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~16-The

Sentinel

BIG .BEND

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f'i

Your Locally Owned;
1 ~ w.·,.
Low Priced Super:f!~arket 'I C••••lty

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Ohio Lottery

l'fHL playoffs

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begin; Bruins

Pick3: 494
Pick 4: 6331 ·
Cards : 6-H, 10-C

upset victims

s~n;

Super Lotto
29-36-37-39-41-45
Kicker ·
741304 '

Page4
· we Welcome
Home Our
Nation'8 Son8
&amp; Daughters. ·

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Vol. 41, No. 243 ·

.

Copyrtghr.d 18111 .

.Tu~key Breast

··1 ·9

g· '

lB. .

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Ch~nce or rain 80 percent. Low
tooiRhl in 50s. HiRh Friday in
mid-60s.

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a1
From Our Deli
SLICED or SHAVED

Q.s

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en tne
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·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 4, 1991

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2 Bootlono, 12 Pea-• 25 ceni.
AMultimedia Inc. New~p~per

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SEED
POTATOE·S,
.CABBAGE
PLANTS and
ONION SETS
·AVAILABLE

Man's family files 'suit against Riggs, Ha:rriS
By BRIAN J, REED ' ,
Sentinel News Start · ·
A civil suit has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Jason Riggs, Dougl!lll
HBJris and several others by the
family and estale of Victor Will.
Will, 82, was struck and killed
by a truck driven b'y Jason Riggs in
June, 1990. Harris was a passenger
in the truck. As a resull of the
impact, Wili's !)pdy was thrown
into the back of the pickup ttuck.
His body. w;ts then taken and
thrown over a creek bank near

.

•

Rich Peat
40 LB.
BAG

Chester. The body Willi recovered dollar amount was not requested in
the following day, and both Riggs the suit,' which · was filed on
and Hanis are now· serving prison Wednesday afternoon. ·
·
terms in connection.with the case.
According to the complaint, ·
The plaintiffs in the case - Riggs was "operating a motor vehiWill's daughter, Vicki Nicholson cle.. .in a negligent manner, and
· {who also serves !Ill the executor of negligently "exceeded tl1e speed
Will's estate) and Nola Will, the limit, negligen~y failed to maintain
.victim's widow- are demanding a safe speed for the weather and ·
judgment against six individuals:
lightning conditions then present,
Jason Riggs, his father, Kenneth negligently went left .of cepter, neg. , Eugene Riggs,his brother, Kenny· . ligenUy failed to maintain a proper
· Riggs, Riggs Ustid Cars, Inc., Har- lookout and an assured clear disris, and an unnamed defendant who
tance ahead, operated a motor'vehiallegedly furnished beer to the IS cle while under the influence of
year pld Jason'Riggs. A specific
alcohol, and negligently struck

.

..

{Wil))."

u,nderage and nevertheless fur - WiD's body was disposed of. JasO!I
The suit alleges that the Riggs' nished alcohol to him, the com- · Riggs' brother. Kenny is named as ·
family business, "Riggs Used Cars, plaint goes on to say.
a co-defendant in this portion of the
Inc. and/or Kenneth Eugene Riggs"
As a result of lhe incident, the complaint. The complaint alleges
were the owners of the vehicle
complaint states, the victim· suf- that Kenny Riggs "conspired with
driven by Jasoc Riggs at the time fered "severe bodily. injury and the !lefendants to keep the whereof die incident, and states that the experien.c ed pain and mental abouts of lhe body unknown ...condefendants kne'w or should ha"e anguish" prior, to his death. In addi- tributing lo the abuse·of lhe corpse
known that Jason Riggs was an
tion, "the decedent suffered severe and the emotional distress of the
"incompetent driver" and was neg- emotional djsttess and lerror prior plaintiffs."
ligent in allowing Jason Riggs to to the impact wilh the Pefendant's
"The actions of the Defendants
drive' lhe truck.
vehicle and upon the realization were inlentional, outrageous and so
Harris and "John Doe" (the indi- that he was abomto die."
disregarded the rights of lhe Plainvidual or corporation pr.oviding · . The plaintiffs also allege emo- tiff," the complaint continues, "lhat
Riggs with the beer) "knew or uonal d1stress and mental suffering the imposition of punitive damages
should have known" that Ri·ggs was as a result of the manner in which are warranled against them."
'

'

Commissioners approve_bids
· others will be re~ubmitted and Court Judge one thtee-yeanerm
reapproved on a monlhly basis.
holder. No more than two of lhose
Roberts and County Garage on the board can be elected offi- •
The Meigs County Commission- Superintendent Ted Warner attend- cials.
ers approved several bids for mate- cd the meeting and discussed a
Five members were appointed to
rials .for the Meigs County High- problem of mudslides in the coun" the board in 1982, but Housing and
way Dcpanmcnt when they .met in 1y. According to Warner, mos1 arc U~ban Dcvelop.mcnt (HUD) omreg ular sessi on on Wednesday in locations which make them the cials have indicated to the commisaflemoon.
·
. responsibility of lhc townships. The sioners that those terms were
.
Three bids - one each from commissioners thanked the high - expired.
Dravo, Ri chards and Sons and way department for clean up efforts
In other business, the cornmisQuality Stone - were approved for at the site of a mudslide ncar the sioners: ·
·
aggregate materials. The commis- county courthouse.
• approved payment for a scmisioners approved all of the bids,
Discussion wa~ held on possible nar in Columbus for Joan Tcwksleaving the decision of which to appointments to the Meigs bary ·and Kathy Cummings at the
purchase to Meigs County Engi- Mettopolitan Housing Authority, a Tuberculosis office;
·
necr Phil Roberts.
.board that reviews subsidized hous- ! · • approved paymcm for ttavel
The same approval was granted in~ applications and recommends 1 and expenses for t@ Meigs County
to both bidders on bituminous rental property for subsidized hous- Recorder and ht!t' staff for the
materials. One bid was received on _ mg use.
Sou!beast Ohio District Recorder's
bituiJ\inous products from Ashland
The county commissioners are Meeung m Lancaster;
.
. • approv~ payment for a stausPetroleum and another from responsible for appointing one indiAsphall Mal43als.,llle.:,J. ,: ,. ' """" .•. Yidtllll fot' a'· f()qr ~-.tcnnrAcldi-· . , Uul.tcpOt11Dg_semmar..foF County. ·• ·
· Richards end. Sons and United tionallt,' the' Mayor of the mo~r · Coorv·en~~~loy.ees Lmda Be01z and
Asphalt submilted bids for asphalt populous village m the county (m Pat Wolf; .
·
·
concre1e malerials,: at~d both bids, this case, Middleport), appoints
• approprialed $375 that had
again, were approved by the board.
two members for one-year renns; · been certified by the Budget ComThe bituminous products bids the Probate Court Judge one two- mission for use by the Meigs Counwere accepled for the year, and the year 1erm; an~ tile Common Pleas ty Common Pleas Court.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff

,,

NESTLE INST~NT

Hot
Chocolate

BOX ·

·,.~o;.io-:t

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EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON

By Charlene Hoenicb .
Sentinel News Start .
Dedication of the new Fits!
Southern Baptist Church building
located on Pomeroy Pike will be
held at 2:15p.m. Sunday. ·
· The Rev. Lamar O'Bryant, .paslor, invites the public to attend the
dedication ceremony and ~ open
house which will follow.
' Speakers will be Clifford Coleman, director of missions for the
Scioto Valley Association, and Ron
Martin, who heads up the Buckeye
~aptist Buildings which assisted in
framing the new 7,000 square foot
structure which is attached to the
original 3,500 square foot ·church
building constructed in 1982.
The facility will be open for
viewing by visitors during the
af1emoon and refreshments will be
served following the dedication
ceremony. Regular morning ser. v.ices will be held at 9:30, Sunday
school, and 10:45, worship service.
The 'new section includcs.l6xl8
foot classrooms for ages nursery to
to adults, as well as new restrooms,
an office, and'a '\,8x48 foot fellowship hall with a fully equipp.ed
kitchen. All of the classrooms arc
attractixcly dccorat.ed and furnished for the respective age
groups using them , and the entire
church i ~ carpeted. .
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CAN

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Limit 2 Wit!) Coupon and Addltioned=•urchase. GolJd th'ru April 6, 1991
-

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EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON

9

NESTEA

Tea
·Bags_

100 CT.
BOX

LIBBY'S

Potted
Meat
•

Polite roy Plk.e, will be (ledicaled at 2:15 Pr.m.
Sunday. The publit is invited to attend the ceremonies.

First Sot~thern Baptist Church dedication
ceremonies scheduled 2~·15 p.m. $unday

Armour
Treet 12 oz.
- -

'

. DEDiCATION·· SET SUNDAY ; Th~ First
Southern Baptist Church building, located on
.
_

3 oz.··
CANS

While the church building was
framed by Buckeye Builders, volunteers from the congregation and
others provided most of the labor in
completing the bu1'ld'mg. The con· gregation has a 'building appraised
. than a •••f-m1'U1'on dollars
at more
""' $130,000 plus
which cost abput
hundreds of hours of volunteer
,
·
labor,
accordmg
to the Rev.
•
O'Bryant, pastor •llr th. e past f'rve

y~ss a ~an of the lat;st proj~t, a

. I stri!cture .was
section of the orlgrna
renovated to provide a pastor's
office and conference room : which ,
also serves .as ~ Sunday school .
classroom: '
Besides the regular .Sunday scrvices pf th, e church, a variety of
.
o1hcr programs arc taking place rn
the church fpr both youth and
adults.
' nighl entire
·
On Wednesday
faroilies are offered special programs.
These include Master Life Disci-

a

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boys first through sixth grades,
Girls in Action, frrst through sixth
grades. and youth groups for both'
junior high and teenagers. ·~ ~
In addition, the church has a
volunteer !Utoring program in
progress for studcius .who are havrng difficulty in some academic ..

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LUCKY' LEAF ..

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Cherry ·. 21 oz.
Pie Filling cAN

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·oreo
Cookies· 20 oz.
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Local briefs.;._
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HalUssues reminder on liquor salts
Daylight Savings Timei'etums to Ohio at 2 a.m. on Sunday,
April 7.
.
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1o1m R. Hall, Director of the Ohio Department ~,&gt;f Liquor Control. reminds all liquor permit holders, "When the clock sttlkes 2
a.m .. it will, in fact, be 3 a.m., 30 minu1es past the legal closing time
for all permit holders entitled to be open,
"Therefore, all sales and consumption of_liquor mu~t cease at 2 :
a.m. when clocks should be advanced one hour," HaD added.

Name mystery farm winner ·
Marie Bush of 49740 McKenzje Road, Racine, was named. this
week's wipner of the Sunday-Times. Sentinel's mystery t)lrm contest. · ·
·
Mrs. Bu~h was one of 10 to correctly idciuffy the farm picture
which appeared in the Sunday paper as that of Robert Lee on
Bas han Road. Her name was selected ~y lottery because of the ties.
She wiU receiye a $5 check from The Ohio Valley Publishing c;o..
The contest is;co-sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Wah:r Conservation DislricL
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·G soJ"Ine
a
• .es t Uffi bJ e
PfJC
.
By WALTER
,. A'NDREWS

United Press lntetaational
Wholesale
prices
bl d
1U.S.
2 gasoline
t
11
tum
c
near
Y
ceo
s
a
ga
on
w·•
da af
· d
d
. ....ncs yrtedter 1an rn ustry
tra
' led . c
group repo
a ong-awm nse
in· imports,
leading
the drest· of· the
k · d
011"Gasolin'
mar et m ae ownwar
Jed the sprn.
marke1
down," said Tom Bentz, 'dircclor

~~~~~i~RT;;~ri~~b~fs~~~;:~g~ ~c~~~~"~t.~~~gr~n;~yu~n~r~~ ·

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ar~as.

Two ccrtified 'teachers give
two hours each on Wednesday
even1'ngs help1'ng students who
have difficulty in reading and math .
The minister advises thai the
church is !\oping to have the tutor·
ing pronram
" . expanded to include
other subjects.

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matically and demand is kind. of
tapering off.' '
:
"fhe May-delivery futures conttact fon unleaded gasoline dropped
1.7 5 cents from Tuesday 10 65 .97
cents a gallon 00 the !\lew York
Mercantile Exchange, while the
benchmark West Texas Intcnnediate crude May contract slipped 23
cents on the day to $!9.47 a barrel.
The industry's American
Petroleum Institute reported late
"fuesday that U.S. gasoline imports
·last week surged to a daily ave~e
,0 f 535 000 b 1 f
119 o·
'
arre
s
rom
barrels the previous week ·and
205.000 a year a~o, ·

'Ohio House moves to end

common law.rna·rri•ages

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.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) The Ohio House of Representatives
passed a bill Wednesday' that will
end the practice of common law
marriages in thesuue.
Rep. Ron MotU, D-Parma, is the
pr1'mary sponsor of the b"1ll and h••
~
been worldng s1'nce 1967 lo get a
bill of this type through the Legislature.
.
·
Mottl sa1'd common law marriagcs need to be eliminated to &lt;rive
.
. sh' .,. d
some cenamty to re1auon rps an
to eliminare instances where fraud
arises in settling estates. He said
people always attempt to get part of
an estate by clal' ming a common
Ia' w arrangement ex1·sts.
He sa'1·d that common law marria~es have been recognized since
be ore Oh 1·0 became a state. In
those days Mottl said
common law
beca
1
marriage,s wprked
use peop e

,

· •.
·
had problems getting to. churches ,
for traditional weddings.
In today' s modern society, he
said; there is ~need for common
law marriages . ause mostpeop1e
can easilr reach ministers~
Mou ·Said . 37 state
ave
already noled th1s and b nned
. C!)m' mon law marriages.
The House also considered and
adopted a bill to provide payments
of up to $500 to public employees
h
Ttary rcse 'sts and had
w o are mi. I .
rvl .
.
lhctr benefits mterrupted by bemg
called to activo-d~ty. The bill was
already approved m th.e Senate and
affects some 1_80 publ.1c employeesf .
who w.ere acttvated m support o
Operauon Dcsen Storm.
In other House action:
. .
-A bill was passed to proh1blt
h
1
anyo!le from recording
tc
ep
one,
·

d
· 1 sec ·1
cbe 1t carh or
socra
1cs r·•--• • un y ·nomh
rs· on c ec ts o '"'"" •Of
· pure ases or paymen ·
.
-A measure was approved 10
overhaul
d
f lhe way
h Oh10 ,handles
.
or ers rom ot er states •Or payment
spousals and child
Thof 0"'
1 support,
.
e
uro
enate
a
so dmetb'll
on
wd d
d
e nes ay an approve a I
designed 10 restrict automated tel~phone
caUs
by
f'
Af made
'
·d telemarketing
·
1
urns. tcr consr enng severa
amendments from the Senate floor
added to the bill it wu unanimous-

,
ly approved. The bill, if adopted in
the House, will set up a toll-free
number
mainianfed
·
I' b~r·the Ohio
Th'
attorney
venera
be · ~11 11 s o ICC. • IS
num r bl
w1 f a ow
' anyone, oor
th ' .a
reasona e ee, .o remove e1r
number
1
kfrom
· the
li list used by lhese ,
tc emar etmg mns.
...

Coal dust samples altered, Post reports&lt; '
. WASHINGTON .(UPI)_ Oper.
,.
ators of nearly half the country's
underground coal mines have been
tampering with dust samples they
send to federal safety inspectors
who determine miners' risk ~f· gett1ng black lung, The Washmg1on
Post reported Thursday.
_
Labor Secretary Lynn Martm
was expected io announce Thursday that the govemm~t will seek
civil penalties agajnst the operators
of more than 800 of the approxi·
mately 2,000 U.S. underaround
coal mines for tampering with. dust
samples.

In the past few months, federal Depar~cnt source t,old the news,
af .
h
t d paper. There are gorng to be some
mme s ety mspectors ave oun
vcr)r big fines.,
·
,
mo~ than S,IXX! incidents of sam- . According to government and
ph~g fra.ud, sa1d the !'~wspapet, industry sources, the newspaper
wh1ch cited u01dent\f1ed Bu.sh said lhe cost of shuuing down 8
admmlstrauon officials m tls min~ and making any necessary
report.
.
repairs to a vemilation syslem far
. In many cases, mme operators outweigh the cost of government
s1mply blew away or vacuumed lines
some of the dust ff!ll" gove!"mentThe Labor Department has the
approved samphng equipment authority 10 order a mine shut until
bef~re the .samples were ~ubmulC(I -~afcty corrections are made, ·but il
for ,r,n~uon, the Po~t smd,
cannot close an 'UIISafe fllCility perIts a test thai directly affects
tl
·
.
lhe lives of the workers," a Labor manen Y·
.
•

Move·.on·toprivatize county,
::0!~~;~~ei~;~~re~· city minim(lm security jails ,
..
re~::;1::;:!u~~1:a;;~~~~~~
.
transit to the United States were

.•'

The trader said the API statistics _
also indicated that daily U.S. gaso•
'··
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- A offered lesllmony before thC seria!e between the profit motive of a p~­
line demand declined to 7:2 miJlion
barrels from 7.9 miUion in the pre- plan to privatize count_y &amp;J!d. mu.nic- Judiciary CQmmittee and called it vate cont{actor and the governvious week, .
· .
lpal minimum secumy Jails tn a poor~public JIO.llcy fot govcmmeniS .men.t '-s duty to ensure the fatr
Moreover, there is more than · cost-savir\g .move got harsh criti- to get out of the business of ilrl(&amp;i'· adminislrition of justice," he said.
enough crude on world markets, cism Wednesday by a union leader C\lfllting criminals. ·
•
Lauridsen offered eumples of
and Bentz saw WTI eventually_ representing worlccn wllo would be
·Lauridsen said the bill raises states that had tried privatizing
going below $18 a ti'arrel even affected by this proposal.
.several questions, including who jails. He said they heel problc1111
thougp he said it managed 10
D~yid Laundsen, .director of would be legally responsible and
with operaton bringing in priiOIIedl
"creep 1!ack up" at the elid o( legisfation for {)hio Council 8 of liable if 1111 inmaiCi escapes.
.. from odter slates to rail the ~
Wednesday's session after u'ading the American Federation of Stale; · ''This also raises a concern available so they didn't lose
.County and Municipal Employees, about the conflict of interest money.
as low as $19.37 a barrel.

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Comnientary
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Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Thursday,,Aprll4, 1991

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AmiD living in comfort ___

JackAnderson
,.....----=a=nd=~D~al:..;;_eV4.:. . :. :.a~nA;.::.;;..tt=..a

Entebbe airport and rescued the
JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia - The Amin find shelter in Libya, and another story. He is a Muslim hostages, Amin .vented his ~ge on
Saudis are eager to get their hands then threw him OUL Wben the full whom th'e Saudis once called the one lone Israeli left behind, 73DEVOTED TO THE INTEIIEBTS OF THE HEIGS-MASON AREA
.
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on Saddam Hussein so they can try . extent of Amin's butcbely became "brother." They gave him billions year-old Dora Bloch, who had been .
•
Afb
.
him for his treachery. Yet, living broadly know, Gadhafi· publicly of doUars to fight against Iran (not hospitalized. She was beaten, shot .•
~m~ ,.....,_,.__,...,........,.c::~~- ,
· undisturbed iri sanctuary in the Red apologized for having supported an Arab nation). But · when he and buried in an anonymous grav\1. .
clwse last August to invade a
, ~v
Sea port is one of the most despica- him.
Otlter female prisoners in Uganbrother cou~try, K~wait,. he was da were usually raped and tortured. ·
But
not
.
Saudi
Arabia.
The
ble butcherS in history · a man who
BOBERTL. WING~T
. CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. had the limbs chopped off his ex- porcine Am in lives in luxury in condemned m Saudi Arabta as an After A&gt;min divorced one of his .
Publisher
Geaeral Mana1~ ·
wife, a man who once stored the · Jeddah, having gotten away with ''enemy of God." Instead of sanctu- Christian wives and then learned .
htiad.s of his enemies in his freezer mass tnurder. Tile difference ary like Amin, Saddam ca11 expect that she had'had ·an 'abortion, he .
PAT WBITEIIEAD
so he COJIId berate them, a man between Saddlim Hussein and. Idi execution if he ever falls into Saudi had the ex·wife, the doctor and the
•
AMWaat Pabl..ller/Conlroller
who chtded Adolf Hiiler for Amin is that Amin, a Muslim, was hands.
U
Saddam
had
chosen to attaek doctor's family killed. The excareful
not
to
brutalize
other
Mus"killing too few I ews."
Israel instead of an Arab country. wife's arms and legs were chopped ·
.
.
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
ldi Min Dada, the one-time lims.
off and then, resewn on her body,
The only people who were safe thin!ls might Iuive been different. backwards and on the ~ong side.
AliSOCiatlon and the American Nl'Wspaper Publishers Associ allan.
Ugandan dictator, makes Saddam
look like an amateur. Amin tor- jn Uganda, with a ·population of 12 Amtn, on the other hand, was Am in sbowed liis children the body
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
tured and murdered between million, were the country's 800,000 always politically correct if morally and told them, "See what happens
words tong. AU letters are subji!Ct to edltlllg and must be signed with
100,000 and 300,000 of his own . Muslims and the Nublans from repulsive. The Saudis were not to bad mothers."Many of the male
name, aadress and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be put&gt;
people and, in a ceremony to gain southern sud&amp;n. The Muslilris were unhappy when Amin led other victims of his ·wrath and.paranoia
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not persona II·
power over his enemies, ate some Am in's religious kinsmen and the African nations in breaking rela- . were tortured for months and then
. II~.
•
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of theii. body parts. His eight-year · Nubians becallie his thugs and tor- . lions with Israel. He even promised bludgeoned to death because Amin
.
.
.
reign of terrof ended when he was turers. Sporting flowered shirts, to build a statue of Adolf Hitler didn't like to waste bulleiS. Occa·
overthrown in 1979 by an army of bell-bottom trousers and sunglasses until other African leaderS talked sionally he had hi$ ellemies castrat·
(even at ni$ht) the Nubians helped him out of it.
Tanzanians and Ugandan rebels.
ed. and then atr.=gled with their
Amin
elirrunatc about one in every . In 1976, Amin welcomed Pales. And when he had nowhere else
own genitals ··
tinian and West European guerrilto turn, Saudi Arabia took him in. 50 Ugandans.
Ther~ ere so many bodies to
Under ancient Muslim rules las to Enrebbe when they brought
Even Moammar Gadhafi, the "mad
dispose
of during Am~' s reign ~t
,,
do of the Middle East." washed liis regarding hospitality and sanctuary, with them a hijacked French airlinhis
men
tossed &amp;llem mto the Ntle
paws of Amin. Gadhafi first let the Saudis felt obliged to 'give er full of Israelis. After Israel
to
be
eaten
by ®:odiles. But there
Amin asylum. But Saddam is staged a successful raid on the
wercn
't
enough
crocodiles so the
·
BJ GEORGE tOBSENZ
bodies
floated
ashore
for all to see..
• wASHINGTON (UPI) - Nawrally occurring bacteria, already seen
About
30
of
them
clogged
Uganqs a promising tool for cleaning up oil 'spills and toxic chemicals, also
da's
key
dam
and
had
to
be
exmt,.
oould help provide a solution for radioaetive uranium wastes, a new study
ed by scuqa divers so the electrical .
$id Wedriesday.
.
generators could be started up •
·, Sciehdsts at the U.S. Geolo~ Survey have identified a strain of bac·
again.
· terium that not only "eats" iron, but also has an appetite for uranium, a
Compared to Amin, Saddam
common environmental contaminant aJ many nuclear fuel facil~es. urarii· .
Hussein's
megalomania would
urnmining operations and federal atomic weapons plantS.
'
have
been
tame,
except Saddam
The study found the iron-eatin~ microbes, known to scientists as GS·
had
something
that
Amiri didn't ·
15, gobble up dissolved uranium 10 water, obtaining energy and forming
an army. He could threaten vital U.
solid deposits of the uranium metal.
S. in1erests and Am in could not.
By fiXing the uranium in insoluble clumps, the bacteria could help pre·
To our lcnowledge, the United
vent the spread of uranium contamination in rivers, lakes or ground water,
States
never pressed the Saudi govthe s~tidy suggested. .
.
ernment
to extradite Amin back to
"The potential for uranium cont;tmination df surface and ground
Uganda
to
stand trial. Nor di~ !he
wa1ers through uranium mining activities, irrigation of agricultural lands
United
States
send half a mtll.ton
and disposal of nuclear wasteS is an environmental concern," said the
armed
Americans
to Uganda to lib·
, study published in the journal Nature.
·
}'erate
the
people
there
from Amin.
"The results presented here suggest tha~ in many instances, it may be
In
the
new
world
order, there
possible to immobilize uranium contamination by stimulating microbial
,
should
be
no
statute
of
limitations
(activity) in aquatic sediments or ground water.".
,·
on
genocide,
and
now
that the
The study said the same method also might work with other radioac· ·
Saudis
are
beholden
to
the
United
tivc metals, such as plutonium and technetium, both of which have been
States,
Amin
should
not
be
allowed
discharged into soil aJ federal nuclear weapons facilities. ·
to fade into peaceful obscurity in
The biological process described in the study differs from the growing
Saudi
Arabia because he is old
use of bacteria to break down and detoxify oil spills or toxic was1es, a
news.
,
,
cleanup method known as ''bioremediatiori."
(Copyright,
1991,
United
Fea·
The m.ost publicized application of bioremediation techniques has
ture Syndicate, Inc.)
.
,
come in Alaska where Exxon and federal scientists have fertilized natural·
.
.
1y occurring bacteria in Prince Williain Sound tO accelerate their decom·
position of oil spilled from the supenanker Exxon Val&lt;lez in March 1989.
. .
Unlike traditional bioremediation, in which toXic chemicals are broken
' .
ljpart and neutralized, GS-15 does not chemically change uranium or
11
eliminate the health threaJ posed by its radioactivity. It only solidifies dis·
. f:,;.._
·
.........
.
solved uranium, preventing it from spreading
l"alcing i,t easier to
clean up.
.
.
,
,
,.
,.
. , . .. .. .
. For the allied coalition in the. and the Executive Branch of gov- · have to be added in ,as well;
further aggression.
. ,
.. However, Derek Lovley,lead author of the study, satd tha~ m addmon
Persiar\
Gulf
the
hot
war
is
behind
ernment.
Another
actio
Ill
taken
by
the
Mtcr
aU,
for
Kuwait
the
war
in
,
tO its ability 19 immobilize uranium, GS·I5 has shown it can break down
tftem.
What
rentairis,
unfortunaJely,
In
order
to
ensur~
that'
the
Congress
that
likewise
sent..the
the
Gulf
literally
meant
"to
be
or
..
aromatic hydrocarbons, a famil,y of toxic organic chemicals.
While its ability to auack other types of organic wastes has not been is another form of war, an ongoing money goes toward payment of wrong signal to our allies in the not to be," and thOugh their country
tested, Lovley .said the microbes' versatility co.uld· make it ideal for. war of words as to whtl is to pay only war related expenditures d!e coalition was tlie amendment pro- had been taken over, they still had
addressing extensive "mixed waste" contamination at government nucle· for whaJ. Much attention has been Congress, by recent legislative posed to the Supplemental Appro- control of vast holdings in overseas
given tO the ongoing efforts by the action, capped what the Adminis· , priations Bill that would have banks and companies.
ar weapons plants.
Now in the aftermath of this
Mixed wastes contain both toxic and radioactive elements, posing an Administration and Congress to tration could spend from this placed an embargo on the $ale of
collect the monies that bave been account and asked for, a full military equipment to our allies conflict, after the Arab states have
especially difficult cleanup problem in soil and ground water.
·accounting of the expenditures · until they fully satisfied their obli- performed admirably in .the fight·
"In the case of 'mixed wasres,' the activity of uranium-reducing bacte- pledged by our allies.
To date, roughly 43 percent from the fund.
··
gations to the Defense Coopemtion ing and in the diplomatic efforts tO ·
ri.a might be able to couple the decomposition of toxic organic compounds
($23 billion) of the $,54.5 billion .
As mentioned earlier, the Fund.
isolate Saddam Hussein, for the
with the immobilization of uranium,." the study said.
.This provision was aimed pril]- Congress to say in Monopoly game
Lovley said the ability of GS·15 to filter out dissolved uranium in that had been pledged to 'help account, once all pledges are
defray the cost of the war effort has received, should come to $54.5 bil· cipally at Korea and the Arab states terms, "do not pass go until you
water was demonstraled in both laboratory tests and in nature.
He said uranium deposits often were found in iron-rich ocean bottom been received. The Administration .· lion. In that estimates by the Con· of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and have paid the bank X amount of
remains optimistic that the out· gressional Budget Office put the Kuwait .who lag ·considerably dollar," is in my opinion insulting.
sediments, suggesting the bacteria acted on both minerals. ·
· We should keep in mind that
, · 'Lovley noted scienti~ts ·generally recognized the formation of uranium standing balance will be paid in cost of the war at $45 billion, a behind Germany and Japan in maltc
ap
of
$42
billion
was
ing
good
on
their
earlier
pledges.
Saudi
Arabia, and Kuwait have
full.
spending
.
ores was associated with certain bacteria, but believed microbes played
of
recent
placed
on
this
account
by
and
who
traditionally
have
pur•
experience
considerable expenses
However,
a
series
only an indirect role. For example, the bacteria were thought to produce
by
leadership
in
Congress.
•
chased
large
volumes
of
military
aside
from
·their
commitments to
actions
initiated
chemical substances, such as hydrogen sulfide, that reacted with dissolved
_the
Congress
have
served
to
under.
This
in
tum
has
led
some
of
our
equipment
and
weapons
systems
the
Defense
Cooperation
Fund. We
uranium to form ore deposits.
.
should keep in mind, thaf'Kuwait is
' However, Lovley said that in testing sediments from the Potomac cut the Administration's effort in allies to question the need to pay from the U.S.
the full amount of their pledges in · At present Germany has pat~ 70 expected to lose. some $157 billion
River, he found uranium deposition was~J.ch greater in samples where this regard.
· Admittedly, we all want to see that they have taken the estimates percent of tiS pledge of $6.5 btlhon, in oil revenues due to the ignitirig
baeteria were active, as compared 'to sedl~nts were bacteria were killed
these outstanding obligations satis· by Congress as an indication that Japan 68 percent of its $10.7 bil- or its oil fields by Iraqi forces. We
off.
.
.
lied on a full aqd timely basis, but we illdirectly may be making a lion commitment, the UAE ~per- should keep in mind that these
frankly;
I'm more than a little con· profit on the war. ·
cent of its J&gt;romised $4 btlhon, countries have given no indication
••
cemed that some iri Congress may
While I hotly contest such per· S audt Arab•a 36 percent ·o"Nt'' that they don't intend to pay . .
I ·
·
·
~e going a~ut It counter-produc- · ceptions,l can see how some .of Sl6.8 billion pledg,e •. Kuwait~
Most importantly, we should
uvely.
..
these countries arrived ar that COR· percent of its $(6 .btlhon offen~g . keep in mind that these ,ountrics
The actions I speak o(, though elusion. Personally, '1 am of the and Korea but 18 percent of ItS , are our friends not our enemies .
taken with good intentions, appear opinjon from my scat on ·the S385 million obligation.
For Congress to propose legislation
to have compounded the problem Defense Appropriations CommitWith respe~t to some. of these that was. threatening in tOne was
rather than help resolve it
tee, that the final cost.of the war in accounts, dunng my t,nP. to the net only.in poor taste, it was poor
The account in which these the Gulf will be more i,n the range Gulf last Scpte~bcr wllh .the diplomatically.
pledged payments are deposited is of the.lJIOst recent esumate from Defense Appropnauons Commmee
If we as a nation want to he
called the Defense Cooperation thePentagonof$70biUion.
and during a follow up visit to the viewed as a trusted ally and a
Account and while it' is maintained
Keep in mind; we still have .a Hill. by members of the Kuwa1~1 friend, you best attain that standing
by the Department ot Defense, ·it is large number of troops deployed •.n Cabmet, I took repeated OpPOnunt- by being appreciative of the feel·
Congress who comrols how the the Gulf and the expense of thts ty to convey to our A!ab alh!lS• par- ings and circumstances of those
money is to be spent once it is continued presence along with the ticularly those from Kuwatt, how you're befriending. Bullying your
received. Tllis division of respon~i- sizable cost of repladng the large impqnant it '!'as for them to com- buddies, will soon make ex·bud·
bility in monitoring and controlling invenlo?' of munitions and equip· mit their countries' wealth to the dies of those whose friendships you
this account has ~ed to~ series of men( expended in the conflict still U.S. led effort ·to liberate Kuwait· value.
·
spirited exchanges between the Hill
lJ!Id' to protect the Gulf states from
Ill Coart street
Pomeroy, Ololo

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Bacteria inay help clean ·
up radioactive wastes

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Sending_, the wr~n.g signal-'"-·;,--'-'-'

~--'n~-=-··C_l_are~~-~e_M_ill_er

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.Be. r,ry· s,.·Wo rId. .

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IsPo abuse an excuse for murder:?
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riner Ohio Gov. Richard if!Jmediate threat to his or her sur- ened'before finally capitulating to a standable that victims of domestic
.Celeste has gone and done it. vtval. Defense attorney~ for bat- domineering sadist. And still others violence sometimes tum on their
Maryland Gov. Donald Schjlefer tered women now seek - and m a never make any effort to sever ties husbands and kill them even with·
has follo'Yed sitit. N~w New York growing number o~ cases have with the mim, they evenruaUy kill.
o'ut an immediate th~eat . Such
. Gov. Gano Cuom~ IS bemg aslced been granted.- a .different stan·
Shouldn ! these dtfferences women obviously deserve different'
to commute the pnson sentences qr dard for acqutttal: tf a person felt . affect the ulumate sentence? It is treatment from stone-hearted mur·
pardon once-battered wonleo who (rapped in a relationship and saw one thing for a woman to has been derers. But acquittal? Death is sim· ,
.
no way out but the death of her tor- h11ntcd down by her husband to ply not the penalty our society
killed their husbands.
n is the latest way for politicians mentor.
turn finally on him with lethal metes out for assault·and-battery
to ~~~w their politically correct - Needless to .say.• this is an force, but it .is quqitc another tiling - ·even repelised assaults and batsenstbVIty.
.
~"itr~mely ela.suc .(tf not to say for a woman who never makes a tery.
Perhaps some of these women mfinttely flextble) standard. Not single serious bleak for freedom to
Bauered women are not the only
did dese~ve liter. se.ntenc.e~ than .enly d~s - proof of. feeling plu.nge a knife into her husband people who feel trapped, after all.
trapped rely almost entuely upon while he sleeps (and this haS ha()'" Many ghetto youth feel no less stifthey recetved. It 1s tmposstble to
know, however, without looking the word of the person who does pe_ned) or to hire' an assassin for the focated by poverty lack of role -'
into the details of each case. Pre· the killing, it also will vary from JOb. If the really felt too helpless models and opportu~ity Are we to .
sum~ly, it!sp!:C~g. such ~ is woman to woman.
.
and powerless to leave. how was it allow urban drug deal~s and robprectsely. w~at JUTI~I and JUdges
Many women tolerate ~ vto- th_at s~e mana~e_d to suml!lon the . bers to d~fend themselves in court
by citing their longtime sense of
spent theu ume domg. How else lence whatsoever from thea bus- Will to plan a killmg?
were these \VIllllen convicted?
bane!'· They walk out _at the fust
True, domestic ~iolence needs helplessness. Presumably, no .
, The debate over the ptopea .,n. ~g 1Uid 1111\tet look back. Oth- to be laken mQre senously by many Whatever an individual ~s ·unfortu· "SAAAAY!
Who ARE these l.,.A.P.D. guys?"
tences for · ba~ women goes 10 ers leave after ,several failed juris4ictions, and battered women nate background he or she must at
.
.
the core of '?~r concept of s~lf· auem~;~ts at reformina the brute's in .some communities "need more least to some 'degree, be h~ld .
defense. Tradiuonally, the law JUS- behavtor. Others try to heave but shelters and havens for escape. For responsible for a decision to end
lifted taking a .life only if the per· a~e pursued, harassed and threat· that matter, it is ~ertainly .under- another human life.
. '
~.-_ _.._ _..__ _ _.,...._ _ _..-;..;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___. son resorting to violence felt an
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The Deily sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reds come from beH nd to defeat Tigers, 6..4; S~IIeck plays ·

Page-.-2-T~e Dally

:

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Tl!e · Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 4, 1991

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whether he'll ever be able 10 fill the
~troit Tl::S!igll~ inning pinch · tams of his new one-year COIIIIIIC&amp;,
ht~!Cf '!'
y •!gilt sln!Ck out · but the 01aao White Sol! decided
swm~g on ~ 1-2 Pilch 1Uid drew a to tlko a pmb~ that the two-aport

excellent potential to heal;'' i..eiils hit a iJ'IIId
Carmen
Andrews said.
Castillo anci SMile Mlct lllllckcd ~· described the injlll')' as back-10-llKit homen to laid Minan ''atypical -.vucular necrosis'' nesota to an Il-l ,out of Texu. ·
~g OVBiiOn.
star will recover frorn his hip and nOt de&amp;ellerative . .The 'doctor Lei us' grand slam otJeoed 1 7-1
aybe that's because be injury. · · ~·
said he wanted to avoid the term · lead for Minnesota 1n the third
"Sin!Ck out" so nrely in his long·
"The key is whether he's "avascular necrosis" because of
runmng role. as the hunk Hawaiian healthy and "'""••'• ....
...., n'·'"
.... we're the "gloom and doom" associated innin&amp;·
At West Pa1m Beach, Fla., Dave
gumshoe of Maanum PI.
taking," White Sox Mlnqer Jeff with it.
J · had
hi __.
RBI
The 46-year-old Tom Sel.leck, 1 Torbor' aaid Wednesday In
The doctor said it will be decid- ::'tJ.n:~ 1 'ts~~ ov:
· . .!"Cvoted f1;R whose blue Tigers hat llllliOUDCIIIJ 1110 siiDinl of Jacklon. . ed at the iili-S.. break if JaCkson the New york y w u. Jeff Tread,ls somethma ofa trademark, hal "The feelmg is if anybody cOUld will play this yoar.Jaclcson said his .way added three hits and one !Qil
·been hanging around Detroit's cotne back frotn an injury, It's th4!'8PY sessions have been encoilr- for the ·Braves~
..~g uaining camp in Lakeland, someone like Bo Jacbon whQ hiS agmg; .
.
·- At Clearwater, Fla., John Krull:
ptcking up some background for a the drive he bas."
~~ere IS no. deadhno f'?r r.ack- · smashed a twO-run homer to lead
~ IDOVJe. In "Tokyo Diamond,"
. That drive was in evidence son s .return. ~ Cl!l!Cn~y II b~ted .· Philadelnl1141 to a 7~ lfiumph 01IU
Selleck will portray an aging WednesCtay.
'
as bemg &lt;!n rehabthtauon asstgn- . St. Lo.tis. The blast put ltruk's
• American baseball player seeking
"Right now, 1 feellilte a caged ment and IS n9,1 on lite White Sox spring·nlaiM average at.406 with
•. to.extead his career m Japan.
animal. I can't wait for .them to roster
21 RBI Phiru'es
~
Mul
:
Detroit lost to the Cincinnati ·ope!l the chutes and let me Ill·"
"When you .have the opportuni' •
SIIU'Ier etrl
~ Reds 6-4.
.
said Jackson, wbo attended the ty to 'eta Bo Jackson to hCII' yo'¥' ~oJ!and allowed one run 10 three
"It was a lot of fun,.but I wish news conference In Saruoll. Fla., organ1Z8tion and your team, tt's an mnmgs. edi Fla. Dan D..~
c we'd won the game," said Selleck, oncnitches.
opportunity you can't pass up," hadA:IB!ithe6uc.F~~
• v.:ho did managt to foul off two
The conuatt for the two-sport . Torborg said.
.
.
Sox used 1 14-hit auact to blut
: puches.
star includes an oplion for two
Jf!C~ ~ S8;ld he wtll try~ Toronto 7-1. Chic:ll$0 got four runs
: . ''!was ~;TYing to thiillc about baJ- yeari. The~ salary t'Qrthe 1991 co11unue playmg tn the NFL. His off Dave Stieb tn the second
,:: ung pr~cuc~ an~ the way I ~ad . s~on ia believed to be sliaJ\tly . foot.ball ~.F was not addressed inning.
,
10
the Whi.~ Sox con~L
.
At Scottsdale, Ariz., Gr~g
• been ~g ~gs m that. ~utI JUSt more dian $1 million, bat If Jai:k, couldn t. find .tL Ai lelist It ~asn't siJa
to 111;hieve all the contnlct·
I~ exhttiltion gaiRCS Wedn~s- · Vaughn broke a tie in the seventh
. .
. inning with a,(lin!:h-llit solo llomer
• th!ee .~ttches up, three pitches ince.ntives In 1992, he would be day.
down.
.
paid $2.5 million. He could receive
At Wmter Haven, ~a., Roger to help give Milwaukee a 4-2 victo~ · 'Selleck apologized 10 9-year-old $3.1 million in 1993,
,
~IC!"ens. allowed .one .h•t over ~ve ry over San Francisco. Chuck Crim
: Molly Fogarty of Youngstown,
Jaekton wu released M8lth 18· tMmgs and rookie Ttm Naehring pitched two scoreless innings of
: Ohio, when one of the fouls hit her by Kansas Citv ........... of vmous .had a two-r,un single to le!"' lloston
lief for !he Brewers. ·
• ih the head. He si&amp;ne4 a baseball reports indicating he would not be to ~ 3·~ vtctory over ~tts.burjlh. re Ai Tualon; Ariz., Greg Swindell
• for her: "To Molly, wtth love and recover from. his injury wbich he Luu R1vera ha~ a tbud-ulmng pitched eight shutout inninas and
: aloha, Tom Selleck."
susts.ined l'laying wllh the Los solo-homer off Pittsburgh's Doug Albert Belle hit a three-run homer
Detrott manager Sparky Ander- · Allgeles RaideiS in a January play- Drabek.
·
.
10 lead Cleveland 10 A 7.() triumph
• sor cleared the ra~er .un~ox off game.
'
- At V~ Beach, Fla., ~eff Hamil· over Sealde. Swindell allowed five
,.• ~ubsutuu~ wtth ~mcmnat! manBut Jackson's personalphysi- ton ho~ered and Eddte Murray hitsand'struckoutseven.
At Phoenix, Harold Baines
• ager to? Pinella. Pinnella said OK, cian, Dr. James Andrews, toid the drove m two run.s to lead Los
~ but advised An~erson not to ~nd news conference that after spend- Angeles to a 3·2 tnwnph over ~e smocwt a d!rcc:run hom.et: 10 !yd
· Selleck up agamst hard-throwmg ing four weeks in Birming,ham New York Mets. New Yorks Oakland to a 9-2 romp over the
: reliev~ Ron Dibble..Tim Layana, Ala., with Jacksoil, he is convinced ~wight Gooden, who recently Chicago Cubs. ~' Blankenship ,
:- who pttched to Selleck, replaced the hard-hitting outfielder can play l slgned·a tltree-yoar contract exten· had three hits and scored three
; Dibble in the eighth inning.
baseball before SCISOII's end.
st~n. worth a guar~te~d $1 S.45 runs, and Walt Weiss went 3-for-3
•
"Due to it bein:La traumatic mtllton, gave. ~ a run 10 each of in Oakland's 16-hit aaack. ·
·
At p a1m Spnnga,
·
Cal'f
•b . Even, Bo Jaelcson doesn't know ·•IRJUTY
... we th'nk
1
t Bo has an theAfirstp threeChmmngs
· Fl S .
• ., B'p
1
,
t ort
ar1otte, a., colt Roberts, Tony Fernandez and
· h·
Marty Barrettbad twO hits each to
• ·Oh 10 s zng report
~
lead san Diego past California s-3.

· ·LAKELAND, f1a. (UPI)- The

1

were

BO ADDRESSES PRISS • Bo Jacaoa addresses a press conl'er·
ence Wednada7 arter the Cbleago Wblte Sox management .
auounced lfl aequlsltlon r1 the ronaer K•N" City slugger. (UI'I) ,
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SAVE!

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: Twister t.ails, minnows work best
~ on Ohio River sanger, white bass

~:r~~~~~·.~~:;c ~vo~t~cS:r~~e~~

HOOVER~
EllteTM

thumps
.
Southwestern

I.O~Motorl

i:~tern

•. By United Press International
rigs tipped with miMows and small with brightly colored twis~r tail,.
:
The
fiShing !epon, from " jigs fished in water; three to 10 feet The best times to fiSh are 10 early
·• the Ohio Division ol Wildlife~ Fc'lr · deep work besl. A few largemouth morning and late afternoon. Daily
more information on lakes and bass up to four .pounds also are reportS ~ available by calling 1·
80&lt;J..BUCK.EYE.
~ streams not listeil, call 614-265· being taken on niglltcrawlers.
·Lake La Su An area - These
.,. 6659:
wildlife area lakes are open to fiShSoutheast
Central
Ohio River- Some sauger and
Alum Creek Reservoir - . ing beginninll April 4. Special reg:. a few white ba.u are being caught Anglers are taking lome channel ulations, including a reservation
:: below the Jock and dam structures catfish on chicken livers and system, are in effect for these lakes
• OIJ jigs fi§hed around currents. Use nightcrawlers near the Hogback which offer good opportunties to
: twister tails and minnows for best Road area of the lake. A few crap- catch btuegills and largemouth
• results.
pies and largemouth bass can be bass. .
~
Wolf Run Lake - There were taken from the backwater coves. A
: 4,Hl0 golden rainbow trout stoCked few saugeye ~being ta1cen on jip
. ,;
, , North~
·'
,
::: in Woir Run Lake two weeks agb. tipped with minnows' below t6e ' 'f'y•atunlng Reservoir
: Fishing with kernel co.m. miniature , · spillway.
.
Some walleyes can be taken south
: marshmallows or. mmno~s sus· · .• B.uck~ye Lake...,.. Good crappie of the causeway by slowly troljing ,
,, pendcd beneath a bobber 10 shal· ftshmg IS found along the north · deep-divin' cranlcbaits. Crappies
:; l«;&gt;w water is recommen~ed. These ban~ east of ·sellers Point around also are avrulablc where su~erged ·
ftsh ~verage 10 to 12 mches and available cover such as boa! doclcs. structure is found. Use m10nows
; are ~asily caught b1 shoreline Bluegills.al)d largemouth bass also suspended beneath a bobber in
wanglers.
ar~ proVIding some early season
shallow water for bes,l rcsQI",
,..
acuon near Cranberry Marsh.
Ladue Reservoir - Crappies
,. .
Southwest
, ·
up to 121nches are being taken in
• Grand Lake St. Marys -Try
Northwest.
good numbers from shoreline areas
!'fishing around the rocks along the · . • Maumee, Sandusky rivers around the lake. Try fishing in the
; cast and wes.t shores or woody Warmer weather will push water afternoon in shallow water for best
,.(a reas in the channels for large· temperatures to near 50 degrees results.
"mouth bass. Small jigs tipped with this weekend and river levels are
'1llinnows should be used Jor crap· expected to return to normal pro· Lake Erie
pies.
.
viding for good walleye fishing.
Walleyes arc providing fair fish·
Paint Creek Lake- Crappies Males averaging two to three ing action in the nearshore areas of
: averaging eight to 10 inches can be pounds, and occasional females to the western basin reef complex and
•.caught this time of year in areas five pounds are being talcen ~ l/.4 1 Sandusky Bay. Anglers should
' with flooded timber. Srnall crappie ounce and jflj ounce Jtgs Upped slowly drift fuzzy grubs tipped
,
,
· with .minnows for best re$ults at

weeklr

lUNLV's Johnson captures
~~g':::;~~~~'~i:t~~
R. Wooden Award
·· innonheastemohio. •
.!lJohn
tian Laettner of Duke, Jimmy ·
LOS ·ANGELES (UP!) -

•upright ·
Claaner
Powerful

-.......

.

• utfthualetw.

•IIUihed~.-..

. •TOit-ti'IIN¥ . . . . . . .

........

........ Htomltic tt.lfht

A 14-run third iMing boosted
the Eastern Eagles to a 21-S SVAC
victory over the Southwestern .
Highlanders Wednesday at Tuppers
Plains.
Randy Kaylor, who led Eastern
with three hits and two walks, wu
followed by Tim Bissell (2-3,
walk), .Jeff Dunt (3-3, two RBIJ,
walk), Mike Smilh (2-~. two. dou·
bles, four RBis), Matt Pinlaw (single, dl,ltlble, and triple), Jason ;
Hager (3·~. two doubles), Chad
Savoy (2-3, two RBIJ), Rod Newsome (1·3), Jared Ridenour and
Aaron Wilson (bOih 1-1), Tyson
Rose (2-3, three RSis, double) and
Mickey Bauer (double).
Eastern pounded out 28 hits in
all.
Tim Bissell picked lip the win
and is 1-0 as Eastern moves to 2-0
on' the sea§On. SWHS is 0-1. as is
its pitcher Chris Metzger.
Bissell, Smi1h. and Bauer
pitched for Eastern and Strock out
nine, five by Smith. They walked ,
just one. Bauer gave up five of the
SWHS hits and all five runs. ·
Eastern will host Wahama
tOday.
.
Score by lnnlnp
Southwestern 0 0 0 0 5 - 5·7-S
Eastern 4 0 14 0 3- 21-28·2

. . . . . .It

..,.

.l~ati&amp;Chmeitlal

"'

•S1 ft . con:II.,CII...._

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

.. 01111 lwulft .....""

'

. ... .
llllt&amp;e'-'"1'111 ?II
.

-...
·--

I 7 IIF 1111 I ClifF II • ·
• IJUI• 111111

~-

• - l U I and"- noule
e l'ulf.IIIM edge Cleaning
• lnctlldlc attoctvnenll

Save s2o

.

• Nevada·LaS Vegas forward Larry
· Johnson, seemingly a man among
: boys during his team's 45-game
: w.innjng streak, Wednesday won
· • • the John R. Wooden Award as col·
. lege baskeiball' s Player of the

:Year.

• Johnson collected 1,646 points
• in balloting of 1,000 sports writers
!and spmtseasters. SJ:!.aquille O'Neal
:or Louisiana State fmtshed second
~ith 1,389. followed by UNLV's
Stacey Augmon with I,IS6. Kenny
Anderson of Georgia Tech with
717 and Syracuse's Billy Owens
with 621.
• The deadline for voting came
before Johnson scored only 10
points and passed ur a sliot in the.
·closing seconds o the Runnin'
Rebels' stunning 79-77 loss to
eventual national champion Duke
in the NCAA Tournament semifi·
nals. It was UNL V's only defeat
this season.
The 6-foot-8 Johnson, who took
only 13 shots against Duke, had
reeular-season average&amp; of 23.5
potnts and II ~bounds in. becom·
ing a likely NBA L.ottcry ptck.
O'Neal, who 'at 7-1 and 29S
pounds was college basketball's
1arges1
beneath tho balalt.
averaged 27.7 pol nil and 14.6'
rebounds this season u a aopho-·
mere.
To qualify for the Wooden
award, named lifter the famed former UCLA coac;h, a player must
maintain a 2.0 01 hlahet cumulative
grade-point avemat U I full-time

peaenee

Jackson of Ohio State, ETic Mur·
dock of Providence and Steve
Sinith of Michigan Sra~.

1011, Todd Day o( ArbMa,

,,

,.

ChriJ.

..

.•J
.:1 a;: • r 18ft05
.........
... .,.
........ .• ·--"'·
-·-lift--

.
.
' ~
One of Mle'l great lrultraliona: to
take a tin of urdlnea from the .eupbo8rd, only to find the key to the can
IS millllng.

Tl

Ill F&amp;rf I k

...... .,,

•U_II"_

The Daily Sentinel
(Wftl-)

" DIYIIIIe ., •w

• Fe "
anclllNIIIId edge CIJ ... .

.

a

,..., a.e.

P1111a~.

-II!

111 COUrt St .. Jla.
meroy, Oldo, b)' lilt Ohio Valt.y Pu1&gt;

llobbW

~/Multbnldla,

7" .

5

ov4ry - . ..... ~

Publllbel

Ell

S

• laptaoiOOIWICftan
• !Oct
-~laollll

• Cenuuilli•tooiiiDragt

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

VII

• Hlualaed tool coddf'

lite.,

,...,._, Olliottllt, Ph. 112·2111. S.,
«&lt;nd e1Ua )IGitoP pold II l'oiiWCI)',

OMo.

.

.

Momllor: Ullllld Pnu Intmwlaaal,

lnlandDeU~I'nAAuoetiU.. and tllo

OldoNIW~AIIoriAtlc.. Notlaaal

_..,

otlvo,llraldlom

m 'l'lllrd Ave••·
New Y'orll, New Y'ort 10017.
NtwoPeil*'

to 'lbe Dally lontiDII.
O&gt;ultII.,
f'Oir1'MAITER:
Sond ·IllFOmfroy,

Olllo ~.

.. ,....-

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rtol\ .lillY ...,It .. ....,._ dlrlet 1o
'l1le DaiJ)' Ioiii IIIII on d1lot D -~~~
No oulloerlpt- by 111a11 pennllt8d In
areuwlloreblntoarrllr-11
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'

..

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I'" I

·---

Air]orrlmi• by Nike.
IOYS - AVAILAILIII WIITI Alii UCI
Mil - aACI (White Ce: 1111 leeiiJ

- · Cndlt wtllllollvn-•cb

I ,,

..
l

~

• I It asiidr....-.ueteup

..... .

itlidenL
The Wooden All-American
team, announced Ia at week
includes forwards Johnao~
O'Neal, AuiJIIOII, Owe111, Andor-

l'.

.

.

.ING.ELS

.....,

NOitll SICOND )

AVL

FUINnUIE AID JEWELRY
116 10111

"'·2611

•••on,

0110

..
j

•

•

~----~---.--~~----~----------------~
..
.. .'
'
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•

' I'

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:

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'

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..

,_

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....... - ..

·-

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·- -

-

NHL post-~ason playoffs· .. ~~
begin; Whalers upset Bruins
.

- OIDIUI'I
.... •..,
B ..,JIJ
.,..r
UP1 Sports Wa 1teJ

..
The Hanfonl WhiJers, 1 piciiii'C
of futilil) agllfilst die B011Qn Bru·
ins during the regular ~Je~Sat, aren't,
going to go so easily in lhe play·

off~evin

117..,..,

Browa
tbe Je.l 111 twO
)a '
goall It 9:37 with I )io~
score. Pill Verli I k, l l die

of the left c:ln:le, slid the JUCk
- d i e slot 10 BIOWI!Illhe riabt
side of lbe aet and 116 fiRJd I lliot

unt::!~c:~~~ales

.

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

Rockets win with defense; Cavs top Knicks

••

..

the tint period 10 lead the Canadi·
ens to a 1-0 advantage in their
series. Montrcsl ~ blclt liom ••
2-0 del'ick with five straight goals
to chase Buffalo &amp;oaltendi:r Daren
Puppa from the game.
Raaprs :Z, Capllalll
' At New York, Jan Erixon and
Bernie Nicholls scored second- •
period joals and Mike Ricliter
, recorded 28 saves to help tbe
lWlaers to a 1.0 aeries lead. New
Yor~ shut down the Capitals so :
well that in ·the five Washington
I1IIUI-IIIvaotagc opportunities, they
got only one shot on goal.
'
Devils 3, Penlulnsl · · - ,
At Pittsburgh, Peter SI8Siily and
Laurie Boschman scored aoals SO
seconds apart early in t6e third ·
peri9d fer New Jersey a5-the Devils
toot ·a 1-0 series lead. Stastny
scored his second goal of the game
at 4:12 of the third pCriod, :his 29th
career playoff goal in 71 games,
the most playoff goah by any
Devil.

Sports briefs

.

'

'

.

B
.
o l t

outlasts Meigs, ·l s-1·2

,.j -

'

Major League
EXHIBITION STANDINGS
American League

u......

Minnc~ou

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

rPNJe .....:......................,

I

J..oiAngclCI

.609

10
tO
II
II
12
14

.600

IS

(

.433 ......,.

.44:41

"

ta,

Dieso VI. Sau.le, Las v~...

Calilonua at 1..ol Anadc:~,l0:3~ p.m.
• San Fnnciso at Oakland, 10:35 p.m.

x-denola,lpiiiiQWid

W L
.........53 20

y-Philaddpki1 ......:-41 33
New Yodl
.......3l 31

Wu!Unpn

~

~

.726

.554 12 lfl
.479
II

.37l l5 lfl

. .
y-ChicaJO

.7so

.liS , 30
.7!17 31 ttl

.
I

....

..

•

,.

...tw#.

'

·'

Cb&amp;rloae

.630

29
34
37
47
.......... 22 ll

.602
.$21
.493
·'"6
.301

'

(QfiiOI ST.

AND

Weslfm Conference

SERVICE

•

(AAA).

Ba.ton - Signed pitcher Tony Foasas; sent pitchru- fO:Iiial M1nza.nWa to
Pawtucket.' a! lntemational League
(AAA). .
~· I
'
Chiclgo (AL) - Signed outfielder..
Bo l1ckson LO 1-year em tract.
'
Chlcaaa (NL) - ·Sent pitcher Steve
Wilson to lowa of Americ1n Auocinion
(AAA).

.

'

Clevdlncl -c o;oooed pilfhcn Dove
Otto 1nd Willie Blair to Colorado SJ?rina!
of Pacific Cout t:c:.gue (AAA); oplloncd
pitcher Mike Walker and outfielder Cub
Ma.nina te'Cmton·Akron ofEamm

1,9 91 CHEV. LUMINA EURO COUPE
Bright red. Loaded. Ust 117.061

•

l.ooiUC(A/o),

Lu.is dclOI Santoll

for~lpoiC o(

Scoalon""'

· 1990 GEO METRO T ·

l'lcilio c- LoaJUC C"M).

T~--OclpllcllerTerry

W.U. e.o miftCl'-lupae camp.
B11kdbaJI

LEATHER. LOADED.
LIST 133,046

95

AUTOMATIC. Alit

8 ~~= i;~~forwud ~u
Sa~OA(WBL) - Siped '

guaniE......,S-.

Colt...

dition tJI North Carolin1·0a•done, 'sooth
Floriolo oad
Conononwakh, of.
foc:Uve Juae 1.
·
N.., Cuolina Clllltll-N......
DUhop Horria foooboll ......
Ohio Alhle&amp;ic Conleni!oo - N.uncd
Tim Cileuon oornmillmtr.

vu.w.

.

Foolbotl

lkmillon (CI'L) - ~ 0.., .
Moluladinlol«ofola1"_...,d;
'Bnanltil.k and John ·

'

1916 CADIUAC FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM

;l'.:tmbcll:•
~

·-7

95

LOADED.

- Annowlcod l'llli&amp;n•rion
or aeniar M ,..-..~ LGu NaMe. · ·

..
'
1915 CADIUAC FLEETWOOD IIOUGHAM
LOADED

_nDI,ICED

tf $5,987 ..

w.....,...-CotloclupiOII""""

1im. l:hivn.U: rram Balti:mcn of American

Hockey Lupc.

.

s.....

Pallu (MSL)-Announced . .u..
mem ot aOilleadw Klyl ~~l•t end

•

Media
· .
· • USA TODAY BIISObail Wecldy,
an all-baseball newspaper geared
!award statistics, makes •ts nau'!nwide debut Friday. The tablo1d,
published by the USA TODA.Y
news~per. will sell for $L It will
pubhsh every week durmg the
!)aseball sea.son and, every other

.

week during the off·se&amp;on ..... The
· Racing Times, a newspaper rumcd
at horse racing fans and published
by Britain's Robert Maxwell, goes
on sale April 13. The paper wiD
compete with the longstanding
'Daily Racing Form .. Maxwell
recently bought New ,'Ybrlt's Daily

1991

!-EA~HER. LOADE!D.

ttST '32,428

Jim Cobb

New~.

,,
•

'LOADED. SPORTY .

alvin&amp;

him uncondi&amp;iOMI rdlue.
New YOlk (NL) ..::_ AMiJned clleber .
Orltlndo Merctdo Ind. 'inrMildilr KCI vin
Torve to T'adewa• elln&amp;cmabonal
Loai""(AMj.
,
.
. Phllad........ - O{&gt;tl ... Ocl 'pilohon .
Bob
BloccRW!n 10 SCIIIIIOfl: Wilk.CI·B•ne ~ lnt.ematiftnll Leape
(AM); pl•cocl pitchor Socva Onti,....
and out!'lcl.der RaaJone~ on diaabl.ed U.t;
1ili&amp;Md phclw OW., Col tO Clurw1w
of f'loftaa Sllto Lellp (A~
San Diee:o -Optioned pit.chen John
C•tellomd Ricky Donato La• Vepa of

'j

II

'

$

llouston- Scat pitchGr Bob Scbn. to
minor leap caMp fot uUpne:nt.
Kann1 City,_ Waived firtt b111cm1n

Sports briefs .

•

;

1988 5-10 BLAZER 414

of'lealon.
U.S. Soccer Fed•tion - Nlmed
Wi11Wn Slip IXIrllllltmt..

.•

991·2975

,.

8 Ill

10 11.2
16
tllfl
2&amp; lfl .
32 1/2

.,.

•

GRAVELY TDaOR SALE

II
27

,• t:!=ta . . . . .
•

II

CB

·- Central Division

IOIIIYhS·a-..UD

"I

Pet.

.......27 4l
New Jeney .....23 SO
Mi.omi
: .. ...22 l2

....... .S4
y-Dctrcnt
......... .46
y-Milwaukr.c ......44
31
.. ......... 36
a...land ......... 26

1

nigtn to Rochoaw of Inwnaional Leaaue

·

Eastern Conferen~e
Atlantk: Division
x·Boaton

..
.
THANKS BEAR·Y MUCH ''FUR'•
GETTING TO KNOW US!

I

. Friday Games

Portland at Odando, 7:30p.m.
J~,
CMrloac at OC¥elmd, 7:30 p.m.
W..mn,ton at Indiana,7:30 p.m.
M.inne&amp;CIUI It Dluak. 8 p.m.
San Ant.alaio It Chioaao. a p.m.
Utoh at Dollai, 1,30 J&gt;-Dt.
HOUltOn It Denver, 10:30 p.m.
MWaiotLA Laltcn,J0,30pm.
Sooaloll LA C!ippen, 10,30 p.m. .
Ptr.oeais. at Go1dat State. 10:30 p.m.

Metro Confcranc:e - 1Announoed ad·

NBA

•

·~pr.

. . ;;.

By UnUH. Prtu lnltrnatlonal
,
Bueball
.Baltimore- ~oned outfieldc:r
l.uil Mercedet and mfielclcr )eft' McK-

Friday Games

''

1

Portland 1t WuhinfM, 7:30 p.m.
·Atlant.a.tt ~7 : 30p.m.
Daiva"tt~ •• _p.m.
Chicasa aNewYask.l:30p.m.
an Aatonio 11 Mil'"ukeo. 8:30 p.rrt:J..~ ,
;LA l...akCIIIl Phoetib., 9:30 ftnL ,

'

· fh.,tj)lp.m.
. ' ...
Tor"Oftto v1. S1..lau.U:, St. Pt:tenbwg,
Fla., 1:OS p.m.
Columbua (AAA) v1. New YOlk
{AL) Fort Laudetdalc, Fll., 1:05 p.m.
Cinc:innlti vs, Damit, Lakollnd, Fla.,
1'30 p.m.
Pi.ttabtqh VI. Te.w, PortQarlou.e,
Fll., I:JOp.m.
Minnelou VI. ChlcaJD (AL), SarasoFla., 1 :3~ p.m.
Chi.CifO (NL) It Milw•ukee, 7 p.m.

'

I

Wednesday
Sports Transacllons

Nev. tO:tl'J {'·m.

·)(.,.. »-At

irn Cohh Is Heatin Up pring
With Su er A ri.l a~ings!!l

Tbunday Games

H1v'cn, Aa., I :OS p.m.
ManlrCil VI. Atlanta. w. Palm
Bach, Fla., 1:05 p.m. .
. .•
. Kan.u c;ily "'· HClliiOn, Xila,rnoo.

&lt;

pro league off the ground. will usc
Obituary
William Sage t\s a con~ultant on the
Frank Gustine, 71, a Conner All- project. Sage, co-chatrman of the
Star infielder for the Pittsburgh American -Professional Soccer
· Pirates, died Of a heart attack Mon· League, will help draw up a 5-year
day iJ\ Davenpo
· rt, Iowa, while on a bUSIQCSS
·
p1an. ... The Un•·ted. S••tes
w
,
G
riverboat gambling excursion. us· behind Shawn Beachum's goal
.tine played for the Pirates from with 13 minutes left, blanked ~uba
1939 to 1948. He then played one l-0 Tuesday night-i_n the final
year for the Ch1cago. Cubs and one round of the CONCACAF Underyear for the St. Lours Browns. He 17 championShips in Trinidad anl1
had a career average of.265. - ·- ~ Tobago. Three of the 12 tea"!s
Soccer
qualify for the world ftnals 10
Argentina Presidenl Carlos Ecuador in August. ... Roma
Menem says is he is saddened over defeated AC Milan 1-0 on an-ownthe suspension ·of Diego Marndona, goal by star striker Marco van Baswho tesllld positive for cocaine last ten 10 advance to the finals of the
month. The Italian Lea~ue could Italian Soccer Cup.
impose a fonnal suspens•on Satur- Honors
day. FIFA, the world governing
Don Chaney, who guided the
body, would then foUow suit. Such Houston Rockets to a 14-1 record
a move would ban Maradona from in March was named NBA Coach
playing' pro soccer worldwide. ... · of the' Month. The Rockets set a
The U.S . Soccer Federation, still ·club record for victories in a
·
.try
· ing to get a significant outdoor
monu,,•. .

2112

New Jeney at Botten. 7:30 p.rn.

Philadelphian Bolton, Winter

..

Sports briefs

Houotoo t tr2,
16
Saalo 106, Sacnmento 91
Utoh 99, !.,'. cu_. 97
Golda!S1a10l27;Miami 114

.l83
.l60
.l42
.533
.500
.413
.462

Thursday Games

_

Jazz 99, Clippers 97
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
scored 39 points, including Utah's
fmal 5 over the last three minutes.
Utah improved 10 30-5 al home and
to 32-5 when holding opponents
under 100 points . U1ah also
improved to 20.2 against Western
Conference teams.
Warriors 127, Heat 114 .
At Oakland, Calif., Chris Mullin
scored 12 of his 28 points in the
final quarter and Tim Hardaway
recorded 8 steals to help Golden
State clinch a Western Conference
playoff. The Warriors reaChed the
playoffs for the third time since
1977, Glen Rice led Miami with 27
pomts.

-n.u..

Toronto.va. Kanu&amp; City, Bucb.U
City, Fla.,1:05 p.m.
TeAM vs. Minneaot.a, Fort Myers,
Aa., I :05 p.m.
Houston vs. Cincinnati, Plmt City,
fh., LM p.m.
.
New York (NL) VI, Montfe:ll, We11.
Palm Beach, Fla., 1:OS p.m. . ·
Detroit v1. Philadelphia. Oearwner,
Fh., I :OS p.m.
Ba~t.oa vs. Pittsburgh, Bradarton,
fh.; I ,()3 p.m.
Cleveland vs. Milwaukee, Olandlcr,
Ari!, 3,()3 p.m.
Sc.ttle vt. Chicaao (NL). Meo,
Ariz., 3:05 p.m.
.
BalUmore va. Ne"' Yodt (AL), Fort Lauderdale, Aa..7 :35 p.m.
OUCIJO (AL) VI. Sl..l..ouil, St. PctenbWJ. Aa., 7:35 p.m.

SIR

. SOtmiEBN 1MI VABIID'Y '
•
SOfTBALL ICIIIIDULE
· ])ATE-OPP.-GAMJ: TIME
Fed. llocl. (DB). U: ..
•
(Bus Leaves 10; 30)
;\pr. 1-Kyaer Creek, 1: 30'
Apr. 2-Trlmbk!, 4:30
Apr. 3-At North Gallla, 4:30
(Bus LeaW!I 3: 1!1)
Apr. 8-At Symmes Valley, C: 30
{Bul Leave~ 2:30)

. ('

9

land rebound from a 16-point first·
half deficit.
Sixers 107, Pacers 104
.
At Indianapolis.• Ron Anderson
tiC\! his seao;on high with 27 points
and. Armon Gilliam adde&lt;l. 22
points and 13 rebounds to lift
Philadelphia. The 76ers pla~ed
without Charles Barkley and Rtck
Mahorn because of injuries.
· Sonics 11)(i, Kings 91
- · At Seattle, Shawn Kemp collect·
ed 20 points and 14 rebounds·as
sealtle handed Sacrameruo its 33rd
straight road ~oss. The Sanies, 3537, won their third straight by
breaking the game open in the
fourth quarter when they outscored
the Kings 30.21. ·

Wednaday Results
ct..-d 95;N"" Yat 14
Phil.tllolphio Ull, lndi..,. I04

CU1CUUiati 6, Dctrnit 4
Milwauk.co 4, Sm Franasco 2
Clcvelmd 7, Se~ulc 0
Oalclttld 9, OUcoso (NL) 2
San Diego 5, California 3

';

'

.286

.712

so

.

y-Phoeni.\
........
~
.694
4
y-Golden s,.;e ......31 '" .S21 161/2
Seattle .1 .......~....3~ 37 .486
19
!.,'. Clippon ......28 4l
.3114 261/2
S•cramento .... ~ ..20 52 ·.278
34
x-cll•claetl diYiaJon title
.1:~1nchod playolf berth

14
.43 1
14 .481
13 .48P
IS .423
16 .407
18 · .379
18 .308

20

.. ~ ..S2 21

y-LA.Lalten

Ballimore 11 Monuoal, ppcl,, nin
K.ansu City 8, HOUltOn- f

Apr. 29-0ak Htll, 4:30
:t-pr. 30-Waharna. 4:30
)\lay 1-At Eastern, 4: 30
May 2~At Watet1ord, 4:30
May ~-Alexander, ll:oo tDHJ
May 7-At Trimble, 4:30
.

I

~ 583

.560
.538

801\.Cin 'l Pittsburgh 0
Philaddpbia 7, SL LQuil 2
· Atlanta 6, New York (AL) S
Minntsou II, Texu 1
Chicago (AL) 7, TOIUlto 1

26-Southwestern, 4:30

9-At WU.-, 1:30
:
(IIU Lea- 3:30)
·Apr. lD-At SalltllwNII'D t: 30 •
•
(BwLea-3:15) '
Apr. ta-At Fort FJye ll;)H), U: 00
•
j IIIII LeaftllO: 15)
Apr. lS-EatMm '' 30
Apr. 17-At l(ner en&amp; 4:10
(Bill 1M- (I: 201
Apr JJ-Nordl G.W., C! 30
f&lt;pr. 23-Waterford, ,,.,
Apr. 24-S)'JIIIIIH Vallty. t: 30
Apr. :16 SOU~ItJ"'I, 4:30
Apr. 30-Wahama, t : 30
May 1-At EuMI'II, t: 30
.
{Bua1Mivel3:30)
May 2-At Watfif014.
(8ul Law~ I: I)
. )lay t, Alexuder (DB), ll: GD

.619

Wednesday Results
!.of Anaclcc 3, New Yool: (NL) 2

'Apr. 19-North Gallla, 4:30
Apr.. 22-At Hannan Trace, 4: 30
Apr. 23-Watet1ord, f : 30
Apr. 24-Symmes Valley, 1:30
f,pr.

PeL

.360
Spllto~ouad aam~ c:Ounl.ln ... lndln&amp;&amp;•
TI~ ,;D" aami!S nd aamet aaalns_t •
non-major le~&amp;ue 1e11111 do not.

GILMORE'S

.,.

11
12

14
.. p 17
.... 12 15
· ....9 16

'- Cincinnati'
Philadelphia

=Je=. . . . . . . . .

..

.621

... .14
SLI.wi•
.....ll
SOft Dieso
..,14
Allanla
......14
Pituboush .
.. .. 13
San Francisco
.14
New YoU
..14
Chie~go·
.... .14
Monueal
.:.. 12

'

':f11esJ.r.........................
s..!;

..18 11
..,.14 I 0

y-HOUilon. ........47 25 .6S2 . 1/2
y-Utoh . ..........47 2l .M2
lfl
Odando
..........26 4l
.~
21
DtUu
..........26 46 .361 2llfl
MinneaOI.t
......42 49 .309
2l
Denver
......... .! 9 ,S3 .264 28 lfl
Pactnc Dhillon
y-P«tland ..... ~ .. S4 lB .750

Nadonal League

~.

Plw::::::::::::::::::1o

.690

HousiOII

·SPECIALS •...

-

L
9
... 19 9

Kanus City
..,14
Seattle
· ....... 14
Baltimore
.... 13
Chicaso
.... .13
C&amp;lifarnia
· .... .12
baklarid .. :.11
Tcxu
..... .11
Milwaukee
.. II
Toronto
r..... 8
Detroit
........ 8

DINNER

0

. . . 20W

New York
Cleveland

-

t&amp;--4~

By IAN LOVE

UPI Sports Writer

Scoreboard___,

Sheets among leading matmen
at all-star
meet

.
t
h
d
I
S
: pr1ng spor s sc e u es .,.R~LEM~~~~J:;~~~~J~h~

.

points and Herb Williams added15 .
for the Mavericb, who ·have lost
The Houston Rockets are 'Nin- ·eight of their last 11.
ning bllsketball games the old-fash· , Olajuwon sccired 17 points and
ioned way - with ltard wort on Maxwell added IS to help Housron
defense.
build a 52-35 lead at halftime. The
The Rockets have zoomed into Rockets continued their domination
·!he thick of- the Midwest Division into the second half and opencd,a
race with an emphasis on prevent- 21-point lead.
ing points from being scilretfrathcr
Dallas, though, was without Roy
than on flashy offense. Houston Tarpley, who is on the injured list.
and Utah are both a half-game out Tarpley also continues to !lave offof first in !he Midwest behind San the-coon problems. He was arrest·
Antonio.
.
eddru
. ~~st wdri~ekend odn susfp icion of
"Our offense might have their
....en vmg an may ace re\'0slumps ·cvcry now and then, but as calion of a two-yel!r probation on a
long · as . we're playing . &amp;oo~ previous DWI conviction. .
defense, we'll stay in any game,"
Houston still led by 21 with
said Houston Coach Don Chaney, 8:44-left in the third quarter when ·
. after the Rockets posted a 102-86 ·. James Donaldson started a 20-6 run
triumph Wednesday night over over the next six minutes that
over the Dallas Mavericks. "We're closed the gap to 68·61.
,
getting the boards and forcing
Olaju...,on hit two free throws,
teams to alter their shots."
Floyd scored four straight and
The Rockets established a l'rano · Maxwell added a 3·pointer to end
chise record by holdin$ an oppo- the quarte~give the Rockets ·a
nent to less than 100 pomts for the ·. TI-6llea
.
37th lime this season. Housron held
Maxw
opened the fourth
, Dallas to 13 fust·quartcr points and quarter with a free throw for a 1737 percent shooting from the field point cushion. Blackinan scored six
for the game. Hoilston also outre- straight 10 get Dallas within 88-75
bounded the Mavericks 58-35, as with 3:40 left. but the Mavericks
Hakeem Olajuwon had his sixth could not mount another surJ;te,
20-rebound game of the season.
In other games. Cleveland
Olajuwon finished with 22 clipped Houston 95-84, Philadelpoints and grabbed 22 rebounds, phia nipped Indiana 107-104, Seat•
and. Vernon Maxwell added 27 de pounded Sacramento 106-91,
points for Houston, which has won Utah edged the LA Clippers 99-97,
15 of its last' 16, and 27 pf its last and Golden State stopped Miami
127·114.
32 games.
Cavaliers 95, Knicks 84
"Their front line i§..probably
At Richfield, Ohio, 1,arry Nance
one of f!l.c best in !he league right
· · th
now," said Dallas Coach Richie scored 10 of his 22 pomts m e
fouith quarter and John "Hot Rod"
Adubato. ''If you ·double-team Williams scored J 7 points and
FERRY SHOOTS • Clevelan~'s Danny Ferry shoots over New
them inside, you pay !he price,"
=bbed, 13 rebounds to help Cleve·
York's Klki Vandewfghe in the fourth quarter of Wednesday
Rolando Blackman scored 20 ..-~
night's NBA game in Ricbl'leld, Ohio, which the Cavaliers won 95·
84. (UPI)
•

Dineen ud Rob Brown
scored second-period goals Confel'lllc:e with IQO points ·this
. Wednesday night to lead the · 1011011. il MCkiDa ill !bird Dip in
Wtlalers ·to a 5-2 upset over the four years to t6e Stanley Cup
llruins in ,the fust nme of their . finals. The DruiDS entered die first·
Adams DivisioiiiCilll'ftDiit series.
roul!d series u heavy favorites,
Tbe Whalers, winless in their having CllOCd 27 more points t1wi
previous six games with Boston nan•uou.
Ibis season. shrewdly drnrlhe Bru·
'~Being firll in the division,
ins into penalties lbat.Icaulllld in everyone's OJIPCCiing us to win,"
two power-play goals and their tint Boston's Cam Meely said. "We put
win since March 16.
pressure 011 ourselves ~ bcinJ at
"We're excited," B~ said. lloa11- and played aliltlc ti&amp;IIL"
"We were pic~d to lose four
Tbc Wllllen, wbo have just fOOJ;
straight but right now lhefve got wins in their Jaat 20 pmcs, had
to tate us to at least five."
entered the postseason with a.
Hartford has lost in the first aeven-a-ne-:MDicss 11n:1k.
round of the wayoffs each of the
"We don't really know how
past ·~ years including a seven good we arc u 1 ICIIII," Dineen
. gam~J'!si to Boston Jut spring: said. '"It iakes.a dO-a-die sitllalioli
But through the fmt twa periods io icc how goo!l yqu teally are."
Wednesday night, the ~era kept
Also scorinJ for tho Whalers
the play In Boston 'a zone and · were Vetbeet 10 the fint period,
maintained consistent presswe on with John Cullea and Paut Cyr
the Bruins• defcnsemen.
addlns insunlilc:e JOIIls In the final Coiieae ,
"We played hard, we played. five minutes. T.Uying for Boston .
' NOrth Carolina-Charlotte; South
aggressive llld we pia~ 1111111," were rookie Jeff Lazaro 111111 mid- Florida and Virginia CommonWhalen Coach Rick Ley said.
season acquisition Felli Skrilco.
wealth will join the Metro Confer- .
. Bruins Coach Mike Milbury
Game 2 of the best-of-seven · once, effective June I. Other memsaid tbe Whalers "outworked us, series_will be played Friday l)ight at bers of the 162ytar-old conference
the&gt;' finished their checkS )letter, Boston Garden.
are Louisville, Southern Mississip·.
thCll defense was beller, their goal· . In othCr NHL fmt~round playoff pi, Tulane and Virginia Tech ....
. .. ......•·,
'
-"
..
''"
tending was bcttu. We were beaten. . action Wednesday ni&amp;ht, Montreal The Ohio Athletic Conference
KNOCKED TO ICE • Boston ioalle .bdy
: Hunter during the lint. period or Wednesday
outlasted Bl!ffalo 7-s, the New named Tim Gle~n its first full:
··Moog m11oages to get a glove on the pu~k after - . ' night's NHL nrst-round playorrJame.ln
on, . tomght,noqucstion."
After
playing
to
a
1-1
tie
in
the
Yorld~anp:rs beat W1Shing1DII2·1
being knocked to·the Ice by Hartforjl's
time commissioner. GleasOn is the .
.
.
. Mark · wllidlthe Whalers won S·:Z. (UPI)
first period, Hanford took a .2·1 and New J~ upenilcd Piltlburgh assistant executive dicct~r of the
lead when Dineen scored at 2:18 of 3-1.
National l\ssociation of Collegiarc
the second~· Tbc right winger
· Cla""iens7.Sabres 5
Direcrors of Athletics.
circled behind the Bruins' not arid
At Montreal, Run Courtnall
FIIDetll
..
.
tucked the puck inside the right scored iwiee in a,three-goal out·
Arnold Schwarzenegger, the
post
burst
within
a
79-second
Span
of
muscle-bound
movie star who
By Dave Harris
But Trimble scored three more in singles eacjl anci Gary Adams
server
as
national
chairman of the •
Trimble jumped out to a 11·2 the bottom of the second and five added a sin~ Budd)' Vorc led the
Council
:
o
n
Physical
Fit'!Css and ,
lead at the end of three innings and in tlie bollom of the third innlaJ the Tomcats goiDJ 4 for.S at the plate
Sports;.announced
Apnl
24 as .
-held off a furious Meias comcbact big lead.
with three doubles and a single.
National
Sportsmanship
Day.
The
:a&amp; they defeated the Marauders 15·
Meigs scored seven bi$ rUns_in
McGuire was the starter and
wr~stli1;1g
purpose
is
to
expose
American
stu:12 in Tri-Valley Conference action the top of the fifth innma. but loser for Meigs. Wright and Shawn
.
..
dents
to
the
imponance
of
ethics
:on Wednesday evening.
Trimble plallld tWo IUDS in each of Hamon also saw acuon on the
· The South squad. coached by decisioned ROb Kosser (Lancaster) . and fair play. - .
· The loss was the fll'St of the year. the fifth and sixth iMings. Mdss mound for Meigs. They combined
Gallia
Academl· mentor Tim 1-0
Foo~~
·
·
for Meigs as its record droppcll w closed out the scoring wit!l two to give up 12 hits, slrikc out six IIJd
Tarvin.
won
10 o 13 11111Ches and . Hwt. - Aaron Sheets (Melp)
The San Francisco 49ers and ·
. 4-1, with the win Tpmble iatscs.its runs in the top of lhe 5ovenlb, but walt five. Steve Sbamhart'was the
record to 3·2.
.
.
the Tomcsts held en for lhe win.
winnor for .Trimble with relief helP. captured .team honors in poSting a decisioned · Jesse · Wheatley Chicago Bears will play an exhibi- '
tion game in Berlin Aug. 3.
.,
Trimble jumped out io a 3·0 ' · Meigs was led at the plite by from Da)'. Tbe Marauders didn t 30·12 viclot)' over the North team, (Athens) 8-2
lead at !he end of the frrst inning, Jason Wright with a triple and a help themselves in the fteld IS they piloted by New Lexington boss
Mike Halaiko Sr., in Wednesday
.but the Marauders cut the lead to 3· single, l(evin Tal:::!· .Terry committed a whopping 12 errors.
night's Soutbeastcm Ohio All·Siar ·
;! in the. top of the second inning. McGuire and Randy
· had two .
Wrestling Match at NelsonvilleMEIGS 020 070 2·12 10 12
York Higll School:
.This victor.y was the tliird
strai§ht
for the South team in the
SOtmiBaN 1111 ·
May 1 -At Trimble. c: 30
. (3), Sbawn Hamon (4) and Randi meet s five-year
history.
VARSITY U*D•II,IIOII'RR
(Buo Leaveo 3: 15)
Corsi, John Harrison-(5)
Tbe
meet's fl1181 results were IS
NAME, PViliRfH
. Gr.
IIOll'I'IIBJIN SOP'QAU.
Steve Shamhart, D!ly (S) and foUows:
·
·:•Mark Taylor, P/IF ..................... 12
.,, IUIID\'B ~
Richard
·
103
lbs.
,.....
J~
Wright (Bel·
·'Jamie Aaderson, PIIF .............. .12
A 2 At Trimble I 30
LP·McGuire
.
.'
:·TAoddndyGBater, Palf/OFP.ti'F.................. l22
pr. - !Bus Jeeves ~:151
WP-Shalnhart'·
P:&gt;J~ned Mike Ollom (Warren
·'
r nast •
.. ..............!
Apr. :1-Fed.•HOOkln&amp;, .:30
L
) an 3t49 .
.
•'Amte Duaan, OF....................... .12
Apr. 9-At Wabama, (after varsity)
· ll:Z Jbs. - Matt' Huffman
"Michael Kincaid, IF .... ;,,..... :: ..... 12 . , Apn 13-Fort Frye' (DHI, 12:00
(Marieita) deeisioncd Scott Clark
'Colin MColoalden a, I FF/OF ................!2
Apr. 17-Me!P. .f :ll
00
0
2
Melp14
Miller
j
1
•(GaWi Aeaclemy) 11·7 .
Danllo
m •
.................... ,
Apr 19-At ll'«&lt;errl Hocktns 1· 30
_"Scott Llslf!, CIOF ..., ................... 11 "
.
(llu Lft- 3:15) ' '
119 lbs • .- Jeremy Morosto
HEMLOCK.,fdciJS J!Ounded out
. THUISAY - FETTUCINI ALFREQO '!\
Apr.' 30-W&amp;IIuna, Iafier varsity )
.Ronnie Spaun, OF .................... ,.... Il
13
hits
lnd scored m eVe.ry inning (New Lexington) ~is1oncd Jesse
.Andy Hill, IFIOF ......................... ll May hAl Alexander il'OO
but one enroute 111 a 14-3 {lOUnding Roberts (NelsOnville-York) 9-4
WITH ITAUAN SAUSAGE
·Chris Ebersbech, OF ................... 11
' !Btu Lea-· 9:il))
Kellh Jones, P/ IF ........................ IO
May 7 Trim~* , . .,
·
over the Miller Falcons m a Trius
lbS. - ·Jolm u,ton (Logan)
Kyle Wlcklltte, CIIF .................... .lO
• •
. FRIDAY - IUTTERMIUC PECAN CHICKEN
Vallcy Coofercnce make-up game decisioned Eric Hedl: (Melp) 9-2
Jeremy DPJ, PIIF .......................10
IO~IOI'I'BALLROIITEa
on Tueaday .evenilla.
.
130 lbs. - Todd Wyrick
cmd I.I.Q. RI8S
•-LeUerw or
IVUIIIJ ... P ntl)
While die Marauder bitten were (Logan) decisioocd Brian DouaJu
•
, •• = • v·- .. Needl
bangins away at two FalCQR pirch- . (WL) 3.()
.
·
SAlURDAY
STUFFED
COltiSH GAME HENS·
IOU'I'IIBIIN
Ull
,
"Sh
Cou
-•
. RESERVE B.UBBALL IIOft'EP
annan
n,!S .......... , ............. Sr. ers, Marauder southpaw Mike
135
lbl
•
..:..
Brian
FQndale
(NL)
n.
"Tonya
: • ............................
Name
P ~•J
.
sSr.
AND B.B.Q. RIBS
·Robert Kl~·s CIOF
10
eeney
........................ ,... r. Vance was· mowing the Falcons decisioned Tom Owena (Jackson)
6-4
,
•
'
:Tyson Mu~rie.
:CberyH·•"tll
sSrr. hiuen down. The~ went
,, ·~~G WNCH1 TUII. ~ Fri,-1, 1 am-3 pm
.Job Chaney PIOF
10
HHtta. Roub ............... t......... . the' route slrildng out 11, waJJcing
140 lbs. , _ Toby Caudill 1
·oa.:ls stth. IF .................... ,10 • Altpl S11tt1er ..:.......................... Sr. six and lllvins only four hits. War- (Sheridan)
1;
•SEIYING DIIINEI ,
dccisioncd Bart MIDiyan
JOii'y Hensier, w: :::::::::::::::::::::::::10
=~~ WW.J!~:.:::~ .................. SrSr.•
,
..
·
'
Wedlllday
&amp; ·n...r..y-5 pm-1 pm
(1\!L)
74
.
.
0
ren
IIJd
llrinstead
pirch
far
the
Pal·
Billy Jones CI IF
.
9
~- Y ".....,"""""' ..................
•
Tucker wnitalllB 'pioii................. 9
"Mayta Yo.eb11m ........................ Sr. cons whh Warren picking up the
145 lbs. - Jeromey Sheets (NFrWay &amp; Setvnlay-5 pm-9 pm
Jeremy Northup; P / IF .. :::::;::~:::::: 9
~ ~r. loss.
Y) decisioned Mite Halaito Jr.
CLOSD SIIDAY I IIOIDAY
.Aaron Drummer, CIOF ........ ........ 9
Kelt'· Er In
o ........................ Jr.
Terry McGuire and Kevin Tay- (NL) S·l
~ndy Grueser CIIF
9
~
rv
...
,.........................
.
r.
~
•
......................
Le ra Fry
J
FEATURED DAILY SPECIALS-Ctrry Out Available
lQr led the Marauders at the plate
15.Z lbs. - Jason Kopack
:Andy Fields, OF .. : ........................ 9
.M:, ~
&lt;... : / .
l'rent Cleland, IF ............ ..... ......... 9
"Ml
.,;;coy........................ /' slamminJ. two singles and a double (GA.) decisioned Shawn Green
Mite Welcb added a triple (Sheridan) S-3
:e~~::r~;,~j~t; it..................,:
~u ..... ::::::::::::::::::::::: J~: each.
'"
• ....... ..... ......
Jenny Varney ............................ Jr. and a single, Terry Reuter and
1"' D!s. - Paul Abraham (NL)
y
Rebeeca Wiles ........................... Jr. Shawn Himon Al'o sing~a each
dccisiolled Breat Slmtut (GA) 3·1
112 East . .
· P-roy, Ohio
'
R.lberta c.Jdw~n .... :.............. Soph. and .IAICII Wri&amp;IJt a liJiaiC, Llllning
171 ~*e.- . . Holley (GA)
SOtJTIIBBN t•l
.
NO
IIUIIIYATIONI
NI!CEIIIAIIY
VARSft'Y BASI!:BALL ICDDULE, "JetUllfer Croaa...................... Sopb. had two of lbe four hiU far die Faldecisiooed Leuer Snodarau
Heetlltr BlU .......................... Sopb.
.Mar. 30-At Fed: Hock., 12:00 jOH)
(Aihenl) 8-1
.
coril.
.
Cbrlaty~ .................... Soph.
,l.pr. 1-KYII'r Creek, 4:30
Heii!Mt
PilaU
...................
Sojlh.
will
.boll
Vinton
County
j\pr. 2-Trlmble, 4:30
. . . . . . ~~~(WL)
l&lt;elta
.......................... !iojlb.
.Apr. 3-At North Gallla, 4:30
Atlllle
........ ,.........·, ...... ~·
· *Pr.-4-At ~vensioood, 1:30
nu#t14u3 ·
··M:""~
.~~ ...................~
•' •
'i\pr. ~Hannan Trace, 1:30
101 010 0.3 4 8
Jodi
Caldwell.............................
.
Apr. 8-At Symmes Valley, 4: 30
Jal-touniS ......... , ; ................ Fr.
Mike Vance and1CX&lt; McElroy .
Apr. 9-At Wahama, 4: 3lJ
Aimee MaDUei ........................... Fr.
Wurren,Grinstcad (5) and King,
Apr. 10-At Southwestern, 4: 30
Marcy Matthews ........................ Fr. Warren (5) ·
Apr. 12-At Oak Hill, 4:30
Conua Mulford ... :...... ............... Fr.
,&lt;\pr. 13-At Fort Frye,l2: 00 IPHI
WP-Vancc
Tabllha Willford ................. :...,. .. Fr.
j'\pr. 15-Eastern, 4:30
LP-Wuren
·-Leaer
Apr. 16-Ravenswood, 4:30
,O.pr.17~At Kyger Creek, 4:30

~Trimble

The, Dally Sentlnel-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

., tJ ..

''

•

••

- ·'

.

.

...

"

... .......

SAil

$2 900

CHEVROLET -OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC· GEO, INC.
308 EAST MA.. • 992·6614 • POMEROY,_OHIO

.''

�•
•

Page

6 The Dally SenUnel

,.

eventually winds up back at the
right alria ready to make the circuit
another time.
The heart has ooe"way mechani·
cal valves between the atria and 1he
ventricles that ~p the blood flow·
ing in the proper direction with
each contraction, or beat, of the
heart. Without proper valves, the
heart would just "slosh about"
without effectively pumping blOOIL
The valve between the left atridln
and the left ventricle is called .the
mitral .valve and it is this valve
which doesn't 'work properly in
people with mitral valve prolapse.
Wh.en the. defective valve is
stressed by the pressure of the contracting ventricle, it bulges .backwards out of its normaf position
(whaf).ve call "prolapse") with
such vigor that it creates a sound the heart murmur your doc.tor
heard.
.
Mitral valve prolapse has been
recognized for Blleast 150 years. In
fact, it was the leading cause for
medical disability among draftees
for World War I. The emotional
stress that is produced by havin&amp;
that infamous "induction physical
creates the perfect cmiditions •
surges of adrenaline and racjng
heart - for MVP to be noticed by
the examining physician. Fortu- .
nately, the development o.f
echocardiography during the last
2S years has made ,it possible to

l

r

Curious about how much your
Social Security benefit will be
when you retire? Need a Social
Security number for your child?
Changing your name because of
marriage or divorce?
All you have to do is contact
Social s·ecurity, You should know
that there is no need to pay for
these services. Many times people
will get advertisements from companies that offer to assist people in
their dealings with Social Security
- for a fee. But there's absolutely
no reason to pay a middle nian for
services that Social Security offers
for free. ·
,
Advertisements for these companies sound as if they're offering
some special service that Socia1
Security doesn't' provide, or that
'they have some secret information

that we don't tell people abouT.
Some companies make it sound as
if they can expedite the service.
These claims ar.e absolutely
false. In reality, .the companies
come to Social Security to get the
infonnation. They'just act as a $0between, which adds ao extra step
. to the process, thus slowing it
down.
So why do people pay for services they can get for free? There
are a number' of reasons. Some
people just don't realize that Social
Security offers the service. Others
a.re leery of dealing with the
bureaucracy so lhey are· willing. to
pay for the "assistance" that they
really don't need. And sometimes,
people get official looking mailings
and think they're from Social Security.
How can you avoid paying for a
service Soc~al Security offers for
free? If you need help wid! a Social
Security qllestion or pro\)lem, contact Social Security directly. And if

~

·
Medicine

Famil~

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

establish the diagnosis of MVP befCl'C teeth cleaning or other denwithOut subjecting the individual to tal wort can' greal]y .lessen this risk
exceptional physical and emotional by reducing lhe ...shower" of mouth.
strc:ss.
.
· · bacteria that gets into the blood
Many individuals afflicted with during dental wort and subsequentthis condition have a relatively nar- ly infects the weakened mitral
row chest when measured from · valve. The risks of complications
front to back. Light-headedness from MVP- are relatively small. In a
and fainting are common ~blems six-year study of individuals with
as are fast heartbeats, palpitations unusually severe symrtoms, only 9
and chest pain. Doctors have also percent eventually required surgery
notic¢ that these patients tend to on lhe damaged valve. Keep in mid
be anxious and hypochondriacal, that this is 9 percent of the patients
but it is unclear whether this is due wid! seven: MVP; the figure would
to a certain ~ty type being presumably be much smaller for
associated wtth MVP or, as I think the total population of MVP sufferis more likely, because whe~t a per- ers. ·
So, I'd recommend that you be
sop realizes that they have a "h~ ·
problem" they lend to get panicky.
cOQcemed enough .to see your doc·
Question ·• My doctor. didl!'t tor regularly. Complications of
seem very concerned about my MVP do occur but not often
condition. Should I be? ' ·
enough to be a ifCBt risk to your
· Answer • Yes, you should be longevity or·vigor. Just see your
concerned because you have mitral doctor regularly and take your
valve prolapse, but not exceptional: penicillin before geaing YOU!' teetp
ly so. Most individuals have few cleaned.
problems. The episodes of fast
heartbeat, ches~pam or. passing out
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
that SOIIle MVP sufferers have can column. To submit questions, write
be easily treated with medication. to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni- ·
The risks of more serious compli- vcrsity College of Osteopathic
cations such as failure of lhe mitml Medicme; Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
valve or sltoke ~ greater if there Ohio45701.
lias been infection of the mitral
valve. However, taking penicillin

ADKtomeet

S~curity

you get an official-looking letter
offering a Social Security service
and reque~ting a payment. it's
probably from a private company.
Contact Social Security for help
before you respond.
The Athen.s Social .Security
office is located ~~t22I 1/2 Columbus ~oad. the phone numl&gt;er is
592-4448. Social Security's toll
free nmhber is 1-800:234-5772.

Primera · ( ·
Patio Group! by
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I!

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Happy New.Year!

CANTATA SCHEDULED • Tbe First Baptist
Church or Middleport will perform the the cantata "fbe Day He Wore My Crown" od SuDday
at 7:30p.m. Tbe cburcb is located.on the eoraer
of Slxtb 1111d Palmer. Pictured is Debbie Dingey
or Middleport; wbo portrays Mary, tbe Mother
or Jesus in tbe cantata. Tbe cantata portrays the
story of the birth, deat~ and resurrection of

Fourth grade· Shannon Enright,
R,ejoicing Life School Honor
Rachel Forbes, Jacque Hall,
·Roll
The honor roll for lhe Rejoicing S~phanie Jones and Rachel Pan:
. ·
Life Church and Christian School gio.
. Fifth $f3de - Aaron Pangio and
. has been announced.
Kindergarten • Amanda Fetty, Steven Rtce. ·
Joshua Eagl,., . Todd Jacobs,
Seventh grade • Todd Davis and
Michael Long, Stephen Riggs and · Shawn Rice.
Eighth grade - Emily Asbeck
Scott Taylor.
.
First gr;tde- Brandon Werry and
Ehran Wilson.
Sec.ond· grade - Chasidi Biggs,
Erin Harris, Isaiah Kehler and Rose .
Schrock. .
Third grade • Tawny Jones,
Joseph McCall and Aaron
Schaekel.

Jesus hi song and still-life drama. Tbe cantata
was well-received on Palm Sunday. Over 30
members or tbe church choir are involved in
either the drama or choir. Cathy Riggs and
Donna Grueser direct the drama and Sbaron
Hawley is the choral director. Pastor James Sed·
don serves as tbe narrator and invites tbe public
to attend.

((ClA991FIID ~S .,n'B ta gat raaulta))

Doerfer birthday.
Josie Doerfer celebrated her
, third birthday recently with a party
in which a "Simpsons•·th~me was
carried OUL
. \.
Attending were her parents, ·
Ginger and David Doerfer, grandmother Josephine Justies , Butch
Mercher, Pete Garndner .• Tode
Anderson, Steve, Beve and A.J. ·
Hill, Gina, ·Bub,· Chris .Duncan,
Susan· Stone, Larwance Powell.
· Sending gifts were ViCk:ie; Lisa
Reed, Mary, Henery, Dawn and
Josl\ Doerfer, Mary, Annette
Sheets, Becky, Rachell, Carlyn,
DanUil Davidson, Bill, Andy, Tresta, Bubby Doerfer, Linzie, Nic,
Joey Nottingham and a call wa'l,
received from Bettie Keams, Cali·
fum~. .
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1. Elm GREAT American VACATION Certlllcatn with qualifying Rldlo Sheck purchesea.
Only o~e certificate may be used per ticket. Travel
lhrough April!, 1992. Each·Certificate Is good tor:
$30.off &amp;ny round-trip excursion of $179 or more
$50 off any round-trip excursion of $279 or more
$70 off any round-trip excursion of $379 or more
2. Save your Radio Shack Receipts • -earn two
Certificates for purchases totaling $100 or more;
earn four Certificates lor purchases totaling $200
or more; or earn six Certificates for purchases totaling $300 or more. Receipts must be,dated between March 28, 1991 and May 18, 1991

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• Must be dated between March 28, 1991 and May
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The lour-day Chinese New Year.
Hsin Nien. and the three-day . Viet· .
namese New Year festival, Tel, begin
at the first new moon alter the sun en·
ter5 Aquarius. The day may fal!.
therefore, between Jan. 21 and Feb.
19 of the Gregorian calendar. Thl!
. start of the n.ew Chinese year is fixed
according to the date of the new moon
· in the Far East. Since this is west of
the.International Date Line, the dal.!! ·
may be one day later than that of the
new moon in the United States,

Save '100

ROSE BUSHE$

.... 29 •., IIIW

OHIO

etl-1111111

Flcirence Richards read 11 letter
that shll had·received from a yoong
man of the medic:al baualion in the
· Persian GUlf, thanking her for the
Christmas card she had sent hiin.
He was from Oak Hill.
Mrs. Bowles appointed a nominating committee of Lula Hampton, Annette Johnson and Dorothy
Casey. .
i·
The Legislative Bulletin. and
Firing Line were ordered.
·
A letter of endorsement for Mrs.
Sharo~t Squires for the office of
Eighth District President was
received from Wellston Unit-371.
Mrs. Johnson, community service chairman, gave a report on the

Several matters were discussed
at lhe March meeting of the Long
Bouom Communi!y AsS!l;Ciation.
The meeting opened wl\h the
LOrd's Prayer and pledge in unison .
It was announced that' a water.
cooler was installed by Paul
Hauber and Harlan Ballard.
Another smorgasbQrd is' planned
for May 18 and it was noted that
the l!uilding had been booked for .
shower and two birthday parties
last month.
.
..
·Down Home Jamboree will b6.
held at the hall on Saturday from ·7'
11 p.m. and admission is free;
Refreshments will be available.
Melody Roberts and. Phyllis
· Larkins hosted !he March meeting.
Hostesses for the Apri.l meeting
will be AI ta and Harlan Ballard.
Games were played by those
attendings: Mae McPeek, Kenn1.
and Ada Bissell, Judy Holter. Phyllis and Dorsel Larkins, Harl[\11 aQd ·
Alta Ballard, Melody Roberts and
Delores Hawk.

homeless senior citizens, the envi·
ronment and communi'ty fund
drives. She sta~ families wi~t
adequate food and shelter are found
in small towns and that members
can get involved in recycling and
clean-up programs.
'
Mrs. Richards talked frQm The
Firing Line that Robert Turner, .
national commander, has asked
members of American Legion to
lead the nation in • continuous
expleSSion of unity'and support for
. the national purpose' The Le$ion
suggests one of the best wa»s ts to
display the t:J.S. flag at full staff
during the operation of Desert
Storm.
Mrs. Hatppton,legislative chair~
marl, st8led th8lthe war has caused
Congress to introduce legislation
for veteran housing, Soldiers and
Sailors Relief Act of 1991, employ~
ment services, health care and educatiOQal services.
.
Mrs. Ross served a dmner to
ihose attending.
·
The meeting closed with prayer
for pea~e and the singing of
u America. n
'

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public in t976. · ·

CLEANING HOUlE TO MAKE ROOM
FOR NEW MERCHANDISE

Lewis Manley _Auxiliary
·holds recent meeting

·Honor rolls announced ·

Cool and comfortable, quality ,
you can see. Sleek, sculplured
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baked-on polyesler finish ..
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Logan, city council representative:
so. n ........14.t8
and Debbie Miller, alternate city 10,000
11,000 so: FT ........1t.tl .
council.
Niese! Gerard presented a cuF
tura1 program for Iri$ Payne, "Creative Expression: Fine Arts as a
Forum of Expression" noting different forms of an.
Charlotte Hanning and Sandy .
Hannif\g presented their program
on "Current Events.:' War in the
Gulf news highlights were read as
was a poem about the American
flag.

SPRING CLEANING
SIDEWALK SALE!

•~

5-pc. sal includes
48" umbrella !able
and 4 slack chairs

. Long Bottom
Community group :
.holds meeting . ·

JOSIE DOERFER

The Fernwood Garden Club met basket filled as they wish and·also
recently at the home of Wilovene · three dozen muffins.
'
Bailey.
.
The next meeting will be at the
Members answered roll call by Zion Church· on April 16 with
naming ~eeds brought for Helen Eblin as hostess. The proexchange. Suzanne Wainer was the gram will be on container gardenchairman for the exchange of nas- ing.
·
turtum, cotton, hollyhocks, flowerWilovene Bailey had the proing kale, verbena, zinnia, tomato, gram on ·"Hands in the Garden."
salvia, Martin house gourd seeds.
She gave facts about predatory
The county meeting will be actions of birds at feeding stations
April 22 at the county extension and how to minimize damage to
office and Fernwood will have the feeding stations.
program.
. .
· Attending were Thelma Giles,
The regional meeting will be Evelyn· Thoma, Ida Murphy,
Apri: 27 at Salisbury School. Each Suzanne Warner, Chelsea Young
~lub will provide a centerpiece of a and Helen Eblin.

A tq!Ort on Founder's Day was
given at t!Je recent meeting of the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
.Sigma Phi Sorority, heltl.;ttthe
home of A.R. Knight in Pll"meroy.
·The event wiD be held April 25 at
6:30 p.m. at the Sportsman in
Athens. Reservations are due by ·
April 14.
Kay Adkins presided at the
meeting in which the J!etition for
the Order of !he Rose was received.
Officers ·were elected as follows: Niese! Gerard, president;
~ Woods, vice president; Paula
Haynes, recording secretary; Linda
Bates, treasurer; Jackie Hoover,
corresponding secretary; Kay

69900

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-T

4, 1991.

her behalf.

•

A dinner meeting will be held
April 16 at 6:30 p.m. at lhe ~ine
United Methodist Church by the
Alpha.Delta Kappa group..
·
Deadline for reservations is
April 11 and may be made by call·
ing Linda Fisher at 992-2836 or
Karen Walker at 949-2648.
Doris Wheeler, Raveswood,,
W.Va., presented a progi-am
. · on her
travels to the U.S.S.R. .
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses, Eileen Buck, June
Lee and Karen Walker.

Thursday, April

The Lewis ·Manley Auxiliary,
ynit 263, ,American Legi~n, p~et
·· recently at lhe horne of Edith Ross
in Point PleasanL
Margaiel Bowles presided at tile
meeting and asked each chainnan
to bring her blank report fonn to be
filled 'in to the next meeting.·
A thank-you card was received
from the children of Julia Williams,
.'Columbus, a former member, in

.'

.Fernwood gardeners meet . ·

Xi Gamma Mu holds meeting

~~~~4fN!~~~~~f ·

Ohio University
•
College of Ost~pathic Medicine

·Save money - contact Social
By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Albeos

Thursday, Aprll4, 1991
•

With proper care,
MVP victims may
lead normal lives ··
Question • '1 recently went to
my doctor for my yearly examination. She said that I have a heart
·murmur thllt sounds like mitral
~alve prolapse. She ordered testS
which confirmed this. Can you
explrun what this condition is?' I
know the condition has something
10 do with my heart.
·
. Answer • Mitral xalve prolapse
(MVP) is a common .heart disease
that is present in about five percent
of the U.S. population, with women
being affected a linle more often
than men. Let me start by ex~al!·
ing where the mitral valve is
t·
ed and what job it perfonns.
I'm sure that you remember that
the heart has four chambers - the
left and right atria and the left and
right ventriGles. The atria are low·
·pressure, less-mu~ular, chambers
that collect blood and then push it
· into the more muscular ventricles
at the proper time. In the next pan
of the heartbeat, the ~ery muscular.
ventricles contract forcefully propelling blood. into the artenes. In
:fact, this action of the ventricles
produces the preSsure that is mea.sured as your blood pressure.
Blood from the right ventricle is
pumped to the lungs where it picks
up oxygen. The left .ventricle supplies the circulation for the rest of
the body; The blood lhatleaves the
left ventricle continues its travels
through the blood vessels and

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People in ,the news
.

'

'

group ftlunde4 by Fonda ud TOIII
By WILUAM C. TROTf
Haydeli, the Calif'omilleaillator
United PrwiDtenatlaDal
FONDA FEELS ntE FINAN· 10 whom sbe:wu muriel at !be
CIAL BURN: Jane FCIIda's aero- time. Fonda later opened 1J1U in
bics studio is not so healthy. In Encino and Sen' Pnncilco but they
fact, it's r!oW The Beverly -Hills w~re clOied yea111 ISO·
studio, Jane Fonda's WOikout. Shut
ANOTHER MUSICAL BAD
down Tuesday riighl beciiiSC of the
immense competition from rival GUY: Rock lllp' Greu AUmaa
SOuthern California health clubs, a says he's not really a bad guy,
spokeswoman said. The actresa and despi~ playinj vi1llins in his fii'St
excttise maven now will ~ Cree 10 'two acbnB jobs. After a· role u a
copcenttate on fillless books and bad guy in an episode of the JYDdi·
videos. Fonda opened the workout eatcd "Superboy'" te~vfaion
studio in 1979, In part to raise series, Allman, a fo1111~ heroin
mOIICI¥ for the Campaign 'for Eco- user, is cast as a dru&amp; deller In the
nomic Reform, a li~ral political movie "Rush," !he story of liD

Communi41 Calendar items Tuppers Plauis from s, a :30 a.m. Dcpaninent will have a fiSh fry on
ap~ two
Wore an event featurin~ Rocky Mountain Blue- Saturday from 4· 7 p.m.
. :
ud the day ot that event. Items grass. J1m Carnahan will be the
MIDDLEPORT • "Horse with ·
must be received well in advance ~er. Public invited.
Flying
Tail" will be presenled at ..
to assure publication In tbe calthe
Meigs
County Public Library · .
. endar.
POMJlR..OY • Meigs C9unty
•
on
Saturday
at 2 p.m. and on Mon- : ·
Grange Banquet. Friday, 7:15 p.m.
day
at
7
p.m
. at the Midllleport ·
THURSDAY
at Salisbucy Elementary. EntertainPOMEROY • Revi.val at the ment, Bob .and Kendra Ward Brarich.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel ' in Bence ..Speaker, Gene Esbenshade.
RACINE - The Southern 'High
Pomeroy will be held through SunSchool
Class of 1966 will hold an
day at 7:30p.m. nightly with Rev.
· BRADBURY. Revival services
·
organizational
meeting for its 25th
Kenneth Hooper as evangelisL The at Bradbury Church of &lt;;:heist Frichurch is localed one half mile off day lhrough Sunday at 7 p.m. Pub-· class reunion on Saturday at6 p.m.
· Roule 7 on Rou1e 143. Rev, Victor lie inviled. Special speakers night- at the high school. Alllocal·school
RouSh invileS the public.
ly. AI Hartons, Friday; Derek : class members are urged 10 attend.
Shimp, Saturday; and Don Seevers
RUTLAND • BasclJall league
LONG BOTTOM ·. Revival Sr., Sunday.
·
will have a signup Saturday from 9 ·
through Sunday at Mount Olive
Community Church in Long BotREEDSVILLE - ' The Olive a.m to I p.m. at the civic cen1er. · ·
lOll) at 7 p.m. each nighL Speaker Township Trustees will meet Fri- .
SUNDAY
'Viii be·Evangelist Bill Villars.
. day at 6:30 p.m. at ihe Reedsville
CHESHIRE • The Gabriel QuarFireHouSe.
·
tet will perfonn Sunday at 7 p.m. at . •
RUTLAND - Rutland Township
Trustees meet in regular session on
MIDDLEPORT - Inspection . the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist :•
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. ai the Rut- Middleport Lodge No. 363 F and Church in Chesh'ire. Special · ·
land Fire Stat_ion. 1
AM, Fri(lay, 6:30 p.m., potluck · preaching by Michael Fr;!Sh: Public •
dinner, meeting at 7:30p.m. · ,
IS inviled.
.
,.
.
POMEROY - 'PERI meeting at
' SATURDAY
Meigs County Senior Citizens CenPOMEROY· Popcorn Sunday, ter ill I p.m. on Thursday. All
MIDDLEPORT. There will be Hillside Baptist Church, Sunday, ·'
members are urged 10 atlend.
a fish fry at the Middleport Fire
10 a.m. Everyone will receive pop- ;:
House on Saturday beginning at II
com and suckers.
MIDDLEPORT • Evangeline a.m.
# 172 OES Middleport will meet
LOT'l'RIDGE " The Lottridge ·.
Thursday for their regular meeting.
SALEM CENTER . • Star Community Center will have a . ·
Officers are 10 wear street dresses: Grange and Star Junior Grange will smorgasbord dinner, ·~uilday, noon '
. ··
, 'lneet Saturday at 8 p.m. at the 10 2 p.m., Cost is 4S for adult and ...
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. - grange hall near Salem Center. $2.50 for children . Public inviled.
:
The La Leche League of Point ,Harrisonville Grange will visit.
Pleasant will meet on Thursday at 7 Potluck refreshments. All meriibei-8'
POMEROY • A 12·step AA
p,m. at the Presbyterian Church at urged 10 atlend.
meeting will begin Sunday at 7 .
8th and Main Street. The discusp.m. at the JTPA office 117 West sion will include a discussion on
CHESTER - The Chester Fire Scc'!nd St in Pomeroy, ·
.
nutrition. For funher information,
call (304) 675·5142 or (304) 6754439.

eta,.

HYMN SING HELD • A hymn si!Jiwas held recently at HiDside Baptist Church. Featured singers were The Gospel Tones,
God's Little Lambs, The Joyrul Hearts, Mrs. Linda Jones, The
WiDIDI Hearts, The Redeemed Quartet, and 'fbe Children or God.
Pictured are members or Joyful Hearls,·l•r, Barb Pratt, Kay WUIett and Barb SiabL
··
.

register their children:
-A record of immunizations 10
include measles (Rubeola) Rubella
(German measles, mumps; all .
adminislered afler the · first ·binhday; 4 DPJ shots, 3 poiio Sabin,
and a recent tuberculosis. stin leSt
are required for admission to
school.
·
-The child's binh certifiCate.
All parents who have children of
RACINE • The Racine Amerikindergarten age are asked ui regis· can Legion Post 602 will meet
ter at this time. 'The number of Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Refresh.sehool. personnel needed. is coolin· ments will foliQw the meeting.
gent upon the number of students
who regisler, and the count needs
LOTTRIDGE - The Lottridge
to be as accW'IIIC as ~ble. Ques- Community Center will meet
tions concerning registration diroct- Thursday at 7 p.m.
cd to the elementary principal in
the designaled aaendance area.
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group
Those who have a ·child who of AA and AI Anon will meet
will be of age to attend the first Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred
grade next year,. but ~ho is not . Hearr Catllolic Church:
· .
atlending a c:harlercd lcindergarlen
this year, Should contact the county
POMEROY - Seed applications
superintendent at 992·3883 to will be ae~:epled at !he Meigs Unit·
make arrangements to see if their
Methodist Cooperative Parish
child can be eligible to enter the ed
through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 1
first grade. This al~o needs to be p.m. at the office at 3 II Con(jor
done before school starts in lhe fall. St.. Pomeroy.
·

Rutland _gard~ners h'old meet!ng
Pauline Atkins opened the
March meeting of the Rutland Gar·
den Club with a. poem, "Spring."
Margaret Belle Wtber liosled the
meeting and had devotions from
Ideals, "Easter and Spring," followed by prayer.
Roll call was answered with
"My First Spring Bloom."
.
Pauline Atkins placed a spring
arrangement at Overbrook Center 1'
for the club.
Arran$cmcnts were completed
for the tnp 10 Gallipolis Development Center.
The Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs regional meeting will be
April 28 at Salisbury Elementary.

Final plans for the meeting were
Eva Robson had the a{tan~e­
made.
ment for the night featuring spnng
Kathy Dalron won the ·traveling flowers.
prize donated by Ruby Di.ehl.
Dorothy Woodard introduced
Dorothy Woodard will donate the Connie Hill who llad the program
prize for the April meeting.
on herbs. Herbs are plants used for
PlanS were made 10 lOur Connie pleasure and medical and seasonHill's herb garden sometime in mg. They have been around for
May.
centuries. She recommended startNeva Nicholson, Margaret Belle ing with a a small garden using
.Wt!ber, Kathy Dalton, Pauline seasoning herbs. They need a
Atkins, Stella Atkins and Marcia sunny, well-drained place using
Dc~ison furnished flowers· for the
lime and some compost.
churches.
Eva·Robson had the hint. She
Dorothy Woodard read an arti- ' said now is the time to prune dead
clc on herbs. She said the red bird canes away from roses and berries.
was selecled as Ohio's stale bird in Mulch can·be removed from snow1933 by the General Assembly:
drops and daffodils. ·Remove mulch
from asparagus and dress lightly.
. Dorothy Woodard closed the
meeting reading; "Consider The
Lilies," and "Consider Their MesGem of t,he Day: l know of sage."·
.
nothing that keeps people .on the
Dorothy Anthony, a guest, Won
straight and narrow like sound the door prize.
·
upbringing, deeply instilled mcral
The next meeting will be held
principles, and witnesses.,
April 30 instead of Monday, April
29.

A n~w twist on Operation Ann
Oear Ann Landen: I think I have
a new. one for you. I took your
"Opemtion i\nn Landers" 10 new
heights.
1am stationed iit Saudi Arabia and
1 have received several •Any Service Member" letters from all over
our great country. They really did
. cheer· me up sci I decided to do
something about iL ·
·
I sat down and wrote a letter 10
·My American Citizen,' ADy Old
Address Any Town Close 10 This
Zip, USA 52215." (I got the zip by
averaging all my friends' 'zip codes
1 ther)
oge ·
'v
~
Today I tocel ed two I'CS!l?n!J:CS.
One correspondent _sent a elippmg
from a_newspaper m Tama, Iowa
(The z1p ~ode I made up happened
10 be the z1p for Chelsea, I~.) The
newspaper m Tama pnnted ·my
letter and encouraged everyone in
thC county 10 write. .
I thought you might enjoy !his
slory. It's the first time I've ever
wri~ 10 you. Keep lip the great
work, Ann. I have been enjoying
your column ever since I learned'
how to read. _ SGT. KEVIN D.
MORGAN
DEAR SGT. MORGAN: Thanks
.
for the update. It JWII goes 10 ~w
~hal a ~nse of advatlure and a litlle
creatJYity can do. Carry on and keep
me posled. .

'

Delta Kappa Gamma meets
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, was hast chapler of
the joint meeting at Saints Peter
and P~ish Hall in Wellston
· recently. · .
. .
Alph,a OmiCron prestdenl Susan
.. Will mtroduccd the ·presidents Qf
the guest chapters; Beta. Alpha
(Gallipolis), DeiiJ! Epsilon (Jackson), Beta Tau (Waverly). ·
Sandra Nodruff presented the
musiC program. She Jed the singing
of Delta Kappa Gamma. song and
the Star Spangled Banner. She
introduced a youth group who sang
This is My Country, from a Distance, Teach Your Children Well,
and What a Wonderful World.
· .. Sue Jackso~ gave the _m~oca· liOn. She read Joy of Spnng and
.asked the blessing. Ladies o,f the
church served a scalloped ch1cken .
, lunc~eon. T&amp;!&gt;les were decorated 1n
a spnng motif. Favon weJ'l: green·
ery in glazed pottery. Mitchell
Baiter, guidance counselor in Wellston schools, was the sjleaker. He
·

Dear Ann: I just read lliat the
average 18-year~ld has seen I 3.000
killinas aad more than 100,000 ,
violent ac:tJ on TV. I find this
appalling. What can be done about
it?- DISTRBSSED IN WASHING·
. TON
.
' DEAR D.: You can send a long,
sdf-addreucd, lllamped enveiQPe to
Action for Children's Television, ......
Dcpi. A, 20 Uni~ity Rd., C8mbr• .
idp, Mass., Ol138. And you can
tum to Public Brow!casting.

•

summarized requirements of Senate BiU' !40 which .is now law and
the requirements of proposed bills.
He said that dbio is emphasizing
~ting, accountability, and teach. ers' responsibilities without being
willlng 10 provide proper funding. .
Pre'sident Will conducted the
business meeting. She thanked all
who made the meeting a success.
Nellie Parker read thank-you cards
from Jackie Fain, .Wykle Whitney, ·
Merry Dawn Simmons, Mary L.
Houser and Judy Fetherolf.
, Membership chairman Fern
Grimm conducted the election of
new members by secret ballot.
Members present from Meigs
County were Paula Wbiu, Marge
Feuy,, Sandra Tillis, Rosalie Srory,
Fern Grimm, NeJJi~ Parker and
Gay Perrin. ·
The next meeting will be held at
Hamden Eastern Star in Hamden
on April 29. Founder's Day and
Neaology will be the program.

. SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
.

,,

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dal)ce on
at the VFW Building in ·

skin aaem to help amokers kick the habit with fewer side sffacta ttlan nicotine chewing gum. say researchers at the
Francia Scott Kay Medical Center fn Baltimore. FDA approval
Is expected .Oon.
. •
.
.

. . *.• * *
Adhesive patchea that rlleaaa nicotine. slowly through the

"''

- ~-

(.'/nN.~i.fi1•1/ lln~l'.~

Gall•• Cqunty
ArtaCode614

Metp County
Artt,Code614

441 Gal-

992

,.

379 •

ArliN• Dial.

w......

117

Coolv~le

that 1M v.._ ._mlneo

675-4340, EKI. 304. ·

-••tv
·'"" blddlflt
. VIUAG! OP SVIIACUSE
...... ·not

·

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING.AVAILABLE!

Chwl• llllll• R. Ph.
Rpnlkl Hanning. R.Ph ..
Mon . lhrU .lat. 1:00 e.m. to 8 :00p.m.
Sundlrt 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
PRESCRII'fiONS
PH . 882· 2860
E. Main ·
· friencly S.rvic.
Pom•oy, OH.

K-•h

•Video Touch
•Prescription Slloppe
•Joh~n·s Variety Store

p,.. ............. Of

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

McCulloulh, 11.....

ap.,w...

.,.. MQJI .Dfmofet

.

praaiiJ.
Janie• Llwoon,

"TIIitll ., unaudited

Jj""

Flnencllr Q •CASH
SUMMARY
IALANCEI. · CEIPTI
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNOS
REYI!NUE RECEIPTS:
T.... .............. 114,113.14
•d Fila ..... ..... 2.170.00
lntarvovarR-ntal .
R-lpu .. ....... 13,084.38
· lnt. .lll ............ ... 2.347:1e
All Othe•
ll-nua ........ e9.34o.n
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .... 202.212.31

.APR. 5 &amp; APR. 19

o-aiGov·

Musical
Entertamment By

· ·"The R1tz"

.

'

--~ ,

.

~!

From 6:30 pni 'til ?
In The Bar Dini.1g Room
· Come Jom The ·
Comradery At..
·

•'

PRICES STAll AT

$2995

.

OSCAR'S .

''
•'
I.

OF COURSE!

59 Court. St.

STOP BY AND SEE OUR

. Gallipolis

-~~~~ ......... 38.210.114
Pulllic lafaty ..... 33.171 ,19
Pulllic W.orko .....84.1101 .74·
Hultlt .......... ..... 27.M3.01
Capital Outily ... 31,001 .28
TO'I'AL DIIIURIE· · . ,
M!NTI ........218,183.20
Totalllaaalpto Qvar/(Un·
dlfl Oilb. ........(11.120.111
OTH!II FINANCING
IOUIICEI (USES)
Adv•all·ln ........1.000.00
AdvMoii·OIII ....... 000.00
Pund Celh Balance
1/1/10 ............41,IH.I4
Fullll Calh Ballnol
12/!t /to ..... ... 21,011.91
llltarVI F01 Encuntll. ,
12/31/110 ........ 21.011.11

•

3 Announcement•

•.

SPECIAL
ht 50 High Schoel
Stll.nts

Public b Invited

.915···73
667-6179

FOIIVII.IIONZI

,.

I

......

'

·: -·--··t

.: , I

Services

HouMhold Gooos

62 - s...,.u... Goodo
53 Anhquea
54 Mile. M•ch.n~e

81
82

Hom~ lrnfuovttmenh
Plumbing 6 He,.mg

83 h.c: ~•ting
14 El.aric81 6 Reh.gu.auon
85 Gun•al Htu hny

luilding Suppli•

57 Mulicat lnslrumentt-

51 hults • V•o••btll
59 For Salt or Tr•d•

"
l . .anl L Wrltelll

ROOFING

86 Mobil• Home
87 Upholslefy

Rt~pOiu

UPHOlSTEiiY

Guttera
Downapouts.
Gutter Cleaning

•t•••;ut

Painting
FREE ESnMATES

····1161
3-4-tl·l- ...

·4· 11-1

110.

· IIIIIJIIIfDINT

TII·COUNTY'
RECYCUNG

OPEN7DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.

J"on dean
up ,_
wnklnds,_. we ·

111-. . S...IIi

H

yt~r

bUJ.. Dll, W...tlllliL

H•nd Tufting
Custom Drapea

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING

S6 y ..............

614·tt2·1321

l.ocaltll Off 1111 ly,..s 011
. The Com• of

W. ley Whet W. Do.
W. Do What-·-·~,..,.,.

• Rt. 7 &amp; Rt. 141

,_,,, ow. .

Ptylng calh for 'alumiRum.

,....au...
••· ..,.,...to,.

AllUm
lrhltJHiaOrWI

Fldllp.

IIIII'S APPLIANCE
SIRVICI
992·5S35 or
915.3561

"' ...........

Acn• ,,_ Pelt Offici
I'OMIIOY, OliO
. . 3/&amp;/90/lfa

_...,Remodeling ertd
Home Repeirl
•Roofing
•Siding
•Poin1ing

' )I

,.
•.,.

1614) 915-4180

3·1·'11· 1 mo. pd.

CEDAR

lrokell Clllln Rlltairltl

.........

IAMIS
,_,. . ftlfOII'

FREE ESTIMATES

coNnncnoN
992·6641 or

CUSTOM 111LT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES
"It
til l'l'l•"
PH. Mt-2101 '
.

PwwiOPif•llt

,......,,

614•VV7.A

.

CAll fOI I'IICIS ,

lOS N.

~Strait ·

IIIIIIIIUPOif1 OliO 45 760

Offlct 6J4·"2·21U
IICIMf 614-tti-Htl
DOml 'IUINII, 110111

s.

HOUIEI•LOT8UAIIMI
COMMIItCIAL
11'e Need Uellnpl
.

'

11·1''10-..

9AM·7PM-7 .... eW...
. 2-ll.'tiJ

·Plumbing

,..... ...
-~-···(FIIEI IITIMATEII

-lloollnt

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Anno uncc lllr'lil '•

3 Announcement•

.

ft2·6215
,_,,Ohio

11 - l~lln

. fiOPtiiES • PlAiiiiiS

s..tc-.M.= ••

41 , ...

1 I·J\ ·10-111\

BISSELL
BUILDERS

-

IIM't·
and .,. """

"4·9'12-5114

-IIHIII Addllluua

-a.--E-C--rlt

...._

COUNIIY CWI

NO JOI TOO Slftll

EMilEE MUINAI
MONIAY tfwu . . . . I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. unfii.NOON
.. SAT-AY .

Tab the Pain out of
palllling.
L1t mt do It fOf' JOII.
VEIY IUSOIIAIU
HAVE IIRIINCES

GOI.F LESSONS- $J 0 oo.
6 for '55
NEW GIIPS ........- •••• S4.

For.llllreeft.

to PUCI AN AD CAlL ft2·21S6

·

f«rou1 m-.lt.

CARPENTER SERVKE

·FREE
· -ESTIMATES
• 011110.

~._

r~dlltOr&amp;

YOUNG'S

LINDA'S
PA,NTING

'

~~~5P
1::====3=·1:4·:'9:l·lf:·~

copper, lHasa.

MICIOWAYE
OVEN REPAIR

'

CIIPH CIIAIIIIS
alllli ftll fLOOI CAB
•RNtonlble RatM
oQuellty Work
•FrH Eetlmetes
•C•rvet Heo Feat Dry
Time
tHigh Gloaa on • Tile
Floor Finlah

,, *"'"'

"
NEW--All

USUIU.,~C­

Co....ttGra....

...... .

fts.sttl

,., ......

$10 ·

Call 9"·2126

Fr• Eathutes

GlOOM
.ROOM

J 1 - old. W.i.
illadt nylln Cllar with
. ·plate and ad·
........ 915·4211
· • D 'hh l1 liitJht

' 10 SESSIONS-

Sti!P &amp; Compare

t•p1 td.

C•tlld GriiDrY

Motatcvch•

7S • Bolts &amp; Motors tor Salt~
76 AUto PtrtsB! Ac cesiOI'•m;
77 Auto Rllpiilu ...
78 ·camPtno ·E'quepmen.l
79 Camptr5 &amp; Motqr Hon;et

1170
00
Serv-icesL_l·~·:,~~~=~·~~J.IiJ

FORIVD 1101111
PROM TANNtiG

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

.......... 70 ....
OPfN

1•

M~:rr:li~n11ise
51

21 Busln•• Oi:Jpanwnnv
22 Mon-v to Loan
,
23 Prof•slon•I·'Stt"ic..

-c:-ple--

......
....
.
.,
,...., ... "'Yihr·
11011. I Fll. Tl I P.M.
TUES. WED. 'IIIUI. Sf,f.
Tl s ,...

4' -Apettm.nl 1o;·Reni
45 · Furnt•hed Aoom1
41 Space tor Atnl
47 WMttd to Rerit
41 fqt.~ipmenl tot R~t
49 For L•••

56

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

tiiiiJ. .,...,. .....

I

71
7.2 ·TtucMt-lot Sa.le
73 Vttnl &amp; 4 W0·' 1

. .

., ·"· 949·2860
'. Day w Nltlht
NO SUNDAY

Would appnciute int.nwl-. ..._ ,ia

lilt

Tr ~nsportalion
'Autos tor Stitt

1

51 , .. , tor 1 ....

182 NeW H•ven
895 Litt.,l
U7 Butt-'o

•••n .

5100 IEWARD
For Lost Dot

41 Hou~• IDf Rent
42 Mobilt Horne~ tor ftMnl
43 hrms tor R•nt

576 Apple Grovtt

173 M11on

'

•

36 At. E•tett Wlrl1td

loon

I.SSIU I IUID
CONSYRUcnON

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPI
. For F'-1 Y- Ending
D-mllllr 31. 1110
LETART TOWIIIIHIP
COUNTY OF MEIGS

. THE FIRST AND THIRD
FRIDAYS OF THE .MONTH

'

Bu.tn•• luehlings
35 Lot• &amp; Acreage.

HelD W1nltld ,

Busi_n ess

Ucan ... Permtte

.

With a tuxedo
selected from
Haskins· Tanner's
large selection of the
latest styl~s and
complimentary
accessories. Expert
fitting ·a'nd ht choice. guaranteed.

11

61 - hrm Equ~pmunt
62 · Wanted to Buy
13 LN .. to"dl.
64 Hay &amp; Gr1in
65 · Sttd &amp; Ftnhlinr

3I

Public Notice

Call 614-992·7104 for Appt.

Lovely Is T_he Night ...

32 Mollite Homn tor S .. e ·
3J FffUns lOt Sale

Givuw..,

12 Situ•llon WMt.S
13 lnsu•ance
, 14 lusin., Jrat"'"9
J6 School&amp; ·• ln,lruchnn
16 lhdM». TV • CB Rttpau
17 Mllc ..len.ou 1
18 w..,~foDo

• 5-ll-'90 lfn

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and owner financmg of up
to 80% of purchase amount may be
possible lor qualifying person to
buy very nice large home on 31;
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths,·2
garages, rented I BR apt. Property · ·
includes 4,800 sq. II. farm bldg.
and mobile home.

.a

31 - Hom• tot 8.t1

Busine.
s s Services
..

"' Ill bldo, ltld to ...... ~ny
lntor-lhv' or frrltjularlty
.

C.rd of lhanb
In Memorr
t.I'IIIM»Uellft\..h

5 Happy Ads

.'

LHIII Su~~l1es
&amp; L1v~stuck

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public
Notice
Public
•
'
PUBLIC' liD
'port 10 be OOrNCI • d - · lt-....;,___________
•
ADVEIIl'liEMENT
BALANCE ...... 211.011.11 to tlie bit II. of ,my knowl·
Fund c..h ·
WHAlEY'S
S.led blda 'will bit ... . 811ance .......... 2&amp;,oe&amp;.89
' IU.MMARY ·OF .
ldge.
·
·
Oepooltooy
INOEITEDNESS
by 1hl! Vlllege of
· Joyoe Whtto.
AutO PAllS
1Vr8auoo. ·Ohio, until '12
........ """ ... 31.121.14 Outltlndlflt
1
1
Jan.
1,
1810
.....
21.11111.
17
Totll
Trouuoy
a'ctooll locel tln!e 01\
C~J ~1~ ..'J.
Spl ...... Ia
Thu....y, MIIY 2. 1811. at'
Balance .......... 31.928.14 ,Ratlrld ........... .. 11,444.13
Racine,
Oh.
41771
c
.....
,,_ ._.,
whlallt' .._ they . wlll ... L111 Outlllandlng
Outlllndlng
.
(1141247·31
211
NEW.
USED PA..TI
opened end jJojllliciy ...d.
Cltlcko ............. e.aeo.1&amp; 12/31/10 .. .. .... 17,110.34 14) 4, he
'·
FOil
ALL
MAKES &amp;
for1hapu..,...ofe1111 TOTAL
1 conHy t1t1 fol-lne ••
MOOELS
model polloe oruieer with • ·
992-7013
VI '!10 gea enll!no. Com·
oi'
992·5553
~~·~udonefor~
palica aruieer1Moen
· bit,,..,
ob- ~--~------~--~--------~------~--------------~
tained
__

re~ ,

-v

'158

247 LM., flilt1

Clerlt·Tr-urar
(3127; (4) 4, 11. 3tc

·McDonald's
;Gilmore's Restaurant
•Mill Street Books
•Dan's Clothing

...

1111: nls

,67$ PI Pl•tial'li'

949 Racine
742 Rulloo)d

rajlcteny.

TUESDAY, APRIL 9-6:30 P.M.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
DOCTORS CONFERENCE ROOM

Annut• 11 n

6 Loat end Found.
1 Y•d S••lpeid In •4w•ncet
B Public S'e le &amp; Auction
9 Want.lto lhv

Muon Co , WV .
.. Area Code 304

Meddltp0t1.
Po...,oy '
915 Ch• .. ,
143 Ponl.,tl

.·

BIG KIDS &amp; BABIES•
PROGRAM

1
2·
J
4

I'UI't•r I l!t•

followitl~ I f'll'l'h'lm• 1•xdwu~t·.~ ...

-ofVH·

•Dairy Queen

Fri., April 5 ;_AI Hartson, .Speaker
Sat., April 6-Dertk Stump, Speaker
Sun., April 7-Don Stevers, Sr., Speaker
7:00P.M. Each Evening ·

..

.

16

Weed &amp;
Transmission Kilter

'

time.''

ocrronnance.

s, 'VIu:o

Do you need a cane?

****

Brcidbury Church of Christ·

'

.

· HAPPY "40th" .
OLD MAN . .

.

r_.

MAKE' OSCAR LAUGH: The
owilen or the Jmprov, the venerable Los Anaeles comedy club,
think Oscll' ileeds to laugh more.
Budd Friedman and l!rhrk
LODow plan petitions in the club 10
urge the Aaldemy of MOtion Pic·
tuie Ana 1114 Sciences CJQte Oacar
categories for best camedy movie
and belt comic
"It's

F 1\1\JIIJ yII' 1: Ill

~43

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

When new medications become available. you'll find them at...

REVIVAL

'

.

.

15

246 Rio Grande
211 Gu.,.nDtn

'BULLETIN
--- -- BOARD ·

'

****

r---------------------~~

.

'

****

There'• t»aan lm Jncraasaln the number of cases of rheumatic
· ~8)1. . reportact bv.pedlatri~ carC!Jolo!lists .in the United States.
Bast t,..tmant. t!'ay say, is prevention: prompt and effective
therapy against atrep infactions.
·

PMli36J
Wou.. 1..... To TJuinll

...

-

'.

· Rate

. 15
15
15

317 Ch•t*e
311 ViMon

..

.Ov,r 16 Wor!ll
.
.20
,14.00
t&amp;.OO '
.3Q
' .42
$9.00 .
.60
.13.00
.06/day ·
• S1 .30/day

Words

·

10
Monthly

200 PM . W£DNESDAV ·
2 '00 f M . THUR.SOAV
2 00 PM . fRIDAY

tHIOAV PAPER

Warfarin, a drug available since th!l early 1950s but rarely
used today, may be able to reduce tha risk of new heart at·
tiCks. stroke ,and dNth a111ong people who had previously
suffered coro.,arlas. New research was reported in the New
England Journal of Medicine.

.
FRIDAY
CHESHIRE • The Gallia-Meij!S
CQmmunity Action Agency w1ll
hold free clothing day on Friday at
theold high school buil(ling in
CheShire from 9 a.m. to noon.

e

11 ·00 A.M. SATURDAY
2 ·00 P.M MONOAV
2.00 P M .'TUESOAV

SUNDAY Pt.PER

.NeW birth eo~~trollmplant II aald to ba far more effective than
other methoclll. Small, soft plastic tubas ar'e implanted ill a wo·
man'a arm. Wllere they reiNH a contraceptive hormone for five
years. FertiiJtY can be restored In deyll by removing the tubes.

.

1
3

DAY BEFORE PU8liCAHQN

THURSDAY PAPER

,~

Days

,.Ill 01l5o ~Pt~~• · •n tht1 Pt Ptuas•nl Rew~tttr ;,md the Gall•
ptlftl Oot1ly Tnbmur. u:;n:Juny ovot 18.000 hon••

BY YOUR

~

film year in and year out," Friedman said. Lenow lllded: •"A!Uiie
Hall' won back in the '70s and
Kevin KUne won a couple of
qo for 'A FiSh Called Wanda and
that's been about it foc a very long

RATES

'A cl.oliolhud ~ cloJeflfl.Vtnt1tl1 pi.M: t.KI m lhu 011tly SmttM!W I .. •
ctff)t
claudutf.l dlsplit'f . BtiSIIIUU Card illlld h.tgal notte:n)

TOPICS

'

tilne the ac:idemy acknowled&amp;ed

comedy's enormous contribution to ·

.
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

POliCI ES
,
'Ads oueSidt! Me1gl. G.lh• or Muon counti• muSI be pre
plld
'
,,
.
"Rvcuwtt $.&amp;0 dKcoul1t to• •dl p,~id 10 •dvilnC:~t. .
•free ad1 GWeaw•v •nd Pound·ads wnd• 16 wordsw•• bv
run 3 d._,5 at nO ch•ge.
.
·
.
' ' Prtc:.. ot •d lOt all capil•llelte.rs is doublu pm::e ot ad coSI
'7 potnt Ieete lyptt only uled
'.
'Suntrnd • n.o t responslbt .. tor anon taftUt linl 'd., . &lt;Chudl
tor errors hrsl d- " fUll I lA p•purl , CJil bt!tore 2 .Od P 111 '
d.., "''"'Publ•cation tn m•k" corr~CIH)U
' Ads lh.._ must ~e pa~d'" advt~ncu iK'l
Card Gtlh~Anlrl!o
.H•PPV Ad!&gt;
In Mtl'f110nlln .
Y-¥d Sal Uti

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
IUESOAV PAPER
WEDNf.SDAV PAPER

It Is My Heut. '' wu a c:ritlcal success, 5pCP at Johns Hopkins Univerlity in Baltimore and described
the oovel-writin&amp; JllQCCII u "the
11101t bizam way of lbc&amp;llin&amp; your
brain." Eve~~ if there n no more
novels, Oltes will keep buy with
short sfllries, plays, mystely boob
untter the name Rosamond Smith
and llt'Z teaching job at Prince"!R·

..

TO rt,ACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thril FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY'
ClOSED SU!tDAY
'

-----------------·
PHARMACY

addicted police offer that .is ~iag lemOIIIIde. Newman pvcs the piof.
filmed in HouSton. ''Tiw's a coin· ill from the food company 10 chari·
. cidence," Allman Said or his vii- . ty.
lainoua pens. "If I get more offers ·
I'll resist that. I'd like to~ east as ' . , BOOK I LOCKED: Joyce
a lover." Allman says_~ initially. CaroJ Oates says she's ~tieD her
was unsure aboutacbng. "I bad last novel unless she Clll oven:ome
. trouble remembering my lines," he a case or \vriru's block. "I don't
said. "But then I thought of it as feel that emotionally I'm relllly to
rememberina the !roes to a song. do a novel and I haven't done one
It's the same thing, except they for quite awhile," says Oatn, who
don't have 10 rhyme.''
·nonetheless says she has a pouible.
idea in mind. "I bave writer's
NEWMAN'S MENU: Pilul block tight now. I·Cilll't write this
~WIIIID's food empize is ~xpand· . novel so I write other things. If I
,mg. To nw1t the lOth anruversary had to write this novel I've been
of the $tall of Newman's Own, the thinking about. I'd be paralyzed.
IICI« introdoeed. four new products I'd be sweating. I'd have all kinds
Tueaday in N~w York - hot of visceral reactions." Oates,
sauce, ranch salad dreslina. light whose most recent novel,
rtlierowave popcorn and honeyed "Because It Is Bq and ,Because

'

'

The pa11y Sentinel-Page 8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

s

SIOINO
eALUMINUM SlbiNCJ
•BLOWNtN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDIIG CO.·

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

"Pretlllimatll"·

PIL.94f.2..1
erl... t4t·2160

I,_ '
"

NO SUIIDAY

-Knepp·*....... ,.
Pull -

,,.,
N•l•

IIOIU 1101• FUINACES - IIUT ,_S
AU. FUINAU PAm

...n'S MOIU HOME .

IUIIIIG &amp; CO-

........ IIChellltnl ... .tilt. •••· ·

lnalllh IIIIHL

Old,.lrlglriiOI, I - TV IIIII wM. Cell ....
4:~1M

a

441 Mill

~.oa~aFounc1

__ ..................

I'CIUNO . ,..,.,. -

. . . 'IIIII

- . - · I,Mn, ....

-.IIM-4A-IIK

'

�D-The
6

Ohio .

Sentinel

. LAFF-A:DAY
.
'

Lo-.&amp;Found

72 Tn.lclcs fOr . .

Trocko. · Cent~: O.•pallli
Pollee Dopa- ol 03118.

~~..~~:t ::::':: =;·
..................

•

,.

Yard Sale

7

Television
Viewi·ng

, . . ,.... ......... fullold

Two 3 . . - - llloyot• ~
Aru Of 01111 LOla, llalhaM

..

Ohio

1991 .

1891

[QJ
[g] ;.•

•'

Gallipolis

EVI!NING
1:00 alD Cll CllD Ill G1 D .

a VIcinity ·

~~~~Q
III R~R81nb0w Q
~~1 ,·

WJ.lAT'S THE PROeLeM?
.,,

G~~
DlgRt
.
'

WE FORGOT WHI:RE.

Q1 Wortd Todlly
I) Our~

.. WE J.IID IT..

lios w a...riy Hllittllll-.
1 30
'

.,

iU=:::R

I

_

·"I just had a talk
,·

--

Fr!dlr ·a
IILrn., CfiHdtin I lifull

•

•

•

.
., .

,J

you a bird or a bee?~

Qorog&lt;o lllfei

cartop _..,, fit. 7

'

al!D Anctv OrtlfHII · · .
GUpetoH
1:35 (I) Andy OrttiMh
.
7:00?JJ:... iiJ WhMI ~

c

'b

. ooln Plko. -Mil conlo,·
ooiftll,.fDJoiMit, Mile.

. ·

·

Solunloy April 1111.

,

Drive, .,., - ·

Dollbv adllll aloihlng, blkoa,
ehlldi¥,
uwlng mach!ne; lote'
.

Eurlkl,

.
Off fit. 7;

1 - Road, Frfdoy.

·

- ~- !lll.::'.t:=Q
·..

!!1!1$:An9a
dl · _Mac aid's In th8

Motorcycles ·

• .., .. ""'
fllwrfno
1'1141.
........
_, ~
.......

search lor a legendary

Hilurw: II.T.W.- L111.. te ,,_,

2lli

;nr.!.l~!!!.~ Q
.;;;;.;-

~!:Gil tot*'~

.

'
SCUM-UTI ANSWIR$
' Lunacy - Exist - Viper - Oueasy -'EXPENSE .
_Inow know that holiday shopping makes it harder lhan
ever to laugh at your own EXPENSE.
·
_

WIDNamotJtan~
New8Hour~

tO)'tl,

ml.a.
South of

CllD AIC Newa C
Mo,_.: TIM Ar1b fiootd

3;2' 1 c:on- Q
GIIDDCIINeWeQ

&lt;

~

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Qorogo lllte: , . . , a ......,.
1-5. FIN! h - on fell on Un-

..

.

_ ..........----..:,..- '
BR!DGE

_·

8 Sci'..c:row I!IKI MrS._King _

54 MlecelllneOua

. ' r.t.iclllndllli .

18)e

.7;06 (I) Heppy .Day•

7i30 (j)

W
Cll

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·

By PbUiip ~lder

.

~I t;f

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G I'Nua1011 laHIMtll
· Ql Cronflre

Pt. Plluant
a VIcinity •

11-710 HOnda. Colt .... 5:00,
114-4414172•
•
HanU ,,.
~tor. ,eon
1'144'J1.2'f1t
\
.
1

r-

:t""'eoc
. • : . April 3 thru I,
. ql
Hann, WV. oild IIHI
, -.· ·

.

Pomeroy,
•

.

~

lila loll

:-o.

..... CaoocltiOI• ...
1711. ·
. • .

Mlddi8PQI1
&amp; VIcinity

Ill

'"'by N:.f'A,

~ Wer l

Piece In ~
Age C
(I) The Mind 1:j! ·_
· Ill IDe Top Cope A man
sets his hOuse on lira over a
domestic dispute. S)ar&amp;o. Q
(!])• stmp10111 Homer
decides to sue after his bPss
hits Bart with a car. (R)
Stereo. Q
.
II! Murder, Sbe Wrote r:;J
• On Stege
. .

lftC

2 Tanke. •

N~~Cieer

114-216-

YES, BUT I THIN I&lt;. WE -W.IUi

,- 1FomiiY
Olnlp - . ~ . ,
8th J :DO a.m. to I p,m. f'kll
-

. on toft

pat Joyinor- c.u..

QIP~meNewt

Ill MOVIE: llefe Come the
01111

Fumlshld
· Rooms

"""'· ,1,000.

Pronto • - -.oa a
. . eolllor ........ . , . _ 1.113,
Far 1o1o

.

'

Pont- -

Tnflor, Now 30ft.

1780. IIWU0447, IM-:IIM411. · .

11 ft. troviot trailer, fully oquiJI~.

1'141.

t 1, 1,

n•

roof, ..,, A awning. 114-251r
.

1m - .. compor trollor~ao
I'!. long. -WII7.
.
em Alrolf'l!lm Trwviol Troller,

1!

·aeillent aonclllon,

TO RUIN MY DAY.

talMd, AC, Sli7DO. 1........,3Qs. .
I foot plck"'t .....,.....:,
lu,..
AMI, OVert. fonl trucK tlrwl l

rot.,

. . . . . 114-ot41.oll1.

-

r:;Jce_The Antegonltll .

(!])

e lleVerty Hlle, 10210

'§l'ereo, r:;J

.•

·

Brandon falls tor a senior
hU a baby. (R) Stereo.

l'ot Solo: "" 24ft. s.i~
oontelnod C.rrqior, oi- 5,
daubll ule. ' hal I ~11-out"

ewni!'lo olr ..,..n._.

2 Onelime
3 Letler
· sights
· carrier ·
6 Fanatlcal
4 Differsnl
11 Blkini, e.g. !I Woody
12 Love,
' Allen
~allan
movie
slyle
6 Poe biid
13 Out7 In !he
dated
thick ol
14 She·foK .
8 Spar
15 Abot,mded 9 Fury .
17 Forefoot • ·10 Lair
19 Bowling
16."The . target
Worker "
· 20 Deed'
(1962
23 Doting
film) - ·
one .
17 Shows
25 "Pinocnervous- ,
· chlo. pet
ness- .
28 Phologra- 18 Saw
phor
20 Charily
28 Otq oath
29lndian ·
gamo
. prop .
30 Seoul unit
31 Pub quaff
32 Unlle
3:1 ~agi. clan's
word
35 Legal .·
38 Bashful
· 41. Woody
Allen ·
movie
42 Thrill ·
',4;J Giant
44 Tlghlly
packed
DOWN
1 Spigot

a-s

-l

who

_2 MOVIE: C~me Story.

.l'Illl:oo1
c
Nethvflle Now

Ex••~

Cincfftfon. Colt 304-458-1118.

BARNEY,.

'

Q1 LlltJ King UV.I ·
1:30 ale 1121 Selntetd Jerry
: encourages Elaine to move
.Into hil ![l8rtment CompleK. .
· Stereo. Q
10:00 I]) D I!J) L.A. LIO¥ Kuzak ·
t~a to attract tour of the
. firm'S ia~ers to B new firm.
Stereo. Q
·
Wllewa
·
.
(I) Clltl ~matime Uve
S'tereo. r:;J
l!yll. on 1M ~ze .~ tereo.

·~· '

YOU HAD A N!CE,
' _II&amp; SUPPER.!. JUGHAID-' NOW GIT 8U)Y
. ON YORE
HDNffiiiDiliC

An-na

ind.otry. -..... .
ch•Tc·
· nor, OE.~
Sond

'1/

~Under Fire

·

1111 iDe .l &lt;n* Llnl!lna
Jaton'a ernollons are·torn
between hiP •HI lather arid
Macli. Stereo. Q ·
Iter Trefl: ~Next

P3 .... "' PGint
ter, 200 M•ln St,
WV21110.

£.e
e1]1700
:.=u:n.9tnu
Newa
ClUb With Pat
,,

R._ .

.,

' · ·~

.

10:01 (J) MOVIE: Heiaufee Agelnel
,
the Mangale (1 :55) . r
10:30(1) Welt Ylrgln!l ~Iii

'
II~ ~nll ChiN
erning you in the year ahead. Send for LIIRA (hpt. 23-0ct. 23) If a problem
G BeMINtl TOnltll!t ·
Aries' Astra-Graph predictions today . 811818 today thetthe family musfcollec- 11:00 alii (I)
Ill 112Je
by maiHng $1 .25 to Astra-Graph, c/o lively rnotve. keep outSlder!i out of the .
IDI Hen
this newepeper. P.0. BoK 91428. Cleve- picture. Their Input could C(eate serious
, (I) Night c-rt Q
.
BERNICE .
land, OH 44101-3428. Be SutO to llate Complicallons. ·
.
•
'
(!) NIIIIIWIItlh
"
your zodiac sign.
.,
ICOfiPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You might
(!J)D
Stereo. •
EiEDE OSOL
TAURUI (April 10-~ 10) If you feel have to deal with somei1111 today who Is · ·
I(J Miami VIol Stereo.
Inclined to make suaae1111ons to people · loofllng lor ..:fight Unlor1unatety, you're
Ill
today, ,be &amp;Ktrernefy careful that you not the type Of W!IDII to·back off, and
· 111
•
, .. . . . . . . . .~" . don't do 10 forCibly. Aggros!llveness Is your inlieKiblllty could prime you lor
Q1
·•
•
a suie·way to draw lire.
·'
battle.
88c;1rwow_1~M
- re. Kl_ng .
GEMINI (MIJ 21..,_.,~ Try to avoid IAOOTAIIIU8(~. a::D.c. 21) Your
Joint encr,evOIS thet Pfi!Ce a greater cerelea!18H in. flllng records or re11:30alD 0 Tonight
·
pllylicel or flNnCIII burden on you to- · celpts of ••j)endliuree could 8!/lnlually
Slareo.
...
day. Inequality could Invite f1illtire.
-_, raul! In a lou. Pay cfoH attention_to
~ IIIICitld
.

(1).

•
-dapendebltl
dopoMotlle,,.,....,.....,..
...... - · hove tYJ11no eldlfo llftd

-tnofnlng.
"""""""
..,.....,..
or
...... .......,..,
.... Clo
011, o/0 Qenlpollo DollY T........
121 Tllfnl Av- Qolllpaffe, OM

®

41111.

~~

,_not

4·4

to,_

,, .

....

-

·standing the lnlluencel which are gov-

,,

obMgated to en1er1a1n.

.' .
\,

'

·.

--h

11

a-s

--

Clle~~MI!Ii

Night SWeo.
ali:-J:;:.Mulllnf With

Hill
II! n.e

·

.

II ..

. .

1 2:001&amp;::"'~-.,..._.otDr..
IPOII2•UDI , .

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II Mlllltn MIIIIOIIIop
. llllpolte tonight .
11:311 (I)
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CRYPTOQUOTE .. :-

Y R X N)

-~.....i~~~~:r~~-.QOI·id. ·

·'

Yesterday's Answer
recipient
toresl
21 Slop
33 Type type
22 Exer;14 Scrabble
clsed, wilh
piece
"up"
35 Tub
24 Blushing 36 Ac1ress
25 Dove's
MacGraw .
. cry
37 Ignited
27 Got by
39 "- De·.
force
Lovely" ·
31 "As You · 40Huby or
Lik9 II"
Sandra

One letter stands for another. In this sample Ills used
for the _t_itree L's, X for Jhe·two O!s, etc. Single INters,
apostrophes; lhe length ahd 'formation 'or the words arc
·all hints. Each day th~ code letters are dlffcrcilt. · .

'1but .

~·

SOUTH ·

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

=-

den01 hi ' an
enviable
qullfly.ind-nBut, it · CAI'IIICOIIN
(~ ......... 1t) SomeCANCER(
....
21-suchdelellltoday.
mulln'fbe-carried
to ex1remee
today, 0111
whOm yOiJ
Mltllortzed to
IUCh
as
,Ctingln
allell-ltlfVing
manner
·
spell&lt;
on
your
~llfl. mlght make a de-'
' ~5,11}11
. when · 'an 1rrangernent calli lor cillon lor you tOday. H· this occurs~ 14!1 .
.
lhf... "rlig~l ~tefy. ~
Yoilr financial statue loofla rllther en· cooparllton.
LIO
AUD.
-II)
You're
not
likely
ACIIIAIIU8 (.len. . . . . . 11) H you
· ·~raging In the Y..,llhMd. but mOney
to
!*form
under
~·
today,
have to -'&lt; with ~ toohl or
Isn't lfhly to be handecuo you on 1 ...
.ver platter. You'll haW to be enterprfe- 10 try not lo """" crttlcll ~n-.te meterlihl today, b e - · -.1111. RMd
unllllhllaetmlnute..EitabiiM!Magen- the ln"ructfont CINiully 1!0 thll you
lhg and 11m your own.
• cton.:.,~Don
llhd itr""' to be methodical. .
= I..
I(~O't 1anc1
·
~• ,...,.. :t1·Aprll11l rr··to. de
---• .,.._, .,,.....,
day "PI to .-tto thOH who lllye ,_, YIIICIO(Aug. ...lept.IZ!Nrenuevour
your oWfl Wlv today, ~ly ·
unlrflihdly end tpittlul to you. H yow 100111 catenc11r today 10 IIIII you .,.
ablttotptnCitlmewtthpeopteyouJruly . In 1~1 oil -~ naturt. Be
objeCt""' II to gil - · you'D only wid, "' ihe gap, 01\ajump Oil life by under· entoY rather then indlvlduale ~ou ,... demoorlllla and let 111a majority rule.

• J6 32
+A J 10 54 2

+8 7 6

I&gt;AJLY CRYP'il&gt;QU~'JtS - Uere's h()W to work it:

.,._Hell

. ·'

• i

• AKQJ 2
• to B 5

ACROSS
1 Recording
sludio

~'irtteryl A woman's
children are trapped In a
deadly network of terror. (PI

HES DET!:RMII',.IED

Mil-e~

+ 96

. by THOMAS JOSEPH ·. ·

e

campelii&amp;
. Motor Home•

EAST

WEST

+1 3

·CROSSWORD

.b.c

.:oo e

Pontoen- Boot, 211, Lonathc_S.O
hp, Now~ MotM, $4,0UQ.
1114-311700447, fM:31J.0485.

8 . , PubliC Sale ·
&amp; AuctiOn

.·

~

,:. Whitley deals ,with the .Issue
of cientorahlp. Sttleo:·r:;J
W NBA Belkelbell
II) • Bebee The Babes ut
out to do one tiline they have
never done before. (R)
~':£n
$hOP.
I])
I!J)
The death
of e labOratory rat ceusts
·traumi lor LM~h. Stereo. r:;J
(I) (I)
Twin Peekt
Truman awaken$ In a naked
woman's murderous
embrace. Stereo. Q ·
(lJ Myet8Jyl Sidonia seeks
out an ·American prl~ate
dettctlve named ~oma•. (PI

24 ft Pont!N!oJ. 7)1 H~. Evlnrudo,
·IX40 HauM ' Jrlltor; -•ury 35
wfth-rehl..1114447-4011.

111vem111•

•

, 1:06 (lJ MOVIE: Ru Sonja (PG1 31 ·
•
(2:00)
.
.8:301])'D ODHt-ntwo~

1.. IIIja lolondor 180, A·1 ·
- · 1 - MD hp, 11ft Wllk
wlncfolllllld,
""' · ··
2
-thru ""
...... ou _.,.
ind
pull
111

- ...-.,~tle'"'

(~:Oil)

.KQ 97
+KQ J

Today's deal is takeil from the 1971
Australian Open Trials. At seven ta- .
bles, the final contract -was _four
spades by SOuth, usually following a
Vulnerable: Neither
pre-emptive tliree-club opening by
Pealer: East ·
East. True. a three-level pre-empt IS
generally made with a seven-card South
WesJ
North · ' ~4!1 t_
· suit, but East couldn't make ·a weak
. Pass 4·+
All pass
two-bid in clubs. (In his system, a two- 3 +
·club opening would be strong.) Ther~Opening lead : • K
fore, the three-club bid showed six or.
seveil clubs.
At every table, West led a top heart '-----~--..,--..,..;..J
and continued with two more winners
i~ the suit. At six of these tables, West the .predicament that his partner
was worried that· his partn.e r had sev· would fa ce. Taking control, he ruffed
en clubs _for his pre-empt. As a conse· his partner's third heart trick and
quence each West continued with a cashed the ace of c lub~. ·
. ·
fourth heart, hoping East could overIt's such a simple play once you
ruff the dummy. No such lucl\, Declar- think of it. Perhaps the answer is not
·e r gratefully ruffed with dummy's only to diagnose things from your ,
jack _of spades. dtew trurnps and· dis- partner's point of view bot also to concarded his club loser on one of dum' sider your options. AI trick three. Ea~t
my's diamond winners.
can discard or ruff . He should analyze
tablo, East could
see both possibilil.ies.
. At the seventh
·.

e

· . QLIAftTfT.J7
'
.

75 Boats &amp; Motors ,
for Sale
' -~
1111. Aont Cnlll Trt-Hull w; as

..\ F"!f'Y,vn !Wie, ""I01111
~' • •..,...
H i o - , 10:GD
' AMto?. .•

VAftlfK ~'$1'fop,

4+ 91 '

.AK Q I0 72
.6 5 4 3 _
+A4
+9

7:35 (I) Sanlord.and Son
1:00 alD II) Colby Show Cliff
and Russell remlnlece about
the gralt Old days of
basaball. Stereo. Q
W Bulla Eye · (I) (I)
Fether Dowling
Mylterlee Father Dowling
and-Sister Stev~ investjgate
a rock sial's death. Stereo. .

~tNGINt;

'•

· One of the ar.i s of defense In bridge
is taking control when you .know how
to administer the ~ilhng ' blow. Don't.
leave things to your partner, who can·
not see throqgh the backs of the cards
and
· make a logical play that
to your side rather than to

'

ht CourtQ
· E-ln!Mnt _'.
. Tonltll!! Stereo. Q
Clle Mama'il Filmlly
(!])
M'A'S'H .
ll 'l eaSlar

~~~Tr
•ton ·

J
.

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0V

N E R V R N \1

.?, N - .. V N

J

W V -

J .)'VSJ R R V . - BIYSN PW V R:WS H W
i) Yes~erday's Cryptoquote: WE WERE BORN TO ·
l,INITE WITH .OUR FELLOWMEN, AND TO jOIN IN
COMMUNITY WITH TilE HUMAN RACE. -- CJCF.RO

.
I

\I

I ,

�I'

'

-~~--1~2~-~Th~e~Da~lly~Se~n~tl•ne~I--~--------------------------P_o_m_~_ro_r__l_lld•d•~~eo~·-"~·O~hl~o----------------~------------~~Th•u•~~da~y-,A·p~~-~-4~,1-99~1:

...-----Ohio briefs-__, Rain expected in Buckeye State l)y·tonight
Career education fund~ may be cut
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - . The Legislative Office of Education Oversight Is recommending a severe funding cut in a prdlp'am
to help more than half of the slate's local school districts provide
career education for students.
·
.
In a report issued Wednesday, the office recommended reducing
the Career Education program's biennial subsidy from $11.5 million to $500, 000. .
,
The report said ihe program "seems to have no effect" on making studen~ better workers.
· ..
. ·
Of the state's 612 school districts, 365 l'llCCive about $5 a student
'in state money for programs designed to help students " make good
choices in life' ' and to e11hance job performance:
The office sai4 it has found "no statistically significant differ·
ence" between students in school dislricts that receive the slate
money and those that do noL .

GOP chairman calls for probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) - Republican State Chairman ·Bob
Bennett wants a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of illegal phone-tapping by state auditors during an audit of the Southern
Slate Community College.
· "One of his (Slate Audi\OJ' Thomas Ferguson's) employees is
being investigated by the FBI for tampering with phone lines,"
Bennett said Wednesday. "Thi~is a sta.te college funded by Ohio
taxpayers."
· .
Denny Gilber~ an assistant deputy auditor, said Benneu is off
base and working from misinformation provided by George
McCormick, president of the college in Hamilton County. .
"B.eli nett and. McCormick are the Looney Tunes brothers,"
Gilbert said. ''I know we are clean in every way in our endeavor at
Southern State."
·
McCormick has charged that Tom Burke, an employee of the
auditor, and another man were seen inspecting the school's switch·
board and were believed to have installed or removed wiretapping
devices. ·
'
·
Gilbert said the audit is expected to be completed by July I. It is
being conducted following allegations that cash is missing from col·
lege accounts and that there have been improper purchases, !Qck. ·
backs on computer purchases and improper loans from -college
funds.
'
~

Men sentenced in drug operation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPD - Two men have been sentenced to
prison for their roles in a marijuana operation that cultivated more .
than 8,000 plants on Perry County farms.
Melvin Baker, 44, owner of three adjacent farms where the
plants were found, and Ronald Severance, 43, a worker at the farms,
were sentenced Wednesday by U,S. District Judge George Smith.
Baker was sentenced to seven years in prison and Severance to
·three years. Both 'were convicted of "conspiracy 10 manufacture
marijuana plants."
,
""
Two other men, Daniel Ross, 45, Columbus, and Robert Holmes,
34, Glouster, also have been convicled in the case. They ate awaiting sentencing.
·

U. S. to focus on Itaqi plight .

a chance of showers and thunder·
storms over the wesltnl part of the
stale. Highs will be in the 60s
~hursday and tllere will tie occaSi?nal show~rs jind .thunderstorms,
wrth lows in the mid 40 to near 50
Thursday night. ·
Some showers will linger in the
eastern pan of the :lluckeye State
Friday morning but slcies will be
partly sunny otherwise: Highs will
again be in the 60s.
·
Early Thursday morning high
pressure was centered along the
Atlantic Coast and extended to
· Ohio;
A weak cold front was from
Minnesota to Louisiana. The high
will move off the coast Thursday.
The cold front will move through
Ohio Thursday night and be to the
East Coast by Friday evening. By
then weak high pressure will move
across Ohio.

----Area deaths---John H. Terrell
John H. Terrell, 84, Terrell ·
Lane, Pomeroy, died Wednesday,
Apri13, 1991 at VeteQII!s Memorial
Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy
after a brief illness.
Born in Pomeroy. he was the
son of the late ·E.B. and Martha
Terrell Epple. He was a retired grocer from Epples Grocery in
Pomeroy where he worked for
many years. He also worked as a
welder at the Marieua Mlinufactur·
ing Shipyard in Point Pleasant,
W.Va, puring World War II.
.
Mr. Terrell was a member of the
Trinity ChUrch in Pomeroy, former
member of the Pomeroy Bend
Grange, and until his demise, the
oldc.st living member of the
Pomeroy 'VoiQnteer Fire Department with 58 years of service.
He is survived by two daughters '·
and sons-in-law, Martha and Joe
Struble, and Lila Sue and Gene •
Mitch of Pomeroy; one step-daughter, Kathryn Spencer, Anna Maria; ·
Fla. ; a daughter-in-law, .Polly
Legar, Pomeroy; ten grandchildren,
14 grea~ grandchildren; a cousin,
Clara Lanham, Cross Lanes,
W.Va., and several nieces and
nephews, .
·
Besides his paren!S Mr. Terrell
was preceded in death by his wife,
Wilma Hines Legar Terrell and a
stepson, Charles W. Legar'Sr.
· Services will be held Sunday at
2 p.m. in Pomeroy with Rev.
Roland Wildman officiating. BUrial
will be in ·Beech Grove Cemetery
in Pomeroy.
· Friends may call at the Ewing ·
Funeral Home Po Friday from 7 to
9 p.m. and Saturday from 2 to 4
I
and 7' to 9 p.m. .
·
Services by the Pomeroy .Fire
· Department will be conducted at
. the funeral home on Friday at 7

WASHJNGTON (UPI) - The country, as well as support for
administtatiori promised to tum its democracy in Iraq," the depart" urgent" attention to humanitarian ment said. ' .'The majority of the
issues such as .the plight of the meeting focused on the humanitariKurds fleeing Saddain Hussein's an aspect of the situation in Iraq."
Identities of the Iraqis were ·not
armies, and a senior U.S. official
met with lnlqi opposition figures to disclosed for fear Saddam might
discuss the suffering of the Iraqi hurt theidamilies, officials said.
The group consisled of Muslims...:.
people.
State Department spokeswoman . all living outside Iraq - and
' \ Mmarcl.l'~ \)'~.,IY iDCiuded two American citizens of
Ira(ji origin.
·
ilfe~Jl'ariiiiiisiiiii'Oiilia's msttucted
Thomas Pickering, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, to pur·
U.S. officials, stung by allega·
sue the plight of Iraqi refugees and tions
tbat the administration has
other·issues.
turned its back on the rebels after
Tutwiler also. voiced concern encouraging them 10 oust Saddarn, , p.m.
about reports that the Iraqi army Is . also will meet with Kurdish repre- Mabel E. Brickles
massacring civilians in an. apparent sentatives in the near future.
successful bid to crush an uprising.
Earlier Wednesday, President
Mabel E. Brickles, 87, of 39581
Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary Bush said he would be "willing to
Gold
Ridge Road in Pom.eroy, died
of State John Kelly, head of the take a new look if the (IraQi) army
We!lnesday,
April~. 1991 at Veter·
State Department's Near Eastern took matters into their o'wn hands."
ans
Memorial
Extended Care foland Asian affairs division, met with The president, v~ning in Flori- lowing an extended·
illness . She
Iraqi opposition figures at an undis- da, added that "if a new regimewas
a
housewife.
·
closed location outside the State emerged then I'd like to see w~at
She
was
born
in
Bedford
TownDepartment
.
.
their
gohls
are."
,
ship
on
Apri!IO,
1903,
the
daughThe meeting, the fir st of its
ter of the late John Carl and Lydia
kind, lasted about an hour and the
But
Bush
cautioned,
"I
don't
•
McCumber
Brickles. She .was a
"Iraqi participants expressed their
want
to
see
us
get
sucked
into
the
member_
of
Carl~ton
Church.
concern for the events that are
She rs _survrved by t~o sons ••
· occurring in Iraq and the suffering internal civil war inside of Iraq. ...
.. · of the Iraqi people," the State We are not there 10 intervene. That Donald Bncklcs, Martinsville, Ind.,
.
· an~ Cecil Brickles, Mt. Sterl!ng,
Department said in a statement late is not our purpose."
At
the
State
Department's
daily
·
Ohro; one srster, Lou1se Harnson
Wednesday.
· "They expressed their support news briefing, Tutwiler said the of Pomeroy; one brother, Raii?h
for the territorial irttegri\)' of Iraq adminislration condemned violence Carl of Pomeroy; seven grandchddren ; a,nd II great-gr81\dchildren.
and the non-dismemberment of the against Iraqi civilians.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded iri death by her husband,
Roy Z. Brickles; a brother, Dale
Carl;
a sister, Faye Pratt; and an
Am Ele Power ........·..............29 3/8
DAVtomeet
infant
brother, Leo.
.
Ashland Oil ..... .......... ......... 30 5/8
The Disabled American VeterGraveside
services
will
be'
held
AT&amp;T ...................................34 1/2
ans and Ladies Auxiliary will meet . on Saturday at 11 a.m. at Carleton
· Bob Evans ..................................20
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall on 124 Cemetery with Clyde Henderson
Charmmg Shop .......... ........... !4 3/8
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy. officiating.
City Holding .............................. .14
Refreshments
will be served.
.
..
Friends may call aL the funeral
Federal Mogul .............. :....... 15 3/4
,
home
from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at
Goodyear T&amp;R .....................23 3/4
Chicken noodle dinner
the Ewing Funeral Home.
Key Centurion ........................... .13
A chicken-noodle dinner will be
..
Lands' End .......................;...22 1/2
held Friday from 4-7 p.m. at the .Charles D. Kennedy
Limited Inc. ;.........................27 3/4
Bethany-Dorcas Onited Methodist
Multimedia Inc ........ ::...........72 1/2
sponsored by tiJe parsonage
Charles D. (Windy) Kennedy,
Rax Restawant ..........................7/8 Church
charge.
Proceeds
will.
be
used
for
,
65,
1-lysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/.8
the
parsonage
fund.
died
Wednesday, April 3, 1991, at ·
Shoney's Inc ......................... l6 1/2
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabili·
Star Bank ......... .....................21 1/2
RaciJie Hleh School reunion
tation Center following a brief illWendy Int'l. ........................ 10 5/8
The Racine High School Class ness.
,
~orthington Ind ................... 24 3/~
of 1961 will hold an organizational
He was born in Rutland to the
meeting for its 30th classJcunion late Charles C. (C::huck) and Bessie
on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at 'Southern Lanning Kennedy. He was a retired
High School. All local class mem- maintenance worker at Phillip
bers arc urged io attend.
Sporn Power Plant in New Haven,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
•
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
; Ethel Lambert, Pomeroy; Virginia
Thoren, Middleport; Perry Hoff•.
13.00
11.110
SPRING VAll fV CINfMA
man. MiddleporL ·
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY l s.-Y
BARGAIN N!GWT TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
446 4~24
• Chester Co if, William Right·
house. and Beatrice Smith.

Stocks

W.Va. He was a veteran of the
World War TI Anny Air Corps and
a member of.the Eli Dennison Post
467 American Legion in R.utland. .
He is survived liy his wife of 43
years, Margaret L. Kennedy,
Pomeroy; a daughter and son-in•
law, Pat and Kevin Archer, Columbus; a son, Perry Kennedy,
Pomeroy; six grandchildren, Burt,
Jake and Maggie Kennedy, all of
Pomeroy, Drake, Grant and Brian
Archer, all of Columbus.
Besides his patents he was preceded in death by a brother,
Emmett (Tubby) Kennedy.
Services will be Saturday at 1
p.m . at the Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland with George
Nash officiating. Burial will be in .
Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
ho111e on Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
and on Saturday before the service.
In lieu of flowers donations may
be made to the Meigs County
Chapter of 1he American Cancer
Society, 236 West Second St. ;
Pomeroy.
. ·
·

.

..•

--Weather-.-.----.....---..;

By United Press Jnternational
An ·American Electric Power
official said the company is
"deeply disturbed" overacc!lsa·
tions that it tampered wuh coal
mine dust samples taken to guard
against black lung disease
,
AEP headquartered in Colum·
bus, is a'mong 847 coal mine operators across the nation c\1¢ for vio·
lations Thursday by U.S. Labor
Secretary L:tnn Martin. The La~J?r
Department is seeking $1,000 m

Ohio extended forecast
Saturday through Monday ..
Fair through the period, with .
high s in the' . 70s each day.
Overnight lows will be in the 40s:
Saturday and Sunday mornings, '
and ranging from ·the mid 40s to ;
the mid 50s early Monday.

.EMS responds to ten ·cans

'

'

fines for eath violatio~ against
AEP and. thr~e ot~er rums t)lat
operate.mmes m Oh10.
The fines are being asse~sed
~gainst AEP fo~ 19 ~leg~d v1o!a.·
uons at .two of rts mmes m Me1gs
County...
,
.
.
.
J.E. · Jack Katlic, semor v1ce
p~ident of fuel ~UP)llY for AEP,
said the alleged vrolallO'!S concern
' 1 percC!II of the 2,500 .m sam~les
AEP mmes have submuted dunng
the Jli1St20 months. .

{I&gt;

•
idation Coal, said that the irony is
that the coal induslry has·been ask·
ing the Labor l&gt;epartment for a
year - without success - to work
cooperatively wfth it to . examine
dust sampling procedures:
"Apparently the Mine Safety
and Health Administtation is more
interested in malting headlines than
in malting progress in the area of
mine health and safety," Hoffman
said.

· . ''We intend 10 challenge each of Robert E. Murray, for one alleged
the allegations," Katlic said. "We violation at Ohio Valley Coal Co.
would never knowingly or willfully in its Powhatan mine about 15
compromise the safety of our miles south of SL Clairsville.
employees."
.
Consolidation Coal Co., a
The other three Ohio coal mine DuPont subsid.iary that operates the
operators fined are E.I. du Pont de Powhatan No. 4 mine, which had
Nemours &amp; Co., cited for 27 the most violations of any Ohio
alleged violations at itsPowhatan mine, also said it·would challenge
mine in Monroe County; Oglebay · · each counL
·
Norton Co. , for nine alleged viola·
Thomas'Hoffman, vice presi·
tions at its St: Clairsville mine; and dent of public relations for Consol·

•

Robert Murray of Ohio Valley,
Coal Co., owner·of the independent
underground mine near Powha!RD
Poin~ was upset that he was bemg
accused of a single violation.
'
"l am at a loss to .understllnd •
where the on'e violation came
from." he said.
.
A Saginaw Mine Co ,
spokesman declined to comment.
Thursday on the fines, saying he'
was unaware of the allegations.
.

'

'

992-2124
2 MEDIUM

Plzz·as

$999

..

COLUMBUS, o ·hio (UPI)- companies . Under Blessing's for statewide offices that are part of
The Ohio House of Represen1atives amendment this uriion could con· tne bill. Candidates for governor. ·
Thursday passed a much-debated tribute to campaigns under 163 . would bC restricted to $3 million,
· while the auditor, secretary o{ state
bill that' will set up a systeln of vol· separate groups. .
and treasurer would be capped ai
"Is
that
a
level
playing
field?
'~
untary campaign spending limits
$1.2
million each.
for all can'didates for statewide Vukovich asked.
Candidates
for . ·the Ohio
·
In
addition
to
campaign
spendelected office .
Supreme
Court
will
be limited 10
The vote was· 60-37 in favor of ing limits the bill calls for limi~ng
'
$750,000,
while
state
senators
House Biill, and the vote was split contributions to any camP,a1gn
would
be
able
to
speitd
up to
down party lines. The Democrats, committee that does not alnde by
$500,000
and
representatives
who hold the majority in the voluntary limits. The bill also
requires the Ohio Elections Com· $250,000. '
House,
con1r01led the vote. ·
.'
House Speaker Vern Riffe.• DSeveral Republican ammend- . mission to be independent of the
New
BosiOn, voiced his displ~ure
meats were offered 10 the bill and secretary of slate's office to remov·
in
the
partisan discussion on the
soundly defeated by the ing the possibility that political
bill.
Democtats. One amendment in par· pressure could be exerted on the
"Everyone has ben anxious to·
ticular dealt with "leveling the commission. · ·
shoot
holes in this bill . The gover,
The measure will also require
playin.g field" by evening the
nor
has
already indicated his antiamount that corporations and Secretary of State Bob Taft to comlabot
stance
by lhreatening to veto
unions .can contribute to cam· . puterize campaign fmance reports .
the'
legishition.
But the bottom line
The bill is sponsored by Rep.
paigns.
is
)hat
no
one
bas come forward
Rep. Louis Blessing, R-Cincin· Judy .Sheerer, D-Shaker Heights.
with
an
alternative
bill ," .Riffe
nail, offered the amendinent saying She told members of the House that
.
that Gov: George Voinovich fells the problem with campaign fmance said.
The bill viiU now be sent over to
so slrOngly about putting business is too much money in the sy,stem
the Republican-conttolled Senate
and labor on an equal footing that and out of conlrOI spending.
Fair held at the school on ·Thursday. Tbt fair
CHECKING BLOOD SUGAR • Kelly Jobn· ·
for its consideration.
.
Efforts
in
other
states
.
to
come
to
he
has
threatened
to
veto
this
bill
if
WI!S made possible with a grant from Southern
son rigbt a student in tbe Nursing A,ssistant
In other business the Senate
terms with campaign · finance
this language Isn't included.
·
Obio
Coal Compa!IY· (See page 6 ror additional
Cla~s at Meigs High School, checks the blood
, reform have been ruled unconstitu· Agriculture Committee . heard
Rep.
Joseph
V:ukovich,
·D·
photo and story).
sugar level or Melanie Qualls during the Health
Poland, responded to B Iessing by tional because of mandatory limits amendments to a bill that would
privitize Ohio's state-run liquor
arguing that the proposed amend- on spending or contributions.
One amendment adopted
stores.
Sheeter
said
she
is
confident
ment could be circumvented by
will
place
a $1,000 contribution
that
this
plan
is
constitutio~al
unions. He g~ve an example by
ljmit
on
individuals
who place a
because
it
advocates'
voluntary
lun·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - : The . 1'otat hbn-(arm payroll employ· year, remained slagnant in March, pointing out that -the United Auto . its.
•.
'
bid
to
buy
a
former
state-operalell
nation's civilian unemployment meat dropped 205,000 in March to although employment in health ser- Workers have members in 163
·
Sheerer obtlined spending lill)its siore.
rate soared 0.3 percentage point 10 109.3 million, following a 290,000 vices grew slightly by 40,000 jobs. '
Two other indicators corrohorat·
·6.8 percent in Mareh- the highest drop in February. Since last
ed
lhe bad news, Norwood said. ·
since 6.9 percent in November September, the number of payroll
"Tiie number of persons
1986 -· as workers lost their jobs jolis has slipped 1.3 million.
employed
part iime involuntarily,
in manufacturing, consttuction and
Manufacturing jobs, meanwhile
whtch
rose
sharply for February,
trade, the Labor Depariment said continued their downward march,
remained
at
a very high level Qf
Friday.'
losing 90,000 in the month after a
over
6
million
in March," she said.
Since June, the jobless rate has drop of 150,000 in ~ebruary. Fac·
Steven Newman, author of ·ago for Pomeroy's :F~der's Pay Blackwood of Ch¢ster, and Jl\ffieS
climbed 1.5 percentage points as :z tory jobs have been shpprng smce ' ~ Additionally, the number of dis·
,
million workers lost their jobs, a January 1989, with a total loss couraged workers, persons who "Worldwalk", will be the keynote eelebratio)l. He anbcrpatcs .another Pape of Syracuse.
report they want a job but are not speaker . at Camp Kiashuta in- book being published later th•sThe ttail was "blazed" by memLabor Department spokesman said. since then of 1.2 million.
bel'S of the Ohio Civilian ConservaThe unemployment rate was 6. 5
Most of the lost jobs continued looking because they believe their Chester on· Saturday morning, as year, entitled "Yellowstone".
Ground for the Camp Kiashuta lion Corps. This spring. srudents at
percent in February.
,
to be concenttated in durable goods search will be unsuccessful, coiltin· the Meigs County Park District and
ued to edge upwards."
the Tri-State Area Council of Boy ttail project was bCQken in January, Hocking College are expected to
"The nation's job market deteri· industries.
Total
employment
rates,
mllSnSCO\Its
of America dedicate a new and the Parks District .worked develop the interpretive trial natwe
orated further in March, with a
The conslructuction industry
while,
also
edged
down
in
March.
hiking trail at the camp.
closely with Carnp Kiashuta study as a part.of their required
sharp rise in unemployment and a fared no better in the month, losing
With the grim news on the
pronounc.ed decline in oonfarm 70, 000 jobs in March for a IOta! of
Newman, an Ohio native, is list- Ranger Bob Arms, Shade River ptacticuin. .
.
unemployment front, analysts ed in the Guinntss Book of World Forest Manager Jim Milliron and
payroll employment," said Janet 0.5 million since last May.
Sa""'day's grand opemng ce~
mony will al_so p~oy1de tho_se m
Norwood, Commissioner of the
Retailttade jobs dropped 50,000 expected the Iiederal Reserve to act Records for being the first person Meigs County Wildlife Officer
- Department's Bureau of Labor in Mareh following what the gov- quickly tO boost the sagging' econo- to walk around the world alone.
Keith WOOd. The three-mile IJ!Oject
attendance wrth an opportnntty to
Statistics.
,
ernment called an "unusually my by cutting its benchmark uis-·
According to a press release was completed in March.
· •
walk the new trail, and those interAs workers lost their jolls, ~ow- large" revised drop of 110,000 in count interest rate.
from Newman's publisher, William
Members of the parks district, in
ested in walking the trail ariil
Economists had expecled such a Morrow alia Company, Newman addition to Director Powell , are
ever, the average workweek fol- February. Trade industries have
receivin~ awards will -be required
lowed a trend that began six · lost a total of 460,000 jobs since cut if the jobless rate had grown 0.2 did s0 without corporate swnsor- Charles· Barrett of Rutland, Lloyd
Continued on page 10 ·
percenlage point in ·March -. and
months ago by edging down slight· last summer. . .
.
with limiledin funds
ana all he
of r-::::~'-:-r:::rz~~i::-::~-:-- liiii;;;;::----:~1
ly ·in March. Average earnings, · · Th_e servtce rndustry, whrch the 0 .3~~~~t;}it~~~ poin tf rise ship,
his belong!ngs
a bac~pac_k
,..
~. put moreiJres·
named "Chnger". Newman spem .
m~w~Ue•.gJeW sliallilY.•
• . r~marned healt~y unt,U late la$1 seemed
sure on the l'ed to act.
four years completing his !ravels,
which took him across five continents, 20 countries :md a IOJ8I of
15,000 miles.
The "spring forward" part of while serving as the U.S. envoy to
Newman's adventures included
WASHINGTON (UPl) - Lose
an hour's sleep Sunday morning or the old addage, "spring forward, France recommending that shops braving a violent snowstorm in the
party an hour tess on Saturday fall back'' occurs at 2 a.m. local be-opened and closed earlier duriog Pyrenees, surviving a trampling
night; whichever way you go, you · time on the first Sunday of•April, 'summer months to cut the costs of team of horses in Morocco, a ni&amp;ltt
·
.
spent treed by long-tuslced boan m
can't escape the loss of an hour this depriving most American.s of an providing lighting.
ho~r
1&gt;~
sleell
a~d
plun$108
lhe
·
William
Willett
b~gan
urg!ng
Algeria and a battle with bull ants
weekend.
nauon rnto dayhght-sayrng time the adoption of dayhght-savmg in Australia. He ·was arrested in
and more. sunlight at the end of the time irk England and· during World three counaies • and escaped from
day. ·
·
War I it was adopted by England, jail in TUrkey.
The c'loc~s go back at 2 a.m. Fram:e Germany and a few other
A graduate of Ohio Univenity
local time on the last Sunday of nations'.
with a degree in journalism, Newman visited Mei~s County a year
Continued on page 10
It's daylight-saving time , October.
It has not always been so, ·and.

Jobless rate hits 6.8 % in March

•

Newman keynote speaker
for:dedication ceremon~ · · :

1991 FORD
ESCORT LX

1991 FORD
FESTIVA

1991 FORD.
RANGERXLT

STOCK 111337 ·

STOCKt 114.18
•XLTTrlm
•Cast Al~m . Wheels
·A~F.M Cassette .
•Chrome Rear Bumper
•Two Tone Paint
•power Steering
•OverdrivE! Transmls~ion
•Loaded With Optipns·

~~~
STOCK I 1 ~98
•Power Steering
•Rear Defrost
•Light/Conv ..Group
•Overdrive Transmission
•Air Condition
•AMIFM Cassette
•Tilt Wheel
•Cruise Control
•Povver LockS

•Cloth Interior
•Overdrive Transmission
•AMIFM Cassette
•And -More

·. WAS 110,437

'
'

..

....

Daylight Saving.Time returns Sunday

WAS 112,675

Spring Fon\ ani
again. Remember to set

your clock ahead one hour
at 2:00a.m. this Sunday.

/ittt

T-1

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•

•

10 pm • 2 a111
,.

'

House passes much-debated ·
campaign finance reform bill

.

"8Utz Creak"
,
u
•
lf4WIItG
111,.40t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frloay, April 5, 1991

~

REBATE

FRI., APRIL 5

.

2 Sectl!&gt;fl•, 14 Pill" 25 aenla
A Multimedia Inc. Nftwapaper

-Coal mine operators upset over ch~rges

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

at

Vol. 41, No. 244
Copyrlghl.t 1H1

WE~THER MAP· A cokl'rront ~oviD&amp; through the North·
west wiD eause rain showen· along the coust and snow showers in
the mountains. Thunderstorms will develop along a surface
through Texas. R11in sl!owen will develop in the Oblo VaHey. Sun·
shine and warmer temperatures will prevpil in the Southwest and
central Plains. (UPI)

Low toalgbt In 50s. Partly
cloudy. High Saturday aear 80.

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South Central Ohio
Occasional showers and thunderstorms Thursday night, with a
low ·near 50. Chance of rain is 80
percent. Partly cloudy Friday, with
a chance of showers mainly in the
morning, and highs between 65 and
70. Chance of rain is 30 percent

Pick 4: 4975
Cards : 4-H, J-C
J-D; A-S·

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Pick3: 525

Pages 3·4·

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.Ohio Lottery

Chicago Bulls
trip Knicks in
NBA action

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Lottery numbers

Hospital news

WATERING
HOLE

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Meigs Emergency Merlical Se~- squad was sent to Route 33S fot'
yices units .responded to 10 calls Christopher Hadley, who was takeo ,
for assislance on Wednesday and to Veterans. At 10:19 p.m., Mid·
early Thursday.
die port went to Mill Street for
At 9:36a.m. on Wednesday, James Wooten, who was treated
·Pomeroy squad wenno Chester for · but not transported.
Delmar Baum, He )Vent to St.
On Thursday at2:48 a.m.. Mid·
Joseph Hospital.
!lleport squad went to Middleport
At 2:46 p . m~. Tupper's Plains Police Department for Robin
fire depart ment we.nt to Silver Dugan. Dugan refused treatnaenL
Ridge Road for 811 outbuilding fue. At 7:17.a.m., Pomeroy squad to
Chester fire department assisted. Wolf, Pen Road for Helen Eblin, &lt;IP ,
The fire was at the Chafee resi· who was dead on amval. At 8:08
dence. At5:12p.m.,Rutland squad ' a.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Wolf
went to Meigs Mine 2. Joe Bryant · Pen Road'for Henry Eblin, Sr., who
was taken .10 Holzer Medical Ceo- · trealell but not lransported. At 8:48
ter. At 9:12p.m., Middleport squad a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Molwent to Oliver Street for Terry . berry Avenue for Don Betzing. He ,
CLEVELAND (UPt) _ Wednes· ' Hoffman. Hoffman was taken. to · was-dead on arrival.
day's winning Ohio Lottery num· Veterans. At 9:41 p.m .. Racme
bers:
, .............................................. .
Pick-3
494.
Pemeroy
Ticket sales: $$1,440,007.00.
Hours: ·
Payoff: $338,922.50.
WE NOW
11
am to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.
Pick-4
HAY£
11 am to 1 am 'Fri. &amp; Sat.
6331. :.
DIET PEPSI
Ticket ,sales: $282;333.50. Payoff: $ll5,400.00.
Car'IW"'"
Six of hearts.
Ten of clubs.
Five of diamonds.
2 ITEMS
Queen of spades.
. ·Ticket sales: ~65,871. Payoff:
$21,070.
..
Super Lotto
·29-36-37-39-41-45
.Ticket sales: $3,042,036.00.
•1111 OcMftito"s "-•· lac. burdrW•••ry'- tt...l t20 .0o. ~ ••IIMteed te
Kicker
..,,. .... ..,..,.... .,...., .. pettk:....._loctdoft ontr. ,.._ tu .cl •dlllllolllll wfl . .
. 741304.
_,plc:IMe. Pj,RT 11MI AND t:&amp;ltltEit O PPORlVNITIII NOW AVMA&amp;EI
• Ticket sales: $502,534.

Announcements

AT THE

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!
H&amp;TIOHAL WEATHER FOIIECAST FIOII7 All O+ft TO Tlll...t.'
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By United Press lDtenatioual
High pressure continued 10 hold
on along the Atlantic Coast early
Thursday but -it will move east
allowing a weak cold fron! iitlo
Ohio late Thursday, bringing a
chance of rain to the state.
The highest probability of rain
will come 10ward evening with the
rain moving through quickly and
by Friday afternoon there will be at
least ·partly sunny skies across the
state.
·
Thursday morning skies were
partl-l to mostly cloudy and winds
were from the southeast to south 10
mph orlesi. .
·
.
Temperatures were on the mild
side early Thursday witH readings
mostly in the mid 40s to lower 50s.
It was in the upper 30s in the
YoungsiOwn area, however.
Skies will be pilrtly cloudy with

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~~~~~;.:e.,;:c~':.united states

For instance, Haw,ii, Arizona,
the Eastern Tirile Zone ~ of Indi·
ana, Puerto Rico, tbe Vugin Islands
and American Sam01 are excluded
from ha_ving to make the cltange.
The seven months of dayli&amp;ht
saving timC' now observed is based
around the idea of providing an
equal amount of exira evening sun·
light on either side of the hottest
days of the year, generally in late
July. '
.
· HistoriCally, the idea of juggling ·
the hour !land about to adJIISI per·.
sonal schedules to the longer and
shorter days can be traced 10 !len·
jamin Franklin, '!Vho ~te a ~

Court .dismisses sewer petition
A petition to organize the Rut· district on Jan 1_3.1, 1991, but
land Area Sanitary Sewer Dislrict according to $anay Smith, project
filed by the Village of Rutland has chairman for the village, Rutland
been dismissed, according to an • Council voted unanimously 'at a
entry filed in the Meigs County s!*lal meetin4 Tuesday night to
·. dismiss that peutiotl after consider·
Common Fleas Court.
In view of the dismissal the rub· ing the prOJected cost of about ·
lie .heari,ng pn the formation o the 550,000 per )'eat for its operation. ·
The district would have handled
sewer district to administer the $2.2
million waste water collection and billing, setting rues, and 1eneral
sewage treatment system scheduled operati(lll and maintenance of the
for Monilay at 9 a.m. at the Meigs system. Without a sewer disUict
County Courthouse has been can· being e~tablished, these matters
will be bandied through Rutland
celed.
Village
Council.
The village filed a peiition
requesting formation of the sewer

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STEVE NEWMAN ·

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