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Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

'Wednesday, March 29, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Hokies
capture
NIT title

Pick 3:
384

Pick 4:
4265

Super Lotto: .

• 4-22-26-28-35-43
](jcker:
518103

Page4

Low lonlaJ:bt In the 301,

cloudy. Friday partlysuaay.
HlaJ:bs In 50s.

I

Vol. 45, NO. 234
Copyright I 995

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
Less Than Factory
I Invoice on Most
·
Models.

I

2 Secttona, 12 Pogea 35 cenla ·
A Multlmec:tlo Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 30, 1995

Racine Village may sell alleys to land owners
By GEORGE ABATE
Sen~l News Staff
Racine Village may decide t,o
sell alleys. to property owners at
next Monday night's council meet·
ing.
At least 15 unused, not main·
tained alleys could bea&gt;me private
drives, Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton
said, during a recent discussion of
the proposed action.
Many of the alleys can not be
used for. emergency purposes,

Thornton said. ·others have not
been kept up for years and are
overgrown with grass.
"We'll keep. the right of way
just in case If we have to put in
water lines," Thornton said.
Broadway Street's Marie
Phillips told council no one
infonned her when sbi: bought the
property her carport is located on
the alley. The carport had already
been built when she moved near
the Welton Cemetery and alley,

Phillips said.
Mary Shultz said she would
oppose opening the alley next to
her property.
After the .meeting, council members and Thornton viewed the
Phillips propeny, ThorntOn said
"We have several alief&amp; where
people already built on the alley,"
Thornton said.
.
In otller business, council heard ·
from Clifford Ashley of the Meigs
County Fish and Game Commis·

sion about upgrade plans at the
river landing.
Ashley suggested exteil(fing a
boat launch pad and a parking area
on the top of the hill, along with
installing a portable toilet and a
fish cleaning station with a trash
barrel.
Councilman Dale Han said Ashley ~ill try to pool various groups •
resources to push these ideas. The
village already bas applied for state
grants to upgrade the boat launch.

Council will work to enlarge the
parking area and ask for help from
the Meigs County Commissioners
since Syracuse and Middleport
received money.
Council also:
- Ordered the village equipment to be used only on village
property after a complaint about
baprnoe u ~e. The equipment can be
used on private propeny if the village gets reimbursed.
.- Learned the Star Mill Park

Meigs·County residents,
officials explore 911 system

MARSHALL McCORKLE
Sole,. Conoultant.

DELMAN CHENEY

Saloo Conoultant

D CARS AND TRUCKS

(:J ING~ ~PECT(:JCUL(jR
.,.

1994
CAR'
SIGNATURE SERIES
V-8 Auto. NC . lilt, Cruise, Cass,
Pwr Seat. PS. PB. PW, POL.
Savoral to
'23,949
Chooee From

1993

V-8, Auto, A/C, iin, Cruise,
AM/FM Cass, PS, PB, PW,
Much More
5

UP TO • MOS.

14,949

01 ALL 14 AID. PROGRAM CDS

V-6 Auto, A/C, tilt, Cruise,
AM/FM Cass, All Power
··
26.000 miles.

o,21

1994 FORD TEMPO
dr, 4 cyl., auto, air cond, AM/FM
Cass, lin, Cruise, Power Seat. PS.
PB. PW, POL.

4

--

MONTHS

Mo.'

1994 FORD TAURUS

1993 FORD E1SO CONVERSION VAN

4 Dr. V-6, Auto, Air Cond .. AM/fM .
Cass, Tin, Cruise, Pwr Seat, PS, PB. ' ..
PW, POL, Air Bag, Etc.
.

Mark Ill 351-V-8, Auto, Front &amp; Rear AJC, AM/FM
Cass, PS, PB, PW, POL, Tilt, Cruise, Etc.
1991 FORD T-BIRD
V-6, Auto, A/C. Tilt, Cruise,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, AM)FM

ES CONVERTIBLE
Turbo. Auto, A/C, ,AMJFM Cass,
PS, PB, PW. POL.

8,949

5

1991 MAZDA PROTEGE
4 dr .. 4 cyl, auto. AM/FM cass,
.PS, PB, POL. Tin. Cruise, More

$6,949
1990 FORD PROBE GT
Turbo. 5 spd., Air Cond., 1iH,
Cruise, AM/FM Cass, PS , PB,
PW, POL
5

7,449

O~ly 35,000 Miles

'9,949

1994 FORD AEROSTAR XLT

1988 MERC\JRY TOPAZ
LTS, Allwheel drive, 4 cyl, •
. auto, A/C, AM/FM Cass, Tilt, ··
Cruise, All Power.
5

3 949

MONTHS

•

Mo.'

1994 MERCURY SABU
4 dr., 'V-6, Auto .. Air Cond, •"""'

Cass, TiH. Cruise, Pwr Seat, PS,
PW, POL, Air Bag . Etc.

MONTHS

..........

Mo:

1994 FORD F1 SO SUPER CAB XLT
V-8, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM Cass, Tilt, Cruise, PS,
PB, PW, POL More

Mo:

ri ;:=:=:::i:Ji:i:;:::::::=::;;:=::m:::==:::::=~··

;::::::::::::=====:
1994 FORD E-350

Extended length, V-6, Auto, Dual Air
Cond., Ti~. Cruise, Cass, All Power.

1989 FORD T~BIRD
V-6, Auto, A/C, AM/FM Cass,
1ilt, Cruise, PS. PB, PW, POL.
Power Seat
56,449

Turbo, 5 spd, PS, PB,. PW,
lilt. Cruise, AM/FM, Cass,
Sunroof.'

4 cyl., auto, air cond. AM/FM Cass, .
TiH, Cruise, Power Seat, PS, PB,
PW. POL.

24

Mo.'

1991 DODGE SHADOW

1~,~~~~~~~~~~:~1ffi99~3~~~~~~

1994 MERCURY TOPAZ

----

1993 CHEV S BLAZER

4 door, 4x4, 4.3L V-6, Auto, Air
Cond ., Tahoe Package, Bench
Seat

1990

24

MONTHS

1993 CHEV G20

CONVERSION VAN
Auto , Air Condition, AMIF'M I
Cass, Tilt, Cruise, PS,
POL

Mo.'

• ALL PAYMENTS QUOTED ARE 24 MONTH RED CARPET LEASE
•THE PLAN", PAYMENTS ARE BASED ON S7,000 DOWN, AT
TIME OF DELIVERY THIS INCWDES 1ST PAYMENT AND
SECURITY DEPOSIT RESULTING IN 23 REMAINING PAYMENTS
ALL VEHICLES COVERED BY WARRANTY. ·

"Ughtning" H.O. 351 Auto, NC,
AM/FM Cass, Tin, Cruise. PS,
PB, PW, LoW Mileage.

s1 .tUf4~
1989 CHEV S-10 BLAZER

4.3L V6, Auto, Air Cond, . PS,
PB, PW, POL, Till, Cruise,
AM/FM Cass, Much More

. STAT£ TAXES Not INCLUDED.

MERCURY
LINCOLN

s9 949

VOYAGER
SE, Auto. Air Cond., PS, PB,
Tin; Cruise, AM/fM Stereo, Elc.
5

8,449

19891SUZU
LS Pkg., Auto, Air .~Orl~ .L~
PB, PW, POL, Cruise,
Cass, 4 x 4.

~Qrry

U.yman hooked

of his life worldng on his family's fann outside Apple Grove. The
electric fence protect&amp; agalnot ground bogs and deer, although a
few rabbits eat his vegetables. (Sentinel photo by George Abate).

s11

24

24

MENDING ELECfRIC FENCES -

up an electrical fence around his garden Wednesday afternoon.
Tho 85-year-old Pomeroy resident said be grew liP and spent most

V-6, Auto, A/C, AM/FM Cass,
1in, Cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL, ·
Much More.

niANCIND

CONTINENTIAL
SIGNATURE SERIES

Cass.

1994 CHEV BERETTA

APR.

Jones won't run
for West Virginia
governor in 1996
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- House Finance Chairman ·Bob
Kiss filed pre-candidacy papers'
Wednesday indicating he may run
. for governor in 1996 and fonner
state Sen. Ned Jones said be will
not run.
And House Speaker Chuck
Chambers said be now considers a
campaign for governor more likely
than seeking an appointment on the
state Supreme Court if a justice
resigns, But be is still .interested in.
thecou&lt;t.
All three are Democrats.
Jones is the son of the late Bartow Jones, who was a Republican
state Senator from Mason County
from 1948 to 1956. .His brother,
Brereton Jones, is a former Republican leader of the West Virginia
House of Delegates, and is the
Democratic governor of Kentucky.
Kiss of Beckley said he flied the
pre-candidacy papers in the Secre1ary of State's office so be' could
raise and spend money, but be .will
not decide whether he will run until
June or July.
The amount of political and
financial support he gets will determine whether be will announce his
. candidacy, Kiss said. It lllkes about ,
$1 mi Ilion to run a viable campaign, he said.
·
He and Jones both are modernte
to conservative and would attract
the same voters Kiss said.
But Jones' decision not to run
probably won't affect his own
fund-raiSing efforts because Jones'
personal wealth could have .
{inanced his campaign and they
would have received donations
from different people, Kiss said.
Kiss has undergraduate and law
degrees fta!l Ohio State Unlvcrsl·
. ty. He ,was elected to the House in
1988 from Raleigh County and
each two yean since. .
Jones cited personal reasons f~
not running. He declined to be spe-

.Building win have roof worts~­
ed this week. Also, elecb1cal hoes
will be installed to accommodate
high usage times. The park board
will be asked to pay the monthly
electric bin.
- Found the viUage street light
contract expires next year.
-Will get a new quote on cost
for putting pagers OJI frequency,
since the frre department acquired
new ones ..
Continued on__2!1QI 3_

--·-----

Sentenced
Point. Pleasant's.
mayor gets jail
time for charge

By MICHELE CARTER
By JIM FREEMAN
through real·estate reassessment. a property tax levy;
OVP News Staff
Sentinel news staff '
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. _:_
a sales tax; by the county's general fund or by pooled
The pros and cons of a 911 emergency system and community resources.
Point Pleasant Mayor Russell V.
.
possible methods of funding were the topics of disHolland was sentenced to 60 days
Ward speculated a system for Meigs County.
cussion at a )iublic meeting Wednesday night
in jail and probation Wednesday
would cost between $200,000 and $400,000 for five
Approximately 50 people attended the meeting at years.
morning in Mason County Circuit
.
the Senior Citizens Center called at the request of
Court
on a misdemeanor charge Qf
Emergency Med.ital Service dispatcher Bracy .
Meigs County Commission President Fred Ho(fman Korn said Meigs County does not need 911 -. that
embezzlement by a pubtic official,
to evaluaJe public interest in 911.
·
The mayor emphasized in a teiC.
the current system works well.
Emergency Services di~tor Raben Byer intra·
phone
interview following the ~­
"We need other thin~s worse in Meigs County,"
dliCed EmergiTech representative Michael Ward and be said.
tencing, however, that it will not
Athens County 911 coordinator Randy Mace who
affect his eartler decision to run for
· Others said llie system's benefits outweigh the
answered questions from local officials concerning costs.
reelection in the May 20 municipal
·
911.
.
ele.ction.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby asked bow calls would
Byer used a series of transparencies to explain be routed or prioritized through the system.
Holland, 64, was sentenced by ·
·some of the features of the 911 system. .
Judge James Holllday .lo serve one
· "Everyone who calls my office feels their call is
A 911 system allows people to use their tele· ilriportant - ·every call is important and we try to
year in the Mason County Jail, two
phones to summbn emergency or law enforcement respond to all of them," he said.
years
probation and 200 hours of
.
assistance by calling a three-digit number, 9-1 -1.
community service.
Mace said 911 dispatchers would transfer calls to
The primary benefits of the 911 system is that the . the appropriate departments.
However, the jail sentence was
.
number Is easy to remem~er and dial, promotes
suspended
except for 60 days. HoiAt this time, the Meigs County Board of Comnus· involvement by community residents and is easier for sioners has two options jn Conning a 911 plannmg
' land was also ·ordered to pay all
travelers to use, he explained. In addition, 911 can committee: appoint a commillee by resolution or 1 costs in the prosecution of the case,
automatically identify the number of the caller and , · authorize the fonnation of a citizens committee to : including the county's coscs.
prov!de additional infonnalion about the caller' s investigate the feasibility of 91 I.
Holland will begin serving his
.
locauon.
·
time
in the colllty jail Monday at 9
· Commissioners said they would be interested m
Seven of Ohio's 88 counties, including Meigs letting a citizens committee investigate the system.
a.m.
County, do not have 911 or a 911 pl!mning commit.
Holland was indicted during
"The fairest way is to put it on the ballot and let
tee, Byer said.
January's
session of grand jury on
the people decide," said Commission Vice-president
A 911 system can be funded several ways: Janet Howanl Tackett.
three
misdemeanor
counts of
·
embezzlement by a pubUc official .
He pleaded guilty to one of the
charges, involving a $28 check,
and the others were dropped In the
plea agreement.
"Russell Holland is being made
· an unfair example," said Ron SteiB,
Holland's attorney. "The punishment does not .fit the crime of $28."
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In with another method of appointing Ohio teachers.
Stein said he could recall an
the same news conference in which WI inspector general," Voinovicb
"Anybody that gets appointed
incident Involving an employee of
be stressed his desire to pick the said Wednesday - a day after his by the governor is going 10 he subthe Mason County Board of Educastate schools superintendent, Gov. choice, former Gallia County Judge ject to scrutiny or political pottion and more than $40,000 of tax·
George Voinovicb suggested gov- Donald Cox, gave up the adminis- shots," be said. "It's a very awkpayers' money. The defendant in
ward environment for a governor,
ern\)l's ought not appoint the state trative watchdog job.
that case received probation and no
Voinovicb bad called the news and I think it puts whoever is jail time.
inspector general.
"I think the Legislature should · conference to push his plan to appointed in a difficult position."
The attorney said be believes the
look at this and maybe come up require performance standards for
sentence is an attempt by the court
to deny the citizens of Point Pleasant a fair choice in the upcomlns
mayor's race.
Prior to the sentencing, Holland
WASHINGTON (AP) - The the issue to rest. The spectacle of assure you it will be a major issue apologized til the court. admitting
. House .threw itself into the path of lawmakers agonizing over their in the '96 campaign."
be had made a mistake and said
a popular grass-roots· movement own fates and the intentions of the
Republican· leaders fell dozens steps bad been taken at tbe city
and slowed the momentum of the · founding fathers promised to recur of votes short of the two-thirds building so this could not happen
new Republican majority by throughout the 104th Congn:ss and majority needed to approve a con- again. Holland said the 111011ey had
defeating a constitutional amend- infuse the next election cycle.
stitutional amendment limiting not been used for personal gain and
ment to limit the years II!entbers of
"Tenn limits will be voted on House and Senate careers to 12 that it never lefi the city buildina.
Congress may serve.
as the first Item in the new years each. The most popular of
Stein told Holliday bla client
But 10 hours of politically Congress if we are the majority," four alternatives that were voted on
bad never intentionally done any.. . · ..
·charged debate and a historic first- House Speaker Newt Gingrich Wednesday, it failed 227-204.
Cantin
ued
~n
P'll•
3
time floor vote did nothing to put vowed Wednesday night. "I can
Continued on page 3

Voinovich says governors
should not appoint IGs

Term limits plan dead, for now

~

,,

NED JONES

.

.

'

Former congressional candidate wins
appeal on driving under suspension charge

cific.
.
''We just want to leave it at that.
Every time you see a politician
decide not to do somethit1g they By KEVIN PINSON
ity Act for driving without insur- 4507.02. A "B" was later added to
indicate which subsection he was
drag out a whole laundry list of OVP News Staff
ance.
.
.
excuses . We don't want to do
The difference between a "B''
Weisman's license was ·suspend- charged with.
• The court erred by refusing
that," Jones said. ,
• and a ~'C" has enabled a fanner ed for a driving under the influence
Weisman's motion for a jury trial.
"Politically. it looked good," candidate for Congress to wiD his · conviction.
Jones said.
.
appeal on a ch:&gt;rge of.driving under
"Although the record reveals Weisman, who is an attorney, did
Jones sent out hundreds of let- suspension.
(he) bad not yet shown the proof of not file a jury request within the
t~ Tuesday teii';D~ supporters and
The Fourth District Court of fmancialn:sponsibilily necessary to proper time limits and was denied.
The appeals court chose not to
fnends of h1s deciSion.
Appeals ruled earlier this month reinstate his license afrer his ~v • ~ wrote this letter the first time that Gallipolis Municipal Court ,in~ under the influence suspensiOn, address the other two argumentS.
twci months ago and. decided to put found James E. Weisman, ·~io "' the record contains no evidence
"In ligbt of our disposition of
.it aside and sit On it and think about . Grande, guilty of the wrong section that (Weisman's) license was ever (Weisman's) third ass1gnment of
it, it was such an important deci- · of the Ohio Revised Code and suspended pursuant to (the FRA cnur, we ftnd (his) first and second
sian to do it overnight," Jones said. reversed the conviction.
statute)," the decision says.
assignments of error to he moot."
· "'t just doesn't work for us
He wall convicted under section
Drivers who have their licenses
Wben he was stopped for speeding Feb. 21, 1994 by the state highri~bt..now and .maybe some day it 4507.02 (B) instead of 4507.02 (C). · suspended must prove they have
wall, Jones wd.
In June, 1994, Wiesman was insurance or a bond to reinstate . way patrol, Weism!UI bad a coun
Jones announced last year be Cine~ $150 plus court costs and their privileges when '!be suspen- order that permitted him to drive in
would not seek re-election to the sentenced to three days in j;lil, sus- sion en&amp;.
search of employment
.
Senate seat be had held since Dec.. pended. Judge William S. Medley
In addition to $e ar~ument conThe trooper later found be bad
31, 1985 because be planned 10 run also ordered his vehicle lmmobi- cerning the ORC sections, Weis- not paid the reinstatement fee or
for governor.
·
l1zed for 30 days.
man's appeal also ;llleged:
provided proof of insurance and
He does not regret that decision.
According to the appeals coon's ·
• The court erred by allowing
charged Weisman with driving
It's·important to get away frmt the decision, W e e was found the prosecution to amend the origi· 101der suspension.
legislative environment and "see guilty under a statu deallns with nal complaint. When the trooper
In May, Weisman lost the
what reality is all about,'' . Jones driven whose Uce
are suspend- originally wrote tbe ticket. tbe Rep~blican nomination for the
sllid
.. '
ed under·tbe Fi
Responsibil· charge was listed as a violation of

Sixth District Congressional seat to
Gallipolis businessman Fr1lllk Cremeans,,. ~ho defeated incumbent
Ted Stricldand in N:ovembc:r.

•
t \

'

�•

•••
••

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publlsbu
CHARLENE HOEFLICH •
Genenol Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'I'!M.y obould be le" than 300
words long. Alllellln - ·111bjec~ Ill editing and must be signed with nome,
addreto and relepbone numbeo. No umigned letren will be publiabed. l.etren
obould be in good tule, addlouing iu1101, not penonalitieo.

.

.

:: Excerpts ·trom other
· Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press ·
Excerpts of Obio editorials of national and statewide interest:
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, March 27
It's bard 10 stick out from tbe crowd. lobo Bochner knows.
For months, tbe prominent Ohio congressman tried 10 downplay his
longslanding opposition to the movement 10 limit congressional terms.
As chllirman of the House Republican Co~ference, be occupies the
fourth-highest post in the House GOP leadersbop. And leadership bas Its
obligations ·- like persuadin~ other Republicans ID stand rogetber behind
the ''Contract with America.'
Perhaps it should be no surprise that the pressure finally became IQO
much for him. At a news conference in Wasbingron last week, the young
congressman known for his supreme self-confidence fmally succumbed.
announcing a last-minute conversion on term lim_its, just in time for
debate on the issue this week on tbe House floor.
Boehner said that what "crystallized" tbe issue for him was tbe recent
defeat of a constitutional amendment to require a balanced budget
because of the opposition of a minority of senators:
.
"The arrogance of those few 'helped me better understand why the
public is so frustrated with Congress, IIJld why they feel \~=riD limits are
needed,'' Boehner said
·: .·It's bard to escape the conclusion that be reversed positions for a more
: : pragmatic reasoo: pany politics. It's easier to stand with tbe_crowd than 10
go it alone, especially when the crowd expects you 10 be tbeu leader.
The Clnclnnall Enquirer, March 27
.
· ·
·
The overwhelmingly popular crusade to call a halt to careers In
Congress bas ooe mm: convert: House leader John Boehner. ·
Boehner saw tbe term-limits light bu.lb Oip on while watching a doddering ftlibluster by ancient Sen. Robert Byrd, who stopped the balanced
budget amendment in its tracks, despite support by three-quarters of
American voters.
Although bOth branches are controlled by the. same party, House
Republicans put tbeir Credibility and futures on the line with tbeir Contract A landslide of voters pitched out Democrats and said, ''lust do it''
But Republicans in the Senate made no such promises. That's where
term limits and tax culs and other long-awaited reforms could stall. And if
·. they do get smothered ~n the Senate, House members wi!Jialce It to the
people in the next elecuon, Boehner vowed, and v01ers wtU have another
chance.to sweep out the Senate the way they cleaned House last year.
'
Bucyrus Telegraph-Forum, March U
·
Since Bill Clinton became pres~n~ computer prices have dropped by
more than half. A computer that cost'$2,000 on Jan. 20, 1993, cos1s about
$700 10 $800 today.
.
.
It's called Moore's Law. Moore.'s Law stipulates that computer power
doubles (or compu'ler prices drop by ball) every 18 months.
· Then why is CliniOn' s administration planning yet another ~overnment
program, this time to help pour people get access .to computers .
Any family now can buy a fairly decent computer for about $300.
Throw in a 14,000 baud modem at $70 and tbe family is connected to
cyberspace. ·
.
If the Clinton administration·wanted to help people leam computers, tt
would end the wasteful and counterproductive federal "education" programs - all of them. And it would give everybody a tax cu~ so families
more easily could pay for their own computers.
Tbe (Toledo) Blade, Man:b U
;
·
.
For years California and Florida have grown at tbe expense of Obio
and other midwestern states. And for years federal bailouts have kept
them on their rast track after natural disasters.
Finally, lawmakers in Washington are catching on to the inherent
unfairness that such aid bas become. Instead of equitably providing emergency funds for states bit by severe weather, tliese federal funds have
become free insurance fbr California and Florida. A disaster bitS, tbeJeds
step in. Neither California nor Florida takes responsibility for adequately
insuring itself against such disasters. ·
.
Disaster relief is sure to stay a bot-butron issue as other federal programs are cut so that there are funds to throw_at California and Florida.
The disaster rehef system reqmres dramauc overhaul.

Letters to the editor
Drug abuse must be stopped
I am doing a report in school
about something I want changed in
the world. My choice is for drug
abuse to be stopped.
I think drug abuse should be
stopped because it doesn't only
burt the person who is using it, it
also hurts other people. Such as
family members, friends and many
others.
Drug abuse can kill a person.
Drugs can cause you to kiU another
person or another person to kill
you. I am sure that's a fact.
Drugs may kill pain and make

your probleii!S go away, but they
don't go away forever. Your problems only go away for the amount
of time you're high on the drugs.
Also the same with pain.
I hope you will help me help
others get drugs stopped because
they kill, burt, and don't help any·
thing in your life. Drugs cause you
problems they don't help 'your
problems. Please take Ibis iniD consideration and try to help me help
otbers.
Tara Blount
Meigs Junior,High School

•

;Thursday, March 30,1995
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy4'iddleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 30, 1995

•

~

••

Friday, March 31
: 1-~A~ec:u~-W.~ea~tb~er"~~~or~ec~:a~ost~~~or~~~coodi~~-~lions~~and~hi~·!!gh~tt~m~per~a!~ure~s~

before the crack epidemic bit,
crime lliiC5 were going down somcwhaL ·
Later (1986-1991) tbe economy

MILLIONS OF · VJEW~

•

•
••
••

·,

••

...

Joseph Spear

Today in history

ne

..

'

L

Silo-.. T-siOmJS Rain

S~~tny Pl.

leo

: . ViaA~P,...~

.I

,

Cloud):

meet at 7 p.m. tonight at the Carpenters' Hall in Pomeroy. Safe
boating classes are continuing at
the ball on Mondays, 7 p.m.

Cloud):

C1W5Accu-W..tMer, Inc.

' · ----Weather
·;...
.• South-Central Ohio
: • Today ... Varlable cloudiness.
: High In the lower SOs. West winds
: s to 1S mph.
• · TonigbL .. Panly cloudy. Low in
: the lower 30s. Northwest winds
: less than l 0 mpb.
; · Friday... Partly sunny. High near

..::so.

Extended forecast
Saturday...Dry. Lows in tbe 20s.
Highs from the middle 30s northeast
to tbe lower 40s southwest
Sunday ... Dry. Lows 2S to 30.
Highs mainly in tbe 40s.
Monday... Dry. Lows 30 to 35.
Higbs in the SOs.

•' · William Wallace "Wally" SlOver; 81, of Racine, died Tuesday, March
.: · 28, 1995, in Holzer Medical Center after an extended illness.
: · Bom Feb. 16, 1914, be· was a son of the late Elisha D. and Lillie Mae
' (Casro) Stover.
·
A retired night security guard for Tri-State Material Sand and Gravel
•.
• Company, be was a farmer, baker and Protestant.
:
Survivors are bis wife, Elizabeth M. Hoschar Srover; sons and·daugh:·, ters-in-Iaw, .Leonard and June Stover, Alvin and Mary Stover, Racine;
:.. Paul and Wanda Stover, Pleasantville; three daughters and sons-in-law,
;:·Allie Farmer of. New Carlisle; Bleva and Drew Fisher, Irene and Butch
__ Johnson,. Racine; sisters, Hazel Mitchell of Columbus, Foci.e Hayman of
;: Racine, Velva Haught of Walker, W.Va; 10 grandchildren and five great.. grandchildren.
!:: Services will be Friday, I p.m., at the Casto Funeral Home, Evans,
;• with the Rev. Gerald B. Sayre officiating. Burial will be in Uie Letart Falls
::;. Cemetery, Letart Falls at3 p.m.
.
:: Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday, 5 to 9 p.m., and Fnday,
chapel.
,•. 2 to 3 p.m. at the cemetery
.
.

-

:~ ··Units of the Meigs County Wesley Clark; VMH.
. RUTLAND
~~Emergency Medical Service
9:23
a.m.,
Gaston Road, Fern
•--recorded six calls for assistance
Halley,
Doctor's
Hospital;
~ · Wedoesday including one transfer
10:21
a.io
.,
College
Avenue,
:~ call. Units responding included:
Tyler
Faulk,
VMH.
·
.
.
~·
MIDDLEPORT
PLAINS
TUPPERS
8:14a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
2:49 p.m., Arbaugh Addition,
• .Center, Hester Houck, Veterans .
E. Cole, Camden -Clark
Holmer
· ~ -Memorial Hospital.
Memorial
Hospital.
::,
RACINE
;
10:06 p.m .. state Route 124,
'

The Pomeroy Chapter of the

U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary will

Correction

:·······························
* H e_y ~ We're readly for §]pring :

I

--- with lbea1UlHf1Ull lBUNNTIE§ :
&amp; huilariou3 HARE§ t
'
§ I*
cu
esome OOTTQ_:\ITATIL&amp; wonderful 'V AiBl!U1'§!
*

*•
I
I

i .Things are hoppin' in here! I
:

.

_ _
.
intendent of public onstructoon
should be a member. of the Cabonet "

The admission ~~ ~nusual for
Voinovicb . He tepeatedly bas
asked for authority to appoint

~======~

members
of tbeand
statebas
school
board,
now elected.
moved
to
bring the now-independent Bureau
of Workers' Compensation under
his control.
" Give me the ball . bold me
·responsible. but give me tbe
autborily 10 get the job done,"
Voinovicb said. " I think the super-

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
FAR FROM HOME, THE
ADVENTURES OF
YELLOW DOG Pi&gt;-"

STARTING FRIDAY
Brad Pitt, Anthony Hopkins

IN

LEGENDS
OF THE FALLA
ONE EVI:NING SHOW 7:30
446-0923

FILM DEVELOPING

··~
.
Io
· . pu•re gom.g

thank me12lor
it:•
Exp. Roll $1.99
15 Exp. Disc $2.99

An article in Wednesday's Daily
Sentinel· inaccurately reported that
Athens County Common Pleas
Court Judge Michael Ward heard
the arraignment of Patricia Ingram.
The arraignment occurred in
Ward's courtroom, but 1udge L.
Alan Goldsberry oversaw the bearing . The error was due to reporting.

Round/square dance set
The Tuppers, Plains VFW Post
9053 will meet from 8-11 p.m. Saturday at the VFW ball. Music by
the Smoky Mountain Drifters.

'

EMS logs 6 calls

usda to meet

Rutland youth leage set
The Rutland Youth League will
meet at 6 p.m. Friday at the Rutland Fire House.

'\._,

~Meigs

Bake sale planned
Senior Saints of the Rutland
Cburcp of God will ha've a bake
sale Saturday. 9 am. at the Rutland
Civic Center in conjunction with
the EMS bazaar.

Letart Falls group set
The Letart Falls Community
Association will meet at 6 p.m.
Monday at the community building. Members are welcomed . For
more information, call 247-2344.

:--Area
Death-..
..1' William W. Stover

The. Ohio River Bear Co.

:

** 9-4204
N. 2nd Middleport, OH 614-992-4055 . :
Weekdays liiifl •
CS) Layaway 10-5 Saturday*

24 Exp. Roll $3.99
36 Exp. Roll $5.99
Otter good on 1 sel ol standard size 3·
prints made from your 35mm,
disc, 110 or 126 r.olo r print film
(C·41 process only).

F• I your eyes
oa IC.ockK Colarwalch
Quality this Holiday.

Come see for yourself

Kennelll McCullough, R. Ph. Charlea Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Henning, R. Ph. .
Mon.thru Set. B:OO 'e.m. to 9:00p.m.
Suo day t 0:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 9$2-2955
E. Meln
Service ~omeroy, Oh.

-'·······························

t.

·- ,

Council..~ontlnued

~~Racine

·:-; - Will bold a spring cleaning
- session sometime-Ibis April. Coun,;~ cilman Larry Wolfe will handle
·::care for 12 Dog wQod trees and
;.-;:grass seed for the palk.
·;--- - Warned residenls 10 get tags

trom page1

for their dogs since the dog warden
bas beard about dogs running
loose.
- Set the next council meeting
for 7 p.m. Monday at the council
chambers.

~Durst improved;
~ransferred to Holzer
A Middleport man who was
;; allegedly robbed. beaten '!ld then
. . ~ dumped in Pomeroy ear her thos
'"month bas improved enough to be
'' transferred 10 1-!olzer Medical Ceo:" ter in Gallipolis, officials stated.
... Melvin Durst, 65, of Middle• •., port, bad been admitted to the~'"bilitation unit March 23, a bospotal
· ·• -offocial said Wednesday afternoon.
•• Durst, who was originally held
· • for more than two weeks at St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington,
, W.Va.. , sustained severe bead and

turnips and Himalayan centenarians who subsist on turnip yogun.
- Turnip burger stands will
pop .up all over America, featuring
"broiled, not fried" shoestring
turnips, "grilied, not fried"
McThmip Burgers and "baked, not
fried" turnip pie.
- . Washington will not be
neglected. Operating ·on the
assumption that most people will
like whatever Bill eiinton does not
like, tbe ru is hoping to convince
the president - a Ia George Bush
and broccoli - to declare his
hatred of nunips. A scheme Is also
afoot to offer Newt Gingrich $4.5
million to write a book about ''sick
McGovernicks' ~ who ~ 'just don't
get" the nunip mess113e. Newt may
also be offered a boous for a shame
campaign against people who shun
turnips,
•
So there's your Foodgate scandal. We can only hope that exposure foils tbe plot.
J-ph Spear II a IYJIIIIutred
· writer lfor NeWSJ18per Enterprile
ANodatlon.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronlc:ally with
this columnist and others, con·
lad America Online by caiUng 1·
880-8l7:6364, ext.IJ311.)' ·

The Daily Sen&lt;inel
(USPS 213·960)
Published e..,ery afternoon, .Monday through
Fridl:iy. Ill Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohi o Ynlley Publi shing Comf&gt;'ln y/Mullimcdi~

Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph . 992-21S6.
Second class postage: paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Membtr : The· Associ ated Preu, a nd the· Ohio
Newspaper A~ wc iation.

pOSTMASTER: Se nd addre:.u co m ct i on~ to
' 'fhr Daily 5t'ntirw:l. Ill Cour!"St., Pomeroy.
Ohio45769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Roolt'

One Week ..... ........ :....
One Month · . .

.

One Year . .

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.. $1.75
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neck injuries· and was found lying
in tbe snow wilh a blood temperature below 90 degrees in front of ·
Dr. H.D. Brown's office, said John
Lentes, ~eigs County Prosecuting
Attorney:
·
Lcntcs said a member of his
staff bad talked to Durst. but Durst
could not recall anything from that
evening.
..
A member of his staff will Y!Sit
Durst again next week to try asking
him more questions, Lentes added.
Durst's status bas stabilized
enough to lie moved, Lentes said . .
Bu~ Lentes said be bad not talked
to Durst's doctor to know if there
would be any long-term damage.
Lentes said the prosecutor's ·
office, the P Jmeroy Police DeJ;lBrl·
· meht and •Aeigs County Shenffs
Departmr ,,, are investigating the
incideQt.

Subscribers not de-siring to pay the cnrrier may
remit in 11.dvance direct to The Daily SentiRel
o three, ~ix or 12 month bMis. Crtdit will be
Ji¥en carrier each week.

011

N~ subscriptitm by mail permitted in un:o.s
where home co.nier servite

i~

uvaHnble.

MAIL SUBSC)IIPTIONS
lntkle Mt-J&amp;I County
13 Weeks ........... ................................ $2).92
26 Weelu ............ ..................................... $.47.06
~2 Weeks ............ ..................................... $92.56
Rata O.Ukle Mclp County
ll w...1u........................... &lt;. ...................m .61
26 w...u .........................,.......................$49.66
~2 w..u .................................................$96.20

___..

_

,......_J::;:-.
l

Hor.;pital news
VETERANS MEMO~IAL
.
Wednesday admissoons - Otis
Frederick, Pomeroy; Wesley Clark,
· Racine
Wednesday discharges - Belva
Glaze, Pomeroy

'' SINGLE COP'I PRICE
[)ajly, ., ........................................ ... ...... 35 Ce nlli

.~..,;

•

"

~

:

millioo

••• •

Meigs announcements

'
•

}

cent of the nation's .114 million CUll taxpayers save the $20 billioa a
taxpayers. That's because it's con- year they now spend .10 have their
tained in a monstrous volume that's rerums prepared for tbem, the IRS
four lnclies thick, 4,000 pages and would cut its collection costs from
5.6
words.
$7S billion a year 10 $25 billion.
So most Americans don't even
Even more significant, with
bother to fiU out their own 1040s. individuals and businesses no
They leave this intticate task to longer making economic decisions
accountants and tax lawyers, who based on tax implicatioas - like
rake in $20 billion a yel)r to tell · buy1ng a bouse to get the morttaxpayers bow mucb they owe gage-interest deduction, or holding
Uncle Sam.
on to assets to avoid capital gains
And even the so-called tax pro- taxes - the gross domestic product
.fessionals often make mistakes would grow exponentially.
when calculating an individual's
Indeed, 'Harvard economist Dale
tax bill. That's why every president Jorgeson (who hardly could be
from Richard Nixon 10 Bill Clinton described as a supply sider) estibas been forced 10 pay the Internal mates that a Oat tax would Increase
Revenue Service back taxes.
the nation's wealth by 13 percent
A Oat tax can stop the madness. or roughly $2 triUion. .
With a straight IS percent rate
The flat tax is an idea whose
(and, again, no deductions), every- lime bas arrived. Rather than
one can figure out lheir own taxes adding even m&lt;l'e pages to the fedwithout tbe aid of a supercomputer. eral tax. code - by creating new
Instead_of lhe plethora of tax forms deductions and new credits - lhe
- 1040s, 1099s, 2SSSs, 3903s, House GOP ought to put its weight
4972s, S329s, ad infinitum- there behind tax sbnpUfication.
would be a single, simple tax form
The American people would be
tbe size of a postcard.
forever grateful for such a reroiu/'t. taxpayer would lalce a matter
change in the present .
of minutes 10 fill it out (about the . lionary
Byzantin~ tax system.
amount of time required to calcuJoseph Pei'ldm Is a columnist
late the tip on a restaurant bill), for. The San Diego Union-Trl·
then they'd mail it in to the IRS. bune.
No fuss. No mess.
(For Information on bow to
Aside from the simplicity of the communicate electronically with
flat tax, this minimalist tax system this columnist and others, conwould' be a boon. to the nation's lad America Online by calllnt! 1·
economy. Not only would Ameri- 800-827-6364,
ext. .8317.)

cinogenic quali!les of grilled steak,
the cholesterol m lobster, tbe tat in
butter? They were the work of the
TU. The Alar scare? The TU bad
plans 10 supplant apples in school
lunches with "crisp, delicious
vitamin-packed raw turnips.':
Apple juice would disappear and
turnip JUice with "10 percent real
turnip'' would take ils place.
- The trashing of Chinese ·
food? Coming soon: Szechuan
Turnip and Kung Pao Turnip. ItalIan? Watch out for pasta with
turnip marinara. Mexican? Turnip
tacos and refried nunips are on the
way. Movie popcorn? If tbe TUbas
its way, it'll be doused In turnip
buller and sprinkled with turnip
. salt Deli? How dOC$ a turnip salad
sandwich with turnip mayonnaise
sound?
- Health food stores will not be
.. overlooked. ·A team of nutrit!Qn
specialists, trained at the East
Caribbean School of Food Sclena~s, is woo,Ing on turnip supplements, turnip extracts, turnip oil
. capsules and an official .Turnip
Diet prosram. Plans are afoot for
an advertising campaip featuring
skinny, brainy, .energetic Japanese
who eat nothing ·but ·steamed

W.VA.

''·
.

Say h·e llo to the Turnip Age

Take It from an old investipllve of tbe past few years and see
reporter: To get to the bottom of what's not mentioned.
·
the Foodgate mystery, you've got
It's turnips, that's what. l,'ve
to follow the nomcns.
been keeping my-eye on turnips
It's an old rule in the muclaalcing business. What is MENTIONED, many times, Is less .
Oc - - - important than what is NOT MEN- smce Iober 1992, when I first
TIONED. The "nomens " as we . reported, based on tips from
say in the trade.
' ·
source~ of undete~ned re!iability,
"Follow the money," said Deep that a group of radical tunup farmThroat to Woodward and Bernstein ers called the Turnip Underground
in the Watergate scandal. "Follow mi~t be behind the attempt 10 disthe nomens," said Deep Trans credit every other food substance
By The Associated Press
· Fatly Acid to yours truly In the on the planet. When all other foods
Today is Thursday, March 30, the 89th day of 1995. There are 276 Foodgate scandal.
have been condemned as dangerous
days left in the year.
And so The Curmudgeon fol - to the p~blic _health ~nd welfare,
Today's Highlight in History:
lowed the n001ens.
the turn1p w1ll be km~ and the
On March 30; l981, President Reagan was shot and seriously injured
A study of tbe early history of Turnip Underground woll be the
outside a Wasblngron, D.C., hotel by John W. Hinckley Jr., who also lhe Foodgate affair ·- . when such food_equivalent of the Colombian .
. wounded' White House news secretary lames Brady, a Secret Service savory viCtuals as bacon, eggs and cocwne cabal.
,
-· agen~ and a District of Columbia police officer.
.
•
blue-cheese
dressing
were
That
is.
the
pl_
an
and
they
ve
.
On this date:
denounced as unhealthy - IUr(le(l !Jeen working on II for years. OurIn 1822. Florida becanie a United States terrirory.
up several dozen conspicuous no- mg the cou_rse of my Foodgate
In 1842, Dr. Crawford W. Long of Jefferson, Ga., rust used etber as an
mentions. All investigation of the probe. I ran mto a test-tube; washer·
anestbelic during a minot operadoo.
.
trashing of movie popcorn and of m tbe Tuo:nlp Underground s seaet
In 1867, U.S. Seaetary of State William H. Seward reached agreement Italian, Chinese and Mexican Iaboratones and be soon became
with Russia to pun:base the territor)'.of Alaslca for $7.2&lt;million, a deal cuisines narrowed tbe list to about my best source. I call him Deep
ridiculed in the United States as "Seward's Folly:"
·
10 possible perpetrators. The recent Trans Fatty Acid.
,
In 1870, the !Sib Amendment' ID the Constitution, giving black men ·attack on delicatessen sandwiches
According to do.cuments and
the rightiD vote, was declared in effecL
,coofumed my susf!il:t"
. ·{oformation supplied by DTFA: ·
In 1870, Texas was readmitted to the Union.
.
I know who is
Foodgate. . I Turrup Underground bas
In 1909, the Queensboro. Bridge, linking the New York boroughs of
· Try It yourself. Go back and b'een behind most (,)f tbe major food
Manbauan and Queens, opened 1
·
·
check all the food·basbing stories scares. Those stones about the car-

•

I

,

With .flat tax, only accountants lose
. House Republicans are putting transform the most 'complex tax
the finishing touches on a $189 bil- system in tbe. world into the most
lion tax relief package that dishes sunple:
.
out gpodies 10 farililies, seniors and
First, get rid of all the 'various .
businesses.
The smorgasbord includes a
$500 per cbild tax credit, a capital
Joseph Perkins
gains tax cu~ a deduclioa for losses
in home sales, more generous treat- and assorted federal taxes, with
ment of individual retirement their multiple rates, in favor of a
accounts and a reduction of taxes solitary Oat tax at a single rate of
· benefi
somewhere between I0 percent and
S ial S
O{l oc
eeunty
Its.
Normally, yours bUiy would be 20 percent (wbatev,er would yield
\Vildly enthusiastic about the the current level of revenues for the
B
tbi
federal treasury). Then, eliminate
prospect 0 f tax cuts. ut not s lhP plethora of tax deductions,
time around. Methinks it wen and
"'
good to reduce the tax burdi:n for credils, exemptions and exclusions
certain classes of taxpayers, but for individuals and llusinesses.
ft ble 10 · lify th
What this means is that there no
vastlyfor
preeverybody.
era
SIDIP
code
. e tax longer would be five different indiThe obvious way to do this Is vidual income tax rates and eight
with a "Oat tax" for both individu- different corporate rates. And the
als and businesses. A ~ecent federal government no longer
Time/CNN poll indicates that 62 would collect Social Security taxes,
percent of Americans favor such a capital gains taxes, fuel taxes and
change in the tax system, while excise taxes.
·
only 28 percent are opposed.
Instead, all individuals above
On Capitol Hill, a Oat-tax plan the poveny line' would pay Uncle
bas been put in play .by House Sam, say, IS percent of their gross
Majority Leilller Dick Arm~y. the income. And businesses wvuld pay
Texas Republican. On tbe olber the same flat rate on net income
side of the aisle, House Minority . · (revenue less expenses). This new .
Leader Dick Gephardt of Missouri -'- and much iniproved - tax sysis expected Ibis spring 10 weigh in tem would be so easy ID figure ou~
with a slightly less-than-Oat tax . even those of us who Me merely
plan or his own.
college graduates could do our own
If either of the two Dicks were taxes.
·
to ask me, this is bow I would
As it is now, the federal tax
code is unintelli$ible 10 99.9 per-

•lcolumbusl47"

•••

~~lF~

EVER LAND AN
AC TIN5 CAREER?

O.J. TRIAL WONDERINt?
ABOUT THE OQR;OME ...

IND.

~

ers' minds and it's where CliniOn is
weakest. His welfare plan, after
much pumping np, was late and
limp. His crime proposals were
ta._
·
· characterized (mostly uafairly) as
""IIIIi (iff::IN!Wl ftl&lt;!;r..'ll!i; pertaining to "midnigiJI basket- ·
'ball." A few weeks ago he said
sometbjng mildly realistic .about
!lffumative action ("We sbonldn 't
be defending things we can't
defend.;."), but new signals from
the White House indicate one more
folderoo to the liberals. Moreover,
for many voters, CliDIOn bas come
to personify the permissiveness of
1960s social liberalism.
Is there a remedy for Clinton?
Sure. Cause a recession, blame it
. on the Republican Congress, say
the most important problem is "the
-economy, stupid," and nm on il
. Ben Wattenberg, a senior .fel·
low at tbe Amerlc:an Enterprise
Institute, Is the host of tbe weekly
public tefevlslon · program,
"Thhik Tank.''
(For Information on how lo
communicate electronically with
this columnist alid others, conlad America Online by calllnt! 1·
1100-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

WILL KATO KAEUN

ARE WATcHINS THE

• ""-

..

Voinovich •.~ontlnuetJ rrom pag•1

thing wrong and ba4 cooperated the Rev. Steven Dorsey, pastor of
with the court completely through- the Trinity United Methodist
out the case.
Church, of which Holland is a
Holliday, who is filling in for member.
Judge O.C. "Hobby" Spauld•l\ll
"I am deeply disappointed by
while be is out of town, saod tb~ the sentence," Dorsey said . "I
law says not 10 do what was done. believe there is no finer man He said ibis is another case of a kind, considerate and with more
public official disallpointing the integrity- than Russell Holland."
public. Hoihday saod sometbmg
According 10 Dorsey, the judge
bad to be done to set a deterrent to · characterizing Holland with natnes
keep it from happening again.
like Barron and Moore was a misThe judge compared Holland's representation of Ibis episode.
"Russell Holland's every
case to crimes· committed by forthought
bas always been for the citmer West Virginia governors
izens
of
this community, not himWally Barron and Arch Moore ,
self,"
Dorsey
said. "I am fully supwbo were convicted of crimes and
portive
of
bim
."
·
sentenced to prison . .
Holliday granted a stay in the
Stein argued that Holland's case
did not compare to Barron or execution of the sentence until 9
a.m. Monday, at which time HolMoore.
Several peopl.e were in allen- land must report 10 jail.
Stein said be will file a motion ·
dance at the sentencing to show
for
'reconsideration of the sentence.
their suppon for Holland. including

MICH.

rcent Sic tranSit gloria missiles.
· doing ratb
Well, maybe . .\nd maybe not. pe
The eco~omr Is
. er
There were 'our "takings" of the
well.
This
SJtuaUon,
depending
on
''
question from late 199 I to late
1992. Two of these showed eco- whom you're talking ID, is JefCJred
nomic issues in rust place. Two of · to as either "the Clinton Recovu
b
them showed social issues in rust ery," "the Bush Recovery" or
8 en IJI~
nSu'en. erg
place. The average for economic "what usually happens after a
so the
. improved, and conseauentl Y dimi n-. was 40 percent. The average for recession."
ts mere 18And
pe-nt
avera
·economy
ge
'shed
''ble:_
''
reported
b
social
was
40
percent.
Such
results
ge
a
·I
as a .. o m,.
Y
f
.
The social issues are king of· the
only 23 percent of respondents. are o ten called a Ue.
biD, with a rating of61 percent.
The Cold War bad ended. Even
Alas, poor George Bus b. He
No wonder. What domlnajes the
with a ripple of concern about may well have believed that it was political dialogue tbese days? WeiKuwait in 1991, the average read- all about ''jobs, jobs. jobs." He fare. Crime. Racial preference.
ing for foreign affairs bad chopped barely raised the social issues in his
10 14 percent Crime started going general election campaign . So
These are social issues, 6ire-aaclcer
·
issues. ft Pres
up, an d tb e soc1·a1 1ssues
move d frightened was be by the nasty way issues,· legitimate
·
~
iniD first place, with 43 percent.
the media spun the conservative
ThiS IS not
PY news a
·
·
d
f
1
·
Houston
Republican
coovention,
be
ident
Clinton.
mocrats
always
Cons1 er nex.t a asc naung
fi
tb soc'all
:J
"f e "1 ssues
h
. moment, tb e run-up
to the 1992 · hardly menu'oned cnme· , welfare or want to messe
· tb
d B' ll Cll
race preference, let alone gays in and run on
at cats vs . t e
I
.e ecuon at ma e 1
nton th
·u
B sh
..
.. "slr!lggling middle class." Repubpresident. What ntrned out 1D be a
e nu tary. 0 · lllll on bUsl
Jicans have made a successful
rather modest recession was slowly He said Ointon was a "bozo" who
beginning to bead north, But dial's waffled so much be ate at "tbe career ofpayin~ auentinn- somenot what was headlined. The neon warne bouse." Bush lost
times demagogocally, often seriouspronouncemcnls said that the three
Comes DOW. There have been iy - tl)'lbe perceived eroding
fabric. gets the'GOP nOOiinabiggest issues were ''jobs, jobs, six takings of the survey since · social
Whoever
jobs," and that America's No. I November of 1993. The· foreign
'II
·
problem was "the economy, · affairs issue bas sunk without a lion for 1996 WI not Ignore the
trace
f
social issues as George Bush did.
Stupid."
-an average score 0 001Y 3 , Quite to the contrary. It's on vot-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Sentenced..•eontlnued rrom pag•1

OHIO Weather

•

Social ins~cu'rity _ is No. 1
What do you thlnlt is the m011
important problem faeina this
country today? Here are your
choices: I) economic issues, 2)
social issues, 3) foreign affairs.
That is the question and those
are the choices offered by tbe
Washington Post/ABC News Poll
on 36 separate occasions since
1981. The historical series, just
pubUsbed, paints a picture of recent
American political and social history - and potential trouble for President CliniDD.
In the first part of the '80s
(1981-1986), the economic issues
were ·way ahead: An average of 56
percent of the public said that's
what was troubling them most.
Mter all, there had been a sharp
recession ln.1981 and it took several years to recoup and get back on
an ascendant track. The Cold War
was still going on and the issue of
foreigQ affairs was in second place,
with an average response of 16 percent. In dead last p~. with an 8
percent averag!, were tbe "social
Issues." In the early '80s, just

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�•

•

Sports

:Thursday, March 30, 1995

The Daily Sentinel

~Players'
.,.

Thursday, March 30, 1995
Pa

·~-Labor StOppage

union board votes unanimously to end strike ,
tO end if arbitratiOn

the ~titioo by the Nat;ooa_l I;abot
Relauons Board for a prelimmary
injunction against owners. The
NLRB bas accused tbc:m of Ulepl·
Scbilling thinks the union's new ly changing the terms of the
offer will cont.liin a tax of 30 per- expired collective ~argaining
cent with a threshold of $49 million agreement before an tmpasse in
or $50 million . That would bave bargaining.
caused six teams to pay a tax in
The uni~n·s executive board
1994, five more than the players' voted unarumo~ly Wednes~y ~
previous plan but five less than the end the 7 1/2-montb stnke 1f
Ownellf' proposal.
S oto~ayor issues an inj_unction
"We'D find out bow saious the restonng S!IIB;rY arbitration and
owners are when we make our · free -agent btdding.
counterproposal," Bobby Bonilla
''If the prior terms and condiof the New York Mets said after lions of employme~t. are ~estored
the union's executive board con- effectively by the IDJUncuon, the
cluded its two-day meeting.
. players will end the strike and
U.S . District Judge Sonia return to worlc," union bead DonSotomayor bas schedu~ a
aid Febr said. .
for Friday - just two days before .
Owners planned a conference
the scheduled se'ason. opener - 011 call for today to approve the use !X
replacement players. If players do ·
end the slrilce, owners could lock
them out. But that possibility is

b""" •

6..

. In the NIT title game,

{ind uee-agent lu'dlng feStOred

.Virginia Tech edges Marquette 65-64

By RONALD BLuM.
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
ilrllce talks resume tooigbt, a day
before a federal judge bolds
jog on whetbcr 10 issue an injunc\k&gt;D that would end the walkout.
· " I'll be coming in," acting
~ommissioner Bud Selig said by
telephone from Milwaukee late
)Vedoesday night. "It's centative;
"f'C have to flfDI it up in the mornmg. But I'm sure I'll be coming."
. Philadelphia Pbillies pitcher
~urt Schilling said be thought the
union will move toward the posilion of the owners, wbo claimed in
fuurt papers flied Wednesday the
~ !w cost them $700 million.

-By RICK WARNER

NEW YORK (AP) - Overtime
in the NIT championship game
·seems tD bring out the best in Virginia Tech.
· · In 1973, lbe Hokies beat Notre
:Dame fo r the title on Bobby
-S teve ns' jumper at the buzzer in
·overtime.
On Wednesday nigh~ Tech won
its second NIT when Shawn Smith
.made two free throws with less
than a second left in overtime for a
65 -64 victory over Marquette.
. " I figured if I miSsed them I'd
take the blame and if I made !hem,
:I'd be a hero," said Smith, voted
lhe tournament MVP following hiS
24-poinl. 12-rebo und performance
in the tina!.
Smith, only a 67-percent shooter
fr om the line, made 10 of 12
, against Marquetle. However, the
.only one s that Tech fans will
-remember came aftef Smith was
fouled by Faisal Abraham as be ·
. wen I up for a shot under llie basket
.wi lh seven-tenths of a second
remaining.

After Smith made his fust Cree
throw lo tie the game, Marqueue
called a timeout to make him think
about the next one. But Smith came
out and calmly sank the second
shot.
"He had to step to lbe line and
make lbem, ·and he did justlbat,"
said Marquette coach Milce Deane.
Looking for a miracle basket,
Marquette then inbounded lbe ball
10 Anlbony Pieper just across midcoun, but he couldn't get a shot off
before lbe buzzer sounded.
It was Tech's second victory
over Marquetle this season. The
Hokies (25-10) won lbe fust meet·
ing in Milwaukee, 57-54, on Jan.
17.
Both teams shot only 38 percent, but Tech was much more
accurate from the line. The Holdes
made 20 of 26 free throws, while
Marquette missed 10 of 16.
"This was one of the ugliest
games I've ever seen," Tech coach
Bill Foster said. "In a way. il typifics our season. We were able to
hang tigh~ keep it close and do it at

the end.'·.

Marquette. which won the NIT
in 1970, finished 21-12.
• ''It was disappointing lbe way
we lost. We're ju.st going lo come
back stronger next year," freshman
guard Aaron Hutchins said.
Hutchins scored the farsl basket
of overtime to put Marquette abead
59-57, but Tech scored six straight
points to take a 63-59lead.
Marquette countered wilb a 5.{)
run, moving ahead 64-63.on adriving layup by Pieper wilb 18 seconds left. Tech ran down lbe clock
and Smith was fouled after malting
a pump fake near the basket.
Deane didn 't complain about lbe
call.
"I thought we fouled them," be
said. "It was a gutsy can to make
"
Shawn Good had 14 ppints for
the Hokies . Hutchins and Tony
Miller scored 15 points each for
Marqueue, while Amal McCaskill
bad 13 points and 15 rebounds.
Tech used only seven players,
all underclassmen.

'bear-

"Next year, hopefully this wik
will provide a sllringboanl for us,"
Foster said. "We told our kids
what a glea! opportunity Ibis could
be and they bought into it"
Trailing by 10 points early in
ue second half, Virginia Tech ratlied to tie it at 55 on Smith's f"ree
!brow wilb I:59 remaining in regulalloo.
After Roney Eford's foul sbot
put Marquette up 56-55, Tech took
its first lead of the second half on
two free throws by Good with 49
seconds left.
·
Hutchins made one of two from
the line to lie it at 57 with 33 seeonds remaining. Tech then set up
for a possible game-winner, but
Myron Gulliory missed a driving
shot in the lane. Marquette got the
rebound, and Pieper's balfcourt
shot bounced off the front of the
rim as lime expired .
· In the consolation game, Dan
Earl and John Amaec'h! each scored
17 points to lead Penn State over
Canisius 66-62.

•

By FRANK BAKER
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - .
Female college athletes won a
major victory wben a judge found
Drown University discriminates
agai nst them, but some fear the
. · dc.cision could spell doom for some
male athletes and their sports.
In his ruling Wednesday, U.S.
. District Judge Raymond Pettine
· found even though Brown offers an
, equal number of sports for tnen and
; wome n, I he school favors men
:.. beca use the teams it chooses 10
. . field have m&lt;_lfe spots for them.
·Thai means a disproportionately
. hi gher percentage at men have the
, 'opportunity to plily spllrts, he said.
.. Brown plans to appeal. Exeeu• live vice president Robert Reichley
warned that if the decision is
· upheld some schools may have to

cui spots for male athletes . Foot- counsel for the female athletes who
ball, which has by far the largest sued.Brown, 'said at schools where
number of male athletes at most football produces a large profit
schools, could feel the brunt, be some of the money can be put aside
said . .
to give more opportunities to .
"Women do not have a compa- women.
rable program in which you have
She also said that at most
100, 120 or more in some cases, schools - including Brown players, as you do in football," be football is the biggest money-lossaid. ," ... What we ought to do .is ing sport. If schools can afford to
eliminate the entire football pro- fund losing football programs, !hey
gram in the United States at the should be able to find money to
collegiate level. We could do this comply with Pettine's decision. she
and everyone would be in compli- said.
-ance.''
" ·
Labinger noted that in 1989-90,
He said at schools where the the year before Brown dropped
.football program makes enough four varsity sports to save $70,000,
money to support other progr.ims •. it spent $250,000 to buy out the
eliminating the team wo~1:t be Aa .contracts of its football coach and
consideration. That meads other his staff and bought out the consports could be cut.
tract of the men's soccer coach for
· But Lynette Labinger, lead $60,000.

, · Junior Gary Stanley scauered
) ix hits and struck out nine and
walked only three in leading the
Meigs Marauders, playing their
ieas&lt;in opener, to a 7-2 victory over
Nelsonville in Tri-Valley Conference baseball action Wednesday
evening._
. Meigs opened up the scoring in
the first inning on back-to' back
doubles by Paul Pullins and Gary
Stanley. Cass Cleland led off the
second inning with a ·single and
stole second. He scored one batter
,later on a Buckeye enor 10 make it
a 2-0 Meigs lead.
The Marauders increased tbe
lead to 5-0 in the fourth inning. The
10aroon and gold plated lbree runs
in the inning, Chad Burton and
· ·Bradley Whitlatch both singled and
.. tater scored on a double by Brett
. ~ Hanson . Hanson later scored on a ·

•

' :These are policy decisions,"
she said. "Yes, if an institution
says 'We're not going to spend
another dollar on sports before we
add money lo our library' lben lbey
may have to cu~ but they can't say
, that if they spend $800,000 a ~
on a football program that loses
money and another $250,000 to
buy out football contracts."
In his ruling, Pelline found
Brown fails to meet stipulations in
Title IX, the 1972 federal law prohibiting. gender discrimination at
schools that receive federal funds.
Title IX requires a school to
have a ''substantially proportion- .
ate" ratio or female to male athletes; expand its athletics to meet
women's interests and abilities; and
maintain a program that "fully and
effectively" -meets the interest and

Scoreboard
Basketball

Hockey

NBA standings

NHL standings

•:ASTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE

A.danllc Di?llion
'li L I'd.

.Iii!

1-New Yori: .......... .45 24 .652
Miami .................... 28 43 .394
Bolio !I ......... .... .. .... 27 42 .391

New Jmey ............ 27 43
Pttiladelphia ........... J9 .SO

.]86
.271

6.5
24.5
24.5

Wa&amp;hlngton ......... .18 51

.261

33,5'

Ium

• ·Orlando ..............52

18

,743

x-I!Kiiana ........ ......4.5

25 :643

CLEVEI-'NO ...... 38
lllicaRO .............. .37
AUanta ................... l-4
Milwaut.ee ............. 27
Detroit.. .. ... .. ......... 25 '

31
33
35
43
45

x-Olarlotte ............. 42 27 .609
.Sll
. ~29

.493
.)86
.357

2S
32.5

2.5
6.S
I
10.5
18
20

WESTERN CONFERENCE

x-U!Ah .................... 52
Hou,ton ....... ..........41
Denver ......... . . ..... .33

18

I'd.

.ns

.Iii!

19
28
36

.732
.594
.478

10
18

Dallas ..... ............... JO

37

.448

20

MiUDC$0ta .............. J9

51

.271

32.5

L

'li L I Ell. lil! Ia
4 38 I04 92

Ium

Philadelphia ...... 17 11
WahillfiOD ...... 13 12
New Jcney ....... 13 ll
Aorlda .............. 13 16
N.Y. Raqen .... 13 15
T~q~~ Bay ....... 12 17
N.Y. blanderl ... 10 17

Nartheut DI•LIIon
~- .............. 22 7 3 '47
Plt1oborah ......... 22 9 2 46
BOlton .............. 16 12 2 .34
Buffalo.............. 1ll2 .5 31
Hortrord ............ 1314 l 31
Montreal ........... 11 IS S 'Il
Otta1n .............. 4 22 4 12

81 75
92 89
12 90
8l 82
8l 00
78 101

129 14
t33 t 07
92 75
74 7..
IS 90
19 102
6~ 105

s

Cmlral DWWoa

ll: L I Ell. lil! GA

Ium

Detroit .............. 21 7
Chicqo ............ 19 10
Sl. Louis ........... II 10
Tomato .............. IS I2
Dallu ................ 1·1 14
WillDipcJ .......... 9 17

2
2
2
6
S
S

44
40
38
l6
27
23

116 61
Ill 75
110 112
92 92
91 82
91 117

.710
.710
.611
.529
.493

P~~eUk

6
12.5
15

.319

21

.197

36

x·dinched playoff berth

DI...Uia.

Calpry ............. IS 13
t.o. Aaaelea ...... II 15
Vucouver ........ IO 13
EdJDJ.aCoo ......... l216
Sao J01e ............ 12 Hi
Anlheim .......... 8 18

S lS lOS 94
6 28 102 121
a 28 92· 102
3 27 19 loti
2 26 77 106
4f 20 76 112

Wednesday's scores

Wednesday's scores
Philadelphia 99, Ot..lotte Ill
M iami 101, Washington 97

New York 107, Detroit 97

indiana 107, CLEVELAND 96
San AntoDio 107, L.A . Laim 14
· ~canle 109, Minneso ta 92

Tonight's games
Portland 11 New Jeney, 7:30p.m.
Dallu a1 Oarlotte, 7:30,.m.
Atl1n1111 at Golden State, p.m.
Boaton II CbicaJO, 8:30p.m
'
Uwaton It L.A. Clippen, 10: 10 p.m.
~ni l If. Sacramento, IO: JO p.m.

Frklay's games
Miami at Botton, 7:30 p.m.
Oall1111111l New York, 7:30p.m
Portland at Ptu!adelphia, 1:30 p.m
Wa1hinatoa al CLEVELAND. 7:30
p.m.
.
.
Denver &amp;IID!Uana, 7:30p.m.
Orlando a Utah, 8 p.m.
Milwaukee at SIUI Antonio, 1:30 p.m.
MiruJetOtl at~~ . 9p.m.
Sacramento atl tattle, 10 p.m.
Atla.Dta at LA: Laken, 10:30 p.m.

.

New Jersey 4, Ottawa 2
Wuhinaton4, Tampa Bay 2
Hartford 4, Aorida 4 (tie)
·St l.oult 3, ChiCI~Q 1
VltiCOuver 5, 1..CI Aa1J.els '2

Friday's games .

Hartford at T~a Bay, 7:30 p.m

Quebec at Wutunpm, 1 p.m.

Toto nto at Chicago,ll:30 p.m.
Sao Joae at St. U:luia, 1:30 p.m.
Calaary Ill Edmonton. 9:30p.m.
Anllil eim at Vancouver. 10:30 p.m.

Transactions

PI1TSBURGH PIRATES: AJ1ig11ed
Erik Johuoa, ahorlltop, to Charlotte Q(
lhe Soulhem Uague.
, SAN DIEGO PADRES: Sisaed Cory
Sayder, infielder-outfielder, to awntract
with Laa Veau of the Pacific Coast

t.ea..,..

FootboU

Nadon .. F.at~iall Le•ue
NR. PROPERTIES : Named Howard
Hand!CI' vice preaJdem or markdlng.
DENVER BRONCOS: Aareed to
tcrmt with Mib Lodilh, de(eru:iYe: tackle,
on a two-year colltBCt.
KANSAS CITY C1DEFS: Signed Rich
Oaonon, quarterback, to • rwo-year conln&lt;l

MIAMI DOLPH!NS oTroded Kollh
Jackion, li&amp;ht end, and • 199S fourthroUJid draft picll: to the Green Bay Paclcm
Cor • 199S aerood-round cbfl pick.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS ! Resipcd Aaron Jo oe~, defen1ive end.
RAMS : AnooWlc:ed that they mac:hed
a.n otrtt lheet for Jeaaie Heater, wide re·
ceiYer, rrom the Sellt.lc Scaha'lt't.l. Siped
· Yonnie Jacboo , tight end.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Slfil aed
David Pool and Brian Allred, corllerbackl, and Buil Proctor, linebacker.
SAN FR.ANOSCO 49ERS: Slped 1u·
nior bryant, defenaive end, 10d Kirk
Scnfford, orfeoaive tackle.

1

N•do•allloekq Le•ue
BOSTON BRUINS : Recalled John
Blue, aoattender, &amp;om Providence of the
Amerkau Hockey League.
BUFFALO SABR-ES: Reauiaoed
Mite Bavll, ril)\1 win&amp;, from Rodtelter
of the America~~ Hockey ta&amp;ue to South
CuoUtUI or the Easl Coaat Hoc:tey
Leaaue. Returned Scott Thomu, rlaht
win&amp;. to Rodleaer of the Amerleaa Hoek-

'' t.eoaue.

· ·

EDMONTON OILERS : Returned
Ralph latnnuoYo, riaht wi.DJ, &amp;Dd Petu
White, ceoter, to Cape Breton of the
American Hockey lngue. ·
HARTFORD WHALERS: Returaed
Kevin Smyth, len win.J. to Spriaafleld of
the American Hockey Leque.
OTTAWA SENATORS : Recalled
o-rca Rumble, defeonJTaD, ud t.ticbel
Picard aad SteYe Luouche, forwardt,
from Prl.lce Bdw•d hlaad of the Ameri·'" Hocuy ~.uau~
PITI'SBURGll I'ENOUINSo Rdwaod
Patrick Lallme, &amp;oaltender, to OeYelaJld
ol the hteraatloaal Hockey Leaaue. •
Loaned Steve Bancroft, defeDJCmu., to
St . John' • of the Ameri caQ Hoc:key

·

TuEBEC NORDIQUES : Recalled
Garth Snow, ~~:oalteDdq, from Cornwall of

Sunday 7 p.m.
Aptil 2;,9, 23, 30, 1995
:/

at Old 'American Legion Hall
on South Fourth Ave., Middleport

ahilities.of female students.
"At Brown, far more male athletes are being supported at the university-funded varsity level than
are . female athletes, and thus.
women receive less benefit from
their intercollegiate varsity program as a whole than do men,"
Pettine wrote.
, He gave Brown 120 days to
come up with a plan to comply and
offered some suggestions.
"It may eliminate the athletic
. program altogether, it may elevate
or create the requisite number of
women's positions, it may demote
or eliminate the requisite number
of men's positions Or it may imple- ·
ment a combination of these reme. dies," he wrote.
Reichley said · Brown bas
worked h3rd 10 make itS women. s
sports program among the best in
the country.
"Despite a host of disagreements over legal and s1atistical
issues, all parties in this case including the plaintiffs' own attarneys - have agreed on one point:
Brown's program of athletics for
women is indisputably one or the
nation's largest and best," Reichley said.
''We believe we have obeyed
the letter and spirit of the ·law and
we are proud of the women's athletics program we have established
at Brown."
Labinger said since Brown is
better than most, it won't have to
work as hard to comply with Title

IX.

T!)ROI'ITO MAPLE lt!APSo. Reu·
• ia:~ed Di1on Wud, ten win&amp;, from St .
John"I of the Amedcu. Hockey l...eape to
Detroit of the laternalioaal Hockey
Leape. Reca.lled. Darby Hendricklon , left
wing, and Ken lkiiJller, len wloa. from
Sl. Joh.a'a.
VANCOtNER CANUC~S o Aarud
to tern with Dave Bab~h. delUKman.
ooa contnct el~loo.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS: Returned Jdr Nelson, center; Joha Slaacy,
ddeDHI'Illll; ud Pill PeKe, rlaht wlna. to
PMiaqd of the American Hockey Leque.

"Their argument is, 'We're better than everyone else, don't pick
on us,"' ·she said. "Being ·better
does not mean they're in compliance. It means others have to take a
look at what they're doing."
Brown offers an equal number
of men's and wanen's sports - I 6
- but many more men than
women participate.

WHAT IS THE HOLY GHOST?
A free, one hour, in your home, Bible
Study will give you insight in the
scripture concerning the Holy Ghost.
'
Call 992-4178 leave name and phone
number after pterecorded message.

BaseboU

Come &amp; Be Fed Witli
Rev. Michael Pangia

·

SHOT DENIAL Is the objective of lbe moment for Virginia Tech's
Shawn Smith (right), who trleo to keep Marquette's Tony MUter from
scoring 'In the second halt of Wedn.eoday night's NIT cbamplonsblp
game In New York. Smith 11111de two clutch free throJ¥s with Jess than
a second len. In overtl!ne to seal the Hokleo' one·polnt win. (AP)
·

tho Am&lt;ri&lt;lll Ho&lt;keyl..eque.

Amtric• Lt._ue

Spiritually Thirty &amp; Hungry?

~

pitcher.

Hockey
USA HOCKEY: Named WiiCOIIIill
coach Jerr Saua- coacb of th111 199S U.S.
National Team.

Tonight's games
Ottawa Ill Butralo, 7:30p.m.
Boaton at N.Y. hl.anden, 7:30p.m.
Quebec at N.Y. Ransrn. 7:30 p.m
New Jeney at J:1biladclphla, 7:30p.m.
Dallu at Detrott, 7:30p.m.
Wianipei It Anaheim. 10:)() p.m

.

.

N.a~n.. I...pe
CINCINNATI REDS: Added Pete Ma·
a:~e , pitcher. Acquired Howard Furner,
patcher, from the Montreal E1poa for ruture couideratioDI. Releued Chril Reed,

1
•

Paclnc: Ohoi.Jion

x-Phocoix ..... ... ......49 20
x-Seatlle .................49 20
L.A. l..l..tm ............ 43 26
Portland ................. 36 32
Sacramento ............ 34 35
Golden Sllte ..... _. .. 22 47
L.A. Cli ppen ......... l4 S7

33
32
4 30
3 29
2 26
4 24
1
6

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Mldwul Division

:rum
'li
x-San Antonio ....... SO

Allandc DIYblon

CLEVELAND INDIANS : Traded
Edpr Diu, infielder, 10 the Toro11to Blue
Jays ror ruture considcnti~;ull .
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Releaaed
Pat Bailey ·III.Dd Joe Siwa, catchers.
TEXAS RANOERS : Releued Dan .
Peltier. outnelder. Auianed David Bai.De
pitc her, to Charlotte of the Florida Stat.~
Leape. Traded Erlk JobnJoo; ahor1a.top,
to Pltuburgh for a player to be namc:&lt;l

GENERAL TIRE SALES
C:0\11'1 TEH TIHE B\1.\\CI\C;
Hours M·F 8-5 Sat. 8-12
Middleport, Ohio 45760

BATTERIES
STRUTS
SHOCKS
TIRES

hearing

~eigs diamondmen beat
~N-V 7-2 in season opener

.B~O':ttiJ'niversity found guilty of gender bias

••

Our Line Up:
,,,
I

~C!C!bok

, , -·

•

-~
•

•

"
Meigs broke open a close game
.• in the third inning with four runs eo
· route to a 8-1 win over Ne,tsonvilleYork.
Meigs, playing its season open;r·er, jumped out on top in the fust
~ inning when shortstop Bobbie
: Butcher slammed a home run to
: ·give Meigs a 1.{) lead
.. · In the third inning allj:r one was
: out, the Marauders used consecti-.
r. : live one-out singles by Emily Fact'
: ler. Amber Blackwell and Butcher.
: Bi!eher' s single in a run to make it
~2-0 advantage. Billie Butcher
I then slammed a run scoring double
: ;,an&lt;~ one out later Stephanie Stewan
l "'Cleared the bases with a ttiple.
• · Meigs made it a 7-0 contest in
: the fifth inning on a Bobbie Butch: er single, a fielder's choice and
: Stewart's single.
•
• ·After the Buckeyes scored a run
: in the sixth inning without the ben; ,:fit of a bit, Meigs closed out the

• runs in the fust inning, !ben added
: seven in the second en route to a
: 12-5 Tri-Valley Conference base: ball victory over the Ewltern Eagles
• Wednesday evening.
: Having graduated much of the
from last .year, Eastern (0-1)
: is in a rebuilding season. Eastern
· • coach Dan Thomas said, "We've
:got a very young team, especially
:in the pitching ranks. We need to
: get some varsity experience on the
~ mound. Our bitting overall bas
: come around and will improve
. even more.
: Eastern bitters were Michael
• Smith, Cbris Bailey and Steve
"burs~ all of whom had two hits in
~ - a 2-4 nigbt. Teammates Eddie
'
'

:team

.

.,.,...
SHOE PLACE

992-5627

NOTICE

On Saturday, April 1, 1995, from ~:00 a.m. until 12:00
noon, Leading Creek Conservancy District wil,l b~
connecting. a replacement line (across SOCCo's longwaU
miner panel) into the existing li11e on Red hill Road . Til
complete .this instal~ation, the District's treatment planS
·pumps and the 250,000 gallon tank on Red Hill Road will
be out of service. Customers.pn the following roads will
have lillie or no water pressuti!Jluring this time : SR 121
(between Mine #1 and Painter Ridge), Red Hill, Briar Ridg~
(Danville side), Painter Ridge, ' Price Strong, Fairplay,
Molehan, CR 1, CR 1A, Point Rock, North Run, Laurel, and
Sisson Roads.
All customers east of Danville on SR 325, SR 124, SR 7~
.SR 143, SR 684, and all county &amp; township roads adjacen~
to these slate roads will be supplied by the District's 20,000
gallon tank on Horner Hill. This tank will provide orily
limited volume of water, therefore the Districl urges all
customers to prepare for this outage on Fri~ay evening. and
to conserve water on Satur~ay. After service is restored, the
District's employees will be repressurizing and flushing all
lines, so customers can expect some discoloration for the
next few days. After setvice is restored, all customers
should boil all water used for liuman consumption for 3
minutes until further notice.
Those customers at lower elevations may not experience
any significant changes in their, water pressure during this
time, ~owever please be considerate of those on the higher
elevllttons and use water only when absolutely necessary.,
Leading Creek Conservancy District

..

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Eric Hill and Ryan Hawley
each singled.
For Alexander, Mace had a double and single, Mike Wolfe a double, Ross, Rolston and Mansfield
each bad singles, while Chapman
three walks.
J:lailey suffered the loss fa- Ewltern with relief help fr9m Eddie
Friend in lbe !bird. They combined
for two strikeouts and seven walks.
Wolfe gained the win with ·relief
from Phillips. They combined for
five bits and lbree walks.
Eastern is to finish Monday's ·
suspended game with Belpre today. ·
Inning totals
Alexander: 57~12-6-2
Ewltern: 010-31 -5-9-3
WP-Wolfe
LP-Bailey

'

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team,

to draw a
a feasibility committee determined, the city would
have to build an arena fust.
Arlene Shoemaker, oommission
president, said formation of tbe
alliance is an important step.
·
"We have the ability," she said
in a statement. ''Now we have the
public-private partnership and the
will needed to identify the choices
we bave as a community."
· Obio State University already
bas announced it will build a
21,000-seat basketball arena that
could be ready by 1998. ·

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convert to fully 10dexed APR The ' Bank Pnme Rate" IS based on the Prime Rate as published by 111e Board of Governors or the Federal Reserve System
· for the week includ1ng th~ 15th day of th~ ~:mor montn Tne "Bank Pnme Rate " as of March t . 1995 was 9 00% Of1er valid 'On lines of $·10.000 or more . The·
fully indexed APJ=i on var1able-rate li nes w•th an 80% loan-to· ...alue rauo as ot Marcn 1, 1995 wa~ 10 50% APR tor lines ol $50.000.or more: 11 .00% APR
for lines of $20,CXXJ to $49,999. and 11 50% APR on lines of $10,000 to $19,999 The APR on variable-rAte l1r-lOS may 1ncrease or decrea se. not to B)(ceed
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whl\e supp!ies last One Ba~ One Match and Win Sweepstakes Check per person per day Off iCial rules posled at paruc•patlng Bank One locations. Open to u.S. tegai
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WAGNER HARDWARE
;•.

Columbus area officials form
alliance to build new arena

·dollar
closing
costs•

prime•

BEST lit ItHUI
LATEX SEMI PI !ISS

1 ~- $131

SIXTH STREET

that was involved in an accideot in
Plant City, according to police Lt.
Carl Rupp. The driver of the other
car suffered a minor injury.
"He's off the replaca~~~:nt 1e1111
and we'll let the judicial system
handle the rest.'' general Jlliiii8IICf
Jim Bowden said.
Farmer. 28, appeared in sill
games for the Expos in 1990.
The Reds might make one mtR
roster move before breaking camp
today and beading for Cincinnati.

byone.

summer at

·-$ 199 :=:.. :::.= $1499
BESTIRENGR
UTUSJAII

'

minor-lea~ue pitcher Pete Magre
and acquiring pitcher Howard
Farmer from Montreal for future
coosiderations.
Farmer took the place of pitcher
Chris Reed, who was kicked off the
replacement team Wednesday after .
being arrested overnight. Reed, 21,
of Huntington Beach, Calif. , is
charged with driving under the
inOueoce and leaving the scene of
an accident involving an injury.
Chris Reed was driving a car

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The city's quell to build a multizoo.
.
purpose arena gained an ally
· The Reds aren't sure wbo will Wednesday.
sing the ·national anthem. A mill- .
Franklin County commissioners
· tary officer from Wright-PatterSon
joined the mayor, council and busiAir Force Base performed it in ness leaders in an alliance to build
recent years, but the Department of an arena.
Defense won'.t allow participation
For more than a decade, Colt11n·
this year. It doesn't want to give bus has sought a professional
the appearance or choosing sides in sports team. The city, with a poputhe labor dispute.
lation .of about 630,000 ,people, is
Cincinnati put what might be the among the largest in the country
final touches on its replacement without a major-league team· But
roster Wednesday by add'ing

up

..

•

Z Visiting Alexander plated five

there ...
The plan could be scuttled if
slrikiog nu9ot leaguers get a court.
-injunction and return over the
weekend, or if an accommodation
is reached in the labor dispute.
· If neither happens, the Reds will
have an opener Monday afternoon
against Chicago with different·
players but all the usual hoopla,
including a downtown parade .
Roughly 47,000 tickets have been
sold for lbe opener.
The Reds have chosen Cecil
Jackson, the bead elephant keeper
at the Cincinnati Zoo, to throw the
ceremonial fU"St pitch. Jackson, 65,
trains Princess Schottzie, an elephant that Reds owner Marge
Schott acquired and donated to the

.O NE·derlulreasons
to get a home Btl .·
line.ofcredit are piling

:..Alexander hands Eastern
:• baseball team 12-5 loss
•

decmlsing.
arbitration under the expired deal.
W_hile teams wa~t the tax to
"I don't personally know
" We're de.fmitely on the same startm 1996andendm2000,playwhether there's 21 voteS there or planet," said Eugene Orza, the ers don't want the \&amp;X to Jut for ·
not," said Colorndo Ro&lt;tie• chair- union's No. 2 official. "We're more than lbree yean .
man Jerry McMorris, who is said even in the same continent."
"It's movement but it's very,
be's inclined to vote against a lock·
That left the owners' demand very l!Uie," free agent pi~ Ore!
out
•for a luxury tax as t.be primary He~~ said eX the OWDerS plan.
American League lawyer Bill obstacle, although the union also caUmg It " a baby step."
Sc~weitzer met in Baltimore with
objects to cbanges in the owners'
On Thursday, owners . ga~e
Ori?les owner Peter Angelos, who revenue-sharing plan and a~- Sotomayor a 38-p~ge b.r~ef 1n
agam refused to field a replacement a1 that teams who release an arb1- response to the NLRB s peunoa.
team. Tbe league 1s tbi-eatening 10 tralion-eligible player receive draft: '~f the_ ~ issues the ~~1mate the team forfeit any missed pick compensation if that player ed _mJUDC!i~, the brief said, lhe
"lJ!lacementgames.
signs with another team.
umon ... Will bave a compelliag
"1bere bas been mendon of the
Owners asked for a 50-percent reason to delay further serioua
potential penalties that can be luxury tax on the .~ons _uf pay-. negotiations until .IIJ:e Ia~ stunmer
assessed • Angelos s•id. • 'My rolls above $44 nultion, wh1ch was or early fall when IllS apm advanposition i~ that everything the Ori- 108 percent of the avemge lasl sea- tageous to slrilce the clubs."
olcs have doDe is in the best inter· son. The !Dlion proposed a 25-perAlthough teams haven't signed
ests of baseball. in the best interest cent tax on the portions ·above .133 any free agents since the union
of Cal Riplten's streak."
percent, which was $54.1 million ·ended its signing ban on Feb. 6,
In their latest proposal, owners last year. A tax plan at the level management's Player Relations
offered to teep basically intact the Schilling talked about would be at Committee rJaimed in the brief thll
system of free agency and salary 120-122 percent of lbe average.
the maric:et hadn't changed.
·

Huntington man hopes to .p itch for Reds in opener

fielders clioice.
Tbe Buckeyes (1-1) plated a pair By JOE KAY
of runs in the top of the fifth inning
PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) - If
on a pair a walks and a pair or sin- everything goes the way Rick Reed .
gles.
·
·
hopes, he'll !brow the second pioch
The Marauders l;losed out the of ·the season next Monday at
scoring in the bottom of the fifth on Riverfront Stadium.
a walk, a Buckeye error, a ground
The fust wiD come from an eleout and a pair of Nelsonville errors. phailt trainer.
Nelsonville loaded the bases
The Cincinnati Reds are moving
with oile out in the top of the sixth forward with preparations for an
inning oo three straight singles. But , opening day with replacements.
Stanley bore dnwn and picked up a They got their roster down to the
pair of strike outs to end lbe'threal.
32-player limit Wednesday and got
Hanson led lbe Marauders at the another good performance from
plate with a double. Richie Wams- their best pitcher.
ley, Pullins, Stanley, Burtoo, CleReed, 30. gave ur just three bits
land and Whitlatch all added sin- over six innings o a 3-2 victory
gles.
over St. Louis. That left tbe jourIDnlng totals
neyman with sensational spring
Meigs: 110-320-x = 7-7-?
nmnben - 35 strilceouts in 33 113
Nelsonville-York: 000-020.{) = 2- innings.
6-?
The only .thing that can come
. between him and the opening-day
start is a major development on
baseball's labor fioot.
"I'm having fun," said Reed, ·
who lives in Huntington, W.Va. "I
• J
can't sit around and wonder 'if.'
scoring in the botlom of their I'm having a lot IX fim.
inning. Ashley Roach singled and ·
"I'd love to pitch on opening
scored on a fiel&lt;lers choice off tbe day. I ll\'e two hours from Cinc.inbat of Jessica McElroy.
nati. I'm going to have family,
Meigs was led at the plate by friends and all kinds of people
Bobbie Butcher with the home run
and a pair of singles. Billie Butcher
·added a pair or doubles. Fackler
added a pair of singles, and BlackweU and Roach eacb a single. Coffey and Mickerson bad the only
Buckeye hits - hack-to-back singles in the seventh inning.
Billie Butcher started on the
mound for Meigs and pitclfed fiv~
innings, strildng out 13 and walting five . Fackler pitched the final
two innings giving up the two hits,
strildng out four and walking two
walks.
. lnnJnl{ totals
· ·
Meigs: 104.-021-x =8-1-0
Nelsonville-Yofk: 000,001-0 = 12. ?

"'Meigs girls down N-Y 8-1
:.in Marauders' first game

Peuine noted that during the
1993-94 academic year, there were
555 male athletes and 342 female
athletes. The pereentage of female
athletes was 38 percent that year;
while women accounted for 51 percent of the campus population.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Thursday, March 30,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page · 6 The Daily Sentinel

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'Worm-less' Spurs keep w1nn1ng·; Pacers down Cavaliers ...--

By BOB GREENE
Calbert Cheaney scored 23 for last 11 games and 18 of 22. Shawn ninlh loss in II games.
game.
AP Sports Writer
tbe BulleiS.
Bradliiy had I 0 points and IS
With New York leading 92-90
Pttan 107, Cavallen 96
The San Antonio Spurs no
76en 9!1, Hornets 81
rebounds for Philadelphia, which with 4:30 10 go, Davis scored lhe
Reggie Miller's three threelonger have lhe NBA •s top gn:cnClarence Wealherspoon scored oulrebounded Charlotte S4-28.
next five poinls 10 give lhe Knicks pointers sparked a IS-4 spurt. givLarry Johnson led Charlotte some brealhing room.
haired rebouoder. Nor lhe league's 28 poiniS and Sbarooe Wright and
ing Indiana the lead for good, and
besto131lged-hairedrebounder.
Dana Barros added 18 apiece as • wilh 22 poiniS.
Jobn Swks added 19 poiniS for be fmisbed with 22 points as the
Knlcks 107, Pistons IJ7,
What the Spurs do have is the . Philadelphia toppled the visiting
New York, wbile Delroit' s Allan Pacers extended their winning
league's hottest team, even without • HorneiS, wbo lost $tarting forward
Hubert Davis scored five c9n- Houston scored 32 and Grant Hill streak to five games overall and
th e h
i. JH cd Dennis Rodman Scott Burrell for the season wilb a secutive points in the final 4:30,
had 26 points, 12 rel;10unds and seven straight at Market Square
(a.k.a. "'lbe Worm'").
ruptured right Achilles tendon in and Patrick Ewing had 18 of his 28 nine assists. Hill missed his first Arena.
" I think a lot or people !bought the fU"St period.
.
points in lhe second half as visiting career triple-double when Oliver
The victory, combined witb
we would fall off our pace as soon
Jeff Grayer added 16 poiniS for New York snapped a two-game Miller missed a dunk late in the Charlotte's loss in Philadelphia,
a5 Dennis got hurt," forward Terry the 76ers, who had lost 10 of their losing slreak and handed DelrOit iiS
Cummings said. "But our greatest
asset and one we've had all season
is our depth. We have role players
who know what to do to be successful.
·
M SAL~DINO
Bulldogs, said "everyone's coming tant. Tulsa won lhe MissOuri Val- He was an assistant at .Virginia
"We' re a good team now, but By I~s. Ga (AP) _The fact back."
ley Conference title the past two Commonwealth for seven years,
we' U be even better when Dennis that the University of Georgia is
"Some of the ·guys were upset seasons. His team was 23-8 in · and spent three years at South Carcomes back."
known predominantly as a football early because they bated to see 1993-94 and 24-8 this season.
olina and two at Kentucky before
· Rodman, noted for his dyed hair school didn't deter Tubby Smith coach Durham fued, but it's going
Smith·, a. native of rural. Scot- going to Tulsa.
, , almost as much as his rebounding from talcing the basketball job with to be all right,' ' said Strong , land, Md., played at High Point
Durham, S7, bad a 298-216'
slciU, separated his right shoulder in . the Bulldogs.
reauited by Smith when be was in (N.C.) College, an NAIA school.. record at Georgia and was 230-95
a motorcycle accident. Since bis
Smith, who guided Tulsa 10 the bigb school and Smith was an
in 12 seasons at Florida State.
injury , the Spurs have won si~ NCAA Sweet 16 lhe past two sea- assistant at Kentucky. "We got a
:straight, running their season-best sons, wm be the rtrst black bead great coach and everybody is going
· streak to nine consecutive tri • coach at Georgia.
. to be happy. I'm ready 10 get start•
•
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6
: flllllpbs. San Antonio has won 28 of
Smith, 43, succeeds Hugh ed."
ea~
its last 32 games, and is 43-9 .since Durham,
who was fired 10 days
In addition to Strong, other
Dec. 10. Overall, the Spurs have earlier after 17 years at the Athens starters returning include Anderson ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- National Football League have
the best record in the Midwest school.
al)d guards Pertha Robinson and Ohio State football coach John lured six B~ckeye players in the
Division at50-18.
Georgia albletic director Vince Katu Davis.
Cooper is suggesting that players last four years, including three this
; "Getting the best record is defi- Dooley said Wednesday that Smith
Smith, whose given name is who jump to the NFL before fmish- year.
nitely on our minds," San AniODio agreed to a si~-year contract at · Orlando, was knicknamed
ing school - or the. professional
"I'm just trying to stop the
i:enter David Robinson said. "You $115,000 per year.
"Tubby" by his molher because of team they sign with - make resti- bleeding, so to speak," Cooper
can't conlrOI things like injuries or
With a compensation package his fondness for the bathtub .
said. "We've been burt as bad if
motorcycle accideniS, but we have that includes basketball camps, a "Coming from a family of 17 kids, tution 10 the university.
Arid
Cpoper
said
Wednesday
be
not worse than any program in .th\:
good chance. We just have to tennis shoe conlract and tele.vision you don't get a chance to get in the
counlry
with players leaving early,
thought.
$100,000
would
be
a
nice
Continue to keep things going.''
and radio shows, Smith's annual tub very often," be said with a !igure.
"I'm
just lbrowing up the red
· On Wednesday, Robinson income is expected to be around laugh.
Cooper
e~pressed
his
fruslraflag
and
sayin~ , 'Hey guys.
scored a game-bigb 3Q poiniS and $500,000..
Smith was 79-43 in four seasons tions during Obio State's spring Enough is enougb. "
erabbed' 16 rebounds to direct the
He said be bad no problem with · at Tulsa, his first bead-coaching
Spurs' I07-84 viciOry over the Los Georgia's reputapon as a football position after 12 years as an assis- practice preview. The big bucks · Cooper proposed that a player
associated with playing in the who leaves for the NFL draft
Angeles Lakers.
.
school. The BuUdogs bad finisbed
: "The winnillg streak is not on in th.e top 20 in eight of the past 15
our minds," Sari Antonio coach years in The Associated Press ftnaJ
Bob Hill said. "We're just ttying poU, including No. I in 1980.
(0 win one game at a time. We're
"Everything at Georgia is footill great shape right now."
ball, football, football,'' forward
: In other games Wednesday, it Shandon Anderson said when
~as Philadelphia 99, Charlotte 81;
Durham was fued.
· Miami 101, Wasbingcon 97; New
Smith said be discussed the situYork 107, Delroit 97; Indiana 107, ation with Dooley, who was footCleveland 96, and Seattle 109, ball coach for 25 years at Georgia,
Minnesota 92.
and was assured that be would
: Cummings and J.R. Reid filled receive I 00 percent cooperation for
iJt for Rodman as. the Spurs set sea- the basketball program.
son marks for rebounds and defenForward Carlos Sttong, one or
Sive rebounds, and tied their season four returing senior starters for the
t)est for blocked sboiS. Cummings
'
broke his season high with 16
rebounds and Reid matched his
~ilh 13 boards 10 go along with 14
points.
.
- : Cedric Ceballos .s cored 17
:poiniS and. Anthony Peeler added
'15 for !be !.akers, who ·saw their
season-best five-game winning
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Dan
slreak snapped.
Hipsher, coach at SteiSon UniversiSuperSonlcs 109
ty the last two seasons, ltas been
hired as basketball coach at Akron.
Tlmberwolves 92
· Gary ·Pay100 equaled his career
Hipsher, 40, spent four years as
bigb 'by scoring 33 poiniS as Seattle the bead coach at Wittenberg
defeated visiting Minnesota for the before posting a 29-27 record the
17th straight time. The victory - ·past two seasons at Stetson.
·
moved the Sanies into a·lie with
"There bas been great basketthe Phoenix Suns for ftrSt place in ball tradition at Akron and I am
the Pacific Division.
looking forward to the cbaUenge of
. Detlef Scbrempf added 22 building on that lradilion," Hipsher
points and Shawn Kemp bad 20 said on Wednesday.
~ints and II rebounds, wbile !saBorn in Lancaster and raised in
ish
Rider
led
Minnesota
with
19
Fostoria,
Hipsher played college
1
points.
ball at Bowling .Green and got a
·
Heat 101, Bullets 97
.
master's degree from Miami of
Rookie Kbalid Reeves S!Xlred II Ohio. B~ Green, Miami and
consecutive poiniS in the final2 112 Akron are %rtbe Mid-American
REGULAR
minutes as visiting Miami handed Conference.
RETAIL
Washington its fifib consec.utive
He was a graduate assistant ·at
loss. .
Miami, then was an assistant coach
Glen Rice scored 20 of his 26 and head coach at Miami-Dade
OFF REGULAR
poiniS in the second half to help the (Fla.) Community CoUege. Hipsher
Heat snap a two-game losing slreak was an assistant at the University
~:»~.. \
and move Miami percentage IJOints of Dayton from 1980 to 1989
ahead .of Boston in the race for the before taking over at' Wittenberg.
(ina! playoff spot in the Eastern
His teams went 29-2, 26-3, 23-6
Conference.
and 19-7 at Wittenberg for a 97-18
· Chris Webber bad 29 points and record.
19 rebounds for the Bullets, who
Stetson was 15-12 last season,
led 91-89 before Reeves bit a three- its first winning record since 1989.
pointer to put the Heat up for good
Coleman Crawford resigned .
~nd begin his late-game scoring
after going 24-54 the last three seabinge.
sons.

gave lhe Pacers a 2 1/2-game- lead ....
over lhe Hornets ·in !heir battle for
!be Central Divisioolitle.
,.

Family
Medicine ·

Cleveland trailed 66-62 when :;
Indiana went on a 14-0 spurt, igoit· ~
ed by Miller' s three-pointer with ,.
6:51 remaining in tbe third period. -:1be Cavs went more than sill min- .
utes without a field goal before •
Tyrone Hill made a layup wilb 1:46 ~
left in the quarter.
•

John C. Wolf, D.O.

.

Georgia appoints Smith as new men's basketball coach

•
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Durham's last team went 18-8
during !be regular season and fin·
isbed second in the SEC's East
Division. But the Bulldogs lost
their first game in tbe SEC IOurna·
tnent and the ftrSt of !be NIT tournament The Bulldogs last were in
the NCAA IOUlllllilicnt in 1991.

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COOper says· un1vers1
• · "fleS
• Sh OU/d receiVe
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restitUtiOn .rom

::·

y-uepatlng p avers
T·

a

..

•

before his final season or eligibility•
· either pay $100,000 to !be universi-•
ty or have the NFL team that draftS ..
him pay $100,000.
· ;
"Obviously, you can't enforce-:
· this; you can't make tbe guy or the :
team do that,'' be added. "I'm just.•
saying that if a guy does leav ~
· early, be does owe the university;;
something."
'
Running back Robert Smith,:
who left with two years of eligibUI:.~
ty remaining and was a fust-round,;'
pick of the Minnesota Vikings "

.

'

Lifestyle Furnitures

INVENTORY REDUCTION
.Continues to Make Room For New Patio Shipment

Akron names
Hipsher men's
basketball coach

bas
been diagnosed with chronic lympbocylic leukemia. The doctor
explained that be bas something
wrong with bis blood, but I was so
worried that! don 't remember most
or what be said. Would you please
.explain about his illness?
Answer: Chronic lymphocytic
leukemia is a form of cancer, but
:before I tell you more about it, I
:would like to respond to an importanl statement you made.
You reported that you don ' t
remember very much of what the
doctor !Old both of you about your
busband's illness. This is very typical of the way we all react to
shocking news. Once one hears the
diagnosis, our mind races· through
the thousands of ramifications of a
possible life threatening illness.
We are temporarily unable ·to
' concentrate on the majority of
information the doctor provides.
Studies show that most people
retain only -10 to 20 percent of !be
information a physician provides
under these types of circumstances.
So, your experience is rather typicalC
. br
.
.
h
.
k .
o.ntc 1ymp ocyltc 1eu emta
(CLL) is a cancer that affeciS spe/ cia! immune system cells called
lymphocytes that play an important
role in helping the body fight disease. Cancerous lymphocytes
resemble nermal ones but they
aren't effective at combating infection. Also, the CLL cells grow at
such a vigorous rate !bat !bey suppress the growth of normal lym·phocytes and olber .components of
lhe blood. As the cancer progresses, it spreads to lymph nodes
throughout the body, the liver and
the spleen. It causes enlargement in
all of these organs and interferes
with their nonnal functioning. .
However, most individuals with
Cll don't feel ill, at least not until
late in the disease . Chronic lymphocytic leukemia is oiten djag- ·
nosed from a blood count tbat is
done because of enlarged lymph
nodes or simply as part or a regular

implies that this is a disease which
progresses slowly ~ at least slowly when compared to most other
cancers. Many people live with this
disease for 1S or more years ·but
not all are this lucky.
Those who have many enlarged
lymph nodes, enlarged liver and
spleen, and infection at the lime of
diagnosis will probably not Uve as
long. The average survival for
those with these more advanced
symptoms is only four years.
Sufferers of this disease complain of repeated episodes of in fcclion . Bronchitis, sinusitis, pneumonia, and urinary tract infections are
the most common . Fortunately,
antibiotics are effective at clearing
up most of these, and other measures, such as avoiding crowds and
individuals with .obvious colds, can
reduce the frequency of respiratory
infections.
There are several treatments _
none of them perfect _ that are
currently used to help those with
CLL . The standard "first line"
trealrnent for early CLL is simply
frequent checkups. This "watchful
wailing" phase may last for many
years . However, if the .patient
doesn't die of something else fU"S~
it will eventnally become necessary
to start some form of active treatment. The "active trealrnent" phase
is usually begun only when the
blood count bas become quite
abnormal or organs have become
dangerously enlarged.
Radiation bas been tried in some .
cases.. but it bas proved to be of
limited benefit for most people .
Surgery is sometimes necessary to
remove a severely enlarged spleen
or lymph nodes that are pressing on
other v.ilal organs sucb as the
ureters. There are several different
chemotherapy drugs that can slow
the progress of advance-stage CLL,
but none of them wiU cure it.
So, please go back 10 your husband's doctor and ask 'him or ber
the many questions you have . I
suggest that you write your questions down as you think of them
physical exam.
. while you are at borne. Otherwise,
As you may have deduced from
,
k
the name, the "chronic" of CLL you may .orget 10 as one or more
-llllllllliof them.

OFF .

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RUSSET
POTATOES$
SO#Bag
Limit 2 Bags

.....

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35

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366

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~·

·

Tom Boggs sent thank-you notes
for the fruit "baskets they received
from the garden club.
The group prepared 75 Easter
bunnies by filling them with Easter
candy for th e Arcadi a Nursi ng .
Home in Coolvi lle. Betty Boggs,
Mary Alice Bise and Margaret
Grossnickle have charge of tb e
remembranq: program.
The hostesses for the dinn er
included Nola and Kristy Young
and N'ahcy Wachter.
·
Those attending included: Betty
Bogg s, JanCo\, Con~ o lly , Delores
Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Ella
Osborne, Marlene Putman. Frances
Reed, Grace Weber, Maxine
Whitehead, Mary Alice Bise and
Ruth Anne Balderson.
Betty Boggs won the door prize.

M&amp;M lovers get the blues
M&amp;M-Mars un veiled its new
confection on the 86th floor of the
Empire"State Building, whiCh was
lighted all in blue in honor of the
occasion.
. Bags containin_g the new blue
candies won't be widely available
until September.

NEW YORK (AP) - Arinounclng a new color that(won't melt in
your band: blu911
•
The resuiiS of a two-month campaign to choose a new M&amp;M color
were unveiled Wednesday. Blue
won e~ ily with S4 percent of the
more than I0 million votes cast,
beating out pink and pmple. .

Alfred methodist women reflect on resurrection
Pastor Sharon Hausman lead the guilt and resentment were ·rolled
Easter program "Openings" at the away by Christ's love. The stone in
March 21 meeting of the Alfred front of the worship center was
United Methodist Women with the· · then removed. The program closed
ope.ning song' "He Ro5e."
· · of "Up From the
wt'th the smgmg
Worship center dis.played a Grave He Arose."
cross with a siOne in front of it and
Eighty-two friendship calls were
Thelma Henderson read resurrec- reported. Members piscussed and
tion scriptures from Mark. Osie praised missionary saturation week
Mae Folirod, Martha Poole and presentations.
Martha Elliott read the experiences
President Neltie Parker reported
of women whose stones of anger, the Alfred UMW-Five Star Giving

Ibuprofen slowed lung decline in children with Cystic Fibrosis
By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
NEW YORK (AP) - High
doses of ibuprofen - sold under
such brand names as Ad\dl, Nuprin
and Molrin - slowed lung deterioration by 90 percent over four years .
in children with cystic fibrosis, a
study says.
. .
The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation,
which partly funded the study, bas
recommepded that doctors begin
trealing.cystic fibrosis palieniS with
the over-the-counter pain reliever.
The drug's benefits were most

pronounced in children ages 5 to 13
who consistently took it twice a
day in addition to conventional
treatments with otber drugs, said
the authors of the study, which
appears in today's New England
Journal of Medicine.
Ibuprofen also migbt 'bave some
reduced benefi IS for older patieniS,
the researchers said.
·
"This study suggests it's a valid
therapy to introduce into the clinic," said one of the authors, Dr.
Pamela Davis of Rainbow Babies
and Children's Hospital in Cleveland.

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increase the life expcclalicy of cystic fibrosi s patients, although it will
be years before that is proven. With
current ·treatm ents , half of the
l,OOo ·new patients diagnosed each ·
year die before age 30.
Davis cautioned patients not to
begin treating themselves with the
drug, because it can have harmful
side effects if it isn't u~ed correct-·
ly. It can harm the stomach and
kidneys and interfere with other
drugs used to treat cystic fibrosis,
she said.
"One of the lbings we're worried about is that ibe diug is available over the ·counter.

Cys ti c fibrosis is Am erica's
most common fatal inherited disease . About 30,000 Americans ,
mostly whites, arc afflicted with
the disease, and one in 25 white
Americans is a carrier of the CF
gene. The disease occurs only in
those who get two copies of the
gene, one from each parent.
Part of the lung damage is
caused by inflammation of the
lungs. Ibuprofen, an anti-innarnmatory pain reliever, helps to con1rol
!bat.
Doctors agreed that the addition
of !be new trealrOent probably will

$20,988

200(11 COli'ESI SEDAJIS

$111

Van Meter who iS ill. The society
signed a birthday card for Brenda
Connelly, evangelist in Norlh Carolilta.
Present were Nina Robinson,
Martha Elliott, Florence Ann
Spencer, .Martha Poole, Osie Mae
Follrod, Sarah Caldwell, Thelma
Henderson, Pastor Hausman, Ne!Ue
Parker and a guest, Mary Wells.
Next meeting will be April 18 at
the church .
·

Certificate is now displayed on the·
church bull etin board . Members
discussed the reading program and ·
exchanged books.
Mrs. Parker ;mnounced coming
events including Spring Retreat,
AJ1ril 21 to 22; Mission School,
July 10 to 16; District Annual Day.
Sept. 14.
Florence Arin Spencer presented
the prayer calendar for Charlotte

$17,488

BAG

NEW TEXAS
YELLOW
ONIONS

PHIL DffiT ROLLs IN - The PhU Dirt and l'be Dozen Concert wUI be be lei at 8 p.m. April. 22 at the Rutland Civic Center.
The RO&lt;:k 'N RoD oldies group, based In Columbus, h... performed
annually In Rutland to raise funds to fix tbe conununity buUdl"''•
roof. Tickets are on ...le at the Rutland Civic Center, Joe'a Country Markel, Pomeroy's Mane Image, Fruth Pharmacy Middleport's Quality Print Shop, Syracuse's Chancey Sta'tlon ud
Racine's Country Kitchen.

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

40%

This Weeks S11eeial

of Family Medici ne

Rocking.oldies

In ·stock
Recliners

In Stock
High Leg Recliners

In Stock
Reclining Sofa's

Associate Professor

I

Plan's for replacing shrubs at the
historical marker near the Bellville
Dam and Park were made when the
Riverview Garden Club met recently at the Reedsville Church of
Christ social room.
Tbe group also discussed planting a pine tree to be used as the
community Chrislrnas lree at some
future da'te.
·
Nancy Wachter led the devotional readings of "Song of Sr,iing
Time" and "Look Up and Live ·.
It was noted that litter will be
picked up at 10 a.m. April I along
the highway from the Riverview
School sign to Long Bottom. Clean
up will be continued on April 10
around the Reedsville cemetery
shrubbery.
Ada Bissell, May McPeek and

...llllllllll...

In Stock

Chaise
Recliners

Riverview Garden Club
to replace shrubbery

Ohio University
·
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

· P~. Pffi

· To~ S~enng

•• P
- ower W
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locks
ll'oOOws

• Cruise ConTrol

• OriYer Stde A1!bag

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• Con~e
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• Pass-Key !I Thefl Deterrent
• Rear Declo LJd Spo1ler

• Speoal Aero GrounO Efteds
and Wheel Flares

• Spoi1 Suspens.on
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• 16" Cast Alummvm Wheets.
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~~~~~~~~;:~·l~~~!

9to 5
Friday

New Shipment of Western &amp; Indian Vases

'

9to 8

MEIGS FARM MKT
Or Uae Our

Third &amp; Olive

F..t Credit Terms.

446-3045

Sales and
Service with
Low, Low Prices

TOLL FREE·1·8DD-B22·0411 • 312·2844

344·5947. 422·0156
.

I

Friday &amp; Saturday: 9 am -10 pm
Noon ·il pm

,.

.•'
M

I

J
•

•

�•

'

•

:Page

~Love-starved

-----oii
·
Ann
Landers

•
Thur~day,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Dally Sentinel

insistence ·we saw counsclo[ After

se~eral v~its, the counselor laid il on
the line. If niy husband was unwilling
IO act on

the advice we were getting,
we were wasting his time and our
money.
To keep busy, I have worked two
and three jobs at one time, raised our
children, gone back tD college and got
·my degree .. I am a 50- year-old
woman who would love tD be held,
!DuchCd and made love to. The time
we have wasted in this , .1arade we

recliner.
Why is it that men will spend a lot
of time (and money) 10 keep up a car.
a house and a boat, but they never
thinkahoutdoiliganything intheway
of maintenance on their marriage?
I'm beginning 10 think seriously
about your famous question, Ann,
•Am I bcuer off with him or without
him?' Any thoughts on this? -- NO
NAME, CITY OR STATE
DEAR NO NAME: Each woman
must fi nd her own answer to that
question based on her individual
situation.Aretherechiidren who will
be affected? What are the financial
repercussions? Is there any love or
affection tD build on?
· To expect a wife, at the age of 38;
to seule for a peck on the cheek is

asking a great deal. My advice is 10 chemical dependency. Also, daughget a beuer counselor. .
ters of caring, loving parents do gel
Dear Ann Landers: This leuer is pregnant and are sometimes too
in response to the woman from immature to raise their babies.
Marina del Rey, Calif., who wrote
At th is time. there are over 3.2
questioning the wisdom of allowing million children living in households
agrandmotheriOraise her grandchild headed by a grandparent. These
because the child's mother was grandparents cannot stand by and sec
incompetent to do so. The writer thei r grandchildren neglected and
asked the prov~ativequestion: 'Has abused by parents unable 10 care for
.it ever occurred to anyone 10 ask who them. In most Slates, Jhe grandparents
raised that incompetent mother?'
are denied ·legal rights .and social
Too often, the slide into chemical · services availablc.io foster parents.
dependency has liule 10 do with the . Does th is seem fair? •• DR .
competency of parents. Children are PATRICIA M. PAKAN AND DR.
pulled into addictive behavior by GLENN A. SALTZMAN, NORTHpeers, poverty and living in an EASTERN OHIO UNIVERSITIES,
environment where s9ch behavior is COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, ROOTacceptable. Frequently, teen preg- STOWN, OHIO
nancy is one of the consequences of
DEAR DRS . PAKAN AND

~Society

25 -·organizations
join WalkAmerica
fundraising effort

MIDDLEPORT - New TOPS
·(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) club
.fanning at Middlepon Church of
Christ Thursday, 6 p.m. Weigh-in,
5:15-6 p.m.
PORUAND- Lebanon Township Trustees , regular meeting ,
Thursday 7 p.m. at !Dwnsbip )milding.
RACINE - American Legion
Post 602, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. with
diDner.
CHESTER - The Chester
Baseball/Softball Association will
meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at tbe
firehouse.
·

SALTZMAN: No, it does not seem
fair, and somedting should be done
about it.
..
Grandparents whosttmforpan:nts
should be given the legal rights of
fosterparellts because that's precisely
what they are.
Is alcohol ruining )lOUT life orrk
life of a loved one?. "Alcolrolism:
How ro Recognize II, How ro ·Deal
With It, How ro Co"'lutr II" can turn
things around. Send a self-add!essed,
long, business,siz~ envelopt and a
checlcormoneyonlerfor$3.!5 (lhis
includes postage and handlmg) ro:
Alcolrol, clo A1111 I..anders, P.O. Box
·JJ562, Chicago, Ill. 6()6/1-0562 . (In
Canada, und $455.)

In the next 25 years, the March of
Dimes envisions an America where
there is universal access to materni -

ty and infant ·care, interventions
exist to prevent low binhweight and
prematurity, there is a 75 percent
reduction in smoking and alcohol use
during pregnancy and neural tube
defects have vir(ually been eliminated
through daily consumption of .04
milligrams of folic acid . .
Organizations participating in the
rally included: Magic 101 , Lakin
Hospital, City Insurance, Kroger of
Pomeroy and Gallipolis, Peoples
Bank, Bank One, Point Pleasant Register, Quality Farm and Fleet, Hol zer Medical Center, Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Fruth Pharmacy, Gavin
Plant, Mason County Medical
Alliance, Wahama High School,
Point Pleasant Middle School, Point
Distributing, Holzer Clinic, the University of Rio Grande, Carolina
Lumber, Point Pleasant Moose
Lodge, K-Man, Philip Sporn Plant,
Shell "Chemical and APCo-Mountainecr Plant.
"We invite other teams to join us
.for the. 1995 WaiJ&lt;America," said
Dianna Ellison .. Walk Coordinator.
"Walk for SO!lleone you love because
your steps mean life and health for
real babies." To find out more about
how your organization can fonn a
team or ·become a WalkAmerica
sponsor, contact Elhson at (304)6751607.
.

Beta Beta Sorority updated
on MaxWell 50 program
.

WALKAMERICA AMBASSADOR
- Diana Eads, a third
grade student at Bidwell-Porter Elementary School and daughter of
.Brian and Sandy B.lake of Kerr, Ohio, has been named ambassador
of the Tri-County WalkAmerlca for the March of Dimes. Diannla,
who has muscular dystrophy, willleacl the walk 011 Sunday,Apr1130,
2
p.m., at Hannon Park in Point Pleasant. Pictured behind Diana,
from left, Brian and Sandy Blake; Dianna Ellison, Walk Coordina- .
tor; and Jane Graham or the WalkAmerica steering committee.
.

Members of the Preceptor Beta
Beta chapter of tbe Beta Sigma Phi
sorority were updated on Holzer
Medical Center's Max Well 50
program at their meeting. at Grace
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
. Candace Pope said lbe program
wlil offe.r free screenings in the
future and will have a booth at area
county ·fairs . She also discussed
outpatient services.
There will be a cholesterol
screening on May 12 at tbe Senior
Citizens Center. Roll call was taken
with 16 members arid two guests
present.
A !bank you note from tbe arts
council for a recent donation was
read. Donna Byers spoke about the
new arts council which is being

formed. She also showed a painting
sbe bad done a1 tbe arts council studio. · ·
Founders Day dinner was
announce~ for April 27 at the
Sportsman m Athens.
. J~ne Wallo~ spo~e on ~e sc~olarsh1p fund .w•tb d1scusston bemg
tabled. Pres•dent Charlotte Elberfeld will find out more about the
fund.
Eleanor Thomas of the service
committee said tbe cancer door-todoor solicitation will be in June.
0
B s·
Pb' cb
ill
thee eta 1gma t apters w .
also help.
Norll)a Amsbury and Donnn
By~ represenred the group at a tea
beld by tb~ Obio Eta Pbi chapter of
!be Beta S1gma Pbi sorority.

Onc_payOnly! Friday, March 31st, 9am to 9pm

·You Decide What's On Sale!

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees will bold a special
meeting Thursday, 1· p.Di at the
Chester town ball.

IIIJ • Sell • Trade

MR. RIGGS
..

WHATYAIIICALLIT
SHOP
NEW&amp;USED
Household ·
Collectible
9-5 T-Sun. ,
1 mile from Pomeroy,
SR33N
.1192-7502 or 992-5805

,..,

.

FRIDAY
. SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, 7:30 Friday at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. .
.SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411, stared meeting, Saturday, 7:30p.m. at Masonic
Temple. Refreshments.
RUTLAND - Rutland EMS,
craft show and bizarre, 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Saturday at Rutland Civic
Center. Bean dinner. Proceeds to
local EMS.

-

Landscape Stock
White Pine &amp;
Norway Spruce

•Lots ·o f Fun and
Learnjng
•Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
· A.M. till 6:00 P.M.

BARR'S Nursery

..

304-882-3336
l/1411 mo.

were laaued, by the Ohio

.

Envlronmentel Protection
Agency (OEPA) lui week.
"Acllono' Include tho
adoption, Modlrlcttlon, or

rovocotlon of ordoro (other

th1n emergency ordera)j the
laauance ,
denial,
modl{lcatlon or revocatiOn
of UctnHa, permlta, ltllll,

Gallia-Mcigs Community Action Agency has
•vailable a limited amount of dislocated worker
retraining funds . These funds can be used to pay the
cost of retraining (tuition, fees, textbooks) at area
~chools such as The U~iv e rs ily of Rio Grande, .
Buckeye Hills Career Center, Hocking College, Tri.
County JVS, and Ohio University.
To qualify for these funds, individuals must usu ally
have become umimployed due to a b.usiness closing or
reduction in force type layoff. Income is not usually a
factor. Certain additional restrictions and requirements
~o apply. \Priority consideration will be given to
applicants already enrolled in training.
' If you believe you may qualify, please call614-3671342 or 614-992-6629 to have a pre-application
!ftailed to you. Pre-applications are also available to
the JTPA offices at 859 Third Ave., Gallipplis and
?3105 Highland Rd., Pomeroy, and the Job Service
office at45 Olive Street, Gallipolis.
; Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency
·
JTPA Programs
8010 North State Route 7
PO Box 272 .
Cheshire, OH 45620-0272
614-367-7342 614-992-6629
Equal Opportunity Employer .

RARELY HEAD
On Stage April 6, 8 pm
State Theater, Pt. Pleasant
Adm.: $10. Ticl&lt;ets on sate at

varlencee, or certlflcatea;
and

the

approval

or

dloepprovel of plene end
opoclllcollono . "Droit

Action•..

are

written ·

otato.,.nto of the director ol

304·675·6575

SPRING CRAFT SHOW
April 1 , 1995, 10 am-6 pm

Written

National Guard Armory
Rt. 62 North, Pl. Pleasanl, WV

and

proposed ICII~ If 1 hlerlng
roqlloot or objection lo
roc.lvtd by the OEPA within
30 deyo of luuonco ol tho
propoood octlon. Wrttten
commenta, rtquaata tor

public mutlngo, end
od)udlcetlon· hnrlng

environmental protection••

requaata muat be eant to:

reapect to the leauarice,

Environmental Protection

(Diroctor'o)

Intent with

donlol, etc. of
licente,

1

o r.der,

permit,
ate .

lnteruted penon• I!I'Y
eubmlt wrHten commtnta or

roquut • public meeting
rogordlng drelt ectlono.
Commenll or public
milling roqu1111 mull be
oubmllltd within 30 deyo of
notice of the droll •ctlon.

.. Propo1ed Aetlon•r •r•

Handmade Holiday Treasures

modlflcetlon,
revocation, or ren.wel or 1
ptrn)lt, 11cen11, or vorlonco.

h.. r.ng mey be held on 1

Heerlng

Clerk,

Ohio

P.O. Box 113Mt,
Columbuo, Ohio 43211-310
· (Telephone: 114-644.2121),
"Finel Actlono: ere actlono
of the dl;ector which oro
ofloctlvl upon loouenco or 1
· lloled elloctlvo dote. •
Pureuepl to Ohio rovlood
cod HCtlon 37411.04, • final
octlon mey lit eppealtd to
·Continue on Poge I
~oncy,

and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

~

I
I
I
I
I

THE SOUTHFORK INN
SHOWBAR
GIRLS-GIRLS-GIRLS
OPEN AT .6 P.M.

1 - - - - -1 Take 810 Off
I

I
I
I

1-304-675-5955

Any Anal Touch
Jewelry Item
Over$49
lnStock
.,,

L•-•••--•-'-

I(~~

408 Main St.

...,.._ _. .-. • - _. • lilrtia'liiPU I.i;

. Friday, March 31st, 11am to 9pm ...

. . . . ........... One Day Only!
(304) 675-1581 · Point PleiJSant WV
j.

·

4\.

" '

)

~

I

'•

•

v..y Friendly, eu ue ores.

L.oel : 2 mixed Boll.,.. brtncn•

mtite, tlln • whha Mrnlle, SA

Loot : yo Ilow and g~katiOI,
SyracUM vk.lntty, I
.e111.

7

4/WS,

1 1 18' 1'~

Clolhot,

ALL Vard Soleo Muot Be Pold In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2 :00 p .m.
liNt day bolon liNt ld le to run.
Sunday edttlon • 2 :00 p.m.
Frldoy. Monday odHton - 2:00
p.m. Sa1urdly.

Bl&lt;l Vonl Sole: Friday, Soturdey,
Raln C.ncOio. Out Addl_, Plko,
F1rllt lnterMCtlon, Turn Rae..!:
Oo Up Slrtp MinH, 41h
On Lo!J. EYo Ga~L?' Ollvor
Rood, ualllpollo, OH 40031.

Scrvice11 .
Hnmc Sitel!l, Laml

Clearing, Sepllo Syotetno
&amp; Drin "Ways.

TruckingLime8tone.,
Top Soil, Fill Dirl

Eatate Yard Sa..: s.llurday, April
1M, t-.? Locatlon: Kanauga,

Southeaotom
I.Dto 01 E..rythtngl

otde

a.

Equipment,

Fl• Mllrkllt • Amnta Building,
April 3rd, 41h, Ot&gt;eno I A.M. 114258.e571, 114-4411 ... 208.

ft-.

Gorago Solo: Baby
8ooQ, S'-, Monl One Dty

992-:~838

Only! Friday, March 31.. , t.'P, ·
531 Debbie Drive.

Mon:h :not, AprU 1ot, nh Houoe
8:30 ·To s:oo, Don1

Out .na,

·GRAY'S

MleoThleOnol

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

0

Chuck Stotts
614~992-6223
Free Estimates

LHI

Lota Of Ill~ . heme, Rain /Shine.

Bulldozms, Backhoe,

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Only,

lolo 01 Inion! Boyo,

E\C:\\'\'IT\(;

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

Satutclly

Tran.r On Lett On Taua ANd,

110\\ \IW

992-3954

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

2f12/921tln

Emergency Phone 985-34 18

or 114-t...

181, 114 188 1557
8755.

(614) 992-5291

..

Lost &amp; Found ·

Found: On Vanco Aa.ct, Medium
Slzo Long Biondo Holr Dog,

Mowing,
Trimming
Firewood .
Also:
Co,tracl work

42 Por~ SlrMI, Mldd'-t, Sat.

Mobile Welding

KINGS'
Home Improvements

.rl:~·

r,-. ,\_

td dL· r \\ lu·, ".rrrl .11rd th.'t'd

qrLdrt\ hr. dtl r rw,rll. r!l( r

I

~;i 1,r

ij lplrL:Ilttl~h - ~

l l!lll:lli-, Jlll(ll 1\1 \IIIII

11 .;; 1ir hilllrd .r.,- .l rrrr B t;•,h
, I_L:,1.' !l : j1 11 \rt h I IL: r:r

AprU 1, fumHure, houlehokl heme, mt.c.

I·

61-t-J(,7-7J56
MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT

KIN'I APPLIANCE
IEDICE

clolhoo,

P.O. Box 220
Bidwell, OH 456 14
lnMemory

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

"Take the pain out
of painting - Let us
do it for you"
Interior &amp; E;xterior
Free estimates

We Hare Cars and Vansl
-

•All Make• .,.2 Yeere

Kenny's Auto Center
1 _800 _486 _ """J'
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
OH. 45631
·

•Wallhtrl • Dryer• - R•ngaa
•Retrlgeritora •Freezer•
•DilhWIIherl
•H.W. Hutert
-Microwaves tDitpotall

•Thonko Molgo &amp;
The family of
Susie M. Fischer
would like to thank
everyone, relatives,
friends , and neighbors who sent food,
flowers, cards end
visited with us at
the funeral liome
and just being there
In our sorrow.
A special thanks
to Extended Carli
and Rev. . Kris
Robinson for a very
nice service. Thanks
to· Ewing Funeral
Home, John and
Gerald, for their
help.
' Thanks Again,
Hilda Frecker
Gloria Michael
Mary R. Porter
and f~milies.

614-985·4180

12/1Wn

o.lou e

Public Notice
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
CLERKS OFFICE
Racine, Ohio 45nt
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Sutton Tow.nahlp
Trusteeo will accept aaaled
bids lo• year 1995 for
mowing ol10 cemetarlea at

I " P l tiOtl
&amp; Slr.tton

.....

mann·e rs,

using

own

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

using

township equipment or
equipment".

Stated amount of blda
should be lor each mowing
of the 10 cemetarles, also

Included In bid ohoutd ba a
separate

amount

for

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

742·2455
31
rna:
1111

S""P.

FiJd.ly 3101

lolurday

I

l.t. File c.blnet, brua ,..,..

Wlmtrbtt, nlcti clean clathlng.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Crofto I '"hor homo by EOIH.
Mar 31 Apr 1 I ~ 10~ , 2310 .

Gorage Solo Mor :ri thru Apr 1.
MIRon Rd.COmp Coitlty.

11-41:30.

1 " " " - " ' "·
Tooto
olothoo
nn turnllure,
... n ~,
tr..'

··-.. .1-.-Plllo

Sole.. Sot April

PIMNnt lt. 01r1e

1.

t 11

eumnw, ..,..

.......... otott
Oolllutoh,
wom.n'e
. ., 1f1N- d1

Mo.

1"1'0,
t&amp;o.io..o.' .. ..,.

von~· - · 2201 North 11o1n 111
~:::: 31-&amp;lt Apr 1. r:..

Dull WhMI Pull

Blda may be submlned In

Two family oaraae ..,. rain or
ohtne. JooM onil Holotd Smhh
Syrocuoo formerly Jo'o Gtti

Rain cencela.

311.4/1 mo.

the 'direction of trustees .
TWO

~

1.. , 1:001m-4:00pm.

rug!. guno, trotloo undorplrv&gt;tng.
1 tr&lt;mll• out SondNU. Slgno.

•Convertible Tops
•Carpet &amp; ·
Seat Covers
·Headliners
•Antique Cars
•Boat Seats ·
41464 Starcher Rd.
· ~omeroy, OH.
992-7587

~-· -- uD=~

Frt. Mon:h :not, Sot April 1ol,
Humono :ooctoty.
.
Thrw lomlly.eao B. Second
Avonuo, Mlddlepon , Frldoy
Moreh 3101 I Bllurday, April

Monroe Ave., PI .,.....,.... •
tonnat~ call 3Q4..175-4001.
F~ I So1 11-2, S lomlly'o. ClothIng, houMhold llama, ortental

JESS' AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

or

.

lltlgo

Before 6 p.m.-Leave
Message; Afte r 6 p.m.

FOR SA I.E OR TRADE

Surrounding Are..

(614) 985-3561
992-5335

houao on ton, llor. :n, Apr. \ s 1

One dollar big Mle of clothing,

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; Co.

ofi!CtOry Auth"rizld Porto
A Service
•Foot Reliable Service

...J

" '~

Monday, April s, June StrMI,
Ruotlc Hlllo, s,..cuoe. Ap.
plton..e, drapoo, houMwo,..,
old oink, cordi- phone, Eo01o1
tlemt,
boc*t,
clotho, •
g-waro, coltoettblel, much
morogooaoluft.
Mavlna11•,.D• ..... rain or
.ohtne,lloloon Ad, Autlord. Flrol ·
•• t.m-4pm.

&amp;'171'1 IYIO,

Roofing, Siding, Room Addi1ions, Concrete, etc.

(614) 992-5S35
(6 14) 992· 2753

Free Estlm1ttes

614-742·3090
304-773-9545

614) 388-9865

• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
•Rooting •Painting
. -Garages •Porches
•Pole E;larns

{ ; \'1\t'l:d

2

6

2/28195

W:\NTEI&gt;

t:rkL' ~~llll

AI&lt; Conditioner, Repaired, IU 441 '031 ,

Sunday 1:00 p.m .
12 Gauge Only
Limited: 740
Backbore, 680 Front

949-2168

.rt ;r !l&lt;~rd . r iliL r ~~~ ..,

PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 99,2·2172
Olllce.Houra: Ntoh.-Frl.
8:00 a.m .~ : 30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, .VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors; Storm .
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatlmalto .

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS

FREE ESTIMATES

St-rll t ll ( ·r!t/t' ll '-

539 BRYAN

1/1Wn

Howard L. Wrltesel
!=IOOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Guttar Cleaning .
Painting

1

J&amp;L INSULATION

port

WI-

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
• Room Additioos • Roofing

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job oltes ' Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
ll
d&amp;Bdd20

pupplel,

To good homo, PNt.robiy In
country,
t.male
Au .. ratllln
. Shephard, child,.., dielll&lt;.. t.maledoga. ~.

L&amp;W

MODERN .SUI'rAftDN

mlxld

~J&gt;&amp;.

Cocker Spen'-1, IM-'1112~2154.

Lawn Care

(No Sunday Calls)

t.male,

wHh children.

Small

712219&lt;

614-992-7643

by appointmenl &amp;
.cJub repair as well
Call John 'feaford al
Chester, Ohio

Exlension 71 01
$2.99 per min.
Musl be 18 yi's.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

written atetementa of the .

comment•

Shrubs Shaped

1c900-562-7000

..

nMttered and

opoyed; 814-HZ·Trnl.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CLUB
Golf Lessons

CALL NOW!!!

••"'·7

~anwH,

ct.c:lawed; au.,.,, g,..y and whtta
tam~•
Slam• eiHimlllyan,

985-4473

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
· FREE ESTIMATES

COUNTRY

Light Hauling,

3 Announcements

denlol ,

CHESTER

·· TREE TRIMMING
AND RJMOVAL

Specializing in Custom
· Frame Repair
NEW &amp;USED PARTS FOR
All MAKES &amp;MODELS
· 992-7013 OR
992-55530R
FREE 1-80CI-848-0Cl701
DARWIN, OHIO

reapect to the laauance,

112mn

·- - -~-- --- -.

PARTS

with

Pomeroy, Ohio

2;4S1f
'RO ;1t;4NC.2

BULLETIN BOARD
1600 column
weekdays
1800 column

.....

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

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

"'"". --

..

CALL OUR OFFICE AT

614-84;3-5264

992;6215

614-742-2193

614-992-3470

Bank One, Peoples Bank

requuto for 1 public
muting rogerdlng •
propo11d octlon moy bo
oubmllltd within 30 dayo of
nolle• of tho propoood
octlon. An tdludlcetlon

Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Se•tintl

LONG BOTI'OM - · Weekend.
services; Red Brush Church of .
Christ, Basban Road, Long Bottom. Saturday 7 p.m.; Sunday 10
a.m. worship service, evening service, 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Foster,
W. Va., speaker. Publ.ic invited.

Intent

Middleport, Ohio 45760

(Specialize In
driveway apreadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fnl Dirt i

'

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

321 24 Happy
Hollow Rd.

.

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

YOUNG'S
CAIPEITIR SERVICE

H&amp;HSAWMILL
Portable
Handsaw Mill

WHALEY'S AUTO

MIDDLEPORT - Free children's fmgerprinting at tbe Middlepen Masonic Lodge, 9-1 p.m. conducted by the Meigs County Prose- .
culing Attorney's Office.

. Dlroc:for'o

ROCKY R. HU~P

. - -·'
DAVE'S
i
,
SWAP SHOP
,
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat. ·

WICKS
HAULING

Public NOtice

.PUBUC NOTICE
Tho
following
oppllcollono end/or verlfled
complolnto wore rocolvod
end the following droll,
propootd, or llnol octlono

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

(Lilts!- low Ratts)

Chrla
Schar'el
614-992-4236

King oiH bed, compiooto. 175'3122.

~gan . E.lkhounc:l:

.

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Lollds of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992-2060 10f!Y,mo

773-5612
Bring in ad
for 10% off.

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENT!NG
Compllrtlblt Sires &amp; Prim
NEW HAVEN, WV
304-882-2996

J::

1-6

With tvery naw
alarm Installed receive 6 month's
FREE monitoring.

Maggies Crockpot
'Clifton, WV .
Dine-in or Carry-our

742-3149 or 992·7285

&gt;115/lfn

Special Thu
Month

.

TAMMY HYSEll'S
DAY CARE

State Theater/Curtain Call Cafe,

Public Notice

9

The Dally Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~9~·5388

JAMES ALARM
SERVICE

scrapbook-:

TEA PARTY
ferth House for a recent donation iD
A ritual of jewels tea will ~ bebal(of Carolyn Kom.
held at the home of Beth Stivers
Niese! ·Ger31d. Pat Arnold and
May 7, it was announced at the Kathy Johnson served refreshrecent meeting· of Xi Gamma Mu ments.
·
chapter, Beta Sigma Pbi Sorority
BREAKFAST.WITHBUNNY
&gt;held at the Bradbury Church of
A breakfast with the Easter
Christ.
Sheila Harris and Linda Bates bunny bas been planned for Sa1urreported on plans for Founder's d_ay at the Middleport Masonic
Day to be held in April, and Kay Temple. The all-you-can-eat breakAdkins and Barb Black noted lbat fast is being sponsored by Evangeitems are still be coileeted for line Chapter O.E.S. and Job's
Daughters, Bethel 62. Tickets will
Sen:nlty Hoose.
Members ,brought items to be be available at !be door. Pictures
donated for the silent auction held . wiD be taken of each child. Serving
· by Xi Gamma Epsilon at the wiD be from 9 a.m. to I p.m. At ~
Pomeroy Catholic Olurch.
same lime tbe Meigs County ProseA !bank you note was read from cuting Attorney's office will do
Margie Blake for an anniversary free child fmger printing.
gift, and one waS ted from Unver.
'

~Community calendar·
The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
.designed to promote silles or
.fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Ministerial Lenten worship service will be
beld Thursday, 7:30p.m. at St.
Paul Lutheran Church with tbe
Rev. Fr. David dePlantier preaching.

.Th11rlday, March,30, 1995

woman
may
be
better
off
without.
husband
a

Dear Ann Landers: This letter is
for "Frustrated in Philadelphia,'
whose wife decided she didn't care
for sex and saw no need "to do that
stuff.' He desired affection, which he
'was unable 10 get at hqme, so of callamarriage canneverberepl~ .
I have kepi myself tnm and
coun;e, be wandered out of the corral.
I have the same problem in reverse. attractive in the hope that it might
My husband announced 12 years ago, tum him on ..So far. I've scored zero.
· at the age of 42, that affection and I've decided that the only way I can
lovemalc.ing were foe ' young people' ignite this man is io light a stick of
and I should fOJget about it. At my dynam ite and blow him out of his

Twenty- fi ve area organi zations
from the Mason-Gallia-Meigs area
were represented at the Tearnwalk
Rally for Walk.America held recently at the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge.
Their' teams will be among those who
"walk for someone you love" in the
Tri-Co unty Walk.America for the
March of Dimes, to be held Sunday,
. April 30, 2 p.m., at Harmon Park in
Point Pleasant.
Last year, I,200 walkers raised
more than $43 ,000, helping contin. uc the March of Dimes fight against .
birth defects and infant monality.
· Those in attendance learned more
about the March of Dimes' effons to
improve the health of babies by pre.venting binh defects and infanl mortality through programs of research,
community services, education and
.advocacy. ·
The 25th anniversary of WalkAmerica will be marked in 1995, and
the March of Dimes has achieved
major milestones in maternal and
infant health over the last 25 years,
including early research in the development of surfactanl therapy to treat
respiratory distress syndrome, saving
thousands of babies' li ves each year. ·
And the creation of Mom Mobiles to
bring prenatal care directly to women
.who wouldn't otherwise get it. Local:ly, the March of Dimes funds such
program s as the Mason County
.Health Depanment 's "Right From
The Start."

March 30,1995

,dllftti

Announcements

8

3 Announcemems

Public Sale
• AuctiOn

Spring. SUI Ellmlrw.t. F• wtth

Wolght, Alduoo -110, And

Alt-nalurot
Hovo Enetlfl'Herbot
114...Product.
4&amp;'2410. '-e

·a·UALITY WIN DOW SYST.EMS "

mowing of Carleton
Cemetery, twice during the
contract year.
.
Board of Trustees reserve
the right to accept or reiecl
any or all bids. Sealed btda·
should be In cterko hando
byAprll9,
1995.
1 Send
I
wrlnen
blda to Clerk
PubliC Not C8
Paul Moore, 327BS Pleaaant
copy of tho eppeal mull bt VIew Rd., Racine Ohio
"rved on tho director 45771
within 3 doyo after filing tho Paul S. Moore - Clerk
Sunon Townahlp Truotee
1 ppeol with·tho EBR..
Flnll IOIUinCI 01 (3) 30, (4~6 2 TC
Corltncatlon
VIIIIDI ol Pomeroy.PubliC Notice
Mel go, 0 H looue D•t• ::=:---:-~:""'"'.;...:..~~
03;'20/116
EIIR. Ptrllll'll to ' 401
Receiving Wotero: Ohio ctrtlllcatloni go1tn~ perlolno
River
to Hunttngtr"n ototrlct corpo·
Thlo llnol ectlon ·not oi'EnglnH Public Notice
precodod by propoood (H) 111-04. ·
·
octlon end lo lappuloble to (3) 30; .1TC I
/

•Custom Made
•Solid vinyl
repluement ·
windows
•Free Estimates
•Startiilg At

'=====-==-==::!

*200 Installed

1 ......... Dlollyollftl. Eot Tho
F - You En)of Loolng
W*hll -llle P -. 114'

aa.lluo.
-

you Ill Jude. C8
THE PAMPIRED CHEF
"Tho 11011 Thai
To
Your Door." • - t ~-.~-nt

eon-

Avottoble AI:

--~-

-

. 114-441-4'124

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

992-41l9 AI Tromm, Owner 1-800·291·5600

/

morol Ed Frulor 1130.

For~l'.::t'io:i~ On!Or- 9 Wanted to Buy
tng
Koono'i/~~
0. For B¥olnMI
uniiiM.
Fr• Cllln Lite Model C.r8 Or
Brochure votloblo.
Trucko, 1tll7 o. lltww
- -- -- ' - - -.Smhh Buloll Ponttoc, 18iiil
4 · · Giveaway
Eootom
OIIHpollo.
1 Y•r Old 811~ Fece Col, PNg- =od0:":-ro, •• 1 -

A_..,

30"

whHo

.
bolhraorn

......... old ~bOld thor-

vonlty

ond

- - · 114-N-2173.
• "" puDDielto o good home

=w'!'::i..:

fumlluro. ' AIV..tne

• lntlquo
,.,.lq-.

·

114-182-

114-:1112-:ZStl. •
' J I D'o Auto Porto lnd s.tv.,..,
=:;:-;:::-=:-:-~
' -;-;-..,.:-::- buying -koJun~ IUIOO &amp;
Bilek Lob, rnolo, 1yr !ltd. *- truclui. Atoo,poilo lor - . IM42lt.
77W343 or rn.to3S.

.

I
l

-c-oo•·.
Mooro, g-. ;;;::" tot';

Colt

nent, IM... -

"VISIT OtJR SHOWROOM"

Aucllono ovory Ffl&lt;lly.e.tWdoy,
Alto AUotloit Rt. 24;;
·Ron ......, .. 1w

1J&gt;m, Ill

'

..

�•

...
Page--10--The Daily Sentinel .

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 30, 1895

r&lt;••••,.•·•• ••-n

30,1995

Ohio

The Dally

•
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

butt---a-

Vl'RA FURNmJH

:lbr - DIDoeM
· .' , ..........
_ pluo
...........
..

lumlt~---• ......
........ -11141.
' Wo,.od To Bur. J101k Autao
. Whh· Ot Wh- .......... Coli
. Loll')' Uvoly. IM-386-11303.
~ Tap PrieM Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold .Ringo, Sllvw Col no,
· Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

Z

Quolfty Hot

And Aj&gt;pll...._
On
Coolt And Conyt RENT40WN
And Lovowoy Aloo _ . . _
F,.. Doilverv Willi In ZIIIIIIL

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

53

you mean we're
aged?
We tape home improvement shows!'

a....

C:

mployer.

3 lodroom Soc:llonol t.pprox. I
Ylll Old, APPfOL 4 IIIIH 011 35
On Bulavtlle Plb, 114 ttl • •·
3 lodroorno ·2 . lotho, Hoot

COOKWARE

Wanled: Exper~ CookWire

Pump. Gn "F.;,.Q!, 1 Act.,
· Addloon Alii, saz,ooo,
114-317-72tll

In
Home
llu.t
Be

Honn1,
AdVIncemem
To
Man.g.m.m Poulblli, 304-175tl91.

4br. on Redmond A. . . lknln

from town, 311c l•nd. b.m I
gango. by oppolnt_,.

Dopondobll
Non-Smokor
Babyol11or In lly .Homo !For 2

only 304-41711-e401.

so-.

Stlrt now.

110 ~n
lllddlopo~~50'•100 laC, ttn. bMroom
complotoly nmodolod inoldo,
MW carplll, MW ldlchen, 1141182-131111•

,L

Brick Ranch Th,.. I dmmn, 1
112 BattiiiJ, Anlehecf lr rr nMNIIII,
Two Car Go-, Control Air,
Fenced B~ekyaid,
~~~ al•,

ChlldrM, 3 Oily• A W..t I'M.
~~ltiAIIor 1 P.ll,
I

IIJ llulflng

No experience. frM IUPP'IH.
F- lnlonnotlon. No ~ron.
Sond S.A.S.E to Slortlng, Doot.

13

Eooy Woricl Ercollonl Pori ...

In

514-441-:llfJI.

ranee

Ptror Bllilngo. t-2 ro. Aoiotod

AMERICAN NATIONAL
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTQ, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS
&amp; AUTO DISCOUNTS
UFE I HEALTH
304 ass t257

CLA 355, r:lo Gallipollo
Trlbuno,
Third A llpollo, OHa:zs
451131.

18

BlUing et.rk: E.xl*l•~ With
Modlcaro,. llodlc:ol:\Third Po~y
Aepty

To:
~

•

Wanted to

Do

Hondlcoppod Gontilmln, 114441-4000.
I-,..;.:..:..,:::1,..==-Sor-v-=-lco.,.,.-:CCNn=-::-.....1 -:-1111
.,-,
.lion
To
Dololl. llallft, ...., 211Jn. up. • lnourod, fno
llolivatod, With Good ecm- llllmolll.l--lltt or 1-

a RopOno From ltonl
Copy And iOi DilL StnMI!I Dr·
aardutlanal Sldilo With .. Afton-

=

munkatlon Sklltl. ,Aepty To:
CLA 358, r:lo Golllpollo. DoUr

508~
••.....,1111

llpollo, un451131. ·
JOIN AWINNING TEAIIII ·
lmmodlllo -lng lor o
DrtverJS•rvlel Technlclln with
ono of Ohlo'o latgMIII2!Homo

lntwatod coli 114-912-5213 ·~
111 4pm.
Caro For Tho Eldorly In Thol;
Homo, ·Port·Timo 20 -25 Hro.

A.taltera. Beneflf•: hou wage
pklo prollt oha~ng, voco1 n, fneun~nc•, 40'1 K · and unllorllll.
lluot bo hlrd wortling, and CIIN abaul the cullom«.

1 m• hOfno cloon

;nd'~o"klnQ envlroiunent,

W...dopOniy,IM-441-2427. .

Gononl Molntono....

Pol'"lnaJ

Yard Work Wlndowe Wasnea

Guttorw ClNnod Light H.oullng,

Corllmertc!1

I

Aeeldlinlial, Steve:

·EJ:peri•nee
with Manutectured
homee prelerred.
COL llcenM il~1~4~44~5;tl~u.;.w;il9;;;;m:~;;;;
will bo .--ry lor *lYing. Goorgoo Portabfo Sowrnlll1 don'
liond ,...mo • oppty In houl your logo lo lhl moll Jull
at
Homel,Ohio
37'121 43131,
Hock·
lnJAlverda,.
~":· loiJIIn
:167.

ponnlf
5-4 Forno to
cow·mllker

18 Feohlon
19 Joekey Steve 21 Port o o
HlillowMn
costume ·
23 Was l!llroducod
to
24 Hebrew lettor
21 Flower holdor
291nqul,..
32 Small hoi'
34 TV lrog .
36 Speclea grou.,O
37 Cruy
38 Small weight

56 Angw
57 Ancient slave

58 Mild e&gt;pletlve
59 Cushion
60 Changes
color of
51 --poly
DOWN
I
2
3
4

Sorrowo
Redcllth-brown .
ABA member
Rellglouo poom

5 Actor -

Mineo

6 York 111111
club
·
7 - - Wondorlul

..

54

Tr- For Rllll. aompo11o ca1
Uinlto, t14-441-24tt.

43

Farms lor Rent

I;co;II;:IOW~;17S-;~t;IU~.~~;.~

.6.11real estate aclvertist~ In
this newspaper Is subjeCt to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to adverttse ~any Preference,
llmitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention ro
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.·
This newwaper will no\
knowltngly accept
advertisements for real estate
wflich Is in violation of the law.

Our readers are hereby

inlormed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
o~nunlty basis.

Mobile Homes·

tor sale

IJcenMd WV R..l Estate SaiM
People. It you're looking tor •
gJound floor opportunity where

54

poeo,li4-lll:l.z118.
21&gt;drm. oplo., Ioiii oloc:trlc, opplioncoo lumlohod, iou"*Y
room ....._, . _ 1o echoOI

ot: Vlloa- ·c.... Alllo. ,., Of
colll14--3111. EOH.
F u - APOIImom, I Bocl.......,107 Soeand Avonuo, Ooi- 2 FORI llolor Compll"'' FrGIII
llpotlo, $27Wo. IIIIIHioo Pold, End eo.... (Bntl 1 Rtio ThunderillrdAndtFitoEooortGT
114 441 1411 Aftor 7 P.ll.
Llkl
-·
114-241-20:12
Evonlngo.
All Fumlollod
Eftlcloncr, 3 Room
,.,..._
In
Downtown OoiApoilo, , , . _ 24' Round · - ground pool,
71114.
CCNnpiotol
uuKanougo.Oh.
- · lluot 114to ,.......,._
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT --~73
·BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA::a 12 Will
d ~.. 4 lolo In Cllrlollono Gordon,
Late \ 2. '· • 4, 151-1, Ohio VII-I rnoviH. to
SZit.
10 ohot&gt; ... llomOfy Gordono, uoo. 114CIH 114-44f:Z111. E441-3478.
quol Houit1ng ~unly.
4'x24' Pool, New Liner, Pwnp· I
Fumlohod 2 I 3 Room Apon- Sand
..!10. 114-21111-ttllll
ment, et.n, UIIIIU• Paid; No Aftor4FIHor
P.ll.
Poto, Rer.ror-, Dopoolt R•
qul~,l.........1111.
A &gt;olo Ill Com ......, 13M; 31"
Rfdrne - · $125; Cornonl
Fumlohod Etllcloncy $111M1o. Ill••
Wllh Eloc1tlc llolor, $171,
Utilhloo Pold1 Shiro Both, 507 s-.242
Allor I .
Socond. Gollopollo, 11,14 141 Uti
Allor 7 P.ll.
BaHory OpiiOtod Bot.,.n ear,
Fumlollod
Elllc:loncy,
All - . $100, 114-24&amp;-Uil
lltll~loo Polcl. Both, BNuty Equl...- For s.r., 114tMSIMo. 811 Second Avenue, 441-0141.
Golllpollo, -11-3145.
B - B1 11oc1 wtna
Fumlollod
olfloncy,
Pcint -40 To -10 ·Dogrooo, 'li.H. B-•
-30Ul'&amp;'r,.3.
....._utllhloo pold. - · Guaromlod IAMot Prlcoo, Tho
-Coto,IM4tl 4222.
·
Groci- living. t and J bod- Brand· New~w MotOitud
o p o - ot Yl- Tr.odmlll
In Jonuory,
oncl
R l - Will Soli ~: $1 080, 114-311'
ln lllddloport. F""" 04141 n No LNuo -

.--aua.

:::-7--:--:----:---:--:-c=--

:.~~=~ J.~~~

171-Z117hftwlpm.

45

Furnished

Rooms·
Rooru lor rent • wee1c or month.

Stortlng ot &amp;120/Mo. Golllo Hotll.
114 4tJ~O.
,
stooping -

with - n g.

Aleo trailer ~pace on rtnr. All
hook~pa. C.ll •!*' 2:00 p.m.,

304·m-slll, Maeon WV.

you can bl creative • . apply

1Dll4 Holly Pork, MilO, IUOCI,
614-1141-2025.
1190 Clorton MillO 1IZ Acn lol
2 BR, t Bath, CA, Cot-ol
Calling, Z Oeckl:, Fenced Yard, 1
IIIIo Out 581 On Loll, S28,ooo,

092-633311-f 1-1.

114 441 1133.

...,......,.j/

3
.21 Acroo, St. AI.
141. I Millo rom Gollpollo, 114448-7303 Evonlna-.
LIMITED OFFER lEW 14170
$1191 DOWN, $11&amp;110., FREE
DEUVERY I SElUP. 304-7555511.
llou J poymonta • mova In,

nN 14•70 2-lbr. CIH Rwa llur·
dock l.fOO-Zit-10711-

llllle-

-1

10lolllll~

lnotru....t

11 G - o
18E~-

20ShNda

24~-

II
WHO WAS YOU
FIGHTIN'
WITH?

Mrsc:ellaneous
Merchandise

63

WHAT DID
I TELL YOU

JUGHAID

"TARN TAIL
AN' RUN I!"

ABOUT

s ·o~o

6 ••

,

North
I•

Pass
Pass

2•
3t

East
Pa ss
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

26 Polluled

28 - oort: oupplemontlng
30 Clltlo
.,.,.-4-+----jf--4--+--t 31 W1lk
n-+-+~ 33 cnruorrun

lead : • 7

FIGHTIN'
WITH

35 Pop

40 NoiH'IIWtlllc

.e.ment

The queen
of the night

. GIRLS?

Livestock

2•

West

(ol.)
25 -lnd
lermlnor

Nge.

Rainbow IWIIPir, Hill MW,
S4IO. 30Wn.2084 ••• 7pm.
Rolrlgerotor--. goo grill,
knlck«nocko, town tumlfon,
t&gt;lcnlc tobfo, more mloc., 114-

tn..ML

Aetrla«aton, atowa.

And~ All

Will••

A1ccndldoned
And - . . . - $100 And Up,
Will Doll¥er...............

Edward Young. the English poet who
died 230 years ago, penned:
Night, sable goddess' from her eb&lt;Jn

64

IT'S TOO 8AD 'I'Ol! DIDN'T
. LIVE DURIN6 WORLD WAR I ..

Hav &amp; Grain

1700 •· round .,.... of hly; aleo

atfal1a IICIUIN bate~; Mr com;
114 •54183 or lf4.41J.e1S4.

lllaorl Alflllo And Drchord
STORA(E TANKS 3"000 GoHon $1.71 Sq. Bolo!, Doiono
Upotahl, Ron Evono ~nto­ Jacbon'a Farm, 3M-1~1'7113.
Jocloilon, ONo, 1~'7-0521. .
Squora 8oloo Ql H.oy On K~~&lt; 1.,.,--::,.-,:-:=".,.,..;.;_;,..._~
Thrw prom ......, elM 7, OM llaorl, a..._ Soodo, 114-441- 12 Fl. V-8ct1oin Wllh
waddk4
$!:ii-hne, 2115.
-~; Trol~olorl( 2
high nock, tow bo
1
111
• ·
Gono
.,._
~··•
or
• , ...
M' Fiat Botlom, 7.1 · HP - .,
101.2.
Trolling. llotO&lt;, Ft.h Fl-.
Whlta clock tobfo wl\lmlnllo,
ll.21, Trailer, 11,310, 1\4 441 ?:I'M 1
4cllaln ·w/c-lono. ·304-TI'I- Squorw boloo of hoy,
never wet.l1t 115-3110.
5811.
18ft Thundorb~ 150hp lo!&lt;jr. cury, 30.w711ook frir Ed pr
Yo....., 1000 wott lnduotrlol
~aftwllpnl. .

.-n.

-tor._'.;!~!!.•

=.-w!"'"..AIIIoo Bor.,H.o~=
Transportation

or pul IIIII,

.::SilO;::.;:··~11.:.;14-~.........
~::.:::....---

55

sBuilding

71

1884·18' I ' Chomplon Ellto Booo
Boot t!OXRI ..,.or, Loocledl lf'-

441-17t7, 114-441-1101.

Autos for Sale

1172 Corio 4114
Right, 114 4 ll 41101 Allor
Grovollooo
_,tpo
•· .
drolnplpo ,_ In atoclc. Sidero I P.ll..

choot typo ~~ 1a •• •· ... '56--Pe-=t_s_lo,r,..,Sa;..;,-1•_~
concl. ttOO. 3UM7D-1845.
. 0,.,... Shop -Pet Grooming.
Conc:roto I Plaotlc Soptlc Footu~ng Hydro Both. Julio
Tonu 300 Thru z.ooo Goiiono Wobb. c.n 114-441H231.
Ron Evono Enll=i. Jock- AKC Doiomatlon Pupo, 1
~~-=·OH:::.:..,I:,:-ION=='S1::_::5ZI==:.:--:-- Fomoloo, 3 Molle. Vel Choc:Ud,
Eloc:t• Whllichol ... - . . . . Flrot llltoto I Wormod, 1200,
And
Uud, 114 • 1121 0.114-3111--. .
F... In Homo .
Domonotrollon,
s-mon•o AKC
M
Hom oro, 114-441-72A
- · tll0. 104o5J1-a444.
Entertolnmoilt !)lllllr ~Ex·
tro Nlool IIWl'l-2720
RI
P.ll.
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
T.V.
:Z.nhh Conoolo...Sit.lll
AOC 1.1" Port. $71.111
PRINTER

-.n. -·

Chlzon 200CIX

..

•

=.ronoor::r:-,,..a.h.:..-zzt

tfll Chi-., 4dr, outo,
Hclob ck, lnopoclod.
101115, . Ao oonnd ron. ..._
~..7N211.
.
...__
1810 Pontile Qr~nd Prix, $800,
.Joh- Tr-lllioM And
080, For .........~. 814- Sorvlco Uood And Rlllulh

.-eo.

.....

=~or, SIMpe

t.J~

~.,

dllnce

Trellr,l1 4 Ut UM.

1891 Chrna." LAblron ConY. Y4

1171 lnto-lonol - . Truck
-ring Che - ·
e...-1247.

Aulo.AH- Goad Condition
10,000 lllloo •iiOO 514-441-1451.

IKM Fl.
Nodo Cottle
T.-,
t1,3M,114-311--.

t-

1'\AKl::O YOU

"-55&lt;. SUC.H
A THINU?

Home
-·
lmprovementa;l

'

. -··....;:···· ...--~-----.

......

ASTRO·ORAPH

11 Potnt~ Piuol . . . - .
onion oolo, _,bulbi I bill'
Pl•until WV, Cllll ~M&amp;O. ding plonto. :IOW71-4014.
114 448 -111.
.
Rill Fwnhure. W. buy, Mlllld
SWAIN
trode
ontlq=-l\llod
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12 ho••oholclluml
· Wll buY
011¥0 St., Golilpollo..- " Uood •nr •mount. 1wa
n. ·101
tumhlft, ~ or;- :ootorn &amp; 8eCond 8t.t ~1 WV. ownir4
41
Wotk-a.l .
H.
Rocky Pol_,, --773-U41.
No t!ppHancea. Holluhold fur.
nlohlng. 112 mi. Jorllcho Rd. Pl.

•

31" - - · ...... pony,

Rorllwhlfo ,...., ridinG horM,
u• .t:na w/oodclo &amp; l&gt;rldto.
~
1 :M~IOI7.-.• f14-441.11ll Of
4-H Plgo For Solo, 114-317-'11131.

4yr akl ~. sad&amp;labNd,
o.M;;;.;;ICk.=.;::IOMA.:.:..;=-21=:11.:.:__ __

SASE to Astro·Graph, clo lhis newspa- LI8AA (5ept. 23-0cl. 23) You might be
peJ, p.d . Sox 4465 . N ew Yo rk , NY
10163. Be sure to state your zOOiac sign.

1!4

Electrical &amp;

Friday, March 31 : 1995

Relrlgeriltlon

Eacellinl Condition, ..,.zoo. IM44&amp;-1157 Allr 1 P.ll.
11H Ftonl F-ZII ILT Lorio! .,._
.........
.•
Efl.ll

• Your material prospects look promising in

LnrNnOe IEnl~·::.-,le'::
L&amp;wuww,
a 0..
L-P • Not. ~- I
Eloc:t. Furno- s.
Umotoo, H You
Colt Uo .Wo

Don,

r
......

==

Bolh ' - ' .................
1au•ucklw, 31,000rnl, ... 21'J.1301,
wv 002141.
•
.. tho ... _ . $11,000.
Evonlngo-2-2111.
Rllidorotlol or - i l l

Ill- - Uconood
!f!klntl,
Aldonour Eioc:tMII,
304..711-1711.

I.

'

~®=bdJ\y

.'.

.
,

.~:lne

year ahead. This will be due to a new

-;'1Jtream of opportunilies.

· ARIES (March· 21 -Aprll 19) Favorable
.'.'/:hanges that have taken place recently In
y our personality will be admired by Olh·
~rs. Don't ""e surprised If You're imitated
:·today. Ge: a jump on hie by understand· .
...iftg the inlluences that govern you Ln the
"'9ear ahead. Send lor your AstrO•\&gt;raph
predoctions today by mailing $2 and a

unusu8tty lucky today in an arra ngement
with two other people. Think ol the group

TAURUS (Ap&lt;ll 2D-Moy 20) II could be as a whole &lt;nsl~ad of yourself.
utremely dilhcull to loot you loda y, SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Instead ol
owing to youJ except•anatty keen percep-

tions . You ·will accurately perceive the
ur,lderlying motives of others.

clot, 814-2111-1811.

F EMTFPGMC ' B

C F L WD0 M
YF P G )
DC A0 P L
YMC E
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Time wounds all heels." - Jane Ace .

o· P

.

"One man's folly Is another man's wile ." - Helen Rowland.

~~:~~,

S@tt41lA-l££trs· WOlD
IIIII

l~lto~ ~y

Rearrange letters of
0 four
tcrombl.d words
~ to form four words.

KU L I NE

I I' I

I

CLAY I. POlLAN

the

be-

r

B0 S E E

I

II I

r

1

E NE I C

~-~=,'

break inson
hiswas
college classes. 'aI
learned a good lesson lhis last
·
semester. When I runoutofdDor. - - - - - - - - - . k n o b s. I can .actually use the

tI

. .--:

O;:_;.,R-=E...-~1 Q- (;m-~i;,.
6

the chuckle quored

TO GET ANSWE R

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

ITHURSDAY

·:;;ROBOnL\N

Services

a-· u-.

X J

STRI&lt;£ ABLOWN 11-£ v.M ON

.\

F......,.. Hooting And Cooling.
·--.-po~-Fonf,
lnotollotlon And - · EPA
Cel11fled. Aetldentlal, eomm..
good, 12000; 114-a4l'4ZII.

A F 8 . "

CFLWDOM

(ZXOV ·XBMC

J D P G

GDG

1-fGH PRICES. SHOP THE. CI.ASSFfE.DS,

t wu ._, i-. f.'l'-

-

A K ·F W

XNW

PMRMC

"What do you say when someone gives you a package?" the mom asked her precocious son . "That's easy."
he grinned, "I say CHARGE ITt '
·

INI Torry tnvol trOiMr,
mlclowlve ..._,

1la Ftonl FIIO, I CJL 4 opoocl,
little 1'IUIIII. runo aood, ftOIO:,

D

Remand - Torch - Ledge- Device - CHARGE IT

ZZ', o1r
otaopo

UP X A

UNSCiAMBlE .t.BOVE lETTERS
HE
Au.JAVS TAKE
EVERYTH lNG
SO NEGAT I~ ELY &gt;
\oiH' DOE~

... •

71l'2281.

'H X N

bY f1U1ng in the trusS1ng words
L---L-.I--L-.1...-1---.J you develop f rom step No, 3 below.

good condhion. :104-114')

... 000.~5511.

•

Cipher cryp~ograms are created trorn quotal iOflS by famous people. put and pr.unt
Each \ener"' the Cipher 11ands l or anolher Today ·~ cJ~ : Z ~ C

r. I I I I 1

i4n

INI Colomon Pcrp-Up Clmdor,
Sl- 4, 'lory - . 1100, 114'
•• 4414.
..
1M7 Elh tn~vet trailer. • ..
fol:ced air heat, blthlu:4.&amp;
ehoww, ceiling fan, fullol
h
wtndowto olldlng polio - ·
20ft ownfna. inlny hlno.
Uood VWJ~lilt- candllilljl.

by Luis Campos
Celeont~

1

ChovJ Jo...homt, II,OOOml, vwy

1184

molor

CELEBRITY CIPHER

s:--,..:.._N,_T.:....,
.

•

1H1 Ford Thunderbird, v.a anD!','!o ioodod, - · 114-ta·

- 110,
RorlfiE
....._,
l.oodod,
71.L.OOO
IIIIH,

That gives you a hinfas to the right
line in today's deal. ·How should Soulh
plan the play in six diamond s a fl e r
West has led a trump?
South's rebid of three clubs wasn 't
necessarily natural: It was fourth-suit
· fo rci ng . He might have been hoping
North, with a club ·stopper, could con ~
tinu.e with three no -truinp . !!ere,
though, North had nothing betler to
than rebid lhree diamonds . He had
shown hi s major-suit distribution a nd
he didn' t have a c lub slopper . Now
South, Hugh Ross. bid what he hoped
.
he could make.
If only declarer had a dummy entry.
the contract would be easy to make. Ye~
although the trump split was favorable,
without a dummy e ntry, h ow could
South avoid losing a heart and a club?
One possibilily was to play the ace
·and another heart. This wouldn't work.
·though, if West wenl in with tht! kin g
and relurned ·a club, Easf covering
dummy's card as cheaply as possible.
Ross made lhe .iight play. He led
dull queen at Irick two. !The 10 would
have worked looJ .
Iflhis trick had been ducked by the
defense. South would have continued
with the ace and another club, ruffin g
in the dummy. But when East won with
the king, the club jack became a win·ner . South had gained access to the
dummy a nd discarded his heart loser
on the spade ace.

iI

-•J -

CII[IC .... 4 X 4, .... . CIII,
,
_ - · aood
-ton.
Coil :IOW)$.7111"
..,.__

Her leaden sceptre o·er a slumb'ring
world.

i

NO! WAAT

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

PICKENS FIJRIITUH
Nowr\lood. ..,.,
.

Bl6. ~7

In rayless maJesty. now stretches

(,000 GRAVY,

Six, ~'14-

l71-'IIIIZ.

so

C 1995 by NEA, tne .

3Q

48 Slmpto .
so ChoriC1or In
Odlotlo
51 WitCh pori
52 Whirlpool
55letlol...u.r

forth

0

18114 Allongo motor horne,
Chi¥
- · 3.!'.!'J
2V.B53ml,
ood 4114
oonolllon,
....,,oo.l.
..

11n ~loc Grond Am, 2 - ·
ac, 18,000ml, 15500. Phone 304-

Toloocioo 8ottor • Fonn

llo- Forguoon Troc:tor 271 Dual R-o, Good Cond~
lion, Hoilondto Hoytlnor
HlyiMollor 271, 114-371-2430.
POLE IUILDING IPECIAL
30'o45'xt'. Polmorl SIMI Slcloo.
GolviiiORI- Raat, 15'xl'
SIMI Stldor, 3' lion DoO&lt;.
~~~· ERECTED. IRON HORSE
100,000 BTU HI EHicloncy lutLDERI 1.-aaz..-.
Goo
Fumaco - • Pumpo,
Vll'f Roooonobly PMocl, Ono 63
Livestock
UMd 25KW Elll:lrkl Fumaco,
Conlnl Air Condhiono&lt; F... Eo- 1 11
Old ..__ ~ntlo, Good
tlmatoo, t.-.al7-iill c. au
,_,,, 441-e301.
~ 11'01.
Wllh CNiciNn, - · -

If·~ '11-\E. WIPE"
DI~D! .

TO

tAli£ IT

·tm Apocllo Pop Up N.w

81

20TJ.

175-7121,
1100 Laser, 1~r. ti,DOOnll,
auto, 1111. cruiM, •m·fm caalnklo "5:30pm.
u.... ti!IOO.
304-oll.aetlfl.oftw

I -

~._

.....

.......

• "

' ... etUL&amp; loJE:
NO
f\OP€0 IT WA51&lt;fN... 1

AADt I..&amp;D'ID W'~ ,

Motor Homes
anVImlcaiMtt.. M, IIUio., 1lr, 1Dl'4 A - 20 Fl. Seil-cd&gt;talntd N;, Good Candltljn,
-tomlly,
- AZIO,
oncl battl.,
Of
114-MWB71
or
$2,200, 114-. . .2111.

1111 Ford Tewru, new hood 1ncl
tondor, high m - . PS,
PI-'-cnrloO, tilt, $2000, ,._._

&amp;1 Farm Equipment

DID ~TU:J 61VE YOU
TH~T ~IN~ I-III£N YOU
601" ffiSW:£D 7

... r'::::::::&lt;.&gt; TIIID R.IG.IIT! MTJ.U. ,

1111 Cellbrtty Eura Sp c.rt • •

w•

Financial

·-·· 4

.. )JORN LOSER

=

:.:.r.-

-rll'""

Farm Supplres
&amp;Livestock

-

Tranomlo.tono. Aloa, ~ Aorl
tHO ~loc Tnno Am 13.000 Clll')' Tronomto-.o. 11Wl'I'
original mlloo, llkl ,_ {noldo.I ZZI3.
out; loacad. $4,500, may ....
nloo -to&lt; on · 1 - .
ton... - . :
- . . 304-t711-1834.
lie. D il Rro.:!:.,':"i::,..., WV. 1041112 Cutiooo Cion $1Z5; 18 Fl. 372-3833 or 1.aoo.tr.1«121. •
lltllhy Cal Tnllor, IM 381 1101
Tronomloolono. Uood, robuiK, •II
ln-od, auonntoocl.-...
__ _
1112 llorcury, 2*, outo, · - 4150.1bieto
tod.$125.104..71-3211.
clll· I
tl84 Z-28 350 Au!Omotic, T·
Tapo, --7883.
79 campere&amp;
388-tall.

~ ~ntor $110.111
1-1-2041.
.
VCR'S
'llobfle homo- lor- In Symphonic $11.111
·
1ta1 ·c;:tt.vy C.nll1r, 8unrool,
COUntry• QlriNigt, MWW 1nd
Good
CondKion, 114-4411-ZB71.
Weier (ncludtd, Clible evalltb... a ..... With R - ~&amp;~ .ea
Proflaalalllll Pill Groomlna. All
&amp;aero
Dolbo
$71.111
185/mo., Ju•t 10 mlnUIM from P1natonle Ml.ll
.-. · 11'-. 11U Font F-210, 4x4, ~· Ton,
Athlno, 114-1182·211l
- Soltoloat._,, YOU&lt; Fair Condhlon, 3111 Wind-,
KJIC.$11.11
. -Second- FMRCI. Loove Rune Good, NNcle Bed, 8Mt
Tral.., lott Fakvltw RHid In BkS- Mognovox 4 HNd Wllh R-• .......
H 1 can' Get To OIIOr, 114-2111-ea71.
woll, Ohio. 30.w-IH321 bohlro Lilli Now, &amp;MI.III
Pllono, Dr Col Allor I P.ll. Colt
So.-ng
4-$101.111
5pm Of 114-24$·$344 olllf 5pm
1181 · llorcury Cougor, Y-e,
STEREO'S
•••ktnda.
251110, For Appoint-. oulomoll..l:''· , _ ond runo
JVC • Ca-to Doell • Storoo
aood,
od to 12450, 11449
For Lease
Tunor • lnlo'!lnlod Amp PI-•
114~871 or 514-1141-:1045.
EOft71.H
;::--;:::-;,..:..-.:::;-::::.:...~,....,...
1111 IIOfllo c.m 88 Block.
B5 Aero Form 35 Acr.o, Nowly Ponooonlc • Tunw Ca_,o,
WANTED: 8TUD SERVICE FOR 5~000 lllloo, All P-r. Sooclod H.oy, 10 Ac,.. Hlah Turn Toblo_, t .P'-.J:iDI
BAIBETT
HOUND
114-31~1,
Tl..., Roconl Tuno -Up, Good
Dl.l5
Productive PIIIUrt'For 50 lo 10 Marantz· o;ulltll
IF NQ ANSWER 'LEAVE liES. Cond-. CoH Allor 3:30 P.ll.,
.
IIICROWAVEI
Hood 01 Big Cl~!!', 4 111111
BAOE.
Konmorw Fut1 Blao, iiiii.H
114-441-41141.
From HooPital, lt4-,..-tl41.
Ponooonlc Whh Tum T till Ford Thundorbird LX,
Musical ·
..1.115
57
'moorvool, at, brown. tully
Merchandise
Ponooonlc Whh Tum TobJio
Instruments
loodod, klrlooo ontry ·~-..
$71.111
.
55,000ml, t51100. 30W711-30111
lloiOIICft*J Word Full 111H 'hldwln c...- plono, aood (llondnl.
Slt.lll
~
oond.,
SlOG. ~
H9US8hold
Sewnl Clr !llereo'a To ettoo. betaN Spm or ...,. m . •Dii·
till Oldo Stot._, Wogon, one
From!
'
Goods
ow,.,., 41,000 mi-. MW tl,r n.
Jll TECHNQLDCIY
A-1 oond. owner
tiMnce.
m Stoto R - 110
104..~232 or 175-3030.
Glllipollo, OH

wm mow, wnllnt yard lind
-.otory. Coli ~75'6- ...
IO&lt;IIIU.

••

..

2415 lh21.

Equl...-,104..71-11121.

'"FRANK &amp; ERN:EST

f

upplles
Biodl, brick, wlnllmolo, CloiHIO Wln..... 'R1o Gronde, OH c.n 114-

lOut-.,

01-1, I DON'T
KNOW .. LIKE,
''WI-lEN IS
LUNCI-l? ''

YOV COULD J.IAVE 8EEN A
CARRIER PI6EON ..YOU COULD
I-lAVE DELIVERED IMPORTANT
MESSA6E5 TI\ROII6H ENEM'I FIRE

..

43 StOIII)Od
45- Qinlfy
-+--+-~f--+--1 45 Cut
47 lorootllolk

By Phillip Alder

In town. ADDiicltlona lVII...._

Opportunftloo.

· South

74

1 and 2 bedroom aparlmenllw,
tumlshed Md untumt.hed.
MCurlty •...tt rwqul,.., no

Col

1tt3 Ford F-111. 4•4, I c,lnirlr,
:.,.~ Nr ~Ianing .....

I.

Apanment
for Re!ll

46 Space lor Rent

your ekllle kl lhe WVIOH •ru.
then we need to talk.. Call 114-

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

12 HP C... Codot, 122 modol,
42" cut, SilO; I HP Cub
Codllo, 31' cut, 1710; 114-1122013.

~---18.

44

Life
8 Prophot

22 Tho Do¥11

a.w••

:::z4~Hot::-:...~c.~..:-:F::or~E:;:Idoo;::::~::--::Or::

Full-Time Slcrllory: Exporloo101
Wonl...-olng
eorro_.

Trlbunel.~5 Third Avenue, Gal-

a,

.,..:;,==,.su;:...,=,·;,.,.,.,--,.,-

umblo Producto At Homo. Clll
Toil F.... 1-800-467-6561, Ext.
3t3.
•t1 R---•vobft
Ful I•Tl me -coun
· -

3

Homes lor Sale

IM-3N-2240.

Computer ~ needed. Work
own hour~~. 520-SOklrr, 24hra.
714-251·33'11 elt 1501. ·

I

31

3 Bodroom Homo In CcMrnt,.Y
F0&lt; Solo By a.-, Bolting On 3
WANTED
10 Pooplo To l.aoo Wolahl, llou Acrw. Rural Water, Loelted
llonoy. For tntomiotlon, . . . _ Polrlo4 • NO&lt;tllup
Callt.aoo-210-1071.
Primo Hunllng, To Soltl

AVOfl SPRING SAI.ES
Avorogo S8 .fl5 /Hr. AI Work
-Homo
-Moll.
Dlocou,.ol
Bonofhol No Door IDoOf, lnclop.
Rop. t.jiOO.JII2~731.

Expert•~-

-

No~her'a

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

5 - 11/l c...,. Lond For Cloy T-nohlp $211 Por Aero,

o, Dllfwontlal WHh Ea· 11
Help Wanted
..... Equal Opportunity _:._.:..:.;;.::;:_....;..:::..;.:.:..:;_ _.

Work

53

Podol digit
MOAIIII .
Kopt cloor of
llovo gently
ond omoothly

wA 2
oAK98432
·o loAQ108

Srnol :lbr, ffll pluo utii~IH.
-882-2141.
......., dopoolt.'Col -

Cen-

K, P.O. Box 14i16~ Ortando,
32814.

42
..
45
48

11101.

And t"art Time, State Teeted
Nuralng A..letanta. Compethln

..

so-.

ln~$110/Mo. IM-44&amp;-

llpclloc Ohio 45831 FO&lt; Full Tlmo

Eom up to $1~

.

• Q 10

o!o K 8 3

SOUTH

Smell 1 BuLoom Mobi.. Home

now hiring ~rt-tlme help. Comil
In for appUCitlori.
.,
AppUcatlona .,,. Now a.lng kr

.nvel~

•J 8 53

Antiques

Buy or 111. Anllqwo,
an Rl. 124
Nloo lrnoH,2 bodroilmo, IQ. yonl, 1124 E. lloln
Zl Porch St, Kanougo. CIH 114- Pomooof. - : ·II.T.W. 10:00
1.m. to 1:00 p.m., sutar t :DO
-11113.
to 1:00 p.m. 114-ta-ZIZI.

Help Wanted
AVON I All Arolo I Shl~oy
Spoa ... 30Hl'S-MZI.
AVON to buy «eell, Mlrityn, Independent r.p. 304-112-2648 or
NIOG-092-6351.
84 Lumbor In Gllllpollo Forry

Dtmonatr~Uon.

·•10974

IT ().SED 10 BE

lll-2133.

11

P.apa.

EAST

IS 1-.0T A&lt;, e.N) AS

e~ectriD, ..... ,.w~,.~
-~. n!O..-h. ­

Employment Servrces

"'J 4

so I.X1r +-\I'M~ NJY

Bodroom Trillo&lt; No Plio,

3br, 1111

Sll•

Clnal-

hold Fumlllft

IIZIMio $200 Do_.~ Bullvlllo
pt... Trooh Pold, &amp;tUIIIIDD.

151 s.cond Av.nue; GalllpoiJe.

ter, 170 Plnecr'MC Drlv•,

•A K Q 6 2
• Qt076
• J 5

~

:IOW7S-'Illl.

42

3·30·95

Anewer to PfeYtoul Puzzle

41 Fiber clu1ter

1 Enlold
5 Outlf cowring
of on anlmol
9 Over tiMiro
12 Booeblll collo
13 Plleller
14 Actor Vlgoda
15 Found
t7 Dove's cry

11(#11.... lion okllltlo, ,..:
. ••..., - w....
ciiiM,

cpoCod At P"-tool c...

31 Blooblll tum

hiring professionals today , apply your
mind and l alents to your projects. You
can do some of th em yourself and save

GEMINI . (lley 21-June 2.0) When considerable time and money
involved in some lorm of social activity SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2:H)ec:. 21) Today
today , you're likely to be .at your best yo~ will standout wherev"r you go . You
Your presence .wHI have a cheerful, posi- ·have a marvelous quality that will put t~e

i1v8 effect on others.

focus or atten1ion on · you , whatever

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Chance" you're 'doing .
might put you In the rlghl spot at the right CAPRICORN

(Doc .

22 -Jon . 19)

time today to benefit Prom a material Conditions ·might not start out to you' lik·
opportunity. It may have somet1ling to do · lng today, but everything should end up
with your career.
.
• to your satisfaction . Keep pos itive

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your chances lor
success will increa se today if you look
upon life as a game instead of a battle.
The right attilude can pul you in lhe win~
' 1
nor's circle. ,
VIRGO (Aug. 2~-Sopt 22) Someo~e you

thOughts embellished with high hopes.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob . t9) Try to
think in more expansive terms today. In

fact, big plans will have a better chance
of succeeding than little ones.
PISCES~Fob. 20-llorc~ 20) You mighl ·
be lucky today in Yf?Ur malerlal interests.
g may s uddenly develop lhat
increase your holdings.

are strongly connected to· emotionally

I

could be 1of tunate lor you today and
introduce something new arid /worthwhile

1Somethi

Into your tile.'

.

·

.

'

MARCH 30 I·

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 30, 1995

,__Making it big---:

Land deed signature is.likely forged
ASK ANNE • NAN

signature· very well while other realty·stretcb. It's made of 100 perpresidential secretaries, such as cent cotton. These socks come in
President Tyler' s, didn' t even both- black and white and cost $4.50 per
erto imitate his signature.
pair. To order, call 1-800·222If you want to get in touch with 0020.
•Lingenfelter directly, write to blm
FEEDBACK:
CLOUDY
a t P.O. Box 299, Lahaska, PA RESIDUE IN ADECANTER-J.
18931.
Wilson of Port Austin, Mich.,
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: wrote about this for B. Brown of
Would you provide me with the Algonquin, Ill., who was trying to
name. address and phone number remove a cloudy residue from a
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
. of the company that sells men's decanter. She sayS:, "Often i t is not
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
socks lhat do not have elastic in the residue but the etching of the glass
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: 1 tops? You published this informa· from age and liquid that bas been
just found in my late husband's . lion a year or two ago, but I have in the container over the years. By ·
papers two old land deeds dated lost it. - VIRGIN.I&lt;A GRADY, . using more chemicals it just makes
May 1. 1860, and signed by Presi· Arlington Heights, Ill.
it worse. I had this problem, and an
dent James Buchanan. If collectors
DEAR VIRGINIA: Here are a antique dealer said to put a few
were intereSted bow would I deter- couple of sources f~ socks w1thout drops of mineral oiJ ·in tbe &lt;!ecanter
mine the value? -E. LEGATE. elastic:
and roll it around till the inside is
Rolla, Mo.
~ Dr. Leonard's Healthcare
coated. If there is any excess make
DEAR E.: We spoke with Tom catalog features non-binding cotton sure it is poured out"
Lingenfelter of the Heritage Col- socks, two pairs for $6.99 . The
STIJMPED: FUZZY SOAPlectors Society of Lahaska. Pa. He item number v;uies according to Barbara Pellonpaa of Ishpeming,
said that odds were very poor that· · the color of the socks; black, Mich., writes: "When I was a little
your deeds were actually signed by brown, charcoal gray or white are girl, about8 oc 10, "in tbe late '60s,
President Buchanan. He explained available. For the catalog, write to t· fondly remember having a
that President Andrew Jackson Dr. Leonard's Healtbcare Products, 'fuzzy'-growing teddy bear $08p,
signed land grants during his first 74-20th St., Brooklyn, NY 11232; about 3 inches tall. I don't recall
term, then he authorized his secre- telephone: (718) 768-0010.
.exactly how you got the 'fuzzy'
tary to sign them.
- The Chock catalog has an started, but you set lhe soap 115i~
With this preccden~ virtually no elastic-free sock that is described for a few days aild then- 'fuzzy.'
presidents signed land grants after as an "oversize sock for extra com·
''Once· ypu used the soap and
Jackson's first term. President fon and extra ease of foot care." It got it wet, the fuzzy would not
Buchanan's secretary imitated his looks like a regular sock, but it can return. But it was great fun anx-

iously waiting and watching for the
fuzzy little spurts of growth that
covered the entire soap bar! I
believe tbe soaps came in various
colon - pink. yellow and blue.
"I've asked about this magical
fuzzy.growing Sllap at many shops
and stores but no one bas ever seen
or beard of it I bave two children
of my own and would love to share
such a neat childhood memory with
them."
Readers, ~an you help?
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest y;ill .
appear in the cPIU!11n. Due to the .
volume .of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors
of "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whet·
stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
Two E'rlze Problem-Solvers
Sb!lre Their Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, calll-800-888-1220.
Copyrightl995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist aDd others, con. tact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

the most important component of
the typical sitcom.
Maybe the sitcom laugh ·track
you hear on your TV contains the
recorded sounds of a studio audi •
ence that are rendered sufficiently
giddy to laugh at almost anything.
Or maybe a laugh track consists
of canned audience responses
dubbed in after filming is complete.
The laugh track is the Wonder·
bra pf mirth. It transforms comedy
that would play as thin as Kate
Moss into something that purports
to be volupruously funny.

•

,,

AL;lHEIMER'S SPEAK·
ER - Lenora Leltbelt, coordinator of a support group for
Alzheimer's and related dlsor·
ders, was the guest speaker at
Monday night's Rotary meet·
lng. Leitbelt works with tbe
Meigs County Council ·on
Aging.
and how to cope with the stress
assPciated with caring for people
with the disease, she said.
PePple with Alzheimer's lose
thei~ short-term meR!ory so maintainmg a routine is very important
she explained. At present there i~
no cure for the disease and it is progress!Ye or gets worse as tirn"e progresses.

-~--Poet's
''Middleport Too"
.

"Please, I'd rather not discuss your
bathing rituals." The laugh track ·
(HAHAHAHAHAHAHA) acts as
yo"" proxy.
Where does _that leave you when
the TV 1s SWitched of~? As the
Bard wrote, all the worlds a·stage.
As you go about your ,bu~iness
away from the rube, you re JUSt as
much an actor as Je~ Van Dyke
or. th?,se w~men on The Mo.mm1es. In thiS comedy you call hfe,
you deserve a little backup, too.
. If ins~t, pus~·button, ne~er·
mmd-there s-nothmg-funny-gmng-

Chester
--&amp;Juncil D of
A to attend
· state session

Support
available for
Alzhei·mer's
careg1vers
Alzheimer's disease and q:lated.
disorders were discusse.d at Monday night's meeting of tbe Middlepan-Pomeroy Rotary·Club·.
, .Lenora Leifheit, a suppon group
1' cpordiriator, provided some facts
about the disease.
•
Alzheimer's in on the increase
in the United States, she said. Pee-. ·
pie are living longer with. the
chance of getting Alzheimer's
increasing with age.
· There is not a good test available yet to determine if a person
bas Alzheimer's, she said. Many
other disorders similar to the dis- .
case have to be ruled out frrst, she
added.
Leifheit says 90 percent of the
.c aregivers for people with
Alzheimer's disease are in the
home. Caring for a person with
Alzheimer's is very demanding and
trying for the caregiver, she commented.
The caregivers get together to
discuss care of patients, nutrition

Remember, the laugh track is
not there to make you laugh, or
!flake y~u think what it'~ applied to
1s genumely funny. It s tber~ to
mark each place where the wnters
meant fo~ laughs to be.
. Here':' a bona fide example of
Sltco'!' !pve-and-take. ~he. laugh
trru;~ md1cates ~~ r,mcbhne.
. M1ss m~J.
As much as I
miSs m¥ acne . • HAH~AHAHA.
. Yqu re out m the kitchen lookm~ for a snack. Not tow~ if you
m1ss an exchl!Dge like. I,h.and!~
small. fragtle antiQUities;

I was born in Kenlucky and
weaned ncar Army boots,
But at one time in my childhood
I was raised in Middleport too. ·
Yes, I call .to mind the school
there where my hair was sbon with
curl.
At the lower part of town, from
there, across the street of Pearl.
.So after writings of the upper
river v1Uage fmm the blue,
Like help I gave when called
That I left Put other times I lived upon,
. and played in Middlcpon too.
Showed all my friends I care,
Attending juniPr high school
But when they really needed
:there and church of mother's me,
·choice,
I never made it there.
I always bad a good excuse,
I thanked the Lord for bcari~g
To be some other place.
prayer fwm a young and tender
Til' i~ like all the others,
voice.
So as I went on forward to my
.Showed on that mirror face.
future without clue,
So every time I take a look
All the time.\ good came in my ·
mind, of that life in Middleport too.
That face I plainly see.
I recall the days Pf summers in
Telling me in silent thought,
the park and at the pool,
The way I ought to be.
. ' It was there that I resorted for
That in the future, like the pas~
Sllme fun while staying cool.
Friends may come and go.
· Yes, the grace pf God was witb
But like the mirror !CUing me,
me, while as yeti never knew,
How many willllrnow ?
Of his mercy that bad kept me
as I lived in Middlepon too.
How many can I count on
That do the same as I?
So my mind was looking back·
Pretend they really mean to do, 1
ward and my thoughts were there
so true,
.
And then don't even try .•
And my bean was in division
Sp after looking once again,
I know wbat 1 will see.
and it nearly split in two.
, Both placeS I grew up in; thank
Whatever face, that mirror
shows,
·
, ,,
, God be bmught me through, '
And it's a fact be takes me back·
Is reflection back from me.
·to thoughts of Middlepon too.
·
Love
(
By Teresa Hill MUier I
·
Ronald Coats
· Pomeroy
Love is being bap~y for the
other person
.I
when they are happy being sad

SUCCFSSFUL RACINE WOMAN - A former Racine woman
bas been promoted to general manager of the Sun City/Palm
Springs Community Association In CaBfornla. Sue Curtis-Sweeney
will oversee golf course operations, facility maintenance, Illness
center and financial aspects of the resort. She is the dllughter ·o f
R'a cine's Sam and Mary Curtis. Recently, she performed as a
back-up singer with Barry Manllow at the McCullum Performing
Arts Theatre In Palm Springs. Sweeney is a member of the Indio
Chamber of Conunen:e and the Palm Desert Master Chorale. Sbe
and her husband, Tom, live In West Indio, Calif. Tom is a corporate pilot for Santa Margarita Co. In Orange County, Calif.

~

on-here laughter is good enough
for the likes of "Full House" and
"Muscle," why shouldn't it be
available to you?
So get yourself a Laugb-Pak and
you'll have audience responses at
your command. The Laugh·Pak:
It's the all-purpose. portable, personallaugb track.
You're trying to impress a date
with your cleverness and your joke
falls flat. You press a buuon on the
Laugh-Pak. Instantly, her ears are
ringing from · the laughter of
amused multitudes.

.I

Or maybe you hurl a zinger at -::
your husband something about not •
only does h~ have a spare tire
around his waist but it needs a ..:,
retread. Never mind that your wise- ,
. crack doesn't make any sense. Just ~•
push the "Gotcha" button on our:
, Laugh-Pak, ·and out comls a
resounding "Woooooooooo!" •
You've scored a bull's-eye.
~
You say something tender and
loving to your child. Of course " ·
he's not listening. With the press
a button, the Laugh-Pak emits an appreciative "AWWWWWYI_YI_'!!W·~

I

ot

If You Have A Clean Car, Truck Or Van,
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I

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia tnc. N-apaper

.By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The House bas approved the first phase of a welfare
reform plan that Republicans said was needed to break generations pf
dependency. Democrats said i.t was mean-spirited.
.
RepresentatiVes on Thursday approved 56-39 and sent to the Senate a
biU to end the General Assistance program this summer.
Gov. George Voinovicb .wants to use about $200 million in savings
from the program's demise IP finance welfare reforms in separate legisla·
lion that bas yet to pass.
Sponsoring Rep. Joan Lawrence, R-Galena. said the biU was the firSt
s~p in a plan io encourage personal responsibility.
··' "For too long we've sought to treat the symptoms rather than the dis. ease," Lawrence said.
"ADd tbe results. of this mentality have served to trap multiple generations of Ohioans in the really terrible web of poveny, at great social :ind

F~rked

financial cost to all of us and, I would contend, to the recipients," she
said.
. •
The vote in the Republican-controlled House broke along party lines
with minority Democrats in opposition.
Democrats portr.lyed the cut as an attack on the poorest of the poor, an
average 61,000 able-bodied adults a month who receive $100 payments
for six months out of a year.
Rep. David H81'\ley, D-Springfleld, recalled his eltJ)erience as a volunteer at a church-sponsored shelter:
"I would hope that at least the members of the Finance Committee·· ..
might spend two or three days or nights, all night, in a homeless she.lter,
get to know the homeless people, get to know Slll.lle poor people," Hanleysaid.
.
"They aren't bad people like we like to think of them. I truly believe
that Ibis is a mean-spirited piece of legislation," be said.
·
Rep. Mary Abel, D·Athens, acknowledged the need .to reform a wei-

Run gears for '95 season·

Employees add
new features to
state facility

product
The GOP maasuRis all the goods
and services produced by workers
and capital located In the united

States, regardlessolownershlp.

fare syslem sbe described as fraught with problems.
"B.ut in many .aspects it is difficult tP suppon a bill or a program that
does little or nothmg to break the cycle ofpoveny," Abel said.
Republicans insisted tb,e debate was not over compassion but abotlt the
best way to help the poor achieve independence from well'are.
Rep. Michael Wise, R-Broadview Heights, said a government safety
net remained in place. A majority of the ObiP Department of Human Services' $9.1 billion annual budget is used for fmancial and medical assistance, and food stamps to low-income people.
"W-e are not being mean-spirited," Wise said.
Lawrence said the current system bas not worked, and public money
ins)ead should help provide training and jobs.
"4t ~e stress that persons formerly eligible for GA remain eligible
for $115 m food stamps, fQr employment and training services fpr
empiPymenl subsidies, for lin)ited medical coverage and emergency MSiS·
tancc," Lawrence said.
·

Democratic se·nators
attempting to rescue
imperiled pr.o grams
By ALAN FRAM ·
Associated Press Writer
W~HIN~TON- Senate Dem()!:rats "say $1.3 .billion in education
and children s _programs should be shielded from a Republican budget.slashmg campa1gn that has berome a tangled political battleground. ·
Minority Leader Tom Dascble, 0-S .D., planned a low.oods attempt to
n:s~re .the money today as the Senate continued on a bill trimming $15
b1U1on m already approved funds from dozens of social programs.
·
Dascble said that if his amendment was defeated, Democrats would
make other efforts to p.reserve .social pro8fll'!'s. jeopardizing GOP hopei
of sendmg a comprormse versiPn of the Ieg1slation to President Clinton '
after next week.
:
"We are not as concerned about when the bill flnisb·es as we are i()
making sure we restore the invesunents this country owes to its kids ''
Dascble said Thursday.
'
A day after the Clinton administration pmnounced the bill unacceptable because of its _cuts in education, job training and other social initiatives, the Democratic tactics were angering Republicans. The White
J-!ouse al!'eadY bas threatened to veto _the S17 billion HouSe-passed verSion, wh1ch makes even deeper cuts m housing, home-bcatins aid and
Pther pmgrams.
.
Senate Republicans see the measure as a frrst whack at their pledge to
balance the budget by the year
Many of them believe they would be
political winners even if Clinton vetoes the measure. Such a veto would
not comooeasy for the presiden~ since it contains billions in aid for earth·
quake-rattled CalifPmia, a key state for his 1996 re-election bid.
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., s;l)d that if Senate MajPrity Leader Bob
Dole doesn't "see llQme daylight on when this bill can be finished Dole
wiU pull it We lose all the cuts. but the president doesn't get his ... 'disas·
tcr aid.''
·
Complicating matters further was an amendment by Sen. Alfonse
D' Amato, R-N.Y., tbat would all but scuttle Clinton's $20 billion bailout
of the ailing Mexican ~nomy. D' Amato's measure, opposed bitterly by
Democrats and the admm1strauon but likely to prevail if brought to a vote
slowed lhe Senate to a crawlfor mPst of Thursday.
·
'
Democrats threatened to delay the spending-cuts measure unless
. J?' Amato wi~drew his amendmenl The New Yorker's provision would
s1nk the Mex1can economy. and rattle world financial markets and the U.S .
~nPmy. they srud. But D Amato said the bailPut was a waste pf taxpayers Jnoney.
Still another impediment was separate legislation providing the Pen·
tagon w1th money 11 needs to finance its recent operations in Haiti Somalia and elsewhere.
'

zooz.

BREC merhber's concern over
petition le9ality prompts action
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallia
County member· of Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative who fears a
member move to oust BREC' s
board of trustees could fail if taken
to court·has set out 10 ensure that
members' goals are met successful·
ly.

Virginia Carpenter of PatriQt
said petitions circulated by BREC
Members for Change calling for a
special board election won't with·
stand a legal challenge.
Her opinion is based on an anal·
·ysis of the petitions offered by
Columbus attorney Louis Cen·
namo, who bas also offered to represent the interests of Mrs. Carpen-

concerns.
¥rs. Carpenter, a 34·year
BREC Members ror Change is BREC member, hosted a meeting
chaired by Charlie Freeman of Tbu_rsday .at the Galli a County
Scottown, which in addition to the Semor CitiZens Center to answer
petitipn drive called for the dis- questions and seek support. She
missal of Geperal Manager Walter revealed to the nearly 40 people
V. Truitt Jr. and an investigation of present that she bad met with the
BREC's managerial and account- board at its meeting earlier this
ing procedures.
week and requested information. .- .
!Truitt bas since been terminated
Sbe asked for access to informa- ·
frqm his position and separate · lion already submitted to Freeman
aUllits of BREC's books by private and stressed that she and others
and1 federal agencies are underway. were not affiliated with Freeman's
'Everyone's been coming to me gmup.
'
•
ana tellin~ me that he (Freeman) is
She has since received a reply
nbt speaking for us, that all of the from the board's attPrney, Dean
counties haven't been heard from," Evans of Gallipolis, informing her
Mrs. Carpenter explained.
(Continued on Page 3)
"tr you want this board ou~ you
have to do it legally. Otherwise, it's

O.J:p;;;~~cutor questiOnSDNA ·;;ierl\-~~;·~;d;~;

lhllr 71,- •ll•,lliii,I/C, .....,

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$

cloudy. Highs In SO..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 31, 1995

WASHINGTON (AP) - The attributed largely to increased sales
economy grew at a bouming annual of aircraft and jleavy-duty trucks
rate or 5.1 percent In the fourth and higber net exports. The expon
quarter last year. a pace that private figure was adjusted because
.economists estimate has slowed imports were revised downward by
dramatically in the first three $2.4 billion, the Commerce Depanmonths of 1995.
men! said.
The Com"'erce Department
The revisions caught analysts by
reponed today that the surprisingly surprise. Most bad predicted that
strong fourth quarter increase in the rate of growth would be
gross domestic product- the best unchanged from the earlier estithree-month showing since the end mate.
of 1993 - belped push the econ&lt;&gt;;Economists say a series of seven
my to its best year in a decade.
increases in interest rates engiThe pace of growth was even neered by the Feder:il Reserve over
mpre rapid than the government the last 14 months is having a pro•reponed amonth ago when it esti- nounced impact that will slow
mated that GOP. which measores expansion to about half the pace or
the output of all goods and services the last quarter of 1994.
produced in the United States,
GDP increased 4.1 percent for
surged 4.6 percent in the last ihree all of last year . The last time
months of 1994.
growth was more rapid was in 1984

an• ............ __ .......,,

1.1 Liter,., .. lagiDe, 'l'llt, CruiM, Rr.
u.Jog, 14K, Power Door Loclcl,
LDck lrabe. lpr to lpr W..rut,.

Ptdaell

Low lolllpl In lhelO., pori·
ly cloudy . Saturday, portly

2-14-15-20-32

Economy's 5.1 °/o growth
in late '94 surprises some

Always Here
By Teresa HIU MUler
I am always here to understand
you.
I am always here to laugh with
you.
I am always here to cry with
you.
\ I am always here to talk with
)\OU.
1 I am always here IP think with
·ypu.
\ I am always here to plan with
y~u . .
.1 Even though we might not
always be together.
Please know that I am always
"I to love you.

I

1·2·2·5

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Area residents should dump
their cabin fever and explore
anew Forked Run State Park,
said Park Manager Randy
Wachter.
The 917-acre state park
remains one of Ohio's best-kept
secrets because of its seclusion,
activities and lack of crowds,
said Wachter, who bas managed
the park for 11 years.
Although not obvious IP
passersby, park employees have
worked all:&gt;winter (or the rus!).of
.spring campers, outdootsmen
and pleasure seekers, Wachter
said.
BEHIND THE SCENES- Forked Run St:ate Park is finishing the final projects before spring
Many county residents
activities begin, Park Ranger Randy Wachter said. Much or the work completed during the win·
already know about the fishing.. ·
ter has not been obvious - such u overhauling the park truh .truck, Wachter said. Ahove,
and camping opponunities that
employees BID Chevalier !lad Garllelcl Pauley Jr. change the truck's oil. (Sentinel photo)
exist at the park, but new. features have been added, Wachter
·best to speed up transactions
recycling center at the park to
The park offers two hiking
with. customers, by adding an
trails, Ohio River boating
said.
clean up the area and save on
"We're trying to entice them
electrical cash register and fax
access, fishing, 198 non-electric
trnsb collection costs. be added.
machine, be said.
in with a few more activities,"
Other inconspicuous signs of .
camping sites and 2,601 acres in
· Volunteers are stiU needed to
Wachter said.
the 10 employees' work include
the nearby Shade River State
plant
trees, paint signs and preThis year, the park has added
cleaning and painting old bathForest
serve
the park, Wachter added.
a youth soccer field near the
room stalls, mending old trails
Some of the upcoming park .
The
park employees pride
entrance with the help of the
dates and events include;
·
and repairing equipment.
themselves
on answering quescounty parks and recreation
• April 1, the tackle shop will
Park usage has steadily
tions
and
helping
pleasure-seekdepartment. The park also
open for the season;
increased during the last 10
ers,
Wachter
said.
This year, the
boasts a new horseshoe pit, volyears, Wachter said. Ulst year's
• April 12, trout will be
state
recPgnized
tbe
park for its
leyball and tetherball courts, and
Memorial Day was the busiest
stocked;
100 new campfue rings.
level of public service based on
weekend during that time span,
• mid-Apri.l. one shower
Other updates include adding
travelers comments.
but he added that much of the
bouse wiU be open for campers
"The people wbP come into
picnic tables, rebuilding
traffic depends on the weather.
to use;
restrooms and planting new
the
r,ark are the most imporBeyond the new activities,
,• April 24, turkey season
Wachter said. "I think we
tant,'
trees.
the park's location bas kept the
begins.
do
a
good
job and people come
This year, the Meigs County
long lines and waiting 1Q a miniAlso the camp is doing its
back."
Litter Control office will open a
mum, be added.

New ·Buicks -&amp; Pontiacs
· · , In Stock!!

. Being together in goPd times
and bein¥ together in bad tim1;5.
Love IS the Sllun:e of strength,
' Love is being honest with yourself at aU times.
Being honest with the other person at all times.
Telling, listening, respecting the
truth, and never pretending.
LPve i~ the Sllun:e of reality.
Love is an understanding so
complete
That you feel as if you are a part
of the other person,
.
Accepting the ,Pther persPn just
· .
the way they are,
Not trying to change them to be
something else.
,
Love is the source of unity.
Love is the freedom to pursue
your own desires
While sharing your experiences
with the other person,
The growth of one individual
along side of and together witb the
growth of another individual.
Love is the Sllurce of success.

" ,

Pick 4:

House votes to end general assistance

lOr the person when lhey are sad.

~

3.·6·8

Vol. 45, NO. 235
Copyright 1995

corner----

Looking Back at Me
By Olen D. Harrlslon
As stand before my mirror,
M y face, I know I'll see.
But [wonder, if to Plbers,
That face is really me?
Is all my tboughts and feelings,
Coming from that piece of
.glass?
Is just a look upon a face.
Like time, will soon be past ?

Pick 3:

•

CHECJ( THIS OUT!!

State se~on to be held Aug. 13
through 16 at Dayton was noted
when Chester Council 323, Daugh·
ters of Am_~:rica. met recently at the
ball.
It was noted that District 13 of
which Chester is a part will be presenting the memorial and installation services."
·
Erma Oeland reponed on rallles
held recently 81 Dayton and Bethel.
Members were reminded to take
gifts tP the district rally to be held
April 8 at Meigs High School.
It was reponed that Betty Denny
is home from the hospital. The
death of Betty Young's motber-inlaw was also noted.
Ethel Orr presided at the meet·
ing which opened in ritualistic
form wit!l patriotic songs and scriplure from John 29.
After meeting a potluck was
held with quarterly binbday being
observed. Included in the group of
honorees were Mary Jp Barringer.
Pauline Ridenour, Opal Hollon,
Marcia Keller and Joann Baum.

Optimism
rises in end
to strike
Sports, Page 4

Thanks to sitcom laugh tracks, you'll never laugh by yourself
By FRAZIER MOOIU;
AP Television Wrlter
NEW YORK (AP) - Big sit·
com night tonight, with laughs
aplenty. Maybe even yours.
·
The folks who create sitcoms
like "Seinfeld" and "Mad Awu1
You" (not to mention duds like
"Martin" and "Living Single")
aren't taking any chances. Why
not? Consider the two laws of sit·
coms;
- Laughler is contagious.
-Lack of it is deadly.
Enter the laugh track, which is

Ohio Lottery

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES -Proving that
the battle over DNA evidence in
the OJ. SimpSiln trial wPn't be for
the faint or heart; a prosecutor suggested a defense sctentist ought to
go to a drug detox center before
testifying.
Deputy District Attorney
Rockne·Harmon delivered his acid·
tongued co·mment about Nobel
Prize-winning scientist - .and
admitted LSD user - Kary Mullis
out of the jury's presence Thursday.
Just moments e·aruer, Harmen
I

was accused of harassing and
intimidating scientifi~ witnesses
who didn't agree with bim.
"This is the sort of thing we
mean," said defense attorney Peter
Neureld, springing from bis chair
and pointing at Harmon.
Judge Lance Ito warned, ''Mr.
Harmon, I don't need to bear these
things.' •
Mullis wasn't in coun and mes- ,.
sages left on his borne answering ·
machine were not returned late
Jbursday.
.
The sparring was part of a bear·
ing in which Simpson's attorneys
argued they bad the right to resur-

rect a challenge of critical DNA
evidence.
They alSil asked Ito to stop prosecutors from waging personal
attacks on witnesses like Mullis. Ito
said be would rule Monday.
The bearing set the stage for the
next phase of the trial, which could
begin as early as. today with testi·
many from police technicians who
collected blood and other evidence
from SimpSiln's bouse and Bronco
and the crime scene.
Simpson. 47, is charged with
slashing to death bis ex-wife
Nicole Brown ~Impson and her
friend Ronald Goldman outside

Ms. SiiJIPSOD's cond inium. '
and zip it up," Clark said at a side·
Prosecutors said I ey plan to bar conf~ncc Wednesday.
·
haul an airpon trnsh
into coon,
"The t.raslj-can is coming, too," ·
along with a new wi ess to sug- she added. ·
gest Simpson dispos d of someThe witness's name was not
thing before leaving to the night released and Clark did nPt elaboof the murders, accordi g 11&gt; a coun rate. Prosecutors also didn't say
transcript released Tb
y.
when they mtght produce the witDeputy District Mieia Clark ness or the can.
said a witness had c e forward
who saw SimpsPn st 1 nding by a
Defense expert William Tbomp·
trash can at Los Ang~les lnterna- son lambasted Harmon foc trying to
tional Airpon before tj :s late-night terrorize scientists who disagree
with prosecution theories on DNA
flight to Chicago on J ne 12.
"This witness will state that be analysis and asked the judge to
saw Mr. Sjmpson reach down, then · limit questions that prosecutors
reach hack up and go into ~is bag would be allowed to ask.
1

SP-ring

Daylight~ time begins;

remember to set your clock
.,
.flliWard oae hour Sllllday mommg.

•

l

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