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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Women allege
sexual relations
with archbishop

Beat of the Berid...
by Bob Hoeflich

ALBUQUERQUE, N;M, (AP)
- An Ohio woman says her
Again lhc Meigs County Medi·
The group is doing a "Good alleged affair with an archbishop
cal Srices were busy in February. Egg" Easter tree project and this is destroyed ~tcrlaith.
Dlfector Bob B yer repons that how it worb. For $5 • name you
''At the time I was a very
units made 252 runs during the can place lhc name of your favorite devout catholic," Judy Maloof of
shortest month of the year trans- "good egg" on one of three trees at Columbus told interviewer Mike
porting 130 patients to Veterans the hospital. The names are Wallace on CBS-TV's "60 MinMemorial Hospital; 41 to Holzer attached to pastel Easter eggs utes'.' Sun!lay. "I think he exploit·
Medical Center; 12 to Pleasant which are placed on the tteeS and ed my spirituality by comparin$ me
Valley and nine to other institu· so far, the Auxiliary has sold eight at time,s \lith wwerful religtous
lions.
dozen eggs. And that's good. ico11s like the Virgin of
And here's the breakdo~n by EJtCepllhc qUOia for the drive is~ Guadalupe."
units of the services: Columbia · dozen so support will have to be
Two other woman said in the
two; Middleport, 74; Pomeroy,'
coming from you, xou 11nd you. on-camera interviews that Arch·
Racme,47;RuUand,43; Syracu~ You can send your money and bishop Robert Sanchez molested
17, and Tuppers Plains, 1S. In names of your "good eggs" to the them while they were teen-agers
addition, the services made 49 Auxiliary at 11~ E. Memorial active in the Roman Catholic
transfer ·runs and were involved in Drive, Pomeroy.
Chun:h.
four aero-medical transfers during
The white trees have been
Ms. Maloof, who grew up in
the month.
placed in lhc hospital lobby, cafete• New Mexico, now is an associate
I'm always impressed with the ria and the sun room of the Skilled professor of Spanish and ParSHOWBIZ • Fraak Slaatra poses with his
Los Angeles. Otlm:s tittendlnJ the ceremony
figures on the number of runs han· Nursing Facility. The auxiliary tuguese at Ohio Stale University.
wife, Barbarllj second from right, who was prewere Jilly Mack SeDeck, second from left, .and
died by the units lind wonder what members have used pastel ribbons
The interviews with Mike Walsented the 1!193 Womea in Show Business
Don Rickles, rtpL (AP photo)
we did before the services were along with \he eggs and already the , lace were broadcast two days after
Humanitarian Award by Tom Selleck Sunday in
established. I have been reminded trees are atuactive and provide Sanchez submitted his resig11ation
though that in past djlys, doetors pretty. spots about the hosl&gt;ital. to Pope Paul II. Abounwo weeks
made house calls many limes in the Bob Ftsher, husband of auxtliary a~o lhc archbishop publicly apolo·
evenings, on days off and between president, Libby Fisher, braved the giz:ed for any pain, harm and disapth~ir regular office hours and that
weather to cut down the tteeS and J:!OIDtment caused by the allegaLONDON (AP) - Bucldn&amp;Jtaro
Royalties from the -movie ninth-graders, Buffett will award
went a long way in relieving the pa~nted them along with some uons,
·
.
Palace
has
off~
the
Duchess
of
enabled
lhc Rungstedlund Founda· 1012,000 scholarships to Sea
situation. Funeral homes were asstst from several auxiliary mernSanchez hasn't con·firmed or
often called upon to provide trans- be? an~ Don Beegle of the hospi- denied the accusations and has York a fmal divon:e settlement of J tion to turn Blixen's white-brick Camp in Marathon, in the Keys.
ponation with their vehicles. The tal s mamtenance depanmerit.
been in seclusion. He had headed $750,000 and a trust fund for her house into a museum. It was the He'll also pick up expenses and
emergency units, of course, have
The auxiliary is such a deserv- .the Archdiocese of Santa Fe since d~~tghters, a newspaper reported flTSt time Streep visited lhc home round-trip Ill' fare.
&lt;Sunday.
.
··
about 19 miles north of Copen:
long been established and did lhcir · ing organization asking for your 1974.
Winners wiD spend Aug. 3-20
The
Mail
on
Sunday
said
friends
hagen.
thing long before· the "services" support. Just in the past weel:
studying marine scleiiCe at lhc nonMs. Maloof said Sanchez
became into being and so well members purchased a new seduced her by .using spiritual Jan. of the former Sarah Ferguson said · Blixen, who died.in Rungsled in . profit camp.
.
organized. The Middleport Emer- wheelchair, a quantity of modem guage. She said she was 19 when she had hoJ?ed for $6 million and 1962 at a,ge 77, published in North
"We're so excited we can't
gency Squad was the first to be patient charts and a copier al)d their·relationship began.
other fiJU!Dcial sttppOI'I,
,
AmeriCa under the pen name lsak stand it," said Linda Basler,
Buckmgham- Palace had no Dinesen
organized and that was back in stand oeedcd at the hospital. Trust . "And lhcn he took your virginischool-community coordinator for.
immediate comment on the n:port
·
1937. You remember that year, of me, this is a volunteer organization ty," Wallace said to Ms. Maloof.
Cincinnati public schools. "This is
that
the
settlement
has
been
·rmaJ;
CINCINNATI
(AP)
-Jimmy
course, what with lhc biggie flood. which docs a world or good in
very special for our district. We
"That wasn't all he took " she
Following :were Pomeroy, Racine, many ways. I frequently see the said. "I mean one of lhc OUIComes ized. Fergie and Prince Andrew BuffeU is sending some Cincinnati just don't get these Jdnda of schoJ.
you11gsters down to the Florida arship offers."
Syracuse, Rutland, Tuppezs Plains group in action so 1'm sold on of my affair wilh him was within a formally separated last year.
The
newspaper
said
lhc
pacbg\l
Ke~.
.
and first responders in Columbia them.
, BuffeU ~armed five sold-out
few months after he terminated lhc
offers
the
duchess
a
lump-sum
Through
-a contest for the city's shows in Cincinnati last year.
Township in 1989; Olive Town·
Hope you have at least one relationship, llost my faith."
ship, Chester Township, and "good egg" in your life whom you
She was not yailable for further "payoff' and a trust worth $2.1
Orange TowiW!ip just this year.
wll! hovor by participating in the comment Sunday. No one million for the couple's two daull:h·
At any rate, I'm glad there's proJect. The eggs from the trees answered the telephone at her ters and $900,000 earmarked Tor
·
help out there. If you've ever will be given to the honorees after . home early Sunday.evening and the the pun:hase of a horne.
. The newspaper didn't identify
needed .it. you're probably glad too. Easter.
,
line rang busy later.
tiS
sources.
.
.
Cathy Mendoza and Pauy
What wilh the wealher warming
According to the calendar Madrid said they were 18 and !he
'
RUNGSTED, nellllllirk (AP) - .
and looking up, the Women's Aux- spring did arrive. Now if we ca~ archbishop was 40 when he foniliary is hoping for a big upswing just crutch thtough without a flood, dled them. The broadcast did not Meryl Streep received a pnzc that
.in its current fund raising project
we should be able to keep smiling. ·make clear where the women lived. honors Karen Blixen, the Danish
writer she portrayed in "Out of
Africa.''
·
.
Same Day Service
"I have wallced in her path, but
AU Parts Extra
I will never walk in her shoes "
Includes: Cleaning,. Oiling,
Streep said Saturday during a cde.
AdJuslmelts; Gr~aslng
mony at Blixen's former home.
The sale of Blixen's boOks toOk
off after the release of the' movie
which won the 1985 Academy
By LEE SIEGEL
the "big bang" birth of the uni- Esiabroolc said
Award for best picture and earned·'
AP Science Writer
verse 15 billion years ago and other
The scientists are looking for Streep a nomination but not an
PASADENA, Calif.. Three cosmic cataclysms.
S~ond
Very long gravitational WaVes, such' Oscar.
·
Einstein's general theory of rel- as those produced by the "big
spacecraft heading in different
directions may help scientists fmal· ativity predicted such waves, gen- bang~" supermassive black holes
Iy prove one of Albert Einstein's erated by lhc most violent events in or the collision of two such objects.
predictions related to lhc creation the universe, should be rippling
Black holes are collapsed stars
of the. universe and his theory of through space and time. But despite so dense that not even light can
years of hunting, physicists have escape their gravity. Much larger
relativity.
"This is a once-in-a-decade yet to fmd any.
supermassive black holes are
The new search will be one of believed to occupy the centers of
opportunity. I'm on an adrenalin
htgh right now," said John W. the most sensitive ever because it galaxies, where they swallow hunArmstrong, an astronomer at uses three spacecraft- the Mars dreds of thousands of stars.
NASA'sJetPropulsion Laboratory .. Observer, the Jupiter-bound
Scientists give the.experiment
I
Scientists are looking for gravi· Galileo and the Ulysses solar only a 5 percent chance of success.
tational waves - faint echoes of explorer - and high-tech radio Estabrook said it will take six
equipment, said Frank B. months to a year to analyze data
· Estabrook, a physicist at the Jet from the experiment and determine
\
Propulsion Laboratory.
if gravitational waves were detect·
If strong enough waves are ed.
moving through lhc solar system a1
The Ulysses probe se:jl'Ched for .
the SDCed of light, lhcy shoulil warp gravitational waves last year. but
Gina Pellegrino-Pines of the fabric of space, causing slight
Pomeroy, a political science major changes in the frequency of the failed to find any, be added. ·
at the University of Rio Grande and radio signals.
Rio Grande Community College,
The search started Sunday when
has been named to lhc 1993 edition a NASA Deep Space Network
Looking for a Pet?
of Who's Who Among Students in antenna dish near Canberra, Aus·
American Colleges ll(ld Universi- tralia, began tracking the Mars
Shop
ties.
Observer spacecraft, Armstrong
A campus nominating commit· said.
the
we and editors of the annual direc·
The Galilee and the Ulysses
CUISSIFIEDS
tory chose Pelle~no-Pines based · also are being ttacked by the antenon her academtc achievement, nas near Canberra; Madrid, Spain;
community service, leadership in and Goldstone, Calif.
extracurricular activities and poten·
CW.Iflecle; .. your at
· The search, a joint effort of the
tial for continued success.
home ehopJIInll oenter.
National Aeronautics and Space
Pellegrino-Pines join.s an .lite Administratio'n and the European
Find great buyo on peu,
group of swdents from mon: than Space Agency, will continue until
pet aeceuOriea, and
1,400 institutions of higher learn· Aprilll.
service•.
ing in all 50 states, the District of
Findinjl: gravitational waves
This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For '100.00 Or Less
Columbia and several foreign would venfy Einstein's prediction
CaU for complete details ·
nations.
on placing.
And Advertise It FREE.
and provide scientists with a new
Outstanding students have been way to "see inside catastrophic
ads to sell for you.
Simply 'a ip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
honored in the directory since explosions in the cosmos,"
1934.
.
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.

Ohio Lottery

·Miami
Redskins
advance

Pick 3:

216
Pick 4:

0207

Low lmllght 1111 mkl-405.
Sbowen. Wednesday, showers,

Page4

blgb llllllid 50s.

..

54;

Committee :outlines park improve·m enf plans
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sendael News Staff
Plans for further development
· and expanded use of Hartinger
Park were outlined by Middleport
·Recreation Committee members,
· Arnold Johnson and Skip Jobnson,
· at a meeting of Middleport Village
Council Monday nighL
. The two ~layed a map show·
ing proposed plans for a mini-park
inside Hartinger Park for children
· under seven. Then: would be spe: cial eqpipmerit for preschoolers
· along with sand in an enclosed area
· built from lmlled lumber.
. The need for more benches at
' lhc park was also nOted, along with
· plans bein$ made toward getting
· the swimmmg pool rea"'ly to open
· in late May. Fund raising projects
including the sale of bill boards
· were discussed.
: · Financial problems of last
• year's opetatioa of lhc pool were
reviewed, and May.or Fred lloff·
; man reported that he plans to!send

FREE INSPECTJ()N

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
(All Brands)

Student among
Who's Who

CC1LA®~lliFilJBJD)

AJD)

You Ad Will Run For One Week.

Community calendar

MONDAY
POMEROY • Revival will con~inue at H·ysen Run Holiness
' Church throDilh Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. nlghdy. David Scott, Logan, is
ihe speaker. Pastor Robert Manley
invitc81hc public.
RACINE • The Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet Monday at
7:30 p.m. at Southern High School.
MIDDLEPOltT • Eric Chambers will inltruCt a Tal Chi class for
the Middleport AriJ Council beginnins Monday. Colt is $15 for~
cluscs. to registet, call 992-2675
or992-n33.

RACINE • The Southern Local
Board Educatitwl will meet Mori·
day a1 7 p.m. at lhc high school.

or

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Xouth Baseball League will hold
stgn-ups on Monday and Thursday
from S:J0-8 p.m. a1 Pomeroy Elementary. Prices are $12 per child,
~ot 10 exceed $25 per family. First
lime players will need to bring a
birth certificate.
TUESDAY
POMEROY • American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
hold its annual birthday dinner at
the Senior Citizens Center on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. The Ladies Auxiliary and family an: urged 10 attend.
RACINE • OPASB Local 4S3
Southern Local, will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at lhc high school. Everyone U!Jed to attend.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Youth Leaaue will hold a
coaches mi;Ciing at 6:30p.m. in the
Middleport Council Room. Anyone
interested in coachinil should
aiiCnd.
{

MIDDLEPORT • Ballroom
dance clalaes will begin Tuelday at
the Middloport Ans C&lt;&gt;uncil build·
ing. Bcglnngers come from 7:308:3l) p.m.; advauced, 8:30-9:30
re:On~ cost iJ $7 per ~le, per
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Intermediate
clas!'Cs in Texas style dance will
beam Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .
Advanced class will be held 8:30..
9:30 p.m. Classes are at the Mid·
dleJx:ln Arts Council building. The
.cost IS $7 per couple, per Jesson.

•

(NOTE: 15 WORD UMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, :rHIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)
~AME:~~~~~~~~----------~~~~

PHONE NUMBER: .,--__,,;..._,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;.-"-::--

MAIL TQ:

The Daily ·Sentinel
111 Court ~treet, Pomeroy, OH 45769
(OFFER EXP.IRES 6/211/93)

biliwion funds through the Ohio
Department of Development. The
area being considered for rehabili·
tation is along Hartinger Parkway.
Other Busiaess
Roger Manley met with Council
about a spring cleanup program. It
was pointed out that while Manley,
according to his contract with the
village, hauls everything, except
remodeling materials, tires, brush,
old carpeting and rocks, anytime a
cleanup wc;ek might not be necessary. However, it was decided by
Council that perhaps a designated
month might encourage residents to
clean lip around lhcir homes. Mliy
was set as spring cleanup month.
The village's recycling program
was discussed and a contract was
given to James Johnson to pickup ··
materials from lhc 140 customers
in the village. There will be no
charge to the village, piclcups wiD
continue on the same day, and
materials collected will be stored
out of town.

Mayor Hoffman read a feuer
from lhc Environmental Protection
Agency advising !hat the village
has been granted an extension to
Jan. 1, 1994 to have a full-time cer·
tified water syslem person in its
employ. Bill Browning, a village
employee, will be taking the test in
May, the mayor reported.
The second reading of an ordi'
nance to abandon an alley off
South Founh between the Barcus
and .Mil!s prOJ!Crties w~s given.
.along wtth .a first readmg o£ an
ordinance reducing Jean Trussell's
salary f~om $18,456 to $12,649.
Now only three days will be paid
by the village wllh the Meigs
Housing Authority picking up pay
for the other two days.
.
Gail Hovatter and Marilyn
Meier wen: appointed to five year
terms on the Middleport Arts
Council. No apP.ointment was
made by Counctl to the Meigs .
County Park Oistrict advisory
Continued on page 3

Court says emergency
rule unconstitutional
MOSCOW (AP) - The Constitutional Court ruled today that
President Boris Yeltsin had violat·
ed the constitution when he
declared emeigency rule.
"There is an entire basis for
impeachment," parUament speaker
· Rqslan Kbasbulatov, Yeltsin's
· arcb~ri~ .~d at a.newl confer.ence. ''That's clear."
Russia's 247-member standing
legislature, 'the Supreme Soviet,
hastily called a meeting for later
today.
The 247-member Supreme
Soviet, Russia's standing legislature, could call an emergency session of the 1,033-member Congress
of People's Deputies, which has lhc
eonstiwtional right to impeach the
presidenL
In his televised address, Yeltsin
decl3ied Clllergency rule, called f~r
a public vote of confidence in his
administration, and said the refer•
eridum could lead to a new constitution in place of the Soviet-era
charter. The proposed constitution
would replace lhc current Congress
with abicameral legislature.
The independent lnterfax news
agency earlier had reported that the
court had found that Yeltsin violat·
ed the constilution but did not
deserve impeachment
That confrontation between
Yeltsin and the Soviet-era
Con~ress over who should rule
RuS$13 sh~ on Sawrday night
when Yeltsm, seeking to break the
logjam, said' in a nationally tele·
vised speech that be was declaring
emergency rule and scheduling a
referendum on April25.
Yeltsin, elected in democratic
balloting in June 1991, said he
wanted a new vote of confidence
from the people, popular endorse-

ment of lhc concept of privale ownership, and approval ofhis piuposal
for a new constitution replacing
Congress wilh a bicameral legislature.
'
The standing 247-meinber
Supreme Soviet leaislature, in an
· emergency sessi011 Sunday nigh~
vo!A. l25-16 to as.l: the ~ourlto
review the constitutionality of
Yeltsin's actions.
Impeachment sentiment is
strong among lawmakers, more
!han 80 percent of whom are former Communist Party offtcials.
The court, daninated by former
Communist Party members, has
ruled against Yeltsin in the past,
and chairman Valery Zorkin on
Saturday characterized the president's speech as an attempted coop.
The president's team was ·in a
fighting mood Monday an~ today,
vowing to go ahead wtth the referendum whether or notlhc Congress
voted impeachment. Yeltsin
spokesman Anatoly Krasikov
issued a stiuement saymg lhc president could not be impeached legally until after a referendum on a
new constitution.
U.S. Secretary of State Warren
C~stopher _
said Monday that the
Clmton admmtstration was coRditioning its backing of Yeltsin on
further democratic and economic
reforms.
"We will reiterale our concern
that the c·urrent situation in
Moscow must be resolved peacefully and in a way consistent with
respect for civil liberties " Christopher said in Chicago. '
The U.S. position appeared
destgned to caunon Yeltsin against
any dictatorial steps, and also to
keep the door open to any Russian
leaders who might succeed Yeltsin
if he loses his political gamble.

who spoke on condition of .
anonymity.
.
Twenty-five pe&lt;&gt;ple, including
21 children, had previously left the
cl!lt's nnl compound near W&amp;aJ.
lt was IICll immediately clear if the
people who departed Friday night
were adults or children.
Earljcr in the day, · federal
authorities had characterized negotiations with cult leader David
f\Oresh -to end a 2lklay standoff as
lhc "most positive" since March 2.
· A l1IOIIllllil telephone discussion
was "'the most positive convcr$11·
tion that we've had with David
SIGN IGNORED • An army vehicle drives . Texas, Monday. Recently, a tank drlvea by an
Koresh since Marcil 2," FBI a,gent
past a sign erected by the media at a chetkpolnt FBI agent ran over a car left by the media durBob Ricks said. "He indicllled that
at the Branch Davidian. compound near Waco, Ing the shootout on Feb. ZS. (AP)
it was his desire to get this matter
resolved.
"He asked for a little more time.
He has no intent ot committing sui·
cide. He believes that he has a message to get out, and be realius that
if ~' s killed. his message will not
get OUL"
·Negotiators refuse to get too
at a site in Youngstown once occu- dies Or adjustments of the two,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) hopeful because thc' leader of the
depending on the fate of local tax
pied
by LTV Steel Corp.
Branch Davidian sect has disap· The Youngstown and Massillon
Mayor
Pat
Ungaro
said
the
city
levies.
city school districts have been
pointed them before, Ricks said.
So far this flSC81 year, lhc s!J!te
hopes
to
attract
olhcr
industries
to
Authorities have been in a authorized to borrow a total of
has
~teed loans for 45 of ~
the
I
00-acre
si
tc
in
an
effort
to
standoff with Koreah since a Feb. Sl 0.3. million from local blll!ks to
state
s more than 600 districts.
eventually
provide
1,200
new
jobs.
28 gunfiaht that left four federal .keep their bills paid ~ maintain
·
AppUcations
arc pendin' for 16
The
other
school
districts
·
agents and ·at least two· cultists claisroom schedules.
others,
and
68
are repayma old
receiving
loan
guarantees
were
lhc
The state Controlling Board
dead. Twenty-seven people have
loans,
departll)ent
spokeswoman
left the compound since the siege voted Monday to guarantee six Manchester Local district, Summit Susan Tavllkolian said.
began. The four adults have been loans totaling $11.6 million. County, $443,000; Chippewa
Ungaro -said the Department of
held u witneues.
. Youn,stown's $7 miltion and Mas· Local, Wayne County, $353,000;
Development
will help Exal
"What 1 do see' is, though, a sillon s $3.3 million lOpped lhc list Champion Local, TrumbuU Coun- buy equipmentloan
and
machinery to
complete clwtge in the demeanor of districts that had deficits cerli· ty, $333,000; and Harrison Hills make aerosol containers for the
City Harrison County, $144,000.
aJI!I an active parti(:ipation in David fied by the state.
The Department of Education food, cosrnepc, housebold, pharma·
In olhcr action, the board authoKoresh ... an indication that he is
said
the districta aireed to pay· ceutical and other Industries. . •
now willina to uy to work this rized, a $3 million Joan to Exal mentallplans
Exal should employ 150 people r - - that include spending
Corp., an aerosol can manufacturer
lhintr out," Ricks said .
.rLet's hope that it takes place. that will employ 100-150 workers cuts and reductions in stale subsi· within a year, Ungaro said.
Let's hope nothing inletferes with
State troope~s located the vehicle and driver responsible for two
m.t•procea."
hit·skiJ!
accidents Friday afternoon in Rutland Township, the GalAuthorities thought the standoff
lia-Metgs
Post of lhc State Highway Patrol reported this morning.
'
at:Jhc Branch Davidian CIIDpound,
Vincent
M. King, 25, 35608 King Ridge Road, Pomeroy, was
·about 10 miles northeast ot Waco,
issued two hit-sldp citations, two citations for no operator's license,
would end Malch 2 after they pera left of center citation and a failure to yield citation.
suaded sever~! radio stAtions io
In both hit-skip incidents, the other driver was able to obtain the
play· a !18-mtnute sermon from .
Koresh. ButiCorelh reneged on hiJ
vehicle's license number.
taken by new transmission lines. knowledge.
promis~ ~o surrender, saying he
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Identify schools, hospitals,
was watllng for a message from New rules about electromagnetic Members of lhc panel an: represenGod
·
fields caused by high-voltage tatives of the PUCO, the deJ?Il!· churches and other institutions near
The Gallia-Meigs Post of lhc State Highway Patrol issued two
Not until Friday morning did wwcr Jines represent a balanced ments oFnatural RIOUfCCI, agncul· lines, alon' with estimatel of the
citations f~ driving under the influence.
.
Koresh stop talldng about "trivial response io an issue that may never ture, environme!ltal protection, number of people who live nearby.
James
R.
Ferrell,
35,
Elmwood
TerrtK;e.
Racine,
was cited early
htalth
ani!
development,
and
the
·
-Include
detailed
estimates
of
matters" and return to the main fuUy be resolved. astate utility regMonday
morning
and
RObert
K.
Arms,
47,
254
West
Main Stree~
public.
.
.
EMF
beneath
propOsed
transmisi~. Ricks said.
ulaJa said. ·
·
Pomeroy, was cited early this morning. Arms was also cited for left
The U.S. Environmental Protec.· siOn lines.
·
,
The rules adopted by the Ohio
of
center.
tion
A1ency
said
last
month
that
-Disc:uss
alternative
.ways
to
.
·Power Sltln1 Board recognize a
:
research
iii
needed
on
the
build
lines
to
minimize
EMF
more
matteJ of imporllliCe, but one on
whidl the IICienlific jury is sliD 0111, effec11 elecrromagnetic ftelcls on effecls.
Olauf said lhc board took I btl!·
.
b
oard Chairman Craig Glazer said health. For yean, I variety of stud· ..
.. Monday.
A Pomeroy IIIII! was injured in a two-vehicle accident Sunday
.
• . i~ have cited links between the anced approach between utilities
afternOODin
Sali""'ny ToWnship, the OaUia-Meigs Post of lhc State
A mectina of the. Me!{~ Local
"It's one wbere we need to have Acids and cancer, • well• blolos· that contend no further Information
Highway l'ltrol reported.
Board of Educlliao will bj held at the sc:ientific Information, to be ical effect~ in Jaboralory animals, should .be required, and citizen
Hugh R. Daniels, 39367 State Route 143, Pomeroy, was transgroups thai Willi to ban aU llanl·
the board offtee Ia the Pomeroy able to weigh that ill lhc equation tissues and cells.
ported 10 Veter1111 Memorial Hospital by Meigs County Emergency
There are no rules reaardin1 mission lines until the issue Is
'Municipal Buildin1 at 7 p.m. with all the other environmental
Medical SeMcc where be was admitled to intensive can: and is in
t!lnllht iDIICid or II the Har· . impacls and secioloaical impacts electromapetlc fiekll at presenL resolved.
stable
conditioo, a hOspital spokeswoman said.
"I'll) not sure it'll ever be firm.
rilooYIUe Blemenwy School. Pie· and cost impaell that thia board Adopted by the bolnl Monday was
According
10 lhe accident~ Dlniels Wllllopped at the u.s.
· dicled rain which could create a deals with on 111 ont:!.O: basis," a pachp that wlll ,require appli- Jy reaolved. So I tltinJc we're OOID·
33
off-ramp
at
Stile Route 7 ltld pullod into the J*h of a v, hicle
.
in1 down right where we need 10 In
flood probletll- pwn.u the Jea· Olazer said. He also
lhc Pu~ · ean1110:
-Address possible health taking a really balanced
'
Coatlnued on paJIC 3
1011 fOI' chlllsJng die mecdttJ Joca.
lie UtUities Commission of Ohio.
effec~
based
on
current
~~eientitlc
approach,"
be
said.
lion.
The sltins bolld approves muleS
.
.

State Controlling Board OKs
$11..6 million in school loans

Local briefs--

New rules for hlgh-voltage
power lines are approved

CHESTER • Ches~r Council
No. 323, Daughters of America
wiU meet Tuesday. Quarterly birth:
days will be Observed. Potluclt dinner. Practices for lhc rally will be
held
RACINE • The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
Tuesday a1 6:30 p.m. at Sw Mill
Park. New members welcome.

p.llt~;..ii:l:dding,.uu)edcral ~

-- "

IFmiEIB

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that evenL Items
must be received well iu advance
to asnre publication in the cal·
eodar.

.ina week. '
Tbe members Je(t about 8:30

----

Clean Out Your Closet,
· Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

Gallia County were excluded.
Village Projects ·
Mayor Hoffman reported on the
Issue 2 funding for paving of Nonh
Second Ave. From Issue 2 the vii·
!age will receive $62,470 add put
in $7,721 for the project
. He also noted lhat the village
sun has under consideration for
funding from ihe Small Govern·
ment Fund lhe Park Street widen·
ing and paving project. The village .
·has applied for $27,681 .and' would
use $3,421 in local funds.
The mayQr was authorized by
Council to sign a contract for the
Broadway-Logan Street sewer !lfO·
ject. Total cost of that project is
$16,711 with $14,873 coming from
Issue 2 funds. Once the contract
has been signed the mayor wiD proceed to advertise for bids on the
projecL
Mayor Hoffman announced a
public hearing for Wedn~sday,
Marth 31, &amp;I 7 p.m. at village hall
· on an,application for housing reha-

WACO, Texas (AP) - Two

Ave. • Mldd,le rt, Ohio

'

ment has been scheduled 'for late
May and that another is planned for
June. He said that ·the committee
also plans several activities at lhc
park to be held in conjunction wilh
the Soapbox Derby as a means of
attracting a bet.-t crowd to that
evenL
The committee, he said, is also
interested in developing recreational programs in other parts of the
town. Bub McClure also serves on
the committee.
Airport ~lion Oppo&amp;ed
A resoluuon was passed by
Council opposing the location of
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport
in the Rodney area. Council
exJ!ressed concern about the airport
bemg taken farther away from
Meigs County.
A preference for the Rodney
location was announced two weeks
ago by the Gallia·Meigs Regional
Airport Authority after existing
public and private airports in Meigs
County and.the regional airpon in

. in&lt;n people left lhc heavily armed
· CIIDpound of the Branch Davidian
: sect late Friday, lhc flfSt to depart

.FRUTH PHARMACY

••

out letters to companies and individuals suggesting lhc purchase of
blocks of season tickets. Hoffman
said that lhc goal will be 400 season tickets to be sold in advance of
the season. The mayor n~ported that
advance ticket sales were at their
lowest ever last year.
Skip Johnso'n talked about lhc
concession stand which has not
made money for the pool for the
past several years and said the
committee is ready to turn that
at9und lhrough better supervision
of lhc stock. ·He· also proposed that
scheduled activities be .held at the
pool to boost attendance, such
lhinP as water aerobics and water
volfeyb1111. Johnson emphasized
that the pbol itself should be COD•
sidered a "recreation thing rather
than a money-making thing", but
that the concession stand should be
profitable.
.Work on lhc fields and dugouts
was discussed and •Arnold Johnson
reported that on~. softball toUflla·

:'fwomore .cult
· members leave
·compound

, TUESPAY, MAR. 23, 2:30·4:30 P.M.

786 N.

A Multimedia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 23, 1993

;eopy;lght..! 1Pll:l

People in the news--~

·Gravitational waves from ·'Big
Bang_' sought by three spacecraft

cent•
Inc. Newapapar

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25

·VoL 43, No. 228

Hit-skip suspect located

Two cited for D.U.I.

Board meeting
location changed

'"

or

P(Jmeroy man injured in wreck

�•
TUesday, March. 23, 1993

·c~mmentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Stftet
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.. DEVOTED TO THlt INTBllB8TS OP' THlt 111':108-IIASON AREA

..

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Bill saved at' Ill costs. If Yeltsin goes
The fmal break Willlilcely occur
Clinton had the first year of his they believe, his democratic and over continued privatization and
presidency mapped out. He free-market reforms ·will be set demilitarization of state industries.
planned to devote his energies to .buac~k~dec:=:ad~es~or~sc~rapped~~~al~to~geth~­ Chernomyrdin, who once support·
the deficit. heallh-&lt;:are reform and ·ed Yeltsin' s radical, free-market
stimulating the economy. Unfortu· R b Tt
UT
· reforms, is apparently now ready to
nately, hedid DOl plan on Boris
0
back Ktoasbulatov.' s economic
Yeltsin and the Russian Parliament
." stabilization program," which is
presenting him witb one of the · er.
actually a return 10 siaiC planning.
most compl~ f~ign policy probThe new administration' s sole
If Yeltsin attends the upcoming
!ems faced by any American presi- focus became what it could do for Vancouver sumniil, it is beleived
dentsince World War TI.
. the beleaguered Russian leader. he will ask for massive new west·
Reportedly Clinton was 11\ken NoJ¥, however, only two months ern aid. If he gets it, Yeltsin will
abaclc when, during his first inreUi- into .his D?W presidencY.• Bill Clin- probably move quickly to suspend
gence briefing as {!resident-elect. ton ts seemg how tembly compli· Parliament and rue Chemomyrdin.
the CIA told him 11 was unlikely cated the Russian equation has Yeltsin wiD ask for U.S. support in
that Yeltsin would laSt another six become.
these moves.
·
months. CIA analysts had concludYeltsin's chief rival, Parl~ent
Clinton's foreign policy team is
ed that Yeltsin ·would probably be Spealcer Ruslan Khasbulatov, has advising that the United States give
replaced by a more hard-line col- badly outmll!leuvered him. Intelli· Yeltsin this.. level of support. In
lective leadership emerging from gence sources here believe that recent 'days, however, the picture
the former Communist-dominated Kbasbulatov will try to effectively has become considerably more
ParliamenL
re(llace Yeltsin J¥ith Yeltsin •s own cloudy.
In assembling his foreign policy pnme minister, the conservative
Russian Ambassador Vladimir
staff. Ointon brought together peo- Viktor Chernomyrdin. This wiD be Lukin asked for. and received, an
pie at the State Department and the done by allowing lhe cabinet, under urgent, private meeting with Secre·
National Security Council who Chemomyrdin·. to directly intro- tary of State Warren Christopher.
believe Yeltsin - Russia's first duce legislation into the Parlia- By the time the meeting ended,
popularly elected leader - must be menL
Christopher and his top ad¥isers

e J• rragman

t

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisbet/ControUer

C~RLENE

HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he leSs than 300
words. All letten .,. subject Ill editing IIDd must he signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letten will he published. Letten
should he 10 good last.., addressing issues, not l'"""nalities. '

·.Letters to the editor
·'

A united effort pays.off
risks to assist ·lhelr feUow citizens.
Dear EdiiOr.
It wiD be some time before we . The police, sheriff's office and
forget the weekend of March 12, emergency dispatchers who kept
..and the evans thal happened. Per- the communication lines open,
. sonally I would lilce to acknowl- some. staying on duty 30 hours.
.'edge and thank the many. people catcbmg a nap, when they eould,
.who came together to see us lhen back at lheir job.
. The amateur radio operators,
: through lheae events,
: From 9:S3 am Friday wilh the who kept us informed of lhe wealh.fire at Meigs High School and er conditions, the events in surihrough the snow emergency, when ' rounding counties, passing mes.)llany volunteers and county per- sages between counues, and send. ~onnel worked tirelessly getting ing messages for us, WCI1l at lheir
· people to work 11 lhe hospilal and posts for bettt:r than 30 hoius.
I shall be fon:ver grareful to all
'horsing homes. volunteering their
vehicles and equipmenl, lllSWCring · those persons who in some way
emergency c:aUs, and keeping the assisted us and got us through. A
_roads open so we could answer lhe big thank you 10 all, for a job well
done.
:Calls for help.
·' · The Fire Departments and
Sincere!)', Meigs County Emer'·Emergency Squads with lheir dedi· gency Semces.
·:cation to helping people lOOk many
Robert E. Byer, clikctor

· 1r~

DR. K'\ORKIAN.

H~ RECO.tiJIENDS A

HALFGAINER WITH ATWIST.

Pulling together when it counts
· lsn 't it fUMy how just one word
of praise or thanks can seem to
· make all the effort worthwhile.
·. No maner bow many times
. you've been kicked (usually when
- you're already down) just one per. son saying they appreciate what
you do helps you 10 remember just
why these projects WCI1l begun to make a differmce in somcone•s
: -life·, even~ for a liule while.
• This leuer is to thank tholle pco~ pie who.have thanked us for what
: we do and those who continue to
; support our projects, without
. whose help we couldn't accomplish
; what we do.
One job. is as important as lhe
: next -no mauer bow big or small.
: because the pieces wouldn't fit
· without everyone's help. No one
: person could pull these projects
: together. Our runs are becoming

well known for their successfulness
as well as for the way everything
always runs so smoothly. But once
again, it's only through everyone's
individual donation of time and talent lhll it's possible.
. It's amazing that no matter how
many prol)lems or differences of
opinion !here are. everyone always
puUs together when ii counts. And
as far as we ere CODCeiTIC(I what we
do is definitely good, and we 'II
continue to move ahead with
everyone's support, both fmancialAccording to the Bureau of
ly and mentaUy.
·
.Worlcers' Compensation's Division
Plans ate already moving along of Safety and Hygiene, 245 denth ·
for 1993. Our 6rst project is lhe 8th claims W):IC flied in Ohio in 1990
annual Memorial Day Run to be as 1 result or workplace injuries.
held on May 30.
An additional 850 severe injury
Ride safe and frlle in 1993! claims wen: filed in lhe same year.
Breada Davis for the While lhe number of claims have
Meigs County Bikers improved over yean past, one can ·
see from lheae figures that hazards
of the workplace stiU remain.
.In recognition of the need for
S)IOIIg safety and health protection
opment. This hasn ' t happened. in.lhe workplace, and lhe victims
•
Dear Editor
:
Did you notice lhe Ohio Depart- Why?
of workplacC injuries and disease,
take a look at adjoining Gallia lhe Ohiil General Assembly enact• ment of Hishways rcc:endy award·
: ed 40 highway projects totaling County with its new four lane high- ed legislation in 1990 designating
ways on Route 33 and Route 7 and
: $29.1 million. ·
, Again Meigs County has been all lhe infiW&lt; of new business that
: left out For years and years this foUowed.
f..9llk at Athens County with lhe
• has been a common lhing for the
: State of Ohio to ignore Meigs four lane around Athens, Route 33
: County and spread lhe money else- and Route SO. Also Route 50 to
Coolville is about 10 be made four
Although a decidedly unsenti• where.
menial federal district court judge
:
Meigs 111 pment has no smoke lanc.
But here sits Meigs worrying in Texas, Ricardo Hinojosa, had
; stack industry, only seven miles of
about
replacing the Pomeroy stayed the execution of Leonel
: four-lane highway, over 10 )leltellt
when they already have a Herrera so that he could present
Bridge
· unanploymentlnl cme of the biib·
of
the art bridge at evidence of his innocence, the
state
; est rates of P.eople on Aid for
Ravenswood
that just needs a high- Supreme Court refused 10 remand
: Dependent ChildRn. But stiU when
way
to
help
develop
the land. Why lhe case for a henring on that evi· Meigs tried to gel a prison built
. •
.
: here to create more jobs, lhey WCI1l haven 't our senators. congressmen, dence.
Judge Hmollsa had made h1s
; told the highways weren't good and commissioners pushed harder '
• enough as one reason for rejection. for this? Let's get a bang for our ruhng out of ' a sense of fairness
: Afso a bridge was built at buck 1ilcc everyone else is and state ~ due ~s.': ~utthe best ~~
: Ravenswood. W. Va. during the complaining to our governmental Ch•ef_Justice W1lham Rehnqu1st
• Rhodes' Administration at a cost of officials to do something now and f•ve other members of the
: millions of dollars in taxoavers while the federal funds are becom- S~preme Coun could do for the
pnson~ was to suggest he try for
: money and the State of Ohio said ing available:
Get
the
h•ghway
fust,
lhen
fight
executive
clemency.
• they would run an access highway
for
jobs
and
industry.
Clemency
for a murderer ')0 Ibis bridge and tic in Route 7 and
David
Cleland
especially
someone
convicted of
Route 33 thereby opening up all of
Tuppers
Plains.
killing
two
policemen
- is very
:Southeast Meigs County for develhard to come by in Texas. Talbot
D' Alemberte, in!medlate past president of lhe Ameriean Bar Association, argued on behalf of Herrera
before the Supreme Court. I
By The Associated Press
':!5umed
he was no.w going 10 petiToday is Tuesday, March 23, the 82nd day of 1993. There are 283
uon
Gov.
Ann R1chards for his
days left in lhe year.
laSt
chance.
client's
: Today 's Highlight in History:
"
No,"·
he
said. "she doesn't
: On March 23. 1775, in a Speech to .the Virginia Provincial Convention,
have
direct
authority
to grarit
Patrick Henry made his famous plea for American independence from
She
has
lhe
power
if a
clemency.
Britain, saying, "Give me liberty, or give me death! "
lhe
Board
of
Pardons
majority
of
· On this date:
, In A.D. 752, Pope Stephen II was elected to succeed Pope Zacharias: and Paroles recommends cremency."
,
however, Stephen died only two days later.
Acconlin$ to D~Aiemberle, lhat
· In .1743, George Frideric Handel's oratorio "Messiah" had its London
.premrere.
board is qu1te uncommunicative.
, In 1792, Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 94 in G Major, also known as "When you send it something."
. the " Surprise Symphony" for its startling crashing chord in the second says Herrera's lawyer. "you lOme·
times aet the feelmg that you ate
movement, was performed publicly for lhe fll'sl time, in London.
In 1806, explorers Lewis and Clark, having reached the Pacific coast, throwing your papers into a black
hole. You may never set an
began their journey back ~L.
.
.
.
. .
.
answer,
~cept 'We received your
: In 1919. Bemto Mussohm founded h1s Fasc1st pohucal movement m
papers.'
Indeed,
you may not learn
)'oiilan, Italy.
, .
that
clemency
bas
been denied until
. In 1933, lhc German Reichstag adopted the Enabling Act, which effecyour
client
baa
been
executed.
iively granted Adolf Hitler dictatorial legislative powers.
Thene
are
a
number
of
boards
like
· In 1942, lhe U.S. government began moving Japanese-Americans from
that
in
other
llalea...
'
iheir West Coast homes to detention centers.
Not much was heard from mem, In 1956, Pakistan became an jndependent republic within the British
bers or Congress after a majority of
Commonwealth.
.
'
· ·
• In 1965, America's first two-person space flight began as "Gemini the Supreme Court decided that
III" - nicknamed the "Molly Brown" - blasted off from Cape Herrera had had enough due process - enough 10 last him a lifej(ennedy with astronauts Virgil I. Grissom and John W. Young aboard.
·. tn )981 , the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could require, with time, as it may weD tum out But
rome exceptions, parenlal notification when teen-age girls sought abor- Sen. Howard Metzenbaum , DOhio, l"as appalled. ·
·
tions.

were unsure whether Lukin represented Yeltsin or Khasbulatov.
The ambassador warned in no
uncertain terms that if Clinton goes
too far-in his support of Yeltsin,
Parliament will scrap lhe just-concluded START II nuclear disarmament treaty signed by Yeltsin and
George Bush. Reportedly. the
ambassador also warned thai a
majority in lhe Parliament would
.vote down the ratification of
START II if the United States
eniered the conflict in Bosnia
against Russia's traditional allies,
the Sertis.
.
Then Washington receiv(:d stem
warnings from two of the former
Soviet Union's newly independent
nuclear powers: Ukraine and Kaza.
khsian. The leadership in Ukraine
is especially concerned that Clinton ~s focus on Yeltsin is be~inning
to be at their expense. Their message: You •d better consider us or
else we will ignore START II also,
As lhe problems have become
increasin&amp;Jy complex, Clinton has
turned to two former Republican
presidents for advice. Reportedly.
that advice has been conflicting if
not contradictory. . .
·Former President Bush strongly
believes lhat Ointon must continue
his policy of absolute support for
Yeltsin. Bush belie.ves Yeltsin is the only ·o.ne who can deliver on a
reform program, and he must
receive whatever help the United
States can deliver. The same message was delivered to Christopher
by Conner Bush Secretary of State
James Bakzr.
However, former President
Richard Nixon is less sure. Nixon
re~y believes lhe current situ·
ation is largely Bush's for not helping Russia more economically in
the last year. Possibly reflecting the
slrong beliefs of h1s own former
secretary of stare, Henry Kissinger
- who thinks we should not be
involved in the Yeltsin-Khasbulatov sttuggle - Nixon has reportedly advised that the United States
focus on supporting Yeltsjn's
re(onns, but remain measured in its
support of Yeltsin as leader.
Robert Wagmaa is a syadicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Associatloa.

Safety in the wor~pl~c~

Meigs left out again

April 28 as Workers Memorial in Columbus,; services Southern
Day. As the day approaches, we Ohio.
must reflect on what the state of
Another program designed to
Ohio is doing to reduce work-relat- help eliminate workplace accidents,
and stop workplace illnesses, is
OnSite Consultation Program· COD·
dueled by the Ohio Dejlartrnent of
ed injuries and to help !hose who Industrial Relations in conjunction
currendy suffer from such injuries. wilh lhe federal Occu~~Btional SafeTo assist Ohio's injured workers ly and Heallh Administration. The
in returning to the workplace ~s OnSiiC Consultation Program takes
quickly and effectively as possible, a proactive look at worker safety
the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Com- by providing employers the .opporpensation offers rehabilitation ser- tunity to identify and remedy
vices lhrouglt a statewide network potential work practices likely to
· · 0m and
• · na1 cause injury and illness.
0·f
p!O•CSSIO
The OnSite Consultation Procaseserv•ce
managers.ICes
The C8mron
Center
gram is strictly voluntary and con- ·

Sen.]an M. Long

sultationli are conducted free of
charge. While suggestions may be
offered, consultants do not share
their inforntalion wilb enforcement
officials. If your company would
like to take advantage of the OnSite
Consultation Program, you may
conlal;t John Sahayda of the Ohio
Department of Induslrial Relations
at (614) 644-2631. ·
.
As always, please feel free 10
c_ontacl my offiCe if you have questiOns or commen11 on lhae or any
other issues my address is, SlalC
Senator Jan Michael Long, Slitc.
house, Columbus, Ohio, 4321S,
phone number (614) 466- 8156. ·

Senator instructs the chief justice______

..

.

Today in history

.

•

*

OHIO Weather
Wednesday, March 14

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, March 23, 1993

Will Clinton ~prop up weakened Yeltsin? .

"The court held," he said, " that would not for a moment ·tolerate ~ood Marshall, but the cries for
'finality" have put habeas corpus
a state prisoner who claims he .has the outcome of the Hemm~ case."
Co-sponsors of lhe Metzenbaum very much on the defensive on
new evidence of his innocence' is
not entilled to have that claim bill ate Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., and DealhRow.
Carl Levin, D-Mich. There ate conMetzenbaum's bill should be
iressmen, however, who though acted on by itself 10 that inembers•
friendly toward the bill, prefer to of Congress can specificaUy decide
include its provisions as part of an whether it is 100 much to ask of our
reviewed in a federal proceeding ... overall habeas corws section of lhe system of justice thal a prisoner be
the doors to the courtroom are sem itemai,Omnibus Crime Bill
allowed to present new evidence
closed." All thal is left is an 8l)IJCal
~is is a losing .strategy. Met· !hat he could be innoceilt befon: he
to "mercy ... just 1ilce lhe de(ciued zenbawn deliberaJely left lhe term, •s executed. This is not, after all
gladiators in ancient Rome. This "habeas corpus," out of his bill. Iran.
'
great nation should reject Chief The Great Writ is regarded by BiD
, Nat Hentorr Is a natlo11all1
Justice ~ebnquist's conclusion that Clinton -end many members of reaowaed autboriiJ on the Firat
we should rely on the grace of Congress as being used much too Amendment and the rest of tile
elected officials to grant clemency often. ·Particularly in capilal cases. BIll or Rl1b ta aad a s7ndlcatcd
in cases of Ibis kind."
The executioner must not be ~pt writer ror Newspaper Eaterprlse
The senator went on to intro- waiting 100 IODj!.
· . Aasoclatlon.
duce a bill 10 that Congress can
"Dealh is differenl," said Thur·
"prevent lhe elUlClltion of someone
who can prove his innocence.' • On
what authority docs the senator
dare 10 instruct the high court and
its chief justice? "Congress," Met·
zenbawn reminds us, "has always
had the power to determine which ·
types or cases are appropriate for
I
federal court review.' •
Now in the Judiciary Commit·
tee, lhe bi!l - S.221 -allows "a
prisoner under sentence of denth 10
obtain judicial review of newly discovered evidence showing he is
probably ~nL"
The application for this review
in federal district court has· to
include ''facts - supported by
sworn affidavits or documentary
evidence tluit could not have been
diacovered throu$h lhe exercise of
due dili.flence in lime to be presented 11 triaL (Theae facts), if proven,
"would establish thai lhe applicant is
probably lnnoccnL"
,
One of Sen. Metzenbaum ' s.
more admirable characteristics is
that he does not waste time in
euphemiJDI or gratuitoua civility.
In hil llta&amp;CIIIenl, he noted that "it
is ironic, and indeed, al11101t tragic,
that the Supreme Court would
"Since November, I've downplsyed my being ··
announce this callous and unfair
Rhodes Scholar. "
decision just one day after the
death of Thurgood Marshall. .:. He

NatHentoff

Berrts World

I

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Acc:u-Wealher"
•

The Dally Sentlnei.:...Page

Warm wet weather will continue around Ohio:

for

B1 The Aasocialed Press
Wet sprin~ weather will continue across Oh10 on Wednesdljy, and
Iemperatures will finally match lhe

conditions and high

MICH.

season.

The National Wealher Service

•

PA.

IND.

'' ' ''

•!co1umbus!s2"

ale~ people living near streams

and .fivers to watch for possible
flooding,
Forecasters said temperatures
across lhe Buckeye State will fipally be springlike. Highs on ThUrs-

Stocks

I

Am ElePOwer.........:. ........ .35 7/8
Ashland Oi1........................28 J3/8
AT&amp;T................................S7 3/8
Bank One........................... 56 l/8
Bob Evans ........................ .lg 1/8
01atming Shop.................. 14
Olmp lndus!ries. ............... .14 1/4
City"Holding......................22
Federal Mogu1 ....................17 314
Goodycar.TilR ..................76
Key CenU,Irion ......... ;.........24 118

,,,,,

Slmy Pt

Cloudy

Clo&lt;Jdy

.___ _ _..;__Weather-----

a.m.

C&lt;IISI.

Rain forecast from the South to
lhe Midwest brought a flash flood
watch for this afternoon and
evening in the mountains and
foolhills of Norlh C.Oiina.
Temperatures today were
expected to range from lhe 30s and
40s in New England 10 lhe 50s and
60s as far south as central Georgia.
The Pacific Northwest should
have highs in the 40s and 50s.

~.

Around the D8tloa
Rain and thunderstorms soalc:ed
a wide area today from lhe Gulf of
Mexico lQ the Grest Lakes. More
rain fell on the Pacific Northwest
as a windy storm front weakened
and moved inland.
Parts of Iowa, southern Wisconsin and upstale New York had light
snow. Parts of Washington, Oregon
and norlhem California had rain,
and a. heavy surf advisory and gale
warmngs were pQsted along lhe

Lottery numbers

·

Guest speaker
Hillside Baptist Church will be
having guest speaker, Dr. Rick
Brintzenhofe. liellowship Tract
League, Lebanon, on Sunday 11 6
p.m. He wiD also be bring Guy Priano with his music ministry.

Library board lo meet
The
regular meeting of the
Monday night's Ohio Lonery
Meigs
t:ounty
Library Board will
selections:
be
Thursday
111
I p.m. at lhe library
Pick 3 Numbers
in
Pomeroy.
2-1-6
(two, one, six)
Taleat show plaaaed
Pick 4 Numbers
There wiD he a - . !alent show
0-2..0. 7
at lhe Meigs County Public Library
(zero.two.zcn&gt;,seven)
in Pomeroy on Saturday at 7 p.m•
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are

Umited Inc....................... 23 518
Multimedia Inc. .................36 1!2
Point Bancorp.................... t3 112
Rax RestauranL ..................?/8
Reliance Electric................23 118
Robbins&amp;Myers .....,..........20
Sboney's lnc:.....................23 518
Star Bank ...........................37 1!2
Wendy lnt'l.. ......................13 3/4
Worthington Ind................25 1!2
Sloek reports are the 10:30
a.m. quples provided by
Kemper Senraties, lac., o·f
GaUlpolls.

w~ile just to the eas~ 60s and 70s.
were forecast from northern Mon~
tana to Denver:
:
Highs in the 70s and 80s were;
expected in Florida and lhe Sou th~
west.
:
On Monday, lhe tempctature a(
Helena, Monl, rose to 69 degrees:
tying the record high for lhe date'
set in 1960. The high tenlJlal!bll'C:
for the nation Monday was 93&gt;
degrees at Thermal, Calif.
:·

•

--Meigs announcements-·. . . . •;..

•

Lands End .........................28 'l/4

. vr. .,,.

day will be in the 50s most places.
The record·high temperature for
!his date at lhe Columbus weather
station was 76 degrees in 1966
while the record low was 9 in 1885.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:47 p.m.
and sunrise Wednesday at 6:28

Put It in writing?

:
Graa1e buquet llatal ·
Bernard Shoemaker, 1118Ster of
the Ohio Slate Grange, will be ~
speaker for the annual araqe ban•
quet to be held April 16 at 7:1S
p.m. at the Meigs County Senio{
Citizens Center. The Salisbury
PTO will setVcd a baked steak din;

ner.

Tickets for lhe banquet ate S1
for adulls and .S6 for children.
Tickets an1 available from Maslt.ls
Patty Dyer. Norman Will, Rosalie
Story, Bill Radford, Dorothy Smith
and Arthur Crabtree. Tickets ate
aiso available from Pauline Aikins,
Ziba Midldlf and Opal Dyer. Tickets must be purchased by April 1r.

h.
·. .
. .
Coacert slated
Plaats read7 for pick-up . .
. terog 1yp 1c wr1tmg, whtch •s
The Big Bend Community Band
Tree
packets and ground cover
found only in Egyptian civilization, will present a concert atlhe Meigs ·
plants
ordered
fnm the Meigs Soil
dates back to the end of the fou rth Co 1 · Publi L'txary
. Pomero
millenium B.C. II appeared as anno· . un Y
c 1
"! . . Y and Water Conservation District
lation to scenes that were cut in relief on Sunday II 3 p.m. Public UIYlted. ate in and ready for pick-up. 1'hal:
are still a few packets of white
on slabs ol slate in tombs and chapels.
Get-together plaaaed
pine, Colorado Blue Spruce, Bailie
The earliest hieroglyphics, then, represent lines of hymns and prayers, as . The Burlingham Junior Modern Ivy and wildflower seeds available
,
well as the names and .titles or indi- Woodmen will ho.ld a family get- for sale. Pick-up times ate 7
together Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
---Vl·du-als-•nd-deil-ies._ __
. hall in Burlingham, Mr. and Mrs. until 4:30 p.m .. Monday lhrough
Friday. Thqse who ordeted plaQts
Kennelh Sanders, Gallipoli•• wiD ate asked to pick them up as so9n
present lhe prognm. 'kefreshrnents as possible.
Harold Barnhart
·
Mary Rife Gilkey
Eydthe L. Jay
Kenneth Yonker
wiD
be served. Everyone .welcome.
Harold A. Barnhart, 83, of Tup..
Mary Rife -Gilkey, 93, Middle'Eydthe L. Jay, 83 Columbus
Kennelh Yonker, 89, of pers PlaiQs, died Monday, March
Da111:e ptanaed
.
port, died Moaday, March 22, died Moaday, March l2 1993 at Pomeroy. · Ohio died Monday, 22. 1993, at Veterans Memorial
Revival slated
The Tuppers Plains VFW PD$1
A revival will be held at the No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
}993: ~ PleaAnl Valley Holpital Veterans Memorial ~pital fol- . Malth 22 at Holzer Medical Ceo- Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born
on
June
9,
1909
at
Lillie
.
Rock
Springs United Methodist sponsor a round and square danae
. .m Point Pleasant, W.Va.
lowiaa 1 brief iD-s
ter.
Born in Sept. 10, ~1199. in Meigs
Born Dec. 13 1909 in BradHe was the owner of Yonker Hocking.l!e was the son of lhe late Church Sunday through Tuesday at
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. w~
County, she was the daughter of bury, she was
daUgl\tcr of the Coal Company in Caldwell, Ohio John and Anna Beutler Barnhart. 7 p.m. nightly. Rev. WendeD Ver- on
music by CJ and lhe Country GenHe was a manager of the Forked m111ion will be lhe gu1:41 speaker.
the late Alvin and Myna Gilkey late Alpheus and Edith Winkler and a retired farmer.
. ·
Red Carr and Melvin Cross
.Rife.
· Rossen. Sho was a homemaker and
Born July 26, 1903 in Broad Run State Park and worked for lhe Thm will be special singi"¥ each tlemen.
will be callers. Everyone wekane.
A member of the Bradford ·a member of the Indianola Church Run, he was the son of lhe.late Wii- State Highway J?eparun'ent for 20 . evening: Rev. Keith Rader mvites
'
,
·
.
the publiC.
ChurchofChrist,shewasacookat ofCiuistinColumbus.
liam and Lovina Gossett Yonker. years,
woiaea•s'fellowsblp to meet
. the former Home Restaurant in
Slle is survived by: bel- husband, Also preceding him in death was
He was .a member of the
The Meigs County Women's
Meedag caaceled
Middlcpon.
Robert K. Jay of ColumbuJ; four one son, Bill Yonlter; one grandson; Coolville M8Jionic Lodge. the
Fellowship will hold its monthly
The meeting Middleport meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
She is lllfVivcd by two acpbews sistera, Oyda Allensworth of Mid- two brothers, Isaac ana Robert Marietta Masonic Lodge, and was
and lheir wives, Cblrics and Ellen dleport, Susan Rawlings of Yonlter; two sisters. Queena an antique dealer in the Tuppers Pomeroy Branch of the American the Rutland Church of Christ.
Association of University Women Bring a book for the · book
Rife lnl Worley lnl Paula Rill Ill Delawate, Ohio, Jessa Mae Bran- Romaine and Grace Roush.
Plains area.
scheduled
for Tuesday has been excban1e. Marge Purtell will be
of Middleport, and aevcral
nan of Middlepolt and Flora DcU
Surviving are his wife, Sarah
He is survived by four sisters,
nieces and aephevfs. Also IIJfViv- Grueser of M'"'ddqxn
Heddleson Yonker, 1\lmeroy Ohio; Lois Jean Mugrage of Racine, canceled.
guest speaker. Everyone invited.
ing is a special friend. W'llma SarAlso surviving ate: lhree r.ieces, five sons, Paul Yonker, Bell Valley,
Erma HiD of Letart Falls, Virginia
gent of Middlepnn. .
U~a Faye Abramovicz of Holly Oh!D; Terry Yonker, . Byesville,
and several
Eulah
WagneroforSyracuse.
Layman. and
...,..._ _ __
· She was precedlld in death by . Hill, Fla., DdJbie Gert.ch of Mid- OhiO; John Yonlter, Omton, Pen- Salser
her husband, Willtam Gilkey, in dleport and Dorothy Roach of nsylvania;
George
Yonker, nieces and nephews.
.
" 1966.
' Pomeroy; two nephews, Don ~le, Pennsylvania and Park.
He was preceded in death by his .
' Continued from Jllllf 1
Services will be held 11 a.m. Grueser of Steamboat Springs Yonker. Benicea. California; lhree parents, his l"ife. AugiiSII Barnhart
driven·by Rober) S. Davis, S4, 43960 Yost Road, Racine.
:Friday at Fisher Fuaeral Home Colo.; and Robtrt .Rawhn1s of daugh~
~yn
Metzger, in July, 1992, two sisters, Wilma
with Derek Stumli' officiating. , Masoo. W.Va.
:Zanes~ille, Oh10; Kate ·Foraker,
Daniels was cited for failure to yield. Both vehicles sustained .
Brooks, Betty Urban, and two
)!urial wiD foUow m Gravel HiD
Sbe was preceded in death by Byesville, Ohio and Bonnie brothers. Warren and Thomas
heavy. disabling damage and were towed from lhe scene.
Cemelay in ChelllirC.
lhree Iiiias, Bemice Fox, Gladys Hughes. GaiHpolis, Ohio; one stepBarnhart,.
, Friends may caU fnlin 7-9 p.m. Ruuell and Gatnido Miller.
son, Robert L. Glidden. Caldwell,
Funeral services will be held
.Thursday at the funeral home.
Services will be held 2 p.m. Ohio; ~ s~. Mabel Pi~ens, . Thursday at 1 p.m. at the White
A Pomeroy man was cited for driving under lhe influence and ·
Anna Jo Shoemaker
Thursday at Fuller Fun Home in Pomeroy, _OhM?; 17 grandchildren: Fun~ral Home in Coolville, with
failure
to control foUowing a two-car crash on Second Street in '
Midd1epon with AIIJartson oif'JCi· !:tr.:!hil&lt;hn; several great- the Rev. Roben Sanders officiat- ·
Pomeroy
Saturday around 2:48p.m.
Anna Jo Shoemaker, · 2S, atiDJ. Burial will follow at
·
; 'two grell·great ing. Burial will be in' lhe Success
According
to a Pomeroy Pohce Department report, Edilh Sisson,
Cheshire; died Sunday, ~b 21, Ri~w Cemetery in Middleport. gnlldCII!Idren and 12. step-greal- Church of Christ Cemetery.
Pomeroy,
was
puUing out of PoweU's market and was Slruek by a
·~ 1993 111 Holzer Medical Center in
Friends may call from 2_. and ~:
Friends may call at the funeral
car
driven
"r
Jfomer
Bricldes, Pomeroy.
Gallipolis followillJ an extenlled 7-9 p.m.. Wednesday allle funeral
Semcles wdl be at 1:30 p.m. on home Wednesday from 6 10 9 p.m.
No
injunes
WCI1l
reported. Sisson· s I 987 Pont GrandAm and
illness. ·
home. .
Wednesday. March 24 at the where Masonic Services will be
Brickles'
1979
Buick
both sustainecfti~ht damage.
held at 7 p.m. by the Coolville
Born on Sept. 12, 1967, in M
t E N' b Is
FosleiOng Funeral Home wilh the
hi
addition,
police
ate investigatmg a hit·· skip accident lhat
LQuisa. Ky., she was the daughter
argare • IC 0 .
Rev, Herbert Roush officiating. Masonip Lodge.
allegedly
occurred
Monday
aCtemoon on West Main StreeL
·o r Rulh Bllckbum Harris of Gal·
~garet Ellca Nichols, 77, or. Burial will foUow in lhe New Lone
According
to
a
police
report.
a 1991 Chevrolet driven by Christi- .
lipolls. She was a homemaker.
Pomeroy, died SUDday,. March 21. Oak ~emetery.
na
Blackston,
32,
Pomeroy.
was
parked on West Main 'Street and ·
Besides ber mother, she is sur- 1993 at Vet.eraa~ Memorial HospiFriends may call tonight from 7
suuck
by
anolher
vehicle
which
lhen
left lhe scene.
vivcd bY. her husband, Roger Shoe- tal Exlalded Cere Unit.
to 9·p.m. alhe funeral home.
Damage tO Blackston •s vehicle was listed as moderate.
maker Cheshire; ber llqlfatber.
Born in Windber. Pa. on April M
E O'B '
_DouJiu Harris ofr.. n~is; a.... 11. 19lS, she was the dllugh~er of ary •
raen
Charlie WilliamDI o Rutland; a · the late John and Esther (HolsopMary E. O'Brien, 79, of 107
brother, Eddie l'lllrick of Lela100; pie) H11111er. Sbe was a bomemaltcr HoOey Lane, Pomeroy, died Moo·
Units of lhe Meip County Emer~y Medical Service respond- ·
three stepdaushtm and their bas'- and a member of the Meip County day, March 22, 1993, at Holzer
ed
to eight calls for assiSWICe overml!hL Responding were:
bands, tina and Danny Speacer, SeniOr Cilizllls.
.
Medical Center in GalliJ)O!is.
•
Monday9:34 a.m. Syracuse to l&gt;omeroy Nursing and Rehabiland Lucia and Ronnie Adatns, Ill. . She is survived by her husband
Born April 10, 1913, in Alfred,
itation
Center
for Sara White who was transported 10 O'Bieness
of Huntington, W.Va.; grllldpar- of S9 yean. =icbols of she was tlie daughter of the late
Memorial
Hospilal;
10:03 a.m. Middleport to Tucker Road ·for
and- Clarence V. and Carrie Worthen
ents, Mr. and Mn. William Black- l'llmaoy, two
James
Radcliffe
who
was
transported to Veterans Memorial HospiEAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio (AP)
bum and Mr. and Mn. Haskell in-Jaw, NIIIICjr · 'Francia Tomes Swartz.
tal: 12:49 p.m. Racine 10 North Broadway Street for Eldon Krauuer
,PaDick, all of Inez, Ky.; four step. of Marietia -~ Bither and Ralph
A homemaker, she was a mem- - Opponents of a hazardous-waste
who
was triiiS)IOI1ed to Holzer Medical Center; '1:16 p.m. Syracuse
grandchildren; a ilpecial aunt. N111- Prather of Viacent; a son and ber of the Allied Methodist Church incinerator hope telephone calls 10
10 State Route 7 for Harold Barnhart who was trans~ to VMH; ·.
nie Blackburn, Cbesiire: and a daalltter-iD-Iaw, Jalm and ·Brelida . and the Harrisonville Chapter of the White House will persuade
8:40 p.m. Pomeroy to Butternut Avenue for Jess1ca McCormick ·
President Clinton to act 6gainst
l&gt;rolher·in-law, Mike Shoem*r of Nidiola rl Vi"'CDD; lhree bro1bm, lhe Eas~ S'!lf.
who was transported to VMH; 9:33p.m. Rutland to Stale Route 32S ·
Cheshire; seVCII1 aunts, IIIIClclllld Ral{'h Hunter of Speacer, Ind.,
Surv~~ meludc: her husband, plant operators before it begins
for
Walt« Perry who was transported to HMC: 10:47 p.m. Racine
cDUiins.
Dilvid HaniCr ofW'aadbcw Pa. and Re~ 0 Bnen of Pomeroy; two canmercial burning.
to
State
Route 124 for Kevin Dugan who was transported to St
Opponents of the Waste Tech. A private funeral wiD be held J - Hlllltcr of WabrU., inc.; daughters ~nd.sons-in-law. June
Joseph's
Holpilal in Parkersburg, W.Va.
.
:
Wednesday at Fisher Funeral and three listcri.•Marioa Wild of and Paul E1chmaer of Pomeroy, nologies IndusDies plant were dealt
Tuesday
12:02
Lm.
Middlepon
to
North
Third
Street
for
':
Home in MiddleporL The Ren. SJi 110:•, Ind.; DorlsZellln rlMil- and Nancy and John Rawlings or a setback on Monday when U.S .
James Brumfield who was transported to v~.
.
·
Alfred Holley and Jack Man:um lvllle, NJ., ud Mary Kathryn SICWII't; a son and daughter-in-law, Supreme Court Justice John Paul
will offJCiarr: and burial will be in Sweiaen of Hummelstown PaY· Larry and Phyllis O'Brien of Stevens refused to interfere with ~~;;;;;;;;;:;;;----;:=========~
Riverview Cemellry in Middlepm. ICWal.--k'I!Jdrca, and m
R_acine; seven &amp;~dchildren and thestan-upoflheplant
'
b
S
b
land
II"'
~
moe great-grandchildren.
Tite Daily Sentinel
Keat ut er
. The opponents had asked
Continued from page 1
Buldea her }lllellta, she was
She was preceded in death by a
(USPS 213·11110)
Keith Sutherland. 11i, of 34337 preceded in deatlt !ly an infant brother, ~ Swanz, and a half- Stevens to overturn an appeals board although members were
1\ibliMhrd every a flttmonn, MondHy
COliC) decision lhll allOws lhe plant advised of a meeting to be held on
Whites Hill ltd., Rutland, died dauJhter three brothers and a sis- brolher Oris Swartz.
lhJ'!"'~h 1-'ridAy, li.J Court St. , l ~roy.
to
start
commercial
o~ons.
March
291117
p.m.
March 21, 1993. at Veterans ter.
'
·
Services will be held I p.m.
Otno by th r. Oh1o V!t.llcy f'ublitthirtG
The opponents, mcluding the
The mayor's report showed C"":"Pil"YfMult.imcdia Inc., PorMT'O)'.
· Memorial Holpltil.
Graveside IClVicies will be held Thunday at Ewing Puneral Home
Otuo 4G7fi9. Ph. 992-2156. Second clua
A former welder for Kaiaer Alu· 'l'btalday al a.m. at Rock Sprinas w!lh lhe ~· C?w'les ~sol'fJCi - environmenlal group Greenpeace. receipts for February of $4 ,322. JKII!'llllgr. JNtid ,., Pomeroy, Ohio. .
minum, he wu born Aqust 22, Ce1111tery ia Pomeroy. The Rev. lllng. Burial·will follow m Burling- said lhey would run ads in Wash- Village streel workers were comington and in the Ohio Valley areas 111ended by Council for lheir street M~mbt:r: The A.IIIIOdat.nd 1~11. and thc
1922, in Coal Fen, W.Va., 1111! of William MiddJeawan{l will offici- ham Cemelety.
·
Nr.wKpApar AKIIOI:i•tion, N•lion•l
o(
Ohio, Pennsylvania. and West cleanup during the recent snow Ohio
lhe late Guy and Jetale Hemntiags
wiD be 110 c:alllnt boln.
' Friends .m.ay call 6-9 p.m.
Advr.m 11inR Rcpf"'8c nt.Rtivc, llranham
Ncw•papm- S.ICII,' 133 Third A'l't!nue.
Sutherland.
Ar. q
1 ts ere beiDa bandied WedneJday at the funeral home. V!JJinia. The incincraur along the SIOI'III.
Auending were Mayor Hoff. New York, Nr.wYork 10011.
He wu 1 member rlllle Sal:red by filllll' J1aaeaa1 Hallie 111 MlMJe Elllllln Star ICI'Yic:ec will be held 7 Oh1o River is near the border of
those states.
man, Dewey Horton, James ClatHean Catholic Cb~~~~:i a a.Jarine pan. Memorial contribulioni may p.m. Wedl!eldly.
worthy, Judy Crooks, Paul Gerard.
veteru of Wodd Wtr IL He wu · be made to the Senior Citizens
"Call lhe White House today," and Jack S11terf.eld.
a radio spot says. "TeD Bill Clin= •o~n:~r; PUll caller.
ton and AI Gore to keep their
Survlvon include his Wile, J!IIie
promise and shut down WTI. If
smoot"Sutherlaadrlh!l"'\lllda
lhey don't, it's you that's gelling
dau,hier andf-.adJOD, aren
burned.''
Schmdler an William Alan
VITBilAN8 MEMORIAL
DluoludH ll1ed
Rick Hind of the environmentai
Schindler, bolhofY1•"M1. Va.
MCIIIIIaJ'I admiuioa • Jamea
A .JICI!tion for dlaaolution was group Greenpeace said orFUiizers
Subt1criht!rR fNI4. dN~ iring lo pA( tha ami·
He wu p1et1hd
by a Bat'ni,PiitJNI •
riled m n Moip c-ty Court ot had .Just beauit Mantitttina wllb ._..
nr rnA)' f't'llllli. in Adva ncn dlri!lli lo The
Co11•oa Plea Moeday by Rex tioRI. They had no cpntraers and
son, Raymalld. and a.-.
LOlli•
MoDcle,·s'Zicwae • Alfred
llaily SMlinr.l on • Lhme, li1 or 1a
.
monLh lMIIAM. Crndit will bn givr.n atrior
RuueD.
Allllllio1W, ltudl .... ud RQbin - · 1 sure how much lhey would
Yca,.Pwoy.
Mth WM!k.
Servlcu will bt lleld 10 a.m.
L)'lll Hacrl•, Odip'Ua
have 10 spend, be llkl. . ·
Na •~pllonl&amp; by rM11 pCnniUacl ifl
Wednesday 11 Slelt4 Heart
~
Dl II._ &amp;Lid
Mf'OIUl whcnl home Cllrtk'lr ~~enloe 'Their buciJet figure was "four
NVIIih•bl('!.
Cltbollt: CJiuldl
. . . . 12 111 •
_ Lltlda
A " s*doe ;t'11111riaae wu dlaJu but Dot a lot more t11an that,"
Falbet Walter ltu.
Ia Altldclae, Bapu 'loll, Ruby lllllled UoeMIIJ 10 Mlmlo DaWJ\ he Slid. "We don't have enough
MaU8.a.ertptlnM
addldoll, .... It • d:n
...
lrwldu MGIICI Co•ntr'
for aiiiiJialbl Cllllllli&amp;n.' •
ta waaa.. .........................................al.Ciol
aDd Jw-18d-.J.Hanaon.
held 2:3d p.m. W*'aiiJ II ML Sean, "Mr1. RIIIIHJ
Blue
Marshall,
president
of
26 1WoekJ~ ............. ........ ............ ......... SO. ll
daallt•
Mil.
CltdsiDDIMr
Jaddl
r
Dl'iaa
.........
Olivet Cemetery Ia Cbiioatoa;
rl2 WCC:kll ................ ., ........................ 1:14.71
WTI's Swiu-owned parent, 'I' on
alllf da•illter, Clleria Walllll,
DIWGrm
lfiDIOCI Mondly RoD
O.talde llolp ~
W.Va.
Inc., aid Ia a aewa,relea·,
11
Vqal • vlt:c will be held 8:45 Lucy ReeYN, RoiMn RICiclllr, 10 Sell-=ltor Pierce fro111 MandtiY lhlt W111IId lOt lOt up'.
26
~., J• tl...-le for COftlllllefal opera112
Tu~•daY at Bwina·Pa~ml r.ua~llkCcs'l, C!I'J PtddM.
lobi
•IJI
atpp.
, lt8lly Jr.
•
wrence tion.

South-Cealral Oblo
Tonighl, showei1 or drizzle like.. Iy. Low in the mid..COS. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
Wednesday, cloudy with a chance
of showers or drizzle. High
Chance of precipitation is SO percent.

so-ss.

Exteaded forCCiit:
Thanda7 through Saturday:
Fair duoughout period. Lows in
lhe 30s Thursday, mid-30s to low
40s Friday and in lhe 40s SaiW'day.
Highs in the mid 10 upper 60s
Thursday, 60s Friday and 65-70
Saturday.

H.

a.m.

_____,;;.____ Area deaths
me

;e..

r-----.Local bri·ef:s
&lt;

'

'

Man cited following crash

Incinerator
opponents
planning ad
campaign

of

EMS responds to eight calls

Committee...

Peat:

•.'Ibn

7

Hospital news

Divorces and
dissolutions

ill,_.

1115*

••a

"*'

fi:ie.
.,,

:t

1

ra'di, ,._ .f::

'

.

�•

Sports

Tuesday, March 23, 1993

The Daily Sentinel
'

-

e-4

..

By HARRY ATKIN$
WINTER HAYEN, Fla. (AP)Two Cteveland Indians pitchers
died and I third WliS in serious COil•
clition after a relaxing day on the
I~ turne4 into tragedy when a
fishing boat rammed a dock.
Steve Olin, 27, died i.nsu!ntly in
Monday night's accident on Ltuk
Lake Nellie, ~ Clermont in Central Florida, and hospital offtcials
said Tim Crews, 31, died early
today 8l Orlattdo Regional Medical ..
Center.
· Iiob Ojeda was seriously
injured. The lhree had gathered .
wtlb their families atr the lake
whc.-e Crews leased a llouse, Monday was the tesm' s one scheduled
day off during training.
'"lbey had been fiShing appar·
ently and were traveling back

-In NIT action,

Minnesota, Miami Jledskins .win to move·into.quartenmals

....:

1

By MIKE NADEL
Monday's rowdy crowd of 18.2S4
AP Sp,orts Writer
at Target Ccnlei', didn't even wail
Over the years, many teams until USC defealed Peppcrdiae 7lhave tried slowing dowJi tile Soon- 5q,to put IIIOIIw game ia ~
ers. Few have succeeded, wl!ich is Ia. It wiU be played at Met Ccur
why Oklahoma SCORS 1110J11 poiniS in Bloomington, bome of die
and wins more games than most NHL' s North Stars, because die
clubs.
Tirnberwolves wiU be home J~ 111
"We said cominf in lhat every NBA game Wedilesclay Ill Target
time we shoot, we ve got to get Center. Williams Are••· the
back," MinnCSOia 's Randy Carter Gophers' on-campus facility, 'is
said. •'Get back, get back, get back, being I'CIIOV8IDIL
get back."
. In odic!:·games Mnntt.v, il The Gophers got back on Miami, Ohio 60, Old DMifnm S&amp;;
defense ofte11 enough Monday Boston Colle&amp;e 101, Rice 68;
night, holding die Soonen to 31.3 Alabams-Binningbam 65, Clcmtoa
percent shooting in an 86-72 Nrr 64; and S0111hwest Missouri swe
second-round viclery.
70,1ackson State S2.
"My Gophers, I think they're
Tonight, Texas-EI Paso is ·at
one of the finest defensive 1eams, GeorgetOwn.
.
at this sta¥e of lhe season, in lhe
Also on Wednesday, Providence
country,' coach Clem Haskins visits Boston Colle'e and the
said.
Georgetown-UTEP wmne~ plays
the Gophers ( 19-1 0) will get Mianii, Ohio. On Thunday, it will
' their third consecutive ESPN-tele· be S outhwest Missouri State at
v~sed hoine game Wed11esday · Aiabama-Birmingham.
mght, when .they meet Southern
Vosbon Lenard scored 17 points
Cal (18-11) in the NIT quarterfi· as Minnesota shot S0.8 percent
nals.
against Oklaboma (20-12), wbicb
NIT officials, impressed with oblitcnted its pn:vious posmason

I

,·,. 12

Mar~ etta,

." .STRONG MOVE- Old Dominion's !'etey Sessoms (4) makes a
stroaa airborne move to tbe boop agatast tbe Miami Redsklas'
. Greg Darli:JS~e duriog Mollday aigbt's NIT contest in Oxford,
.Oblo, wbere tbe llost ReCiskills won 60-58. (AP)

IntbeNBA ...

B7 RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Cinchinati Woodward's Damon
Fliat, Hamilton's Chris Kingsbury
and Kevin Kovach of Stow bead·
line the 1993 AuociMed Press Division l all-Ohio boys ,baslcetball
tesm llllllOUIICed today.
Flint, a 6-font-5 senior beaded
to oruo Stale, avaagecl 28.6 pointS
and 20.5 Jebounds a pme. Kingsbury, a 6-S senior. going to Iowa,
was good f~ 22.'2 points, 8.4 re-

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Toolgbl's game

Tcxu·El Puo (21-12) at GcorJc:town
(17·12), BOpro.

--

Wtdn.UJ
Provi.dlnCC (19-11) It Bo.lm!. Collep

(IS.I2), 7:30p.m.

So~o~them Cal (II-II) ll Minncaota
(I!HD). 9 pro.
Oeorptown-UI'EP winner VI. MWni.
Ohio &lt;21·&amp;), TBA

Th.ndaJ
SW MUoouri SL (20-10) 11 Alabomt·
Birmin&amp;lwn (19· 13),1ill p.m.

Transactions ·

o..-

' '

American LPpe

07,111oh93

GoWoft Stole 96. DdnJd 91

'•

...... ~7 :10p.m.
IIDuiiWiaac · :
7:30p.m.
- · - 7:10p.&amp;
'

BOSTON RED SOX - Sun Jeff M.,.
Nedy, outfielder, 1nd Derek Liv-emoil,
pit.chcr, to !heir minot-lciguc camp
teo

.Tonlgbt's pmes

J

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CIDCAGO Wllli'E SOX ~-·

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Deaver at

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Jao.dYM l l uw.. 9 p.m.
. New YOlk at PMali.I, 9:30P.:m.
Pllnland \'1. S.aJe II lhe Kif\adornt,
• !Op.m.
: .
L.A. Clippeta•l SIGnlmllnLo, 10:30

•

,....

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Miemi It 801t&lt;rl, 1:30 p.m.
Chadoaua New lcney, 1:30 p.m.
Oaietpal ~ . 1:10 p.m.
llollu
BOr.m.
s..... Anlonio. Minnoeou, p.m. .
Milwaukee It L .A. Clippc:n, 10:30

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--

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

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and Bnd Komrniutk , 01.1tfl&amp;ldor, w lhcir
min,.·lap&gt;&lt; ""'P f o r - KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Op·
tioned Mile Maa,nana.o, pitcher; TeiT)'
Shum~rt,

. . . -..- -:1.--.-

_.......,

.

MINNESOTA 'I'ORTK STARS Sent ltiMI BlKt. ~. 1a .Xalunu:oo
of tho lnlanational Loop
'
NEW YOU IIANOERS - A"'!..ii..t .
John Mclai:,Z.. ..... !no tJ. ~ AD.... Kinplor Mutt Haroly, .w..,_,..,,
ond • 199311M....... daft choloo. Tn6llll llandy OUben. cm~a, to &amp;he Ttmpi

"1AMPA BAY UOIII'NINIJ - Tn6-

od P«cr TaaliiDIIIli. dcfCIUCtiW\, to ~
Pitubur&amp;h Pcnau'int for • 1993 lhlrd·

V"~~ CAN\JCKS _: Tnded

Roben. Kmn, loft •ina; a 199l thltd
...Old dnA ..... aod ~.......-

10 tba Htr\Cord Whtlon for Mun17
Cnwn, forward. and a 1993 IIN.-zound
ctrafi p;.k. Acquirad Dm RaiYthny, dofcnscrnan, flam the Wi.Mifea Jc&amp;a for •
1m oiall&gt;""""' ctratloidl.
WINNJP£0 JETs".....; Traded Ri~k
T•boncci.aoalio. tolh&lt;
c.l"
kall fcw lim llri..U, aooJit, and "'"""

s•••al

He~iithesonol ·Bowling :t::1~11pt•

Leaa~o~e

COLORADO ROCKIES - Assigned
Brett Mclriman, Mo S1nfc rd, DIM Ridenour 1nd Soon Fte.drickacn, pitched, and

J. Owens, taLChcr, w Colorado Sprinp ~
!he Pa cifir.: Cout Lcasuc.
LOS ANOELES DODGERS - 0~
ti.oncd Mik~ H l.lfCh and Eddi.e Py•, in-

fieldcrl, and Dilly Ashley, outfielder, to
Albuquc:rquc of the Pacifir.: C0111 League.
Relcaud l,ence McCuller• and Wetly
Ritchie, pitdtcn.

n~o~u ig.nm ent .

BuketbaU
N1llonal Bukdb1ll A11oclatlon

Football
National fOO(baiiLeaaiHI

CHJCAOO BEARS - Aareed lo
lenni with Jim Hubau
Ulrwblck m

=•

B!Yant of Canton McKinley, l&gt;fedina s Ryan Sooy, Basra Fakhir of

De

ht"i

-:.:site._

• .

=

5

"

is cay.
ps 1·2

cliairman

,

l'lse 5)

F YOU noN T

· Basketllall KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Lemar Young scored 24 points lllld
David Smith made four free throws
in the rmat 43 seconds as Hawaii
Pacific beat Oklahoma Baptilt 88·
83 in tile ftOal of die NAJA rournamenL

\VArJ1

TO

[) I":&gt; C U S ', Y 0 U

r~

T/..1, X [ S 'N i 1 f-i

s () M r u r'-o/ f

"

W H 0

', P '-' I D B 'r

THE i R'... TAL I&lt;
TO SC&gt;McONE

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
raOJced even more by

insUring both your car
. and home with the Stille
Aula Companies.
Let us tell you just

how much your savings

C80be.

WHO ISN 1
This year, let someone else
Remember,,when you
· share your tax burden. Or
-shefpwith,)'OUrtaxes,
at least the burden d prepartnz ,our Qllll5.
JOEl anJI 1j I alr.ID -ildlite who 'Mlf'ks for
Come visit one dour BS.Im w!uraer uxar dleiRS.Ema-i&amp;aEwhDWD~rbJbrfree. For
sistants. You11 find them in llil:nrie5, ociiDOis,
churches, shopping malls and ociherClOittlebietttt
locations tht"QUghout your cornmuniq frumt
january through April. '. ·
Our volunteer assistants are 111 sjleoAIIt .
trained-by the IRS-in tax prepamion....,.
cA them are retired accountants and ltlk pepr
ration ex~~ They specialize lA taX help for
the elder~)~ disabled and non-E11&amp;1lih sp I i nc
population. And chances are, ilihey an .ans et
most cA your tax questions. If not.~~
special hotlln'! volunteers can use m &lt;CDmlli1l:

· '·

Then there was lhe possibili!Y
the San Francisco 49en could join
· the hunt - if lhey·didn't match
Atlanta's .offer for. defensive end
Pierce Holt. Holt is ·a transition
player and the 49ers have until
Wednesday to put in a matching
owner.
That seemecl'liltely.
The 49ers' ow.ne~. Edward
DeBanolo Jr., reiterated his posilion late Monday· that the 49ers 11a!i
never given guaranteed contracts.
·And since that's a stipulation ol'!le
deal wilh the Falcons - $7 .S mtllion over the years is lhe money

.

'

."!.

,,

have be~n hi~ed to cover Terry.
Cooney ,s reur~m~nt and S.t~ve
~alermo s conttnumg rehabtllla·
11011.

•

,

•

Ban:on ts one ofJS umptres
comJIClir!i for die ~jobs. Mllst'of
d!e candi~ such as Larry .Ponctno, Kerwm Daniel' and ~dgel
Hernandez, have work~d m&lt;th~
majora when. other. U!"Ptr~ ha.ve
been~ •IIC8Ilon '!" lliJwed; Barron
made lliD the miQOII ~· for the
fmal ~last season m New York

..

~~innai
, We &amp;!I uoo~ each olh~! and
we re ~ for eac~ other, Bar-

rOI) said. "TicllOw I,m 9ne of lhe
yo111,111~ ~· SO ,~e llliave to see
tf this 18 my bme.
.
Barron, ~8, was m :th~ Class
AAA Amertc.an ~ssoctabon last
season afler sbnts m the Northwest,

be inducted into the Palma SporiS
Hall of Fame. The .inductiort will
bring melnbercbip in the Hall tO JS.
Vadini, who hiS been reJjred
eel.
.
from the Panl\8 Fire Department
.It wasn't until he hit 35 that the for eight years, said be tries to train
and he • d
be all season
'
b bi h.
w~'tt.,:bail.
•OUR out
"The ~eatiler makes it tough,''
Now: at 66, he is an accom- he said. "If the' weather's decent,
plished speed skater and cycliSL He I'll get out anc;l ri,de. about five
has won 1S state cycling champi- limes a week. The rides vary from
onships, including the last four 30 to SO miles, Or from three or
t-·-."
stale tournaments ..He has been to "'our '"""•
12 national cycling championships,
He said he still skates two or
twice placing flllb.
.
lhiee·dmes a week.
. .
'
. He took up speed statjng wh!:n
He also worics Ollllla local fit·
he was 3S.
.
ness club.
· ..
. .·
"My kids were involved with . "I go abo~t ~ ~~ a w~
skating and. it was a ¥,0od way to JUSt to keep ID Shape, .he said.
spend time with them, ' he said "I · "But it get&amp;~.., year." . .
was working at the ·ftre sWion lllld
.The S-foot·9,lfill pound :Vadin•
did some carpentry in my spare sstd he logs about 8,000 ·mtles ~
time. But as far as exercise, I lhe cycle each year, Hil compeuwasn't getling much," ·
tive season ~egins. in· April and
Speed. skatin_g fueled Vadini's ends at the nationals tn July.
competitive sptrit. He soon .was ' He has need all pvet the ~skatipg in races. •
try lllld ~ raced ·ID the MasiCf S
Atago42 bestarredcycling
WorldCupmAW11n8.For21 years
His hard~ soon will
off he has ri~ in the 100-milc T':l""
in another way. "
· . of the Sc1010 River Valley, wht&lt;:h
Today Vadini and 11 others will starts in Columbus and ends tn
Portsinollth.
PARMA, Ohio (AP) - When
Dominic Vadini was younger, be
wasn't much for sports. He said be
was 100 small and not very,interest·

pay

).

.

Longshots...

&lt;ContinuedfromPage 4&gt; . ,

•

• will be one be the last teams 011L ,
tstives of loSt CIUSCI, the no-chance
. Red-hot Seton Hall is finished. team lhll has some nerve showing
' So .is defending champion Duke. up. They tUC the spl!ilers and now
And ACC toumSmCnl champ Geor- they are
8l high lllld mighty
· &lt;ria Tech. And Arizona, which lost Michigan, w~tch already has' surfust onc:e in the last six weeks of vived·one crisis in this toumamenL
the regular ICISOO·
GW is a 13-polnt Underdog.
· Terry l&gt;eherc. is fit;tished, but Don'tll:ll die Colaniala they can't
Sonni Holland .flld Dtrkk Surles win. They'n seen ·llranger things
aren'L Bobby HUrley has !Kit away happen.
his jeney, while Kwame S'¥8111 and
·~is the ca. of Rodney Pat.Y inQ Dire are still in uniform.
tenon, whoae o:ror-1 from the
The tou111U1e11t necda 1be Colo- floor agal!llt' SOiilhem on Sunday
·.nials. Bvery: IOIIIIIIIDalt doca. Titer ~ so much to his .team and his
mate it all fun. riding thla emotion, . tesmmaleJ;
·
a1 roller couter from also-ran to . . 1'lllerUI aace played on 1 GW
stlll-runnlna. starlna down the tesm lhat went 1-27. 'Iben he had
heaVYWeiibll.
10 Jive up buketl)all fDI' a.while.
Clevef1Dd State did it 1 few He bad ~. He underwent six
yean 110, allowina absolutely no monlha of dobllllatin8 chemolhera·
respect b)' 'Itnocklna off Bob py to deal with tumor in hia c'!£11.
Kalght and lndialll. Tllon Rll:ll· Nowlbedire•iainJ.n"juionind·.
mood did it to Syncue, leaving be 11 back with ow Uifite•a in the
Jim Boebeim ~lib that quizziCal NCAA toum-ll,
. lldt his face.
1
And you· expect GW to be
The Colonlalllre the ,._,.. ICired otT by Michigan?
.

airnin'

us directl)!

214 EAST MAIN.
'POMEROY '
. 992:6687

.i!J

.atent.

ton.

•

part - that would mean they
would be willing to let him go.
That, in turn, would open up a
spot in San Francisco ror White.
· As the losers in lhe NFC title
game, the 49era can't sign a free
agFent,unf~s thef
. )li~se one - the
Nl L s mal our IS prohibited
under tbo new labor agreement
from enrering the free ag~nt sweepstakes. Br'!tdle loss of Holt means
they coul\1 ~White.
.

l

know lhe aetion is fmally taken,''
lhe Cardinals owner ~d after his
colleagues did whitt they had
promised- give Arizona the 1996
Super Bowl if the state's voters
approved a holiday celebrating

.

.

.:

•

'

Martin Luther King's birthday.
The Super Bowl was supposed
to have been plaYed last January in
Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe. But
it was taken away two years ago
after the state's VOII;rS turned down
·...
1

....

tile holiday. AI tile time, the OWIIC!!I
said tiley could have the 1996 ganae
if theY reinstituted the holiday, and
when they did so last-Novembbt:,
the award was a fjlregone conc!u;sion.
•

wr.·ght State student-athletes find . .
Fr·azi·er 's upbe~t
··nspl·. rat••
o'nal· ·
&amp;(· outlook
.
.;
··,

·

.

.

..

· "We'•ve never been afraid to
spend money,'' DeBitrtolo said of
the possibility of going after White,
. who probllbly will cost about $4
million a year in the current markeL
All around, it was a good day
not
for Tagliabue but for Bill
Bidwil , ror whom things haven't
always gone right since be moved
the Cardinals from St. Louis to
Phoenix. The .owners fmally gave
Phoenix the Super Bowl they had
taken away, and the Cards got

. Immediately after the collision,
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -One ago as· an academic adviser in
Frazier
.was paralyzed fro'm the
point that Wright State academic Wright State's university division.
adviser Brian Frazier stresses to his He worka mostly with freshmen neck down. Slowly, be re&amp;ained
studeniS is thai they should not get and sophomoces - some with some limited IISC ol his hands, anns
down on themselves.
more challenging disabilities than and legs, though he must use a
Frazier should know. Eight his. He makes sure they're taking motorized wheelchair.
Frazier, 28, of Cincinnati,
years ago, a collision during foot- the \'roper courses to satisfy acaball practice 8l Miami of Ohio left demtc requiremeniS and generally returned to Oxford in 1987, earning
him paralyzed.
helping lhem navigate lhrough the .his undp'graduare degree in 1990.
Two years later, he received a maslfe said he remembers the injury collegiate bureaucratic maze.
from 'tirne to time.
Jeanne Fraker, the university ter's degree in ~ organizatiOns.
"Qifferent things trigger it, division's' director and Frazier's He worked for eight months in a
Sometimes I'll just be silting boss, called Frazier "a very posi· youth progmm based at the.Univeraround al\d I'll think about it,'' tive forte in this office."
sity of Cincinnati.
··
He started 'his' · new job-ln
Frazier said. "I don't think it's a
Oark.
·
"We deal wilh 5,000 studenlS
"It's a greauelief for me to pity party. It's lhere because I see it here, and lhere are days when it November 1992 and married :his
· every morning. It's my life."
seems like all S.OOO
mhere ask- wife, Kimberly, in Jan wiry. , • •
'
He said be lhinks about what ing for advice," Ms. Fraker said
. When be talks of the present ibd
might have been ·if he had not "Even on those crazy days, Brian the future, his words are direct, :tCt
hurled his body head-first into a is still smiling and still doing softly spoken.
·
-,
California, Fkirida S~ll: and South- fellow Miami University football everyJhing he can to belp stu"Up here, I see a lot ofstudciniS ·
em leagues.
. · .
· ·
player during that fmal pre-season · deniS."
who are a lot worse off than II!Dl,! •
Barron, wearin&amp; his "NL" cap, scrimmage in 1985. ni collision
Frazier said his disabilty doesn't Frazier said. "It's not like it's~.
was behind home plate last week j81llmed his spinal cord so severely mean he's different.
but no one has an easy life. Evert· for his first exhibition game that he spent eight weeks hooked to
"Something tells me there are one has obstacles.
.
,
between Minnelota and PiUsiKqh. a respirator, seven monlhs in the things out there for me ltnd I have
"I don't see myself u a role
While. veteran u~pires tend !o hospital - and will spend the rest to go out there and get them," Fra- model, but if I can.inspire someone
casually make thetr calls early m · of his life in a wheelchair. ~
zier said. '"Just becanseJ'm in this who may be in a similar situatiQII
the spring, there ~ nolhing nonBut most of the time, Frazier chairdoesn'trnean1can'thopeand to do something, then maybe
cllalant alloul.Barron.
1
focuses on the present and future. dream the same things everybody there's a purpose ·in what hap~ fll'll pllcb of the game. from He's 1110 busy to do 9(berwise.
else does."
pened."
:.
Bob Walk wu a fastbali 'Qv,et the
Frazier got a job five monlhs
pia~. ~ Barron sharply pt~
to hts nght, neatly ·lhrust out hts
ann and clearl:,: ~ "Strikel"
Later, after a bauer stepped OUl,
. he precisely pointed at Twins
pW:IIeF Bert Blyleven, letting l)im
. know when time was ~ in.
Barron alsO did his share of run. ning. Umpires wQdt in three-man
crews dunng sprina training, meanI

onll

are

St•t• Auto ,

lnaur•nc• eo,..••,••

on

!I

Gulf Coast in Clearwater, calling a
game between . St. 'Louis and
Philadelphia.
Bell, also 28, is in his lOth year
as an umpire. He was in the Clsss
AM mtemational League last sea·
son, and had "rour or five" stints
in the mllioo as it fill-in.
"You come out to work every
day and let the chips fall where
they may,' • Bell said.
This week, all IS pros"'"ctive
umpires will be workingr-in the .
West Palm Beach area, mating it :· .
easier for NL umpires supervisor .
Ed Vargo to observe them, He'll
consider a whole lot of factors the calls they make, haw they make
them, where they mate them from,
apd more.
"It's going to be tough, picking
six out of that many,'' Vargo Said.
"But it's just like the ballplayers
down here- we're looking for the
people wilh the talent and ability to
do the job." ,
·

s

,

·

. ports deadlines posted

- --

-t.-- '

VadinijindS catching sports bug all~y~:::~~~Yo:U::e~~:
the bases.
,in mid-30S pavs
(J#
in State titleS BradentOn,
While Barron was working in
'J
'JJ
Wally Bell was !!t' the

was '':;1 .:d.e•:;:;s:;:;:;

C,S. UJNGSilO[S •

m~.

.

•

Phoenix, reports continued to cil'·
culate about the eyentual destinatimi of this year's moll-sought free
agent, Philadelphia defensive lineman Reggie White. ·
,
On the one hand, there were
repordts that WBhitet~a~~~eaning
0
towar reen I!Y. uut uo;;y were
unsubstantiated. Then there was a
broadcast report that it was the
New,Yorlt ]CIB,. report vehement· ly denied by.:hiS
J~my Sex-

By BEN wALKER
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) _
Like milll roolties at spring training, Marlt Barron is hoping to earn •
aspotintilemajlnthissesSOD
·
''I'm not worried about thi: job
situation," he Said. "I'm a little
nervous, but everyone is. I just
want to do my best every dsy."
If be's good CI\OIIgh and·lucky
enough, he'll get lhe job ~ IS a
Nlllional League umpire.
·
Because of expansion and the
retirements of !:lOng Harvey and
Dutclt Rennt'Zl, the NL needs to fdl
six slots for umpires this season,
. It's 10 unusually high number, consideringlhat there are some years
when no full-time job! are open.
· The American League bas no
slots to fill. ReplacemeQts already

~~ _ • ·~:sia,dtc&amp;~~
••llw b t ICbJowl::2
..!!_-:-- ]":~• ~~ rs
fJ£., 19-1 IOisuD. Their
next season, w .......,.. 11 ""' lllD · . . . . . _ - • • · • . _ J211t ..,.
t the C'oloniaJs
~~==~~~~ ~:r-::-:n.J:~j~ ~ is. tic1 ,;~umament's
Selected to lbe dtiJd team wen: :~lidtl._.,.c • •
a
we£
-left. ow is still
Alliance's Chester Harper, Obe ·m ' Ole oldie 1aat teams in

- -·Sports briefs--

SAN DIEGO PADRES - Opd"""'
Smt S&amp;ndcn and Tim WorrelL pikhm;
D.J. Dozier, outfielder; and t...lil Lopez,
'infielder, lO Lu Veau of lhe Pacific
Co.ut Leapo. Sent Joe St.ron1 and llay
Yw.na. pi!.Chcn; Bob Om:n, cat.ehet; and
Iirvll Brown, ouLfic.ldcr, 10 lhcir minotleague camp rorruuipmcnt.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - Se~u
.. Ctais Colbert. caldlcr. SieVe Holey, out·
fielder; J.R. Phillip&amp; and Andta Sanuna,
infiddm, lo their minor· leap camp for

:·

· ~-liON.

Slmlin&amp; Hilehcoclr:, rilchcr, Lo Columbua
of the ln~Mnallont w,uc. Sent Kiki
Hernandez. C..K:hcr. to Lhc:ir minor-lell\lt
camp far ..uipmc~~L
SEAm..E: MARINERS - Senl Reg ·
gi.e Ham.. pitcher, ouuiaht LO Cal&amp;•tY m
lhc P•cific Coall.l.ea&amp;.IOC.
wil.h Oklahoma Cit)' of tht: American
Aa&amp;oci&amp;Uon.

sjlilia

Green Stale UniversithecOI!Ch Jim

t:l"l.le.

Uloct

1

Larranaga. fo.rhile~~~-- ~play

American. Aat.ociation.
MINNESOTA TWINS - Oplioned
Rich Oupo uul 0.0..., T...U., ......._
to Ponland cllhe Plc:ific Co."
Sana Dunian Miller, ealdlcr, to their mi·
nor· lap ""'P I«

TEXAS RANGERS - Signed Mike
SdKioler, piteher, Lo a minor-league oon·

r

Georoe
of this year's longshot lovers
as
,a
·

sime&gt;.

1n 48 games in 1991, ~had 17

Steven Robert Olin was born
OcL 4, 1965 in Portland, OJC. He
played at Portland State and WIIS
named the team's outstanding
pilcher in 1985 and 1987. He &amp;Jllduated from Beavenon (Ore.) High
School.
son.
.
Olin and Crews are the first
Ojeda caine 10 the Indians as a
free agent this winter. Last season, . active major leaguers to die in :.0
he was 6-9 for Los Angeles with a accident smce Thurman Munson:of
3.63 ERA. ·The left-handed starter the New York Yankees perished·ln
began his major-league career in a 1919 plane aash. The 1-.st JXOiiti·
nen.t baseball ~gure kill.ed in In
1980 with Boston,
Wliile wilh the New York Mets acctdent was Btlly Martin or Ilk
in 19118, be cut off the upper por- New York Yanteea, who died!.'!¥
tion of his left middle fmger wilh auto~ on Christmas Day IYII)I.
The Indians canceled today's
an electric hedge clipper while gardetiing at home,
· game at Winter Haven against Bjtl•
..
•..•
O)eda was expected to be in the urnore.
Olin is siuvlved by his wife
slaltlllg rotation, while Crews was
a strong candidate for a bullpen Paui and lhree children, Aleu, 3,
and twins G~u and Kay lee, li
job.
saves: He joined the Indians in
J.989 and was 1-4.
Crews, who also came from Los
Angeles as a free agent lhis year,
was 0-3 with a 5.19 ERA in 49
games with the Dodgers last sea-

.Barron vying for:slot on NL umpire crew

i:-ar

ERA.

.,

•

.

-..._._:ai:
-=

ce.w

1e.cond bateman ; and Bob

lh&lt; '""""

. •.

bounds and 3.2 assists a pme. And East CkYc' d SU.. D w d
Kovach averaged 25.5 points a . Lyles .,.- l.i8a Sww. Tdr t1o
game while Ieiding Stow to 1 rqu· Sata's Natia 11r• 7 ..n ki'Iar-season Asaoc:iatcd Press poiJ..Ii- maiM R I - flf CW 'n
tie and the llile lllllmlllienL
Eat.
The three share pl,yer of the
III:K's !IE 1991-91 A
I
year honon, based Oil RICOIIImen- ~Diu" - •I• a " lla)s . . .
dations from 1 lillie puicl of IIJlllll5 t a( • - . ,
•
die RIDwritcn and broldt:lsten.
. •
5 a(. , _ . flf
Stow's Dave Clole, whole team ~p~~~~w· ,_.
.
went 19.-I A~ the "'"''lar sea- - - - . - -Oliillliiop
r ._..
son, -die.
of tbe year.
lbuoJ,r ·: ..:~.._;Gc;.___
Kovach, a 6-2 aenior who is un- ~6'l.S...ZI~--....._6'l.
decided about bis college choice, :--:is,~m~;;~-....~
will lead Stow (24-l) .into Thws- m..,-.-Sk,.a5.
o(
._.-...:;: Clllliil
day0 s semifiinals
.
the stale IOiana•
'I"' ...... :rr.a.-=
'•
ment apinst Cincinnali Elder (21- _ _ H.._~·;
4). Oeveland lfei&amp;hll (22-3) meets !i~},..~~.Q;u..!:'­
Toledo SL 1o1m's (22-4) in lbe·olh- ,_ ..!III.Sa:.IIU; -Iisl4.a-.-.
er Jelllifinal at SLJohn Amla.
· ..s.s...•u.
.
....a...:a..-~wJoming
die~ duee on the fust Sc..JU:o.:....,c..
..~"• •
team were RnPiid'J Gary. Meeks, 14.- c ; - - -.su..s..
Brett LarriTfEI
.
d'Rob
~~,.;:z~-~-c o yna, an
~~.po,.._._sn.s...--.-Eggcn ol Cuyahoga Falls.
...,... -~•. IIU: - --· • - - .
Meeks, a 6-7 senior, scored 21.8 1 " ' z
points a pme, while Lmick, 1 6-3 ,.40':""i,"~-;~ ~~-.
senior, scored 2S a COIJir. £ucn. &amp; I
U ..
a 6-10 ICIIIor.
be rae\~ tor In~~'W-~-diana. hit for 20.9 po1nts a pme.
Lisled on the ICCODd leiDi wae
~ -L,
·
'•
6·4 senior cu.rtis Sim~ona of
yy8!VJIDgloO t8VOFJte
Columbus Marion Franlthn (27.,6
• b
·
pomts.per
s-9-- SCXJ~J
Dappril:b of Mount v~ ao.6&gt;.
.
6-S ieni;-' Iay 1..arran1p !Jf1olelb
!MI-.. n ., fCt 111e No. 1 seec1s
SL Jobn I (18.5), ~3 Clrlol
•
AI' i II W..
. . 1k •
t"U gera no argo·
Knox or Dayton Meadowdale
. Ill dtc a:a " • fiB nltc - . W'11k 'M ••• of lbC chart
(18.9), 6-10 seni~ JJ. L - of NCAA
sM
lirM, lillll"stk.•h" 1
Middletown (18:9) and 6-3 ~ !._hl~ltqttll &amp;s'
T - B 1••..
of lhe
Da.mion Ezell of Cleveland -ll'il•~ I iii ,
• iii
in!ee, admilled GW

lhmdm, fint bu&lt;m&amp;n, .. OmW ollh&lt;

DALLAS MAVERICKS - Si1ncd

_ M••J'IICOI'l!ll
.. _..3

... .,_,,v

piu:hcn; CtmmWI Al-

vuoz, eucha; I&gt;Rw DeMon, Wielder,

Tim Legler, &amp;U•rd , for the rcrnuindez of

-S.IIadfard~

N.Y.-5,0....,~
1

ClpOGnod

Robc:n Ellia,s;
·w.er, to Suuou ar Lhe
" Flarida SlAte
Sau Scea Rufi'com

National

.W.. Dlvlt6oli

:&amp;·Buftelo ..........

rar

ldf Schwarz., ptct., and &amp;Wibea Belin
and Clril Cron, inficldcn, \o NuhYillc ol
lhc Amorican Allociation; Johnn7 Rulflllo
pildl«, and Brudon Wdut, infiddc:t, to
BimUnaham « lhe Southem 14&amp;Ue. and
and Chria How

HARTFORD WIIALERS - Traded
Su~n Konroyd, ..reatem~n, 10 ~ DeII'Oii.t Red Winp
. . for • .1993
. ~· ICIU.Dd

n:aui'""""'
NEW YORK YANKEES -Oo&lt;ioood

Liken, 10:30 p.m.

' In the NHL ...
;

Mwli.-

w.....,_

&amp;...baD

We*"1;"" 97, New Seney 92

(

Jtama.,., .,.,....., 1a m. Pi"'burah

8&amp;7 LiJh&amp;ainl fH Mib Hanmen, left

Quarterfinals

Mooday's 8COftll

'

'liad..,.IH_, .......
BUFFALO SABIU!S - T'nded Mlb

Bi:'.t:..urorMilre """-. -...

s...bomCoi71.~S9

..;)
16
216
34.5

S~

- " " Bab'llmoy, lei\ ......
£'DMONTON OILERS - Traded
en;
"'lho OU..p

MWni, Ohio 60, Old I&gt;mWUm l&amp;
lotim-. ... ~ 72
lbr.oa ColleaeiOI,Ricc61
Altbunt-Birmin!Chun 65, Clemmn 64
SW Mitlmui SL lrjo, Jackie.~ SL !li2

. sl

.

Hockey

Monday's scores

GB

~9ERS -

Mou, linoblckclr.

In the NIT ...

4

.•

Denli Lo¥ille. ........ bocl:, uul Ao&lt;hooy

Boaon 11. Buffalo. 7:40p.m.
MootiW at Hartford,7:40 p.m.
Philadelphia et N.Y. Ran1cn , 7 :40
p~ .
.
SL lAuia 11 Calguy, 9:40p.m..
I.e. Anp&amp;. at Vmcouvar, 10:40 p.m.

· · WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklw•l DI.WO.
.
W L fa.
................ Al n
.606
s.a
Ao............... AO n .63s
1Jult _,, .................. l7 29 .561
!9 .3M
IE
·e ,_,_;·...... lS 41 .231
Dolla ......................6 ll .~

..........
SAN FaANCISCO

'I:wonto •J'Winnipc&amp;. 1:40 p.m.

2S

.

NEW ENGLAND PATIIIOTS SlpodScollSoculo&amp;..............._
PIIOI!NIX CARDlNAt.S '- Si1ned
OlfX Cia*, wide !'DCIIIYcr, 10 a Wec-)'C&amp;l

s.n

•

T-

• four--)'Cilt CGnii'ICl.

Tampa 817 ·~New lcne)', 7:40p.m.
)01111 Pial burp, 7:40p.m.

2.6.5

.501
.500
.&lt;W6
.315

.,.

.• ., ' -

'

By DAVE GOLDBERG ·
PALM DESERJ:, Calif. (AP)NFL ow'ners are finding out what
f~ agency is like - 11 perpetual
rumor mill,
While the owners fmally were
, awarding PhoeniX its SUJier Bowl
• an~ unveiling B plan that could
Cltjland rosten to S3 and simplify
·'the injured reserve system, their
meetings Were turning into a rumor
mill about who wa8 going where.
One rumor came li'IIC when the
.owners appointed a three-man
committee that will negotiate a new
contract wilh commissioner Paul
Tagliabu~. who was credited by
both players a'nd owners with
bringing about the labor peace that
led to free agency. It was apt tim. ing and placement- rour years to
the day and at the site where Pete
Rozelle announced his retirerilent.
Most of the ruman, however,
were about players.
At the same time quarterback
Jim Harbaugh was re-Signing wilh
Chicago and receiver Gary Clark
was jumping from Washington to

'£ · t\'l • J 8
. . a ' poid« wilh Sl seconds
0111 p · • 51
At Orh.4, ~ Saa Bd];w ldi,IDir::ad:AI•ma-Bimlingham.
IIDIIIe-6a
. 111 switlo--tiSC.711, Pepperdine 59
. mtds ldi. 0111 D " - . •:i;i;i.
AI.
Lal; AIIFies, Soutbem Cal's
hebe 'AI I P •4 4 ..- 1ti1
O.IJIIC&gt;
Hackett came off the
lbadt aidti a( a
lUisi
lwaciiiD
score
21 points, all on
· rtbe RzUMs (Z2.-, It a
bII
i
+•
slicts.
fimk.
-

,.

and was expected to recooer fully.
He wu in stable but serious condi. lion this morning 11 South Lake
Memorial Hospital in Clermont.
His wife, Eeanor Ojeda. was 11 the
hospital, as were four Indians
coaches,
the accident happened 25 miles
north of Winter Haven, the Indians'
temporary spriRJt home since Hurricane Andrew ravaged lhe club's
new permanent site in Homestead.
Olin came up in tile Cleveland
organization in 1991 and emerged
IS their best reliever last season.
Selected in the 16th round of the
1987 amateur draft, he is third on
lhe Indians' all:time saves list. Lnst
season, he led the team with 29
saves. He was 8-S with a 2.34

·Phoenix welcomes ex7Washingt~n . ·Redskin ·c lark to Cardinals'-flock .

AI.BirmiDgbam, All., Robert
g
scored 1~ points, includ-

:

toward shore around dark,·' said . boal 0011ling lllld c:8ilcd to the playVinard Hitt, spokesman ror the ers.
Florida Game and Fresh Water . "I . kept screaming, I ·tept
Fish Commission, which is investi- screaming, but they wouldn't
gating die accidenL
answer," she said. . ·
Crews WIS piloting' the 18-foot
Firefighten on the scene said
open bass boat when it sp¢ into the men bit the dock almost at
the dock. knocking out pilings and head·level. Olin was killed instantcoming to rest about 100 f~t ly.
&lt;&gt;
beyond, Hill said. He added that
"Steve wis one or our own,"
investigators routinely check to ICC said' Bob DiBiasio, vice president
if alco6ol is involved in such acci- of public relaiions for the Indians.
deniS, but there was no immedialc "We grew ver{ close to him and
word.
.
his family. This is very tragic."
Tile Orlalldo Sutiul ~
Crews, pronounced dead II 5:40
that a resident heard the boat strike a.m., was 'airlifted to Orl!lndo
the dock. which extends about 2SO Regional Medical Center with a
feet into the ·water. Sbe called the !lamlged lunf and 1 " very saiaus
Lake County Sllerifrs Office at head injury,' said spokesman Joe
7:52p.m.
.
. Brown.
.
Jeua Heinrich rushed outside
the Indians said Ojeda. 3S, was
with her cordless ilbone, saw the operated on far head lacerations

Shortly after getting 1996 Super Bowl,

A•• •· Brilll"'ngbam 65
01 ...

C

Qod&gt;ec o1 Wuhini!IM, 7:40p.m.
N.Y. klandm It Detroit.1:.t0p.m.

16

C&gt;O:qo.. ..............A5 20 .692
. CIJ!YELAND .......~I 24 .631
' ~ c:llldoae--· .........35 3D .531

I'

Jo.t•-St52

AHartsm, Miss..1obnny Murdod: •t wf up II: clo6e game with
- b:r dne-poinren and ftnished
wialil 11 fill' Soulhwest Missouti
~(»10).
.
.

M

Tonight's games

~RN CONFERENCE
.U.Dc,_
WLN.GI
Now Yad&lt; .•••.•• .AS II .714
Nowl«&lt;ooy .. ----39 'l1 .591
7.S
......................37 21 ~
9
~ .................30 33
.Kiti
u

•

SW'Miaouri St. 70

Logan ·get . three on dream team

Scoreboard
.·

CoUiae

a •=
101, Rice "
ld .......... Bill Curley's inside
play ud Genud Abram's three.
poillas Jed !lot-shooting Boston
Cellcp,:: ud ended Rice~s best
p
•ruil ia 39 years.
BC p 23 points from Curley
2'2fiurmAir.ull.
,

On Division I all-Ohio basketball teams,

filA!'! :

The Dally Sentlnei-Page:-5

.Florida boating accident ~ills Cleveland .hurlers Olin, Crews

Tt . . . . March 23,1993
p

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

\

-

..

.

' ....

-

.....

/

...

- -"

Clean' Out Your Closet,
Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

JFIR{IEIE
CC11A~~ll!Fll1BJD)

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For 5 100.00 Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simpty Clip This Coup~n ~Photo Copies Not Accepted),
. Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
You Ad Will Run For One Week.
'

•

1•

The GtJllipolls DtJily Tribuu,
The Daily Se11tittel, the Poi111
P/eiJSQIIt Rerisrer.and tile Sunddy'IYmes-SellliM/ value lhe contribufions their readers matt to the
sports sections ol these papers, and
thCse contributions wiU continue to
be published.
.
However, certain deadlines for
submissioqs will be ~ed. ,The
deadline for pho!os and relalecl ani· .
cles for Mslrelball and other winter
is the last day of lhe NBA

Wn!l:

Likewise, tile ~ine for submissions of local baseball- and
softball-related ~ IIIII related
articles, from Tto the Dl8jora,
as well as other sprlilg and IIIIIIJIIer
sports, is the day of the lilt prne
ol the Wodcl Series. The dellill1ne
for Dhotol and relaled artiCiea ror
football and 'other fall nporllla the
SBlllnlaY bef01e lbo 'Super Bowl,
, _ deadlinel have been instituted to give Jeadln plenty of lime
10 get their photos back from the
photojplphy IIUdJo ol cholee and
to giVe the titdn lllo OIJilDdUIIIty to
pu61lsb these apona photos and
ai1icles durina die apprqtriate season tpr thlt IIJlll7t.

AJD)

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD&gt;
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT AP~LYTOYARD SALES)

I
NAM~----~----~-------------------------PHONENUMBER= --------~~------------~-=~~

MAIL TO: ·

Th~ · Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH
(OFFER EXPIRES6/21/93)
I

\

.

457~9 .

�By The Bend

••

The _Daily Sentinel
·

Tuesday, March 23, 1993

Page-e .

"~~~~~~~~========~--~~~~----~-

GOOD IIRVICE IS
OUR UDAL .

Beat of the Bend...

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.

by Bob Hoeflich
Fortwlllely, 10111e of ~ have a
knack at creating "Moments to
Remember". Often, crcaDna IIICh
mOIIICIIII requires 1101 only Orpnizadonal skills but 1 peat deal of
iime, effort IIIII IIIOIIe)'.
.
Vance IDd Doml Will Higias
of Orient a"~ 111 Remember" JICCllllc IDd did !hey ever come
throush 10 houor Donna's father,
Nonnan w.u. in cclebratioo or his
80th birtbday which wu Muth L
Vance and Donna
have
Norman nl hill pleasant wife, Allegra; ID dillner 10 cele1nlc bolb or lhelr birthdays, Allegra's Is March 15, but this year
they CJeiiCd a ftllllly IPOClll oblcrvance. . They invited Norman and
Allegra to meet them and Norman •s silt« nl her bUIIJind, Keith
and Alia Will Casdoipb of Columbus at lhc Ohio University Inn at
S::)O p.m. oo Feb. 2?. A11qpa wu
given strict instrucbon 1101 10 dare
10 allow Norman 10 arrive before
the designated time.
When Alle'ra and Norman
arrived at the 1nn, lhey met, as
expec:tejl, Donna and Vance and
Keith and Alta in thi: lobby. ~
six stancd iniO lhc dining but
. before they rcacbod the maiD dininS room, Vance opMcd 1 door 10 a
pnvate party room and told Ncrman and Allqra 10 .. , inside. As
they did they were greeted by
shouts of Msurpriae• • And.a lllr·
prise it was. Stanc!i"'lnllllld tw0
walls of the private party room
were all or Nonnan's five 11'blings
and their
the duec
. •
in WiD =·and their fall8lll
'
duec grandcbililren.
ly, Norman and Allegra wae nearly overwhelmed. ,
A floral arrangement and two
lalie beart-ihaped IMdloons ·decorated the table of the honored

Fo:J:•·

:w;

NO SEX DAY • Kimberly Zamudio,
holds her l-year-old
••ib_t~ Vldorla, Ia York, Pa, Mouday. ZamUdio Is a single par.
became a mother as a teenager and lleUeves that York
pj:OIIIIty Sex-Out Day Is a good Idea. (AP photo)
. ·

esidents to· do
f;,~';l/l) ithoui sex today
YORK, ~ (AP) -Officials in
•;:;o,•m arc hoping 10 lt8Ch unmarried
~ ~·:;::~1 die jOys of abstincnce by ·
,.
~in the colinty 10 go
wilbout aex lllday. ·· ·
•
"If you can C;ontrof•)'OUI'SCif for
. one day. roo can conuol yourself
' llliy day,' said Joe Fay, chainnan
' of the Teen Pregnancy Coalition of
~ Ylld: County.
.
·
The Great Sex-Out Day was
i organized 10 call attention 10 the
: - · · exuemely high birth rate, he
• said.
~ Teen-118crs IIIX:OUIItcd for about
. 21 ~of all births in !he coun~ ty m 1991, the Cl!lllltion said. York
~ .Coonty, south of Harrisburg, has
. T

·Cheboygan, Mich.

The "SIOnil of the century" did
its best 10 cancel out Allesra' s
binbday but trus1 me, site didll't go
neilected. Things were beautiful
far bel' 1110. And, by the way, now
it can be told. She's 74.
I hope you're sroring up some
nice "Moments to Rem em be~·.
Feel free to share them with me.

Enjoy yourself. ~fter all, it's.
not written in siQIIC that yoo have
10 pow old Sraeefull&gt;'. you know,
and do keep smiling.

.

time plafcrs will need to bring a
birth certificate.
POMEROY - The Community
Unten SeMc:e for the Meiss Minlsterill Assoc:iltion will be at' SL
l'aul LytbcraD Church ill Pomeroy
Oil Thursday .at 7:30 p, m. Rev.
Walter Heinz of Sac;red Heart
C8lhOiic Church will be preaching.
'
.
CHESTER • Chester Baseball
AISOCiation will hold sign-ups for
the 1993 b•l"h!ll and 10ftball SCI·
sons on Thursday from 6-8 p.m.
and Saturday from 10'a.m. 10 noon
at Olester Elementary.' Registtation
is .SIS per pll!)'!:l'. Anyone who did
1101 partie!~ last year wiU need a
copy of their birth certif'IC8le.

.

.;People in the news

.
l
l

II
II

I

~,

I

LOS ANGELES
Kirk
Doullas
defended his(AP)
son -Michael
81111 iJ1c film "Palling Down" in a
_.

er opinion piece, answerabout the disturbinl
~
II' of a lsld-off defense worker
t 1 ut ·
'Pillinl Down' 11o had lhc
10 play a JJR!jlldiced, middle.· •
; liD nerd.'' ])ouglal wrote in Mon·
±day's LOs An1e1e1 Times. "He
1; JIIMd ItllriiiilnllJ
.
· •. I think it is his.

'- J:,......

;r.;-

• WKDIIClloi-IOdatc."
. ~ . -;The mo•ie IIJ~ , come un.c!cr
•

, ...

w

To place an ad

POMEROY • Free clothing day
will be held at The Salvation Army
. on Thursday from 10 am. 10 noon.
All area residents in need of clothins are wek:oine.
RACINE • Racine American
Legion Atlxlliary will meet Thurs. day 817 p.m. atlhc legion hall.

REEDSVR.LE • The Riverview

Garden Club will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Church
of Christ. Easter favors will be
made for residents of the Arcadia
Nursing Center. Marilyn llannum
and Nola Young are hosteSses.
nJPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 90S3
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Members arc urged 10 attend.

New.recruit

..

f:·•· ·

•c"

COPY DEADLINE

.

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Wedneoday Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

1:0Qpm. TUI!IIday
1:00pm. Wednooday
100 pm. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

• Ada o•"ide the cowaty you.r •d I'WUI lllUit be prepaid
(;~j,fied pages c011er the
• Receive dilcoual for ad. paid in adYaDCe.
• r... Ado: Ci-.way and Fouad ado uad.. ls worda will be
· folltNing telephone ezchonge1 ...
run 3 day•·•t oo charp.
• Pric! of ad for aD capital ~etten i• double price of tid co.t
Gallia CoUIII)' Meip Cowuy Muon Co., WV
• 7 poiDlliDI type oaly uied.
· Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
• S.nliliol ilaot r.poMible lor erron altar fu1t d.y (cbeck
for erron r.... tday lid MUll in papet). c.u befo ... 2:00'p.m.
~alii polio
992-Middloport/ 67 5-PL Pleuaat
day altar puhlicatioa to tulte corr.cUoa
367..a...hirc •
Pomeroy
. 458-I-o
• Ad. that lllUl he paid in. adYaace are:
388-Vmtoo
9854'rt•r
576-Atplo
c.....
Card of Th&amp;Db
Happy Ado
245-llio Craade
843-Ponlaod
775-IIMoD.
Ia Memoriam
Yard SU.
256-C..,... Dw. 247-l.ota" F.U. 882-Nn- BaYCIIl
• A cleuifled advenile...ot pleeed iD tho Callipolio Deily
64S..AreLie Dw.
949-Radae
8911-U.serl
Tribune (•cepl Cleuif'oed Oiaplay, B...n- Cord or ~I
379-Welout
742-lulialld
937-lialralo
Nolie.,) willalao appear iD tha Point Plouu1 Ileptor aad
667-Cooi.W.
the Daily S...tiaol, -•hiac o-18,000 boaeo
•.
'

Days

Words

1

3'
6
10
Monthly

WRITERS GUILD • Dustin Hoffman, right,. greets Arthur

Miller before the start ot the 45th Writers Guild Awards In New
York oa Moaday. Holrman later preseJ!Icd I be a~rd to Miller.
The plaJ'!I'illht Is known fill' ''Death ola Slilesman" ud The Cru.
cible." (AP photo)

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

Call 614·992·
6637 .
St. Rt. 7

Cia•••Ire.,

3-Aaoouace...ar.

II-, Help Wuted
1:1-- Si_tlo,. 11'utod

:&gt;-HapprAdt
6- Loot utd Fouod
7- Loot and Fouod

lil-1--

• Auction

ss.- Lou 4 Ac....,

1\1 \ i\1 '
'

It.~

41...:- HouH.I for

liMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

AVAILABLE.
BEPnC iYBTEMB,

JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE

4.7-Waat.edtoleat
68-- Eq.ol-1 for Reet

...

Pl...b;,. A H..tiatr

15- School. 4 l•lnctloa .
16- Radio, TV A CB IIOpair
17- Miocolla-•

E.ea;atiat
Eloctrieal4 Rofrlpn1ti0~

C...e.,.J Hau!iacr

614·742·2131

· .

Howard L Wrflesel

ROOFING &lt;

'

In Memory

.

Gutters
. Downspouts
~uttar Cleaning
Painting

BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

OF
FRANCES
11YSELL ·
MARCH 23,
1990
Gone but not
forgotten.
' ..

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
3·1&amp;-93-lln

NOWOPBN
MYSTIQUE
TANNING

1.

sc~

Wolfe Bed
15 Sesslo.n $25
Depot St., Rutland
742-3190
Call for
Appointment

Sadly Missed
. Guy and ~:..,.,,h,l

Happy Ads

112211 mo.

SHRUI &amp;
TRIM and

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

7~ud-

Auto-Rentals

ALL HARDWOOD

By
Dave

Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.

Grate
of
Rutland

(614) 843·5264

, .. ,__

I

(614) 992-5449

&amp;prfn1Tfme
Special

,

1111d mACKHOE WORK

HOME SITESend
TRAILER SITES,

LANDCLEARIHG,

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

3-4-93- 1

MoLlie R•m• Repair

IN MEMORY

AOI ·

5

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE

. NEW- REPAIR.

ClAttfiEO

.1

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG

HAULING
Reasoaable ·
Rates

Upholotery

· .FORf
IN TNf

lox 119
Middleport, o•to 45760

POIIIIOY, OliO

14-- Iluaiaaoa Treiolll(

2

,..,oy,Ohlo

Rocky.R. Hupp, D.C.U. ' Agent

..... , _ .... tfflot
217 L lecaaUt.

3:1- Mo~ilo H - for Sale
33-- Fana• for Sale
~
~ 8 ,. 1_ Buildiap

i~w•• ...iroDo

'HERE!. A

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

992-5335 'or
915·2561

I \';\I 'I I 'I' I I I '
,\ I I I I , I I II 1,

2-laM......,.

· 9:-' Y.,.ted 10 Buy

Palnli
(FREE ~n~lES)

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Healt!'l
Accident •Annuity, iRA • Mortgage

lEI'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Fruiu4V...Ialola
For Sole or Trade

46-- S - for Roat

~Nolie Sole~ .

Ex._lor

' .

Muicallulnullenll '

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

..._ Apal"bbeellfor R-.1
~ Furn.ilhed Room•

'

Approx. 4 miJea North of Gllflpolls'

and 4 miles South ot ChHhlre l.o
Addison . Turn oft' 51. At. 7 onlo
Addison Pike. Body anop approx. ~

· Iring It .. . Or Wt
Pick Up,

42- Mohile HotnU (or Rent ,..__ y,,_
: 43-- Far11111 for Rt~n.t
Molao,.yc.loa

7kJ!Uj4t

&amp; TAX SERVICE
Quarterly and
Year-end Reports
REASONABLE
RATES
Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY
311/1 mo.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAYAnNG
(614) .
667·6628
3-8-931 mo.

Shade River Saddle Shop. .
-

CUSTOM SADDLES,

·~

lEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358SR 7

..

Chester, Oh. 45720 '
'N
' 985-3406

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. :·
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
..
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL . .
FREE ESTIMATES

UCINE GUN
CLUB :
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

614·992·7643

...

(No S.IICiay Calls)

1:00 P.M.
OPEN TO PUBLIC

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

...,

h

•regardless of income
'regardless of grades .
'plus $20k guaranteed lOan "·
'regardless of cred~
:~
'To collect your scholarship money
1.-.'
call614-985-3556 ·
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-7 dr Sal10-4 · !:
Vioa I M.ot. Card
~ilti

992·7036

REMOVAL

BIU SLACK
992·2269 '

Guaranteed Scholarship Money\.
for all college bound students. ' '

2 Froat Struts • L••or
• 4 WIIHIAiiJintent
Prices St.tang at
1 129.95 +Tax

USED RAILROAD TIES

RODGERS·
£.1 RIDE
'

1419 Slate RL 7

· 12131112/1fn

Fur•lture

Gingerbread, House

w..,

To err I• hum.n, but to
Out
lho waMr boloro lho poncN 11

overdoing IL

SIZED UMESTONE
. FORSALE

Over 15 Words

4-Gi~war

Relinishing , Frame Slraighltnin&lt;,r. Cut~om

All MAliS

.. GET REStJLB • FM'I!

J)llrent outweig.hed his former
wife's desire 10 briilg the embryos
10 term herself or through.OOIIation.
The U.S. Supreme c;oun n~fused
last month 10 review die case.
Hash asked that any action be
delayed so the former couple will
have time 10 consider the resulL
"That wOuld be the worst thing
that this court could do either for
Mr. Davis or Mrs. Stbwc," Charles
: ~lifford, Davis·· attorney said.
"She, as well as my client, needs
10 go on with her life."
·
Young Jli'O!Ilised a decision "in
the not 100 distant future." Attorneys guessed about two weelcs.
The state Supreme Court said
there were two options for the
embryos, which are preserved in
cryogenic storage at the Fertility
Cen1er of East Tennessee in
Knoxville. They could be used for
research, but only if both Jlljl'ties
agree, the court said. The other
option WIS disposal. .
Mrs. Stowe, 32, proposed .
implanting the eJ!Ibryos in herself
or another woman, for research
purposes, to see if 4-year-old
embryos are stiU viable.
That's a subterfuge 10 try'ro get
around the Supreme Court's order,
Qavis' attorney said.
"My feelings are the same as
four years ago," Davis said. "My
opimon as well as everybody's
opinio(l abou1 when life begins is
lhcir own opinion. My opinion is
that is not children." ·
Mrs. Stow'e was abSIIJlt from
Monday~s hearing.

Monday-Friday, 8:00-5:00

C~erized Eslimales. Oullity Wolf&lt;, Ins. wOn&lt;
Welcome. FbefGiass WOII&lt;, Colrjlltlt Rtpaffl,j &amp;

. ' AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE

Quality
Stone Co.

:-=----''-----1 3l&gt;- Roel F..latoll'eaiod

embryos' disposal

Nurses apparently
give insulin·shots'·to
non~diabetic 'patients
'
.

15
15
15
15
15

367·7444 • 446·6644
1·100·926·2032 (OIIIio O•lyl

MICROWAVE OVEI
•••VCR REPAIR

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
chaJ8ed for each day as separate ads.
·

Lawyers argue over
lly DUNCAN MANSFIELD
Ailoc:lated Press Writer
MARYVILLE, Tenn.- If a
man wants 10 ~y seven frozen
human embryos he heiJH?d conceive, then ,he should do II himself,
an at10ntey for the man's ex-wife
ll(gued Monda:y.
.
"If it comes 1o the point that I
have 10 do it, then that's what I will
· do," said'Junior Lewis .Qavis, 34,
who has been fighting a cusiOdy
battle for four years over the
embryos. They were conceived in a
laboratory ·by midng his sperm
with eggs from his then-wife.
Lav.ryer Dick Hash, who represents Davis' now-remarried former
wife, Mary Sue Davis Stowe of
Titusville, Aa, said during a hearing Monday that asking Davis 10
destroy the four- to eight~cell
embryos was not iniended "10 lay
some guilt on him, b!lt 10.make him
think about what he is·doing."
Aftef lhcir divorce, Mrs. S10we
wanted the embryos 10 be used, ll!d
possibly donated 10 another couple.
Davis objected.
·
Blount County Circuit Judge
Dale Young ruled in 1989 in favor
of Mrs. Srowc, saying that because
"life begins at conception" the
embryos were "children in vilrO"
deserving the state's prorection and
chance 10 develop.
.
The Tennessee Supreme Court
overturned the decision in June,
saying Davis' righ!Dot 10 become a

Rate

· :aH• AU&amp;.. ..... •O.U9eJio, OR. 4S6JJ

miles on right.

. ·RAtES

.,

IAIUlY'S BODY SHOP ·

Sandllasling, Mallin Stnour M~ng Syslom

•Minimum 50 Cetane
,·
•Low aah and aulfur
•Will not gel in winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST
Spec'lal term lerrne with peyrnenl 4 tlmee a y... r
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
·
·
Larry E. Miller
1-800-598-5654
614 446 1157

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. S.turdoy
'1:00 p.m. Monday

Monday Poper
Tueodly Paper

Call992-2156
.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Two
non-diabetic patients at the Veterans Adminisllalion Medical Center
POMEROY . The Pomeroy. died sfllr ~idenWJy being given
insulin shots. ~g 10 the hosGroup of AA will meet Thursday 11 pital
chief"Of staff.
1 p.m. at Sacred Hearl Catholic
Dr.
Mwray Allose said differena
Church. Call 992-5763 for infornursea
Were 011 duty when SICphen
rriation.
•
SmoliJislci, 80, and Thomas J. Riggins;'70, received insulin shots
Dec. 17 and when Riggins got a
second unpn:scribed shot Ian. 30.
Allose said Monday irhasn't
been determined who gav~ tile men
Scott W. WliialaiCh, son of Mr. · ·•- shots
and Mri. Max Whitlatch of Mid· ""'Smollnski' s heart stopped and
dleport, bu enlill~ In the Air ~ were unalllc 10 revive him
FDm~'~'dr..cd Enlistment Pro- after he received an insulin shot
~·
g 10 TSGT Randy instead of the blood-thinning q
~·Air Farce reeruirer, Alhens.
heparin. .
Airman Wbitlall:b, a 1993 gradRiggins survived but received
uate of Meiss High School, Is ailoaher insulin shot Jan. 30 and
scheduled far enJiJirilent in the res- died Feb. 2S. He also was sUIIIJOSCd
ular Air Fm:e in June 1993. Upon 10 getheplr!n instcadofinsulfn.
The ooro0er has detamined that
sradualion from the Air Force' I
si~t-~ buic lraining course ne. Smolinski illed of hypoglycemic
San
ADIIlnio, Teus, Airman Whit- h ·k
sed b 1o blood s ~··
WEDNESDAY
laldlla achechded io receive lechni· 5 oc cau
Y w
u..· .
MIDDLEPORT • lnternlediatc cal training·· In tbe mechanicil level. The cause of Rlgsins' death
-.,.....
. ·
haan 'I been detetillined. ·
k fr010 dd
· d
in TeX.. style ·dance wiU ·
10
0 rr•· classes
- - ._..
A1IOIO llid be didn't believe the
attae
cnse
usuy
begin
,Wednesday
at
7:3
.
0
cials and from Korean-Am~s,
. Airman Wbidatcb will be ~- inlulln lbclllldlled Rigins.
w~o objected 10 a scene in which Advanced class will be held · :30- in1 eredill roward u UIOCtate
Cayahop County COroner Bliz·
Michael Dousias' character anacu · 9:30 p.m. Claliaea a at the Mid·
ia lpplied ICI[enoM tbralllh abetb K. ll!llraj b!ls asked the
a Korean-American grocer for dleport .Alii Coanc:il bnlldin&amp; 1'111 diO J!DIIIIIlllity CoD I or the Ak ·Cleveland pollc:e homicide unit to
charging high prices.
·
· cost Ia S7 per couple, per I IT all.
Porco whUe 11~lluic and invol'i•te the deaths. The inspecThe elder Douglas said critics
THVIlSDAY
tccblical trainlnl
. tor pneral or the De,Pa;rtment of
who claim "Falling Down" sioriV.,_ Affairs also II investi&amp;ll·
fies lawbreaking arc missin&amp; the · POMEROY • The Pomeroy - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . ;· ina.
point.
Youth Bueballl.elgue will bold
On Juae ~7, 1144,1-pb Smlth, the
Allose said lie believed th~
1.
"Michael's character is not the sign-ups 011 Monday and Thunday founder of Mo1111oniam, and hla broth· · insulln shots were given accidental'hero,' or 'newest urban icon,' " from S:30-8 p.m. a&amp; Pomeroy BJe. er, Hiram, weN mlll'dered by a mob ly. The host&gt;ltal dispense• more
Douglas~· "He is the villain IIICntary. Prleea n $12 pet child, in Carlha&amp;e. m.
· . · than two million medicatiOIIS 1
and lhc VJCUln.
110110 Cllceed $25 pet flrilily. Pint
..
• .
year, he said.

!Douglas
defends
Douglas
·
.
,
l(~ '

· dlflerenca.

.

Community calendar

t

•BP Diesel Supreme ...Try it, there Is a

say?
· the eldes t livmg
· of
. ·Norman 11
seven Will children. The eldest
died at age four nt the olhcr llix
arc all ..UI living, 118ea 66 10 80.
At any rate, the family occupied
the party room lintil about 10:30
p;m. c:attbing up on all the activities of various Wnily memben.
So you ace It really - ooe or
those "Momenll to Remember"
happeninp .rar Norman who is still
on· Cloud Nine. On band fOr the
1*1&gt;' wae. or !XJUI1C. the Higgins,
the Cam pbs, the bonoml 8IICIIS
and Duane, Brenda and David
Will, Point Pleasant; Danny and
Linda Will, Rutland; Pearl and
Doris WiD, Charleat6n, 'W. Va.;
Dick and Ruth Will Smilh, Galen
..nd Freda Will, all qf Coluaillils;
Oivi1lc and Martha Will, Yakima,
Wash., and Todd and Sandy ZeUer,

=

~

about 300,()00 residents.
The national rate for girls ages
15 10 17 in 1990 was:about 3 percent.'
'
"We want 10 take one day to
highlight abstine~e. to point out
all the benefits or it and 10 ¥1 an
exam~le for everyone, esilecially
teens, ' Fay said.
Shoppe~s pollcd over the weekend at a York County mall over the
'
weekend said one day of abstiCommunity Calendar Items
nence is doable, particularly on a appear two daJI Wen u eftllt
Monday.
.
and the day ollbat event. lteiDI
"As long 1,1 it's voluntary and must be received weD illadYUCe
they don't get in10 that 'have to' to assure pvlllicatiOn ill the cal·
stuff," said Don Carter, 40, of enda~.
Dover.
l
TlJESDAY '
·POMEROY ' Revival will cootinue at Hysell Run Holiness
Church tbrousb Tuesday at 7:30
'
p.m. nigbdy. David Scott, ~. iS
: RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Roger
NEW YORK (AP) - Now that the speaker. Paslor Robert Manley
· Ebelt became iileensed with fellow the plot.secret of "The Crying inviteS the public.
.
• movie ~tic Gene Siskel for reveal- Game" is.out in the open, lhc mysing me plot-twist in "Th~ Crying tery remaininjt is whether Jaye
POMEROY • American Legion
'' Oame" during. a recent v•deotilp- Davidson, nominated for an Oscar · Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
,. in TV Guidcrepa~s.
as best supporting actor, will show hold its annual birthday dinner at
f. ~recording their ~dated up for the Academy Awards.
the Senior Citizens Center oo Tues~ Oscar speciai; "If We Picked the
"I'm not sure I'm goin~. There day at 6:30p.m. The Ladies Auxil'
r, Winners." Ebert denounced Siskel are many thinss 10 be cooS.dcrcci,P
~ ou CIIIICill and coruinued off-cam- he is quoted as saying in the March iary and family are urged 10 aiiCDd.
.•\ i!l'a, the magazine reported jn ils 29th issue of People magazine.
RACINE • OAPSE Local 453,
· ~27issue.
Davidson, 25, who was born in Soulhern Local, wiU meet Tuesday
.,.... "The prosram is 'Siskel AND California and raised in England, is
7 p.m. ulhc high school. Every, Ebert.'" Ebert rold the magazine. a hairdresser's helper IUliRCd clolh· at
one urged 10 aaend.
·
t "A decision like that should have ing designers' helper turned actor.
·• • been discussed beforehand. It was · He made his screen debut in the
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
· { ~ofhim."
thriller that offers the cinematic port Youth League will hold a
• • Arrogant? That's a strange surprise of the year yet has no coaches meeting 816:30 p.m. in the
I~ •'choil:e
of word!," replied Siskel.
for the Oscars p~eSCnta­ Middleport Council Roam. Anyone
t "We never discuss our opinions in enthusiasm
tion in Los Angeles on Man:h 29. interested in coachins should
advance~ I was simply making a ''To me, an Oscar nomination is
·aaend.
calc for one of my picks."
inelevant," he said.
Siskel said Ebert "was as angry
CHESTER · Cbester Council
; an SO-year-old child."
·
ROME (AP) Luciano No. 323, Daughters of America,
~
Was he worried the argument Pavarotti is recovering in hospital wiU meet Tuesday. Quanerly birth~ ~ get physical? . .. .
. after arlhroscopic surgery tO repair days will be ob~ Potluclc din.• . ~at 1s ~ot possJblc, S1skcl a knee injury that prompted him 10 ner. Practices for the rally wiU be
~d .. T!IC~.s not enough motor. cancel a performance at Milan's La held.
~nauon.
Scala opem theater. .
- ;..
·
.
PavaroUi was in good condition
RACINE • The Racine Area
'l • WNDON (~-Mel G•bs_on after Sunday's operation and was CommiDiity Organization wiU lncet
,: defends tl!e acuon-packed mov1es expected 10 remain ,at the Roman Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Stir MiU
~.bel~~ hun to Sla!'dom.
European Hospital for only a few Park. New mcmben welcome.
I ~on I behev~ they d•d pro· days, said the Italian news agency
mOte violence;. I thi~ th~y mmor ANSA. citing unidentified hospital
MIDDLEPORT • Ballroom
what they sec m S&lt;?C•cty, the 37- sources.
dance classes will begia ~at
~rear-old Austrah~~ star !&gt;_f lhe
The operation to remove dam- lhc Middleport Arts Counc:U build~ IJ.e,t,hal ~ea~on and Mad aged carlilage was performed by ing. Beginners come from 7:30~ ntoviCSsaJd Monday. .
Dr. Wolfram Thomas of Hamburg,
p.m.; advanced, 8:30-9:30
.{" . :'The wo!ld has alway,s ~n a Germany, said Alessandra Campo, 8:30
p.m. The cost is $1 per ~lc. per
~Y ~ flace ~d II s s1mply a spokeswoman for the orthopedic lesson.
·~uon ~t s ~mF. 10 e~ulare surgeon. Sl!e refused 10 say which
what it sees 10 SOCiety, he ~d.
knee or 10 say how long it would
CHESTER • The Chester Ball
~- , ; But Gibson IOid BBC Radio that lake for lhc knee to heal.
Association wiU meet Tuesday lit 7
: ~fi~overstep~mark. ,
Last Wednesday, Pavarotti can- p.m. at Chester Elementary. All
• ; • They re ~ gntW~. I don. t celed a scheduled April 1 perfor- mtercstcd pan:nts a invillld.
• believe that I ve been 10volved 10 mance in Ru~gero Leoncavallo's
~ one that does go 100 far and ~ feel "Pagliacci' at La Scala. A
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
~ c!llmpletely proud !!f my .henlage spokesman said at the time that Child Conservation Lea1ue will
t 8llll '!IY ~~orb.. !IC sa~d.
Pavarotti was almost unable to meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
~ "• G1baon 11111 Bnwn 10 promore walkbecauseofkneepain
Middleport Fire Swion. A pncluct
• hill movie·"Forever Young."
·
dinner
wiU be held for husband's
: ~. '
•
nighL Table service will be provid,. .
ed.

.
,
f

IDd ToQiiWiiii
dinner Vance emceed 1
is
your life• type projram durin&amp;
which lime everyone rold of tome
meq10ry of Norman. ' Respondillg
10 die pognim and llllpriae event,
Noonan ltidlcd it the"~ day
or my lifnllcept the day Allepll
said 'I do'•. Ple#y good tbinting
on Norman's part. wouldn't 'you

suest.

JIIOW OftM

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE

•••

Tho mora you aoy, tho looo people
romernb•.

•

milD,

•••

II ltn'l lho lhlngo lhat go 'In ono
tar •d oul lht olhor you hove to
worry abou~ •• much 11 lhe onea
lhll go In one oor, gel all mixed
up, ond allp oUilhe moulh.

'

..,

51CNO!IIt-A..nut
,lliddltport, Ohio457&amp;0

Opealagof t•etr
lafaat/Toldler Protr•• ·

AIHUICOII.O

no, I'm eorry, you

can't borrow my van.
Love You Loll,
Lillie Brother;
HOpe

We wi.l l NOW serve children
,6 months. to 12 years of age.
Call ua for more Information •

had

~!':.""ler Ia W~l you ore In lhe
The hardeol lhlng obout roller
olr.Una It lht noor, when you
ooma ~ghl clown to IL

•••

•

""~ .. " "•• • 36S ..,, a '
Y.· ~· r• "'" llawe It lo• lw
a solo -•" of R.S.V.P.

-...

R.S.V.P. •••
EwwP., Low PTicts.

Rutland Furniture
lt. 124 Rutl•nd, Oh.
742·2211

'PI!"

317
St.
Mld..epert,Ohlo
MH.•frl. 10100-5100

~·

,

S•odgrass Up.olste,Y

'

"H•Ip/11g You 7b R1co,.,. Yolll' I11Nit8UIIt"
Church, Ho1111, Truck, ao.t. Auto
· lll)d Ofllce S.tlllg

•

t

UCIIII, OHIO

614·949·2202

.' 61 ..., ..

lEVIN'S LAWfl.
MAINTIIIANC~ 1
949·2391 or .,,,

36970 Bal Rn Road

IUY • SILL • tuDE

Pomer~,OWo

1·100·137-1460.

SIZED LIMESTONE

LIMn llosull'ft "1!.
Ferlllzlng, Weeding, .,d

992·3470

Satwrday 10.~6100
ClosadS•IMhiy

,_.

Shrub -

OWNER: ,
Jeff Wkkerslla•

t4n:u77

luclltg.
"•
Tree :rrtmmlng

Retlilll'\4111 • COI'IMNtl"'t4fOOil!lol
Fne Ealln I
~.

Hl"'3

(814) 992-7328

•••

•a.s.v.P. -• n•ydaJ lew .Prien 01

THE
BARN

',,

WICK'S HAULING
SERVJCE

FllEWOOO FOR IAI,I,
HI·-

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB

IN POMEROY
1:41 p.m.
•
Special Ewly Slid
1100 P.yofl
Thle ad good for 1
FRE~ cerd.,
. Lie. No. 0061·32

Meigl Alumni
Aa-latlon Is
lool!lng for current
adclrM- of Malga
gl'llduatM for April
melting for Alumni

Dsncaon
May28,1H3.

Malllddre8Ma to
Melga Alumni
Auoollltlon, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
·

Ohio45780

SOUR
IIIAIES

2 . . . . . .,...1
....... Off
II. 124

12S..sao.s$20
16 .....~ $25

992·2417
. 3-4-93-1

WE DO

ROOFING~

AND EVEiflHIMG UNDEIIIUtr;

TRO

.BUILDER$2

20 Years Exp.

742·232iJ
•

�,
~-Paaa

8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bnce llellttto:

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by larry Wright

32 Moblll Hom"
for Sale

5I

11M 111:a7D Cllwton I led oon.e.
I 11:11 IIIII, 2 f - lrown, Goo
- . ..lilY Eltrul114o:MJ.7041.
11M MOo'-........, homo 14x'IO

YI'RA FUAIIMIE AND ,._

,

March 23, 1993

II

tllj,

FE

dl 23, 1993

7t Autos tor Sale
-co· • 8odiro Dooll,. &amp;·

ACROSS

..... ONJ.IMI41

--

PUAHCII
•114 Ul 1131 OR 11 I 111 . . .

PHILLIP
ALDER

- - - - - SE,
"..._
-r-.--::'1:i

=~.-bo

.

111'7 Sl\uMI 14110, CIA. uderponnlng. 3 llodroomo, 2 tuM
3()4.

11M Sliyllno Holly Rldgt 14x7V,
IN lllec, 2 bMroomt, AIC,
oowwed parch, kitchen lel8nd,
... , . blda,_ !'~dorponnlng,
KU ,.., 304-1~14.

NORTH
J-U-11
+8 S2
.K!
IA96432

_

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

....... _...

... .. J
. l-'-ll:fl."4

W0-4"" ,
Cl ,. . .., IIIC.

1

Help Wantecl

.
DEI.MIIliLB'IICIIIIIDQ(I

Wantecl to Do

18

Dow .... - . llr tho
·
lila,
IM-MUI23
•~'~••aaae

cludoo clotlvtry, aolup otopo
okl~lng, fl&amp;Smo. Coli 614·

••4

381~434

.... for lllk•.

Sand HH1 Ad. 1 ocro land. ilobllo
homo wllh ICid-oq, largo dloll.
CoH SomiMIII Aoonr. '304..75:1030 or :IIJ4475.3431.

)

•--··
54 .MIIC81Merchanctlse .
For wtiotl CIIIJr Whh

ClEAN~~
ClASSilD ADS

SIG Col
114'
-Taillo Lillo
- - . And
-lno

. .. . o

u• t1131.

Gtmrgeellel1ablti1Winill,don1

·

::::~,...... mil )uol
-

SOUTH
+QJ 10
.... J 6
• 10 8
.AKJ98

1111, Pll, PI,
.--:n.
. Pll,. .~­

l"=:::::::====:r-====-t

II... ...utoo, 1M3 14a7V Rod·
men wtth I par warranty, ln-

+to s 1

.......

..... _,.,...n""'l",.,
...,....
.....,w.. nvr

f ;mn SuppltPS
~ Ltvcslock

1l7ll TNcklforSIIe
a.., Co10 Pi 1 Up,

aai,I\DIID.I1tt&amp;IIIN.

Soatb

1f1l'- , . . 1 CIII!Jala.
Rod • - . ...... R .........

BARNEY ·

__......,.. -Tal_
--·
1\1011,...,_,111 t&amp;hli.
•

t+

.......,

- - · · - - - ... -

-.a • - - •

HEADACHE
I'II..LS. TOO.
DOC

....... DCMi,GLJMI . . . . . . I

:1171.

_

.. lin Coni Clnlor 1
-Wool 01 HIIC On Joobon
I A.ll. .-1::111 P.ll. H

+

HE DON'T
HAVE A

LEAVE SOME

=t •

1 NT
2
3 NT

n......

LAVN£'8 FURNITURE
Complolo homo · ~
ttour11: llou Ill. N. ~
03:12, I ... Ill . . Ad.
F- Dollvoly• .
PICKINIII'URNITURI
NowAJaod
..... llllold ~ 11:11 ml.
Jonlalto Rd. Pl. PI 1 nt, WV,

old · wfth CPR troinl!lll

IDoklna for M1M0M to 1aki
... cit · In u hamo, IIWN-

'1111.

AI~

WlA do """"Cillnl!lll- :1114 1112
2227or - -

36

Real Estate
Wantecl '

.... -.-.

c
. . • • · · - .....
.... M. EJ:a•· .. cc..onilialllt"''

Re11ta ls

Opportunity
41 Houses for Rent

01110 VALLET PUBLISHING CO.
..lhot you do .......
wMh pooplo you k.-1 ond

NOTioooiid -ll!roulhlho

-

iWIIU you- ..._!plod

lhlollortnl-

Em ploytre11t Se1 ,, tCf'S

- _..
.,...,., __
.., ____ _

11

Help wanted

,oompuy.1a
... ... •••n
--..

rr..

53

AnUqu81

lonGt!\luoch'
"
moo, ....

1 lurrilw, llorlouolnq_u~ o:'.l

CI-,Fanl,~~

-·--=
-·-

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'a
111t Cl•wolt4 4 WD, Aok1nf:

Coli - 3 a 7 P.ll. I 4
.... 8121.110. ooqulnod 2861.
. . _ 7 11:11. ...... 101 11 o1t1 _.,, u-..
1112.

Prom .......

• liiHII, wllh ..

'

=r-4 -

im......

.

•

...

~~0:,\1::.
m;;:: 'r &gt;-..Ohio··

-.1
1•21to

lorl . . . .

A$1CtD ,AIDCIT •·
HI$ C.ONtPtfTE \ ..-•. fCONO.fllliC PLAN

-·
.._
~

...

NEW Colar C..log. 1100 • •

Pass

STUMPED?,

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1li.AT ,J"OCJc.S./~~~~
.

.

.

-•

THE ~lLI I~'T
TIIJQ" SPIC.Y!

•

baH&lt;! on '"""· oolor, nollglort,

sex ta.,...l stMut or nauonal

By Jefll'ey McQuain
The Scollish DELATE ( "dee·
LATE") informs against or accuses:
"The police sought witnesses to delate
the suspect." Relate this spelling key
for lhe verb: DELATE ends iike
RELATE.

.

- MORTYMEEKirEANDWINTHROP

ol1gln, or liP( lnlenllon to
make ll'lf M.Jch preference,
Kmlallon or dlacrlmlnallon. •

CA8H?l!

1Hie"RleiTlVE:

fvEBEEN

1HIHI&lt;INI!i"

\'ICRKINc;r
,1(1" IT FOR

5TUFFI5A

ANDTHie
a::lUNTR'T'fs
OFFICIAL..
BIRD te
eTI LL..11-IE
e.AL..D
eAel..e.

~'\Ret. , _

LOT OF
~-

A No, "severe all ties'; is a mistake.
SEVERE, pronounced "sub-VEER,• is
an adjective meaning "harsh" or "ex·
treme," as in "a severe punishment."
Without the final .E. the spelling
SEVER is pronounced "SEH·ver'': this
word is a verb meaning "to cut or separate." Sever all lies with the spelling
mistake or "severe an ties."

II'

2-

15M Sq. Ft, .ll .... .... 211

. living
2 -· ........ .......,
room,
raorn,lbdrm.,
wal~

ac,
,...._,..or, ......._,,.,

- . - · Iiiii,
llrwo,
Hoinl
Nol'f....... Roclna, 0H. 114-M..

2210.

4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

---a.

5 •._____________,._____

-For lola: . . _ ' Lot, In

1--------------~--~
2.
______________
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.

31 Hom11 tor Sill
In _ . , 11rttt oorpotod.

6~--------~------­

~.----~------------8._....,.....
_______________
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

10~----------11
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

12----------------13 •.__________________
14~
· -------------

15......,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ---Gallipolis I)aUy Tribune
446-2342
Pomeroy DaUy Sentinel
992-2156
Pt. Pleasant Resisler
675-1333

Lol, 0 ••I

m, ElillkL
HolM. 114 t41 1031. Rll'-'1

ldrig

ASTaO-GaAPB

1'140' trolor, 110011 for ilvolbonk
or MOIIIfl,llao, IM-llt2·2131.
Crown Clly, 114--mL

BERNICE

- . 1 \12 ...... :1-4 2 .., , .........
Ollllnt tDatlan, .. ..... 114MN021.

BEDEOSOL

-

.. bolh,

,..,. Aroa, Oak Dotvo,
litcll"l lldiOCWIIa 1112 ~~~~~
Corport. ac, ·o.. Hnl, '"" ,
........., Atcentty Aemadlltd
~· Prlco: $64,1100, 114-

-·1-

32 Mobllt Hom11
tor Sale

.........,,_
1112.17 ,_ -

lnaludlna elx

-11M Ill-. -1(170,
_ _ , .... 1104 up, oklrting

ln' tllo _ _ . . . .. . . .... do ..

!MI.you.,..., ••

-

· n-s a 1

·~'"''eel M ........

- - - . a ""
IMj you -- got
'I - · - · .......

.,..,~---·
AlliES c-ell :H-Aprilllll v..,·,. ., •

.WML

'

""""· $1100, 114-

Ast1o-Giapn Matchmaker instantly reveals
wtlidl ~ps are romantically perfect lor
yw. Moil S2 plus a long. self-addressed ..
sat.-a; etl'l\lelope to Matchmaker. clo'this
,,., 1"'1"''· P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.

OH 44T01-3428,
TAURUS (April• 20-Moy 20) Th ere a re

at.ll'lfJI4t ~i ties surrounding you at this
time. J&amp;t you might not appfeciate their
- . I n lacl. tltere·s a chance you may lei
- s i p pas1 you today.
.
c;t • (lily 21-.111111 20) Expand your
I!W9 at social cootacts . but don't ignore
did friemds IMI the process. Thft n~w crowd
""""' you link up willt migl\t lack you• bud·
Ms'~·quailbes.

CAIICER (Junt 2t..July 22) Don't take
anyt111119 lo• granted today. especially
.ttere yaun status and career are concerned. Situahons you feel you have
rnqtllio onyt!iing bulllial. ·
221 Guanl againsllncli·
ttaliions tDdlly to discuu yoUr intentions
- - . , . • ~ t1te outcome of your plans
- • afleocly a lait accompli. You'll be
&amp;htiiU I II tt IMtr if 1t)ey don't pan out.
-~a ·s ;tft~U~II'Y"" are
a . - dllenminaling bllyer .11ul today
- m a ;:ant impulses might oamand
iur ! diete !Jfattfication and impel y()u to
..... bum deals.

-liP

I.EO.....,:ZS.a••

·-llwtgi-.ol-·--......... -

c y d o - l 's -

ifll-.1 ~··- .....

·p.,;y- '

22 PinoChle
1lrl'll
'
23 Actor - -

GulnMM 25 Doplrlld ;
27 Arm bont28 llriAII to •
aullll

,.;

34Chlolt

'

341---·.
a._ o?iirot
37
3fl Clllkhn'taulllor Dr.41 -INti·
42 Cltrua lrult1

43AiiOwMCt '

tor ,wntt:!

.....
'*' .

441!ncow45 AdiiCUtt

~

47Complanl

1101 • ..., . . LllliJ

I.Ud&lt;
..
. . . .. T. .
don1111- ....... ,.... - fo llob1k lor
and J011'1 Jnd It The

•o••ce

•••

\

I

..

.I, I I. I 15 I
~·l

H I T

.

Granny
to
youngster,
"Peopf!l are always wishing for
L-...1.-.1..--l.l..-..1.. ...-J. ~ whattheyhaven'tgot."Young.--~~----"-. ster to granny, "Sure they are.
E M o O T s 'What else can one
---?"

I1

6

0

•m

I I

17_

I

0

Complele lhe chuckl.• quoted

by fllhng '" the m1ss1ng \lltOtds
1....-L-L....J...-l'-...&amp;....-' you develop from step No. 3 below.
.

_

_

_

~-

UBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl.
bility that both you and your mate might
make important decisions today that affect
the other without his or her knowl(3dge or
consent. This could create complications. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It is best not
to delegate crirical assignments today to
people who have been undependable in
the past Do things yourself ~ e11en if i1 Is
inconvenient to perform these ta sks on
yourown.
,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) There is
a very thin line ·today between w1shlul
thinking and healthy op timi'sm ,
Unfonunalely. it looks like you might have
1roub1e distinguisl1ing between lite two.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.,jon, 19) You could
be too sell·serving today when ~ comes to
advancing your personal ambitions, even
lltougll yay might say Ilia! you'll lake care
ot people whose toes you'll tread upon.
Cliancis are you won't
~QUARt\18 (Jon. 2«1-Feb. 19) You llave a
Cbse friend who is a very nice person, bu1
.he or she has a terrible time keep ing
secrets. ll's best not 10 lake your pal into
your cOnlioance loday,
PISCES (Feb; 20-Morcll 20) Conditions
are veiy ' illy" today wllere your oommeroial
affairs are concerned, so be careful in busiriess matters. Projects that look like winners could tum out to be losers..

,,

-....

..

•

Q. Is il all right to use "severe all
ties"' I've been seeing thai in print.

Rea l EsiJIC

Tum your clutter into caah,
SJdl it the eau way... by glwn.e,
no need to lea11e your home.
Place your cltusified ad today!
15 word. or le11, 3 day,
3 papers, 15.@ paid in advance.

2D DHignor -

211 Oraot-.ot
30 Dlminlltl..:

I

oj

.

3531 ext. code 100 • osc.,...-.

I

All roof Olllle odvort!Utg In
this newspaper ls Uljlct to
lho Fodera! Fair Holiolrtg Ad

Want to: ·
PIN clown EXTRA

1-~54

u-+-+-t

OUR LANGUAGE
1968 """"' 11111t01lllegol
to ll&lt;IY1011M ·onv proferenoo,
lmla.tlon or dlscrtmlnlllon

Call For Answert~ • Toucfl.tono. "'Rolwy - . . .

O

- BORNLOSER

tiUO. Coli todoy FREE

11117.

East

PaSs

••••

•

-Dire 1111~~l.olnpo,pilrn•lt•
Latlono,
: II&amp; .,...,
low •

THE .,.,.

ATE IT.'"

-~lolo-Unla,

-'a...U.,I14-

archllc "'

1S Willi
18 Without ttld

..

~ff'P£11T SAil&gt;

WOlFFT~IEDS

r- ....... .,..

1DIIelnt
'
11 lltw•cf: :

.....-

"' ''WtfEN

Good,-"'··-~
_ , LMt. · - v.nct.

DIDt 1 til ........ ~ ... blbr 14

5 Sound of
hoaillllon
611okH

DOWN

••ct-...

.... FRA.NKAND ERNEST

lluiok? No Woyllul We Hno A

AVOII I AI ..,_ I """"

.....y '
fiF-IIUJttanlllclor

W,'f.:orid

cisco. And a g'uide lo the city states
4fl JoJIUI
that when you gel tired of walking
around, you can always lean against it.
10 .........,
There are many world bridge coam-1
53 Artlftclat .,
pions living in lhe Bay Area. Most
.._..__,_
l11gu.....
them are extroverts. An exception
"
Lew Stansby, a quiet man. '"!';•ted;;:~~~~~~
•for his amiability than for n1
elegancl!. He has won three world
.
'"
ties (one pair and three learn).
'T M
T Y I A 8
M P F PI
ELAGXU
,.,
ije, played today's deal en route
winnong the 1989 Bermuda
,
RAI N
R W I 1:
TMWKTXE,
•
ceiving an assist from another
Area world champion, Kit Woolsey.
YLWUSPM,
OGPPM
FWYIAIWT
.,
Stansby's rebid of one nl)olrulnp I
.showed 15·17 points. Two clubs was an
AI
UWMAETGSE.'
E WI
artificial inquiry; two nl)otrump
invitational.
IWYLTIU
TIIPMHAIAGVL.
The defenders began with
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Juotloe Tlturgood Mllnlltall waa a giant In lhe.
rounds of spades. Declarer .
ques1 lor human rights and oquol opportunity," - Bill Clinton.
third round, cashed the
...
played a heart to dummy's king and
WOlD
nessed his club jack. West won with
the queen, cashed the spode nine
eJited with the diamond king. With
back against Telegraph Hilf, StaiiSby
Rearrange letters of tht
won with dummy's ace, fin~
four scrambled words below to form four simple word~.
heart jack and cashed the club ace.
When the 10 dropped, Stansby claimed
nine tricks: one spade, three hearts,
FROFET
•
one diamond and four clubs. ·
At the other table, Woolsey led the
killing diamond king. Deeiaret ducked
in dummy, so Woolsey switched to a
,
spade. Now declarer lost five tricks:
"'
ZIREP
three spades, a diamond and a club.

. . . . . t14 tt\-ODL

YENDING ROUTE: Clll Rlclt

... A1IOII Clllllt , • ??'?

~

Wimbledon
chtmplon

8 WM1 dltnli·

·'

" TODAY.

-~-W..WUiloTo

01= COURSE, HAVEN'T
GOTTEN OUT OF BED
't'ET, EITHER ..

~--..·

•&amp;WIN' ALLA.AII--

'
L

rttaa..

Thurman
2 Larg• tub

ever spent was a summer in Sari Fran-

~-r...=-t..-=
Hortlord
....
.... 1100.....·$'100.olllmoiiCI
Aloe Zl

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

8EUE'If

~-

.......
. O.....
liO
tii,OOO
,1112•1111

CIIIIun'tl a1dlng Aln. Club For

01111: BA5E6AL.L SEASON
STARTS TODA'f, AND WE
I-IA'fEN'T LOST YEL

I CA)/r

11,1100.11441Nm Aa. I P.ll.

W.niiCI To laoo, Buy On
Donolo Uoo Of 1·3 Acroo To Lo-

'

INOTICEI

1 Aclrllt

· San Francisco leaves indelible im·
pressions on· lhe. mirid: the Golden
Gate Bridge, lhe cable cars, Chinatown. Mark Twain is supposed to have
claimed that the coldest winter he

- ....
XL, ......
..........
,.,........,Ali

A-lno Ao!llll. Col 114-2415-

Bullneu

•
7 Ftllllle

By Phillip Alder

-AIIor'lP.II.

21

aullatanct

54 U~ruty child
55Pos-vo
pronoun
56 llakt ovtr
57 1875

Playing bridge
at the Golden Gate

Eaporlo- Ia Tho
11 eono.m Far Your Cllllcl'l
C... Cll Uo Far A Yla•• lntonl
IU 111 I:UJ. P,....
Waal re Jlchool &amp;g. I~
IZI4.

':f:', WoCo10,Do Comft

-Brown

52 Soawold

..

Cluollf -

Stop 11J SIIJ!.
olllo Lllwn
aMoUI DIZI.

Lucid

.If

pt.. ...,

-

Nort~

Opening l~ad : • 4

HEADACHE

40 Con. prov.
41 Formulolld
42 SouthwHI·
ern lndllna
44 Froid lrom
rutr.llnl
46Chooao
variety
48
51 BandloiCitr

Impure

Pass

1, .
2+
2 NT
Pass

38 Noun lallil
30 Retort

.32 Romon 51
33 DtriviCI from

Well

Pass
Pass
Pass ·
Pass

from chllr

Stato
9 Aatronout'a
terry
12 Hondlo
rouvhly
1a ::~non
14 Compoaa pt.
15 Interior

-c. ....
31 lloodow

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
N,

3&amp; Dtllodvo

porlumo
19 A11roo
21 ComP-alld
22 Ship • polo
24 IIH, otflcor
25· Btrnaloln, lor
lhort
26- Wohach
27 Typo ot coot
29 Author John

+n

__

. . &amp;.MLX.C.,

IYI

5 Mormon

IPICII

EAST
+AK 7
•Q98S3

TIWIZI.

34 Permit to
35 WHhlngton,

1 Port of tho

17 Cli'tmoniol

+72

anillon--f100.104o

:.:;:;;:::.:;:=._ _ _ _ 11

NEA Crossword Puzde

BRIDGE

..... Cell#' . . . . . . . . .

with h24 . _ . . , lllodi":P:I
........ CA, lulf oqul
........ llildMplnnlng, 2 ..

=.,rr•n 1ub, extr••·

The Dally

Ohio

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
J •.,
Papacy • Motif • Crest • Hearth • REPEAT
1have two neighbors who are very fl?SY. overheard
one gossip say to the other, "You cant belteve everything you hear but you sure can REPEAT ~."

!

••

....

�•

•

Tuesday, March 23, 1993

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

..

Future husband continues
to taJk about his past wives
Dear Ann Laden: The man ·
whom I am now going with and who
has proposed marriage talks
constantly about his former wives.
. His fJist wife died 31 years ago,
and. he is still puddling up and
dabbing his eyes when he speaks of
her. He has told me, with incn:dible
venom, how his second wife~
on him, publicly ridiculed him and
· ran off and married IIIIOiher man !IDe hairpins, braces, surgical pins, metal
month before they were legally shoe lips, underwire bras, ell:. k is
divorced. He also let me know thai not reasonable after one's pocktu
she was a tariblc cook, a sloppy have been empdcd to ask people to
housekeepcl' and the world's wont disrobe or undo their hairstyles.
driver. I have heard ad nauseam
1 am an executive who travels
about this same woman's incompa- frequently, often overseas. All
rable.beaUty, her dancing ability and security Sllllions have hand !C81111Cn.
her size 34DD bras.
.
Too 'oflen, while traveling in the
I find it diff'ICult to compete with staleS; I have encountered IICCurity
a cinonized ghcst'and a."gorgeous guardS who are too lazy to use the
creat~· (his words). I've told him sc8nner s.&gt; they keep sending people
repeatedly that his commerus make back through the deleciors again and
me uncomfortable, but.he invariably again. Nowhere else in the world
retwns to the subject of these two docs this happen. The hand ·
women. Should I bail ollt now or• SC8IIIIClS are used routinely overseas, •
keep waiting · for him to start even in high security lirpons. ..
appreciating me? -- ONLY A 36C
Hand scanners solve the problem
IN MINNEAPOLIS
nicely. That's why they were
· DEAR 36C: A man who insisiS invented. Please deal with this in
on l his line of patter during your column... FORTUNE SOO
courtship will not change his EXECUTIVE IN ROCHESTER,
tune after marriage. Unless you are N.Y.
prepared to hear a.bout these
DEAR FORTUNE 500: Your
two women for the rest of your letter is sure to caleb the .eye of
natural life, my advice is to bail out airline executives l)lho are struggling
now.
in a highly competitive field. After
.Dear Ann Landers: You recently price, the major factors that
printed a .letter about airport metal influence ~sengers to choose one
deteclors. The wriw complained thal airline over another are food and
soine people, just to be service. You can be 'sure the
difficult, take oiT one metal item at employees who are too lazy to .use
a lime, whicb Rlquires them to go. the IIC8IIIICII will hear about this.
throu&amp;h the delcctors over and over, Thanks for writing.
boJdinl up odler pusengers.
It is amazing what will trigger
When pllllllling a wedding, wlto
these delcctors- rivets in blue jeans, pays for wlt(Jl? Who SfQIIds wltere?

Ann
Landers

.

II

.

LOTTERY WINNERS • Former railroadtrack maintenance worker living on disability,
James Russell, 52, is surrounded by ramily Mon·
· day afternoon in his Jobasto:wn, Pa., home. RusseU says be bas one ot three winning tickets tor

an $86 million Florida Lotto jackpot. Jlro!D left
to right Is wife, Bobbie, gral!ddaugbter, Julian·
JIB, 3, her brother, Bel!, l, daughter, Jamie Mer.
riman, James Rjlssell, and daughter-in-law,
.
Judy RusseU. (AI'"photo)

---'-'-Names in the news---"!"'""
NEW YORK (AP) - Ivan
Boeslr.y is now a dirorced man.
Whether the former mullimillioniire ':"ill win his fight for alimony
remams to be seen.
·
: . A judge granted the divorce
Monday to Sepma Bo~s"'y on ·
grounds of "cruel and mhuman ·
treatment," said a court source,
on condition of aoonymi-

rmg

A hearing on finances was
scheduled for Aprill6. Malrimonial cases are sealed from public disclosure in New York stale.
Mrs. Boesky, with a multimillion-doUar {ortune of her own, flied

for divorce in 1991. In 1992,
Boesky sued her, lieeting $20,000
a week in temporary support. He
·said he was barely geaing by while
his wife of 3Q years ~~ $42,000
a month.
" She is seeking nothing from
him fmancially," the source said.
"'The money she has is money she
inherited." .
The Boeskys . own a Park
Avenue penlhouse 11p111 tmeru and a
colonial mansion ouiSide the city.
They have three adult cbildrell.
The fonner Wall Street player
pleaded guilty to insider trading in
1986 and agreed to pay a $100 mil- ·

lion penalty. He served nearly two
years in prison.

-LOS ANGELES (AP)

~ "Back
to the FuiUie" sw Lea Thompson
lOQI!: a two-year bre!lk from making
movies to raise her daughter. And
now she's back with a role that
really tested her maternal instincts.
The 30-year-old acuess plays
the harried mom in the big-screen
version of "Dennis the Menace,"
directed by John Hughes. It is due
in tbealers this swnmer.
"I just couldn't take an ad out
in the trades &amp;nd say: 'I'm back!'"
she said.
·

Ohio Lottery.

.Probe
._boating
accident

Pick 3:
362
Pick 4:
9553
BuckeyeS:
1-3-8-36-37

Page 4

7he AM Landers Glli« for Bridu"
liDs all the fJII.fMiers. Sertd a t;t/f-od·
(insud,long, busbtul-lix llflltlope

altd a check or lfiDIWY order for
$3.65 (this i~~eludes postage artd
hlllldlillg) to: Brides, c/o AM Lalt· ·
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Cltkago, 111.
60611-0562 . (In Ci:utada, send
$4.45.)

During two five-week summer .
sessions, Ohio University offers a
wide variety·of undelgraduate and
graduate courses at lhe main cam·
pus in Athens and at the five
regional campuses in Chillicothe,
Ironton, Lancaster, Zanesville, and
Bel010nt County.
In addition, the.university offers
more !hlVI 100 workshops, special
programs arid seminars.
•. .
After the day's studies are' over,. .
the nearby slate parks in southeast·'
em Ohio provide many opportUni·
lies for recreation. On campus, the·
ater perfonnances, concerti, films,
lectures and intramural l)lOrtl programs highli$hl afternoon and
evening enterl!llllmenL
~ummer sessions bulletin ~d
schedule of classes is now avatl·
able, which include the listing of
summer class offerinfs at the
Athens campus as wei the five
regional campuses, along with tl\e ·
wor~hops, special programs, and
extmc'urricular everus to be offered
this summer.
For more information and lO· ·
receive a free copy ol the summer
sessions bulletin and schedule of
classes, call (614) S93-2583 in
Athens, toll-free in Ohio 1-800336-5699, or write to Office of
Summer Sessions, 310 Cutler Hall,
Athens; 45701.

Vol. 43, No. 229

Copyrighted 1993

.. ..... .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, March 24, 1993

PRESENTED PLAQUES • Recognized ror
serving 111 buglers ror l'unerals and patriotic services were Stephanie Price, rour years, center,
and Mltbelle Young, three years. They were

presenttd plaquq by Chaplain Jame~ GUmore
at Tueaday night's celebration by Drew Webster
Post 39 or tbe 74th birthday or the American
~on held at the Senior Citizens Center, '

Legion .
observes 74th
•
anniversary

'

•

I

LEGIONNAIRE OF TilE YEAR • Commander John Weeks,
tert, was named Leglonaalre ot the Year ai the 74th birthday
observance ot IU Amerlcaa Legion, Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday aigbl. He waa presented a trophy by Joe Struble.

Senate rejects GOP effort
.
to kill Social Security tax
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate today rejected a Republican
efforno kill President Clinton's
proposed tax incre11se on many
Social Security recipients, as
Democrats rebuffed the stiffest
challenge yet to the president's
economic plan. •
·
The Senate voted 52-47, .mosUy
along party lines, to tum aside the
GOP amendment, which was
aimed at the most politically sensitive piece of Clinton's five -year
defictt-reduclion pa~;kage.
With Vice President AI Gore
sittin$ in the Senate president's
chair m case his tie-breaking vote
was needed, Democrats derided the
Republican ~sal as a shol that
was really Blmed at brealdng Clinton's economic recovery plans
apart.

I

"Our colleagues are now making an effort to derail President
Clinton's momentum," said Senate
Majority Leader Georgo Mitchell,
D-Maine. "Do we want to aivc
President Clinton a chance, or do
we want to torpe&lt;1o PreSident Clin-

,

STORE HOUR~ ....

,.
•

WE

)IBCQge. .

'

Now, individual Soeial Security
recipients pay tuea on up to half of
their Soeial Security benefiiS once
their income exceeds $25,000 for
an individUII or $32,000 for a couple. The president would raise, to
8S percent the portion of benefits
subJect to .the it¥:ome tax, the same
as for private pensions.

EMS responds to call for assistance

291 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY, OH.
R.HT TO LIMIT

"Let's not be fooled by this,"
the measure's sponsor, Sen. Trent
Lou, R-Miss., said of his opponents. "You are, voting for a Social
Security tax increase on the elderly
middle class and low-income
Social Security rccipieniS. That's
wrong...
Clinton's Social SecuritY. ta~
proposal would raise,$32 btllion
over five years, maldng it one of
the biggest revenue raisers in his

Chester Townabjp 'I'rulleca wiD hold alpCCial moetlna Friday at
9 a.m. at the Chesw Town Hall · .

IAM~lOPM

/

means.

Trustees to hold special meeting

·Monday tin ~1nday

One Triple Vendor Coupon Per Customer ·

rogram

ton. s
before it gelS under
way?'
. ·
But Republicans said they were
trying to kill a tax that is unfairly
aimed at people of only modest

-----Local briefs----

.

TRIPLE VENDOR• '
COUPON
Good Wednesday, March 24, 1993 Only

2 Sectlone, 12 Pa~• Z5 oenta
A loluiUmedla Ina. -paper

Meigs Local B·o ard
hires personnel; ,study
results are announced

PRICES GO.OD WEDNESDAY, MARCH· 24th, 1993 ONLY!

'

near 60.

Courses offered

.

POWEU'S SUPER VALU

Low tonight near 40. Partly
cloudy. Tbunday, cloudy, hlp

•

PO ELL'S MARCH . MADNESS SALE

WE WILL REDEEM UP
TO 5 VENDOR
COUPONS (Max. SOC
Value • No.Cigarette
Coupons) With The
TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPON AT RIGHT.
(You must bring the
Triple Vendor Coupon
Below•• One coupon
. · per family.)

I

.~

Unlll of the Melp County J!merpncy Mcdlcal Service responded "to Pomeroy Nuninl llld RcblbWjlllon Cearer Tueaday II 9:26
a.m. for Donna Morri10n who- DllliljXll1ed to V~ Memori81 Holpital.
•

'

!

certified and non-certified
teachers llflll other personnel were
. hited and April 9 (Good Friday)
was designaled as a makeup day .
for the district when .the Meigs
' Local Board of Education met in
' ~gular session Tuesday night at
tlie board office.
Hired as substitute teachers
~ere Theresa Lieving King, elementary teacher, and Mila ,Raymond, cosmetolog~ teacher. The
board also entered m a purchased
services agreement with Shirley
Van Meter to tutor a handicapped
student at $11.72 per hour not to
exceed five hours per week.
Kevin Musser was hired as
assistant junior high track coach for
this spring's program pending certificuion in CPR and sports
medicine, and Steven Cotterill was ·
employed a sobstitute mechanic
for the remainder or the school
year. The resi11nation of Diane
~wley as a substitqte cook was

as

accepted.

ir.lere accepted for next year at the higher education. Superintendant
high school . They are Danijela James Carpenter reported that the
Kmoija, and Wielllr.e Muhlhoff.
resolution comes foflowinJ a study
The board passed a resolution by Shawnee Slate of 20 districlll in
designating Feb. 16, 23 and 26 and I 0 counties ill Southeastern Ohio .
March 4 and IS as calamity days · where as many as 80 percent of the
and set Good Friday as a makeup students indicated they would like
day for one of the days missed but · to go on to higher education, but
not covered within the live aJ1otled
where Jess than 30 percent 11:tua11y
days.
do . .The resolutions are being
Approval was given for a Meigs secured so thai Shawnee State can
High student to D'lvel 10 San Anto- ~t ~m to officials for appronlo, Teus for competition in the . pnatt acuon.
·
Business Professionals of America
Several appropriation changes
Contest. It was reponed that the were made at the request of the
student won state competition qual- Treasurer Jane Fry. Prayer 10 &lt;!~Jen
ifying her for the national contest.
the meeting was given by the Rev.
School board meeting dates for · Glen McClung, Pomeroy Nazarene
April were cbanged. The next Church.
·
.
meeting will be held on April 6 at
In executive session, the board
Harrisonville, and a meeting on - upheld a Salisbury student suspenApri) 20 wm be beld in the Central sion. A seoond executive session
office.
was held to discuss personnel and
The board adopted a resolution to meet with another ji!ODP to disindicating thai appropriate actions cuss school propeny d•sposilion .
and propn.s bo tabn by the disAttending were Lany Rupe,
trict to mcrease the p~on ol president, Randy Humphreys,
district studen~ participating in Roger Abbou, John Hood, and
Robett Barton.

Two foreign e~change studeniS
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
John Weeks, com m11nder of
Drew Webster Post 39, Amerij:an
Legion ~_received the Legionnaire •,
of th~Y·ear il')'atd at lh• post's
observance of the 74th (!irthday of
the American Legion Tuesday
night.
Long-time legionnaire Joe Stru·
ble made the surprise presentation
to Weeks who has served as the
post commander for the past three
years before more than a hundred
legionnaires and their guests
attending the dinner at the Senior
· Citizens Center.
Struble commended Wee~ for
his leadership and enthusiasm, for
his dedicallon and inspiration '
which has led to increased mem·
bership and participation in jJost
activities.
Weeks, a native Meigs County
returned to Pomeroy following his
· retirement and immediately
became active in the local Pomeroy
post A World Warn veteran, he
has been a member of the Ainerican Legion siQ!:C I 948.
Meiga County Virtues
'
The vinuea of Meigs County as
DEMONSTRATING CALLS- Meigs aod
uraed novice aad se111oned turkey bunters to
a retirement centez weze dilcussed
attend a l'ree seminar to be lleld Saturday after.
Gallia County Game Prote~fors Keith Wood
by the Rev. Roland WUdman, pasand Jim Splete, from trout to rear respeetively,
noon at the Forked Run Sportsma's Club. For ·
tor of Trinity Church, speaker.
demonstrated 1 variety of turkey calls at The
more lnrormatioa, see related story. (Sentinel
"The potential is here for a
DaUy Seotloel omce Monday afternQOa. Wood
pboto by Jim Freeman)
reti(ement mecca and what we
need to do is catch the vision," said
Wildman. He described Meigs
County as the "prime site east of
the Mississippi" and prec!icted an
influx of. retirees bec•nse"we have
everything here that they want".
"We have the fmest, friendliest
people here of anywhere." Wildman said. He suggested getting rid
of abandoned property, mentioning
the improvement at the old MOM
Farm City site, and the need for
By JIM FREEMAN
ceming turlcey hURling.
. by actually mimicking one of the
more shops and restaurants.
Sentinel News .Stall'
Huntini hours are 1/2 hour birds through the use of a turkey
He talked about the proposed
In abOut a month, the hills of before sunnse to noon, Wood said. call. Unfortunately; the huntez may
revitalization of Pomeroy and Mid· southeastern Ohio will be alive, not Hunters are allo~ to use a shot· . htre anothr; hunter at the same
dleport, and imJXOvemeniS in liaht- with the sound ·or music, but with gun, a muzzleloadmg shotgun, a . time.
ing which are to be made in the 101111d of putts, p11111 and clucks crossbow or a longbow. Rilles may
Wood said 99 percent of all
Pomeroy this year. He also said as hunten take to the fteld, anni:d not be ~.
.
turkey hunting accidents involve
that plans are being made for · with shotguns, calls and camouHunten are permtu.ed to kiU one victims being mistaken for game
assisted living facilities, mention· flaRe, in search of wild turkeys.
- beanJ:ed turltey J?ef season. Howev- generally by other hunters noi
ing om: which he said is to be
J:rom 1966, when 321 hunters er~ wtth possesst?D of a bonus per· obeying game laws.
located in or near Syracuse and participating in Ohio's flist turltey mtt1 a seco~d btrd may be taken
The key thing to remember,
another at Overbrook in Middle- season killed 12 binls,lhe sport has dunng lh_e third week of the season, Wood cautioned, is that hunters can
port.
grown in popularity while the Wood said.
only shoot a bearded turkey A
He also reponed thai a market· tlllkey population continues to rise,
Like deer, turkeys must be hunter should flrSl identify his iar.
ina study is underw1y now on 1 which is music to many hunters tagg~ .where they fall :With a tag get as a turkey, see that it h\s a
multi-million doUar assisted livina ears.
contammathe dale and tune killed, beard and consider what is behind
facility in Meigs County.
In 1992, turkey hunting was tbe bunter's name and address. the wget before shooting, WOOd
While the markets are not close allowed in 38 of Ohio's 88 counties Dead turkeys muat be taken to said.
by, while ainsponation is IICt ade· and 5,678 birds wero klllod. Baum's LUmber in Cbollar, Meigs
Keep your eyes and ears open
quate, while there are limited Hunter• in Meigs County killed Conntfa IUIJr;ey cbec:ldna alation, for other hunters, WOOCI said, and
resoUn:ea. while the labor supply il 283 turkeys matins tho county f&lt;!r inspeelion by 2 p.m. on the clay identify yourself if you see another
mostly unskilled and while good founh in the state behind Vinton, · ldUed, W~ 1114
·,
huntez.
t1al building liiOI are hard to lind, Hocking llld Oallll countiea while
In addiJion, Wood1~ It Ia illeWood labeled calling, moveWildman said thoao need not deter Atherui County. 10 lbo nonh, came gal to slloot alllrltey 11111 ola 1ree or ment and contrasting color as tho
the area from growina . Ho aid in fifth.
to hunt over I ballail-.
three elements ~ommon in most
similar communities have devel·
For hunlcrl suffilinJ withdraw· ·
s.ret,
turltey huntina accidents.
oped local ikllb coneenli'IIID&amp; on al after the fall bununs season , . ~lth~&amp;b IUrkay
Wood ursed hunters to •void .
one thinl! and have exocri~nced Ohio's spring tudtey lle8SOil offers hunlill&amp; m
Ia
waaring red, white, blue or blilclt
great prosperity.
·
an enjoyable divenion, If a few safe. ~
- colors associated with wild
"We have a quiet locatloll, It's hunlina laws all.d l&amp;fety rules are ctlltiOD,- ::' 1II
turkeys.
avoid small patches
sate to walk the streets at nlsht. obeervcd.
calla
of
llld.
.
you 'can feel safe in your honle, a
Han11D1 Jaws .
tbrough the
fine climate, sood medical care,
Meiaa Couaty. Oame Protector
and a low coat of llvingt Wildman Keltli Wood outlined some of clad fully
Continued on paae 3
Ohio's role and reaulations con· lure a turkey

Talking /Jlrkey•••

Meigs hunters prepare
for wild turkey action

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