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                  <text>r a 11

Pomeroy-:Niddleport--o,lllpolla, oli Point PJeeaant, wv

- 1nme• sentinel

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~ Fair ,Housing

By Lisa CoiiiDs,
be eligible for price suppon loans
Glllla ASCS
on com the farm must have pa!!iciGALLJPOUS - Glllia County paled in the 1992 Feed Gnun Profiii'IIIClS are reminded of the .avail- gram.
ability oC 1992 crop loans ·on corn
All 1992 sOybeans arc eligible
and soy beans throuJ!h May 31. · for loan, The price support loan
Through the availaMity of loan · rates for 1992 in Galli&amp; County are:
· programs, farmers with eligible
Corn - $1.60/Bu. and Soybeans
.grain stored have the advantaae of - SS.lOJBu, The loans have 'a niJ\eoperatin' capital ai a reasonable month maturity dale with variable
price while the grain is stored for · monthly interest rates. The April
later__sale_or_livestock feeding. To . 1993 interest rate is 3.375%, which
will apply throughout the ninemonl)l loan period.
The loan
Continqed from D-l
tant casbier and ttust aarinmstmtor;
Michael' C. Davis, assistant cashier
and Rio Grande Office mimager; ·
Martin M. Dean, assistant cashier
and linancial analyst; Sandra ,L.
r !wards, assistant cashier and
electronic data processing officer;
Ohio Valley Publllbbal Co. Leave your name,
Hugh H. Graham, Jr., assistan}
address md .teltpboae ·number wltll yoar eard
cashier and Jackson Office mana&amp;·
or IetUr. No
calli will be acee:r::!. AD
er, and credit counselor.
·
Robert'T. Hennesy, assistant
._ __ _, 1
contest entr(es .
be,,....._ n to
news- ·
cashier and installment lending
paper olliee by,4 p.111. eadt Wednelday.ID cue
N Ka•"~ Mass'
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by
lottery
manager;
·
ww:u
IC, 8.SSIS·
01
o a t.e, t e ......er .. '"' c osen 11
•
tant cashier and ~ining officer;
Next week, a ~elas Couaty.farm wll
be rea·
Billy J. Meado.ws, assistant cashier
tured by the Melp SQ!lmd Waler C~rvatioa
and special services mallager;
District.
'
Linda L. Plymale. assistant cashier
and pioof and ttansit officer; ,Tom

crops to work for the producer
while they arc stored. Many fanners thin that this program can provide benefits onl~ to the grain producer; however, the livestock producer can oblain benefits through .
the use of the program also, The
Iiveswck producer can use this program to oblaiil opemling capital at
a reasonable rate while the grain is
stored for later feeding. '
Once the ~rain is needed for
livestock feeding, the grain can bC ·
released by repayment in 10181 or in
part as necessary for feeding. ·
If you have eligible grain stored
and are in need of short term, reasonable priced financing, now is
the lime to contact the Gallia Coun. ty ASCS Office at 446-8686 and
discuss the benefits of-the Price
Support Commodity Loan Program. •

--GdNES .

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nity but not to others.
aspec18 of the fair housing laws.
Consistency in equal opponuniYou'll fllld thai when you work
GA1.1J1m.I5 - ~~~ is Fall' ·
"- of t h e
n · a ,. n A ciiDe to reDect ty in housing advertising practices with any. of the mem...,rs
tk ri&amp;ht of every throughout an advertising cam- Southeastern Ohio Board o( Realpaign is the key.
.
tors to sell your home he llf she
:
•IIWII!,. 1M ••lj Mid· use
Realtors are commiued to C9,ual ~I be.quiek to ensure &gt;:OW' hOme
-tal c z II.J- ni~~ntb _also
die ...,..·IIIJilver- opportunity in housing and beli~ve ts advertiSed to everyone m town.
Sonny Glr!les Ill president or
~ _. Tlllc '¥DI of tile Civil that the best way to avoid potenlial_ . . . Jla..ti die Fairi Housing Iy discriminatory situations is to tbe Soutb~ern Ohio BOllfd or
Ad oL 1988 which become fuUy latowlcdseable of all Realtors.

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,,.. cannot

api•st on the

·illlliiK _.-., n+w; n:ligioo, sex,

t' a n t

BMP wor,ks ho.p sc_·h.ed uIed

lll£iliu or famil-

menL
The tmining will include infor.- • lie alllll•ne of the real
mation on House Bill 88 (which
'i•ws; "MXk withdeals with nonpoint source poilution), bl!sic hydrology (water
a Jill CIIGJ' dily. ManyFair
of stumpa_ge
Once prices?
they get those prices, movement on skid roads), o~ra:-. . . _ - ia l i e - of nondis- what is.the best and most economi- tion and management plans, map
. · - - ill priat.lld\rcnising; cal way to get the timber out? ·
reading and pre-planning skid
, 5 f • , - - ~~. proWill the landowner be satisfied roads and landings. The day
·illl's, billboards, . with the condition of haul and skid includes a morning session in the
:. . .*roads and landings once the sale is . classroom and an afternoon session
• lftma
m rta market· . put to bed?
will be held at an actual logging
~--ilrlll:laR,saleDt~tal
What conservation practices site.
.
.
p a lJ, . . , . . ad~erusm_g must be considered to minimize
Loggers who complete the
- 7' ~ • .-11 Ill w!W CX:tent IS soil loss and ensure water quality? · course will be given a certificate.
-_,. FtpnU:I'i as unpor- ·
House Bill 88, which came into The certification gives loggers the
_i5 .... i5awraiacd in that effect in November of 1992, extra advantage the.y need with
z
requires loggers, skidder or:tors, . landowners to assure them that
.Sz "'! 'ea. ~t tilt· ·ciml!er cuuers, and sawmil &lt;JWDCtS
their limber and laild will be man· .:::.....:.. I •
_.. "l~.•....:.:.,,'!::tya to specifically address the l!ISt three aged under the bi$.hest conserva,...
.......... -questions in the above, paragraph tion Sl4Jldards poSSible. The cenifi.
;.: . a
.
on a voluntary basis. Timber har- -cation you receive here wiD also be
F
.._wa dit use of vesting is being ever viewed .with a accepted by the State of West Vir-..... a
-.1! iD liousing more critical eye due to todays ginia.
a - -•·=:'lllent in all environmental movement
The day will begin May 21 at
The
Clinton
Adminisuation
is
the C.H. McKenzie :Agricultural
...
£
;:~ thatmatenthe-·
• •-I . · •
fixed on a greater environmentaL Center at Ill Jacksiln Pike, Gal·
7 'li:: ID neryone awareness.
Jipolis, Ohio with rqistration (cof: aa 7 r _i5•a ~
aioF. li .
In order to help loggers come to fee and donuts) from 8:30 to 9:00
lian
'• dire g~on,
cap
.
-..
,. or . terms with the new demands on am. The morning session which
limber harvesting the Ohio Forestry follows will consist of classroom
. . '$ - dill:•li thJII of print Association, Gallia Soil &amp;. Water teaching of the baSics of Best Man•I' I M
f' IDlmPet list- · Conservation Distiict-ODNR Divi- agement Practices. A hot catered
IU!' IBlt iadicatc or sion of Forestt.y and the Ohio lunch will be served at noon and an
-..,a
limitation or Power Company will hold a Best afternoon session at an actual log- --*:1:; !beFiir Hous- Management Practices Clinic on ging site will conclude the day's
ils A
I
For example, May 21. Logsers who attend and activities.
1
IIIIIC"!!IPPIJJI7 of c()mplete the clinic wiU be certified
Registration fee is only $5.00
5 3 h•• 5 - wllicli rache8 a by the LogserS Standards Council which will cover a hot lunch and
nonula- of the Ohio Forestry Association. all handout materials. Prc-registnl- ·
1 • •
a 1 of
._ die. .--r
1tii1i1 ._,.~a discrimmatory Best Management Practices are . tion is requested. Please call 446'
if iili5 _ . ncfusi~Iy for concerned with erosion conll'OI on 8687 or stop by the Gallia Soil &amp;.
- - llldllllll odlers. logging jobs. They are common
Water Conservation District office
_._ .., I
•a!qic place- sense practices that every timber
at II! Jackson Pike, Suite 1569, •
1 ~. dislribulion harvester needs to know to stay Gallipolis, to register or for more
_..._. • Jllllill kocliures, etc., ahead of the environmental move- information.
,._tlllt1111J'G111Yq! thal housing

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- =-~=oL~*:~Fcderal

GALUPOLIS • Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation Distril;t' s
demonstration with their newly
purchased John Deere Diskchisel
which was scheduled for March 29 ;
· at the Rob Massie Fann was ciwceled due to weather.

)Vaverly Office manager; and
M
. u
K. T'•........
·
~·•h'er
·
1
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an°d JL&amp;.u
~-..~-n"'Pit.......,eoasm~~
Harden obse·rves 20th.
The board also made the fo ow•
EP
ing committee assignments:
anniversary With A
Executive: James L. Dailey,
chainnan; Jeffrey E. Smith, secreOAK lflLL • Donald B. Harden
wy; Keith R. Brandeberry, MerriU · of Oak Hill bas observed his 20th
A new tentative date of April 12
L. Evans, Morris E. Haskins, C. . anniversary with Appala.chian
has
been set for the demonstration.
Leon Saunders and Wendell B. Power Company. He IS a mainteOn
hand
speak will be Bob Hen·
Thomas.
nance mechllnic for the company's dershot, to
an
agronomist with the
Audit: ·J(eith R. Brandeberry, Centralized Plant Maintenance Soil Conservation
Service, and a
chairman; Larry E. Miller, secre- (ACPM) group. Headquartered in
·
representative
froin
the Greenline
wy; W. Lowen Call and Carrol H. Point Pleasant, ACPM provides
III, the equipment dealer from
McKenzie.
maintenance service to A~bi- whom
the plow was ourohased.
, Marketing and Long Range an's Mountaineer and John Amos
Planning: Rober-t H. Eastman, Plantll, Cenb'al Operating Compa' chainnan; William J. Gray, secre- ny's Philip Sporn Plant, and Ohio
Time of the event will be
wy; Merrill L. Evans, Jeffrey E. Power's Gavin Plant.
. , between 2 aild 4 p.m. at the Rob
. Smith and Tom R. Shcphe~.
A Navy veteran, Harden hol(ls Massie farm on Buck Ridge. Rd.
Trust: Warren F. Sheets, chair: an associate degree in business Call the Gallia S&amp;.WCD office at
man; C. Leon Saunders, secretary; adminisuation from Gallipolis 446 8687 to confirm whether or
MorriS E. Haskins!'&gt;~rilnk H. Mills, Business College. He is married not the demonstralilln wiD be held.
Jr. and Tlto~as E. wiseman.
.
and bas two sons.
·

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GALLIPOLIS - Loggers are
faced with new challenges every
da
y.How can they get the best

5

world

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demonstration
canceled.-

·, out there. But thank goodness

7

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·there are·still a few things you can

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344256

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VoL 43, No. 242
Copvrlghled 1m

.

risoners riot

l!ive inmates killed, eight guards taken hostage
Sunday at maximum security prison .in Lucasville
. I

From staff and wire reportl
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) 'Prisoners at a maximum-security
·prison were told today they will be
:allowed to talk to" the media if they
:release one of ei,ht guards taken
·hostage after a not that left five
:prisoners deal.
. At Ieast450 Southern OhioCOr•rectional Facility prisoners were·
:.banicaded inside a cellblock on the
:northwest side of the prisc!l, wbich
·houses 1,819 convicts, s~ about
.-3 p.m. Sunday. The prison is in
:SOUth-ccnb'al Ohio about 70 miles
'SOUth of Columbus.
.
:: Atlesst 18 people -. 10 guards
and eight prisoners - wen: injured
:after a ftght csealated into a riot.
•
:: Michael SangiacomO, a roportcr
Jor The (Cleveland) Plain Deal~.
·was taken into the prison early
:.today to talk to the prisoners, but
,was not allowed to speak with
· them, be said.
· : Nesoti.ators who would not
identify themselves apparently are
:using the media as a negotiating
. :tool, Sangiacomo said.
"Before they would do an.y'thing, they wanted a guard
:n:Ieased. Once that happened, they
would tbeli allow tbein 10 give me
:t~.F demands," he ~d.
· He said negotiators also told
him that the prisoners are getting
tired.
A prison officw took Sangiacomo back inside at .about 10: IS a.m.
EarlieJ, Sangiscomo, selected as
a pool replrtrS, was allowed in the
prison and. spoke by telephone with
a prisoner, whose name was not

'&amp; ann Cll!lai oppor-

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watch your father gave you that his

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or

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.,dllcconunumi:y. without

e z ,II!:,
.....- p "'fS, IIIIJ

_reac~ng

father gave him. Or your favorite
recliner, with the fabric worn through,

:- WHEN YOU UY·AzWAY YM
POOL FOI TillS
LOW 1992

--a.:m::c:~; ~~·
,

being wrong. Like that old pocket -

FREE MERCHANDIS

_

•Wi reg_ard. to equal

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right where you set your elbo~s
every night around six to watch

AII'IIIIJI .

.

Ill !lOCI

POGI (sj ,. WAIWIIII . - . I • - .... VACUUM
lf&gt;&lt;&gt;J,., - · TI5T liT, rwiiiiiBCIIIIIIIM

H~k= I

Cellular One~ is like that. Take

2973 Piedmont Rood-Huntington, WV

•

j

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phone for sixty days and if you don't like it, we'll buy it

...---Local briefs----,

back: If you
experience any unsatisfactory calls at all,. you don't have
.
to pay for them:- If it takes more than one hour ..to get your phone

'Wood{anc£ Centers, Inc.

fixed at any Cellular One ser\rice center, we'll give you a

ONEOFTHE MOST COMPREHENSIVE &amp; PROFESSIONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES IN SOUTHEASTE~ OHIO

free
loaner phone. And on top of all that,
you get
'
.
. 60 minutes

Woodland Contora II funded In ptirl by lhl o.lho-JaclciOMAolgo Boord ol
Alcohol, Druv Addiction and Monlot -nh sorvlcH

•

. .AlE
IIISURANCE
PUlES PROCESSED
•...,...a::tfilliriMiiSIWdlt~Dn

- -c-.
a

&lt;:~rehensiYe

PROTECTED
Adolescer-.

CounseiW!g &amp; Thorapy

&lt;:hltWen's ~esidenllal

a-~~

JACKSON . ··
- ~-ST. .

Home._

E.~Aut. ~rograma

oQotla Molgo Hoa&lt;lott~

· -caMManagemert

.

That's right.. ~elluli!f One's kind of like that old pickup

Columbia trustees to meet

.

your dog. It's one of the few things in this crazy wotld
•.,

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.GAIIIPOUS ..
·GZS RMP'IIlE

Emoi~Dia:MIJd

Ph- far 61) dtlys.

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Police prob~ accidents· · ·

· · · ··. ·

=-

owned by

,

~~==~
ille ~1oc or !be Flnnen Bant lb!Jut
10 un. lluvella Bldltlo, 76, of
pullina; into I pU·

'

304-675-2722
1/

·,

Two minor accldentl with· tlo citations were lnveatipted by

N4te Communications 1
,
Pt. Pla11at
.
,

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j=·

Authorized Agents .

. 992·21

'

. Two suits seeking cash judaments were recently filed in the
Me' County Coon of Coinmon Pleas. · ·
.
·
~ Oblcl Casualty !nJurance Cotitpaqy of Columb~ is seeking a
54.672.90
from Charloae l'umon. Pomeroy.
. ..
The. Firat
. It National CC Bank of Pleaaoton, Calif•• is
seeJrin&amp; a SS, .45 Judlmetlt -from Kenneth R. Uu, Pomeroy. .

•

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_.left
Nir~~ Ol a •
cGatlallld oa,... 3

· ing place when she llrUCk

· ··· · ·

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Judginents sought

' .

The One You Can. Count On ·

MULBERRY HEIGHTS
, . .

~~~~-

Ti-y • CeJiuJ~~r an.. · .
you, we'll 1&gt;11)1 h l&gt;«:k.

.CELLULA

POM.EROY

. ·800-252-5554

The Columbia 'roWIIIhip Board of Truslea ,will hold a special
·· meeting WedneSday at 7:30 p.m. at the. fire station to pay the interest on a repair bill.
.

'

TP0 AVAilABLE

.GAUIPQUS
CALUNGAREA
lOU FREE DIAL 1
.
lTHEN
.

5

If !t~ DOl ria/It far

you can always count on.

446-5554

OUTSIDEOF .

The S!llem Township Volunteer Fire Departmen_t responded to a

of free airtime, just to make sure you're completely happy.

SCALE-CERTIFIED BY STATE OF OHJOoEVENING APPTS. AVAILA!!LE

24 HOUR-.
. CRISIS LINE

·

fll'C this mommg at the Kenny Sorrc.ll restdence on Molehan Road ncar Salem Center.
·
The fire department was notified at :12:45 a.m.' according to the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
No injuries were~·
A repon was unavatlable as of press time.
(

•

oSuporvlold HOuolrG lor

·

structu1e

and fishing and airing out
you keep . around for hunting
.

•Benlar S.rvlcee
o £ y - &amp; ToiiW!g
•Adul Cornrrllnlv Tl'llnlnQ

.Povdiolhlrlpy

••IE••IF•W
- - · , •VIdin'sAutltaneeProgram
-orOut-Potlori Troatn\ont
...,
~AII&gt;TlTLE

.Pal~ervk:e lor1ha

· Structure fire reported

'

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY ·

thaD 1!00 colorluf$~ eap, eacll CGDtalalag
a dollar bill or a
certlllc:ale. Firemen were
on llaad to lllilt a lluc11JD1 tbe clllldren who
were divided by ace levelllllld d)reded to deSign
nated sections of tbe park.

READY TO GO • More than a thousand
boya and girls tllt'ned out Sunday to take part In
the annual Easter Ea bunt_litaaed at HartlniJCt
Park II Mlcldleport. Tbe M~leport Community Assoclatloo sp~red the bunt ror tbe. more

our service guarantee for instance. Try a Cellular One

Pllllll: 384-428-4711 ......fit. 1:31-5:80, SI!L 1:3•2:11
WE SHIP U.P.S. DAILY

7

+

t~e evening Qews.

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC.

vtewe u
5 ,, • •"J'- Alnod\er" example. is
lilt . . . a 1191: o 13Cially !Jlixed
hwa6erliSeiOlone commu-

. 511 1
&amp;ol 11

a...........

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available. Negotiators stopped the . cerned ihat they had not heard from
call when the prisoner began listing the ~ighth hostage, also a ·male
demands.
guard.
.
Prisoners released the bodies of
Ms. Kome~ay said the hosta~es
the dead early this momin,.
· . told authorities they were bemg
.Two of the dead were Identified treated well. She did not know
as Darrell Depina, 35, who was where tl)ey were b&lt;iing held.. .
sentenced from Medina County for
At least one of-the 10 InJured
rape and kidnapping, and Franldin guards was talcen to Grant Medical
Farrell, ·49, from Lo01_in County, Center in Columbus, when: he was
for aggravated arson.
in fair condition, said hospital
spokeswoman Bev Hefflcen. Ohio
Southern Medical Center in
Portsmouth, about 10 miles south
of the prison, treated and released
10 people from the prison, said
spokeswoman Elizabeth Blevins.
She didn't know how many were
prisoners and guards.
·
It was not known where the
other injured ~le were treated.
About 200 pnsoners who didn't
want to be part of the disturbance
were nfovcd from a .!Mtation yard
C!U'ly today to an adjacent gymnasiuin, Ms. Kornegay said. Water Jlld
' Shlirron Kornegay, spokeswom- elecuicity to the cellblock were
an for the Ohio Department of shut off, she said.
.
Rehabilitation and Correction, said
The prisoners have given negothe identities of the others were not tiators a list of 19 demands, includreleased.
ing a request to ~ to the media;
Ms. Kome~ay said authorities Ms. Kornegay said. She would not
believe the ftve prison~s were ~uss the othel' dem8nds but sai&lt;!
kiUcd by IeUow prisoners. Some _of IIIey dealt mostly with prison rules.
the rioting prisoners are armed wtth . The not,started when Jl few pris.
' from. .......~.
I.
batont.taken
··w
onm-bogan fighting. ~
"They suffered ex1ensive ers:betame involved, Ms. Korneinjuries," she said. "I think it'$ gay said. Seven guan1s were able to
probably prcuy obvious who killed escape the cellblock before the
them. Our staff wouldn't do th!lt''
prisoners toot over.
Seven male guards being held in
Ms. Kornegay said the prison
the prison were able to aet wonl to had been preparing to conduct a
authorities. ' Authorilies were con·
CoatJnued on pap 3

in jars. And the weatherman

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· sunset. Kids catching fireflies

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1 Sectloto,10 P.gee .25 _, .. .
A llultlmecllt Inc. Ne•a piper

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio; Mon~y; Aprll12, 1993

count on. Like sunrise and

',

Law toDIBbt Ill mid~

Clur. Tuaday, IIIOSIIy sunny,
blab In lower 60s.

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-·n=

Super Lotto:
47779711 17723
Kicker:

PageS

7

.._ r

Pick 3:
299
Pick4:
8824
5

·Disk chisel

!;s~~=~c:~!
A. Strickland, assistant cashier and

Mon. th being observed

Langer ·
captures
Masters

interest commodity loans offered .

Dividend...

FAD? -1'1111 week's illygery
....... - . . ._, 1M Ga11ia Soil 1ad Water
.=
LIE lor;.• is laCitld
sclaaewbere in
• Ia
11 1
F C
bY- Klidull wlall Ito par c •
...... 'IJ c•t t . .y do 10 by paslnc
.. --" or d rop otr your
~ • •
- JJ._.
- · ...,,
.. ..., Zllldly Sutmel, 111 Coort St.,
f
I!IJO&lt; ...._ 457.0, or the GaUlpolis Dally
n, ·, 1115 nir• Ave,, Gallipolis, O•lo,
,-_,will~ $5 pme rrom .the

-Ohio Lottery

Apr1111,1883

•

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Secret report.says Hanoi withheld
U.S.
POWs
information
·about
.

NEW YORK (AP) - A secret
document found in. lhe archives of
the Soviet Communist PartY sug •
gests NOrth Vi~ was holding
more than three umes as man.y
American prisoners of war as it
admitted to near the end of the
Vietnam War, The New York
times reported today.
'The discovery of the document,
authenticated by members .of a
joint American-Russian commission investigating the fate of &lt;_lther
American POWs, may complicate .
Hanoi's efforts to establish diplomatic relations with the United
States, The Times said.
North Vietnam, was holding
1,205 American prisoners of war in
197;2, according to the document,
while officially saying 8l the Pans
'j!eace talks that the number was
only 368.
The report, marked "Top
Secret.'' was written by a senior
North Vietnamese general and
delivered to the Communist Party
Politburo in Hanoi in September
1972, The Times said.
Several months later, under the
peace acCQrd between North Vietnam and the United States, S91

prisoners of war were released
from North Vietnamese prisons.
Hanoi then claimed no other Americans were imprisoned and has
mainlained that position ever since.
"On the basis of this, we can
conclude that tnoro than 700 t\mericans had been held back by the
Vietnamese at the time of Operation Homecoming," said Stephen
Morris, a researcher for the Harvard Center for International
Affairs who found the document in
the party archives in Moscow.
_ "This is the biggest hostagetaking in the history of American
foreign policy and we still don't

know where the hostages are, what ·
happened to them, if they are still .
ali ve. ..
The White House announced
S'aturda.y that retired U.S. Army
Gen . John W. Vessey Jr. would
visit Vietnam on April 18-19 to
assess Hanoi's cooperation in
accounting for missing servicemen.
. The United States sliD lists mon: •
than 2,200 servicemen as unac- :
counted for. More than half were · .
known to have died and their bod· · ·
ies were not recovered. The fate of :
the others is not known, according .
to the U.S. government

Student dies S:tfter. falling
from OU dorm window
'ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - A fall
from a fourth-floor donnitory willdow that kiUcd an Ohio University
freshman was accidental, authorities said,today.
.
'
Laura Bansek, ·19, of Grafton,
fell from a window in -Crawford·
Hall af about 9:4S p.m. Sunday,

said university spQ)cesman Bryan,
McNulty.
·
·
Ms: Banselc was pronounced
dead at O'Bieness Hospital. Athens
Coun1y Coroner Robert Buus said
Ms. Banset died of head and neck
injurieS.

The fall was accidental, said
campus Safety Director Ted Jones. .

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Monda~Ap~l12,1993

Pomeroy~lddleport,

•

-

OHIO W0ather

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• Accu-Weather• forecast for

COIIditions an'd high

By The Associated Press
Plenty of sunshine on Tuesday
and a 'little warmer, with highs
ranging from near 50 in the n~Xtb to
the lower 60s in the far south.
Highs today will range from the
middle 40s near Lake Erie to
around 60 ovet far southern Ohio.
The cloUds will decrease tonight, as
lows range from 25 tQ 30 in the
nOrth t.o 30 to 35 in die SOuth.
.
Mostly cloudy skies covered
Ohio early this morning, with some
drizzle over northern Ohio during
the nighL .
Sunrise Tuesday at 6:57 a.m.

MICH.

·Mining and grazing issue worries Democrats

Those three Republican sc;nators
WASHINGTON - In bis deci- Neb.; lild tom Daschle, S.D.
$C8IS for tbe Repub~ Another
are
Slade Gonon of Washington,
sion to withdraw ptoposed inaeas111 Court Stnet
Accoriling to SOIII'teS, the more facta favoring Republicans is that
es to grazing rees and mining roy- than hour·long White House meet- the party that has lost the presiden- Conrad Burns of Montana and
Pom.eroy, Oblo
alties on federal laild, President ing was unusually blunt, with near- tial election has gaiiled Senate seats Malcolm Wallop of Wyoming.
DEVOTED TO THE ll'IDJlESTS OJ' THE IIEIGS-IIABOJII AREA
Clinton was heeding political warnin 11 of the last 14 midterm elec· Wallop reponedly may not CYen
run for re-election.
ings raised in private meetings with
lions.
· On the Democratic side,
Western senators that it could cost
· . 1r Republicans capiUi"e control
DeConcini
tops the Republican hit
Democrats eontrol of the Senate in
of the Senate next year, according
list
for
1994,
according to the
1994.
to Republicans and Democrats,
senior
Republican
strategist IroniROBI£RT L. WIN(;ETI
Clinton ant~ered environmentalCl.inton would be rendered a lame
ists by buckling to regional presPublisher
duck with two years left in his cally, DeConcini may face a stiff .
primary challenge from Hattie Babpreside .
. .
sure and ultiinately removing fees
bit,
wife of Interior Secretary Bruce
for
grazing
and
miping
from
his
ly
every
senatcr
raising
the
subject
PAT WWTEIIEAD
"W~ave the opportunity to Babbit.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Bruce Babbit was one of
budget
Though
the
administration
.
of
the
1994
midterm
elections
slice the Clinton presidency in
Assistant Publisber/ControUi!r
General Manager
sought to package the compromise • and the fact that the president was half," one senior Republican the adminisuation 's·key arehitects
· as an attempt to retain the support in danger of imperiling the gains strat~:gist told us, conftrming tbe of the grazing-fee and mining-royll':TfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They abould be les• than 300
of Western senators for his eco ~ made. in the last election when he Democrats' worst fears. These alty initiative.
.
words. All letlen are subject to editing and must be signed witb DIIIIIC,
nomic package, electoral politics won several traditionally GOP were the types of fem that permeEven those senatoiS who do not
addreos llld telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be publisbed. Letten
. played a much larger role during states in the West.
have to face the voters in 1994 felt
1tbe White HoQ'Sc meeting ~
'--'bo-uld_be_in...;;.good--tas-te_._ad_dre_u_in.;;g_iu_u_.._·_110_1.;.pa_so_•11_i_tie_•_
· .:.•_ _"""!""_ _. weeks of negotiations than either
"This president made inroads in ated
where Clinton impressed the sena- a political stake in the federal land
the While House or Congress is traditional Republican territory," tors with his copious' aote-talcing issue. Baucus, for" example, will
run on the same ticket as ClinfDII in
e
publicly acknowledging.
explained one Democratic Strate- ' and attenliveneu.
.
.
.
•
That was illustrated most dra· ~ist "We don't want to lose those
· · ·.
One source close to the negotia- 1996. Montana's minin~ industry
matically' during a White House mroads. We want to build on that. tions describes the meeting this has suffered from the pnce drop in
.
o~nal
meeting last month between Clin- We can't have a repestof Jimmy way: "1 -know one of the themes precious metals.
· ton and the "Gang of Nine" sena· · Carter by writing off tbe West"
Democrats
are
disheartened
by
that was ·sounded throughout was,
tors who forced Clinton's .early
Clintongotanearfulofelectml 'Look, you've done beucr in our Clinton's failure to anticipate and
retrcaL Led by Democratic senators politics during the White House pan of the counay than any Demo- avoid lhe flap over grazing fees and
By WALTER R, MEARS
Max Baucus, Mont, and Ben meeting. It's reducible to some crat in recent history. We have a mining royalties. For example, why
AP Special Corrtsponcleat
WASHJNGTON -In lhe real budget deblle, lhe question isn't bow Nighthorse Campbell, Colo., the simple math. Democrats must number of Senate races that are were Democrats kept iB the dark
much lhe government should spend, it's bow.
- group included Dennis DeConcini, defend 22 Senate seats com(lll(ild to competitive. And we're not just along with Republicans until the ..
The $1.52 trillion President Clinton~ isn't much diffcm~t from Ariz.; Kent Conrad, N.D.; By1on . juSt 12 for the GOP in 1994. Cur- talking about (our) incumbents. We night of his State of the Union
the IOial spending George Busb projccltd 10 bis budget farewell. The dif- Dorgan, N.D.; Harry Reid, Nev.; rently, the balance in the Senate is have tbreC very vulnerable Repub- address? Democrats think that their
opposition to the fedellll land issue
ference is in priorities, in where to put the IDOfiCY and bow to nlise iL Richard Bryan, Nev.; James Exon, 58 seats for the. Democrats to 42 licans in the. West, too.'"
could have been averted if Clinton
That's where lhe lines are drawn.
had consulted them.
The eongressional sendoff Clinton won in advance, with adoption of
''I think it is significant in that it
the budget resolulioo refleeling his proposals, was on1y the fint step, and
tells
you that some of ~ deciprobably the easiest in lhe process.
.
sions were inade in a vacuum on
· Now he's got to get bis program enacted, one detail-at a time, a laSit
the other e~Jd of Pennsylvania
that .bef!ins in 22 congressional committees. 'Ole~ have Democratic
Avenue or in sole consultation with
majoriues, but aU are composed of politicians, w
individual preferenvironmental
interests," said one
ences llfl(l needs may not mesb with the administration's.
'
·
Democrat
clpSe
to the negotiations.
So ClinfDII has a sales job ahead, especially for the tax i!JCM8SCS be
"We
probably
could hav~ given
seeks to fiiiiiOCC increased domestic spending and curb the growdi of
the
administration
some good ·
deficits at the same time.
advice
on
how
far
to
go
in propos''The American people have demanded cban&amp;c. and it is.our ICI)lOIIBi•
ing
changes
in
these
pi!lgrams.''
biliry as their elccltd scnants to answer their cali and take the action they
This same source said that
demand," the president said in the budget be licnt an absent Congreas on
members of the Gang of Nine
Thursday.
.
sensitive about their imase in the
Republicans say they're bearing a different messagt from the people. ·
wake of challenging Clinton .
'"!bey wahl us to cut spending fust, and that's not done in thiS budget,"
"These Western Democrats are
said Sen. Roben J. Dole, the GOP leader.
being
lumped in with Republicans
It is the unexpurgated edition of the Clinton economic prognun. It lllso
as
son
of James Watt·types," this
is, in effect, the third budget of the year, since Bush left behind a baresoilrce said. "That's not tnie at all.
. bones. version, and Clintoo.' s Feb. 17 economic message amounltd to bud.get highlights.
·
·
·
~ one of these senatOrs has said
he can live with reasonable
Republicans have been complaining for weeks that they doo't reaDy
refonns."
·
know the Clinton numbers because the full-length budget wasn't ready
'Otese senators will be wall:hing
before Congress .acted on tbe budget resolution based on the new administo make sure the administration
tration' s economic plan.
stays
"reasonable' ' as it studies
Now thai they've got it, they complain that the new budget would add
·
smaller.
increases in &amp;~azing fees,
$153 billion to domestic spending l!lld offset it with higher taxes and
which
it
can raise without the
defense cuts. •
··
approv'al of Congress.
.
The Clinton defense budget for the year beginning Oct 1 would cut
Jack Anderson and Michael
S14 billion from what's being spent this year. Other spending goes up 3.2
Binsleia are writers for United
percent, about the rate of inflation.
•
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Those life all proposals and projections, contingent noi only' on the
decisions of Congress but also on the courSe of the economy. The Clinton
budget says it is based on "highly cautious assumptions," eontrasting that
wilh rosy scenarios it says made Republican budgets suspect
Still. the numbers always seem to lxiunce, as with the adminisualion's
projections on future deficits.
.
in the minority, societ~ that unabashedly divides performance will intensify. Trying
"Qualiry Cducation." 'Both buz- where whites
The first Clinton economic message projected a $473 billion bite out of zword and goal, it is also a phntse ability tracking is seen by some itself by class and abiliry, nonethe- to be all things to all people, thl;y
continuing deficits over the next five years. When Congress adopted the that encapsulates the extraordinary puents as an ai:ceptable form of less practices a ruthless form of will be too few to too many. Indibudget resolution, sponsors said that plan would take $496 billion out of demands we Americans put on segregation.
.educational egalitarianism in the vidual parents, surveying the chaos,
deficits during the same period.
· ·
~~--------~ elementary ~des. The Japanese
will continue to try to carve out a
public
education.
It
means
different
'Ole Clinton budget forecasts five-year reductions of $447.5 billion.· things to different people, but for
theory is QUite simple. Everyone special niche for their children, and
But his budget draftsmen said the 10181 could wind up at more than $500 almost aU of them,'there is a shared · J..l.'
•
can and will gc,&gt; through together, the devil take the hindmost. ·
biUion with additional action in Congress and improvements in the econo- bottom line: The schools should
Theirs is and will be a natural
But the debate over tracking was which means dtit everyone can and .
my.
.
p10vide to our children what the being waged furiously )ong before will learn the basic material in each reaction, but no less wrong and
While Republicans have taunted the adminisuation over the shifting family, the community, the lilrgcr
grade. Their cla,sses are a tbird harmf~tl because it is understand- :
projections, they earned no bragging rights on deficits that soared during sqciety and the church do .not or there was much integration of any larger on averase than. ours and . able. ·This society, in which 90 per·
in many _Public schools. When
t~e Bush and Reagan years.
.
• cannot. It is a task for supermen kind
I
was
a child 10 a se~ public unseg~egatcd by ability. But thanks cent of all children depend on pub"In every one of the 12 years, eight years of Mr. Reagan and four and superwomen, not mere monals,
to a totally dilfereat •oach to lie school education, will rise or
yeatS of Mr. Blish; wl\eneverthey· sent their proposed budgets to tbe: ·and it" guarantees frustration and school in Mississippi, my then, teaching - and diJcipllne,..,.. every fall on its success. And success in .
hometown dumped its superintenCongress, this Congress appropriated less than they asked for," Demo- failure.
·
dent in part because he didn't student benefits from il ~ edu- an inc~e&amp;~ingly heterogeneous socic181ic Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa saijl in ~on Clinton's job creation
There is hardly a pul&gt;lic school believe in wbat is now called calionll experience that lcave5 no ety will .not be measured witli how
well a favored few perform, but
in the nation that is not tom "classism." The .parents of sman one behind. .
~oofinished business is a -subplot to the budget The $16.3 billion system
~ takes us back to the masbow thoroughly and weU the vast
by controversy. In my hometown white kids didn' t want their chilbill was blocked by Senate Republicans with a procedural filibuster; it is of Alexandria, Va., the most recent
sive
extnlileOIIS
burdens·
we
put
on
majority is educated.
dren being paired with poor white
to come up again on April 19.
But to meet their basic responsi·
nap has· been over the future of kids who slept their way through public education in this country.
At a budget briefmg, Vice President AI Gore accused the Republicans homogenous
Often with lhe best of motives, we bility, educators must be ~t free to
grouping
in class.
of working "for paralysis instead of progress."
advanced-placement classes. The
Elite grouping as a deliberate have made our schools into facto- • be eaucators, not nannies or soup
''Our opponents apparently don't want io hear about the human cost of superintendent of schools believes
policy ·goes back for 100 years or ries whole products only inciden· · kitchen operators. Those are viral
P.laying politics at the.country's expense," he said.
that •'tracking," as it is called. con- so in America. Today, according to tally include well-educated stu· taskS, and sociery should undertake
· Clinton advocated a jobs program during the campaign; the Democrats signs less gifted students to permadents. They ue feeding_srations them in' appropriate settings and
'
say his election w1141 mandate from the voters to enact it and his long- nent second-class sratus. Parents some estimates, there is tracking of and binh conuol clinics. They offer circumstances. The schools, howone kind or another in 60 percent
term econom1c progtiiin.
whose children have been identi- of tbe nation's elemenrary schools bi~ bands, winning teams and ' ever, shOuld be places primarily for
Predictably, the Republicans don't think so. Dole said the polls show fied as.&lt;Juiclcer learners, 01 who
drivers' e4. Exll¥unicular aclivi- learning the basics and expenenceroding suppon for the Clinton program. And while DemOcrats control hope th~ 11\ey will be, argue vebe- and in 80 pen:ent of .the secondary ties are stressed and popularity ing the joy of lea!ning for its own
schools. But the trend lines are
Con&amp;~ess, m the Senate, the 43 Republicans can foo:e delay and compromently that their kids sh6uld not be · down as the result of a new wave contests encouraged. Children sake. That's what quality education
mise when Iiley slick together.
"held back" by classroom coexis- of educational theory which holds assume the privileges of adults is all about; and -it should be avail"Coincidentally," said Sen. Chol.lles Grassley of Iowa, "the number tence with slower leamel'S.
that the drawbacks of ability group- with too few adult constraints. Sub- able to all students without regard
4.3 happens to be the same percentage of the vqte that Mr. Clinton
Here, as elsewhere, the debate ing for the bottom two-thirds of the urban bigb schools often' closely to the qualiry of their lives outside
received in November."
has racial and ethnic overtones. students outweigh the limited resemble shopping centers, their the classroom walls.
Hoddln1 Carter III, former
White students tend, on average, to advantages for the top one-third. buildings bobbing on a sea of partEDITOR'S NOTE - .\Valier R. Mears, vice preside11t a11d colum- · be higher achievers than blaclt and Sllldents consigned to the '"dumb" ing lots, the students' cars more State Department spokesman
nisi for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and other minority students. Many classes tend to live down to their important than their classroom per- and aWIIll·wiDDIIII reporter, edi·
.national politics for niore than 30 years. ·
·
white students start schoot with reputalions, some experts oontend, fonnance.
. tor and publisber' is president or
Until the public schools are MaiiiStreet, a WasbinKfon, D.C.built-in advanrages, not least their converting their designatioil to self·
allowed to refocus !heir attention baed television production comparents' educations and interest in fulfilling~·
•
l!ducalion. In larger urban systems
It is worth noilng that Japan, a on their central task, or .are requiR:d · puy and a writer for Newspaper
i .
to do so, the eontroversy over their Enterprlle Association. ·

.'

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

•lcolumbusl59"

SUIIIly P!. floudY Cloudy

,.,ea· tber

______.;...__ n

· South-Central Obio
.
. Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
the middle 30s. Tuesday, panly
sunny. High in the lower 60s.
Extended rorecast:
.

Cecil Bush .

l

.,'
"·

.•.

'

uodd•n·g Carter Ill.

NatHentoff

sen.

~~

~

v.

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•1
,I

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&gt; I•

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Michaels' innocence, decided to
tllce the case. Pro bono. Michaels'
fantily bad no money left. With his
s ·
age Dtuw..., IaViS said to a friend,
"This may be my last big case."
His Center for Constitutional
~ightl refused to help him, recoil·
in~at the politicaUy \lilwiJe idea of
dendi
·
e ng someone tharaed with
sexually molesting chilcfn:n. So,
Sravla tlll'lle4 a.room in his aplrt-

' I
' l
' I

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I

tit_,_..

v::U::.

~'.2{=\::

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Wednesday throu1h Friday:
. Wednesday, fair. Lows 30-40.
Highs in low SOs to low 60s. A
chance of rain Thursday and Friday. Lows 35-45. Higbs in the 50s.

'Genevi'eve Smith

expected to be heavy. Another
weak disturbance was expected .to
bring isolaled sl)owers from Penn·
sylvania to the Cbesapeake Bay.
. .Over the 9~ Lakes, a band of
IIUI and SIKJIV that dumped up to a
foot in _Places Sunday was moving
east, bMging wet weather to pans
of southeast Michil(an and northern
Ohio;
·
Snow was falling early today in
the ll&lt;irthern Rockies.
.
A.warm, sunny cf;ly was forecast
across most of the . Southeast,
although scattered thunderstorms ·

could develop by tonight in the ·
soutllern Plains.
'
Sunshine ·was expected across ·
the S.outhwest and reaching up lhe
West Coast by this afternoon.
Temperatures were forecast
lotlay to reach the 30s and 40s froni
the northern Rockies to New England, the 50s and 60s in the PacifiC
Nonhwest and across most of the ·
nation's midsection, and the 7ps
and 80s across the southern tier. ·
The high temperature for the
Lower 48 states on Sunday was 99
degrees at Dei Rlo, Texas.
'

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lpll..,. by !Mil pormiiW in

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8
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MrVIao to

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18 .....::...·--··--···-·····..
liWtlll:~

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5t w.q,.,..........i&amp;i'ii"&amp;;u,'i7'•
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71

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26 Wl!lkL., ...........................................IIO
~~ WIIIIL .......... .......... :....•..•.•...••••-. ....40
'

~·~·

::: .
•

Llcens• Issued
in~:=:-ec::t\1

day Ill
E. Glidy, 22, Racino,
and Tiita Marie Van Polt, 20,
fllnDoDih. Va.

••

••
'

Los Angeles may in fact ~orne
isolated from the rest of the Uniltd
Slates.
'"Law enforcement officials
have the responsibility to· keep
order," he said. "But what I'm·
saying is, I want to make sure we ·
don't go 100 .far and wind up doing
somethi~g thar is provocative. If
you do too much, that can provoke
unrest and outbreak.''
Chavis, 45, was chosen Friday
to succeed Benjamin Hooks as
executive director of the National
Association for the Advancement
of Colored People, the nation's old·
est civil rights gwup.

.••..
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RIOT SJTE - n1s aerial view or the maximum-securrity Southern Ohio Correctional
.faciUty .In Luc:ilsvUie'. was taken ,Stmday after a ·

nine guards and rour inmates, authorities said.

Meigs announcements
Middleport revival slated
Wesleyan Bible . Holiness
Church, Middleport, will be staning a revival Tu~sday with Rev.
Eiben Barrows from Nortb Carolina. Special singers will be Brian
and Connie Connley. Services start
7:30p.m. Rev. John Neville, pastor, invites the public .

":·

nght amona inmates Suaday escalated into a
.riot. At least 13 people were injured, including

discuss plans for the alumni banquet.
Legion meeting Thursday.
Racine Post 602 bf the American Legion will meet Thursday at 8
p.m. with supper starting at 7:30
p.m.

.,

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday's admissions · None.
Saturday's discharges · Lucy
Wiblin, Rutland.
Sunday's admissions - Pamela
Salyers, Racine.
Sunday's discharges ·Trenton
Cleland, Racine; Eddie McGrath,
Alhens.
·

..
•,

,,
Democrat meeting planned
HOLZER MEDI&lt;;AL CENTER
The Meigs County Democratic
April 9 discharges - Rebecca
SHS Jr. parents to meet
·,
Parents of Southern High Par\y Executive Committee will Steele, Edward Tewksbary, Lexi
•'
School juniors will meet Tuesday meet 'Otursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Clark: Katie Perkins, Gathel Shaf.
fer, Brittany Bunch, Juanita Jenk:·
at 7:30 p.m. at the high school to Carpenters' Hall in Pomewy.
ins, Lailra Mitchum, Lidora Brady,
Monie Fraley, Mts. Todd Smart
and daughter, Lenora Mooney, .:·
Roncie Yoder, Tomi Chandler, Florence Wells, Fran McEwen, Joseph
lglehean, Brenda Hawley, Harriet
Inmates set fire to mattresses
wACO, Texas (AP) _ Mass
Amen, 40, was the second per- Mays, Mrs. Toby Hudson and '•
and knocked down security cam- suicide has never been a considera- son lO sneak into the compound. daughter, Adam Wolddford, Doneras
after listeninf! to reports about . f
· · ., 1
Dewitt, .Elizabeth Bennett and
the riot on the nulio, he; said.
· ·uon or Branch Davtdtan ,.lJ t He entered March 26 and left Apiil ald
members holed up in their heavily 4. He is being held on $2,000 bond Katherine Gardner.
Apri110 discharges -Jami ··
armed fortress, says a visitor who on a charge of interfering with the
•
McGinness, Helga Cheesebrew,
spent 10 days in the compound duty of a pc&gt;Iice orfi.cei.
In the mterview, Amen also dis· Marjorie Robinson, Audrey
after sneaking past law enforceputed
several other FBI staiements, Adkins, Ace Kerns, Dolly Ramey, :
ment.agems.
mcluding
th~ir characteriziltion tliat Alma Marshfl).l, Max Vier;&amp;, Freder· ·
'"They
are
not
in
that
frame
of
Am Ele Power.............•.•.... 37
ick: Lanier, Susan Moore, Pebbie .,
he
umade
no sense."
Ashland Oil.•...........•.... ..••. .26 1/S mood at all," Jesse Amen said
Roberts,
joe Clark:, Helen Morri'
·
Amen
said
fedetal
agents
disAT&amp;:T•.........................•.....59 1/Z Sunday in a telephone interview
son,
Mary
Harrison,
William
Elam,
•
Bank One.........~.................59 318 from his McLennan County jail pahigcxl, him bdcl!use he refused to
answef their questions. "They Mount Tippie and Ronnie Ewing.
Bob Evans ......•.................. 18 3/4 cell. "That's a right upfrontlie. '-'
April 11 discharges - Garrett
There appeared to be little activ- asked me things that would be
Otannina Shop.................. IS 718
Saylor,
Laura Ring, Tiffany Fooce, •.,..
Ounp Industries................. 12 1/2 ity at the compound Sunday as the harmful to the people," he said.
Billy
Gamble,
Nicholas Kincaid,
City Hqlding...................... 22
slandoff entered its seveqth week
.Adam
Ingels
,
Donna Stewart,
Federal MoJnl).............. ......l8 1/2 and the sect neared the end of its
Thomas
Farley
and Angela
Goodyear T&lt;lR ..................78 1/2 Passover observances.
Dempsey.
.' .
Key Centurion .................•.25 1/2
Cult leader David Ko1esh has
April
11
birthsMr.
and
Mrs.
I..and.s End.......................... 28 114
been holed up with 95 followers
Dennis Clarkson, son, Oak Hill.
Umiu:cl Inc ..... ...........1•••••• 23 318
since a Feb: 28 shontqut in which
Multimedia Inc•................ .32 3/4
four f~ agents and at least two
Units. of th&lt;: Meigs County Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Conley,
son, ~ellston.
.
·•7 ' .
Point BanCO!JI, ...........•....:.. I3 1/2 ,cult members died .
Emergency Medical Service . -------,...--..,..,._;..__:''
. '
~~
Rax ResrauranL ................. .3/8
respotided to seven caDs for ~sis· ..
Reliance Electric................21 3/4
The Jarg~s t mosque in the world is
tance Sunday and Monc;lay morn·
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 ·1/4
ing.
·
Shah Faisal Mosque. which js located
Shoney's Inc ......... :.; ..........22 ·
near Islamabad. Pakistan. The total
A headline in Sunday's Sunday ' Units responding were: .
Slat Bank ...........................37
area
or the complex is 48.87. acres.
Tfmes,Sentinel said a Langsville
Sunday.- 4:50a.m. M1ddlepon
Wendy lnt'l........................ l3 1/4
man
bound over 10 the Alhens to ~eventh and. Palmer StreetS for
WorthingtOn Ind. ............... 21"3/4
Municipal
Cdun. That is incorrect . Dwtght Wallaoe ~ho was.~~ to
Stock reports are the 10:30
~PRING VAll fV r.JIIfMA .,..
The
headline
should have said Veterans Mcmonal Hospnal. 4.37
a.m. quotes provided by
44f, 4\:.1
'
the man was bound over from the p.m. Rutland Fire Departn)ent llld
Kemper Securltlea, lac., o
Athens Municipal Cou1t to the squad to Swe Route 1~~ tor ~Galllpolla.
.
Athens County Gnuid 1ury
ncth Walsh who was ti1Jured 10 a
·
motor vehicle accident After boin&amp;
transported to VMH, Walsb was
taken to Columbus via HealthNet.
~
9:20 p.m. Racine 10 Vine .Street for.
Gina Knotts who was taken to
' ,.. ·
Continued f'rom page 1
Pleasant Valley ~ital; 9:49 p.m.
0

Cult compound visitor denies

mass suicide being considered

Stocks

EMS responds
to seven calls

Correction
was

r---'!"----Loca·l bn·e,""s
'J •• • ---.. .

__.....

No

also is sending in troops and Gov.
Pete Wil~on said last week more
than 5,000 would be available to·
help if needed.
"I'm very concerned," Chavis
said today after watching television
news coverage of the preplllitions.
He said the activity "reminds me
of the ·preliminary activi.ties of
Desen Stonn."
"South Central Los Angeles is
pan of the United Sta~s. it' s not
pan of the Saudi Arabian desen or
the desert in Kuwait," he said.
"I'm very concerned, with all the
mil,irary apparatus that is surrounding Los
that the

Prisoners ...

Continued f'rom page 1
lock:down - confming prisoneiS to
their cells - this we~k because
some Prisoners had objected·for
religious reasons to talcing a tuber·
. culosis test. She would not say
whether that was related to the riot·
ing .
. The rest of ·the prisoners and
staff are safe, Ms. Kornegay said.
The state's 22 prisons are under
lockdown as a precaution.
Ms. Kornegay would not say
bow many gUllids ·were on duty at
the Lucasville prison Sunday.
There usually are about 130
g!l3idS.assigned to the shift, but as
. few as 80, may have been on duty,
said poo Sargent, n:~i9nal sraff
repre511111ative of Amertcan Federation ilf' ~tate. Counry and MiJnici·
pal Eliljlloyees Local ~1 .-ne officers could have had the day off for
Easter; ~e said.
There usually are 20 guards
assigned to a ceUblock, said correclions spokeswoman Tessll Unwin. ·
All off-dury guards were caUed
in and ljot control teams from other
.Priso.ns aild the State Highway
~ Pa!r~l we111.: ~1. !ht; pr!son. !;!o
escapes havebeen repo~.
,
:t:'lve trOOperS from the .Galha·
Meqs Post of the.State ~•g.hw~y
Patrol are at the pnson asstsung iD
the investigati~n. spokespersons
from. the post SBid.
.
Eighteen patrol posts from cen·
tral and .south.ern Ohi~ l!ave sent
manJl!l:wer to tucasvtlle, a local
patrol sargent ~rte4. .
All Lucasville schools were
c.losed today as a precaution, Famihes of the hostages gathered at a
high school across the street from
the prison.
.The las.t disturba!lc~ at the
pnsoo, wh1ch ·was bwltm 1972,
occurred io Oc19ber ~985 when
five prisone,rs held two guards
hostage for ~liout1~ h~.
Meanwhilo, a mmor dislUlbance
was reporu:c! at the ~Y Scio~o
. County Jail Sunday ntght, satd
sheriffs Major Delbert Slusher.

Cecii,R. Bush, 58, of Hocking- . Genevieve "'Tottie" Smith, 67, a
port, died Saturdliy, Aprll 10, 1993, resident of Willshire since 1970,
at O'Bieness McmOOal Hospital ill died Monday April 12 1993 at
Athens.
·
·
'
' '
'
. Po.
restdeoce.
Bom m
.illl • _.., w. ·va., herBorn
Sept. 10, 1925, in Gaines,
he was the.son of the late Charles W.Va.,llhe .was the daughter of
and KatheMe Caruenter .Busb.. He ·Roy .F. Armstrong and the late
was a ~ember of the Coolvtlle Mary Margaret Grogg.
A homemaker . she was a memMasomc Lodge 337, Am vets of
Athe!IS and the Athens Veterilns of ber e£ the w'illshire United
. Fore1gn Wars..
. .
Brethren in Christ Church and the
He ~~ s~mved by two ~a~gh- Willshire Senior Citizens. Her husters, Vtckt Lo\Vry of.L~u•sv•lle, band, the late Rev. Menzel Sinith
Ky. an.d Pamela D!lhnger of served as pastor of the, Willshire
Athens, one son, ;R.1c Bush of · United Brethren in Christ Church
Athens; two grandsons and two from J9j() until he retired in 1985.
granddaughters..
.
In addition to bel' father, she is
Funeral servtces wtll be he_ld survived by daughters and sons-in·
Wedl!esday at 2p.m. at l;he Wht~ law ·Greta and Jerry Strader of
Funeral Home m &lt;;oolvtlle_. ~1th Weirton, W.Va., Judith ·and John
· the.Rev .. Hel~n Khne offic•aung. Bunner of Decatur, Ind., Marie and
Bunal ~ill be m the Stewan Cemc- Michael BeDIZ of Willshire; dilughtery. Fnends may call at tl)e funeral ters Bonnie Smith of Little Hockhome Tuesday from 3 to Sand 7 to ing. and Beverly Henrey of Rock· 9 p.m. Masonic serxices will be ford; sons Dana Menzel Smith and
he!d ~t 7 p.m .. Tt~esdiy by t~e :.Jlavid Duane "Snuffy". Smilb,.of
CoolVIlle Milsomc Lodge.
Willshire; IS grandchildren and
.
four ~t-grandson,.
J
M ·
•, Also surviving are two sisters
ames oqre
and brothers-in·law Kathleen
James L: (Jim) .Moor~. 45, of Blakely of.Warren and Lois .and
Route 1, 236?7 Mo~ntam Belle Richard. Rtce. of Tallmansvt~le,
Road, Coolville, d1ed Sunday, w va and ·a brother funlor
April 1.1. 1993. at ~amden Clark "B~e" Anitstrong of Wheeling,
Memonal Hosp1tal m Parkersburg, W.Va.
W. V11. .
Beside her husband, she wa;
Born 10 Parkersburg, he was the preceded in death by an infant s6li
,son of Ruth Elma Stewan Moore of Roger Dale Smith.
'
W!I~erly, and the .late James
·Services will be held 11 a.m.
Wtlliam Moore..
Thursday at Willshire United
. He was a mem\&gt;Cr IIJ!d past pres· Brethren in Christ Church 'witb
tdent of the C~lvtlle Lions ~ub.
Revs, James E. st"'¥eon and Stan
. BesitJ~ h1s. mother•. he •s sur- v. McCammon. DunaJ will follow
v1ved by hts wtfe, Debbie Step~· in Willshire Ceme~eey.
·
son Moore; a son ~d. daugbter-m· . Friends may .call 7·9:30 p.m...
Iaw,James and Chrisbne Moore of Wednesday at Zwick·Sefton arid
Morgantown, W. V•.• and a son, · Jabn Funeral Ho~~~C in Decatur
Jere~y Moore, .at home; Michelle . Jnd.1 and from'10 a.m. until time tif
Moore of Park:eisburg, W. Va., and servtee at the chwth Thursday.
Rena M.oore, at home: one grand- · Memorial contributions may be
son; Enc Pattoo of Parkersblp"g; made to the Willshire United
thtee s.ister.s,Janet Rer,nold~ of 'Brethren in Chria"Church and the
Brandon, Miss;, and·Marilyn Kirb): Van Wert Visiting Nunes Hospice. '
of West Cheste~, Oh1o, and Patsy
Pallbearers will be grandsqns
McDo~d of Vtcnna, W. Va.; and Mark Strader, Tim Strader, Daniel
several meces ~ nop~ws.
Strader, ·cbr.istop~er Cochran,
Funeral servtces wtll be be.ld Stephen Bentz and Eric Case.
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Wbtte
.
' Funeral Home in Coolville, with ·
·
the Rev. Perrr. L. Stewan otT~eiiU- MorrisP. NeutzHng
ing. Burial•w1ll be in the Fairview
Morris P. Neutzling, 78, of 493
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
South
Second Strcet, Middleport.
funeral hom~ Monday 7 to 9 p.m.
dieci'S111day,
April 11.1.3, at the
and Tuesday from 3 to 9 p.m.
VA Medical Center in Clilllicotho.
11om Jan. 18, 1915, in·Pomeroy,
the son of the late Raymond and
Min~e Morris Neutzling, be was a .
TI1e Doily Sentinel
{Ctired construction worker for the
(UBPSIIII-980)
, ShulcrCoilltnltlioo Company.
Publllhod ov1ry a!lomoon, Moilcloy
A member· of the American
l"""'h Friday, Ill Couri.St, p..,.rvy.
LeJ!on .Pceney Bennou Post 128 of
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Publialli'W
C«npony/Mullimodia Cne.~ ::::;-..-.
Middleocltt. ho wls a veteran of
Ohio 45769. Ph. 11112-211!8. . 0 ......
Wbrld
n.
·
poo...a paid ol Pomervy, Ohio.
He: is survived by his Wife,
..
Member: 'flic Atioc:i~tt.od PN1, and tho
Mazy Pick Neutzling; a slster,.Lil- .
Oh'to NowejM_por Aaociation, National ,
llait Demoaky of Middle=
AdYerl.ifting Kcp,.entativa, Braaham
NewapaP« Selee, 733 Third AveDUe,
nieces Beuy Denny of Midd
NovrYOtK,NewYork
.
. 10017. .
and Mary Rager of Washington
C(lurt House; nephews Bill
POSTMASTER: Send • - cha- 1D
Tho Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Demosky of Middlopon, Jay and
""""""r, OHio 45'188.
Jim Warner of Mlddlepon, and
ltJBICIUP'I10N RAtti.
.
II¥ c.rrtw or lloiGI' loalll
· special arst·~ OleRorY Paul
OM - .............................. :......... ..$1.10 Rqer or Washklaton court lfoue.
OM MOIIIII······································-···
1~rvices will be bolcl 1 p.m.
&lt;lnll ~................................,...............10
Wednesday
at Piaber Puaeral
·~
. liN~
.
Home
in
MiddlepOI't
with Rev .
Dail)&lt;f••. ,........................................26 Cenlo
James Seddon ofliciatlng. Burial
t
.
Subocribon no&amp; d'"irlnr ID poyiJ., cani·
will follow in Riverview Cemetery.
may mmi&amp; in adYancc direct. t.o Tho
Friends may call at tho lunoral
[la0y S&lt;mlinol Oh I lh.... , ofk Or t2
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tues·
monlh boobo. Cmlil will' be l!iYCn cwrricr
day.
.
(ff'

I ;

1a
de
h ·
.
~~ atu n1_1 10 elp in the
He wu obleued by the case. He . ·
d 1 r ed 10
· th
an
•v
e same ~ui!ding, l
·Nat Hentorr !a a natloaaily
reDOWDed aatbilrlty oa the Flnt
Amllldmll!t alld tile r • or the
BID of Rlallu aad a writer for.
Newspa~r EaterpriM Aaocla,
.
· ·,
. tloh. ·

A flood watch was in effect
today for nonhern Maine as the
$torm system moved slowly northeast, although sbowers were. not

----:-----1"

m---·

are

sexual abuse of 19 children
between the ages of 3 and 5 at the
Wee Care Day Nursery in Maplewood, NJ. The cllarges against her
included fon:ing the children to
.
have oral sex with her, penelrlillll8.
their orifices with spoons, forks
and toys, and compelling them to
w~and~~on~
ln sentencing her .to 47 years in
prison, Judge Will~ Hatth c~acterlzed her crimes as "sordid,
bizarre and demeaning.'' So did
much of the prea, lnc:ludinl Anna
Qaindlen, a Now York Timet
columnist whose account of the
case had the honatory headline,
"Believing the Children" - the
children who had ·testified on
c.loled-circuit television aaainll
Michaell ·
· · ·
Mort Sravia; on readinl an article on the trial ~ Dqrothy Rabinowi~ in. Harper 1 IIICI ta!ldng 10
~evcnl people whO also believed in
.
..
'..
'

OIH3Accu--li)or, Inc.

--Area deaths~-

Schools should stick to the ·basics

Tlie Clarence Darrow of ottr time

nation.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
"I want them to know our
newly elected leader of the nation's oldest and largest civil
NAACP said today he was con- · rights organization is with th'em,"
~erned about 'the buildup of a "mil- Chavis said here in an interview on
•tary apparatus" as authorities in NBC. "We plan to stand in solidarLos Angeles prepare for a verdict · iry with them, and we plan to con·
. in the Rodney King beating trial.
Linue .to demand that justice be
. The Rev. Benjamin Chavis of done."
• Cleveland compared the heightened .· As jury deliberations Continued
afert of police and Nationaf Guard · m Los Angeles, police began can·
units to Operation Desert Storm as celing days off and redeployin_g
the United States geared up for war staff. to put as many as 600 addt·
wi~ Iracj. ·
tiona! officers on duty. Police
ChaVIS, f!&gt;peallng for calm, said planned to issue a tactical a len,
he was flying to Los Angelei today during which all officers can be
and plannCcl to spend the night in a called to work, ·once the jury is
housing project in South Central ready 10 announce its decision.
Los Angeles.
The California National Guard

W.VA.

were ·

By The AssoCiated Press .
~ocjay is Monday, Aprill2, the 102nd day of 1993. There are 263 days
leftm the year.
When I was young, I ·! WI a lot rights cases in tbe South, belp!'Jg
Today's Highlight in History:
.
about Clarence Danow. Since~. clelir the way for the 1965 Voung
On April 12, 1861 the Civil War began as Confederate forces fired on
I have known a few public-interest Righu Act He was an attorney for
Fon Sumter in South Carolina.
Iawyen who were in his league, Martin Luther King, Philip and
On this c!alc:
.
but his equal, in my experience,
In 1606, England adopted as its flag the original version of the Union
was Morton Stavis. Lite Darrow,
Jack.
Stavis never gave up. One of bis
In 1862, Onion volunteers led by James J. Andrews stole a Confeder- · clients, George Melriu, convicted
ate uain near Marietta, Ga. "but were later caught. (This episode inspired
three times for murdering a police- ·Daniel Berrigan, and was long
the Buster Keaton comedy ''The Genellll.' ') .
• man, was .in prison for 10 years. involved - as Clarence Darrow
In 1877, the carcha;'s mask: was r~t used in a baseball game. .,
Bc;cause Of•Stavis' work. as his had been- in ttying to abolish
In 1934,the F. Scott FitZgerald novel "Tender Ia the Night" was fllSt
appel,lale lawyet; Merritt was final- capililJ punillbmenL Also lite Dar- .
published by Scribner's in New York.
·
.
Iy freed, .
' ··
..
row, lie apenu peal ~· of time
· In 1945, F181lldin Delano Roosevelt, tbe"32nd president of the United
· Also hke l)arrow, Stavis had andt:lll'etitJMOIJI!ihl81tiscuea.
Slates, died of" a cerebral hemorrhage in Wlflll Springs, Ga. at age 63.
bten a labor lawyer. That is, a
Staviswuaf~oflheCen­
Vice President Harry S, Truman became the nation's 33rd chief execuIawyer for wookea.s llld unionl, by ter for Constltutioaal ~ights in
tive.
·
.
contrast witll a1tomeys who cafl New- YOlk. Jt too klOii: on wijJOJlUIn 19SS, the Salk vaccine ag'ainst polio was declared safe and effective,
themselve.labor lawyers but are in .. cllenla llld Wlllllinlled 101110 fl
In 1961, Soviet Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man to fly in
the pay of management. "William the uncolllliiUiional snrs:• of
space, orbiting the earth once before making a safe landing.
Brennan, be.fore goina on the the PBI. AI the qe of 7 , Sravia
In :1981. the space shuttle Columbia, carrying astronauts Roben ~·
bench, '!IIU one of the latter, and decided to reprdeDL on appeal, a
Crippen and Jolu\ W. Young, blasltd off~ Cape Canaveral, Fla. on 1ts
oppoaed Sra~ in two New Ja;-y w.Oman who may have. ~n tho
fmttell OighL. •
·
· .
cases. They tied. •.
· inClllunliOilllllr client of !Iii c... .
In 198.5,
Jake Gam ofUtah became the firSt senator to fly iii spat:e
~~,avis, .somelim~s at pelso!lal. '~ keUy Michaela had bec!a. ·
as the s!J!J!Ile)&gt;isC!?very lifted of! fro'!! Cape Oinaveral, Fla. .
penl, went on to .:Wtn key
votmg ' convicted in 1988
of liS counts of
.
. !

1.,,

Sunset Tuesday at8:o7 p.m .
Record high tempemture for this
date was 86 in 1930; record low
was 21 in 19.76.
Around the aatloa
A low pressure system nea~
Cape Cod spread cloods and rain
over much ·or the Northeast today,
while clear skies prevailed across
most of the southern half of the

..

NAACP chief compares LA police buildup to desert storm .·

Ne.xt budget step
.Congresst·.
ap·proval

Today in .history

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

.

Plenty of sun-shine forecast for Ohio

Tuesday, Apr11'13

~nday,Ap~l12,1993

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

•

•

Ohio

~~~fi=:: .:::rm'C =.~ tt\=~u~tlo~: ::~n;o~ c~!'f~: w~~;:·~~~:

· Ia'ldlon'slnlck.
·. .
·
At 1:&lt;46 p.m. PtUIY ~ld aecidont OOCIIIIed 11 Wea Mila
1M BbVpn, ltaltdy;l).
, 16, of Ptlmaoy, was enleiiDg tho

&amp;.

~
· &amp;omapaatin&amp;~wltenllocollidedwithacardrivenby .

u - 50,. ...-.-..
t':1.111..11:. perry, w . va. .,._
ue ·-KJ•
,,_.,was mod-

erate damage to tbe right lido front of. tbe Henry car, and minor

damasototheleftlidoliontoftbieca-drivenbyComorandbelongIna to Elva Bro1¥'1in&amp;· Pomeroy. . .
·.. •
·

.

.

wu ••dp(1111d Ill VMH. 11 10:35
p.m. Pwae&amp;oy alllirwl
Monda)' • 12.:4.5 a.m. Salem
Township Plre Deparlment to
Molchan Road for a strUCture fire
M the Kenny Sotretl resilience;
2:20 ~.m. Pomeroy to Johnson
Road for Tr•cy He in who WJ!S
taken to VM;H..
·
·

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�•

••'

Sports--

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The Daily ·S-e ntiitel
1993

..

Germany's Langer claims Masters title

Monday, Aj)rll12,

1

pag~

By JOHN NELSON
ond fo'r Langer, who won it in
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)- Bem- 1985. He also won a week law at
h,ard Langer made his peace wilh the Sea Pines Her.itage Classic,
the gods of golf at Amen C(lmer, and, despite playing on the U.S.
donning the green jackel or the lOur for six of those years, didn'l
Masters winner and shedding the win in the United States again until
biuer memories of the Ryder Cup.
Sunday.
"The Ryder Cup is more or less
A group of four golfers - Tom
forgotten," Lan$er said Sunday Lehman, John Daly, Sieve Elkingafter beating Ch1p Beck by four ton of Australia and Lanny Wad·
strokes. "You will remind me of it Ieins- fmished at 283 on Sunday.
-the rest of my life, but I have to Dan Forsman wound up at 2.84
live in the future."
· along with Jose-Marie Olozabal of
Langer, who was boni and lives Spain.
.
in Anhausen, Germany, shot 2However, as the leaders entered
under-par 70 for a four-round total Amen Corner - holes II, 12 and
of 11-under 277.
13 at Augusta-National - Langer
The victory will go a long way led by one stroke over Forsman,
loward repairing the damage done who was playing in the twosome
to his reputation at Kiawah Island, ahead of him, and by one oyer his
S.C., in September, 1991, when he playing partner, Beck.
m(ssed a five-foot putt on the 181h
Forsman saved par out of a
hole of the Ryder Cup, allowing bunker at 11, a 455-yard par--4, and
the United States to steal victory ~~gao his shon walk_to the tee at
from lhe Europeans.
the 155-yard, par·3 12lb, lbe shanThe Masters victory is lhe sec· est, meanest hole at Augusta.

Cincinnati edges St. Louis 4~3
Dibble said of Hernandez. .
Torre said.
Cardinals third base coach . • 'I just think the left fielder
Bucky Dent also helped the Reds made a very good play by being
survive by mistakenly believing over there to back up .the play, plus
Hernandez was on the field only to h~ had ~ 1hrow over Lankford to
guard lhe Cincinnati bullpen. But get it to lbe plate. It·was a hell of a
Ca~dinals manager Joe Torre
play."
·
defended the decision to send
Of course, Dibble gets some of
Lankford:
lhe credit He-.wasn 't .about to apol·
"Anytime lbe ball gets bk and . ogize, saying it would all even out
you have a guy with Lank ~rd's (See REDS on page 5)
speed, you have' to send h1m," ·
.
·
•

By R.B. FALLS'i'ROM
ST. LOUIS (AP)- Rob Dibble
isn't himself; and he lhinks he
knows why. He's tod well-R"sted.
"I know what I'm doing
wrong," Dibble said after earning
his second save despite an awful
· nintli·inning a~pearance in the
Cincinnati Reds 4-3 vic1ory ov_er
lhe S't Louis Cardinals on Sunday
. night. "I feel really good."
· Tile Reds won on--opening day,
lhen lost fout sllaighl. That meant
lillie warlc for their closer, who has
a 9.00 ERA afw three innings this

season.

.

ERIE INSURANCE GROUP

"My arm feels great," Dibble
said. "But I jiiS! get so keyed up. I.
was ovenhrowing a little bil."
It showed. Dibble entered lhe
ninlh wilh a three-run lead and proceeded to walk lhe bases full. Then
he gave up a two-run, two-ou1 sin·
gle to pinch hitter Luis Alicea.
Then he forgot to back up home
plait and ended up as lbe relay man
on the play, throwing wildly to
lhird in an auempt to catch pmch
runner R1ly Lankford.
,
Left fielder Cesar Hernandez,
who had entered the game as a
pinch runner in the eighlb, finally
came to the rescue. Hernandez
picked up the ball in foul temtory
and easily threw Lankford out at
the plate to end the Cardinals' four·
game winning streak.
"He gets the save, not me,"

lrulovative insurance·for

Auto,. Home,

By beating Utah 112-99,

~inessand

Sports deadUnes posted

TinS ONE'S OURS! - Ciaciooati Reds Rob
Dibble (left) and Joe Oliver (wearing helmet
backwards) celebrate lbelr team's 4-J Win over
tbe host SL LOuis Cardiolls shortly after Oliver 1
put the tag on the Cardinals' Ray Lankford

(kneelinll) in tbe latter's attempt to score what
would have been the tying run in the ainth
Ianing, u tbe Cardinals' Brlitn Jordan looks on
from a distance. (AP)

Scot·ehoat·((
'

- "' Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE
T-

Pel.

W L
I
2
2
3
3
4
4

Philaddphia ............ J
St t.uia ..................4
Pi......... ................3
~ ..................3
Nc• Yook ............... .2
2
fl . .. ...................2

GB

.133
.667
.600
..!00
.400
.333
.333

a:!ri20....................

Allood&lt;lli-

T -.

W L

y·Ncw Yook ..... :.... 53 21
33
New1-y .,_,.,,,,,42 34
Orlando ................ 36 31
Miami,-................. 30 oiO
Philaddphia ........... 23 52
Waohinpo ............ 21 l4

I

3

J60

11.!
12
17

.459

19·
30.5

.l01
.210

32.5

1
3
3

.500
.500

I.S
l.l

4

.429

San Di"io ......... ,...... 2

3
3

.400
.400

2

CINCINNATI ..........2

4

.3.33

.714

•·Cblcaao .............. 52

x-'O.EVEIAND.. :.47
A~ ...................40
Clwl.................... 31
- Detn&gt;it.................... 37
lndWu ........ :.......... 37
~waut0o .............211

2

2.~

22
21

.635
.533
.l01
..!00
..!00
.371

5
12.5
14.5
15
15
24

s.. Fnnciom 12. Pillaburp·5
MldwootDI.WO.
Team
W L Pd.
I.· Hou.aton ........ _.. ,,49 2S .662
. .:~San Antonio .......4S 29 .601
x-Uiah .................... 42 33 .560
Denv'" ................... 32 43 .427
~ ...:.......... 11 l6 .243
Dallu ....................... l 66 .101

.....

S1. Lou1a 2, QNCINNATll , 10 rn·

Sunday's S&lt;ores
Allanla 3, Loc Anaclco 0
San Diego 6, Floridl2
Philadelphia 3, Cl_!ic&amp;JO 0 .
San Fn.ncilco 4, Piusbwgn 3
Howm S, New Yom 4
Manrc.t 19, Colcndo 9
CINCINNATI 4, St Lallil3

x~Seat1le ................. 5C)
x~ Portlan4 .............. 46

2S
21
31
39
42
53

4
7.5
17.l
31
41

.667
.622
.493
.473
.432
.293

L.A. CIOooen ......... 31
L.A. I..Uin ............ ll
Golden Slatc ~ ........ 32
Sacramento ............ 22
x·clinclaal pllyolf benh
y-cUncbad diviCGn b\lo
z-clinched confcratt.c title

Florid~! (Hammond 0-1) at San FrancilcO(f. WU.on 0.1),4 :Q5f..m.

CINCINNATI (Smi ey 0-1) at
Philldo:lpilia (lockiOII 0-0), 7:35 p.m.

Oti c.~go (Hibbud 0-0) at AUanLI (Av-'

13
225

24
21

37.,

L.A. Cippou lii, Don,..IOI

A orida 11 San Francisco, 4 :05 e-m.

Sunday's S(Ores

CINCINNATI 11 Philadelphia, 7:35
p.m.
O.icaao at A\lanu, 7:40p.m.
New Yodc 11 Colondo, 9:05p.m.
Piuibu,tgh·at San Diego, I 0:05 p.m.

GB
-

ClEVELAND ......... 3

2
3

.600
.500

.l
I

New Yon ................3
Milw•uk.ce ...... , ........l

3
3

.500
.400

I
1.5

Douoi• ..................... 2 . 4

.333

2

Bollitn..., .... ,............ l

.200

PhiWiclphia-al Cbulaac, 7,30 p.m.
0Ucatoalllooni.7:30p.m.
Dallaa II Ullh, 9 p.m.
Phocnil: It L.A. Clippc:n, lO:lOp.m..
llanv..-at Golder~ State,IO:XI p.m.

Tuesday's games

Indiana It Bo.on, 7:30p.m.

•rNcw Yadt, I p.m. ,
L.A. Liken ll HW~~an, l :30 p.m.

. 1.5
I1 ' .

1,_,
.soo 1.5
.167 · 3.5
.

-*NHL -• -

Salurday's scores
Mirinaou 1. Ka,nau aty 2

Ttam

Oakllncl4, Milw•ukec 3
N.ew Yolk 12. Olica1o 0
BoMan 10. Teau 2

a.EVELAND 10, TOIOIIIO 6
Kooua Cilyl, ~I

Ada .. DI..Iao
·-...........
so 26 7 1117 321 :166
. y-~ .......... 46 2710 102 34S 291
y· Monbal ........ 47 29 '6 100 321 275
y·llull'alo .......... 31 .34 10 16_329 217
!Wtfoot ............ 2S 51 5 ss
357 .
Oaa"a .............. 10 61 4 24 191 315

OlicaJO 6,New York.C

m

.

~7, Bo-6, 12lnninla

II·-

Toda '•pmoa ·

~City(~-

·
0.1) at l:law Yolk
~- 0.1), l_e_.m. .
CLEVI!L\NQ
(Mtnil 0-0)
(VIOiai.O),
l~.m.
Ctllfarn:la ~· 0.0) at M.llwallkeo
~l-4);2105p•-

==· (Dill!""" 1.()) •

.

OicJao

(MtCMHII 0.1 ~ 1:01 PJII.
1h-.,. (Mu•ilD• 0..0) .11 T•u•
()-0).·1:35 p.m.

a

o.u,--•

·
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE.

·

' Tum

-' t ....:as ,.....

W ~. L

T Pia. 01' GA.

2S 12
21 · 9
21 II
36 ;15 11

I02. 213 226
364 211
214 2l1
21' 271 ·

101
91
s........ ...........
13
Minncoo&lt;a ......... 36 36 10 12
Tampt B.y·...·.... 22 S3 7 51

267 21S
235 323

Smylhe·Diwlalon

Oaldaoll • -.... 1:3! p.m.

- 7"'1':01
PJII......
:::: ·
. T
• Qdoop.

l'llorr.. IH•Ia5a. ·

,

.......... oll
y-~ .. o........ 46
y·T.........,...... 43
y~o

TUIIday'IIPJIIeti

..

11 316 212

40 36 6 16 291 21!1i
N.Y. blanden... 39 36 6 ~ 320 21S
N.Y. Rlll&amp;en .... 30 3611 19 302~1
Phila&lt;lclphU .•.:.. 33 31 II 71 306 :!II

Sunday's scores

. , '.

7

J~NewJenc.y ....

Dc:ttoit S, C.lifomill

t·

W L T h. GFGA
l6 21 6 Ill 361 21i2

,..waahin~ --- 40 34

BaltimOftl 5, Se.ale l

a

Patrlek Dl•&amp;alon •

•'l'illlllwJII ......

.

y·Vanco.ncr ..... 44 29 9
30 11
y·Loc MJ,Cioo .. :1!1 33 10
Y'Wlnoipc&amp;....... :1!1 36 . 1

r·Calaatl' .........: 41

..

'11 331 261
93 311 211

a 321 32S .

1$ 316

m

• I

..

---.....

. .

. .

tf'

C¥

•

MinnclcK.a. 8:10p.m.

. LAWN &amp; GARDEN

1'unpa81y at WinniP'I, 8:40p.m.
Calpry at Edrnonrori, 9":40 p.m.
Lal AnplCI at Vancouver, 10:40 p.m.

.

.

'

.

SPECIAL SECTION . .
IN T"E
•POINT PLEASANT. REG-ISTER
•GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE•POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
.

.

·-

Nadonal PootballiAa.&amp;M
CHICAGO BEARS ·- ApHd to
tc:rmt with Cn.ia ..lronhoH" Herwatd,
fl.lllbKt, on a...._..,_ oonUKL
LOS ANGELBS IIAMS - Apod 10

.•

•

ADVEiriSIIIG DEADLINE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, '1993 • NOON

with ShiM CGnlan, liMtllcllc, on a
thJ..jear COII1ft1Ct.
tenna

- - Sports briefs - Football
LEE'S SUMMIT, Mo. '(AP)-

Kansas City Chiefs linebacker
Petey Snow·faces a possl!llt misde-.
meanor assault charge after
allegedly _lbrealeni!lg a group of
golfers Saturday w11h a gun afler
his car was hit by a ball, police say:
·
Tenilll · · ·
. .TOKYO (AP) - SeCond·seed·
ed Pete Sampras C!f the Untied
StaleS, who unsealed Jim Courier
· as the lop ranked player .in tbe
-world earlier -in lhe tournament,
beal seventh-seeded compatriot
Brad Oill)en 6·2, 6·2, 6-2 in lbe
final of the Japan Open oo Sunday.

as the S~ns matched a series.
season-low with 31.
Kevin Johnson scored 29 poiniS,
. Barkley may miss 1onight's . Ainge 23 and Dan Majerle 18 for
game against lhe Los Angeles Clip- the Suns, who improved to 33-4 at
pers. His status will be evaluated home, tying New York for best in
and announced before lhe trip to the NBA.
California.
.·
Karl Malone led the Jazz with
Danny Ainge hit 1wo three- 22 points and 10 rebounds.
poinws during an 18-0 run late in
Elsewhere in the NBA, lhe Los
the game as Phoenix· clinched its Angeles Lakers defeated Seattle
first Pacific Division title since · 98-96, New York tripped Boston
1981 as well as the best record in 102-90, Delr.oil beat Washington
the conference. The Suns (59·15) · 106·94 and Portland whipped Minneed just lhree victories in their last nesota 127·110.
eight games to be assured of lhe Trail Blazers 127, Timberwolves
best record in the NBA and home110

liiSEiriON DATE:
.FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1993
0

,•

'

CALL DAVE .OR P. J.
.FOR MORE IIFORMAIION

992•2155.
..

.
'

Rod Strickland had 10 of his 14
poiniS. in lhe third period and finIShed wilh a season-high 14 assists
for the Blazers. Cliff Robinson had
all five or his blocked shotS in lhe .
quarter and Kevin Duckworth
scored eight or his 16 points in the
period. .
. Chuck Pe~on scored 21 points
for Minnesota.

You take great pride in
watching yi&gt;ur money. But
you want to enjoy life too.
With our new Classic One~'
Account, both sicles of you
are satisfied.
•

lhird as Robens was caught stealing. Cincinnati has stranded 51 run.
· ners in six games.
-over lhe long haul. ·
·
·
"We're getting hits, but we're
' "I'll just kee~ going out there," ·. not gc:!ting them al the right time,''
Dibble said, "I ~e learned to deal Rerez said.
'wilh adversity. l'llthrow strikes
The. Reds did get. some timely
eventually."
e
p h
d
1
Reds rookie starter Tim Pugh d~.ense. ug rna e an unusua ·
(i-0) wasn ,1 complaining. although . play, stopping II'Smash by Brian
he admitted he had been worried. Jordan wnh his pos1erior, lhen
•
picking up the ball and throwing to
Pugh, who allowed a run on .our first in lhe fulh. Kelly made a div·
hits in seven innings, was sitting in ~ng caleb in cenw field on J.ordan's
the · dugoul during the final fly tiall in lbe seventh.
·sequence.
"I was saying some prayers,
- - Sports briefs -:-100,'' he said. _
.
Like Dibble's comrol, lhe Reds
. Auto racing
will also get an extra-base hit even·
DONINGTON, England (AP)
tually. All their 17 hits Sunday ,- Aynon Senna of Brazil char~ed
were singles. and they've been from fifth to first .on lhe openmg
playing ii one base at a time for · lap and powered to victory in the
their lasl 25
. ' hits overall. Club offi-, J;iuropean Grand Prix on SuJ1day,
cials don't know whether lbat's a his second straight Formula 0netriumph.
record.
The Reds. had 12 of.lheir hits
Senna, who averaged J02.901
and scored all four runs in the rmt · mph in his McLaren Ford for the
four innings against Bob Tewks· 76-lap race on the 2.S·mile Don·
ington circuit, leads the drivers'
~usr ~ingied llim 10 death~" standings wilb 26 points. Alain
\ said Chris Sabo, who was 3 for 3 Prost of France, who rmished lhird
wilb 111 RBI against Tewksbury.
in a Williams Renault, is SCCOIJd
Robeno Kelly also had three with 14. Damon Hill of Britain;
.hits and scored twice against second in a Williams Renault, is '
.
'Tewksbury, Oary Varsho bad two lhird wilb'12.
hii.l and an RBI and Bip Robert had
·
·
Horkey
.·
.two hilS.
: • Tewklbury (()..2) wu second in
ATLANTA (AP) -. Manon
the mljora with a 2.16 BRA last· Rheaume, pro· bockey'•s only ·
season and worked six or more Jemale soaltender, allowed six
'lnnlna• in 30 of hiJ3 ~~
~- goala In bcr flnt atan for the'
dmt. be Jailed Ju.at "'"
ngs.
Allanta KnlcJIIS In an 8-6 loss to .
: "It waa almoat e~barrw~. Cincinnati tn the Iinernational
haviniiOSOoutdlm.' T· Hockey Leape on 'Satunlay niJht,
It could have been worse. · Rheaume, 21, made 2S saves, but
Tewklbury avoided a blowout . knoclred uhot Into her own goal in
becaiiiO lbc. R~ s~ded •ven · the lhinl period 10 give Cincim•ti a
runners durmg his aunt ~d ~!~ 6-5 lead. .
.acored.two runs ~ five hus in !"C·

.

It offers you a major
credit card with no annual

fee; achecking account with
unlimited checkwriting that

earns interest every day;
THEONE.Card that works
like acheck for ordinary pur·
chases or like an ATM card
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•

in the v.Qr)d, anytime. Add to

that no-fee money-orders,
cashier's checks,'Iraveler's
Checks and no annual fee
ov~rdraft protection.

Phis

an easy-to-read combined

•

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With Classic One

you11 also enjoy group
travel, a flewsletter
..

and even your own
personal program di"rector. To qualify, just·
keep $5,000 in any

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. Bank One savings,
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~

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&lt;;ombination, or have
a Bank One line of .
credit of at least

'

$15,000.' O: merely pay·a :
small monthly fe.e.
So fmd out more about

'lUrxwe

c

points
and Ponland took a one-game lead
over San Antonio in the race for
homecoun advantage in lhe first
round of lbe playoffs by defeating
Minnesota.

.(Continued
Redsfromwin...
Page 4) .

.

Brrant Stidl, pard, on Ulo injured Uat.
AcRnLed Robwt. W.nt.M. forwaid·~­
.... fzom lho injuiOII...
..
PIIOl!IIIX SUNS - Adiv!'Od ~
Muatar. forwant, from ~ injured lin.
Waiwcl Alex StiYrinl, rorward.

FoolbaU

wALES CONJ1ERENCE

iorciiUJ ~. Cl..EVELAND 4

'

NadaoallaoUIW-Ilao
DENVER NUGOBTS - Plocod

Minncao&amp;a at Scatllc. 10 p.tn.
San Antonio al Sacramento, 10:30
p.m.
~ . Cijppera atPutland,·t0:30 p.m.

\!

·~

'

Basketball

Wu~.t.on

.100
./R7
.600

Monaula1 Buf!'alo, 7:40p.m.
OUawa at Quebec, 7:40p.m.
St t.uia otT.....,, 7:40p.m.

CLEYEtAND at Atlanta, 7:)1) p.m.

Wutern Diwlaiori

.

day cliaabled liiL

Milw1~ ll Odlndo, 7:30p.m.

2.5

·.

Hmfurd atN.Y; lllandal, 7:40p.m.

, NEW YORK MET$ - Announced
l'lw CHboan, pilda, """"~"'&lt;~ .., ....,..
muu to Norfolk of 11t1 ln11m1tional
Lea.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES - Sipod
Jay Bc.ll, thorutop, to a row-year oonu.ct
e•ten•ion throuah 1997. Waiwsd Mite
LaVaWore, oateihlr, for tbl PIIIPOH of
&amp;ivint him hia ~- Ac·
tiwa&amp;Od D1va 0Uo, pi1Chet, from t.ho 15·

Toolgbl'.s.games
Pt:L
.667

Tuesday's games

10, Am Nnnwt. 1o lnd.i.aMpolil. Ttan~·
fcmocl Hal Mania, lim -..... !rum lho
ll to lho 110-day dinblod lla

Milwaubt 11 Miami, 7:30p.m.

L
2

Why not make us prove it!

In Ti1ne For Spring

'

Nallanll~

Doiuoi1106, Wuhin&amp;lal 94
Ph-u 112, Ulah ~
L.A. Loi;.., 98, Scxulc 96
Ponland I'21, MiM•«a 110

E&amp;Jkm DIYiflon

pJn.

CINCINNATI RPllS - C.Uod up Bill
Landrwn, pitcher, from lndlan_!POlia o(
the Amcdcan Auoc:i.alba.. Sc Tun CCII·

NcwYodd02.llaOion90

AMERICAN LEAGUE

'

and the Erie Insurance Group provide
'
'
folicyholders with as near perfect
protection and service as is humanly possible.

ERIE INSURANCE GROUP

rebo~nds

was

BasebaU

OU...ao 92.1ndiano 11
"""""' 91, San ......... "
•Milwaukee 101, Odanclo fJ1
Golda~ SUIO 100, DaiW 94

Ho.a~oen 11 MONtUI, 1:3S p.m.
SL loW~ at Loa Afll,cla, 4:0S p.m.

108 Mechanic Street

~:::::::::::::::::::;::

. Wubinaton at Monuea1.7:40 p.m.
N.Y. Ranaetta~ Pbiladdphia, 1 :40

AmerkaoLu,...
TEXAS RANOERS - Activated
Kevin Brown, pitcher, from the IS-day
diaablod lis• Optionod Don "'Iller, aul·
fic1dcr, &amp;o Ok1atlCma Cily of W American
Alaociation.
'
.
TORON'!;O BLUE lAYS - Si11u•d
Lee Ste:wc:na, rmt bueman, to • minor·
lcal'oic CUitnc:t and lllianecl him 1o ~yra­
CUM ~lbo ln'Cmation&amp;J.Usap.

Miami 112. l'llilodclphia 114
AllanIa 111. Charlocio I Ql

Tuesday's gamos

Williams &amp; Associates

son for lhat
sport.
articles
during
the appropriate sea- •

..:..... • Transactions • _.;. .

~100,NowJ-y99

New York. (S•bcrhac:n 1·0) al Col·
orado (Ruft"lll 0-1), 9:0S p.m.
Piua:bur&amp;}l {Ono 0-0) 11 San Oicao
(Hurio 0-1). 10:3S p.m.

Tu;u 4, &amp;o.ton I
OMand I, Milwluk. 2
Cllifamia 10 Doaoit 6 .

BCIII:In 4,.0ttiw• ~ •

~0 It

9.l

Saturday's scores

ay 0.0), 7:40p.m.

3
3
5

Sunday's srores
Tampo Bol3, OUcaaa 3, lio
Winnipea 7,1!dmall&lt;lft S
v........ 6.CilwY3

Judith A. &amp; J. T. (Jack) Williams
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(6.14) 992-3985

.Cleveland posts 10-6
win over Toronto

The Phoenix Suns, approaching ·
!heir flrsl 60-win season and their
fJJSt year wilh lhe best record in·the
NBA, also are at lhe time when an
injury could undo what lhey 've
accomplished.
Charles Barkley pulled a muscle
in his right shoulder Sunday in the
· first quarter of the Suns' lith
straight victory, 112199 over Utah.
'the, win clinched home-court
advanlllge throughout !he Western
Conference playoffs.
" It affected my shot and my ·rebounding, too," said Barkley,
who managed to play 37 minutes

TORQNTO.(AP) -The Toron- you have to look for something
: to Blue Jays aren't about to give up posilive. We have 10 look at the
·on Jack Morris Just yet, especially fact that we played the world
when lhe oppoSition is the hot-hil· champions, even for three games.
-•·1g Cleveland Indians.
. Unfonunalely we only came away
' 1 "No ll!atter who's pitchin~
with one win."
•
we're going to score some runs,'
Paul Sonen10 maiChed Baerga's
Carlos Baerga who went 3 for home run IOlal, taking Mike Timlin
' :said
5 with a three-run homer as the over lhe fence in center 10 cap lhe
··Indians hammered Morris for seven scorin~ in lhe ninth. It was Sorrenruns in a 10-6 victory Sunday.
to's third in lhree games:
.
· For Morris, the key was locaMark Clark (I..Q), acquired from
. · lion, or more appropriately, lack of St. Louis in March, allo:.~&lt;ed five
il
.
runs on eight hits over six innings. .
· • "I've been 0-2 before,'' Morris He sttuck out two and walked one
said. "But I'm still alive."
in his American League debut
Like ~is Toronto counterparl,
"1-don'tiptow if lhey're usihg 'a'
Indians manager Mike Hargrove juiced up ball or what," Clark said.
thinks i1' s jus1 a matter of time "But every ball in lhe air seemed
before the American League sees to carry. Even guys who don't hit it
lhe real Jack Moms.
too well would put it in the air and
. "He's going to be OK," Har- I'd cringe."
grove said. "I don't think anybody
Devon White put one in the air
on the Blue Jays is womed. He was that even Clark knew wouldn't
just missing his spoiS."
.
come down in play.
.
Blue Jays miiDager Cito GastOn
"I thre'!V h1m away, away and
wasn't quite as optimistic as Har!hen one piiCh inside and he
. grove, ~ut he )Yas w'illing to give away.
hits
it
I knew that one was
Moms, who was tagged for seven gone," out.
Clark said. •
.
runs on I 0 hits in an opening day
The two"run homer for While,
· loss to Seattle, the benefit of lhe who tied a career high wilh four .
doubt for now.
· hits,
his first of lbe season.
"The his! two. times out Jack · Ed S(lrague, wilb his second,
.jusl hasn't had good location," and Joe Caner, with his second. hit
Gas1on said. "I'm not worried solo homers in a losing cause.
about him .... Not yet"
.
Carter also added a sacrifiCe fly. .
Despite losing the first. two · Derek Lilliquist retired six
games of 1he three-game series, · straight over the final t'wo innings
Cleveland cdllecred 41 hits in lbe for his second save.
.three games and has now scored 43
•runs over their last five games.
Sandy Alomar chased Morris
· Thomas Howard led 1he 16-hil wilh a run-scoring Si!l$1.e.Jn . t~e .
.. assault, .tying a career high with lhird and 'Jeff Treadway, who went
four hilS and driving in lhree runs. to lhird on Aloinar's smgle, seored
He had a two-run single that made · to make il 7-4 when caiCher Pat
it 5-Z in the second and a run-scor· Borders lhrew !he ball into center
ing single that made it 8-4 in sixth. · trying to throw out AJ'oll\ar at sec.
"We wanted to come in here ond.
.and win Ibis series," Howard said. . FeliJ! Fennin addlld a RBI single
I
"Bul when you lose lhe first two, • ·m lbe sevenlh.

Tonight's games

GB

Paclllc Oivlaloo
z-Pit-u ............... 59 IS .797

Today's games

1
l
2
2

Naw J.,.y '· W,u hinp 3
BDitan S, Monlrealt
Philed.,lphi• 4, Toronlo 0

•·

t&amp;:J:tos

S• t.uia S, Min-. I

WESTERN CONJ1ERENCE

Colorado 9, Manual S
Philadelphia 5, au..,. 4 .
.
FlOalla ~. San Diqo I
U.. Anaolco 2. Adinla I. I0 .......

Te._q; .. _...................4
O&amp;kland ...................4
Clllifomia ............. ;.. ,]
S&lt;aulo ........ .............. 3
Chiago.................... 3
~ ............. ,...3
Kanua City .. ,......... .1

Ouawa S, N.Y. bl.tndcn 3

FltiiiMJh 4,N.Y. Rqen 2

N.Y.I&amp;landcn S, New Jcnc:y 4

Houaton 6. New York 3

4

.

Tororm4, Huttonll
~- 3, llolfalo I

Saturday's scores

Te1m
W
8oaWin ......................4
JC)ft)llla ....................3

~ 6, Jlu{ool 3

Loc AD.... 3, San I ... 2 (OT)

.'1113

3l
31
31
31
46

'

~~turday's scores

0...U 6, Bllftalo l
Ciiicaaa4, TompaBa12

Mianoocita 4, s. Lallil3

Cenlral Dhll•

Atlanta .................... .S
HouslOn ................~ .. 3
... Fnnci&lt;co .......:..3
Lol Anlcl01 .............3

ru..ad0 ..................2

Gl

.553
.416

~

·
Iitle
, ••-· -&lt;lmaJoo
playolf boltb

Pd.

.116

Bca1Gn.~ ...............-4l

I.S
2
2.S
3

w..cera Dtvlllon

•

San-........... II 70 2 24 215

EASTERN CONJ1ERENCE

a.uter. Dlwldoa

60 2oiO 330

l!donatioa .,.!\.. 26 41 I

.......,*NBA•-

.

p~~~!!t~ »!fS ~~~-~~~~u~~l ~~r~~~!e~~~P~!~r J?e~r~~2!!~ io

life
at the lowest possible cost

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sentinel, the Point
Pleasant Register and lbe SlllldayTimes-Stlltilltl value the cantribu.·
lions their readers make to the
sports secliOM of these papen, and
these contribulioos will continue to
be .blished.
.
l'fowever, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for photos and relalcd ani·
cles for basketball and other winter
sports is, lhe last day of lbe NBA
Finals. .
Likewise, lbe deadline fpt sub·
missions of local baseball· and
softball-related photos and related
articles, from 1T-ball to lhe majors,
as well as other spring and summer
sports, is lbe day of lhe last game •
of lbe World Series. The deadline
for
and related anicles for
- foo
and olbec Jail sports is the
Salllrd!ly before lbe Super Bowl.
. These deadlines have been instituted to give readers plenty of time
to get lheir photos back from the
photography studio of choice and
to give lbe sl8ff~ lbe opponunity to
publish these spons photos and

Rae 's Creek, among lhe most · what Forsman did." ·
famous stretches of water in golf,
It landed on the back fringe. He
runs in from of No. 12. If you were stubbed lhe chip but saved par from
to sneak up on it wilh a fly rod in 6 feei.
yopr hand, it wouldn 'I look like
Beck made par, 100, and !railed
much, but with a 7-iron in your by two shots. Now. he was lbe only
hand, it looks like a monster.
man wilhin striking dislance.
He hit a 7-iron into lhe creek on
No. 13, the last hole of Amen
· lhe fly.
Corner,
is a 465-yard par·S, severe
He took his drop .100 yards · dogleg left
Rae's Credc: run·
. away from the pin and looked at ning along with
the
left
then in
lhe gallery, motioning as if to break front of the green. It side,
is
among the
his wedge over his knee. He proba· most famous holes in golf.
'
bly should have.
.
.
· He hir his nex1 shot tb in. The
Beck's lee shot W!IS along lhCl
ball hit lhe steep bank in front of right side or lbe fairway' lbe safe
No. 12 and roll ed back into the way home. Langer hit his drive
water.
down the left side. It took two big
"Next year, I think I 'll lay up bounces and came to rest not 10
shon of lhe water,'.' he said.
feet away from the c-reek, near
He wound' up with a quadruple some water hoses.
·
bogey-7.
•
Beck knocked a 4-wood onto
Langer lhoughl about a 7-iron at the green, about 24 feet from the
No. 12, too. But he said he went for hole.
the 6-iron inslead, because "I
"I had 202 yards, which .for me
couldn't take the chance of doing is a 3-iron.'' Langer said.

Classic pne today. It's a ser·
ious way to manage Y!JUr
'
money that just happens

to be a lot of fun .

.,....

="

Whatever it takes:
Member FDIC

.

0 1993BANC ONE CORPORAtiON 'Cred~ services,and THE ONEeCard subject to approvai. ,
1

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"

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·) ·
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�•

Pllge &amp; The Dally Se~Uner

)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Public Notice

Public NoiiCI

Public Notice

Public Notice

.

ESTATE, INTEREST OR
the omce of the Arlil ~I
and may be obtaln.cl ftln
RIGHT THEREIN
the Architect, Rlchal'll E.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
APPROPRIATEO
Dittmar, Inc., 13 South
JarryWray
In
.the
Townehlp
Fourth' Street, Zan•vllle, l'
Situated
Director ofT-~
ot- Sallebury, County of Ohio U701, upon.clepll"t of
State of Ohio
U.lge and State of Ohio, $50.00 with $35.00 being .
PLAINTIFF and known • being pert of refunded when dooutMntl.i
-vs100 acre LoL No. 383, • part are returned In good ~
.Unknown OWner
of Town 1 North, Range 13 condition to the Arctut.ra
DEFENDANTS Wee!, u ehown by the office within tan (10 daya) of 1•
c.. No. 83-CV-77
recorded llelge County Tax bid date.
~
J
..
•·:rE.
OF
OHIOFIDAVIT
.
.
Plat,
Map
No;
27,
Parcel
No.
Blddero
ehall
note.
that'
S ,,.
086, and mora tully
'II w R
•
COUNTY OF MEIGS, u
bounded and d118Crlbad 'ao the prevao ng age a1• '
published by the De· •
Re bacca A. Hower d, lollowa:
~artmenl of lnduetilal '
CE
b i
being lliet duly aworn,
depOIH 'and eayo that ehe
PAR l NO. S.WD ·
alation• are to : •1
Ia a duly appointed,
(Highway)
complied with throu~out 1 ·
All RIGHT, TITLE '
thlo projecL
d
I
qualified
an
act
ng
AND
INTEREST
IN
Blddero ohall aloo note
HOUS~ OVIRHOWINC?
Aaele!Jont Attorney General
-s•~
Ohio
...
_
...
_
FEE
SIMPLE,
EXCWDING
that
· the Rulu end l
1
0 I .,,. w•~ 0 1
CUANUPWITH
; ..,. .,,.
UMITAnQN OF ACCESS,
Regulation• on Elfual
Plaintiff, Jerry · Wray,.
IN THE FOLLOWING
Elllploymenl Opporhlnlly •
CLASSIFilb
ADS \! '·..'
.
Direetor of TranoportaUon, '' DESCAlBED PROPERTY
ehall be made OW1"rl of lhlo l
Being In the cenw of the conlract. No blclder mey I
State of Ohio, ...... by hlo
PubliC Notice
Petition, to approprllote the niad on the oouth Una of ' withdraw hie bid within 30 l
, _ _ _ _.;;_...:..;.;..:..;___ . property d..crlbad therein tOO acre Lot No. :113;
day• after the actual data cill
NOTICE TO
and to foe the value thereof; thence waot llbout200 '-1 the opening !hereof.
that·nhe -ldence(e) of the to the cliff:, ,
If, In the opinion of tho•
CONTRACTORS
Delandan\(e) named below
h
pt •
''
1
STATE· OF OHIO
ie unknown and cannot wllh
thence n • northerly Ownero, t e aooe an~• c
DEPARTMENT OF
reaeonable ' dlligance be direction to the r:omer Clf the lcweat bid ·fa not In Ill•
TRANSPORTATION
aecertelned: UNKNOWN the Silvie Rogor and N-y beat inleraet of all
Cofumbue, Ohio
OWNER
eouth praperty Nne;
concerned, tho Ownel\lniyl
March 26 ,11113
Th 10 11 1
thence
•
about
200
IHt
accept another propooal ao!
e
owng act1one tolhlwntarof ...... road:,
opened, or reject · Ill &lt;
Contract BalM Legal Copy were !Joken 011 bahlll "' the ·
~•
No.ll:l-306
Plaintiff to· aecertaln the
thence aouth 7 •11r- riropooaiaand adverUee Ior i
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT place( a) of r•ldenC• of the w.. t about 11 fMI to the other bide.
NGH-OON (25);
U!lknown Defandon\(e): A Place of Beginning, , By Order of the Secrelary !
STP·FYI3{2)
thorough · .. arch of containing 0.551 of an acre, .
·
M~ry K. YQet .
S.alad Propooale. will be cour.thouoe recordo, tax mora or Ieee, and being of ·
Melga County P11bllc
received at the office of the mapo 'from the Count)' unknown ownerehlp In the
·
. Library'!
director of the Ohio Recorder'• OHice, county Cholour.t of Melga, State of (4) s, 12, 19, 26, 4tc
!t
Deparlmant of Trano· Engineer'• mapo and 0
portatlon, Columbue, Ohio, dlfcuuione with adjoining
Ownere reteln rlghta of
PubliC Notice
!
until 10:00 e.m. Tu.day, property ownare alllndlcata lngr•• and egr•• to and
• l
April 27, 11113 for lhat the owner of !hie lromanyr•klu.rolarea.
·
lmprqvamenta In: Alhenl, oubject P*Cell' unknown. , •, h!~~;~'.."::..!t;.~~. NOTICE f ELECTION;, ON .
Gatlla, Hocking, Melge,
It il nece11ary therefore unleu they, or their
,TAX LEVY IN EXCESS
Monroe, Morgan, ·Noble, lo give no~ce of the filing of Attorney file an Anewer no
OF THE
'
~nton,
Wuhington Coun: the · P•IItlon h4reln by lalertha'n 28 daya after the
TEN Mlll.UMITATION I
! FIRSTS IN SCIENCE FAIR· An outstand·
sixth grade, center. Other stude!lts, pictured left
t ••, Ohio for ,Improving Publication, accordance co"mpleUon of the e-·lce of
NOnCE le hereby •giVen i
! log ~bit ill Harrisonville Elementary School's
to right, wlnbiag first jllace trophies were from
oectlon ATH-33·0.00 on with Section 2703.14;
-·
that In pureuance of a i
·United Stetee Route 33 and 163:07; and Civil Rule Publlcallon, they will be·
,_ J
: sdeiiCe fair was one pertaining to turtles. It fea·
the Jeff, Jody Donohue, kindergarten; Re~s
ot.har variouo routea and
deemed to have waived Raoolutlon of the. yp.,.ga'
Wyant, tblrd; James Stanley, fifth; (Drummer); ·
4.4(A), ~lead Code.
lhelr •lght to anewer, and Council of the VIII~ oil , .
tured a research tri·fold on turtles and hibema·
oacllono by applying retroAnd turlher affiant eaith the ...;!ilion will be tak- 81 Pomeroy, Ohio, palled on l
Ben Bookman, second; Joey Blazer, fourth; and
• ti01 along with a display or snap and land turtle
reflacUve poly•tar: .laet dry noL
r•
-·
d8J Ot ...,
r-b ~ uory, II.
will
be th
• 11 t th
! shells. It was prepared by Megan Drummer, a
Megan Dodso,n, first. (Photo by Ch~lene Hoe· •· .,pavement .mar.I· ng materIah
Rebecca E Howard; tru••nd judnment
•
11113
Ill b
for cenler nn .. and lane AsalatontAttorn...; General rendered accordingly; Civil
•
ere w ; · e•
filch)
·
·•
Rule12(AK1).
aubmlttad to a vote o the.
· un...
Swor11. to before me and
JERRY WRAY people of uld eubdlvlelon
The Ohio Deportment of oubacribed In my preeence
Director of Tr-portaUon at • Spacial Election to be.
TranaporteUon hefeby noU· thle 3rd day of March,11113. (
• (415 IZ. 111 26 •
held In the VIllage of
flee all blddere thai It will
Robert I. Schlatter, (53121
Gtc
•
,
•
•
Pomwoy, . Ohio, at tho
3•
afflrm.Uvefy lneure .the! In
Attornay.. t-~
regular place• of vollng
any contraot entered Into
..
No!Jory Public ·
Pu· bile ••ot. lce
·tharoln; oil the 4th ·c~t~y oil
pureuant to thle adver·
Ll;GAL NOTICE FOR
,.
May, 11193, the quuUon. oil ·
Ua-~ mlnS!'!J buol-•
PUBUCATION • ·
levying a tax, In excJIH o!',
nllrp!l- will be afforded
UNKNOWN OWNER,
,
tho 1er! mill Umltetlon, lor•
lull opportunity to eubmll wh·ooe adilr•• Ia unknown
LEGAL NOTICt;
the benefit ol Pomeroy ; ·
· HARRISONVILLE • Gover· · Agriculture and Food Science fiflh, and Megan Drummer, sixlh.
bide In reeponu to thlo .to the Plaintiff will take ·. Sealed Bido will be VIllage for the purpoee of•
Second place winners were Invitation a11d will not be notlcethatllh• beaneued received by the Melg• CUrrent
nor's Awards were presented in Award; and Rees Wyant for ''Torlcinder•arten
throuoh sixth grade dlecrlmlnated agalnot on by the Director of County Public Library at
Bald tax being: , An·•
five categories at the annual s.ci- nadoes and Hurricanes", the Ener"
"
.
the
grounds
of
race,
color,
Tranapor!Jotlon
of
the
State
216
W.
Main
SL,
Pomeroy,
additional
-of I.e mUll, 11 {
ence fair of the Harrisonville Ele- gy Research Award.
were Samantha Lee, Jess1ca Preast, or nltlonel origin In of Ohio, who hulnotltul8d Ohio 45769, until 1i00 p.m. a rate not exc..dlng 1 l.il )
'mentary School held last week.
Lynn Boolcman was chairman of Tasha &lt;;lreen, Chris Dodson, Kyle .. conllderatlon for an awwd. a proceeding In the local time, Thuroday, April mill• lor uoh ona dollar of
the science fair with 88 students . Smiddie, arid Lincjsey Lyons.
~ Receiving the awards were Kyle
' -..lnlmum wage ratee for Common PI••• Court ·Of 29, for the Reading Room valuation, which amounta to
third place winner· were Josh thle project have been Meiga County, Ohio, to Addlticm to tho Melgo nlnotaen cente C$0.18) for
. Smiddie, for his project ''The Glass exhibiting displays, Trophies were
Ark''; tbe Litter' Prevention an!1 awarded for fust and second place Milard kindergarten· Billy Reeves predetennlned u required appraprla!Jo o-ln property County Public Ubrary, 216 each one hundred clollare of
·
S .'
·
d' by law and •• Ml forth In deecrlbed hereafter for W. Moon SL, Pomeroy, Ohio va...Uon,forlveYNi'f,
.
'
Recycling Award; Ben Boorman winners in each grade, and badges f 1rst,
Nathan tearn~. sec on , the bid prapoaal "The •ta hlghwey purpo-, nemely 45769, according to
The P9lla lor ..rd Ell4idon
for "What Aquatic Plant Produces for lhe lhird place winners.
Amber l:ianing, third, Johnni Bar- 111 lor completion of thle the maldng, conetrucUon or drawlngo and opacification• will open at 6:30 "'elock
the Most Oxygen", the EnvironThe first place winners were ley, fourth, Raina Benneu, fifth, work llhall be ..t forth In lmprovem..taof:
on fila In the oKlee of the A.M. and r.....!n open' until
mental Sciences Award; James Jody Donohue, kindergarten; ·and Thomas Kopszinsky, sixlh.
thelllrldlng prapaul." .
Btete Route 7, Section Library and the Archltec~ 7:30 o'clock P.M. of eeld ·
1
Stanley for "Ph Levels Qf Ponds", Megan Dodson, first; Ben BookPllon:,~n1 d ,!~~=-,.!0-~ 0.31; Malga County, Ohio
Richald E. Dittmar.
.,..
(
the Water Resources Award; man, second; Reese Wyant, lhlrd;
S Q
:~e :O~';'po"rta'iion -~du•th"e end to fix the nlua of ..id
Bids will be received lor
By order of the
-·
property. The property thelollowing:,
Board of Election• of
Megao Dodson for "Yeast'', the Joey Blazer, fourth; James Stanley,
omo. of the Dlotrlct Deputy oaught lobe appropriated Ia
Comb! ned Bid including
Melge County, Ohio
Director.
more
.
e
peclllcally
~rlbad
all
tradae.
Htonry I. Hun._, Challman
l
JERRY WRAY u lollcwa:
· · ·'"
Plano and apecllicallono
111111 D. 11111111, ~r
Director oiTranaportaUon
DESCRIPTION OF THE
for lhe proposed con·
Dated
February 10,1]113•0
5
1
APRIL •12, 113
· PARCEL OF LAND AND
structi'!n work are on file In (4) 5, 12, II, 26, 21D
') '

ByThfBend

IN THE COURT OF
. COMMON PLEAS

1:

I
l

l

In,..,

l

.0

Governor's Awards are .
presented Harrisonville_pupil~

up_.._

.'A'ane

d

,,;
'

•
h
b rt

·

an nounced

HDW .DDES
EFFECT
[HAIELEDftS
"

Your Social Security
,

By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager iD Athens .

.

And wheihet you hie 10r bene-.
fits at the Social Security office in
Boise, Idaho or Melbourne, Flori·
· da, your claim will be processed in
·Recently I overh::ard a conver- the same manner and you will
sation in the waiting room of our receive exactly the same benefit . ·
.Social Security office. A man was payment.
· telling .lhe woman seated neKt to
I have been tallcing about Social
him tiult he had driven a very long Security benefits. The srory is 2111·
way 10 get to the office. The lie different for ihe· Supplementai
woman said she thought another Secnrity Income (SSI) program. '
office was closer to his home. The SS! payments are 'based on need,
man agreed it was, but said he had and the program recognizes that
reCeived an estimate of his retire- needs will change in different parts
ment benefits from his hometewn · of lhe country. Although there is a
' office and wanted 10 see if another basic Federal SSI payment lhat is
office could give him a beuer deal!
the same throughout the ·United
The man would soon learn- States, individual States can supaltct talking to one of our service plement the Federal payment.
representatives - . that V~ere is no
So, SSI rateJ will vary· from one .
sUIIb thing as a better deal from one state 10 another. But you have to be
Social Security office to another. living in the State to qualify for
Social Security is a national pro.. that State's supplemental payment.
gram with very specific rules and In other words, if you live in Ohio,
. regulations lhat are carried out in you cannot file an SSI claim. in
. exacily the same way by C'ach of Michigan hoping to gpt a higher
· ~proximately 1,350 Social .· payment from that state. And even
ty offices and lelephone cen· !hough the rates ·change among the
ren ICIOSS be country. In additioo, . States, all SSI claims ~W processeil
evrt Social Security office in the in the same mannet lllin&amp; the same ·
. ~ II linked to tbe IIJlle c:qm- eligibilll}o rules: ..
·
~
tletwork. So, the retirement
;rhe overall message is this:
·
fjtutlmate you get from the . don'·t "shop around" for Social
S~ial Security office in Bangor, Security. You .'ll get the .same
Maine will be the same one you get "deal" - and it's a good deal·fronl the office in Chula Vista, Cat.. know matter which Social Security
,ifaniia.
·
office you call or visit '
·

=

..

.

Dr. and M:rs. Erik Aanestad;·
· Pomeroy, announce the birth of
their first child, Hayley Erika, on
March 31 at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital in Alhens.
She weighed eight pounds and
10 ounces and was 21 and one-half
inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Karr, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Aanestad, Cedar
Rapids, Iowa. Paternal $feat-grand- .
mother is Mrs. Helea Aanestad,
Ottomwa, Iowa.

TIDRD PLACE WINNERS • Given badges for placing tbird
ill tbeir grade level on science exhibits·at the Harrisonville Elemen·
tary school were these students, left to right, front, Josh Milard;
kindergarten; Nathan Stearns, second grade; Billy Reeves, first
grade; Amber Haning, third grade; and back, Jobnni B!lrley,
fourth grade, Thomas. Kopczinsky, sixth grade, and Raina Ben-'
nett; fifth grade. The exhibit on how .stress effects chameleons
(lizards) was prepared by Raina Bennett.

'.
1

..

ii

LIMESlONE,

Mary Kay has I provtntlfectivt akin care P.fograrn
dellgned lor your ikin type.
.
MARYKAY
lndepeudeut Buuty
Caneultenta
Cerolyn McCOy
(614) 182-&amp;012
S.ndre Heudetton

GUVEL &amp; COAL

.....

ltasoaallle

JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2131'

(614) IIIN&amp;47

........

SUMMER
IMAGES

2

Hysell

12 Stssioas $20
16 ....~•• $25

St. Rt. 7
c••••ire,OI.

992·2417
a-4-113-1 11111

Meigs Alumni
A1soc:latlon Is
looking for current
addresaes of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on
May 29, 1993.
Mall eddf'IISHS to
Meigs Alumni
Assoc:latlon, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohlo45760

PHONE.992·7036
Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY

eGan..•
eCo~tqilete
........li••
Step &amp; Co•11are

PROM and WEDDING
MAKEOVER ·

FIIIISTIU1ES

985-4473
667·6179

CHAILIE'S

SMAU 'DOZER
DRIVEWAY WORK
alii UMESTONE
DELIVIIlY SERVICE
REASONABlE RATES

'25 HOUR

l

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EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and tRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnc SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and

TJIAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

992·2259

"*9''lhlnll

.........000.

ahad, . .

lhuppll~g ...

.....,wocc! a

electric

.

eec. Come 1ee1121,100.

lA 121 NEAR DANYILLI a 12+- Mill rncible hOm.
.Wr 1'lon, Clllar, bern, garege, LCD Wllllr, paved rued.
Nioe 11r1n11 llnclconlltollrig of haytand, ,_..,. • YIOOife.

'

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FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
3·1.1H3-tfn

318/tfn

'

2251 Sb:t• St. e (614) 992·5315

SEE OS FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.
T-Shlrts • Hats • Uniforms
V•lety of T.Shirt Colora end Lettering Stylee.
(,Ill lud. 1 \ I

111

NURSES' AIDE
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Room Additions • Roofing
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ll.llll ( Oll'&gt;ldL1111111

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•

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PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE

Ohio

5MNOI!hs.oondAUiddltpoll,
tl5710

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Opt1l1g of
l1fa1t/Toddler Program

lnnovaces •••

'

:v,2611 mO• •

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AND ·EYERnHING UND.RNEATH
•

614-992a7698

2112/92/lfn

•UGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

We will NOW serve children
6 months to .12 years of age.

I

992a2269
.
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Call ua for more Information
(614) 992-7328

USED RAILROAD TIES

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1-ft·f

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614·949·2202
61

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Powwadtiy U..:ury Outboard•

J. S. MARINE ·
1Dmllu 110uth of Galllpolle
on Bladen iiOild
PH. 614-2&amp;6-6160

·1svaa,.

.,_louoa

j'.
"

.

'· .

·~~-~

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BHIDING

HEY OUYSIII . , _ Oklo. Wont
To Tlllll To Youll 1·100 110.0771
Eat 1204 lUll Per lllln. lluol'
lie 11 y,., Unlo1ot Co. IONS1·

Cll11.

47269 St. Rt. 241 e lYa Milt OH Rt. 7
T•ru c•ostor oa Rt. 241

PH. 614·985·3949

NOW OFFERING••••••
OIL AND LUll SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND ROJAnNG

1.124/91/ I •o J1111

~· -·

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 119 •
Mltltllt1101'11 Olllo 45~60(614) 143~5264 112C118Wn

.

VIII 1 JAEif'a . F - home Wllh 3-4 bedroomo, car·
port, pello, ........ Olllar, t.nOIIl yard. otoraga lhed.
Worfl Gt II:I0.'1Q tnllll All!lng 127,000. '
. . .

•

... ·-

IGOIIIIIIICIII
ODIIIIL

dlfflrenco.
.
•Minimum 10 Cltane
•Low ..,. and sulfur
·•Will not gel In winter lfml,
·
1tl3 SPRING LUBE SALE

(614)
. ' 667·6621

,..,mo.

MARCH 11TH lhru MAY 31ST
Special term ...,. with parll*lt 4 tlmM a year
end NO INTEAE8T or ANAHCE CHARGE.

141tltlltl Rt. 7

614 44h O!.!t.
..._ ....,__.

. . c.

!

Larry E. MIRer

.

.

. 1141.1117

.

a-,

.,

_, ___ .,.,

- ...............--. . . . ,_,\ l.lt -124. ...

•,

,_flol. _, __ .,
............ Onl...... 1111

HAS SUPERIOR FUELS AN[)"
.

D. A. lOftON..
.EICIYAnNI

'

LOitlFound

'
HARD FOR YOU. ·
•BP Dlllll Supreme...Try 11, there Is a

•BACKHOE
•TRACK W-"ID
•TRUCKING

lito lllfj&gt;, .

.,,
One. -. aaa..,e:IIM.
""' -

LUBRICANTS THAT WORK .

•DOZERS

=

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

ICII- AIM

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accidenf •Annui_ty, IRA • Mortgage

ne-

~

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE anti •
ACCIDENT IN$UUNCE COMPANY

I bill, ber. built-In et,.t.Mg,
rajlein ~~~
- ..... hell pump, ........ ...,. pon:h, etDraga
ehacf. wry nloe, oarwenllnly locloted cloaa to ICIIOClle,

...
....'j'

992·3138

IP!OI,EPOAT -:MXIO nonoh llyla mo±...r3 bedrooma,

$72,100.

'

UIESTONE·TRIICICING
FilE£ ESTIMATES

IIIIIEA RD. ~ conllmpot'aly will 3 badRIOIDe,
2 ...... ounpo~ diCidng, llPPflar-e, 80+- llilrn·

'

Gutters

3mml1

.

.

NEW- REPAIR ·

992·7553

,,

IIIAII Eft AF!fOADABLE HOlE locatad n.r P0111and
on 2.11 - · lnoludal """'' ahad. Alldng S7 ,500.
'
1~ II1'0RY HOME locall4j on Pleuant Ridge hal3 bedrccme, 2 lola of 50xtOO. Nice home or Nnlal
lll'llllniOIIL f18,1100.

'

ROOFING

POMEROY, OH.

I

~

How«d L Wrltesel .

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

36358 SR7

-ROUSH'S PRlNIING

-

;

i

'

I·'

992·3577

........

I

'

JI!RAY WRAY
Dlrectqr of .TranaportaUon
APRIL I; 12, 1111 .

Closed Sunday

Houn: Sun.. Ikon. CIOeJd
Tilll., Wed., Fri.
1:30 -':31 pm
Thurs. a SeL 10 liN pm

Personalized make-up, skin ·
care and color consultation.
Call today for your'
oomplimentary facial and
make over. ·
Independent Beauty ConsuHants
Carolyn McCoy (614) 992·5082
Sandra Henderson
(614) 992-3647

... fer ........n of thle
..,. .... " ... forth In .

Director.

IUY • SELl • TRADE
31711. 2nd St.
Middleport, Ohio
Mon.·frl. I 0:00·5:00
Sattnday I 0:00·6:00

ll•pa/r

I

1Ceep deal rJ overhead~ liM at home or~ wark.If~ru're ~ ~ pab•tli'C.
or cleaning guttets, re111fmber to keep your distance. Touching an overhead power line with
anything oould result in a serious or fatal injury. For a free safety booklet, giw; iJs a call.

1213t112Jtfn

BISSELL BUILDERS, .INC.

~~~~ .
Shoe~

PUBLICAtiON

and edge llnao.
Tho Ohio Deportmen I' of
Tranopoi'teUon hereby noU··
flee ell bidder• th1l It will
affirmatively lnaura that'ln
any co~lract entered Into
pureuent to thlo adver·
1111men~ minority buel-•
.,..,..,,,.. will be afforded
full ·or,portunlty to eybmll
bldo n reepenlt to thle
lnvlteUon and will not be "'
dlecrlmlnated agalnet on
the gtounda of rece, oolor,
or netlol!tL..!ulllln_ ln ~-~
conlldwaUon lor an award.
Minimum wage ratea for
thlo projacot heve been
predetarmlned • required · •
by law and ere HI lor1h In
.... 11111 , . . Ill. "The ...

omo. of iMo Qletrlcl Deputy

IHE BOOK
BARN

MEADOWS SHOE
LEATHER REPAIR

I

•===

(614) 992·5449

Fr• Elitlrnat•

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

985·4lll

I

.. ..
.. tn
ol":TranePIII'IaUan
and the

Delivered.

• Remove!
AMIMntlala commerdlll

FREE ESTIMATES

•

'lor oenter line•; .l•n• linn

$40.00 a Load

OWNER:

lL
:·

FerUIIzlrlg. Weeding, and
Seeding.
Shrub and Tree :rrtmming

992-3470

Rial Estate Glnlral

·'

HARDWOOD
Seasoned

CUSTOM SADDLES,
. . . .LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Quarterly and ...
Year-end Reports
.REASONABLE
RATES

-·FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
We Paint Mobile
Homes and
Aluminum Siding
Power Washing

HOWEU'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; Ill lERVICE

From Foundation
to Roof
Free Estimates,
Low Costa,
Work Gua111nteed
614-948-2335 or
614-!in-5010

Lawn~lng,

742·2328
Exp.
•.
Bl'LLLIT\ BO \RD
3
I~==='=~=·=~=~=Oh~.z~c·:!~ l~::::::::::::::~::==~====~~~ tfn
BULUnl BOIID DEADLINE
IISSILL &amp; lUilE
4:30 P. a DIY BEfORE
CONSTRUCTION ·
'b

•regardless of income
•regardless of grades
•pius $20k guaranteed loan1
•regardless of cred~
To collect your scholarship money
call 614·985-3556 ·
Open MQn.-Frl. 10-7 or Sal10-4
Vlu • Muter C•d
3112m

Shade River Saddle Shop

311/1 mo. pd.

'

Perry, VInton, Weehlnglon
Countlu, Ohio for
Improving oection ATif.SO.
4.07 on United S!Jotea Route
!10 and other v•louo routao
and eectlone .by applying
relro-reflectlve faat dry
pavamenl maildng material

.

w_-::;~ ·~·':" hal !llflre

Jeff Wkkeriltam

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

for all college bound students.

KEVIN'S LIWN
MAINtENANCE
' 949·2391 or
: 1·100·137·1460

"'" •

1041tulbenyAVI.

;

Monroe, Morg•n, Noble, ,

12·6-tln

..,.

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

((ClA991PIID NIB
IIJII'B to uat taauii_D)
.I

•

, I

LICENSED ond BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

lEI'S APPfiAIKE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561 '

SIZED UMESTONE

Ia ....... _ ... attend. •
(4)12, liD

Public Notice

•

992-6215

Pgmeroy, Ohio

PUBLIC NOTICE

=
I'
••

"

8:45p.m.
Spec:llol Early Bird
.$100 P•yoff
Thle ad gOad lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0061-32

36970 BaRRa• Road

Tho U.lga lhlropollten
Houllng Authority Board of ·
Dlraotcire will hold their
Annuli Meeting on April I 4,
111111n lhe c:-.dl Room at
II ~~bp ort Wlllge Hall, 237
Raoa It, Mil w part, Ohio.
Board meeting will begin
at 7:30 p.m. and the pubHc

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
. HOMESITES
HAUUNG: Umeetone,
Dirt, Gr8Vel and Coal

IN f'OMEROY

HAULING
SERVICE

J'W)IIc Notice

EAGLES
CLUB

All liliES
. .,... ..It In Or We

·SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992· ·
6637

Rt. 124 .

.

PONDS

MICROWAVE OVEI
aadYCI IIPAIR

Quality
$tone Co.

•il••
on
Runao.•OH

R&amp;C IICI¥111111
BULLDOZING''

EVERY THURSDAY

. p..,oy,Ohlo

Productaln Stock

3-4-83· 1 mo.

•=

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTIENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columltue, Ohio
March 26 '11113
Contract S.lal Legal Copy
•
• • No.13-307
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
NGH-OOON (21');
STP·FYI3{2)
Staled Proposal• will be
received at the office of the
director of the Ohio
Department of Tr.,•·
portatlon, Columbue,· Ohio,
unUI 10:00 a.m. Tuadly,
April 27, 18113 for
lmprov-•nta In: Ath-,
Gallla, Hooking, Melg•, .

CO.PLIMEIIIARY
FACIAL

·HAULING

..:

' lhetlla~·

•

Monda~April12,1993

·7

VantSalo

PonllfOJ,
Mlddl1pan

·

�..
a

Page

'

..

The Dally sentinel

Monday, Apr1112, 1993

Monday, April 12, 111G .

Public Selt
&amp;Auction

8

...

Pomeroy....:Ulddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

. KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wricht

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACIOIS
PHILLIP

ALDER
Renta s

4- I

52

•u ·

-•na
...,....w .............
...........

*...,.....,.·
A_,

-.

tn

.. 117$4

Rodney

soura

molllo DopcMII l Roterenco,
IJoU43.2tll Aller 4 P.ll.

Help Wanted

lNr
JNr

All real estate advertising In
this Mwapaper Is !IJbiOd to
tho Federal Fall Housing Act ·
of 1968 wlllch rnal&lt;os k Wagal
1o adYer11se •any preference,

' AVON' ALL AAEA818horo your

lht

Two bedroom SyracuM, 114.g~·llll
5pm,

lmlatlon or discrimination
based on race, color, Alllglon,
sex familial statuS or natk:H'II.I
ortgln, or any lnler:'JIIon 10

for Rent

-rf

adverttsemenls for,.., estate
. wNch Is In violation, ollha
Law. OUr readers are taereby
· l!lforma&lt;! lhat all dwehlngs
advertised In lhls newspaper
are available on~ equal
!'P!&gt;OftUnily bo~S.

1

.. ....,.

a

For. 4 y. . Old, • 4 Muol h llrd .... W

Old.

'='

Wlto llecMillr -::·

r:t

A lloko,
Atfwd To

-up.IE"

Pool And 2 11om~;
· a Adjlocont Aero• m11

.....

Awol~
.

llllm~dlately.

E=

1

=.- t-

c..,...,

for Sale

W.

Are Portlculorly lnl- In
Tho.. Whh I.Mdonohlp Ability
Who Aro l.ooldng Foo AllenulnO
. ca..., Opportunlly.

=

.•..,..

dollverad ond Ml up, oldrtlng
and . . . . 1-100-13Me25.

Wanfld to Do

call SIIYO GcMd Foo lni- Dozor rurd llolioorl work. by llio 1417e Rtdm1n, lwo bedroom,
Appolntmord Monday,
...... ..... fll4.i4Ut2S two loolhl, two dackl, 3114-182And Wodnooday Allf4.4414
2301 Of 104-TJ3.1182.
From 10:00 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M. ..... 14112..
OR Walk-In for lmn•dl&amp;telnt. .
11ft 141111 llobllo With
view At Tho Boot W - llolol, Ull Till! IIAVICE. '~ 81&lt;21 ExD&amp;ndo 1 hlh, 2 Bodo
. 918 Socond Avonuo, Qalllpolll, Tril1•1 ..... TrM Removal,
=-~~rai . Air, $10,000,114T~. EoU..,.tool I
Ohio.
3111'
Allor 4p.m.
.
Falrmonl Mobile Horne,
General illwn aare: · mowing, 1181
Mx70
...
2. lledroomo, 1 Both,
111dMtlna, 11c., fully II'IIUI'IMJ, El ... ,...,
Underponnlng. After
S P.M. 114-44114044.
On:rgM Port11* Slwmlll.r. don1 1181 Sky liM Holly Ridge ,.x70,
houiJ:: loao lo lho moll lull Ill elec, 2 bedt'OOIM, AJC,
...
'IS-1ll7.
cooliod pooch, kitchen lolond,
olonogo blda. undaiponnlng,

·-·1377.

like MW, 3C)4.175.24M.

Coli t-711·64lil Foo COlored
Brochuro on Now Cope Cod

, ...

'

.

--. ...... ...._
@~yen lmMiiora 304-721111111 "'

Conlury 21 Slio""'k AMIIy, 304INOliCII
717-1111,
·
OHIO YALLIY PUIIJIHINQ CO.
• A
f1 a I TriMI. IIIII yr1111 do bUal6- q ""• I oom, Ful BI&amp;IIMI'It, 2
nooo wllh ........ you
ond lotlio, 2 BoriHI; Worlc lltop,
NOr
tho W/Oorego, Crib. 114-441-2310.

::•'"i;.:

:.:..:.:::::=:--,..,..'::---:-I ~-!!. ~·~··~·-~._~=-==...;.=
-----

~· F• ~ .tlolrra.....

od

=.==a. =·.:.~

·

.tnl.... lflllbr&amp;llll
To Alr!IIJ

•. . . . . OppettWIIIjLnplujU

....

a 11a -.Calif.
I Bltwton NB
and NO

2 LN 11'•177' Eoch o n -

D!ht, 9ft - · 31, CHy lolooOI
Dlolrlct, P,- For lolh l.olo,
....,_, ,....., Mlcldlap o~. Ololo 1
-1.
.,... _ . curronlly
plocroill 11 Mlollllllood locotlcrrrO lorolnooo "' rooltlonllol 2 .ooroo
12,-. '"""'"" onty, 214 a AI. 2 front-. bot·
~-·
"AIItlon • ...,._ ar.....
pulollo woler. 1 ..... kU with
rppN¥MI Hptlo IYII-.n .....
..,. lottom
lilboOIVIolon.'
Clydollciweii,Jr. J04.171.23M.
Ch&amp;r01811&amp; Hill' • ·•- B11o1

= =-.. ._..:
I k J 1 11 loiloli 11Nit, Qol.
llpolo , . ,• ...., newl.onhcn

-............_,..............

, _ , , . -.... 1/lliolht,a.

- -

......

afNl

_ ... *iii
t

I

loiillv
,

•rt

1 or 2bdrm, MWIJ remad1Jed,

o.m a

Dot_... IUJ'llt.
001 IMd wr.- ...._ DINct From
Sloe~ ood

oa11 ~

64

1111111

33un

-+-+-I

.

2Mtll0

' ••

W~ATEVER

!lodP: ......:1

QwutO!ol, - .

WA5 IT

.•·:
0

NOT
MUCH FOR
SPORTS,
ARE YOU.

A GOOD

' 'I

··~t:::·

GAME?

I 6UE55 NOT .. BUT
SOMETIMES I 6ET .
LITTLE CURIOUS ...

DID A~D'(

~&lt;r.c::

I
'
V \

A HOLE· IN-ONE?
CELEBRITY CIPHER
'*1'*+•••
.......
ffom Cll .. 1 c •
fwnoul peopte, Pill ina~ ­
e.ctl ....... ln en.
...,. 1ar
roa.y-, '*'-'E..,.,.. w.

MARCIE ~

c.ICirttr ~

:!

w

c~pMr

·FRANK AND ERNEST

YM

-

Efflcloncy oportm.t!, llultooroy
Avenue, P - , IJ4.1t2-'NN.

56

BMP

F p

by

WTTMOWBP,

PM

D M F I D

. f"SK

PM

DMP

N U

WTPCJT

BOYI fO, lfUIG A

f,ff

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I can ttke anything bo4!, apathy In lhla buainen.
or .boo. but don'l iu!'' all lliore." - Jay Leno. ·

Either opplao od

c;out~T,Y.

111A1 DAILY

WOlD
tAM I

PUZZlll

"

::2.... -. ......

Pels for Sale

Fumw.d S Rooml I Bath,
Very Cloon, Wolor Pold, In Por·
lor Aru. 114-318-1000.

Fumlohod Elflcloroey, 7 112 Nell
Ave.
Galllpollo.
1110/Mo,
\IIUM'rtt Pold, 114 ~41 4411 Allor

Trd"loport.:t:on

Fumlahed

EHlu:lanc,

s.-111

.I

•

107

z ···-.. ~ Ap8rtrnent
.........,., 101 Loculi · -...:::-

W.._,
e,
AelltaorOI«
Furnlohod.
$221111o.
1110. Dopoell, · 311111.

Hpoll&amp;

I
·--ontlllultnour on .... at Paint ~ - .

.lor!"-

Aut, wv, ....~.("

.....

Colroa _ . , rillkt and K-40
movnotlo ........: Pold - ........ 1110, ...,

4 on&amp; t I J co;n 8DIU'tm.d8,
.... ,......,.. rent. ~

IIDU or 171-41011.

111111, IIW41-210 or IJ4.1112.
31'12.

Furnished

II

L A T E N y·

lllifid D=ba - •
Pr'olr- .......

Pt..-,

lehlppel'll,

2

........nllli&amp;,.

441

IOildor llluor, $150 aM-:JIII.Illl

WEL.L.1 1 eiEUe.le 11-1~~

Cco41o
w-- Old, IIWP-

-...
---........
1

Flolr Tonli, -

ful · 1no

loti

Cit ... Clood
Cor - - .... Cll Uor I

' Aft.

P.II.IJ4.4oilo.an

T........ ~
lilt, ltlnlo,
I

.

s

I~
•

ll'mnotsmartenoughto······.

I I I e
•

.

•

•

Complete .'he chuckle quoted
by f•llmg m the mrsslng words

~,J........i~,J........i~,J......J you develop from slop No. 3 below.

04

AN EVIL- Ft:JWEI&lt; OUT
"THERE .•.

WHO PU"re&gt; LL..W.P.5 .IN~
~MeAL- AND KN011!'&gt;
INM-f~~Ee.

78

tllnaldot

by - - . .

DMpooo
HN.Y Duly
- · -. , OT-320
Oreplrllo

•

Dolofllllllon, " - - . t14-

&amp;'
3421.
i"'fori:'"'.....,.._ WI tea

--w

Aloo'lfoll•-·- AU-..,.,..
Slooolna
· · · Aliocllp.m.
Call 111M' - 2:00 p.m.,
304·773-

•

Hond lod tootrr Cc ...... 140.
-It, *-4421.
..

..... _ , _... _ 1
Coli 1144117-0212 Aaor 3:10, I
W-Old.

Merch andise

5t

1

For-OnJrPr

Roome

.....

ft

AKC

wll-1250.1·:~-44~~·~=~=~=~
I'll

oport11R....,_
Vllloao - •304-417~-.
d,....,, gooc1 cond,
lolaont
l
Apart-•
1n lllddlotrort. F""" ...:....cc..::c:c:.:.::._____
**· Clill-aatt. 1011. Colroa 21 L'll) mololll Cl with

4S

People are always asking

. m_e for advice. I can come up
with some very sound advice
..--~---_.:::
·;.:...,for them. The problem is that
L.

· Chld"o Ftona~ ohopod

Oreolcouo lvlng. 1 ond 2 -

I

A·r I N G
4 ~
I
I
I
1
--1.-.L
. .....J.-.L
......... ~

A.._
OiiiiiiOIIo,
lhlrl Bllh Sill: Utlllloo Pold,
IIJ4.44a.44ll AIIM' 7 P.M.

For ..-. Itt. coffM table, aU&amp;f..

lonl condlllon, PO, 114-1112·
3111.
For Solo- Lodloo winter cool, luU
longlh. groy ·~ - " · 1roo
liMit
2421. dry ......... $30, · - ·

Household
Good I

II... lUI \'d. llolloloon Ctr·
polo, AI. 7llorlh, 1-.1'144.

ti.U ' WMk~Ia akahetvN

:; ASTRO·.GRAPH

lng 121.11; -~- Nt-L&amp;oro

And Clooore 1211 Oo ·llo.a
Wook: Colloo And · End With
Dooro 1111 ~j I' T - Wllh I

ctoon\:~~
~:
• urdly

Or 4 -

Pikt.

BERNICE
BEDE.OSOL

u.-

No Doro!roll On

-.:z.Own:

Hollolng ·-....

•....

U.YN£'8 FURHITI.iRE .

Contplola ....... . furnhriJI-.
Hourit: llor; lat. .... 114-4411!322.,

I -

roollolwory.

OUI IUiovllo fld.

~-_
tllrolna-

....
.- .'ea.-v
.,. ~

·-

- ·loll .•
II :.::!1: I ...... ......

~- .......

am!glll•......,.u..-..

....
•* '~ ... ~ .......
llfllntWIIOO.-Annt
0011111 ... -

(Sipl
dillnslanlly revealo which signs are romanli· ' agreements· between JOIIIncf your....cally ptrfiCI lor you. Mail S2 plus a long, . IQ!Iay as ,... ,tp~~y as !'Of"""· I
oelf·addressed, olamped envelope to lhtre's a cltance lhot 1 number ol smal
Miltchmakti, cJo litis newspaper, P.O. Box eaplosions mighleoupl.
4465; New Vorl&lt;, NY 10163. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 2 . -. 22) You miglit

TAUAUI (Aprll20-llly 201 There are indi· have 1 mort difficun -~~~~n ...... in
· cationS IDd8y lhal yOu mighl do aomelhirog ., keeping your wtwr•rlllo JOUtSIII I ...,.
lhat your bolter judgmenl warns you one irrila1et J011 todlly. A ol.......,.
~g~inal. Wyou do H anyway. ,..., might not
could irMit a WtJrCMtlllliOto.
eocape lht con~.
SAGITTAIIUS (Moor. »&gt;r 21) Yrolding
GEMINI (llay 21.:June · ~o) Be wary or 10 ex1rev1Q1nt lmpul- ;s root
jrwolving .youi1l811 IOdly In en ilnlfllllllll'il ..,..,.lodly, and illllitdi&lt;.., rot~'~- I
Jiri11
" · wllh friendl whlre money or aomelhlng lin,. Yol trill
else of significant value 11 al ltlkt. do.
.Someone mighl .come ~ on Ill! rohort end. CAPRICORN (o.ic.
11) F-.g
Olllte llfck.
.
.
·
11u11 wilt litUitiOtll or 1*1* iti..., 111 liD
. CANC!II (JUne 21...,. 22llmportlnl one- loday, borl Mlln1 10 &amp;IJIIoii..
• ICHllle "'*liortlhlfiS will requlro tiCiful hln·
Kttp lllilllh miild blltlol
.
dlirog IOday. B8 .. ooopll....... polllblo. . IIIIJOM .
Arnbilious opj1C1ive1 you esllblish for your· evon Wltoe Olhtr 91J'flln't.
AQUAAIUI (,_. ll Pal 11) 1J1U111r
~r ahead hlvt I good c:Ntneeol 'I LEO (July 21-Aut. Ul If ttuiblt, try to you•,. a JIIIIOII- •• 5 I sluau11
ol ·· rta~td . "'-""· btwora· try· · -klloniiOday. Co-worlcerlt or..._., ilia 1rtg1 in oe.a nl
t w . ....
ln!J•IO do more lhln you can comfortebly could· crealt more problema for you , dMfln!J wilt..._ But lllllllf,... llliFt ld
rnctiDI!· . '
.
.•
dlltroylrog anylhing blntflcial IItty !flight follow your bat* of "'" ... ,,...,..,. . .
AJ11U (Maoclt 21-Aprll1.1 'lltlrlo&amp; pol- -~~~ 0111&lt;:
.1
alblllly you might nol get lite IUPI!Orl for yiiCIO (Aug. D llpt. 221 Ill aeltctille In Fll Clil (M. ll • • Jlt In JOII' dtall
Wh~h you'yt betn hop.lng from othtre ~you pilei your l1lth, ttptCIIIIy II ol~ . . . iii-JIIUIIIiftl
IOdly. ·TtYmll to lon:t lho iiiUioould Nkt ,.,.ll'l.ltWdlng ~ ..-outc~t for you. A -~~~dell ... lllllllf. lla • . . . . _
mll)lera 'lOIII. lnll~td ol. faclllllllnOII. luit cltolcll
rnoriey.
you're an IMY M 1 • •1111111 ,....,

PIUio

0.. ... On'

to-you_,

~=~~===~~~~:!:--;;lln:d~-:il-.~Th~e~A~II:ro~·Graph Malchmakar

Start·

-·-

palt•••1ip •

aeltot:"

.

~

··~···· ~ .:'~
l.~s:;:.= .lri,..iieon.;:
.

AK

W 0 C K.

A L.OT TO
,U/1/

FIC!orJ. llol for" Pro111to On Her for ....
Ml l i l l _ l o n _ - - ..... 101111
I.Mmlng. No ...._, llo- - .

lloltct llluttob
lind
Avolllblo. Coli For III'OAJIA. ......
nitA
11011. :lfl3.711-m1, ElL 100L

F "N

8 y

~.

BMP

WTTMDWBP .

::::::-:::::-:-:::--:::~~~-=­

quit-~..

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Ill

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u. . . . . . . ..
"

•'

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..

.

I*...,..

-...,....._,..
"""',_.. ..... ""' • .., ·=,£"
-

110 ...... lntttt IIA I
1

illl . ~ T.lliil ~. Dnor,
'lfi
.. ~ . -.&amp;~·: .. .... ....... ~ Doltt •

.. ic':
)

.

.

l&lt;n:P~ .II! .kiOI&lt;~~~rau~

.

..

31 Canoput•••
32 Fllh lrlfl .

top.:·
!t

Hay lo Grain

Tcrya, Adull Cloll!l"g, lloo
C.biMI, Ylllon Clalw"" car..
E$TA~ 538 Jocloaon Pikt. nlnf1W1iro, I loll or Mlocl Coli
A.ll. 'Ill I P.M. 121
from
mo. W.lli 1o oholl 1 Abr
moviN. C.llt1t· 441 ~II. EOH.
Rood, Coli :IOI-f7lo

IEAimRIL APAATIIENlS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Lloldrog lor 2-4
ground,
Pou&amp;IOittflillddltJOrtlfM- •.
7,muolnotbe--.....
tl24124.

1

t:tow much does

IT SU!Pf GCHT.f

lulkllna •

Gold .... I&amp;U:oNCit • . .: • . , Clolt.e,

1o1 In Allrl To Lllte.
lpiM
Wiry. Lilt A - LI!J, 111,100, · - J04.I7I.IIII2.
114 • 1110- 1 P.•.
·

.

hD

Eul
Pus
Pus

.... .Pioli-Up, ..... lllltoft. .
._. Crib, . . - , 2· T - N ' :

1.01 .' .IIU
. . . . ._ . llll ..... fJ'I.

ni,iGiAcN~~,iiL~t,..,.

'31 HomnforS.Ie

s•

Nwlll

38 Parctlvtd by
touch
31 HtavJ club
--~-1 41 lllrrltd Wlllll"
·•n'o Utili
-+'--1
42
1110 - tung
44- rtvolr
48 - dtlrl

i,

pllo-o lumlohod, llundry
room locUMioo 1o ochool
In lown. AIIDI!cOilono mlloblo
ol: Vlllogo ·o.- Alllo. .., 01
coiii14-HZ-3711. EOH.
Apartmanl: lor I'Wll:, Aadne lf'N,
1112-em.

-

PM&amp;
PM&amp;

~.1

2bdrrrt. oj&gt;lo., lOIII -lrlc, op-

M:•low-

111-v.nd.

J;:_

~~

35 LOt1 &amp; ....
.. .
ruge

In Y- F.. onl lnock 11 Ac111 MIL Y - Land Wota;
111o 11,001 Wkly -.,.lol, /EIIc Avolloblo, Ooorgoo CNok
..-llll-1111.
Rood, 114,001 Firm. ,.......,
0121.

.......,..... ~

K"""' . .

-

~ 414,
lUi!'
,.
.,.

........... .lltlhl•, VI'M FURNITURE AND APPUANCIS
·
poo111rw, '10 crop, email 114441 448 OR IJ4.441..3111 .
11111m. IMorllflll 1onc1 ·SII,OOO. linn.. Aoli' lor E m - Contor'o· 1141 Or.

--;,:.;.;,~.;..;:..--

'e6onallem 1e ' r rr II And
· Cornponoolod-AIIIISolorJ Arwl :ll!tntlo 01

llont
' 2 Of
grandPMtnlo
3 Wlrt mtuurt"

ontctr

11 s.l~rlll lllip
13 Rtlkltd
16 Slcrtd 1111111
11 PIIJWtllht
Dlwldzo lntllldtd
22 II"' quiet
23. RIIIIOmola.t urt
from
25 Cartmonleo
28 W1ya ol
Wilking
28 NIWJerMY .
unlvtrllty
211PrtMr¥td
phlr.oh
30 Worllar In 1

a Greek urn?

112 -

Buslnelti
Opportunny

=

1 lloltltd

27 Aom1n ro1d

10 NIYtl peHy

4 llyMII
5 Armorbtarer
6 Pllll IUbWIY
7 ll1rglrlna

b12 Corpot 140. All Vlnyt · In

33 Farms for Sale

Fmanc1al

ALL YORE

WY~71o2541.

::::r:.lrt~es:~.r::

.31114434 ollklor Mlko.

.'/::': ' :·lnV.:

DOWN

35Dr-

··-

It

tor mora lnwrnauon,

l~M GLAOYOU
.SRUNG THAT
LOWEEZY

.--~-­
. . . --loOI,-114-

on :114 ..,., '!lr•

1112-111711.
Muol IOCI'Iflco, 1113 141111 Rod·
rn.n wMh I r-r warranty, an.

· ·

11

I J Q p

2 bedroom opt, Odlpollo Forry,

W: Toke Tradaolno.

bedrovm, .,.... worunop,
fruit tre•, ciD&amp;III to town, 114-

Gtlllpollo ArM
If You're lnlorooiMI In WOrlolrit
For Tho Nadonol -.lnduolij
IMdar. Krroort ,..... \'- Ill•
porlloo To "-"lio 'TirO · White Aftlllng ' And
(:ouioM!Ing Pa-L

C

43 Anmlel
45 PtttOI
47 Dtllriorllto
48 ltd COYir
.

-~
-

73 Va,. lo 4 WD..

..nnloo lneludod. dopooM ,..
~'1'131 w 1175o

lormollon on Now 11 Wide.

'II'

20 IIOlhtr ol
21 ~Pao
_, ht~~
22 Nloo
•I ..,.
CIIIOOII
· chlractar
23 Ltt'llllktl

............... .,... aMI;;.

.-,awn.,...
. ,. .

-1
.
IU'I,....,.wv.
Coli J.I00-711-141'1 For Mon ln-

- . home

·WASHIN'?

1la Clwuu lal ~ ._..;~

cjulrad,

.,.

-

TWO
SOLID
WEEKS

lotdL lltoit or tong; Nio nrol.t,

dlohw-. , .... ~. porchl
WHI
eel A-forundorplnnlng.
morolh.
Stortt:z ori12D!mo. Ooltlollolot.
whiWWIIIiooO
a.a
··-·
304·77:1!1141, 3GW82·3331. '

:.:::...:IPH.liiiiw:iiST___I

-

171

.....,...._

bedroom good locollon,
101 Sllllli ~ lloln St. Newly
l'lln:ad&amp;lld wfMw ~

1810, Mxllt, 3bdrm., 2 batb,

t.--

-For .... tnrolr,per,l1tl..... '

7P.II.

1112.17 por - h Including •••
rnorrllio froo lol ronl, , _ 14a70,

18

Uvlllock

old~lng,

1

HILLTOP IECW910H
·MOO Squono FMI Conlempary
Horne on 11:1 Acroo ..,. With

• 4 la*'oom Hama On 4 Aa•
With Zb121 Porty A_,
AU Of Tho AboVe Wllhln 3 Mil•
or Rio Grande • Conloct lUI
Connol AI: Domo lumrnora
A- For Mort lnlormotlan At:
Delivery P....on· JWireha ......... .,,.....,onca...ne, t14-3M-Gal.
Worlltr, CllauHour LlcfnM , . ....- o 1 n l lo:
qulntd. Apply AI: Sporl&amp;le 11+110, PO lox 304, Pl. Alverlronl
Tho 'llowl lrnSulllllr Co. !1311 Strole - · 141. PI
nt, wv 21110. 'Tiptilun- .....,.... 3 •~._2 1011oo,
Goitlpollo, lloncloy Tl'l\l Frldey, noo be ...- .
Plllo A-, Hoot "'""PI 2
8 A.M. To 5 P.M.
()onogoo. llony . . _ Elllro o 4
WI"I.L PAY 'IOU .To Typo No- IIUoo South 01 E-o 177111
Due To ComponJ Prorrooilone. Allrl ., '
'""" Hornel Stolo Aouto ~ $11,100. SJWIJI.
·-· Th- ·
Opoillr9 .-.ooPer-.CIII1-- nn.
Now Exlol For
In TN ~,: M~~· Or
Rodney AIM, 3 lldnoorn
" Loc:tol Drench Of A l.lorae 0.. -~ · ' oo.
ontzollon. H You Ani loloolorl,
:
•-~ Ronch, F-~ A=, lolond In
OU YJIII h Qhron , _ - k t ookiWIY, N.AuroN, 10142. · KM-,1145. .
Of Clauroono ~ W. W-: rrooner1 Spring 'lallty Aroo, Ooil Dtlvo,
Job praponllcin B.itcll-a ledraouna 1 112 Bathe,
'Provide Com~ COrropeny Fill olglll Bonelha. o .........,_ ' - T o,
nonllodlllonal
NJ, Ooo Heol, Full
Slort. All Pr_._ Ani 1 - .
- . , (IJNOWI,
-mont. A...,Uy Rornodolorl
On Morll Not Sonlorfty.
T h - . Prlco: 114,100,114~1.
.
To Be AccopiOd. You A 1o1
Bus
Inns
Pleasant ~~Amblllouo,
Eager lo Ool ........, looodoblo,
Ti'llnlng
32 Mobile Homes
21 Yoars Of Ago 0. Oldor W
FrH To Start

. . ...:

:=.~,., ~

Apartment .
for Rent ·

31

¥we•=••I
-

- I l o g - or wtllrldo
lor 314 ... 4WO Wok of .....

clellverad ond Ml::f: for l118m0.
can 1or 1n1ormo1 on. IJ4.38&amp;1121111ifor-

A Lady

Arllll nndad
mlII, ...,II dI d
...,.
-.....
lor
Mrnllna
.
- I TV
· Wodn~oy AprH 14111, bMw-. _,_.....
C11£Ar::!j
9-12.
--·-~-.. or .
,
carponm To Ropolr Oldor lho of 1 - • box.
Home, f14.441..oe21.
.
Rei,..,,._, JOU .,. try!ng to
0111 I ........ -'IOU. Tope 2

P•--Per-•

63

Ollftraotno ..... _ _

2nd

A Non- ~:~Ill A....,;, And~=:
amoUr, 8.........,1110, L.-w 01
::,: ~we Ratll'll.ncut
. Moougo.
Coli
l'or ...._low.
Bart.ndll'. ~ onlrt ....._.,
to
. - ......
••, ol • - ....,...,....._.,
only.
PleiM

Whr

..

_1:-:-:00=P,ll:=,,::-::==-;:-;::::-::::::::-llooo_,. To ll!tY -

iiob)'l-- 1n 11y - .

·;.-ntsaoo.e-.
.,.
..1

a,..,~

w.';'A. ~~2. Hurrllng, sii;ooo,
114-

~·~·=·~·;~l:~c."': a:;;J:Nr~u
~
n •Ohio"""·

furnlolotd, 2 or 3bdrm., for ronl
In Country lloblll Pork.
drYot, olr._t2381 - . , 11W82·
21&amp;~ 1M -~ .1227.
2 bedrOom rnololll 1210.
month ..... • goo ;.iid. Sll-2434 or m.P71..
Two bed"'""' trailer for rwrl,
PlY ronl whtlt ""' otn
own o 1111 14170 Rodmon -

111Ac.48oclnlom- A..ol

':-1ana~lnc:l

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

114-IMIU031.

31 Homn for Sale
Shltley ; -

WHO'S DOIN'

e::.:~;u \=i

Country Soiling: 14110 3 ,_,., 2 111111; Anlloblllot 01
lloy, 114471-2114,

T h i s - will not
knowingly aocepl

................ Ill .......

YlP-·ELVINEY'S
BEEN GONE FER

42 Mobile Homu

lmlation or dfscr1mlnallon:

ref reQUired.

In

lfter

.

make any sudl pratarenca,

~~~~~'=.I

40Yoi.IIIUIUII
41 CIYII ~r
•

v.J.ralllr:: Nt!iU.....

~

Help Wanted

llmt whh .... You'l company. 1.-1112 a1111.

Aomen

za Actor Clry

+u

~7'4785

12
14
Bltttop'fl'
· 15 hetddr•
17Giy01e
lllllf.l
18

Dealer-~

Employment Serv1ces

11

.......

dopoell -"'"" .,..

daya,

=
,_.,Is

Cuglt

24 EIIWII

+AJ5S
9QUS

3bdrm. In
tuUidlchon,cooparl,

Top Pold: All Old U.8.
Colne,
Coins, GOld AlnP. Gold CoiM. II.T.S. Coin 8llop,
151 - - . . . . Ollllpoh.

34 ElllfiiOJtd
35 Golf lhotl
35Aplece
37
(11*.1
35
31 1,051,

11 ()pp. o 111111 • 4 2

EASt .
•QtU
9AJ2 .

Qol.

llpol'!, Ohio. 01181- Plrlllng,
h - . DopoeM I A.....nco.
t14-2M-1121• .
7

11

r:.. . _
i....1

tK.QU
+KQUS2 .

belh -""AI. :na,

I~ F1n1 Avti!I'IO,

6-IZ-4

+J

.WO&lt;k-~

'""' ' "' ..-.30U71--.
o..-.,..
..............
a,_ •

_..

. lumlllft, - · _ . . , . ..

belli,- 1o

Zl Chor.,
COfiii)OIItlon
31 l.eM nolty

E~
:;,o:.

IWAIII
AUC1IOH I. RIRNI1\IIIE. 12
Ollft II., Gollpollo. I. IMN

41 Houses for Rent

21! DOwnpoUr

1 p...a•o ..,,
-r• Covered Willi
velnty

u.

.. ,

ooulcl•,...,
\\

,._ ... ~ .... \

.

..

.,

'

�•

..

''
Pomeroy......Uiddleport, Ohio

Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

-

Ohio Lottery

Dorothy Smith presents Wildwood program
ciatioli of Garden Clubs spring .
regional meeting will be April24 at
the Holiday Inn in Galli~lis. The
afternoon program wtll be an
arranging demonstration, "East
Meets Westt which will compare
oriental and American designs by
Myrna Cordray.
For the program Dorothy Smith
read "When Easter Lilies Bloom."
Easter poems were read by other·
members and residents were asked

,

••

- ' '&gt;-1•.

Members of the Wildwood Gar- ·
den Club met recently with residents o( Ov~broolc Center in Middleport.
..
.
Kathryn Miller presided at the
meeting which opened with the
club creed in unison.
For devotions, Betty Milhoan
announced the spring board meeting on April 17 at Chester United
Methodist Church at noon with a
potluck luncheon. The Ohio Asso-

-

'

Reds
lose fifth
game 5-4

their favorite flowers.
Favors a_ndJ!.Qlted marigolds ·
from Mary Rqse's greenhouse was
given to everyone present.
Betty Milhoan presented a red
rose to Ada Holter, an honorary
member.
The club will tour the Riverview
Farm Herbs, Route 338, Racine,
and Rose's Greenhouse, Bashall,
on April 17.

.Pick J:
648
Pick 4:

0753

-

lAM •1DDJ&amp;ht In mld-48L Rllln.
Wedllesdly, lbowen, bla~ In
Blld~

Riffle inducted into honot society GretaL. Riffle, daughter of Cur- •· uo.n as a Robert 0. Chollar
tis and Sharon Holter Riffie, Eagle Research Associate at the Keuering
Ridge Road, Racine, has been · Fou11dation at Dayton.
inducted into the Golden Key
The graduate committee of the
National Honors Society at Ohio department of political science
University where she is ·a senior in awarded her wit!) full tuition scbolthe Honors College. She will grad- ~ip for 1993-94 ~!c year.
uate in June with a B.A. in Political This award pays for her tu111011 cost
Science in only three years.
f~ fall, ~~ and SJIC!.ng quarters
The society has a lifetime mem- wuh ~1bJii~ of g~g a gradubership. by invitation only and is ate ~iate~lup which would .also
limited to the top 15 percent of provide a stJpe~. The com_m1ttee
juniors and seniors enrolled at the was favorably Impressed WI'!J her
university.
·
records and recommendauons,
Miss Riffle was accepted inio according .to Michael Mumper,
graduate school in the department Ph.D., charrman of the graduate
of political Science at Ohio Univer- committee of the political science
sity starting in September.
deparllllent
In March she was recommended
In June and July of 1992 she
po~;sible candidate f&lt;x' a
teceived the Governor's Honors

Internship at the Department of
Ohio EPA in the director's offiCe.

She is active with area youth
organizations. As a 4-H leader and
bethel guatdian of lnternationpl
Order of Job's Daughters No. 62,
Middleport, she is aJsg a member
of the Daughters of America Coun·
cil No. 323, Chester. She has
received several scholarships from
the above organizations. .
She is employed at C&amp;E Hardware in Athens where she has
worlced for the 'past two years.
·
She graduated from Easteni
High School in 1990 and was valedictorian of her class. She altellded
4-H Ciub Congress in Chicago, Dl.,
· 4-H Forum at Chevy Chase, Md.,
Ohio 4-H Club Congress at Ohio
State University in Columbus, and
Meigs County Junior Fair Queen
and Outstanding Meigs County 4-H
Girl in 1989.

TIFFANY ARIX

Arix celebrates
third birthdav

Tiffany Arix, daughtef of Candy
Arix, and the late David Arix,
rectntly celebrated her third birthday at the home of her great-grandparents, Jake and Doris Gillispie.
The theme of the party was
'" l!amey."
· ·
w.
· Cake and ice cream were served
to: maternal grandpatenis, Junior
and Patty Gillispie, Trisha and Katrina Russell, Teresa and Hatold
Gibbs and Stacey Gillispie.
Others presenting gifts were
Guy Harper, David Russell, Patn
and Andy Grimm, Leona Jones and
paternal grandmother, Jellie Arix.

'

'.

EMPLOYEE
oamed as April Employee rl tbe Mouth
OverbrGOk Center iD
Middleport. She wa clloeen by ber peen
her dedlcaliOD and
service to tbe residents and tbe facUlty. She 11M been in the nvsiDg
departmnet at Ove.rbrook u a ilursln1 as&amp;l,stant since June or
'1991. Sbe resides with her huslland, Charles, and ber tlauabter,
Bethuy. ,

Vol. 43, No. 243
:Copyrighted 1983

ers,

Surprise

'

Important information should not be overlooked
Dear .U. l«rden: I W/fY
much iiiiiCI ned io !be lealn Uoul
cirtiamcisioa in a r=nt column In

addition to the benefits of
circumcision dilcusiied 'in thole
letters, tbele is anodlc:r lldvintqe
that should be noted by your
reader$.

Studies over !be put several yars

have shown that women whose
sexual partners have been
circumcised liCIId to have a lower
incidence of cervical cancer,a well
as lower natea of acute and chronic
infections. This impcrtant information should not be overlooked. No
name plcaae. Just -- QLD DOC IN
KEN'IUCKY
!;&gt;EAR DOC: Several ,•young
Does" wrote to point out !be same
thing. The following leuiCr sbould
be of interest to the parents of
boys:
Dear Ana Laaderi: Please,
please urge your readers to
circumcise their sons at birth. We
didn'L

Some say it is "barbaric: and
IIDI'C( H •ry." I suppon the other
snq!, however.
Gem or !be Day: Accept lbe fi!Ct
that lllything WUib doing is going
10 take looger !ban yoil think.
Wlle11 pltiMUtg a Mddillg, who .
ptzyt for wltat? Wllo &amp;tDNU wltlre?
'TM AM LaNlu&amp;Gultkfor Brides"
and .
lw all tire lill.rWtl"3". Serttl a iel/..fllllbe only two iD their entire gym ct.ss druxd, iollg, biiSinw-Jiu envelope
who had not been &lt;:ircumciJecl, IIIII 111111 a cltect or mot&amp;ey order for
the Olher guys tbnoi&amp;bl lbey W!IIC $3.65 (tllis iiiCIIIIUs posttJge and
flats. He begged us to have the IIartdlillg) to: Brides, clo AM Lall·
circumcision done, IDd we did. It des, P.O. Bo:r 11562. Chicago. Ill.
· wu a ~ Jllillful opcrllioa. aad be 60611-0562. (/11 Canada. se11d
WUIDII)'wilb usloriC1Ialll ~ $4.45.)
.
berll!IC we dida't have it t1ooc when
be- .. infaDt.
I bopc :ro8 wiD pila Ibis Ieaer
and 8pll"e other J*alll (Ia weD ..
their 11111) whit we went lbrouabThant you. -- HELL IN

Ann

Landers

MASSACHUSETr.i
. DEAR HElL: You spoke r« a
great many people today -espec:illly die IMICiicWDCilecl males

A surprise graduation ilnd pizza
party was held ~h 29 in ~onor
of Fred Thompson by Marty and
Debbie Morarity at D&amp;M Pizza in
Syracuse.
STUDENTS OF THE MONTH - The student of the mouth
Thompson graduated from
assembly was beld recendy at Tuppers Plains Elementary. Thole
Hocking College on March 19 with
bonored were, l·r, front, Thomas SimmoDS, second grade, R;rau
a 3.8 av~ge overall.
Kidder, first grade, Nathan FoltJ, kindergarten I, Sarab Y01t,
Refreshments of pizza, pop,
kindergarten II. Back, Amanda Upton, rtrth grade, Michelle •·
cake and ice cream were served.
O'Nail,,fourth lll'ade, Tommy, Coram, sixth Fade, and Michael
Attenlling were Marcy, Karyn
·
~·
and Matt Thompson, Racine; Bob . Bennett, third grade.
and Alice Thompson, Pomeroy;
'
Many and Tonya Meadows, Panland; George and Dale Thompson,
Pomeroy; Paul, Linda, Jeff and
Brian T. Hoffman, $on of Joan
Missy Darnell, Pomeroy; Tom, and Oeor~e· Hoffman, Riverview
Terri, Todd and Tara Hawley, {'lace, Middleport. has recenttr
Pomeroy; Dave and Tina Neigler, been accepted for admission at
Racine; Bill, Ramora, Rayan and Catnpbellsville College in CatnpBilly Young, Pomeroy; Scott Hill, . beltsville, Ky., for the fall quarter
Racine; Mary B)'er, Syracuse; of 1993.
.
Jamey Nelson, Racine; Marty,
He recently received word from
Debbie and Brittany Morarity, the college that he has been awardRacine.
ed a $500 per academic y&amp;ir Performance Grant Scholarship for his
potential in art that his portfolio
· Compiled by:
work showed during a recent visit
Emmogene Hamilton
to the college.
Recorder, Meigs County, Obio
Hoffman wasCollege
alsO recruited
by I'~~~~~~~~~~
signing his
Joyce M. Parsons White, Carroll Campbellsville
Henry White, parcels, to Edna G. commitment certificate and will ·
become a member of the Fighting
.
·Parsons, Antiquity; .
Elizabeth L. Upton, Tracts, to Tiger Football incoming class of
~
Scott V. Upton, Cheryl M. Man- 1993. Head football cQach Ron
sky, Olive.
Finley stated in his recent letter 10
'
Arthur Robert Duckworth, Vir- Hoffman that "we are looking forginia Rhonda Duckworth, parcel, to ward to you being an integral part
111 Second St" P011ero~
'Robert Wa~ Duckworth, Angela of our football and campus family
Ann Duckworth, Midd. Viii.
during 1993:
Arthur Robert Duckworth, Vii- ·
· Hoffman is a senior at Mei~s
AGENTS SERVING
ginia Rhoda Duckworth, parcel, 10 High School and plans to major 10
Robert Wayne Duckworth, Roberta art education and minor in physical
Ann Rodehaver, Midd. Viii.
eclucation or Sports medici~ ..,
SIHCI 1868
' Lucille F. Clay. parcel, io
•
I
l.Jewey F. Smith, Jr, Ches~.
, Ernest Imboden, Wanda Imboden, Lot 284, to Pamtita l)nboden,
Pom·. Vill.
·
' William Kennedy Fatnily dba,
Red Hill Fatms, A. Partnership,
11
parcels, to Christopher D. Young,
Elaine K. Young, Scipio.
Dr. James P. Conde, Inc., James
P. Conde, parcel, to Davenport and
Tap Associates, Midd. Viii.
Robert R. Benoit; Dorothy
Benoit, parcels, to Dan Roniuno,
Sue Romuno, Scipio.
James Stump, Carol Rose .
Stump, Lot II 26S, to Annette D.
••
Tucker, Pom. Viii.
_618 E. Main St. • Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Starling Mossar, Soridra
Mossar, parcels, to Starling
992-6674
Mossar, Sondra Mossar, Orange
and Chester.
Haura: 8:00..:00 Mondey·Frlday; Saturday 11:0().6:00

Hoffman·campbellsville bound '

GRETAL. RIFFLE

Property transfers

DOWNING CIILDS .
MULLEN MUSSER

INSUUNCE

YOUR INDE"NDEI
MEIGS COUm

Dfl you pay for. dtlld c11re•••or for

flte c11re of dlsa61ed dependent1

When OlD" son was 13 years old, who · get n:c:urrent urinary triCI
he sat my husband and me down infections and .e ptlling orr lbe
and informed us that we had been . p•mlurc bee•• lbey dlatd lbe
Gold fever
very unfair to him because we failed
(Jilin or llllll!'Y,· '"'. .
In 1857, gold was discovered in lhe
10 have him ciicumcised. He then
I should !elf yi:ill lhar·not··all ··· Pike's Peak area of Colorado· ili 1858,
told us he was ·very embanassed authoriliel applaud &lt;:ircwnc:ision. it was found in Cherry Creek; Denver.
About 100,000 hopeful people traveled
west, but half of these never made it
to the pld-rich regions. Instead, they
settled in Denver, which had become
a city complete with a circulating liCommunity Calendar items
pressure clinic at town house from brary, debate club and theater.
appear two days before an event 10 a.m. to noon. Lunch will be
and the day or that event. Items
served for members after. All weimust be received well in advance come.
INC.--~-··
to assure publication in the cai·e.ndar.
CHESTER - Pomeroy OES
•Ear, Nose &amp; · Throat •Allergy •Hearing Aids
pracLicing for inspection at 6:30
.· •Head &amp; Neck Surgery
·
MONDAY
p.m. at Chester Masonic Temple.
QUAUTY CARE FOR YOUR FAMILY
LONG BOTTOM - Cemetery OfQcers urged to attend.
clean-up will begin in Olive Township on Monday. Anyone wishing
POMEROY - ·Ohio Eta Phi
LQ keep flowers should h;lve them · Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
removed by that time.
will. eat at The Olive Garden in
Medicare &amp; UMWA Asalpments Accepted
Parkersburg, W.Va. Meet at
CHESHIRE - Women Alive Pomeroy parking lot 5:15 p.m.
Suite 112 Valley Drive,
Pt. Pleaaant,
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Notify Becky Triplett if planning to
'
Kr.ger Creek Club House. There attend.
w1ll be a devoLional speaker and
craft demonstrator. Refreshments
IN CONCERT
RUTLAND • Rutland PTO
will be a soup bar.
AT THE
meeting 7 p.m. First grade will
have
a
program.
POMEROY - The DA V and
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Monday
REEDSVILLE • Revival
at 7 p.m. at the DAV Hall, -12:4
CIVIC CENTER.
Lhrough
Sunday at Fellowship
Buuemut Avenue, Pomeroy.
'Church of the Nazarene starting 7
POMEROY , Pomeroy Elemen~ p.m nightly. Rev. David Myen,
wy PTO will meet Monday a! 7 ~r, special Singing nightly.
p.m. in the school gym; The third Rev, John W. Pol!gliS in riteS the
·'
grade classes will be present the public. .
ciw:lr• (18 • u.w&gt;-M
program. Everyone welcome:
'2 II
••
WEDNESDAY
,
Al'llleDIII .......
MIDDLEPORT- Amateur
PURLfNGHAM • The Bedford
Tlc~a available at the lhlga County Chamber Offtc•,
Gardeners
Club meeting 7· p.m. at
Township Trustees will meet Moo- .
Quality Print Shop In MlddJ.pol't and Fruth Pharmacy In
day at 7 p.m. at th~ 10\YDhaiL
. P.resbyterlan Church with Mrs.
-.
Edward Burlten as hostess. Oirdcn
Middleport, GalllpoUe and Pl. Pllllunt.
·
movie
10
be
shown
by
Ruth
Pow.
TUESDAY
• ·
by Rutland Vllatie and
'
HARRISONVILLE • - Har- ers, Meigs County Public ~brary
C:hllmber ot Commerce
.fisonville Se.ilior Citizens bl()od librarian .

-Community Calend~.....:

..

JOHN WADE, M.D.,-

.,

'

.

SAT., APRIL 1.7
8:00P.M.

'

.,

f•

. By CHARLENE u ·OEFLICH
holding public meetings, and
Sentinel News Starr ·
handling volumes of paper work.
.· Middlepon's downtown revitalIt was decided that the village
· ization project .was not funded by . wil~ apply for revitalization funds
, the Ohio Departme11t of Develop- ag&amp;ln next year.
.
men!, it was reported at Monday
Meanwhile, Trussell suggested
·night's meeting of Middlepott Vii- ~ ·long-range planning and strate.lage Council.
·
gtes for development of the down. Maytt Fred Hoffman read a let- town area might be beneficial when
·tet from that agency advising that applying for .the ~nt next year.
the project did not rank high She felt that the h1gh vaca11cy of
· enough 10 be funded. ,.The village buil~gs in to':"" was a deterrent to
. -bad applied for $212,000 to restore getbng the proJect funded.
.the downtowl! section.
·
Other Projects
At last night's meeting disap- . Plans were made to apply next
pointment was expressed by village month for a housing rehabilitation
.officials as well as Jean Trussell, grant from the Ohio DepartmeRI of
housins lll!d grant specialist, who Development and the necessary
~ worlced _for lll!lnths :0~ the pro. resolutions were passed at the
ICC!, confemng with building own- meeting.

.

' Effedive April 1993~
our~ oftice hours in Middleport will ·be:

...........

IIOMMf;..1111J111My
~

,

By JAMES PRICHARD '
not heard the voice, but confirmed
Associaled Press Writer
that inmates had rigged some kind
LUCAS VILLE
Talks · of loudspeaker system.
~ between state negotiators and prisThe rest of the 1,819 prisoners
oners who took over a cellblock at housed at the prison were confined
: Ohio's maximum. security prison to cells away from the affected
: nicked up as the standoff entered atea. ,
• fts third day.
.
David Morris, a _department
Aboul 4SP..J1risonen ~~ t.!!£.. spokesman, sa1d the eaght hostag.es
SouthemOJiio·correc'tioi;i"Facili· - na..~~'Jl seen by a pi'iscin' enfploy:
ty kept eight guards as hostages ee Monday and were reponed to lle
today while negotiating a list of in good condi~on.
'
demands presented to state offiState officials had no comment
cials. Six mmates died after a riot on the progress of the negotia~ons.
. Sunday at the prison, about 70 . "We are still in contact w!!h t1!e
miles south· of Columbus.
mmates but not as regolarly, srud
Piison officials said there were Ms. Kornegay. She declined to
more discussions with the rebel- elaborate. ·
·
lious prisoners this morning, but
Aut~orities sa_id Lhey ~ad not
convicts found a way to let determmed a mouve for eJthef the
reporters outside the compound takeover or the sla~ings.
.
know they were unhappy with the
_Department Director Re~m~ld
negotiations.
y.'!lkms~n there was confhcu~g
The convicts rigged a loud- mformauon about whether the not
speaker and announced from ·a cell- may have been racially motivated.
b1ock window that they were not All six dead prisoners were white, ·
satisfied with the negotiations. ·
but sorne o( ihe injured priso~ers
"I'm telling you that you got were black. One of the e1ght
problems. They can give us what hostages is black and the others are
we ask for. It's well within our white, Ms.Komegay ~aid.
·
rights. Then you will have someone
·:certainly il coul~ be r~ially
back •• the voice over the loud- mouvaLed, but there IS also mforspeaker said. "Why don't they ' mation to presume that it may not
want 10 do this?"
be the case,'.' Wilkinson said,
Sbarron
Kornegay,
a declining 10 elabomte.
spokeswoman for the Ohio Depan· Dozens of reporters and photog-

~entofcorrectioils. said she had. rap~cov~ngthestandoffwete

IIIIMY

1:50a.&amp;ll5p.&amp;

,

&amp;\'IUIIMY

1:50a.&amp;IDUp.&amp;

•

brte• s-.---.,

,· .

I

H '

Fireff&amp;hters of the Middleport Vluntecr Firo DeJ!arlment
• reapoiided 10 Hall Monday anlllnd I: IS p.m. 10 a mobile honle ·
occupied by Lila BoUn on Roush Lane, Cbelhire.
.• . .
ACeordiaa to I In depllnmenl spc;Ik•man, a blower motor overheated Ud dama&amp;o!llho lllilcr'a fUJ11111:e. No liD WBil r1f11M1 and
~- Ofi ICCIIO f« iboitl-4 minuiDI
·
Ten flrefiahten and t11ree velliclet responded. The trailof !I
owned by Beuy !&gt;fercer.

M1111DAY

..
4

••
•

.

.

. ., , .

.

SIXTH VICTIM • The body of the slxtb
prisoner killed at a riot at the Southern Obio
Corteclioual Facility at- Lucasville is removed

. Monday. Inaates rioted Su•da;r artern- at
the priso• illi SoutiMrn Ohio, lakin&amp; guards
bostsge aDd ldUina otiJer inmates. (AP)

Commissioners OK annexation request
By Kathryn Crow
· ley, Jim Clifford, and An Wi•er
Sentinel Correspondent
who operate as Water's Edge
A petition 10 annex 5.58 acres of Apailments, LID.
the Lawrence G~er property into
According to· Bailey, theJe will
the village of Syra~use 'has been' be 20 one-bedroom units, two of
approved by the Meigs County whiCh will be equipped f« bandi·
·commissioners, Greg Bailey capped. Bailey expl8ined that tlle
reported to S~cuse Village Coun- apartments will be pllced on 1.59 ·
cifMonday rught.
acres in a single story brick struc. The propeny will be owned by ture. Each apartment will include a
Water's Edge Apattments, LTD. · living room-dinin11 room combinaElderly housing apartments wiD be tion, kitchen, bath and bedroom. .
constructed.on the site, Bailey said.
The entire area will be paved
The propeny is owned by Bai- · and have concrete sidewalks. They

•''

'·
••

will 'be serviced with water, .·
sewage, rue and police protection ..
by the villa&amp;e. There will be a ~n- ,
trally located laundry lfld commu·
nity offiCe. The maJIII&amp;er will main- •.,,,
lain the buildiag and the Sllfl'OIIIId·
ing area of !he buildiq wbitll will ·,,
haveaccessoffRoute 124.
:· .
Bailey stated that cOnSirllction &lt;,. · · ·
should get underway early this fall, ~ ; ·. ,
and that it will take .five to six !.
months 10 complete.
~- •,
Mauger Hired
Continued oa page 3

Announce theme for Child Abuse Prevention Month (,
~~\

CUOI! ,..

MVF.'D ~.-es:ponds to c.heshire Jh•e

8a.a.to.Up.a

moved about 200 yards from posilions near the prisori's main
enll'!lllCC early lllday. • .
Sgt John Born of the State
Highway Patrol said offiCials wanted the media out of the prisoners'
line of sight becaUse reporters had
become a "factor". in ncgotiations. ·
. Late Monda)' afternoon, Jl!is«&gt;n·
ers hLlllg:Slieeifou1'wlnifOWs Oldie
cellblock. .One s~eet said, ·'We
want to tallc to ,the FBI." Another
said, "The state is not negotiating."
Ms. Kornegay said FBI agents
were at the prison but were not piu-ticil&gt;ating in the neJotiations.
Wilkinson said a fight that
broke out just before the distur- ·
bance began about 3:15p.m. on
Sunday apparently was not sp&lt;)ntaneous.
.
"It appears as if there was a
staged fight," Willdnson said, and
of~c;eTho ~ere calhled to breakral
h it up.
at s w en seve
ostages
were taken. But a number of offi- ·
cers1also were able' to break away
from that situation;•' WilkinSon
sl!id.
Officials cut off electricity and
water to the cellblock, and refused
to deliver food. Prisoners were last
fed at abouttorednoon Sun~}.:.b}ltthethe.Y
may have 5
some '""" 10 If
.
Contiaued 011 page 3

Prot'

Oranae Town8bip TrusiCCI will meet in a special session Thurs-

.

IIIDAY

man, cleric-treasurer.

"Because Childhood Lasts 8 a store or home. Run to the nearest
2. Yell loudly and don't stop . use I yell in a dangerous situation
Lifetime, Ohioans Must Prevent safe place. Par~nlS should help . yelling until you are safe. This idultsandchildrel)a)ite DIUSIJIIliC:
Child· Abuse and Neglect" is the ' children. determme all safe loca- . strategy requues practice. sinee tice. Times for practicing yells
Koresh and 95 of his Branch .· theme of Child Abuse Prevention tions along regular routes each children Ieatn that yelling is not should be arranged ud ·the yell '
Dllvidians, inc!~~: 17 children, Month which is being observed in child travels.
okay most of the time. In order to
Coalined
3
have been barrie
inside since a Ap~~e Child Assault Prevention
weapons raid by Bureau of Alco- (CAP)
eel Of Gallia, Jackson
hoi, Tobacco and Firearms agents and Me'
· · - ..
ther
erupted in a gun battle. Four agen1s
IgS ounues IS .JOmmg o
'd ·
projects across. Ohio in celebrating
were slain, and K ores h .sa1 SIX this important month, said Moni:a
cultiats were killed.
Dodn"II., ccoooordinator of the lcical
Ricks said Lhe razor wire was CAP Pro1'cct who stresseS that good
placed around the compound to
.
'th
.
keep people from going in or out prevention begms WI commumwithout authorization. Two people cation.
"Today most parents have many
have sneaked past authorities, and
fears for their children. To help
into the compound since the stand- ' children pr~vent abllse, parents
off began.
·
· must turn that feat into action,", ·
The Washington Post reported said Dodrill. She urges all parents
today that authorities monitored a to
. talk 10 thelr children when they
dam near Waco on Monday after
d
. the .,_.
Koresh threatened to destroy it. are young, an 10 contiDUe
..,..
Law officers said Branch Davidi- cus~~=g~~~=cd
ans outside the compound or their bu
• L-- ,__
sympathizers might try to destroy a ~ se
y., """'' P
darn.
101~
'!:,~
m ~~willa ~
~· co onn~ con.... on u"'
~
be earned out iD scvesal resi8U11111ts

·· day 11 7 p.m. at the homo of Clerk Patty Calaway.

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

!lemonstration grant program for"1: : ',
which the village might qualify, ·1
and that there will be Issue 2 ·' ,
money available ~xt year.
The mayor S8ld he felt a package of funding cOIIId be put togeth- ·
e~ so that the service could~ pro- .
vuled for at least the houses 10 that , ,•.
area. James Clatworthy stressed/ ·
that the concern f!'r providing • , .
water and sewer scmce IS for those ':"·
~ithin the corporation limits of the ,. '·
v1Dage.
~ :·
T_he mayor's report showed ::. ' ·
rece1pts of.$6,087.78.
!' '. '..
Attendmg were Mayor Hoff.)&gt;' . _
mao, Dewey Horton, Jack Sauer- f , :·
field, C:Iatworthy, and Judy Crooks, ,:,~:
ColDICll members, and Ten Hock- f ,"',

oa,...

. , WACO, Texas (AP) _ Cult
leader David Koresh is awaiting an
earthquake, fire or other catastro·
. phe as a sign from God to end the
standoff, the FBI says.
.
Law officers, meanwhile, finished stringing razor wire around
the cult's fortified compound Monday and were SBI"d to be watching a
dam in case of a sabotage auempt
by the doomsday prophet's disciP1es.
.
w'd MooFBI agent Bob Ric...
""
day that talks with Koresh's top
lieutenant, Steven Schneider, indi·
cated the cult leader was awaiting
divine guidance. The siege entered
itS 45th day today. .
"He believes this will be a sign
· from God- ccftllin ca!BCIYsmic
events ... either rue, earthquakes, or
other events of tliat nature," Ricks

-

8LID,tD4:JOp.a.

month and making the position
part-time. Trussell is the housing
specialist and while her job will:
continue full-lime, she will be partially paid throu'h another agency
which she administers. •
Hobtoa Service
Mayor Hoffman said that within
a month he will be makin&amp; a proposal to Council about providing
water and sewage service to the
Hobson area which was annexed
into the village several years ago.
He said that he has contacted .
several agenciCI! regarding funding
and is worlcing on a financial pa¢1:·
age. He said that Farmers Home
Administration could be a source !1.
some funding, thai the Ohio
Department of Development has a

FBI agent says It mtght take act
resh tO
SUrrender
.,.. Ko
... .
·

: Orange Trustees to me.et

MONIMY-'IIUIIMY

are

Trussell said.
.
Bids ·on the Wheeler's Run
sewer P.roject were presented and
Council accepted the lowest one,
$69,900, from TAM Construction
Co., Lancaster. There were ·three
other bids.
Ordinances Adopted
Two ordinances were given
thirdreadingsandadopted.
,
·one provided for abandoning
the alley between the Barcus and
Mills' properties on South Fourth,
and the other for rezoning a portion
of Mill Street in the area of Mill
End Fabrics.
A second reading was given to
an •ordinanc!.reducing the salary of
the village's housing specialist
from $1,538 a month 10 $1,055 a

.

.

,.....-~-- Local

. .

While no figure has been decided on, Trussell reported that the vii- ·
!age can apply for up to $500,000.
The·target area for rehabilitation
includes Beech, Pearl, Sycamore,
Oliver, and Logan Streets. About
151 households are iD that·area, and
Trussell repMed that 6.5 percent
are low income. She said that rental
properties can be included if the
owner agrees 10 rent to low-income
families.
In that same area the village has
set aside $2,500 to remove trees on
Pearl Street which
causing side- ,
walk damage. Partial fundin$ for
the'tree removal and consttucbng a
sidewalk on Beech Street from
Hartinger to Laurel would also be
included in the grant application,

·standoff continues
iat Lucasville prison

s&amp;id.

RUTLAND

Inc.,.,,.,,..., •. .,.,;'· ..

1 Secllon,10 PagN 21 -.ta;
A Multimedia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprll13, 1993 ·

Agency failS to fund Middleport pfQject :·~

· · · party- giyen. · · ·

RACINE SCIENCE FAIR- Tbe lint aDDul Radae Elnleatary
· School Science Fair was beld reeendy witllllll p-ades plll1ic:ipatiog.
Winners were, in first and second place,. Montana Jarrell and
· Stepbanle Bradford, first grade; J~lfer _WIIIker and Jeri Hill, - . ond grade; Tyler Lltde md Jeri HID, third P.W!e; Kali Cummins,
Fallou Rou&amp;JI, and Angel Bird md Steven Saiitll, fourtll p-llde; Mike
JohDSOD and Chr&amp;opber RIIDdolph, and J.B. 110110, K7le Norris IUid
Jared Smith, fd'tb grade; aDd Jennifer Carletoa IIDCI Jolie JarreD, and
Scott Brinager, Donny Carnahan and Mitdldl Walter. All participants received participation ribbOD&amp;.

.

~e~n~~~r:b':oO:e~c~,:;

aw=i said t1111 proaram• are
still .be carried out -ijl tlie schools
with funding fronl tfte Children •s
Trust Fund and the Obio Depart·
mcntofHea!dt.
.
.
The Oallia, JIICbon and Meigs ..
County CAP Project SUUtlll tbat
the followi~lllt of cliild abuse
11 be · ~-·" hv
prevention
•
reVIew.... vI
parents a'nd thea, when QPIXIttDJU·
ties ariso, dlacUNed widt thOir cbll· .
eire~: Rua away from dialer· Run
tQ school, to 11 ncipbor'alipuse. to
'

l

,

.

..

~ ..

-.

..-

•
·..t

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