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"'

Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April 19, 1993

Does Congress need 20~000 staffers?

JOINT EXERCISE • Alaska 'Air National
guard and Air Force personnel load one or the
two HH-'OG Blackhawk Helicopters to be used
in a ~oint search and rescue exercise with the
Russ~an military aboard a Air Mobility Com·
mand c,s Galaxy eargo jet Sunday at Elemen-

WASHINGTON (AP) - For/
mer Rep. Charles E. Bennettbeglllt
his House career in 1949 wilh two
lypists and an assislli!IL He retired
last year with a slaff of 15, and
many lawmakers now wonder
whether Congress is overslaffed.
. Bennett; a Florida Democrat
who's now a professor of government, said constituents didn't get
, less service in 1949, but "they got
less political massaging."
Neither he nor anyone else..is
suggesting the slaff shrink 10 1940s
levels.
But budget-cuuing fever has
broken out in Congress, and pink:
slips already have been handed out
·, in an inslitution lhat produced
fewer pieces of legislation as its
slaff grew.
The brunt of the layoffS has fall·
en so far on four special House
committees thai went out of business Maich 31, eliminating 65 slaff
positions. The Senate has begun
making a 10 percent cut in its
1,000-plus committee slaff, mainly
by attrition.
But powerful forces are coalescing 10 demand more extensive cuts
among Congress' 20,000 slaffers, a
figure that swells to 37,900 when
legislative branch agencies such as
the Library of Congress are count·
ed.
Sen. David Boren, D-Oida., has
proposed a 25 pen:enl slaff cut for
Congress, including trimming committees and subcommittees from

dorr Air Force Base, Anchorage. Personnel from
the Air force, Air National Guard and the Canadian Air Force will join Russian mililary personnel to conduct a first time joint search and
rescue exercise on an island 225 miles north or
Tiksi in tlie Artie Ocean. (AP)

lion of CQ0&amp;RSS. wltidl is hMit'C

hearin~oa•I•"Ci''CCU'Ci" ssi++wl

!CaliiiiiiCIIdldtis&amp;D..
'"There's &amp;oia&amp; .IO lie resjslance" from somela-ab1's,
Borea said ill u illlieniew. Ba1
he·s reilly 10 " ' al direcdy 10 a
public dill lias e&amp;pi 11 cII i1s disCODitDl wilh

Indians

10 agencies that fall under
CoagJess' budget and control.
Tbese include 1he General
Ac:c:ounting Office; the Govern·
maJtl'rillliDgotfi(:e, the Library of
Coap:ssandlheBocanicGardens.
Tbe prdens have only,a tenuoos liDt 10 Congress' operations:
They supply up 10 six plants for
eac• sena1or's office and grow
Jllllaial for the handsomely land·
S«"ied CapiiOI grounds. .
·
Bemeu, 82, recalled that in the
old days he would mail one form
·licua-10 a conStituent 10 acknowl·
edge an inquiry and .a second 10 an
agency that could solve the prob-

operltiOilS llld piau 10 mate its

Owagm ia poll after

poll.

Batnett's ~ saffn• mliCts in
1949 were typical for • Ho•se
member tlaL 1bi: IS
last year lqlfi 11 nted dln:c UDder
.the·~
,
A ,..,.,.....lypi&amp;:ally had m Slaff
members ill lhe laic 1940s bot
employs• --.geof41 &amp;Jday.
Despite diose increases, · a
Congress that illttoduced 26..460
bills and eaacted 1,002 .laws in

lie.......,_

laD.

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)The Air Force is headed for
Siberia, not on a spy ·mission or a
.
bombing run, but to lake part m
what's being called the first mili. tary exercise involving U.S. forces
on Russian soil.
The tw.o countries will team up
' for a mock searc h-and·
this we..,k
rescue operation on a remote Russian island in the Arctic Ocean.
The Americans hope to learn
more about cold-weather opera·

tions from the Russians, who in President Clin10n 10 show support
tum will get a glimpse at in-flight · for embattled Russian President
refueling procedures and the more Boris Yeltsin.
.. We hope It
· w1'll be use f ul m
·
advanced American aircraft
"We all find (the cooperation) creating pohtical slability, which is
very dramatic," said Brig. Gen . in all of oor best interests," said Lt.
Kenneth Taylor Jr., commander of Gen. Joseph RalsiOn, commander
the Alaska Air National Guard. of the 11th Air Force at Elmendorf
"They had been the enemy 'oor so A'tr Force Base m
. Anchorage.
long."
· After months of planning, the
Aside from the practical bene- mission had been she! ved for
fits, American mililary planners money reasons. It was revived s~
say the operation also is a 111ay for wee'ks ago after Yeltsin found him·
1 'th
se If Ioc ked 10 a power SUU$g e WI
the ,conservative leadership of the
Russian parliamenl:
Ralston, who was leaving early
IOda
'th three d
Air N ·
y WI
ozen
auonal Guardsmen and Air Force per·
sonnet for the five-day exercise,
also will be meeting with several
.high-ranking Russian officers.
"ll's important 10 eslablish that
has suggestions for the reunion we can communicate with the Rusactivities or would like 10 take part ·
rsonaJ bas"
b ild
stansona·pe
tSIO u a
in the planning sessions is cordially level Of DUst," he said. '
inv.ited to contact a committee
Thursday's simulated ai.rplane
member to get logged in.
crash is being Slaged out of the mil.
itary base at Tiksi, at the mouth of
You know I keep telling you it. the Lena River on the northern
is a small world.
· . Siberian coast.
You might remember recently
Four helicopters- two Russian
one of the Beat of the Bend and two HH-60G Blackhawks from
columns carried a poem sent by the Alaska Air National Guard's
Evelyn Fick Young, former resi- 210th Air Rescue Squadron- will
dent The poem dealt with the plea- fly 225 miles north to the crash
sures of living in asmall town.
site. Rescue . personnel will
A friend of Evelyn's from some parachute in 10 lend the ~·victims"
4 S years ago in Pomeroy read .the and prepare them for evacuation to
column and picked up on Evelyn's T"·-1·. · ·
·
name. They had not seen each . ""'
• Lessons learned may also have
other for aU those long years so she commercial benefits, given. increasle I~p h o~e d .E.ve Iyn ~ ho now ing air traffic over the North Pole
re_s,des •.n Stdney, Ohto, and a and efforts .to increase shipping
fr:endshrp from way .back was from the Pacific Rim to Europe
ren.ewed. I belie~e the friend through the Northern Sea Route.
"The Ru, ssians are the premier
rest des m the Gahon area these
da S as I recall
Y•
•
cold-weather operations people in
the world," said Air Force Lt. CoL
As I' ve men t'toned be'•ore 1 have Mike Callahan, mission commandifficulty dealing with today's
..
ld f ... al, I'
h
der.
wor 0 mnr ~ :. m some ow
''For example, in Tiksi, there
turned off by the mr.uals !Jemg ust;ct . are no hangars on the llightline _
to refer to the Umversny of Rto they do their maintenance outdoors
Grande these days They are
.,
..
. · .
on the runway, even when it's
URG
·
Sounds
hke
a
nOl.se
f~om
minus-40.
they do it with·
an upset siOmach or hke II might out
freezingHow
theirdohands?"
refer 10 a creature from outer space.
Whatever..: ..do keep smiling.
,,

Beat of the Bend....
by Bob Hoeflich
Wonderful how a number of
alumni a,ssociations ip Meigs
County have ~ranched into awanl~
ing scholarships each spring, kind
of a spinoff as a part of the annual
reunions of the groups. .
The Pomeroy High School
Alumni Associauon is among the
grouJ?S and again this spring will be
offenng scholarships. They are the
Bob RobertS Scholarships which
are offered to a child or a grandchild of a Pomeroy High grad and
the Charles S. Gibbs Scholarship
offered 10 a Pomeroy resident who
is graduating and will be attending
the University of Rio Grande or
Ohio University majoring in education. Deadline for$&gt;llpplications is
May 15 and apphcatiens can be
secured from the Pomeroy AI umni
Association, P.O. Box 202,
Pomeroy.
The Pomeroy Association's
amiual banquet and dance will be
held at the Meigs High School
Cafeleria on May 29th and alumni
wishing 10 order tickets by mail are
to send a slamped self-addressed
envelope with the graduation year ·
and maiden name, if applicable.
Requests again go to the association at the above address. Price is
$12 a person. Local alumni can
now secure tickets at Francis
Aorist or the Swisher-Lohsc Pharmacy.
The 'Gary Stewart Orchestra,
popular is our area, will be providing music for the dance following
the banquet. Admission for persons
wishing just to attend the · dance
after the banquet is $5 a person.
Several prizes, among·them a 19inch color television, will be given
away during lhe dance.

wag~ ~·····•we.,~

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24 children
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new address for a member of the
class please conlact a committee .
member. •·
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On the af1emoon of the whole ·. i.
school reunion lhtre will be a spe- , 1
cia! gel'together tor class !'lem)lers
from2to4p.ni.attheMiddl!-'pon . . i

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Arts Coull(:il
building The
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AND IHlENEIT II '

FEE IIMPLE, EXCIIJIIIIG
UMITATION OF ACCESS,
IN 1HE FOLLOWING
DESC~IBED PROPERTY
Bains In t h e - olthe
rolld on lise oouth ... of
100 _,. Loi
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COUNTY Of MIR:.IHO
"llll IS AN UIWOIBI
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Death In Waco
Only a 'ow sui'Vived the dwastatiog liut Monc!Q,y that endod a 51 ·dar st..-ando ll nl tho Brun ch

Davtchn cotrfiOUnd oulalde waco, Te~eas . Tnere were believed to be at least 17 chikkcn undor
10 among t. gs foltowen holed up with Oavld Koresh, who claimed to be Jesus Christ

a~

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Sund8y, Fob. 18

Mond•Y. AprH 19

•About100 eu-.·u of Alcohol,
TOO.cc:o and
move

l ;fU •.m.: FBIIQ4Ifl15 mel by httvy gun lire as atmore&lt;J ~t&amp;hiele
~to purv::ll tioiM In waU1 thef1 pump 'nonp~rolechnic' 1esr
gas- dM!ver.ct bW lptll~ nolin e1pl~sive deviee- lnlo tW,111dings.

WACO, Texas (AP)- The FBI
had hoped the "motherly instinct"
among David Koresh's disciples
would take over as the walls came
tumbling down. Instead, his follows
ers apparently spread lantern fuel
from roomiO room and loOk nearly
everyone 10 their death in a ghastly
inferno that fulfilled his apocalyptic vision.
. Koresh and as many as 85 others - including 24 ,children were thought 10 have perished in
MondAy's blaze, which broke ou1
after FBI agents used armored
vehicles 10 batter holes in the compound walls and pump in tear gas
in an attempt 10 drive the cultists
out 51 days 1010 the siege.
"I can'l iell you the shock and
the horror thai all of us felt when
we saw those flames coming out."
FBI spokesman Bob Ricks said.
"We though!, 'Oh my God, they
are IeiDing themselves."'
Ricks said there was speculation
}VIEWING CLEANUP - Pomeroy VIllage
Young, MaJor Brualteed, Clerk Kathy Hyaell,
that
cult members injected the chi!·
legal c0111111el Patrlc:k O'Brien and council litem,
Council viewed cleanup e"oril at the old
dren
with same lcind of poison 10
ben Jobn ·Biaeltnlr and Seolt Dilloa. (Sentlael
POtberoy Junior lflah bltildlnl Moadaynlaht as
easi
the
terror and pain of the end.
part or Its replar meeliDg. Present were, from
photo by Jim Ft eeman)
At
least
nine cull members sur·
left: eouadl memben Tbomas Werry and .Bill.
vi ved, but aulh.orilies said they
wouldn'l know the preeise death
toll until they could search an
underground maze of passages.
The search was expccled to start
IOday, after the ruins cooled down.
One SW'Vivor told a11thorities
that as he fled, he could hear peo·
pie inside sa~, "The fire's been
12:1Sp.m.: Fl•met
. '
and lll'lOkl seen in.
discuss the landslide behind iJie account al the highesl available . lit, the fire s 'been lit," Justice
~ndow1iuttabova
tt-.- I'Niin enlfance
Deparunent spokesman Carl Stem
Meigs Counly Museum onBuller· interest~.
Fit-a 'II'Nd QUickly
silid.
.
due mhiGh windL
In other action, council:
Pomeroy Village Council mem- nut Avenue.
J~b l:lept~rtment
A
man
found
in
a
bunker
on
the
O'Brien
said
he
is
awaiting
a
-Mel
with
O'Brien
in
an
execbers toured the old Pomeroy Junior
· CIMI mtn1Mtt1 M l
tt.lire.
High building Monday night to report from Triplett Engineering, utive session 10 discuss legal mat- grounds IOld authorities the cultists
spread lantern fuel throughout the
examine cleanup efforts a1 the old bul added that he feels the cily ~ ters.
no
liabilily
as
far
as
the
slip
is
con-:Discussed
initiating
a
good
wooden complex, dubbed Ranch
schoolhouse.
·
Apocalypse
by cull members,
" cilizenship award. Mayor Bruce
The tour was held before a regu- cemed.
In
addition,
council
members
Reed
explained:that
council
may
before setting fires in several
lar meeting of the village coyncil.
As· part of the cleanup, workers expressed con~ over two large grant the award on il monthly basis. places at once.
FBI snipers positioned outside
- Discussed enforcement of the
have been scraping old paint, from potholes in the village.
Village Administrator Jolin village ioilering law. Council mem- reported seeing a man in a gas .
lhe walls and replacing broken
windows. -sections of the 63·year' Anderson said the large pothole !HI bers nOted that people are loitering mask and black uniform throw L~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~,;~~!'!~~~~
something inside, followed by a
old building, ;:ecendy purchased by West Main Sired near tho Middle· on sidewalks in front of bars.
pon
corporation
line
is
"the
respop·
·
Pondered
the
feasibility
Continued on page 3
· the village,,are already being used
sibilily
of
the
contractorM
who
requiring
a
$10
janiiOrial
fee
for
for SIOI'IIIC.
Couneil members, several who recently inslalled lhe new water use of the village audiiOrium pend·
ing a meeting with legal counsel.
a11ended the junior high school, line there.
Anderson
silid
the
village
has
- Discussed repairing flower
seemCd impressed with the suucbeen
putting
limestone
in
the
hole,
boxes
damaged during the March . WACO, Texas (AP)- Some Ko~_CSh ~d as man_y as 85 others - I just can't comprehend it," she
. ture •s solid construction. Council
b111
permanenl
repairs
must
wait
blizzard.
Member Bill Young Qplained the
.
, - Complained people parking people were lilled with anger· oth· - tncluding 24 children - were Slid.
building's concre.te walls and until a lealdng tempotary valve is
ers
with
anJUish.
Still
othe~
said
th~gh~
10
have
~shed.
.
Other
relatives
w~
angry and
. ·
(
junk cars on village slreels and they were sunply numb a1 the real·
floors, covered with hardwood replaced.
I
Just·
don
I
know
what
th1s
hoped
God
would
pumsh
the FBI
.Anderson said he wants to use (larlcing cars the wrong direction or
strips, make the building highly ftre
izalion
that
loved
ones
had
perDavid
Koresh
has
done
to
this
agents
who
used
tear
gas
in an
concrete and hot mix 10 repair a in unauthorized locations. '
resistant.
.
ished at lhe Branch Davidian com· group of people," said '(Jail Magee effort to end a 51-day standoff with
- Noted. complaints that do~s pound.
When cleanup and renovalion . hole on Easl Main Slreet. He added
.
.
of_ Massac~usetts. Her si~~r: Lor- . the.~~ Davidians.
are completed, the building will be that he will contact the state garage have been running loose in the viiMany relatives sat horrified, rame. Sylvlll. and Ms. Sylvl8 s 1~. I believe that God has everyused for s10rage and other village in attempl 10 gel metal plates 10 !age. Dog ,ordinaD&lt;:es will be watching on lelevision, as fire, and 2-year-old daughlers were m thmg under control B!!d ~the will
·
functions. People working 10 pay cover the holes pending permanenl · enfcirced, council.said•. ·.. ·
take care of them, sa1d K~ren
·
· . Present were counc1l members ~tly set by the cult members the.~ompo!ffid. ·
off fines are being used for .the repair.
lliemselves,
consumed
the
coin·
.
To
~ink
~at.
they
,
coul~
slay
Doyle!
2~. whose father and SISiet
Also, council approved a motion Jollil Blaetlnal1 SC:ou Dillon, Be~y
cleanup.
·
·
pound
Monday.
Cult
leader
David
m
a
burrung
·building
w1th
chddren
were
mstde.
, .
Following the tour, council met 10 place $20,000 from lhe vil.'s Veronick, Larry Wehrung, Thomas
with A.ttomey Patrick O'Brien to frre fund.iniO a passbook savmgs Werry and Young, Mayor Reed
and Clerk Kathy Hysell.

C_otln~il examirr~s . ~~~~PUP
ofOI;d Pomer'oY s~hool " '
~ea~l'~

'

Family ~embers stunn~d

State officials agree to
some ~of inmates' demands
LUC.ASVILLE, Ohio· (AP) -'- inmates or group of inmates or · Sharron Kornegay; another
department spokeswoman, said
The state has agreed to some their property.
-Discuasiona
aboulthe
transfer
negotiations on Monday with the
demands inmates have tDilde during
of
inmlltel
IO.other
prisons
in
Ohio
inmates were "po&amp;itive.'
an eighl·day standoff and wants
and
elsewhere.
The inmates earlier Monday
them to bnng a hostage to the
.,-Improved
quality
of
life
with·
·asked
for a meeting with' attorney
negotiating. table, ac~:ording 10 a
in
the
pnson.
·
Niki
Schwartz,
an inmate-rights
messqe played over loudspeakers
-Lower
prices
in
lhe
prison
activist
state
officials
brought !rom
inside lhe pnson fence. ·
Cleveland. Ms. Kornegay said she
· Reporters covering the standoff commissary.
. -A 1U8f811tee 10 moni10r civil did not know whether a meeting
at the Southern Ohie Corrections!
had taken place. ·
Facility could hear the message rights.
1
-Consult the Department of
Abannermadefromabedsheet
being repeated over Joudsj!eakers
was hung from a ceDblock window.
IOday.
.
. · Health abo11t tubetculosis leSting.
''We ask that )'QUt leaders come Part of it read: "Slllle lying to pub: "These demands have .been
reviewed and signed by· the admin- to 1he bargaining 1ablo with the lie. We ere willing 10 end. Musi
istration 10 we can end this in a hoslage'' so tilt ·standoff can be flt'sl 1alk face to face will! atiOr·
·
·
•
peaceful 1111111ter," said ihe voice · ended peacefully,the apcaker sa_id. · ney. ••
Thcllllelllo~IOCOIIIider
Authorities
brought
SchWartz
10
on the ,loudspeaker. The apeaker
ttansfer
~~
in!Datel
who
Lucas~
on
Sunday
10
act
as
"an
did not identify hlmlelf.
.
. The Inmates have held cell' believe It 1sn 1 sa e fo~ them t.o observet and an advii!CI'" 10 the
inmates ·
block at the lillie's maxlmum-secu- remain 8l Lucasville. ·
Reportera, hoard no mention of .· . Ms..Kornegay aJsci said aulhori·
rily prison aince • riot April II,
w'hen they too~ cfghl guard• as . the pruoners , demand·thai Warden ties had begun diggin1 a trench
· between two security fences on the
h(lstages. At least seven inmates Arthur Tate be repllced.
Jim Mayers, a spokea';Dan .for weal aide of the priaon,looking for
and one guard have died. Two
the De~enl of Rebabillwion posaible tunnels du.g by. iomates.
ho~ weie re!Nsedlast week.
• AmOIII the concession• by the aild Cottec11011, llid he fll!uld DOl She saithhe did not lcnow whether
comment on ,Ill• measag• or the any 11111ne1s were fOund.
Sllte menticiaeclln ~ messaae:
·
-No re&amp;alllting aelion qainst · MIJ(lliallons. ·

a

.

A Mulllnelldl• Inc. N..

believed dead

'nto118-.. 111,12J
11

1 Sectopmo. 10 Pagoe 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 20, 1993

Standoff ends in ·names

1
Unknown Ownw
conllllning o.ss f i l l • - iS§E~I~~~~~W~E:
AI~~~~IJ:HT'SI
or leu.
IENTI-·--11,11J,3U
,!!.!-~
•u moro
unknown
_ ._.
. . ......
. Is .fill
.
e..
ilcpla. Ovw (Unclor)
Coun of lle(go, *- fill 1 J 1 r ...,.
..._ _____ (1,.1,117)
STATE OF_ 9i:IICJ.
ohio.
t,aa.sn PI milo of
•
COUNTY OF
..
Ow...,. ,.... ....,. e1 J ' I
~~
,lloftdt ____,...... 1,211,327
10 asd ,.,......,
Rebecca a
and1~.
51o't.t17
being flrot :;:.
"i'a~c~...., ~2,
,at -n-P.rln-.....01,541
that ahti
.,...;;;:-~ t.W,J22
1
:""o:••d~'l: ~!.:;:;;,-,:·.o- ohd 1ur111er ...,....., ...• 11
. . ,1
~5,40
Uli.r-Out ..... (~1,541)
qu.llffod
~ih.jj
unleoo
lll•J,
!'
..,...
c
7
a.to.m
In Not
1
Alolo18nt Attomey G_,•l Aaom.,, Ill • ttUIII
R 1 ..
--...21,454
of the S181o or Ohio· lhlttthe
111&amp;1
7
m,1D Alto • Out Not
J
' W
complelonfiii . . Saulooal c 17 la.op_m,sn R; tij·----·-(21,454)
Plaintiff,
erry
,., Publlcatlon -.., . . .. ....,. ,_. .. 1
OIMr no
Director of Tru.porldon, d
-~ to' ~- ~ .,.
n
·s
s ..teofOhlo, liMb, by hlo - . . .
•wo
-a•l-----21,574,1.
Petition, ID app•opr181e the their "'!'t 10
, asd ..... ,.. ·a I
OIMr FIMnclng
property a.crlblld thorlfn the Pliii1ian ~ ........ •
, _.~ ............1,en,a1
'"
--121,341,118)
.,dID nx the v81uelheroof; true IHid Ju 4 , . . . . . • 1
--TOTAL OILR FIN.
that the ...tdoncl(e) of the ,...dorlld 8 " • • iJ, a.il
,,
31,1• sotiiCES---1,531,321
Defond8nt(o) ....-1 below Rule 12(AK•I1DTM..
Euo~Over
iounknownand-wllh
JE&amp;h111RAY
11'1
tt,P\114
~Dieb.IHidO..
ruoon•ble dillgenc• b•
Dlr-allou 1$ 1 5:1 TCzA V 0 ' 1 1
U....-----(110,318)
81Cert•lned: UNKNOWN (3)21;(4)5,12, It, a;.
Di
.(1......., F..... Caoh . . _
...
OWNER
(5)3, 61c
OIIC::f RIUI *'G
J8n:.1,1t12._;...3,101,Dn
Th• following •cliono ==~~~~~~= SOUICEli(USESt
F..., Caoh
BII- e llibn on behalf of the
P~llc Natke
l'l'o 1 fill
0.. 31, 1112--2.170,118&amp;
Pl•lntllf lo •ocerl81n lhe
o..,.......
• _'IL , _•.2 ?" ~~ en-~o.
_
1 1
~n":n~~:f ~=:t(~~:th: sea~~~:n:-1 ,.. -· - •
• 01,541 ~s7""t• ;...;::::::.;:C&amp;~m
tborouoh , uarch of received by the lhip OW , _ 1i I •
......,T__,
·
cQurthouu rocordo, tu CQunty Public l.lbr!wr ai ;?"
f01.541t !:":=;.;-~i;i 3,051,153
map• from the County 216 W. Main SL, P ••~ Is
~O.hl 4~g .... to,481
Recorder'• OHice, County Ohio 457611, until 1:00 p.a. ,"!A R I ''
a,tst 10TN. BAL:..--2,170,111
Englnew'o m•p• •nd ~";,"l,!l~ ~-~ ~'r'
cx.-4) ",, t ~---225.05, 141
~~~='::n:Oth~:t/~~.: Addition to the . . . .
I;
.,..10•1---·---4.30
that tho owner. 01 thlo County Public. l..lbniy, 21&amp; ~·Fi
:IM,51D Outljr101M .....__ .uo
bJ 1
e1
len
w. Main SL, P-•or, Ololo ..,_..
• s
F 1 It i
11
oultoclo -pare..~ryunthorownlf..:.,
(101P • I 1 n-----22.1117
v•• 457611, according to
_,
ID give notice olthe filing of dr-lngo 8lld epl If C 11 1DTM.. OIIUIIFWL
F I • Cu!luo
the Patltlon ho;eln by on file In the ofllca a1 . . SOIPI w
·P ; *1 - -...... 22,187
Publication, •ocordance Library .,d the A:clril 1. (USES)
ICILDULE OF
with Section 2703 . 14 , Rlch•d E. Dlltlllor.
, •~
G.o..=!IEDNESS ·
163.07; •nd Civil ' Rule
Bid• wiD be rocoiw_._.,,
....._
4.4(A), Revleod Cod&amp;
the following:
· .~'
- 11 1 111• (-....,. Ooitlors*'9
And further •Hiant 18ith
Combined Bid including .,_""C:.t'8 1~· ·-·,......, A~ !:.1~-·---14.000
·
olllr~-.
..., • -........... 12,000
no•
• ·Rebecca E. Howard,
Pia-;-..,.. opecir;c--. ~~--;--2,41t.tn o I I ldi4 ·
--~ coa- .- . 11113
72,000
Alalo..ntltio- Genaral 1or I he propo.....
,..--- • · • ..,._ 00..
. . -31:.......:;---·
Sworn to boi~;: ,.. •nd alruction wort&lt; . . 010 till in ·
•osn ....,..... 1 NOTES:
~
.._..._
1300,000
oubocrlbod In "'Y p-ea tho Office of the - i t I -no,;,-,_, · 54,U2 A,_. 1- - - ' 15000
thll3rd cloy of March, 111113. and 111ay be, olelainod~
Robert L Soh._, tho Architect, Ricleafd E..
..
1112-- 1,235,000
Atto""".of·Law Di-. Inc., n Sou..
FWmS
::;,,:}•
Notrt ,_lie Fourth StiMt,
iz
.....
0 1 1 '*'I
LEGAL NOTICE FOR
Ohio43701,upon '1 •l'!af M~A
111
PUBUCATION
sso.oo
us.oo leeisg !!-~~! IS
:• .._..._,
.lis. 1• 1•·----14,000
UNKNOWN
OWNEtt
refundedwith
when do.,. ""' lDTM..I
1112.1,300,000
whoao liddraoo 1e unknown are returned In good I
. . ,iff:.
R 71111,1112--.77,000
10 0
'o tho Plaintiff will t•k• co~dllion ID the .Ard 1 r..
•
ldiiQ
notice thalli h• boon oued office within ton (10 dopJ of 1DTM..
O.::.IJ1,11!12--~
1,307,000
I
*RS-10
I
. . ....,.._...._
, •
by tho Dlreclof , of bid date.
TotiiA : • 1
•-r-•"' ...
Tr•noporlalion of the Sl8tio
Biddero ahall note thai Ill' ,
4 .-(t"""'
Lid . _ to lie8 beet
of Ohio, who hao lnaUtutlld the prevailing Wage A-.
..,
a , procudlng In Ill• publiohed by the 0... ~~-c-.Ouwl
--r
.
Com111on PI- Court of parlmenl of Industrial (I' 1 ,/. 11 ....._.
AI ltor,
Molgo County, Ohio, to Relation• •re to .. a..ru •
(1_
P.O.Box•l
opproprlalocortaire property complied with thrO!!glicul "-dC:O..B 1 1
_,
Pcr•lror,Oiela417111
described ho;•afto; for thJ. projiCL
1.
1 C:O..
1. _ 141 1'- 1tc.
1 p
hlghwey puipoaM, naonoiJ · Blddoro oh• alao _.. .,_
1
liell!lloklng, c010otructlon or that the Rules ••d · 0
Sl, --IIJU
1
lmprovem.nta of: •
Regulation• on_......_.._
.,....
- 1• ... ..,._
..
.......,..,,
Sl81e Route 7, Section Emp Ioymen I Op,.....--• • 1 OW ; 1
LEGA&amp;:. N011CE
0.31 I Melgo County, Ohio
I hill bo !lllldo a pert o( . . . .
A
Nofice 1e h•ebJ glv..
ond to fix the v•lu• of oald contract No bidder ..., a.. n
I
property. The properly wlthdr- hlo told ..n:.. 30
,21 ,.,_1 ... .__..meollngol
. . sa..shalds a of F.,.,..
aoughtiDbo IIPPfoprlatad lo doyo att.r t h e . . - - fill ca. p
""
1
BIRI IK... Inc. wl&amp; lia
0
1
more opocllically deecrtblld thoII, PIn ninv
Uewoof.
.;;;-. cniU
Ll- ....
If . . libalil offlo8 o(
11 followo:
tho opinion of .,.
•-r
Fw
..............
OESCRIPiloN OF THE
Ownora, tho
1't: - fill
PARCEL OF LAND AND
the lo-t bid ,h 1LDt in.. ~'S
: : : " C 1 11 211 w.tlnollll
Streot, P•ooroy, Olllo,
boat lnteroot
af all (I'
~-ESTATE, INTEREST OR
concomed,
lise o-...,
··• •} ,,(......_
__
_
_...IOitaler..,e,on
RIGHT THEREII
accopt .,otis• ·prapooll •
r!:!..... ............ n '
l"SSIt third Wodn•d.., ol
APPROPRIATED
opened, or reject .tl . - - - - •
....., 111J, ort 4:00 p.111. lor
lltu•ted In th• To...hlp
.IilLI,I Lftl purpooo of aleotlng
of S.llabury1 County ol propolalo and oduuf tar .,_ C:O..
*-'toro
Md lise trano·
otleor blclo.
Molgo •nd Sl8te of Ohio,
By 0rc1ao of h •
r O..SI,
.At,tl&lt;l
of auch other
..d known - being put of
1DDII.S
PfGpsrty
100 -e Lot No. liS, a put
Mory lt. .,_, AIEEa!ll'llrSk
Jlorirlll. "-ct. 1 •• t r
Waot, •• ohown by tho
lAowy a.
tar
p) 21, 21; (4) 2, 11, 4to
recorded Melge Counlj T• (4) 5, 12, 111,21, 4lc
I

•

•

review will iodpde wqjuywctl: a

fill

Low tonlcht In mkl-405. Rain.
Wednesday, cooler, blgb In 50s.

2835

Page4

·

nsponses to the constituent and
woald c:.all the agency if it wasn't
mponsive.
1967~sawdlo•a• Msclrctine
Today, congressional slaffers
by 1991·9210 lO.Sll iabOdac- em puB my number of paragraphs
tions,610lawsu• •"
from a computer's memory and
But aot evayoae ap-ces lhat add afew petsonal words.
major, across-thc-boanl ~IS are
..Some congressmen will write
·nece:ss.y.
aleaer saying· 'How's Annie?' and
..We assume some units are aD that," Bennett said. "But my
,operating vay ellicicndy," said • lcltel$ were wellllandled. I read
· Thomas M t ~of lhi: p - every one of them. People were
·emmentll stqclieJ l*ogt- at die gcuing just as much $fay matter.
Brootings luslimtioa, a n:searcb Tbey just weren't gewng as much
group QID'ltrhng ils IMil review or ....m " .
Congress. ••some areas of
Congiess ate UUil29wfFM "
Mann also Siid that _Kiva die
high volume of~-- -.iJ.
', • . the
cUlling S1a1J would oa1y lllllklaw--'-- ....._
•
.. ·

direction 10 . . -

368

l;le would relay any favorable

-•wt
ot.=e::;r;::;c .,_=
·

Speaking of alumni reunions,
several members of the Meigs High
School Class of I 978 have formed
a committee to make special plans
for lheir 15th reunion to be held in
conjunction with an all-school
Meigs alumni reunion at the high
school also on the evening of May
29.
.
Making up the group are Paula
Ashley' Whitlaieh, Rhonda Hudson
Hannahs, Jane Sisson Banks, Dave
Harris, Jennifer Wise Harrison .and
Paige Smith Cleek.
,
The committee is allempting to

tee will also specially decorate. a
comer in the Meigs High School
Auditorium and all class members
. are 10 be seated in ·1hat !lrea on
· reunion night ·
· · ·
· Any member of the c~&amp;ss·whq

IN THE COURT OF

Pick 3:
Pick 4:

•

Joint Committee on the Organiza-

'

lose to
Blue Jays

,.
•
•1•
t
U S,~, ROSSian IDI I ary
B~r~~·isco-chairmanofthe .'-:!';:.;e~idbiscommiuee's
WMIT ADS
team up in ·Arctic search 1-~~Pu~bnc~N~ott~ce~~P~~~uc~Ma~lllc~•~~A~IMI~c~"''~k;•~~Pub~.t~Jc~Not~tce~,
266

Ohio Lottery

'

Man ordered to complete sentence
after committing second offense

A Meigs County man was
ordered recenlly to complete a
ptison sen1ence for breaking and
entering after attempting another
burglary in Jackson Cowlly while
still 011 probation.
Shawn
Minshall,
19,
Langsville, was originally placed
on probldon,on Sept 3, 1992, afler
serving six months at the SEPTA
Center in Nelsonville for a break·
ing and enu~ring committed on
Marth 11, 1992.
Accoi'ding 10 an entry filed in
the Meigs Coun'y Coutt of Com·
mon Pleas, one of the terms of
Minshall's' probation wss thai he
· violate no Jaws.
,
On Dec .' 10, 1992, Minshall
ple.Jed guilty 10 alfelllPted
· vated burglary in J~. Counly
· and il ~dy bein&amp; ·incarceraled
forlheorime.
·
Acc:on&amp;lg to !he entry by Judge
Fred w. Crow m, Mhublll argued
thlllhe court should not revoke his
probatiOn due 10 a proviJion of !he
Jackson County plea agreement
· Accordin1 to lestimony, former
Meigs County Prof:CCutinJ AltO!,· ·
ney Steve SIOrY lflvised
.
Minshal.l s
Jackson Coun&amp;y 11110r110y ibal Min· .
shl!ll' a Meigs County probali on
wou.ld not be rev~ted and, as a

aara·

.

""

•

result, Minshall pli:aded guilty and
was senlencell.
AI the. hearing, :Story recominended 10 the court that Minshall's
probation not be revolted. Howev.
er, the Adult Parole Authoritl[ dJS.
agreed and flied a motioniO revoke
Minshall's probation due to the
seriousness of !he new offense and
the short period of time . lhat
elapsed between his release from
lhe SEPTA Center and lhe new
offense. Crow wrote.
The Meigs County Court of
Common .Pleas originally placed
Minshlll on probation, upon the
recommendation of the Adull
Parole Authorily and lhe Me,igs
C::olinty Prosecuung Auomey. but
did so only with the provision lhat
Minshall serve six months incarcer·
alion 11 SEPJ'A. Crow wro1e.
.
According IO .Crow,thb cou~
sentenced Minshall to the max•·
muni sentence lllowcd by Jaw (18
months) IIIII ~ him on pt&lt;!ba·
lion for the· maximum pcnod. of
time lllowed by law (five years)
and ordered ·him 10 serve · six
monlhlllic:artenttion at SEPJ'A as
a condition of probation.
·
Crow wrote:
·
.·
''"Ibis COUrt finds that if an:Yone
convicted of 1 felony cillt nol

hehav~ for the maximum period of .
probation, then the individual pmb·
ably should not have bet:n placed
on probation in the fus1 place.
"'!he court usually imposes the
maxunum .seniCn~ in on1tr 10 give
the probationer a liUie extta incentive to behave. The coun exoects
probationers 10 behave. Obviously,
(Minshall) opted 10 continue in his
criminal ways and not conform his ·
conductiO society's standards. ·
" ... (Minshall's) 1ackson County
plea bargain of non-revocation
does not bind this coutt, and this
court would not and does not
· accept continlling ~lion for a
felon who commits an attempted
~vated burslary while on probauon. ·
·
"'If this court would ·continue
probation in this siluation, it
~ppears that the court shouldn't
bother placing convicted felons on ·
probation in the first place.
.
''If the defendant was Mi&lt;~: r ' in
his Jackson cou:rertea blrplnl
his recourse iiiO
his Jldr:son
County convlctioJL•
·
Crow then ordered Minsball 10
· serve lhe rem1inder of hit 18·
monlh -ICDCC lfter lilY other.- ·
~ce he ~ cwrently sem.,. ·
..

�·,

TUesday,Ap~l20,1993

•

Conimentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, April 20, 1993

• 'I

wedllfSday,Aprll21

rI _A~ccu~-W~ea~tber~"~fu~~~as~t~foc~~~~co~n~w~·t~io~M~~~~~~~~

~ Rain,

MICH.

Clinton plan ·is short on specifics

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Btnet
.
Pomei!Of, Oblo
DEVOTitD TO.TJIIt JNTERBSTS ·or THB ¥BIOS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
· Publisher ·
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

.LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words. All letteiJ are subject 10 editing and .niust be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, &gt;ddtessing i11ues, not personalities.

Letters to the ~ditor
Praising snow removal crews
They worked in shifts from 2
Dear Editor,
. People will be talking about the a.m. Saturday until 9 p.m. Sunday,
blizzard of '93 for years. They'll 43 hours suaight. They must have
talk about the blinding snow and been tired, sore. cold and stiff
how deep it was. They'll shiver while most of us were warm and
when they think of how cold it was, cozy in our homes.
eSpecially with the windchill factor
But people won't be talking
bein' 20 degrees below zero, and about how well they cleared the
they II gripe about having to dig slleets so thai police and emergency vehicles could get through and
out their sidewalkS.
They will especially complain so .we could g~ to stores for. food
about the village maintenance · or medicine. They should be
workers blocking ·their cars and thanked, not yelled and ·cussed at.
So, I'm sayinl it, "Hey guys,
driveways with plowed snow. But
that's the only place they can put it good job! Thanks!
Kitty Pugh
and they have neither the manpower nor the time to unblock lilmlly
MilldJepon
hundreds of driveways and cars.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Bill
. Clinton's ~tly unveiled federal
budget- 1,478 page. dammed
with hundredl of numbers in very
small type - is being called a
"stealth liudgct" by' aome because
it seems to raise more questions
. th1UJ it answers.
Budget Director Leon Panetta
calls the Clinton budget a: "bold
. plan aimed ll ~in&amp; the deficit,
changing priorities and investing in
the future of our people and our
country." In the abstract, this may
be true. Reading the plan closely,
however, you are hard pressed to
understand how it will accomplish
· this.
.
Even j!iven its mind-numbing
length, thiS budget is still more of a
blueprint about wbc:ze the administtation w•ts to go than a specific
road map about how it intends to
get l)lere. It talks about huge cuts,
but doesn't detail what will be cut
It asks for billions in new spending,
while remaining vague on where
the money will come from.
In order to meet spending plans
recently adopted by Congress, and
reluctantly endorsed by the admin-

istralioa, Clinton is now agreeing
to cut $66.7 billioa mille over the
ne11t five fiJCII years thaD he was
prepared to cut as recently as

Robert ,l. Wa:gm
' an
February. These additional culS are
the real basis for sayin,, as Vice
President Gore did, thal 'this budget hacks away ll the deficit" But
nowhere in the budget does it say
what will be cut to make this
redUclioa.
Actually the administration
must cut closer to $80 billi~ over
the next five years. The current
budget plan calls fclr new spending
or revenue reductions oC about $10
billion more than originally envisioned. This is the total of programs the administratiat wanted to
cut, but has agreed not to, or reveriues it wanted tp raise, but now
won't This is the result of deals cut
with influential lawmakers in order
to get this~ through.
For instance, the administration
- wanted to slash funds for mau
ttansit, an&lt;{ reduce funds for home-

'

... am&gt; ;..,
ReCoRD

T;Me ...

Supports volunteer fire department
Dear Editor,
The American .dream is to own
your own home,' but not if you are
thinli:ing of locating your borne in
Bedford Township.
We bought our home in Septem. her or 1992, and tried to get msur·ance until February or this year.
Several insurance companies
turned us down because we live 15
miles from the nearest ftre depan'
ment If you do not live within five
miles they will not even quote you
an insurance pn:mium.
.
We did fmd one insurance company and took our . it;~surance o.ut
with them. That was su weeks ago.
Today in the mail we received' a
notice of cancellation. The number
one reason for canCellation was we
are not close enough to a fire
department
.
We have people in. our township, including-our elected township government, that do not
believe we need a volunteer fire

department They think they might
have to pay a few dollars out for
taxes.
Did they ever stop and think that
their insurance rate would drop?
Young people will nOt move into
Bedford Township because they
will be unable to get homeowners
insurance, which the bank requires.
I would like to ask each pelSOR
who does not believe thai we need
a volunteer fin: dej1artment to ask
themselves this question: If your
home burn-ed tomorrow, would
your insurance build you a new
home and then drop you, because
)'Ou now live too far from the nearest fire departmenl'l
.
I think it is time for tho people
of Bedford Township to work
tqgether .to build our f1re depart··
ment We need to belter our township, so that young people will
want to build and live here.
Angle Brickles
Burlingham

Volunteer Appreciation Week
Dear Editor:
National Volunteer Appreciation Week is April 19-25. As the
staff person responsible for the
American Heart Association in
Meigs Count&gt;', I wlqlt to thank all
the local volunteers that lead the
fight against our nation's number
one killer bean disease.
The local board of the American
Hean .Association is doing an outstanding job in raising the much
needed dollars .and supponing our
efforts 10 educate people about the
risks of cardiovascular diseases.
The following people serve as local
board members: Sandy lannarelli,
Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Rhonda Dailey, Millie Midkiff, Donna Carr,
John Costanza:, Alice Wolfe, Bob
Hoeflich, Denver and Nora Rice,
Jdil Diehl; Scou Lucas, Dan Morris,
Betsy and Eldrid Parsons, Jeaneue
Thomas, Jane Frymyer, Texanna
Well, and Debbie Haptonstall.
In addition to the board there are
commiuees and events which are
completely run bY. volunteers. I
woufd especially like to thallk the
nearly 100 volunteers for their fan-

tastic job with the 1993 Residential
Campaign which raised $4 ,900.
Captains recruiting neighborhood
volunteers were Maurisha Nelson,
Donna Carr. Dee Brown, Joyce
Sisson, Jean Alkire, Jeanette
Lawrence, Millie Midkiff, Susie
Karr, Kay Proffitt, Terri Shain,
Grace Weber, Marilyn Robinson,
Joan May. Linda Montgomery,
Cathy Cooper, Judy Humphreys,
Eva Howard, and Tonja Blunter.
Although everyone who has
assisted the American Hean Association in any way truly deserves
individual recognition, the names
are far too numerous to list here. I
would Iike,eich of them to know
that the AHA appreciates their dedication and hard work. Thanks, too,
go to the generous people of Meigs
County who dOnate to our life-saving cause. Without them we WQuld
have little impact on the devastating effects of cardiovascular disease.
. Sincerely,
Susan Gerken
· Community ~er
American Heart Associauon
•

Farewell to the 'Tin Lizzie'

•

Dear Editor,
the old Model T Ford, so I sold her.
This is the last episode of the • According to today's prices she
"Tin Lizzie." ·
was worth a fonune, bull $Old her
These could have been the head- for 40 bucks, which didn't last
lines in early 1945: "Local man long.
squanders fortune."
.
All I could ~Y was "good bye
I was home on leave from the old friend" you gave me a lot of
Navy. In those days the pay was memories.
about $7S a month, and it didn't go
Virgil Walker
far. and I was brolce.
,
. . Racine
, Well the only asset I had was

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IND.

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Cincinnati 49•

W. VA.

Pt.
In&lt;.

-----Weather ......- -..........South-Central Ohio
Tonight, occasional showers,
thunderstorms possible early. Tumin~ cooler. Low 45-SO. Chance of
ram i$ 90 percent, Wednesday,
showers like!y .. C?O!~· High SO-

J

D. B ,

ay •

Vigilante sends a scary
convictions.
Of the 15 convictions, only five
result in sentences of more· than
one year in piJon. Of the five sen·

Joseph Re··'...:ns
J'
• IU

lice. They wonder why .the law is of engaging in lewd acts with chitso efficient, say, in penalizing dreil. Another 3,900 were convictmotorists who commit minor tntffic ed of aSsault, in most cases with a
violations, yet so ineffectual in deadly weapon . And 1,500 _ a
punishing felons who commit the frightening total - were convicted
most vile and heinous crimes.
of murder.
No one feels safe in this country
That these social deviants have
anymore. Not when 34 million~ · been disgorged from California's
pie are touched by crime o~ prisons to ptcy upon the unsuspectyear. Not when someone is ra , mg public shows how QUI of whaCk
assaljlted or done Some Other bodi- the criminal justice system ~as
ly harm every 11 minutes. Not become. There no longer is a link '
when someone is murde_red every between commission of crime and · ·
24 minutes.
~wift and sure punishment Justice '
The shots liired 10
· the Tuol
more often is m;•••-'ed than well·
umne
_ ..
C0111ty cilwuoom this month may served.
have uiherecl in a new en of vigi:
It is a sick irony that the people
lanlilm 10
· Am · People · 1 who condemn Nesler for her act of
enca.
sunp Y
·
·
don't trust their government to pro- vigil111tism are not similarly outtectlllthem anymore. So they're cor- raged that violent and perverted
don, goff their ~.t~. Tb~y're felons are alloww to run free. If ;
b\J~g
They re hUUig pnva1e Driver had ·been locked up after •
sec:unty
· previously pleading guil"' to child , •
'c;an blame them? Here .I'n moleslitton
. ma......
.,
'
1 ..., he would never· ·,
Califorllia. for inlaance; more than . have encountered' Nesler's 6-year- :
J:S,OOO violent offendenlare Jeplly old ilon. And mavbe Neller would _ •
walking tho street&amp;, having 6een not have blOWil iiJm away.
·
turned out of the stile's prisons. · . Jlllfpb Perkin• 111 columnist '
· lncludojl in thil figure are more for The Sao Dle1o 1:1aloo-Trl·
thlll 3,000 Jell offenden, !lear~y. bun.e and I syndlc:ated wrlier ror , .
half or whom have been convicted Newspaper ~nterprlse ANoda- •
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tences, 001 -even one 18
. served in
full mc::asure.
Elh~ Nesler thought that ~he
would un~ the CJC!ds ~ Driver
·- was pumshed for h11 cr1me. She
could not bear the thought that he
might receive pobllloa, lite he ";d
b
~
""
some years ack Bater pleading
guilty to mokatlna 8 like ll 8 San
Jose, Calif., day-are ccn
_ ter. So she
.Ud:: the law into her own hands.
While such acu. of penonal
vengeance caMot be condoned,
they are 811 ine\lillble COIIIel!uence
·hen
.... ,__ faith
,
w , P·r. ._
in the criminal JUStice .l)'llemldin.'l11roqJhout the
land, the llw-ab g are telling the
~~~and the prose~~~ors: the
J
and the~· We. re as
m ~ bell.OO we re not lotDJ to
· iakepillnlymore.t'to'
..
cope WID . • see~" ~mblance of balance m Amencan JUS,;

me~sage

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auns.

colder weather expected by tonigJtt

· SOs-. Some showers are• also likely
Colder · weatber expected to continue on Wednesday, at least
tonight. The front moving into over eastern parts of the state.
northwest Ohio ·this -afternoon
The record-high temperatW'C for
should be exiting eastern Ohio this this date at the Columbus weather
evening.
station was 85 .degrees in_1896
Colder air will swing into Ohio while the record low was 22
right behind the cold front and · degrees in 1904. ·
should drive the mercury down ijlto ·
Sunset tonight )Viii be at 8: 14
the mid and upper 30s in northwest p.m. Sunrise W~dnesday at 6:45
Ohio with much of the rest of the a.m. and su~ will be at 8:15 p.m.
state bottoming out in the 40s.
Around tbe nation
Not a whole lot of warming is
A spring storm lashed the
expected -for the rest of the work na~QD's interior early today. Snow
week with afternoon highs in a fell over the northern Rockies,
range from the mid-40s to the mid-

wl!ile. th~ no~em Plains and upper fy as it moved east. bringing the
MISSISSippi Valley braced for threat of severe thunders10nns and":
chilly, wet weather as the storm possibly tornadoes to the mid-Mis- •
moved east.
sissippi Valley today and snow to :
Snow advisories were posted for Wisconsin by Tuesday.
:pans of Wyoniing and South DakoWarm, sunny weather was fore· •
ta, with blowing, drifting snow cast for most of the East anq far ;
forecast for the mountains of south- West, although clear skies were :
east Wyoming.
·
expected to gtve way to clouds and •
Rain mixed with snow and cold- scattered showers in western New •
er tern peratures were forecast York and New England late in the ·
across Nebraska and Iowa, while day.
The high for the lower 48 states
Minnesota expected to -be hit by
.
on
Sunday·was 98 degrees at Lajitonight.
·
The s10rm was likely to intensi- tas and Presidio in Texas.

By Tbe Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Hous- · million at i seasonally adjusted
ing stans fell4.6 percent in March, annual rate in March, down from
the government said today, curbed 1.19 million a month earlier.
by weather for the third straight
The decline was even larger
mpnth as the B~zanl of '93 blew
thall the 1.5 percent drop thai many
through the Sou them and Eastern
analysts had expected
For the first three months of
United States:
Starts were down in every
1993, stans were down 7.3 percent
region of the nation except for the
from the same period a year earlier.
West, where they posted the largest
But many analysts said epnstruC'increase in nearly two years. ·
lion that would have occurred durThe Commerce Department said ing the first quarter merely had
construction of new single-family
been postponed until spring.
homes and apartments totaled 1.13
Applications for building per-

Standoff...

Six were fined and six others
forfeited bonds in the court of Middlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman Monday night
Fined were Christy Diann Johnson. Lelart. W. Va., $425 and costs
and tbrt!'e days in jail, physical con-'
trol of a motor vehicle while under
the influence of alcohol or drugs;
Harold Braden, Jr., Middleport,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner;
Rbnald S, Waj!IIW. Racine, $2S and
costs, .consummg alcohQI under age
of 21; Raymon&lt;J Kirk, Gallipolis;
$10 and costs, fiCtitious tags; Kevin
Mantey, Middleport,· $10 fine only
for allowing his dog to run loose;
and Kenneth W. Stewart, Marion,

ftreball. The man "was knelt down Koresh was becoming increasingly
with his hands CUPPed, from which violent
a flame erup!Cd,"-Ricb said.
Reno said siJe ~ever considered ·
In Congress, there were calls for the ''chances were great for mass
a full investigation.
suicide," despite Koresh's doomsAttorney General Janet Reno day threats and his warning in a letsaid she gave the go-ahead for the -ter just last week that any agents
assault because of reports of severe trying !o harm him would be.
child abuse within the compound. '• devoured by fire."
Reno also said she was concerned
"We made the best-judgment
that federal agents were growing we could to escalate the pressure.
weary - and there was no sign Based on what we know now,
Koresh was relenting.
obviously it was wrong," she said
The Wall Street Journal, quoting on CNN. "The buck stops with
unidentified government sources, me.''
reponed today that bugs planted
At least 75 to 80 rounds ci( gun· inside the compound had shown fare came from the compound in an

Three from Meigs County
complete mentor program
Three Meigs Countians were
arnong 44 from Southeastern Ohio
to complete a three day investigative mentor program sponsored by
the O)lio Peace Office Training
Academy
Local persons completing the .
program were John Lentes, Meigs
County Prosecutor; John Spires of
the Meigs County Sheriffs depanment, and Dan Toban of the Meigs
County ~enl of Human Services.
. .
The Investigative Mentor Trainillg Program provides a unique
training experience for selected
individilals from each county: The
emphasis is on protecting and-¥rv.'

The Daily Sentinel
IV8P8 11S.fl80)
PubHthed

every an.mooi., Monday

lllf'OUih Fridoy, Ill Coun Sl, Pomeroy,
Ohio liy tho Ohio Valley · Publiahilll
Compony/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy, ·
Qllio 411769, Ph. 992-2156. Se&lt;vnd ct...
~ pt;d at Pomeroy. Ohio. '
Mem!&gt;e;-, The ~ted Preu, and tho

Ohio New1papr Auodation, N•ttonal
Advertilintr Repnlentative, Branham
Newtpopor Sal•, 71!3 Third A.. nue,

New York, New York 100J7.

I'OSTMASTEJ~, Send oddrua cha...,. to
Tho Dally Sontlnol, Ill Court St.,
Po~ OHio 41171!9.
·
8UB8CRIPI'ION RATEs

B;r Corrlw or Motor Roale
One Weok.. .......................... :.............. IJ.60
One M&lt;mlh......................................... $6.911
One Yeor....... ., ............................... $83 .:10

BDIOLECOPY
PRIC.E

Ooily........................................ .....2!i Cenlo

hboeribon nol wlrt.,.. to pay the Am·
may remit in advance dtrec:t t.o The
Daily Sentinel On.. · a thl"M, lix or 12
month bUio. Ctwdit will be pvm ollinlor
-.ohwoell.
·
No -.rtptiono by mail pormttlod 111
II'MI when home cani• Ml'rici ie
Ill

0¥1;11o81o.
.
·

Matlloboorlpllolll
tlootde Molp CounQ'

w-... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...

ta w..a.............................:...........I21M

ta

~143.16

till Weob.......................................... tll4.76 .
Otatoldoi Jllolp CqonQ'

13 We1Jai................:......................... l23.40

16 Weob.,....................................... f411,110

till Wooko. ....................................... Nuo

ing children, acCordiilg til Attorney
General Lee Fisher.
In 1992 there were 92 ,967
repons of child abuse and neglect
fl!lde to Ol!io's public children ~r­
vace agenaes. The program trams
people from law enforcement and
children's stlVices to quickly, sensi lively, and skillfully respond· to
reports of child abuse and neglect.
The P! is _to ~~e ~use of
multi-diSCiplinary .mvesugative

Eight calls for emergency assistance were answered by units or the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service MOnday and early Tuesday
morning.
·
At 8:22 a.m. Monday the
Pomeroy unit went to the Pomeroy
Nursing a!l(l Rehabilitation Center
for Elizabeth Mcintosh who was
taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal.
Ai 2:32 p.m. the Racine unit
transponed Bill Morris from his
'home on Third Street to Veterans,
and at 6:08 p.m. the Pomeroy
squad took Dennis Osborne from
Pomeroy Pike to Veterans . ...
The Racine unit was called to

Meigs announcements

WASHINGTON (AP) Authorities say they are confiden!
I)Jey have caught the man responsible for a series of drive-by shotgun
auacks afler a susjlect was arrested
in a bold daytime killing.
James Edward Swann Jr., 29, of
Iselin, NJ., was charged Monday
with first-de~ree murder in the
shotgun slaying of 61-year-old
Nello Hughes, who lived in the i ().
block area where authorities concentrated their search for the
assailant.
Police said they will maintain a
show of (orce in the area, two miles
nonh of the White House, just in
case.
.
Police had been seeking the
gunman since Feb. 23, when the
first of the drive-by attacks
occurred. Three people were killed
· and four \\'ere wounded . Several
other people, including two just
before ·Hughes was killed, were
threatened but escaped injury. ,
All of the attacks, except for
· Monday's slaying; occurred. during
nighttime hours. In each case, a
gunmall inside a small foreign car
singled out pedestrians in secluded

Hospital news

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,....,
446 4524

areas and fti:ed a shotgun from his .
window.
:
Swann was diiving a 1993 blue '
Toyota- Similar to the vehicle the
police had been looking for, said .
police Inspector William Ritchie . ., ·
Authorities say Swann was ,
apprehended after an off-duty offi~ ,
cer; Kenneth Stewart, driving h~ ;
o~n car, spotted ltnd followed ,
SWann's vehicle' as it moved errati- ·
cally.
'

Slate Auto's already
loW premiums can be
reduced even more by .
insuring both your car
·a home with the~·~
Aulo Co(npanies.

Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

I

·,

Lottery numbers·

CLEVELAND (AJ')- Here are
·
Monday
night's Ohio Lottery
Inc:...................... 19 S/8
selec:tions:
Sill' BB .......................~....38 lJ4
Pick 3 Numbers
Wendy,·Jnt•t...........·.. ~~....:.••• 13 lfl
3-6-8
Worthington Ind.......:........27 l/4
(three, six, eight)
Stoelt reports are the 10:30
PICk
4 Numben
a.lll. q•otel proYided by
2-8-3-5
Ke•per Secarltlet, lac., o·l
(two, eight, three, five)
Gllllpolll.

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Officials may have
killer in custody

DEADLY FIRE- Flames engulf the Branch Davidian compound Monday near Waco, Texas. The Justice Department said
cult members set tbe fire. (AP)

will

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State Route 124 for Wesley Clark
who wi!S taken to PJe,asant ValleY: .
Hospilal..At 7:13 p.m : Eddie Slarlc;
was taken by the Pomeroy squad
from Lincoln Hill to Veterans; -af
7:20p.m. the Rutland squad wen!
to Dye Road for Douglas Lambe(!
who was taken to the Holzer MecJi-:
cal Center; and at 9:37p.m. the
Middleport unit responded to a call
on Noble Summit Road and traris:
poned Howard Minard 10 Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital.
Tuesday at 7:17 a.m the Racine
unit went to State Route 124 for
Selma Salser who was taken to
Veterans.
·
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Stocks

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Meeting postponed
Perlormanee slated
The meeting scheduled for SatThe Jellisons will perform at the
urday at Mount Union Church, United Pentecostal Oturch in Midconcerning Leading Creek Conser- dlepon on Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
vancy District water service in the p.m. The public is invited. ·
Scipio Township are, !las bee,n
,
~s!J!Oned . !he rqsch~uled date
· '· Fesdval planned
.":'til be pubhsh~ ~g co?'ple- ·
The Carthage Township Festiteams.
~on.
of
the
engmeenng
ftrms
preval,
sponsored by the Lottridge
The program is su~ fman·
cially by the Otildren s Justice Act, hmtnary cost estimate. Further Community Center Association
awarded to the Ohio pepartment of informa.tion may be o~tained by will be held May 22 and 23. Tbm
Human Services by Health and contactmg Brent Bohn, LCCD, • will be country music, arts and
Human Ser.vices. Co-sponsors · 742-2411.
·
crafts, a .Little Miss and Mister
include the Buckeye Sheriff' s
Carthage Township, games and
PrO(II'IIm planned
prizes, a junior and senioc tractor
Association, the Ohio Prosecuting
Kay Cecil, antique collector lind pull and flea market. If you have an
'Attorneys Association, the Ohio
appraiser,
will present a progi8111 at an or craft which you would like to
Association of the Otiefs of Police,
County Museum in display call667·3422 or 667-fiJ77.
the
Meigs
Ohio Chil4 Welfare Training ProSaturday at 2 p.m. Spaces are available for $10 on
Pomeroy
on
gram, and the Public Children•SerBring in several of your favorite Saturday and $5 for Sunday aftervices Association of Ohio.
items for appraisal.
. noon. To perform music call 6673193.
Dance planned
There will . be a round and
Country music nl1bt
Am ElePower....................38
square dance Friday from 8·11:30
Country music nilht at the LotAshland Oil .................;.....2lii,Tl
p.m. at the Henderson Community tridge Community CENter will be
AT&amp;T..............................,.S8 S/8
Building. Music will be by CJ and Saturday from 7 p.m. to midnight
BankOne........................... SB
the Country Gentlemen. Frank · All bands ate welcome. Refres~­
Boll Evans .........................17 lf2 Bowles will play fiddle. Everyone menta
be served. Everyone
Charmin&amp; Shop................. .lS 7/8 welcome. ·
welcome.
·
Ounp Industries.................12 lf2
City Holding......................22 1f1.
BaD team to meet
The Chester baseOOII association
-Federal Mogul.................... l9 S/8
GoodyearTitR .................. 7S 3/4
will meet Sunday at 3:30 p.m. at
Vetenns Memorlil
Key Centurion ..............,....25 1/8
Chester Elementary. AU parents are
Admitted: David Pauley, PonLands End.............. ............29
invited,
land.
Umiled Inc ....................... 23
Discharged: Walter Roush and
)l.tultimedia Inc..................35 1/4
. Trenton Clellnd.
Poirlt B'DC1"'JJ.................... 14 ·

Ru Rei:L~
l/4 ~
Je1laJiwe
••.•••••••.••••.2() .
ltobbiMAMyers •••••!••········16 1.12

initial volley after agents started
The FBI previously said two ot
ripping holes in the walls and the women in the compound were
pumping in tear gas via com- pregnant, one of whom.was due to
pressed air, rather than explosive deliver in May .. They apparently
canisters, the FBI said.
were among the dead.
,•
"We had hoped the women
Four cultistS were ·hospitalized
wou14 grab their children and flee with burns and broken bones ... that the rn91herly instinct would two in critical condition, -includins
take place," Ricks said. "That did a 16-year-ol!l girl. The five other
not occur and they bunk~ doWil survivors were jailed as materil{l
the children -and allowed them to witnesses.
go up in flames." . ,
The siege began Feb. 28 when a
The blaze, fanned by stiff winds, weapons raid by the Bureau of
erupted six hours after the initial Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
assault and raced through the erupted in a gun battle that killed
prairie compound in just 30 min- four agents. The cult said at least
utes, reducing it to smokin~ ruins.
six members were killed.
Koresh 's mother, Bonme Hilldeor the 25 children who were in
man, lashed out at the FBI. "There 'the compound at the st;lrl of its·
were law-abiding, God -fearing final day, 17 were I 0 years old or
people in there. They didn't hun younger, Thirty-seven people;
anybody. It's ridiculous," she said, mostly children, had left the com·
her voice shaking.
neund during the standoff.
-

Squads make eight ·
runs past, 24 hours

''n

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from 149,000 the previous month :
when it jumped 24.1 percent.
:
Regionally, starts soared 17.9 '
percent in the West to a 296,000 :
rate, the largest increase.since they
shot up 39 percent in Aprill991.
_But they fell elsewhere, includ•ing a 26.8 percent drop in the
Northeast to a 90,000 rate. ThaL
was the lowest level since builders
staned homes at an 88,000 rate in
February 1991 and the largest
decline smce a 27 percent drop last
January.

·.,

$50 and costs, PRJ\ (no insurance)
suspension.
.
Forfeiting bonds were William
D. Stewan, Rutland. $460, physical
· control of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol-Or
drugs; David ' Klein, Pomerpy, ·
, $460, physical control of a motor
vehicle while under the inrluenl::e
of alcohol or drugs. Clarence M.
Mooney, Gallipolis, $60 running a
red light; WilliamS. So_;anls, Vinton, $60, expired operator's
license; Michael D. Ogle; Hamden,
$53, speeding; Judith R. Laudermilt, i.audermilt, $210, driving
under suspension.
,:

.

-mits, often a barometer of future
activity, slumped 8.8 percent in
March to 1.0!1 million, down from
1.14 million in February. Irwas the
largest decline since permilS fell by
the same amount in Aprill990.
Single•family construction fell
4.5 percent 10 a 993,000 rate, down
from 1.04 million a month earlier.
It had slipped 1 percent in February.
.
Apanment construction dropped
5.4 percent to a 141,000 rate, down

Continued rrom page 1

Middleport Court news

W
. ho

~

Thui'lday ,iiarOIJih Saturday:
. . Fair Thursday aJid Friday. Quite
cool. Lows in l)le 30s. Highs in 40s
to mid·SOs. Silurday, a chance of
rain. Lows 35-40. Highs 55-65.

Hill, Hartfoid, W. Va.; six daugh•
ters, Mary B. Doafer and Helen S.
Reginald Guy Hill, 80, of New Phelps. bQtb oC West Columbia, W.
Haven, W. Va., died Sunday, April . Va.; Doris J. Gillispie, New Haven,
18, 1993, at the Holier Medical W. Va.; Patricia L. Smith, Clifton,
Center. Gallipolis.
W. Va.; June C. Bright, Spring· Born on May 23, 1912 at Madi- field, and Kathryn A. Marshall,
son, W. Va., be was the son of the Mason, W.Va.; 29 grandchildrelt,
late l!omer S. Hill !IJid Maiy Helen 4S great-grandchildren, and 18
Nunn Hill. He was a retired insula- great-grandchildren; and a sister, ·
tor on construction and a member Maude Tripplett, South ChlQ!eston,
of the National Associat1on of W.Va.
Insulators and Asbestos Workers,
Funeral services will be held
Local 80, Charleston, W. Va.
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the'·
Besides his parents, he was pre- Foglesong Funeral Home in
ceded in death by his wife, MarY Mason. The Rev. ·George Hoschar
Lorena Hill in 1986; two sons, Will offiCiate and burial Will be in
Roben and Jerry Lee Hill; and a the Kirkland Memorial Gardens .
daughter, JoAnn Hill.
Friends may call at the fun~ral
Surviving are a son, Homer S. home 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.

fe~h

Pres'd t t:r101011 le at
1 en
en
e.v ed these co.nc~rns to the lll!llonal
ag~:~~nking
· e ~e~ll!th~ ~::~
00 1
•
opbreak th~ stranglehold or regJOfll!l .
prerogative that has for so lon_g stJfled refonn. ~h~ he then slnpped
them from hiS nauonal age!\(la. the
appel!rance of a cave-m was
unavotdable.
..
.
Far more than ~oney IS at Stake
her~. Whether '!'Ill!' tracks of our
national forests will ~anently
becom~ httl~ mor~ than hug~ tree
plantations IS ~~.Issue. So 1s the
recovery of m1Ihons. of acres of
badly over~ public rangelan~ .
A!Jd so _too IS _whether deep p11
mmes wtll conun~e to be allo~ed
to become mass1ve ho.les With
heavy ~etal concentrauons that
contammate underground w_ater
resources once the gold and silver
are gon~.
~.
.
Presld~nt Chnton says he Will
now pursue the nc:ed~~ refor!"s
separately _through tndivtdual btlls
to be ~onsulesed by Congress: Just
ho":' vigoro~sly he d';~CS so will be
a st.gn of hu com'!lllment ~ the
envuon~ent and his commtunent
to changmg the status quo.
Jay D. Hair has I Ph.D. In tbe
studr or aalmallife .and has b~n
presidea.t ott~e National Wii~Iife
Federation smce 1981, and IS a
. WJlte~ for Newspaper ~nterprlse .
~tattoo.

Extended h'ecast:

Reginald Hill

.

· One of the bigest public land integrity of the president's entire 1992, the records show, new appligrabs in ~t bisllll)' is now under . progiam.
cations were filed to buy 36.621
way in the WCIICm United States.
Now, the president has renewed acres of public land. That figure
If~dent ClinfD!t acts ~Y ':" his pledge .to see t~e r~fo~~s represen.ts a 91 ~t.i~P froq1
stop tt, he can be&amp;in redeenung his thrOugh as dillinct Iepslauve Int- the prevlODS year s applicauons.
damaged promise to protect the
·
To demonstrate his conviction
resources of the public domain.
and commitment, President Clinton
The-promise was delivered in
417
should immediately ask Congress
. the president's February economic
to pass a moratonum to end the
message in which be called for an
giveaway.
end to environnientally destructive tiatlves. That's where the land grab
Further, Mr. Clinton should urge
subsidies on public land mainly comes in.
Congress to pass a complete reform
within 11 Western states. BelowOne of the Mining Law's worst · of the Mining Law, including a fair
cost timber sales from national provisions allows prospectors to royalty like that paid for coal, _oil
forests were to stop. Fees for graz- . buy public land for a low of $2.50 .and narurat gas taken from public
ing on public rangeland were to be and a high of $5 per acre- 1872 land.
set high enough to at least cover prices. An area the size of ConThe timber, mining and grazing
the· cost of administering the pro-' necticut has been vinually given issues are cases of public land
gram. The archaic 1872 Mining away Ibis way, land_rich in miner- abuse that have festered for years.
Law was to get the long overdue als once owned by the American Congress has failed to remedy
reform of ftnally charging a royalty public.
them because they have _been relepayable to ,the Treasury for the
Sensing reform on the horizon, gated to the regional prerogative of
gold, copper and other hard rock claim holders are rushing to buy up the West Senators from Wes~
minerals extracted from public their stakes before the practice i~ siBteS, exercising the disproportionland. Tog~. the administration brought to a haiL In Montana, for ate influence their states cannot
said, these measures can generate example, the Stillwatec Mining Co. command in the House of Repre$1 billion in savings and revenue has the paperwork moving to buy sentati\I.CS, have consistently
over the next five years.
'
2,036 acres of the Gallatin and stymied reform.
But a bloc or Western senators Custer National Forests for the
The fundamental point, howevconvinced Mr. Clinton to begin dis- princely sum of $10,180. Accord- er, is that these public lands belong
mantling his own program by strip- ing to Stillwater's own estimate, to the entire nation. The husbandping it of the minina and grazing the land is laden with over $30 bil- ing of their resources is profoundly .
provisions. The timber issue had lion worth of platinum and paiJadj. a national concern, not a mere
already been relegated to a legisla- urn at today's prices.
regional prerogative. If regiQnal
- live track separa~e from the centerBy the end _o f fiscal 1992, interestS are subsidized ill exploitpiece economic pack;age. This accordi~J to government records, ing these resources, it is the entire
retreat, in th~ eyes of many envi- the backlog of applications in the nation that puys the subsidy. If the
ronmentalists. compromised the miners' rush to buy up public land resource is degraded in the way it
. ·
totaled 160,800 acres. Durillg fiScal is exploited, the entire nation suf-

55. ChanCe of ram 11 ·1u percent

--Area death--

I

'•
•
•

Weather blamed for drop in housing starts in March

.----1--,,..----. '

Will Bill Clinton stop the land gr.ab?

She had stood ouJside the courtroom with the man accused or
molesting her little boy. She was
sure that he smirked at her. As
though he knew thai he would beat
the rap or get off with a liglu senrenee. It made her blood boil.
· So as Daniel MMic Driver sat in
the dock in a Tuolumne County,
Calif., courtroom a fortnight ago,
Ellie Nesler walked ue and' shot
him dead. Sbe was unwilling to let
.
justice taice its course.
·
To some minds, Nesler is a
heroine. But closer to the truth is
that she •
s
. . . Bf. Tile Auoclated Press • . , . . . ·.
. . IS a sYmbol. he IqAeaents
Toda
. y is Tuesday, Apnl20, the liOth day of 1993. There.are 255 days - the growing number ol AmeriCBiUI
· who_feel that the criminal Juitlce
left in the year,
system has broken down; tflat the
. Today's Highlight in History:
·
··
scales of jus~ce tilt decidedly in
On April 20, 1902 scientisiS Marie and Pierre.Curie isolated the radioac- favor of criminals over their viclive element radium.
·
. , . tims.
On this date:
.
.
.
Tbi .
-"'le view ~
Iared w:l
. mark'mg the stan Qf t he · · · 1 IS .not 111 un'"'...,
. ~t
In. 179~"• Franee d_ec_
_ A.ustna,
·
French Revolutioll!lfY Wars.
·
·. · ·
,
·.
·
dts subS1&amp;nlit!ted
edbby theth ~Bual crimcf
In 1812, 1/Je fourth vice presi t of the United SIBteS, ~!Je Clinton, · ·J all! cosmp,t1 . 'I e ureau 0
died in Washington _at age 73- the ftnt vice president to die while in ·. usuce IIUSUCS. ·
offace.
·
· or 100 felony complaints filed
In 1836, the Territory of Wisconsin was established by Congress..
by private ci~~ in a given year,
In 1889, Adolf Hiller was boni in Braunau, Austria.
only 30 result in arrests. Of the 30
In 1940, RCA publi~ly de_monstrated its new and powerful. el~tron . airests,·only 20 are prosecuted. Of
microsco
. pe. · .
.
.. . . . , _.
·. the 20 ·prosecuted, only 15 field

Today in history

ownership under several Depart- competitive with foreign coal. If
ment !){Housing and Urban Devtl- the coal companies are up~. th~n
opment programs. These funds Sen. Robtn Byrd, D-W.Va, ch81Ihave been restored in the new bud- man of the Appropriations Comget after Ointon was bluntly told mittee, is·upset. If Sen. Byrd is
by influential Democrats in the upset, then no new budget will ever
Senate thai they would nor siiJlllOn get through the Senate.
The result: Coal will not be
the budget if the funds weie cut
Likewise, the centetpiece of the taxed at the mine, but at the utilities
Clinton tax increase is a new ener- lhat use it, .or the distributoril. CoslS
gy tax, which the _administration will be passed along directly to the
boasted would be fair because it consumer. The government will get
would tax all sources of energy ·considerably less, domestic coal
will continue to be a favored fuel
equally.
source.
and Sen. Byrd will suppon
Tba1 has now changed radically.
!he
bill.
Under intense pressure from the
The administration is trying to
mostly Democratic congressional
explain
awax the plan's curreni
delepnoos of the Northeast, home
heating oil will be taxed less heavi- lack of spectficity by noting that
Iy than other forms of energy in $80 billion over live years is rather
order to hold down next winter's insignificant in a $U trillion annual budgeL But, in point of fact, aU
. home beating bills.
West Virginia is coal .country, these cuts will have to come from
· and coal companies were upset · discretionary spending, and that
thai, for the fii'St lime. coal was to adds up to only about $250 billion
· ·
.
be taxed at the mine. Altboug~ this annually.
If
the
bill
is
silent
on the
is the most effteient way or taxing
of·,tong-term
revenue
specifics
coal, and ·would have resulted in
significant revenue increases, it increases and deep cuts, it is just as
would have upped the price or silent on. a number of key shond.omestic coal and made it less term issues that specifically affect
the fiScal '94 budgeL
·
· The new budget, with its economic stimulus package, exceeds
the domestic spending cap
approved by Congress for fiscal
year '94 by $5.4 billion. But the
budget does not detail where this
more than $S billion is going to
come .from - additional cuts or.
new revenue.
The bill specifies cuts department by depanment. We know, for
instance, that next year the Agriculture Department will be cut by a
little more than 4 percent and the
Department of Eneray by more
than 5 percent. However, JJQwhere
is it specified where these cuts will
be inade, and if you talk to people
at the departments involved, all
they know are the gross numbers.
involved, but they have no idea
where the money is acrually going
to come from.
The Same is true across govern.
ment.
The administration calls
• •
these cuts "streamlining." In
answer to a question about
specifics,'an Office of Management
and Budget spokesman said the
details "remain to be seen."
•
Robert Wagman iS a syndical·
/
••
ed writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa e--3

214 EAST MAIN

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
· April 17 dllchrtla - Norma
Sexson, Oin1 .Mitcliell, William
Martin, Jam~ Hess, M(s, Jeffrey
Warner and sQn, John ~aker, · ·
Alberta Sheets, Ted Cr.rt, Mrs . .
Thurman Smith 111d son, and Ver·non Spearry.
. . ·
AprU 1.7 birth - Mr. 111d Mrs,
Brian Poare, 11011, Jacbon
.

.

POMEROY
'

892·8687

',,!j .... ~

�•

Sports

TUesday, April 20, 1993

The, Daily Sentinel
•

Tuesday, April 20, 1993

Page-4

Homers push Blue Jays to 7-1
win over Tribe in short AL slate
Guzman gave up only four hits, second and Darrin Jackson in the
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- Juan one of them an RBI double by founh.
· Ward widened the lead to 5-l
Guzman had only pitched a couple Albert Belle in the third inning that
of bad ga,nes..Robelto Alomar had extended Belle's hitting s!rW to a wilh his lhree-run home run in the
only struggled for a coupie 9f career-high 12 games. Guzman fiflh.
"The count was 3.{), and I came
weeks. .
. shuck out seven, but he had some
control
)X'Ilblems;
waiting
six.
in
with
three straight fastballs, ' •
You don't fret about players of
"I need to cut thai out," he said. Bielecki said. "That just tells you,
lhal caliber lhis early.
don't go 3-0."
·
Guzman bounced back from two "One step at a lime."
·Part of Guzman's problem, GasUntil he homered, Ward had
poor outings by pitching seven
strong innings, and Alomar had ton said, was that he could have gone 1 for 191his season.
"He got behind in the count and.
three hits including one of Toron- . used a little more time on the
had to come to me," Ward said.
to's three home ·runs as lhe Blue mound in spring !raining.
"We bad 2~ pitchers in camp. "He threw me a fastball up, and I
Jays beallhe Cleveland Indians 7-1
That's too many," Gaston said . . did what you're supposed to do
Monday.
Alomar entered the game hitting "Juan didn't pitch last winter, and wilh it.
"1 felt I wasn't s~ggling. I've
.222, with no homers and . three with 25 pitchers in camp, it was
RBis in 11 games. Guzman had a. ~a~d to get anybod.Y enoug.~ been putting ~e ball in ~lay. ~ut it
.. · 12.46 ERA and hadn't made·it past · lnntnJ.s. lt c.uts a S!IY.&amp; liule short. ... ···does mess -w1th you a.. httle-bll.· It
M1ke B1eleck1 (1-2) took tl!e was like 'Gee soll)l;thing's got to
lhe sixlh inning in eilher of his flfSt
loss, giving up six runs and 10 hits · fall in.',' • '
·
·
two stans.
Alomar hit a one-out home run
Not to worry, said manager Cito ~n 6 2-3 innings. Bielecki, attemp!mg to COJile back from elbow off Bielecki in the seventh, and
GasiiXI.
"Robby's a low-maintenance surgery last summer, has an 8.27 Olerud led off the eighth against
player. He's going to produce," ~·
. ,,
.
. Mike Christopher wilh his second
Nolhmg s wrong w11h my ann. home run of lhe season.
Gaston said. "I wasn' t concerned
about him"
I feel my stuff is there," Bielecki
The victory gave lhe Blue Jays a
Same
for Guzman.
s~d: "I'm just not m.~ing good
split of their four-game series in
"If he was complaining about .p1tclies when I have II?'
. Cleveland, and it ajainst prevented
his arm, you'd be concerned,"
· To~onto scored smgle ru~s on them from losing two straight
GasiiXl said. "But he wasn't com- RBI smgles by JOhn Olerud m lhe games. They haven't lost two in a
plaining, so I wasn't concerned."
rQw since last Aug. 28-29.
In the only other America,n
Leagur games, it was Seattle 10,
Detroit 6 and Boston 6, Chicago 0.
Mariners 10, Tigers 6
.
When
the pilehing-poor Detroit
WESTERN CONFERENCE
- • Baseball • Tigers
scored
20 runs twice in the
Mldwelt IH•IIIon
T,...
W
L
Pel.
GB
last
week,
the
temptation was to
· NATIONALLEAGUE
. _,DI_
y-lloullon ' "''&gt;l"' """'•'S4 2S .tiM
ask
if
!hey
had
won. They answer
1.-San Aftloftio .......1.7 32 . 59~
7
TW L Pd. Gl
x·UIIh ....................olil 33 .m
was yes, bolh times.
.
I.S
P!Wadelphio .,. ..........9 3 .7l0
Don...... ............... 34 4l .430
20
Pi.-p ................7 l .ll3
2
When
. th~ Seattle Mariners hit
MiMOidl .............. lB ~ .231 3l.S
st. LaWI .......... --....7 :s .n3
2
four homers two .days in. a row
Ilollu.......................9 69 .l!l 44.S
New Yod: ........ , ......6 l .S4S
2.l
against the awesome Tigers, the
Cbico.......................6 6 .soo
3
Plclflc lllrloloo
-.u ..................6 6 .soo 3
..
same question was ,in order. Well,
z-Phoenis.
...............
oo
19
.759
Flori4o .....................4
I .333
l
•.s..w..................!l3 26 .671 ' 7
one out of two ain't bad.
x·Pa1lancl ..............l.9 29 .628 10.S
W....,.DI,.
"You never feel safe against
. l ·l-A. Clippon ......39 40 .494
21
San Fnncilco ...........
l .6ll
these
guys, because they've got
~
x-LA.
Laten
.......
:n
41
·
.474
ll.S
llollllat ...................7 s .ll3
.!1
Gold'" s..............]l 46 .410 27.l
Allon!a .....................7 7 .SOO
1.!1
seven
guys who can hit 20 .
Su:mnerao ...
24 S4 .308 3!1.5
Loo Anp!01 .............6 7 .&gt;162
2
homers,"
Ken Griffey Jr. said after
1-clinchod
playoff
berth
Sanl&gt;io&amp;o ............... .!l
7 .417
2.l
y·c:l.inched diViliot title
hitting two of his own to lead the
Colondo ................. .4 7 .364
3
:.r.·c:linchcd Overall boa record
CINClNNA1l..........3 • 9 .2l0
4.!1
Mariners to a 10-6 victory Monday
over
the Tigers. "They've got a
Monday's sror.S
Mooday's stste
whole lot of guys who can swing ,
Ho.mon u OtiRao. ppc1., nin
....... 96, s.. - · 19
llouotonlll.-97
the bat, ·so they're never out of a
Tonight's games
game.''
Tonight's
games
,
Atlanta (0. Mlddu.a 1·1)'11 Florida
Wuhin..,. 11 Odondo, 7:30p.m.
(Bowen 1-0), Hl p.m.
. The Mariners. 20-3 losers to the
No'!' Yor:k 11 ~.7:30p.m. ·
Loo ""&amp;cloo (CIOdioai G-1)" Mon.,..
Tigers
on Saturday, got a vivid
lndiri. at~~~.__7:3Qp.m.
o1 (N•bbolz ().{)). 7,3s p.m.
,
n.o.;. .. ~. 7.:30p.m.
demonstration of that on Monday.
S.. !Mao (Eilond G-1) at Pbilodolphio
LA. LaltM II Minne~ata,l p.m.
(0....1-G), 7:35
Seattle led 10-3 with two outs in
Philldelpltia ataac.ao,l:30 p.m.
CINCINNATI (llclchcr 0-1) at Pi.lU·
lhe ninth, and won when Rob Deer
LA.
CQ&gt;oon
II
Dollal,l:30
p.m.
(l'omliniJ.G), 7,3l P."'U1ah II !ia:amcnto, 10:30 p.lll.
Lo Fnacioco (Swill ().I) a Now Yod&lt;
-who
had homered earlierGolden State &amp;I Portland, I 0:30 p.m.
(l'omoadco 1-0). 7&gt;40p..m.
flied
to
Griffey
wilh two men on to
Haaaton (P~u&amp;al 1· 0) at Chicago
Wednesday's games
end the game.
•
~y l.O),Iil! p.m.
.
Orlando 11 Booon, 7:30p.m.
Colona. (B. Salilh H) at S• Louil
Seattle
manager
Lou
Piniella
(Anloho 2-0),1:35 p.m.
New J•oyll NcwYorlr, 7:30p.m.
shook his head afterward, mindful
Miami al Philldelpbia, 7:30p.m.
Alloo1o11W........... 7,30p.m.
of what lhe Tigers can do.
Wedaesday's games
Milwaukee at O.ad~•· 7:30 p..m.
Ho1111oa (Drabek 1· 2) at Chica&amp;o
"When they beat us 20-3, it
a..EV£L.\ND at Indiana, 1:30 p.m.
(Mo&lt;pn 1-2), 3"" p.m.
Dallu It Omvcr, 9'p.m.
didn 'I look like a baseball game,"
Atlonlo (Smdta 1-2) • f1orido (1!""1)1
LA. Lakas 1t Ulab, 9 p.m.
2-1), 7,3l p.m.
.
he said. "It looked like Michigan
Sacramento at Ooldc:n State:, 1 0:30
'
Loo Anacloo (AIIacio G-1) .. MoniiOII
pm.
beating
Northwestern."
(l. J.... ~~ HSp.m.
I
s.._ !Mao (Bonio 2-1) •• Philodolphia
Detroit manager Sparky Ander(IU.... l-1~ 7'35p.m.
NUL playoffs • son never is concerned about an
CINCINNATI (lijo 1-1) ot Pilllbu!Jh
(Cookc0.1), 7:35pm.
.
offense averaging 7.7 runs with a
Monday's srores
, San FnnciJco (BAntlc:yl-0) at New
.305 batting average. The pitching
Detroit 6, Toron~ 3, Detroit te.dl~e.-­
Yodt (Goodat 1 - l~ 7:40p.m.
ritll-0
staff
has a 4.59 ERA.
Colondo (!food 2-1) ••• u.u. (MoVancouver 4, Winnipea l, Vancwvcr
..... ().1), 1,3l p.m.
"All
we have to wony about is
lads ~Cries 1-0 .
·
our pitching, because we know we ·
Tonight's games
are going to hit.': he said. "It .
New Jcn.cy at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
·doesn't take a Harvard degree to
N.Y . ld1ndcn 11 Waahinaton, 7:30
AMERICAN LEAGUE
p.m.
Euttm D1111lllon
fi~ that OUL"
BWialo at Boston,7:30 p.m.
Tum
WLPd.GB
Eric Hanson kept Detroit's
Montreal
a
I
Quebec,
7:30p.m.
8011Gn,... ,,,,,.,"' '' '" .)Q
3 .769
lldmiL ...................7 s .m
2.5
offense in check as the Mariners
Wednesday's games
r.........................7 s .m :z.s
avoided a sweep while ending the
Now Yod: ................6 6 .SOO
3.l
Tororuo It Dcuoi.L. 7:30p.m.
Tigers' five-game winning streak.
Milwauki'IC .: .............4
S .444
4
St l..milat Chicaso, 8:30p.m.
ClllVEl.AND ........ 5
I .38S
S
1..01 AnJeb at Calgary, 9:l0 p.rn.
Griffey also scored four runs for
Winnipean Vancouva-, 10:30p.rn. ·
8~ .................4
7 .364
5
the Mariners, outscored 39c20 in
.
W.a.tr• IH•Wo•
the four-game series at Tiger Sta4i- * Transactions * Tea• ............ _.........1 3 :m
um. The victory ended Seattle's
Colilomio .................6 4 .600
l.l
Baseball
Minnoi&lt;U ...........:....6 l .S45
2
four-game losing strealc. .
·
CNuao. .................. .!l 7 .417
3.5
,
National laiiH:
Hanson (2-0) beat Detroit for
FLORIDA MARLINS - Ploccd Bn1
Soolllo ..................... 5
7 .417
3.5
Barberic, infielder, m 1.bc 1.5-day di11blod
Ooklond ...................4 6 .400
35
lhe fiflh time in seven career deci• liJl.
KIIUal City .............3
9 .250
5.5
sions. He allowed three runs on
LOS ANGELES DODGERS eight hits, struck out five and
O•imod
Steve
Puris,
pitcher,
orr
Wlivm
Monday's stortS
from the Philadelj)hil Phillie~ and ·aawalked three in 7 2-3 innings.
BoRon6.0til&amp;aoo
aignod him to San Antonio or d!.c Teiu
S..llk 10. Ddroi.t6
Dwayne
Henry, the third Seattle
~a,,~
Toronto 7;-G!EVELAND 1
PffiLADELPHlA PHILUES - R•
pitcher,
got
his flfst save.
leased Bn.~ c:e Dpml, or,nfielder. from
Toalgbt's games
Pete
O'Brien
added a 'lhree-run
Scranton-Wilkca-Barrc. Act.ivaled Cary
· Tuaa {ltDJCn l-0) at Detroil (Wella
Willi•ma., outficldcr, from lhc di••bled
homer
and
Tino
Martinez a solo
:Z.O), 7:0S p.m.
.
lise
shot.
Jay
Buhner
drove
in two runs.
'Cbiuao (Alnru 0-0) at Baltimore
(~Donold 1 - 1~ 7,35 p.m.
.John Doherty (I-I) allow~ five
Basketball
Milwaukoc (Navarro 0.0) • ~at.
National Balkdball Aalbelalldn
runs in 4.2-3 innings, Including
(Bonbl.O), Iil!p.m.
,
NEW JERS_EY NETS - Sianed Dave
. TONnta {SIOW.emyre 2-0) 11 Karu'u
three solo homers. Kirk Gibson had
Hoppcn, cenw, to a iocond 1()-day conCit~0.2~ 1:35 p.m.
two hits and drove in lhree runs for
(Clomooo 2.0)' at S..llle (Cum·
"'"'
minp ().2~ lO,OSp.m.
lhe TJgers.
Football
New Yodl: (Vatnan l-0) II Oakland
Red Sox 6, White Sox 0 ·
(S. O.vit; 0-2), 10:05 p.m.
•
Nollon.ol F"'"ball Laaoe
~
John Dopson pitched a lhree-hitDENVER BRONOOS - Sipcd Karl
CLEVELAND (Mo.. 0-0) at CaliforMecklenburg, linebacker, t!) 1 one-year
nio (Son~ 1-0), lO,OS p.m.
ter for his first career shutout,
COI'llnc:t.
.
extending
Boston's slreak of seore.
NEW
ORLEANS
SAINTS
AJIOOd
Wednesday's games ·
10 t.emu wilh Richard Cooper, offcrurivt!
less
innings
against Chicago to 18.
Tuu (Lerruts 1· 2) u De.t r!)it
1.1cJde, and Br1d Muster, runnina back, .:n
(Kntc!cr H ~ 1,35 p.m.
The
White
Sox, shut out Sunday
Wee-year c:cxuna..
Oucaso (M(:Oowdl 3-0) at Balt.imorc
SAN
DIEGO
CHARGERS
by
Frank
Viola,
last s¢ored .in the
(Su~liffc. 2--1). 7:3S p.rn.
Matchr.d the offer sheet lendered by tho
"Milwaukee (Bona ~1) at Minnal»&gt;..l
ninth
inning
Saturday.
Chicago
~•mpa Bay Buccaneers to Dai'Ten Cu~
(Ti,..U ().Z) , ,,os p.m.
scored
one
run
nnpan,
~.Cety.
in
the
last 27
toronLa (M&lt;Wnt 0.3) at Kan•a• Cit)'
(Oubi&lt;u ().2), 1:35 p.m.
innings of the four-game series at
HD&lt;key
~
(Parwin 0.2) .. Soollle (lohnFenway Park.
·
NaUonillllotke)' Leaaue
lort 1-1). l O:OS P~·
PLORIDA PA~THERS - Nome&lt;!
By winning the last lhree games,
New York (Ke)' l-0) at Oalt~d (B.
BW Tomy ptc~ldom. .
Wiu 0.0), 10:05 p.m.
Boston
increased its lead in the AL
SAN JOSE SHARKS - F...t GomJ• '
CLEVELAND (N•&amp;J 1· 2) at CalilOI'East to 2 1/2 games over Detri&gt;il
KinBIIM, coach.
,
nia (Farrell 0..2).10:05 p.m.
and Toronto. At 10-3, the Red Sox
Colltge
- *NBA-• are off to .their bes1 stan since
CEN'I'li.AL FLORIDA - AMowtood
1952.
the Dip!&amp;tlon r:f Joe Dean, men'• blakCI·
EASTERN CONFERENCil
ball c:O.c)l. . N•mc-d Ben DeVary in~t:rim
After being held to two hits by
AUollllc D I men'• bilkeJbaUeoaeh.
·
Alex Fernandez (2- 1) for five
: Ttam
W _L . Pet.
GB
y•NiwYoS ...... ,.... 56 . 21 .711
innings in the traditiorlal Patriot's
"
••. ..............~ 34 .570 ll .l
· Day morning game, the ~ed Sox
Sports briefs
0:::.!~.::::::::;:
:~ lli~
got all their runs in .the sixth off
MMmi .................... 35 43 .449' ~l
four Chicago picchers; Boston got
Pltilodolphli ...........2S 53 .321
Hocl1ey . ·
·
seven consecutive hits, wilh RBls ·
· Wllltln-........... 22 l6 .:112
34
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - The credited to Mike Greenw~ll, Aridre
CIOO'IlDhlo...
San
Jose, Sharks · fired coach Dawson, Mo Vaughn, CIU'IosQuiri,.o;...,
..............ll 23 .70S 4
,.aJ!VEI,A)&gt;II)....ll 27 .6S4 ,.
George
Kingston, who was 17-58-5 lana and Scott Cooper. · ,
··
Clwlollo.:..............41 31 .Sl9 14.5,
·
and
11-71-2
in
the
franchise's
first
Dopson
(1-1)
won
just
one
of
u ·
....-...................40 31 · .Sil
lS
.,
, _ ,:............... :40 31 ,Sl) .
t~o _seasons. Tile 53 , year-~ld his previous 16 starts dating back
17 .
J)ooojt........ :............ 31 40 .417
Kingston,
who has a year remam- to lasl summer and was wilhout a
lofllwo'*oo .............ll _ 51 . .3S4 27.l
ing on his tbree; year contract, :· sh)ltout in 88 career starU. His last ·
iUmed down an offer to become a . .complete game was in SeJIICf11_12cr
pro seouL
. , ·
.
. 1989. .
. .
.

"m.

Battling to to stay mthe playoff
picture, the University of Rio
Grande Redwomen softball team
drl&gt;Pjled a doubleheader will\ MOC
opponent Urbana 8-.S and 10-6 last
............ Thursday.
The ball flew fast and hard in
the opener · as the Red women
recorded 15 hits to t~e Blue
Knights' 12. Robin Stull, two- for ·
four, led lhe way wilh a double and
two runs scored, while Kelly
Robinson and Belh Floyd, each two·
for four, had a run apiece credited ·
to'them.
Urbana answered wilh a two for
four performance from Rayna
King, who made good on two
RBis, and Angie Burton, two for
four with two dou\)les. Starr
Philpot had the loss and Lynn

Veniiy was the winnin~ pitcher.
The Redwomen comm1tted two
errors and Urbana had none.
Robinso11's three,run homer in
the second game was one of the
highlights of Rio Grande's eight-hit
showing, backed by a two for four
showing by Char Pean and Shelley
Whitaker. Peart scored two runs
and,Whitaker had a pair of doubles.
Nickey Leeth was two for follr
wilh a trjple and two runs and Burton connected for two doubles at
two for four. Belinda Hottle had
lhe loss and Cindy Cok:man was on
the mound for lhe Blue Knights.
The Redwomen committed two
errors to Urbana's one.
A Satllrday game with Walsh
was postponed due to rain, but the.
Redwomen were back in action

Sunday in a· makeup en·counter
wilh Mount St. Joseph. The Mountie Lions emerged with 6-l31Jd 8-6
wins.
·
Philpot (6.. 7) allowed MSJ eight
hits and Jenni Neyer nine for Rio
Grande, with Shelley w'hitaker
going two for three and Pean two
for four wilh a double and a triple.

and Deric Johnson, one for one.
The Bears committed two errors.
On Friday, the Redmen emerged
with a 4-2 win over Tech, mounting an eight-hit offense and holding
themselves to a single error. The
Golden Bears were allOwed seven
hits and also had one error.
·
Greg Edgar (1-0) had the win, ·
which saw Wes Young go two for
three with an RBI, and Eric
McLean and Conrad W$icka each
record one for' two sho~ ings to

advance the Redmen cause. Erik
Shamblin was two for three with a
.home run to lead Tech, and Paul
Hopkins took the loss.
· .'fh!lt encou,ater was foll~wed by
a JUniOr varsuy game wh1ch saw
the Golden Bears net a 5.{) shutout
10 send Rio Grande's JV record to
3-2 on the season.
Tom McGirl allowed Rio
Grande five hi!S in which Edgar
was one for two and Voorheis went
one for one. For Tech, Hopkins

was one for two and John Johnson
ended one for one. The Redmen
suffered three errors to one for
Tech, and Ryan Young (1-1) had
the loss. .
•
Rio .Grande opens this week's
action Tuesday at Mount Vernon
Nazarene, to be folloWed Wednes~ .
day by a makeup with ~ne. On
Saturday, the Redilien travel to
Walsh and will be at home Sunday
at 1 p.m. against Central State.
"If we can survive this week,
we'll be all right," Oglesby said.

Eastern takes eight innings •
to get 6..5 win over Alexander
iimiDI of Monday's Americao League game
agaiost tbe host Cleveland Indians, who lost 7-1.

GOOD RIP, TURNER! -Toronto's Joe
Carter (rl&amp;bt) congratulates ~mmate Turner
Ward aner Ward's three-run homer in the finh

(AP)

Reds' Chattanooga farm club pounds
Brownzng early en route to' 8-4 victory
CINCINNATI (AP)- This
time, Iom Browning couldn't even
get Class AA hitters out.
Browning was rocked for 13
hits and seven runs as lhe Cincinnati Reds lost 8-4 Monday niJ!)lt in
an exhibition against .their Chattanooga, Tenn., fann club. It was
t~e last ,thing the Reds wanted. to

see.

hard in spring training and his two get good pitcheS."
regular-season starts, got to pitch
against the minor leaguers.
Browning, 32, hasn't pitched
,The ·left .. hander essentially well since his .i'econstructive knee
threw batting practice for the flfst surgery last July, after he tore ligathree innings, giving up 10 hits ll!ld ments in his left knee in a collision
seven runs.
·
-~·
at home plare with Houston's Scotl
"1 think us hitting early sur· Servais.
·
.
prised him, and maybe even surprised us," said Chattanooga third
·. He had a horrible spring "that
baseman Brian Lane. "It wasn't carried over into the regular seasQn.
really his day. This 11uy's got a per- In his two starts, Browning is 0-2
fect game in the maJOr leagues. We wilh a 16.71 earned run average.
got to him early and it was fun . He has ;ven up 13 earned runs and
Some days you go to lhe plate an(\ 19 hits m seven innings.

f

The Reds skipped Browning iii
their rotation last week, moving
fifth-starter Tim Pugh up to pileh
against ·the New Y~rk Mets on
Sunday. Browning, who's been hit

~

.

----

--''

·~

,

By BERT ROSENTHAL
BOSTON (AP)- A Kenyan
won the Boston Marathon. It was
not lbrBhim Hussein, the two'time
defending champion and lhree.. time
win~r.

..

I
\

'

---

. ,...

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Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepte~l)1 .
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. (OFFER EXPIRES 6/21/93)

'.

the lead about two miles from lhe
finish and beat Ki!ll Jae-Yong, lhe
farst el.iJC Kiltbn in the race in' 43
· for the Spanans. Ei:sieril tied in
years, -liy about 70 yards Monday,
bouom of the frame on hits 'by in 2 hours, 9 minures, 33 seconds..
Ha 1 N 1 and Karr
• N'deti, lllh at lhe halfway point
w er. e son
a
errQr. of the 26-mile, 385-yard race,
Redov1an walked to force home a
run and Hendricks drove home two made his big move over lhe second
half of the race.
w,hile reaching on an error.
·
Tied at 5·5, Eastern won in
"In Kenya, I was training in
eight innings, when with two out · · very high mountains," N'deu said.
Jaime Wilson singled, stole secomi "So I was feeling nice when I was
and third, and carne home on a hard climbing lhe hills here.''
hit ball by Jessica Radford,
K N'deti is only one of two
Eastern hitters weie Wilson, · enyans ever to fail a drug test.
Hawley who was '3-3, Nelson, .. After fi.nishing second at the 1988
World Junior Cross Country Ch8111·
Karr, Hendricks and Aeiker. pionships at · Auckland, New
Inning totals ·
d h
Alexander. lOI-030.00 = 5_74
eiuan , e tested positive for a
Eastern: 101-030-01 = 6-9-12
stimulant and was banned for lhree
monlhs.
N'deti, who l)'lade his maralhon

llie ·

z ••

Southern diamondmen hand de~ut in December. finishing secFederal Hocking 7-2defeat Montana wants Kansas

City, noifs, ands or buts

The Southern Tornadoes posted

singled and Kyle Wiclcliric doubled
''llhought that what I put on the
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
Thai taetic was seen by some as
in lhe go-ahead run. Southern 'left
table
was
more
lhan
fair,'
Peterson
..
SANTA
CLARA,
Calif.
(AP)
~ calculated effort 10 drive up
ball win over Federal Hocking runners stranded at second and
-Just about the time the San said. "I improved the offer of what Kansas City's bid io bring it into
Monday evening.
· ,
· lhird.
.
Francisco
49crs decided to give Joe 1 had befo~e. I can say withoul •line ~ith one from the P~&lt;?e~ix
Ryan Williams was the wiMing
..Federal tied the score in the
Montana
his
~ob back, he decided equivOcation that it's a very handCatdmals, who proposed glYing
pitcher with. relief from Andy lhird inning, but Southern broke lhe .he no longer wanted
some
offer."
it.
San Francisco a first-round draft
Grueser, who J)osted the save. They game open in the fourth, taking
Montana,
who
lost
his
job
10
Montana
made
clear
Monday
pick in return for Montana.
combined for eight strikeouts, advantage of two walks, two errors
Young
during
a
two-year
recovery
that
the
quarterbacking
job
he
·walked seven and !lave up only and a single in the rally. SHS plat·
wants is in Kansas City. He reject- from an elbow injury, turned down
lhree hits in the duranon.
ed five runs to take a 7-2 lead and ed
an offer by lhe 49ers to reinstate the 49ers' offer earlier Monday
Jonas suffered lhe loss for Fed· lhe win. ·
h,
i
m
as the starter over .Steve during a meeting with Policy and ,·
era! Hocking, going lhe dipnce to
Southern bitters were Billy
Young,
last season's passing leader coach George Seifen at lhe quanerfan foilr and walk two.
.·
· Jones. with a triple and single,
and
league
MVP.
back's home.
·
Southern (5-4) got some fine . Wickline a double and singles each
OXFORD, Ohio (AP)'- Herb
Still,
the
coach
said
Montana
Cannen
Policy,
lhe,49ers'
presidefensive help as they posted an by Dill, Northup, Jeremy Hill and
Sendelc hopes to have .Miami of
technically
was
lhe
team's
·No.
I
dent,
said
he
hoJ?ed
to
resolve
errorless ball game. Federal com- Eric Jones.
with Young geuing Ohio looking more like the Univermited two errors.
St. Angelo tripled for Fede~al. Montana's status w11hin lhe next48 quarterback,
sity of Kentucky on lhe basketball
lhe
job
if
he
lefL
hours
desl&gt;ite
a
breakdown
Monday
Federal Hocking took a 1.{) lead · while Hardy and Jenkins each sincoun.
.
in
trade
negotiations·
with
the
Just
a
few
.
days
ago,
it
was
the
in lhe first, but Soulhem came back gled.
Sendek, an a sistant at KenChiefs:
other
way
around,
and
after
the
in lhe bottom half of the frame to
Southern plays Miller Friday.
The problem is over the com· April 7 re-signing of Steve Bono as tucky, accepted the job as Miami's
' lead 2-1. Billy Jones tripled, Jere- Innin1 totals
.
pensation the Chiefs would pay lhe Young's nominal backup, the 49ers . head basketball coach Monday.
my Dill singled him home to tie the Fed. Hocking: 101-900-0 z 2:3..2
49ers for Montana,, a four-time deemed Montana expendable and , Two Ciricinnati newspapers reponscore
at 1-1, then Jeremy Northup Southem:200-500-x=;5-7-0
'
.
Super Bowl winner in 10 years as gave him permissiOn to shop ed he was offered the job after
San Francisco's starter. He has a around for another team.
. Kansas assistant Kevin Stallings
·
Montana ended his two-week turned it down.
year left on his 49ers contr;ICL
Sendek, 30, interviewed last
Policy indicated the Chie(s search by embracing Kansas City,
hadn't changed !heir earlier offer, but the 49ers blocked the move, week wilh Miami alhletic director
Trimble firetiall Justin Day 1·0. Reuben Kittle doubled and but Kansas City president and gen- complaining lhe Chiefs hadn't bid R.C. JOhnson for lhe vacancy creatfanned 14 of lhe 24 Eastern batters Pay singled him home for the run.
eral manager Carl Peterson dis- enough. Then the Niners clouded ed when Joby Wright took the ·
he faced as the Tomcats rolled to
Trimble scored another single agreed, allhough he didn't specify the picture further by offering Wyoming job on April6.
an 11.{) shutout win over Eastern's run in the second, then broke tlie the change.
The Redskins had a deliberate,
Montana his old starting job.
baseball team Monday.
half·court offense under Wright,
~arne open with a six-run third
Oay fanned 14, walked four and mning. Three singles, two .walks
who played for Bobby Knighl at
Indiana. Sendek said Kentucky's
hurled a one-hitter despite a con- and a costly error allowed lhe six
stant rain thai fell throughout the runs to come home to putlhe Tomrun-and-gun style "is what 1 feel
game. Young Joey Coates pilehed a cats ahead 8.{).
•
most comfortable with and lhe sys-.
good game for Eastern (1·5), gaintern I've learned to believe in.''
A Kittle home run over the right
ing relief from anolher young East- center field fence and a John ~k­
· Sendck has been an assistant to
em reliever, David Koenig. They ey double accounted ·for the other
By The Auqclated Press
scored on four of their first five Ken!ucky coach Rick Pitino since
combined for three strikeouts and three Trimble runs. That allowed
There were no· swpriscs on Day shots in lhe second period, includ- Pitino took over the Wildcats' proseven walks.
ingJwo power-play goals, to jump gram in 1989. Sendek was Kenthe Tomcats to fil)ish the game 2oflheNHLplayoffs.
. Day fanned the side in the flfst un~ the
rule. '
.11ic Detroit Red' Wings, one of ' out to a 5-I Iead. ·
tucky's coordinator of recruiting.
afrer Trimble (6-3) had gone ahead
"We expected a physical · He began working for Pitino as
Eastern threatened with .three the favorites to reach the Stanley
walks in the fiflh, but could not Cup fmals, bad an easy time with game," said Detroit's Steve Yzer- a graduate assistant at Providence
Toronto in a 6-3 win.
man, who had a goal and an assist. in 1985. Sebdek has reached 1he
Sports deadlines posted• score.
The Vancouver Can!Jcks, win- "But the score dictates what ·Final Four with Pitino at ProviTrimble hitters were Kittle a
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune, double and home run, Lackey a ners of six of seven regular-season Toronto can try to do. After we got dence in 1987 and KeniUcky I his
.
The Daily Sentinel, the Point double, Rusty Richards and Day games against Winnipeg, Continued those quick goals in the second year.
their
dominanCe
in
a
hard-fought
4.
period,
they
couldn't
J?lay
us
that
·
''Miami
looks
like
all exceUcnt .
two
singles
and
singles
by
Tom
Pleasant Register and the Sunday ..
2
win.
·
li&amp;ht
any
more.
It
wasn
.t
that
physoppommity
for'
ine,"
Sendek
said.
Hardy
and
Jay
Stinson.
Times-Sentinel value the contribu- ·
Randy
Kaylor
had
the
lone
EastOne
game
has
been
completed
iOihfter
tbat.''
~
"Miami
has
an
outstanding
acalions their readers make to the
in
each
fust-round
series,
and
lhe
"I
think
we
wert
having
a
lot
of
demic
reputation,
a
beautiful
camemhiL
sports sections of these papers, and
early surprises are the Buffalo- uouble adapting to their speed/' pus, a tremendous arena to.play in
these contributions will continue to Ionlnttotals
BOston and St. Louis-Chicago Toronto defense man · Jamie and a great winning tradition."
Trimble:
116-03
•
11-9-1
be published. •
·
~tern:
OOQ.OO.O..l-4
matchups.
Macoun said. ''We were letting
"I want someone from a sueHowever, certain deadlines for
The Sabres, who finished founh them bre.lc out much too easily, cessfill provam beca
. use I believe
submissions will be observed. The
in the Adams Division, diclated the and we've got to work on that for in the old ada!ie that success breeils
de8dline for photos and related anipace of play lhroughout a surpris- Game 2.''
·success," JohiiSOII said.
clcs.for basketball and olher winter Memorial linkfest
mg 5-4 overtime win Sunday at
Canucks 4, Jets l
Sendek Scouted Miami's Redspcirts is the last d~\' of lhc· NBA slated for May 29
Boston.
At
Vanco11ver,
British skins for the Kentucky-Miami
Finals.
The Blues, who didn't qualify Columbia, Trevor Linden snapped game on Dec. ~2. whic.h the Wild·
Likewise, lhe deadline for subPlans
are
underway
for
the
lhird
for
the playoffs util the last Week in a rdJound at 12:16 of the third cats won 65-49.
.
missions of local baseball · and
anriual
Meigs
Band
Memorial
Golf
of
the
season,
uaed
a
third-period
period
to
put
the
Canucb
ahead
.
Wright's
1eams
were
61-29
in
softtrall-relatcd photQs and related
·
power-play comeback 10 down Jhe and Cliff Ronning added an insur- his three seasons at Miami, includ·.
articles, from T-ballto lhe majors, Classic.
The
tournament
wiU
be
held
at
Blackliawks
S-4 Sunday in the. ance goal wilh 1:29 left. Vancou-. ing one Mid-American Conference
.as well as other spring and summer
the
Meigs
County
Golf
Course
on
seriea
opener.
..
~ver'a cbecting line of Anatoli title, a. tie for the tide and _appearsports, is lhc da)' of the last game
May
29
wilh
tee
off
time
.at
8:45
OpeninJ·round
series
continue
Semenov, Oall'y V.JIIt and Tim . ances 10 the NCAA and NIT tour·
of the World Seiies. The deadline a.m.
·,
.
.
tonil!hl
w11h
New
Jersey
at
J'ittsHunter beld rookie star Teemu namcnts.
fQr photos and related anicles for
This
yea{'
1
honoree
will
be
burp, the New Yotlc Islanders at Selannctojultoneahotongoal.
''Those int:!lfbles are in
football and olher fall spons 'is lhe
lonatlme. educator and ~ 1im WaShington, Buffalo-at BoiiOn arid
"Winnipeg played a cagey place," Senclet
. "The frameSaturday before the Super Bowl.
Vennari.
..
.Monii'Oil1t Quebec. .
.
. IPIDC. wailing for breaks and got a work for 1 IUCCessfill ptograrn has
These deadlines have been ilisti·
. The lOUIIWnent wiD be a mixed
Game 2 ol the Los Anieles-Cal' couple fluky pis, but we bounced been llld."
·
tu~ to give readers plenty of time
Vancouver-Winnipeg, . back, took adv1ncige of our
Sendek is a Pittsburgh native
to get their photos back from the sCf8111ble wllh 1 blind chw. Fee is gary;
pliotography studiQ of c:lloice and $45 whiclllnchida lunch and bev- Detroit-Toronto ud Chicago-St. chuc:ct We I¥Cn' a lot moredillci· and 1985 gradu.ate of Carneaie
10 give lhe staffs lhe oppi&gt;nunity to maes.&gt;6olfcn wiD 11ave 1 ~ Loui1 11riea will · be played plin~ !ban a year ago when we Mellon. Ho lettered dlree yw~ at
·
.
. lost_the opener.'' uld Canucb' Cameaie MellonCblitpvc up his
publish tbese apona photos and . to Win 1 new c:a' for 1 bole In one. . Wednct~ay.
For more IDforioldoa 80lfen may
Red Wlllp 6, Maple Leafl3
. assistan! CO!Idl Ron Wilaon.
final year r4 el ·
..., become
articles during lhe appropriate
ca11
the
aoJf
COUIIO.
At
De~r"lt;.
the
R.ed
Wings
,
an
1ssistanl
at
'ltlbuJ'&amp;!I
Central ·
lOR for thaupon.
·

a 7. 2 Tri-Valley Conference base-

.

Trimble blanks Eastern 11.. 0

t

'

.

But Montana preferred to play
for the Chiefs, who reportedly
offered !heir farst-round pick, but
sought the 49ers' second .. round
pick and lffiOther player in addition
to Montana.,

High School.
. Pitino said he would appaint a
replacement for Sendek soon, possibly laler this week.
"Herb Sendek is as talented as
any assislantl'vc had,'' Pitino said.
''He and I started togelher at Providence, and he helped our teams go
to two Final Fours. I know he will
do an outstanding job at Miami.''
Sendek is the lOth former Pitino
assistant to advance to a head
coaching job.

74e.L¥t

Detroit, Vancouver record
wins in NHL playoff games

rnercr

sea-

,r

~~d:!·~~=~~&amp;~~~~,o~:~

ond at Honolulu, also said he was marathoner in the U.S. in 1986, . onds, then surged into lhe lead.
"1 was watching him," N'deti
not bothered by the heat.
1989 and 1991.
said.
"When you are running wilh
In the women's field, Olga
Egorova, who challenged
some\)o&lt;!y,
you can tell 'if he is
MarkovaofRussia won fort.llesec- Markova and 1991 winner and
tired."
.
ond year in a row, in 2:25:27, the 1991 world champion Wanda Pan-.
Swanbooi
couldn't
"eep up the
fastest in the world lhis year.
fil of Poland early in the. race,
pace,
and
N'deti
was
on
his way to
Markova became the first failed to finish among the top 15.
a victory lhat was worth $65,000 in
women's repeat winner since Rosa So did Panfil.
Mota ofPortu$al won in 1987-88.
. · The 35-year-old'S;~muelson prize money, a place on the
Kenyan team lhat wiU ~mpete in
After winmng Boston last year wourid up sixlh in 2:35:43.
in 2:23:43, the fastest in the world
"I went out with lhe leaders, but the World Championships at
for 1992, Marlcoya was not given a 1 said there was no way I could Stuugan, Germany, in August, and
place on lhe Unified Team for the hold on " Samuelson said. "So I the prestige, honors and accolades
lhat go along with being a Boston
Olympics; because she skipped the dropped'back. ·
team's qualifier at Los Angeles and . "I had trouble with my leg winner.
Swartbooi wound up third in
elected to run at Boston.
going up the hills. The leg bolhered
2:09:57
and Hiromi Taniguchi of
"1 wanted to make a point," me, but I came back every time.
Japan,
lhe
1991 world champion,
Marko.va sa1d, . af!er beau.ng M;y time is disappointing, but it
in
2: 11:02.
wasfounh
Olymp1c gold .m,edahst V11lenuna was important to finish in this comHussein,
who
had earned lhe top
Egorova ofRussw. .
.
petitive field."
·
prize
and
the
olher
honors associat- .
At 18 miles the front of the
The 1984 Olympic champmn,
Joan Benoit Samuelso~, also com- men's pack had 'dwindled down to ed with being a champion, after ~
peted Monday, markmg the f1rst Lucketz Swartbooi of Namibia, becoming the first Kenyan winner
time two women's. Olympi_c running his third marathon, and in the race's history in 1988,
marathon gold medalists were m Kim winner of the 1992 Seoul dropped out after 18 miles with
lhe same race.
• .
Marathon. Closing on them was stomach crimips.
Mark Plaatjes, a native South
The runner-up was K1m Jones N'deti, second at tlie 1992 Tokyo
African
now an American citizen
ofSpokane,.Wash.
Half-Marathon and lOth at the
living
in
Boulder, Colo., was the
_. Jones,_also the second-place fin· 1992 World Cross Country .Chamfirst
U.S
.
finisher,
sixth in 2:12:39.
' isl\er.in 1991, was more lhan 4 112. pionships.
.· .
The
first
native
American was
•· minu1es back, in 2:30.00.
At the 24.3-mile point, N'deti
Keith
Brantly,
of
Ormond
Beach,
"It was very warm out !here," .\ caught the from-running- Swart·
.Fla.,
ninth
in
2:12:58
.
.
said Jones, lhe top-ranked women's booi. ran alongside him for '40 sec-

Sendek selected as Miami
University's men's cage coach

\

....

Grande's four.
.
Starting lhis week at 9: 14 overall and 2-6 in the Mid..Ohio Conference (2-10 in Pistrict 22), lhe
Redwomen will be On the road all
week, starting Tuesday at Ohio
Dominican. The team meets Capi·
tal Thursday and will participate in
the Ohio Dominican Tournament
this Saturday and Sunday.

N'deti breaks tape to win Boston Marathon

.

.

_,,'

Eastern scored a dramatic · 6~5
win .o ver Alexander's softball
team, as Sbelly Hendrix pitched
an9ther great game for the 5-1
Eagles.
. Alex went·up I.{) in the first, but
Eastern came back to lie in lhe first
on a Penny Aeiker single and RBI
single by Jessica Karr.
.
Alex went up 2-1 in the third
when Carsey singled and Sherry
Wolfe had an. RBI single. Eastern
came back to tie al2-2 as ~ac!Jael
Hawley singled,.Nicole Nelson sin· gled and Hawley ¢ame home ·on
Karr's f.elder's cboice.
Wolfe bad a r.Wo-RBI double in
I the fiflh to spark a ~run inning

· Leading . the visitors' game were one for four perfol'Jilllllce resulting
Julie Liedhegner, two for four, and in two runs and a double, as Jane
Nicole Bobay, who netted two Jess connected on one hit out of
RBis on heningle hit of lhe game. four attempts. Kelly Reynolds
· The Red women endured five · scored a run on bet single for MSJ
errors to two for the Mountie and Bobay netted two runs.
,
Lions. ·
Hottle (2-4) took the loss and
In the nightcap, the Redwomen Joy Igo was credited with the win.
reele.d off eij!ht hits with Stull's MSJ, which had a three-hitter,
commiued a single error to Rio

in second race of career,

It was little.. known Cosmas

.

'

1

strength of two home runs from for four, and Brian Williams was
Brian Williams and Rich Knisley credited with lhe win.
(each two for three), the highlight
The nightcap went more Rio
of the Bears' nine-hit, one error Grande's way when Phil Kuhn (4attack against the Redmen bulwark. I) limited the Bears to a four-hitter
Mike Voorheis (3-3) took the while the Redmen squeezed off six
loss for the Redmen, who were hits in spire of.Brian May's efforts,
allowed six hits and ~peel wilh a . Jason L. Wright went made his one
single error. Jason Wright connect- for lhree showing at bat count for a
ed for a two-run homer on his one ·thtee-run homer, while Chad Carfor three showing lit bat, while roll was lhree for four
Sh~nnon Bossert and Jason L.
Leading hitters f~r lhe Bears
Wn,ht were each one -for two, "-were Don-GuUen-Jr,, one for two,
SSU s Scott McGinniss was three
.

Redwomen looking to overcome ·llJsses to Urbana, Mt. St. Joseph

.

,j .

Keeping their playoff hopes
a)ive, the University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball tealll split a dou- blebeader with Shawnee Stale and
won a varsity game with West Vir·
ginia Tech in weekend action.
Rio Grande be~ this week at
- 9-10 lind 7-3 in Disttict 22 and lhe
Mid..Ohio Conferenc;e. This week •s
schedule, Coach Dave Oglesby
noted, ''will either make us or
lbe Redrnen dropped Saturday's opener with SSU 8-4 on the

- *

:

The Dally Senllnei-Pag.,_S

.·Redffien split with Shawnee to po's t 7-3 standing in MOC

breaic US,"

ioes

N ... . : ..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

m.e12. .

7~&amp;«4
By
Dave
Grate
of

Rlltfc.d
·F1raitwe

-·t

lome people
jilal lltledv
worken - they're moll0ftl111.

•••

A nick.. aiiU ..... a long ftV. You
CM ·-.y II wound kir a ....,
without fincllng ll!IYfltlng "' do
with IL

•••

,..,thing Je

harder to do ......,
lhan atub your toe.
·

• ••

" ' - - ·&amp;lid "What you Ia
~:sou gat" orderecllroM

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

•

oatrlag.

•••

· c.. .. a..-Fan~~~n .... ,..

tllaleMII .... t.Wf~ff ... ,-.1
.

'

.,

.•

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v..

Plica
. I.S.US..Yw~
Dwh
'•lrir•'tt

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

• ••,

'

I

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WW. 1 ;lite wt'i l't:;
..,.,,,.
fHMD"f

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'lit

n•nru u•s

Ia• t,lla.

741-1111

.

�By The Bend

Tuesday, April 20, 1993

,c..t. ._,,
, ••••...,

Page-6'

, ........ tft.J77t

MEADOWS SHOE
LEATHER REPAIR

District 13, Daughters of Ameri.ca, held its 66th annual raUy at the
· Senior Citizens Center in Logan.
Mildred Lowery, Logan Council,
district councilor, presided.
.
Eileen Clark, deputy of Guiding
Star Council, introduced Bette
Biggs, district deputy. The color
bearers. ·Everett apd Charloue
Grant, esco(ted them to the altar.
The color bearers esco(ted Gene
Dennis, Mayor of Logan, and Rev.
Paul Sellers to the council room.
The mar.or spoke briefly and welcomed all the members to Logan.
Rev. Seller.s gave the invocation.
Mildred Lowery gave the
response.
Natiomil board members introduced were Carolyn Wise, national
conductor; Joyce Otting, national
wars and means committee of
Ohw; . Lynda Walton , deputy
n'ational councilor. Each were presented a gift by Bette Biggs.
State board members introduced
were Flarna Pierson, state councilor; Arlene Howman, associate
state councilor; Carole Douglas,
junior past state councilor: Viola
Rupen, state vice councilor: Beverly Cefoldo, associate J.P.C.; Joann
Baum, state inside councilor;
Esther Smith, state council treasur- ·
er: and Helen Taylor, state council
secretary. They we£\: also presented

gifts.
.
dueled by District 13. Each preThe iqtroduction o( state offi- · sented a potted flower.
cers and national commjJtees of
The ·addenda for Bette Biggs,
District 13 recognized JoAnn District 13 deputy, was conducted.
Baum, Chester Council, state inside She was esco(ted to the front by the
sentinel; Esther Smith, state trea- color bearers. Thl\re was an Easter
surer, Chester Council; Faye hat placed on ller head and she held
Hoselton; Belle Prairie Council, an Easter. basket given to her by
past state councilor 1980; Dorothy JoAnn Bauni. Members of District
Ritchie, Chester Council, past state 13 had Easter hats on their heads
councilor 1986; Mary C. Moose, and .they marched around and put
Perry Council, national representa- Easter eggs containing money in ,
tive: Opal Hollon, Chester Council, her baskeL Esther Smith and Thelstate credentilll committee; Char- ma White were-ilressed as Easter
lotte Grant, Chester Council, state bunnies. They ·esconed Mrs. Biggs
publicity committee.
and the members with Easter hats ·
Mildred Lowery gave the ritual- around the ha!J:
'
is_tic opening. Janice Lawson, secThere were 46 members
r~tary, read the roll call and the
received officially . They were
report of the last rally. She also national and state officers, commitgave the investigative report,
tees, disb'ict deputies and visiting
·Guiding Star Council conducted council deputies. They were
the ba!Joting.
·
.
received by the district captain
Ini!iation was conducted by Dis· J oAon Baum 110d her guards.
trict 13.
Council deputies present were
Esther Harden, Guiding Star Eileen Clark, Guiding Star, SyraCouncil, gave the prayer before cuse: Sylvia BowQes, Logan; Faye
they recessed for il potluck lunch.
_RALLY HELD· Pictured are members ot
Charlotte Grant apd Everett Grant, district
Hoselton, Belle Prairie; and Erma
The district officers opened the · Cleland, Chester.
District 13, Dauabters of America,' during tbe
color bearen; Bette Bi.RJIS. Distrlet 13 deputy;
· \
afternoon session and a memorial
~lith annual rally or tlae group. From 1-r are
and Eileen Clark, Guiding Star Council, deputy
Members working on the differ~
was presented by Logan Council , ent t'llbles gave lheir reports. Esther
state couadlor.
Chester Council presented the col- Harden and Thelma White on the
ors. A silver shower was by Perry registration committee gave tl1eir
Couitcil.
,.
report: state officers and commitThe addenda for Flama Pierson, tees, 38: national officers and comstate councilor, and ·Arlene How- mittees, five; visitors, IS; members
'
.
man, associate councilor, was coil- ofDistrict 13, 34; totaJ, 92.
Flarna Pierson, state councilor,
spoke briefly saying District 13 had
im "excellent" rally and cpmpliAtkins
adn
a
guest,
Mitzia
Rife.
mented on the work the district did
Allegra Will presented a proThe
hint
of
the
day
was
"do
not
and also talked about the events
gram on "Omamenlal Grasses" at
the recent meeting of Star Garden plant dahlias until the soil is thor- that were comiJij! up. Lynda Wal_
ton also spoke briefly.
Club at the home of Martha Chap- oughly warmed up."
Refreshments were served by
The ritualistic closing was done
man with Margie Rife as co-hostthe hostesses.
by district officers.
ess.
Mrs. Will noted these grasses
grow to six to 14 feet tall and h;lve
the ability to resi~t freezing. Varieties are green and green and yel'
low and they are useful in flower
arrangements. •
_
one interested in helping is invited.
· For l!evotions Mrs. Chapman
Community Calendar items
-read "The Master's Touch" ;and appear two days before an event
-Mrs. Rife presented two Easter and the day of tbal event. Items
BURLINGHAM ·· The Bedfard
readings.
· ·
must be reeelved well In advance Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee will meet Tuesday
Virginia Nelson, secretary, - to assure pubUcatioo in the cal·
at 7:30 p.m. at the Burlingham
called the roll with "A Good Tip on
endar.
Growing Gladiolus." Some tips ·
Modern
Woodmen Hall
.
given were to plant bulbs three to
TUESDAY
D OF A LEADERS • Pictured are officers of . r, JoAnn Baum, District 13 captain; Flarna Pierfive inches deep, mix cow manure
MIDDLEPORT · Revival will
,. WEDNESDAY
District 13, Daughters or America, at th,e
sou, state coundlor; and Arleue Howman, assowith soil when plan!ing and after be through Friday at the Bradford
SYRACUSE • The Third
group's 66th aunual rally Logan. They are,lciate stale councilor.
the plants are several inches tall Church of Christ. Tim Wallace, Wednesday Homemakers Club of ·
they should be lied. to a wire fence Wheelersburg; will be the speaker. Syracuse will meet Wednesd~y at
se.t up for the purpose.
Services are 7 p.m. nightly and at '· 10 a.m. ·ai the S}'racuse Murucipal
- Pauline Atkins presided at the 9:30a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 7:30p.m. Building. Bring needles to tie, a
Westvaco Corporation wiD promeeting and announced that she on Sunday. Special music nightly. quilt. Flower seeds will be vide Loblolly Pine tree seedlings
•'~
had attended the open house meet- Nursery provided.
_,
exchanged. Eggs wiD be finished. for Spring 1993 planting in Meigs
example, if the Medicare fee sched- :
By ED PE'f.ERSON
ing of Rutland Friendly Garden
Bring anything you want to work County.
ule amount for treatment by physi' •
Social Security
_
Club. Interesting projects were
LONG BOTTOM · Faith Full on.
Landowners . can obtain
cians who don't accept assignment ~
Manager in Athens -dyeing herbs and making wreaths. Gospel Church i'n .Long Bottom
in the local area is $100, the physi- 1
seedlings at a cost of $16 ~r one
Mrs. Atkins_also reminded mem- -will have revival through Saturday
RUTLAND • The Rutland Fire thousand seedlings. The mmimum
If you 're on Medicare, here's a cian who treats you cannot charge !
bers they could obtain fact sheets at 7 p.m. nightly with Charles Ifal1, Department Ladies Auxiliary will ' order that can be accepted is one story that could happen 10 you.
· you more than $115. When you get •
on growing flowers and vegetables Marietta, evangelist. Special
thousand seedlings. Orders-will be
You're
visiting
your
son
in
yout Medicare statement it gives ~
from the county extension office.
singing nightly. Fellowship meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
accepted through April 30.
another
state
and
become
ill.
You
the
Medicare approved amount for
Manha Chapman addressed the Wednesday evening. Homecoming fire station. There will be a kitchen
Landowners who wish tp obtain call your son's doctor and discover each sdvice.
topic "Growing Fragrant Plants for dinner, Saturday at 5 p.m. Pastor shower for the fire house. Members
seedlings may do so by contacting that she doesn't accept assignmentIf you live in Connecticut, Mas- '
will then go to ~izza H111 for supSense Appeal." Fragrant shrubs Steve Reed invites the public.
your local Westvaco representative, on Medicare claims. What does this sachusetts, Pennsylvania, Rhode.~
per. Opal Dyer will have the travelmen}ioned were lilacs, butterfly
W.E. Malics, at 304-863-90?3, .or mean-and whar can you do? Should Island, Vermont, or New York, : ·
ing
prize.
bush and lavendar. Sweetly perPOMEROY · Mt Hermon UnitWestvaco, Fine Papers Division, you search for a doctor who your state has laws that could fur- :.
fumed flowers are roses and lilies ed Brethren Church, Texas Road,
I, Box 41, Washington, accepts assignment on Medicare ther reduce your costs. In certain :
Route
THURSDAY
of the valley.
_
Pomeroy, wiD hold revival through
W.Va., 26181.
claims? Not necessarily.
cases, such as for participants in ,·
POMEROY • State Senator Jan
Pauline Atkins read t.he poem Sunday at _7:30 p.m. nightly with
Landowners
with
old
fields
that
When
physicians
accept
assign·
the Qualified Medicare Beneficiary ~
"When Daffodils Appear."
Rev. Charles Norris, evangelist. Michael Long will read to the pub- · arc idle' or have areas where timber
menton
all
or
some
of
their
Medi(QMB)
program · physicians must
Spring flower arrangements Rev. Robert Sanders, pastor, lic at the Meigs County Public
has
been
harvested
may
want
to
th
h
accept
assignmem
for covered sec·
Library in Pomeroy on Thursday at
care cIBlms, ey agree to c arge vices/:i&gt;Vided to beneficiaries who
were displayed by Martha Chap- invites the public.
planting
tree
seedlings
to
cm\sider
no more than the amount Medicare
6:30 p.m. in observance of Nationman and Wanetta Radekin.
protect the environment and prof
h
. th
quali y for QMB.
al
Library
Week.
approves or eac servtce ey
If you have a physician who
Others attending were Mildred
POMEROY · The Meigs Counvi¢ a potential future cash crop.
offer. Since Medicare will pay 80
Jeffers. Neva Nicholson, S.tella ty Republican Ex.ecutive Commitpercent of the approved charge, this doesn't accept assignment on :
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
tee will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday al
means you will be responsible for Medicare claims and he or she has ]
OAPSE Chapter will meet Thursthe Meigs CountyCounHouse.
day at 7 p.m. at the junior high
Elephants, which evolved from crea- paying only 20 percent of the exceeded the charge limit for ser• .
vices you\ve received since Jan. 1,
'
'
'
tures that were not much larger than apptovedcharge.
school.
MIDDLEPORT
• The Amencan
Physicians
'who
don't
accept
1991, contact the doctor and ask
a
pig,
originated
abo"t
100
million
Fred Thompson of Racine was Legion Drew Webster Po91- No. 39,
years
·
for
a reduction in the charge or ~~"'
assignt:
n
ent
can
charge
more
than
CHESTER · The Pomeroy OES
among several Hocking College Pomeroy, will meet Tuesday, Din- Chapter
the
Medicare-approved
amount,
but
refund.
If you cannot resolve the •
No. 186 will hold its annustudents who participated in ceram- ner will be at 7 p.m. with meeting al inspection on Thursday at 7:30
beca\lse
of
a
new
law,
they
are
limissue
with
the doctor, contact you
ic engineering technology student at8p.m.
ited
in
the
exb'a
amount
they
can
local
Medicare
carrier -to ask for '
p.m. at the Chester Masonic Temnight activities at the Central Ohio
·charge
you.
This
year,
the
most··
helJ).
'jlle
!\!hens
offiqe is located ~
POMEROY • Tlle F.O.E. Ladies ple. Anne G. Price will be the
Section of the American Ceramic
they
can
charge
for
Medicare
covat
221
1/2
N
Columbus
Rd. The ~
Auxiliary No. 2171 wiD meet Tues- inspecting officer.
Society.
,
ered
services
is
II
percent
of
the
office
is
opened
from
9
a.m.
to 4 •
He presem.ed a paper on "Glass- day at 7:30 p.m. Plans wiD be comMedicare approved-amount. For p.m. and the number is 592-4448.
REEDSVILLE · The Riverview
es for Laboratory Warc and Indus- pleted for the Mother's Day dinner Garden Club will meet Thursday at
~
"·'
cheduled for May 4 at 6:30 p.m.
trial Processes". He··will present the s_
.
'
8
p.m.
at
the
home
of
Janet
ConThe
cost
is
$6
per
person.
Nominasame paper as he representS HockFuture proj_ects discussed '
nollY: Co-hostess is Ella OsbOrne. .
ing College and student branch of tion of officers.Debbie Gilmore .will present a pro·
ACerS at the annual meeting to be
Future community projects
gram
on herbs.
POMEROY • The Big Bend
held later this month in Cincinnati.
discussed
when the Rutland Rebels
A $250 award from Central Stemwheel Association will meet
- •The Racine AmeriMeigs County Girls Scouts wlll 4-H Club met recently at the hdme .
Ohio Section. ACerS was ·acaepiedo- Tuesday at 7p.m. at the Carpenters canRACINE
•of Terri Williams, advisor.
Legion Auxiliary will meet
Hall
in
Pomeroy.
Plans
for
the
golf
by Walter Crihfield of Nelsonville
name
a
Meigs
County
''Woman
of
Those ,lli'Ojects include planting
Thursday at 7 p.m . at the post
on behalf of students who will be tournament will be discussed. Any- home.
the Year" and present her with a a ~'at Meigs Junior High School
plaque at the annual mother-daugh- and
· - ·
0
•
attending the annual meeting.
. ter banquet to be held 00 May 15 .
partictpabng m the hie River ,
POMEROY • Saored Heart
ft th
ard
Sweep.
. · !
. ati'
Nomm
ons or e aw ·- 3
Committees were established •
Catholic Church will have a golf
woman who contributes ioher
•
tournament scramble Thursday at
community by working wilh youth inclu~ing a community. service I
tile Meigs County Golf Course. _:.
- are 10 be sent by April 30 10 - commtaee and a fund wsmg comCost is $50 and includes lunch
DEVAN MARIAH
Pam Johnson, 17 5 North Third mittee. A field trip was also 1
'
'
dinner, golf and cart. Lunch will be ,
Street, Middleport, 4!5760. The plorff~ers will be elected a; the :
served at noon with tee-off at I
eCQfl
nomi na.tion should inc! ude the next meeting on May 6 a1 7 p.m. at :
p.m. Call the golf course or Jim
name of the woman, her address, the home of Beverly Stewart.
•
Hill at 992-3325for infonnatian.
·
and a statement on her contribu. A. game f;J.f basketball was :
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
tio~he nominated women.s contri- played.
'
. '
- Refreshments including cookies, _
of AA will meet ThurSday at 7 p.m. ·
bution need not involve scouting, chips and Kool-aid were served hy I
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
!)evan Mariah Soulsby, daugh- Johnson said.
·
'f 1
. Terri Will1101s.
Church . Call 992-5763 for infor: ter of Jimmc:r and Connie Soulsby,
mation.
recently celebrated her second
. birthdav with a party at her heine.
AdVOCIIIing a- deal'
HUBBARD'S CIIEENHOUSE
1
. A ' Barc:::t '!'he DinosaurM
'• N-ap.,. For
The Democratic Convention nomin.. s-..
th
emewu
edout. ·
·
nated Franldln D. Rooaevelt for the
11'1 ..... (flew... &amp;
· AttendlnJ m her parents and presidency in lt82, and this ended a Y~ ..... I•••• ' - •:
sister, Shannon, alonl with mater- deadlock In whiab Rootevelt, John
Plilll, c..flii &amp;llltl • " ry
nal grandparents, Jiin and Dorothy Nance aamer of Texas and Allred E.
Pill kiM~ &amp; llid1' '
Stout, paternal grandpareqt, Jim Smith of New Yorll were au aupport·
SPBCI_AI, o' filE 111oNirt
MIDDLEPORT · ,A free com- and Susie SoUtsby, maternal great- ed by oppoain11 faction However,
- -~ .,_. &amp;
'o:~3~~v: visiDI) screening will b!: grandparents, Carl and Hazel Barn· Gamer wa1 persuaded to &amp;lve his del,
'
..
c M ww '1.15 ....
. BUNNY-FUN • Tbe Easter bunny made a special visit to Caril
by Marietta Ophthalmolo- hill, paternal great-grlindmother, egateato Rooaevelt in return for the
HUIIIII'I
11111•1• '
leton School just. tbe laolkiiiY· Having fun with the buany bere are
gy Asscxiai:es on Thursday f~ 10 . Virginia Will, Terri and Pat Souls- vice· presidential nomination. In his :
·
IYUCIIII
rroat, Asbley Rboades, left; and Jennlfer Gray, ani! back, Jennirer
_a.m. to 2 p.m. at Fruth Phanitacy in by, Cindy and Joe Ficldlltld Caley acceptance speech, Rooaevelt called
OPEN DAILY N,IUNDAY· 1f-6 I
Artllar, Jnslea Simpkins, Nieki Wilson, Melissa H•rt, and
Middlepon. Reservations are not · and Emily, Orli:e 111d Olen Stout for a •new deal fodhe American
776
. Mltcbell PaweD.
·-nece!!S8JY,
.'
,
and Keith Stoullnd Missy Poster. - people."
&amp;...-.....:~ :.:.:::...-..,..1

~~
R'fHIIT

Houn: aun. a 11oft. Clolo4l
TIIM.,Wtd.Ftl

Fa~.

1011 ., buy vory nloo homo an 3'A In
- · 4 BR. s bolhl, 2 gonigOO, 1
BR op1. PIOI*II' ~ 4,100 oq. II. firm
bldQ,
CaU14oiiii2·711Miof
t

COMPLETE
WELDING AIID
RADIATOR
SERVICE

,'·1

•d

Q

•TRUCKING
D. A. BOSTOII

ID . . . .

Cudof:n-b '
J. II
to..

ILppJAdo
Yon! Soloo

3 Announcements

•

. ....
Doortoroi!IP
Far Quollftod
No ..,_........
PoY ·
Qnly

742·2321

20Ye-.Elrp.
"A Qqoiity

Far Whit y., leU. Add F•
Selling
..........
Altlftcl.a

"''"red Contrtu!tor"
'

,_,.ToY- P - Uno 01
.............. llolol .
f!lntl F.- .... To AU8.
Colrijlilllln With DloocMo1l

....

3131831fn

a..,_

•••i..... Out

REPAIR

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Work Gu-nteed

- CALL IEC
992·7204or
742·2223

614·949·2335 or
614-593·5010
441

4/1e,'g3f1 mo.

SHRUB TllEE
TRIM and
REMOVAL .
•LIGHT

· •FIREWOOD

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992-2269
USED
RAILROAD nES
•

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WITH CPR
TRAINING
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SOMEONE TO
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OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698

WalkM Alley
Parts end s.v~c~~

SEPTIC SYSTEMS; ·
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~

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......
eCoJ!IIIIIel•

. •......u.,
-

''

36970 Bal R11 Road

PONDS
• SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

Pomeroy, Olllo

UNES

WATER &amp;-SEWER

SIZED LIMESTONE

FREE ESTIMATES

OWNER:
Jeff Wkk•illa11

Myrtle leoch "'-: lllolol

COMPLIMIIITARY
FACIAL

-Shade ~iver Saddle Shop
s
CUSTOM SADDLE ,

~=.~a::. Wllh
Bilek and
Soonlol,
1 -h
o· Dill,lnglloh
hod -

LEA'
I'UER REP'"AIR
AI n
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

«;hester, Oh. 45720

21117.
,
Threo
112 Hl. .lyon 1
tllolto, ,2 Fomoloo, 1'14-441-41122
Allor I P.ll.

'·

6

47269 St. II. 241 • 1Y, lllle OH Rt. 7
'lllrw C..ster •• Rt. 241

Lost &amp; Found

;:."'..~~· -~

=.~:~~~.:::

Pli. 614·985·3949

IIOW OFFERI·-·
OIL liD LUll SEDICE
TIRE UNIR IIID IOTATII&amp;

~Sllllon, MWAAD,

~m'i:~'T,.!..~;
•
.

L _ _,.;..._ _~...;.;:;.:.~;;_~;;.:;.;;..lj7

~Voy~agers~~W,~~
J. S. MARINE

Yard Sale

S.V. Big on
Pu-lld by........., ClulboMI8

__

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
3 Fomlly: I lllloo 8oulll Rl. 7,
11ors 21 In 10 IDHCI IIIIo,
Chivy 11-10, Lang lod T - .
llati_ll-10 - - Hitch, ......

Box, Hond T-,
22-24, ' llloa. - - · Th"J
So!Utdor.
loy ....., Sow

..........
16-

PH. 614-256-6160

MARY KAY

-.m-

Loll: IIIlO Chlh•hUa Bllclr

-J/2'/tl/1 . .

10 mllee eoutll ol Gelllpolla
on Bladen Road

~~uc-

Found: coon ..._ - - .

ALL -Yord Soloo IIUM eo Plld In
Advonco. OEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
th• cfly bolon lho od lo to riln,
SUndoy odltiCft • 2:00 p.m.

Frldly. - y odRion • 2:ao
p.m. Soturdoy.

(614)mat7

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; Vicinity

-·-

All Yord leloo Ia Pold In
-cloy bolwo
· - tho ...
tho
od 1:00rlm
lo io riln,
Su~ odftlon- 1:OOpm Frlclly,
........,

odhlon

letutdoy.

·I,j-Go=u~--~w~":..- Plumbing

SIZED UMESTOHE II
FOR WE
Call 614-992· ·

oaoc1

whho, olzo 5, 1114-.,.2-2121.

:~JA~MAR
· CAR~~~~c:::v1a
Quality · AoomAdclll- Stone Co.

Fomolo FuR Bloodod eo~. 14 11on111o 01c1,

Pert a-, nd, _.,, good
wllch dog, booulllul, 114-NII-

-------:.....--~~~---,1
. S CUSTOM -

•

oliot•.

""" ., boy'• Nlko booobou
cll1111, ~leo now,, bloclr lllld

985-3406

KELLER'
BENDING

a- -

:~\:z'::.'·

Nlllnd.I14-2!1-IOI3.
=~3_"' IIUII Tolw All, 114-

3IWn

Mary Kly hll I PfOVIIIelflctive lkln Cll't prog11111
duigned far yaw lldn lype.

~

,

On -

Abonclonoclll!'II--

Productlln Stock

3-11-93

11/W'I2111n

I~rt:el ~;.lw
. A Kid Flohlngll

614·992•7643

indepi!Kiant lleauly
c-Illlnll
Clrolyn lllcCoy
(614) M2-5CI82 '
S.ndra lllllderton

992-3470

Of Slo Orl Troul 1 Palo UmM
Ooon AI: I A.ll. To 7 P.M.
Cfoood on Th-.ya. s 112
1111• From V1n1011 0111o on szs

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

6181'12/1

~~-

IN

1.

Flohor.. nio eo.. .-... talw
Slacldng
TNMi. Wo
Hlvt u... loft And
Umft

Room Additions • Roofing

w~...

1148-2801 . . . . .
._______

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
11r1d-TAACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.

-

Mowv.CMinMw-

HOWARD
EXCAVATING _

CHARLIE'S
SMAll DOni WORJr,
• DRIVEWAY WORK
.dUMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVJ(E
REASONABLE RATES
125 HOUR
992·7553

Aol- T-

New Homes • VInyl Sl~ng
New Garages • Replacement Windows

a.ch, 1 • 2 Rm, Eft. MDI 151
(614)
Nightly. 1175 4225 W-*Y. Aalo
2112/92/lfn Inc. 110m. Wll. C.H 103-ZU-stl2.
667·6621
__....;,..~1~M;!3~tln!:!JI:1~-------r------_..l 4 Giveaway

•

..

High~·--·
You eon
Add .-.ao To
$2,000.00 To v- - . .
During _
.. Doy ·
W111o T~ Far Dolello To Dope.
~ P.O. 1oo 101, OUvlllo, IN
'0103c

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

EICAVADIIG

• A.. ·'!M ..mrt
t ploo.oila ... Collpo. DUijo
T..... (...,. Ch lhllllopi&amp;J, IIWI cc Cud or Lop!
No-)wll!aloo.,_ta ... P.lat Phuut
ud
... DoiiJ S..lhol, ........ ·-11,000 .....

F,..J•-.••tioll
'Roof

IWOIAIU PIICEI

10:00o.m.

-~~···Clmp
1ot
-April 22nd
... • loll,
Flood.

exwJor

Public Sale

&amp;Auction

6637
St. Rt. 7 _
Clles.IN, OH.

........ Aucllon Compony,
hrl dmo ouct-r, complole
ouctlon
-..
Uconood
,..,Ohio I Ylrglnlo, 304m.1711.
.
.......

Wanted to Buy

IEYIII'S LAWH
llllmUICE

·-..:::::;~1~0
Lawn Mowing, ·
Fertilizing, Weeding,
' •l,ld Seedliig.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming • Removal

Reeldenllll • Com-cllll

FREE ESTIMATES
41tt.W-IIn

Meigs Alumni
Aasoclatlon Is
· looking for cu.rnnt
~dreiHs of Meigs
graduatee for April
malllng for Alumni
Dance on
May 29, 1093.
Mall .addresses to
Meigs Alumni
Auoclatlon, P. 0.
Box 2&amp;, Middleport,
Ohlo46760

LIMESTONE, .
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
R.........

•••••
JOI N. SAYRE

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3-4-93-1

-

Hewtl'd L Writesel

: ROOFING

NEW- REPAl.R
. Guttara
0own1pouts
Gutter' Cleaning
Painting ·

FRU ESTIMATES

- 949·2168

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
HARDWOOD

Seasoned
$40.00 a Load

. Delivered. · •
(614) 992-5449

Don, olunlt Rl Soli U. You'r Non-

ROUSH'S

HAULING

~

celebrated

-.•

.
'
.

J&amp; THOME
IMPROVEMEIITS

ALSO GIS TAIIK

S . d
b,Irthd ay

V'

'.

IWo

a

L

,.

"2-

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

oapllol ~euon • ....~.~. prioe . , " " - •

Ut

!

I

_,.,.
..........
•Prioo.,"" ,.. •
I

Thompson
partici pates

w~j

AI IIIU UIICP!ll(' Ill'

TROMM BUILDERS

10
10411ullllryAvt.
, . . . , 011. 45711

Ito ...
.,.,.
'r • I.., ..... lor O..On altor lint ..., '&lt;• .....
t....;....;_========~=::;--1-1 · •. f7s............
o r - lint day ..I..., Ia ,.,..). CaD beforo 2:00 p.a.
Tht price hal- *lad .. tea.IIOO lllld
.,. .,... p
eon-doD:
-omauntftnn:ing
"'
up
..
"'
P!"chaM
•
.w.
..........
"""'
I
a
....
_
....
mow bo pooolblo,far quolllylng por·

I

womrui of year .

1-lt·T

liD mrmiNI u•111U111

•Fp..W.: c•--rudFoud .... ....WIS-rdowilll••

PUILICAnOII

Your Social Security

Scouts to name

(1111

ROOFING.

WE DO

......~ o~~ooo •• for ... """' laod-.-

4:30 P... DAY IEFORE

.

s

t:30

._

"-.-.w. ..to~o~o ........,. ,..... ..I r- ..... ""prepaid

_Community Calendar

I

*=•
T1lun. • 1111. -.3..,

Bur.-SP.M.- SAT.8-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES .

Program on grasses presented

!Jl
Pine trees availa\'&gt;le

•.,.............
~

D of A holds 66th arinual rally

.

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

The-~aily Sentinel

ATTENTION
CATTLE· OWNERS

2251 Sial. St. • (614) 992·5315

-SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.
'

jou::

T-Shlrbl • Hats • Uniforms
Varlllly ol T-8blrt Colan ancii..MIM1ng StyiM.

Kirk Undorschuliz, A.F:A . ...Ufi«&lt;
now offering his hoof trimming •rvioetlo ca oWMI'S.
hal 15
oxperience u. profallional Ianier.
AI 1rimmlng Is done wilh hand toola (not grindo,.)
uoln~a portablo I&lt;&gt;ltover chulo.
.
Irk willlnlvol up 1D HI houro fRml Utae Hocki~
and requiNs a minimum of 15 head of cat11e per Visit lo
Special arrangomonla
for 4-H groupo ond clubo.

rears

w

WOIIllng

. 61-4·91 -2405
, ..... ~.n. ...... &amp; ...........

Appllonooo,

Rolrljjontoro,

FNIZIIIS, VCA's, Mlciowlve11

Air CondRionoro, Quhw Ampo,

Etc, 114-251-1231.

,

J l D'l Aulo 1'1111 lnd SIIYI!Io,
....
buying )unit . . . a trucio.
304-7n'5341

.

A.,._....,...

·-- ,.,,..n••

THE BOOK

·

BARN

IUY • SILL • TUDI
317 II. 2M St.
Mwllleport, Ohio
lloll.•frl. I OdiO·SaOO
llttl'lltiJ I IIIOHIOO

CloMtl S•ntl•r

·-

Speef4d

r~•a

,IIDIDII-1
2 Fr..t Struts •
•4MHI:a.r.••t.
Prlc.. It •1 ..
1129.95 + Tu

1411 State Rt. 7

.......

1•1 IIIIICB II

'992·1577
na:~~

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK '
HARD FOR YOU•
o8P DIMII Supreme.••Try I, tileR Is a

lnMimCJry

llo)or

TV'o,

r:::blo
• .,......

l-1~tfn

2

ea.

Ute •Medlcere • Ctncep Fire~ Htllth •
Accli:tenf •Ann"'ty, IRA ~-Mortgllge

lockj L

H•"~ D.C.U.

• A.-t

'801189 '

.

..........

olllnllftlllll irO Celane

ot.ow ..... and .......

•WII nat gel In wllar time.

-·

CAN
OW

YOU

,_.n
,

IHAntR

1Hti

IIYTHS?7
Selling 1 , - , lao

...._And

C.mla11ane
At8
·
-Cl- The Renar.
Lliioe WeAN
"""
One
A
1 . - In on. 01 The Noolon'a
• Top 8 Indo Oloo.lf

.,
•

..

.......

'lou-

'I Of lAIII ....

1

=

1••• dlf ullllina, lrflr 1flill .
I Yl U. Tilt

~·'Err
.NuNe

.

ii;i;;:;:

11111 WRING LUBE SALE
IIIAACH 11TH thniiiAY S1ST

.......,.,.,. .lo 41760

. Bpeclelt.m ................. . . _ . r-r
llld NO llfTERE8T or FINANCE atARGE.

(6' 4) ·~·5264

LMyE.Mihr

11'M3Mn

A'ION I AI - · I 8hlrlor,
lpoerw,IOWJS-1421,

CIII.. ,_..hO.. .......

-dL - ',
'•

�Ohio

The Dally

1993'

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

......

Ani. . . . , ....... ......

37 Summt-

PffiLLIP

112, Ro1Hn
4 .........

ALDER

1 = = - --1

131.8ywohre

14~wpollon

11- Lllll.a

...
WIST

QU

tnl

"

II

"

.

ilrealoer

......

21 Prlnter'a

tK&amp;7U
.A Jill

52 illldow

22-.23 TV'a talking
llorM
(2 '11'111.)

.,

EAST
tJillll
.AIU71
tQJt

53 Aetr-Rowlencla

5411owle

loetUon

27- -de-aac
Hllontrtl

55 Actreas-

31 Runlllng

58 Nllf'IOUI

30 LowHI point

32 llouuhold
Pll
33 - tnd tonic

.K72

--tAU

3-4 Eaypllln god

.KQH75t
Vulnerable: Both

llt~tnanl

.

35--'- 11 an
illand

5 - Gola

Secret

DOWN

Pus
Pus

BARNEY
PAW I! JUGHAID

AN' JAMEY ARE

PITCH IN'
HOSS
SHOES!!

WHAT'S
WRONG
WITH
THAT?

FER FIVE

Norllo

u

s•

~·

CourH
7 Have dinnar

1 Dac. looHdty
2 Article ·
3 llldtllt
naUon

17 Y-(Fr.)
111 IAIIgtlr 22 RtdYCt
241L

at"""''
(2 Wdl.)

8 llember ol a

28 lmlllwllgtlt
27 Polnltcl ...,. '

Pus
Pus .
Allpau

CIN(. . . )

211 •• lble to

-.r-+.--+-+-1

s rare
or commonplace?

4CIIIta

Molt

TO WAIT'?

BUS?

FRANK AND
ERNEST
•

,.

. •hlrtwind ·

wM

- ......

'

..

BORN LOSER

,.If I 5TOP e€1.1£.'/it.l' IM lilt TOOI'H

...

FN~, WIU.. [~ToP 6£1111-1' .
OOMTW ~ lfl'( Pfu.a.l ~

•

DON'r~ ..

•

"

Q. Why do people say things like
"He makes promises he Won't live up
to"?. These statements are made by
educated speaten.
A. Nowadays it is a rare speaker

lJNI

eee we 1-\A\.e-

~~

80CW\ .

preposition. Winston ChurcbiU is said

who
refuses
endatathis
sentence
to
have
pokedtofun
rule bywith
com-a

mentil!g; '"This is thesorrof English
up with which f will not put.• We
should all try to lt:eep this rule when
we write formal English, but let's not
make promisea up to which we cannot
live, .

.

by mailing $1 .25 plus a long, self- yoUr .ning procll(bes lodoy, riglll .. - ~
addressed , slamped envelope to Astro- · mi!1'1 be best IO.openrte along -ionll
Graph, clo lhis , . _ r, P.O. Box 4465, lineswilhwllichyoUieelc:omlutllbl&amp;.
New "l'orl&lt;. NY 10163. Be sure to- your SAGITTARIUS (llov. 2s-Dec. 21) Even
zodiac sign. .
~you ..._..not be Ill fir1l one cu ol
GEMINI (!ley 21.June 20) A lassori you'w! the startillg block today. you have the
BERNICE
learned from a biner peal elj)lliietoce
poiiiiiiiiO be a Rang finisher. Don1 quit
BEDEOSOL be
used conslruclively today to !lkJp a lriond earlY jull becallM yoU're a bil behind .,.
lrom making a similar plllaN.
-.
CANCER (Juno Z1-July 22) You might · CA RIC1lNI (Dole. 22-Jin. 11) Somathlug
receive assistance now in something that yoU're • - in liD 1 ol
you realize you can't do unoidod. The ' - - . DUIIO your · • "' o a.,..,~
mighl come from an individual who has ..._..- DIOoow. Thil it not a time 10
neY8r.obliged you prellioualy:
..,.. or thg your !eel.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 An can be AGI'•RII• (Jill. ..,._ 111 You achieved loday lhrough a frank "*&gt;•iOn gillfodiY lOr telling up
or iuun ·
b81ween you and another who ahara 1 ..,, Oil'ell Ill QlllUIId andmeling
.................. ,,............. April21, 1113.•..
mulillil interest. ~ are beo llilllar-. _ , - . Try 10 - I lor eua jOIIe'aliln'
VIRGO(Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Y- bell- .._
.
year ahead, lhe"' ""' focbtlona that IOdly it your ability to hWIIIOrm . . . _ i t . PIICEI .,_, • • • . . &amp;.1 t{IOo9l
'might develop a. promising ilide ven- outrnodad into IDI!I8IIoing Ullllul and f1onc- ,...lillglll
in Ill '*'lllladlr.
tura . II may a11rt oH unobtrusively,_bul il ttonal. You,,-kl be able to e10 fhll .., •IGIIII'a ·a c Ill COUld be M, in llige
could giow Into aomelolng big. . ,
·both Wogililai and lntangllilal.
pllrt, to yoo~r tlllida:,_ a!id conlrlbu1lon.
TAURUS (April 20-lllly 201 Challenging LIIRA (lepl. n.oct
You'D llllreln lila
II not lila
developmenla today will aerve 10 bring out lng, ·11'1 unwloe to gamble·on oilualiane fllJir.
.
·your reoolve and _dotarminalion . Your . where you have Illite conrrol Of file end . , . . (lllnlll .,__.,.. IVOUCII*III.
chanceo for IIChitving Objeelivel to w1o1c:11 11811111. IIOue,.r,lodly ,au m1g1o1 be""*' -..g bullliol~ linn, ...... 1 good
you ere 1111'1' 'lid lOok good. TaUNS, liM~ WifiDIIillllngliiiCII!IIfCIOii. Mil
IIIWD,OUGIIIIil..--10-171.
yourael 10 I blrtllday gift. S4ind lor T~ · 8CORI'IO (Oct. 14 Nov. D) ll'llllld 01 lodly
lllln . . . lor. II lialo
~lllflh pr8dlcliot11 lor lila yNr . , _ lroiR!Ciuc*lg- malhocll or IICio I:'" Iiiii jiWi I . ..,. ..,._

ABTRO·GRAPB

'*'

BobyoiiiiM In lilY ....... . _ ,

wv. -m-&amp;41(.

Colnmono lloctrtcol- homo •
rrolltlr -lcol oorvlce, IWIIIZ•
:1034.

c:a-

In.,.
you

,......IIIJinl

DjQeo.....,.p..

,.

lUll!'-·

liM,...._

,,

...

.;

alan dtll
45 Arclillecl -

'

v•

cter dlolie .
4e U-achalr

\

y_

·

1

47FIIiillllne

... e:.m:
41 Caallng

cltvlct
50 Plloolltic

aymbol

· · CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

Cetebrity CipMJ crypt~ . . ~ from qiiOIIIOI" by flmOI.II l)eOI:Itl. I)Ut a'ld preMnt.
br;ll_.ln the CipMr tllndl fOr MOtMr. ToRy'I dul: 0 ~ w.
.

'DN

Ld

JIHVNA
GM

CV

GN

KIG

.

DJFGWB .FX,
C'MI
GWHG

LilA

GWI

..

JIHX

IFJVFCAK

CG'V

GWI

DIXX-UANDA

DHT

. .'

"

IHVG."

UHGI
LFJGNA.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "As soon as I started taking drugs, 1 became a
Pri- again ol my old lnaecurllleli and doub.ts." - Elton John.

.•

r::~::~' S@t\illA:..~i.trS·
::::
HIIH lor CLAT I. I'OUAN __:::_.:;___::__:::.,_
O four
Rearrange ~ttars of tM
·
oc;rombled WO&lt;dt b.

I

low 1o form four ~mple wordt.

•

....."'!,

...

CAFFEE

'

.......'

. ..:

_

'

.

'--~~1~~~~==~=~l~~~~tt~~j
· ..

ANSWERS -

· ~-·,

Kni(Jht - Moldy - Swank - Behest- LONGEST ·
I hacf attended a neighbors birthday party. At the
dabuffel table I heard one not so smart fellow say, 'BirthllveYI...!'
the people who have the most

;,~:0:.;":"':~-----j_.,!i!"~'"'~~~!f:::::.::::;.~;;:....,....,

r

18 Wllnted !O Do-

IUCC-

44 Ul441nve-

By Jeftfty McQuain
Something GLUTINOUS is sticky
like glue: "Her shoes stuck on tbe
glutiiiOus surface." Stick to the right
pronu!lciation of this adjective; it's
"GLOO-Iih-nus."

I'M EiOINI!ii 10 ~ E:VeRY' .
KID IN "ll-iE 'M:R\..0 UP IN
THe FRIE:NIASHIPCLUe.

.

m+-

OUB LANGUAGE

MURTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
Campers&amp;
·Motor Homes

43 LP'a

brldee deals feature playo

bave before. Yet
somelhln&amp; diflereat comes along.
do ,ou thillk the play lhould 10 in
clulis, West leading a trump?
South's four hearts wao a splinter
bl~ lhowlnc slam Interest and at
·
one belrt. North waso't Interested.
As West hasn't led a spade after an
auction that stn~~~~~ly suuested an Initial attack iD that suit, be is likely to
bate the ace. U so, East must lie kept
off
play while the diamond suit is be•
inlestablished for discards.
•
Tbe declarer's first thoupt was to
lead a low heart from the_dummy at
trick n,o, tryin&amp; to look like a man
with a sinlleton queen. But be realiled
FIJST ATTJAG'J"fl&gt; Mf
that if that ploy didn't work (or
couldn't work because West bad the
TO F'AIIc.tNf
beart •!-'!!), be would be poorly placed.
i
$fi'ISf Of
South's llecOIId tbouPt wao mucb
~
better. After willlllng the lint trick in
· tfUM~.
tile dummy, be Clllled lor the beart
I
kine- Wben East~ with the ace,
declarer ruffed, played a trump to the
-. . - ....
" dummy
aDd led the beart jack. Tbls
time East played low, so South dis•
carded one of bis low diamonds.
West was welcome to the .trick, but
now South could estabUih dummy's dir'w~ wmN1f r., Tl¥.l
"' amonds without lettlns East on play.
'tOOit ~ :,nu. BQJEVE! ITile cootnlet was rmde for the 10111 of
tri~. m. .~ ~jor_ suit. __

J4tr

•

Vloltnl

41

minutes.•

WE SUPPOSED

ol-

31Mntll

qaestion: What esaetly are the odds of
beia&amp; run over by a bus?
hr+,OIIe pe~ calculated the chance
be about one iD 10 million. But a
aaswered, 'ODe can lie iD the
bolln without beins touched
be run over three times In as m.a1nv I

LON6ARE

30 Steel
32 p-In 11M

37 Wired
38 Kind of rock

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By I'WIIIp Altier

WMERE'S THE
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.

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47 ConiUMd
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10-The Dally Sentinel

TUesday, April 20, 1993

~Untouchables'

Poet's comer·
The Man Nobody Knows
One day l read a suiry called the
man nobody bows,
_
And of his nonexistence they
wemllbout to disclose
.
ADd dull he C\'lr lived hcl11they
also disagreed
Despite evideoce Olhetwise, dlis
man they never see.
Somehow they do not under·
stand that through faidl, prayer and
love,
· They too can get acquainted
witb•the stranger up above.
This man they say · nobody
knows whose birthplace was a
manager,
This man they say nobody
knows to me is no stranger.
I go to him in prayer wi!h my
troUbles and my woes,
_ADd always I am comforted by
· dlis man they say nobody knows.
Pontius Pilate said "behold. tllis
man, I fmd no fault in him",
·Then straightway washed his
guilty hands to _cleanse them of
their sin.
Then he let !hem take this innocent one arid strip him of his
clothes,
·
And watched as Simon Peter
declared, he's the man nobody
knows.
With a crown of !horns upon his
head, they nailed him to the ll11C,
Yes, man's best friend was Jhcl1l
to die that all manldnd go f=.
Then they thought they had him
in the tomb, helpless and all alone
But God's own angels from
above, rolled away the stone. ·
. Now I'm so prQUd to tell you, I
can go whcl11 hegoos
For I'm the ransomed child and
heir, of Jhis man they· say nobody
Jcnows.

Mrs. Alpha L. Douglas
115 Mulberry HeighiS
Extended Care, Veterans
Memorial HosPital
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Harrisonville news
.Mr. and Mrs. John Williams had
as gUests -for a wee~ their son, Carl
and wife, and two of Mrs.
Williams' sisters, all from Michi·
.gan.
· Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
recently entertained Joe and Donna
Townsend Redwine, Lexington,
Ky., Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stanley
and Emily, Albany.
Mrs. Nellie Lowe spent Easter
weekend at the home of her son
adn wife, Pat and Gloria Lowe,
Akron. .

Ron and Marilyn Wilt, Lancast·
er, visited Mr. and Mrs. Orville
PhiUips on Easter Sunday.
Alun and Kenda Armstrong,
Cincinnati, spent two days with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Donohue.
· Bessie Graham, who resides at
OverbroOk Center, spent Easter
Sunday at the home of her son,
Harold, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Cotterill
entertained all !heir children and
!heir families on Easter Sunday.

Dar AM I =dell: Some lime
..,, JOII~~womca •
wbothcr tbGy would be CODW!I to
· "etl'ldle" oriftlqo.llllllyWIIMdlla.
Have you CQIIIidered the other ~
of tbe picture?
Many' years qo, I mll'riod a
beauliful PI I WIS In love widllll4

are product
of cold parents
..

"STEWARDSHIP AWARD PRESENTED· George WriBbt,
Pomeroy, a member or tbe Pomeroy Uqlted Methodist Church, .
was presented a.plaque in reropltion or his good stewardship and
dedication to his church and community rrom Bishop Judith Craig
or tbe West Obio Co!derence or the United Methodist Cburth.
Bishop Craig visited tbe church on Saturday afternoon.

Eleanor Knight presents program
"Scents and Senses of Aavors"
was !he title or !he program presented by Eleanor Knight at the
April meeting of the Chester Garden Club. The meeting was hekht
the home of Mlurita Miller with
Mrs. Knight, assisting hostess.
Mrs. Knight noted !hat !he sense
of smell is 10,000 limes stronger
than !he sense of taste adn could
save ones life. Women have a
keener sense of smell than men.
Smell and taste are closely related.
No two people react in the same
way. Al1las about a big as a !humb
nail, deep inside the nose, are covered widl millions of receptors on
the ends of which hairs receive the
various shaped particles from !he
air that produce a variety of scents.
There are seven basic kinds of
smells: edlereal "(fruity), camphorlike, musk, floral, minty, pungent
(vinejlaty), and putrid. Pine, peppermmt, lavendar and winter-green
~ energizing. Lemon Is refresh·
mg. Lavendar and cypress, calming. It hils been repcrted that in the
slot-machine 8l1I8S at Las Vegas,
smell increased betting by 50 percent A noticeable level of smell
did not draw more people into !he
slots. But once there, the more
smeU, the more betting. A general
discussion of memories evoked by
scents followed.
. Clarice Krautter, devotional
leader, read the Easter stay beginning with Jesus' triumphal entry
into Jerusalem, through Holy
YfCC!-· to:lhe joyous message, "He
IS nsen, of Easter morning. A
poem, "What ,is Easter?" and
prayer concluded the devotions.
The ' theme for the month ,
"Scents of Flowers," was developed by the roll call, "Your
favorite flower for scent" was
answered by 13 members.
Two "Save the Earth" lessons

were presented: "Use Cloth Diapers" by Eleancr Knight and "New
lngmdicniS," a hold over from the
January meeting by Pauline Ridenour. Mrs. Knight noted that about
one percent of all America's landfiU space is occupied by disposable
diapers, eighteen million a year. In
·1961, Proctor and Gamble intro·
duced die ftrst affordable ·disposable diaper, Pampers. Disposable
diapers decompose very slowly and
also consume an incredible amount
of resources annually. The biggest
potential problem is contamination
of ground water by soiled, poten·
tially disease-infected diapers.
Mrs. Ridenour reported that coffee filters, white paper towels, etc.,
are white because they . are
bleached. This process of bleaching
is responsible rot creating dioxin, a
·deadly toxic, which is dumped iniO
American waterways. To make
pla~tic wra\' cling manufacturers
add "plasucizers," potentially
harmful chemicals !hat can work
their way into food. Simple things
to do inclulle using unbleached coffee filters, reusable containers to
store food and biodegradable wax
paper instead of plastic wrap or
aluminum foil.
During the business meeting,
conducted by ~da Mora. officers
for next year were elected: Bette
Dean, president; Macel Barton,
first vice-president; Edna Wood,
second vice-p111sident; Pat Holter,
secretary; Clarice Krautter, assis·
tant secretary; Twila Buckley, trea·
surer; and Dorothy Karr, assistant
secretary. ·
,
The S{lring meeting of the Ohio
AssociatiOn of Garden Clubs was
announced for April 24 at Holiday
Inn in Gallipolis. A coffee hour
will begin at 8:30 a,m. .wi!h business meeting at 9 a.m. ·
Belle Dean auended the state

and
IIIIICkinJ their lips? Those famous
fried chicken (leople send shivers up
my !pine with the implifted I'ICtet
dcnincbia8 ailp cbirkm The folD
who are pushiDJ apple• from
Wubington 110 biaing • with the
scrunch d biJ bunks being IWn
disoovae~t INt not aaly did ·su~~·
out of their fruit. A. girl talrelalOIIII ·
not Cll'e lbout liCK, but • - ice
bite d a criJp diet wafer, and abe
cold and wanted no cloaeness 111e careful not to touch each other. I sings abou! sweet revenge. The •
whatever. A year '-t, when I was never geJ a good night's sleep . crunching and crackling of potato ·
just about to Ilk fur a divoa, abe because thoso memories of chips makes me want to scn:am.
•
suddenly became. extremely thousands of olights of rejection
What is wrong with the people
inlauled in intimacy. I fouad out come flooding back.
·
who write such advertising? Why
that she only ·waated to ge~
We !alre Jood care of each other, do the sponsors pay them to offcad
pregnant, which happened very but our ~lalionship is stecile, The ua with thelc ~ling IOIIIICII?
quickly. ·
only thing we have in commoo is
Please addreu this national
I can't !ell you bow many nights I our children and our aucts. We look annoyance that drivea me (and·
wept into my pillow aftel being VIII)' iiiiSCb manicd ~ rtwelly we pobably miUions ol othcn) up the;
rejected by her. Whea walking are jllll - HOUSEMATBS IN 1liE
wall. Am I super-lelllili~ out ot;
Ulgether, she refuses Ill hold hands. NORmwBST
tunc wilb ~ times or becoming
l never receive 1 hug nor can l give
DEAR HOUSEMATBS: I receive crotchety In my old age? .. NORA
her one. She stiffens and pushes me dlousanda ol leuen f'rolll women
IN FORT WORTII
away.
who_sutTer die pain of rejeclion, but
DEAR NORA: Bless you for
It was so difflCIIltto sleep ·in ·the very few men write about !hia reading my mind. For ages, I've been :
same bed with her thai I eventually problem. Counseling may help you. , hoping aomeone would write
moved into the pest b¢100m. . The "untouchables" are invariably
this~ IOUI'CO.of revulsion. I, 1110;
When we have guests and circum- products of cold pllleDis who didn't
find il odd that a~~ hala't'
stances forte us to share a bed, we love CKh odler. · .
·
.
fm:ocl thole dlsguating COIIllllen:ials
More often lban not when man off the air.
(or
WOIIIIII) is frozen out at home,
Let's hope your letter gets the
board meeting in March at Dayton.
It was noted that the club he or abe finds warmth cllewhcze..l
attentioo otthe decision-~ rn,
received a score of95 on the 1991- do not condone thia, but I can
bet sales would IIOilf if !hey would .
92 program book. Maye Mora Certainly undasland il Than,ks for
stop offending JlCOIIle.
Showed !he scoresbeet of !he pub- unlolding in this comer.
licity book _which received a score
Dear Alia Landen: l am naiiiOof 94 and was fourth in the state. . atcd. I am disgusted. lam fed up.
Gem of the Day: A ailic noted
Twila Buckley is alter flower What have parents been doing the
recently that the quality or TV is
chairman at Chester United last gcnera1ion or two?
'
JCIIinJ so bad that kids arc doing
Methodist Church in April. Pat
Why 111e our cars suddenly being
their homework l!&amp;3in. . .
· Holter, Maida Mora and Clarice assaulted by people on TV who are
.. Krautter deCorated for Lenten setvices and renewed the ramp
planters at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
Bernice Carpenter was present- teenagers will be sharing testi·
_ Appreciation from Nancy Miller ed i special recognition gift of a monies, singing and puppetry. Each
Mays was noted. Dorothy Karr pin by her sister-in-law, Dean Bar- teen must raise $2,390 plus supreported on the March "sunshine" nitz, far her service and dedication plies, the trip and spending money.
remembrance.
Isabelle Wolfe, devotional leadto' the Pomeroy United Methodist
Mrs, Dean distributed "Spring Women and as a district officer of er, told of Mary, mother of Jesus,
Gardening Guide" to each member. the gro11p.
of the joy and pain of watching her
Pat Holter prepared print-outs of
Abbte Stratton, president, son grow, suffer and die.
"The Language of Flowers" for !he lippointed a commit,lee for silk
Jackie Hildebrand, program
.club members.
flowers arrangements to be used leader, used personal and commuHint of the month was tllat for social functions, to provide nity forgiveness stones were passed
seedlings should become e~tab­ dessert and beverage for Council of and held and each was to pray
.lished in a nursery or protected . Church Women on May 7 at the silently for broken and hardened
place on your property. Don't set Pomeroy Church and to provide relationships in !heir lives. Each
them out in !heir final location until bread and butter for County Coun- received a sto~~ in cloth
!hey are old enoligh 111 111main visi- cil at Chester United Methodist with a prayer a
.
ble and independent !here.
Table blessing was ·given by
Church on May 10.
· Refreshments were served.
The unil vOied to send a mone- Rev. Eunhac Kee. .
Maida Mora and Pauline Ridenour tary donation to Heidi Hoffman of
Refreshments were served by
received the door (lJizc.
Shade. This young teen will be Myrtis Parker, Isabelle Wolfe and
The next meeting will be MayS going to camp to learn and then on Evelyn Clark. . at !he home of Kathryn "fora and 10 Hungary to WOik on a three story
The next meeting will be the
will featum a book review "Carrots orphanage that will provide food mother-daughter banquet on May
Love Tqmatoes" and a plant and she Iter and te1,ch teellnjQl_ fl at6:30 p.m. It will be a potluck. exchange.
skills to young people. These . '·

Riversweep/recycling, T-shirts and
C.P.R. class. Thomasina White
gave a demonstration on making
peanut butter baUs and Peggy Hetzer gave one on Firsf Aid for
wounds and tick removal. Recreation fer the evening was the viewing of a movie. Refreshments were
served by Jennifer Goeglein. The
next meeting will be April4, 1993,
at !he home of Marvin Edwards.
Peggy S. Hetzer, News Reporter

•
10

Landers

.mom·

Pick 3: ,_
776
Pick 4:
7640 Buckeye 5:
11-14-15-26-36

a row

PageS

•

. 2 Sectiona. 1I PagM 25 CWila

• Vol. 43, NO. 24t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Wednesday, Aprll21,1993

Muldmectlalnc.

' HONORED -The rollowing Southern
Local School District elementary and junior
high students were honored ror academic excellence at the distrid"s ac:ademlc banquet held
J'uesday evening at Southern Jun ior High.
Receiving •edallioas were, from left: front row
- Asllley MiUer, Charles Alan Moore, Amanda
Huddleston and Lori Ann Sayre, Letart Elementary; Brandi Codner, HoUy Hannan, Erin Bolin,
· Brawn Herman, Jane Hill and Jason Roush,
'&gt; Portland Elementary; second row - Jennifer
Harr!s, Jenairer Walker, Tyler Little, Rachel

Marshall, Jonathan Evans, Emily Stivers, Klle
Norris, Jesse Little and Phillip Harris, Racme
Elementary; third row -Mindy Chancey,
Matthew Ash, Cody Wallace, Cora Asb, Sara
Ball, Joshua Davis, Autumn Thomas and Kim
Sayre, Syracuse Elementary; back row -Brian
Allen, Zacb Couch, Greg McKinney, Amber
Thomas, Cynthia Caldwell, Nikki Robinson,
Stepb11nie Stemple and Evan Struble, Southern
Junior Higb. Not present was Brandon Wolfe,
Ra~ine Elementary.
I ·

'

I .

.

of "Students-on !he Right Track to
Academic Success," Dorsey pointed out that !he students present
have already proven themselves to
be on the right track.
The trick, Dorsey explained, is
to remain on the right track in the
face of distractions.
To stay on the right track,
Dorsey said, you must remain ~­
ciplined in your work, stay 10
school and consider going to col lege following high school.
The percentage of students in
Ohio who attend college is about
10 percent below the national aver. age, Dorsey said. In southeastern
Ohio, the percentage of students
who attend coUege is about I 0 percent below the Ohio average, he
added.

Darsey said it is important to
recognize outstanding scholarship
and noted that many schools ignore
scholars while recognizing outstanding athletes. -"Even now, more is expected of
you academically," Dorsey told !he
assembled students. You will be
expected 10 understand the theories
and concepts behind the know! ·
edge, he added.
Furthermore, it is your responsibility to approach your studies
objectively by having an open
mind, to add 10 the body of knowledge and help perpetuate knowledge by passing the knowledge
base to following generations, he
added.
Dorsey said for students to
Continued on page 3

Me:igs board awards teachers contrl!~ts
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr
S~veral contraciS wm issued at
Tuesday's mgular meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
The following teachers have
·been employed on one year contracts:
Karla Rrnwn

Matt Morrow, Kendta Norris and David Pickens,,sophomores; Paul Ihle, Rochelle Jenkins,
Jennirer Lawrence and Rayon Young, fresh·
men; back row - Todd Grace, Julie Hill and
Ray. Proffitt, seniors; Michael MeKelvey, Fred
Matsou and James Smith, juniors. Not present
was soph,omore Andrea Moore.

.

tbat. We

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
Be the kind of person who
makes things happen.
That was the challenge presented to 49 Southern Local School
District students honored at the districts six!h annual academic banquet by guest speak:er Dr. Barry M .
'Dorsey, president of !he University,
of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College.
Dorsey explained Ibm are !hree
types of people mthe world: !hose
who hope for things to happen ,
those who watch things happen and
those who make things happen.
Dorsey challenged students to be
the third type of person arid make
!hings happen.
Followmg the banquet's theme

~

·Portsmouth newspaper says
Muslim
inmates
warned of riot
.
.

deserve'to

.

.

RlU~(){;NiitED FOR EXCELLENCE Medalllons·wen presented to these Souihern
HiJib School students by Susie Grueser, presideJit of the Southern Local Board or Education,
at the dlstrld's IICIIdemic banquet held Tuesday
evening at tbe llllb school. Those honored
include, l'rom lert: rront row - Mason Fisher,

The Bashan Beamers 4-H Club
met on February 15, 1993, at die
The Shade Valley 4-H Club mel
home of Sonia Circle with 3 advi- at the home of Debbie WaiSon with
soil and 13 members in attendance. 2 advisors and 10 members present
Officer books, pins and celliflCBtes Dates of weigh-in for livestock,
wm given out · .
· days of s~ow and sale .and ~ing
•
Kelly
and
Christie
served
out of_pro.JCCt books were the ItemS
· The Pioneers 4-H Club met on refreshments. The next meeting of
b_us•l)ess. •
March 25, 1993, at the Chest« Boy will be at Sonia Circle's on March
Refreshments were served by
Scouts Lodge, with 1 advisor and 15, 1993.
•
Debbie Watson. The next meeting
14 membecs in attendance. Disl:usJuli Hayman, News Reporter will be at !he home -of Alan and
sion was held on candy sales and
Brown on February 28,
Th e Coun lry Cl overs met on , Luann
who will bring refieslunents. Elec1993
·
tion of officers 11@5 held.
February 9, 1993, at the J~s!ice
·Jeanie Newell News Reporter
'
Debbie Drake served refresh- · home. Suggesllons for fund rwsmg,
ments. The next meeting wiU be on group project and !he need to pay
The Country Clovers 4-H Club
April 2, 1993.
·
dues as soon as possible were dis- met on January 12, 1993, at Jessica
Melissa Francis, News Reporter cussed.
Janey's.home, wi!h I advisor and
The Klassy Klovers met on ·
The PatterSOns and Erin Harris 10 members present. Veterinary
March 21, 1993, at the home of served refreshments. The next Science was decided as a club proLester and Pam Parker, with 3 meetine will be at the Ranis home ject and dues of $3.00 per person
was set
·
advisors and 14 members in atten- on March 9, 1993.
dance. The club elected officers,
Erin Harris, News Reporter
Refreshments were served by
talked about touring a hog farm and
the Thobabens and Ms. Janey. The
The Bashan Beamers 4-H Club next mecling will be at the J11Siice
what kind of fundraiJen Ill have.
- ·
Refreshments were served by met at !he home of Sonia Circle, home.
with
3
advisors
and
13
members
Erin
Harris
News
Reporter
Pam Parker. The next meeting wiD
. '
be at the Parker home on April 4, presem. The members discussed
what projects !hey wanted to take
The Yopng R1ders met on Jan1993.
Sherry Burlce, News Reporter and ·wem over new projects added uary 17, 1~3. at the '!&lt;&gt;me of Bill
!his year. New officers were elect- Cornell, wllh 3 adVIsors and 7
The Busy Beavers 4-H Club met ed, and there were two new mem- members present The duties of the
on .March 20, 1993, at !he home of bers.
.
offi~rs wm fel!d. money malting
Delma Karr. There were 3 advoors. Mal~ Mikey and Laraine Law- proJects ~ere d1scus_sed and 4-H
and 9 members in auendance.
son
ght rcfrellunents. The next membenhl(l cards were fllled ouL
Discussion was lbout projects, meeting will be 11 Sonia Circle 'l
The foUo~ing officer• were
, activities and place and time of . house an February 17, 1993, at 7 el~ted: ~1de'!t, Sandy Smith;
.,.•.. meetings •. K.elreshments .. were I'.M. ..· '""
· V•ce Preaic!ent. J11111c Ervin; Secreserved by Delma KJ.r. l';ext meet·
..
tary, Kandi Hysell; Treuurer, Kyle
· ing will be 11 Delma Karr!s on
· The Young _R1ders met on Ord; News Reporter, Pamela
·
~ II, 1_
993, at t!Je hoine of Neece; Recrcstion, Jayme Miller;
Apri!3; 1993.
SUJIII Tobin, NeWs Repo»tca · B1ll Cornell, With 5 adv~ and _12 · Health, Stacey Mills and Safety
members present. Bus mess diS- Danielle Grucser.
· '
The C01111ay Shamrocb met on cussed w&amp;S the Fun Show .on April Members discussed the parts of a
March 19, 1993, at the home of 10, preparing to bold a raffle. and hone and about which hone pi-o..
Jennifer OoeJici!l wid! 2 advisors upcoming events.
jectJ 10 tab. Next Qleeling wu set .
. and 12 memben in IOAidauce, The · The members looked at different ·for February 11, 1993. · ·
·
membe~s ·
discussed horse feed and discussed how it ·
P~laNeece,NewsReponcr

AMultimedia Inc. Newapapar

'Stay on the right track,'
Southern scholars urged

•

r,

¢;:

SOs.

•

Bernice Carpenter recognized for service

looked and felt. Reporis were .
given, with members naming different pariS of a horse and identifying different . grains. It was ·
announced !hat Dani.elle Grueser
would be going to the Hippology
Clinic to represent the Young Riders 4-H Club.
Pam Neece and Sandy Smi!h
served refreshments. The next
meeting will be on March 11, 1993,
at the home of Bill Cornell.
Pamela Neece, News Reporter

Low tonlgbi In mld·30s.
Clear. Tbur$doy, sunny, blgh In

•

'

a

Meigs County 4-H news ...
The Basban Beamers 4-H Club
met on March 28, 1993, with
Tommy McKay President, in
charge of the meeting. The Secretary and Tl118Sumr' s reports wem
given. The members discussed a
·dance in May and possibly a car
wash and bake sale. Candy bars
were distributed to each member.
The club is planning to pick-up
trash on Bashan-Keno road in
observance of Ear!h Day on A~l
22.
.
Refreshments were served by
· Tommy and Dutchie McKay and
Jero111y Bissell. Next meeting will
be at Sonia Circle's home at 7:00
P.M. on Aprill2, 1993.
News Reporter

Reds make
it two wins

c~omping and . chewing

h, Ann

Ohio Lottery

The newspaper did not identify n·o infor~ation about such 11otes.
. PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) She said She could not commenL
Muslim inmates at the Southern !he official.
In the test, a small amount of
The Daily Times also reported
Ohio Correctional Facility in
Lucasville had warned !hat they protein derived from tuberculosis that as many as 20 guard_s have
would "do what they have to do" bacteria is injected under !he skin resigned from the prison because of
if forced to talce a tubeitulosis test, of the forearm . If someone has !he riOl and the _state's han'!Jing of
· been infected with tuberculosis, a . the standoff, which entered Its lOth
a newspaper reponed.
The Portsmouth Daily Times raised spot will appear in about. 24 day Tuesday.
.
.
The newspaper SBid guards have
reported Tuesday it obtained a 10 48 hours.
prtson official's nates ipdicating
The official wrote lh.atau!hori- been calling the new~paper to comties
f~rst wanted to try to persuade plain· about the stalemate. The
that supervisors met April 9 to dis·
cuss consequences of fo~ting pris- . the inmates to take !he test volun- prison. about 10 miles nortli of
oners to take the tests, administered tarily, the newspaper said. "If not Portsmou!h, is in the newspaper's
by injection.
,•
·
will put them down in their ceU," readership area.
Muslim prisoners objected to !he newspaper quoted the official
I'Y!s. Millhouse said the report
being tested on religious grounds.
as writing.
was maccurate. ·
James A. Demons. a guard who
"Hot meal if atmosphere is
was released as a hostage on Fri· okay," the newspaper quoted from
day, has said !he dispute over TB the notes, which added: "make
testing might have contributed 'to sure 1M (inmates) to be tested
!he uprising April 11 at t!Je state's understands (sic) ramifications. " ·
maximum-security prison.
The note says 43 Muslim prisThe newspaper said two 16-man oners objected ro the injection.
teams were scheduled to handle
"MGt with these 43. Most .
securitY in cellblocks K and L, !he . would not voluntarily test and may
·
G
·
· cellblock prisoncni evenlllally took present a problem,'' the newspaper
R~ ~ TE,co~strucnboln
over, dllring the testing.
quoted from !he notes. "Muslims cre~s. will oogm rep acmg ca e
A camera team and medical have been informed and have stat- facllilles on state _Route 124 South
Route
Staff wClll to be included. the news- ed staff do what they have to do ncar Rutland swung
· at -state
1es towar,.A
s and heading sut
paper said. The offiCial wrote that and Muslims do what !hey have to 32.,.._
m1
Phil B"
W,......,v ille, ~ordin
authorities "may have to use do."
. g to
•e·
force" and wanted tbe.testing docRhonda
Millhouse,
a derman, G~ dismct manager.
Jhe prOJCC:t w1U mplace Oth~r
spokeswoman for die state prison
umented. .
aerial
and buried cable as tilt ~h10
system in Columbus, said She had
D~~artment of TransportatiOn
• Wldelllland re-surfaces Stale Route
l~;Anytime we replace cable, it
.
'
hasapositiveimpactonthequality
of
ttansmission" Biederman
The Oallia·Mc~t of the State Highway Patrol iqvestigated a
explained. The proJect will cost
minor accident in
· TownShip Tuesday ·afternoon.
.
approximately $153,000, e)\clusive
Accordins to the accident 111p0rt, Jane L. Manuel, 27, 49173
of manpower resources and mainte.Manuel Road, Racine, was westbound on State t!.oute 338 whep
nance activities performed at the
Timothy J. Bearhs, 35, 433S4 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, who was
comnletion of the projccL
southbound from 1 priVII.C drive. pulled mto her'JI'!th·
·
. Blcdcnnan expects the project
The colliPon fmced B.lts' vehicle off the nght side of the road
10 be llOIIIJileted ~~lime.
·whiR it tiiiUCt a iUIId rail.
.
Wilkeaville u
in GTE's
No injuria -•cpoited and no citations were issued.
Soutbem Division, which serves
Bcarhs' velticlc lllitlinotllight damage and - driven from the
203,000 customers in a 6,400
scene. Minue,l's vehicle llllllalncd moderate damage and was towed
~~mile area of soulhcm Ohio.
from !he acene.
. with corporate offices in
s··-~ Connecticut, serves over
2
acc:ealinea Worldwide.

GTE to
replace· cable
facilities

.

--Local briefs

Patrol investigates accident ·

i.:ill'ii:t

Johnson,
· Carol Mahr, Paula Roush and
Bryan Zirkle.
Employed on three year contracts are:
.
Rick Edwards, Daryl Owens,
Linda Smith, Shirley VanMeter
and Sandra Walker.
Teachers employed on five year
contracts are: Bob Ashley, Lynn
Bookman, Mary Brauer, Barbara
Logan, Sue McGuire, Marsha Radabaugh, Julie Randolph, Carla Saelens, Rita Simmons and Carolyn
Smith.
Employed on continuing contracts are Carmen Manuel and John
'
·Wendy Halar, dir~r or the Chapter!
Van Reetb.
program In the Meigs Local School District, presented a plaque of
· Supplemental .contracts for peorecognition to the Meigs Local School Board at tbe board's regular
ple not under contract as full-time
meeting on Tuesday evenin11. The plaque WliS presented in recogni·
teachers have been grante&lt;l to
Bobby Ashley, assistant varsity . lion of the board's support or the program in the district. Accepting on bebatr orthe board is board president, Larry Rilpe.
football coach; Tim Faullc, assistant
varsity football coach; Bobby Ashley, reserve football; Carson Crow,
seven!h and eigh!h grade football;
Phil Harrison, boys' varsity basketball; Gene Wise, boys' ninth grade
basketball; Chris Stout, boys '
eighth grade basketball; Pat
O'Brien, boys' seven!h ~e bas·
ketball; Amy Perrin, assiStant high
school track; Bobby Ashley, junior
high traek; Kevin Musser, assistant
junior high track; Scot Gheen, head
baseball; Danny Thomas, assistant
baseball; Maria Knopp, girls '
reserve softball; Betty Wolfe, girls' ·
junior high basketball ; Kathy
Doidge, high school cheerleaders;
Lisa Pape, junior high school
cheerleaders.
With a vote of. four to one
(board members Randy Humphreys
voting against) the following were
employed on supplemental con tracts for one year: Jeff Baker,
assistant varsity football ; Gregg
Deel, assistant varsity football and
reserve football; Bryan Zirkle, seventh and eishth grade football;
R"ck
assistant varsity
1 ,_ Ash • boys'
b
R.
·"II:
Ed
· ······i f-···
~- • ·'····
•
as ..eta11 ; ,,_ · war
s, · b.oys
bas'tball·
Dale
HarrJ"
son
reserve
..e
,
• ,
1....
girls' assistant volleyball; Daryl
teacher at Pomeroy Elementary, was retOgDiocu
Owens iris. mserve basketball;
of appreciation ou Tuesda)' evenin1 by the Meigs School BOIIJ"d ror
Mike Ke~Dedy girls' head track; II her wor!t with the ldnderprten program. Presenting her certlt:l·
Tammy
girls junior high~te is board member, Roger Abbott.
volleyball; Mike' Kennedy, girls'
junior high basketball; Mike Stag,. gs, athletic facilities care; El~r
, McKelvey, _ye~rbook; Ceh~- . .
'
~y!
drama; Rick Edwards, alb
leuc dtrector; Joh_n Van _Reet!J. ,
_
assistant _band _d•.r~ctor, .John
.
.
.
.
.
~ott, ~t~nce,. Chff Ke~nedy:
AKRON. Ohio (AP) "If any offer for Logan is serigwdance, Mike W~fon~, ~•dance , Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.•. ously discussed with a buyer, the
E~ Btaeanar, librarian, Rebec: which has been selling assets to future welfare of the associaees and
~ Triplett, Pomeroy safety ,PBirOI,
reduce its debt, said it his possible customers will be. an important
Gary Walker, EMI~ coordmator; _buyers for iiS LDg1lll plant southeast cons~" said Ned Kendall,
Eleanor B.llletm•. library SU!!CfVl· of Columbus.
. . vice presldelit of~ )JIOCIsor:. Kevm Sheppard, v~attonal
No agree~J~Cnt on the sale ol the ucts. Goodyear refers to employees
a~noulture (60. days), Tone~
plant has been reached, Good~ as associa!CS.
D1ngess, ~ d!=tor'(40 days), said Tuesday. The plant, whtch
"Associates will be 8dviled if
John Arnott. gu•dance. (20) days; employs S75, malces instr~ment and when I potential buyer ud
Eleanor ll1aettoar, library (20 naMI pads. The lire maqr die! not .Goodvear ente~ into I letter of
. 1 · CooUnued on page 3
fdeR!ity .the possible buyers. . · · intent,I. Kendall said.
·· ·.

Chapm;..

L ogan Goodyear
plant
_
has possi•b) e buyers . .·

-I

I

'

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