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                  <text>. ~ Pomeroy-Middltpot1 _ Clalllpoll•, OH-Polnt Pieasant, wv

Page

Special disaster payment program
announced for 1992 crop corn
~ producers

By Lila Colliu,
Galla ASCS Orlke

·MYSTERY FARM • This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Spil and W"ater
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
•. Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
. pale in .the weekly contest may do~ by guessing
the farm's owner. Just. mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentine!, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or tbe Ga!lipolis Daily
Trivune, 825 Third Ave., GalFipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the
.

Ohio Valley Pub!ishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone·nRmber with your card
or Fetter. No te!ephone cans wlll be accepted. AFI
conll$1 entries sbou!d be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner wll! be ch11sen ~Y lottery.
Next week, a Mei!IS County farm w;ll be fea·
tured by the Meigs .Soil and Water C9nservatlon
District.

·. es
'Sheep
.
. l•n ven
. . ·.tor
. ·y
. dec"
. lz•n
.
upin~lasthalfoflhe 1980s.".

· WASHINGTON(AP)-World
)beep inventory at lhe beginning of
this year was an estimated 819 mil·
1ion head, a 4 percent drop from lhe
previous year according to an
Agriculture DePartment rqx&gt;tt.
·.: "This marks the. third straight
year of flock declines, and indi·
cates the world sheep industry is
'still working through .lhe collapse
of wool prices in 1989, low sheep
. meat prices in more recent years,
.and economic reform in Eastern
Europe and the former Soviet
Unioo," says lhe report this month
on lhe wocld livestock situation.
. However, the report said that
over lhe past six to nine months
wool prices have shown some
·improvement, •'although in real
. terms, !hey are still well below lev.els established before a price run·

sai~:

.

,

NFL

Pick 3:
680
Pldt4:

draft

"Ui

ends today

ie e

for 1993-crop-~ if dlellljal- · ·
ment in prodnm.., • 7 ia a;;.
of65'1&gt; or.mm:.
The
period • •
May 7, ~3. ClllliKl :ya.local
ASCS Office ·(446-!6116 i;; Glllia
County) f'?l' eddjtjnnll M•i• '+•

• Super Lotto:

10.Zl·Z7·32-33-39

mc=atioo

Kicker:
595111

Pile•'

GALLIPOLIS • Each year, hun· The Scene ·Safety ....,;nat, LiJcal
dreds of serious accidents change agencies and oraaaiulioas
the lives of Ohio fanners and their involved in bdpiq 10 JC16e .,.._
families, according to Jacltie Gra· narsetuparc:Eiolm¥ !Me!Ccaham Gallia County Farm Bureau ter, Gallia Collilty S!;erill's Dqlmsafety chairman.
ment. Sllte Hi,abwly l'llrol, Gellia
· Psually, farm accident victims County Healdi Dqjat-'ll. Jm•
are discovered 'by family members den's Farm Equipalcat,. WIERoremp1oyees who must act quickly AM, WMGO-FN, ud die Fua
. to save lhe victim. FreqReDdy, lhe . Bureau youth and
first person on the· scene becomes
Every family is inpooW., die
lhe second victim by malting inall" local &lt;:ammunity. Yo. ...ay lialC
. propriate decisions when trying"w··· 'one lire so learn 10 lbi* afl:ty.
make a rescue.
Because you cauot predict
The ability to make the right exactly when an ace••··
decisions when a fann accident is pen, you must leam 10 lllill: llloill
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S. discovered depends on whether safety at all times. Ac il •ca.
exports of fresh asparagus, peppers you, the [IISI person Dil lhe scene, be costly wilh muy dollars Foil..
and celery aU incfeased significant· ·have .becn trained in assessing farm For example: paia 1111111 tliiifli1ailc.
ly in value in 1992·over lhe previ· accident scenes and first aid. You loss of Fimbs, bospita11lills,. a.l
ous year, according 10 the Foreign must Qe familiar wilh the macbin· hired hei.J!. You ba1C clllly CIIIC ire
Agricultural Service.
·
',ery, siorage facilities, and Sln!C· and that s w,hy it is impollal4 b
The primary market for these lures on the fann so lhat decisioos everyone to get involftd ill.dais
vegetab!es was Canada, said lhe made will not furlher injure lhe yic- type of program.
agency's report this monlh on hor- tim or put yourself in danger. Your
For more infCJriiUIIDI ..... die
ticultural products.
goal as the fli'St person on the scene First On The .Sceuc 7*"1*- a."Most U.S. fresh vegetable • is to keep the victim alive until tact: Gal!ia County Fana B exports to the Eui'opean Communi· emergency medical service arrives. 212 Pearl Street SniJc A 11' "-"'·
ty face strong comp.etiilori from .
That's why Gallia County Farm Ohio 45640 1-800-777-9nfi
Europe811 and Mediterranean coun- Bureau is sponsoring a Firs I On
. tries, such aa Spain, Morroco, Bel·
• gium, lhe Nelher!ands, Turkey and .
Israel," said lhe report.

ll'IAII:::;,.

wil,..,..

Pomeroy-~lddleport,

Ohio, Monday, Aprtl 26,1993

UMW sending ·message to coal operators
,

CHAJUJISTON, w. va. (AP)
- A UDited Miae Workers
ij*i
1171lllioa JIJllea In SL
LcNilllld 1M Ailgelea over lho
5 ' - - 10 1e11t a mea·
. . vl.....,lty 111 COil opera~«t
11 ... MaJ 3 contract oxiCnslon
F •w cbwiiiUf.
•
"I lbl;;t tiiCio IJICI other evenll
G&amp;r i delr demollstralioll of lhe

sible." .
for aatrona contract." he said.
He said the union. planned
MltiCI Workers drcucillln camouflage fall~:• staged a ''We demonstration• Tu~y a! plants
come for jus , not for brunch '' owned by Hanaon Industries,
march Saturday outside the posh which Ia lhe parent company U.S.
1M Angeles mUIJion of a top coal coal giant Peabody Holding Co.
The unioo also planned to rally Sat·
offx:lal.
And in SL Loulu tJnlted Mine · urday at the U.mp_per St. Clair, Pa..
Workers union leader uraed the headquarters of CONSOL Fnc,
In Beverly Hilla Saturday, lhe
nalloa '1 lar1101t coal producer to
..._._.dwdepl!lol~.lhat remembOr how impo!Wit workers union members marched on the
UMWA IDCIDben bavc tllrOUihOUt are u It gem up for tiClgotlatlons estaiC of Lord Qordon White, an
1118 a.l fieldll and lhrou&amp;hout lhls
the '!"ion·
. offiCial of Hanson Industries.
ca try," UMW apokeaman Jim
I thmk It certaln!y sends a
About 80 demonstrators, some
Gn 5 Mltlid Slltlday aigbL
. clear and unrnlallkable meuage," carryins alps reading "Justice in
•'It llio ~ u OIIDOitUDity Oroafold said. "Our objective il to lhe coal fieldJ now," marched for
10 *-•auate the uni'hakab!e win a Slflllli contract and we'd like one hour in a bid to ''rock the Dris·
._•illaclll of UMW A families 10 see that achieved u lOOn 11 pol· · tine Beverly Hills nelghborhooil.''

There were no arrests.
"II was 11 demonstration of
union solidarity and an attempt Ill
prevent calamity in the coal
fields '' UMW ~eprcsentative Joe
Drexler said ouUide White's
walled estate.
In St. Loul's, demonstrato(s
gathered in tl)e shlidow of Peabody
Holding Co. 'a downtown office.
Peabody Coal is a subaldiary, of
Peabod~ Holding Co. of St. Louis,
the nation's largest coal producer. ·
"Peabody started over 100
years ago as a mom-and-pop operation. Today, tl)ey are the larsest
prlva~ely-owned coal company in
the world. They have forgotten

----Rainy day for recycling

Akron.newspaper reports inmate
warned guard the .day riot sttuted

wl'!',

Nutritionally advanced
horse f•d specifically ·
.formulated for your olde
horse's less efficient
metabolic systems...

Saturday, May J, 1993 will be
the "first On The Scene" mid-day
program at the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds. This safety
awareness program dealing with
agriculture related accidents will
start at II :30 a.m. and is being
sponsored by the local Farm
Bureau organization in cooperation
with several other local groups.
Severa! demqnstrations will be
· conc!Qcted lhroughout the day start·
ing at about l p.m. A spaghetti
lunch will be available. Hopefully
for many farmers, Saturday, May I
will be a good day for field work.
the late season will bring many
long work days and the result is
usually more accidents. This pro·
gram' is a must for spouses and
children with limited experience
around farm equipment. If you
found a family member caught in a
tractor PTO, would you know how
to tum the tractor off! Attend the
"First On The Scene" program.
Edward Vo!lborn Is Gallla
CoRnty's extension agent, agri·
culture.
.- ·

. Researchers· continues to find
hew lhings abourthe importance of
Vi18.111in E and selenium in lhe diet
of dairy cows. According to Dr.
:Bill Weis s, a researcher at
O.A.R.D .C., we have found that ·
feeding dry GOWS 1000 l.U. of supplemental Vitamin E per day and
la&lt;;tating cows 500 I.U. of supple·
mental Vitamin E per day with
diets containing .3 p. m. of supple·
mental selenium reduces the inci·
dcnce and duiation of clinical mas·
titis by about 40 percent as compared to cows not fed any su~ple·
mental Vitamin E or sclemum.
B:eeause feeds differ in content and
consumption varies durin~ !he
~pre-fresh" and "post-panuntion"
it is difficult to balance these levels. Call for a complete review of
this topic in the recen.t DHI
;:Insight" newsletter. ·
According to John Lawrence,
Economist from Iowa, beef product
movenient continues good in spite
of ;ecord hij!h live canle prices that
were established in the week end·
liig March 26. It appear&amp;, according
10 Lawrence, that retailers are rea~
ijjring select beef over' choice !O
l!elp overcome. the higher-priced
product The choice-select boxed·
1111cf spread has remained quite nar·
row. In February lhe spread fell to
f7.76 per hundred and bas stayed
under $~.81 since. Dr. Lawrence
. predicts lhat as more of the 199Z
C!Jlves start coming · to slaughlct
there will be an increasing su~ly
of ~·se lect" resulting in a WJder
price spread.
·
,

1992 MAZDA 626
Automatic, AIC, sunroof, loaded, only 12,000 low
miles. Local one owner.

• Unique feed form ...easy t
chew and digest.

.,....,.luctrl!·atltl.,.....
•II.,W,•pril"l•fl*

•

. . . . . . . . . .JIJ,I

Highly palatable·

• Improves skin &amp; hair coat

1992 CADILLAC SEDAN DMW
Lt. blue metallic with blue leather trim. Only
12,700 miles. Bal. of 481$0 Warranty.

While It may !lave illiiiPellld 10111e partldpatloil at .
anual recydlq day car allow
at Melp Jll~h lchoo!, Satur·
dlly moralaa a rain didn't dla·
courage people frGIII ilriDIIDI
In their recyclable -terTall.
Accordlna to Mtlll Couaty
Litter Control OIIICer Kenny
Wl1glaa, turnollt waa.areat.
Wllllu uld 25 batterltl, 200
1a!IO.. or motor oU, lour to..
of 1Faai, 500 pollndnf'rood
caDI, 200 pOUDda or iltvtralt
CIDft 100 pOUIIC!I Of tldiDI,
100 11ounda of Juaa aad two·
. Jlter IJottlea, a tOD or Dtwlp8•
pers and 500 pouada or card·
board wen turilecl In lor reeyc!lng. The event w11 aponsorecl by VOCitloaal Jadllltrlal
Chaba oi,Amirlel (VICA) and
the Me!a .COIIDI.I ,Litter CCIII·
trol otrli:e. Top, Wlfalaa a,epa·
ratu recyc!ab!ea. AI .lett,
G!ean Morrla ~ ParkeribiD'I,
W.Va., wlpn ralawater or ltie
1!170 ·Cbnro!et Chevelle
88'54 he dla;i!l)'ld at the car
ahow. (Sendael photot ~1 Jim
Freeman)

The Store with "All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets, Stables,
Large and Small Animals, Lawns and Gardens.

R&amp;G Feed &amp;.Supply Co.
399 W. Millie

992·2164

PomeroJ

1

1991 GMC JIMMY

•
Auto., AJC, 4 wheel drive, only 9,000 tow miles.
"93 Buick Trade".

Ohio University
College of Business Administration

•

1989
OLDS
98
BROUGHAM
•

Executive MBA
Program·

Only 54,~00 miles. Exceptionally clean. $ter11ng
sliver with dark grey vinyl roof.

1988 BUICK aNTURY 2 DR.

ts an a.ff!rmattve action tnstitutton.

For detaile, call 614-593·2028

or 614-593-2029,

V·6 with only 31,000 low miles. Blue. "Buy with
Confidence,"

or complete the coupon and mall it to:
.

'

.

'

.

' i·

~

·····································••!•••····~·
Director. EXecutive M.B.A. Program
College of Business Adrn!nlatratlon
Haning Hall. Ohio University
Athens OH 45701 -2979

Ple!IM - d mo lllfonutton on the kecaU.o M.B.A. Pro.,_.

.....

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-

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'

ft~'== Deadline Saturday

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..!'a:;:

State

By KEVIN PINSON
OVPNewaStaff
(Editor's note: Till Identity of
till lnwst11ator Interviewed for this
story Is beln1 wlthlltld to protect
him/or jwun Ulldlrcowr work.)
the Gallla County Sheriff's
Depai'IIMnt bu reuon to believe a
burglary ring responsible for
almoel $1 m!Uion worlh of !hefts is
operstins out of tbe area.
Sheriff Jamea D. Tay!(l' said the
rill$ appears to be using the count)'
u Its bale of operationaud hal h11
all the surroundln11 counties,
Including some In Kentucky and
West Virginia.
,
"They're liviD$ ~ere and we
don't need 'thole kind of people,'''
he saicl.
Invelllaators believe lhe ring is
alao reaponsible for at least five
brl!akins 111d enterlnga at local

buslncnea - Crown Ciry if:DDI1
Mlrt. Crown City; Styline I,..,
OaFlipoiia·, Dentill DavJiJ ~.
Smith'• office, Oallipolia; it1Je
Spring Valley~~)'. GaDiJI!Ilis, and the R1o M1n1 Mlrt, llio
Grande.
All of !he break-ins hav.elibe
same method of operation, 11
department investi«ator lai4.
.' ~
suspcctl cut the phone ud ·a t.m
w!re.s before prying open doon.and
breaking into the buo'p rei' ·lib.
The rina a1so takel other ilemJ.
he said, but it1 main obje.ctiv.e
always seem a 10 be the ufe, ~n
some cas ea. the safe was 1even
taken alona if it could not be 'Cut a
broken open 11. the scene.
SiW!ifar evidence, auch..._as
match ng footpr Inu, h
. a• ,...,CJI
found at some of die aime-.
the inveal!Jalllr added
Some'ollhe bulinoascnfli'!JJDI"

Attorney says cult member le~rned
of FBI's raid fr()m -TV photographer
WACO. -r.. (AP)- One of
The fire ended a Sl-day atandoff .·
... people wllo died Ia David that beaan after agenta of lhe
~·1 1 1 ~ ~ told the cult Bureau of Alcohol, TobiiCCO ud
....,_ Q '
5
J:GI!IInJ . Pirearma who c:unc to arre1t Xore·
bMalfttlrl il4dlelllwl!loriJ ah ahot it out with cult members.
1 TV DIY?VIIPMr lbe day lhe Four apntneretiUod.
·a• • llr ,..,,..,;Kmuh'l·lawyer
DCIGuerin said when he visited
IBid.
lhe ~pound during the ltlildoff, ·
na n ...,, Dicll DCIGuerln. he ~ aevoral tlmea witb David
a5auaill s 5 1 lhll Karelb lilted Mil:liaei Jonea, wilDie body wu the
.a. 10 dnrlr If·a wiD aacl leaal flnl of die cult memberl' ldendlled
•
u pnliiC
. tlq lbe euli'1 by authorltlea.
... lflllll ~ Jio¥k1111a for
DeOuerin saijS J01101, whq wu a
r?ilJ
- 1 'aewr- mall carrier, told him he'd be4n

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abaentee n die May 4 e!ec:tlon,
Rita
Smitb,
dltector
die Mtla•
County
Board
o'fpfB!eot~:.'d
IIIIIOilliOed. She saicl dllllbe · .
........., bo
lbal
froin 9
iiii~aoon.QJIIIII . y
Till 0111y laue 10 be 011 die ·•
ballolla ........•!I operadna levy

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Investigators bearing
·down.on burglary ring

..

The College of Business Administration of Ohio University is
currently recruiting the •eventeenth group for Its very BUC\=essf({(- , .
weekend Executive M.B.A. Program at its l.aJu~uter Campus.
Classes will begill in September 1993.
Ohio Unluerstty

w•

r.

• Contains added nutrients
n~ed by older horaea.

_________,..,_

they got thet way becau.e iof lthe
UMWA," said Jobn Buov!c,
retired ICCrctary-trcuurcr for lthe
union.
The union sb'UCk Pelboily llibsidlariOI in Febnwy .,_ "MtlWI'
negotiations with the BitnmiMJII
Coal Operators Aaaociati011 cOl·
lapsed. 'fhe aii!OC:iatioil llbpCIIOUJ
the nation's 121arplt.coi!poiluoen.
.
Work resumed after a 60-i~
contract extenaion wu!Tacllell
March 3.
Neaotiationa continue in
ingiOD, D.C. Groasfe!d ·cJoclinodliD
diiCUSI the ltaiUJ of JIIIIIO&amp;i•tiaJII,
Union official• Hidthe :Jirike

, CASVILLE, Oh1o
· (AP) . IB11tlillc
LU
guard abo ut lhe wam;ng.
An inmate at Ohio's maximum· second luard. w)lo Wll raqiqa•
security prtaon warned a guard lhat duty, tliought nothin£,! ii\. idle
trouble was coming lhe day prison· newspaper said. "You
ibMiill
ers S'-8~ a riot lhat led to an II· the thne," be said.
.
day sicse In which 10 people died,
The Beacon Journal &lt;ili4 !Ddt
a newsPJPef reported.
· identify either IIJIId.
.
The 11uard relayed lhe warning
.Atabout3:IS p.m.. hundJ 1 ...a:
to a second gua;:d, who thouiht pnsoners rioted and todk UiliiMil11olhins of the prisoner'• comment, cellb!oclt L:
.
.. • , .
the Akron Beacon Journal reported
The upnaing ended WriJ. 1. s
SundJy.
•
wilh lhe surrender of 4ff1 1pria •
Moan while, Gov. George and release or five hoatQDI. OIJe
Volnovlch !Old .The Columbus Dil· guard who ba&lt;l been belif!h: I ¢
atch he wu coallderlng upgrad· and nine inmate~ died in the ..ang ~urity IWUS It lhe Southern off.
·
·
OhioCOITCCtionalFacllity.
· A telephone meuap IC"ili"'
The ~eacon Journal reported." comment was loA It ,the]ll'i.-a!id
that an mmarc told a guard before there wu no answer at 1he O!Jlo
. ..lin .. APt~ 11 shif! chansc that Department of RehabilitaUIM lllllll
"somelhmg was IOlliB to go down Correction.
today."
Officials said Saturlla,- 1llleJ
The guard said he !Old anolher don't lalow how 1on1 dielr Jmati-

Introducing Purina Equine Senior™

'

.._, 'LI ..:...:..-.
'1'. Fz;.WIIII!i.llilltll.._

••

·Gallia County F.arm Bureau
t 0 sponsor Sale
n." t.y seuun
• .ar
, ,

Older
Horses
Have
•
"Special Need:~" ;

·Local crops suffering
.from cool, wet weather

'

chase multiple peril aop ·

Exports.increase '

It smd lhat over the S3!11e penod,
The sheep m~ust~y su11
world sheep meat pnces have appears to be workmg us way
shown more mm:ed unprov_ement t!'roug~ lhe.effects of low meat and
from producers standpomt as hve pnces 1n 1990 and 1991, .even
reduced culling and smaller lamb though a 40-year-old wop! support
crops reduced meat supplies.
pr~gram . hu to' a large extent
"Produ~ers ar~ p~obably ~ow . shielded 1t from the last .sev~~~l
contemplating rebuilding, but g1ven y~ of low world wool pnces, 1t
sun large wool stocks1 only modest S81d. . .
.
and uneven growlh .m the world
Pnce. mcrease~ that began m
econo~~, and contmued strong 1992 suggest culhng may ease m
comJJ{ltt,bon ~m .olher meats, any 1993,1he report said.
rebu1ldm~. ~Ill hkely be gradual
"Both live and retail meat
and ~all. It smd.
.
.prices were up in 1992 as a smaller
Estimate~ for lhe Umted States lamb crop pushed meat production
showed the mv~tory at the stan. of down 4 percent." it said.
the _year drop;nng fo~ .the thud
straight year, to 10.2 million head.
That was only 100,000 head above
the record low of 1986, lhe report

Farm Flashes

GALLfPOLIS · The laiC week
sun was welcome. All crops are
suffering from adverse cool-wet
conditions. Wheat, barley, veg·
etable plants, and outside to~cco
float plants are showing stress from
recent weather. It appears that the
wind during the cool-wet time may
have caused additional problems.
Leaf yellowing and mottling and
tip burns are some of the symp·
toms. In some cases, additional
pi augen fertilizer may be needed to
tum the crl!'ps around, ~ut generally
wann sunny days are the best cure.
Plan to join your friends for an
educational evening on Tuesday,
:April 27 at the Curti~ Balthaser
{arm near Danville. The topic Of
· the evening will be a pond clinic.
The Balthaser farm is located near
die Meigs/Gallia County line. Mr.
I! a! thaser is well known lhroughout
lbe area for his cattle production
and conservation program. Signs
~ill be posted on Route 325 near
Panville, directing to the farm.
From Gallia County the easiest
route for most will be to take Route
:S.'2S north from Vinton. Eric Nort~nd, OSU Extension Specialisl,
will be lhe featured speaker on the
topic of "Fish Stocking Rates and
Weed Control". The program is
)leing sponsored by soil and Water
Conservation Districts in both
Meigs and Gallia Counties and the
OSU Extension Services of both
cbunties. Plan to anend!

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia ASCS
Secrewy of Agriculture Mike Espy
announced on April 9, 1993 new
assistance for j)roducers of com
crops whose harvest was of low·
quality due to natural disasters in
1992. These corn producers may be
eligJblefordisa•terpaymentsbased
on lhe low quality of lheir crop,
even !hough the quantity harvested
wolild not usually qualify lhem for
disaster assislance.
Adjusunents in production will
. be made for those producers of
1992-crop &lt;;om who suffered losses
from reduced quality caused by
damaging we8lher or related coodi·
lions. The factors for determining
actual production will he: 80% for
Grade No.4, SO'I&gt; for Grade No.5,
and 15'1&gt; for Sample Grade.
Producers who fi!ed a written
disaster application 'for 1992-crop
com may amend a previously filed
applicatioo to include los9es due to
reduction in quality. In addition,

who have not previously
filed a disas'ter application on
1992-crop com may file for a loss
due to reduction in q,uality, provid·
ed lhe producer has not filed for
disasier benefits in both 1990 and
1991 crop years.
Producers are required to pur-

·Ohio Lottery

driving hla 'car, with U.S ..Poatal .
Service taa• on it. when he uw •
television photo1rapher who
appeared JQjjL
He aaid the ph. oto~apher
warned him, '"There's so 10 he
a big 111nflsht wilh lhele
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of he~e.'''
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ready wllen Jbe ATP qenta ai'rlved
Feb. 28.
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Comme~tary
Th~

Monday, April 26, 1993

..

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy-Middfeport, Ohio
Monday, Apr1126, 1993

~y,Aprll27

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED 1"0 11IE JIIITERESTS OF 11IE IIIEIG&amp;-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gen«ral Manager ·

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'They should he less than 300
words. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters w~l be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addre ssing issues, not personalities.

Governor.praised for
low-profile role in siege

·WASHINGTON- F~ a mere
$8 per year, any American over the
age &lt;if 55 can s~bscribe to an
almost irresistible bargain, and 34
million of them do. Joining this
club gives members access 10
everylhing fJ'Qill discounted mo_vic
tickets and .hotel rooms to special·
ized financial services thli1 include
group health insurance, no,load
mutual funds and Jow.lnterest credit cards. It's a hard deal to pass up.
. But joining the American Association of Retired Persons also ties .
one in to the largest lobbying juggernaut in Washington. Its size and
sophistication make it the envy of
its competitors. There is only one
thing the AARP doesn't diSclose to
its members: the cost of its advoca·
~ The AARP's agenda would
mate even the most free-spending
member of Congress choke on his
port - lobbying for $300 billi1&gt;n
in new government spending for
1993 alone.
That's how much the National
Taxpayers Union estimates th31 the

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinovich 'drew praise for staying out
of sight during the ll.Qay siege at the state's maximum-security'prison,
but it may be too soon to tell if the goodwill lasts.
.
Potential revelations from investigations into why and how the riot
occurred at the Southern Ollio Correctional Facility could cause problems
· for Voinovich as he bids for re~leclion in 1994.
Less than 24 hours after the last prisoner and hostage guard emerged .
safely from the cellblock Wednesday, Voinovich was flying to !&gt;astern
· Europe to salvage what he could from a state ~mission.
He was forced to delay his participation in the trip because of the
prison disturbance thli1 began April II .
Voiilovich was criticized by some prison-area residents and callers to
radio lallc shows for his decision to maintain a low pro[J]e and let professionals handle the crisis.
But two officials close. to lhe siege thlilleft nine inmates and 9ne guard
dead said they found no fault with Voinovich.
· Nilci Schwartz, a defense lawyer from Cleveland who helped negotiate
a peaceful resolution, said Voinovich did the right thing.
•'The easiest thing in the wood for him to do would have been Ill come
down here and inflame the already inflamed passions and denounce the
Inmates. And he didn't do that," Schwanz said from Lucasville. ·
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, in whose district the
prisoo is located, offered praise of his own.
"Some people, even in my own home district, criticized the governor
for not doing enough. I know better," Riffe said.
·
The 11nion thli1 represents prison w,Prkers aiined its post-siege criticism
not at Voinovich, but at LL Gov. Mike DeWine, the governor's point man
on the criminal juStice system. .
·
. Paul Goldberg, executive director of the Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association, said DeWine "failed miserably." Goldberg said new leadership was needed in the prison sysiem.
The OCSEA refrained from such criticism while the siege was underway. Now that it's O\'t!', the union will conduct its own review of problems within the system ..
A criminal investigation was being handled by the State Highway
Patrol, and the Legislature's Correctional Institution Inspection Commit·
tee was asked by Riffe for a "tough and thorough" probe.
Disclosures from those investigations, and any trials or lawsuits that
arise in the full!rc, might provide material on which Voinovich political
In late 20th-century America,
opponents could capitalize.
we live in a stale of siege, physical
and psychological. It would be
wrong to say that we have become
inured Ill it, but correct to say that
we are hardened by iL Our reaction
increasingly is to seek private inoculation from the public plague. We
By The Associated Press
are
tem~y shaken out of our
Today is Monday, April26, the I 16th day of 1993. There are 249 days
desensttized
acceptance of the
left in the year.
unacceptable
only
when someone
Today's Highlight in History:
we
know
or
a
neighborhood
ip
On April 26, 1986, the world's worst nuclear accideni occurred at the
which
we
live
is
victimized.
· Chemobyl plant in the Soviet Unioo. An experiment involving the No. 4
For instance, perched on the
reactor went awry, causing an explosion and fire that sent radioactivity
iniO the atmosphere. At least 31 Soviets died in the immediate aflermath suburban rim of Washington, D.C.,
it was impossible for me to esc;tpe
of the accidenL
•
knowing that daily carnage is a fact
. On this date:
of
life for inner-city youth. But
In 1607, an expedition o.f English celonists, including Capt. John
however
aware I was intellectually,
Smith,.went ashore at Cape Henry, Va., to es1ablish the first pei'JIIanent
it
might
have been occurring on a
English settlement in the New World.
distant
planet
for all the effect it
In 1785, the American naturalist and artist John James Audubon was
had
on
me
emotionally.
II was a
born in Haiti.
fact
of
their
life,
not
mine.
In 1865, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln, was
That ended abruptly on a spring
sUII'Oiinded by federal troops near Bowling Green, Va., and killed.
evening
a month ago. Tiie daughter
In 1900, seismologist Charles Richter, who devised the eanhquate·of
a
friend
became the first of lhrec
measuring scale that bears his name, was born in Hamilton, Ohio.
victims
picked
at random by a
In 1937, planes from Nazi Germany raided the Basque town ofGuemicold-blooded
assailant
in Washing.
•
ca during the Spanish Civil War.
.
ton,
murdered
f~
no
apparent
reaIn 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Yankees hit the fli'SI of a record
61 home runs in a single season; the homer was off Detroit's Paul Foytaek son other than her ~nee on the
street when the killer drove by.
at Tigec Stadium.
In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyilca and Zanzibar merged 10 With her death, the unaccep!3ble
suddenly became intolerable.
form Tanzania
And n bec11111e even more.so last
In 1968, the United Slates exploded beneath the Nevada desen a one·
week.
One of our daughlllrs-in-law
megaton nuclear device called "Boxcar."
·
called
to
say that in tranquil Chapel
In !980, following an unsuccessful auempt by the United States to resHill,
N.C.,
the annual street festival
cue the hostages in Iran, the Iraflian government announced the captives.
had
been
disrupted when rival
had been taken from the American Embassyljllld were being scatlllred to
youth
gangs
suddenly began shootthwart any future rescue effon.
mg at each other. She, like a number of other mothers, had been on

AARP·s legislative agenda would .
cost the gcMIIlJ1IeDt lhis year if its
entire legislative wish list were
passed. It's an agenda that looks

By Jack Anderson
and
Miehael Binstein
great until the sticker·shoclc sets in,
and it's not surprising to find the
costs scarcely mentioned in the
association's policy papers. In a
study to be released later this week,
a draft copy of which was obtpined
by our associate Jan Moller, the
NTU puts the taxpayers' money
where the AARP's mouth is.
•
By far the most ban ..Lb
- ustmg
item on the AARP's agenda is
health-care refonn. White House
officials privately estimate .that
their P.ackage may cost between
$30 b1llion and $90 billion in new
spending, an amount that pales in
com paris on to the package that

payers about $15 billion per year if
it were passed today.
Like any large and sophisticated
marketing operation, the AARP
regularly polls its membership to
gauge their priorities. When the
AARP polled its membership on
health-care reform, a SU!Jlrising
paltcm emerged: While the .Wash·
mgton staff has made its healthcare reform plan the cornerstone of
this year's lobbying efforts, less
than half the members even knew
that an AARP plan existed as
recently as last August. Mmtover,
when the AARP polled members
last December, only 29 pereent of
those who said they were familiar
with the group's health proposals
believed that the AARP-ba~ked
plan would give them better coverage than they currently enjoy.
Ironically, the organization that
today rarely sees a government
program it do~sn' 1 lite was
launched with a credo of selfreliance for the elderly. In the early
days, the AARP's main concern
was obtaining health insurance for
the elderly. In 1964, retirees were
the only age group to vote for
Barry Goldwater - a presidential
candidate who opposed; amqng
other things, the Medicare program. In 1965, AARP co-founder
Ethel Percy Andrus would write
about the group: '' AARP holds no
meetings to bewail the hardships of
old age, nor to formulate p:e$sure
~grams. nor saess potenual polit·
1cal sttcnglh of older folies, nor 10
urge government subsidy.~'
The AARP of today IS a far different animal. It has an annual budget of more than $300 million,
which doesn't include income from
its related orga~~izations. In 1993,
the group will pay at least $23 m~­
lion just to rent its office spac~
(which one Senate staffer called
"the nicest building in Washing:
ton"), and .at least $70 million jusi
for printing costs. The organizatiol)
has at least 19 registered lobbyists,
and its budget and membership far
surpass both the Republican and
Democratic parties. Many people
here believe that it carries mucb ·
more influence as weD.
Jack Aadersoa aad Miehatl
Blnsteln are writers lor United
Feature Syadicate, Inc.

AARP wants.' AARP is lobbying
for HeallhCare America, a version
of tliC "pay or play" model Clinton was advocating early in his
campaign -but with a much higller price tag. The NTU study esti·
mates· that AARP' s plan would
come at a cost of $207 billion· in
new health benefits spending.
. AARP' s health plan cal!s for
large expansions in care, including
the' 'universal long-term care" bill·
that would cost about $60 billion,
!according to the NTU estimate.
The group's platfonn· even calls f~
reinstatement of the "catastrophic
care" legislalion llillt led to one of
the most embarrassing episodes in
the group's history.
The AARP fought for years 10
have catastrophic illness covered
by .Medicare, and .finally got it
signed into law . But the law
repealed two years afier its passage
when AARP membc;:rs revolted
over the $9 billion iii new taxes
thli1 were required 10 pay for it. The
NTU study estimates that catastrophic coverage would cost tax-

•

Social fabric unraveling·with

.Today in history

that Satne street with her two chil-

•

crime ~

Middle Ages on into the last century, the rich had private armies
began.
·
while lhe poor were at the mercy of
Ali!IOSl simultaneously, a IS- predators large and small. On! y
over the past two centuries did the
theory and then the'praclice of universa! police protection emerge in
year-old towhead was shot down the WCSL NonelheleS$, by the midafter an argument with a teen-age die or the 20th century the comclassmate in another suburban monplacc expectation was that the
home outside Washington. The law-abiding citizen should and
dead child's last words to his moth- c:Ould be secure in his home and on
er, in a telephone call moments the streetS.
That expectation has crumbled
before his death, were, "I was just
along with the infrastructure, mom!
calling to say hi and I love you."
Consider the large, impersonal as weD as govenunental, that reinpicture again.- In Los Angeles, the forced iL Our society is fast revert-.
big story elu:lier this month was ing to medieval practices. There are
that there was no massi vc rioting more private security guards
after the seCond trial of four police employed today than there are
officers in the Rodney King trial. pohcemen. We arm ourselves to
But th1 real story is and was that the teeth. in the name of selfLos ADgeles is im armed camp that defense and watCh individual secuhas been in lhe middle of a rolling rity diminish because of the. prevariot for yeats, and that Los Angeles lence of small arms. We seek and
is not much different from a dozen create enclaves of privilege as
other big cities. Nor is Chapel Hill refuges from society's perils, then
all that .unique. Small towns and discover anew the Wisdom of tl\at
medium-size cities have a,lso familiar refrain from the old spiri.
tual, "There's no hiding place
become combat zones.
down
here."
It's not supposed to be this way.
What's
required is a reawaken·
In the begiming, men and women
ing
of
sense
qf community that ·
formed communities for mutual
brought
us
together
in the' first
protection against outside foes.
place.
Rather
than
turning
inward
They were the building blocks of
and
away
from
the
chaos.
and
terror
civilization, the necessary condion
our
streets
and
in
too
many
tion for man's progress. .
Initially, however, personal homes, rather than trying to buy
security was a sometime thing individual security while ig11oring
inside those communities. From the the collective breakdown, we need
to seek common solutions and
dren about the time thli1 the melee

Hodding 9arter III

m.

I

establish common ground against
the evil'within.
Much of the problem is centered
in dysfunctional families. Much of
their rot can be attributed to the
hopeless environment in whicli
they try to exisL Restore hope and
opportunity and the rot can be eontained and then rooted ouL
'
But that 'is the long-term goal. In
the shorter run, society's guardians
must be given adequate support.
Rather than more rem-a-cops, there
must be far more cops on the beaL
The emphasis in the schools should
be on protectinj! the majority,
which means diS(:iplining .and
ejecting ,the clangerous minority.
No neighborhood, no matter how
poor, should be abandoned to petty
hoodlums and Ofganized gangs.
Society's norms 11\USI be a,sserted ·
and enforced vigorously within the
central city as .well as in the suburbs.
'
Otherwise, the gatne is lost an~
we are back in a jungle where it's
every man for himself. Changing
course reauires a chan~e of atti·'
tude. It's our collective problem!
We will either solve it IOgether for
everyone, or there will be no solu!
lion for anyone. ·
·
•
. Hodding Carter Ill, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, editor. aDd pubUaher, Is president or
MalnStreet, a Washlnpon, D.C.:
baled television prod!idion com-,
pany and a syndicated writer for·
Newspaper Enterprise Associa-'
tlnn_

-Patient rights vs. an .· impatient state Drs. Christian Pross and Gotz ·medicine was being initially
Aly belong 'to a g~oup of young reshaped after the First World War,
German doctors a1ld .Jawyelil exam- its cost-benefit approach helped
ining the transmogrificabon of Ger- chaJ;!ge the role of the doctor.
man medicine before and during
the Second World War. Some of
their research, in text and photog111phs, made up the exhibit ~'The
Value of the Human Being:
In time, the national economy
Medicine in Germany 1918-1945" became more important than the
at the National Museum of Health welfare or those patients who cost
and Medicine in WashinJtton late too much to treat and in any case,
last year.
would not become productive
Accompanying the exhibit was ~noush for the greater good of the
an illustrated boolclet by Pross ~ society,
Aly thli1 should be required reading
TheJ'e were, it should be IIOied,
by the president and Hillary ROd· some admirable BOals for the prohllllt Clinton - along with IJICffi· fession, ''Socially minded ilocton
ber• of Con1rcss -· as mitional ... demanded universsl health insur·
. health care is being refOimcd. The ance." And for a while, there were
aulh&lt;irs empllasize tliat as Gennan advances in tralmcnt IJid prevcn·
tion. But increasingly, dociOn saw
themselves "as more responsible
.
for
'health of the nation' than
Deadline Wednesday for the·
the
,ood· of the iadividual
· . Deadline IO!: IUb!Jllltlal Let·
pa!ient.'
Indeed, "the flnt para·
ters to the Editor pertabaiDI to
lsaues In the May 4 prilllary elee· graph of the profeasional code of
tio.n is noon Wednesday, Arrn medicine in Seplember 1926 IIWild
28. No eleetloa letters wil be that 'The pmcaion Qf a doc:IOr Hes
in health service for tbe Gennan .
accepted after that deadline.
nation.'"

NatHentoff

·-

-------

~

!.
•

•'

•

''

')
Universal health care, funded by . side of that. debate won.
.
the State, turned OUt - as ecilnOm1'hele weie heretics who did not ~
ic·conditions worsened -to be not believe in managecl health care ror ~
5o universal. Certain patients were the pea1er economic benefit of the ,
categorized as of lesser value. The state.' Dr. Julius Moses, a general :
intellectual rationalization for this practitioner in ~lin and a member :
approach was in a 1920 book, of tile Reichsraa between 1920 and :
"The Sanctioning of the Destruc- 1932, warned during his last year ~
lion of Life Unworthy of Living." ·in office that ~a National Social-•
T~e distinguished professionals ist Thin! Reich ... only the curable f
who collaboraled on the WOlle were would be treated! The incurably ,
Alfred Hoelle, a aewopaJhologist, sick are considered 'human bal- :
and Karl Bindinl!, a lawyer. Part of last,' 'human trash,' 'valueless,' :
their deadly thesu was that limited and 'unproductive.' They must •
economic resources should not be then be destroyed. In a word, the :
wasted on people who couldn't ·physician becomes the haqman/' ~
benefit sisnlficantly from treat' Dr. Moles died of hunger 111111 loss i
meDI- And Jfoche, in qth« recom- of strenph in 1)eresienmdt;
;
mendalions to the nation, spo1te of
· In . its Jan. ' l8, 1993, issue, •
"hUIIIIII burdl::ns." "defective per- American Medical' News quoted :
sons." He emphasized that "a the widely respected Dr.' Fred :
tremendous IIIIOUDt of capital wu Pham, chairman of the Neurology l
being withheld from tile aroas Department It the N~ York Hoi- )
national product In terms of food, · pital~ell Medical Canter and •
clothing and heat - all for an lhe physician who ori1inated the ~
unproductive pwpoae."
,
phrase "peraillent vegetative ;
• Also belna disc!ls&amp;ed amon1 Slate." · '
.
:
·:
German physlcians was whether
Nat Hentotr Ia 11 •Jndlc;ated •
they ·should be allowed to kill
patients. As later events made. wrller for Newspaper Enterprise ~
abltndantlv clear, the affirmative . Alll)!:lation.
·
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.

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IND.

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lco~~mt!usls-,.

coatlued rrom page t

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Attorney.. ~
Conlinutdfrom PtJP I
money made from movie or book

W.VA.

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------Weather------

Four drivers cited after wre.c k

Inmates surrendered after
accepiing a 2l-poiat asreement in
Four drivers were cited in a
which stale offiCials promised to live-vdridc accident on West Maip
review certain Hving and worting s~ in~ • 11:42 a.m. All
concitions lithe prison.
five were traveling lOUth on West
.
Warden Artbur Tate told The Main.
Dispaich in • iataview published . According to a report from
Saturday that he bad plano~ a Pcmaoy Pulice, Roland Durst, 73,
lockdown for April 12 to test of Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy,
inmates for tuberculosis. Some had stopped his 1992 Ford behind a
Muslim inmales had objecled 10 the
Cll' lD lront of him who 'NIS preparteSting.
ing to make a left band tum mto
Tate said he believed the Mus- Super·Amc:rica.
.
lims' objection was one rca!Oil for
The Durst car was struck from
behind by a car driven by Arlene
the riot.
.
Tate said departmental policy Barnes, 34, of Racine. 1he 1987
required testing because one IClivc Chevrolet owned by James Pauley
TB case had been reported lD the (iC PQn1and and 'driven by Barnes,
prison. He had planned a llueMiay was shoved into the Durst car llld.
lockdowa llld ammged to have 30 t11en Struck from behind by a car
State Highway Patrol troOpeiS on driven by Scott Williams, 23. of
standby while testing was conduct- Rutland. The Williatns vehicle was
struck in the rear by a 1984 Ford
ed.

· Greenup, Ky.
The Beacon Journal reported
that prisoners leading the riot told
other inmates they had until4 p.m.
to walk out if they didn't Wlllt to
be part of the uprising. But some
prisoners were held against their
will and some wcie forced to beat
or ll1pe Others, the newspaper said.
"It was unreal the way tbcy
were treated," the newspaper quoted a 11uard it did not ilfcntify.
:'Officers and inmates went
through living hell...
· Hostages have said they were
shackled with 4uct tape and lhresiened with homemade .weapons
repeatedly
during.their ordeal.
.

.IMansfiak:t Is.,. I·

'

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Weather• forecast f~

What would the AARP ~ost taxpayers?

Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

.

truck driven by Phillip Eagle of
Racine, and that truck was struck
from the rear by a 1980 Chevrolet
driven by J&gt;atricia Morgan, 34,
Pomeroy.
The Durst vehicle was not dam·
aged. The car driven by ~ames had
moderate damage to the front and
rear as did the Williams vehicle.
The Eagle truck had moderate
damage to the rear, and the M~gan
car had moderate front end dam·
age.
Durst was cited for leaving the
scene of the accidenL He reportedly got out of his vehicle, checked
for damage, and having none,
drove away. Williams, Eagle, and
Morgan were all cited for failure to
maintain assured clear distance.
There were no injuries in the accidenL

deals.
He said Koresh saw a draft copy
of the will and requested Chanj!OS.
Before he could bring the fmal
copy. DeGuerin siid, the fire broke
out, 11nd an estimated 86 cultists,
including Koresh, were believed
kiDed.
DeGuerili'!llid the will is evidence Koresh didn 'I order the fire.
"You don't leave anything for
the future if the world's going to
come to an end,'' he said.

Wedladay, chance ol slalwers,
Sou.. ·Ceatral Ohio
mainly
over the nor1h. Lows in the
TO!Jight, clear and cold. Low in
40s.
Highs
in the 60s. Thursday,
.the mid-30s. Tuesday, sUMy. High
VETERANS MEMORIAL
fair.
Lows
in
the 40s. Highs in mid65-70.
Saturday
admissions - Eliza·
50s northeast to the mid-60s south.
Extellded forecast:
Roberts,
Pomeroy, and Jewell
'beth
Friday, fair. Lows 3545. Highs 55- Curtis, Pomeroy.
Wedn~ay throup Fridlly:
·
llHi5.
•
Saturday discharges - None.
Sunday admissions- Beatrice
\
Lisle, Syracuse.
· Sunday discharges - Kenneth
\
'B k G C
Don,.na ·McClanahan
Imboden, Middleport.
ec Y • omer
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Becky Geneva Comer, 21,
Donna E. McClanahan, 44,
April 23 dlsebar e1 _Mrs.
1
2
Ponieroy, died 1'1runday, AJl!il22, Pomeroy, died Thursday,~ 2. Michael McCoy and son, Rita
1993, in B.'l automobile acadent in 1993, in an IIUIOiilobile accident in Lantz, Estil Johnson, Richard Grif.
f'ilyette Councy, Ohio.
Favette County, Ohio.
·
fith
C I' M'llcr
Ann Saun
1
•
D'Born in' S""ft"'ield
aro meLee,1 James
•
.,.._,_ Snringfiel"
r·-· .., she was the
ru.,... on Ana.
'"" 31, ders,• Jackie
Weiher,•
jlaughtcr of James Edward Large 1948, the daliglll« of Clare~~ Gayle Meadows, Jennifer Smith.
~ Donna Palmer LarJe McClana- . Geneva Cox Palmer, she Hved m
. h
Ah N h · ls
han and lived in Springfield most Springfield most of her life and Bn' am s • at ame wan,
'of her "'e. She was a member of attended the Word of .Faith Bible Dixie Miller, Tyler Kearns, Mrs.
w,
John Harmon and son, Lauren
Hillside Baptist Church in Center.
Porter, Paula Browning, Helen PrePomeroy. '
.
Slirvivors include her husband,
· M
and Nathani 1
.· She:q' survived by her husband, Sonny McClanahan of Mariori; her . ~':ks~egan oses
e
trip to
MURAL OF MEXICAN VILLAGE • Tills wbleb Balo)' purchased daring
baniel Comer of Springftdd; her mother, Geneva McClanahan of
AprD 23 birth _ Mr. and Mrs.
Clark
colorfnl •ural ol a Medeu vlllap bu been Mexico RVeral nan ago. Here
father of Pomeroy; two daughters, Springfield; one !5011, Micah lariC Daniel Williamson, daughter, Point
painted oa t•e bark wall of the Mel&amp;• Hi&amp;h •nd 'Bryaa Colwell work on tbe street scene,
"'-manda and Jessica Comer of of Pomeroy; two daughters, La . Pleasant, W.V~
Plloto by Charlene Hoenk:h)
School elulr- wllere Spaalab Is taught b7
J&gt;omeroy; one brother, Mica.h Donna ~intz of Pomeroy and . AprD 24 disdallrp _ Thressa
.
Fred Baloy. It Is pattened alter a water color
LarJc ofl'omeroy; two sisters, La 1amic Km,_of Columbus; ,four Henderson, Maggie Waldron.
Ponna Mintz of Pomeroy and brothera, PhiliP: RObert and Dai!"Y Elena Conneu, Frances Curfman,
'amie King of Columbus and many Palmer of Spnngfield and ;Mike Trisha PelerS, John Lewis and Judy
aunts, unc~ nieces, nephews and Palmer of JamCSIDwn; four siSias, Souders
cousins.
Pam Brandebtnv of Uibana, Vicky · A ril U birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Services will be held 1 p.m. Jones, Cheryl ~rley ~nd Susa~ scolKosain, son, ML Alto, W.VL
Tuesday II the Richards, Raff and Palmec all of Spnngf!Cid! ll grand •
A rU 25 disebar1es - Oliva
Dunbar Memaial Home 11 826 E. children and many nu~ccs and · Kostfval, Mrs. Daniel Williamson
~Bh ~treet. SIJI'!n~cld, With Rev. nepheShcws.:,as preceded in death by . and daullhter, Eloise Curtis, Alexis
l•m Bnlton officiating.
·
~
Hill, Adelle Rice, Rita Neal and
Friends may call fro1i1 6-9 p.m. her father, a grandson, and a Melvin Cordell.'
~y at the funeral hOme. In lieu daughter, Becky Comer. '
.
April 25 bl~- Mr; and Mrs.
DC flowers, the family requestS that
Services will be held I. p.m. Brian Hoffman, daughter,
donations be made to the funeral Tuesday at the Richards, Raff and Cheshbe.
Jlome.'
Dunbar, 836 .·E . High Street,
Spri~g~eld, with Rev. Ji111 Brilton
To meet Wednesday
off'lc13ung.
Sarah R. Smith
Friends may call 6-9 p.m. today
American lted 'Cross, J'ri-State
II the funml home. In lieu of flow- Region Blood Services will hold its
: Sarah R. Smith, 84, Pomeroy, ers, the f11111ily requests that. dona- annual meeting, VV~y.~y
died Sunday, Apri12S, 1993, at the tions be made to the funeral home.
19' 1993 at the Holiday Inn-Gale.Vei«&lt;DS Memorial Extended Care
way, 6007 US Rt. 60 East, Bar·
:Unit inoP0111eroy.
boursville, W VL, from 11 LDI. to
: . A housewife; she was born
~p.m.
April 27, I907, in Meigs County,
All blood service members are
i.hc daughter of the late Joseph
invited to auend. Please contaet Joy
~~Cora Lightfoot quisty.
Units of the Meigs County Curry, Public Relations Dircclllr at
Slie was a member of Flatwoods Emergency Medical Service 304·522-0328, cxL .249 or 1·800·
Methodist Olurch.
·
responded to 10 calls for assistance 344-6603 .for more information or
Survivors include a son and during the weekend. Units respond- to ma1cc reservations.
llaugh~-in-law,ltoge~" and Alberta
ing wece:
limith ,of Pomeroy; a dau&amp;hter and · Saturday - 9:14 Lm. Pomeroy Five arrested after fight
son-in-Jliw, Meda EloiJe and Roger
Five arrests were made follow. Watson of Pomeroy; four pd- to Peacock Street for Ruth Bierhup
wh
was
transported
to
Veterans
ing
an alleR:ation on Court Street jn
childrcn; eight great-grindchlldrcn; Memorial Hospital; 4:53 p.m. Pomeroy
Salurday nighL
brothen ManleY Edwin Cluisty of Pomeroy to Lee Road for Virgil
Arrested
wen: Danny BuffingMiddlq,on. Clifford Leroy Christy
Harrla are, from left, Wesley Tboeoe, Kylie
of Coolville and Raymond Olen- Lee~ wu transported to Holzer ton, Brian Buffington, Sharon
Sa)'l'e,
Mlu7 Cremeans, Allan Hubbard, Evao
M~ Cen~ 8:4.5 p.m. Tuppeh Buffington, John Ohlinger, and
ford Christy of Ravenna.
and Tara Pkkens. (Sentinel photo)
Struble
Plains Volunteer Ftre Department Juon Hyscl1, all of l'omeroy. All
Sh~ was preceded in death by
•
1
arc scheduled to appear tonight
her husband, James Calvin Smith; and squad to Sta~ Rou~ 681 for
'
one-car accident mvolvUig Dwayne (MOI\d8y) in the coun of Pomeroy
three sislm .... two brothers.
. Servic-es will be held I p.m. Barber who was treated at the . ~yor 'Bruce Reed. The incident
.
Tuesday at Ewing Funtral Home . scene; 8:47p.m. Pom~y to Ann occurred about 7:20 Saturday
Street
for
Jewell
Curus
who
was
nigiiL
National
Pre-school
Irlimunizaweet
in
Meip
Cculty.
with R~v. Keith Rader officiatina.
tion needs of pre-schoolers.
lion Week is ll!ling observed tbis
·Hands Across the Nation for
Burial, will follow in Carleton transported to VMH; 10:56 p.m.
Progress was ·made in the
Middleport to Page Street for Sarah
Preschool Immunization" is the 1980's to achieve immunization of
Cemecer1.
Friends) nay call today from 6-9 ~~who was ~ansportcd 10 ...
announce~en
:=e~f~:::ew:~.:r.:: school-aged children, but efforts
p.m. It the funeral home.
for pre-school aged children had
Sunday - 11:02 a.m. Pomeroy
Glll'Cien dub to meet
market hogs at the 1993 Meigs lions. One of the most important lagged behind, leaving too many
to -Second Street for Lena Nessel·
The Rutland Garden Club will County Fair m• qi 1: llld pay hcallh objectives of the U.S. Public pre-schoolers vulnerable to dis' Daily Sentinel
The
road who was tranSported 10 VMH; meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the picture money in the WOOUIII of$10 Heallh Scrvic:e for the year 2000 is eases.
2:S2 p.m. Chester Volunteer Fire home of Neva Nicholson New per animal (maximum two, one to immunize 90 percent of pre(U8PIIIIS.IIII)
"We expect National Pre-school
Departmept to Sumner Road for a Lima Road. Rutland.
'
ewe and one wetber).l'llither infor- school children by _tbcir second Immunization week to be a lime to
P.bliah«&lt; -.y ,.n;,_., Molldoy
structure fire at. the Bob Reeves
·
mation may be obcained by con- ~against dipblberia. tetanus, plan for the future, to recognize
u......p Fricl.oy. Ill Court St , "-"'1·
Ohio b)' ..... Ohio Valley Publtoldllf
residence; rescue IQIIIId wu called
. Duc:e planed
tacting Chip ~ lithe ~ )ICIIII5sis, polio, measles, IJiumps, acconiplishments toward achieving
CcmJNI!IYIM•IUinodla Jno. ,;
in.for auistaQCe; g:30 p.m. Syra- ·
The Oallia Twirlers Western County Extens1on Office 11 ~- ruebclla, HlB and ~tilis B.
,Ohio 46'188, Ph . .1182-21116. 8
&lt;IU.
· the Nation's goal for the year 2000. .
.po~tace s-la at Pouuwro,, Ottto.
·
ctlsc to Bridgeman Street for Beat• Square Dance Club will bold
M9fo.
The OhiO~ or Health For every one dollar ·Spent on
'
rice Lisle who was transported to • dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m. 11
FlaU'r7 lll*d
recommends ·tliat children born immunizations, ten doDars is saved
:=~.:-~ot':::."'N"!':~
VMH. .
.
the Hendersoo Commwtity Cent«,
There will be I filii fry It the after Oct. 1, 1992 receive the heti- later on in health care related costs
AdY&lt;niiolllf
1a11... Bruhom
Monday- 6:45 a.m. Middle- Henderson, W.Va. Herb Shelton Chester F'tre J)qJiali au !111 SIIIW- llitus B va:c:inea in lddition 10 die per National ASsociation of ChilNo•lllloo, 10017
aa 'nlinl Anoue,
port to Oliver Street for Clrl Mar- will be the caller. The dance is
y from ,11 Lm. 10 6 p.m. f~- DTP, ol'll poliQ, HIB and MMR dren's HospitafS and Relal¢ I~li­
: ~~ow York, Now 'fort
·
.
lin' ho was transported to HMC·
fiisla tails .._dogs. sloppy"""'
nization1 by
· J'()8'1'111A8TER: s-a-• - to
7:¥wa.m. Syrac11111 to State Rou~ open to all western style square :.\ed bead;:-;alads anif b~ imm~~
~ obser· tutes; Reibel said.
111
D&lt;diY
c.un St.,
124 for Ella Quillen who was 11'101· danccri.
goods.
vance of National Pre-School
:'I'M
r.w,;.
,, . OHteSonllaoi,
41711.
,
._..,. to VMH
G
SPRING VALUY CINEM
- - - o N L\TBI
,.,._
•
Club to lMd
Immunization Week,
lenna
.;~..:.'11-~~owta
' The Wildwood Garden Club
RmmlaJIIOinll
Riebel,MeigsCoanty'sim~~ :~ 4~{4
"Yt::ODo W•IL ................. -.... -...............-!.!·!2
will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
The tbird wedt of MVIVII is ~ tioa nOI'Ie~ 1"1"*11 that commuruty
OM ManU.................. - .................,.......at the home of Kathryn Miller.
progress at Mt. Moriah Charc:ll .,. based inununn•adons clinics have
- - ---iiitiii..ifoon··--.. #1.20
God on Mile Hill Reid mRlclne
In aUIOWlllhiJil in
PIICK
.
.
. BIIJ'becue r, 'DDed ,
with Ron Blevins, 11'7'11 Jjsl Ser·
p.n,.... ,-......................................:16 C..to ·
· Seventy-five Meigs County vcnThere will be a ~~ blr1le- vices - 7 p.aL Jli&amp;l!dy wllh ..emphdaed dill vacclnea in
110
I!Gbo r1bon '* dooh111f .. ~ aoni·. diJra have been notified" that
cue at ihe Tupperll Plain• Plre cia! ••a- J&gt;-. J - Slaer· Meip CouniJ a he.
!).:''~"' ~. II• ':.~ · cl1atette llceniea are due to be House on May 9 at 11 a.m. Price is field inYi1e1 tbepHr
~a:! ~.:e:•~ . Is·
--·~,::0. Credit wt11 boP- '"'::""•
~new~. accordlna to Mola• $3.7 5 . t inCludll 1/2 chlcbP or
- - ...,. •..Q..~ • . . _ c-ty
. autty AudiJotN~~~eyCampbell.
ribl, blbd boiJII, cole lllw.lnl!l
· · SJMICial•lll...
.-itly recei¥ed aew llllllllindi
No-~ by moil P•••ll,.. tn
CiaaJeUellceJ 1e1 mllll bo pur- . and beVenlp. Pie and cab IIVIil- of·thenwr,
from ..o Ollio Deputmnt of
:=:..,k'- ..._ ... . - - ia chaeilbeforeMay24.
~for50CeJiiiCliUI.
---1l'ulllic
HaldlfarCOI l'k)''-dlmmu·
Jlolii_,__
AnyclliC eappd lD the whole,
.
·Board 011 unday 11 1 P~- far
cllDk:l far cbildien ·agill
· - ...._ ao..v
aale or nstall hl!'~nea ohellina
JteP1aatloa 11t
the jiliiPI* of
llilfl far t1ae two 1110M11hsto 24 _ .
13 we.p.,,.,.._ .... _................... satM cipretiC4 maa obtala a liceDJC.
Mlrbt llcia JllliiUatbi b 1993 new addition
,
Riebel aid lllll tile Center for
::;;-:-.: . ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1:;= ~are dlllrlbuled locally 10 4-H and f:FA market boa
~ Caaaollild !Wvention iD
c-v ·
IOWQihipl, villnM and the county. exhibiton has been 1101 for s-day
1i All II to !Mel
Adlalla, Ga. Ia wutJaa with other
18 w..u. ..................._.. _.....,.... ,.•ltuo
no au4iiiifll office is open from 9-ll Lm. at lbl Meip c-.
The Lebanon Townahi' · public: and
. a J*l rn 11
::=::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::1::: Maaday tlloalh Friday_ 8:30 LDI. ty Extension ()fflce. Any 4-H c1r • ~ will milt nlnday •
ibe Mi
IMito effeCi • ...... ·
to4:30 p.m.
.· ~A niember plunla1 to abow . p,m. at the IDWDIIdp t.n• I
. . at wedt 10 addl• die i•-mlu-

Hospital news

'(~.

.Area deaths

m·

-

EMS responds
to 10 calls

I mmunJzatJOfl
· • • . week beJng
• ·o bserve d

ts_

M etgs
•

:::t"'l'·

a

.!Ia.

2:

C1•garette ta•cenSeS
due for renewal

=t'c'::'-

Le:.t,.':.Ma

...

Fedili!ITIIII,IIil!•,

••·-w,

. o.-.. .

.:
L-------·
_...,...·,..__,
,.

ni......,

r-tw•

,,
.

' '

...

-

"'

�..

.

Sports

Monday, April 26, 1993

The Daily Sentinel
•

'

Monday,

With ninth-inning rally,

In AL

Olivares (1-U) allowed two runs..
on five hilS wilh five strik:eouiS and
three walks. Lee Smith camel1 his
seventh save this season and tile
362nd of his career by striking ou(
two batters to end tile game.
Padres 9, Mets 8 · Reliever Anthony Young lost
his 16th straight decision when
Craig Shipley stole third base and
continued home in lhe eighth
inning on a throwing error as San
Diego beat New York at Shea Stadium in a game marred by a benchclearing brawl:
. •·
In the first inning, Gary
Sheffield and MeiS starling catCher
Todd Hundley were ejected after
words between the two playefs
resulted in· a bench-clearing brawl.
Hundley thought Shef£i~ld was
stealing his signs to pitcher Sid
Fernandez.
Marlins 11, Rockies 1
Florida won two of three games
against Colorado in the battle of the
expansion teams, routing the Rockies 11-1 as Junior Felix hit a grand
slam to highlight an eight-run
fourth inning at Denver.
Ryan Bowen (:~-1) gave up no
runs and three hits in seven
innings. Bob McClure and Trevor
Hoffman finished tile combined
1.
six-hitter.
.Scon Aldred gave _up seven runs
and six hilS in just two-lhirds of an
inning after .relieving Bryn Smith
(l-3) in the founh.

By CHUCK MELVIN
on Philadeiphia rookie Clarence
RI.CHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - The Wealherspoon and two more after
Clevetand Cavaliers have beconle a he was fouled while stealing the
point guard factory.
· ballfr.omJefrHomacek.
The 1ea111 lhat introduced Mark
Philadelphia got no closer than
Pri~e and Kevin Johnson to the
threeafter.lhat.
NBA appears to be developing yet
"With Terrell, I think it's
another point guard with all-star poise," Carter said. "II takes time
pOtefitial, Terrell Brandon.
for you players ... to be able to set'·'The CJ~veland ·staff knew · de dOW!I and play basketball prowhat they were doing. They got a fessionally, and it appears he's
player," Philadelphia coach Fred made that step up."
Carter said Sunday after Brandon
Cleveland won 11 of its last 12
took charge down the stretch as the games and finished with a 54-28
Cavaliers beat the 76ers 107-103. · record, the thinl-best in team histoBrandon, a first-round draft ry.
choice out of Oregon in '1991,
The Cavs also became the fust
scored nine points during- an 11-4 · team ever to lead the ,NBA in all
Cleveland run in the final three 1 three -shooting categories: fieldminutes.
goal percentage (49,7), free-throw
Normally, Price would. have percentage (80.2) and 3-point peebeen on the floor at the end. But · centage (38.1). Price led the league
witlt the playoffs coming up.ThW'S- in free-thlow percentage at 94.75
day _and Price still hampered by a pe~nt, second-best in league his:
sprained right thumb, coach Lenny tory behind Calvin Murphy's 95.8
Wilkens decided to ~what Bran· percent in 1980-SL
don could do.
The Cavaliers JPCn the playoffs
• 'I wanted to give him some Thursday at home againSI New Jerquality minules at a crucial time.'' 5ey, a learn lhey beat3-1 in the fliSI
Wilkens said. "He's going w help round last year.
.
us, and we're going to need him
The 76ets. meanwhile, clOsed
coming off the bench. His 1ame outtheiqvorstrecord(26-56)since
has really accelerated. The expert- tlley went 25-57 in 1973-7.4. They
e~e he; has now just makes-him so were 7-19 after Caner replaced
moch smarter." ·
· Doug Moe as head coach in early
The 76ers took a 99;96 lead March.
when Thomas Jordan sank one of
"It's been a tumultuOUs time,''
two foul shotS with 3:23 to play.
Carter said. "It's been stormy.
Brandon responded with a 10- · There's bUn anger. There's been
foot running jump shOt, and John frustQition. They played hard. We
Williams followed wiah two foul just don't seem to get it done at lhe
shots that put· Cleveland ahead for end."
good.
Craig Ehlo, who becomes an
~randon then .hit four straight unresiricted free _agent after Ibis
free wows. two following a foul season, led Cleveland with 23

- CELEBRATING WIN- Tbe ChkaJO Cubs' Jose Vbclano t:ele·. ·
brates his team's 2-1 win over the visltmg Cincinnati Reds Suliday .
after his ninth-inning &amp;&amp;me-winning sin~le - ~is rourtb stralgb~ or:
the game - drove in pincb runner EriC Yeldmg (left) from third
base. (AP)

c leveland post s 6'-o· w I•n 0 ver 0 a klan.d

,I

'

ScorelJoard

Kao... a., .......... .7 l1

- • Baseball • -

·

EuleraDiw .....
.
WLPd.GB
.l3 4 .765
................ ll 7 .6ll
SL La&gt;i1 ................ 10 I .556
3..5
Cbicqo..................9 I .529
4
PX..t.qh ...............9 9 .SOO
4..5

Tam

•

•

:u

New Ym:k ................ l
FloDdo .....................?

9
11

.471
.319

5
6.5

,
• WMllnl DI\'IIIH
Hcu1m ................ .10 7 .511
San Fnnci«o ........ ll
I .579
Alhn~ ......... ........ .11
9 .550
SanDieao ............c••• l
9 .471
Colorado ..................6 l1 .353
CinciM.oli ..:......,......6 12 .333
LooAnp .............. 13 .316

6.5

Toranco 10, aua_,4
Tua 15, Milwa&amp;"ee•
BoltOo.- 6, Eoouo Illy 5
a...lond-1 0. Ookllnd ]
Dolnm 1 7 , - I •
Calitomia a. a-on s
Now Yoct l, Scoalo 0.11 ion.

Suaday'o 11:0ns

T....,..l,CbicqoO
Dcuai1. 16, M F I 5
Teau6.Mil.....eet

..5
2
4
4..5
5

. Saturday's scores

Kooou City 3, Boltimono 2
O..cload6,- 0 '
Ntw Yodr: 10, SCIIale9

CW!...U.Z.-1

'

Toalgbl's IIIDts

MinncsOII (TapW 0-2) at Milwaukee

Cincinnati 15, Oicaao 5
F1orido 2. Cd&lt;ndo I

(BCIICI0-1), 7:05p.m.
,
r.... (Lcllelll 1-3) "r...... (Mor-

n. 0.3). 7 :35p.m.

Monuoa16. San l'nnriKO 1
San o;.l" 5, New YOlk 3
P!Waddpbi• 7, .... ...,...... 3
ilcol&lt;oni,PitabuP4'

-

B•'drN:J~

(VUmz:uela 0-l) at CIDcaJa
(Aivuoz 0-0).1:05 p.111.
Dcltoit CK~w«,c:r 2 1) at Kl!nsaa City
(Ou!Ku 0-2)',1:!5 p.m.
4

Atlonl.o l1 , Sd.o11i1 0

Clovo1and &lt;Muoio 1-1) "S.al&amp; (loin·
ICI\l-l), l0:05p.m.
') ,

Sunday's ocores
San Franc:iloo 4, Monuall
PhiJMWphi• 5, .... Anplai 2

Tuaday'•aam..

MiNMicK.I ~ 4-0) • Milwu-

· Pl.,;.,p7, H....-2

san Dicso 9, New YOlk I

koe(Wopnanl -3).2:05 p.m.

OUcaao 2, Cincimati 1

l·l), 7:35p.m.
Blllimorc (Su.tc::liffc 2· 1) II Chi~IJO
(Mdlowe114-(Jj, 1&lt;)5 p.m.
Qeuoit (Moore 2.-1) at K.nsas City
(Caie0-4).1 :35 p.m.
Cl&lt;vdand (N•&amp;J 1-3) "~... (BoQo
I· I),IO:OS e_.m.
BOlton (Dirwin 0-l) "c;&gt;akluwt (8.
Will 0-0), IO:Ol p.m.
New York (Key 2-0) at California
(FWey l-0), !0:35p.m.

Teu~ (Nell 0-0)

SL Louil7 , A lla~ 3

Florida 11 , Colorado 1

Toolghl's games
San Franc:itco (Brantley 1·1) at
l'lliiJdeiJ&gt;IIi' (Ri-1-1), 7:3.5 p.m.
Flonda (Housh 2- 1) It Cincinnati
(R.i.jo 1-1), 7:35p.m. ·
·
l.Ot~"t;.'• (Aauc:io 0-2) at New ·
Yodl (
2-2), 7:40p.m.
Pitllburah (Cooke 0-1) at Atluu
(Smohz2-l~ 7&gt;40p.m.
St. Louis (Miann• q.-2) st Houston
(llnboli 2-2),1'05 p.m.
ChiCIJD (Hukey 2~ 0) It Colorado
(Noi&lt;l 3- 1), 9:05p.m.
Mont~ I (Jonea l -0) at San Dieao
(Taylor 0.0), I 0:05 p.m.

Tuesday's g1111es

'at Toronto (Htz~lJ,en

- ·· NHL playoff's • ·Salunlay•o ..,.,.••
N.Y1 blanden 4, Waahinaton 3 (2
OT),N.Y, ............... ...;.,].I
Buffalo 6, Botton S (OT). Buffalo

wv.acn.4-0

3, Qod&gt;oc:

-

San Pr•nc i•c=a (Burkett 4 -0) 11
flittiadclphia (Mulholland :Z..2), 12:35 p.m.
Lol Anatlu (Henhiu:r 2-2) It New
Yodl (Schawok 1·2),1 :40p.m.
Aorida (ArrNtrona 2·2) at Clnc:innati
(Snlii&amp;J 0.3~ 7:3.5 pm.
Pl.,buiJ)&gt; (WU.cliold 2-2) 01 AUon10
(A"«l 1·2),7:40p.m.
Sl. Louia {Comtier 1·1) 11 Houston
(Kik 0-0),I'Ol p.m. ·
.
Chicaao (MorJ•ri 1·3) at Colorado
(B.H _.., 0-2), 9:05pm.
Moalnll (lontafield 1· 1) u San
Dqo (B- 3-1 ), lO:Ol Pc'"-

•

z. ocrir»liod 2-2

••
t

Sunday's scores
New Jcncy 4, Pl..biuJjll. Plllobiqh

.
lt.adl acria 3-I
St J.oWa •. auc.ao 3
winiiCI'ia ~

(OTJ. St. LoW

FROM THE SEAT- Cleveland shortstop Felix Fermin &amp;oes to
his backside lo make Ue lllrow on wbat tumed oot to be an lnr~eld

Lao MI.... 3. C.i&amp;UJ I, ..,;., liocl
2-2
r_..., 3,1leuvit2. ......... 2-2

single by Oaklaad's Rube•· Sierra durln1 Sunday'• American
League 1ame .In Oakland, wbere the Indians won _6-0 to complete a
s.:eep of the two-pme ~erie&amp; (AP)
·

Vancouv• 3, Wianiplt I. Vancouva"

lcadlllaW 3-1

.

Tonlghi'IIAIDts
NcwlaMfll~, 7:10p.m.
N.Y. lllanden at WuhinJt«&lt;i, 7:3o

W

L

DeuoiL ................... I2

Pd.

5

Boalol'l .................... u

Gil

.7(16

I· .579 .

2

New VIlli .............10 · I

.556

25

Tonno ...... :........... IO
Milwauke,........... ".6

.556
.400 ·

2.5
S

I
9

Clcwlond .................7. II . .319
B.ollim!ft ...............;J II .313

w-.Dt~

colil..,;., ...............12

Tea• ........·.............10 6
O!icap...................l 9
16 1'. ...............1 9
.....................1 ' 10

-·

'

.750
.62S

.411

.471
-

5.5
6.5

.....,. • Transactions • B.... aD

"_.._

liiL-

MINNBiarA TWINS - Plo~od .
&amp;aa. lAlul, ia!Wdlr, • . . IS~•J &amp;oblod
Oooop T...,;,, 'td&gt;
er, ftom Porlllftd tlllill Paci.rw: ~...,

'-""

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•

ALLEN'S GARAGE
35117 LEIDING ClEEK ID.
742·3"5

MIDDLE NIT

'

llllbnl. .. - ' . •.

•

'LARGE PE

··992~2·124

sa''

·PIZZA

By 'l'be Associated Press .
sim:e .a 3-f defeat against the New
· New Jersey has .ended Pitts· York Rangers on March 5. The
burgh's tong unbeaten ~treak. The Rangers had also administe{ed
Devils' work, however, has only Pittsburgh's last playoff loss, in
just begun.
,
Game 3 of last year's first-round
With Sunday's 4-1 victory, New Patrick Division series.
Jersey ended a 21-game unbeaten ·
While Richer toOk care of the
streak by the two-time defending offense, goaltender Chris Terreri
Stanley Cup champions . Bu.t.i! made 30 saves to head lhe defenserved only 10 delay the Pengums
sive effort.
,
drive into the second round' of the
"We displayed a seventh-game
playofts, preventing a sweep of the mentality,'' Devils coach Her'\
first-round Pairick Division series. Brooks said. "I dido 't expeCt anyPittsburgh ~an close il out tonight tllin_g less. Ia's w~ ~ have to do
at Pittsburgh in Game 5.
! agam romorrow rughL
. .
With New -Jersey enJOytng a
Also tonight, the New York
Islanders;have a chance to close out two-man advantage, Richer gave
the Washin&amp;i'on Capitals when lhe · the Devils a 1-U lead' at 5:22 of tl!e '
·' teiiJIIS meet 1or Game 5. of lhe other fii'St period.
•
Pairick· series at Landover, Md. In
'' S~f has been frustrated a little,
tonight's other game, Montreal, but !hat fll'St ~oal w.as a~ Richer
fresh off two victories at home,.vis- shot,'' Devtls defensemim Ken
iiS Quebec with that Adams Divi- Daneyko said. "He's been wcrting
sion Series tied 2-2. ·
· hard. You can't keep him off the
· · · The St. Louis Blues closed oitt board, especially with his talents."
!heir opening-round Norris DiviNew Jersey scored twice to
sion sweep of Chicago by bC:ating break the game open afler Pittsthe Blackhawks 4·3 in overtime burgh's Jaromir Jagr was given a
· Sunday.
five-minute major and a game mis·
Pittsburgh had a run of 20 wins conduct for a high-sticking penalty
and a tic until . Sunday, when · against Valeri Zelepulcin with 2:16
Stephane Richer ended a11other left in the second period.
·
streak wilh a goal and two assisiS
Defenseman Tommy Albelin
as New Jersey avoided elimination. stretched the lead to 2-0 ·with 9A
Richer was scoreless in the previ- seconds left .in the pe~iod, an(!
ous ahree games as Pittsburgh Claude Lemieux connected 1:52
pushed iiS playoff winning streak into lhe third. ·
to 14 games.
..
Kevin Stevens got lhe Penguins
"We had a pr.etty good streak on the scoreboard at 3:28, and
from last year m the playoffs and Claude Lemieux· added an empty·
then again at the end of the year," ·net goal with 17.8 seconds remain: PitiSburgh's Miuio Lemieux said. ing.
· . .
"It was juSI a mawir of time until
In other games, lhe Los Angeles
we lost one. We had ~ ID fin· Kings beat Calj!ary ,3-1 and Toronish them off today. We 11 have to · to edged Detrott3-2, evCJ!ing !hose
wait untilwmorrow."
two series at2-2. Vancou~er lOOk a
The Penguins hadn't lost a game 3-1 lead in games over Winnipeg

'

Brakes. Drums and Rotors Turned
Shocks. Struts. Ti.m•upa
Radiator Flush. Exhauet Work

by beating tiie Jets 3-1. Those t1!ree
series resume Tuesday night. .
Maple Leafs 3, Red Wings 2 ·
At Toronto, the Maple· Leafs
completed a climb back from a 2-U
deficit behind the scoring of Dave
Andrcychuk, whose second goal of
the game at4:4 7 o( the third period
provided the winning margan. He
scored awice in Game 3 as weD IS '
Toronto began its comeback with a
4-2 victory.
Blues 4, Blackllawks 3
At St. Louis, Chicago's season
came to an end when Ed Belfour
left his net WJCovered. Belfour left
the crease to tty to tniCk down the
puck, but collicled with the Blues'
Brett HuU and couldn't get baclc in
time to stop a weak shot from lhe
left. circle by Craig Janney at 10:43
of overtime.
Goals by Hull and Brendan
Shanahan 1:21 apart early in the
thfrd period had given the Blues a
3-2lead.
Kings3, Flames 1
At Inglewood; Calif., rookies
Warren Rychel and Robb Stauber
stood out while Los Angeles' bigname veterans continued to sputter.
Rychet:.a left wing, scored a goal
and Stauber turned aside 28 shots.
The·Kings' Wayne Gtetzlcy, LUc
RQbitaille, Tony Granato and
Tomas Sandsuom n:mained sccre.less in the playoffs after combinin1
for 141 goals m lhe regular se&amp;SOD.
Caaucks 3, Jets 1
At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Kirk
McLean counted several speetacular saves among the 29 stops 'he
had as Vancouver moved wlthin a
game of eliminating Winnipeg.
· Sergio Momesso scored what
proved to be lhe game-winning
goal aa3:18 of the second period to
giye Vancouvtt a 2-U lead.

'

.Bengals' have plenty ·of rebuilding
to do, too few draft rounds left
·

By JOE KAy
· have picks, and picks high enough th~ quarterback, and one~ again
CINCINNATI (AP) - Too to fulfill those needs adequately,'~ ahink lhey have someone wtth that
many hbles too few draft piclcs.
coach Dave Shula said. "We lcnew potenual.
.
The Cincinnati Bengals got we weren't going to answer them
:·we feel tha.t 1!J Cope~nd
started on their rebuilding Sunday -all. but we feel that we've we vcgot~a~~81
- tmpBJ:~l' Y~
by going for defense in the NFL addreSsed them with ,an eye on talc- at the d_e ens•ve _tne po~• 10n,
drift They took four defensive ing !he best playen.'
,. •
Shulawd.
r.
play~rs. led by lineman John
Copeland is the b~st player
They need one. Actually, a ew
Copeland from Alabama and one among lhe five chosen Sunday. He of them.
ti ht end in the firSt four
.and Alabama 1eammate Eric Curry
Th~ defense has bee';~ I .Ion~, gThey think that Copeland and were con~idered. the two -best .standmg ~\:~n~ 2S •
ti ht erid Tony McGee from Michi· defensive l111Cman m lhe draft. The 28th ind
.
yean.
g
·
· jobs 0 n a team first round seemed to confirm it: The Bengals gave up 400 toll1
•
gan can wm starttng
c - 1a d ·th yaardsrds .five10times
and aa least 300
. , that went 5·11 lasl season. The The Bengals lOOk. ope n wt
of their 16 games last
.
rest? Who knows.
the No. 5 overal! pack, and Tampa . Y
m
1
. Only ope thing was clear Sun- Bay took Curry nght after them..
season. . . 10
. particul has bee
day IS lhe Bengals watched other
Given the defense's despel'lllon,
~~ l · : ·Bengal~
teams snatch up all the good offen· Copeland ts expected to SIMI at end we · e on Y ~ -~-- .........
sive linemen and cornerbacks next season. The Bengals have can ~et pteSStl.urebyonbli .._.;id;';
: bet
their piclcs' This team still been trying for years to draft and consiSiell Y!'
IZIIII·
has~C: of problem~.
·
develop a lineman who .can rush . leaves theif weak secondary
(See NEEDS Oll Pqeli)
• "We have more needs than we

thetically. Se!!tlle gained the home-

court adVIIltagC for a possible sec-

Thomas, who finished with 25
poiniS and 10 assists, scored 16 in
the fourth quarter. Joe Dpmars
added26.
Warriors 1~9, SuperSonics 109
The Warriors closed a dismal
season on a positive note, getting
41 points and 18 assists £rom Tim
Hardaway.
·
In George Karl's fust fl!ll sea. son as coach, lhe SuperSonics fmishcd wilh a 55-27 record, falling
one win shy of the club record set
· in 1979-80.
.
Clippers123, Trail Blazers 112
Reserve forward Loy· Vaught
had a career-high 27 points and ,

ond·rouad meeting with Houston
when the Rockets lost 119•117 in
ovenlme ID San Antonio.
Houston and Seattle both finishcd with 55-27 records, but the
Sonics own the tiebreaker ed~e
beeause they won !he season senes
three games ID one.
·
. Houston -was poised to clinch
the second-round homecourl
advantage as it led San Antonio
109-107 with time running out. San
AntOnio set up for a last shol, but
Dale Ellis' jum~r bounced hi~h
off the rim. David RobinStOn's Upin went in, but it appeared the clock
expired first.
Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich even ran h31rway off the;
court thinking lhe game was over.
but referee Hugh Evans called him
back, ruling that the basket was
good.
·
Television replays showed that
Evans was wrong. Even Robinson
lhought so.
"1 don't lcnow, it was close,"
Robinson said of the tip. "We were
fortunlte to get the call."
San Antonio took a quick fourpoint lead in overtime and never
trailed again. It was the second
suaightloss for the RockeiS, who
won 11 suaight before losing Saturday nighl to Dallas.
"This was a big game for us. It
was a big loss,' ? Houston's
Hakeem Olajuwon said.
·
·Knk:ks 89, BullS 84
This was supposed to be the .
BIG ONE, the game 10 decide who
would have homecourt advantage
through the Eastern Conference
playoffs. Unfonunately for NBCTV, which televised the game,
Olicago's loss to Charlotte on Friday ensured the Knicks of the East
tid~
'
· Eveii though the game essentially 111eant nothing, both coaches
used !heir best playen for most of
the game. The ircore was tied after
each of lhe fii'St three periods, but
New York took control in the
- fourth quarter with a 17-6 run in
which Rolando Blackman scored
seven points and Patrick: Ewing six.
Nuggets120, Suns 118
. ·
Chris Jackson swished a 3pointer IS the final buzzer sounded
at Denver 10 give the NuggeiS the
upset win. The victory was Den. ·
ver's 36th of the year, giving it a
12-game improvement over the
1991-92 season.
Plslons116, Nels 110
Olden Polynice had a seasonhigh 27 poiniS and 13 rebounds as
Detroit finished its most disappointing season in a decade, Isiah

~"

OUT OF REACH -New .York center Patrick Ewing (left) gets
the ball out of the reach of Cbk:ago point guard Mic:bael Jordan on
his way to lbe boop during Sunday's N-BA game at New York's
Madison Square Garclen, where the Knlclcs won 811-84 In the regu·
tar-season finale ror bolb teams. (AP)
.

--- -

- -- '

.

grabbed 13 rebounds as Los Angeles reached lhe .500 mark.
Timberwolves 113, Jazz 111
Micheal Williams broke Calvin
Murphy's NBA record for conseeutive free throws by making 10
straight, giving him 84 in a row.
Murphy set lhe previous record of
78 for.Houston in 1981'.
Celtks 106, Bullets 94
At Landover, Md., Robert
Parish scored six points in a 12-U
third-quarter run that carried
Boston to the win. Larry Stewart
scored 26 for Washington, which
dropped its lasa five games and 10
of its last 11.

!IQ

I
I
"I
\

I

....

- --

....

'

"

--

,

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

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And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accept~d),
. Flllln Yoilr Ad And Mail II To Us Or-Drop It Off At Our Office.
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!NOfE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
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NAME;------------~--~--------------~--

'

: Browns ta~e Everitt early in·NFL draft

;

''

PKIUP «DELIVERY ·

New Jersey beats Pittsburgh 4-1
to end Pens' 21-game win streak

wena down to help lhem IIIIIAid.
· ~. ~ seven-tinfc Pro Bowl llelocEveritt; a .6-foot-5; 292-pound uon, from Cbicqo lilt year in 1
Michigan center, was picked by t1!e ~ld to streJtlthOII lhlr offeuivc
Browns in the fint round Sllllday. . ltno.
·
Cleveland's 10e0nd- and lhlrd·
"I want eveatllllly 10 be tile
round olcb were Din FOOIIDIII. a beat player I CD be. You~ ll!iPt_
derenslve end from Florida Stale , by tht beat,, 10 then yoa &amp;Ot a .
g~~~~e.
·
.· ·
· and~ Caldwell, a linebacker chance," 111d Bveritl, tile 14til
~ ICiected ~in the dnft,
Everitl, a run-blocking ani! l'rom Middlc,TellllOIIIIC Stile.
Jonll'-snappinl specialist, wu
Bverlttll8idhewasreadytoJillj
'_ 'I~_.,&lt;;u&amp;Jer~Q..~.~boale.
IICleCied to play in Jllllllr)''l Senior centllr or tud for the ~ t•
•
1 (H!V1
Bowl . c:oac:hod . b~Ciovoland' said competint'llilll c:enaw ~ay beiillaotliA I v- Iloc*a 1!1
BloWDB" coach Bin Jklicltick. But HiltellbeCJ would be a leamin1 it w!';l WOik Ia my fa~ ill die loDe.
his family wu •till diJiing out experience.
.
run.
from Hurricane Andrew, so ho
The Brown.s obtained H,llaen- ·
(See PICKS oePq")

'
B THOMAS J, SHEERAN
; · · B~REA; Ohio (AP) - Steve
Evcrlu hu 1 reputation for being
• tough The Miclligail
' center broke hi1 jaw, thumb and
; foot iii c:olieie bul it took Hurrl·
• cane Andrew ~knOck him oua 'of a

Ill W.IIAIII SYRmefOMIROY

Tueoday'•a•-

. Tot0n10 • Denia. 7:30 p.-.
Laolln..... otColprJ,J :30pm, ·
.Winniplt at Vanc:aunr.l0:30 p.m.

'

-

•• •

·PIZZA

.,
~ at Qudxle, 7:30 p.IB.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulon!Dt•'

•

ond for a 2-U lead.
Successive sinkles by Kenny
Lofton, Fermin and Baerga pushed
across Cleveland's third tun in the
seventh.
A three-run rail y in the eighth
put the game away. Lofton's RBI
single chased Davis from the game,
and Fermin greeted reliever Edwin
Nunez wilh a two-run single lO put
lhe Indians up 6.:().
Rickey Henderson singled with
one out in the sixth to break up
Mesa's no-hitter, a grounder up lhe
mid(lle that skipped just under the
glove of shortsl!lll Fennin. Ruben
Sierra•s infield smgle in the seventh and Lance Blankenship's double in the eighth were the only
other Oakland hits.
:
In other gam~. Detroit P,Ounded
Minnesota 16-5, Cati(omia edged
Boston 2-1, New York h~ld. off
Scallle 10-9, Toronro beat Chicago
1-U, Texas~ Milwaukee 6-'1
and Kansas City beat Baltimore 3;
2.
'
'
Tigers 16, Twins·5 1 •
Even the Detroit . Tigers are
amazed at what they're seeing
these days.
.
"You just sit back and watch,''
Tony Phillips said aflet till: Tigers
ran up another (ootball-like score,
trouncing Minnesota 16-5 Sunday.
The Tigers completed their firSt
three·game sweep in Mi.nnesota
since August 1972, outscoring the
Twins 45-10. Phillips, Chad
Kreuter, Alan Tnunmell and Mickey Tettleton all homered, giving
Detroit an 11-2 edge in that depan•
ment in three days.
•
• Detroit has won five in a roW.
and 10 of 11. The Tigers lead lhe:
majors wilh 8 1!2 runs per game:
the NFL's Detroit Lions averaged
17 poiniS per game.
, .
Detroit uailed 5-1 before scor,
ing eight nms in the seventh inning
and seven more in the eighth.
,,
"We got shellacked," Twint
manager Tom Kelly said.
·
No lead is safe againsl DeD"oi
and the Twins foUJMI that out at ~
Metrodome. A day after losing 17•
1 to the 'l'igers, Minnesota took i
four-run edge into the sevent..
inning.
•
But starter Willie Banks lef{
with .a runner on base and Kreuter'
homered off Mark Guthrie (1-1);
Phillips followed with a home run,
Cecil Fielder hit an.RBI double and
- Rob Deer bloopcd a, two-run' double off Brett Merriman.
In the eighth, Mih Cuyler hit a
three-run double and Trammell
homered. The romp marked the
first time since August 1984 that
Detroit had scored in double fig.
wes for three suaight games.
Reliever Mark Leiter ( 1-1) wy
lhe latest pitcher 10 benefit from
Detroit •s burst. He pitched 1 1~
innings for the victory. .
-

,

p.m. .
T-

Oakland-bashing bandwagon
would be a big mistake right no~.
· "They don't have the poweiful
club they've had in the past," Hargrove said, "but they've only
played 15 games; and you know
lhey'll be there. I don't see lhe California Angels continuin~ to play
like !hey have, either."
.
Mesa (1-1) won his fii'St game in
four starts - all on the road. He
held Oakland hitless for 5 1/3
innings and allowed two hits in
seven innings, wilh three walks and
six ~lrikeouts . Lilliquist pitched lhe
final two innings, with· one walk ·
and two strikeouts.
·
Oakland's Storqt Davis (0-3)
had not lost a decision to the Indians since August 1986, going 9.0
in 15 appearances. That all ended
with Sunday's 137-pitch stru!!gle.
Davis gave up six runs on 11 h11S in
· 7 2!3 innings.
·
Cleveland went up 1-0 in the
fourtll when Albert Belle led off
witll a single. stole second, and
scored on Glenallen Hill's two-out
single to left.
Fennin doubled wilh one out in
the fifth, -reached third on Carlos
Baerga's infield single and scored
on Belle's RBI ground out ID sec-

points and 10 rebounds. Brad
Daugherty returned from a twogame layOff amW by a sore~
and scored 19 points, and Blllndon
had 15. Larry Nance missed his
second game because of a broken
left hidex finger, but he said he
would retwn for the playoffs.
Hersey H~wkins scored 34
· poiniS, making 13-of-18 floor shoiS .
mcluding 5-of-6 from 3-point
range. Annon Gilliam scored 19.
Holnacek had 12 assisu bu1 was
limited to 11 points on 4-of-16
shooting.
·
"We j:J.'layed more wild,"
Homacet · . "We had nothing to
lose, so when the shots were there,
the guys took them."
.
The crowd of 19,425 boosted
Cleveland's season average a a
home to 18,329, best in franchise
history.
.
In other games, San Anaonio
beat HouStoll119-117 in overtime,
New Yodt defeated Chicago 89-84,
Denver edged Phoenix 120,.118,
Detroil downed New Jersey 116110, Golden Statc surprised Seattle
119·109, lhe Los Angeles Clippers
topped Por1land 123-112, Minnesota'6eat Utah 113-111 and Boston
beat Washingloll106-94.
Sonlcs happy wltlt Rockets' win
As final days go, this one was
anylhing but climactic.
The NBA regular season was
put 10 rest Sunday with none of the
games having any bearing on lhe
fii'St rouild of the playoffs.
·
Despite the lack of do-or-die
games, there were a number of
tight finishes and upsets.
.
~ Two games even had. a bearing
on the.postseason. at least hypo-

In NHL playoffs,

.

6

10 .333
Saturday's scores

OUIMd ................ .5

. NATIONAL LEAGUE

=ri· . . . . .

.319

.
.
and called for a mandatory, full·
scale workout.
"Ia's 111 opportunity to work on
!letting hilS, making plays and makmgpitches," saidLaRussa,oudining three basics the A's have not
displayed much of the last 1wo
weeks.
"It's such a lqng season," Rickey Henderson said, "!hat if you
start wotrying early. you put too
much pressure on yourself. We
don't need to do anything different,
just keep going.at it. We can't get a
break right now. When it comes, it
comes in bunches."
The season. might IIC·long; but
it's never 100 early for La Rossa to
gei mad aboullosin(!. even while
attempting 10 guard hiS emotions.
"I don't think it's important
what I'm 'oing ahrou~b," La
Rossa said. 'I don't like It when I
pick up the papers and read about
managers.
.
·
"We're under .s'OO, we just
have to play. That's why we play
six months, to determine what kind
of club you have. A guy who's hitting .200 now could wind up at
.300. So let's play. See what kind
of club we have."
Hargrove said jumping on an

,

Brandon's leadership helps Cavali.ers beat Sixers 107-103
'--

Chicago notches 2-1 win over Cincinnati
CHICAGO (AP) -Jose Viz- misplay wasn't to blame for the
P.lrlles 7, Astroe2
caino is taking advantage of.Ryne loss.
Randy Tomlin (1-1) pitched
Sandberg's absence.
five-bit ball for eight innings in his
· Vizcaino's founh single of tile
"It's my own fault," said strongest start this season as Pitts·
game Sunday pushed across ahe Belcher, saying he served up Viz- burgh, which swted the day under
winning run in lhe ninth and tile caino's game-winning hit on a .500 for the fii'SI time in two years,
Chicago Cubs beat the Cincinnati pitch right down the middle of the beat Houston at Three Rivers StaReds 2-1.
plate. "On an 0-2 pitch, you don't dium.
But Sandberg, sidelined siilce a U!row it down the middle,"
Andy Van Slyke's run-scoring
pitch in spring training broke a
Reds manager- Tony Perez said single and losing pitcher Mark Parbone in his left hand, is scheduled Hernandez should not have tried tugal's throwing error keyed a
10 reclaim his second base spot this for a shoestting catch in that sillla- three-om fifth inning as tbe'Pirates
week, playing his first game at tion.
avoided Houston's fii'St three-game
Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati
"He has got!D keep that ball in . sweep in Pittsburgh since May 26on Friday.
front of him," Paez said "At the 28,1989. Pgnugal fell to 1-2.
Sandberg left for Florida on worst scenario, the Cubs have runGiants 4, Expos 1
Sunday to begin his rehab assign- ners on firSt and second and we're
"ill S ift p'tched seven strong
ment wilh lhe club's Class A Day- still winning."
innlngs :'nd s;orcd the go-ahead
tona Beach farm team. Then he
Perez also said he never thought run as San Francisco defeated
will play for the Cubs' Class AA of walking Vizcaino to load the Montreal at Olympic Stadium 10
Orlando affiliate.
bases, assuring a play at every base snap .the Expos' six-game winning
With Sandberg back, it appears and forcing Lefebvre to go to a streak. Swift (1-1) allowed four hits
t1!at Vizcaino will sit, although he's pinch hitter for the pitcher.
and one run. Rod Beck piiChed lhe
hitting .339. .517 in his last nine
"Vizcaino is hilling -the ball ninth for his sixth save.
games.
OK. But he can bit a groundbali for .
Barry Bonds and Matt Williams ·
"I'm not the least bit sur- a double play,'' Perez said. "He each hit home runs for the Giants.
With the score 1-1, Willie
prised," Chicago manuer Jim did, but it went through and that
Lefebvre said of Vizcaino'~'s torrid was the game."
McGee singled in Swift with awo
start. "I've said all along, this kid
Elsewhere in the NL it was ouiS in the seventh off JeffFassero.
has a chai!Ce to become a heck of a Philadelphia 5, Lo$ Angeles 2; San Passero entered lhe game in place
complete utility player. He's play- Francisco 4, Montreal!; Pittsburgh of starter Chris Nabholz (1·1).
ing as good as anyone."
7. Houston 2; San Diego 9, New
Cardinal$ 7, Braves 3
Vizcaino knows his days are York 8; St. Louis 7, Atlanta 3; and
Omar Olivares pitched six solid
numbered as a starter.
Florida 11, Colorado 1.
innings as St. Louis beat Atlanta
"I'll be ready whenever they , ·
PbiUies S, Dodgers 2
and Greg Maddux (2•2) at Busch
want me or what position they want
Not even Tom Candiotti's Memorial Stadium. Ozzie Smith
me to play," he said
knuckleball could stop the and Todd Zeile each had three hilS
On Sunday, he got the opportu- Philadelphia PhiUies.
for the Cardinals.
nity to win the gaine after makirig · ,. Pete lncaviglia hit a ~wo-run
two errors • second.
·
homer and drove in three runs as
action,
"We were losing and somehow the Phillies defeated Los Angeles
1 wanted 10 make up for my mis- · 5-2 Sunday at Veterans Stadium to
takes," he said. "When Steve sweep the three-game series and
Buechele got that iriple, I felt this send the Dodgers to their sixth
was going 10 be my day.''
straight loss.
.
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) _The
Wilh one out and Delrick !lofay
The Phillies improved to 13-4, Cleveland Indians solved their
on fii'St after a single, Buechele hit topS in the major leagues. The 13 problems with a weekend sweep of
a line drive that rookie eenter-field- wins also are their most victories in Oakland that left the Aahletics
er Cesar Hernandez dove for and April since a 12-6 slart in 1981. . loolcing for answers.
misst;d.:.and the ball rolled to the
lncaviglia entered the~ with
"We've needed two games like
wall :Cor a tr!Pl~.
.
. . ~ lifetiJ!Ie ave~ ~f.O 3. (2-for- this ever since the season opened,''
With Ctnctnnatt starler Ttm 24) agamst Candiow. But 1t seems
M''- Har
Belcher remaining in the game everyone on the Phillies is hot right Indians manager u.e
grove
ntil
the
end,
Rick
Wilkins
was
now,
no
mauer
who
provides
the
said
after
his
team
completed
the
U
two-game sweep wilh a 6-n victory
intentionally walked and Vizcaino .oppositioo.
Sunday, one day after pounding lhe
singled in pinch-runner Eric YeldThe Phillies are ~ne games over Athletics l0-3.
ing.
.SOO for the fttst time sance Aug.
Th I d' .. · ed to 7 11
Pau'.......,...
• ·•anmacher (1-U) pitched 22, 1987 (66-S7). They are 9·2 at and handed
e n tans
•
tiletmprov
A's aheir· eighth
home.
.
loss in nine games, sending the
a perfect ninth for the victory.
· F~ Castillo had given up just
''It's kind of like tryin$ to catch defending AL West champions into
three hilS in 7 113 innings.
butterflies," Incaviglia Satd. "He's las!' place with a 5·8 mark. J.ose
Chris Sabo - 8 for 12, includ- tough because you're used 10 fast- Mesa and Derek Lilliquist ceming a grand slam, in the three-game balls and sliders and now all of a bined on ·a three-hitter and Felix
series - doubled home the lone sudden you get a lcnuckleballer.It's Fermin went4 for s with a double
Reds' nm in first.
not easy·" ·
an&lt;hwo RBls.
.
"We played some ugly baseball
Tommy Greene (2-U) allowed
"We dbn •a want to get toO far
up until that ninth' mning,'' four hits and two runs in seven behind any more than the Athletics
Buec~ele said, "Defe~ively ~e innings llld Mitch ~illiams got the
do," Hargrove said. "It's imporweren t ~ Sharp , and wtlh Castil- last three_~~ for hts se~enth sa~.
tant for us to win now. We'U worry
•• to not p1tch1ng for about two . ~ncavtglia s l!o~er m the tl!tt.d_ about Detroit later."
weeks, ~.e gave up some walks mnmg '?rr Candiotti (0-3) was his " the Indians passed lhe league's
early on.
.
, sec:~ m two games and gave ihe worst team ERA to the A's over
the weekend. Oakland has been
Belcher (1-2) 5ald Hernandez s Phillieaa5-llead.
outscored 70-25 in the last nine
games. Manager Tony La Rossa,
worried enough about his team's.
slow start, canceled today's off day

In NBA's ltJstregultJr-season dale,

1993

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;
•.

:

:·

·•
•:

•

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

MArLTO:

The . Daily
·

Sert~inel

til CoUrt Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
.

(OFFER EXPIRES 6/21/93) .

'I

'

'

I

"

�; Paga 6 · Th8 Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

llbnclay, April 26, 1993

. Monday, Aprll26, 1993

· - -

_In NFL draft,

:Bledsoe_,Mirer selected first
•

~

By DAVE GOLDBERG
NEW YORK (AP) - If there
.

was a change in the NFL draft m
•the fust year of free agency, it W&amp;!i
'8 subtle one.
· After quarteroocks went 1-2 in
Sunday's draft for the first time in
· 22 years, teams got down to the
basics. As in most years, the big
guys went quicldy. - a half dozen
·offensive linemen in the first 19
. 11icks and an equal number of
defensive linemen in. the first
round.
"It's always a dance of the elephants," fenerlll manager George .
Young o the New York Giants
said after the fust round. "You got
·five offensive tacldes that go. All
tile big guys go, whether they're
linebackers or defensive. linemen.
They always go early."
There were no surprises at the
top Olher than the trade by the New
Orleans Saints of linebacker Pat
Swilling, the 1991 defensive MVP,
to Detroit. In return, the Saints got
the eighth overall pick in the draft.
• which they used on offensive tack· le WiUie Roaf of Louisiana Tech.
• Drew Bledsoe; the Washington
State quarterback, went to New
:England-and Rick Mirer of Notre
Dame to Seattle. BiD Parcells, the
Patriots' new COICh, said Bledsoe
, .bad been his team's fllSt choice all
along, although he considered bolh
Mirer and a trade.
Teams like Atlanta, Houston,
..'..W ashington, Philadelphia, San
Francisco and Indianapolis drafted
i specif!cally to fill holes lost by
• defectmg free agents, and there
·were seven fust-round tnides ~ six
swaps of draft position, the seventh

one the SwiUing deal.
next ye..-· s top pick to move up
But there were others who went · and take running bKk Natrone
to the best available athlete theory, Means of Nor1h c.olina. Thlt MS .
like Pittsburgh, wh ic h needs a reprise of whll he did twO years
linebackers, had plenty of defen- ago when he traded his 1992 No. I
sive backs and still went for COOICr· to the Redsldns to move up in the
back Deon Figures of Colcndo. · ' second round for guard Eric Mol.en
" When you're draftin'- 23rd in and that pick turned out to be
the first round, you don t always Desmond Howard.
have the luxury of doing that,''
Parcells' choice of Bledsoe was
SteeleiS"c'l!aeh Bill Cowher said..
hardly a ·surprise. But Ul))lke Troy
So it was a typical draft day. Aikman, who was. made an instant
After Bledsoe and Mirer, no Qilar- starter in 1989, when Johnson took
terbacks w~nt until Washington's him No. 1 for a, 3-13 Dall&amp;!i ll;arn,
Billy Joe Hobert went to the Los · Bledsoe may not be an instant
Angeles Raiders on the last pick of starter.. ·
the second round and w&amp;!i the only
"In the final analysis, we
other quarterback picked in Sun- thought Bledsoe had a little more
day's four rounds.
ability to throw the ball effective- But there were . predictable ly," Parcells said. " But I premise
rnQVes by .the usual ~ts:
you I will not throw him to the
- Dallas coach Jtmmy John- wolves and he will not play until
son, who couldn't sit still when he he's ready to play."
had multiple high draft choices .
Mirer went No. 2 and was
from the Herschel Walker trade, happy to be going west 1'8lher than
couldn't sit still again.
C&amp;!iL
·
W!th the 29th and last pick i11
Then Phoenix swapped places
the ftrst round after wmmng the with the New York Jets and took
Super Bowl, he traded it away for Georgia running back Garrison
three later choices. Then his first Hearst; the Jets took linebacker
two picks came from the college he Marvin Jones of Florida Slate and
used to coach - wide receiver Cincinnati took Alabama defensive
Kevin Williams and linebacker lineman John Copeland.
Darrin Smith of Miami, who will
Eric Curry, the other Alabama
join a half-dozen other ex-Miami defensive end, went to Tampa Bay;
players on the Cowboys.
.
Chicago took ysc wide receiver
- San Diego's· Bobby Beat- · Curti$ Conway; the Saints took
hard, who never met a first-round Roaf; Allanta took offensive tackle
piclc he wanted, got stuck with Lak- Lincoln Kennedy and the Los
ing Stanford defensive b~~tk Dar- Angeles Rams took Notre Dame
rien Gordon with his ~ piclc. ·
running back Jerome Bettis, one of
But Beathard, who had just one four Fighting Irish players taken in
No. 1 in his dozen rears in WaSh- the fust round. Thai W&amp;!i one short
ington, made up for 11 in the second of the record set by Southern Caliround by trading to San Francisco fomia in 1968.

ByJIMUTKE
This was supposed to be an easy

One.

For a change. most NFL clubs
!mew exactly what they were shop'ping for and the merchandise-on
. the shelves was plentiful, properly
~;tagged and, best of all, cheap. On
."'top of which, any pieces a club
mnsed or still needed for a
set could .be purch&amp;!ied via
free agency until July I 5.
So how come it took some of
those guys seated behind tile bel. ·mets and in front of the phones five
)lours to get through the fust round
ofthe draft?
·
Assuming the phone bills were
.paid, the only other explanation
·was to make the draft look harder
than it reaDy w~.
' In recent lVCCks, everyone with
a 1-900 line- including "Sabrina! Your Personal Psychic" and
.even ESPN draftnik Mel Kiper Jr.
·- had Washington State quarterback Drew BledsOe pegged as the
.:No. 1 pick by New England. Yet
·Bill Parcells played the ~uspense
for all i.t was wonh. He dutifully
hid out in a "bunker" since &amp;!iSuming the post of do-it-all for the
, Patriots three months a~o to mull
&lt;things over. He held JUSt three
;;news conferences over that span.
rAnd he dismissed questions about
the draft at his last public appear•ance only Wednesday by saying,
·"there's no one who knows. No

matched

~one.

"My wife has asked," Parcells
.added, "and she doesn't have a
·clue."
Wrong.
• She knew. And he probably
'knew s-he knew. Even without
,relling her.

.Sports deadlines posted
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sen lin el, the Poinl
''l'leasam Regisur and the SundayJimes-Sen_linet value the contributions their readers make to the
&amp;ports sections of these papers. and
these contributions wi ll continue to
j'le published.
" However, certain deadlines for
'submissions will be observed. The
d()lldlinc for photos and related ani.clcs for basketball and other winter
'$ports is the last day of the NBA
Finals.
Likewise, the dead line for submission s of loca l base ball : and
softball-related photos and related
'articles, from T-ball to the majors,
as well as other spring and summer
·sjlOns, is the day of the last game
oC the World Series. The deadline
'for phmos and related articles for
football and other fall sports is the
.Saturday before the Super Bowl.
•· These deadlines have been instituted to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos back from .lhc
photography st ud io of choice and
to give the sLaffs the 'opponunity to
publish these sports photo s and
articles during the appropri ate scaIIJn for that spon.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

NURSES' AIDE
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TRAINING
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while standing witb New England Patriots bead
coacb Bill Parcells. He and Notre Dame's Illck
Mlrer were tbe fii'SI two quarterbacks selected
first in the draft ror tbe ftrst time In 22 years.

FIRST IN DRAFT- Ia recogaitloa .or bis
being selfcted a$ tbe first player Ia Suaday's
NFL dr!lft, Former Wasbiaatoa State qu~rter­
back Drew Bledsoe (right) holds up bls Jersey

Bengals' .needs •. •·......:....(C_on_tin_ued_from-,-P.....:ag::_e

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BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
end TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,

R&amp;C IXCIYITIIG

Assocllltlon Is

wlh fill&gt;&lt;

Found: 2'x2' -

bot -1, under -ian llalrt on
Rl. 7, CIJJI14--7MI 10 JD. l

ttO Soulh Second "'I t8p9t1,
ApiiJ B tJI__.Mft I. CIGth!

PIIHnNG

HOME SITES and

JOE N.SIYRI
SAYlE TIUCKIIG
614·742·2138

'

llaek
ond
llln CiOIIIIIIft
Shepherd, - - Aldfle
orli, good ...,.... ...,
queaJicinoakad,tt4-M..aae.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

on Blttden Road
PH. 614-256-6160

TRAILER SITES,
LANOCLEAAIIG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
IMESTONE-TRUCKING

•

Porno roy,

EXCAVATING

GUVEL &amp; COIL

!rom--..

-kaald, - l e . - · -·

mil" eotrth

HOWARD

LIMISTOIE,

May 211, 1993.

POIIEIOY, oi.

•

FrN P......; 112 Cocllor • 112
Bugle, 8i4-441-7.
:

DRIVEWAY .WoRK
IIIIUMESTONE
DELIVERY. SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

i.

Cell: Plevtul Young Lor&gt;ghiilrWhlle -Bfeck Femoile, v-a
Qny Whlto llole To Good Hom•

T-Shlrtl• Hats• Unlfonns
Vlr~ltv of T.Shirt Colora .nc:t l.dlflng Sty~-.

DOnR

'b •• CIIMte, alze

t, lib - · 114-JIIZ-2126.

47269 St. Rt. 248 • 1Y. Mit. OH Rt. 7
Thru Chaster oil lt. 241

POMIIOy, OliO

CHARLIE'S

.

S
ldltono
to -:-IOW'JI..W18,
- • - I·•
black
......

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

CARPENTER SERVICE .

IIEAa4

Runo, FIMBI Dooe HoC F -.
114-MN110.
•

KELLER'S CUSTOM
.
BENDING

....
· - .... Office
217LS.CM141St.

YOUNG'S

-Ell ; 'lrl '

•
RAIIIIDA:
o-n Fron1 t.ua..., Condo 110
Pool, s...,.. 4 To 1. tall W'..,..,
C.ll Ownoi, a.IJ4111.

MYRTLE

8or'1 NN&amp;e b

992·5335 01'
915·2561

614·949·2325 or
614-592·5010

-

Myrtle ArM: llcltll .On
- h , I &amp; 2 lim, Ill. MOl 'f55
Nlghlly. $175 _ ,_ .....

a 8moJJ uu Reftlpnl... That

614 446 1157

36358 SR 7

Nt.ll:fl·

tlon c.nt., P.O. loo 40, Henderoon, WY 21101.

SERVICE

LowCo•te.
Work Guto111nteed

-Gill

tnd iftfonNIIIIon ~dl.rgr.

Giveaway

Larry E. Miller

St. II. 7
Cltes.ire,OI.

J &amp; I HOME
MICROWAVE 0¥11
IMPROVEMENTS ••tl YCI IEPIII
llliiiiU
Froa r•••••tiotl to
~
......... o..
I(EN'S RiaiCE

11 .lAd ...... 1111 f' III 1,
atalllllllll•nwlp ..,....,..

lnc.llom.-Cel-~

(No Sunday Calls)

Shade River Saddle Shop

Call614-992· ·
6637

IHOI
Iii. 1117.
$3.11 Per llln. lluet le 11 Yrt.
llnlllar CO.
LOSE 12 L8l In 7 DAYI - The
Ull-. 24 IIOUII DEll -.1

-A-.

Top -

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB '
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thio act good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32 ·

C~ll

Pold: All Old U.S.

Colnl, Oold Rlnp, n- Coin•.
· Caine. II.T.8. Coin Shop,
1!1
OollpoJto. ,

Emplo yment Ser11ices
''

11

Help Wanted

1

'AVON' ALL AREAS! Sllare your
"""' wfth ,., You'll ion 1,_
oompony.1-tl2oi3H.
4 ~ W- Uka To
S.lo\-Cdi14-14WJSI, -:

APPOINTMENT IIECAETAIIJES
FOR LOWE 'I STUDIO
J•

WE DO

ROOFING

AID EYEIIYTIIIIG UIDEIIUIII

·BUILDERS

Read the

CLflSSfED ADS
Annottt1rrments

No So,_ huiOIM. No Ex~ t'r: Tllr"). W. Trait'!
bood Pay And lxnlhnt ~
!!If Co&lt;ldlloue. 11ot '"'• Ami
Ewtnlna ....... Anlhhnr llutl

_ .....,_.....,..a-,1

In -A1N11 ftOnlv.
liattl•
Oil,.._,
If A.ll
Or 2 1'.11. • t P.lf. AI The
1:::!'!'~:1'.1 .~~ Oh.Aeorn20t,
81110 ....... 7
,_..,

I

"A Qua&amp;y Allured Contnu:tor"
3r.W3tfn

Molgo Coii!IIY Pullllo

GDRIIIOR .. liMp Alallnt'a
·
:LiwlrY
olllonrllllll '""(10.,.) of (4) 5, II, tt, a, 4111
bid . .~

.
~------------~~
...-re 111111 aola lhet
:!'part••••
:tor:'et.:'or1yw.re
":
tnd11o1rlel

L.OCA'!10N1 ~.000

. YOUR HOMETOWN HOUSING .CoNNECTION: CLE; .
LAND REALTY INC. CALL U8 FOR YOUR HOME .
IUYINGIHLUNO NEEDS. WE AIM TO PLEASE!

FOISALE

~C::uc:::. .C"!!"! .:!1~ :"'~':':.:fa~.:

IAIAI ADDIT~ Bilek l'llndl home 3 btKI!ooono, 1112
ball. ~-~· pt11lo , biiMment VERY NICE .

held In lhe VIII... of
ltoiiMroy, . Ohio, el lhe
l'llfllllar Jlleou of voting
lleretn, 'on lhe 41h clay ol
lley, tiN, lh• ..-aon .ol
o...uong a IU In • • - of
ik'ian 1!1111 liMitation, lor
lie ·b.,.elll of Pomeroy
Wlage lor llo purpon ol

COMMERCIAL and llESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

CAtTLE OWNERS

.

.. . lhe Office of the Arohllecl
and tnaY lie obtained troeo
lhe Arohllecl, fllchard E.
Dl. . ., lno., 11 loulh
F....,. ltteel, Zoe..,..la,
Ohle am upon dlpoelt e1
· tiO.OO wlili ....00 ileln1
re............. aloo~111wrlli
are 111urnlll1 IR good

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
· HARD FOR YOU.
· •BP DieHl Supreme...Try It, there Is 1

1/24/91/ •••

... openfnillhereol.
Plano and epeclllcetlona
11, In lhe oplniOII ol the

-roor.

lo

epecl,.,_.

New Homes e VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

HA~

SIZED UMESTONE

Rlchft E. Dillin•.
Bide- wiJ t. received lor

Gallipolis, Ohio

::Jlw
hlgi&amp;W*f ,.,11••••• ,.._.., ,uplt of Mid eula.,11hn
lie ....... ODMirultlon •
eU lpoolll Eleallon lie

Ito• o.

on lila·in lhe ollloe of lhe
Lfb1ery and lhe Archlteot,

Is Proud To Announce
The Relocation of His
·.
Office To
2.28 Upper River Road

P••••

GtN~II2

41111111 ...

HtwcnLWIIIIsel

OURIOAL

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

NOW OFFERING......
.
OIL liD LUBE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND IOTITIIG

4-f.IIIIO.

s•ua &amp;flEE

0001 SERVICE IS

·PH. 614·985·3949

;COIDLIMIIIARY

.

- .•

laY • SILL • TUDE
117M. 2IMI St.
Mltldleport, Oh..
lloll,•frl. 10:01-5:00
Satvnlay 10:01-6:00
Closed Sa!Miay
992·1577

WHALEY'S

:;:':'====

The new spacious office · features all
types of contact lenses and aiUypes of
glasses il')cludlng:
· .
The No-Line Bifocal, Children's VIsion,
Low Vision &amp; Free "Off Street" ~Irking.

THE BOOK
BARN

312511 mo•

r=====~====:::::=:r-==::=.;;::::::::::::==r:=~:;;;::;;::;;:==li-====·

(614)

To Hw , _

Youlll M'RE UW: AND WAIT·

caught 32 p&amp;!iSCS last year.
;·
-,
Karmelowicz said. "He under"He brings us speed down the
ping the run, either. A measure of stands."
field at that position, something
the ineptitude: Houston's Warren
The choice of Copeland was the we've been looking for the last
Moon threw for a career-high five Bengals' toughest. They have two couple of years," Shula said. "And
touchdowns
agaiiiSI
in other maJOr
· shortcommgs:
·
one
game last
year,the
andBengals
Lorenzo
o f'.en- he' s a fime blocker: We think· he'll
•
While rushed for a c.areer-h;oh 149 sive line and cornerback. And they be able to srep right in and help us
Beatbard
is
anodler
si(Xy.
Trad..,
knew thatby the time their second· immediately."
·
Fact is, so much of the first
ing
top
draft
picks
ror
veterans
yarids
in
another.
f
·
round
piclc
arrived,
the
good
ones
By
the
.time
the
Bengals'~two
round wen~ according to form. this
t was an easy choice or the · at those positions would be gone.
third-round picks arrived, it W&amp;!i
year that with a little bit of srudy, workc:d in Washington becanse the
Redskins
were
a
player
or
twO
from
Bengals
in
that
sense.
Curry
is
conThat's
the
way
it
worked
out.
clear
their major areas or nee~
Judy Parcells might also have
reaching
the
Super
Bpwl
nearly
sidered
a.
good
pass
rusher.
Offensive
taclde
Willie
Roaf,
their
.
would
go unmet. They took Ohio
known that Seattle would take
every
season.
It's
quue
another
Copeland,
though
Jess
flashy,
is
other
consideration
for
the
firstState
linebacker
Steve Tovar and
Notre Dame quarterback Rick
matter,
however,
in
San
Diego.
·
more
well-rounded.
round
pick,
went
to
New
Orleans.
defensive
tackle
Ty
Parten of AriMirer with the second pick. And
Two
years
ago,
to
get
Eric
Moten
"I
wasn't
really
talked
about,
And
all
of
the
cornerbacks
on
the
zona
in
that
round,
then
went With
tllat ·somebody would fleece
_
Eric
Moten?
_
Beathard
gave
that
1
could
do
this
or
that,''
Bengal$'
wish
list
were
gone
by
the
·a
long
shot
by
choosing
cornerback'
Phoenix in a trade, And even that ·
away the f~-round pick that was Copeland said. ' 'But I'm solid. I ti.me they picked in the second Marcello Simmons in the founh .
wheeler-dealer Bobby Beathard Simmons , from Southern
now employed by the Chargers but eventually used to get Desmond can do e:verything. I can rush the round.
So they went for tight end Methodist, has had operations on
still wearing his Redskin thinking · Howard. This time. as pll't of a passerorplaytherun."
The one drawback is Copeland's McGee, who has the chance to start - bolh shoulders and is considered a
cap - would barter away a rust- multi-pick swap with San Francisround pick to get his hands on co, he gave aw·ay a 1994 first - size. The Bengals want the 6-foot- right away with Rodney Holman srep slow.
That left the Bengals sti1) trying
some guy even the psychics round rounder to come up with 3, 285-pounder to built up over the gone to DcbOit as a free agent. The
Natrone Means. Bet on thts: The summer to help him take on 300- thing that most intri~ the Ben- to add cornerbacks, offensive linehaven't heard of.
gals is McGee's abiltty to run pat- men, receivers and linebackers
The selections of Bledsoe and Chargers are not just a Natrone pound blockers.
"I've talked with him about terns and catch the ball - he with just four rounds left today.
Mirer were virtual gimmes, Means _ Jl!atrone Means? _
because the only war to turn a
from· reaching the Super
franchise around fast ts to hire a away
Bowl.
Public Notice
PubUC Notice 1
Public Notice
guy who can throw the forward
The maneuvering aside, it
•
Public Notice
· pass. And taking Phoenix or Beat- · should seem scary to everyone that
IN 11E COURT OF
ESTATE, INTEREST OR
Said lax being: An NOTICE OF AVAILABIUTY
h!lfd for a ride on draft day are fasi it lOOk well-paid, fUll-time football
COMMON PLEAS
RIGHT llEREIN
lddltlonal tax ol 1.9 mill1, at FOR PUBUC INSPECTION
becoming time.honored traditions.
men two months -of preparations
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
APPROPRIATED
·a rate not axcMding 1.9
The carleton Collej~e
Slluated In l!le Townehlp mill• lot' each Cine dollar or Board 01 True- 1\aelliled
No wonder the Cardinals always and five hours 10 announce enough Jeny Wray
S.llabury, Counly ol valuallon, whlell amounta to ita annual reiUrn ofeprtval8
draft high; they're always running names to complete one round o{ die Dk'iOCior of TrantpOrtalion
ft.
Because
the
bad
news
S-ol
Ohio
1-:,:a:,.,:an::d
Stale ol Ohio, nln•t•n c1111ta ($0.19) lor foundation, Form HD-PF,
•
t
'
t·
in place. With all the holes thai dra
15
PL.AIIimFF I•
• ..llelng
pert of MCh one hundred dollar• of
· ~ lue
~ 1
longer.
V&amp;
,
-L
_
I
Wllu
nterna1 Reyenue
could
oet
needed plugging, this year the
·" f
- "" ...,_ 383, 8 1!._. va uallon, lor live Y'IWI.
Service lor cal1111dar yur
club's braintrust traded away one
Wtth ret agents getting richer UnknoWn Ownw
f Norlh, Range 13
The polla loraald Election 1992. In accordance with
DEFENDANTS
ohown by the will o,..n 81 6:30 o'clock Internal Revenuo Codo
very good running back, Johnny and a salary cap o{ about $30 milC.. No. t:I-CV-77
Melp Collnly Tlllr A.M. and remain opan until Section 6104(b),lhlolorm II ·
Johnson, to move up one place to . lion set to go iniO effect one yew
from
now,
the
clubs'
only
source
of
AFFIOAVIT
No. 27, Parcel No. · 7:30 o~clock P.M. ol aald available lor public'
No. 3 and draft - what else? another very good running back, cheap labor wUJ be draftees, whose ~~J~~~iGS, ..
anci ::,,~'!~ clay. .
By ardor or·~- ln•pecllon al lhe Syrecun
R....
~ aca A• Howar d ,
allhe
Georgia's Garrison Hearst. Think wages are alre'ady artt' ft'ct'ally
Board ol Election a'""'
ol Municipal
home ol Building
Roller! or
Wingett,
New York Jets general manager depressed because of a separate being II ret duly oworn,
PARCEL NO. 3-WD
.
Melgo Counly, Ohio Pr.. ld•nl and Principal
was happy that his phone bill was salary cap on rookies. Making the depoe• 111111 uya lhat aile
(llahwllrl
Henry L Hunw, Chelnn• Manegoor, 1367 Coli ega
Rita D. Smllh, Olreclor Roed, Syr•cuu, Ohio, ·
'ALL
paid Sunday? With one call from right picks will become more 1• a duly a:rpolnlad,
imponaiu
than
eve'"
and
the
guys
·
qualified
•n
utlng
AND
I!TEAEIT
IN
Dated
Febru.y 10, 19113 during the 180·day period
Phoenix, he picked up Johnson
hiding
behind
the
helmets
will
:::::':"..!:!i~;'~:•..:
FEE
SIMPLE,
EXCUIDING
(4)
5,
12,11,
26, 21c
beginning May 1, 1993,
AND a promising linebacker in
4 26 11
Florida's Marvin Jones with the want more tirne than ever. And Ptalnllll,' Jerry WrfY, U':'~~tt.t:s,
11 • "
No.4 pick. And it wasn't even his · everybody won't have the chance Dlreclor ol Tr. .portallon, OESCR1BED PROPERTY
qjlarter.
to draft behind Phoenix or deal Stale of Ohio, 1Mb, by hie Being 1n
ollhe ·
with Beathard.
Petlllon, ID llf'proprlale lhe road on ·lha eOIIUI liM of
\
properly deacrlbecl lh.,.ln 100 acre Lot No. :183;
TOWnS plC S, , , .:_(Continued from PageS) - - - ::. :.ru:.:-~::;:-:~
w•l about 200 r..t
'"\
lothllllce
.... dill;
Dellllldltnl(o) · below
thence In • northerly
Belichick said the selection of Belichick said. "I think he r~y itl imknowri and cannot wllh
rea1onable diligence be directiOn lo the cor- ol
Everitt, 22, was not a-negative brings an element of toughness IQ aacerlalned:
UNKNOWN IM. Silvie flo9er and Nanay
reflection on the 33-year-old · our team ...
OWNER
Snyder oou1h praporly line;
Hilgenberg but said the two players
Th e Io 11 ow1ng aclfona lot"-1
- tollhe
aboutroad·
200,IHt
During his injury-plagued career
Real Estate General
lhe _,..,
"obviously" were at opposire ends at Michigan, Everitt said his atti- - e taken on behalf ollhe
of their careers.
.
tude w&amp;!i, ''If I can walk out on the Plalnllll lo 11certaln the w~~:~~~ 1!_~=
place(a) ol
ollhe
" At some point in the near field, I'm going to play as hard as 1 unknown
Defendant(•): A Place of· . Beginning,
future, Jay's is going to end. When can.''
.thorciugh ourch . 01 containing 0.551 ol an acre,
that will be, I'm not sure but, y:ou •
The Browns picWf Everitt after cour lh ouae record. '• lax
more
or '"'·
and being
ol
unknown
ownwahlp
In lhe
k:now, it just gives us more depth swapping their II th pick in the fin! m•p• lrom lhe Counly Court
ol Mel-, Stell ol
and quality on the offensive line.
round to Denver to get a third- Recorder'• Office, County
•·
E.....,._.. mapa and ohio.
','1 think it's really important for round selection.
.
with adjoining
ow-• retain rlghta or
us to be a strong 1ea111 up the midBelichiclc said Everitt must also chcuaalono
property ownero all Indicate lngr•a 111111 egrMe lo and
. die and Steve's the kind of guy compere against long snapper Brian thai Ihe owner ol thla from any rllldual - ·
Said --.one
noled .....
who can play center or guard," Kinchen for a starting job.
. _ oubjeet p&lt;trcel II unknown.
,.....
.11 Ia nec•••ry lhwelore ahalllurlher I8U notice thai
ID give noliae of lhelllfno of unleae lhey, or Iheir
lhe Pelillon her• In by AIIDm.y, ftle an Aneww·no
Publlc•llon, accordance Iller lhan 21 clay• •lllr lie
llh s 1
-plellan ollhe Service ol
w
eel on 2703 · 14 • Publlcallon, lhey will be
992-2259
t63.07; and Civil Rule dHmed Ia have waived
U(A~ Ratloed Code.
And further eftlanl 11111 lhalr rlghl lo enaww, Md
REDUCED! Tupp&lt;tra Phlln•· 3-4 bedroOm horne oo 'Main
the Petition will be lakan •
St. 1 balh, newer'wiriog and general repairs, 2 lirel&gt;laoes,
handcrahld c;Nnda~.,. 1+ ilcnt wilh lenced back yard.
Rebecca E. HowMd, 1ru1 •nd (udgonellt wlil be
.
NOW ASKING 545.000 Owner may accept reasonable
Ao...lanl AllorMr Genenll rendered acoorclngly; Civil
ollarl
IWCJI'il to ......... ..,. and AWe 12(AM1~
....._
JERRY WRAY
......
crllleclln
rroy
prn•DlreciDt of Tr--·IIOn
REDUCED! Mlcldhport- 1 t/2 story home 4 bedror:&gt;mo
lhlllrd d.y ofiiOrih, 1113.
,...._
nice
lot,largell'ontpcln:h, cloH to shopping. NON ASKING
,
Robert L lehl llw, ~~~21; (4)1, 12, 11, 21;
$32,000 may accept olhlrl
'
5
. · Allornepll Lew
I, etc
'
Nol8r)'NIIIo .
.
NEW LISTING- S.R. 124 ,._.Rutland 110.99 acreo•with
two older hameo. 2 lheda, ·one brick building, free gas w/
LEGAL NOlla! I'OR
_ ___;Pub;..;;;;;.;;;llc:..;~~Q:.:;;IIIct;::.,_
G~llipol~s
PU8UCATION
royalties. Very nicelocalionl ASKING ~115,boo .
,
UNIOIOWN OWNER,
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
NEW UlliNG- WalnutSL In lllddleport- One floor frlm~ '
whoee J I n II unknown
TAX LEVY IN EXCE"
~.,.,. with 2 ba«aomo, t.lh, FANG heat, carpelfdrywajf ,
10 lhe "-1•1111 will take
OF 11E
large front pon:h, ollotrMt parkina . Very,.,. &amp; allorda*: ·
nollae thort II hal liMn ailed
TEN MILL L.MTATION
'
toy lha Dlreolor el
N9l1CE Ia hereby ·giv• . $24.500
'naw;A 11LIIa11 of.,. lilLie lhet I• purau-• ol •
POMEROY· One floor f r - home wilh 3 bedlooms, bath
ol Ohio, who hal lo!olltutecl AHofulion ol II• Ylllego
lui
tlnilhed ~1101 ol100 ~ 150 ASKING $t0,000 '
a prooeedlng I• the Counall 'ill II• VHiage of
CoMMOft , . _ Court of
Polll•ow, Ohio,
on
MIDOL!POIIT· an!.lt. 2 1tory lramt home with 2 bed- ··
446~3300
llelge' Counly, Ohio, . to the tat tlay ol Pellril.,y,
~l IIIIth.
watm mcmlng a-• atow. ASK........ ow11:111.,. ~ 1111, there will be
ING
..,,000
OW... may ~ rwuonablo ,.,,
hwe.n:r'*'.O: ...,,...., 1e • vet~ of .,.

B

--1.

OUYSI We -

NFL draf( easier than it looked
AP Sports Writer

.

3 Announcomonhl

Reletlone are lo be·
lhrougliout
I*Prllt L '
"
lldd1r• ellell ahlo ROll
11111 , the Rut•• ••II
oM.~hil wllh

..

..........
....................
.
........... •• 14tJel
~......,

ooatrMLNo~....,

'

•

..

�•. .rage

- 11

8 The Dally Sentinel

.Pemeroy-Middleport;-Ohlo .

•

Help Wanted

t

. . . .A _O

:

~!!!'!!....,.~

.._,

to:

~~,:;

=
-~~1:~~

1212,

=t:-·'b..

.

:! ~-iF&lt;....."Cool 407~ . . . .. ED. t40.
fllrlng £nnll
E
E . LlomToOrivo(T..anlng AvtU.blt)
UIA TIIUCK ..

Looldng

For

f~

£n1ry, ~ Dr!..,. For O..r Ex•

:I

ponolll1t FINI.

• { Allond Our FREE SEMINAR To
•- Camphlo An Application And
'1 LMm About The Trucklna lndutlry And. O..r Trafnlng

.!:
. ~"'r.27.
.

11193

10A.M.,2P. •, a&amp;P.II.
Smiley'• Motel .

Monday, April 26, 1!193
~

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACfiOIS

City-·

Ko ll )E' ...

~.

..

111111(11.)

12' FooiNI
CINidt

Collectkwl, $20
2222.

10

..,..

WMII -

Dotto Modem Aloundor oa.or.
121 To S50 Eac!!; Elvlo, - .

.I•n:

I
•w
. AII:»t

.,·•

$25, 114-441--

t otAIWMtlve

......

REAll'f..

-

'

. QJ»

I:

•. a•s
)[2

~37-4&amp;42

,.,

E0£11/FIHN

DOWN

:zt. Kltntendu II
Ill Cipltll
3,1, lnl•t

~-

u

Dnl . s.dt

USA Truck

. 55 Llrge US co.
5I llonllor
23 c:orn pllnt
content or
511 Crucial Umeo
24=1W..t
61 Long and
llendor
21· '1 tl: blrda 62 P1rty glwero

pncllce

(lllllr.)

• an

For 11ort Information

53 Follow

....,_,_,

. QJIU

Hurrlcont, w.ot VIrginia

Rhythm

20&amp;::=

• Is

. Jilt

_,

51- -

Cltl·

.

IT?

.5Q Din•

tiT.-

. l5t2

I1CVJ IUAS

48 Widing bird

u.......,oiK

• u:s

...

45 Promo tape

46 Sc:old

151elllonMt

.Ill

"

1 Type ot ore
2 Author John
- Carro
3 Football dlv.

.. h ...
33 Layer OIIYe

-....

Anewer to PrtYioul PuUie

public
olftcllll)
39 N1111oly
12 Wdl.)
42 VIOlent
wlllrtwlnd
43 Paper monty

11 ..........

AIDER

f

35 Skin alime nt.

36 Aeeu.. It

•1 Locllly

PHILLIP

Ford lllllgor, X~T• .._.
..... 4114• .,.. · II£, ..,.,.

1+4blt 34,

"

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-9 ·

Ohio

In -1
4,
""~auuaw.tt.-. ....

~~AJI\6D Df A
'7fl-11'- I..~V~L

- - - - -•

'

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

. I 'VI; /UWA'fs

:,..~

Inc.
11711
Wrlll To: RW . . _
mont Co, Inc. c/o AHWA, Inc.
P.O. lo1 10071!:.':~ Ohla
451!10, Equot
ng Dpportunfty.
•
Furrllohocl ..,..,_ , Bod- · '1111 FOurth Avenue, Go~
lloollo. Bllh, $ 1 -.
lJtiiiUM Pakf, IU 441 41'18 After
7P.M.
Fumlohocl Elllcloney, 7 112 Noll
Ave.,
GalllpoiiA.
11801Mo.
Utllftloo Pold, 614 4te Ute Allor
7P.M.
Graci- Hvlng. 1 and 2 bod, _ oportmonto at Vllloga
Minor
ond
Rl-lldo
Apan...,.. In lllddlopor1. From
1111. cau 11+112-611it. EOtt

• ', .... """ -

I ;

12 Truckl tor sa

-Aport-•"r:!,lcotlono, Sonlor,

AIM

- -

Monday, Apr1126r 1893

Apanment
lor Rent

.
.
-=-..
-

-

-~

,.

4 A South
African
5 At- -

tor

words
6 Hebrew leiter
7 Radio type
{abbr.)
.
Pay penally

a

tor

·

:s•

,. BARNEY
HOW'S YORE

Fmanc1al

111l14 14112, Ranted Lot,

a llod-

~:i ~~~U:!.~·p~·u,soo,
Business
OpponunHy .

1m Shuft, a BR.~. oil tloc.
Whloliootna Pinto n.. Form.
304-e'7WQ2 or 304-2J3.21111.

I IIIICI - . . Earty Amorlc.on

1111 , . . _ , Zbdrm. mobile

l.ocol Yandlng Route: $1,200 A
oltuatod on forgo
Wook Polont!OI. Muot Soli. t - homo/Ill-.
lot, 118Jn st., Rutllnd, S18,00D,
5113-v.nct.
614-1'l2·30112.
1117 Redman..JIIYIN'-, MdO,
2bclrm., 1 both, ltrgo Uvlng
toom whh colhodrol colllng,

n 111• - . Cotermin
2112 ton Ctn1rol Ml,goo range,

,_fitgorrho4_w,otor - · · M.lcu.lt.
Rotal Jewelry Ex·
...,..... Required, For Mtlgo
Co. Storo, Apply At kqultltlon
.-ry 1!1 'llooond Avonuo,
lltltlpot\a.- -Sot, 10-12.
!klbtlltutt dr-lar rural popor
route, 6M-11l2-2125.
· Tho Clltf'o Gallor And Ctlppor

lllglnb, 2 ..Utng -

LounGe (Acroee "From Holiday
Inn, ~tllpallt) It Now Hl~ng
For WlltrM-, B1rtand.,. l
Uno Coqka, After 3:00 P.ll. Mon

-1111, Ho Phono C..lo.

kh, · vtnrt

AU real estate a(fvertfslng In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 whlcll makes llllogal
to adver1lse ·any preference,
limitation or dlscrimlnaUon

based on race, color, religion,
sex lamlllal status or nallonal

origin, or any lntertlon to
make any such preference,
llmll:ation or dlscrimlnaUon.•
This newspaper wUI not
knowingly accept
adverttsemenls for real estate
whk:tl ts In violation of the •
law. Our ntaders are hereby
ln'!Onneo ll'lat all dweHingS
adllenlsed In this newspaper
are avalabkl on an equal
opponunty bi.sls.

wnlghl

underpinning, lolo
more, Sto,IOO, 114-1112.at31.
1111 Slcyllnt Holly Ridge 141'JQ,
all .tee, 2 beilnKNM, AIC,
- o d pordl, kitchen latond,
111- btda, ..-panning,
like new, ~71-2414.
1110. MK'Jit, 3bdnn., 2 bath,
dlahwelher, . . lumlc., poroh,
underpinning.
Will
ooll
wtth'Witho&amp;.C 1.8 ICNI 1 3CJ4.773a

!1141, 30W82-3331.

2 BR rnollllo home lor toll. 304713-5331.
3 Bedroom lloillto Homo, C..n
Bo Loft On Ronlod Lot, Mlnutoo
Fnom Galllpotlt And Hoopltal.

814

ue 1340.

lluot -rlllco, 1113 1417Q Rodm~~n

wlh 5

year w1rranty, ln-

ctudoo dtllvery, Hlup, olopo
and oklltlna. $i6&amp;no. C..ll 61431W434 oili lor Mlko.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Real Estate
Wanlld: Fult-tlme eocl81 work•r

th 111101.,. lovtl whh 1 WV
llconot. To whh rooldento
In M ICF lacll~y. EX1enslve
bonolh pockaao. Contact Lakin
HoapH•r, 304-l'fl..0880, ut. 21.
MondaY • Friday, 8:00am·
4:00pm. EEOIAA omployor.
Wonted: Fut~nmo Banondor,
Expo•
Rolorancoo

about nontraditionll
, iONOW), 1-800-

113

.

Situation
Wanted

12

tntormotlon on baby cndlo buill
OW. llorAgl ChHt. aold II IUC•

Uon around 1t90, ~~~ 114-852·
11301 oolloc:t onytlmo.

18 Wanted to Do

city llmhL Btilornood lrH,
tor bolh loll. 304-1~
-

31 Homes lor Sale

1884.

10 Room Brick Homo, 2 Car

'

s ....,_ ,

112 • botho,

kit"'-, IMna raom. ao• - ·

-N. Moln
- 81.
h2liszoo
11118
IIR,~."-"·
o1ovo, rat.,
a
dryer tum-.. ...opoce

:=,

HouM for Rent· 2 or 3 bIll room,

Roclno-, 114-112-IIU.

Nice mobile homo lor up
to 16180 homoo - n Athono

EU TREE .SERVICE. ToDDing,
Trimming, Trw Removal, ~edge

I Pomeroy, $85/mon.,

Trimming. FrM Estimates! 614· For Solo By Ownw: 3 llodroome, 1 112 Bath, Dlnlna Room,
317-1157' After 4p.m.
IJIIIHy Room, Garage, NIGo Roor

et..-11511.
Qaart- Portable Sllwmill, don't
haul
~· to the mill Just

rour

c:aii30U111·1t57.
Guitar lnsons, nrst lesson free,
tor more lnformatton 304-675~
1810.

uWn work, mowing and lrlm·
mlng, tully Insured, 614·992·
5377.
MJ•• Paula'• Day Care Center 1
ltoctl W-.t 01' HMC On Jaellton

Plko II·F I A.M. ·5:30. P.M. II
O..IIHV And Elpa~onco li Tho

11 eoncem For 'four Child's
C.re. Calli Ut For A VltR. lnflnt

/T-rt 61H4U227. Pr...
c:hooters 19chool Aga 614-446-

1224.

·r.e:·
Interior

PAINTING

a

txlerlor, minor
frM Hllmattt, lowHt

hlghott qualhy,

304·~

Pint Slroot Corwooh "Under
M-ont· Spoctollzlng
In
Hond Wo1
.......Jllnl
Tot Detolllng,
Romova~.lntorl"!t_.
Ea·
.......,
....-.
Ulho
CIMnt~. ony
r
=~·,l::',':m...:' 614-446-9113

e

,.

2187.

IM-112~

Traitor tor - · Nicholl Rood In
Rutl0nd1 - - and dopoolt
Yard'- GrMt Locltlon 1 112 l"'qUirea,
114-H2-tnl.
Bloc:u From Downtown Ga~
llpollo On Avon,., C..ll Two Zbdr.m. trallera, Condor
114-446-7111. ,
.
.SI-. Pomorooy, S25Wmo~
Mpaelt, no pMt, ......_.
HILLTOP SECLUSION
• 34100 .....,. Fool Contompory altor 5pm.
Homo On 17.1 Acroo rn/1 WHh Why poy rant you con
Poo1And2BIown a 1093 'Ma70 Redman wfth
• 13 AdjloMII Acroo mil Avoll· 5 Y. . Wlrnlnty, 8tlpt, .tdrtlng,
lbll
dtllvorod and oolup lor $115mo.
· • - - H o m o ! l n 4 - Clll tor lnlormlllon, 114-311&amp;WHh 22121 Pony Room
1821 aek tor BrendL
All 04 Tho Allolio Whhln 3 llltoo
01 Rio Gra- • ContiCI BUI 44
Apllnment
Connotl At: Donne s ...- .
Roo!JLF&amp;;y
Mora lnlormo- At:
lor Rent
114.
Nlco 3 bedroom homo whh Iorge 1 llodroom, Noor Hotzar
2 cor garage, tocotod on nlca
£-CII Goo - ·
101. All bod,_ hovo , _ cor· Slovo, of. Fumlohod, 1245illo·
pol, locolod bolllnd Rutlond Dopoolt Roqutrad. 614-&lt;44 6-29~7.
Elomontary ochoot, 114-!142· 2 Bedroom Unlurnlohod· 2 Bod- ·
2tl20.
"""" FumiAhod, Cort Miu Ad,
Nlco 1 yoor old cllurcll building ott 326, Ho Polo, R...,.ncoo
1111oto oppooood), 3 bedroom lloqulrod, 114-241-1122.
.,.,._., I'Mintty ren a dtlad, Zbdrm. 1pte., total etectrlc. ·~
2.1 Kr• of lind, nut to fire pllancea fumt.htd, " ll1.1nclry
dopanrntnl In Horrloenvlllo, rvom lacllhlte ctooo to ochool
Ohio, 134,100, 114-N-2001 or In town. Ap&gt;pilcOtlono tYIIIoblo
114-112·2MJ. ·
·
G1
!'tt ~1::!-~&amp;M,•· IMI or
Roncll IIYit homo, ~ bodrvomo,
1 ...
-·
- · - llr, 3~hbarhood.
roarn opa~mont.
Ar
_,-hod
wlnJ ;o._oentrel
Depoeh Nice
a
FOolor 111, 77S-IISO.
r o - required. 304.17Slovtn , _ and lloth In Aut· '
'"nd
~ ~
·
l4orm o:BEAUTIFUL APARTIIINTS AT
w'.er:rUO;
lot, IIJDGIT PRICES AT JACKSON
bul .... ,_go....,_oollor.._~ £STA'!!!,_~II3I JocktGn Plko
,....ng, t17.SOO. - - rrom ....,...., W.tk to o11ot&gt; a

Hooplt'/i

-::'.!.:

-

·Coli

around the ladder

PEANUTS

a

Boals lllolora
for sale

~~--------~~---------------.

......... Itt.. 110 II' 110
--·~~~··-.......

-

USED APPUANCES
W.llhoroc. dryoro, rolrtgorot~
,.._, , . . _ Applloncoo "'
~=6il!ll14-4*73ii, 1·
GOOD

. . . I 1.1111 J

- - Qoroge kopi.IDMJNOa

11M 1Ift "!\\lard •

.........

:Ida,

..... •.• rd ~!I!D
~- ...... -0110,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Contploll homo tumiA~~c·
Houra: Mon-Sot, w . 61
DSaZ, ~ out Bulovlllt Rd.
,_Dollvory•

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

0.

.

·-~Cipher cryptoprams . . cr.t«t lrom quotations by famous people. p• t

=

••

.....

&gt;·

PI
nt, IOWJS.2IIU,
::.." :1 T1 1.ftr11
111n10;

,.

AohTonii,:MQ

I

I

au-

---~·

ol•
....
bod
wldra-_1 hood-..r, 2 tulip
ltmpo
304-882-3435.
R. a S. Fumhure. New, uMCf, an-

l l l l _ ...... _
,C....lor.
__ .-.I04-f7UIII;

a ""'"""

76

t~uee. Koutehold luml8hlnge.
Mooon,WV. 304-~.

Ra~or,
A~llor,

2 Door, Whh1, $15;
2 Door, White, h5i
RotrlgOrator, Froot FrM, Coppori- 1150; Ro!Jigonolat, Hor·
-Gold, Froo1 Froo, Uko - .
$2G5; Whirlpool Wuhor $15;
o.E.
$150; Whirlpool
Dryor 1111; G.E. Dryer 115; 3D
!nell EIICirtc Range. tiS; Color
Cedar Choat, Porch Qllder SlOG
Elchj • Pon:n Spring, Power

w-

- - - o u t o ., AC,

MeslcaJ

.,,
ttltMI
•"-I P.M.
or
-r
- 13,111.
a 'r,._

Instruments

1M7 Ford T - Cll. 2

o-,

- . • Cylndor, fE!lglnl,
AC, Pll, PB, llrM, l..ioko

-45.-.

Wheel Bib, $50 Each, &amp;4......_
01111.

AcCIIIOI'Iea

,._ • 304-e75-110Z toovo

-

a tiunli _ ,
-

--

-SINe;-

·,

,.

.

.

.,. ...,.,

1-JAAfU...

S

Til€'{
TliiNKOf'

-

_,

llliwe ~-

1 =
·-itlll
~
it c:w•ediJ:

-=~:73oa.

Q.. We"te . . . . ... .u.s.., ..
pa d;r . ~ a cari=
~ l!f S'd 1 me. Is 111M liw!
THE:N 'WHY DO ·

1M SURE
THeRE

- ..

pklr.

=~·--.

rt.... COBUIEIIOIIA1WE
'rrle w ...._. tile

U..IIIe
TIVE l'f pi

MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

=~:;IT.-.
I t J' z:

/

ARE.

eWe

A.Y~il."slra. P

ill lite :t I
~-.I. S 7

HEAYEN:t'

st .

·-z...,aid
..,
' -~ ~•MC•
~

. . . fires.

Fan &amp;,ck Roclll~ Chair J58i

Garden Arch W.y'o $1aUO

· - • _.

~~~~~~~~·=~=

T~~~

=:;~~::=

304.. 75-2052.

53

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Rlvtrlne AntlqUta.
1124 E. Main StrMt, on At. 12&amp;~

S.nn Mild, tlull ~ Mctl~ •tor .... SUOMCIL

to 1:00 p.m. 6M-112·252tl.

..........Lo._pltyw

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

..__
...,.In- pink-. pink
11- I plt1141c hooko: liood

150 Wott Por Channel MCS
s.rtoo Homo Syatom Storao,
Fow 150 Wan Por Chonnot
Spookoro, Compoct Oloc Dual
c:a-to, 5 Brond Graphic E·
?uallz~ Dlallol AIIIFM Starao,
umto o, l500, 114·251-1444
Aok For Lao.
30" pa rtnge; frost tr11

Singer Iewing Ill ••• Slli

refrlgeralor;

..

~
~ ~.·~

.

lnpu4. - - - -

oondllon, II. 114141 "%!

-

6M-112-1207. ·

::.,.~~~~ ::-:-r,:~

=tl::

MW, 1100, 114-816-4254.

•-on.

m ••

I2,IM;
M.C!II. 111- -

Q,jiiiO - . ;

eo-;

- I
II

-c.-~--­
..

JD.I• •1M Ja rr

1'1111111 -

-:.
.•.

••
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••

a

St-an Wlmor Phono FlliAM
F - - · Orl14-2...eht
Rod CINiry, 135,
114-441-3230,

P!ll. ...

I

__ _

=

- - Ftl, .... -1:31. 1ll

I

-

Ill

wv.
""''C'"""
.:..I
••.. ...,

a
Cot-

....
'1'
:~
•
-

~~· ol- doora, 840.• EuNko
T1m1Null111
10111. 118.
t!O. .::".~. . Pup toni,
.

"""='

boo1:t

I

,.

' "'"'"'4 , oa:-:r. - "':
-,,......,

..._

Matchmaker 1nstantly reveals wh1ch slgns
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N:rv. '22) Be war,;
are romantiCally perl~or you. Mail $2 · •· today if someone tries 10 pump you tor con·
piUs a lOng. sell ·addressed . s1amped enve · hden1ial 1nformat10n ab0u1 someone etse .
Th1s indlv1dual Eo mot1ves m1ght be more
lope to Matchmaker. c/o lhrs newspaper,
P 0 . Box 4465. New York. NY 10163.
dev1ous than curious.
' BERNICE
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Be a bll more
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) II mrght
not De a good rdea to share er&lt;penSivt! pascarelul
t han ~ usual with your posses~ons
BEDE OSOL
and va luables today. For example. don't
times today with friends who are reluctant,
to pay lllerr lair share when the bill is pre·
leave costly 11ems on the seat of your
parked ca r. VISible to all pa&amp;Sers·by.
sented.
.
CANCER (June a1-.1u1y 22) Your audi· '
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 1tl n you
have trouble 11111klng on imponant decision ··
enee will take you at your wora today. so
think tWice before you make p!OI'IIisea.
today. - - trom more 1111n one
source, becauae your counoeloro might not
Whal you consider an. expeditious cOm·
menl could be a bindrng cammitmlnl to
hovo lhe WhOit - r.
AQUARIUI (M. ...... .11)
lhtm.
Ll() (July 23-Aug; 221 People IOholn you 0
might
NliiY .-·
deal w•th today eoold 11o • trille contUIIICI
• you txpiCI todlly. A'wneioMI ·by your blliavlor.......... what you say
ollort might ... ,.quno to .acomp~~~~~....,
and do might De 1WO dllltrent things. Bt
In lhe yea( ahead. you mighl do some
lnltlll pu!POII.
weed1ng in order to clear oullhl deadWOOd · CDnlia1enl Ill bOth - a n d dHdo.
Cf'lll. II IlL lilt Ill An ICqlleinYIIIGW (Aug. 23-ltpt. 12) Fln4ntlll tlp5
llrtCI Willi ullltltlr-... migiii"Y to
whore you r group intertt1U !8 concerned '
mtnipUILII you 111111r 111111 1t11 or 111r
T1le reautt couklllo heppreriSIOC!IIiOnl ol Iron\ Wlll·lrtWitlonld friandl ohould not be
liken lt1 goiptl todly.
~ng Ot
~rgher quality w~h llwer people.
cling.• )lOUr pr~~• ...... - .,.._
TAUAUS (Aprll:zo.MIY 20) Usually you·ro
inVelling. CheCk lht inlorml1lon lgtlnsl
CbUid bUt&lt; tlfltl.
llbil 10 grnp tha ....nee Ql ldeal rather
olh1r 00111'011 .
Alllll(llltiiii1-Aid111111-a! ·
(iltpt. 23-0ot. ~~ Try 10 De • good llmLII COl I 1 ICII, ,OU -ltlllllwdl
quickly .. bul todly your jUdgment rtiiQI\11101
11o up to par:.You miglll 0111y hear what you lltttnor.IOdly lnaiHd 01 idctrtlllng IOptCI
youl'loiiiiO tlti!Nir'llllllr· 'MW
or
wonllo llear. Knqw whirl to look tor
,
you llnOIIr llmOII noiNng about. Your LPUri· Nywlll.ll¥ f I' . pMIWif PJIII• ftllt
dhohlglltuout.
.
I'OIVInet and you'llllnd The Awo-Grlflll OUifaota nogltl bo cltiM11igld.

ASTRO-ORAPH

~OliO,
;\';;
a
•

TrPftlll• With -

8112 T1·11, Shlnalo Root Tttlarwn--.••te,
Slorago Bulldln,. Aolilng: $525, $20, 1,._1112 IU7.
'IWolttm_ ... . . , _
C..ll Allor I P.ll. M-441-1121.
· turntable a 2 A&amp;l1am bll1 Cllllne 112.111 ._.
AMIFII r1dlo with
.... Cordo ,'Jio lhoo1, · ~HzaaBot"'::' Mil
24th onlyl .,
roy,
ut Y
"-;;;;-;::=::::::-:-::=::--=:::--:::-•- ~
"' • "" jllnL 150. n - . rlmo
tar KTV. N . MIYoro dHppump. fiOO. ~ 75-1131.

.... , . -

-

~..~-Copter,

19" ltWnmower:

.....

~~~~~~~~
4-H. FRo - . H i l l . M4

-

·~

·

Ach....- 1104--.

'

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a.ro..

UIIIA

. I

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wow•

n.

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(1'11

'jw

IMONDAY

-c.· . . . . .
-'=..... ..... . ......
--=--.:rn:. .

" ' - lnod, 1iiiM 63
LfviiiOCk
bolgo ....... $30. d l - pot. - - ,... - . , torn bedroom oot. 140, 3IM4JII. tlllo Fund. 1flJ MIHA .... By
'1504.
..icl(a DuDE I'M - 00'

Pomeroy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:ou

a.n,. to &amp;:OG p.m., Sundlwo 1:00

--.,1

ltere: ........ .,

-~-------­
......
01
.IEalrMI
-.Uko - ·

DR A CON

"

People keep asking me how
granny has lived to be so old.
.._....__._....;,.._..J....-' ; Granny told me that the way
. - - - - -- - - - . to .prolong one's life is to do
S U V A L I
npthing to --- ... .. !
•

I
IJ,.-'ilja=-T,::'g.:..,l;,;,_.:;l-=-,.--1 0
1

-.IL.-.L.-.J.-.J.--'.L-..J

Complele lhe chuckle quolod
by fil ling in the missing words

you da\'elop from ste p No. 3 be low.

J' ... -':

~rn.---iajmiesiiD

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrauahl l"'n Table W/4 Cholro;

=

GAM I
--

liaR .... 1zis1m ..
a e..s-a. : a a.
ltqd ies as "11le Snltis• plaJ.*

THEYC6.LL IT

SIIW IIDc:.se

Boddlng -Twin 11111 Bot $81, Ful
$11 set.l.. auoon 1141 Sot; 4
Dnlwer .....,._ $44.hj Car Bed's,
Bunk Bed'o, Pcotor BMo. Ful
Une Of Soulhweetem Vaan
S1or11"!1 At $20.00; lncllano Many
Sltopo o ·I S!zoo Stoning At
15.00. Z locotlono ·lloolde Jouto
Auction Or 4 Mlloo Out Mt
Opan I A.ll. To 6 P.ll. Mon -!lot.
Sol Ill nirao 'M" - . I R .
P.e
Ouat 1 Full T... •
Window ahura 1pr. 50"'184'",
1 pr. 100"x54". Ught bluo. Ex.
c~nd •. 22.1 cu. ft. refrigt!rltor.
Konmoro, lldo-by-oldo: Copper· - - E8Mrgo !ergo ...
lor-. wtth loern1klr • lcewatll'. ~ ..,..., ~-- - + o,IIU412lt1L

CLAY R. POLLAN-----

WORD

.

'Senes t. f:t'
II
II]' ( ,.,

' N£~T?

61 Farm Equipment

C..

SOLUTION: "My sexual iconography Is a love 'em and leave
Eddie Murphy.

OUR lANGUAGE

~-JIIIlll-...-.~

5I U•r M itl -

NHZ ' DFJ .

,,

~ L',·~·:)·v::"

I

SGTTCZ ;

GO

-Rearrange letters of the
fou r scrambled word.s befCJw.o to form fou r simple words.

,II!'

e.::.

wza

F W F U · G XC ' D

Edl~d ~y

.u.

SL;DG'

.M .I I

OWDCNJ

P~I0US

-.....•

Equipment
:IP

M

'=~~;~' S@~4tllA-~£tfSII

C8mplng
F

UTI!IIUID

'ftm guyr in a leather suit and wi~h an enlourage." -

I· '-

'

300

Commercial exhaullt tan, $25;

Tttf fl.. Ow. G.ttA,T.

',Mo

"'

• z.

.,

zx.
op41ono,
oao.... c:on
tMIIZ4111 auulll..._

Colhctlbto -FrinkUn King r
F'- Fan- WorlcJI 125, 8'14'2451217, Or 614-441-3230.

..

0~· OH- ····tle,e G.OM~S Tl'le '-.
--=SQUIH f'~OM Tttf TOP Of ~....-.,......._

••
.,

Sl4ll

KGXUT

X II F S X U .L C

IJicll . . . trurall
bu::: p .. m:p..... MWTV,

, _ , 13,200, · -

1117 -

I'll. w· M'

FRANK Al'ID ERNEST

Auto Pena a

----··
a........
·--- ......................
Codlllto deVIlle,
16,1100 - . ....... 13 - -

VJC

.IUYC

V J C I

¥ -26

·-

coll-..~1450.

I

FW, zWXCZD

1

1112.

210 Pt. lls:azlsJI IDiii ....._.

t.nd presen t.

bch''-H• in the~ standi ror aootner. Tod• y'J au.:N equa/.J P.

llooniNi - - 1 0
....
...,Cui.............. .

Now Ook China C..blnoto,
T•btea. Chalrt HutchH, Coffel
Tabloo -End i'abloo, Etc. Alnr
Voltoy Ook Fumhura&lt; Goorgoo
Crook Rd, 114-446-431o.
.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NoWJIJood
Hou- tumlthlng. 112 mi.
J.ntcho Rei. Pt. Pleasant, WV,

._-=c=:·=,--:::====-= :::.::-rw

ly Ito" Liwn caro, Com- : : ....,._ homo, EIIQ!o
114 441 21M. I!011.
ot ~"!'ll~l
rvlco., Wo Do h All, Rkfle, U - · , _ root, fUr- ~~!"'Y lperlmont
,1 ~
a tAl .
- . . . , . tor
~..- - , Ponwerar, 1 _....,_,
ltiOOo
·~vo ..I O - o
. 'Metote T- Sorvlce. Topping, - · · 114'
-..g~"'!ng, Romovol, __,_
.....,
I. Free E• 1'lne hd oom.. two Mth, lui
tfmlioo.114-3117-0U3.
.
... •.... doojl~ 2 - ,....
-eel T• Do: In Homo Nurolng 2 2 - - r •lot Hlgn, pnoo
Cora, In .Homo1 Ro,_.o, · mid '111'0; 114-:)414 loi opf14-ol46o7JUAftor o P.M.
, '-'
~
~....;.;.·--·-__,-

4

pliO, Rt. 7 Nonh, 814-4UI·7414.

2323• .

hour, 1owwt rate, 814-843-!123

C..mlflcal, R"ldlnt lal, Stave:

:::kc;.~ J.r~t.~I~:~Y~

new matel tool bo..t, $12u.i
=3oGarago. 304- 814-112-30711 .., ... 100m. .
T.V. $15; Sllaggo Appllancoo, 711
2 or :llldnro. homo In Rutllnd, Vlno Slraol, Galllpollo, 114-4411depod: &amp; ..._.nee required, no 73111, Or 1-800-49~4tMI.
pola, 66'14-1'l2·21161 after 5pm or
:zo - ,__,_ t/2· """· ~ Bod- 1nyt1me on w..kend•.
AUCTION ISW~:NITURE. 62
~ · Willi Eliictrtc; Wood
3311 Slcond Avo, Galllpolh. 2 Olivo St., GolllpcHo. N- a Uood
- · &amp;oporato CJoroao, Blm. 1 Bedrooma, 1350/llo. • O.polt, tumlhn, heal.,., w... ern &amp; OM Eloctrlc -•21 112 1111d
1111• FrVm -rvlllt ott Rt. C..ll ... Only. 114-446-2411, 614-. Worlt _._ 614-4411-3151.
110, -~·nne After e P.M. 441-:1141.
:.!:6~ u- 40
Wook- Any11rM.
VI'RA FURNITURE
5 Roome; Flrwl Avonue; ~
814-416-3151 Or 11'14-446-4426
Ping pong t•ble I ace 111 g lieL
tlpOth. ott St- Parking, No
DAY SAllE AS CASH
!'ell, Dopooll l RolorancoL OR "90
$30.
304-e71-37S3.
RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
8271Mo.•14-:IM-1121.
.

or &amp;14-143-6281.

Yard Work Wlndowo, Waohoo
Guttoro Cleaned Light Hauling,

75

oltctrlc mower, $2S; 814-112·

~~:O:::;::-::::-;:::::--i;:::;::- . dlr lot, 'l14-.812-782 after Two bedroom hoUM, 1250/mo.,
A &amp; G Landocapo Cara -Mowing,
prlvoto oottlng In Pomoroy, pay
Pruning, Landt&lt;:apo Work. Gary
own utllhloo, 11U85 4251.
.
3A--On3-,Par·
Kopp Coli 814·367·7928 For E.. tlalty Rem J lit lid., NMde Work.
1IIMI:M.
42 Mobile Homes
suoo. 614-371-2442.
DoiOf and Bobcat work, by tho
lor Rent

'Qenerll Maintenance, Palntlng 1

LA ouho. King llzo woter bod,
$100 ...... 304'175-&lt;4587.

Chramo bruoh guord, 845; I~

41 Houses for Rent

·

Move under or

Household
Goods

pod epeaker 11t1ndl: $10 uchi

Re11tals

G1r11ge, Fll'lpiiCI, 1 112 Bath,
Electitc Hut Pump, CA, Llrge
lAvel Lot, Loe~tM In A Nice

Subdlvltlon Wl!hln Golllpollo
Chy School Dlotrlct, Cl- To
~~ I Shopping Aroaol
. 11387.
.
tiiCI-ry, OIIDortufthy For Ad- I
nncement.. 9tnd RHurM To: 11110 Clay1on Soctlonol, hoot
CLA 2111, c/o Galllpollo Dally
Trttouno~.,~5 Third Avonuo, Go~ ~mp, . .II, • - bollr-, two
Nt~W, . "'-ted on lot In· Rllclne
llpoh. "" 45831.
.
nice,
near echoola, very
$30,000, 114 Ml 2203 ..- IMMlkl
moo.
monoyl
Frw olght - k job preparation 148-2045.

-=

Build Combined
your - ol•on101100.
- · In2
tole.

MOOOSIC
TO MY EARS !!

Merchandtse

Knol moblto ' home, 2
bdrm., muol bo ......r from lol
614-W2-3021 or 114-112-71C!7.
1112-26104.

BOSSIE?

Traitor Lot Whh Bam Pond, 7
MIIM Fram Galllpod~••.•WIIIr
Paid. 111...._ 114-251-uoo.

Sl

1112 Schult, two 'nd"OOm, 814-

Salol:

46 Space lor Rent

Ftl-, 141M. a BR,
9:::. condftlon.
$6500. 30,H75-

-

OH It THArS

. SORE THROAT
THIS MORNIN',

•S.

lite flll!r"s tide

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Arouse • Limbo • Unity • NefJ(IIe • I was BORN
Smart coed: "You flunked the history exam!" Not so
snwt coed: "I know. But all the quastions were about
tltii:tgs. that happened before I was BORN."
Cl ~ TV Detal Tacht

I

iMi LP.

Ft Worth. TX

APRIL 261

�•

~By~ The Ben~

The Daily Sentinel
Page-10

The _do's and .don't'~ - ofpurchasing
OW All leldn I live Jn a
, . . . . ill Flarldl. and • . .
!lUmber of Nortllemen are c:omlna
dowa 110 buy IJI*III*II condominl·
11111111111 hom&amp; My condo Ia up for
llle, lllld I bave complied a lilt of
dol and don'u ror prospoc:tlvo
buyen:
·- I. Do not brinJ Ilona 111other
. couple (the .mavena). You are the
bu)'el' ·
· 2. Do not check Oullll apartment
for • friend. II WUIII lime, 11\d

nadliJii Ia pined.
3. Do not blrllill If you don't

latend ID buy.

•

OPENING NIGHT • Pict11red ready ,for tWr

·fila•

performa!lce Ia '~&lt;:r.••••• Nlallt" part
"EveaiDa or Tbta ' at Melp Hllll Scllool•
Friday at I p.m. are: Mated, 1-r, Milly S..._

4. Keep IJIIPOintmcnll or alve a
callllld CIIICOIIf yOU can't make it.
It wW be peatly appreciated.
5. Do not complain about ~·
colon or decor - Juat 11y lt'a not
wbat you'nJ1QOidna for.
6. •Do
., not II)', "I wDI pt blck
li IDf
)11u, " you bavo no lnten on o
doina iL It Ia 10 much nicer ID 11y,
"Thank rx'· but it im't what I had
in mind.
7. Remember, you are In aome·
one'a home. Do not open cloiellllld
drawenwilhoutuklnapennlaalon.
8. Do not alt down llld take up
the aeller'a ,lime if you aren't really
illterelted. Thla Ia not aiOCial villt.
II. Don't II)', "I bavc ID uk my
children," unleuthey ate PIYinlfQr
It, or you areaenlle,
10. Do not uk apeclflc pricea on

•

•

Ann

In hil claaa.
1 live IIi New leney, and ·
children's bil1hday paniel 111 a bli
aD
bulinell: They are held In reatau·
rants, beauty parlon, craft lhopl, etc.
You can ovon bW a birthdaY party
caordinaa. You mggt book dw!le
placel ~evenl monlhl In lj!lvance.
IIJid the coat Qn be .ull:iOI)Oinica I'
· die pho!lo. 1be approximate price II think lhia Ia ~.
'
In the no~apapor ad, and It'•
I havea 4-year-old 1011, 11\d we've.
neaotlable.
.
been ioin&amp; 1D IIIJ)er·flllc:y birthday
I 1, If you ue lonely or depreaaed, parlioJ l'ar lluee yean. How clld thll
don't ~ 10 real 11t111 ldl u
llmacy aeurarted'l
·
"lherlpy: Calla paychlatrilt.
What happona wbcn the child pti
12. Do aot expect the aeUer 10 older llld ~ehlevea eomethlna ,.all)
hold-the Jll*ibi!OIIIor coodo for~ lmpollllit? WW the J*OIIIIthen hire
than 2-i hOun without a depoliL
Yankee Stadium? .. OUT· OF
13. Do not ut 111o aeUer ID rent HAND IN NBW JBRSBY
·
instead of sell •. Look under
DI!A.R N.J.: I aaree with you
"Jlentail.'
totally I "ViaiJ birthday -..lao ror
...
.-- '
.14. Do Ilk if thele II I mortpp. . IIIII are' .for
the parenll, not
die ld~
15. Do Ilk how much the malnil· It remlndl me or the limo I aaw 1
nance llld ~es are.
2-year-old 1anore 1 S200 toy and
16. Do alk when the home 11 lllay for houn with a plo tin lllld a .
available. ·
homemade raa doll. I learned
Sorry 10 make you read IIUCh a -aomethl.na that diJ·
lona lilt, Ann, but thoae are thlnaa · A1111 La11d~r 1 /at111. boolc/11,
lbat peq~le need to know ... JEAN "Nulfets alld Door/11," lltu '""""
(TAMARAC, FLA.)
tlli11g from till ONII'diiOUit, fiwt'1·
DBA.R Jl!AN: No lilt Ia ~ 10111 to till p()lg/14111/y INtgll(ul. S111d a
1r It educate~ people. Yo1111 did, and te/faddrltlld, hmg, biUiwNiu
I thank you,
·
IIIVIIoJH alld a clllck or IIIDMY.or·
. Dear Anu l.anden: I feol the urfor SJ (t!W hltludlt po11a11 llltd
aame way as "Partied Out In lullldl111g) 10: Nullftl, clo Allll Lall·
Buffalo,' whose kid. received dirt, P.O..Bo% 11562 •.ChJcaBo, Ill.
.
.·
. 60611-0562. (Ill Callfida, telld $6,)

Community Calendar

..

-.

MONDAY
POMBROY • 'I'M Melp County Veterans Service Commission
wUI moot Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

•

REEDSVILLE ·. The Bastern
Local OAPSB Chapter will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the high
school cafeteria.

Lona Botto!TI. Pastor Steve Reed
inviteathe public.
POMEROY • BcUea 111d Beaus
Weatem Square Dance Club will
sponsor an open dance Wedneaday
from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oak
Resort. Oary Shoemaker,
Sevierville, Tenn .. will be the
caller.
MlDDLI!PORT • Middleport
Litenu)' Club will meet Wednesday
at :;. p.m. at tile Meigs County Pub·
lie Library. Mrs. Richard Owen
wiD review "A Vision of Light" by
Judith Merld9 Riley. For roll call,
tell of a ".woman of vision."

also explained tho work of the
Child Welfare Foundation. She
1111ed the Vcterans Children Home
·in Xenia c:onlalns 75 percent of vel·
era ria children. She also reported
from the American Legion Flrina
Line that the San Franclaco Euminer stated ihlt ·the 0. S. lntcllf,
gencc Aaencios have determined
that Libya is building an i)nderaround w"-pons plant lbat can pro:
ducc and atoro poisonous gas. Lor·
rene Ooagins, president, sla~d that
the food drive for the homeless wu
a great success. This was given to .
the Cooperative Ministry in
Pomeroy.
Lu~ Hampton, legislative chairll)an stated that tho Leaionalres
face moro chaUengea than 111ytime
since the oraanlzation nearly 7S
)'0111 •ao with the cutbacks in theii;
defense posture and closing or mit:;
itairy bases.
l'he' mccling closed with prayer
by Annette Johnson and the sanfllng
o1' "America."
•
A roast beef dinner was served.
by Mrl. !loss.
.
.
The hOSJCII for the nc1tt meeting
will' be Dorothy Casey of Oallipo·

lis.

CC League nominates officers :

MIKE'S CASE • ''Mike'a Cue" will .~ Jl~
seated durlna "Aa Evalnfl of Theatre" at~
Hlab Scbool ·oa Friday at I' p.m. by tbe selllor
drama students or Cella McCoy. Pictured, k,
are Heather .Franckowiak, Heather Paaley1

&amp;...

c....._ a,_ S,e•cer, Mila Hail,

-..,=; I II Na$ • llloy
-Sl;:r·' J'7..•
,,.c.
,...,.,., ,COI!rt•
W, Carle I ..... ab COIUI aad
I

IIQ

c

.....
j '

TUESDAY
CHESHIRB • The OIIUI·Melgs
Community Action Aaency will
Officers-were·.nominated at the
hold a free clothina day Tueaday recent meeting of the Middleport
from 9 Lm. to noon at the old hlah C~ild Conlervation Leaaue held at
s&lt;:hool building In Cheshire.
lhc Rockaprlngs United Methodist
Church.
.
RA CINE ·• The R80 Ine Atea ' Nom. lnated
_ for ihc 1993·94 YW
Community Organiwion wiD meet 10 b
1 s
... Ka h
Tueldr%. at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
c,:gan n cptem""r arc I Y
~arst, ~sldent; Unda Broderick,
Park· ew mom..__
..... are we1come.
v1ce-pres1dent; Nancy Mo~. !"·
retary;
Blacks!Dn, h1stonan;
RACINE • Tho Middleport PeJIY Helen
Harris, reporter; Kelll
Pomeroy Branch of the AAIJW S111der, treuurcr.
·
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. it tho
President I:-inda, Broderick
Racine United Melhodiat Church.
opened
the meeung Wlt.h the Pled~c
Quilted wall hanaina winner will
of
AII~Fiance
and the "Mother s
be announced. Prayer.
Roll call w.a~ ans~ered with
. RBBDSVILU! • Butern LoCal each
member 11vmg theu "Hope of
Board of Bducation, apeclal meet·
World
Devclop.m_ent." Thank you
ing, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the hilh
notes
were
~c1ved from Ken 111d
school to discuss personnel mat;
Pegay
Harr1s
and Anile Brlckles.
lei'S.
Devof,lons, "~rayor for a Days
· RACINE • Special mooting, Walk, wore 11vcn by Pegy Har·
flOfS
Racine Lodge No. 461 FAAM,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Annual Inspection. Work in ihe entered apprentice degree. Refreshments:

Tops ho.

weekly loser

LORA SAYRE

MA"ITIIEW ADD5S

Hundt.eds of chil~n toddicrs .· National. Children's D ' .H .' li
.
'
Month m f'ebruuy.
and t~n• thro.ughout t~e country Ped' tric Denlilts 11..,.•• t 1ia
11
participated in the American
.
.
........, ..._..
Academy df Pediatric Dentistry's from lbeu OWIIb;alannual art contest.
awareness prr&gt;IIIOIIOIIS. Eacla Jal'
It is held In observance of all place .w-JMcn reoci~ • ••
•

s,.._... . ,...

•
Cl ub revzews

Helen Hayes reviewed lhe book

"A
Year In Saigon'" by Katie Kelly
at the recent meeting of the Mid-

dlepon Literary Club atlhe home
of Beulah McComas with Jane
Regan serving u hostelS.
This book is a Jouchina and
com.pelllngmemoirofayearspcnt
· in_ VieJnam teach ina Amerasian
children, In 1990, Ms. Kelly quit
her job with NBC, lathered what
· few educational suppliea that she
. c.ould find and new to Saiaon .
'I'Mre she wu confronted with the
reality of entire families living
under deplorable conditions. Here
were children barely edating yet
eager to learn. Hor involvement
with her atu4ents went far beyond
· Engllth
leaaons.. She
~came , a$
.
.
'

.

'

. S .
ear zn
. algon,

'V
.1.

they called ·her, ~dtier Alaerit:M
Mother.'" She wu
by dlil:r
cheerful spiritanddleiiranac?esile
to come to the U11iled Stas _.
persuc the Amerieaa ~.
mcludin1 that ,IJIOil duli1le * of all findin.l their Aillericaa ·
fatherJ.
Mart.h* Hoover, ~
conductod _the mwi• wllidl..
. opened wid! the~c:oUru.
Proareu reports 'Wae
.. aboui Cl~ E.rwia, leal
and Eldred Paa10111.
Eleven· me11bers lid IIIICC
gue11s, Emmaline J'raU, Beldall
McComu ad Sisler P'd re lldl,
anawered roll Clll 'Will •A F•

IIIIIWd

tr•

But~ dealinalion;·

·

ris.
·.
Nancy Morria presented a.
sprltual proaram. Each member,
,took J!ll'l in tho proaram, "Prayen
and Prayon Answered." Mrs'/
Brod'.'"'Ak III''A . "Praver 1' uk1'nf
"""
""'
' "'
and receiving. It is taUdna wit ·.
Oad, It Is making a "'nueat known:
unto Him In faith-:' The Lord
instructs to ask, seek and knock'
and lllthin~rs arc possible when
!his is done ,,.
Tho boitess gift was won by .
Kitty Darst 111d the travellna prizil
was won by Nancy Morrl 1 ;,
Hoatessea Linda Broderick and,
Nancy Broderick aorved a deiiCI't'
.course.
Next month Ellen ROuflhl of
Mothers Againlt Drunken Drivera.
will be the aucst speaker ·
•
Four members of Mlddlepor.t
Chllci.CoiiiOIValion Club are pl1111•
ninf to attend tho South Contra.!.,
S~nn~ Conference In llodney on ·
Fnday.

.

,

A

Pomeror.

OF CASH

·as

BEJ. JER'·

A

Complete M,.al/surglcal Cart ·
for No11, and Throat Including
Asthmci, Altrgy &amp;Hearing Aids

'•

John A. Wade~ M.D. ·

OF STifF

•

-~

·992-21J6

I

.

'

'

Low toDigbt In 4011. Clear.
Wednesday, 111nny, high In 70s.

41787

•

..

•

•

.

.

a -I

e

Vol. U, NO. 2A
•11111111111118 Inc.

''

1 S.Cilon. 10 Pt~~M 25 oenta
AMulllmec.. lnc. Ne• p·p1r

Pomeroy,Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprll27, 1993

'.

·council feels FmHA b·est way.to fun&lt;J Hobson ·project
' By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
fum, several moothJ ago on putting jeciS .and that additional suppleSeatiDel Newa St8Jr
water and aewer ·aervicc into exist- . menwy sources of money would
How 110 pay l'ar exlellding Mid· ing homes iD tbat area u well as be needed. He suggested ibat Issue
dlepon's water and sower system providing service for future Indus- 2 monies or Community Developin'to the Hobson area which was uial. development. That
sot mont Block "--g
..m.
..,,.., ~~ be a -..
annexed iato the village soveral the COlli for warer • $168
lllld plemenwy aource o funding for
years ago - diac~ at Mmday acwcr, $239,000.
the projecL
Several pioposals for fundina
-Revltalbatioll
night's ~g of Middleport Vii·
lage Council.
·
were diiC'Issed, including issu111cc
Since Middleport's revitalize·
Mike Strotb of SBA Consul- of bonds by the village, grants
'
' tants,1Kbon, who is woddng witb through agencies like the Ohio
the village on another sower p(o- Department of Development and
ject, met with Council ID discusa Farmers Home Adminislratioa. It
possibili~ for financing the Hob- 'wu .the general consensus that
1011 ~
FmHA wu die beat SOia'CO _10 pur·
,
SttOth and Council talked about sue at this lime altb=! was
a study completed by Floyd G. IIOied by Mayor Fred
ibat
, 'BI'OWIIO Anoda!N, 811 cnglnecring FmHA doea 101 totally fund pro-

•=

B oalid
adopts ne. . .'
polz•c·.y

A new regulation regarding a
$SO fee for cutting off water service after iegular working hours, ·
weekends, and holic:ays hu been
adopted by the Middleport Board
of Public Affairs.
AccordiDg to the new regulation, If a customer U. no shut-off
valve and must call the water
ciCparancnt after hours to have the
water shut off at the meter duo ID a
-leak or for any other reasop, a
charge of $SO will be usessed on
the fOllowing monthly bill.
However, If the customer doea ·
not have a shut off valve a1 ibe acrvice !inC and iristalls a valve during
.the time tbe wa1er II sbul off, then
the$SO fee will be waived.
AccordingiD a directive from
the board, all C~IO!IJ"" allo~l!!
lufve sliut::Olr¥81\oei on·their'service lines In order ID be able to shut
. off their own water in case 'of an
Tb~ policy hu been
· lo encourage cllllonlcrS to
shut-off valves on tbeir scrOUI'STANDING EDUCATOR. Ed Bartell, r1t11t.- - • · •
Iy ree••nl•• by till Melp Local Board f/1 Ed!Kidiia tor bella ID
outltudlaa edaator lit)' the Melp Local Board of Edaailoa.
Here 'ai II CIOIIII'Uidated by Job Hood, boud
ButeRa Is
iDYOIYed wldl t\e Lead Taaer Project, tile RaraJ Sdloola DemOIIstrado• Project aid tbe.State Deparlllleat K·ll Mathematics
Coune of Study Project.

-ber.

lion was OOt funded this year by the
Ohio Depanment of Development,
the need for a strategic plan for
development of the down10wn area
·
as a pre I'1mmary
to next year •s
applicalion was discussed.
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
from 11m Hartzer who has wcRed
on another village project, offering

to prepare a downtowp strategy Middlepon Community Associaplan for $3,800. He said bis plan · tion, met with Council to discuss
would Include reasonable goals for co~c~s of that aroup ~bout revidevelopmont, suggestions on ways tahzauon as well as h1s concern
to fill SIOrefronts, along with assis· about the general lack of suppon
tance in preparin~ next year's • which the community gives to local
application. Council did not take busmesses.
action on the proposal.
'
He asked for ideas on how to
- Tom Doo!ey, president of the
Continued on page 3

.

RECOGNIZED • Ia early April blall wiDdl
daml'pd tbe Salem Center School bulidiDa. A
HCtioD Ill the I)'IIIDUlUDI roofwu ~off the
buUdila. School cuatiDuad, however, wltb the
stair aervlaa meall Ia the clauroo1118, ud other
activities uSually ba1cl In the IJIIIDISium beiDg
moved to otlier areu. Monday moralactbe
~n- alld oilier IJtall' at tbe-sehool:wve ~­
oplzed for their dedication ID coat1Dul11 tbe
educatloaal proceaa aader adverse c:ondltlo...

Eaeb one Wll preaeated I persoaal letter of
appreciation. Ia tbe flrotiP were left to rl1bt,
Croot, Jolm Hood, Melp Lac:al Board •-ber;
Carroll JoliDIOD, Saady Napper, Shirley Vaa
Meter, Darl4 Keuedy, Mary O'Brlea; second
row, Jim Carpeater, Melp Local saperiDteadeat; BI'IID Zirkle, Rita Simmons, Llta Joaes,
Sandy Wal!;er, Larry Rape, Meigs Board presldeat, aad LIDda Stobart. Conale Gilkey 'II'IS aot
present ror the' picture.
.

.

Rape victim may;.~not have been first target ·
By KEVIN PINSON

Boanl mcmbon reiainded cus·
iomers that it is illegal for them to
tamper with water meters or shut

OVP Newt Staff

It appears the Jackson County
woman abducted, raped and shot
off valves at the meter. This, three limes last week may not have
acc:ordiDito a spokesman, causes .. been -the alleged rapists' first
damage ID the meJers and persons · attempL
.
cauaht doing this are subject to
An investigator with the Gallia
fines, according to village ordi- County, Sheriff's Department said
nance.
·
Monday the department has
The installation of shut-off received Jwo reports of women
valves on all service lines willpro- who were pulled over in a similar
vide fiillnclal Mvinpto the village . manner within the past two weeks.
by limiting the need to 1;!111 out a
Two female University of Rio
water depariment emp~ ID shut G~ students pvc descriptions
off service. Damage to meter con- wh1ch matched Vmcent H. Vamey,
nections by customers illeRally . 23, RL I Ewlngton, and,Gregory S.
sbuaing off water valves will be Pickeas, 27, 12283 S.R. 160, ViDeliminated.
ton, as the men who pulled them
Valve lnsrallarion, according to over two weeks ago, die invcstiga·
the bolld, will also be beneficlalto tor said.
·customers who can Immediately
Varney and Pickens, two former
sh• off their olW wlller upon the Ollila County sheriff's deputies,
disc:ovel)' of a leak saving dollars were amigned last week for kidon their monthly bills.
napping and rape.

'the.women, wbo were in the
same vehicle, told deputies they
were pulled over by two mon driving a dark blue or black sedan.
.
The men IOld the women they
were undercover officers. When
the WOIIICII asked 10 see identifiCII·
iion, lhe two mon IWU'IIcd to their
vehicle and left.
Deputies checked the area after
the complaint was flied, but were
unable to locate either the vehicle
or the suspects, the investigator
said.
'
The vehicle allegedly used in
the abduction/rape/shooting is a
dark blue 1980 Chevy Malibu
Classic, he added.
About one week ago, !he depanmcnt received a second repon from
another woman who said a dark
colored car usiDg a nashing dash
light attempted to stop her.
When the woman pulled into
her.own driveway, the following

vehicle reporre&lt;!ly turned off itS
emergency light and continued on,
the inVCSUgaJOr said.
She was stopped before the rape
was reported, but did not file a
complaint with the depanmmt unlil
local media released the rape story.
The woman was unable to give
a description of the driver, he
added.

ProsecuJing Attorney Brent
SaUIIders said there is a possibility
that additional chargea may be flied
once illl the evidence is coUectod
and the investigation is compleied. ,
Local law enforcement agencie$
reported they have not experienced
any difficulues making routine traf.
fie stops since the report of the
alxluction.
,
Gallia County Sheriff James n;
Taylor said his de~ent rarely
uses 111l11ll1rked vehiCles for pulling
drivers over. When a unniarkeil
· Continued on page 3

OU president Charles]. Ping announces retirement
·

·

~Hf.:i ~.!:~~first
time be saw the Ohio Univenity
18 years Aero
· ''It is such 1 lovely
·
· •
·
a1mo
. st ~ Ideal umvemty sctbD!J
with a StmP\CRell for. life and yet !!

. CIIIIDWI more than

=

W. VIRGINIA:

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Tho Mei11 Soil
111d Water Conservation District
board of supervi sou will ' meet
Wedneaday at 8 p.m. at the Meip
SWCDOfficc.
.

s._....

04••••

Pick 4:

·,

Sharon Mallon wu beat weekly
loser and Trina Paulk wu runner
NICOIASSCIDIEIDER
•
up at the recent meelina of 'Ohio
COUNTY
MAPS
'
"
'
TOPS Club No. S70.
IN' STATE BOOK
,.
Beat KOPS loser was Llnnie
A booll cpntalninr aU of W~~
Aleshire and belt teen loaer wu Vit,W.'o &amp;&amp; county mopo it avlilable.'
cd~fi -• samM.auuuwS.
.......... .
Heidi Delong.
.
Prlntod on i 8x12 Inch doublo IPI'Nl..
Virginia
Whitlalih
won
the
fruit
.
P•r•.
••h county h11 1 IIJ)Irl\t mop&lt;
. c.a.. Jri1e d rr·
·
POMEROY • The Melaa Coun·
The
book
conljlino 144 p&amp;Jtl. ..
•;'
basket
and
Maida
Lona
won
the
LonaS.,.•eeilfMb-aradcr at ty !If)' lirO hydrant committee will
Tho
etate'e
84,242
mll11
of
roado
oro
J11iDr Hip School. She ineet It tho Melaa Soilllld Water gadaet gift.
In clelail. Towne, cltiM •nA
Donna Jacks wu honored with thoW!I
is tlic , 1 ol J.W. 1. s
Conservation D1stricl Office on
v1Ut811 ore indued and IOc.ltd. ond
or Rati.£ nd 1helate Ric::: Wedneaday at 6:30p.m. All mem- glfu from the other membera for thoro It much addllion~l inlormulon. T~
Mill Sprinatime.
Sayle.
ben uraed to abenc1.
.
order Wut Vitlinlo County Mop book ~
ttnd 1!4.86 !price lncludta dalivtrH
Plana
for
a
fund
rail«
l'ar
Area
Flrcltlnr wr er
VISA and MootarCord accopltd .
~ecoanltion Pay weio diacussod
Mlullew Addis iu second wi;~g =~J: s:n~ and the aecretary and woiah t
Mako chocko payabla 10
-•
aada • W , . ZW EJementary. p m at Faith PuU n-1 :JIYarch repc1111 were given.
CouaiJ Mapa
lie is tlic- ol Clltlyl Addis of · · ·
·
"""""" Chi
•
&amp;21 Putll Plaoo
. ,
The.JOUP meets every Tueaday
Ly.ndoa BlaUoa, WI 63164 · •
at the (;I!Jlenterl Hallin
1808IIJM.Iill
.
H 1 Alr ....luw .
Hlllftl'IU
Other
olltto
avallablo:
AR.
FL.
IN,
New
members
aro
alwaya
we
•
Ni ' Sot ·w is i fleabman
IUM'UL
KY. Ml, 1'/C. OH, ~A, SC. _ ~nd TN . '
come.
aOIIiiA( ;:Heltdie1011 of
X.. II. S&amp;- File! Davilon.
. s993 . . 1l?Je4411icelellrllioll of
·· ~~a; I0?'4'1D l:illflalth
-~
·
'
I
...... 1k tbe-. rcw- ~··
~ar,
abwi• r -~oa¢epatb!D
7 r 1'lle ...... ror
Till II
die
Cftlllt is 10 ..cwlde an
111M ·
·
·10 SW
awa 1 111
P P ,....,.,.... 1111111.
Dr. Jol!au Jorpun .11 the
Clliil
ror.Hillionll Cbild'ml's
Suite 112 Valley Drive
I·
D1 ne eetltll Moatll for Oatua
Pt. Pleaant WV
0 ~ Ae a. qriv• P'JICiice
~ ~-~;_
.••is hitld to pediatric
.Ca11304-675·1~ for appL odnfonnalion

_ Dentistry art contest winners named

750

Page4

L derS

Contribudons were made to the dent, opened the meeting in ritual·
Child Welfare Foundation Habllat, istic fonn.
U.S.O. and Radio Free Burope
Florence Richards, children 111d
when the Lcwil Manley Unit Auxi- youth chainnan gave reports. She
Iairy 263, American ~eglon mot · reported that parents should teach
reccndy at lhe home of Bdlth Ross, children. 10 beware of strangers.
Pt. PIWIIIt, W.VL
She spQII:o of teenage suicide, dnig
• Helen .Culmer, first vlce-preJI· abuse, child abuse and crime. She

Commualty Calndar Item•
appear two daya before aa eveat
and tbe day of tbat eveat.Jtems
muat be received weD In advuee
to aasure pubUcatloa In tbt cal·
endar.

Pick 3:

blrlhday l!lviraliona from every child

Auxzlzary reviews recent donations
l

Ohio Lottery

Bartrum to
speak with
NFL Chiefs

Monday, April ~6, 1993

•

seiilili _

~· ~= m !he~

-

·:
SUPER CUSTODIAN· Ted Hatfield, rlpt, II ca ldwed a
, Melpl.-1 Sdlool Dllbk:t..,.. CIIIDIM Ill ...... fllncopls
d• t o W die boud -bare awmtlded
far perfor-.
ma- 01 bll "'mmqae" .... Nat Ollly lloel be do ......... jllllllorlll
. jobl, be atokea the ~1 fltruca by da)', bub It at llalit, aad
~-the aaatlt
•liWIII tile • ..... Here LaiTy
IIOir!l prn~ ~~ lladllld wlio- pre·
~eated wldll~ teaer rr- the......_

·:'a.,., :r.:

=;.-

*

Wages, salaries up 3.5 percent

re;: r

u. 18~~
1994
"i ~ · aed ~ ~ Inter:

Dllional :._..
P'na 62 ·d he ill retire
bec~so 'or ~~ prob~s relaled
10 shonldrz llld bloe ailments.
Uadel' Plq, Ohio U. created lhe
School of OSJeOpathic Medicine;
wblcb bas beea credited wltb
increuing the .aumber of famBy~tic:e and primlry-Qre docliOrl
mibeiiiiC.
'l'bo BdiiOn ADimal BiotecliiiOIOIY Ceaier provided reaearch in
Mlmal pi avlicina and IIIIICicd
private ClOIIII*Iiea to lllllbt otb6r
r 111 m:ll at die c:eater.
Tile UDivenity'l CoalelllpDrlll')'
History In~Jilllto 111d !be SIOCter
IDt and
Ceb·
tho ......
lily's llaimdulel by bDOdlq 11e1
with aenral aclloola overaeu, ·.
JIK!lw!ID\:
for
teadi.. ~lb 1!1
City,

WASHINGTON (AP)- Amer· lion ID a 3.S pen:em iDcrelie, tbo
.iciD ....... ...... lllllriel and smallett
Janauy-Dec:ember
~mae 3.5 pen:entln tbc ,_.
ad¥IIICO aiDce • 6.6 pe!Ciilll jaap Ia
'eadod Warcb 31, allahtly falter -1982 wbea tbe index- bepn:
.diiD the rate of overall lnfladoa. . In advance or tbe repon,
the jpiYGIIIIMIIU llld today.
~onomlau at New Yort'a Mit~
_ ne Labor De!llilmliilllld 111e iUblabl Blllk wnito ill lbolr Weekly
iRCIUII iD Ita !inploy-1 Colt Econoatk -Indicator Report dtat
India, c
one of till belt :'tile bolt ..Uilllll on c:onlniQina
• • • fiiMII' WIMW ... WEI, emr.loyeo CCiatlls JaraeJy beblnilm
_
IIIIIICI
_
.
SloWed l'ftlm ibe 4 Jlllaa&amp; lllcn age us. •
a~eadllr.
The Mitaablabl economllta
CG
'I' prlcel1011 3.1 per· . noll1d thalia early I"O,Ialiar 1iD1t1
te8t cl1lrtq die 12 IIORthS Ollded '
riaiDa at I rapid S.5 pen:ent J.....
"OIIio
Uliverlity
II rldi~
Mlldt31.
.
pace bat tTiea aloWed llecaDae of
....
ore•t
...
-.or
.
Poi-CCIIII
till flrlt qua::'t~-t~ the u..t oldlo let I "
. 4il.Mi lll.ctlatDr•..W1
IIMIIt
mae 1.2
SUIJ, dill do DOt_Upect IDy
. dllllbe.U ,. I'IMh..-IDtbe rapid ........... lhiJ OQIICt ' -• - ADd I dllat it can ride dill
JiDII*-•
1111 ,I.'O'M•,_. pace D bolilll
waw lata 811 m:1t1111 - CWIW·
abolt 3.5 jWt I
. - ry,"PIIJIIIid.
~..,':tlri=r~~
Bill Jlma . . . M I wllen

srate fundiD is dwindling.
Provost David Stewart to a two"I thiJ the bli$ic problem is year term ~s provo~t. to replace
how you b~ild a stable ~nd .~de· ~~~ Bthe~!~ ~·
.
quate base m state fundjng, he
·.. ~ .BIJI!Om a pres!·
said. "lust when you reach a point ~nt ,to~ ~lies m Julr. !9?4,
of snbility the sra1e cuts funding
thiS mtenrn appomtment will giVe
Funding · 'dri
b the po!iticai · the new president six months to
realities l:f th~e~a/base and the review orpnizati9flal sa:ucture and
demilnda on that base ••
to make judgmeniS on lhe provost
Pina said he tim~ his retire- posilion," Ping said.
ment 10 onawe effective tranSition
"'!he sesn:h IIR~ ~reening. profor the new president and for the
cess.~ mlft than limply ~g a
scarth ID appoint a provosL
· president. The process 1s a rare
In l811UIIY, Ping appoinleil Vice opportunity for the campus com·

T==

RaoQit
WI=?Piu...,...

u.,..

aaivenl.f...=tter

·....

~·

caalltleiE ...

a.,...,...

...

WALKAMBIUCA WINNEilS...:. Mare tUa
UO walken ,.._ Ga_Ria, Malp ••d Muoa
~~
Mardi oroa. Trt·
Coaty a•AIMrb S1l8daJ Ia Po1at Pmut,

lllwtlilhdtto . . . tllewalkiftlhcl
vlliey
Jf••tlta? Welte•
C. Polat Pa t... Seer
oad 111111 Tlilrcll'llct
two rJ~ llllk
W.VL

•*'-*_...
.., ..... " ...
c....
I(

..-Yell

~-

munity to ~ome !Dg~ther •.review
the st~te of th,~ bm':erslty and
asse~g~~~:~ a~esS:~r absence
.

.

dunngthe 1?9'1•9;i.acadennc year
before retummg td the clasaroomat
the university as Trusllle Profeasor
of Philosophy .and Edncatioo: .
He also w1D help estab!Uh the
reccndy ~wed Ping ~btutc for
ihe TeachmR of Hu1J1811ibes and the
proposed,Cuder ~holars ~.
wh1ch will prov_tde financtal s~pport for ou~tanding students.

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