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                  <text>1913

.Ohio's jobless rate remains at 6.5 percent
COLUMBUS,
5.9 perccaL lbe rate wu lower
He Slid.Obio's April
"com_ploy..,.
Aprill992, wben the
well with
biJ
but
..........,., from
6.S pa:- -7petceaL
since the growth is so
it

00» (AP) Obio's April
nle.. diaD
figure
Mln:ll •
call, sbows die ~~~~e's oc•••J is
1be aalion's jobless rate for
pcn:eat,
1rad_ually powia&amp;, tile Ollio
' Aboul 5.l miDioo Ohi01111• bad
. EmpiOylllalt Scniocs Slid.
"Obio bas beal . . .i&amp;&amp; . . . jobs it April, down by 18,000 from
improvemeat ia eu•••ic aati- Mild!. ODES Slid. 1\c nwn~ of
tioos since llll fall,•• DdJq Bow- ...u.s -played in Allril was
lapd, ODES mini....-. said fti- 3SS,OOO. clown trom 351.000 in
MadL
day.
lteidl Ewald, director of ODES
"With no &amp;real cJu&amp;e ia die
llbor
Nlt:t informlltion division,
A(lri1 employmcat li&amp;1ftS Oftlr
said
abe
service ind..stry ~ to
pnor lllODih, abe slow ~ou
m

April-.,

lppCIISIObe~

otber

April's mtc Wll$abe IINest silll:e
Novemblr 1991, wlll:llabe . - : -

~ual,

won't like a lot 10 llp8et iL"

Promotions boost pistachio.exports
or 111r: po6t pt*Dtial of ~otins

WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
pislachio exports. lJ!• , I by lawy
promotioo etr..!S,IUIC ., SM lion in 1991, a 100 pen:c:at pill
ova- lbe pevious ,.-_.a si•liolo!
increase over 1988.
Overseas pun;bascs aow
account for 40 percent of die
· domestic aop, said a 1a:a1t n:port
by lhe Foreign Agriclllbnl Service,
"Sales of piS!Xhios - . up ill
nine of the top 10 martcu aJIDpared with a year ap, ud in 811
but t b e - - t d pills- it
the
abe lqllllt Sllid,

triple-..

"_, ...... ,
It .....,..
""'

f

1

aad posilionin&amp; pistachios in the
fresh p!UIIui:c sections of SIOI'CS. ••
1bc report also cited product
...., ... otbc:r in-store promolions as alllln'buting to the grow lb.
''Pl•••MOticas in Japan bave been
panicalarly successful. Japan's
Daiei retail chain reJ?Orted an
iDcrcasc or 80 percent JD volume
IIIII 95 pc:rtCDt in value due 10 onecial displays of pistacbiog, .. it ~d.
Ia another report, the service
DIJial lhlt a ckop in prices over the
llll few years bas caused pislaehio
•• .,Vim in the Nelherlands to
rise. 1bc repoft said lhat Iran is

••

I
••
for U.S. pislld'ios as IJaDa K-a.
$20 million; ar.-y, $16mi!!jpa
and Taiwan, $11 mjlljcJI folie aal
by Canada and JllpD, S8 milb
each.

believed ., bl: the primary soun:e.
"IMI:h impcrts, direct and indim:t, of U,S, piJtachios have been
reWivdy small, as importers and

...,._.saJers believe Irani&amp;!~ pista-

chios 1as11: beller," it said. "More''In~ 10 "II""' expuus,.abe
California Pistachio Ollll•;..q... ower, lhr: lillie DOteS lhat U.S. pishas successfully pnllllOtCd dleir tachios an: typic:aJiy more expenproducts as heallllid
h wiJh si¥e tballlboee from Iran .••
However, the report said two
li nlcages to a trendy Califonia

t.p Dub:h ~ chains now seD
lifestyle. •• the tqiOil said.
"The CPC is also wodtia&amp; 10 exclusively California pistachios,
convince what len and Jel8ik:rs

cadi

JllliBI

of 1his year's budey IICI• co crop..
To coUcct Ibis_...,,. pn111utas
and purchiSCI'S or the '1993 crop
will each lx: mquiled ., pay Jl415 wil ••••• e lbe individual grade
cents per pound, 10 u:dla:e oadays . _ niCS and JIOriiCl-cost assessby lhr: Commodity Credi1 Colpn- meats as established by USDA
before the marketing season
tion.
The price SUJ11101t le¥CI micca

.......

Greyhound drivers approve
deal ending 3-year-old strike
. DALLAS (AP) - Uaioa
drivers for -Greybouod Uacs lac.
approv~ a six-}elr CDilllat!, ading a 3-y.,.. strike tbat left l!uadreds of drivers lllll:lllployed a.1
¢Wicd tbe inlc:aSiae bus Iiae.
Jun La . ~ i•*inMH

WASHINGTON (AP) - Commercial catfish operations in the
map producinJ states of Alabama,
Alkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi had 132 million fnodsize fish on
hand at the beginning of last
month.
That was 21 percent less !han
April I, 1992. said a report by the
National Agricultural Statistics
Service.

IAIDUPRI

·m

--·•amour-,.
The UIIIIIICt, which expires on

31. 1999, pRJVides l!llllual pay
. . _ lllat. will inaase the $13.85
llourly wage r... drivers to $1655
by Mln:lll, 1998.

hD,

2

,dDir,V~Cianl

1.0Jdt.l'!\a,._:_'139"'m,.
.....,, ..... /lit

Sllllgblet stein: choice 76,00·
84,00; sdcct 72.00-79,00,
Slaqbtcr bcjfers: choice 75.0084.00: sdcct 72.00-79.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 55.25
... down,
BuUs: 1.00 higher,; all bulls
.

•

'

The 21st annual Tri County simulated disaster exercise will bl: conductile~ in Gallia. Meigs, and Mason

FULL OPTION VEHICLE

.s15 495°0' •'
. •'

SUPERC~B

'•

r

$13,99500 '
Remaining 1
$
Special Prices Thru May 29 111

•

2

I

,

Call For Details
SPECIAL APPOINTMENTS ACCEPTED FOR YOUR CONVENII:IC:E

1990 Pont.r-·~

2..,, sd~- ..,,

\

1988 Ford F-150 P.U..•'1~1"-111I

!

414,. Cjl,lhart bod

1988 FOrd Conv. YIIL.'1._

···~"-PP

Monthly Payments
11,000.00 Down Or
Equal Vat&lt;e In Tllld9-lll

and 8aJance FlnMced Thtu

.

2

Yearling steers 80.00-88.00;
yearling IM:ifers 65.00-87-00
Steer calves 70,00-125,00;
bcifer cahes 70.00-108.00
Sheep and lambs: L00-4.25
Iowa; cl!oice wools 60.00-70,00
aad down;. choice clips .60.0070,00; feeder lambs 80.00 and
clown; old sheep 28.00 and dOwn.

Counti.es Thursday, May 13.
E~ersency medical services,
fii'C departments, Jaw enforccmcnt
and otl!er agencies, wiD be put to
the test as if an actual disaster was
occurring.
The disaster scenario in Gallia
and Meigs Counties. developed by
the Mid Ohio Valley Industrial
Emergency
Planning Council,
PROM QUEEN- Abby Blab WII.C:IOWDed
prom Saturday Dlgbi. Here, MRS PrladpaJ Feii.
(MOVIEPC), Gallia County Local
llle Mt!lp lllp Scllool 1993 l'nlm Q - at tb~
ton Taylor Cl'DWIIS Blake wblle Prom ICIDg Jay
Emergency Planning Committee,
Cremeans looks iln.
(LEPC), and Bob Dyer Meiss
County LEPC director, focuses on
a chemical leak caused by a log
truck hitting a train at the railroad
. crossing on State Route 7 and
Roush Lane in Cheshire.
· GBllill,and Meijls CouJtties will
be
working jointly m lhe mock drill
.
-since
the accident occurs in lhe
TERRE HAUJli, Ind. (AP) ''Am ax will be struck on the companies that make up the BCOA
.
Middleport
Fire Department's
. Selective strikea lr.!_illt Amax .first da7," ~)"ers was quoted as expired Feb. 1, pmmpting Trumka
vc 'hI ill 1d
~In · , sayiag,ta.toGay'•.edlliebs of.• the..,.-tO'eell a strike ap1nst the subhoned today as the Uruted Mihe
newspaper, "and more will fol- · sidiaries of St. Louis-based
Worlei's IODgbt 10 brelk a dead- low.'
. Peabody Holding Co. A month
loc:k ia Jalb with the llllioll's top
Amu also operates mines in later, negotiators agreed to a 60c:oal Clllllpaniel
Chandler, Brazil, Sullivan and Clay day extensio~ of the contract so
The union caJiala news c:mfer- City, Ind.; Marion, Ill.; Hazard,' talks could continue.
eoce ill WasJrioaton thil aftaJioon Ky.; Coalton, W.Va.; Dunlap,
The extension expired May 3,
on tbe - l b day bf 1 hiatus in Tenn.; and in Utah and Wyoming.
but union miners have c&lt;intinlled 10
11C8 MiNiAJs behmn the union and
The Star-Tribune reported that work.
.
the Bituminous Coal Operators leaders of union locals learned of
The contract covers about
Associatioa. President Richard the strike plans II a Sunday after· 60,000 miners in six states in
Trumka promised to make "a · noon meeting in Vincennes, about Appalachia and the Midwest. It
majora••--"*ODCDL"
60 miles south of Terre Haute in also affects about 120,000 retired
P1aus call for cenain mines western Iridiana.
miners,
·
operated by Indianapolis-based
The union would like 10 reach
Union spokesman Iim GrosSreld
Amax, including its laiKC Wabash an agreement with lhe producers declined comment on what Trumka .
mine in KeeusburJ, Ill., to be without resorting 10 1 strike, the wouldaddrcss.
struck fliSl by tbe UMW, and the newspaper said, quoting an anonyThe coal c.ompanies did 110t
. job action would SJR8d 10 mines mous source who attended Sun- know what 10 expect from Trumopeaii'Clbyotbc:rcom)Biies.llriion day's meeting.
ka's•announcement, said BCOA
uecutive board member Roger ·
No talks between the:two sides spokesman Tom Hoffman. He said
Myers of ()aid and Cit)', Ind., told have been scheduled.
all was quiet at mines covered by
TbeSJar-TribuneofTcneHaule.
The union's contract with 12 the contract Sunday.

-Amax Coat, ·other producers
·- reported new strike targets

_,..4

AFTER REBATE

.lwpl2door, ....

Feeder caltle: steady to 3.00

~

disaster drill slated May 13

1993 AEROSTAR WAGON

AFTER REBATE

1988 F-250 SUPERCAB .........XLT, Auto., LOADED.............................•5,995,00
1990 BRONCO II .........................XLT, AJC, Power, One Ownert..............'8,495,00
1983 PONTIAC PHOENIX ... .Auto., Good WO!k car! ............;..................'495.00
1992 EAGLE SUMMIT.............Auto., A!C, one Ownerl.........................'7,500.00
1987 PLYMOUTH FURY....;.One OWner,Auto.,AIC, 0n1y 47,ooo ..............*3,500.00
1992 TEMPO GL.......,dr., Auto., AIC, Cruise, All Power,16,000 Mlles....*8,495.00
1988 8-10 BLAZER...................4x4,cass., V-6,LowMnes....................'6,995.00
1992 AEROSTAR EXT.~........... Auto., A!C, Cruise, Tilt, All Power.....*14,995.00
1993 FORD FESTIVA.....................;.................................................:........15,995.00
1988 TEMPO LX...........................Auto., AJC, CruiM, Runs Grestl..........*2,800.00
1990,CORSICA LT................. Auto., AJC, Stereo, Only 48,000 Mltest.....14,995.00
1989 FORD TEMPO...:An Wh8et Drive, Auto:, AC,49,0001MIIea, SUper Clllnt.*4,500.00
1992 R~NGE R STX.................V-6, AJC, Loaded! Only 8,000 Mllesl....•1 0,495.00
1986 OLDS CUT, SUPREME....2 Dr~ BRGHM. Pkg., Fi.ctory Mlga. ....}2,995.00
1992 MUSTANG ..........................Conventbte, All Opttonsl....................'11 ,995.00
~992 MAZDA PROTEGE .........orieOwner,Air,cau...........................*8,495.00
1991 TOYOTACOROLLADX.....oneOwne~,Auto.,Ac.......................'7,800.00
1991 FORDJ:EMP0..........4Dr.,Auto.,AC,Crulll,
Mlles1 .....'7,.,u,1.,

' ''

.oversee dev~lopment of sites
, COLUMBUS, Ohio .{AP)• Stile offlrie!s may aa1e an indepmdenJ bomi ., ow:nee the redc~t of 1:011tamiliatrd iadus-

aiahites.

.

:J:t

cy ~=Pr·~::ecr:liol::Oil!IIP

rlf a IJilllhat would allow abe bolnl
10 lite O¥er abe ljla!C)''I duties in
supervising cleaaup of polluted
siJa.
Gov. Geoqe VoinoviGh said in
a speech this year thlllbe idea was

one of his top environmental initiatives and a•key 10 economic devel-

.
VauJbn Laughlin, head of the
EPA's. central district office, has
taken over the project from EPA
Deputy Director Grant W. W'Jitinson, who is stepping dowu on May
~nL

IS.

..

Laugblin and a.panel of state,
municipal and business officials are
trying to get a bill drawn up by
midsummer lhat could include an

- -·Local briefs-----.
· Four peDJIIe 'Mft cited Satunlay and Sunday for drivinJ under
the ioO-. abe Gallla-Meip Post or the State Highway Patrol
leported.
'
Cecil May.d. Jr., 34, Fifth Street, Racine, was cited fur D,U.I.
and loft of ceater, Iolul•y 0. Hawley, 25, 41074 ·Baker Road,
I'Umaroy, - ciled fur D.U.I. _. failure 10 drive within' marked
lanes; (]yde D. Lowe, 68, Mianli, W.Va., was ciJed fur D.UJ. and
left d. ceD1er Iiiii Rtmic L. J&gt;unce, 34275 Swe Route 124, Rutland, was cited fc.- D.UJ., spcrdilla
Opetllor's license.
2

"CO.IIPI.E1Z AV'I'OJI07JVE .MCIIINE SHOP SERVICE"
AliTO ENGINES- INDUSI'RIALENpiNES- AIR COOLED-ENGINES
+ Complete Tul)e·Ups

+ Cylinders Bored I Sk:cvtd I Houcd
+ Blocks &amp; Heads MJilcd
+Complete Mag0a0UJ[ Jnsprdlnn
+ Valve Guides (RepaJrtd or Replaced)

+ Cranksha!ts-Or!ndtng
+ Oven Cleiiiling of Parts
+ Computerized Etlglne Analyzer
+ Flywheels Ground

+ Heads Rebuilt I EJlrhango:d

+Canlsluift Bcanngs Aemoved and InStalled
•

•Engine RemoDal and ln$tallation Sea ulce
-complete Engines and
short Block Asseillllifes A11Rila1Jfe
-custom .Pfptt:Wnrfing Be uiee

CHECK OUR PRICES
BEII'ORE YOU BUY

AINiilallle~-=~iAiLil.f·WiiOiiiRK~~G~U~:ARAN!iiiTEiiEiDiil

244 S. Church
Ripley, WV

DRNE-A·UTTU
SAVE-A-LOT

SEE RICK TOLLIVER, TOM MilSTEAD,
GUY SAYRE oa TIGER SAYRE
.

'

I~800•964·J673

/

_.110

'

independent "industrial land·
reuselt board.
. The plan also may allow developers 10 earn a certificate from the
state that would piO!eet them from
-future liability. They could .earn the
certifiCite bv demonstratina that a
property is 1'clean" or by removing contamination.
Developers and fmancial institutions have been hesitant 10 develop
any abandoned industrial property
boc•nse the site' may have chemical
contamination from industrial operations from generations ago.
Any new use of the ~:perty
could make a new owner · ,Je for
cleanups lhat could cost milllcins d.
doUars. '

, .{

..

•

i,.

DEDICATING FLAGPOLE:.,._ Members ol
the Feeuey-Bcaaett Post 128, Middleport, dedi·

cated a aew

naa and nagpote ror tbe S)'I'I!Cuse

ballpark at a eelebratio• Ia Syracuse Saturday
momiDg. Here, rrom left, Frank Epple and Fred
Smith, cl!aplaiJJ,_prepare to ralle the nag, Also

U.N. forces
reach Zepa
s~vo,

BOII!ia-Heneaov-

iria (AP) - U.N ." forcel who
reached lhe embaulod Muslim
• enclave of Zepa found a neuly
deserted iown where thouaanda
once liWcl, 10 bodlelln a lloJMid- ·
out_mo
_ ;:e and "'a hllJIIIIIltarlan
CldMIJ
,'. oftidaJI aid JOC!ay.
·· ·MlliliiY ob.veraciWIII In the
, mountain villlp 4S milll wtl euc
of SarajeVo on Sunday aftomooo
aflet Wllklna die lalt .mnJ mllel .
bee- !be lOIII hid IJeen bludJecJ
by feUed lJiel.
•· .
ThDir lindinp back up Wlrlllnp
by BQIIIia'a Muallm-domiaatecl
JOVomment laat week of an ·
lftlpelldinJ caJaatrOpbe In tbo !C-

IDilllelion. '

'

jurisdiction. Also coordinating the _Lodge ParlcinJ. lo.t in Pouit Pleasthree mock disasters are Holzer ant.· The scenano mvolves a 1rac10r
Medical Center in Gallipolis, irailer hitting a church van at the
· Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point intersection of West VirJinia
Pleasant, and Veterans Memorial Routes 3S and 2. The ttactor bBiler
Hospital in Pomeroy. All three hos- will be hauling a hazardous materipitals will have the opportunity 10 al called "Malathion" which is
test their emergency department often used in the manufacturing of
operations.
·
·.
insecticides.
''The local emergency plannirig
The drill will begin around 1
committee is required by law to p.m. Heailing lhe Tri-County disasannually conduct these disaster ter exercises are Bill Stricklen,
exercises in order for us to obtain president of MOVIEPC and manPant money .to opemte the LEPC," ager of safety and training at
said Terry Hemby, GaUia County AKZO Chemicals in Gallipolis
Emergency Management Agency Ferry; Tom Childs, chief operating
director.
· •·
officer of HMC and cltaiiman of
The disaster drill is also a the Gallia County l.EPC, and Rex
requirement for hospitals accredit- Tmy, corporate safety officer ·at·
ed by the Joint Commission on PVH.
Accrediwion of Health Care OrgaMembers of the River valley
'11izations, The Mason drill gets ~h School Key Club will 1x: parunderway at appmximately 10 a.m. tiCJpatinJ as victims in the chemiThe mock disaster drill in Mason cal spill in Gallia County, Club
County will 1x: staged in the Moose · advisor is Sandy Forgey.
~~----~~----------------~

State considering board to

Four cited for D.U.I. ·
AUTO ENGNE REBOILDING (ALL MAKEs • ALL MODELS)

year old Jeffrey S. Halley, both d.
.Gallipolis.
..
Presiding Meigs County Commoo Pleas Iudge Fred W. Crow Ip
indicated earlier that opening argUments and witnesses will be illtrOduced to the jury Tuesday.

Annual Tri-C ounty mock ·

"12 UNITS IN STOCK"

'

.1 llec:llon, 10 PICIM 25 oenla
A Multimedia lnil. ,.._....,_

A ju., of five men and seven Township to view the ·site where
women, with two alternates, were the alleged mulders took place and
seated Monday momins in Meigs · the locations where the bodies were
County Common Pleas Court for found.
the murder trial of William D.
LeMasters is accused of four
LeMasters, II, 26, of ~ine.
charges of aggravated murder in
·Late this morning the jurors the Feb, 8, 1991 shotgun slayings
were taken by van to Lebonan of Jeffrey L, Halley, 26, and 12-

Due to special pricing of these vehicles,
retail sales only.
,~
ABSOLUTELY No Dealers! .
PriC!e Advertised Is Good Only
Till Close Of Business May 29, 1993.
First Come, First Serve Basisl .· .
Hurry, While S.e lection Is Best! All Colors!

..

aos.

LeMaster trial begins

•Super Savings,

OPEN MONDAY·FRIDAY, 8:00 A.M.·7:00 P.u.; SATURQAY; 8:00 A.u.-3:00:• &amp;
1• Pont Flreb.llnl~.'115"''- I

,,

.]

-a I

•Low Miles . ·

4 ..... o,1MU'Iilltl

, . . ..,. ExCib-'131"--'

•

Low toolabt Ia 681. Partly
cloudy. TIIHdloy, partly doucly,
high m

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 10, 1993'

WITH AIR ·coNDITIONING

2dDir,l.oldlll

n.oo and clown.

•Cruise
•Tilt
•Rear Defrost
•Power Mirrors
•Balance Factory
•Warranty

1993 F-150

1990 Mere. eoug._'177"-.

Livestock report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct Jivesrock pria:s ... '" cit 45
at selected buying poia!S Wert
day by the Ohio Depanmcat of
Agricultur!::
Barrows ;md pits: fully to SO
cents lower,·J)rmand modo.-c IJ
JighL
..
U.S, 1·2, 23().:260 lbs., c:ououy
points, 43,25-44, a. few 44.25;
plants 445045.50.
U,S. 1:3. 230-260 lbs., OOiiDby
points, 424350,
u.s. 1-2, 210-230 lbs~ i:owb)'
points, 414250.
R~ipts Thursday 1,.200. Estimated receipts Fliday 7,500,
Prices from The Ploduca'S LivestoCk A-ssociarion:
Caltlc: 1.00 ~-

.

1981

lw • w a !llDdel fc.- labor-IIIIUJiliCa.· .
_,.:lfttrv .,

e

•Power Windows
•Power locks
•Power Seat
•Cast Alum.
•Center Arm Rest ..
•Ught ·Group .

•Automatic
.
'
•Air

(1-800 881 0628)

~'f"rrlt EXIIriar

wiD bm abe buis of a new workin&amp; m"im=bip besween the co'!'~ lild abe worttn .... also will

dent of ·lhe .A malpmiJaln.sit
Union, said Friday diC Aaelpwed Council of Greyllouad Local
Unions had approved the deal
announced April 20 by oompany
and union leadl:n

.i

H008860LAW

1. Oldl DiiiiiL......, ..._

•

r

SultaiiOO
Columbua, Ohio

1•Piy.Gr. Vopger.'1B4"---'

Ia a pepaied Slmenlcnl. La SaJa
palM WA 1be iiiC( a; mt • 'not only

' pai-

Page4

8 East Broad StrHt,

year's c:Cisl-of-production index.
ne u••aing "SC'SIJIC'.nt is autborizal by an llllaldmcat 10 the Agricultmal Act of 1949 by the 1990
f - bill. Price support will be
Jllldc availalllc 10 elipble producers llaua&amp;b t.B lll8de 10 producer
• iMinM JJIIder COIIliiCt wilt1 the
C"•not•y Ol:dil Cor!lcration.
ne Apicultural Stabilization
and Q1aseM1ion Service (ASCS)

GALUPOUS - l1le price Slipport level for 1993-aop IHuley
tobacco_is $1.683 pee (IOidd. 3.4
cents per pllllld more lbaa abe 1992
suppon level Producers aad ~­
chasers must c:acb pay a -•diJC
assessment of O.S pm:e.nl of die
1111

WASHINGTON {AP) .,... Commodity loans disbursed by tho,
Agriculture Deparunent' s Com.
mo&lt;lity Credit Corp. in May wiD
carry a 3 1/4 percent interest rate,
That is dQwn from A!ri's• 3 318
percent, and reflects die interest
raiC char~ CCC by the U.S, Tr:ca"
sury, saJd Randy Weber, acting
executive vice president of tfle
CCC.
.
·

changes in the five.yeat moving
awu...,. of martel prices and last

GalliaASCS

prit;e support leYCI

in levels in pistachios from other
origins.

614-221-GIBI .
·..:J;: L. W. QNNAMO
AnORNEY AT LAW

Burley tobacco price
support up in -1993 ·
ByLisao-

due 10 the fear of excessive aflalox-

Pick 3:
147
Pick 4:
' 1042
Super Lotto:
. 8-11-13-14-36-41
· Kicker:
100975

move to 2nd
round

ll8tel.

The u.s. Labor Department said
the nation's jobless rate wu at 7
percent for the third SlraiBht monlh.
Service industries added larse
numbers of new IIVOI'kcrs but buildins and manufacluring employment
feD, the JOvemment said
The oomblr of new jobs nalionwide rose by 119,000, according to
a survey of business payrolls. That
lie acaerating more new JObs .in foUowed a reviled decline of 9,000
Ohio tball ocber indl$ies, but no jobs in March. There were 8.92
6pres'MftiYailable. ·
million people unemployed in
April, the report said.

*

Cavs win,

lite

piiiQ

Ohio Lottery

SOAPBOX STYLI - ll:rear·old Kelly

c •••• ol Polatroy a. .outralld tilt propll'
•llllod oiiiiUiq Ia 1 ....,._ dertl7 car Salar-

day at I ICJ!'Pbilll. derbJ' dllp'-J -

die

Syn·

present were Mike Floccarl, ftuace otncer;
Andy Batey; Henry Clatw:!!J• adjat. . t;
Cl!arles Carr, senior rice com
er, ud Fred
Hanel, sergeant at ar-. (Seatlael pboto by Jim
Freemm)

�•

Commentary
.

Monday, May 10, 1993

·,

The Daily Sentinel

and
Michael Binstein

.......,, -··-•ilmil:•.,...

•-=

I

s

Congressional
candidate disillusioned

1

s

3

I&gt;OLE .·

STIMULUS

PACKME

.

=~~!:~~=:: Heot~~y~:tt~:~~

. Maween Brown, a spokeswoman for Secretary of Srate Bob Taft, S81d
the eteciions commission, which Taft's office oversees, received Dorsey's
complaint Marclt 15 and. se~t out ill! r~~ March 16. S~ said the
· ccirnmission's statement that It lacks Junsdiction over con~onal can.,: didares does not mean the commission ignored Dorsey·
Dorsey an Anderson Township nustee and University of Cincinnati
. prof~. 'said he ran for Congress as a challenge but isn't inclined to do
ll·agam.

"Life goes on. The election is over. I gave it a shoL I was not accepted
by enough people to win," Dorsey said.

.
h
d
•
t
I
or
ters
to
e
e
t
Let
0

i

•

supports dove hunting

. . .
.
everyday hvmg.
Any hunter worth his salt would
have no trouble .~istinguishing a
dove from a bluebird or bam swatlow.
.
..
.
The hWitmg lrad.ibon which has
been around ever since the pitgrams came to lhe new world for a
better way ot:t!fehas always been a
standing ?radibon.
Hunting rights are ·being~dized by animal rights activJsSS.
The 2nd Amendment to the Constitution, the right to keep and bear
arms, is under constant attack by
gun-grabbing politicians and the
media. Some are even trying to
repeal the 2nd Amendment.
·
If it wasn't for the National
Rifle Association and irs three million members, we wouldn't be
allowed to own a gun Soday for self
prorection or hunting. It's time for
American hun~m and sportsmen to
wake up and calllheir congressmen
and senators, before it's too late,
and voice their opinions ·on these

Dear Edilllr'

In suppon or the House Bill 287
before the Ohio House of Representatives adding the mourning
dove as a legal game bini. the misguided individuals that portray the
Ohio bunters and sponsmen as
bloodthirsty killers never take into
account the millions of dollars that
hunting licences and fees add to the
economy of the state and preserving game that 81 one time was ~
eWnction, for ewnple, the whitetail deer, wild IUI'key and beaver.
• InSielld or 8 great comeback .or
tliese game animals and wildlife,
without the support of the Ohio
hunters, these specimens would
now be extinct
As long as there is plenty of
game, the hunting tradition and
rights of hunters and sportsmen
siiOuld not be imposed upon by a
few select individuals.
. Most hunters are decent lawabiding citizens, probably your
husband, son or next-door neighbor ·
who like to use hunting as a way of . matters.
relaxation or a vacation to get away
from the daily rigors of work or

·

Ron Swain
Reed&amp;viDe

.

Today in history
Monday,

.· Today is
May 10, the 130th day or 1993. There are 235 days
left in lhe year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
' On May 10. 1869 a golden spike was driven at Promontory, Utah,
marking the CO:Optetioo of•the fii'Sl transcontinental railroad ift the' United

SrateS.

On this date:
In 1774 Louis the 16th aacendcd the throne of France.

In 177S, Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys cll!ltured the
BriliJh-held fiXUWIIl T~ New Xork: .
· In 1818 American J111riot PaufRevere died m Boston. . ·
1n 1865: Union ~ captlnd Confederare President Jefferson Davis
in Irwinville, GeorJia.
· ·
.
·
· . 1n 1908, the tnt Mother' a Day ollsav~ took place during churdl
~in Grafton, W.Va., and Philldelpbia. ,
.
.. · · ·
' In 1924, J. Edpr Hoover'- ~ven ~job of FBI ~!Of· .
1n 1933 the Nazillllpd ~~~a~~~ve public llcJok burnings m Germany.
In 1940, Brililb Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain resigned and
Winlt.OII OJurchlll formed a new govemment.
In 1941, A4dl Hider's deputy, Rudplf Hen, parachuted into.~
a peiCC mia1011. (Heal ~ up IBMJig a life
011 whit he c!e!med seneeace It Spin,_ priaon, where lie died in 1987, an appatellt silicide.)
In 1!1611, ~ Vlcwnl ~~began in Paris.
1n tm.~JoanCrawforddiedmNewYOI'L · ·

••

~

I

OHIO Weather

-die

Accu-Wealher• forecast for daytime Cllllditioaa md

A}

·

•d

-as

H

entOJJ

It wii!Op - a ~~ -, iPI lnd-

enbip • oh 2 • ptlllic- _.
c:enaiDly die Owan:a - • die
need so • '?"
w
w; 1
• well a •lOll c:oevica • clndl
ooa ___.. w· AJ t.iL
If Coli*
Lewis is ll!ftiI

ciwdy

?a' so

a

JU

•'lllilc••
li:ts
m .._ Moj s.

·I

be ....
•• a tlllic a •
fer tile~....
way die deaSII P""'lJ WOib. A
1990 .Uuricae Bar AaoriP'ioe
study of •aheas CX11JP1 ad Pile
delsllll 'f ¥"
a 1M a lew
clerk af JIII?ICIC .... Jlapl s.. ,
''The deaPII pc•lty fmpteudy
results rro. ••iea P11aa
potatylldpoorlawJCiiizrc."
Jussicc Tt.eplii!l lbnllall
made Pilat paiat apia
Ia
his I
b . . . So _, Ciimil
Judicial O""""ca::e ill Sq? 111'1"
11181, ManWl pwe a ac:ries of
chi'J' I Z
Mit• af .... 7 r
r

-

- -

ad....,_

•

"There's alitlle peed versus
JRCCI iD all of this,' one former

lli&amp;IHwi"' fediftlllllrilime offi-

h dill tile llllritiQie indnstty
is" · it bod! ways: They get ·
,.Z!':f.l set-asides and they ·

u dd;ng
C'n-*er
lll
.f.l,l0
•
"'''

WM

•illm ,. r..,

.........,
4 ,_... It

jobs lila' die liCit a
alao e•pl • die &lt;]jgtrw a1 · •
lll?iaa'a R&gt;t • far ....... i*rat .,.....,iea ,· ed a ce• · bJ
induauies -liCit eu'•c'l zwiiJ
Joc:eled pri1urily ia die wiliWJ
rman:llllll deillllf 1m• '-Is
land of Califunia.,.. die ; z11

But defense spendiDg IW bel:a
slashed 1q1 medly SUICC thcll, with ~a-.
further cuts ahead. Mn•ach..as
TlilWOI?Id- • be a • • 4
and California, swea once widely m,r1, • ila =
I
envied for their minlcle em•nies, coucni• of die beleue
have simultaneoualy .,...... inso.....,. Adt
•I
• PM• • ~
decline. With Djj.fmeni'7f · cyiPID6ella7llllaaB~Ik*•d

~~~=~~ :v:.alu!~ :t::.·m:~~~=

ing hot flashes of plant closings
and cold flashes or jobleuness,
pervllde' the economy.
.
The receuion ... the early 19901
and the paltry rec:ovcry or the past
7eaf coincided with significant CUll
m defense spend~£: bus few
observers ~
ve Phlllbe
ci!SS wen: '
y I'CI{'OIIIible for
·the nation's econom1c anemia.
Even in fucal 1992,1fler the slowdown was well underway, the milis
tary-indulltrial complex di(ec?ly
~toyed almost 6 million people.
That
.
lesllhan 3 """"'"t Of the
total .U.S. work force{liiO;.h the

tioaal 2

=·==~~;;:.-::::

$262 biUlon in she 1994 budlet, lite
effect is reachiq inland from die
!WO co1111us well. By fiacal 1997,
Pel)raaoa outlar:.c pro~ SO
boaom at $238
.Ia m0ez1madjUIICCI dollln. thll will be doa
to $200 billion in 1991 Ball.
No llll27ier hotv yea cwtll. thllla
a chiDy e.:u'OIIIic t.h. ¥In bale
closures, fewer indua~!':;
fewer 111111 and w
ill
-an of Pt- ase dep r• ilia
economy
y sqgin11Dd. iD
helllh.
poor
1'1llt oxoolel.oe die af bezl4.
linea~She ~a addla
.
l r e a d

I

.

·

~~I

~ pw•l
. . . lM* J1J Ia
die,_ flldlo _ ......,.._. '
Wsl
M bJ flee • l
• ?Ill F
s.. .,
ill
die c:oevaliua )M C II
!C1J
.,.._ "Wtsllrial polii:J.. •
$
• 6e .,.. + m
wllo • 6e F
. . . . 6e
UllOa.
will • JIIIJ
pi . , . . b ao- 111,.;_l!J..~
j '
' I
_
_. JOiicr ,_ 1111I
JIIPI'I wJii . 8zi&amp;W)
rt r ale..., ...... Pill PI '1 I

SiaM..,- '
w.••

~..,:;-=~:.~

r-

by the f~t '
... wid! ao .w:h aid pouring in It
-.lite Jnrjr
have' been
beaet buridlock
JeiUk, marirille ~!! say shit aome Amec· '
i&amp;:lzl _ . . .have waited for up to ·
40 . , . so l1llkJid in .Russian ports ..
-llac:OitafS2S,OOOaday, ·
As one AmeriCIII shipowner, ,
wllo ' - bel:a mlking delive;riea to
.R.aia ia receat IDOIIths, told ua:
"It•s lib pow~ 10 lOlls of c.-go .

.c':'

'

•w.t ~pan: pesitiOner's life." The

fedenll dislricl cours ruled that the
~-pedi
. ~L was not COli·
~-lly lb.......
Tile·Alaerican Bar AasociatioD
f'"WIIIIII'IMIJ thai "because many
of die defects ud delays in the
Wns COIJIIII pocedUI'e lie due to
dtB fac:t thai the accused was not
aep
~by COIJIII"tenl counael,
peaticallaly It she trial level, the
stata ud federal governments
do!dd be oblif!ted to provide '
.. . , 2 lid acj. tel~llllda
lf«capi?al
ts
... as well as provide ~ufficient
for invl'llig•till!l, expert
wit
r, lid osher senicea - at
allllfl'loJcapilal~entliti!' ·
plioo •
s.dy a p-.dn• of Yale Law
Sc.ool, who has also altended ;
Odont Unhasity, llhould see the
liJP: ..t ......, of the ABA's rec•
~ ~ :~ tell !he :
~

-·

~

Hospital news

=

Meigs EMS
responds to
12 calls

.

Stocks

leaa P"Ctim~, to due process.
Qwinr CJIIl for fundame111al fair·
- ...... not COil him roo 111111y

- · Meigs ·a nnouncements--

a

'
'
lllall•• ' l!iiJin&amp; ~out .will :

.i;1

•
:
:

;
I

•

I

.

I

I
I

I
''I

j

---.....

,.,."'" '-

~1:;:.-=.w~

.

bo....., _.....

;
'

!P.

!':o_.,...._

1•

:
•ili?arJ·indwsttial policy was :
'b ced wizll borrowed moacy, :
. . . _ 1111 rrlllions af dollm of 1
11.1111 debt ties ahead. ~ I
fcl 711 b •an Ia expei:ted to run l
1 defiCits llllgliJ anywhere :
~ S300 Jrjllim .so $200 billion :
far • • af she CCIIQiiy, even if •
Pile Clle201r IU proposals are :
PIIClllllllid ...... wost • adver- :
liaell. Uider die IIIOit ODtimiallc: I
•••
1. . .ioi,DI ... •adotal ilebt will
dlloi IIebe tile .....
il CMIS'.Il .... Sl lrllllon 12 yem I

...

deaths--

Cross pleads innocent

a..z--- !te

The old

.::T

c~.end~ m~y

•-c:ea

Baa is it a aood idea?

.

UMW endorses Burch for governor.

,,

seedl•beiqlm nwtquickly.
. ,
,
,

a.m.

addins mote water to swollen
rivers aud erects. New flooding
w. poaible in Texas. Oklahoma
lild she lower Mississippi valley.
Rlin also - expeacd soda)' in
die Virginias and in the Pacific
Nouhw r Mostly fair weather was
eapc:c:St:d clJewhere.
Vinfeai storms sttetched across
she P•lwm Plains over the weeltc:md and IOmadoes skipped ~~CrOSS
nTexas.

rescued

Ftilbie Syadieate, lac.

2lb Pille, llld umc 11 a prec:1oua
-••Mty iD ?oday '1 prec:arious
C[ I M). If iDdlllzrial policy is I
aood idea, dieD it is 1D idea that

The mreco11ms:ld-Jiilll • : • • e fer
this dale • die ~ weasber
statiOD was 94 c!cpees ill 1936
while the record low was 25 in
1966. Su!IICU "&amp;ht will be a 8:34
p.m. and llll1rile Tlll'l!!ay at 6:20

Rain fell .lbis..sm.or.lling in

s-,.... •

. . . , _ I&gt;MMJMMI'oted

·'IIUII'L

K•• •.ArDnsas anil Minnesota,

CLEVELAND (AP) - Three
people who had been on a pleasure
boat that exploded are dead, .00
loday divers were to try to find a
man who may also have been killed
in the blast.
A man and a 'baby On board sur01109
tnc.
vived but remainod hospilaljzed_
~------Weather------A 33-foot Chris-Crafs cabin
cruiser P8111ed Plane C1'IZy IV blew
South~Centrat Ohio
Wednesday through Friday:' . u~. cau1ht fm and aant Sunday
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 60A chance of showers and thWl- lldDOOII at the doet of She popular
65. Chance of rain is 20 percenL derstorms Wednesday and Thurs- SllootetS res?aurant in the Flits, a
Tuesday, partly cloudy with a day. Lows Wednesday in the 50s. strip of blrs and ICStiUranlS where
chance of shQwers and thunder- Highs in the mid-60 to low 70s. the Cuyahoga River meets Lake
slllrms. High 80-85.
Lows on ThiD1day 45·55. Hi$hs in Eric.
the 60s. Fair on Friday. Lows m the
Extended rorecast:
The ~h for a possible fourth
40s. Highs in the' 60s.
.
victim was called off Sunday as
. nightfall approached. More ICIIChing waS pfaimed fll' soday, and the
wreckage wil! be brousht to the
surface, said Mall Zlorki, 811 officer
William Maddy
Charles StrausS
for the Ohio Divisioa of WaserWilliam (Red) Maddy, 65,
l'rowt of it uplocPft7 and burst lito names. At
Olarles V. (Chalky) S?raiL'IS, 85, craft.
·EXPLOSION SCS!:NE- Cite &gt;« &amp;eVtThe Cuyahoga County COIIXIel'S
enlll.edotte•-fll••i••• ,,.......,.
least three people were ltiiJed ad nine Injured.
Wilkesville, died Saturday after- of 117 Ebenu.a' SL, Pomeroy, died
(AP)
ia CJnoeia.d
"ccchd Is!
noon at Holzer Medical Center. He Sunday, May 10, 1993 in VeteiiDI office Sunday night identifted the
retired in 1989 as a chief engineer Memorial Hospital 'a Extended dead as Denzil Moss, 62, and his
in the U.S. Merchant Marine. He Care Facility.
wife, Nancy Moss, 51, both of the river. Ms. JltJI!i • - {._; die subjec:t «die -m.
The coroner's office early today
was a World War II U.S. Navy vetFor many years Mr. Strauss Grafton, and Marla Hoffman, 29, under die doi:k _, - pr;!led up
Tile (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
confirmed
that the Mosses were the ·
eran and a member of the Knights owned and operated the Home of Cleveland. Grafton is a small so the dock by Jlllllple It lite Ka1C aepaded today that members of Pile
parents of Marla Hoffman. The
of Pythias or Jackson and the Laundry in Middleport He was a city about 40 miles wat of Cleve- ~~ioaaeueller~Btiyaftr:r '*side Yacht Club, where the Plain Dealer reported that Bud
Wilkesville American Lcf.on Post. member of Trinity Church.
land in Lorain County
""' . - .
Pllne Cqzy IV was doctcd earlier
~it was Mrs. Hoffman's brother'•
He also attended the Wilkesville
Born on Aug. 24, 1907 at
A baby and a man who had been
Oc:lldand
~
Dqar•
z
Bizs.-..,·
said
01ar1es
Hoffman,
46,
and
the baby is the child of the
....,,_said ,_,_ . - T
offman
United Methodist Church.
Pomeroy, he was the son of the late
were taken to MelroHealth salioD Olief -...__ ......,.
_, .was also on the boat. He is an
H
s.
·
.He was born July 27, 1927 to Vlilentine Srrauss and An1111 Hob- Medical Center. Charles Hoffman Sunday aigbl dial lie could not pro.
owner
of
the
Million
Air
Club
as
Assistant
Fire
Chief
Bill
Lee
-.
Cora Hayes DeWist of Kanauga stetla' Strausi
Jr., 18 months, of Cleveland, was vide the name of tile who is Butte Lakefront Airport_
said the cause may have been gas
· ~ 1be late William Maddy.
He is survived by his wife, Eve- admitted and was in satisfactory
•
,
in the bilge. or boaom of she boat,' '
Survivors include bis mother; lyn Srrauss, a daughter and son-in- condition with second-degree bums
his wife, Virginia Darst Maddy; law, Carol Ann and E!l Kennedy, on his face. Deilzil "Bud" Moss,
two daujlhters, Sheila A. Long of Pomeroy; five~hildren, Deb- 24, of Grafton. was in critical oonEscond1do, Calif., and Connie bie Kennedy,
.
.
I Thomas, and dition.
McWilliams or Point PI~ two Mike Kennedy, a I of Pomeroy,
Tbe United Mine Worters ,of to tile people of the 30th Disttict Ward oommented, ''Rob Burdl1101 .
Several people suffered minor
sisters, Margaret Rollins of-Gal· Charles (Chuck) Kennedy of injuries
America
Districs Six Politic:al but more impoiSBDIIy, he has been only has the educational back-.
.
lipolis and Eleanor Pennington of Mason, Ohio, and David Kennedy
Action
Committee,
(COMPAC}, a lirelcss aepesenrative for work- ground to be Governor li Ohio but
Cleveland police Detective Jaclc
Charleston: three SJ:.Im.dcliildren ~f~=t· N •• C., and eight Bomfeld
Friday
............
lhc
.... - - ing men and women through-out he has made a point of gaining first ·.
wd after a preliminary
and three grut-grandellllclls,
'
.
of
Sure
Senupr
ltobcJt
L. Baidl ia ouriiiiC."
band experience of the problems
ilnYeltiplion that'lhc bbtst ..,.-.
He was preceded In ileath by
Besides his parents, he was prehis
bid
so
became
Govai1CI'
f1l
she
'Scuaror
Burch
is
a
graduate
of
our
citizens face in the every da)(
State of Ohio. · .
two daughters, Anita K. and Cathy ceded in death by four brothers, endy was accidenrat.
Kens
State
Universisy
and
the
world.
During the tass nine years,
boat sank about 18 feet to
s. Maddy, and one son, Dennis L. Sam, Edward, Donald and Norman theThe
Gc:olgetown
Vni-mty
School
of
Burch
ttptsiiiiU
Ollio's
not
only
has Rob identified the .
Senator
of the river, Cleveland
Strauss, and five sisters, Sophia Fireboaom
Law.
During
the
CarZec
Adminisproblems,
he has been one of the. .
30sh
Satarmal.
Distria.
Deplrttnent LL Tom McGill
call 6 to 9 p.m. Mac and MarF.Ct Srrauss, Agnes
liliSion.
Smaw
Burch
served
as
an
COMPAC
SII?C
Omcil
Olairs
few
legislarors
to speak ouL" Ward ·.
loday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Neutzling, Mildred Grindley, and said
attorney
for
the
National
Labor
man
Gleam
Mct.oe
ss.raP,
"SaiMQ!
concluded,
"Over
nine years qo, ~
Divera pulled the Mosses out .._
Funeral Home. Services will be Ruth Adams.
Rd'5ions
Bolid.
Rob
was
first
elected
to the Ohio
Burch bas been a b"l*'•hos PSICl
hetd 1 p.m. Tuesday 81the functa1
Funeral services will be held ll
District Six President Larry General Assembly. He took an .
home with Pastor Ron F'teroe offi- 3 p.m. en Wedneiday 81 the Ewing
enthusiasm to Columbus that had
ciaDng:
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev.
not been seen there in years. That
Burial will be in the Reynolds Rolland Wildman will officiate and
enthusiasm bas never wavered.
"Whether the issues have ·
Cemetery in Addi~ with.I ~­ burial will be in Beech Grove
A Langsville man accused of
Vetenes Memmial
side flag presenraucn by the Pomt Cemetery. Friends may call It the felonious assauts against State ty Sberiff's Dqatmea Slid was a
involved labor, the poor, thj: elder- .
SATIJRDAY
ADMISSIONSof domestic violeace
Pleasant American Legion Post.
funeral horne Tueaday from 2 to 4 Highway Patrol troopers made 1
Carol Jcu, Racine; and Ruth Bush, ly, the consumer, or lhe economic ·
y
i1MIIviDI Cross.
and 6 to 8 p.m.
well being of our state, Rob Burch·:
Hanford. W.Va.
plea li innocent so the cbarge when
Accordin1 to the sherifrs
has
always?been there. Now the
Ella Selbe
SATIJRDAY DISCHARGES· he appeared laSt week iii Atheu dqrarunens, tile depety lllalpUd
United
Mine Workers of America
Ella Mae Selbe, 67, of Ohio
Wayne Adams and Stephanie
County Common Pleas Court. ·
so mab: a tJdic *P oo Cross. A }Jostim;
are
proud
to be there for Rob Burch
Ave., Gallipolis, died Sunday, May
Ernest L. Cross, 27, in addition . chase ~gu which iDwolved tile
and
we
woold
wge the labor move9' 1993 at the
Holzer
Medical
CenSUNDAY ADMISSIONS
of one count of felonious assault, hipway tJIZIOIIId whicll Cllded in
,.
ment
across
Ohio
to join us llild be ·
ter.
Dixie Slaw?er, Mason, W.Va.
faces charges of vandalism and A1hr:ns with she lllat af Cross. .
lhere
with
Rob
Burch."
..
Born on May I 0, 1925 at.
SUNDAY D!SCHARGES •
failure to comply with a lignal of a
The pMrol said a ?IOOpll's auisDisttict
Six
of
the
United
Mine
Pomeroy, she was the clauJhtcr of
police officer. According to a er pulled iD froat af she Ouss car CaroiJett.
Workers of America bas jurUd.ic- ··
the late John W. Selbe ..d Effi11
report in The Athens Messenger, and was struck in she.R:Pr. At me
HOlZER
MEDICAL
CENI'ER
lion
over the entire State of Ohio:
Mac Jlmts Selbe.
bond has been ICt at $50,000 pend- poial, a booper - d' 1 ly bia in
7
cllldarps
FJizsbr.th
May
and
the Northern Panhandle of.'
She' ~survi~ '?&gt;' ~ sillers,
ing I JIUIC 221rial.
tbe leg by Cross's ear as be Muller, Jolll Dickens. Ganeu Wat- West Virginia.
Units
of
the
Meigs
County
Ruth Th81er, Miam1, Fla., KatherThe charges lpinll Cross SPcnl approached the vehicle on foot.
SOII, Sli8h Mode, Williain Wells,
ine Pullina, Point Pleaslllt, W.Va.; Emergency Medical Service from
a lt'dea of events on April I Another troOper receited I hand
Hard
W111P, Wade Rollins, Eric
and Beuy Graham, Columbus; two responded to 12 calls for assissaJX:e shit srancd when a sheriff's dqluty injury when it was anq.,dly -aAnlbSUIE,
Oa!es Malone, Nancy
brother!, Thomas Selbe 'and John on Saturday llld Sunday.
respo11ded
to
whit
She
Meigs
Cowlwiched
between
a
cruiser
ud
Colcma,
Maggie
Griffm, Charles
Selbe, Jr., both of Columbus, and a
On Saturday at 10:44 a-.m. the
Cross's
car,
acconlin&amp;
.,
she
pMrol.
Harper,
Reva
Evans,
Walter
'half-brother, Joe Brown, Avon.
Middleport unit responded to LinAm Ele Powec....................36
McDaniel,
Geraldine
Harrison,
Besides he!' parents she was pre- coln Street for Edria Pinnell who
Ashland
OiL.......................2S 3/4 .
Timothy Snedaker, Agne~
ceded i li death by a brother, was taken to Plealiant Valley HosAT&amp;T
................................
S6 1/2
Ohlinger, Carolyn Lewis, Mary
•
Franklin Selbe, and a Sister, Emes- pisal.
Bank
C&gt;ne
..................
.
.........
3J8 '
p.m. for cl:iJdaal-sea 0.14. Prilar Woods, Chdse Jones, LoveD Mans Bob Evans .........................53
At 5:49 p.m. the Syracuse. Wlit
Meetlag llaled
sineBroWn.
17
1/2 ·
Graveaide, services will be held went to Apple Grove and Dorcas
The committee for the United will be awarded and there will be ioa, Mary Thurston, Lyndsey Olarming Shop.................. 1S 118 :
Channel, Laura Breatiron, Lloyd
at 1 p.m. Wedneaclay at the Rock Road for Adrian Reel who was Fund for Meigs County will meet free ho?dogs.
Chmp lndustties................. l3 1/2 ·
BUlk and Gina Mitcltell.
Spriqgs Cemetery. There will lie no transported to Veter1111 Memorial Wedne8day ll 3 p.m. at the Meip
City
Holding...................... 24
May 7 birtlsll - Mr. l7ld Mrs.
.
Seeiol' trip •e ?iw&amp;
calling hours. Arrangemenll were Hospilal.
County Chamber of Commerce
Federal
Mo2UL ...................20 318
Theie will be a special ID' sit• David Cuadiff, daughter, Racine.
handled by ihe Ewing Funeral
Office m Porncrvy.
Goodyear
1'&amp;R ..................37 518 ·
for all Eastern seniors and tlleir Mr. and Mrs. Mart Stanley, son, Uutds End.......................... 31 718 .
Horne.
1'he Pomeroy unit went to Wl'll
pareniS on Thunday at 7:30p.m. ia IWioL
Dlnaer plaDDed
Inc....................... 23 114 '
Main Srreet at 10:33 p.m. for Scott
May I disc ..rges - Brenda Limited
Jhe
high school cafCieria •cpdinc
There will be a public dinner ll
Multimedia
Inc .................. 33 ~
Harrison
who
refuJcd
natment.
The Daily Sentinel
Hawley, Lorena Houck. Jessie CarPoint
Bancorp
............. ,...... 14
Oil Sunday at 1:35 a.m. the the Meigs County Senior Citizens !he senior class !rip.
roll, Mrs.. Harley Wells and daugh(U8P8 11:1·810)
Ra:x
Res!BuranL
..................3{16
Syracuae unis went so Morning S?Pr Center·on Thursday from ~ p.m.
ter, Tracy Hall, Ora Woods, Sylvia
lGc7&amp;e to ieeet
PubHihod ...., ollemoon, Monday
Reliance Electric................ 21 .
Road for Gail Rowe who -liken Cost is $4 per person. Menu
111.,.... Friday, ut c..m Sl.z. ~oy. to Pleawlt Valley. Al 7:!58 a.m. the iileludes creamed baked chicken, There will be I qular 1 . Gilliam. Rolfe Lee, Ruth Danner, Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 114
Ohio b)l .... Ohio \Ioiiey t'UbHohlrw
Mrs.. David Cundiff and daugb?er,
Shoney' s Inc......................20 718
unit went to tltC corner of Founll green beans, cole slaw, roll, cake of Shade River LOdge N'!~
Compony/Multimodie lne.~,.:::a·-·
CPaymon:
Rowley, Charles Oam- Star Bank ...........................36 1/2
F.tAM on Thursday at 8 P·•· at
Ohio 415,8111 ""· 11112-21.SS.
.....
and
bevera1e.
The
Classic&amp;
will
and
Cook
Ssrees
for
Mae
Gardner.
poolop paidal·""-"-'· Ohio.
. .
bers. Angela Powers, Charles · Wendy lnt'l........................13 318
She was ta1cen to Holzer Medical ~sed.IIEII. F~ wi~ oa:ering. Public the Olem Mamie HaD. Rdi 1
llaoedi:tEric Sl!lnders.· - .
Center.
.
.
snen?$ served.
Membor: 'i1io - 1 e d Pnu. oad ....
mVI
WOrthington Ind.....::........26
May
I
blrtPtl
- Mr. llld Mrs.
Ohio
-.,.£"
No&amp;l-.1
·
Stock reports are the II:,..
·At
11:58
a.m.
the
'Racine
unit
_ _..,
nlattn
B,..,hom
111
Cliff
Hager,
dau$111Ct,
Hamden.
s,a,t.caJ
«h
II'
VFW
PGIIl
so
IZiftt
.
a.m.
quote.• provided !ty
went to Hoggs Hollow Road for
No...,.pot So._, '1811 Third .Monuo,
Now York, Now Yon 10017.
The Roct Sprinp Sc:aior YCIIidt Mr. - Mrs. ChriSIOpher Piguet. KeiDper Securities, lee;. o·f
The Tuppcn Plains VFW Pott
Justin Diddle wbo was liken to
No, 9053 will meet Thursday at will have a IJUI&amp;I"'t7i ~ May SOil, Oilk HilL
GaUipolis.
Veterana.
POSTMASTI:R: s . . l - cha-1o
\
22
from
5-7
p.m.
Txbll
are
S4
for
7
Ma
'
ditdarlea
Breanna
7:30
p.m.
at
the
post
home.
OffiThe DollY Son&amp;lnel, Ill Court 81.,
· At 1:17 p.m. the Syracllll! unit
Slleplwd,
Hazel
lthodes,
Sarah
ldults and $3.50 fer QiliRa . .
Puo-o;t.OlljQ 4151118.
responded to Lon1 Hollow Road cers will be installed.
six lid sasdel'. 'l'ic:lli:ll are IE ]~ Wa!br, Paul HoPley, Mrs. Chris
IRJUCIIIP1'ION IIATU
. for William Ritehouu. He '\'faS .
llj cani• or2J?otorat FlaiiCis Florist ia A
OJ ...a Pip:t ... SOil, laez GRJenJee llld
· Duce plaued
?Ibn so~.
ODe w&lt;iJIL.,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,.,s..,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,,.,,tJ,80
.
The Royal Oek Dlnce Club will. should be purdlaaed by May 19. omJJc~.
()ae ~&amp;h......:.....................................81
The Miildlepon unit responded
SPRING VAll fY CINFMA ODe r-................................. - ..t&amp;'l.to
May ' r.lrtll - Mr. and Mrs.
to Llncoln Terrace at 3:43 p.m. for sponaor a dance Saturday·from 8s Menu iDcludes Jpqlleui, prlic:
.. BING... COPY
daughler, Gal446 4514
'
Nell Oraves. She .,. ~sported 11 p.m. at Royal Olk Resort with bread, salad. pic 114 CICI&amp;e. Sill or lcpTidJa
. PUCK .'
pop.
Cany-out~
Doll)&lt; .....,.......... - ......................~21 C..lo
music
by
MonPip.
to V e&amp;el'llll.
At 8:34J:.~ Syracuse unit
MWA•JMet
wen&amp; so B
Slllet lor Ruth
The
High
•DollY
""'iloolllriol
ninll Ia"'..
,
.
.
• lliNi, ol1 or II
Th11
May
meotlnl of tlie
Shain.
She
was
transported
to
monlli Wto. Crod!lwtn
Bur7lnaham Moden! Wood- af Post No. 39. Fouwtoyl wiD ...,..
Bober.
School
Choir
wJl b e - - · 7
Alllerica will be I patluct dlaner It May 18. Di
-~ by .WI Jll"ftl11ed In
No oaboci1pt*W
. Ill I p.a 11lele
Tile Mlddlopon unit went to 7 p.m. at the hd' Ill Saswday. All p.m. _.
_ . when ....,. •rrior lo
would ,like
thank
..allablo.
Owitllcd: 01 7 It 8:37 p.m. lor m0t11en atte?ldlu will be feCOI· will be •
pr 1
;.
. /'~
MaJ$1~---Blltlala Col!
Site was ?Ibn to nized and plans fOr . . masdo!'Ji
an the buslnesaas
Jloltra Coealr
Ho'
.
fund
dinnei
Oil
Mclllciia!
Day
13 . _
___ ..........- ... ---..
'
Tba Rlltland ualt, ll 9:57 p.m. be diaam d
that
contributed
In
11 w................:....................-...
11
12 w..aa.................................. ........
71
wea&amp;liO
New
Lima
Road
fer
GlenO.IIYo llofp Ona1F
Fllll... derby lilted
~way to Frld~y's
•• Yarllroafb wbo was lilteD to
IS - . ........................... - ...........
................................
Tbe Forked~ Run Sponamu
..... All :45 ~die unit went
J ·~··'·1·
baach JMirly•
. ID New Lima Raid f« Kyle R•· Oub wiD hold ill third - - fllhs
inl cled!y May 22 l'rozn g a.m. so 1
. . . . . . . aiD . . . so Jlnl..
..

-~Area

WIIJ
l7ld ineffic:icll·
c:iea . . . . bl could undCinnine
lite lid P"'' I .
·
Sltipow11t0'1 dlim lb8l prublem

•

uua..

weathei and even cooler ,.,...,....

Tiie storms ltilled three pecple
in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas,
•nd left another three miuing, ·
includin' iln infalt SWept from her :
car seat by a ragin&amp; creek in Okla- :
homaCity.
•
High tempentures today were :
expected to reach the SO. and 60s
in New England, over pans of the
Rocties and the cenrral Plains; the .
90s and more than 100 in Soudll'ln ·
California and the Desen South- :
west; and in the 70s and 80s else- :
where in the Lower 48 stales.
The high temperature for the :
nation Siinday was 101 de~ in •
Monrovia. Calif.

·

'i.

;e ... ss

•:t::
C.,

I

7

wadd •uket, it h11lp1 th11 U.S.
iliaws DI1•Uy,.and il eapecially
. . . IKRP"i•.s,"
·.
~•• die maritime ,UOUUOUJ
.......-. says
it's jilt fiP'i"' for some crumbs.
'lkJ poisl OUl dllt the~ pef·
aw Ins only applied so 4 percat f1l die commoditiea t!Jat the
U.S. aJric:ultural community
,eapJdld lilt year, while much of
die adler 96 percent 'll(ent out on
foreip-fllued vessels at lower .
. . . . And die industry blames its
, . . ftiCe?lt priee bites on greedy
.Rusiu 11:11trepreneurs who are
jP
up COlli iD .Russian poru.
Faoma Praident Buab warned
OW.. af just sucll a 1ce1111io in a

JG Asldenoa awd Mlc•ael
l'iwldw are writen ror Uliited

from deadly weekend storms that
inclUded romadoes and flooding. .

Araull tile ,••
niD and thlllldensonns
80s.
po .
the aoutbem PlaiDs and
The cloud cover will persist · the lower Mississippi Valley arty
over the state into midweek with today, giving resideots no break
the front likdy stalling·out ~Mr She

u

-··-port. .

Ohio Valley. This will lead to a
COIID•atioll of die t1ftal for wet

Three killed,
• •
one mzsszng
in explosion

Nal Bewtorr II eatloaal!y
1 w 1d •tllorlty oa tlse Flnt
A• 7 1 I ... die rest of llle
et-.lwidt*=,..... .. ~- 1a fllllipb nd a writer for .
: : ' · 1.....,., 6is .ay taD) New ; ,,... Eltterpriae Aaocla~
e• .d27'....., "did• ...._
'
pvc die j.y a sis&amp;lc a
wiiJ it
'

....

I•

•IColumbus!81"

Government's role in.'free market'
1.6 million people who held
defense-related manufacturing jobs
represented about 9 peroent of SOSil
manufac?uring employmptt).

PA.

IND.'

I •

The hot topic on the political
horizoh is national health care. The
, almost Invisible debate concerns
industrial policy, or more pccisely,
. whelher a new one is needed. The
second, though currently subdued, .
is at least as .important as the first
"New" is the operadve word.
Defense spending was America's
industrial policy in military drag
for most of the Cold War. Now, ·
with the eigbt-)'CII' boom fueled by
the S1.2 trillion Reagan military
. buildup a distant memory, she
D8uon faces 10111etbin eerily akin

•

" , !Mansfield !a1•

cial sold ua. '1t comes down to
DfiODie fiabring 0\'i:r the share of a
iediimllllblidy. The f1r111ers Wlllt a
subsidy to hell! them sell their
. poduc:ts in fore1gn markers. And
~ awitime indusuy says, 'If
yoa'n: JOiiiiSO do ?bat. we want at
bit Jllll or the benefit - ship it :
oo U:S. wuels "'
Kid: Miller, diieclor of inlrma- ·
lilllll 08!1015 It the North Arner· :
icu fxpc;n Grain Association, .

chawlloaw"t..,, .. . ,
atPon1eJ leam, • die II7IF SPJS. lllllillly . ,........,;111 sbis JeiiSI8"
"YoaJCl .... ,_flY far.••
Pine is villi iD 1 nation clevolcct, at ,
· lac.~e-rllat.J.U:e" I D
ciled. lite I r
law)CI "did iOl
inforll die Jily . . ptiri
lied
no crimiUI mZOiy, Ud beew
steadily t• ; C. lied • s..orable •i!ia&amp;J •-d.ltad beilll a
qular •' ••'· 1111 lled ,CIOCIJI-

bring the clouds back to Ohio
.tonight and the potential fot l'llin.
Sc.aaaed thunde.!ssorms Ire poaible on Tuesday but mucb of the
state will remain dry.
However, the chances of rain
will increase on Wednesday and
Thursday.
.
S1iptly cooler lt.mpeaiMmea are
on tap f9r Tuesday, with highs
ranging from the mid-70s to low

IToledol7~ I

ICIDIIIy dlllge.

etter t~. pres1 ent on executions

Congressman John Lewis, D- .instance, has been a ?raditional C.:Ga., was a victim of more violence tor in determining whQ actually
a key figure in the civil rights gets executed. Lewis circa a 1990
movement_ than most other peo- study by the di............&amp;,_ G-'-•
pie could have survived. The beat..,.,....~...... .,.,....,
ings were inflicted by mobs, but
J\T
,#
since local and state police often
I~ af
did not intervene, it col!ld be said
·
dial Lewis also suffered from vio- Accountinf Office that ''found a
lence approved by thesrate.
pattern o evidence indicating
Last year, Lewis was an enthusi- racial disparities in the charging
astic and influential supporter of and impoSition of death sentences
Bill Clintofromn.~~yhas,the con- nauin.sonta.~~ coufts throughout the
gressman
~-..wntten
a letter io Clinton "concerning
Lewis also urged the president
your administration's position on -in lhc face of insasiable artemprs
the death penalty" - she ultimate ·in Co_ngress and by the chief~
· violence by the state.
to eviSCerste habeas corpus to
"While the rest of the world is fmnly reject" such anacb. "The
movin$ away from ~Jill a form , ~Jt~Mof ~.so a~ rev!ew
of pumshment," said te+Jis, •'cap-· 'ftltl'lideral eonsdl!dlooaJ clanns m a
ita! punishment is becoming more f~ c~ should not be corns
entrenched in sQme parts of ·our promised. ·
country."
~is nothing~ the leU« that
It is highly unlikely that the · deals wtth the morality of the lll2t
president will be conver~ed b.Y as a.ltiller. A br!ef sentence~
Lewis to the point of declaring hiS caution the ~eaident that capi?al
opposition to capital punishmenL It punishment risks terrible errors.''
would be hazardous politically, and Yet, a 1989 Gallup Poll showed
besides, as enemor of Arkansas, that 79 percent of those surveyed
Clinton bas
an· executioner at were more concerned abous aimitimes, and his soul does not seem .nals being ?reated roo aoftly by the
to have been notably seared in the justice system than they were 1lbont
process.
the violation or dle.criminals' conJohn Lewis, however, ho~ to stitutional rights. That percentaae
'capture the president's attenbon in has probably risen 'since theR,espeother ways. He points out.in the let- ciatly concerning those on death
ter that racial discrimination, for row.

By Tile Auodeted Preis

An approaching cold front will

MPCH.

vessela will

that

*

Most of state will reinain dry until Wednesday

Tuesday. May 11

em~ =-==:O';.:C': i:'i=tr::~::F~;t:
o.s. commodiu'es to the

Form~r

·

'

.Espy g·ets Russfan .aid package shipshape
r.:.
:s
nle
u.s.
a.
By Jack Anderson

WASHINGTON - Agriculture
fraclioll of die~ ....
Secretary Mike Espy may have
•
' •lie . .
li!ife •
'af•
••
u
saved President Clinton's $1.6 biJ.
Pomeroy, Ohio
boa.
•
· DBVOTED TO THE INTEllESTS OF 11Ut JOJQ&amp;.IIASON AREA · lion Russian aid pickage recently
by engaging in some Cold WarBllbJ - -..._ dtc.ApiculbR ~s
COIIId J.J die
stylebrinkmimship. .
Espy ·w.s I~ in a sense twoCOIIIIIIOitilie r.o. fiRip tties dial olfu Iowa pN:a.. Of
hour meeting with several 2llp Rus•
..
sian officials, including Deputy expense of shb Russian people. coune, dill -wile •.,esy to
Prime Minister Alexander Shokhin. Both government and indussry offi- ~f!.";•*s. sea .._. COUWidy
ROBERT L. WINGETT
for a 91 ,
s., .....,.
The officials had been hinting for cials agree. ~t the aid package
Publisher
days that they mjgbtlbandon a cor- · pays belt)' dividends to l'armcrs and
af
nerstone
of
the
cfinton-Yeltsin
deal
.
shippers
alike,
who
themselves
zhil
raa:r:Jr!
'
r-iiJ
,._._
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
-$700 million jn food aid Late in have engaged in an unseemly
"If. - so.,_ a.
General Manager
Assistant Puhllsher/Conlroller
the meeting, &amp;py one-upped them. scramble for a piece of the pie.
1111111111
bJ 1MJ8c A i"I've got a plane to catch,"
The two induatries have been C8ll ...... .;;-• ...., F b i'MI
LETillRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
Espy said, and headed for the door. fighting over a U.S. law rcquirilig Americ:aa ~. too,"
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be ·Signed with name,
A. D N! D-S.D~
The Russians responded quick- that 75 percent of food aid be Sell, TIM
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters Will he published. Letters
ly, imploring Espy to return to the shipped on American-flagecl - . told ou •nociiiC Ed Bury.
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
negotiating table, according to one sets. Since AmeriCIII vessels an: ''We'n:IIIGKeu• 7 .......
.
"..
source close to the talks. The show- currently c1wJ1in1 fR:ight r112a lblll
down paved the way for the two are two to three tim,cs the wo!ld
nations to forge a oompoorlse over. market level, the gram oomparues
•· ...a . . far..,..fll
far die
the next few days.
supplying the commodipjes for this reqllft•
Rs · •faatlk
Wbat nearly derailed this key aid projp1lm W!ft lobbying for the ·die o
wljpjpe •lie •
f wild,.
.. foreign policy initilltive was literal- · "cargo preference" law to be up to die -~ dtal foni ..
ly "made in America." The RIIS- waived.
Y' 71 h _ . . S'IJ
sians thought the aid package was
That would have enabled. the fl.qp:4
c:biiJc. ..... - u.ilal s $
~
By JOHN NOLAN
pandering to American agricultore federal government to let foreap· bas ~~teed so pay dtB diffa e
Allocillled Press Writer
and maritime. inserests· at the · flagged vessels ship the~lla .. _ _ die r.-:~,__. .CINCINNATI - A former congressional candidate says state elec_.,.._
-......--tions offiCials ingored his complaint dial a fellow Republican misrepre- . - - - - - - - - - _ : __ __:_ _ _ _ _~......:.-----:~~::~~~~:~::;--,
sented the positions of other GOP candidateS. .
.
. . .
-• ~
Bob Dorsey filed a complaint with the Ohio ~ec.uons C~IDISSion m
March He accused Rob Portman of falsely Slating m teleV181on ads that
~ was the only candidate who would not cut Social Security beJIC:
fits.
GOP
• Portm8n beat Dorsey and five' other candidates in the March 16 .
Primary to fill the congressional seat vacated when Republican Willu
GradiQI resigned. Portman, a former Gradisdn aide and Busb lidminis?ration lawyer then won the special election Tuesday to succeed Gradisoli.
•'He ~an) stated that he was the only candidate which had not, or
would not, cur Social Security," said Dorsey, who added dial no candidate in lhe primary had said he. would cut iL
"I called it to his atrention in person tlee limes."
. . .
Dorsey said he mailed his complaint to the elections commiSSion m
Columbus after Portman did nothing to conect the claim.
"It was an outright raJsebood, there's no doubt abQut that," Dorsey
said
'
He said he received the elections commission's response the day lfler
the primary. The oommission told Dorsey it needed more information Portman's address - and that the comp?aint ~ly should have been
sent to She Federal Election Commission because' congressional candidates were considered federal candidates.
"My interpretation was that they didn't really want to bother with it,"
Dorsey said. He droPPed the complaint because the election was over, he
_
saidPortman said he directed his criticism on ·the Social ~ty issue to
GOP primary candidates Jay Buchert and Bob McEwen because they
were advertising on television lilce Portman. McEwen and Buchert both
said they would not cut Social Security if elecsed.
"The commercial dealt with Mr. McEwen and Mr. Buchert. Mr.
Dorsey wasn't on television. The debate was between those three," Portman Sjdesman Barry Bennett said Thursday. "I think that spot only ran.
•
six or seven days.
. "I'm~ if he didn't think that's a =~nse," Benneu said or
s
·

111 Court Street

The Dally Sentinel Page

Pag1 2 The O.lly -1ne1 ·
~ MddllpOI't, Ohio
llondly,llllly 10, 1813

•

s·m...

..........-. . . ,_. ,..,__. . . . ...1!5

3

aa••

... Rolli-..

SOutham
to

�\

--

~sports

Th~

MOnday, lily 10,1993

Daily Sentinel

B1 betlling Cincinntlli 6-3,

Monday, May 10,1993
Page 4

ln ·th,e NBAplllyoffs,

.Ho~:~ston gains split in four-game series

.

i

Sco•·eboat·d
Mi1W111be (Na..,.. Oo2) u New Y..t
(M. W'oal-0~7:30p...
·
801toa (Clcateu 4-2) al Baltimore

(Mdlooold2--3),1:3!p.m.
Deue1.1 (&lt;kllllck10a 0..0) at T011111to

NATIONAL LEAGUE

l'bia-.. . . . .

-DI•Ioloo

y...,

WLPa.GI
22 1 .'IS9

Monaal ................ 16

(Sioalom,.O 3-3), 7:3!1 p.m.
Chielao (Stieb 1-0) at Suttle (R..

14 .533

6.5

J-4'2).10:0Sp.aL
Teu• (Roae:n 3·1) a&amp; Oatl•ncl (B.

St.I.aW. ...........:.... 15 I! .!00
C!Uu,.o. ................. 14 15 .413
F1orido ................... !. 16 .461
New Yodt .............. jO II .3!1

1.5

Wlll2--1), 10:05_p.m.

I
1.5

... (-4-1~)0:0! p.m.

l'llllbur&amp;b ............. .l5 14 .517

1

11 .5

w...-.JM...._
SanFnooiocO ........ l9 11

Howtm ................. 11
• Allmto ............... ,... 11
San Diet• .............. 13
LooAn- ...........13
CINCINNAn ....... ll
COI.,.do .......... ...... IO

.613
.600
.loll
.441
:433
.&lt;00
.333

12
ll
16

11

II
211

.5
2
5
l.!
6.l
1.5

u·

ceo Cfoaoobley l-0) U Calif...

- • NBA playoff~ • Sa!UrUy' s
ftnt-roulld ICOI'el
L.A. Cippoa 10. """-

-14.

rioo 3-1

Saaday'IIICOI'II

f'ln&amp;..--

Yak 1

auo.ao··· s.. Di... 6

~;;:~:s= ~ 1, 11 in·

~ i ll~;-~.; i: ·~~-~
l'lllobwah 10, Mmbal 9, 10 U.W.,.

CLEVELAND 99, Nc• Jorse)' 19,

C1J!VEUN1) ......... 3-2

- . , 112. 1...11. LU.s I04 (01),

PboaiLa . . . . . . 3-2

c........ ....w~u..

~••York

Sunday's ~eorea

~atS=.m..

w-...,

3

Oladoae at New Yolk, I p.m.
otSAIIIo, !0:30p.m.

Tonight's pmn
San Dieso (f1ylor 0.1) at CINCIN ~
NA11 (Bm~a._Z-2), 7:35p.m.

It PhilldWphi•

Florida (Bowen 2- 3) at New York

(Sabedup 2-3), 1:40 p.m.
1..o1 AnJclca (.Aaaao 2-2) at Oticaao

(llibbonl 2-2), I : ~ p.m.
Allanu (Moddu• 2--3) II-.., (Por1Upl 3-2), 8:05 p.m.
S.an Frtnciaeo (Wiltan 0-2) It Col·
ondo (Rcynolo 1-1}, 9:«\i p.m.

.

Tuesday's gamn

,........,

W!VE1AND ll.Oii.cqo, l_p.m.

s. Aatcaioat..Phocai&amp;,
,_, 10:30 p.m.
Pboenil. It SUI. Antt.io. I p.m.
11 a..EVPl.AN'D, 3:30p.m.
Sciulli •llcJulka. 'p.m.

- • NHL playoffs • SaturUy'IICOI'H
N.Y. IIlmdat 6, PIU.bwlh l , ocrioo

L01 Ansel" (R . Manincz 2· 3)

cmc.ao(Cutillo 0-1), 3:20 p.rn.
FlOrida (AqWlo 2-1 ) a -

1l

()lll1

~).B5 p.m .

San Die&amp;o (Whitc.hunt 0-0)

CINCINNATI (Belclloo 1·3),1:3! p.m.

1t

Pitubllflh (Quo 1·2) at ft'tilldclphia
(Riven 1·2}, 7:35p.m.
Atl anta (Smaltz 3· 3) at Hou11oa

~ed2--2-

Ma!a.l 4, Bu!!alo 3

wm....-41-0

.

' San franciaOI) (S"wift. J..l) at Cokndo
(Niod l-3), 9:0S p.m.

(011. Mona.!

Suaday'a~eora

Tororlo 4, St. l..ouill, toriel tied 2.-2
Vaacouver 7, LIN Anaele~' 1, lerlu
tiod :Z·l

This 1reek's alate

(Dnbdt 3·3), 1:05 p.m.
.
New Ycd. (Hillmm 0..0) at St Louia

&lt;"""""• 1·1), &amp;:3! p.m.

......,

Naw Yodl: •tQutaae.l p.m.

auc..,

Top draft pick Copeland sucking
wind in Bengals' mini-camp

Too!PI

N.Y. !mndoonl-toarp, 7:30p.m.

T_..J

St. LouiJ a&amp; Taron&amp;o, 7:30p.m.
10:30 p.m.

v-.
w_,

t..a kploo •

n-

Pitl&lt;lup u N.Y. laWwlon, 1:30p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
J:uler'n DlwW.
Ttar11
W L Ptl.
Dcuvit. .................. .J7 12 ·' "
New Yod: ............. .17 1l .567
Dmtm.................... l7 14 .S41
Torunto .................. l6 J5 .516
Mihnu.kee ............ .l3
.464
B altimcn . ~ ............ .l2 17 .41-4
CJ.£VEI..AND._.:.. .'I2 19 .317

J'

Cl

..S
1
2
3.5
S
6

w..... ~~~ow..

ODcaao.......-...••.•.... 11 11
Califomia ............... 17 11

Texu ..................... 16
Seattle .................... l6
Kanau Cily ........... 12
Mlnnclo&amp;a .............. l2

12
15
11
17

.621
.IJ11
.171
.516
.414
.414
.310

10 11
Soturday'a...,....

o.JWnd .._. .............

BaltimOIIII 6, TGra!IO 3

MilwMoc 6, 80ft01'1 3
To" .It JCen.u City, ppd., ntia
~F ~ ~~7

Now Yod&lt; I~ Doloait I, 11 .......
Selale 7, M"
11 2
()U1and 6_ C•ti'tmia 2

..5
1.5
3
6
'
7

Toronto tt St. Louit, 1:30 p.m.
YeCIII'ta' at l.al Anp, 10:30 p.m.

.._,

N.Y. IIlanden•Pituburab. 7:30p.m..,
Sallllda

if _ , .

SL LoW 1t TOI'OIIO, ~:JO p.m .• it nee_,.
if
Lot AnJdelll Vanc:ouver, Ap.m.,

-uy
- • Transactions • Blleball

HEW

.

A-'-·
YORIC YANKI!I!S : Placed

s•ble6
.... 1iA
- Recalled.
piodoor. ... lbo 15-&lt;la, ...
ANJy c..a., pilch«..
from Cohnntuu of the Jawm•don1l

~ONIO BUJE JAYS: Plaoed lad&lt;

Moail, pi.u:b•, • dlo 1S-4•J diaable4
u.t rmoactive. to Mar 2. Activated. Al
Lob.r, piu:ber, - 1ho 15-day dioabled
!ill.

Slillda£,.-. 2
Now Yodl
I I.
m4, T...-o:J

Belti

Mil-4.-0

OojcoF 6, QZ\IIIU,N1)!

S..ald, I li

4

T-:z.-0., 16, 10'-"Calif-7, ~
--

'

.

o;

eon..

HAIVAltD: Armnttd 1111 ........ ~
tiM tl Joe lledio,ioGcblll
QwlllhciDicllbtl993....._
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baollolao!IIO_ ... _ .......
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t

·t

Mourning, who made 7 of 12
shotS from the field and 7 or 9 free
Utrows in the first half, wiiS 3 of 9
with no free throws in the ·second
half. Nine of his 13 rebounds came
In the first half.
After Charlotte took a 73-63
lead in the dtird quarter, New York
rallied with 13 CODJCCulive points,
includin&amp; a three-pointer l1Jid 18fOOiel by "rlup point guard Greg
Anthony. After Tony Bennett's
tbree-pomter gave Charlotte.an 8078 lead. Anthony tied it with another jumper with 20 seconds left in
the third period. .
Then the Knicks outscored the
Hornets 31-15 in thefmal quarter.

CaYIIIIers 99, Nets i9
Cleveland earned its fourth
playoff meecing with Chicago since
1988, eliminating New Jersey
behind Brad Daugherty's 24 poin~
and team playoff record 20
rebounds.
Terrell Brandon re~laced_ inef.- 1.
feclive starter ~Price mid'(,ay,r
)_
through 1he firs! quarter anil
brought die cavaliers to life. scoring 10 points .00 helping his teammates double-team Nets star Derrick Coleman. develand trailed by
two when Price left and led 47-38
when he returned at the start of the
second half.
Cleveland' s starlets took over
frQm there, ~ by Daugheny and
Larry Nance, who !lid 20 points
and 12 rebounds. Price, a 37 per- ·
cent shooter in the fllSl four games
· of the series, scored 16 second-half
points.
"We were never overeonfJdent
playinF, New Jersey," Daugheny
said. 'In this locker room, we
knew they're capable. They were
one of six teams to beat us here
during the regular season. We
knew they were going to be difficult"

•

Most valuable field performers ,
were Fle.tcher Bl'OOkS of Allegheny, who won the men's shot put ·
and was second in the discus and
fourth in the javelin, and Kindling,
who placed founh in the long jwnp
besides
winning
.
. a pair of events.
Allegheny ' s men had 124 .
points, followed by Case Western, :
104; Ohio Wesleyan, 84; Wooster,
74; Earlham, 60; Dc:niscJn, 58; Wittenberg, SS and Kenyon and Oberlin, 14 apiece.
The Gators led the women •s
standings With I 41 points, followed
by Wooster, 122; Ohio Wesleyan,
98; Kenyon, 46; Case Wesrem, 44;
Denison, 42; Wittenberg, 41; Oberlin, 14 and Earlham, 10.

DOWliNG CHILDS
MULLIN MUSSER

INSUUNCE

Ill Second St., POIIII'OJ

YOUR IIDEPIIDEII
· IIIIlS SIIVIII
SIICI1868 .

DOMINO'S PIZZI
111 w. lAIII snmeftOMEIOY

992·2124

•

.

PICIUP • DELIYIIY

Southern, Cadiz split ~oubleheader
after Tornadoes blank Eastern

lint imlilc l11d f01 a load performance rn. their Sllrtin&amp; pildler
and IUlwd it into a6-3 viclory over
.· die On+ i•MWiRcdsaoSIIDday.
Rc:da rookie Tim Pugb (2.3)
Saturday afternoon, the South-' but its runner reached on an error.
Southern took a I~ lead in the
beca•e the latest victim .o f the em Tornadoes split a day-long dou- Two other errors and three singles second when Kyle Wickline doubled, two SHS bauers grounded out
Astros' early outhursL Houston bl•-'"-~- with Class AA (division brought home the runs. .
iiiiJ&amp;IDI tbo CiDcinlllli suner un'ino~ Cadiz as Southern won
Southern scored a single run in to advance Wickline, then Joey
Hensler reached on an error to
fOI' aiDe
end six JUDI ill five the ftrst game 4-3 and Cadiz the the sixth, lesving the bases loaded.
i•inp. wiJile AJirol Slarter Pete nightcap 6-4.
SHS scored a single' in the. sev- score Wickline.
The. game remained close until
Hamin (3-l)..atowed tiRe runs
The game was a homecoming of enth, falling shon oo a 6-4 score. •
Southern bitters were Jones, the bottom of the fifth , when
..a 1i1t 11i1s iD - iminp, llrik· sorts for Cadiz mentor Miice Miller,
iD&amp;Asoca1!-, did m
· ~---'-jl'' 12_1 formerlr of Middleport and. a Williams, Dill, Northup and Roben Soutbern built its lead to 4~.
ing three runs off Coates. Roben
-~
.,....,..
Meigs High sw in high school
Reiber.
victory over the R.c:da, ouslon
Southern (12-6) claimed the fii'St
Nonbup, with relief from Eric Kimes led off with a single, BiDy
scored five ruas oa five bits Ill its tilt, taking a 1-0 lead in the first Jones suffered the loss, and Cass Jones singled and Williams delivlint • • l11d coas'ed the rest of when Ryan Williams wallted1stole Cleland was the catcher. Wood- ered an RBI single. Jeremy
die way.
·
second l11d came home on ail RBI waid picked up the win.
• Northup wallted 10 load the bases,
••h lnnhd '""- a_,_ from the
Jeremy Dill bit a sacrifice fly, then
-....,. ·-~
sin~':; Kyle Wickline.
· · lanln&amp; tetats-rll'lt game
· nig,ht before, cuqJt they didn't bit
·
· too1c a 2-llead when with Cadiz: 020-001~ =3-6-2
Wickline doubled home another.
The
double was Wicldine's second
_,. 1lomc ruas.." Cincinnali man- two outs, both strikeouts registered Southern: 100.030-x = 4-S-2
..-Toavl'm:znid. "laueqlhlt by Jeremy Dill, Bill Tweedy Inning tetall serond game
of the n!!lhL
Leadtng 4-0, Souahern added
is load-"
walked, Hennis delivered an RBI Cadiz: 010-104:0 . 6-7-1
After • hiD&amp; his Reds win tbo double to lie the score at 1-1 and Southern: 000-021-1 • 4-6-2
even more inaurance inthe sixth as
Jane and Williams delivered home
~ (WO pmes ~ f~-game Coale had an RBI single.
BACK TO FIRST - Houstoa's Lu Gwn'a . . . It I1Mk ..
_P m:z- bis p~ Iliff
The pme remained quite combig blows to score three more SHS
Toraadoes blank Eactes
nrst b~~e 011 his stomach ahead ot tile tit bJ CI...W u nr. '-eo V'C'J•tmJ for 18 ~- m the last petilive until the fith inning when
Setting the srage .for Tuesday's runs. Southern went on to win 7~. .
man RaDcly MllUpa durin&amp; SUDdaJ's NMioeall rape..- .-der
lWO JI1D1" After WIWJC line m . Southern took a 4-2 lead, turning
Southern hitters were Billy
sectional tournament rematch, the
the first four pmes 011 the road the tables on the momentem esta15- Southern Tornadoes rolled to a 7~ Jones with a double and single,
the Astrod0111e, wltere the Astr01 6-3 to ean a lpllt hi 6e lawgame weekead &amp;eries. (AP)
- trip. IIIey .-..,-,. 1 • 3-3.·
lished eartier by Cadiz. Billy Jones shut-out victory over the Eastern Wickline two doubles and a single,
Joe ~~ tw1HU11 bomer and' sinsled to stan the frame, Stole sec- Eagles Friday evening in Racine.
Williams two singles and singles
Robedo Kdly's solo shot account- ond, the after a force oui and 6-3
each
by Northup, Reiber and
Ryan Williams, a sophomore
edforc;.• i•wi'snms.
put out Northup reache4 via an hurler for Mick Winebrenner' s Kimes.
.
.- _. ;.1,t;.
Jeff Bagwell, the Astros' firs! error to' score .Jones and Wicldine TOrnadoes, posled the win, scatterEastern hitters were Pat New-·•11t\ ''·
baseman. weat 8 for 14 for the· did the same to score Northup.
ing four bits on Ibis tour, strildng land, Jared Ridenour, Robert Reed ··• '.
s:ties wi1b liRe borDe 11111$111 push
Both balls were described as ou1 ll and walking four: Billy and Matt Bowen.
llil ballin&amp; ~vera&amp;~ to .34~. ~e "shots• by SHS mentor Mick Jones was the catcher. . ·
Southern is idle tonight, then
IJIIIb -"'llbct!e r hs m Ylt- Winebmmcr.
Joey Coates suffered the loss hosts Eastern (2-12) in the sectionCHICAGO (AP)- Don't tallt order, as Sunday's win proved. tulllyewayaffCIIIive• I I"'·
Later, Andy Fields singled to with relief from 'David Koenig in al Tuesday in Racine.
to ahe Chicago White Sox about Bell, the clenaup bitter, &amp;ot die
A Me lip C!lallial:r 011 a roll, clrive home Wickline.
the seventh. They copmbined for lnnlngtolals
juiced-up baseballs ~ thinned-out winning bit and No. S biller RoiJia ltc Imd a ~-ilmiDI broken-bat
In the sixth Cadiz sc~ a sin- two strikeouts and one wallt, while Eastern: 000-000-0 . 0-4-2
pitching rotations. They'd prefer Venwra drove in tbreenms.
sin&amp;le dill ~ ~!'ely in front llle run, but SHS and Dill held on giving up I0 EHS hits.
•
Soutbern: 010-033-x "' 7-10-l
"We've been pleying preuy C!lleftfielderJCeviiM*MD
lorthewin.
~ notl_ling taint their club's offen·
SIVe reVIVal.
well- we're starting to score
"He~bisllalandlliiiJl!l•
Dill fanned five and walked
That revival continued Sunday some
runs,' ' Venturi said. .,We •it. tbat happens when you re five while Coale suffered the loss.
as George BeD singled home Ozzie feel confHient enougb dill we c=- swiDgiaJS the bat well,'' PUgb said.
Southern bitters were Jones,
·
'1
·
GuiDen in the ninth inning to give come back and win liOiiiC pae&amp;. "Bqwell can burt you. He's a . W1lliams, Wickline, Fields and
~s, behind a ~ing pirch" in tho second when Newsome sinthe surging White Sox a 6-5 victory When we've got Joey llld Lance 11Ji1Bb Oil."
.
Kimes all with singles.
·
ing . ormance behind sophomore gled ind advanced to third on two
and a sweep of their three-game hitting the way they .are. and
Despiaedli:osNeii'IDhers..ntCline and Hennis each sipgled BreuNewsomedefestMiUer S-1 in passed balls . Newsome came;
series with th,e slumping Cleveland George gets goiug, that's good for ing widt the best Ibis,_-, Bagwell tWice, Tweedy doubled and Coale TVC baseball action Friday around to score on a ground out by
Indians.
our run production.
aemains ralistic: about his early sinsled for Cadiz.
· evening at Hemlock.
, ·
Welsh.
Critics of offensive powerhous"We just feel fortunlte to &amp;et si• •
Southern left the bases loaded
Newsome, a righthander, fued a · Meigs added two insurance runs.
es such as the Detroit Tigers have ~~here.~ three wins qlli• .
.,k's been~ or 1balc ~gs in lito sixth inning of the nighrcap, brilliant twll'hitter, suiking out IS in the in the sixth and seventh
speculated that baseballs have been u"""' ~ys
wllere I 818 JCUDI&amp; decca! pliCh- dropping a 6-4 decision.
falcon hitters and walking only innings to close out the scoring.
"juiced up" this season to create
Guillen"opened the ninlb inlliD&amp; es.." Bqwe1l sUd. "I have been
C3dii took a 1~ lead in the sec- one. He. struck out the s1de three The only other Miller base bit off
more offense.
with a bloop single to Ie£t off bittilillle llall wdl, bull r.ve ~~so · ond, then advanced to 2-0 in the: times and chsllted up two strike out of Newsome came in the third off
There ' s also the theory that reliever Derek Lilliquist (1-1). bcclllac:kJ. WIJca you're bittin&amp; founh. Southern lied the score in in two other innings.
the bat of Cook.
.
National League expansion has Cora sacrificed. and Guillea lorJk lib I lll.ve been this V'Wllll you the fifth, but with the go-ahead
Meigs jwnped out-on top 1~ in
Mike "Abby" Welsh led Meigs
deJ?leted pitching staffs at the third when fim b r m• Pial Sar-· '-veiOpt-IM Is"
runs on the base paths, a costly the top of th'e first when Mike at the plate with a single,. double
maJ~-league level.
reniQ bciolled JobnDI'sp•• P..
Tltc aest of die Allrol' linenp double-play ended the rally.
Welsh singles and later came and a triple. Newsome added two
But don't tell that to lbe White
After Frank~ was wa1b:d ' bas joined Bqwell in posting
David Smith led off with a around to score on an error by the singles, while Pullins and Billy
Sox, who after a slow start that saw inten1ionally, Eric 1'1-*iipla:ed ,.y "we-""'stbeycouldlllnl- walit, Jeremy Hill reached on a Falcon left fielder on a ball hit by Glaze added a single .each. Frey
them check in with the lowest club Lilliquist and BeD a"""' 10 cae ly r.ve i p....t • this poinllasl fielder's choice in which no put Jim Pullins. { .
.
.. was the losing pircher for MiDer.
batting avera1e in the American to msko I winner mrliever Scalt a a • ,
outs wae msdc•.Joaes had an RBI
Mill&lt;:r scoi:ed in the bottom of Inning totals
· I...e8gue, have raised that mart bet- Rac!inslcy (2~).
Houstoa has a team-battiag single. williams had an RBI single: the fi'r.sl livheil Cook led off ahe ' Meigs: I Hi-002-t ,; 5· 7-0
tenhan 30 points io its current
Chicago won ill founb sani&amp;lll a w C!l m Ibis,_. ana•ed to lie the score, then SHS hit into inning wah the only walk from Miller: 100-000-0 = 1·2·2
.273.
. game and lOth in its last 12. The 101 m Jl .224 • this poinle ,_- the double play.
Newsome. He later scored on on a
WP - Newsome
"I don't think the baseball is loss was Clevc:lllld's founb
aao- 'l1le adler iatpnmd numbers
Cadiz had a big four run rally in _base hit by Sexton.
.
LP- Frey
juiced up at all," outfielder EDis and sixtb inaaowoa dlesmd.
owudlr: lint 30 JI1D1" oldie ,ar the sixth. Cadiz had a strike out, .
The Marauders took a 2-1 lesd
.,
• Burks satd. ''They said that back in
"Our defeue
hurtMite
111 allpme."
....60
30cia
flwa
111 42,
14. aD
153wiJile
nlilll
;;,;;;;.;;;;.;;~--------------------------i'
'87 too, when there were a lot of Cleveland
JIIIIIIICI'
ll'a!'!: ;.
10 84
11'1 10
homers bit. But 'then things went said. ''There wae plays we&lt;!!!-_ ...,..;iag srieocita from '223 to
pretty much back to ~al.
have mademsdcalld ~:t becl1~ 142.
.
'·'We got off to a rocky stan errors we
• m" I c.....,..
As a RSi11t. ·Houtoa is 18-12
early. Maybe it was because of the m111111d 10 on.
..t a half p.e - C!l first place:,
(cold) weather. But lately we've
"We came into the season • 7 • C!l me 1
off 1be JIICC •
gotten it going. Joey Cora and knowing we had to i.mprpve Q!!L as • Allnll- • die- lime
Lance Johnson
have
been the table- defense and we have:~ but our -~· willla 13-1711:1C01d.
,.
.
.
1
seuers .
defense beat us today. Tbcll: pys
• we•.,. pt some pop ia. the
Cora, who has taken over the need ·to W8ldl the bill 1111 tbo way 1ioCI1p Ibis year, •• 11ou1011 outleadoff spot for the injured Tim into their !!love.
fielder Eric .&amp;•IMity rid. '.' If we
Raines, has scored 12 runs in his'
"It's JUSt basic, fundantental. -•••i«dlelinclbolslikewe
-....
.....,
last 12 games. Overall, he has defense."
Trailing
5-4,
theln-liedtbo
ltnebla,
weclaa'I_.IDrelyOD scored or driven in 34 of the team's
game
in
the
eighth
011
GleaeiiCII
ltiUiaJ
Ito•
mas. We've been
14 I runs (24 pereent).
HiD's
pinch-bit
homer
off
Radiuawiapc
•
bllsiCII
~ ~.'.'
Raines, out with a tom ligament
Hu •
..-. na• ..,.,.,... IS
in his right thumb, bas been swing- stcy.
10~--~
Chicago's Kirk McCukill
~,. IWIJIMIIilPillwiDcoaing a·bat and is anxious to return.
There's only one problem for him. · allowcd four nms l11d ejpl bils in tia•.
'n~ sttiqinl oar •its.
•'These guys are billing so weD, six in':!,2t•· Cir ·•elana•s Mark • 111.... wlllllwe 4bt't bit home
I don't know if I can fmd my way Clark,
·ng ~ .:1 fii'SI -*' si..:e raaa Md 1111.1 is ~ good siga,"
April 22, jaw- JP five 1111111 in four !fuM: Slid.
back into the lineup," he said.
The White Sox production has innings.
not been limited to the top of the

m:

to

Mei"gs hands MI"IIer 5-lloss

••CI'I

I
I

We

Baseball won't gain
up.-front TV rights pact
'By JIM DONAGHY
most likely involving ES·PN, nrt;
NEW YORK (AP) - When the or USA Networt.
. owners get together in Chicago on . So instead of the nearly $14 ailThursday, some mighl ask just how lion a 'lear from netwodt TV .-1
much money they wiD. be rUing ' cable rights, each team could from baseball's new dea with get about $4-$5 million ~ if dill
ABC and NBC.
m~h.
Thai question is hard to answer
The problem·, ·~ least for lite
ev,en for the most experienced fii'St year, il for the front nllicaiO
accountants money can buy.
figure ou1 bow much _ , . IIIey
Under the last ~J!'CI'ment -; a have to '!"ork Yiitb. nis could
four-year, $1.()6 billion deal wtth mean 1 difference In liplq free
CBS -teams could count on spUt- qents ~~diem go.
.iing up $26S million each year.
The M1lwallkec Brewers. for
'That's more than $10 million per example, cunendy mate ODIJ $3
team not including cable and loc:ai million annually 1iom local TV .a
television rithtl.
more than $13 million ~ dloir
• But under the ~Cbae share of the curreat Nl• • cmannonnced Sa~y. ·
1, tOr lracts with CBS and ~-If ...
lbe first time, won't receive an Brewers' io1c $8 '!'m10JI
ppfront TV rights payment.
, . . frDn! rhat toW, it miata -cilia
! With the des!, reportedly a six· tradin&amp;IOIDe 0! their lliP-Piald
tear agreement, baseball and its
or letUnl otben 1leca •e
!*work' pu111e11 will fcnn I lepl·
IJ'IIIS.
rate venture that "will be I'OIPODsi·
The Brewers had to let free
ble for admlllllterin&amp; tbo product, agents Paul Molitor and Ckil
and f~ the mdeling l11d salea ol BOlio sip ellewbere llftllr ... 1e1pc buaball." San Diep1 son to keep the clab'•..:...M~'••l!-•
owner Ta w-.llld.
line with their *iuldll as
Neither baseball nor tbo ael· ·
Ono of tbo IC'Iulit»a .,...._
JIOfb - - I l l ...... It tbo aew . c.-diD help naP 'd venturo'SIIart•up COIU. Apd, il'l Ulell-lharinlr.=lbodtl&amp;
ancenaln· jlllt bow much money But ownen in moll
• ••
ascb un wW l1llke IMUllly from a 1101 COI1Yinced II
wmk.
1f1e dell, if
Ia lbe moantale, tllo '"OW""I...,.s
CBS hid $151 mil- wW t1ltll&amp; In CNc 1 • ca 11w h)
l,lon In net salea. If tho fl!are ID ~. 1110 1V J
rema1n1 lboul die -~.. h lblll
"nla Ia IH ,..,. of die
would ncelve ' - lha!t :tl20 mil- fultn," llid BatiSelfl,
D's
l,lon stann.: 1994 with the irJ illllCJIIM'l 1 · ..a-ot
JIIIIYIIM!r
Ill the lllliWGib. A die Brnon.
dlbla c1111
to 11o neaactaeo.t,

Minneso~

wins
twovs. OSU

~

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in tripleheader
~(AP)-~

I..awler- a- awo Md uved

poe

~ dne 10
tbo M•
~awootdno&amp;

a
over
Ollio St. s.-a, _...,..a. lint
Jillce in die Bit Tea. '
Ohio Saeae (33·14, lS-9 Bit
TCII) . .teddlr: day by 1' ..... f W
a 6-1 Yii:lary iD a pme dull was
•q t ded in tbe se'leeth iaainJ
s - bo ol~ '111Mpwe
die B~ 1010'11:~:•• of

fintplac:c•*c•..i.

B• dJo Oct' rb (37·13, 15-7)

-eacll·---~43 tD aeb • ( ..... lead bt tbo
, I'

lildl . . . . . . . . . . . . ._
5

paaa left. widl tile
Ooc!n'*1:JIIIIIll10=·
•&amp;.
or- ....
ot~-

&amp;!:ers

.111\COUIIY

back. Cincinnati reans home for a
seven-game homestand, opening·
with foitr penes against San Diego.

ChiS ox edge Indians
6-5 sweep series

Besides winning two events each, ·
Drayton anchored the first-place .
men's 1,600 relay team while
Chase was second in the women's
3,000.

$1 0''

early National Lague West ~w-

-:n:s.

"%a

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

a JOOd way to wi•!:;!~ames •
ScoreCIIIIy and pildl
• .
For die ICCaad IIDictu fame.
die Allnll JtOftld five nM m the

down. The Astros trail front-running San Francisco by a half game,
and the Breves are IW() games

scor-

the Rio Grande program in I 992
and guided the team to a 26-S sesson and its first outright cham pionship of the Mid-Ohio Conference
at 13-1, feels Winters is a vital
addition to his team.
"We felt that one of the areas we
needed to strengthen next ~ear. and
in the fulllre, was at the IM?st," be
explained. "I fecltJtat w1th Mea-.
gan's siU, abilitY to. run the floor,
and quickness at getting the shot
off inside, it's a tremendous plus
for us:
"With the signinf! of Mesgan,
we have solidified thiS position and
we feel very strongly about her
inside game," Smalley added. "I
feel the potential in fronl of her
wiD allow her to just get better during her college career.
"Meagan is a player who was
overlooked by a lot of schools, but
she is a player who is going to
mature and fit nicely into our style
of transition. Sbe'i a' hard worker
on and off the court, and we 'ro
very pleased to have her in the Rio
family," Smalley said.
The dau2hter of Buck and Judy
Winters o[London, Winters has
not yet chosen a
but said she
is lesning toward
lion.

c

Houston will host Atlanta

::&amp;.

CWRU's Medford wins 400IM
hurdles for fourth straight year

W!VE1AND II Cloia&amp;o, l p.m.
SaD Aznonia It PhaaDJ., 10:30 p.m.

Lot Anad• 6, San ~4

Atw.INrah (Walk 3-2)
(Jac;:boo 2-1), 7:3S p.JTL

_,

Till$ week's Illite

s..

Pbilodolphia 6, l.aWo l
Flmida ~. New Ya:k ..
s.. 01qo ! , Cbicoa• •
Pituburab 6, Montreal!li, 11 inninp
Atl.uu 11, Colnndo 1
Houlton 6, CINCINNATI

111, Chulat.'e 95, New

Yc.t-...m.t.o..

Ha&amp;UIOn 12. CNCINNA.ll l

game.''

Measan Winters, the all-time
leading basketball scorer and
rebounder in the hisllry of London
Higli School, bas chosen the Universily of Rio Grande and its
women's basketball program for
her
college career.
B1 STEPHAN NASSTROM
virus that causes-AIOS. He played .
"Rio
Grande is a small coDege,
in the NBA All·SW game that seaHELSINKI, Finland (AP) which
is
what I was Iooltinf for.~
The jeers turned to cheers for son, where he w·as named the
the
6-0
center
.said after a signing
Mag~ Johnson. . ·
.
MVP, and was a member of the
ceremony
attended
by her parents
The NBA career assist leader's gold medal-winning "Dream
and
Red
women
Coach
Dave Smallfirst pass in COIIlpelilive basketball Team" in the Barcelona Olympics
ey.
"It
bas
a
strong
women's
proin almost seven months was inter· six months later.
gram
and
I've
beard
a
lot
of
good
cepted by an obscure Finn.
Without Johnson, who arrived
Mag1c did score on an easy here only 24 hours before the things about Rio Grande."
Averaging 20 points and 10.9
layup a few minutes later, but then game, the· NBA squid beat the
per game as a senior at
rebounds
missed a three-point attempt and F"mnislt natiOnal team 120-108 FriLHS,
Winters
received All-Ohio
two free throws momentalalcr.
day at Twlru in western F"~land in
honorable
mention
and was named
That triggered boos from some the fllSl of the two-game selleS.
of the fans at Helsinki's hockey
The YMCA team, last year's to her All-District second team.
arena.
Finnish champions, was reinfon:ed She compiled the same postseason
Johnson probably didn't bear iL
with three national team players, honora as a junior, and was a mem·
He rinisbed with only two including former University of her of the league's second team in
points and one assist in the opening ·Kansas center Petta Markkanen, 1991.
For the four yearslhe'• been at
quaner, but responded wid! a speer and played much better. They led
I,.HS,
Winters recorded 985 ' points
1aeular perfonn~Q~:C in the second 63-56 at the half.
aiiCI
as
a senior had her highest sinhalf as a team of NBA vetersns .
The All Stars, with ·only two
gle
game
output at 39.
edged YMCA of Helsinki 119-JI7 players sliJI active in the NBAActive
in 4-H for the past 12
in an exhibition Sunday.
center Moses Malone of the Mil·
years,
Winters
was appointed to the
In tlie end, after Johnson had waukee Bucks and Kun Rambis of
Ohio
State
4-H
Fashion ·Review
scored 28 points and dished out the Sacramento Kings -now travBoard
in
1992.
seven assists, the fans were cheer- el to the Netherlands and Belgium
Smalley, who became coach of
ing and they mobbed the greatest f~ four games Ibis week. Johnson
guard in the game's bista'y.
is scheduled to play one game in
After all, the game itself was each country.
just a sideshow. Everybody's eyes
He insists the tour is not a stepwere oo Magic.
ping-stone to a comeback in the
"I fek great out there," Johnsonerf NBA.
.
said. "Evetytbing was wond ut
•:I'm not~ looldn forward
DELAWARE, Ohio .(AP) It was furi to play with my old to going back (to the ~BA),"
Matt
Medford of Case Western
teammates again."
Johnson said. "I'm not trying to do
Reserve
won the men's 400-meter
The rusli~s clearly showed in that."
intermediate
hurdles in S3 .83 Secthe beginning, but Johnson insisted . .But be doesn't mind playing
onds
Saturday
to became the first
he felt good.
·
exhibitions.
of a running
four-time
winner
"Same thing. I felt great,''
"Everybody's cslting and wants
the
North
·
c
oast Conferevent
at
Johnson said as he lefl for a late me to play all over the w~ld." be
track and field champimeal in his hotel, surrounded by said. "But l'djustlike.to go out for ence
sbi
.
00
bodyguards.
a week It a lime and lhst's about iL
AJf:jheny won the men's and
It was Johnson's first game
"I don'l want to make il too
:women
s teani crowns, defending
since deciding against a comeback long. I wan1 to spend more time _
titles
the
Gators also won last year.
with the Los Angeles Lakers after a with my family, But it's nice to
Allegheny's
Stanley Drayton
few preseason games last fall.
play with guys I've never played
in
the men's 100
was
victorious
Johnson, at age 34 the YOUDf!est with before. And it's also nice to
and
200
dashes·
for the third
player on the NBA team, retired sec countries I've never seen
year.
Also
becOming
threestraight
from the Lakers in November 1991 bef~."
lime
champions
were
Tim
Dwtbam
after announcing that he had the
of Denison in the mem's
steeplechase and Amy Yothers of
Ohio Wesleyan in the women's
discus. Defending titles they won last
year were Eric Winslow of
Allegheny in the men's javelin,
CINCINNATI (AP)- John lion any player bas to make."
Tina
Chase of Allegheny in the
Copeland lined up as a SWT« durCopeland looked good when .be
ing the Cincinnati Bengals' week- lined up against an offensive line- women's 10,000-meter run, Sheila
end mini-camp .;_ no surprise man. The Bengals say his ability to Gishn:cht of Ohio Wesley111 in the
there.
rush the passer and stop the run women's shot put, Claire Robers of
But there were some surprised , will make him a versatile addition Wooster in the women's 400 and
her teammate Shannon O'NeiD in
expres5lons when the Bengals put to the line.
the
women's IOO .'and 200. Krista
the defensive end from Alabama
"A 191 of what he did was very
Hicks
of Wooster, who won the
good,''
Shula
said.
''When
be
lines
through strenuous drills. Copeland
women's
I on~ jump, also Wll
was generally unimpressive In the up and puts his hand down with
NCAC
champion
in the eve11t In
40-ld dash, the weight room and those other defensive linemen, he
1990.
looks pretty dam good. But he has
hal -mile run.
·
Brsides Drayton and O'Neill,
.
The Bengals' top draft pick- room for irilprovemenL"
other
multiple event winners were
didn'tlook lite one.
"If he was a fmished product,
Marvin
Mackey of Wittenberg in
"I think be got caaght up in the I'd be nervous about it,"
the
men'
1 long jump and triple
cClebrity and being the No. l pick. Karmelowic:z said. ''This is a
jump,
Tina
CbaSC of Allegheny in
This has been a wake-up call for developmental lime. This is what
the
women's
5,000 and 10,000,
this is for. What we're doing is
him," coach Dave Sbula said.
of Kenyon in tho :
Kelley
Wilder
"I know I've JOlto be in beUcr identifying strengths ·and weakl,SOO
and 3,000 and
women's
shape," Copeland said. "There's nesses. If everybody showed up
Leslie
Kindling
of
Case Westem in
no question about iL When the lime like Superman, we'd probably have
the
women's
triple
jump and 1tiah
less COICbel.'' ·
comes, I'U beJeady to play."
jump.
The Bengals told Copeland
Copeland ~ the coachlllg
. Dravtnn and Chue -.. c:holen
when they drafted him that. be staff by = h e ' s learned a lot
·
as
mcJt~uable ll'i1ck perfonnen.
.
needs to built up through weilht ofthedefeue
lifting. Instead, be lhowed up l~
"He 'a an inte ligent kid,"
mini-camp bullted up II1'0IIlld the Karmelowicz .Ud. "He's everythin&amp; you - L I couldn't be hapwaisL
•
The coecbes _.. diuptJoiD&amp;ed pier with the guy.
"He'• the bell left end we have
in his condition, but - - -r 011
in
Cllllp.
He's aoi1ll to play lhere
the cr!lki• .If ~llld sbowl up
in beater shape
1 two-week and be effoclive lhcn.''
camp in J-; hiiiOUih lllini-camp
Copeland ia stanin1 to learn
what that means.
wiDbef::r=
"Johnod'a a good fOot·
"There's prenure,'.' he .said.
ball ptayer-alldlhat will ihow when ·"Tbat'a 1010etbina I'm golnJ to
lito pliO of footbll1 ....._, '.defOII· bav~ 111 deal wid!.• I've been in the
live llno cOich ilob Karmelowk:z lpDtlight, but never ~ dill. Peo1 , . ,...
uld. "SIR, be needs to be In aUt- ple l!l1piiCt bf&amp;·lbln&amp;l 0111 ol me. But
Ile better Shape. He needs to gel I I'm lOin&amp; to 'tt'lllk It my own J*O.
little itronger, but that's the tranli- I will pfbell« each day."
.
~
1

winl--].2
Scaaia 100, Utah· 92.. Seattle wiaJ 10-

.• Saturday's scores

A..W ~1 New

'It wasn't until midway through
the third quarter that New York
saarted dominating, outscoring
Chatl01te 48-22 in the final 18:47
aiiCI holding Hmlets center Alonzo
Mourning to six points in the second half after be scored 21 in the
fllSl.
"We were letting them score
too easily, Our defense just wasn't
"-·" Ewing said. "But we won
the 1ame. I won the battle with
Alonzo because we won the

London High standout
Magic helps NBA vets to playfor Rio Grande
edge Ftnnish hosts
in exhibition contest

HANGING AROUND tile rim cu realt bt a-tedtlliEal foul, as
Cleveland c:eater Brad Dau&amp;berty lladl oat after tbill jam duria&amp;
Saaclay's NBA rn-rouad playoff llaale ilaJut tile Yilltln1 New
Jersey Nets, who lost 99-89 iD part we.-'01 Deucberty's 24 points
and 20 rebounds. (AP)
.. ,

- • Ba.Seball • ~

JCCOrd. No eighth seed has beaten ·a
No. l seed.
·
·
·Led by James Worthy's 24
points, the Lakers led 9S-9l before
baskets by Barkley and Dan Majerle lied the score. Then came Scott's
enant three-pointer.
"I knew it was a little sbon.
Danny Ainge bit the palm of my
hand JUS! when I released it," Scott •
said.
.
In other playoffs Sunday, Cleveland ousled New Jersey 99-89 in
another first-round faflb game, and
New York defeated Charlotte 11195 in a second-round opener.
Other second-round pairings
have Houston at Seattle staning
tonight and San Antonio at Phoenix
and Cleveland at Chicago on Tuesday.
Knicks 111, Hornets 95
Palrick Ewing, who averaged 35
points against Charlotte in the regular season , scored 33 as New
York extended its home winning
streak to 23 in the opener of the
second-round series.
The Hornets led by as many as
12 points, even though All-Star
Larry Johnson sprained his right
leg above the ankle a minute into
the game, f~ing him to the sidelines after be bit two jwnpers in the
fii'St 46 seconds.

JfOUS'I'Of (AP) - Tile HoUI-

. . Alliul-.e I'CCCIIII) ,.;;.. I ;emJ IODighr in I three-pmo series in an

.Suns, Cavs move on to second round
. B71'11e A81c:lated PrSI
The L9s Ant:,::;' Later1l were
one shot away
a third shocking victory at Phoenix .and the ·
biggest playoff upset in NBA history.
.
.
That shot in the final seconds of
regulation came with the score lied ·
9S·9S aiiCI the series lied 2-2. But
Byron ScOI,t's desperation threepoint attempt just before the buzzer
missed and the Suns a~ided firstround embarrassment by outscoring the Laken 17-9 in ovatime f~
a 112-104 victory.
•
" They were fantastic and they
just sbowed what they were !llade
of," ·Suns coach Paul Westphal
said of the Lakers. "We .are very
fortunate to get past them...
Charles Barkley bad 31 points
and 14 rebounds !« the Suns, who
also got a sparkling overtime perfoi'mance from Oliver Miller, the
heavy-set rookie who lost 40
pounds during the season. Miller
had 17 points, 14 rebOunds and
seven blocked shots, includinJ nine
points and five rebounds tn the
five-minute extra period. ·
The Lakers, the only team in the
playoffs with a losing reconl, were
making their third sttaiglu attempt
to CO!Ilplete the series victory over
the team with the league's best

the Dally Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy •ddleport, Ohio

-

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p,._,__

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.... 51&amp;
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Milt t' ••• '
tWCHW . . . . . .

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..mcoo,a ... ...._.,._
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.....

o-' RBIJel+ .... It 4-2 ia
tbo fift1l,

••

On Friday, May 21, The Daily Sentinel will
have a special edition with photographs of
high school seniors graCJuating this year.
Now through Wednesday, May 12; Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily Sentinel or At
Your High School Office To Be Included In
This Speclai Edition, At No Char,ge.
(Pr:lnt Your Name and High School
on back of Photo)

.

******

.

.

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL
OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS WHO WOULD
LIKE ·TO HAVE AN ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS
SPECIAL EDITION PLEASE
CALL 992·2156.
·Ask for Dave or P.J.
..,di··
•

...
•

l.

�,.

'
'

•
'

..

The Dally Sentinel

. '
Pomeroy Middleport, OhiO

.

Monday, May 1

Pomeroy . Mlddl,.,ort. OhiO

ford set an unoff"JCial track recud
of233.433 mph las&amp; y&amp;r, iDcrwed
his top lap to 221.212.
.
The fastest speed of the day was
223.931 by Cana!lian Paul Tracy,
who replaced tbe retired Rick
Mears as a full-time driver with the
P11nste team .
Among the drivers practicing
for the fmt lime on Sunday were
Canada's Scott Goodre-, the lWI·
ner-up 10 AI Unser Jr. las&amp; year, and
·Brazilian
Nelson
Piquet.
Good:(ear's top speed was 222.239;
Pi'\uet, making a comeblck after
senou.s leg injuries in a crash dur·
ing practice las&amp; re-. had 1 top lap .
doesn't It?.'
.
.
of214.480 mph,
• • Andrew and his youngest son,
Among the most famous names
Jeff, were among the fu,test drivers in auto racing, the 'Andretlis ~ve
:_ on the f~ day of prac~ 8lld C~?D· had little to celeb~ate here smce
' llllued their steady and Jl!lpresstve Mario won the race m 1969. .
~ :~01'111811Ce8 during Sunday's aes·
Mario thought he ll!!d his second
s1on. The fmt of the four days of victory in 1981 after a one-lap
qualifications is Satur!lay.
penalty to Bobby Unser chan•ed
_.. ; Mario, driving a new Lola pow- the official standings the mornmg
e~ by .a Ford-Co~orth Cl!gine, after the race. But Unser appealed
• nused hia top speed ~~ pacbce Ill the penalty and, four montliS·laler,
223.SI4 mP!J. J~. cl!'lvmlt I year• .· a special .U .S. Auto Club panel
• Q).d Lola-Bwct m·which JUD Craw- restored his victory and dropped

. By STEVE HERMAN
:. : INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - -Heanbreak and disappointment
·· have plagued the Alidrctti family
li!Ore often thap not at the lndi·
. anapolis Motor Speedway.
•· . Now , after two seemingly
' effortless days of practice for the
. .May 30 race, patriarch Mario
• JlllPCIIrl ready to shed the jinx that
has haunted him fm- 23 years.
"I hope so. Thai's whll we'rehere for, wbat we're Sttiving for,'!
•. ·said the elder Andretli, the 1969
• Indy winner. "I hope somehow we
•• -get a little bit of payback here. I
think this p,lace owea us big-time,

'"}} . } • L b
R ceway
,;; 1 er c atms e anon a_
~_}lS origin ~f career turnaround
~M
·

·;_· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) "The two-lime defending champion
driver at Scioto Downs says the
. · turning point in his career came at
' ; .._ .~.....-Ohio baCk. .
.,. """"""'
·- ~ David Miller said people began
. ''to notice him when he won the
- ..driving title at Lebanon Raceway's
· 1991 winter meet. He followed that
·, ·up by leading scioto Downs
drivers with 115 victories in the
spring 8lld summer of that year. He
·JOOk another Lebanon Iitle at that
· tiatk's fall 1991 meet with 133
wins and $1119,107 in Camings.
"Lebanon Raceway got me
·
d Mille 28 f Gro
going," sai
r, , o
ve·
· - ~ "You can win a couple cnv• mg titles at a small tn1C1t and peo; p:te will notice it. I had the most
wins ever there in one night and I
broke my own record twice for
,..:Wt·ns ln. a single season down there.
, · "If your reputation is as a win·
ning driver, you get better horses.
. Last year, 1 won the driving title 81
·: Scioto, broke the record. Things
- started snowballing.
.__
"Any athIete gets on roUs w•.,..,
;;,.;yQu can't do anything wrong. But
·• {'ve driven a lot of gOOd horses. I
drove all kinds of horses, the cheap
· 'Overnights and the stake horses."
In 1992, Miller won driving
• titles ·at Lebanon's winter meet and

;

I
I
I
\

I

(~

-rt

~ -,
....
.

.

---

'

..... /

.....

said.

S

por

t 8 d dl'

:=
t d

ea IDes pos e

The Gallipolis Dally TrlbiUit ,
The Dally Stnlillt!l, the Point
Pleasam Rtlll.rlu and the SIUidayTiiMs-StmiMI value the conlributions their readers mate to the
sports sections of lhese papers, and
these contributions wiD contiolue to
be ft':bllshed.
owever, certain deadlines for
Submissions wiD be observed. The ·
deadline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winter .
sports is the last day of the NBA
F'nal
I
s.
.
Likewise, the deadline for submissions of local basebc. ,J. and
sortball-related Jl))olo$ and related
articles, from T-ball10 the majors,
as well as other spring and summer ·
sports, is the day of the last' game
of the World Series. The deadline ;
for photos and related anicles for ,
football and other fall sports is the
Saturday before the Super Bowl.
These deadlilles have been insti·
tuled to give readers plenty of lime
to get their photos bact from the
photography studio of choice and
to give the staffs the opportUnity to
publish these sports photos and
articles during the 1,_,..,.;.,~ sea·
rr·..,...son for that sport.

--

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&lt;

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And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepled),
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Yuu Ad Will Run For One Week.

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS OOES NOT APPLY TOYARD SALES)
'
NAME: --------~----~----------~--------

PHONE NUMBER: -----,-------~------~---­

.

The Daily Sentinel

COIIfiUCftll

-1010 11111MUS

::1:''

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

.MAIL 10:.

t

The nexr yw, Andrctti began
from the aecond row. But Jlis raoe
was over before he crossed the
swting line as Kevin Cogan lost
conttol and triggered a cniSh that
took Andretti out of the race. In
19B7, M.-io suned fJOm !he pole
and_dominated most of the race,
leading 170 of lhe fmt 180 laps.
He was pullinJ IICtdiJy away frOm
the field wbm l1is en~ne went sour
50 miles from the faush.
The misfortune has touched the
second generalion of Andrettis, too.
. In 1989, ddcst son Micbael was
in the lead and pgllina - y when , ;;:·r::;•
his engine blew. He led 97 laps in
1991 before Rick Mears passed
him with 12 laps to go. Last year,
be led 160 lips and dominated the
race until fuel pressure problems nec•ury lo
put him out wilh II laps remaining. protecta known •
Jeff Andretti felt the family
~=~rf~~~g, plac!~
curse las&amp; year
publicly opened end r..,d
After being Indy rookie of the aloud.
yur in 1991, be crashCi1 durin~ the
Tile •tlmatld colt ot the
1-992 race and suffered senous proJecta are us,ooo
injuries to both legs, ankles and rrolect No. CR 430) and
feet. Mario crashed earlier in the ~=~:;,'101 No. CRC141
race 8lld broke some toes 911 bolh
Contr110t clocumenta, bid
feet.
., .• ' •• ··•·· ,,, ... ...... ..,,.. .
and tpeclficlltlona
"'~Jeff has w~ked as hard as 1 can
obtained at aaid
1

----

-'
#,

:,

AndreUi to leCOIId.

~~= r:.!~~:S

. at ScioiO Downs, where he had 142
victories. Last fall, he left Ohio for
The Meadows near Pittsburgh and
won 8S raoea in about four months.
For the year, he had $1,280,462
in earnings and won the Ohio Sires'
Stakes two-year-old filly pace and
five-year-old trot titles driving
Enticement and Pegasus Sahbra
respectively.
.
. Miller's hot streak continued at
The Meadows this year. He won
125 races and had $365,409' in
earnings in 693 starts there. He
hopes to continue such success 81
Scioto Downs, but acknowledges
·
f
that he's starUIIJ to think o moving up 10 the Meadowlands in New
Jersey.
"That's a goal. Thafs some·
thing I'm going to keep striving
for," he said. "That's like the ulli·
mate and 1.'m not going to let up
unlill fmally get~·
•
"Alii really need IS to have one
reaily good horse. If I could drive
on !he Grand Circuit, I might get a
start. But there' s so much power
th
good dri
I' ·
ere, so many
vers. ve
seen a lot of gOOd drivers go there
and just be one of the guys because
they don't get the mounts. Some
guys would rather be big fish in a
little pond"

fllit'r;ul!l.• r • 1:;:,

•

... .

.

The Dally senuriel Pa&gt;Qe 7

1813

··Andrettis among fastest drivers
·::on first day of Indy 500 practice
·-- - ··
~ ~.

.t

•

::~oa":'e~~·. :':ic~
:';.:"~~=:c::.~~n=e::

upon the retum ot ·tha
complete aet in good
concltlon no more than tan
110) daya attar bid date.
Chackt ahell be Made
payeble to the VIllage of
Syracu.., Ohio.
· .
Each blcldar Ia required to
tumilh willllta prc;poaat, a
Bid GuarMty and Contr110t
Bonet In ~~ecordance with
Section 153.54 of the Ohio
Reviled Code. Bid OMCurlty
tumiahed In Bond torm,
o"-!lbelaaued by a SUrety
Company or Corporation
llc......t in 1M • - ot Ohio
1o provlda aaid auraty.
Thla proJect 11 1 Minority
Bualn•• l:nterprl• (loBE)
Set-Aaida ProJect. Each
bidder muat aubmlt
evidence thlllltla alli-ity
Bualna11 Enterprl.. aa
cartltlacl
by the .State Equal
Employmant
Opportunity

oiiiiSHCUMH

lesfdentlallaoflng 11 our

fiiAIICIIG AVIUIU
·-··-M~Wt.

'

••
•
•••
•

MORRIS

Plumbing ln~tallation
and
Repairs.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES
(614) 992-7878

Homer Orlmm, om not
rooponolble for on~-. othof
•-

I,
J

.__ _ _ _ _ _"""'!!"-_ _ _ _ _..;:;:;;:..., thon m~own.

including: economic deVIl·
opmant projacta; atrHt,
water aupply, drainage and
11nitary aewer lmprov• .
·menta; demolition of unallfe
atructurH; rehabilitedon of
houaing and neighborhood
tacllitl.ea. The actlvitlea
muat be daalgned to
primarily benefit low and
moderato incoma peraona
or aid in the prevention or
elimination of aluma and
bligh~

No activity in the Formula

Program can be )uatitied
under Urgant Naed. Tha
Olfica of Local Govemmant
Servlcaa h.. lunda aet
eaide tor thia purpoae
through ihllmmlnent Thr•t
Grant Program.
Cidzano ara encoureged
to attend thia m•ting on
May 27, .1993, to provida
their Input on the County'•
progrem.
Melga County
Commiaalonera
Mary Hobatettar,
Clark/CDBG Admin.
(5) 10. 17, 21G
PubliC Notice

BID SPECIFICATION FOR
DESIGNATED ISSUE 2
PROJECTS lot MEIGS
COUNTY, OliO
Blcl prapaoalalor •II work
daocrlbed horain will be
raceived by the Board of
llolga
Co u n t Y
Commluklnero in the Court
Hou.., Pomeroy, Ohio .until
10:00 A.M. on the 26th day
of may 1113. The bida will
be opened 11110:30 A.M. on
the 24th day of MIIY 1"3
and read aloud for tha
following Job•:
113 1 C·l 2~·••• Roed)
from•·c -a
lo
7.
Coordinator.
13-2 c-11 (a-h Grove
Each propoaal Muat Road) from SR·124 to TR·
contain the lull name ot the 57.
Party ot· pertlaa aubminlng
113-3 c-174 (HIPPY Hollow
the propoaal and all Road) from IIA-7 to CR-3.
peraona int-ted therein.
13· 4 C-11 (Kingabury
E~~eh bidder mull aubmit Road) from SR-143 1o CR·
evidenca of Ita axparienc• 20.
·
on pro)ac:ta of almilar alze
13-1 C·Z$Jr.'meroy Pike
and complexity. The owner Road) from
211o SR-7.
lntencta and requtr.. that
Each bidder mual tile e
lhla project be -pteted 10% ,.torm•n:.J;c' at
no tater than Auguat 1, the time of the
· and
the au-alul bidder muat
1913.
Bidder• ara required 1o tile • 100% performanc•
comply with the Minority bond. A letter Mllbllahlng
Bual-• Entlrprlae (Mill!) Olfllllad Une of ci'ldll, In the
requlrementa aat lo~natalad amount, lrom a bllllk
Section 114.07 of the o
doing bualn•• within the
RaviUII Code, and Ru
cope Ohio Baking 1..11\Q
164-1-32 of tha Ohio will
accepted ••
Admlnlatrellve Coda. In
with tha bonding
port, lhle maena that any
bidder, to the extent that it
lalte lor
ai.lbcontrecta work, ahall
cw!Jiltcl
IIWn eubconlr1111la lo alate
certified
Minority
Bualn"•
:JE~~~
Entorprla•
in M ljjgragate
Ldoller vlllua ol no las• than
live peroent (5%) or the -urllllling work.
prime controct. Bidder
The au-lui oontrprocuremont actlvltlea, to mil)' be raquked to turnlah
the extant that the eny lab work • *IUirad by
contractor purchu.. the Melga County Engln-.
material• and/or aarvlcea,
The anvalope cont.lning
ahall reeult In the award of the bid muat be marked,
procurement contracta ~~ "A••urJ•olng la•u• 2
atete: certified Minority 1l'rqJtgL Bid ..,...,itlllltlona
Bualn•• Enterpria• 1n an , m:r, be picked up at the
aggregate doiler value of II• Ill CouniY EnglnHr'•
not I•• than two percent Ollfco. Olfiaa houra
(2%) of the prime contract.
4:00

"Bid I• MonllorS."
The aucc11alul biddar
muatlurnlllh • one-hundrad
peraent (100%) porlannband and • algned
atatement thot the.r bldder
underal•nda the apaclfi·
caliona and petielty
ct..a-.
Tha llalga County Commiaaionera I'IIII'VI the rlaht
lo reject any andlor all blila.
or eny part thereof and to
waive MY Informality In eny
propoeal.
.
llelga CoUnty
Commlulonera
Mary Hobelfttlr, Clark
(5) 10,' 17; 2to
'---:-:-::-:----PubliC Notice

Impact: It

Polley Act of 1181.

•vat...

fl. EatllftiiiN,
Low Coate..
Work Guarantetct

614-949·2335 ...
614-593·5010
4-&amp;-1

REMOVAL
· el.IGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

.. BILL SLACK

I

u.. ohio
Prod
materiala,
a...Vic•, 1111d labor In the
lmplamentalion of thia
p r o I • ct.
Addition lillY,
contractor compliance with
the Equal Employmant
Opportunity raqu,lr~R~enta
ol Ohio Admlniatntlve Code
Chllpter 123, the Governor'•
Executive Order of 1W2 and
Governor'• Exeoulve Order

Public Notl~

CARPENTER SERVIa ·

· Steel Sales
No order
too small or too large .
Order.s .welcomed

992-3470

(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992- 3053

992-6215

Poiittror,Ohlo

Quality

.....
c
•.
SIZED UMESTONE

:FOR SALE .
Cal 6 14·992· .
. 6637
. St. II. 7

a.••.,.,

.

THE BOOK
BARN

IUO Ill 1111

IUY • SIU • TUDE
JI7LW1t.
Ohio

: amcE

IEPill
CALL IEC

pro)act ln .. cal~ -~
of a requife lleclalon
llnding or allp applioeble to
the proJect In the
environmental review pro·
••••· Ob)aclon II)IMit be
prapared and aulomltted In
ec aordenoe with the
required procedure (ll4 CFA
Pert Sit and may be
lldd,.aact 1o the 8tata.
Objacllona to the reiMae
of tun• on bMia other than
lhoao atalad obove will not
be conolclared by the 8tata.
No objacllone received allar
June 16, 1113 will be
conaldared by the 8tate. No
oblactlona received altar
Juna 18, i 1113 will be
conaldared by the Stete.
Commanta or objacUone
may be aent to ottlce . of
Local Government • Ohio
Department of ·Dwelopment, 77 S. High 8treat, P.
0. Box 1001, Colu111bua,
Ohio 4326&amp;0101 .

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting .

Aluminum ~ing
loPo~wtr Washing ;-

.FREE ESnMATES.

fnl Emuns
985·4181

949-2168
1-1..83-tln

Backhoe and
small Dozer
Work

Robertl .....obach,

Gatling marrled7 NNd
lloto ....? Aoceaaorlea7
Cheak out my prlllllo III'IIL

"lnsplriltlona"
Flower Shop
1185-4111 4110

MARIIECH
INDUnRIES

m=rppQP

aadYCIIIPIII
...... ltiiOrWe

EVERY THURSDAY

1(EN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

EAGLES·
CLUB

992·5325 ...

IN POMEROY

915·2561

· 6:45p.m.
Specllal .Early Bird

.............. Oftloa

217L hc•tl St.
POIIIIOY, 01110

$100Pa~ff

Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32 .

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMIIHG
fi~IJ!Ing

~·
31904 Lladiag
M'ddle~rt,

COMPU.EITIRY
FACIAL

Ml;t_

Kay hu I provenollie . lldn en progr1m
dealgnad IQr your tkln type.

MARY KAY

o•io

lr.dlpattdll4 . .uty
Corwullanta
Carolyn llcCoy
(514)118H082
· Sandra Hendnon
(814) 18N847
Products In Slack

614-992·7144

4/29/93 thJ

WHiLEY'S
IUIO
. PARTS

.........

NEW &amp; USED PlUS FOR
AUIIAIES &amp;MOORS

992·7013 or

.U'ili.'3
0

1·

=70

IUWILOIIO

'71311'81M

SHOE&amp;

992·1259
RACINE- Ba.... n Rd.• 8.5• liftI ,Wilt 1871 12 X ~
.mallie' home and older hcual. TPC ..,.., 2 Hptlo tanka.
a..t aile lor fulllre btAidng '-lion. ASKING $23,000

.

VACANT GROUNOI 28.2111 acr.a located an Rl 114
,_ Hanlaouwlll.lata 01 pollftNI: ASKING S11,000
CHaiiRE• Roueh U.... Nia. little rental it-wnantl
lncludll 1170 2 bedroom mobile homa; l ~
atliclahoy apar1mlnl,
llltller hook up. 1+ acr.
exalalir'IJ uniii~N~ff/Wtt ""'*'·ASKING ~.100

'

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

WICK'S HAUUNG

•'

.,.,

' • "' ,,. . • t·..- ·

"'

.,.

... .... .

&gt;

.,

. .
'

1418 State Rt. 7

Colll14-441-7n1Morl P.M.

Lost: 4121/tn Fimato Cltaoalota

Granclo~ll~ - . J I

lllltiiEIIIICE
949·2391 or
1·10N27·1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Waedlng,
alld lleacllng. .
Shrub and TrM
Trimming &amp; RemoVItl
FREE EBTIIIATE8

Slturdl:y.

:.c:'~

OWIR:

. ..ltff .......

614-992-7698 '

241L E.RGENCY SERVICE

New Wiring, Rewiring,
· Trouble•Shootlng
COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
LiceaHdr lasured &amp; loaded
FREE ESTIMATES

'

..

..- . ..
I

.-

-ton.-:';

.. ,,.
•....
••

ALL Yonl - - III!OII.'In
Adnnco. DIADIJIIE: 1:0!1' lli'L
tho da~ bofoN h otd II 1D Surtdor adltlon • 1:00 ~
F~y ....ton •

p.m.

,.

-.....,k

011r,gun

l"zoi

·:· .

)lji

·-ring . . . . '

ltolt,eiDiho,mloc. "-r~
.......,, II'?

Rd.

~-

O.,..IIall: ........, ~
11th.
ConiOitory, c:..nw
.

Plu -

C..Oia.

8

.2 Froat Strwtl • Laltor .
•4WIIHI ....••• ~
Prlce1 Starti•l a
1
· ~· · · ·~

129.95 +Tax

....... · ~· · · "" ~4.1&gt;

ALSO- TRY OUR NlW
VINYL SEAL 111M
$1.00PER Ft

.,,

Firll·
IIJ"

Rauto

141, 1-4,

=::=:~~

IIISIIUD PIICIS OH-SIIIIrAUD
tx7•S27S.OO
~ IP-$200.11
16•7-t4st.oo
YM n
.....

-

.....
-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

.. IAIMJ Mlllt IMA"IOOI

"'

~

Pt. ·Pieaunt . :
&amp; VIcinity
:

5/10193

NURSES' ~IDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
S,OMEONE TO
TAKE CARE.
OF IN OUR
HOME. , .

,.

M~~ovorl
I From

312111

..

Middleport

-.

do~ bolvro tho otd II to -,.,
Sundoy otdKion- 1:OGpm FrldiY.
Mondor
odHton
10:- . .

,.,a... .

.'

Pomeroy, ..

All Yood Soloo l,luot 8e - ~ n
Advonco. Ooo.. na: 1:0011m lllo

992-3470

4-1

_,.

••

Gallipolis

SIZED UMESTONE

D. L IOSION
EICA¥11111
. ' (614)
667·6628

Yard Sale

7

&amp;VIcinity

11UinltlllflW1.
p

~

,_.,".,¥.,•II

36970 Ball R• Road
P01111roy,OW.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK ,LOADER
•TRUCKING ·

.

w.Atoo~tr~o

614 -446 ·0736

ta..-:•11111

a

...

F9und: , ...... 01 ..... Plont,
Ono Block Molo eo.or ~nlol ,

Lab Dcta. On ctwty ~ - Rio

SERVIa

BatltiV....t
. ~~ ..

Lost &amp; FOund

.

n.n. a 111. 11 -.4""'

(OFFER EXPIRES 6/.21/!Jl)

.~-'' "

UIOdTroci«Tin,114417-711o.
Whlto ~- In gaodahOpo.
114 448 05il
••

RODIIBI£..1 RIDE

Houri:..._ 11on. CtaaH
Tula.,WM..rtl.

o:r..r.:'a:-·

=·

To good ~:1 r-!11 oolo,
houioltroloon, .............
bolge ond
, tnwn, •MMt..ztl1.
"•

Lost: man'• waUII, Cheahlrt
vicinity, kMP ......,., Mum
contenll, no q· 1 " w ubc:l,
eM-m-21184.

Auto-Bentals
Sprlnl Time
SJNefld

,./,
a

RUTLAND- lrtofl II.• 1 floor trama home with Z
. . _.. gal heat. one•
!ruN
- . 11 fta-.Mx18DIDLAB
111.
DEllER• 1 112 1101)' home 7 - . 4 badtOIMna, olrller,
added inlllllllllon, large lro"t potoh.
NG 18,000WE
U8T1NG1tl

X.:"

a-, Port

Found: wotch cin P• - .
calllo ID, BI4-8112-3111T.
• ·

4-22·'13-1 mo.

~~ -

iddl...,..

~

•

Chlhuohuo Aloo Large~ Froo
To Good Homo, Fflolrl!ll~.
IM-3711-2434.
•

6

(614) 742·2345

IIIGI

POMEROY· Older heme whit :1 loti. 3 badtooma, t.lh.
Home Ia in need ct Npelr. ASKING $0,1100.

.

, r~_

' 4111N11M.

LEATHER REPAIR

1 n'm option.

w.Atoo-

Sp 1 . . . . . II Cttstoti

2

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

.

. llLMitiU

(614)992·7878

Datallad Information,
lnatruationa, propoul
forma, end complete
apHilloaUona may be
obtained frorn the oftloM of
the Melli• County lrn.,.
~~;I)Hllllh•
edloal lervl-,
POll 141.
OhiO ..,... 1114)

I

.....,. - " M~~.::a,._.s

CrHkRo..

Real Estate General

Smotl Block Port

· ~M-

P.M.

lld!!JII!

,

R-•
froo to good 3&amp;7·103:1
.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

· 10 mil• eouth of GaiHpolla
on Bladen Rciad
PH. 814-251-1180 · ··· ·

MICROWAVE
ENTERPRISES

Othof 8ctop

-IOorrY.

5-S·tl-1

,ROOFING

Rofrlgerotor~...&amp;

Loot: HAnyono Hu- A...;;
Bonk Oopoolt Boa tho! Wu
Plckod Up At Odd Lola Parking
Lol, Nome On~=
Rowordl IM-S?t-all Aler 't

H2·3577

How.-.1 L Wrftesel

a-

Mothor T.,l•
DUIII&gt;IoO.
Twll graot ldttona. 304.-:ataa.

June, IM-245... ,.,

(614) 992-7878
·. FAX (614)992-7878

IOUU1

41181'8311 mo.

•

Mole Slamooo . .In .
molo Anaora, b o t h - - no
pape,., S04~.
.. .

Old

and Welding _

T..Shlrt Colors alld 1Att8rlng Stylea.

......rl. ICh00-2100
CLOIII 11UIIIAY

992·7204or
742·2223

mental revllw ~lor the

· CUSTOM SADDLES, .
· LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

T·ShJrts • Hats • Uniforms

llltl.,.,.,..

ltuolliaU PIICU ·

Shade River Saddle Shop

-----------------,1
Steel Fabrication

Rta101altle .
Ratti
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE
614·742·2138

:,: COMPUTE
WELDIIIIID
·····- UDIITOI

........ 304-IG-ZIJI.

3l8llln

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

&amp;

llole pout liNgle daa new home wllb ~ fo run •

36358 SR 7

HAULING
u•sro111,

.•

Kltt- tog;::~• ~k
whho,l14-8
•
.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

9-1

LEGAL NOTlCE
Sealed propoaala will be
raoalvect in the otnoe of the
llalga County Commla·
alon.,., Third Floor of the
lona.
Courthouaa, Pomeroy, Ohio
The Vlllaga of Syrecuu unUI 10:00 A.M. on May 21,
r•orv• the right 1o waive 1113. Bl. wiU be opened at
irregutarillal and to ralect 11 :00 A.M. et the aamia
any or all blda.
loollllan on the abeve data.
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
Propaula ahall bo tor
Janloe L.awaon, tour (4) •nbrUialorhnonllor
Clerk-T,_ror devloaa capable of
(5) 3, 10, 21G
monitoring petlent ECG,
daliverlng dellbrlllaUng
anergy, and documenting
PIJI)IIc Notice
critical EC~ data. The
.Woe llhal be daalgnlcl tor
portable uae. The device
ahall have • nonlnvulve
p

· YOUNG'S ·

SIZED UMESTONE

I

114-laluiH be required.
lllddore muat comply with
tha prevailing W111J1 ralal on
Public lm provementa In
Maiga County end the
Vlllaga of Syrecuu, Ohio,
• detennlned !rY the Ohio
=artmant of lnduatrlal

Booglo, 814-441-IM!l
•
•
Froo To- Homoo In Country:
Larg• L,aoolo'fYpo Dog, IM-245-

2/1 2l92ltfn

USED;UILROAD TIES

Prealdant
llalga County
Com.!\IIII!Oft....
Courlllouae
r•erv•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711
.
or ratac:t any County Cornmla•ioner•, (5)10, 1tc
llncllor MY part llelga County Courthouu,
wUI-ept the "-aro~u~rlo 45761 durina
lor the' Intended normal
neaa houl'll 1:3li
a.m. • 4:30 p.m. No lurthlll'
Envlrol)mantel review of
F!·E·• F!•S·• I auch
prol~~et Ia propoeed lo
Engi- be conduatad prior li&gt; tha
Rei- of Funde.
Public ·Comment of
Funclng: All lnter ..tad

involved
:~A~II~f~c~~o~n~tr~ac:~tora
and
will, 1o the

..

whlla kilt- til
aood " - . Oldo &amp; .vory
friondl~. 114-1112..300.
Froo Pur&gt;r&gt;loa: 112 eo... &amp; 112
Flvo gror l

(No S.nday Calls!

36970 Bal R• Road
Po111eny, Oldo

992·2269

the -tlllcation llj not In
tact executed by the
CerUiylng Olllcer or other
ottlcar of the applloant
approwd by the 8tala or (b)
that appllcante · environ·

Board rupecling tha
propoaed pro)IOt h• .....,
made by the above named
county which documenta
the anviron111111tlll raview of
the proJecbl and more fully
aeta lorth tha r1110111 wily
auch atatemant Ia not
raqulrad. The Environ·
menl81 Record Ia on Ilia at
thalllldrHa end Ia IIVIIUebia
tor public exeminalon and
copy upon raqUMt Ill Meiga

HAUU
SERVIa

I

and

the following~ : (a)

.

a ,.- &amp; 1

Cllllco, 3Q4..&amp;~

614·992·7643

4l2lllln

TREE

Ol!jection to the 1Stele

All Envlronmantal Review

• w1o old kltt-.

1325.

All- of Fun•: ,Thli Btale
will eccapt objection to Ita
epprovel only It on - of

detarminad that auoh a
raqOMI tor rllleue of tun•
will not conatltute eny
IICtion llianllicandy allecUng
the quafity ol tha human
anvironment and accord. lngly, the ebove named
county haa decided not to
prepero an Environmental
Impact Stetemant under the
Natlonel Environmental
lll)pact Strttemaili under tha
Natlonel Envlronmantal
Polley of 1111(P.C.I1·110).
The rauona for auch a
daclaion not to prepare
ouch atetement 111 ••
followa: The above projaota
will enhence public aalety
and not heve any adveraa
allecta. The maJor lmpaot
will be ahort term and will
Involve a minlmal111110unt of
nolae and dual The aawer
Une will tap into an exiallng

w.......,

Authorized: Brtgga I
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Ceiller
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra II- M-F t-3 Sat.
Cloaecl Sunday
949·2104

Giveaway

2 11 whHo klttono, I old, 1
moJo • 1 · :1114-1'7U114.
2 Mole Kilt-. ANdy To Oo,
-·~·1· 44NI13.
z ~bbha, 1114-4M-11U.

New Homes e VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions o Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL.
FREE ESTIMATES

PlrtsiiiiSrllct
Mowm ~ Cltaltt S.WS

'

4

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC• .

WALIEillUY

'I..W. . . Out

addr••

b . .n

h..

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

agenolaa, grouila' end
paraona diaa • ..lng with
thle dl alalan . . ~ln¥lw •
aubrllh wrltlen _ _.. .
tor conalderatlo~ 1o the ·
County at llelga, County
Commlaalonera, ' Court·
houaa, Pom~roy, Ohio ·
45761. Such coftlmllllle
ahould be reclllvad at tha
'on or before
above
May 25, 1113, All auch
commanta ao Ncalved wUI
be oonaldared and tha
CO~JIIty will not reqlieat
rei•• ollun* 9r lab any
.edmlrlltlrlllift aotloil on the
propoaed project prior _to
the data apecltled In lila
preceding ...._..
Rei- of Funde: lllelga
County ComMIIIionan wMI
undertake. the prolecta
deacrlbed above with
Community Development
Block Grant Fund' from the
State of Ohio under na. I of
the Houalng Act of 1174.
Meiga County Commia·
aionera are certifying to the
State of ·Ohio that llelga
County Commla~loneia I
Robert Hwtenbacl), PrNIdent, In hla otnalal !POPI!City
aa praaldent conaent to
eacept the jurladiollon of
the Federal Courta if MY
110t1on Ia brought lo enforce
reaponaibiUtiea In relation
to envlronm1111tel review,
ctecialon making and .CIIOn;
and that thell r•·
aponalbllltiea h•~• b•n
aatlatild. The legal affect of
the cerUIIcatlon Ia upon Ita
epprovlll. The lhlga County
Commiaalonera May uae
the Block Grant Iunde and
the Stata wll have lllllallad
Ita r•ponalbllltioa ..nder
the Nallonal Envlroi'IIMnlill

LEGAL NOliCE
Notloa lo ... Pullllc of No
Significant lmpecta ' on
Environment and Notioe to
tha Public of Ral•••• ol
Funde, May 10, 1113.
The Meiga County
Commiaalonara, llelga
County Courthouae,
P-oy, Ohio 4578L To All
lnterntad
Agonal-,
Group• 11nd Peraona on or
about Mil)' 28, 1193 the
nova nomed county will
requaat a r.-... of lunda
from the Stele of Ohio,
Daportment ol Developll*lt
undor ntle t at the Houalng
and Community DIYelopmant Act of 1114 (RL 13·
383) · lor tha following
pro(aol:
.·
Village of Pom•oy - 4" 800 llneor 1. .1 Sanltery
Sewer forced · meln and
eernc. oonn.alon1.
Tha prolact lnvolv• tha
lnatallatlon .of a 4" - 900
II- IHt of SMitary ato aervlce the Rlv•ralda
Food Mart, 431 W. Main
Strllt, Pomeroy, Ohio in the
County of Meiga. The total
coat will ... $31,000.00.
Flnclng of No Significant

RACINE
MOWER CUIIC

•

-~,

· :J
• Auction
.-:

PubDc Sale

�'

P~ge 8\ The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio ·
.
.

SN~FU®

by Bruce Beattie

45

:

Monday, May 10, 1193

54

HelpwantiCI

11

,..,._,._v.,,....,.,ho

11

1t11 QIIC Ploii.U. T...... 4 WD,
0 . Col lloNid Qocqo,
114 4•1MII:311 A.M ... P.ll.

-·--""·

· -ALLAIIEAII_.......... 1.0112GSI.

r'na -

..h -'dna·

Alloi--.AII--upo.
Col .... 2:00 ........ J04-T/3o

Cultom luln CorMr Boolh,
Auot Colonel, VInyl, 5 112 Fl •

lnl--

MOil'l'll
.A74

_ , T1IN Ftldoy, 7:45
Be Dopon-

A.ll. To I P.ll. -

.

270, cJo
OoiiiDolll Dolly CLA
Tllbuno,
825
Thlnl A•-. Golllpollo, OH
41111. ·

Q

•u•:s

Wo,.ocl To Rent: Pr!Yolo Troller
Lot, 1411711, Holzlr, 114-611t334.

!"""

+u

l
I I' I I I
~

calmly replied, "And what did
you eKpeCt • . .
?" '

G

• ~tSMMHEOr 12 r r I'

• • 7'4

I' I' ,. r 1
111111111

.AQ1015

Vulnerable: Botb
Dealer: South

Pus

West

£oot
·P a.

Pass

AU-

!Cii*MUTS ANSW11S
r· 1
V.at • 'bfiiJ' • HowJ1 .. Hurtle .. IMPROVE
· Cbnly h'IJIIIID dance inslructor: "I want to dance
..... inver." Dince in8lruclor replies : "Don't you
_.. tD IMPROVE?"

Opening lead: • 10

HOW'S TATER'S

Rea t Es tat e

1· ~husband ~~our

Comple1e Ihe chuckle qUOiod
by Wing in the miuing wards
L....L.
• ....J.L....L.~-L...J you dowlop kom stop No. 3 bolow .

• AKQ

... BARNEY

words.

I

•Qs

Tr ansport at ion

wonts be-

"17. p R I ME E

SOOTH

ZNT

1

IL..=1~1~~s~r~~~ filled with ~r The land~

•u
+AKHU

-I.

I

_WH I T C

EAST

•Jn

r.1erchandise

t

LADIIG

•HWI

•Qz

:·EEK AND MEEK

Wanted to Rent ·

JDD8

I IlliZI I
I
I' I t I I

•Juz

-,No~ln-. K

four

THYAIIS

ALDER

........ IIIW75-M21.
IMvaMr ,_ 2 v.r Old In My

..... lotion of tho

---Pour . . ,.

PHIJ,UP

DMp..-wm.

46 Space for Rent

A - I AI .liMo I - . , .

,

•

TEMPER'TURE,
LOWEEZ.Y?

31 Homes for Sale

-oom.

nur achoole,
very ntce,
$30,1100, 114-149-2203 .. 614141-204.11• .

IlEA Cro••word Puzzle

Rentals

S.CUonol, pump, c1oct1.two
botho, tocotocl on lot In Raclno

1110 Cloylon

_ _ _ .._ ...... Ea.

WM

oela.nt Coiwllton, _..,
1 led mn ttau.1 , . _ llram
U-_y Rio Grondo. 12Q0Mo.
DltM!oll RIC!Uirocl.l14 311 - ·

4

, . . t4ort* QaiJ ••

2 . I ,,_,.
ljnluml~
1
HOuoo In · Gollt&gt;OIIo,
f236/IIO.
$200 ' D......_ Ro,__ R• GOOD
qulrod. 1~71:10.

4 .......... 111'-

Trldo
Fat .24Netl.

UIIED

75 Boats'&amp; Motol'l "
tor Sale

APPUANCES

:.~*ii~=:-:e
=:..=-.

114-441-73~. 1·

:...A...!:Hiz .."::. t!;

6tLL!RAVMOND! FRED!
ARE WE ALL HERE"?

'

. . . . . . , . • •,

NO. YOU'RE RI6HT... I
WOULDN'T WANT TO BE
'' TWEETIE "

I

--~~~~-.
-kif'·;

PICKENS FURNITURE;
NowllMocl
Hoe hold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jonlcho Ad. Pt Pt-nt, WV,
coii304-17S-141G.

-11400.~.
- · ltlo EJte.

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

=:.=a"""-. iT.-.
olleri:OOPII..

mirror,
tulip lompo,
rollo I 2 ohooto.
$250.

1 Stelll2 Oulllow
3 5I, lloniM

.

;

A. l S. Fumlluiw. NM, uHCI, lnHou11hold tumlahlnp.

-

- --

-

- ~

---

411ewoott • .·

5

...-. wv. 30:f-77WMI·

.-

.

AUCT10II l FURNITURE. 12
01...., OolllfOIII. Now l Uoocl
turnllure, - . .. ., Weltem 6

wa-L
- · Rolrlgor!tor,
~ T.V. r~1 Ali !)oncUUoner, ·~12311.

·--·

for Sell!

12155 Noor N.G.H.S. Ponlolly

Fumlohocl, W...._,___1rooh, .P,oiQ,
NM

Carp.t;, ' RSOIMO

Dlpooll,

1~1611.

$152.17 por month Including •I•

of

•.,12-41833.
WIA ..,. lor oldorly moll or
- - . In
Ill)' - old ·on
Stoll
cortlllod
duly.....
24

PIU'I

Som llomwwlllo'o Bolllollold • loci oo-..uge (l_roobork -.n
ormr pottom~ Twlloy April ztl. Moy 22. SUrplus - · •
5~ Sporting Goods
clothing. By Sondyvlllo Offl~ :"
. 11a;, N- 1111 8:00
2 ,.,......, - - ..... 0/U PM.
Silvor II; 12 • 20 'gougo, $450.
ooch, uc obopo, 31M.a15-6335. sameonUe card table, lour

Sunaoy.

w
- - . .-..yl
Froo olght wooll lcll-roUon

1'14-3U 1157 After I P.M.

'51

-·---.
:r:..:: m

•

SIMI lor Olio, C Chonnol, cut to build 11 ft. • 71 ln. aar
IIOIIo'i,- l 1.,..., t300,
304-6115-58111.

211 . . . . . .
31 DolarM - ·

Rio

.

33
34
H
37

(lllbr.)

40ttua-.,._..

41 Rapulllve
42¥44 CPulcll
41 c.ftt.rot
llllelll
41tnllhort
linll
48 lloccu'n

LDw-.12.100.114111

......ar...

.

tm,

Mngtroclol.!:' . - onoll-

1111 Ponti• PINblrd aulo., AC,
_, ooondftlon. $3,1111.
111111tM1 after I p.m. or

•noo -~~~. • L,-±.

~---·
·-~
.-;oa R~wrn;;:
~-t

Eas..

1187 Chivy IIIOiltNm, ~~­ Condition, Will llocroflco. 114-

••ra?t
...... -

fb M '

bojl.
'·

1187 Fon1 TM!po GL 2 - .
CyllndW, Fuollnjoollan,
AC.~, ""· lfll, Qood Tl~oob
I"UMCioadlMulllor Syotom, 13,200, I -

Auto~

Vegetable~

1111.

1til

Ponta. hnnl¥1111.

••a

--No
-·
=·

,_

.

Till

TWo ChoYrolll truck
:::J Toke
Pul~Off~·'
Condlllon., CO'nFlot
Af.
~
-port--1~
tiOi Wool twtn bed, ·UO; 114- ••7 .11.111 211 1011.

dloc bllllilo. PW, olr,

,
_ _ -.tM-21
•. m
..-~·.
~Be~lo~r·~·!;~-~i~-~:'"~~~~~-.,-nut.
Pol-ow, . :::132:-:-cllull:::-:-:-"'"-l !:2::- 4 1 1~
0
~~-~~-~~·
IRC.el
-

1081 Fonl T~ &amp;porto 5
IP"Od,
N;.lllloogo,
PB.
P~. Low
$4,:110, IM-

co-•·

::i.":' Owon,

11.780,

...
"

81

DAY

Coo dltlcn.l2,100 tiWII-1617.

- ·, ~Aopllr, 114-141-7211.
~
'
8omo

lilo!"rt
PT...

'

eon.-.

Nloo . . . In """"
11
A. FuM loll, Rolrlgwotw,

. A &amp;ULLY.

-·

.., .a . ...., """ Kloller \?.)i ~~~·~·~~~11~·~--..,~~~·;oao;n;•;ga
.--. -' .... -h.

•• 1

EXCEpt 10 M'EI!I v.ot...L.cer',
OF a:::JUA5E, WHEN l HAVE
10 1-~VE"ll-IE POOM.

'

A. Look for "Trash Cash, Fiubas
and FlaUiners," a book of new words
collected by Sid Lerner and Gill)' S.
Belkin. (TRASH CASH refers to ..t·
vertising that 's printed to look DR
dollar bitls, 8Dd FLATIJNER is 1 de..t
person.) T.hey define lhe noun
FIZZBO as "an owner of a Jkuperly
who offers it for sale without tile help
of a professional real estate qeD~."
Try to pronounce.F.S.B.O., the jnililh
of "for sale by owner," and yotr11Citlllle
up with FIZZBO.

1811 ~~~~~:=t. 12,7110.....
o1oon, 12,000. 1
- · oulo,
11,110. 304-17114440.
1• Plr- Colt, VorY 0ooc1

p;:;;o,. ~

.........
ywy old11212 bed,
llockoprtnp
NO, 8hh1ey
Ad., 1011.

DECIDEED
lD 5101' se lNG'

llon,$'1200,1141112217.

~

112·7MI.
- -N-~-- , _ . , ,150;
~
Ditch Witch · Trwnchor 111 ~~~- ""'• won :::--J
wntoo.'l-7842.
$4,110; 1111 CIUo 42 -

~

nd, PI,

cruloo, ounrool, -llonloorol~

Eoeh; 10 - · Chol10 Sl Ptoiltor, ....,.._,
Eoch,114-441-7211.
F-n M lndopoo- - ·

"""'\rn

'

ital Fonl M. . . . Gf,

61 Farm Equlpment
4 - Alloo

·Iaa•l!ril'

:..
'!::":.
-.-...
,......,...._..,.

I'Ve

,..

5001.

Fmn Suppl1es
1\ I "e;;tock

- - ·...........
........ 114 · -

wa-.
140
Oldokaww,
U
•·- •n~Ro:...-:.or,
~.
N
- ~::-:r!~.::.
JD
JD 1 PT1 v.e,-.
PW, IIIIIWI8t
GroW In-Dunhom
· 311
14FT

~t::."..: .-:-:::

Rotlalo
JD 7:311 -II JD. 401, PT Coin
Aluminum I Ft. Truck Toppor

Mini linn, 23 oc-, 10 -.., 2

·"Undor
....,
11...... lpnllllzlng
2 ,Corwooh
In Fino Dltollllllll Hond Wu
~Tor-, 1..- ... II·
tertof a....
U!hlr
Spoclolnloo, Coli 11 411 1113

11101)' ttoull, lftlllll 111m; 1 lillie
out .lorloho Ad. OYer 1ooko Pl.
A-. ~

•'4!

ForAppolnlnwll.
By Stop Lown Coro, Como u.- Sontlco, Wo Do n AM,

~
14 411 • •.

34

Wll clo hOUII¥ ·ark durt11i1. ltVeftw

lng hoWO or will boi&gt;V oft In

Ill)'

Busl11881 ,
Buildings

~ Ollloo
llda. lla7tlat. 1111 illr d Will gtvo flino loooono In my traJiir ha a!H4t, ......... MDIIc
- . •• A1f1110 Orcwo, W¥. 304- - · Ortlon .. - t o o.s;
ll'lo24H.
- - ID44ll-1122. '
- · 304-t71-1373.

F n.rnr

21

.

Fumlohod EfllololncJ, 7 112 !loll
A¥0.
Qolllpcllo.
t1~. Ooad lhape, $100, ·~·
Ul~\ee Paki, 111 418 U11 A,_., Antiquo P~n Smoa Tobit
7P.M.
Modo: Solloro SIO; Antiquo
Condv Joro 112 Pint $1 Ploi:o,
QIOCI- living. 1 lind 2 bod- 114-41&amp;-112112.
·
, , . . . _ ot -..,I ::;~.:::..:=,__,.,....-=-Moond
-..ilo Atorl Vldoo Gomo WKh ltcrllilo
Aport_.. In M!O!-.,~!"C~rl. F- C.. And 14 Gomoo Worb
EOH.
Orootl325 ColleM-441:Zm.

f1•. Colli_....._

'

W.ntocl: Honoy boo owormo.
304 112 2071.

ChoY. 1167 To 1110 Lona Bod

Modlm 2 llhp•. l1t •• a.u
Behomo~IDoyo/4
Undootlcckocf, Muot Soli.
One · lndrOCNR
_,mente. ~hto,
Por
Umftod Tick·
I
t22Jimo, inch dn utMtll• • .,. ..... 407-717~
Ell. 111, Man·
-urlty dopollt, no pots; 114~- ThN SotuiUoy, g A.ll. To 10

Welati4- wllh wolghto, $10;
lona ........ - . ....
14, SIO; 1110{....,... hollllll, tto;

Lodr..

1141121111.
Wa c: dip..._ buill an

bam,,....,

Pl. . . . l'f4.2l. 10'11.

MQoo, N;, AT, PI, 1111,
114-441-7lll.

---,~--------

ABTRO·OMPB

2311.

21111.

5S

Building

BERNICE •
BEDEOSOL

Supplies
WinCloildO
~ Or-, CIH
Coli -114-

- · lint""- ....

112-321"1.

Wool

•'

,,.

'"
,

,• :

&lt;

a:

- - - lhot you .do _wllh~,
...I
Nal'
10 Mitcl_,.,
tho
molluntNyouhon-

1-0id-••••n ''"' ,.,.1

,..,..... .,., 1 ,..... For lion!: I -....,. ,_
Ds ,...,........._ ...
0.
2
""'.
_
.
......... ttii8L
I,
10 llollw Pr ..... ....,.-.~·

.....

~v.a.o~-=-

..., 1=:1r-::r-·~tal

-----~---~-·
:..:
.............. ea:
"

84

~.

AI-

-.uoriP

all_.lwll_,
, . . ""'--v'

lllloy 11, 1113 ,

1

deltnninalion and drtve. Once you set
mind 10 something. you 're not easily
deterred, but, unfortunately, this may not
be lrue of you IOC?ay.
SA!JITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Plans
that you have devoted Iota or lime and
thought 10 shouldn't be revised at the lall
minuteiOday. Impulsive changst could ruin
everything.
reaolvlng.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jin. II) You could
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) Collective: be excsptionaly tonulllle In lhll cycle with
ventures hove good chances for succeoo people you're inYoiWc? with. piOYidld none
IOC?ay, pi'OV~ your leammato can offer toi ollho parties gs11 greedy. All boll oro off W
lho -vor as much as you can. n nOt, il, they do.
may not work.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20•FIII. 1 I) Things
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Someone wllh lhould work out rather Will lOt you IOC?ay W
whom you'll be involved IOC?ay mighl need everyone goos along with your woy or
a 111111 puoh 10t a jump llart, bull you I*· thinking, but -10 IIIOM who oppoM you.
IIIII .with lhiti lacllc, ft couk? prove counlllr· Opposition coulc? become a hoiiiCI, 111110-

.·- are romantically Perlect for you. Mall $2 ·
plus a long, self-addressed, atampec? enve·
lope 10 Matchmaker, c/o lhis nowspaper, •.
P.O. Box +485, New Yorlc, NY 10163.
'
GE.IIINI (Mioy 21.Jtute 20J You're not likely
to mince words today wilh peopla who
oppoae your opinions and positions. II
might be wise lo stay away lrorn cleballble
aubjecla lhat neither porty is ""'pablo ol

BloOk, briciit, -

1.11

INOIICEI
OHIO VALLIY PUIUIH- CO.

·

~-iiti!D;odijpgo~lh~I!M~· J:.ii;=iiiii

lnlme to bl uNCI Clft ~nl=
fonn lroct«, $126.
•

. apponunHy

~ ..

Corl$1,100. ~

John Dooro M - I ComDiotlf
Robullt I -,._ ~
Condldan,
•EJtoOIIoril
.,......

Buslneu

lhoo?

...... 1114.

11D~ef1

51 Yilt ...
53DICI

$5 US toldler

Q. My cousin wot;ts in real estate
and talks about "fiiZbOs." Can you tell
me what those are?

- . :iOW7a4722 ori7Mm.
1185 Chon Clmonlln&gt;o, .z.a. 1
ownor, AWl - . 114-241-

tto

By Jei!Tey McQuaiD
BLURT speaks suddenly, without
taking lime to think: "Don't blurt ·
answer." H you're unclear about
I ~~e~~'!! this verb, remember that
II
should begin with BLUR.

~.

2111111.

FruHs&amp;

Wllllech

1185 l)adgo Dl]ltono . . - ,
11t

58

-

Pull ~Pert
AllrtJIIN
PontMr
31 FonaMtple

3011.

Kor-.

tllllo3lll2.

18· ~··&gt;.
17

21 A lettwr

1~ lllozdo Al0'8E. .·lull loci, """ mlloo, $2300, 114-62·

tolto f150 lar ..... wnhout tho'- llougN .._
SOlo ond ft111clll~ choir, IJICII. tho Top In Sound Compony, 114-

wanted to Do

,

tlan All Pow- NO,
AIIWM Cltiatte,•130;DOO .....
8-7121.

but ...

ilnt aoncUllan, I'I!Rtl 2IG.

·cLUB

1114 ChoY. Coplloo Cl- -

ln cllurdt,

CONOW&gt;. 1-800-

..

tlrtciMII
11 FonMrll»

2D ., -I
22 Et- Brut•
21TIIIze North of
OltiL
27111Da

~::=-~
Dmono With Now .,...; 'i"A'&amp;:

;r,.'""'............,,. ond 26 iiOoPOI

114-........

~ ........ nontrocllllonol

18

441~

......, Furn"lohocl, wnh AC,

WID.J!!I'!!'., Be MOYICII $4,1100,

"'· .... J04-77N717.

iiH'iLI._.'

ct\alre, ·~.i 20.. tan 1nd •and,
$25; 114-....ai5S1.

01 3 Mountoln Sctno Plcturo
Lolto1 . opon 7:0CIIm., elooocl Sot
Wood FIJirMe Prb: $10, 114-

1111 Flomlng 12x50, ••2 -

IIIII, 114-4*2111,

11AQLX~With-

aandltlan. $100,

Spoclll tltlo cnpplo mlnnowo, so -oldol., lloptowood

monttt. tr.elol r.nt, new 14x70,
doilYOnd llld oot up, lldrtlng
ond .. _ 1.eoo.83UI2&amp;.

881-31S2.

WhlloW~I out-IG

• .....,.,
114-1112

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
32 Mo!llt4! l:!omes

Condition,

Prcm . . . , _ ooyll llluo $50.
flill block 134. Full rod $30. 304-

113,R-

10 Lick of

tiling (II.)

HEALTH

1183 Fonl EXP, I Spoocl,
. Lo11S1 Ill Low MI..., Elc.ntnl

Wotlt booiL 111 ... " "·

1111c1Aftj

e1 Epoch
Lunch, •·•·
aar--

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SWAIN

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.... ..,.,

1811 Clllta Cid, 1Ift. 144 hp ....

With

·-·

WOODSTOCK! CONRAD!

=aszs.11t ••• u•.

F-DIUYory.

a - .... -•bod

-c!.~·;:;,.'\Jt

14 A.

LAVNE'8 FURNITURE;
Complll• ' homa fuma.h~
Hotn: 11D1 811. N. I
0322, 3 mllol out BuloYIIIo Rd.

==

Wiy .,..

...... 10,1100 ~-

·

pnlductive.

-

. . ..

...._raft

.

. Advancement In your choosn field ol , , VIIIGO (Aug. 23 I pl. 22) vou·ro 1tq1y 10 PIICIS (Fell•
2D) II poulblt
a;.de&amp;YOr 11 a strong probebiiiiY lor the year , bo bOll pnxluCtive ond lndYOirioua IOday, • IOC?Iy, try 10 ~your lllofl ond lltiiiiY
lhead. Howavar, you muol be pali.ent, llllf7 aro • - - llow..,or, 10 tatk8 or url~o,,.lla t1to1 aro ala mtnl!el ;,. your aecent up the ladc?Sr of sue- W you like on ...,. titan you lhoulc?, INI 111 or ~ netulll. Y011'111 not JIIIIIO do
coukl bHiflaond ...,..,
COUld dllrupt ... antllll-bly line.
too ... 7llndllniJ phyllcal c7IoiiiS.
TAURUI (April 2D·II•Y 20) Important L1811A (llpL J3.0ol. 23) You have loll al 1 Allll!l 1111ra1t 2f-Aprll11) Y011 have a lot
oiJjlctMI 0111 ICitlellllble IOC?ay, pt'O'ildocl ' lrllndl who Ike '"' you, 00 don't going lOt you loday, ltiCh u good -~11011 don't let your lmpu- OYtnidl your puoh yourMII 1n1o a fi!GUP or cllqua lodly biUppOI'I allrllnda, llld 1 poaelble Mlill
1i!pt!IOdOIOIIY· Be syoltlmatiC, p&lt;aCiicallnd _ , . yo0'.111 not genoroualy IJCCIPIICI. II · 11om Lady l.uc*, ~tittle 1111111 1 oltlnos
P!lltenl Know whera 10 loOk lOt 101118nce. rnlgiii be 1 bid hplrilnOit.
you mov not tully capllatlzt on
.ftd ~lilt find it. The Aatr~·Graph! ICOIIPPQ (Oot. JA.Nov. 221 Naluro hall -'a.
Mltehmakar inlllnlly ...,.... whlc:llllgnl, . !"dowed JC!U wHh an ldlqlf!ll• ~· ol,,

:·

•

'DE Z

.IRK

YX

ll

x•

K!f'YOE,
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8ZZFX

OYDYUZC

o•

ORPXZKRS
.INCA

y D •

Hill

91:11\.IG

R X

DEZ
. XRVZ.I . I . '

T.WZTD
w•.ID.
PREVIOUS SOUIIIOfl: .._ , . , siX·yeat-&lt;lld boy said to me: I've been
-.g to ,.... lao ..., lie." . - Fay Wroy.
.

a

�\
I

•

•

'rhe Daily Sentinel
.

.

I

·

Ohio Lottery
,!.. '

.

NBA cagers ·
inducted into
hall of fame

Monday, May 1o, 1993

.

PIIQI 1j)

Graduation isn't the end for
.

ByLYNNELBER
" They're older than normal
AP Tele'lsli. Writer
high scbool kids," be IIOICS. "But
LOS ANGELES - Ob. c'DIClll. we did start them as sophom~n~,
A wa11:h? You didn't really lhink and we ~laycd one soph~m~~e
lhe kids of "Beverly Hills, 90210" year, one JUIIlor year, one seruor.
and "The Fresh·Prince of Bel-Air"
The soft-voiced megaproducer
would settle for a mundane gradua- · also politr.ly, but firmly, _poinrs out
lion gift like niAT.
an obvious pattern of discriminaThe " 90210" brat pa~;k after · lion.
all, .wore designer duds by
"No one com~ wbcll a 32Karan and. Issey_ Mi)'alt~ to their year~ld- we don t have I!DYbodY
prom - likely msugaung rear- that old - wben !'-. 32-r=r·old
some nationwide battles between male star plays a htgh sc
stu·
~g teens and their skioDin1 dent in movies," Spelling sayL "It
·
COISI8Rtl1 amazes me."
parents.
Y
d
But for twin~ Brandon an
No, what lhcse lap-of-luxury
high school graduates warit, and Brenda (Jason Priestly and Shanwhat !hey 're getting (gift wrap ncn Doherty), Dylan (bearuhr!&gt;~
unavailable), arc TV contract Lute Perry) and Donna (Ton
renewals. Their shows are coming Spclling,.you-know-who's daughback in the fall.
tel), there's no more high school
AND they get to continue grow- haven.
"I'!D sure the network would
ing up. NBC's "Fresh Prince"
graduateS irs Slllr, Will Smilh, at 8 have liked us to stay in high ~I
p.m. Eastern 1onight, while Fox for another four years," Spelling
TV's "90210" special two-hour said. "But we didn't do thal. and I
season finale airs at 8 p.m. lhink the cast really appteciated the
Wednesday, May 19.
fact we've shown the growth."
Even NBC's Saturday IIIOllling
So, just like tbe great poet
high school sitcOm, "Saved By . Robert Frost, our stalwart gradu·
The Bell," gets a prime-lime c:ae- ates soon will find themselves conmony at 8 p.m. Satwday, MaY. 22.
fronled by alluring multiple-dloice
No snide J'l!IIU!I'b, please, about nBis.
lhe, ummm, more llliiiUre·looting
Well, maybe -not the SAME
members of "90210," although roads. not roads in some musty old ·
Aaron Spelling ~ that wood. But hey, we aU try for the
lhe youngest san of the scnes pro- path less traveled, even. if it turns
duced by his COOipany are 19.
out to be Rodeo Drive after rush

Do.ma ·

PAGEANT WINNER- Holly Williams, left, participated
recently Ia the Miss Teen Ohio Pageant Ia Wortbiagton. She
received second place .I n the talent division aad third nnner-up to
Miss Teeaager Ohio. She is pictured here with Miss Ohio 11191
Amy 'Osborne.
-

Holly Williams .
comes in third
in state·pageant
Holly Williams, dau,llter of
Allen and Marilyn Wtlllams,
Pomeroy, participated in the Miss
Teenage Ohio Pageant in April at
die Holiday Inn Wonhington. She
is a senior at Meigs High SchooL
Miss Williams wu awarded the
title of third runner-up to Miss
Teenager Ohio. She also fmished in
second place in the talent division.
She received an $800 schobuship
from John Power Modeling.
She is now eligible to participate in lhe Show Choir Camp of
Amercia. She will be traveling to
Disney World in Florida "in August
for !hat presentation. .

CASPER, Wyo. (AP) - "Children of a Lesser God" playWright
Mark Medoff says school budgets

.
William H. Cleland, 1anc w.
ymon of"D""'ft·
Cleland. R/W• to '"""6e ._u..,

Cc.pledby:
EDliii'J&amp;eDe Jla•!Jtoa
Recurder, Meigs Couty, Ohio

HOLI;Y WILLIAMS

Mitchell is a 1989 graduate of
Meigs High School. He is a construction worker presently working
in Columbus.
The open church wedding will
be an event of May 15 at 2 p.m. at
lhe First Baptist Church in Middlepan wilh Rev. James Seddon officiating.
.
A reception wiU follow in the
church fellowship hall.

-........ Names in the news·
PENSACOLA, Fla . (AP) Astronauts who set foot on the
moon say it's important to return
and travel beyond.
•'Going to the moon, allhough a
lot of people look at it as having
been a luxury, wasn't at all,"
Eugene Cernan said Friday at a
news conference during lhe annual
Naval Aviation Symposium. "We
are going 10 go. It'll man's intuitive
spirit..to go back and go on to
Mars..
Ceman, lhe last man to walk on
the moon, was joined by Neil Armstrong, the first man on. the moon;
Alan Shepard, !he fJtSt American in
space; and James Lovell, part of
the fJrSt moon mission.
Former Air Force astronaut
Buzz Aldrin of Laguna Beach,
Calif., lhe second man to walk on
die moon, introduced the panel.
Armstrong, who walked on lhe
moon in 1969, advocated furlher
development of manned and
unmanned spacecraft.
"For some jobs you are going to
have 10 require intelligence on lhe
spot," he said.
Cernan, speaking of his December 1972 Apollo flight, said:
" Many of us are disappointed !hat
that beginning never continued."

for lhe ans always seem to be lhe
fii'St ones cut in diffiCult economic
times.
.
"As a society we will not pay
for education t I do not under·
stand," he saRI. "In failing to
answer lhc needs of education, we
are signing a dealh warrant of our
society as we know il.''
During his stay in Casper Ibis
week, Medoff wall:hed rehearsals
of his play "Stefanic Hero," based
on a Hans Christian Andersen fairy .
tale. The play is about a princess .
who's turned into a swan by an evil
sorcerer and !hen goes on a quest 10
break the spell
The themes of love, courage and
the clash of one person's desires
with the wishes of olhers are lhe
same tikmes Medoff applied to his
famous play. "Children ora Lesser
God." That play was made into a
hit movie starring William Hurt
and Marlee Matlin.
·
KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine
(AP) - Former President Bush
told friends and neighbors this
reson 10wn will be gelling bact to
normal after four years of Secret
Service agents, press entourages
and visiting dignitaries.
Bush noted !hat lobster fishermen who.were barred from the bay
surrounding his seaside home during his presidency are now wei· ·
come to return.

Sw:dison C. Brace, Mabel L.
Racine
Louise Thompson, Lot 13, to
:
:
~·
to
Village
of
•
Dorolha Nentzlins. Pum.ViL
.,_
......
!
Discri
Roben Barton, Patricia J. Bar·
Local ......w
Soulbcm
ct.
ton, Parcels. to Thomas McChmg, R/W,ID
Village
of
Racine,
Sidton.
M•deline McClung, Pum.
William L. Cleland, Sharon L.
Dewayne G. Stutler, Mldla C. Cleland. RJW. to Village of Racine,
Swtler, 45 A., T-4, S.33, R-12, to RaCine VilL
Charles Donald Burke; RoseBeneficial Mtg. Co. of Ohio,
Orange.
.
mary Burte, ~· S.6, T-9, R-.IS,
Anhur W. Nease, Ada L. Nease, 10 a..tcs Bnan Burke, Columbl8.
parcels, S. 2~. T-3N, R-13W, to
Patrick V.1ohnson. Jill L. Jolm!JQD,
Sutton.
Roben 0 . Willis, Shawnna L.
Willis, Lots 10 clll, to Home
National Bank, Syracuse V. •
Dar AM hMe!s: I am writina
Dewey Ray Birchfield, Mary .in respoase to your totally
Birchfield, pucels. to Lmy Car· o«.-..a nply 10 "J• a Boob."
penter, Pom. Vill
You waWAI "Boob" that a JIC!IO!l
Roben E. Facemyet, Melissa F. need only lake a look at his
Facemyer, 2.3~A. to Joseph D. sw 1 t' ra mother 1o ree whatshe
Cremeans, Racbacl Cremeans, will be liU in 25 years. Wrong! ··

Community Caludar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD In adVIIDCe
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

Wednesday tO a.m. 10 2 p.m. Public invited.

MONDAY
BURLINGHAM • Bedford
·Township Trustees, Monday, 7
p.in., town hall.
·

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA~ •
Singing by the Lake, Krodel. Park.
Point Pleasant.• W.Va.; 7 p.m .
nightly, through Sunday. Ed Craw:
ford, Conrad Cook and Calvary
Echoes. Paul Olapnan will emcee.
Call 304-67S•138l ror informalion.•

!J:irit

'..

bour.
Sr.;Uing plays it CCI'f about what
the '90210" graduates wi~l do:
where they'll live, who's gom11 10
what college, wbo may head m10

Jason Carroll (the name is
changed to protect his privacy), a
diabetic since the age of 13, had
unsuccessful eye surgery in 1978
and developed an infection !hat
resni!M in amputatiOn of bolh legs
above the knee.
He applied for and received
Social ·SI!Curity disability benefits.
He also received vocational reba·
bilitation services from a State
agency. With this support, he
returned to college and in 1983
~ted wilh a bachelors degrees
m social work and business .mnin·
istration. Today he is a state vocationa! rehabilitation counselor and
is teaching Olbers what he learned
throu.. bolh his studios and his life
expeneoces.
•
This is a true story, and one !hat
Over lhe next several years, ~
illustrates a fact !hat far too many · experienced additional heallh prob'
~pic may not know about-lhat
Jems, includjng a kidney transp~f
1s, rehabilitation help is available if Each time he fought back. for 3&lt;$·
!hey become disabled. Every State ' monlhs after his trial work period,
has a vocational rehabilitation Jason was allowed to receive
a11ency dcsi11ned to assist people Social Security disability benefits
for any month he was unable to
work enough 10 earn at least $SOO:
selins; training, job placement, Medicare coverage concinued dur·
transportation to and from work, ing lhis ~. providing help wilh
and on the job assistance.
doctor bills. _
Every ~licant for Social SecuIf you are disa\)led and want
rity disability benefits is considered help in getting back to work, you
for refcml to lhe State Rcbabilita· ',should call your State Vocational
tion Agency for help, even if they Rehabilitation Agency, listed in the
do not qualify for disability beue- telephone book under."Siate Gov·
fits. If they do get disability bene· · ernment". Y011 should also contact
ft'ts, Social Security pays for the the Alhcns Social Security offJCC at .
cost of the rehabilitation $CI'Vices if 592-4448 or call Social Security'i
the services result iD lhe individual toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213,
being able to work. People are business days between 7 a.m. and 7
accepted for vocational rehabilita- p.m. 10 find out how work incen•
tion services based on an evalua- lives can help you while ypu are on
.
tion of their rehabilitation potential. lhe road back to work.

a

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•z.

-Mted. · ·

Colllpleti Medical/surgical Care
for Ear, Nose; a~ Throat Including
Asth•, Allergy &amp; HHrfng Aids

RACINE - Southern Junior
High Boosters, Monday, 7:30p.m.
All sixth grade.parents attend.

. POMEROY· DAY, and Ladies
Auxiliary, MOnday, 1 p.m., 124
Buuemut Avenue, Pomeroy.
. MIDDLEPORT -Meigs Junior
Hisb Al:adcmic Booslen, Monday.
7 P·~· · school cafctqia. Everyone

invited.

WEDNESDAY
RFFNVJLLB • BllftiD School
RACINE • Racine lloard of Board, special
Wednes·
Public Mfairs, Monday, 10 a.m., day. 4 p.m., high
cafelaiL
Star Mill Park.
· MIDDLEPORT • Middlepon
RACINE - tuberaWn 11kin lelt· Literary Club, WedDelida/a!:
lng clinic, Monday, S· 7 p.m., p.m~ home ofMn. BJd!ed
•
RaCine F'U"C Station..
Group review or Jane Byre by
Clladolre 8lonle.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - BarPOMEROY • Pomeroy Merrisnnville Senior Citizella Club, clluta AMocillion, Wednesday,
l'rcc blood p1 IlL£ clinic Tueaday, 8:30 a.m., Bank One conference
10:30 a.m. 1o noon, toW!Iboale. IOOIIL
Potluc:t cliMe( a&amp;r the clillic. AD
memlicQ wdconie.
·
. , POMEROY • Am a Ganim·
..
en Clab, WM"""t), 7 p.m., home .
POMEROY • Tuben:ulin 1kiD of Mrs. Harold Lohao, Wolfo
It Ohio Valley Qris. Drive, PI I Of. Alic:e TbolapiDII
bly Taeaclay from S- 7 will pi r•t JIRIIIMI 011 orieDial .
p.m. Ptee eernce.
•••• PM ... '

m;.:t,•

lelli,=

John A. Wade, M.D. ·
Suite 112 Valley Drive
· Pt. Plesant WV
Call 304-675-1244
for appt. or illformation.
.

-In regards to the per~ons letter,
please come forward and attend
our meetings and your Information .• .
. that ·you ·are seeking will be
explained to you. . ,
Trustee ot Oranae 'l1fP

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Robert Mmmld
l
'

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70s.

•
,
. Pcln1810y-lllddlaport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 11, 1993

Vol, 44, NO. I

Moiltlm1latnc.

1 S.C!Ion. 10 PagN 25 oenllt.
A Mullmeclatoc. ,._llfi8PW

In LeMasters murder trial

Jurors visit sites where bodies were ·found
By JIM FREEMAN
SentiDel NeWB Stair
Jurors in lhe aggravated murder
trial of William D. LeMasters II
visited two sites in riU'al Meigs
County Monday where the bodies
of LeMasters • alleged victims were
found.
l.,eMasters, 26, of Racine is
accused of four charges of aggraVllted murder in lhe Feb. 8, 1991, '
shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and 12-year-old !ctfrey S.
Halley, bolh of Gallipolis.
A co-defendant, Fred Drennan
of Ravenswood, pleaded guilty .
March I 10 lhree charges of aggra"
vated murder in the ineidellt. Dren·
nan is expected to testify aaainst
LeMasters during lho trial as pan
of plea bargain agreement.
The tour of lhe two sites was

held soon after counsel ror LeMasters and the state finished
tin&amp; •
jury of five men and- along wilh two altemalc jurors.
The jurors, in two VIliS, visited.
site off Old Port18nd RoadPortland iri Lebanoo Township
where the body of the clcb Hallcy
was found in Septemller 1991.
Mterwards, jurors ttaupaocd
to a location on Eatoo Rol!d, allo in
Lebanon Township, where the
remains of Jeffmy S. Halley MK
found in Aprill992.
Jurors, following inttnlctiou
from Court Bailiff Teresa M.
Tyson-Drummer, viewed die dialy
sites while LeMasters sat ia the
~ear of a Meigs County Sbclifl's
DeparUnent cruiser.
According to Judge Fmd W.
Crow. III, jurors viewed the two

silr:s 1D br:lp them 1leaer W!!lcnland
the ewi• • c ... will be JIICSC!Ited
..... die 1rial..
Followill&amp; die jllrors' JCtum to
the coardaoasc around I p.m.,
Crow 10 cnnl porecdinp nntil
8:45
T
by when opening

a..:

••••• ,., -

... ltelal

.

Before bciDJ n:cessid, Crow
Oll!l!: apia 1Did ;.ro.s to IK)I dis. t:IISS the c:awe IIIII 10 a-void media

:·;:..ofto'ot':c:~ !:

e.. '.

-u JQD' "• • • •

ev*'

solely ta1 the
Oow aid

D
Wfh
Also Moeday. Crow denied a
5

=ia"l..~.t::::::.1::~

c:rilai I -=t al•=a flJ commilted
ealitrbyld'
iMevi+nrc in
tallill..
•

During the hearing, Prosecutor
John R. Lentcs said the information
needed to be presented to demonstrate that LeMasters was not "an
innocent bystander" in the double

m..

..

Lentes said LeMasters was
involved ip the robbery of lhe
Howard Lawrence store in Long
Bollom and the subsequent beating
of Lawrence in January, 1991.
lninically; Lawrence was murdered
during anolher. rob~ in which
another man, Donald Lindeman of
Racine, was latel convicted.
Lentes called attention to a
graph showing similarities in lhe
two incidents.
•
Bolh acts were planned in lhe
presence of Michelle Drennan and
occurred in Lebanon Township
wilhin lhree miles of esch olhet,
Lc:nles said. In addition, lhe same
vehicle and shotgun were used, he
said.
Attorney William N. Eachus,
representing LeMasters, called the
motion an attempt by the prosecution "to buuress a case lhat isn't so

&amp;ood -'YJIIOie." .

. ,

. ) .

"To allow (lhe mcormauon m
. would be substantially pejudical to
our dient, Eachus said.
Crow denied the motion saying
that the informatiou would be high·
ly prejudicalto ..LeMasters and
would pemaps warrant a reversal
upon appeal.

Ann

.C'::.:r=:n~~

Low tonlgb!ln 60s. Pll'llyf " •
cloudy. Wednesday, rain, high In

6350

ft

Dear Aaa LaDders: Your
. llltemeat 10 tbe )'011111 follow, "]f
you want 1D ree ~ )'IIIII' wife will
look lb in 25 ,._., loc* It her
mother,• wasiOially W11J11i.
.·
My mother was a atldd,.. for
neatness. I~m a slob. She was a
devout &lt;Jtholic. 1'111 • atbel• $be
B~~ of Middleport, Ohio, 12' Wrong! WI'OIIII
X 114 • strip, to Ruben Collins,
I - die oldeat cl five kids and ~!!'!!'!!!!'!!!!!-....~~;;;:;;;;,.,;;_~J wu never lllo for anylblaa in b!l'
life. I'm new:r ta1 limo. Mam wll
Thelma Collins, Midd. Viii.
CIIIIC from a family just like the one
alWI)'II
a aw:r. 1'111 a I(IQ!dOi. ~
delaibed
In
tblt
lcall'.
My
mother
Your
tatimony
is
impressive.
You
John N. Ginlher, Jr., Judy K. bad 110 n 1 nal MariS wbalsostayed
with a busbancl who wu
have
a
right
to
bq
proud
of
)'OUI'Idf,
Ginther, l.SOO A., to James M.
meal
abusive
and pntalthful. I duew out
"'~ever. Silo- coc*ed
a
, Read ou ror more:
Sprouse, Jr.,.........
did ,__._
Jack lett, Betty Jett, Ease, to cl wt die IDa or
.awf.
Dear Au l.aaden: I lin darned two lousy hg. . . . . . wbo- very
Monongahela Power Co., Olive.
1be bad a loa&amp; fri;tcclnJ lucltyyoudi&amp;l'tprint "J•aBoob's" much lite. my ladler. ·.
1bore ol4 ciJcbee daa'talways fit;
Stanley L. Boyce, Frances M. biliary of llt:IDa too -.y pillnnd lcaer when my bnsband IIIII I met
Boyce, Ease. and Ronald E. Jamll, was a MhlmiiJilr. Silo anbtiliud 30 , . . qo; "Boob" blalilcs bis Ann, 10 qait uing them. -· A
Jr., Chester.
die l'anily by aam.l'"'*l" at 1 .'
aJ!VELANDCRITIC
·
lllllrilge 011 dlo fact tlw
Cecil Maynard. R/W, to Vilhlgc . ~.... w- b bonncina cbecks ""'""'
DEAR a.BVIILAND: 11vllb for
be was dumb enough 1D many a lid
of Racine, Racine Vill.
and f'nrsing pcscaiptiona.
from I dirty, dysfunctional borne. If h8ullna mnp lholt lnu(Mihat.,~ ·•
My dad Wll!l't much beau. He · my huabind had.judged me by my
11 alco~ nthtbtg yow life tJf' '"" •
parenllllld the Jllllsbeclde house I lift of a lowd 011t? "AlcoltoiUm:
~;!~~
. lived in, which was baiod in junk, How Ill Rtoophe II, Huw Ill Deal
wilb my 11c:1t rri&amp;ld. By the way, be )WUid !IC\U have lllllried me.
Wllh It, How Ill Coiii/IIN It" t1.11111ri
Dad was a minisW.
· Luckily. he had faith and tlli11.11 aroiU!d. Stlld a 11(/-1111,
Owning tsUmlbatbDg!ound, rm COU'I&amp;6· We are both ~UCCC~Iful drtutd,lo,.,.~,_~
sure you cu undentand the profeaionals. 8lill in love and have twl 11 clltcJ: or lftOIIIY twtllr /o~
aelf 1 m ptHemc I bad. But I two lovely children and 1 beautiful $3.65 (llril il!clllllt• poltagt , . ,
am p10ud to tell you, I pulled home. .
lralldlillg) Ill: /Jcolrol, clo AM Ltua·
IDylelf out of tblt- and am now
Slwile 011 "Boob" for a mQ!r tkrs, P.O.BoJc 11562_, Cllll:ago,IIL
livlnl a WOIId&amp;ful1y leWIIding life cop-out, and lbame ou you for 60611-0562. (Ill Ca/Uida, ~elld
in a clean home with a clcwtcd loaing bim act IWIY wilh it. Amoog $4.45.)
h"'wMI..a dno t a•!li'ul children. your readen, Ibm are COIIIIIIeu
The WOIIt iDmlt I could naive boya and gida from dirty, DtWicct·
lo Not~~ Open For
would be for • _,., ID tell me I ful, alcoholic and llobn bomea who
I"
n.. s.........
1111 jultlikc my"""""'· I have spent long for and ca11 succeed in
J Pltats (flaw... &amp;
30 years ayina 1D be • different building a beUer life ror themaelves.
¥
........
),
lllaMt Well, Plllltl
fnm b!l'.a p•INc. "JOlt a Boob's" I hope they doa't let tlw lazy Boob
Pliatt, c..,llli ll. ol • lluy ·
leall' will be eatremely cliscouraa· dealnJy their faith In lhemrelveslllll
.... lJM&amp; ....1f11f IW
. . 1D people who liYC in dyllimc- in each other. - ,A CINDBRELLA
. SPECIAL OF THE MON'lJI
c,.••., ••,..u
..... taailiell!ld billiiM tl!ey are FROMPHRLY
OPEN HOUSE SLATED· doomed 'k IE, Ala, tell diem thtll
c.lllew•'l.l5
Carroll Teaford will c:dd'nte llil
DEAR PIDLLY: You've hit a
HUIIARD'S GIIEIIIOUSE
life II wllat JCU !Dike it. - PLANO.
70tla blrtbda, with- . . . - - TI!XAS
home IUD while I WU fumbq
IYUCUII
bOIIted bJ his daqllten oa, Sat·
OPEN DALY
t2-l
DEAR PLANO: ~ you for &amp;Oilil)fobere-theblr :"en.Keop
urday rr- Z-4 pa. 81 SCar Mil the 11¥kl x IIIII poop1e Cllllllld do r-ting for I!!OIIIa' dobbcl.
Park In R1dae. II lias •eea
riae !!blwc a bligh""' beaiDDing.
requested that lifts be

.I

Pick 4:

PageS

'

Counselors look at Stich liK;IOrs ·
as age, education, work experiencew
and most importantly, they say-'
motivation. "If the person is moti!
vated and really wants to work,,
generally we can help him," 1\
counselor stated.
In addition, Social Security has
a number of special. rules designed
to assist people wilh disabilities-by
providin$ extended cash benefits .
and Medicare or Medicaid coverage while ·!hey attempt to work. In
1ason' s case. for example, a montlf
ilfter he graduated from college Ire
became a case service manager
wilh lhe County Senior Services
Agency. Durin~ this time, he
received full Social Security bmei
fits for nine monlh "trial work
period" and then. for a three monlh
"grace period" before his Social
Security checlcs stopped. .
~

r

240

the wort world.
And, he. adds: "What is Luko
Peny going to do in the summerand witb whom? 0)1, I wish 1
hadn't said that. ..

Social Security ne'Ys
By ED pETERSON
Social Security
Manaaer in Athena

Pick3:

.Parents' behavior won't doom you

Colnmurtity Calendar .

ANTIQUITY • Tent revi~al;
Monday, 7 p.m., Failh. Fellowship
Crusade for Christ, Antiquity,
Brother Hurest Prater. Everyone
welcome.
,.
LONO BOITOM • Failh Full .
Gospel Church, three day ICI!Iinlr
on Holy
by Rev. MirY Dia- ·
mond, A 1011, Monday and Tuel·
day 10 a.m. to 00011 and 7·9 p.m.,

TV's top. teens _:

r---------------------.,
I Property· tran·s£ers I~!.,~s~t!s~c: ::~

Brewer engagement announced
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Brewer
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Marybeth Hazel, to
Vaughan Kelly Mitchell, son of
· Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Mitchell, Rutland.
Miss Brewer is a 1988 gmduate
of Meigs High School. She is
employed as a veterinarian assistant for Dan Notier, DVM, Gallipolis.

•

JURY AFIELD • Joron In tbe aggravated aurder trial of
William D. LeMa&amp;tera D, lli, of Racine tourecl two sites MOI!day
where LeMasten' two alleled vlctlnis were fouad. Here, Aaktl"t
Prosecutor Charles H. Kafgbt and Bill Mcl.aae of New' Pblladel·
pbia, representing LeMasters, eaamlae the site where the re~~alu
or 3fi-year-old Je"rey L. Halley were round. (Sentinel photo by
•
Jilli Freeman)
. '

..

:
•
:
:•
·

Nelsonville firm awarded bid to
·remove trees, stumps in Middleport
ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

·
NO, THIS ISN'T TOUCAN SAM • Stadeall
at Pomeroy Elemmlai'J eajoJed a visit from the
Columbus Zoo on Monday afternnoa. They

were ripon • to • •• . . , •.:. Ilo' iaclwl'' I

I I I«
theblrdllwt .................
this IOWID wllidl _,. •

t.' . a .
:

:

Charoes
are _re'iled
in coc-u::g.
· hting' case
b
'.1 "
"'J "•

McARTHUR, Ohio (AI') Fifty-seven peopl~ pleaded innocent 10 misdemeanor cockfighting
charges refiled in a 1991 case.
More than 100 people cnunmed
into lhe ViniO!I County counroom
forthe&amp;n1dgnrnenthlonday.
.
Vinton County Prosecutor
David Kessler said he reflled the
charges becmtse he was c:oncerned
die original charges from the May
11, 1991, raid would be voide!l. ·
. The_4th District Court of
Appeals of Ohio il) Athe~~ is
reVIewing an appeal of the original
ruing by 20 people charged in the

. case.

Died cadi of 284 new amplailus,
. . . by c:erlifilld !lllil..
Kessler Slid die Jeaet advised
d!a die co.~ is wil1in&amp; ID KCept
Ia ~-· of ille oriP'a1 case

'

donations have been made to lhe
pool fund. He said a comJ?Iete
report on the donations wtll be
made at lhe next meeting.
The mayor reported !hat
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, had made a $1,000
donation 10 lhe village and !hat lhe

money went 10ward ·completion of
lhe stage in Dave Diles PaJt.
Mayor Hoffman said that he
will be meeting wilh a representative from lhe FmHA Friday regarding financing of the Hobson water
and sewer project
Continued on paae J

Hubbard reported in.stable
~::c:ri:::f::J:!~~:~t:! condition after gunshot wound
award the bid but for a scaled down

project to bring the cost 10 $S,SOO.

Charges of attempted aggravated murder are expected 10 be f!led
able for the work through a grant against a Pomeroy woman as lhe
and local monies.
·
result of a shooting at Jeff's Carry
Council gave a second reading Out early Monday evenin~.
ud
the defeadallt isn't to .. ordinance 10 hire a pool manMeigs County Shenff James
tiliil)l!in:d 10 ....,_ for die new ~ ager at SS.SO .. hour in lieu of a Souls by said this morning that
n:creation director. The third read· Brenda Sue Fry, 43, of 606 East
Ia ll, S3 rl ' "'"' ~ 10 ing and adoption of the ordinance Main St Pomeroy is being held in
~~ ao COI!test ud paad $54 will tate place at the next meeting lhe Gall~ County Jail pending mne n:maiaing 231 clefcn- prior ·10 Memorial Day when the ing of charges.
dal5l eadllii(. d die ~IIIII band pool is slated 10 open; .
The victim, Michael R. Hubbard
pc1111td a illeir am:st, Slid COllllly · . On the recommendabon of lhe · of Syracuse, was reported in stable
coutt Oat R g w Brilbr.
MiddlcP.M Recreatiori Committee, . condition at Grant Hospital where
Slleeu Slid lie believes Vinlon Council approved hiring Kenny he was taken by Life Plight at 7:30
Coullly's
pi;. • the defen. . Reynolds as pool
Mayor p.m.
Fred Hoftinan
SCV6Ial
That is the amount of money avail-

ccMil19

· According to Sheriff Souisby,
Fry walked into the Carry Out
about 6 p.m. carrying a shotgun.
She reportedly had some words
with Hubbard and lhen fired tl!e
gun. The bullet struck Hubblnl m
the left shoulder area. Several -of
the people the!"' took the ~ from
· Fry, former wife of the VJCbm, the
sheriff said
Hubbard :was tran5!lO!"ed by ,the
Pomeroy Ulllt of lhe Metgs County 1
Emerg~ncy Se~vtcc to Veterans
Memonal Hosp1~ where he w~
treated before bemg .taken by .~t:li.copter to Grant Hospital.

.

·.

EPA conducts
landfill bearing
'

The Ohio Environmental Pro-

tection. Agenc
. y conducted a brief
hearing Monday night conccning
the American Electric Power's
applicati011 for a landfill to dispose
of coal COOibustion wastes.
About 10 members or the public
aucnded the one-hour mectina,
held at Kyger Creek Elementary
· School. The OEPA pvc 1 ~­
iation on landflll requlremenll lnd
then conduc&amp;ed 1 question and
answer session. ·
· Pollowina a short break, the
agency then opened the meedna for
public ,comment, but no oae c11oe
to 1peak on the record, aid 1eff
Rennie, AU Public Attain Man·

IF·

The poposed 225-acJC landfill
would be conltniCied 1 1/4 miles
northwut of tho Gavill Plant in
b.e,hhe and would hive lllaUl 14
years .....,;'ty. It would be 1111111 10
diapoiO of coal combuadon by·
lJ'nducll IUCh u uh and IC!Ubber

duda.

James SheeJS,' a lawyer ~senting the 20 defcadiiU. aid 1!is
appeal contends the ori&amp;inal aaplaints were void because theJ
were not notarized, as teqailed by
law.
Kessler said he was OOdl:emed
that the county might have to
refund lhousands of dollars to 1he
defendants if illolcs the appeal
"The county dOCID't l!i!ve it,"
Kessler saidofthemoney. .
Keasler said he bad 1D refile lbe
charges by today bec••w: of • twoyearstablteoflimilatious.
Letters explai · that there a defect in dlo o k l : IDC• . .•

Smtiael News Staff
The bid of Altier Complete Tree
Service of Nelsonville for removal
of several tr®s and stumps was
accepted at a meeting of Middleport Village Council Monday
night
•
The bid, $9.980 for the removal
or 19"1nles and seven sblmps, was
the only one received. Since the bid

1'he OBPA now bu 75 daya
from the April S pennlt IJIIIIi:ldou
nt1!1f dale 10 1Mw ,_..,: I
and meet with AEP ror
.

•

.

'

--Local briefs----...
Man cited after accident
A charge of unsafe vehicle was fded against Allen Manley, 19, ;
of Bidwell Monday afternoon follawing.an ia:idcnt at the inlersec:.
lion of Mulbmy and Second Streets.
.
..
Pomeroy Police reported tlw Mantey's vehicle parked on Mul;
berry rolled backwards across Second Sueet and struck Illes ,
1993 Jeep owned by Gary Wolfe, 46, Racine. There was no
•
10 the Manley car, and light damage to the driver's side door of ·'
Wolfe vehicle.
:

Three injured in accident

:::

. A two vehicle accident Monday aftemoou in Olive Township· •
sent three people 10 lhe hospital, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stile :

Hitr:.
~~ytsell, 31, and his pusmga-.. ICaihleen M. .
Jcnnelle, 32, both of 52003 Joppa Road, Reedsville, lind Cbri8ti L. : ·

Hoffman, 22, I passenger of l'l!mela K. Hoftinan, 42, bolb of 37380 ;
Texas ROlli, Pomeroy, WCIC all lrlnSilOdDd by Mllip County Bmet- scn9 Medical Service ro
Memorial Holpltal.
·,
.They weftl all treated and releaaed, a holpilaliiJ'l• ~ .-14: :

vesenns

this --w..t".

•

. - .

,

,

~ to the BGcii!ent report, l'ioif- W. northbound 00: : .: : ' : .

State ROUII'J 124 when abc turned left inlo the path of W1lylloll'« .:

IIOUthbound vehicle.

.

;

·

. . · : · ,1
· Hoffman was cited for failure to rield. Wbyuoll'a veblde q. •
•·
tained heavy, dllabling clan!qe and - towed from tho ~ :. . ,
Hoffman's vehicle sustained moderate
climap
and wu drivea.. :-. .,
.
'
~

away.

'

'

One-vehicle accident relH!_rted

..

"
"

.'

1 ~
A Cincinnati ~·a wblcle ....a.J ........._..... S.. .
day afternoon in I 01111-.vebit:le l"fi+l'l in Columbia TOWillldp, lila •
·

Coati

n~• -JIIIt3

.,

· •

l., ..

- ~

•·

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