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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.

'

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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.,-

.,

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

'

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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-.---.,

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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

••
•

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.

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

�..

•
~

.

.,

~.,...

. -

•

Coinmentary

'
.

·"

· Tuesday, Aprn1; 1993

)

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy ..ddlepOrt, Ohio
lllaa*J, Aprll13, 1993

Wednesday, Aprlll4 ·
Accu- Weather• forecast for

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

Clinton's last stand? ·Not so fast
a

Washington; perpetually pell- the instant conventional wisdom. for the mining o( silver, gold and
mell place, has just plung~~ into .. " ... The President's stated delermi- ore now taken from our lands free
another classic .rush to masJudg- nation not to yield to special inter- . of'charge. Timber sales are being .
ment.
ests sudd~nly seems negotiable," reviewed as we speak . All are
anachronistic de facto subsidies
to- You can hear all about it from
that ought to be sharply reduced.
TV 's talking heads and read all
But IIIey are, after all, small change
about it in newspaper editorials -··
they are all the rage. ~at they are
items that oupat not diven us from
raging about, today, as Presadent scolded the editorial page of The the ~ig decistons that are really in
Clinton's rollback:. in response to New York Times.
.· · our national interest
pressure from Western senators, on
But wait. lust think what the
We've all heard abOut how the
proposed fee increases for grazing, · sman thinkers would be saying if Clinton White House has studied
mining and timber sales on public , Clinton did nothing and allowed Lyndon JohnSon to learn. how .10
land. Clinton agreed to droJ;&gt; these his crucial economic package to die deal with Congress. But a semor
fees - which would raise JUSt Sl for lack of a few Senate votei. Clinion adviser concedes he and
biUion over five years - from his Some would brand Clinton politi- his colleagues really benefited most.
budget. He did it to sec~re the cally naive; others, a political by going to school on Jimmy
votes of Western Democrauc sena- dunce. Bolli would be right.
. Caner. He taught them what not to
tors for his comprehensive ecoInstead, what Clinton did was do.
nomic plan,
vow to rnake his fight on these long
Carter began his presidency
Washington's .sman ·set rushed overdue subsidy reforms in other with a burst of principle: He sent
· to lambaste Clinton for a •'cave- ways, at other times. Interior Secre- Congress a liSt of its pet waler pro- ·
in · ' to greedy special interests tary Bruce Babbitt will issue an jects to be scrapped as wasteful
(who else?} - and lament that the administrative order to increase examples of pork barrel politics.
!)resident showed he can l;le rolled grazing fees. A separate bill will be Then Carter watched in asiOnishby any .stiff breeze. That became drafted 10 require _royalty payments ment as the Capi10~ ·Hill dam burst

.

111 &lt;»art Stleet
Pomei'Of, Ohio

.

D£\'O'I'ItD TO 1'H1t IN:'I'I:RE8T8 OJ' THlt JIBI08-MASON AREA

Martin Schrilm

'

ROBERT L. WINGE'JT
· ·l'ubllsller

•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher!ControUer

LETIERS OF OPINION ~ welcome. They shoUld be leu than 300
~ subject to editing 1111d must be signed with. name,
addreu and telephone number..No uoslgned loners will be p~blisbed . Letters.
should be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities.

wonh. All letlors

If soft drinks are food,
what's in them?, AG asks
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A judge in Columbus refused to require the soft~
industry to disclose recipes for their products in a lawsuit challengmg a
new penny-per-can I8X on soft drinks.
.
Judge John A. Connor of Franklin COWI~~mmon Pleas Coun rejeCted the request for the ·'secret formula" for
-Cola and Pepsi Cola. ·
Attorney General Lee Fisher had said that the conlen!J! are critical to
the soft drink industry's own arguments.
"They are claiming the tax is WJconstitutional because soft dri~ are
food (not taxable in Ohio, except carryout}, so all we want to know IS how
it is made and what's in it," said Rob Biesenbach, Fisha'' s press secre-

and he was ea:agulfed by a waoe of
congressional re sentment that
doomed max:b of his big-ticket lcgi sJatiQn .

IND.

In the case of tbe current ridiculously low grazing fees, llle nonexiSiellt mining royalties, and the
below-cost timbel' sales on public
lands, there is broad agR:C'JIICDt til(ll.
sanething must be dooe. What the
delegation of a dozen senators from
Western staleS argued at the While
House in early Malch was that their
region was being singled outiO ~y
the first big price of s ubsady
reform.

Consider thiS'from Sen. Mali
Baocus, D-Mont, who led the delegation to the White House: "Each
of these issues will be addressed
later in other forums, and I do
believe they need 10 tie addressed,
but in a way that is fair and bal:
anced. The Amtrican West cannot
be made to suffer mon: than other
areas of our counuy.''
That gets us 10 a big-tick'el idea
tbal the Clinton White House Ought
10 consider the CCOIIOIIIiC
plan is enacted. There are pages
upon pages of fedenal subsidies some direct tax subsidies,.others
just special spending benefits for
one or mon: industries. In the Progressive Policy Institute's recent
book, " Mandate for Change"
(which I co-edited}, economist
Robert J. Shapiro provides lists of
federal subsidies and 'tax breaks
ripe for reform and nores that by
Cutting just half of them, we can
save S62.billioo
. over four years.

.ner

WyHc responded to a press re!ease Friday by ~itizens Against Unfair
Taxes which includes of soft drink makers and distnbutors.
Lo~ Heger of Cincinnati, the group's co-c~. ~d Fisher bired
outside attorneys who also asked the coun to requli'C truck loads of
information going back to 1934." .
·
.
Connor, wbo has'scheduled a heanng May 10 on the ments of the case,
ruled that Fishey' s request was WJnecessary.
..
·
•'FuU blown discovery is not necessary,'' Connor said, adding that the
The Clinton administration
information wiD be obtained through "deposition testimony," or sworn
should begin a grand review of all ·
of them. Then lhe time will be right
statements.
.
·
Heger also objected to Fisher's decisipn to hire outside counseliO repfor Clinton to mate his grand pop.
ulist
srand. ,Serap the subsidies that
resent the stale.
.
"I can't believe they would use our tax dollars to pay high-pnced
are
mtproductive
or unwise - and
,
Cleveland lawyers in an attempt to funher gouge 18Xpayers through a spereform
or
recast
the rest 10 make
•
cial, $70 million consumer taX on soft drinks,'' he said.,.
them fit the 1990s.
... •
MartiD Schr.u is syadicated
Biesenbach said the attdmey seneral hired a Cleveland law fmn to
writer tor Newspaper EDterprise
assist and not replace his !&gt;wn leJlal ~.
.
·'We are going up agamst a heavtly-funded campa1gn lllatas represemAssocialioa..
ed by the second largest law fmn in the world," he said
The industry is represented by Jooes Day Reavis &amp; Pogue which has
offaces in Ohio and other states.
.
Biescnbach also said the Legislature lllat Fisher bile m~ lawyers.
The Legislat~ enacted the I8X in December as pan of a package needed to help eliminate a $250 million budget.deficat. State fiscal officers
Grant personal allowances of worry about Mooey would now
It's April once again and time · it I want 'a system designed not to
estimated revenues from the tax at $65 million a year.
$5,000
per person and tax all · where the market directs it, Dot
Soft drink distributors staged a rally at the Sraldlouse on·Malth 22 10 for my annual, feral, futile, solitary engineer social change but to
wages
and
salaries in excess of that where per wu:o pols guide it.
finance llle government. .I want·a
scream in the wilderness:
protest the tax, but at the Same time delivered the farst installment system that protects the poor and amount at a 17 perCent rate, except
Do you see what we would
IWANT,AFLATTAX.
about $j,6 million -10 the state treasurer's office.
.
·cor
earnings
on
saved
income.
A
have?
A mildly popcssiiiC SJSiaD
·
Forgive
my
outbursL
My
m,ind
Lawyers in the case said it could be as long as two years before ll
is
a
muddle
from
grappling
with
reaches the Ohio Supreme Coun.
fallmily of fofur$20woooould tlhfus h~ve dthatcmands~~ofdi~weal
. .thedyandbut
l"
a owances 0
•
.
eanung
u~~
.....
Wendy Cameron, vice· president of llle Ohio Soft Drink Association 1040s, 1099-MlSCs; Schedule SEs
$2S,OOO,IIIey would pay only $850 doesn't punish them. A ttuly fair
who spoke at the Starehouse raUy, said the group wants .the Lei!Siatlire, · and other instruments of the lnlernal
Revenue
Service's
"simplirequi(es
the
rest
of
us
to
pay
the
·
i~xes, or 3.4 percent of total system lbat would take the same
the governor ~· the people know ''lllat we are going to faght thas I8X to
fied"
tax
filing
'process
.
(You
same
proponionate
amount
of
our
income.
The same family making relative amount from e~. A
thC end."
·
know what Henry Block once said income to Uncle Sam. I want a flat $50,000 would pay $5,100 in taxes, system so simple that tax returns
about the IRS's experiments in tax.
or 10.2 oercent of income. At an could be filed on a poacanl A syssimplification? He said lllat "every
1 know, Jerry Brown touted the income level of$5,020,000, the full tem that would foster hoDesty
time the IRS simplifies the tax idea during his campaign last year 17 pen:ent - $850,000 - would because there would be few oppor.
tunities ror abuse. A system that
code, our business increases."} I and was jeered for it. l have two be paid in ·taxes:
·
·
B The AssoCiated Press .
• ·
am incensed that I had to fork over things to say about that: I) Brown's
You say it bothers you to see would encourage savings .00 disToday is Tuesday, ApJ. 13, the 103rd day of 1993. There are 262 days
$15 for a 500-~e book 10 guide version of a flat tax - which taxed quintillionaires keeping all their courage coDsumption. A system
left in the year.
·,
me through this ' simplified" hell. rich and poor alike and eliminated i!!come above $5.02 minion? F'IIIC., that would make the go•aaunental
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
.
process easier to understand
I am irate that I had to give up and the Social Security sysu:m ~ was slap a surtax on them.
Two hundred and 50 years ago, on April13, 1743, the third presadent of · engage an accountant to cipher out moronic and. a disservice to
You say the rich dOn't wlrl: oo because we could see plainly see
the United Stales, Thomas Jefferson, was born in present-day Albemarle
the sum I am privileged to pay llle · enlightened flat-taxers; 2} the crit- salary and thus escape taxation? No where our moaey is COOling from
County, Va
·
slavering wastrels waiting in WaSh- ics were mostly ' i~eologues who · problem. Slap the flat-rale tax on and where it is goiDg. aDd vote.
to disperse it.
care naught for anything but docc··· till busineSs ancOme- dividends, accordiDgly.
~~~~g Henry IV of France signed the Edict of Nantes, whic~ ingtOn
It'll never happen, or course.
I want a simple, fair, efficient trine, journalists who clearly had interest, rental revenue, capital
grarited rights 10 the Protestant Huguenots.
.
Liberals want to squeeze the rich,
system. I want a system that pro- not studied up on that which they gains.
In 1742 Geol)le Frederic Handel's "Messiah" was performed pubtects me from politicians who censured and the army of parasitic
You say the politicians would conservatiws WMl to pro1oec1 them
lici for ~ first ume, at the New Music Hall in Dublin, ~land.
'
spend a lllird of their time handing ' attorneys and accoWJtants who feed still play games with the law to and politicians want 10 pn:serve the
fn 1870 the Metropolitan Museum of An was founded m Me~ York.
out tax breaks to their pals and on the current system.
help .their constituents and ratcat status qoo.
In 1943', 50 years ago, President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated the
another third trying to induce me to
Trust The Curmudgeon . It can supporters? Not in Joe's system.
But I can SCICBiio, can't!?
Jefferson Memorial in WashingtOn.
.
,
spend
money in ways tJ!at IIIey, be done and done equi't'ably . A Joe would. eliminate all deductions,
Josepb Spear is a SJIIdiattd
In' 1958, Van Cliburn became the first Amencan to wm the
with thetr superior .knowledge and decent flat-tax system might look credits, exemptions. There would writer for Nntsp&amp;per !aterprise
Tchaikovsky lnlemational Piano Coolest in Moscow.
.
.
brains, have divined I should spend something like this:
therefore be no phony shelters to Assodalioa..
In 1964 Sidney Poitier became the farst blick performer m a leading
'
role to wm' an Academy Award for his woat in the movie "Lilies of the
Field." '
·
·
· led
In 1970, ApoUo 13, four-fifllls of the way to llle moon, was cnpp
when a tank-of liquid oxygen burst. The.crew was able 10 return safely to
Earth four days later.
.
·
·
· th ' fi
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
According io several sources, spending plan?, the White Hoiase ciary Commillee has put the maqer :) .
In 1986, .Pope John Paul II visited a ,Rome sy,nagogue Ill e arst
White House has vehemently many in llle presidential detail are respollse was to move a $380 mil- on hold after rcc~e:iv~i:n:gJa~J~o:n:
recorded papal visit-of its kind. ·
. ..
.
denied that President ·Clinton and very unhappy about the dismissive lion nmject, and hundreds of poleD· " unsilfted memo from the
In 1990 the Soviet Union accepted responsability and apologized .forwife are geltiog along less than way they are. being treated by 'the tial
ton. .JO"bs, from Huntsville to llous- Bureau of
ofPrisons
.._law could · · g that
the World War II murders of thousands of imprisoned Polish of!icea:s who · his
10
swimmingly these days. Press Sec- .
""'
were shot and buried in the Katyn ForesL
·
.
retar)' Dee Dee Meyers has
rf
UT.
As others in the Democratic OSUI8 comrol of the · sysiCIII.
. atte(!Jted to stuelch rumors lllat
0
r~agmarr Senate ' lea~ership are trying to Prisoners, the leuer explained,
· t'he la'ntons ave not exactly
make peace, neither side ~ms could use the new law 10 demand
enjoyed marital bliss since moving young White House staff and by ready to back down.
special diels, dresi. haintyles and
intO the While House.
members of the ftrst family . Said
An intereSting dust-up is OCCIU'- days orr to worship based on
According to stories making the one agen~ whQ admiiS he has asked ring at the Justice Depanment, "claimed religious beliefs wbelber
rounds, ~ Clintons have engaged for a transfer,' "It' s ~ot that they where the Federal Bureau of Pris- sincerely held or not." The memo
in regular. shouting matches. On . don 'tcareaboutsecunty - orcare ons has gone behind the back ·of askedthatthelangwlgeoftheliaal
·WHEt" '(DU WA'/...f.. U~
·one occasion, 'it's ~en said, the . about photo ops more, which is the new Attorney General Janet Reno . bill i::::::~~ific exemplioo
first lady threw a lamp (in some case ~ but they treat us as if we .in an attempt to chan$e a contro- for"
·
seuiap." .
~ILL WANT!\ ~AAAtY iOY
· . stories a vase; it· iS not clear if she are some kind of rent-a-cops, nc,me versial piece ofl~gisJ•tm .
The problem with all this:. At
simply threw it or if she threw it ai of whom has an IQ in three fig The Senate is ready to take up her conftrlllllion bcuing, AllOIIIC}'
It{ 11\E ~01?.51 WA.'( IN
the president}. Other rumors assen ures.' '
the House-passed Religious Free- General Reno (to say MhiDg of the
that the two have moved into scpaThe ongoing fight between the dom Resrontion Act- a piopooled White House) had given her
ORVEK TO GET O~E. A
rate bedrooms.
White House and Democratic Sen. law to reverse the effect of a 1990 unqualified support for the bill as
COt\'f~\~UT10~
Meyers calls th~se stories Richard Shelby of Alabama is turn- S..,.-eme Coun ruling. In thll case, wriaen.
"garbage" and said she sbou!~ ~t ing ugly. . ee1ven by Washington stan- Orqon v. Smilll, a sllatply divided
It is believed daat this is why the
. M.US'f ·~ MAt&gt;E
. eve11 have to. comment on thas . dards. Preside!it Clinton and his top coun ruled: 54, that any criminal mano - oa Bureau ofl'lisolas sa.
kind of trash journ81ism. It is sim- aides have been ange,red by Shel- statute could limit the exetcise of tionaty - is unsignal l;he.author.
f~S
ply unttue." But she did admit that.- by's anti-Clinton seance on a num- religion unless it could be showa tbou&amp;h. is'beliewd to be Bum~~~ of
STAiiO~ .. .....
sometimes, the Clinr.ons do discuss her of issues,·including Clinton's that the sole .purPOSC ofthe'law, was PriloDs DileciOr lCalhleeD Hawk. ·
things energetic:ally, and with voic- budget reform pa:kage.
to limit relipm.'
·
~
Reponecly, while DOl nece ri-.
es slightly raised.
· The White House got orr to a
The J)IOII08ed llw would return ly clislp:cing with Hawk's JoPC,
The interesting thing is. that bad start by seeming to be intimi- 10 lhe )ire-Smith silliation where a .Bcao has heeD a11pred that the
insiders
are auributing the soorce ·· deled by .Armed Services Commit- state can limit the free ~en:ise of Ullligaed memo - seat Led: for
'
after showing a COI)I- 1 new B - oi'Pritoas dircclor in ' .
of these rumcirs to the While House ~ chairman Se!l. Sam Nunn, D- . · religion
· Secret Service detail, utually the Ga., on the issue of pys in the mil- pelfang • . to do so. •
. . the aear fuaR.
' . most close-mouthed FOUP imligin- itary. Now it's usmg the Shelby
It appelred that the bill would
Rahrt w. .u 11 1 11.u01a. able ·
dispute to show that it ·will play
have IIIIOOlh ailing in the Senate td writer for ~ Eater. Another . story maki ns the hardball if ~bed by individual
~~-~ anRe:;..~~~Uhadc· ~':'· ..... A.'\'1" ......
·rounds is t1w t11ete hal been a sig- membclrJ of
pa~; . . . ·
,
·~"""""
Jllllg
nificailt turnover in the Secret Ser.At fant,. when Shelby WOllldn t
convoluted logic, the church felled
that if Roe v. Wade waa overV" - detat'l.· ·R -·::e·dmore than .· faDintoline,hewunotgivcnticlt· "Umey," whicb waa orilillally a
h~ the detaii'b;,"""' for rcasfor a While ·House reception for
tunled.IIICI abortion rights ~ ld't
New
World np~aaiDD ror Briti1h
signment, an odd occurrence w~n · ~ '!lllional.championlhip UnivertO the lWei, a Wometl miaht cllinl
ilon
dei'Ms hm
conyou consider that the prcsidenual sny ·of Alabama football te.am.
• religiou1 neces1ity to have Ill
~.,.k,n
or
lilaea
ud
oilier
fruita
to
detail is the high ell .honor fo~ a · Then, when Shelby ~ught .to lllc;P
abonioo under lbe Jli'"Preedlaw.
prevent
ICUfVY.
.
.:
up the ·pressure agaan1t Chnton i
Now, however, the SeDate Judi· Secret Service agenL ·
~

IIQ-I ·

a

Prepare for the annnal flat-tax ~owl
Joseph S.near

'' ·~

.

Today
in history
.
go

mr

White 'House denies.marital discord .
l:fc

R b J
e •

t
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The Dally sentlnei-Paga 3

Showers expec~ed over Ohio bite tonig~t
By The Associat. J Press
· A stationary front c~ntly over
the Gulf Coast states will move
northward tonight as a wann front.
Thi s will cause an increase in
cloudiness across lhe state. There is
a chance of showers late tonight
over southern Ohio. Lows will be
in the 30s over the nonh with 40s
in il1e soulll. · · · · . ·
The warm front will move into
southern Ohio by·late·Wednesday.
Moist air flowing northward' from
the Gulf of Mexico coupled with
the front will !rigger numerou.s
showen and thunderstorms ac:ross
the slate on Wednesday. A few of
the lllunde~Jtorms cowd be severe
o~er far southern Ohio Wednesday.
Highs should range from the middle 50s over the nonh to around ·70
in the far south.
·
"
The record high temperature for
this. date at llle Colu11,1bus weather
station was 86 delZI'eCS in 1941. The

record iow was 2I in 1920.
Sunrise this morning was at 6:57 ·
a.m.' Sunset will be$ '8:68p.m.
Arouad the aatloa
A spring snowstorm developed
today over the Rockies and headed
toward the Plains, while rain

warnings and snow advisories were
soaked the Midwest.
A low. pressure system intensi- · in effect IICIOSS the area.
fied overnight in the Rockies and
In the Midwest, heavy rains
was. moving east today, threatening
were aggravating local flooding.
heavy snow and blowing snoW: for
A band of severe thundei'SimJif
pottions of Colorado, Wyoming , brought hail and nearly 3 inches of
Nebraska and South Dakaa Storm
rain MQnday to JllflS of Kansas ·

.,

Annou.nce.~.
Coatlnued from page 1
practiced in the baSement or With
the door closed so as to not scare
011183Acc:u---. Inc.
anybody. When· practicing with
small children, start out soflly. and
g~t progressively louder because
young
children can be easily starShowers and thunderstorms
South-CeDtral Ohio
.
tled
and
~htened .
Tonight, mostly cloudy . A likely Thursday. Lows from the
3.
Defane
safe and unsafe
cl)ance of showers after midnight. low 40s to the low 50s. Highs in secrets. Surprise parties and gifts
Low 45-50. Chance of rain so per- · mid-SOs north to around 70 far
are safe secrets, they don't make a
cent. Wednesday, sh'owers and south .. Friday, a c~anc.e of rain. child
feel afraid. Safe secrets eventhundentorms likely. High 65-70. Lows an the 40s. Htghs an the 50s.
tually
are told to someone. Unsafe
dorMOURN DEATH - Ohio UDiversily fresh- . . day nighl after falling oul or a
Saturday, a chance of showers.
Chance of rain 70 perceilt.
secrets
are
meant
to
be
kept.
man Julie Bourdo, left, aDd Kim Brest' kDeel
mitory window. investigators said the death was
Lows in the 30s. Highs in mid-40s
Exteaded forecast:
..
Unsafe secrets often make children
aD accldeDt. (AP)
down at a memorial MoDday in Atheas for feJ.
to mid-50s. ·
' Thursday through sjaturday:
feel scared or uncomfortable.
low classmate Laura Bansek, 19, who died Sun·
Unsafe secrets always should be
shared with an adult wbo will help,
· 4. Brainstonn l!te names of safe
Cemetery, Cheshire. F.riends may adults witli your child. Safe adults
B• Ruth Cook
are adults who lislen, believe the
B. Ruth Cook, 78, of Shade, ;{11 ~t the ~neral home anytime child, and help. Children need more
died Monday, April 12, 1993, at · ler p.m. ednesday.
!han parents in whom they can con.L ocal fire departments and Volunteer Fire Department and
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
fide. They need teachers, grandparemergency
squads responded to Tuppers Plains Squad responded to
Pomeroy ·
·
ents, friends, and neighbors.
Monday
afternoon and an automobile ftre on State Route
three
ftres
· . Born Sept. S, 1914, in Chase, Donald R. Whan Sr.
5. Give your children permis,
7. No injuries were re~ned. Th.e
evening.
the daughter of l!te lale Bliss and
sion to say no. Many chi'ldren
car belonged to Randy Hickman.
At
I
:09
p.m.,
the
Middleport
Orace
Reeves Woodyard, she was a
believe that saying "no" 10 an adul.t
WASHINGTON (AP} - Bathomemaker, retired housekeeper
Donald Raymond Whan Sr., 49, .
At 8:52 p.m . The Scipio VolunVolunteer Fire Department
ed
M
nda
A
ril
12
as
wrong
and
that
they
will
be
puntered
by the Blizzard of '93, retail
0 f Alban di
0
and restaurant worker.
Y
y, P
' ished. However, children need to responded to Roush Lane near teer Fire Deparqnent and Rutland sale&amp; plunged I perj:ent in March,
She is survived by a son, 1993, at his residence.
d
d d be ·
Cheshire in Gallia County for a Squad responded at 8:52 p.m . to
. William c. Cook of Shade·, two
Born in Alllens on May 8, 1943, un erstan an
gtven perm is- trailer fire at the Lisa Bohn resi- Cottrill Road for an automobile the second consecutive decline and
·daughlers and sons-in-law, Bonnie t he son o f G arne tt Mc K1'bben sion 10 say "no" to any adult who dence.
ftre. Janie Green was transponed to the worst in more than two years,
the government said today.
and cllarle.s Pratt of Radcliff 'aDd Whan of Athens and the late Paul frightens them t'ith requesiS or
At 8:30p.m., the Tuppers Plains Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,.;nte
•
demands.
We
encourage
our
chiiWhan
h
CO
tract
All but one category or retailing
Roger and Connie Malone of Ham, e was a n
.- r tor
·
·d
h'ldr
d
the
past
30
years
and
a
member
of
dren
to
say
no
to
drugs
and
we
drug stores - reported a drop,
den; sax gran c 1 en an one the Athens AMVETS and Sons of need to support them in saying no
bringing the seasonally adjusled
greal.llrandson.
AMVETS
10 adults who may exploit them.
level of sales tb $166.9 billion, the
J\[so surviving is a sister,
·
b h'
'f
, 6. Your body is your own. You
Commerce
Department said.
Pauline Zeigler of Albany, a brothHe is survived 'Y as wa e,
Retailers
haven't reponed such
er, Seldon Woodyard of Heath and Shirley; a daughter and son-in·law, ·have my permission and you have
a
sharp
decline
since January 1991,
several nieces and nephews.
Lora and Tim l:ittleton of Logan; a my help to~ care of iL
· MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) the bill in the House.
7
· Whenever you have a prob- The Clinton administration has
She was preceded in death by daughter, Ii)ebbae W!Wt of Athens;
President Clinton has pledged to in the midst of the recession. It
her husband. , Char.Jes F. Cook.
,aandson .andWdauhanghtefrMi
·ll!·ddlelaw, Donald
.
lem, no matler how scary or embar- given the OK for an experimental give sta~ maliimum flexibility to brought the level of sales to the
0
Mary
port
rassing, I will lisien, believe, and program ·n ve ontlhat ould c t test welfare reform ideas and has lowest in six months. In advance,
SerV!Ces
• · · are 't"w~
· s tep- help you. This perhaps isoneofthe be nefiats :tor peop
rmle who donw •t fi nud prom 1'setl sweep•' ng re'orm
Thursday
at ,will}.eJwld
Fisher Funeral1,1...a.m.
Home · ·-~i\1 so .suryavmg
, · s/ at. llle analysts were expecting March
sales to remain unchanged from
in Middleport with Rev. Allen dau~hters an~ ~tep~ons -an-Jaw, most important messages since jobs'or accept public service work federal level.
Blal;kwood official,ing. Burial will Jackte and Wdhe Milam of Tup- children often think that no one afler 2 Ill years on welfare.
Changes in the main 'felfare February . .
The Clinton administration
follow in Hemlock Grove Ceme- _ pers Plams and Barbara and Dallas · will believe them. They also
Sanctions would include restric- . program , 'Aid to Famili~s with
. tery.
·
·
Young of Col~m~us; two step· believe that they wiD get in trouble . tions on bow they could spen&lt;l their Dependent Childrep, need federal quickly seized on the report as
Friends may call 7-9 p.m. daughters. Vackae Rhodes of or that they wiD get the~ who welfare checks Jlll(l'the loss of med- approval because .the federal and ammunition in its fight to push a
Wednesda at the fwaeral h e
•Albany and Penny Causey of ·is hurting them in trouble. ParentS ical benefits for adults.
state governments share the cosL · $16 billion jobs bill through the
·
Y
om ·
Athens; two stepsons and step- need to let their children know that
As an inducement to work, the
Vermont Gov. Howard Dean Senate, where Republicans worried
daughters-in-law, Grady and Pam they want to protect them from reform proposals also allow wei- .said he was eager to proceed with about the budget deficit have been
Martha Rife
VanNess of Columbus and Tony harm.
·'
fare recipients to earn more and the program after getting word of blocking it with a filibuster.
"Today's announcement ... proManha Catherine Barbara Ceciland Fran Causey or Tuppers Plains;
ilccum ulate more assets without the approval from Heal!h and
vides
compelling evidence that
losing benefiiS. They would also be Human Services Secretary Donna ·
ia Schiebel Rife, 81 , of Albany, three stepsons, William Causey of
recovery
is at risk unless decisive
died Monday, April 12, 1993, at Guysville, James Causey of Las
offered child care and longer medi- E. Shalala. The stale wants to run
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Vegas, Nev~. and Gerald Causey or
CoDtinued rrom page 1
cal coverage.
.
the experiment for seven years action is taken when Congress
returns next week, " said ComBorn in Butler, Pa., she was the .!;.!!.!!.licothe; five gran.dchildrell, 11
Council hired Tom Lowery as
The proposed 'legislation has beginmng in 1994.
passed the stale Senale. Cornelius
Vermont has nearly 29,000 peo-. merce Secretary Ronald H. Brown.
daughter of the late George ~nd stepgrandchildren and one step- . manager of London Pool.
Mary Schiebel. She was a reured . great-grandchild; t)VO sisters,
The pool will open on May 29 · Hogan, Vermont's secretary of pie on welfare, most of them " ... Americans have every right to
resent the reimposition of gridlock
rood service employee at Ohio · Priscilla Rosser and Bernadine and it wiH be a free day. Life guard . heallll and welfare, said llle federal women and children.
government
in the face of new and
Universjty, Athens. .·
\ Campbell, both of Albany, and one · applications life now being taken approval granted Monday n;oay help
growing
evidence
that the pace of
·· · She is survived by a daughter, brother, Edward 'Whan of Sebring, · and must be submitted by May 1.
and
job
growth
may not
recovery
Mary 'Mcintyre, Pittsburgh, Pa.; a Fla.
Councilman Bill Roush and Mayor
be
sustainable.''
step-son, Douglas ~fe, Columbus;
He was preceded in death· by a James Pape are to work with the
March was the third consecutive
three Step-grandchildren, five SIC_P- sister, Rachel ConanL
manager to draw up rules and regumonth
without a sales increase.
great-grandchildren, and three SIS· ,
Services will be held 2 p.m. Fri- lations for him 10 go by in operaCLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
·Sales
slipped
0.3 percent in Februters-in-law, H;azel Stout. Albany, day at Living Water Church in tion of the pool.
Monday night's Ohio Lottery
ary
and
remained
unchanged in
Pauline Rife .of Bidwell, and Mrs. Albany with Pastor J.im Stewan
Also meeting with Council was selections:
January.
They
had
soared
Ll J.!Cr·
Harry (Flossie) Tate of New Lex- officiating. Burial will follow in . Bob Jeffers of Jeffers Excavating Pick 3 Numbers
W.Va.
(AP)
cent
in
December,
the
fifth
increase
CHARLESTON.
ingtOn. .
Coolville Cemetery.
In re!!ard to replacing culver~ in
6-4-8
- Key"Centurion Bancshares in six months, !living retailers their
Funeral services will be held
Friends may call from 2-4 p.m. the vallage before paving .begins
(six, four, eight)
shareholders approved the sale of best Christmas m five years.
Thursday at 2 f..m. at the Bigony- and 7-9 p.m. Thursday at llle Hugh- within the next60 days.
Pick 4 Numbers
the
state's largest banlcholding
Commerce
Department
Jordan Funera . Home in Albany. es-Blower Funeral Home in Athens
Council extended thanks to
0-7-5-3
company
to
Bane
One
Co,rp.
of
spokesman
Adren
Cooper
said govRev. Edward Jones will officia~e and at the church one hour prior to Charles Canter, a pan-time village
(zero, seven, five, three)
Ohio.
·
emment
analysts
were
unsure
how
and burial will be in the Gravel Hill services.
employee, who was· inadvertently
.
Almost82
percent
of
the.
share..
much
of
the
.
o
verall
decline
to
'
.
missed when thanlc:ing others who
holders
approved
the
takeover
·attribute
to
the
storm
that
swept
up
CoatlDued rro.,- page 1
helped out during the recent snow Monday , Key Centurion said . the East Coast in the middle of the ·
810
AbOut' 500 shareholders heard month, But he said the; across·thelockers, Ms. Kornegay said
to release their names or condi~iending were Mayor Pape,
results
of llle vote Monday.
board nature of the drop suggesled
Prisoners had not asked for food lions. it was·not known wh_ether the Council members Jack Williams,
The
sale,
initially
valued
at
$550
Kenny B"'kley, Bill Roush, Denor medicine by late Monday nigh~ others were IJeated at bospatals.
Morris said. He did not know if
During negotiations, prisoners · nis Wolfe and Kathryn Crow, and • A marriage license was iSsued . million, is now &gt;'alued at $625 mil- '
Monday in the Meigs County Pro- lion, said Marshall Reynolds, Key ..------~--~...,
prisoners had cand.lei or other presented 19 demands, most of ·Cede-Treasurer Janice Lawson.
bate Court 10 John Keilll West, 32, Centurion chairman.
liglits inside the ceO block.
them dealing with prison rules .
Key Centurion has 18 banks in
· Columbus, and Roberta Jean JohnMs. Kornegay said prisoners They also asked to talk to the
(USPS 11:1-1160)
West
Virginia and Kentucky. The
son,32,Portland.
·
who took 24-inch batons from media.
·
• '
holding company has $3.1 billion
Publish .;. every at\emoon, MmdAy
through Friday, 825 Thitd Avn.,
guards during the riots killed llle
NegotiaiOrs told a pool reporter,
in totai8SllCts.
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley
six convicts.
·'
Michael San41iacomo of The
Bane One of Columbus, Ohio,
Publishi ng Company/Multimedia Inc.
Eighteen people, including I 0 (Cleveland) Plaan Dealer, that pris·
Second clua poatage paid at ·Callipolh1,
has
assets
of
more
than
$60 billion
JUards and eight inmates, , were oners could speak to the ·media
Ohio
' ·
An action for dissol.ution was
and has banks in seveial states. •
mjured in Sunday's fighting. At Pnly after releasing a gu11fd. He initialed Friday in ~ Meigs CounThe transaction wi.ll officially · · Member: The A!sociaLcd Pres s~ and 'thfl
least 11 were IJeated at hospitals.
was allowed to speak to a pris~~ ty Coun of Common Pleas by DalOhio New.paper AIUioci at.ion, NatiOnal
Am Ele Power................... .38
take place May 3, when Key CenThree inmates were admitted 10 by phone once, a call authonues las Anhur HiD and Debra Rae Hill,
Advert.i8iiiiJ Reprt!Hnl.ltivo, Branham
Astlland Oil. .......................27
turion wiD become Bane One West
Newapapf!l', 733 Third Avenue, New
Ohio State University lfospil.lls in cut off when the prisoner began both of Racine.
York , NeW York l00J7~
AT&amp;T.............................. ..59
Virginia Corp., officials said.
Columbus, but llle hospital refused talking about the list of demands. ·
A petition for divorce was ftled
Bank0ne...........................60
POSTMASTER: Send add.reee chl hRetl t.o
Monday by Lisa M. Dill from
Bob Evans ........:................ 18 S/8
The Gallipolis Dail? 'lnbune, 825 Third
Edward D. DiU, both of Racine.
t A•e., GaUipolia, Otno 45631.
Channing Shop..................16 3,18
SPRINf&gt; VAll [ Y CINEMA ,...,
BVBBCJUPTION RATIIS
Cbmp Industries.... ;:,.......... l3
~46 4',,'4
-Carner or Motor R.ow.te
City Holding. ..................... 22
One Wook................................. ,......... $1 .80
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Slaughter steers: choice -74.00Federal M!!J.IJ!. ...........:....... I8 3AI
One Mdnlh ..........., ....~ ........................$6.96
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
One Year.......................... :....... ___ $83.20
Direct livestock prices and receiptS. lf1.00; selccl68.00-76.00.
Goodyear T4R ..................78
.
SINGLE COPY
Monday admissions - Mary
SllughW' heifen: choice 74.00at selected buying points Tuesday
Key Ccnturi&lt;ln ...................26
PRICE
McAngus,
Pomeroy;
Woodrow
by the Ohio Department or Aan- 80.00; selccl68.00-75.00. ·
Doily........ ..................... ,.............. ..25 Conto
l..ahc1s BrKl. .........................29
Cowl: ltCidy 10 1.00 biaher; all Hall Jr., Racine; Mabel StevCJII,
cul~~n:
Umiled Inc. ...................... 23
Sut.riben not. deeirin&amp; l.o ..,..)' \he cani·
Racine" Don CuUwns. Pomeroy. .
Barrow&amp; and Jilll: fully ~ cents C:OWI S4.00 and clown.
Mullimedia Inc.................. 33
er rpay nmlt in aclvance direct t.o The
Mo~day discharges • Ayward
GaiHPGH• Daily ~bu.ne &lt;~'~ 1 B tt,rl!e, aix
Bulls: nol tested; no prices
higher; demand riaodertre 10
Point Balaccip.................... 14
or( l~ .month buie. CrfldjL will he IPven
.
Jones,
Racine.
.
U.S. l r2, 230-260 lbs., country ·~e.
Rax ReataUJML .................. 318
~-~week.
points, 44.00-45.00, a few 45.SO;
Feeder eatdo: not tested.
~ Blectric............... .21
No s.-pliano by -1 pomdlled in
planll44. 75-45.75.za few 46.50.
Y
atecra 60.00-84.00; · HOLZER MEDICAL CENTb
Robbills&amp;Myers ................ 17 ,
anu wta.t bome catril!ll' M1"¥"k:e 6a
aqi\ablie..
,
,
April 12 dlacurau - Seth
.. 60.00-82.00
.
U.S. 1-3, 230-z60 lbs., country .yeilltill&amp;
~~~~:~~nc
2()
.Wayne
OleDder,
Wade
Mereer,
. . 42.5().44.00. .
. .
.
llalllhJrocrlpti· Steer Galves 70.00·1 02.00;
..... Gal.llo~ ·
· · ·
Taylor, ,WIIllam Woomer, Gladys
~- 1·2, 210-230 lbs., countty heifer r.Ives70.00-102.00
u w-.:..................:..........-.........ata.N.
Dunn,
Norma
Halley,
Lenore
poinll, 41.50-43.00.
.
Sheop and lambs: 3.00 10 4.00
as
841,16.
&amp;a
184,18 ,
higher;
choice wooll 62. 75-69.50; · Howard; Janet Hill; Harry SimpReeeipta Mo:z 6l.800. B~ti-' ·
. Oorloldo Oalll!i e-ll'
'lllllellleCeipll Ti
y.&amp;/XK). •
choice clips, no report; reeder kins, M.-y Hmlen,llalhshebl Colt3
w-.;
.....................................
asw.oa.........,.......,....................._
Pricel
'1111 ~Live- llmbl 72.00 and down; !lid ~~~~ ley, Mary Starcher, Lawrence
MW-................................. ,...._
Workman, Charlel Swan and KeUi
23.50tnddown.
' 1111Ck Arietim'
·.
KimmelCllde: !() CODIIIO 2.00 higlllr.

Weather

Area deaths.

Fire departments, squads
respond to three calls

Retail sales
plunge 1
percent

Vermont permitted to re.q uire
WQrk from welfare recipients

CommiSSi.oneT.;,

Lottery numbers

Key Centurion
shareholders
approve sale

Standoff. ..

License issued

Dz"vo•ces' and
dz"SSOIUti,"onS

Stocks

Livestock report ·

Hospital news .

.

M ..

aooo.

ear'i!:.J.

. :. . . . . . . . . .

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

-e

tiOIIl

•

..

..

.,,

�f

Spor~S

The Daily Sentinel
·

Tuesday, April 13, 1993
.
Page-4

In NL action,

Dykstra's tie-breaking homer gives Phillies 5-4 win· over Reds·
By The Associated Press
. The Philadelphia Phillies are
getting everything they need so far:
hitting, pitching and a healthy
Lenny Dykstra.
Pykstre hit a 3-2 piiCh for a tie. ·

breaking solo homedn lhe seventh
inning as Philadelphia beat Cincinrrati S'4 MoMay lli ll!ar\'etetails
Stadium for its thirJ slnl,ight viewry
'Dykstra, hittinA .174 when he

•
b
b
E
.•
.
16
8
M eigs om s as ern ' •

·

.

Se~t!t~!r:ZPRO:~nt

.

~~;b:~oag~~~~7;gvar::;e
added r
.
w• 11 •s

,

Meigs pounded out nine runs.in , run, and M1ke Wets~ add . t
the third inning en route to a 16-8 smg~s. Other Me•gs h1tter mcludTri-Valley Conference victory over e~ B•lly ~laze, Nathan rown,
Eastern Monday evening at Meigs Vmce Re1ber and Gary Adams a
HighSchool.
smgleeach:
. .
.
The win was the first i'n four
Van~e was lhe wmm.ng pitcher
games for the Marauders and lhe for Me1gs. The lefty puched the
first win in three tries in conference first five ·inning~ scattering three
play. Eastern drops to 1-2 in lhe hits, striking out 10 and walking
conference and overall.
two. Jones pitched the last 2 2/3
The Marauders held a 3-2 lead innings, w~l~ing five, striking out
heading into the decisive third . three and gtvmg up two hits.
'
·inning. In the inning the Marauders
Pat Newland led Dennis
pounded ciut seven hits in plating Eichinger's Eagles at the plate with
the nine runs. Two of the Marauder a double and a single. Matt Bowen
hits were home runs off lhe bats of and Ty Rose added a double each
Aaron Drummer and Mike Vance. and Wes Arbaugh added a.single.
Matt Bowen was the starter and
Drunimer hit a solo shot, while
Vance slammed a two run round loser for Eastern, David Koenig
tripper.
and J. Coats also saw mound duty
Drummer and Keith Jones led for Eastern. The D'io combined to
Meigs at the plate with. both going give up 14 hits, slrike out five and
three for four. Drummer had a sin- walk five.
· ·
gle and double to go along with his
Mejgs
host Vinton Couniy
round tripper, Jones had two dou- in a conference game today. .
·

will'

baited with one oul in the seventh
· he retired die
strok d his · nd h m
f th • P•IC r,
. .
lllst five Padres
~ off re~i:~ S~e ;~r
batters, ~ng out lhree, fo~ .~•s
tie and boost· ~e d!ird ~~e 10 as ~~.~rliJOJbes.
2Ph) .to. snapaot:ll
&amp;. ~ the fi week of
IIDIS 4, ,_.,.. 3. 11
111•es 10 1 or
JtSl
Ba_rry
Bonds de~ut for San
111e 'SCBSOn.
FranciSCO at Cand!Citiclr:: wun't a
"l'mn~tfr,u.stratedatall,,'' totalsucccssBondsllomcn:dinhis
Dykstra said. !feel
befc?re leavspraymg the ball around. I m get m~ m the Slllth mnmg With a leg
~nngg::S~~·
stealmg bases and ~or- inJury.
:
. .
.
Bonds, .who before the game
H~ helpe~ th~ P~J!hes bUJ!d a received bis 1992 NL MVP award
run !n the f•rst 111nmg_. walk•!!&amp;· from godfather Willie Maya,
steai!Dg. second, advanCJn.g to third thlilled a sellout crowd at CandJe..
~ .a wild puch ,and sconng on an stick Pad: when be lofted a pill:h
mf1eld out. He s hiS stolen four from Chris Hammond over the
bas~ and SCCJn:d seven runs.
The slluallon was 3-2, nobody
on. He (Foster) threw the right
pi~eh. He didn't want to walk me. I
JUS! hit it good on the line."
Dy~stra was on the disal,lled list
three umes last season ana ended
,up playing in only 85 games. In the
last tow:o seasons, the Phillies are
·76-71 with the center fielder in
their lineup.
The Reds tied the score with
: two runs in the sixth, chasing
starter Danny Jackson. Jose
DeLeon (2-0) worked I 2{3 innings
for the victo~ and. Mitch WiUiarns
finished for h1s fourth save.
Elsewhere in the NL it was San
Francisco . 4, Florida 3 in II
innings; Chicago 5, Atlanta 1;
Plltsburgh 4, San Diego 2. New

c):

go~d.l ~ ~lfSl.Plate ~

··

nght-field w~.
· . Th~ lefl f1el~er \eft .the game
w1~h lightness .m h1s nght hamstnng after beating out a grounder
to second. The Gil\Dts said his sta-.
tus •s day-to-day
DarriRLewis;RBisingleinlhe·
lllh innin_g offJoe Klink (0-1)
the capaclly crowd at Candlestick
Park ho~ happy.
Rod Beck (1-1), the fifth San
Francisco piiCher, worked a scoreleSs 11tli for the victory.
Cubs s, Braves 1
Greg Hibbard, a Braves fan
w~ile g111wing up in Mississippi,
up cine run in 8 2{3 innings for

·

his fust NL vic:IOry. It was onfy lhe
second time in eight games the
Braves have allowed more than
two runs.
Hibbard (1-0) was 41-34 in four
seasons with the Chicago. White
S bf
be'
'redb k

~I c~~s ~s~Nov.'~~ ~~~ori~. ~~

gave up seven hits and walked
three.
..
Sammy Sosa hit a homer and
drove in two runs and Candy Maldonado added two RBis for the
Cubs . Sosa ended an O.: for-10
slump with his first homer off
Steve Avery (0-1) and drove in
another run with a groundouL

Wellston downs Southern 11-5 Rockies'
~~z,a~~~~~~~~d~~~~b~~~:
flfSl night game.

Visiting Wellston plated seven
runs in the second inning to defeat
the Southern Tornadoes 11-5 Monday evening in Racine.
Wellston took advantage of
what Southern coach Miele Wine.
brenne'r described as "errors and
mental errors" in the second inning.
The end result ruined a fine complete-game pitching performance
by Ryan Williams, who struCk out
10 Wellston batters and walked just
· two while scattering nine hits.
Mollihan got the win for Wellston, walking four and fanning
. three in the route.
Southern (2-3) settled down
after the second, put the da,mage had already been done. Despite
playing Wellson to a 5·5 score the

last five innings, Southern fell in
Pirates 4, Padres 2
the end.
San Diego's home opene1 was
Wellson hitting was led by Ous- ruined by left-bander Dave Otto,
ley and Hendershot with two sin- who was added to Pittsburgh's rosgles each, while Fought, Mollihan, ter on Sunday. Otto g01 his first NL
.
A. Mollihan, Lamben and Stevin- victory and first major league hit
attempt during: Monday night's game in
•BROK_EN U~ - Pbiladelpbia baseranner
son each singled.
and RBI, and rookie Kevin Young
K•m BatiSte shdes under Clacinnali second
Philadelphia, which the Phlllies won S-4. (AP)
Southern ·was led by Ryan . ,got his first triple as the Pirates
saeker
Bip
Roberts
io
break
up
a
double
play
Williams who hit a single and defeated San Diego for the third
triple, while Billy Jones, Jeremy time in three meetings this season.
Dill, Jeremy Northup, Andy
· Otto's two-out single drove in ·
Grueser, Andy Fields. Eric Jones · Don Slaught to cap a three-run
and Jeremy Hill each singled.
•
fourth inning.
'
Jay Bell hit his first homer of
Southern will play River: Valley
today at Cheshire-Kyger Middle the season leading off the fifth to
School.
· help chase Greg Hairis (0-2), who
. Charlie Leibrandt (1-0)
his fice fly and Puckett doubled.
By BEN WALKER
Inning totals
also lost to lhe Pirates on Thursday. .
first
game
for
Texas
and
Tom
Angels 12, Brewers 5
.NEW YORK (AP) - All durWellSton: 070-120-1 = 11-9-3
Just like in that loss, Harris allowed
Henke
got
his
fourth
save.
Damion
Easley and Chili Davis
Southern: 002-003-0 = 5-9-6
eight hits in 1;13 innings.
' ing the winter, when the New York
Twins 3, White Sox l
hit home runs and California sent
Stan Belinda, the fourth Pirates Yankees were mating big changes,
they wanled a game like this. The . Kirby Puckett hit an RBI dou- Milwaukee to its sixth straight loss
Kansas City Royals, meanwhile, ble, capping a three-run rally in lhe in home openers. Easley's threenever envisioned another beginning eighth inrung that lifted Minnesota: run homer capped a six-run ninth
Jim Deshaies (2-0) defeated inning.
this bad.
Ch.uck Finley (1-0) won despite
Jim Abbou, Paul O'NeiU,-Wade Kirk McCaskill (0-2) for the sec,...r................ o 2111 F7214 237
ond
time
Ibis
season.
allowmg
five runs and nine hits in
-*NBA •;__
Boggs and Spike Owen gave the
SL Lou»............ 36 35 II 13 275 271
McCaskill
gave·
up
only
two
hits
5
1/3
innings.
Julio Valera finished
fans a great look at the new-look
......... 36 36 10 12 '}f,7 215
EASTERN CONFERENCE
T""po&amp;y ....... 22 S3 1 '51 235 323
until
the
eighth,
when
Brian
Harper
with
shutout
relief for his first
Yankees, beating the Royals 4-1
AU.ndc DI•Won
and
pinch
hitter
'Randy
Bush
s!nmajor
league
save.
Cal Eldred (1-1)
Monday in their home opelier.
T.,.
W L Pel.
GB
StnfllleDIy·Now Yodt ........... 53 21 .716
J.·Vancouvet . 44 29 9 97 331 261
gled.
Shane
Mack
hll
an
RBI
d6~.
lasted
only
3
1/3
innings,
the shortAbbott outpill:hed David Cone,
Ballm .......... - ....... ,42 33 .560 ll.S
y.c.Jpry .......... •1 30 11 93 311 rn
ble,
Chuck
Knoblauch
had
·a
sacm
·
est
start
of
his
career.
0 'Neill went 4 for 4 and Boggs
New Jenoy ............42 34 .553
12
, ..... AqeJa .. 39 33 to u 321 m
Orlondo ...- ............. 36 31 .416
17
r·Wimipec ...... 39 36 1 as 316 JJ5
and Owen also had key hits as New
Milmi .................... 3S 40 .&gt;167 11.5
Edmomon ......... 26 41 I 60 2AO 330
York won in the fust game owner
Philldclpllia ........... 23 53 .303
31
San Jooe ............ II 10 2 24 21S 401
21 ' 54 .210 32.5
George Steinbrenner attended at
x-dincbod div.iaim Iitle
, ..Unchod p..yol! benll
Yankee Stadium since bis 2 1/2Cenlral Dl\l'llkln
year bailishmenL
•·OticaiJO .........,....Sl 22 .101
Monday's IICOI'es
ll-O...EVELAND....47 Zl . ~
5.5
W.......... 3........... 2(01)
. "This is exactly .what we imagCLEVELAND (AP)- Carlos The Indians got 16 hits off four
Atlonla ...................40 35 .S33
13
Philodclpllia l, N.Y. R..,... 0
med· when
we
put It together
Ibis Baerga has helped .,.
mve the Indians, Toronto p11c
· hers, g•vmQ
· · t hem 41
a.w-................39 :11 .513 14.5
..
s
·
bre
'd
·
lndllno...................n n .lOO u.s
spnng,
tem
nner
sa•
ID the
not
known
as
big
hillers,
a
big
hits
.
i
n
lhe
three-gam~
series . •
Toaf&amp;bt'SI81Des
Ddmit ...................:11 ll .49:1
16
Hutfcwd at N.Y. lslandcn, 7:.c:Jp.m.
clubhouse after the game: He boost in their offense.
Paul Sorrento mall:hed Baerga's
Milwaukee ............. 28 47 .313
25
Montroal u BuJI'alo, 7:40p.m.
wa~ehed the game from a private
The Indians have scored 39 runs home run tolal with·a solo homer in
Dsawa at Quebec, 7:40p.m.
St.l..t;uil: at Tom110, 7:-40p.m.
box w•th Mayor David Dmkins, in their last four games, and Baerga the ninth. It was Sorrento's third in
a.c.ao u Mianelou., I:IOp.m.
Tom Brokaw and Regis Philbin.
launched the barrage in Thursday . three games.
Tompo Boy" Wimtipow, 1,40 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
A'
crowd
of
56,704,
the
largest
night,'s· ga~e agaipst New York. 1
Monda,y'·s game at Boston
C•IIU)'
1t
Ecknontoa,
9:40
p.m.
Mldwell Dl•llkwl
to. Anpla: 11 Vancouver, 10:40 p.m.
Tum
W L Pd.
GB
for a reg~-season game at Yan- He bu a pau of home runs in lhe which would have been the 'Red
x-Hounon .............. -49 25 . ~
kee Stadium since it was remod- Indi8R~' nin~-~ seventh inning.
Sox • home opener, was rained out.
a-San Atlion.io ....... -45 29 .601
~ 4
Wedauday's games
eled
for
1976,
watched
Abbott
Sw•tc~·hltbng
Baerg.awho
a
The
game 'was rescheduled for
• · U!ah .................. -43 33 .566
1
8011Gn II O.tlwa, 7:40p.m.
Dcnv"' ....o.............. 33 43 .4:M
17
N.Y . blancbs atHartfmd.1:&gt;40 p.m.
pitch
like
the
·
ace
the
Yankees
day
earher
.had
been
g1ven
a
contoday.
·
MiM-.. ............,.111 56 .243
31
W••hiDaton at N.Y. R.anaen. 7 :40 .
exJ!CCt bim 10 be.
tract extens100 that could keep him
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
Dollu .......................l 67 .101 41 .5
p.m.
.PiuabuaJh at New Jc:ney, 7:40p.m.
'.When I walked out on the m Cleveland thr?ugh 1999 said he isn't surprised at lhe overall
Padfk Dh11ien
. field, the fans staned cheering;· ~e the first maJOr l~guer ever offensive production or at Baerga's
Z·Phoonix ............... S9 16 .717
- • Transactions • a·ScMde ................. SO 2:5 .f/67
9 .
Abhou said. "The size, the intensi- 10 h1t homers from both SJdes of the contribution
•·Ponllnd .............. &gt;16 21 .622 12.5
ty,l
got a kick out of the New Yorlc pia~ during the S!l'"e inning.
.
"I think he's one of the lOp hit- ·
L.A. ClippaL ...... ll ll .SOD 21.S
a-bau
LA. Lal&lt;en .... -...... ll 39 .413 23.S
NaUoaaiJ.eaaue
=~:.~ way they were jumping · . l.t was lhe b1ggest,, ,mCI!t exc•t- ters in tb.e game, •' said Hargrove.
Golda&gt; s.............. 32 43 .427 . rT
CINCINNATI REDS - a-uod Jeff
mg n1ght of my career, sa1d Baer-· · "And right now he's hoL"
!
Sac:rarT\41\10 ............ 22 '3 .293
37
x..u.. pild&gt;or, r..m lndiiMoolil cllhe
Abbou
(1-1)'
gave
up
eight
hits,
ga,
wh~
was
named
the
American
Baerg
a
is
batting
.520
(-13
of
'
•
• ·clinched plafO!fbofth
American Aaaociation . Oe•i&amp;nated
y-clinchod diYIIim tide
OWayneHauy, pite:bet, fortoa•i&amp;nm._
including
an
RBI
single
to
George
League
s
player
of
the
week
Mon25).
As
a
team,
the
Indians
are
hitz-clind\cd confcta)CC title
MONJ'REAL EXPOS - ~
Breti, walked nooe and struck out day.
.
u11g .340. But the Indians; includthe raipulion a( Jim FaMina. apecW
ccntul~.~n~.
Monday's !ICOres
four. It was his fust game in New
The ln~1ans beat the Yankees ing Baerga, know ·that off~nse isn't
NEW YORK METS - Pludwod lhe
Miuni 106.Milwautoe9S
York since the Yankees got hirri in 15-S that mght. They lost io Toron- all they'll need·
~
•
c.oatrlel ol Mickey Wa&amp;on. pilchar, flam
Cmlocle 120, Philoddfitia 101
December from California for three to 13-10 the followirrg ·afterrroon ·
·
Nad'olk ollhe ln.-ttc..J t..p. Sent
Chicoao 9B,Iloboit 91
Wayae- ...,.....,, 10 Nadollt.
· Utah 107, Dallu 94 ·
young players.
.
and fell to the Blue Jays 5-4 on ,--...,;,.."-....,:~...,;...,;_;..,;_.
SAN DIEOO PADRES - Ploood KIUt
L.A. Cli...., Ill, Phciona 104
Cone (~2) allowed three runs, Sunday.
Stiqwcll. infielder, on tho lS·day diaablcd
Denver 1C17, Golden St.ato 96 ·
o~ly .one of them .earned. on seven .
But Baerga went 3 Jor 5, includlUI.
Ridty
- Cot It·
(romRecalled
.La• Vea••
ofCluticnoo.
the Pacific
Tonight's gam..
h•ts 10 seven m~ungs. He has lost ing a three'-run homer, as lhe lndilndiano I t - . 7,30 p.m.
bolh starts for h•s new team, even ans beat Toronto 10-6 on Sunday
Milwa\.lbc II Odando., 7:30p.m.
BlllketbaU
though he has given up just three
·
~atAd&amp;n&amp;a, 7:30p.m.
Natloul W b d A.._.IUCIII
Wuhinstan at N• Ycd:,l p.m.
earned
runs
in
15
innings.
S
t
d
dl'
d
NBA- S"f""dod S.....,.lloboroa &lt;11
L.A. Lakcn 11 Houaon, 1:30 p.m.
The Royals, who also acquired . ~r S ea IDes poste
1llo Leo Alt.... Cllppon Ulll T... u.m.
lolinnaola It S..Wo. 10 p.m.
mond1
ol
ihe
Dorlvct
N11gc1.1
for
one
Sen Ant'onio at Sacramen10, 10:30
Greg Gagne, Jose Lind and Felix
p.m.
.
•
...,.eadlrorf-ina_.,oaApri!
G_allipolis Daily Tflbunr,
Jose
in the winter, have lost six of ThtThe
10.
fined
·aw.i'u
110,000;
H.o...-.
L.A. Cippaa II Partland,,l0:30 p.m.
Datly
Sentinel, the Point
SS,OOO; aad Elm01t Spencer and Oat)'
. their first seven games. Gagne's PlttiSIJIII Rtgintr
and the SudayO...t ci111o CJiwM UIIIIAI'bonoo l!llio
Wednesday's pmes
enor at shortstop led 10 one of New Timts..SentiM/ value tile contribuRobert
WCIII.inn •d s.... !laatlrlp Of~
N~wYod&lt;otO.ul-7:30p.m.
State Aulo's already
' Nugcu SSOO ~ for lol!vin&amp; \he ba;:h
York's runs, while Jose and Lind ·tions their readers m·a ke to the
Ailutut Daroil, 7,30 p.m.
area
d.urina
tho
incident. Named Le.roy
low premiums can be
were injJRd and did 1101 play.
N~w J~y ~t lnd.iana, • :30 p.m.
Nuaay rice
f« human and insjJons scclions of these papers, and
Miami at Otica_JO, _a:30 p.m
reduced even more by
fOIInlfiat. NIOW'CCII.
City
also
Last
year,
Kansas
L.A. J..ikai It Dallu,l:l() ~1ft.
lhclc conlribudons will continue to
PHOENIX
SUNS
PIIC&lt;Id
Chodeo
made
seveml
changes
in
the
offseainsuring
both your car
Houa«n al Dmv«•.9 p.m.
bepublished,
.
Butlcy, fonnrd, en lhe injured Uat. A.c:ti·
MinnelcM It~ 10:30 p.m.
son,
but
dropped
its
first
seven
Yll.ed tom Ch•mbcn; forward, from the
•anc1 home with·tl)e st~te
Su Ant.onio at Oalden Sa.t6. 10:30
llowever, certain deadlines for
i.njwd lia.
games and swted out 1-16.
p.m.
Auto Companies.
submissions .will be obsaved. The
In
other
games,
Texas
beat
BaliootbaU
deadline for photos and relllecl ani-•.NHL•. timore 6-3. California defeated clcs
N.-IP-ii~Mpe
Let us tell you just
for te*etball and other winter
NFL - NIUDCid r.. -"lllllll clinc:\olMilwaukee 12-5 and Minnesota
how much your saYings
cl ' _.....pulolk,..._
sports
is
the
1ait
day
of
the
NBA
WALES .CONFERENCE
topped Chicago 3-2. The Cleve- F'mals.
AJ!-',NI'A PALCOHJ - Sipod AI·
PalrkkDiw..._
•
.,_
can
be.
toft Mmtl&amp;amcl)', tr. lll•y, arwl Mike
land-BosiOO poe was flined OUL
Tum
W L Tl'll. OPGA
Likewise,
the
deadline
for
subGaM, d.Jen.ive u... an, to two-,.., .
, .p;.. ...., ...... 56 21 6 Ill 361 262
Rancers 6, Orioles 3
conar,cu. Sianed. Jot Filbblck, ..,.._,.;
y.w.-.,.. ... 41 l4 1 19 319 2a4
missions of local baseball- and
Juan Gonzalez again led Texas softball-related
Y·Ncw '-f .... 40 l6 6 16 291 'liS
A;ndlot~y w.-u .... NMia~dl.; Ktlly
photos and ~elated
- SIIM, eanahdc:and:Tm
, parMI'.
y·N.Y.IIIIndcn 39 36 6 14 320 21.5
wilii his second two-homer game articles, from T-ball
Pliilodclpllia ...... l4 rt II '79 3(11 311
DENVER B.RONCOS - Siano&lt;l
to the majon
of
the
season
afainst
Baltimore.
N.Y. a...,... . .. )I :11 II , .'19. 30230l
Robert Delpino, llllll1iq - · 10 I iaf•
~-,_~r.,.
The Rangas' 5- record is the best u IVdl • other sprina and ~~~~~~­
sports, is the day of the Jut
~ rtOiiwr 10 a an.)lll OGIIInCL
A.S..Divllloill
\
in the AL.
··. LOs ANGELEs aA Ms - Sianed
·
·
-...........
so
'}f,· 1 101 321 266
of
the World $ciries. The cleiilllnc
Shane Conlan, linCbecUr, 10 a~,..,.
y·Qoel&gt;oc .......... '-16 %7 tO t02 345 291
. Gonzalez had his lOth. mulii- for ))hocos and relaled articles for
Y·lolooaat ........ 47 J0 6 100 323 211
homer gamb for Tens, tying the footblll and other flll~~~Jmt~lJ the
loiiNNESOT A. VIKINGS - Si....
y·Buft'olo ...-..... ll 34 10 .16 3211.211 .
·214 EAST MAIN
S...Solilbuty,.
·
team recml held by Llny Pmisb Salunlay before the Super Bowl.
.. llurfmd ............ 25 5\ l ' Sl %7l!57
NEW OILUNS SAINI'S - Sipod
POMEROY
and Toby H1m11L .
.
o........ -... -.... 10 61 4 24 191 315 .
.W. . Wiloon,q..-, 10 , _ , _
These tledinel have been lastiJobn RUSICII also bomered for tured to give !IIden plenty of lime "
. . 992-6681
~.wWMlbl~a-.nct.
the~
.
to 101 their pholol back from the
NEW YORK JETSScoot
~blt·~--in pilotop'lpby llUdlo of choice ud
.... ,.1"-MI . .....
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
.
NorrloDMoloo
the
siXIb for a 5-3 ad. It - bis 10 liYe t1Je lt8lli the oppllltUilily to
NI!W YORK OIAIII'S - A,_ to
Tu~
•
W L f I'lL Gr GA
fifth
c:areer home run off Mike puliliah thcso aportl pbo&amp;oa and
t.,-na wilh LawJMCC T•Jior, 'in+ =hr,
,..ouc._. ......... 45. 25 12 I~ %73 226
~I
t\II'D-f'Cil'
COIIli'ICL
.
fnawa~~eoeon.,eru.a
Mussina (~1), who
J'n...ii ...... ,.. ,, &gt;16 21 J lQI 3641(T7
artides duriJII the appRipiMc sea. '
stniaht decisioa!s.
son,for thll8pOI'L
_
·

.

-~-

New York, Texas, Minnesota,
California winners in A·L ·action·
won

Scot·elloard
- * Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE
EUttm Dtvillon

Tem

W

L

Pd.

Phill..lpllia .............6
Pk-&amp;h ............... .4

I

.ll7

SLl.w" .............4
MOIIlOII ................. 3
• Chicoao.................... 3
New York .. .............. 2

2
2
3
4
·3

florida .................... .2

l

.1167
.ib7
.lOO
.429
.400
.l$6

GB
!.l
l.l
2.5
3
3
4

Wattrn Dtviakln
Atlanll ..............~ .....5
3 .62!1
San Francisco ..........4
3 .571
1-louai.OI'I .................. )
3
Lo&amp;Aoad~ ............. 3
4 .429

.s

.soo

Colorado ................2
SanDicao ................2

3
4

.&lt;400
.333

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

S

Z&amp;6

I

I.S
I.S
2

:u

. Monday's scores
San Francilco 4, Aorida 3, II i.nninp
l'hil.odclphiol, CNCINNATI 4
0\i&lt;:aao 5, ALian!.l 1

New Yodt 11 Color:ado, ppd., nin
Piaubuflh 4, San Dieao:1

Today's games
Houston (Harnisch 0 -0) at Monueal
(Hilll.O), Ul p.m.

Sa. t.o..U. (Cormier 1·0) atl.o&amp; AnaeJ.e~
(K""" Groa 1·0),4'0S p.m.
f1orida (Aqwn o 0-0) 11 San fr1nciJco
(Burt. 1-0). 4:0S p.m.
CINCINNATI (Belcher 0-0) u
Philldelphia (Greene ()..0), 7:35 p.m.
Chicago (Cutill o 0-0) at Atla nu
(GliYinc 1-0), 7:40p.m.
New York (Siberhaaen 1·0) .u Colondo {Ash by 0-0), 9:05p.m.
Pitt.Jbursh (Walt 1-0) at San Dicao
(Gomc::t. 0-0). 1 0:~ p.m .

Wednesday's games
Florida at San Fnm:iaco,&lt;4:M p.m.
. OlicagoatALlarua.S :10F.m.
Hous1.0n 11 Montrc.al. 7:35p.m.
CINCINNATI at Philadelphia, 7:3S

p.m.

New Yolk aLCoiondo, 9:0S _p_.m.

Pitubu~ a tSan. Diego,lO:OS_.P. m.
10 :3~ p.m.

St ..U'nluat Lo;t Anaela,

'

•

....,.,..

AMEli.ICAN LEAGUE
Eukm IM•lllon
W L Pet.
801LOO .... .. ...............4
2 .f:JJ1
Toronto .... .............. 3
2 .tiOO
New York ...., .......... .4
3 .S71
CLEVELAND ......... ]
l .lOO
OcuoiL.... ;........ , ...... 2
4 .333
Milw•~;~-ke.e ..............2
4 333

08

Ttant

·Baltimore ...... , ...... .1

'

S

.5

.s
I
2
2
3

167 ·

2
2

.667
.667

Saulc .................... 3

2
'l
4

.600
.S11
.429
143

o"'~nd

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

MM\IIGICU ............ ..4

Chicaa.o................... 3
K~nuJ City ............. 1

6

I
I
1.5 .

I.S
2.5
4.5

Monday•s scon:s
New Yolk 4, Kanau City I
a..EVEI...AND I t B~I-OR, p¢., rain
C.lifomi&amp; 12. Milwaukee
Minn-.. l , Chic.oao 2
Tea .. 6, Battimo~ 3

s·

Toduy's games
CLEVELAND (Mulit 0.(1)

801f0"

IL

(Viol• 1.0). I :05 p.m.

·

o.kland (DtYII ().1) at Dctroi.L {MOOR

0.1), I :35 p.m.
Solt~

.

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We~Lun Ot•blon
Tc1u ....... 1.. .. . .......... 5 I .ll3

CaUfomia ........, ........4

Bae:r:-ga's efforts earn him
AL player-of-the-week honors

w......,.... . . . . .

· .

(B01io 0.1) •t Toronto (Lei&amp;er

1.()), 7 ! ~5 p.m.
..
_ _ . ( - O.ll 11 Otiooao

(Fomln4oa I·O),s,os p,m .
.
BlllliiDOnl (Valenzud• 0·0) at Teua

(Ropn O.O), I:JS p.m.

Wednaday's pmn

·K~MMCilyaiNew YorX,I p.m.
a..£VE~,A.ND al801\0n, I :OS p.m.
~ • Mllweukee. 7:0!1 p.m.

- · r - . 7:3Sp.m. ·
· PI
x·a~.t:OSp.m.
N'
r • Tea•, 1:35 p.m.

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.Tuesday, April 13, 1993

'

In NBA action, .

.

·

Old-fashioned court battle
sees Bulls beat Pistons 98-95
By The Associated Press
The Chicago-De~it game had the look of four
years ago, when M~chae! Jon!~ was getting hammered and Scotue P1ppen s contnbution was negligible.
The difference now, however, is thai the Bulls no
longer are chasmg the Pistons and Chicago usually
wms.
·
. 1he ~arns waged an old-fashioned battle Monday
mght, wnh three ejections, five technicals and a fla~t foul in the Bulls' 98-95 victory.
When we play Delroit, it is always a war," said
Stacey Kmg, who scored II of his 17 points in lhe
fourth quarter. " They hate us, and we hate them."
The ga~e . which saw Scott Williams arid Bill
·!-3imbeer ~Jected after fust-half fight, got increasmgly phys•cal in the fourth quarter as Dennis Rodman ":'as ca.lled for a flagrant foul on Jordan, who Jed ·
the Bulls w11h 23 points.
After that, J_&gt;istons coach Ron Rothstein was called
,for two techmcal fouls, and was ejected by referee
. P~n Vaden. There was also a double technical on
Is1ah Thomas and Chicago's John Paxsen. ,
Af~r R~lhstein's ejection, Chicago led 84-79, b.ut
.Pelroll ralhed for an 88-86 advantage wilb 5:43 left.
Jordan put the Bulls m front 94-93 on a jumper with
two minutes remaining.
.
Olden Polynice's dunk gave the Pistons a 95-94
lead with 45 seconds left before Horace Grant
grabbed an offensive rebound and passed to Jordan
who was f(_luled and hjt both ·rree throws with 22 sec~
: onds r~mrumng . After Joe Dumars missed a jumper,
King hit 1\110 free lhrows to complete the scoring.
· Terry Mills led Detroit with 25 points.
·
, Elsewhere in the NBA, it was Miami 106 Mil·
.waukee 95; Charlotte 120, Philadelphia 101 :' Utah
107, Dallas 94; the Los Angeles Clippers Ill,
Phoenix IQ4; and Qenver 107, Golden State 96.
Clippers Ill, Suns 104 - Los Angeles took
advantage of the absence of Charles Sarkley to win
its sevenlh slraight home game and snap Phoenix's
11 -game winning Slreak.
·
The Clippers, behind Danny Manning's 31 points,
became the only team to defeat the Suns three times
th1s season and won lhe season series 3-2 for the second straight year.
Barkley, the Suns ' leading scar~r and rebounder,

a

In NHL action,

.

.

was pia~ on the injured lisiMonday with a strained
an4 bru1sed shoulder and will miss at least five
games. Rookie Oliver Miller started at forward in
place of Barkley.
Rookie Richard Duma s led Phoeni~ with 28
points and 12 rebounds.
· Nuggets 107, Warriors 96- Golden State
already the most injury-plagued team in the NBA•
couldri 't overcome having just si11 players in the sec~
ond half and lost at home to Denver:
Reggie Williams scored 13 of his 33 points in lhe
decisive.thlrd-quarter for ihe Nuggets.
.
Denver, down 5848 at halftime, outscored Golden State 26-6 to open the second half and 34-14 in
the third quarter, taking l\0 82-721ead.
LaPhonso Ellis had 21 points and 12 rebounds for
the Nuggets. Victor Ale~ander had 22 points and 12
rebounds for the Warriors.
.
.Jazz 107, Mavericks 94 - Karl Malone had 27
POihts and 13 rebounds as Utah snapped a threegame .losmg streak by winning at home against Dallas.
·
Th~ Jazz erased a S4-S2 deficit midway through
the thll'd quarter as Jay Humphries and Jeff Malone
who finished with 17 points each, keyed a 27-13 ~
that gave Utah a 79-65 lead going into the fourth
penod.
.The Mavericks, led by rookie Sean Rooks' 20 ..
pomts, could get no closer than eight points down the
streiCh and fell to 8-67 for the season.
1
H~nets llO, Sixers 101 -Larry Johnson scored
?4 po~nts .and Alonzo Mourning 28 as Charlotte
tmP.roved ~ts playoff chances by defeating visiting
Phtladelplua.
·
.. ~e Hornets, who haven't made the playoffs since
JOmmg the NBA in 1988, Sll!yed in seventh place in
the. Eastern Conference playoff hunt, one game ahead
of ulle lndi8JUI and I 1/2 gameS ahead of DetroiL
Johnny Dawkins scored 23 points for lhe Sixers
while Kendall Gill hruJ.18 for the Hornets.
' ·
Heat lOf?, Bucks. 95 - . Miami kept its s4m playoff hopes alive, beating Milwaukee for its 14th victory m IS home games.
.Glen Ri~ sco~ 25 points and hit three threepomters, while·Bnan Shaw, who had an NBA record
10 lhree-poiljters at Milwaukee last week, made four
threes and scored 16 points
·
Todd Day scored 20 poi~ts far Milwaukee.

Philly hands N.Y. Rangers .l-O ,loss
to grease -latter's best-to-worst skid Taylor OKs tWo-year pact with 'Giants . .
LET'S GO! -The Chi~ago Bulls' Scott
Williams (42) and the DetroifPistoas' Bill Laimbeer (right) exchange jabs on the court during a
boxing match inter1upting Monday night's NBA

game at Auburn Hills, Mich., where the Bulls
won 98-95. Williams and Laimbeer were among
those ejected from the game. (AP)

We were trying to make up lost
The Rangers, whO . had JO!l
ground with a less-effective team.
points Inst season, were knocked
months after Taylor stunned the . used as a situational player on pass"If we didn't think we were a out o.f a postseason berth for the · · By TOM CANAVAN
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. G.ants m October by announcing mg snuauons. But you don't pay
good .team, ':l'e wouldn't be. sil dis- . first ume 1il five years .
appomted nght now. I th•!'k the ·
The Flyer~, knocked. out of play- - ~AP)- Now lh~ Lawrence Taylor his retirement at the end of the someone $2.5 million annually to
•s all but back m the New York 1992 season.
.
be a part-t•mer. The Giants also
expectatiOns we had, certamly to off contenuon the mght before Giants'
how
will
.his
role
be
However,
a
combination
of
free
seem
to lack lincbacking depth,
fold,
make the playoffs, (were) legiti- when the New York Islanders
defmed
by
new
coach
Dan
Reeves?
agency,
a
coaching
change
and
a
meaning
Taylor might have to be a
mate."
defeated New Jersey, pulled themTaylor
assured
himself
of
some
season-ending
Achilles'
tendon
full-timer.
·
. Ranj:ers coach Ron Smith said selves imo a fifth-place tie with lhe role Monday by reaching agree- injury in November in a game
,
Taylor
has
said
he
does not want
thtngs m the loss Monday reflected Rangers with two games left. Each
ment .on a ~ew contract that will against Green Bay caused Taylor to to be a situational player, and Rost~,c,:tub's ~n.
. .
·
tea.m is five points behind the . l&gt;ay h•m a bttle more lllan $5 mil. reconsider, Rosner said.
ner said he docsn'tthink LT has to
When II happens uf the 82nd Islanders.
honoverthenexttwoyears.
Now it's the Giants·· turn to sharctimc.
grune, you have to wonder," Smith
The Flyers not only were able to
Steve Ro~ner, Taylor's business think . The big question is : Does
Rosner said 'one of the things
sa1d, noung lhe Rangers' ballered celebrate Mark Recchi's team- manager,
srud
the
34-ycar-old,
10- Taylor remain a full-time pass that convinced Taylor to return for
troops. New York has played 46 record !20th point of the season
tune Pro Bowl linebacker will sign rus~ing linebacker in a 34 front, or a 13th season with the Giants was
games without star defenseman and Dominic Roussel's secorid theconlractlaterth•s week.
,. do things change? ·
the level at which he was playing
Bnan Leetch and the last eight career shutout, but look forward 10
The
agreement
comes
just
six
It
is
possible
Taylor
might
be
before
being hun.
without defcnseman James Patrick. getting out of the division ·base" He was at a preuy high level "
. "It would be worse if we were ment at the expense oflheir nearby
Rosner said .
'
at full streriglh," Smith said. "We rivals. ·
·
The Giants declined comment
were askmg people to step up and
·. "We've got to beat them out for .
on t~e agreement Monday .
compensate. Maybe we asked too fifth. and !hat's our main goal right
Spokesman Pat Hanlon said it was
much."
. now." said Recclii, whose first,
team policy not to _commem until
penod ass1st set up Greg Hawcontracts are signed.
good's lOth goal as the Flyers put
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich . McDowell: " Mac's a nigger."
.
The new conlract will increase
together their best streak since (AP)
- Protests from students,
Dambrot released a statement Taylor's salary by almost Sl mil October 1990.
community members and alumni when he began serving the suspen- lion per season. He made $ 1.45
. R;cchi said the Rangers "just forced Central Michigan University sion, saying the term was "not million in 1992.
d1d0 t seem like they wa~ted to win · ·tO fire it:l basketball coach for using used in any racially offensive manRosner said the sides have been
the game."
a rac1ally derogatory term in front ncr."
close lO reaching 'an agrccme'ri[ for '
Cl.iEVELAND (AP) - . The best players that we can,," he said.
"Our team understood the con- more than a week, adding lllat TayCleveland Browns hope the NFL
Clevell\Dd will select lith in lhe
But the Rangers' Mark Messier of his ·tcam, universjty officials
draft will provide some players first round o'f the draft. · Browns said he couldn't ·say the team was said.
notation of the word as I used it lor, who was a free agent, never got
Keith Dambrot was fired Mon- and were not offended by it." far in talks with other clubs.
who have staying power on the .coach BiJI Belie hick said the flat.
·
field.
.·
team's recent free agent signings
"We were playing a tight day.
\l&gt;ambrot's.statement saitl.
Several team s expressed an
He had been suspended for four
At least one player said he interest in talking to him and havqirec'tor of player personnel are a boost.to its draft-day strategy. checking game," Messier said.
da)IS April I for allegedly using stands behind Dambrot and said ing him take a physical examina·
Mike Lombardi said Monday that
The BTowns have picked up "That's the kind of game it was.
"The last week has just been rac1al slurs .when he spoke to his - that was the only time he heard the tion Rosner said.
the Browns, who have six selec- quarterback Vinny TeSieverde and
· tions in the eight -round draft that wide receiver Mark ·carrier from · tough. You live and die lhe game team and when he referred to assis- coach use such language.
"I know he's not racist" fresh·
begins April 25, will be looking for Tampa Bay' offensive tackle Hous- and something like this happens, tant coach Demck McDowell.
"Public reaction to the incident man DcShanti Foreman '!old the
what he called "three-down play- ton Hoover ·from Atlanta and you take it personally. It's a biuer
ers."
defensive back Majee Mustafa (for- pill to swallow, that's for sure."
has smce created an environment Detroit Free Press in a story pub- .
m~kes it impossibl.e for the . Jished today.
that
"Today you see a lot of substi- merly Reggie Rutland) from Min- .
Roussel, whose only previous
umverslly
to conduct a v1able bas" If this were a black coach say· tution on the field nearly every nesota.
shutout came Feb. 27, 1992 at Calplay," said Lombardi. "But if you
"We feel that with the four gary,stoppedaU,Z4shOtsbyateam ketball ~rogram unde~ , Coach ing that, nothing would have been
can get someone who can stay on signings that we have put ourselves · that in two previous games this sea- Dambrot s lead.ershiP: pave made of it. It's just one of those
the field for all three downs and 1101 ·. in a position to choose a grea play- ' son scored II tolal goals against Keihtz, Central M1ch•gnn s dii'CC!Or . things that's getting blown out of
By
of athletiCS, sa1d •n a statement proportion."
·
l!e "substituted, his value goes way er rather
than pass for a player for a him. . ·
· 1 eed" B I' h'
'd
"It was really important to Monday.
Dambrot led the university's
l up.
partJcu ar 0 • e IC ICk Sat •
me," Roussel said. "There were
Dambrot,
who
refused
to
combasketball
program for two years,
Grate
1
"We don't. worry ... if Ibis is a
"This team i~ in the best posi- three games left in the season and 1 .
deCISIOn,
sa1d
he
lias
accumulating
a 20-34 record.
menton
the
l deep draft as long as we get the six tion since I came here ' three years had no shutouts. 1 was re3lly think- consulted several lawyers. He said Dambrot also coached
· of
at ·Ashland
'
ago," he said.
'
I
Lombardi and Belichick cau- ing about it in lhe third period."
he .couldn,'t speculate on possible University and Tiffin , University.
Rutland
acuon
unul after he meets with his He has a 108-70 career record.
I
Sports .b r.'iefs
tioned against grading the team's
The shutout was i'he ,Flyers'
Furalt1re
·~ ·
picks immediately.
sixth this season, their most 'Since anomey today.
.
He was 16-14 and 24-9 at Tiffin
1
"Making these grading reports eight in 1985-86, and their· third
H.e allegedly told the· players from. 1984,.1986. At Ashland, he
;
Football
on how a team does the day after during the winning streak.
'
late m the season: "I wish we had was 22-8 and 26-5 from 1989Thera'• a ·n - pill that makee you
., ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) the draft are good for lhe 'ans, but
Recchi claimed Bobby Clarke's more mggers on th1s te·am." He
1991.
look younger, &amp;ut pule on -lghl
~I -The Buffalo Bills will match
" very 17. year-o Jd rec9r d s hOft 1Y arter also ,allegedly said, in reference to
So lnotMd ol looldng oixty you
it's important not to take them
loOk like two thirty-yeor-oldo.'
:san Francisco's offer to nose tackle seriously," sa"" Loinbartli.
being honored with the team's
•••
tJeff Wright, general manager John
"We are a"'skl'n~ college players most valuable player award, named ·
~~4 ~ ~ ~illl!f/$11it"~f*! fid~
Do
you
know
what'a
rNIIy ocary
Butler said, Offici.ally, the Bills to;nove from a I -gaiJIC schedule '''or Clarke.
about haavy traffic? On the other
'~ have until Wednesday to match lhe .to
a 20-game schedule aand some·Working on lhe left side behind
olde ol the rOIId, th- •• juet •
1
,•
,offer sheet, but Butler said the Bills
•ke net Recch'1 passe" to Ha ood
mony ..,. trying lr•llcally to !l!'
-~
..-(',
I
..l\f"
'"""
f,.U,
times
we
forget
that,"
he
••'d.
.
"'
•
~
wg
•
1
away
from 1M placa where you ra
bave
decided
to
equaJ
.the
fourwho
put
it
past
R'chter
'th
S
18
1
l
"You have to give it time,"
WI
:
going.
:year, $6 million package.
Belichick added. "There are guys remaining in the fJrst period. It was .
~~
57-59 Court St., Gallipolis )
••• •
What you haar nev• ooundo aa
:
'
Basketball
who have great first years, then R~hi's 69111 assist, to go with 51
/. . • ~ 'U i ..-+'ij,
(614) 446-9545
, TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) goals, as he passed Clarke's 1191mportantao what you o-hear.
•Attorneys selected a jury for the rater out. And you have some w~o point mark of 1975-76:
"For Your BMtjit,
' l!:r.!'~ oomaona you ,.y
isexual discrimination trial of for·ave a hard urn~ adjustina and
In the only other NHJ. game
wtlit !'&gt;! ~ batt.r lc!IJ,
;mer Alabama.coach Wimp Sander- improve in their SCCOfJd year, like Monday night, Washington edged
•son, who allegedly punched his Leroy Hoard. When a player gets Montreal3' 2 in overtime.
Thwe'o one thing about oiUpldity
10 his third year, you haye a real
:longtime secretary in the face.
Capitals 3, Canadlens 2 (OT)
- you can ba pretty oura Jt'o
genuine.
• A
· h
b ·
, good idea about him."
·
·1
n e1g t-mem er Jury was
Last season, Cleveland traded
A:t Montreal, Canadiens coach
•••
· :selectlld durin¥ an all-day session its 'fourth choice 10 the Chicago Jacques Demers lifted g~tender
,in U.S, Distnct Court that also Bears for center Jay Hilgenberg.
. Paui~k Roy .m ~e .fmal mmute of
, lineh!ded
selection Of jurors for
Cleveland's eighth round scJec• . OVerti~C, Wldl h1~ team desperate
•Iive other cases to be trted while don ·went 10 the Las An ••• Rams for a wm ~move. 11110 a de ~o~ ~.
AT OSCAR'S, OF COURSE
:Birmingham-based Judge Sam
ge...,.
ond place tn lhe A.c·-s DIVIStO
' in a trade for linebacker Frank
.
· ""'"
. n
IPointer is in Tuscaloosa.
·
Starns.
w11h Que~ . The aa~ble f!ided
i Nancy Watts chums Sanderson
A number of
suon
· 5 ~~..:··-• when a. w1dc-open Mike R;•dlek.
'a• ave her a black :Je March 17. ' around Robert que
-·'"""" scored mto "."
•n empty net
th 4
Smith, who left
.
w•
.
.· .
\
•1992, after she IWt him about his Oblo Slife eart 10 enter the .._. sccllf!ds rrmammg, .
:..Ciationship with 1001her female The BIOWIII wlat..n•t ~':i
R!dley tapped m a pu~ from
Or ............... ~ ......... ,...
71110!1~
:Cmpl"lee In lhe alhlelic ::wart- wbether they ml&amp;ht pursue the for- Kevm Hatcher u Wash•ngton
. "'PEN 7 DAYI
DALY LUNCHEON BUFFETS
;:::L11r~th~':: ~n ::::· mer EPCiid High running back, en:ed a f!l"r-game !osing streak
11.124 ...........
AWEEK"
11:1U.M.·1:41P.M.
"tiiCked
him
and
......
•tuck
out
~'Olhet'
than
to say dlcy'd oonlillmd anhi movolllhree potniS ah~d of
,. __ '"',.
•ua him
'
t rd-plac.e New Jeraoy m the
742·2211
•a~:n
oJett ~ 10 fend her otf. .
·
·
· Palrick.
·
·

ByMIKEOWEN '.
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Now
that the New York Rangers and
Philadelphia Flyers definitely are
· out of lhe playoff picwre, both can
work on another goal: not finishing
last in the Patrick Division.
The Rangers' 1-0 loss to
Philadelphia on Monday night
,.
ma~ked a turnaround from the
NHL's PeSt rec.ord a .year ago to
elimination.from a chance at postseason play.Jt was New York's
fifth s!l'aight defeat and ninth in its
last 11 ga~s.
Philadelphia won its .sixth
straight.
' 'The most disappointing thing
is that we didn't .takc the bull by
,the horns,' ! said Rangers goalie
Mike Richter, who stopped 23 of
·24 shot,s. "That fourth-place spot
was open for the last three weeks.
.

Central Michigan removes .
Dambrot as head cage coach

Dave

r-.:'b;
. . ;.,.:.--,: ~

Oscar's (/)" rt"

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·) · FRENCH CUISINE .EVENING )

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Chose F,_ 0. EmNSIYE BUFFET! ( .

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The Daily,Se.n tinel

By TheB,end
The anniversary celebration
hono~ing Charles. J. ~nd ~etty
Brown Lainbert, Reedsville, will be
held Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. ·at the
VFW hallm Tuppers Plains. Rela. lives and friends of the couple are
invited to atiend d!e open reception
hosted by their son and daughterin-law. Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.
Lambert, and mends.

Dances discontinued
Square dances which have been
regularly held at the Long Bottom
community building are being discontinued. However a smorgasbord
will be held at the building on
Apri124.
I

INFORMATION AVAILABLE· A n11mber of info1111ational
pamphlets a.nd brochures about various events and attractions
throughout Obio are availa~le at the Meigs County .~bamber ~f
&lt;;:umltlerce Visitor's Center m Pomeroy. The latest editifln of OhiO
Pass is now avaUable and features an advertisement about Mei!p
County'On page 53. Pictured are JoA.nn Wilford, right, and Debbte
Clay, as they. arrange tbe brochure d~play.

,

I
I

.

~

Ohio Pass brochures available

, If you are looldng for an inter: esting and fun place to visit within
• Ohio, the Meigs County Chamber
: of Commerce Visitor's Center has
· the information you may be look·
: ing for.
.
There are free copies of the
: Ohio Pass .magazine, m which an
. advertisement for Meigs County
appears on page 53, Ohio Buckeye
Quanerly caleiJdars, Meigs County
eveniS calendars, annual and quar-

terly brochures from around the
state.
Also available are pamphleiS on
workshops. seminars, the Small
Business. Administration, and other
useful information.
The visitor's center is located in
the chamber office at 200 E. Second Street in Pomeroy.
The brochure racks in the offtee
were donated by Robert Harden of
Plus Systems, computer specialist,
Minersville.

........." . .

Did you knq~?
Yellowstone National Park,
established in 1872, is the oldest
national park in the United Stares.
It covers parts of Wyoming, M9n1ana and Idaho.
Under the U.S. tax laws,
employee business expenses
including travel. automobile. tele- ·
phone, gifcs and entertainment are
deduttible only as itemized miscellaneous deductions.
During its long run .on Broad·
way, "South Pactfic" . had a total
of 1,925 perform~ces.
.
The Great Seal of the United
States shows an American bald
eagle with a. ribbon in il$ mouth
bearing the slogan' "E pluribus
unum" (One'out of many).
Sir'haac Pitman invented Pit·
man shorthand, the shorthand
method of writing ·that bears his
name; in 183 7. ·

-

,.

.'•'•

.. •·'

. -'·

Council
makes
-donation

'•
•

'

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f

'

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I

I
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~~

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.;'
ACCEPTS DONATION· Rita Field,LSWoftbe Meigs Coun' ty Early Intervention Program, accepts a check from Peggy
, Stevens, social work major··at the University. or Rio Grande, on
: behalf of the Social Work· Student Council. Educational materials
wiD be purchased with tbe molley.

. The Social Work Student Council of the University of Rio Grande
has made a donation 10 be used for
the Early Intervention Program at
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment
Four counties were selected to
receive donations through the project of the Socia:! Work Student
Council.
Peggy Stevens. a ·social work
major from Middleport, and a
junior at the University, was-cho·
sen to. present the check to Rita J.
Fields. licensed social worker. She
is the service coordinator for the
Meigs County Early Intervention
Program. The money will be used
J to purchase educational material
for the birth to three year old chi!·
dren in the.prograrn:

'Te~porary

- - - ----

Tuesday, April 13, 1993
. Pag~

•

Lamberts p\an to
celebrate anniversary

The Dally Sentlnei-Pagt-7

' stay turried into

t4 months

,. Days

Words · Rate

l

I5
15
I5
15
15

3
.6
10
Monthly

Over iS Words
$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ ..60
$.05/day

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

Rates are for consecutive tUns, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

==-=-----!

.._.,Lou

57- Muolcal IIUirl'menu
Fruiu &amp;: Veeetaloleo
Fol' Sale or Tr•de

GET RESULTS • FAST!

2-loM...ry
3- Auou'DCemeall

11- Holp WaoJod

4--Civeaway

12- SituatioDI Y anted

5-HappyAdt

13-IDI~e

~Loot

omd Found ·

At.~ction

9- 'l'an"!'fiD Buy

'

Auloo for S.lo
Truclu lor Sale

. v... &amp;4wD'• .
ltfoloreyclea
Boall &amp; Moton for Sole
·Auto Parll It A.cc ..oori"l
Auto Repair
Ca•p... Equip~~~eat

Fumlobed Roo. .

46- Space for Rent
47- 'l'aaled to Real
48- Eqaljomeot for Root

•

.

52- Spo...... Goodo,
53-Aallo!~ Mile. Merobandioe
55- BuildiD(I Supplleo

PIH~

614·989·2405
lllliva

-•••I• &amp; pltOM M....r

614~742·2138

•

3-4-93-1

6:45p.m.

2251 Silll. St. • (614) 992-5315

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Th ia lid good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. He!. 0051-32

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

••,.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING . 1
BULLDOZING
CARPENRR SERVICE
.PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp; '
. HOMESITES

HOME

•

L.OOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

From Foundation
to Root
Free Estimates;
Low Costs,
Work Guaranteed
614-949-2335 or

&amp;._lor
Painting

(FREE ESnMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
. 992-6215
POIIIII"oy, Ohio

COMPLIMENTARY
FACIAL

CHARLIE'S

36970 BoD Run Road

Pomeroy, Ohio

SIZED LIMESTONE

992·3470

OWNER:
JeH Wkkeri•am

Contulllnll
Carolyn McCoy

REASONABLE RATES

(614) 992-5082
Sandra Herderaon
(614) 992-3647

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

992·7553'
POMEROY, OH.

Producllln Stock -

3m/8311

4MS11ft0.

MICROWAYI 0¥11
••d YCl. RIPAII .

THE BOOK
BARN

lrf'\11 Ia Or We

IUY • SELl • TUDE
.317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Ohio ·
lloll.·frl. llhOO.SzOO
Satartlay I O:G0·6100
Clo11• Sunday
' 992·3577

lllMIIU

KIN'S lPBfiANU
SEIYICI
992·5335or
985·3561
Acnu , _ ,_, Offlca

EXCAVATING

Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint
Homes and
Aluminum Siding
Washing

NEW - REPAIR ,
Gutters
Downapouti
Gutter Cleen Ing
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

949•2168&amp;o1J3..tfn

11111"1211

3·1

I:H 1111&gt;1:10 pm
Thull. ..... 10 11114 pill
104 Mullltrty Aw.
,.•••• Cia. 417•

fOI WI
C.ll 614-992· .
6637

Fe!tiiiJfnl, .W11C • and

tudlng.

•

_........

Shrub IIIII Traa :rrimmlnl!
• Ratnoval
,•;

Ar ·£ , PillA

PM

I olll .

lt.ll. 7
CHIIIIN,.OI.··.

'

FIIEWOOD FOR tAU
~.

..

'

.

II

31241931 1 •o ptll

Announcements
3

A

nnouncements

Aa 01 Thlo

I"

Dolo;

I ..,.,. 0.

SmHh Will Not Bo Rao....,.lblo

Debt&amp; Othlr .Than My

ACCIDENT
INSUUNCE COMPANY FOt'
:=_~;::~r..=~'~r
'= ~
'
Whot You Sol. Add Foot
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accidenr •Annui.ty, IRA • Mortgage ·

Roc ky R• Hupp, D•( •U• • Agent
;
BOX

189

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843•5264 . 1/20/93Mn

~!."'-To~~..lD::!"~

Men:hondl...
Ratalt
Prio•
Ronge
F""" .IS.
To $21.88.

=

CollipatHive Wlfh D l - t
,..,.._
Hluh a..1"' " - Ateo.
v... Can Add - .oo To

~::-oo_;.:,..v~~
~rit;,T~rt.:\~"ll:.~~~

~~:~~Ill T - Glrr. WIM

To Talk To Voull 1·-0 00 110..0771

E•t. 6204 · U .H Par Min. Mull
So 18 Yrw. Unlat1r Co. 102-t31·

0111 . .,

II.

WE DO ROOFING

COIISIIUCnOI

SIDD LIMESTONE

l..wnllotelnt.

.

NOW OFFERING••••••
OIL AND LUBE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND ROTATING

IISED RAILIOAD TIES

•••• •••n••
....... =:.
...........
·.u;,;

'I·IH·IJ7~1460 .

.111 Court Street, ~omeroy, OH 45769

Io_la . . laylarvke
CaH 'Irea4a at 992-5770
20• Tn. hp. lowlatt
l•lt·J ••

IIU$lACI
992·2269

G•ll2

94f·2391or

'··~··llleNI......, ••.,.tn,

. -LIGHT
HAULING.
.
•FIREWOOD

&amp;IUIII

.MAimNAICE

IIINIA'S
CIIITIOIII &amp; IDIUJIOII

PH. 614·985·3949

SHRUB
TRIMa•d
REMOVAL

Association is
Joo.klng tor currant
addresse• ot Malga
gradu~s for April
ll'!alllng tor Alumni
Danca on
•'
· May 21, 1993. ·
Mall addresses to
Meigs Alumni
AISOclatlon, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohlo45780

RIPDit

....

ROOFING

ORtVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMEST.OftE·TRUCKING
FREE ESl'IMATts

Houro: lull. a lion. Cloltd
. T-, Wtd., Frl

fill 11111U111

Howard L Writesel

L.ANDCLE~G.

.Shot
~uJ
!i~

2/12/92/tfn

I'it.::::::::::::====:::; I.:============:;;;~::;
AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE ana :;:,~ny

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
· SEPnC SYSTEMS.
HOME BITES Mel
TRAILER SITES,

MEADOWS .SHOE
L~THER REPAIR

(No Sunday Calls)

47269 St. Rt. 241• IY. Mile OH Rt. 7
Tllru Chester o• Rt. 241 ·

(614) 992•5449
12131192Mn

AW

. 614·992·7643

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

· · Susoned
$40.00 a load
- Delivered.

'25 HOUR

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESi'IMATES

3fl511

DOZER WORK,I
DRIVEWAY: WORK
aatl UMESTONE
DUIVERY SERVICE 1.1 ...... HARDWOOD

Miry Kly hit a proveneffective tldn care progrem
dealgned lor your 1kin type.
MARY KAY
lndepandent lluuty

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

614-992-7698

614-593-501 0

129.95 +Tax

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

TRAINING

U.tmo.

WICK'S
SERVICE

1

NURSES' AIDE
WITH .CPR

IMPROVEMENTS

12·5-tfn

Prices St.t1ng at

T-Shlrts • Hats • Uniforms

. ·--·-··--·

.

SIRUT &amp; SHOCK
2 Front Struts • La.or
• 4 w•••l AliJI•ment

ROUSH'S PRINTING

IN POMEROY

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE

can 814-992-7104for - l

&amp; Mater C•d

POOR BOY TIRES

; EAGLES
CLUB

PH. 614-992-5591

q

Kirk UndeiiChultz, A.F.A.c:ertified joumeyman Ianier
altering his hoof trimming aervicea to cattle owners.
15 years experiance as a proles&amp;ional farrier.
All trimming Is dono with hand tools (not grinders)
us.in~.••.port,~le rollover chute.
.
travel up to 1Y, hours from Uttle Hocking,
requires a minimum of ·ts head of cattle par visit to
Spacial arrangements poa&amp;ible for 4·H groups and clubs.

Call fer aa appel.. _

EVERY THURSDAY

...........
..,••.

,;

The DailY · . Sentinel
I

I

•regardless of income
· •regardless of grades
•plus $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless of credit

Viaa

LICENSED ln&lt;l BONOEO

MAIL TO:

I

for all college bound students.

87- Upbolotery

HAUUNG: Llmellone,
Din, Gravel and Coal

PHONENUMBER:----------------~--------~-­

"

Guaranteed Scholarship Money ·

po
82- Plumblq &amp; Boa lilts
83- E~teaYaLint
84- Eloctricol &amp; Refr;pn•tiorj
85- C..enl Haallntt · · ·
86-- Mobile Home Repair.

LIMESTONE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL

ownar finonc:lnQ of up 10 IIO'Ko of pwchasJI
amount may be pooolblt• tor-qua/~ng per·
oori 10 buy very nice home an 3\loaes In
· 4 BR. 3 balho, 2 Qo!IGOI. ronlld 1 ·
BR apt. Propor!J /nCkHiol 4,800 oq. It firm

NAME:~----------------------~~~--------

.

CATTLE OWNERS

&gt;I I i \ II I ,

HAULING

Rt:pUCt:DI
·
The prtca haa bMn reduced 10 $88,900 """I

.

.

ATI'ENTJON

'

DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

~

!NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLINC PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY. THIS DOES
NOT AI'PLY TOY ARD SALES)
(

. ..

318/tfn

call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10.7 or Sat10-4

ENTERPRISES ·

'

985-3406

u.-....Jt

3-12· 3·1-

.

Chester, Oh. 45720

To collect your scholarship money

This Is Your Invitati011 To Sell Any Item For ·~ilo.oo Or ,Less
·
And A,dyertlse It FREE. ..
. . .
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted1,
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our .Office.
You Ad Will Run For One Week.

..,

614 446 1157

Hay &amp; Grain
Seed &amp; Fortiloer

14- B • l - TraiaiD(I .

· 8- Public Salt &amp;

1-800-598-5654

"" ....

· 41- HoUHI for But
42-- Mobile Horne. for R,qt
43- FarJU for Rent
~- Aparttnent for Rent

15- S,hoolo &amp; ll."tructioo
1~ Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mioeollanoo"'
18- WaoJod To Oo

7- Loot and Found

IFIRIBIB

. (OFFER EXPIRES 6/21 /93)

•SP Diesel Supreme...Try It, there Is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel in winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST
Special farm terms with payment 4 times a year
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
Larry E. Miller
.

'I'aatoclto Buy

33- Fanu for Salt
M- B ...~ Ilaildillp
ss- Loll a. .t....,.
3£&gt;-. Real Eotate'IVaoJod

~

36358 SR7 ·

I \1&gt;\1 -1 1'1'111'
,\ I I \ I ' I t It 1,

IiI \ I \I ·.

Clean Out YouJ;" Closet,
Basemerit, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into ·CASH With A

'

56- Poll for Sale

32- M..lle Ho- for Sole

•"

PARTICIPATE IN PROGRAM· Students school students with' the programs. Students
from Eastern High School and Me.i 's High attend lectures and labs, following the same
School recently participated in an engtneering schedule as tbe under~raduate student. Eastern
student for a day program at Ohio University's ·, High School and Metgs High School students
CQIIege of Engineering and Tecbnology. This parlicipaling in this program Included: Tyson
program pairs high l;chool juniors with under· . Rose, Eastern; and Jason Miller, Arnie Elliott
.
graduates in one or the engineering Qr technolo· and Tonya Thornton, Meigs.
gy disciplines in an effort to acquaint the high

11\\\tl\1
21- B..Opportwoity
2223- Prof.aiooal S...ic•

,~------~------~~

CJLA®~llWllilD

1&amp;Yu,.

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

RATES

---___ ..,.

.,_....,.

Shade River Saddle Shop

,Marketplace.

bldg.

......

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.

•The Areats Number 1

Area Convention in Baltimore. Md!
was presented. Members receive&lt;C
invitations from Xi Gamml!;
Epsilon about Founder's Day to bqj
held at the Holiday Inn in Galli~
lis on April29, 6 p.m.
' :
Otllers attending were Joa~
Corder, Charlotte Elberfeld, Velma;
Rupe, Reva Vaughan, and Clal'iat
Krauuer ~·

--

.,

MA:O

10 mi... aouth of Glllllpoll•
on BJ.den Roed
·
PH. ~14-256-6160

-•

.Donna)ones elected sorority president

'

GOOD SERVICE IS
OUR GOAL

J. S. MARINE

Retired teachers to
meet

'

.

save Big on Voyage... · ·

Lan derS

\

.

Po-.cl by Meircury OulbcNinll

Ann

0

...

, I

Dear Allll'•nden: 1 was moved
I work daily with people like
by tbe 1cacr fnxa "''cM:e At Lilt in
"Trapped.· My clinical experience
Green Bay' that ran in your column
suggests that people can sec ~
in tbe Peoria Journal Sw.
underlying and silent patterns,~
I was raised in an cn~t
changes, learn· to love thelnsclv~
that was fraught with anger IJid
ANN LANDERS ·
and go on to live satisfying lives,
hostility. My pllellts Yelled 11 each
"1!193,LaoA~Jiet..
complete with self-esteem and
allier for 60 years. 1 lived in
Tbn.. SJDdlul&lt;
loving, equitable relationships.
consJant fear of my father, who
Cruton SyHicolc''
Please keep telling people to quit
would slap me ~round on 1he
volunteering for abusive relatiooslightest .whim. I hated my after he was divorced. A temporary ships -- they deserve better and
domineajng mother, who controlled stay of about two wedts turned into should go after it. -- · A
me. I got out; llllllrieda fmewoman, 14 mondls. with '"l'nlppcd" doing all THERAPIST IN SHERIDAN,
raised ~ bappy children llld have tbe wart llld paying for everything. WYO.
.
. .
a couple of extraordinary grandldds. He closed by saying. "I'm afraid 10
Dear Wyoming: You iold them,
It wasn't easy.
· say anything for felt it might and I tban1c you.
.
·
I had problems understanding that jeopardi1.c oiJr rdalionship.'
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
weD-balanced ~Je doo't engage
You wac certainly right 10 tell life of a loved oM? "AlcoltoUsm:
in punching and yelling. I came to . him to 'ihrow tbe bum out." .but How to Recognize It, How to Deal
realize that I'm the guy who is please add one more thing . . Willtlt, HUJIIID Conquer It" can turn
responsibtc for me, not my parents EnCourage him and otbc:n in similar things around. SeNd a · st/f·ad·
or my lousy upbringing. I have the situalioas not only to resolve the · dressed, lOng, business-size ern¥/opt
ability and tbe freedom of choice to m¥~t isaue by gelling rid of the 1!1111 a check. or money ordu for
malte my life whllt I want it to be, "bum." but lb look carefully at an $3.65 (litis includes postage and
and tbe only way 10 break away·from . underlying problem: the neurotic handling) to: Alcohol, c/o AM Lantbe past is 10 put it behind.me.
need to like care of people.
tkrs, P.O. 'Box 11562, Chicago, J/1.
It toolt a long time 10 fJgurC all
The most revealing aspect of 60611-0562 . (In Canada, send
this out. but lKIW that I have come "Ttapped's' letter was his fear of $4.45.)
10 terms with myself IJid stopped ~!he relationShip. He was
blaming my .'rotten childhood,' afiaid that his brother might get mad
I'm a lot happier. -- D,A. IN at him, blame him for his "bad luck"
PEORIA
.
Qr, worse yet, tell other family
DEAR · PEORIA: Thanks for memben that he had let his brother
The Meigs County lt1Hired
underscoring a point I've tried ~wn. . · '
·
Te~chers will meet at the Meigs
mate for years: Y.ou can't do · 'Caretaking" is the national County Public ·Library .for a·lunanything aboUt your past-- it's gone .occupation of co-dependents cheon meeting Saturday at noon.
· -- 11ut you an responsible for. your afflicted with the need to be nice no Reservations are to be made by
future. Not everyone has the strength maaer what the cost Chances are calling 992·3887.
and resources to overcome a that "Tnpped's' brother is another
miserable childhood, but it can be example of the people wbo liave
done, as your leuer has liken advantage of him over the
North by Northwest
demonstrated. I appreciate your years bcnuse he was "lfraid of
·
.
·
testimony. It will~ otben jeopardizing the relationship. •
The Northwest Ordmance wa~ en·
\vho are now where you were many ··· u.o.•.:.-·• ·Jie'· "·•. · tb"11 - , ; , acted by Congress under the Arhcles
'"""" ~gn~
........... ~ . or Conlederatioli on July 13. 1787. It
years ago.
•
.,
~· ~ tl. OVCitO!llCS his established the Northwest Territory,
Dear Aim Landen: I~ WDUIIf , feelings ?f t~uacy and fear '?f the region bounded by the Great
to ~PQnd to ~ m Texas.
loss orre,JeCUon.and learns to be his Lakes on the north. the OhioRiv~r 9n
~estlteUJIIIIIKriedman.who~ own penon, he is going to be used the south, and the Mi ssis~ippi River
his brother to move m With hun again and again. ,
on the west.
.

New officers were elected at' a Notma Custer was named to be the
recent meting of the Preceptor Beta chapter's representative to City
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi . Council.
Read at the meetifig were thanlc
SorOrity, held at the home of Jane
Walton.
you notes from Vera Crow and LilElected were Donna Jones, pres- lian Moore, both of whom have
ident; llleanor Thomas, vice presi-, been hospitalized.
dent; Walton, treasurer; Rose Sis·
Information on the Ohio State
son, corresponding secretary; and Convention and ihe Mid-Eastern
Ann Rupe. recording secretary.
k''~, .... ~
· ·•
'

'

.

I

.B-UILDERS

ron Tarrtar, IIIWAIID, .....,._
mt.

20 Years bp. ·
•
,,

meor•--

=.:-~·lllney

II

. ,.,..... 3 .
66 4179

·-7-

Foond: 11!11. lllloll, . . . 1111. · FOUND;
tt.u•w
1N1

AND.EVEIYTIING UNDERNEATH

'

·

Lost a .Found

'

\

,,

. 742·2328

LOST: IIJMII A -

111110 loe-

.

�.............
Tuesday, April 1
April
7

Salt!

5I

Rentols

1993

The Dally

:ALLEY u-U&gt;.-

..,.

NEA Cronword Puzzle

11 Autoa tor Sllle

Household

Goods

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

SIX I...

SEVEN!....
. . '""'""I

1 Feo,.la blrda
5 Totem pole
8 ActrallAowlenda
12 Soutllwtlt•
em Incitant
·13 Period of

Ume

Nlt-lEL:.

14 Frome of
mind
'
15 Central
. 18 M•kla
I!Qitlrl
18 Aa wrlnen
(inua.)
11 Therefore
20 Wild ox
21 - tu, Bruta
231 '-Woman
24 .Burdentd
28 At no Ume
28Nol .e llll
ze Coegullte
30 Stl•_nltll hero
El32 Eller . .
33 Winter mo.

NOBTB

t-IIIE fiNO A1-W.F!

+u .
+u

.A8763

-~EKAND MEEK ·

'-'E.'S UP!!

+QH:I

;[ lUSH I 11AO A GCoD.

WEST
+AQ765

eco&lt; 11-\AT ((llO ill!;;£
• f1IIE fW.jfW f'lib.1 rr AUUt;E;~tn~

EAST

•w

+A785S

•u

+Jf

+KtU76 '

+J 8S
••~u

sovnr

+K·to 9

.KQJ95
tKQJ
+A2
Vulnerable:·Both

38 at.ck
40 ActorWilder

41 Prlnter't
MHurl

43 ComparaUYI

aufflx

44FeQow
45 .. (Sp.)
47 12, Aointn
40Chrla51 UK Umt
52 Actor· Tlllllrofl
54 Act ol doing
ltulf.) .
55 Explorer
Vaacodl56 llrMI'a.Gold• ·

1Dr- .
2 Sdenceol

57 Renee (abbr.)
58 S.ewetd

3 Colllpoaor -

-

R..,.,

4 BIIIP!IIna .

'""'·

DOWN

5 Rwegal
6 Solo

•

auction

..vice.

9

. TVo

Color

ll"(rrgorotoro,

F,...,. · vcR·.,

~··

Air c;.;dnlono.._ Guttor Ampo,
Etc. 614-258-1238.
.
J l D'o Aulo Por1o_oi&gt;d Solvogo,

aa.o buying Junk
·.

~773-53U

oe.-

tumllure,

mart»Je1,

ltont

ca~

Ia trucb.

gtaa, ahlna,

.,rowtitadl, tooll,
jart, 1llo fumhure

..tlnlshlng, Ooby
1112·1'141.

Ma~ln,

IDr

n~rr.tlna

redlO &amp; TV

conimon:lsll. il&amp;: CREATIVE;
malw up conuMrclala or

re~a

thl bock· of a •-• box.
Remember/ you IN trying to
Mil o procfiJ!:I -YOU. To~ . 2

oPEANUTS

mlnutal of )"'UrMif on caaHtt!l,

11-1-

Employment Services

u

Help Wanted
"AVON' ALL AREAS! Sho,. your
tim• wHh Ul. You'll abw the
company. 1-800-m--6351.

Business
Training
Rlllnln · . -lll!lltulh..otom
Vou,Y
Plua_.CallCotloll'!,
T-y, 8- ~f'!~-4367H
...-1mB.

18

Wanted to

Do

11 .,. old wonlo yord ·" odd
4 Lodln Who Would Uko To lobi
,for oummor, Sondhlll &amp;
Soli Avon Call 6l4-448-33&amp;1.
.,_adowbrook aru. a304-675AccoptlniJ Ap!)llcotlono · For 5731.
Duk CIOrk PosHion, W - Doar and Babc;el: work, by thll
da~ From '12 To 4, Apply In Po~
,son ONt: Super' 8 MOl•, Ori hour, I!&gt;WHI roto, 114-843-5123
;
Stale ROute .7, Bnlclll lob or6~89. .
R•trauflC.
EaR TREE SERVICE.
AVOfl I All Arooo I Shl~oy Tri-IOIJ, TriO AomoVII,
TrlnlmlnQ; Fr• Eatlmatoll .f
' ~"'· 304-675-14211.
341JI-'1151'Aftar 4p.m.
r-'.
Babyt:·lner Needed In My Home,
Po,toblo sawmill don1
For: 4 V1ar Oldi &amp; 4 Month Old. GeOrgio
toao to tho mltt lust
Muot Bo llolurw And A ~!ion­ hlut
75-1\17. '
smoker, 114140-1_810, ~VI cotl
M1111g1.
Gultar 1-..ona, first lauon tree,
Bartender, nklhts only. Person tor -o lniOrmotlon 304-ll75·

Ev•...-

=

1o walt tabre., nights only.

1&lt;!(;,

1e60.

PI- oppy ot __
Lodgo, Mlso P-'• Oly Caro Clntor ;
WednMday April 14th, Htw.en Block WMI Of HMC On Jackson
!1.12.
Plko 11-F 8 A.M. ·1:3G P.M. it
Quality And · EXPiri•nce Is The
Delivery Pfton IWarehouH 11 Cancom For 'Your Child's
Worker, Chluffeur UcenH R~ Care. Clll Ut For A VltH. Infant
quliod. Aor&gt;IY At: lif&gt;l!'kio frodd814-446-8227. p Supply Ca. ll319 Slato Routo ·~41. choolera /School Ap 114-446Gallipolis, Monday Thru Friday,

8 A.M. To 5 P.M.

' Oua To Company PromotioO..
Three P.manent- Qp!Mllnga
Now Exist For Perwna In Tfie
-Loc•l Br•nch Of A Lara• Or·
• it
ganlzaiiOD. II You Art Selected,
·, 1Y9u Will 81 Glv_,. Four WMU
•
Ot Clas•room , Training. We
Provide Complet1 Company
1Benefit•. GuarantMd Income To
S11rt All Promollons Art Baud
,. , On Mtrjt Not Seoiortty.

f. To h , Accepted. YOu NMd A
PINNOI Porsonallty1 Ambitious,
•&gt; Eagor To Got Ahoaa, Bondab~oJ
, ' •21 'YNrs Of Ago Or Oldor A.,.
~

To Start lmmedlataly. We
A,. Pilrtic:ular1y lnle,..ted In

8224.

Small Engl"fc Repair And Tun•
Up, Two And Four Cyolo,

448-1210. .

'1.4-

st::r, By·Stap Lawn Cara, Contp o Lown Sorvlco, Wo Do MAll,

• Cor- Opporturilty,

Call St•v• Gould Far ·lot.rviltw

Appohilmont Mondoy, Tuooday
An&lt;l Wodnoodo~ At 814-446-3373
From 10:00 ·A.M. TO .1:00 P.M.
OR Walk~n f0&lt; tmm...lstolnlor·
view At The s.t WHtam Hot.t,
t18 S-nd Avonuo, Golllpolls,
'Ohio.
Easy World Exoollont Poyl A..
aemble Producte .At HD~M. Call
Toll Froo, HI00-467-5568, Ext .
313.

•

Goll.lo • Molgll Hoad Stort Hlo An.

· Immediate

~nlng

In ·.Ollila

County Fc::~r A Famlty S.rvk•
Aida. Apptlcantl Must .P ouaM

•

An Atooclato Oog- In Soclsl
. Worl&lt; IAtlotod Flold And Hold A

ArH,. 3

S.ctroom

Ranch, Fl_f'!11!Y:. Room,_ leland !n

.

::=..

underpinning.
· Will
••II
WIUVWithOUI 1.8 acrn, 304•'773o5141, 304-112·3331.

tlmatoo.IM-~7-0553.

Avl'lllb4e · In . Athen•1 . c;lallll,

·

~.:!~Jl:r_:klng~=

-vlllo, OH - · 81ol·753'
3591. u.fllnt To A;;;;l,.Ia April
'1~! 19113• . AN IOUJil' OPPOR·
TuNrrY EMPLOVEA.
" .
•(

wv 304-676-2548.'

'

5 bee hiVft W/bllll 6 Ill ICC....

sorlu, mlko oflor, 3G4-112-2887.

8- qu•rt' canner, $40. Four Dint
con-. $20. Sklor $20. Ex.blllo

wldo Nit, $35. 30W82-34n

·

Financial

21-

Business

0pportun lty
INOTICEI
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISHING CO.
rKDmrnel'll:t.· ihal you do bual·
non ~h poopfo ~ou know ond
NOT to ..nc1 money through tho

4 one bedrC)C)m lpirtmehll,
nice, rusonabla renl.· 304-675-

Call HI00-788-5474 For Moro In· 2053 or 175-4100.

sorlouo lnqulrios only, 614-992· 45
5277.
Mobile home oh 3!4 ICJIJ _t!'rH
bldroorn, gorogo, worunop,
lruh 111111, clou 1o town, 614-

;;:1112:::-s~m::::...:::---::-:.,..-,-:::-~

.

Furnished
Rooms

Roomo for ron1 ·woo or month.
S::,~~=~~Golll HOiol.
.'

.

roomo with -king.
Muot Ncrlfloo, 11193 14xl0 Rod- Stooping
tfllltr 1pece. All ~k·upe.
man wHh 5 yNr wor,.nty, ln- AIIO
cludtl diiiMN, HI~ .e tlps Call allar 2:00 p.m., 304.TJ'3..
ond oki~IOIJ, $115mo. Coli 114- 5811, lllaan WV.
385-2434 ul&lt; lot Mlko.
46 Space for Rent
mall until you hlv• lnv•Ugated
thoolferlng.
33 Farms for Sale
TraiJer Lol Wtth lam, Pond, 7
18' Concnelon trailer, neWly 48 A, 8 RoOm, Full luem•nt, 2 MIIDI From "Golllootls.L._WIIor
remodll1d, CINn, partially •
Baths, 2 Barns, Work Shop, Polcf .. $110/Mo. 814456-1....
qulp.-d, heaHh department ap-

proved. $3200, 114-31M3M,

quortum Comptole With All At&gt; ci!clior,
~· 111-v.c;
114-MNIU·12hp,
rlclor. .· ....
·
CMIOrlll, 814-441·1Gali. ·
Shorp z.q Homo Caoolor, - . 63
!Ipol

elzea. QOOCI. condition; 114--7U·
2050. .

WIGI.~gt,

I

JEiec Avallabla, G.orga~; CI'M:k

All real estale advertising In .·

-

~ And Clti-AnatM . _

R:i:l,._,..., Pr1ood. .....

-:.~-.. ~114-

IIEST unl.l"' CUI8 ' LAME
SALE, Atorfl 17 l 11. y,.oty . . 'IIIII - · ... A.M.

To 1:00 P.ll. -

oav-, 8olo

------·-

AI ·
10117
.1
0I'Mo;
- NOIIh
Of
wa~ C.H. L l - •
11

- 2-, 0 01110
1
0 ....
-

uoo ml,

--4-..
.
.
.
-T
.
.
------11M lA ::&amp;::nt
~11.110;
.

..... fM.441..1Q01..,~ ~·~-·----...e.. ~-

y--~

, 21Jewel
31 Nn aocllllte

-.Witf ...

.,_~

.

75 Bolts &amp; Motors
8o0nASato-.-To
for Sale

~1/.:.:.tc!"c':.~
or !!!'-!! 01 ....

OUR LANGUAGE

AI .

By.Jeffrey McQuain
Something that's PLODDING
moves slowly or heavily ( "the plo!l·
ding horse"). !\nybody plotting to ~pell
this adjective should change the dou·
bled T of PLOTTING to a doubled D
in PLODDING.

F - - -p, wlol\o !lllh
.... loll, .110, 1141118o42lll.

:..t:t.::~:~,:,:

Coi ...... ~.1WIWI10,

64

MERKLE AND WINTHROP

Hay&amp;Grsln

b!QW

Auto Parts&amp;
BlOWn Pltatod ShodH Fft Slid·

Shoo~

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

wv. 304-675-4084.

Caun!r T-.o auota. Mor-

lng 09ors $40; Cooidlfllltlng
Drapa-1•, Aochi $30j Crul'li

$20, 114-4441-t~• .·
Bu,P.. SHdo ond ~ulk now On Ull it Pllnt PIUI, 2801
Jackaon Ave, Point Ple ...nt,

lilllxod

hoy

Sq.·-~~-~
For Soli,
hM
Pw lllo,IIWII.1471.
Wll .., . . POf lb for -

..,. farlll, At. ... - · ·

T1 Jnsport&lt;'llon

WHAT DID

Acc:eaorlla

for ..,,, _....

-... .-. -'""
79

based on race, color, religion,
su ·ramRial slalua or fllllctnaJ
ortgln, Or.any lnten110n to
make any such "preference, .'
lmlla!lon o~ dlscrtmlnatlon."
ni~

nowspaper·wlll not
knoWingly accept ·

adV~rllseme"nls for

real tstate
.whlc~ Is In violation or the
law. ~r readets' ~re hereby
'lnformecllhlta!l dwelllnQil

'· advertised J.n thiS newspaper
a~ avajlahle .on an equll

•

1\. Yes, that's wrong. The .si;~!';~!" .
noun is CRISIS, pronounced
sus," from the Greek word for
sion.': The plural word for more than
one crisis is CRIS.ES. promllunt,ed i
"KRY-seez." You can
about "an·
other crisis" (singular) or . . ,oth,orl
crises" (plural), but you need to
the de.Cision that "another crises" is
wrong.

""""
I .

41 Tnt
42 DJ'tnMCI
44 ACIYinturdeed
45 JIMAutten
IIU.

48 l!lo'rie 48 3. llomllll

~t:'·

53 IIIII IItie
_.._..........._, 55 E. ol AIL

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cfllabrtty ClpMr c:ryptogriiM . . ~tram qyotatlont by flmoul p.ople, 5*1 ~
E..:ft fen.- in the c;;lpnet tlMdi IGr .nalhef. T~ .. rJlW I~ R.

UENIEXF

·~

LG

UNKKA

UEAWX .

UL

K N WA '

EPXA

G NY 1111' C L M U.
~

ONPW

U L W Z U

GLI
KX.'
FLI.IU
FNA .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '"I'm lust not arrogant, and I'm not going to be .
. arroQ&amp;f\1. I've got to do It lltY way." - Arthur Ashe.
TIIAT DAILY

WOlD

ruzzut

·•

lAM I

O four
Rearrange letters of
scromblod words

the

be-

low to form f.our simple words .

1.

2

Famous comic on fashion:
~
"They should put expiration
-L,....l...-1-.L-.J
T
·dates
on clothes. That way
L
3
. . . - - - - - - - -::.'.,people would know when whal
j....:..-r:;,D....;I..,.;S:....;:C:..I;.....:V"T.
wearing
gone oul
IS
Complete the chuckle quoted
L.......J-..1..
I_L......l..-L......J
. by filling in the missing words ,

-1~~-~:~

,I . I I I

O

h~

vou develop. from step No. ·3 below.

UNSCtAMBLE AIOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCIIAM-Lm AN~US
Junket • Pilot • Giant • Neatfy • TAKE IT
People are·always asking me lor advice. I can come
up with some ve.ry sound advice lor them. The problem
is that I'm not smart enough tO TAKE IT.

Scrv1ces

... .....
'

,

HousehOI!:I
Goods

4 Cinohlon Gold Volvo! Couch,
3141 Allor 4 ~.M.
lhlt2 Corpot •eo,,AJI.VInyl In
Sloc:k t4.41 Yd. ,._n Car·
pota, At .7 North, ·~·7444;
VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP.
PUANCES
.
814-441-4421 OR 114-4411-3!51

~,~:==2~~~~~~~~=j !predictions. for ihe year ahead by mailing

ill!!!lnl ......... ·-a.a.a..........-,...

~~~.~114
--

....

.

NWF

VILE X

MotorH~

Excotlonl CondHionl 6 -

preMM .

K L B .1· XU

JW

Merchandtse
Sl .

37

40 lllcrobft

campers&amp;
.
;

23~0cl.

LIBRA (Sept.
23) Situations or ·
ASTRO•GRAPH•
··$1.25 ·plus a long, self-addressed, stamped endeavors you etther create or control
· ·
~ ....". envelope.Jo.AsltQ:Gr~plt_,_ !'{~_lb.is newspa· · sh&lt;tuld wor1&lt; out .lo your satislaction today.
per, P.O. Box 4465, New Yorl&lt;, NY 10163. Delegate as little work as possible and lry to
Be sure to stale your zodiac sign.
do most th1ngs y~urself .
CE
TAURUS (April »MM}}20) Instead of moo. SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) In situations
BERNI . .
itylng or eliminating signilicant objectives where you took out tor the wettare ot others.
BEDE OSOL.,. today , think in terms ol enlarging them . as well as your own, the end results COuld
·. Dunng this particular cycle, big could indeed ext* your expecla_tions. II selfisl\ness pre·
. be bountiful.
·
. vails, the opposrte m&lt;ghl be true.
GE-l (Mty 21.June 20) Social contacts SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc. 21) You're
· 'couki be. eipecially importanl for you now In ikely to be a M more _farsighted than your
·~
h&amp;lplng to lurlher your plan$. Don't be atraki J P!!B'" today, so adhere to your assessments
.·
' tV-..
; lo consult wilh people whom you have a 1 •nslead of the1rs , especially If lhe1r prOJtC·
~· • '.
•JUUf ·
lriendly rapport with. ·
.
lions have a negative bent
't ~• .
CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 12) An unruly . CAPRICORN {Dtc. 22.Jin. II) Financial
•••
development that you've hid lo· contend . ixlnjlillona are •trencling in a favorable
• 1
'' Aprll14, 1913
with recently could.take a lum •for me berier ; lion lei you It thiS time. There ... ln01'C8·1
.
. iod&amp;y: In~ ol impnding your progreu, H• Iiana rou shOuld be tbte t.o o:::•:r:.~~~
- · .• · . ·
. ·
. · · may aoc81erate it
, gal~ hom something .that 11 al
Your financial proapec!$100k very e.ncourag· . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Mike a pol~! todly I' tivt.
1ng Jor ._tho year ahead, l~onks to :ady ·01 sltowing tho same considlretion 10 your AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fc~. It) Somellmes
Lucl(s ..,..lnleresl !" yt~~~r aff~lrs. Shell do mate 81 you de 10 cloMtrienda. 11 coultll!tg- lt'l unwlle· to pursu.• a courie along the
~~ ol·the apadl worl&lt;, bul the reJII .wi\1 be ger something lortuitOus mJ\ neither of you . H- of the le!lst ,..,stance, bul not loday.
"'lo Y'\1': · .
. ... · . · .
-...~.counted on.
.
Whel comet easily, is likely lo be best for
ifllljiES (March 21-lprll 181 You _oould . VIRGO (Aug. 2Ntpt. 22) flY to de'olote as VOIJ. '
·
.
prove lo be luckY lor clooa lnendoi~Y and much anention ~ possible toqay to oitua- , PIICIS (l'ell. 20-Molch 20) Don't toolahly
th•y. in turn. might blJiortiJnt!t to;, you. H tiona tpll could tillia~o. make· or save you try lo tiler~· lhat are preaenlfy run·
,wjll' be up to you, h~wever, to lnll1a1a lhl money. You might be quite luo~y in lhe nlng arnaolhly . Keep thtngs on track ,
· plly oi actiOn. Ariea_. treal, youraell to .a greenback depa~menl. ·
beclute ...,.. is good now COUI&lt;I get even
birthday gHI. Send tor. A~•• ,Aslro,Graph_
.. .
.. : better.
.

..

.. .

· ~rlu·nJtY basls. .

r-t-+-t

34&amp;:..on
p_,
31Letll-

. 36 Tipper-

it?

YE5TCRDAY HIS
EYE: BALLe WERE
• SPINNING.

Wt:LL,'ITCAN'T e.EAS
SAP1¥5 YC51'ERQ4.Y.

!

CBb1:bt;laY
_ .

10 advertise ~ a{l'f preference,
' lmllatlon ot clscrlmlnallon

Q: l heard a politician talking about
"another cri!ll's." That's wrong, isn't

.,. '

roo~

rm~-:

33-and

·I

Crib. 614-4*'2380. ·

lnvoot In Your .Fut ..ol snack 35 Lots ~ Acreage
;s..qt~.,:~1 f'ae~ Wkly Potential, 11 Acm MIL Yacant Land Watar

lhls fl9Wspaper Is subject to
' Ihe Fedlr!ll fair Housing At!
ol t 968 which makes I Ulegoil

vJtt.L, ~ viONl&gt;Efl t40w
,ANI&gt; ·tilE A!rt

Nogcitlsblo, Can 114!441-Gtlso.

St.,. and IMiaU111p u.,..U.

""llalo. *'47"""' r......
llll-1.111, (ACIOC, llotoiiiCo, "-" lllllllol Limbe, 1om Loot Of
tion; 4 h"'l fMdors, different Mepcleth), 11~ • tal.
Jonuery, Coli Dllrln, 814-M38 F.,..on cr..-. excelltnt condi-

orlcloua living .. 1 and 2 bad·
room apanrMnla .at Vlllaaa
Manor·
and
Aiver.&amp;ae ·

WanUng to babylh In mY hDIT)I, formation On N•w 18 Wide One . _badroam apl:, Paint
CheStar, any aga, 114-US-4282 ·Hom" We Take Tract.lna.
Pt..unl. Fuml•had. vary ciNn,
afttr7pm•
Mobile. home lar ..le, price ,.... n_o..;pol0:.......;.'_304_-6._7&amp;--._1_3,;.841...;_ _....;.
gotlabla, mu8t be movad, 1

howebtptr. Six childreo.
R1twr.nce1 requlr.cl, 304-8751377 onyllmo.

R- And Plln')' CauOIIOO. lntor,
. 'lololl P..onl ShoUld C""'oct ·

Of .... - . lacOtlont
Candltlonl t128; 20 Gillon A-

.....-::-:::-

dishwasher, gas tumace, porch,

IM Offici.'

1112·212•.
. PAIIT·TIME, DAYTIME
_..
STRuaTORS /TRAINERS • Thl
H - Sol¥k:oo O.V.Iopmont
lnotH!Ill Of Hoaklna Cal-l
s.olui E-oncod, Succ!l'lllo
Trol'*l To· Conducl p,.porod .
CO&lt;IFWM For Fnint·Uroo Worlco..
And.· Su~
lng In
County
rtment•Work.
Of Humin
Sorvlcoo.
rico . tN&lt;hlng .
~dullo And
kground 1~. In·
comt M•lnt:•n•nc• And Child
Supoort· · i'..rorrocl. Pooltlon

Sot

apl, GalllpaU. Ferry,

w-....

No Shift Work, I lnto-od Canloci: 114-446-9620, 1:3G To 5
P.M. Or $end R-mo To: P.O.
Bo• 788, Golllpotl., OH 45831.
Llvo
In
blbyolftor
&amp;

Now · Y_
klng applicationS for
Dom~'l PIZZI In Pom•roy; 814-

~room

I HP Grovoly M"'"''i' Speed,
Eloctrtc ~~~·"'- Duo WhHis,
Sulky, 11-I-367-&lt;TI41, .
.
and ....,., 1-800-837-6625.
Fumlahed 3 ROOJM a Blilth, Aquo Prom . OriS!. Anklo
VOr-t
Ctun. W.tor Pold, In Por~ Longth, Wom Of!CI, tiiiiWhere
14x76 R~man, two bedrOom, tor Areo.I1Waa.aooo.
· Slu: 18, Cl•~n.t, Lace
two batht,, two deckl, 304-882·
Covarlld, 140, 814-441-2205.
2301 ., 304-773-2.
Fumlohocl Effoctlvo.l.~.'!'ltltloo Blhaml Crui.O, I dayo14 nlghla.
Pakl, Sha,. lath ·~~- D'ICI
Muot
Hill
11173 Foroot Por~, 12d2, ·1114- Soc:ond Avon... Gllllpotls, 61+ Undorbookodl
$279/c:ouplo.
.
Llmhod
tlckoto.
448-3145
.
992 :=:874::·~=:::-7."
Building
407-?87-8100 old. WI. Mo.,.Sat, 55
19&amp;2 14x70 Mobile Home Wllh
1:00AM ·.1:00PM.
Supplies
8128 EXI&gt;Indo 1 loth, 2 Bod·
raomt, C,nin~l Air, $10,000, 114Block, brlclt, Dlpoo, wln245..e:za:z.
ddwe, llntell, Ito. Clliuda WI•
t.,., Rio Clronde, OH CIU 1141983 Fairmont Mobile HOrn.,
245.at21.
14K70, 2 Bod~mo, t Bath,
Elec. Hut, Und.rpannlng. After
Gold Sool IIIMI Bulldlna l
5 P.M. 8'14-4411-3044.
SlMtwoocf - l p . Buy,..
-ntocl
Dlooct F.1188 Skyline Holly Rldgo 14&gt;170,
Fectary. lloko llroflt Whllo
all elec, 2 bedrooma, AJC,
locu8t SlrMt, Gal·
Looming. Port-limo To Ol..r
caver.d porch, kitchen leland,
Water,
Stove, ·
BUIIIIDII. 8omo ._ , . - o
ltorage bldg, undM'pennlng,
Fuml•hocl.
~vstlsblo. 303-7111-41:15,
Eat.
llka new, 304-67s.2464.
Dopaolt, 11~
1000.
1890, 14XJII, :lbdrm., 2 both,

LDcol Von~lng . Routo: $1,200 A R-. $14,000 Firm. 814-4411WMk
Potential: Mu11 Salt1..aoo.. .05:;2::i:.,.=~-:-:---:-:-:-:-:-VaUd Drive... ·l.anM. · The 653-~end.
· ::
. Beglnnlnl Rate Of Pay Ia SS.SO
i1118 Aero on Llnooln Holght..
,JHr. For ddlllonal lnforqaation, · AUSUN a WOLFF TANNING $1500 diown, -nco II 8'1&lt;. with
CAM 81t.;446-el,_, 8;00 • 4:00,
.
BEDS .
..t.roncoo, 11-1-1112-21521 on~
llandly • Fifclo~. Gollls • Molg• New Commercial- Home Unite, IM¥1 rMINQi or· •" Guido,
Held Stlrt, A ~vlalon . Of from $199.00. Lam~ I.Dtlon1, 132 Butternut_,Pomaroy.
W-ond . Cant.,., Ia An AcHAOrln. Monthly - ~ymonts
low oo $18.00. Col't-y FREE 2 Lola 96'•177' Each On Dunlo
AA/EEO Emptoyor.
NEW CaiO&lt;· Catalog, 1-800-482· ·D~vo, Oft Aouto 35, City School
,
' 814-446-0111.
Ol.rlct, $5',800 For loth Lf;MI,
Fut•nmo Roglolorocl X-Roy ,11. .
Toohnlclon, Mon~oThru Frtdoy
For A Buay P

2

Kltchon,114jZ411-11213.
2bdrm. ••·· tol•l ettctrlc, lpSpring Vai ..Y Area, Oak Drlva, pllancoo him...,..., ll~nclry
Brtok 3 Bodrw.,. 1 112 BothO, room leciiHioo atoM lo ochool
Carpor1, AC, Goo HNI, Full In town. A;;;;;.o.,;;lons ..-ltobll
BaHmant, Aacently RamodaiMI II: Ylflllll! 'orMfi Apls. ~9 ot
Throuahout Prlco: $84,900,114- ..11114-912·171 1. EOH.
446-41419.
BEAUTIFUL APAIITMENTS AT
BJJDGE'T PRICES AT aACKSON
32 Mobile Homes
.ESTATES, . 1531 Jock~«~ Plllo
tr- S2081""'. Walk Ito ohop &amp;
for Sale
movloo. Caii&amp;14'441Haea. EOH.
$152.17 por month lnoludlna six Efflcloncy o~rtmiont, llulbony
montha frn lot ,.,,, niiW 14x70, Avonua, PomORII'.I1-I-1112·71198.
delivered lnd set up, tklrtlng

'Trimming, F.-ding, Ramovlil, BrochUN! On New Clpe Cod
Stump Removal. Free • £1. Homu! •

, thcloe Wfth LNdorshlp Ablmy

•.., ~- Who A,. Looking' For A·G~L!Ine

Rodney

814-446-w.!S.
Apo~mont•ln lllddlopio~. From
Tri..Stata TrM $1rvice. Topping, don 1.at0.788-54lll For Calorod $196. Colll14oiU2-58511. EOH.

,.,..

··;·

TO KEEP FROM GETTING
WET, IT 15 6EST TO
CA!1-R'( AN UM6RELLA
SIMILAR TO T~IS. ONE ...

TI-llS IS MV
REPORT ON RAIN

tneloel 1 ,..ume • maU tO:
M+llG, PO Box 304, Pt
pteuant, wv 2555G. T•pae CIA•
notbiiOlumed.

14

1

I was amused by a comment in a recent issue of . New Zealand . Bridge.
While describing his team's match
against an African nation pt last
year's world championship, the.writer
mentio~ that .on an early deal tile
opposing South made a strong jump
overcall in diamlllids while holding a
weak !;.5 in the majors. North, taking
his partner seriously, bid a slam,
which the Kiwis doubled for 2300. New
OKA'&lt;, LET'S
Zealand W!lll the match, but not by a
j;:QR6ET TI-lE
wtde margin. Apparently there were
"too few opportunities for -U!e opposPROPS ..
if!l South to do his thing.•
Today's deal was also in the maga·
zine. How ~bQIIId South plan the play in
four hearts against the lead of the club
jack?
New Zealand is a land of four-card
majors; .he.nce. North's single raise. U
North knows of at least five. trumps
opposite, a pre-emptive jump to lour
hearts has much to commend it,
Declarer. made short work of going
down. Tbe first trick comprised the
jack, queen, king and ace of clubs.
South drew trumps and drove out the
AI&gt;AM
diamond ace. However, West led his
GtTT.I/'16 ON.
second club-to East's nine. Back came
a spade and the . defenders had four
tricks: two spades. one jiamond _and
one club.
. " .
From the bidding and lead, it is al·
most certain that West has the spade
ace. Therefore every effort niust be
taken to · stop East from getting on
play. LOw clubs should be played from
both North and South on the first trick.
........;:;;,;___.!,!:!,!::::!:~;2:~~1....::&lt;-~ A;fter winning the club continuetion,
•
declarer draws trumps and attacks di·
a moods. Now •. though, East has no
try, ·and one of dummy's spade
disappears on the ,third
diamonds.

Galllpotlt, Mon .Sol, 111:-12.' . ·
Vok:eoV• ·Artlsq ne•d•d
!Omolo 6 moi•• ·on u-nooclod
~

28 Scold

a low profile

.a.w.IJ')', 111 Becand Avenue,

DOn' Ju.. hi Soil u. y..,, NonWorking . · llojor Applloncu,

"achool"

Keep

' "

-II Jowolry Ex·
- - Roqultod, For llolgo
Co. Storo, Apply At AcquloltiOn

Wanted. to Buy

wllerellle

bulfiiO fOIIII

2611Nk

IN TH'·•

Llc:.n..t ·
1'66,0hlo &amp; Wllllt Vlrglnlo, 304- Soloo:

773-5785.

22 Son of rlldlo
25 ... - -

27FfMChfor

YORE "UG

'
... . • . 1!1~~- P!oo'- ~lion Coil!~ny.
hill limo ouct-r, eomplllo

11 Flnl. 10 llecogalzed

Opening lead: • J

YOU THROWED

&amp; Auction

10=•

. cloc-'l

20=··

Pass .
Pass

Public Sale

IOawn

17 CloH !IIcon

EUI

8

7111ake-.

8 Auto co.

~

IUblllnCI

34 SIHJI

. Dealer: South

Aaeworto,__

35 Place lor
· exercloa
· 36 Chewing 37 V.I.P.

'

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'

-~

...

' ..

..

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'

j

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__ ..c._ ......,..,. .....,__

I

�~

Ohio

••'

..

Tuesday, April 13, 1 QQ1~

Syphilis cases Oil: increase
in Ohio
..
CLEVELAND (AP) - Health
workers dealing with sexually
transmitted diseases are especially
concerned about the increase of
syphilis in urban centm across the
stale, a published report said today.
The l'lain Dealer reported that
cases of sypbilis in Ohio incrtased
55 wt year from tbc I ,909 cases of
the disease teported in 1991, and
55 percent of the state's cases were
from the Cleveland area.

Birthday observed

speaker
. named .

•

..

Vol. 43, ·No. 244

..,

~ Sectlono, 1: Pages 25

tJRG pr·esident speaks at
Meigs Chamber .m eeting
. ,. . fti!DIAN
S z· I Nitws:Sfllr
Til: UiitU3ily p£ Rio Grande's
.-- . ) J11D11 is D meet the educalina ..t IAiaiac needs of sooih'
a OfliD RSidta~S&gt; Dr. Barry
~• .- • • Hf Qf tile. Univerity
ar Rio Gl&amp;dt,. said! dluing Tuesa( tile Meigs·County

. '

·•

Ia ...,.• • Doney

qw"

CRASH INSI,'ECTION ~ Ohio State Patrol
. olflcers Inspect a patrol helicopter that crashed
• Wednesday· rooming icross the road from tbe
: . Soutbern Ohio Correctional Facility where riot·

,t.

ing Inmates liave killed sewa po"n s _.
taken eight guards llostage. Tile ' - - . , . .
were In the helicopter were taeAu! .. • hospital. (AP)

Lyons, sixth; Tasha Green, tbird; Courtney
Kennedy, nnt; Samantha Lee, kladerprten;
Jessica Preast, second, and Cbrls Dodaon,
fourth.

IN THE

•POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
•GALLIPOLIS DAILY .TRIBUNE
•POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
··~-

...

INSIITIDN DATE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1993

992·2155.

"* D ollbsrudimts.
Til: wiiUSil) is afso helping to
.-·
ft Ci •••ic lfcve!Op!llent,

.a •

.:Prison officials. cu~ offinformation·to media
;,..,

.

.

~

•

"'·,·. l;~8VP I •E,Qhio(AP) .;.. £,.!:- tultms~ng· i!l~~ with ~l-.
Slate _Hi~ay_ !'~trl)l llel!~optb'r - Iious convicts.
,..,.,,. . _
·

that bild
cuclmg the not·tom
Lucasville penitentiary crashed
early this morning in a fieltl across
the s~ from the prison.
The pi!atllll!l a stale corrections
officii! suffered minor injuries and
were taken to Southern Ohio Medical Center in nearby Portsmouth
for treatment, according .to highway'patrol SgL John Born.
Nursing supervisor Fran Smith
said corrections official Joseph
McNeil, 42, of Marrsville 11nd
palrOI Sl!'t. Edgar Clevmger, 48, of
Plain Cuy, were. being treated for
minor inJuries and were expected
to be released. '
The crash site is midway
between the prison and a school.
Bom. said the helicopler was on
a "rouune flyovcr" of the prison,
where rebellious inmates have held
eigbt guards hostage since Sunday
and seven convicts have died.
Born called the accident a
forced landing due to an undelermined mechanical problem.
·
Witnesses said the helicopter
hovered in place briefly and then
came straight down on its skids. It
came to rest leaning to the right ·
with a rotcr stuck in the ground.
Firefighters doused the craft
with water to prevent a fu:e.
State corrections officials today
p~t a lid on news_coming_ out of the
not-tom maxlmum-sccunty pnson,
refusing to say whether any negoti-

Spokesman Dav~ Mom$ SBid no
more news broefongs would be
scheduled and refuseilto answer
ques~~ about ~egotiations or _the
~ondmons Qf e1ght gu,ards beong
lield hostage. News bnefings had
been held four times a day.
~9rris read a state men I fr~m
families of the hostages complam111g about ·beong annoyed by
reporters seeking interviews. The
statement said the families were
.being "disrrac_tcd ~rom their primary . focus, wh1ch IS 'lhe safety of
their loved ones."
. Morris said the transfer of 85
prisoners from a cellblock adjacent
to the one barricaded by 450 rioting
inm~tes had relieved some of the
rcns1~n ~re.
.
.
. S1;'l prosoners were l"lled on
f1ghtong Sunday at the Southern
Ohio Correction~! Facility. The
!Jody of another pnsoner was found
on hos cell Tuesday.
Also on Tuesday, prisoners in
the besieged cellblock yelled at
other prisoners, urging them to join
the standoff. But guards :fited a
round of tear gas into a corridor
connecting the ccllblocks, quelling
the distumance after a few minuleS.
Tes~a Unwip, a spokeswoman
for the Department of Rehabilltalion and Correcllons, said negotiaLions about the prisOners' list of 19
demands continued Tuesday nighL
She said olfocials were havina trou·

sai!J

lk -iCUiilJ p7alts: IJD: Cllpanding
ils
h"'S" akali&amp;n programs
ud addi•&amp; • Bacbet0r of Arts
d £ L
Sa:aad. dre u11iiv:enity is
•• 1•i• 10 -~ lhe needs of
oldtt,- uaditionaE students.
~ Slid 1111: wiousil~ recendy
iou
d lk
bu of evening ,
uT :1, r"il&amp;.diem more

)Copter crasbes at prison

(ILl DAVE 01 P. J.
FOR MORE INFORMATION

~Slid.

'De lllliwasiey ean1best help
_
wido
CC(MM+ic: ~l0pment by
OU1LINES GOALS • ~. Barry Dorsey, preslcleat ol tH Uai·
ble_~l ........... • r a
..
C
-.-. w1111t we. cro.best," venity'
of Rio Grande and Tliesilay's guest speaker at tile Meip
p~ .
...,:p::.i!-. It JlOCS up ;ad ~ ...\ ~ :;,.~ ;J.~~:::;r~ . County Chlmber ot Commerce meetlnr, ntUnel wbilt tH ualwrsity Is doing to meet its goal In providing for tbe areas educational
ong on who we 111 • '4111. Ms. fi+ •.
Unwin said. ilud ..,.. ...._
and training needs while Chamber Director Paula Tbaeker; seated
F CD), URG is llldressin the
at right, looks on. (Sentinel photo by Jim Frteman)
ing was SC"'!"Ided
llllllllrThe ~ ..,. , • ~ aoiDnl ..t social needs of the
'
been denied food. lell, • .. C) .a.I:Jtney Slid. .
Dui&amp;J
said
•
pi)Widbreaking
first time, was ranked in a recent
and ·warci" sincedlclialt.lls. Unoia
Attorney Steve Story, in a repon
~o said sbe didll"t " - lie-- --'Jitdtlliaailinirtgroorn U.S. News an~ World Repons sur- · from the highway committee, said
d•uon_s of the'"'!"' r•
. . aMirine ro dre c:aitung Rhodes vey of the best colleges in the·Unit- the commmee is lfying to get
Pr1son oflic:ids ~said 1K ec.au. 1\bo. 1M LlfnC c ·enter ed States
Rav~n~~ond. WNa., i11,volved in
A
••••··
'
•iic
a
swe~f-tfu:He·
atiributed
the
university's
demands conoc:m .,._~lilt
the Ravenswood Connector Road
havenotelabcraled. "De-iCiia: Ill _ . . . -..wiD be dl:dicated broad, comprehensive curriculum project.
and low cost as factors leading to , Paula Thacker, exeeutive directh_e rioting_ his ~t bccl!l daa"- Ap0121,1e ....,.
"'llqle
Jill*
QD ~we are a
the survey ranking.
tor of the Meigs ~ounty Chamber
mmed, officials:said.
"
·)
sc:uiite;.~J)(Jaey
said.
.
.Other acthm
of Commerce wtd economic develAbout 8S ·prisonmi ill die C:
Dnlsc:y, ida is ta!IJ:Ifeting his
In a report to the chamber, din-· opment director, said she met with 'cellblock we!IC taka lly ba 10
wu
7,arastlltGpaidient..said
ner/dancc
commillee chairman American Electric Power and
other state pi-T 71J llil&amp;k~~»
lk
MiiCisity
is
licu••iag
morel'
David
Harris
labeled the receni Buckeye Hills Rural Development
ease. overcrowdiaJ, Us. Uawia
Commission officials to discuss the
said. More tblll 900 1 _ • I ill 'lid ' • • alolz lie casran coast dinner/dance as a "big success."
ar1111:"
·
'
s
iudllition
to
Harriuaid
$1,700
was
made
at
proposed indusaial park.
the_ K cellbloct,
doe'S:
'
the
silelit
auctiOn
while
the
whole
; AEP owns the :property in the
de_stgned 10hold640p• s,dlc
.Daoso::r
abo
Sllid
UR.G.
rc.
the
event
cleared
$1,450
afler
costs.
Continued on page J
SBid.
•

em,

-:llidl -

......,__--Loc·al briefs-.•

: Two·chargedWitll DUI

·~ · Charles W. brccn. Baker Road, Athens; was arrestCd Monday
· night by the Meigs County Sheriffs Department on cbalgcs of driV· ·
ing under the influence, no operator's license"and failure 10 conuoL
According to Sheriff James M. .Soulsby, the charges stem from
• an incident in which Green allegedly ran avehicle owned by Walter _
· Arnold into a ditch on Cottrill Road near Harrisonville.
: Soulsby reponed that Green is being held in the Middlepon Jail
· on the charges. He is also wanted in Athens County on a charge of
. failure to appear.
· Jane Bing, Fossil Rock Road, Athens, was arrested on charges of
· driving under the influence, disorderly. conduct and left of ccnler.
• Accordi~g to Soulsby. Bing was being held-in the Athens County
: Jail bl!t WliS released on bond Tuesday night-for .a larer appearance
: in Me1gs County Court.

:Charges pending against iWo .
· Charges swmming from ' seperate incidents are pending against
· : two unidentified men, Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported.
·
: .· Charges from Ravenswood, W. VL, are ~ing against a Meigs
County m111 following an alleged hit-skip IRCideilt in Ravenswood
: Monday ni~hL
.
.
• ACCording :to a report, !he Ravenswood Police Deillrunent
· trailed antifrocze from the vehicle up Stall! Route 124 10 lilllinaer
Ridge Road ncar Ponland. Meigs Coun!f units met t11e1n. and larer
located the vehicle, wi!h license plates ·missina. on Durst Road at
·StlvO!:Sville, Soulsby reported.
· .· . .
.
. inlorniatlon obtained from ilems in the vehicle idcnllfled the
owner, Soulsby said. The vehicle was impounded._
.• .
·
· Charges of faii!II"C to tx111trol are peqdina ~!pi!)~ the driver df ~ .
CODtiaaed oa Pill' 3
.
. ·

.

OFF TO WASIIINGICJIN ~At

Concert Bud . . . _ . a -+'

·z . ?; ~lklllltlm
.,.i_, ........ w_,mg.

ton, D. C. There they wilr compete in the National Adjudi~ators
Invitational Concert Band Contest.

.....

Eastern band to perform in Washington event
'
The 40-pic:QC ·faaera Hip 0 5
Memorials
and the National Air Tomb by Eastern's senior band
Scbool Concec. a.l d ~a
"We"a _, • • I . . ..pei- and Spoce Museum in tbe Smithso· members.
midnigbt Thunday llr r' •at .
~£far.?-..-- ar.J"~l·. nian Institution. Also Rep. Ted
Eastern band members have
bus for Walhi.,.., J). C. ....._
- - ....
Strickland has asked for a photo been prepiu-ing for the trip since
thef will penllfiB illll!le filM+ '
I
- ae
'liC doe lineal 3e5Sioo with the band at the Capitol Seplember. They have raised over
Adjudicuon lnri•u· I~ .._.
ia lk utioD. · Buil.di."ng ~hi~~e _b_and will be $9,000 to cover hotel rocims, meals •
Band CM!M '
) ·
DeJ - _. 10 dilecUae and lDIUUill durin&amp;
VISIL
and charier bus expense.
' •
Eallall«p'a'ified lor doe · e. . 7 ire 1111
Jeam, 1
Another honor the band· will
The st~dents sold_ candy. bars;, : . ·
a1 C1111t=• by Cll1lia&amp;
.._llllir
"
~ve during J.. trip wiD be to lay a · sub sandwoches, and pozza kits. The .:.·
ina at 1ut ,_., &lt;JiiliD lillie JMa.
All 75 k I •CNieN o1 the wreath at the Tomb of the paret!IS have also been busy assist-·.
catlDn Aaoc~'ll
illlll:diliiic
fur Unknown Sofdier in Arlington mg, Hall said; 110ting that the trip&gt;.
ContesL Aboul 15 .... . _ a
wi11o a ...r _,....a. Naliorial Cemetety.
would not have been possible with--;·:
Car away 11 die ._elf W
"11lis will . . _ die tits 10 JCt
''During my Army Band days, I out the hard woric and suppon 0·f- •
wili"""Ptle b ,.- ez _.,.... ~elf a
panicipated in 111any such cere- the p.-ents.
· ·
-. •
11101111 in the .- • ·•
•
·• . . . _.
Z. 6iilb llllllli IIIOIIiel," Hall said. "'ften foreign . In addition m the 40
20
~
'Dis 77
• y . dianitaries would lay a wreath parents a!~d adult Slt!fC memben
. Judaea for d!e c
befOre ~Y~.•isited the PresidenL will be gomg on the trip.
, -.. _
tnclude Dr, D "li.lldl" -._ * lilllla uwpcilli- . NOw we \riw have that hooor, and
Hall said that he had talked with·:
· director nt It elf !loti GiltS.. ..._.
5 • llliL · · .one of m'y Al'llly Band friends, Sergeant Wilhoit *ier this ·wedt··.
Univor~~ -....: 0a1. .
-.... ia • '·
, 1111 iliad .Millet ~eant Paul Wilhoit, wiU .and he had repot"ICIII!III the o."-v;;:
Amlld
- •t I •
elf riP J11J a - • - • . Rt I -' play Taps. .
.
• bloabms in Wllblngton are alii;~ ·
••• U .$. Air Porco 8 ¢• _, ._ . _ 111111 _ . ...... Ailpaa., - 'I:he wreath is ~ing pr_epared . height oC ~ ~ '!l8ltina il one :
Iamea CoiJe.._:ta~, ..... ot . lll=f.-.-.iiil ·1 ' • ·
locilly by. Franc1s Flonsts of of the nicost times of tile yoar 10
banda It lbe um...., a ( . . . . . . .. ... I·.
Jdiiw Paneroy and will be placed at the visiubere.
.
•

::i'

I

•JII!JICiillr- ..
s- ._.
I

y

y •· :-

'

••s

Pal;-...,

* ,._.·

.,....,.,find
·
.i-·-11111.
.-.

=·. ._. .,._
I

stu~IIIS,

..

'

..

eent.

A Mulllmedlo In~. Newapaper.

Duaset. doe cbulber's· guest
7 paaaJal UR.G as a eom•
• J sawice ad outlined .four
.-pitis doiilc D meet its goals.
Til: wiwasi1.1 is: implementing
IICW I*UIJ . .S w·bite adding to
eoNirc ,... 1, Dusey said.
To ill.ware. Dorsey' said the
lllliwcnily is expanding its LPN
.....- rm. IS Sllldenls to 30

AD-VEITISING DIADLIIII:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 199'3 • ~OON

'

Pbmnw..
a ..
-· -• •d r p 1111......
_ ·-w 111 u • 11.,.rll14,
1993

Copyrighted 1993

1

SPECIAL SECTION

l

l-20-22-26-Z.L
9 -+-~7115-

n

LAWN &amp;. GARDEN

'

Low tonlgbtln mid-SO.. Rain.
Tbursday,showers,blghlnmld

Buckeye~:

..,..s arC'__
.

Third birthday observed

First birthday.
ce ebrate d

Pick 3:
338
Pick 4:
lS96 ·.

Page4

p

-Names in the news ... -

Ohio Lottery

Southern
tops RVHS
nine 5-3

"We're having much more ed in Ohio's big cities.
.•
syphilis this past year than we've
"There are pockets of problem
had in quire some lime," said Dr. areas throughout the country wt~
Bryan R. Davis, acting director of throughout the state," Halpin said:
t!lc dermatology department at ''Cleveland is one area tha{
MetroHcalth Medical Cenlel-.
demands our auention:''
,•
"It is scary Jvx:anse it's oecur·
He also said Cincinnati had 1
ring in young people, 111d it's 114 percent increase in the numbef
occurring in young pregnant of syphilis case from 1991to 1992.
women . It means that th~ babies ,
Health workers say one of th~
are infecled and for a baby to have biggest factot:S in the increase c?f
congenital Sr,Philis - this ·is a seri- the sexually transmitted disease is
ous disease. '
. '
the continuing use of drugs and
Congenital syphilis increased to alcohol and the trading of sex fat
59 cases in Ohio last year, liP from dru~s, the paper said. . .
'l
only two in 1988. Six infantll were
'There's a clear relationship:
stillborn ,and two died soon after between crack cocaine and
birth last year, the Ohio Depart- syphilis," said Dr. Jeffrey Goldha'
ment of Health~- The feeler- gen, medical director of the city_
· a! Centen for Disease Conuol in Health DepartmenL "You can piOI'
Atlanta predicts that 40 pen:ent of the increase of syphilis and parall~!
the infants afflicted with syphilis that with crack· cocaine and the
eventuaUy die.
incidence ofprostiwtion."
,
Although it is rare for adults to
-~
die from syphilis, there were 12 .
reported deaths from 1989 throuF!'
Bernard Shoemaker, Ohio State
1991 in Ohio, health officials said •. Grange Master, will be the ~et
Most of the victims were more than for the Meigs County Grange Bwt;.
70 years old, presumably infected. quet to be held Friday at 7:15 p.m~ ·
years ago.
·at the Meigs County Senior Citi ~
Complications from sypJVIis are zens Cenwr.
,
,
serious. It can cause an infection in
Tickets are $.7 for adults and $6'
the aorta- the main arlery coming for children and are available fronr
out of tbe bean - and .can also Arthur Crabtree, Patty Dyet, Nor:
cause cardiac diseases.
man Will, Pauline Atkins, Zibai
Dr. Thomas J. HalPin. in charge ¥idkiff, Rosalie Story, Dorothy.
"'
of the Ohio Depmbnentof Health's Smith and Bill Radfool.
division of preventive medicine,
Tracey Grueser will enlertaiJ!!
nates that me disease is concenaat- during the meeting. ·
·::

A dinner honori·ng Mrs. Vermont Markins of Racine on her
83rd birthday was held n:cendy at
the home of her daug!ircr, Mrs. Vir·
ginia Dean, Wolfe J&gt;en Road.
A decorated cake was served
following the dinner. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reid,
Rodney and Tammy Reid and
daughter, David Reid, Mrs. Vir. ginia Stpith, Joshua and Mica
Dawn, all of Pataskala; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Paynter, Albany: Mr, and
Nease, Barbara
,
BRADBURY CHEERLEADERS • Tbe rlftb
Mrs. John Walter Dean, James,
row, advisor.
third row. Peaay J,.ewis,
grade· tbeerleilders of Bradbury elemeatary
Sarah
and Ai-ogie Willet; John Dean
Otbers ·assisting were Liada Stewart, Peggy
retently .participated in tbe cheerleading compe·
and
Kenneth
Martins.
tition. Pictured are Crystal Leach, front; Cindy
Lewis and Jane Moon.
Visiting Mrs. Marltins earlier
Lewis, Renee Stewart, secoad row. Jeanifer
·were Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Junior
Smalley, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smalley and Adam, all or Wierton, W.
Va.; Mr. wtd Mrs. Kenneth Jones
and Angie of Elderville, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Spaun, Julia and
· Church of the Nazarene starting .7
Community Calendar items
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- Sharon, Pomeroy.
p.m. nightly . Rev . David Myers, ty Democratic Club Executive
appear two clays .before aa event
Lancaster, special singing nightly. Commit1ee will meet Thursday at
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance Rev, John W. Douglas invites the 7:30 at the Carpenters Hall in
public.
·
··
to assure publltatloa in the cal·
Pomeroy.
endar.
WEDNESDAY RACINE • The Racine Ameri- ·
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Amateur can Legion Post 602 will meet
HARRISONVILLE - Har· Gardeners Club meeting 7 p.m. at Thursday at the haU. Supper will be
risonvillt Senior Chizens blood Presbyterian Church with Mrs. served at 7:30 wtd the meeting will
pressure clinic at town house from Edward Buriceu as hostess. Garden begirr-at8 p.m.
·
10 a.m. to noon. Lunch will be movie to be shown by Ruth Powserved for members afwr. All wel- ers, Meigs County Public Library
POMEROY -There will be a
librarian.
come.
dinner ·at the SeniOr Citizens Cenler. Mulberry Heights, Th~rsday
RACINE - The junior class parCARPENTER - The Columbia with serving from 5 to 6 p.m. Cost
ents of Southern High School will Township trustees will meet in is $4. Following that music will be
meet at 7:30. Tuesday at the. high . special session at 7:30 Wednesday played by The Classics with a free
school to discuss plans for the at the fire J;tation. )&gt;urpose of the will offering to be taken for the
meeting is to pay the interest on a. musicians. The public is invited.
alumni banqueL
repair bill.
.CHESTER - Pomeroy OES
POMEROY- The University of
. practicing for inspection at 6:30·
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ser- Rio Grande Chorale will present a
p.m. at Chester Masonic Temple. vices are being held at the Wes- concert at the Senior Citizens~­
Officers urged to aaend.
leyan Bible Hotiness Church, Mid- · 1er Thursday at 1 p.m. The concert
dleport, through Sunday night. The is open to the public. There is no ·
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi Rev. Elbert Barrows from North admission charge.
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Caro_lina w~ll.. be conductjn~ the
will eat at The Olive Garden in serv1ces woth · spec·1al mus1c by
&amp;
Parkersburg, W.Va. Meet at Brian I!Jid Connie Conley. Services
fOpefty tfanStefS
Pomeroy parking lot 5:15 p.m. start at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. John
Complied by:
Notify Becky Tripleu if planni~g to Neville, pastor, invites the public.
.
Emmogeae
Hamiltoa
auend.
Recorder,
l'dei~)!'
County, Obio
THURSDAY .
'
•
RUTLAND • Rutland PTO
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleJohn R. Lelltes, Cathy C.
meeting 7 p.m. First grade will port Child CCinservation League
SECOND PLACE WINNERS • Winning
will meet Thursday at the Rock Lenws, 8fflll, to Levenia Hayman,
have a program.
trophies
for their setond place exhibits In Har·
Meigs.
Springs Uniled Methodist Church,
Warren
Calaway.
parcels.
to
risonville's
aanual science fair were tbese stuREEDSVILLE - Revival 7 p.m. Nancy Morris will have the
John
D.
Riebel,
Sr.,
John
D.
Riebel,
dents,
left
to
rigbt, _Kyle Smldclle, llfth; IJndsey
through Sunday at Fello'!'ship program.
·
Jr., Chester.
, Theron E. Morris, dec'd, Cert.
of Trans., to Bruce R. Maoris, Rutland.
Edward R. Roush, Rebecca J.
Kara Chanlay Osborne, daughRoush, Lot II &amp;: 12, to Meigs
ler of Jim and Connie Osborne, eel·
Metropolitan Housjng Authority,
ebrated her third birthday recently
MiddViU.
with a party at her home.
Home National Bank, parcels, to
. A "101 Dalmatian" theme was
Scou Ours, Rebecca Ours, Sutton.
·carried -out with those in attenJoe Lantz, Thelma Lantz, parcel,
dance:
to
Joe
Lantz, Thelma Lantz, Olive.
Jim and Connie Osborne, Bob
Mary M. Jones, parcel, S. 12, to
and Betty Jackson, Marge Os~~·
Ronald G. McDade, Olive.
Belinda and Torrey Vogt, V1ck1e
Kathryn Hunt, parcels, to Beverand Jennifer Hedges, Jimmy, Con·
lee L. Wickline. Letart
nie and Nicole Jackson, Randy,
Robert Cunningham, Sharen
Ruth Ann and floUy Dunfee.
Cunningham, Lot 1()9 &amp;: 294, to
Sending gifts were Gladys and
Robert Moore, Syracuse.
Wilbert Barber and Duke and
Minnie Dillon, Life Eslale REf.,
LenabeUe Pullins.
J;:ARA OSBORNE ..
to Barbara Dixon Bolen; Lisa R.
Darst, Columbia.
Carol A.D. Hubbard, PL Lot 13,
to Delbert Blake, Midd ViU.
.
.
.
Roger W. Hayman. Levenia
Hayman,
TractS, io Clarence E.
NEW YORK (AP) -After a Monday night in Charlotte,. N.C.,
Hayman,
Virginia L .. Hayman, .
.
.
decade on Public Broadcasting's and Wednesday at the Rochesler
Lebanon
.
.
"MacNeH-Lehrer NewsHour," Institute. of Technology in
Judy Woodruff is joining CNN.
Rochester, N.Y.
Woodruff will be co-anchor of
The Gorbachevs still planned to
the daily "Inside Politics" with appear in Charlouesville today for
Bernard Shaw and co-anclior of the 250th anniversary of the birth
"World Today" with Frank Sesno, ofThomas Jefferson.
CNN said Monday ..She replaces
·Catherine Crier, who went to ABC
UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif.
in November.
· (AP) - Prince is.taking a break
"It's hard to walk away ," this week from his concert tour
Woodruff said. "But I have come because of a respiratory infection.
to the conclusion that this is a rare . . Th.e rock. star postponed sold·
··· opp&lt;)rtoinity 'io mo'iie wiili a·:Pews out Shows sch.eduled for tonight
·organizatiOn that •s 1ncreas1ngly and Wednesday at the· Universal
·
Amphitheatre on the advice of his
·setting the agenda."
Woodruff was NBC's White doctor, spokesman Michael PagHouse correspondent from 1977 to nou.a said Monday.
1982. In 1983, she became chief
Thursday's show will go on .as
Washington correspondent for scheduled, and the others will be
" MacNeil-Lehrer." the weeknight held Friday and Saturday. ·
PBS news program with hosts
Robin MacNeil and Jim Lehrer.
NEW YORK tAP) - Richard
Gere says he doesn't care if he isn't
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) DALE F. ELLIS, JR.
invited back to the Oscars for using
·Mikhail Gorbachev dropped some the event this year to make an
dates from his U.S. speaking tour . ::;~~on behalf of the Tibetan .
because his wife, Raisa, is ailing.
Mrs. Gorbachev, who suffered a
"I spol&lt;e up because. one of the
[
stroke two years ago, underwent great tragedies of our time is
wsts Monday at the Medical Col- u_nfolding in the Himalayas, and
lege of Virgonia Hospitals but was our government has been silent,"
Dale Franklin Ellis Jr. celcbnltthe actor wrote in an opinion-page ed his first birthday March 29 at
not adm itled.
•
the home of his parents, Dale and
, "She needs some rest," said · piece in today"s New Yorli: Times.
Alexander Likhotal, a spokesmwt · Gere, a Buddhist, called on Margie Ellis, Middlepon.,
A "Winnie the Pooh" theme was,
for the former Soviet leader. "The President Clinton to speak out
situation is not dangerous."
against China's "syslematic plun- carried out
Another·pany was held earli~r
Lilchotal gave no details Qll Mrs. d · · d ldlli · T"bet"
an the ng
m 1 • Awards 1·n the month at the home of h1s
Gorbachev's illness b~t said she enng
During
Academy
would receive prolonged treatmeqt last month, Gere, a presenter, . grandparentS in KenL Several rela-'
when the couple return to Moscow. mused about the show •s waldwide lives aneMed.
Gorbachev receiv.ed an honorary audience of about 1 billiOII and
Malerilal grandparents are Tom
degree at Virgi~ia Commonweal.th wondered if something "miracu. and Joyce l'ersinRer, Kent. Btoth·
ers·are Bob Ellis, Midd)eport, and
.University on, Monday. tl)en can- lous and movie-like could hawen
Gene Ellis, Gallipolis. .
·
celed appearances scheduled for

Community Calendar

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