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'

Poinetov

P1g1 10-The o.lly Sentinel

Monday, May 3,1193

Middleport, OhiO

Ohio Lottery

Meigs ousts
Blue Angels
from tourney

Pick 3:

497 .
Pick 4:

Low Jonlgb!lll50s. Cloudy.
Wedllesday, cloudy, blgb In '101.

0482

PageS

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WE'RE .CELEIIITIH Will LOW UIE PIICU TIIOUGHOUT
IHE ROIL n Ill S1A11'S MIIAY, IIAY 31D
Voi.44,N0.4

............ Inc.

1 S.C!Ion. 10 P..- 25 c.nl8
AlluiUmeclllnc. NewlpillfJII

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 4, 1993 ·

Pomeroy councii ·OKs
.
emergency·resolution
.

By JIM FREEMAN
Seadnel News Sgft'
The Pomeroy Vill11ge Council
approved an emergency resolution
Monday night aulhonzing Clerk
Kathy Hysell to transfer $60,000
from lhe general fund to the stteet
fund .for operation of current
expenses.
· .
According to the ~solution, lhe
resolution was deemed an emer·
gency for operation of current
expenses and received three read·
ings Monday night prior to
approval.
In addition, council met with
F'ue OJief Danny ZiJtle to discuss
the purchase of five new air !IIISks,
. spare air tanks and a positive pres·

IERIUNE WAUAWAY
REQIIBS, ROCK-o-LOUNGERS AND
QIWJTY

BERKLINE REQUII~I:::~A~RICS.
RECLINER SALE $·199°0
Anderttlll"l ---~

Ill SIOCI
PORCH &amp; PAllO

SERTA

TURF

MAnR~~~

SALE.

SALE
SEUCliOtl IS
GlEAn

_,.,._...,..
,,.... •.....,
TWIN
5

88

5108

SUMER FURN·ITU E

Reg. *136 Lo~back Spring Base Chair •• Sale *79.
.Reg. s158 Hi·ll~ck Spring Base Chair •• Sale *89
Reg. •30 1 Spring Base Lounger ••~···~·Sale '179
.
Reg. *321 2·Seat Gllder •••••••••~••••••••••Sale •199

EA. PC.

EA. PC.

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

As described by Frances S.
Buchholzer, director of the Ohio
DepailbiCIIt ~ N~ Reaoun:es.
it means Mpolluuon fl'om your
backyard, the nelgbbodiOOd parking lot, lhe nearby construction
site".
"Non-point soun:e pollutiOit'is
essentially rainwater runoff that
carries organic mattrials, soil and
toxins off the land and into our
waterways and ground water," lbe
diR:ctor advises.
An fll!jlhuls d the local ed!ICI·
tional program, according to Duhl,
will be 'he Forked ~un Lake
Watershed, which he said is now
ue.
. one of the lakes in Ohio wilh lhe
· · Duhl also lq)Oiledlhat an appli- hf8bcst quality water. He said the
cation hu been ... bmitted to the JIUIPOse of the program lhere will
'ble fUture prob'Division of forestty for an addi- be to identify
lems
and
to
~mething
about
lional grant at: $2.SOO.
them
before
they
happen,
as
well
as
Meanwhile, Duhl said lhat plans
rare ~ roWird hirilll someone to maintain establlsbdd practices
which have kept the high quality ci
for the position mid-JIUIC.
Role of the"C"ional special- the lake Wiler.
The program will be jointly
ist will be to help llllldents identify
sponsored· by several agencies,
non-point aources'Of poUillioft.
"Non-point IIOIII'Ca" means pol· including lhe Mei SWCD, Meip
Education, the
lutiOII flowiq from SOURllis which County Board
C8IIIIOl be readily Identified, Dubl Meigs County Utter C011b0l. Proexplained. He said thiJ could be a grant, the Meigs County Health
privaJe septic sysrom Which is emp- Department. the Meigs County
.tying into a stream, accumulated Part District, and lbe local ExleR-

MANY MORE ITEMS IN STOCK AND ON SALE
.
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LAYAWAY AND SAVE!

SYLVANIA
TELEVISION SALE

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING

Our Entire Stick ef Syhaaia Color
. Televisions Is IH•ced

•IS COLORS
•12 Fl. WIDTH

25" DIA •.REMOTE
CONSOLE
•178total
:f~:::;::·
2=·1n·l
l cap&amp;bllty-• Dllrk

SPECIAL

$488

\.

!'J;

$4''

0

OIILY ·

Ute 100 picture tube •

Channel Reminder • Sleep
I tl~ner • Cllfitors.

.•

IN STOCK

SQ.

YD

or

GLIDER
ROCKERS

00

.

'.,.

'

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.s.,••••

14 Cu. Ft."REFRIGERATOR-.5499

if ..

BUILT·IN DISHWASHER...- ....5269

. The Accident is still under inVftlligatim.

Tuesday~Saturday

Man bound over on charge
A WaahiniJOn Court House man cbarpd with gross sexual
imposldon - bculd OYCI' to the jurildlcdcie of the Mcip County
CoUrt of Common Plea following a ptelimilllry hearing in Meiga
County Court Mandly lflanoon.
RoUid L. ,Newland, 26, or 624 1/2 B. Paint SL, is !!CCUIOd of ·
fpndllas .an 8-yw-ald Mdp County lid In l'awoio)' an April 22. ·
~ Proloculllr OuiJropla TeDOilla gtd Manday OIIOOIL
Newlllld wu ~,..!'l Pome.loy l'oUce cfticets tho followin&amp;
ewnina after beiDa " • ~··• w ricea lbout lbe ~
lncl"'*'l, Pollco CliWGtnld
aid. .
.
.
. Judp PMril:t O'Brien pl.- cub lland 11 $2,500 011 lhe oandi. don IIIII NcwliDd awid ccatact wilb lbe Jlrl or 111;r family. He is .
being held In tho Melp COunly JaB In lieu of bciod. . .
Newland is rep cnnlld by l·+w Pllblic Defeadei D. Micblel·
Mullen.
·
TMJOJIII llid FDIIIO"'III U.poeitlm Ia a feloay of the lhird

• "'•

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KNEE HOLE DESK

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(..,.:1.J
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...~ ·

-~·

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01

ROLL·TOP
SECRRARY '

::.•188°

0

--punltllablebyaneiOIO~ccvJI

•
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scene.

~--Jr ·.~

~.

·

No iajuries_were repcited. Both vehicies wm towed from the

9:30..5:00 .

'·""

spe&amp;ins 011 condition of anooymity. said COIItt!!Ct lllks ft!CeSied We
Monday night and would resume
today. They said miners were told
to tqJOrt to work as !ISUil.
Miners in Illinois and West Vir·

R~R~.

STORE HOURS
Monday 9:3o-a:oo

THANKS FOR YOUR' PATRONACEJ

•

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r

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eaz•t

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lis college savings program.

Barbara Jennings, executive
director, said resean:h shows that
while 33,000 youngsters ' are now
enrolled, many parents still do not
know that they can buy tuition
credits at today's prices lhat will be
valid - despite future tuition
increases - when lheir children
are ready for college.
The contract wilh the Tomasi
Marketing Gtoup. Inc., or Columbus. includes the cost of both pro.
duction and placement of media
ads.
Ms. Jennin~s said Tomasi,
which will rece1ve $37,000 of the
$ I.l million conb'!lct, was the low·
est of 16 bidders.
In olher business, lhe board:
-QK'd a "$10.1 million loan to
help Luigino's. Inc .• acquire land
and build a new manufacturing
plant in Jackson that the company
said will create almost soo jobs.

Officials probe hunting mi~hap.

'

Two vehicle&amp; lllll8ined mocleiMC clama&amp;e Molldly ~in an
accident in Olive Township, the Galiia-Meigs Post of the SIBle
Hig!Jway Patrcil t"'X*Itid.
.
' ·
·
Dolma J. WIIJOn, 41, 11lird Front Sliel!t, Roedsville, was westbound on Slale Route 681 wben she awervedlell and struclt an east·
bound vehicle driven by Jerry K. Swain, 28, S2S66 Eden Ridge

•

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Two-vehicle wreck reported

•199.

ELECTRIC DRYER·-----·5279

!r

Jndianl and in Wuhinstoa. D.C., sinia reported for aheir 8 a.m.

--Local briefs---

~Starting

AI Only

LARGE CAPACITY WASHER••5369

'

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A ConlniCt Covering 60.000 coal
m'-s in APP''!!Chia and the Mid' west ran out lllday. but no immedi.• ate strike waa called ud union
members !'CIIII1Ied 10 wert.
UniiCCI Mine W~ IIOUR:el in

. SOUD ALDER
•Asnrt.. Fabks
J

GAS or ELECTRIC RANGE.-. 5299

.

sure fan.
Blaettnar suggested the village
Zirkle explained that lbe present accept bids for an old pumpec liUCk
positive pressure fan is old and owned by the village. Councilman
does not work properly . Due to Thomas Werry moved -the village
governmental regulations, the accept lhe bids and council unanimasks and spare air tanks will be mously app:oved the molion.
needed within a year, he exe,.~·
Village Administrator John
Zirkle said he can pure
the Andelson said work on the current ·
fan, masks and spare tanks now for water line replacement project may
$9,518. Councilmu Bill Young be completed within a week.
moved that council allow Ziikle to
Present were Council President
purchase lhe equipment from the . Larry Wehrung and council memftre fund.
··
bers Blaeunar, Betty Baroncick,
Also, council agreed to advertise Scott Dillon, Werry and Young,
for bids for a new pumper/rescue Cledc Hysell and Village Adminis·
truck few the fue depadmenL Zirkle trator Anderson.
said Jhe department will try to
Weluwi~ presided over the reg.
replace Jwo existing li\lclcs wilh !he ular meeung in lieu of Mayor
new unit.
IJruce Reed who was not presenL
In addition, Councilman John

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) prisons.
The release of nearly $1.6 million
Erik Turner, lhe AdjulaDt Genin emergency money to lhe Ohio etal's finance officer, indicated the
National Guard and Slale Highway guard may have olher unpaid bills.
'Patrol brought tbe slale's costs in He said lhe amount received Monsion Service.
the Lucasville prison Iiese to more day, in addition to a $799,000
John Costanza, secondary super· than $10 mHiion.
reimbursement April 19. covers
visor in the Meigs County I!oud of
The state ConbOlling Board on bills lhrough April30.
The paarol received $480,000 an
Educat.ion office, described the Monday approved an additional
new proga:au u a move 10 UOiher $950,000 ·for tho patrol and April 19, which represented 1u
modo ot insiJucdon - ''hands-on" $636,000 for lbe Adjlilant Gener- expensea for the first wCek of tbe
science - in the schools. He said it al's Office, bringing their com· standoff.
Nine inmates and one guard
is anolber way to teach. The plan bined total bill for. the 11-day
calls for bolh classroom instruction slandoff to $2.86 millioo.
were killed in lhe siege that ended
and field . .
Earlier, officials of the Depart- April 21 with lhe release of Jive
Duhl
Costanza sll'eSsed the ment of RellabilitatiOil and Comc- . guards who had beeri held jlostage.
The patrol kept 100 to 160 ofli·
imponance of changins attitudes, tiOIIS estimated its costs, including
of getting people to undersland that dalilages to the Southern Ohio Cor- cers at the scene most of the time,
while tbe guard maintained a foo:e
theie is an environmenlal problem rectional Facility, at $7.4 mHiion.
In
a
related
move,
the
board
of at least 500 and at times more,
out lhere wbich needs to be identified and lben 10 come UP. wilh solu- . transferred $4.4 million into the offiCialS said earlier.
In oJher business, the board
tions. Duhl said that 1f this first Emergency Purposes Fund to help
year's program is a success, lhen the SIBle pay costs that may come authorized lhe Ohio Tuition Trust
funding will IX'Obably be available liter. The money wu transferred Authority to enter into a $1.1 mil·
from an account set aside for new lion, 18-month conb'!lct to advertise
in the yean aiiead.
GGIIIs ud Objectives
Goals as eslabliShed for the new
!IOil·pOint aourc:e pollution environ· ·
mental education JXOject. are:
·- to develop high levels of
Charges are pending agiinst Jwo and separa!ed around 8 a.m.
pul!lic awareness;
Cuyahoga County men involved in
Around 9:30 a.m .. Baum was
-to increase community a shooting incident while turkey silting against a ttee, drinking from
involvement in environmenlal edu- hunting Saturdar morning in a red and while bevellgC container,
cation and cooservation programs Chester Township near Texas · when Keltic, allegedly pursuing
sponsored by the public schools, Road.
what he lhought was a lurtey, saw
Soil and Water Conservatioo DisWilliam E. Baum, 37, of Berea the moving red and white beverage
trict, Forked Run State Part, and was shot while turkey hunling wilh container and shot his hunting partother local. state and federal agen- anolher man, Norman Keric, 42, of ner, Wood said.
cies;
Parma, Game Protector Keith
Wood declined to identify what
-to involve individuals in Wood said Monday afternoon.
kint;l of beverage Baum wu con·
Continued on page 3 '
According to Wood, Baum and suming.
Keltic stai1ed out hunting together
Baurn was
. sli\lck on the right

Coal contract runs out; talks continue

SOUDOAI

APPLIANCE SPECIALS

tiasli, or even soil erosion resulting
in pollution.

Seadnel News swr .
Meigs County has rece~ved
grants totalins $10,000 to go
· toMad hiring an edacational IPCci&amp;list to work wilh sixlb, lnelllb.
and eighlh gradm 011 Cllvironmen·
tal issues, specifJCally the iJ!entification of non-point soun:e pollutiOn.
Announcement of lhe graau,
$2.000 froiD the Environmental
Protection Agency and $8,000
from the Depanment of Naaural
Resources, was made by Mike
Duhl of the Meip Soil and Wt~«
Conlervalion Dislrict at Moaday"s
meeting of the newly organized
Meigs County Awareness Conunit•

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Riot costs beyond $10 million;
ckson plant ·
.Gra.,t will help,Meigs ·acquire .l()an approved for Ja_
.·e nvironmental specialist

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fUll.

.

This sip, in .a r.wen••s froDt yard, IWDI up llae
attkude appaready sllared by a mlljorlty or llae
vUJage's resldelltl. (PIIoto by Jim Freeman)

SIGN 0' THE TIMES - Perllaps llae - . t
commoa sl•e Ia CoolviUe llaese days are lips
voicing opposltloll w llae proptlled lndaerawr.

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SERTA PREMIER
COMFQRT

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side of the bead, right torSO and leg

with 41 pellets of number four
shot, Wood said.
Wood said Baum was transported by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans
Memorial l'A&gt;spital where he was_ ..
· kept overnight before being
released.
The duo is scheduled to appear
May 19 in lhe Meip County Coon
of Judge· Patrick O'Brien, Wood
said.

Leading index figures
down 1 percent in March

shifts.
The lalks, held in Washington
under the guidance of a federal
medialll:, were under 1 news JII!!Ck·
out. and the Bituminous Coal Operaton Associatian, Which ~as .
12 oflhe nation's largest COil comBy DAVE SKIDMORE
product-anytime soon.
weekiy average of 343,000 in
panics, had no COIIlmenL
Alloda.-l'resll Writer·
Last week, the department Febll!lll)' to 376.000 in March.
In a starement, lhe UMW said
WASHINGTON - The gov· reponed fJrSt quarJer GOP growlh
-A decrease in the average
· · .. workWCelt at factories, from 41 .5
.only: •'The operators, IS of yet, emmCIIt's chief economic flnCISI· at an anemic 1.8 pcroenL
have failed to acknowledge the ing gauge plunged I percent In
"We're in a very subdued econ· hours in February to'41.2 in Man:h. ·
legitimacy of, let alol!e meet, the March, the wont dct:1lne since lbe o~y. The~:s ~ing very .buoyant
-A dip iJI consumer confidence , .
needs of our members."
middle of the recession more than . gomg on. s81d cconom•.st Lau· a,s meuured by 1 Universitr of
UMW'President Richanl Trwn· 1two years l$0, the Commerce renee H. Meyer, a St. Louis-based Michigan survey, the lhird 1n a
ka, who has the sole aulhority to Department S81d today.
consulJanL
row
calla llrike, had told minm Mon'The drop, sliahlly steeper ~han
In a speech Monday, Treasury.
-·A ~line in orders and con-·
dar. afternoon to get ready for a predicted by analysis, was a sign of Secretary LI~yd Benuen blamed l,nlet few ~w commen:ial buildings
striltc when the contriCt expired at the dramatic slowdown that hiS the severe m•d-Marcb stonn for and business equipment' such as
midnighL
gripped the ecopomy this year, much of .the fust quarre!:s w~- f!!CI(lly equipmeatand COiilputc:n. .
The 12 companies Involved compared wi!h a brief period of ness. calling the quarter a w~!et
-A drop in new .onlcn to factohave 60,000 miners in 11 least six robust powth lite last year. ·
pothole on our road "! recovery·
ries for COIIS!IIIIel' ~·
states: Ohio, Pennsylvania. West • The decrease was the worst
However, ~mist SIJ!Ig W,oo
-A decreuc m the inflation-.
Virginia, Kentucky, lllinois and since November 1990. It followed Sohn of Nor~est Corp. m Mm· adjusted money sUAJly.
lndilna. The COIIII'ICt between lhe a modest 0.5 percent increue in neap!&gt;lis said the weather c~~;n
-A speedup In delivery times
UMW l1id the .-oci•tioo UIUally Fe~ and a slilht 0.1 percent explain '?"'Y part of lhe economy s from factories, a sign or falling
u a model for tho indusary. · decline m Januiuy. fn Doc:ember, at recent SliPPI!IJe.
·
demand.
About 300 1111al1Dr 0011 companies the Clld of the economy's llrCJll8ell
"Tho - Y is kind,~ ICfiP-,A fall in the fnllwion-adjlllllld
are expected 10 lign the llf6CIIICIII quar11er in ftve yem, lho lnd~ of lnglhe botiOm right now, he said. bacltlos of orclen 11 fllctoriCI 1
as well. .
Leadins Iadic;aton bad leapt I. 7 ''The fun~nlll problenl is. lhe · siP tho aualllll wlctaia; if bivThe contract alao affecu the perc:att,lho beit In a decide.
CC91101DY liD t mlliill enough .iobi · il!g llllle bOuble hepb1g up wilh
~ benefits of aboul 12(),000
· 'J'billndex 1s designed 10 predict to support lhe kind of spending demand
.
reareea.
economic activity six to nine neceaa!'Y to l!av~. even moderltc · Two indicaton were positive.
l'llr!ier Ibis year, ah.oo•andl of monlhsin l!dvance. 'l1ri8 c:onsec:u- econonuc 810wt!'·
. ' ,
Srock prices, as meuured by abe
minen went an a ~elective llrib. ti\&lt;e doCUnet are a &amp;ood. althoi!Jh
In March, nme of t!Je ~ndex s Slaildard .t; Poon soo, rose. The
Tho wallroul endecl after a monlh far rrom foolproof sign of a reces- forward-looking
md1cators . ~of raw materials 1080, a sign
wilh a 60-dly c;cllllr8Ctexltillion.
siOII aheld.
'
·
· decJ!ned. In Older of tholt effecl on ofincreaed demand.
·
The coal
have laid
·Analysts do 1101 expect the.CICOII• lhe index,. ~ .lqest 10 Sllllliesl,
The various changes left the
tbey nelid men
work iU1et omy to ~ blclt into receaian thiJ lhe nepbve indicalllrs were: ·
index at a seuonally adju1teil
to re~aln compolilive whb year. However, they warn that
--!.~In building permits. 152.0, up 2,8 po~c:eut fiom a year
nonumon 11ld forci1p producen. fcrowth Is unlikely to reach the·
-A nse 1D new cla•m• for ago ·and down 0.6 percent from
The nniDII is ,_.llllinl min job
Qanh quaaw me- 4.7 peftlCIIt as unemployment benefits, fFom a· lhrtle ~ qo.
- I t ) for ill memben.
· . measured
by
.
. the aaoss domestic

com=

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' n..day, May 4, 1993

Commentary

•
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2-nie Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 5

. ~.May 4, 1993

Accu- Weather• forecast for

In the aftermath of the Waco
tragedy, one fact sticks out in a
landlciiP"' dominated by conjeclure,
nuestions and doubtful assump.ilons. Somewhere, somehow, there
needs to be a school to teaeh peopie in positions of public responsibility how to refrain from sweeping
assertions before all the faciS are
in. A glaring defect Auornev Geneial Janet Reno shared wfth the
president, a clutCh of FBI officials
abd a ""
. "•le of con~
.. smen in her
othe.WiS'e admirable initial press
conference about Waco was to
state as conclUsive what was speculative at best That way lies disas·

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS or THE IIBIQS..IIASON AREA

•

ROBERT L. WJNGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing iss~es. not personalities.

ter.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
•1 ·' •
·
By :rhe Associated Pft!lll
ExcerpiS of recent edilorials of national interest from Ohio newspapers:
.
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The Columbus Dispatch, Mlly 3
As the U.S. milillll)' contingent in Somalia dwindles down to just a few
thousand troops, it is possible to make .a judgment about the result of
American involvement in that African nalioil.
It was a huge success.
.
When American intervention was being debated, many well-mtentioned people had reservations.
. ·
The government made the right humanitarian decision -to try to save
thousands from swving - and in retrospect the mission could not have
·gone much better !han it did.
·
The United StaleS is sometimes criticized for being a bully, and inter·
fering only where iiS clear na1ional interest is involved. But in Somalia,
the United SlateS made a contribution entirely out of humanitarian concerns, and can rightly be proud of the good that it did in saving unlllld
lives.

•

To be sure, a premature rush to
judgment can appear unavoidable.
The world is wired as never before.
Distant events are reported almost
asquicldy as they happen. Communications Satellites and CNN guarantee that the average citizen will
often know about earth-shattering
incidents as quickly as governments or the affected perties.
Triggered by this instant information, the press and the public
demand instant answers. When
events are particularly harifiC, the
demand builds quickly to a deafening roar. Questions and accusations
tumble over each other in an overwhebning cacophony.

The (Cleveland) Plaill Dealer, Ma:y 2
It has not been a smooth first 100 days for President Bill Clinton.
Al1100 often, the 46-year-old Arkansan has lost ~ght of~ own Jlli:ll'i·
ties, lost conbOI of the political agenda, and lost his way anud Washing-

ton's thiCket of entrenched interesiS.
To vOierS who were esger for speedy chang1:5 after last November's
elec:tion, the Clinton administration has seemed slow to move towanl its
ambitious goals.
.
· . Great expeclations greeted Clinton on Inauguration Day, .and any pres!·
dent would have had trOUble living up to those expectations.
.
.
The nation is
to give the new president a chance. His policy
·goals are sound; his political inStinciS ai'e shrewd. But Clinton enjoys only
a brief opporlllnity Ill prove himJelf, lmd his early misstqM have already
j:()St him some voten' good will.
.
If Clinton is to win their fuU confidence, he must get a steadier grip~
the presidency.

willin'

The Marloll Star, April :1,9
We offer a different opinion !han most of the crowd that marched in
Washington to support gay rights.
·
In our opinion gays have the right to be gay and they have the same
pro~eelions as any other person to be employed and not to be discrimi1181·
ed against.
' . .
.
What this is aboul.llowever, IS special treaunent for whal1s not truly a

minority SlatUS. but is a sexual preference. Homosexuals staliSiically ar:e
beUcr educated and in higber income brackets !han many other Amencans. y er these areas are largely used as a basis for discrimination cases
among blacks, women and other minorities.
What we are opposed 10 is the concept that less !han S percent of the
population is auempling 10 penuadc lhe rest of the nation that being gay
is as imponant to us as discrimination against billcks, women or other
minority groups.

MICH.

,,

.

.At that moment. the spin doctors . second-gueises about 'their deci· Committee, eut,it in a different '
and media maniiJUialon oome into sions. She empl!lsiud the respon· context, "We ve got to wail to fig·
their own. Employed by corpora- sibility of cult leader David Koresh ure out what ~ed before we
tion executives, special interest for much that transpired. She toot have hearings.' In other words, :
personal responsibility for the deci· let's buaon our lipe~mtil we have a '
sion to assault the Branch Davidian lietter sense of the truth.
compound with battering rams and
Tbere's ample precedent for :
tear gas.
such caution. A few years ~· one '
groups, congressmen and 'presiAnd then she went further than of the 11101t bolo able men m con- ,
deniS, their advice is almost always the availallte· evidence justified. temporary public life staged a press •
the same. Get on top of the story. Sbespokcofmaas suicide. She and confemlce which later information .:
Seize control of the angles. Shape other official spokesmen claimed revealed was riddled with miainforthe dialogue. Eslablish your themes there had been recent instances of mation. The. occasion was the ,
before someone else clubs you with child abuse. She, the president and downing of an Iranian civilian air- •
their$. Underlying their advice .is everyone else in authority termed liner by Americ~ forces in the ·
one simple rule: He who talces the Koresh a murderer who had Persian Gulf. The briefer was Adm. '
high ground first dominates the . ordered the deaths of the men, William Crowe, then chairman of ,
debate. .
·.
women and children within the the Joint Chiefs of Stiff. What he '
There is, however, an underly- compound.
·
said was what be diOilgh~ Will sim- •
ing falillcy in the rcchnicians' usual
All of this may be - indeed, · pic truth. As it turned oin. the truth :
advice and a fatal flaw in the way it probably is - true. It is a logical was far more complicated !han he ·
is often implemented. TheJallacy, inference from what is publicly made it SOIDL
·
shared by almost everyone these known. But at the time of those
Similarly, tbe Qow-departed
· dars. is that the battle for public early press conferences, neither bead or NBC News, Michael Gartopmioil is decided in the opening Ms. Reno nor Mr. Clinton knew ner, gave blimket support to the
en~agement. The flaw is that in
any of it for a fact and certainty. "Dateline" segment that came
theu: rush to command center stage, That is why, u tbe president said m under fu:e for featuring a staged ~
those in the media limelight find his news conference, he "diiccted collision and fire '1¥ith a GM truck.
themselves pretending to certain· the United States Departments of . He did so on the basis of a quick
ties that the available information Justice and Treasury to Ullllel1ake a check with people in his news
&lt;loesn't support.
vigorous and thorou~:fia· organization he trusted. What lhey
Thus Attorney General Reno, lion 10 uncover what
and told him was wrong, which' a liU1e
having done those things that she why, and whether lny mg could more digging ~n revealed. By
absolutely had to do, '!)Yerreached. ~ve been done diflerendy. ... "
then, however, It wu 100 late for
She supported her rorces in the
Or, as Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Gartner's credibility, He resigned,
field, offering no instant analysis or chairman of the Senate Judiciary or wa$ forced out, while GM ,
crowed.
.
Both Crowe and Gartner deCided, or were advised, that they
sbould put the run weight of their'
restige behind llorics that didn't
Cold up on rurlher investi$1tiOD.
;.::,r.,:idn't have to do It and
't have done it, but allowed
OUIS~ for I quiet verdict
to cl. their judgment
Saying no in the face of l"'blic
clamor is always hard. Refusing to
speculate about the unknown·
makes officials 'look less than'
omniscient But the media mob can
and should he stared down when
accuracy and . fairness require ·
restraint As for omniscience, it is:
the province of gods, not mere·
mortals. Reaching for iiS appearance encourages error, justifies
cover-up and invites embarrassment or disgnlce.
HnddiBI Carter
Iarmer
State Departmeat spokesman
•d award·wiDDIDI reporter, edi··
tor 111111 p•bllsller, is president ol
'·.
MlliiiStreet, a Wlllll!qtoa, D.C.·
ilued televlsiolt productlnD com·
JlllliY Del a writer for Newspaper
...
EDII!rpri&amp;e Alsoclatlcm.

Berry's World

Robert}. Wagman '
has made it un8ble to be ~ce-com­
pet.itive with smallcr, leaner, newer
computer upswts producing more
technologically advanced comput·
ers.
For the last several years IBM
has depended heavily on iiS overseas business. Two-thirds of its
income has come from foreign
operntions. However, with most of
the world now in recession, that
revenue stream has been severely
restricted.
Some 41,000 IBM stockholders
live here in Florida. many of them
retired IBM employees. About
3,500 of them showed up at the
annual meetinll, mostly to express
IJ)eir deep displeasure.
Typical is AI Passman: •'The
value of my IBM stock has
dropped almosNwo-thirds. I count~
ed on it for my retirement I can't
afford to sen it, but the dividends
have dropped to the point that my
retirement income is only a fraction
of what I planned.''
Facing the siOCkholders for the
firSt time was Louis Gers!Jler, for-

Weather
• South Central Oblo
Tonight, cloudy with a chance
of showers and thunderstorms, ·
Low in the rnid-SOs. ChanCe of rain
.SO percent. Wednesdal, cloudy
• with a slight chance o showers
early, Dec~ing cloudiness late.
High ?S-80. Chance 6f rain 30 per·
cent

John Baker
Word has been received here of
the deadl oOohn Elmer ~. 88,
of Lakeland, Fla., who died Feb.
2S, 1993 at Lakeland Regional
Born Center.
in Pomeroy on Jan. 23,
· Medical
1905, he moved to Lakeland. from
Millersport, Ohio, three years 118°·
He was a government office warlter and a member of the Ardella
. B""';•t Church in Lakeland.

For many years in New YOllt's
Greenwich Village, decorously
dressed followers of poet and guru
Eli Siegel ("Hot Afternoons Have
Been in Montana") used to wear
buttons proclaiming themselves
"Victims of the Press." Their
perennial complaint was that the
newspapers did not.print iheir .
dense disquisitions on Siegel's philosophy of Aesthetic Realism,
which they believed could solve
most of our individilal and coUective problems.
• Many other kinds of groupe, of
course, consider themselves victims of the press, even though they
don't wear buttonJ with that message. On March 19, there 8PPCIRd
· in the University of Pennsylvania's
. Diily Pennsylvanian a letter from
"Z02 African-American studenll
and faculty." It excoriated the stiff
of the paper for being withOut ... a
sliver of morality" as wen as being
ignilrant of idenlities and cultures
other than their own.
· · In .particular, those black stu·
. dents and faculty were greatly

·;

•

"

a

Committee of Concerned Black their.calls. Intent on trying to get a"
and Latino Students" confiScated ~i&amp;!ogue going, ':.'!rr=in n
practicaUy the entire 14,000 copies mvited calls fnjln
on .,
of that day's. Daily Pennsylvanian .QIIIpus, There have been none.
•
and threw them .in uash bins and
The edilor or the l'aullylvanian,
dumpsters. This action by victims Stephen Glass, in bis replar col- '
of the press, said the committee, umn "Enemy of the feople,"
was in protest against "the blalant urged Sheldon Hackney,
vative of the .Pal Buchanan school, and covert l'IICiJm" at the univeni- · of the university ~ and
·
Pavlik has written critically, to say ty and iiS institutions, very much Clinton's nominee to head the
the least, of Dr. Martin Luther includin~ college paper.
National Endowment of the ~
King, Malcolm X, ami-dlicriminaAs
Jordan reported in the HIBIIIIIitles - to clemy conc!ernn .
lion laws that discriminate against April 17 ashington Post, these what happened. Hackney has ~
whites and University of Pennsyl- victiml or the press saw nothing blandly IIIII it wu I
con- .
vania admission ltandladl that, he iUepl in their raid because. they flict berWCICII "diveni&amp;y and open
says. give preference to blackl.
said, "the paper• are free" and ntep~~.icl'ono,,.. lnd hO didll'l eori.t'••wo •
The 202 &amp;reatly .,grieved "there edstl no explicit reatric- it. But It 11 not sufficient, 11y1 ,
senders or the March 9 letter· lions on the number or pipers that · Glul, to limply "not cnndone ler·
declared: "We don't coc_.....te hid- any pven student may remove:·~ ~.··
.,
.
ing behind the delicate laws of (It II hard 10 lmqlne Dr. King or
~or have uy members of the ,
freedom of apeech in order to .sian· Malcolm X lideltepPing, ha this . law echool faculiy bei!n cxorclled
der, demean, haraa and incite vio- way, their ~eapJDIIibility for an act 0J10U1b to come forwanl. This i1 •
lence ·in thOle wbo don't lhare a of seriout . ) · ·
not lurpriain&amp; Iince, in recent ,.
Eurocentric
stealing of the years, only a rew profeuorl · The letter
a colllidet: ~apen, an editorial In the Daily notably hi1torian Alan Kon,and
able amount of ~ in 1he Daily Pennlylvanla emphulzed that. the •PlayllClat Mlduiel Cohen - have'
Pennsylvanian, but not eaoup, aa Iliff llad bemlr}'tlll 10 OOIIIBCt the been aufflcielltly
it turned OUl On ~ 15, a group leaders of tho Billclt Latino Com- rect 10 ~end everyone's
,
self-described as 'The· Worldng · mittee but nobody ever returned of~ on campus.

NatHentoff

C::

...uaa

~="

.·

Followfnc:'~

politlcailr=

Milton H. Circle

Milton H. Circle. 82, of Cosboc·

ton died ...... _..
· Ma 4
....,..y mommg, Y •
i:!~l~. Bethesda. Hospital,
Born Ju IY 9 • 19 I0 • in Meigs
County, soo of the late Charles and
Lois Gandee Cincle, he was a lifelong member of the Methodist
Ch h · M · c
d
urc ID eigs ounty an
attended Park United Methodist
~
Church in Cillbocton.
He is survived by his wife, Ethel
A retired farmer and a U.S.
Baker, Lakeland; sons, FAwin
.
.
J. Baker of Arlington, Texas, and Anny vereran of W«&lt;d W• ll, he
Kenneth Baker of Sarasota, Fla.; moved •to Coshocton eight )'ears
.daughters, Jacqueline Baker · pgoSurvivors include his wife of 47
Bernard of Lakeland, Marilyn years~ Thelma'McKelliie Cincle; a
Baker Cordle of Nonon, Donna son, James Cincle of Coshocton; a
Bakeror Sabo of·. Grove City, daughter, Rita Robinson of
Cheryl B~er CerVI of B~andon, , CoshociOII; a sister, Lucille Duke
Fla., Jennifer Baker Smder of or Salenr one Jlflrldcbild and two
· Lebuon, and Jean Baker Grell, gieatgrmidchildren. ·
Janet Hagerman and Candyce
waS preceded in death by a
Baker Mathew, all of Columbus; a
· t v· · · F - 'N h
sister, Ruth Grate of Sou~b !!!J~~~J~Cinci:' ouse,
CharleSion, W. Va., 34 gs;&amp;l!dchil~ · Services .;,ill be held 1:30' p.m.
dren, and 30 great-grindchi.ldml. .
Thursday at Stark Memorial Funer;
F.uneral services were held m al Home in Salem with Rev.
Florida.
William Moran officiatin • Burial
Cozart
follow in G(UidView
C.harles
.
m Salem.
.
·
· Chules E. Cozatt, 49, .of
Friends may call one hour
Columbus, formerly of Me•gs bd'ore services at tbe funeral home
County and Burlington, Mass., died
.
Friday, April 30, 1993 lit his resi-

H;

a:f,

offended by Gregory Pavlik,
junior science and engineering
major whose column appears every
other week. An unfeueied conser-

Tharaday tllrouah Saturday:
Fair on Thursday and Frida~.
Lows .Thursday SO-SS. Highs m
low 70s to low 80s. Lows Friday
55-6S . Higlls 75-80; A chance of
showers and thunderstorms Satur·
day. Lows from upper SOs to low
60s, Highs 80-85.

Jane

II

"'*latloa.

Extmdecl forecast:

Area deaths

now

Outli*"

By The Assodated Press
Showers and thunderstorms will
continue across much of the state
toni&amp;bt. especially across northern
and eastern Ohio.
•
.
Precipitation should end over
southwest Ohio later IOIIigbt as the
low moves northeast of the area.
Lows will be in the 50s.
A few showers will linger over
northern and eastern Ohio Wednesday. But much of the precipitation
should end by early aftanoon. The
remainder of the state will bave
partly to mostly cloudy skies and
dJy conditions. Highs will be in the
70s.
An area of low pressure was
over Missouri with a stationary
front exlending northeast across the
Great Lakes to eastern Canada, A
wealt cold front llreiChed from the
low into the eastern Gulf of Mexi·
co.
High pressure was located along
the East Coast of Canada ilnd the
United States. The low will move

-Sunset tonight will be at 8:28 · ers fell dU llllll1ling in the Midwest
p.m. Sunrise Wedneaday at 6:27 and the Pacitk Nonb-.
a.m. and sunset will be at 8:29 p.m.
Dry weather wu forccaat for
Aroud tile aadoll
AtahNn• w11ere a JJeries of lllrDI·
Heavy rain feU in pans of Neva· dol and tlwPtfet''bDII 011 Monday
da, Utah and Idaho e.Iy today and blew down bof srs, aees and powrr
substantial accumulations of SlOW lines llld injured • !rut two peowere possible high in the moun- ple.
tains as a late-season storm arrived
·tn the West, rainfall was to
from the PacifiC.
exceed one iriCb ill some place&amp; and
Most of the real of the nation snow was PQIIsible oaly 4,000 feet
was covered by clouda. The only alxnre sea level Hiab lelllpeiUil'CS
states expected to see cloudless were to be in tbe .{()tand SOs skies today were California. OJda. -dian 15 depees below lllmlal
homa, Texas and Looisiana. Show· in some areas.

PARIS (AP} - The United
Stat~s and Fruce sideste~ a
decision today about using military
force against Bosnian Serbs, but
agreed to !I'CS5 ahead with sending
peacclteepm into Bosnia if a peace
!Wchigan by . agreement holds up.
the trough will extend
Apparendy running into continfrom
across Ohio to the ued allied resistance, ChrisiOpher
Carolinas.
said after five hours of talks that
The record-high temperature for
••urgent •• consultations would ·be
this date at the Columbus weather held on m(liwy measures only if
station was 91 degrees in 1949 the agreement signed by Bosnian
while the record low was 31 Serbs on Sunday fell apart.
delt!ees in 1986.
He had encountered similar

~11

dence.

. He was a fonnet employee of
WANG Comp!lters. He padualed
trom ~ine High School, attended
Qhio State UDiversity, and lflduat·
ed from the University of Lowell,
Nj:ass . He' attended the St. Margaret's Catholic Church, and was a
U. S. Navy veteran.
: He is survived by ,a daughter.
Cristen E. Cozart, Burlington,
Mass.; a son, Barry K. Swbbs, U.
S: Army, Korea; a panclso_n. Barrett Stubbs; five Sisters, Margie
Clark of Las Vegas, Nev., Jean
Van Meter of Pataskala, Maxine
liarvcy of St. Joseph, Mo., Fern
Dil.vis of Columbus, and Patty
Campton of St. Petenburg, Fla.;
and four br~hei's, Stanley Cozart
"' of Upper Arlmgton; Oeraid Cozlut
. · of Campbell, Ohio, Jim ~ of
Stover, Mo.. and Joseph Cozart of
Pickerington.
He was~ in death by his
wife, Patncia Sheehu Cozart in
October, 1992, and !lis parents,
Hubert aDd Rebecca Hillllll.COzart.
Friends may can at the Dwayne
R. Spence Funeral Horne, 550 Hill
Road, North, Pickerington, Tuesday (loday) 2 to 4 and 6 108 p.m.
· Funeral Mass will be held at I0
a.m. Wednesday at the Seton
Parish Catholic Church, 600 Hill
Road North, Pickerinaton. The
Rev. Fr. Stephen Hawldns
the celebrant. Interment' will
St. Joseph Cemetery in Taunton,
Mass. A vigil IICrvice will be held
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the funeral
home,

•

Ir

•

Charles A. Frazier .

The name oC a decealed brother
WaS inadvertantly omitted from the
obituary of Charles Allen '"I'udie"

Frazier, 71, of· Middleport, who
died Sunday, May 2, 1993, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
.
·
He was also proceeded in death
by a brother, Clyde Frizier, whose
name was inadvertently omitted by
the family.

Doris HoteUing
Doris M. Hotclling, 83, of Alvada, died Thursday, Ap(ii 29, 1993,
at her residence, 8690 County
Highway 23. Meigs County survil!ors include a dau&amp;htei, Carol
McLaughlin of Pomeroy. Funeral
arrangements will be announced by
the Strombaugh Memorial Funersl
Home in Carey, Ohio.
'

Continued Crom..:.....:....
Pllle 1

September or earlr. OctobeJ _at
F&lt;Wiced Run State Patk where envi-·
ronmental projeciS
will
oped.
.
. be devel-

5chool communities in the identifl·
cation and develapment of personal
and group behaviors that. reduce
non-point source pollulion;
·
-to hire and lrain an educational specialist;
-to develop and provide staff
development programs to educaiOrs
in Meigs County that are related to
non-point source pollution and
environmental education. ··
Plans call for field trips to provide hands-oo lessons in plant and
animal science relating to conservation and career edUcation, along
with programs for teachers ·In llllc

The role or the educational specialist will be 10 assist local school
districts in developing science
enrichment activities. This will
include s_IUdent field days, science
newsletters, hands-on environmental demonstrations, environmental
themed Right to Read Week programs; ~~ Envirothon and Earth
Day actiVIbeS.
Tbe. ultimate obje~tive o~ .the
non-pomt source poUubOII enVli'OD·
mental education81 project will be
to improve sllldent performance on
standardized test scores and the
required proficiency tests, to
increase the number of studeniS
choosing science related fields of
study,
and to reduce non-source
Units of the Meigs County
pollution
in Meigs County.
·
Emergency Medical Service
·
Otber
B•nbess
;
responded to fQur calls for assisPlans were c:ompleted during the ·
tance on Monday and early Tuesmlieting
of the Awareness Commitday morning.
On Monday at 10:&gt;15 a.m . .the tee to begin a bi-weekly colunin in
Pomeroy unit was called to Butter· The Daily Smtinel. Charlene Hoenut Avenue for Willis Bentz. He flich presented a sample head for
was transported to Pleasant Valier the column which will carry the
Hospital. at 12:04 p.m. the umt theme ult!s .your ~ld • Meigs
went to West Main Street on a two- County". The fll'St column will run
.
c.- 11101a vehicle accident in which .next week.
Emphasis
of
the
initial
columns
Orville Hill was *n to VelelanS
will
be
on
~
the
community
Memorial Hospital and Ralph Hall
aware of agencies m the county and
refused treatment.
This morning (Tuesday} at 1:27 the services which they provide.
Mary Powell, Cindy Oliveri and
a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to
Pomeroy Pike for Jessie Jarrett Costanza serve on the editing comwho was taken to Veterans. At 6: 14 mittee and will receive a second
a.m. the Wlit went to Morning Star round of columns at the June I
Road for Jeff Musser. l{e was meeting to' be held at the Meigs
SWCD office, 1 p.m.
taken to Veterans.

EMS responds
to four calls

•

Meigs announcements
Prom aDDOUIICetntat

The 1993 Mei,11s Prom, UA.
Whole New World, will be Saturday from 8 p.m..lll ~ht at the
high school. The gymnasmm will
be open from 6:30-7:30 p.m. for
parents and friends who would like
to see the decorations. It has been
requested, however, that all cars be
removed from the paridng area In
front of the school between 7:30
and 7:45 p.m. so students attending
the prom may park there.

Racine alumni
Plans for the 1993 RacineSouthern alum.ni banqUet scbeduled
for May 29 at 6 p.m. at the high
sc;.hool gymnasium have been
announced. A dance will be held
from 9 p.m. to midnight with music
· by Crossover Band. TickeiS arc
•
available for the dinner and dance
for $10 per person from Racine
World Day of.
Home National Bank and Cross
and should be purchased
Prayer set Thursday Grocery
before May 22. Further information
The Middleport Ministerial is available from Shirley Stewart,
Association will sponsor a World 949-2617 or Laura Hart, 949-2656.
Day of Prayer service at MiddleBake sale plaDned
port Village Hall Thursday from
The
Tuppers
Plains VFW Post
12:20 to 12:40 p.m. Empbaai1 of
No.
9053
and
I adies Awtiliary will
the prayer service wiU be on concern about the moral decline in hold a bake sale Saturday beginning at 9 am. acrou from Farmers
America. Community l'Ciidents n
Bank
in "fuppers Plains.
encouraged to participate in the
JClVice.
Dance planned
There will be i round and
square dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. sponsored by the Tuppers
Slauahter steers: choice, 76.00- Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies
80.60; select 67 .25·76.00.
Auxiliary. Music will be by
Slaughter heifers: choice 76.00- Smolcey Mountain Drifters. Callers
81.(10; select 62.00-76.00. .
, wiU be Red Carr and Melvin Cross.
Cows: steady; all cows SS.SO Everyone welcome.
and down.
Bllila: not tested; all bullJ 66.SO
Ser*a.C
and down. .
{, ..
Weekend services at the'
1'ftder c:aale: 2.00 10 3.00 bi&amp;b· DanvUle .Chdi'Cil of O!rilt wUI be
er
r
Salurdly at 7 p.m. and Sunday at
Yearllna steer~ 86.00-99.00; 10:30 ani. and 6 p.m. Dra'VW Hill,·
yearling heifers 76.(1().98.00.
. Falter, w.v... will be the speaket.
Steer cal.vea 90.00·117·.SO; Public invited.
.
heifer c:alvel86.00-110.00.
Sheep and lambl: 1.00 biaher;
· AuDiary to meet
·
choice wool• 70.00 and down;
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
choice clips 68..00·70.00; feeder · No. 90S.3 Ladle• Auxiliary will
lambl71.01) and down; old lheep meet Tbuncla~~·m. at the
27.00 llld down.
post home. A
comforter
will be~~- away.
·

Livestock report

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct Uvcstock prices and.;::!~:!
at selected buying points
PJ
. by tbe Ohio Department of Agri·
culture:
Barrows ud gllta: moatly 50
cents hiaher; demand moderllle to
good.
.' U.S."1-2, 230-260 lbe .• counii'Y
points, 43.50-44.25, l few 44. 75;
planti 44.50-4S.SO, a few 46.00.
·U.S. 1·3, 230-260 lbl., country
point~, 42.5().44.00.
u.s:•-2. 210-230 Jbe., counuy
point~, 41..5043.00.
.
. Receipts Mo::::k 5,000. Estimated ra:eipt1 T
y 7$JJ.
. Pric:el frnlll The 1'roclucn Live' ·$lOCk Aasociarim:
Caltle: Mally 10 2.~ ~-

I!

~eme~ery

... ___ ____

""
Gli•nnt

.

Elsewhere, high temperatures
CXJ!_etted ill the 40s and so. in
lbe Pacifie Ncrtbwcstllld through- the Grell Plains; in lbe SOland
601 over lbc Gtal Lata region; in
lbe 60s and 70s in New Elllland,
the mid-Atlantic states, Calllornia
and most of the Midwest; and in
the 80s and 90s from southern Ari·
ZOIIIIIO Florida.
The high for the lower 48 SIIICS
Mmday W1S 98 degrees in lmprrial
and El Centril, California, and in
Gila Bend and Lake Havasu City,
Arizona.

U. S., France will send peacekeepers .
into Bosnia if agreement holds up ' :

~~·~·F;·;~~~~~to}owe!.

I

100:000 fewer and dropping
mer bead of RJR Nabisco, IBM's is
newly appointed chairman, CEO daily. Many were early retirements.
and the first oulsider' ever to head But many others, in a complete .
reversal or IBM's famed corporate
the computer giant.
"I understand your pain, and I .culture, have been Jaid off or simwant to do somet!ting about it," ply fu:ed.
With consumer-level marlteting
G~rstner told Passma~ when the
retiree rose to express his anger.
stiU a major problem, .the company
Gentner set the mood of the is increasingly turning to ouiside
meeting when be opened his repm vendors and reaellers. One, this
on the state of the company by fall, will bring the company into
telling the~: "I've .:rived the booming mobile-office market
aa a very Dainful ume for IBM. A by J]BCbging the new 'mM "Think
time filled '!Vith problems, change Pad" nolebook computer with a ,
and uncertainty. You and I have cellular phone and the Spectrum
watched this great corporation interface.
decline in profitability and perforare beiDa brought into
mance. We've seen its very sur- top lllatlllement positions. It was ,
vival called into question ... I regret announced just before the meeting, .
the distress IBM's problems have that former congressman Ed
caused to you, Ill ~ families and Zschau, a computer-industry execto your communi&amp;tes.'.
utive, will run AdStaR, IBM's ;
. To fix what ails Bi&amp; Blue, Ger- infCI'IIIation sllll'lge business.
stner promised !O take "bold
The company is also splitting .
action." But be also cautioned: "I into 13 openting units and giving :
don't have any answers for you yet more authority io each, allowing
them
.
There are no quick fixes.'' ·
.. to quicldy. bring pnce-com'
Gersmer, on the job less than petitiVe prodUtiS to marteL This
three weeks, was able to deflect had led to some speculation that '
most criticism with the obvious IBM might be considerin a •
:
statement that IBM's troullles break up such as AT
wh1cb :
occuned on someone else's watch. was forced to do so by the courts.
But the JlOIWd of directorl, many of
Gerstner said no: "We don't
whom bave been with IBM for De«~ to drop I bomb into this com- ..
years, ca!lle in' for a barrage of pany and SDiinl« it into pieces."
slinging criticism.
Robert W~ Is a lylldlcatIBM is already moving to make ed writer lor Newspaper Eater·
changes big and small. liS payroll prlle

Pennsylvania's;victims of the press .

•

W. VA.

'

product line. The company faces
. fierce competition as it tries to
make and marker smaller computers. Meanwhile, its high overhead
'
.

m

.

• IColumbus I7Z' I

IBM slumps as stockholders grumble

Today in history

,

IND.

.-

.

PA.

IMansfield l12• I•

m,

TAMPA, Fla. (NEA} - There
was a lot of good news for IBM's
18-member board of directors at
this year's annual meeting. They
were all re-elected for another year;
a proposal was defeated that would
have eliminated their retirement
pay; and not one was lynched.
TH (New Pbiladelp.ia) Times Reporter; April 29
,
Given
the general mood of the
The 811l101DlCC111eDt that women pilots could soon be Dying American
company's
stockholders, the latter
eomballlin:raft may cause some military lnlditionalists to blanch, but it's had been a distinct
possibility.
an idea whose lime has come.
·
For
decades,
IBM
.1\l:tuaUy, women have ulready proven tbey can perform virtually all all that was good inrepresented
American
other mili181')1 assignmeniS. They have become an increasingly important industry. But now the company
is
part of the nalional defense structure.
seriously
ill,
and
its
stockholders
If women are willing to volunteer for combat assignments, do the job
angry.
and take the risks, we see no reason to !lfCVCDt them -assuming there are areThe
negative statistics are rather
no "quoces" or relaxalion of qualiflcauon scandalds.
startling. In 1')92, the company lost
$5 billion, on top of $2 billion lost
in 1991. Already in the fust quarter
of 1993 the com~y has a reported
loss of $285 million. The compaBy The AssoCiated Pft!JII
Today is Tuesday, May 4, the 124th day of 1993. There are 241 days ny's stock- once a staple in the
retirement portfolios because of iiS
left in the year. ·
.
stability and high dividends - has
Today's Highlight in History:
1987 it traded at
On May 4, 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen ~ fm: on a crowd of headed south.
$175
a
share.
Last
summer it was at
anti-war protesters at Kent State University, killing four students and
$100.
Today
it
is
selling at about
wounding nine others . .
$48 - a drop of $70 billion in
value.
The reasons? Few companies
have become as bloated as IBM.
WbilejiS overhead soared, the bottom began dropping out of its business. As personal computers
became more powerful, companies
switched to PC networks from
mainframes -the heart of IBM's

,i

'

Hodding Carter III

1hl Daily Sentinel Page 3

Showers, thunder.storms will continue around Ohio

OHIO Weather

Quick answers undermine the fact~

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer

Page

Pomero~lddleport, Ohio

VFW Post tu meet
The Tu~rs Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will meet May 13 aa 7:30
p.m. at the post home. OffiCers will
be installed.

resistance in London to Presidellt
Clinlllii'S decision to usc I combi·
nation of air attacks on Serb
artillery and the easing or an arms
embargo against Bosnian's Muslim-led gowzitment.
.
"'""'......_, in a joint_. conf~-;r.bFrench Foreign Alain
Juppe said, "I think we foaad COlli·
moo ground to implement" the
U.N.~ plan to end the fiabting,
establish a provisional govanment
in Sarajevb and divide Bosnia into
10 ethnically based cantons.
It would reward the Serbs with
much of the territory they Jlined in
a 13-month war on Muslim cities
. and villap. An Cltimated 134,000
I are dead Cll' missing.
·
'
a1Jo held talb with
Mittemnl, Premier Edouard Balladur and
Defense Minisla' PuiiCois l..cold.
Juppe said the forcei of most
major counties would {l~Wcipale in
a peacekeeping operation "that
includes the United S totes and
France."
Christopher said U.S. uoops

Bake sale planned
·
The Rock Springs Women will
have a bake and craft sale Saturday
at 10 am. 'at Big Wheel.
'

DIIICt slated
There will be a dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on
urday from 9 p.m. ID I a.m. with
music by Pure Country Band. Publk: invited.
'

S•-

The following cases were
resolved Monday evening in the
Middlc:.ct Mayor's Court of
Mayor
Hoffman.
Fined were: Kim Denise
Anspach, UpPer Sandusky, expired
operator's license, $10 plus costs;
fictitious . . . $10 plus costs; John
E. I •tdermilt, Columbus, physical
control of a motor vehicle under
the influence, $425 plus costs,
.three days jail; operating under suspension, $100 plus costs; R~
K. Davidson, Pomeroy, fiCbbOUS

Hospital news

Stocks
Bank ()ne...........................55
Bob Evans ......................... 17
Charming Shop.................;l4
Chmp Inclustries. ................ l3
City Holding.......................23
Federal MoiNL .................. .19
(Jc)oclyear nR. ..................76
Ullds :End.. •.•.........••••••.••••••30
I..im.itecl Inc....................... 21
Multimedia Inc. .................33
Point Bancorp........ ~ .......... 14
Restaurant:.................3/16
Electric:••••••••••..•••.20
................ 16
Inc......................20

and

Mr:

tags, $10 pius costs; Laura J.·
Childers, Rutland, stop sign violation, $10 plus costs; Joseph R..
White, Cheshire, expired tagS, $10
plus costs; Donnie E. Stone, Middleport, two charges or disorderly
manner, $2S plus cost on each
charge; Jerry R. Moore, Pomeroy,,
open container, SSO plus costs.
The following people forfeited·
bond: Bmndon L..Janey, Gallipolis,
$SQ, speed; Doris L . Canterbury,
Ravenswood, W..Va., $53, 'JlCCCI;
Joey R. Pridemore Jr., Pomeroy,
$50, speed; Cathleen N. Nally,
Pomeroy, $58, speed; Laura A.
Lee. Middleport, $52, speed; David
S. Walker, Gallipolis, $54, speed. ·

Couple issued
marriage license
A marriage license was iasued
Friday in Meigs County Probate
Comt 10 Christnpber Chi LeMaster,
19, and Candace Lynn Jacks, 19
both of Middleport.
•

Dissolution
filed .
.
'

A· petition for dissolution , f ·
m~i&amp;~e was filed Friday in tl;e
Me111s County Court of Common
Pleas by Carolyn Elaine Oilltrrson
Pomeroy, and Charles Edward
Gilkerson, Clover, S.C.

The Daily Sentinel
(UBP811S.MO)
Publilhell nery .Remoon, Monday
U.,...tl Friday; ll1 Court SL~ ~roy,
Ohio by lhe Ohio Volley ....liahi
CclmponJIMat- . Inc., - . : .
Ohio 45'119, Ph. llfl2.2lli6. ·poltap pUt at PooMaO)I Ohio.
Member. Tho -lod Pnoa, and lhe
Ohio ~Jill' ,• ._..-. Nallmol
Adwortisilll -~..: S....hom
Ne- S.leo, 133 n.tnl Awonue,
New Yon, New v.n 10017.

.....,_ella-

POSTMASTER: Seod
to
Tho O.ily Sonlinel, ll1 Court St.,
PID:sAOJ&gt; OHio 46'168.

SUBICDPlkiN &amp;AT&amp;I

. , Contor ..... . - ....,.

OM Weet....................- ...................11.60

OM -UI.................._ .............. ,,,,,,tiJ,IIfl

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA ,_,
446

OM Yur.............- .....- .........- .....~.20
&amp;INOLa COPT

fti(Z

·l~r/4

•

lloily................... ...................... -25 C.O.ta

---..oopo.ytlloeonlo

-·--.eo-v
lilt-.-·-..c:.-v
. . . . ,. ... . . ..;. . _!:•.,.
._

.. ..., nmil iD - - lo Tho
Do117 llootiMI 011 a - . Ill• .. 12
-.Ill ...... Cnodil will bo I f - No 1ablcriptlona by ..U pw nri:IW.I tn

-••.nable......... ........ •ntor.

PolliCk ·-.e~~ ·
· The Ma)' Modem Woodmen
meeting at the Bur!inabam Modern
Woodmen Hall wiUlte a potluck
dinner M 7 p.m. 011 May IS. Moth·
en lllelldilll will be hoiiOild. The
~P will titmUb IIICIIl, rolll and,
drink. •

,,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May 3 discbaraes- Cecil Rif.
fie, Janice McCleilan, Roben Lambert, Jay Johnson, Charles Merzler,
Delilah Johnson, James WaiSOn,
Jsmes McQuaid, Aaron McGlothlin, Bernice. Westfall, Helen }J"l·
Icy, Juanita Ballard, Neil Hotham,
Melissa Williams, Virgin Lee,
OliveUe Uber, Danny Dewhurut,
Florence McDaniel, Kathleen
McDermitt, Marie Wray, Ametta
Adkins, Heather Bloomer, Austin
Edwards, Basil Casey and BDIII(Ion ·
Legg.
May 3 ilirtha - Mr.
Mrs.
Michael Hunter, twin son . and
daughter, McArthur. Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Shover, son, Wellston.
and Mrs. Jerry Matney, son, Gallipolis.

7 fined in Middleport court

Carnival planaed
Pomeroy Elementary PI'O will
sponsor a carnival Friday from S8:30 p.m.• the school. There wiii
be. entertainment, games, food and
pnzes.

Tordon Jenltll,linpr and 10111·
writer, will be in .concert at the
PealeCP'tal Asaembly.ill Racine on
May 14 at 7 p.m. The cbwcil is
lo llell four m1lea ou&amp; ol Racine on
Route 124. Putor Bill Hoback
invires the public.

••

Hospital news

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Ohio Lottery drawings Monday
ni&amp;bt
Pick 3 Numbers was4-9-7.
Pick 4 Numbers was 04-11-2
The Ohio Loucry will pay out
$497,239 to winnen ill Monday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily pnc. ·
Sales in Pict 3 Numbers totaled
$1 ,409,569.50.
In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players w~ed
$291,747 and will sbare $64
•
The jackpot for Wednesday's
s'!~r Lotto drawing is worth $4
million.

~

Coacertlllllted

peace agreement among rival eth·
nic factions.
He said the Clinton administra·
lion WOUld explain the move to the .
.. American peOple aa "one of lhe:!''C'.;
principal. im.portant peacekeeping
efforts in Ewope, probably ever.''
On possible action against
Bosnian Serbs if they reneged on
the signing by their leader Radovan
Karadzic .in Athens on Sunday,
Juppe said, "We've excluded no
measures.'' But he acknowledged ·
they had taten no hard decision to
endorse any military oPcion.
.
Christopher, meanwhile, said
the allies had "made relatively
good progress" in the luncheon
. meeting &amp;I the Foreign Ministry.
Juppe described the talks as·.
"frank and friendly," and said IIleY ·
had taken up various scenarios·
beginning with ''the best salution"

Lottery results

. Veterus MeiiOI'ial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
Edna Swick. Pomeroy; and Lewis
Kennedy, Rutland.
. Committee to meet ·
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
The Loaridge Community Center Association will meet Thursday Christopher Rayburn, Jewell Curtis
and Elmer Pickens.
at? p.m. Everyone weloome.

Clinks planlled
Free commumty immunizatiod
clinics will be offered Thursday
from 9-11 a.m. and l-3 p.m. at the
Racine Fire DeparJment; May 13
from 9-11 a.m. at .the Columbia ,
Tow.nship Fire Department and 1
from 1-3 p.m. at the Scipio Township Fire Department the clinics
are offered for children age two
months through idnderganlen age.
Parents must bring child's immunization record.

would be dlspau:lied to the Balltans

to help enforce a "good-faith"

'

IS

......

I

lltde&amp;

w-.... . .......-.................. ..tll.&amp;l

:18 'II' .,

........... _ ......_ ..... _,_ ..~.~.

13-........................_.............

:18 -

.

'

ill

......................_ .......,.._

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

�.' .

Sports

Tuesday, May 4, 1993

The paily Sentinel
.

lhe Redmen at 15-12 overall, 13-5
in lhe disaict and 9·5 in the Mid·
Ohio Conference, when: lhey were
in second place last week. •
Rio Gllllllle seized a 4-2 victory
in theq~ener with the Oilm on the
strength of a nine-hit aaact. high·
lighted by a two for twb ~rformance by Eric McLean (junior,
Columbus), and by J!ISOO L. Wright
(sophomore, Pomero ) and Chad
Carro
_ II =or, ChiUkothe}, each
two for
.
The Redmen limited lhem,!Cives
to one error as Lucasville senior
Mike Voorheis (6·3) pitched a
four-liiuer against Findlay. For the
Oilers, Brett- Kauser, John Rube
and Mike Santaguida were each

=

one b tme.
Findlay also hid 8
and o.y Miller llad 111e ._
the pill:hing·lll()ln!
Rio Grande tq!t;~p 6e
tum in die~.,.....,_..._
tJumks to al()..Jiit ('If
61lfW.
lafs Craig Nye'NIIw .. : lila.
tam. Leading the •R •1nm lje • a
were Jason L. w~ :lllWO far
three lmd Brie Pati* (• .. _
Groveport), wbo weat
fDi
five. ·
Kauser was twobd.cebdl:
Oilen llld Brian
for two. Oat Hill• , _ Jliil
Kuhn (S·l) pitcbod'. r = ; - 11;,
against Findlay, IUid 1lodl ~
committed two mors·,.,W.Z
'

-.ze

1.-

;
" c' t 1 MOC
·
,_
•r
p · - • ll!r tpljlj
:=-;
zz z wiilll .:r.,. • C:.
- ill a • vi
-aaed
,.._Aid X. w£s r :.,die
........ ' lllcsa:ond

hits and committed no errors 1·n
· of
~~ Tlhe better efforts of Walsh
pt
Odd ~en. who took lhe
loss. Walsh smlilarly hal! ~0 etrOI'S
and drew one for t1A(O hittmg per·
fcx:mances !fom KeVIl! Ma!Jon 3!'d
M•ke Loc•gno to h•ghllght us

Til&amp; •

1M

h

t-;!~ .

II:IITIIII:C.tlllieis I) a

.._..., .. game.
.
.
But f:be Cavs, who trailed Rm
Idler • ..• W . tin ~ a Grande m d_le cont:erence last week
Om4)~: : .._:a:t;~ ~
likely contmders
, . . 1111: p , a widl PM Oal
or . c P ayo ~. wer~ not t.o ~e
• .
I 'II' .
y, den1ed at least one wm on the!'
= .L
one ~e fie!d 1!"1 brought out the1r
t«
w~ b•g gun m p1tcher Jeff Paul, the
• . •7; Bo- . CJE two confermce Player oflhe Week.
(SiplloAI thou$~ Pa~l !I'~ ·unable to
5 0••
~8 T
d elf five
hold the VIS~tors h1tung down _. 11111111

1

,

:_-a

u.-- ._ :-'

1',

':-

1''

:o fill}{

= np.-:'

,':;.:! .,..--:
a

lar season:

The Redwomen ended at 13·20
on the season, S·l3 in DistriCt 22
and 3·11 in the Mid-Ohio Confer·
ence.
Rio Grande q~ened with a 3-0
shutout over lhe Cavaliers, thanks
to a one for three performance on
hitting from Robin Stull (senior,
Jeromesville}, whose single hit
resulted in a triple with one run
scored and two RBis.
Starr Philpot (saphomore, Day·
ton) held Walsh 10 a two-hiuer for
the game, which saw only Shelly

•

Ashley advance on a single hiL 'f1te
Redwomen netted four hits and
committed two errors, while Walsh
had two etrOI'S and Beth Kemp took
the loss.
In the nightcap, Walsh capital·
ized on three errors by the Red·
women to post a 4.() v1ctory, wilh
Peggy Hatters scoring two runs off
a three for four showin$ at the
plate. Kristy Deeser limned the
Redw6men to three hits to win lhe
game, _while . Heather Brining
(freshman, Grovepon) and Shelly
Whitaker (sophomore, Oak Harbor}
led Rio Grande's hitting each wilh
a one for three performance.
Walsh committed no errors in
the outing, and Philpot closed out

the campaign with a10-.ll.......
Tbe Redwomen ataell...
contest comiq off a Tliw ' y
sweep of Marieaa • .._,
•
with a 5..0 will lid , ... · a .-i11 a
10.3 rout of dlePiaau.
Kelly Robiasoa (..... •c.
Marion) led lbe ltotl-• ia 1111:
opener with a three
back by Stull's ·one for frlw .,._
ing to net another llWO- • a
triple for'an RBI. Maitlla•s ~
Bennett squctzed offa:siacJe.._
Overall, tbc Red-ea
eight hits and .asitl&amp;lc
Marietta's threebils..t'--,
Philpot had the ll'ia _. D
Fion took the loss rart~e u · n
The Plonecn n
c l.;iae .._

for._.....

_ . - . . a - • allolltlc from women split by losing 7•S in the
S.lf
, ilt ~~"!~ t.lfof opener and winning 6· 3 in the
die lliPI. M ...,. aw.w o•en nightcap.
Rio Grande recQrded eight hits
cw. . •iauoil
ou • 10-hit
but
suffered five errors in lhe fust
·~·~aame,
but Whitaker went two for
'1, · Z (IMI br) explodfour
with
two runs and floyd was
feu
one
for
three
with a run and an RBI
lUlls,. • • , _. • d ._PO
to
brightm
lhe
picture for the hosts.
JaiPPiP Rio Gnlade's &amp;•me,
Morehead's
Owens was one for
-.llikllcdi fTaJd (M •••. ~d·
four
with
a
pair
of RBis and White'
IIMJ).IZID-fart., -alad·
was
credited
with
lhe win. The vis• • -. . •RBI.
itors
had
11
hits
and had two
ftolJn' -oe••d widi: tile

R'10 G d
tted · h h'
•
ran e ne
e•g t Ill four err'?rs caused the team to
stumble m the latte':_ part of the

game.
.
•
~uteven .wnh that, Jason L.

Wnght managed to go two for
three atlhe P!ate and Darin Smith .
(fresh':ft~D. Bidwell) went one for
one w!th. an RBI to I~ the R~men hi1;11ng. Walsh, With five h!ts
and a SIDgle erro'i responded. wtth
one. for ~wo peraormances from
Tony Periandri and MauRauen.
Kuhn started the 11ame on the
mound, but· was relieved by Rob
Sharfenaker (sophomore, Col urn. bus), who. eventually took the loss
and sent his record to 1-2.

for
•fora__.slaai..__,

llld ....
_..,.__..,T_Holf.
cow.,
-.
._.-- liaited
.__ I •

errors, while Philpot had the loss.
Stull, three (or four lrom the
plate, had a double, lriple. RBI and
single run, while Brirung made aU
three of her appearances at bat
count for BflDI and an RBI to lead
the Redwomen to victory. Owens
was again the top hitter ror M~·
head, scoring two runs and netting
a lriple.
Both teams had a single error.
Philpot w&amp;S winning pitcher and
Strunk had the loss.

to•

- • Baseball • -

sion draft.
"That was the old Dell Curry,"
Bogues said. "That's what we're
used to. He was unconscious
tonighL"
Curry said there was a reason
for his offensive show.
"I was getting beuer picks, and
they weren't getting around the
picks," Curry said. "I got good
looks at the baskeL
"Sometimes, I can't tell if I'm
in a really great shooting night until
three or four shots. There's been
plenty of times I've hit my first
shot and missed my next five."
The Hornets used a· l5-0 out·
burst in the middle of the second
quarter tO break qJeD a close game
and take a 59-44lead.
Kevin Gamble led Boston with
19 points and Kevin McHale added
15 as Charlotte's smothering
defense forced 17 turiiOven. After

wirfl a.._* f
_

- • NBA playoffs • -

NLstata
THIPt

·'

'

Monday's scores

Ciocimati.(Pbp 2-1) .. Florida (Ham·
..... 0.3~ 7:3Sl''"'·
SID J:lioto (0101 iladl 1-4) ll Moo·
uoo!(D.Miatlneoi-4),7:3Sp.m.
Atlanta (Gl.avi.ne 3· 0) at Pitubutp
(Wotefiol4 :1-2), 7:3S p.m.
Colorado (AabbJ D-2) It Chic:aao
(Oumlu 3-2), I:OS p.m.
· H...aton (!Juaileh 2-0) a SL Loula
(Tewkabwy 1·3~ 1:3S p,m.
New Yad&lt; (f....,. Z.O) ll Loo Anpla (,'.~!ado 1-2), 10:3S p.m.
Philadelpbil (Sehillina_4-1) at S.n
FnnQico (Willal 0.2), IO:lS pm.

Chuloao 119. BotiOG 19, Clwloue

----~1
lll, L.A. Clippn 99, HouoUlll..._,..,.l
I

Wednaday's cames

Boaclall0..dc1!o,. p.m.
~us

.. ~. a,~

a.EYBI..ANDat New hney, I p.m.
HOUitUI. at LA.. Clipper~. lO:lO p.m.

-

UIJ
Seaalc. a Ul.lh, TBA

Phomi&amp; ''LA. t..kat, 'IBA, if n-.·

- • NHL playoffs • Mo.nctay's score

T....,.1 SL l.auio I (2 (11). T....,..
looduaiaHl '

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T-

w L

Pet.

9
10
10
II
13
IS
14

.62!5

a......................... IS

New Yod&lt; .............. l4
Tortlllla ..... - ...........14
MilwaUec ., .......... .lO
CU!VELANIL .... IO
Blllimcn .................9

.600

.m

.560
.435
.400
.391

1
1.5
4J

9

Chicoao..................t4 10
Tu• _., .................13 11
Scaule .................... ll 13
-

.............. 10 14
Oty ........... 10 1.5
QUlood ................... l 13
J(llnt.a~~

.su

.542

1

,410

1S

.417
.400
.311

4
4JI
4.S

&lt;lJ!VI!I.AND S. CWiamia 4
Ooilanll4,- Yad&lt; 2

Sca111o1B-O

Taut,Mii.WI\IUo2

........ .

B-b•JI

.-~.-

7

......

0.\Wclor,'"'" · - of ... [n-..

tioaal Loapo. PronacKod ~1 Ham·
monda, outfielder, frOm Bowle or tho
E.ute:m l..elpl to llachollcr.
MILWAUXI!I! BIU!WI!IlS: Senl Ted·
dy llipri ond An... - . . . • . . . - .

10 Now 01'- II ... Am11ioon Auoelo·
ci.G:I 011 JO.dty NI:IIWHt"'M . . . . . . . .

hnllued dl.e cantn.d tJI. Mau ~·
aulfWdor,
NAw OdMna. Pzunated
Midulel ea.-, CJUCAddw, from El Puo1

rm.

oflheTeutiAoploNow Odooot.

Capital City Classic to feature
Central State, TSU in September

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said. Tbe CONiiciol ' I • . . . ... • _
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'l7a MONTH

• • 11.15

4tz.

111"11'1 . .IIIIOUSI
IYUCUII

5

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OfiE1I DAILY N,IUNbAY 12-j

992·5776

.

choice on Mathews ball brought
.
homeSwigerforaS·l score.
By DOUG TUCKER
Waterford added a single tally in , . KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) the sixth.
·
NCAA executive director Di~k
Jessika C::odner singled home Schultz could lose his job as early
Raberta Caldwell, who was hit by as this week. The Associated Press
pitch to Jive SHS a 6-2lead.
has learned.
Caldwell fanned nine and
AllegatiQns have linlced Schultz,
walked none to .pick up the win. athletic director at Virginia ror six
Campbell suffered-the loss, fanning years before taking .the NCAA job
six and walking none.
· m· 1987; to an improper loan proCaldwell had two singles and gram at the school.
Maidens anoth1,1r single ror SouthSchultz flew to Chicago last
em.
weekend to meet with the NCAA's
Friday night Southern dropped a infractions committee. They dis6-2 decision to Vinwn Count)'.
cussed a report by an independent
Despite pitching weD, Caldwell investigator hired by Jhe NCAA to
suffered the loss. Mcferren was lhe · look into accusaticiqs involving
winning pitcher.
. .
interest-free loans to athletes at
Southern hitters were Caldwell . Virginia .
. .
and Maidens, who doubled. Puckett
Schultz has denied any wrongand Morgan singled for the win· doing. Interest-free loans to albners.
letes are violations of NCAA rules.
Southern (7·11) will host River
The NCAA'~ Executive ComValley Wednesday..
mittee and Joint Policy Board. lhe Inning totall
only groups within the NCAA biers
Southern: 000-032·1 6-7·3
archy with supervisory powers over
Waterford: ()()().()11..() 2-2-5
the executive directdr, are meeting
this week in Monterrey, Calif.

=
=

Theyif ultimately
with
what,
anyth.ing, will
to dodecide
Schultz. It is not clear whether the '
infractions committee'rreport will
be discussed before the Monterrey
meeting ends.
"All I can tell rou is that Ibis is
a highly ullusua case,'' David
Swank, chaiiman of the infractions.
committee, said Monday. "Beyond
that. I can say nothing. It normally
talces some time after we conclude
a meeting to JlRI)IrC a report. Lea
than a week would be highly

•

•
State Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
· and home with the Stille
·AutoCompanies.

Let us tell you just
how much your savingsI
can be.
'

li

t

The Southern Tornado softball
• ' team defeated Waterford 6-2
•
behind another good pitching effort
•
from Jodi CaldweU.
The game was a scoretess·deadlock until the top of the fifth when
Jodi Caldwell led off with a single,
Amber Ohlinger reached on~ an
error and Marcy Mathews, the dess ·
ignated hitter, set out to advance
the runners with a bunt. Mathews ··
also reached safely on the mishan·
died play to load lhe bases.
A1mee Mills then cleared the
bases with a triple for a 3·0 SHS
• lead.
Waterford came back in lhe bot•
tom of the frame to make it 3-1.
Heather Ampre-tripled to lead off
the frame and Mary Campbell sin·
gled her home. Caldwell .then
retired the side, including striking
out the last bauer.
With SHS leading 3-1 1 the Tor·
; nadoes added some i~~S,unuice when
Christi Maidens reached after being
hit wiih a pitch . Angie Swiger,
Caldwell and Ohlinger each fol·
lowed with singles, then a· f~elder's

': -southern tops Alexander 11-4

... --

5

£

w:.rr::r ·-

"'*'

venity, we·can broaden the support
of the classic and increase awareness of activities at The Ki~ Arts
Complex,'.' said Barbara Nichol·
son, executive !iirector of the com·
plex. .
·
·
Ohio State, which plays its
home games at the on reampus·sta·
dium, is idle the day of the classic.

--0(

5

I,.,

•

0

,,..

7

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Placed ·,
Mike Deve!u.ua, outfi~•. on the 15·
..., _ W.. ROeallod DuMo Bul'ord,

.S91

Moaday'aJCorn

- * Transactions • ....:...

S.5
S.5

,

1

St. Lcu.it at Ton:no, 7:30p.m.
Loo Aqoleo "v......-. 10:30 pm.

.5

W~~&amp;emDf•lllotl

Colifomia ............... ll

Wednnday'saama

ca

nsi

I

N.Y. blandenaa Plubi.uJII, 7:30pm.
Bllffalo at Mcmnlal, 7 :30 p.m.

THE BIG CATCH - Erk: Joael or Loaa Bottam plllled thll 30
pomad lllloYelhellill ~7110 from Leadln&amp; Creek Saturday a.ftenoon.
Tile Sottthml !IOJI.bomore, wbo lw done loti or flshlna, said tbls was
bis bigest catch.

By HOWAltO ULMAN
Lewis - ·
a~- wliea
sail.
BOSTON (AP. - Regie 11e
a
Be
~
Lewis, an alhlele in run .nlc.pl.~
. . . a...cowll,
""t'is is • ,;.. Y• au. aZi1: 6om
loped upcourt.
.
He started to sta•ble u die filii.."
.
.
I.cwis.
lis
liiiiiiB
• •._ ly
three-point £ . He fdl• 11: lift vi
the foul line. 11he. ...- ,_. ... ill •
laldlctl f« o!Tier
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ _. Lep ""
YOilaf The Capital City Classic, fealilring
launched so many pafect Jllats
reached down to lOla die · ; • Mar-.;' TP •&amp; "s'dae two historically black college
4 .....
. The blow coulda 't llave Ilea . . _ j •
IIIII!;;
teams, will be played at Ohio Sta·
more jarring.
OtJirs' - - ........ ... • • dium Sept. 2S, Ohio State Univer.
In tbat instant, .he w.u JIBS- ll:lDpa.EDJ'S T;.
president Gordon Gee
Be
iliaD • •
uil sity
formed f'mm a foe lO lie licnt iiiD
announced.
a man fiCing a trip? · &amp; fit'. .~~. Wi-~
Central State University of
T
.sc~aal
That quickly, years of._. .a.t IZI!rsaf.__.... M 1;..
Wilberforce and Texas Southern
Lewis.. ., ...
were betrayed by his lidle _.
University in Houston will meet in
._ . . . . . .._&amp;a! rl the fifth annual football game,
seemingly fit body.
There ·is a ··~ !1*114~ B;iwAIIft . allJ" •Wed which is 'the largest annual rund·
. . . . 11(12
that, at age 27, die lies t T 1
raising event of The Martin Luther
1 •
player on the BOilOII fWrics wilT - - : T wi6Cd s"c:ase King Jr. Performing and Cultural
.. ,
iNc~)
never play apia .bee • vi Zl::ltt
Arts CompleK. in Columbus.
problems, team phy.sicq. Dl'. . . . . . _ pi II b '-at.
Last year, Honda of America
s.p 7 ....
Arnold Scheller.Siid .. ....,.
Manufacturing announced a three·
· But later, Sciielw '\4
liD
year partnership .with The King
•v~•
lyd.lfll: 0 · ._ ·rwail Arts Complex in which Honda will
soften his remllts, ...,.. il difficult to dctennine if Lewis wiTT a
vi Yalfri!;alar donate $50,000 annually as 11ame
sponsor.
play apin bentiue .. .~if~ ID .... 5 ., .
the stage where we fi
(llis otnu.r ·aa-.n.ria&amp;lhe
The nme was moved from
n.t•
T
.,.m
15,000-seat Cooper Stadium in
condition) 0111. Wetllilllldl.edl:
,·s.n 7s . : we
Columbus to Ohio Stadium, which
next step of teltiq ID ~ how you Clll coatrol. it."
n. &amp;I ; 's •&lt;: i:&lt; is llle seata 91,470.
~
Lewis inherited die ,...a·s
Gee; an honorary co-chairman
role from Lany Binl. wllo •
said Thursday. "One
. . . ill - . ... ,._ Eap.d
bdorelhis
• lallillilllll ... BIJIUI an
university must be to
•Ji8Jtanny goal
pron_tOtc lhe diverse te80UII)C8 with·
son,
he
"
10 the community. This event
~e was fi
'Y ICltCiiv;i:f "Ut:p a
.
.
l.cwis
.
.
.
TaatiJit,
llld
SeT
uon u one of die NBA 1 F s
allows us to continue to work
playen.
.
,..._ T TT)-aflfll:- IO(Ie1ber with The King Arts Com.. t
;z
·u t:YCJ pia to increale our community's
"He
bii lhot !II' - ~- rpa•a... I a C Ju.
how we~ou 1..-d U.." a.ricb mullicultural heri~qe."
lotte coach Allu Brislow .-. • "'w.lllla&amp;-rk , I
•~Wilh the -...x:e of the unibefore lhe plll)'lifti Witl••
. . il .......... k
ButlaiThw hJr,•dlll- 'lli1l
-'llllllrZP3 •• . I RUBBAJW'S t;REENHOUSE
I• N- Opon For
'
IUIDbW,. doWII ..... Lwislril 11: _ltllr"
·
Iaia' ..s I,
, , T 1111:""'-:n..s......
. noar•idwaJ.tl.u # ........
CJd of lhe ('A!h' I I • I 1U:101 : " ......
•a•..'ll'•a ,._ lfle'!ftlz &amp;
a" - -2"- . . .
"
h
............... ,tlll4
win ....... dlelb
... a
. . , ( 71
pant
Lewis ~mdy . . d i e 4hli lia If • Lluy
'T

Now YOlk atladiat, I p.m., if nec.-

acii6~,

,.,'\;•

Schultz may lose NCAA job.
Southern beats Waterford 6-2· if loan allegations proven

r

Tonight's games

DeuoiL ..................! s

•icfDiy.., r.a.

7

1)lunday'a pmes

3::111 p.m.

ilu&amp;tn!IIMTIIIoll

is ~ust one

eliminaling dle ·~hjcs
''We've neverllad die ll:lld vi
intensity we're ptayq .-i1l - .Bristow said. ''Butl'IIICZT ,_
right now, Wedn~r will lie a
different pme."
Game 4 wiD be paJIII ia 0.loue on Wedne._,.llli&amp;k
In the only Dlhcl' piiiC 111....,"-l
..,
the Houston Pockets dei r ' 11:

Lewis' heart may dash
his hopes ofNBA sttudom

Ne.Ycd.llla&amp;tiaal, 8:30p.m.
Su.I:IID alllah, 9 p.m.
.. ~ . ....... !0:30p.m.

Colonldo (Reynoto l·b) at Chieaao
Philadelphia (Jaci.aon 2· 0) 11 S.n
Fnodoco (SWift 2-1), 4:0Sr..m.
Cincinnlti (Brownina -2) at Florida
(Bo- :1-2~ 7:lS p.m.
.Sat llicao ( - 1·2) II Manual
(HiD 4-0), 'f,3S p.m.
Atlanta (Maddu• 2-2) at Pitub\lrah
(Wilt 2-2), 7:3S p.m.
Hou"qn (Ponuaal :1-.2) at St. LoW..
(OobGmol-l)),l:l! p.m.
New Yor)!: (Saberb&amp;Jcn 2-3) at Lot:
Aopl&lt;o (It !ofa11inoz:Z.3),10:3S p.m.

team

•

Tonll!lli'II81Dell

CbicoF 11Mon11, I p.m.

Wednnday
(HibboNI·2~

Charlotte took a1JD..58 .leal wrilll
2:27 left in the dlinl pcri9d,dlc
Celtlcs used lhRle illaw-paila , _
kel5 to cloee to 88-7l :llllle ad vi
the quaner. Bill die lb.a..,. a
12-2 run in die final p:liodiD a.
ate the nmaway.
Boston ·sorely misiiDIIIZic - side shooting of Regie Lewis,.
who has been dill&amp;•• T• ......
cardillc ~~ . . .
led the Cellics in_. . . . . . . .
SOil,l.ikdy wiD-...., .
"If anything, we~ ia
Gamt 2, becau11e :die a- closer and we iWied - plilll ia
the second overtime,.. Be s=
F.uard Sherman Doqlas sail.
'Tonight, .in Jhe"""""" 1 aa,
we just didn•c co•
~
1'
sively and f t plid *price...
Chari!JUoe coacll Allaa a. a,.
had a warning, llowe'la, as Zlis
E

. ,I

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
got to secondron a wild pitch,
OVP Statr Writer
moved 10 third on Yveue Young's
Erasing an early 2-0 deficit in fly out to right and scored when
the fust inning of Monday's Divi· Coleman's throw got past Hemby
siiln n sectional softball game, the at third. Lee Henderson then folMeigs Marauders rioted for six lowed by llyin!J out to Howell in
runs in their half of the frame en . center field. Mmily Findlay, who
route to capturing a 10· 7 victory got ·an infield hit on a grounder to
over Gallia Academy' s Blue An· third.• wu thrown out trying to steal
gels at Meigs High School's top· second when Kolcun had a 3-0
of-the-hill field,
count on Pullins.
The decision insuted that John
It may have seemed to be a di.SAr.nou's Marauders will host Bel· astrous inning for Kolcun, a sophopre - lhe Golden Eagles heal Nel- more who was moved to lhe mound
son ville· York 6-0 Monday after starting at second last season.
Wednesday for the sectional cham- But after the riot, the Marauders
pionship.
were the recipients of 11 of her 12
Undet a gray sky that threatened walks and got one of their four runs
rain in the early innings before lhe -"- two (Findlay and Packer in~the
wind pushed the rain clouds to the . third) scored after reaching on
northeast, Bnick Houchens • Angels fieldet' s choice plays, and the other
got things started when leadoff hit· (Billie Butcher m the sixth) denied
ter Meghan Kolcun walked and the plate in after reaching on a sinstole second during Lorri Haul· gle ""-out of those walks. In addi·
. dren' s at-bat. Then · Hauldren tion, she gave up only one extra·
grounded Lisa Fackler's 1-1 pitch base hit-' Pullins tripled to dead
into right f~eld for the fmt of the center .field in a 5~1;ond i.Juliag.
Ac!llti:a\y's Jout hill c,. 1116 daY.•, · · marked by two out· plays· at the .
That hit would have scored' Kol- plate by the Angels - from that
IT STAYS FAIR - GaUia Academy's Amy Morris hilt a linecun from second base had right point on.
·
hugging
sronader dO'II'Il the third base IDe that a'OIISCS the bag for
fielder Mindy Findlay's throw to
.Meanwhile, the Academy could
·a single in the third inning ol Moaclay's Division D sectlou softball
catcher Sarah Pullins been ·any- only muster more·lhan six hitters in
eontest agalast Meigs at Meigs Higb School, where the Manuders
where else but right in front of Kol· an inning once (seven in the sevwon 10·7: Morris, a J11nior1 had two of the Blue Angels' four bits.
cun's nose and into Pullins' out· enth), while Meigs 'did it twice (10
(Tribune photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
s~hed mitL
in the first and eight in the thjrd).
Undaunted, Gallipolis, with
The Angels will begin working
Hauldren at second on the play, fi· on finishing their regular-season
• nally got her in when No. 3 hitter . schedule Thursday with a 4 p.ilt. In limited AL
.! .J""'
Amy Morris.hit a grounder to sec- doubleheal!er at home against Riv·
, ond that second baseman Lee Hens er Valley m the first meeting be·
•. derson muffed. Morris, who stole tween the two clubs.
,., .
second during Tiffany Varney's at· Inning totals
Boston feU out of a first-place .
By
Tbe
AsSociated
Press
bat (Varney later struck out swing- Gallipolis ....... 200 120 2 = 7-4-{;
tie
with idle Detroit in the Ameri·
'&gt; in g) and got to third on a wild Meigs ............603 001 x• 10.8-5
Under the rather severe stan·
can
League East, and Seattle pulled
c!ards established by Randy John·
·; pitch, scored on another wild pitch
WP- Fackler (8Ks, 12 BB)
within
2 lfl games or the lead in
son and Olris Bosio, Seattle's Erik
before Kristin Howell was walked.
LP- Kolcun (OK, 10 BB)
Hanson was battered by the Boston the AL West as Cleveland knocked
However, Pullins.threw out Howell
off division-leading California 5-4.
Meigs (12·3)
Red Sox.
in a steal attempt at second to end .
There were no games in the
By any other standard, Hanson
the GAHS fU'SL
Plilyer-pos.
ab r h bl
National League.
·
The Marauders, whose hitters Sarah Pullins·c .......... 5 I 2 0 was terrific.
Hanson flirted with trouble all
Although he allowed nine hits,
didn't slrike out throughout the af. Lisa Facll!er·P ...........3 2 2 1
fair, got their jailbrealc started witb Missy SisSon·cf .........2 1 0 1 Hanson spread them sufficiently to night, giving up•hits to leadoff bat·
Pullins getting a single on a line· Chrissy Taylor-ss ......2 1 0 0 beat Boston· 2-0 Monday and ters in rour innings and allowing at
· least one hit in each 'inning of
huggi!lg grounder past third sacker Bobbi Butcher·lf/ss ...3 · 1 1 0 extend two impressive streaks.
work. But he gave up no extra-base
It
was
Seattle's
thi-:d
straight
·
0
.0
Hemby. Fackler then followed with Billie Butcher-3b ....:.•3 · 2
hits and no walks.
1
2
shutout
over
Boston,
following
.aliOther·line hugget to third that she . Yvette Young-.l b .......3 0
The bad-luck victim of the
1
o,
Johnson's
four-hitter
on
April
21
;- · beat out for an infield hit. Missy Lee HendCl'S911·2b .....3 1
shutout
was Frank Viola (4-2),
1
0
and
Bosio's
no-hiuer
lhe
next
day.
•
Sisson ihen hit a 1-1 pitch' past sec· Mindy Findla):-rf.......2 1
touched
for
runs on Jay Buhner's
0
0
And
it
increased
Hanson.
s
personal
" ond bcaseman Cindy Elliou to score Cynthia Cottiill-phlrf 1 0
first-inning,
ground-rule double
0
0
shutout
streak
to
22
1/3
innings
: Pullins and Fackler, who got into. Candy Harmon-ph ..... ! 0
and
Rich
Amaral's
fifth-inning sin·
scoring position when they moved Totals
Z8 10 8 4 over three games.
"Randy
and
Bosio
and
myself
gle.
up a base on Kolcun' s wil!l pitch 10
•• Sisson.
In other games on an abbreviat·
are all front-line starters. We
GaiUa Academy (2s13)
ed
schedule, Oakland beat New
lib r b bi always had that chance" to throw
,•
Chrissy Taylor, the Marauders' Player,pos.
,:- cleanup hitter, doubled to left ceo- Meg~ Kolcun·p .....2 0 0 0 shutouts,. said Hanson, who York 4-2 .and Texas beat Milwau.
Lom Hailldren-lf .......2 1 1 0 improved to 4·0 by blanking kee 9·2.
~&lt; . tel f~eld, which got Sisson to third.
·
A's
4,
Yankees
2
Boston
for
6
213
innings.
,
. · Then Bobbi Butcher hit a Texas AmyMorrls-&lt;: ............3 • 2 ·2 I
First bllseman Mark McGwire
Yet it hardly figures that Seattle
;:' • Leaguer that dropped between El· Tiffany Vamey-dh .....3 0 0 0
had
two homers, three big fielding
woqld
beat
up
on
Boston,
which
,~·
liott· and right fielder Misty Coles Krislin Howell-cf.. ....2 1 1 0
plays
and four hits and four RBis.
was
orf
to
its
best
start
ever
(9-1)
at
•:
man, scoring Sisson· and getting Kelli Hemby-3b.........2 1 o o
His
second
homer of the game and
hiuer-friendlr
Fenwar
Park.
·:', Taylor to thil·d. Taylor and Bobbi Kari Brown, lb .......... 1 1 0 0
fifth
of
the
season gave Oakland a ,
.
"Boston
s
a
rea
good
team.
.Butcher scored on two GAHS . Misty Coleman-rf ...... 1 o o o
4-1
lead,
ensuring
the Athletics'
at
They've
been
playing
well
:.
throwing errors before Billie Leah Johnson-ss ..,..... 3 0 0 0
second
victory
in
eight
road games
home,''
Hanson
understated.
"It's
Butcher, Bobbi Butcher's twin sis· Batbie Greene-ph/2b .1 0 0 0
this
season.
a
big
win
ror
us."
Taia Hollinshed-ph... .l 0 0 0
tel, came to baL
·
21 7 4 1
Billie Butcher, who walked and Totals

ADVANCES ON SACRIF1CE- Meigs Marauder Billie Butch:
er hits the dirt while sliding into third base an a sacrilk:e ny hy
Yveue Young in the lint Inning or Moaday's DiviSion D eectloaal
softball game against vlsllinll GallIa Academy, which the Maraad~
ers '11'011 10.7 primarily becaWJe of lheir six-run rally In that frame.
Seconds after tbls slide, !lutcher scored when Misty Coleman's
throw from right lleld got past third sacker Kelli Hemby (9). (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Red Sox, Indians, A'S, Rangers notch wins

' IIIII TIICiday
a widl M6ft,
..., 511* (K:y.). wllitii die Red-

- De 1lld: • 1

:·:Hornets, Rockets post NBA playotTvictories
By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
The Charlotte Hornets have a
'· shott NBA his!Ot)', having joined
,. the league just five y~ ago. And,
as might be expected, their first
home playoff game had an histori•. cal bent.
· Dell Curry, one of the fU'St play·
,, ers chosen by the Hornets' in the
expansion draft, and Larry John·
son, Charlotte's No. 1 pick two
'· years ago, combined Monday night
to lead the Hornets to a 119-89 vic·
tory over lhe Boston Celtics and a
2-llead in their best-of-five series.
Curry scored 27 points, 14 in
·· the second quarter. In the series •
first two games, both played at
Boston, Curry had 15 points tofal.
Johnson led Charlotte with 29
points and 11 rebounds.
.
Muggsy Bogues, like Curry,
was a Hornets pick in the ·expan-

5 ·.

Meigs records 10-7
victory over GAHS

Split with Walsh leaves Redwomen. with 13-20 slate as season concludes
The University of Rio Grande
soflbllll ~-- il4... ·11Pihfll993 •
season l1$t Friday by s~ittiDf a
doliblebeiller with Walsh, cappmg
off a busy fmal week for the regu·

The Dally Sentinel hgl

In Division II softball sectional action,

TUeSday, May 4, 1993
Page-4

Redmen net berth in playoffs with-twin bill sweep of Findlay
. The University of Rio Grande
baseball team assured itself of a
berth in the District 22 playoffs
S.unday when it handed Findlay
double losses in a key disaict game
played at Cooper Stadium in
Columbus.
!he Redmen, wh? complete
tlieir re
. gular season ibis Sunday at
Otterbein, will face Malone in canIOn on May 12 for lhe fust round of
the postseason competition. The
game will decide wbo will be in
second place for lhe remainder of
the tournament, which may be
hosted by potential fust·seed Ohio
Dominican.
The weekend win, coupled with
last week's split with Walsh, put

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
. . 882-6687'
.

.1!1 ........
c.,..,.,••

tn~urli~tce

Reiber to third, ~n he scored on a
passed .ball.
·
.
The Tornadoes added smgle
runs in lhe fifth and sixth frames.
Alexander·' • explosion came as
a result of three hits, three Soulhem
enors and two walks.
Soulhem hitters were Dill With a
double and single, Roben Reiber
two singles, Ryan Williams a single and Kvle Wickline a sin8'•
' Alexander with- a dou·
Riee led
ble and single, Scott Cblpnan had
a double, Hawk a doable and lingle
and ROisler a double ..t slnJie.
Southern (10-S) hosts River·
~rmadeftveerron.~t
, Hawk scauered six hits on the ni&amp;ht Valley Wednesday.
· and got the big play when it count· · JnniD&amp; iotall
ed. Hawk went on to complete the Southern: 020..()11-0. 4-6-S
Alexander: 072..()2().x • ll-8-6 ·
game and the win.
.
.
A ·scoreless fmt inninS hinted
· .Sports briefs
lhlt a good pme wu on tap, how·
s · ever, a iCYIIn•ruD second Jonin&amp; .
B_.aTI
gave the Spartans a lift that SHS
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) , Could not overcome•
•
Alexander added two runs in Jan van Breda Koltf, a fblw Vaneach the third and fifth lnninaa. datlik and ABA IIIII NBA player,
WU nar d bod C01Cb • JU alma ,
~outhebm had oarlior plated ·two
. ......
Bnllll
runs In lhe top of lho IIICOIIIII) IItke .....- Tile 41
·
~,_r...., van
I 2..() COIIIIIIIIIII, bas IIW lhll kiJd
Kolft', wbo 8pCIIU 1bo Jut two
: . vanish • .J~remy Dlll led off tbe sona at Conitll, aaccelda Eddie .
tb ..
, frame wflh I double, RobeftJek .,...._ _..,_ ""111111 1..,
tlnaled him holne, an error ·tent b::li~"':'Solid.C.::::..
The Southern Tornadoes fell to
• defeat for only the fifth time this
season, dropping an 11-4 Tri·V~­
Iey conference baseb!lll game at
Alexander Monday night.
Southern is now 10-S overall.
Three Southern pitchers divied
up the pitching duties. Jeremy
Northup started on the mound,
Jeremy Dill came on to extinguish
lhe flames in lhe second, then Eric
. Jones mopped up in lhe seventh.
•
Soulhern pitc~ &amp;ave up ei&amp;ht
: hits, II runs and ptayed behind a
, dclense that committed five errors.

unusuaL"

"We're all very much on edge
about this," said John Harvoy,llh,
letic director ll Carncale Mellon
and i joint policy board member.
"We wantiO do die riaht thin&amp; for
everyone involved. I C411 tell you
that these discussions are v«y setls
sitive."
.
Jamea Crowley, president of the .
NCAA and head ol' lhe executive
committee, could not be reacbed by'
telCI)bonQ Monday at hil office In
RenO, Ne\o., or at die H)'lll Repn·
cyHololln Monterrey.
· Schultz, who allo was unavall·
alrle for COIIUDIIII, piW"'d PO be ll
tho Monterrey ••Una. NCAA .
""a•=---IIat .._ ..~y-'".
-WUUI• Schalta hll -.it~ be knew Vir·
ainla 'a Staden&amp; Aid Foundation
made loant, but he bas denied .

•s · .,. -·-

,,

,.

")1.,

.,

... .

knowing atxiut interest-free loans
10 athletes.
However, three people who .
were working in t1te Vir$inia alb·
letic department at the ume have
said they told Schultz that athletes
were geuing interest,free loans.
The case centers on 45 interest·
free loans, most made while
Schultz was athletic director from
July 1. 1981 to Sept 1, 1987.

McGwire hit a two-run homer in
the fust inning off Jim Abbott (1·
5), then singled twice before connecting off Scott Kamieniecki in
the eighth.
Bob Welch (3·2) pitched the A's
to only their third win in the last 10
games.
' ..
India as 5, Angels 4
Albert Belle hit a solo home run
in the seventh inning and a three:run shot with two outs in the eighth ·
as Cleveland came back to beat
California. The game-winning
home ·run; Belle's major leagueleading lOth, barely carried over
the glove of leaping left fielder ·
Luis Polonia Belle has 27 RBis.
Angels starter Mark Langs10n,
bidding to go 4-0, handed a 4-1
lead to reliever Julio Valera (1·2).
Cleveland suuck for rour runs off
Valera in the eighth, all with two
outs. Kenny. Lofton's double and
an RBI single by Thomas HoWard
.made it 4·2. After Carlos Baerga

singled; Belle broke his bat on a ).
2 pitch, walked slowly to the
dugout to retrieve a new one, and
hit lhe next J;litch ouL .
Derek L1lliquist (1·0) got the
win, pitching two scoreless innings.
Rangers 9, Brewers 2
· Julio Franco had five hits,
i,ncluding a two-run homer, and
Rafael Palmeiro had two homers
and four RBis to spark a 14-hit
Texas attack. The Rangers are 11-4
when scoring four or more runs~
and just 2· 7 when limited to three
or less.
Kevin Brown (3·1) recovered
from a rocky start to throw a sixhitter, striking out eight without a
wallt. Milwaukee bunched three of
its hits 10 score twice in the second.
Brewers starter Cal Eldred (3-3),
who threw a one·hii'Shutout in his
previous start against Texas on
April 23 at Milwaukee, was pounded for six runs and nine hits in 3
1/3 innings.

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•

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•

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• •••

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•••

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110-.
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l•t..ed F•rnlture
11.124 htl.-4,011.
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•

A public ttmct ofdli~ ~'-

�..
•

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r

1\leSday, May 4, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 The Dally sentinel

Pl. P'IFJPN

Meigs DAR meets at home of Mrs. Thomas

..

The Return I onathall Meigs
Chapter Daulhters of the Ainerican
me&amp; recendv at the ,
1
.........,
•
home of Mn. Daniel ')'lwMa with
lS members and ooe 8uell aaeod·
ing.
Anna Cleland, regent, opened
the meetin . Pauline AlkiDs 1 ave
1
the prayer. OffiCers reports were

Rew'··"'-

.

•

·r

•

'•

.
•

h

,
~
~

•

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__
HONORED • Approximately 60 persoas
•· wbo work 11 volunteers •• •e•bers of tile
: · Women's AuxUiaey or Ia tile SkiUed Narsiag
:! Facility or Veteraas Memorial Hospital were
_ . boDored with a tea 1bunday aftel'llOOD to - I t
• ··Natioaal Voluateer Week. Rlloada Dailey,
"DlredOI' of_N~, aad Holpltal Ad•lllktrator
•· ScOtt Lueas D8ld blgll tribata to tile voluteers
,: : ·rot their work at Vetei'IUII Me•orlaL L - pre,.
~ seated certllkates ol appreciatioa ucl ea&amp;nved
• heart-sbaped pins to the volullteers. M81'pret
_ Corsi, NutritiOD Departmeat employee, presid-

!

Thls

star Grange

~:• Changes in circumstances
~~.may _ affect SSI
eligibility
.
•

,r
.
because they had too much income

By Ed Peterson,
SSI who have had a change in their
:·,.'
Soclal Security,
circumstances that would make or resources may now be eligible.
Too often, people who have
•
manager ill AtbeDs
them eligible.
these
types of changes fail 10 reap··'- An elderly widow I helped the
Following is a list of some of
ply
for
SSI. They're losing out on
· other day inspired me to write this the most common changes that
important
benefiiS because being
~column. She came into the office to could affect someone's eligibility
- sign up for direct deposit When I for SSI: • a decrease in i11come or eligible for SSI means more than
saw that her Social Security check resoun:es ("resouri:es" are things just getting monthly checks. In
was only $410, I suggested that she yQu own or money you have in most States, they would also be eli· apply for Supplemental Security cash, savings, inwstments, etc.); • gible for Medicaid which helps pay
health care expenses. And SSI
~iaiOOme (SSI). She told me that she the death of a spouse; • a spouse
recipients often q~~alify for food
~ applied about 5 years 880 and was en~US a nursing home; • a disabled
. "'turned down because she had 100 child reaches age 18; • a m6ve. 10 stam and other Social services.
IIP;ou or someone you know
-. much money in the bank. As we another Stale; • the medical conditalked more, learned that tile lion of someone who was previous· · was previously denied SSI benefits,
:; nioney liad been spent long ago and ly denied disability benefits wors· look at the situation again. If
there's been SOf!IC kind of cbange,
• she was now eligible for SSI. ens.
check
with Social Security to see if
! XJnfortunately, she hadn ' I reapAdditionally, the SSI income
the
change
means you now can get
.. plied- untU now.
and resoun:es limits have increased
SSI.
You
could
be doing yourself,
There are probably many people · over the years. This means people
:; who were once turned down or who were ineligible in the past or someone you know, a big favor.
·' tl)ought themselves inelisible for

.. ..

honor rolls released -:.S outhern LocalMa~on-,
.

.,.

The honor rolls for the third
~ nine week grading period for
-"Southern LOcal Schools have been
~ announced.
.
••
. Syracuse Elementary
:: First grade - Bethaily Amberger,
! Jordan Bass. Codi Davis, Sarah
_ Hawter, Amber Mills, KaliesSayre.
" all A s; Cole Brown, hawn
: Chapel, Timot.h y CHc;&gt;g arK,Jessicha
1 ennet
cc:;urfman,'Eml1y all,
' ' McKnig!lt, Valer!e Patterson, SI!ICY
-; P.ullins, Joey R1ffle, J.O. Smith,

Jill
Jason Miller, Macy
Rees, Brillany Rime, ovaall.
Fourth grade· Jonathan Evans,
Emily Stivers, all A's; Kati Cwn·
mins.• Clay Enslen, Macyn Ervin,
Courtney Hill, Shauni. Manuel,
Jamie Stemple. Erin Struble. overall.
f'lfth grade· Kyle Norris, Blllll·
dson Wolfe, allcA's; J .B. Boso,
tacey Ervin, hris Randolph,
Dena Sayre, overall.
Sixth grade • Joshua Ervin,
~ overall.
Phillip Harris, Jesse Lillie, Jessica
- Second grade· Mindy Chancey, Theiss, all A's; Steven Boso,
~- Crystal Cou.erill, Mariam EI-Daba· Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp. Josie
;;, ja, all A's; Justin Connolly, Jenny Jarrell, Bobby Johnsoo, Jeremiah
- Larsen, overall.
Johnson, overall.
r
Third grade • Matthew
Ash,
, JP Har
F' Letart dFalls Elementary
arst gra e • Michael DePue,
- Nathan Martin, aII A s; · ·
·;.mon, Mary Schultz, Jamie Smith, Adam Johnson , Tabitha Jones,
:•J.;indsey Smith , Cody Wallace, Maahew Milliron, Andrea Teaford,
. overall. .
jtobert :Weddle, all A's; Jesse
.Jt · Fourth grade - Sarah Ball, all Allen, Mary Bush, David Gloeckn·
A's; Jeremy Fisher,_·Brandon Hill, er. Jennifer Grady. Ty Hill, Paige
ri Chad Hubbard. Jess1ca Janey, Josh Musser, Beverly Phillips, Deana
~ Larsen, Lee Reynolds, Matthew · Pullins, overall.
- Warner. Cara Ash, overall. Second grade - Ashley Miller,
Fifth grade · Josh Davis, all A's; Alan Moore, Alison Smith,
- Heather Dailey, Jonathan Smith, Stephanie Wilson, all A's; Jason
: ·steve Tackett, Autumn Thomas, Curfman, Briuany Davis, Vanessa
overall.
Lansing, Rellecca Lawrence, Bran;, Sixlh grade • Brid~el Cross, don Smith, Andrea Long, overall.
~ Kim . Sayre, all A s; Erron
Third grade • Amands Huddle_ Aldridge, Ashli DaVIS, Zach ston, Tyler Johnson, Lori Sayre,
DeBolt, Jessica Smith. Trisha 1an Wise, all A's: Anthony Barber,
• Warner. overalL
Melissa Black, Russell Krider, Tra~
Racine Elementary
vanna Moore, Amy Wilson, Jerany ·
First grade · Larry Ritchie, Mike Pullins, overall.
. Roush, Lis Wamsley, llll A's;
D. HJP ·Preston Cook. Dustin
·Cassie Cleland, Stephame Brad- Fellure; Brandi Ume, Earl Stanley.
~ :ford Jessica Hill, Montana Jamll,
S.B.H. • Jason Autherson,
• Amy Norman, Joey Phillips, Nicole Blumenauer, Za.chary
.. Matthew Smith, overall.
Borah, Crystal South , R. Mike
~ . Second grade · Jennifer Harris, Warnecke.
Jordan Hill, Amy Lee, Tiffaney
Portland Elementary
~:Patterson, Tara Pickens, Tommy
Fourth grade · Bllllldi Codner,
• Theiss, Jennifer Walker, Brillany Holly Hannan, Garret Kiser, all
Fortune, all A's; Adam Ball, Brid- A's; Jimmy Alley, Nick Bplin ,
· ·•··gette Barnes. Jeri Hill, overall.
Matt Marshall, Jessica Nance,
~
Third grade· "-Amber Duffy, Kayla Pullins, Juice Richard,
· Tyler Liule, Rachel ~shall, all overall.
,; ~·s: Sheri Cummins. Joey Manuel,
Fifth grade · Jessica Alley,
" •

·~·----Names
•••

.,... TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- H. Nor! man Schwarzlcopfdedicaledanele·
! mentary school named for him.
"On behalf of those 541,000
':i young American men and women.
''J thank you," the former Gulf War
. :COmmander told parents, .teachers
1'and pupils Sunday.
;;· The BOO-student school is near
·-•Schwarztopfs ~e. Its mascoi t li"e the retired Army general's
~niclatame - is the bear. .
• "I have been luclc:y enough to
=ieceive honorll from kings, queens
·'lind presidents all over the world,"
~~chwarzkopf said. "J'here is no
~pter honol: that I have received
having this school named after

Frontier scout .

gi1bc lllli&lt;ml dcfCIIIC lql(lft was
.
by D - - D - Ids
illegal
~aven
"""',...yno on ·
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) unmi~IS. There are 20 million
B ·d
illegal aliens in the United States Innkeeper's son James n ger ·
and thousands croa the 1xxders in (1804-81) was a hunter, !rapper, fur
California and Teus. The Nllional trader and mountain guide. .
·
. Orphaned at 13, Bridger joined
Society of the D.A.R. P' e1 a res- a fur company in 1822. He uaveled
~::::r~c:rsoo:n~ more widely as a trader between the MisThe regent rea two letters of souri River and Utah, and from the
thanks for the Invitations to tile CanadianboRiertoNewMeltico.
anniversary celobration in March.
· In ·1843, after the fur trade
One was from Keith Ashley,~- declined, he built Fort Bridger in,
ed at tile refreU•e•t table. · Pictured-at tile
dent of Ohio Sons of the American southwest Wyoming to supply pioobsenaace rr- tile left are Sllaroa Vlcken,
Revolulion, and the other was from neers moving west on the Oregon
Stilled Nu8D&amp; FadlltJ Adl. . . Director w11o
Dorolh Bush state
t
Trail. From 1849 10 1868, be was a
·assisted with tile preae~~tadou; Libby Flaber,
Y
'
ret~en
scout and $Uide for numerous millpmlclat ol tile lllolpltal's Woma's Anlllary; · · the~:i~!Je~ tary .and sclCIItific expeditions.
· L - 8lld Mn. Dalley. Mn. Filller, Auxlllaey
's co ds can be copieead
Frontiersman Bridgerhelped
0
presldeat, pre~eated Bob Hoelllcll, hOipltal pub~nl::~~ conditions.
plan and survey routes for the
lie relatioDs director, witll a diallel' a1tt, for Ills
is caused by the abuses some peo- Overland Stage and for the Union ·
work oa allmd-nller. Slle IIIIo prepared a dec·
. Pacifac railroad. ,He died in Kansas
orated ~ ror the occedoll. Prayer wu by the r .
City in 1881.
!:dlf:eDDJb~er. Potted sprlaa flowers dec;o-

••

I

pie have made.
·
·
A nominatin1 commiuee was
named consistina of Rae Reynolds.
Ph ms Sti
Y
nner, Jeanette 'lbon
omas,
Abbey Strattoll and~ Addns.
The OffiCerS will be ins.....ed at the
June meeting. ~Idle June mcetin1
flag month wall be celebrated at
Bl
h
It I I d State Park
enner asse 5 an ·
·

Becky Davis, Melissa Francfs,
Anita Holter, Erin Bolin, Josh
Pullins, Brawn Herman, Jennifer ·
Shain, ovaall.
Sixth grade • Janey Hill, Jennifer Morris, Billie Jo Sellers,
Jason Roush, Patty Lawrence,
Teresa Bush, overall.
L.D .• Garrison Davis.
D.H. -Ryan Hayes.
Southern Junior High
Seventh grade • Cynthia Cald·
well, Evan Sttuble, all A's; Chad
Clark, Crystal Coleman, Tai
Couch, Ryan Grace, Nicole Hill,
John Matson, Ashley McKinney,
Nikki Robinson, Danny Sayre,
Ste~ie SICmple, ~ta .Wbeeler, 1·11y y oung,ove rail.
Eighth grade . Brian Allen,
Zach Couch, Amber Thomas, Greg
McKinney, Jessica Sayre, all A's;
Malthew Bradford, Angie Carlton,
Jesse Maynard, Amy Rizer, Lora
Sayre, Sarah Wallbrown, Bobby
Writesel, Kristen Hensler, Amy
Northgp, Adam Roush, overall.
Southern High School
Ninth grade. CJ. Harris, Paul
lllle, Rochelle Jenkins, Jenni
Lawrence, Rayan Young, all A.'s;
Jason Barnell, John Card, aobin
GiUispie, Craig Knight, Jay McKelvey, Jamey Nelson, Jason Shuler,
Nick Smith, overall.
Tenth grade • Mason Fisher,
· Mati Morrow, Kendra Norris, all
A's: Brian Anderson, Randy Binj!,
Grant Circle, Scou Grace, Came
Malone, Andrea Moore, David •
Pickens, Courtney Roush, Forrest.
Teafonl, Amy Weaver, overall.
Eleventh grade. Ryan Adams,
Fred Maison, Michael McKelvey,
Jamie Sl\lith, all A's; Jenny Cleek,
Trenton Cleland, Crystal Haimon,
Rachael Hensler, David )us tis,
Amy Moore, Jeremy Northup,
Healher PrQffitt, Stephanie Sayre,
Tabitha Willford, overall.
Twelfth grade • Julie Hill,
Christi Maidens, all A's; .Nicki
Bee~le, TOdd Grace, Kimberly
Jehkins, overall.

:tlian

Oliver Kelly HisiOrical Project
was discussed by Worilen's Activities Chairman Janet Moms during
the recent meeting of Star Gran$e. ·
A donation was sent 10 help wath
the project ·
Eldon Barrow, lecturer, presented a program on Mother's Day. He
said the trials and work a woman
had several years ago as oompered
10 today' s work as washin§ clothes
and hating fond. A poem What Is
a Mother" was read by Janet Morris.
. Master Pauy t&gt;yer conducted
the meeting and thanked all who
helped make the chicken barbecue
and dedication c:envnony a suctess.
Dyer read a leuer from Sta.te
Master B.emard Shoemaker concerning Ohio's hosliog National
Session in November and the
schedule of eveniS for the session.
II was announced that Meigs
County· Pomona Grange will meet
on Friday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall at 7:30 p.m. and that
the state baking contest will be
judged.
·
the next meeting ·Will· be fun
night on May 15 81 6=30 p.m. at the
grange hall.

elected. officials; the president, his
wife and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala

CINCINNATI (AP)- Richard
Dreyfuss says he doesn't much like
to watch his own movies.
Dreyfuss and actresses Mer·
cedes Ruehl aJid Irene Worth were
in ~ cit,Y for a premiere Sunday or ·
"Neil Suna.~'s Lost In Yopken,"
which was filmed near' here last
summer.
Dreyfuss t8lbd 10 reporters but
didn't warch the movie. .
.
"U:t's ~~it this way," 'Dreyfuss said. ' In Hollywood, there are
two subjects of conversation:
Moviu and movies. Neither of
those subjects inteteSIS me. Does
that mllke me a bad person? OK, . ·
I'm a bl&lt;l person.'.' ·
•

(

•

with • potluck picnic•
Tile meeting closed with all
~iting the Lord's Prayer.
The hostesses served a dessert
course
with Anna Cleland serving
punch and Eleanor Smith at the

J&amp; THOME
IIIPI0¥1.111'$

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

coffee service.
.
Hostesses were Mrs. Dame1
Thomas, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Mrs. George Hackelt Jr., Mrs .
Clarence SlrUble, Ms. Nan Moore,
Ms. Nancy v~. Mrs. Roscoe
WiseandMrs. Mark:GrueserJr.

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at .•.._luis....,...._

.........Conwlllll-

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Mlclclllpon '
&amp; VIcinity

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MYn ..... lluoi•Ntl ..

. .••• D.•• a : ..

l'llllor.

2112182/tfn

4+1

...... llrniY. !ltr !.I. I, 4, -

Paul . A. Duff, Op11l Duff,
parcels, IQ Opal A. Duff,
SalemiColunibia. .
WUbur W. Warner, Dorothy M.
Warner, parcels, to Jeffery C.
~ft'!:r, Tabitha M. · Horner,
""w'"6a1"' G
Mary G

rer rueser,

IISSELL BUILDERS, I..C.

....,_,01*-I:ID

r•

Public Notice

rueser,

parcel, 10 Ht'Zbert F. Seth, Loriia F.
Seth, Pomeroy..
Jack E. Follrod. Lot 119, to
Shirley A. Smith, aka Shirley A.
Follrod, Rutland.
Elza Birch, dec'd, Cert. of
Tllllls. 10, Cora Birch, Olive.
Citizens Federal Bank, 1.01 A,
to Cenw ~ Clwter.

..

.

discusses
project

in the news ...- - - -

hug Schwarzkopf..
NEW YORK (AP)- Susan
Sarandon urged people to send
greeting cards to Washington officials on Mother's Day calling for
increased funds for AIDS.
" On a day in which we traditionally hooor 011' own mothers for
their love and compassion, it seems
crucial that we VOICe our COIICerDS
about 'the health lllil wdl-bein~ of
all our families as we face the sec;
ond decalfe of the AIDS epideni-&lt;
ic," the actress said 11 a news conferenee. ·
.Some 500,000 cards were provided free to various organizauons
by Mother's Voices, an AIDS
.me·"
awareness organization founded ·
ll, :.~e's 'jusi cool," said 8-yearlast~.
,
. ..
:Old Jonathan Suatez, who·· was ·· Co-founder Dorry Bless asked
among dozens
of pupils who ran to that people
mailll!ea cards
to their
•.
...
··.
,.

. &amp;VIclnlly

•

For The
Perfect Mother
A ,Unique
Gift From

. ,."-..., ,..
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Mothers Day And All Occasions.
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-IIIII.IU:.:t;

~-·

Pup, 1114- O l d -.... ~ .......
n-'111, . MiWI 1.1, . . .
• - J-, .... tun*'•

Old -

.

..

:="'·~ ........ ......
..,. .......,._.,_,.
.................
*•
~·-·--­
...-.--1272.

.---To
. --10.......-. -...
---a-.._.,_.,, ··- _.. ....,,_ .....
Good

_ ,. . . ._ 1 _ _ 1

\

?tea.~17"G.

-

eondltleft.

n

diiiVIr wllhln naT ant:T

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

~~a-

\

....

---

.,

'

/

-- "'

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

IF IF! !BIB
CC J1 A~ ®Il IF Il IB JD) A 'JD)
'

~

Howanl L Wrlttul

Pupplll ..

N~~~~~t.R

Wfl!l!i_ -

22511fdh St. •

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

Guttar CIMnlng

949·2168
3-16-U-lfn

36970 W Ria Road
Po•roy, Olllo

This Is Your lnvitatio11 To Sell Any Item For •too.oo Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill Il,l Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Yuu Ad Will Run For One Week.

SIZED 'UMESTONE

992·3470.

OWNER:
' JtffWkk.....

11-t3

HAULING

.........

LIMISTOII,
G~VIL &amp; COAL

R.t...
JOI I. SAYU

111EIICIN GENEUL .LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT IHSUUNCE COMPANY
Accidenf •Annui_ty,

.....

1418 Stille Rt. 7

614·446·0736

Rocky l. Hupp, D.C.U. ·Agent ·
·

lox 119

2 fro•t Struts •

Yard Sale

·

L•~tr

•4WIIeelllil•-·•
Prices St..iilt ..
1129.95 +Tax

IJISI8 Nllfl IMAff fiOOI

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

••••••

SUPERiOR FUELS AND

LUBRICANTS THAT WORK

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
(OFFER EXPIRES 6/21 /93)

................
. .,.~.. ...·=·....
~M

, ... l:lllpA11.

'

.

..

.......... .......... _

=·· ~- =
.,~

nAZi

~~,...,.

&amp;VIcinity

,.....

•alll'iiCi II
ii;;-;;;;~ii11
MeADOWS
WTHER REPAIR

. GallipoliS

llnALUD PIKES OPIIIIIIMITALLID U-OUIIII,tlor . . Tiiru
1111. Rtt •••L~ 1.o11!n
9x7-S275.00
Y. 'NP..$200.00
Clillte, OIMr16x7-$450.00
Willi 2 Tra11 JIIWL
.,~-:--·· ~
=-..~
L~Aftood
ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
CALL TODAY
..._ IAI8 Ootol CNidtwi,
W1 c.lllftGIIJAIJirw.
VINYL SEll TRIM
446-4514
Fw••lf!lll ..... ..... .... Tltiie: •tRIItiOrlliN.
Sl.OOPEI n.
1·800·766·4013
ILL'IIIil .... lluoiiWNtlln

(NOTE: IS WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS OOES NOT APPLY TOY ARD SALES)

Th,e Daily ·Sen~inel

11

IRA • Mortgage

·Mlthlltport, Olllo 45760
614·742~2131
(614) 143·5264 11201831ttn
3-4-113-1
I~;::;:;:iiiii=;i:

ILL . . . .

· DAVIDSOI'S

Employn;ent S·•t,•iCc'S

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

SAYlE

MICIOWAVI ORI
••YCIIINIR
.

....._114 1• CIN

RIDGEll I-I RIDE

------...1
WICK'S HAUUNG .
SERVICE

Colle .-., M11r1i IMJIII 31noL
old,I1MOIIII .

Spr••r•••
s.,.er.r

FREE ESTIMATES

.

.

Auto-B•tals

Painting -

;~,-,

II. -

~~ToQood-.

Syr•cuse, Oh•

(114) 992·5315

Downapouta

'

·

'liZ Nor-

noril. - -

· Gutters

' .

gltr••;rj

· . HARD FOR YOU.
o8P DIIMI Supreme.MTry It, l'*-ls a
dlfrwence.

oMinlmum 10 Clllllne
oLow all .... eulfur
•Will not gel In wflllw tltM. ·
• 11M SPRING LUIE IAI,E
MARCH 11TH thnl MAY 31ST .

,.,n••t4

. Special t.m ..,_ wtt11
tkMe a ye~r
NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
·
IMiy E. Miller

•net

Help wanted

�1993

OhiO

P1g1 8 The
44

""T"•

Apartment
for Rent

~1"~ I&lt;A'i• A•WAY' ~ ... ~ i OI!fll&lt;l&gt;
t&gt;DN filA ll.aat&gt; St4oW' To G• 1\ V•'l&gt;. 'f

i ' l'll-'I

71

AutOI tor Bille

rP.oc!oi'LA"'

ACROSS
1 Sporta
Implement

PHILLIP
ALDER

43 Clnlne cry
45 Ptrfec:llr
48Wlthr-t
to
50 Fecit and
!lgurea
51 WOOCI aonel
54 Small fectory
56 South Amert-

.. Collate diQ.

e lllllard 1110t

1 1 Dtvatattd

Fum Isheel
Rooms

-or

NOiml
.QI2

ADoml lor Nlll·
monlh.
lllarllng ............ Golllo Holol.

111 Uf·MM.

swrtna -

..h

tKH
+875

··EEKAND MEEK

cooking.

.......
Coli olor 2:GO p.m.,- 304·1'n*'- lllaoon WV. ·

1 ~ II.NJTW 10 .

~

'IIX).1AUZE.R:...

+H753

eE l&lt;lOI..f.l ~ A

Wlnted to Rent

.Q7

. t64S
+QH

.For - - 1 -.
IK12 · Corpll $10,, All VInyl In:
:101 I. Founh 114., Mld8tock $4.411 Yd. Mollohan C.• ~d;:;I•P::;'::;t:_;,Ohio:;:;:;.
· -....,...--,-,....,
plio, At. 7 North, I14-446-'J1144.
For
full
c.-tv
Rlf!loorotor
llu - · t '
GNY
W/111/ptllcl
•
0
Yoor Old 10 Yoor Com-oor
._ IY clunld,
S30,

-IAdloo--

1400;·

l:'~"'d'

54 MIIC8IIIn&amp;OU8

61

Finn Equipment

=..==-~~-~ ~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Merc:hlndlse

BARNEY

·~ ~

242

For 8oto: 4111 I -

ELVtNEY
MADE ME
STAY
HOME II

YOU GOT

HER LEFTS I!

LUKEY!!

..

•a.

F- DoiiVO!J.

Ooll Chino Clblnoto,
Tobloo, ChaiN. Hutehoo, Coltoo

loa. -End YabiM, Etc, Alvtr

VllioV Oak FumnuN1 Goorg11

Crook Ad, 1-..e-4310.

PEANUT$

PICKENS FURNITURE

NowiiJolll
Houooholcl furnishing. 112 mi.
Jorrleho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV,

I

I M NOT 601N6'TO SC~OOL. ANVMORE
BECAUSE I AlREAD'r' K~OW E~ERVTJ41N6
I'LL EVER NEED TO KNOW .. .

0111304-171-1410.
OUoon lila ··wllorbod

with
d=••• mirror,
2
tuHp Iampo,
10111 I IIIMIL 11250.

,.

R. a S. Fumltura. New, uwd, an--

41 Houses for Rent

tlqUH.

f.lOW FARAWAV 15~E
MOON, WilEN WAS GEORGE
WAS~IN6TON BORN AND WI-IAT'5 THE FRENC~ IIIORD
FOR TOOTHPASTE?

limllalion or disc:rimlnaUon

-·

SWAIN

-

NmllaUon or ~scr1m1MIIon.•

-.

Pogo,St.lllddloport.

.

yov A$ At.I-

VI'RA FURNITURE
114-441-3168 Or 114-4411-4428
"ii DAY SAME AS CASH

Gt?tEIV ANP
Wfi!IN/(/..fp /fCAIIJf
THI,J' fO/ltli!AIT

OR RENT~.OWN (NO DEPOSil)

6nlorrntd INIIIII ctwellngS
e~enlsed In t.-s

ntWIPIIJer
are availlb'- on an equ.~l

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
• - . Flrot . _ Wroulht Iron Table W/4 Cholro;
Fan ock Rocking Choir 168;
lpollo.
011 · ,.._, o.a.ll
-6 ~
Rclwa r No oanton
Areh
$1211.00

... _..

ao,ton laollauol, ,...,._
.ct. thrw II lilt o•n, two
~.,.

'

,.,

WILl- IE (;OJNG
.ON iHE .
{)OLL.A~

1211/110. - - - ·

31 Homel for Sale

I

TidlhiJOIL''IOil

w.,·.

opportunlly baoll-

~1£..£... .

Por ... or.......
a b•daODt"
1n
Ro- ....._...,.,
,,?_,
,,... llluo
31111.
. or hOOO, - -

BORN LOSER

dljiooll

r''«XJR UfE ~~~..
mu&gt; eE: lRIHlEb m.t UIJ..'(

liD ~1/ll 11.-y, I - !'!'OIM.t.
wnn - · 11om.
Wood
IIIII. ~
I
MIN " - M10wWlllo 011 At.
110, 11t 211 1101 .,... I P.ll.

a.-

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

In thurman, OH 1221/110

Will caro lor oldot1y -1• or
-~~ ln my Stoto Oi&gt;'
- - ' · e.nlllod old on duty. 24
hr. coro. 304-773-11828.

;~.;~~~~~~Ro;t~·~·~·~··~·~"""~~~~~~nt~q~ue~s~~~
Antiquo ehiM coblnll
8mol t 'r'=m I''M=...Noor SIZI.Ito!l Houn bed 1800. 304K-11111. Oollllpollo. $32
You 671io4141.

Oolllpotlo
T~o8ol511t~,
ClluletiM,Clt!l~.,,.Peftltd
For lloCINdl llooio In

Situation
wanted

lntormotlon on bobf erodlo buln

over ttorage chnt, sold .. euctlan •ount:i 1190, call 81W52·

6301 eollocl anytime.

18 wanted.to Do
Child eore, my homo, Allen

Str... , Cheat.,., Mary O.mpeey,
114-ld-4212.

· Doar and lobeot - . bf tho
hoW, . . . . , .... 014-843-8'123
«11414W211.

U A TREE SERVICE. Tooolng,

'

Spood

,Froo
_

houoo

St-.

-

-

n-.

":4:u

1. . -

Mobile Homes

44

.........

79

oorwllnoldo. aut. No""'· .....,.

~'!..
.....

I SeT
DePRE5eEO...

campers&amp;

.

..

abows
you vision
the club
ace.be
H~~~~:~
that your
might
But perhaps a sly East has
the card from anQther deck.

I

Fifth

-

.........

':4 .':·

A. You're right. There should never
be a hyphen between an adverb
ending in -LV (such as WHOLLY) and
the adjedive or past participle
&lt;OWNED&gt; that is being modified . •
Notice that it makes no difference
whether the term comes before or
after the noun . Use no hyphen, in
owned subsidiary" or in "The .
.IJ~bllidi·ary is wholly owned." ·
·

I. 1· I~ I I I

II

l

I
I 1

•

I
,
II I I I
. I I I Ie
lI

·'
... ·
)

The teenage

~

girl stepped

•
'
'

•nto the phone booth as the
·
,
;
people in line moaned. 'Don't
r---....,.----'"--. worry." she said, 'l'm/·ust calGRANI 0
hf!!l my boy- friend so can - --

1-Ti-;,;...:..;,_:..:....:;...::.,......-1 -1

16.

-L.-L.-L.-L.- L
• ....J

L..

J

• l

iH C B H

5

0

'

CUHOY

ll

'

•

'

•
'

.
Compl~t· ! he chuckle quot!'d

· ·~

••\

*"

by f•llm g
the miSiing words
you develo:p from step No. 3 below.

.'

•

SC~

LETS ANSWERS

s -3

Campus • Nobly • Graph • Pallet • THUMB

•

"I'm not just a manicurist." the cutie announced to
her client. 'I like to think of myself as someone· who
lives by a rule of THUMB.'

'•
-

'!
'

''

·-·IIIIo.-

(

RIFF

Sc rvtces

.\• ,.
•

•

20' tlbullll• ollteiWion loddor;

Sentry ftoor
Nfe, 1'1250,
1h15X17 112, 11156 eublc lnehn;

I14-IIIH414.

..
)

Taurus' Astro-Graph predictions lor the
Y!lar ahead by mailing $);25 plu~ a IOI)!j.
sell-addressed. slamped envelope lo
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
4465. New York, NY 10163. Be sure to
stale your zodiac sign.
GEMINI (MIIy 2h.lunt 20) Someone fnlghl
loll you something confidential today that
he or she learned abOut another person,
There Is a lesson he": Oon'l tell this person lhlngs you wanllo keep secret
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II mighl be
wise to lind olher things .to do loday,
lnalud of anending a social event which
might mike you uncomfortable. wyou don'l
think you'l have a good lime, you probably

, .ASTRO-QMPH

1112 Holly ....... 1411'1'D, 2 -

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

ISli•ID

.=. . . .. . . . . -·
~-.17111 ·~...9!'1._ , . ,. 114 ttl ... Afllr

JP.IL

-

-Chow C&amp; ...... :we. t
Owttor, ..... DriMI, .,.....

. won't

.

• • • 11113
.

In lilt year ahHCI. you mlgh1 make a !lllljor

Oppattunlly

'Tbe Loser-on-Loser Play"· and
'Endplays• are· the tilles of two
Mike Lawrence's ' Topics on Bridge.•
(Tbe latest 15 booklets in the series
are available for $42 postage paid
from the author at 131 Alvarado Road,
Berkeley, CA 94705.) Lawrence poutts 1 b:r+out that the topics of these two
lets are techniques that overlap - as
in today's deal.
How should the play proceed in
hearts, West leading the spade~ ·--p 1 1.+-lf...-4-and switching to the diamond
With any missing minor-suit b01oors I
likely to be with West. South knew be
wasn't bidding a· guaranteed pme.
But what else could he do with such a
promising band?
West's take-out double marked him
with the club ace. So there was no
.';
point in leading a club to the king. The
' IIF ' 8
M IF
. C. E I 8 C G· E A F Z
I E
' (
opening lead marked West with the A·
~
K of spades. So he was ,asy prey to a
CVGT . BWEG
FOTF'B
•"
lllser-on-loser endp!ay.
After carefully winning ' the dia- .
.'
RDCIEFTMF,
YWF
FOG
'
mond switch In hand with the ace, de"
clarer dn!w trumps and c1'061ed to
I p
DTFWEAMU
F 0 G
iltwv .
·
.
,
. I
dummY with a diamond to the jack.
ruffed dummy's spade eight and
LOT~VGB
LIVIIM . . ·
''
turned to dummy by overtaking his
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ."II life had a second edition how would 1 corr~
aritond queen with the ldng. Now came
the proofs?" - John Clo;e. .
'
""''
the coup de gr«e: dummy's spade
•'I
queen was led and a club was thrown
from the South hand.
•
West won with the spade ace, but •
what could be do next? Whether he
cashed the club ace or conceded a ruff.
'•
and-discard, declarer lolit only
club trick.
·l
I
As Lawrence points oUt. you abould
HIXSNP
play the hand this way eveo If

dol-

IIEAIITFUL APARTMENTS AT
IIUIIOIT PAICII AT o.IACKEITATEI. AI 'ach1an Pike
.._ - - . Wall to ......
....-.. c.ll t1t ttl :IIIL EOH.

21 · lUll,_

r.o.N ao::.

"SCI"_., fully Mil conllinod,
-. _ ....
'"" -.d,
.... both,
I to bod,
I, ol!C
104112-ll•t.

minor -uo oOnl,
Ia lola
IIYinar-,
1 ·
ot - .
104~-nthnoiH.-

UA"' hlg- ""'"'· 304-773-

HA'vt: A 'THUMB

~Homes
1117

1tlt Cltow. ~ ~ . .

.......... p
:,:....., Clll',

I DON'TEVEN

16 'TH4T, WHEN

1224.
1111 Knol mollllo homo, 2
muot bo movod ham lot
Od&lt;llabo noodld, mowing, otc. INI"",
114 iii 3021 '!fl14-ll2-7107. •
304.e'l4-1371

PAINTiffO
oxt•lor,

Don't rely
on your eyesight

Q. I have a question about hyphens
in business language. Am 1 correct
that "wholly owned" should not be hy·
phenated?

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

· - illchoot Age 114-448-

•

Pass·

By Jefli'ey McQuain
.
Able spellers never misspell the
end of PORTABLE. You can spell this
adJeCtive correctly if yilu remember to
end PORTABLE With ABLE

m.oo

01 orgoo Portable lawmllti don1 N2.f7 per month lnoludlna obi
!lout your to tho m n jull monett. "" tot ,.,., - ,.JOO,
-101-4711-1117.
ondllopl,1~oldttlng
Mloe Pouto'o Day CIN Cent• 1
llaek Wool Of HIIC On ........ n
Plu 11-f . I A.M. -5:i0 P.ll. It
QuoiMy And E~- lo Tho
11 Concom For Yo,. Chlld'o
Core. Call U. l'or A VloM. lnflnt
/T-ro 114-44f-4227; Pritt-

lntorlar

2t

•

'

AIM'II camna.
0. ... •• lllca. Chid Galnci
To Call'tl•o ....... Itt tti·1Uf: ·
1.................... _

5 Parldlltl

etc!

Apaitment
for Rent

for Sale

VOU W.VE?

.... ~ I.Millor,

-2bolho,lmlloellam
Pon.....,, OMII'II air, y.-d

- • llolntonon.-, Pointing,
Yonl Wort&lt; Wind-, Woo/loa
' Guttoro Cloonod light Hauling, 32
COlli"""!&gt;!!, Raoldlnt"l, Stove:

AA~ YW KIOJ, IF [
5IW.O DIE~ 1'.'(

Bunioolc.
,....... ~~:;,

aa- ,_form-· 4 bill·
$42ilo'lnci, doooolt roquiNd,
1124112 or 1114-MW048.

..,.

4&gt;4 plell.. trucll
IIIII.
Fill
VZ
ruot.
No tollgolo. ton. - 3414-1$.

.43 Fanns for Rent

Famlty home peiWOflll c• ... for
men 01 women tor elderly or
llondloop, 114-112:1042.

.

, . a-,

p-...
--.............

.

·-'-·

.-

..:.:~h:;

Auto Parts&amp;
Acceuorles

.10 H'old
Evon lloy Only. lldl • oomplolo . ground pool, wMh 11ft upanclo
In
114-2116-1111.
HilLlOP IECWBION
to
llll•oou
privata loeotlon, Buy or aen. Rlvorlno Antlquao, 1:00 ' llrialll
• 3100 Squoro Foot Conlomi'O'Y -oy,
t:OO PM,
714311.
Homo On 17.1 ,.,... mil WHh S210/mci,lt4 IIH211.
11Z4 E. Main
on Rt. 12_4,
PwiAnciZianw. , •
. .
Pomoroy. HIHIIO: II.T.W. 10:uo s 2000,
ton cam.;
......,
a.m. to 1:00 .p.m., Sunday 1:00 Modal
• IS AdjoMnl mil Avail- 42 Mobil. H0 m8S
wfth 161111 KW 1!011,
T otot l tubo kit, 12,000. 104for
Rent
to a:ao p.m; 114-it1-2528.
1'15-42117.
.
· 4--H-On4Aeloo
WHh 22x21 Pll1y - .
z
....
._
lloblio
Homo
Far
54
Miscellaneous
All Of Tho AboVe WHhln 3 Mlloo
B•l• Boola Pow11lll By
Rant, AI 1.._"' No Sunday
Merchandise
Morcury Aloa .._, Outboanlil Flail ,..... 1413 ....- . ....
Of Rio Orondo • Contact BIU Colla,
lto14!11-2171.
Coflnoll AI: DoMI ..........
WHh 2 Y11r Worronly. 114-31l' Point
JOW'II-20II,
AMity For lion lnlonnotlon AI: 2 a.ctroon•. Plrti11Y Fur· I Picnic Toblo Wllh 2 7802.
IIIII fino ,......... floh, Ill...
114 HI 12111.
B•nchee Prl~: $50, 614-446nllhed, ·Cable, Air, Clean &amp; 0IIS.
.
WhMI Choir, Nleo 1171,
Phono:l14-24$-lM41.
a.- ·8h p d ............ $10,
Qulot.
·
I
oao.it
Aoq-.t. Folllf'e llobl!e Homo
114-~.
Polll,l--1102.
IAigo -hJ malo lil"'i"iii""
--......... .... .. AKC
-.
- 11d0
-holnH
· homo
oft• Athen1
far up
to
belwMn
l P-.oy, Mllmon., 114-1112·
21117.

Trtm01lng. Troo Romovol, IWdgo
Trimming. Froo Eotlmatool 11'1.

'

Spirit ...,... Price: MO.
And Whllet 114 4 tl -~

=~""· 114o441-1122. .,._ -=A~nt""la.:..uo~l1..,'"'•«"";:s-:-,;::Cho:-:-lr""c:-a-nl-ng
:

1'M&gt;

31l'7NTAftor 4p.m.

llon'o Uko -

A I

4 Uncann~

l!ut

~~DO

Wfdl-

8_._., 114-2SI 1851

12

53

,. l'U..

5·4-

FNfiiL'l WOUU&gt; G£T $10,000!

ro~~:t ~T~'«X#.~.

-

llolh
8 Potato
9 IIHtmpertd
women
10 Even (poet.)

2 Atmoophtrt

3 Palm Ulr

'

-··

rwnt-

nice,

John -

7 Thr...totd

."
. ..

boolo. .l14-441-316i.

Rod I Gold Uvlng Room
Choir 530, 114-tlil2-st35, 405

Tt"'iS newspaper will not
•nowtngly .....,.
adv&amp;ftisemtf'U lor rut estale
whi:hloi&gt; vlollllon ollhe
~w. OUr r8aotrs are hlreby

6 Tennlo player

DOWN

.

1t11W E - 11oo1. 11ft., 236HP,
.... IIM ·I.O., tssoo, ...771-

....,ft,..,

make anv such pNierence,

_,

I ~AIJE A CtiPCAKE

lumlllllngo.

AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
OIIYo St., Oollpollo. l Uood
hllloro, Wootom 1

sex tamMtalstllus or nltionll
origin, or any lnltntlon to

bolllo, ........... lot In

~OPE

IN Mlf LUI-ICH TODAV ..

To lola and oholr. 171.00 304-418·
........ Call---..,..
,..:O,to.

baled on rac:o, eolor. rollglon.

nMI'

I

........ wv. 3114-773-634'1.

..-.a-

oii968W111Cnmol!eslilogal
lo ldi&lt;OIIise ·•nv praiontnCO,

•

AN' SHE'S GOT

YORE RIGHTS,

Utility

Compllle homo lumlllllngo. Trollor, 114-381 tt:ltL
Hou,.: Jlon.Sat,
514-4460322, 3 mille out Bulovlllo Ad.

Midi

541rmaDouc•
65 II IIIII to

Openilig lead: • K

YOU DIDN'T
SHOW UP FER TH'
CARD GAME LAST
NIGHT!!

":""--:-=-For lila meclum llcloo
wlntorUu
-·
donln\ w1 lo!llhor
trim,
,..,
-til,-

-llpm.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

West
. Dbl.
Pass

CIIIIIIImal

58 I!Jpotheilcal
Ioree
511 Rob
81 Anawerable
83 Planted

1 Dont&lt;ey'e cry

34 Smoother
37 Contumlng
311 Procotd
40 Narrow

+Ku

011

$40,
... d $110;-2168,
·elolhlng;
col 114 112
..
lpm or•-N204

•.Hou-

(abbr.)

.AK10652

ft-

All ftal ullle ICW'I~ In
this neWiplper Is' sub)lct so
lht Fodorll Fair Houtlng Act

211 Small amount .
31Sitlrk
33 Apiece

••tAQ7

:;,=:o-.J'112"':.t_IIOI ._

Rea l Es t2te

26=11d

SOUTH

r.1erclldn d1Se

='=~h leo Maur,

22 llolltrt Nlro
23 DtugrH•ble

E.AST

Wo- To llonl: Prlvoto Trollor
Lol, 1411'1'D, _ , H-, I,......

Buslne._
Buildings

•

.JU3

Allq trallor - - All

-

13 HontnlltJ
15 A letter
18 lltllltd
moun!Mn
CIMt
18 VeHI
111 SwMI potato
21 - - the
ground !loot

......

••
_,

openinv
~~··to Prewlaue ll'llllle
42 One OPPOted . ..,,.,.._.....

. LIO (July 21-Aug. 22) Think twicil belo"
talking about anybody:today,.evon people
· who might cteaerve a IOIIQUI·IIohing. You
are the one who could get pric!&lt;ad trying 1o
· l!llkt wour polnll.
VIIIQO (Aug. u-s.pL 22) II you makil a
mlelakt todly, lfl-lo admit~ and fry to
rtCiily K u llrt~ u potliblt. The worst
· thing yqu can do It aittmpl to hide your

change lri lhe type ol lrlenda. you find
IPPflllng. P-1 pals who don'l ·lit into
Jltlt III!IOIJPI could be ltlt lllndiftg II lilt
lillian.
.
TAUIIUI (April ID-MIY 20) II you ara
negalledng a critical mantr toelly, tach·
and tvtry IIIP mull btl cltarly clefitltcl. ·
Attumpllona could prove 10 be both
unwiM and. counllrproduQIIvl. Taurue, .
1N11t yourMif to a blrtildiY.gill. Send for

tr1011 Of bllmt aiWIIOr " -·

LIMA ~ 11-011. D) Do not throw
H_ . . . .
..,_ ~ 4ttlad 111 you, dOn, llraaden lhe
u.tllllty. II ~ a .. In -.thing IIIII len'
good rnorttr 11111r bed

•r.

panning oul, cui your losses and run.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) This Is nola
QOO!I day lo get inlo a llnger·pi&gt;lnting oon·
lest wilh your mate regarding who is right
or w.ong, Each will resenl baing lhe scape·
goat

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc. 21) You
might spend more time talking eboul your
intentions today than doing them. 11 you
want to be productive, ~ is besl lhal you
roveroe the procedure .
CAPA!CpRN (Dtc. 22-.1... 11) Someone
you are anxious to appease loday might ·
not be· reaponSive to your generous gas·
turas, regaldleu ol how tar you bend over
beckwalllto placate him or her.
AQUAIIIUS . (Jin. 20•Ftb. 11)
. Broadcalllng your lntantiona premalurely ·
. could give a compatitor the edge thet ho or
she hll been looking lor. Don't be a partie·
ipant In your own deleat '
PI8CEI (l'ell. 20 Mltclt 20) You nllght no1
bo In lilt mood today to hiMJ' your opinions
, challenged lly 0111111. Unfortunately, you
could .,_ palhe with a parson who leel8
i h e - way lhll you do.
AlliES (lllrclt 21-Aprll 11) Bt on gUild In
your oornmorclll dtlllngt today, 11acouoo
you,., be lnCIIneelto give up a number·
of trnall advtnllgel and 'l'ind up giving
~a bum deal.

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The Daily- Sentinel

By The Bend

Bulls,
Suns ·
post wins

l'l*tday, May 4, 1993

Pige 10

Community Calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Revival, Mid·
dleport Community Chureb, Pearl
S1n:et, through Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Different sing~rs 11nd preachers
nighlly. Public invited.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

620

Pick 4:
3.875
Buckeye 5:
2-17·25·32-37

Page6

Thursday, 2 a.in. to noon. Sponsmd by EleanOr Circle.
POMEROY • Pomeroy Lodge
No. 164 F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. RefresluileniS.

·POMEROY - F.O.E. Ladies
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Auxiliary No. 2171, mother-daugh- Township Trustees, Wednesday,
ter banquet, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. 7:30p.m., home of the clert, Patty
Officers elected. new meJDbers ini· , Calaway.
•
tiated.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
CHESTER • Pomeroy OES
Chapter No. 186, Tue~Jj, 7:30 Plains VFW Post No. 9053, Thurs· day, 7:30p.m., installariM of offi·
p.m., Cheslt.r Masonic B . . g.

·e

,

Vol. 44, NO. 5

, · · ~P

or.

~. BONORS - 31

EMPLOYEIS roR

S~·

VICE •
Jl Crall Slralfcil"d, M.D-.•Prl!lldellt ol Holler Clinic,
aad Rollert E. Daniel, Clinic AdmiDI&amp;trator, receatly boaored 34
Holzer Clinic employees who reached employment milest011es. The
luncheon meeting was held at ..e Holiday Inn. Each year Holzer
Clinic honors those employees who)lave reached a five-year . .
plateau in their career. Honored this year were: 25 years • Nancy
Dowen; 20 years • Roy Kincaid, Carol.McDaniel, Frances Mullias,
Juanita Noe, David Reymond, Evel)'ll Sw,aln and Jackie Wallen. 15
years- • Nancy Dye, Gladys .Eis. .ugle, Shirley En·gle, Karen
McCall, Dawaa Parsons and Lynn Rult.lO years • Shel DaWS!Jn,
Conni.e D~umm011d and Ann Wicklinel 5 • years • Joan Anderson,

Laura BobbiDI, Faye Boaecutter, Lori Bardette, Haria Elltller,
Randy Fllk.IDI, Etha Hann•, Jen ~Nancy MaUias, Phyllis
Pope, Jeaa Sammons, Russ Slulw, Saady Saedepr, Jane Stoat
Charlotte ThompiiCID, Vldd Wilcox and Pat Woolam. Dr. Slralford
thanked tbe employees ror their years ol dedbtion. He tllid "It Is
great to be here to honor yoa who have served Holzer Clinic ror ao
long • it 1,1 dedicated people like you wbo make the Clinic su_.
rut, who make ..e medical prOia~lon rewardlna and l'uD. Holler
Clinic is a dynamic aad progressive orpnlzation." He roncluded,
"It is made that way throuall your dedication and bard work • you
are the power behind tbe organization."

•"

Wahama
alumni
plans set

•
•

I

I

CHESTER SCIENCE FAIR· Top winners
· at the annual scleace fair ror fourth, firth and
sixth grade students at Chester Elemeatary are,
l·r, Angle Wolfe, in the area or buman body;
Chad Nelson, Ia the area or eartb scieace; Jos•
Will, In tbe area or ph:ysical · scie~c;e; and Jeuny

'

Long, in the area of lire BCience. They were rec·
ognlzed with plaques presented by scieace tea~:h·
er, Steve JewelL The plaques were _purchued
with a coo.trlbutlon from the Meigs Couaty Lit·
ter Coalrol Ollke.
·

No wonder health care is in such a mess

Outstanding Meigs
students honored

RACINE · American Legion
PQ!It 602, Racine, Thursday. Supper, 6:30p.m. Eleclion of officers.

..

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~

Plans are being finalized for the
Wahama Alumni Association
annual banquet and dance to be
held May 29 at the Moose Lodge in
Point Pleasant, W.Va. . Reunion years are ~rraduatin~r
classes that end with 1~"3" or "8.,;
These classes will be seated at spe·
cia! tables and honored guests are
class members of 1943 lmd 1993.
The "Renew Acquaintance
Hour" will begin at 5 p.m. with
dinner to begin at 6 p.m. The din·
ner of steak, chicken, potatoes,
vegetable, salad, rolls, coffee, tea
a!ld dessert will be provided by the
Moose.
After the recognition of classes,
a short business meeting will be
held aild door prizes awarded. All
dues collected will be .:flied to

WEDNESDAY
. REEDSVILLE · Olive Township Trustees, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m., Shade River State Forestry
Building.
MIDDLEPORT · Heath United
Methodist Chun:h, spring tummage
sale, Wednesday. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,

--

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, OES, Middlepon,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Honoring of ·
25-year members and presentation
of 25-year pins. Ofricers were .
chapter dresses.

School, Julie HUI, Southern Hiah School, and
Jeremy Jackley, Easten Hlgb Scllool, wefe presented plaques by Jobn Riebel, Meigs Coanty
superintendeat or Schools, at Tuesday night's

RACINE • Free community
immunization clinic, Racine Fire
Department, Thursday, 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m., ages two months
through kindergarten age. Parents
bring child's immunizalion record.

V
_oters OK 47.7 percent
·o f school money issues

Southern registration set
Bring your child's birth Ccrtifi;
cate, social security card and
irntnunization leCOI'd to the kinder,
garten when you register ·~our
child.
Your child should have had four
OPT,
three Polio, one MMR, and
Sentinel.
one TB skin test before entering
school. The school nurse will be
eligible to attend ldndergartcn dur- present at registration to answer
queStions that you may have about
lng the 1993-94 school year.
The following information immunization requirements.
\'our child's hearing; speech,
about kindergarten regisaation may
'physical and language abilities will
be helpful to parents:
. Call Southern's kindergarten be assessed by trained school peroffice at 949·2664 between 8:30 sonnel. Parents will receive infora.m . and 3:30 ~ . II) . Monday mation about their child's perforthrough Friday to arrange for an mance in areas that are assessed ·
appoinunent to register'your child.
Registration and screening for
new kindergarten students in the
Southern Local SchoQI Di.n:t will
be Thursday and Friday, not Tues·
day and Wednesday as stated in
Monday's edition of the Daily

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .
Voters approved S7 percent of dial have obtained---~
Voten approved -47.7 petcenl"of m IJIOP(liCII rea1 estll!1ilt 1Mes -loans Iii offset projected blidget
197 sc;hool district money issues in to provide money for school oper·
districts winDing
.
.
Tuesday's election, a tally by the aling expenses.
Ohio Department of Education
However, only four of 17 pm- were Bucyras. Clawford
showed today.
posed school district incOme taxes, OlenlaaJ!Y. Delaware Coaaty;
The passase rate was the lowest or 24 ~rcent, w_ere approved to Louloo~Pary. A# ' Coanty; Bettsville, Seneca Coaaty;
since May 1990, when 47.2 percent cover daily openumg costs.
of the issues were approved, but
Districts approving income Logan Elm, Picltaway Couaty;
was within tbe typical range for taxes were Licking Valley, Licking Minerva, Start &lt;;ounty; and
spriag elections lhat
about half County; Covington, Miami County; Mar.rheD , SunwaitCOidy.
At least OllC dislril:t. Abun. is
the measures passed.
Fremont, Sandusky County; and
expected
to be.fOICell to sect a
"That's about normal," said Bettsville, Seneca Coumv.
Slate-bacw
toao ror \be 1ft time
Among the closest outcomes ·
James Van Keuren, an assistant
after
defeat
of
a 7.7 mil levy.
state superintendent of public was a $4.4 million bond issue in
Akron
Supcrinteadcnt
Terry
the Danbury district of Ottawa
instruction.
Grier
said
the
distria
facal
a SIS
" It's still not as high as we County that won by three votes,
would like, but it still filS the ranl!e with four absentee baiiOIS still to be million deliciL
"I doo't know if people don't
that had been there over the last counted.
five years," Van Keuren said. "It
School money measures were believe us or just can't lfford .it,"
would be nice if we could hit the approved in acven of 17 districiS Grier said after the defeaL
SS percent range and above."

defier!;

~~:!rsJosc:~;~~ing· =~~ old~~~~ ~.~~mf:

Practice

oE~hul•

on H11clachl,

Neck &amp; S.Ck Pain

o8portelnjlir1111Car Accldentl
oMo.t lnaUI-1 .......

.-

~ ~L
• ,

do

J
•

•

Dr. II. R 101M • Dr. II. W. Aoblolaon ·

992-2168
Mon.·Wed..frL
1:00 Lfti...:CIO p.m.
T~. 1:00 Lm.-1:00

.

.

He stressed t.he important of
always looking forward, accepting
ehallenges, and mainl8ining the
right !lllitude
He congratulated the 63 bon.
oRCs on their academic accom.
plisbments, and then 10ld them that ·
·while they are "there" now, soon
they will be "has been 's" as the
cycle repeats itself and the challei!aa to excel continue.
., llill.B•rt)&amp;r. WoMeuy auperY!SOI' ~the Meigs County superiatcndeol' s office, emceed the pro-

p.u wlticb f~ a sreat dinner
served 10 tbe hoaot~. their families.Sa-s.
.
The bigblight was the recogni.
tioa l!ld praealation of bop.'lies to
63 llonorees, the top scholars in
Meigs County's schools, In pies
roar. six, eigbt, 10 and 12. Bill
Quictel, president of the Meigs
a.tly Iliad of Education, assisted by ~olm Costanza, elemenWy
supe! ' ' " · presealed the trophies.

PRESENTED TROPHIES • Slxty·tbree hil!b ac.lewers in
Meigs County schools were recognized and presented trophies at
the couaty's aanual Academic Excellence Banquet beld at Meigs
Higb School Tuesday night. Here Brandi Codner, a fourth grader
at Portland Elementary School, receives ber tropby from Bill
Qu!ckel, presldeut of tbe Meigs County Board of Education.
Qutekel was assisted in the presentalioitli by John Costanza, elementary supervisor. ..
·
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_

The superintendents from each were noniinated for the Franklin B.
district, Carpenter from Meigs Walter Award by their respective
Local, Bob Ord froin Southern school districts. Recipient of the
Local, and Richard Roberts from
award was Allison Gannaway who
Eastern Local presented honored will go to Columbus next week for
sbidents from their respective dis· a recognition dinner.
lriCIS.
·
•Recogniz,ed were Meigs County
Also recognized and presented Board of Education members.
plaques were the outstanding Dohrman Reed, Bob Burdette, and
seniors, one from each district - . Harold Lohse, and board employ·
Allison Gannaway from Meigs ees, Kitty Hazier, talented and gift·
Local, Julie Hill from Southern ed coordinator. and Linda Haley,
Local, and Jeremy Buckley from
secretary, who assisted with the
Eastern Local, The three students batiq~et arrangements.

Voters approve Pomeroy levy
Pomeroy village's five-year 1.9 and 67 against the levy. ·
Only 250 of the 1,255 regismill Ievy ·ror c11rrent expenses ·
tered
voters in the village turned
pnrl by a large majority in Tuesout
to
vote oo the levy which was
day' s dectim
The vote was 181 for the 1evy, lhe the only issue on the ballot. It
passed by large majorities in all

three precincts.

The levy will generate approxi·
mately $32,000 a year and will be
used for sll'eet lighting which costs
!he v~ge about $30,000, accord·
mg 10 village officials.

Vehicles collide, damage light .

I

c..•••

v.,,.•aria_,

Jury selection continues .

·

=of

.

Neu!flann refused to concede,
and his ca.mpaign manager, Dick
Leggitt, said he would ask for a
recount. Some voters co~IBined
that ballot levers didn't w when
they tried to vote for Neumann
Leggitt said. Kenosha Count¥
Clyrk Nancy Principe said nobody
complained to her.

. Tractor incident reported

.-----Local briefs---------,

'

f"'"ll

MOUNT JAHORINA, Bosnia· had previously opposed the peace Jahoriaa is site of the 1984 SarajeHerzegovina (AP) - The Bosnian plan, l!ut have reversed their siiDCc vo Wiater Ol)'llllllcs.
Karadzic and Olher Sab lcadas
Sab leada' appealed today to hard· as Western al1iea incn:ued threats
called
for mdonement of the p1aa
line ~bly members 10 approve of military intervelltion.
BJ JOHN ROGERS
crafted
by U.N. envovs Cyrus
But the assembly of Bosnian .
resigning to jofn. President Clina U.N. peace plan war or pre~
Associaw
Press
Writer
ton's Cabioet.
·
.
Serbs,
many,
of
,them
!!e!l~Jerents
Vance
and
Lord
Owen
to
diride
for .Weslenl attacks.
.
It
was
a
draw
for
lhe
DemocraiS
Barca
had
55,578'
votes, or 50
hardened
by
a
year
of
tiabang
that
10
Bosnia-Herzcgoviua
into
" I implore you to ratify the
and
the
Rqi"Nica""
as
Ohio
voters
has
left
134,000
pcopfe
dead
or
provioces
split
bettma
the
Muspercent,
to
Neumann's
54,838
plan," Radovan Karadzic told
scm a former Pasb administration votes, or 49 percent. Three other
missing,
just
last
montll
unani·
·!im-led~0...-.1
the
members of Bosnia's self-declan:d
lawyer to tile House, while Wis- candidates split the rest of the vote
parliament in opening remarks . mously voted to reject the peace Bosnian Serbs. Only s.ajeoo, the
CO!ISia voters narrowly elected a in the district, which includes urban
would
be
joiutly
......
capital,
plan.
'Otherwise, the damage will be
De"••AiliO Sllcceed Defense Sec- Kenosha and rural portions of
It is not cerliin wbea the 77- tered.
enormous.''
.-y
Lcs Alpin In ConJress. .
southeastern Wisconsin.
Bosnia's SedJs oppose the plan
Serbian President Slobodan member ad hoc assembly meeting
Obio
Rcpablicla Rob Portman
mQ!Idy
because
it
fon:es
tbeal
to
for
two
days
in
the
Hea~y
Val'Mi1osevic also urged the assembly
a••• ed Den•er.or Lee Hmnberger
ley region of Mount Jallorina is to cede about 20 peu:eaa ofl..ts they
to paas the accord
011
Tuesday and 'Nill PK'ceed forBoth Karadl:ic an.! Milosevic make the final decision. Mount ~~ captured .the Jlllll 13 .........
mer
GOP
Willis Gradison
and bec•use they are 1111t &amp;UJMI·
. Rep.
....,
m18f...S
to
become
a lobbyist.
teed safe corridors for crawel
Roben G. Morris, Lighthouse
rmb8d
53,ln
votes,
or 70 Road, Racine, reported an incident
, between separate BOSlliu Serb ·
pcn:eat, to Hornberger's 22,685 to the Meigs County Sheriffs
regions.
waes,
or 30 pacenL
In response, the Uailed States
Detlanment on Saturday at noon.
Ia WiDXMIIin, Democratil; state
ll!d other allied fOn:&gt;es . _ dltat·Morris reported he was going
Rql...., lll!ta .... IlqJubliQn east on Route 338 near the John
ened air attw*s • Do-ita Serll
Lipt damage was incurred to two vehicles and lhe driver of one.
llltiUay·pneiricw, .......... •
Milt No
I for lite lfOuiC Hill Farm following his Farmall
was cited in an accident on West Main Street ~onday aft&amp; nooo.
Alpin held for 22 years before tractor and wagon. The tractor economic IIDttiou oa lite
According to a repon from Pomeroy Police this morning, Ralph
Yugoalava for bectiaallte rebel
being operated by Rodney Klein,
Hall, 73, of New Haven, W. VL puUcd his 1987 Chevrolet fiom a
Bmn• Sedtl ... dj. . . w SecPomeroy.
He Slll6d a hose busted
Skin
roadside farm ~t into the path of a 1979 Chevrolet driven by
tellry of Stile woq the tractor causing a cloud of
Orville Hill, 23, of Pomeroy. ,
.
011 a COI15'PI'W·pdlerilt&amp; 10!K of
Astin I til" clinic: will be con- Wiler vapor to blind him (Monis).
Hill was tallcn ~ the f&gt;omeroy Emergency Squad to Veterans
Eatqle..aP .
He then struclt tho wagon.
• Memorial Hospital wllere be was treated and refeascd. Hall was
"'' WI by er-ie Itaqcllait, R.N.,
Ru•a IOdly lllid it - ' d abo
Heavy damaae wu listed io the
Meip eo..ty Tub&amp;• aJoW Nurse,
cited b failure 10 yield.
·
·
coiUit troc1p1 to p, •keepiq
• t11e s,._ FR s • 011 Sill· W8801J and modena: to heavy damHill's vehicle had light damage to the p~ssenjeo: side, while dam.,....._ladle!·'
aae to 111e Croat eoc1 or his pickup
rn.. 11011110
2 p.m.
1180 to tile Hall car was to the driver's side front f611der.
•
.. beiDa
Miloteric:, wlto coetrola lite
truck.
.
clini&amp;:
•
...
_,.
led
..
media ia
Serllia
William B; Downie Jr., Morning ·
a COD'fC!Iiea far reaWnts
.s
11111o1c
..
I'
1
a
a
ScrStar
Road. Racine, ftiDOl'led 10 the
llia aailed ___ .._ __ lite
an 'it&amp; tile Syracue Play Day
Meigs
CQunty .Sheri1f's Depart•
f 1Miia. It ill aa CJ11P111bU10 time
I
ANy 1D ..... liar.,_.,
-r,Jill)' ldeodon: condnues today In tho ~~ty Court of
ment
thai
arouad midnight Saturfor W.fG&amp; a '' c Willi food ~er­
•'Remaittinl dm aada by die
COIIIIDW Pleas in thecaseofOidova. Willilm
• .
day
he
was
travelln&amp; aortb on ·
'rice 10 rcc:eite lbciflkln . . .
LeMuter, of Racine, is accused of four cbargu of aura~ · Serbian people llaft to be sohed
Routti
7
jut
north
or Fon:at Run
FDadl far tbciC clinn .-e pro~ aad .,. "' _ _.. llid
JDurdor in the Feb. g, 11191, Jboliun
Jeff~ Sr., 36,
Road
when
be
lbUCt
and .killed I
vided .... ...,. lite l!iiiii'CukJiillewy
. to_. 4i I
and 12-,.-oldJ-:= Jr~ both ofpolll
.
deer
that
ran
Into
tho
path of his
' aad tbae il110 charge far aay of
•'Tho 'Ole will lie wry clole
'l'llelday,llid Bnln Reed, a=-~
1992
Buick.
Ualldlmue
WUlilt·
· Sia JUIOII_.
dlewwi:ea.
for the .,.,.. CouniY PlclociiiD''t Offloe. ,.....,....... JL;.;
ed
.,
the
rn.
Of
his
vehicle.
.
llld iiiP'C A wMt,.. llid M• i'o
Partlteir illformatioa may bel
Moaday pculttlld.,.. CJPIIIIIIII ergwnenu In lhe - woald be&amp;ln . Kn,llalt. .... of ... - t l l y. &lt;b I I ~ 1ly CQDtacliaa tile Meias
On Tuesday moraini around
TIIUC!ay.
·
3:2.
5 a.m., Michael VaaMetcr,
. bllfote · - hi . . . . . . . . ilitill Comllf Tub&amp;~.,. omce • 992·
SyracUIC, reported be wu east3122.
... . c".U•• 'o6il• . a
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_.....

963 Gen. HILI'tinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio 45760

~aneral

~~

..../'"'

CHIROPRACTIC
.
. CLINIC

anxiouS 10 see this face unknOwn to you're a networt.
them a week before.
Nonetheless, O'Brien made it
The gathering was also heavy clear that time is exactly what he'll
with NBC brass from both coasts. need. Claiming no magic formula
While the highly lilccsble O'Brien for putting on a talk show, and with
engaged in genial give-and-take almost no on-camera experience,
with reporters, his bosses may have he expects to rely on informed
dwelled on their own weighty con- trial,and-ermr.
cerns:
•'If somethin works, we'll keep
- How. well is this newcomer iL If somethi"- ~ 't wort, we 'fi
handling the press?
get rid of it, ' he said. "I think
- How well is he handling the we're going to have to find this '
pressure? .
.
thing gradually...
. ·.
cesser.
Once
he
goes
on
d!c
air,
how
..
Tbe setting was the lavish Rain·
Still, reporters pressed for
bow Room a10p Manhattan's G.B. . long do we give ~im to win .over . ready-made details, and O'Brien
Building ·- 59 stories above the viewers?
ag~eC~bly sugg~ potential sideBy the end of the session, the lcicks as Casey Kasem and Charlie
NBC studio Letterman will vacate
in June for CBS, and that O'Brien answers to· the first two questions Callas. He hinted at a oew feature:
were a cinch: Very well, and . very singing in his Irish ICilor with the
·will take over In late AuguS&amp;.
well
indeed.
··
Monday's affair included an
band. And he lfisclosed his pre:
As
fQr
that
last
matter, well, miere date: laler this very weet. ·He
open bar and caviar bon d'ocum:s, .
and it drew scores of reporters, · " time" is a four-lettei' word when was kidding about it all.
.· .
photographers and video crews

By CHAilLENE HOEFUCH
Seatiatl News Stall'
The cycle of accomplishments
in life and .the role of motivalion
and attitude were discussed by
James Calpenter, superintendent-of
the Meigs Local School District, at
Tuesday night' s annual Meigs
COD!Iiy Arademi&lt;: Excellence Ban:
qaet beld in the Meigs High cafetena.
The speaker related his comments to labels in three phases tbe .._.will be's", tboee will are
"there" and the "has been's". He
said tbat 10 be a "bas been" one has
to bave been "there" and that IlK
Ollly time it is bad to be labeled a ·
"never will be" is when one is sat·
isfied to remain there.
Qupentcr said that it Is "sad to
· lie a 'never was' but have had a
· -:-en
chance to be. ' there'; but never
.

Bosnian Serb assembly opens ,,,, .
with Peac~. appeal from Milosevic ·Democrat wins Aspin's Wisconsin
seat; Republican·elected in Ohio

Rejoicing Life honor roll

By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Televlsi011 Writer
NEW YORK - You thought
Conan 0 'Brien had a lock on that
"Lale Night" job.
Even so, he was called in fo r
another audition Monday.
This tryout took the form or a
news conference. his farst since the
30-year-old " Simpsons" and
"Sallltday Nighi Live" writer was
named as David Letterman's suc·

~

*

Plans rnad.e J.Or SAR COUJ.erence

O'Brien does his first show for reporters

· Academic Excelleace Baaq•t lteld at Meip
High ScltooL The * t t ~.....,;..led by titeir
respective scltool districts ror lite Fruklia B.
Walter Award. Wianer vi that award- AIJi.
SOD Gannaway.

OUTSTANDING SENIORS • Ttrese sealors
from tbe left, Alliaoa Gannaway or Meigs High

•
studenL
declared
bankruptcy.
Eighteen
The informal dance will be from
Dear Aaa Landers: I'm a
months
later,
I
discovered
he
had
9
p.m.
to I a.m. with music being
practicing dentist who is deeply
·forged
myname
on
a
check.
That's
provided
by "Party FactQry."
disiU!bed by the dishonesty I see all
when
1
walked
ouL ·
Alumni
requesiS
no alcoholic ~varound me. Almost every week, I'm
Af1a
our divorce, 1 hid trouble
erages ,dunng the banquet With
!ISiced 10 commit iiiiW1IICC fraud. Of
getting an apartnient because of !"Y
absolutely no undef!:~men per' AN!II LANDERS .
~. I ref~. but I wonder how
"1993, L01 AD&amp;eles
Jnnov crediL Now, my new husband
~!led in the dance. ,
many Olhen submit to the tempta- Ttm
-•
Due to fue marshal s cod~. the
.. Syndlcate
tion.
Crtaton Syndic:Me''
and I can't qualify for a loan. rve Moose Lod(!e has limi~ seating
Ooe patient asked me to use his
insisted that be not place me on any so early ucket purchases are
brother's insurance card number.
checlcing or savings IIIXlOWits so that. requested. 'i1Ckets are on ssle now
&amp;
&amp;
Another asked me to write a
I hope )'IU letlt:r and my responSe my rotteD credit record doesn't at Peoples Bank in Point PleasanL
New Haven and Mason, W.Va.;
prescription in his name since he was will serve as a warning to !hose who · tarnish his.
Tell "Michigan" to hold onto her Fruth Pharmacy in ·Middleport;
Final preparations for the Ohio was discussed. Members were
insured, but it was to be used by an are considering iasuranoe fraud. It's
wallet and run. I wisb I had. - . · Farmers Bank in Pomeroy; and Sons of the American Revolution . urged to write their state senator
uninsured friend. I've been asked tO not wOith iL
•
and n:presentalive on this issue.
overbill and increase the dollar
Dear Ala Landen: I disagree SADDER BUT WISER IN Health Aid Pharmacy in New state conference were discussed
Davi!l Sayre, Antiquity, was
Haven, W.Va. Tickets for the when Ewings Chapter S.A.R. met
amount so the patient's account with your advice to "Uquid Assets SACRAMENTO
welcomed
a guesL The applies·
DEAR SAC: Thanks for the dance only will be sold at the door recently at the Meigs County lion of DaleasColburn
would be credited for more than lhe in Michigan," the woman whose
of Pomeroy is
actual cost. In this way; lhe patient fUIIICe was a wild spender. You told testimonial As my dear father used for $7 siogle IJ)d $12 couple. liCk· Museum. John Kauff. Point Pleas- currently in the process of final
prices for the banquet and dance ant, W.VL, presided.
would not have to pay the insurance her theycoold have I successful to ·say, "If yoa go to bed WI'th dogs • et
are $35 per couple and $17.50 sin·
Ewings Chapter will host the
marriage if her fiance had no charge =·~surprised if you get up with gle. Classes of 1933, 1943 and conference by virtue of having the ~IIIIPter has cans of preset- deductible. ·
Patients always suggest these cards or checking accounts and if
1993 pay a $2 membership fee, but current state president, Keith Ash· vation spray available for sale to
thin~s in complete privacy, and it's
she handled the money and put him
And by the way • accordiDg to my tickets are given to them free of ley, in its membenhip. The confer- prevent deterioration of allltinds of
·never a woman. It seems only men on an allowance. Wrong advice, mail, being a co-signer has been the charge. However, if these class encc will be held at Holiday Inn in paper.
William Howison, Grove City,
have the nerve to make such Ann.
sowce of more IOUI'ed relationships members bring a guest, they must Gallipolis.
W:IS
guest speaker. He is a profesrequests.
When "Dick" courted me, I had a than sex. Unless thecollalaal is rock pay $17.50. Tickets must be purOhio Senate Bill 11, which wiD
sional
lie detector operator. H~
I have spoken to several fine career, excellent credit and solid, it can be a very 1&amp;1 idea.
chased by May 20. Checks may be again make it required for all Ohio
bMUght
his machille to show and
col~ues about this, alld they say
money in the bank. After we · ·Gem of the Day: If at first made payable to Wahama Alumni government offices to provide
explained
iiS operation to the audi·
, copies of records by mail at cost,
it happens regularly to lhem as well. married, he became a reckless you ~n't succeed, you're about Association.
e:Jce. He SIJeSSed lhat it is estimatWith all this chiseling going on, is it spender and overdrew our account ·average.
-ed. there arc CIDTendy 6,000 innoany wonder that health care ·is in so drastically that we were often left
An alcohol problem? How C/111 you
celit-people in jail. He further relatwith
very
litde
money
for
rent,
food
such a mess? .. SOMEWHERE IN
htlp yourself or someone yoalove?
. ed stories in his line; of work.
'
and utilities.
WISCONSIN
"Alcoholism: How to Reco111iu It,
The honor rolls for the fifth j Joshua Eagle, D8vld Snodgrass.
The next meeting will be May
When things got out of hand, How 10 Deal With It, How 10 Con- gra~nl! period for Rejoicing Life Founh grade · Erin Harris, Rose 27 at the Meigs County Museum.
DEAR WISCONSIN: There is
nolhing new ooder the sun. Every Dick's boss contacted us about full qw It" will 1i~ you the QIUI/IIers. Chnsuan School have been Schrock.
·
The program will be awards night
Fifth pile . Joseph McCall, Aaron honoring local people for various ·
gimmick and rip-off stunt hQ been payment of his employee charge Selld a self-addressed, lon1. basi· announced.
tried b'efore. Hlirth care profession:'" ~~:count .. 56,400. Although the ness-size envelope l11td a checl: or Farst grade - Andrew Philson Jere• · Schaehl. ·
·
activities including heroism, good
'
Sixth grade - Shannon Enright, citizenship, flag display and law
ais who fKidle around with the pa- account had a $5,000 limit, Dick had morteyordufor$3.65 (t/t!sillcludes my Yeauger.
enforcement ·
.
perwalc could be setting themselves charmed the young female clat into postage IIIUIItaluJlillg) w: Alcohol, Second grade - Cassie Braun, Rachel Forbes, Rachel Pangio.
up for professional suicide. Investi- allowing him "exll'll privileges."
clo Anll.l.antkrs, P.O. Bax 11562.
gators know exacdy what to look
Dici was soon $20,000 in debt. Clricogo, f/1. 60611-0562. (lit t:;an·
MEIGS COUNTY
One year after our marriage. we ada, selld $4.45 .)
for.

Ann
Landers

A MqiUmedla lnc. IMwop-

.

.

POMEROY - Big Bend Stem·
POMEROY • ReRUlar meetin~. wheel Association, golf tourna- •
• Drew W~rer Post No. ~9, Am~· . ment, Thursday. Entry fee, $50.
,~
can Legton, Tuesday, dinner at 7 Lunch at noon, Tee-off, 1 p.m.
•
· p.m.• meeting at 8 p.m.
'
REEDSVll.LE - Eastern School ~
;
REEQSvn.LE • Eastern Athlet- Board. special meeting, Thursday, •
ic Boosters, Tuesday, 7 p.m., high 4 p.m., personnel.
'
. school cafeteria. ·
•
· POMEROY · Meigs County.·: ·
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport Church public bible reading and
Lodge No. 363, Tuesday, 7:30 prayer. vigil, Thursday, Meigs ·
p.m., Middlepon Masonic Build- County Courthouse. ·
ing.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group ·
BURLINGHAM - Bedford AA, Thursday, 7 p.rri ., Sacred : ·
Township Volunteer Firt: Depart- Heart Catholic Chun:h, 992-5763. ,,
ment Committee, Tuesday, '7:30
p.m., Modem Woodmen Hall, ByRUTLAND - Rolland Township':
laws committee and offJCm meet 7 Trustees, Thursday, 6:30p.m .. flfll
p.m.
station.
CHESTER • Chester Township
Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ,
Chester Town Hall.

2 Secllona. 16 ,.._ 25 cenla

Pomeroy-Middlepor1, Ohio. Wednesday, May 5,1993

Multimedia Inc,

cers.

COOL VILLE - Revival,
White•s Olapel Wesleyan Chureh,
Coolville, Tuesday through Sullday, 7 p.m. nighlly. Rev. Jack Wilhite invites everyooe.

Low lonlgbt In 50.. Cle8r.
Thursday, sunny, blgb In 1101.

testing clinic set

~

;.

hound on Rou1e 124; approximate~
ly one-half mile west of Roy J~
Road in a 1977 Pontiac owned by
h1s father,. when he struck a deer
that ran into his path. Jllo damage
'was listed to the vehicle.
•
Elizabeth H. Bunge, Colum~
~ported to the Meigs COIUlty SherIffs ~anment, that on Monday
at 5:17 a.m., she was traveling
nonh on Rou1e 33 north of Darwin
in her 1987 Pontiac when she
reportedly fell asleep and her vehicle went off the roadway on the
right into the dill:h.
Modtrate damage wu listed to
the vdlicle.
Two four-wheelers reported
stolen on April 11 fro the Dave
Warner property in Ritland bavo

~:;cs.:1J=~s:.:.:, 'p
Accordina to s~. : _

port Police ~eeoYOI'Od one of tha .
fout·wboolon lilt .._ l'loe tha
, lagocJJ. Tho leOIII!d' - NOn .... '
in • field oft Pumetoy Pille ....;..._
dtis week. .
'
AD inveetipdon II cooitn....

l
(

'

I

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