Brenda Schroder or bills, and the controversy surround·
regional economy.
.
courtroom last' week was a piciUre the Senate will support" the House
Scottown jointly announ_ced that ing it bas prompted a petition drive
. "I don't oppose the pft!iect if it meets the . requin:DI~nts," sai!t
of a wound on the defendant's mid· plan. "I think it's a political docu·
Mrs. Schroder was satisfied with to replace Truitt and the current
Wise, wbose congressional district includes Mas&lt;in County.
ment and that's all," be said on
die finger.
the apology made by Walter V. cooperative board of trustees.
Supporters of the mill, including Gov. Gaston Capenon, have
This week, an investigator is NBC'sMeetthe Pren.
Truitt Jr.
A group called BREC Members
said the project would bring hundreds of jobs to depressed Mason
expected to testify about bow
But Rep. John Kasicb, R-Obia,
"She said she accepted the sin- for Change, in addition tO initiliting
County.
·
'
Simpson said be received the the chairman of the House 'Budget
eerily of the apology by Truitt and
the petition drive, bas also request·
But· environmental groups have said it would discharge dioxin
injury.
Committee, promised a compre·
botb parties consider the matter ed an investigation of BREC' s .
iniO the Ohio River.
/- ··
When court recessed Friday, hensive plan by May for slashing
now closed," the statement read.
managerial and accounting proce·
Dioxin can cause cancer, birth defects and reproductive disorDetective Philip V~nnatter wa~ the budget deficit while cutting
Truitt reportedly made remarks . dures by state and federal officials.
· ders, aecording to the federal Environme~tal Protection Agency. ·
about 10 describe Simpson' s three- taxes.
to Mrs. Schroder during a meeting
Truiu has been on administra·
WiS~; said Friday' that the inill's builder, Parsons &amp; Wbiuemore
hour interview with police on June .
·!'At the end of the day, we're
at Symmes Valley Elementary live leave for nearly a month while
of Rye Brook, N.Y., shQUid show the mill will meet future federal
13, the day after Simpson's ex-wife going to be able to show you that
School on Feb .. 9, where angry the board investigates member
or state environmental rules.
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald the American families can have tax
BREC members met witb Truiu complaints against him and the coCompany Vice President Ken Goddard said last week the project
Goldman were slain.
relief, that we need to grow the
and other management IQ...ge! _ oQ'sl!lil!lllgement.. _ -ll,nmmceo-l~ ~oulc) meet pending EPA rules on dioxin discharges,.
. .Jn_the tape:r.ecqr!ted inteNiew,- economy ~i.th risk-taking inccn,._ __
explanations on a new billing proLast week, BREC "
The rules, proposed in 1993, have not been finalized .
Simpson said he doesn't really lives, capital gains tax, .and, in fact,
. (Continued on Page 3)
we can balance th·e budget,"
cedure.
Kasich said on NBC.

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--1--

Vol. 45, NO. 226

lion. The program's e«penses were area. That agency is designated by ·
$671.7 million.
the department and may be a federLast fiscal year, 4.8 billion al, state or private entity.
board feet were harvested from
Based on comments it received
national forests, compared with 5.9 last year on proposed pilot probillion in fiscal 1993, when rev- grams, USDA is considering two
enues were more than $1 billion options.
and costs were $716.7 million.
The first would allow compaThe harvest bas been dropping nies that request service between 6
in recent years, largely because of . a.m. and noon, Monday through
the controversy over protection of Friday, and that cannot receive serthe spotted owl, said Rick Prausa, vice within six hours of their
coordinator of the Forest Service's request, to get service from qther
Timber Sale Program Information official agencies. Finns that request
Reporting System.
·
service at any other time and cannot get service with 12 hours also
WASHINGTON (AP) ·- The may use another agency.
Agriculture Dej)atllhent is considThe second option would estabering two options that would lish a peri~ during which offi~
WASHINGTON (AP) - Revincrease the flexibility of the govenue from timber sales on national . ernment's system for inspecting agencies could provide service to
finns outside their assigned geoforests dropped but exceeded costs
and W~ighing grain.
graphic area if no .official services
by $214 million last fiscal year.
Congress authorized USDA to bad been provided there in the pn:- ,
according to the Agriculture
experiment by leuing more than , vious six months.
Department's Forest Service.
one designated agency ·inspect or
USDA wants comm'ents on the
Revenues in fiscal 1994, which
weigh grain in a single interior geoproposed
pilot programs and on
ended Sept. 3_!), were $885.5 milgraphic area. Now only one agency other alternatives by May 10.
may provide service in a specified

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.

"impractical, burdensome and
expensive," USDA said.
A regular maintenance program
would be defined as an arrangement between an accredited veteri·
narian and a livestock producer in
which the veterinarian inspects
eve. y .animal on each premises
onr ~ every 30 days. The extended
issuance period would be allowed
only after the third health maintenance veterinary inspection of the
flock or herd.
Those wishing to comment on
the proposal should send an original and three copies of written
comments on or before May 9 to
the inspection service.
·
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70S2

,.

USDA wants to expand time for animal health inspections
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department wants to
boost interstate and international
trade involving animals by extending the time allowed between
inspection and issuance of official .
health documents.
The department is proposing to
let accredited veterinarians issue
official health documents up to 30
days after inspecting herds or
flocks that are under regular health
maintenance programs.
The current period allowed is
seven days.
"Allowing a longer time period
for animals under regular health
maintenance programs should
reduce tile costs of health inspec·
tion for the livestock industry without increasing the risk of disease
spread," said Donald Lucbsiqger
of USDA's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service..
Veterinarians and livestock producers have asked the agency to
, change the regulations because
they say the seven-day period is

Pick 3:
. 347
Pick 4:

332517 .

Little Caesars Pizza
Longer wheat stubble in fields saves soil and water
offering delivery service wAsHINGTON (AP) _ Agri- grain off the stem, unlike conven- the harvest but the vegetation left header was used, abou't 0.8 inches

HUNI1NGTON, W.Va. · In an fran~hisee Vicki Dunn-Marshall. . culture Department researchers
effon to enhance customer satisfac- "However, carry-out service will have found that farmers can contion, the Little Caesars restaurants continue to be an option at Little serve soil and water by harvesting
in Huntington, W.Va., Ashland and Caesars too. We hope to attract wheat so that 3-foot stubble is left
Flatwoods, Ky ., and Ironton, people who prefer to have their standing.
·
Portsmouth, Wheelersburg and pizza delivered, or for those occa- ·
Scientists in USDA's AgriculGallipolis, began offering delivery sions when carry-out is not copve- · tural Research Service have been
· nient. , _ '
- - ....
using a new combine header that
S~;tvice March 17:
-.~
The company 's 100 percent leaves longer stubble than conven"Many of our customers in tbe
Tri-State area told us tbey wanted money-back guarantee applies 10 tiona! headers, and which they say
the added convenience of delivery, ali products delivered from Little also gathers grain more·quickly.
and we began this program as a Caesars.
·
The combine header, made by. a
result of those comments, " said
A nominal fee will be charged British company, Sbelhourne
for each delivery order.
Reynolds, uses plastic teeth on· a
high-speed rotating cylinder to strip

Ohio Lottery

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Commentar

Pag8-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio
Monday, March 20, 1995·

No injuries listed
In two accidents

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, Marth 11
Aa:u-We&amp;mcr- forecast for

The Daily Sentinel

Senators take aim at base in tllei~ own state

111 COUrt iueet
Pomeroy, Oblo

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publllller
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Ge.nl Manager

U!I lEkS OP OPINION ore wek:cme. They oboukl be leu IbiD 300
wordlloaa. Allletten are oubject to ~::J llld mual be sigoed with n1111o,
oddrMa IOd tdtpbone number. No Wlli
lellen will be publilbod. ullen
sbauld be in sood ~ llddRIIin&amp;
not pononalltlu.

i.u-.
.

Collectors hope
·doub-le-lettered p~nnies
stir public interest
By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON - Coin collec!OfS bope tbat the double-lettered 1995 pennies that are making their bearts leap will do the same for the public.
The excitement began in late February wbeo a Connecticut man discovered a doubling of letters in "Liberty" and "In God" on a 1995
peony.
' .
:
Collectors.lbink the penny is a dOiitiled-die; which is created wben the
devioe used to stamp imll8es on blant coins leaves offset impressions.
· Since then, fmdings have been reported in several other East Coast
states. Coin experts lhink as Diany as 600,000 of tbe Philadelphia-minted
coins may be in circulation.
However, billions of peonies are minted each year.
"The scarcity is enougb to mate these valuable," Eric von Klinger, an
associate editor In Numismalic News magazine in lola, Wis.
.
The Connecticut discovery was reported by William Gibbs, an editor
with Coin World magazine. in Sidney, Obio. Gibbs said lbat when be saw
tbe coin, bis bean began to race and be pumped tbe air with his fist.
"A kind of mystique bas been built around significant doubled dies,"
Gibbs said. "It's something that's really difficult to explain. It's almost an
emotional reaction.''
Collectors hope the fever spreads so more of the pennies can be found,
Gibbs said. Tbe wider inbli'CSt also could boost tbe value of tbe coins and
encourage 1001e people to become coliectors, be said.
· .
.
Doubled-died pennies also were minted In 1955, 1972, 1983 and 1984.
Gibbs said collectors believe lbe 1995 penny is more significant !ban
those minted in tbe 1980s, but !bat the doubling is not as strong as the
1955 and 1972 coins.
.
Coin dealm are offering up to $200 for one of the 1995 pennies in
uncirculated condition, V9'1 Klinger said. .
_
_
Collectors also are calling the American Numismatic Association in
Colorado Springs, Colo.,. to ast where the pennies were minted and bow
spon !bey migbt be jJI circulation, said group spokesman Steve Bobbitt.
"I lcnow tbe Mint is not (lappy about ·it. They would like !0 produce
everything perfect.'' be said.
Mike White, spokesman for the U.S. Mint, said mint officials haven't
seen any of tbe coins ai!d cannot confrrm lhe existence of~. doubled die.'
He said no llfllblems were found with tbe dies at the Philadelphia minL
Wbite sald the penny bas not been recalled and tbe only people wbo
migbt J'!IY more for the coin are collectors or dealers.
·
:· "It s wortb a penny to us. It's wortb a penny to commercial banks,"
be said.
.
: Gibbs said some people loolr: for doubled dies systematically, going
Jbrou'b roDs of pennies !bey get a! tbe bant.
• "I ve bad others reacb into their pocket. pull out two coins, and one of
lhem is a doubled die. You just have to look at your coins. It's not. going
10 come out and bit(: you."

r.v

~erry's

World

L

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•

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~··-~
0
bv
Inc
11iJ95

NE~ .

"As a fl'eshman congressman, I am totally opposed to term limits. Hey, I'd like to be around
long enough to become a PART OF THE
PROBLEM."
·

WASHINGTON - With the
DefCIIIC Due Closure aod RealiJD·
ment Commission beginning its
fmal round of cutback&lt; dozens of
lawmilten are lobbying furiously
to rescue military bases in tbeir
backyard froal tbe bullget ax~.
_
But Democratic Sens . Russ
Feingold and Herb Kobl bave
turned tbe tables on Ibis pork-barrel
bickering by practically begging
tbe Pentagon to klll a mllitary program in tbeir home state of Wisconsin. The only problem is !bat
tbe Penlagoo bas rebuffed the senators' plea to stop funding the $20
million per year program.
"It's a variation on tbe Henny,
Youngman line,_'Tate my program... please!'" Feingold told us.
The story of Project ELF - tbe
Navy's "Extremely Low Frequency" communications system in
Clam Lake, Wis. - is a reve8ling
postscript to tbe recent debate on
tbe. balanced-budget-amendment.ELF is a Cold War relic that belped
American submarines avoid detec· .

MICH.

lion by scodinJ electromasnetic . an environmental 1aw,: It was 1B!Cf include the ·ELF cut. so it will be.
waves to subs in deep water so they · overturned due to oarKMial secunty decided in conferena: committee.
could surface to receive important · reasons, but a fmal decision is due
A Halfield spokeswoman noted
messages.
. in September.
tbat tbe ELF action proves the
When !be Pentagon left ELF off point !bat Hatfield was trying to;
- its list or recommeodatioos to the mate wben be ·cast tbe deciding .
Jack AnU~
·
l
_· _ · c.ommissioo, Feingold quickly •vote against the balanced budged:
aniJ
·aAJCaled .to Sen. Mart. Hatfield, ~- ' amendment. ''If you're serious :
Ore cbair f th Senate A.ppronn · about deficit reduction you don't.
Michael Blnsteln atio~s Co~it~. It was The&amp;;; bave to amend tbe constitution," :·
before tbe Senate voted on tbe bal· , . she told our associate Ed Henrr- ;
In a Janllll)' letter to Navy ,Sec- anced budget amendment, and Hat- ''You sbouldjust get slarted now. ' .
Kohl, who as owner of pro bas-:
rewy John Dalton, Feingold urged field was besieged by bis GOP col·
!bat the Pentagon Include ELF in . lesguestosupporttbemeasure. But ketball's Milwaukee Bucks doled ·
its ·list of reoommendatioos to tbe Feingold wasn't cal~&amp; about tbe · out a $68 million contract to rootie :
Glenn Robinson last year, is the ;
base closure commission. "With
tbe disintegration of tbe Soviet vo~;Mr. Chairman, 1 want you to fiut to admit !bat the ELF cut is ·
naval nuclear tbreat, tbe major jus- eliminate something in my state," pocket cbange. But be notes !bat:
the budget will never be balanced if·
tification for tbc ELF program bas Feingold said.
A
bewildered
Hatfield
pulled
.
"you're only willing to cut spend- :
!'J'PIIfCDtly disappeared," Feingold
Kohl aside before an Appropria- · ing in somebody else's state."
·
wrore.
.
The Navy isn't even sure if the lions Commitlee bearing tbe fol- , INDIAN GIVERS - · Sen .
electro~tic waves are safe for · lowing day toast if be agreed with . Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaji, vice .
local residents. In 1984, a U.S. Dis- Feingold, whicb be 'did. ELF's · chairman of the Senate · Indian
trict Court ordered that ELF be funding was "zeroed out" as part ~airs &lt;;ommiaee, ~ntly lnvi!Cd.
Giosed-becausc-the-Navy-paid load· ofalarger package ofciilstliat- trtbal ·~efs-to·a-r_erep!ion bononng
equate attention to the system's passed through the Senate. But the . outgomg .commtttee staffers .. He
possible bealtb effects and violated house version of tbe bill didn't . sa:o~gly hmted !bat these Amencan .
lnd1an leaden should not t ome
empty-banded.
"Beca'use tbese staff members.
will no longer be subject to any ·
restrictions Qn the acceptance of
tokens of esteem or appreciation,
please feel free to send giftS if the
members of your community
. should desire to express tbeir
appreciation in tbat manner,"
. Inouye wrote in the Febc6le!blr. ..
THE ~ .
An Inouye aide told us that Indians have a "culturaHradition" or
giving gifts, which only consisted
of T-sbirts, coffee mugs and calendars. That's curious since Inouye
noted in the letter that the staffers
are no longer subject to tbe federal
restriction, which only applies to
gifts valued at $250 or more. The
aide said lbat when the letter was·
written sbe thaugbt the limit was
only $20 but she subsequently
learned tbat il' s achlally $250.
While acknowledging that the •
tribal cbiefs have business before
tbe Congress - especililly regulation of tbe multi-billioo dollar indian gaming ·industry - the Inbuye ·
aide told us: "I'd be very surpris¢ .
'
if anyone felt that they were being·
shaken down."
;
•
Jack Anderson and Michael ·
Blostein are writers for United
· Feature Syndkate, Inc.

By

OK,BUT
NO TALI&lt;'ING
TO STRANGERS .

ON
INTERNEt

again _____
Not long after "The Adventures "Huck Finn" bas elfperieoced, I
of Huckleberry Finn" was pub- was surpris¢ to see .....: IIi ·Valetle
lished in 1884, Louisa M. Alcott S.t rauss' story in, tbe. Marcb 4
lectured tbe autbor: · "If Mr. Wasbing!on Post-· tbat sucb presClemens cannot think of something
better to tell our pure-minded lads
Naf
and lasses, he bad best stop writiDg
for tbem."
tigious places oC learning in WasbSince then, attempts, often suc- ington as the National Cathedral
cessful, have been made to censure Scbool and St. Albans no longer
Mr. Clemens and to remove bis consider the boot valuable enougb
offensive boot from scbool class- to be on their required reading lists.
.rooms and libraries. "Tbe Adven- Instead, tbe book will be "relntrotures of Huck riDD" bas been ban· duced" as part of elective courses
isbed as ''immoral and sacrile- · taugbt in the 11th and 12tb grades.
So much for ,Emest Heminggious" (Denver Public Library,
1902) and ''degrading and destruc- way's insistence that "all mode111
tive to black bumanity" (New 1\mer.ican literature comes from
Trier High Scbool, Winnetka, Ill., one boot by Mark Twain called
'Huckleberry Finn."' Tbere Wll!l
1976).
In recent decades, the accusa- . also the comment of Ralph Ellison
lions at New Trier Higb School, - a writer bardly indifferent to
pressed by blact parents tbere, black humanity - !bat when he
have been the most common was coming up, "1 could imagine
charge against tbe book - in large myself as Huck Finn."
part because tbe word " nigger"
What objecting parents and fearful administrators overlook - or
appears at least 160 times.
The blact mao wbo did the ignore - is tbe story. Huclt Finn
counting, John Wallace- a former - reared In se;~s of bigotry by .
administrative aide at the Mark whites wbo uSed "nigger" as the
Twain Intermediate Scbool in Fair- commonest of debasing words fax County, Va. -eventually pub- transcends all his previous learning
lished an edition of lbe novel with wben be fmally fmds a decent. cariog adult, Jim. FIX' Ibis black man,
all tbe n- words omitted.
When I last saw Mr. Wallace at · Huct is willing to, as be says, litera conference at tbe Mark Twain .ally "go to bell," rather than return
Memorial in Hartford, Conn., be · him to his owner. (Huck bad been
thought it migbt be a boon to blact taugbt !bat sucb a betrayal of the
humanity to do away with the orig- propert:f rights of the white race ·
inal entirely.
woold doom biro for eternity.)
Despite tbe many troubles that
Lite any book with deptb. bow-

Hentoff

ever, "Huct Finn': .needs some
context as be is introduced to
young readers. Intelligent teacbers
do just !bat. One of them, Rose
Reissmao, used to teacb an eigbtbgrade class in Brooklyn, N.Y. It
bad many blact students. As tbe
class read the book. the youngsters
talted about it freely •with ber and
among themselves, a,nd they also
talked.about Mr. Clemens- wbere
be came from and what be thoogbt
about racism..
1 visited that clliss one morning
after I bad debated Jobn Wallace
on the "Today Sbow." The program bad been shown to Rose
Reissman's students. ·Waiting for
me outside tbe building were four
eigbth~graders, all of them black,
wbo were so eager to speak !bat
they could hardly contain themselves.
.
"What mates us so mad," they
said, almost in chorus, "is that'
tbere are people ourthere'' -lliey
pointed In the general direction of
Ohio - who tblnt that black kids
are so dmnb that they can't tell the
difference between a racist book
and a book that's against racism.
Like 'Hucldeberry Flllll."'
I !bought of those youngsters
wben I saw what Bill Matory - a
17-year-old senior at St. Albanssaid in The Washington Post story
about !bat scbool baving taken
"Huck Finn" off the required
reading lisL "It's like taking a big
part of America's past away from
us,'' Matory declared. ''As an

Aroc;a.n-Aiperican mall!1 you must.J
.understand wby tbe•bQoK,was writ·.·
ten, and bow it was written . And .
we ate smart enougb to understand '
that.''
John Wallace came bact to
mind wben I saw a storx 'out of
Omaha about a man named Gecrge.
Wallace suing_Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia and its owner,
. tbe Tribune Company of Chicago,
because of the emotional distress .1
be suffered on finding the wonf
"nigger" a number of times in tbat; '
CD-ROM encyclopedia
!
Among other references were:
Joseph Conrad's "The Nigger of, .
the Narcissus," . Di~k Gregory's :
"Up From Nigger,"and Dr.
tin Luther King's recollection of .
having been called "nigger" by a :
wbite woman wbo struck biro wben ·
be was II years old. The aggrieved • •
man in Omaha is ~ing for S40 mil- .
lion in damages.
_
I once asted a blact eighthgrader, who bad just finished read.:
log "Huctleberry Finn," wbether
sbe tbougbt it ougbt tO be required. .
"Well"
sbe .saidI "I learned tbat )r
'
wbat 'nigger' . means depends on:
bow it's 11sed in the conversation." :
. Nat Henton Is a nationally' ;
renowned authority on the Flnt .
Amendment and the rest of the :
BID of Rtshts.
'
(For Information on bow to ·
communicate electronically with.·'
this columnist and others. cnntact Amerka Online by calling
. 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.. :

Mar- :

1-';

..

NRA politics hold the nation h o s t a g e · - - - - - - - - - - - -1

:\ft:'

Texas, Michigan, Missouri and
Colorado have shown !bat about
two-thirds of those queried are
opposed to concealed wespon per-

Hodding Carter Ill
mits. They toow from sad personal
experience ·or from tbe nightly
news !bat pri;vately owned bandguns more often produce tragedy
!ban prevent it. Law enforcement
officers, most academic researchers
and experts in criminology overwbelmingly agree.
Advocates -don't. They argu-e
lbat in a lawless time, wben police
are understaffed and underequipped to deal witb \'ioh:nt
crime, escb individual sbould have
the rigbt to self-defense. Tiley but·
tress their arguments witb studies
wbicb purport to prove that hundreds of thousands of people bave
used tbeir guns to repel criminals
(studies rebutted by tbe Department
of Justice, among otbers) . As
always, they . ~olaln tbat tbe Second Amen&lt;inlent to the Constitu·
tiou explicitly give~ every citizen
tbe rigbt to bear arms.

MOst of all, !bey rely on anecdotes. Their literature is full of
compellil)g stories l!bmit bousewives wbo shot would-be rapists
and interviews with convicted
felons testifying to 'their fears· that
would-be victims migbt be armed.
· At root, tbeir case rests on tbe
propositioo that an armed citizenry
is a sare citizenry . Wby should
law-abiding citizens be forced to
live in a society in.wbicb only the
.criminals bave guns, they ast? ·
To whicb tbe answer, based on
facts and figures, is devastatingly
direct. As matters now stand, band·
guns in private bands are far more
often the cause of accidental deatb
than of aborted crime. More chi!dren are killed playing with· tbeir
parents' guns !ban criminals are
killed by their would-be victims.
Having a guo at band escalates
domestic disputes into murder
iofmitely-moo: oCteo !ban it deters
crime.
·
The New England Journal of
Medicine summarized the available
evidence by reporting !bat guns iii a
bome were 43 times mure likely to
causethedealbofafamilymember

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or friend than a criminal. "In ligbt researchers bave found that tbe lion is a road well-taken. Once the :
of tbese findings, it may be ~- number oC murders caused by guns right-to-carry principle_is estab- : •
ably asked wbetber teepmg rose significantly between 199'2 ·lis!!ed, tbe organization's lobbyists l
firearms in the borne increases a . and 1993 in tbree Aorida cities.
1will be back in town to demand
family's protection or places it In
The NRA's eagerness to add to :deletion of the licensing require~
greater danger," thejo111118listsaid. the number of weapons in private meots.
.
The balance today is fairly close bands bas led it up a contradictory .
"An armed societ}' is a polite ·
between states that eitber prohibit byway. As a matter of inflexible society," lhe NRA's president said
_concealed weapoos or tigbtly ron- principle, it OpPoses waiting peri- the other day. We all tnow bow ,
trol tbem, and states !bat permit ·ods and otber forms of gun control polite we are at 220 million guns :
them or (Vermont alone) have no -;- e,;cept when it comes io con- and counting. With concealed •
restrictiods of any ki,nd. The NRA cealed weapons. Then, soddenly, it weapons the rule, there's no telling
considers the Florida concealed is OK for tbe government to issue just bow civilized we can become.
weapon law, passed eight years Identity-card permits, require
Hoddlng Carter 111, former.
ago, to be the .ideal. After a 90-day extensive waiting periods, maintain State Department spokesman 1
waiting period, a background cbect ·records complete with Social Secu- and award-winning reporter, edi· •
and fuearms training, an applicant rity numbers and demand frreanns tor and publisher, iS president of :
without a criminal record or.otber training. To wbicb the question MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.-· :
bigbly specific disqualifications· is arises, if ~t's good enough for a pis- based television production com· · :
·given a permit, complete wilb pic- tOI-pactmg mama, wby not for pany.
•
ture and Social Security number. everyone?
.
(For
Information
bow to
1
00
Next stop, a.38 in a shoulder bolB~t consistency is not the . communicate electronically with.
ster, purse or pocteL
NRA s bangup. Its Strategic pur- tbls columnist and others, con· :
Tbe ·effects of rigbt-to-Carr): .. pose is to put a gun in every band. ' tact Amerka OnUne by calling 1- :
laws .are the subject of dueling Any road that leads in that direc- 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.:
·statistics. from an almost overnight
.,
· high of 266,700 permits, tbere are
•
now some 150,000 active ones in
One year 11110: El Salvador beld its frrst presidential election following
Aorida. The state's violent.crime tbe country's 12-year-old civil war. Armando Calderon Sol of the :
:rate is up. Tbe ·bomicide rate is ARENA party led tbe vote, but needed to win a run-off to acbieve the 1
. down. University of Maryland presidency.
·
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'· fl

•lcotumbusl53•

folace!·

at
1:26 p.m. at the junction of West
Main Street and Liberty Lane. A
1982 Cbcvrolet piclcup truck driven
by Scott VapVranten, 40,
Pomeroy, was ltopped in traffic
wben it was struck from hrhind by
a 1993 Buict driven by Steven
Dunfee, 40, Middleport, according
to.a police report.
Tbe second accident occurred at
3:36 p.m. on West Maio Street. A
1993 Ford pickup driven by PaUl E.
Rollins, 44, Point Pleasant. W.Va..
was stopped in traffic wben it was
·struck from behind by a 1992 Ford
Tempo driven by,_Ocie McCune, ·
66, Rutland, tbe report stated.

--=--------....:..
·
.
..4er.son

" I

You migbt not thint tbat a
natioo witb 220 ~Uion weapons in
private bands needs more gw;ts, but
you're not tbe National 'Rifle Associadoil. Despite polls, statistics ~
·common sense, tbe NRA 1s pusb1og
bard to give virtually every adult
American the rigbt to carry a concealed weapon. AJ usual. it is rmd·
iog a receptive audience among
politicians wbo know !bat campaign money is more important
than tbe public trust and tbe ~' s
anger more dangerous !ban cr!izen
disapproval.
Lite me most · people blive
awakened t~ tbe NRA's all-out
pusb for wbal it calls tbe ''rigbt .to
carry ... after it was too late. Vrrginia, my b0111e state, bas atreac!Y
joined two otbers tbis year m
vlng sucb leglsbilion. SimUar
are under considera!i~n or
pending in some IS add1tronal
. An NRA .-........n receotstalel.
--·•·
1 obserVed with ~.:le
"""""""'"" ...,...
f~ tbal "rigl)t to carry is a ~!
issue and it getS bolter eacb week.
It's not because of spontaneOUs
~c combustion, bowever.
1polls. in states as diverse as
..

No injuries were
lm... t.otl two

I·

EMS logs 19 calls

w.vA.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 19 calls for assistance
.Saturday and Sunday Including two
transfer calls. Units responding

. included:

.

MIDDLEPORT
8:55 a.m. Saturday, Stonewood
. Apartments, Evelyn Mains, Veteraps Memorial Hospital; .
·
2:55 p.m. Saturday, Stonewood
Apartments, Evelyn Mains, VMH;
1:50 a.m . Sunday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Leroy Miller,
VMH;·. .
.a
By Tbe Associated Press
11 :34 a.m. Suoday, Stooewood
.Weather foreca..t:.
Spring was to anive in Obio in a
Ton1gbt .. . Showers htely . a Apartments, Evelyn Mains, VMH;
~nglite manner tonight, witb &lt;;hance of thunderstorms. Lows m
10:22 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
· · . OQal temperatures and sbowers tbe 40s.
'
. _ ·Bemic_e_Saxton, Holzer Medic!!!and thun~torm~, Spring officialTuesday ...Mostly cloudy ·and Center· · ~ ··· ·
ly begins at9: 14 p.m.
cooler. A ch;i!lce of sbowers over
10:25-p.m. Booday, Pearl Street,
Tbe f1tst full day of spring on the northeast balf of tbe state. · Dennis Hart, VMH.
.
Tuesday will be a little cooler than Higbs mainly in tbe 50s.
POMEROY
it bas. been recently, forecasters
. Extended forecast:
1:50 p.m. Saturday, volunt~er
said. Highs will remain mostly in
Wednesday ... ~ chance of sbow- f~re department, gas odor at R1ct
tbe 50s, according to the National ers east, otherw1se partly cloudy. Monis residence·
Weather Service.
Lows in tbe 30s. Higbs from tbe
2:49 p.m. S;turday, Pomeroy
The record-higb temperature for upper 50s to tbe lower 60s.
Cliff Apartments Ella Wilson,
this date at the Columbus weather
Thursday ...Fair. Lows in tbe VMH·
'
station was 78 degrees iii 1921 30s. Highs in the upper 50s nortb
11 :'23 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
wbile the record low was I in 1885. and 60s elsewhere.
Clida Allenswortb, Pleasant Valley
Sunset tonight will be at 6:43 p.m.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows 35 Hospital.
and sunrise Tuesday at 6:34a.m.
to 40. Higbs from the upper 50s to
· RACINE
tbeupper60s.
11:20 a.m. Sunday, VFD· to
· Manuel Road, brusl! fire at Dale
Rime property;
.
5:02p.m. Sunday, VFD to Port·
land Road, brusb fire at Darlene
By The Associated Press
Spencer UI, 20, of Morrow, driver Warner property.
Six people, including two in a one-car accident on a Warren
REEDSVILLE
moton:yclists, died in Obio traffic County road.
10:36 a.m. sunday, Eden Ridge,
DAYTON - Jason W· Cl ....
accidents. over the weekend, the
"'"• Mite Smith, St. Joseph's Hospital;
S'tate Higbway Patrol·said today.
20, of Dayton, motorcyclist in a
6 :08 p.m. Sunday, VFD to State
The patrol counted weekend one-vebicle crasb on f Mont- Route
681, brusb frre at Clifford
traffic ~eJ!tbs from 6 p.m. Friday gomery County road.
IIFFIN - Catherine Gase, 38, Adams property.
througb midnight Sunday.
RUTLAND
.
Thedead:
..
of Clyde, driver in two-vebicle
:0S p.m. Sunday, Maio Street,
7
accident on a Seneca County road.
SUNDAY
COLUMBUS - Brian Dicker- . Patrick Day; VMH.
MOUNT VERNON - Donald
J. Phillips 111,18, of Howard, wben son, 21, of Worthing!OIJ, driver in a
11 :47 ~~~~~n~ Mudfork
bis motorcycle collided bead-on one-vebicle accident on Interstate · Road,
brusb f~re on Harold Wi' ~
witb a car on· U.'S. 36 in Knox 270 in Fraoldili County.
pror,w··
.
County while being pursued by a
VAN WERT - David Evans,
:45 p.m. Sunday, Goose Creek
State Higbway Patrol cruiser for 49, of Columbus, driver in an ace!. speeding.
·dent involving two semi-tractor Road, brus~~ACUSE
SATURDAY
trailers on U.S. 30 inVan Wert
1: 23 p.m . Saturday, Spring
MORROW Gerald F. County. ·.
Avenue,.Angela Graham, VMH.
TUP-PERS PLAINS
5:14 p.iii. Saturday, Stale Route
7, Mart Proffitt. SL Josepb's Hos(Continued from Page 1)
trnil or blood evidence that be ~d pital.
began at tile crime scene, Ms.
lcnow bow be suffeied two cuts on
Simpson's Bundy Drive condo,
tbe finger. The prosecution could
play tb3\ tape for the jury as early
mioium, and ended at Simpson's
as today.
Brentwood estate.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Simpson's lawyers s~d. be cut .
He told lbem about tbe di~ov­
Saturday admissions - none.
bis finger at bome and remJured it
ery oh bloody glove on Simpson's
Saturday discharges - Kevin
in bis Cbicago hotel room, wben he
property, about big drops of blood
broke a Fiass afteM. bearing of bis
on the pavement and on hardwood Betzing, Pomeroy.
Sunday admissions - Evelyn
ex-wife s deatb~impson !lad
noors, and about footprints be saw
Mains,
Pomeroy.
flown to Cbicago tbe night of the
at lhe crime scene witb blood drops
Sunday
discharges- none.
killings.
on tbe left. as if someone bad bled
HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER
Vannatter, a lead investigator in
from a left-band wound.
·
DlKh•rxes
Mareb 17 - Betty
tbe case;'ied jurors Friday along a ~
"He became a su~t as soon
Wilt,
Virginia--took,
Joy Wright,
as I saw the glove,' Vannatter
Tina
Leach,
Gladys
Johnson.
Thel"It appeared to be a matcb to
Remarks to member said.
ma
Miller,
Priscilla
Par~s
.
Thor
tbe glove, the opposite glove ... I
. (Continued fronl Page 1) •
Carsey,
William
Andenon,
Juanita
.
bad seen earlier at Bundy.
Tennant,
Sbirley
Littlefield.
"And tben after ooming out into
that members would be allowed to
Dlsc'barges March '18 - Alice
read their meters every montb,
the driveway and finding the blood
Staten,
David Hall.
trail, he became a very strong susstarting April I. Meter reading bad
Discharges
March 1!1 pect.''
.
been handled by an out-of-state
Myrldene
Litchfield,
James Hively.
It was !ben, !be detective said,
firm, but immediately after the
(Published
with
permlssioo)
that Simpson returned from CbicaLawrence County meetings management announced members
go wilb a bandaged left middle finger.
·
. could read the meters every otber
When be saw Simpson's cut,
(Continued from Page 1)
month.
Vannatter said, he concluded "it
Members bave requested time to
Past regents recognized were
would appear be bad the injury that
speak witb the board at its monthly
Anna
Cleland, Ral,: Reynolds, Mary
caused the blood drops on the left
meeting Marcb 27 at BREC beadLu
Johnson,
Pbyllis Skinner, June
side of ihe footprints."
quarters.
Ashley and Grace Eii:b.
•
Of cnursc cats are smart. They Mega-skills workshop set
~he Daily Sentinel
A mega-sldlls worksbop will be
always wail til you're asleep before
held
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Southem
CUSPS %1:J.96e)
!bey scnllch ynu.
High School. . '

Wet weather will _g.r eet
arrival of spring tonight

Weekend accidents kill 6

Testimony set on wound .

Hospital news

A new look

Publidltd even af1ernoon. Monday through
Frida)'. Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley Publ~hing CompnnyiMull~mtdi o
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156.
Second clan po~nge paid ar Porrw=roy, Ohio.

MC"mbl:r: The Associated
New~paper Auociwion.

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•

Jobo E. Halliday,, 87, Frrst Ave., Gallipolis, died Sunday, Marcb 19,
1995 at bis residence. He was an attorney and active in tbe Democrat
Party. He was also a World Warn U.S. Army veteran.
Born Oct. 16, 1901 in Gallipolis, be was the son of the late John and
Maude Dunbar Halliclay.
.
Survivors include two daughters, Anne Jenkins of Gallipolis and Mary
'Pike of Tallahassee, Aa.
Besides his parents, be was preceded in deatb by bis wife, Marjorie
Biddle Halljday; and one son, Dr. Thomas Halliday.
.
Tbe sel'\lice will be beld II a.m. Tuesday at St. Peters EpiSCopal
Cbun:~ witb the.Rev ...Jobn Good officiating. Burial will follow in Mound
HiD Cemetery.
.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may made to tbe St. Peters Episcopal
·Churcb or Bossard Memorial Library.
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Dorothy .Farnham
Dorothy Lindsey Russell Farnbam, Cincinnati, died Wednesday,
Marcb 8, 1995 after a lengthy illness.

Earl C. Roush

.F rances Stewart
Frances Stewart, 79, of Mason, W.Va .• died Sunday, March 19, 1995,
at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va. She was a bomemaker, a
1933 graduate of Wabama (W.Va.) High School and a member or tbe
Mason United Methodist Church.
Born April 20, 1915 in Hartford, W.Va., she was a daughter of !be-late
Samuel and Mary Grinstead Aumiller.
.
Survivors include one daughter, Mary M. Fowler of Pomt Pleasant,
W.Va.; two sons, Jack (Opal) Stewart of Walton, W.Va., and Gary .
(Linda) Stewart of Point Pleasant; one sister, Maxine Arnold Wagner of
Lancaster; and 10 grandchildren; II great-grandchildren.
.
Besides her parents, sbe was preceded in death.by her busband,- Wrlbur
"Reuben" Stewart; and'one brother, JohnS. Aumiller.
Friends may call 4 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at Foglesong Funeral Home in
MasOn and one hour prior to tbe service ~p.m. Wednesday at the Mason
United Methodist Cburcb wilb tbe Revs. Damon Rbodes, Bennie Stevens
and Paul Fitzserald officiating.
·
Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasanl
The body will lie in state in the churcb one hour prior to the service .

DAVID ,Ci.~SVRDYKA, M.D.
Sportll 11\lurle!l • l"racturu • Work 11\lurtea

Think about this. By prearranging, you can inake
arrangements that might be difficult otherwise, and at
the same time avoid the differences of opinion among
· members of your family;

/

Troltlng a variety ol joint and muocle dfaonlero,
knee and hlp replacements,
f'ractu,.,. and adul reconllb'Uctlve OU'II")'

'.

•

You can make sensible decisions now, free from
pressure and confusion. You can also determine choices
and fix costs by the prearranging or preplanning of your
own funeral or that of a loved cine. If you are interested
in the choices of prearranging please contact the:

St'lai,ht .- q.ucke'l - ~oush' ·
.
~ utte'lal cflome · ·
. Ravenswood, WV • (304) 273-2152
~reneed - Atneed - Po•tneed

2907 Jackson Avenue
Polnt·Pieasant. West Virginia
otllce Hou.., 9 a.m. • ' p.m.. Mondllr lluuugh l'rldoy

. ror appolnbna.te call:

(304) 675-5971

IJd PLEASANT VALLlY HOSPITAL
....... The Fomily ol profeSJionols

Locally Owned &amp; Operated w/Complete Se~ice At One Location

Announcements
Turkey bunting clink set
A ftee bunting safety dlnie ror~.~~
turkey bunting will be held Saturday, Marcb 25, from 1-5 p.m. at tbe
Pomeroy Gun Cl~b in preparation
for next month's wild turkey sea-.
son. Turkey bunting safety, calling
demonstrations and turlcey bunting
techniques will be discussed. Pco-.
pie attending will receive a turlcey
bunting book and cassette tape. To
pre-register, contact Keitb Wood at
985-4400.
PO!!Jel'l!y ~quncll pgstponed
Pomeroy-Village Council's reg•
ular Monday meeting will be held
Tuesday, 7 p.m. in tbe Pomeroy
Municipal Building.
Guest speaker announced
Erwanna Jeffries will be guest
speaker at the 7;30 p.m. Wednes-·
day service at tbe Silver Run Baptist Chun:b, Chesbirc, On Monday
at 7:30 p.m., Gloryland Grass witlr
Ronnie Lemley will bave a
song fest.

Born. Aug. 25, 1909 in Pomeroy, sbe was the daughter of tbe Ia!!:
Helen Brown Lindsey Russell and Ralston Russell.
Mrs. Farobam attended Ohio Wesleyan University and graduated from
The Ohio State Universit)'. wbere sbe was a memb!:r of Pi Beta Pbi. In
1937 sbe was married in Grace Episcopal Churcb, Pomeroy, toW. Ray- Youth League slgnup
The Middleport Youtb League·
mond Farobam in a double wedding witb her sisrer, Mary Russell and
will
have a meeting at 6 p.m.
W.H.H. ''Tippy" Dye. Mr. Farobam was Mr. Dye's high school coaCh and
Wednesday
at Middlcport Council
each were honored in Pomeroy in the 1960s with special days celebrating
room.
All
coaches
and otbers inter-·
their achievements in sports and life.
.
'
csbld
are
asked
to
attend.
· Tbe Farobams moved to Ciocinnatf in 1944, where She was associated
with The Lotspeich School as assistant to the principal for 15 years. She
Chapter to meet
;
also was actively involved in supporting tbe cultural arts and ber church.
Preceptor
Beta
Beta
Cbapter,
Besides her husband, Mrs. Farobam is survived by qne daugbter, Lindsey Farnham (Siegfried).Ein of Lexington, Ky.; two si~U:rs, Helen Russell Beta Sigma Phi Sorority .will meet
Mitchell of Sarasota, Fla., and Mary Russell Dye of Port Charlotte, Aa.; Thursday, 6 p.m. at Grace Episcopal parish bouse.
her brother, Rlll:;.ton (Bruz) Russell of Columbus; and three grandsons.
Memorial clllitributions may be sent to St. Thomas Episcopal Cburch,
100 Miami Ave., Terrace Part, Ohio 45174; Cincinnati Nature Center, Special meeting
A special meeting for Racine
Milford, Ohio, 45150; or Pi Beta Phi Foundation, 7730 Carondelet 333,
Village C!lu!lci! and the water
St. Louis, Mo. 63105.
board has been called for Tuesday
at 2 p.m. at Star Mill Park to dis•
cuss bidding on the water grant
project.
Earl C. Rousb, 66, of New Haveri, W.Va., died Saturday, Marcb 18,
1995 in Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
A construction worker, be was a member of Labor Local No. 543 of
Huntington. the American Legion Smitb-Capehart Post No. 140 of New
Haven, and was a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean Conl11ct.
Born Marcb 11, 1929 in New Haven, be was a son of Mary Holt Roush .
of New Hav~n, and tbe late Herman C. Roush.
Surviving In addition to bis mother are four sisters and brothers-in-law,
Lovella and Gerald Lebew of New Haven, Grace and William Roacb of
Meoominee, Mich., Geraldine and William Young of New Haven, lUld
Mae Roush of New Haven; and several nieces, nepbews, great-nieces and
great-nephews.
.
.Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in lbe Foglesong Fun.eral_ Home,
Mason, W.Va., with the 'Rev. Larry Gilland officraung. Burial ·will be m
lbe Sunrise MemOriatj(}ardens, witb full militllry service provided by_ tbe
American Legion of New Haven. Friends may call at the funeral tomgbt
from 7-9.

to plan ahead, you can bring peace of mind to your .
family at one of their most difficult times.

iJ

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsldt Meigs Courtly

John Halliday

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY
..

No lll ubscripdon by mail permitted in urens

where home clllrier service is availabll= .

--Area deaths~-­

~------------~----------~
By nature, we tend to put things off, but, by .taking time -

and 1he Ohio

PoSTMASTER : Se nd nddrc.u correcrions to
The Daily Seminel. I ll Coun Sc. Pomeroy,
Ohio4S769

Eleanor Smltb makes the presentation. Winners
In the history writing contest on the theme, "Living in America Before 1776," were pruented
pins,. certlficatn and DAR books. They were
Holly Broderick, fifth 1rader at Chester, left,
.and Krlstlo Brown, Meigs Junior High student.

GOOD CITIZENS RECOGNIZED - Jacob
Matthew Morris, a senior at Southern High
School, was the recipient of the Good Citizen·
ship Al'l'ard Saturday at the aJmual Clarter Day
luncheon of Return Jonathan Mei11 Cbapter,
Daughters of tbe Amerk:an Revolution. Regent

.·

NC&gt;v...,""'".....

_wv_

.

l""'l'l'WW

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,,....·"
•

.'

'

l!:ltctr(lllktC~•tton

�'

Monday, March 20, 1995

•

Sports

The Daily ~~~~~

By WENDY E. LANE
title in June ofl993.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - All
For one thing, his shorts were
the competitive fire was .tbere . on backward. The NBA logo that
Only the sbobting touch was miss- supposed 10 be on the front rigbt
ina.
leg of the Bulls' shorts was on Jor~
In bis dramatic return to the dan's back left leg.
game be couldn't stay away from ,
But on the defensive end of the
Micbael Jordan showed all the ele- court, it was as though be never
ments that made bim great - the left. Assigned to guard Reggie
double-pump fakes, the mid·air Miller, the league's best shooting
bangs, the explosive dribble, the guard post-Jordan, Jordan didn't
out-of-nowhere passes - in a tan· embarrass himself, even though
talizing reminder of what the NB A Miller fmisbed with 28 points in a
bad missed. He bad 19 points, silt game the Bulls never led.
assists, six rebounds and three
Jordan's best play of the game
steals in 43 minutes in his come- came in the third quarter wben be
back, a 103-96 Bulls loss .to the blocked 7-foot-4' Rik Smits from
Indiana Pacers in overtime Sunday. behind, stripping the ball and
His shooting was rusty. result· sprinting up the court for a driving,
ing in a 7-for-28 effort. With two tongue-wagging fmger-roll layup.
neat jumpers, be kept Chicago That basket, with 8:55 left in the
close in overtime, tying it 94-94, quarter, cut the Pacers' lead to 5().
then pulling' Chicago to 97-96 with 44, the-closest the Bulls got until
1:321efl
late in !be foprtb quarter.
"My timing was a little bit
With 19 seconds to play, Scottie
• off," Jordan said after the game. "I Pippen's three-pointer tied the
know it's not going to happen in game 92-92. With three seconds
one game, but bey, I'm back. I'm left, Jordan fouled Miller bard and
back for the love of the game.''
botb players went down . After
· · 'BUl Jorllan Clil!n't exactly pick staying down several secnnlls,
up where be left off in in his last Miller limped to the bencb with a
game, wben be led tbe Chicago right thigh contusion.
Bulls to their third slraigbt NB A
Jordan stayed down longer,

Guess. Rebind them are Ryan Buckley, Cb•rlle
Bissell, Jeff Stethem and Eddie Friend.

Reds' Johnson takes stabs at replacements
·will finish detertnining who will come in here, get their talk and
By~CHRIS S9ERIDAN
down."
AP Sports Writer
"It's a question I don't want to make up their replacement rosters. they're upset," replacement out·
Baseball staggered through answer," be said. "I just keep bop- 'Some minor leaguers have been fieJder Blane Fox said. "The worst
another weekenll of its own Diad ing; like everjone else, something playing in exhibition games along- thing you can do is (anger) everyside replacements, but not all of body, wbicb is what they did.' ' ·
Marcb.
will get solved."
There were 110 new strike talks
But for yet another day. man- those are committed to be strike·
Those 'who decline the offer will
scheduled, and Cincinnati Reds agement and union people stayed breakers wben.the regular season be sent to the minor league camp or
manager Davey Johnson became away from the bargaining table. No begins.
released.
Tbe Boston Red Sox on Sunday
!be latest to assail replacement ball new talks are scheduled, although
''It bas to be their decision.''
with Opening Day less than two union official Eugene Orza bas said called a meeting for minor-leaguers manager Kevin Kennedy said. "I
weeks away.
it's possible negotiations would and offered them the standard don't want to pu~ anybody in a
replacement incentives .,... a position they don't want to be in.
"It tboks as if this is the way resliiite Tuesday or Wedoesday.
it's going to be. This may be what
"I haven't beard from anybody $115,000 annual salary, a $5,000 I'll just say here is the opponunity.
we have to put up with. What a all weekend," management lawyer signing bonus •. $5,000 more for If you want it, it's there. If not, I ·
travesty," Johnson said Sunday.
Chuck O'Connor said Sunday.
making the roster and $20.000 in understand. ' '
"Normally, spring training is
Players and owners haven't severance pay - if !bey decide 1.9
·one minor leaguer who must
lively, vibrant. with a lot of energy. negotiated in tbc past 16 day~. play Clufifijl the regular season.
decide soon whether to play regular
The minor-leaguers also were season games is Mike Busch, a
It's not that these guys don't have Talks were supposed to resume m
energy. They're just not top-notch !be middle of last' week near Dis· offered ari extra $1,000 per month third baseman ·for !be Dodgers who
caliber," Johnson said, adding that ney World in Florida, but owners above their normal minor-league bit 27 homers at Class AAA Albube considered the skill level "Class called the talks off after they were salaries after the strike is settled querque last season. Buscb bit his
A league- mdependent Class A," summoned t~ Washington to ~ear and tbey are sent back to tbe fourth homer of !be spring Sunday
in a 5-4 victory over the Mets as
Johnson bas distanced himself · !bat the National Labor Relauons minors.
Players
who
bad
already
signed
from the replacement Reds who Board bad up.beld the .union's
Los Angeles improved to 13-4 replacement contracts were not the best record of the 27 teams
lost their fJrSt five games of spring unfair l~r practice charge.
training. Assistant manager Ray
Openmg Day IS ser for Sunday allowed to attend the meeting. playing this spring.
Fourteen games were played
Knight bas since led the team 'to night, Aprll 2, when_ the New_York Some- minor leaguers said' tbey '
eight wins in 10 games. .
·
Mets play the Flonda Marlins at thought the clgb's financial incen· Sunday and four others - all
involving splir5quadS ·-were canlives were roo low.
, Asked when be is going to Miami..
'·'We're out there upset. They celed,
become involved 38ain, Johnson
In tile m:;~;t 10 days .or so, clubs
said, "When my stomach seules
~.

Guess, Je.Sica Radrord, Amy Redovian, Rebecca
Evans, Jessica Kar.r, Pat&lt;y Ae!k_u and Nicole Net- .
son.

. . - ' ......
.

Rodman injures shoulder in motorcycle crash
o:\

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Den- going to have to step up a little Detroit on March 27. Then the
nis Rodman, the San Antonio higher, which they're capable of Spurs are at home against the Los
By The Associated Press
· nated Purdue 75· 73.
ed just before the buzzer to give !be Spurs' rebounder extraordinaire, doing. We're just going to give him Angeles Lakcrs on March 29, Mil·
separatp:l his shoulder· in a motor· some support."
·
Moten's mistake -calling Wolfpack the title.
Lawrence Moten did his impres·
·
waukee on March 31 and Phoenix ·
·cycle
accident
and
could
miss
the
.
The team does not fault Rod· 01i April2. .
sion of Chris Webber, and it helped timeout when bis team bad none . In other games Sunday, Nortb
man's track record for the accident,
knock Syracuse out .of the NCAA .left - was one of the more memo- Carolina trounced Iowa State 73· next month of the NBA season.
The Spurs are at a critical junc''He· was out on a beautiful James said.
rable gaffes in the NCAA tourney ' 51, Massachusetts defeated Stantournament.
·ture in the season. Their 44-18
Don Reid did his· impression of since Webber did the same thing in ford 75-53, Tulsa beat Old Domin- Texas day ... and apparently the
"It could .bave been anybody. It record matcbes the best record in
Lorenzo Cbarles, and it put the final seconds of Michigan's ion 64-52 and Mississippi State stop sign came up on bim a little was a great day ... tlle Hill Coun· franchise history ·after 62 games,
quick. He slatnll'led on bis brakes. try's a nice place. There were prob- which was set la~t year.
loss to Nortb Carolina in the 1993 downed Utah 78-64.
Georgetown inti! the Final 16. .
·
On a Sunday in wbicb the bigh· title gaine.
On Saturday, Oklahoma State His bike went down. He went ably lots of people riding motorcyRodman's absence will have a
Tbe blunder resulted in a techni- beat Alabama 66-52, Wake Forest down. He separated his right shoul- cles in the Hill Country," James "significant impact," James said.
ligbt clips looked a lot like ones
from championship games of years cal foul that allowed Arkansas to defeated Saint Louis 64-59, Ari· der, completely separated it, so said.
."He's one of the best players in
past, Syracuse and Georgetown tie the game with 4.3 seconds left, zona State beat Manhattan 64-54, he'll be gone two to four weeks,"
Tbe m1mmum two-week the league, and what be does on tlle
weren't tbe only teams to bave and the Razomacks went on to win Kentucky downed Tulane 82-60, Spurs coach Bob Hill said.
absence means Rodman will miss a court is invaluable," James said.
Dr.
Da.
v
id
Schmidt
diagnosed
their fates decided on mental mis- 96-94 in overtime.
home
game against Seattle Monday "Fortunately, we've got a deep
Virginia beat Miami, Ohio 60-54 in
takes and buz~-beating shots.
In !be Georgetown-Weber State overtime, Connecticut beat Cincin- 'Rodman with a third-degree sepa· and road games against New Jersey team and a lot of vets on our bench.
UCLA and Memphis also bad game, Reid lept through the air, naq·96-91, Kansas edged Western · ration of the acromioclavicular on Wednesday, Minnesota on Fri- Hopefully, the guys can step it up
last-second victories on the last of grabbed Allen Iverson's airbaii and .Kentucky 75-70 and Maryland beat joint in his right shoulder, team day. Milwaukee on Saturday. and and fill in the bole that this ere- .
spokesman Tom 'James said,
four straight days of tournament kissed a reverse layup off the glass Texas 82-68.
ates .• , •
adding
. that be was uncertain
games that whittled the field from and through the net as the clock
Tbe final 16 consis.ts of four No.
expired to give !be Hoyas a 53-51 I seeds. four No. 2s, a No. 3, two whether Rodman was alone ·at the
64 to 16 teamS.
Point guard Tyus Edney went victory.
No. 4s, two No. 5s and three No. time of the Sunday afternoon inciTbe winning basket was remi- 6S.
de.nt.
•
coast-to-roaSt and scored on· a short
Crow's on top of things.
The
accident
is
one
of
a
series
of
jumper over two defenders to ·give niscent of North Carolina State's
Play resumes Thursday night at
UCLA a 75·74 victQry !!Yer Mis- · dramatic viC\9!)' over HQUStQn in Oakland, Calif., and Binilingbam, mishaps and mis!J!:!mYiors associat·
Hoeflich's 'round the-bend.
souri. And Memphis' . David the 1983 national cbampionsbip Ala. Friday's regio.nal semifinals ed with the NBA's leading
Sands' in the past.
Vaughan scored on a put-back witb game wben Cbarles grabbed Derek are at East Rutherford, N.J., and rebounder.
1.1 seconds left as !be Tigers elimi· Whittenburg's airball and convert- KansaS City.
On Thursday. Rodman arrjved
Freeman's out in the woods.
in the second quarter of the Spurs'
Sunday's action
game against the Philadelphia
East Regional ·
He said he overslept when
76crs.
Massachusetts 75, Staoford 53
his
aiann
clock failed to go off. He
At Albany. N.Y., Reserves
never
left
the locker room during
Carmela Travieso and Tyrone
!be
SpurS'
112-86
victory.
Weeks helped UMass (28-4) to a
Rodman~ was suspended from
43-23 halftime lead. and the Min·
!be team for the first three gaufes
LEGAL NOTICE
utemen led by as many as 27.
Ibis
season
and
then
took
a
leave
of
Lou Roe. the AUantic-10 ConNotice is given that MFS lntelenet of Ohio, Inc. (MFS) has
The University of Rio Grande from Union College in Kentucky, ference player of the year. ·finished absence Nov. 12.
filed an application (Case No. 94-2019-TP-ACE) with the
He was again suspended Dec. 7
:softball and baseball teams kick off where be was the 1994 ·Kentucky with 16 points and eight rebounds
:their 1995 borne schedules this Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and became the school's leading when be failed to return from his
Public U@ties Commission of Ohio for a certificate of
·week.
·
Coach of the Year. Albury's Union · rebounder with 1,054, five more leave of absence for meetings with
public convenience and necessity to provide local
' Angelo Forte's Redwomen teams captured three KIAC titles than Julius Erving. Travieso fin- San Antonio coach Bob Hill. The
.begin their .regular season with a and three NAJA District 32 cham· ished with 13 points and Marcus Spurs activated bim from the sustelecommunications services including direct and resold
·double-header against visiting pionships during his time there.
Camby and Donta Bright bad 10 pended list Dec. I 0.
Hill said Rodman's excellent . switched local ~;xchange services and switched carrier access
'Marietta College today at 3:30p.m.
The 1995 Redmen are 54 in the
each. Dion Cross led !be Cardinal
physical condition coulc;l enhance
. Rio Grande completed a 10- wake of a nine-game road lrip in (20-9) witb 14 points.
services. MFS proposes to offer SI!Ch services in all or parts
his recovery. Rehabilitation was·
game swing through Aorida witb a the southeastern United States.
Tulsa 64, Old Dominion 52
of Adams, Athens, Belmont, Brown, Butler, Carroll,
:tour and six record. Four of those Albury says his team has offensive
' Tulsa's backcourt players, S~ea scheduled to begin today.
"He's feeling OK. He's disap:tosses were by one run. Forte says firepower, as evidenced by the 91 Seals and .Pooh Williamson, comChampaign, Clark, . Clinton 1 Coiumbiana, Cqshocton,
pointed it l!appened, cenainly ," be
-lie thinks his club bas the potential runs the Redmen scored tbrough
(See NCAA on Page 5)
said. ''The rest of the guys are just Cuyahoga, Delaware, Erie, Fairfield, Fayette, Franklin,
(o be very .successful this spring. the first nine games. They are on a
1be coach ·believes his offense and roll headed into Tuesday's home
Gallia, Geauga, Grcne, Guernsey, Hancock, Harrison,
strong pitching will be keys to vic- opener, having won five of their
Highland, Hocking, Jefferson, Lake, Lawrence, Licking,
lOry this seasQn.
last six outings.
Lorain, Lucas, Madison, Mahoning, Medina, Meigs, Miami,
Academic all-American Shelly
Albury's club includes seven
Whitaker returns as the team's top returning seniors. Veterans Rob
Momoe, Montgomery, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, Oltawa,
biner. The senior catcher bit .411 in Sbarfenaker and Phil Kubn anchor
Perry, Pickaway, Pike, Portage, Preble, Ross, Sandusky,
1994. Forte says senior pitcher the pitching staff. Brothers ShanStarr Philpot will anchor a potent non and Shawn Bossert will be
Affiliated with
Scioto, ' Seneca, Shelby, Stark, Summit, Trumbull,
pitching staff. Seniors Char Peart behind the plate and in the outfreld, .
RAYMONI;) JAMES &amp; 1\SS.OCIATES, Inc.
Tuscarawas, Union, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Wood and
and Jane Jess will provide addition- · respectively. First baseman Jason
MEMBER
NEW
YORK
STOCK
EXCHANGE
al leadership fQr the 1995 team. ·
Wyandot counties, Ohio.
·
Wright and third sacker Rick Pat·
CLIENT SERVICES INCLUDE:
·Forte's Redwomen wrapped up terson will keep an eye on the lines
Portfolio !l'lanagement
Any interested person, firtn, corporation, or entity wishing
the 1994 season with a Z6-t8 mark. in the Rio infield. Trey Cassell is
Stocks,
Bonita
&amp;
Mutual
Funds
The club finished third in the Mid- . expected to provide some offense
to intervene should file with the Commission and serve on
Tax·Free Investments
Ohio Cooference at9·5.
asDH.
MFS a motion for intervention and an accompanying
IRA'I
The Redwomen play another
Albury added that three Redmen
Annultlea
•lneurenca
memorandum in support on or before April 3, 1995. The
doubleheader at Charleston on are pro prOspects - Jason Benyo,
Retirement Planning
Tuesday before beading to West David Robinson and Marvin
Commission has scheduled this matler, Case No. 94-2019Virginia Wesleyan's tournament on Perkins - will be watcbed closely
TP-ACE, for hearing at 10:00 a.m;, on May 11, 1995, at the
Saturday and Sunday.
Ibis spring.
.
The Redmen conti1,1ue their
offices of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180 East
1-800-281 -7500
or 428-2222
New bead baseball coacb homestand Wednesday against·
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215-3793. Further
Wayne Albury makes his home Alderson-Broaddus College. The
· 417 Grand Park Dr., Suite 105
coacblng debut on Tueaday at 2:30 f1tst balf of the doubleheader gets
information may be obtained by contacting the Public'
PMC Building (beside the Olive Garden) Parkersburg, WV 26101
p.111. against Ohio Valley College.
underway at 1 p.m. The Redmen
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
·Albury ~omes to the Redmcn will rravelro Marietta Saturday.

Rio diamond teams
:.t o play first home
:contests this week

holding his teft knee, but was on thing at stake for the Pacers, who
the court when the game went iniO have woo six of seven and lead the
overtime. The crowd at Market Central Division. That much was
Square Arena actnally booed him.
obvious when, after Jordan's frrst
The Pacers put the game away two sbots bounced off the rim, a
when Chciago's Luc Longley fan yelled, "Go back to Birmingfouled Byron Scott as he drove to ham.''
It was bard to say who started
the basket, the ball bounced in imd
off
worse, Jordan or the rest of his
Scott bit the floor, and tie coovctt·
teammates.
ed the free tlirow for a 102-96 lead
He didn't look nervous, but be
with 29.8 seconds left.
,
still
missed bis first five shots,
Jordan scored Chicago's only
including
an open 19-footer. Look·
points of the extra period.
ing
like
they
were meeting eacb
There was a crackle of electricity when the Bulls stmde onto the other for the first time, the Bulls
court for warmup_s. and Market missed their first five shots, fell
Square Arena crowd squealed with behind 13-2 and were 5-of-19 in
delight at Jordan's every pregame the fU'St quarter.
Finally, Jordan connected on a
layup.
He bad been there before, bear. 18-foot jumper from the left wing
ing liis name announced as a mem· wi~ 4:04 left before halftime. By
ber of the BuUs starting lineup. but then, though, Jordan was breathing
it wasn't quite the same. For one bard and bending over with his
thing, be wasn't wearing No. 23, babds on his knees whenever play
which bangs from the ceiling of stopped.
He seemed to get his second
Chicago's United Center after the
wind in the second balf, thou(!b.
Bulls retired it last year.
.
In his second coming, Jordan is . scoring four points iii the tb1rd
No. 45, the same number be wore quarter wbile playing nine minutes
as a Double-A outfielder witb !be of the period.
Tbat be went 1-for· 7 in the
Bimiingham Barons.
fourtb
quarter hardly mattered.
This was a game with someJordan was back in the game.

On the spring training scene,

&lt;:bris

Arkansas, Ge_
orgetown and
UCLA victors .in nail-biters

The Daily Sentlnei--P~

·Pacers_beat BuilL 103-96 in_o__vertime_

Eastern"athletes honored
at wint$r awards_banquet
More th3n 50 athletes in the Eastern High Scboot Buckley (Best Free Throw Percentage) and Eddie
winter sports program were honored Sa~urday nlsJ!t Friend and B~ Buckley (110 Percent Award).
in the higb school gymnasium with a nice banquet
Nell, girls coach Scott Wolfe and assistants Paul
and awards ceremony.
Brannon and Penny Aeiker honored members of their
Gary Holter booster president gave !be welcoming
resenoe and district championship varsity girls club.'
address and inn vocation prior to the potluck style
Members of the 1&lt;&gt;-7 reserve club honored were
dinner. Holter then introduced coacbes of !be corre· Joanna Gumpf, Michelle . Caldwell, Crystal
sponding sports teams.
Holsinger, Crystal Morris, Tracy White, Martie
First, cbeerleading adviser Lori Hensley intraHolter imd Beth Bay.
duced"members of ber varsity and reserve cheerlead·
Members ot the district championship varsity
ing squad - Bekky Mcintyre, Jessica Chevalier,
Lady Eagles were honored with introductions and a
Melissa Dempsey. Heather Well, Angie Bissell,
standing ovation. Team members included Amy·
Kelly Osborne and Kelli Bailey. Bailey was honored
Redovian, Jessica Radford, Melissa Guess, Jessica
with the Coacbs • Award, while Mcintyre claimed
Karr, Nicole Nelson, Rebecca Evans, Patsy Aeiker,
Most Spirited, Most Creative and Most Outstanding
Joanna Oumpf, Michelle . Caldwell, Crystal
Cbeerleading awards. Heather Well shared !be Most
Holsinser, Crystal Morris, Tracy White, Martie
Cre;~tive Award with Mcintyre.
Holter and Be.th Bay. Matt Boyles was the manager,
Next, volunteer assistant coacb Bryan Durst gave
while Josh Hager was the Eagle mascot. Jill Holter
awards to members of bis freshman basketball team
and Susan Brewer were the scorekeepers.
;.._ Corey Yonker, Jeremy Kehl, Travis Lodwick,
Wolfe praised his .club1 ·~~o~r~an~~~~:~~~~o!~~~~-'-~
,Nick Spurloclc,..Jo&lt;:y Weelcs,_Wes.San~ and Chris
and.Jbeir dedication and h
Buchanan. Durst praised his team for their efforts . . season. Wolfe also challenged the lroops to work
SENIOR AWARDS - Senior aW.rds went to
and stressed the importance of a freshman program at
bard in the off-season to make a return rrip to the
Amy Redovlan, Jessica Radford and Melissa
th~ srhfVll
. S
· regional.
·
· Keserve meniOr Chris tout then made presenta"It's harder to stay on top than it is to get there
lions 10 members of his 1994-95 boys' reserve squad because the teams you beat along the way are all try·
- Cliff Stevens, Kyle Ord, Rickie Hollon, Josh ing harder anjl working bard in the off season to
Casto,· Eric Dillard,
Bailey, Daniel Otto and knock you off,'' he said-"
Steve Durst. Stout prlUSed bls club for a rme season
Eastern lost to eventual state champion Jackson
and cbal!enge&lt;! them to do well at the varsity level. . Center, a 77-68 vic~r over East Canton in Saturday's
Boys vars1ty basketball coacb _Tony Deem th~n state title game. Jackson Centerpractices 5-5 112
passed out awards to membe~ of ~IS team - Charlie hours every day during !be ~n and has an estab.
B1ssell, R,yan »uckl~y. &amp;!die Fnend,_Jeff S~the~, lised summer program and weight training program. .
M.1c.!me! Barnett, Bnan Bowen, Travi!__Cl!l'...l!.s,_E..I!C---·-Wolfe-cited this as tile primereason JC was playing
Hill, M1cah Otto, Jason Sheets, Kyle Ord and Eric in Columbus Saturday night.
.
.
D1Uard.
.
· Wolfe concluded; "I'm not asking you to practice
Deem !(VIewed the seaso~, saying we started_ !be . 5·5 112 hours every day, but 1 am ~ng you to do
year w1tb _'v~'l b1gb ~pec~uon:;. but never realized whatever it takes to get to the top. It's up to you."
our potential. Deem Cited b1g wms over state power .
Seniors Amy Redovian, Jessica Radford and
Wellston at Wellston, where Eastern became one of Melissa Guess earned Leadersbip-1IusUe awards for
only ~ve teams to defeat Well~IOn at ~om~ m the outstanding service to the Eastern program. Other
past -SIX y~s and Deem also Cited a b1g wm over awards were Jessica Karr (Best Free !brow percent·
Alexander 10 ;Alban~.
..
age and Most Steals), Nicole Nelson. (Most
. Deem pr:used b1s club for their bard work and Improved), Rebecca Evans (Best Field Goal Percent·
mdicated they laid the groundwork f~ future Eastern age), Patsy Aeiker (she got the Most Rebounds
teams to come.
. .
award for her new school record-25/193 season total)
R,yan .Buckley, Charlie BISsell: Jeff Stethem and and Least Turnovers "Apple Turnover Award."
Edihe F!'end were honored as semor members _of the
Honored as second-team Associated Press all-dis·
team. Bissell earned pr81se as a fust-team B!l·~trict, trict and bopomble-mention aU-District 13 was Karr,
firsHeam a!~- TV&lt;; ~d a second-team DIStrict 13 . while Evans and Aeiker earned special-mention
.~lection, while _claimmg the Most ~ebounds Aw~d- Associated Press all-district honors.
· B1ssell was agam honored for bavmg a 1,000,pomt ·
Karr was also named first team all-Conference
career.
.
. .
TVC. Radford and Redovian were· named as senior
. Other awards ~ere gtven to Eric Hill (~est Defeo- District 13 all-stars and all- TVC picks.
s1ve Award) Bnan Bowen (Most ASSists), .Ryan
SPECIAL AWARDS- Earning special
awards at Ea~tern 's winter ~ports banquet wen;
IN NCAA tourn,a ment action,
,
these members or the Division IV Southeast Dis·
trlct champion Eagles. Pictured are (L·R) Melissa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In their effort to spoil Jordan's return

Pa e--4

'

l.ocal
color

••

Times-Sentinel

.I

.

Tracy captures Australian lndyCar Grand Prix flag
SURFERS PARADISE, Aus·
trldia (AP) - ·Michael Andretti lost
second gear during the Australian ·
IndyCar Grand Prix about the same
time Paul Tracy realized be could
salvage some lost pride.
When the second Indy-car race
of the year-ended Sunday under
threatening skies on the .Surfers
Paradise street course, the 26-yearold Tracy, attempting to atone for a
rust-lap crash at the Miami rac'e on
Marcb 5,took the cbeckered.flag.

Andretti, Tracy's Newman-Haas race crasb. "'fbere are always
teammate and the Jl?le sitter, was going to be critics, but I have to
.paSsed by Tracy w1th eight laps to thank the team for believing in me.
"I just wanted to be patient
go when transmission problems
today and take care of the equipcaused him to lose second gear.
To make matters worse, Andret· 'ment so I would be there at the
ti, trying to bold off a bard-charg- end."
Tracy took 1 hour, 58 minutes,
ing Bobby Rabat for second, bit the
wall on the final lap and did not 26 seconds to cover 65 laps of the
finish the race. Andretti also led in 2.804-mile track, a total of 182.26
Miami before being forced out with miles, proving a point to himself
suspension problems. .
and his critics. Tracy bad a rough
"I made a fool of myself in time in qualifying at Surfers ParMiami," Tracy said Of bis , first-

·adise, spinning out several times
and managing only a ninth-place
start on the grid.
.
It was Tracy's third win in his
last four_ starts @n!! be 11veraged
92J35 mph in his Lola-Ford.
Rahal finished secQnd in tbe
Marlboro Lola-Mercedes and Scott
Pruett was third in his Lola-Ford.
Then came Mauricio Gugelmin of
Brazil, Danny Sullivan and 1994
PPG Cup champion AI Unser Jr.,
who was sixth despite two stop·
and-go pe.nalties.

Scoreboard
Phoeniz .t Orlando, I p.m.
Golden State at Mi!WIUII:ce, 8:30p.m.
SeatUe at Houlloa, 1:30 p.m.
Washinaton at PcrUIDd, 10 p.m.
•

Basketball

NBAstandings
•

NCAA Division I

EASTERN CONFERENCE
'

men's tournament

All•de .,...,._

.»:
a-Orlando ............ .. 41

lam

lao

.tl8

x-New Yort ...........42 21 .667
New Jersey ............ 26 39 .400

S
22

L

17

.738

Ba~ton .................... 25

40

:315

23

Miaml .... ................ 24
Wuhiagton ............ l8
l'tllllldefphl• ........... l7

41
46
41

.369
.281

24
29.S

.262

31

_ Ctnjrallltfill&lt;&gt;o
Indiana ...t; ..... ...... ...40 24
Charlotte ........ - ... ....W

.15lS

25

.615

CLEVELAN0 ....... 36 21

.563

Chlcqo ...: .. ...... ...... 34

32
Atlanlo .................. 32 32
Mllwaum ....... ..... lS 41
Detroit ....................123 42

.S

.lOO
.379

San Antonio ........... «

Howton .·................ 40

II
l4
33

Denver ............ ....... 31
DaJID ............... ... 25 37
MlnDCaota .. ............ l9 47

s.......,.•• llidlon

Kentucky 12, Tul10e 60

s1111dar'•lldloD

Iii

.727
.710

Georaetowa SJ, Weber Stale Sl
North C.olina 73, Iowa Stale Sl

.

•

Midwest Regional

S•l•dar'• Ktloa
.... _ Virj:i"iiil60, Mlifftl, Dlio S4 (01) ""
Kansu 7S, Western Kentucty 70

2

Sund17'1 Mllon
Menfhi•7S, Purdue 73
Arpjlou 96, Syncuoe 94 (01)

7

.625

16

.414
.403
.281

21

29

Wesl Regional
s.rw•.,.'• Hllon

P•Uic DI.V"-"
l·PhoeDil ........... ... 49

J7 .7Al

Seattle ............. .......« 19
L.A. t.Wn .... ,...... 39 2l

Porlllllld ................. ll 21
s""""'oto ............ ll 3l
Golden Statc .......... 21 43
L.A . Cllppm ........ .14 l2
z-c:liochcd pl1yofr berth

.691

3.5

.609
.ll6
.484
.321

9
12.l
17
l1

.212

3l

Collnecticul96, CinclnnaU 91
Maryf&amp;Dill-2, TeW 61
sunct 11 'a.c~

MiJIIJJippl Slole 71,111ah 64
UCLA 75, Mittowi 74

Ohio H.S.

S.turuy's roglonaliiDals

S•turd'ly'• scores
Sealtlc Ill. Dwolt 110
New York 92. New Jcne~ 91 {01)
AUallta 122, Phoenizll7
S1.11 Antonio 1}6, DaJIM 106
Denver 110, Portland 90

(01)

104

Indiana IOl, O!lcaao 96 (OT)

Wuhlnaton 96, CLEVEt.ANil 90
Milwaukee93, BoJtOD94
MIDDtOOio 96, L.A. Cllppm 93
HOUlton 114, Ptdlld~lphial03
Pboenis.l2l,MJ&amp;mi 117(0Tl
Golden Stale 117, Decroitll$
· L.A. I.atm 121,Saaamemto 116

Tonight'• game•

L.A. CIIpp&lt;naA~..Ia.1 :30p.m.

· DalluatCLEVELAND. 7:30p.m.
Sanl• 11 Su AAtonio,l:lO p.m.
Denver ll Sr.crameato,l0:30 p.m.
Tue~day'lpmet

Ow-lotte at New York, 7:30p.m.
llldtuo 11 MiW, 7,30 p.m.
N~ Jeney II Detrvlt, 7:30p.m.

.

Zllle~vllle

,.

II, Wand U.din&amp;63

llL lil liA
13 · 87 "76

29 78
l 27 16
6 26 66
3 2ji 69
2 24 7l
N.Y. lalmdm ... 9 IS J 21 68

DIYWonU
Clyde (21-j:) ·YI. Cambrld&amp;e (16·9) ,
Friday, 11 a.m.
Oeveland Villa ADaei•St. J01eph (20·
.S) va. Ciaclnnati McNid\olu (U-9). Fri·
dly, 2 p.m.
·
QwnpionJhip Slll.urdly, .S p.m.

3

74
7!

61
16
10
IS

Norlhcut Dt•Won
PittiiHJtf,h ......... 19 I 2
Quob« ............. II 6 J

40 119
l9 102
JJ 81

91
68

B~»toD ..... ........ . 14 II

2

Butrllio ............. II

S 27 63

65
6l

l

2l

87

4
4

24 61. 74
12 l8 !6

10
MoiiUall ........... 10 12
llartfoo:l .. ."......... 1013
Otlowa ... ... ..... 4 18

DIYt.lon m
Wheclenbutl (22· 3) Yl . Columbu•
Hartley (21-5), Thuilday, 6 p.m.
·ornille (22 -3) v1 . Ontario (21 · 4),
Thurlday, 9 p.m.
0Wnpio111hip SKurday,l p.m.

68

,NCAA tournament action...
(Continued from Page 4)
"I guess I thought we bad one
bined _for 50 points and unloaded a (timeout),' ' Moten said.
barrage of second-half three-point·
Scottie Thurman went 1-of-2
er~ to help the G!llden Hurricane from the line on the technical free
(24·7) advance to the final )6 for throws to send it to overtime, then
the second year in a row.
bad a three-point shot, a 2-point
Seals finished with a season- basket and a free !brow in !be last
high 31 points and WiUiamson bad 2:07 of overtime as the Razorbacks
19. Mike Jones led Old Dominion '(29-6) kept alive their hopes or
(21-12) with 19 points.
repeating as national champions. ·
West Regional
Southeast Regional
- Mississippi SL 7g, Utah 64
Georgetown 53, Weber St. 51
At Tallahassee; Fla., Reid'$
At Boise, Idaho. Erick Dampier
winnin~ basket was Georgetown's bad 21 points, 10 rebounds and a
only field goal in the final eight career-high eight blocked shots as
minutes, but the Hoyas (21-9) held the Bulldogs (22· 7) advanced to
the Wildcats to 35 percent shooting the fmal 16 ror the fJrSt time.
and forced 22 turnovers.
Darryl Wilson scored 24 of his
"I was trying to stay on the 32 points in the second half as Misopposile side, hoping that the · sissippi State (22-7) built a 19rebound would come off the otber point lead and ended an 11-·game
side. When be shot it, I was just winning streak by Utah (28~).
trying to get my bands on the
UCLA 75, Missouri 74
ball," Reid said.
.
UCLA (27-2) trailed 74-73
Weber State (21 '9), !be No. 14 when Cameron Dollar inbounded
. seed, was bidding for its second the ball to !be 5-foot-10 Edney. He
upset and nearly got it. Ruben dribbled 94 feet in 4.8 seconds and
Nembbard went to the foul line got off a sh'o rt jumper over 6-9
with 7.4 seconds left but missed the Derek Grimm and 6·1 Jason
front end of a l·aud·l, leaving tlic Sutherland as the clock expired.
score tied.
"1 was almost i n awe," Edney
N. CaroUna 73,.Iowa St. 51
said . ''J!)si . ~..gn:at, feeling came
North CMOli!la (26-5) trailed by over me when I saw it drop through
14 before recovering with runs of !be net. This is the sweetest."
14-0, 11-0 and 21 -4 to turn this
.Paul O'Liney led !be Tigers (20game into a blowout. The Tar 9) with 23 points.
Heels clinched tbeir 14th trip in 15
Saturday's action
years to the regional semis.
East Regional
Oklahoma St. 66, Alabama 52
"Around our place, !bey take it
for granted we'll make the final
At Baltimore, Md., Bryant .
16," roach Dean Smith said.
Reeves scored 26 points and Randy
Fred Hoiberg, averaging 20.2, Rutherford nailed four three-point·
scored 12 points for Iowa State ers in a pivotal second-half surge
(23-10).
for Ok.lafioma State (25-9): AlabaMidwest Regional
rna (23-10) was 2-for-20 from
Memphis 75, Purdue 73
tbree-point range.
·
At Austin, Texas, the Tigers
Wake Forest 64, Saint Louis 59
(24-9) beld for the last shot after
Tim Duncan scored 25 points .
taking possession with 32.6 sec- and Randolph Childress added 21'
onds left. Chris Garner sliced as top·seeded Wake Forest (26-5)
toward' the basket and released a won its 12th straight game. Saint
leaning jumper !bat ticked off !be Louis (23-8) fmished 9-for-39 from
rim and into !be bands of Vaughn, three-point range, well off its 40'
who caught and released the ball in percent avemge.
one motion from about five feet
Southeasl Regional ·
Arizona St. 64, Manhatlan 54 ·
•away.
"It bounced up high and I was
At Memphis. Tenn.. Ron Riley·
able to get tbc rebound," Vaughn scored 21 points and Mario Bennett
said. "I just put !be ball up and added 17 as Arizona State (24-8)
tbere was a rush of emotions after rallied past Manhattan (26-5). Tbe
lbat,''
_ --· _
--· _jaspers opened the second halt
Purdue (25-7) was the last Big with five quick fouls and hit only:
10 team left. Five others lost in three sbots .from the floor in the
first-round games .
fJrst 12 minutes.
Arkansas 96, Syracuse 94 (OT)
Kentucky 82, Tulane 60
Moten's blunder came after
Kentucky (27-4) used an 18-0
after Lucious Jackson· stole an fU'St·balf run to take control of the
inbounds pass with the Orangemcn game as Tulane (23-10) went 15
(20-lOl ahead 82-81.
possessions without a point. ·

THE

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I»Tliii011IV

Cantr.JIHYIIt.

Spriaafield Cathplic Central (21-4) v1.
Delphos St. John (10-14 ), Thunda~. II
&gt;ITL

Findlay Ubelty-Benton (25-0)

.»: L IJ

Philadelphia ...... l.S 9
N.Y. Ranaen .... 1312
New leney ....... JII2
Wuhlnaton ...... 10 11
Floridl. .............. 11 14
T""'P' Bay ...... I I ll

VI .

Iam

Dal·

ton (22 · 3), Thanday, 2 p.m.

ChllJ1lioDihip Slll.urday, II • .m.

.»:
,L I lll. lil
18 6 2 38 100
16 9 2 l4 102
15 I 2 32 93
1311 S ll II

Dallu. ............... I 0 J] 4

-

~ehioiligh-school

.

Detroit ..............
Cllicoao ............
St. l..oui1 ...........
Toronto .............

girls' state finals

~~winnipe~ ~..

24 13

· 914 4- 22 - n

liA
S7
66

69
81
74 ,

99 -- · -

Pildl\e Dltillon

Cllipry ....... .... 12 II l

Dlvblon I
Xenia Beavmreek SO, L&amp;tewood 39

DtVtslon 0
Clo. 1\ol'f 80«)o 64, Elida 41 .

Echmntoo ......... II 13
. Vaacouvcr ........ 110
S111looe ....... .-.... 10 ll
Loa Anaclea ..... . I 13

l9 91

19

2
I

24 7S
24 12

9.1
92

2

l2 l9

5

21

o\llohrim ....... ,... 11~ l

9l

HERE FoR

T~a

Bay 2, New lctiCy I

OU.wa 4, Buffalo 3 (OT)

wood Fairview 62

Moottooll,Qucboc4

Division IV

WuhJoil.on 4. N.Y. Raoaenl
l'tlillldelphl• 4, Florido 3 (01)
Toroalo 5, 1..oa AnpJ.ea 3

Jacboa Cellttt 7'1, H. Canlaa 68

Hockey

.

YouR CI-!IL.D WHJ:N You NEED Us

Mary Anne Villegas, M.D.
John F. Wiltz, M.D.

Boll.oo 4, N.Y. l1l111den 3 ·

Akron St. VJoceDt·SI. Mary 66, Sher·

.

.

80

79 101

17 61

HILDREN'S
-·-----CLINfC .---

Saturd•y'• acure1

Dlvlsloo Ill

Sunday's scores

Dlnoiool .

ClevdaDd HtJ. 74, Euclid 61
Spriaa. Nonh 43.B•¥erueet 41
Wetterville N. 70, To! . St. frucil 67

Sundily's scores

OllllolU&gt; 108, UW&gt;

boys' scores

Allanilc DtYIIIon

Iam

Clevelud HeiabLJ (24-1) VI. SprinJ·
field North (24-1), FridiJ, 9 p.m.
CtiampioliilillfSiturday. 9 p.m.

AriZDDI State 64, Manhattan S4

16.5

L lao

II

'----- ..
· Soutbeut Regional

I
16

MWw•l IM•IIIIon

.»:
Utah .......... ..., ......... 41

Sundar'• atllo•
MW:achusetll 7S, Stanrord 31
Tulsa 64, Old Dumlnion ~2

1.s

WFSI'ERN CONFERENCE

lam

Salurcby'alldlori
Oklahon. Stme 66, Alabama S2
Wake Fora~ 64, SaJat LoW. S9

4

.m

.354

Eas1 Regional

-....

Weaterville North (23-3) n Zaoel;vUie
(24·0), Friday. 6 p.m.

SURROUNDED - Arkansas frnntman Corliss Wllli.rnson (34)
Rnds his path to the basket contested by Syracuse's Luscious JIIC!kson
(far left) and Lawrence Moten in the second bait of Sunday's NCAA
second-round ganie In Austin, Texas, where the Razorbaelu won !16!14 in overtime. (AP)
·

NHLstandings
EASTERN CQNFEREN.CI';

O!lcqo l. Wioolpo1l
Tarrpa Bay 6, Buffalo 1
Piltlbu1Jh 4 , Ottlwl 3
New Jeney 4, Bostoo 3 (Of)
Sao lote 5, Calpry l

Suite 215, PVH Medical Office Building
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV

51. (..gub; 4, Aaahe\m 2

DlnolooD

Cia . McNichOiu S9, Xetterina .-\Iter
otn.~..

m

Col. lbdloy 72, Valley View 61
Oullrio 86, Delio 61
OmWe 71, Youaa. Mooaey 66
Wbeelenii10157.Mialonl S6

•

ot.hloafV ·
Daltoo 70, Tulelnwu Cath. 57
Dotpbot SL lobo 69, Portamouth E. 66
(01)
Ul&gt;ody-Beotoo Sl,l'l,..... 41
Sprtoa. COihllllc 67, R•lo l6

John A. Wade, M.D.

Slat. toumamonl palrlnp

£aU 304-875-1244 for i\ppt. or Information

AI St. Jolaa A.r.... Ci.... u

(304) 675-4i07

Complete Mediccii/Surgical. Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV. ·
~

Meualler of Aetna PJiiO' A Feder.. M

ul PPO

.

-

We accept aBBignment from private inaura11ct and Medicaid

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�~-..L.-.o-----T--==h=-=-e ~ DailY- Sentipel

y_Thellen

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BULLETIN BOARD
'6" column lack weekdays
•aoo column Inch Sunday

6

Page

SSA ·prosecutes individuals for fraud

. -.,

~

. GIRL SCOUT WEEK - Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton re·

cendy proclaimed March 12·18 as Girl Scout week in the viDage. Here,
. .from left, Rachel Taylor, Bridget Johnson, Ashley Payne and Beth
·Hysell watcb on as Horton signs the proclamation.

·----.- -

-.-

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~

:= vicki Ault to head
sorority chapter

By ED PETERSON
Sodal Sec:artty
Ma11111er In Athem
Attempting to defraud die Social
Security Administration (SSA) can
lead to criminal investigatiOD and
prosecution, with stringent penalties for conviction, including
imprisonment, fmes, and lll8lldatory restitution of funds. Additional
fmes may result from subsequent
civil suits. One individual wbo was
prosecuted for filing multiple ·
fraudulent disability claims
received all four of these types of
penalties following his conviction
01! ooth criminal and ciYII cbatges.
In addition to state-of-the-art
systems security safeguards to proteet your records, SSA bas ttained
employees nationwide to detect
potential fraud situations.
·
Fraudulent activity can take var-..
ious forms. Individuals may file
false claims or make false state·
meots, or ronceal factors such as
work that will affect their entitle-

meat to benefits. Claimants may mother, who lllld died many years
also falsify medical evidence in ago. Instead of criminal prosecuorder to establiJh their eligibility tion, the woman was cblrged under
the Program Fraud Civil Remedies
for dissbility benefits.
Noo d•im•nts may also attempt .Act. whereby pen~ties may triple
to defraud these prognmlS lbrougb the amount or dalllqes that can be
theft and forgery of benefit cbecks, assessed. In. this case, the judge
or by concealing the death of bene- imposed a civil penalty of
f~eiaries with intent to,fmuduleotly $196,800, payable to Social Securironlinuc tcceiving. their payments. ty.
Nine individuals in Alabama
Other examples involve representalive payee misuse or funds received were investigated f9r stealins
on behalf of anolber. lbe fllinR of Social Security benefit cbecks. The
fraudulent Social Security applica- checks were stolen from mailboxes
lions, and schemes to print or sell and negotiated using false identification documents. Tbe individuals
Social Security c:art!sAll suspected fraull cases are were charged with various counts
referred for investigation ape! pros• of possession of stolen mail,
ecution. Tbe efforts of alert SSA forgery of Government cbecks, and
employees conbibuted-to the sue- aiding and abetting. All nine pleadcessful prosecution of the follow- ed guilty and received sentences of
up to lS months in jail, five years
ing cases·
-A Washington, D.C. woman probation,' and were ordered to
was investigated for receiving make full restitution, totalins
widow's benefits exceeding $24,280.
-A bookkeeper for a Georgia
$60,000 that were issued to ber

Numerous donations were made · Brown, was. read in wbicb sbe
wben Lewis Manley Auxiliary Unit stressed membership. Ella Dun263, 'American Legion, !!let recent- smore, legislative chairman, spoke
on tbe work of tbe American
ly at Dale's Restaurant.
Tbe group contributed to tbe Legion Auxiliary.
Florence Richards made a
American Cancer Society, the ·
Heart Association, Easter Seals, report from the Firing Line magaUSO, tbe Vietnam Veterans and zine whicb reported on tbe govern·
Paralyzed Velaaos.
men I' s responsibility for creating a
Lula Hampton was hostess for national Prisoner of War and Miss.· ..
the meeting. The bulletin from the ing in Action Commission to guide
Eighth District president, Nancy policies and operation ronceming

nursills home p!Caded suilty to 76
counts of embezzlement and three
rounts of tax evasion afrer investigation showed that 132 Social
Security checks for patients bad not
been depoSited in die nursing home
acrounL The woman was sentenced
to 33 months in jail, three years
probalioo, and was Cl'lleRd to make
restitution of $74,943.
SSA takes most seriously its
responsibility for protectins the
ronfidentiality of personal informa·
lion about wase earners. Sopbisti·
cated systems safeguards monitor
employee access to computer
records and establish an audit tJail ·
eacb time a sensitive file is
accessed. A review is automatically
triggered whenever there is an
unusual pattern of access. Other!
measures have been implemeuted ·
to ensure that all employeel ar~ · ­
a:ware of their responsibility with .
respect to confidentiality of·
records, and lbe penalties for 11011rompliance.

CUstom BUiding &amp; Remodeling

second
.

.

C:,(fE
Service .................... 000.00

-

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an

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1·----------------

KAREN'S
GREEN.HOUSE

In order to vote in the May 2, 1995 Primary Election

I•

:----------------" f»ul;lllc Notice
Malgt County Soil end
Water ConHrvatlon Dlatrlcl
Slellmlnl of Rectlpta,
Dlaburatmtnla, and
Chana•• In Belancea
lor the year tndad
: · December ~1, 1VI4
: Rtctlpta: Dlatrlct Fund

.

-

I '
'•

•,'

•

RACINI! • 2 lots with River Frontage . Use for Camping,
fishing or boating or could be used as a trailer lot Close
Ia paik, lire dept . and local banking and shopping . Buy
this one before summer gets here and be set up and
ready!!
ASKING $9,000.00
FAfiM COUNTRY • On SR 338 · This property is only
minutes from both Racine and the Ravenswood Bridge.
Nice laying lots with 1988 Clavton 15 x 56 Mobile home
with added 14 x24 master bedroom. 3 bedrooms tota l, 1
1/2 baths, kitchen with appliances including new
dishwasher, utility room . newer carpeting, electric w/
central air. fenced back yard, storage building, large front
porch, cement walkways. Great garden area. Make your
oppointment to see this one! I Great Location for W.V. .
Commutersll
ASKING $30,500.00
MIDDLEPORT • RUTLAND STREET · 2 Story Frame
Home with newer Vinyl Siding and newer roof. 3
Bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, gas floor..furnance, new unit ijir,
rear screened porch, appliances, blinds, fireplace , block
storage building and wood storage building . 3 Room Apt.
with stor~ge- and cellar below. Lovely flowers . Storm
doors &amp; w~ndows. Very well taken carl! of.
ASKING $37,0110.00

I

;. Rentile ...................... l,357

f

• All other ...,.nua .... 11,4e0
( Total R-lpla.~ ....... 3t,411
~burttmtnta:
.
'I , Solarlee
................... 000.00 ,
,
, SJ!ppllta .............: ........ 171
, 'Equlpment............... 20, 100
..._ ContriCia: Rtpalra ... 3,300 ,
I

'

992-2259

oGront~:

1

'

OFFICE

• Locol Govtmment .. OOO.oo 1 RIVER FRONTAGE · I+ Acre Vacant Ground Located
near Forked Run State Park. Beautiful area and view!!
Stale Govemmanl .. 17,549
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII ASKING $15,000.00
Ollta,
Contrlbutlona
and
I
,
. ........11 ...................... 1,133
POMEROY - REDUCED · 1 floor. 3 bedrooms,'2 baths,
1 Stlt of Producta/Motarlalo
full basement with one car garage, fireplace . Reduced to
~ ...................................... 112

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MillS COUNTY
1168 .

'

Publl~ Notl'!e

PUBUC NOTICE
_, In_ C!;!mpiJin.et wllh
-l Section 5715.09 ·oltht Ohio
1 Rtvleed Code, tht Melgo
County Board of Rtvltlon
wUI hold an orgenlullontl
mHIIng on Morch 30, 1995.•
at 2:00 p.m. In tho AudHor'o
Offlct of tht Mtlga County
t courthouH.
1
Nancy Parker Campbell
·:
Melgt County Auditor
, (3) 20; lTC

I

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QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Custom Made
-- =--li
•Solid vinyl
-~ ~
~- II~
replacement
I
'I
window•
---''!.II
~&lt;4Tj
.-...
~
• Free Eitlmat11
.,- . ·ill
..eStarting At
'
' I

'~·

I

""- -

*200 ln•talled

HENRY E. CLELAND ......... .,, .... .. ............ .. .. ........ 992-6191
TRAO::Y L BRINAGER.........................................949-2439
SHERR fl. HART... ...:............... ............................742-2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111. .................................. 992-6191
KATHLEEN M. CLEt,AND ................................... 99?-6191
OFFICE................ ,............... .... .. .......... ..... ,........... 992·2259

.

.

: II

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992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1·800·291-5600

J&amp;L INSULATION
__539 BRYAN I"LACE

- ..
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Wln®ws, Blown
. Insulation, Storm
Doors; Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free EsUmates

Lawn Care
Mowing,
Trimming
Firewood
Also:
Contract work
(614) 992-5291

t/11/tfn

· YOUNG'S
CARPEHJER SERVICE

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

• Room Addilions
· • New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
,
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

•Convertible Topa
•Carpet &amp;
Seat Covers
•Headliners
•Antique Cars .
•Boat Seats
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.
992·7587
3114/1 mo.

GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
·,

Sunday I :oo-p.m.
- 12-Gauge Only-·
Limited: 740

Backbore,

680 Front

112ftln

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
. • ~arages
• Complete
Remodeling
- Stop &amp; .Compare ·
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

2128195

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

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

264 Upper River Rd.
OH . 45631

· · Shingles • Siding • Windows
Built Up &amp; F,lubber Roofing
Residential &amp;Commercial
Professional Service
-ticensed~-tlonded
Free Esllim;ate!;r- j- j
27 Years Experience

1--800·377·4477

Special offer includes:
1. Clean motor
2. lirease ro!!.er bearings

Services.

Light Hauling,

Home SiteB, Lantl

Shrubs Shaped

&amp; Driveways.

and Removed

Tru'c king •
Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Bill Slack .
992·2269

(Limestone Low Rattsl

Howard L. WritfiS81
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
·
Gutters
. (Specialize In _
_ ... __ __
·
driveway spreading) ·
Downspouts
· Limestone,
Gutter Cleaning
Gravel, Sand,
Painting•
Top Soil, Fill-Dirt
FREE ESTIMATES

WICKS .

HAULING

949·2168
511(3/94 TFN

"'""
KINGS'
Home Improvements

WHALEY'S AUTO
. PARTS
Specializing in.Custom
FraiJle Repair ,
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS992-7013 OR .
992.-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·848·0070
DAAWIN, OHIO

33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
•Roofing •Painting
-Garages •Porches
•Pole Barns
Free Est/males
614-742-3090
304-773-9545

l/1711 mo.

filt~r

sys tem

3. Clean &amp; check ag1tator 7. Check electri cal system
4. Clea n all m oving part s B. Replace filter bag

All FOR ONLY SJ4. 9 5 Plus Parts
One year warranty on work pcrtormed.
Valid on all nationally advertised brands .
We service most makes &amp; models.

614-985·4180 '

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W. Main St.. Ripley WV

304-6144

Announcemenls

3 Announcements :

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

ADOPTION:

New H~mes • Vinyl Siding New

r.

Garages • Replacement Wh1!:fows
• . Room Additions • Roofing

All

'

Nllurol Food Produot Which

Halpa You LoN Weight And

COMMERCIAL und RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Have

33&amp;8.

More . Energy,

8'14-44f..

'

Ellmlnoto Fot From Dtol Wllh
All~natul'll Herbril Ptoduct. Lo.
Wotght, Roduco· AJ&gt;potho, ond

614-992-7643

~~Y•

Energy 114-44&amp;-:2410.

Hey Guys Your Speelal Glr1 Ia l
waiting lo t.ar from _y_a u 24
- h-ours • da~. Call ilow l-acr0-3jjj:.
6000
El01.
$3.99/mln. 11+,
Procall
Co.9002,
602-VM-7420.

2/\2192/11n

r------...;.-----------.
One· Srop Com)litli.AutoBodfRepair

.

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LIVE GIRlS , CALL NOW, 1-100·
3!18~000 orl. 6459 $3.111/mln,
Mull bo 18 yro,, Procoll po.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

602-954·11120.

'

MEET ,NEW PEOPLE THE FUN

-

·Ul~

monttd

H.ppi(J

couple wt•h• to ftttp you &amp;
rovkle your babr wllh • loving
amlly and a brtghl tuturw. MedJ:.
Cllflegal IXperlMI Plkl • .,.. . .
call 1-1M)O..S83-03Q2.

WAY TODAY, 1·1l00-T7&amp;-3005 oXI.

8002. 12.99/mln. Muac be 18 yra .
of age, Procall Ca., 802·Q54lll20.
.'

.

THE PAMPERED CHEF •

"The Khchon Storw ThOI CDmM

_..,.

To Your Door."' Local Contul18nl
Available A• :
et4-441-4n4
LAIVIMH&amp;Igl.

'

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.

Call For Information On Ordere
lng hams, ~a11te11 Or For Bual-.

11?f:Z 1/Mitfn

n...

OpportunltiH,

4

Giveaway

frM

Brochure A'i'all1tH.

Burial, Final Expenses. Loans, Business, Family
, Security, College Funds, Emergency Funds, .
· Ret~rement, Estates, Life Insurance to Iii your needs .

·

'1 Female Aottwell1r!Shep11rd. 7
WMkl
otd.
VM chtc~ed
wromed,lall docked. 114-3n!

.ROCKY R. HUPP

2965

1 Puppy Collie /'Cold Altlrlavar

614-441· 1415.

American General life &amp; Accident Ins .. Co.
P.O. Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

.

Dog hOUH for

';;r:. clot•

glwHway, 114-IU.

'

10

Fama~ Bugle Pup, 5 Montha
Old, Good Country Home, 814·

' 614-843-5264

446-3897.

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health· Accident • Annuity· IRA • Mortgage

6

•

'

1.481 &amp; Found

·

Female Gold•n Retrt.ve end

- Female Beagli;Kan•uga arid

r---::~==;,;;-----------..

MODERN.SANITATION

Misc. Jobs.

614-992-3470

5. C lea n &amp; check
6 Chec k belts

Darwin, Ohio

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Clearing, Septic Syotcma

Co.

State Rt. 33

Chesler, Ohio

Bulldozing, Backhoe,

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp;
''Take the pain out
of painting - Let us
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates : .
Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special

CouNTRY

Call John Teaford at

E\C.\\ATI \c;

614·245-0437

·CHESTER

by appointment &amp;
club repair as well

'110\\ .\IW

614-742·2193

Roofing &amp; Ren')odeling Co.

Golf Lessons

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992-2060 10f511mo

1_800 _486 _1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

Kenny's Auto Center .

CLUB

1~

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlckles

We Have Cars and V11ns!

Chuck Stotts
· 614·992-6223
Free Estimates·
Insurance Work Welaome

71W94 .

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP .

Porta bit
Balldsaw Mill

MIKE MARCUM'S

110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

L&amp;W

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Kenny's ·Auto Rental

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

~~~:r:~::::::::::::::::::~:~=~ ~=~=======· .--~-----:-..,
RACINE

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"'===:::::::===:

Comm~nity calendar_

C"

UK£ ~lW

.REFINISHING
- .-

I

NOW OPEN
SPRING SEASON

DOWNING CHILDS '
MULLIN MUSSER
. INSUUNCE

.~dWiol

BATHTUB

Birth 'announced

_

'

· Ri!jllir In Tubs or Sin~-s.
Service F- ........... 000.00
Resudace
Olc1 Ceramlr. Tile, nd
lnlormalton Education
Fllef1uS OIIOWII Cnlda: or Sags.
(Scholarahlpa) ............. 3,402
Trav01and Expontat1,748
Advartlalng •"!I Printing ..
................................. 000.00
Public
Employeu
... - - - - - RtllramanL........... ,, .... ooo.oo
- p () L•,'
Workora' Companoatlon.~.
Chris ~
''0&lt;
................................. 000 ·00 I Scheffel
Producta/Meterlala lor
I~ SHING
. .................................... 158 ' 614-992-4236 REFSYSFMS
Othar............................. tl03 '"::=:;:::::;~::-~~
Total Dlaburttmenlo ......... r
, ................................28,787
1'1'0-1-WIY . Toll I , R t cot ph
MINI STORAGE
Over/(Under) Dlob. ...... 9,024
NOW RENTING
Total of Roc. and Other
( .---1.•- S'1115 • " •
, NOTICE OF INTENT TO
Sourcea Ovor/(Undor) Olab
,.,,..._,.
• rriCts
,.
VACATE
N3E04WoH8A2~29EN96, WV
· I'Je.ata take notice that ond Other-UHa ............ t,624
Fund Ca1h Balance,
-v
the VIllage of Syracuse,
311411 mo.
'purtuant-to-Chaptar 723 of Jonuary 1, 1VI4...m . .. . 30,2il2
Fund Cuh Balance,
the Ohio Revised Code,
Maggies Crockpot
Intends to vacate three' Dtcamber31, 19114 .... 39,916
Reaerve
for
streets/alloys described as
Clifton, WV
Encum.brancea, Dec. 31,
follows:
Dine-in or Carry-out
. (1) Being a part ol Been 1tlll4 ............................ 000.00
773-5612
Rtctlpla: Sptclal Fund
Alley, and described as a
Bring
in ad
Oranta:
15' wide and 294' long wide
Local Govemmtnt..33,000
for 10% off.
atrlp of Bean Alle.y
extending from College
Stall
.. 34,658
Gllto, Govtrnmtn1
Contrlbutlona
and ·jo
,
Road to College Street with
MANLEY'S
reference being made Ia the Btquoata .................... ooo.oo
&amp;ala of Producta/Motarlala
HOME IMPROVEMENT
recorded plat In Volume 2,
................................. 000.00 ' Roofing, Siding, Room
Page 34 of the Mef·gs
Rentala .................... ooo.oo
Additions, Concrete, &lt;1c.
County Plat Records.
·
All ether rovanua .... :.1,775
P.O. Box 220
(2) Being a part of Peach
Tot1l
Rocalpta
.........
69,431
Bidwell,
OH 45614
Alley, and described as a
(614 ) 388 _9865
15' wide and 305' long strip DlaburHmenta:
of Peach Alley extending
from College Street .to Sixth
Equlpment. ...............:..:585
Landscape Stock
Street with reference being
Contrecto: Rapalre ...... 1011
Wh lte PIne &amp;
' made to the recorded plat In
Servlce .........................- .. 50
· Volume 2. Page 34 cf the
Service Feea ............. 1,182
Norway Spruce
. Meigs County Pjat Records.
Information
Education
·' (3) Being a part of Cherry (Schotar~htp•l ................ 337
BARR'S Nursery
Street, and described as a
Travel
and
ExptnHa3,1M
742 3149
- 1. so· Wille strip extending
Advortlllng ond Prlnttng..
•
or 992·~!~
from - the aouthernmost
.........................................
" point of tho Intersection of
Public
Employua
~ Che"y Street and Water
RaUrament ....................5,885
Public Notice ·
· Street In a so,utharly. , Workort' Compen..tlon...
' direction to the lOw water
................................... 1,032
SuppUea .................... 1,571
mark of the Ohio 'River
Producta/Meterlala fi&gt;r
Equlpment. .............. 20,685
, which same is located In rlloia ..........................ooo.oo
Contracta: Ropalra .... 3900
_ ~ 100 acre Lot 295 In the
Other...... ;.,,................ 4,717
Strvlct ........................... 50
·. Village of SyracuH.
·
Total Olaburoemonta.........
Service Fe11 ............. 1,182
.• •l'hls notice shall be'
...;·............................. 63,858
lnlormellon Educollon
o. published o~ce a week lor Tot at
. Roc ol pIa (Scholerahlpa) ....... .-..... 3,739
. six (6) conoecutlve -weeks Over/(Under) Dllb. ......5,573 ·Travel and Expenoea4,944
: with the ta~t ·rubllcat!oo
Total of Rae, and Other
Advortlalng erld Printing '·
·trelng on Apr! 17, 1995. Sourcll over/(Undor) Dlab
........................................ 99
• Action horeon shall be andOtherUaea ............6,573
Public
Employoea
"completed within three (3)
Fund Cuh Balence, Rellrtmtnt .....~ .............. 5,885
months alter publication of January 1, 19114........... ,3,832
Wotkert' Compenaallon ...
the last notice herein.
Fund Caah Balance,
................................... 1,032
"Village or Syracuse by Its December 31, 1994 ......9,405
Produclo/Matarlala lor
Re 1 e r v e
for rllala ............................... 158
1 C1erk
. Janice L.awaon Zuilllng
Encumbrancoa, Dec. 31,
Other.......................... 5,620
(3) 13, 20, 27 (4) 3. 10, 17
1994 .....,. .......................... 147
Total Dlaburaomentt .........
R e c el p II : , Tohll
............................;;... 93,645
Memorandum
Only
Tote
I
Rt c el p to
Public Notice
Granta:
Ovar/(Under) Dlob. ....15,197
Local Govtmmanl..33,000
Totel of. ~ec . and Other
NOTICE OF SALE OF
Stale Govornmanl .. 52,205 Sourcaa Over/(Ui1der) Dlab.,
EQUIPMENT .Gllla, Contrlbutlona and and Other Uooo .......... 15,197 .
· tiotlco 11 hereby given 8equeata ...................... 1,933
Fund Cuh Balance,
~hot the Boord of Townahlp
S.lt of Producta/Matarlala January' I, 19114.......... 34,124
,Truattoa ill R'ulland
...................................... 112
Fund Cuh Balance,
iTownahlp will offer lor ule
Renltl1 ...................... 8,357 Oocember 31, 1994 .. ..49,321
l"ne 11182 lntornotlonol 1700
All other revenue .... 13,235
R• a • r v •
fo r
;earlta dump truck with
Tolol Rtctlpto ....... 108,842 Encumbrancea, Dec. 31,
••now plow end oprttder Dltburoomonta:
1tlll4 ................................. 147
)lox.
Salarlea ................... 44,782 (3) 2G; 1TC
+-Bide will be roclllllld by
--------------)lutland Townahtp TruatHa
Real Estate General
until April 8, 1995 at 6:30
p.m. and opanad at that
'
limo, at their regular
1".1tallng. Appointment to
tntpoel may be mode by
calling 614·742·2t55. Only
SEALED BIDS will bt
. accopttd, and you mu11
wrlto "TRUCK BID" on tho
outaldo of the bid anvalopo.
Blda may be mailed to
Rulllrtd Townohlp Truoteaa,
P.O. Box 326 Rullond, OH
45775.
Truatotl rttarvt tha right
lo rojlct any or all bld1.
(3) 8~13, 20; 3TC

Ann
Landers

Military news

~~niiiAIESi

Public Notice

those issues. Sbe also repOrted on
information that Russia bas signed
an $.800 111illion •sreemcnt with
Iran to complete tbe unfinished
nuclear plant on the Persian Gulf
" .
coast.
Helen Culmer, first vice president presided at tbe meeting in tbe
absence of President Lorene Gogg~, The group sand American and
bad prayer for peach to close the
meeung.

working and it makes sense to try
something else.
·
excessive tantrums. One reader
Not all difficult or rambunctious
suggested Betsy may bave attention
children have ADD, but they can
deficit_,disorder. You
replied,
"I
·
raJ
' o995. , ...ogo&lt;o,
· bene fi11 fro m parents who are pallent
heck
, CAPE TOW,NJ,;Soutb Afriea tinue to maintain-relations witb.
c .., with seve pediatricians,
11ffiii s,,.,..,,..,
· and loving. -EUGENE, ORE.
(AP)- Queen Elizabeth II is older Iran," Rusbdie said.
A;iroD Maxson, son of Ron iind and ~e gene~al__consensus is that
.
c""'"' .,..,~...·
DEAR PARENTS: Thanks to
and South Africa is a lot wiser tban- . Kbomeilli called for Rushdie's wendi Maxson,·celebrated bls sec- · attenuon defictt disorder has become
• ··wh'o' ·wrote.- fo·ur' 'leners were
death six years ago because Mus- ond birthday March 3 wilb a party a fashionable catch-all for children symptoms. My _husband, a wonderful enlightening and gre8dy appreciated.
durilig her last visit 48 years aso.
. The queen arriv&amp;l Sunday on a lim fundamentalists were angered at lbe family's bome in Rutland.
with behavioral problems."
father and prestdent qf hos company,
Fuling pressured to lwve su? ·
historic visit, her fmt trip back to by wbat they considered to be bias·
A dinosaur theme was carried
I'm . not surprised. Most of the also had ADD as ,a chold and suffered How well-informed art you? Write
Soutb Africa since sbe was a 21- phemous passages in Rushdie's out Attending were Don and Gene· research on ADD bas occurred within from bet~g u~dtagnosed at a ume for AM l..!Jnders' booklet "Sa and the
novel, "The S~tanic Verses."
year-old princess.
va Maxson, Becky and Dave Ellis, tbelastfiveto IOyears. Unlesstbose · _when thts dtsorder was not re- Teen-ager.'~ ~nd a self-addrr:ssed,
About SO onlookers and scores
Aimee and Sara.b Kloes, Zacb pediatricians have made a serious cogmzed.
,
1 b ·
·
1o and
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) of journalists attended the Queen's
Butcher, Lois Hawley, Mary B~th efforttostay!lbreastofthisconstantly
Our son, "Kenny," was sent to a
ong,
USIIIUS·SIZt tlll't fit
~
low-key arrival at the airport Sun- If she were on a loaded lifeboat and Scotty Musser, and C~ns. evolving field, chances are they don't neurologist when he was 6 because ~heckor IMnty order fgr V?5 (this_
day, wbere sbe was greeted by . witb public health a11!t public Tat~U_t~Y. &lt;;.J. and Kayla Hamson. know niuch abOut ADD.
his ' impulsive behavior and easy Includes postage and handl~ng)_lo.
Deputy President Thabo Ml!eki and defense, guess which one former
Sending g•fts were CoUCC!l Du~fee,
Generally speaking, primary-care distractibility was interfering witb his Teens, cfo_ Ann lAnders, 1'.0. Box
a 3-year-old girl bearing peach-col- U.S Surgeon General Joycelyn Nonna .Hawtbome, Conme Bailey, pediatricians do not have the time, schoolwork and he was unable to 11562 •Chacago,ll/. 60611-0562. (In
Elders would toss overboard?
ored roses.
and Cay Ia Taylor.
e•pertise or inclination to perform the make friends~ We knew our son bad CIJIUU!a, send $4.55 .)
"Wby don't we do away with
After an official welcome cerein-d':Jlth typeofneurodevelopmentat a problem, bu• we tboughrthat it was
. inony with President Nelson Man- the real drain on America .. . the
med•cal assessment necessary to behavioral and we could handle it by . What did they do with stale nuts
de Ia, tbe queen 'is expected to defense department?" Elders asked
before someone decided they'd be per· 1
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Johnson of properly diagnose ADD. This is a being stricter.
address the parliament eleCted last Saturday during an hour-long interKenny is now taking a relatively feet for dry cereal'
year in South Africa's fmt all-mcc view with "The People's Pharma- Kenna, W. Va. are announcing tbe very real disorder. Parenrs need to
cy," a nationally syndicated week- birth of their fmt cbild, a daughter, leamnewparentingskillsbecausethe low dose of a medicine that has
vote.
When you've come to the end of a
·
ly radiO show on health issues.
· Kassie Lynn.
regular techniques don't work with changed his life .dramatically. He is perfect day, it's- wise to check things
The infant was born Feb. 21 at these kids. Children witb ADD are now lovable,funny and anA student. over one more time.
PARIS (AP)- Sa,lman Rusbdie
Elders' remark was in response
criticized tbe West for maintaining' to·a question abotit a proposal to 1 Women and Children's Hospital in often bright, very creative, original He bas many friends. But best of all,
contaCts wilb the country that's put eliminate the office of surgeon gen- ' Charleston, W. Va. and weighed thinkers, and they teSt our parenting his self-esteem has soared. I hate to
eight poWids, 13 ounces. .
eral.
·
a $3 million price tag on bis bC!!\d.
skills to the limit.
think what his daily life would be like
Maternal
grandparents
are
Mr.
Rushdie. who bas been in biding .
NEW YORK (AP) - Tbere
However, some children who without this medication. •• A MOM '
since 1989, made a public appear- was Magic in lbe air at a Manhat- and Mrs, Jon Vineyard of Teays exhibit ADD-like behaviors may AND DAD WHO ARE LOYAL
Valley, W. Va. ~ernal grandpar·
ance Sunday at the French Book tan fund-raiser for AIDS.
ents
are Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson actually have a learning disability, a FANS
Fair. escorted by 20 police oflicers
Earvin "Magic" Johnson joined
•Pansy •Viola
psychological problem or some type
and a bomb-sniffmg dog.
witb New York Knicks center of Portland. Paternal great grand· of undiagnosOO_medical CQ!lditiOil. _ _ D_ear .Ann_ LanderSL I was
Rusbdie criticized the "cyni- -· Patrick Ewing and former New PJir~nts !!t~lude__Mr. and Mrs.
- •Broeeoli-•Gabbage
. I.suspec_t you will receive a ton of interesuid in your Ieber about ADD. ~
cism" of Western politicians \\!bO York Giant great Lawrence Taylor Thereon Jobnson of Racine and
•Cauliflower
maintain relations with Iran despite at the Sheraton Hotel Sunday to · Mr. and Mrs. William McKelvey mall on thiS. Please spread the word. Let me offer a suggestion. Different .
It would be a real service. -· · children have different ternirs refusal to drop a death sentence raise money for AIDS education of Ravenswood, W.Va.
Cold Weather Plants
against bim by the late Ayatollah and prevention.
AMHERST, MASS., PARENT OF peraments. Sending a child 10 his or
Rubollab Kbomeini.
AQD CHILDREN
her room for a "time-out" is not
About 800 people paid $250 to .
Western nations bave limited attend "Marcb Magic," which
Harold w. Bird
DEAR AMHERST: A ton? Malee necessarily the best disciplinary
contacts and investments with gave lbe public a chance to mingle
Navy Peuy Officer Second , thattwo. I was stunned at the number tactic.
.,
Tehran as a result of tbe order.
Not all tantrums are manipulative.
with New York sports heroes and Class Harold W. Bird, son of. of parents who wrote to educate me.
"On one band, they speak of featured a sports memorabilia auc· William and Judy Bird of Racine, · · Here is a sampling of the mail I've The point is to help .the child learn
Hours_: Mon.·Frl. 9-5
human rights and freedom of lion·. The proceeds were earmarked bas finished balf of a six-month been receiving:
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
self-control. If a lime-out works, it's
expression. and on -lbe other, con- for AIDS programs in New York.
3'!.
miles
past Southern High
Dear Ann Landers: My husband a good tactic. If, however, the child
deployment in the Adriatic and
School,
St. Rt. 124,
Mediterranean seas aboard the and I have three children, one qf goes to his room and tears it apart,
Racine,
Ohio
luided missile frigate U.S.S. whom suffers from auention deficit destroys his own possessions and
614-949-2682
obert Bradley.
. disorder. The other two have no screamsforhours,Isaytime-outisn't
..
Bird bas visited three ports in
Italy
and
Greece.
·
. The eommunlty ·Calendar Is - aJill guests iiivitea~
The sbip is part of the NATO
. published as a free service to
forces
patrolling..off the coast or
· •POMEROY - FOE Auxiliary,
non~ proflt groups whblns to
Bosnia-Herzegovina.
You must be registered by April~. 1995
Pomeroy, Tuesday, 7:30 meeting
announce meeting and special
He
graduated
from
Southern
followed
by
8
p.m.
talk
by
Mony
events. The calendar Is not
For your convenience, you may take adva11tage of our hours for v.oteuegistration:
Local High School in 1990.
deslsned to promote sales or , Wood, DARE director for Meigs
··
~
Meigs County Board of Elections . ·
·
· '
. Jeiiiilfer L-:'BaMihart
fund rl!!lsers of any type. ltelt15 County. Presentation· open to public.
·
·
Navy Seaman Recruit Jennifer ''
112 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio .
. an printed as space permits and
L.
Barnhart, daughter of Wayne
c:annot be guaranteed to run a
. I
Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:30 a.m. til noon
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire and Marsha B8fobart of Pomeroy,
spec:mc number of days.
· . 1:00 p.m. til 4:30p.m.
Department Ladies Auxiliary, 6 recently reported for duty at Naval
Air
Station
in
San
Dieg(l,
Calif.
p.m Tuesday at fire station . All
MONDAY
· Permanent Branch: Meigs County Public Library
Bambart graduated from Meigs
·
LETART EALLS - Letari members urged to attend.
Hours: Monday thru Fr_iday 9:00a.m. til 9:00p.m.
Higb Scllool in 1993.
Township Trustees, at 6 p.m. MonSaturday 9:00a.m. til5:00 p.m.
POMEROY -Drew Webster
Donald C. Cleland
day at township office.
'
Marine Pfc. Donald C. Cleland,
Post 39 Pomeroy American
Sunday 1:00 p.m. ti15:00 p.m.
·
RACINE - Southern Local L~~ion, 7 p.m . Tuesday, Senior son of Henry and Kathy Oe~ of
-. ~~- -~·~ You may alsoregis1er to vote at the fOlloWing Iocaiions:-=&gt;=-~-~
Board of Education regular meet- Ctttzens Genter,· Annunl~fnmtly-RaeiDe; recently completed fecruit
ttainmg at Parris Island, S.C.
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
ing Monday, 7 p.m. in tbe high birthday dinner.
Cleland graduated ·in 199I from
school cafeteria. - ·
Department of Human Services
DARWIN - Bedford Town- Southern Local Higb School.
WICOffice
RACINE - Racine Villagc ship Volunteer Fire Department .
Council meetins in recessed ses- Committee meeting Tuesl!ay , 7
County 'I'n:asurer5 Office
sion Monday, 7 p.m. in Star Mill p.m. at Darwin Town Hall.
Middleport Library
I '
Park Building.
Public High Schools
WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY POMEROY - Heritage Week·
'
Carleton School
CHESTER - Chester Council end obserY~ rommittee; 4 p.m
111 SICOild,St., Pomeroy
..
By Mail
#323 Daughters of Aoterica, 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Meigs Museuin.
Tuesday. Quar~erly birthdays
'
For an¥ additional information, Call 992-2697 or stop by our office at
THURSDAY
observed. ·
POMEROY - Meigs Ministe·
112 Mulberry Av-enue, Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport rial Lenten service, Pomeroy Unit• Pl.ease note that there·will only be a Republican Primary held in
Child Conservation Leasue, Tues- ed Methodist Churcb, Rev. Paul
.
~omeroy Village,on May 2, 1995.
.
.
day 6:30· p.m. at tbe Stowaway Stinson preaching, Thursday, :7:30
SINC~
p.m.
;··
Restaurant in Gallipolis. .Husbands
.
'

·
birthday
Names in the news
celebrated .

.Dear Ann Landers: This is about

"Betsy; the girt who was given to

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992•2753 »OM

ALZHEIMERS &amp;
RELATED DISORDERS
Support Group meeting Thursday,
March 23, 1 p.m.
PVH Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center
304·675-5236for roore info.

Different children have
different.temperaments

AARON MAXSON

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

CILL OUi OFFICE IT 992·2155

Legion auxiliary makes donations

New officers were elected wben Chapter, Anierican Cancer Society,
Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta fund drive in June.
Sigma Pbi Sorority, met recently at .
Members elected the Girl of tbe
tbe office of the Meigs County Year to be announced at Founder's
Prosecuta.
.
, Day on April 27 at 6 p.m. at the
Elected were Vicki Ault, presi- Sportsman in Athens. A fund raiser
dent; Judy William vice president; will be carried out by the chapter at
Geri Walton, treasurer; Eleanor that event.
It was announced that on at 6:30
McKelvey, secretary; Celesta
Coates, corresponding secretary; on Mary 28 a Trasb to Treasures
Patsy Odgin parliamentarian ; will be beld at the Catholic Cburcb
Sharon Stewart, social committee basement. All members are to bring
chairman; and Geri Walton and items 10 be used in a silent auction
Debbie Touodas, ways and means along witb food Hems. Bernie ·
Anderson, Carol Sbank, and Viclde
canmittec co-c!lairmen.
Christi Lyncb, vice president, Ault will go early to set up for the
conducted tbe meeting during event. .
Sbllron Stewart is going to visit
whicb time officers' reports were
a missionary in Africa and asked
given.
·
At the request of Carolyn for support from the sorority. The__
Grueser the chapter agreed to assist chap~ voted to give ber SIOO on ·
again tbis year witb tbe Meigs ber b1p expenses.

ht Yoar Message-luoss
Wit• I Dally Seatlul

-

Monday; March 20, 1995

·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable tofleis rented.
Dally, weakly &amp; monthly rental rates.
J ob sites' Camp Sites' Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and' Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Licon d &amp; B d d
'.
992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

IIJt'IIPPLIANCE
SERVICE·
•Fectory Author'lied Parts
&amp; Service
•All Makea -42 Veins
•Faaf Reliable Service
•Waahera- Dryere • Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers ·
•Diahweahers ·
·

tfi.W. Healera ·
~lcrowave•

•Diapoaals
•Thanks Melgo &amp;
Surrounding Areas

G.orga
CrHk IrA. If fodnd:
614~90111~46-22111
' '

Found: Oooglo mix, fomoto 8uilomUI
Avonuo YlclnHy, coil f14W2-e822, Monday-.frldly.
,
Loot : 3114/95 "R-ord" .._
_ Holr Rod T~bby coo on
Bulavllle Rlka, A,t Base' ln~ller
Pott&lt;, Fomlly Vory Sod, 114-44t31tl4.

Dlomond hoo~..ho11tcf
nockloco, Yiclnlly of Foodla'l!l '

· loot:

&lt;=•rw..h, Pt. Pluunt. Reward!
304-675-12M atl•r 5pm.

7

Yard:SaJe

ll'H'tr ,

Gallipolis

·TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

&amp; Vlc!nlty ·
All Yatel S1lea Mu•t Be Palclln
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day bellore the ad It to rvn

•Lots of Fun and
Learning
i ·Lots of
Experience .•.
Mon . thru Fri. 7 :00
A.M. till 6:00P.M.
'

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335

Sunday

'

• 2:00 · p.rr..

p.m. Salurdly. .

Dog

7Montho. 114-245-58117.

Flu Market &amp; Yard S.le Spa~w

For Rant, 814--446-8267.

8

992·5388

Publtc Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Purwn Auction ComPAnY

3115!tfn

12/14111n

Hltlon

Friday. Monday Mltlon • 2:oci

full tlrM tucUOOMr, IDOft'lpllil.
IUcllon
11rvlco. Uconoect
IIIO,Ohto l Wool Vlrglnlo, :104-

Tn-!5785.

.

'

9 wanted to Buy
Cloon Lolo llodtl COrw Or ·
Trucka, 11117 Or Noo!or
Slnhh Buick' Pontloc, 1MO

7/31191 TFN

Ellotom A...,uo, Otl11potlo.

JAMES ALARM
SERVICE

GRAY'S

Docorolod .._ , . , - · · phonoa, old la:~l.old lhtr·
old
onllque
tumftwo. R'-na Ant~
Ruoa - . , · IM-ta-

momot. .,

2521. Wobuy-.
Wanlod To Buy: Tobocoo U..

Specinl This
Morlfll

Pwmtonont Or lMot• a....· · -

1501.

With every new
alar.m ln"stalledreceive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.

Mobile Welding
Diesel InJector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

304·882·~336

~85-3879

3114!1 mo.

•

Top Ptlcoo Pold: All 0tct U.B

COino, Gold Ringo Sitv. c;otn.;

•

MORRIS EQUIPMENT. .

.RUTLAND

-

. .. .....74~·'2455
31Uirl1

..,.
'

~~no.

M.T.ii. Coin

J

l D'a Auto Porta ond ........
.1 ·

buying wrwc~unk
uucka. Aloo
ror
mo .• Tn-5343or
.

.,.,

lhop

loo ~ndA.....,., Otllipotle. '

-. -

�r
.Monday, Mllrch 20, 19!JS

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

t

The Dally Sentinel-Page

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 20, 1995

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEA TilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Old bull- - . - ........,,
Old light-. oldltole, pic· - Slit w...

g-.
-.
...-.lUI.

2 Bod_, Trolllr No PN,
QMio- Oo- lulovllle
Pfke, Trooh Pold, .14 31111100.

lumll"!". toale .. - - . .
...... """'llartln, •
Wanlod To lluy: Junk'
Or Wit- llol- Colt

-..oo

Uny LMIW. hi 311 IMJ.
Jun~

We lluy

. KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlghl

Core, IM--

eo,a. llt t41 MAT.

--

3 Bedroom MilO Trolllr,
W1th . 2 Poochll
$30 MID. c.-n ay, IM-256-

Employment Servrces

11111 Chtwy 11-10 4 cv-, I
Sjoood, llodtltw, Tool lo1, loci:

YI'RA FURNITURE
114-4414151

- , 79,000 liMe., , _ _
:zmr ...... 5:30.

'
Fumlluro

GuoiHy And Appll.,_ a...t Dto1o On
Cooh And Cony! RENT-2-0WN
And Loyowoy Aloo Avolloble.
. F- OoiiYOry Wlhln 211111et.
WhHo WMIInghoueo: Siaoble
Woohor a ar,.r, $350, 114-:188-

•Q 53
•A 8 4
1K 6 5 3

-EEK&amp;MEEK

•J 9 7

IJ.IE.Y MAY kXlT t..VW

.EAST

NUOi~RM L.IMITS ...

+Q J
1

52 Sporting GOOds

good-· AteO 1200
Wlncheltar blln.l, tun eholla.

$125 • ...,

SOUTH
aAJI0962
•K Q J

.
-

14110,.--.-.

(I

·"BARNEY

74

South
2•

Com~o
· Roglotorod
lof'ICtlenn c.,. nu,.lng ......
tontO lor ..rl~lmo · rotating
Insurance
ohlftoot our ll-llodlllllod....,.. 13
lng tocUity. Jilt B~r-r, AN, ===,.-===--'~

11112 Hondo Sllvor Wing "'"
orh2 s
4th AYO. lllddlop«L Ohio, $100,

304-5118-4257

Wanted to Do

18

32 Mobile Homes

A&amp;R Painting. r.madellng,
IOndocoplng, ootc. F- ootlrnat•, 114-1124813.

r ... SaMe.. Compllte .....
care, 20yn. exp. &amp; lnaurtd, frM
llllmotoo.IM-441·1181 « 1.et)().
Ace

1108-&amp;881.
o.n.nt llalnto...,...,. Polntlng1
Yord W«k Wlndowo Wuhoa
Guttoro Cleaned Ugh! Houllng,
Comm~ AllldOntiOI, Stove:
814-448-11•r.

lor Sale

:1..-

Fumllhod 2 · - _Aport·
'112 Ookwood llobllo Homa. Ukl ment, Aero. From Park, CA. No
- 1 2 BA, 2 Full Both IM-25&amp;Pota, - ·
Roo
1180 W•hndo ond oft.- 5:00 qul..cl,
· - ........_.,.,.
p.m. II-F.
Fumllhod Ettlc:ltoncy $1115/11o.
1178 Ma,..lon , 14x70, 2 B.d· IJIII"Ioe Polcll Shena Both, 107
roomo, Bool Ollor~n Be S•n s.-.d. Goll polio, 114 441 1411
At 86Q Frllndly R
Rood; Or After 7 P.ll. ·
Cllllt4-256-Qtlll.
Fumllhod
EHiclenc:y,
All
1188 14170 Commodore 2 Bed- IJIII~Ioe Pold, Bhoro. Both,
roome, G.E. Applianc• In $'145/llo. tiD Soc:ond Aoonuo,
KHchon And Central Air Unll Golllpollo, 814-445-3945.
304.f75-3341.

Groclouo !IVI!IIr~ , and a~ l!lo!1880 CIIYton 14i8D 112 Ac,. Lot, -room o..ilmonto II VIIIOge
2 BR, 1 Both, CA, Cot-ol Manor
ond
RIYOrekto

Calling, 2 Dec., Fanc.d Ytrcl, 1 Ap1utmente In Middleport. From
Milo Out 588
Lett,
t232-tW •.-

on

•ze.ooo, .

eon· e-.sest.

814 441 1833.
Equol Houolng a-tunhleo.
3 Bedroom!. .28 Acroo, St. Rt.
- · W/0,
I -S
Sot·
14\ I Mlloo •rom Golllpallo, IM- Ung,
- , Co~nlry
RO!rlaOrolor,
441-7303 Evanlnga.
$300 OopooH, SMMIO. No
-Appllcltlono:
·· Avolloblo 11'13
111
LIMITED OFFER NEW 14lml Smotdng
Wook April.
$11i5 DOWN, SI115MO., FREE Clnlonory Rood, GolllpoUo, IMDEUVERY &amp; SElUP. 304·7115- ~2011.

5566.

Wanl to mow cemltary kKI 1t

Union 6 HuHman cemltari...
304-882·254(.

Financial
Graphic

Arllot

Wonted

For

21

SciMfl Printing Co. &amp;14-44112368 Ao F« Chrto.

Business
OpportunHy

HEINERS BAKERY ROUTE
SALES DELIVERY
INOTICEI
Hooded: 0n
lndlvlduol OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
wHh • good drivlng o.c:«d lor recommenda thai you do bull·
. . . dollvo&lt;y. Good on. with ~pi• you know and
We
an
NOT to eend money Uvo~h th1
mill unlll you have lnVN1tgallld
the oHerlng.
_

•-lc

Local 'lending Bualneas ~or
Slle . .Low Start Up lnvH1ment,
Good Solid AM Cloh B..tnooo.

Pl-

085l
HVAC lnotollon noodod. At INII Coil - · I-80G-35CHI363.
lhrM ye1r1 experience. Salary
baNd on · experience. Contact Vending: Won~ Gil Rich Quick.
Will 'Gol A Study C..h Income.
-lng end ~~"A In Priced
to Soli. t-800-820-4313.

w.,...

ChMI•, Ohio •• 114-

26

loclllyor1o800o71lo4223.
LogOI SocNtary, tomlllor wllh
WOld PertKt; gOod communlc.tlon okltts, typing lllllo1
n..,.,.,..
requlrM.
S.na
,.aw. to lox R-14 c/o PcMnt
Pt. . .nt A-altter, :ZOO Main
Stroot, Point PIMoont WV
25550.
NMOI 5 Ladleo To Sell Awon, IM-

I•--•••••••·

4464311. .

N1 dtll: A u..-ln Home Care
Glvor Fa&lt; n Yoor Old W«non
s..no Uftlng Room &amp; Boora1
PraYidod Wllh Solory, IM-3177523 ~ No An- Lo... -

........-

0011 Hill TNclllng Coiitpeny
hMing Over Tho llood Drlvoro,

With ai&gt;od drtvlng roconl. COL
AoquliK .IM.fl2-7773, Or A~
lor 5!00 P.M. Colll14~45-1304 .
OW.nwook Center, 333 P~g~
It,.., l!llddle.,.·le offerlr)Q 111
...wty hired CNA'e 1 $300 .,gn
on banue. Wt onw compll:lllwe
· MfMY •nd benetll .. PIN• atop
..
« call Jan Ellu, AOON, 814112.f472 tvr m«o lnlormotlon.
EOE

POSTAL

f1~--

based on race, color. religion,
seK familial status or national
origin. or any intention to
make any such preference ,
limitalion or discrimination.·
This newspaper witt not

knowlingty accept
advertisements for real estate
whiCh Is in v1olation ol the law.
Qur rea ders are hereby
informed th'at all dwellings
advertised in thi10 new&amp;paper
are available on an eqUal

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

3 Bedroom SubWn~nNn In
Country tt 112 Acnoo, S47,ooo,
8M-379-271l
Pump, 011 Furnace, 1 Acre,
O.r~ge . Addl1011 Arb, Sl2,000,

IM-317-7267.
SOUTH
USTERN 0HtP AREA. 1110-.
lttOifT SHIFT. AI&gt;PifcOnto No.. A Cumnl . COL And A
Cloen Drlvlna Aoc«d. Send
lloplltl To: ClA 314, c/o Go~
tiP."* Dolly Trlbuno, as Thlnl

A~~ Goi=PR~EN~
ENiifiT PAOORAII. '

'

.

,.

.

..

hoUMI In Racine .,.., 114-012·

5858.
.
One bedroom ...,.1110111 In lllddlopott, oil Ulllhleo pold,
$250/mo., SIOO ,.._.., IM-1148-

221l

S.onawoad -Atlartrnenla, lllddlapolt, Ohio , _ hOI ovoiiOiilo

one bedroom aputmenla 11
lived ln. Sovo $6000. Col Ruoo -tc,lor eldorly ond dleobtHy,
IM-8112·3081, EOH.
Murdock, 1-8011-2111-6070.
TWin Rlvwa Tow. now eccepCIng opotlcotlono /.;; 1 br. HOD
oubelillzod opl. tor o - , ond
hondlcoppod. EOH . 304-&amp;751179.

·.Norrie doublawlcle. rwpo, never

Wod{l'! Aportrnento. 1 I 2tir, no
..... tiOI Bu-· Sl-. 871-2072 oftorlpnt.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

45

1.1 tontho ocro ott C...y Ad In
Applo Grove. Cloorad wlchy

water •

Cllble

Furnished
Rooms

1vaUable. $5 1000. Roome tor rn ~ we•k or month.

'::741'"'

304.f'I'B~811.
SI:IOimo. Golllo Holot.
580
10 ocroe on Rodmond Ridge.
.:.:c;· _--,,--,..,..UIII~IM on I&gt;I'OPifty. Will Mil oil Stooping roomo wHh .-rng,
or JH~rt. SJ:I504) per IC,._ 304- Aleo tr•ler IPIH* on river. All
17W401.
·
hook.,:)'l;. Coli after 2:00 p.m.,
2 building toto wKh well a 304 •
585t, llooon WV.
10
pump, ckiM
Ioera, Mooan 46 Space for Rent

'::--'-:'-':c

County t.lrgrouncl

ar~~a.

3QC..

675-2288.
4 AcrM Corner Of Pouom Troc

In -

STO-A-W,.~

mini otoroge. 1110,

10J:10, 101:15, 10x20. NoW rwntlng

Hoven. 304.f82·2tll.

3br houH, 2yfe old, 2.1ec:rN on
Lltlio Sldeon, Southoldo. 30411S-&amp;876 .,.., Spm.
3br~ 2blth on IP.f"OX.

1.en,l

oUt

5acne.

Jerry 1 .Run

Ad.

118.7&amp;0. Coli 304-&amp;711·2294.
4llr on Redmond Ridge, Smtn

town.

lac land; blrn I
11"'"91• Shown by oppofntment
Only :JOU7U401.
from

Household
Goods
50 Tracto 01 Lond 5 45 Acroo 5
AcN Tr.ctt 1100, $110 Down,
$100 Month Lind Controct, Qol.
llo Co. Approx. 10 IIMII From
River, 114-1114412.

Corpot &amp; VInyl In Stock $5.00 Yd
I Up 10 Pottonno 01 KHchon
Corplt In Stock. 0... 35 Pol·
feme VInyl In Stock. Molk&gt;htn

Clrpoto, (14o446-11fo14.

64 ocroo, no building. 10&lt; field, Country Furnltui'H'!umMure tor
roH fronttge, I 114ml out Crab
E••:r.:.oom. lml.,_"!·-~-North,
Creek. $28,000. 30UI7'5..zllt1.
Pl. P _ ont,. ~liHUI.
1110 ecre over.fooldng Ohkt GOOO USED APPLIANCES
River 2ml - n Rt 2. 304-175- Woohoro dryort, rotrtg«otoro,
5880.
rongoo. !ilioago Appllonceo, . 11
Large ~Ice Btrn On 71.15 Acr~~e, VIne St-1 piilll14-441-7311, t •
3 Mlloo Bock 01 Crftn Chy, 800-411t-34n. :

$20,000, 1-11-7128.
Ken...,.. Wo- And Whirlpool
LoiO For SOlo DnGoo- Crook Dryer 171 Eoch Or $125 Cull
Rood, Golllpolle, Coli Aftor e For Both, 114"'411-1479.
RII. IM-448-l'IU. ··LAYNE'SI'iJjiNITURE Tycoon Llk• one act. · kM, Complllle horne fumi~I~C·
121110 mobile homo, county · Hou,.: llol&gt;&amp;t, 8-5. I
wotor, _.,, lllc:lrtc, $12,1100, ~2, 3 mlloe out Bulovlllo Pfko
IM-1112·2157.
Frw OoiiYOry.
'
Mogle Chol f1 CU. Ft.
Ae~••tor I · E..mrlo Stove
Renlals
$200 Eoch; Coldopot Dloh$11M!; G.E. Wuher 1
Dryer e71 ~och, Ouuer 25"
~ T.V. 17!1; Ook CoffM I
41 Houses for Rent
2 End To""' $100, 114-3B7·7123
4 lid-•, 1 112 Bothe, Aftor5 P.M.
f32Mio • . Oopolft, In EwMo,
One II Inch SvtvoniO Color T.V.
113-122.0294. .
531; Ono Swlvol Oftlco Chotr
Coltogo tor rent In Pl. - n t . 811; Ono Aluminum Storm - ·
Comptete WHh GloM &amp; Scroon
114-H2·5851.
81• 811, IMSlondord Nice :s bedroom home, central :188-&amp;801.
olr,
- geroge.
-hlv
PICI(ENS FURNITURE
plue2 -wily
._,., IM-l'li·
NowAJHd
~oftw5pm.
•
No epptiOIICII, H&lt;HoMUO.-IIt'NIIdiOid lurnlohlng. 112 mi. Jon1cho Rd. Pl.
Nice lllroe
Pl.... nc wv, can 304o41'7&amp;-1450,
In
114 411 .....
.
IWAtN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62
Throotl•nr
Choo- Olivo 81., Golllpollo. a Uood
••.
Houema
n..,.. en Mpo.lt '*lultM. lumttwo, ~t"':'4e :"'.-. a
w~st.
114-441-ii21 oftor lpnt.

w...._

3 8odroon, 2 litho, Holt

FoR

Nice 2 bt ooto, In .-oy &amp;
lllddlapolt, i14-1112.f8111.
Nice, dean th,.. Wroom

Merchandise

lion lniD. col 2111-l'IIH301 till 1•
WYi¥, ltm-lpm, S..,.Frl.
PootoiPoolll ....
a.-. • bonolfto. Clrrilro,
~
-lnloromtlon
- ond molnt.
jobo.
for
....,
a oppllcollon ... 701-214-1100 0111. 3170, 31

TRUdK DRIVER

Malee 2 piymentJa • move In,
new 14x7D 2·3br. Clll Au.. Mur~
dock 1.fOG-ast-5070.
N- llli5 14170' 3 bt., 2 bath, lno
cludol oklrllng, otopol blocko, I
yNr hom.ownera neur11nc1,
and B month• FREE tot rent.
Only $1025 - · ond $213 per
mo. Cllll.f00-&amp;37·3231.
NEW BANK REPOS, ONLY 4
LEFT. 304·755-7181.

Bl•- Rood, Addloon
T-nohlp, $'14,000, IM-31HIIIt.

JOBS{qc:
Sttn
opportunitv basis.
F« uom ond oppllco- lit_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _""

__......

..

a

All real esta te advert'islng In
this newspaper Is subject to
the FeDeral Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wt1 1ch makes it illegal
to advertise "any preference ,
limitation or discrimination

· - . f l l l.

--In
.,Ddlt...

.. ,

56

1113

Pets forSale

riding r-n - r . mtoc uteN, mi8C push rnowws,
Oioc1rtc ·range l rolrlgerotor.
304.f7&amp;-7ttl3.
Btby bM, car eMt, welker
ploypon:lf"'oblt crib, toblo wl4
choirs. 4-675-4548.
B111wy o..,.tod Botmon Cor,
Now, $100, IM-24&amp;-stl8l
BooiO By Rod Wing Chi-•
-40 To .ao Dog-e, 'H.H, Brown
Guoronlood, L.Gwwol Prtc•, Tho
Shoo Colo, 114o4411-4222.
Concreto a Pliotlc Soptlc
Tonkl.l. :100· Thrv 2,1100 Gollono
Ron •nno EniO!JiriMo, Joe~.on, OH 1~37.0521.
Elvto Calloe11-: Autographed
Photo, . R~,
Book•,
Mogoll-, PtotM; Trwdlng
Cordi, And ....,.1114-8112·71114.

;;::~~=-=~--:-­
Groom ~- Grooming.
FNturlr1g
loth. Jutlio
Wobb. Colt
-44'"""'.
_,,
1 Full B - Mole Slllhllu,
6~$1
4-8 Month Old HuoQ 1JPI Pup
One Blue Eye 0no 8rown Eye,
Block •White Ton H Found IM441.flll4 CR-•rd)
Adoroble whfto dwo!f bunny
w/111 - - · · tor
Elotor. $40. 304.f75-443tt
AKC Femolo Chlnoie Fown
Color Pug 1 112 VMN Old,
House BrOken, $200, a..t on.,
114-448-4113 Aolt For Chotlo.
AKC Roatotorod .4 Yoor Old
Female, Aattwtllt.r, .,.., IM-

Fl-ood, $10 o olckup loed, Cut
your own, •• h.lrdwood, e'J4..

AKC roglaterod Chow Chow
pupplea, blue ........... bllc:k

992-8115.

I'MIIe or creem temala.

Fow ·bulb cenopy tomlng.llod,
hoo Wolfe bulbo, good cond~
lion, $300, ll4·ll42·3142.
·
Fuel oil lurnoco, ltkl now. 304-

d-~,

..........

214-&amp;881.

8M-tll2·7!1111.

.

moe.,

Oold

Transportation

.I US~l&gt; TO tfAVf
INfL~Tr:l&gt; ~GO,

71

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

.-.

,.

11 112 Woodltroom Ooop Y tom Bolt, $300,114o441·f708.
1112 Jet Ski, 114-441.0731.

~

'-~AIC.

.'

dl

,.

BORN LOSER

...
1\ ROBII·-liN Til£ BIRDei'Ji\ I TMI~

~

· 1\

Farm Supplres
&amp; Livestock

44tl.f308.
Now motol hand oordon cu~
tlvltOf, olllro blodlo, 1&amp;1; ga1c1
gu dry.-, SIOO· gnollno
woodNtor wlbrvo~ 't.t-. $100;
Rurtlno tlllor, llkl now,
114 - . 315 • .
- ==:.:::
'
~
=-.::::=·:....,....,.......:~ I

:4&amp;
:-:

~£

,.J-

.

~

HE'~

SITI!Iol6 Ot-1
AAIC£. F~!

Sl&amp;t-1

1~ . 1-VC. .

YOO KNOW I.

4•
Pass

East
Pass
Pass

liftoff (II.)

32 God o f -.
37 ~0111111 girl

Pass

.

451-

.

C&lt;&gt;lldltlonally

ptttrWrch

48-ttemer
47 Olrl't !!MW
48 R&amp;gtetted
411 Dlntlnullwo
aulllx
51 Actor-

OuiiM

Last Janual)', llraveled to Australia,
where I spent a week coaching ttiat
countl)''s junior players. I was particu·
larly impressed by Murray Green, from
Brisbane. For practice, I selected deals
from several sources, including those
generated by a com puter program.
Today's deal came from "Tricks of the
Trade" by Englishmen Terence Reese
and David .Bird 1$15.95. 800-274 -22W .
Green, sitting West, .defended perfectly.
How should South plan the play in six
spades after ruffing the initial diamond
attack''
·
Two clubs was strong, artificial and
forcing . After receiving spade support,
South bid what he hoped he co uld
The correct line. after ruffing the dia·
mond lead and playing a heart to dummy's ace !dummy's only guaranteed en·
tryJ, is to run the club nine. If it loses to
West's queen, Soulh uses the club"jack
as the dummy entl)' to lead the spade
queen. If the club nine wins, declarer
continues with the club ja.ck. If Wesl
wins thi s trick and gives his partner a
club ruff, declarer congratulates him on
an excellent defense. And if lhe second
club finesse wins, declarer switches to

311 Ratea-

.

52 C.le.U.I53 Fable
:

58Grtek._.,
57 AIIO

58 Demon

,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos

Celtlbrlly Ci!Nr CI'J'Piograma ara cralltlld tram quolalllonl by I~ I)IOCI6e, pPI ww:t ~
EliCh Jener In 1hl Cipher 1t1ndlloranott'Mtr. Todty'l CW.: T .._, W

's
p

ERC

p

c0

.

s

p

SP

KDUKDBXSRO .

S X,

VHa ·e

ERC ·

S X ' F

S X' F

A B W 0,

B

TeXUZ

S X,

ERC

I X' F
I X

TRKI

N R N

AFIHP . '

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Laugh1 er is .w ine lor th e soul ... the hilarloua
declaration made by man that life is worth liv1ng." - Sean O 'Casey .

T~~:t;~' &lt;0@~~\t\-l&amp;t.~s·
141totl
CU.Y I. POLLAN
·O four
Rearrange leners of
scrambled worda
~y

low to form ~our wordl.

·

.

..

.,

WOII

I

PERMEI

2 ...:;..1..:...,.1-1
1 :r--'-1:..,;,;.1
f--r.-1

I~

I
1· I . I I
NI Gy v

· ~. :. .,.V;_. . . :;L,. . =.ET.B~E-ll

1 16 1

~'

..

HA RRET

..

My brother was worrying
aboutaverytrivialmatter."Don't
invite trouble, dear,' his wife
~~i~~ ·~:~i~l ~ppear on its own·.

t-,7:;-i-I.;_;'TI"6:..:.,,:..:·....:;1"'9.:_1,--I
1
~
.
.
•
~

I.

'--'---'--"-...L.-L-....1

Q

Complete tho chuckle quoted
bv lilting in the missing words

vo~o~ develop from step No. 3 below.

79

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

SCRAM,~ETS

ANSWERS
Humane - _Quill - Elope - Census • SPLASH ·
Our son was trying to make a good impression on the
. .Jr kids. ·~on,' his dad told him, ' You can get into hot

j

1117 Oldo II Royolt Broughom,
loHed, 1.1 VI, IIC. Oond.,
- - dr, 54000 080. 30465-315!11.

water by trying to make a big SPLASH."

eon Trenc:lw - . low
boy; 1171 dump trucll, Font, tM,

_. DleMI$1.450, 111 •

csn

JD
Clroln Drill; JD 1310
Sickle - . . ; JD 1311 - .
IM-216.f011.

Servrces

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30'145'111'. Pointed Slooi S~
Gotvol._ SIMI Root, 15'xt

Home
Improvements

StMI II*'· 3' .... Door.
llil444. ERECTED. IRON HORSE

63

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
-BEDE OSOL

C&amp;C
Gonoral
H«no
llolntononco ond lloflllt H«no
Ropolr. F« ' - oollmoto coli

14 • -loiiil · ' Htlt.w,
tome · wtlh croll bNd calvea,
caHI1t 115--3805.

Chot, 114-lliZ-&amp;323.

C:.IVM tor U.Jtl, 114-

a Holotll~,

Thi'M prom dr..... , alze -i. OM
wtddlng ~n. long .._¥e1
Young Potltcl Urrioulln Butlt,
high neck, low beck, IM-2!1 llhO.
'
hoop, htlf pric•, &amp;14-IMt-2481 or

64

-.'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
.
UncondHionol Nlotlmo .... Loco! ........ lumlohod
eon l.f00-217-0571 Or tM-m
0411 Rogero Wotwproof!ng. Eotobtllhod1171.

Livestock

Upright, Ror'! E"1n1 E:ntai'Df't....

good · condHion.
priced. 304-175-

Pass

North
2 NT

Oovle T r - ~-•_4.1}~: p.,.

Jocklon, Ollfo, 1.aoo-537-M21.

614-367-0288.
War•rbed, loU.ilt, · .....,

West
Pass
Pass

c:..-ol

500 ~~
. p4ootlc toM, HS, 1M-

2 a......,, 1 J.-.
ooy, 814..,.tlo048t H No Anowtr
Loovelloouge.
WUI ~lver. 114-al-4441.
'
Anguo BuM, 25 - . rogtotorod.
Royol
Ookl
memborohlp, 12·1400 111e, 1ong a ton, $1000.
Pomoroy, Ohio. Soli « trodo lor 304-&amp;75-1131.
onythlng ol oquol voluo, ·· C.
Bldcherlng
~
And
Wollo, 304-343-0411.
Hom...,lrj Gtllo, 4-R .Pfgo, 114Slnglt bed $30. 10aol oquorlum zsUIIIO.
WIICCt-8 $3. 304-1756042 oftor Bpm.
llonfatd bull, I l/2yn Old. Aloo
cow a cod. 304.f?a.l204 ollor
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gillon lpnt.
.
Reh1@1rttore, StOVM, Wuhere

23 S&amp;en.,
24 ~ ..... lc holy .

110 AC Wldo Frant End Good
CondHion, 114-211-tlllll

Rodng go-koi1J_5.5 HP onalno,
$525, 614-1148-u71 or IM-Mt- I COWII &amp;
1112•2061.
2045.
And Oryoro, All Aocondltlonod
And Gourant•dl SIOO And Up,

22=-)

s.m-

27 Biblical king
30Singlu
31-Not....cly!W

I

Toppor Sltopo• Sooto 2
cholno, &amp; plow, ft200, IM'MZ·
AduHo Or 4 Children, Fiio Full :1117.
St• Pick-Up Aftor 3 P.ll. IM44tlo4t38.
114 4411412.

Choplin

tO S.IUIIor

28 ChrlalmM

.__._.._...t.-..L.-.L.---1 "'

WI.Or-·. -... • hp.; u·
diCk, lkoo, loodod, Wol&lt;thto,

OuMn Slu U.nr... ' &amp; Box
SprlnE', GOOd CondHion, $125,

11 " 18 S.r.d ..,.,
20 Aworeof

9 Mro.Ctutrtea

2$~mud

s

8 ILDERS 1o800o312·1045. ·

Plc~.Up

8 Axiom

61 Farm Equipment

1112~134 oftor 7pm.
. ,
DOutx 4IGe Tracoa&lt; tUIID,j 11F
50 luolt Hog l olodo
Bill; Font Jubllte 52MI: 115

llmttM, 1...aoD..a87-e:sw Or 114-

Fervor
Undergarment
Sell
Nopoteon'o
leland
42 Small tlove

36
36
40
41

· H9wever,
decided to lead a low
spade lo his jack at trick three. If Wesl
won , declarer planned to use lhe spade
queen as lhe dummy entry for the club
finesse. And il West had hesitated before ducking, South would have contin·
ued with the spade 10, forcing a second
dummy entry. However, Green ducked
smoothly. Misled, declare r continued
with the spade ace and went one down,
losing a trick in each black suit. . ·

Tfi~T :')f&gt;R lNG

-

100,000 BTU HI Eftlcl~-- F
~- H
Pu-·-•
.-Vory Roooonobty
umoco~ Prtcod,
•• ·
One
Uood 25KW Eleclrlc Funnoco,
Clntrwl Air CondH~r1 F- Eo-

Hay &amp; Grain

11113 Pontloc L.omone I \000
Mlloo, Aut-tic, Air, Cl-•·
56,000 080, 514-256-1111, 2511-12112.

72 Trucks for Sale

1m Font Dump Truck, Trl..bio,
11 R. Alum. a..- lied IM251-1SZ5. '

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

®~hday

F110mon'o Hooting And Cooling,
lnotoiiOIIon And SoMoo Eflii
Cortnltcl. R•oldorttlll
ctat. 114-258-1111.
' ·
nw-

eo;,

I

.,.r v.a, ~- Trono • Point, Nice
1871 81

.._,. M•e1ge.
1f71 f..t -

XLT Aebull
llolor, r.-ltd, llony- Porto,
Tlreo, a.- R~ Sllorpt IM245.0318. ·
11171 Font Pfott.IJp XLT WhMo
Flborg~ T - . 17~ Reg.
lllloo, eoc.tlonl
Nioii,
11,000, 114--.&amp;ell.
.
11tr1 Dodao 112 Ton PU r.lllloo,l~1711.'

1
•

A SLOiol

i

truck,

1185.33-

34114.

1 -up (ma~eo
lively}
2 Facility
3 ~ew or pine
4 Author rKiptlng
5 WWIIarea
·8 Metal laotener
~ Bridge expttrt
- Culberteon

59

Moving: All DINoront Kl!lll_. 01
Fumhure, S11 AI: 152 Second
Avenue, Oolllpallo, I~

'

,..,....,.

'-ATtL.Y .I ffeL
&amp;..liCE- .I'Vf tfAO

-;-AKC;;;:--'-'-:R:::~--;"'-:-,.,-od-:--::Coc--:-kl-r

$75; 8'112' lUoH

Log Homo For Solo, Approx. 200
y..,. Old, 114-368-IBOt.

DOWN

35---.out

make.

...
-ton.

large DHk,-tloyword Wokltltld
Dlnltto So~ Yllo 1111, Exordoo
Stopper, 114-4411-75211.
Lown Chlot Riding llowor With
Blodo $ISO; liTO Aiding - r
$300; 4 KC L"" WHh Bor $17!1,
114-2411-03111.

RuoonobtJ
5522.

WI-IISPER?

15110 Hondll $200; 4 Wheelel'
ft,310, 814-318.all14.

•2001-.

whh tour gla.. C8... 1nd
oloctrlc, $7!10; 114-886-3:111.

w/mlrror,

DOGS CAN

Wing lniOrotalo
lllod ~ 81.10 /Bolo, 1144117- 41,000 Mil•, Lota Of Extr11al
11111 Or. 441 25ll.
. $2,500, 81..258-1704, I'Mo256113t.
Round Wro"B:' BoliO~
-......
•-It,
1'
IIIII Hondo 250 ldll~y 4r•-""' -2olt2, 814-446-24113.
· 304.a75-7t63.
Sctuoro beleo of mixed hoy, 1117 KXIO, - . I rvito greot,
Slibato, eo11 814-247-2211 doyo • ncolltnt condhlon, $100, 1MBM-241'2711 oft• Jpm.
843.f214 oftor 4 pm.

•

King woodbumor with piping,
$250; 500 gollon plaotlc lonk,
$95; Aoyol EAI21 CMh roglltor,
u..ct 3

64 C -

By Phillip Alder

HOW COliLD
HE SA'f, ''NO"?
0065 CAN'T
TALK ..

OUT AND PL.A'( .. ·

Sponlolo For Salt AduKo a
Pupplt., 114-3711-2721.
175-4002.
2 AKC
Rottnlor Pupo,
Full llzo bed wHh hoodbollrd, Femolto, 1210 Eoch, I~
$150; new roww uereiMr, $50; 1341.
weight , bench exerclnr, 1250; Cocker Sponlet Pupploo, Roody
114-'lll2·:1318.
To Oo Both MollO I Fornoloo,
Hove You Ever Wonlod To Oo 114o446-f'JI12.
Roclng? ClotoM F« Everyone.
Wolmaronor puppy, rogloOponlng SUndoy April lllh, t~ lhouMbroken.~
Gote At to A.ll. ActlvNito, Tl'IO.
AIVUnd 12:00, VInton Roc:;:r.
Inc. Admlollon II, 114-3811, Roglotored Chlnooe Shorpel
814-3611-11817.
pu-t, loto of wrinlllM, coil
114-!148-2121.
Hemlock 4'-T tor londocoplng
c...nlioe1, MOlly olloorod. Boli0'3 Tome Cockellot Cogo a Slond,
a burlooi&gt;Od. Sonto'o F...... Like - . 1 112 Yoorw Old, $GO
304-8H-Mcl1 or 304.f75-4131.
614-448-7145.
JET
To aood home In country onlY.
AERATION IIOTORB
Roglotorod 2n old Block Lo&amp;,
Ropolrod, &amp; Rebuilt In molt. 304-&amp;~:n:
Stock. Coli Ron Evono, 1.et)().
Wonted: AKC AkHo Slud Sor·
537-8528 • .
Ylce, 114--J81.1388 a...,;. ......
Kimball office . 3'xl'
wlcholr; filing driiWII' pluo 5
$400, ,,..ll42·2154.

63 Pent

On top
down under

ASK '(OUR D06 IF
l-IE WA~TS TO COME

.

d-1!. 14,800 miiM, -

UFE I HEALTH

60 Give me - 81 A d - ! of
Csufl .} .
62 Ending wHh
lemon

Opening lead: • Q

,.

Motorcycles

304..75-3110.

8x18 v•n a10r9 box, Hondll

3•
6•

OL' BULLET
MISSES HIM,
TOO\\

1f71 Kowoukl cullom buill
!lord toM B!50, ,.... ~· tonk
~Old, M75, IMM2'lll7t.
- •
IN5 Yomoho 10. $250. Phonjl

COUNTS

54 Nolin
'
55 Cannon
59 So.ok, •• 1111

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

I'LL BE GLA~ WHEN
: URIAH GITS BACK FROM
VACATION AN' STARTS
TOTIN' TH'
U.S. MAIL
AG'IN \\

IHVICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS I AUTO DIS-

..

garment
50 Rope IIIIer

•A K I 0 6

Buy lit All. lllvorlno Anilq-,
1124 E. lllln Slroo\ on AI. 124,
Pomoroy. lloun: II.T.W. 10:00
o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundly 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 5-·25111.

:::::o...":;J!"C:.w,~,;"l"L~ AMEAICANSUA:~L

6 5 3

'tr1 · - S-10 4WD, Y.f,
out-uc.
clo.!.!', . rune good,

oond, $100. -.nl'./C/33.

•A98 74
•Q 8 4 2

10 2

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

0

Marlin 22 oulo wl4132 -

Two bedroom lnlhlr, 1\lppen~
~ ~ ~~~poo~~, 53
Antiques __
--mo.,
.
-=-=...,,...,.,:,;:;:;:::,::.:.,,....,.,

3211, Pcllnt PIHoont " ' 21110.
304.f75-300tl. CA Gllnmolt
Foclllty) EOE.
Compulor uooro W~
own hour8. $20k to $5011/yr.
24ilro1·714-ast-:13t1x1501.
COOKWARE
Wonted: Experloncod Cookworo
BoliO
Poopto
In
Hotill
Demonllrotlon.
ll•t
a.
·
AdYoncomont
To
Mo._mont -bio, 304.f7581tt.
.

••o s s

• 9 7 3 2~

1101.

-

•4

•K 8 7

I Dog or cat
4 Drive baCic
9 Yokel 12 HMrlng organ
13 Pr8c11cal
14 String«!
1ne1n1ment
15 AIIU
17 Compne pt.
18 Shlbby
19 Walla
21 Mate ro-r
25 - - Cltar Day
28 Rlllland29Touch-phone
33 Compttnlon
oluh
34 E1plred .

43 Dlelnlaligllll
44 Pl1ctolng atyte 1,....,...,._
47 r:.male

- - --

Tuesday . March 2 1, 1995

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
o::==~~....:;:;:::.:.:,.___
84

Lowrenco

In the yea r ahead, You r chart indicates .
that you're likely to end up with a muc.h
la'rg.er circle of friends than when yo,u
start ed. Two pa rtnerShi ps tor practical'
purposes'are also probabl~

Ento'Jir!He . TW

t:".P"7""N.t~~ ~= ·~
Eloctrtc Furno-. Froe Eo-

tlmota HYou Don~ CoR Uo w.llolh Loool 114-&lt;141.f30tl ~-

2811.f301, WY 002141;

',

.

.

Rooldlntlol or OO&lt;n"*Ciot
wiring, ., _.,.
Mootor Ucenooit -~~-·

=~.,:c--

,

wv-:·

cess.

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct . ·23} Ge nerally

whi ch signs are romanticalfY per1ect for · . speaking. this should be a very pleasa~t
day . You will know how to entoy;yourSelf
you. Mat l $2.50 to Matchmaker. c/o thi s
in all types of venues and circumstances.
,
newspape1 . P 0 Box .4465 .. New York .
SCORPIO
(Oct. 24·Nov. 22) You are 1n
NY 101 63.
a cycle for deriving substantial rewa~d s
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) lntuit1on and
lrom endeavors you 've intliated. Keep
insttnct could be major contributors to
th e fa ith and push for victory:.
your success in c ~ mmercia l ma tte rs
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-118&lt;1. 21) You
. today. Have faith in you r perceptlOI')S.
.
will have good leadership and organ izaGEMINI (May 21 -Juna 20) II ~ou ' ve

llonal qualities today and will probably
fare well in mosl areas. Th is might not
e:.ctend to 11nancial realms , however.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan . 19} .Once
you feel pressure today , you'll be capa·
ble of do ing w~at needs 10 be done .
Challenge will arouse your determinatiOn,

. been won der ing about the .loyalty o f a
ce rta1n fnend when the chips are d~wn.
today you m ight have the c h anc~ to
make an eva lu.ation.

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) You are n:l
l1kely to finish second in competitive situ ·
at ions today, especially if they affect your
career. Set the pace in your race for the

tape

not diminish l,t.

AQUARIUS (.Jan . 2D·Feb . 19} You

·

mustn 't be envious of yo~r fr iends '
accomplishments today. When you team
of what pals have done, let it tnsptre yoU
to .equal or exceed their efforts .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Disengage lrom
dull r out tnes today and participat e
instead jn th tngs that are ,8~hilarat­
lng . Stimulating activities
your anitude and outlook.

ill refur bish

PISCES
(Feb .
20·Morch
20}
Obst.ruCiions thai have Impeded financial

ARIES (March 2f·Aprll19} A, Jesty situ·
ation , similar 10 one you hanqted sue·
cessfully in the past , mighl. develop

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22
itting con·
ditions that might not favor associates

today. Rely on yourself arid your memory

could prove advantageous for you today .

canny dim inished at this lime. J;e1 mov-

to resolve it . Know where to loo k tor

Take a chance and ride the tide to sue·

mg. •

'
•

't

romance , and you 'll firid
The ·Astro·
Graph Match maker mstantly reveal s

.

• I

tewards in your career may be signifi·
,

'

.~.

..

_ __.,..l

.'
.,

..

..' .. .
I

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 20, 1995

0 hio Lottery

Nerve gas attack in Tokyo subway
l~aves six dead, thousands sick
TOKYO (AP) - Passengers
fainled, vomited and went illto coovulsions after a letbal nerve gas
spewed from wrapped packages
autborities believe were planted by
terrorists today on one of the
world's busiest subway systems.
Six people died ao.d 3,227 were
trealfd iu hospitals.
No group immediately claimed
responsibility and tbere was no
obvious motive.
Police said tbe toxic agent was
sarin, a nerve gas developed by the
Nazis during Wa:Jd Warn tba1 can
be ratal in even small doses.
Japanese news reports quoted
authorities as sayillg the substance
was planted ill wtapped contaillers
in at least five subway cars on three

quickly poured into stations . jinvolvement in today's poisonings ' intravenous drips.
.
Troops were called out, including and threatened in a statement to sue
"When I got to the hospital, I
an anti-chemical-warfare squad. anyone who suggested there was a couldn't move my bands enough to
Signs were hastily posted outside link.
write my name and I could barely
stations saying tbere bad been a
Sarin was blamed for seven speak," said commuter Masasbi
guerrilla attack.
·
deaths in June at houses in tbe cen- Ito.
Authorities said 3,227 people tral Japanese town of Matsumoto.
The poisoning struclc at a cbetwere admitted to hospitals fa: treat·
The source was never identified, isbed national institution, Tokyo's
ment or observation, and hundreds and there were no arrests.
clean and efficient subway netif not thousands of others suffered
Two unexplained incidents ear- work. The trains run on precise
lesser symptoms including nausea lier this month could yield clues. schedules, carrying 2.7 billion pasand coughing.
On March 15, three mysterious sengers a year, about twice as many
Prime Minister Tomiicbi attache cases were discovered at a · as the New York subway system.
The attack also came as Japan
. Murayama expressed outrage and Tokyo subway station, each condemanded a full investigatioo.
taining 'three tanks with an still was recovering from the pbysi·
"We absolutely can't allow this unknown liquid, small motorized cal and emotional devastation of
kind of indiscriminate murder of fans, a vent, and a battery. One was tbe Jan. 17 earthquake in Kobe tba1
innocent citizens,'' be told giving off a vapor.
killed nearly 5,500 people.
reporters.
Ten days before that, 19 train
!;'a: many, the sight of hundreds
Authorities refused to discuss riders in Yokohama, a port city ' of ordinary people struck down on
traili lines.
· suspects - eitber individuals or near Tokyo, were taken to hospitals their way to work rekindled fears
All over central Tokyo, passengroups - and would not ~ay complaining of eye and respiratory that their country is not tbe safe,
gers staggered onto tbe streets, whether they included Aum Sbinri pain from an unknown source of orderly place tbey bad always congasping for breath. Some foamed at Kyo, a religious cult that bas been fumes.
sidered it to be.
the mouth ao.d bled liom the nose, accused of IW!kiog sarin.
Hospitals in central Tokyo were
"Japan bas turoed into a scary
witnesses said. People overcome by
Tbe group, wbic)l bas been inundated today. Doctors and nurs- country," said taxi driver Koicbi
the gas were carried out.
linked by news reports to several es rushed frantically to administer Horie. "We can't allow aimes
Worlrers clad in proteCtive gear unsolved kidnappings, d!:nied any CPR, give oxygen and book up this.''

SUBWAY VICfiM • A subway passenger wbo collapsed by
noxious fumes Is blken away on a stretcher from Tokyo's Tsuldjl
Station Monday morning. Six died and more tban 3,000 became iU
because of nerve gas planted at more tban 15 subway stations
tbrovgbout tbe area. (AP)

Perry meets with
Kuwaitis on Iraqi threat
KuWAIT (AP) -Defense Sec-

retary William Perry met with
· Kuwaiti leaders today to coordinate
plans for bolstering tlie emirate's
security forces in tbe face· of a
renewed military buildup.by Iraq.
: DireCtly upcn arrival liom Saudi
Arabia, Perry went into a two-bour
meetin~ and lunch with tbe emir,

Sheik Jabir al·Almad al-Sabab, and
Crown Prince Sheik Abdullah alSabah, tbe nation's top rulers.
The U.S. defense seaetary was
scheduled to fly to AI-Jaber Air
Base 20 miles northwest of the city
to meet with U.S. crews from the
two A-10 Thunderbolt squadrons
deployed .to the tiny ef!lirate .last
year.

:Meigs land transfers

District 13
All-Star
results

.

The following land transfers
Deed, Wesley K. and Jenmfer S.
were recorded recently in the office Cochran to Secretary of Housmg
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts and Urb~n Development, Salem,
E:mmogene Hamilton:
·
.91 acres, .
. .
Right of way Jol1n and Yvorine
Deed, Mtldred L, Sm1th, Sara
Dennis to TPCWo, 3.1050 aaes;
Eloise Cullums, Juanita Pearl
Right of way, Rodney E., Mona Cusbner, Robert Cusbner, Robert
L and Lilah Frecker to TPCWD, Frank Hawk and Romona Hawk to
B~ford 20 acres·
Bernice M. Hawk, Bedford parcel;
Right of way: Rodney E. and . Right of way, Flora~· Osborne
Mona L. Frecker to TPCWD, Salis- t~ ~uck.e~e Rural Electnc Cooperabury, .36 acres;
uve, ~Cipm;
. Right of way, Rodney E. and . R1gbt of way, Edward L .. a~d
Mona L. Frecker to .TPCWD, Salis- Donna K. Savage to BREC, Sc1p1o,
bury, .40 acres;
10.95 acres;
..
Deed, Mary Ahce Nease, John
Right of way, Rodney, Lilah
and Mona L. Frecker to TPCWD, Dav1d Nease, Marlene C. Nease to
Salisbury, 38.94 acres:
James Jay Cremeans and Andrea
Deed, Larry D., Marilyn D., Cremeans, Sutton, 2.44 acres;
Terry L. and Lois A. Deem to Earl
D.eed, Donald R. and Paul~tta
M: and Marie E. Johnson. Chester;
Pullins to Rita K. Wentz, Ohve
. Deed, Delber.t M . .and Loretta tracts;
Certificate, Harold C. Russell,
M. Blake to Debra A. Blake, Middlepcrt lot;
.
·
deceased, to Terry G., Lewis E.
Deed, Delbert M. and Loretta Roland E. and Raymond A. RusM. Blake to Shelby M. Powell, sell, Salisbury;
Middlepcrt lot:
.
·
Deed, Te~ry G., Kay, Lewis E.,
Certificate, Delphine J. Perone, Betty, Roland and Raymond Rusdecease~. to Thomas F. Perone, sell to Terry G. and Kay Russell,
Salem parcels;
Salisbury parcel.

PageS

Tbe awards were presented in .
dual ceremonies at the Beverly
Hilton in Beverly Hills and Tavern
on the Green in New York.
At the California ceremony,
Carl Reiner was awarded tl!e 1995
Paddy Chayefsky .Laurel Award for
Television, lbe guild's highest
award for television writing. Reiner
was the writer-creator of "Tbe
Dick Van Dyke Show," as well as
a television and Him actor, director
and producer. ·
The winners were:
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY,
FILM: "Four Weddings and a
Funeral," Richard Curtis, Gramer-

Gov. Mario Cuomo and Qklaboma' s former governor.
In 1993, then-Oklahoma Gov.
David Walters lost a c.ourt battle
witb Cuomo over wbetber Grasso
should be put to death in Oklaboma
or forced to serve a 20-years-to-life
seiuence iD New York IUs\,
Grasso said be wanted to die
rather than linger in prison.

on building aid program

SION: "Homicide: Life on the
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY, Street - Bop Gun," David Simon
FILM : "Forrest Gump," Eric and David Mills, story by Tom
Roth, based on the novel by Win- Fontana, NBC.
EPISODIC COMEDY, TELE·
ston Groom, Paramount.
ORIGINAL LONG FORM VISION: "Seinfeld: The Mango," ·
TELEPLAY, TELEVISION: Lawrence H. Levy , and Larry
"Witness to the Execution," David, story by Lawrence H. Levy,
Thomas Baum, story by Thomas NBC.
MUSIC,
Baum, Keitb Pierce and Priscilla - VARIETY
AWARD , TRIBUTE, SPECIAL
Prestwidge, NBC.
.
ADAPTED LONG FORM EVENT, TELEVISION: "Tracey
TELEPLAY, TELEVISION: ''A · Ullman: Takes on New York,"
Family Torn Apart," Matthew Tony Sheehan, Dick Clement, Ian
Bombeck, based 9n a book by La Frenais, Stephen Nathan and
Marc Flana~an. HBO.
l,.eslie Walker, NBC.
EPISODIC DRAMA, TELEVIcy.

VAN DEALER

of the prison, where 87 men have
been put to death since 1915. Three
college students sang, "Anotber
One Bites the Dust."
In New York City, members of
tbe Guardian Angels gathered in
Times Square and toasted Grasso's
death with a dozet(bottles of cbam~gne.
.
was the 11th person executed in tbe United State tbis year.

In a f'tnal statement, be repeated
his wish:'
''Let there be no mistake, Mario
Cuomo is wright (sic); Life without
parole is mucb worse than tbe
death penalty," Grasso wrote in a
statement released after be was pronounced dead at 12:22 am.
Deatb penalty opponents held
candlelight vigils outside the gates

BRAND NEW '95 CHM AS1RO EX1EM

Grasso

..

. By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
Qiesbire residents were assured
by an American Electric Power
Corp. official that noise. generated
·by fans on the scrubbers at the Gen:
James M. Gavin Power Plant
would be significantly· reduced
within three weeks.
A temporary muffling device on
the six fans in the scrubbers' waste
handling section bas already cut
noise by more tban 20 decibels.
said James A. Howard, manager of
AEP'·s Major Projects Division.
But some of the nearly 40 resi. dents wbo met with Howard Monday felt the noise was responsible
for not only lack of sleep but health
problems and contributes to tbe
deterioration of the quality of life
in the village.
"The noise I've beard lately bas
stayed around. about 24 (1ours and
is more so after midnight," resident
Ron Cornelius said. "Now I know
what it's like to be sentenced to life
without mercy:"
Howard said AEP became
aware of the problem a week ago
wben noise, variously described as
bigb-pitcbed or droning, prompted
complaints.
.
The temporary muffler on the
fans bas cut the level from 65 decibels to roughly 42 as of the reading
taken Friday, and installation of
new .equipment in tbe. next few
weekS will prompt a bigger reduc-

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lion, Howard added.
"We are confident this will take
care of the problem," be said. "The
design Work indicates to us it will
work."

Howard acknowledged that
AEP was mistaken in its earlier
belief, aired at one of several town
· meetings during the scrubbers,'
construction, that noise would not
be a problem for residents.
Stressing that the P.lant wants to
be a "good neighbor' to the community, Howard said AEP responded swiftly to the problem and will
continue to work with residents in
resolving other difncuities.
A suggestion that a citizen committee be allowed to inspect the
operation and permits was welcomed by Howard, who encouraged tbem to call bim or contact
Mayor W. Scott Lucas.
Both scrubbing units went on
line at Gavin earlier Ibis year. The
$600 million-plus project, designed
to remove 95 percent of the sulfur
content from coal burned at the 21year-old plant, is characterized by
AEP as .the key· component in its
Clean Air Act compliance.
Residents also complained of a
sticky substance bitting their cars
and damaging pain~ whiCh Howard
believed could be a moisture carryover from the plant. He asked resi ·
dents to provide bim with a sample
for analysis .
·
· Others noted that blackish dust

LOS ANGELES (AP)...:... Prosccuto~. wbo have tried to downplay the .
celebrity side of OJ. Simpson, kept the jury from bearing bis voice by
choosing not to play his taped interview with police.
Simpson's attorneys countered Monday by giving jurors an up-close·
look at the famous,jlefendant.
Escorted by bailiffs and lawyers, Simpson - appearing embarrassed
- extended a .trembling left band anct displayed the middle left Boger that
the prosecutioo contends was wounded during the knife attack that killed
his ex-wife and her friend. The defense suggested Simpson's knuckle
always appears swollen.
.
Jurors 'leaned out of their chairs to get a good view . .Only one juror
looked Simpson in tbe face: the rest peered only at his band . None
touched bim.
The display came early in the defense's cross-examinstion of Detective
t'biUp Vannatter, wbo returns to the witness stand today for more questioning by attorney Robert Shapiro.
With Vannatter's direct testimony finished, prosecutors bavc now
wrapped up the initial questioning of the two lead investigators - without
.Playing a tape recording ot'ISimpson's balf-bour interview with Vannatter
and Detective Tom Lange.
·
The interview took place at pclice headquarters the day after the June
12.murders of Simpson's ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and ber friend.
Ronald Goldman.
Legal analysts called the prosecution's move a "calculated decision" .
possibly founded on the belief the recording could make Simpson loolf
sym~thetic and remove any incentive for Simpson to testify in the case.
"Maybe they feel they've got a lot of momentum witb Ibis pOlice testi·mony and they want to move right intothe forensic ·evidence," said
Eleanor Swift, a law professor at the University of California Berkeley.
"Maybe they didn't want to personalize Simpson," sbe said.
From early in the case, prosecutors and the defense bave ·been locked
in a subtle baule over the ~umanization of Simpson. Defense attorneys
generally refer to him as "Mr. Simpson," while prosecutOr's usually call
him "tbe defendant."

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sort out your local concept," be
By JIM FREEMAN
said, explaining that the local conSentinel News Staff
cept
includes tbe district's needs
The Southern Local Board of
and
wants.
.
,
Education was updated Monday
"We
want
you
to
think about the
night on a state program to provide
concept
at
this
stage,"
be said. "The
funding for new school buildings.
most
important
thing
is to get the
Jack Hunter, from tbe Ohio
community
interested."
Deparunent of Education's school
finance division, met with board · The board would need to bave a
members at their regular meeting at project submitted to the state board
the high school to discuss the state by May 15 to put tbe issue on the
school building assistance program November ballot, but Hunter cau- which provi~es assistance to eli· tioned against baste.
"You bave to make a lot .of
gible districts for building new
tough
decisioos," be said.
buildings.
Under current guidelines, tbe
Hunter said the district is
district would .have to ~y about 50
already eligible for the program.
percent of the cost of a new school
"You are on the lis~" be said.
wbicb could cost about $8 mil"Even though the state will be
lion.
Under proposed guidelines,
very involved ... it's your schoolthe
district's
share could be as little
the state doesn't tell you wbat to
as
10
percent;
be said.
build." Hunter explained.
"There
may
be an advantage to
"The task you bave now is ... to

·AEP pledges to cut
noise from Gavin's
scrubber
unit fans
.

sa 688**
, '

--~----~~N~o--c-u~t-

On
the list
Southern Board updated
\

r,

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 21, 1995

Copyright 1995

Two-time killer .executed in Oklahoma early today
McALESTER, Okla (AP) .....: A
two-time killer was executed early
this morning for strangling 811 87year-old woman to death on C)lristmas Eve after luring ber to the door
under the pretense of giving her a
present
Thomas Grasso, who bad also_
liiTied a·person in New Ycirk; was
at the center of a bigb-profile tugof-war between former New York

Low toutgbttn tbe 305, p1rt1y
cloudy. Wednesday, portly
cloudy. Htgbsln 60s.

2 Sections, 12 Pagtls 35 centl
Vol. 45, NO. 227

'Gump' and 'Four Weddings' win top script honors
BEVERLY Hll.LS, Calif. (AP)
- Screenplays for '.'Four Wed·
dings and a Funeral" and "Forrest
Gump" drew honors from tbe
Writers Guild of America
"Four Weddings," a British
· comedy written by Richard Curtis
and starring Hugh Grant as a
charming bachelor who balks at
matrimony, was honored as best
original screenplay Sunday night
"Forrest Gump," written by
.
Eric Roth and based on the novel
by Winston GrOOm about a simpleton who bas a positive outlook on
life, won for best adapted screenplay:

Pick 3:
455
Pick 4:
7934
Buckeye 5:
9-13-14-16-18

.I

. ·

Aiternate budget
plan holds hint
of break in taxes
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - House Republicans will not include a tall cut In
their substitute version of Gov.
George Voinovicb' s proposed state
budget. But they might put In a
trigger mechanism for a future cut
' Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg, said Monday tbat
linking some kind of state income
tax cut to an improved economy
was one of the alternatives tbe
Hunter said the first step In attaining • new
DISCUSSES PROGRAM- Jack Hunter,
GOP was weighing.
school building through the program Is to forstanding at right, of the Ohio Department of
Voinovicb projects tbe state will
mulate
a
local
concept
a
summary
or
the.
disEducation's school finance division met with
bave an $892 million surplus when
trict's wants and needs. (Sentinel photo)
Southern Local Board of Education members to
the
current budget year ends June
discuss the school building as.•lstance prograltL
30.
· He bas cautioned legislators
school, but the project was turned
wait and see if better funding too fast ... or wait too long."
against spending the money or giv.'
·
The district bad earlier proposed down by voters.
comes up," be said. "It gives you
ing it back to taxpayers because the
Hunter
said
a
school
of
that
size
time to draw more interest and building a new district-wide
state
might need it in tbe event of
kinderganen through eighth-grade - 550 to 600 students - is about
enthusiasm."
an
economic
decline. . · .
(Continued on Page 3)
"The key,'' be said, "is don't act element31'Y school near IIJ~ bigh
Tbe Legislative Budget Office
predicts the. surplus might total at
least $1 billion.
·
Republicans who have been
holding bearings on Voinovicb'~
spending plan for the two years
starting July I will outline an altetnativc on Thursday that- wo'uld
spend less than the $33.7 llillion lie .
recommended.
.
How much less remained the
subject of behind-tbC-scenes work.
·
'I don' t think there is a percentage number," Davidson t.old
Members of .the Southern Local reporters a!'ter presiding .at a rouBoard of Education Monday night tine nonvoting House sess1on.
Sbe has encouraged Republican
approved a plan for the relocation
colleagues
to focus not on the size
of elementary school students to be
of
a
reduction
in spending from
displaced this fall by the
levels
Voinovich
proposed, but .on
announced closing of Rac!ne Elemeeting GOP ~oals that include
mentary School.
The board voted 3·2, with mem- making education a priority and
bers C.T. Chapman and Marty avoiding a tax increase.
"Getting into whether or not
Morarity dissenting, to accept a
plan submitted by acting Superin- you reduce it by 1 percent or twotenths of a percen.t or whatever I
tendent Ja:nes Lawrence.
The plan calls for the district's · don't believe is the drivin¥ force as
kindergarten students and we considel this budget, ' David·
Racine/Syracuse-area n~t graders son said.
House Republicans were to· out·
to be located in the existing kindergarten building adjacent to the line their budget proposal dealing
with education funding during a
junior bigb school.
·
Portland Elementary will house news.conference today.
students grades three through six, . Davidson said Monday the
while Letru:t Falls Elementary will Hou~C would recommend the state
TURNING IT DOWN - James A. Howard, manager of the
host pupils gradeS one through spend less than the S12.5 million
Major Projects Division or American Electric Power Corp.,
four. Syracuse Elementary will Voinovich proposed for a pilot proassure&lt;! Cbesb~re residents noise. levels from scrubbers at the Gen.
·have classes for students grades gram tbat would give low income
James M. Gavin Power Plant will be reduced within weeks. (OVP
parents state aid to send children to
two through six.
photo)
Tbc board rejected a plan ·sub- private school.
mitted last month by a parentDavidson said the House would
was building up on cars, houses black or panicuiatc coming out of teacher committee calling for the propose limiting tbe test to tbe
and furniture in homes close to the the scrubbers," Howard said.
disUicl's sixtb graders to be placed 74,000-pupil Cleveland school dis·
Howard added that .AEP shares in the kindergarten building at the trict, the state's largest. A federal
plant, prompting one resident to
claim that cleanup at her bouse was residents' concerns about the envi- junior high school. Under the com- judge bas placed the financially
ronment and pointed out that the mittee's plan, kindergancn would strapped district under control of
"putting Pledge out of business."
Howard and albers m atten - scrubbers arc an expression of that have been held at Syracuse Etc" the Ohio Department of Education.
dance were in ag~eement that the sentiment.
Another possible twist to the
mentary.
"We are the stewards of tbis
dust was not from the scrubbers,
Board members were unable to program: community involvement.
but wind-blown particles from Earth and we should leave· it in bet· answer questions by parents asking
"We're lalking about -I'll) not
ter shape than we found it," Cor- which school their children would sure this will remain in the final
Gavin's coal pile.
''There should not be anything nelius said.
be attending this fall.
version - some concept of some
sharing of the cost with the com-

Students'
relocation
proposal
approved

~----

r-

Buck ,·n t'""Uck-----.------.
f

1

mimity
to sec iftothere's
in
the. community
bcip tointerest
facilitate
a trial program," Davidson said.
She said payments to parents
likely would not rcaeb the $2,500
per year tbat Voinovicb recommended.
"I think what you will sec is
that we won't permit any tuition to
be paid that would be more than
tbc tuition that was paid in tbe preceding school year,',' Davidson
said.

Area man
dies in chain
saw mishap ·

Ohio omclals last week retrieved rour sets or mounted deer antlers confiscated from Mkbaei
R. Barker, 49, Charleston, W.Va., who pleaded guilty to charges Th.ursday in tbe Meigs County
Common Pieas Court. Above, Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood, left, and special
Deputy Dana Aldridge aii!Dire a trophy buck preserved in a full-size body mounL (Sentinel photo
by Jim Freeman)

JACKSON (AP) ·- A Jackson
man accidentally cut bis throat witb
a chain saw and died while trim·
ming .trees outside his cburcb:
Police Sgt. Carl Eisnaugle sllid
William Hatten's jugular vdn was
severed Monday when a falling
limb b'it the electric chain saw,
pushing it against his throat.
• Hatten, 53, and his father, Roy
Hatten, 77, also of Jackson, were
both in the tree cutting branches .
wben the accident occwred.
The faiber suffered a broken
collarbone wben his son feU on him
after the chain saw accident. · He
was treated and released at Oak
Hill Community Medical Center iq
Oak.HiU .
I .

'
•

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