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                  <text>Ohio

Ex-Syracuse
football coa~h
dies at 83

IVIRSARY SALE
DEL MONTE

STORE HOURS
.Monday thru Sunday

SQUEEZE
CATSUP

8AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

28 OLBOTTLE

298 SECOND ST.

Pick 3:·
860
Pkk4:
6023 .
Super Lotto:
1-17-18·22-24-U
Kicker:
244165

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POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
"SUI.,
25 THRU MAY 1, 1993

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VaL U, NO. 1 '
llultlnolda Inc.

Additional mental health levy
may be on Meigs ·Nov. 2 ballot

$239

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49
Cubed .Steak. . . . . . . .
LB.

USDA SELECT ·BONELESS .BEEf

· CAMPBELL'S'

CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP
10.75 Oz. Cans

s

s1~
$189

9

Oi. ,..

LONGHORN .COLBY

ch

STUIIPING

., wll-

MaJW

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...._._ .... C
dmn JobD Blaettllllr ere,.ref.- de
pulfor by the Street Lilbt ·
·l.fty Ct •!nee. (Sftliael pboto by Jim Free·

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laws

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Twodri~~a~-iDjulediia••
Wd .., • +Mia
Chester ToWIIIhip, tbe GaJiia.l'rip Pml ~-die S.. JliPwly
· Patrol reponed.
·
'Sheny A..Nc tJOW,-46,1' • W.Va..-•
'i•*••h
coaiiiSions llld Pi ~ rn.. Jfuba " li" C
.a L,.e R.
Tayla was llald lur alia IM'Id •-+Irs ••
'lila Vetil'·
ans Mem&lt;Xial Hospibl, hi1 · ',.,.. Slid dlis • • • &amp; Badl
_ _ , 'uz
-.
Ur..:-(1
J" li Ill Scr-•
women were _u•.....-_ • ) ._ 2 JC
vice.
,
According to the repon, 1'1
-•NM 'ca Slab:
Route 7 when Taylor, wllo was JOI• •ca 0
1 Ra.I2S,
attempted to~ S.R. 7 ~ S.R. 248 _ . - Sl!aCk by Nailz!ing.
Tayler was cited ror faikR ID ,illld. J' diiC"s a ' i l e tained moderlle dliiDICC ..S Taylor•s
• 'lawy, diphljng
damage. Both vd!ldes IOiial a- l k - .
•
The pa1101 a11o in·; ia h llliaar deer- a 7· k a• · 7 1ilrsday ev...nna in u - T~ '·
·
~ ~·~ w3 1~,. 1ill L ,....., 39, RGIIIe 2
.Vinton, was nortbboUIId aa SIIIC :a- 32S
Sl!aCk ..S
killed the deer.
No injwies were iqKIIIed. Tile vdlidi:
li&amp;fll" gr;
and was driven from die-..
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Grapefruit. . . . . . . ". . .. .
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BRgUGHTON;s

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2 ~ Mllk. . . . . ~··············GAL

BROUGHTON'S .

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Cottage Che~se. .24 oz. .
DOERGENT

·

Ultra nde. . . . . . . . . 42 01. Reg./47 Oz.

$299

G~NCO ~~~~~--. ~- 2 .s1

5

Sh~

NOODLES

Service wiU be disrupted

Ice Cream. . . . . . .HALF GAL

$ 09 GROUND

.•

1 . BEEF
99( $1490
'·

ORE-IDA REG. or CRINKLE CUT

Thefti uJUler imrestigtlliml

GROUND

....

3/$1~~~ 4~~Lls

79c

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

=~~.:·:.-r;:-

10 LB. PACKAGE

DAIRY LANE

BATH· TISSUE ·

.

· Lcadiq Creek Cm • 1 Diaticl'l llllil!ntri&lt;iccz ca Sllle
Route 124111d Towlllllip a.l 321ill Salall Tow ·) wil becbrupted SIIUiday in Older 1D I pin wal:u .a lila a lk b •
I
plant. Cu110111en em. 0
1 R..t I (Mel'•• a. Jtmd) 1D

mately 9 a.m. to S p.m.

MUEWR'S OLD FASHIONED

CAT FOOD .

..-a

-16 OZ. CAN

159

10J5

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ARGO
PEAS

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ShlrllflllieiSa ,., . .'... Datid...,,Pd
' the theft ole-a law
a a , . . ,._-ill 1 ·' c. Dsftd
WiiFilmi,OikHiliiS I l . . aa.:llj' 7allil . . . caWalr
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96

Clerlc ~ Hobsletter.

S~uthern board OK's contracts
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Ms. Montgomery said the
House-Senare ComctionallnstituticJDs IDspeclion Commiuee would
tistentoallsidesinitsinvestigation
of the 11-day standoff tbD month at
die Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility, One guard and nine
inmales died during the siege,
"We've had, at this point, the
reassurance of the ~nt that
,.....,
-~ will be forthcnnuna
-·-'0 in aU lhe.
information we want, and if not
we'D go from ill=," she said.
11Im: has been specnl•til&gt;ll that
RelJublican
Gov. · George
VoiDovich might choose Ms.
Montgomery as a candidate for
lieullcnantiQVmiOI'sbouldLt.·Gov.'
Mike DeWi,ne decide to run again
ror the U.S. Senate. She also has
been mentiolled as a )J9telltial candidare for aa«ney general. · .
Ms. MomaomerY dismissed any
sugaestioo of piJrliSan influence on
bc:nmrtasheadofthecommiuee.
''1be sooemcr has a lieutenant
govanor; IIIII to my lalowledie he
will remaill the lieutcDant governor
and the lieotenant governor candidale," she said.

.

Senilael News Starr
The Southern Local Board of
Education at its regular 111~ting
Monday approved contracts for
teachets and classified personnel in
addition to approving substitute
reachers and personnel.
Rehlreop•rlDc:lplls
. Actinf ofi ,l)le recommendation
of Supertnlendent Robert Ord and
Superintendent of Meigs County
Schools John Riebel, the board re. emp~ the ,following people~
exte
serv1ce contracts as pnncipaJs· for a period of three years
for a salary of $7,720: Robert Bee·
gill, Racine :Elementary; Michaela
' Kucsma, junior high; Christy
Lavender, Portland Elementary;
Roger Roush, Letart Falls Elementary, and James Lawrence, Syracuse Elementary.
ApproYesubstitute tea8Jers
The following were approved as
substitute teachers for the 1993·94
school year: Susan Arnold, English
7-12; Robert Ashley, physiCal education K-12; Jennings Beegle, 7-12
comprehensive social Studies;
James Bradbury, physical education K-12; Eileen Buck, elementary
l-8; MarY Bush, LD and SBH K12; Lesley Carr, elementary l-8;
Amy Corbin, elementary 1-8; Jen-

tion.

'

"If -61ito 's ·election laws are
goiJI&amp; to have any real impact on
die conduct of campaigns, tbey
must be vigorously and rully
enfoited," Taft said.
.
The proposal would. increase·
.-nbcrship on the I:PliJmission ID
sevea members instead of five,
cMn&amp;e tho ·appoinlmellt poe e" to
JaDOVC illvo!wment of stale political parties, 1nd pve the panel a
t-. . . - Iliff independent from
the SCCRIII'Y of Sllle.
The lill abo would ICI up a Jroccu !bat could lead to a state
appea1J clllll't mdeib,g an elected
oHidalto fllrfcit office for know·
iDIJy mating C1111p1ip statenlents
wftft reckless disregard for the
lnldl.
billie Houle, Rep. David Hart-

ae,. D-S1Jriqfield, woo 86-6 )liS·

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i&amp;aorini

pro::J

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physical educatiqn 7,12; MiCbael
Cuckler, industrial teehnillogy and
driver educadiJii 7-12; TonYJI Cummins, elementary 1-8; D,avid Curfman, general science arid book·
keeping/llasic business 7-12;
Deborah Davis, elementary l-8;
David Deem, elementary l-8;
Bryan Durst, elementary l -8;
. Sbaron Edmonds, elementary 1-8; ·
Cynthia Facemyer, ·health 7-12;
Thomas Fauber, mathematics 7-12;
Teresa M. Fields, elementary l-8;
Michelle Frazier, kinderganen-elementary K-8; Scot Gheen, health
and
Jodi
. physical education 7-12; Hal
Glass, elementary l-8; Cheryl
•
ley, elementary 1-8; Valerie Hanstine, kindergl)rteiJ·elementary K-8;
Pauline Harrison, English and
speech 7-12; Kemberlee HemphillHood, kindergarten-primary K-3;
Sandra Holcomb, comprehensive
business education 7' 12;
Rose Ann Jenkins, elementary
l-8; Bonnie Kibble, kindergartenelementary K·8, biological science
and health 7-12, physical education
K-12; Richard King, LD K-12;
Leda Krauter, homemaking/consumer education 7-12; Timothy ·
LJ!wson, mathematics 7-12; Lee
tee, music K-12, English and
music 7-12; Vinas Lee, elementary

Tenisa L1eving, elementary 1-8;
Kareq Lyons, elementary 1-8;
Bethany Mayer, elementary 1-8;
Michele Mowrey, English 7-12;
Lisa Pape, elementary l-8; Amy O,
Perrin, English l-8;
·
Kirk Reed, social studies 7-8;
history and geography 9-12·,
Nathan Robinette, elementary l-8;
Carolyn Robinson, elementary '1-8;
Susan Roessler, elemenlilry 1·8,
reading K·l2; Sheryl Roush, comprehensive business education 712; Laura Salser, elementary l-8;
Krista Sellers, elementary l-8;
Jody Shipley, art K-12·,. Cynth 1'a
Smllh, elementary 1-8; Kathy
Smith, elementary K-8; Margaret
A. Smitb, elementary 1-,8; Jean · ·
Smithem, mathematics 7-12; Janet
Stiltner, elem. entary 1-8: Carin
Taylor, elementary ,I-S;
Jody Taylor, elementary l-8;
Daniel D. Thomas, physical educalion K-12; Kimberly Van Metre,
kindergarten"elementary 1-8 and
pre-kindergarten; Ruth Warden,
el'ementary 1-8; Ellen Waugh,
math, chemistry and aeneral science 7-12; Ralph Werry, elementary and music l-8, reading K-12,
history 7-12; Shelagh Wilson, ele·
mentary 1-8; Donna WoP£, elemenContinued on pa- 3 .
e•

Secreta!1, of State Bob Taft
tub~ a llill, to be introduced by
Ms. Miiiii&amp;OIIICI y, that would make
tFie elections COOIIIIissiOD independent of bis office. The bill also
"c;:!~ive tric commission
ex
authority and jurisdic-

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No concerned residents attended

IIF olllie lill illcrtnlq 0 . for
waste-law violations that 81D
andaP*ol*' '
iM:llldo failure to lleed clellJup
0111tn • wen.
diapilllll
• D
Ji'
celurea.
-•i•OIIIr6ra 7 !,L • s "
5 . . . . . . ..
Tile IJill .._ fiMI to a maxi:
CCIIIIIleol••.-ll'.... lleea=• ........ I . 7 .... ·
125,1100 i day from the cur' iDadaa II bllii.lllr
.
·
~- ,_
110.1100
a day.
Tile ...... , . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Lam F'I7PI
. fie
11emmed from
F11•=7!!·Sd10'Jhd+ 'a
0
a' 7 ......... _ .
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IMoba
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Sevtnltbeftr.......!'-...
the Mel8l QaiY Slldi"S"

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·CHUCK

lbe he&amp;Qng, However, one propertY
owner, Lorenzo Davis of Cuyanop
Falls, wrote a Ieuer to the comnussion supported the proposed road
Closure.
Prior to the hearing, the commission toured the area to be
affected by the closure.
Other ac:tloa
In other action, the COIIUIIi&amp;sion:
- Voted to table ~ball bids
ope11ed Wednesday pending fwdoet
investigation by Engineer Robert
Eason. The commission received
bids from Asphalt Materials and
Koch Materials, both of Marietta,
and Ashland Petroleum Company
. from Ca!deusbw), Ky. '
- Agreed to notify Rev. Flllllt
Smith of Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport of their
approval f~ holding a ''World Day
of Prayer" event on the courthouse
stepS on May 6.
- Visited the Meigs County
Dog Shelter to discuss security _
anangemCIIIS at the shellc:r.

:~i?si:r::~~t~~ :::i£~~~~=~b~ ==:~:e:~aS

.

pri1aD Ill' Jllnrll• k . ,.I Pit r
af P D
A:ncflhe H(\lise
invo1vedinapotiiicih•hile• :'
..tO• riw
bilU including one that would
Sell. Belly Mdqpi•NIJ, R4'a'Ia a6a' ..,.., S
Pcpabti- increase the fine for violating
Ohio's solid· ln1 hazardous.wasre

PRINGLE·
POTATO CHIPS

PINK

By JIM FREEMAN
.... chronic mentally ill. Almost no
Sentinel NeM Starr
money is provided to the general
Repreaenwives from the Gallia- population for services, she
Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, explained.
J;lru• Addiction and Men~ Health
Purchase new ambulance
Servtce!l infonrte!l the Meigs CounFollowing a meetin~ with Emerty Board of Commissioners or their gency Medical Serv1ce Director
desire to place a tu levy on the Bob Byers, the commission agreed,
Nov, 2 ballot.
with Roush abstaining, to purchase
Ron Adkins and Barbara Wol- a 1992 Horton ambulance for .the
ford iold the comrirission during its Tuppers Plains squad.
regular Wednesday meeting that
Byers said the $59,832 needed
the board is singbng out Meigs for the purchase would come from
Colinty for a one mill, five-year · funds obtained by the EMS levy.
expansion levy to expand services
In addition, Byers discussed
in the COWJty.
obtaining reimburse.ment from
ResJ.IOnding to concerns from March's snow emergency. Byers
Commusioner Manaing Roush, indicated his pref~rence of hand
Adkins said aU money raised by the delivering the forms to Columbus
levy will be spent on support IICJ"· sometime next week',
·.
vices in Meigs County.,Ad!Ons said
Close townsbip road
the board singled out Me~s CounFollowing a public hearing conty because similar .levies have been ceming a proposed road closure,
most successful in Meigs County in commissioners voted to permanent·
the i&gt;asL.
,
ly close about 955 feet of Saljsbury
"111iS is the only f~.way, give Township Road 201 (Rose'Hill
it to the voters and let them Road) ftom the easterly edge of the

~t7~
?iifh·~
et~!~J:E
fo~!~~er~~~~~~.e~;~~.?.~~""'--'~
Qty
Z,
W••..
pas~~d-tllrce'

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·

ance Reed, Couaellwom•n Betty

Ohio prison panel chieif·
.promises thorough probe_

TOASTER
PASTRIES
11 oz.
,(

Chuck Roast.. . . . . . . .LB. .·
KENTUCKY BORDER
.
69.(
Wieners.................12 oz.
SUPERIOR ASSORTED
$ 129
Lunch Meats..........LB. ·

ENVi:Lora - r

lage offielals were MIJ ltalllq an'1pa
Wedaeaday ~··:twltl ' II u q :5 2 ...poi1 for die
'I ;a ;
' ........... _,..
WlrtJ, ... b
L
Here, e-n 1 T
maa Larry Wellr••2• Clerk IalllJ B,.U.

MERICO .

$159

1 Socdon, 12 l'llgea 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. .....,..,..

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24 Pak 1' Oz. C111s

Round Steak............~.........LB.
FRESH
.
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Groun~ Tu~key...........~....LB.
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Pomeroy·Middleport,.Ohlo, Thursday, Aprll29, 1993

ROYAL .CROWN
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PRODUaS

USDA SELECT BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

Low tonJcbt Ia $0.. Cloudy.
Friday, doudy, blah In 70..

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Thu~dlly, Aprl129, 1993'

Commentary
.

111 Coart Street

PomeiOJ, Ohio
. DEVOl AI 10 T1U Df'l'ltRit8T8 OP111B MEIGS-IIIASON AREA

•

Here is a c:harillble , _ of ?be ing. 111= may be some ftlid zafirst 100 days oldie Ojntm admin- IKIIIS for such a coune. If lbe taxes
istra!ion, its rrospects for the were used for defiCit reduclion, it
remaining 1,36 days, and a way to would make sense.. But Clinron's
save it.
Clin1011 wants to do a ~ deal.
That's good, not bad. It IS silly to
say Clinton is "tcying to do too
much." He can't.just stick to "lhe J)I'O?)OS8lleaves us with a $200 bileconomy" when America has lioli deficit ~ four years - too_
major crime, education, bealtb and high, because wbikl raising taxes
welfare problems, let alone !'e 1also increases domestic spendNAFTA, GATT, Bosnia, China mg.
and Russia.
Tbere is even a case that might
His. foreign policy· moves, so be made for more domestic spend- ·
far, have been mostly ,ood. His ing, but lbe Clinton budget doesn't
reaction to the events m Russia make it. Clinton rromised lo
have been bold. Boris Yeltsin's address the '' socia deficit'' by
victory shows that a "democracy changing lhe naiUre of government.
fii'St" foreiP- policy ha jMOIIlise.
He was going to "re-inven!" govClinton s problems are on the emment, making it lean and mean,
home front His budget plan is in · more !eSJ)OIISive, keyed to personal
trouble. It should be. It is misguid- responsibility standards. He said
ed, Its folly stems from several "no more SOI1lething for nothing."
causes. some of which may still be That's what made bim· a .. l'(ew
fiXed.
.
· Democrat."
It nJises both taxes and spendBut where's lhe beef'? His bud-

Ben Wattenberg

ROBERT L WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WIIFI'EIIEAD
A...,nt Pllbllsher!ControUer

CHA.RUNE HOEFLICH
· General Manager.

UITI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
lrolds. All leiters are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
.wress IIIII telepbon&lt; number. No unsigned leners will be published. Letters
Jbould be iiii,OOd wr.o, addJessing issues, not pononalities.

Clinton's got a lotto· ·
do between now, Aug.' 7
-

ByWALTERR.MEARS
·

AP SDecW

con;ra-t

get calls for $8 billion more for
food stamps•. Will that money be
used for a trlllsition program lbat
would "end welfare as we know
it"? Will a new welfare plan rWly
have a "two years and out" criteria
on recipients? Or will it be
watered-down mu•h, as some
administration statements now
5eelll to indicate? No one knows.
For the moment, the money just
goes form~ food stamps. addiag
to America's dependency addiclion.
He wants $9 billion more for
Head Start, but in a recent speech
he acknowledged that the program
doesn't wat well. Willlhe money
go for a changed policy? No one
knows.
Monumental policy figlits within his administration, and with lbe
Congress, on these issues ancj many
others are still to be W&amp;gecL
Clinton's big mistake his been
to let his budget train race way
ahead of his policy train. He is ask-

.

--=:-•:a• ..
-bop.

·•=

cidl:r.

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a;... .,s dill wbll be bas wen in 100 days is enough to signal a

•' 1 illcaneiDWIIhingloo.

"Ia lllclinl.-a: JIIO!Iths r:l.lhis administnlbon, we have ftDldamental• the diitdioo llkal by our nalional government,'' be told lbe
N!fi«
.Agocjarian of RcaltDn 'on Tuesday. "I've lried to overcome
...._ · I •
l!ld indiffenwJCe."
: ne 1~U, pablisbed by lhe White Home,lllit only for Clinton
• ..., fiJr V'lllC l'lesidml A1 Gore Jr., takes special note ofDay 72:
·~- JIIS8CS blsic: outliDe of the economic plan ... for the fii'St
lillie ill ,an. budg!:t ~ution is ~ssed ,before lhe legal deadline.''
· n.•w is for nearly SSOO billion in reductions in the .Jll?,ie&lt;:red
.-m i• spc•4ing over the next five yean, $266 billill!l of 11 through
ilu
d IDeS. CiJIIgess is just beginning work oo the cuts and tax bills
10 aft ... to.e, wid! a midsummer target for completion.

• 1y •I

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n.•salllnl.-,.

Sea. Rol8t J. Dole, lhe Republican leader wbo managed the Senare

......... dill bkrlwl Clin1011's ecooomic stimulus spending bill, said
l!e .-s !he wllolc Jl"'bF is in some difficulty.
.
,
· 11l!ele IIIIo W1S a Jloomy USCSSI!Ient of prospects for ClintOn's pro. . . tn.. his own hrlpl diredor, Leon Panella, who suggested lhat the
'i* ;1 r ..:S ro ddiDe ~ priarities more clearly and try til build public
p
e oa Cuwgim to IChieve them.
·
(]jeoml ~on Sllllday that be may have spread himself too
·dtii,•IID!ldsmore tOcusonlheissucs be deems centtal. .
Bit 1e . . more ooming due, not less, in lbe nextl 00 days.
D
i Ay, be will be l::ttoposing his bea1lh em !donn p:ogram on
·or._ U., :M, ~~ ~ c:ertainly will be the most diffteult
isale of l!is I*' •01!~
~ lhe advice of Panetta and olhe!$ thai it be

ing lhe ~ io '¥Ole new, !rem
money for old. failed policies, or
forablantcbect
.
All the RepabliceM, in public,
are saying 110. And mmy lliGderiiC
DCniOCia!. in prime, ay the same
thing. Together they l!ave tMI!P
votes to llylllie Clin!!lnO!Dirs, wiihOUI a filibuster. Thai would 'be in
ttDle with a majority of Americ:aos.
who say they WBDt less speading
and less.,OvemmenL And in twJe
with a re-actiVIIcdRoss Pelot.
Do not doubt that if Clinton
doesn't change his plui, moden!lc
Democrats will jump ship. The
only Senale [)emu! 10011 to flK:e
111e VOIIQ, Bob ICreaaer mTexas.
has already done so (forlhe special
election in May ·to fill Lloyd
Beutsen 's seat). Other Democrats
will Kreugerize as lhe 1994 elec-

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.-die._

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I

Letters·to the editor

·Clears up misunderstanding

. About !10 scleuce exhibits
· were on display Tueeday algbt
·at the Rutland I!!Jementary
Schooi~Y~Dnaslt!m ror viewing
by the parents or the students
wbo created tliti!J.
The esblblta were judged
during the day by KeDDy Wig·
gins, Kare'a W1lker, Pam
Crow, and Jon May of Bank
One, Rutland, the sc:bool's
partner it! eduration. Trophies
were awarded to the top nn
student exhibitors - In tbe
fourth, fifth and sixth grades.
Ribbons were given to all
other exhlblton.
The trophy winners were
left to right, front, Matthew
Jastlce, RO:r..:mltli, clayton
Tr0111m, b
bil elec:trkal
esblblt, Ben Fowler 1nd
Alyson Patteraon, sixth
graders; Heather Ferrell,
Brooke Wllllams, Tllfany Hat·
fteld, Kevin Snod1rus, 1nd
Ann Kaurr, ~ IJ'IIIers; and
back row, Tlff1ny Priddy,
Bethany McMlllln, James
Conley, Man Stewart, 11nd
A.d am Ballln1ton, fourtll
graders.
Pictured right is Matt
Stenrt, boldlnciiOme or his
plants, With bla esl!lblt entl·
tled "Tempentures Effect on
Germination".
Teachers Julie Raadolph,
Dona Jenkins, IDd Carol
Evans bad cllarge of the science fair. (Pbotol by Clulrlene
Hoeflich)

tilinsapp~ia:b.

Wbat can Clinron do? Politicians re-iavent ~lves, or to'
to, aD the time. He - · t c:aUcd
. Slick Willie because he doesn'!
know the pme.
He will have 10 roD b11:Jt I good
portion his ta-and-spcnt pluJs.
Any eddiriCIIal taxes and spending
shQu1d be earmarked for either
deficit reducti011 or for new programs in .tbe "New Demoera!"
mode, thus linking a new budget to
newpolicy.
.
· This would be euier forOiJMOO
if he had not. in his early staff
appointments, shott~hanged the
very New Democrats that made
him a 0(11...--del. Still, 100 days is
on1y 6 penlOIIl ma term. There is
time 10 hire, Uld 10 fin:.
If Clintou changes, he miJht
weU convince Amcricl!ls that It's
what be inuwtcd to do from the
beginning ..Aft1:r all, ?hal's bow be
ran. It oould still be called lbe Clinton Plan.
Thai's lhe cbarilable view. The
Unc:harillble view is that he lric:ked
America to get elerfed
lea Watte!!ber&amp;, a ..tor fel·
lOw at tile ~erlcall Eaterprlse ·
Ililtltute, ilaa&amp;Mr II "Tile Jllnl
U!llvenal N!!tloa," pvN!rt:'ell by
The Free Pres! lllCI a writer for
Newspaper Enterprise Asocla·
tioll.

Why interest in s~ience is growing

seience, nia?bematics or ~ing conJpetc to earn collqe scbolsays McLaren. "But c~rt;i;;Jy arships.
womeu are absolutely as capable as
"Last March, among the 40/
·men in all respects. I think more of finalists, over 8S patCDl had llltcn
them are CO!iiUJ&amp; into lbe biological part in science fairs," says
sciences - for various reasons. Of McLaren. •'This is the rust time
course, we want to see them in all ' we've had 20 Sll7es
•ted in
..!llt:·to Congress and the country as a
lhe sciences. It's a question of the lbe talelitsearcb.."
of:;:-wls, 10 be translaled into lhe fine print of legislation in
For 44 years, Science S~ice
nolo4y and na!ure. Aliout four continual need to make sure that
!l!e wa:b
follow. While lbe president wants Congress to act on it Ibis
Americans in 10 read consisrently equal opportunity is there for also bas SJIOII!I(nll the lnttmatioaal
~· !heleis., R'.8l chance lbat change so basic: will be handled so quickScience and Enginl:erinc Flir. The
about science in newspapers, mag- them."
Science News is a 16-page pub- annual event now features more
azines or books.
.A~Jlmd, CU.. must decide what to do about Bosnia, with binerly
No wonder. The survey indicat- lication with about 250,000 sub- than 750 Sladent contestants from
cliYided • •
1 ill Congress and elsewhere about how deeply to get
ed that allout two out of ~ peo- saibers. Some 60 percent of them over 400 aflillalcd fairs in the Unit·
iatolwcd ill h "'ite ?be besieged Muslims against lhe Selbs.
.
'pic think news of science is just as wort in the fiel4 of science. But ed S?aJes IUid abmid.
_By July IS, Ojntm bas to deal with his promised executive order. to
unportant as news of politics, busi- since it ~gan in 1922, the maga- · "The greatest number of pro- ·
111 pys in lhe military, and m~ decide on a new set .of 31
zinc has been distributed to all jects atlhe sciellce filirs - particu- ··
ness OJ'crime.
..._, . _ ••winas- being weighed by a ~ial commission. . ·
· Which scientific categories kinds pf readers.
larly lhe intc.t twt"ooal filirs -come
ne ..... i" ilion seets $1.8 billion in additional spending on· aid to
It
disdains
scientific
gobbledyin the environmental sciences "
,deserve more coverage?
'
Rmil:: !he pesilk:l•t has said it wiD be hard to get that money unless
gook.
Science
News
is
a
bit
more
McLaren sa)'S!
'
Most requests were for extra
CuwgJEalllo-vi*Siid lD AmeriCans wbo need iL .
news on dangers I() children's technical than Time ID!Igazine, but
He hopes ?be laanch of Science
Bit OiJbJ ~:~~~"t liffml to go empty-handed to the economic summit
health (68 percent); AIDS treat- not as redmica1 as Scieiulflc Amer· News for kids la!er Ibis year will be
ia Totyo oa July 6 after urging other democracies to join in aiding
ment (6l.pereenl); discoveries in ican. McLaren:s publi~n is sold ano?ber srcp in the right direction:
·u· DNV.
gene-spliang thai can preveut dis- onlr, by subsc~on.
"If you relilly bow your
He ...ws a Sllirt oo campaign fmance ref~. his program of national
'Sux:e I've had the job, in lhe weD, you shonk! be able 10
•
ease (SS ~nt); what to do with
...il:c;, . . - .
past
two
years,
I
think
our
subit
to
say
al2-year-old."
garbage (54 percent); and health
Like ';..ost scientists, McLaren
care where women's problems scripti~?s have gone up .a.nother
IIDITOR'S NOTE- Wlltei' R. Me~n, vice pmident and colum· ·
20,000, says 'Mcl.aren, Ctllng lhe · first became hcrired a a c:hi1d.
have been neglec:ted (53 pen:ent).
!lilt far Tk Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
The key? "Being purchased a
For his part, McLaren adds: risi~g l!:S. i~terest .ih ~i~nti.fic
'allies ror .we tbu 30 yell'S.
•
"What we at Science News see affatrs. ..That s another indicabon Gilbert chemistry set," he says.
"That's it exactly."
particularly in the orders to our of sorts.
Science ~ervice also direc:ts lbe . Howard Siner 11 a SJDclicakd
boot department- there's a great
interest in aging, everything per.- annual Westinghouse Science Tal· writer ror Newspaper Elite! pi ise
ent Search, now in its S.2nd year. Assoclatlon.. ·
·
tainin~ io health,:'
. ,.
·. .
Sctence Serv.tce pays attenuon · High-school seniors who excel in
to a wide variety of CO!J!:enlS.
T
''The main thrust of our organization,''
says McLaren, "is not just ·
Once the Public Utilities ComTo ?l!e editol.
increasing
scientific literacy for the
C011uary to an earlier press mission made its decision, howevgeneral
public,
but more recently
ft11111!1, A • . -Buach is DOt pan er, we felt no further~ could
ence."
we're
focusing
on young people,
til • effort to overturn a recent be served by appealing this deciHe iiOieS: "Enviroomental tete- womeu and minorities."
61 . . • lly die Ohio Public Utili- sion and iJ was time to move on to
rioration
seems to be on everyHe 'says women account for
other
matters.
Thus,
Anheuserlill C
issiCII that lllowa two
·
· more than a third of ?be subscn'bers
Busch is not pan of at\ appeal of bod 's mind."
01'
~ il!iJities Ohio Powec
lfhe fact that science has · to Science News, which is Ameli0 2 , .... Columbus Southan this decision being ~FSued by lhe
a mainstream topic in ca's only newsweekly on science.
become
Industrial
~
Coilsumers.
.
, . _ C••if - to instaU IClilbAmerica
was
cooftimed recently in Two of its three top editors are
.
We
hope
Ibis
clean
up
any
mis·
lia- !l!eii'CIIII-fin:d coal plants.
understanding.
.
Lou
Harris study. It was female; and so are a m~ty of its
a
niajor
· • • As -her of ?be lndusirial
by the Scientists' writers,
commissioned
Sinc:erdy,
&amp;.au CoaSDJD«s coalition, we
Institute
for·
Public
Information in
This reflectS the modem influx
ANHiillSER-BUSE::H
COMPAiailia1ly p"iMed whether this
NIES.
INC.
aJil ...,... lie passed on to rate
Robert C. Merlo Manager, Utility
..,..., We felt !fbs was an imporAffairs
IIIIJM'"'f' W••MI.
had seized control of the General Post Office surrendered to .British
authorities.
.
·
In 1945, American soldiers liberated the Nazi concentration·camp in
Dachau, Gennany, where rens of thousands of people had perished.
In 1946, 28 former Japanese ·leaders wen: indicted in Tokyo a war
criminals.
· By Tl!e Alloclated Press
In 1974, President Nixon announced he was releasing edited tranTodi.J is 1111ncfay. April 29, lhe 119th day or 1993. There are 246
dlys left_ ill !lie yar.
. .
scripts of
of lhe secretly made While House tape recordings relared
to thew~ sCandal.
t....,.s RiPJillt' in Hlstocy: •
In 1981, truck driver Peter Sutcliffe admitred in a Lotidon court to
~ ,_. :t!D-11!1 ~ 29, 1992, Los Ang~lt:S sa:-v lhe stait of deadly riotbeing
the "Yorluhire RiJI!ICI:." the ldUer of 13 women in northern Eng·
Ill ... c.
• .S4 lives llld caused $1 bill1on m dantaRe afrer a jwy in
land
during
a five-~ penod.
·
· ·
Siili V~ llq'!il"&gt;l four~ Anfeles police ~teen o1 almost all stare
In
1985,
lhe
~shuttle
Challenger.
lifted·
off
with
seven
astronauts
&lt;': • ?l!e nk•41ip&lt;d beating o black m~ Rodney King.
and a ••mini-zoo' of monkeys and rats aboard. ·
O.dlildlle:
.
.
. .
.
In 1990, the space shuttle Dlsc:ovcry landed s8fely at J!dwards Air .
Jal429• .._ dAn: eutcred lbe besieged city of Orleans to lead a vicForce Base in California after a mission whk:h included the deployment
.
.
•
"s Houle or Delepres voted againJt lecedlng from . of the Hubble Sp~ee Telescope.
yean
ago:
-Harold
Washington
was
sworn
in
as
the
fmt
blact
'
Ten
-~
.
.
•
mayor of Chica&amp;oJa 1161.New0deii!S feU,to Unioo.forces during lbe Civil W11.
.l!lve yean ago: Mt;Donald's8lili0Uiiced that it would opi!D the tint of a
Ia 1861, &amp;WiljMiiU publiJber William Randolph Hearst was born ill
stnng of fas!-Cood lllllurlnll in downiOW!i Molcow.
SaP ·~
·
ra !1M,·~ hun~ unemployed men known as "Coxey's · One year ago: Exxon executive Sidney Re.o was kidnapped outside
his Morris Township, NJ., home bk~ur Seale, a former
securi1
dicc,l in.cliplivliy.
·
who ty &lt;?ffteial, and Seale's wife,lmle;

~,;: ~=::,~:,11

tary 1:8, mathematics 7-12; Amy

m

WASIIINGTON-- Wbile the first 1d.,s is the cliched checl&lt;point
b a - .nini•"mon. the oext 100 will bold more telling ~IS and
for Pn:sidcnt Clinloo.
by Aag. 7 wiD 1e11 the sbape or Clinlon's first year, and
_, b
die ontloQk lor his first term.
: p.. ' si;w ad fines crowd that time span, from budget specifics to,
·.,s ill die .mary 10 his effort 10 !dorm the Ameri(:an health care sys- . Fcaeip lid 10 Russia demands lr.gisJarioo, and lbe agony of Bosnia
•I
h
was.. He will cboo8e his first nominee to lbe SUJRme Coun.
• AI lk 100-dly ~ toclly, Clinton bu jli'OIIOIIIICed himself satisfted
: _w i* llis
abbangll. it hardly fll his ~ lllk of an explosive
Kliaa pei!iad • •lied in modem history. Still, • Clinton noted, since
Fl
D. ltooleftlt's storied 100 days of landmarlt change in 1933,
-of''dle O!hrs pys" wbo have entered the Whire House has done sd,

NEW YORK (NEA) - Look-.
ing ahead to the 21st century,
Americans of all ages are becom'inJ more and more interested in
sciCIIce. So reports an ex~ '!"bo
COtDlts on modem commurucauons
to boost lhe level of scientifiC literacy.
Dr. Fred McLaren is the president of Science Service, a Washington-based non-profll cOrporation
dedicared to furthering public inter·
eS! in scientifiC matrers. He's also
the publisher of Science Nc;ws, .its
weeldl magazine.
· ,
, 'I ve been struck by the fact
thai there sc;ems to be - just here
in recent years - a termite awakeJiing of mterest. in science," says
McLaren. "It's not quite a htDlger.
But there is a thirsting for more
infonnation."
A geophysicist, McLaren, 60,
earned a Ph.D. in polar studies
from the University of Colorado,
foUowing his 26-year career in lhe
Navy. He was the commander of
lhe nuclear submarine USS Queenfish in 1970 during its historic
underwater survey of lhe Siberian
cootinental shelf.
McLaren says today's concern
about the Earth and our environment is a key factor behind the
gC(ICi31 rise of in~t in science.
' "I'm constantly' associating
with people who are basiCally sci•
entifiC8ily lirerate,'' says McLaren.
"But I talk io people in lhe street
all the time. And I'm amazed at
bow many of lhem are up on sci-

New York.
According tQ lhe poll, mole than
half ·or all Americans regularly
watch TV shows O!l science, tech-

Sadie Biake

'"* •

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/

Berry's World

0

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Today in history

some

-,:;sr,tf:*

gnon

.~,;.·.=:::, e~~lis:"~:=a!~ ~tionalists
•'

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i

.

,1

-.--..----Area deaths----.-

of w0111p1 into ajl fields of scienc:e:
"There's still sane pre,;.,..;•• ,"

Howard Siner

oauv Sentlnei-Pag&amp;---3

~:. :,;ro=m:. !:p: ! ag: .:e1=---- - - -- --'---- - - - -

u::e::..:d

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Th~. April 29, 1993

-

The

--l(.utland science fair-- s0 uthern.... . c:~on: .:tin: .'

Page 2 The Dally Sentinel

Re-inventing Clinto~

The Daily Sentinel
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

0

clarence Newell

Jerry Westmorland .

Sadie Rose. Blake, 70, of AshClarence "Buck" Newell, 66, of
Je~ Wayne Wesunoreland, 41,
,ton. died Wednesday, April 28 at Middleport, Ohio, died Wednesday, of ·Pomt Pleasant, died Tuesday,
,the Pleasant Valley Nursing Care · April28, 1993. at his home.
April 27, 1993, in Pleasant Valley
Center.
He was a retired millwright and Hospital.
She was a member of Ball's construction worker. He was also a
Born June 29, 1951 , he was a
Chapel Church.
World War II Navy veteran.
son of Charles R. and Oma Lee
Born September 6, 1922 in .Ash·
Born May 26, 1926 in Colum- Buchanan Westmoreland of Point
ton, she was the daughter of the late bus, Ohio, he was the son of Alva Pleasant.
. William and Bessie . (Cremeans) M .. Stewart Newell, Middleport,
An employee of Ravenswood
Wrny. She was also preceded in Ohio and the late Clarence 0 . Aluminum C01p., he was a member
dcallt by a brolltcr, Wonhy E. Wray Newell.
of lhe United Sreelworkers Union
;md a sister, Willa Fisher Morrison:
Surving are three sisters, Mrs. 5668 -of RAC and was a staunch
Surving arc her husband, Erva Lewis (Nina) Dailey, Ocala, union supporter. He also served in
.Hunter Blake; two daughters, Florida; Mrs. Henry (Wilma) Scar- .lhe U.S. Navy during the Viemam ·
Wanda ' Bush, Gallipolis Ferry and berry, · Vinton, Ohio and .Sharon War.
,
.
Lois Stewart, California; two sons, Jane Newell, Cheshire; Ohio; three
Surviving, · in addition 10 his
Edward Blake, Ona and Brian brothers, D~n Newell, Mason; parents, are a son, Shannon
Blake,
Kerr,
Ohio;
seven Donald Newell, CliftDn and Roben Westmoreland of ' Cottageville;
grandchildren and ten great- Newell, Pomeroy, Ohio and several' three brothers and sistcrs-in-law,
grandchildren.
nieces and nephews.
Dr. Danny and Kim Wesun01eland
) Funeral services will be held at · Services will be at 1:30 p.m., of Mason, Gary and Barbara
10:30 a.m., Saturday, May I at the Saturday, May I at Foglesong Westmoreland of CottageviUe,
Crow Hussell Funeral Home with Funeral Home with the Rev. Randy and Juanita Westmoreland
the Rev. J. Odell Bush ofliciatinl George Hoschar officiating. Burial of Point Pleasant; three sisters and
Burial will follow in the Moore s will follow in the Graham brothers-in-law, . Rosa Lee and
Chapel Cemetcry in Ashton.
Cemetery. There wiD be mililllry Andrew Beattie of Point Pleasant,
Friends may call at lhe funeral graveside services.
. Anita tyrin and David F~x of
home on Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
Friends may call at the funeral Fainnont, Sandra Kay and M1chael
home 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on Mines of Adanta; paternal
.
.
•
Fridar, April30.
grandmother, Rosa Westmoreland
. Clarence Cbeesebrew
Piltton of Beckley; several nieces
and nephews; and fo~er wife,
: Clarence
"Bud"
William Thomas Voiers
Hill of Cou.agevdle.
Checscbrcw; 85, Vinton, Ohio, died
Thomas Loraine Voie11, 56, of Pillricia
The
funeral
will be Friday, 2
y.retnesday, April 28. .
·
Cleveland. Ohio, formerly of Hen• He was a resident of Springfield. derson died Tuesday, April 27, p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with Pastor Dan Wellman
Ohio for thiny-four years and a 1993, in Cleveland.
and
Rev. Gilben Brewer officiating.
retired employee of the Springfield
Born July 27, 1936, in Sharon,
Burial
·will be ·in the Cres10n
News and ·Sun. He was a member W.Va, he was a son of Mary
Cemetery, Leon.
of the Maiden Lane Church o( God Stayloog Voiers Barrett of Rutland,
Friends may call Thursday, 7 to 9
and the Elderly United, both in Ohio, and the late Andrew Jaclcson
p.m.,
at lhe funeral home.
Springfield. ·
Voiers. Ho was also preceded in
Graveside rites will be held at the
, Born November 3, 1907, in Poim death by allrother and sister.
Pleasant, he was the son of the late
An employee of Public Sreel of American Legion Post 23 of Point.
John Samuel "Don" and Viola Cleveland, he was a mem bet of lhe Pleasant.
Donations may be made to the
Evalinc . "Eve"
(Mackley) ChiiiCh of God o( Prophecy, Brecktrust
· fund
for
Shannon
Chc:esebrew.
·
sviUe, Ohio, at\d a U.S. Army
Westmoreland,
in
care
·
of
Oma
Surviving are hi.s wife, Helen veteran.
(Rhoades)
Chec5ebrew;
one
Surviving, along with his Westmoreland, 9 Woodmont Drive,
daughter and son-in-law, with · mother, are wife, Mary Andrew Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550.
whom he made his hOIIIC; one son Voices of Cleveland; two sons and a
and daughter-in-law James D. and daughrer-in-law,
Robert
of Hospital News .
Michelle Cheesebrew; three sistc11, Cleveland and Dwayne and Marsha
vETERANS MEMORIAL
Mrs. Pilul (Hilda M.)'Goodman and of Cleveland; srcpfather, Roben
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Mrs. Austin (Bessie M.) Morri1011, Barreu of Rutland; sister, Beverly - Don Lambert. Rutland; Roy Fox,
'both of Point Pleasant and Mrs. Bosworth of Cleveland; three Racine.
Waller (Anna . M.) Mayes of brothers and sisrers-in-law, GeoQIC
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
Houston, Texas; three brothers, and Rita. Bclward and Dorothy, au - Dora Hysel'l and VermonJ
Bdward F. Cbeesebrew, Buddy of Cleveland, Rusty and Norma Martins.
Donald Cheesebrew and HoWiid Volera of Millwood; stepbrother,
'W. Cheesebrew, all of Poiill
Traleel to meet
aarreu of New Haven; three
P,leasant; five gr•ldcllildlln; one
I II, Norma Stanley . of
The Board of Trustees or
tflelllll, ~ .., ., ..... "". Oolulllllla Township will meet
~Jl. Mil II Upr AI· Mon4a)' ll 7:30 p.m. ll the fire sta·
, Services will be a
Jl!llll!l, . Ohio; 11141 three lion in c.penrer.
·
day, Mly 1 at tbl
•
1'!&amp;1«11 Home witll
will be Saturday, 2
Gardea dub lo •eet
Pllcliictt
p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
. The 'Middleport G.-den Club
oiiJicdeting.
Homo Widl lhe Rov. Rick Maloyd will meet Mondl;y at tho home or'
HiUCemelay
ofllciaJi~ Burial w1ll be In lbe Mn. Willllm Mcirril ll 7:30 p.~.
Prie11ds may
COIICO!d cemetery, Henderson.
Mn. 0corae And&amp;IIOII will peiCI!I
. _ 011 Friday,
10
Friends may Clll at the funeral a proaram Oft heltw. MembeO may
9p.m.
, borne Friday. !i to 9 p.m.
.
bring~~ llllllptDCIIL
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Young; elementary 1-8; Angela
YotDlg, elementary 1-8.
Clasaii'Jed suiJs approved
The foUowing were approved as
classified, non-certified substitutes
for the 1993-94 scbool year:
Custodians • Patricia Brown,
Judy Parsons, Ro,ger Jones, Kim·
berly Riffle, Jenrue Canter, Judith
Flowers, Lucille Diehl, Tom Lane.
Beverly Moore, Ronnie Grimm,
Carol Hood, Joan McClain, Nellie
Floyd. Mary Clark, Michael Smith,
Wallace Morris and Cheryl
T,eaford.
.
Bus drivers • Charles T. Chapman, William Downie, Dale
Teaford Jr., Tom Theiss, Dale W.
Hill Jr., Charles Lawrence, Delbert
Smith, Julian S. Hill, Jerry Smith
and Max E. Hill Jr.
,
Cooks - Linda Atkins; Janet
Manuel, Judith Flowers, Beverly
Moore, Carol Hood, Joan McClain,
Nellie Floyd and Shirley Dugan
OK teacher COillncl!i
Approved the foUowing teaehe11
cpntracts: five years · William
Baer, Joyce Thoren, James Wickline and Suzanne Wolfe; three
years - Linda Fisher and Barbara
Lawrence; one year , Diane Rice,
Ann Sisson, Melissa Stewart and
· Scou Wickline; continuing • JeMy
Manuel and Dollllll Sayre.
In addition, lhe following classi·
fi¢ persoMel were re-employed:
Donna Wolfe, secretary; Alice
Williams, cook; Cinlri Winebrenner, secretary, and Mary Smith,
custodian.
Approved lhe following as sub:
stitute teaChers from the 1992-93
• school year: Timothy Lawson,
math 7-12; Tereses Lieving King,
eiCJiieutary 1-8, and Carin S,' Taylor, elementary 1-8.
Following I ' discussion on
school prayer, the board voted to
have prayer at graduation.
In addition, lhe board disCussed
forming a marching band.
,
A survey of fifth and sixth-grade
students revealed that 20 srudents
were interested in an i!IS.trumental
IIIUSic program. Sixteen seventh
and liighth-grade students also indicated intereSL
. It was mentioned that Mrs.
Stewart has indicated that if an
instrumental music P.rogram were
started. it would "SUII be a "feW"
years before a marching band can
be established.
Summer school dlscusstd
In a discussion COIICeming summer school, it was pointed out that
$11,000 has been approved by
Lloyd Stuller from the State
Deparlment of EdUcation for summer remediation project for students who have not passed one or
more parts of the ninth-grade proficiency test.
,The board OK'd a four-week ·
program to be held four days a

lion;
- A motion declaring Jan. 26,
Feb. 16, Feb. 23, March IS and 16
as snow days and for the superintendent to request from the state
superintendent thai lhe district be
exempted from making up school
for lbe above days;
.
.- A resolution supporting the
Appalachian Access and Success
~~

..

- JOIIC Raul Rodriquez V from

Monclara:, Mexico, as a foreign
exchange S!Udent for the I 993-94
school year. Jose wiD be staying
with the family of Mr. and Mrs.
David and Terri Casey;
- Letting the Racine Youth
League use the high school and
junior high baseball fields thi$
summer,
- The scbool calendar for lhe
1993-94 scbool year;
- The resignation of Kimberly
Phillips as EMIS eoordinalllr.
A!tcnding were 00.: members
Sue Grucser, Joseph Thoren, Tom
Rosenberry and Scott Wolfe,
Robert Ord ·and Treasurer Dennie
Hill.
.

,..,._.;.._.....:.,__ Weatbe.r - - - - Soutli·Ceatral Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Low 50-SS.
Chance of rain 40 percent Friday,
mostly cloudy with a chance of
showers in the morning. Becoming
partly cloudy in the afternoon.
High around 70. Chance of 111in 40
'Th~

Daily Sentinel

1

peieeiil.

Es!ended foreaiit:
· Saturday tlirougb Monday:
Fair on Saturday and Sunday.
Lows 45-SO. Highs in the 60s. A
chance of showers Monday. Lows
in the mid-40s to low 50s. Highs
65-70.
"

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I

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There's one store In the area that shows you once again how much
they appreciate your business by offering springtime savings and added
values ..• at Rutland Furniture.
•
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suites, living room suites and dining room suites. And for a limited time,
buy any suite priced at $1299.0CJ or mora, and receive a beautiful Roll
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week, three hours per tar, commencing June 14 and ending July
8.
.
.
.
Teachers are to be paid an $800
salary for the four weeks. Tbe
board will need to employ these
people on a supplemental eonttact
at its May meeting. The board will
not know the numbu of teachers
needed tDltil it ltecives lbe results
from lhe March testing.
.
In iddition, lhe board weed to
employ a person to do tlie high
school computer scheduling this
summer, year-end teports, add new
enroUees and withdrawals. Leah
Ord said this will take 20 to 30
days.·
A person has not yet been
selected for the 1emporary position.
It was also discussed that the
dislrict is still in lhe running for a
·gmnt to help fund asbestos removal
at the high school. .
Other actlon.M
In other action , the board
approved:
- The minutes from its last
meeting; financial statement and
activity ftDld stalement;
· - A list of seniors for gradua-.

11

...

IWII SftiET ·luniiD, •10

.
'

�Sports

,

••
•

Cincinnati' posts 4-2
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- At least
the CinciJ\nati Rtds' infield hasn't
lost' its touch.
The entire infield had a band in
turning five double plays Wednesday niaht tbat set up a 4-2 victory
over tlie Pi usburgh Pirates and
· proved lhe Re4s can caleb lhe ball,
after all. .
·
At least the infielders can.
The Reds have lOst two games
in theil' last four because ootficld·
ers misplayed fly balls in the late
innings. Tl!ere have been several
other outfield goofs that made
manager Tony Perez wonder what
was~Oii.

lbey had another outfield error
to set up an WIC8TIIed run Wednes·
~l~~ut Tim Pugh's sinker and the
·
's flawless play overcame it
For once, Perez didn't have to start
·groping for explanations when
asked.about his defense.
we'd have made lhose plays
last night, we probably would have
won the game," Perez said. "We
made them tonight and we did.''
Again and again. The five double plays were one shy of the club
record. The Reds hadn't turned five
in a game since July 20, 1991, at
Pittsburgh.
.
And PIJih (2-1) got most of the
credit His sinker was sensational,
leading
to four of lhe five
double
niDe bits

·:rr

DILL BUNTS - Southern's Jeremy Dill puts forth a bunt dur·
ing Wednesday's baseball game against the bost Meigs Marauders,
which the Tomad~ won !14•.(Sentinel photo)

Southern downs Meigs 9-6
Southern's baseball team plated gte by Dill.
five runs in the second inning 8nd
Meigs closed out the scoring in
went on to defeat Meigs 9-6 the bottom of the sev~th on a Wednesday evening at Meigs High to Kyle Simpson, a Jim Pullins
School.
double, a ground out and a Soulh·
The Tornadoes opened up a 1-0 ernerror.
.
lead in lhe fiTSt when Billy Jones
Williams and Dill led the win·
singled, stole second and advanced ners at the plate wilh two singles
to third on a single by Ryan and a double each. Jeremy Northup
. Williams. Jones then scored the added a triple and single. Billy
: games first run ·when Marauder Jones added tW() singles, and Eric
Jlitcher Keilh Jones ()lilly's broth· Jones, Rei~ and Smith wilh a sin·
.er) UliC(X'ked a wild pitch.
gle each. Norlhup was lhe winning
: Soulhem increased the lead to 6- pitcher scattering five hits; four
1) in the second when they used sin·
walks and while striking out eigbt.
:gtes by Jeremy Dill and Williams
Jim Pullins and Billy Glaze led
.to go along wilh a triple by Jeremy Meigs at the plate with a double
'Norlhup. Meigs didn't help matters each, N3Jhan Brown, Kyle Simp·
·. much with two errors and two · son and Vince Reiber added a sin·
,' walks in lhe inning.
gle each. Keith Jones .was the los·
Meigs plated three runs in the ing pitcher against his former teamlhird inning on three walks and a mates with relief help from Mike
double by Billy Glaze and a single Vance. They combined to ~ve up
by Kyle Simpson.
13 hits, six walks arid strike out
Soulhern increased the lead to 8· ·seven.
3 in the fifth inning on singles by . IDning totals
Robert' Reiber, Billy Jones and a Southern: IS0-021..0=9-13-?
double bY Williams, The Toma- ' Meigs: .003-000 .= 3-6-S-1
".
.does scored a single ·run in the siXIh
WP- Nortllup
on a walk to Kyle Wickline, a sinLP-'-K.Jones
gle by Jamey Sf1!itli and a bunt sln-

WJ,ht.GB
-~~~=:!r';................
............
u 5 .750
12 9 .l11
3.S

T-

s~ Looio ................12
9
Pillsboql1 .............. 11 10
~. .................. 10 10
. .. ...................9 12

New YG .....•..•, .....II

.524

4.5

.soo

5
6.l
6.5

.429

11

.421

w eltef'll Dl•lllon
Houston .. - ............. 12 8 .lm
Soa Frondoco ........ 13

Allanll ................... ll
Sift Di.eao ................9
CINCINNATI..........&amp;

Loo Anadoo ............. 8

Caloftc!o ..................7

1'"

(l.Qimndt ).0),1'35 p!...

3.5

.111

FrldaJ'•&amp;IIDies

Miflncaou. (Backs 2-0) at Dcuoit
(Wello ).0),7,ol p.m.
Oai.laud (Dulina 0· 1) at CLEVE·
LAND (Biolocti :Z,.2), 7,0, P"'·
S..tllo (Citmminp 0.3) It New Y.,.

CP=t 0-1 ), 7 '301"'".

9 .S91
12 .471
11 .45.0
1l .381
13 .381
13 .350

15

3

4.5

4.5
l

K.anau Cily (Appier 1--2) it Baltimore
1·2),7,35 pm.

(lokDorWd

Califomi1 (Furell 1-2) 11 Boston.
(Doploo 1·1), 7:3!5 p.m.
- Toroato (StoUlanJK 3-1) at OUcaao

(l'emaodez :1-2~ a,os pm.

Milwau.i.ee (Navarro 0-2) at Tcs.u

(Rosen 2· 1), 8:35p.m."

Wednesday's scores

CINCINNATI 4, PitubwJh 2

-6.0Ucoao1

- • NHL playoffs • -

SU.ouil1, Colando6
~· !S, San Oiq,o 3
San Fnncitoo 4, New t"Otk 3
1M An&amp;eloo 6. Manaul 1

N.Y. Wmdon 5, Wutiil/pn 3, N.Y.
klondeao win oerieo 4-2
Maoboal6. ~ 1 Matllal -

Florida 3, A\WU I

Wedilesday, Apf,D28

aaia-4-2

Today's games

SL Louil! (Tewksbury 0-3) at Colorado
(AIIIbf 0-1), 3,os p.m.

Philld.elp~ia (Ja~aon 1-0) at $an
Dieao (Saninan.t -1). 4:05p.m.
New Yori: (Sabe•h•ar.n 2·2) at San
t'rulcUoo (llwbo :Z,.I), 4 ,05 p.m.
Pimburah (W.J.&amp; 2·1) at CINCIN~

NATI (BJOwoin&amp;1-2),7,3$ p.m.

florida (Aquino l · l) 11 Atlanta (P.
Smith :Z,.I), ?AOp.m.
Chicaao (Hibbard 1·1) at Houaton
(llaiJdocb Hl), I~ p.m.
(!IW J.O) 1114 AJ!aeloo ()t

Mu1inc :Z..2), 10,3S p.m.
'

Frldoy'sgames
'Colorado (Undecided)'
(llowal :Z,.1~ 7'3.5 f.m.

Cbif!:

NATI
k.

a1

Florida

(~utillo 0-1) at CINCIN·
1·2~

7 ,3.5 pm.

(Otivu. l.Q) II Atl.nu (0.

-·:1-2~ 7'40p.m.

Pilbbur&amp;h (1'~ l · l) at H®flon

(Pooolpl1-1),1 ~

p.m.
N•• York (Fcmandea 1·0) at San
Diooo (I!Um~ O.IJ.1 I O,OS p.m.
.l'bi.lMolphlAo (......,. :Z,.O) 11 Loo An·
ptoo (Kevin a;,. :1-2). um p....
MonttMl (Nabbolz 1·1) at San Franoiloo (Swift 1·1), 10,35 p.m.

·- -

AMERICAN LEAGUE
,_

WLPd.GB
DoiJOit, .................. 13 1 .~0
.......................... 12 9 .571
1.5
T -.................. 12 9 .571
U
NowYodl .............. ll 9 .5SO
2
1 10 .4&gt;14
4
CLIM!LAND ........7 14 .333
6J
6 13 .316
"'

Jofil-...............

ao.-.................
c·l!'

w-.·: ...............13 5 .722 ·

T - ....................11
CIOoop, .................ll

I .519

9 .5SO

-

....................1·1 10 .524
Cily .....: ......9 12 .429
1'
rt ........ - ......1 12 .400
OokW ..................6 11 .3.53

15

3
3.S
l.l

wi~

in seven-piUs lllllinp, but used the
6-4-3, S-4-3, 4-6-3 and the 6·3 to
get,?fJ!: ~~~~ stay ahead in the
count and lll8ke them hit it 011 the
ground and let lhe defensive ll)lfS
go to work," Pugh llliid. ''Tonight
they were awesome. They had four
double plays, I guess."
Pugh dido' t know how many
exactly, but the Pirates did.
"The double play kills you,"
manager Jim Leyland said. "We
played well, we.hit the ball good.
:~w:he~t!~~~ lhal one hit to
·
·
The Reds got only five hits, but
it included a game-breaker.
Dave Otto (1·2) left a full-count
pitch over the plate for Joe Oliva",
who golfed it over the center-fteld
wall for a three-run homer in the
second. Robeno Kelly homered in
the third off Otto, but it w., Oliv·
er' s second home~ of the season

u-

over .Pittsburgh

"I knew the patcner was on
deck," Otto said. "I just made a
bad pitch. My intention was good, I
just didn't execute it and that one
pitch cost uslhe game.•'
That, and the five dooble plays.
"Tim bad a good sinker," Oliv·
er said. ""It ~r. payed off in all
the double plays. •
,
The Pirates managed just one
unearned run when Pugh was on
ihe mound. Sanders misplayed
Dave Clarlt's seventh-irining dou·
ble to ri~ht field, Jetting him take
third anjl eventually.score on a
ground~

· Greg Cadaret gave up an RBI
double to ·Jay Bell in the eighdl the shons!Op's eighth hit in his last
11 at-bats;;- and Jeff Reardon got
the last four outs and added some
drama to the ninth. The Pirates had
a fly oot t6 the waJI, a single and a
walk off Reardon, who got. Kevin
young to JUt into a ground out to
that made the difference.
end the game and get his second
The Reds had Chris Sabo on save.
second and Reggie Sanders on fiTS!
In other action Wednesday,
with two out when Oliver came up. Philadelphia beat San Diego 5-3,
Pugh, a weak hitter, was on de«, Houston cloWned Chicago 6-1, San
so Otto figured he could pitch Francisco edged New York 4-3,
around Oliver, walking him if nee- Los AngeleS topped Montreal 6-1,
essary.
•
Florida beat Atlanta 3·1 and St.
The one thiitg Ouo didn't want Louis beat COiomdo 7-6.
to do was give Oliver anylhing to
l'lllllies s, Padres 3
hit. He wante~ t~ throw a full· ' . Althouah they're not
count fastballtnslde. · In~tead. he ning
with
National
the
left it ova"

~ are putting i good meisure
of distanc;e between themJelve.s and
the rest of lhe peck.
Curt Schi[)Jng pitched seven
innings of shutout ball and Rk:ky
Jordan continued his hot streak
since replacing the injured John
Kruk as Philadelphi!l b~at San
Diego 5·3 Wednesd!ly night,
inCnlasing its division lead 10 3 1/2

games.

At a major-league best 15·5
with two games left this IIIOIIIh, the
Phillies surpassed their previous
hi.iahest win total for April- 14 in
19'79.
. ..
It remains to be seen how long
lhe Phillies can keep this up. The
win over the Padres-kicked off a
seven-game West Coast trip that
several plarers see as an important
indicator o the future for this ream.
. "It's a big trip for us," sai~ -~­
OI)d baseman Mickey Moranjlini.
"Last year we went ow there and
pretty much buried ourselves. -We
have to win a series or two."
Dave Hollins used the same
words, "We've been buried out
lhere a few times."
·
The fast start has haJ?.pened
without much of a contnbution·
from ace starter Terry Mulholland,
tagged with three of the five a-,
or from leadoff hitter Len Dykstra,
batting just .203. Also, outfielder
Milt Thompson is struggling at
.185. and shortstops Juan Bell and
Kim Batiste are hitting .189 and
.188., respectively.
Schilfing (4·1) was five outs
away from his second straight
shutout before the Padres scored
two runs in the eighth. Mitch .
Willial)ls worked the boaom of the
ninth for his eighth save despite .
allowing a run after loading the

ADMISSION •1.10 • 1. Gnl

STARnNG FRIDAY'
Richard Gere, Jodie Foater
·
In

SOMMERSBY PG-13
•'
SHOW TIMES:
FIU.-SAT.-SUN. 7:30 a 10:00
MONDAY THRU lliURIOAY
One Evening se- 7:JO
Admlukln$1.10• ttl DID

Tonight's g11111es .
Decrolt 1\ Toronto. 7:30p.m.

VIDCOIJ\"12 It W~ 8:30p.m.
Cala~ at

t.c. Anplca, J0:30 p.m.

S.lurday•s comes
Taru110 ll IMmh. 7:30p.m., itii.OCCII·

~IIINN
.....,

1t Vancouver, 8 p.m., jf nee-

.....,1M AoJ11oo

11 Colpry.l

P·"'•llnec-

·Sains takes unusual avenue
to coaching .pole vaulting

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes

OPTOMETRIST
Is Proud To Announce
The Relocation of His
Gallipolis Office To

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) _
my runway ·approach," Hensley
When Brian Hensley found out his said. "She wanted me to get more
new pole vaul~ coach was a speed and use a longer approach.
woman, he was
y to quit
~ soon as I changed, I cleared the
"At first, I was shocked;'' said . bar at 13 feet.''
·
'
Hensley, a 17-year-old Middletown
Sams said she met some resisHigh School junior. He was refer- tance at fiTSt, but the five vaulters
ring to his reliction when head are beginning to believe she can
coach Scott Dalton put Sandie help lhem. ·
Sams, an assistant coacb, in charge
"At the farst meeting, I told the
of the pole vaulters.
kids it would be a learning experi·
"I've had Mrs. Sams as a teach· ence for aU of us," Sams said. "I
er, cut her grass and even baby-sat just hoped lhallhey would be open·
her children. But w.hen it came to. minded and allow me to help."
~aving her coach me iia somelhing
Chuck Zody, Miami Universithat she has never done, that was ty's track coach, has been a big
another story.' •
help to Sams and her vaulters.
But five weeks into the season,
'We went up to Oxford and
The new spacious . office features all
Hensley has changed his attitude watched the pole vaulters practice
and his opinion of Sams, who underwater in the swimming
types of contact lenses and all types of
pool," Sarits said. "The procedure
worked hard to learn a sport in slows down · the reactlonnss aanndd
which women don't compete.
glasses Including:
"I was never involyed in track allowed us to see the proper tuck
The No-Line Bifocal, Children's VIsion,
before (coming to) Middletown," and tum.''
Sams said. "When the coaches met
Hensley has set a goal of 14-6,
Low Vision &amp; Free "Off Street" Parking.
in November to divide the respon· which would break the Middletown
sibilities for lhe season; pole vault· school record of 14-3 set by Doug
· ing was open. Scott asked me if I Mayer in 1976.
·
was interested and, being an open·
minded person, I agreed to take iL"
Sams enrolled ,in a clinic run by
former Olympic bronze medalist
Thoma
&amp;...
Jan Johnson.
"Mr. Jolinson was shocked that
a woman was in the class," Sams
said. •'He didn't mention that wilh· ·
in three to four years, pole vaulting .
for girl~ ';?uld be introduced in
Califomta.
·
Nor satisfied with one clinic,
-complete Lines of F9rmal Wear
Sams pursued the sport further,
attendtng more clinics, watching
from 5 Different Companies '
videos and readina books.
"Mrs. Sams is jnto pole vault·
· •Free Brochures
in' real good," Henslef said.
"I ve atteilded several clinics, but
•Expert Fitting
she's told me more about it thMt I
ever dreamed of knowing.''
•Prices Starting At $29.95
"She suggested that I change
I

228 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-3300

Clothiers

StUI Time to Order•••

Your Formal Wear Bead4uarters
. For Your Speeial Prom 'N ight

"

HUBIMRD'S CMENHOUSE

I• N-Op.,.1•r·

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6
6J

•200 of Our Own Tuxedos on Hand
for Immediate
Rental
at Best
.
..
Prices In the Area.

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- 4 , CLI!VI!L\ND 0

Collt..... J.NoooY... 2

Tilda;;.-,!!- . ·

I.(J)IlT~

'I

OPEN DAILY N,IUNDAY .12-5

. ft2·1776

.,

.-In AL action, ··
:Mariners get fourth shutout of homestand .by beating Indians
..

:..

ByJIMCOUR
SEATil.E (AP) - Malbe life
without Chris Bosio won t be so
bad after all.
The Seattle Mariners made it
two shutouts in a row, four
shutoulll for their homestand and
five for the seasm in a 4-0 victory
' over the Cleveland Indians on
Wednesday night
· "That's preUy good pitdling,"
' Mariners manager Lou Piniella
said. "We're playing good bue·
•ball."
; · One nipt after Josin8 Bolio for
• up to two months, the Mariners got
' seven shutout innings from Erik
. Hanson and Norm Cliarllon's third
' save of lhe season.
. They aJao got ·Ken Griffey Jr.'s
· seventh home run, a 395-root line
•drive into the Kingdome's right·
field third deck. Griffey had three
: hitsandthreeRBis.
·• .
• 'Junior had another great
•game," Hanson said. "He's really
' picking us up.''
• Winding up a 6·3 bomestand
·before leaving on a seven-game
mad trip to New York, B~ and
. Cleveland,' the M1rinerJ completed
•a three-game leries sweep against
, the Indians and went over .SOO at
11-10 for the first time this SC8SOII.
, • Charlton said the pressure will
' be on Randy Johnson (3·1, 2.97
ERA), Hanson (3-0, 1.53) and
!rookie John Cummings (0.3, 5.70)
:_Seattle's top three starters now
- until the team gets Bosio and
'

left-bander Dave"Fleminil back
from tbe disabled lisL
"W~'re going to have to go out
there· and get seven and eight
innings out of our Slalters," Clun·
ton said. "Sixofaaveninllingswill
wearusouL It'llkillourbullpen."
Hanson said he wasn't so sure
about Charlton's longer-is-better
theQry,

.

··· the game dictates wbetber
you can keep stretching it out," he
said.
•
Fleming, a 17-pme winner last
season as a rookie, has been side·
lined this year because of tendinitis
in his elbow. The Mariners hope to
get him back within three weeks .
Also expected bact within duec

weeks is Mariners third baseman
and 1992 AL batting chamC
Edgar Martinez. Martinez has
missing wi!P a pulled left ham·
string. ·· .
. Bosio ~ Flernif!g and Mar·
!inez on the disabled list Wcdiaes·
day after breaking his left collar·
bone in a f111t·bue coUision with
the Indiana' Jeff Treadway .on
. Tuesday nilhL Bosio was hun in
his C:ITSI SIIKt after pitching the f.irst
no-b1tter of the I !193 ~ agaanst
Boston last Thursday nighL
"You can't r:eaJlY ~lace a.~
. notch star!Cr !~~ Chns Bos1o,
Hanson said. Its real hard for a
small market~ to~ tbat type
of depth. But we v~ still~ to play
the ~.we c;an ~call b111C011t
' The big thing IS for everyone
not to try 100 hard. H we play the

gamelikewe'recapableofplaying,
we'll be OK."
Scatlle shut out lhe IDdians for
21 2/3 consecutive innings, and
Clevellnd ac&lt;red only dlree runs in
theseries.Tbelndiansbitonly.193
(18 for 93) in the three games.
Clevellll!l's ream baaing aven~ge
dropped 14 points to .290.
the lndiBDI were shut out in
COIIICCUtive pnes for the first time
since 1991 and ended ·a 2-6 road
trip. They think they're 1 much bet·
ter team than their road, trip
showed.
·
''Everyone's a liale tiled,'' Ole·
nallen Hill said. "Maybe we're
pressing a little bit. Things will
come together and we will tum it
around. It'll be good to get home."
In ·his seven innings, Hanson
allowed four hits, struck out seven
and walked two. Hanson was
pulled by Piniella after walking
Reggie Jefferson to open the
eishth. He stretched his scoreless
streak to IS 2/3 innings.
Jeff Nelson, Russ Swan and
Charlt!MI .finished, with Charlton
striking out Carles Martinez to end
the game.
·
Griffey's seven home runs in
April tied a club record held by
Richie Zisk (1991), Alvin Davis
(1984) and Ken Pbelps (1987).
In other games, Catifomiaedged
New Y&lt;&gt;rk 3-2, BOston beat Oakland 3-1, Baltimore bell Minnesota
8-4, Chicago beat Milwaukee 11·2,
Texas b\l.a t Detroit 6-5 in 11

.

innings and Kansas City beat
TORIIIto 5-3,
Aqell 3i Y.Ueesl
I t - just like old times for Jim
Abbote He was pitching in Ana·
heim Stadium with few runs to
wort with.
.
After Mark Laniston pitched
seven no·blt innings apmst the
Yankees 011 Wedneaday nipt, New
Ycrt tm1e beck to tie the 1C01e in
the ninth on Danny Tanabull's
two-rua doullle. But Al!boa, piiCh·
ing in AnUeim for the GJst time
since hil Dec:ember nde, gave up
a Into« hooter to Tim Salmon in
the bottom of the inninJ, giving
Catifomia a 3-2 victory,
"It was 1 tough game to lose,"
AbboU said. "It wu a lot of fun 10
come bact here and to pitclllgainst
Mart. but it wu biaetsweet. Mark
pitched gte~t, kept us off-balance.
... When he's at the top of his
game, he's tough for anybody to
beat. Maybe on a different night
"
Langs1011 (3-0) pitched a lhreehitta"and111Udtout 13 f&lt;ll'histbird
complete pme this !ICUOD Randy
Velarde 101 New York's first hit
when he led off the eighth wilh a
sin&amp;Je up lhe middle.
• I felt bed for Jim, but I'll take

stwm

it,"l.algstoo said.
·
Abbott (1-4) pitched a five-hit·
ter for his second complete game
this year, He struck out three and

walked one. ·
"I feel for him having to take a
loss like that," Silmon said. "But

he's on lhe other side now, so I'm
happy for Mart.''
Caiifornia got two runs in the
fourth. Rene Gonzales b1ooped an
RBI single just over lint baseman
Don Mattin~y's head and beyond
the fingerUP.I of diving second
baseman Mike Galle~o . Salmon
scored, and Tartabull s bouncing
dlrow from right to second - 100
latie to get Goozales - glanced off
shortstop Spike Owen's glove and
into sballow center. J.T. Snow
scored from third on Tartabull' s

·rnor.

Red Sox 3, Athletics 1
Frank Viola (4·1) gave up three
hits, struck out four and walked
four in 7 t/3 innings. Jeff RUSiell
pitdlecll 2/3 perfect innings for his
fourth save.
Mo Vaughn homered as the visitinJ Reid S"ox siOI!Ped a six-game
losang streak. Boli Welch (2-2)
made his fDst'ilart since Apri117
and
. gave. un three runs and 10 hits
tn 7 2!3 mDbaJ!S.
Orloiesi,Twlns 4 .
Cal CRipken- hit three-run
homer as Baltimore exlended visiting Minnesota's losing streak to
six, its Jon&amp;ell
since a seven-game
slide in "'~""
.. -'1 1990.
Ripken 's homer highlighted a
four-run third, and Baftimore
snapped a 4-4 tie with four
unearned runs in lhe sixth off Scott
Erickson (0.3). Baltimore had lost
tJwe
straight
and six·of
seven.
Arthur
. Rhodes
(1-1), who came

a

In with a 13.97 ERA. iuowed four
runs and seven bits in 6 2/3
innings. Pedro Munoz homered
' twice ror the Twins.
' White Sox 11, BJtwaa 2
Frank Thomas continued his hot
hitting wilh a two-run homer, and
Kirk McCaskill (2·3) allowed one
run and six hits in seven ianinp at
Comiskey Park.
.
Cal Eldred (3-2) was ~~ped for
six runs and rune hiIll in Just Co~!f
innings. Milwaukee 1118111&amp;er Phil
G81'11e{ was ejected in the ninth by
home plate umpire John Shuloek
for arguing a called third strike on
Alex Diaz. ·
Raqen 6, Tilen5
Julio Franco doubfed home the
~nning run in lhe 11th as Texas
rallied from a 5·1 defiCit in the ·
tighth at Arlingtpn Stlldium. - · ·
Rafael Palmeiro led off the lllh
wltha pop single off Mike Munoz
(0-1) . Franco took two strikes
attempting to bunt, then delivered
his
winnin hit
.
fo:"Henke rl-0) got his f1tst
victOry for Texas.
.~oyals 5, Blue Ja.JS 3 &lt;,,
Mart G.-doer (2-1) piiChed six·
hit bill ror seven innings as viJiling
Kansas City stopped Toronto's
four-game winning streak. Galdner
allowed .all three runs, struCk out
six and walked two before Jeff
.Montgomery aot six oulll for his
sixth save.
·
· Scott Brow lost in his major
1teague debut, allowang
· •aour runs
and five hits in six innings.
•

in
NBA
playoffs
keep
overhaul
from
coming?.
\Will victories
by
Cavs
.
-

~

believe ill ourselves, believe ihat
this rear.
' As a player, I tl!ink, yeah, we can do it --1 believe lhat's lhe
maybe seven years iii enough time biggest obstacle we have to over·
to put together a lCIIII,'' Eblo said. come.''
The Cavaliers' health is a COO.:
"They're going to keep Brad ~
-{es!ICCiability. .
Mark. They might lhink they have cern once again heading into lhe
~ Yet lhe ~pionship hopes that to add somebody. But we can playoffs, but rar less than .i t has
seemed so realistic after the Cavs . . cbange.all that this year by putting been in previous years. AmOOil lhe ·
~acquired Brad Daugherty, Mark a ring on our finger. If we· just problems: Daugherty haS tendliutis
· Price and ,Ron Harper that year
have so far gone unrealized, leav·
~ ing many to wonder whether anoth·
~ er major overttaul is on the horizQn.
• "I don't ever feel any situation
; is do or die," coach Lenny
CLEVELAND (AP)..:.. Com· as a sport," said Brec:ksville alhlet·
· ~ Wilkens said Wednesda~ as he pre: pared his team for tontght's first· petetive volleyball at the high ic director Da1 Kalinsky. "In fact,
• round playoff opener agsinst the school level no longer is solely lhe we had some parenl&amp; ~
(boys) volleyblll ~ tbiJ re-"·'
: New Jersey Nets. "Only God provinc:o of girb.
Boys' hil{h.IIChool volleyblll is
There are two leagues in the
: knows if r,ou're going to win or
, lose. I don t want to put lhat burden still at club status in Ohio, but the Greater Clevelaad area. The Clevenwnber of playcri and teams con· land City Lea1ue has 15 teams
: on anybody.
,
· • ·~1 look at it as an ~ity. tinues to incre88e and many peq&gt;le playing a 12-pme schedule.
'rhi Northeast Ohio Volleyball
&gt;we're here, and I think 1t's incwn· connected with the spon expect it
"bent on us 10 take advantage of it.'.' to be sanctioned 50011 by the Ohio League is in its lhil'd seison and
, : Daughen~ turned 27 this sea· High School Atbletic Association. has 13 teamS, up from eight teams
its first year. Brecksville, Blyria,
•son.-·and Pnce is· now 19. Since It would be p'...- in die--....
"I
woul!l
~y
boys'
~i'eybalt
Fairview,
'L*wood. Midpmt IIIII
l HarpCr was traded away in 1989,
will
be
the
next
sanctioued
sport,"
Trinity
are
in lhe North t:livisioo.
; they have Iepc:sellled the nucleus
OHSAA
commiasiOIICI'
Clail'
Mus·
Berea,
Brunswick,
Cu~ Falls,
of the team that Magic Johnson
t,oncc predicted would liecome the caro said. "If it continues to grow, Cuyahop Valley Christian Al:adeit could be Sinctioned in the next my, Hudson, Canal Fulton North·
•·team of the '90s.
west and Kent Roolevelt
: Injuries - and Michael Jordan three or five years.
"It's gained tremendous inla'eSI the Soudl Division. Kent
I
:::- have prevented the Cavs from
in Columbus and cenll'a1 Ohio. It's is the leagye's defending cbampi·
~living up to that potential,
~
"We've got lhe team to do it," an 1111-and-coming sport for boys." on.
Milscaro said in order for boys
While the popularity or boys'
~forward John Williams. said.
:::"We've just got to go out and do volleyball to be sanctioned, there volleyball continues to increase,
~ L Y011 know, it took Chicago SCV• need to be ISO high schoolS partici· there are some !'rowing pains,
"CC'a1 years to get there, and Detroit paling, according to a plan form)!· including compcibtion for alhletes
laaed about lhree yean aao. Sports · and gym space, especially at the
~A lot of people don't realize lhat.
'already
sanctioned but below that smaller schools. Bae. .l, tennis
: "Injuries have hurt us, Last
number,
such as ic:e hockey, were and track ind fteld are the other
:'Year. we wm hnlf!!y, and we wen~
permitted
to&lt;continue u long as spring sports for boys;
.
•all the way to the (Eastern Confer·
their
number
doea
not
drop
below
•
'If
the
weather
IS
bad.
the
sanc·
·
.: ence) flllals,"
·
25
teams
two
years
in
a
row.
tioned
llllllrl!i
get
priotity
(for,
gym
~· So Williams isn't so su1e it
"Right now, there's between 80 space),'fKaiinsky said. "'Jbeii the
would be wise to brealt up this verand
100 registered. hiJh schools volleyballiCalll usually praetiCl'l at
•sion of the Cavs jlllt yet.
: "That's a possibility, but the playing boys' volleyball in Ohio," 7 in the ~·"
'
, way I look aa it, whll could you do said Midpark coach Roy Varga.
Kalinslf 1111d the ~g c:oeehes
, to help this team? We've gill three "But there's about 20 more at BrectS;me hav111t complained
•·All-Stars,'' he said, refening to (schools) actually playing volley· about the additinnal ~ lllat he
~Dau&amp;flerty, Price and Lany Nance. ball in tbe state.''
said that eould cJ.age if vo11eyball
Brecksville and Fairview Park is sanctioned.
~"You can'u-eplace thole IIUYS."
. " Gcnai1 manager Wayne Embry Fairview are schools with girls'
"We ma_y lose some quality ath·
~ertainly hasn't been shy about vollerball traditions. Both have Jeres in the other sports," 110 said.
· ~pulling off inajor dealS. He boys club teams playina in the "Bec•ase of lhe (small) size of our
~ Nance and Mike Sanders, Northeast Ohio Volleyblll League.
school, ~ mav be speadiJJg our·
"I think if they (OHSAA) s.ac· selve.s 100 lhin~r,
·
'both swters today, as pan or a
. ~five-player transaction that sent . lion it. our confmncc will. adopt it .
.:'KevUi Johnson to PhOenix in 1988,
• 1 ,
rI
:and he ·traded Harper to the Los
games.~. (ContinuedtromPage4&gt;
f,ngeles CliPI*S for the rights to
;Danny Ferry in 1989.
• .
~ Craig Ehlo, who becomes an · bases with 11011e ouL
.scored twice on Montreal mistakes
;lanrestrii:ted l'ree agent after this
Jordan went 3 for·4 with one as the Dodgen put a just-complet·
'SCUOn, said he wouldn't be sur· · RBI and two runs score4 for the ed 1-610!1d trip behind them in ibe
. prlsed if major changes occurred second straight night in place of open~r of a seven-game homes...apin:.:... unless lhe Cavs win it all , Kruk, sideHned since Monday with tand. .
••·
a hamstring injury.
·
Pedro As1acio (1·2) allowed six
~.~.Sports d~&gt;adlines poste.d
Aslnll4i, Cabs 1
hill in six-plus innings and got
""
In a game p~ in just 2:06 in relief help from Pedro Martinez.
•• The Gilllipolis Daily Tribune, lhe Astrodome,
Swindell won .Dennis Martinez (1-4)' was1the
:~he Daily Sentintl, the Point his fourth straight start, giving up loser.
:~teiJSIJni Register and the Sunday·
seven hitS in eight innings.
Marllu 3, Bnves 1
: ',l'imes-Sentinel value the contribu· , "He lletS the ball and throws it,
At Atlanta, Benito Santiago's
"'ions their readers make to ,the he doesn't mess around. He throws infield single in the ninth innin1
: IIJlOTlS sections of these papers, and strikes and the other reams know it. drove in the go-ahead run ana
: khese contributions will continue to 10 they go up !here swinging. 'J'1Iat Orestea Deatrade followed with 1
:be published.
makes him easy to play behind," sacrifice Oy off Conner Cy YOUIII
· : However, certain deadlines for Hous1011111B111ier An Howe said of Award wlimcr Steve Bedrosian (0: f.ubmissions will be observal. The Swindell (4·1).
.
2) as Florida won •its second
: ileadline for photos and related arti·
The Astros scoreil four runs in straighL
·
.
:1:1es (or basketball and other winter die second off'Chicago starter Jose
Bob McClure ~1·1) picked up
:•ports is the last day of the NBA · Guzman (4·2) and made it 6-0 in the victcr)' by p1111111he Hns1 out
• firials.
·
lhe sixth.
in die eighth inning. Bryan lbrvey
; , Likewise, the deadline for subGla!alll4, Mea3 "
got his seventh ave.
: missions of local baseball- and
Matt Williams hit an RBI single
Cardllall7, Roddes 6
:~oftball-relatcd photos and related
with two OUtl in the bottom of ibe
IU. Denver, Rod s - singlecl
· ~le5, from T-ballto the majors,
ninth as ihe Oiants rallied for the home the winning run with two
:JIS well as othq spring ancl .s~mmcr second innln&amp; in 1 row. · · ' 01111 in die n1nt1t afla' two Colcndo
• 1ports, is the day of the lift 88!'1e ,
San Fiancllco lialled 2-0 enter· fteldetl allowed a pop fly to diOp
:br the World Series. The deadltne ing the elahdl, buc rallied for daee betw• them.
: Cor photos and related anicles for runs. Howard Joha1on tied the
Roc:ldeo e1o1er Darrea Holnlel
•football and other fall sports is the game in the top of !be nlil~ wilh 1 (0-2) 1nD:v' lbe t.a Jneded wltll
:Saturday before the Super Bowl.
IICrific:e fly \Mllft Willllm• diOve one out before Lull Alicll'a 111ft
:; These deadlines have been insti· ho111e Mike Benjamin with ·the IJOIIUP
.. fell betwa slut!*+
: tuted. to give I'Ciders plenty of time . pme-winnilrl ftll,
.
•
CutUit aad lefl fielder JOfl)a
w!o get their photos liack trom the . Jeff lania (0·1) waa ehar.Jed Clark. llllowlnJ tile tying run 10
Ephotogrliphy studio of choice an!! With lhe loa M4 Rod Beck ~I) ~eore.Roll Mi,Piay (1·1), tile
• to give th6 aida the opportunity to got credit fer the win.
fllllllh CardiDall illll:ltfr, JOI *e
: publish these sports photos a nil'
·Doll&amp;en 6, ...,_1 • ·' win, and l.AIO Smiih pidled ap hll
articles during the appropriate sea·
Brie Karrva ucl Brie Davia hit ~ lnpe-lndlq iiiDib ..,..
SOfl for that sport
·
solo home runs and Breu !lutler
•
By CHUCK MELVIN
.
" RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) , Seven years have passed since the
, 1986 NBA draft, lite one lhat pve
• the Cleveland Cavaliers instant

in the lmee, Nance has a fractured

left index finger, aad Price has a
spUacd ri&amp;ht thumb. .
•
"The injuria we've had in the
put were debilitating," Wilkens
said. "These are MJ&amp;i'f injmies.
They're not c!ebjJi!J!Iing.'
New Jersey's situation is much
WORe, clolely relelllbling the
prob!ems Cleveland has. faced in

Sports briefs
Bllblball
NEW YORK (AP) - NBC
agreed to cootinue tdccasting NBA
games througb lhe 1997-98 season
in a deal that gurantees a rninimiBII payment lhlt exOD"ds lhe current $650 million contract The
deal also has proviaiou eosuring
profitability for NBC and some
revenue-~.

·.

.

previous years. . Nets point guard
Kenny Anderson, with a broken
wrist, and center Chris Dudley.
with a streSs fracture in !he foot,

will miss the series completely
while Drazen Petrovic Chris
ris and Sam Bowie ~ banged up
but able 10 play.

J,

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Wedaetday'sJCOnt
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._.a.,

The Dally Sentinel~ .

Boys' volleyball clubs push
for varsity status in Ohio

A FEW
GOOD ME~
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:111

RUN PREVENTION Is exerclaed by Clnclnutl cak:ber Joe Ollv·
er alalnst Pltts!lurg'-'• Lonnie Smith In the elghtb Inning of
Wednesday night's National League game in Clnc:bmatl, where the
Reda WOII 4-2. (AP)

Mllwa'*eo (B
.,. 0.(1) ll Cbicop
p.m.
Mimi.OIOU (Mahomea 0-3) !l Bald.·
'"'"" (Maoo;aa :Z..1),7,3S p.m.
Detroit (DaherlY. 2·1) at Tcxu

(Stiob 0.(1),

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Page 4

'

(Oumuas ~; I:Z,;.'.t.'"'

• Baseball • -

.

(See NL on Pap 5)

Scoreboar(l
-

.

. Thul'8day, Apl11 a, 163

I

In NL action,

.

S~ntinel

The Daily

•

Thu...ay, April 29, 1993

•'

,.

•

!,

�.1

•

••••

,,

_fP~IG!I~8!:~Tht~
ura aw. p
,
- ~om~~~-~S~e~nu~ne~I------------~---------------2P~o~m~~~t:~~"~d~~~-~~~ort~,~O~h~lo~------~----------------------~Th~~d~~A~rl~129~!1~~
·::

By The Bend

Point Pleasant native Schwartzwalder dies··~.
•

'

"Football coach: Ben was !he
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Fordefinition,"
said former Syracuse
mer players and mends reroembered ... Floyd
" Ben " head coach Dick MacPhmon.
" If anybody saw Ben, thev
Sc:hwanzwalder as the archetypal
fiJOibeU coach - tough, honest aod ca1lcd him "coach." You couldnrt
help h. That's exactly what he
~Mwalder, who produced was," MacPherson sai(J.
Schwartzwalder, a West Vira Heisman Trophy winner and a
·national championship in a 25-year ginia gnlduate and decorated paracoaching career at Syracuse, died !rOOper during World War 0, Will!
153-91-3 at Syracuse:
Wednesday at age 83.
." " You always knew where you
He coached !he J...959 squad to
stood. You wanted Ill wort hard for an 11-0 season and the national
biJn. l owe him tons," said Gerhard championship, culrnmating with. a
Scb~ who teamed with Heis- Coaon Bowl win over Texas. That
JD811 Trophy wiDnor Ernie Davis in Syracuse teaJD, regarded as one of
the backfield of SchWartzwalder' s !he best in college .footblll, allowed
1959 Nfjoml clllml~ team . . .only 59 points all season, and an
''He pepared me ror life roore astonishmg 19 yards rushing per
lhlm any teacher ever did."
'
game.
Scbwartzwalder died at a St.
Schwartzwalder was a master of
~ Fla., hospi!al where he !he run offense. He recruited great
=~illll) after a heart attack :backs, then put in offensive line
1scheroes that were ahead of their
Scbwartzwalder turned out a !time. His trademark unbalanced
::.fsline of outstanding running offensive .line. was difficult for
at Syracuse, including Jim
ents 10 prepare for.
·
Brown.. Davis, Jim Nance, Floyd
always wanted our teams to
Lilllc ... l.a'ry Csonka.
.
different,'' Schwartzwaldci said
His teams bad a siring of 22 Jn 1989. "We ran lbat offensive
consoc lllive 11011-Josing seasons and .1ine which left people aU messed
wen110 seven bowl games.
up."
.
SchWIIIZWiklcr sliffeled a heart
A cnun)))ing stadium and a boyauaclt in February and was recu- cott by SOJDC black players in 1970
periling at his winter hoJDe in SL precipitated the decline in the prohlenburg. He bad another heart gram. Schwanzwalder retired at
aaact last Thmsday.
age 65 after a 2-9IICISOn in 1973. ·
" He was a great man. He truly
SCHWARTZWALDER DIES- F-er Srrac- fiiOIUII
His accomplishroents earned
coach Floyd (BeD) SdaWIIl'lzwaldtr, wllo • •w' ' .mp idiow Ill- •was the~ legends are made of,' ' him induction into the Cqllege
ends IS Jim Bl'OWII, Larry C-a 111111 Floyd IJale • wei • die . said Larry Kimball, !he school's Football Hall of Fame.
late Heismllll Trophy wiDDn" Ende Daria, dial Wal day Ia SL sports infD!'IDation director and a . Survivin$ are his wire, the forclo5e friend of Schwartzwalder.
Petersburg, Fla. He wils 83. (AP)
mer Ruth Swpson; two daughters,

Mary Scofield of Winesbilrg, Ohio,
A memorial service willl&gt;e hcl4 ·
and Susan Walter of South Salero, May 22 at Syracuse's Hendricks ,
N.Y.; and five grandcbildren.
· Chapel, Kim~ said,
•

.

'

Routa 7

a

''IISteit a ref if he could give !hen went on a lear m.t began with
me a~ foul for thinking 1lad !he Atlantic Coast Conference tourtbiDp about him," Valvano said in namenL Stale defeated Nonh Carone of his stories. "He said, 'Of · olina in the · semifinals, then
counc DOl.' I said, 'Well, I think knocked off Virginia and Ralph
you Slink.'·And be gave me a tech- Sampson to take !he ACC Iitle.
nicai. You can't uust'em."
S1x roore victories followed,
His first Wolfpack team $11Ug- most or them nail-biters in the
g1ed 10 a 14-13 recm1 but followed NCAA West Regional. When the
with 22-10 and an NCAA tourna· trip was done, the Wol!pack had
men1 berth in the 1981-82 season.
taken its second national charnpiTbeo came the miracle season or onship, defeating the high-flying
1982-83.
Phi Slamma.Jamma Houston team
Tbc Wolfpack finished the regu- · led by Clyde Drexler and Akeem
Jar-season wilh a 17-10 record,
Olajuwon54-S21n!hetitlegame;
.
.

Page-7

.Open house scheduled Sunday at Southern
An open house wi1l be held Sunday at Southcm High School.
The open house will begin with
a dinner in the cafeteria sponsored
by the Southern .Junior High to
raise money for school window
blinds aod the computer lab. Cost
&lt;if a turkey or ham dinner will l&gt;e
$4.15 for adults and $3.SO .f!l" chil·
dren under 12. Food willl&gt;e S«Ved
~ II IJ!I, to 2 p.JD. and lake-out
dinner$ willl&gt;e·available.

.

•

'

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Gertrude Rol!inson lead the · for Alfred in 1993 and !hat School
and self denial program of Christian Mission is July 12-18
Env~ronment ~ Health" when at Ada. The group discussed the
the Alfred Umted Methodist . visit of West Ohio Bishop Judith
Wo~n met at !he horne of Nina Craig to Pomeroy.
Robmson and Clara Follrod.
Sarah Caldwell had the prayer ·
All members took part in read- calendar and chose Andrea Scar·
~g and diseussion: Special empha- brou8h who is in laity in Chwch of
· SIS ~as placed on awareness and · the World in Tex-as. The group
healing of waste care and pollllli~. signed a l!inhday card for her.
Sarah ~d~ opened !he blisiDuripg the social hour Nellie
~s .IOCetm,, wil;h prayer and group · Parlcer served ice cream, strawbersmgmg of Th1s Is My Father's ries and homenuu:Je cookies CharWorld." Friendship calls reported lotte VanMeter gave the bl~ing.
for !he last !hrec months were 134.
Attending were Rev. Hausman,
Rev.
Sharon
Hausman Osie Mae Follrod Florence
announced the Co-op Volunteer Spencer Clara Foll~od Nellie
Appreciation Dinner 81 Chester on Parker Martha Poole N~ RobinMay 10. Alfred UMC is to furnish son, o'ertrode Rol!inwn Charlotte ·
salads. She also announced Native · VanMeter and Sarah Caldwell.
Arneri~ Awiuencss Sunday.
.
Osie Mae Follrod will be proNellie Parker announced that gram leader and ·will S«Ve refreshFaye Copen is UMW shepherdess ments at !he May 18 meeting, .
J!ray~r

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DID SOMEONE SAY
THIS IS 100 1/o
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GUARANTEED?

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TRI·CHLOR 3"
TABS

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16 LB....~...... ·s49.95

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8 LB...........~8.75

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4 LB........... 515.99

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TM Pool '"-ople will open your pool lit a
chera- of only--.

·

'CAMELOT' TO OPEN - Curlty Cnlllu, left, who plays
Guenevere In the RSR Eaterprlles prodac:tloD or ""Camelot,"
receives some lastrac:tloa from director Ed Roark during
rehearsaL "Camelot'' wiD be stqed • a beaellt for ldtolanbips
lhis Thursday, Friday ud Saturdat at I p.m. Ill the FIDe ud Performing Arts Ceater 11 the University of Rio Grlllde. Admission is

,'

9

~·r•

$5.

my..._ '

Matthew.

~ ~-

-

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:~

_ ..-

---••••••••••
••••••• •••

~ Sl'!lLINC ACI
...
....:. ........ .

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"'*

......

•••••
IIIBB
•

'he

CUT20" ·

lAVE
'4D

•

,::,:-- A stint' "It Could Happen in. a
Moroent was sung l!Y:"Bonnie
, Arnold, Gina Thoroas .and Kay.

--IIJ'It .......
llREIT, BUY/
CUT
....

a Oual·pori' reliability

~":!~~~·-~hor~~i:J9niOI folding

T?.

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Name omitted

,...,,...

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,.......

VALVANO DIES-.. II' Nardi Ca I 8ale ISO.M
«llltlp'l
J.. ...... '·.... " ~ ........
W.arUII ;l:d ... UMiwalll)lflb I 'aftl?
J
ern .. die l~ N(:AA ..._pk lit . - . . . . " • , 1 fa

* ......

Dlll"lnaa, N;;C. of

ttr.lle.-

I

47.

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The name of Christine Grueaer
was unintentionally omitted from
the Ust of llllden'- who made tho
dean's lisl81 Hocldag Collegc for
the winter qUIIIICr.

'Nllf

,.
...______

tion ror hi!lh school willl&gt;e held at
I:30p.m. m ROOJD 101 for the l&gt;enefit or parents of eillhth graders. At . Winners after 18 holes of play
this meeting l!as1c registration m the Tuesday Morning Ladies
information will be given. Leah Lcagpe at the Mei~s County Golf
Ord, guidance counselor, and ~oil Course were: Nellie Wright, low
Ord, superintenden!/principal, will gross; Tee Teaford, low net;
be availaj&gt;le to answer questions Clance .Knlutter,low putts.
and share concerns.
·
Clarice Knlu!tcr had two chipThe entire community is invited !Jts and Tee Teaford bad one chip- · .
to oome to the dinner and view the . m.
activities and projects undertaken
Allllidies are welcome to participate in the league.
by Southem students this year.

SATURDAY, MAY 8
Holzer Medical Center French 500 Room
Registration At 7:30A.M., Program at 8 A.M.
Presentations by .Dr. Daniel R. Black, Jr., a
Physiatrist 11t Holzer Clinic, Dr. Daniel
C81"1' with Scott Orthopedic Center, Inc., In
Huntington, WV., and · the Holzer
Rehabilitation Center starr. Topics to be
discussed include: "The Knte: From injury
to Return to Athhtics;" and "Ankle

·ReluJbiUtlltion."

.

Robn Cllnfe fnu"-• •II eo~~eMs, •thl.tle
tr•l...,., •nd lndlulda•ll fnuolued fn
•thlftie profll'•rn•r

REGISTER BY CAlliNG
LORI WARD AT
(614) 446·5244
Registration Feels '10
'

. Va.

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Completes course
FOJI.T JACKSON, ·Columl!ia,
S.C. - PvL Thomas J. Collins has
C!&gt;~Pietcd an acbninistrative specialist course here.
1
Students were trained in the
preparalion or military recordS and
forins. Instruction was also 'given in
fundamentals of the Anny filing
system, typing, aod operation of
office machines.
·
Collins is ~ son 'of Nancy M.
Collins of ~916 Olive SL, Colum· bus, and Richard E. Collins of
Ponleroy. .
. He graduated {fOlD .Westland
High School, Galloway, m 1990.

'

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Our new Preferred
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to think aboulltgives you
instantacress to}OOrrnoney

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The checking balance will earn you
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APRIL 28, 29, &amp; 30
OFJ:ER GOOD ,ONLY ON ORIGINAL ROLL 135,110. 126 OR DISC
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TAKE YOUR FILM 10 ANY OF THE FOlLOWING LOCATIONS:
271 N. SE~D AVE. .
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annual fee. Plus a

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5411 Ulloft 8L

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HOLZER CLINIC'S

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP

!he hoete8s

,,.

Kathryn Jolmson presided at the
meeting. O[ricers reports were
given and sick calls IDCDtioned.
There was an Easter bounct contest with prizes going to Leona
Hysell, preaiest; Peggy Bole, ugliest; and Ida Murphy, most unusual.
The meeting closed with the
song "Burdens Are Lifted at Calvary" and prayer by Virginia
Wyatt.
,
The next roeeting will be at· !he
.,Bradbury Qiiii'Ch of Cluisl on May
27 widl Lynn Runyon, guest speaker.

•
Rebecca Dawn Roush, Racine,
recently ceJebmed her third birthday with a "Kitty Dress-up" tbente
party at the home or her parents,
Rollett and Carrie Rouab Jr.
Attending were Carrie Roush,
Glenn and Marie Young Sr., Tilla
Roush, S18Dley, Tonya and Christopher Holter, Jeff and Vanessa
Brown, Glenn, Buddy and Briueny
Young, Lester, Carol, Michael and
Zachary Manuel, Jim and Opal
Hupp. Jim and J.R. HUI&gt;P· Troy
Manuel, Larry and Jeff Barnes, Pat .
· Mordnstem, Shirle Willis, Deb·
bie, Tiffany and
Willis, Betty
VanMeter, Pauline Wolfe, Paula
Gill!ride and Yvonna Pmioger.
Sending cards and gifts were
G~ne and Hilda Davis, Don and
·Angie Roush, Brenda Parish, Dennis and Gertie Manuel, Helen
Manuel and Nick and Katie Perry.
•
Refreshments were served along wi!h cake aod ice cream..
Door.prizes were won by Glenn
Young Sr. ; Opal Hupp and J.R.
Hupp.
.

A program or slides and tapes
on bluebirds was preseulcd ~ Mrs.
Pat Holter at the recent JDeetulg of
the Sbade Valley Council of Floral
Arts. Mrs. Holter was hoetess for
!he meeting with fivo IDCIIIIIcrs presenL
Roll call was answered by nam·. ing a fact about birds or bats.
'·
Beuy Deall gave devotions "The
Great Banhworm Race" from the
Sunday DigosL
For the next meeting on May 16
'!he group wiU tour Stahl's Nursezy
and watch a movie. Those going
, are to meet at Eastern High School
at3:30pm.
.
. Everyone illtending made bluebird boxes.
Rerreshroents were served by

, . , . . , . , H' , . , .

McElroy.

Roush obserVes third, h~Y'It-h~

'Bluebirds
discussed at
recent meeting

Officers were elected at the Maison, Pam Diddle and Brenda
recent meeting of the Xi Gamma Curfman. This was also the group's
Epsilon Chapter, Bell .Sigma Phi Ritual of Jewels Tea.
New .officers are Judy Williams,
Sorority, held at the home of Phyllis Hackett. Hostesses were: Sue president; Kathy Cumings, vicepresident; Celesta Coates, recordmg secretary; Vicki Ault, corresponding secretary; and Geri Walton, tteasurer.
Celesta Coates was installed as
a new merol&gt;er.
Nominated for girl of !he year to
.E aster weekend guests · of l&gt;e announcecllll.FOtJDder's Day on
Dorothy Roller, Middleport, were Thursday included Patty Pickens
her son, Lt. Col. Ret. I ames and and Judy WiUiams.
.
Mrs. Roller and grandson' Mark
Fair advertisements to l&gt;e sold
Roller, Waldorf, Md.
by the group were distributed.
On Sunday a family gathering Areas to l&gt;e covered include Midhonoring the family of Mr. and dleport, Bradbury and Rutland.
Mrs. Brian Conde whose children,
Founder's Day will 1&gt;e Thursday
Andrew, Mason and vaierie Conde at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis:
.were christened during services 81 · Social hour is at 6 p.m. with dinner
tbe . Heath United ,Methodist at 6:30 p.JD. Secret sisters shoUld
Qluach.- ..,. • . .
' .•
be remembered fur !his ocassion. &gt;'
Other guestS were Mr. and Mis.
Kenneth Calc, Marcia aod Jessica
Cllle, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Andrews and Tyler Ray, Mr. and
Mn. Richard Roller, Belpre; and
· Mrs. Wilbur Hanning, Middl
Visiting with the group~re
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gress, Middlepon; Mr. and Mn. Pat Gress,
Benjaroin, Joseph, Johnny and
WiUiam, Columbus; and Dr. and
Mrs. Steve Eddy, Parkersburg, W.

Middleport
personals

Janet Bolin speaks to fellowship

·

Janet Bolin was guest speaker at
the recent roeeting of the Meigs
·county Women's Fellowship he~
at the Zion Chim:h or Christ with
31 roembcrs ~L
Mn. Bolm spoke about 'spring
fJQwers and demonatrated several
flower arrangements.
The~ opened with ~
singing ~ !he Baale Cry and
prayer by Bonnie Arnold. Isadora
· Williams tead devotions froiD

---

Epsilon chapter elects offic;ers

•

•

FUlL SERVICE POOL OPENINGS
·
dirty old pool co- end gotUng your pool $
995
otarled, l•t th• Pool Peol• gk•
of h.
,

If rau don't look tonWud to ftghUng wllh thilt

ln conjunction with the dinner,
the high school will be open for all
coromunity members to tour the
building and talt with many of !he
high school teachers. Classes and
activity clubs will have displays
showing projects from the _1)8Sl
school year. The school store (Tore
nado Towncenter) and the FFA
greenhOuse wiU also l&gt;e open.
·
In addition to the open house, an ·
informational session on registra~

Lady winners
announced

Gertrude Robinson presents program ·

$1995 PllsTax

Yep. H you uee the proven
Suatain•trouble-lree pool care
ayatem according to label
direction• and get algae In
your pool thle .umm'r, PPG ·
will pay lor the algae trutment
chemlcala needed to reetore
the pool to 1111 elg...free ·
condition. Wow! What could
be -ler end good lor your
pocketbook? .Great ayatem.

29, 1993

Th~raday, A~rll

I .

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•'

•253 W. Main.St., Pomeroy 1-800-552,19110

The Daily Sentinel

:.of

'

Ex-N.·c . State coach.Valvano dies at 47
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
appearanclC at lhc IRIII sioc:c be
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Jim resigned
Valvano, the wise-cracking New
Instead of his cbanc:teristic
Yorker who COIICiied North Caroli- swaggaiag suon, his sreps were
na State to a magical natimal bas- halting 111111 be - sfi&amp;bdy beat. At
ketball championship before scan- the Alpericla Spons Awards, be
da1 forced hw out. died todsy of bad to be helped up the SfqlS 10 the
cancer. He WIB 47.
Slagc, but his wu:ds still IBII&amp; of the
Valvano died pcsccfully around P!Bsion llld aDCJCion be llougblto
10:30 a.m. with his family lly his the gllllle: ..Aad, if by r~, the
side at Duke University Medical Loot WilliS 1111:• be's going 10 act
Center in Durham, according to his the best llama bo••• ,., ... Cit·
attorney Woody Webb.
""'ked»ll COidl dill they ever hid
"Valvano wag¢ valiant fiJht up there, I'D ecllyoudlll."
.against cancer over the past year,"
· He fought his illness wilb the
Webb said. "Jimmy V never gave same scasc of humor that made
up."
•
.
him popular beyond N.C. Stale's
Valvano pulled off one or the borders.
·
...... · great ·upsets in collegc.. basketball · .
During a Mlltb 4 Sl'"'d' • the
history in 1983 when- the Wolf- awards show on ESPN, VaiYII!O
pack, a team with 10 regular-IICI- said: "On:uc:m llltnway 1111 DIY
son losses, beat heavily favored physical abilities. It cannot t&amp;Mdl
Houston in the NCAA loumament my mind, it .,._. UJUCII ~ IICIR
fmal on Lorenzo Charles• buzzer- and it c:anmt 1DUCb
lieating dunk. Seven yean la!er, he
Tbco lhc teleplompler Dnhcwl
was forced out after an NCAA "30 seconds." Valvano stopped
in\ ...
qf!ipliolt
round his plavers had and laugi!M
·.
.
shoes
and
I
.
. . , . _ gOI ~ _.. - SO1u the!t
C0f11plimentary
·~
"'"""''~ ... v•- - 3
·tickets.
body, and I'm going 10 wony IIJoul
He then became a successful some guy flasbiag a m rp ...
· bi'O!II!caster, aild eoiltinucd to wort says I've got30 ••ob?" be raid.
Valvmo a• • ......., Nann Sbn
after his cancer was diagnosed in
1992. Indeed, he opened the 1992- as N.C. Swc's l5dt ..._. CDdl on
93 season in the studio for ESPN March 27, 1980. He ,_alyand at courtside.
over fans wi!h his WIIC c:rw nag
Valvano rejoined the Wolfpaclc charm and developed a llylc that
ror a 10-year reunion on Feb. 21 earned high fees as a IDDii••hwl
and· gave a capacity crowd at speakerforcuptW-....
Reynolds Coliseum a stirring
" I teU lhclll jokes," be once
description of how that cbamJ!i· said when ubd bow a New Yorkonship team belped .bim cope WJ!h er became ao popullr em Tell• co
his iUncss.
.
Road, "I fC)I them I c:m't fly fisb
"The '83 team gave you hope, because it's tough ~g into a
gave you pride, told you what hard fire hydrant."
work was al)out," Valvano said
And Valvano loved to jotc at
rrom center court. It w~ his rust his own cxpcniC

.

'•

.'

· Find out more about
Preferred One and do it
soon. After all, when you .

haYethebest8IXOUI!t,'Nhat '
is there to thiDk about?
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110 High St.
Glaulllr,.OH

•

114s7174t44
•.

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•.
Sentinel

Children attend
recent retreat in
West Vrrginia
·

Bl I.I.L 1'1\ BO \RD

Oildre• of tbe First&amp;aptist

0 ~JacP;e,RCelllly~a
c:lil*al's rate~~ held It Plrdlmeot
Valley.~. W.Va.
The theme of the retreat was
"'WaltiJI&amp;' iD the Lialn". It was
- - ?be di;eaio;; of tbe chan:b' s
,.,... putow, Ric:k Harris. COUDsclan
.tbe relrell included Jeri
a.ris. Debi Bradford, Anthooy
Badfonl.llld Ray llld Sbeila Prof.

IULU111 lOIII 11. .11
4:30 P. a DIY IEFOIE
PUIUCI1101 .
•
t--;:::=::==::::~:-1

CIULIE'S

MICIOWIRORI

SMALL DOZER WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
711711UMESTOII I

llli''U

AuociaUon 20th AnnUal Sale Fri.,
April 30th, 7-:30. 13 bulla, 7 helfera,

REASONAILE RATES
'25 HOUR

Jackton

Tweaty-four children from the
Raciw 11'1:11 J*licipllied in the two

for aim-ilr ., vice was award-

ed to the Rev. William Mid·
' wadi• ueceat mwing of the
Roc:t Si•i POruiF·
IMiaa s-y Kubl presented
a J"?"liC 10 llilil b the many ICliv·
iDes ud services performed as a
retired milliater and citizen of
MeipO
y.
A po11uc:1r dinDer preceded lhe .
UW ?in&amp; llld JJKC WIS Ji'«&lt;l ~y the
lle.Y. MW' Wlftb.
'
. . ()pl1 ( l . - pye ~ le~­
. live n:port. CWA clWriDan Bar~
bani Fry reponed tb. at old eye

J' . •a llill being collected

Ollc: appeal for aid was
aaswered aDd a contribution to
Pt ... Giqc for the bate sale

_.._
- -'W
!k:.
A:us •

.

. T1lc IICW pange history book
'"People, Pride and Progress" is
i t - reported.
AD
?be JliiiF jWticipated ia a cc:n:moily honoring
ll8nlld BW+IIIID for SO years of

scnicc 10 the: panJe. Lecturer,

I

-•BR,S-, 2onooo,-1

BR apt l'loportr lndudoo •.aoo aq, ft. t.m

,.

bldg.

· ~~~~;:;-~:o.;·:,~:~~-;.~:1~~-:b:;~:·t:-::::::~~~
NURSES'AIDE .
W'ITH CP.R
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
· SOMEONE TO .
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
·
HOME . .
. 614-992-7698 ·

MalgsAiumnl
Aaaoclatlon Is . .
looking fQr currant
ldd?'liiiSIIs of Meigs
g?'llcluates tor April

1n12lll8:.!:~ !~umnl

·May 29, 1993.
Maiii?Cidreues to
Meigs Alumni
Association, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohlo45760 '

312&amp;11 mo.

Alfred area happenings
Nellie Parker and Fred Smith,
Chester Class of 1931, attended the
graveside services at Chester
Cemetery for their classmate, Edna
Warnez Childers of Ncwpcrt Also
attending were Mrs. Childers'
cousins, Ruth Taylor, local, and
Clarence Wamer,Atbens.
Pnm and Richard Yost, Aaron
and Sarah, spent Easter holiday
with his parents, Maxine and Del·

B.-y Kubl, paemed Blactston
will a SO year pin and Master
WilliuD lbdford was awarded the
Carrie Kennedy presented the
:~shelf from the Nation- program at the recent meeting of
the Friendly Circle of Trinity
Followilllthe meeting, an aiiC· Church held at the home or JoAnn
?illlwasbcld.
Wildman.
-Birchfield honor_ed
Mrs. Kennedy's readings
included "Always at Springtime"
with bridal shower
by Helen Steiner Rice, "Now 1 Lay
- ..-.. Birchfield was honored Me Down to Sleep," and "SIIll')' ol
-~
Messiah from "The Beauty of Eastrec:adiJ widt a sbower hosted by er" wriuen by Handel in 1743 and
~ -:'Jat:.~':f.::=.d, and completed in 24 days. Mrs.
Odlers aueodi~ were Shelia Kennedy also gave the offering
. prayer.
Howell, Sarah P mer • Connle . Gay Perrin presided f!!the meetPallia, Gay YOUDg and Dorothy mg and stated a donaaon of $100
'IJO.Tbe_._ decualed in.;.;,.._ with was given to the Meigs County
_.. .;'llld
made lhfllDlary from lhe Lenten Breakby 9dia Holidl.
fast.
'~IJ
wen:
woo
by
Palmer,
Mary Kautz thanked everyone
G"'
for the vase of flowers and Clll'ds

•

she received during her ' recent illness and Mrs. Perrin thanked all
who asSisted wilh the Eas~ break·
fast.
Mrs. Perrin informed the group
of the many missions the benevo·
lence committee of the chmth will
be helping this year.
Trenton Cleland, Joe Hill and
Pam Crooks will continue to be on
. lhe prayer line.
·
The May fellowship meeting
will be held in the near future.
A 1ello salad snack, crackers
and muffins were served by _the
hostesses JoAnn Wildman and Carolyn Thomas to 17 members.
Favors of cross book marks
made from ribbon f'Cre presented
to each member attending.

spencer, Mora present UMW program
.

~~~

Olkls pRIClltiDa Jifts to. the
....._.. pat were Susie Millcr, . - "S . d

,._lllll..SAmyFooce allofPt.
Plcasa•t. w. Va.; Trac'ey Hall,
Gn!CII p.t. Edythe Rogers and
JeweU Spears. Gallipolis Ferry·
J - Slllidl. ci-lcstoo, w. Va.;
a · Wfi&amp;III,I'Oca. W.Va.; Debbie liuas. Plm Smith and Char~ 0... .u c1 Racint: Virginia
G--. Ptw:aoy;
Clmpbdl. PI ; • ...._j, Ky. and Marla
FUiiCC,Sc:ollA.F.B m
·• ·
•

Gcoraia

Country Bunl.pkins
elect new officers
Tile Counuy Bumpkins 4-H
Clu ..S the: COUDtry Bumpkins
Rabbil Club met recently at the
........... PlliDs Elementary School.
a - maalxn lOCI ~Me advi~Qn

~t::f., new clfJCen ror lhe

f F .h
· ee so au ·Death and ,
Resurrection" was the tide o~ the
• program present~d by Manlyo
Spencer and Demse Mora at the
April !JICCI!ng of the Chester United Methodist Women.
~ focus of tbe program .was
Ch~~uans hll'!or, death, endings
Bill! goodbyea as
10 new
!ife. ~ripture ~
J~.:. ~:
mg
program 11 was s............
Jesus used the image a seed 10
speak of God's plan for bis own
cfeath and resurrection when he
said "lJnless a ~~Ud falls to the
earlh and dies, it ~mains alone; bui
if it dies, it bears milCh fruiL" Each
person took a packet of seeds and
reflected on the seed of the spirit
lhat have been planted in dieir own
Jives.
1
The group sang the hymns ''My
Failh Looks Up 10 the Thee" and
"Because He Liyes" with Betty

E:;"ges

or

FACIAL

.

.
.
Dean a, pianist. The .prpgram
closed wilb prayer.
· Kathryn Mora presided at .thc
business meeting with nine members presenL There were .27 sick
and shut-in calls IqiOI'ted.
The group voted to donate $75
every quarter to die ~igs Cooperalive Parish.

MARY KAY

lndopelrclant Beauty
Conaulllnla
Clrolyn McCoy

aiAirpoft.

.

.

(614189U082'
S.nd111 Hender aan
(614) 882-3847
.P!oducllln

(4) 1S. 22, 2t; (5) .. 4tD

=:,_

DAYIISOI!S
PLUMBING

THE lOOK
BARN

31904 a.•••••
CrHkRoall
IIWtllepert, Oltlo
614·992·7144

BUY • SEU. • TUDE
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Middleport, Ohio
Mo?I.·Frt. I 0:00..5:00
n~., 10:00..6:00
Closed Suntlay
992-3577

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O~P1Jllng

•tudy
tho two Countr •••·
otudy wae undortoken to
. . . .1.. tho boot .... lor
an lmprO¥td OaRia-Melge
Regional Airport oopeble of
mHIIng the long-term
aviation ....- for Oalllw
and lllelge Co.......
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985·4473
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•BP Diesel Supreme...Try it, there Is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Catane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel In winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH.15TH thru MAY 31ST
Special farm Ierma with payment 4 tlmee o year

WW/1

Howcl'll L Wrftesel

ROOFING

...,._._
..., ,., •=-:ao.
- r..
, . _ lloln dli1o, ..., 3rd, 114ft2-17211.

and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.

· Larry E. Miller ·

.NEW- REPAlR
Gutters .
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE £SnMATES

949·2168
3-16-93-dn

yearw

A relny night 5

hand
and Aid "lt'w time to

Jeeua took your

.......,

.....

•

When ehe •Y• ehe
cldn 't get to tell you
goOdbye.
All of · the' people
• whoH life you did ,
touch,
Your
family
end

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

J &amp; THOME
IMPROVEMENTS

....

Services
lnte~iOr &amp; Exterior

Fr• FMIIIII..Io• te

Paint Mobi
Homes and
Aluminum Siding
Washing

Inside •IHIOut

LP•oinlio""

frlencle

Wo love end mlee you
very much.
Patty &amp; Michelle,
Peronte, Brolhen &amp;
• Sl••r

Freo Eetlmotea,
Low Coate.

Work-GIIIIi

•'toed

614·949·2325 or
614-593·5010 '

FlEE ISTIMAns

915·4181

4+1mo.

MEADOWS SHOE &amp;
LEATHER REPAIR

~~ R.,II

......,.,..

Houn: Sun.&amp;· llall.c:toaed

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE
-----

•••lontlalloollng 11 our

Shrub and Tree .
Removal

- 1

· Trimming &amp;.

' Reolc?anlal l eommorc?al
FREE ESTIMATES
4f1771113-1fn

·· COMPLITI
UDIITOI
SEIVICE ·

Thn.' 111.11 ~ ....
10411ullt11JA-.
p "'~ Clh. .,..

WHERE' CUnOiiEi SATISFACTION IS
OUR MAIII COICERII.

PATIO FUilNITURE:
-2 Seat Gliders
•3 Seat Gliders
•Piirit Stands
.Umbrellas
•Bar Table ~/cultured marble
top &amp;4 bar Stools
····· ..........

.
•ARIELLE 5 pc. Dining Patio
Group lncludea 42" round glau top table 1nd 4
ann dining chalraln auorted colors. ,
Reg. $650.00 SALE

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

AUOIAS UNK
·.·

UPAIR

III!OIIIU ..KEI

CALL IIC
992·7204 or
742·2223
41181D3/1 mo.

UCINE ,
MOWfl CLIIIIC

Wlllll ALlEY
P.bi.. Strvkt
Mowers· CHII S.ws

w•••••,.,.

Authorized: Brlgga l
S?ntton lllTD, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Cenwr
' P?CKUP end DEUVERY
Houra 1111- M·F 11-3 SaL
Cloud Su!llloY

472691t. Rt. 241• IY. Mile OH Rt. 7
Tltru Cltester on Rt. 241

PH. 614·915·3949

Chester, Oh. 45720

36358 SR 7

985·3~06

NOW OFFERING....;.
,
OIL AND LUll SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR IIID ROTITING

Youlll WE'RE UYE AND WAIT·

INOi - l?uol
- •lbl.111517.
SS.9t
Per ?lin.
Yra.
Unlltor Co. --ottl.
L09E 12 Ll8 In 7 DAYII • Tl!e
Ullmlle Z4 HOI.I_R D?ETI lont7
t1 and .., . lllf addr ,C.

__

Save Big on Voyagenr
Po-.d by 11-ury OutiiOanl•

,

o,n B~n Road

1

PH. 814-258:816&lt;1

--

4126/lfn

ond fnlormolloot (ltlaltogo: Nulol-

lloot Cenlor, P.O. Boo&lt; '10, - .
.....,,wv-.

-y.

lllyrtlo AIM: ?Iaiii On
?leoch, 1 l 2 Rm. En. $4GI til
Nightly. $171 IS22I
5lllo
Inc. 17om. Wit. CoR 101 ZSl511Z.

RODOERI 1-1

10 mllu aouth of Galllpolla
15YOIIW

. ?IYRTLE BEACH M?IAD&amp;,
Ocean Froni ......., Condo 110

· ~ICENSED 11H1 BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591
12·5-lfn

EXCIVAnNG
' (614)
667·6621

•Strap Patio Furniture
-cushion P4dlo Furniture
•Assorted Colors
· •Patlo.Accessorles

IIIII 7IIY Ill On(f. W. 7 CUI 211.
?llbf Clolhlo,
Clllld- Clolt.e, ,...,.....,
?lllc.

a

tor (ltlrll.
-MDIIIal'lea.
...,3Q4.471.17'12.
..... Lionel. J a D'o Aulo Por1o ont2 Se1Y1110,

oleo 7Mtna ..... ..,. l IIUCiil.
-..m:ali

• -41117.

Coli

Pnn"lw Ouortol l

Singing

CooltM- !-ICIOPII ~
MIJ 13, c:o.-1 Tlckllo p
NowI

sore

Giveaway

I.

2 aoot2 molo hunllng ~.
mo0oor - AKC AINdile, 3114'
175-7771.

BISS'LL BUILDERS, INC.

Pt. Pleulnt
&amp;VIclillty

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • liooflng

IKIIt.,.ToGIYHwtiJ ll?ale.l
F01111lo Collco, Call Aft., I P.ll.
114-2N-137r,

• -

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Old w.r~.. Pupo, 114-

:118-1110.

Ernployrne11t Serv1ces

614·992·7643
(No s•..-, Calls)

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. I. BOSTON .

El- ...rn.

Pool~ 4 To I. 1171 WMk.

14111 State Rt.-7 • 614·446·0736

E-'"t ..._

R&amp;C IICIVAnNG . ,
Bll:lDOZING

PONDS
SEPT1C SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
' .BASEMEJifi'S &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmoetone,
Dirt,.Gravel and Coal

Diocanllld - -...~ r.npo,

onllque - . . .
PoUcli
themtom .... and ............
tlq-. Antlq-, RUM
~-- . . do liP'

otamDod .......... lor .......

Auto-Raatals
SprineTf••
SJNclal .

WoAiooHno
7 l12

J. S. MARINE

To--

3 · Annou"'*"enta
OUY91 We-

2/24/93/ I •• pd

949·2104 -

T-WM.,FIL

WHERE IUND·NIME MER(HINDISE
IS FOUit IT IN IFFORDDLE PRICE
Recliners, Sofas, Hld..l·leds
Simmons leautyrest Mattresses

Lifestvle

• _~

:J-4.83.. 1 mo.

3-11-93

Bring• a t•r to my

Lawn Mowing,
FertiHzlng, weectlng,
end Soedlng, __ _

JOE I. SAYRE
SAYlE TRUCKING
614·742·2131

JeH Wickeriham

girl

(

CDiftiU
CIIS,.RUftiON
c.

I-ION37·1460

St. Rt. 7

Re.........

OWNER:

Your Innocent llttlo

· SIZED LIMESTOIIE
fORSAU,·
call614-992·
6637

u•STOIE,
GUYEL &amp; COIL

992·3470

go."

Quality
Stone Co.

HAULING

SIZED LIMESTONE

ago

LAWII ·
UIIITEIIIIKE
949•2391•

WILDIIG AID

Po;neroy, Ol?io

The Eastern High School alumhi
coordinating oommittee is currently
making plans for the 1993 alumni
banquetiO be held June 12 at the
high school.
Any alumni not contac?ed with·
in the past live years sbould contact
Brian Collins .at 985·3593, Julie
Elberfeld Dillon at 992-2006 or 1•
Leonard Koenig 81992-9918. .

2112192/tfn

WE DO

ROOFING

liiD DERnHING UIDEINIATH

BUILDERS
. 742·2321

20 Ye•rslxp.

'.'A QuaiUy A11ured Contractor"

41711
, WITH MOTHlR'S DIY JUST AROUND-TIE COINER, WHY NOT
: CONSIDD A IEAUTIFUL, YET. PUCTICAL Gin
Quality Patio Furniture by lalcyon-Mta•owcraft &amp; Telescope

... •r :=:h

h•ll•li•g

LANDCLEAAWG,
DRIVEWAYS IN8fAu.ED

tt2·5335or
915·356.1

na~ SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU~
.

eCo~lete

KDII~S

Plan banquet

Ct '7 Bamptia 4-H Club were
MaU Morris, president; Billy
Sc.llll%, vice president; · Amy
Saill. secn:wy; Crystal Smith,
t t+'llld llt'c:ty cBic:a. New ofli.
cas b die Coan?ry B~ Rabllit et.b Amy Sauth. presi*-t Josepll McCall, vice presiICCICI8rt; Cody
3 ...
and safety officer;
c- Howard. recreatiOD; Joseph

Mary Kay ... I piO'M~
elltctive lldn en Pf191111
dnlgned lor your lldn ;ype,

eo..

dovoloptnent ol an I•·
pro Jed Q,W1 111111 Aeglan-

bert Yost, Lancaster.
Doris and Floyd Avis were
Easter guests of their daugh~ and
4/29/93 ...
family, Kay and Larry Spencer, 2
In Memory
Racine.
.;;....___;;;..;..;.;.;,;.;.;.;.;..;..:__ - - - - - -.....
Sunday visitors of Nina Robin·
r
son and Clara Follrod were Norma
WICK'S HAULING
In Memory of
Jean and Gerald Swartz, Reno;
MATIWEAVER
Alma Swartz, Williamstown,
SERVICE
W.Va.; Leola and Otto Swartz,'
April29, 1118836970 Bal Rl• Road
Shade.
Aprll29, 1993

Carrie Kennedy leads Circle program

ribbon.;;-

COMPUIIEIITAIY

miG._... ... , _ .
to wu.nd lh?e 711f'onilollw
IIIMIIng and ptov.. tho7r
etot•••nte ••btut tho

•

AVAILABLE.
. SEPTIC IYSTEMS1
- HOlE SITES and .
TRAILER SITES,

112111ia11mo

Airport Autllcirlty and lie
lltw Enlualloo ltudy

Technlul Advleol')'

.~:.
SERVICE

·BOOB SERVICE IS
OURDDAL

IISSitl &amp; lURlE
CONSTRUCnON

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
lllC5 TAACKHOE WORK

· I'OIIIIOY. 01.

1

Tha n-'11111 Algla Ml

.....-b...,..

•••VCIIINIR

'

0"·

Tho pt1ct 11ao-. reducod"' sea,eoo anct
ft~ of up .. of,..,_
........ ..., bo
por·
aon Ill buy wry nk» ,_. on 3\1 In

-

992·7553
'

II
lllt:~ft:;MI
~
Allplrt Aoail
CW=OK.41G1

lollawing

' call 304-811~14.

filL

Rock Springs
Grange has meeting
A "Citin:o or the Year" award

H_.•.,.,

Mlltlid ......... .......
eiiMIW lie - t ..
lito Aliport AuiMfltr In •
eealed anvelope II tho

1D cowa with calves; 8 atMra.
Jackaon County Falrgrounjla,
ColtllgeviUe, WV. For Information

ror

dayAfMIIL
li . .
d
.
Rllell or Jumor an sen1or
hi&amp;b youth will be held there this
w 'awl

DEliVERY .SERVICE

Counly Polled Herelord

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

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG

31311131fn

2 Front Strut• • L•ltor
.• 4 WIIHIIIIJIIIIellf
Price• Stllrtfllf at
1 129.95 +Tax

,...,... iepill?u.

Projec:l books were presented

_,
-•hers were instructed to
wodt 011 dlcir boots. Easler baskets

.-.-.e.

. .EIIAL
WIUPIPEI·

•LOVESEAT GLIDER
(C:U.hlon not plciUrod)
. REO. S320.LO

2MO lOllS JUST

Ton~-tied? Let a Carhon card do the t~
' for you on Mother'• Day.

1111111
BEAUTIRJL

SELECTION
RETAL PRICE $19~99

Life • Medicare • Cancer • fire.e Health •
Accldenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage
-

(With Uft-011 Tray)

REG. 1237.00

uu 1177

71

'

.LLSLACI
9.92·2269

ICueltlon not ploturod)

*Wi *296

91

USED

ILIID SHOP

IIIC..!n .... II. PH.
CIWiol !lftli, II. I'lL
............. A. ....

.-

P . .. lt'J&amp; fllip f IICh ·
.an 11--.

- . ................ I:OipJIL

.......... va.

.
'

i

·- -:AIPnO......... ·-1.111.104:00,... '
I'IIEIK a riONI
PH. -.au
E. iloln
,_,· ~-OH..

'

'

'

FRIDAYN

'Mlddliport, Oltlo 45760

TIES

(614) 1.0·5264

ct•R Of IBI tiM ltllm
446-IMI

, EAGLES
~

CLUB

POM!RO't'

1:48p.m.
8p IDIIII.uty lllld

. FRy:;_

Uo.Ne.DOI1-32

tiWPOU.
)

'

1/l1011311fn

EVERY TtfURIDAY

n:'!~._,

TERMS

.

Sal.26471

.

EAIYCREDrT
N

Opln Wlllt Nlglllltl I

.

AU bema Subject
· To Prior Sale
FREE DEUVERY .

OPEN DAILY

Box 189

•30• MESI CAFE TDLI
. I 2 CAFE CHAIIS
REG..-:t.OO

'

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

I

•

-

•

•TEACART

·r··;_
·_ ~

Wlu.PIPER

...._

oA;IflstaWe Chalst Lou.
Ill!?.

uu•6":,•"

IIDII..dliUFrLM
.... N;S..t-1

' ,.Lt

1 240°~

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and ·
ICC,DENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

fnllll Ui1lt Hoc?drrg,

ofta11t per .tall to

11

-

11111111\t PGMIIrle far 4-11 gftiUpe and duba.

c.1er

•iJ,Od I I

. 61+9

. . . . . . . . . .171

7

1

HOI

•--··~hr

22lllbdlt

SH ·US FOI YOUR 1WI NEEDS. ,

T-lhlrta • tt.t. • UnlfonM
Variety o1 T-lhlft CoiDrund L ltulntllWieL
(1!1

1

•\!
' {

,,

I

(6141

iotl!l(
I

' II '

'I

'

l

1

1

I

'

�•
•

Ohio
44

Apartment
torRent

,'

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

54 IIINIIInloUI
llln:llendiM

71

AuiOI for Bile

_,__
..... 1111 PI d
-

NEA Cro•aword Puzzle

CM.._

,.,... !IMUJ. LGellld. ..,

CJ1111n1: . , .

L

ACIIOII

Cll .....,...

,...
••

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

-.-

- . ta,IIIO. -

-..

PHILLIP
ALDER

·~

IOM1Io

NOilTII

..

+ttl

••

•Jau

-lumiC

.+JlOU
WIST

EAIT

.QJ0711 .
tAittU

•u
+QlOU

.

+QtiU

+u
SOOTH
+AJlOU

••

+AKQU
Vulllerable: Eut·West ·
Dealer: South

,.•••••

BARNEY

Wool
Pua
Pua

N.nar

!NT
J+

L

Pus •5+

OpeniDglead:

15 Exlllliner
17 City In ,..,
111 T.,.. plaror
· - Undl
21s.telltn

2ZWIIIIUZICI

·21N. oll..,.
27 Morello 21 Wltllout IIIII

••u

Soidr

IIane
12 Well.)
.
ITot.apole
12 - llnckro.o

13=1
14 lnlertalner

tJH

+7

1DVenlon
5 TV'I l.rklng

~=.lcleNI(Ibbr.)

33 Future lilt.
34PIIrlntllltld
37 Nof off
38 Dawn

Eul
Pua
Pua

0

40=·

Alit.., to ......... ........

41 Fr-h

lmprftllonllt

43 llltultlng
from

45 Po..Wu
47 New ZHiln4
IIIIM

IO ...... ilrum

51 Whole

5311-ee•
cont.klor

57=-Sorxon
58 ..... •ounl

80 Altomtr
Gonerll

et J•••Mao - ·tune

....

82 SorndltiC

4 lnhUitulor

to So 11e ra

DOWIII

a lndlln " ' - '

11 ......,•• -

1 UK 111111
2 25111 illtlr
3 Bitter vllcll

contraction

83 Lollell

7=

5 Will pllnllng

teJ=t....
out

18 IXIIIOIM

8 Smlil welghl
II WoodJ

~

...........

20 ....

22AIMIII' ZJIII lddJIIQII

•

Allpua

24 Foollllll pc11.
21 Atnul21 TOUIII
31 Worcllol
denlll

+K

LUKEY II DON'T
YOU DARE WALK
IN FRONT OF

32 IMIIII
38 JoJIIII
uelllllellon

ME II

38 PCIIIdcllck
31 C8lm
42 - piUI ullrl

44 ....... Sort.
... Liquid

.........

47 Eolcounter
411 No ill,- or
bull
411 -

, _ ll!oreD - - With
.. .,..._, Dull c.-to
Doalo S:IIO 114o441-7:131, Ahr I
P.M.
Tolfttolon II'IIMinl' and raiO&lt;

.. PEANUTS

100 1M! oabla -.lal ond '1111 ~
poloa au r. teO.

,., ....... ....-. .....
30W'/5--.
high olialr, S211; ""'""*-Nil
ctiialr. al; Hoovw •npt 11-

helllfttl
54 T1lroulh
55 Yolto-

·I

'' PLOWSilARES ''

58"'-1*1
511 Tliilnkt, In

TRV PLA'r'IN6 E16HTEEN
HOLES WITH A

llrltlln

PLOWSilARE,MARCIE

......,ote, 17.10; 114-8111-G17.

ItA UAJ.tA.HAH

'IWollwn--fiOpOAulomololla Cholno $12.10 a..
bol Co. . .'IU - . 114-4411-

2857. .

'cELEBRITY ...CIPHER
w bV fWNM peopte, P11t

~ ClpMr Cfl'PIOIPWM . . c:nllld from ~~~o.ta

'

.

'IWoll-lng Whfto Drop Sillllo1
Whfto Wltfi Rlluroo Ana
Countor Top Coil 114 441 1213

I

IF J

;

75 Boats &amp;·Motors

MU

for
Ti illlS pot Id II oll

PISH
GRAMMAR

·'

..

·"

ltiCI ,....,_.,

la...._lltU. . . . . . . tor . . . . ..Totlay't . . .·N - - U.

' W G J I I

Allor7P.M.

WIIIIJG
D

ltVGUI
KRIJE

.I,ITVELU

v .a

x -F

MU

.

M I

M W K N I

HKIIG

WGKIFJG-VE-IMT

L G M W U

XFJXC.'

AIIQGMH.
• lr~~glle !IS a 81011 rod."

ZVA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "UIIIan 01111 CMGM -~ Franceo Merion.

'::~:;~' S&lt;C~~lA-Jl~tr~·
_ _....__;..__ Nltool 1rr CLAY I. POlLAN

M

WOlD
I AMI

R-ronoo lertort of tho
f011r ocrombled -ds below ro '"''" lour simple words.

•

H R YT T I

42 Mobile Homes

OUT81DI
I'IIRNIIIUNGS:
WNualll INn Tillli W14 Clllha;
Fin . hole Roc._.. Chair • •
Gonion Arch W.,'li tai.OO
'

-~·

..,.1171.

~II£

---·Good

...-... Cui .... , ..........
P.M. 114-44111013.
.... Plymouth

ca...,lis'r"' ...

campers&amp;
Motoi'Homll

~-=- t.ri··~~
On'!.:; ...1m4r

-.
'l.C:*N.CUI.I.
Chi I I ,._
F-,
CGIIIII

Con!'tJI

· '

""' MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

•

.-

••h~M ....
. 080. 1171Ttola
Land~....... For Pwill, ....

--.
30W7MMO.

~· 'rOLJ IC!oiOWOIE TV ~
I ICEAU-Y Ml~':? 'CAPtAJ"-1
~NG&gt;'.ROO!'

_.....,_
. . ....,...==o::or=
441 lt11

1117

L!-AC.~'caL.oothlf,

Child$

o.c. Wil r-afloo,
To C:lh g1, II,. , 114-448-:

Merchancll•

m... &lt;I

I &lt;.'Hi

1300. Cill ....... I

54 Mlecellaneous

\oJE AAVE

lloohln1 ihl!lr 321&lt;411112 oovo1
11111 IIJGing - . 0n1 3

1341.

llhr_.••

TC+IK.IIT.
Mtllt? .

onlry
- · -price
PNCioloft
Fromo
Hvlfr114ot4WI22.
--~~- •·cycto 100, f1100,
lklls, 114-8111.utl or 304·773121,

Buy or 1111.
Anllquue,
1124 E. lloln . - . on Ill. 124
Poo-. : II.T.W. 10:00
Lftl. lo 1:00 P.'!!;t_Buncloy 1:00
to 1:00 p.no. 114 - 21•.

,.WAATCAA OOIN'
'

_.,..._S410.JCM-

lor Rant

l'lfth

=~

-

.......

,....

"CAP'TAIN I&lt;A.~ROO"
wENT~!= 'THE AIR

"'YEARS Aeo!

eo+.\ETI~

I GEl

THE FEEL.II-Jtii'o '1H4.T
l"WL.IVED~ .

'

....
..

-·.--.
0

-llonnovlllo,
...
001111
lnoldo
a -.
No ...... ¥iiiJI
top,J04.11241U.

-

Chow '*.!Ill..
Cyln.
cllr,4aa-l,tvfcm.4 WD 11gto, 11C111.
:1240.

n.-

OUR LANGUAGE

F 0 RE F

I I t

By .lell'rey MeQtoala

DISCORDANT meua "clashlq"
or "oonfliellng,• as in "lbelr diiCOf·
dant relationship." Never diaagree
with using the adjective DISCOR·
DANT is a ll)lllonym for DISAGREE·
lNG.
,
OUR LANGUAGE AD·VICE: Tbis
month's Ad·Vice AWII'II for pronunci·
ation trouble 110e1 to the news re·
porters who talk about our bud11et
"deb·FIH·sit." These speallen seem
to be oonfusinll the American pro·
nunclation of DEFICIT with it. British
pronunciation. The preferred rorm
here Is "DEF·ih·elt,• with the acc:ent
on the lint syllable. lA British vari·
antis "dih·FIS·lt." with the accent on
lhe second syllable.) This term, mean·
l~g •exceu In spending,• hu a deft· .
n1te American streu, which alw~ys .
taU. on the lint syllable ol DEFICIT
U -ln DEFINITE.

r

I..

~ I FI I
_,;O:....:;N~T...,.:..:R...;A,._:E:..,.--fl .,-~omplete
r I' I I r I
.

_

CE Rp I

The family of six.Who lived next

to my apartment had gone on

vacation. A week later I re. ; ceived a postcard from them
...- - - - - - - - , Asking me if I was enjoying--·
tho. chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
L...-1..-L.-L.-L--1-...J you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCUM LETS ANSWERS
" · '~
Honey - Letter· NOT to TRY .
As a kid I didn't do many things because 1would be
disappointed if I failed. Mv dad said it was okay to fail

,

Rudely • Flung •

but It was a real failure NOT to TRY.

•

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AITRO·ORAPH

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BERNIOJ:
BEDEOSOL

......

•••

1111 govomlng you in lll8
ahead.
Send lorTaurua· Astro-Graph prediettona
today by maMing $1 .25 plus a long. seW· !'
addressed, stamped lrtV8Iope 10 AotroGraph, e/o lhis -~r. P.0 . Bore «611,
New YOfk. NY 10183. Be sure to 11ate your .

zodiac siQn.
.
GEMINI (May 21.,Jun~ 20) YO&lt;! llliW!I be

lry 10 impede your prognoa.
IAGITTAIIIUf (Nov. 23-0ic:. 21) S!riW to
be oomplimertlary, not critlclol, III!Waril cowortcera loday. In Older for aH p.aniH to be
productive, thono must be a oorwivlat

privy 10 some hotpfullntormatiOn loday, yel
rtOI tully appl11C18to Ill wor1h because of a
preJUdiced leelirtg againottho IOUrte. Don'l s!mOiphere.
· be bialld. .
. .
. CAPRICORN (O.C. 22.,_ tt) II you
·' ,
CANCER CJune zt..JIIIy 22) lt you've 1 lhir'l&lt; VOl(can get by tr1ICitng on tho
accumulated a bit of surplusellhlo lime,
-or~ of IIIIIOCiallll today,
apply *&lt;~me of rt towaro old obllgltiOnl. It 1o you COUld be in tors big elisa~ rlment
belt ID go 1o your creditors befora !hoy
Tho only pillion you~ ,.ry on lo you. '
oome to you.
·
AOUARIUI(Jin. »Feei.11)S!Hr olllr
LEO (JUly 23-AUII. 22) Don't expooo your
ollituaUOna today while one lrilnd might
Aprtt 30, 1tiN
llrtsjllldNI !Oday 10 PICPie whO_,
lry lo
you Into lllclng. ~
~ lhelr voluo. Negative oom·
pGIIIIon IQIIIIII11101hor pel. Don, be •
,~JOint YIIIIUrM you'! hove in tho year ahoecf mlgttl dllcourage you ~ liOw your •pawn In tltilpo!IOn'o geme.
'
:
PIICD (l'tll. .,111111'110) Your pc 111111' :;wtflt
you love and """' lhould piovl progma.
~far all corrcerrtld. Alliancli
VIIICIO (Aue. D-lepl 22) Be very cartful l1iel fur Pll'loMi glln loolt I1IIIOI'Iibrv
, ' you mllrnol"' lhou you Cion, lt!tOw 100 .
10 .,_ you
hllflll' or pe~p,
good forl~Y, provtdlcl you cron, do_,..
Mit, hoalilr, might •
0\11: 4 ·
loelay. Talking out of lum rnlgllt un-,~
lhlng you.,....,, whMe atltllllpllng 10
TAU.. (Atilt INier 10) VourobjlodllllaQI,1011110111 whO 1o 111od1i •rvtna o1 .talhor yaur own 11111.
Alllll (llanlh 21. . . 1t) Hyou lry 10
; ..... aro ad•ablr
bill lilt rllldlo .CIIIIDIIIII.
CIOUid be a racily cne. In Older 1o
LllltA (llpl. DOol. U) ~you .,.118c!e.cpedill i lnlnclll- of Nnpo111nce
• 4Utfli )'QUI' . . . . vou wtll ~ IIOih /nglo lng wtflt or buying
1r0rn a flllnd
today, you might be llcllnld 10 ..._ Mlta.
:"'hully n Plfllllenea. T -. geaa jump todooy, you rniglll rtOI get II good a ~ 11 you lhOUidn,, Don, be In I big hUIIY 10 Clo
on W. by urrdntlrodirgthe ~ '
you COUid·Wyou _,.lo a person Cit finn
. thinglllhat are-~-

....

.

yOu didil'l know.
8CORPrO(Ool. 24-Nov. 22)Unress you
aro willing to cooperate and ahara loday,
h's not likely lhlt Olhors wilt be supportive
of your 1 - a. In lacl. they migl1t oven

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12~The1Jally

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Thursday, April

SenUneJ .

Tai ChiCh.'uan.offered by MA~

Beat of the Bend...
,. by Bob Hoeflich

J

29, 1993 ':'

.

Many of you will remember the amount sold was just a tad
Mike Roberts.
under the 19 doze!J. gceJ set roc the
· He is the son of Nonga Roberts project, Auxiliary members are
of Pomeroy . and the late Bob well pleased with the response to
Roberts, who was a popular the projecL Thank you.
. ,
Pomeroy teacher.
•
You might like an update. on
Thank you, Edna Hunnell, for
Mike.
sending along that little morale
Four years ago, Mike, and a booster. It's good 10 have- a {elder
long-time co-worker, left their full. -- ·think of me once in a while. I'll bet
time jobs wilh the Cleveland-based you even remember thai song: from
Garland Co. and began making a way back when: "Once in a wbile,
product, an aU-rubber rather lhan won't you try to give one little
modified-asphalt waterproofing thought 10 me?". Sure you do.
material. At the time Mike was
director of research with the GarWith alumni returning home
land Co. Mike's company, the next ·month for their high school
Rubber Polymer Co-p., IS the sub- reunions, perhaps, you would be
ject of an article _in the May 13 · interested in securinJ for them one
issue of Popular Sc~ence. ·
.
of lhose excellent VIdeos all about
Mike founded tbe company, Meigs County made by Roger
. invented the produei called Rub-~- Gilmore. A new batch has been
wan and currently serves as presl· produced. They're $6.95 each and
dent of the company which is can be purchased at lhe Farmers
expected to do a minimum a $2.3 Bank and Savings Co. or at ·the
million this year. The company has Meigs County P8lk Office which is
awlicators. that is, people who are in the . former Pomeroy Pablic
trained to apply the product Libruy.
designed to provide foundation
waterproofmg, from coast-to-coast
Margie Warner of Middleport
in the United States, in Canada. and sends a)ong her thanks for all of
the comJliii!Y is expecting to soon your clflls, prayers and support.
begin sh1pping 10 Europe.
She •s had health problems which
· The Akron located company have dragged on 10o Joni. Howevcurrently is plinning an expansion er, she'sfound some help and is
and new products relating to the DOw medically·on the right track.
foundation waterproofing business
1..,
have already· been added. Several
A nice reunion this week for
photos of Mike are visible in the two former Pomeroy High ~­
color brochures used the the fl1111. ates and clissmates.
Blackhawk Constructioo as Mariet· ·
Jennifer Crew Solomon, who
ta is one of Mike's applicator com- has ber doctorate in psychology
panics.
and teaches at WinthrOp CoUege,
Good to learn of Mike's
s. c., drove to Richmond, Va., to
so well. He's bright, talented
attend a convention held in her
deserving.
field of endeavor. Enroute she
slllJllled at Gre8t Bridge, Va., home
The next bi~ actiOn for members of'Aiita Carpenter Carroll, her
of the Women s Auxiliary at Veter- friend and fOI"IIler classmate, who
ans Memorial Hospital will be the joined Jennifer accompanying her
awarding of their annual scholar- the convention. You can well imagships in Mar..
inc that there was some "Pomeroy
The Auxiliary received 17 appli- talk" during the off-convention
cations for the scholarships wllich hours.
makes selection of diffiCult chore.
. Incidentally, in case yoli won- · If April showers truly
bring
dered how the Auxiliary fared wilh May flowers then next month's
its Good Egg TreeS fund-raiser this posies should be spectacular. Do
· spring, there were 17 dozen and 10 keep siniling.
eggs sold for the three tree. While

•

•

The Middleport Arts Council flow together into a continuouJ deflection series, the re_Petition •
will continue to offer its program" series sivinl the practice of Tai Chi series, and the closing senes. Once:
of Chinese Yang Style Tai Chi Ch'uan the ~ce of a $low, the 88. postures are learned, lhey·:
Ch'uan. lnslnitor Eric Chambers oriclllal·stylc b8llet.
may be performed in a long form
will be inaocb:ing the YanJ Style
Tile Yang style is comJI!li!'C! of compoacd of 400 movements. Per-: .
Kiclr:ing Series which emphasizes 88 poawres which are divided into forll)ed correctly, the Yang. form ::
the deve!:/!:,~nt of lower body five series including the inuoduc· should takele about 12 10 30 mm11tes;:
st1a1glh,
and limb control
lion series, the ticlr:ing series, the to comp te.
:
. T6e new ICl'ies of classes will be
·
·offered on Monday e~g• from
7: l5-8:15 p.m. on begJIIIIIIll May 3
,
.
. .
and continl!ing tluol!gh May 17 at
Hal Kneen, county .extension tribu~d free le~flets on vanous~
lhe arts council center on North · agent, was guest speaker at the aspects of gardenmg.
::
Second AveDI!C in Middleport.
II'Cellt meeting of the Friends and
It was reported that th~ Easter.
Students with no previous Tai Flowers Garden Club held at the baskets were greatly appreciated. :;
Chi experience are wek:ome. Fur- . home of Shirley Miller.
·Future projects of .the club•
ther information about this class
He spoke on landscaping stating include planting at the elemen!SfY.;
may be obtained by calling 992· that the way a house faces depends · school, partiti~ating in the nver.
2675 oc 992-7733.
on where and what you want to sweep and msking a flower bed at
The cost of tile three classes is plant. Roses have more disease the new sign pointing 10 the school.
$15 p~yable upon registration the problems if placed in shade .. ~e in Rutland.
.· .
. .,
flfSI.t of class.
stated that Meigs County soli 1s
The next meeang will be J:lel4 at
Dunng the rernainder of 1993, very acidic and will often times ,the borne of Kristal Bolin With the.
the arts c;ouncil is pepared to offer hold the fertilizer and not dislribute club making grapevine wreaths. ••
the entite Tai Chi Ch'uan, Yang it out to the plantS. He also dis- '
,.
Style, long form.
·
This style is one of the three
major schools of Tal Chi. The
Chen Style is the oldest and until
recently ibe most secret.
.
The Yang style is an oui-gi'Owth
of the old Cheri style and was sim·
plificd in its postures. It has
become the most populilr Tal Chi
Style in China as a result of its
introduction and practice by the
Manchll Dynasty royal family. It is ·
most often association with the •
developatent of good health and ·
physical fimess rather than combal. '
The most recent major Tai C)li
. style to develop is the Wu Style
which has quicker movements and
is more oriented towBnl fighting.
All Jlyles of Tai Chi hold potential benefit for the practitioner but
as JICOP.Ie have dif(erent goals and·
obJectives, so do the various
,.
schools of Tai Chi Ch 'uan.
•
ATrEND CAMP GALUA ·Students from Carleton School
· Each style is '-4 upon a aeries
and Meigs IDdustrlell visited Camp Glllla In Gallipolis reeeotly.
of body positions called postures
They enjoyed watebiD&amp; the ClvU War Reeuactnn and Jhey also ,
which are ccimectcd by tranSitional
moves which allow_the posiUieS to
toured Tile French Art Colony.
.
"

Ohio Lottery

NBA
playoffs
begin

Pick 3:

612
.Pick 4:
9441

PageS

Kneen addresses gar,den c[ub

ERIC CHAMBERS
INSTRUCTOR

_ People.in
the news

IRVINE, Calif. (AP) _ Movie

director Spike Lee finally made it
to the University of California,
Irvine, campus for a lalk pos1pOIICd
a year ago at tbe height of Los
An¥.~:S'ft;
10 speak that
night," Lee told about I,SOO peopie during a Tuesday night spcech

:::Ot!i

u:=s

at~

s!":~'i!· traf.

fie on April30, 1992. That was the

second night of riotiilg sparked by
the state coun acquitlilfs of four
white Los Angeles police officers
charged in the beating of black
motorist Rodney King.
•'I was feeling a lot of hurt. a lot
of anger, and I understood why
peo~le were acting the way they
did, ' Lee said. Now, a Y- later,
with two of the policemen since
convicted in federal court of violating King's civil rights, he's not
quite so angry.
·, But the final outcome of.the
case woo 't be lmown until August,
when sentencing of the two offiCers
'
.
.
is scheduled, he noted
Lee, one of the country's li!OSt
.: ....:&lt;. ••
. celebrated black directors, also said
the ultimate verdict is not yet in on
his film "Malcolm X," which
said, "Gum chewing is a right, and I .
wasn't nominated for an Oscar as
Dear
Ami
~den:
I
hope
you
intend to continue." What do I dd '
best film of 1992 and was shut out
now'1 --CALIFORNIA
•;
in categories where it did receive will continue 10 address the aerious
problem of charity fraud in your '
DEAR CAL: Gum chewing may •
nominations.
column. Charity fraud roba a
be a "right,• but anyone whose gutn; . .
genero~~~ public and takea muchcracking can be heard clear acroar ·
needed fundi from the legitimlle
an office is a clod. When:'a tl)e
charities who so vitally aerve the
sul'C1rvisor? How about a signed ·
public interest.
petliion? Othen must hear it 10o:.
Please continue to remind your
Get moving.
·
'! ,
readers
to
take
their
time
when
Is lift passing you by? Wa/11 to '
CHESTER • There will be a fiSh
of Meigs High School will present
Community Calendar Items
solicited
roc
donations.
Encourage
improw
'yoUT social skills? Wrirtfor
fry
at
the
Chester
Fire
Department
an
"Evening
of
Theatre"
Friday
at
appear two days before an evellt
them
10
ask
questions'
about
how
and
.
on
Sllturday
from
II
am.
10
6
p.m.
AM
LoN/.trs'
new booklet, "How U/ ,
and the day of tlult emaL Items 8 p.m. at Meigs High School. The
where
the
money
they
donalc
will
fCIIUring
fish
tails,
hot
dogs,
slopMake Friends and Stop Beln1 .
must be received ftll Ia advaace . prodiiCiion of lhree one-act plays is
tn asaare publication In the cal·
under · the direction of Celia 'py joes, baked beans, salads and be used. If the answers are DOl
l..oMiy." SDid a #lf-&lt;Uidressed.long,
satisfactory, they should not
endar.
McCoy. Admission is $3 foc 111\ults bsked goods.
busilltss-siu enwlopt IUid a cMck ·
contribute. And if they have any
and $2 for students.
or money order for $4.15 (this ill· •
THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE • Regular questions about a charity or if they
eludes postage and lrondling) to: :
RACINE • The third week of
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- meeting, Harrisonville Lodge No. feel that the charity may not be
Frullds, c/o AM Ltutdtrs. P.O. B01i ,
revival is in progress at ML Moriah pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 411 F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30p.m. legitimate, they should not hesitate
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (II! .
Church of God on Mile Hill Road Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a Refreshments. All master masons to · cGntact their state auorney
CIUIIlda. selld $5.05.)
·
in Racine with Ron Blevins, evan- dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. invited
aeneral's office or the local
gelisL Services are 7 p.m. nightly with music by Smoky Mountain
authorities.
'
ANTIQUITY ·- Sonifest Saturwith special singing. Pastor James ,Drifters. Red Carr and Melvin
Charity fraud stops with the
Satterfield invites the public. t
Cross will be callers. Public invit- day will be held at 7 p.m. wilh the informed ddnor, Miss Landers, and
Christian Family, Jackson. Public yam column can do a great deal to
ed.
POMEROY • There will be a .
invited.
keep them oo the alcn. I hope you
RUTLAND · Revival at the
speCilll program at the Meigs
will continue to provide that
CHESTER ·There will be a
County Museum on Thursday at Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
7:30p.m. on "The Practice of law will be Friday through May 9 at 7 special meeting of Shade River important service to your readers
in Me~s County Over the Past SO p.m. nightly with Rev. Billy Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM on Saturday across the country.- ROLAND W.
Years. Participating will be.iuor- McCoy and family. Rev. Dewey at 7:30 p.m. Work in the master BURRIS, ATIORNEY GENERAL,
mason degree. Refreshments. All STATE OF ILLINOIS
neys Fred Crow, Bernard Fultz, King invites the public.
DEAR ATI'ORNEY GENERAL
Jim O'Brien and Frank Porter.
master masons invited.
BURRIS:
You c:an be S11R1 I wiU
Steve Story wil\ serve as moderstor
SATURDAY
blow the whistle on phony charities
SUNDAY
for the program. Public invited.
RUTJ,.AND - There will be a
SYRACUSE - Chicken barbe· whenever I spot one.
dance at the Rutland American
My readers , c;an also check the
PORTLAND • The Lebanon Legion Hall Saturday from 9 ,p.m. cue will be held Sunday·at the
Township Trustees will m~t to I a.m . Music will be by Pure Syracuse Volunleer Department. legitimacy of fund-raising groups by
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the township ~ountry Band. Public invited.
Serving will begin at 11 a.m . .and writing to .the Philanthropic
continue
until the 350 meals have Advisory Service, Council or Better
building.
MASON, W.VA.· The VFW beeri served. Proceeds will go to Business Bureaus, 4200 Wilson
POMEROY •. The Pomeroy Post No. 9926, Mason, W. Va, will London Pool.
Blvd., Suite 800, Arlington, Va.
Group of AA will meet at 7 p.m·. hold a benefit dinner saturday at
22203-1804 or the National
Thursday at ihe Sacred Heart the post home beginning at 11 a.m.
CHESTER - Tfle Ohio Valley Charities Information Bureau, 19"
GETALOW
C&amp;tholic Church. Information may Menu includes one-half chicken, Draft Horse and Mule Association
Union
Square
West,
Department
be obtained by calling 992-5763.
will
hold
its
annual
field
day
Sun~
baked beans, slaw and roll. Call
PRICETAGON
304-773-9191 for delivery. There day across from the state highway 250, New York, N.Y. 10003-3395.
Be
lillie
to
enclose
a
i!Cif-addrased,
POMEROY • There will be a will be 350 dinners available. All garage on Route 7 north of
AMAVTAG!
special meeting at the Meigs Coun- donations will be accepied and pro- Pomeroy. The events begin at I stamJI!'Cl envelope.
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG
ty Public Library in Pomeroy o!' ceeds will benefit a friend of lhe' p.m. and include draft horse events, . · Dear Ann Landen: Last year,
my
mother
moved
into
a
nUlling
ThursdaY from 6:30-8:30 p.m. C'!_ll· organization.
WASHERS .
· ·
a fishing derby for children,
I
tied ''Geuing Ready for Reading a
antique tractor and equipment dis- home in Florida. My sister lives
•lasts lof'Oer. needs fewer ·
.within IS minutes of the home. Since
focus on reading (reading slcills
GALLIPOLIS - Washjngton play, concessions and more.
repairs and costs less to
seNice ·
!live in Ohio and operate my own
children need ft!1d how Jl&amp;Cnts can Elementary PTO and Green Ele·
·No
. 1 preferred branc·
LOTTRIDGE - Tliere will be a business, it is diffiCult foc me to visit
help). Nick Weiland, Me1gs County mentary PTO will sponsor the
smorgasbord dinner at the Lot- my mother more than lhree times a
Ed~tion Program! will be ~ fourth annual "country ueasures"
,,. . Paten~
ihe presenter. For further mforma- arts and crafts show·at the Gallia tridge Community Center on Sun- year.
FACTORY
lion call Susie Heines at 985-4163 · County Junior Fairgrounds on Sat- day from noon 10 I :30,p.m. Cost is
My silter feels that she should be
afiCI 4 p.m.
urday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.mJ and .$5 for adults and $2.50 for children ~ fll' visiting Motber two
under 12. Carry-out is available. to three times a week. She w111ts me
Sunday from noon to 5 p.m .
'
CHESTER· The Ohio Val!ey
·
.
Everyone welcome.
Ill help pay for her psoline and also
Draft Horse and Mule, Assocrabon
TUPPERS PLAINS • The TupwiU meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at pers Plains Church of Christ
RACINE • The Southern Junior for doing my mother's lal!ndry,
the Chester Volunteer Fire Depart· "Christian" Cemetery will remove High Boosters will hold a ham and which can be done at the nuning
menL New members are welcome. all flowers Saturday for clean-up. turkey dinner Sunday from 11 am. home for a minimal charge.
My mother h.. been very
·
Those wanting to save flowers to 2 p.m. at the high school. Cost is
FRIDAY
$4.75 for adults or $3.50 for chil· aenerous to my sister and me
should remove them by that time.
throughout the years. I l'llali7.e my
POMEROY • Meigs County
dren under 12.
sill« iJ under a great deal fllstreu.
Church Women United will meet
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy The Liberty Mountaineers will per·
POMEROY ' Meigs County 4- '.Her husband is not well, and sbe iJ
United Methodist Church for the form Saturday at lhe Senior Citi· H hoof trimmin'g, Sunday, 9:30 worried ahollt him. Her request,
May Fellowship planni,ng meeting. zens Center in Point Pleasant, am. to 3 ·p.m., Meigs County Fair- however, upaet me, beet'•• I don't ·
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG
grounds at the steer bam. Spon- feel she il j11atiflcd in liking roc
W.Va.
DISHWASHERS
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
sored by Country Shamrock 4-H financial compeasation. ·
• NobodY getS dllrltl Cleaner
·
•O..CIIarWI9
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
HENDERSON, W.V'A. • The · Club. can Kathy Banin&amp;fl at 378Pleue help me be objective. ..
• NO Cldrl¥alft1r ftOidl mort
will ba:ve a preaching and singing Gallia Twirlers Western Square 6267 for appolnbnenL
·
OHIO READER
Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed DanCe Club will hold a dallce Sat. DEAR READER: In my opinion,
invites the public. FeUowshjp will urday r~ 8-11 p.m. It the HenPOINT PLEASANT • 11le Clasderson CommUnity Center in Hen. · sics will Dcrfocm a Vliriety of music )'011' lisler should be compellllted
. follOw.
carrying lhe greater Jllfl of lhe
derson, W.Va. Herb Shelton. callcr. at lhe West Virginia State F&amp;nl) for
MiLLFIELD - There .will be a
Museum, north Of Point Pleasant,' burden wbich has tallcn on her
c1ance and ahoW Friday from 8-11
POMEROY • MDet hog regis- W.'fL, on S!lnday ~ 3 p.m. Public simply becalliiC abe is ill the 1110e
p.m. at the Russe!l Buildin&amp; in tration, S•wP.Iay, 9-11 a.m •.:. Meip ·inVIted. Free admiSSIOII. .
. city with your mother.
You can never repiv her
Millfield wilh mUSIC by Off Sea· County Exletllion Office, ~to per
' 741·221
.animal, maximum or two lllimals.
RACINE • Ricine Chapter OBS ideq•y fOi the t1mo iad aaen~ ·I
can 992-6696 for infiKDlltion.
willii"ICtice foc inspection on Sun- tion lllC ia COila1butiDJ, bat y011 . l i t o - surely can (and 1hould) be aa ...,_ _ _ __
day 4 .,.m.
·
POME!tOY - The senior claSs

do:'J

do

Ann will continue to blow
w·histle on · hon
·ties

...
·-..

Ann
Landers

Community Calendar·

\

'

Low IODiablln 50&amp; Clut.
Saturday, SUDDy, blab In 801.

•
Vol. 44, NO. 2
Multi..... Inc.

1 Secllon. 1~ hfoe 25 -

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 30, 1993

A Mul1lmecll•lnc •.....,....,

',

Lions Club to
•
sponsor czrcus
onMay14
I ,

Middleport to expand
boating facilities with
$94,900 ODNR grant

Tile cin:us is coming 10 town.
In celebration of 200 years of
cin:uscs in America, Walker Bros.
Cin:us, is coming to town on Fridlly, May 14.
.
Sponsored by the Pom~roy­
Middleport Lions Club, the i:ilcus
will set up its tents on the Roek
Springs Fairgrounds. 'lbere will be
two perfOIIIUin&lt;:c:S, the first at4:30
and the second at 7:30 p.m.
"Our sponsorship of Walker
Bros. Circus gives the: Lioas Cub
the opportunity to bring the fiDeat;
in quality family enterllinmelllto
this area while helping nile IDIJIIe)'
for our Lions Cub Silbt ~ ·
projects," uid Jeff Vlama, focal
Cin:IIS Chairioaa.
.
Both wild and domestic lllimlh
will be per(ormine.;..tbe c;in:us.
This will include e
b! conaicL
ered the most intdligeut of all
mats, the fontball playing Boxer
dogs, and 8 dog and pony review•
There will be aerial artistry, iuJ·
glees; acrobats; clowns and DIOIII m
the 90 111inute extravaganza, Warner said.
Tickets are available 8l a special
reduced rate from members of the
Pomerey-Middlepon Lions Club
DOW through the day before the cir~
cus. Information may be obalincc!
. by calling 992-5479.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Sentinel News Stall' .,
A $94,900 Waterways Safety
Grant has been awarded to Middleport village through the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Waterways, for expansion of bo11ting facilities at the
Middleport levee:
Sen. Jan Michael Long (D-Circleville) 8IIIIOUIICed the Waterways
sat~ Fund Capital Improvement
Grant award Thursday afternoon
describing it as "anolher example
of state government working for
local sovemmenL•
Tile funding announced yester·
day will go toward further
improvements, including widening
of the boat launch ramp, a large
parking area. and the installation of
courtesy docks for the coovenience
of boaters.

a·

. F§~tory . _
·or'dets down
iii March

COMING TO TOWN - nil 'W..,.. .... arc. dlnni wDI
be aw• lo .... • May 14. Pa fa; a Ml wiD lie at the Roek
Sp;lap ~pc i ill • 4:30 ud 7:31 p.-. Tickets -Y be pur• c'
J rn. -Rrlaldle Puasoy-Middleport LloDs Clnb.

J.

Personal income
rises.~.6 percent

WASHINGTON (AP)
Orders to U.S. factories slumped
l.S percent in Marcb, the l8l'gcst
drop in i!Cven moolhs, the goiOUnment said today.
Much of the decline CIIIIC in aircraft orders but many other cate·
WASIDNGTON (AI')- Amer·
gories posted dea ; . I I as well. _the
1
icans
puiUDII i• •••• , ......1 0.6
· Commen::e Depabuent said.
.
peroeot
in Mln:b. but JDDCII mthe
Tbe depubuent said ordas fell
to a seuonally adjusted 11'1111111 life incn:ase came ia C.. mbsidies
of $254.5 billion. The drop fol- m:l •&gt;**I''« 4 .... fell for die
lowed •a gain of. 1.3 percent in lint~ i D - ..0.0.. the govFebruary and a drop m1.3 ptic::eul ernneat said IOday.
Incomes IVIC to a seasonally
in January.
- - raiC rl. $5.26 tril~
adjusted
M~wflile, keY barometen of
lion,
die
Commerce Department
how busy factories are likeJy to be
said..
Tile
pin
- the bell since I
in the future deteriorated. The 1 pen I adWIIICie
in ])ernk and
backlog of unfilled orders
~ida
ri.O.l.peaceut in
decJeaaed 1.2 percent to a nuJ!IDI!.
F*-J
aad 0.5 pe.iceDt In Janly adjusted $470.3 bilHon. It uary.
the first decline siJICe No-*r.
PIPcrllliODIIIIOBII
Ill £n&amp;,
In another bad sip for tiUure
at1iJe.
0.2 pea:aato
production, the invauory of aoodl m
•
• of0.2
held on factory shelves and J.ct. $4.23 iriDion
po:ceat
in
Fcbi•y
and~
)ICitalt
lots roiiC 0.2 percent in Man:b to ·
mJ-y.
.
$380 billion, the second COIISCCU•
II~&amp;:• _., were inlho eII by two

=.·

live~.

While .67 percent of the"money
for the entire project will be provided throug!lthe grant, the village
will still have to come up with
approXimately $48,900. According
to Mayor Fred Hoffman, that
amount can be either cash or "inkind" services, such as labor, supplies the village already has .on
hand, use of equipment and administrative services.
. The project has four -components ·Widening of the; existing
approach' to lhe boat launch ramp
by paving an area six feet wide ror
. a distance of aPJli'O"itnatcly SO feet
to provide for temporary parking
areas after boat launching.
-ConsbUCtion of a 30 foot cour·
tesy dock for the convenience of
boaters and passengers in launching their boats.
.

·rurchase of a 113 by.158 foot

secuon of property oo First Avenue •

at Walnut Street adjacent to tbe
boat launch area for a parlting area
for boater vehicles and ttailers.
·
-Paving and improving the parkingarea.
Estimated costs or the project
include $65,000 for the acquiaition
of six parcels of land 10 be used roc
tbe ~kina lot; $43,500 for the
parking lot construction; $15,000
foc the courtesy docks; $1,300 for
additional paving on the launch
access; and $18,000 for engineering services and contingencies
As explained by Mayor. Hoff.
man, this poject is the third phase
of an ongoing project 10 pJ'!)vide'
adequate boat launching facilities
for Meigs County and the surrounding area and 10 improve the
Continued on page 3 .

Pomeroy man bound over
•
·on charge of burg·l ary

conflictia1

special

March. Tbey were boosted by a 64
percent surge in farm owners'
income and held back by uninsured
housing daiJia&amp;e canaed by a severe
stmn thal swept up the East CoiSI.
Excluding special factors,
incomes rose 0.2 percent in Marth
and 0.4 pen:ent in February. .
In a separate report today, the
dcpar1ment said orders 10 factories
slumped 1.5 percent, the worst

dr=

AnBUSL
roc
clanble goods -

big

ticket items from cars to COIIlflllers
- pltmged 3.4 .percent, the biggest
decline since December 19'91.
Orders for non-durable goods such
as food products, clothing and
papetrose 0.7 percent
.
Tbe most-watched component
mincame - W111CS and llalmes factots io roee 111-ic 0.1 pcRC~Jito $3.01
triUioD after a 0.2 pen:cnt decline
· In February. Government transfer
payment&amp;, IIICh as Social Security,
roee in Marcll and interest income
-down.
The deputinent said a $3.3 billion farm mbsidy payment was the
bnest since October 1987.·
.
'Ileal disposable income inflation-adjusted income after
IUCS- rose 0.5 percent ·in March
after a 0.2 percent decline the
month before.

"" A 31:-year-old J&gt;omeroy man,
was hound over to the jurisdi~tion
of tbe Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas following a preliminary hearing in Meigs County
Court.
Frank Allen Haggy of 41252
Starcher Rd. is charged with aggravated burglary, an aggravat~d

felony of thC firSt degree: Stemming'
from an April 21 incident on Vinegar Street, Ricine.
Al:cording to Assistant Prosecutor Christopher E. Tenoglla, Haggy
allegedly entered a mobile home
between one and six o'clock in the
morning. The victim apparently
came home to find Haggy in the

trailer, Tenoglia alleged. ·
Haggy is ·being held in the
Meigs County Jail in tieu of $5,000
cash bond. If found gQilty on the
charge, Haggy faces a possible sentence of five 10 2S years incarcc:ra·
lion, TenO!Jiia said.
. ·
Haggy 1s represented by AllOr·
ney D. Michael Mullen.

'Buy One, Get One Free' sale on 1993
season
pool passes offered by Syracuse .
.
.

Syracuse is having a "Buy One,
G!t One Free" sale on 1993 season
· passes for the village-owned Lon:
don Pool from May I through May
20. .
Mayor Jim Pape said today the
new pool pass marlceting technique
is bemg implemented in.an effort_ to
bolster sale of season uckets pnor
to opening of the facility' on Memorial Day, May 31.
.
Cost of season tickets, regularly
S25 each, will actually be reduced
to half that amount if two are
obtained during the sale period,
Pape said. He einphasized the specia! price will not be extended
beyond lhe May 20 deadline. The
mayor reported the village has up
to 200 J.18SSCS for the special sale
promouon as the result of over
$5,000 donated by area businesses
and individuals.
Project sponsors include Home
National Bank, Racine and Syra·
cuse; Farmers Bank and Savmgs
Co., The Daily Sentinel, Bank One.
Anderson's Furniture and Appliances, Valley Lumber 111!1 Sujlply,
Fruth Pharmacy, Peoples Bank of
. Point Pleasant, Hubbard's Grecnhouses, Judge and Mrs. Fred W.
Crow Ill, Chancey's Food Mart,
Mr. and Mrs. L. Frank Briah't. Sr.,

beque with proceeds going to the
po61
fund; Monday, May 3, 10 Fritions, Williams and Associates
day,
May 7, from noon to 4 p.m.
Insurance, Powell's Super Valu;
from
Janice lawson, village clerkMr. and Mrs. Bobby Ord, Brogan·
treasllm",
at the water board offiCe
Warner Insurance, Jeffers Coal .and
in
tlie
Municipal
Building; Satur·
Excavating, Crow's Steak House,
day,
May
8,
during
the craft show
Bob Wingett and Davis-Quickel
and
baseball
games
at the park;
Insurance.
May
10
from
llOOD
10
4 p.m. at the
Pool passes on the "Buy One,
water
hoard
·office
and
May 12-20
Get One Free" basis can be pur·
from
2
to
6
p.m.
from
Lowrey at
chased from Pool Manager Tom
Lowrey at London Pool on Satur· !he pool. Additionally, passes can
day, May I, on Sunday, MaY 2, at be pllfChaaed from May 1-20 from
the Syracuse Municipal Building Mayor Pape at Valley Lumber and
during the Firemen's Chicken Bar· Supply.
Don Shaffer, Morris Communica-

Do·wntown.block in Athens·
evacuated after-gasoline spill
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - A
downtown block was evacuated
todsy afrer a gasoline tanker swerv- ·
ing to avoid an onconting car hit an
electric pole and spilled 10 10 20
gallons of fuel,anthorities said.
No injuries were reponed from
the accident, which happened at
about 2 Lm., said a pab'Oiman who
declined 10 be identified.
About 200 to 300 people ~ere
evacuated as a precauuon 1n a

Rotary speaker discusses history of. submarines

S.ALE

RUTLAIID FURNITURE CIC

·

Tbe fltSt submarine in the

u.s.

Navy wu a. turtle-shaped vessel

used ~ the Qvil War, U j.g.
Jolin w. Rice IDkl the Middleport-.
Pomeloy R'*Y Club at ita weeldy
moetin' at the Heath Methodist
CIIIIP m Mlddkpxt.
, The Rbmarine later blew up,

Riceadded
.
Rice il the 11011 of Mr. and Mis.

Jobn Rice and the b!!lbancJ of the
.._Amy Labb.

A padaate of Bastern High
SdiDol .S Obio UniWIIIty. Rice
die Nuc:J. PIJwer 001.c:er ~dale Prolfllll at o.u.
1lefcn lllrlilll bia five-year atint
witllllll Navy. Wb1Ja OS IIIIIQb1 llo.-as &amp;] I ofthe
··. - WWcl bu tOIIDol over the

c••c

DdaJMBIBVaMA••

,...,a.
Ju

·ILH-JII!IIW.IIelh&amp;O..
IH?'R ....
'n
• *!tit I II
£
I
0 ..... &amp;I I' I
IUcl._n&amp;U$1dtD ... U.U.Net • 'DJ.
. ·

.... c-.,nd?

7

7

7

110

i':,~- ~e biltor)' of tho

HI

;~llldlkdill

Ia llliiMuriaa -

llll
dellloUtraled

Dming lhe later stages d tho war, smaller aaack submarines Me about
until two men, Lake and Holland,
U.S. submarines accounted foc 80- 400 feet long.
became active in the early 1900s.
· As fit as safety fOl" die crew is
Even then, liale inlaest was shown · 90 percent of enemy shipping
desboyed.
· in the United Statea, but Oennany
concerned, Rice said his personal
Rice explained that the diesel nllliation detector showed only four
and RU&amp;ia c!r:mon'lllted COIIIiderablo interest In tbe early sub- · submarines uaed during World War millirads after a month on the bost,
D were limilcd bec••iiC they bad to but nearly iiC¥111 millirads wbiJe in
llllri-. Rice said.
come
to the surface or send up lhe lhipylld.
Rice laid AlbiJal Rickover was
SlKikds
for the oxygen their diesel
tho ol6cet wbo ..Uy broQaht IIUbRice said be will be reasaipcd
eo&amp;ines
required.
.
ill Georgia aft« he returns 10 active
llllrinea ID the fOiefJwt In die Unit·
.Nncleai power offers a way to . duty.
eel Slllel. Some activity- evidlnt in World W•l, but it Cllile to get power without the need for
In addition, Mrs: Jon hrrin wa
111o fOiefald 111 Wcxld w. n wbeD 01tYaeo fnlm the uface, so nuclea guest at the me 1"1·
.
Ooman aubmarlaoa actod Ia ar-powered anbmarines can atay
. President Ri&amp;P JepcaMid a YOry
&amp;fOIIIII blown • ~ Hitler under water for u long u three
suceessful panCib bntltfut wa
lieliivod aubmariaea altould be IIIOIIIbs at a time, be said. Nuclear
held last Slllilday with 1110r0 111a
submarine&amp;
are
refueled
every
ISO peoplil.-ved. 1111 ._.
:zd.
UIOd oaly 10 proteCt the homeland;
IDVIIII,
ID10~
ed the CCIIllialtMiol of tile llr ' e 1
bul otbllll Uled diem 10 attack COO·
· Today'• nuclear-powered sub'iOyl, Rico said.
10 llile fuadl for llotlry . . . . in
Melp Coauty.
.
Germany lost 30,000 oat of litarlael are Jnaao ltniCtarel 630
Ladies of lhe HHtb Uaitod
38.000 submarinea durina Wocld feet laq, .... fee&amp; In d1ameler and
W• D. The Ulilld 5111111 loll ono equal in heilllt to a four-atnry
MetbOdiat Cbareb •I'IMI die dJD.
ner.
of every five ~. ~ llld. ....ilding. R..._ lllbmariDol may
-be ..... Rice..,......., The
7

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