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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio News in Brief: ~

New law improves arrest record
•

1\Jesda~,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

COLUMBUS - The number of domestic violence arrests and
charges have increased in Franklin Counly since October, when a
state law designed to better protect victims took effect.
.
During the first two months of tbis year. 666 charges of domesuc
violence were filed in the county, compared witb 431 during the
same period last year.
·
.
The prosecutor's office is hiring two full-time and two part-lime
employees 10 handle tbe extra worlc:, said Assistant Cily ProsecuiOr
Rob Levering.
The itew law increases penallies for ·violating court protection·
orders and requires a " preferred arrest" policy.
.·
Officers Il!.ust me charges even if the accused batterer has left the
victim's home and the victim does not want to prosecute, S8ld Lt.
Kim Jacobs of Ll!e Columbus Police Division's' patrol bureau.
In the past , many people calling to report domestic · violence
would have been referred to the prosecutor's office, and many
would have decided not to go, Jacbos said.

Guards lined up for women's wing
CIRCIEVfLLE - Interviews for three jailers at the Pickaway
County jail began on Monday, tbe first step to reopening the
women' s wing next month, the sheriff said.
.
~ ·we're moving as quickly as we can," Sheriff Dwight Radcliff
said. "We'd be happy if we could open it tomorrow."
Radcliff closed two of tbree wings of the $12.4 million jail Feb.
24, 1994, about a year 'after it opened, because of budget cuts that
forced the layoffs of 10 guards.
.
The county commissioners agreed to rehire tbree officers
because it would be cheaper than senditig prisoners 10 Ross Counly,
the sheriff said.
The women's wing can bouse 16 prisoners.
'

Libr.ary directors protest state cuts
MANSFIELD - Area libraries are being held back by state budget cuts, library officials say.
·
Libraries formerly received 6.3 percent of the state personal
income tax, but the number was temporarily reduced to 5.7 percent.
Last week, legislators said the decrease would be permanent
The difference in the tax takes ·has totaled $1 .2 million sin'ce
1991, said Joe .Palmer, director of the Mansfield/Richland County
Public Library.
.
"Therefore, we're faced with a library ·system where all the
equipment was purchased in the 1980s," he said.
The library bas eliminated three or four full-time jobs by aurition, cut part-time hours and bought fewer books and less equipment.
The cuts have not hit Galion Public Library as hard, said Lynn
Dominick, director. But she said the Galion library has been unable
to advance technologically.
"In this time when there's a lot more emphasis being put on
technology in libraries, such as CD ROM, we feel pressure 10 keep
up," Dominick said.

March 21,1995

Injuries in nerve gas attack · exceed 4,600
By MARlY AMAGUCID
Associated Press Writer
TOKYO -,.. Many riders avoided lhe subway and police n:moved
trash cans from stations today for
fear of another terrorist attack as
the investigation focused on a man
seen placing a container of nerve
gas on a train.
Tbe man. one of l)lousands of
victims of Monday's lleadly attack.
was being treated in hospital, and
police were· waiting for his condition to improve before questioning
.him, Japanese television and newspapers said IOday.
.
The death toll from the .rushhour attack climbed to eight today
with the deaths of a second subway
employee and another passenger.
Another 75 people remained in
.critical condition, officials said.
A fire&lt;lepartmeot official,
Takashi Yamagisbi, said 4,695
people had been treated and nearly
700 remained hospitalized.
The three lines Contaminated by
sarin, highly toxic nerve gas,

a

resumed operation today after mili- desaiptions of suspicious pcnons.
rary chemical-warfare experu in
News reports said the bospitalmasks and protective clothing ized suspea had been seen by sevsprayed chemicals in s!lbway ears era! people placing a plastic bag
and platforms to neutralize the gas.
wrapped in newspaper on the floor
S~. ~ nerve gas devel?Jled by by the door of a train.
the Naz1s ~World Vfar II, _1s heavWhen he got off, a passenger
1er than alf, so II IS d1fflcull to who was suspicious of the man
remove from underground subway kicked the object onto the plalform. ·
tunnels. .
It began to e!!Ut !"bite fumes and
Altbougb subway officials the suspect collapsed. the reports
i~sisted the trains were safe, the said. Two people died at that standershlp was about 30 percent less lion.
than normally seen on a public hoiPolice officials would say only
iday; the stock marke~ · government that they were investigating the
offices and many businesses were reports,
closed for the Spring Equinox
A cult-like religious group
today.
named Aum Sbinri Kyo again
All trash _cans were removed denied today it was involved in the
from 148 staUons on the three lines . attack. The group has been linked
because of fears of ~ f~llow -up in news reports 10 several mysteriattack. Some other tram ltnes also ous releases of irritating gases near
removed or covered over trash-con- its facilities and to several unsolved
lalners, but there were no reports of kidnappings.
any unusual obje;;IS being found. ·
Three members were arrested on
Tbere were no cr_edible claims Sunday on. suspicion of kidnapping
of responsibil!tY for. the attack. . a college student wbo .reportedly
However, pollee sa1d they bad wanted to leave the group.
received
30 eyewitness
. - - -about
--,.

1be Buddhist sect, which claims
10 000 members iD Japan, accused
th~ government of carrying out the
subway attack as part of a "tricky
crime' • to blame the group and
then suppress it.
The search for a possible motive
turned up at least piquant but
incooclusi ve fact : newspapers
reported today that trading in the
stock of a company that bas a
monopoly on gas mask man~facturing in Japan was 100 umes
abov~ average on Thursday and
'Friday the two trading days before
the at~
A spokesman for the company,
·Shigematsu Works, called the
surge in turnover •'visibly unnatu•
rat' • and was at a loss to explain it.
Bookstores, meanwhile, reponed §trong sales of a 1991 British
novel, uanslated into Japanese,
with an eerily similar plot to Mooday's attack. In the book "Deadly
Perfume " research(.rs 'study the
impact of a plan to spread antbrax
bacteria in subway systems.

Iowa
eliminates

NEW YORK (AP) - Former
New York Gov . Mario Cuomo
derided tbe execution of a man who
murdered two elderly people, saying the killer himself made It clear
·he would rather die than spend the
rest of his life in prison. ·
. "Thomas Grasso's words reveal
that we have let our anger and confusion panic us into an absurdity,·'
Cuomo said Monday. "He admitted that being allowed to die was
an act of clemency for a double
murderer, relieving him of fbe

relentless confmement be dreaded
morethandeath."
Grasso, 32, became symbolic of
the fight over the death penalty in
New York state. Cuomo, a deatb
penalty opponent, insisted that
Grasso serve a 20-year-to-life sentence for the 1991 murder of an
elderly New York Ciey man before
going to Oklahoma, where be faced
execution.
Cuomo lost his re-election bid
last fall to RepubliCan George Paraki, who promised in his campaign

that one of his fii'St acts would be to
send Grasso 10 Oklahoma.
Grasso's execution was "not the
consequence of my actions, it's tbe
consequence of his actions ... in .
killing two innocent people," Pataki said Sunday.
In a final written statement,
Grasso wrote, "Mario Cuomo is
wright (sic). All jurors should
remember this. Attica and Oklahoma State Penitentiary are living ·
hells."
,
Grasso· s widow. Lana Yvonne

GeEll

Page4

VOl. 45, NO. 228

· ATHENS- A man riding an all-terrain vebicle up an embankmcn~hit a tree root and the vehicle flipped, .killing him, authorities
said.
John Humphrey, 52, of Vincent, was killed Sunday near Opio
550 when the ATV fell on top of him, the Athens County Sherifr s
Department said.
.
Coroner Robert Butts ruled the death accidental.

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Pomeroy Council hires
part-time police·officer
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_.WEL..COMED AB.OA.RD - Pomeroy Pollee Chief Gerald
Rought, right, welcomed the vtllage's newest omc:er at Tuesday
nlgbt's couDCU -.ling. CouncU approved hiring Pomeroy resl·
dent Edwud Pattenoa, U, as a part·dme oftlcer under the COPS
FAST lli'BDt, part or last year's crime biD. Patterson wiD prlmarUy
serve as a foot palrohnan for the downtown area.

~reade

WASHINGTON (AP)- America's trade deficit S!lfled 68.4 percent in January as the deficit in
merchandise soared to the bl&amp;hest
level in U.S. history, reflecting
heavy demand for imponed cars,
toys and televisions-:--~--·~ . .., . .
The Commerce Department
repOrt today showed that the total
de(icit in goods and services rose to
$12.22 billion, up from a Dece.mher imbalance of $7.26 billion.
.
The report bightighted the first
trade fallout from the economic
chaos in Mexico. The United
States, which had been enjoying
trade surpluses with Mexico, suf-

ments of the Americans with Dis"Two-thirds or his time will be abilities Act.·
foot patrol," Rought ~aid.
Council then scheduled a special
Council met with Pomeroy resi- meeting for Monday, 6:30 p.m. to
dent Harry Clark wbo approached . discuss granting Clark and Barton a
cou.ncil asking for a franchise to taxi franchise and asked Clark to
operate a taxi Slirvice. Clark said he present a fee schedule at the meetand Bob Barton would operate the ing.
business as partners out of Barton's
"We want to take over at tbe
Sugar Run Ashland service station fmt of (April)," said Clark.
on Mulberry Avenue.
In addition, council met with
The move follows in the wake Pleasant Ridge and Rock Street
of an announcement by owners of homeowners regarding water probthe Blue Streak Cab Company, lems in tbe·area.
Middleport, that they will bait
Pleasant Ridge property owner
operations effective Marcb 31.
Nancy Thoene said her house bas
"I'm not in it 10 make money," not bad water for 1 I weeks and
said Clark. "I'm doing it for help- said village workers are not doing
ing the people."
all they can to fix the problem.
Clarlt, who currently drives for
"I know you've got a problem,
Blue Streak, said plans ,call for but I don't know when·we'll get it
starting out with two cars. Since done," said Mayor John Blaettnar.
the operation will be privately
·"We have been patient... going
funded and unsubsidized, the com- into three months is a little bit
pany will not bave to meet require- much," Thoene said.

Blaettnar said be would call
Thoene daily to keep her informed
on the worlc:.
About eight houses in the area
are .affected by the problem whicb
consists primarily of low water
pressure.
·
In other water-related matters,
council authorized Village Administrator John Anderson to proceed
with the replacement of a pressure &gt;
tank serving Lincoln Heights .
Anderson proposed replacing tbe
existing, 40-year-old underground
tank with a I ,600-1,700 gallon,
above-ground tank.
It will take about eight weeks to
complete the project, Anderson
srud.
·
Council also asked Anderson to
appear at Monday·s,special meetmg to update _council on progress
made .toward mstalhng new water
wells m Syracuse.
Continued on page 3

downward pressure on tile li~Jllar.
In recent weeks, the U.S. rurrency
has wmbled to record lows against
the Japanese yen and German
mark.
The blg increase in 1an uary
reflet:ted13rge ..gains In imports of
goods and services, which both hit
record highs in January. By contrast, U.S. exports fell with goods
dropping 5.4 percent and service
exports fallin&amp; 2.3 percent.
· Today' s report represented
another setback for the Clinton
administration, which has made
trade expansion efforts a centerpiece of Its foreign policy.

fered a SS63 million detidt in January, the biggest imbalance with
that country in nearly a decade.
Imports from Me:xico jumped by
10.9 percent while U.S. exports fell
by 9.8 percent as tl!e steep devalualion of the Mexican ·pcso· pri·cetl
American goods out of what bas
been America's third biggest
export IIIlll'ket.
.
Economists bad been looking
for the overall deficit to widen in
· January, but the actual jump was
far above the $9 billio11 .many analysts had been forecasting .
Analysts had worried that a bad
· trade report could put further

WASHINGTON (AP)- Lima,
Ohio, was the nation's most affordable housing market in the last
three months of 1994, topping the
National Association of Home
Builders' Housing Opportunity
Iodelt for the second straight quarter.
Lima is in the Midwest region
of the association's survey,
released Tuesday. ·Dutchess County, N.Y.. in the Hudson Valley
north of New Yark City, led the
NQnbeast region; Melbourne, Fla.,
paced tbe South; and Boulder,
Colo .• topped tbe WesL

San Francisco remained locked
·into last place on the affordabillly
list of 183 metropolitan areas, a ·
spot it bas held since the Home .
Builders be$an the quarterly surveys in early 1991.
·
The least affordable markets in
the other regions were Chicago in
the Midwest, New York in the
Northeast and El PaSo, Texas, in
the Soutb.
·The index measures the proportion of bomes sold in a market that
a family earning the median
income in that market could afford
to buy : The indd takes into con-

Four accidents, one resulting in
serious injury to a Portland area
man, were investigated Tuesday
evening by the deP.artment of
Meigs County Shenff lames M.
Soulsby. .
Billy G. Jones, 18, of Bald
· Knobs Road, was westbound on the
Bald Knobs-Stiversville Road
around 3:35 p.m. when his )990
Geo collld~ beadon with·a 1990
Hyunda driven by Mary E. Parlcer.
Parker was reportedly left of center, and was cited on that charge.
Jones was taken by UfeF1igbtto
Grant Hospital where be was
reported to be in stable condition

this morning. The Racine Squad heavy damage to the 1984 Mercury
and fire department were on the driven by Craig .
scene. Jones was transported to
At 7:-10 p.m. Roger Dent, MldVeterans Memorial Hospital by ·dteport, was northbound on State
squad and then life nighted to Route 143 near the Bailey Run
Grant from there.
Road In a 1979 Chrysler Lebaron
Debl1! L. Craig, 30, of Route 2 and struck and killed a deer tbat
jumped into the roadway.
~ine, was cited for being left of
center following an accident on
The fourth accident investigated
State Route 338 at Letan. Accord- by the sheriff's department
ing 10 the report, Craig was coming . occurred at 10:05 p.m on Sate
around the curve and looked away Route 681 just east of Tuppers
from the road, went left of center, Plains. Carl Smith, Reedsville, was
and sideswiped an AT&amp;Tconstruc- traveling welt in his: 1990 Chevrotion truck. 1bere w;IS no damage to let pickup and struck one of several
the 1981 Ford truck but there. was deer that jumped intb the roadway.
There was no ·damage to his truck.

Local briefs-......,
Search for motorcycle continues ..

Youth faces mischief charges
*All prices include
rebales to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not

included.

sideration differences in property
tax and insurance rates.
The national opponunity Index
fell to 62.3 during the fourth quar•
ter from 66.8 a year earlier. That
meant a family earning the national
median income of $39,900 could
have purchased 62.3 percent of the
bomes sold during the quarter. The
national median price of a home
was $114,000.
The median is the midpoint,
meaning that half of the incomes
totaled more and half totaled less.
or that half of the homes east more
and half cost less.
•

Portland man·injured in accident

A 16-year-old Meigs County youth faces criminal mischief
charges in Meiss Cooney Juvenile Court for damaaing the mailbox
of Yost Road resident Charles Fmley.
: ·
According to a report from Sheriff Jtimes M. Soulsby, neighbors
hearing the Incident obtained the license number and a description
of a pickup truck at the scene. The driver, wben confronted by
deputies at his ~sidence, admitted to doing the damage, according
to the report.
Continued qn page 3

{

area on foot

deficit hits all-time high

The Middleport Police Deparunent ~ sear~ing for information
concerning a motorcycle reported missing earlier this month.
The green. 1995 Kawasaki KX60 was reported stolen March 11
by Richard Haggeny, Middlepon, Anyone with Information concerning the motorcycle should call the Middleport Police Department at 992-6424.

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news starr
The hiring of a new police ofticer and establishing a special meeting to discuss a taxi franchise highlighted Tuesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy Village Council. .
·
Council . approved birin&amp;
Pomeroy resident Edward Patterson, 26, as a part-time officer under
the COPS FAST grant.
1be COPS FAST gran~ part of
last year's crime bill, is designed
for communities witb fewer than
50,00.0 residents . Pomeroy was
awarded $34,071 to hire the officer
_ who will primarily serve as a
foot patrolman for the downtown
area .. according to Police Cbie,f ·
Gerald Rought.
Councilman George Wright,
who serves ·as a liaison between
council and downtown merchants,
asked for contumation that the new
officer would patrol the downtown

-

Lima has nation's mos( affordable housing

V6, auto., air, stereo, 2 Dr.

Correction From Sunday's Insert

I Section, 12 Pages 35 conto
A Multlmedlalnc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy•Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 22, 1995

.Gopyrlghl1995

Grooins, was charged with firstdegree murder .in New Yo.rk on
Monday for allegedly helping to
hold down S7-year-old Hilda Johnson as Grasso strangled her witb an
extension cord from ber Christmas
tree on Christmas Eve 1990.
New evidence linking Ms.
Grooms to the Oklahoma Slaying
was developed during the past two
months, but prosecutors delayed
filing a murder charge against ber
fearing Grasso would decide to
fight his execution.

~'
b~.

Low lonlflbtlll !be 40s,
doudy. Thunday, doudy. Hight
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Vincent man dies.in ATV accident

l~)u1rt1ro1iit 1 §I()~CiiJIII

Pick 4:
. 1293
Buckeye 5:
17-20-22-28-33

: I I

MINGO JUNCTION - After 28 years of consolidation·, Mingo
Junction wants its own school district again.
· A group of supporters called the Hope Commi!lee is expected on
Tuesday to present a petition to the Jefferson County Board of Ed~­
cation, asking that Mingo be allowed to break away from the Indian
Creek School District.
.
About 1,600 people have signed the petition .
Mayor John Corrigan told peoplC attending a rally Spnday night
that the repeated failure of·schciollevies is evidence the consolidation is not worlc:ing.
Mingo Junction is about 130 miles east of Columbus.

Gll.BERT, W.Va. - A Wyoming Counly man was killed in a
logging·accident in Mingo County, state police said.
A tree that had just been cut Monday hit another as .it fell, breaking off a branch that landed on Michael Eldridge, 33, of Cyclone, .
said Trooper M.A. Smith in Williamson.
.
The accident remained under investigation, Smith said. He said
Eldridge worked for Shannon Logging Co. of Gilbert.
- The Associated Press

626

N. Y. governor labels execution 1ustice'

Split sought in consolidated district

Logging accident kills man

Pick 3:

ou 66-62

· ,

WEST LIBERTY, W.Va. - Clyde Campbell will retire July I
after II years as president of West Liberey State College, the school
said.
Campbell started at the school as a chemistry instructor in 195S.
He later became chairman of the School of Natural Sciences, director of the School of He.alth Professions, dean of administration and
academic dean.

Ohio Lottery

•

L---~--------------------~------~--~--~

i

LOOKING TO EASTER- Colorful plastic
eggs were tied to a bush on High Street In
Pomeroy Tupday afternoon by the Ebersbach
children, Ashley, left, and Amber, as their

younger sister, Autumn looked on. Over the put
sever.al yean decorated trees bave grown In popularity for the Easter season. (Photo by Charlene Hoerucb)

'Kato' Kaelin returns to witness
stand today in 0. J. Simpson trial
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A of how he came ·to be living on
detective in the O.J. Simpson ease Sittqlson's eslale at the time of tbe
admitted mlsstatemenu in request- murders.
ing a search warrant for the Simp"Little bit nervous today?"
son estate the day after Nicole Clark asked.
Brown Simpson and her friend
''Feel g£eat," · Kaelin said
were slain.
brightly, before admitting he was a
Also, it was revealed tbat Supe- little nervous.
rior Court 1udge Lance ,Ito bas
Before Kaelin was sworn in,
ruled against showing jurors a Detective Tom Lange was brieOy
·knife contained In the so-called recalled for just a few questions
"mystery envelope."
about garage doors at Simpson's
At tbe end of tbe court day estate.
Tuesday, prosecutors called Brian
Earlier, in explaining statements
"Kato" Kaelin to the stand for the that Ito had earlier described as
fii'St time in the.trW •............ _ .
"reckless," detective Pbilip VanKaelin, his blond hair longer natter acknowledged that he wrote
and shagaier than when he testified in .im affidavit that.human blood ·
at Simpson's preliminary hearing was found on Simpson's Bronco,
last summer, squirmed and fidgeted . although no tests had been conin his seat as prosector Marcia ducted to conflllll thal
Clark led him through an account
''That's true. I misstated that. I

guess, based on my experien.ce, I
believed it was buman blood, and I
think now, I still think it's human
blood. I think it's been proven to be
human blood," Vannatter said.
Vannatter insisted . that his
beliefs at the time were warranted ·
by the circumstances, since be Juid
just left a bloody crime scene.
Defense attorney Robert Shapiro
also questioned Vannatter about
another statement on the .search
warrant affidavit - that Simpson
bad taken an unexpected flight to
Cbicago the night of June 12 wben
Simpson bad actually planned tbat
trip for some time. .
,
"In tiDing out a search warran~
you indicated to a maaistrate, under ·
penalty of perjury, that you were
told that OJ. Simpson had left on
an unexpected flight to Chicago,
did you not?" Shapiro ask~.

House OKs bill tf) grant firms immunity from lawsuits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Employers often are afraid to passengers to drink alcoholic bevComplaints about lawyers and peo- glve other companies anything erages in Hcensed limousines.
pie who sue their former employers more . than employment dates
Sen . Gary Suhadolnik, Rdominated a House debate on a bill because of the threat of lawsuits by Strongsville, said he sponsored the
that would malcl: it easier for com- disgruntled former Workelll, Corbin latter bill to reward people for.
panies'to give and get references.
said.
responsible behavior . Tbe bill "People are sick and fed up
Opponents argued the bill was would not allow people to desigwith the amount of litigation that weighted too heavily in favor of nate a driver and drink· in a private
goes on today," Rep. William employers and takes away the legit- vehicle.
.
Balchelder, R-Medina, said during imate right of workers to contest
Sen. Dennis Kucin,ich, D-Cleveunfair references.
·tand, said that was unfair.
a lengthy floor debate Tuesday.
The House passed the bill, 61 "Wbat' s happening here is the
"it's class-based legislation, "
33, that wou)d grant companies · closing of the courthouse doors," Kucinicb said. "If people can ·
immun.ity from lawsuits unless it • said Rep. Qtto Beatty, D-Colum- afford a limousine, they cru1 have
can be proven they lmew the inb- bus.
· the privilege of drinking.".
mation was false, was given in bad
The bill now goes to the Senate. •• The bill passed 27.-5.
faith or was malicious.
Meanwhile, the Senate passed a
The House defeated several
"The present system protects bill giving the State Highway amendments to make the employee
poor employees and hurts good Patrol the power to enforce the reference bill more worker-friendly
employees," said sponsoring Rep: state's rules RoveminR the Capitol and one .that would have forced the
· RO!Jert Corbin. R-Centerville. .. · gro.unds, .and legislation allowing losing ·lawyers to pay tl!eir oppo-

.

.

nents' legal fees if they fail to dissuade their clients from filina
frivolous lawsuits.
Two Republican amendments
did get through, bowever.
Corbin amended the bill . to
. reduce the burden of proof for
workers filing civil rights or discrimination lawsuits. He said the
change was necessary to conform
with existing law.
Opposition by trial lawyers led .
the House to remove an .amendmentau.acbed to the but in committee that would have forced loser$ to
pay the winners· atiOmey fees and
court costs.
.
As passed, the ~IU gives judges
the right to determine whether a
lawsuit wa! frivolous and 10 force
losers to piCk up legal tabs.
·
1

.

�'

Commentar
The Daily _Sentinel
111 Court Sb'eet
Pomel'OJ, Oblo

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlsber
CBARLF.NE HOEFLICH
Geaenl Maalger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LB II EkS OF OPINION ore welccme. TbeJ' lbould be leu tb1n 300

woldiiOD&amp;. !Jlleam ~ iill&gt;jec:t to editina llld muat be sianecl with aame.

lddreu llld telepbo110 aumber. No uali&amp;aed 1otten will be publilbed. Letters
aboukl be ia good lUte. llllchnia&amp; lnueo, aot penonllitiea.

•.

Maybe Clinton should
visit the feed store

Wedne1day, March 22, 1995

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 22, 1995

'

·
WASHIN~N. - Two recent
events bave btgbhgbted tbe fact
than in France, where socialists
have held political power for years,
the almighty franc still rules over -.
priaciple or common sense.
French officials took an
unprecedented step last month
when they expelled five American
agents wbo are accused of political
and econoouc esp10nage. Allbough
it's not the Orst espionage incident
between the two allies, Ibis is the
ftrSt time such an incident bas been
made public. In the mean tim~,
French dtplomats contmue tbetr
full-court press at tbe United
Nations to lift the international
sanctions against Iraq.
Behind tbe scenes, America's
nascent adventures in economic
espionage pale in oomparisoo with
those of France. For years, Cential
Intellige~ce A~ency sources tell us,
French. t_ntelltgence agents have
been ~tltgeotly at work stealm.g
Amencan trade se~rets for tbetr
state-owned comparues back home.
For more than a decade, not even

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Co.....,pondent
RALEIGH, N.C.- Ou a smaller slllge, a Democratic coUeague.from
statehouse days bas a leading role in a political drama not unlike that
President Clinton faces in dealing with a Republican Congress.
Gov. Jim Hunt of North Carolina is coping with a divided legislalun:
-and the first Republican-conuoUed state House since 1870- by taclc:ing to the right on taxes and aime conlrol while focusing on his lrademark issue, a state·priva&amp;e program to help needy preschool cbildn:o.
lr5A
· Musing on the two situations over luoeb at the governor's mansion the
MOSAIC
other day, Hunt said what the national Democrats and the White House
MADE
need most is a canmon-sense focus on the things lhat really concern peoENTIRELY
ple.
Hunt Said the quesdon lhat ought to be asked about any proposal is
FR()M fall)
whether it will make sense to the common man.
STAMP.S
AN[)
"So why don't you establish a common-sense czar and put him at the •
president's elbow?'' Hunt said be' d suggested at the White House months ·
WITHOUT
ago. He said lhat would get everyday advice to the 'presiden~ aaoss the
NEA
barrier of the crowds, dangling lilicropbones and security.
FUNDIN5
Hunt said be doesn't have a czar of bis own but doesn't need one,
because be can get bis feedback at places like the feed store dming week·
ends on bis cattle ranch.
· Common sense would have put Clinton on lbe side of the balanced
budget amendment to the Constihltion instead of against it, be said, as an
elUIDlple.
·
.Common sense, perhaps. Practical politics, for sure. And Hunt is a
master. He served two terms as governor, woo the job back in 1992 after
an eight-year break, and now is the most popular political figure in a
Republican-leaning state. .
Troubled Norlb Carolina Democrats, wbo lost the state House, D8ITOW·
ly beld conuol of the state Senate ani! saw their congressional delegation
tum Republican, eight seats to four, spent Saturday trying to figure out
wbat1o do about their plight·
About 200 of them, including Hunt's political lieutenants, heard the
centrist message of the Democratic Leadership Council, Clinton's old out·
Whenever I bear someone sug·
fit. The DLC is bome to tbe New Democrats, wbo have been trying to
gest, as Time magazine recently
years to pull the pany away from old-style libeml dogma and move to the
did, ·•-·
""" the Socialsecurt·ty system
· d o·tts
oiiddle.
ought to be· trashed.
my1IDID
·
Hunt gOt there in a buny, in il basically conservative state. For Clinton,
back to apt~ m a par or.
reclaiming the New Democrat image is proving more dirficult ·
' It was seldom used. my grand. Still,. the echoes of Washington resound in Raleigh. Republican reacmother' s parlor. Onl y wben " com·
tion to Hunt's State of the State address, suggesting that he'd hlmed mepany" came was the door opened
too toward GOP ideas, were in almost lbe same words used by the new
and lbe blinds raised. It was cool
inajority in Congress after Clinton'l State_of the Union address, "Weland carpeted, and the walls were
come aboard,'' one North Carolina legislator said. ''He's one of us,'' said
bung with pictures of Christ and
rumther.
mementos of tbe son wbo was
.Jn Raleigh, as in Washington, tax c_uts are a major item, but with a
killed in World Warn.
· These, and a picture of Franklin
striking difference: Hunt wants a corporate income tax cut that Republicans are bypassing Ibis year. · ~ and a cut in taxes on.investment earnDelao0 Roosevelt.
ings, really will belp average working people, Hunt said. "They are
FDR Was Mom 's bero · He
aimed strictly at job aeation," be said.
·
brought us out of tbe Depression,
: Nationally, that is generally a Republican argument
sbe 'd say. He won the war. And be
. : Hunt's overall formula is simple: "Cut taxes, fight crime and, most
gave us Social Security, without
importan~ belp children. We haven't gotten off on .a whole lot of other
which tbe Spear· family's ,ends
·
siuff." .
might not be met·
. He sai.c! be thinks Clinton is beaded lbat way, too,
.
·So when I bear economists and
- "I believe I detect that be's going back to his roots," Hunt said of
conservatives and Generation Xers
Clinton. "Bill Clinton understands what I'm saying because be did it as
running down tbe nation's most
gpvernor." ·
·
reliable ~nsion systein and most
Hunt's centerpiece program is an effon to use both public and private
successful anti-poverty program, I
funds for community-designed plans to J;~~Cet health and educational needs
tend to get a bit irritated. I consider
of preschool children. On that one, "Smart Start," Hunt is a crusader.
it a moral obligation to care for
Republicans in the legislature are skeptical of his drive to expand it with
those wbo have survived life's
ail eye to making the system statewide by the end of the cenhlry. .
vagaries, and I regard tbe critics
This in a state that was a presidential battleground two years ago.
who would hesitate to do so to be
While Hunt was winning by 10 percentage points, Clinton lost to George
sorry specimens of bwnankind.
Bush by 20,000 votes. Tb~ likelibo&lt;id is lbat be wouldn't do that well
That said, it is clear that the
now.
. It's too soon to speculate on Clintoo's 1996 standing, Hunt said diplomatically. "We'd like for him to be ·more popular here, we Democrats
would."

tate·
can be passed 10 tbe proper s
vice could oompete with the French owned company. CIA
nd
in terms of gaining a comjletitive
Although th~ can - :'at
economic advantage in foreign does- get tis
.00 c~ace~
or ~ secrets sometimes,;
.
By
- a dtlemn_&gt;a not known m . ranee.
U'
Economtc tntelhgence mtght be
.
valuabl_e to several.fums that are
.
COI!IpeiiDg for a ~~ular contract.
Michael Binstein Tbts puts the CIA m. the ~com:
f?rtable - and une~tcal
post
trade.
lion of.choosmg favontes. f .
"Take it as a given thatlbe ftrst·
Wbtle tb_e French ~re ut.nmg
class seats on Air Prance have fre. over our espt_onage, lbetr own mtcl·
quently been bugged for the last IS Itgence ser~tce ou~ht to t~ll th7m
years at least," one CIA source that renewmg b.usmess ttes wttb
told us. These are the seats that Iraq could. have mcendtary resu.lts.
might be occupied by American ~rench dtplomats bave applted
executives wben Oying to France mtense pre.ssure on the U.N. Secuon business.
rity Council to allow Saddam Hus·
Since many of the largest 00111· sein to export his . oil reserves,
~anies in France are fully or par- whiCh would give bun tbe tools to
tially state-owned, economic espi· rebuild bis military . The .French
onage pays larger dividends in ~ould likely~ one of tbe ftrst m
Paris lban in Washington. If French hoe to bu&gt;: lraqt oil.
. .
spies learn that an American bid f&lt;X •
France s arg~meniS for hflm~
a large foreign contract can be tbe sanction~ ~Y m tbe face of thetr
beaten with some minor tinkering, own cul~abthty m belpmg to ~
for example, .tbe information easily Saddam m the ftrst place. Coostder
the fonner Soviet intelligence ser-

Jack An·""er.son
and

..............,._

.•• ;4";.

.....

\

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•
~
.,6
.
I ................... ~··"-,
~
i
~

Thursday, March 23
farecast for

tbe following facts, established by
our own .sources, aul;bor .Ken Timmerman and extenstve mvestiga· lion by congressional staffers:
- In the 1980s, France replaced
the Soviet Union as Iraq's chief
weapons supplier. The multi-billion dollar sales. wbicb supponed Iraq's
war against Jran, became a linchpin
of lbe French economy.
So many~ :-"ere being .sold
at such a raptd chp that lraqt air
force jets routinely Oew to France
·ustto load them. They used a for· .
· !ner NATO airfield, built by tbe
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in
Central France, ·10 load up French
missiles cluster bombs fuses
radar equipment and avioni~s.
'
'
_ France gave the initial boost
·10 Saddam's nuclear bomb-making
project by selling material for a
civilian nuclear reactor, which was
later converted to other uses .
Nobody in France questioned why
a country awash in oil would want
to invest in nuclear power. ·Iraq
only approached Franee after the
Soviets _ knowing full-well what
their client' state bad in mind _
turned lbem down.
Even Saddam himself dropJlell a"
hint about his intentions during an
interview with a Lebanese newspa;
per just days after lbe accord was
signed in 1975. '''The agreement
with France is tbe Orst concrete
step toward tbe production. of the
Arab atomic weapon," be said.
When the full text of the Franco-Iraqi Nuclear Cooperation
Treaty was quietly made public
almost a year later, one tipoff of lbe .
unprincipled French involvement
was a clause lbey agreed to, at Iraqi
insistence: ''That all people of lbe ·
Jewish race or Mosaic religion" be
excluded from participating in tbe
program, either in France or in
Iraq. The treaty atso committed
France to training 600 Iraqi nuclear
technicians, wbicb· is more than
enough to launch a·bomb program . .
Tbe United States is deservedly
· embarrassed by the recent spy flap.
But when it comes to putting
money before morality, it's tbe
French who have·the most explain·
in~ to do.

Don't trash Social Security, fix it
Social Security system as presently
constructed cannot survive. The
boomers wt·u bust t·l
we thougbt we bad tbe Stblation
·

year 2029, just wben the Ge~xers .

The in-between answer could be
Cb"
t e
tlean model, recently
whole thing will be bankrupt.
endorsed
by no less an economic
So somelbing m
. ust be done, and authority than
the World Bank.
.
J · ph ·
if. the politicians ever get serious
F"
tfteen
years
ago,
the
govern'
about it, tbe debate could obviate
ment
of
dictator
.
Augusto
Pinocbet
tbe need for term limits. The pow·
taken care of. For nearly 50 years, erful and vocal senior citizens dumped Chile's U.S.-style guaran- :
Soda! Security was a pay-as-you- lobby has given Social Security a teed pension system and required
go system in which revenues and reputation as the third rail of Amcr- that all citizens put 12 percent ·of .
benefits were mostly in balance. In lean politics. A touch can kiD. Two their earnings into one of two
1983, in anticipation of the retire- years
. ago, wben Democratic Sena- dozen government-regulated pri·
ment of the"baby boom generation,
vate plans. The truly indigent are ·
a commission recommended that tor Bob Kerrey of Nebraska and still protected witb a minimal
taxes be raised, that lb
f r·
Republican Senator John Danforth stip.end funded with general reve age 0 e ,_ of Missouri recommended some
gibility be pushed up and that beneenues,so no one is starving for lack
major changes, they were com- · of income.
. .
· fits be trimmed.
pelled to submit their suggesu·ons ·
A
. As a resul~ the trust flllld staned to tbe Wbite House without the 14 s a result, Chileans are earning
racking up huge surpluses, wbicb sanction of the commission they
percent on their mllney, and
were supposed to be used to take headed.
.
they are saving at a rate 10 times
care of the boomers. But the money
greater than we are. The economy,
The best solution, as usnal, may b
is not there. Succeeding admlnis- lie somewhere between the leftoosted by tbe extra cap~_!, is
trationshave been borrowing it and wing's belief that we should keep . boommg.
leaving behind "special obliga- things as they are and the right·
They didn't ravage it. They
lion" Treasury bonds. Tbe trust · wing's conviction lbat the system rebuilt it.
·
·
fund is a vault full ofiOUs.
ought to be completely privatized.
That's the way we sbould go.
Couple the pecuniary problems The former would require a lot of
· Joseph Spear is a syndicated
with lbe fact that people are. living faith ·in prayer; the latter would wri"'r for Newspaper Enterprise
longer and healthier lives, and it's require a lot of confidence that cor· Assoelatlon.
plain to see that .we are facing a porations will always honor their
(For information on bow to
stupendous problem. Sbortly after pension promises and that private communicate electronically with
tbe tum of the century, the comput- investment plans wiU perform well Ibis columnist and others, toners predict, tbe system will begin and never go broke.
tact America OnUne by caiUng ].
eating into tbe surpluses. By the
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

ose·

are entering lbeir sunset years, the

b

Spear

Clinton fights GOP.with 'panderama'

EDITOR'S NOTE-:-- Walter R. Mears, vice president and clilum·nlsl for The Associated Press, bas reported on WasblnRion and
national polities for more than 30 years.

President Clinton portrays him· spending.
self in practically every speech
Similarly, the public sides with
lately as a centrist "New Clinton, 58 to 34 percent, against
Covenant" Democrat, bitt many of converting federal child nutrition
tbe policies be's pursuing smack
Tbou~ht for Today: "EI amor es fuego, pero con el no se cuece el
strongly
·of protect-your-base old
puchero. ' (Love is a furnace, but it wiU not cook lbe stew;) ~ Spanish
politics.
proverb.
·
·
Wilbin tbe past few weeks, . programs Into block grants to states
Clinton bas gone out of bis way to and by.53 to 34 percent against tbe ·
curry favor with veterans groups, cutoff of funding for public TV and
· labor unions, the trial lawyers radio.
·
.'
lobby and tbe elderly. One aide
The poll still showed Clinton's
teniled the process "panderama."
job approval rating at just 44 per·
It's no surprise Clinton's doing cent, down a point from January,
so at a time when be clearly is risk· while approval of Congress bas
ing offense to two stalwart Demo· risen 10 points to 41 percent, and
cratic constituencies- minorities Speaker Newt Gingrich's, R-Ga.,
and women - by calling for a approval rating is up by 5 points to
review of affumative action pro- 37 pe!CeDI.
grams.
But Clinton's .recent speeches
Still, it remains to be seen bow demo~strate that the Wbite House
far tbe president wiD go in disman- · is determined to fight - by dogged
tling tbe current preference sy8tem, repetition, if other methods fail and be is trying bard to appeal to tbe longstanding tendency of tbe
these liberal groups by his persis- public not to remeniber mucb that
tent attaclc: on proposed Republican Clinton bas accomplished and to
cuts in social funding.
·
think be doesn't stand for anything.
Clinton's poll ratings bave yet
Tbe president routinely claims
to sbow mucb improvement from lbat. it's much too early for anyone
bis new political strategy, but to be concentrating on 1996 poliWbite House aides are encouraged tics, but he bas developed what
lhat lbe public seems to think that amounts to a stump speech in
GOP program-slasbing bas gone wbicb ~e recounts bis record,
too far.
makes 'himself out to be a centri&amp;~
Aides were especially pleased and then blasts Republicans for
-....:::..
. about tbe NBC/Wall Srreet Journal what amotlllts to beaittessnes8.
, ·~-~
poll last week, which showed that •
As be put it in his March 3 press
by 52 to 36 percent, the public conference - and, in similar
believes that Republicans are bead· . terms, in bis March 11 radio
ins ip "the wrong direction" by _ address - "Since I've been presleliminating Clinton's national ser- dent, we've got a lower defici~ a
vice program and by 79 to 15 per- lower unemployment rate, a lower
·'
cent in cutting federal education inOation rate, a higher growth rate;

Morton Kondraclce

Berry's ·World

..

-'

'

•

•

.

'

High pressure to keep rain away

OHIO Weather

French·espionage protests ring hollo~

we have cut the size of the fedena · lively unew."
government, so~~;~ething they
But, on March 6, Clinton called
(Republicans) did not do, and still for an increase of $1 billion over
found a way to invest more in the five years to build new veterans
education of our children.
·
"And I might add; we have hospitals at a time when the number of U,S. combat veterans is
e~panded trade more than they did
declining and -many ' ' New
and supported democracy and ~
Democrats" are recommending
reduction of tbe nu.clear lbreal · •
closing tbe hospitals and giving
. Wif!K'Ut missing a beat, Clinton
satd, But.. you know, we've got vets vouchers to purchase private
to stop all this. It's Marcb of care.
For the unions, Clinton signed •
1995 ... we can't bave everybody
P.laying politics here for the ne;t an execu'tive order barring federal
contracts with companies hiring
SIX, seven monlbs. We've got work
replacement workers for strikers.
to do."
For trial lawyers and consumer
Reverting to his theme be congroups
(some of wbicb are funded
cluded, "We've got mo;e peace
by
tbe
trial lawyers), be bad his
more prosperity, and fewer prob:
attome:•
geneml and White House
lems. 1ban we bad w.hen r showed
counsel
come out against legal
up,"
reforms
proposed
by House Repub· .
In another part of his stump
licans.
speecb,,Clinton des!"ibes "a great
And, for lbe elderly, Clinton has
debate gomg on m Washington
lbreatened
to veto cuts in Medicare
about the. role of government. "On
311d
Social
Security, even lbough •
~e one ~tde, l,bere~s lbe old Wasbmost
experts
agree that large enti· .
mgron vrew ... that big government
can fiX 7vet;r problem," he said on Uemelit programs must be reduced :
the radto. . On the ~ther, there •s if tbe deficit is ever to be brought
the Repubhcan contract view lbat under control. Clinton's own bud- :
govemment is tbe cause of every get contained no.entitlement cuts.
problem."
Asked about his record of :
appealing to Democratic con· :
His own view, be often says
"so~etimes called the New Demo: stituencies, one White House aide •
cratic or New Covenant View " is ·volunteered, "If you want to call it :
different. "I believe in a go~ern­ 'panderama,' I can't argue." ·
:
If tbc public remains confused •
ment lbat is limited, but effective, .
lean but not mean _ not a savior
about wbetber Clinton is really a :
but not on the sidelines, a partner 1~ "New 'Democrat" or an old-fasb- •.
th« fight for lbe future."
.
ioned interest-group liberal, it's not : ·
Some of Clinton's programs _
bard to figure out why.
:
!'Otably reinvention and downsiz(Morton Kondrac:ke Is eKecu- •
mg of govefllment - are distinc- Uve editor of Roll Call, the news- :
paper of Capitol HID.)

..

.

conditions and high templ'1"atures

!Mansfield ISB•

I•

IND.

60'

•lcolumbuslso•

••

The Dally Sentlne~~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

By Tbe Auoc:laled Press
Things are looking better for
Ohio thanks to a stationary bigb
pres~ure system· over the upper
Midwest the National Weather
Service ~
Ohio sh~uld escape wilb just a
few sbowers or thunderstorms over
the extreme south tonight and early
Thursday. Otherwise, lbe forecast
is for partly cloudy skies lbe next
few days.
Overnight lows will be in the
30s and low 40s and bigbs on
Thursday will be in tbe 50s and tow
60s, forecasters said,
The record-high temperature for
Ibis date at tbe Columbus weather ·
station was 82 degrees in 1938
while the record low was 6 in 1885.
Sunset tonight wiU be at 6:45 p.m.
. and sunrise Thursday at6:31 &lt;Lm.

W.VA.

Across the naUon
at Ibis time last year. Several more
Heavy sn?w ~as falling. in ~e feet of snow were expected in the
northern Caltfornta mountams tbts Sierra Nevada today.
morning, but it was warm and dry
Tbe East was generally dry and
in most oftbe Midwest and East
partly cloudy, except ·for lingering
An inch of snow fell on parts of rain sbowers across New England.
flood-ravaged Cali~ornia's Napa,
A very powe~ul storm system
Sonoma, Mendocmo and Lake io the eastern Pacific was expected
~ounties on Tuesday. Two to 5 to spread areas of rain, snow and
mcbes of snow bad fallen in north· strong winds into California, tbe
east Nevada, southeast Idaho, Pacific Northwest and Great Basm
nortb~rn Utab and southwest today:
.
Wyo'!"'lg.
.
..
Wtnds m those areas were
Wmds assocta~ wtlb a storm expected to range from 20 mph to
syst.em spreadmg mto northwest 40 mpb, wtth gusts to near 60 mph '
Cahforma, gusted to 52 mpb at along the c~ts. and m tbe moun·
Crescent Ctty, Calif., late Tuesday. tains. More noodmg rams were
Siron~ lbunderstorms. d~ped ~to . possible in California. Higher ele·
3 t~ches of smaU bail m Reddmg, . vatioos were expected to recetve up
Caltf.
.
to 2 feet of snow over the next 48
In tbe Sierra Nevada, tbe snow· hours.
pack measured 146 m_cbes at DonScattered showers were forecast
ner Pass compared wttb 21 mcbes for today across New England.

Today'$ livestock report

-----------Weather----South-Central Oblo
Today... Mostly sunny. High 60
to 65. Norlbwest winds 1Q to 15
mpb . .
Tonigbt...Inaeasing cloudiness.
A 30 percent chance of showers
after midnight. Low 40 to 45. EaSt
winds around 10 mpb. .
·
· Thursday ...Mostly cloudy wilb a
30 percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms
in
tbe
morning ... Then becoming partly

cloudy in the afternoon. Higb 60 to
65.
Extended forecast
Friday ... Partly cloudy . Lows in
tbe 30s. Highs in the 50s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy. Lows
mid 30s to lower 40s. Highs mid
50s to mid 60s.
Sunday ...A chance of showers.
Lows upper 30s to mid 40s. Highs
in the 50s.

--Area death----carmen P. Compson

Carmen P. Compson, 32, of RaCine, died Monday, March 20, 1995, at
'
Born January 8, 1963 in Gallipolis, sbe was a daughter of Marilyn
Bugg of Clifton, W.Va., and the late Paul T. Was)lington, Jr. She was a
homemaker and a member of ClifiOn Holiness Tabernacle.
Sbe was also preceded in death by ber grandfather, Paul T. Washington, Sr.
In addition to ber mother, sbe is survived by ber husband, Mark A.
Compson of Racine; ,two sons, Ryan Marshall and Matt Marshall, both at
. borne; step-father, Larry Bugg ofCilfion; balf sister; Mandy Bugg orClifton; maternal grandparents, Violet Bums of Clifton and Jake Burns of
Point Pleasant; and paternal grandmother, Maxine Washington of Letart.
Graveside service will be beld Friday, March 24, at I p.m. at Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant, with Dr. James Acree and Rev.
George Hoscbar officiating. Bmial will follow.
Friends may call at. Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-9 p.m.
Thursday.
her residence.

House Republicans want
to spend more on .schools
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) Republicans wbo controllbe House . want to spend less money in the
next state budget than Gov. George
Voinovicb bas proposed. They also
want to spend more of wbat s left
on education.
Republicans said Tuesday they
would recommend a state budget
about $250 million less than the
record $33.7 biUion that Voinovich
submitted fOr the two budget years
starting July I.
. House Finance Chairman
Thomas JobnSQn, R-New Concord,
said lbe GOP rewrite of the budget
bill would include about $500 mil·
lion ·worlb of spending cuts, wilb
some of lbe savings going instead
to education.
"It doesn't answer all tbe probIeins but it goes the farthest that
I've seen" Johnson said at a news

-. Tbey also said tbey want to·
-spend $200 million of tbe state's
pwjected $1 billion bU&lt;!get surplus
to begin installing computers in
every classroom for kindergarten
tbrougb fourth grade statewide.
Tbe state would borrow an addi·
tiona! $300 million next year to fin·
isb tbe job of providing Qne com·
puter for every five students in
every school district.
House Speaker Jo Ann David·
son, R-Reynoldsburg, said improving education was tbe GOP's top
prioricy.
"As sucb, our education pack·
age is the centerPiece of the House
version of tbe budget wbicb ~ill be
unveiled later tbts week m tbe
House Finance and Appropriations
Conunittee," Davidson said.
Republicans included at least
$24 million to reimburse schools
conferen~.
for losses they otherwise would
Republicans proposed a $165 experien&lt;7 from changes in a ~tate
million increase in spending for .tax affec110g telephone comparues.
schools above the $10.7 billion recAnd they decided to keep his
ommended in Voinovicb's budge~ · plan to replace tbe 11-member
up about I percent
elected State Board of Education

_

Scattered showers and thunder·
storms also ~ere possibl~ fro~ ~e
northern PJams to tbe 1111&lt;1 Mtssts·
sippi River Valley and western
Obio River Valley.
Temperatures were expected to
rang.e from 30 below zeru to the
40s m Alaska, m tbe 30s, 40s, and
50s in New England, 60s and 70s
in th.e Mid Atlantic, 60s, 70s, and
80s m the Midwest, 40s, 50s, and
60s in the 'upper Midwest, 40s and
50s m the Northwest, 50s, 60s, and
70s in the West,. 80s and 90s m the
Southwe st, and in the 80s in· the
Southeast and Hawaii. · , •
The nation's Pol spot 1 uesday
was Laredo, Texas, where the ternperature reached 101 degrees: The
coldest spo t was Soda Spnngs,
Idaho. where the temperature was
·l4 degrees.

----Suit filed----

(Editor's note: A lawsuit out. interesls and cost~ from Grange
• U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country. lines tbe grievances or one party Mutual Cas ualty Company,
points 32.50-37.00.
against another. lt does not Portsmouth. The Scarberry's allege
Sows; steady to 1.00 lower.
estabUsb guUt or Innocence.)
, the company did not pay for dam·
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs., 24.00·
Robert M. and Cathy Scarberry, ages resulting from a Jan. 17, 1994,
29.00; 500-650 lbs., 29.00-33.50, a , Pomeroy, in a suit filed Friday in stonn and that tbe company can-.
few 34.00.
the Meigs County Court of Com· celed their insurance agreement
Estimated receipts: 36,000. ..
mon Pleas, seek $9,797 .58 plus after tbe claim.
· Producers Livestock Associ•·
~ontlnued trom page1
Uon pnces:
Cattle: 1.00 lower.
- Entered into a contract wilb
In other business, the board:
SBA
Consultants for engineering
- Agreed to advertise for sale
work
for
tbe promenade project;
·old village vehicles; ·
OK'd
the following dates for
- Approved tbe ftrst reading of
a resolution granting Interstate Oldies but Goodies car club activiUtility Company a right-of-way for ties in the parking lot: June 10,
·a natural gas line serving Mason, cruise·in from 7-9 p.m.; July 8,
Architecblral Designs Inc., Mil- in the preparation for a return to W.Va.;
cruise·in from 7·9 p.m.; Aug . 6,
waukee, Wis., bas been awarded independent living.
- Approved the hiring of a all-day show; Aug. 12, cruise· in .
tbe contract to provide architecture
'"Ibis addition allows us to pro- part-time dispatcher for tbe police from 7·9 p.m.; Sept. 10, all·day
and construction services f&lt;X a new vide a wider scope of services to a department;
sbow; Sept. 16, cruise-in from 7-9
3,500 square foot rehabilitation larger cross-section of tbe popula·
Accepted Affirmative p.m.
center at Pomeroy Nursing and lion," said Admibistrator Jim Lin· Action, equal opponunity employ·
Present were Blacttnar, Clerk
Rehabilitation Center, . Rock deman. "It will also give us space er, Minority and Women's Busi- Kathy Hysell and councilmen Scolt
Springs Road.
to bring in specialists."
ness Enterprise statements in addi· Dillon, Bill Haptonstall , John
Tbe project will expand tbe cenPNRC is staffed by licensed and lion to a procurement policy for Musser, William Young, Larry
ter's existing square footage to certified bealtb .care professionals / hiring .contractors for the down· Webrung and George Wright.'
in,clude new inpatient and outpa· and provides personalized nursing town revital'ization project;
tient physical occupationaf speech and rehabilitation services.
and respiratory therapy treatment
Architectural Designs is a
areas.
national architecture and construe·
The following land transfers
Affidavit, Jack D. Clclantl ,
A training kitchen, bathroom tion fum, specializiilg in lbe design
and bedroom will also be incorpo· and construction of senior living, were recorded recently in lbe ofOce deceased, to Alana R. Cleland. Rutrated into tbe addition, equipped commercial and residential facili- of Meigs County Recorder Emmo· land village, .306 acres;
gene Hamilton:
.
CcniCicalc, Gcrtruce K. Fugate,
with standard furnishings .to assist ties.
Deed, Gary Lee and Bonnie Sue deceased, t.o Frank M. Fugate,
Warner to Francis P. Broderick, Olive/Pomeroy parcels;
rl·e~-s
·
,...-.----1 ,
10 ••• .,....---, Salisbury, 2.433 acres;
Certificate, Frank M. Fugate,
Deed, Kenda S. Chapman to deceased, to Eva Mae Stoecker,
Continued from page1
.
Floyd T. Chapman, Syracuse Eva Mae Emerson, Pomeroy/Olive ·
parcels;
parcels;
•
Deed, Otillia Romine to Melvin
Deed, Opal Mather to Steve and
·H. Romine, Rutland parcels;
Christina Mather, Chester I 1.16
A 4-year-old Ponlitnd girl caught in a private llome elevator
Deed, Lulber E. and Veneva M. acres;
Tuesday afternoon may be released from tbe hospital today, accord"
Gilliam
to James F. Reedy, Sutton,
Certificate, Harold E. Hysell;
ing to a repon from Meigs County Sberiff James M. Soulsby.
deceased,
.037
acres;
to Dorothy M. l;fysell ·
According to Deputy Ralph Trussell, wbo responded to the
Deed,
Jerry
F:
and
Barbara
A.
and
Charles
F. Ohlinger, Salisbury,
scene, Ashley Weddle, Bald Knob-Stiversville Road, got caught
Roush
to
same;
corrective
deed;
I
1/2
acres;
between a Ooor and the top of lbe door of the elevator as jt wa~
Deed, Ruth B. Frank to Ruth B.
Deed., David and Mary Ann
going down.
Frank
and
Anna
L.
Norman,
Huddleston to John 0. and Dorothy
The elevator was apparently installed for an elderly previous
Racine
lot;
M. Chaney, Racine lot;
owner wbo used itiO go into the basement, Trussell said:
Deed,
Mary
J.
Clark,
Mary
J:
Affidavit, R.E. Mclntbsh.
The child was transported by the Racine squad of the Meigs
and
William
R.
Finkenbinder,
Sut·
deceased,
to Detty J. Mcintosh , ·
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital
ton,
.59
acres;
Salisbury
lot:
·
in Pomeroy pending transfer to Children's Hospital in Cohnnbus by
Affidavit,
Jack
Gardner,
Deed,
Betty·
J. Mcintosh, to
LifeFlight belicoptcr.
·
deceased,
to
Ida
Mae
Gardner,
Betty
J.
Mcintosh
and Luanna JaySoulsby said tbe elevator apparently bad a faulty .switch.
Syracuse lot;
·
cox, Salisbury lot.
Deed, Ida Mae Gardner to
Gertrude Robinson, Syracuse lot;
Deed. Mary E. Hysell to Roben
Jeffrey Hysell, Middlepon parcels;
Revival services set
Revival services will be beld at wiD 1&gt;e held Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2
the Mt. Olive Community Cburcb p.m atlbe Scipio Fire Department .
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 7
p.m. Bill Villers of Anam&lt;liab, W. Smorgasbord Sunduy
Basban Ladies Auxiliary
Va. will be the speaker. Lawrence willTbe
hold
a smorgasbord at the
The following actions to end
Busb, pastor, invites the public.
Basban fire house Sunday, with marriage were ftled recently in tbe
serving from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost office of Meigs County Clerk of
Cemetery dean up announced
All decoratimis on Olive Town· $5 for adults, $2.50 for children. Couru Larry Spencer:
Dissolution granted - John M.
ship cemeteries are to be removed Complete turkey dinn.er.
Allen and Robin A. Allen, March
by April 10 to allow spring cleanup Country music night planned
20.
or tbe cemeteries. Preparations will
Country music night will be
Divorce granted - Gary Allen
begin at that time to prepare for observed
at ibe Lottridge· Commu· Jones and Sandra Kay Jones,
Memorial Day.
nity Center, Saturday, 7 p.m. to March 16.
midnight.
Food available beginning
Divorce dismissed - June M.
Y outb League slgnup
at
6
p.m
.
.
from tbe Bethany Ridge Arnold from Gerald Arnold, March
Harrisonville Youth League
I7.
final signup for summer balieball 4-H group.
COLUMBUS (AP) -Indiana~
Ohio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: 50 cents to
1.00 lower; demand light
U.S. 1·3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 37.00-38.00, a few 36.50
and 38.25-38.50; plants 37.50 ·
39.25.

Pomeroy..

.Milwaukee firm awarded·
contract for PNRC project

Meigs land transfers posted

Loc;'a/ b

Child injured in elevator mishap

Meigs announcements·

Divorces and
dissolutions

Meigs EMS ·/ogs 5 calls
. Units of tbe Meigs County Stiversville Road, Ashley Weddle,
Emergency Medical Service Veterans Memo~ Hos,Jlital pe~d- .
recorded five calls for assistance ing transfer to Children s Hospttal
Tuesday including three transfer via LifeFligbt helicopter,
runs. Units respooding included:
_ 3:44 p.m., volunteer ftre departRACINE
ment and squad to Bald Knob2: 19 ·p.m., Bald Knob· Stiversville Road, motor.-veVhMiclHe
accident, Billy G. Jones,
pending transfer to Grant Medical
The Daily Sentinel Center via LifeFlight helicopter.
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Friday. Ill Co url St .. Pomeroy, Oh1 o, by th e

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Stock reporb 1tt0 tbe 10:30 a.m.
quot01 provided by Adveot o
Gallipolis.

o·

.,

Welcome
Dr. John F. Wi tz

••

P

leasant Valley Hospital Is pleased to welcoMe john F. Wiltz, M.D., a pedlatrldan associated
wlthTheChlldren'sOinic, to Its Medical Staff. Dr. Wiltz comes to Pleasant Valley from ReynoldsAimy
Community Hospital, Fort Sill, OK. He did his residency and Internship In pediatrics at the Walter
Reed Army Medical Center. In Washington, DC. A board certlfted member of the American. Academy of
Pedlatrk:s. Dr. Wllt1ls a member of the American Medical Association. As a pedlatrldan, he spedallzes In ·
the prevention. diagnosis and treatment of disease In children. from birth through adolesc.ence. The
Children's Oink. located In Suite 21 5 at Pleasant Valley Hospital In Point Pleasant-. Is open Monday - Friday.
9 a.m. ·- 5 p.m.. For appointments call (304) 675-4107.
'

)

'

RaJ
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
tr1
The Family of profession~ls

·

2520 Valley Drive, Point. Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

�.....

Wednesday; March 22,1995

..

Sports

•

The Daily Sentmel

In the NIT's second round,

·

Dillon ·a nd Williams
among 14 SE Ohio
cagers so honored

.

;.= Penn State and Iowa claim wins over Nebraska &amp; Ohio

.,. . .

: :By The Aaoclated ~
In January. tbere was a lot of
: speculation about who would win a
_,; . ·Penn State-Nebraska showdown.
:; . · On Tuesday night. fans got lbe

answer. Unfonunately, it was on
lbe basketball coon instead of tbe
football field.
.In a meeting of last season's top
two college football schools, the

Niuany Lions beat the COOlbuskers
65-59 to reach- the NIT qu~­
nals.
Wbile·it was a satisfying win for
Penn State's basketball team, It

didn't mate up for the disappointment Nittany Lions fans felt when
lbeir football team finished second
behind Nebraska in !be polls last

a

Penn State center John Amaechi
. said the football controversy didn't
affect !be basketball game at Lincoln, Neb.
"It really doesn't mean much,"
Amaecbi said. "I beard so much
about the football title and I saw all
March 4, was for a 50 percent luxu- the signs !bey bad in their arena
ry taX on the portions of payrolls before the game and that really
above !be ·average, wbicb was means nothing. Penn State fans can
$40.7 million in 1994 according to mate wbat !bey want of it. but it
management calculations.
means nothing to me."
Players that day proposed a 25
Amaecbi and bis teammates are.'*
percent tax on the portions above were motivated by newspaper sto133 percent of the average, which ries that indicated Nebraska was
was $54.1 million.
IO&lt;Jking past Penn State toward a
Fifteen ieams would bave paid a possible meeting with Iowa.
tax under the owners' plan, topped
"Frankly, I was a little
off by Detroit at $8 million. The annoyed," Amaecbi said. "They
Tigers would have been the only were looking at Iowa like we
team over !be un.ion' s tbresbold ' weren't a worthy opponent and,
and would bave paid $663,633.
truthfully, that peeved me."
People 'involved in the talks on
The Hawkeyes beat Ohio Uni. the players' side, speaking on the versity 66-62 to set up a quarterficondition !bey not be identified, . nal malcbup against Penn State on
said management offiCials had told Thursday night at Iowa City.
them in recent. days !bat owners
Other quanerfinal pairings are
want to test the union~s resolve, New Mexico State at Virginia
hoping !bat players would break Tech, South Florida at Marquette ·
ranks and cross.
and Washington State at Canisius.
Those sources said the same
Rasbaan Carlton scored a seamanagement officials had told son-high 19 points for Penn State,
them owners wiD attempt to delay a including eightoftbe Lions' last 10
decision in the NLRB' s move for a points.
preliminary injunction to. restore
"I was motivated by the papers
salary arbitration, free-agent bid- this morning that said Nebraska
ding and anticollusion rules.
was looking forward to -playing
Tbe NLRB board will meet · Iowa in the nex~ round," Carlton
Thursday in Washington and said.
almost certainly will approve genPenn State (19-10) took its fll'St
eral counsel Fred Feinstein's lead of the second half with 6:38
request to seek an .injunction . remaining when Pete Lisicky bit a
Daniel Silverman, the agency's lhn:e-polnrer to make it 55-53.
New York regional directo~. is
Milcki Moore, who scored all 15
expected to file a motion request- of his points in the second half,
ing !be injunction Thursday or Fri- later bit two free throws to put
STUFFED- Iowa's Jess Settles (left) stuffs the shot attempt or
day in U.S. District Coon in New Nebraska (18-14) back in front.
Ohio Unlvenlty's Gary Trent In tbe ftrst bait of Tuesday night's NIT
York. That would lead to a bearing, Then Carlton, who bad been on the
second-round contest In Iowa City, Iowa, -where the Hawkeyes beld
probably next week.
olt tbe Bobcats' late charge tb win 66-62. (AP)

_:: 'Doom and gloom'.in forecast

for settlement of baseball strike
..

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•••

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) ·- . There
was no enc01lJ11ging news following a two-day meeting between acting commissioner Bud Selig and
union bead Donald Febr. Only
more doom and gloom.
"We're sure in a beck of a
mess," Colorado Rockies cbainnan
Jerry McMOiris said Tuesday night
after speaking with Selig. "I can't
put my fingers on anything !bat
was building bloclcs."
The goal going into the meetings, held in lbe Wasbington area,
was to set up the resumption of
full-scale bargaining later this
week. But no date was set. prollably meaning the next step will be a
bearing befon: a federal judge on
the National .Labor Relations
Briard's anticipated request for an
injunction against the teams.
"There wasn't anything really
accomplished," Atlanta Braves
president Stan Kasten said after a
conference call among the owners'
negotiating committee. "They
reviewed the issues for two days.'·
Selig, according to two soun;es
with knowledge of the meeting
speaking on !be condition they not
be identified, talte&lt;l about owners
raising their tax rates and lowering
.their lhresbolds. That would move
their position fartber from the players, not closer.
Selig, reached in Milwaukee,
denied owners bad backed off.
"There was an intense discussion of !be core issues." be said.
"In fact there were no issues not

discussed.''
Just 10 days remain until the
scheduled start of !be season on
April 2, and owners appear intent
qn opening witb strikebreakers.
Manageineilt, in turn, says tbe
union is refusing to negotiate.
McMorris.
confirmed
widespread reports !bat the position
of some owners bad hardened in
recent weeks.
"I tbink the burt gets deeper
every day," be said. "I think !bat's
'what's been underestimated. When
you dry up the ticket base and you
dry up the sponsors, people tend to
lock in. It' s bard to recover for
many of !be clubs.''
The last formal negotiations
were March 4, when talks.l!foke off
after six dl!ys at Scottsdale, Ariz.
''The union,'' Kasten said, •'is
still where they were in Scottsdale:
a tax on basicallY nobody lbat disappears after three years."
Fehr, speaking Tuesday night
from his home in suburban New
York, said be wouldn't confll'Dl any
details about the meeting.
Mediator W.J. Usery as,ked
owners on March ·9 to make a
"best offer" to players, but Selig
dido •t refer to !bat
·
"I'U be in touch with Bill Usery
tomorrow and I'll be in touch with
Don," Selig said. "Other than !bat.
! ·really bave no canment.' •
Selig was accompanied to the
meeting by management I3wyer
Rob Manfred. Febr was acc"mpanied by Lauren Rich, !be union's
No. 3 official.
The owners' last proposal. made

~: Federal appeals court reverse$
~: .$30:3M judgment agains_
t NFL
:{ By RONALD BLVM

•• ·

~:.·
'1

.. :
••

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. ·
ers and reversed a $30.3 million
NEW YORK (AP) - In a set- judgment against the NFL. .
back for organized labor, a federal ,
The 2-1. decision announced ,
appeals court ruled unions can't Tuesday by the U.S. Court of
file antitrust suits against employ- Appeals for the District of .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Shay Richardson of Middletown
Madison and Akron Manchester's
Nate Scblndewolf share top billing
on the 1995 Associated Press
Division lll boys' all-Ohio
basketball team, released today.
Richardson, a 6-foot -5 senior,
and Scbindewolf, a 6-4 junior, were
selected the C~&gt;-players of the year in
the division, based on the
recommendations of a stale panel of
sports writers and broadcasters.
Don Moormeir of Lewisburg TriCounty North who turned around a
program from'4-16 a year ago to 164 this season, was chosen the coach
of !be year. This was Tri-County
North's first season witb more than
four victories since 1983.
Richardson averaged 21.4 points,
8.3 rebounds and S.S assists a game,
while Scbindewolf - a secondteam all-Obio piCk last season- bit
for 23 points a game while attracting
the attention of many big-name
Division I college progams,
Also selected for the first ream
were: Chillicothe Unioto's Jason
Cruse. Mitch Lefeld of Coldwater,
Uticd's Brad Hostasa, Jeremy
Conkle of West Lafayette
Ridgewood, Malvern's Mike Pryor
f p ·
'II
.b
and TODY T I ayan 0 81DeSVI e
Harvey.
. Cruse a 6· 7 senior averaged
.'
'
20.3 pomts and 16.1 rebounds,
while the 6-2 Lefeld bad 17.4 points
. lS
and 34
• ISSlS a game.
Hostasa, a 6-2 senior, scored 23.6
points and had 9 6 rebounds and 2 2
. ·
. s·
steals a game whtle sbootmg 7

Ohio coach Larry Hunter &amp;aid
bench witb four_fouls, rewmed and
bit long jumper to give Penn be's tired of playing at Iowa City.
"This ilt a tougb environmen~"
State the lead for good.
·
Chris Kingsbury scored I 9 be said. •'Iowa is an awfully gOOd
points to help Iowa (21-11) beat basketball team and they're playing
Ohio University (24-10) for !be very well bere at the end of the seasecond time this season at Iowa son.''
Ohio, which trailed by 14 points
City. The Hawkeyes won the fll'St
at
halftime,
cut Iowa's lead to 63meeting 91-75 in the final of the
62
on
a
layup
by Ed Sears with 51
Hawkeye Invitational on Dec. 3.
"We knew the team we saw in seconds remaining. But Iowa's
. the tourney is the true Ohio U.," Andre Woolridge bit a bank shot
Iowa coach Tom Davis said. "We with 20 seconds left and Jim Barplayed about as well as we could tels added a free throw witb 3.i
. play In the first half but tbey came seconds remaining for !be final
·
·
back on us in tbe second bhlr. Tliey margin.
showed what kind of team they · . Gary Trent led Ohio with 18

season.

Tournaments. In lront are (L·R) are Nathan Mar·
tin, Brice IDU, John HuMell and fourth-graders
Justin Allen and Justin Connolly. Behind them
are Mk:k Mh, Matt Ash, J .P. Harmon, Derick
M.lcbael and Joe CornelL

UNBEATEN - Tbe Syracuse llftb-grade basketbaU team recenUy fiiiiUed the season with 11200 record, lndudlng a 19-0 record In the,league and
tournamenL The team, led by Mlck Ash won the
league tide, league toul'IIIIIIIOnt, the Easlem Ath·
Ietic Bo01ters and 'the Po1me1roy

"

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2nd Aouncf
MWct\ 18-11

_

SEASON CHAMPION- The Tuppe11 .Pialns
fourth-grade basketball team took first"place In
tbe Southeastern BuketiNtU League this past 11011·
son. In front are (L·R) .Kyle Conklin, Nathan

M.rch 18-18

)

''

Columbia will bave an impact on
baseball and the NBA, which bas
operated without a collective bargaining agreement since last sum(See JuDGMENT on Page 5)

Gn~bb and Cbrls Wigal. Behind them are Jeremy
Shanks, Jason Coleman, Clayton Conklin, Travis
WUiford, Aaron Yost and COIICb Ralph Coleman,
Not pictured Is teammate Daniel Buchanan.

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..=,..·

. ...

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WEST
UCLA

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Mir"Ctl23&amp;26

I--·---LEADERSHIP HONOREES - Senior and
Leadersblp-Husde awards, presented at Eastern's

...
....
"·

·~ : . BOYS' BASKETBALL HONOREES -East;,. · ern basketball players Ryan Buckley, Charlie Bls":-. sell, Eddie. Friend and Eric Hill (L·R) received

son.

.·

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Basketball

Oiicqo .If &amp;Oiaoa. 7:30p.m.
Su Allloaio at New Jmey, 7:10p.m.
Ooldc.a Staee 11 Alil*lphia, ?:X) p.m.
Miami at AUaala, 7:10p.m
Sacrameato al CLEVELAND, 7:30

·NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl•lk Dlri.loe

»:
:t.oriiJido ....,. ........ 49

I1a

J ·New Y«k ........... 42
N~:w

Jcncy ............ 26
B01toa .......... .......... 2S
Miami ....................25
WllhiD&amp;toa ............ ll
Allladefpllia ......... .. l7

L l&lt;l.

11
2l

.742
,6S6

40 394
40 .liS
41
47
••

l19
277
.262

Ill
6
23
2J.S
24
30.5
JU

Central DtYIIIom
ClW"loDe ..... ,..........41
IDdiua .......... ......... .W

2!'i

CL.eVELAND·.... ,.. )6
Chle~ao .................. J4
Atlaolli ...... ............. 33
MllwauUe- ............. 26
Oettoit. .......... ,........ 24

29
32
32

~

41
42

.621
.6 15
.H4
.s15
.SOl
.318

\S .S

.364

17

.5

4.S
7
7.S

"

••
•

•
'
•

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•

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•
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•

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LA. Clippen •ladiiDI, 7:30 p.m.
Dallal II MinuetOta, I p.m.

Dea¥cr • Utah, 9 p.m.. •
Portland at LA. l..a.Un, JO:JO p.m.

WI!STERN CONFERENCE
MWwetDh-W..

ha

~

L l&lt;l.

1-Utah ................. :.. oll

II

.727

Sill Antoaio ...........4$
1-loulton ..... .. , .........40
om...................... 31
Dallll ..................... 26
Mlnmr.oti .............. HI

II
25

.714
.615
.477
.41]
.211

:J4
37
47

Podli.DttWon
1-Phocllii ..............49 11 .7JI

Seottle ........ :...........U
L.A. t.Urn ............ l9
Fonload ................. 16
S8Ct'Uhtnto ............ Jl

20
25 .
21
33

Oolden St.~e ..........21 44
L.A Cllpp&lt;n ......... 14 Sl

.692

.609
.S6l
.492
.323
.209

&amp;~liDChed playoff berth

Tuaday'tiCOra

Ol..tot!c 71,Nrw Y«t 69
Miani fJJ, ladiaoa 9S
Deuolt IOl, NcwJmey9!

Orl111do 126, Flloeola 102
Mllwauteelll,Ooldea,.'i... I09
~e104.~a

102

l'llrtland Ill, WlOIIII!plD I06

Ill
I.S

Thursday's games
Utah at Houstoa, 8:30p.m.
New York at Deaver, 9 p.m
Wllhinaton a1 Seattle, I0 p.m.

Tuesday's
second-round KOres

Thursday's quarterfinals
Wllhiai(on Stme (ll·ll) at Clllllliw
(20- 12), 7,10 p.m.
Perron State (19·10) at Iowa (2 1·1 1) .
9:30p.m .
.

Hockey

s...ta,,MveltUft•ll
Semifinal WUIDetl, 2:40p.m.

ThundaJ-• ......""'""",.........

3
1.5

Gcoraetowa (21 -9) v1. "North c.olinl
(26-5). 7:•S p.m.; KentUckJ (27·.of) "'·
Arlt.oDI State {24-1), 30 mlnutet after
PR¥\O!a pme

Southeast Recloaal

O.k c,.,,., llno ...h..., Ala.

.s.t..i~.,'• n...t

Semifinal wlllDcn, 6 p.m.

Midwest Rectoaal
Frkl.,-..a Kllllptf Ar•n•
K•-CIIy,Mo.
Me~tua (2-4-9) w. Atbn&amp;M (29-6), 1

p.m.
.
Ku&amp;• (2.5-S) vs. VirJIDia {2-4-1), VI

miDIDilftetprevtovapml!

s..-,.'a filial
SemUIJPJ wtn.nen, p.m.

s

. Weot Rectoaal

r;:v

NIIL standings
Allantic ot.wo.

.W. .L

I &amp;

Pb.i.lldclphla ...... l6 9 3 3S
Wl&amp;hinaton .'., ... 12 II 6 30
N.Y. Raqcn .... 13 12 3 , 29
New Ieney ....... 11 12 S 27
Florida .............. II ll 3 25
Tampa Boy ....... II IS 2 2&lt;
N.Y. Ulanden... 9 IS 3 :ZI
N he ......_. .... __
•t ut UTI"_..

Pi!llburah ......... 20 I :Z

Quebec .............. 19 6
BOIIOD .............. Ull
Butrllo .............. II II
Moalreal ........... 10 13
Hwtfcrd ............ 10 14
Ot~wa .............. "19

32

96

li.f ~
95

72
71
76
73
73
61

80
67
74
7S
It

w
IS

-42 122 100

3 -41 107
1 30 II
:n 6l
.S . 2$ ?It ·
4 ""24 68
4 11 n

s•

69
74
84
74
99
11o1

80 93
U 93
87 IU7
62 87
64 98

72

6S
61

9S

79
17

waiven.

ICUOn.

Nadonall'ootbel Le•ue
CHICAGO BEARS: A&amp;reed to .terms
with Anlhouy Johuoa, tullbad:, and
Scott Adama, OITen&amp;ivc auard.
MIAMI DOlPHINS : Traded Mlll"i: In·
gram, wide receiver, tri the Green Bay
· Pickert for a 199.5" ·rourth-mund draft
p1ct.

.

Hodley
Ndonal Boc:key Ltque
DALLA~ STARS : Recall ed Mark
L~wreoce and Grant ManhaJJ, riaht
WIDIJ, fr om JCaJamazoo or the fnl et DI·
Lional Hockey Leque.
9l:fEBEC NOROIQU Es': Siaoed
Ouiluan Mltte, rialn wins.

Injured lilt.

MIAMI HEAT: Na.mec~ CbriJ Wallace
direct(l" of collqe I.Dd intern•ionll &amp;COLli·
iq IDd Mite Stlllfield director of ticket

Toalgbt'ocomes

Phlladclpbil at Jr.trord, 1 p.m.
florida at Moatreal, 7:30p.m.
boa • Q.Jebec:, 7:30 p.m.
NewJeneyll N.Y. Ruacn. 7:30p.m.
WiMipq; at Detroit, 7:30 p.m
Edmoaton 11. Dalla, 1:30 p.m.
st Louil a CaJ 11.-y, 9:30p.m.
N.Y. Raaaen at ,N.Y. blanden, 7:30

p.mEdmouton 11 ballu, 1:30 p.m.
Cblcaao at VIDCOuver, 10:30 p.m.
A.111heim It Su J01e, IO:l) p.m.

1
I
:

I
II
I
I
I

'
FootboU

CHICAGO BULLS: Activated Lany
Kty•tkowiat:, rorwud. from the injured
li1t. PIICCd Jud Buechler, forwwd, on lhe

Olicaao 7, San J01c 3
to. A.aaetea 3, Aolheim 3 (tic)

u.,..

N.. louiiA. .t
CINCINNATI REDS: Releuod _ ,
Borbou. pitcher.

•

PIDLADELPHIA 76ERS: Nuned Joe
Carbone llrenattt'llld co.Jitionina CO!dl. ·
SACRAMENTO KINGS: Activated
Doua Ue, ,....d, £rom the injured ll1t.
Placed Alu Abdelaaby, forwird, oo

BaakotbaU

W11hinl(on 1, Ottna 0
Vaotouftl" 3, ToronlO I

BueboU

.ula.

NaiW... a..btkii.A.otiallon
ATLANTA HAWKS : Sianed Eani1
WhaUey, guard, Cor the remainder or the

Tuesday'sKOI"t!ll
Pittabu.rah 3, BuHIIo 2

A....-k•
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Relcued
Mite Ecel1toa, JCcviu Tolar aad Mark
Smith, pltchm. Re.•lancd Mart Hui&amp;manu W Regie Hlft'ia, pltchcrl, to the
• miwlequetanll',
.·
NEW YORK YANKBHs, Releued
Prot Dippold. Todd Harriland Dennia
1 S"!teney, pllcbm; Tremayne Ooaald,
Nell Kurtt 111d Rey Noriep, lnfielden
' ond Oleo Bruooo, oUIIlelder. R...i.,od

Randy DeBruhl, catcher, to the mlr~ar
leqUe '""1'·
OAKLAND AntLETICS: Releucd
Brito Eldridae ud Terry Taylor, infiel~·
cn,.ud Dennis Goll&amp;l.lvta, pitcher.

PmSBUROH PIRATES: Released
Jamey Oberbruner and John Lepley,
pitchcl'l, ud tCUiip.ed Miruel Bonilla..
plt~het, to the ml~ lcaauc uqt.

Thursday's games

EASTE
. RN CONFEREN-CE
Ila

ChiCIIao ............ 11 9 2 36 ID9
St. LouiJ ........... IS 9 2

26
26
l.o1 Aogelea...... 9 13 6 2•
SanJote ............ tOI4 2 22
Anaheim ........... 716 4 18

New MtJ:ko State (25-9) at Virainia
Tech (22-10), 7:30p.m.
South Aorida (II· II) 11 Marquette
(19-11), 9:10p.m.
.

State (25·9), 7:..0 p.m.
1\olu (2._ 7) va. Moaa''"""" (21-&lt;).
30 niDUtel after ptevioua pme

.»:

·
L I &amp; lil liA
Detro!! .... ., ........ II 6 2 31 100 51

P"""Dinolon
29 91

Wednesday'• quorterfinob

Reglo..l

I&lt;a

C~pry ....... .'.. 1212 l
Edlmntoo ......... 12 J3 2
Vancouver ........ 9 10 8

. Pen.n State 65, Nebraska .S9
Iowa 66, OIDO 62

. NCAA Division 1
men's tournament

CentraiiH"f'h,_

Toronto ............, 13 12 S 31 82
011111................ 10 l3 .. 2.. 83
Winrupea .......... 9 14 4 22 7S

S.tur,1.,-'an..l
Semifinal WiMen, 3:40p.m.

LA. Cllppen 1i Mihnube, 1:30 p.m.

7.5
16.5
20J
29

11.5
16
T1
3l

1

Dallu at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
· 0\arlone • Orlando, 8 p.m.

East

WESTERN CONFERENCE

UCLA (27·2) Yl. Mi11i11ippi Stale
(22-7), g,os .m.
Maryllfl (26-7) VI . ConDC&lt;:ticut (27·
4), 30 miDIDel aftet pre.vioua pmo

' NIT action

Fricla7-ar De Mrlldowl•dll
EMt R•lllnforll, N.J.
Wate Fore1t (2 6·5) Ys . Oklah oma

~

••

p.m.

•

Th~ -11 o.kl•d-AI.,eda
C~ty Coll•wn, Oilk.land

winter sports banquet last week, went to Mellssa
Goes.•, A,my Redovlan and Jessica Radford (L-R).

JUdgment reversed • • • (Continued from Page 4)

awards at Saturday's winter sports banquet ror
tbelr on-court accompllsbments_ln the past sea-

.

'I
DAIRY-VALLEY
ftb

;

.

'

mer It agrees with and in some
res~cts is broader than decisions
by federal appeals courts in St.
Louis and New York.
"When federal labor policy col·
tides with antitrust policy in a labor
market organized around a colleclive bargaining relationship,
antitrust policy must give way,"
Chief Judge Harry Edwards wrote
for the majority. ·
"Injecting anti\Dislliability Into
. the system for resolving disputes
between unions and employers
would bolb subvert national labor
policy and exaggerate federal
antitrust concerns."
Baseball players have asked
Congress to strip baseball owners .·
of !heir antitrust exemption, created
by a 1922 U.S. Supreme Court
decision. But even if the exemption
was removed, Tuesday's decision
in Brown vs . Pro Football Inc.
would force the Major League
Baseball Players. Association to
decertify before it could ftle soil
"It's a really big win,' ' acting
baseball commissioner Bud Selig
'd
~Tuesday's decision went beyond·
the 8th Cia:uit's holding in Powell
vs. NFL and the 2nd Circuit's bold-

ing in NDA vs. Williams. The court
ruled that a unilarerally implemented term 'after an Impasse in bargaining- was beyond challenge
under the antitrust laws.
·
"To accommodate federal labor
p&lt;)Ucy, we must preserve the delicate balance of countervailing
power !bat characterizes !be process," Edwards wrote in a 30-page
decision.
The case decided Tuesday was
filed after the NFL unilaterally
implemented a rule in 1989 cstablisbing developmental squads of six
rookie or first-ye!lr players per
team . Tbe league fixed their
salaries at $1.000 per week. ·
On May 9, 1990, Antony Brown
of the Buffalo Bills filed a classaction suit on behalf of 235 developmental squad players against the
league and its teams.
U.S. District Judge Royce L3!D·
berth ruled for the players on
March 10, 1992, and on Ocl. 6,
1992 a jury awarded damages that
were trebled to $30,349,642. On
the following May 13. Lamberth
issued a ~anem injunction bar-t
ring the
from ever agam seting uniform regular-season
salaries (or any category of player.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUIICE

•• ····r:LOSE
~ 10 LBS. •

.

w...... ......1:

l" ,..

.....__•..,,..__...,.,

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STEAK~­

$184

111

Sec:o'nd St., Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNR
SINCE 1868

•

1
1\

~~==~------------~~~;:~~----------------;;:;:;;;;.-------r--~------~----~~~--1. ~------------------·-'+ .

percent from the field and 7S
percent at the foul line.
The 6-2 Conkle and 5·9 Pryor,
co-players of the year in the East
. District, .averaged 24.3 and 31
points, respectively.
.
Tibayan, a 5-9 senior, averaged
16.4 points and 7 assists a game.
Tbe second team includes
representatives f~om three teams
competing 1n tbts week's state
RYAN WU..LIAMS
tournament.
Valley, 6-J , Sr., 17.0.
Six-four sophomore pstaban RJvuThlr•
II••' Brad Occiu, Columbiana
Weaver leads Columbus Hartley Crtltriew, 6-3, Sr., 23.0; Mwcel Dtuoo. tAr-ville.
(21·5) into its semifinal at 6 p.m. ~. Jr . , 17.1: Stew Ycaak. Milford. 6-4, Jr., 19 .9~
Keal 0.-mt, Belpre, S·fl,Jr.• 19.6; J.oa '1'\aBer,
Thursday against Wheelersburg (22- VeruiUet
, 6-1, Jr., 11.1; William fruklin , Cia. N.
3) and 6-2 senior Jonathan Eaton. Collca• Hill, 6-4, Sr., U .6; .Bndy Aui.rum,
Znenille W. MUitinaum, J - 10 , Sr., 23.2; Bo
Weaver, 'first team last year as a CIIW,
Wellnille, 6-3, Jr., 2S.O.
freshman, averages 25.1 points, 10.1
PleJen or tilt Jtarl Shay Richardaoa ,
Madiaoa;·Nate Schildewolf, Atroo
rebounds, 3.4 assists and 2.1 steals a Middlclowo
M -.
game. Eaton is good for 21.8 points
Cod oiiiM '""' Ooq Moormelr, Lewiltnq
and five rebounds a game.
• Tri-Couoty North.
Bryan Moloney, a 6-2 senior who
~bu Bn~ttoa. BkxJm-c.roU; laa Owtmealaa.
averages 14.6 points a game, will Col. Academy: Clint Haye~,lkv~tly Fort~; Jeff
Lore Cky Buckeye Trail ; liiiDD Etkia,c:r.
lead Ontraio (21-4) against Orrville Snedr••·
Zoanr11Je Tt&amp;cn.._ Valley; Matt Dlvldloa, New
(22-3) at9 p.m. Thursday.
Loudon ; Ryn DuMonte, Carey; Brllll Nler,
iile Clintoa-MIIIie; PAUL DillON ,
The winners will meet Saturday Clarkav
PROCfORVILLE FAIRLAND: Wca McCorkle,
at 2 p.m.
Oak Hill ; Chri• Beard , Chillicothe z... Trace :
Here are the 1995 AP Division Nathan Cop•. Seam~ D N. Adami; lay SuUqo,
Bedford Chanel; Howard Ownbcn, Obcrt.ID.; B.ddie .
III teams, based on the Riltw,
Rocky Riv•l.uthcna Wt«; Briu Minotu,
reCommendations of a state media &lt;ilta Mill&amp; Gilmour; Pall Duacaa. Ali'OI'I. '
u.....w. ....._
panel:
.
Nllhu AdttDI, Loadoa MadiiOD Plaiu; I"'Lia

---

Flralleaan Shay Riehard1o1 , Middletown
M..U.oo, 6-fooo-S, Soalor, 21.&lt; p11.1a..,.:
Crule, ChlllicOt.hc Ualoto, 6·7, Sr.,l0 .3; N1te
ScbiDdewolf, Aktoa Manc::heatu, 6--4, Jr., 21.0;
M;tch l.e!eld, Coldwotcr, 6-2, Sr.: Brod Hoowa.
Utica_ &amp;2, Sr., 23.6; Jwemy Cot~klc. W. ~ayeUe

1•••

R;d 1ewood,6-2 ,Sr. ,20;Mit&lt;Prvor,M~""'·S·

9, Sr., 31 .0: Toay Tiboyaa, P~ ... 'llllelbrvey, l-9,
Sr.,IU
SKOftd 1eam1 Ellaban Weaver, Col. H.tley, 6•. Sopb., 2l.l: JoDIIhoo Eoooo, Wboelmbur~ 0-2.
Sr., tU; Bryan Molooey, O..lrio, 6-2. Sr., 1&lt;.6:
QueDiiD Dl'l'il, Cln. N. Collcae Hill. 6-4, Jr., 16.0;
Ip""io Delaado, Delta, 0-2, Sr.• IH;
Pl.., ,
You. Mooney , 6--1, Sr., 16.7; Jn1h Rich, MllioD

.,,m

Celtics plan to retire Lewis'
jersey despite cocaine stories

.1995 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
111 Round
M.a-t 16-17

Sentinel-Page 5

The

AP names boys' Division Ill all-staters

· Wedneaday, March 22, .1995
Pa e-4

'

•

OhiO

---

.. ,.

I

'

•
•
•

IN
3 DAYS!
All Natural C.H. 2001

••

-EY BACK GUARANifE

•

Wlrfl CllnNIW&amp;111t PlcDNna,.

112 00 Ofl"~

COV~ON

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• FRUTH PHARMACY •

·······• -Middleport

992-6491' '--

'.'This is a significant ruling
because the court held that the
terms of employment for 'professional atbleles, including modificalions to a collective bargaining
agreement, are to be decided as
part of a process that involves player unions and teams in a league, not
by the courts," said Harold Henderson, lbe NFL's executive vice
president for labor relations.
Chip Yablonski. the lawyer who
argued the case for the players, said
his side would appeal.
"The coon majority simply got
'it wrong," be said. " This case represented !be most extreme abuse of
monopoly power by a spoits league
against ·its most vulnerable players.'" ·
,
Judge A. Raymond Randolph
agreed with the majority decision.
Judge Patricia Wald filed a 25-page
dissenting opinion .

By GLEN JOHNSON
. BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Celtics prepared to retire R~ggie
Lewis' number tonight amid lillegations that the late player admitted
to at least one doctor that be used
cocaine before every home game as
a "performance enhancer."
1'ht! Bosron H~rald today quoted
an unidentified medical source
close to the case as saying Lewis
would not or could not stop using
cocaine even after collapslns dur·
ing a game and belns warned that
continued use would Jdll blm.
Meanwhile, a college teammare
and friend of Lewis on Tuesday
night recanted statements that he
used cocaine with Lewis s. d Len
Bias, who died of a cocain~ overdose days after being drafted by
Boston.
In interviews with The Wall
Strtet Journal and The Boston
G/oln, Derrick Lewis bad said be
bad used cocaine witb Reggie
Lewis five days before the Cellics
captain collapsed during a playo_ff ·.
game in April 1993. He also S31d
be used. cocaine witb Lewis and
Bias during a summer basketball
camp in 1985.
But Tuesday night, be told
WCVB-TV be bad never seen
Lewis or Bias do cocaine. ·
·
"I never got high with Reggie,
no more tbail drinldng beers," be
told WCVB in a telephone interview. "The Globe and all these
reponers are coming down here
bugging me, just to IJy 10 get some
dirt on Reggie."
The Herald's source said Reggie Lewis told.!be doctor a number
of Celtlcs reammates used cocaine
at the time, The newspaper also
said the former bead of !be state
· police Narcotics Uni~ Detective Lt.
Robert Long, S31d reports of drug
use by certain plafers were "common knowledge ' among some
investigators.
.
.
.
Jan Volk, Celucs execuuve vtce
president andJeneral manager,
said !be Heral account was "an
incredibly bold statement to be

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made under the cloak of an
unnamed source and an obvious
violation of medical ethics."
"I have absolutely ·no knowl edge of !be conduct suggesled,"
Volt said.

BIICUione, Bllilimore Ubcny Ualon; Briaa Blake,
Col. Gra~~dv-icw Uta.; Con Hamittoa , Marlo• FJain;
Tom Kenner. Cardlnatoo·UocolD.
Zact Burdette , Torontn : M1n Yoder ,
suaarcreel Oar•w•y; Juatia Sh•w. Ol*lcllhutten
IDdiiD Valier: Shawn Carpenter, Sanhnille
Sheoaodoah; Xcviu Youna. Mlltiu Ferry; C)lellia
Bdtina.cr, Woodsfield Moaroc Ceot.; 8riQ Gchrlc.
Hannibal River.
.
Brian Ouaaeatl, llm1 Ceat. C1th.; Steve
Bollenbacher , Roctrord P1rkw1y; Bnd Yucc ,
Sherwood Fairview; Terry Tll'lli;l, Toutoaany
Otseao; Kyle Getlwt, Buc:)'f\11 Wynfotd.
•
Mite Thompaon, Cin. Deer P.t; Gccal...«enzl.
Cin. Wyonfin l; Butch Stidham . Germantown
V11ley View ; rad CUDDIDJ,hlm, C•lille; Tony
Hoot, N. L&lt;wilbura Triad
Eric EYilliZet , Sumas N. Ad1m1 ; Sl'11wn
Sollllllln, MiDfc.-d; Mitt Fout, Chillltolhe Ullioto;
Brett Fink.• Welht o n; Tnvla Rice , AI~IDY
Alnander; RYAN WILLIAMS, RACINE
SOUTHERN; M1rk Whitlna. Stewltl Fe'denl
Hoclriua; Mite 1-WIAah, Pi~ott.
Rkt Flet~her , Gatu Mllll Ollt'nour; · Oan
SI!Jdcr, Pary; Bryan Ropn. Orwell OnlDd V~tey :
Dave Siefert, Brooklyn ; Toby Davis, Pllnenille
· Harvey.
Ryan Fitch, Wuren Champina; Tim H(lwrnan,
W. Sll.em Northwat..-a; Zath Willian•. Uabo1
Andenoa; Reaautd Ray, Orrville ; Joah Platt,
Cratoo Norwayue.

School, St. Rt. 124, .

773·5583

Racine, Ohio

614-949-2682
,.,

DON WOOD
~'Where

Better Really Matters"

East State Street
Athens, Ohio

)593·6641

�.

N~M~L;;;-::::-::-~~P:om:er:oy:Middle
Page

·

6

The Dally Sentlnel

. .

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port, Ohio

Wednesday' March 22, 1995

Wednesday' March 22, 1995

.Pomeroy-M lddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

·

.

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"SHU

~-

·EGGS
.dozen

~

.

'fttiS VI&amp;&amp;K It . ,•• VI&amp;&amp;K

IT'S EASY'

Ju!!!E'Srour
How TO s~liEJ
s,_.:
me:::
coupons
tile sm s
FREE 5
1111 . ,
llt_our
wrtll
. purcll115e.l:u

Sillier Fol:p

Sllopper
11nd fill
Sllopper

~llle
w~
err t1me r
rour

store ro
Slloppei. co: will receilte ~ visit our
grocerr
POll for n " ne Smllrt
folder fo:r;~e! Pre:e~:-oo "'roilr
Sp:'c'f: rour sm11::';~ filled

11

•

~~~:::~~~a~nlf~5JIVEI

HU
..

6.5 ounce can .

. ·.

.- .,

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01111er

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

'

Wednesday, March 22, 1995

Pomerqy-Middleport, Ohio

Unthou· htful family mem~rs violate delivery room decorum .
_ ...,;.;;..;;.;....;,"'i·'

baby: She says she will by, but it is
llplliii'Citt thlt abe is still very lliJI)t
llld 1 fear this will go on unti l she
alienates the whole family.
1 hope you wiU print my letter so
Olhen wi}lleam not to ruin a most
spec tal umc for someone else. -IRENE'S MOM IN SALINAS,
CALIF.
DEAR MOM Irene, her husband,
~d,octor and you need a course in
how tQ.be more assenive. Someone
should have said to the invading
· bllOps, "You're in the way. I want you
out of here right now. If you want 10
wait around until ihe baby comes,
fine. But you'll have to wait in the
other room."
,
: Dear Ann Landers: Three couples
tn our crowd often go out to dmner

hele," scvaal in-laws boopt.dinto llle
room to w~ICh. Irene
extremely
upsetbythiS,butshedidn'ttnowhow
to handle the situation. By ihe time I
realized all the relatives were in the
delivery room , it was too late to say
anythtng. The doctor was also

Ann
·
Lan derS

:was

., ........ ,_.,._.,..,.

eo.-••,_.,..

annoycdbccauseitdrewhisatten~on
from Irene and ihe baby and spotled
tile te~der moment she had be_en

Dear Aan Landers: My daughter
had her fJrst child recently. "Irene"
told everyone she wanted only her
husband and me in the delivery room.
She swed quite emphatically that ·
there was a waiting room for other
relatives and that the hpspilal stat'
would keep them posted on the
delivery.
.
AI the very end of her delivery.
when the doctor told Irene, "It's
almost over -- the baby is just about

planmng througho11t her enure

pregnancY·

.

.

lrenetSnow~grywt~herm-laws

for not respecung her wtshcs.l have
done my best to calm her down and
urged her 10 let the matter drop, but
shercfusesiOdoso. Thedoctoran~ I
both told Irene 10 co~front her mJaws~ express her f~hngs and cl_ear
the lUI' so she can CDJOY her beautiful

Members 'of Precepur Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
enjoyed an outing in Athens last
week with luoch at Sylvia' s and
shopping at The University Mall.
On the outing were Charlotte
Elberfeld, Clarice Krautter, Maida
Mora, Eleanor Thomas, Carolyn
Grueser, Jeannie Powell, Dorothy
Sayre, Jane Walton, Ann Rupe,
Rose Sisson, Carol Adams, Norma
Custer, Martha McPhail, and Ruth
Riffle.

to stop

BULLETIN BOARD
1 011

6 col•mn Inch wqkdays
18011 column Inch Su•day

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

!he

ALZHEIMERS &amp;
R ELATED DISORDERS
Support Group meeflng Thursday,
March 23, 1 p.m.
PVH Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center
304·675·5236 for more info.

'P.o.

The charter was draped in
memory of Laura Circle, 60-year
member who died Feb. 25, when
Racine Grange 2606 meet in regular session at the hall with Dorothy
Smith, master, presiding.
Reports were made by the legislative, women activities and fiscal
chairmen. The master reported
Pomona Grange banquet to be held

7:15p.m., April 28 at the Senior
Citizens Center, and announced
that 1uly 29 at Rio. Grande University Meigs County will host tile
Sixth Degree.
Harrisonville will visit Racine,
and Racine will visit Star, it was
noted.
·
It was reported that Racine won

the state awird for gaining the most
new members for a Grange in its
size category.
Mike Dubl was named steward
and Nancy c;amahan, gatekeeper.
The Literary program was
"About Rice" and the song "Midnight on the Ocean."
Patty Dyer, county deputy pre-

sen ted Mary Easterday with her 60
year seal and Mrs. Smith with her
55 year pin. It was reported that
Clara Adams is will undergo
surgery in the near future, that
Sarah Voss is in the Durst Nursing
Home, and Blyth Theiss is recuperating. The baking contest was won
by Ms. Easterday.

held. in Jackson County, W. Va. due collects, and a discussion on
with Verla Shaffer and Sandy Hoff definitions of active and inactive
· members defined. Cookbooks are
to be co-chairmen.
Shaffer reported th;~t the histori- tile main fund raiser of the group
cal society ts researching which and members were encouraged to
berbs were originally used around actively try to sell them to the pubthe log cabin at Cedar Lakes so that lie.
Purchase of a projector for use
those herbs can be incorporated
by
members for programs for the
into the garden there.
community
was postponed until
For roU call members gave their
after
the
Herb
Fest. Members put
birth dates. Lucille Keebaugb was a
togetller
a
sunshine
basket for
guest officers' .
were given,

although once the flowers mad e
into bread.
·
Hoff presented a program on
aloe, members sampled fresh aloe
on their bands, and Hoff gave a
demonstration on aloe skin care.
Refreshments were prepared by
Rose Marie Dubites, Julia Given,
and Judy Hudson. April meeting
will be at the Long Bottom Community Building.

.

The Meigs Community Band directed by Toney
. Dingess wiD present a concert 2 p.m. Sunday on the
parking lot of the Meigs County Public Library.
Those ~t~nding are asked to take lawn chairs. In
th.e e¥enLJUs.cold or rainy, then the concert will be
, . presented inside.
The program will consist of traditional and contemporary music. Two numbers will also be presented by the Community Jazz Band.
• : .The Meigs Commun_ity Band is sponsored by the
:-. M1d~~port Arts Coun~l .and fiDlded by a grant that
. Is a JOmt proJect of Ohro Arts Council and West Vir!' ginia Commission.on the Arts administered by Arts• bridge. .
·
.
::, •The mission of the grant called Obio River Border
:' Initiative is to share opportunities and resources
• among arts organizations and individual artists in
:,-ohio an~ West Virginia. Members of the Meigs
· .CotnmiDllty Band are from both states.
.' The required matching monies from the Middle• port Arts Council were raised tllrougb Bob Hoe-flich's Meigs Talent Showcase staged last fall. The
:-,pro~ is ~ and open to the public.

..

sa 8·88**
'

.

BIWIJ R '95 CIEVY ASTRO EmEI
CCINVEiaiN VAN

• Extended Chassis
• Driver Side Pir Bag
• Aflti·Lo:k Brakes
• Au Cond1t1on
• Automat~ Overdnve
• V1sta Bay Windows
· • Power S1eering

• Power Brakes

· rm Steen~

• Cruise
• At.I/Ft.l Cassette

• Power Windows
• Power Locks
•4 caplain C""rs ·

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP
• Custom Cloth Interior

• Driver SiOO Artlag
• Rea~ Anti·L9d&lt; Brakes

• S!llailled

·lnd'ect lighli~

· Steel Belted Trres

• Power steen~
• Power Bral&lt;es

• Premiu.mWOOd Pkg.
• Full Cooversion
• Aluminum Running Boards

·Loaded!

'

One mile out
143.from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wad. • Fri. • Sat.
. c:,..1...;
• Crllftsman Toots
•Toys
•Guns
LOIIds of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992-2060

· Power Bra~es

4:.:4

• Aulomatic
• Driver Side Airbag
• Anti-LOCI&lt; Brakes
• Power st...nng

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

$17,488

. Trlt st...ring

• P 235175R I5' Tires

I

$11 ,488**

· Loaded!

~l)(x: fees

• 4•4
• 4.3lilfl! V·6 POVt'ef

Speclala.ollnlund Effects .

$14,888
IIRMII NEW '95 BliCK CEII1IIY SEDA1
• PS. P/8
'I»&gt; llx&gt;s

• Powel WrOOws
•.P,., TrriReleil!e
• Mt'F MStereo

. •Automat&lt;
•V1i Power
• Dual Airba~

• Power Staerif9·
· Powerlhl&lt;es
· Power Door locks
• Power WindoWS
• A~t.l Cassette
• TihSteerifl\l

4x4PICKUP

•

DeM"M·

=;--~Pu=b~ll~c~N~Q~
tlc~e___ ---·~pu=b~ll~c~N~m~lc~e___

.
•
·•

''Sale Price
t~ctm GMAC

'

...,...,
"""""

• Cuslom Sport arct&lt;et Seats

S26,988

• Sport Suspension
• Spll Dual Exhaust

• t6' ca~ A~m•um l'v11ee~ .
• Loadedl

. •Cruise Contr~

•

TBtL FREE 1·BIIJ-.fJ417 • 372·2844

344·5941• 422·11756
- -· ,...

...

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: N11on - 6 pm .

"

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wrltlon oletemanll of tha
PUBUC NOTICE
. Dlrector'a tntenl with
' T he
I o II ow I n g
roapecl to th1 tooUince,
eppltcetlone 1nd/or verified dan\ at, madlltcetlon, ·
complaints were receiver'. revocetlon, or rwnewal of 1

• Console
• Pass-Key II Theft o.terrent
• Rear Oe&lt;k lid Spoier
• Special Aero Gl1i1rld E«ects
and Wlteel Flares

'

"•

ftrS1 l 1me Bu~

• Onver Side Aifb&amp;Q
• 4Wheel A~l.oo'i Bla~es

..

992-7587

(614) 992-5291

"..

,

end the following drefl • permit, llcenu, or Vlrllnce.
'Jiropoaed, or flna! acttonn Written commonto end
'wore taouad, by the Ohi&lt;J roquuto Ia• o public
Envlronmsntof Protecllon muting rogerdlng 1
'Agency (OEPA) l11t wook. propaud octlon moy be
•"Actlonc" Include tho oubmiHod wlllltn 30 daya of
;:adoption, Modification, or notice of the propooed
·nvoeatlon of ordoro (other acllon. An odludlcltlan
' hon amarg1ncy ordora); tha he1rlng mey ba hold on 1
taauanco , . denlol , . propoaodac:tlonlfahearlng
)nodlflcltlon or rovocetton roquul .or oblecllon le
'Of ltconuo, permlla, laoaoo, rocoiVld by tho OEPA within
· 'Yirtencaa, or certlflcetu; 30 doyo of loou1nca of lhl
•:.nd · the opprovol or propoiod 1clton. Wrlttln
·:·dlaepproval of plono 1nd commenlo, requoate lor
&lt;epeclflcellona : "Draft public meetlnga, .and
,·Actlono" ere written ldJudiCIIIDn hearing
'atetamenta of the dtroctor of roqueata mull be oent to:
:..nvtronmentol proloctlon'a\ Hearing Clerk, Ohio
•(Oii'ICtor'o) tnlont with Envtronmentel Protection
".roapocl. to lht laouonce, Agency, P.O. .Box 113Mt,
"'lenlel, ate. ol • permit. Columbuo, Ohio 4321.,_
J lcenoe, order, etc. (Tol,phone: 814-844-2121). 1
-tntaroetod poraono mey "Final Actlone: aro ectlona
' aubmn wrmen commontl o: of the ' dlrocto• which lie
:requaat 1 public moeun, olfactlve upon taou1nce or •
:•regarding drefl acttona. aleled alfactlvo deto.
~Commanto
or public Pureuenl to Ohio ravlttd
111111hlg ,.quaoto muet ba cod "otlon 3745.04, 1 final
1'1Ubmlllad within ·30 der- of action may bl eppeelod to
nottca of the drill acllon. lha anvtronmentet boerd of
. "Propo11d Actlona" ore 1 rovlew (EBR) by a. poreon
I'

I

•

v

(614) 992-5535

'992·2269

(614) 992·2753 ~ ·~

PERFECT NEW TAN

In Memory

New Busin ess In

Operation
Stewart Hollow Ad. off
Bradbury Rd.
Phone 992-4044
Owners: Aoltie &amp;
Shrrley Stewart

In Memory Of

JEREMY
GUINTHER .

L..-------.1
who waa 1 party to o
proceeding belon tho
director by llllng on opput
wfthln 30 d1ya of notice of
tha final ectlon. Purouonlto
Ohio rovloed code ooclton
3741.07, 1 ffnol ocllon
luulng, donylng, modifying,
. rovoklng, or ronowlng 1
ptrmH, llcenu, or varlenc•

which lo not pr1cadod by 1
propoaod .ectlon, moy ba
lpPIIIId to tho EBR by
filing en 1ppeel within 30
deyo of toouanca of tho lln1l
octlon. EBR appeola muot
bllltod with: Envtronmontaf
Boerd of Rtvlew, 238 Elot
Town Street, Room 300,
Columbua, Ohio 43215. ,.
copy ollhe eppe1t muot ba
earved .on lha director
within 3 d'1y1 ellar 111\ng tha
1ppeel wlthlhe lfBR.
Approved parmlulon .lor
open bumtng OAC Chopler
37411-11

KoKoalng Conolrucllon
Inc., St. Rt. 7, Pomeroy,
Soflabury .• Cheater, OH
Appllc..fon No(i) OB..Q6.
53-0 2

'

(3) 22; 1TC

rt,

Bill Slack

Your Business Would
Be Apprcciafed.

20 Sessions For
$25 .00

2

""'"

And still we mourn your
death
And sllll we miss your
amite
And so I'll sit at Jeremy's
Place
And Ponder lor awhile....
We Love You
And M\aa you vary '"uch,
Jed,
Grsnny &amp; PsPa

~

~

(Specialize In
driveway spreading)

Lhnestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

...-._,

State Rt. 33
Darwin,·Ohio

..

614-992-3470 ,,.

10f211941Hn

Announcements

Burial, Final Expenses. Loans, Business, Family
Security, College Funds, Emergency Funds,
Retirement, Estates, Life Insurance to fit your needs.

Resl;iac&amp; Olt1Ger&amp;mir: Tile, a:'ld

FibeBrg:.J"·rowHar·T''
&lt;.&lt;i&lt;tU•orB
S•gs..
M

t R~FI~ISHING

3 Announcements

ROCKY R. HUPP

All Nalunol Foocl Product Wllk:h
Helfll You !.oM Weight And

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

Ha'(l - .
3351.

~.

·-

Ellml,.,

fll F""" D1o1 Wllh
All-nllunol IWbol · !.oM
.... ond
w.tghl,
- 114...a::MICI.
Han
E&gt;wgy

614-843-5264

Oup \'our s-t11 Olrt II

Hey

L----·

e-di-ca_r_e_·_c_an_c_e_r
e- - - - - '
Health-L-if_e_·_M_
• Accident
• Annuity • IRA·-F-i-r
• Mortgage

ytMJ

Wlhlng 10 M•r from
24
houro I dl~l , _ 1-111
8000 Elt.
$3.tllmln. 11+,
Poocolt Co. lOll lilt 11120.

.------------------....o.---,
MODERN SANITATION
=,.!a:,"'~~..;:!~
AEOUCE· lun olllol white-

~~REFINISHING
•

POMEROY, OHIO
Septlc tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job shes • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coat
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Ll
d&amp;B ' dad 20

THE PAMPERED CHEF

c-

"The K"cllln 91..., Thot
To Yow Doo&lt;." Loc:at Cono-nt

A•olloble At:

t!:!:~-.:,:..

Colt Foo lnfonnollon On Onfor.
lng l""'o6.:':~rtlw Or Foo 8,..._
,....
until•.
F,_
Bn&gt;Ghuno A..lloble.

992-3954

,,,.J

Emergency Phone 905·34 18

Giveaway

4

.

Golf Lessons

JEREMY RAY
. GUINTHER

have seen.

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

~~ iWlTESi.

In Memory

WICKS
HAULING

PR.ECISION AUTOMOTIVE

· .~III&lt;RIJirY UKE ~IW
Ropairinlubsor Sin~~.

by appointment &amp;
club repair as well
Call John Teaford a1
Chester, Ohio

(Lhnestone Low Rates)

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

~,(n

CLU'B

TruckingLimestone,
Top Soil, FiU Dirt

2112192/tln

311411 mo.

CouNTRY

Services.

Horne Sites 1 taut.!
Clearing, St:l•li c Sy!! le m s
&amp;: Driveway8.

(No Sunday Calls)

304-882-3336

CHESTER

Bulldozing, Uat khoe,

614-992-7643

Special This
Month
With every new
alarm Installed receive 6 month's
F.REE monitoring.

SYSTEMS

2/211195

110\\.\IW
Exc .\\' \TI ,.;

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES ALARM
SERVICE

Chris
' Srher'el
1&amp;14-992-4236

SHOOTS

304-6144

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing

'"'''"

I

GUN

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Pgmeroy, Qhio ...

.I

RACINE
GUN CLUB
Sunday I :00 p.m .
12 Gauge Only
Limited : 740
Back bo re, 680 Front

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

992-6215

In Memory

July 23, 1977·
March 22, 1990
JEREMY
I look up to the brlgh1
blue sky
Run my lingers through
this grass
I take a breath...lhlnk
of you
And all that's come to
paas.
And life flows through
, these bladea
And life flows through
thla green
The g;au that grOINS on
this. your grave
Is by far the preHiest t

985-3879

614-245.0437

One yea r warranty on work perf orm ed.
Vnlid o n aU nat1onJIIy adverti sed brunds
We se rv1ce mos t makes &amp; models.

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

· TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Mobile Welding
I Dltasel. lnji!Ctor SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

ALL FOR ONLY s14.9 5 Plus Part s

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

614-985-4180

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

. 07/23177 to 03122190
H'a been live years
you've been gone, but
not one day that you are
not on mv mind and tn
my thoughta. Oh, how I
miss you, Reek. J wish I
could touch your aolt
freckled face, and hear
your voice around the
house again. This would
be your Senior year, all
your friends are gradu·
ollng. They, too, have not
forgonen. we love you
Reek.
MOM

•

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY 5-SERIES

BRAtll NEW '95 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE COUPE
• ,6jr Con~tl&gt;n

.

$13,888**

No 0oc Fees. OeiMrEif

Cu51om Building &amp; Remodeling

A committee was named to seek new officers for
: the 1995-96 school years 10 be elected in Apriiand
: assume their duties in May.
:
Officers' reports were given and a·report was
: given on the Right to Read Week observance•.March
·i 6 through 17, with visitor.; from Ohio University and
~ parents participating in "Reading Around the World''
~ themed program.
·; Room count was won by the third grade. Next
' meeting will be April4.

• Cru1 se Control ·
• Electromc Shift Transfer Case

• Power Door Loc~s
.• Power Windows
• AMIFM Cassette

Mowing,
Trimming
Firewood
Also:
Contract work

Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; After 6 p.m.

1015/lmo

·: sOon ..

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY BLAZER 4x4

' 'Sale Pnc:e lndude! GM.\C Fill
Time &amp; yer II'QI'Ie\'e 11 Ol.llliflel

$11,888

No Doc Fees. Delww"#Jl'

'

0

•Convertible Tops
•Carpet &amp;
Seat Covers
•Headliners
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats
•
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co.
"Take the pain out
of' painting - let us
do it for you"
Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates

SWAP SHOP

a

$21·488

No Do: Fees. lliNrtd'

L&amp;W
Lawn Care

(602) 954-7420

DAVE'S

'
Plans for attending production of Cinderella in
• Parkersburg, W.Va. March 29 were discussed when
: the Syracuse IYI'O met reeently at the school.
It was noted that the Easter sales project proceeds
' will go toWard paying for the show plus meals for all
·' the children at McDonald's.
·
Other activities discussed was the sports banquet
: beld Saturday night ·a t the school and the dance
: which followed and the fourth grade proficiency test' ing which is going on at the school Ibis week. It was 2
, also nolcd that the Stanford Achievements test will
·~ be given the first week of April, and tllat Mark ,
• Wood, who !loes a magic safety show wiD be, coming

'

12f141Hn

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY ·

Procall Co.

I

Spec in I offer includes ·
1. Cleiln rnotor
5. Clean &amp; check filter system
2 Gre.1se ro ller bcanngs 6. Check belts
3. Clean &amp; check ag~ t ntor 7 Check etrctncal system
4. Cle11n ill I moving parts B. Replace filter bag

or

992-5335

1-900-562-7000 .
Extens ion 7101
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

I
I

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special

~lcrowave••Diaponla

•Thanke Meigs &amp;
. Surrounding Arell·

7131/91 TFN

PTO to
: attend 'Cinderella'

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

•H.W.Hiiatera

311 4/1 mo.

Specializing in Custom
~ Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
· ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992·7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

I

DRAY'S

oJllshwaoher~

(614) 985-3561

2;4S1f
'R0;11ANC2
CALL NOW!!!

1-800-377-4477

•Washer• • Oryera ~ Range•
-Refrigerators •Freezer•

712210&lt;

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Meigs Community
. ·:· Band to perform · ·

•All Mskoo -42 Yearo ·
of'aot Aolloble Service

985-4473

:.'17M mo.

mo.

311411

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Free Estimates
27 Years Experience

&amp; Service

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

614-742-3090
304-n3-9545

AMERICAN DIRECTORY SERVICE CORP. ·
EOE

of'octory Aulhortzed Porta

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
'

33151

surrounding areas in Meigs, Gall Ia and Vinton courities.
· To become an ind9pendent contra ctor you must be at least 18
years old, have.the use of an insu red car, van or truck, and be
available a minimum of 5 daylight hours dal)y.

304-882-2996

Shingles • Siding • Windows
Built Up &amp; Rubber Roofing
Residential &amp; Comm ercial
Professional Service

KEIII'IIPPLIIIIICI
IEIIIICI

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Difton, WV
Dine-in or Carry-out
773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off.

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTI NG
Colllpllffl61t Slm &amp; Prlcts
NEW HAV EN, WV

MIKE MARCUM'S
Roofing &amp; Remodeling Co.

Kenny's Auto Center
1_800. 486 _1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Galli olis, OH. 45631
""""

Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Skiing
•Roofing •Painting
-Garages •Porches
· Pols Barns
FrH Eallmares

Books in Pomeroy, Middleport , Rutla nd, Langsville, Apple Grove,
Racine, Syracuse, Portland , Chester, Long Bo«om, Reedsville,
Tuppers Plain s, Cool vill e, Letart , Wilke rs vill e, Albany and

=Syracuse

'

"'-

We Ha11e Cars and Vansl

Maggies C rockpof

lft.I-WIY

'.':' HOMEMANLEY
'S
IMPROVEMENT
• Roofing, Siding, Room
' Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220
BI~W~!I , OH 4$614
(6141 388-9865

1

KINGS'
Home Improvements

80 people needed to deliver the new Ohio Valley Telephone

Lenora Cales who is hospitalized.
in coronary thrombosis, and conHerb of the month was clover firms the present of compounds
by Rowena Fleining iead by Joyce that inhibit laboratory tu.mor~ .
Stephens. Sbe said red clover is a Flower tea is drunk daily for breast
short lived herb with tbree oval cancer, it was noted, and the whole
leaflets,. marked with a pale cres- plant is included in experimental
cent and summer flowers. Clover treabnents for diverse cancers.
flowers, it was noted, yield a sweet
It was pointed ouUbat the habihoney and an uti-inflammatory tal for red clover is moist, grassy
cleansing treatment for skin com- . places and cultivated land, and that
plaints and arthritis. Research sug- white clover is cultivated for hay,
gests It is
anticoagulant, helpful

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

1/tMfn

&gt;

River Valley Herbalists to serve tea . for National Herb Week celebration
Plans for a rea to be held at the
Meigs Public Library in Pomeroy
in observance of National Herb
Week, May 7-13, wer:e made when
the River Valley Herbalists met
recently at the home of Sandy Hoff
in Cottageville.
The tea will be held on May 7 at
· the litiracy with free fennel plants,
tea and food samples to be served
to the public. Denise Arnold will
chair the
rea will be

Help Wanted

No Experience Necessary
Deliveries Start Late March

100 PERCENT CLUB- Students selected
mentary 100 percent club f11r the second nine weeks' grading peri·
od were, from left, Charlene Zeigler, primary, Justin Browning,
ldndergarten, and Jon Duffy, intermediate. They were selected for
opedal recognition on the basis of their accomplishments during
the grading period.

•Lots of Fun and
Learning
•Lots of .
Experience
Man, thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6:00 P.M .

539BRYAN ·PLACE .
MIDDLEPORT 1Kill-2n2
Dlltce Hou,.: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 l .m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
in'sulatlon, Storm
Doora; Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estlmatea

DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS

Grange charter draped in memory of member

Kenny's Auto Rental

J&amp;L INSULATION

At National Guard Armory
Rt. 62 N. Pt. Pleasant

11

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

992-5388

TURKEY SEMINAR
MARCH 25, 1995
11 :00A.M.

..,.""ial recognition-.......

-

to visit Harrisonville Grange May
LmRARYWEEK
19. Hemlock Grove will visit Rock
In observance of National
Springs on May 11 .
Several legislativ~ issues were Library Week, April 9 through 16,
the Meigs County Public Library is
reported by Opal Gru«:!i.er:
offering
four craft programs.
ROCK GRANGE
There will be two for children
Spring activities planne d by and two for adults because of the
large respoose from adults to proGrange
The annual Meigs County grams offered.
The programs will be held
Grange .banquet to be held on April
28 at the Senior Citizens Center Tuesday April 11 and Thursday •.
was announced when the Rock April 13, at 1 p.m. Registration is
Springs Grange 1J1et at the ball required for the programs al the
library.
recently.

Sp'ealter at tile banquet will be
the Ohio State Grange membership
officer.
Barbara Fry, wanen''s activities
chairman, announced the baking
contes t to be held in April, and
Bunny Kuhl, community service
chairman, reported on making lap
robes and the continuing plaos for
upkeep of the mini-park at the
springs. It was noted tllat hedge
roses will he planted at the site.
The sixth degree of the Grange
will be held at the Rio Grande College on July 29. Plans were made

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Get Yo.r Message Across
With l D•lly Se11ll11el

til ·
·
d k ~
he pays in cash or uses a cm ht card.
ts pracuce an as or 11 'sou nds as if Tiin just might be
~te checks. I then satd we w&lt;JIIId wri ting olf the dinnet 81 1 business
gtvc htm jlOSt-dated ch~ks for our
which is not what 1 would
share tf he tnStSicd on paymg lhe btll. expen~ h •
behaviot
He se.emcd annoyed by the cal6!':'~f \:O.;'ay (Credit Erica
suggesuon.
long): Advice is what we ask for
The four of us do not feel that we when we already know the answer ••
anddoesn'thave~CC?U~uphis~ are out of line. If one person is and wish wedidn'L
of the check unul hts bill eornes m,. picking up the check, he has the nght
An alcohol prr1blem' How can you
which is ofum two or t11ree weeks !O.pay any way he wants 10, but when help yourself or sc~ou you love?
later. .
.
_
_
ttmYOives ~~k:· we feel that _ -"Alcoholism: How 10 Recoglliu 11,
My wtfeand I and theoihe!couple he should par mcashru.:e
rest of HowtoDta/Wiiiiii ,HowtoCOfiiiUtT
feel tha.t we should a// pay m cash, us. We need the opm_JOn of a ~I'' will giwyouiMQIISWtrs. Senda
but unul last week, no one, had .the disinterested party and decided to ask self-addressed, long, business-size
~~rve. to say . so. We don t th1~k you. What do~ say, Ann Landers? en vel
cwla cltecA:ormoneyOirler
11 s fatr for Ttm to walk out .wtth Is Tim out of lme or not? •• DAn..Y fi $~ (til ' includes postage and
our _money to use freely u~ul he READERS IN DELRAY BEACH, h:ndiin ) :~ : Alcohol, c/o Ann
m:e1ves hts b11l from the crcd1t card FLA.
Landers
Box IIJ62, CIUca o,
company.
. DEAR !&gt;EL: As l~ng as Tim pays 111 606 iJ -0562 . (In Canada, s!nd
Last night, I spoke up and toldiun hts share, Jtshouldn I matter whetller $4 ..5S.)
·

together. One of tile guys, "Tim,"
always asks if anyone wants to pay
by credit card. The other fellow and
I say it's too much trouble, we prefer
to pay in cash. nm ihen takes our
money and uses hiscrcdit card to pay
ihe btll. He pockets the $60 to $75

-----Society scrapbook .
BETA BETA

Wednesday, March 22,1995

1ro

-kod.

1 femole RallWOIIII/SMfllrd. 7
....... Old. voe
•Wromed,lltl clocked. 11W7!1' •
'21115

s hall Arnertcon

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

J

hell
r'
P
Piw·
3 ...._
2 moloi, wll be . .
&amp;11\mo,

oqulrrot doG

dogo. 30...71·111111.

dl~

ManuN, 114-44&amp;-1418.

•Cuttom Made
•Solid ~inyl
replacement
windows
•Free Estimates
•Starting At

Pupplee: llolo I F.,..lo Pon
Boitalo I At..Un Huelry, 114-

448-~15 Anytime.

~moll'...,..,..., I - k l
Old, Hulky/ COtl\111 a.-n
Shopllord ml•. 114-112-32111.

ThrM pupp I•• to gin . . .,. 1141112-21112.
'

6 · Lost • Found
' Found In Sh1da Alnr .,.. Lana

8011001 I Aal-1111, 114--

$200 Installed

4457.

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"

loll: blar:k, w!1fte 1 ton -~~
IIMgto, L..,.. '--!&gt; Rd.
orM, Harr1oonvtlte, RUIIInd, 114-

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

'1112·27211.

992·4119 AI Trom11, Owner 1-800-29'1-5600

7

Yard Sale

Howard L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

FOR SAI,I OR TRADE

Gallipolis
&amp; ViCinity

: :~:.:. - f~
....
o.~

ALL Yud S.too Muot S. Pold In
Advonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the dey botot. the ocl 1110 run.
Sundlr edMICOI • 2!011 p.m.
Frldoy. llondly ocllllon • .2:00
p.m. Selurdoy.
.

....

Adhll ll b ..

Ftw -~Yard Sotelpec•
For Rent. 11t ttl 1211

M~TFN

Landscape Stock
White Pine &amp;
Norway Spruce

BARR'S Nursery
742·3149 or 992-7285

''

Pomeroy,

949-2168
•
DUIII WhMt Pull

1 )

Middleport
&amp; ViCinity
All Yord letw 11uo1 1e Pokl In
AdYo,_, Dlod!IM: 1:0111101 lhe
!lay " " ' - the ed II io run
Sundly ediiJon. ,.,.... ~·
Mondor
dlon
10·00..m'

MORRIS EQUIPMENT .......,.

'
RUTLAND

'

'

742·24$5
llt&amp;/1 mo.

1

.

.

I n - .Thondoy lnd l'fld!y, t
liZ '\IIIIo on HYM11 Run. a..,..
mor/Wintw 'c•lolhoo.• milo., e~­
IQ2-I%71.
....

�Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Wednaaday,

March 22, 1895

Wednesday,

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

March 22,1995

The

Ohio

Dally

ALLEYOOP .
•

PHILLIP
ALDER
8

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Homes

Public Sale

for Sale

&amp; AUction

'5I"'"' II'S -riM£ FoR. A
f l-IS' Col-

A Ct.-6!\R.

Rick PM.- Aucllon COnijiony,
fuN tim. a\ICtk:ln.r. oompMte
auction
MNice.
Uc1n..a
168,0111o l WMI Vlrglnll, 310477W7a5.

FumEHicloney, · AI
UIIIHioo Polcl, Shore lalh,
1145/llo. 111 Soc:ond

N E&gt; W

- a -. eon....... -

Fonl414. JOW15.Itl2.
a.., 112 Ton Von,
Auto, ...-. 080, I'Mxa 1132.

ITI'\-R~-

A

A-.

7pm, Itt. Ano Auction, At. 2-33
"Croeer01.", Ron Price, 1111
lloono,_ ll.roc«~"- ptuo talo
morwl t:d Frazlwr ~.

Allortrnonto In lllcldloport. From
12:12.-w • eon 114-tta.-t.
Equol - n g Opport-.
Nloe 1 ltd

00111

. l'rt- ~'~~1,
\)o '{OIJ II A'IE

ApertiMnl In

1

purahlll d

11:'=1.., "'"lquo
IIIO!fiOCoro, old
phcnoo, old

fumll.... Rlverl,.
Au. Moore,

Anlkluea.
114-112·

2521. Wo buy ootota.

way it was carved. It says this
:;.":',~ 1:1;100 ""' :asculptor wasn't good at BfTTIS or heads."
-~~~----rwln ~·
Old
- - · ln&gt;n
.........
jowolry,
old llu!!t-.
oklllolo,
piCIuroo, etor w....
Chino, 11
Help-Wanted
.:.18:.....:.:W~a;.;;nt~ed::..t.:..:o...:D.:..:o;....__ 20 INn Form Lond, For c...n Or
fum•~ loola or -......... •
.:..;._..:.:.,;:.;::~~:.:;:..:;___
c. Shoolo, 11411100, 0111f llortln, 114-0112-11141. a l..odlol Tow a_,, 114Wonled To Buy: Junk Autoo 441-3311.
WHh Or Wit- llcll- Coli
4 Acroo Comer 01 Trol
w.y Uvoly.lll 311 11 Dl.
Ook Hilt Truc:klna Coonp1111
•
Blair AOICI, Addl1011
Sootdng Onr Tho ROod Drtvoro,
T - . , 114,000,114-3e'-71"W.nled To B"': Tobocoo Lt!L With drtvlno . - . CDL
Po......- Or ......_ 814-216- RoQutnd. .-!-7773, Or Af.
5.:12 271 I wlclo r!!lgo top
Financtal
UOt.
t• 1:00 P.ll. Coli IIW46-1304.
building .no, tl:l,liO. lliyburn
Ad,
r11nnllll1
rwetrlctlonil. Na
Top · Polcl: All Otd U.S. 0.-ooll . Coni~ I» p...
.
.
.
.
lnqulrol,
,..........
Colno, Ootd Ringo S- Colnl, Stroll, lllcldloporl • O!IWintl ill 21
larli!otlan molted on nq.-.
Business ·
Oolcl Colno. II.T.il. Coin Shop, ,_ly hired CNA'o I $3110 ilan
3IIW1N2B3.
on bonue. We on. 00111p.e.ltrvre
'I ll - . c l A_,uo, Ooltit!c&gt;Mo.
OpponunHy
and bonollto. , _ t.arao Nloo 111m On 71.1 1-.
Wo
Junk Coro, ,,.__ •••rr
In or cal Jan EH•, ADON, 1'14-INOTIC£1
I 111M IKII: or Cl'aWrl a:r,
IOIZ. 114 ttl MAT.
tt2-e472 tar _ . lnlarmlllon. OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. $30,000, 114-446-711211.
:E::OE::,_____=--...,.--1 r~r.:amnwndl thll you do-... 1'YOoon u., one ecrw tot,
POSTAL
JOIISiqo
&amp;tort wtlh pooplo you k-,llld 12x10 mo1o11o homo,
~.-~.For
~-~
.~ maN
Nartollnd-.o,t=lho
••
••""'·
.._ .
- app..,...
unlll rvu hntii ln'MM
lid - w, __., '
'
Employmenl Services tlon
Info. ooll 211-111--. Ill 1,_...........,
'III2-Nl
....
· . . . ..., -. .
WV1141,ton&gt;-tpm,fltln-Frl.
...- • .,.
111
.:::=:!.:P::ooi::::III!:Poo:::!.:ll::ono:=:::.__l • - - . Or IuNder, a.
__,_______ I--~~~
..__._ etoot auttdl"' 0oo1w.
+ --••• _,_., Pacontlol
F - •·•oo
otortco. - .... one~ lllllnt.~o~o&amp;
..
,_.. 11 Help
,;..;_..:...._:....::._.;__""
_ _ _ 1 For uom lnl&lt;&gt;rlmllan
ConoiNCIIon. hoi High
tlan ooH .,..__ _ a~: tllD, -Lumber Coolo, Buy Foei«J
oloo-ovonlngo.
F""" Notional lllnufoO.
AVON I AI Arooo I" - . ,
30:1!'fogrlnl c-dlnolor tar tho 7tt-UOO, bt. 2100.
Spooro, 30Wl11-142t.
'
Oiropolllon Hoo olng For oolo-A good ootoblohiid
AVON to buy~ HI,
Aut
• Port tlml _.Iori. In ....,_
awn..
All real estate advertlslng In
1111
of tlocllan I wont to rodrol ~
Bantlnol,
!Ills newspaper Is sub)eat to
:':.r'l:.v~P ~a~'.l"""
...._!_ ~ PD lor 72N1 Pomooor,Ohlo.
the Federal Fair Housing Act
,,,...,.
oi1968Whlcllmakesitlllegal
AVON SPRING SALES
A - - M -$IS /Hr. AJ Wort ~~IGn Ulk
llll~plond•r
PAY PHONE ROUTE
to advertise ~any preference,
111,.... ,_,_ or MWiouue
110 1'1t1111 l
Eolobl'-~
-llonMi
Dlooounlol tho
obllnr lo lntlft'lloto With lhl
·
..._
llmHallon or diserlmlnallon
Banolftol No o- /ODor, lnclop. public.
~... will be ooopted LaM!Iono IEorn $1 IIGO Wldv.
based on race. color. religion,
Rop. 1-lU-4731.
II tho llolgollol'""'lton- Open 24 ilro. Colt 1~f7.
sex famllialslatus or national
Blbyolltor NNdod lly Homo Or lng A._.hllltly Oltloo~ 3113110
0o1
origin. or any Intention to
Rich Quick.
Youro, Blclwol lllcidMy Am, Uruon Avo., Sullo 11, ·pomorar, .- . . ,, Won1om
to
4:00pm
_
,
.
Wll
Oof
A
Cool!
make
any such prelerence,
OH
.:00
114-311 1347.
thru frt.y untN APrti 7. ,.,, Prtc.l to SelL,., 120 431!iS. .
limitation or discrimination :
Baioo ...-olclor.
· Am-rnont
Hcluolng
18yro
IIUII be abllCo.
to ·~ot"'ffiOIIIn
• an
Thisne~paperwlllnot
trovol. C.l 114-2111-2150 1--4:30 'Aul
_,
. unHy E

'1: -

I ~Q~~~~·::;'"'

u-.

==-Allee

1..,

=

tlf'*
..

-m.

wam....

f:l

I"'-

a......._ -

======-----1 ·-· -,.,.., Tollon,

- .·11&gt;::.=:304-ea-akaor

=.r:

.-.on.

Equal=

whk:h

11-F by .....h 3110 apply.

a - Cortlflod Nuroiilg ,.,._
olollnt· wfth ,,_ hoolth core lnduOiry orawtna. lhl Mod for

It-

lbh• •ecrlmiM
of ,.., or'Md, ookw,

*•••
-notlonll oriGin, 001il ..., - .
. . . pollflclil
blflefll.

1 IIWion

Or

31 Homes for Sale

dodlcoloil NuiOing · Aoofalonto
hie grown too. AI-• community
....-rc. to thoH In the Pcneroy

13 AcrN And lim a HouN 3
PT~ ~ r...ded to ,...,.. Bedroom., 1 112 ......, LA, •
....._ It home. C.ll now 1-100- Peved Drt'fWWily. 114 448 0131·

In·the Rve1 at othwl. Pomeroy
Nurolng and Rohobflllotlon Con-

4"111-1.11151 LD 1011.
AN Fui ...Time PoeiUon Anll1bte,
Ellcellonl Solary1 Pold ft.
ouronco, Apply . 111: P.O. lol
1165
. , OolllpolloL.CJ!t ue:n. Or

or•, who wouklllu to Join IIIII
lndbotry and lillkl i clllw11101

. ter .. othting

1

c.rtlfttd Nu,.

lnt Aulllonl clul. TNo l!5
hour
offorodpoulblo
II no
chlrgo· ond II oftoro

_,...ton.

omptoymonl wtlh -

flcfllly
upon
Clue io
limited, ploool oppty In ,.._.
by »ttN, tonMo&gt;m. -utoly
no phonl Cillo. EOE.

Com_..,....,

Roglotoroct

~-term c•rw nurwlne • • •

tan&lt;io

porl~l..

lor

roUIIIng

ehlrtl 11 our $8-bed Milled nu,._

lnt loclllty. jMI ilum&lt;tordnor, AN,
DOn, Point Ploooonl Nurolng A
Rohabllftlllon Conlor1• .!1! 1 lox

3211, Point Ploullnt ... 28850.

304-875-3005.
Foclllly) EOE.·

u...

(A

Glonmatfc

Comput•
needed. Work
own hc&gt;uro. $20k to $1101&lt;/yr.
24hrw ,.714-251-3311111101.

COOKWARE
Wenlld: Experlel cd Cookware
Solol
Poopto In Homo
Domono1rotlon.
llull
..
Honelll,

Advancemenl

To

llonogornont P - . 304-e711-

ltl1.

.

Donco,. oppty In .,.,__
SoUihlork IM S&lt;-~r1 At. 2 N.,
Pt. -~~J wv. Pota nightly,
304-875-6-.
Dlllvory driver noodod COL •
mutt,. need Ia hlw

monogor oldiiO,

110me

cal BOO-

11008 " " --

Dlllv.,Y
- . . . Now
Polnl , . _

.
for
Ho-.

lppro•. proftl $150'mo. ContiCt
lorvn
M1&lt;110 1-.1155-el10
od24.

El!m up to 11000 wookly otulflng

-onnl- o1 homo. Slorl now.
No orporlot101. F- oupptloi:

--

Phone: 111 ... ~·

Prlnlor

'

orophk:l~, At:

In 011111
114-1186-

ftor I P.ll.

aco..~....~

lor

2-llory rurop, bookie -

llpoUe

="oom:':lad!f.'r'; 1~!!!!!'1!"!'--1!11!""
boyo: (front bliy 40'128', - r
boy :12'123'), 100'r40' lot,
$21,000. 304-882-27'13.

__,.,

a,
Awol

klWotor, .__ed
Potrtol- a Northup,
Primo
-lng,
To WI

Houses for Rent ·
S

llodroom

Ronch,

Nlco

Prl"r.::mo:z.·,i~: ~~14-J71.~::.:.22=40~.,.....,,.....-:-:-·-.....,. ~-~h~
....

oloro. Apply II porto . op In
OoiMpolll, Ohio. Coli 114-441·
1412 or ot101lpm 1*-l?'B.
TRUCK DRIVER FOR SOUTH
EASTERN DHIO AREA. IIIDNIGHT SHIFT. Apptlconto Have A Curront COL A
Cloon l),!l!lng Rocord. Band

3 -

...... -lonot """"'"' 1

, _ Old, ~ 4 lllloo 01131

On BufavtiiO l'tko, lt4 411 1211.

3 Bodruom S u - n In
Count ~ ,. 112 · - - ·~ooo
.' "
' ..,, '
I14-J71-m7.
a Bid-., 2 Bllhl, Pump, 0.. Furnoco, 1 k:ro,
Qlrqli,

Aekfli110i1 AIM, •12,000,

114-317·7287.

::..:..:::..:.:=----~- 1

a: O::..;"'!'oxti.!""':::

:;,1
HB,7110. eon 304-67&amp;-2214.
Truck Orl..,._ lor 24' oll'llghl 4br on A - Ridge, llmln
lruct.., cloon d":Stc:&lt;~ from tow'\ 31c lmd. Mm •
1111"111· by . _ . _
~~.:r,:::, 7 doyo por Only
l04-e71-e401.
- . coli Doltoo Hfl, lt4-24f
21114.
I , _ . I both, IIIIo
Umlll-: Tho OrMn lloulllll
!Sollbd An =elation • Looldna 110 ~
" lllddl•.....-~

----•llorBpm.

For. -.
~·For
The
s
nto lluol

50"1100

at-,
lot, three

bedroom

UllaiOo,

ZliiO.

~ .....

814-371-

e·;
-

Two

No':"s0o""'• m-ry, I •r

!mo., roloroncM A
. 304-875-2411 . . ..., ..

bedroom

unfumlohod

- . _ no poll, dopooll
and NWifiCII Nqulred, 114-

~

WIU"'&lt;T

__ ...,__

54 Miscellaneous

Rooms

Merchandise
boll
opmdoro,
II
lnta no
-tarrWII-- ... -..h. __.:;:.:;.::.:.:::.:::;:::..__1 _
lllllllng o1 .-aa-. Oolllo Notol.
PIP·**' ..... J., b~'.': with
11t 1.s;euo.

I

F - - . 3104-

fiQ.

, . _ ,_,. with ooolllna.

Aloo 1rillor an rlwr. All
......... ,._ Coli ortor 2:00 p.m.

304-773-5ISI, •eon WY.

.- .... ...
--. ....-.
="
Klmboll

-

I'll' lloNh ... 11111. - · eoo
_ #%1~
~
,... 8

-

····~' ........

- · ..... -

CIOI'lelon.

- - _.. ptokor 223, good
:J04.m.2I3Z or,-.m-

46 Space for Rent
llabllo ...... -

·far ..... In
-ntry- .......... ond

wotor fnciUdod, cobll ....- .

=·~~--

...,..• • • doyor, 114-l'INOIZ.

1414.

POLE

BUILDING

SPECIAL

Uvestock

83

....;________

a - lor-. 114-

11'12-211111. ·

Household

Good
.
S

sz.zoo.

1117 ~ Vulcan,

114-44M128.

,

1117 KXIO, loob l ruM gnllll!,

I LIKE IT ..
GOOD FOR 'I'OU

nlehlng. 112 mi. Jerrlcho Ad. Pl.

PINNnl, WV, coN 30-W75-1450,

114 441 •HI.

....,..

Do!U

_ _.,,

w-. --...

SWAIN
AUC110N A FURNITURE. 12 . Slore Olivo St., Oolllpollo.
UOOd

a

Colh And Corry! RENT-1.1-0WN
And LIIIWIY Aloo Avoll-.
F,.. Delivery Within :II IIIIo&amp;

Antiques

tl20 J Pc. Uvl"' A - Suite,
Ortglnol . , _ Uphollloroct,
Connon Ball F.-, Dood Concfl.
tlon, Aft• 4 P.ll. 114-441-GI:Itl.
Buy « 1111. Rlvlrtno AnllquH,
1124 E. l!loln Sl-, on At. 12~
-OJ. Houro: II.T.W. 10:w
· 1.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundly 1:DO
lo 1:00 p.m. 114-11112·2521.

·

dryer. 30W75-

chino.

II*, IIIWI7-

.....

Tran sportation

54110.

lllngto bod $30. 1Gaol ~u•

sa

W.c•••cr1H

11-

::1104::;2:.a:;:tt::";.;':!pm:::;,·-===...,-:-I
11111no1 Plano, - - Fno Lolo
llodol OIIC iCIIovY Truolo $111;
Aqua~um 8ol

211 o.l. Will

7t

Re&gt;.... .1111l.MVIIIIIIIIgT

•··•- 0111
- - ··
o, 1

Th-poamdo
-lng
high

-~

..;;;,

• IM-416-

Autos for Sale

;..:._;..;:.:..:..:...:..:..:...:..:;;.:.._ _

'II ......_ .... toDd olio~
$1000;
'A
Ali._, Y-11
,.,_...,
'17 eo-.... t...... tullv 1
.... tlr.e, Y-1
autOmodc, eo,Oiiil ortglnol mllol,
rul toDd -ftlon,
~~fico
nogollllblo; 114-ee2-113:L
'IIO Thundorblrd, tow lllllol, 0 •

!:::•

s-

1111 C1mero

tubbed,

full
...~ quortw olldl, . ohlttnold,

: . ...OOO.I~-MG7.
,ol•7,ono m Ford~- Coli~~
~11301
r~·-

:.,.""i. ,...:.;

~~-

2411 or

.55

:;.:~• =7ocia"::w~1~
-···

Building

t-.

:::.. ..~ • :::.,eo::::r·
....... . .....
=-~..:=::w~

4441·11173

llorcury Cougor, v-e,
llr, 1- ilnd runo

-

11111ory O...,Oiod Batmon Cor,

aut-~

New,IIOO, IM-241-1117.

roducod IO tz-, 114_11411-21711 or 1-HOU.
1W7 llonlo Collo 88 IIICk,
17.000 111111, Condition,
good,

ColloN Clnty, Col ....
- - 2:30 ..a:3111'14411 tMI.
1111'.
lrougt.h,
-....~ 1.1 Yf, ae. Ooftd.,
........... ...., 010. ....

a. ......

-~-.

- F o r d - · It,
':1."1...,~ UL,
- 11 111 ct• wtlc,
14 uc. 'ooncf.
tully
loedld,
... 310. -.e7WOI7 (Sandre).

11111 Dodal Orand Corovon v-e,

Aul.!t._ ..... ~!..-~ CNoo,
$4,1ml, ........'HII'3L

IN-

.

'·

'·

•--0738.

111112 .... Sid,
11M 11' I" Chlmplon Elfto Be•;
loot 1110XRI llcllor, Loa- 114- ·
441-1717, 114--441·1101.

,... . --r

,.

COUKTS

UFElHEALTH

'

Clo_cll ..
IOxiS. M now -hlon, 114-•·
-lonol VIIIO Unoo olzo 228-

..-.

Ftonl c1o&gt; tar 11181. Onlnd PmL
Thralllo &amp;ody pluo clllr lor 1117
Nloun Z24 onglno. 301 812

,.Ol'lLY 11-£.. CJ...E.Io,R

BORN LOSER
r'..x.JST c00c_ 1\f JIOI-J
DE£Pt.Y HE.~.

~1£1&gt;1(£. Cf "'

· 011c.1&gt; a:u D

5l...w&gt;l t"lo. .

.:332=::'·-~--------,-...,
Sorvlco,
RobuiM
Johnoono Uood
Tnnomloolono
-

Tral....,.,,lana. AIM, c.tt Anlt•

1-m fl.. CAA£ 11-1
1}1€. ~D!

PROVIDE:

fl.. lle)T

Tronomlulllno, 114-37t-;:
221i.
•
,:·
,.. tllllllo, one ton lruojj;:
-.
~
olc. D&amp;AAut.36:1-.WV. ·•
m-:ltl3hr 1
m:t321. ;;
Porto 1112 Fwd dumjl'
trudl, 130 engine, tranaml 'an.
Corry

'113 Ford Rongor, kintl bod. bluo.
-t-21111.

For

sale

or Trade

~.~

LIMITED IIFI'EII HEW· 141711
DOWN, tiiiMO.. FREE

t'r t d: A u..ln. Horne CIN
01ww fot 77 v-

-·
-·--·

P;ovldd Wilt ....,, f'M.3iP.
7121 II Ho " ' - LU.. -

..... Colli_,___

a

a-

.......

~ 111,0011 .. ..., 1114 • • u~r.

IE1UP. !1104-711-

111111 2 , . , _ .

:::. =..:-:.
.

1171 Ford 114 Ton -.... 1

Farm Supplt es

1n,

,_ 14178 Mttr. Col - -

&amp; Livestock

Niw -14m 1 br, aboth. ..,_

oludoo ..lrtlng, . . . - . _ I

,.., ..... ,.. IMiiriince.
ilnd I - . . 1!11 _ _.
Only $10211 w ~~ por

:::.::.;.:.:::=::::::..:=:.:..·__
............ t14 ttl

•

,..1-11-\fl..T ~
~E.NC.£7

H£'S ..lOST 60T
fl..~
~yl

Powell played well on today's deal,
taken from the semifinals.
In the old days, East would have re·
s ponded wit-h ~ pre -emptive three
hearts. Now, though, most tournament
players treat this response as a splinter
bid, showing a singleton or void in the
· bid suit and a good fit for partner's suit.
North's jump cue-bid of three hearts
showed a high -card raise to three
spades.
Leading ace from ace-king, West
opened with the diamond ace. South
played the queen in tempo. Obviously, a
diamond continuation would have defeated the contract. But West, afraid
'that South's queen was a singleton,
·switched to the heart 10. Powell gave
the defense no second chance. She won
with dummy's king and drew three
roonds of trumps, picking up East's king
in the proces•. "'ext, Powell threw her
club seven oto &lt; , •my's heart ace. Tben,
knowing West had the club king for her
upening bid, declan!r played a club to
the ace and pulled the last trump.
Now came the diamond 10. West
ducked, but deolarer -continued with a
low club to West's king. The club queen
was Powell's lOth trick.

_
-

Polomlno -

0 1995 by NEA Inc.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis C1mpos

c.a.bftly Ciphef cryp~ograms ari c,.1t.d hom QUOtation~ by tamoua people. Plat Md PfMenf
Eact'l -.r·Jnlht clphlrtl.... lof anott.r. TocMy·~-· II eqwill L .

•X
N

PC T M

SMT

a v x ·o c J o

NC Y

PXCYO

TCVR
C T"S

T C G

(NBDSEXNC

-

TCG

TZ
JTBLKXCL

J T I L K X-C L • •

AXNCXDS)

-

NEIBE

DJKCNUGV.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Sinatra's idea ol Paradise Ia a_place wheno there are
plenty of women and no newspapermen.' - Hu~phrey Bogart.

T=~~~, S{{:\\.~~""E~s·
CLAY I . POlLAN

••••
lAIII

Ulfo~ ~y

!etten of
0 Reorronge
lour ••:rambled -do
low to form four words.

NUBCOE

I
I

TAM U D

I I

3

I 1

V0 NE W

I:.',. . One.oldtimertoanoth~r.

-L..-l.--'--J..-'

L.

s. 0

M "'

"After
living so long I believe irs bestto
have six senses, and lhat one
~~..~~ ~-~·st importa~t one being
Comploie the chu&lt;kle quoted

by filling i_n the miuing words

vou develop trom step No. 3 below.

... M'l

TO LIVE !\
LifE Of UTTER Df'PP.I·
VJO.TION fOR THI! ~
Of 11'( ART

•

!

SCUM.I.ETS ANSWIU

Jerkin - Pants - Cloak - Nipper- PARENTS
"I wish I knewwhallo do,· the teen Sobbed to her mom.
"Lite doesn't come wilh instructions," the mom laughed,
"thars why we have PARENTS.·

,.,. ::

"""•"" teo boo, . . _ I. Pikl •·
$3400, ... 12500. ~. ..-~;

79

'·

campers&amp;
Motor Homes
11118 Bannor Trollll Trlllor

..

114-317-0512.

•

I WEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN

ou,.
Elldrlc, Aafrlalnllor, Stowe. •,
Furnace a Air, IIMpe I, tt,200.;,
.

MARCH 22J

I I

camper;:

1111 _Palomino pop-up
with •••~na..!!f!k, otovo, ~~--~:
Ill, ......a-~,...

'.

IH7 P_,. ~ :17.1 R . Fllh ;
Wheel, Awning, Root, Air, ·~ I:
245-ISJit, IM-241r5021.
•,

&lt;
'

Services

',.

...
-Bl---------··
..
Home .
Improvements ,
B_ASEIIEHT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltfonll Ullllmo guoron-

.

•

ASTRO-GRAPH

cac

HCIIIii

!reo--·o.norOI

·-"

Heating

-;;;;;;;;:;;H.;;ii;
·~~c;;;;;[.
FJMmen'• H-~
Md Ca :una:.

/CMiflld.

olal. IM41fo.11.

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Ent!MPII 11 T.V(. , ;
&lt;!&amp;wiw""t.__~ 0.. Fu- '
•
L.P • - · ~ a ··
lloolrto - _ fl'lli . ...
t-&amp;11,\'ou Don1 Col Ill W.
lath ~1111 . . . . . . 1-101- ,.
- , WVOOH4I.
.,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

@=.
Thursday, March 23, 1995
Circumstances (n the year ahead might ,
p18&lt;8 you in the lorefronl of a progressive ·
anqeavor_ Although you might nol see it .
now. you could be ushered-into a leader,
ship role.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprff 18) If associates
perceive you to be too self aetVing today,
th~.Y might •nempl to hoist you onlo your
OWII ·plke . Emphasize the ·we," not the·:
· me." In your involvements. Trying lo :
peTth ~p a broken romance? The Astra- ·;

Graph Matchmaker can help you to way· around.
understand what to do to make the rela- LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) There are indllionship work . Mail $2.50 to Matchmaker. cations today that you and your male
clo this newspaper,. P.O. Box 4465, New might lake opposing posit ions on a
York, NY 10163.

volatile issue. It neither compromises ,

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The biggest
problem you have to deal wilh today

conditions could really get testy .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) 1181811 pos-

rnighl be of your own making . Try to think sible today, ·try not to work around others,
a few mo\leS ahead so vou don' I get . espec1al!y if ypur assignment demands
caught in a corner.
your complete ~ocus .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A friend who
is under an obligation lo you Is anxious lo

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Strive
lo be disciplined today in your. spending

resolve the issue. Go to himlher today

•patterns. You might hang on the edge

instead of having this person come to

between eJCtravagance and waste a.nd

you.
"lose your grip.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Good sug· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 18) Treat
gestions should not be rejected today just persons over whom you have authority
because they onginate from a person you very carefully ipday . II angered . lhey 1
dislike. Keeping a narrow mind only hurts , might fig ure out sly, deviOUS ways to batyourself.
ance accounts .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Choose an assis· · ACIUARIUS (Jan. 20:-Fob. 18) Today you
lant for a critical task very carefully today.: mig~t have little tolerance lor frl_ends who .
H you select someone who would rather don t agree wrth you. Gel back m characbe boss than a helper, there's going lo be ler and keep an open m1nd.
trouble.
PISCES (Feb. 2fl'.Merch 20) You
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Be carelul in : ·have a good time loday wlthoUI delving '
your financial dealings today. You mighll. too deeply Into your resources. Money ,
go into a snualion thinking that you have 1 aarrnarf&lt;ed lor essentials should not be
the edge only lo discpver II'S lhe other spent on a whim .

,.

•

·,

•

'

1---.1-,_,..1......,1,_.,..1~-~

Cemplng
::
_.;E;;;q::.:u:.:.:lpm:.:.:..:.:e;.:;n.:..t_ _ ::

~w.: Ll•twiOI

..:.e.oAtt•l:i6P.M · '
, _ I I - Cob PI• 1/C 1
lpood, Allll'll C
1o, IOOoO

Before the Australian National Open
Teams began in Canberra last Januaty,
the National Women 's Teams was con·
tested. &lt;This staggering of the schedule
permitted the women to play in both
championships.) The winners were
Denise McKinnon, Ruth Walcott, Anne
Powell and Sue Coleman. This was es·
pecially pleasing for McKinnon because she had been. dropped by one of
the more fancied teams just prior to the

lo/fLLINGIIE~

1_:

1m Ford Dump Tnloll, Td-Arto; - - And ........ Eflll·
11ft. Alum. liMon lied, 114Rnldu1tlll, ComiMr
211 ~-

i:r..-+-+-1

YUI', l ~!&gt; IT I~

~TI'( 111PRE~I/E

304-11-:·..

-~""
82
Plumbing &amp;

Trucks for Sale

1•

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~ THESE SQUARES

:::~~-=:·~~ ::
78

5 Type ol fish
6 CorneliaSkinner

,.,...+-+-1

East

I I I I

Tronornloolane. ~Mod, robulll, !!L
l~ed, guorontood.
!1.,1
to W«k wloomo -~

=-.
72 ·

North
Pass

s
16 0
IL_.l__.l.-..l.l-..l.l-...1.. ......J1

-plot• - ·,.

n:l:.

7 Click boltle
8 Tnomb..
8 Drew out
10 Welke
unoteadlly
1!'....,.,...'111"'""'111"""'1~., 12 Ilnvllltlon
nile.
13 Ovalo
f--+-f--+-t--4 t8 Former boxer .
21 Merflad
lr.--1--4-+--+--1-~ 23 Actor Jack25 Throw
27· Proud
-+--+--1 29 Lila jacket (2
wdo.)
33 Playwright
Eugene34 Dwarl
35 Hindu
cymbale
37 Hate
38 11•11 unlto
38 Hall
41 Slngeo
Celfne 43 Impudent
45 Smile
46 Letlall
49 In time gone
by
51 Scooby -

MU N

- -1 · ~- ~--112.
• op can,-·~·~

l l l l n t - llld - Ropolr. For
11000, - - 9hol.l14-tt2-a23.
Ponlloo .._,_ 1\000 Ron'o TV .....................
1111-. AutotMdc, Air, C.1Mtt1, In lanllll IIIIo • 4ltCIIIfl lnOiil
...000 080, 114-211-14118, 114- ........ ~:.~ ....

211-12112.

Wesl

rodll,_-

,... ,..... 1huu....... V-1 . .

· · Jock
. . Dtflooonl
Tho
HIIPPJ
J.X Floo- ~
I
-Ill Cont.... No Svnthollc
PYI'II- For Doge II Colli
JD North P; cd~ - .

0 IIIII b¥ MEA. IN.

50 so..w!

..

304-811-4257

•

Accessories

,,.. Ford Eooort
. ar • ,,_.,
Loitdod1
114-4*1111 Anor 4 P.ll. .
.
••· Loclll iWiwiWnDII fvrniiMdl.
-Oklo Cut- Cloro lntllllll- Call t-.r..-.. Or 114-1.13lllonll EDIIIMI Condlllon
Wil-ling. EO' .
11,000 lllloo, Aulo Trono, Ail I~:U:.t'1fl11.
.
- . . . 11,100, IIIWP-11114.&amp; -.. - Condftlon,

1·~1.
. ,..,...,..vG",s-

-~-

. ,.

Auto Pens&amp;

76

-. -·· ...... - - ........ -~ton. -· ,_
-~1_,~-~.,~oo~,·~Tiu~t~~~:IUI;::Z":I •-·•-•-·
dr-a car,
~Uprtghl, Ron E..,.~..., wold-·
ITORAOa TANKS JOOO- ;"'i •111ooloo,bw....
rrM

,

2 Chllperon
3 High regard
4 Soulhweollrn
Indian

31 Gun grp.
32 Actor
Alaolllr-

event.

':l'

-._

DEUVEIIV

IT MEAN5

1m Toytoocroft -Ilk- "
lhtu
........
Ilk!,
·
..
-or ond t-r. tiiOO.
·:
IJI..IO'II tene mung• on ,._ .

-.,.Ohio.... pr · - tar
onythlng ot 1111•1 - . c..

38•-,

•a

I DON'T KNOW

1t11tluzufti.DR 100 Dirt IIIIo, In ,
Ell...lont CooMitlon, 114-21111011, Aftor I P.ll.

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1 Tea type

whaleo

By Phillip Alder

11 112 Woodolreom 0... V Bot··
tom loll, $300, N-M1..UD8.
•:

'= suo

VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS A AUTO fliS-

...

.

Into-·:

ttM SIIIUid \:.l=!fiO..!!t good ...,.. '
clllon. 11410. _..,..__
:

7S

-vii•

SURANCE

01o1-.
-Uittna.-•
......

.

11113 Ootd Wing
41,000 llllol, l.clo 01 Ellrool .
f..~· 114-2BI-8704, 114-211- :·

........

APPLWICES
W.ohoro~.d~ 11...... 11~
.rang•. KA£101 AAIII•ncee.
VIne StrooiL~iN 114-416-7311, ,._
..
-..tt-34 ·
·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
11 :..~~. ~':"'llolllnaL
~
...
!!!._
~
--· _
,....._
- · • mlloo ou1
Plkl
f:'~lveiJ.
Riltrlgerllaft, . . . . . . . . . . .
PICKENS FURNITURE
And~ , . p
.......... llflted
,..~~~
Jht0r
-No appllancee, tfollnhokl fur. 1100 Anol
Will Dlher
............
. Up,

53

·

Condllon. .__ 11..... SI,OIO, .·;

-111M.·

DOWN

28 Uquor
30 School ol

Out of sight,
out of mind

ereoma,"l7,500,
1f. ·
..-.a
- 30t 1111272
- '""·'

USED

114 I II :hH.
VI'RA FURNITURE

SATIDDY
NITE !!

'•

v . - 110 spor:~o~, -

flbrtco

44 Club 45 Frozen,
47 - -!lUll •
(a-much)
45 Ch«ooll
50 Commenclo
22 Middle t!oot
52 Lepl writ
0111· '
53 Loopo
54 Muofclan 123 Hllwollln
wreathe
John
24 Orlenlll nuru 55 Hopscotch
26 Tum upolde

Pass 3 •
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • A

BEST MAN

:"""o:::: ~~-· =--~ ·

old. 1200- 304-en-1&amp;1B.

-o.

YOU TO BE HIS

1'12-211111.

Ctooloy holvy duly . . - , lyr

Wort&lt;

PAW II THURLOW WANTS

....__, .

HDnda 300 4 ....... $3.100, 114- t

Counl~o~':"".u-um~uro lor
EV"f
-~ifoNorlh,
Pt. P
.

-a
hut. ., W..t.m

1111
-

t2
.. 10 8 6 3
SOUTH

It

1•
4•

...,LDERS 1 - 182-·--

Merchandi se

GOOD

..•.

30'r48'1r. Pointed SIMI S -1 no1l'llnl condiUon, SlOG, 1'14- ,
!!_lovtl&gt;g: AI Dlllooonl Klndo 01 11'18 14W2Mohr4pm.
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Our readers are hereby
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advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal

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ACROSS

•

�Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
port
down
always wanted rant or maybe you'd like to.
If you travel Route 33 betweeu
to have a band in the government
of the town, there's no time like the Pomeroy and Columbus, you'll
present
- - -find the reslliUI'allf juS! on the otbez
Right DOW there arc absolutely side of Logan going towards
no candidates for fonr village posi· Columbus. A sign is posted along
lions which were supposed to have the route in either cfuection oodog
been filled by v&lt;J!ers in tbe faD . The the exist wbere you tum off. The
positions include mayor. two coun- restaurant is located just off 33 and
cil P?sts and the clerk-treasurer's you'll fmd ,also in tbe same location a big motel and a large antique
position.
shop.
Be you a Dcmocra! or RepubliThe restaurant is one of those
can, however, you can file a peti·
lion to run for any one of tbe four Amish kind where they food is
posts as an independent Candidate. basic, well-prepared and served to
You don't have to secure maiiy sig- you In practically no time. The
natures to do tbls but you must me prices arc quite reasonable.
We round tbe restaurant Saturyonr i.tition as an independent by
May .
·
day evening while visiting in LanIf you'd like to look in to the . caster. We were starting back to
possibilities a bit more, just give good old Meigs County and wen:
the Meigs County Board of Elec- going to eat in Lancaster. However,
tions a call and tbe staff will fill it was during tbe prime diJiner bout
and the Lancaster locations were
you in on tbe complete details.
packed. We bad bean! a mention of
A long-time tradition of the The Olde Dutch ·Place and decided
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club to search it out-found it without
was broken last year when the club any problem and had practicaUy no
dropped its annual Easter egg bunt wait at all even though tbe restaufor kids held at tbe Hartinger patk rant bad many, many customers.
in most recent years on the after- One of the emg~yees of tbe restau·
noon of Easter Sunday.
rant told us it
been in existence
It's great that the Middleport since August. In conjunction with
F'tre Department which lorig assist- the restaurant, a wide variety or
ed with the bunts, bas come forth to baked goods and candy arc sold for
again pick up the activity where the you to take along to munch on.
Rotary Club left off.
Firemen, beaded by Skip JohnIf bas occurred to you that soon
son, are now seeking prizes to put . we will be moving back to Dayin tbe eggs for tbe bunt Tbey want light Savings Time, you might
to put one dollar in each of some want to mark Sunday, April 2, on
2,000 eggs. Arid before they're your calendar as the day the time
through they'll probably again changes. You are to "spring ahead"
reestablish tbe gold and silver eggs one hour at 2 a.m., but you don't
which bring special prizes to the have to stay up that late-just
finders. If you want to see the tradi- change the clocks before you bit
tion continued, the rue department the sack on Saturday night
will be more. than happy to accept
..your monetary donation for the
"It's spring and those really are
project. .
daffodils blooming in the yards.
Now ain't that "swell? Do keep
Perhaps, you have already dis- smiling.

Community
calendar

Family
M~dicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor ·
of Family Medicine
Question: My husband was
ing bre&amp;tbing troubles tbat were so
bad our doctor put him In the hose·
pita! and. did many 'tests. He ftnaUy
determined that.be bas "farmer's
lung." The doctor didn't give him
any medicine. Instead, be told him
that his breathing would slowly get
'better, which it bas. Why didn't the
dociDr give my husband any medl·cation to belp him set better?
. Answer: Farmer's lung is an
.allergic-like reaction that can be
triggered by different microorgan.iSms. The most frequent causes are
of bai:terla called Actino-

~---~y~tr~fi"r~iifilijl~rmolds

Aspergillus. Because these
microorganisms grow in hay or
gmin, farmers who handle these
crops - particularly in areas without good ventilation - are more
'likely to develop the condition .
Fortunately, not everyone who Is
exposed to either these molds or
·bacteria 1:\)mes down with farmer's
·lung . Only those w1th particular
sensitivity actually develop th.e illness, just as your unfortunate bus·band bas.
Farmer's lung- as. well as several other lung condiuons tbat are
. due ·to bypc~nsitivity reactions.may begin With symptoms that arc
indistin~uishable ~ those assoctated w•th such disorders as bacterial p~eum.onia, viral pne~onia,
sarcotdos•s and, heart fa•_lure.
Someumes farmer s lung begms as
a very acute illness with fever,
coughing, shortness of breath and
other signs of respiralory infection,
usually within eight hours of exposure.In other.cases it begins rather
insidiously with the gradual devel·
opmeot of sbort~ess or breat~,
coughing, wbee~mg and chrootc
tiredness. Inorganic lung irritants
like asbe~t~s and silica can als.o
produce similar symptoms. That IS
· why your husband's doctor neeqed
to do a number of tests before the
diagnosis was confumed.
Other ba~teria in the ~ctino mycetes fam~y can ca~ 1Doesses.
with descripUve names like prgeon
breeder's disease, bird fancier's
disease, and humidifier lung dis-

ease. Tbe\hypersensitivity pneumo'
nia from Actinomyces was even
- responsible for the fabled
"Mummy's Curse" of King Tut'.s
tomb. You see, Lord -carnarvon
developed a "strange illness" and
died shortly after being in the
newly discovered tomb in 1922.
His untimely death created the fer·
tile.ground upon which the rumor
grew. Only after many others
developed similar but less severe
iUnesses was it discovered that the
.tomb floor as well as tbe mummy
wrappings were heavily infested
with Actinomyces. Lord Carnarvon
diedof an acute hypersensitivity
pneumonia not from a
mommy's curse.
Your husband's doctor didn't
prescribe any medication because
no medication consistently helps
this condition. In very acute
episodes, the medication peednisone is often used, but it is of no
value when the symptoms are
milder. The most effective treatment is avoidance of the offending .
agent. This usually gives prompt
recovery for those with their first
episode of hypersensitivity pneumonla. For those who have bad
multiple episodes or wbo have tbe
chronic form or the condition, there
is no Jreatment - including avoidance - that brings much relief.
In your husband's case, this
means ~e should avoid moldy hay
and gram forever. Better ventilalion in the barn helps decrease the
concentration of the offending
microorganisms in the air, . while
malting sure the bay is sufficiently
dry before it is baled and tbat it is
stored properly greatly reduces tbe
.amount present in the hay itself.
High-efficiency face masks can
also reduce tbe amount of mold or
bacteria inhaled. These steps are .
Qften sufficient to prevent repe;~ted
attacks of farmer's lung.
·
''Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To aabmlt questions
wrlle to Jobn C. Woll, D.o.:
Obio University College of Osteopatblc Medklno, Grosvenor Holt,
Athens, Oblo 45701.

Pick 3:
0-7-1
Pick 4:
1-J.0-4

Low toolghtlolh• JOs, portly doudy. Friday, suaay. Hlghl
nar 60.

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1995

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS
12 pk. 12 oz. cans

'

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

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 23, 1995

Vol. 45, NO. 229
Copyrlghi199S

House GOP touts 'significant' cutbacks
.

.

By JOHN CHALFANT
Alsodated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A proposed $287 millioo cut in state spending from
levels Gov. George Voinovich recommended is significant although it
amounts to 1 percent of the budge~ the House Fmance CommiUee chairman said
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New Concord, said Wednesday that a
Republican l!lwrite of Voinovich's new state budget would spend $33.5
billlon over llie two budget years starting July 1. .
Voinovich's spending plan reached $33.7 billion.
·
"I think it's significant given the history of funding budgets in Coium. bus," Johnson said in an interview.
. "When YoU cut a haif-a-billion dollars and funnel pan of that to education, and yoo have overall less spending of $250 million to $300 million,
that's significant," be said.

LUCKS

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Junior High Boosters Association
will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m . at
the Meigs Junior High School. All
members and parents invited.

PINTO
BEANS

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post home.

I Soz. Limit 8

USDA

BONELESS ~BEEF

s

$ 39

E sh Roast ••••••••~~~ ••• ·

SATURDAY
POMEROY ~ Free turkey
bunting clinic Saturday, 1,5 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Gun Club. To prereg·
· ister; call Meigs County Game Pro. tector Keith Wood at985-4400.

15.25 oz. can '

s

Bounty

Towels
single roll ·

.

TV DINNER•••~-!~l~:••• 79
~ STARKIST

(

(

LAY'S
POTATO
CHIPS

TUNA

2/$100

6.5 oz.

'

"

..

KRAFT SALAD
DRESSINGs

18 oz.

16oz.

CLOROX BLEACH
Gal.

\

GROUND

CHUCK

Star Grange arranges for soup supper

SOFT &amp; GENTLE
BATHROOM TISSUE
4 roll pk

79~

IOit

s
'

..

90

By NITA LELYVELD
Alsodated Pres5 Writer
WASHINGTON- Biller
partisan fights, full of screaming
and Shouting, arc fast drowning
out substantive debate as the
House tackles the sweeping
Republican welfare overhaul.
Democrats charge that a
harsh biD is being shoved down
their throats, while the GOP
forges steadfastly ahead. Republicans fumed at Democratic
attacks Wednesday, calling
· Democrats prdtectors of a w~l­
farc system everyone knows bas
failed.
. The Republican bill - called
tbe Personal Resp&lt;inslbility Act
- would dismantle 45 social
programs developed over six
decades and send money and tbe _
responsibility of dealing with the programs directly to the
states. More than 2 miDioo legal
immigrants could be barred
from key programs.
Republicans say their
approach will be more efficient
REFORM PROTEST - U.S. Rep. Patsy Mlak, D-Hawall,
as states find Innovative
spoke on Capitol IHJI Wednesday during a raUy to protest proreforms, saving more than $66
posed wei.fare legislation. Mink was joined by other women
. billion over five years.
leaders from politlc:s and academia at the rally, sponsored by
Democrats say tbe states are get- . the National Organization of Women. (AP)
ting money with few strings
That was. only the beginning
attached, while poor people are
"I will be as petulant as I
losing the guarantee that .they
of a very nasty day, which
want to be," a red-faced Gibwill be taken car.e of when in
- early
cans included an abortion
Debate on amendments to the
to
The remark promptwelfare overhaul were continuamendment in a package or 11
ed Republican boos.
ing today. But the Republican
amendments, declared there
· "Boo if you want to, make
leaden;' determination to meet
would be a single vote on the
asses out of yourselves if you
their promise to vote oil the pro- " package. and cut off debate after
an hour.
want to. ... Let •em boo, Mr.
visions of their "Contract With
Speaker," said Gibbons.
. America" within the first 100
"Will you get these highly
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas,
days of this Congress already
paid members to sit down and
called the rhetoric "emotional
bad its price Wednesday, when
shut up? You all sit down and
bordering on hysterical," and
they squelched a break in their
shut up. Sit down and shut up,"
dubbed it the "dying throes of
own ranks.
Rep . Sam ' Gibbons, D-Fia.,
the welfare state tbat has been
Anti-abortion Republicans · roared at the presiding officer.
built block by block over the
and infuriated Democrats oear\y
Rep . Jim McCrer~, R-La.,
last 30 years, and which bas
blocked the welfare bill, as a
interrupted, asking, 'Is pelufailed after the expenditure of
vote to befin debate squeaked
lance a proper form of behavior
$5.3 trillion ."
by, 217-21 .
for a member of Congress?"

Other suspects
set to undergo
pre-sentencing
investigations

according to a spokesperson in the
office of Athens County Prosecutor
Bill Biddlestone.
Ingram was indicted .ott charges
of conspiracy to coinmit robbery,
compticity 10 commit robbery, two
counts of conspiracy to commit
kidnapping, and two counts of
complicity to commit kidnapping .
The bank tellers were the victims in the kidnapping-related
charges, it was reported.
The men involved in the r.obbery, Jamie Ford, 21, of Belpre,
and Brian Lynch, 20, of Lillie
Hocking, each pleaded guilty in
hearings last Friday 10 one count of
robbery, according 10 the prosecu- ·
tor's oflice.
Pre-sentencing investigations on
Ford and Lynch are currently

Arraignment of a Mei'gs County
woman who was indicted last week
in Athens County on charges of
robbery and kidnapping in the Feb.
28 Bank One branch robbery in
Coolville will be 1:30 p.m. on
Tuesday, March 28.
Patricia Lynn Ingram, 45, o(
38917 Success Road, Reedsville, is
scheduled to appear before Judge
L. Alan Goldsberry in the Athens
County Common Pleas Court to
. enter her plea to the charges,

underway and once they have been
completed and reviewed, sentencing bearings will be scheduled, the
prosecutor's spokesman said.
Because of their cooperation
with prosecutors, both of the men
are free on recogni1.ance bonds, it
was,reported.
Ingram, who had worked at the
bank about 10 years. is free under
the $50,000 bond she posted eartier
oil the robbery charge, Biddlesl!!ne' !l office ~.
'rbe robbery occurred as three
employees were opening the Bank
One office about 8:05 a.l1\., according to earlier statements by Athens
Comity Sheriff John Hicks. He said
that an employee was forced into
the vaul~. ,Tbe men latef flee! il!
Ingram's car, which wa~ foul)d
. abandoned a few miles away.

·r---:-:,;--o:--::::-___,~

Authorities
eye caus~
of fatal fire
A 36-year-old woman found
dead after a fire engulfed her Middleport home oo March 14 died of
smoke inh.alation, according to
Meigs County Prosecuting Allorney John R. Lentes.
Teresa Rodatz, 36, was found

reacbed~~;an~~an~1g~ry~:c;r~:e:s;c~e~nd~io[~~~~-iho~ns~:s~-b~ou~ted~~!be~fore~~co~m~--~--~I::fi~:~~~~:·'~~~~n~~· to the

90Z.

JIF
PEANUT BUTTfR

But be said Republicans bad noi really cui spending. "They've played
checkers with the mooey," Jones said.
Other changes in the House version of the budget:
• Delele an increase Voinovicb wanted in real estate IJ'ansaction fees ID
generate $23 million for the Ohio Housing Trust Fund tblt.t develops housing for low and modemte income families. Funding instead would come
frOm $20 million in inlerest on the state's projected budgeI slirplus.
• Tum the independent Minority Development Financing Commission
into an advisory board under tbe authority of the state development director. The commission, created to help minority bUsinesses, has beell
accused or ignoring lending rules that cost taxpayen; $4 million over the
last seven year.;.
"We feel as though this change will produce greater savings in the
long run ... and more responsible h8J1dling of the taxpayer dollars," said
Rep. Doug White, R·Manchester.
·

Arraignment set for woman
charged in Coolville robbery

Democrats howl
as GOP welfare
plan races along

SWEET
PEAS

MORTON FROZEN

Republicans claimed $500 million in reductions from a 2 percent cut in
administrative budgets of most agencies, and from less spending on welfare as a result of lower-than-expected caseloads.
Much or tbe money saved was channeled into increased state aid to
local schools and higher education.
.
The GOP budget would increase basic state aid to schools. protect'"
wealthier districts from cuts Voinovicb proposed, and reimburse scbools
for some of the money !hey would lose as a result of a coun ruling against
a telephone company tax.
·
Also proposed: $500 million over two years to place cmpputers in
every classroom for kindergarten through fourth grade.
Rep. Wayne Jones of Cuyahoga FaDs, the ranking Democrat on the
committee, welcomed the Republican changes.
"I think a lot of tbe proposalS are recommendations that we've made
... and we're extremely happy that a lot of those items got in," Jones said.

Overhaul

1 . . _. ·ARGO
..

Meigs joins
·school lunch
program

Activities planned by Star Grange
Grange.
a program on spring holidays.
Plans for a soup supper and
Janis Macomber, deaf cbalrper· RCadlngs were by Joe White, Opal
open meeting to be held on Man:h son, reponed that May is Better Dyer, and Smith.
31 were made wben Star Grange
Hearing Month. She plans to get
Upcoming event. announced
778 beld its recent meeting . The
information for distribution to local were the Meigs County Grange
soup supper will be served from 5
~Is. She also reported tbat tbls banquet on April 28 at the Meigs
to 7 p.m. with tbe program to begin
.ume of year, even a liUie ear ache, County Senior Citizens Center, and
at 7 p.m. Donations will be acceptuntreated can cause deafness.
Meigs Cou nJy Pomona Grange,
ed·fortbefood.
Eldon Barrows, legislative May 5, with a potluck at6:30 p.m.
In other business, plans were Plalrman. asked members to waldl and meeting it 7:30 p.m. at Star ·
made for iDspectioa on April I and
for scams and takeovers. He also Grange Hall . Jackson County
the second degree wu pracliced for I rep~rted .on the balance&lt;) budget Pomona will visit. 1
'
.
• bewings.
Members and juniors enjoyed
Lecturer Yield Smith presented . potluck refreshment• .
this and conferral at Alba~y
• •
•

1-5-5-9-5-3

298 SECOND ST.

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. Middleport Church of
Christ. Mlddleportto have program; Hemlock Grove to bave
devotions.

Meigs County is joining ih the
American Heart Association's
Hearty School Lunch Program
· geared to provide lunches that arc
botb bearl-bealthy and tasty, .
according to John Costanza, program chairman of the Meigs County Division of the AHA.
"Schools aroQnd the country are
structuring menus to fit into a
. lower-fa~ lower-cholesterol, lowersodium eating plan" said Costanza
in announcing the program which
includes menus, recipes and nutrition information. This allows a
food service director to provide
meals with no more than 30 percent
of calories from lotal fat content
and less than 10 percent ·of total
calories fiom saturated fat (when
averaged over a month).
School lunches avemge 38 percent or calones from total fat,
according to the U.S. Deparbnent
of Agriculture's October 1993
Nutrition Dietary Assessment
Srudy or 545 schools. ·
The program's objectives are to
reduce the amount of total fa~ sawrated fa~ cholesterol and $odium
and to increase the amount of carbohydrates in school lunch menus
to levels recommended by AHA
dietary guidelines for healthy children.
High blood. cb.o lesterol is a
major risk factor for heart disease,
the AHA said. Diets high in fat saturated fat and cholesterol tend to
raise blood cholesterol levels. The!
AHA estimates that 36 percent of
U.S. children aged 19 and under
have cholesterol levels of 170 milHgmms or more, which is undesirably higb.
The American Heart Association's Hearty School Lunch Program uses food commodities common to school food services. The
program has been endorsed by the
American Dietetic Association,
American Academy of Pediatrics
and the American School Food
Service Association.
·
''The Hearty School Lunch program offers examples of how
healthful eating can taste great and
e good for you, too," said Elaine
Downs, FOod Service Director of
Trimble Local Schools who is
presently using the program in
Athens County and volunteering
for the AHA as a trainer to help
other schools with tbe program.

Kicker:

(

•

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Super Lotto:

4-19-14-19-35·36

2 LITER

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Ministerial Lenten service, Pomeroy United Methodist Church, Rev. Paul
Stinson preaching, Thursday, 7:30
p.m.

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 Thursday,
Reedsville Church of Christ .
·Favors will be made for nursing
home. Hostesses, Nola Young,
Christy Yodng, and Nancy
Wachter.

Quarter.final victors
iil NIT

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Heritage Weekend observance COUUDluee. 4 p.m
Wednesday at the Meiga Mu11e11111.
POMEROY - Black Lung
Represeolalive Art Antxanders will
be-at the-senior-Citizens Center,
Wednesday, noon to 1:30 for
scheduled Bppoinbnen!S. He will be
available from 1:30 to 3 p.m. tO
answer questions concemin~ Black
Lung and wiD lake appllcauoos for ·
Black Lung beoefits. Further infor. mation may be obtained from Leafy Chasteen, 992-2161.

Ohio Lottery

Wednesday, March 22, 1995

Pomeroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Flip Kaelin turns serious
·in testimony on murders
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sud- nfgbt, about thumps be beard comdenly, murder wasn't so funny any- ing from an area w!wre police later
more.
found a bloody glove, about SimpBrian "Kato" Kaelin shifted · son's demeanor when be left in ,a
from limelight-loving jokester to limo for. tbe airport and aboul blood
reluctant prosecutioo wimess in the in Simpson's foyer.
O.J . Simpson trial after he was
Tbe .sharp tone of Clark's inquiasked about the children whose sition at times made Kaelin look as
.mother bad just been slain and much like a defense witness as the
whose father was the prime sus- prosecution's wimess.
peel.
In fact, Kaelin testified that
The morning afler the killings, Simpson and his lawyers, aware
6-year-old Justin was playing a that Simpson was a prime suspect,
video game in his father's bouse, quickly homed in on Kaelin as the
Kaelin told jurors Wednesday. man who might clear him . .
Sydney, 9, was spread out on a
They th!clced Kaelin down at his
r.ouch, trying ID sleep.
friend Grant Cramer's bouse J)te
Having recounted this poignant - · day after the slayings, and Simpson
image, · Kaelin's demeanor himself got on the phone. Later,
changed. No more one-liners. No Kaelin said, be an.d Simpson met.
more playing ID the camera like be face-to-face in Simpson's bouse ..
was auditioning for an encore
"0.1. said, 'Kato, you know I
appearance on Talk Soup . Kato was in the bouse, " Kaelin
Kaelin turned serious.
recalled. But be said be told SimpFrom' there, It w~ tough ques- son then what be said on the wlttioning by Deputy Disaict Attorney ness stand - that be never saw
Marcia Clark, who was tryi!IB to Simpson go into his bouse after
show thai Simpson bad time to kill· they returned from the trip to get '
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald bambwgers.
Goldman before catching a flight to
Kaelin, on the stand for a secCblcago.
.
ond da~ also told jurors about a
She grilled Kaelin about his trip previously undisclosed qu~l thl\t
10 McDOnald's with Simpson tbat Simpson had with his ex·ivife at

&lt;:t,,,.r-11-~--·--

residence.
,
. "It was definitely smoke inbalalion," Lentes said Wednesday
afternoon. In addition, Rodatz bad
· a1co bo1 pnor
· to
been consummg
the fire, he added .
The blaze is considered as being
"inlentionally set," Lentes said.
Officials have determined the
fire started in a trash bag on the
back porch or the two-slory frame
ho111e, be added.
"The fire spread ID other trash
bags and worked its way up to tbe
second floor of the bouse, filling
the bouse with smoke," Lentes
said.
The bouse is now taped off and
posted with a sign marking the site
as a possible arson ftre.
Rodatz's boyfriend was charged
with domestic violence the night ·
before the incident and was in jail

FATAL FIRE SCENE - OMdals have determined a fatal
Middleport fire earlier this month was ''Intentionally set.'' Teresa
Rodatz, 36, died of smoke Inhalation In the blaze, ollldals determined. A 'poster now marks the gutted home u a pooslble arson
site. (Sentinel photo) ·
at the time of tbe ftre, said Middle- staying with local relatives at the ·
port Police Chief Sid Little.
.lime of the fire·, Meigs County
Lentes hesitated to label the Sheriff James Soulsby said.
death as a homicide at this time
Middleport and Pomeroy volunpending further investigation. ·
teer ftre departments responded to ·
Rodatz' s two children were · the scene.

Specter pledges to save heating aid

'KATO' KAELIN
their daughter's dance recital just
bours before tbe IdDings.
"He wanted to talk to Sydney,
and I don't think - Nicole wasn't
going to give him time to talk to
Sydney, and I think they (Ms. ·
Simpson and her children) went off
somewhere," l)e said.
,
Clark asked Kaelin if SImpson
was aUowed ID spend any time with
his daughter. "A short time," he
replied. 1

'

/,

I

.I

•

has for the poor, elderly and cbHdren. Because of its cuts in social
programs, the Clinton administration bas threatened to veto the
padcage_
The chairmen of the 13 subcommittees of the Semite Appropriations Committee were completing
work' on their own version of the
spending-cuts package. The bill.
expected to fall a bit short of the
House's total, probably will be
approved by the panel on Friday
and move to the Senate floor next
week.
'
On another fron~ Senate Budget
Committee Chairman Pete
Domenici, R-N.M., bas bekuQ
detailing a preliminary $1.2 aillion
deficit-reduction p!Qn to his GOP
colleagues that woulil' ~ tlie
budget by 2002, said a Senate
Republican who spdke on con~i ­
tion of anonymity.
At least for now, the outline
lacks tax cuts that House Republicans and some GOP !jenators want
and .leaves defense spending mostly

WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republicans seem ready to preserve a home heating-aid program
for the poor and in the process do
batlle with a GOP-led House that
bas already voted to kill the assistance.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R'-Pa., cba!J:man of the subcommiUee that oversees the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program and a presidential hopeful, said Wednesday he .
would shield the $1.3 biUion in aid
from budget cuners.
"To cut out the entire funding
for (the program) w.ould be very
disastrous for many American families," Specter told reporters.
The assistance program, which
helps 5.6 mi!lion ' bou~bolds, was
.among the most controversial cuts
the House made wben it voted last
week to cancel S17 billion in
already-enacted spending.
.
RepubHcans touted the package
as their first step in trimming the
deficit, but Democrats have said It
shows the 1 scant regard the GOP

{'

.

level. As he readies the plan for
presentation to his commiuee later
Ibis spring, Domenici plans to .
invite S811ators who want tax reductions , defense increases or other
changes to suggest ways to pay for
them, the source said.
The $1 .2 trillion, seven-year
oulline would cut scores of programs by $1 aillion and generate
an additional $175 billion in savings from resulting lower interest
paym~nts .

It would include about $770 billion in savings by coning and slowing the growth of benefit programs
such as Medicare. Social ~ecurity
would not be cut There would be
$.230 billion in additional savings
fr011 the , . · O( tile IMid1e1 that
O~paMIIS otber obneatic programs, foreign aid and defense .
Domenici would provide no
details of his plans, saying, "We're
loopng at options."
·The beating -aid · program
Specter wants to protect dispenses
average annual fuel assistance of
$200 per fanlily, · ,
· · ·

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