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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
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Cincinnati
RedS make It
two In a row
~P.G.rW.

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Pick 3:
405
Pick 4:
3284

, Sueper Lotto:

on P...-s

. 1-4-12·15-29 40
tacker:
311846

a

Cl"r tOfttgltt, low• In
the •oa. Friday, aunny,
hlgha In the mlcl70.. .

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21 alhl-,11,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Thureclly; April 3, 1997

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AGIIwiiiiOD.II . J tJr' •

EsCa ee c8ught in ~Cqlurnbus after kiiU~ ~ ,
,__;;;;.._..,. COLUMBUS (AP) ~ A paroled Court.
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murde~ suffering from '"hysterical
'.The Colum~ Dispatch repOrted
paralysis"' leaped out of his wheel· that he was also charged with felochair and ove,rpowered a sheriff's . nious assiult on a peace.officer and ·
deputy taking him to a court hearing, escliJ&gt;e, Addidonal charges .,e
police said.
expected when,the case is presented
He then allegedly c81jack~he to the grand jury, police said.
.
driver a pickup true~. shot the man
Carnpbl:ll was in a wheelchair
with . the deputy's service weapon, after jail doctorS had diagnosed him
stole his clothes, and carjacked .a as suffering frqm "hysterical p.,..ywoman before being chased down by sis," Chief Sheriff's Deputy Steve
Police and arrested. The. woman was 11· Martin said. His. skull had been
. not injured. ,
. grazed by a bullet, alleg~ly during
· Alva ·campbell, 48, was arrested ilie robbery o(a westside IIW'ket last
about6:45 p.m. Wednesday, about six month for which he had been arresthours aher escaping fJom custody at ed.
the Franklin County Courthouse. He .
He · overpowered Deputy Thresa
was charged with aggravated ml\rder Harrison and escaped from an under·and was being held iJithe county jail ground ~a of the courthouse. He
Wednesday night. He was scheduled was there to be arraigned on 13
to liJ&gt;pear today in county Municipal ciwJes from a series of robberies. He

. had lieen .1\ild il) the coonty jail on pollce,sakl. She jumped out of the car
Campbell w~ ~victed o{. miar- ;
$2SO,OOO bond. ·. .
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.· and wa$ not hurt.
der fcil: killing l4-ycar-old ·william~
~s. Harrison ~as takeri to Grant
, Brian Gibson, 31, witnessed the Dovi!IOJky ·at,a J&gt;ar lJL.Cievclllllcl. He
Medical Cenrtr whC!C she was treat- · carjacking of Mrs, Worltman. ·
· sho! DOvlilosky tw~te. lreWu COli• :
ed for ficial cuts and released.
'"I .wa5 scare&lt;! to death," he told · victcd' in APril 1~72 and paroled i'!
Campbell commandeered the The Columpus Dispatch. '" He had the 1992. ·
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pickup truck; driven by 18-year-old gun to her head ..He basically said, 'I · Joe: Andrews, a spqkesman at Iii '
Charles Dials, police said. Dials' just killed ()f!e person; don 't make me . Ohio Department of Rclla!lilitation .
body was found about 3:20 p.m. in shoot you::·
.
and CorreCtion·, said Wednesday that'
the cab of the truck in a. Kmart parkPolice spotted the second vehicle a note· on Campbell's parole sheet . .
ing lot about five miles south of the and followed it to an east side neigh- indicate~ he "wasn't adjusting" !o:
courth.ouse. He was dressed in Camp- borhood where Cam.....,
· con tact w1·mL!
""" II abandoned
paro1c and. was not ~n
·~-'
bell's prison uniform,
~t and fled on foot. He was found hid· parole officer. Catnpbl:ll was declared·
Police ·found Dials dead at the mg 1ft a stand ortrees.
a parole violator Feb. 12.
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scene when they responded to the
. "This was a desperaie person
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report ofa shooting in the parking lot. who had to be caught," Chief Deputy
Before his murder. conviciion al) :
Dials may have been at the cour- Robert Taylor ·told the newspaper. Cleveland, Campbell had served four' · '
!house to pay a fine for a headlight "This was a desperate situation for ye_ars in prison for~ artned robbery;
violation tickei received March 20. law enforcement. We felt we had to and for the shooting of a State Hiab- :
C~bell then forced his way into catch him before lie killed somebody way Patrol trooper in Summit Coun-·
11 car driven by Katie Workman, 66, else.~·
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M~igs to host · Nationai~Plott Hound_. ~vent

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Plott hounds are coming.
This June, the Meigs County Fair-. .
grounds will be the site of the 1997 .
National Plott' Hound Association
gathering, cxpectCd to draw hundreds
of Plott hound owners and aficionados. ·
The event will be held June 16. 27
and 28 and will feature various contests and activities on each day.
primarily u$ed for t'IICthe 11ncestors of today's
were used for boat hunt-

.Ciub. 5~~:;~~

United
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coonhounds,'·only the Plott
doesn't trace its ancestry to the foxhound.
Plott hounds are either brindle or
black in color with a brindle trim.
· Males can w~igh 1,1p to 7S pounds
with females being slightly smaller.
T~ey arc. known · for their great
courage and s~ina, . and , ane also
·· used for boat at)d bear jlunting.
Thursday, June 26, will be a fun
lnatall additional
llilhta ,
and. family day, accOrding IQ event
calli for wldlnlng aome
·
.end
cool'llinator Bj)l Spal!n, president of.
aflclrlc811 conduit ln1.d of tearing . the Shade River Coon Hunters.
in front of bualne11n. New llghta will
The day w:lll fe111ure a youih
Sllwl betWeen Butternut jvej\!» end
bench show with all kids eligible to
on Court end Linn ., ........ Here work i1
parti~ipate. Prizes will be awarded 10
~ale?"&amp;~ Streat.
· }·
best female and male.
. ,. ~ ··~
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"If lbey don't have a Plott hound,

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, . ,000 In diS8StE.!r·
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t.ra, n
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approve
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f
or
d
t
' g'
.·~~JU~~ M~igs resi~pnts '
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~;::::~foundforthemtosoow,"

A treeing contest and dash race
willbeheldinadditioniOl!CoOnroll
cage event and an aii-Piott hound

hu~~i~nnelCiubs~nctio:Cd
show and hunt will be lteld Friday,

, • ' • By AARON MARSttALL
the. I? declared countieS chgt~le for J
27 With all recognizi:d breeds
· · G8nn.it Newa Sfrvlce
· indiVIdual ass1stancclf
une •
. COLUMBUS - NCIU'IY $7SO,OOO
· -Meanwhile, aslfiousing mon~y · . .
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star!Stotrickleinand'*PPiicationsare ..
lieen approved for residents of Gal- processed. the dea(Jiil!C for di~aster
J:;;lr/111 l l
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lia and Meigs County, according to unemployment is \OoJ11ing close,
information releBsed by the Ohio according to the age~~!=)'. Anyone livOver S11.4' million has been
~" EmefS~ncY, Management Agency this ing or ' working in the 17-County issued fordlsaster.hOusing assistance
• week.
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· soutliel'!l ' Ohio flood zone ' who grants and low· interest loans to 4,275
··: · -In Glllia,County, J34'claims for becalite unemployed as a result of last applicl!nts in 17 southern Obio'coun· · · housing ·grants ha.ve ~n approved month's high waters has ·until April S ties that have been deci.OO eligible
·
·. · thus far to rt;eeivel checks totaling to liJ&gt;Pl:Y for disaster unemployment. · for Individual Assistance.
, • 57&amp;1 ,89S.oul of 250 total applicants,
-· 'Jbi~ P,rogram applies to any
In Meigs County, 293 .applicant~
·. IWCC!fd!~J IO. Ihe agency. In Meigs worker 1mpacted by the d1saster, have requested assistanCe throuJh the
.: &lt;:oul\ty; 112' disaster cheeks out of including fai'me~ •. farm workers and Federal Emergency Management
··.. 29911PJ!!.icaiions ha,ve been appro · the se!f-employed In •'¥! 17 .d~clarcd Agency. 229 of those applicanb have
· ·7&gt;11\at money is,part of the $1 ~ .8 counties..~ene.fits can be apphcd for requested assistance with housi'ilg,
milltunlhtillw been issued statewide • at IDly Olito Department of Employ-. and 149 checks had been.issued as of
··
'Saturday. The total amount of disas· . · foi: d i * hoUsing ~jstanoe grants ment office,
·, . .00 tOw-iiuen:llloans to applicants in .
tcr housing grants approved for
Meigs County flood victims is
$343.9n
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i9disastc:rhousinggii~ntshasatready

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PLOTT HOUND DAYS- Malga County will be •Huhtera member; Jackie Ce,P.nter of the Beir
the 11te of the Nltlonal Plott Hound event June Run Plott Kennel In Din villi With ,!IIMr Run .i·
H-28.1t the Melga County Felrgroundl. Mam- Je1u; Jeff Koons, Gtoullter, of the National . ~
:
berl ·of the ~I Plott Hou;td Alloc...lon ' PlOtt Hound AIIOC:IItion witli RldwOod Bultir;
weN In the county Jeet·weekencl in advance of Fred Cavey,·GloUatar, a 37-~ar Plott b....cler, ~
the June event, Shown here era, from left: Bill who will be the bench 1how judge It the June · "
Spaun, prn~t of ~ Shade River Coon event. .
Huntll'l; Doug . Swann, Shade River Coon
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being allowed to pat1iclpatc: black
Spau~ estimated between 600 and County .event .is being held funhef.
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and tans, blueticks, English, Plott. , 700 people would attend the event. south than in years past.
In
addition,
many
bll!linesses
re.
l
at~'
Spaun sai~ the Shade River Coon
redbones and walkers.
A bench show, treeing contest and. Hunters had t&lt;i submi.t an application ed to coon hounds and hunting wili·
. ~
.dash race, cooii roll cage event and to be considered th~ site or ,the bC represented at the e.vent.
Spaun said National Plou Houn4
national event.
UKC night hunt will be held.
· He said Plott hounds are particu- Associa.lion members were very
A business meeting will be held
larly
·popular with Southern hunters impressed with the fairground J'ai:it:;
Saturday with presentation of award~
and noted that Ibis year's Meigs ·ities.
:
for Plott AssOciation members: .
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4•nancf•8
· /,' ' I!•e·ga/
8SSI•st·ance
.s ·t•/~1
. ..,I Bb'16 ·.' .~..·.
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·Additionally, more than 5,860 8 a.m ..to 1 p.m.
S~nall Bu~incss Administration loan
FEMA has also announced that a
applicalions have been issued, but group of volunteer attorneys is prO.:
only 1,253 ha.ve been completed and viding no-cost counseling to l.owreiumed. SBA officials are . urging income residents of the 17 CO!Jnties
applicants to complete their paper- affected.
work as soon u ~ble, even if they
The legal assistance is offered by
have not received a final settlement the · Ohio State Bar Associatio~ in
from their isurance company. . .
cooperation of the Young Lawyers
S.BA representatives are available Division of the American Bar Assoat die' Disaster Recovery Centers for ciation and FEMA. ... • · .
applicant$ who n~d assistance comThose lawyers will help qualified
.pletins the · necessary. paperwork. ·victims with questions about noodl;oc8lly, a Disaster Recovery Center related legal issues including in surwill operate from the Rutland Civic ance claims, landlord/tennant and
ecnt¢ronAprilll. 12and 13frorn otherhousingproblemscausedbythe

disa.~ters. consumer proteCtion .mai3

ters such a.~ h~me repair conlrai;Ui arid:i·
contr&amp;!=tors, replacement of wills and •
other legal documents lost in the di 1~:
aster, and !port@ag~ foreclosure,prob,.':
· terns caused by the disaster.
· 'Meigs County 'il&lt;xxf victi!lls wliOi
. feel they may qualify for this lcgai .
assistance sho!Jld contact the Oi)io•
State Bar Association at (800) 310- :
7Q32 beiween' 8:30 'a.m. and S p;m;:.
. A voice mail system will ask callers :
to leave certain i!iform-'ion. A Ioeal ,
volunteer ~uomey will then 'contact·'
the caller as soon as pOssible. ' ' :
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'·..Oh.
.
, rece···ve
· lOans
· fewer. .
::· 1e~eral . tax dollars irt '96 · $outh Gallia athlete dies after. bei~g hit in ·
.
so!'~~~~n:. i:1ht;-~oaC: Me~:c::.~:iaf~~r~;: v~~~~~~ chest .With ·baseball during contest' at Ironton .:
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ATTENTION SENIOR CITIZENS
Do Y~u Know You Can. Receive
· nome Health Serv1ces . ·
Absolutely Free* Of Charge To You?
Some services we offer include:
• Hou ~e Cleaning • Meal Preparation • Helping-You With Personal
Care • Home Injections • Run Errands • Draw Blood &amp; Take
Report to Your Doctor
For more information or a FREE Visit by our Nurses Call:

&amp;14-992-7900"or &amp;14-992'-7988
HEALTH MANAGEMENT NURSING SERVICES, INC • .
Also: Always hiring Nurse Assistants starting at more than $5.50. per hour. EbE
'Several state and Federal programs are available,to pay for our services.
Home Health Aide Classes available at no charge.

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or paid out less in Ohio 11111 year than
· · it did in ~ 995,, the Census Bureau
, reponed. ·
' " Total fedel'l!l oxpen4itures fn Ohio
• toppec! $50..J4' billion in fiSCal year
: • 1996, 'clown from SSO.S4 bllllon in
199,, the IMnau laid Wednesday.
Almostlllofthll;decline(()Uicl be
IJ1ICed 10 Cli(blcks in granll to stale
1 and ~ IOWI'!.Imenll.
The r.11ra1 JOVentDIOnl steered'
$339 millioll of m.t JYpe of
.~ paylliCillJQ.Ql!io ill J99S 11wt it did
. ·.
: :·in J996, 1he'report uid.

benefits, black lung payments and
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college grants cumulatively declined
A SOOth Qallia High.School sttlby $108 million, from ·$31.2 billiqn dc!ll and member of 'the &amp;ehool's
down to $3t, I billion, the reJIO'I said. b&amp;Seball 'team died :Wtidnesday after
, The decline ill direct .piymcnts to he was strilck in the &lt;best with. a
individuals ;foiiQwed steady, yeari,Y baseball in Ironton.
.
increases of S2 billion or more
~k Lawnce, 16, wu ~
throughout the 1990s.
.
nounced dead at the Rivet; Valley
Cllifomia, with the Jaraest.popu- • Health Sys1ems hospital in IrontOn
lation, hal Jed in federal'spendtnl for after life~&amp;villl elt'otU fliiled to revi.ve
yean, followad by New York and ·him, slid Dr. Burton Payne,.
'Thxas. Thole fl!lkings Stayed ihe Lawrence County'~·
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same in 1996, with~·· total ti'lilLawrence, a sophonlon, tlnd othina thole ~
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er pl,ayers on tf!e Rebels ~ were ·
cpmpetingagailistlrontonSt. Joseph
Cl!lho11c Hiah. SchoOl when the ball
str.ll~k I;.awr~ncc, accotding to
Rpdrts. SGHS be&amp;an its ~I season this Week.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
wa petfOrmed on Law,.et)Ce by peopie at the buehdl field, but they were
unable to restore a pulse: ~ayile slid.
Lawrence wuliken to the hospital, where continued life~aving effons
wtJO UIIS~sful and lie was pro-

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nounccd dead, he added. .

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'"Wedon'tknow~:xactly~hathap-

pened','' Payne told the Huntington
(W.Va.) Herald-Dispatc~. "CPR was
done at the field and at the hospital,
bllt he must have had a cardiac
arrhythmia."' \
· Payne described the condition as
an.bnormal heartbeat ibylhm, which
could be caused by a sharp blow to
the chest. Lawrence's body was taken to Cabell· Huntington Hospital,
where an autopsy is to be Jlerformed

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today, he 'added,
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~
Both teams were taken to the St. \
1
Joseph's Church rectory · after~
· Lawrence .was transported . to !hi!
hospital. They remained there until
they reeeived word thai he bad died,
ISJ Principal Jim.Mains said.
"Our team stayed togclher with
theirs," Mains said. "It's 1 toup
thin&amp;. Our sympathy and .condo; :
lences t!O out to their team and "-t ~
ilies."
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111 Court Sb nt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-98.2-2'151• Fu 812-2187

£
A Gonnett Co. N!IW&amp;paper
ROBERT L. WINGm

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CHARLENE HOEFUCH .

MARGARET LEHEW
Controler

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Gingrich's tough talk on
China may help him in GOP

EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Rau111 covers politics and national affairs
ror The Associated Press.
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Dear Editor.
• A benefit lfinner and auction
were held recently to raise additional funds toward the Chester Courthouse Project. Ohio's oldest standing'
courthouse and surrounding property. Suppqrt shown by Meigs Countians helped to make the evening a
tre~ success.
·
- - . :1rusteesof the Che'sterShade Historical Association want·to
thank everyone who a11ended. 'The
hard work and dedication of our com-

mittee people and numerous volunteers helped to raise $3,500, you are
applauded! This will allow the association to receive$2.500 in mllching
funds from the Modem Woodme.ri of
America Camp 4798 to bring lhc total
raised to $6,000, a result of the benefit. The outpouring of support and
interest from everyone has been fan tastic.
Mary l'owell,

ro-ny

Today in history ·
By The MIOClllld PrMtl

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Today is Thunday, April 3, the 93rd day of 1997. 'There are 272 days left
in lhe yell'.
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Today's Highlight in History :·
.
On April 3, 1860, the legencbry Pony Express began service between St.
Joteph. Mo., arid Sac~to, Calif. (It lasted only I I/2 yean before giving way to lhe 11111$(011(Jnenlal telegrlph.)
On ~~~- dlte:
.
I• 1'116, OCorp Wasl\inpotl received u honoritiy dociO!' of law deJrte
fram tflnrlld Colleae.
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By The ••oclltttd PI'MI "

voce to~ degree?
destruct.)
Likely. Towlrd the very end oflhe
Third story .line; RepubliCans.
1996calnpaip; theJohn!-Ju1111gsto- . Theiradversarieswerespeading$20 ·
ries about alleged illegal foreip · million for ,television commercials .
campaign contribulions did finally hit ·accusing the GOP"of pushing Grand- "' .
the media, and Clinton's lead in the rna into lhe street.· 'The commercials
polls shrunk from about 13 jiercent to dramatically raised Clinton's
about 8 percent in the actual election. 3PPfOval ratings. (Recall, Clinton
Why so little coverage so late? . was running behind 001e in the pair•
Dick Morris' astute plan to buy $20 . ing polls itl early 1~5.) Did the
~illion wo'fl!l oftelevi$ion commer- · RePublicans not wonder a:bouJ where' ·
c1als went tnto effect 18 months · the advertising mo
U"coming
before the elect~on.lt 1s .~wd that t~ . from? Like from China .
early Democrabc telev1s1on adverllsLots of quest1ons. The ey opera- ·
ing "traveled beneath the nidll'. '.' tiona! one is: Were·there tual illeWhy? .Because it didn'~ pl~y ih galities· in addition to gross im[ll'oWashmgton, D.C~ New York C:ttY or prieties? 'The key ·substantive one
Los Angeles. Ha:h! Heretofore 11 was · remains:.How important is it? lf·it
thought ~~at ~~e poh~cal pres~ co~- would be importan~ in a one-point .
ered_pohqes •.~ Amenca,. no~JUSI tn · race; why isn't it important in an 8three med1a markets. Rtp Van point race? The principle is the same,
Reporter, wake up and smeU the and the Clintonistas were acting as if
money thai boughtthe commerctals! ft could be a one-point campaign.
_(Of cou~, while. all _this was Moreover, some C?r all oflhe 8-point
gomg ·on, Chnton ~as ~~~ely and final margin carne about from the
pmfitably changtng hts pohttcal ~- . edge Clinton had piled up ~y spendmgs. And Repubi1cans were figunng ing the possibly ·illegal money. .
out wondrous new ways to selfHow important is it? Compare it
to a president accused of stealing
money (Harding) or abusing powe~
(Nixon). Is stealing an elecJion more
important than stealing money? You
betcha. Elections are what give the
American system legitimacy. It's
what we sell when we teiJ Ol~r
nations ·that democracy yieldn more
prosperous, mpre . free and· more
peaceful way of life for alL Is steal- ,
ing im election .more important than '
abusing pow.er? Well. power can't be
abused in a democracy until It is
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' gained by election victory. ·
It's very important even if the participants didn't quite understand what
-they were doing. In fact. it may be
worse. Stolen elections and abused
power commingle when the perps say
that it was s~ important bccaulje those .
brutish conservatives would have
taken over if Clinton · didn't ·w"in. ·
There is a word for that--· the one that.
Nixon and Oliver North were accused ·
of: zealotry. That's important.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at lhe American Enterprise lnstl· .
lute, Is lhe 11t11hor oC "Values Matter f"ost" and Is the host or lhe
. weekly public television program
"Think Tank."

lMansneld !.67"

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save Bosnia from Serb destruCtion - th~ Ho'usc sJll'nt $1 million l~t ¥Car
investigating the pOlicy.
A month .before the election la.~t
year, commi)tee
Republicans
demanded a · Justice Department
. prohe of po,ssible perjury by·I,.ake.
As a presidential campaign issue,
the controversy went nowhere in
1996, and during Lake's confirmation
hearings in 1997 the Justice Dc[!artnlent said it had· found Lake's testimony truthful.
.
In the end, other factors were ,
· largely responsible for Lake's failure
to get t~e CIA job. especially. his
loose administration of the NSC and :
lack or tl;te toughness necessary to .
outlast his nemesis, Senate lntelli- :
g~nce Chairman Richat'd Shelby, R- :
Ala.
•
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, But for the Iran arms operation, •
Lake deserves a medal. As Hyde pan- :
el Democrat Howard Berman (Calif.): ·
put it: "'fl1is was God's work. It :
saved .the Bosnians from genocide :
and it kcjllthem fighting long enough :
for the'straiegi&lt; situation to &lt;hange ,
and ·a ccao;e-firc to be worked out. " :
Now that Lake is gone, though, :
the controversy lfl8Y ~!aim another •
victim if the Justice Dcpanment can :
find out who leaked the House GOP .
report ..
There's no proof that the leak
damaged U,S. policy, hut then the
merits rarely seem to matter when •
political blood can be drawn over •
.
Iran..
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By TONY SNOW
John DihJiio, a scholar at the seven times as high for suicide.·
time behind· bars, die earlier, earn •
Creiltorl Sy!KIIcate
.Brookings·· Jnsti~ution and Princeton
Men · who break their vows are less, receive welfare niore oftc~ ilad .: .
WASHINGToN · "· Here · arc Uorivcrsity, tries to correct that injus- bettet candidates for on-the-job prob- inherit the family . penchant for :
things pfofessional scolds think ~auld ticc. In the current -issue of Natio~al . !ems, stn:.ss~relat~ di'!C8se and~ stay divorce. .... ,;,:
. ~
(
.This is spectacular stuff, especial- •
· kill you: fake fat, fake sugar. real salt, Review magazine, he calls attention in prison. They treat their kids like
Chinc"·food, Italian food, Mexican · to the ovetlooked oeuvre of Dr. ditt. An amazing 4S percent haven't ly for a public hooked on fad diets. :
food, edible food . beef, poultry, fish, David B. Larson. president of the seen.their kids in a year, and 22 per- relationship manuals,and ~osmetics :
V"'!etables treated with.. anything, · National Institute of Healthcarc ceot haven'• seen ·their progeny in guaranteed to roll back the years. :
popcorn made with canola oil, pota- Research.
· five years. Not surprisingly, the aver- Jl,ccording to figures collcctcll from :
to chips, pizza, peanut b.utter, ice
Larson grew up in a broken house- aged divorced guy can expect to live coast to coast by respectable physi- :
cream. coffee, tap water, beer and hold, and he approaches the issues of a decade less than if he stayed mar- cians and social scientists: If you pray :
anything y_ou might happen to enjoy. faith and farn'ily with special passion. ried.
.
. .
and stay married. you' ll live longer,
Now, some th1ngs guaranteed Jo While others investipte the fatal burWomen also tak~ II 1n the neck: weigh less, cam more-, make less
keep you alive: nagging from your rito, he has meticulously examined Ex-wives have sig'nificantly _higher trouble. and enjoy markedly higher
SJ?OIIse. taking outsarb~ge , washing traditional-vtlucs folk wisdom -- death .rat~s from mfcct1ous dosc~~es, . sel~-estcem.
d1shes, monogamy; fumly vacations, such as the 'notion that if you divorce, chrome 1llm:sscs, resp1ratory d1sor, The research even ba• a lubricious
prayer. grueling trips · to the mall, vou die -- and has decided on the ' ders and ~•i\es other tban lounge an ale. As'Larson nollls: "Love is betmortgage payments. car payments, , basis of the best available epidemio- hzards .. D1vorcCd w.01:nen, Larson ter and more interesting th11n food .
orthodontist payments, religious ser- logical data that Graadma knows i'eJl!'riS• &lt;?iss SO percent more work Se• is better than food." ·
,
vices, parents' nights at schools and more about longevity than any frown- l~n the1r mamed colleagues to
' Despite this, the' pre!' ba• ignored
mini.vans.
,
ing.-white.frocked Nadefite.-·-----llU,Ury .@IJ!Ull!lf§S.• and buy the farm the sensational rcveiiJIIon that faith
Contrast the two lists. 'The roster
Consider hi~onclusions a.bout the five Y~ earhcr.
· .
and fidelity'*' add years to your life.
PrediCtably, boch selCS htllhe bot- Editors instead have focused on
. of ~y edibles has appeared on relationship between marriage and
every front page inA~rica, thapks mortality:
tleand~medicine~ll\erlhey
exposing lhe evils of Demon Pop,
to be.n-curd worshtppmg sccli such
If you w.nt to die early and mis-• get the1r freedom. Divon:ecl or scpa- corn.
·
as the Center for Science in the Put&gt;- erable, dump your mate. DiVO(Ced rated coljplel ~ drup IDd aJc:oNo "doubt media bias plays a role
lie Interest. On the ocher hitnd, papers men enter psychiitric hospilals 21 , hoi nearly five times u ofteft ulheir ia this decisioa. 'The averap jourhave all but isnored the reveltllion times more often than their lllll'ried hidlbound, llllrried c:oe\'lls.
'!8iill is a Jllllll who thinks Clod is ,
that you can ~ye1rUo Y®r life_by counterpans. 'Their premature death
These ~ ~ lllhen, of In-~ fOf Gil On Down lllci 1 • •
mlln)lmg, staymg mamed aad gewna rate is twice as·high for '-1 di_., coune. ltids &amp;om diYOiced ' - · c:hun:h
right with God.
. •
four times as high foqmeuinonia and holds do wone iuchool.lpllld IliON . knick.

•

Another sunny and warm day is
forecast for Ohio on Friday with ihe
mercury climbing into the mid-70s in
most parts of the state.
Lows tonight will be in the 40s.
The sun.shine may end with the
arrival of the weekend, the National
Weather Service ·said.
.
The forecast calls for cloudy skies
and rain on both Saturday and. Sun-

le

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day. But temperatures likely will
remain unseas&lt;mably warm. 114 Tilt
record-high temperature for this date
at the C61umbu~ weather statitm was
79 degrees in 1981 while ihe reeord
low was !8 in 1879. Sunset tonight
will be at 6:58 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6 : II a.m.

Hooding. High ,1"inds, with _gusts up was expected to continue. Snow was
to 80 mph, were'causina problems in also expected in southern Uta:h and
the West. 'The East w" dry and calm, · Colorado, with up to 8 inches in !hi
while the Midwest was colder with highest region s.
·;
light ~bowers .
lligh winds were expected to coni
Up to 3 inches of rain was expect- tinue in Utah, wi¢ gusts as high d
ed across Texas, with fl~ in the' 40 mph.
l
southeastern part the s~. Moderate
·
J
A~l'OII the nation
rain was ~xpected· in the southern . More rilin was upected in ~~ ­
Heavy rain was falling this mom- Plains.
Northwest, with some snow in p~
mg in
causing some flash
In the Southwest, rain and snow of northern Idaho.
'

•1 Co!umbus!'68• I

W. VA. ·

Lola Clark of State Ro~te 684 in Pomer~y (Harrisonville) died on Thurs. ..
day, April 3, 1997 at Overbr~k Center \v Middlepon.
Arrangements will be announced by jltrchfield Funeralijome in Rutland.
.
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Leona S. Macio

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Today's weather.forecast
By The Anoclated Press
Saturday.. .A chance of show~rs
Ohio forecast
· and thunderstorms. Lows frorn the
Tonight. :.Mostly cloudy early mid 40s to the lower 50s. Highs mid
nonh ...With clearing · Jate. Partly 60s to mid 70s.
cloudy central and south. Lows in the
Su.nday...A chance of showers.
40s.
Lows 45 to SO and hiJhs 65 to 70.
Friday... Partly sunny. High from
Monday ... Much ·cooler with a
., . the mid 60s nortbeastto the mid 70s chance of rain. Lows in the 40s and
south. · ·
highs in the SOs. Vrcek
,Extended foreaost
··
·

Egg farm emplo·y ee.S
.
k
to Id.to report to wor
.
LARUE, Ohio (AP) - Three
employees who claimed they were
fired from a c_orporate egg farm
becausetheyaccuseditofsellingold
eggs have been rehired, their lawyer '
said.
1

"They are back on the job," Mark
Finnegan of the Toledo-uased Equal ·
Justice Foundation said Wednesday.
· AgriGeneral Co. L.P. · President
Duke Goramtes sa1d '" a statement
that the women were not fired.

·Meigs announcements
Benefit soup supper planned
The Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church outreach commit·tee will have a benefit soup super Saturday, with serving to begin at5 p.m.
Vegetable and bean sou·p, along with
chili; sandwiches and dess.:rtr. and
beverages will be sold to eat in or car·ry out.

be conducted by the University of
Rio Grande and Rio Grande Com.
munity College, through the office of
Adult 'and Coritinuing Education.
The project uses acrylics and all
materials are furnished. The two,
evening session will be held on
Monday evenings, April 7 and April
14. The cost is $25.
Registration may ·be cpmpleted by
calling the University at (800) 482?;!0I,ext. 7325. ·, ,.
'

Cemetery cleaning underway
. Cleaning of cemeteries will soon
be underway' in Salisbury Township,
, ·ana those wishing to remove flowers - C,!luncU 10 meet
. .
, and otlter decorations from graves in . Rac1ne V1ll~ge Counc1l will meet
township cemeteries should .do so m regular _sess1o~ Monday, 7 p.m. at
: immediately.
' the mumc1pal butldmg.

Trustees to meet
. .
Danee class to begin·
. , ·The Salisbury Township Trustees
Tbe Big Bend Cloggers beginners
will meet on Monday at6 p.m. at the class will be held Friday through May
township hall.
· .9 at the Pomeroy Municipal building,
6 to 7 p.m. For ,information, re.sidents
Class offered
may call Vivian May. 992-7853.
. A Flower Pot Angel session will

·---Local brief----Electric outage planned

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Approl'&gt;imately 2,700 Ohio ·Power customerS iri Pomeroy, Racine,
Minersville and Syracuse will be without electricity for about four
hours Sunday afternoon, according to American Electric Power Gallipolis/Point Pleasant District manager Mary Kent.
.
The electricity will be off from 2 p.m·. to 6 p.m. so workers can
replace a sub-transmission structure that,is localed in a slip, Kent said.
"We realize there is no convenient time to be without electrical ser.vice, but we have scheduled this work 'for a Sunday in order to min· .
imize the inconvenience ·to both commercial and residential cus·
tomers," she said.
·
In case of inclement weather, the work will be rescheduled for a
later date, she said.

•· L.-=~~~~~------------------------------~

:Today's ·livestock rep·ort

Leona Shumaker Ma&lt;io, 79, Cool ~ille , died Wednesday, April 2, 1997,
at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
··
·
A seamstress and homemaker, she was born Aug. 5. 1~18 , in Cheshire,
daughter of the late Hollis and Irena Wilt Shumaker.
"
· She is survived by sisters, Alice Taylor of Barberton, Geraldine Grueser
and Audrey Chapman, both of Columbus; a brother, Charles Shumaker of
Barberton ; arid several nieces and nephews. .
·
She was preceded in death by two sisters. Helen and Ada Shumaker.
Services will be held Saturday, 2 p.m. at the Poplar Ridge Baptist Church
in Gallia County with the Rev, Clyde Henderson officiatin~Burial .will fol low ln Poplar Ridge Cemetery.
,
Friends may call Friday, 6-8 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Hom in Middlepon
and one hour prior to services at the church.

...

Ohio is not among the states
that r~ceiyed strawberries
By The Associated Preas . . ·
Ohio is not among the six states
that received shipments of frozen
strawberries 'that ·may have been
exposed to the hepatitis A virus.
according to the U.S. Agriculture
Department
Much of the fruit ended up in
. school ~afet~rias. Thousa~ds of
schoolchildren in the six states and
the District of Columbia inay have
been exposed to the virus by eating
frozen strawberries.
So far, the only reported illnesses ·

linked to the tainted berries are in
Michig;m, where about I 5 I studen~s
and teachers have been sickened.
apparently after .:ating ·Strawberries
provided at lunch, federal authorities
said .
· Public schools in Ohio have been
asked not to use their strawberries a•
a precaution, said Juanita Gordon, of
child nutrition services in the Ohio
Dep~rtment of Education.. ·.
Sbe confirmed that Oh10 d1d not
receive the tainted berries.

'

.' .

Units of tbe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 10
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding,included:
CENTllAL DISPATCH
.
12:41 a.m., Harrisonville. Brian
Bart, Holzer Medical Center:
. 9:49 a.m., Overbrook 'Nursing
Center. Middleport, Francis Lagaris,
. Pleasant Valley Hospital;
·
I p.m.. Lasher Road. Rutland,
Nichole Bell, refused treatment, Rutland squad assisted;
2:02 p.m., Laurel• Cliff Road,
' Pomeroy, Mildred Jacobs, Veterans

Memorial 1-!ospital;
· 3:06 p:m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Virginia Pottinger, PVH;
7:48 p.m., Union Avenue. Paula
Blankenship, VMH;
8.:35 p.m., Pomeroy · Police
Department, Keith Day, VMH.
,
MIDDLEPORT
· 3: ll p.in :, Low~r Route 7, Hol&gt;son, Marvin Yeauger, HMC.
RUTLAND
8:01 p.m., Hysell Run Road,
Roger DeWeese, VMH;
9:06 ·p.m., Main Street, Rutland,
Marvin Edwards. VMH.

.,~

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Wednesday's
.G
.PLA results
·
.
,
.

.. WASHINGTON (AP) - The cost category of free. mail delivery whic)]
of renting a mailbox at rural po,st will provide free post office bpxes to •
offic~s will go fmm $8 to $12 a year apprexirrtately 950,000 people in rurunder a series of rate increases al areas who do not receive carrier
approved by the Postal Rate Com- · service.
. The 32-cent price of a first class
mission.
· The independent panel also voted . stamp was not changed by the fourWednesday to raise the annual price member panel. It rejected a Postal
of large mailboxes. typicaUy used by Service plan to charge 22 cents for
businesses, in eight major cities from postal cards with postage already
$310 to $372 and agreed to formally imprinted, leaving the price at 20
end special delivery, a mail service .cents.
The va~ious increases approved
dating from 1885 thill has been made
obsolete by the U.S. Postal Service 's Wednesday will give the Postal service an additional $100 million a year
overnight Priority Mail.
It rejected a Postal Service pro- in revenue, less than a third of the
posal to impose a $36 annual non- $340 million it had requested. .
resident fee on mailboxes ·leased by
.. The new rates need only a formal
customers who do not live in the area vote by the Postal Service Board of
serVed by the post office where the Governors; another presidentially
appointed panel, to be imposed.
box is rented.
The commission approved a new

Meigs EMS logs 10 calls

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SUNNY DAY • Wedneadsy'a fine weather Inspired these two
young men to get out their fishing poles. Chris Lliudermllt, ~. and
P.J. Hill, both of Pine Grove Road near Rsctne, were fishing at
the pond on the G.E. Frecklr Farm.

Postal ·rates going up again

Auction results from Wednesav's
· .COWS: Pri&lt;·e trend, steady. StanGallipolis Producers LivestockAsso- dard. $38-49.50; Utility. $34-37;
ciation:
.
Commercial, $25-32.
Total head n/a.
BULLS: Steady; Butchers. $42. HOGS: Butcher hogs, $47-48; 59; Feeder. cattle. steady; Yearlings,.
sows, $45-49;boars. $37 - 3~ ; feeder steers, $58-75; ' Heifers. $60-70;
pigs, $30 and down. ·
·
· Calves, Steer5, $70- 113: Ba~k to the ·
F""""""!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!il!=:"'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!il farm babcs,$62 and down.
.
· SHEEP::Good, $..13-70.
Special graded feeder sale, MonI
. day, April 14, 7 p.m.
Am Ele Power .........:.........44 1/8
AkzO ou ~o • • •••••• oooou•••••••••••••••69 3/8

AmrTech ...........................58 318
Aahland 011 ....................... 41 1/8
AT&amp;T .................................33 518

Bank One ..........................38 314
Bob Ev•n• ........................ 13 718
Borg·W~rner ............................43

Champion ......................... 18 314
Charming Shops ................5 1/4
City Holding ......................32 112
Federal Mogul ........;................ 25

Oannen .............................83 112
Goodyear ..........................51 1/4
Kmart .................................11 314
Lands End ........................:25 7/8

Lid .............:....................... 17 718
...................................37 314
Valley .........................35 314
Peoples .................... :........ 29 1/4
Prem Flnl ........................... 14 314

Rockwell ....................., ....63 114

RO.SI1ell ..........................171 518

r ·:.~ . Tr

! ,JMUHKUW

Shoney'e ...................'......... 4 711

Star Blink ............\ .............40 311
Wendv's ............................:zo 118·
Worthlngton ......................19 718

-·-·-

Stock -rsports are
a.m. quotas provldld
of Gallfpolla. .. .

(,T .iPTr,

1uMUI• r{lJ W

Couples issued marriage licenses

The following couples received Carolee Sulanne Scarberry. 23, both
marriage
licenses recently in the of Racine; Mark Broderick Williams,
'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- Ohio -direct hog prices at selected .
Meigs
County
Probate Court of 42, Pomeroy. and Deanna Lee Den_ _...,.________. ·;,;·.,;·;..;,;;;.
· .. buying points Thursday as provided
ny, 35, Rutland.
by the U.S. Department of Agricul- Judge Ro.bert Buck'
Matthew
David
Richards,
23.
and
The Daily Sentinel ture Market News;
. ·Barrows and gilts: steady: demand
(IJSPS 21,_)
~--~------------------,
moderate on a light to moderate
l'llblishe4 nay atlemooo. Mondor lhn&gt;!lafl
movement. ·•
·
friday. Ill Coun St.. l'onlon&gt;y. Ohio, by die
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
Ollio Yllley Poblbbiq Comp~~~y/G...... Co.,
"""""''' Ohio 43769. PI!. 992-21.56. Secood
points 49.00-50.50, few 51 .00; plants
clou ,....,. poid 11 Pomeroy, Ohi&lt;&gt;.
50.00-51.50.
.
. .
Memllln The Auodlledl'lw.lllld ille Cillo
U.S. , 2-3, 230-260 lbs. ·44.00llewspoperAuodadoo. '
. 49.00; 210-230 lbs. 39.00-44'.00 ..
Sows: steady to weak.
POS'I'MASTEW: Send lddreu comc:dms to
The Dally' Seod•l, Ill 9-t St., Pomeroy,
u .s. 1·3 300-4~ lbs. 39.00-42.00,
Ohk&gt;4l769.
few .38.00; 450-50Q lbs. 41 .00-43.00;
SUII8i::RIPnoN IATIS
S00-600 lbs. 44.IJ0,46.00. few over
600 lbs. 47.00-48.00.
Ole 'lleek. ............~•... l''•-·····"''''"""'''''''''$100
Boars: 36.50-38.00.
OneM-......................:........................18.70
One Yeor ............ :......:....................c......$10..00
Estimated receipts: 29,000.
Hog market trend for ThursSINGJJI COPY PRICB
Dally .................................................. !l c..u
day: steady. I
.Coin and Curr.ency Dealers
Summary of Wednesday's ProSub!crlben .,........, 10 pay~- moy
ducers Livestock Assoeiation aucremit in llCf¥.Mte ctilect 10 The Dilly Sadnel
stfourly Pri:Zea
ooa ,._ al• or 12 bloiL CrMit wtn be
tions at Gallipolis and Mt. Vernon:
iwen
carierC!IIdl
..._
1
.Hogs: steady to 1.00 higher.
No sut&gt;ICripdon by moll ...,..,... Iii Butcher hogs: 43.50-52.25.
Spomored by
area~
COIN CLUIJ
whmhome--lo•Cattle: steady.

fOR All

CHICI THI

W~

Are Now Authorized ·
To Fill Plescriptions
With Your

COIN SHOW SUNDAY

- --

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.•,c._ ... __

·9:00 •·4:00 PM
Holiday Inn, Galhpols

thu

.

l'llbli..... - - " " ' .... ., ........ duriDI till 11bocrlpdoo poflo6. S.blcrlpdoo -

......., ..ybeln.;l a al~chual&gt;atlll
.uodooafche . .lpdDa.

,_.....,c..,

MAIL~ONS

--

ll \l'oeb .............................................S27.:lll
26 ..............................................f.!l.ll
l2 ............................................SIO!Jt

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~ 215-.
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n -...........................................

. . . .._....................- ................... _,$29.1!
13

156.61

st011.n

Holzer ~edleal CenteF
Dilcbarps AprU 2 - W.nda
Stiffler, Seth Reffitt, Penny ~Coy,
Mrs. Gre&amp; Curininghlm .nd son.
· T~eesha Smith;, Gayle Thompson,
Mrs. Michael Carter and son, Ericka
Murray. Charles A~ :
(Published with peiwkuloA)

0-KAN

•

from SEARS

Prescriptions Cards.

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W• . W•~Tour

PraniptfotiBusi,..ss..

"

Featuring 12 D,eolera

.Hospital neW$

AND .

f

J.n'S Coin Colnpan,

'.

ef ..ID,olls, Olllo ·
.W.2842
151 SecOnd Ave.

,!

U.S. COINS
B&amp;WandSell

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The Dlllly Sentinel • Page 3 .

Lola Clark

FBI probes new Iranian arms scandal-·
By Morton Kondracke
said the number was much smaller · mcnt last week.
Iran never ceases to menace the - no morj!than 25 people at ihe time
Charges that Lake failed to tell
careers of American offl~ ials. Jimmy of the leak-- and said those with the Congress about tacit U.S. permission
Carter. lost the presidency partly" most to gain from leaking ·it were for Iran arms aid were used ·by Senbecause of the Iran hostage crisis. Republicans and CIA officials.
ate Intelligence Committee RepilbliRonald Reagan 's secoad tcllil was
· Rep. Lee Hamihon, D-lnd., rank- cans to pummel Lake, who wi.thdrew
blighted by ·the Iran-contra scandal. ing member of the select committee, his nomination this month.
Tony Lake isn't CIA director partly said that "it was obvious to (him) that
Lake saiil that, in retrospect, it
because of Iran.
what was leaked-to the Times was the would have been better if he had
And ·now, FBI agents are inter- (GOPJ majority report " containing · inforined Congress that the United ·
viewing ·staff members of the 1996 material damagi'!Jl to the ClintQn Statesknew of Iran's arms aid to the
House select committee that invcsti- administration: cspccially LaJ¥. who Bosnian Muslims, but that he was not
gated the U.S. role .in Iran's transfer at the time.of the leak had just been legally required to do so because.no
of arms ·to Bosnia · in an ·effort to nominated to head the CIA.
U.S. covert operation was involved.
An administration official said 1hc
The administration contends that
determine who leaked the committee 's highly Classified rcpon to the had -learned from an LA Times U.S. Ambassador Peter Galbraith
Los Angeles Times last December. source, not Risen, that the leak came simply was as~od by Croatian offi. A Clinton administration ofllcial from "Republicans."
cials in 1994 whether the United
charged that the Times Mory "con- . During and : after the committee States had any objection to Croatia's
tained very sensitive intelligence inquiry, headed by Rep. Henry Hyde, a.~sisting the Muslims in getting Iranmaterial whose compromise could • R-111. , Republicans on the p~nel ian arms, even though th~ United
·cause harm to ~merican servicemen charged that Lake had lied when he States was officially abiding by an
in Bosnia" by warning Iran that U.S. denied giving a go-a:hcaq for Iran' to international arms embargo· on forintelligence had penetrated its t gi.vc arms 10 the Bosnian Muslims. mer Yugoslavia.
embassy in Croatia.
The committee's other RcpubliAfter consulting Washington, the
The Times su~ry. by James Risen, cans. were Reps. Dan Burton (Ind .). administration ccintends, Galbraith
reponed that in April 1994, "th'e CIA Coss Ballenger {N.C.), Sam ~rown- told the Croatians that he had "no
obtained intelligence about (Muslim hack (Kan.) and Doug Bereutcr instructions" on the m•tter. The
cleric Sevko)Omerbasic's conversa- (Ncb.). ' '
Housc.report implied that Galbraith
tion with the Iranian ambassador, in
An administration · oiTicial sug- had colluded with Omerbasic to get
which the Zagreb cleric talked of get- gested that Burton. the most aggres- the arms transfer going and that
ling U.S. encouragement for arms sive Republican on the panel and no~ Lake "winked,and nbdded" when he
smuggling to Bosnia."
head of a committee investigating directed that Galbfaith tell the CroaA Republican staffer told me he Clinton campaign abuses, m'ight be tians he had ~o inslnic:Jions.
.
informed the FBI in January that as ihe leakcr. hut Burton was not ill
Even though the CIA learned of
many, as I00 to 150 House and .~en~ Washington at the time the volumi- the transfers and informed the HOU5C
ate employees and executive branch . nous report was leaked. Bereutcr, also and Senate Intelligence ComQ)ittccs
officials had access to the 700-pugc aggressive. wa:s in town when the .. and even thoug[J Congress six
repon.
·
ltrak happened. his office said. months later directed that the United
A Demoi:ratic staffer, however. Bcrcutcr was unavailable for com- · · s~a~es cease enforcing the embargo to

Pomeroy • Mldd~ Ohio

Cloudy skies, rain forecast for weekend .

Friday, Ap...l4 ,

it had been .a close electi.o·n

Letters to the editor·· ·Papers ignore find~ that add years to your _li~e
Courthouse dinner a success
.

OHIO Weat11er

ThuNdlry; Aprll3, 1117

1

By hi) Wattenberg
. · ·
close, what would the story line be
Just how important ~ the politi- now?
.
cal money scandals no"! swirling
'The big one would be politicide.
around Washington? And who's to If some Clinton-Gore: money was
blame?
raised illegally&gt;(!~that money move
The polls report that most Amer- enough votes to change the electim.
icans think the scandals are not very result? Shorthand: Did Clinton steal
. important. · Yawn, say the respon- ihe . presidency? If !hat were the
dents, it stinks to high heaven, but _question, the counbj would be up in
everyone does it. Anyway these Clin- arms. Politieal scientists call such a
·ronistas were enthusiastic, 'not evil - citizen tanttiJm "a crisis of legitima-·
- Jmpropcr, not illegal -- so stop has: cy." Overthe course of history, such
sling them. ·
'
turmoil has at times toppled governThere ·is some validity to that. ments and ruinel,l nations.
Politicai"Washington has never been .
A second story line would be joura gathering of choirboys. Stuff hap- nacide. Where were the bloodhounds
pens. even to well-meaning people. of the press? Almost a thousand peoBut there is another way of look- pie went nighty-night at Motel 1600,
· ing at it. Supwse Bill Clin~on had not many of whom were potential or.
beaten Bob Dole by 8 percent of the actual big campaign contributors.
vote in 1996, but by 1 percent. Such That became a big story AFTER the
a result, after all, has not been so · election, pursued by a press corps that,
unusual in American political histo- grew up an the Watergate-Woodward
ry : John Kennedy and Richard Nixon mantra of Follow The Money. But ·
each won the presidency by less than woul&lt;{n't it have been a ·big story
I percentage pOint. Jimmy Carter. BEFORE the election? If it had been
won by 2 percentage points.
covered by the press earlier, could it ·
If our last election had. been so have changed the arithmetic of the

ByTQM RAUM
.
.
Associated Press Writer
.
WASHINGTON -Just a week after he was proclaimed ".road kill on
the highway of American politics" by a feiiQw Republican, Newt Gingrich
is winning praise from GOP colleagues for his tough talk on China..
·
Whether...the new, perhaps grudging, respect from conservatives will help
the embattled speaker regain his footing in the House is an opeu question.
But, Gingrich has an unexpected ally ·in his struggie for rehabilitation: the
White House.
·
·
·
·.
In an arena where all things are interconnected, Gingrich'sconfrontational
remarks during his trip to Asia won widespread"praise from some ofthe con- ·
servative activists who had all but abandoned him a week before:
That ultimately could strengthen Gingrich's hand in dealing with his own
troops and the White House on both party's top legislative priority this year,
a compromise plan. to balance the federal budget by 2002.
"Newt Gores China." said a memo of "talking points" issued Tuesday
by the National Republican Congressional Committee. It drew a deliberate
comparison to Vice President AI Gore's simultaneous visit to China.
The gist of the memo: Gingrich upstaged Gore.
·
"Sometimes it's better to be lu.cky than, good. Having Gore there in &lt;;hina at the same time was·very helpful," said Rich Galen, spokesman for the
committee and.author of the memo.
.
1
.Gore. 11nlike Gingrich, trod carefully on conlroversial issues with his Chinese hosts, and returned from .his closely watched overseas trip with little
in tenns of specific commitments.
·
The White House clearly was unconifortabte' dealing with Gingrich's
remarks, particularly when he told.Chinese leaders the United Siates-would
defend Taiwan in any attack on tbe self-governing island. ·
"The speaker knows full well that the president is commander in chief,"
White House spokesman Mike McCurry said.
But White House officials, more privately, were not displeased to see the
speaker roughing up China a bit; particularly if it would help re-establish
·his own shaky position among Republicans.
: 'The reason: Gingrich S!'ddenly has emerged as someone the White House
:believes it can deal with.
•
.
• On China, Gingrich generally supPorts President Ciinton's policy of
:engagement. despite his blunt words on human.rights.
·
; But it's in the budget are} where the administration thinks it has the tnost
p hance of making headway with' Gingrich.
"
, Gingrich caught ~Y colleagues off guard with his dramatic proposal
d ~t month·that they "'poranly dela)U:QilStderatton of pnzed tax cuts unt1l
:a deal to balance the u'dget1had been struck with the administration ..
; It produced near-open rebellion in some GOP ql13rlers. But the White
·
.House seized.upon it as an important opening.
• "I have to compliment Newt. He's been very constructive on the bud'get," said John Hilley, Clinton's cl\ief legislative lobbyist. "That was a ·huge
~tep for him to do tha.t."
..
: In an interview Tuesday, Hilley said Gi_ngrich's gesture- as well as sev··~·ral goodwill overtures from Senate Majority Leader Trent Lou. R-Miss. were "true indications of flexibility trying to come our way."
: "What I feel so good about thi~ year is that the leaders all want to get .
~his budget agreement done," Hilley said.
·
But Gingrich will have difficulty exerting leadership if he doesn' t have .
'the support of his own party.
.
.
.
· ; Just last week, Republican Rep. Peter King. R-N.Y.• who had supported
Gmgrich's speakership previously and had criticized ethics charges against
J~c Georgia lawmaker, pronounced Gingri~h "'road kill" in an article in the
conservativejoumalthe Weekly Standard.
·
' In many ways, GingriCh's red-blooded tough talk durin!.! his five-day trip
to Asia wa• an attempt to mend fences with the conservatives he had alienated earlier.
··
.·
Fred Greenstein. a political science professor at Princeton University, said
House Reputtlicans appear to have been the only audience for any " upstaging contest" between Gingrich and .Gore.
· Gingrich "made a view for his own·constituency that has a certain sense,"
Greenstein said. Still, i\ probably won't do much .for the overall public
approval rating of.a speaker who seems "locked in as the ogre of American
politics," Greenstein said.
.
. .
.. · ,
· Bill Kristol, publisher of the Weekly Standard and a Gmgnch cnt1c, grudgingly.gave the speaker high mark~ for the .trip, especially in contraSt'? ~ore_'s .
' " I think he had a successfultnp to Chma. He deserves credn for n. Kristol·said. Still, he added, "I don't know that it really changes things at home."
For once, the White House seemed to be cheering for Gingrich. ·

t

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' 4 e The O.lly Sentinel
Page

.

Jeremiah Bentley, followed with a
double to put rurners on second and
third. ·one· out later, Scoll Ge,argc
then launclied a long home run owr
the center field fen.ce to tie the gai'QC
at 3-3 and force the game i~tQ e~tra
innings.
•
In the eighth withiwo outs, Tony
Dugan singled. Qualls and Mullen
· walked to load the bases. Bentley
then followed with a bloop single 10
right field and score . Dugan and
. Qualls with the go-ahead runs.
In the bouom of the inning,
Merker 'singled' and a walk put run. -n~rs on first and se~ond . A passed
ball moved both ·'runners up. bul
Geor~e got Young to gru~nd out to
first to end the game . . &lt;' '
George picked up the win in route
going performance, ~triking out
eight, walking four whtle scallermg
seven hits. Only one Vtkmg run was
earned.
·
.
Merker was the starting pitcher

eypr.e

inn.e r dri vc that is probably 11,1atched
by no one in .sports."
. The extension guamntees Ripkcn
.about $15, I million lor the 1998 and
1999 seasons. He will get $6.3 million in each-of the next two seasons,
and the Orioles have an option for
2000 at $6.3 million with a huyoul
of about $2.5 million.
Ripken, 36. was enterin_g the final .
season of a $32.5 million, five-year
contra~!. The new deal
was
announced in a press conference
after Ripken homered and hit two ·
doubles in the Orioles' 4-2 openingday win over Kansas Cily,
... , dun:llhink we had a deal until
after the home run." Ripken said .
· with a wide grin.
The sides negotiated fur several

.

Mulchloe3st ......... '2.49
Sphagnum
cu ft. 7oeo9 ........
Sphagr;tu"'

~2

pitching the first six inning giving up
four hits. striking out I0 and walking one. McFerren wentlhe1inaltwo
inning striking out three while giving up six hits.
•
·
Beniley led the Mara~e~s with a
double and a single. Mullen and
Dugan added two singles ·each.
George added his game tying home
run. Brad Whitlatch and· Rick
Hoover each ad(led a single. . ·
Mer)&lt;er led the Vikings with three
singles. Ward added a double.
Meigs will play at Eastern today
in a make-up' contest. The Marauders will host Fe'deral Hocking Friday
before heading to Jackson for a doubleheader Saturday.
·
Inning ll!IBii
Meigs ·
000-000-32=5-9"2
Vinton Co.
000-201-00=3-7-2
WP - Scott George (WP) an&lt;! ·
Jason Mullen
LP- Josh Merker, McFerren (7)
(LP) and Beckett

·

ts.t't
*8.99

All Purpose Peat
40 lba. 70110 ........ 11.99
Tap Soli
40,1ba. 711111 ........ *1.49

S"d"d'
Pressan-tnahd.

.,....., 1ConiPoatact Manure

Laaclscape

40 lba. 711112 ........ '2, 19
Potting Soli
20 lba. 70114 ........ *1.49
liiiiiiil Pine Bark Nuggets
2 ou. ft. 7001&amp;.......'3.29
· Pine Bark Mulch
2 cu. ft. 70017 .. ;: ... 2.9~· ··
White Marble Chips

Orioles and Ripken ~pprove
thr~e-year contract extension
BALTIMORE (AP)- First. Cal.
Ripkcn stepped into,a new position.
Then he got a neolr, contract that virtually assures him of finishing his
career with tlie Baltimore Orioles.
Ripken re~eived a three-ye.ar
extension Wednesday !llatties him to
the Orioles through the year 2000,
during which l)e will celebrate his
40th birthday While it would appear
as if the future Hall of Fame star
won ' I need another contract after this
l)ne, the Orioles arcn' 1 so sure.
"Hopefully Cal Ripken is going
to end his career with the Orioles."
gcncrdl manager Pat Gillick said. "I
can' t say thai for sure he won't be
playing past 2000 because he has a
will 'and a desire for baseball and an

· !lmben

Will not rot from ground
·.:ontact. Make great fence

2'x8'x1/2"

weeks in an effort to get the contract
~ompleted by opening day. Ripken
and Gillick both said they would not
negotiate past the opener, and now
Ripken has a contra!'t that .will keep
him in a Baltimore uniform through
his 19th major-league season.
"Tn •nc it has murc spe~.:ial mean·
ing than most be~ausc I grew up in
the area," Ripken said. "I a ~ways
wanted to be an· Oriole. 1 was drafted as an Oriole ... . It 's very rare that
someone gets the opportunity In .
play for the same team their whole
~arecr. Don'tthink that! don'tthink
I'm lu~ky in ihat regard.
"This is a very happy day. It takes
me loa point that very well could be
ihe·cnd of my career. I hope not; but
it very well could be."

··~·············· '3.99

!'

4'x8'1/2"

70189 ................ '7.49

'

Potting Soil
.
40 Lb. 70113 .... :....
2.39

Heavy Duty
4'x8'x1"

.

168300/4ldl-1in .. : ..

'

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'14.99

4'z8' ·.

PolJdhJiene

Lattice Panel

Easy to Install &amp; maintain.
Looks like woocL Easy to
clean. White

-

$19.99
uch

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.,

The Cavaliers opened a six-pnint
By JIMMY GOLEN
.
lead
late in the first quarter ilnd a scv·
BOSTON (AP) --: Cleveland
.
en-point
lead at the end llf the secguard Tcrrcil . Brandon . saw that
ond.
Hill's
layup at the end of the
thing's were gelling out of hand. so
he. calmly walked over to the refer- third quarter gave Cleveland a 64-62
.
.
ee and goaded him into calling a Cdgc. •
Cleveland
then
s~nrcd
the
first
II
technkal foul.
"H you're going to get nne, you points of the fourth, gelling" two free
should get your point across ... Bran- throws and a three-pointer from
dun said Wednesday night after lead- ' Brandon, a three-pointer froin Boll
i~e the Cavaliers to a 96-87 _vi~tory
o~er lhe •Boston Cehics. "'No one
e~e sh,O\Jid gel a technical Joul
e~ccplthe captain. I think it calmed
c•erything down."
,
Brandon ~ored 19 points, includ"
i')g the first live of the fimrth quar''t· as .Cleveland (38-35) pulled
a.-uy frnm the Ceflics and moved a
h~lf-game ahead Of the Washington
. B~llcls (37-35) in the race for the
Ejlstcrn Confc,ren~c's 1 fimil playoff

Sura and another three-pointer from
Ferry off an assist from Sura for a
75-62 lead.
·
T01)d Day made a three-pointer,
Conl\m.convertcd a three-point play
and Day hit a long jum}ierto make ..
il 75-71 before Cleveland rallied otT
a 7-0 run. Bo~ton closed In 85-77
helore Sura's three-pointer scaled it
with I :40 In play.

•

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'

30" CONCRETE SPLASH BLOCK

PATIO BLOCKS
Retaining Walls:

.

~

.

.. . .

WINDSOR STONE GRAY 4'X8"X12' .,.......... $1 .99
WINDSOR STONE BUFF 4'X8'X12" .............$2.29
DIAMOND STONE GRAY 6"X16'X12" BEV .. $4.29
• DIAMoND STONE BUFF 6'X16'X12' BliV ...$4.49

18118
'

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New York " .... .......... I
· Toroolo ........ .'........... l

$999

Choice

•

· Kanaas City ............ .O
Milwauhe ............... U

74Sitltl·ll0l' "'

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,

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0 1.00
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• AltUiwim .."................0 I .000
llakl&amp;uxl ................... 0 ' ., .000

..

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S'TwoHote

70191

End Post 70183

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Oakland (Adlmo Hl. l.l~ p.m,
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tmol !C. .......0.01: 7:!1!1 L';m.
Chii:illu Cvbll CCawil 7· 16) II t-lori·

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. Phit.delphi• (Lde,t 1-12) .. Los

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By ROB GLOSTER

Frldlly'o a--

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(NcaJfe
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IrOn pin II 11M•Cheater to
" - Roell, T-"'P AOIId
tMno..S 31 d11rw•ll'

W111.11,_.11ongllte
to 1 paint

eumittu~Dd.....,.,...,_

the county· aulllilll* Ill
Applloallon .t o tiM Ohio
D*putment ,
of
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Iran ·pin
feat In 1

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~am. ... ..:...........~· I~ -~ ~
A·NtwYmt .......... .$2 . 21
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WashinJ1un ............37 ~~

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llolloo .. ,.,.,,. ......... ll JO

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CLUVHLANll W.: a..lom H7
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Mi.....,. 114, Now lfncy 11'1
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L.A. Lakm: 110. Dn•cr K.1

Friday••....,.

L.A. Clfrp:n at Bnll.on. 1 run,

lntJiHU ld Philadelphia, 7::\0 r-m.
V.:tntit ll Atl_,.ll. , :30 p .M.
WIIIIMnatHif ~.IC ' p. m.

Orllndt111f New Yurk. K p.m.

.

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·
V111M:UUVLT allJtah. 91),111.
MilwiUkue ue fluniLUKI. If) p,m.
Sa• Amunio 11 L.A. l.Akcln. 10:30

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opportunity to ....,._ tllld
comment on tiM county'•
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appliCIIIJon, lnaludlq tiM
p.ropo .. d • aatlwru..

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11M CHIP program provtdaa on
11M oounty'i propond
aiMxt;;&amp;ufUidllg_..of CIIBG
CHIP App¥olllon.
•110,1!10 ·• for eJiflbl•
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On ....... 10, 1117, .... other)
due to 1 IHIIIIHy,
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CIION·Kiola,·
pultlla h..,ng to., lnlontl i:lerlt. prior to April 14,
oltllt nl -.ut 11M COBG 1117, II (114)
In
ltow II MIY IM· onler to , _ .. tltll , _
needa
'will . b•

....,...;, ••Ida

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

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Vllfti.'Oin"er ............. 12 63

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CINCINNA11 (Bonn 7-1•1• Floritla
.(Rilflp fl-16), 7:0!1 p.tn.
· ·C - (Wriafl&lt; 4-fllll Monln:ol (1\4 ,
Vllldes 1·31..7:l5 p.m.
-

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Hflrdy Azaleas
. (\'Rtf ol calclfl)

Beautiful'Blooming Pansies·
(Frolt and Freue Proof)

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Houston ................... 2
PiltsbLirp ................ 1
Cbicaao ....................o
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CINCINNA11.!Schour&lt;k .._,,,_ ll oJ~ p.01.

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April . 14, 11t7. to expre..

I

· 8' RAILROAD TE

, .

Public Notlcit .

NOTICE OP SECOND
PUBLIC HEAAIIG
Th Melge County
Comm18el0nere Intend to
.llpply to th• · Ohio
Dep1rtment ·
of
· llevtllopmenl, for funding
Ulldllr the , ·PY' 17
Co~r~munHy Block qrant

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Pilt~e: (l.t,Niza 2-J) UII.Ail Aftlll:k:l

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# ·' -' I'"!

I GOT VOUI- O.ld8nd c.tcher o--ge Wll'-nllllya thlll llw"'
· on thl Cllv•llncl lndlllna' David Justice far h out In the nlnlh · ,

Florida 4. Olicaao Cubs 3
Hovaoo o4, Atlantu l
,
Lui An,elc11 !', PhilUifl'hia 1.
SonDieJo _6.N.Y. Meool!lll

Nt standings ·

· -Wednllllay'sKOnS

ft~niHd

'dt f

I

ning99 games liS\ !ICBSOn.
. ..
OAKLAND. Calif. (AP) -After
Mark Mc&lt;lwire. drove in th~ :
being traded from Allanta to Cleve- runs for the Athletics, including .a ·: .
1
land last week, David Justice spent twO:run double with the bucli loaded
much of his time in the InditW' ' that tied the game 6-6 in the fifth.
dugout carefully watching American But he grouttded 0111 ·with the tyinft
League pitchers.
· runs on base and two outs in the sev.!
His observations paid off enth. .
Wednesday night in his AL debut;
1ltc A's pulled within 8-7 in -diet
Justice hit a tie-breaking' homer eighth on Geronimo Berroa'sdouble;+ ·
and also tripled and singled in his AL a groundout and a wild pitch. But
debut, and newcomer Kevin Mitchell Jim Thome led off the ninth wi!)l 111
added a solo homer. as the revamped . h!lmer lo rcstorc
Indians' two-run
Indians del'eated Oakland 9-7 in margin.
• .'l
"He slniek out the first two in the Wednesday night.'• !leasoo opener.
Ernie Youn11 and 8enoa had solo',-.
ninth, then we hit the jackpot," limy
lu81ice's two-run homer in the homers ror the A's, ~O!iC Canf~C('o,- ;
Williams said after his winning · seventh bnJke a 6-6 tic. The hall. , " back in an Olklatid 11nifomr for the- ;
debut as lhe Red Sox manager. which landed in tbc second deck in first time since 1992, went 1-for-4
"The kid was wild: It worked out .right fteld, was retrieved for him.
with a walk.
. ,.., ,
great for us. We didn'l even hit the{
"I've· gotten over the shock (of
··1 know wc'lltiCorc runs. 1',11 take"·• ·
b~ll o.ut of the infield .. Someti!fies a the ~)now. But I'm definitely a seven every .Jamc." said A's manag-:',
wtn lake that gets you gomg tn the neWCQIUICr," he said. "It's been gRit· cr All Howe. "The pitching w.a.•n't'"
right direction."
.
Everything's been smooth sailing stellar. Hopefully, we can hold doJVn ·
Perctval couldn't believe he blew They've made the·transition an easy our opponent.• a lillie hctler:··• ·
·'
the lead.
one."
Sleven· Kline (1-0) pi~ched twO.· '
. "I ,was very foc~sed for the first
It didn't toke Justice long to lhirds of an inning. of relief for the
two baiters, then I JUS~ hall a mental .adaptlo AL pitching, just eight days win in his major-league del)ut. ,Paul ·
· ~~down: I SCI'!' wed II upl :~ he ~- ilf\er being traded from Atlanta. , Shuey, the ' si~th Indians' pitcher,,"
1r I m gomg' to get beat, I m gomg
"Good athletes . !lav.e a way ol pitched the 0 inth for the save.
·,
to get beat phys1cally, _nol menially. shonening their adjustment period.
Don Wengen (0-1) was lhe loscri·~
','It's riot going to h~n aaai~. David's a good athlete," said Cleve- despite not allow'ing a hit in 2 113"'
... I d gol&gt;ack out there nght n.ow tf land . manager M1ke Hargrove. innings of relief.
"David Justice came up huge for us
. Cleveland !llaner. Charles Nagy~
they wanted to s~ ~nother game."
The Angels, trauhng 6-S, loaded . ·tonight."
allowed six runs on seven hits in, 5.4
. the bases in the boltom of the ninth
Justice also had an RBI ground113 innings. A's starter Aricf Prieto~
before Heathchfle Slocumb got out in Cleveland's lour-run nrst as gave up six runs on eight hits.in folll'l l
Jorge Fabregas on a shon fly ball to the Indtons, desptte a radtcally -innings.
•
·
end ":
.
.
changed lin~up, showed they sull
·" We're going to ~ore some l'J,Ins,, 1
·
Lbts Alteen stngled home t,:-vu have plenty of power.
yeah." N~gy_ said. "It's a l!&lt;•Kl thing,·: .
runs and scored once for Anahetm.
·The Indians hav.e only II players to have; but vou can.' I rely on it. We ,,
and another new Angel, Eddie Mur- remaining from the .team that -:von ·. got a big lead tonisht, but I made ·,
ray, got has l;900th career RBI.
ti)C 1995 AL pennant. And the hnc- some bad pitches lind let them back',
.
'
· •In otlter AL games, it was Min- up has undergone a hua~e makeover in lhe ballgame..~·
nesoto 7, Detroit • Baltimore 4, since Cleveland won its ·second
lllome. who alliO bad an RBI ·
(See AL On Paae 6) .
straisht AL Centraltitlc .whilc win· · .double, went 2cfor~2
'
·.:

N.Y, Yankee1 (Weill fl-14)ut OaklltndiKonoyi).O), IO: J~p. m .

Ba\lil'!lfl= o4, K~~~~W Ci1Y 2
Tororno 6, Chi.\::llf,O White SoJt I

~CDBG~~:.IIer
a S.nlllfY
,......, ' .......
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I

What's going on out West? Lots
of runners circling the bases.
Three American League games in
th~ Pa~ific time zone-produced 45
runs Wednesday nighl.
Boston got four of them with two
outs in the ninth inning to stun Anaheim 6-S. New York, sparked by
three home runs by Tino Martinez,
routed Seattle 16-2. Aod Cleveland,
helped by,David Justice's superb AL
debut, .edged Oakland 9-7,
.
The Angels led 5·2 ~nd had Troy
Percival, their ace reliever, on the
mound. He struck out the tirst two
batters, but then John Valentin doubled, Mo Vaughn walked and Reggie Jefferson got an infield single to
load the bases.
Per~ival
then walked Tim
"!aehring and Wil Cordero to make
it 5-4, .and hit Rudy Pemberton on
the .upper left ann, tyins tbe galf1C.
Pep Harris I'Ciie~edi and; ~inchhiller Troy O'Leary had an infteld
single 'to third bose, knocking home
the winning .run in lhe season open,
er for both teams. ·
l'ercival hll&lt;! just three blown
saves in 39 chances last season.

Minnno~a 7, Dilroir6

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By TERRY' KINNEY
ing on gms, he probably has no
CINCINNATI (AP)- Dave Bur- . hits."
· ba · siarted ,last year 0-8. Reggie
Deion, in an impressive return to
S.aoders was hun much of the time . baseball after sticking solely to footand played .\n just half the jam~s. ball in 1996, is off to a 6-for-9 start
Deion Sanden didn't play baSeball at as the Reds leadoff man.
~
Reggie Sanders gave' the Reds a
all.
into lhe,-1997 season, 3-0 lead Wednesday with a three-run
Two
all three. lre·in full stride.
,
homer in the first
,
"I thought about it the wbole off"I just hung ,t," Swift said of the
season and I told myself, 'Don't put slider that Sanders put in the gree,n
any pressure on yourself. Just go out . seats. "It was the kind of pitch that
and ilo what you can,"' said Burba. you wantto puU back as soon.as you
who suuck out seven and allowed release it Other than thai, I thought
tive hits · in seven innings as · the I did pretty 'good."
Cincinnati Reds real the Colorado .
Sanders says·he spent the off-seaso~ having fun- honing his karate.
Rockies ~-3 Wednesday night
"It was a tremendous effon for ridmg a bicycle and rollerbladingBurba," said manager Ray knight. and trying to forget 1996.
"I was thinking about takptg him out
"Last year was a tou$h year after the sixth inning, but we tal!ced start, stop, start, stop. 'It was not a
about it and I told }lim; 'You can go good cycle," he said. "This year. I'm
back out there if you keep the ball healthy early and I'm off to a good
down •• Then he goes.oui and punch- stan."
'
.
For Baylor, the feeling o~.losing
es out the side,. "
Deion Sanders had four ~its on the road was the same but 'differincluding ·two infield singles - for ent. !n two games, thd Reds
the sixth four-hitgameofhiscareer. outscored Colorado 7-0 in the first
He alsu had a stolen base. an RBI inning. The Rockies, 28-53 away
and made loser Bill Swift balk and from Coors Field last season, lost
commil a throwing error.
Tuesday's opener 11-4.
· , "He's disrup\ive every till)e he's
"l1d.like to have the lead one time
o~ bpe. He makes pitchers ,.make - ju.•tto ~ h9w that.~eels," Baymastakes - throw the ball away, lor said. ,
.
bl!l!(jlist because of his speed," said
"ll's going to)um around. We
Ritckies manager Don Bayl_or. •
have better focus, better at-bats than
."You can't walk him- !bat's a.., last y~ar. Lastyetlr it wasjustl-2- ~ .
dCluble. You've just got to ,Pitch to
1·2-3. This year, ,opr iuy(kcep bathim. He liad four hies; if we're playtling back.". .
··

I

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•

618 EAST MAIN ST. ·POMEROY

...

••

~,

BRICKFACE REO,. GRAY, BROWN

'12.99 '

,

the BraVes, .. Dierk« lllid. "They so hard to play. The li&amp;htcr the game.
the harder, the bcuer they play."
Trailing 4-2, the Bll!ves pullccl
within a run ·ip the ninth on Jeff
Blauser's RBI double off John
Hudek. Blauser took third on Keith
Lockhart'' ,groundout, and· Billy
Wagner relieved to .face Kenny
Lofton.
·
Lofton hit a line drive to lhinl
baseman Bill Spiers, who causht the
ball. then doubled up BIIUief
the
final out.
Blauser knew it wu over when
the ball passed him. '
·'()nee l&amp;aw it go by me on aline,
my first tboughi was to try II) get
back to the bag, because I knew it
wasn't going ·to bounce," .Blauser
said. "It was hit too hlrd. That was
absolutely the wont-&lt;:asc ~0 in
that siluation for us. He (Spiers) Willi
moving that way when the ball was
hit, so illere wasn't much I could.
(See NL CMI Pqe 6)

· R~ds · record 5~3 ~· · · · ·
win:over. Rockies In other AL action, •
BoSox and Yanks
get wins in 'vastly
different fashions ·.
•aiJ!es

.

••

I Antoine Walker scored 25 points
a4d Marty Conlon had ll se:isnn-high
If fur Bos111n (13-601. which lost its
sqvcnth in a row us ll posittons itself
f&lt;~ the top spot in the drat't. Despite
. 11'1: disparity in the teams' re~orus .
&lt;OPEN MON.· FRL 9-6, SAT. 9-5
1~ game was physi~al and featured
the techni~al louis.
MasterCard/VIsa/Discover
t " II was 1 a fiery game, a lot of
etbotions oul \here," Celtics coa~h
f4L. Carr 'said. "You don't want to
lnlc control· of it, though. It was a
v&lt;ty important game for Cleveland.
T1\e
guys knew that and "'me oullir. ~
'
.
In~ .
!Chris Mills scored 24 points to
lead Clcvcland .•while Tyrone Hill
had 19 points and II rcl&gt;ounds. Bol&gt;
Sura scnred only 10 p&lt;Jinls fur the
Cavaliers.. but that induded eight
fourth-quarler points ilnd two key
thiFe-pninlcrs.
·
The most excitement in front of
thq sparse crowd came during an
exchange of shoves ca~ly in ·the third · ·
qu\trter between Dal'ny Ferry and
,Dtjvid Wesley. Wesley was brought
doWn hard by Ferry on a pick: then.
, af~r Wesle~ ran into Ferry again, Ihe
Cavahers lorwara pushed Wesley
do!wn. leading to shouting. shoving
'• aflll double technicals.
..
"Thqy ' re both compeuuvc
guys," said Cavaliers coach Mike
F~tello, whose next wm wtll be hts
:;O(lth. " One guy was trymg to set a
~c~en. the other wa.' trying 10 li~ht
through il, 1 have no problem wnh
that... .
'tiP ·
At the 01her end. Ferry gave Eric
Williams a har&lt;j ' foul. 'and when
Bran.don argued the call. he drew a
Ola·~-' l.:chnicol. The Cavaliers co-captain
.., ..... ., ... , II t
pid he did so intentionally to k~ep
'-' .... "Fiflllrs.,Jtr.
' fntieUo (rom getting thrown oul and
to try wtd take control of the learn.
"'lltcy have nothing to lose,
1~y 1 re going to ~lay hard unt!lt~
end," Brandon satd. " And we re m
I· 1 playoff race. This is a pme we def·
initely needed tO· win."

,

1

. .. .:• .. .

•,

"

Heard from the IRS?

.

By TOM WITHERS
- AP Sports Wrltw
.
Larry Dierilcr's career switch
was supposed 10 be • stnagile. SO flli',
though, il's been perfect.
, ,Die)'ker, who went from the
Houston Astros' broadcast booth to
their dugout, improved to 2-\) in his
. first yeir as the club's manager following a 4-3 victory over the Atlanta
Braves on Wednesday nisht. ·
Houston's second win of 1997
was as unlikely as its first: One night
after beating 1996 NL Cy Young
winner John Smoltz, the Astros ·
roughed up Greg Maddux for 10 hits
in six innings.
"They found holes," Maddux
said. ''It's not like they were hitting
a lot of line· drives. Sometimes the
ball just bounces that way."
The !:Jall is certainly bouncing the
right way for Dierker, who spent 18
years as a broJH!caster before taking
the Houston job. .
"You've got to be lucky to beat
'

Ideal lor 111-rfor - ·

.......13·.79

Cui!J.':!i'.:=., ..._the

~""" 1:-3. (AP)

!reate4
Lattice.Panels
70186

: AftRIVES AT THIRD - Afttlr llllvlnclng on Willie ON1nt'1 1ac&gt;
rlllceftv, ClnclnniU'a Delon S.nclera IITivw 81 third bHellh11d of,
the ,tmow tO Colonldo third ..Ciw Vlnfty
first Inning

~ \Y.Mntlday night's Nllonll LIIIJIIIgamJin

pOSILLSI'

SOiba. 10122 ........ '3.69
Red Volcanic Rock

\iii 1 cu. ~- -

.

Cavaliers defeat Celtics 96-87

l

--

Astros beat Braves
4-3; Marlins, Expo~
·&amp; Padres also win .

'.

Meigs diamondmen tally 5-3
·victory over Vinton Gouoty

By DAVID GINSBURG

--

~ -----......,.--- ·

,In other NL IICt#on, .

,'

In e~ra Innings,

Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs spotted Vinton County a 30 lead but stonned back to post a 53 victory in extra irlnjngs over the
Vikings.
The game was the season opener
for both teams .
·
The Vikings jumped oui to an 20 in the liftll.infiing. Josh Merker singled witll':One nut, stole second and
· moy~~ -to third on a ground· out. A
walk put runners on· first and third .
A Marauder error scored· Merker and
Coleman followed with a single to
. make it a 2-0 ~ontesl. ·
,
Vinton made it a 3'-0 game in •the
sixth on three walks and a single'by
Dafl. ·
The Vikings held thcJead head, ing into .the . top of the -seventh.
Robert Qualls srruck out leading off
. the inning ·hut' reached on a passed
ball. Jason Mullen reached on a
fielder's ' choice forcing Qualls.

'-,•

Sports
By DAVE HARRIS

•••

'

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'

'

114 •

Norlll ol

·· Puttii!Ol4'' Ian Bridge
Mn a t,WV
" - P.M~ 77M7I1

2400 EnrumAWOUJ
(Aaoil flam ICMIIt)
f) q IIII,OH
Phta• (114) ....1111

.'

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•·n.
......... N8A action,

.

•

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t.t:r=~~r'~-~. . ~~~·Meigs

. .

=--.:
'

t11roup the Weseent. Coafere~~ee 90.
had seven points and ci&amp;hi rebo11ad•
playolfl. .
•
lee,... "
in 20 minutes.
''l)y to lueu what '!elm hu the
"We've JOI~m!e JUYSihlllook
At Phoenix even the return ·of
·Horaels 95, Hawkl 84
loqm willnilll sl,!elk in the NBA;
like tbey'~e not in very aood shape · Charles Bulcley wun't enough to
At Cbarloae, Gloa Rici. siJo!lk off .
Cblc.,o? Easy auess; wrong
to be able to JCI up IIIII doin the slow down the Suns.
·
lhe flu and scOred·38 points as a.IIISMi'. Their 63 vic~ IIIII eiaht
floor," coachJerry Slom sUI in his
Bll'lclcy, a surprise starter and lotte snapped Adanta's seven-game
wins .aren't the solution.
typical self-deprecatin&amp; m1nner. : ·pJayin"i for the first time since sur- winning streak. ·
i
·
Phoenix? Almoit. TbeStins, who "Thai)luzzles you 11 this stage. l'.d feringa hip injury March 1, grabbed
Rice led all players with 42 minsWtedtheseasonO.tj,llettreldy · lwc!o~whatitwouldbelike-on 16. reboimds, but missed 12 of t• UteS and made 10 of 21 field-goal
choice, yet their seven-pme winning a bad team."
.
shols from the field and ·finished ith auempts and 16 o( 18 f~l . shots.
strea!l is currendy just the third
That doesn '!figure to happen any six poinis in 26 minutes.
~
"I was feeling pretty bad," Rice
, longest in the league.
time SQOn in Utah.
Kevin Johnson had 30 points and said, adding lhatbe spent most of lhe
The Lakers? The _Bullcts? Nope.
Karl Malone scored 23 points, ·11 assists, Wesley,Person 2l.points previous two days in bed. "I just
Nope . . ·
.
•() Bryon Russell added 19, Hornacek \ and Hot Rod Williams 16 points and tried to get a ~of rest. and it ·
II and Greg Qstenag 10 l~go with a season-high 16 rebounds for the worked."
It's the .Utah Jazz, 1 team lhathas
1
·.
to be one of the least talked, about
II rebounds. John Stoekton had I0 Suns, who have won 13 of 15 games
suceess stories of dJe past several . points and seven assists in 22 min- - including two each over Seattle
: "This fas a big one," Cowens ·
se&amp;$Qns.
,
utes.
and Houston.
said. "The guys were determined not
The Jazz upped their winning
Malone, who also had nine
Barkley . didn't seem overly to lose this game. We held a ~ly
sticak to 10 games Wednesday night rebounds, was needed for only 28 impressed by what he saw from good team to 84 points.1'
with a victory that got ridiculous ear- . minutes- well under his 38-minute Phoenix.
Pistoas 99, Spurs 91 , .
ly. Utah"-" runs of 17-2, IS.2 and average. Russell,whohitthreethree,"They have played ' temfic, but
At San Antonio, Grant Hill had .
. . 14-2 in the first half, led 67-2811 the pointers, ptaycd only 24 minutes- they are whl!t they are- the No. 7 . his ninth triple-double of the season
. break and went on to a 118-87 rout eight less than usual. The Jazz got 45 seed·(ln the West)," he said. ''If you ' with 31 points. II rebounds·and 10
of the Sacramento Kings.
points from their reserves, with ask me if I'm concerned about them assists. and Joe Dumars ·m~ a pair
"You come into these pn\es and AntOine Carr and Foster each seor- beating.us in a playoff ... you know of crucial three-point baskets as the
you ha~e to win them, so you go out ing 10 ·and Howard Eisley adding the answer to that question."
Pistons pull~ away in the founh
there and play hard," Jeff Hornacek nine. ·
·
Laken 110, Nugets SS
quatter.
said. "The bad thing abou! it is you
The Kings shot iust 35.3 percent
At Inglewood, Calif., Eddie Jones
·The Pistons moved a game ahead
get up by so many at the half that it's to Utah's SS percent, and the Jazz · scored 27 points and Nick Van Exel of Atlanta in the race for the founh ._
_almost a natural reactioil-to ciuise. also bad a 53-30 rebounding ad van- had 18 points and 12 assists as the playoff position in the Eastern Con- .
But it.'s a,win, and y~u go on to the . ·tage.
,Lakers, playing without three injured terence.· .
..
·
next-one. ·
" 1 lcind .of think they gave up," centers, moved into a firsl-place tie
Timberwolves94, Nets 89 .
· The next game for Utah (54-17) Russell said. "I know it's not going with Seattle in the Pacific Division.
At MinneapoJis, Stephon Marwill be at home Friday night against to be that easy when we g9 down
The.Lakers, who have won· five bUI')' made a season-high six threeVancouver, and the Jazz should there (April 20) and play the last straight games and JOoftheirlast 13, pointers and scored 21 points as the
move one vic~ory closer to the fran- game of the season."
played without Shaquille O'Neal, Wolves reduced their magic number
chise record of 60 wins set two .years· . In other NBA games, Phoenix Elden Campbell and rookie reserve for reaching the play 9ffs to three.
ago. .
.
defeated HoUSion 109-96, the Lakers· Travis Knigl)t. Campbell and Knight ·
Rap!On 112, 76en 90 ·
Tbe Jazz, have won IS of 16 trounced Qenver 110-SS, Charlotte were injured a night earlier in a vicAt Philadelphia, Doug Christie
games ove.rall and
of 35 home · beat Atlanta 95-84, Detroit topped tor)' at Seattle.
·
had 29 points, se.ven assists, eight
games.
San Antonio 99-92, Minnesota
However, Roben Horry returned · steals and a career-high 15 rebound$. ·
With four ,more victories, Utah downed ' New ·Jersey 94-89 and to action, playing for the first since · Damon Stoudamire had 23 points, 15
can Jock up homecoun advantage Toronto crushed Philadelphia 112- injuring his left knee &lt;in Feb. 16. He assists and no turnovers. ·

s- ••·

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COLUMBUS .' Ohio (AP) - · today forO'Brien .andat Boston Colyear in 1991, was tired a day after
O'Brien is 168-166 at BC and
Boston College coach Jim O'Brien lege's spons information office.
the Buckeyes finished tliis se&amp;Son. 235-217 in 15 . seasons of college
will-take over the men's basketball
O'Brien, 46, has coached Boston
He was 124-108 in his eight years as coaching. The Eagles ·are 41-20 in
program at &lt;;!hioState, OSU sports College . for . II · sciisons. He will
head coach.
the last two seasons and have'won 17
information director Steve Snapp replace Ra!idy Ayers, who was fired
O'Brien was inter~iewed ar Ohio or more games in four of the last five
said· Wednesday.
·
March 10:
·
·
State Monday. He was not offered years. They made it to an NCAA
Athletics director Andy Geiger
He is the second coach hired from
the .job then but was prepared to regional final four years ago and won
offc~d 0' Brien the position after
that school by Ohio State in recent . accept it, The Boston Globe -repon- . the Big East regular-season 8J)d..
interviewing O'Brien this week and years. The Buckeyes took 'Gary ed . . The newspaper cited sources tournament titles this year. ·
O'B{ien accepted, Snapp said.
Williams from BC in 1986 and he identified !inly as being close to
Boston College under O'Brien is
·:J'ndy con finned· that early Coached Ohio State to a 59-43 record O'Brien.
5-3 in the NCAA tournament and ·
today;-· Snapp said.
in thiee seasons before leaving for
Geiger also interviewed niinois eliminated one of the Buckeyes'
Q~iger planned to meet w_ith · Maryland. his alma mater. He was
State coach Kevin Stallings on cam- biggest rivals. Indiana, in 1994 and
~rs later today, l!fld O'Bnen
succeeded by Ay,ers, '
1996. The Hoosiers were the higher
'pus Tuesday.
was1:xpect~ to be in Columbus latO'Brien will face the challenge of
Geiger also is looking for a coach seed in both games.
er in lite week, possibly Thursday, rebuilding a program lliat has strung to replace tired women's coac!l Nan- · ' O'Brien's accomplishments have
Smijlp said.
·
together four straight losing seasons cy Darsch. Stanford assistant Amy come despite . BC admission· stan,
Details of'the offer were not dis- - something that had never hap. Tucker is believed to be the leading dards · that are stricte'r th•n the
· cl~. bl,lt the Bcston Herald rep&lt;in- penC!i il! the school's history. • · candidate for the job and wlis to tell NCAA's. Those standards have cost
ed IOday that it was a live-year deal.
The Buckeyes finished 10-H the Geiger by today whether she is him several pnt.eil 'recruits 'in r6cl:1it ·
the Herald said the offer is last "!t'O seasons. They f&gt;'OUnd up in . interested.
years, and ' that reponedly ·has
bel~ved to be wonh about $650,000 ninth place in· tbe Bil Ten this put
Ohio State also has interv~wed strained., his ·_relationship ~ith unia·yelir. ·
._ season.
. .
. · Detroit-Mercy's Nikita Lowry and versity·administrators.
. Telephone messages were left - Ayers, the national c:Oach of the San Diego State's Beth Bums.
.

action. I~ '

1995 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

1994 PONTIAC
GRANDAM .

4 Dr, VI, wto, 1lr cond,
AM/FM CllH, till, crulae,

4 Dr, V8, auto; .., COind;
AMJFM
tilt, crul..,

PS, PI, PW, POL

PS, PI, PW, POL

LOCAL TRADI

1 EAGLE
VISION lSI

VI, auto, elr cond,
AMIFM csu, till, crulu,

3.1L, V8, 1uto, llr cond,
AMIFM can, tilt, 'c i'ulu,
•R power, lllthlr.

Pwr -Hit, PS, PI, PW,
POL ''
!

' . •, .

a

News Hotline -~.
News·Hotline ; .
News Hotline :
News Hotline i

k'

:992·2156 {

·-

SMITH'S FAMOlJS

~LASSJ~ ·

•

CARS.
..

Sell Them Once!·. · · :

·7s'sso.;

·RBI for the Marlins.

· ·

"1 Lecal Owner!"·

''Balance Of New Car Warranty"
'

1995 FORD
CROWN VIC LX
luto,

elr

concl,

AM.IRI.C.U, tilt, cruiH,

, PW, PDL, Ieith-

1995 FORD
)W.INDSTAR ·
. IUtO, ' II;

CQr;tct~

llLIIIFII can, tilt, Crill..,
PI, PW, POL, imich'

I..,;,._

1993
TAURUS LX .·
euto, elr cond,
AIIIFII CIU, till, CruiH,

PB, 'PW, PDL, PWt
Jllttllr.

LOW MILES

1992 F"ORD
TAURUS WAGON
auto, elr cond,
Ulll!lll ca., tJH, cruiH,
PS, PW, PDI., pwr
Hilt.

-"2"- In Stock .

oo~

DODGE
·
•
DAKOTA CLUB CAB ·
luto, lit concl, AlliN
• • · tilt, crulu, PS, PB, .
PD'-, MARK ·ua

~Ne~s poiicy- Ohlinger 'places at gymnastics competition
shi~ :?~~~~~!~t~~~;e 1~r ~~~~e:;

Times-Senti.ne! l'lill not aecept weddings after 60 days frpm the date of
the event. .
.
. Weddings submlued after the 60. day .deadline will appear during t~e
week · i~ The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
anicies i11 the !IOCiety section must
t)C subrliitied within 60 days · of
oecurrence.. All binhdays · mu.st be
subr!litted ~ithin 60 days of the
. occ;urrence. '\ ·
All material submitted for publication is silbje~No editing.

Micheal Cory Ohlinger, son of
· Miohael ' H. · Ohlinger and Diana
. Smith Ohlinger, Baltimore, Md ..
former area residents, was the winner of the Maryland State Gymnastics Championship on - ~till rings;
class 6, age 7, and ti&lt;4.for founh
place int~e stale on vault.
•
He is a member of the USA Gym,
· nastics J~nior Olympic Training
Program and 'h~s been training since
age 4, · ·
·
· Last summer he auended Woodward Gym,nastics camp located
north · of Harrisburg. Pll. ~where

Tile Community Calendar ~
publlllaed as a free service 'to .non·
prdflt JI'OUJIS wishing to announce
meetlaJ Qd special events. The
~nditr II .not dealped to pro·
-te sales or tunci•ral!oen ·of any
Jype. ltenu· are printed as space
pe1111lts.and cannot be paranteed
to nan ai(Mdlk numbet: of days.
'IUURSDAY .
. . POMEROY -- PERl meeting ,
noon 1'11ursday1 S~nior Citizens
Center. Call 992-2161' for luncheon
re~t:rvations .
' ,
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
Republican Committee meeting
1'11mda:r. '7:30 p.m . .at C.leton
ScllooJ, All ~ic:lns welcome.

.

•

.

Olympians such as Amanda BOrde~,
Dominique Dawes and Jaycte
Phelps train. This summer ll!lt~hael
will be attending the International ·
Gymnastics Camp located in the
Pocono MQuntalns of Pennsylvania,
·north of New York City. ,
The camp has helped trail1 such
champions as Kip .Sinrons, Chainey .
Umprey, Jair Lynch and Shannon

"Showroom Clean'· . ·.
4 Door, We Sold New, Auto, A/C, PmAiAr
CD Player, Uke New.

6 400 Low Miles.,

Miller:~

. · Michael Ohlinger is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High School , and
Diana Smiih Ohlinger gradu.ted
from Meigs High _School .in 1975' .
.
'

-~

SATURDAY
.· ' · · ·
RA,CINE -- American :Legion, Post
STIV~SVILLE •• Stiversville •
602, .busiaess meeting, 6:30 p.m. Commumty Church, Ponl~d., hymn
with dinner to follow at the hall.
sing, 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
.
:.
·
~CINE
-Red
Brush
Church
of·
RUTI.AND -- ~utland Township
Trustees, Thursd~y. 6 pm. ~t fire sta- Christ Saturday, 7:30p.m. and Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. with Denver
tion.
Hill, F,oster W. Va. speaking.
FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE .: Olive Town- .
SALEM CENTER-- Star 9range
Ship, Friday, 6;30 p.m. at the !own- · 778 'and Sw Junior Granp 878 .
ship building.
Saturday, gran1e hall, ¥em Ce~ter.
Potluck supper. -6:30 p.m.; mcetmg,
• . EAST.MEios ... Spring revival. 8 p.m.
Soutli Bethel New Testament
MIDDLEPOllT -- DAY, 91h.DisChurch, silver Ridse. 7 p'.m. Friday
through Sunday. Cllris Lonureu of trict meeting, II a.m. luncheon,
Celebratron Center. PllrltersburJ, business meetinJI :30 p.m Saturday
. speake' Special music.
at Chapter 53, Route 7· below Mid•
dlepor:t.
.
.

· ·

f1

·

. /,

•

Only 35,000 iow.miles, Leather inte1ribr,
·Automatic Climate Control, Loaded

"Granite · ·

. HARTFORD ·. -- Mini-gospel
singing jubilee, Saturday. ~ p.m at
Father's House Church in Hanford.'

•

I

'

Sand Beige Metallic, Leather Interior,
24,000 Low Miles, New car warranty.

'

"Shows T.L.C."
;.;...,_...,,_

.STIVERSVILLE
•The
·Stiversville Community Church,
hymn sing, Saturday, Singers wel~ome .

.

(

Mr..Smith's Qemo, only 6,000 miles,
CD player, leather interior.

SUNDAY
.
REEDSVILLE -- Planning session, Rtveiview Community Vaca- ,
rjjon Bible school, 2 p.m Sunday, at
Reedsville
United
McthQdist
church. All churches in Reedsville
and Long Bottom communities
invited to send representatives.

'
)

•

· ~ A/C, Sunroof, Power WindoWs, Spojler, ·
· "'
·
· · 5-Speed, Low Miles ·

-__,..·-· -· ---=-co·mrrlunity - calendar·--~--

..

. ;:

I

~

TWO IN STOCK

•

••

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·:.~-----~ilurrjt·h'·l' we.'i..,...:;:.,..1Y,:~r"

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,•

For Your

(Continued. from PageS)

advanced on a ·passed. ball, and
Caminiti scored the tying run on
Mark Grace drove in ·an three
Wally Joyner's sacrifice fly.
Cubs runs with a homer and a douOne out later, ·Gomez who ignitble. ..
·
ed the Padres' 12-5 victory Tuesday
Dodgen 5, Pbillies 1
wjth a homer. singled to left ~eld off
At Los Angeles, Raul Modesi hit
reliever Toby Borland.
a three-run homer-iii the first inning
Sean Bergman recorded one out
to back seven strong innings from
.
Hidco Nomo.
' for the victory.
·John Olerud, twice gave the Mets
Mondesi, who went homerlcss in
a lead thi:y could not hold. hitting a
79 spring training at_-bats, went 3two-run homer in the sixth inning
for-4 with four RBis as the Dodgers
and
then an RBI single in the 12th.
got their first win of the season alter
being shut out by the l'!lillies on
. opening day.
Nomo allo\ved four hits in seven ~Sports briefs-innings with eight strikeouts.
- Basketball
Mike L!ehenhul homerei:l' for
CHICAGO CAP) Brian
Philadelphia's only run.
Williams. a free . agent center after
Darre rclfon got _put of a two- optin~ out of a $2.5 million contrnct
on, two' o I jam in the eighth and · with the Los Angeles Clippers,
I I
(Continued from Page 5)
pitched a rfcct ninth for his lirst signed with the Chicago Bulls for the
save since 994.
remainder oi' the seas9n. Williams,
"-~_ sas City 2; and Toronto 6, Chica- top of the ninth.
· · , 6 M · 18 5
""''
1'wms.
. re I'levers G-~gg 01 son and
e Gamel's 27. av.:raged 15.8 points. and 7.6
go 1.
·
At Siin D1eji'it.' Chris
, Yankees 16, Mariners Z
Greg Swi~ll combmed to Jl.vc up .RBI single with two QUts in the 12th reboUnds lilt' the Clippers last season.
Basketball
Martinez homered in his first . th~ runs 18 . the top of the " 1 ~ helped Son Diego complete a twoPH"OENIX
(AP) ·...., Charles
. t~ree at-bats' and drove in a career- mnmg-as th7 .n~ers took a 5-4 I~=~ run rally.
.
..
high seven , runs. Traded by the But J?an Mtceh., who .gave. up four
Ken Caminiti drew a lea!loff ' Barkley, sideli.ned. since huning his
hip March I, returned to the Hous-'
10
5
Marinc;rs,to New York after the 199S runs Tuesday loss, came on 10 walk off loser Ricardo Jordan and
ton
Rockets' line11p for 'a 109-96loss
season, he hit a three-run homer '" surrender Greg Colbrunn's two-~n, moved up on Archi Cianfrocco's
to
Phoenix.
Barkley had six points
the fir.it, a two-ru.n shot in the third .two-out homer In the bottom ol the pinch-hit single. Both ·runners
and 16 rebounds in 26 minutes.
,..d u solo homer in the fifth off Scutt etghth as Mmnesota went up 6-S.
·
San&lt;,lers. who was makmg hts AL
' Oriola 4, Royalsl •
.. . ._ . ._ _ _ _ _ _..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
debut. ·
·
Cal Ripken, playing third base in
Maninez got fou cha~es to an opener for the li_rst ,time si~ce
)lec(iine the 13th player in history to 1982, saved a run With a spal'khng
hit · four homers in a game, but · play. doubled. tw1ce, homen:d and
failed.
.
walked; . ·
..
''It was just one or those things
Followtng the game at Camt;len
tha~:happel\o .. Maninez said. "You Yards._ Ripken . signed a contract
I"' can't try to'do it." . '
extenston,that vtnually assures he'll
;
. ~a ,~' · .
.
_, finish his career with the Orioles...,..
'Q1e Mar1ilers traded Manmcz to the only club he has played for.
· Ne'f Yen befcxe the I996 liOIISOII
Jimmy Kcl' pitched six strof!g
· because the)' couldn't afford to keep inninp in his Baltimore debut. Koy,
him"alons with theif other top play- who signed 8s a free a&amp;cnt, allowed'
ers.::.
.
. ·
no c.ned runs, four hits and a walk
. ·'fie's been relaxed all SJiri?g and to improve to 7-0 in eight career
switfginJ the bat reallY. w~ll, ' Yan- openinl·day starts. . ' ' .
.'
keeS:manase~ Joe 1'ol;re s&amp;~d. .
·liJae JaJS t, W1IMe Sal
~ .
. ~)ldy Petuttc, ~ 21-game wmner .
RoJer Clemens earned his fii'SI
for the World Series .chlmJliOU lilt careenictorY with the Blue Jaysseasc)n, helped New York brelk a his other 192, along with lllree AL
fiv6,pme losin&amp; sttuk in~ Kint- Cy Yoqna ~warda, came in 13 years
donie lllld aave ~Yin~ .)lilt their · with Boston. He pitched a six-hiller.
thiril: win in 18 • - in Sattle.
llrul:k out ni~~ellld walked one in the
· :_ Twlal7, Tlpn 6
.
AL's lint Complete pmc this season.
Min~ l!ll1ed 2-0. for? the
Benito Slllliqo put host Toronto
first time sinc:e 1987. Mlfty Cordo- lhud 3-1 ill the fourth with hit tii'SI
va ·i·qac-outllillflc ICOI'IICI Pat Meal'- AL hit, a two,run homer off Wilton
'I
e• ia the ninth io win i!, · .
Alvarez. Orttndo M«ced. ~r
RK:k ~j..... 101. the VICIO?' Jllue Jays lftCOiiier, br'oke ~n the
•
clerPite JIVJIII .up Miill W~beck S pme-widla line-nat double m the
IIIDOliPOIIT
11211127
211 N.IIOOND AV!.
.....-lyiiiJ homer fill' Detroit In the ICmO.

Rolls

Expect qqallty £ars • Beady

RC!C!bok """" __.

•

'- MUCH MOR.I

1994 DODGE
INTREPID ES

AL games.

•

csu,

'

pitches.
d0.,.
~
.
Elsewhere · '" the Natmnal
1..# Smith, baseball's career 58\'es
League, it was Monircal4, St. Louis leader, worked a perfect ninll) for his
I; t;lorida 4, Chicago 3; Los Ange- . first save since June 28.
.
les 5; Philadelphia I; and San Diego
Rodriguez doubled, tripled and
6, the New York Mets S in 12 homered.
innings.
-Marlins 4, Cubs,J
Expos 4, Cardillllls 1
At Miami, AI Leiter and three
At Montreal, 'Jeff Juden allowed relievers combined o'n a five-hitter as
two"hits in seven innings in his first Florida improved to 2-0 for the first
stact · since 199S, and Henry time.
Rodriguez went 3-for-4 for the ' l,.citer allowed four hits and two
Expos.
ruris .. in five innings for his 50th
Ghris Widger, hit his second •. career win. Robb Neil pitch~ a percareer home run for Montreal, which feet ninth for his first save. ,
droj)ped the defending NL i:)ntral . ·Aorida's Gary Sheffiel~ who
champions to 0-2.
signed a six-year, $61 milli~ conSt. Louis, which got only two tract extension Wednesday, doubled,
hitst,has scored only two runs in its walked twice and scored a run.
firs~: two games - both on wild
· Jeff Conine went 3-for-3 with an

H~nor

.j? ..

OSU .names.O'Brien's men's cage coach.

~L

Local

The Meigs Local School District Snow~en, all A's; Kelly Spaulding,
Grade 2: Andrea J;Janrum , Keilah Venoy-all A's. Bryce Davis, Weston Heather Kerns , Sean·· Phi Ips,:'
has released, by school, the names Allison Story, Marcus Ward, Tara Jacks, and Belhany King, all A's; Fife, Cody Hysell, Amanda Jeffers, Jonathan Preast, and Joshua~
Alima ,Compson, Nikkie Ginther: Jordan Shank, Abby Stewan, and Williams:
of students on the honor 91ls for the Wyatt, all A's. ·
Grade· 3: Miranda Beha, all A's;~
Grade Eight:
Amanda Miller, Ti111J11y Spires, Alison WoodS'.
third grading period.
l.
Cara-Ash, Chasidi Biggs, Joseph Joshua Taylor, and M'organ Wolfe.
Founh Grade ~ McCarley/Deem) : · Rachael Gardner, Joshua Slater.~
MEIGS HIGH SqliloL .
Blazer, ~
·ck Bolin: AII A's; JenGrade 3: Josh Bolin, Sarah Clare Sisson, all A's; Shawn Day. Joshua Spires, William Taylor, and ~
·. · ';
nifer Brickl •. Reatha Bush, 'Mari- Eskew, Adam Humphreys, and A.J. Dickens, Justine Dowler, l;ddie Roben Wine:
.~ .
, Grade 9
Grade 4: Peggy Duff, all A's; Jodi!
Steve Beba, Be\!l'rly liutd,tte, anne Car , Sarah Clifford, Andrew Sarah Dawn Jenkins. all A's; Valerie Fife, Cory Freeman, · Bmndon
Rusty Marsruill , kyle Smiddie, Jere- Davis, Michael Day, Tiffany Day, Diddle, Carita Gandner, Tysoq · Grover, Jesse Haggy, Maggie Mold- Donohue, Cassie Lee, Carl · Noel, ~
. ------miah Smith, Wesley Jboene, Lori Chris Dodson, Jennifer Fife, Hollie George, Briuany Hysell, and.Taryn en, Regan Shuler. Deidra Strong , · and Brad Runyon. ·
,~
Kelli Tattersori. Anthony Tennant,
Grade 5: Maegan Dodson, all A's;•.
· Mr. and 'Mrs. Bob Mills hoive Thom~on, All ,at's; Meghan A'l'is, Griffith, Stephen Grutser, Michael Lentes.
Kevin Butcher, .Edward Doug Dill,:
!'tturned · to , tfieir •Meigs .. eounty • , Keith B_arrett, ~ta~ey Brewer; Metis- !{ammon, Ashley · Hannahs, Holly
Grade 4 (Evans): Renee Bailey, · lenni Young, and Jilfi Young: , .
Fourih
Grade
(Van
Matre):
BritGates, Sarah Lee, and · Holley ~
Jesse
· home fQilowing a visit wi their sa DaVIS, Martone Halar, . Mtchelle Hannan, Abby Harris, Alison Hays, 'Ashley Baylor, Madison King, and
son-in-law and daughter, .Mr. and Hatt, Brawn J:Ierman,_ Enc!c John- Sarah Hous~r. B. · J. Kennedy, Adam Snowden, all A's; Shane . tany Cremeans , Jason. DeMoss, Williams.
.
•·:
Trevor Depoy,' and Man Krawsczyn.
Grade -6: Jami Hayes,' Jessica:
Mrs. Tom Foreman and fami in , son, Jeffrey Ohv~~· Juhe Spaun, an~ .Andrea Krawsczyn. Michael Lam- Collins.
·: .:
Macon, Ga.
James Stanley.
• "
bert, Carrie Lightfoot, Beth McMilGrade 4 (Robinson): Sarah all A's; Jerri Bentley, and Justin Preast.
••t
DeMoss
.
.
· . Tom j,s onrthe lt\lernet a was · Grade
Jan, Derek Miller, Bea Morgan, All Wilkes, lall A's; fustin Coleman, Ben
'
.
I Fifth Grade (Lowery): Kara Buff- . BRADBURYELEMENTA~Y ~
really surprise~ wbiie the Mi s were ., :.Lacy Banks, Tricia}'~vis, Meli,~· .A's ;, Mel.issa Pauley, Jessica Powell, Hatfield. and Miranda Sit:npkins.
'
· • . ..
~'
lhe,re . that. a. correspondent n the sa Holman, rramra O_Dell, All As; Shai\IIOn Price, All A's; Justin Rob. Grade 5: Chrissy Miller, all A's; ington , Nicole Burman , Thurien SCHOOL ·
J:ifth Grade-All }..'s-Kennyl
computer system by the 0 me of . Jen~1fer Arthur. Krtste~ Bro~n, son, Bradley Searles, Scon Shank, Tyler Barnes, Randy Huoson, Pam Caner, James Ellison, Ryan Hannan,
Brad Frecker put the entire dition Mehssa Dar_nell. Ryan Dtll, Jesstca All A's; Brooke Smith, Alben Rupe ,. Miranda , Stewan, Corey Xantha Smitb , Jordan Williams. Carsey, . Ryan St!,lban. A-B l;lon~:· .
Angela Wilson .
·
· Roll-David Boyd, Page Bradbury,::
of a former Meigs County newspa- Evans, Damel ~annan, Justm Jef- Stearns. Ashley . Thomas, Trish Vaughan, . ·
.
Fifth
Grade
(Stanley):
Jaynee
Jamie Chapman, Katie ChiJtjs, Jes~i::'
per OQ tile Internet.
fers, B~cky Johnson, Jessie~ J?hn- Walker, Stephanie Wigal, All A's;
Grade 6: Brook Bolin and MalloThe newspaper was the Feb.' 24; · son, Krisuna Kenn~dy, K~lh Ltght- Coqnie Willet.
ry King, all. A's; Stephanie Barr, Davis, and Brandi Thomas, all A's; ca Curfman, Ryan Frazier, Heid••:
1897 edi(iolt of the Tribune-Tele- foot, Tara 1'\lorm~n, Alyson Patter:
Ashley Banrum, Melissa Cremeans, Ty Ault, Jodi Barrett , Michael Gilmore,Ashley Hallev, Raymond:;
SALISBURY ELEMENTARY , Hollie Ferrell, Crystal Jacks, Jessica . Davis, Cqunne.y Kennedy, and Paul Hess, Kim ,Johnson. Shl!ena ' King,;;
graph ; · wlt!ch ·-,~as . printed in · son, Stefani Pickens, Ryan Rams.
Jonathan Larkins. Ashley• Payne,.,
Pomero.y,. Qob h8d -n....:;. ·print., out bur~, Fr.anco Rmn4no, R~bekah
' • SCHOOL
,
Justice, Jenni Priddy, Allison Will .
1
Sixth
Grade
(Davis)
:
Kayte
Erica Poole, Heather Young.
:·
OraGe one: Amy Barr, Kyle Willianson.
·
aged newsp_a, Sml th • B··J· Sm1th • .Georgtana
.
several·Pilges from ·th~•u•l'
Davis, Michelle Drenner,. Heather .· . Sixth Grade-All A's-Carrie Darst,;,
pet and.'brought ,t.hf:m. home wtth . Spears, .Teremy . Thll,W)!S• Bndget Boggs, Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee
DH-'I&gt;rimary: Bryce Laudermilt
,him. Tom be!i~ves thai the lnt!rnet lli Vaughan, an!Uonathan.Wyatt,.
Kennedy, Trenton McClintock, and
LD-Primary: Michael Hudson. Hysell, 'Katie Jeffers, Jeremy Roush, Casey Dunfee, Emily· Story, Beth·'
printi~g of the ',newspaper came . G~Me II ·
.,, .
.
. Valerie Schoeppner, ·all A's; Laura Barbara Jones, Mikie ·Lavender, and Michele Runyon.. all A's; Wilfong. A~B Honor . Roll-Sara:,
fmm the state of California and posM~hs~a Barrett, M!~lle B_tssell, Fields, Heather Graham, Jared Grig- , Michael McDonald, and Matt Slater. Andrea Burde(te, Jassiline Caner, Casto, Rachel Chapman, Tirzah::
sibly Frecker who put it on the svs- He1d1 Legat, M1ch~el Letfhett, gs, ·Kirk Legar, Michelle ScarLD-Intennediate: ·scott Adams, . Maria Drenner, Candice Fetty, Jason Dodson.zach Gilkey, Lucy . Hower-: ·
ton, Andy Hysell, Kathy . Iones,,
·· . f
fr M . C · ·, Nancy Whaley, Mehssa W1lhams, brough, and Daniel Lawson.
R,ebecca Houser, AliCia Pickens, Murdock, and Brandon Ramsburg.
Sixth Grade (Hubb;ird): Jennifer. · Brooks Johnson, Will Kauff, Abram:
.tern ts .m:merl~ : IF etgs ou,nty. . Sandra .Young, All A's; Stephanie
Grade two: Shauna Clark and Carrie Walker.
Zielinski, all A's; Cassie Braun, Sayre, Brandy Shea, Carla Smith. ~
· Th---i,fddl '.' n ,·a· h' s h0 1 Bunon, Jerica Clark, Kelly Dalton, J~nnifer Smith; all A's, Andy Gar·
1
Amanda Fetty, Robyn Freeman, and · Tashia Stewart, Angel Stone.-:
.1. e. A
h~g ••~ ~
Ginger · Darst, Leil~na Davis, nes,. Anthony McAngus, Nathan
POMEROY ELEMENTARY
1
15
Stephanie Story-Schwab, Natasha.;
Ben See,
SCHOOL
A u~m SSOJ;I ll!lD I ""~"'ng , s Brandie Elliott, Enily Eowler, Jason McClure, Brandon Pearson, Bradley .
· .:
L.D. (Stump): Adam Wise
, Tackett, Hannah Woolard.
offenng three . scholarships to chtl: Frecker, Dnnielle Grueser, Conney Ramsburg, Trista Randolph, and
Kinderganen: Chad Bonnett ,
.
Kindergaten-AII
'S~s-,RucheJ
·
M.H.
(Welling):
'
G
ene
'Buckley,
dre~ of ~lu~m . ·
.
Haley, D\)wney K'lnnedy, Steven Bradley Soulsby. · ·
, ·Deanna Cundiff, Ryan Cunis, Henry
-Apphcattons are av&amp;Jiable: fron;t McCullough, George r.:1iller, Me lisGrade three: Travis Butcher, Doerfer, Daniel duPiantier, Emily · Joauana Fetty, Katie Kibble, .Jamie Davis, J.T. Evans, Action Facemyer,o
th~ trustees of each scholarship anCI sa Reeves', Scoitie Seifers, Matthew Brooke O'Bryant, and Christopher Fields, Ashley Freeman, Sarah Hub- King, Randall Mahon, and Ruth Amanda -(,lilkey, S~awn Hawley,~
·· Tiffany Jo'fmson, Morgan Kennedy,:;
. must be ret.umed to the respecuve Sellers, Wendy Shrimplin, Amanda VanReeth.
bard, Douglas Jenkins, Jessica Jew- · Snyder.
Stephanie Lewis, Ashley Mayes,:
trustees .by Apnl 30 along With Smith, Sabrina Smith, Amy Smith,
Grade four. Grant Arnold, Emily ell, Thomas Klein, Kevin LauderAndrew : O'Bryant, Demetria Pear-;
HARRISONVILLE
ELEMENacc~_ptance from .the college of Sascha Sperling, Jonathan Stewan, Ashley, Megan Garnes, Ashley Ora- ·milt, Ricky Laudennilt, Branigan
son, Jesse · Pullins, Kerri Vanreel\1.::
TARY SCHOOL
chmc~.. . .
.
d Matthew Williams:
ham, and Ross Well.
Long, Aaron Oliphant, Alexandria
·
Ehgtbthty requirements for the bad 12
·
Grade five: Nikki Butcher, Stacy Patterson, Erin Perkins, Calee
Grade 1: Talisha . Beha, Chelsey Christi Will.
Sljsan G. Park Scholarship are a 3.5
r 1 e 'f
ern
d
C'ndy
.
Pullins,
and
Derrik
Randolph.
.
Reeves,
Randall
Reeves
,
Kelsey
Noel,
·
Brittany
Preast;
and
Daniel
1 or '
&lt;lr above grade point average, an
en.m er
.1
s 1 b c · I'
·
nfticial'grade trailscti"' and recent H~wkms: Betsy Houdashelt,,L1beny
Grade si.x: Meghan Haynes and Sauters, De.van ou s y, at\ m Runyon, all A's; Natausha Adams,
"' .
. ~·
C
Kmg, Enn KrawsczyM Leshe Pllfk· Jennifer Walker, all A's; Marc Barr, Swartz, and Matthew Will.
.
· Jonathan Black, Cory Gates, Nicole
Hill, Carrie Phelps, Anthony Wer-.
plioto.
Trustees
are
Jeaneue
roo
s
s
·
R
d
c
th'
ll
s
d
Zi
Jonathan
Diddle,
Ashley
Eblin,
First
Graae
(Deem):
Chelsea
tl!omas, 784' Chestnut St .. Middle- er, tacte ee • yn t .an y, . npon; Judy Sauer Croo,s, 536 High ma Spears •. Beverly Stewan, Ric~~ Juley . Eblin, Ashley Fields, Jon Hicks,. Casey Hubbard, Bradley vey, Ashely Wervey, and Han'\a
.
.,
st: , Middlepon, and Nancy Roller . Yost: All As; Scott Autberson, Rik.i Halar, C.J. Haye, and Shawna Man~ Jones, Molly Sq~ith, Steven Stewan. Williams
Grade
2:
Daniel
Bookman,
Cary
.
· .
.
and Caitlyn Thomas, all A's; John
C.ale, 342 s . 6th Ave., Middlep'ort. . Barr.mger, Chad Panrum,__ Sherry . ley.
Baker, Lisa
f
d
C
A
Cl
h
C
k
B
· The McComas-Moore Scholarur e, my one • . asst Y o . Blankenship, Danielle . Dill. Ashley Browning; Sarah Lantz, .·
ship require.s the recipient to major fey, James Dean, Robm Donohue,
SALEM CENTER ELEMENHopper, Alex Johnson, K}'le Kin- Cayla Lee, Cayle Well, an&lt;) Celeste
in . education. Trustees are Judy • Jenmfer Garey,_Scott George, Tara
TARY SCHOOL
nan, Roy · Laudermilt, .Kenny Taylor, all A's; Alicia Butcher,
Arnold, 625 l/2 Chestnut St., Mid- Grueser, Whttney Haptonstall.
·Grade One: Ryan Barrett, Joshua . Lunsford, Corey Mayes, Cassandra Amber Haning, A.J. , Haning,
.'
dlepon; Joseph A: Young, 40225 Sl_l. , Aaron Hockman, Alyssa Hoffman: · Burnem, Corinna Cross, and Donald Patterson, Jill Reeves, Jordan Smith,
~
(j92, Pomeroy; Carol King Brewer Rtcky Hoover, Joshua Howard, Edd1 Neal, all A's; Natane' Adams, Dusty and Megan Still:
.
arid _Jerry Vanlnwagen.
.
How~_ry, Robyn Hunt, Misty Jeffers. Adkins, David Davis, Nathaniel
First Grade (Johnston): Michael
. The Crawford, Gray, . Lewis Shawn KtQg,Chns Umben, Eward ·· Davis, Jamie Stites, and Lance Ball, Megan Johnson, Jessica .Lilley. .
Scholarship reqyires ,the recipient 10 Landaker, T1mmy 11ewts, Conme White.
.
Drew Long, Lindsay McKinney,
live in Middlepon a~d the chairper- Mash , Jess1~a Mcfilroy, Bra~d~
Gra~e Two: Samanth~ Sho11tz, . Jesse Mowery, . Gregory Musser• ..
son is
Miller Beaver, 457 . Meadows, Mtchelle M1ller, Patnck All As; Anthony Da~IS, Rene Travis Roseberry, and Amorette
Beech
Mull., FranWn Pierce,-Siacey Price, . EdmoQds, Terry ~tght, Cam McKin- Salser-all A's; Matthew. Billings,
. Roben Qualls, Chris Roush; Jodie ney, Brandy Nottmgham, Raymond Makayla tunis, Travis Eblin,
Kelsey fife, Grant Phillips, Morgan
Sisson, Amber Slaven, Janel Reynolds, and James Wallace.,
G~-.g~_ Bu,t-"'
· G[~Thr.ee· :UcAAI'Y ·\YllberiAII · Powell, Fe!icia, Sec, and Kaylyn
~.St •l!ftUIII!II""i\l:gabrigt'lt' an'lt"'Kelly :-Spradling;...·• · ... •r-· '
.,.. ~..,.,. · ·
·
Napper.
Second
Grade
.
·(Carpenter)
:
to Clirolvl1 ' 'Pi,~rce
Grade Four: Zachary Bush, Heather Elam, Kayla Grover, Jerod
&lt;J'Io~·
Randy Han, Kayla Icenhower, Kim Wyatt, Tiffaney Zornes- all A's;
fo~
Reynolds,
am~ Curtis Varian, All ~achary Arms, Angela Carter,
Orad~ Seven .
· the
. ' $'3 and alumni
A's;
Jeffrey
Baughmaa, l!ric Meghan Clelland, Mark Cozart,
Abbot!,
cari 111ake contributions -to any of the A's;'Carrie
Cross,
Amber Hand- Ashley DeMoss, Rebecca Klein, ·
Burnem,
Julia
Andrew Baker,
Baylor,
scholarship pro)ecls. .. ·
Supercharged 3800 Engine, Power Moon Roof,
Joshua Black, Eric~ Bryan, panny Iey, Aaron lhle, Glena Jarvis, Aman- Ronnie Po)Yell, Christoplier Runy~
. ~- . ---'!.,'-. ~ 'l . . '
da
Johnson,
and
Samantha
Pierce;
on,
Ashley
Russell;
Matthew
Silly.
· Leather, Cassette &amp; CD Player
·
Steve Boso;&lt;·a forii\er studei\1 at Buffington; Jessica C..IJdi·ff; Jessica
Grade Five: Josh !iay and Jessica ers,. Britnee Sauters, and Stephen
Davis, Rickie Dill, OS'hald Eakins,
Southern High.School lind ~ current Delana Eichin'i:er, Amtier Ellis, Smith, All A's; Joanna Bowersock, Will. ·
student at River. Valley High School,· Heather Fry, -Zach Glaze, Tasha -Rosie Eggers, Aubrie Kopec, and
Second Gmde (Jeffers/Hoffman):
has now been returned to his home Green, Amber Haning, Erin Hanson, Brittany Powers. ·
.
Randy Collins, l{eather Fink, Nakita
following an extensive hospital stay J. W. Lee, Joh11 Le,ntes, Joshua
Grade Six: Lindsay Bolin, Ashley Fitzpatrick, and Counney ~aggy, all
at .the result ·of injuries received in a . · Lynch, Antohiette M~lintic, fl!ick Colwell and Kelly · Johnston, All A's; Counney !;Jarrett, Cectha Core,
4 Dr, 4 wheel drive, cassette player, power windows,
car accident while he was enroute to McLaughlin, · Richard Michael, A's; Lo;etta Darst, Megan Haefner, .,. Weston Counts, Evan Dunn, . Justin
SLE Pkg, Automatic, Loaded. , . _
school last January. He's a grandson
Amanda Moore, Erin Moore, Krista! Johnson, and Rachael Mor- Harper, Sar,h Jeffers, Dayton Jenkof upriver's Ann Boso.
ins, Glenn Johnson, Scotty Musser,
Chelsea Moss, Don Nye, Mindy ris.
Dru Reed, Casey Richardson, C~ris,
I
.
.
'
I
'
.
O'Dell, all A's.'
•
tee'na
Young.
RUTLAND ELEMENTARY
. Don't forget, S'unday we go back
·Jarol Ogdin, Krystal Pennington,
Third Grade (Haley): Nathan Jef- ·
SCHOOL
into Daylight S;lVings ii!fle. At 2 . Autumn Phillips, Beth Phillips,
Grade 1: Jacol1 Barnes, Enily fers and Jake Kennedy, .all A's; Wes
a.m. yo~'f'\1 suppo§ed ~o mov~ your · Kristy Puc~ett, MistY. P~ckett, . all .
Davis,
Katie Doczi, Bethany Gibbs, Ault, Brandy Baker, Heidi Griffith,
clocks ahead one hour: Ns they say A's; Jennifer Reeves, 1\:f.ehssa R•ch2 Dr, Power Windows, Cas$ette, Grand Effects Pkg.,
in spring 'With ·the tiri\e change we . rqond, ~ichelle · Ri'ffie, . Jessica Seth J~hnson, and Jesse Mullins, all Jilian Jenkins, Josh Kennedy, Adam •
.
Balance of New Car Warranty.
,"spring f91'Ward". You're gonna lose Roush, Leslie Runyoh~ Joe Rupe, A's; Lindsey Houser, Kori Priddy, ·Pines, and Miranda Young.
Third Grade '(Hensler): Whitney
an hour but I know you'll keep smil- . Mary · Schultz; Travis :Siders,. Marc Cassady Willford, and Keith
Thoene,
Jacob Venoy,. Joshul!ing.
Smith, , Rebecca Smith, Amber Williams.

10:

2 Dr, 11110, .., ' cond,

n

.

...

otthe
Bend

•

CIMBIIIIUtiDAN
r 1 r • Will r

•

...,.,_lfOY •Middleport, Ohio

Ol'llo

Jazz rout Kings ·to get -1Oth strai-g ht win

'=

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.

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..

·

~. Aprl3, 1117

·

--------

Racine LJ.Aited Methodist
_Women :hold.meeting · ,
The program, "Living in Easter Time" was led by Sharon Hall at the
Man;h ow:etina of the Racine Uaited Methodist Women.
She lix:uscd on the resurrection of Jesus to understand more deeply
the fullness of the resurrection mystery when we,compare and contras.,..
the accounts of the resurrection and identify die reaction of the women
. and the disciples.
.
,
/ A table arranged with a wooden cross, open Bible and spring branch' es was set in the center of the group. After an opening prayer, the mem' . bers sang the hymn "He iose.~ Resurrection. passages from all four
Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John .. were read by Martha Dudding, .
Vici Ault, Alice Wolfe,Ch~s Hill and Marilyn Bogard respectively. The ·
program then in:Volved silent individual reflection. on scripture, sharing
and group reflection, review of scripture content and relating resurrection stories to our life today.
.
·
,The program clo d with prayer b)l the leader.
President Lee
the business meeting which opened with everyone repeating the Lord's
cr. The UMW Purpose was repeated.
. ~ris Hill gave' the secretary's report and thank-you notes were read
from Margery Roush and the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital. . '
.·
· ·
·
(:lara Mae Saigent gave the treasurer's repon and the "hat and mitten
fund" was collected.
·
' ,
Plans were finalized for the Alpha Delta Kappa dinner to be served
by the group April 15.
'
1\vo tables will be reserved for the Racine Aower Festival on April .
26. Church members are asked to bring baked items to the Racine park
~~~a~
.
.
,
.
A comforter made 'by the members was given to the Allen Wilson
family and $100 was sen to the Meigs Cooperative Parish for the flOod
victims.
•
Marilyn ·Bogard gave CPI)rt on the new UMW reading books. She
will also be. attending the chool of Mission at Ohio No!them in July.
1..ee J,.ee will attend._the . strict UMWretreat at The Plains chur.ch April .
26. She and Martha D ding attended the installation meeting of a
newly organized unit at
Ches 're U.M. church. The Conference
President installed.
It should be noted that a Memorial service for Frances Roberts and
Dorothy McK~nzie was presented at the February meeting.- '
1\venty-two Easter flowers were delivered to the ill and shut ins
March 20.
.
.
An Easter motif was c~rried out for the serving of refreshments by
Etta Mae Hill anll Chris Hill. Get well cards were signed.
.
Attending were: Melissa Harkness, Karen Walker, Margery Roush,
Gladys Shields, C~ris Hill, Clara Mae Sargent, Etta Mae Hill, Manha
Dudding, Margie West, Donna Matson, Sharon Hall, Alice Wolfe, Vici
Ault, Marilyn Boga~d, Brenda Hill and Lee Lee.. ·
The next meeting will be April 28 at 7:30p.m. at the church.

'·

;AprU Ral y .discussed
by D of A Council
. Rally plans were · discussed when Chester Council 323. D~ughters of
America, met recently at t~e hall.
·
· •
, Members balloted on six applicants who wil going into the organizati'on
at tlie springs rally to be held at the Senior Citizens Center on April 19.
Members were reminded that they arc to take g,ifts for the tables at the rally.
. Esther Smith presided at the meeting whi~h ·opened in ritualistic form. It
·was reponed that Ruth Smith had hand surgery at the Holzer Medical Cen- ·
ter. The meeting time was changed to 7:30p.m Letter were read by Beulah
Maxey and Betty Young. ,
·
Refreshmenfs were served by Evereu and Charlotte ,Qrant ·and Dori~
Grueser. Quanerly birthdays were observed with a cake baked by Joann
Ritchie. Sc~ted at the honorees table were Bob and Joann Ritchie. Opal Hollon, Mary Barringer, Marcia Keller. Others attending ,were Elizabeth Hayes,
Delons Wolfe, Jean . W~lsh, Julie. Cunis. Goldie Frederick. Helen . Wolf.
Laura Nice, Mary Holter, ,Erma Cleland and Thelma White.

Chester AkJmnf·Ass_
ociati-.on ·sets
.
.

..., .

.

.

M&amp;.J
POMEROY, OHIO

614·992·7119

.

~'Build

•

DRS

·.POMEROY, OHIO

. '

,...,

•~ ·

·~

..

lit 1996BUICK
ROADMASTER

iit 1997 CHEV.
510 PICKUP.

1997 GMC SONOMA
EXT. CAB 4X4 PICKUP

• Top • Trim • Removal
· • Stump Grinding

,;/

,;

• •

'

Was.~ ... ~....................... ~,685

Don Tate Dlscount ........ 1.~
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..
.

1 -.IliOn Tete D~acount~ ..... ,...............4.43
-Aebate •••~ ................................lil.••• 1 ,000

~ Tate Dlaco~nt.......................... 2,081
·Rebate.......... ~ ...~................. ~........... 1,000

. .
$ .
.
'
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.
$27 ' 17
NOW...............
, NOW.............. · 999 NOW.............. 1
'

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· EXT. CAB PICKUP

,~_.

1997 GMC
JIMMY. DR.

.,

..

Was ••••••••• ~ •••••..••••••••.•. $2._,573
Don Tat~ Olscount .•.•:••• 2,624

25 9'49.

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Was •••••••••••••••••••:·•••••••• $17
Don Tate

23
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Window Systems
OhiO

GUN PRIX

=;;;:::: ,,

H11res

:aaa,

KINGS'

1995 CHIVY'

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.

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WaS·······~·············.······· S1 3,492

Don Tate Discount ••••••••••• 723

Was ........... ~ ••••~ ..... ~........-~ $21,403
Don Tate Dlscount .•;••• :1,004

1996·0LDS
CUTLASS.SUPREME

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$20· 99.
~ow........:..... $1. ·69 NOW...............
....,...... ear
Profll'am Car ·

Sayre

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Fri., 1
Mill WMI Of -.ov On Rl. IIIII,

Pre1r•••• Car

.1996 CADILLAC ·.·
SEDAN DEVIU~

'1996 enDs
CUJ~S CIEU .

;··JLL .B.~~"LDERS, .1

. _New Homes··VInyl Siding New

·.·614-992·7643

..,..._

CARPET·

rt

.

:
••a.m. toit 114-4415 p.m.,
•.;._;..._..;..,.;;~~~~;:·:::m:*:n~
=-'!"'--~ 11130,
proJaot I1111111M~ through Frldlly.

(3) 20, 27; (4) 3, 10. 17; lTC

PINE MEADOW

•

CIRYCOISKI -

•

TIM'S CUSTOM

. ·; .

'

.30 AnncUic:emlnta
. GUN SHOOT

For 1oM of Atnll1can
LAgion !'081 128
Mlddlepart, Ohio
1 p.m. Sunday
22'• &amp;410'•
lc! Public

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

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

CHRISTY'S P~
.-

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

'

Belha, Grooming,

Gutl8nl .
Downlpoutl

l(annel

ea.. .

and Love
Mon., Tuel., Wid., .
Thul'8., Fri. 1(1.6;
Sat. 12-8; Sun. 12-4
271 Notth.2nd

Gutter ClHnlng
Painting
FREii!·EmMATES

949-2168 .

, Mlddllpolt, Ohio

.3/t 71t411fN

992-4514

Adult Junior IO Mlllll, M..o M

l L, Tayo, Mlco. 1374
hoad
. Rd 414 • 4/5.

Middleport

~t~r~""' Racine, AP,a,t
All Yard Soln Muat a. Pelci Jh

~ Moncloy odlllon-

CELLULAR PHONES

._tor

dothol.toyt, -

April :4 I 5, near OVerbrook·. on
Parle StrH~ Mlddt..,.,rt Watch for
olgno.

360° Comft'!unlcatlons·
.

.

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

Big ·garage oolo- AP&lt;il 4-5. air
c:ompre11ar, air condltlonara,
tools, toya, loada or misc .• fret

113 W. 2ND ST.

3@8 ,Fiatwoodl. Rd.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479

. 992·7074
Gl'Bvel, Llmettone,

Topeoll, Fill Dirt,
Send, RefUte.

_,

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~:

Friday· 133 )Juttornul Avonuo,
Sowing ....t1lnlt,
billa; '
compYte&lt; Ia~ and - · olec:· · ·
trio grinder, kitchen appllancooj
onli!IUII, much morw.

1!'-''"'•

·WICKS

JUITCILL, .

Arthur Tr.eachar•a Fiah and
Ctipo.

Friday l Saturday, 8am-5pm:
South Socond, MlddloporL All·
condl-. glrj"o c!Qthoo, oquarl:
um,mloc.
,

· · · (Ume Ston•
. ' Low Rlltll)

-..uDL)-.

ltama. Came early,· atay · la~e..
•roaa lrorri

HAULING·
. Umestone,
· Gravel; Sand,
.Top Soli, .Fill Dirt

. 614-992-3470
. YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVIa
tltoom Addition•

.
DUMP TRLtCK ·
.

$ER'(ICE.
Umeatone • Gf1WI
· Dirt· Sand
985 4422

..... Gw

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•ll!leclrlcllft':.umblng
tflooflll(l
.
.......... aEIIIMiol
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Allo Conc:IMI Woric

(FR!I ESTlMATE$)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

.· · ChM!er, ohio

MltJOlHICU.:U~

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bet~ld

IUILDII&amp;

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at...;' 10A.M.
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ArH'fl4th on
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115-4141

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Credit. No CNdlt. . .
may be ..... to hllpl .

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tliaee - Owner

P01Jieroy will

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Pomeroy,

.$6.50-parftm

~UCTION
.P,(operty at
211 E. 2nd St.
'

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Sunday.. Calls) .
=~"~:i::d;~~;~~~=====~
Advance.
t:OOpm
lito
dill'
belorwDeadline:
tho od Ia 10
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Co.

50%·75%

'lltnl .- : Clo- a.to N8 ., 4T,

··Garages ! Replaceme~ Wlnd9ws
.Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
'FREE E$TIMATES .

. SAVE

FRIDAY fiSH FRY
ami FLEA MARKET
FRI~:!.:~~~

't!=..

Giftware

I

GalllpOIII

(up to !n UDit.d Inch•) •

•••i

&amp; Crystal

• .... 10 JJAYPIW.CiiiG
•.,.. QPJ WIW nua

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5195.00 INSTALLED

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199~ ,PONJIAC

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70

•

(614) 592·5025.
Atheas, Ohio

Local8d at Plne'Orow Rd. 6 .Forett Run Rd.
. .
Racine, Ohio
·
·
open DallY 1O;OO to 8:oo fncludfng sundey .

7IfJlF,~ ·
111 Mil at., Mlddlepot., OH 45780 • t12-e250
Mon.I:3N; ru..-nu.. G:30.• a; SAt. G:3().8

304-e75-4471S.

Aitorney William Safranek

1

-1997' _
CHEVY
MALIBU
.,·~
· . ,, ~= · .

Harley Davidson 25o/ooff.·
'
Jewelry.
~· Brass

.LOST· gl&lt;i'o block oohball glova
It Ordnance field . If toUnd, call

"FACI'OR't DI}U:CI'
PRICES"
(OpdonA..Cioble 01 MNi

Found ·

CHAPTER 7 • CHAPTER 13

..
:-All Bedding Pip for Spflng Planting ·

Retail

_,,., Owl.-:

Lost and

992·2753

0

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"11...... N• Ownmflip"

992·5535

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, _ 1M' old molt Booglo, good
poU14-11112-75!»,
· ,

In Cooo 01 Rain, The Foltowl~~g
Thull&amp; Ffl

l:ePa1nsv ..-~to plant $8.00 par t1a1

J

,_,....

(614) 367-0266
1-800 -950-3359

·Jailor tor the . ,.rlmeter
ll\eulllllon.
'
•.. Soh. 40'jlla8tlo .._
oNew Homes · tHo JOb Too Small
and lallor for the w•JJ
p•ne·tratlo~•·
All
~modeling
•Any and All of Your
meaeuremente ehall be
aciMncf to within 1/4" of
~aragea
Ho11'18 Repair N•eds
.Plan ·meuurlmenle.
oCall Today for Your
!:oMNia etJ•Igtlt and reiNir
olze ellall mHI or - d
Free Estlrnat~
plan .. requlr•menta.
Contractor ahall obtain
MD-ry approval Dl the
olal• lnapHIDr. All· work
:~NORTH UNE OF
ohall be oomplllld wlthln· 3
•
-~~~ of •Mdulood otorl
'.78 TO SAID
..._
,
Plcl! up dla~nllll'
:· THENCE NORTH
lldltolil ft Plumbing:
llppll•ncu, ,l lattoriM,
.
ConlntciAira ahlllllnoluda
,; THE EAST .SIDI!
:~ALLEY FOR A DISTANCE the following In lhllr bkl:
t;n~~ny 11111111• a •
.: OF 60 FEET TO MULBERRY
1. Piping, ttillnga,
' ,.. IJIO«cir bloelal.
;• STREET. ,
flxturoe, accaaoilrlu,
• Permanent
parcel hlrclwere tor the building
.; numbera: 1U1006.00 and pluin bing portion qf
' ' 15.()1007.00
oonlllr1lotlon per the plano. .
:1 Current Ownel'8' liame: a. LAbor to oompl«e the
'
:-! O.reld M. MC!IMr and Tony lnelallatlon oi •aid ham'
OneUnltNow
·I Mohler ·
'
and obtain necaleary
Available
.: t · Property eddr8oa: 247 approval by the 11111
. ·!Mulberry St., Middleport, .lnapiCIOr. The rough·ln
101128,
,ir mo.
! 0 hA~IHCiet• ;200il.oo plumblnv ahall be '
eomplatecl within one wHk
1 ..,.. •
. 1 TERMS Of SALE: To
of echeclulecl .lllrl dalo. TM
· ~ oold lor no le.. then
tlnleh plumbing ehell be
Public NoUce
, lhlrda of th•
complated within two - a
of IICI!Idulecl 111r1 elide.
Bid 11om II Electrical
1value. .The
·lntroduclnu.,
; .ehall depoah
.Bid Ham 13 Floor end ln....lallon:
·
;the eherlff
ApnHia:
. ·
..:fonlnclorl ehlll Include.
HflriWIH
..-kl •'-·
ConlntciAirl ehllll Include ....,.lollowlng In IMir bid.
• JAMES
SO ULSBY, lhto following In lllllr bid: .
1.
All •Jectrlcal
:SHERIFF
·
·
1. Concrete, remeah, oqulpment,
llxtur••·
. RemOdeling.
: NORMA M•. FRA!fk CO., ,vapor barrier, , and m;torlale to .l~etoll In the
Stop&amp;Com.,_.
., ,,L.P.A., Normln M. Frink, 'PXJIIII!Ion tor lhtl building eubJoot building p•r the
·~orMy for Plaintiff, 33 floOr·!liid.......,..
•&amp;
.Diirio. '11111111olud'u , but le
FREE
'
~!forth High Street, Bulhl
2. LAbar Ia pilOt ilnd ncif' limited lei; IJglillng,
ESnMATEES
Columbue, Ohio 43215: flnllh th• concma el1b1,
awHch11, o~leto, earvlce
. 992-7696
•TelephoHl 814-221·11182.
,.r the f'llne end~· I ,.;...11, fane, HVAC aupply
985 4473
;(3) 20, 'Z7 (4) 3 3TC ·
poww ......,.... B!'llh wHh 10\ dl1connecte, all home 102 E.
•
the proper elop•a
run wlrlllfl, tic.
:
Public Notice
pae111 er v.U.V. MOre...
. ··' 1 &lt;ll· L.bot' lo lnatell eeld
1/1". A broom flnllh Ia to 1M lliin1 ,., National Electric
'1
provided on lha· eprona Coda, OBBC, NFPA, ate. ilnd
lloal•ovt•allts .
'
LIQAL NOTICE ·
only. tneure pro,.r rough obtain n~.. , • ., epproval
3351 Happy !follow Road
! ProJ.at: Recine Voklntew plumbing lit-In:_!"• drain fiX th•
lnafl"lor. All
Llmeetone 6 Gravel
f'lrl Dept. • Fire Btotlon.
troUQhll ehlll be formld and wllrk ohell be completed
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Septic Syatllll'ie
Bid pound ,_r the plan dltoll. ::'!,~HklofiiCIIIdulecl
N- Hcmee, ·Acidltlono,
, D. . orlptlon:
,.HCIIIIOII for ContreotoN. Conlraotor ahlll obteln
-··
, Roofing, Siding. ·
Trailer 6 ·
· 1h• Vlllag• of Recine
epproval.by the
Bid 11om 18 HVAC
POle Berne, DeckS, ·
HqueeSitn
Pelirtlng, Geragea, '.
rl•ehea~a'::o~oc:,a::.~
etot• lna,.ctor. AU ~ork lnac':=;,• ahall Include
.R H.onabltl Rates
Porch... .
.lnonthellf April Md Augual ahell 1M compleled within 2 the tollowlllllln lllllr bid:
Ul7. Bide ehell be IIIHCI WHka of ech·edulod otort
1, All HYAC aqulpm•nt '·
J.o e N. Seyre
Clll U. For AFill~
614-742-3090
)n ·prevelllnv wag• tor lhtl
.Miulldlna Kll:
lncl -rille ,.r the pl8rie
.electrical 8nd . HYAC
C - allaH Include lnoludlllfl, but not lllllbd to;
814-742-3324
)orllono onlr. Contraotora. thtlollowhiilln IMir bid:
hall ,.pump• w/. .rvlca
614&lt;7•12·2:138
614-742-3076
~•Y bid on any portlon .ot , 1.;,.. billldlng kh which dleoonnacta, ductwork,
•
prolct or on ""' llllfrl melto the genoral criteria ,..,....... dantptl'8, ate.
~~
Jtol;.a ..•cONDITIONS
Ill forth In ""' plene and · lna~~':f:nto.;o;:r~~~==
; IN........
·
m•atlng lt1t• OIIC
, t. Work Houre: 7 a.m. to 5 I'ICIIII,....nlllor 'ttruOtural l!ld obtain nac. . aery.
,p.m. Mon·Frl. Atldraaa ·deelgn, ate. .
ep~roval by lha atate
\VIirl•!lca• · wllh project· · 2 .
Building·
kll JniPeclor. All work ehall be
11
nlnllr .
.
complotecl !fllltln 2 ...... of
'
0
·; 2. Utllltlee: Contractore
·=~=!-~, ~ •• aoheduleclalarld
....
~~
Plana
for
lito
proJect
.
,,.
reaponalbl • for ,....,, naullllitn, welklhril d - .
FEEN~~~~:m
wage, power, lruh ovarhoecl door and windOw evallebla el th• Racine
ltiiiOVII for their waiii8Cia,. H'mlng IIIChor. bolla .trim Municipal Building during
AMERICAN LEGION
Ju•t off Bridbury Rd.
• • "-~·"ule· no. proleot
•
•
the,ltoura ot I a.m. to 4 p.m. .
ANNEX (lOok for •lgn•)
' ' ... ....,_ •
lde llld fteahlitil aa referred to Monday through .. Friday•
•engln•ar will · prov de, 111 the plano.
·
n.-11 1 chll,.. of 11 per
MDI
Street,
Middleport
·
.
Middleport, OH
: tu-111111 bldiMre with 1 · 3. Ullor io eompllll 1M thwtng. Bide wll be due at
YeltdiR $5 ··S'Tibll
614-89M379
alvl echadu!• lnetollallon of aeld Heme the • - loclllan on ltfjtr.
Call
Ru•
Mozingo
Dey
l E~lng Hl'8.
'.
wort&lt; blglnl ·anil obtain neceuary
, , 4. Jneurance: Contreotor approval by the ••••• 21, 1117, 11.4 p.m.• Bid•' will
· 742·2014
._;__...__,;;m;;;"';;.;.t;;""";.,
; 111u•t provld• ~opl•• of• l~o~utor. All -rk ahell.,.
ewerdod the following
,\
--~
• ..blllty (t milliOn dollar) · ocmpl1lad within 3 Wllb of :\t"ialf ::!.:'lr;'u!:t~
H9ward L. 'Wrlt1111
.: ~nd WOitcrnan'~ ··' Com_p. ICMdtoilld.,_.._.._
c1n lie enawoncf by the

~ · sALE ·

•

Galllpolla, Ohio 45131

e·

PRICE

Retail .

a.afq

.

rid/While l)lllit 1/2 Boogie,
Holind.~22t8..
Nordic Ridge By Nordic Trock
tsJ. lt4-245-Dt54.
·

boiiL
3.. lneuldon lloarcl and

CORSICA

•·

(114) 112-4277

Aeration ~or oSalee 6 Rtpalra
Cletlnlng s.pt1c &amp;yetema
Port-A-.Iohn • Rintala • Serviced w8elity
No Extra Charge for Evenlnge or W~
24 Hr. Prompt Service
· 7 Daye A Week

the
ln•tall

·•'

ftliiCIC"

Joe~IIOn

FrM to good home. 1..0mo.

SOUDVINYL
REPLACEMENT Wll'IDOWS

.... w....,

'

@

lit 1997CHEVY
t3836
CAVALIER

!fll)('E ~!R!J

1 • Marlin Bti'Ht
Pomeroy, Ohio 457111 .

992-6342 (Diane)

..

·JltCQtU1SirriON$ "

·25°k off

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

Your Dream" ·

ca.....,..

NO.W..............-

'

"

'

reunion-

lfldUIIinJ IOIIior whose perents or ·m0111h before die Nllquet. Thla
~~~~~ wcre..a.e.tcr Alumni. yur's olfiCCrs are StarlinJ Ma51ai:.
Sen ion ll:e uke6 to COIItiCt -the pnllident; Mary llose, · vKe prcsi-' ·
school for 11pplicarions for the lehol- dent; Bettr Dean, secretary and ·
Al!hip. • ·
~
• 1 Betty ]'{ewell. trt.surer. ,
•
-1.
Cards will be sent ·
a
·

•

'

Paul and Tina Roush of Colum~
bus announce the binh of their first
child. ·a daughter, Cassandra Nicole
· Roush.
/"""t_
The infant was bOrn on Feb. I0 at
Si. Ann's Hospital in Columbus. Sbe
weighed 9 pounds, 8 ounces and was
21 inches long.
•
Maternal grandparents are Marion "Buzz" and Iva Sloter 'o f Albany. ·
Oreal-grandmother is Shirley Slotcr
.of Racine. and Pat~rnalgrandmother;
is Carrie Roush of Ra~ine.

•

•

. Plans for the May 31 Chester .: those of 1927, ' 1932. 1937;~ f!M2~
Alumni Association banquet . and 194:7, 1952 and 1957. Music will be
dance were made when the offic~rs furnished by alumn.us George Hall.
met recently at the Chester grade .
The annual .OaJe K.autz Family
school.
and the Chester Alumni
Classes to he recognized are
will be · awarded !0 a

Roush
birth
announced .
'

.

'

'
•

.

. '

·i.

�..

'JhlnUy, Aprll3, 1117 1 ~
.

'

.

'

·NEA Crouword

..
...
..:::2.__ ·=...
ACROII

PHILLJP
At.DBR .

~

•

. ~ _~ Dll~ 811611l• P 11 11-,;

.
•.

.

MR

1 !oJ.z-!t .,.

Pu••••

I 1110

~

....

411'&amp; lTV ..
., ""' 1

.........

111'11t ...... .,. .......
1
11
I 1
I
• . : : . ..

!Ill'

r,=-... ,...., .=._....
•:u..a..•
·141

W'Oi'JIIF ;

• Itt 7 4
.• 10 • 1,2
• Q J 4'

.... .

'

lllllwltiltt ••lan eo

'11 - - o4ung

0

-.,A,.Q741

Aiding Horsoo For . Solo Child
· llobr QuariOI llatao 814,
448-ot1t0.'

• Q

a ..

.. , • 3

,.
••
4t

. . DOC
PRITCHART

• • . Nania
. 1NT

1'111 ••
Pill 49
.1'111 'Pua

t
. ot

=~·

I

•

co··-\ '
WN

1 Pua111o lnclllll I .

PM'Ot

'

8IMdll

(.....,

iaNaw Znlnncl

'
.
Vulner'lble: Beth
Dealer: North .

·'

.,

, M. piEDII
v ~
·,
a Pt; Gf TGI'
M COIIIt -eot
• IIIDI'IW Gocl • , • NMI
.
11 New
II! •An\ol I • IOalt

. =-dar,

O'AKJ·

I

•hiiiROe

11" I II Ta
Mllr..
' Arttlllllt
1101 1M ....
17 Allow IJIOIL) ·17 . . . .
.

•KlO ,

'

....... . . _

. ,.:·~

• I I I ,I

9AKJ
• Q 7.
• .A K 'l

..

lfltl'!t

1 f' ' too Mad
I 'launglllnl
4 Aiulli II I
IIIII

=•

• D'Ainllq'l
I

rtc1gaa

Bait

1'111
1'111
PMa

Pua

()penlnt Ill¢ • 10

.. ·'

Ho~many .

kiPT IT II

did Y()U Win?
By Phillip Alder .

. MlltiJrcuelt, lbe Freaeb ·dlacel' aad

aiJiaer, lUI, "A klla.eu be a..........,
.a queatloa mad: or aa exclamation

•
ltdueod. 304·875-221 0 If·

5 lo 150 ocru wllh .or wllhoul

1014j)m.

polat 'l'bat'a balle ape111n1 that Mr)'

..... Olllbt to lmow."

TRANSPORTATIO N

houl8 In Meigs Counay, 81o4·002·
11411 .

.
.
.
Well, Jet lh!e queitloa riJiil and .
• perhapt you wiD recelw! a Jdu·from llr-t--t--:your wo111111 or man. In tbil deal, If
you were ·so11lh Ia alx apadea, how
IDiliY trlcb wollld JOU wla1
;J'!Ie auetlolllealure. cme-'+Jdlng .Ia
repiJ to Soutb'li pnae·foreiDI tbree
ttplldee; North -uy bu two cbolc:ee. With ,spade support, he ralaa~ .
Wltb6ut IIIJiport, he retial&amp; to thne
no-trump, So, whit Ia four ~uba1 It
ca~not ahow nve eafda In t!le ault
Nortb Ia being asked only .about
'FRYKWI)
JO
DZC Z.GI'KM
apadu, not Ulltber aull ILia e~
an adYance cue-bid and lhon a maza.
'
J .MXKWMKDJRM
RY
DZC LJPJMC
mum rlllae to four 1pad11 with tbe
.
club ace. Upartner Ia lblnld"l about a
.... . . slim, North II~ lie 11M a IUit.ble v R w x c R y x w c K o J n r . · - .An co z.c :
band.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: -n..,. ara two thaortee on hitting lite knucide~ll.
Aa Nortb might llot ban 1 t~p
~.net~tterorthem-u.·-Charteyl.au.
.1
- ' .
heart, Soulb eue-bidlln reliln!. Yet If.
ter North cuea In hearb, SOuth blck
lbe Bllm. &lt;Yes, perillpl he ablililhe-

RE N TAlS
'

,..

1

. for ,

Cllflddon.

110

Help Wanted ·

Opportunity

AVON I All Aroll I Shlrlor
Spol/1, 304-675-1420.
OHIO
Abfe Avon Representatives
needed. Earn moniy fo~ Chrl•t·
mu blll1 at homolal-k. t-1100-

Business

210

INOIICEI
PUBLISHING CO.

V~'(

rec:omman_,a

thll

11112 14x10 2 - - . . , 2 Baltw,
IMao
Kill:hon. c.n~ "'"' &amp; Nr,
C11hodtal Coiling, Exlla Cloanl
Good' Condlllon, $14,500, Will
Rani LD~ 814-268-1401, 814-25111131111.

wou do bual·

:

. . , ;:

Rip.

.

ATTENl10N
Oullldo Selo1 A- Uke
Cable Concepti Or Kirby, Etc.
TillES HAVE CHANGEOI Sm.
Sotolllll Dlahal ,.,. 1119 Sellora.
Great Opportunity Awa1t1 You In
Salol ll.tona-t Call Ron Tol
Fnooo 1·1188-o43Z-7371.
IIOTTI.ED WILL PGWER.I LOSE
up to 30 poundl, 30 DAY MON'
EY BACK !)UAAANTEEI Natural,
DoCtor .-mmonded, .814·441·
1182. Fret ..,r...
Computer U••• ·Needed. Work

Stoai' Bulldlng lndualfY Booming.
Daolor's Bur Facrorr Direct
Commorcill lndualrial, '1\grteultur·
al
And~--Cd For
Pinantlal
Opportuni!J 303-750·
1011 14x70 2 or a Bedroom,
3:100 ExL 71150.
. .
•ois down, •105/mo. ·Onlr at
Thriving Catering Bualno1l I ~.-. Nl..,, wv.ao.
\
oqulpmont lor aalo. Priced upon 765 5185
lnapacdon. 30U75-4281 or 304875-21811.
.

;l30

•
'
:7i
With 4.3 V-8 . I

.!

256-6180.

2 bodloom, gal hoi~ 2 mlloa flam
Audand out- Unia Ad., 814742·280G Of 814-742·2421. '

aoar Sale Going oil Now -Aquat· ...l

_.

ron Boa11 -Cuny Cabins ·Bow ~
Rider• -B••• Boata -sea . Ark 1
:-. .
John Boala -John1on Outboard ;:-•
MotQfl. llerlne S•rvlcn, Kerr ~

,,St-,
.

..

11vaa bod! oom mobile hcima, ou~
aldo o1 Pamorar, et 4·882·5030

760

.

.

SjraouM, Ololo.

Auto Pa~·

Ac.cessorlls

••

ProfeSsional

awn hou ro. S20k 10 •.soklyr 1·
.-naext508.

\

CiJ1111,trs •
Motcx: Homes

_kl,

I

I~

I D

I I

F.ACTllA'I'DRECT.

.

.....~

I

•

. ' .'

/nlakJ. Putge • Flesk • Nollon- PLANNING
AltercuVICIIIDn lllltlummer lluln Ia ad that a short·
cutillhe fated wr, to get to a place you weren't PLANNING to go.
.• -

'~•.

ITHURSDAy ·.

~

••: ;,

S

:

S l HVICICS

.

ICIAM liJI ANSWIII ·

1

tGe4 Niaaan mlnl .motor home,

.

MEAN. TO ..

'IT WAS A
II"'Ci!!!:Niln (\.VII., llUN6..

1

liMioa 4, dual - - . . . alnk, :
110Yo a rolrl" cab 1~. et,400. I

--·

SAVEISS1.
•
OakWood ·Homu Ia tho onlr
doalor In .tiro trl-ataro a,.a lhat
builds and 1olla 'lholr awn
homol. FO&lt; factorr dirac! pficn,
lhop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
TAD. WV.304-755-5886.

....,
1' )

. """\ .
:'l,l

APRil3'1.· ~:;..,

..'

1078 Wlldornea1 25' With AC .., ;
1975 Mallard 27" With Awning '' 1
1800 McCormick ROod, GalHpolll. ·' I "
OHI1+441-151J. '
,t~~ - .

' NO UllllLE 11A1t

Lorge ulocdon of uaod

TRY

·1

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I

~~

.

o;:::::-;;:::.:=::-:;";;;;:;:-:::::;::
1980 FIHiwlng 17' \'t'llh Awning rll,..I

Earn 11,000
Stutflng En·
wlojrlll At Homo. ·Stall Now. No
ExpO&lt;Iin&lt;o. Froa S.pplloa, Info.
No Ol!llgadon. Sond LSASE To :
. .ACE, Dopt 1351, Box5137, Dla·
mondBar, CAOt7811; .

I

VOSTEI

.

DIDN'T

__.

790

law IC!. !onto,'-.--...

:.v

'

gao tar\t(1, . I ton truck
whoal1 I radlatora. D I R Auto, _ o
Aliolar. wv. 304·372·3033 or 1·
,
801).273-~ ;
• I

'cooka /Coou Aldo In DIETARY
Departmonl, Dar And E..nlng
Shlfla. Appllcollonl Now Being
Tobn AI Iconic Hilla Nur~lno
Canto~, 311 Buckrldao Ad., Sid'
W11, 011 a A.M. -4 P.'il., M .f No
"'-Coda Plouo, .
-

·~

~·

j

sep
H. .

112, Now Cor-

•n rono-· """' of
0 four
ICIOooblacl -.11

.

Budget Price Tr•namleeiona, •
Sllrtlng It tile.OO and Up. Ulld I
:
Alillullt, All ~pa1, O.ar 10,000 ·, ,

· services

'

,~

.r ,,r,

•
:

Tririlml•alona, Aaoe11 1Yanafer

~

"•

.•"'

u

:,

Roar End For A 1;as 2 Whoa I
Drlvo Ranger, 814-387-7102, AI·
10(5 P.M.

'

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' ...,
:;

-=-=~~~~~;::::::-;:::::-;
5 Speed Ovordrlva Trano Fronl I

,,.,

. ·. ~
. ,.

.....

C11o1 a Roar Endo; 814·245·

HARTS MASONAAY • Block,

.aaawer

Crall Bi.ss Boat With 200 HP.. _ 1
MerCurr, Come See Our New ~
Morado I Aluminum Ba11 Boota 1
In Stock Nowl J .S. Marino 814· 1

814-388-1100.

-

C811.rani --~-·-.~ ...

play tllat IUII'IIIteel lucceM wbliaever it is attalaable ..You ahould atart
with a a.,.de to your ace. When lbe
tlng doesn't drop, return to dWIIIII)'
wltb a red ault aad lead a aec;ond
trumP toward the M'll·
'
So, the right
to lbe quaUon
II 12, not 13, U JOU lin-.tbe llpttde .
queea, you l01e when Weat ·baa the
siqletoa Jdni.
.
'

.

UD4 Baja 18 Ft.

2 Badroom VOJJ Clean Carpott,
Hao1 Pun... No Pill, A&gt;IIOI Atoo.

2480•

1·

........

'

Now to tbe play. All' tbe aide aulll
ue aolid. !So~'• club loeer pes •
clummy'a lblrd heart.) The only problem Ia in the trump suit, where you

MlliC. Cruloa, 1003 Marado Ill FL ' : ·
3.0 Uerc Cruilt. 1980 Norrl1 } •

3 Bedroom, 2 Balhl. CA, Or
Large PriYIII Lot In Groan
Scllool Dla111c1 f3·so; 814-028·

wJIII pooplo you kllow, and
ID oond lllrou~h .lha
mall undl you haYO lrwlltlgatod
002-8358 or 304-882·2845, Ind. lhoOiforii"G.

leet lix no-tnunp.)

.I

1988 Swe-tor Pllntiilill-..11•,
or, 80hp Mercury, now buoor ..,. l
ss.ooo nog. 304-n:Hm4. Good .

FlrJI\IJC IAL

....

...

~75~0~B~oM5~~~~~~-

EMP LOYME NT
SE RVICES

.

f.\!Uo:. a-1 f#,.'( C£FEI.L i" t::::::=...-9.
H&gt;lto Tf\!;:. ~:,it.-..-i
~

3327.

14x80 All Eloc~lc, 2 Sodrooml,
WID sa- IRolrlg...lll, CounlfY
Soiling, 814·2511-lo.M Call EvenlngL
.
.

.

I G.OU.D ~TIE ~lo\

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Ohio Lottery

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Ptck 4:
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Buc;keye 5:
1?-19-24-28-33

.

Sports on Page 4
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lloelly ctouctr tonight, •
chance of 1 ehower efter
midnight. Lows In the soa.
,Seturdey, rein likely.
Hlgh8 In the mid 701. .

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Vol, 47, NO. 235 .·
01W7, Ohio Ylolley ~lahlng Corilpttny

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2 leotiOM, 12 P8gel, 35 cema

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll4; 1997 ·

AQen;'lltt Co-. Naw't.,..._

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&gt;i\I&gt;'

Lawmakers loOk to insulate highway ·projects ·

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J&gt;' .'' ,.

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By PAMELA BROGAN
. .
Gannett News Service
·~ ·
.
WASHINGTON -Appalachian higliway · stcmproponcnts-m~lud·
' ing Presiqent qintoli - are 10lking for a new· dong vehtcle to msulate
the program from what has become annual money batt,les on Capitol Hill. .
Clinton and Sen. Robert-Byrd. 0-W.Va.• have proposed that gasohnc tax·
es from the federal highway irust fund be used to pay for compl~ting the
3,029-mile Appalachian Development Highway System. which is now 75 per-.
cent finished .
.
· Clinton wants to spend more than $2 billion in six years under the fed eral highway program to.continue constructibu of 826 miles of !he roadway.
Byrd has proposed spending between $6 billion to $8 billion during the same
penod to complete .the highway. The n:ml!ini_~f. ponion of th~ highwa~ is .
the most expensive to construct because tl runs through mountamous or htlly

· ..:rom• ..·. ·: :
·~top lly for·a ·
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drive
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tu..ay. _

Cardiac arrest may
· , have caused death..
of baseball player

ter11lin.
.
In the House, Rep. Bud Shuster. R-Pa .. chairman of the Transponation
and Infrastructure Committee, hasn't rul~d out including money for the
Appalachian highway under the federal highway program. The ~igliway 'runs
through his home state. .
.
" I think you can assume that he (Shuster) would be open lo that," said
his spokeswoman Patri~ia Law.
·
In southern Ohio, pon_ions of the highway not built include a 16-milc
stretc;h to widen U.S. 50/State. Route 32 to four ll111es in Athens and Meigs
counties. Another project not under ~onstruction Is the Parkersburg Bypass.
"I have felt for years that construction of a four-lane highway (on U.S.
50) should be completed and will open up more economic opportunity in this
area, •· said Thomas Closser, exe~utive director of the Buckeye Hills Hock-_,·
ing Valley Reg,ional Dev7lopmerit·Distric1.·

Rc~. Ted Strick!and, D-Ohio, ~grees
.
·
·. ·
.
"If the~ projects can't be built, then the current economic stagnation that

exists in southern Ohio .will continue ... Strickland said.
•
The·Appalachian hi¥hway i.s n~w funded .through annual appropriatipns
of $90 million to S100 million under the auspices ofthe Appalachian Regional Commission. At that funding rate. the highway wouldn't he completed until
2050. The ARC. created in 1965. provides federal money for jobs and economic and infrastructure development. in 13 partly impoycrisilctl states.·
The program ant! the highway have become u frequent target for crities.
including Housc,Budget Commillcc Chainnan 'John Kasich. R-Ohio, who
consider it wasteful during lean budget yean;. Knsich wants to climinate 'it. .
Su'icklaild said he will wor~ in Congress to ~ade Kiisich io drop his
opposition to ARC p~ojects, including the road p~a.m .
·
·

=~::~~~ial

. ._---.
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Altrtost dOne

. nod to new::·
floodplain ~

~

The death of a South Gallia High School athlete after being struck by a
haschall was a freak accident and unrelated to his existing medic~l problcrrr,;.
according to the Lawrence County coroqer. ·
·, :
'
Dr. Bunon Payne told the Huntington (W.Va.) Herald,Dispatch that Patrick
Michael Lawrence, 16. Patriot, pr9bably dieo:l Vfcdncsday from "\'''diac arrest'
caused by a nerve refl~x.
' .
Lawrence, an SGHS sophomore and a pitcher for the Rebels, was pronouhceo:l dead in the River Valley Health Systems hospital in Ironton after
• ef[9r!s to revive ~im failed.
·
':
~awrence was running to third base when a ball thr()'wn by a member of
the Ironton St. Joseph Catholic High School team struck Lawrence jn the
chest. his mother, Pearl Vance.Lawrence, told the Herald-Dispatch.
Her son collapsed and was taken to the hospital after a spectator's etTorts
· to resuscitate.him were unsuccessful.
.
Mrs. Lawrence said her son suffered from Crohn 's disease. a chronic
inflammation of .the digesttve tract, and frol'fl asthma.
·
But Payne said those conditions were not related to the youth's death . and
I&lt; that cardiac arrest by nerve reflex, although .a rare condition: &lt;;an be caused
~ hy.,a,•udden blow} O the chest.
, .',;: 1 , f, ,,
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~ . "It just happened," she said. "I don't blame anybody. I do~·· even know
. :''wh\1-hc is and I hope that he dNsn 't'blame 1\imself." ,
,
· · ··.
Coun~elors came to SGHS Thursday to help students deal with
Lawrence 's death and were back on campus today. A memorial strvice was
' held be fore classes ended yesterday"' ,
.
' ,
Services for Lawrence have hcen sci for II a.m. Sunday at,the Morris
Funeral Home in Wayne, W.Va.

AS LOW AS:
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ordinance ~
By KI\THRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent ·
To keep in compliance with ll•x&gt;d,
plain regulations . so residents _can

secure llo•&gt;d insurance. Symcusc'V.illagc Council.lJufrsday night touk its
-~\ ~ first step hy giving-a first reading on
acceptance of a rcvi., cd llood plain
,,rdinancc.
Mayor George Connolly aqd ·
Council President L;trry Lavender
met with Mich ..el E. Gease of !he
Ohio Dcpunmcn1 11f Natural
Resources on M.arch 21. and the ondi. nance was a·resuh of·tbal meeting .
•_.,alli!~C'il arid rcsid&lt;;~t~ il\ll!c .1\&lt;&gt;od·
{1~Jil!p,.~r\:~ ha~s .~lh'!!Jllc.m ~Iii i~&gt; cm.~­
fj)y ·wltfi'-lfic roltfiUs -'.to~r(blly sMI ..
· If council fnils to' coni ply. the ·village
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will not be ahlc' to receive federal
· Work Ia elinoiit conipleted on the Mefge Coil~ty ~Og ~imd Upgrade Project (PUP), which
gmnts. he nut cU. ·
Includes -t he CO!'Itructlon of e pOle bern overtop of the exiSting pound end !ha addition of nConnolly said there . arc seven
dog kennelt. Dog W1rdln Bill Oyer' seld workers with Home Creek Enterprises of Pomeroy ere
homes
and trailers. possihly more,
ebout 75 percent done with the project end noted that future plinslnclude Instilling wells and
tha.
t
arc
in vidlinion ofthc lloodplain
dobra erQUnd the entire structure. .
··
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.
ordinance .. Tho.&lt;C persons will be •
advised of the lloodplmn situation by
leucr. 'he said.
It is impi&gt;rt,Wt to n1itc 'that permits
must be secured hcli&gt;rc - huildi~g .
pla~inp a trailer vr remodeling any
building in the flood plain, he
stressed.
· '
a convicted thief. a man in 1roublc
PermiiS may, he secured from
with the Internal Revenue Service
Connolly and fl&lt;Kld plain maps~
and a woman with a drug problem.
also available. it was noted.
'
.
"Dctcnda'nts arc entitled to a jury
Pcn;oits failing to comply ~"ay be
oftheiq!eers, and'that's what they're
fined $300 for every violation a'ad
gelling,'' suid Andrew.Cohen, a.Den·
cvery.day is a new violation, it was
vcr lawyer.
noted. Persons have 30 days ' to
On Wednesday, an out-of-work
respond to the revised.ondinance.
carpenter sheepishly admitted he had
Any house or trailer built 'or
. hccn convicted of.steali'ng a baucry
placed hcforc t9K7 will he grandinfrom acaund thrtecounL•ofdriving .
therctl and mit included in lhe . nr~iwhile intoxicated. ·
·
nancc. •
" 'You're not on trial tierc. we just
Once again. Connolly s!res~ed
need to know something about it."
that pern1i1s must he nhtuinctl hl:flitc
Matsch said.
building in the 0&lt;K&gt;d plain undo also
Under f~derallaw, a person -connoted that elevation shnts must t;c
victcd of a felony cannot serve on a
taken bcf&lt;&gt;rc and ul'tcr constructioii.
jury, but the man eouliln't say
~~~=~-=~ei~J:::,J=~
he
comAccording tu informauon sutimit·
. lcm.ln M.cVelgh's trial
·whether his conviction was .fur a .menton tl)e jur\1 1
to a gag order. · ted to council hy ODNR anti tflc Fedfelony and the judge said his rcc1irds
· ~ Emergency Managemuiu
w.erc. unciCar.
· ·
·
·
· 7 ·
·
· Agcncly. r~atinns apply · to itll
A
he'
·
·
·
d
·
·II
1)1\'
thc
n.•nulty
~nd
inicrc.
s
t.
He
said
drunken
drivin"
c\'invictions.
deve 1opmen ·uvuocs
. . . in area that
· arc
•
· not r man, a wtn ow tnsta cr
,..
e
1
· mont
· ·hs, ad mm
· d 1·urSlx
· ed hc• he ·u-•,·d- 0111 h11ld the g•&gt;vcrnmcnt
''I'm not proud · of them . vc sub'~cct tnt1•w,..,cng.
, ,.
De vclnpmcn(is
·
mame
·
bl
·
1
h
h
IRS
rc
.
·sn.msihlc
for
his
tax
'-"'lcms.
moved
on
and
grown
up
since
then,"
r.
·
d
had gotten Inti! trou e w t I e
,..
1~vu
dcomed to the 1u c buildings or strue·
He nlsn acknowledged several he told the judge.
seven-years ago and was su'II paymg·
• •1
(Continued .o n Page 3) ,:•
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'

.Judge .rejects media's· request
. to open up trial's j.u ry . selection
DENVER (AP) - The judge in
Timothy McVeigh's triai 'Thursday
turned down a mcdin effort t&lt;&gt; make
the jury seleC\iOn process more open.
reiterating his position that prospects
needed to be protccicd .
·
U.S. District Judge Richart!
Jo,intsch .denied a request from the
·media to .open up more ol' t!Jc jury
scle~tion process .. He· said he will
continue to hold secret meetings
every morning to determine which
. jurots sholild be excused li&gt;r hard·
: · ship. or their inability, to impose the
· dcnth penalty.
..
: . The identities of the prospective
· jurors have bciin kept hidden from the
news media since. jury selection
hcgan Monday.
, . Media .auorncy Tom Kelley
: ' argued tha1 the selection of jurors is
· \ crucial to a public trial, but Matsch
said he ditln '1 want /hem harassed hy
: reporters. or by friJbds and rela!i vcs
: t()'ing to influence their opinions.

, McVeigh, a decorated soldier in
the .GulfWar; is accused of plolling
the April 19; 1995. true~ bombing
that destroyed the federal building in
Oklahoma City, killing 168 people
and injuring inorc than 500. He faces
charges of murder and conspiracy.
.A pool of 350 prospects have been
called into the federal ~ounhouse.
Nineteen were questioned dn Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday.
With some people bei~g quesiioncd . for an hour or m11re. it i$
expected to take' weeks to whittle_the
p&lt;!OI down to 64 people who will then
be subjected to 'challenges by lawyers
on·both sides of the case. In the end,
12 jurors and six alternates will be
selected.
.·
. Much of the process·has focused
on whether J'urors have an)'cnpposition to the death penalty and "'-'
arc able
toJ·w;tgeMeVeighfairlydespitcpublicity surrounding the casec .
Among those questioned so lilr arc

Remember: Spring forward A.n~i~funding ruling move irks Shoem~~er _
ti~M
By
vtsl~
th~
O~he~
,. turn
clock
·
re~ember
~·
dcccSin~ mclud~:
.
one~
.:o~httnn
· ahead on
1&lt;1
us
Sundsy·
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WASHINGTON (APl - El'fcctive Sunday..._nig\ltiimc will be post·
poncd one hoUr.
'
That's right, it's time to "spring
: . fnrward" to daylight-savinJ time.
: shiftina an hour uf•light from those
dr,:ary 'mornings to summer cvenmgs.
The ac1ual moment of c~ange
occurS at 2 a.m. Sunday fo~ most' of
die nation •.when clocks should be
shilled lorwiii'a an hour. Most people,
. thou&amp; h. "!Ilk~ the change J;!eforc relit·
ing Saturday 1.- espec1ally those
who want to avoid being. late for
church on Sunday.
· Standard time returns Oct 26.
The law allows some areas to
exempt thcmiclves. and d8ylifhl.. vlnl lime is 1101 ob.cnred in. Ari·
zona. 1-lawiii,_part lnd!ani Puer-

o(

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ria light-saving
begins; · ·
to sel our clock
•
forward
Sunday morning.

to Rico, -t~ Virgin Islands or Amcr. Samoa.
tcan
.I
Safety · officials ' arc• remiilding
Americana lha!.the time of-chtinlillg
the clqcks is. also a aood time to
repltii:C the bancries in smoke ~tcc­
tQI's.

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.AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service .
COLUMBUS - . As the 'Ohin
J.tt!&gt;~ney General's offi~e asked the
Ohio Supreme 'Couri
reconsid~r
pans of landmark sc:hool funding
ruling Thursday. 't?th District State
Se~ator Michl~# I Shoemaker hlastcd
political inaneuverinJ alons a .:filTerent front···of the school funding
debate.

. Alla~~ing statement. from. ihc
· conservative Ohio Roundtable. that.
!hey may ieelt a ballot ' issw! over·
,turning the court's decision tossing
oui Ohio's i!Chool fun4in1 fo~ula c
Shoelnak.er·called the group's Head.
David Zanotti, a Voinovich administraiion 'frontman. "·
,
·~o ignore this decision with a
biJIOI issue amacks of cullllral bi&amp;OOY.
that we thoufhl died i11 the 1950s in
.the . ~p Soutl!.': '' said the
. BoUrneville, 0e11IC!CI'It in are~.
"Pettllps il's dille Mr. Zlr_lotti's
group and lhe ~we politicians acl\1'

'

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•

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ally
some nl . the schn&lt;&gt;ls .
group 'su7ccssfully pushed .
maJor developments st"ce lhe
mvnlved 1n .the..lawsutt and hsten to term ltmns tn Oh1n and wus pan:nt ·
. . ••
..
some stlldents. . .
the
that !)cleated a casmn
• Vomnvtch s ap_pomtmcnt nl .''
In 11s 4r3 rultng, the coun ~~vc t.hc ga~1hlm~ mouauvc.
seven-member task force to come \II'
General Asscmhly and Voinovich
In rcspqnsc to Zanotti. Gov . . with a funding proposal. The panel.
nne ycjli to devise a new l'undin~ ' George Voinnvich said· Wednesday . which consists of the. governor. tlic
method providing more adequate that while he . wants to "move for- Senate and House majority a/r,d
and eq.uitablc funding . ICl Ohio's wand " h•y;ards a funtlin~ solution, he minority leaders. Super!Ptendent of
school districts,
. . docsn,' t helic vc in ruling &lt;&gt;ut a con- S~honls John Goff and st~tc Budget .
The ·ourt also punted the .author- stotull&lt;omol amendment nvenurnm~ Dtrcctor Greg Bmwnmg . os slated-~
ity in .QV ·ccin¥ t~e process an_tl the decision.
·
·
have its firstlncctin_g_next Tucsdat.
.
acceplmg
rcJectmg the stale s ·
• The Ohto Coaltt)On for Eqml)t
revised plan i the hands lif the tri- '.
Meanwhile . tho motion tiled hy and Adequacy 's, the group tilin~ the
al counjudge,
County's Linton the atti1mcy general on Thursday asks suit . announcement of a plann.ill
Lewh'.
the justices to "clarify" 1!r alter three April 15 press conference to lay oilt
Earlier this week, Zanotti said his -areas in the ruling. The mntion asks · it's detailed hlucprint l'ur • l'undit1li
northeast. Ohio-based · g~oup . is the coun to retain jurisdiction of the Ohio's schi)Ois adcquut~ly .
•.
mulling over a petition drive to put a case rather. than Lewis, clarify
• Hnusc.Speaker luAnn Davidsoii,
conslilutional amendment on the · whether the emergency loun program R-Reynoldsburg, in a statement. saiU
statewidelbaiJotto ovenurn the court found unconstitutional in the dc&lt;:iM&lt;m thai a st.mcwidc tax hike to puy I'~
ruling.
.
is still valid, and clarify whether local ro.:vamped school funding is likely ttl
He . called the coun's decision property taxes can be used as lhe reach the statewide hallm thi'c;
• "nOnsense" and ,..Jd _it should not · "corncrlitone" of lillY future funding Novc'mher.
have liken from the legislalllrc. the formula.
While n.thcr ,1utc oll'iduls ha1'~ •. ·
power 10 fund and ovenct the state's
. Thursday's filing with the coOn is ugrtcd·a Ia~ incrca.•e is incvilllhlc. n(l
scilools.. Zan~ui's group has a truck just the latcsl twisl in the 10 days one else 1\as hcl:n spedfi~ abiout thf
rccoht when i1 comes to hallot issues sinc'e the court's bombshell decision. timin~ ur txpc: ol' · rca.•c needed. ~
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