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                  <text>Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

IP.,ta-rao~~~r,-llllllddleport,

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Ohio

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Wednesday, Aprll7, 1993

Ohio LQttery

57th

Masters

Pick 3: ·
. 886
Pick 4:

underway

9586
_ Super Lotto:
2-22-24-33-34-39

Page6

Kicker: 9i3524

Easter Lilies

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Low toalcht .. mid-50s.
Partly doudy. Friday, cloudy,
high In 70s.

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Vol. 43, No. 240
Copyrighted 1993

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FOODilND

Boneless
Tavern
Ham

____ __

~ongress
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lB,

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND $10.00 ADDITIONAL IPUiiiCIIIIASiE_J

._

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EASTMAN'S VALUABLE COU PO 1\
Expires Sat., AprillO , 1933

~

v-os ...... .
IOIIUS SIZE

. Styling ·
Products
lllrr

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IE •"-"1

.., ......

• •u n C.• m~ lf(OVklea
· 2

let

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••111wq
,
.Mid
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99 '

CAN

¥·05
·~25
1~"~.--.?Hair $229
....--•-::~
.... Spray . . .

I

WIS...,_, er COIIDmONER ~--

·RED.-RIPE

Str.awberries
.

LENDER'S

~; . Bagels

~Ianning

for the .future

Work begins on RG's student. center annex

Authorities are trying to piece·
together story of
nian ·

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briefs-.
Cuomo.reje.cts nation's high~st court offer ---Local
Theft of dog probed

State to change system
of.issuing license plates

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· Howard said.
· By Jir., FREEMAN
-Hocking County Commissioner .
.
Sentinel News Stall'
Rober!
Oaubenmire explained his
Alhens. and Hocking County
coumy
wanls 10 join wilh Athens
Commissioners carne one step clos·
Counly
to see thai the old Route
er 10 forming !heir own separale
691
Landfill
is closed properly due
wasle dislrict afler Meigs Counly
10
po1ential
damage
10 lhe I.e-Ax·
Commissioners Wednesday said
they do no1 oppose the two coun • waler syslelll which supplies soiitb·
ties leaving lhe existing six-county em Hocking County.
Daubenmire said the old landfill
disbict.
,
Meigs Counly C9mmissioners is aboul located a mile upstream
Janel Howard and Manning Roush from the I.e-Ax well field. He said
said they would supporl 1he 1wo Le-Ax waler syslem will be
- coumies in leaving 1he disuicl inslalling new lines from the forwhile Commissioner Bob Harten· mer Poslon Power Plan! site near
bach said he wanted to survey !lie lhe old landfill.
The six-coumy disbict has said
issue-Junher. ·
Commissioners of the two coun· il will not assume ownership of the
ties ar~ visiting the other four coun· landfill which was closed in 1985.
' lies 10 ask for support before House Closure Qf the landfill, located near
Bill 723 goes inlo effccl, allowing the Athens-Hocking county· line,
counties 10 withdraw from multi- wiU cosl aboul $1.5 million.
"I lhink (making our own dis·
county districts during a 90-day
BREAKING GROUND '- Wielding shovels
Welherboll or lhe Community College Board or ·
bict)
is our only way out," DaubeR·
period
starting
April
16.
to break ground Wednesday for lbe.$1.75 mil· Trustees; Rk:bard Haft of Morrison's Hospitali·
"As
of
April
16
...
we
are
going
mire
said.
lion annex to the James A. Rbtldes Student Ceoly Group; Stale Rep. Mark 'Malone; and Dr.
Irwin said he and Athens Comto make a formal !IJ'Oposal to ask
ler at tbe University or Rio Grande and Rio
Barry M. Dorsey, president or Rio Grande. Con(the commissioners) to release us missioner Bill Theisen originally
Grande Community College were several Rio struction is expected lo be complete by early
ou1 of the six-counly disbict along supported lhe six-counly -solid
Grande ofric~ls, including Robert H. Eastman
1994.
with Hocking Counly," Alhens wasle disbicl plan bul changed 10
or the university Board ol Trustees, Manning E.
.
Counly Commissioners Broc Irwin supportiqg the two-county flan
said.
after lhey became aware o the
"We just wanted 10 come down problems ·surrounding 1he Route
and lalk 10 you 10 see whal your 691 landfill.
feelings are," Brae added.
"We have 60,000 people we
"As far as I'm concerned, it's have 10 answer 10 in Athens Coun:
going 10 be fine with me," Roush ty; Irwin said.
said . "If 1ha1's your wish, you
The 1wo commissions have
'While one lnajor consiJ'uction will seal400, a significanl increase denl Dr. Barry ~- Dorsey ciU:d lhe won't have any problem oul of already met with the Gallia, Jack·
job at lhe University of Rio Grande over lhe 250-person capacity in the project as an example of the public me:·
son and Vinton Board of County ·
and lUo Grande Communily Col- currem facility in the basemen! of and private pannership lhat exists
"I have no problem with it,"
Continued ~n page 3
lege is being completed, anolher is 1he SIUdent Cenler, and will be belween lhe universily and lhe
gelling slarted. · ·
localed on the second floor along community. Funding for the project
Ground was broken Wednesday wilh the kitchen and some small is provided hi part by Morrison's
.
Hospilality Group, the firm wilh
for a $1.75 million annex 10 the meeting rooms.
The
frrst
floor
wiU
comain
one
which Rio Grande contracts for i!S
James A. Rhodes Sludent Cen1er.
~issing
The two-story, free-S1anding sttUC- large meeting room, a facully-slaff food service.
ture will be located on the green dining area, a ltiiChen siOrage facil·
Dr. Dorsey also delailed the
ATHENS, Ohio {AP) · between ·Boyd Hall and the new ity and the building's mechanical need for the annex since lhe universaid it appeared Tippie had-been
dormilory ope·ned in the fall of plant, Koby said. Expanded s1udent siiy has become a social and cullur· Authorities in Meig' and Gallia . bealen and his feel were in poor
enrollmenl and the addil\on of the. a! center for the area. On any given counties are trying 10 piece togelh- shape afler he allegedly tried to
1991.
The consii'Uction sile is located new dormiiOTy prompted consider· nighl, he said, il's nol unusual 10 er the fragmenled s1ory of an walk home from CharlesiOn, W.Va.
near the $2,8 miUion annex 10 Lyne ation of a hew ·dining hall, Koby find rooms in the Sludent Center Albany man who was missing for Meigs Count~ Sheriff James ,
Center, scheduled to be finished by said.
and other buildings being used by 12 days.
Soulsby said T1ppie has 1old a
April 17, according to Rio Grande
The annex will free up space ill studenl and comm.unily organi~­
The family of Mount Tippie, 63, chec~ere~ s10ry of ?lhers driving
Vice Presidenl Dr. Herman L. lhe Sludenl Center uSed for dining tions for meelings, seminars and reponed him missing on March 27 , h1m m h1s car, which remained
Koby. The' general conl.l'actor on and banquel purposes. ll's hoped banqueiS;
afrer he failed 10 reiUm to his home missing. He has said thsl a Aorida
the SIUdenl Center annex is Crace thai evemually, such sludent-relal·
Following Dr. Dorsey's address, on t.farch 25. He resurfaced at 4:30 minis1er befriended hirn, gave him
Coruitruction Co., Piketon, ani! il ed services as admissions and brief commenls were heard from a.m. Tuesday at a Gallipolis molel, money and pul him on a bus,
was designed by Cincinnali archi· records, now hOUSed in olher build· Roben H. Easunan of the universi· where he asked for help in contacl· Soulsby said.
'
leet E.A. Glendening.
ings, can be moved into lhe Swdent ly Board of Trustees; Manning E. ing his brother in Athens.
Tippie also said he was IUmed
Scheduled for comple1ion by Center 10 provide a central, handi· Wetherholt of the Communi1y ColTippie suffered from lack of a way by Charleston police as a
January er February of nexl year, capped accessible location. The lege Board of TruSiees; Richard insulin injections for his diabe1es drunken drifter, the sheriff said.
the 16,000-square fool annex will umversi1y's booksiOre, now in the Hafl of Morrison's; and S1a1e Rep. and was admilled 10 Holzer Medi·
Au1hori1ies said Tippie was
not only provide new dining basemen! of Holzer Hall, may also Mark A. Malone. The group was cal Center; where he was listed in found wilh bus tickets in his pockarrangements for studeniS, faculty be moved into the cenler, Koby joined a1 lhe· groundbreaking by slable condilion.
hospital ets from Clearwaler, Fla., Augus~a,
and s1aff, bul will expand meeting
·
.
spokeswoman
Candace
Pope
said. Ga ., Columbia, S.C.; and
said.
Alan
Crace,
owner
of
Crace
Con·
.
room space on campus.
AI a recep,lion prior 10 1hc · sl.l'uction, .and by uo.ivcrsily offi- Wednesday evening.
Charleston.
•
The new sludenl dining room groundbrcakil)g, Rio Grande Presi· cials and studenl represenlatives.
.Gallia County sheriff's deputies

' He served po\itical commenlator and Slate
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - He
Cuon!O ·has been been saying-for governor of New York.
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment arc investilwice counted himself oul of the months _lhal .he's preparing 10 run from 1959 untillale 1973, when he Umversily of New York political
gating lhe theft of a dog from the Meigs County Dog Pound'. ·
· race for presidenl. Now he's for a fourth fou~·year term nexl resigned to head a national com· science professo( who is close to
.'
According 10 Meigs Coumy Sheriff James M. Soulsby, William
removed himself from considera- year. He's been governor the past mission. He was Ialer appoinled Cuomo. ·
Dye,
Meigs Coumy Dog Warden, reponed lhallate Friday night or
tion for the nation's highesl court.
"Obviou'sly, he loves being
I0 years.
vice president.
early
Salurday morning tbe lock was cui on the door a1 the dog
Just what does Mario Cuomo want?. . Only· Rockefeller. a Republican,
"He ·sees the opponunily 10 set governor," said William Cunningpound
and a blue tick hoWld was 18ken.
.
Apparendy a fourth lerm as govbas been elecled 10 four 1erms as . a record." said Alan Charlock. a ham, a veteran New York Demo!hat
the
dog
had
been
picked
up
on
Cook Road
Dye
reponed
ernor of New Yorlc; to maiCh Nel·
. cralic political consliltant who has
after
il
had
been
there
a
couple
days.
Nothing
else
was
bothered at
son Rockefeller's record.· ·
worked on a number of Cuomo
the pound.
"This is a simple lhing. It's a
· campaigns. "Maybe he's just not
commilment 1·fe~l toward lhe
ready 10 go iniO the .cloistered life
slate," Cuomo said Wednesday
of lhe Supreme Couit"
.
afW ipfo{ll!ing ~.!It Clin)bo •
He's as much as said so himself,
Gene Clegg, Long Boltom, was cited 10 the Meigs County Court
by Ieber dial he didn't want to be
likenin$1he Supreme Court job in a
by
the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment on a charge of no ~ra­
The stale had issued 7.6 million ~nt m1erview 10 bolh "heaven"
considered for the Suprep~e Court
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) IOTS
license foUowing- an incident on Swe Roule 7 Wednesday in
sell that wiD open .lip when Justice
The Ohio De~enl of Highway new plales for renewal registrations and being "entombed."
which
a coffee mug feU from the lOp of his vehicle, bounced off lhe
• Byron Willie retires !his summer.
Safely says !t will b!l&amp;in issuing ..e'le~y . five .years, said Milch ell
f!e also likes lhe limelighl thai
highway
ll!ld smashed against the windshield of Vicki .Wamer's
· ·, · -In lhe letler, ·Cuomo said he · fewer new hcense plales to save Brown, Bureau of Mo10r Vehicles comes wilh being governor, and the
vehicle, causing a slighl semtch in the glass.
reg!strar.
.
wanted to remain governor 10 help nloney.
·
ability to have· an immediate
Brown said the change will save impact: "The feeling when you get
New York's economic recovery
The department will issue new
and 10 give political suppqrt 10 pllites only 10 vehicle owners who Ohio lboill SIS million every five up in lhe rnornil)g dlat tbele are 111 .
Clinlon's "good work."
· .
are regisrcriDg for the first time or years in the making, s1orage and infmlle number of things you can
David Carnahan, Tuppers Plains, reported to lhe Meigs Coumy
·
Cuomo, 60, kept people guess· who have lost or damaged their disbibution of plale$.
do 10 make life beller for some· .
Sheriff"s Department Wednesday lhal Tuesday afternoon a tool box,
inJ through much of lhe early . jllales, dcpanmenl Director Charles . . Shipley said the deparlment one.'' · ·
saw •. two Sllllders, an amplifier and other 10ols'~ taken from the
decided not 10. cut. expenses by
stages of tbe 1988 and the 1992 ShiPley said Wcdneaday.
Cuomo has been considered a
back of his pickup ttUCk which was park,ed at his fCSidence. ·
presidential campaigns, POIIderina
· 1'he swe had been issuing new eliminating front license plates. contender for lhe Supreme ,Coun
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was
recommended
i"
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Thai
idea
the PFPJ and COIIJ so Jlllbllcly tbii
plates 10 all vehicle owner• every
since Clinton sinaled him out last ·
he gained the nickname '"Hamlet · five ·years; Now most owners will 1991 by Gov. George Voinovich's ye.-u a "superbr;- po~e~~lial candi·
on the ·Hudson." He eventually ··keep the 18111e plates and receive Operalions Improvemenl Task date. He had 'ell'leQied IS the ~
·. ' Roger C&lt;WS, :Bailey Run Road. Po(IICIOy, ~Sunday niahV
Fonce.
:·
bcued off both races.
· ··
v~lidation slickers w-en the)'
that somelime during the day someone apparently iried II! enter Ttis
wing's sentimental chqic.e .since
"We wanled 10 keep .tho two White's announcemendn March,
· · -·fhere was .no dithering thit renew their reaistralions, Shipley
house 1ly blelldng oul a ·besCmenl window.
.
license
plales iyslem to aid law though the Clinton inner -circle
lime. Cuomo said he lOki CliniOA
said. The fee,will be lhe IIIIIC.
Blood wu found on the wall under the window, ICCOI'Ciilllto 1
he Wllll'l inlelelled Apil I, when
Tho dcpirlmcnt expciCIIIO issue enforcement,. and tbiJ coi1-cuttina n~ver tipfed its hand about . · sheriff"s depanrnent report. It was believod that no entry was lllllle
·iniO the hOuse:
·
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··
rile praident c:aUed him io, disCuss 2.2· milliOn new plaleiiM..Uy for effort will sali~ the ru:ommenda· . Cuomo's
chances;
·
•
Shipley sai4. ,
lhe VICIIICY.
·
new regisbatiou and replacemenll. lioJi of lhe
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• Atl4 ' Slwa...., clean••
~~~rr-..vn laav•

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton lllday sent Congress a
$1.52 'billion budge! for nex1 year
that spells out ~ow he wants to
atlack the deficit through sharp cuts
in defense and higher laXes on the
wealthy, corporations and li.nergy
users.
He said his plan would "resiOre
hope in the hearts of the American
people."
Clinton's frrst full-scale budge!
l.l'acked 1he broad outlines of the
plan he unveiled in February' Bul
iii just two months his estimates for
how much the deficit could be
reduced over five years declined by
$31 billion. .
The administration budget prt&gt;·
posal projects spending S1.52 bil·
. lion for the· fiscal year lhal begins
Oct. I, up 3.2 percent from currenl
spending, essentially keeping pace
with inflation.
However, CliniOn projects that
revenues will rise lhree times as
fas1, climbing by 9.2 percent 10
S1.25 billion. This reflects lhe sub·
stanlial lax increases Clinton is
proposing. .
The deficil, the shonr'all
belween revenues and spending,
would shrink 10 $264.1 billion,
down from a ~ftC'fllf~e-dl'd
deficil or $322 billiOn lhis year.
. Today's budget document spells
oul Ctinton's line-by-line proposals
for every govemmenl program plus
providing funhcr informalion on
his package of laX hikes.
The .oemocralic-conlrolled
Congress already has approved- the
broad oumnes of Clinlon's plan
and for lhe firsl lime in a dozen
years a presidenl' s budget will no1
· be declared "dead on arrival" on
..CapiiOI Hill.
·
Bul thai does not mean that
ther~ will nol be ballles over the
details of·CliniOn's program, 'whicli ·
he projects would shrink the dencil
by $447.5 biUion over five years, .
Even so; Clin1on proi'ecls 1ha1
lhe national debl will stil ,grow by
$1.19 trillion over lhe next five .
years. a pace only slighlly below
the levels se1 in the Reagan and
Bush years.
Still, Climon argued that ·his
proposal reverses lhe nalion • s
course toward ever-increasing debL
"Therefore, I ask your cominued supporl and help," he !Old
Congress. "Togelher we can get
1he American economy moving
again, bring federal finances back .
10 a sound fooling and res10re hope
in the hearts of the American people."

liMIT ONE
WITH
ADDinONAl
PURCHASE

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AMuHimedla Inc. ~paper

Commission
OKs split in
waste district

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DOZEN

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President's
budget
goes to

SUPERIOR'S WHOLE ORIGINAL .

Large Eggs

2 Sectlone; 12 Pev-e 25 ...,,,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, AprilS, 1993

Man cited for no OL

·.

Theft of tools reported

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10·12 OZ. PKG.

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. Attempted B&amp;E investigated

EASTMAN'S

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Commeittary
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).11 COurt Street

PomeJ'01, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO niE INTZRE8T8 OP THE 8108-IIASON ARM

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPOOON are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters n .subject to editing 111d must be sigr,ed witli nam~.
address and tetepbone number. No unsip!Od letters will be publisbed. Letters
sbould be in good taste. addressjng issues, oot personalities.

·Outnumbered
Senate
.
Republicans have·
muscle when united
.

By wALTER ll MEARS
AP Special Corretip(llldst
.
WASHINGTON -Once, when an affronted senator complained at
being told to.go to heU, Vice President Calvin Coolidge assured him there

was~~~~;~~ec~:t~sathe~::!~;·in another heated s~nate

de.tJau:. a struggle in which ou~umbcred Republicans.staged -a show of
IJ)UIOnty clout to prove they can t be told where 10 go, e1ther.
,
.•· They haven't got the voteS to win. But when they slick together, they
if, have enough 10 b~ ac~on. That's.forcing.the J?emOCili!S.to bargain
II)- order to get the spending side of President Clinton s econonuc program
lllrough Congress. With no deal, the impasse led the SCnale on Monday to
~t the entire issue aside until Apri120, aflef a sJling break.
• At issue is the economic stimulus bill Republicans stalled to force the
administration into compromise and cuts. At stake is a GOP effort to
make the DeliiOCrBIS heed the minority in shaping legislation on other.
bigger issues, notably health care reform.
"It's just a po~tical power p~y.'' Clinton said Monday afle!' Republicans blocked a third attempt to hm1t ~ and force Senate acuon.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Vq11U8, the Democrat central to the
debale on the bill and on tactics, said Republicans were holding the legislalion hostage because they couldn 'I win their points any other way.
· That's right, on both counts. The only JIICS$UfC point the Republicans
, hilve left ~ the Seilale, ,where !t takes 60 vD~;CS to limit debate 8J!d end
mo4ern fil.lbu~. That s ~ kind the Republicans pave been wagmg f?r
a week, w1th ume-copswmng amendments that can t be passed and wntleD notice that theY. won't relent without compromise.
•• Arrogance Will not succeed,'' Sen. John Chafee of Rhode Islaild, not
usually a partisan spokesman, said. "Consultation will." He said the .
administtation was going to need Republican vOleS on issues to come,
measures like the budget, health care and the North American Free Trade
Agreement
w.hOnthestimulusbill,theadministralionunderestimatcriGOPsolirlarity,
ich stiffened when Byrd invol!;ed an arcane Senate pocedure to effec- .
lively'preclude amendments 10 the measure.
'
· It was Byrd who recalled the Coolidge anecdote of the 1920s, citing it
as leStamenliO the importance of the Senate rules manual he used for parliamentary advantage. The Republicans played by tliat same.rule book in
blocking action·on the Clinton bill.
·
The administration argues the bill is essential to crea1e jobs and help
sustain ~c recovery. Republicans say it will only add 10 the deficit
to finance pork-barrel projects, and should be pared back to essentials,
including $4 billion 10 keep paying unemployment compensation.
·• At times, it sounded'as though the electionhadn't interrupted the campaign. "The Democrats. like ti&gt; tax and tax and tax and spend and spend
and spend, and we like to cut spending first." said Senate GOP leader
.Bob Dole.
The Democrats called. it Republican maneuvering against Clinton and
for their rival ambitions to challenge him in the next election. "They're
trying to help themselves for 1996," said Sen. Donald W. Riegle Jr. of
Michigan.
.
That r:nay be a factor, althoufh who said and did what in this dispute
will be forgotlen IOn'g before 'it s time even for the.preliminaries to the
next While House campaign.
·
More io the point, Republicans are bent ori claiming at leasl a minority
share of power in congressional decision-malting between now' and 1996.
"This is the one place wh~re we can have an effeci," said. Sen. Arlen
Specler of Pennsylvania.
·
'
In the House, the rules force iss11es to votes in which the majority
wins; only in the Senate can a minority say no, even lemporarily.
Clinton calls it a revival of the partisan gridlock that voters want
ended. "Good things can be accomplished wben we reliSOO together," he
said in his Saturday radio talk.
.
But the Republicans complain that there's been neither reasoning nor
. ~onsultation, Chafee saying !hey won't he treated like a bWJch of door·
~~

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Page 2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, Apr118, 1993

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' Republicans were not consulted when the economic plan was shaped;
ifid they have scant representation on the health care task force. That's
not surprising. Clinton won. And George Bush didn ' t consult the
Democrats when drafting his programs.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walt~r R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

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Accu· Weather•

ar IBM

r-.M

Wffar -

..._

MaKe$ VQ(J THil~ You
cat-~ Cll1' iT He Oe. 'l
·
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."YWW/1

~

~a':~:F~ee=Y~ ..

10.see many ~ names from the
heartland. That IS no small order
when you ue looking for a carect ::
ethnic and gender ~ilt of brig~t
people who agree With the presl- •·
dent's programs, have someJov-· :
emment experience and are, · not '·
FOBs, at te,st AOBs (Acquain- ~
tances of Bill).
•
This slow pace of appoinanents "
is making implementation of new ':
more difficult The prime ·
is Defense Secretary Les.
He is being asked 10 go into
with the Joint Chiefs of Staff ':
change .numerous policies of ··
the Bush administration. However
he is Cl!rrerniy surrounded by
deputy and assistant. secrewho established the very •·
he is trying to change
,
Wagmaa is a syadlcat- .·
writer ror Newsp~per Eater- ~;
Alrloelatioa.
~
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Excuse me, I was ·j·ust.·... '. Zzzzzz!

A Sunda~ spread in the "Life role. But it was eerie reading that were in higb school, scientists were
and Times' section of the local . article, like seeing each of the experimenting to sec how ·little
newspaper recently was about sleep symptoms of a disease lisled on the · sleep a person could get by with,
deprivation. The authors contend health page and ~ng you have and promising ada~ when we'd eat
it's one of the most pervasive •
health problems in our country . :._.....,._ _ _ _ _ _ ___;._ all our meals in p1lls. One of my
sdcial studies teachers told us that
today.
.
if we'd just gradually reduce the
"I fell like they were writing
amount
of time we slept each night,
about me," a friend told me. "The
soon
we'd
be getting along on three
irritability, the inability to stay them all. Sleep deprivation victims,
or
four
hours
or sleep each night
awake dunng meetings."
.
you learn, are about as alen as a and our bodies would never know
She is an executive married to a can of Spam most of the time and
bank vice-President and could buy are responsible for most traffic the difference. My gy~ teacher
made us lie on the hatd floor. cross
all the sleep she'd need if it were falalities and industrial accidents.
our arms and legs, and imagine we
for sale, but she can't manage
That's what the article said, ~ere the limpest, dirtiest rag dolls
enough between her long days and along with another I read in a
the world. She told us 15 minnight meetings.
·
recent issue of Time magazine. m
utes
of this was equal to three
. "The other night," she said, "I Health researchers say that sleep
hours
of sleep a night, so we could
was driving, orily about three deprivation is at least as imp9rtant
~ave
all
that el\tra time for things
blocks from my office, and I had to as drogs, alcohol/anil equ1pment
.
hke.
studying
and practicing our
pull over, put my head down on the failure in causing general mayhem.
headstands.
Sleep
was IDF.wcenies.
steering wheel and catch a few Our mental and physical abilities
Now,
after
having
devoted ourminutes of sleep. I absolutely suffer. we're cranky and unable to
selyes
for
~ur
entire
~u!tlives
to
couldn't keep my eyes open a give. anyone our full attention.
lrymg
to
tnck
our
bodies
1DIO
needmoment longer."
· We're less creative, less accurate
mg less sleep so we could have it
I knew exactly what she was .and. yes, dangerous.
all
and be all that we can be, health
talking about, and will say no more
Several of us baby boomers in experts tell us we're ldlling ourlest I ~et mail from traffic safety town are talking about the article
commtssioners and letter·to-the- because we were unaware that selves. And here's the ldcter: They
editor writers who pounce on every · someone changed the rules on us say the typical adult needs eight
sin as a resson to wrile another 95 (perhaps we w~re .napping) since hours of sleep a night! l haven't
theSes with me in the Martin Luther we were growmg up. When we averaged eight hours of sleep since
I entered fust grade, they handed

Sarah Overstreet

Springing China free -

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me my crayons- and said,. "Here's
your little coloring book. Put it in ~
your lillie bnefc;ase, take it home, ::;
and.briitg it bact in the morning all' •
fmished.''
:::
I am happy to report that I'm on· •
thecuaing edge of this new "Sleep ~:
is Good' • trend. These same health
· experts :~we can retan1 our dam- :":
a'e by ·ng short naps. I could
g1ve lessons on pulling a short •
snoozer on my desktop afler the
office closes and before 1 start :
plowing through my daily New ·~
Yort Times. The janilor has ·
learned to resist trying to give me
· CPR when he sees me head-down
and to come back later to vacu~ •
my offtce.
:
. rve also accepted the fact that
even though some other woman
may be 'able to perform brain
surgery, write best sellers and
model Jockey underwear in
women's magazines, my DNA ~
didn't include that much .energy. I :
tried to have it all. but I looked like •
a raccoon, and I'm too vain for ·
· that.
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. Sarab Overstreet Is a syadl· :..
cated writer for Newspaper •
Enterprise Assoclatloa.
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BEIJING - Even five days buying the idea . that America nations. But if China should remain least seyeral decades. But, in any ?,
here offers up a full menu of Chi- should back off. The fervor of the what it is now - growing and event, ll IS an incredible economic, :;
nese views. How Bill Clinton's Tiananmen SqWII'li revolution may booming, non·democratic and and human, developmenL
~
America reacts now will be less be resting. But these Chinese kno"' ·repressive - we can end up back
. More. so ·than in the unpre- :
newsworthy than what we do &amp;bout
in ·the 1wamp of a big power rat dtctable cauldron that is Russia .
Russia, but almost surely of greater
ur'att
·
race not unlike the sort we just fin- President Clinton'has an opportuni! ;
long·1!71D importance- for us, for
rrt
isbed with the Soviet Union.
~Y to ~his mark, and pw theory
China, and for the rest of humanity.
Three •
A-'-'
the
1010
IQCUCC.
.
The official Chinese position on that if America relaxes there will
•acts uuoounale
current
Clinton
ran
on
.
a
democracy
our principal problem is simple and be no ohe around to push tor the fhinthese situation: 11) China is ~y
Dear Sir:
.
majority in Congress believe they
"H
· h · Ch
grea.ter political space they want, . ar e most popu ous country 10 platform. When he said George
adamant:
uman ng ts ·m ina b
ask ~ .· th' on!
the world; 2) 1ts economy is grow- Bush was "coddling dictaiOIS" he
Congress is off 10 a lousy start!
arc above the law:
or 10 IS Ypar· ing at the fastest rale in the world; was talldn$ mostly abotit our China
Carf you believe it, Congress
(;pngress' hplier than thou ;uti- is an internal affair." Accordingly, ut cannot
Chinese officials, America tially relaxed p&lt;!lice state.
3) 11
· 15
· th
,.,.
returns ' with over 10() new faces · tud~ what created the check kit- say
ought not, should nOt, and must not
And surpnsingly, at very high
e on1Y w•portant country policy, Clmljln says that a demoand right off the.bat, they vote to ing scandal, the post office scandal 'nk ·
· f trad
1 Chinese levels, there seems to be that remains politically unfree.
· cra~ic wo~l~yields more peace,
e, or·e se
. fl 'bT The .
The current population is about more prospenty. less pollution and.
ellempt themselves from another and· so on. Sadly, that kind of l1 .JL to. mailers P
there will be big trouble. But that, some growmg exJ J lly.
re' ts 1.2 billion people. more than less terror. This means, he says, :
law!
thinking · continues today. It is a of
Americans
U\lk
about
entering
into
discussions
course,
is
just
what
: Congress rushed .to pass The · disgrace! .
do ·each sprina when federal law with Americans about a five-year America, Europe, Japan and the that the old d.iplomalic arJument :
Family &amp; Mcdical Leave Act and
After the 1992 elections, you and political practice dictate that plan to promote democracy -Chi- former Soviet Union put together.
about pragmansm vs. i«Jeahsm had
Clinton rushed to sign it but when would have expected Congress to the president and Congress must nese.style. This, it's said, tould
The economic growth rate lasi · been .resolved : Idealism has '
all was said and done, only busi- change for the better. Exell!pting act to extend. deny, or put condi, include a grealef role for the Peo- year was 811 incredible 12 percent, become the most pragmatic course
ness is saddled with this law themselves from one of the first tions on "Most Favored Nation" pic's Congress, and grea1er free- and much higher in the booming for America.
because Congress excmpred them- laws passed does not indicale any sUitus for China.
H he doesn't back off in China, ·
doms for the Chinese people, and SOUthllnds that are the leading edge
selves.
ki.nd of change at all. They are as
U
he
keeps the pressure on for
Many influential voices from the Chinese media. In short, if ofa mooernizing China.
·
· If Congress thought Family self-serving as ever!
·
human
rights, he can prove his thethe .imernational business commu· . Clinton hangs tough, there may be
BecaiiSe the Chinese population
L:eave so important for business,
Sincerefy,
ory.
'
.
nity echo the offtcial chinese posi· an.opcning for a scri~ quiet bar- is so large and the . economic
why didn't they think their own C.P. Hitchcock,
Ben· Watttilbtrg, 1 seDior reition. Thanks tO more free market gam on MFN soon.
.
~=~~l::J:J;.:.0::~1.:! low at the Amerte.. Eaterp~ile •
. employees deserved the same treat-. Solon, Ohio
econ~mics,,
they
say,
Chin!!·
is
·
·
The
stakes
at
play
ate
enormous.'
.
has it that the Chinese Gross lllltltatt, Ia aulbor or "Tile First :
ment? The answer·is ·quite clear. A
boomrng; let s all make money; a Look at it this way. The world Domestic Product would surpass . Ualvenal Natloa;" putilllbed by .
,
keep . changes. The Uniled StaleS Is not America's ODP in 10 years: More Tbe Pret Preta ud a iiJDdleated
. li~tle authoritarianism
•
thmgs stable. So, they say, back off likely 10 remain the only superpow- moderate estimaleS, probablk more writer .ror NewapaP,r laterprile
America, cut out the "goody-two- er forever. The next nation 10 move
Dear Editor,
,
·
Cjln't take it anymore! New lis· shoes human rights stuff, extend into the big leagues will probably , iiCCtp!e, put that moment 0 by at Alloclatlon.
this is abOut the manager of tencrs now of Zippo 'in th·e·morn- MFN, and with no conditions . be China, and poaibly 10011.
WJEH Radio Station.
mg.
Kay.Powers attache.d. (American businessmen
U China is a free, stable, ·pros•
If we wanled io listen 10 marc
add that the· new economic free· perousllld demOCI'Itic: player in the
.. !flk shows, we'd turn on our TV's.
. Sberri.:al:aonepp · doms will inevitably lead 10 greater world arena, we IDlY bope for a·
1ri 1946, the l..eaiue of Natiolll assembled in Oeneva fat the last time
We have enough of them on l'V
politicallibeny.)
•
new world order, IUmultuous to be
In 1950, ballet dancer Vaslay Nljinsty died iD London.
.
•
without WJEH tryjng 10 cram more
· Charlotte CJ'l!ig,
But many non-official Chinese sure, but plausibly .without lpOCI. In I~S2, aesident Truman seized the lleel indllllry to aven a nation. ~wn Ollr thnlllts.
. • . . · . Gallipolis • , in off-the-recorc! venues are not · lyptic threats amoita the major Wide slrike.
.
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Letters to the editor ·

Ben

Off to a lousy start!

enb. erg

will

upset with talk shows

Today in history

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IMansfield !sa· l•

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• !cotumbus!-,o·
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' Showers T-storms Rain

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

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Ckwdy

Meigs area
announcements

:!---------Weather-------

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the~~~~~~o~~~t~!d~er~~ru:

lion by Rous~ stalil)g:

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Livestock
reno
r ..t

Pro.spects for

Ohio ~r.WMpAPf!t Alnloci•tion, Nation.•l
t\dv~ina RepmacnLfttivc ,.. Drnbham
~CWIIJIAJI" SaiP.I , 733 Third Avenue,
Now York. Nr.w York 10017.
·

·Lottery.results
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early plar~ting fade

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CLEVELAND (AP)- There
By Tbe Assoclated'Press
I'OS'I'MASTER: Send lllld'- chong,. 1o
was one ticlret sold naming all six
Here's
the latest Ohio agricul·
..,., ' Daily S.•lin&lt;!l, Ill Cwrt Sl ..
numbers
drawn
in
Wednesday
.
\ural
weather
advisory prepared by
~!1'0), 0Hi,~118. "'' . .
~ -•
nijhi's"S~
Lptto
game,
and
the
the
National
Weather Service's
8UB8CRJPTIOI'f I1ATD
·Ill inning ucket is worth $16 mil· . Midwe&amp;t Agricultural Weather Ser·
By Carrier or llolw ......
One Wocl&lt;.......................... ............ :., .. $1 .110
lion, the Ohio Lotlery said.
vice Cenlef in West Lafayeue, Ind.:
·( )ne Month ......................................... l6.9&amp;
The
winner
will
receive
·More rain t~hl and Friday
()n., Yl:'~tr...... .............. ................ ~ ..... ,.S83.20
'
:IDIGLBCOPY
S6a,384 the first yoat. with the will further set
plans by Ohio
PJUCI:
-remaining
$15,384,616
10
be.
paid
farmers·
to
get
into
the
fields. But
• IN,ily: .....................................,..• ; .211 ('..,.Ia
in
25
annual
installments,
the
lotrainfall
amounts
shouldn't
·be
' l
.
'
!-Cul.Mcribrin&amp; not dfwiri"' to PRY the earri·
tery saitL . .
• . excessive - probably no 1110re
C'ir may "romiL in RdVRnca dimct. to The
the winning Super I.:.otto ticket . than .25 of an inch.
l·
1 •
0..8)' . Sn"liM1 on a Lhmt\ lrix or · 12,
' nMifllh l:~~~Mitl . Crndit will bc1 givari carrier
)'lias purchased at Sterling Food
Unseasonably mild air ahead of
-Nich W,(IC!k ,
.
Store 27 in Beyan.
· tbc storm syst~m· should imP,rove
~ ~pli""" by !Mfl pcnnlllcd In
· •.
.The jackpot dro~s back to $4 soil .conditions.
•m~• whprt~ horftt. c:anicr IMTI'VIc:e it
million for Saturday s game.
Prospects for an early planting
AVMiflhle.
.'
Pick
3
Number•
·
.
.
will
fade with the arrival of mois-~PiloM
8-8-6
,,
'
l...tdo Mol.. c..nQ&lt;
ture Friday IIJ)d further irlllleatloM
13 w..ru. .............................,........nt.llol
(eight, eiJht, six)
of poor weather for tilla1e next
26 weeki. ................................~...... Ma.JI
week. ·
ri2 Wct!lr~ ............. .. :.......... ...............S84.78
Plclt " Numbers
- O.loldo Melli" Co•~ty
'
9-S-8-6
· The 6--IO'.dsy outlook for Tuesta wftllk..............." ......~ ...................s23.40 •
(nine,
five,
eight..
six)
day
through Satt~rday ct~lls.for
16
:.S&lt;uo
SuP'r Lotto
112 w,.b ...... ,............:..................... US.40
· below-normal temperatures and
2-22-24,33·34·39 '
above,normal pm:lpltatlon. }

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until Friday afternoon.
Tempemtures will be five to 10
degrees cooler Friday. High tern·
. perawres across Ohio will be most·
ly in the 60s. ·
Some rain could linger across
Ohio Saturday. SWJday is expected
to be dry. It will turn cooler over
the weekend. High temperatures
Saturday and Sunday will.be most·
Iy in the 50s.
The Columbus Weather Station
says the record high for this date 83
in 1893. The record low was 19 in
1972.
Sunset tonight will be 8:02 p.l1).
Sunrise Friday will be 7:03a.m. ·
Around tbe nation
Showers soaked the nation ' s
midsection fiom the lower Missis·
sippi Valley to the western Great
Lakes early today. The Nonheast
enjoyed mostly clear skies, though
temperatures were on the chilly
side.
Up 10 5 inches of rain were fore·

.

cast for pans or Louisiana.• Mississippi and west .Temessee, bringing
the . threat or flooding after
Wednesday's rains.
L,ingering sprinkles were fatecast for portions of ,Minnesota,
Wisconsin and the eastern Dakotas.
Wet snow could dampen portions
·of northern Minnesota.
Gradual_warming was forecast
for the Northeast under generally
sunny skies.
In the West, a jet stream disturbance wils expec~ to bring rain
.and' gusting coastal winds into Ore· ~on, Washing10n and northem CBIJfomia today. Rain was forecast as
far inland as the northern Rocldes.
Clear skies were forecast for the
Great Basin.
The National Weather Service
reported that tornadoes touched
down southwest of Missouri City,
Texas. near Houston and in southwestern Louisiana ncar Starks and
De Quincy on Wednesday. There

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were no iqJOIIS u iogrtrrirs ar... ·
danlqe.

,.......... , a

'lie"'

(!(rain iD ~ lllo.s• D
lllio
Teus. . _ fiDod
.. • ]
fcetdeepdoled-.y ...... .....
1011801 2 114 iDdtcs g ... ira. ID.hom'p5iod..

Higbslllday-.. .. .. 40s and 50s ror ..... New Eat• land and lite . . . . . . . . . I
! ..
Plains: ill die 60s aamsllte Naraeasl. ~ die ( l t i o - Mj sippi ·...uqs aad &amp;aUIIII
ern Plains; ud iD dte 70s ila dte
Southeast, .... dte Gull'- -s
. in pan:s of lhc S&lt;&gt;t d 4 1
. The IIICI'CIUJ was c•JIIC • • d •
climb iDio die IKis . . _ ~ u
Florida aDd lite Sc .........
The Jete,weH•e . . 60'4:pczs
in~M " ,•Wa'
''t'•
brealdng the niaJnl b dtc diiC ~
57 dciiJecs a .ill l96'l..
The hip
Wild'-.
day """ 94 depea .. Lajiaas.

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•-•IJ ,..._

Jury _instructionsthrashed Noone hurt ·
out in Rodney· King case .in two wrecks•

·LOS ANGELES (AP)- Jurors
will be asked to tl)ink like,ordinary
police officers in deciding whether
the videotaped ~ling of Rodney
King was police brutality or just
another rough arrest caused by an
unruly suspect.
Final arguments 'in the federal
trial civil rights trial were scheduled for today. U.S. District Judge
John G. Davies said the case
should go the jury Friday.
On Wednesday. defense auilineys and prfosecutors debated e
wording o the instructions the
jud$e will give to the jury before it
. llegms deliberating.
Davies suggested that even
before they start deliberations,
jurors be instructed how to break a
deadlock. "I foresee difficulties,"
he told the lawyers.·"What can we
do to minimize the difficulties?"
Davies later berated the news
media for reporting that his
remarks indicated he was con·
cerned aboui the possibility of a
hung jury. "I haven't any idea of
what's going to happen in this
case," he said. "I don't think any
of us do."
·
The issue of instructing th~ jury
on dealing with a deadlock was not
mentioned again. ·
Other issues debated included
what constitute$ unreasonable force
and what consitutes intent. Prosecutors .in the case must prove that
the officers i~ten'ded to deprive
King .of his civil rights - in this
case , the right to be free from
unressonable search and seizilre.
Davies agreed .to tell the jurors
that reasonable force ''is that
which would appear reasonable to

EMS respop.ds
to four calls'
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Serv1ces
responded to four calls for assistance Wednesday morning.
At 9:03 p.m., .the Syracuse
squad went to the intersection of
Fourth and Crook streets fot Eva
Triplett who was transported to
Veterans Memorial·Hnspillll. • '
, A 10;29 a.m:•.the Racine squad
· went to Bucktown Road for James
Rhodes who was taken 10 VMH.
· The Rutland squad went to State
Route 6$4 at 6:09 p.m. for Lelia
Clark who was transported to

VMH.

·

·

At10:43 p.m., the Racipe squad
respoded to Water Street for .Zclla
Coppick who was taken .to V~.

. ·
, an ordinary, reasonable officer
under the same circumstances."
"To determine whether the
defendants used unreasonable
force, you should consider all of
the cirCumstances as they would be
viewed by a reasonable officer
under the same circumstances,"
the approved insll'Uctions read:
Regarding intent, Davies said
the jury does not have to find that
the defendants were thinking in
"constitutional terms" at the time
King was' beaten to reach a guilty
verdict.
A defendant can be convicled of
depriving. someone of his civil
rights even if he has n·o familiarity
with th.e ·constitutional right
involved, the approved instructions
said.

Stocks
Am Ele Power..........:......... 36 518

Ashland 011.. ...... ................26 5/8
AT&amp;T.. .... ..........................58 318
Bank0ne ........................... 58
Bob Evans ........................ .!&amp; 3/4
Charming Shop.................. !~ 3/8
Chrrip Industries................. I2 1/2
City Holding...................:..22
Federal Mogul.. .................. 18 1/2
GoodyearT&amp;R ............ 4 .... ?6 ·
Key Centurion .............: .....25
Lands End ........ ;,, ...............28 1/2
Limiled Inc ....................... 22 5,18
Multimedia Inc . .............. ,:.32 314
Point Bancmp......., ............ 13 112.
Rax Restaurant....................3!8
Reliance Electric................2I 3/4
Robbins&amp;MyerS ................ 17 114
Shoney's lnc...... ,...............22 3/8.
Star Bank ...........................37
Wendy Ini'l... .................... .l3 3,18
Worthington Ind. ......... ~ .....27 3/4
Stock reports are tlle ·l0:30
a.m . . quotes provided by
Kemper SecuriUes, Inc., o"i
Gallipolis.
··
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MASON
DRIVING
.
RINGE
r:..
NOW.OPEI .

WHk..p 3:00·hrll
· ,n.n. &amp;fri. •
2:00 tehrll
WHUH .~2;00 leW

· Ball Machine Closed. ·
for Now
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GoJdie V. White, 87, died in the
,
~ Village Care Nursing Home, do hereby grant their authority to
: Galion, Ohio, on Wednesday, April · approve all ap~intm.en.ts u the
1 '
, 7, !993. .
·· •
Meigs·. County Depar.tment of
• She was born April 1. 1906, in Human Services to the director of
; Elizabclh, w, va, daughter pf the said agency for the hiring of new
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) : late Wren and Grace (Roberta) ell1ployees and any relared per.son· Directlivestoc~ prices and receipts
,, Furr.
nel actions s.uch as promotions, at selected buying points Thursday
: She manied Grover C. White on demotions, lat~ral transfers, sus· by the Ohio Department of Agri··
:,July 3, 1928. He preceded her in 'pensions, terminations, etc.
culture:
•
: Oeath on May 10, 19{;7,
' "Be it further resolved by this
· Barro'ws and gilts: steady;
: · Three son.s survi've: Grover, board that the directors shall notify demand moderate.
: Marion, Ohio; Lewis, Reedsville the Meigs County Board of Com,
U.~. 1·2. 230·260 lbs.; country
•·and Thomas White, Port CharlOtte, missioners. of this action in the points, 43.50·44.25, a few .44.75;
; Fla.; three daughters: Mrs. Jean M. f~tm of a Jeuef ~· beJ&gt;~rn~ized in pla:Jtss43i2j~~~5i~t~; 46.00. ..
~ Boyce, Marion, Mrs. Elsie L. LortB c rdecofrCs o t c CJ~~ ounty
. ... - ... .
s.• country
oar o ommJsstoners.
potnts, 42 .00 '"'"· 50.
: mor, Galion and Mrs. Virginia
, Shenberger, Ashland, Ohio; 12
In other action
U.S. 1-2, 210·230 lbs., country
; l!(andchildren, 12 great grandchilApproved an animal claim of · ·points, 41.0042:50.
• dren and two great-great grandchiJ-· $20 for Cecil Roseberry, Pomeroy,
Receipts Wednesday 8,800.
• dren; one sister, Sylvia Rutan, for a goat that was reponed killed Estimared ~ipts Thursday 7,500.
; MansrJeld. One son, J;~ek. and five Sunday. ·
.
Prices from The Producers Live·
, brothers and two sisters preceded
Opened bids for aggragate and stock Association: ·
: her in death.
• asphalt which wen~ tabled pending
Cattle: 1.00 higher.
: She was a member of the White , further examination by Engineer
Slaughter steers: choice 74.00·
82.50; select68.00-74.00.
· ; Shrine ofM3rion, Lydia Chapter, Roben Eason.
! 83, OES, Marion.
.
Acting on a recommendation , Slaughtcr 'heifcrs: thoice 73.00, · Funeral service will be hcld 11 from Eason, the commission 79.00;select67.00-73.00.
~ a.~. Saturday ·a 1 the MarJe A. · accepted bids for the purchase of
Cows : steady; all cows 52.00
: Schneider Funeral J{omc of Galion 404, 402 and 301 hot mix asphalt and down.
• with Rev. Larry Draper officiating. from Richards and Sons Inc. of ·
Bulls: steady; all bulls 62.50 and
: Friends may call at the funeral Kanaugaat$23.50pcrton.
· down.
; home on Friday between 7-9 p.m.
.Noted thai a public hearing con·
FcCder cattle: steady.
.
; Burial will be in Chapel Heights cerning.me proposed regional air·
Yearling stC!lrs 85.00 and down;
•
· port will be held May 13 at' 6:30 yearling heifers 78.00 and down.
' Cemetery • Mari on.
· the county courttoom. In..
Cal vll$ steers I05 .00 and down;
p.m. m
addition. the commission met with calve$ heifers 95.00 and down.
Paula Thacker, director of the ·
·sheep and lambs: 2.00 to 3.00
'11te Doily Sentinel
Meigs County ,Chamber of Com- higher; 'choice wools 76.00-80.00;
merce, to discuss the proposed air- . choice clips 76.00-80.00; feeder
I"UbliahOO ·every Rr\crnoon, Monday
port.
·
Iambs 70.00 and down; old sheep
.th""''!h Friday, Ill Cinon S&lt;. , P"""roy,
Ohio by the Ohio VAlley Publi11hins
Attending were commissioners 26.00 and down. .
·
CompAnyiMullimcdt" lne., Porftcroy,
Rllush,
Howard
and,
Harten
bach
Ohio 4G769. Ph. 11112·2156, Soconcl ;1...
poRlAifn PAid At PomerOy, Ohio.
·
and Clerk Mary Hobsteuer.
Me:mbr.r: Th«! AotiOciMLad Preh. and thp

o.tr Si lllt.l

· A record number of employees
and volunteers at Veterans Memo·
rial Hospital were recognized for
service beyond the call of duty dur·
ing the frrst quar1er of 1993. . •
The increase in those recognized
in the hospital's "I Done Good at
VMW program was credited to
extra effort beyond the call of duty
put forth dluiitg the weekend of the
"s10rm of the century".
•
·
Winning a $50 prize awarded
each quarter from among the
employees and volunteers honored
during the program was Judy Carl
of the housekeeping department.
Those recognized by the program
receive "I Done Good" badges and
are entered into the quarterly drawing for the$SO prize. .
Other employees and volunteers
recognized by the program during
the first three months of the year .
.. includeJ'am Ables, ijelen Turn·
bull, Margaret Corsi, Linda Holler,
PRIZE WINNER· Judy Cali oftlte..
I 5. 2
Bessie Darst, Vicki Nottingham,
Ellajane McDaniel, Terry Lauder- · receives a $50 prize from Scott Lucas, wz-- · I '
milt, Betty Dill, Elaine Parsons, Jati
Memorial Hospital. Carl .was 011t .o f •• 1 1 1 « 5 ; 11 ' " 1
nized by the hospital dQrbtg tbe fll'St tUft • . lh., M3 S.
Reese, Alana Holman, Linda Whit, ley, Edna Davis , ·Donna
effort beyond lhe call lo duty. Her
1
the names of all employees bODored duriatl Cltefint4 lti .rar
Williamson, Carol Cleland, Doris
year making tbem ~ligible to recei~e tbe $58
Woodyard, Ruth Riffle. Tanya
Holter Jackie Fields David Fields
Harri~t Friend, Ja~e H·offman',
Starchec. MarilyaJ Sir
Ci. LiiiiiJ
Brenda Cunningham, Bobbie Har- Virginia Michael, Roger Starcher, Fisher, Belly 5ayR. Jc:aic WIJill:
ris, Sandy Peyton, Linda Hudson, Terry Phillips, Gary Smith, Jack and I I ¥4., Laai C
.
Lyons, George Hoffman, Jackie

tlietrusteesbyAprjtls.

co::~yi~:CSC:.'~fd~~~;s~~~~~

:Goldie White

The

workers, volunteers honored

Tournament slated
The Sacred Heart Catholic
Church will sponsor a.golt tourna·
,
ment April 22. Cost to participate
Saturday through Monday:
is $50 which includes lunch. din·
' Soutlt-Central Ohio
; Tonight, becoming mostly
. Saturday, a chance of showers. ner, golf and cart. Lunch will be
cloudy. Low 50-55. Friday, show- Lows in the 40s. Highs in mid-50s · served at noon. Teeo{)ff will be at I
!lfS and thunderstorms likely. High co low 60s. Fair on Sunday and.' p.m. Further ·information may be
around 70."Chance of rain is 70 Monday with lows in the 30s and obtained by calling the Meigs
;jierteni.
highs in the 50s.
County Golf Course or Jim Hill at
992
:. · Exteaded forecast:
•3325'.
• .
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Continued fr(!m pag~ 1 .
Pomeroy.PTO .io meet
, ·
•
•
•• • _ _ _ __;;__:..::.::,____
Pomeroy Elementary PTO will
- Commissioners.
approve the resolution.
meet Monday a.l 7 p.m. in the
' Jackson County Commissioners
Discuss JTPA
school gym. The third grnlle classes
~Dale Neal and LICiyd White said
The commissi&lt;in ·met with Sid will have the program . Everyone
;they have no problem with Athens Edwards, director of the""allia· invited.
,and Hocking Counties forming a Meigs Community Action Agency, '
•new district while Vinton County · who updated the commission on
Super senior league
Commissioners believe the six- CA:"' _programs in&lt;:luding the Job
All area ~olfers interested in
county district should remain in.tact Trammg Partnership Act (J1PA). playmg in a ' Super Semors" league
, until the EPA-drafted management weatherization program, Home (65 years or older) are asked to
•plan iS ratified.
·
. Energy Assistance Program attend a short meeting at the Meigs
!, In Gallia Cowity. Commissioner (HEAP) and the commo_dity pro· · County Golf Course at noon on
, ' Kenneth Farmer said he supPQrts gram.
. .
. .
Wednesday. If interes~ed but
· : me two counties' withdrawal from
Pass resolutu~n on h1rmg
unable to attend the meeung, ~all
~the distrjct whjle commissioners •
M1c~l L. Swtsher, d1rcctor of Sob Freed at 992-2044 after 2.30
· •Harold Montgomery and ~iarold • the Me1gs Co.unty Department of p.m.
.saunders said they have no opin- Human .servJccs, mforn:'ed the
·ion.
,
· ·
~omrntss1on that due to an ~~crease
DAV to meet
~ A resolution supporting the · m ~e case load, two new m.c~me
The Disabled American Veterwithdrawal must go before direc- mllintenance worker lll pos1t10ns ans and the Ladies Auxiliary will
tors of the six~ounty district, then have been created for t~e.agency meet Monday at? p.m. a.t the DAV
':'they must send the.resolution to the and approve&lt;! ~y th~ Oh1o J?.epan· Hall, 124 Butternut Avenue.
...commissioners in all six countic;s ment of Ad~IDistraUve Semces.
' ·
'•for votes.
.
·
Accordmg to a letter from
Cemetery clean-upJSlated
: The board of county commis- Sw. is. h.er •. st8te lists exist for bo. th
The Sutton Township Trustees
.
· .-eac h county must posttt.ons. However, no M e1~S request th a t nowers and other dec·
'i SJoners
m
:
.,,.. ;_. ·; hhO:· "' , •.• v• . ·
Codaun.~ans have appeared.on the list orations be removed .Crom grilves in
•
tO - ·
cemeteries· that are maintained by
•

lA rea death

.

Jle.cord number· of hospital

C'l993 Actu·-weather, Inc.

,,.."'
•,.

'"I~

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w,yA.

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By Tbe Associated. Press
Most of Ohio will remain dry.
duri~g daylight hours today. By
.late afternoon the western edge
could see showers.
Accompanying the dry weather
will be warm temperatures. Highs
across most of Ohio will be within
a few degrees of 70. Parts' of south·
east Ohio could see the mid 70s.
Areas along the west end of Lake
Erie near Tqledo could stay in .the
50s if the breeze stays off the
water.
The t;astern counties will sec ihe
majority of !he sunshine. Some dim
· sun will shine through the clouds
across ·western ohio from · iime 10
time.·
By tonight the rain will slowly
·begin to·spread acfoss the state.
Much of western Ohio will see rain
but it may take to till early morning
before the rain reaches Columbus
!llld most of central Ohio. The east.
em· most countieS may 'not sec rain

'Commission '

many ·:

.

conditions and

MICH.'

Robert]. u:r.agman

THRee

for

.

Cool wet weather .forecast ·ror weekend

,.

Friday, April 9

unusual circumstances, Bill and the appointmeliJ process down io cult, given the Ointoos' seemingly
Hillary Clinton are only comfort- the assistant-secretary level.
inexhaustible circle of friends and
able with people they know personThis policy resulted froll) a acquaintances. However, it has
ally, and know well.
. group qwetly working for Clinton proven almost impossible to balduring the last stages of the cam- ance the new government by race,
paign. It examined how Washing- gender and geography.
.•
•'
"I
ton worked for other presidents so
It was fairly simple 10 fill about :
Clil!ton could avoid repeating mis- 20 percent of appointments with :
" Maybe you want to call it con- tak,cs from the past. One thing they women. It was more difficult to get .,
ceit," says one While HoiiSe insid- heard from officials in several past that)iercentage up to around 40 ;•
er, "but Clinton believes he knows. administra~ions was that letting percent, which is where the powers ~
or at least has met, everyone in Cabinet secretaries appoint their that be ultimately want it; It has ;
Ainerica who is importanL He has owil top deputies allowed them: to · beeil· all ~ut .impos~i~le to .find .~ .
· this ~mingly inexhaustible circle develop personal fiefdoms, w~1ch wom~ wt~ the ~~te depth ~f •
of friends, acquaintances and !lC9- later prov~ less. than responsible expene~ m certam h1ghly leehrupie he has met or talked policy to the pres1den.t ~~~~~self.
cal agencJCs.
.
·.:
with. He also has this encyclopedic
So the deciSIOn was made that
It has been fmly easy to find •
recall; he remembers each and the While House- the close circle enough highly qualified African- :
every one. Therefore, if he doesn't a~ound the Clintons - would Americans to fill high-level postS.
know them, or at least has never duectly ma!te all appointments But the While House headhunlers ~
spoken with them, he figures they down to the third level of each have had a mucb more difficult
can't be important enough to be ~ departmenL In t!Jis ~a~ the lime ~mding Hispanics and Asian- .:::
appointed."
appomlees would o.we theu JObs Arnmcans.
'
Acwally there is a little more to dir~ctly to the president, not to
Finally, and apparently to every- ~
it than that. Early on - that is, theu ~binet secretaries, enabling one~s surprise, geographic balance ·•
back in Linle Rock immediately the, While House to more easily has proven to be much more diffi- "'·
after the· election- a policy deci- nuuntain an absolule hold qn poli- cult than anyone thought. .Of the ';
sion was made that
White cy.
.
.
firstl50 appointments, more than a •
House would
This should not haye been diffi- third, 51, came from the Wastc~ft- ·~
ton, D.C.• area; 21 came from
e.... .o "L!~Ol" ~r
fornia; 20 from New York; 8 from
f"'Vf\ lb"il'\. iiJ ~ \7 1
the president's home in Arkansas;
$eVeN
"""~
and 6 from Teli8S.
.
~~ ~'
.
aw..
According to sources, .. this ceo~T Sea~s--so
tralizali'!" of actments angered .

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Try
as they mi1ht. the people running
the While HoiiSe penonnel operation just can't seem 10 get the EGG
righL As a result, several Cabinet
secreiaries are pulling out what.littie hair they have left.
EGG stands for "Ethnicily,
Gender. Geography," the primary
[!)(;tors l)eing IISed to assemble the
government Bill Clinton promised
- one that mirrors the "diversity
~f the . ~~ ~1c: : Achievmg th1s divemty IS P':Oymg much
harder than anyone ~UC1pated. .
Act~al!Y, accordmg to White
House Jnstders. acronyms that are
even more impor1ant than EGG are
FOB ~ FOH -;--. Friends of Bill
and Friends of Hillary.
· The story m;Wng the rounds is
tha! recently the ~dent was sent
a hst of potential second-level
apP!&gt;intments. Within minutes the
hst landed ba~k in the l'frsonnel
office w1th a btg red "X ' through
it al)d a note in the presidential
scrawl: "Who are these people?':
Simply put, e.xcept in highly

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Di.versity goals styniie Clinton team · .

'

I

.'. Thursday, April 8, 1993

.

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

k

'~

Two . accidcars ICSIIItiaJ ia
minor darur w!dJ ., ilytrrrrri- ar
citations were ia'falipb:d dJis
week by Poawruy PaZit:c.
At 10'-SS Maaday a lite iwrlersection olJ' ' · -sF-owt~~.a
truck llms by .ldiiey
29. Rutland, SII1ICt a ex ••
'
by Marvin ~. 11. Mwe. W.

W•••

a.•-

Va .as he IIIIDrl:d liu.
Mechanic. Then:.was li&amp;flldlcP-.ie
to the driwa-'.s side door . .
1971) Plymouda, _, ..... I E I
damage tndlc w..• · "saact..
On Tuesday as Miaa Reg ,
27, Racine, was aawdiag east . ..
Route 124 llfac Rar:dc, a bKit
driven. by TiiiiOtlay Txtcn. 29,
Rutland, andli11Wdiiw ia rite apposite ,direclioa IIRw a 5IIMe . - .
hit the wiadsbield of Dogcss'
1981 Audi an•in&amp;- rl g
Mrs. RoQ bnCdM I . .
rollowed the lnd: 10 Nyc A in Pomcaoy ~ siJc- ilL*: •
. get it stopprd..:.:.: iqJIIil ulk
incident was taken by l:'a 'OJ
police.

....J!..

Correction
In a WM

'*1 iqJIIila a file

iDOak~dleS-±d•••

•1
idenlified lite,•••• 0
1...
iff's
1 15 lk LirJwp
t
County Sllctiff's DqM
De

Depaoy

S~l Iqpc:ts - --

Hospital news
Veter rM
ill
A~iucd: Eq Trip'Cc:u. S,.. .

cuse.

·

DiiduaF~IU
SPR'~:,

,t.'•:

H~ ~: ~

.,

~tt,ll

;.
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The Daily Sentinel

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Page-4

...

Indians record 4-2 win over ·Yanks; Tigers top Athletics

..

Last year the Angels backed
Abbott with '2.55 runs per game
the worst suppon for an Americ;u;
League pitcher since the designated
hitter was installed in 1973 The
result was a 7-15 record, de ' 1· ·~ a
2.77 ERA that was fifth-best~n ~e
league.
·
Abbott was traded to the Yankecs in December.
"I try to put last year behind
me," Abbott said. "There are
things you can control in this game
and things you can't. I just try to
keep my team in the game. I reel
like I did that today, so I don't

Southern beats Ravenswood
.
es
9- 4 t 0 sweep season seri_

want to be too hard on myself.
Give credit to Albert Belle. He's a
good hitter."
Abbott was far from flawless ,
altho':f,h he pitched )¥ell enough to
·
· ld d · •·

~~l~gs~ r:v~g ~~~ C~l~~ ~;:.

ga led off the eighth with a weak
double down the left-field hne.
"Over the long· haul, as a starting pitcher, you want to give your
team the innings and keep your
team in the game, •• Abbott said.
"If you do those things over the
course of a year, things should
work out for you."

a~~ager

Buck Showalter
"To critique what he did wrong
is tough to do, because Lf we'd
scored five or six runs, we'd be
Ravenswood came back with talking about how well 'he
Southern's Billy Jones pounded
one
in the bottom of the flfSt.
pitched;" Showalter said.
out four htts and the Tornadoes
In
the
second
Southern
took
the
Eric Plunk; Cleveland's fourth
received good pitching from the
lead
for
good
when
David
Smith
·pitcher,
got the win for pitching.a
two Jerernys - Nonhup and Dill
singl~.
Jones
siqgled,
Dill
had
an
scoreless
eighth. Derek Lilliquist
- en route to a 9-4 non-league
Rill
smgle
and
Andy
Grueser
sinretired
the
three batters he faced for
baseball win over the host
gled to toad the bases. Northup hit the.~ave. .
RavenswOOd Red Devils.
,we ptcked. each other u~;
The win was Souihern's second a sacrifice fly and Kyle Wickline
of the season, both of which came knocked home the third run with a That s what we did a l?t last year,
single to put the Tornadoes ahead . Cleve!and manager Mike Hargrove
over Ravenswood.
said. 'They do what they can to
Jeremy Nonhup staned on the 5-1
Ravenswood made it S-3 in the.__help each other."
.
mound for Southern (2-1 ), worlting
bottom
of
the
frame,
But
SHS
carne
.
Cleveland
scored
a
~un
m
the
four su-ong innings to pick up the
baclc
with
two
more
in'the
third
to
ftrst
on
Kenny
Lofton
s
leadoff
win. Dill came on in relief, also
double and an R!3I smgle by Carlos
pitching well to record the save. expand its lead to 7-3.
pitehmg
settled
Baerga, who St$ned a foilr-rear
The
Tornado
They combined to fan six and walk
down
and
held
on
for
the
win.
contract
extensiOn the prevtous
· nine. Both earned praise from TorSouthern
pounded
out
11
hits
day.
.
.
.
nado coach Miele Winebrenner.
led
by
Jones'
two
doubles
and
two
.
Thc.
Indtans
made
tt
2-0
m
the
Akers suffered the loss with
relief help from Hunt in the fourth. singles, Dill doubled and singled, third on Thomas Howard's home
That duo combined to fan six and Wick!!ne l!_ad two smgles,Joey run . Abbott allowed only 12
Hensler a smgle. and David Smith homers all of last ~ear~ .
walk seven.
a
single:.
The Y~ b~. 111~ the sevSouthern scored two runs m the
Hunt
had
two
singles
for
enth
on Berrue Will18D1s two-run
first as Jones singled and Dill
Ravenswood,
while
Akers
and
Pat·
home.
run, the second allowed-by
drilled the next pitch off the top of
terson
each
singled.
Denms
Cook 10 two games. C?Ok
the wall in left center, nearly hit·
Soulhem
plays
Wahama
tonight.
gave
~p
29 homers last year, third·
ting a borne run. Dill seUled for a
Inning
totals
most
m
the
AL.
double and Jones stopped at third.
Southern:
232-002-0
·=
9-11-4
Left-bander.
Jeff Mutis started
The two Southern runners then
for CleveJa~d and threw S 1/3
· scored on conseCutive errors for a Ravenswood: 120.001-0 = 4-4-3
scoreless ·mmngs, but he was not
2-0 SHS lead. "' ..
around to get credit for the victory.

him

Hargrove pulled
in the sixth
with one out and runners at firSt
and second.
Mutis was 0.5ln six
bigleague games.
"H '
been u~re~r: ~:ga:::.tc.=n~~
any success," Hargrove said. "I
did not want him facing the possi·
bility oflosing the game." .
Elsewhere in the AL, it was
Deu-oit12. Oakland 7; Boston 3,
Kansas City .2; TorOnto 2. Seattle
0; Texas 3, Baltimore 1 in 11
innings; Minnesota 6, Chicago I,
and Milwaukee 3, California 2.

career

.. I've nevor seen lhat many
wallcs," said A's reliever Kelly
Downs. who pi.,., 2 '113 illllillgs
and gol tile Yiaory despile allowinl Ccc:il Fielder's sixlh career
grand slim.

Terry Steinbach's lbree-run
llomel teyat OU:Jond's siKI1L The

"

•v'

A •s sent I 5 batters to the plate -;
Mike Munoz walked tine eonsec}
Ulive blum with the bases loaded. ·'
F.elder drove in five nms for the!

Tigers, who led 6-3 starting lhe
botUJm of the sixth. The time of the
game was an Oakland record for'
nine innin2S.
'I
(See AL on Page 5)
"

Oscars
~taurant
,.

5

. 57·59 CHrt St.

G•llifol"ll, 011.

·

NOW OPEN 7 DAYS
•A WEEK!
llon.·Sit. 11 am-11 pmSunday: Noon-8 pm.
'

'

MONDAY-DR/ENTAL NIGHT
TUESDAY- FRENCH NIGHT
WEDNESDAY.:... GERMANHUNGARIAN NIGHT
THURSDAY -ITALIAN NIGHT
FRIDAY- FISH &amp; SEAFOOD
NIGHT
SATURDAY-AU AMERICAN
BEEF -NIGHT
. SUNDAY- THANKSGNING .DAY

•

shake off bad day to beat Reds 5-l

.

- • Baseball •. ·NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutun DMskln
W L PtL

Ttun

Philodelpltil . .. .. .. 3

0 I 000

New Yotk ......... ... 2

0 1 000
0 1.000

Pi.uahurah . , .. .. I
• Moatrcol . ............. I

.. ....... .1

I
I

.SOO
SOO

Chicl,o.. ... ......... 1

2

333

Sc J..ouiJ

Florid.o

• .

GB

'
I5
I

I5
2
2

I 2 333

Lao Angoi01 ...... .2
CINCINNATI .... .1
San FWicilco •...... 1

I

«&gt;7

I
1

.SOO
.SOO

San Diego ............0
Colorado . •. ... ......0
HOUlton .. . .. .. 0

1
2
3

.000 •
.000
.000

s

t

I5
2

Wednesday's scores

Now Yool: 6, Colondo I

••

ALlanta S, Chu:ago4,10 innin&amp;a
Monltell. 5, CINCINNATI 1
Loo ~el.. 4, Ftorido 2

SL Lou.i&amp; 6, San FnnCliCO 2
Philadclphi1 6, HOUII.m 3, I0 tnrungs

Today's games
Manual (Nabholz 11· 12) at CINCIN·
, NAll (Bckhcr 15· 14), 12·3S p.m.
1
San Franc11co (Black 10.12) at St
• LoWo (Osbcmc 11-9),1,35 pm.
~
San Dicao (Ore&amp; llama 4· 1) tt Pitll·
bwah (Wilk 10-6). 3:05p.m.
Lo. AnJek:.l (Candtotll 11·15) at At·
Janu (~vane 2Q-1),7o,40.p.lfl.
..., ., •

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Friday's games

i

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OU.caao {Casullo 0..0) at·Phi.Ladclpha
(Riven O,O),l:OS p m
Montrc.al (BOUenftcld ().0) at Colorado
(B. Smith 11'0), 5 0:5 p.m.
San Dtcao (Semmua 0.0) 11 Florida
~ 0-0), 7:35 p m
San Franci-co (Swif't 0.0) al Pinaburgh
(Tomlin (1.()), 7.35,..m.
'
HowLOn (Ponuaal 0.0) a1 New York

I (S Fc:rNndel 0..0), 7 40 p m
:
Lo. Angelca (Ast.cto o.."o) a\ AllanLI

1 (P Smith 0-0), 740 p.m .
~
CINCINNATI (Browning 0..0) at St.
• Louia (Arocha 0..0), 8:35 p.m

••
•

Eutmt Dlvllioft
Team
W L Pc:L
GB
Ba.tm ......... 2 01000 · ·CU:VELAND . . I
I .500
I
Milwaukee ........ """.l
1 .500
I
New York ............ 1 1 .500 ...
1
Torun~o........... .. . .1 ,),1
.500 _,.
'
B1ltimore . , .
. . 0 2 .000 i' 2
Dcuoit
0 2 .000
2

0

Capture all the sights, aounds- magic aiU. nuoe•
with a Memorex• camcoodar llee's,.. -·s ... righl
for you. Each model ,_._ low-liQhl•lliti•iiiJ.lightweoght dosogn, auto-focus,wo11111-. -an,ing
erase head for seamless eCiiling.
YHI.Super-shmdesign 11111---,._..011.._ . . . . . .,.....
amm. Palm·llzed. . . . . . . , .... o. .... ._.....,.,.,

r

'
:
1
t

•
:

-...o. ......... 111111..

}

YHS·C. DC video light ..... . . .

Watcrn Dl"lslon
Q&amp;kland 1 •• , • 2 0 1.000

I

•••
•

: Ta .. ~ . ... ... .. ... 2
' CaW'onua ... ... . ... ..1
! Chictao .. -· .......... 1
~ MiMelcta . . .. 1
: Scaule ............. .1

BUSINESS ClASS

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~~= - ···· ._ ·:

Sports deadlines posted

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0 1.000
I .300
1
SOiO
I .500
I .SOO

I
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2

' Kuuto City ............0 2 .000
Wednesday's scores
TdionLO 2, SC.Ule 0

•

CLEVELAND 4, New Yodt:: 2
Tou 3, BaJ&amp;un&lt;m I, II inn.ings
Minn .... 6, ChiciJO I
BOilOn 3, Kanaaa Cily 2
Milwa~ce

•

3, California 2
Oak.la11d ll, Dcuott 7

t

Today•s games .
OUcaso (Fmtanda 8-11) at MiMcso-

ta (Mahom~N

•

Friday's games

'

~

Van(:9Uvct at Calguy, !b40 p m .

0..0) at Tc1.11 (Ryan

- * Transactions * -

· MiJwalolkoe (Navarro 0.0) ll OUJ.and

(W010.0),10:35 p.m.

·

-* NB"A .,._...

•
•• EASTERN CONFERENCE
•

FOR THE I A~11 LY

I,
21
30

PtL
701
.SI3
.l68

37

.416
.444

32

M)

so .31 5
• w..,...... ......... 21 52 .218

'

.,

-

C~al Dhllkln

.............50' 22
l, ' a.auc..O
GI.J!YIILAND .....415 zr

. , , . , ,7 '
cb-AOM.-..o...,=•s
•• ,.. wlhiMtnrt t rt.ll:nlylfeh' p .-ua .....

.,,

NO INTEREST ' Ill Or.JORIR, 1993

AtJanUc Dlvlllon

~ TUM
W
: •·NeW Yolk .. ·. .Sl
I 8•-.cm .................. 4~
, Nowlcncy ........... 42
I iJrllndo .. ,.. . ... . .. 35
' Miami " ........ ..... 32
: ·PhiWclphi.l .... .. n

VALUE PERFORME R

1

AU... .................. 39

1 Otadclw: .............. 31
• lfMiiuu ............. 31
' Deuoit .......... ·- .34
~ jfJJ•.W.•." ........ !rl

•
'

__ .

.,_. :...:
.

- "I - ~

-~

'i

.

~

t

GB

9

10
16
19
28 5

30.5

.

.694

s
m
34 .S:W JIS
36 .501 13..!
t3.5
36 .Sill
37 479 IS.S
23
o4S .31S

.

2S

a- San AniOftio .......44 2t

.653
.611

.

Baseball
A.mcrlc•• Ltlgue

S•gncd

CLEVELAND INDIANS -

Jawn Orimaley, pitcher, to a mltlor·IOIJU'conlnl:t and Ullp«&lt; him to Charloae d
1M ln1em1tional Leap.
NEW YORK YANKEES - Ploocd
Mclido Perez, p1f.chcr,' on tht.l,-day dilabled hn, tetroacuve to April I. P~r­
c:hllod 1he c:onlnlc:l of Noal Ho:.ton. pi&amp;ch·
cr. from Columbut o( the International

Loa ....

WESTERN CONFERENCE
·
M-111TWLPcl.GI

'
: a-Hauon:...........•7

.,._

Piuaburgh at N.Y. Ranp, 740p.m.

0.0) al Toronto

• City (Oonlner 0-0), 8:35p.m.
~
Deuoit (Moore O·f) ai CahCorni.a
, (Sondcnon 0-0), I0.05 p.m. '
t
Baltii110te (McDonald 0.0) at Seatllc
r (lbnlcn 11.()), 10:35 p.m.

..,. , . . , . 4/fO/tJ

324 257
y-C.tgotJI.... .... 40 29 II 91 300 27C
y-u. ...gco... 37 33 10 S4 323322
r-Wincipo&amp; .... 37 36 7 11 304 307
Edmonton . _. 26 47 II 60 235 323
s... 1ooc.. ... ... 11 68 z 24 212 402
•·clinched divilicot u~•
y·clinchcd P1'&gt;"11 bclth
. Wednesday's scores
. Hlttford 6. Ott.two I
Pilubtitsh 4, Mcnueol 3 (01')
Now Jcncy 5, N y RongOft 2

Waahingtorlll Phibdclphia, 7.40 p m.
Toronao a\ Winn.ipes, S:40&amp;. m.
San JOIC at LOI An plea. J .40 p.m.

Mi..nneaoll (Trombley 0.0} at Kanau

w-

• ~utomalic banery backup!tttter ,.., •·• 11 a 1sn

sm1the Dhillon
·y-VIIICOUvcr ..... 43 ·21 9 9l

Detroit at Tam)ll Bay,7:40 p.m .

· (Ooumln (1.()), 3:l.l p.m

• T.J¥0 alarm Nttings-ldeal choice for work•nu coupln

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE 1 Nor.~Dhllloo
r .. m
w L T p11, GF GA
y-Dcttoit ........ 44 28 9 97 349 211
· y-Chk•8• ... 43 2l 11 97 263219
,.r......
42 26
11 95 211 226
sc l.ouil ... .. 35
34 11 81 267 266
Minncoou .. ... 3l 35 tO so 262 277
TunpoBay ...... 22 St 6 so 229 307

New York (Wickman 0.0) at Ouc:ap,o

' ~ (nop.on
~0}. 8:35 p m.

291 301

Quebec at Boaton. 7:40p.m.
ChicaJo at N.Y.lllande:rl. 7:40pm.

Friday's games

! · (Alvm:z ().0), 2.35 E·!"·

310 273

289 217
310 213 '
296287

Tonight's games

New YOlk (Militello 3·3) at CLEVE·
1 LAND (Bielocl&lt;i 2_.), 7 05 p.m
,
Booon (Hoi:Clh S-9) 11 Kansaa Ctty
, (GubiCZI 7-6), S:3l p.m.
I

GFGA
347 256

y-Bufhlo .. .. 38 32 10 86 323 278
Hortfonl ..... 2S 49 5 55 267 347
Ouawa... . ..... 9 67 4 22 1!11 3711

Dc&amp;ron (Doheny 7-4) u Oakland (S .

Davil7-3), 3.15 p.m.

:
•

,.,.

Patrick Dhillon
W L T PlL
Team
:Jl•PitllburJh .... 54 21 6 ll4
Wllhin&amp;UNI ...... 40 32 7 87
New Jersey ...... 39 35 6 S4
NY lalanden 311 34 6 82
NY . R~~ .... 34 3411 19
Philodelpltil ...... 31 31 ll 73
A.dan Dlvltlon

Vancou&gt;&lt;d,.£dmmloll4 (OT)

3-&lt;4), 1.15 p.m.

1 · a.EVEI.AND (MOll

TANDt

.

y-Booon ... . . 47 26 7 101 313 261
y· MonqeaL..... 47 21 6 100 320 2'70
,.~- ........ .. 26 10 98 334 218

AMERICAN LEAGUE
,

three while hurling the one-httter'.
Eastern goes to VintonCounty
tomght for another TVC (make-up)
game. ·
Inning totals
Fed. Hocking: 0-4-7-0-2 = 13-7-3
Eastern: 1-0-0-0-0 = 1-1-5

to fmd. o.ut how m~y o~r players . Smiley, signed to a four -year,' more ~r a· reaction. It's kind of in
haven ~yet had It, mak10g them $I8.4 million contract last Novem - limbo.
.
suseepuble.
ber, was nervous about his firSt NL
Worrell started the mnth,
"Most of !he people I've talked start in two years. In all, he was allowed a hit, got two strikeouts
to have said they already had it," pleased by the res~ It if not the and had a 2-2 count on Bret Barmanager Felipe Alou Said. "Hope- score.
berie when he -yalked off the
fully, he's the only who has it."
"I'm not worried," he said. "I m'!und accompamed by the team
Th.at would b.e bad enou$h. k~ow ~esc guys will hit. Every- tra10er. _
DeShields drove 10 a career-h1gh thmgwill be OK."
.
Kev10 Grossga~e ~P ~wo runs
56 runs last year, hot .292llfld stole
Hill was nervous, too, and 11 and seven htts m stx mnmgs and
46 bases. The Expos have no other showed. He hit Chris Saba to open struck out mne, and Roger
proven leadoff hitter. They have the second inning, then walked McDowell .sot the last· out for the,
only one other second baseman on Randy Milligan and Reggie save. Chrts Hammond allowed
the roster. rookie Mike Lansing.
Sanders. Bases loaded, none out, three runs and eight hits .in six
"It's a big loss. With that one and only 14 of his first 33 pitches mnings .for the Marlms, who struck
guy out, we're very close to being had been strikesc
out 11 umes.
up agains.t the wall," Alou said.
"It was a mauer of me rushing,
Ca~dinals 6, Gian~ 2
''If anythmg .happens to Lansing,· being so anxious," Hill said." '""'' .
Geromm_o Pena contmued his
we have nobody to play second
·He took a deep breath and stan· fast s.tart w1th a three-run homer,
base."
ed pitching. He struck out Joe Oliv- two smgles and a walk. Pena began
Lansmg stayed healthy Wednes· er and Smiley, then got Bip the year 5 for Swith tl_lree walks
d~y ~nd eyen drove in a run with Roberts- who has a .467 career before luung out m the eighth . .
h1s firSt maJor-league hit, and the average agrunst h•m - to ground , . Rhea! Cor~mer allowed five hits
Expos squeezed a couple runs out out.
m seven mmngs. struck out four
of John Smiley and then took it to
That was it. The Reds got just and walked one. Barry Bonds
the Reds' bullpen. .
one more runner to second base homered in the se.venth, his first
Smiley, ma~ing his fi.rst ~ du~ing !fill's seven inninJlS. Mel home run for the Giants sinee signstart smce spending a year m Min- RoJas pilched two perfect mmngs 10g m J:?e~ember ~or a record ·
nesota, _ ga~e up ju_st four hits over in relief to complete a three-hiuer $43.75 m•~•on over stx years.
,
sev~n mnm_gs. T1m Laker had .a an~ ~et the save.
. PbdHes 6, As~ros 3
sacnfice l).y 10 the second and MotI had a chance to. brea.lc the . .Milt. Tll.OmJ!~On htt a. thre~-run ..
ses Alou hit a solo homer with two game open and I didn't do it," double off Xavter Hernandez m the
out in the sixth for a 2-1 lead.
O!i ver said. "He got us chasing lOth i~ning at the Astrodome. .
"He threw well and kept the sltders and forkballs out of the
Luis Gonzalez homered twice
game clo~," Reds manager Tony strike zone."
.
) forth~ Astros, ~ho.got. a se~en
Perc~ said. "He made one bad
. TheEx.l)Os broke It open agamst . mmngs o_f one-hit p11chmg fro!D
pitch and they hu it out. r m very Cmcmnau s shaky bulfpen. Ste~e [fete Harnisch. He took a no-hn b1d
pleased with the way he 'threw Foster gave up a two-run smglc m onto ~h~ seventh before Darren
tonight."
the eighth to Sean Berry, and Laos· Daulton s leadoff ~omer.
.
ing singled home a run in the ninth
Ipse DeLeon pnched one, third
off Dwayne Henry.
of an inning for the victory, and
In oth~r games, Los Angeles (Miich W~lliams pitched a perfect
knocked off Florida 4·2, SL Louis -lOth for hts second save.
beat San Francisco 6-2, PhiladelMets.6, ~ockies 1
•.uw ... . ,.. 42 31 .S1l 55
phia
beat
Houston
6-3
in
10
After
getung"shut out on four
Dcnvc- ..• ,.........32·t 41
.438 15.!
Minn-1 .......... .18 l4 .llO
innings,
New
York
beat
Colorado
smgles
by
Dwight Good~n in Mon29
DtUas ... . . ..•..... 8 64 .Ill
39
6•1 and Atlanta beat Chicago 5-4 in day's opener, the Roek1es went 5
10 innings.
·
1/3 innings withou~ a hit again~t
Paclnc Division .
x-l'hocnU ........ .s~ ts .789
Dodgers 4, Marlins 2
Bret Saberhagen until Jim Tatum s
Jt -Seattlc. .. .. . 49 2A
671
8
It
didn't
take
long
for
Todd
pmch:smgle.
J. •Port:land .
4) 28
606'
13
1-A Clippen .36 31 493 21
Worrell's arm to start giving him
Wtth one out m the seventh at
L.A LU"' ...... 34 31 .479
22
trouble.
Shea
Stadium, Dante Bichelte hit
Golden State ...... 30 42 .411 26.5
Sacramento . .. 22 51
301
The injury-plague reliever the first homer in Rockies history.
x·clinchcd playo.ffbenh
strained his right forearm in the a 418-foot drive past the bullpen m
ninth inning of the Los ~ngles left field.
Wednesday's scores
Pbilldolphil98, Wuhinglm 90
Dodgers's 4-2 victory ov the
Sljbcrhagen held Colorado_ to
Orlandql09, CharlOltc 96
Florida
Marlins
o~
nesday
two
htts m eight mnmgs, and Mike
Inch ana 113, MinnCIOta I 05
night.
Maddux pitched a perfect ninth in
Tonight's games
"I wouldn't want to speculate his Mets debut. Rockies starter
Dcaroi.llt New Jersey, 7 30 p.m
on
how long he'll be out," said Dr. Bruce ~uf~n gave up six ':'Ins and
BOlton 1.1 N'cw York, 3 p m
' Mianu at Milwa\lk.ce., 8 30 p m
Dan Kanell, the Marlins • team seven hits Ill. three-plus tnn•n,gs and
LA Clippers at San Anto(JLO, 8.30
physician.
walked four.
'
pm.
A magnetic resonance imaging
Brav~ 5, Cubs 4
.
HOUSI.on at Utah, 9 p m
' LA. LU.en at Ooldcm Stale, 10:30
was
scheduled
for
Ron
Gant
hit
a
two-run
homer
m
examination
pm.
today in Atlanta where the the lOth at Wrigley Field. Jeff
Phocnu. at SaenmcnLO, 10 30 p m
Oallu at Portland, !O.JO p m
Dodgers play a four-game weekend Blauser beat out an infield hit with
series. Worrell missed the 1990 and one out and Gant hn a 2-I pitch off
Friday's games .
1991 seasons because of elbow and Bob Scanlan into the left-field
Ocln:it at Boston, 7:30p.m.
..
Orulouc at fhiladd~. 7 30 p m
bleachers for a S-Head.
.
shoulder problems.
0UC1f0 at Atlant.,1:30 p.m.
"It
definitely
was
not
the
same
Jay_
Howell
gamed
.the
v1c~ory
Wash1ngton at CLEVELAND, 7.30
type of feeling I had when I hurt by retmng one batter In the mnth
p.m.
Orlando at Minncao&amp;a, 8 p m.
my elbow a couple of years ago," after the Culi~. ~recJ. twice w tic
.,
SacramcnlO II Se~Ulc, 10 p.m ~ '
said Worrell. who signed' a $9.5 the score at~· Sammy Sosa smgled
Denver at PhoeniJ, 10:30 p m
Portland at L.A. Lakcn, 10:30 p m
million. three-year con !fact on the home a run m the lOth.
.
.
.,
~'offseason. "I'm waitit\g" fo ·s~e · · ·Ste·ve Avery took a f•vc-hll
-*NHL*what happens before I have ahy, ... shuhtthout and a 3-0 lead mto the
e•g .
WALES CONFERENCE

"

Walern Dl~ts:ion
......... ..... .2
1 M7

ALlan \.I

Call446·9545 for·leservations!

·~

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

1992 CHEVROLET
LUMINAEURO

1992~~
THUNDERBIRD
TWO TO CHOOSE FROM
2doors. coupe, frono wheel drive, 6 cyl.,
, auto ,PS, PB, powfiiWlndows. pow,.
power ~ks.lillwheel, cru1se, rad&lt;
AMIFM slereo tape

Scoreboard

•'

Federal Hocking tops Eastern
_13-1 in Eagles' season opener

•

I

,
By JOE J{A y
.
_ CINCINNATI (AP) _Ken Hill
was making a bad day for the Mon.
· treal Expos much worse.
The Expos got a jolt Wednesday
afternoon when Delino DeShields
their leadoff hitter and second
baseman, came down with chicken
pox . The disease that spread
through their training camp, infecting four minor leaguers, had shown
up on the major-league TQSter.
Then Hill went out and went
wild, handing the Cincmnaii Reds a
~ases-loaded. none-out opportunity
by hitting a bauer and walldng two
in the second inning. The game
was only a few pitches old, and it
was looking like a blowout.
• But Hill somehow recovered his
composure in time to escape the
!.hreat and pitch the Expos to a 5-1
~ictory over a team he's had little
)uccess against.
• "I felt good and in control and
~was," said Hill, now 2-4lif~time
hgainst the Reds. "When you feel
~n control agrunst that lineup it's a
good thing."
'
1 The Expos are worrying about a
tew things out of theu control right
bow.
• They thought they'd escaped
~urtherchlcken pox problems wlien
lhey broke' training camp. But
l:&gt;eShields started feeling bad
!r\'ednesday, and a ll'ip to a hospital
fOOfurned he had the disease.
• That sent the Expos scrambling
'

•

The Eastern Eagles' softball and big hits by Hawley, Morrissey
team finally carne out of its nest for (two RBI), Wilson, and Radford. ·
the flfSt time this spnng, claiming a Radford slammed a three RBI
: big 19· 3 win over Federal Hocking triple that cleared the bas.es. Aeiker
· Wednesday evening in Tri-Valley followed up with an RBI single.
: Conference softball action. Eastern Eastern led 14-1.
; (1-0) won· the game in five innings
Eastern plated a single run in the
•on the mercy rule.
third, three in !he fourth, and a sinEastern's Jessica Radford, a gle run in the fifth. In the fourth
. hard-hitting sophomore, hammered · frame, Hawley tripled and Radford
· m six RBis to lead the Eagles' hit had an RBI single. A series 'of
parade, which also saw Jaime Wil- fielder's choices allowed Radford
. son have three singles and Rachael and Brandi Reeves, subbing for
Hawley get a double and a ll'iple.
Nelson to score.
'
Federal threatened in the fifth
Eastern took a 4-0 lead in the
first mning when Wilson walked, with two runs, but Eastern held off
Jessica Karr walked, Hawley the challenge and claimed the big
walked and Radford hammered a win.
·
.
hard hit ball to sho~tstop, which
Behind Radford's big bat, Wilknockcd 1n two runs. Radford son and Hawley collect three
ended up reaching safely on a mis- safeties and a walk, while A~iker,
cue at short Penny Aeiker walked, Mornssey and CHoward each
Nicole Nelson was Iiit by pitch, arid reached safely.
walks . to Carrie Morrissey and
Hendricks f~nned five and
Amy Redovian forced home runs walked five to post !he win, while
to put Eastern ahead 4-0.
Angie Little suffered the loss. She
Federal (0-4) came back -with walked 12 and fanned ctwo wh1le
one run in the second off EHS hiuing a bauer.
Eastern will play at Vinton
pitcher Shelly Hendrix, who
pitched very well and scattered just County tonight
five hits.
·
Inning totals
Eastern plated 10 runs in the Fed. Hockmg: 0-1-0-0-2 = 3-5-4
second inni~g. ~ind six walks Eastern: 4-10.1-3-1 = 19-7-1

The G_allipolis Daily Tribune,
The Datly Sentinel, the Point
Pleasant R~gister and the SundayTimes-Senl:nel value the contributions their readers make to the
spons -secli~ns .of these papers, and
these conmbuuons wtU continue to
be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for photos and related anicles for basketball and other wirlter
spons is the last day of the NBA
Finals.
Likewise, the deadline for sub·
missions or local baseball- and
softball-related photos and related
articles, from T-ball to the majors
a~ .well ~ other spring and sum me;
spons, IS the day of the las! game
of the World Series. The deadline
for photos and related articles for
football and -other fall spans is the ·
Saturday befotc the Supec Bowl.
These deadlines have been instituted tO give readers plen!)l of time
to set their photos liack from .the
photography studio of choice and
to give the staffs the opportunity to
publish these sports photos and
anicl~ during the appropriate season (or that sport.
'

h~an.

So !~~~ r~:·::::u~ base·
ball games.
The Detroit Tigers and Oakland
Athletics took the long way home
in an American League game on
Wednesday night that tasted 4
hours, 9 minutes.
By the. time it was over, the
Tigers had emerged with a 12· 7
victory and critics pf overly long
games had another argument to
back their case. The baseball eSaablishment has been U"ying to speed ·
up ~ames this season, but the
Tigers and Athletics didn't help
any with their walkathon at the
Oakland Coliseum.
''It was definitely not what I
had in miJ.td for my major league
debut," said Tigers rookie Greg
Gohr after he was pounded for five
runs on three hits in one-third of
the sixth inning in a disastrous
major league debut. "It was a
~trangc game, and I certainly did
my part to make it the longest."
The n w speed-up rules obvi·
ously haven't had much of an
effect in Oakland, where the flfSI
four· innings took 2 hours to play.
Monday night's opener lasted 3
hours, 19 minutes.
The Athletics took advantage of
seven walks to score nine runs in a
nightmare of a sixth for the Tigm.
Detroit pitchers walked 11 bauers

Eastern softballers top Federal
:Hocking 19-3 in season opener

Eastern took a 1-0 lead m the
first inning, never crossed the plate
agam as VISiting Federal Hocking
rolled to a 13-1 win over the Eagles
on the I 0-run mercy rule in five
mnings dunng TVC baseball action
Wednesday night.
The w1n was Federal's first in
four tries (1 -4), while Eastern hit
the held for the first time this season.
Federal's game experience was
displayed at the plate and m the
field.
Eastern, having had no outSide
practice on their held, looked good
m the flfSt inning as Matt Bowen.
with some good defense behind
him, retired the s1de in order. The
lack of outdoor pracuces, because
of the spnng rains, took its toll on
the Eagles.
·
Eastern took a 1-0 lead in the
first when Randy Kaylor singled
for Eastem!s only hit of the night.
then came home on David Koening's.[lclder's choice.
-Eedtral carne up with four runs
in the second inning to take a 4-1
lead, taking advantage of four Eastemerrors.
Eastern went down in order in
·ihe second.
Federal came up with se~en
more runs in the third on six hits, a
walk and·a hit batsman.
Keening came on in relief of
Bowen in the. third and pitched
well. They combined for four
strikeouts and one wall!:, but gave
up seven hits.
Jenkins wenr the distance for
·F~eral. fanning tour and walking

. ~xpos

Thul'lday, Aprtl 8, 1993

In AL contests,
By CHUCK MELVIN
· CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Ne~ , )'o!k Y~ees are making it
Mfocult for Jtm Abbott to forget
l992.
The hard ~uck _that dogged
bbott 10 CahfOf!lla last season
as ev•dent agam Wednesday
•ght, . w~cn he pitched seven
trong mmngs but lost to the Cleveland lndians4-2:
Abbouleftwtththegametied2·
2 and a run~er on second in the
eighth. One pitch later, Cleveland's
Albert Belle drove a .two-run
homer offJohn :Habyan.

a, 1993
Jn NL action,

Thursday, April

'

SpOrts .

. .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3

' ·
N•Uoeal Luaue
SAN DIEGO.PADRES Mike Stmma, outfielder, tq

k:.IJUe conlltcL

1

SiJned
m1nor·

·

Football
Natlon•l PoolballAaaiMI
CLBVEU.ND BROWNS -A.,_.
to \Cmll With Mull Canil:r. Wlde receive~,
·matta.JUlCCIIIriCL

'

PHOENill CARDINALS - AJreod
10 lWIIll with Chuck C.CU, 1af~tt.y~ on a
1.hree-year ooatnct Slped Jay Taylor,
defentt'(l blct, and
Tayb to the
Kan111 Ci1y Chief• fof Ill tandilc:lo~td

&amp;n,..

' draft .idl: in 199:t

sXN FRANeiSCO 49ERS

- Re-

aianad Sten Bono, qllah.erlMct, to a
..._,., - - · Sl,...t Tim MeDon·
ald, ¥fay, 10 a fiw•,- c:auna.

Hockey
Na.._,_,_.,.

tOltONTO MAPlB Ll!AFS
S;pod MlnMutia,dcflltMitiOit.

I

'·

..
u

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SABLE .

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power locks, nlo wheel. cruise, AMIFM
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Sedan. front wheel dnve, 6 cyl ,a1r, aula ..
PS. PB power w•ndows. power seal,
power locl&lt;s, Hit wheel. cruiSe, AmiFM
stereo tapa, rad1als. rear w1n. delog

NOW

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513,449

Baerga plans to ·stay .
in Cleveland until1998

that I am now," he said.
By RICH HARRIS
Baerga announced his long-term
CLEVELAND (AP) - Carlos
commitment
in a news conference
Baerga gave up a little to stay in
at
the
Gateway
stadium construcCleveland. The Indians' AU-Star
tion
site.
second baseman figures he got a
The Indians move to the new
good deal anyway.
ballpark
next year. The stadium has
,,
Baerg a said Tuesday he had
become
a concrete symbol o;&gt;f the
agreed to a four-year contract
team's
commitment
to a young
· I hat WI"II k eep h'1m 10
·
ex tens10n
.
corps
of
players,
a
strategy
intendCleveland through 1998. The deal
meant giving up free agency and ed to make !hem a contender by the
h
'b' .
f
.
time they move in.
1 e poss1 tiny o Jucrau v~ offers
"I think it's appropriate that
from other teams, but Baerga said
he's in no hurry to leave the lndi- we're making the announcement at
the Gateway site," Indians general
ans.
"I signed because I wan~ to be manager Johq Hart said.
h
. Terms were not disclosed, but
ere with the kind of people we
have," said Baerga, who recently the new deal reportedly upgrades
bought a ·house in Cleveland. "I Baerga's 1993' salary to $1.3 millike the fans, I like the team. The lion and 1994 salary to $2.3 milfront office has showed they want lion, exercises the 1995 option at a
to ha~e . a winning team, and I.want salary of $3.6 million, 1\fld covers
the 1996-98 seasons at annual
to Stay here the rest of my life."
0 ther teamS might
..
salaries
of ~.667 million.
have made
Bae11!3 is guaranteed $21.2 milsome attractive offers, but there's
lion througlt 1998. He could earn ·
more to life - -and· baseball as much as $400,000 more per year
than money, Baerga said. ·
(See BAERGA 011 Page 6)
"I want to play happy, the way

AL gaml!S• •• (Continued from Page 4) ·

.

'

'

CLEAN/ LOW MILEAGE!
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power locks, till wheel, cru1se, AMIFM
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1111 wheel , cruiSe, AMIFM Jad10, .oad1als,
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2 doors, frono wheel drive, 4 cyl.,
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· NOW

leadoff single off Todd Frohwinh .
. Red Sox 3, Royals 2
Bob Patterson, who worked out
David Cone, returning to the
Royals for the first time s1nce of a jam in the ninth, got tl!e vic to'
!986,lost to Frank Viola in a pitch- ry.
Twins 6,' While Sox 1
ers • duel as the Red Sox beat the
Dave
Winfield drove in four
Royals.
Cone, a Kansas City native trad· _ runs, and Jim Deshaies gave up
ed to the New York Mets after the four hits in seven' innings for his
1986 season in one of the Royals • first AL victory. .
·
Winfield •s three-run double off
worst d'eals, agreed Dec. 8 to an
$18 million, three-year conu-acL He Scott Radinsky capped a four-run
gave up two runs and eight hits in eighth inning and gave him six
eight innings. struck out five and .RBls.in.bis fusttwo games for the.
Twins,
'
walked two.
Deshaies allowed only Carlton
Viola pitched four-hit ball for
eight innings. struck out four and Fisk •s home run and three singles
walked one. Jeff Russell finished over seven inning. Rick Aguilera
for his second save.
pitched 1 I-3 innings for the save.
Blue Jays 2,"Marlne.rs 0
•·
Brewers 3, Angels 2
Al Leiter, starting in plaee of the
BJ. Surhofrs ninth-inning sin·
injured Dave ~tewart, pitched gle mapped a tie and Diclcie Thon
seven shutout innings.
· sin~l~d in what proved to be the
Toronto went ahead in the the deciding run.
·
.
eighth after Chris Bosio,. making
Greg Vaughn worked rel'iever
his Mariners debut, retired 17 con- Joe Grahe (or a walk, advanced on
secutive hitters. Devon White sin- a·single by Tom Brunansky and
. gled with two outs and scored on scored on Surhofr s single to snap a
Roberto Alomar's double. '
1·1 lie. Than singled in Brunansky
Raasen 3, Orioles 1
"·
w make it 3-1.
(lllnnlntp) ·
. Cal Eldred allowed one mn in
Doug Strange h1t a two-run three hits in eight innings. Doug
· pinch homer off Gregg Olson in the Henry ~ot the save, allowing Tim
11th·inninp; after Ivan Rodriguez's Salmon s sacrifice fly.

I.

.
•

1992 FORD
TEMPO GL

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ONLY 24,000 MILES/
4 NEWT/RES/
V-6. soand. orans , P?. PB. 1111
wheel, AMIFM stereo tape, bockot

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CL.lMIAML r lf'ACCW! OM.f 41,0NML£$
Station wagon. V-8, ""· auto , PS, PB,
powerwindows, power seat, power locks,
1111 wheel cnnse, AMfM soereo ~~p~,
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NOW

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�_/
.,

Page 6

The Dally Sentinel

Pomero~lddleport,

'

•

Ohio

Thursday, April

a, .1993

t

Couples' divorce woes cloud Masters chances
B1 JOHN NELSON
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - If
Fred Couples gets a .migraine now
~then, who could blame him?
His wife, Deborah, .is suing him for
divorce and wants about a zillion
dollars, and he's got an ugly few
days in cowt looming ahead.
"They pop into my head when I
put a lot Qi pressure on myself and
I sit around worrying about it,"
.Couples said. "So111elimes I get
very dejected and down when I
can't get rid of the headaches."
Couples, who admits the
divorce is the first thing he thinks
about in the morning and the last
thing at nigh~ said be had bis last
migraine two weeks ago at the
Players Championship. Ag;Un, who

••

c_ould blame him? He fininished said. "He's playing great every tomorrow, and I don't know why,"
!led for 39th.
.
week. If he docsn ' t win he'll be Couples said. "Last year, I came in
So, _even Lho~gh he's the .· very, very close."
'
playing really well. This year, I'm
defendmg champ1011 and even
Instead of hollering "You the worrying a liule bit about, 'Should
though he wo11 the Honda Classic man" at Couples now, the ·gallery I do this, or should I do that?' I
last month, he's not considered one bums will be hollering "You the think I'll be fine once I get to the._.
of the hot golfers coming into the . shark" at Nprman .
first -lee, though."
,
fli'St round of the Maslers teday.
Norman .cilme out of a two-year
Kite reinjured his back Tuesday .
Those · .wou~d be 9reg N_orman
sl ump last fall by -"inning the on the practice 1~ and spent most
of Au~t,ralta, N1ck Price of Z1mbab- Canadian Open. He won .again at of the rest of that day and the next·
we, N1Ck Faldo of England, Davis Doral in March and has beeQ third receiving treatment. He didn't
Love lll, Phil Mickelson and larry and fourth in his last two starts.
return to the practice tee WednesMize. Tom Kite also would have
"In 1985, '86 even '88 1 was day, but he did put on a tight girdle
been an:'ong the favorites, but he playing well coming into. this tour' and hit a few balls ourof a trap.
has pamful back spasms · that nament," Norman said. "But I
The sun came out and the wind ·
almost kept him .out of the touma- haven't been for the last couple of kicked _up on Wednesday, drying
mcnt 'for a second straight year.
years, for sure."
·
the course out some, but thunder•
"Obviously, I think the pick
Of his own chances, Couples i.s s10rms and more rain were in the
would be Greg Norman,' ' Couples slightly more reserved. .
· forecast for Friday and Saturday.
· "I'm a lillie nervous about

Niners re::sign Bono, OK contract with McDonald
By DENNIS GEOII:GATOS
team in the NFL rather than sitting
"He's an•outstanding q~artcr­ · four yer.r$.
.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) pn the bench, even if that bench is back that we have won games with
The 49ers remain anxious fo~
- Tim McDonald bas arrived. Jeff in San Francisco,'' 49ers president and can win games with so we're defensive line help since losing'·
Wrightc;ouldbeooming,andSteve Carmen Policy said. "Joe is happy to have Steve 'Bono again," Pierce Holt, th"eir best defensive
Bono nevu left, ~hich means Joe presently exploring those altema- Seifert said.
.
player, to NFC West rival Atlanta,
MOntana's days with the San Fran- tives this week .. That-means he's
Bono's new contract was a which signed him as a free agenL
cisco 49ea ~ JI!Qbably numbered. _.,.talking to other teams.''
· three-year deal worth $5.1 million.
Montana's status should be~
In a senes of player moves
Kansas City, Phoenix and
McDonald became the highest" resolved before the April 2S draft,
Wednesday, the 49ers bolstered Tampa Bay are int~rested in paid defensive back ip the league altltough Policy said the possibility
their semndaiy by signing MeDon- obtaining Montana, a two-time after signing a five-ye(IT contract of Montana's departure through a
aid, a Pro Bowl safety from league MVP who led the 49ers to worth $12.75 million.
. trade left )lim feeling uneasy and '
Phoenix, as a free agent.
four Super Bowt wins in 10 years
"I never thought I'd live to see the organization open to a fan~
They pn:saved depth a1 ql13rler- as their starter. .
the day a defensive back is com- backlash akin to the reaction fol· ·
back by retaining Bono as the
He missed virtually all of the pensated. this way." said his agent, lowing the ·1991 departures of
GOOD PUTf, ERIC! -fuzzy Zoeller (right), the 1979 Masters
backup to Steve Young and an past two seasons because of a tom Leigh Steinberg.
Roger Craig and Ronnie lotL
champion, gives Eric Clary a high five after Clary sank Zoeller's
offer sheet was Cllu:nded to Wright, right elbow tendon that took three
Wright,
meanwhile,
has
been
ball on the ninth bole or the P~r 3 contest Wednesday at the Augusa Buff~_o &lt;!efensive lineman who is surgeries to repair. He returned to offered a four-year package worth
COLONY THEATRE
ta National GolF Club in Augusta, Ga. Zoeller ·b ad invited tbe
a ll'anSIUooal fn:e·agenL
play in the second half of San Fran· $6 million, which the Bills have a
youngster From the crowd to make the putt during a preliminary
The re-signing of Bono and . cisco's 1992 regular-seaSon finale week to match if they want to keep
FIUDAY THRU THURSDAY
match .to today's Masters. (AP)
coach George Seifen's refusal to against De'lroit and looked like the h1m.
·
• KEYI~ COSTNER i. WHITNEY HOUSTON
subject Young, last season's MVP, Montana of old but didn't play
~
.
The Wright offer followed
.
to spring -~i ~petitioo le.rt again.
Tuesday's decision by Reggie
the 49as With liaie Wiggle room m
The 49ers who also have third- White, an unrestricted free agent
R
•
•
their dealings with Montana, who string quart~rback Bill Musgrave defensive end from Philadelpbia to
SHOW TIMES:
W3DIS the chance to start'apia
on their roster, made clear they pass on -~~ FraJ!cisco's five-yw.
FRI.·SAT.-SUN. 7:30 l 10:00
. By HARRY ATKINS
law at Wayne Stau: UQiversity.
MONDAY ·THRU THURSDAY·
"Joe bas indicated to us he think the retention of Bono made $19.5 milhon b1d and sign with
One Evonlng ShDiil 7:30
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)"If this were Webber's last ~ prefer suming for -.y other Montana expendable. . . ·
Green
Bay
for
$17
million
ovet
L-.-Ad~m~l•=•~lo~n~$1~.~~·=~~~~~~--J~
Don't worry about Chris Webl5er. game, as it was for Roy Riegels,
'
A psychiatrist says the blWtdcr that then it might be a sowce of bumili•
might have cost Michigan the ation and shame for him," Luby
NCAA championship could make said. "But because Webber is
By JOHN NADFJ..
has ever happened," said Duke
Webber a stronger person.
·
going to play again , either. at
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Indi- Llewellyn, the chairman of the
''When there is an error, .there is Michigan or in the NBA, ·!his will ana rorwam Cal~ OJeaney.was a award committee. ''This is somean opportunity for growth,'' Ralph be very trivial.
I•
clear-cut winner of the John R. thing we're gain' to have to sit
· Rubenstein, chief of psychiatry at
"I'm sure he'll feel he let his Wooden Award, but unlib: most of down
and tonk aL'
. Detroit's Hutzel Hospital, said. teammates down. And he'll feel the pre¥ious winners, be didn't
Of Webber and Michigan coac!J·
·:He's gone throu~h a trial. In cri- some shl!"'e. Shame will probably 3l1eRd a Q!rernony to acrept bis tro- Sieve Fisher's appearance less th;m
s1s therapy, cns1s 1s a danger l!lld a be the pnmary emotion.' '
48 hours after the Wolverines lost
phy.
n~gative. But it's also an opponu"Chris Webber is going to play
"It is defmilely an honoc to win to North Carolina 17-71 in the
nny."
,
basketball again, and his skills will an award that has gone to such
tQumament championship
With II seconds left and the improve," Luby said. "There will great playen Ill Michael Jordan, NCAA
game. Llewellyn said, "I think
·· Wolverines trailing by two points be some -taunting. But be bas a Larry Bird and. David Robinson," that's one of the all-time class
in t~e title game Monday night strong support system. strong par- Oleaney said in a 1apCd swement acts.••
agamst North Carohna, Webber · ents and a good coach in Steve made prior to Wcdncsd~y·s presenCheaney, a 6-foot-7, 209-pound
called for a timeout. He had forgot' Fisher.''
·
tation.
"The
award
is
special
to
senior.
averaged 22.4 points this
ten that Michigan liad no timeouts
"We've told them, 'Don't be everyone in college basketball
season.
A native of Evlnisville, ·
left.
.,
disappoimed. Use it as a base to because it carries the name of
bid.,
he
became
the leading scilrer
A technic~ foul was called and build from,"' Fisher said. "Ob. the Coach Wooden."
in
Indiana
his16ry
and Big Ten hisDonald W1lhams made both free hurt will linger. But he's a special
Cheaney, the Big Ten's can:er. tcry. in the same game, again~t
'
throws to seald)c Tar HeeJs' 71-71 person. Maybe they give you just scoring leader, received 4,799
Northwestern
last
month.
v1ctory.
about as much as you can bear. points in voting by I ,000 sports
' '
He finished h(s college career
"I think he'll be bothered by it a And Chris has got awful broad writers
and sponscasters through- with 2,613 points.
little bit," Rubenstein said shou~ders."
out the oountry. "Kmmcky's Jamal
Wednc~ay. "There ~ill be. some
Hugh Bray, a sports pgycholo- Mashbu: n finished second with
depress!On. He could v1ew th1s as a gist who has worked with the· 4,306 points..
failure. He could feel. he's le~ a lot Detroit Red Wings and with the
The Wooden Award is named
of people down. Th1s may last a U~iversity of Michigan hockey for former UCLA coach John
few days or a few weeks. But it team, also feels Webber will come Woodm', who guided the Bruins to
will be shon-lived.''
.
out of this crisis stronger.
10 NCAA dwnpionsbips in a 12~oy ~icgels
known h~~
"I think in athletics, people year period in the 1960s and 1970s, .
'.
GO
e~tlfe hfe as
Wrong Way _ learn far more from losing than and presented by the Los Angeles
R1egels after h1s m1sdrrec1ed run m they do from winning," Bray said. Athletic Club.
the 1929 Rose Bowl game.
.
"The important thing is to go on. · Cheaney, who -led Indiana to. a
The c~ances..of Webbe~. gomg Say, 'I blew i~ it's time to go on.' 31-4 n:card and to the finals of the·
through life as T1me Out Web- If he overmagnifies it, that will hili- NCAA tournament's Midwest
her arc slim, according 10 Dr. Elliot der progress.''
.
.
.
Regional, previously
the EastLuby, professor of psychiatry and
man Awanl and was clloscn as The
AssociaiA:d Pn:ss player of the year.
(Continued from Page 5)
Duke's Bobby Hurley finished .
third
in the Wooden voling with
in "award .. bon.uses.
Bob Milicki, who started 20 games
points,
followed by ~phis
The Indians hold an optjon for for Baltimore last year, and lcft- State's Anfemee
Hardaway with
1999 at $4.667 million. They must .handcr Mall Young, who started 3,120 and Micbigan"s
Chris Webinform Baerga by the end of the eight games for Boston - to Class ber with 2!Trl. . .
1997 season if they inlend to exer- AAA contracts.
Seton Hall's Teny Dehere finThe pitchers supplement a ishOO sixth in the wting with 2,243
9iSC the option.
"They've committed a large , bullpen depleted by injuries and the points, fojjowed by Pludue:s Glenn
amount of money to a very talented deaths of Steve Olin and Tim · Robinson, 1,710; North Carolina's.
player," said.ScQll Boras, Baerga's Crews in a boating accident during Eric Montross, 1,633; Vanderbilt's
.
.
· '
agent. "It's a -player they can mar- sjYring training.
Billy McCaffr~y. 1,486,. and
ket. that people can associate "rith
Duke's Grant Hill, 1,1,02. .
.
their franchise. It shows the lndi ·
Tradilionally, 111e lilp five o;()lt· · ·
ans' commiiment tci the continuity
.
.
getters
their IXIIIChes appc:.- at
of their program.' '
the awanl ceremony, but Oleancy,
"Carlos is our kind of people."
Mashburn and Hurley were abscnL
manager Mike H;lrgrove said. "He
"This is the fust time dial this
comes to the park enthusiastic and
,.
he works hard at what he does ...
Last year, Baerga had one of the
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio Hall of Fame Bowl,
most successful offensive seasons University football coach Tom B • ..,
·
· ever by a second baseman, hitting Lichtenberg announced the
_lg ~en Sign
.312 with 205 hits, 20 home runs appointment of two assistants
• ·
and
RBis.
Craig Coleman of Morehouse Col~
CIDCAGO (AP) _The Hall of
105
lege and Tom l'!arducci of Fremont Fame Bowl has bccoo'le the fourth
The only other major league St. Joseph High School.
. .
postseason football game alioned
second .baseman to hit .300 with ·
c
1
30
·
.,
200 hits, 20 homers and 100 RB!s
o eman, ' graduated from with the Big Ten.
was Rogers Hornsby, who &lt;lid it Cl!f\tOn McKinley High School and
The conference said Wednesday
five times in the 1920s.
Ad[lan (Mich.) College. He it has signed a two-year agreement
Baerga baucd .353 at Cleveland received his masters degree from with the Tampa, Fla.-bascd bowl
Stadium last year, second-highest the United States Sports Academy game, wbich will select a Big Ten
10 Daphne, Ala.
·
team to play an at-' -e opponellt
at-ho_me. average among Am
, erican
He has coac hed at Kansas Wes, after the Big Ten's - • II' ntati~
~League playets. Roberto AIQlllar of 1
u · ·
......
Toronto hit J54 at Skydome in eyan mversny' Western Con- - are dc~ermincd for the.Rose. FloriToronto.
nccllcut Stale Upiversity and More- : da.Citius and Holiday liowb.
house, in Atlanta, Ga.
The next Hall Of Fame Bowl
He was honored as Indians Man
N d
4
'.
ar ucci , 2. graduated from wili be played at the 74,296-seat
of the Year each of the past two
seasons in balloting by the Cleve- John Carroll University and has Tampa Stadium beginning at ll
lahd chapter of the Baseball Writ- coached at Fremoni St. Joseph a.m. EST on Jan_. I. ESPN will
ers' Association of America. He smce 198l , building an 82-44-2 televise the game.. .
was also one of three Indians record. He was selected Sandusky
"The Hall fame Bowl relanamed to the American League Bay Conference coach of the year tionship adds to the Big Ten's·
10 19.85 and Midland Athletic
All-Star team last year.
overall plan to deyelop and s&amp;abiThe team has reached multi-year
:~~i~ the year in l98?, :!,Z:,~u••~~li;i~~eaw~'!?%~
deals with numerous playe·rs,
Hi team h
.,
including center fielder Kenny 1
s.
s ave won si;&lt;. suaight er James·E.Dclany,
· ,
Big Ten teains are 1-3 in the
eague champ10nships. He was .
Lofton ....,... sign.ed to a four-year selected
North west Oh io Division
·
.
. Hall of Fame Bowl, wilb Ohio
deal witb a club option foL a fifth y co h 0 r the · b ·
·· yeor, worth a total of $10.5 mil. uon · · · ac
year yThc Associ- · State losing IQSynCuse in 1992.
.,.
alcd Press in 1991. ·
.
·
" Big Ten teams bave always
- and left fielder Albert Belle,
Th e appointments
··
,.
announced been J10IIIllar with our local f.., ·•
·. ·who has a three-year deal with a · Wedncs4ay fill the vacancies left ..5aid Shiiley R~ tftsidcntd the
club option for a fourth, worth ·a by M1ke Haywood; who is now at · ·Hall of F.ue Bowl.
. ~ · total of $13.5 million.
Ba11 s!lite, an d 1}m Hinton,
·
now
· Penn State ·will begin.fOOiball
.
· Also Tuesday • the "lnd1ans head footba!l coa~h at Harding competition in the cmfen:nc:e this
· signed two pitchers - right,hander Higl) School 10 Marion. .
·
fall.

.

Time-out blunder can serve as
opportunity for UM's Webber

THE BODYGUARD

Cheaney wins Wooden Award

HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH

Will Be Having ASpecial Service
· On Good Friday at 1:00
In .the Afternoon. -·
Special singing wnl be by
The Partakers, The Blood Covenant SinQers,
Linda Jon•s and ,b,.Redeemed Quartet.
Amessage.will be given by
Rev. James R. Acree, -Sr.

..

Eve1'3Jonels W.leome!

. In Ti111e For Spring

::vas

tf\

wm

Baerga .•. .;

SPECIAL SECTION

J.m

·Coleman, Narducci
named OU assistant
football coaches

LAWN &amp; GARDEN-;&gt;

•

•

....

· IN THE
•POINT.
PLEASANT
'
R
EGISTER
.
•GALLIPOLIS ·DAILY TRIBUNE
•POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

-oo

pact ·

4

•-c

·ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1993 • NOON
INSERTION DATE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1993

or

;eg,&amp;.g9

CALL. DAVE OR ~. J.
FOR ·MORE- INFORMAT-ION

992·2155_

'

..

...

••

·.

By
The
Bend
.

A day
in
the
life
of
a
teacher
.

.The DWly Sentinel
Thursday, Aprll8, .1993

Page-7

Marla with child; Donald.with Marla?

By LARRY McSHANE
Norma Foerderer said Wednesday. onciled .a week later. Not for ton~.
Associated Press Writer
. Dear ADD LaDdtn: I teach
The developer and casino owner is They went their separate ways tn
Seplember 1991.
.;
.,'
NEW YORK - It's official: · the proud papa, she said . . • ·
..
second grade It Ill inner«y I!Chool.
opinion. -- BEN IN ISLIP TERYou get the idea.
Marla Maples' next role is mommy
The new arrival will be The
RACE, N.Y.
.
r
AciWIIly, I'm not able to do muc:h
By
March 1992, they wcr•
teaching bcc••ee 111011 of my lime
DEAR BEN: I ICIIt yOU! leltc:r to opposite Donald Trump's return u · Donald's fourth child Ill he relearns " doing terrific,'' said Marla Unlit
"The An of the Diaper.'' He and
is spent in "c:IMaDOIIlllllll8jlellleiL"
Stanley Paul, whole orclieslra is one daddy.
Maples,
who
appears
in
Broadhis
ex-wife, Ivana, have two sans Donald's roving eye led 'to ... you
There are 30 studenl8 in my elus,
m
tbe
1110111
Jqi'Jiar in Oticago. Here
ANN LANDERS
guessed it ... they broke up in Octo. ~.,...~
.·
•t993, 1M AIJcdoo
is his respoose:
.
. '!lay's "The Will Rogers FoUies," and a daughter: Eric, 9.1vanlca. II, . ber 1992.
~
'
and at least half of them are in - '
·
.
Tltloeo Syndktte
"I have beat in the entenlinment 1s due to deliver her first child in and Donny, 14.
of counselinJ. Five should be
Dizzy yet? How about Marla's
Cretllon Syndiea.''
spokeswoman
Will the patter of little feet be
receiving IntenSive "lheiapy.
business for l!ver 25 yean. I have October,
·brie(
relationship with singer
accompanied by the sounds of
Theac cbildn:n III'C disruptive 8lld
·never heard of an orchestra that
Michael
Bolton? How about The
wedding bells? Nobody's saying.
Donald's
dales with several modtotally IJldiseip~ ~ ~ HANGING ON BY MY FINGBR· expected dinner. We are being paid
Trump planned no statements about .
els?
How
about Marla's publicist
and 111gr:r they feel u mptlellini.l · NAILS IN .SACRAMENTO, to provide a service. We are not
the pregnancy or his plans,
guests.
and
his
strange
attraction to her
~ sc:e ~ of these kids ~- CALIF. ·
·
Foerderer said.. A public1st for
stolen
high
heels?
·
"When
the
client
does
provide
mg auninlls wben they are .older if
pEAR SACRAMENTO: CaliforMaples did not return a phone call.
When
Donald
and
Marla
~sur­
refreshments,
however,
it
is
always
we dQ not help them now.
nia has CJ~periencccl a 9CVCie ec:oA little history is in order here:
·Donald and Ivana were di vo~ in faced for a Pebble Beach golf tour~ ac~ bas one counselor, bllt nomic I"'C"'Sioo in die lasliYIO yean, appt~iJ!te{l. Usually a table is .set
December 1990. Donald and Marla nament in February, rumors of an
she ts available only one. afwnooil and as a leSUlt, die scboola have suf- up in another room 8lld during our
breaks we eal .on the 1111. In all my
a week and serves the entue SIUdent fered.
were already &lt;~n item, king and impending marriage were everywhere. That was the final word
queen of the gossip pages.
body. She aces three of my cbildml
.Don't Jive up. We need dcdiattcd, years in the music business, I ha"e
from
the couple until Trump: The .
Not for long. They broke up in
rievcr expec!Cd to be seated and
o~ce every two weeks fo_r IS intelligent reachers like )oou. The
·
Baby
.
.
July 1991. Not for long. They ft(:mmutes. We have~ t;JS:tthologist on contribulion you are making is treated like a guest at die pany. •
Gem of the Day: A bore is a per.· our ~who also VISIISOOce a week, enormous. Hang in there Help is
son
who, when yoo ask him bow he
but her worldClad includes cbildml die w.y
.
·
with fe~:mitig ~bilitips as weU.as
oear ·ADn Landen: Would you is, tells you.
Lottesomt? Tah charge of yoiiT
those ~th emouonal problems.
please address 8 problem that 1have
811 W. MAIN . STRUT•POMEROT
life
IJIId IIITn il arolllld. Wr:ilt for
Soetety spends ~t S.30~ a never aeert in your column, 8Ithough
year to keep~ enminal m pnson. I've been reading you for many AM ~rs' MW book/tl, "How lo
If.we spent a lttlle more money oo years. Why are the bride and groom Mal:t Frief!ds aild Stop Being
. each ~11l110w, we~-~ expected to pay for dinners for LoMly. • Stnd a self-IJ/Jdnssed,/ong,
GUEST SPEAKER •
the number of ~tial crunmals musicians in the band? These people ·~ busilltss-sizt envelope and a clleclc
Kar~n Walker was a guest
and save a lot of ·pam and.anJUish are not inviled guests. They are there or monty order.for $4.15 (this inspeaker durln11 Racine Ele·
cludes postage and lumdling) tD:
as well as money.
to woik.
·
mentary's Right to Read
Fritnds,.clo
AM
~rs,
P.O.
Box.
. Bee•,.., of the sttess and feelings
The price per person for a
Week. ~rs.. Walker spqke
a'bout the constellations and .
of hopelessness, 50 ~t o~ ~ wedding dinner these days is 11562, Chicago,TIUIJ611:0562. (In
PICKUP «DELIVERY
made an in-school phinetari·
teachers leave the profeSSion w~m astlonomical. The caraers ~lave let Canada, send $5.05.)
um.
the ~ five yean. I "love tcacbmg, us know that if we don't pay for the
but I m not sure I can hang 111 there musicians' meals, they may be
!llUCh l~er. At the end of the day, disgruntled IJld 110\ perform very
I'm ~
.
well. For die IIIIIDWit of money it
. We 11mply muat 1mprove the will cost to feed the musicians we
conditions under wblc:b tea.chen could have invited six or eight ~ore
· wort or. our beloWid ~ 'win people that we really wanted.
soon be m deep trouble. S1g11 me We are 111gry about this quiet
,•

.l

Ann

Lande.rs

blackmailllld would'appreciate your

~

on

DOMINO'S PIJZA
992·2124

2 MEDIUM PAN ·PIZZA

$1 0''' .

With .1 Item Only

-People in the newsLOS ANGELES (AP) - La
Toya Jackson averted an Internal
Revenue Service auction by paying
$Sli,OOO in bacl taxes O!J her
interest in her parents' IS-bedroom
home.
The entertainer is said to own a
one-fourth interest in the Enciqo
-home. Her brother, Michael, owns
the majority inte~st
The IRS had scheduled 11J1 auction for Wednesday if Ms. Jackson
didn't come up with. the money
owed for 1988, 1989 and 1991. She
paid all if it on Tlll4day, &amp;aid her
husband and manaJer, Jack Gor-

don.

·

Also saved from the auction
black was Ms. Jackson's cstimalcd
$23,000 inlerest in a three-bedroom
Encino condominium she owns
.with her supentar brother.
MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP)- Mary
Jo Buttafuoco offen this criti9.ue of
a book co-written by Amy F1sher:
"Lies and more lies."
. "She didn't like a word of it,''
said Mrs·. Buttafuoco's attorney,
Michael Rindenow.
The book, "Amy Fisher: My
Story," hit bookstores this week.
Rindenow filed court papers Tuesday seeking to seize any assets
Fisher might receive from the
book.
.
Fisher, 18, is in prison for
pulling a bullet in Mrs. Buttafuoco's bead, leaving her face partially
paralyzed. Fisher claims she

became the lovet of" Mrs. Buuafuoco's husband, Joseph, when she
was 16. He denies having sex with
her.
.
Fisher's lawyer, Eric Naiburg·,
said Mrs. Buttafuoco's quest for
book profits is a waste of time.
''Amy Fisher is not making one
periny off this tiook,'' he said.
Nor did she benefit from any of
the movies and television shows
abo~t her, Naiburg said. ;Fisher
turned over the rights to her story
to KLM Productions as part of her
SZ'IIIillion bail.
· .
' LOS ANGELES (AP) - Peter
Criss, former drummer fQr.thc roek
group KISS, setiled a libel lawsuit
against a supermarket tabloid that
portrayed bim as a homeless alcoholic.
The settlement with Star magazine was reached hours before the
trial was. to begin Tuesday .. Terms
of the settlen'leni, were not ·'disclosed.
An employee at the Star's suburban New York City office said
Wednesday no one would be available for comment until Thursday.
A Jan. 8, 1991, story in the $tar
said Criss was "living like a dog,"
getting his meals on bread lines and
, sleeping jn .a men's room at the
Santa Monica Pier.
One photo caption read, "Pitiful
face of fallen superstar Peter Criss
- bloated by alcohol abuse that
has.desllOyed his kidneys.''

·'Street Stori~s' producer
named to head.NBC news

NEW YORK (AP) - NBC on show producer, to head its embatWcdnesday named Andrew Lack, a lied News division.
·
Lack, executive producer of
Iongtin!\' CBS ·News·maga:iint;'CBS' "Street Storie~," will S\IC·
ceed Michael Gartner, who
announced hi~ resignation last
month following the botched
"Dateline NBC" report in wbich a
OM truek was rigged 10 catch frre
on impact.
Lack, a··t6-time Emmy Award
recipient, winner of the Peabody,
Potk ·and many other awards, is
himself no stranger to con1r0versy.
As creator-executive producer
o( "Face to Face with Connie
Chung" in May 1990, he was criticized for that show's re-enactments
of news events.
.
He also was creator and .executive producer of "West S7th," the
jazzy, prime-time news ·magazine
described by "The Complete
Directory to Prime Time Network
TV Shows" ils a "Cast-paced, yuppie version of '60 Minu~ts."'
.
·
1
.t
p~iered
in
August
1985
and
~BEL PICKENS
aired (or foav seasons.
Lack joined cas News in t976.
· .l J . . S
beciiii\C a "60 Mil!utes" producer
·
·· .
· · in May 1977-and joined the "CBS
. Mabel (YOnkCf) P1ckens cele- Reports" unit in 1978, tiecoining
. ~ h.er JOist birthday on March · its ex~ulivt prochlcer in 1981. .
30.
.
.
·
._ .
He was senior ell.eutive producer
: Sbe.u·• ~t of~vuy14w , llf "Crostrea~s. '' t~e woekty.
~~~~ ~wnbla. Sl!e newsma11azine anchored by
.
:
.
Charles Kuralt •nd Bill Moyers
She n the last_livmg member during the summer of 1984,
· from a family of Sill children born
He succeeds G.artner, who
to W1lham and Lov1ua (GossCJt) resigned after the embarrassing
Yonker. Two s1stets and ·three siaged iilcidcntlh81 tiiok place dur- ·
brot~ers are deceased, Que'enie inga iepOI'I to show" the IIJepd fire
Rom10e, . Grace Roush, Isaac, danJers of the "sidesaddle" 1u .
Yonker, Robert 'ionkcr and Ken- · t8nks in older Qcneral Moton pick., .~Cih Yonker.
~ ups. ..
.

Wlllllllcb I
Cltllllllll' ....

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.
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flllrl
totelgn or dOmestic

...

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SUff

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•NT-15

'.........
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-y

OPEN SEVEN DAYS· A WEEK
, -llou10: 1:30.o.m.lo I p.m.
lfii'Outll flteloy,
8:30 o.m. lo ·7 P·l"· s.tunloy, end t o.m. 1o 8 p.m. . _ ,

GALLI.POLII

ur

.
;

•

209 Upnvr Road •

•

�Ohio

Notice

Public Notice

Final and Dlatflbutlvo
NOnce BY
Account of Raymond
PUBUCATION
Elbarfeld, Ex..:utor of tho
To: WILUAM DUNAWAY,
Eotata of Ylrgana Ellen whoaa .... known addr••
Elberfeld, O.CaMed.
wao 54304 N- PorUand
ESTATE NO. 26171
Road, Portland, 01\lo
Final and , Dlatrlbutlvo 4S170.\
·
Account of Granvlllo Stou~
You ara hllfaby nolilied
Adminiotrator of tho Eotale that you ha•t&lt;&gt; bean named
of Jimmy A. , Stout, O.londanl in a legal acUon
Ooca•ad.
antltled Rogar Hayman,
ESTATE NO . ' 2751 1 _ Plaintiff, vo. William
Final and Diatrlbutlvo Dunoway, O.fandant Thla
Account of Lawronca W. action hu boon ualgnad
McQuaid, Executor of tho Cue No. 13 CVF 11 and io
Eo tala of Audrey
In tho County Court
McQuaid, O.C...ad.
.
County, Ohio;
. ESTATE NO. 26514 Courthouoa,
Final and Diatrlbutlva
01111&gt;
Account of Gena Grato,
Executor of tho Eotata of · The oblac t of the
Helen Lyonii,Daceaud.
Complaint ia leaking
unta.. axcaptiono ara damagu lor failuro to pay a
filed thereto, aald accounts loan in the amount of
will ba for haaring before S1 ,000.00, and oaaklng
oaid Court on tha lOth day damage• for. otongo
of May, 1993, at which tima chargaa i" an amount in
uid account• will ba axe- of $1,eoo.oo; and all
conoldered and continued other rallof which may be
from day to day until penn,.!,ttad by low or in
di,.Poaad or.
·
aqu 1•r·
Any paflon inlaraalad
You ara haral&gt;y required
may nta wrlllo'n excaptlona . · anowar tho .Complaint
to .. ld accounta or to within twonty·elghl (28)
mattero porlllnlng to tho daya altar tho foal
execution ol lha trual not publication of lhlo notice
len than flva daya prior to which will ba publlahed
tho dale oat lor hearing.
one a a wook for oix (6)
Robtrl E. Buck, Judge auccoa,lva weeka, Tho laat
Common PieM Court, publication will bam- on
Probate Dlvioion tho 22nd day of April, 19113,
MolgoCounty,Ohlo and tha · twanty-eight (28)
(4) a, lie
day a for anawarl"g will
oommanca on U\al data. In
•••• of your follure to
onawor or · otharwlaa
raapond •• required by tha
PubliC Notice
Ohio Rulaa of Civil
Procedure, Judgment by
INTliE
default wlll ' bo rendered
COUNTY COURT OF.
againot you for tho raliel
MEIGS COUNTY, Ohio
demanded in tho Complaint
ROGER HAYMAN,
Dated thlo loth day of ·
Plaintill
March, I 113.
·
-va_
Unda Bantz, Clark
WILUAM DUNAWAY
(3) 18, 25;
Defondant
(4) 1,1, 15, 22, etc

...

c.

4.·30'P.. a Dlv
BEFORE
,1
PUBLICIJIOII

111---;=========::;---1

SHERIFF'S SALE
·OF REAL ESTATE
STATE OF OHIO,
• MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
: TAXATION,
Plojnlill

vs

CLETUS DALTON, olaf
Oalondanll
CASE NO. 12 CV 290
In purouanca of an Ordar
ol Sola dated FabNary .16,
••· In Ill• -va .antitlad
ic:lion, I will oft• for oalo at
:pubUc auction, at tho front
'd'clor or the Court Houoa, In
Pomeroy, Ohio, in tho above
.,mad County, on Friday,
..o14th day of.May, 11113 at
10:00 o'clock A.M., tho
following doacrlbad raal
..ta.., aifllelo in lha County
'ef Malgo, - State of Ohio,
to-wit:
, PARCEL NO.
1: Tha
following real eotota
aitualed in tho Stala . of
Ohio, County ol Melgo and
Townahip ol Scipio and
known •• Two loll Number

------

Public Notlct

public Notice

PubliC Notice

Throa (3) and Four (4) in tho
Village of PagavAie in aald
Townlhlp, County and Stata
oforoaald and daocribad •
followo: . Baing port of
SactiOn No. Sixlaan in Town
No. Iaven (7) In ·Ranga No.
Fourteen (14) In · Ohio
. Company'• Lot No; Thraa
(3), tho aloraoaid raal aall ..
baing the aame raal aalale
convoyed by Mary A.
Brocko and Ezra S. Brooko
to Samuel H. Quaon by
daad dated Saptambar 15,
1a87 and recorded In tha
racorit. of dMda cif Melga
County, Ohio.
·
PARCEL NO. 2: Slluall In
the Townohlp of Scipio,
·County of Moog• and State
of Ohio; and ,In tho Viii.- of
Pogovlte, and baing known
al 42'/o foal oil of tha aouth
oklo ollAI No. Jhraa (3) and
In SacUon 16, Town No. 7
and Range No. 14 of tha
Ohio Company'• Purchua,
baing tho oama pr-ioaa
conveyed by Rabacoo J.
Quaon to Adolbarf -ell
daad dated O.Cembar

1125.paa raoordod In VQ!umo
128• ago 365 of tha lhigl
County Deed Recorda,
rafaranca to which Ia
1\oraby l!lado.
Sold premloM appralltd
at Two Thouoaild Four
HundrBll Dollar~ (S2,400)
and cannot bo told lor IMI
than two-third• of that
amount
TERMS OF SALE: Tan
par canT( tO%) calh In hand
on day of aala with llalanco
to bo paid upon dalivwy of
dead.
'
THIS SIIEAlFPS SALE
OPERATES UNDER THE
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMI'TOR. TilE
MEIGS
COUNTY SHERIFF MAKES
NO GUARANTEE AS TO
STATUS OF nTLE PFIOR
TO SALE.
Jamoo M. lloulaby, Sharift
Molal County, Ohio

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER .OF
SETTLEMENT OF .
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounll and vouchara
of tho following nomad
. liduciariaa hava bean Iliad
in tha Proba.. eourt;Malga
County, Ohio, for approval
and aaltiemont
·
ESTATE NO. 26511
Final and • Diatrlbutlve
Account of Oouglaa w.
Little, Adminiotrator of the
Eoto.l a of Rhoda Hozal
Hackett, Doc-ad. '
·
ESTATE NO. 23007 - '
Final Account filed by
Jomoa Ruuall, Com·
mioolonar of tho Eotote of
Irene Ruuall, , now
docultd, on bahelf oflrane
Auaaall al Guardian of
Karon L. Haggy, an
lncompalent·Paraon.
ESTATE NO. 21496 -

OTHSandHala•
Attorney ro; Plaintift
(4) 8, 15, 22, 3tc
.

· • h
Names ln t e news
.

·

·

. .NEW YORK (AP) - . Carly
Simon shot back at critics of her
opera "Romulus Hunt" in a rebut·
• tal in The Washington Post.
The opera blends rock, reggae,
rap and classical music in telling
lhe story of a bOy tlealin~ with the
divorce of his. former h1ppie par·
ents.
·
: "I have written an opera of a
different sort," Simon wrote in a
rebuttal published Wednesday. She
said the reaction has ranged from
"the open-minded and enthusiastic
to the angry and traditionalist.''
The opera opened in New York
in February and has moved to
· Washington's Kennedy Center.
· · "Most of lhe critics have .waited
to see it to pass judgment, though
some - including one at this
iiewspaw - have written about it
l!ased on the overall concept," she
wrote. ull was a concept he didn't,
shaU we say, relate to."
She said "Romulus Hunt" was
aimed at a new genemtion of opera
fans.
.·
"I have· tie¢n bending my 'pop'
sensibilities. and with the help of
experienced operatic hand~ have
styled a work that fuses a number
or forms, forms familiar to the
younger'genemtion," she wrote.
NEW YORK (AP) - Tatum
O'Neal has her health, her looks,
. her three kids and a revitalized
career. What she doesn't have is
estranged husband John McEnroe,
although the Oscar-winner says
that might change.
",t,m I happy? I am ecstatic,"
the 29-year-old actress said in the
May issue of Mademoiselle magazine.'

.·

lawrel- A.llaiaw
Spacial Counael

, But could lhing&amp; be better?
•
"Yeah," she acknowledged. "It
could be a lillie better with, you
know. the person in New York
(McEnroe). But we'll see how that
workS out."
The 34·year-old tennis star and
O'Neal separated last year after six
years of marriage. Pan of the prob·
lem was his reluctance to accept
her return to work after years 'of
staying home with their three chil·
dren, she said. ·
O'Neal is starring in the TV
movie "Woman on Trial: The

·

·

·

·

·

.

Miss Dey stars as a restaurant
Bambi Bembenek Story," which
who falls reluctantly in love
owner
airs next monlh.
wilh
a
newspaper columnist played
· "It was scaty t(/ go up to John
Jay
Thomas.
and say I wanted to go back to
work, and hav~ him say, 'What? I
lhought you didn't want to work,'
" O'Neal said. "And he '.s like,
'WeU, why don't you wait a year?'
And I'm like, 'I can't wait anymore, John."'
-CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
-c- Nick Nolte got lhe bum's rush
after proposing a housing development named Down and Out in
South Hills.
The Municipal Planning Commission rejected 10.0 Wednesday a
proposal by Nolte and his wife,
Rebecca, lo subdivide theirfouracre lot ,Mrs. Nolte is a Charleston
native.
Residents ha&lt;! complained that
the name was insulting and that the
'development would bring 100 much
traffic and noise.
The name was a takeoff on
Nolte's 1986 film "Down and Out
ir\ Bever!~ Hills," in which he
plays_ a bum who becomes .a guru
to a ncb-but-unhappy couple.
.
"The movie's about a:.bum.
That say.s ·a lot about what he
lhinks of our neighborhood," said
Sara Busse, who presented a petition. with ~0 signatures against the
proJeCt.
. L ''It's just a name," said· the
Noltes' lawyer; Brawley Tracy.
''These people have to be looking
for offense to think offense was
intended."
,
. .
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · Susan
Dey is leaving CBS' "Love and
War" because of unspecified "ereative differences" with the producers.
The falling:out between Miss
Dey and Shukovsk:y English Enter·
tainmelit was announced Wedncs·
day. Her publicist said the parting
was amicable.
.
Production for this season has
aheady ended.
CBS said it had no comment on
Miss Dey's departure. The network ·
is expected to announce next
· monih whether the romantic comedy created by Diane English and
Joel Shukovsk:y will be renewed.

LIMESTOIIE,
GUVEL &amp; COIL

PROM and WEDDING
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BUFFET
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Jeff W'Kkersham

.

BllLSLACK

Jeanie Howell,
•
NOTARY

:....._ _ _..:1:.2-l:::ll-.;:92:.,:·tfrr=.~
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Col .,.... et ftz.l771

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'NOncE

OF AVAILABIUTY
•'
TO THE PUBUC
~~· · • .. STATE OF OHIO
{': · OEPARTMf;NT OF
1 • .TRAN!IPOATATION
,;
Columbuo, Ohio
• • Tho Ohio Dar&gt;a!tmant of ,
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1:3Q 111&gt;6:30 P!"
Thuro. I Sit 10 lm4 pm
104 llulblrry Avt•
Pwaur, ott. ma

WE'. .DO
"

'"

ROOFING

.

...........

TROMM
BUILDERS
..
.

.·. 74!-}328
•

313193tln

.COIIStRUCJION

a(o~lito

s·nodgrass Upholstery

. Sto~t&amp;Cow-.

"Helping You To Recover Your Investment"

Ro!IIDdoliag

Fill UTIIWES

915-4473
667-6179

CHARLIE'S

DODR
DRIYIYiAY ·WORK ·
asdUMESTONE
DEUYIIY SERVKE
REASONABLE RATES

'25HOUR

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
514 North Second AvtnUI
lliddJ•pcrl. Ohio 451&amp;0

ll.aOUICII t•t Opealag of t•eir

7

· YardSale

..

Infant/Toddler PrograM
We will NOW serve children

Gallipolis

6.montJ1s to 12 years of age.

&amp; VlclnHy

Call us lor more Information
ALL Yord Sataa lluol It Pold In
(614) 992·7328
- · DEADIIIIE: J:OO pJJI.
L-----.....:.;..;..;.:_p;;..~;,;..--.::.:~::..1 rho d Q - rho ..r 1o 1o non.
~ -.... • a:oo p.m.
fltdov: Monda! adltlon • a:oo
p.m. 8otunlay.

POOR BOY TIRES

· ~·

IISSILL &amp; IQRKE

eG•r•M•

Gingerbread "oase

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

SJRUT &amp; SHOCK
·2 Front Strwts • L•ltor
• 4 Wheel 'li••-nt
Prices St..tlll at .
1

Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office. Seating

129.95 +Tax

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

UCINE, OHIO
.
614·949·2202
. 614·742·2996

alai..,.-.
-

~I

_.,

ATTENTION

Save Big on Voyegors

• o" Blacltn Road
PH. &amp;1W56-6160 .

992·7553
POMIIOY, OH,

.

C•ll • · aa ·~·-

.. . . . .

614·989·2405

April t ·~. . . . .

Pomeroy,

Kill&lt; \.lndanoChultz, A.F.A , cenifiad joulnayman
1
now offering,his ~mming 181VicoiiD cattle ·-·-,.·
·· . , .... ,
has 15 yeara ax~ · . u a prolaslionallarriar.
All trimming is done with hand tools (not grindafll)
using a portable rollover chula. .
Kill&lt; will travel up ~ 1y, houls.lrom little Hocking,
and raquir11s a minimum of IS head ol caltla ~r visit 10
Specialarrangemantsr;sible lor 4·H groups and clubs.

10 mil• aouth of Gallipolis

.............. .........

•••

=='!...,'=.., :=.""

CA'ITLE OWNERS

Je S. MARINE

=:::;

tocuot IW.
Vooollanol
HeM nllold • mlai...,
..... · -

' April ..10.

Powwad by Marcuay Outboarda

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

•

·~-lana-··· ~

General

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING
''

,;201 =::.-~Ave.

· Pre·Wash lees ........ $18 ?

'

·nRE ·IEPAIR lND ·ROTATING
3/24/tJ/ 1 -

p4

AMERICAN
LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Ac~ldenf •Annuity, IR_A • Mortgage

Ro•ky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
·
Middleport, o•lo 4$760

Fifth. A f 112 stciry 3-4 becln&gt;om home
yard and cantr.l air. If yo.u want tha
of Hving In -n. yo~ batter look at lhi1
. .
..
'
; $32,000

,, 14) 143·5264

·~.

· FASHION

llntenda exaluded.

lhoee •xoluded.

·4l300:laur•l Cliff

IN

·• Pomeroy
l

OPEN MON.-lAT. I AM-I Pll
SUNDAY 11 AM-t Pll ·

.
. .• ----i: --- ._ .......,•••. ' ..... -~---

............,__

.

• '•

•

J

•

,,

'

'I

,,

:.:w.---OOD IIRIICIIS ·
-

G

OUR OML

•BP Diesel Supreme...Try ft, there II a
difference.
., .
,
. •Minimum 60 Catano
· •l.:ow alh and sulfur ·. ·

Auto-BMMII ·

D. A. JOSTON

wOAIIo~

,EICAVIftiiG
. (614)
667·6628
'....
.

~ I RIIIYIM

Ull '

••••
rf.,•
• . . . . .c

•Will not gel In winter time. ·

. 1993 SPRING LUBE SALE

RGDIIIII-1 RIDI ·
1411SialeRl 7

6 14 446·0 736

3oM3 1 ...... n&lt;l.i

.

a-

aii,OIIIo
m-1711.'

LUBR,ICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR.YOU.

•DOZERS
· •BACKHOE
•TRACK LO~DER
•TR!JCKING

.......u.

CIBARANCE

. . MIDDLEPORT

'

fuN tlinl IUCI- .

"as SUPj:RIOR FUELS AND

'

~
WINIBR

Rlci!Poa--a
-ian·-.
&amp;Auction

. '*In_

20% 'ott

·, ·· Children's, Boys, la~lies, Men's

,

· LONOB~· Hayman Road- This 7 year ~d modular
hu
2 bltlio, family room, garden bathtub
kitchen,. new heat pump, and . ~
, Alii~ good condition. Alio hu a trailer
011 3.31 IICI81.
$45,800

,

.., .. .,

OIL AND tUBE SERVICE·

POMEROY· Old Union Ava. ; Two big lots with a lillie
. over 1~ IICnl. ~~ the end of the road olte a 1g83 Clayton
do~ble wide w1th 3 bodroomo, 2 batho, lamily room,
. dinong room, ilnd ~ n~~¥ ,front ~h. Kltdlen is equipped,
Including a new d1shwalhar. Hao oantrai air and a water
.."All in good Q&lt;indtion.
' $34,000

3

'.

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GlOVE REPAIR

Gutters

HEY OUYS!II -

To Tllk To YOUII1~
Exl. 1204 $3.10 P• 111n. ......
e. 11 v... Un- Co. aoa.m0111.
NO ARQUIIEN18t NO NAQ.
OINGI Juol Tho lllilo Of Your

PH. 614·985·3949

.Men's

t,

Shade River Saddle Shop

47269 .St. Rt~ 241,a I Y. Mile OH Rt. 7 ·
· Tllru .CIIoster •• 11. 241

·Men's Basic
39
'
h
l
.,
.
$2
'
2
Prewas · ev1 s ......... . .

992-3684

· : · ~m~ ·

OFFICE 99~·2886

.Girls, Boys, Students, Ladies, Men's

, 290 N. 2ND , : .

LEATHER REPAIR

Engln-'o Offlca In each of
tha twelve ODOT Dlalllot
Olllcaa and tha Bureau of
Planning April 15, 11113 to
April 21, 18113. The ODOT
Olalrict omca aarving your
arao Ia located at
Moiaklngum Drive and Davia
Avenue, Box 151, Marietta,
Ohio.
·
.
. Any comment• to bil
offaradahould ba In wtittan
fa'"' and tr-rnltlecl to:
.... 1'homu Singleton,
ACting B-u Chief
BurMu of Pl,nnlng·
Ohlollapa-tof
Tr-portation
21 South Frantatroat
Columbu1, Ohio 43215
Written comirlanll muot
lit rocalvad by tha clo" of
bualnaaa on AprU 21, 11113,
JERRY' WRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPOATAOON
{4).8. 1tc

Levi's, Lee, Wrangler, Chic,
Sunset Blues, Rocky .

'

NEW- REPAIR

3125m/1

20% OFF

.Western Boots •••••

· ROOFING

12/31/921lfn

Estate

JEANS

Howard L Wrilesel

ROUSH'S PRINTING

SHOE&amp;

$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

Publl C NotlCO

3 Announcements

1

, 311/1 mo. pd.

Seasoned

••

~ 21113

2112192/ttn

ALL HARDWOOD

20+1n.l.........
Nt-J

},

EA

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

~ · CIUrlOIII&amp;IIRIGIHI

;

RATES ·

a. M.. t. card

· ,

\111'\IICl\
II \\1', ,\ &lt; 0\l IllS

B\1.1

IUY • SILL • TRADE
317 N. 2ntl St.
Mltltlltport, Ohio
Mon.;Frl. I 0:00·5:00
Saturday I 0:00·6:00
Clolttl Sullllay
992·3577

PHONE 992•7036

··:.. 992·2269
; , USlD RAilROAD TIES

~'

THE BOOK
BARN

REASONABLE ,

Yiaa

614-':41-2335 or
614-Sn-501

Ffe!l E..tmat•
FIREWOOD FOR SALE

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE ·
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698 '.

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports

Loweo.ts,
Work Guaranlwd

Fertilizing, Waading, and
Saadlng.
Shrub an!l Tr• :rilf!!mlng .
a. Removal

-··- ···- Paot Otflca

HOWELL'S
'IOOIIEEPIIIG
&amp; TAX SERVICE

to Roof
Fnte Eltlmlttos,

RHkltntlll • Commen=.. l

'OWNER:

'

• Lawn Mowing,

992-533501'
tas.Js61

992-3470

aLIGHT HAUUNG
. '• '
:• •FIREWOOD

;

949·2391or
1·100··37·1460

SIZED LIMESTONE

~~

'

AlL MAliS
lrl1111 It In Or We
lick UP!

· Poriteroy,Ohio

TitiM and
REMOVAL

!!

.MAIIIIEIIANCE

36970 Bal Rls Road

fl :s•uB &amp; TREE

12·!Hfn

MICROWAVE OVEN

From Foundation

To collect your scholarship money
call 614-985-3556 ,
Open Mon.-Fri.' HH or Sat 1G-4

PH. 614·992-5591

Lie, No. ~51·32

WICK'S
SERVICE

Association Is
looking tor current
lddresaoa of Meigs
graduates lor April
mailing lor All!f!lni
Dance on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addr'esses to
Melga Alumni
Association, P. ·O. ,
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohio45760

•regardless o1 income .
•regardless of grades
•plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of cred~

HAUUNG: Llmeetona,
Din, Graval and Coal
LICENSED ilnd BONDED

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

St. Rt. 7
Cllesllire,

Gallipolis

· 57-59 Coun St.

POMEROY

a1tiYCR REPAIR

Call 614·992· ·
6637

3-4-93-1

,

P01111roy, Ohio

SIZED UMESTONE
. FOR SALE

992·2487
NEW AT OSCAR'S

(614)~7

·Quality
Sto•• Co.

2 11iles on Hysell
Ruaao.IIOff
Rt. 124 •'
: 12S.ssius $20
· 16 S.nio•• $25

CLUB

HOMI
IMPROVIMIITS

for all college bound students.

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER A SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES

This ad good for 1
FREE card.

992-6215

. Producllln Stock

3-4-93· 1 mo.

. EAGLE$
Speclll Early Bird
$100 Payoff

. (614llli2-&amp;082
Sandra Handeraon

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

PONDS

6:45p.m.

Conaullanll
Carolyn McCoy

'

RIC IICAVAniG
BULLDOZING

EVERY THURSDAY

IN

indepondont Beauty '

' 614·742~2138'

(614) 992-3647

WPENTER SERVICE

MARY KAY

JOE N.SIYRE
SAYRE .TRUCKING

care a{ld color consultation.
Call today for your
coflll:ilimentary taci&amp;J and
makeover.
Independent Beauty Consu~~nts
Carolyn McCoy (614) 992·5082
Sandra Henderson

NGO

YOUNG'S

effec:tlva lldn en progr1n1
l .derllgnad lor ydur lldn type.

RtiiOII...
. ·Ratti

Personalized makS.:up, skin

o.

. COMPLiiiiiTARY
. FACIAL ·
Mart t&lt;., hoa • prowr.-

HAULING

'

G•lllpolla

MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST
, Spacial f•m ttriM
ptryrMnt 4 tlmn a yMr
end NO INTERI;ST or R!'fANCE CHA"GE.
L:arry E. Miller ,
·
61
57

wlih

'
'

e

ftg1n1a, -

·

Wlntecl to Buy

""'* .,liJiolar
... Uo• .,_ .....

Dan,
~

c-.
:~,..~
'1. ....14..~
Ita . :ico
Etc.w. Airltrlt;.
5

J l D.. Auro Parl8 and 8i1w1a

;l:=/"*- a~n~o~e: ,
J"'* -. -

.,,•an

rf;

b1 t , 1

',

�.,

Page 10-the Dally Sentinel ·
'

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattk

Employmc'r~l Srr•,tces

11

Thul'ld8y, April 8, ·1

Pomeroy-Middl4tport, Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript
W\4'/ t'IR\ t&gt;•N'T to.£"''
101,._'1.~1) IN 1"1 LA ....... M•V•III\e ..'T \

CliMe

Help Wanted

· ®~&lt;A"&lt;
~T

®

•N

1.\ w,e .

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

NEA Crossword Puzzle

72 TNcJcs for Sale .

, ·,., ,.....
....,.....

~

ACROSS

.

'

PHILLIP
ALDER

tiD Cltau • • Pick 'lit IEJroll..
..,. 1llw I W. llune Oa!lf,

--··JII!I,~

o,..
CvT'f .

A c"'t

N6RTH
+KQ2 .AK5

f-1-ti

I -

:dt:IIC

42

4 Ton
9 Cook'o
m111ure
12 Juz player
Kid- . •
13- - It an
ltlend
14 Guido'• high
nolo
15 Mort

«

:r~~gnlllcent

+&amp;52
EAST

+ to 8 74
.J976

us

+K 10 8

+AS 3

tA' K

+QJ743

· Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutb
Sou:~

Welt

Nor"

I NT

Pass

3 NT

'

18 Acta
21 NtgoUve
word
cave (poet.)

61Soui(Fr.J .

6~ Prll"

64 Bo In debt
65 Younr.·t or
66 Pera " '
67 Oamp

a2

~:~~
.
Poetry loot

Swltt potato
llongrol
lle11ure of
wl.
35 Cttch
37 Willy remark
39 Sun god ·

•Qn

Undtrground
IXCIVItloftl

29
31
33
34

SOUTH

role
Layer 01 IOH

46 Uiltlx..-cted
diHicultr
48 Pigpen
50Volct
lnllocllon
51 Dtfln..
dtPI.
53 Eaotwlnd
dolly
55"Woody
58 Proper (ll,l

compoct
17 More

t7432

,...........................

40 llao WeJI

,1:

4 Lttlolnt

5 lnv1dlng
· throng
·
6 B1lore noon
(lbbr.)
.

DOWN
1 Fllh

. 7llt1Witn

2 Yorklhire

Colo. end Mo.

river

B- -lhe

3 - B.

ground floor

Johnoon

East
All pass

Opening lead: +Q
THAT MEANS ·

YO'RE FIXIN' TO
GIT COMPANY,
LUKEY!!
Yllllllll 400, Good
t400.114:44l:IJII,

TtJnspottJtron

Sit back
or lean forward?

Con:llllajl.
.

By PbUllp Alder

' .

15 11oa1t l Moto... :
IOrSall
:

11 Autos for Sale ·
1111 Corwlr, IDU7I-DII ...
larDoonnL

~OW

ABOUT SHARING"
YOUR UMBRELLA?

ANOTtt~~

-

fi£M

•

Ft5TIVAL1

~.tif

:1110 4 - allaln
Com11111e
CMw · ·
lion: Col 30W7W'III I I ..
I AM. :J P.ll.
•

WANTED: .Port,llmo P&lt;ltlllon
(32.1 Hrw /Wk) Available At A
Community G"!UP _ Homo For
Po,...... Will: IIRIDO In
Houro: 3:30 :llp.m., Wocl; 3:30:
8:30 p,m., F~; 10 a.m. :llo.m.,
Sit; 8 a.m. .a p.m., sun OR 8
a.m, " J&gt;.m., Sot;, 1 , , &amp;.m.,
Sun· (Rolatoa """"
hor
WNkand); 2 :Hour Waaldy Stall
-ng; Or AI Otl:o:. SchodUiocl. High Doa-

:r=-·

m.e211 cfoyo, 614,.74711
ovonlngo.
·
, For Aont Or Solo: 1 Room Homo
In Country, 2 Boclroomo, 2
Batho, I 112 Acroa, A..lloblo
Mar\ 614_.41·1003.
'"

.

for Rent

Wator, G,.:t Hunting, $a5,000,
114:216-11142.

WANTID: 1Wo Part:Tlmo 120 Hro
IWir) eomm...., Skll:o '""'"""
._ Nooclocl To Alalot Porsono
With IIRIDO In tommu~Hl
t.rvlng In 1111111 Countt=H~

.
'

T - Yoora Driving Exporlonco,

I

_ ,, N .OO IHr, To Stort. H InC.CIIIa At I:
100:131:2302; Dooclllno For Ap:
ptlcanlo: 4:12:J3. Equal Op:
porvtniiJ Empie;"·
WE'LL PAY 'IOU To ~po Na::iio.
And Add- '""" Homo!
$100.00 Pw '1000. C•ll 1.U a.
, _ !SUI IIIN11yrs.+l Or
Wrtto: MISE , 33W, 111 S. Un:
cotnwor, N. Aurora, :L 10M2.

~ Canlaat

. Fw-=
"""'proparotlori
_,
olfl:. -waalllafi

=

rsmaboUt nontrociHionol '
,..~. (ONOW), 1:100·
.
13
Y011r OWn Monthly lncomol II
Wortc AI Homo, lloko ....~·o A
A..... ti.OO + Sl , To:
D&amp;A Supplloo, Sox n, HIHIQOro,
OH41133.

mn

• 83 Adjacenl AcNe
A'lllltablo
, 4 81droom Honw On '4 Acroa
With 22x21 Party Room
-,
All ot The AboVe Within 3 Mlln

Of Rio Orondo , Contact Bill

Connall At: Donna Sum--o

a~, 1'- YordiziOiiiO:S.:,up
u-:r-' n.:!'....11,

Ga-

F

or """•• ....,_
II4:31H258.
·

Th--

44 ' AP.nment

~~~ly
441-e4la.

=:.::

Y,-......

;!:k "*

.
Nlc&lt;: cllan oiUIIocl 1rn1 ahalr;

white ant-.ldlchln cupboud,

Mobile Homes

t152,17 jill month Including 111
montt:a r..o:o: ...... - ~:qo.
dollvorod and..ool_ up, oldrtlng
and
1:1100-137:J125.
t4Jr71 Redm.~n, two bedroo~
two batho, lwo ........ 304412:
2301 ., 304:773.ell2.

"'"'*·

11180
Ubarty,
2···
Now 12dl
Corpa!,_
13,100~
114:317,

Dozlr and Iabeii work, by tho

'J2t3 Aftor 5 ~.M. Alk ,.., Paul.

· .... lil4:i4Ut23
orl1ti43-IUI.

1110 rnobll. lwnl, 2 bedroom•,
~- good cond, 304:1178-

T~-'"8. Traa
·
Trl-'"1.
Fr.. lotlmatool

tNI Skrllno Holly Rldgo 14x'IV,

a

•
- :fJc..
!'~dorponnlng,
llklnow,
,.....,.,
·
.

au-

-

1 Uoocl l:.lrnlturo tor u:o. 114:317•1728 -

.

-a

-:onw.

:.C:

.• ~.- ~....,

Two Trail Blkaa,

m-

1 Bod- Unlurrillltod Apart:
moniDI• Rarial, ~Iter,
" - ' • tloi.111 P - .
W.tor, - . , Garba!" Pfllol.
~ Aoqillrod. R 1
l3t
Flrot
Awenuo,
·
114:441!
2111.

Each, . Coli Aftot 5 P.ll 1 7137. .
•

=~rir•=--:r;=
AAII,
:11133.

--·a.. -·--- - ..
-

1111 ,.... T - . 4 Drllrt~

:·~ . . . . . . . Gllion
Awallal:lo P - ~bini
lluol::, ......_ OH
-

-

•

.Ia-

-::---:--

53

j:l I
1224.

.

l
·····'·

I

-

I •

and

lfll~lna, ·1111-

:IU:24:M arili lor IIIII~.

luY

or 1111. R:-t .. Anllrt-. ~~noel, ~ IM:II&amp;o

GNRI&lt;
8RRX ,

John
...... !loon:
,. 1111 -

KNRLM
CZ61.. JI'NK,

__

XCGGTUA

IVCB

TU

r a ,·

VK

LMTUJCSRF, ...-

MCHL
.

XFTWTX,

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Life Is rather like a lin of sardines. We are all
lOOking for the key." - Alan llrtnnett.
.
·

·- -··

r::~::~' S@~Q{llA-~£~s·
lAIII
14lro4 lty ClAY I. POllAN _::....,_ _ __
0 lour
Roarrongo lottors of tho
scramblod word1 1M:

WOlD

low to lorm four rimplo
word1
,_

By Jeffrey McQuain

EUPHORIC describes ,somebody
wbo has bigh spirits «)r feels especially
happy. Your listeners, however, won't
be euphoric if you fail to pronounce
this adjective "yoo-FOR-ik."
Q. We keep seeing the Latin ex·
pression S~NE QUA NON. What does
tbat mean?

A. This Lalin phrase has lhe literal
meaning of "without which not." Tbe
phrase refers to somethin&amp; !bat's ab·
solutely essential or necessary, such
as a prerequisite for an advanced college eourse. Otten pronounced in English "SJH,nay kwab non," SINE QUA
NON has been a ''must" in Engiisb for
more than four centuries.

fg ' PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN · 1
THESE SQUARES

A
V

UNSCR,r,MBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

11.1111

SC!tU'l LETS ANSWEIS
~,,
Attune , Baron - Nylon - Blight , YOU do IT
Last summer we visited our son at camp, We asked
him about his activities. "There's plenty to do around
here,' he informed us, "but the counselors won't let
YOU do IT!"

y

471...,.~

-

1('17 hoyl:lno. -ll!q:or
71 ...., . .Hal:
..
110 IIIOao AI good

.....

~ .

nlu:._,... f21110, - a .
'

11t~2MI.

l:fe by unclerslanding lhe Influences which
are governing you in t~ear ahead. Send . LIBRA (S.pt. 23,0cl. 231 Be shanng wolh
ASTRO,QRAPtf
lor Anes' Astro·(iraph pr~ctionstoday by lhe de$etv:ng roday. bur also· be carelul
mailing $1.25 plus a long, self-addressed. yOu're not jockeyed 1nto an awkward posi·
stamped envelope Ia Aslra·Graph . cia lhis lion by a manipulator who asks for things to
'
newsl)lper. Po , Box 4465, New York, NV w~ich he or she is nor entilled.
SCORPIO
(Ocl.
~4-Nov.
~2)
Puhing
tanh
10163. Be sure Ia state your zadi~c sign .
BE~NICE
TAURUS (A~rl! 20-Moy 201 Your ma:e ·s • maximum effort is an admirable quality, Qut
BEDE OSOL point ol view laday could be a bit on the roday )'Ou could be so determined to
somber side, and wher:e you see poSitives. achieve yQur objective that you 'II do everyhe or lhe may see Qr1ly negatives , II will be thing 11:1 hlrd way, ·•
· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dilc. 211 Usually
up ro you to brigt:tert the persJlO!'Iive . ,
G~r,IINI ,(u.y 21.Juna 20J:Be _graleful for you are a rather optimislic person , but
· the gOOd thol comes your way today . even today you mighl slap out of, charac:er
, if you innatety f~el you're ~deserving ol be "'ore of a defeatist than an advent.urer,
· muc11 mo~ . Keep your expeetalions wilhin Unfortunately, this is not a productiVe role.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22:Jon. 111 Social
reasonable bounds.
problems
cannoi be resol~d today it you
CA:ic'!A (June 21,July 221 Guard against
prelerd
they
do not exist lnslead ol bury,
inclinations today lhal rempt you io specu·
ing
them
In
lhe
sand, bring !him to the sur·
;
late .wlthln areas where you're not famm,r.
face
lor
solutions.
In lhe year ahead. it looks like you Will be This is nor a good day to _gamble on lh' AQUARIUS (Jin ..20-Ftb. 19) IndividualS
taking on addHional duties 6nd responsiblli· unknown. ·
Who cannot help you . with, your p"resant
, ities . However. this shOuldn't bolhar you, ~EO (July 23,A"ug. 22) You 'll have com- objectives should nor be Involved in your
' · · tNt:~~use your locus will t:8 on rha personal , passional&amp; feelings for others today. -but ·
endeav~rs today . Their contribution and
~enellt~ rhal can be der:ved tiom your you might "not know how .fO express Ihem . input could atymie your offont..
properly. Your bef:\a.vior could.eVoke a neg!'()rk.
.
PISCES (Fob. »ii.,.,h 201 Companions
ative
reliponse.
.
.
•
ARIES (Morell 21'Afl'lt Ill You are not
will ba more lnt;lint&lt;IIO accept your poltlcll
. apl to be int:mldaled flY diffieuh develop· VIRGO (Aug. 2!--Sept. 221 Do nor expect or ~hiloaophlcal concepts today It they
more
tor
.co·workars
today
than,
you're
pre·
ments roday and you'll handle them com,
aren't preeente&lt;t in a l)eavy,handod laah·
l!elenlly: However,, something that should pared 10 dO yoursen. All eyes wi.ll be on you ion . Keep your, preaentaiion light and
'. be tun could get you uptight. Gel a j~mp on td". set the example and lf it is a poor one. chee~u l.
·
'
'

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OUR LANGUAGE

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10:00

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toi:OO p,m, 114:11112:2121..
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man With I ,.., war,.nty. lnAgo .114:441: oludoa' -dollrirr, .... otopa
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12112 Wllk~n - ·
moo; ~3xl wolk:ln - .

O:r!:l!lJ ..., ~ '" tho I:30W::.:..::=I2:.:'2147.::.::...- - - - - , .Cri..., l'lir Yow Clllld'o lluot ........._ tftl ui'IV...:....
"

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6'1 Fann Equipment

fruit Ollbr; 2 Clr g1rage, Wr4

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Antiques·

"-'• Dor Coro Coni• 1 lonllnilhod roomo upatllro 12
' ·- OIIIIC On
frvll on S 112 ae-. &lt;,.;;
PIM fll.f 1 ·AJI. ,.:10 P.M. H aoMt loeotlon, Raclna, Ohio.
iCoro, Col Uo ,., , YJotl, ..,_
11 M 1 11t 411 lUI. p,...

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114-tiZ--1377. .
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oil aloe, 2 l:oilroorii., AJC,
aow~N porch, kllchln llllnd,
Genenll -.n cww: rnvwtna,
dntlng, ..c., · NUy IMureil,

..

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"IF IT AAT eR)I(£,

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2 IICiroosc• Or 1 ladaoom -~Ublolti,IM:
Portly ,........... IJo!urlly 2111"' .
o.,o.ll A-.¥riH.IIt Ul I I aI

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IIOT V00\4£ IWW£D

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1225 Each, Or
1400 loth.l14:44f.41to,

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebr~ Cipher c:ryplogr~ are cr•t«t from quotatiOnl by 1~ people, past and ,....m.
Eldlletter In the dphef stMdalor anothef . TO&lt;My'• due: CtqrMIIwiJ.

m, ca• i14. ne11213 ~
Allir - a log loa:lor
or. . ntll
len 4WDlruOk
., ..,..
~~;.,.·;.,.u.,..~-=-----­ -lar ~ Clotn:o

u:nn110 lncluilocl, floPooH ,.
304:f71:7131 ...

Musal
Instruments

'ftiJ IOOW TIE W&gt;·~:
"IF IT AJNi BROIC£ •.• ' ?

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Two Picnic Tobloo For Solo, ,30

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ITTO '«ll!, &lt;J

------

Vont Rib, EIICOIIOnt Concl"loni
1 bad,_, opto, aood locotlon, f2SII. Evonlngo: 111+24H047.
101 111111 I l:l:iln Bt, Nowly
remadalut wiMw ·~

Sf

·•

lllcrowo... a coblnol, Som-·illo'olatllolloldplo •IN, 2 chMI "' dNworo, tocl comollaugo ~--"' c1oo1gn
~ pattom). "Turkly .
·
·
2 Apo'l21, ..., zz. surp:.. ...,...
comer Cllbhrt•, J04.171..11t2l
alalhlng. ly ~lie POIIt
Oolc China Coblnolo, ·QIIIco. 'F.!i: -~'Noon •• 1:110
•-~~ ~·, Hut-. eo~" Pll, 304:o,.,.;ooo.
· - """'
,_
T~nd Obloo, Etc. Rlvtr Soars LIM&gt; 14 HP aT,
VdoY 0o1c Fumll~ Oo orgoa Vorl Drtn, 42 lnclt 14110, 1114:
c..oll lid, 114 4tl 43tt.
381
-~-=::.·
PICKENS FURMTURE
Soaro riding lawn troclor wllh
. NowltJaocl ·
occ•oo~ll, 1 liori!LJ.400-,·,
Houoohold lurnlol:ing. 112 ml
llrowood Jorolcl:o Ad. Pl. Plauont, WY, ~~~
'
;
·call304:475--.
;:..:~:.:.::.::,'- - - - - ' Sot of - n g rlf)g, o:. I, 14
Aofrlooralor, ·Exeol- Con: karol gold, Kur b dlomorido,
clllloli. 114-241-1171.
$200, Mll1y ,..., - - lilt. .
SWAIN .
.AUCTION ' FURNITURE. ~ -.G and m;toV!flll o a 011 • GaNI~"'
•~ ta- lor 1010, tt,t7prr.,. '"ftQO.
n ..,..,
,.......
......,. 1f78.1"" (ACIDC. .... 40•
rumnuro, ._..,., WIMom • llago-), 114 •• 4421
'
Work-._ 1 ~11.
T-n Olfcr IWO In
52 Sponlng Goods
P1fl
vartoblo With dolnlll,
114 11114421
-lftgton 22 _,, o~ -•":::"'::,=':OO:::!pm~.- - - , - - t-,
aor - ·
. Tub,' Two Drop
. 'Sinko, WIIHo
1
ng Pomnl' ft On c..t """

="=' ,r_wt:;t\r"'a:r,:

tor Rent .

. Prlco: 114,1100, 114:

Rlvorlront ·Enjoy tho Vlowl Ill&gt;:
maculolo 3 Bod- z htho
Patio Room, p;;,;; 2
o·-·· llanr 11ors E.:,!'l. 4
lllloa South Of Eu:ollo 171111
Stato Routo 7, tse,IIOO. i 71112.

Business

EIR TREE SER¥1CE. l:rF:l

dry•r,_•lr, $2311 IIHHL, e ....DG.
2tll; I14:31W22l

Spring Val:oy Aroo, Oat: Drtvo,
Brick 3 Boclroonw 1 1/2 lalho,

,_,

1:~5"'oro In,.,.,_ At:

for Sale

Wanted to Do

_._rl

--.
·
~ .., PlY rent you con
-n a 1111 141'1V Rodman with
s
·-nd,, •o~!!t ~r:::::f'
1
dol
~.., - ••
·
~~
Brondo: ' 114411:

~2

Training ·

llo, Plua 0100 Dopoolt. Froo
Wator. "'t:IIUIIOII. •

3 bad:aom brick ronch, Go~ . MilO 2 Br, 1 milo - h ol
ll~lo Forry. Brond now L.onnox Euroko, on St. Rt.7. No poll,
heat pump, now ::pplloncoo, at, rolor..-. 114:2!IWOII.
tachocl garo111, lorllfl, lar, nleo
nalg-liGc:CI. 304:C75:5!WI.
2 badooom trollar lor ....,, bahind' Plaaoirl, 1*"2:2312 or
HILLTOP 8ECWSION
814:812,2034.
, 3800 Squoro Foat Coi\lo:npory
. . _ On 17.8 Acrwo Ifill Wllh FumloM:I, I or 3bdml., lor Pool And ZlamL
In Counlry llobllo PoriL

R ily
l FFor II

llollll Tool Box For Plck:Up
Truck, Sliding T'"l! , lloclo.....!(l
lllddioJ&gt;!!.'l Cillo, I'll'* .....
114 4-..J.

"*"' ..._ .-, -

111 AI:. 4 Bodroom Houoo, Rural IBR TrallorL In (:ountry, f200

EOE.

Arid ARquoto AIOomol&gt;llo lnMH'8Aee Coli&amp;r.gli Required.

ts~~.

31 Homes for Sale

IOO.e31:2302. Dooclllno 10&lt; op:

llagnavOI T,V.- Play., 11

=llo::.•::""::o.:,:f1::110::•.;tl4:=21::.1,::1131.:::;..,..,.,...

114-ft2:12U onor 5pm,
:"'..(O:,_,'"":ulto-:.:....c~ Nlc&lt;: rocll-, no; two oil
chairs w/mllohlng - . : palnllnao br , Ronald Grimm,
lllro 1100.
A:iM33
-::.::•;:12;:.1•..:S330=;-;114::..;--:.:::,.:;'2113~;,·.,....,
Mkl , _ Soli l -::
lownlll ba1ao a flcnl Odl ~Loaf Tabla ~;.Wood
't310. Entorlr:l..- $71. Youth Bod f4S, 114-141:-2.
Tine l:l1droam, Ponwroy, lWo llftlll chalra rn1U¥e a C1111 Power ..._._ ~1171 Font,
f2501m0. tiOO ~ , . , _ tiiiO 3044tS:IQ22.
-·,.
rsqulrod, no polo, 114:812, :;.:..:'~:.,::.~~,---:----'- SUI; dirt blko I
.110:11, f10;

42 Mobile Homes

. IU ...nctl
COftf'agl
ntqulrecl.
~lary: fi,QO/Iw. to llart. H fn,
t~fecl C01'11Kt Cecflt. ~ 1~

LOSER

Applla- 78

ii t14:441:7iil:, 1,
4
:;~;;~-~~~i;;';;j0;,-;;;;;i!;;nd.
.

-nee.

'21Mio.

wt'lid"'ls tn violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed IIlii all ctweHings
advertised tn·thl!li newspaper
are avaUable on an equal
opportunity basis.

living In llalflo Countw. Hl~h
ochOOI dogrso; volld drl- •
llconoo, gOod driving reconl,
ihrM para driving nperleno•,
and Odoquoto aUiomol&gt;llo lfl:

-18

APPUAHc:ES

- · - · DnOII:O.o;·rol ·
.' :lop rsqulrod, 304.e75-t01G.
1.1n10 =otor, aooc1 cond,
I Roomo l'lrot A_..., Gal: WMlia
• flOG. ~78ll~lo. Oii:o. 011 St- Po:rt:lng, - ·
Dopooll ..
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1••••• ,...
~- -·,
comp:oco homo fumi~I~J:·
Boautllul 3bdrm. houoo In - : llo:: Bol, N. I
lull kltcMn, c~, 0322, I mlloo aut B u - R:l.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accepl
a~ven lsements lor real estate

10M with MAIOD In community

14

UI&amp;D

~,..., .l'llrtgendars,

mo., ._... r.quirM, IM- Frw DIUNry.

WANTED: Two part timo 120
hroJWI&lt;.) Community Sldllo 111:
ltructora needed .to ...1.. pet•

..

Holzorl1o-= !!'!!!' .Sottlng $300111o.
.,.,.,....,
4 ""'.. a bath, c - to

to advertise ·anv preference,
lmftalloo or dlsatmlnlllon
baseo on "'""· color, "!llglon,
sex lamllal slalus or natk&gt;na.l
origin, or any lnlendon to
make f.l"Y such P.f'l8rence,
MmMatlon or discrimination."

. lildwlni
ColllniilniGIIIIon
And Or -niH,
~don Sldllo, Punctual A"r1 Ablo
To W..:. AI Port Of A Toam lie:
aulrod; &amp;pot- Woridna
With Por- With IIRIOO
Prolorrocl. Solary: ts.OO IHr, To
Start. Sand Roaumo To C.CIIIo
a.ur, P.O. Box 604, Jadtlon,
OH 45140; Dooclllna For Ap:
Jlllcanta: 41141113. Equal Oppdr,
lunly EmplOy«.

-~Uoanaa, GOod Driving

2 Boclroomo - · Claeo Tcr GOOO

All real estate actvarllsng in
lhls newspaper Is subjed 10
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes I IUegal

_ Vatl!l - · a Uoanaa, Good
Driving lliConl, Th- Yaars

pllconto: 41121113.

iP~=-- -

41 Houses for Rent

I-.

BOGif

What do you make of this vene? ·u
you're anxious for to shine in the bigb
aesthetic line as a man of culture rare,
you must play your bOt:ors hlgb with
enrernely special care and a confi,
dent ligbt air.'
Tbe firslbaU is a lyric by William
Schwenck Gilbert for "Patience," the
comic opera be ·wrote with Arthur
Seymour Sullivan. I added the IICODd
ball for "The Bridge Players' Boogie,•
my as yet unpubllsbed rock opera ..
Tbe late of some contracts depends
upon the timiDC of the play of a criti,
cal honor, as in today's deal.
North,SOuth bad a normal auction
to three Ill): trump. However, West
found declarer's poii!Dtial Achilles'
heel with the diarnond:queen lead.
How sltould the play have proceeded?
South had eight top tricks:
spades, three bearts and· two
moods. The ninth trick bad to corrle I
from the clubs. However, as
to lose lbe lead twice in es:::ii~ I
that suit, tbe tempo - or
was with the defenders, as long as
used it to best advantage.
After winning trick otte with the
mood king, declarer crossed to
dummy in a major and played a
club.
Tbe critical moment bad arrivecl.l
But East knew an entry,INtvlng play
when be saw one. He roae a foot or so
in his chair and put the club klllg onto
lbe table. When be won the triclt, East
retameil· hii seeoaci dlamond, eata•l
lllltlng his partner's suit wbUe
still bad the club ace as an
U East played ~
three nQ:trump could no longer
defeated.
Would you have shilled with a
aesthetic play?

...
. I

t=".i~

•

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..
ow,

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l

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Page-12-The Oally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Community calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - First Souihern
Baptist Church will hold revival
services through Thursday at 7
p.m. Pastor Lamar O'Bryant invites
. the public. Evangelist will be Rondel· Manin, Columbus; and soloist
will be Morris Wood, Gainesville,
....._ Ga.
RACINE - The Racine Church
of the Nazarene will hold revival
with Rev. Dave Canfield, through
Sunday at 7· p.m. nightly and at
. · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Joy .Sizemore will provide special
music. Public invited.
POMEROY - Communion ser·
vices' at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
will be Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with
Rev. Amos Tillis. Rev. Victor
Roush invites !he public.
POMEROY • Maundy Thursday
services at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy will be at 8 p.m. with
communion .
&lt;
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
No. 453 F&amp;AM will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be
served.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the JTPA building. Further information may be obtained
by calling 992-5763.
POMEROY - There will be an
. organizational meeting of the
Pomeroy High Class of 1968 on
Thursday at 7 p.m. at Pizza Hut in
Pomeroy to plan for its 25th
reunion.
TUPPERS PLAINS • A free
commumty immunization clinic
will be offered at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department on Thurs·
day from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for ages
two months through kindergarten.
Children must provide an immu,nization record. ·
POMEROY- Bricklayers Local
No. 32 will meet Thursday at the
Pomeroy Library at8 p.m.
· SYRACUSE - Ordinance at the
Syracuse First Church of God will
be 'i)lursday at 7 p.m. with communion.
RACINE -·An organizational
meeting for the Racine Fourth of
July celebration will be held Thursday at 7 p.m . ·a t the fire station.
Any group or organization wanting
to participate should have a representative anend the meeting.
RUTLAND • The program;
"Wash Their Feet," under the
direction of Marilyn Williams, will
·be presented Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the Rutland Church ' of the
Nazarene. The public is invited.
POMEROY • 'The Rutland Elementary Sports banquet will be held
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
High School. Bring drinks and a
potluck dish.

pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053,
Ladies Auxiliary, will sponsor a
round and sauarc dan'ce Fridav
from 8-11:30 p.m. Music wiU be by
True Country Ramblers. Red Carr
will be the caller. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT • The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
· of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Middlepon.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. with a communion
service. Pastor Steve Reed invites
the public. Fellowship will follow.
Easter sunrise services will be Sun·
day at 6:30a.m.

POMEROY • Community Good
Friday services, sponsored by the
Meigs Ministerial Association, will
be held at Grace Episcopal Church
from noon 10 I p.m.
,

J'llPLEY, W.VA. · The Libeny
Mounl.\lineers will perform Friday
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

'

REEDSVILLE ·"Easter sunrise
service, Eden Uniled Brethren
Church, Sunday 6 a.m. ; breakfast at
7:30 a.m. Sunday school at 10 a.m.
"The Empty Cross" by Robert
Markley a1 11 a.m. Public invited .
HOBSON • Sam McGuire will
be at the Rolison Church of ·Christ
and Christian Union, Sunday morning. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.
Pastor Theron Durham invites the
public.
POMEROY · Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington, Gallipolis, guest preacher,
Naomi Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
Sunday, 10:45 am. Public invited.

'

Thursday; AprilS,

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
.
AP Science Writer
BOSTON - Scientists have
discovered a genetic defect that
causes hyperactivity, the fii'St time
a specific inborn flaw has been
linked to a common behavioral
problem.
The discovery should allow doctors for the first time to spot newborns who are likely to develop the
disorder, as well as provide clues
about its cause and tteaunent. .
Scientists found that attention
deficit-hyperactivity disorder, as it
is formally called, can result from a
mistake in a gene th~t regulates the
body's use of thyroid hormone.
While this gene probably
accounts for only a fraction of
cases of hyperactivity, other thyroid hormone problems may tum
out to he a factor in many cases,
..the researchers reported ..in ,Thursday's .New England Journal of
Medicine.
"Attention deficit disorder is
very common. It is unlikely we
would find one ~ene responsible
for all children wuh this," said Dr.
Peter Hauser, who directed the
study.
Three percent to I 0 percent of
children are estimated to have
attention deficit disorder, and the
problem is more common in boys
than in girls:
Victims have trouble focusing
their attention and controlling
impulses, and tend to be restless
and aggressive. Often, they are disruptive in school. While the disor. der is first seen. in childhood, it
may linger into adulthood.
The discovery of an underlying
genetic defect in some victims was
. made at the National Institute of •
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
SYRACUSE - Syracuse First
Church of God, sunrise service,
6:30a.m. Breakfast follows.
RACINE • Racine Baptist
Church, sunriSe service, 6:30 a.m.,
brea!Cf~. 7:30am. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m. Easter cantata by adult
choir at 10:45 a.m. Public invited.

Diseases In Bethesda, Md.
The researchers found that
attention deficit disorder is cspe·
cially common among people with
a condition known as thyroid hor·
mone resistance, which runs in
families. They studied 104 mem-

bers of 18 families with the $!0ndi·
lion. '
They found that 70 percent of
children and 50 perceiil of adults
who inherited the bad gene that
causes the thyroid disorder also bad '
attention deficit-hyperactivity. •
·

Senti foster Greetings
.
I . .l . k . I ·
Today.
.~
PICK FROM
OUR
WIDE
.
.
ASSORTMENT OF BEAUTIFUL
CARLTON CARDS.
.

'

April 9, 1993

OPEN

E~STER

•

Vot 43, No. 241
Copyllght..t 111113

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll9; 1993

Pharmacy .
992·2955

IN RECOGNITION • Jack Ambrose, assistant maaager or Kroger's Ia .Pomeroy, bas ·
retired after 45 years ol service witb tbe company. To boo or bis years or declicatioa to tbe bu,si·ness com munlty, certificates or support aad

reco'g nltion were presealed to Ambrose on
Tbu~y morning by 8111111 Clark,,rlgbt, represntlng tbe Pomeroy MercHats Association,
and Paula Tbac:ker, executive director for tbe
Melp County Cluoober ol Comm,erce.

Get twice the
comfort for half the price!. Buy
· one Lane®
Recliner, get the
second one

Defense
blames King
for riots
· LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
defense attorney blamed Rodney
King foe lasl year's riots and commended the policemen who beat
him. The jliosccution charged that
the officen mc:ted out stn:et juslice
IW••sc King was "disrespectful."
"These defendants iaught Rodney King 8 Jesson," Assistant u.s.
Attorney Steven Clymer charged
during closing arguments Thursday.
The federal civil rights case was
expected fO go tO the jury - possibly tonight - after closing arguments· of the three other defense
lawyers. lbe prosecution's n:buual
summation, and the judge's
instructions to lbe jurors.
Authorities stood ready tO prevent a replay of last spring's riots,
whieh brob: out when lbe four offi·
cers were acquitted in state court.

bri~

.

SPECIAL DAY OBSERVED - Jack AmbrOR was lloaored
Tbunclay· upoa Ills retlremeut from Tbe Kroger Cp•paDJ or
Pomero7. Ambrose, wbo Is asslstaat store muaaer, bas retired
alter 45 yean ol service wllh lhe company. He wu h•orecl wl.tb
"Jack Ambroae Day" at the store duriDI wbk:b this buge calr.esbared witb bls maay friends and feUow workers.

Get two "Action recliners for the price
of-one and .do.uble your savings! ·
'

\.

'•»'

•

By spectal arrangement w1th this famous
maker, we ·re able to bring you a remarkable
offer' Choose from any of the stylish,
comfort-cushioned recliners we've shown
here, and whe~ you buy one. we'll g1ve

you a second one absolutely free! And,
because they're Action recliners, .you'll be
sure of quality inside and out. Hurry, to
get in on this two for one otter,

Unwind a{ld put your feel up in IIIia WaU-Save.e of
Rocker R&amp;clin~r. II offor8 Qena"?Usly pmpottioned
tuflod back and seal with pillow arms.

LOTTRIDGE • Country music
night will be held at the Lottridge
Community Center on Saturday
from 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands
are welcome. Refreshments will be
available. Everyone welcome.

s;;;;
BUYS

TWOI

~

Biscuit-tufted ooauty!
Head-to-toe comfort comes naturally

.----,--·

._..IIIII Plli-IMI 1411111111 VM Sauo,. o1
,_.,A, a a. 1 OIWipwa •Itt prcportkxltd 1ufted

. relaxlnc on this ultnH:ullhloned casual.
It features a hJd&amp;.a-way chaise i'ecllnlnc
· footrest, padded pllk)w anna ani! a
IIOSh biscuit-tufted back. ·

Reposing casual.
Srnart, soft and ready to snuggle Into
thts chaise C~ellvers complete head-t0:toe
comfort. With a bustlebacli, button tufting,
and pillow anns, Its trendsetting style doesr
get In the way of pure, soothing comfort.

856 3rd Ave.
GaHipOIIs
4483045

.,
'

.•

.

In March, the mild· inflation
came despite a 0.7 percent jump in
energy prices ~ the biggest in
eight months.
Gasoline prices fell 0.4 percent.
But fuel oil prices jumped 2.5 percent, natural gas advanced 1.6 perCC.It and elecnicity, 1.4 petcent.
Food and beverage prices in
March rose 0.1 percent for the second consecutive month. The.index
for meat, poult~¥, fish and eggs
jumped 0.8 percent, with pork
prices alone rising 1.6 percent and
poultry climbing 2 percent. Fruit

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
. Clinton administralion is congratulating itself fot doing something no
other adminisaation has ever done
- producinl a complete budget in
its fiTSt year ·m offtee. But Republicans -say .they don'tlilc'e the full·
scale d\)Cument any better than the
earlier aJ»'idged version.
And judging from the rhetoric
employed when President Clinton
sent his '$l.S2 nillkirrspending'plan
tO Capitol Hill on Thul1day, both
sides are girdins for i( war that
.could drag out una! fall.
. The upeomins lights likely will
make the sparring over Cfinton's
$16 billion shon-terni economic
stimulus program pale by compari·
son.
, .
In unveiUng the. administration's
budget, Vice President AI Gore
tOOk anotller shot at the Republican
~- filibuster that kept Clinton:s jobs
progr1m from passing before
Conaress left on a two-week

recess.

,

'

''·

Meigs County Sheriff James M. da, stopping at a couple places·
Soulsby interviewed a 63-year-old along the way.
He could only give a vague
Meigs County man Thursday afterdescription
of the two males,
noon who was reported missing
Soulsby
said.
· """'
from Athens on Man:h 25.
Tippie
said
he
found
himself in
Mount Tippie, Albany, resurfaced Tuesday morning at a Gal- Jaclcsonville, Fla., when he began
lipolis motel where he asked for the journey home, Soulsby said.
Soulsby said Tippie reportedly
help in contacting his brother in
hitchhiked tO Augusta, Ga., where
Athens.
Soulsby said Tippie told him he he contacted a minister who bought
left home and was abducted by two bini a ticket to Charleston, W.Va.
Soulsby refuted statements pubmales who got in his car, put him .
in the back seat and drove to Flori- lished in an early report from the

' in _
prices 'fell, offsetting an increase
vegetable prices, including an 18.8
percent advance in lettuce prices.
The price of cereals and baked
goods fell.
The core rate of inflation was
held down by a milder than usual
increase in medical care costs.
They rose 0.3 percent in March, the
smallest since March 1984, after
climbing 0.5· percent in February
and 0.6 percent in January.
Clothing costs fell 0.5 percent
last month, but the ·annual inflation
r;ate in that category for the year so
far is 7.5 percent. Airline ticket
prices fell 0.6 percent, but for the
year to date they have risen at a
19.9 percent annual rate.

Associated Press in which he was
attributed as saying Tippie gave a
"checkered story of ethers driving
him in his car'' and that Tippie said
he "was turned away by Charleston
police as a drunken drifter."
Soulsby said at that time he had
not yet spoken to Tippie.
Soulsby said he asked Tippie if
he had gone ·ro Charleston police
and Tippie said "no."
Soulsby said the incident
remains under investigation and
added that information has beep
turned over to the FBI.
·

Thousands retrace steps
of Christ; Pope hears confession
JERUSALEM (iU') - Christians from &amp;round the world walked
the Way of Sorrow on Good Friday, some lugging heavy wooden
crosses as they traced Jesus
Christ's steps toward his crucifixion.
Thousands made their way
along the narrow street to the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher, built
where Christians believe Jesus ,was
buried after being crucified.
In another Good Friday tradition. Pope John Paul U heard con-

Mi.ddleport Sears Store
will 'remain op.en

fessions.in St. Peter's Basilica The
Vatican picked 12 people from
seven countries 10 be confessors.
Israel's sealing off of the occupied territories last week to quell .
Arab-Israeli violence meant only a
few hundred Palestinian .Christian's
with special permits took part in
Friday's procession in Jerusalem.
"I will nollive ·my life ·in fear
and not do things because of that,"
said Tonya Andrews of North Hollywood, Calif. "I'm a Christian ...
so this goes straight to the soul."
Sydney Reynolds of Orem,
Utah, sl!id she brought her children
to strengthen their faith.
"We believe that Christ has
died for us and will rise, and we
wanted them to learn that these
things are true and mo~ i~porJant

than anything else,'' said Mrs .
Reynolds, 55, while taking a rest
near the Third Station where tradition says Christ fell under the
,weight of the cross.
Gilbert Peru of Anaheim, Calif.,
re-enacted the march dressed as
Christ. Wcaring a crown of thorns,
his arms covered with fake blood,
he was accompanied by two whipcarrying ''Roman soldiers.''
Among the worshipers were
several hundred Otristians from the
occupied West Bank who said it
took them a week to receive a special entry permit for the ritual.
"I feel upset about the closure
because it's"our right (to be here),"
said Iyad Shraiga, 20, from the
West Bank town ·tJf Nablus, as he
walked in the crowd.

The endof Sears' catalog business
is part of a larger Survival
buck and Co~ 's decision tO convert
intended tO save the compa·
effort
about 350 of its 2,000 former cata· .
ny
an
estimated
$300 million yearc
Jog stores, including the MiddleThat
effort
also
includes closing
port store in Meigs.County, to
113
other
Sears
stores
cutting
smalliWiil businesses is a shrewd about 50,000 full- andand
part-time
business move, a retail analyst
.
JVUO·
•
says.
Sears
said
Thursday that the catBill Haptoostall, owner of tbe
alog
stores'
conversion
would be
Middleport Sears Sto~e, upon hear·
CQIIIplete
by
year's
end.
ing that his SIORl had been selected
"We have received hundreds of
don't have jobs period.''
to stay open, aedited 'that decision
calls
and ~ from customers in
Republicans were j~ as point- in part to the hundreds of Bend
smaller
markets who have traded
ed in their criticism of Clintoq's area residents wbo tOOit part in the
with
Sears
for years asking us to ·
spending piaD, which propasrs lax local "save our store" caU-in camremain
as
a
part of their communihilces on eneray, the wealthy and paign.
.
corporations, lllong with spendinl
He said· that his 'business will ty," said Arthur C. Martinez, chairreduc.tions. in ~re than _200 gov- change from a catalog store to· a man and ehief executive ·officer of
·
ernment programs to ach~eve $447 retail sture handling lawn and gar- Sears Merchandise Group.
· The StOres tO be converted span
billion in deficit Jeduction
the den, eleeuonics and appliances.
next five years.
Haptonstll'll said that he did not tlie cpuntry, from California to
know euctly whi:n tbe change will Vennont and Wyoming tO Florida.
In Ohio, the t:onvcrsions will be
"Far from being bold oe bring· occur but he anticipates soon.since taking plaoe in Bryan, Celina, Galing real change to soverrunent lh1lt his contract for tbe catalog business lipolis, Jackson, Middleport, New
.
_.....
. ....... _. .
expires in June.
Amencans v....,.. for, this ..._... IS
Analvu Philip Abbctihaus said
nothing more than a return to tbe
f '7
'II II
s
r-=·_ _
failed policies of the .....,
the decasioa WI a ow ears to home appliances, consumermajor
'eiecI; ------•
rmaintain some lucrative markets
taxes on everyone, more ~
without havin&amp; to buy land or pay .tronics, ind lawn and garden equip- ·
'spending and bi~UF eavanment." labor:
.
'
menL The dealers wilfIIOCic cenam
TliT
;
1
said Rep. John- Kutch of .Ohio,
"Itlrind ol likes them ~ 10 =Jar-selling models and can .
cenaiD other models for cus- · .
Judith '&amp;· Lau4ermilt, 43, Rutland, was arreSted. Thursday mornranting Republican on the. House a~ siiU'tlon where
. Budget Commluee.
these
Je selling their
· tomers.
ing by Pomeroy police for driving under the influence. ,
.
Sears
said
the
independent
deal·
•
·but the~'t haYC to carry •
ers running the convet1ed retail
· Previous adminishtions have overhead IDd tbe costs atld the stOres
will opefllte on a commis·
'
related
expenditures
aecellll}' to
not put forward 1 full · ~u:fet in
sion
for
meR:hanclisc sold. II said
A Pomeroy man was cited for failure to maintain an assured
opeqle them IS I chaiD," Abben·
. their fUll yell' in ~
~
Cllcb.store
·
i
a
~pectcd tO generate
clear
distance ahead followin' ·an accident Thursday afternoon in
insleld to limply IDike modific:l- haus Slid by telephone Thatsday lboul $1 million 11,umally. Focmer •
SalisbUry
Township, the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway
tions tO lbe final budJet submis- from SL Louis.
calaiog
store
owners
will
be
given
Pab'Oi
reported.·
·
·
·
.
·
Oa J... 2S, Sean ,llicl it Would first lbot It operating the new relail
sions of their ptdocr n. Howe~t­
.
Albert
0.
Cupp,
38,
40902.Laurel
Cliff,
Pomeroy,
was
eastbound
ei', a change in the budget lnt close most or·itt 2,000 Cltaloa outlell
.
. .
on State Route 124 when he stOpped behind a vehicle driven by
allowed tbe Bush tlll!niDilaltio 10 ·. n. bel •tse it -IIUlllDI out of · FICfAin conaidercd in selecting
Shjrley
A. Smith, 57, 45158 Baum Addition, Pomeroy, at the interleave office withoulaubmltiins a thO Cltaq Nnj I I 8111 SiiiJi said die 111n1 jneluded )llevioua C81alog
section·
of
State Route 7. His vehicle tben ·rolled into Smith's, caus- ·
· IJIIftdinl plan for 1994, thUS' ron:- it mi&amp;bt bep . . . ol ita indlipen- revenues, JIIOllimity 10 tbe I1CIIUt · ins light damage,
·
· · . · ..
ing ClintOn 10 put tOacther a mm. · dcndy owned liares open II ICtail Seir• retail •tore, and custom·er
.
·No
injuries
wei'e
reponed.
Cupp'
s vehicle was not damaged .
outlels.
plctc budaa doc110enL

cmcAOO CAP&gt; _; Seats. Roe-

Repubiicans call full budget
no better than abridged version

"Those scoatOn who held our
jobs package hostage and woeked
for Jl8!1:1ysis are at.!he Slll't of their
spnng break," he told a packed
budget briefing. "Many other
Amcric:p wbo " - senatDrTI represent aren't J1eUin8 •IJIIina brelk.
. They don't ;hlve jobs with vacltlons or health bencfi ts and IIIIDY

..

than the overall rate, shot up 0.5
percent during both January and
r:~. but rose on!~ 0:1 percent

Sheriff interviews,Tippie,
refutes earlier AP story

. a friend and
share the savings!

,,

2 Sactlona, 12 Pa11e• 25 cenla

A Multimedia Inc. NewsJI'Iper•

increases of 0.3 percent in February
Today's numbers bolstered the
and 0.5 perc~t in January. The · case of other analysts who had conea,lier reports had raised fears tinued tO argue inflation would not
among some eetlDOIIIisu that infla- be a problem this year.
tiQn had stopped declining and was
Nevertheless, the seasonally
starting 10 accelerate.
adjusted annual rate of inflation foe
-the year so far is 4 percent, significantly higher than the 2.9 percent
rate for aU of 1992.
More
importantly
for
economists, the core inflation rate
- prices excluding the volatile
food and energy sectors - has
risen a1 a 4.3 percent annual rate so
far this y.ear, compared with 3.3
percent for all of last year.
Tbose core prices, which analysts consider a better measure of
underlying inflationary pressures

Swisher &amp; Lohse

FREE! Or,

50s.

•

10:00·12:30

POMEROY

Low toaJaht In mld-401, Rala.
Saturday, cloudy, blgb Ia mid

Consumer prices up 0.1 percent i~ March

.

'

•

·Good
F·riday

~

.

.·MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise cantata, "He Is Risen," Middleport
Church of Christ, Sunday, 6 ·a.m.;
. ·8:15 and 10:30·. a.m. worship; 9:30
POMEROY - Easter candy is a.m. Sunday school.
.
available until Friday from the
Future Homemakers of America . ~OMEROY • Sunrise service,
and the home economics students HyseU Run Holiness Church, Sunat Meigs High School.
day 6 a.m. Communion. Sunday
schoql, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
TUPPERS
PLAINS
•
The:·TUD·
a.m. and 7:30 P·m· Robert Manley,
. .

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
. 372
Pick 4:
0344

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- today in a report that eased inflasumer p~ices edged up only 0.1 . lion worries.
percent m March, helped by the
The slight, seasonally-adjusted
smallest medical care mflation in increase in the Labor Deplutmeot's
nine years, the government said Consumer Price Index followed

POMEROY - The Meigs High
School Class of 1978 will hold a
meeting Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
home of "''om and April Smith,
1691 Lincoln Heights in Pomeroy.
Plans will be made for the class's
I5th reunion.

REEDSVILLE • There will be
an Ea~ter egg hunt at the Forked
Run Sportsman Club on Saturday
at 2 p.m. Public invited. The hunt is
open to children ages 12 and under.

1993

Scientistsfind genetic ·defect
behind attention deficit disorder

RAI''INE - The Racine Legion
Post602 wiU liold its annual Easter
Egg Hung on Saturday at noon.
The event will be held rain or
shine.

PATRIOT· The MGM Disnict
Cub Scout Pinewood Derby will be
· RUTLAND - The ann~al Good held at Southwestern Elementary.
Friday all-night g_ospcl sing will be " Registration will be from 9-10 a.m.
held Friday at 7 p.m. featuring 12 For more information call Connie
groups at the Freewill Baptist McCormick at 379-2860.
Chur~h in Rutland. Everyone welcome.
·
SUNDAY
PORTLAND • The Portland
LONG BOTIOM · Good Fri- First' Church of the Nazarene· will
day services Will be held at the feature a dramatized version of
.Long Bottom United Methodist "The Sermon on the Mount" on
Church at 7:30p.m. Rev. Norman Easter Sunday at 10:30 a.m. by
Butler will be speaket. Everyone · Rev. Kenneth Maynard. Everyone
welcome.
wel~ome.
RACINE • Oood Friday services
"at Racine Baptis~ Church v.:ill.be at
7 p.m.

pastor, invites the public.

POMEROY • Easter sunrise service, Mt Hermon United Brethren
Church, Texas Road, Pomeroy,
. RACINE- Good Friday services Sunday at 6:30a.m. Breakfast folwill be held at the Racine United lows. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. A worsliip at 10:30 a.m. Robert
cantata will be. presented by the . Sanders, pastor, invites the public.
Southern Cluster Choir.
·
..
l!'
REEDSVILLE • Sunrise serSATURDAY
vice, Fellowship Church of the
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham Nazarene. Reedsville, Sunday, 6:30
Modern Woodmen will hold a a.m. Breakfast follows. Sunday
potluck SatUrday at 6:30p.m. at the school, 9:30 a.m. and worship at
hall. Ham, eggs, rolls, coffee and 9:45 a.m . Rev. John Douglas
pop will be furnished. Bring a cov- invites the public. . ·
ered dish. Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND • Sunrise service,
PORTLAND • Cemetery clean Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.
up will begin in Lebanon Township Sunday, 6 a.m.
on Saturday. Anyone wanting to
keep flowers should have them
LONG BOTIOM - Mt. Olive
removed by that time.
Community Church, Long Bottom,
sunrise service, 6:30 a.m. Pastor
FAIRPl,.AIN, W.VA. • The Lib- Lawrence Bush invites the public:
erty Mountaineers will perform
Saturday at the Jackson County
MIDDLEPORT • Silver Run
Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va. ·
Baptist Church, Story's Run Road,
suhrise service, 6 a.m. Pastor Bill
POMEROY - Wells Cemetery Little invites the public.
will be cleaned Saturday. Anyone
wanting to save Dowers or decoraPOMEROY • Hillside Baptist
tions should remove them by that Church, Easter cantata, 11 a.m. and
time.
6 p.m. Rev.-James Acree invites
the public.
POMEROY · The youth groups
of-Trinity Church will hold their
POMEROY • Hemlock Grove
annual ·egg hum Saturday at the Christian Church, sunrise service,
parsonage on Mulberry Avenue in Sunday, 6:30 a.m. with breakfast
Pomeroy from 2:30-4:30 p.m.
following. Worship at 9:30 a.m.
Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT · There will be
a round and square dance at the
Old American Legion 'Hal! in Middleport on Saturday from 8-11 :30
p.m. Admission is free. Children
are welcome with adult supervision. Bring soft drinks and snacks.
Melvin Cross will be the caller.
Music will be by CJ and the Country Gentlemen.

SYRACUSE • Holy Week serPOMEROY ·The Ladies Auxilvices for the Syracuse Charge Unit- iary of the Chester Volunteer Fire
ed Methodist Churches are: Maun- Department will hold a bake sale
dy Thursday at Forest Run with Saturday at 9:30a.m. at Kroger:s iii
communion at 7:30p.m.: Good Fri- Pomeroy. All donations will be
day services at Asbury at 7:30 accepted. Donations may be left at
p.m.; Easter Sunday sunrise scr· , Newell's Gas Station in Chester.
vices at Minersville at 6 a.m.
Breakfast will follow in the church
RUTLAND • There will be a
soc1al rooms. Public mvited.
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
TUPPERS PLAINS . The Tup· p.m. to midnight. Music will be by
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Pure Country Band. Public invited.
will meet Thursday at7:30 p.m . All
mcm bcrs arc urged to attend.
HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance at the
FRIDAY
Reynolds Building in Hockingport
SYRACUSE - Good Fridliy ser- on Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. feavices at the First Church of God in turing the country band "Out of the
Syracuse will be heid Friday at 7 Bl,ue." Ronnie Wood will be the
p.m.
~aile.(. Everyone welcome. ·
MIDDLEPORT · Hope Baptist
Church in Middlcport·will have
Good Friday services at 2:30 p.m.
Public invited.

•

.......

over

.

:= .

B~a::~r:i,rcirry

PI=me

.

.

'

.;._Local bri·e.e.s

rromanjaz•1edfior D.U. .

Ma.n cite.din accident

~~duL,.

••

I

~--------------~
•. - ..~.~.--------------~· -J
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'·

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